SATURDAY, JULY 23 1966 THE, MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THR SATURDAY, JULY 23, 1966 TIlE MICUIGAN DAILY PAi~uI~ TUT i Ci Vf Li ,i ili\ Seeks Airline Government-Run s DuringStrikes employes continued to lose back to work under such a court Morse proposal was referred, said million a day in wages. order while the union and airlines it was too early to say what action, e struck lines-Eastern, Na- negotiators would be directed to if any, might be taken on the Q, Northwest, Trans World continue bargaining. bill. Morse said he couldn't United-estimate they are Sen. Ralph Yarborough (D- imagine Congress not turning out g $7 million a day in revenues, Tex), chairman of the Senate some legislation by next Wednes- ndetermined portion of which Labor subcommittee to which the day at the latest. Dutch Wage BROOKLYN RIOTS: IEIF U Verbal War With Chinese I Increase Police Reserves; Rioting Spreads Through City Repect To Get Charge of Plot Commnists WASHINGTON (PA)-A plan for a government takeover to end the airlines strike was presented in the Senate yesterday. The chief of the striking union promptly de- clared that the proposal lessens chances for early settlement of the 15-day walkout. "Compulsory arbitration is com- pulsory servitude," the machinists union president, P. L. Roy Sie- miller, said of the proposal by Sen. Wayne Morse (D-Ore). Morse proposed a law to order the strikers back to work while the government directs operation of the airlines. "Sen. Morse has given them (the airlines) a new excuse to delay genuine bargain- ing," Siemiller said. He also replied to the comment of the chief airline negotiator, William J. Curtin, who said it was "a sad day when an irresponsible union" makes it necessary to con- sider such legislation. 'Sad Day' "It is a sad day when corporate management refuses to live up to its responsibilities to share a small portion o fits abundant profits with the employes who helped build the industry," Siemiller said. "It is also a sad day when Con- gress isasked to deny freedom to any portion of our society." Siemiller answered affirmatively when asked if he feels Morse's move worsens chances for settle- ment. This, embittered exchange came while negotiations to end the walk- out already were in a talk-and-no- action phase while 66,000 strike- idled $1.6 Th tiona and losing an ur will be recovered through an agreement under which nonstruck lines will share profit gains trac- ing to the walkout. Chairman Morse was chairman of a presi- dential emergency board which, prior to the strike, recommended a compromise wage hike of 48 cents spread over a 42-month contract. The airlines hiked their offer to about 50 cents over 42 hours before negotiations nearly broke off, then dragged on, going no- where. "The public interest is para- mount," Morse said in urging that the strike be ended at the earliest possible moment in the national interest. Morse said his proposed legis- lation would not deprive either side of their collective bargaining rights. The White House gave no sign of supporting any emergency legis- lation to break the strike of 35,000 AFL-CIO mechanics, who are de- manding the 53 cent an hour wage increase spread over three years. If a national emergency were declared under the Morse proposal, a federal court would name a special receiver to take over the airlines and run them for up to two years for the government. The strikers would have to go ASIAN PEACE: Rusk Says Door To Talks Still Open WASHINGTON OP) - Secretary of State Dean Rusk told Moscow yesterday "we agree" with the need for compliance with the Geneva accords for peace in Southeast Asia-"so let's get go- ing on it." Among other things, the Com- munists have refused so far to agree to a reconvening of the 1954 Geneva Conference which pro- duced accords for peace, inde- pendence and neutrality for In- dochina, and the similar 1962 Ge- Rusk cautioned a questioner who neva Conference on Laos. wanted to know why United States The Communists accuse the planes do not bomb North Viet United States of violating the Ge- Nam's principal port, Haiphong- neva accords. Washington says the "and to hell with Russian ship- Communists are the violators. ping" there. Rusk voiced regret that the So- "We could make this a larger viets and the British, co-chair- war very quickly," Rusk replied. men of the Geneva agreements But the best interests of the parleys, have not agreed on re- United States, ' he said, are to convening the Southeast Asia "keep open the possibility of a talks. The Kremlin recently re- prompt and peaceful conclusion buffed a bid by Britain's Prime without a general war if we can." Minister Harold Wilson on this is- Speaking to the International sue. Platform Association, an organiza- Noting that both the Moscow tion of professional lecturers, Rusk communique following French kept emphasizing what he said is President Charles de Gaulle's vis- a U.S. desire to get discussions it and the communique of the going on a peaceful solution of Pact meeting have called for com- the Southeast Asian conflict. Communist East Europe Warsaw t 1 Y T To Defect To West THE HAGUE, Netherlands (P)- The Dutch and Red Chinese gov- ernments waged a diplomatic war of words yesterday. Peking accused the Netherlands of working with United States agents to get Chi- nese diplomats to "betray their country." Red China declared that the Dutch charge d'affairs, G. J. Jongejans in Peking was unwel- come but added that he would not be allowed to leave until a team of Chinese engineers now in the Netherlands returns home. The Dutch Foreign Ministry charged Peking's action was in defiance of international rules of diplomacy, since the Chinese en- gineers do not have diplomatic immunity. Here is the sequence of events: Hsu Tzu-tsai, a member of the visiting team of Chinese engineers, was found outside the Chinese legation in The Hague last Satur- day suffering from a fractured skull and spinal injuries. He was taken to a hospital. But four members of the Red Chinese staff spirited him away, returned him to the legation and refused to give him up. He died the next day. Incensed, the Dutch government ordered Li En-chiu, charge d'af- faires, to get out of the country, and he left. Peking declared Jongejans per- sona non grata yesterday but said he would be held until the engineers left Holland. The Dutch, however, want to question the en- gineers, who had been attending an international conference at Delft, about Hsu's death. Peking said the expulsion of Jongejans was retaliation for Li's expulsion and then engaged in some anti-U.S. propaganda. It said Hsu was injured when he leaped from a legation window in an attempt to defect. Dutch police reported they had no evidence of this. The statement from Peking said the Dutch government had plan- ned with U.S. secret agents to "in- cite" Chinese diplomats "to be- tray their country" and had "grossly violated the elementary principles of international rela- tions." The Dutch statement denied any attempt to persuade Hsu to defect. It asid the Chinese statement was "made in an unacceptable language and with imputations while the case was presented in a way entirely in contradiction to the facts. The Dutch government completely rejects this version." E NEW YORK (R) - Police re- serves were bolstered yesterday against any explosion of Brook- lyn's race rioting into other parts of a tense, volatile city during a hot, humid summer weekend. May- or John V. Lindsay called upon New Yorkers to "stay calm." "We are prepared for something similar to what we had last night," said Police Commissioner Howardi R. Leary. But he added that if the rioting in Brooklyn does not grow in intensity, "I don't expect it to spread to other areas." Leary scheduled the deployment of 1000police in the East New York tenement slum section of Brooklyn, where an 11-year-old' Negro boy was killed Thursday night by a sniper's bullet, during sharp but limited disorders. The commissioner also urged a voluntary curb on East New York youths, asking that they be kept home with their families, and off the streets at night. However, he declined to say whether he might seek a curfew. East New York fire companies also were manned at full strength, mindful of a pattern of arson that has afflicted other cities during were there and the two groups fell racial riots, upon each other in sporadic clash- Mayor Lindsay, who visited the es with clubs and bottles. The East New York area shortly be- shooting of young Dean brought fore Thursday night's outbreak of more Negroes spilling into the violence, called an emergency City streets, and police reserves were Hall meeting of his aides. summoned. "We are deeply concerned about - Bottles, bricks and fire bombs this situation," the Republican were flung from roof tops and mayor said of the East New York shop windows were smashed. rioting that involved Italians and An unidentified Negro onlooker Negroes. Eric Dean, 11, was killed declared: "This is strictly a race by a shot in the chest. problem. Poverty is no longer the Police headquarters determined cause here. There'll be a blood that the youngster was killed by bath tomorrow night." a .25 caliber bullet, probably from East New York has seethed all a foreign made gun. Leary said week with racial tension. In fight- the death weapon was not a police ing Monday night, a Negro woman pistol. suffered a minor gunshot wound. Lindsay earlier in the evening The area is mostly Negro and had met with leaders of the Ital- Puerto Rican, with an enclave of ian-American community of East Italian-Americans still remaining. New York in a restaurant. The latter reportedly have long Outside, teenaged whites chant- held the line against further Ne- ed anti-Negro slogans, such as gro and Puerto Rican encroch- "Long Live Jim Crow." ment along New Lots Avenue, Meanwhile, Negroes reportedly which divides the two sectors. were angered because Lindsay had "We've known about the ten- limited his visit to the Italian sions for a long time," Lindsay told area. A group of Negro youths newsmen. "It's a very, very sen- marched upon the restaurant, but sitive community with very abra- the mayor had left. sive tensions that have been alive However, the white youths still for a period of time." World News Roundup .,.' Am#ErmmmiM~mm m smmsmgsam DeAILY OFFICIALm BULL%%%%mEMWY.m%0ETINsmsmamss h t tf .; ' ii Fi kft ?Y al. "' J 3. _F pliance with the Geneva agree- ments, Rusk said "We agree." "Of course we will comply with the Geneva accords," he said. Rusk said "the United States is not the obstacle to peace. Amer- ica is trying to stop aggression in Viet Nam in order to deter po- tential aggressions around the world." The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of. Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editor- ial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3519 Administration Bldg. be- fore 2 p.m. of the day preceding publication and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday. General Notices may be published a maxi- mum of two times on request; Day Calendar items appear once only. Student organization notices are not accepted for publication. SATURDAY, JULY 23 e neral Notices Lecture: Thomas F. MacIntyre, Irish short story writer, critic and lecturer, will lecture "On Writing Short Stories" in Aud. C, Angell Hall, at 4 p.m. on Mon., July 25. All interested persons are invited to attend. Doctoral Examination for Myron Wish, Psychology; thesis: "A Struc- tural Theory for the Perception of Morse Code Signals and Related Rhyth- mic Patterns," Mon., July 25, Room 3419 Mason Hall, at 10 a.m. Chairman, R. A. Hefner.- previous exper" preferred, not neces- sary. By The Associated Press LONDON--American and French buyers helped push up the pound to its highest level in five weeks yesterday. The rise seemed to sig- nal a slow revival of confidence in Britain's money. But uncertainties about Prime Minister Harold Wilson's ability to see his crisis program of de- flation through still hung over the world's money markets. * * * LONDON-The House of Com- mons voted overwhelmingly yes- terday in favor of a law legalizing abortions where justified on medi- cal advice. The terms of the legislation authorize an abortion where two doctors decide it is necessary ,for the health of the mother or where there is substantial risk of a child's being born deformed. MOSCOW-Soviet cultural au- thorities are detouring the jazz combo of an American pianist, Earl "Fatha" Hines, away from the country's two largest cities. Officially, the American em- bassy had not been informed yes- Phone 482-2056 (44a'wO'CARPENTER ROAD Open 7:00-Now Showing terday of last-minute schedule changesuthat will keep the Hines group out of Moscow and Lenin- grad. No reason was given officially for the change, but it appeared to fit in with what American of- ficials have called Soviet harass ment on the cultural front due to friction over the war in Viet Nam.1 * * * WASHINGTON-A new clash! between Sen. J. W. Fulbright (D-' Ark) and the White House devel- oped yesterday when Fulbright suggested there is a "Johnson Doctrine" for U.S. protection and aid to non-Communist Asian na- tions. The senator, chairman of the1 Senate Foreign Relations Com- mittee, called on his colleagues to think over the administration's Asian doctrine, as he called it,' "before it becomes an irrevocable national commitment undertaken without the consent or even the knowledge of the Senate." "There is a possibility that out- siders were involved," Leary said of the disorders. He was inclined to blame the violence on teen- aged hoodlums. However, Lindsay said: "While a lot of teenagers were involved- and I would say they were primar- ily teenagers-that doesn't mean too much. The problem is _deeper than that." Passport Pictures Application Pictures Group Pictures Wedding Pictures Available at any time Ready Quickly CALL NO 3-6966 Are you FUN to be with? Are your dates FUN to be with? We are FUN to be with!- Michigan Scientific Introduction Service 216 S. State-662-4867 For further information please call ~ 764-7460, Bureau of Appointments, Gen-- eral Division, 3200 sAB. i on Curtaini ORGAN IZATION Nations Seek 3 t r l I i ] Z i Doctoral Examination for Verne Ed- Day tc 'tt~tl ean Collins, Music; thesis: "Music In ay Calendar Ann Arbor High School," Tues., July Cinema Guild-'Key Largo": Archi- 26, Room 2277 School of Music, at 2:30 tecture Aud~, 7 and 9 p.m. p.m. Chairman, A. P. Britton. Dept. of Speech University Playerslac men Performance - Harold Pinter's "The Birthday Party": Lydia Mendelssohn POSITION OPENINGS: Theatre, 8 p.m. University of Wisconsin Medical School, Madison, Wis.-Research vac- 1 in]dnees. Two positions in Veteran's Ad- Events Sunday ,., aa"~ ::Ee l r 6 mnistraton Hospital, one technical School of Music Degree Recital __duties of non routine nature in hem- Philip Skelton, violinist: Recital Hall, atology, other in animal surgery lead- School of Music, 4:30 p.m. ing to assisting in surgery. Others in ________following fields: Pharmacology, Physt- School of Music Degree Recital - ological Chemistry, Experimental Surg- Mary Johnson. pianist: Recital Hall, ery. Entomology. Oncology, Neurology, school of Music. 8:30 p.m. Pathology, Phys. Ed. BS needed for ________most, men and women. Local Insurance Co.-Secretary. Gen- Events IM onda y eral secretarial duties, shorthand, typ- myin and some bookkeeping. Prefer some Audio-Visual Education Center Film college bkgd. Immediate opening. Preview-"Israel" and "John Cabot: a Local Research Institute - Research Man of the Renaissance": Multipurpose assistant to work on community deci- Room, Undergraduate Library, 1:30 p.m. sion making in regard to public health issues, assess voting habits and opinion English Dept. Lecture-Thomas F. formation. Woman, some poli. sci. or MacIntyde, short story writer, critic soc science course work preferred. No and lecturer, "On Writing Short Stor- previous exper. necessary. les": Aud. C, Angell Hall, 4 p.m. t Rehabilitation Programs, Inc., Pough- keepsie, N.Y.-Speech Therapist treat- University Musical Society Summer ing cerebral palsied children and young Series Concert - Grant Johannesen, adults. BS/BA major in speech thera- pianist: Rackham Aud., 8:30 p.m. py. Applying for or member of ASHA, NOTICES USE OF THIS COLUMN FOR AN- NOUNCEMENTS is available to officially recognized and registered stundent or-I ganizations only. Forms are available In Room 1011 SAB. B'nai ,rithHillel Foundation, Grad- uate Student Councilmoonlight beach party, Sun., July 24, meet at 4:30 p.m. at 1429 Hill St. to leave for Silver Lake. Folk Dance Club (WAA), Folk dance, Mon., July 25, 8:30-10:30 p.m., Women's Athletic Bldg. s * University Lutheran Chapel, 1511 Washtenaw, worship services: "Christ's Mission to the Church," by Rev. Scheips, Sun., July 24, 9:4 5a.m. Bible class, 11 a.m.; supper speaker, Melvin Kiesch- nick, will discuss work in Hong Kong, at 6:45 p.m. Voice-SDS Educational Series, "Twen- tieth Century Revolutions," last pro- gram- Jim Bass speaks on "The Move- ment in Peru," Mon., July 25, 8 p.m., Rm. 3G Miehigan Union. General mem- bership meeting, final plans for Inter- national Days of Protest, Tues., July 26, 8 p.m., Rin. 3G Union. Michigan Christian Fellowship, Lec- ture-discussion (informal), Tues., JulyI 26, 7:30 p.m., Rm. 3RD Union. * * 0 Voice-SDS, General membership meet- ing, finalizing plans for International Days of Protest against the war in Viet Nam, Tues., July 26, 8 p.m., Rm. 3G Michigan Union. Stronger Ties VIENNA (AP)-A former Polish diplomat says Poland has worked out plans for a four-nation fed- eration in Eastern Europe to ar- rest the political and military dis- integration in the Soviet bloc led by Romania. Wladyslaw Tykocinski, once head of the Polish military mission in West Berlin, told Radio Free Eu- rope in an interview carried yes- terday that the plan was mas- ter-minded by the Polish Commu- nist party chief, Wladislaw Go- mulka, with Kremlin approval. ~~~ Richard Hayes of "Commonweal" called A THURBER CARNIVAL "A gaggle of unicorns and toads ..." DANCE at YM-YWCA Every Sat. Evening 9:00-Midnight Single People Only Admision: $1.50 Refreshments -ON- ~mmn=r rmm MOinMmmmmminmmm mmmmmmmmmmm..ureammm r r FRIDAY and SATURDAY FOCUS-THE AMERICAN FILM DIRECTOR JOHN HUSTON gr r , r I r * U r , I ! ! HUMPHREY BOGART, LAUREN BACAL L, r EDWARD G. ROB INSON, CLAIRE TREVOR a (Acadery Award), Lionel Barrymore, Thomas Gomez. * U I g SHORT: "H ELP! MY SNOWMAN'S BURN ING DONI"N I I HUMPHREY Sarng wrd * N THE ARCHITECTJRE AIRlTORIJM , r , r iArMrrrrrUN : IirTY C E NT * "ELP MYSNWANSBUNIGDON"- I' I I 1? 11 Rent, Buy, Sell Trade Thru Daily Classifieds x,. .. __.,.._ ___.. - ..._ .f z:.w ,ins HILLEL Graduate Student Council MOONLIGHT BEACH PARTY Sunday, July 24 * Silver Lake, meet at 1429 Hill St. at 4:30 promptly 0 cost 99c for dinner 0 for information call 663-41 29 i1 f Oum t w t ' ul yRI 4Wk>aDzz ipay. ip~es. iii F Lw wtI Imw RIOBad 4RADEPARTMENT ,CTORE A Piaw. Gnnimalt film . JEAN.CLAUDE BRIALY a MARIE L.AFORET SOPHIE DAUMIER a JEAN-PIERRE MARIELLE Now at the j /' InPANAVlS0 N . and METROCOLOR * ALSO - 4,SWIM, DOG,THE MONKEY Shown YOL oal PLUS "Race with the Wind" Color - Sports in Action 2 Color Cartoons i Presents II I Summer GRANT JOHANNESEN STUDENT DiIIECTORY 50c I I Renowned Concert Pianist and Recording Artist Nona reTC Monday, July 25, 8:30 in RACKHAM AUDITORIUM (appearing in Summer Concert Series) PROGRAM: Sonata No. 3 in B-flat . . I.i ' . . H n emt I l & "7 rm I III II