AY, OCTOBER 3,196% THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGETHREE -- KI ennedyAppeals For Solidarity OnCommunism{ WASHINGTON (P-President John F. Kennedy reportedly made an appeal to the foreign ministers of 19 Latin American countries yesterday for hemispheric solidarity to quench the fire of Commu- nism in Cuba. The President was described by Sen. John Sparkman (D-Ala), one of those who attended a White House luncheon, as speaking at lengthhand vigorously on the theme that the Soviet threat posed there ( DEAN RUSK .. . stringest sanctions REFORM : Anti Gaullists kEnter Motion For Censure PARIS (M-Opponents of Presi- dent Charles de Gaulle last night struck back at his constitutional reform plan. . They filed a motion of censure which threatens to topple the goy-. ernnient of Premier Georges Pom- pidou. This could mean the dissolution of parliament, and new elections. The Motion of censure, filed by non-Gaullist, non-Communist par- ties of the National Assembly, at- tacks de Gaulle's proposal that fu- ture presidents be elected by di- rect universal suffrage. It accuses de Gaulle of violating the consti- tution he helped write in 1958. De Gaulle has valled for a pop- ular referendum on this consti- tutional change. The cabinet yesterday set the referendum for Oct. 28. Education Minister Pierre Sud- reau boycotted this session and in- formed sources said he'd resigned. " is the responsibility of all - not only the United States. Exert Pressure Earlier, the United States called on these Latin American allies to Join in more extensive and con- certed political and economic pres- sures against the Soviet-backed government of Fidel Castro. Secretary of State Dean Rusk is reported also to have made two other points of United States poli- cy in opening a 20-nation con- ference of foreign ministers on the Cuban situation. Cuban Relations First, the United States will make every possible effort to deal with Cuba through the Inter- American Defense System and the Organization of American States, but will act as it deems necessary if the threat or use of force by Cuban-based Communism affects vital American interests, he said. Also, Rusk assured them that there is no possibility of a deal with the Russians to end Soviet support for Castro by trading Western concessions in Berlin or some othet area of cold war con- flict. No Action Outlined Rusk avoided laying down any detailed blueprint for action, but he left no doubt that the United States feels further steps are nec- essary to isolate Cuban Commu- nism and to strengthen; hemis- phere defenses against Cuban- based subversion. The delegates went to the White House for lunch with Kennedy after hearing Rusk's speech and opening statements from repre- sentatives of Nicaragua, Argen- tina, the Dominican Republic, Guatemala, and Honduras. Unity Develops. While protocol ruled out any formal response by the ministers, some of them told members of Congress that surprising unity was developing in conferences to gain broader and more concentrated political and economic pressures against the Russian-backed gov- ernment of Fidel Castro. As an example, it was reported that Argentina had reversed its previous position and c a m e through at a conference session with a strong statement support- ing the United States position. Six Orbits Scheduled For Schirra By The Associated Press CAPE CANAVERAL--Astronaut Walter M. Schirra Jr., ran through his flight plans for what he hoped was the last time yesterday, pre- paring for today's launch on a i'ocket flight six times around the world. If all goes well, the launching may be watched on television in Europe, possibly even in the U.S.S.R. and eight other Iron Cur- tain countries. Storm Warnings Even though', tropical storm Daisy continued to kick up five to eight foot waves in the second orbit recovery area, Project Mer- cury Operations Director Walter Williams ordered technicians to continue preparations for the launching between 7 and 10 a.m. There is a possibility that the entire launch phase might be wit- nessed behind the Iron Curtain, Paul Haney, a spokesman for the space agency, said. " h yAsk Questions "They are interested enough to' be asking questions and one of the questions is: if there is a dis- aster will you show it?" he added. Haney said the Soviet Bloc tele- vision representatives had been told the answer was "yes." If the launching occurs between 7:51 and 8:17 a.m., the Telstar Communications Satellite will be within range so that live cover- age of the event could be trans- mitted instantly to television view- ers in 17 countries of the Euro- Vision network. 8-Minute Broadcast The United States plan calls for an eight-minute Telstar transmis- sion to Europe. If the launch' comes during that period, it may be possible to show Europe the last two to four minutes of pre- launch activity and the four-min- ute climb until the launching rock- et is out of sight. Williams explained his decision to proceed with launch plans de- spite the weather. Weather Conditions "This is about as close as we will ever come to suitable weather around the entire track," he not- ed. A 28-ship armada plus 143 air- craft and 22 parachute-medical teams are standing by to rescue Schirra. Two separate Navy task forces are deployed, one in the Pacific and the other in the Atlantic. Since there are nine. places where he might come down in the Atlantic, that fleet is much larger than the one in the Pacific. There are only two planned landing areas in the Pacific. May Lose Accreditation AID BILL: Senate Passes Measure On Foreign Assistance WASHINGTON W)-In line with administration strategy, the Senate passed the foreign aid money bill yesterday after beating back every attempt to cut the '$792.4 million added by its appropriations committee over what the House voted. The vote was 57 to 24. The measure carrying $4.4 billion in new economic and military assistance now goes to a Senate-House conference to work out a com- promise. The result is expected to be less than the Senate total while oretaining a big portion of the slash made by the House two weeks ago. Cut Total President John F. Kennedy had asked for $4.9 billion last January but the figure was cut to $4.7 bil- lion in the authorization bill which -> . set spending ceilings. The House went along with its appropriations committee in shrinking the money total $1.1 bil- lion below that-to $3.6 billion. Aid to Cuba The Senate voted to give the President authority to permit aid to countries which sell arms to Cuba or permit their ships to be used to transport military sup- plies to the Communist-run is- land. By G. K. HODENFIELD Associated Press Education Writer WASHINGTON-Even rougher days may lie ahead for Ole Miss. The rioting over admission of a Negro will eventually be quelled and physical peace will be restor- ed to the campus. But the dark shadow of loss of accreditation may hang over the university for many long weeks. The Executive Council of the Commission on Colleges of the Southern Association of Colleges and High Schools issued a stern warning to state officials and the university administration Friday night. Warning Unnoticed The warning passed largely un- noticed in the hullaballoo attend- ing the admission of Negro James H. Meredith. The Council warned that unless "unwarranted interference with the integrity of the institution" is removed, it will recommend that formal accreditation be withdrawn from all seven of Mississippi's state colleges and universities. Such withdrawal of accredita- tion is, in effect, a sanction. If carried out, and nationally ob- served, the diplomas and degrees awarded by these state institu- tions would not be recognized else- where. Affects Seniors Thus, their graduating seniors next spring could not leave Mis- sissippi to go on to graduate school. Outside the state, their graduating lawyers and doctors could not prac- tice and the certificates of their graduating teachers would be con- sidered invalid. "Mississippi officials might choose to ignore this," one Wash- ington educational authority said. "But you can be sure the alumni won't. And the students-regard- less of how they feel about inte- gration-will hesitate to do work for which, in effect, they will get no credit, at least outside the state." Political Interference The council said the issue is not the admission of Meredith to Ole Miss, but political interference with the university. Meanwhile, a graduate of the University of Mississippi, now ac- tive in national education affairs in Washington, said yesterday, "The university has been going steadily downhill since the Unit- ed States Supreme Court's deci- sion on desegregation in 1954." The graduate, who asked not to be further identified, added: "For the past eight years the focus has been on integration, and how to avoid it. Lose Faculty "There has been a tremendous turnover in what used to be a very fine faculty. Many of the univer- sity's outstanding professors have left for other colleges and univer- sities. "Those who have stayed behind have been afraid to speak out against interference by the politi- cians." He noted a recent change in the progress of student admissions at the university. Admission Changes "Mississippi traditionally has ac- cepted all Mississippi youngsters who are in the top half of their graduating class," he\ said. "A few years ago, however, it was ruled that each applicant for admission must file with the reg- istrar five letters of recommenda- tion from responsible citizens who have known him for at least two years. "The 1962 university catalog puts it this way. 'An applicant who re- sides in Mississippi must be rec- ommended by citizens of his coun- ty who are university alumni.' "Whenrthey leave the admis- sion standards up to the alumni," the graduate said, "you can be cer- tain that nobody but 'right-think- ers' are going to be admitted, no matter how talented they are." Explorer 14 Circles Earth CAPE CANAVERAL (AP)-An Ex- plorer satellite soared into orbit last night to measure radiation. streaming from the sun, how it affects conditions on earth and the threat it poses to space ex- plorers. The Explorer 14 payload shot aloft from Cape Canaveral aboard a towering Thor-Delta rocket. All three stages of the booster fired with precision and drilled the satellite into space at a speed of nearly 24,000 miles an hour. Project officials announced at a news conference an hour later that the 89 pound satellite had been injected into a looping orbit which was intended to take it 53,000 miles away from the earth before it swings back as close at 185 miles. I Time:I Place:I PROGRAM - 7:00 P.M. to 8:30 P.M. DANCE CLASSES at4 WOMEN'S LEAGUE Registration-Wed., Oct. 3 at7-P.M. BEGINNERS and ADVANCED TUES. or WED. Only $8.00-Men ... $4.00-Women Theme: CRITICAL CONCERNS IN THE WORLD COMMUNITY 1. If. Folk Songs and Choral Music Subjects and Speakers: Korea......"Christianity-Culture or Religion?" by Susksan Kim Lebanon ."Muslim-Christian Relations in Lebanon" by Anthony Shebaya Africa...."Modern Africa Relates to the World" by Emile Zola Philippines ."Minority Groups" by Natividad Ngo India ....."Caste in India" by Dr. P. Sreenivasochar, Visiting Professor of History U.S.A......"The Struggle for Racial Brotherh6od" by Sharon Jeffrey All students from outside the U.S.A. are guests. Cost for students rfom U.S.A. fifty cents. Please make reservations immediately by phone, 668-6076. Absolute deadline Thursday, 10:00 A.M. Only first 300 reservations can be accepted. i w y INTERNATIONAL BUFFET SUPPER, Sponsored by the Ecumenical Campus Center October 5, 1962; 5:30 Informal Social Period, 6:00 Supper First Baptist Church, 512 Huron St., across from the A & P I '-!<. (Author of "I 1Was a Teen-age .Dwarf," "The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis," etc.) I MIKE MANSFIELD .. . foreign aid bill _ I I i s T!T!T 1l THE NEWMAN CLUB inzvites you to attend a U World News Roundup i! UNIVERSITY LECTURE "THE RELIGIOUS HUMANISM of ALBERT CAMUS" DR. PRESTON ROBERTS Associate Professor of Theology & Literature Divinity School, University of Chicago 4:15 P.M., WEDNESDAY, OCT. 3 Auditorium "A"-Angell Hall By The Associated Press HONOLULU-The United States resumed nuclear testing in the Pa- cific yesterday after a two-month recess. The task force, in charge of the tests said an "intermediate device" was exploded in the air above Johnston Island after it was dropped from a plane. ,' . 4 NEW YORK-James B. Dono- van flew to Cuba yesterday to con- tinue negotiations for the release of 1,179 Cubans taken prisoner by the government of Prime Min- ister Fidel Castro during the in- vasion of the island more than a year ago. The Brooklyn attorney issued a statement before his de- parture saying the negotiations with Cuban officials have not in- volved cash, machinery or other items which would strengthen the Cuban economy. UNITED NATIONS - Mahmoud Fawzi, United Arab Republic for- eign minister, told the General Assembly yesterday United States promises of missiles for Israel will "prompt Israel to more aggres- siveness and more hostility." TOKYO - Red China charged that a United States plane in- truded into Chinese territorial air space yesterday, the new China news agency reported. SALISBURY-A restriction or- der-equivalent to house arrest- was served yesterday on Joshua Nkomo, leader of Southern Rho- desia's outlawed African Nation- alist Zimbabwe American Peoples Union when he returned by air from a brief self-exile in Tan- ganyika. * * * NEW YORK - The S t o c k Market rallied slightly in sluggish trading yesterday, with Dow-Jones averages showing industrials up 6.78, railroads up .49, utilities up 1.40 and 65 stocks up 2.07. group discussion on IS CENSORSHIP REALLY NECESSARY? moderated by: REV. CLAUDE ARNOLD, CSB Wed., Oct. 3, 8 p.m. 331 Thompson St. WHAT TO WEAR TILL THE DOCTOR COMES Now that you have enrolled and paid your fees and bought your books and found your way around campus and learned to hate your roommate, it is time to turn to the most important aspect of college life. I refer, of course, to clothes. What does Dame Fashion decree for the coming school year? (Incidentally, Dame Fashion is not, as many people believe, a fictitious character. She was a real Englishwoman who lived in Elizabethan times and, indeed, England is forever in her debt. During the invasion of the Spanish Armada, Dame Fashion- not yet a Dame but a mere, unlettered country lass named Moll Flanders-during the invasion, I say, of the Spanish Armada, this dauntless girl stood on the white cliffs of Dover and turned the tide of battle by rallying the drooping morale of the British fleet with this stirring poem of her own composidij; Don't be gutless, Men of Britain. Swing your cutlass, We ain't quittin'. Smash the Spanish, ,Sink their boats, Make 'em vanish, Like a horse makes oats. For Good Queen Bess, Dear sirs, you gotta Make a mess Of that Armada. You won't fail! Knock 'em flat! Then we'll drink ale And stuff like that. _I In Sponsored by the Office of Religious Affairs i69 eIrYr d 1 'l' I OPEN TO THE PUBLIC I " Ik ~ JALE As a reward for these inspirational verses Queen Elizabeth dubbed her a Dame, made her Poet Laureate, and gave her the Western Hemisphere except Duluth. But this was not the extent of Dame Fashion's service to Queen and country. In 1589 she invented the laying hen, and she was awarded a life- time pass to Chavez Ravine. But she was not to end her days in glory. In 1591, alas, she was arrested for overtime jousting and imprisoned for thirty years in a butt of malmsey. This later became known as Guy Fawkes Day.) But I digress. Let us get back to campus fashions. Certain to be the rage again this year is the cardigan (which, curiously enough, was named after Lord Cardigan, who commanded the English fleet against the Spanish Armada. The sweater is only one product of this remarkable Briton's imagination. He also invented the glottal stop, the gerund, and the eyelid, without which winking, as we know it today, would not be possible). But I digress. The cardigan, I say, will be back, which is, I believe, cause for rejoicing. Why? Because the cardigan has nice big nockets in which to carry your Marlboro Cigarettes- HI-Fl MONAURAL and STEREO Orininoll v$98. $4 98$5.98 I ail I i C 1.