TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1,1963 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PACE THE MICHIGAN DAILY PA 1.' K' a ,.tAaa a.. rr uc. in. §Ask End of Commission * * * * * * Cabinet Officials Say President Considering t M 1 Russian LIQUIDITY: Nations Discu Of Internation WASHINGTON (M)-Finance minis cussions yesterday on the possibility of1 national financial machinery. The studies, to be conducted both' Fund and a group of 10 industrialized n lem of international liquidity-the tec and " ~coul Willis Plans co Uni try' e nat TravelBifll m a m den By The Associated Press Uni WASHINGTON-Rep. Edwin E.she Willis (D-La), chairman of the House Committee on Un-American Activities, plans to introduce a bill pos mi to give Congress specific powers to i curb travel abroad by United an mov States citizens.b This issue has come into promi- ber nence because of student violations crew of government travel bans to Cuba K this summer. old It is understood that Willis is upi thinking of a measure that would $35 give the secretary of state author- T ity to prevent anyone from going his to any country if it is determined He that his travel there would be the against the national interest. vest Wheat Export ss Pr le-Meeting Set This Week ial Finance ialFi aeeOn Problem ters of 100 nations opened dis- putting new gears in the inter- Fulbright, Ellender I by the International Monetary Support President ations, will deal with the prob- hnical term for currency, gold WASHINGTON (P) -- Cabinet * credit used in settling ac- officials told inquiring senators nts between countries. yesterday President John F. Ken- 'he current problem, from the nedy is weighing the political as ted States view, in this coun- well as the economic effects before s persistent deficit is its inter- deciding whether to 'permit the tonal balance of payments. In sale of wheat to Russia at subsi- essage to the conference, Presi- t John F. Kennedy said the dized export prices. ted States is determined to Official government sources re- e this problem "but not at port the Russians have been talk- expense of others." ing about a deal for three million We recognize that the reserve tons at $250 million. This infor- tion of other countries is a mation was made available in ad- ror image of our own," he said, vance of a night meeting at which d that as the United States Secretary of State Dean Rusk, So- es toward equilibrium, it will viet Foreign Minister Andrei A. more difficult for others to in- Gromyko and British Foreign Sec- se their reserves." retary Lord Home were invited :ennedy renewed the 30-year- guests. United States pledge to back Sen. J, William Fulbright (D- the dollar at the fixed rate of Ark), chairman of the Senate For- per ounce of gold. eign Relations Committee, and he President got in a plug for Sen. Allen J. Ellender (D-La), domestic tax reduction plan. head of the Senate Agriculture asserted that reducing taxes is Committee, both threw their sup- best way to improve the in- port behind presidential action. tment outlook. They said that Kennedy has the authority, in their opinion, to clear the way for a quick deal. Meeting This Week CUSSION GROUP Ellender said it was his under- standing there will be a top-scale administration meeting this week, probably today, to review all the "political" and "economic factors," with a view to a decision this week, at 7 30 orearly next week. Fulbright said that if the ad- )OM--UGLI ministration has to wait for ex- tended debate in Congress- on a I D SUMN ER, resolution voicing congressional GL ISH sentiment in favor of such a trans- action, "there wouldn't be any deal." The senators reported that See- Freeman and Secretary of Com- retary of Agriculture Orville L. merce Luther H. Hodges favor an order from Kennedy authorizing the sale and that Undersecretary of State George W. Ball, while pointing to the "political" prob- lems involved, appeared to favor it also. Bulgaria Interested At the United Nations, Bulgarian Foreign Minister Ivan Bashev re- ported he told United States Sec- retary of State Dean Rusk Bul- garia is interested in purchasing grain from the United States if the terms are favorable. Bashev added that he found Rusk's reaction encouraging, but that the discussion was only in general terms and any talk of a specific deal would be premature. Russell Leads Move Against Rights Unit By The Associated Press The nation's racial crisis con- tinued to smolder yesterday with events occurring in scattered parts of the nation. In Washington, a flood of bit- ter denunciation of the Civil Rights Commission by Southern members opened Senate debate on a move to give the agency a new one-year lease on life. The Southerners were led by Sen. Richard B. Russell (D-Ga), who said "let it die. This agency has shown a prejudice that dis- qualifies it." The commission itself, in its last legal day of existence, provid- ed the Southerners with new am- Imunition by making public a j whole group of new civil rights recommendations for Congress and the President, including some tough penalties. Among them, the commission urged that states which refuse to grant Negro voting rights be pen- alized by slashing their member- ship in the House of Representa- tives. . The Senate is debating strategy of keeping the commission in busi- ness by tieing the proposal for a one-year extension onto a com- pletely unrelated bill-thus keep- ing it from getting lost in commit- tee. The Senate had planned a vote last night but decided to put it off until today. Approval of the meas- ure would send it to the House, where leaders privately said they see little hope of overcoming par- liamentary hurdles to get action there before next week. The commission told President John F. Kennedy that for the first time there is genuine hope that the nation can solve its racial problems. However, the commission warn- ed against complacency in this area. "There is still danger that the growing battle to end discrimi- See COMMISSION, Page 8 Say U.S. Restricts Newsmen WASHINGTON (R)-A congres- sional subcommittee accused the State Department yesterday of restricting American newsmen in Viet Nam and hiding the facts there from the American people. The accusation came in a report on a controversial and still classi- fied cable sent from the State De- partment to the United States em- bassy in Saigon in early 1962. The report was filed by the House subcommittee on informa- tion. The subcommittee said the cable was intended to restrict newsmen in Viet Nam. It was drafted by Carl T. Rowan, a former news- man, then assistant secretary of state and now ambassador to Fin- land. In Helsinki, Rowan declined comment. He told a reporter that the records were in Washington and "that's enough." State Department press officer Richard I. Phillips declined com- ment. Other department officials, however, said the department was doing all it could to facilitate the flow of news from Viet Nam. The cable has been rescinded but the subcommittee said no new press policy has been sent in its place. Court Halts GOP Move By The Associated Press DETROIT--Another in the long series of attempts to reduce Rich- ard Durant's control over the Re- publican organization in the 14th Congressional District has been halted by a surprise order from the courts. Earl R. Tinesman, one of the three members of the committee, charged this was a "plot to elimi- nate the growing rank and file enthusiasm for Barry Goldwater for president." Both Republican State Chairman Arthur G. Elliott Jr. and Republican County Chair- man Peter B. Spivak denied the charges as unfounded. UPDATE CHURCH: 11 i I SGC READING AND DIS KAFK TON IGHT MULTIPURPOSE RC SPEAKER: MR. DAV DEPT. OF EN( World News Roundup . . By The Associated Press WASHINGTON-President John F. Kennedy named a cabinet level task force yesterday to seek reme- dies for what he called an ominous rate of rejection of young Ameri- cans called up for draft board examinations. * ** UNITED NATIONS - Nigerian Foreign Minister Jaja Wachuku said yesterday the powerful 32-na- tion African group plans to apply the strongest possible pressure against South Africa and Portu- gal but will stop short of demands to expel them from the United Nations. UNITED NATIONS - Yugoslav Ambassador Miso Pavicevic said yesterday Yugoslavia will pay part of its arrears on the United Na- tions Congo operations cost. Fol- lowing a conference with UN Sec- retary-General U Thant, Pavicevic said Yugoslavia will pay its arrears for the period Nov. 1, 1961 to June 30, 1963. He said the figures in- volved and the details of the pay.. ment will be settled next month. NEW YORK-Light trading on the New York Stock Exchange yesterday was characterized by weakness in blue chip stocks. The Dow Jones average showed 30 in- dustrials down 5.19, 20 railroads down .12, 15 utilities down .48, and 65 stocks down 1.27. H SUPPORT fi. ; .. ._:: . yc k i# + .'\ r y The U. of M. Friends of SNCC BUCKET DRIVE TODAY and TOMORROW $ for freedom ' V '" ..q (Xb " .. z n . . t y4 ~- . " i . ,# f, . 1 F. { o t t Ym 1. .a, 1; j 1O90 to Fall BERMUDAS 690 to 9 TWEEDS, FLANNEL, CORDUROY, COTTON SUEDE. Corduroy CULOTTES 590 Reg. 9.95 JUNIOR SIZES FLANNELS, TWEEDS, CORDUROY, PLAI DS. JUMPERS 1290 I, W-doot-dofthI I I I Coeds are toting books in fold away travel kits It's the latest fad for school! Handy zip. pered case carries your books, clothing for gym class and make-up; doubles as an overnight case. When empty, folds flat. Size: 1734"x 13'x 5'". In plaid canvas, 4.00 ortaatr t MICHIGRAS Central Committee PETITIONING Through Friday, Oct. 4 SKIRTS 90 to90 TWEEDS, PLAIDS, CORDUROY in regular and shortee lengths I I I