AY, OCTOBER 26, 1967 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE TUREE ~Y, OCTOBER 26, 1967 THE MICHIGAN DAILY RAGE ThREE * City of Suez Hit; Refineries Burn Security Council Passes Resolution Condemning Cease-Fire Violations By The Associated Press UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.-The UN Security Council, meeting urgently to deal with fresh vio- lence in the Middle East, last night unanimously condemned violations of the Egyptian-Israeli -ease-fire and demanded an end to fighting in the Suez area. The resolution, offered as a stopgap compromise between com- peting resolutions put forward by the United States and the Soviet Union, also expressed regret over the casualties and property dam- sge from the recent violations. SSenate Unit Passes Civil Rights Bill WASHINGTON () - The ad- ministration's civil rights bill was approved by the Senate Judiciary Committee yesterday by a 7-5 vote after escaping narrowly a series of efforts to alter it. The administration was able to produce a committee majority with the arrival of Sen. Hugh Scott (R-Pa) from England on a military flight arranged by the White House. The bill-designed to protect Negroes and civilrights workers from violence and threats in ex- ercising f ederallyguaranteed rights-was sent to the Senate where it faces a possible filibus- ter if Southern opponents rally enough Republican support. Senate Fight Sen. Sam J. Ervin Jr. (D-NC), sponsor of a substitute bill which n the committee shelved 8 to 7 in favor of the administration ver- sion, said he will take his fight to the Senate floor. Senate Republican eader Ev- erett M. Dirksen supported Ervin's proposal in the committee. The administration plan would provide criminal penalties for in- juring or intimidating a person exercising specifically listed fed- eral rights or because of race, color, religion or national origin. Rights Defended These rights include voting, at- tending public school, serving on a jury, employment, participating in federally aided programs and use of public accommodations and such common carriers as railroads and buses. The minimum penalty would be $1,000 fine or a year in jail. If bodily harm is done the penalty would be 10 years or $10,000, or in case of death life imprisonment. A Judiciary subcommittee had approved 5 to 1 Ervin's substitute, which would provide the same penalties but would not require a showing of racial, religious or other discrimination. Federal protection would be ex- tended to all citizens regardless of race, religion or national origin. The White House, anticipating a. close vote at Wednesday's ses- sion, had sent word Tuesday to Scott, who has been in England lecturing at Oxford University. Ervin Amendment Ervin amendments rejected by 8-7 votes would have: -Provided protection for the constitutional rights of American Indians. -Made it a federal crime to interfere by violence or threats with a person's employment or with his going to and from his job. -Prohibited a labor union from fining a member for refusing to participate in a strike. -Required any punishable act of violence or intimidation to be sufficient to constitute as assault. Ervin said the bill as it now stands "merely spoken words be- come a federal crime." Before sending the bill to the Senate, the committee rejected by 7-4 votes amendments that would have extended its protection of troops and National Guardsmen engaged in maintaining law and order during civil rights demon- strations and prohibit crossing a state line to incite a riot. TONIGHT FRANKENSTEIN dir. James Whale, 1931 The original, with BORIS KARLOFF The council was called into ses- sion Tuesday night at the request of Egypt, which accused Israel of a "new and premeditated flagrant aggression" for its shelling of the city of Suez earlier in the day. Fires still raged last night at the ruins of two major oil refineries hit during the attack. Both Egypt and Israel blamed the other for starting the shooting in the Suez area but reports of UN observers on the scene failed to pinpoint the responsibility. The council resolution reaffirms the "necessity of the strict ob- servance of the cease-fire resolu- tions" adopted by the Council last June during the six-day Arab- Israeli war. It further demanded that the nations involved "cease immedi- ately all prohibited military activ- ities in the area and cooperate fully and promptly" with UN peace observers. Not Authorized But despite heavy pressures, it stopped short of authorizing Sec- retary-General U Thant to name a special representative to seek peaceful solutions to the complex Middle East controversies, as many members have proposed. It also took no other substantive action that might make a start toward a permanent settlement. Appeal for Peace The secretary-general, speaking after the vote, made a strong appeal for a stronger UN peace operation along the Suez Canal "in view of the number and ser- ious nature of the breaches of the cease-fire." He asked specifically for an in- crease from 43 to 90 the number of UN observers along the canal and a doubling of the number of UN observation posts. There are now nine. He also requested four small patrol boats for UN observers to use in the canal and adjacent waters and four small helicopters, with operational and maintenance personnel, for aerial observation. He said that this would increase the mobility of the UN observers Thant suggested in addition to these steps that body armor to protect the upper torso be provided for the observers, who he said "have on several occasions been caught in exchanges of fire be- tween the two sides." Compromise Resolution The resolution was worked out in consultations among the 10 non-permanent members of the 15-nation council. It was offered as an alternative to rival resolu- tions submitted Tuesday night by the United States and the Soviet Union. The Soviet Union called for condemnation of Israel, repara- tions for -the damage caused by the Israeli shelling of the city of Suez and Israel's strict observance of the cease-fire. The U.S. proposal would con- demn "any and all violations of the cease-fire," insist on scrupu- lous respect for the cease-fire and ask the governments concerned to issue categoric instructions to all military forces to refrain from all firing. Chief S. O. Adebo, of Nigeria, the only speaker at the morning meeting, appealed to the council to avoid an immediate vote on either proposal and to allow time for a search for a compromise. I-- STATE DEPARTMENT CRITICISM: Senate Resolution Urges UN Settlement for Vietnam War WASHINGTON UR)--A bipartl- diplomatic and military battles in not in business as a committee to san resolution urging that the a quarter century of hot and cold support Lyndon Johnson. We are United Nations attempt to end the wars - expressed concern that concerned with the future of the Vietnam war was introduced by "strident voices of some dissent- United States which is bigger than Senate Democratic Leader Mike ers" are receiving disproportion- any of us-or any group of us," Mansfield yesterday with the ate attention here as well as in Douglas added. backing of 35 other senators. Hanoi and Peking. The gist of the committee's Before the day was out, Mans- The new Citizens Committee view. Douglas said, was in a para- field announced that 18 more for Peace With Freedom in Viet- graph of a statement released at senators had signed as co-spon- nam was unveiled at a news con-1 the news conference and signed sors, rasing the total to more than ference chaired by former Demo- by the members: half the Senate membership. cratic Sen. Paul H. Douglas and "We are opposed to surrender, One of the sponsors, Sen. George Army General Omar Bradley. however camouflaged. Yet nothing D. Aiken (R-Vt), accused the At the news conference. Douglas we advocate can be interpreted as State Department, along with the acknowledged the idea for form- unnecessarily risking a general Soviet Union, of blocking action ing the citizens committee was his. war in Asia or a nuclear war in on Vietnam. But he rejected speculation "our the world. We favor a sensible An earlier similar charge by project would be the final action road between capitulation and the Sen. J. W. Fulbright (D-Ark), in an administration counter-at- indiscriminate use of raw power." chairman of the Senate Foreign tack against the Vietnam critics." The committee said its objec- Relations Committee, had brought "We are backers of the office tive is not to suppress dissent and a reply from Secretary of State of We presi ecker .. bt e a citi is mn o f o licy. Dean Rusk that it was not true. of the presidency . . . but we are criticism of policy. And yesterday Mansfield said President Johnson has tried on Senate Debates Budget Cuts; four occasions to get UN action. The Mansfield resolution would urge Johnson to direct Arthur, l- ,l_ . 3 C C 1 -Associated Press SOVIET AMBASSADOR to the United Nations Nikolai T. Federenko is seen talking to United States UN Ambassador Arthur J. Goldberg, at the Security Council sesison yesterday. The council met to discuss violations of the cease-fire between Egypt and Israel which was broken Monday with the sinking of the Israeli destroyer, Elath. Also discussed at the session was the destruction of Egyptian oil refineries which Israel says was provoked by an Egyptian anti-aircraft attack. FROM THAILAND BASES: U.S. Jets Bomb Hanoi Bridge; North Vietnam Claims City Hit SAIGON (AP) - Thailand-based U.S. Air Force jets, pressing max- imum effort raids, b o m b e d Hanoi's Doumer Bridge for the second time in the war yesterday and again worked over the North Vietnamese MIG field at Phuc Yen. The North Vietnamese, in a broadcast dispatch that lacked American or other confirmation, declared 10 planes were shot, down. Bombs were reported to have sent dust and smoke boiling up from the Doumer Bridge, a mile- long concrete structure across the Red River that carries railway I WW7 11 11 'M. T and highway traffic Hanoi and Red China. between Work crews had repaired it since the first raid, Aug. 11, dropped the center span into the river. Wilfred Burchett, an Aus- tralian correspondent who spe- cializes in Communist affairs, said in a dispatch from Hanoi last Saturday, that the North Vietnamese put it back in opera- tion in less than six weeks. Spokesmen said they blasted fresh craters in the 9,170-foot runway and hit maintenance and support facilities that were passed' up in the initial raid, the most massive of the war. The ground war was marked by light Viet Cong mortar attacks on a half-dozen closely bunched towns and an airfield of Kien Hoa Province, in the Mekong Del- ta 30 to 45 miles south of Saigon. The U.S. 1st Air Cavalry Divi-; Goldberg, U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, to press for action on a Vietnam resolution intro- duced by the U.S. that has been pending in the world organization for 21 months. "It's time for the United Na- tions to fish or cut bait," said Mansfield. Mansfield, who has opposed military escalation of the war, mentioned in introducing his pro- posal that the hitherto-immune North Vietnamese airfield at Phuc Yen has been bombed this week. Just as the number of exempt targets are decreasing in number, Mansfield said, "so are the alter- natives and options which could lead the way to negotiations and a possible honorable settlement of the conflict." WASHINGTON ()-The Sen- ate rejected yesterday by a vote of 48 to 39 a proposal to cut fed- eral spending in the current fiscal year by $5 billion. Senators then took up another amendment, which would order a cut of nearly $2 billion. The proposed amendments came up as the Senate deliberated a resolution to continue to Nov. 15 authority for operating funds for agencies whose regular 1967-68 budgets have not yet been ap- proved by Congress. The House tied to the resolu- tion provisions calling for over-all budget cutbacks up to, $8 billion. The stop-gap resolution, passed 59 to 26, was sent to a conference stop-lap measures v iewen $8 billion in his budget for the current fiscal year that began July 1. House-Senate conferees agreed on a compromise $4.58 billion bill to finance space activities. But they cut funds earmarked for two research projects - the Voyager long-range spacecraft project and the second stage of the Nerva nuclear rocket. The total is $400 million less than Johnson asked. A second-try compromise was worked out to provide $10 million extra for the annual rental sub- sidy for housing for low-income people. The House had turned down both the $40 million asked by Johnson and approved by the Senate as well as $10 million rec- Squadrons of F105 Thunder- ; sion, which lost 15 men killed and chiefs returned to Phuc Yen, 18 17 wounded in a seven-hour miles northwest of Hanoi, which battle Monday at a fortified vil- was hit Tuesday for the first time lage in the coastal Tam Ky sec- after being removed from the tor, reported finding 50 more Pentagon's restricted list. enemy bodies within the village. That raised the known toll on the enemy to 98 dead'. E ., Shortly before Mansfield's move, with the House in face of pre- ommended by its Appropriations a blue ribbon nonpartisan com- dictions the House would balk at Committee. mittee - with former Presidents going along with the Senate in Senate - House conferees who Dwight D. Eisenhower and Harry merely extending the spending agreed on the new rent subsidy S. Truman among its members- authority to Nov. 15. compromise also tried a new $312 was unveiled and gave its approval' The House, in passing the reso- million figure for the Model Cities to U.S. policy in Vietnam. lution last week, had included a program in comparison to the $237 The blue ribbon group-includ- directive to President Johnson to million voted by the House and ing men who figured in American shrink spending by $5 billion to 1$527 million voted by the Senate. 7 World News Roundup Division announced slim results in a 13-day hunt for North Viet- namese troops across four prov- inces of the central highlands four Communists killed, 16 Amer- icans wounded. The operation, dubbed McArthur involves about i By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - Senate eth- ics committee reported Wednes- day it has found no facts show- ing that payments received by Sen. Edward V. Long, (D-Mo.), from a St. Louis attorney had any connection with a Senate in- vestigation of wiretapping. Sen. John Stennis, (D-Miss.), the chairman of the bi-partisan panel, reported to the Senate on an inquiry into charges that Long had misused the wiretap probe in an effort to help James R. Hoffa, the imprisoned Teamster Union president. * * * DETROIT - Striking United Auto Workers Union members appeared yesterday to be placing' their stamp of approval on a pro- posed new three-year contract with the Ford Motor Co. Ratification by overwhelming numbers was reported in early returns from several UAW locals, including the 34,000-member Lo- cal 600 at Ford's mammoth Rouge plant downriver from Detroit. Walter Dorish, president of thej Rouge local, said 93 per cent of' the production workers and 62 per cent of the skilled tradesmen had approved the proposed pact. MIAMI - A federal court or- dered six Cuban exiles freed of piracy charges Monday on the grounds that a Panamanian freighter they allegedly hijacked was in U.S. waters, not on the high seas. U.S. District Judge Clyde At- kins directed a verdict of acquit- tal, but the six were convicted of lesser charges. They remained free on bond and no date was set for sentencing. 11N (L I U IN r IL IK 11 8,000 men. The Saigon government an- nounced a reward of $850 would be paid to anyone catching or helping to catch Viet Cong ter- rorists Oct. 31 or Nov. 1. On those successive days Chief of State Nguyen Van Thieu is being inaugurated as president and South Vietnam is celebrating its National Day. HOUSE Monroe Noon Luncheon 25c Sat. 4 November 7:00and9:30 MICHIGAN MEN'S GLEE CLUB OHIO STATE MEN'S GLEE CLUB Plus two guest performances THE ARBOR'S BOB McGRATH -Tenor BLOCK TICKETS TODAY AND TOMORROW $1.50 $2.00 $2.50 GENERAL SALES START MONDAY GUILD 802 M Friday, Oct. 27 Speaker: Prof. John Erlich School of Social Work: "Organizing the Local Community" .1 SEATS TONIGHT! Fri. and Sat.sold out! "ABSOLUTE DELIGHT!" "CAPTIVATES!" -Detroit Free Press -Daily "WARM GLOW!" -Detroit News TONIGHT at 'I THE ARK 1421 Hill Street 8:30 A LATIN AMERICAN FIESTA with Colombian Dancers, Original Poetry Reading, and folk singers from Mexico, Peru, Venezuela, and Colombia Friday-THE BIG SANDY BOYS The best bluegrass in Michigan--returning by popular request This Friday, Saturday, Sunday JONI MITCHELL FOLK SINGER and WRITER of "URGE FOR GOING" and "CIRCLE GAME" 330 MAYNARD doors open at 8 P.M.-$1 .50 after the 2nd Set-$1 .00 FREE FOOD I Saturday-THE BUDDY JACK TRIO withI WALTER BLACKWELL HARVEY HILL and BUDDY JACK doing blues, Belefante-type songs, pop-protest, folk music, and classical guitar. i I I t U