THURSDAY: D9CEMBER 10, 1964 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREV THURSDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1964 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREJI Officials Believe ilson JOHNSON PLEDGES SUPPORT: Report Calls for Medical Aid Changes By The Associated Press u WASHINGTON - British Prime Minister Harold Wilson may have W modified his views toward the in- po ternationally-manned nuclear sur- face fleet proposed by the United t States, American officials believe. Summing up two days of Wash- ington talks, Wilson said in a newsS conference yesterday that he and President Lyndon B. Johnson have ca reached a "total identity of views"fa on how to continue the search for fit a satisfactory nuclear defense for the Atlantic Alliance. w w. He said his government "is pre- ai pared to go forward with all pro- posals." U.S. officials interpreted a his remarks to mean that the p British prime minister might have -Associated Press modified his earlier outright re- )N, right, told jection of the U.S. project, and it ent Lyndon B. would consider it as one element a nr Lyndion B ofrhis broader alliance nuclear c for formation force.A guidelines for This force would also include rlech is shown Britain's bombers and three Po- m laris-equipped submarines, now H Views on MLF ider construction. Before coming to Washington, Vilson criticized the American an, a multi-lateral nuclear force intly owned by NATO allies in- rested in the idea, commonly mown as the MLF. He said in a House of Commons peech that it "adds nothing to Vestern strength, is likely to ause dissipation of effort in the Iliance and may add to the dif- culties of East-West agreement." At his news conference yester- ay, Wilson said his opposition as directed against "any proposal imed at overriding a U.S. verto." The prime minister left for )ttawa shortly after talking to re- orters. American Veto Wilson, informants said, made clear during his talks here that ny plan he would agree to must *ntain an absolute, irrevocable kmerican veto. This was expressed in the com- nunique issued at the White Souse Tuesday night which said that an arrangement must be found "maintaining existing safe- guards on the use of nuclear weapons." Both Wilson and American of- ficials-the former at his press conference, the latter in private remarks-expressed guarded hope France might be interested in a new approach to the nuclear de- fense problem. French Hostility France has shown increasing hostility to the MLF fleet proposal which French Premier Georges Pompidou charged recently "could boil down to a bilateral German- American accord." Herve Alphand, the French am- bassador, immediately poured cold water on such hopes. Asked by reporters after a conference with Secretary of State Dean Rusk yes- terday morning whether he saw anything in the British proposals which would appeal to France, the diplomat said, "Not that I am aware of . . . the French position' is unchanged." WASHINGTON (-) - President Lyndon B. Johnson was told yes- terday that thousands of Ameri- cans die needlessly for want of the best medical care available. In receiving a report from a presidential commission, Johnson pledged a concerted drive in Con- gress and the nation to buttress federal, efforts against cancer, heart disease and strokes. Unprecedented Plans The commission proposed these unprecedented programs: -A system of 60 regional cen- ters where Americans can get the best in diagnosis and care for heart disease. cancer and strokes: -A network of 450 stations across the nation where emer- gency care, diagnosis of heart di- sease. strokes and cancer can be provided along with rehabilita- tion-with patients referred on for further care: -A binding together in cooper- ative arrangement of the health facilities of communities and uni- versities. Unnecessary Death According to the commission, "every day men and women are dying who need not die. Every hour families are being plunged into tragedy that need not hap- pen. Wives are widowed, children left motherless-not for lack of scientific knowledge, but for lack of the right care at the right time." The programs proposed by the 23 physicians, editors and busi- nessmen on the commission would cost nearly $3 billion over the first five years-much of it in "federal seed money" requiring additional funds from the states. AMA Non-Committal The American Medical Associa- tion said in a statement that fn had not yet had time to study the report and had no specific com- ment. However, it said, if legisla- tion is introduced to implement the program, the AMA will react then. The AMA has pledged opposi- tion to all federal intervention in the field of medical practice. The 35 recommendations to the President spell out that those who can should pay for care at the medical centers, but that free care should be provided for the med- ically indigent. U'"" Light an d lively leather.. with a fleece-warm lining BRITISH PRIME MINISTER HAROLD WILSC reporters yesterday that his talks with Preside Johnson have been successful in setting objectives of a nuclear weapons force in NATO and laying allied consultations. British Ambassador Lord Ha above with Wilson. WORLD NEWS ROUNDUP: North Viet Nam ChargesU.S. Shellings By The Associated Press TOYKO - North Viet Nam charged that three warships oper- ating under command of United States and South Vietnamese authorities shelled one of its coastal villages yesterday. The al- leged attack was called the fourth such military encroachment since Nov. 25. The complaint of Ho Chi Minh's Communist regime was relayed to the world by news agencies of Red China and the Soviet Union. Though U.S. Ambassador Max- well D. Taylor and South Viet Nam's leaders are weighing the idea of revising war strategy to shut off the flow of Viet Cong supplies from abroad, there was no immediate comment from Saigon. In Washington, a Defense De- partment spokesman said, "We have no knowledge of any such incident" WASHINGTON - The Senate Rules Committee voted yesterday to call former White House aide Walter Jenkins for questioning in the Bobby Baker investigation. This was disclosed by Sen. John Sherman Cooper (R-Ky) at the start of a public hearing after a 4-hour closed-door discussion of the future course of the Baker probe. Earlier in the Baker investiga- tion, the Democratic majority had voted down GOP motions to call Jenkins for questioning about tes- timony relating to the sale of advertising time on an Austin, Tex., television station owned by Johnson's family. Cooper, the only Republican committee member at the meeting, said that over his objections it was agreed that the "party girl" issue raised in the Baker probe required no further investigation. Committee Chairman B. Everett Jordon (D-NC) had said earlier that additional hearings will be held after the new Congress con- venes in January but gave no details on subject matter. He gave no immediate word as to when Jenkins will be called, or whether the questioning of the former White House aide will be public. p'MERIDIAN, Miss.-Federal law- yers polished plans yesterdayfor a preliminary hearing for 19 men in Mississippi's case of the three slain civil rights workers. The 19 will appear before Unit- ed States Commissioner Esther Carter here today. The federal EVERY MONTIH ill PAGEANT MAGAZINE AMERICA'S LIVELIEST THOUGHT-PROVOKING MONTHLY MAGAZINE PAGEANT offers over 30 ar ticles and features that are exciting, stimulating, controversial, construc- ive, Inspirational, funny and shocking, ]PUAENT reflects the world about us, places our national scene into sharp focus, incisively, reports on new developments in the fields of health and medicine, probes the politi- cal horizon to bring you the widest range of rewarding reading every month by such outstanding people as: Vice.President Hubert Humphrey . . Max Lerner . .. Walter Limann . Robert Hutchins ... Sen. Jacob Javts r.Rev. John O'Brien . .. Jim Bishoi ..Norton Mockridge ... Sen. Margaret Chase Smith ... Dr. Rebecca Liswood ...Justice Arthur Goldberg... Art government must show "probable cause" for further legal action on the charges filed in what the FBI calls a Klu Klux Klan plot. Of the 21 men arrested in the case, 19 are charged with con- spiracy to interfere with the fed- eral rights of the slain men. The others were charged as accessories after the fact. Any murder charges in the case must come from the state, which had made no move. * * * OSLO, Norway-Martin Luther King said yesterday "there will be no lunch counter battles any more" in the civil rights struggle in the United States. "What is now needed," he add- ed, "is a new dynamism of strength, a grand alliance of the civil rights movement, the re- ligious, labor and intellectual forces to enforce the kind of poli- tical action that can end de facto segregation as regards housing, schools and job opportunity." * * * . WASHINGTON-A broad in- vestigation of the administration of justice in the federal courts, including the impact of press, radio and television, was voted yesterday by a House judiciary subcommittee. The action was taken by a spe- cial subcommittee set up late last session to investigate the Depart- ment of Justice, particularly its prosecution of Teamsters Union President James R. Hoffa. NEW YORK-Sen. Barry Gold- water (R-Ariz) met two former Republican presidential candidates in a summit conference yesterday and they all agreed GOP unity could be achieved if opposing fac- tionts gave a little ground. Goldwater announced the agree- ment after talking for an hour with former President Dwight D. Eisenhower and former Vice- President Richard M. Nixon in Eisenhower's suite in a New York C HARMS The Truly Personal Christmas Gift from IBAYS ' .6. TELEPHONE SPORT CAR Choose the charm which suits the personality. Come in to see the fine selection of sterling silver and 14K gold charms-over 3,000 charms to choose fon. Engraving done at no extra charge 16 Nickels Arcade-off State St. hotel. Nixon and Eisenhower later cit- ed the unity need. * * * SAIGON-Repulsed in a three- day battle at An Lao, Viet Cong guerrillas switched to raids and ambushes at a dozen other places in central Viet Nam yesterday. The Viet Cong killed a U.S. in- fantry officer in an ambush on highway No. 1 in Phu Yen Prov- ince, on the South China Sea 230 miles northeast of Saigon. The rash of minor attacks broke out after government reinforce- ments poured in by helicopters helped a beleaguered garrison turn back the threat posed by several hundred guerrillas to the district headquarters at An Lao in a mountain valley of Binh Dinh province, 300 miles northeast of Saigon. CAPE KENNEDY, Fla.-A last- second engine misfire on a Titan 2 rocket yesterday dealt a severe setback to the Gemini man-in- space program, postponing the final unmanned lauching of the two-man spacecraft until Janiuary. The National Aernoautics and Space Administration- also said the delay will shove the first manned Gemini flight into the second quarter of 1965. Tomorrow at NEWMAN, 7:30 P.M. FR. RAY ELLIS, Ass't. Director of The Confraternity of Christian Doctrine "CHRISTIANITY AND I COMMUNITY" Newman Student Association, 331 Thompson Europe-U.S. Student Exchange EXPLORE EUROPE This Summer With OHS Of The UNIVERSITY OF VIENNA $66400 For eligibility details mail coupon to: International Student Exchange 409 Waldron, W. Lafayette, Ind. Name Telephone Address Home Address Mill } CHALETu ComfyO Slippers * * BLACK or BONE with Red Fuzzy Lining I EVENING EMPLOYMENT 18-35 If you are free from 6 p.m. to 10 p.m. four evenings each week and occasionally on Saturday, you can maintain your studies and still enjoy a part-time job doing special interview work that will bring an average weekly income of $52. If you are neat appearing and a hard worker see Mr. Moskowitz from 1:30-4:00 p.m. at Room 212 Student Activities Building, Monday, Tuesday or Wednesday. No other times. We are also interested in full-time employment. f 306 SOUTH STATE Open Friday night and all next week until 8:30 7 I GUILD HOUSE 802 MONROE Friday, December 1 1 ... 1-2 Noon JOSE CHIPENDA Pastor from Angola Support the "AFRICAN SITUATION-POLITICAL FERMENT, UNIVERSITY LIFE, CHURCH'S ROLE" Lunch 25c SHOP CA e4tei' FOR CHRISTMAS I Berkeley Students and Faculty The struggle for free speech at Berkeley is ours too. Freedom of political action and expression are fundamental democratic rights, and their denial is shocking when it occurs at a university. The use of police to repress on-campus protest has been es- pecially objectionable. Before the controversy, the question of student rights and grievances was effectively disregarded by university officials. By organizing and acting dramatically on their grievances, the students and faculty of Berkeley have reversed the situation in which they were ignored, and have begun work on university reform. We salute them for their initiative and their demonstration of the power of action in dealing with per- sistently neglected campus problems. I Richard Horevitz Chairman, VOICE Political Party Cords SCandies I Wrappings Decorations, 312 So. State 1203 So. University Dewitt Baldwin Prof. Frithjof Bergmann Prof. Robert Blood Prof. Richard Brandt Prof. Samuel Eldersveld Prof. Marvin Felheim Prof. Carl Ginet Prof. Otto Graf Rev. Robert Hauert Prof. Arnold Kaufman Prof. Hyman Kornbluh Prof. Charles Lehmann Prof. Shoe Livermore Thomas F. Mayer Prof. Leon Mayhew Prof. Charles Moskos N. Patrick Murray Prof. David Norsworthy Marvin Olsen Prof. Bradford Perkins Jerom Rabow Prof. Richard Soloway Prof. Richard Schmuck Elizabeth Sumner Prof. Thomas Tentler Prof. Jack Walker Prof. Richard Wheeler Prof. E. Thomas Chapman Prof. Donald Hall Prof. Marc Pilisuk ..-. u U . A 1 ., .I HURRY! LAST CHANCE TO BUY A. . 1 I I a 0 I.