16.1963 THE MICHIGAN IA II PAGE THREE '17 *On Nations Propose Ban, Orbiting Atom Arms ;:; WASHINGTON: Repubican Delays SEduc d B011 By The Collegiate Press Service WASHINGTON-Legislation that would expand federal aid to vo- cational education was sidetracked in the House yesterday by a Re- publican opponent. Rep. Paul Findley (R-Ill) voiced. the sole objection needed to pre- vent an immediate House-Senate conference on differing versions of the legislation passed by the two bodies. As a result, the matter is now *Sets Limits For Grants WASHINGTON--Congress has finally settled on a 20 per cent indirect-costs limit for research grants given by the Defense and Health, Education and Welfare Departments. Thus continual efforts by col- leges and universities to secure a more liberal ceiling on these ex- penses have failed for another year. The actions were taken by House-Senate conference commit- tees. In the case of Defense De- partment grants, the House had recommended raising the ceiling to 25 per cent; the Senate backed the 20 per cent status quo. The HEW situation was just the oppo- site: the Senate had proposed a 25 per cent limit; the House wanted to stick with 20 per cent. Indirect costs include all ex- penses of running a research proj- ect beyond the direct outlays for labor and supplies. They include expenses such as building main, tenance, libraries and administra- tion. The University's policy toward the two federal departments will remain the same this year. It takes few defense grants, because it can get similar-and more generous- grants' elsewhere; but seeks "a good many" HEW grants, Sawyer said. *shunted to the House Rules Com- mittee where it could remain for several weeks. The three-part bill, approved by an 80-4 vote, includes: 1) Extension for three years' f the National Defense Education Act, which would expire next June 30, and an increase of funds avail- able through this plan. The $95 1million per year, presently avail- able will be increased by $35 mil- lion for the 1964-65 school year. 2) Extension for three years of the impacted areas aid program, providing about $300 million a year to school districts crowded by children of government employes. 3) A $1.4 billion vocational schools bill aimed at combatting school dropout and youth unem- ployment problems. Sen. Wayne Morse (D-Ore), chairman of the Senate education subcommittee, called it only "a first installment" of the administration's plans in this area. Two major amendments were defeated. Sen. Jacob Javits (R-NY) tried to attach a civil-rights provision authorizing construction of non- segregated schools for children of ' federal employes who live away from government installations. It was killed, 54-35. And Sen. Barry Goldwater's (R- 1 Ariz) bid to cut $805 million from the package was defeated by a 52- 1 23 vote. Goldwater argued that he - wanted to hold the administration to "promises" to cut federal spend- ing in proportion to the proposed tax cut. HAROLD MACMILLAN ... summons six Six Answer .Bedside Call LONDON (P) - British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan sum- moned one by one yesterday the six leading candidates for his job. They showed up at Macmillan's, bedside in a London hospital, but there wasn't the slightest hint which he preferred as Britain's next prime minister. But with London bookies posting new odds in the Conservatives' leadership race, the word spread through party ranks that the 14th Earl of Home, Britain's foreign secretary, might emerge yet as the ultimate choice. Macmillan, 69, recovering from an operation for the removal of a bladder obstruction, summoned to his bedside: Six Summoned -Deputy Prime Minister Rich- ard Austen Butler who saw Mac- millan immediately before presid- ing over a meeting of the cabinet. -Lord Home, who is being por- trayed as the one man who could save the Tory Party merely by agreeing to run for office. -Chancellor of the Exchequer Reginald Maudling, 46, who is the favorite of the "Young Guard" generation of Tories because of his liberal, modern approach to affairs. Six Answered -lain MacLeod, 50, who is leader of the- House of Commons and joint chairman of the Con- servative Party. He, too, is a mod- ern Tory whose misgivings over the Eden government's Suez ven- ture in 1956 still counts against him in some sections of the party. -The Second Viscount Hail- sham, 56, who is giving his peerage sham, 56. who is giving away his peerage to get to the top. He is Butler's strongest rival because of the backing he enjoys among Tory rank-and-filers. -Edward Heath, No. 2 minister at the foreign office, who is re- garded as a -longshot outsider in the succession stakes. "NO Women University Musical Society presentation Koutev BULGARI1A N NATIONAL ENSEMBLE Company of 75 Dancers, Singers and Musicians "iA colorful panorama . . . splendid voices . . . a sort of organ-tone quality." ...N.Y. Times "Authentic folk costumes, fresh, unspoiled heritage of song and dance of a strong ethnic tradition . . . song after song wove exotic magic." .. N.Y. World-Telegram & Sun Fri., ct. 8 830 in HILL AUDITORIUM Resolution Offered at UN Session' Seek Quick Approval In Special Meeting UNITED NATIONS (P) - The United States, the Soviet Union and 15 other' nations yesterday proposed a ban on placing weap- ons of mass destruction in orbit in outer space. They submitted a resolution to the General Assembly's main poli- tical ccmmittee which called a spe- cial meeting for this morning to give the resolution quick approval. The proposal is the result of the recent declarations of President John F. Kennedy and Soviet For- eign Minister Andrei Gromyko and subsequent talks between Gromy- ko and-Secretary of State Dean Rusk. Formalizes Earlier Agreement While the resolution is not bind- ing, it does formalize an agreement in principle previously announced by the Soviet Union and the Unit- ed States. . Joining the two big powers in 'ponsoring the proposal were the other members of the 18-nation Geneva Disarmament Commission. France has boycotted the commis- sion and did not take part in the consultations that led to the reso- lution The resolution "welcomes the expressions of the United States and the Soviet Union of their in- tention not to station any objects carrying nuclear weapons or other weapons of mass destruction in outer spa'e." Asks Refrain in Space It calls alse on all states to re- frain-from placing in orbit around the earth "any objects carrying nuclear weapons or any other kind of weapons of mass destruction, or installing such weapons or celes- tial bodiessor stationing such weapons in space in any other manner." The introduction of the resolu- tion capped the opening of dis- armament debate in the 111-na- tion committee, where priority was granted the question of ex- panding the present limited test ban treaty to include underground tests. United States Ambassador Adlai E. Stevenson told the committee that his country wants a total test ban agreement, but that it must contain provisions for adequate verification, including on-site in- spection. Hears Nehru's Sister He challenged the SovietiUnion to make clear what scientific ma- chinery it will accept to assure such verification. "The committee also heard Mrs. Vijaya Lakshmi Pandit, sister of Indian Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru, declare that the limited test ban pact is in danger because France and Communist China have not signed it. She appealed to the United Na- tions to bring moral pressure on all dissident countries to join the pact. She assailed Peking's hostility toward the treaty, saying "this kind of perverse thinking can only be understood when seen against the peculiar philosophy which views the destruction of hundreds of millions of human beings in a nuclear holocaust with equan- imity." Hare Refuses To Toss in Hat Secretary 'of State James M. Hare said Yesterday that he is not a Democratic candidate for gover- nor in 1964 but that he will seek re-election as secretary of state. He listed three men as major candidates for the Democratic nomination but excluded himself. The three are: Congressman-at- Large Neil Staebler, Highway Commissioner John C. Mackie, and former Governor John B. Swain- son. Hare was defeated in the 1960 Democratic primary by Swainson. Democratic State Chairman Zol- ton A. Ferency was surprised at Hare's list. "I am surprised Hare counted himself out," he said. Senate Hits Stormy Note On Tax Bill WASHINGTON (P)-Public Sen- ate hearings on the big tax cut bill began yesterday on a stormy note with senators protesting that sup- porters of the measure are trying to rush them into"action with "pressure propaganda." Sen. Albert Gore (D-Tenn) said it looks like an official of the Democratic National Committee is attempting to purge him in his home state because of his opposi- Ition. The outbursts came as Secre- tary of the Treasury Douglas Dil- lon led off the administration's ef- fort to persuade the Senate Fi- nance Committee to approve the $11-billion reduction this year. Includes Graphs, Charts' Dillon's bulky prepared state- ment was peppered with charts and graphs to back up his argu- ments. He underwent stiff ques- tioning from the senators, includ- ing a lengthy quizzing by Chair- man Harry F. Byrd (D-Va). Byrd, who opposes the tax cut unless there are balancing slashes in federal spending, sought to be- little the amount of the tax saving in the bill. He said the average for all in- dividual taxpayers would be $110- a-year, or $2-a-week and that the taxpayer with less than $3000 in-' come would receive only $49 a WASHINGTON WP)-The Senate Foreign Relations Committee voted yesterday to arm President John F. Kennedy with the full backing of Congress in withholding aid from the authoritarian govern- ment of South Viet Nam if he so! desires. This was accomplished by adopt- ing an amendment to the foreign aid bill that would make it the sense of Congress that: "Foreign aid should be extended to, or withheld from the govern- Rome Votes News Rituals VATICAN CITY (P)-The Vati- can Ecumenical Council voted overwhelmingly yesterday to mod- ernize the sacraments of the Ro- man Catholic Church. The more than 2000 prelates as- sembled in St. Peter's Basilica from around the world voted to: -Allow regional bishops' con- ferences to authorize local lan- guages in the rituals for admin- istering baptism, confirmation, penance, extreme unction, holy or- ders and matrimony. Latin would be retained only for the few essen- tial words actually conferring the sacraments (2,133 votes to 19). Change in Name -Change the name of extreme (last) unction to "anointing of the sick" to show it is for all the seriously ill and not only for the dying (2,143 votes to 35). -Allow the baptism formula to be said en masse, instead of in- dividually, when large numbers are being baptized together (2,058 votes to 42). -Clarify the difference between sacraments, which are believed to give grace, and sacramentals, which are outward signs of spirit- uality such as holy water and blessings (2,224 votes to 12). Amends Schema All four measures are amend- ments to the third chapter of a scheme (topic) on liturgy, or public worship. The Council fath- ers voter either yes or no. The en- tire chapter comes to a vote next week, when a third kind of vote -yes but with reservations-will be allowed. The three categories of ballot- ing were used Monday in the Council vote on the schema's sec- ond chapter on the mass. The chapter gives regional con- ferences of bishops a broad range of permission to replace Latin with the vernacular languages in much of the mass, alter the mass struc- ture to make it mean more to worshipers, put new emphasis on sermon preaching, distribute com- munion on special occasions in the form of bread and wine, instead of bread alone, plus other chapters. The chapter on the mass got 2,198 favorable votes and only 36 votes against. But the favaroble votes -included 781 Council fathers who marked their ballots "placet juxta modem"--yes but with res- ervations. ment of South Viet Nam, in the discretion of the President, to fur- ther the objectives of victory in the war against Communism and the return to their homeland of Americans involved in that strug- gle." Modified Version The change is a modified version of a resolution previously proposed by Sen. Frank Church (D-Idaho) and 32 other senators. The original version would have put the Senate on record as favor- ing withholding aid to the govern- ment of Vietnamese President Ngo Dinh Diem until it halts "oppres- sive policies" against Buddhists and gains the support of its peo- ple. The committee met to consider the administration's battered $4.5- billion plan for helping foreign nations attain economic stability and military security. The House slashed the fund authorization to $3.5 billion. Little Progress The committee did not even get to the funds authorization yester- day and Chairman J. W. Fulbright (D-Ark) acknowledged after the session, "We didn't make much progress." He said it would be "difficult to say" whether thetcommittee would compite v , Iction on the bill this week. Other members said there was little prospect of that much progress. The committee did take one oth- er action. Several weeks ago it adopted an- other Church amendment that Mirror Folds As Costs .rise NEW YORK OP)--The New York Mirror, a morning tabloid and the. nation's second newspaper in daily circulation, announced last night. it is ceasing publication with to- day's editions. Its death was attributed by its publishers to rising costs, aggra- vated by last winter's long New York newspaper blackout. About 1400 Mirror employes lost their jobs. They were promised severance pay. FOREIGN AID: Back Plan To Withdraw Aid 4 U DOUGLAS DILLON .tax cut year. The Virginian referred to this as "cigarette money" and de- manded to know, "How is this go- ing to spark the economy?" Predicts 'Important Effect' Dillon replied that while it might not mean much to many individ- uals, the total ns large and busi- ness economists agree it would have an important effect. Byrd told the Treasury secre- tary he does not believe any oth- er President in history has propos- ed to "solve all the nation's ills by reducing taxes on borrowed money -by a planned deficit." Dillon replied that President John F. Kennedy remains in favor of a balanced budget eventually. Student Organizations N EED MONEY ? NDM Cinema qt(ldAnnounces Petitioning for Sponsorships Spring 1964 Pick up forms through SGC office in S.A.B. PETITIONS MUST BE RETURNED TO CINEMA GUILD BY NOV. 11 Judy Berry, in charge of sponsorships would deny grant assistance to Western European and other eco- nomically developed nations cap- able of sustaining their own de- fense and economic growth. Yesterday the committee agreed to make it clear that this ban would not apply to Spain and Por- tugal because of new base agree- ments with those countries. Leader Quits In Germany BONN (R) - Konrad Adenauer ended an era as West Germany's chancellor yesterday. As he bowed out, parliament de- clared that he "has earned the gratitude of the Fatherland." Adenauer then addressed the Bundestag for the last time as chancellor, urging his fellow coun- trymen to remain true to their Western allies. Only with the help of friends abroad, he declared solemnly, can the dream of a reunited Germany be realized. It was a dream he was unable to make a reality through the 14 years that he worked to re- build his nation from the ashes of Hitler's defeat. For the first time since the end of World War II, West Germany will have another chancellor. The Bundestag will elect Economics Minister Ludwig Erhard today, an- other builder of postwar Germany, to the chancellorship. Erhard was the choice of the Christian Democratic Party, not Adenauer. The chancellor felt that Erhard. who brought about West Germany's economic recovery, was too green in international politics. After reminding the packed chamber of Germany's disgrace in the early postwar years, Adenauer said: 'We can hold our heads high because we have entered the ranks of the free nations and become one of them." He said that without its allies, West Germany would have no hope for reunification. He warned against any temptation to negoti- ate with the Soviet Union, which has made East Germany a part of its bloc. IWordNews Roundup By The Associated Press CARACAS-In a move against increased leftist terrorism, Caracas Central University,, a Communist hot bed, has been closed until after the Dec. 1 presideitial election. The university ordered the shutdown after a carload of terrorists escaped police by taking refuge on the cam- pus, which is off-limits for police and the army. WASHINGTON-Police officials from Florida and New England pleaded with Senate investigators yesterday for federal help in coping with organized crime bosses. Vir-.. I TNot at MUFUN This Friday TICKETS: $4.50-$4.00-$3.50-$3.00-$2.25-$1.50 Aot UNIVERSITY MUSICAL SOCIETY, BURTON TOWER WOLVERINE CLUB PRESENTS Student Air Charters to NEW YORK on United Airlines "THANKSGIVING VACATION" Leave Nov. 27 ...........Return Dec. 1 "CHRISTMAS VACATION" Flt No. 1-Leave Dec. 20. . Return Jan. 12 A tually to a man, they called for legalized wiretapping. Police Com- missioner Edmund McNamara of Boston said that while this in- volves civil rights implications "the efficiency of the wiretap is quite clear." NEW YORK - Adm. Alan G. Kirk, 74, naval hero and former ambassador to Russia, died yester- day of a heart ailment. * * * VIENTIANE - Neutralists and pro-Communist forces again are fighting in the strategic highlands of East-Central Laos, it was re- ported yesterday. Neutralist ar- tillery opened fire on a pro-Com- munist Pathet Lao troop buildup near Phonsavan on the Plaine des Jarres front. The Pathet Lao struck back with a small infantry attack, wounding several neutral- ists. WASHINGTON - The United States declared yesterday that it "has not and is not interferring in any way" in the internal affairs of the Dominican Republic. Ward P. Allen, alternate United States representative to the Organization of American States, made this statement at an OAS Council meeting called to hear Dominican charges the United States is med- dling in its affairs. A of NI ot MAST'S SHOES select group EW FALL SHOES AT $868 values to $14.99 ;: i:: :::ti""r": ig"::ny tttC i%'"i:Titi:5:LE'": " :"i""" k MID.SEAS-ON SALE 194 N r } i TRAVEL FAIR South University Avenue OCTOBER 20 1:30-5:30 P.M. All Heel Heights BLACK 'RED BROWN BLUE ~.rI 11 !.- VITALITYS MANY STYLES { DRES Un~lP rniurwekn i VITAL ITYS MANY STYLES ,,