WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1967 THE MICHIGUAN DAILY PAGE TEMBE .' I WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 13.1987 PAGE THREE, 'N.Y.C. Teachers SIKKIM QUIET: Uneasy Calm on Tibet Border As India, China Cease Fighting Ask Negotiations Rap Brown, McKissick Teach Class As Parent Groups Operate Schools NEW YORK (MP)-New negotia- tions and a court battle shaped up P yesterday as a teachers' strike crippled instruction of the city's 1.1 million public school pupils for the second day. The strike has enabled militant Negroes, including H. Rap Brown and Floyd McKissick, to teach classes in Harlem schools. Appar- ently they were invited by parent groups operating the schools. Union leader Albert Shanker in- dicated he would seek new talks, but said his 49,000-member AFL- Senate Votes Controls For Political Gifts WASHINGTON (M)-The Senate passed unanimously yesterday a bill designed to bring full public disclosure on all campaign contri- butions in presidential and con- gressional elections. It would eliminate the present campaign spending limitations, long considered outmoded. But it would seek to make effective the $5,000 limit on gifts that one in- dividual can give to any one can- didate by outlawing evasive meth- ods now considered legal. The Senate rejected by a nar- row 46-42 vote an effort to tie into the measure a recluirement that all members of Congress and candidates for those offices dis- close publicly all their sources of income, assets and liabilities. Dirksen Criticizes Senate Republican Leader Ev- erett M. Dirksen of Illinois de- clared before the vote that the proposal by Sen. Joseph S. Clark (D-Pa.) is "an impertinence and outrage that ought to be roundly defeated." There were several vote switch- es on Clark's proposal as the roll call progressed slowly. It ended up supported by 29 Democrats and 13 Republicans and opposed by 24 Democrats and 22 Republicans. This is the fourth time the Senate has passed an election re- form measure in recent years. The previous three died in the House, but supporters say they are con- fident of better chances there this year. Discourage Family Aid Before passing the bill, the Sen- ate stripped from it 79 to 7 a pro- vision which several members said would make it "a rich man's fam- ily bill." This provision would have exempted from the $5,000, contribution limitation any gift to a candidate by his wife, child, grandchild, parent, grandparents, brother or sister. CIO United Federation of Teach- ers will stay home until its de- mands are met. Mayor John V. Lindsay had said the school board's door was open and the next move was up to Shanker. At least one high school closed its doors because not enough help was on hand. An- other dismissed half of its stu- dents. I Brown, chairman of the Stu- dent N o n v i o 1 e n t Coordinating Committee, spent nearly an hour in an East Harlem school saying when he emerged, "I taught black history and the movement." "It is my second day here," he said at Intermediate School 201. 'Control School Systems' McKissick, national chairman of the Congress of Racial Equality, called the strike "a 'classic exam- ple of why black communities want to control their own school systems." The union claims strong support among Negro 'teachers, and Ne- gro leader Bayard Rustin appear- ed on the picket lines. The union demands smaller classes, more disciplinary author- ity for teachers over "disruptive children," a strong program for slum children, and higher pay. Prohibiting Strikes In court actions, hearings were set on a city injunction to bar the walkout under a state law pro- hibiting strikes by public em- ployes, and on a union counter- move for an order closing the schools because of health hazards presented. by volunteer teachers not subjected to strict medical examinations. A new state law, untested so far, provides fines of up to $10,000 a day against unions which call strikes of public employes. Union officers who fail to heed injunc- tions would be subject to jail terms and fines. Shanker maintains the teachers are not striking, but have resigned. He says he has about 38,000 sign- ed resignations on hand, but will not submit them to the board un- less it withdraws a threat to turn over the names of resigned teach- ers to draft boards. Chance of Settlement Meanwhile in Detroit a state- appointed fact finder indicated yesterday that there may be a break soon in that school strike which has kept 300,000 students home. "There is a chance ghat settle- ment could be reached in a few days," said Ronald Haughton. In other action striking Holland (Mich.) school teachers, ordered back to work in a decision Sat- urday by the State Court of Ap- peals, carried their legal battle to the Supreme Court yesterday. SUBSTITUTE TEACHING As the 55,000 member United Federation of Teachers took their strike against school system into its second day, Floyd McKissick, national director of CORE, v( p5ublic school class in Harlem. McKissick called the strike a "classic example munities want to control their own school systems." - - --- --- ---- 'EXTREMIST DIVISIVENESS': Romney Warns Invest4 Riots Remain National NEW DELHI, India (A')-Chi- firing, gave the Chinese Embassy na's artillery fell silent yesterday a note proposing* a cease-fire for on the mountainous Sikkim bor 5:30 a.m. today followed imme- der, leading Indian officials to diately by a meeting of sector hope that the most serious Sino- military commanders. Indian clash since their 1962 bor- Newsmen were told there was der war may now be ended. no evidence of any substantial A Defense Ministry spokesman troop movements or buildup on the said Chinese artillery ceased fire Chinese side of the line. at 2:30 p.m. across the 14,000- It was considered likely the Chi- foot Nathu Pass in the Himalayas nese had stopped firing after de- between Sikkim and Chinese-con- stroying a barbed wire barricade trolled Tibet, ending two days of the Indians have been erecting shelling.-along the border. The spokesman added that In- dia's mountain forces suffered Indian and Chinese patrols had ?' light casualties, which could mean clashed three times on the border up to 10 killed. The Chinese claim after the Indians began erecting 36 of their frontier guards were the fence Sept. 7. Indian officials -Associated Press killed or wounded. Dawn Attack The Chinese accused the In- Reagan Calls dians of crossing the border and the New York City launching the attack. The Indians lunteerod to teach a said the Chinese opened fire at oves ow ar of why black com- dawn Monday with rifles and ma- chine guns, then followed it up SACRAMENTO, Calif. (W)-Gov. -~---'~-~-- with 76mm artillery. The pass is about 20 miles from Ronald Reagan called on the Gangtok, Sikkim's capital. With a United States yesterday to throw population of 170,000 and an its full military punch into Viet- armedaforce of 3 00 ae gua, nam "to win the war as quickly -~ armed force of 300 palace guards, as possible." ISikkim depends on India for itsaspsil. defens . The bellicose statement was the Peking has branded the Sikki- strongest yet by the freshman Re- mese royal family usurpers and publican governor on the war. T h rea t urged the population to seek full dTopolitical observers, it pro- ( independence. The border be- jected Reaagn more firmly than tween Tibet and Sikkim, however, ever into the 1968 presidential what happened to De- is not considered to be in dispute. picture despite Reagan's repeated lsewhere "does not be- Intermittent Fighting declarations that "I am not a xcuse for extremist di- The Indian spokesman said the candidate." To some it was close n our nation." Chinese reduced their fire to 22mm to a declaration of candidacy for said building the fence may have brought on the shelling. Earlier in the day, Red China got off a note to India threatening "crushing blows" if * the Indians tried to invade Tibet. Sikkim lies between the north- east frontier of India and the Ladakh area of Kashmir, two fronts where China inflicted a heavy defeat on Indian forces in the 1962 war over border differ- ences. At that time, India feared- the Chinese might thrust d o wn through Nathu Pass and cut off the northeast from the rest of the country. for Escalation; d GOP Race on a series of speaking tours which will take him from coast to coast. But while calling for use of all the nation's "technological pow- er," he said nuclear weapons aren't needed to win the war. Reagan was sharply critical of the present policy of gradual es- calation that he said has given North Vietnam a chance to keep pace with American power rather than forcing the enemy to the no- gotiating table. Reagan was asked about in- creasing speculation of a GOP presidential ticket featuring New WASHINGTON (A) - Gov. George Romney told the Presi- dent's riot commission yesterday "it is later than the nation real- izes" and he called for a historic effort to prevent "greater blood- shed and possible destruction of the nation." Romney declared, "the seeds of revolution have been sown in America more by our own failures and shortcomings than by any outside subversive ideology." The Michigan governor, who has charged that President John- son played politics in calling in federal troops to quell the Detroit riots in July avoided another di- rect confrontation with the Presi- dent in his testimony prepared for the National Advisory Com- mission on Civil Disorders. Less Destruction ' However, Romney told newsmen after his 31/ hour session with the group that he expressed belief to the commission members that there would have been less de- struction and loss of life "if troops had arrived earlier." Romney gave a chronological ac- count of the racial troubles in Detroit and again said Atty. Gen. Ramsey Clark assured him July 24 that an oral request would be suf- ficient. But a final report yester- day on the riots by Cyrus R. Vance, the President's representa- tive in Detroit, disputed this. Vance related that Johnson re- ceived Romney's telegraphed re- quest 10 minutes after it was sent and notified the governor minutes later that troops being sent. However, they not actually deployed into streets until about 12 hours3 when Johnson signed an exec order authorizing their use. 'Underlying Causes' Romney, in his preparedI entation to the riot commis gave "my personal observatio to the underlying causes of nine were were the insure that troit and e come an ex visivenessi later "Recent studies," Romney add- cannon and grenade throwing yes- utive ed, "indicate that our races are terday and this was intermittent drawing farther apart, not closer until the cease-fire. together" and he declared "our In a news briefing the spokes- pres- nation canndt afford to pile mis- men said India, before it was ssion, direction on top of disorder." known the Chinese had stopped ns as the, riot." Among them, he said, is that "too few whites really know Ne- groes and too few Negroes really know whites." In declaring that it's later than4 the nation realizes, Romney said: "Present widespread racial, econ- omic and social frustration, envy, hatred and sedition have an ex- plosive environment in which to ignite a national holocaust em- ploying civil guerrilla warfare." World News Roi By The Associated Press the Suez Canal again yesterday SAIGON - Warplanes have hit before United Nations truce ob- four hitherto untouched major servers, obtained a cease-fire. The targets in Haiphong in the closest Egyptians said their guns chased strike yet to the-center of North off two Israeli planes, knocked out Vietnam's important port, the U.S. five tanks and blew up an am- Command reported yesterday. munition dump. the Republican nomination for York Gov. Nelson Rockefeller and president. Reagan. Reagan called for "sharp esca- "I'm just not interested in that lation" of the conflict during his proposition at all," he said. final Sacramento news conference "At either end of the ticket?" before departing late this month he was asked. "That's right," Reagan replied. The governor has declared his only intention is to be a Califor- nia favorite son candidate at the GOP national convention in Mi- ami next year, to preserve party Soviet Union at present. There is unity in his state. only out-and-out Fascist dicta- Just how the war should be torship and white terror." escalated properly shouldebe left * * * to military leaders to determine, Reaagn said. WOODS HOLE, Mass.-Russian On nuclear weapons, he said he and American scientists announc- agreed with former president ed yesterday plans for two joint Dwight D. Eisenhower that "per- cruises researching fish conserva- haps one of our' great mistakes r tion in the Atlantic Ocean. was in assuringthe enemy in ad- * * * vance of our intention NOT to OVIEDO, Dominican Republic use them.-that the enemy should -Large areas of this southwestern still be frightened that we might." secaor of the. Dominican sector of Reagan said he thought Rom- the Dominican Republic were un- ney had explained what he meant der water yesterday as a result of when the Michigan governor con- Hurricane Beulah but there were tended he was "brainwashed' by no casualties and small damage to administration officials about the crops. progress and value of the way. The Michigah governor said it:, UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.-Sec- EAST ST. LOUIS, Ill.-A wave will take an all-out effort "devoid retary-General U Thant reported of fires, looting, vandalism and of insincere or unrealistic prom- yesterday that Israel had made it violence that erupted in the wake, ises" and based on the full mean- clear it was going ahead with steps of a Sunday visit by H. Rap Brown ing of the Declaration of Inde- to annex the Jordanian Old City resulted in 35 arrests early yester- pendence "to a- oid such a na- of Jerusalem despite two formal day. tional and world catastrophe." demands by the U.N. General As-* * . Romney told the commission, sembly that such action be halted. TOKYO-China fired back yes- headed by Gov. Otto Kerner of *'terday at' blistering Soviet criti- Illinois, a Democrat, that one of SUEZ - Egyptian and Israeli cismof Mao Tse-tung, declaring: the greatest responsibilities is to forces fired at each other across "There is no democracy in the 11