WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 2'7, 1967 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1967 TIlE MICItI%~AN 1JAIIAI PAGE .... ..a ..L Tentative Accord Reached in N.Y. Teachers, Board To Vote on Hike; Students May Go Back Tomorrow PUBLISH TESTIMONY: Wheeler Calls For Air Strikes On Forbidden Haiphong Port NEW YORK (IP) - The mas- sive New York teachers' strike 0 was settled on a tentative basis for the second time in a week yesterday and 1.1 million public school chlidren were alerted for a return to regular classess pos- sibly by tomorrow. "It's a fantastically good .pack- age," said strike leader Albert Shanker of an accord involving an added $135 million in teach- UAW Asks AU T H.Ford To Attend T1alks DETROIT (1P)-Walter P. Reu- ther suggested yesterday that Hen- ry Ford II should join contract negotiations between Reuther's United Auto Workers Union and Ford's strike-bound automobile- building empire. Malcolm L. Denise Ford vice president for labor relations, said there was no reason he could see for Ford joining negotiations and told newsmen "I'd be very sur- prised if he did." The UAW struck Ford in an at- tempt to win a new contract it hopes to use for pattern for settle- ments later at Chrysler and Gen- eral Motors. 21 Days The strike began Sept. 7 and enters its 21st day today. Reuther and Denise differed on whether a visit by Ford was sug- gested in a two-hour bargaining session yesterday. Denise told a news conference that "the invitation was not ex- tended in the bargaining room," but added he understood "one was extended out here" in an earlier news conference by Reuther. No Progress The strike erupted over econ- kk omic issues and both Denise and Reuther agreed no progress was made on them in yesterday's bar- gaining. Reuther said he would be back at the head of the UAW team tomorrow. He said prior com- mitments preclude his attendance today. While Reuther went to Ford, UAW and company teams met at the national bargaining table at Chrysler yesterday for the first time since Ford was struck. There was no report of progress from that meeting either. General Motors and the UAW currently are in the second week of attempts to speed local-level bargaining in which at-the-plant working agreements are written to supplement the national contract. ers' wages over a 26-month period. The walkout of Shanker's 49,- 000-member United Federation of Teachers, AFL-CIO, has all but paralyzed normal operations in the city's 900 public schools for 12 class days - since the sched- uled Sept. 11 opening of the new fall, term. Once again, Mayor John V. Lindsay, his patience reportedly near an end, played a key role in bringing the UFT and the Board of Education together. He had announced a tentative set- tlement Sept. 20 and the schools were 'scheduled to reopen Mon- day. Agreement Fails However, the accord fell apart in a bitter argument over the reduction of its terms to writing, leading Lindsay to sharply ac- cuse the union and the board of "haggling." In the face of the mayor's ob- viously displeasure, negotiators were summoned to City Hall Monday evening and held in ses- sion for eight hours. After a res- pite, the talks resumed yesterday morning. At 3:36 p.m., Lindsay strode into a packed City Hall chamber to announce once more a seem- ing end to the longest, costliest strike in the history of the na- tion's largest school system. Summit to Board In a joint announcement, school Supt. Bernard Donovan and Shanker said the formal agreement wouldbe submitted as quickly as possible to the Board of Education and the union. The statement added: "It is hoped that this can be accom- plished so that the teachers can return to the - schools as early as possible tomorrow, following the ratification meeting." The tentative agreement on wages replaced a former teach- ers' scale of $5,400 to $11,950 a year, with a new salary range of $6,750 to $13,750. Few Classes At the outset of the strike, as many as 600,000 pupils reported for classes that seldom were held. Most of them were sent back home. With more than 40,000 teachers away from their class- rooms, few children received any formal instruction. By Monday, attendance had dropped to about 130,000 stu- dents - only 12 per cent of the total enrollment. It reportedly rose to about 147,000 yesterday. Shanker and his top UFT aides ignored a no-strike order from the State Supreme Court in lead- ing the teachers out. Later, they brushed off a subsequent back- to-work mandate from the court. Z t c c s Z c C I f jc f A C Y T { t it -Associated Press UNITED AUTO WORKERS PRESIDENT Walter P. Reuther suggested yesterday that Henry Ford II join personally the contract negotiations between Ford Motor Company and the striking UAW. Ford's chief-negotiator Malcolm Denise said he "doubted" that Ford would involve himself. The strike, which began Sept. 7, is now in its 21st day. (See story on page.) POSSIBLE THREAT: WASHINGTON (A'-Gen. Earle and then you are going to have G. Wheeler described the one to go back," he said. North Vietnamese port raided by Dealing with other aspects, American warplanes as a "peanuts" Wheeler said the Vietnam war target and called for action would end in a relatively short against the now-forbidden harbor time if the Communists could be of Haiphong. denied support from the Soviet Wheeler, chairman of the Joint Union, estimated this year at Chiefs of Staff, reported a dif- about $670 million in military aid. ference in judgment within the He said the same thing is true, administration on this and said: "I am on the side that we could undertake actions against the port of Haiphong!' Foding of1( His suggestions on the nature of those actions were deleted by T Pentagon censors. In raurrisa e Dangers Wheeler's Aug. 16 testimony be- HARLINGEN, Tex. (IP3-Sand- [ore the Senate preparedness sub- bagging work crews struggled committee, made public yesterday, block-by-block against swirling acknowledged that raids on the Rio Grande floodwaters Tuesday haarbor could hit Communist bloc in a desperate effort to save the shipping and pose the danger of center of this south Texas city of a wider Vietnam war. 41,000 from inundation. "On two occasions," he noted, National Guard helicopters and "our air strikes on target areas trucks evacuated a state tuber- near the harbor areas have ac- culosis hospital as waters advanced cidentally damaged Soviet ship- inexorably. ping." City officals said 800 homes But he said that militarily ac- had been flooded. tion against Haiphong is one of AR io Grande levee burst on the the most important steps the U.S. Merican side of the river at Rey- could take. nosa, putting one-third of the city under water. Haiphong Important The surging Rio Grande has "The other two ports, Cam Pha been swollen greatly beyond capa- and Hon Gai, are peanuts," city by 20- and 30-inch rains that Wheeler testified. "They are noth- accompanied Hurricane Beulah's ng of any great importance. Hai- track inland last week. phong is the important port." Some 20,000 persons in the On Sept. 11, nearly a month af- 40,000meqrmileeo Texs ter Wheeler's Senate appearance, battered by Beulah are still in Red U.S. navy bombers struck Cam Cross and Salvation Army shelters. Pha, a port used primarily for the Various Texas rivers are still as Wheeler testified that one air much as 15 feet above flow stage. raid is not going to be sufficient The state highway department to choke off the flow of war sup- said 15 major roads remain block- plies through Haiphong. ed by high water. "In order to really destroy the Meanwhile, Sen. Ralph Yarbor- capability to move stuff through ough (D-Tex. charged yesterday the port of Haiphong, you would that Gov. John Connally was have to apply a sizeable effort "playing politics with disaster" by over a considerable period of time, not having applied by now for FILM: CONVERSATIONS WITH PAUL TILLICH Prof. Tillich discusses the place of religion in the philosophy of life, morality vs. moralism, the latent vs. the manifest church, and other topics. TODAY: 12:30to1 P.M., Multipurpose Room, UGLI (Also will be shown Thurs., Sept. 28, 7:30 P.M., Canterbury House) Sponsored by: The Office of Religious Affairs, 2282 SAB to a lesser degree, of Communist Chinese support, estimated at about 25 per cent of North Viet- nam's supplies. Wheeler reported the Joint Chiefs of Staff believed that 70 targets which had not been ap- proved by the administration on Aug. 16 should be authorized for strikes. Mxas Continues leulab's Wake federal designation of south Texas as a major disaster area. Connally and his aides say they are waiting until proper paper and damage assessments can properly be drawn up. State and federal officials had estimated the damage to Texas from Beulah at $500 million last week before the torrential rains hit. Estimates now exceed $1 billion. The death toll from the giant storm, one of the most powerful hurricanes in history, remained at 44. Eleven died in Texas, the rest in Mexico and the Caribbean. Students, udistsPang 9 T Protests of VietnmEecin TO tn I am IlRS SAIGON (;P)-South Vietnamese tary government in the spring of termeasures the Buddhist drive government police are steeled for 1966. subsided. possible student and Buddhist This morning militant Buddhists Since then they have fragment-r demonstrations reported to be at the An Quang pagoda in Saigon, ed and the power Tri Quang's mil-; planned for today, tomorrow and headquarters of Thich Venerable itant sect is thought to have di- Friday. Tri Quang, plan a mass meeting, minished. If the students and Buddhists possibly followed by a march into Students and Buddhists marched' take to the streets, they would the street, the informants said. in Saigon, Hue and Da Nang Sun-t Tri. Quang was the leader of the day to protest that the Sept. 3f pose the most serious threat to the antigovernment "struggle move- presidential and senate electionse government since the militant ment" in the spring of last year, were rigged. The Buddhists want Buddhists tried to topple the mili- but after strong government coun- Chief of State Nguyen Van Thieu, - __ ___- - the president-elect, to rescind a new national Buddhist charter he AgkXT" signed inJuly, British Seek Parley The charter recognizes as the official Buddhist Church of South T f Vietnam, a nonmilitant sect with Si n swhich the militants are at odds. H an oi For signing the charter, the mil- itants called Roman Catholic UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (P) - Vietnam yesterday rejected as an Thieu a traitor. British Foreign Secretary George "American-style trick" U.S. Am- The government clamped downj Brown called yesterday for imme- bassador Arthur Goldberg's plea yesterday on another form of polit- diate peace talks on Vietnam, but for United Nations members to ical opposition, closing the Saigon charged that Communist Hanoi help bring about a political solu- newspaper Thoi Dai Epoch for has "declined to grasp the many tion to the Vietnam war. printing a story that said the Na- opportunities to negotiate that (The official Hanoi newspaper tional Assembly was going to in- have been offered." Nhan Dan wrote a scatching com- validate the election of Thieu In a wide ranging policy speech mentary which was broadcast over and his vice president-elect, Pre- before the 122-nation General As- Radio Hanoi on Goldberg's speech mier Nguyen Cao Ky, because of sembly, Brown appealed anew for before the United Nations last irregularities. a settlement of the war on the week. Three other papers have been basis of the Geneva conference on (Goldberg asked for assurances closed this month and a total of Indochina. that there would be negotiations six Saigon newspapers are now (Meanwhile Communist North if the United States stopped bomb- suspended, leaving 23. ing North Vietnam.) Saigon students have scheduledI As co-chairmen of the Geneva a meeting tonight and some leaders conference, the Soviet Union and talk of a street demonstration Britain have the authority to bring after the meeting. d Vietnam before that body. But Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. On Friday, police sources say, soGromyko remained adamant 'students and Buddhists are plan- I A source close to Romney said gainst temiea w Bron ning demonstrations in South the governor will declareformally sounded him out over the weekend. Vietnam's major cities, among his candidacy when he returns them Saigon, Da Nang, Can Tho, from a tour of urban ceners yea abortive" efforts totachieve Nha Trang, Hue and Dalat. the nation this weekend, possibly a Vietnam settlement had been Friday is the day when the Na- soon after. overshadowed by death and de- tional Assembly is scheduled to struction. begin debate on whether or not BOSTON-A steady stream of "There has been no progress in to validate the Sept. 3 elections. voters indicated a substantial vote the fighting," Brown said. "There It must consider the 15 official yesterday in the city's non-par- has been no program toward a complaints filed against the elec- tisan primary to choose among 10 solution." tions. 8 P.M. FRIDAY, SEPT. 29 TICKETS: i. L HUDSON COMPANY MEMORIAL BLDG. 342.1029 $4.50, $3.50, $2.50. $1.50 ON YOUR CAMPUS you may buy tickets at U of M Box Office - --- ------ - - --- ---------- "FASCINATING !" -Det. Free Press "WICKEDLY POTENT!" -Flint Journal "TREMENDOUS SCENES !" -A.A. News f'VIRTUOSITY !" -Det. News "PROVOCATIVE !" -Toledo Blade "SCH IZOPHREN IC" -Daily World News Rou By The Associated Press MOSCOW-Alexander N. Shele- pin, long regarded as a future top man in the Soviet Union, lost his key post as secretary of-the Rus- sian Communist party Friday. The demotion by party officials, who apparently feared the 49- year-old former secret police chief, was announced by the party. The announcement, after a party Central Committee meeting, said Shelepin was released because of his appointment last July to head the Soviet trade unions. The trade unions job is traditionally a sec- ondary one here. MIAMI, Fla.-Tropical Storm Edith, fifth of the slow-starting but busy hurricane season, form- ed yesterday 675 miles east of the Leeward Islands which spawned the killer storm Beulah. The Weather Bureau said Edith probably would become a hurri- cane today. Tomorrow & Friday THE BURMESE HARP dir. Kon Ichikawa, 1956 Japanese, subtitles a tale of pacifism in a WWII prison camp. Japanese prisoner must decide-? Japan or Peace? CAMIRI, Bolivia-Regis Debray, 27-year-old French chronicler of Castro-style revolution, went be- fore a military court yesterday on charges of aiding Communist guer- rillas in the Bolivian jungle. The prosecution asked the maximum sentence-30 years in prison. The military prosecutor, Col. Remberto Iriarte, declared Debray "entered Bolivia clandestinely and took up arms." Iriarte presented as evidence De- bray's book, "Revolution in the Revolution" which sets forth the Cuban revolution as a tactical example for leftist movements around the world. DETROIT-Gov. George Rom- ney will visit Europe in November and plans to announce his candi- dacy for the 1968 Republican pres- idential nomination before leaving, reports indicate. CINEMA II ROMAN POLANSKI'S Presents Repulsion (1966) A provocative attempt to out-Hitchcock Hitchcock aspirants for mayor, including Louise Day Hicks, outspoken op- ponent of efforts to achieve racial balance in public schools. The two top vote-getters will run off for the mayoralty in the Nov. 7 final election. The gloomy picture he painted reflected conclusions Brown and Secretary of State Dean Rusk reached after private talks Mon- day that prospects for Vietnam agreement at this stage were "none too bright." TRAVEL- INTERNATIONAL COMMITTEE UNION-LEAGUE Presents A Holiday in NASSAU Via United Air Lines DECEMBER 26th-JANUARY 2nd DETROIT-NASSAU-DETROIT MASS MEETING for Those Interested- Room 3R and 3S Thursday, 7:30 P.M. Union September 28th - THIS WEEK AT: 1421 Hill Street STARTS THURSDAY "EXTRAVAGANTLY BOLD and BIZARRE" -Bosley Crowther, N.Y. Times "MISS ZETTERLING MAKES EACH SCENE A WORK OF ART. STUNNING EFFECTS. -WilEiam Wolf, cue Magazine "THE VOYEUR'S DELIGHT OF THE YEAR.' -Jud;#h Cris, World Journal Tribune StarringINGRID THULIN ADMITTANCE RESTRICTED TO PERSONS OF AGE 18 MINIMUM Mon.-Thurs. 7, 9 P.M. Fri., Sat. 7, 9 & 11 .M. Sun. 6, 8 & 1 0 P.M. in de Ghelderode's NOW to Oct. 1 IT a Evenings at 8:00 P.M. Matinee Sun. at 2:30 P.M. SHORT: .l A C.. Chaipter 2 rune f%^ Returning! PRIOR To EXPO 67 4b at- AEWhA LJ&1f Coming ! Oct. 10-15 (also Oct. 31-Nov. 5) l Ii ~.. . lAev ^111kir -C-11, I I I