WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBE.Et $,1967 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THIME WORLD NEWS DEVELOPMENTS: UAW-Chrysler Talk Deadline I [onight DETROIT (1'- Auto Workers fer in the precise assignment Union President Walter P. Reuth- given to the representative. er said yesterday if agreement on The three-power draft would' a new contract is not reached call for Israeli withdrawal "from' with Chrysler Corp. by midnight all territories occupied as a re- tonight there "definitely will be suit of the recent conflict," a a national strike." formulation that Israel contends "We will not make an exten- weakens its position. sion," Reuther told newsmen as The U.S. plan calls simply for he emerged from a 14-hour bar- "withdrawal of armed forces from gaining session shortly after mid- occupied territories."j night. The session was the longest Each also would call for an end since Reuther signaled the start to the Arab state of belligerency' of showdown bargaining by join- against Israel, recognition of the ing talks Saturday. right of freedom of navigation of Reuther and John Leary, chief international waterways and the negotiator for the third largest need for a solution to the Arab automaker, said some progress refugee problem. had been made in fitting the re- The U.S. proposal f u r t h e r cent settlement at Ford Motor stressed the necessity for "a lim- Co. to the more complex Chrysler itation of the wasteful and de- situation. structive arms race in the area." But Reuther said there had Egyptian sources said the aim been "no movement at all" on was to "prceipitate action," and resolving one of the central is- other diplomats said Egypt hoped sues-wage parity for Canadian the pressure of a public debate auto workers. would hasten council agreement. Reuther emphasized, however, A that the party question was only rewriting the Ford pact difficult aogo sevralsehs tatre m M ayi principal to most of its provisions Long H ea ing7 which hikeaveragerFordyworker's WASHINGTON -- The Senate $4.70 in wages and benefits. ethics committee announced yes- Leary and Reuther also agreed terday that it will "fully consider that today's session would be a the latest allegations" of mis- long one, probably extending far conduct against Sen. Edward V. past midnight. Long (D-Mo.). Only three local agreements re- Sen. John Stennis (D-Miss.), main to be negotiated at Ford chairman of the bipartisan panel, plants across the country and the made a brief statement to the company plans to be back in full Senate in reply to Life magazine's production by the end of the charge of a whitewash by the week. committee in its current issue. The union is seeking one more Indicating at least a partial big benefit from Chrysler that it reopening of its inquiry, Stennis didn't get at Ford-the parity for said the committee's chief coun- 12,000 Canadian workers who sel, Benjamin R. Fern, will talk make about 40 cents an hour less with William Lambert, the au- than their American counterparts. thor of the Life article, to find * * * out the evidence on which his 'the wiretap probe in an effort to , keep Teamster Union President James R. Hoffa out of prison in its May 26 issue.I The Senate Foreign Relations Committee yesterday failed to reach agreement with Secretary of State Dean Rusk on whether he will appear in public to discuss the administration's V i e t n a m policy. The secretary said after a 3'- hour closed meeting that he will give more thought to the matter. Committee Chairiman J. W. Fulbright reported there was "a clear division within the commit- tee" on whether it should press Rusk to appear in public. Surveyor 6 r Nears IMoon PASADENA, Calif.-Surveyor 6 rocketed toward the moon yester- day on a course so accurate scien- tists may delay a decision on whether to re-aim it closer to a target almost dead center on the lunar disk. The steering maneuver normally is made about 16 hours after launch but controllers at Jet Pro- pulsion Laboratory said they might wait 24 hours longer to get more precise tracking data. The 2,200-pound spacecraft, which will weight 600 pounds after burn-out of a rocket designed to take it to a gentle landing, shot aloft from Cape Kennedy, Fla., at 2:39 a.m. EST. It was scheduled to touch down 1about 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Sinus Medii-Central Baysan area so ruged the craft was given a 50-50 chance of remaining upright to televise close-ups of a poten- tial astronaut landing site. An "even-number jinx" haunted three astronauts to the moon. Born in a log cabin in Red Rive, Officials said preparations for County, he studied for a year at the maiden Saturn 5 liftoff were Vanderbilt University-his ances- "on schedule" early today. tors were Tennesseeans-returned 1 1 "All early data looks good." a National Aeronautics and Space Administration spokesman said as Surveyor 6 winged toward its dis- tant target.I * ..* Former VP Garner .Dies UVALDE, Tex. - John Nance Garner, who rose from origins in rural Texas to the nation's highest power councils, died quietly and painlessly yesterday. He was 98 years old. The former vice president, who was found of referring to himself as a "little old Democrat," came within one year and tWo weeks of his goal of living to be 100 years old. Garner, widely known as "Cac- to Texas, ran for Clarksville city attorney and lost. He moved to Uvalde, 500 miles to the southwest. The young lawmaker champion ed some remarkable losing causes. He introduced a bill to divide Texas into five states so as to give the area10 senators. He entered Congress in 1903 and stayed so popular in his district he was consistently re-elected with- )ut making a campaign speech for 25 years. He came to preside over both houses. -Associated Press ROMNEY IN WISCONSIN Michigan Gov. George Romney was greeted with scattered hissing and booing at a Peace Corps recruiting booth on the University of Wisconsin campus yesterday. Romney told the students law and order and a belief in God were essential parts of America. The possible White House hopeful is in Wisconsin to test the political winds. STARTED IN FLINT: Police Arrest 27 Members .I tus Jack," was vice president for the first two terms of Franklin D. Roosevelt's administration. He broke with Roosevelt over the third term issue and left Washing- ton in 1941, vowing never to cross the Potomac River again. He never did. People in this town 50 miles from the Rio Grande in Southwest Texas were preparing for an an- nual celebration, the birthday Nov. 22 of the man they called Uvalde's No. 1 citizen. Now the stunned citizens are making plans for the funeral to- I orrow. Of Three-State Crim LANSING (,A)-Striking in a widespread series of raids Monday night and early yesterday, police arrested 27 persons on a range of, charges that included gambling, auto theft, armed robery and con- spiracy to murder. Michigan Atty. Gen. Frank Kel- ley said the arrested persons were part of a single "large-scale crim- inal operation" which had branch- ed out from Flint to other parts of the state and to Ohio and Pen- nsylvania. Kelley said warrants had been issued for the arrest of another 11 persons in the same alleged con- spiracy of crime. One of the arrests was made in Erie, Pa. The others were in the state. Unemployment Rate Hits Hi hest Level WASHINGTON (P)-- The na- tion's economy experienced a "disappointing job slump in Oc- tober, falling to the highest un- employment rate in two years," the government said yesterday. The 4.3 per cent jobless rate reflected the sharpest two-month rise in seven years and indicated that the number of Americans out of work totaled 500,000 more than there were a year earlier, the Labor Department said. Slower Growth While total employment in- creased slightly to 75.1 million, the rate of growth was slower and millions of employes were work- ing shorter hours, the report said. "Certainly disappointing," was the way Commissioner Arthur M. Ross of the Bureau of Labor Sta- tistics summed it up. But Ross declined to predict whether a worse economic slow- down appeared in the making and avoided questions as to whether the new figures bolstered Presi-, dent Johnson's argument for an income tax increase. Previous Support In previous reports on employ- ment and living costs, Ross us- ually interpreted latest economic figures as supporting the need for higher taxes. Johnson's proposed 19 per cent income tax surcharge is held up in the House Ways and Means Committee. "It is premature to attempt a firmer explanation" of the job slump, Ross said. The President's Council of Eco- nomic Advisers, often quick to use new economic figures to back the case for a tax hike, had no com- ment on the report. The over-all jobless rate for Come Hear DR. BENJAMIN SPOCK sponsored by The New Politics Party S . 17th 7:45 P.M. AnnAror High Auditorium I Since 1965 white workers rose from 3.6 to 3.8 per cent, and the rate for non- whites-mostly Negroes--went up from 7.9 to 8.8 per cent. Total employment rose 550,000 in October, the expected increase, but an unexpectedly large rise of 600,000 in the labor force erased the job gains. The year's increase in employ- ment was entirely in such service- type jobs as state and local gov- ernment and retail trade. The bureau said much of the 260,000 decline in manufacturing jobs the last year was due to workers on strikes - running at the highest level in 15 years. Strikers are not counted as un- employed, but they are stricken from job lists. The figures reflected a real slowdown in the growth of manu- facturing employment, the' bu- reau said. ie Ring Of the 27 jailed, 24 were charged with conspiring to violate state gambling laws in what Kelley de- scribed as. a $100,000-a-month football betting operation in Livo- nia, Flint and Lapeer. Five persons also were charged with conspiracy to murder Charles Thomas, who was shot twice in the head in a Pittsburgh area motel. Police said Thomas had been work- ing with them to help break a counterfeiting ring. Gambling Kelley said three of the 27 also have been charged by federal au- thorities with gambling violations in interstate commerce .One of the three also was held for transport- ing a stolen auto across a state line. He said a two-month investiga- tion of the alleged crime ring in- volved his office, federal agents, and police in Flint, Detroit, Livo- nia, Ohio and Pennsylvania. Large-Scale "The investigation revealed that several individuals originally oper- ating out of the Flint area had set up a large-scale criminal oper- ation and had been involved in robberies, burglaries, check pass- ing, car theft, prostitution opera- tions and gambling in various parts of the state and in Ohio and Pennsylvania," Kelley said. The same persons and others, Kelley added, were involved in a $100,000-a-week football betting operation in which betting cards were circulated in state bars and' factories. I /111/, el Egypt Asks UN Session UNITED NATIONS-Impatient after long weeks of fruitless nego- tiations, Egypt called yesterday for an urgent meeting of the U.N. Security Council and set the stage for a confrontation of rival plans for a Middle East settle- ment. The request came in the midst of heated bargaining over a new United States draft resolution that Americans had hoped would break the prolonged deadlock over Israeli withdrawal from Arab territory captured in the six-day war last June and continued Arab belligerence toward Israel. Soon after the Egyptian re- quest was submitted, two resolu- tions were introduced-one by the U.S., and the other by India, Mali and Nigeria. Members of the 15-nation coun- cil consulted on the time of the meeting but said it might not be held until tomorrow. The council is scheduled to meet this after- noon on a complaint from the Congo. Both the U.S. draft and the three-power proposal would au- thorize the sending of a special representative to the Middle East to try to work out a settlement between the parties, but they dif- conclusions were based. controllers. Surveyors 1, 3, and 5 The committee, in a report to soft-landed successfully. Surveyors the Senate Oct. 25, said it had 2 and 4 failed. found no facts showing any con- At a nearby launch pad, the nection between payments to space agency Monday at 10:30 p.m. Long by St. Louis attorney Morris officialy began the countdown for A. Shenker and Long's conduct of an unmanned flight test tomorrow a wiretap investigation. of the first Saturn 5 rocket-type Life accused Long of misusing craft which is to one day propel ~ - - - - - --- - - - - --U Grad Student Council BRUNCH of Bagel, Lox, etc. SUNDAY, November 12, 12 noon John N. Garner Citizens for New Politics GENERAL MEETING 8:00 P.M.-THURSDAY at Our New Office 109 Miller I -I CINEMA 11 1 presents "SMILES OF A SUMMER NiGHT" Ingmar Bergman, Dir. plus. Chapter 3 FLASH GORDON I UNION-LEAGUE WINTER WEEKEND '68 needs interested people NOW for the following committees: * Booklet * Friday Night * Secretary Sign up this week at Senior offices of theleague SERGEI EISENSTEIN FESTIVAL TON IGHT 7:00 & 9:05 ARCH ITECTURE AUDITORIUM TEN DAYS SHOOK THE Eisenstein's vivid account the Bolshevik Revolut Cinema Guild's showing of th cides with the 50th Anniversary Nov 7, 1917. c I A lIVCr rUIL THAT WORLD 1928) of the events of ion of 1917. is great film coin- of the Revolution, Fri., Nov. 10 Aud. A, 't° a . Sat., Nov. 11 Angell Hall 3iILLVI'ILI :Uci L' I i 7:00 &9:15 P.M. 50c /11el -Donation- I I U Sabbath Service FRIDAY at 7:15 P.M. MISSION IMPOSSIBLE- UNION-LEAGUE VIET NAM why we can never win in South East Asia MIKE WINTERS THIS WEEK at h' (ARK 1421 Hill Street TORAH SERVICE Reading of Lech Lekha in the Triennial cycle 8:30 P.M. I III II