TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER'12,1967 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAnIR TTMVI AFT Fights for Higher Salaries, Smaller C lasses i WASHINGTON ()-"We're not hurting the kids," says the presi-i dent of the union that sparked thei teachers' revolt affecting nearly 2I million school children around thei nation. + Charles Cogen, president of the AFL-CIO American Federation of Teachers, said the 75,000 teahers striking in New York, Michigan,1 Florida and elsewhere are fightingi as much for the children as for themselves.I "The strike doesn't last forever,"i Cogen said in an interview yester-i day, "but conditions in the schools do last forever unless you fighti to change them." 'Now, he says, schools are little more that "cus- todial institutions." The teachers' federation repre- sents only about 7 per cent of the nation's teachers. * 'Resis UFT Rejects Wage Offer; No Talks Set One Million Pupils Miss Classes While Parents Substitute NEW YORK (R) - Over 40,000 New York public school teachers defied a court order and began to strike yesterday. The strike forced more than one million pupils to miss regular classes on the first day of the new term. "We will stay out until our de- mands are granted," declared Al- bert Shanker, leading his first s t r i k e of the 49,000-member AFL-CIO United Federation of Teachers. Parents Substitute Parents attempted to fill in for some of the absent teachers. .4 At an elementary school on Manhattan's upper West Side, Josh Mamis, 10, declared: "The parents are better than teachers 'cause teachers scream too much." The Board of Education esti- mated that 41,000 of the city's 55,000 teachers stayed away from their desks in a deadlock involv- ing wages and classroom condi- tions. The UFT set the figure at 49,500. 'More Tomorrow'+ "There will be more out tomor- row," Shanker predicted. I Mayor John V. Lindsay met with union leaders for more than six hours at Gracie Mansion dur- ing the night, vainly attempting to head off the work stoppage. No new talks were scheduled. A $125- million wage offer earlier was re-+ jected by the UFT. It was the third time in seven years that the UFT has struck the nation's largest school system. But the previous strikes in 1960 and 1962 lasted only one day each+ and involved respectively 4.600 and 20,000 teachers. Stay Open Board of Education President Alfred A. Giardino said of the2 idle teaciers: "The schools will remain open tomorrow. I do not expect a long protest. After their initial duty to the union is ful- filled, they will then respond to their obligation to the pupils." An estimated 60 per cent of the 1.1 million public school children showed up. But Shanker declared: "Practically all of the 900 schools in the system sent the youngsters home early." The UFT president described ! such school activities as were carried on as fruitless, with mo- tion pictures and recorded music replacing instruction. A new state law prohibits strikes by unions of public employes, with the union liable to fines of up to $10,000 a day. It replaced an old law - seldom enforced -:' which made the union members the targets of penalties. The UFT had announced it in- tended to try to circumvent the law by having the teachers tun in mass resignations. However, this maneuver was de- ferred at the outset lest the names be turned over to local draft boards. Some teachers have been deferred from military service be- cause of 'their classroom duties. But the ' comparatively small union, numbering 144,500, is in- creasingly becoming the voice of the teachers, and has even prod- ded the conservative one million member National Education Asso- ciation NEA into, abandoning its 110-year-old no-strike policy. NEA affiliates are predominant in the Florida dispute and in some of the Michigan teachers' strikes. Cogen and the teachers' federa- tion emphasize that in addition to demanding higher salaries, they are striking for smaller class sizes and a wide range of improved ed- ucational services to benefit chil- dren. They also want a larger voice in school policy making. "The big strikes and mass re- signations are indicative of what is to follow unless the boards of ed- ucation get down to real good- faith bargaining and readiness to share with the teachers in the control of the schools," Cogen said. "This is not just a sudden flare- up," Cogen said of the strikes. "It has been long in coming. Cogen views this as a crucial year in the fight. While the strikes are affecting a relatively small percentage of the two million teachers and 45 million pupils in the public schools, the growth in teachers' disputes has been astronomical in the last two years. The number of 'strikes jumped from a little more than half a dozen in 1965 to 33 strikes in- volvinng more than 37,000 teach- ers in strikes or strike threats far more than doubled again at school opening this year. The militant fever sweeping teachers across the country is a far cry from the walkout of 20 teachers in Branchdale, Pa., in 1940-the first recorded teachers' strike. There may have been an iso- lated school strike or two in the 1930s, the teachers' federation says, but Labor Department rec- ords go back only to 1940. The federation, founded in 1916, also had a no-strike policy for many years, sanctioning its first Walkout in St. Paul, Minn., in 1946. The number of teachers' strikes edged up slowly to a high of 20 involving 4,720 teachers in 1947, then dwindled back to a handful a year until the big surge in 1966. "Teachers are more militant than they've been before," says Cogen, who headed the federa- continuous decline in the quality" tion's New York local during the of education," he said. 1960 and 1962 strikes that marked "One of the main things we are the new wave of militant teachers. interested in is much smaller Cogen became national president classes in order to make teachers in 1964. able to reach the individual child. What do the teachers want? In salaries, "they are low man on the totem pole as far as the professions are concerned," Cogen said. The federation is aiming at a nationwide beginning salary of $8,500 a year, compared with about $5,000 now. But Cogen concedes this is a long range goal that won't be achieved quickly. Another major demand, Cogen said, is improved working condi- tions, which means improved schools. "Education is far behind what it should be. There has been a We want all kinds of special serv- ices for disadvantaged children, like psychological services, home contact of individuals, special reading teachers, and so on-on a vast scale." Who's going to pay for it? Cogen wants President Johnson to call a national educational con- ference to make "an honest evalu- ation of just what good education would cost," and a vast increase in federal aid to education. "Good schools cost good money and we're not afraid to say so," said Cogen. Asking the government to plug 'tax loopholes" to bring in some "The schools, too, have been $40 billion a year more federal saught up in this whirlwind of revenue, Cogen saiid, "There is a frustration, nihilism and human .ot of money - which is readily alienation," he said. available to support the kind of Unless a multimillion dollar a schools we need if the government year effort is made to improve has the courage to go get it." U.S. public education system, he He called eliminating tax ex- said, "Our schools will remain emptions in the oil and gas indus- what they now are--custodial in- tries, state and city bonds and stitutions." -apital gains. Are teachers hurting the schools, Indicating the union's emphasis and the pupils, by striking? :n federal action, the federation "If teachers don't fight for good has just completed moving its na- schools, who will?" asked Cogen. tional headquarters from Chicago "It is our professional duty to to Washington-"to get into the refuse to .permit schools to oper- ,enter of activity," Cogen said. ate on such a less than satisfac- What is wrong with the nation's tory basis," Cogen said. schools? ' "The right not 'to work under Cogen, a former New York so- substandard conditions is a right cial studies teachers, cites this we must insist upon regardless of summer's Negro riots as "symp- fines, jailings or other threats," he toms of a deterioating society." said. India, China BATTLE AT CON THIEN: eachers Strike,Forces Fight Marines Re On BorderA ,. pulse Enemy Intensifies (court's Order NEW DELHI, India OP)--Indian As Air War and Chinese Communist troops clashed sharply on the Tibet- SAIGON (P)-Enemy attacks on Sikkim border yesterday tn an U.S. Marines positions are mount- fears of a new India-China Hima- ing in the face of intensified Amer- layan conflict. ican air attacks on North Viet- A Chinese note warned the In- am. dians not to "repeat your mistakej of 1962," when Indian forces took a mauling from the Chinese in a border war over demarcation lines. In a note to the Chinese, India suggested an immediate cease-fire and meeting of the Indian and Chinese sector _ commanders "to reduce the tension and prevent the Situation from assuming a' very serious aspect." -Near Capital The fighting was scant 20 miles from Gangtok, Sikkim's capital,, where former American socialite Hope Cooke reigns as queen with her husband, the chogyal-king. Sikkim, with a population of 170,000 and an armed force of only 300 palace guards, is a pro- tectorate of India, which is re- U.S. Marines believe a 'drive by 3,000 North Vietnamese Sunday was attended to cut off the ad- ;anced Leatherneck base of Con Thien near the demilitarized zone between North and South Viet- nam. Outnumbered 4 to 1, the Ma- rines shattered that drive about two and a half miles south of Con Thien. At the end of a five- hour battle, the North Vietnam- ese left 141 dead on the field. 'Marine losses were 34 killed and 185 wounded. Increased Aggression For the past week, the North Vietnamese have been increasing- ly aggressive, giving battle as far south as 140 miles from the de- militarized zone. one for exporting "coal to pay for arms from the Soviet Union and Communist China. It remained untouched although last June U.S. planes blasted antiaircraft guns on the outskirts, and in the pro- cess strafed the Soviet merchant cship Turkistan anchored in the harbor. U.S. Air Force planes attacked the two rail lines between Hanoi and Communist Ohina Sunday and encountered at least seven flights of M;[G 17s. One MIG was listed as probably shot down. While reporting no raids in the Hanoi area, the U.S. Command said 4.5 million propaganda leaf- lets were dropped over the North Vietnamese capital Sunday. They told of South Vietnam's election in spite of Viet Cong terrorism de- signed to scare voters away from the polls. Radio Peking declared that De- fense Secretary Robert S. McNa- mara's plan to extend a barbed wire and electronic barrier in South Vietnam near the demili- tarized zone was doomed to fail- ure. "The Vietnamese people in both zones are kith and kin, bound by flesh and blood," the broadcast said. "No force on earth, no 'bar- rier h atsoever can possibly sepa- rate themr" North Vietnamese drove within 15 yards of the battalion command post before being hurled back. One Marine commander said that all but 30 of his 150-man company were wounded, but most of them kept on fighting. sponsible' for its defense and for-; The enemy has had more than eign relations. 900 killed in the five northern DeGaulle Suggests F-Polis Pact -Associated Press BYSTANDERS FLANK A BARRICADE and shout at teachers picketing outside a school in Harlem yesterday morning. Thousands of New York teachers struck on the opening day of the new term after rejecting a proposed two-year contract. AVERAGE RISE $133: Chrysler RevasPrice Hike; UZ4, ord Set, Talks Friday The intensity of the fighting' caused consternation in'New Delhi and officials kept close watch in an effort to determine Communist Chinese intentions. China and India fought a Himalayan border war over demarcation lines on two fronts in 1962. Second Outbreak It was the second serious out- break of fighting in five days in the same area. Peking's New C h i n a News Agency accused Indian forces of "a flagrant military provocation." It contended the Indians sought to "provoke an even larger scale border incident." In New Delhi, the Defense Min- istry said the Chinese remained on their side of the border. It charged the Chinese fired mor- tars and 76mm guns into the In- dian positions as well as "in depth"-that is, at targets beyond the border inside Sikkim. The firing capped a week of minor incidents at Nathu La Pass, which is at the bottom finger of Tibetan territory extending south- ward between Sikkim and Bhutan. According to the Indian Defense Ministry, Communist Chinese also intruded across the border Sat- urday and Sunday, but withdrew "after being warned by Indian troops." provinces of South Vietnam in that time by American count. Only yesterday morning the Communists launched a ground and mortar attack on the provin- cial capital of Hot An, 20 miles south of the major Marine base at Da Nang. They also attacked three district headquarters and five militia outposts. Weeklong Skirmish Skirmishes have been erupting throughout the week in this gen- eral area and' Sunday South Viet- namese troops reported killing 70 enemy troops. Al this has come in the face of intensified U.S. air attacks in the North sweeping to within 20 miles of the border with Communist China. Hanoi radio asserted a U.S. B57 bomber was shot down over North Vietnam yesterday and two smaller planes were knocked down over Hanoi Sunday. . There was no official confir- mation of these reports. The Pentagon took restrictions off Cam Pha, the third largest North Vietnamese port, and U.S. Navy pilots reported they wrecked wharves and cranes in an intense air raid Sunday. They said they left the port practically useless. Northeast of the major port of Haiphong, Cam Pha is the chief WARSAW (P) - Charles de Gaulle proposed at a special ses- sion of the Polish Parliament yes- terday that Poland join France in forming a united Europe and become -reconciled to West Ger - many. Communist Party chief Wladyslaw Gomulka quickly re- jected the ideas. De Gaulle's proposal for a Eu- rope united from the Atlantic to the Ural Mountains of the Soviet Union implied a pullout by Poland from the Soviet-dominated East bloc in Europe. Hits 'Confrontation' ' "Real security cannot, of course, result from the confrontation of two blocs facing one another with iorces on the alert and opposing pacts," said- De Gaulle. But Gomulka took the rostrum immediately after De Gaulle's 15- minute speech to say that Po- land's security is tied closely to its alliance with the Soviet Union and the Warsaw military pact, the East bloc's answer to the Northj Atlantic T r e a t y Organization. France has withdrawn its military forces from NATO. The special session of Parlia- ment was called as a climax to De Gaulle's state visit. De Gaulle spoke without notes; .Gomulka read his speech. De Gaulle suggested Poland fol- low the example of France and become reconciled with West Ger- many "since Germany has repu- diated its misdeeds." But Gomulka replied that any settlement of the German ques- tion requires recognition of East Germany. This is something De Gaulle has so far refused to ad- vocate. Pre-War Failure Gomulka told De Gaulle the,-two countries' alliance before World War II functioned badly and "failed to protect either Poland or France from defeat, catastro- phe and Hitler's occupation." "This period of Polish history, which was a period of weakness and desperate maneuvers has been definitely closed," Gomulka said. He added that Poland had "adopt- ed the way of friendship and al- liance with its great eastern neighbor, the Soviet Union." DETROIT (P)-Chrysler Corp., citing increased costs of labor and new, required safety items, yes- terday announced.a price hike on its 1968 models, which is said would average $133 or 4.6 per cent over '67. General Motors, American Mo- tors and the strikebound Ford Motor Co. are also readying high- er price listings on their new mo- dels, but it was not immediately known when their prices will be announced. In another development, Ford and the United Auto Workers agreed to return to the bargaining table Friday in an effort to end a five-day-old strike by 160,000 Ford workers.- The strike is not expected to delay Ford's new ,price announce- ment, since the company already has 85,000 new models ready for introduction by dealers, Sept. 22. Chrysler's new models will go on display Sept. 14, the earliest of the four major U.S. auto- makers. The C h r y s l e r announcement marked the second year in a row that prices have been upped. The latest boost by Chrysler was larger than its 1967 model hike of an original 36. per cent or $111.32. '66 Cutback Both Ford and Chrysler rolled back their prices last year after General Motors announced a list far lower. Chrysler's price changes range this year from $256 on a three- seat Chrysler station wagon to a cut of $144 on the Dodge Charger, the only model out of 115 whose price was dropped. As usual the pricing picture was complicated by the fact that auto companies traditionally s h i f t equipment around on cars. Thus, an item which might have been an option on the 1967 model was made standard this time and is reflected on the higher 1968 price tag. Automakers had been predicting for months that three major fac- tors-safety items, health items and new wage agreements with the UAW-would cause substan- tial increases in new car prices. Chrysler board chairman Lynn A. Townsend referred to increased costs of materials and labor and the added cost of safety equip- ment and exhaust emission con-' trol systems required by new fed- eral laws. I L World News Roundup PRESENTS: JANUS FILMS PRESENTS THE ARCTURUS COLLECTION DIRECT FROM NEW YORK'S PHILHARMONIC HALL a collection of brilliant short films by the directors of the 60's (& 70's) By The Associated Press ADEN-A three-day battle be- tween rival nationalist supporters e n d e d dramatically yesterday. Twenty unarmed officers of the South Arabian army walked through the streets calling, "In the name of Arab brotherhood; cease firing!" Within 20 minutes the battle that took at least 40 lives was over. Supporters of the National Lib- eration Front -NLF - and the Front For the Liberation of Oc- cupied South Yemen-FLOSY had been battling house to house since Saturday, following an NLF claim that most of the strife-torn colony, soon to go over to self-rule, favor- ed its policies. * * * MIAMI, Fla.-Churning relent- lessly westward across the Carib- bean yesterday, Hurricane Beulah smashed coffee and banana plan- tations along the Dominican Re- public's southern coast, raked Haiti and then aimed her. 105 mile-an-hour fury toward the re- sort island of Jamaica. * * * YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio-Striking police and firemen accepted a city wage offer Monday, ending a five- day strike that kept most of Youngstown's safety forces off the job. PASADENA, Calif.-Surveyor 5 lowered a radioactive metal box to the lunar surface yesterday to start a historic test of chemicals in the moon's soil. WOIA 102.9 F.M. ROBIN BROWN Broadcasting 'New CinA "MUSIC FOR MODERNS" I Mon. thru Fri. 9 P.M.-1 2 Midnight Cinem I I PROGRAM NO. 1 ATTENTION! APA FALL FESTIVAL Enter Hamlet Fred Mogubgub, U.S.A. Renaissance Walerian Borowczyk, Poland Les Mistons '67 Francois Truffaut, France Running, Jumping, and Standing Still Film Richard Lester, England Two Castles Bruno Bozzetto, Italy The Fat and the Lean Roman Polanski, Poland Corrida Interdite Denvs Colomb de Daunant. France IN PERSON PETER NERO SUBSCRIBERS Iq jll II!I 11 . i