Page Three >ruary 15, 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY i Labor leaders predict the news today by The Associated Press and College Press Servic I few strike law changes MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (A' - Labor leaders don't think the White House plans to propose any .major changes in federal labor law despite President Nix- on'scall for "newapproaches" to deal with big strikes. "I don't think it means a hell of a lot," said S. Frank Raf- tery, president of the AFL-CIO Painters Union. "I'm not alarmed," added Pe- ter T. Schoemann, president of the AFL-CIO Plumbers Union. They were commenting on Nixon's news conference state- ment last Thursday that Taft- Hartley Act provisions for na- tional emergency strikes were outmoded and that his admin- istration will ask Congress for new legislation to deal w i t h such labor disputes. The only provision in feder- al labor law now for such a strike is an 80-day cooling off injunction. While union leaders fearrany stiffer restrictions on the right to strike, they don't believe Nix- on will propose any drastic changes in the law, "I don't think he will toy with the fundamentals," said Ed- ward J. Carlough, organizing director of the AFL-CIO Sheet Metal Workers Union. However, some of the union leaders, here for a series of AFL-CIO meetings, do think that any attempt to open up Taft-Hartley to changes might lead to what they consider. an- ti-labor proposals, Walter Mason, legislative re- presentative of the AFL-CIO Building and Construction Trades Department, said many proposals already before Con- gress would be harmful to or- ganized labor if enacted into law. These include proposals to ex- tend the 80-day cooling off in- junction to a longer period, to establish a U.S. labor court to replace the National Labor Re- lations Board in dealing w i t h labr disputes and to bring unions under antitrust laws. While Mason did not connect such pending bills in Congress with Nixon's news conference statement he said: "These proposals, if enacted, would be extremely detrimental to our trade union activity." Mason, in a report to the > Building Trades Department composed of 17 unions, said it is too early to judge the 'out- look for labor legislation in Congress. However, he said he doubted there will be any severe anti- labor laws passed but that neither does he see prospects for any pro-labor laws. Schoemann said he believed Nixon's statement was prompt- ed by the longshoremen's strike now in its second month on the East and Gulf coasts. "I do not believe that we have enough options in dealing with these kinds of disputes a n d breakdowns," Nixon said. "I have, therefore, asked the Department of Labor to dev- elop some new approaches in this field, and we will submit them by legislation this Con- gress," the president said. Union leaders are waiting for Secretary of Labor George P. Schultz to appear before the AFL-CIO meeting here next week to get further details on, what the Nixon administration might have in mind.' Schultz originally had b e e n scheduled to speak to this week's meeting of the Build- ing Trades Department. H o w - ever, AFL-CIO President George Meany vetoed this because he wanted Shultz to appear first before the full executive coun- cil of the 13.6 million member labor federation next week. /' -Associated Press Agnew gets expanded role PRESIDENT RICHARD M. NIXON signs an executive order establishing an office of Intergovern- mental Relations, to be under the supervision of Vice President, Spiro T. Agnew, left. The new office will attempt to coordinate activities among federal, state and local government. Anewworks--fr-rapport before thebatlsbegin or "PALACE OF PLEASURE" s IN COLOR AND DUEL PROJECTION!! A SENSUAL SPACE ODYSSEY FEATURING THE VOICE AND POETRY OF LEONARD COHEN 'Contains some of thedmostbeautiful color sequences ever filmed .., it abundantly demonstrates that split-screen techniques can be used for something more artistic than a "Chelsea Girls." -Chicago Tribune also on the same program: "LAPIS" by James Whitney, winner of innumerable awards, the most highly acclaimed psychedelic film ever made, music by Ravi Shanker. W. C. FIELDS in "The Dentist." LAUREL AND HARDY in "Two Tars," silent classic featuring fast cars and fast women with a great comic destruction scene. Also BETTY BOOP cartoon and GENE AUTREY, "America's Singing Cowboy," in a stoned science fiction serial, "Phantom Empire." benefit for "DIONYSUS '69" legal fund Mad Marvin Presents Underground Movies Thurs., Fri., Sat. and Sun, only at 11:00 P.M. Vth Forum Theatre 761.9700 WASHINGTON (;') - Vice President Spiro T. Agnew is making a special effort to estab- lish smooth working relations with senators from both 'parties .before the year's major legis- lative battles unfold. Agnew, the first vice presi- dent in 25 years without prior Senate experience, has been spending up to 30 per cent of his working time in the Capitol, presiding over the Senate and chatting with individual sena- tors. In addition, he has started a series of informal luncheons with small groups of senators for what Frank Da Costa, his legislative assistant, calls "both camaraderie and the exchange of ideas, not necessarily legisla- tive." At each of these, Agnew meets with six senators, Democrats us well as Republicans. Aides a1 u excluded. Later, Agnew hopes to extend the luncheons to House members. "He has been fortunate ,hat the slow early pace of Congress has enabled him to meet thes,: senators under relaxed lircum- stances and not be in a position of twisting arms," said Waiter Mote, a veteran of many years with the Senate Rules Commit- teee and the head of the vice president's Capitol staff. Agnew's main office is in the White House itself and most of his staff is quartered in the Ex- ecutive Office Building nerby. His aides agree, that, while the personal approach is important PETITIONING for CINEMA GUILD BOARD s Sign Up 2538 SAB II rixxxx4xxii 1h11111: BOB SEGER SYSTEM Original Charging Rhinoceros of Soul Teagarden and Van Winkle Fruit of the Loom Friday, Feb. 28 8-12 midnight EMU BOWEN FIELDHOUSE Ypsilanti, Mich. Adm. $1 TICKETS AVAILABLE: Discount Records, Ann Arbor; Hudson'T; Grinnells; McKenny Union, EMU F now, other factors will be more significant in the long run. "The substantive issues which are implicit in legislation will ultimatelydetermine what the relations are going to be," says Da Costa, who was civil rights aide to Agnew when he salved as governor of Maryland. While interested in establish- ing rapport with all of the sena- tors, Agnew has concentrated at the start on the leadership. Top Senate leaders attended his first luncheon, andhaides credit the many hours he has spent fulfilling his constitution- al duty as president of the Sen- ate to a remark made by Sen. Richard B. Russell (D-Ga) in welcoming Agnew on Jan. 21. "I hope that with all of the new duties that the press re- ports you will assume, it will not "mean you will desert the Senate or that chair, and that you will perform as often as possible the constitutional re- sponsibility of presiding over the Senate," Russell said. Ag- new evidently got the point. Presiding over the Senate fre- quently can be a routine chore, and vice presidents in the past have often turned over the as- signment to individual mem- bers. With the new administration still feeling its way and the breadth of Agnew's duties still awaiting concrete definition, his aides say it is too soon to say what-role he will play in helping pass President Nixon's legisla- tive program. But they see his lack of prior Capitol Hill experience as a pos- sible asset rather than a draw- back. "He doesn't have a legislative record," Da Costa said, adding that "he's not slotted in to fix positions" on the issues that will be coming up. Mote said this will enable Ag- new to support 'administration positions without having to wor- ry about conflicts with earlier viewpoints on legislative issues. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Publishbd daily Tuesday through Sunday morning University year. Sub- scription rates: $9.00 by carrier, $10.00 by mail. Rent your Roommate with a Classified Ad VICE PRESIDENT SPIRO T. AGNEW will coordinate relations among the various levels of government, Presi- dent Nixon announced yesterday. An office of Intergovernmental Relations under Agnew's supervision was created by executive order. The President hopes -the new office will bring together federal, state,and local governments by providing easier access to the federal government for local and state officials. Asked whether the creation of the new office completes the expansion of his role as promised by Nixon, Agnew said he feels "as volatile as gas. I'm constantly expanding." Nixon also suggested an eventual transfer of some fed- eral powers to state and local agencies. He refused, however, to designate which powers will be yielded. *!*! PERUVIAN TORPEDO BOATS fired on a group of American tuna boats fishing 26 miles off Peru's coast yesterday. One of the American vessels was damaged and captured. It was released, however, after its captain paid a fine to the Peruvian Navy. No Americans were reported injured. The incident was the latest of several confrontations be- tween U.S. fishing boats and authorities of western South American countries that claim territorial waters far broader than limits recognized by the United States. In Washington, Secretary of State William P. Rogers-pro- tested to the Peruvian ambassador, calling the attack "wholly unjustified." PAKISTAN'S STATE OF EMERGENCY was lifted yes- terday as President Mohammed Ayub Khan b o w e d to massive opposition pressure. In recent months the president has been the target of violent demonstrations staged by discontented students and workers. Angry mobs yesterday took over Pakistan's major cities in a one-day general strike against his regime and gov- ernment troops were called out to put down rioting in Kar- achi, the capital. Observers see Ayub's decision to end the state of emer- gency which has been in effect for 41 months as opening the way for a conference between the government and the eight- party opposition coalition. Ayub also released his main political foe, former Foreign Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, who had been detained for more than three months for "inciting Pakistani masses to violence." * . ! SIRHAN BISHARA SIRHAN was "in a trance" when he assassinated Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, his d e f e'n s e counsel said yesterday. Emile Zola Berman, one of three attorneys defending Sirhan, contended that at the time of the shooting Sirhan "was out of contact with reality, in a trance in which he had no voluntary control over his will, his judgment, his feelings or his actions." Sirhan's defenders do not plan to deny that he shot Ken- nedy, but will rely on psychiatric testimony to plead a de- fense of "diminished responsibility." The state yesterday began calling witnesses to try to prove that Sirhan shot Kennedy with "malice and premedita- tion." * -0! PORT OF NEW YORK'S 22,000 LONGSHOREMEN ended their strike yesterday when they voted to accept a new work contract. However, most of the other 75,000 members of the In- ternational Longshoremen's Association remained on strike as the eight-week-old walkout on the East and Gulf coasts drag- ged on. Officers of the I.L.A. hope the ratification by the New York longshoremen w o u l d pressure management in other ports from Maine to Texas into agreeing to union demands. The strike, the nation's longest waterfront walkout, has cost an estimated $15 million daily in lost wages and business and tied up more than 600 ships in port. COMMUNIST CHINA'S missile delivery system, now under development, will only be 50 per cent efficient, the Defense Department predicts. A D.O.D. spokesman said yesterday that the political un- rest in China which accompanied the cultural revolution of Mao Tse-Tung set back strategic weapons development. Nevertheless, Communist China is expected to have about 20 intercontinental missiles in launching position by 1975. Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird, now reviewing the Sentinel antimissile program, has said Sentinel would defend the nation against any possible attack f r o m Communist China. THE JUSTICE DEPARTMENT yesterday urged the Supreme Court to force the integration of privately op- erated recreation organizations. However, the government qualified its position so as to exclude what it called "bona fide private clubs. Citing the Civil Rights Acts of 1866 and 1964, the govern- ment said in a legal brief that Negroes have the right to pur- chase admission to privately owned clubs that are, in effect, open to almost any white while being closed to blacks. ii I I I [I mmmw DON'T MISS JOHN HAMMOND DOIN' IT TO IT ALL NIGHT "BLUES" at- "SOFT" I THUTOTMPTJ7 rPVP f7 rqt 0 I XBAapn -.,m WXM' --.ILS V" - r-,rrAw I