THURSDAY, NOVEMBER12, 1964 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE Draft Scandal Major Sees Unity PAGE Draft Scandal, Major Flooding sees enity FofPolitics Plague New Viet Nam Regime In Bolivia U.S., USSR Deadlocked in UN SAIGON (I)-A draft scandal showed up yesterday among flood relief, political and other prob- lems besetting South Viet Nam. Police sources said they uncov- ered a ring, involving officials in the former government of Maj. Gen. Nguyen Khanh, that has sold exemption papers to Vietnamese youths conscripted for military service against the Communist Viet Cong., The price for avoidance of du-, ty in the U.S.-advised armed forc- es, they said, ranged from the equivalent of $750 to $1500. That, would be too high for peasants, but within the means of wealthy families. Press Investigation' The police reported one man is under arrest. They said they in- tend to press the investigation de- spite a pbssibility of efforts from high places to sweep it under the rug. Draft boards speeded up their, work recently after a -long lull. Teams of military and civilian po- lice are stopping youths for checks of identity and draft reg- istration cards and sometimes are inducting them on the spot. All branches of the armed serv- ices need more men. While the United States has built up its supporting forces to more than 21,000 men, at only half their authorized strength. One goal is to bring the regular army up to 215,000 by the year end. Flood Disaster The war went on even in flood- ed central Viet Nam, where U.S. and Vietnamese relief and rescue teams struggled through Viet Conzg sniper fire and foul weath- er to alleviate the disaster. A U.S. military spokesman - cautioning that the figures might be exaggerated--said floods rush- ing through mountain valleys in the last few days are reported to have drowned 1100 civilians and driven 150,000 from their homes. Refugees poured into the main coastal cities. It was estimated that 36,000 or more are in Da Nang, a South China sea port and military base 380 miles northeast of Saigon. In Saigon, dissident student leaders pressed their demands for a reorganization of Premier Tran Van Huong's week-old civilian government. A dozen surround- ed him at a state reception in Gia Long Palace, saying they lik- ed him but couldn't stand some of his ministers. Huong, a former school teach- er, told the students that all complaints are under study. But flood relief has priority for the time being, he said. The students clearly were not satisfied. They have threatened to defy Huong's ban on demonstrations if their demands are not answered by Fri- day afternoon. The 12 youths were among in- vited guests at a reception given LA PAZ, Bolivia (R)-Gen. Rene Barriento said yesterday most po- litical parties have agreed to sur- render their arms to prevent fur- ther violence in Bolivia. "This is an important step for- ward in the understanding we have achieved with the parties," the President of the military jun- ta said in an interview. "We are gradually strengthen- ing a working alliance with the political forces toward realizing our aim of national unity." Civilian groups, including pea- sants, students and miners be- longing to different parties, have had weapons for years. Their stocks were increased by loot- ing arsenals during last week's military revolt that ousted Presi- dent Victor Paz Estenssoro. By The Associated Press President Lyndon B. Johnson has expressedwillingness to re- solve the deadlock over UN fi- nances "in tny number of pos- sible ways" consistent with the UN charter. But from all indi- cations, the basic positions of the U.S. and Russia in the feud over payment of UN dues re- mains unchanged. The President's chief delegate, Ambassador Adlai E. Stevenson, gave Johnson's position in a let- ter to the Nigerian UN ambassa- dor, Chief O. S. Adebo, made public yesterday. The Soviet Union is two years behind in UN dudes because of re- fusal to pay assessments amount- ing to roughly $52 million to support UN operations in the Congo and the Middle East. Charter Penalty Article 19 of the UN Charter says any member two years be- hind cannot vote in the Gen- ral Assembly. The USSR could avoid being the full two years behind by paying only $5,793,331 of their total assessments. Others two years behind are the Ukraine, Bylorussia, Czecho- i eral U Thant. Afterward Feder enko told reporters not to "hav any illusions" that the Soviet Un ion would depart from the state ment of last Saturday reiteratin its refusal to pay for Congo an Middle East peacekeeping. According to Stevenson, th U.S. is willing to strengthen th Council's primary role in peace keeping, without derogating fro the Assembly's power of assess ment. It favors assessing peace would "take more fully into keeping costs in a way that woul "take more fully into account" t views of the chief financial co tributors. Stevenson said that "as far the United States is concerne the current financial difficulti can be settled in anynumber possible ways consistent with t charter." He did not elaborate. The United States has always argued that i would be "consistent with th charter" for the Russians to for- feit their vote if they did not pay. But it has also said it is flexible as to the method of payment, be- cause "the only vitally essential ingredient in any solution is that the funds be made available to the United Nations." Stevenson's letter was the first announced response to Nigeria's letter which was sent Wednes- day to Johnson, French President Charles De Gaulle, Soviet Pre- mier Alexei I. Kosygin and Brit- ish Prime Minister Harold Wil- son, asking that their govern- ments get together on- the issue. :"bC+.:v:H;$ x;r. . . . . . ..."":::...":. . . . ...vtv"" : ii~ :','}:ii:i4 : :!"S:"a">}::: DAILY OFFICIAL BL ... ......... by Chief of State Phan Khac SuuTentative Backing in honor of his predecessor, Maj.1 ; .All political parties except Paz's Gen. Duong Van Minh. Minh was PREMIER HUONG Nationalist Revolutionary Move- scheduled to leave today on a ment and the Communists gave good will tour to Hawaii, Formosa, groupings and even the High Na- the military junta tentative back- Thailand, Malaysia and Japan. tional Council, the interim legis- ing in a meeting Tuesday night. Criticism of the cabinet, made lature that confirmed Huong in Barientos said some parties gave up of technicians rather than poli- the premiership. outright agreement to surrender ticians, has recently spread among arms to the government. Obvi- Nguyen Xuan Chu quit as coun- ously this did not include Paz's religious, student and political cil chairman last week. He was party, whose People's Militia .... *...,...,...,.......... miffed at the fact the council was fought for Paz to the last. i not consulted on selection of the "Other parties have not yet new cabinet and complained that cmethroparties avre notyetd Uthere is insufficient representa-ros a tionof oliicalfacion. ;"but the general trend is in that direction.," JL E T NAboofouti00mmbersof the na- dPar~tyl'eaders, however, were tional studen ion called re- keeping a watchful eye on the ENGINEERING PLACEMENT INTER- cently at a noisy meeting for dis- military regime. Their backing is' VIEWS-Seniors & grad students, please solution of t h e government. essential to keep Bolivia at peace.* sign interview schedules posted at 128-H West Engrg. for appointments with the Speakers charged there are "for- Rests on Promises following: mer secret policemen, drunkards "If the junta keeps its prom- and Diemists" (followers of the ises, everything should be all MON. NOV.rp. Beloit Wis. BSMS: ME late Ngo Dinh Diem) among the right," said Juan Lechin, a pow- BS: EE. R & D, Des., Sales Trng Prog. 15 ministers. The students were erful leftist leader whose tin Cook Paint & Varnish Co., Detroit reported displeased with Huong's miners in the south rose against Research Dept. BS, MS and Prof: ChE. announced policy of separating Paz last month. "But if the prom- BS-MS: Mat'Is. and Chem. Can consider politics from the classrooms. ises are not kept, we wi fight non-citizens if becoming a U.S. citizen. ssaentkpt ewl ih R and D. New Unity again." R.C. Mahon Co., Warren, Mich. BS: The promises include calling IE and ME. Dec. grads. Can consider non-citizens If becoming a U.s. citizen A spokesman for the Roman free elections within six months R and D, Des. and Sales for ME's, Catholic faction of the Rev. Hoang to a year to name a civilian gov- (Continued from Page 2) Student Government Approval of the foilowing student-sponsored events be- comes effective 24 hours after the pub- lication of this notice. All publicity for these events must be withheld until] the approval has become effective. Approval request forms for student- sponsored events are available in Room 1011 of the SAB. Economic Society, .Speech by Dr.i John M. Montias, Nov. 12, 4 p.m.. MPR . UGLI, Astronomical Colloquium: Sat., Nov. 14, 2:30 p.m., McMath-Hulbert Observ-1 atory, Lake Angelus. Dr. Richard G. Teske, Dept of Astronomy, will speak on "Preliminary Results from a Dou- ble-Pass Solar Spectograph." Attention Seniors and Grad Students: The McGraw-Hill Engineering Digest,: edited for engineering students, is con-s ducting a Seniors Program and the U-M Engrg. School has been selected.: Seniors and Grad students can ob-] tain an application blank for a free one-year subscription to this digest from the Engrg. Placement Service, orI frodm your departmental office. MIDYEAR GRADUATION EXERCISES December 19, 19647 To be held at 2 p.m.. in Hill Audi- torium. Exercises will conclude about 4 p.m. All graduates of the summer session of 1964 and graduates as of: December 1964 may attend. Reception for graduates, their rela- tives and friends in Michigan League Ballroom at 4 p.m. Please enter League at west entrance. Tickets: Four to each prospective graduate, to be distributed from Mon., ORGANIZATION NOTICES Use of This Column for Announce- ments is available to officially recog- x!ised and registered student organisa- tions only. Forms are available in Room 1011 BBB. American Society for Public Adminis- tration - Discussion on "Sensitivity Training"-The Application of Social Psychology to Admin. Organization, November 13, 1964, 4 p.m., Graduate Outing Room, Rackham. The Christian Science Organization, Meeting, Thursday, Nov. 13, 1964, 7:30 p.m., Room 528 D, Student Activities Bldg. AMBASSADOR STEVENSON slovakia, Hungary, Poland, Ro- mania, Bolivia and Yemen. France will be two years behind Jan. 1 if it continues refusing to pay Congo assessments. The United States has insisted that the penalty in the Charter be applied. The. Soviet Union has hinted that if that happens it will quit the United Nations. Both the Soviet Union and France hold that Assembly peacekeeping as- sessments are illegal, on grounds that the Security Council has sole authority over peacekeeping. A Firm Stand Late yesterday, Soviet Ambas- sador Nikolai T. Federenko talked for an hour with Secretary Gen- 'Dec. 7, to 1 p.m., Sat., Dec. 19. Diplo- Bldg., except on Sat., Dec. 12, when office will be closed. Sat., Dec. 19,of- fice will be open from 9 to 1 p.m. Academic Costume: May be rented at Moe Sport Shop, 711 North University Ave.Orders should be placed imme- diately. Assembly for Graduates: At 1 p.m. in Naturfal Science Auditorium. Mar- shals will direct graduates to proper stations. Programs: To be distributed at Hill, Auditorium. Candidates who qualify for a doc- toral degree from the Graduate School and WHO ATTEND THE GRADUA- TION EXERCISES will be presented a hood by the University. Hoods given during the ceremony are all Doctor of Philosophy hoods. Those receiving a doctor's degree other than the PhD may exchange the PhD hood for the appropriate one after the ceremony. Such exchange may be made in Room 1139 Natural Science Bldg. during the half hour after the recessional march, or in Room 2564 Administration Bldg. on the following Monday morning. Placement E POSITION OPENINGS: The Dearborn Press, Dearborn, Mich. -Reporter-editor. Immed. opening for male Journ. grad or near BA for sports & school beat. Exper. not re- quired. Mfgr's Duplicating Equipment, De- troit Area-male grads for sales trng. program. Bkgd. in Engrg., Systems &, math helpful but not req. John Deere Waterloo Tractor Works, Waterloo, Iowa-Management Develop- er, MA in vocational counseling or re- lated area, bkgd. In psych., between 30 & 40 yrs. Exper. in industry or teaching pref. * a « a 3 I Prod. for IE's. Northern Natural Gas Co., Omaha, Neb., ES: ChE, EE, IE and ME. Can consider non-citizens ifbecoming a U.S. citizen. Dev. Texas Instruments Inc., Dallas, Tex. All degrees: ChE, EE, ME and Met. Men and Women. R and D, Des. and Prod. U.S. Gov't. General Services Admin.,. Nationwide. All Degrees: CE, EE, EM, IE and ME and Arch. MS: Constr'n, Pub. Wks. Admin., Sanitary, Commun'n Sci. Men and Women. Des. and Mgmt. MON. and TUES. NOV. 16-17 Bendix Corp. All divisions. All de- grees: EE and ME: MS-Phd: Instrum'n. BS: ChE. PhD: AE and Astro., Meteor. and Ocean. Dev. and Des. Boeing Co., Seattle, Wichita, Phila., and New Orleans. All degrees: AE and Astro., ChE, CE, EE, EM, IE, Mat'ls., ME, Met. Prof: Applied Mech. MS-PhD: In-I strumen's. MS: Constr'n. BS-MS: Naval and Marine-outstanding students. BS: E Math., E Physics and Sci. Engrg. R and D, Des. and Prod. Union Carbide Corp-Ph.D. Recruiting N. Y., N. J., W. Va., Ill., Ind. and Ohio. PhD: AE, ChE, EE, EM, Met. and Nu- clear. Can consider non-citizens. R and D, Prod, and Mkt.-Res. NASA-Lewis Research Center, Ohio locations. All degrees: AE and Astro., ChE,EE, EM, R and D, Mat's., ME, Met., Physics and Math. MS-PhD: In- strum'n and Nuclear. BS: E Math, E Physics and Sci. Engrg. Men and Wom- en. R and D. Quyen said Catholics and Bud- dhists, often at odds in the last 18 months, are prepared to unite against the government. Huong's statement that politics and reli- gion should be separated is open to question. Both faiths are dissatisfied be- cause Huong did not consult re- ligious leaders in selecting the ministers, he said. ernment. Parties giving the junta some form of backing range from Lechin's Revolutionary Party of the Nationalist Left to the right- ist Bolivian Socialist Falange, the nation's two largest parties. It remains to be seen whether the various parties will return all their weapons, Lechin's tin min- ers, for example, are heavily armed. TODAY: 4:10 p.m. Promptly Frieze Building Arena Theatre World News Roundup By The Associated Press PITTSBURGH-Representatives of steelworkers employed by 11 major steel firms will meet in New York City next Monday and Tues- day to discuss union problems in a prelude to new contract talks. MOSCOW - The Soviet Union and Yugoslavia yesterday signed a $300-million trade agreement for next year, the Soviet News Agency Tass reported. They also made agreement on a $250-million Soviet order for 78 Yugoslav-built ships for delivery in 1966-70. VIENTIANE, Laos-An army communique said yesterday there have been strong Pathet Lao at- tacks against the government army's forward positions about six miles north of Tha Thom, a strategically important town in North Central Laos. The communique issued by the chief of staff of the national army said the government, troops are firmly defending themselves a few miles from their original positions. HIGH LIGHTS from MAGAZINE ONE YEAR LATER A Special Report: J.F.K. A Final Tribute By Adlai Stevenson Harry Golden * Joseph Alsop * Art Buchwald *U Thant *James Reston WHAT WE HAVE LEARNED by Hubert H. Humphrey Plus HOW GOOD ARE THE '65 CARS? Over 30 rewarding articles includ- ing features by James Baldwin, Bob Hope, Cindy Adams and Sidney Skolsky PAGEANT MAGAZINE AMERICA'S LIVELIEST THOUGHT-PROVOKING MAGAZINE! (Look for these highlights next month) I * 4 I r. Liste us on FIRST.. . SEE THE SHOW... THEN . .. SEE US FOR THE ALBUMS! rgFIOBELLO" Original Broadway Cast en for 4171 WCBN Ph.6 E. Liberty 662-0675 A. .vx:: ":.} ::. :.:...::' : 4:e:::t y:.w.W. w,, ~~.'+}t4: ''4+..* , TCHIN-TCHIN (Acts I & I I) by Francois Billetdoux Department of Speech Student Laboratory Theatre Admission Free s lowU D0 00 iS For further information, please 764-7460, General Div., Bureau of pointments, 3200 SAB. SUMMER PLACEMENT: 212 SAB- call Ap- Do you want to find out about jobs in Europe? Come to Summer Placement Service and sign up for interviews to be held Nov. 23 & 24. Manpower, Inc., 205 E. Liberty - Survey Work, campus area, men with 8-12 hrs. avail. Nov. 18. Earn up to $15.60. Must have good vision, legible handwriting & be able to work out- doors. Apply at Manpower, Inc. Make appt at Bureau of Appoints., 3200 SAB. _ MON. NOV. 16 U.S. Gov't. Housing and Home Finance Agcy., Calif., Puerto Rico, D.C., NYC, Phila., Ga., Ill., Texas. BS-MS: CE. MS: Constr'u and Sanitary. Men and Wom- en. Skimmers of soft, supple leathers Wafer-thin heels, a must for your wardrobe! Colors for every occasion . {C rSr~n . j ...... _ - . i * * * International Students Association, Petitioning for Administrative Vice- President, Petitions may be obtained in the ISA Office, 2521 Student Activi- ties Building until they are due on November 20, 1964. Le Cercle Francais, Le Baratin, le 12 Novembre, lejeudi, 3 to 5 p.m., 3050 Frieze Building. Near East Studies Club, Lecture on Kuwait, Nov. 12, 1964, 8 p.m., Room 1, Lane Hall. University of Michigan Amateur Ra- dio Club, Meeting, Nov. 12, 1964, 7 p.m., 4505 East Engineering. W.A.A. Folk Dance Club, Folk dance with instruction suitable for begin- ners 'Friday, November 13, 1964, 8 to 10:30 p.m., Women's Athletic Building. O *" v - 4e E ! 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