SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER, 10, 1966 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 196G TIlE MICHIGAN DAILY aGE THREE aa V LO Henry Ford Strike Nears Agreement Disputes in Riverview, Traverse City Still Block Starr of School The faculty and administration of Henry Ford Community Col- lege in Dearborn reached an agreement in principle yesterday to end the four-day old teacher strike at the schools but details of the new contract remain to be resolved. The agreement between Henry Ford College Federation of Teach- ers and the Dearborn Board of Education, which administers the school, essentially accepted the fact-finding report issued by How- ard Cole of Ann Arbor Thursday. A meeting of the college's 150 teachers was planned last night to consider acceptance of the agreement. James Tobin, attorney for the Dearborn school board said he hoped that the board would also consider the agree- ment Friday night. This tentative pact brought hope for a quick end to one of the three teachers' walkouts affecting Michi- gan schools. Riverview Strike The Riverview Education Asso- ciation. charging a violation of teachers' constitutional rights, filed suit against the Riverview Board of Education. Meanwhile. efforts were under way to solve a "no contract-no work" teacher walkout that has caused officials to place 3,000 children on half days at Traverse City. The Riverview association, bar- gaining agent for the 150 teach- ers in the Detroit suburb, accused the board of refusing to bargain in good faith and imposing "ar- bitrary and unreasonable condi- tions" on teachers' return to work. The Riverview board announced Thursday it would not negotiate further with the teachers until they return to work. The district's 3.000 pupils were to have started classes Thursday but stayed home because of the strike. Arrogant Refusal The association also charged the board with "arrogantly refus- 4 ing" to continue negotiations as requested by the Michigan Labor Mediation Board, refusing to em- power its bargaining team to en- gage in "meaningful negotiations" and attempting to deprive teachers of "vested property rights," in- cluding accumulated leave days l under previous contracts. A hearing date on the suit was not immediately set. After a marathon series of sep- arate bargaininig sessions that ended early yesterday in Traverse City. the Traverse City Education Association, bargaining agent for the teachers, turned down a school board proposal asking the teach- ers to return to work. The board asked the teachers Thursday night to return to work The board asked the teachers Thursday night to return to work and accept the recommendations of a state Labor Mediation Board fact-finder. who suggested tax money once allocated for a com- munity college be devoted to tea- cher salaries. In a counter-proposal. a spokes- man for the education association said the teachers accepted most of the board's offer. The spokesman said, however, the association still sought "the readjustment of cur- rent budget money" for teacher salaries. Y 2 r r x r E z } t { T . GI Receives 1BOMB NEAR SAIGON 5 Years At Hard Labor U.S. Planes Attack Viet Cong To Thwart Election Sabotage Pvt. Sanas Shaken SAIGON, South Viet Nam :- After Court Delivers United States jets and helicop- ters lit up Saigon yesterday with Maximum Sentence bombs, flares and tracer bullets in an attack on guerrillas operat- FT. DIX, N.J. (P-Pvt. David A. ing at the very edge of the city, Samas, 20, of Modesto, Calif.. was evidently in the Communist drive found guilty yesterday of refus- to disrupt tomorrow's election. in-, togo to Viet Nam and sen- About 30 of the black-uniform- tenced to five years at hard ed Viet Cong were reported to have labor. crossed a canal that forms Sai- A 10-man military court also gon's southern boundary and ordered that hp hPivn. ic hidden among the houseboats. u The bombing and strafing de- veloped, along with a bombard- ment of suspected Red approach routes by 105mm batteries ringing the capital, as the government s t a r t e d switching Vietnamese troops to election guard duty. American and other foreign for- ces, whose 350,000 men total about half South Viet Nam's military personnel, were left to take up slack in field work until the voters choose a constituent assembly, in- tended to put the wartorn nation on the road to democracy. Vietnamese soldiers and militia- SCRUB ASTRONAUT RICHARD GORD' was scheduled -for yesterday mor fuel line in the Titan 2 rocket 1 SNCC LEADER JA h 4} -Assoc GEMINI 11 LAUNCH ON practices a maneuver for the flight of Gemini 11. The ning but had to be canceled when a tiny leak was discovel booster. The launch has been rescheduled for today. -L-----E ILED: Carmichael Held in Atlanta; Charged w1th Incntlg Rots ATLANTA, Ga. (P) - Stokely Meanwhile, U.S. Dist. Atty.' government property an Carmichael, a "black power" ad- Charles Goodson said his office ing with the Selective S vocate accused of inciting a riot and the Federal Bureau of Inves- ! Scores of persons wer which left 15 persons injured, wai- i and 15 injured in Tues ved preliminary hearing yesterday tigation are investigating possible ing which included brick and was ordered_ held for grand violation of federal law during an bottle throwing. Polio jury action under $10,000 bond. incident at an Army induction broke up a milling crow Carmichael, 25, chairman of center in Atlanta last month. 500 Negroes with tear ga the Student Nonviolent Coordina- Investigate SNCC forts by Mayor Ivan Al ting Committee, was transferred Goodson said federal authorities talk to the rioters went from the city jail to the Fulton are investigating SNCC members Tllen braved flyin County jail pending his release on in relation to the disturbance thrown by Negroes and, bond or action by the grand jury. which resulted in the arrest of 12 car when it was surroi The jury was in session Friday, Negro antiwar demonstrators who to jump from the top but recessed without considering attempted to batter down a door rocked back and fort the case. A spokesman said it and prevent entry of Army induc- crowd of demonstrato would be.next week or possibly the tees. "Let there be no following before Carmichael's case The federal official said the in- standing of our intenti would be heard. vestigation concerns possible vio- apprehension of these Hearing Delayed lation of laws covering damage to ers," Allen said. A hearing for Carmichael-ar- rested on a state charge of inciting 'ONLY EFFECTIVE GO VERNiIM a riot and a city charge of creat-_ ing a disturbance-was delayed Friday when attorney Howard" Moore, Jr., asked for more time to Rodesian High prepare his case. Moore later waived the hearing on both charges, and Municipal " " Judge T. C. Little fixed bond of I3 l1t SSC $900on the state charge and $1,000 on the city charge. Little sent both charges to the By The Associated Press chaos and a vacuum it grand jury for consideration. The Rhodesian high court held this court should give Carmichael ignored questions yesterday that Prime Minister Ian such measures of the asked by newsmen as he left the Smith's rebel regime is unlawful government, both legis courtroom. but is the nation's only effective administrative, as coul Awaits Grand Jury government and must be obeyed. have been taken by the 1 An SNCC official, James For- Smith welcomed the ruling as ernment under the 19 man, said at a news conference at "very good news for us." He told tution." the organization's headquarters 2,000 persons attending an agri- Smith, who declared that Carmichael was expected to cultural show opening that Rho- dence rather than bow remain in jail pending grand jury desia will press on along the road demands for an ultimat findings. on which it started with its dec- the black majority, told "The last word we have from Mr. laration of independence last No- at the agricultural shov Carmichael is that he is a politi- vember. No Appeasemen cal prisoner," Forman said. "He Ruling that Britain still held "We have no intentio was captured by the police. And sovereign power in Rhodesia, the ing to appeasement and for this reason he wants to stay in high court said the constitution maintain our standards jail" rproclaimed by Smith after his de- way of life." Forman said 17 members of SN- claration of independence "is not He claimed the rea CC were in jail in Atlanta and the lawful constitution of this Commonwealth prime their bonds totaled some $70,000. country and the government of were not attending th William Ware and Bogby Vance this country set up under it is not London conference was Walton, are free on bond of the lawful government. they left their own coun charges of inciting to riot in the "The government is, however, might return to find the lence in a predominantly Negro the only effective government of er held their positions. same disturbance. They were ar- the country," the ruling continued, ference is debating acti rested during an outbreak of vio- "and therefore on the basis of taken against Rhodesia's section Tuesday. necessity and in order to avoid gime. v1Uc U ,1aU11 e given a as- > rhonorable discharge and forfeit all pay and allowances. Two companions similarly con- victed received prison terms at hard labor Wednesday and earlier Friday. The court deliberated 14 min- iated Press utes before announcing sentence. It had deliberated 25 minutes l reaching the guilty verdict. Samas had been charged with willfully e launch disobeying an order on July 14 red in a that he board an aircraft bound for Saigon from nearby McGuire Air Force Base. Samas appeared shaken by the sentence. Earlier yesterday, PFC. James A. Johnson Jr., 20, New York, was sentenced to five years at hard la- bor. dishonorable discharge and forfeiture of pay. On Wednes- day, Pvt. Dennis Mora, 25, New York, received a three-year sen- tence on the same charge. The sentences are subject to review and appeal through mili- d interfer- tary channels. The last resort is a ervice Act. three-judge civilian panel, the re arrested Military Court of Appeal. day's riot- Johnson testified for 15 min- k, rock and utes yesterday. He said he felt he ce finally would be a "criminal" if he fought vd of about in Viet Nam. He told the court: "I as after ef- feel our country went halfway len, Jr., to around the world to get into a civ- unheeded.: ii war. Peasants are being bombed g objects and gassed so our country can was forced have a stronghold in Southeast funded and Asia." of a police He said to fight in Viet Nam h by the "would make me lose my personal rs. respect and dignity." He cited misunder- the Nuernburg war trials, saying ons in the he felt it was his right and duty lawbreak- to disobey an order he felt would make him a criminal. [ENT': ourt Holds ion l Unlawful shanties and slum dwellings of the 4th Precinct. Vietnamese po- lice moved into root them out. USSR-Viet Leaders Meet, Hint Peace Bid MOSCOW Y)-A high-ranking North Vietnamese delegation met here yesterday with Soviet Com- munist party chief Leonid I. Brez- hnev amid unsupported specula- tion of Moscow - Hanoi peace moves in Viet Nam. Diplomatic sources noted that the Soviet press had described the Hanoi delegation earlier as an eco- nomic mission. And in addition, North Viet Nam's Foreign Minis- try issued a sharp formal state- ment terming Communist troop infiltration into South Viet Nam a "myth" created by the United States. It also rejected as a hoax Presi- dent Johnson's statement that he will schedule withdrawal of U.S. forces from Viet Nam if anyone shows him a schedule when infil- tration from the North is halted. Communist sources said the del- egation was here to discuss Soviet economic aid and possibly political matters, including relations with Red China. An official Soviet announcement said Brezhnev met in "an atmos- phere of friendship and cordial- ity" with North Vietnamese Depu- ty Premier Le Thanh Nghi. Le is a member of Hanoi's ruling Com- munist politburo. The brief an- nouncement did not disclose what was discussed. The Soviet delegation included two key officials in charge of re- lations with foreign Communist parties, strongly suggesting that the talks may have touched on China's role in Hanoi. The two were party Secretaries Mikhail A. Suslov and Yuri A. Andropov, both ranking Soviet ex- perts on ideological problems and relations with other Communist parties. Reports of the visit touched off speculation from Yugoslav sources that Hanoi was moving away from Chinese influence and closer ot Moscow, possibly making Hanoi more receptive to peace proposals. In other diplomatic activity yes- terday North Viet Nam termed Communist troop infiltration into South Viet Nam a myth created by the United States. It rejected as a hoax President Johnson's statement that he will schedule withdrawal of all U.S. forces from Viet Nam if anyone shows him a schedule when infil- tration from the North will be halted. men were being posted at the 5,- 238 polling places to combat rising Communist terrorism which, in incidents Friday, claimed five more lives. Revise Casualties The U.S. Command finally made public its revised figures on cas- ualties from the accidental na- palm bombing of a 1st Infantry Division unit in a jungle battle north of Saigon Aug. 26. Maj. Gen. William E. DePuy told newsmen confidentially at the time 22 sol- diers were killed and 26 wounded. A spokesman said Wednesday investigation showed the flaming canisters killed very few and that some of the casualties originally attributed to the napalm were due to enemy action. The revised fig- ures, as released officially Friday: three killed, 19 wounded. The radical Buddhist leadership, splintered by Ky's alternate tough- ness and adroit political maneuv- ering, mustered a dozen monks for a protest march on the U.S. Em- bassy. Although the demonstration was a pale shadow of past efforts, it brought an immediate police crackdown. Eight monks were ar- rested. Several hundred monks in Sai- gon and-Hue were on a three-day hunger strike to focus attention on Thich Tri Quang, the leader of the militant Buddhist movement who entered the 94th day of his fast. He has said he will fast until Ky's military regime is out. He subsists on dextrose solution. World News Roundup By The Associated Press W A S H I N G T O N-President Johnson signed the landmark au- to-highway safety package into law yesterday and told the na- ion's carmakers they should "build in more safety without building on more costs." The President's message to the auto manufacturers, many of whom were at the ceremony in the White House rose garden, ap- parently was prompted by some predictions that car prices are going up because of increased steel costs and because some safety fea- ures are becoming standard equip- ment. * * * WASHINGTON - The admini stration's civil rights bill flound ered in a sea of Senate aputhy yesterday. Efforts to round up a quorum of 51 senators to discuss a motion were abandoned after about three hours and a recess was taken un- til next week. WASHINGTON - The United States in effect turned down yes- terday a North Korean proposal for a conference of the powers involved in the Korean War to settle the 'Korean question. The North Korean proposal, by passing the United Nations, drew from State Department press offi cer Robert J. McCloskey a Strong endorsement of the U.N. formula for the unification of Korea. * * * BELGRADE, Yugoslavia - Con troversial Yugoslav author Mihajlo Mihajlov was released provision- ally from jail yesterday apparently to sand trial within two weeks. He told newsmen from Zadar, where he was released from Jail, that he had been indicted on charges of spreading "false in- formation about socio-political" conditions in Yugoslavia. n the law, effect to effective lative and td lawfully awful gov- 61 consti- indepen- to British te vote for the crowd w: nt n of bow- d we shall s and our son some ministers te current because if atries, they y no long- The con- on to be s white re- - At the 22-nation Commonwealth conference broke up for the week- end last night with delegates split broadly on racial lines over Rho- desia. Some, however, held hope for a compromise to end the Afri- can colony's 10-month-old rebel- lion. No Detail Yet This compromise plan, still to be spelled out in detail, will be heavily pressed on the more mili- tant African - Asian delegations during informal meetings over the weekend. Its essence emerbed from a 30- minute Conference address by Ca- nada's prime minister, Lester B. Pearson. He appealed in effect for time to allow a stiffened version of existing sanctions to take ef- fect. If they failed, he suggested the full weight of a United Nations embargo on trade with Rhodesia could be considered, starting per- haps with oil. tAr Cd ...SOML Ammmh - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - II AUDITIONS if you missed our mass meeting you can still sign up for an audition or committee position CALL for orchstra for cost j bruce fisher 665-8528 ack rause 663-6055 -Julie Snow for central committee richard rattner 662-3484 auditions Sunday, Sept. 1 .. 2:00-5:00 and 7:00-11:00 Monday, Sept. 12 .............7:30 to 11:00 Friday, Sept. 16 ..............Results Posted this is MICHAEL COONEY and gandolf, we need say no more! See him this weekend The University of Michigan Bands announce that pianist-comed- ian Victor Barge will appear in concert in Hill Auditorium on Thursday, tt.ia.6a. t 30 R P..PM roceeds frtm thA encert will a to the .c. -a. .... 0 .:Dr) .. ..... 1I 1-7 r^ . rr rII ri.,sat .,sun. b :ijU p.m i./- per person II' !I'i