FRIDAY,,SEPTEMBER 18,1964
THE MICHIGAN -DAILY
FAC'! : TRR:1i!'rC
FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER 18, 1964 THE MICHIGAN DAILY
raJ ..5.;j £ £.tg,
Soviet Union Vetoes UN Action Ruling Party
Panelo Juges Sy B
UNITED NATIONS ()-Casting Any draft which did not take-?
its first veto in more than a year. into account Indonesia's claim ,
the Soviet Union yesterday killed that it wis fighting neo-colonial-".:<'*°x
on its 1 a Security Council resolution de- ism was unacceptable, Morozov"Needs Bomb
ploring the landing of Indonesia- said. i' Needs Bomb
based paratroops in South Ma- Stevenson quoted from a De- 4 I
laya Sept. 2. .... ,.1 LONDON (P) - Prime Minister
X
Judges Strike Down Section of Bill
As Violation of Fifth Amendment
BIRMINGHAM (A})-A three-judge federal panel, expressing con-
cern over spreading congressional powers, struck down yesterday a
section of the Civil Rights Act as applied to a Birmingham restaurant.
The Justice Department said it would appeal the decision to the
United States Supreme Court.
The judges referred specifically to interstate commerce in issuing
a temporary restraining order preventing acting U.S. Atty. Gen. Nich-
olas Katzenbach from enforcing the public accommodations section of
the act against Ollie's Barbecue.
Congressional Violation
Restricting its ruling to the Birmingham restaurant, the panel
held that Congress violated the Fifth Amendment in applying the pub-
lic accommodations section against Ollie's. 'We conclude," the panel
held, 'that Title II of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as applied to (01-
i f
World News
Roundup
By The Associated Press
MOSCOW-The Soviet Union
has issued a new warning to
Japan that it may become .the
target of retaliatory blows because
American .military forces use
Japanese bases.
BELGRADE--Yugoslavia yester-
day established links with COME-
CON, the Communist Bloc's equiv-
alent of the West European Com-
mon Market.
It was the closest formal tie
between independent-Communist
Yugoslavia and the Red Bloc since
lie's) was beyond the competence
of Congress to enact, and that its
enforcement against plaintiffs un-
der the circumstances of this case
would be violative of the Fifth
Amendment of the Constitution
of the United States, in pertinent
part reading: No person shall be
- . . deprived of , . . liberty, or
property, without due process of
law., .'"
The Birmingham panel-com-
prised of U.S. Dist. Judges Sey-
bourn H. Lynne and H. H. Grooms,
both of Birmingham, and Circuit
Judge Walter Gewin of Tuscaloo-
sa, Ala.--said that "if Congress
has the naked power to do what
it has attempted in Title II of
this act, there is no facet of hu-
man behavior which it may rot
control by mere legislative ac-j
tion.
Initiate Suit
All of the council's 11 members
except the Soviet Union and Com-
munist Czechoslovakia supported
the Norwegian proposal which
grew out of a Malaysian complaint
charging Indonesia with aggres-
sion,
This was the 102nd veto cast
by the Soviet Union.
Nothing Accomplished
The effect of the Soviet actior
was to bring eight days of debate.
to an end without any formal
pronouncement by the council.
United States Ambassador Ad-
lai E. Stevenson expressed regret
and surprise that the veto had
"prevented the council from doing
its duty." He said the action was
hardly designed to engender con-
fidence in the Soviet Union':
avowed desire to strengthen peace
through the United Nations.
Soviet delegate Platon D. Mor-
ozov backed Indonesia's claim that
the resolution was one-sided. He
said the Western powers were
trying to impose their will on In-
donesia and the other peoples of
Southeast Asia.
- -"
Johnson Cites;
New Defenses
SACRAMENTO (P) - President
Lyndon B. Johnson disclosed yes-
terday the United States is able
to spot missilesabeyond thedcurve
of the earth and also destroy
bomb-carrying satellites in space.
While Johnson said he spoke as
no partisan, he obviously had in
mind that Republican presiden-
tial nominee Barry Goldwater has
accused the administration of fail-
ing to develop any strategic weap-
on systems.
cember tetter in whiih rime n-
ister Nikita S. Khrushchev told
President Lyndon B. Johnson he
was prepared to write into an in-
ternational agreement a declara-
tion banning use of force by one
"country against another no mat-
ter what the reason might be.
"I am now forced to wonder
whether our gratification was not
premature," Stevenson said.
Continue Opposition
Morozov said the Soviet Union
still stands behind Khrushchev's
words, but it would continue to
oppose Western efforts to main-
tain colonial positions. He said the
United States was at present en-
gaged in trying to suppress what
he called democratic movement
in several countries of Southeast
Asia.
Malaysia's minister of home af-
fairs, Dato Ismail Bin Abdul Rah-
man, said he was pleased that
nine council members had sup-
ported the Norwegian resolution
which he interpreted as backing
Malaysia's charges against Indo-
nesia.
In addition to deploring the
paratroop landing-involving some
30 to 40 men-the resolution:
-Regretted all the incidents
which have occurred in the region.
-Requested the parties con-
cerned to avoid the recurrence of
such incidents.
-Called upon both countries to
respect the territorial integrity
and political independence of each
other.
ADLAI E. STEVENSON
Indonesia acknowledged that i'
had trained and equipped "volun-
teers" and "guerrillas" on In-
donesia territory and that many
of those fighting in Malaysia hac
received such training. This waE
described by Indonesia's represen-
tative as part of the so-called
"confrontation" policy of Presi-
dent Sukarno based on his claim
that he was fighting colonialism.
Sir Alec Douglas-Home's Conserv-
atives pledged yesterday to keel:
Britain's nuclear armory, saying
the nation one day might have to
stand alone against an enemy's
threats.
In a manifesto of general elec-
tion promises the ruling party lab-
eled "nuclear abdication" plans of
the opposition Socialists and Lib-
erals to phase out Britain's atom-
ic arsenal.
Douglas-Home launched the
Conservative program with the
claim, "The irrevocable conse-
quence of Socialist policy would
be that France and Red China-
which are developing their own
nuclear weapon capacities-would
take our place in the highest in-
ternational councils of the world."
Harold Wilson's Laborites argue
that the Conservatives are seek-
ing to justify a continued nuclear
role for Britain with the false
assertion that the United States
and other allies might desert Brit-
ain in a crisis.
They maintain this idea lay
i b e h i n d President Charles de
Gaulle's go-it-alone policy of
building up a French nuclear arm.
reached into the House Judiciary
Committee, where various reap-
portionment proposals are pend-
ing, and plucked out an amend-
ment introduced by Rep. Wright
Patman (D-Tex) .
Although permitted by the
House rules, this tactic had not
been used for years until Rep.
Howard W. Smith (D-Va), chair-
man of the rules committee, took
similar action last month.
CONSIDER AMENDMENT:
House Committee Views
Reapportionment Issue
WASHINGTON {'--A Constitutional amendment aimed at up-
setting the Supreme Court's ruling on state legislative reapportion-
ment was pushed along yesterday toward House action.
But even as the rules committee cleared the way for a vote, Sen.
William E. Proxmire (D-Wis) advised the House it would be engaging
in an act of futility if it passed the amendment.
Proxmire, one of the senators Who is blocking a vote on a proposal
to delay court-ordered reapportionment, said "a long educational
campaign" will be conducted in the Senate on any constitutional
amendment sent over by the House. Proxmire said he feels there is
little chance of the Senate passing-
any amendment before it adjourns. . -
The House Rules Committee Vlet Studlents
worked a power play in trying to
get action on the amendment. It M ake r tests
SAIGON A) -- The new high
council, intended to steer South
Viet Nam toward civilian rule, is
being born in controversy.
Students expressed dissatisfac-
tion yesterday at a list of 16
civilian leaders reported iominat-
ed for membership by Mai. Gen.
Duong Van Minh, the titular chief
of state. Spokesman for the stu-
dents demanded a greater repre-
sentation of Vietnamese youth.
I
DIXIELAND
"The New
-Old Heidelber-
k Stalin ousted President Tito. _ ""- ""
*d P n T The owners of Ollie's, Ollie Mc-#
NICOSIA-GaloPlaza Lasso Clung, Sr. and his son, initiated
the new United Nations mediator the Birmingham suit after refus-
for Cyprus, declared yesterday he ing to serve Negroes at their res-
would pursue a "fiercely indepen- taurant.
dent" .course in seeking a solution The establishment is located on
to the Cyprus crisis, but that hej Birmingham's southside. Although
would accept advice from anyone. it is in a predominantly Negro
A NF a i neighborhood, it caters to a midi
WASHINGTON-Federal media- dle class white clientele.
tors pressed efforts yesterday to
avert a possible nationwide rail- The federal panel attacked the
K road strike next week. Civil flight Act's basis for en-
A spokesman for the National forcement under the interstate
Mediation Board said representa- commerce clause, noting that Con-
tives of the railroads and six shop gress passed the measure without
craft unions had agreed to make attaching "legislative findings."
a serious effort to resolve their The panel said these findings are
jab security dispute. traditional in such measures.
-Recommended that the two
governments resume talks on the
basis of the joint communique
issued at the end of the Tokyo-
meeting last June.
It is clear why the resolution
did not win approval, he said.
- - -
I
Lecture &
Discussion
"J. D. SALINGER'S
MAN AND HiS WORLD"
DR. N. PATRICK MURRAY,
Assistant Coordinator, Office of Religious Affairs
6:45 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 20
Baptist Campus Center
502 E. HURON ST.
Rent a TV this Fall
NEW 19" G.E. PORT AB L ES
onl $1 0.00 per month
F FREE DELIVERY & S'ERVICE
TV set on displuy at FoleU's B3ookst' le
L'a NE JAC TV eh (f1
phone: NO 2-5671
BALLETS DE PARIS a
starring
7IIZI JEANMAIRE
HILL AUDITORIUM ..... .Tuesday, September29
UNANIMOUS PRAISE FROM LOS ANGELES PRECEDES
THEIR CROSS-COUNTRY TOUR TO ANN ARBOR.
4
ZIZI JEANMAIRE-MAGNIFIQUE! - el
~-Citizen News, Los Angeles
"This typically Parisian revue is a lighthearted blend of ballet, jazz,
night club and music hall diversions and it makes a glittering
'' package."
-Margaret Harford, Los Angeles Times
"Miss Jeanmaire's vibrant and typically French voice and her fasci-
nating, sophisticate4 movements were something to hear and see.
The Company is about as eyefilling and diverting as one could wish a
for; it is, in fact, not to be missed."
-Blain Hightower, Pasadena Star-News
, "The most inspired musical shows to play here in many a year.
There hasn't been dancing like this anywhere before in the United
States."
-James Powers, Hollywood Reporter
"Roland Petit's choreography is zestful, imaginative and often j
exotic as he combines ballet with revue." I
-Daily Variety
"Credit Yves Saint-Laurent with the visual beauty and glitter; his
costumes establish some sort of record for lavishness."
-Margaret Harford, Los Angeles Times
""Miss Jeanmaire and the company is part of the international ex-
change between the United States and France-if Zizi was only the
French President, relations between the two nations would be
t sweetness anzd joy."
-Sidney Miller, Valley Times e
"Petit has created the solid framework of the show, with a Parisian
music hall format that combines classical and modern terp motifs
with a one-woman song and dance performance of tour de force
proportions. Petit provides a showcase of inventive and clever
, numbers that. move with pace, precision, style and grace."
-Shaw, Variety
"Zizi and Roland Petit made a triumphant return to the Greek
Theater-the capacity audience acclaimed (La Revue Parisienne)
;, with profound applause-it will bring gasps of delight and smiles
. of pleasure in scene after scene."
-John G. Houser, Herald-Examiner 4} I
v.r.....vr .:.4
TICKETS: Main Floor (center section} $4.50, side ,
section $4.00
abbof
28 to 36
*Dacron & Cotton: pink, blue, beige, white, or black
* Oxford Cloth: with lodon, blue or red stripe
306 SOUTH STATE
THIS IS A
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YOU CAN BUY IT AT .
DISC SHOP RECORD CENTER
2 .University 304 S. Tayer
NO 3-6922 NO 5-4855
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VFW HALL
314 EAST LIBERTY
SEPTEMBER 18
FRI DAY,
9-12 P.M.
Stag- or Drag
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