CTINDAY,' OCTOBERS, 1967 THE MICHIGAN? DAILY rAGEK'I SUNDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1967 TIlE MICHIGAN IJAILY f'AHE1 Courts To Decide Legality Of Union Walkout at OSU -Associated Press HIPPY FUNERAL Hippies are carrying a coffin and a hippy on a stretcher through the Haight-Ashbury district of San Francisco as part of a three- day-wake, which began Friday, for the death of the hippy move- ment in the area. Militant Vietnam Buddhists ToProtest Religious Decree I COLUMBUS, Ohio (P) - The battleground of the current strike of non-academic employes at Ohio State University moves into the courtroom tomorrow where deci- sions could have far-reaching af- fects on the nation's state-sup- ported schools. The American Federation of State, County and Municipal Em- ployes (AFSCME) appears to have selected Ohio State for a show- downx battle which could set or- ganization trends in other areas. Ohio law, the Ferguson Act, pro- hibits strikes by public employes. William McCue, international organizer of the striking union, feels this battle is an important test case. "What happens here will be felt across the nation," he says. "I'm real happy with the situ- ation." MaCue, 45, has been in union work for the past 22 years. He be- came president of the Interna- tional Union ofElectrical Workers (IUE) when it was formed in 1952, where he remained until last February when he joined the AFSCME. The situation is this: After failing to get its demands for a 10 per cent wage increase, free parking, free meals for food' service workers, family hospital- ization plans and grievance proce- dures providing for bind arbitra- tion, the union called a walkout Thursday morning. Current salaries range from $1.40 to $3.80 per hour for laundry workers, food service personnel, operating engineers, laborers and equipment operators. On Friday union officials ap- pealed an injunction grantedI Thursday in Franklin County Common Pleas Court ordering the strikers back to work and banningI picketing. A hearing on the ap- peal was set for tomorrow. Ohio Atty. Gen. William B. Sax- be then filed contempt of court charges against the unior4 for de- fying th' court order. Officials ofI Local 138 were ordered to appear! tomorrow to show cause why Sax- be's charge should not be upheld. Saxbe's office had ruled pre- viously that state-supported uni- versities cannot sign formal con.. tracts with the union. cif INULI tl MIjA JUK eUL*.aljit. uatJ'' across the state in convoys, sent on special weekend maneuvers to be near trouble spots. A rock heaved from an overpass on U.S. 23 near Flint, Mich., struck Frederick E. Beck, 40, of Wayne, Mich. A second rock shattered his right windshield and the big rig swerved off the highway and plow- ed into a field. Beck's death, if confirmed by state police to be connected with the violent-splattered strike by dissident Teamsters, would be the -Associated Press THE DRIVER OF THIS TRUCK was killed inst antly by a rock thrown through the windshield. State police believe that the slaying, which took place near Flint yesterday, is connected with con- tinuing violence in the strike of steel haurels. PROPERTY DAMAGE: Urban Riots Cost Over $100 Million SAIGON UP) - Militant Bud- dhists and South Vietnam's gov- ernment were set yesterday on a collision course.. Leaders of the radical, power- seeking religious splinter group an- nounced 1,000 monks and nuns :would stage a three-mile march Sunday from the An Quang pago- da to the Independence Palace, despite a government ban on street demonstrations. The government held to the baif on such a parale. Brig. Gen. Nguyen Ngoc Loan, national police director, notified the Buddhists by letter that no more than 80 would be allowed to leave the pagoda for a trip to the palace, the government head- quarters. " The militant said they would ig- nore the letter, Their avowed purpose was to visit their leader, the Venerable Tri Quang, who is in the second week of a protest vigil in a park across the street from the palace gates. Chief of State Nguyen Van Thieu had brushed off Tri Quang's demand that he rescind a charter, decreed in July, that designated a rival, moderate sect as the mother church for South Viet- nam's Buddhists. The monk, in turn, had spurned Thieu's suggestion that all the Buddhists get together and draft a substitute, which the government would approve. Tri Quang wants restoration of a previous charter, which gave the militants a strong voice in the affairs of Vietnamese Buddhism. A spokesman at the An Quang Pagoda, Thich Nhat Thuong, told newsmen Saturday: "We have been invited by the committee for protection of the old charter to go to see Thirh Tri Quang tomor- row. We will accept their invita- tion." DEATH IN FLINT: Violence Spreads In Steel Rebellion PITTSBURGH (.P) - A truck first since it began seven weeks driver was killed by a rock yester- ago. day as snipers and vandals zeroed Ironically, Beck was hauling ani- in on trucks in five states, shat- mal remains on two flatbed trail- tering the relative calm of the past ers. but a trooper said "it could two days in the steel haulers re- easily be mistaken for a steel bellion. hauling truck." Fresh bursts of stonings and The 10.000 to 20,000 maverick shootings flared in Pennsylvania drivers, who drive and lease their as Natinnal Guarrdsmen ushp d1 In a statement, the militants said they would "sacrifice to the last man in order to safeguard the legality and honor, of our church." The statement denounced "the religious traitors the moderate Buddhists who are supporting Gen. Thieu in his maintaining of the illegal decree." The group also accused the gov- ernment of torturing students ar- rested in recent antigovernment demonstrations and said monks had been drafted because of anti- NEW YORK P--Urban rioting' triggered by racial unrest has caused more than $100 million! in property damage in 1967-with the grim returns still trickling in. Additionally, cities, counties and states have spent millions for po- lice and fire department overtime, and the calling up of National Guard units, an Associated Press survey showed today. More than 16,000 persons have been arrested during outbreaks of violence in 67 cities, more than 3,200 injured, 85 killed. Courts Clogged Courts dealing with criminal charges arising from the riots will be clogged for months. In Detroit, 2,318 persons bound over on fel- ony counts were awaiting trial at the end of August. By mid-September 779 had been indicted on criminal charges in Newark and another 87 cases were up for grand jury action. Damage estimates by respon- sible officials and members of the business community ranged from a staggering $83 million in Detroit and $10,251,200 in Newark to $300 in Lima, Ohio, and Prattsville, Ala. Detroit's bill for police over- time and destruction of equipment3 topped $2 million. Fire depart- ment overtime came to $750,0001 and lost or damaged equipment ' to $82,500. In Boston, police and fire department overtime totaled $168,800; damage to equipment $152,500. Minneapolis had $22,500 in po- lice overtime, $8,300 in firemen's overtime and a $42,700 tab for calling out the National Guard. Philadelphia discouraged pos- sible disorder by putting its police on 12-hour shifts from July 27 to Sept. 1. The overtime cost: $5.1 million. Police overtime in other cities where tension exploded into vio- lence included $58,287 in Tampa, Fla., $55,540 in Portland, Ore., $50,923 in Phoenix, Ariz., $127,000, in Toledo, Ohio. Approximately 850 Michigan state troopers earned $226,800 in overtime while helping quell vio- lence or prevent it in Detroit, Pontiac, Grand Rapids, Flint and Saginaw. A week's occupation of Cam-! bridge, Mnd., by the National Guard cost $150,000. In the end, all of these extra- ordinary costs must be born by taxpayers. Some taxpayers, including busi- nessmen, home owners and in- surance companies hit by riots, may retrieve part of ,their losses through federal income tax de- ductions. Serious losses of business by firms in areas involved in rioting were reported in many cities. Thus a curfew in Wichita, Kan., cost theatres, taverns and clubs an officially-estimated $100,000 in trade. John C. Prickett, vice president of the Grand Rapids Chamber of Commerce; estimated lost busi- ness there at $700,000. Businessmen in East St. Louis, Ill., said receipts fell off an aver- age of 25 per cent during disor- ders Sept. 10 to 16. Hardest hit were stores catering mainly to women, who were afraid to be on the streets. Total business losses were calculated at $500,000. Allen Andrews, safety director of Toledo, Ohio, said looters made off with $100,000 worth of goods in rioting from July 24 to 27.' Many stores closed. high rate of dismissal of cases against arrested persons. Buffalo, N.Y., had 185 arrests during a racial disturbance on June 27, 28 and 29. Of the first 66 cases to reach the courts, 22 were dismissed. Frank Felicetta, Buffalo's police commissioner, said the main problem was to obtain positive identifications of suspects. He ex- plained that in quelling a. riot, police make wholesale arrests and may be unable to single out of- fenders when the cases finally are heard weeks or months later. Police' arrested 489 students in a May 16-17 campus riot at Texas Southern University in Houston, Tex. All but five were released without facing charges. In Detroit, 7,207 persons were arrested. Ultimately,- 3,363 were charged with felonies. So far, 197 of the felony charges have been dropped. Most of the cases are pending. 'own rigs to private trucking firms, are pressing their union for a bet- ter contract by shutting down the highway movement of steel. Steel firms have been forced to cut production, workers have been laid off and construction in many areas has been crimped. The Penn- sylvania mines department said coal mines owned by the steel pro- ducers face a possible shutdown. A spokesman said delivery of rock dust used to aveirt coal dust ex- plosions has been hampered by the strikers, severely limiting the sup- ply. "If not enough dust is available. the mines must close," the spokes- man said. Some 300 uniformed National Guardsmen of the 165th Military Police Battalion in East Penn- sylvania were ordered to maneu- vers in the troubled plagued west- ern part of the state .The gover- nor's office said the action didn't constitute a call-up, but inter- preted it as a psychological move to stem the violence and quiet the fears of highway travelers. The Guardsmen, placed on alert earlier this week at the height of the violence, }were to spend last night in bivouac areas near high- ways. Violence also spread to Wis- consin and Maryland. Two ex- plosions near Baltimore were also thought to be connected with the dispute. TONIGHT Marius Triloby Part 11: Fanny dir. Marcel Pagnol, 1932 "Wine, Women, & Song" -featuring Raimu, great French comedian. One of France's most loved films, noted for pure French genre. 7:00 & 9:05 ARCH ITECTURE AUDITORIUM STILL ONLY 50c government actions. It both alleged activities. In most cities which exper- ienced rioting, there has been a protested World News Roundup GUILD HOUSE 802Monroe -MONDAY, October 9 By The Associated Press NEW YORK-Foreign Minister Thanat Kohman of Thailand says he would favor hot pursuit of North Vietnamese forces into Cambodia if Cambodia is unable to close its borders to the Com- munist forces. Kohman says he believes Cam- bodian authorities realize that the North Vietnamese have been us- ing remote areas in Cambodia as staging or regrouping areas for the war in Vietnam. * * * LAGOS, Nigeria - A bombing plane attempting attacks on a Nigerian naval base and govern- ment headquarters blew up amid antiaircraft fire over a residential section of Lagos early yesterday, damaging two foreign embassies but missing its prime targets. SAIGON - U.S. jet squadrons kept the heat on North Vietnam yesterday, striving to paralyze enemy supply lines before the imminent northeast m o n s o o n shrouds that country in ra'in and fog. Radio Hanoi, in a broadcast unsubstantiated in Saigon, de- clared North Vietnam's air force and Hanoi militiamen shot downI four planes. * ATHENS, Greece-The military junta lifted house arrest restric- tions yesterday against former Premier George Papandreou, one of King Constantine's leading op- ponents. Eight of Papandreou's followers also were freed after signing agreements to stay out of politics. * * * WASHINGTON - President Johnson has ordered a govern- ment-wide freeze on all spending commitments except those essen, tial to national defense and health and welfare, it was learned yes- terday. CJLI !IE1BUNY i FOUSE, NOON LUNCHEON 25c PROFESSOR JOHN E. POWERS Dept. of Engineering "FREEDOM AND LICENSE IN THE STUDENT SUBCULTURE" TUESDAY, October 10 NEW SYMPOSIUM on "CONFLICT" Researcher: ALVIN ZANDER Mike Seeger John Cohen Tracy Schwarz. LAST CHANCE-TONIGHT! THE NEW LOST CITY RAMBLERS 8 P.M.-$2 at the door-free eats-great music! NEXT WEEK The 3rd Annual Humphrey Bogart Film Festival I I I OPENS TUESDAY! W presents THE SIXTH ANNUAL DANCE FESTIVAL Three Performances in Hill Auditorium HARKNESS BALLET . . . . . ... Fri.,dOct. 13, 8:30 Program: Night Song; Feast of Ashes; Zealous Variations (Schubert, Op. 83); and Time Out of Mind OLAETA BASQUE FESTIVAL . . .. Sun.,dOct. 22,8:30 Dancers, singers, and instrumentalists combine to provide dances and music of the Basque country-seven provinces on both sides of the Pyrenees, both in Spain and in France JOSE MOLINA BAILESESPANOLES... Fri., Oct.21,8:30 Program of Spanish songs and dancing, including 'folk, classical, and flamenco 0 in the AMERICAN PREMIERE of it 11