'TEMBER 8, 1967 TNF. Mle"IFf_' A IT TL ti TT -l7 ________________________________________________________________a MEZ:iYaa EkYrljIR~iiJiaX1uud- £ AY /AILEu PAGE THREE 9 Teacher Schools Strikeoss r ripple 'McNAMARA REVEALS: Military to Build Vietnam Anti-Infiltration Barrier Country r JExpect Delay SOf Classes Vacation for Half Million State Pupils Little Progress Made In Halting Walkout By Detroit Teachers By The Associated Press Teachers in several Michiga school districts took contract dis. putes to court yesterday as co. workers picketed and official postponed classes for nearly a half million youngsters "unti further notice." Detroit School Supt. Norma Drachler postponed indefinitely yesterday's scheduled school open- ing after the Board of Educatior and Detroit Federation of Teach ers reported little progress in ne- gotiations., Officials in at least 17 other of Michigan's. 34 unsettled distrct said there would be no classes to- day.' Focus on Detroit Acting Gov. William G. Mil- liken said yesterday he will meet today in Detroit with the chief mediator and state-appointed fact finder to explore expansion of state efforts to break the Detroit contract stalemate. "Because the number of -pupils and teachers involved makes De- troit the state's most critical area," Milliken said, "We will review all aspects of the problem and try to determine the most effective action the state now can take to promote a settlement in this district." "Both the teachers and the board know that the possibility of additional state funds is out of the question and that the issues must be resolved on the basis of existing facts," he added. Meanwhile Gov. George Rom- ney, in Oregon said repeatedly that teachers and school officials should expect no more money this year from the state. Stay of Injunction The Holland, Mich., School Board cancelled classes after the teachers' union had obtained an emergency stay of a temporary injunction issued Wednesday or- dering teachers back to work. By far the biggest chunk of youngsters unexpectedly out of school was at Detroit, where 300,000 school children were idle. It was the first time in history Detroit schools failed to open on time., Detroit teachers seek a pay raise of $1,200-down from an or- iginal demand of $1,700 - and a 38-week school year, instead of 40 weeks. Blue Ribbon Panel The DetroitbFederation of Teachers, AFL-CIO, has rejected Dracher's proposal that the issue be settled through arbitration by a blue ribbon panel. Before last night's negotiations, DFT President Marry Ellen Rior- dan said in a television statement she did not expect an agreement. "I don't know how long it will take," Mrs. Riordan said. "I hope it's soon." She said Detroit now lacks 500 "qualified and certified teachers" and the union hoped the higher wages it seeks would bring teach- ers into the Detroit area. WASHINGTON (/) -Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara announced yesterday that an anti- infiltration barrier, equipped with barbed wire and electronic eyes and ears, will be stretched across South Vietnam to reduce the flow of North Vietnamese men and supplies across the demilitarized zone. McNamara made the announce- I N ew ment at a wide-ranging news con- n1.11 or~k~ference at which he called Gov. George Romney of Michigan 100,000 Students "blind to the truth" in accusing Floida I.the Administration of giving out Ir a,Illinois inaccurate information on the war Get Extended Holiday in Vietnam. In disclosing long rumored By The Associated Press plans to erect the anti-infiltration The nationwide outbreak ofj barrier, McNamara gave only the teacher's strike threatened to barest of information and turned reachepidemic proportions,as in- aside virtually all questions on dications were yesterday that New grounds any elaboration would aid York City's schools would not open the enemy. Monday. Lack of Will campaign against the lines of a 1965 trip to Vietnam. Romney communication. said after the trip U.S. involve- "We know, of course, that no i ment there was morally right and obstacle system can stop the in- necessary, but has changed that filtration of personnel or sup- view. plies." The defense chief said he was Some senior U.S. military offi- confident Henry Cabot Lodge, cers are reported to have been cool then ambassador to Saigon, and to the barrier idea on grounds it Gen. William C. Westmoreland, might take a quarter of a million U.S. military commander in Viet- men to make sure such a line is nam, spoke factually to Romney impenetrable by the enemy. during the tour. Warning System Prediction Became Fact However, it appears likely that Romney also claimed Monday the barrier approved by McNa- that McNamara said last Novem- mara will be more of a warning ber draft calls might be cut and system than an actual impene- the administration hoped to ward trable obstacle. off a wartime tax increase. McNamara also denied Rom- McNamara replied the lower ney's charge last Monday that he draft call prediction has become had been brainwashed by military fact and sited figures similar to and diplomatic officials during those issued Wednesday. -Associated Press VIOLENCE FLARED yesterday during a sit-in in the office of Milwaukee's Mayor Henry Haier held to protest housing bias, as police forcibly ejected five demonstrators said to be blocking a corridor. OPEN HOUSING: Milwaukee Rights Protesters Hold Sit-In in Mayor's Office In addition to the Michigan walkouts, over 100,000 school chil- dren inFlorida, Illinois, and Ken- tucky enjoyed another unexpected day of summer vacation yester- day. Many school boards were at- tempting to enjoin teachers from staying home through court ac- tion. And similar action was being considered by the New York City Board of Education. New York's United Federation of Teachers was awaiting a new contract proposal based on recom- mendations made to Mayor John V. Lindsay by a special panel named by the mayor. But there wasrconsiderable doubt whether the proposal could be ratified in time to send the teachers into classrooms in 900 schools on Monday, the scheduled start of the fall term. The union has said it will sub- mit 40,000 teacher resignations Monday morning if there is no new contract. The 90,000 school children of Fort Lauderdale and other com- munities in Broward County. Fla., were assured of two more weeks of holiday by a school board order closing schools until Sept. 25. Schools had opened Aug. 28, but some 2,500 members of the Class- room Teachers Association voted Tuesday to submit resignations be- cause of a pay dispute. ITIS G KSTUDENT F Also, McNamara disputed the contention of Gen. Wallace. M. Greene, Marine Corps comman- dant, that the war in Vietnam must have priority over urban problems. In a challenge to Congress, Mc- Namara said the problem was not a lack of financial ability but a lack of will to deal with both mat- ters simultaneously. He also disputed a contention by Gen. John P. McConnell, Air Force chief of staff, that without the bombing of the North the United States would have had to send many thousands more troops into the war. No Correlationi "I cdon't think it is possible to correlate the number in the South and the bombing in the North," McNamara said. A barrier all across South Viet- nam at that point would run more than 40 niles and McNamara de- clined to say whether it would be extended into neighboring Laos, which the Communists are said to use as a virtual highway for in- filtration from North Vietnam to South Vietnam. "We are preparing to initiate late this year or early next year the operation of a system to make infiltration more difficult," Mc- Namara said. "The system's objectives will be consistent with those of our air IREAT I I' PAUL BUNYAN'S COCKTAIL HOUR 4:30 to 6:30 P.M. Reduced Prices PAUL BUNYAN STEAK $1.99 *PITCHER BEER Jackson Rd. at Zeeb Rd. Open 7 days till 10 P.M. Fo od Systems W~-7 Ii I! PAINT-IN SING-IN SWING-IN (Bring, (Bring your smock) your folk song requests) MILWAUKEE, Wis. (R) -Mil- waukee civil rights demonstrators seeking a city open housing law sent a delegation to Mayor Henry Maier's office yesterday for a sit- in they vowed would turn the City Hall suite into "a =poor people's hotel." About 35 youngsters led by a New York City minister, the Rev. R. M. Kinloch, sat down in the mayor's outer office. "We're planning on moving in here with cots and' beds and stoves," said Kinloch, who said he was director of the Harlem Prot- estant Project of Civil Rights in New York. Shortly after the demonstrators, about half of whom appeared to be of school age, took up places on the floor, Maier and several aides threaded their way through the group.. 'Poor People's Hotel' When one demonstrators at- tempted to halt him, the mayor said, "I have a schedule this af- ternoon., Any time any of you want conversation without the press and television cameras here, I'll be happy to talk to you." "Okay mayor," Mr. Kinloch said. "We'll just make this a poor people's hotel until you're ready to talk to us." However, Maier later dispatched a telegram to Roy Wilkins, execu- tive director of the National As- sociation for the Advancement of Colored People, in which he said he would meet with the group only if Wilkins personally was present.- The mayor added that the pick- ets would be protected "to give the lie to contentions of police brutal- ity," and could stay in his office as long as they liked to "show the nation their bad manners." A short time earlier, Maier hadE told newsmen that he was suffer- ing from fatigue and depression, and that he was considering giving up his office when his second four-year term expires next year. A former president of the Na- tional League of Cities, Maier won praise last month for ending an outbreak of racial violence after a single riotous night. But after the current series of marches, with as many as 1,000 persons participating in nightly parades through various sections of the city, he said, "My optimism is about gone." Yesterday afternoon he added, "Nobody's going to combat the Groppis and the Rap Browns." He referred to father James E. Groppi, the white Roman Catholic priest who serves as advisor to the NAACP's Milwaukee Youth Coun- cil, sponsor of the present cam- paign. Early in the sit-in, one of the mayor's aides came out of the in- ner office and asked the group "to maintain relative quiet." A woman wearing a great sweat shirt with "Fair Housing" lettered on the back replied, "We're going to make it as inconvenient as pos- sible for you to work here." The sit-in preceded another ral- ly at St. Boniface Church in the Milwaukee slums, where Father Groppi is assistant pastor. to HILLEL DELI HOUSE (Bring your appetite) SUNDAY, 5:30 P.M. Two corned beef or pastrami sandwiches with the works Members--$1.00 Non-members-$1.25 Artistic expression--free 1429 Hill Street Phone 663-4129 U /1,1/el SABBATH SERVICE Friday at 7:15 P.M. New Border Clash Shatters Israeli-Jordanian Truce By The Associated Press Tank, artillery and infantry units from Israel and Jordan ex- changed fire across the Jordan River yesterday after Israeli and Egyptian machine gunners dueled 200 miles away at the Suez Canal. The incidents were the fourth and fifth breaches of the Middle East peace in a week. An Israeli spokesman said Jor- danian troops shot at a patrol about 31/ miles south of the Al- lenby Bridge near Jericho and that the Israelis returned the fire. They reported no casualties. Amman radio claimed that the Israelis shot first with light ma- chine guns and, after a 15-minute lull, shelled Jordanian positions across the truce line with tank guns. Just before noon, Jordan said, the Israelis opened up again with heavy field artillery and a half- hour exchange followed. No Jor- danian losses were reported. Israel and Egypt each blamed the other for a two-hour ma- chine-gun duel near Ismailia, mid- way along the 114-mile-long canal between the Red and Mediter- ranean seas. The shooting ended at midnight yesterday after U.N. truce ob- servers intervened. Lt. Gen. Odd Bull of Norway, chief of staff of the U.N. Truce Supervision Or- ganization, arrived in Cairo yes- terday to confer with Egyptian authorities on Monday's duels across the canal. In a report to the U.N., Bull re- peated his earlier assertion that, Egypt initiated the firing. Egypt claims the Israelis touched off the incident. In Beirut, Lebanon, Arab news- papers speculated on the existence of a power struggle inside Syria's radical Socialist regime and the pro-Egyptian newspaper Sawt Al Arub-Voice of Arabia-reported Syria's head of state, Noureddin Atassi, was under house arrest. The reports suggested that the regime was under Communist pressure to soften its hard-line approach toward a political solu- tion to the Arab struggle with Israel. Western newsmen were banned from Syria, strict censorship is in effect and there was no confirma- tion available. One report said the June wartime blackout continues in Damascus and that troops pa- trol the capital. The reports did not suggest a coup, d'etat but rather a power struggle among top military offi- cers andpcivilians to replace the leadership of the Baath party regime. (sponsored by Alpha Omega Fellowship) 5 to 8 P.M. Sunday, September 10, 1967 BUFFET SUPPER- Tremendous music by King's Heralds accurate film Impact of Archaelogy You can't afford to miss this reception' GRACE BIBLE CHURCH corner State & Huronj Dr. Raymond H. Saxe, Pastor PANEL DISCUSSION: THE CHANGING CHARACTER OF NEGRO-JEWISH RELATIONS 11 DR. RAPHAEL EZEKIEL Assistant Professor, Psychology JOH N HARTMAN Institute for Social Research DR. HERMAN JACOBS Hillel Director OTHERS TO BE ANNOUNCED JOHN PLANER, Cantor Choir Directed by STEVEN OVITSKY JOAN SPITZER, Organist FIRST METHODIST CHURCH State and Huron Streets WELCOME ALL STUDENTS World News Roundup .' I I .1 By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - The United States is preparing to give the Japanese government a 22-year- old documentary film which shows the effects of the 1945 atomic bombing of Hiroshima. The film has been classified secret and never made available to the public. * * CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. - Mil- lions of tiny "astrobugs" rocketed' into orbit yesterday to spend three days in space helping scientists learn what biological hazards face astronauts aboard future long- distance flights. RICHMOND, Va.-Virginia Gov. Mills E. Godwin Jr., signed an extradition order yesterday for the return of SNCO, leader H. Rap , Brown to Maryland to face charges of inciting to riot and arson. VATICAN CITY-Pope Paul VI, exhausted and fighting recurrent I . I bouts of fever, was ordered by his doctors yesterday to take an ex- tended period of rest. SAN FRANCISCO-A wake-up earthquake aroused sleepers in a 90-mile sector from San Francisco to Hollister at 5:39 a.m. yester- day. More than an hour later, a Nevada underground nuclear test deluded seismologists into think- ing there was a second quake. i 3 J I . 1 t 1 i SUNDAY-9:00c DR. HOOVER RUE September 10: ' The CoL September 17: "The Coy Broadcast WOIA and and 11:15 A.M. PERT, Preaching urage of an Open Mind" urage of a Closed Mind" WOIB, 1 1 :00 A.M. Co me To Middle Earth 1429 H ILL ST. All Welcome I i Have you been searching for a Restaurant-Cocktail Lounge with romantic atmosphere as well as fine food? then try the Featuring SALE OF For Your STUDENT FURNITURE and APPLIANCES SATURDAY UNDERGROUND MIDDLEGROUND ABOVEGROUND . .NEEDS i ml