/ AT, AUGUST 3,1966 TH E MICHIGAN DAILY PA TT Iumv r 'lxL 1 ALtt£,Z . Johnson rp ;es Congress Strike Laws Administer WASHINGTON (') - President Johnson sent word to the Senate yesterday that he wanted legisla- tion that would halt the airline strike, but without saddling him with responsibility for ordering the machinists back to work. Senate Republican Leader Ever- ett M. Dirksen of Illinois report- ed receiving that presidential view in a telephone talk with Johnson. Dirksen's report came while the" Senate argued about legislation to get the five strikebound ma- jor airlines flying again. The strike of 35,000 members of the AFL ". CIO International Association of Machinists is now in its 26th day after Johnson's pact-making ef- fort had csollapsed over the week- end., Against'a backdrop of election- year politics, the Senate debate centered on the question of who -Johfson or Congress- should actually order thestrikers back to work. u Dirksen reported a joint Repub- lican-Democratic leadership effort to draft, with the help of Senate experts, a compromise that would share the responsibility-and the .: blame in labor's eyes-for a strike- stopping decision. Atty. Gen. Nicholas Katzenbach came to Capitol Hill to join that effort. The compromise plan may be in- troduced in the Senate today, the GOP leader said, "Certainly he wants legislation," Dirksen said of the President. Until this point, Johnson had avoided committing the adminis- tration to support a law ending the strike. U.S. SOLDIERS AWAI At the same time, Dirksen told reporters, Johnson does not want that legislation to put solely in heandsthe authority to order fA trA "The President believes that the * decision and the finding are a matter for the legislative branch of the government to make and D e nD es not for him to make," Dirksen Dn e I said.- Sen. Wayne Morse (D-Ore) has SAIGON W1) - United proposed legislation which would planes have struck a third have Congress rule that the strike the oil storage depotsc t has disrupted essential transpor- North Viet Nam's key port tation and order the strikers back phong. to their jobs for six months. The Senate Labor Committee This was announced in advocates a measure which would ington after North Viet make a similar determination but charged that U.S. planes require an executive order to stop Haiphong yesterday, "indi the strike. nately bombing residential "The crux," said Dirksen, "is who ters and factories." embraces the primary responsibil- The oil depot is situated ity to move in this matter-is it Haiphong dock area two the Congress or is it the Presi- northeast of the heart of t dent? The Defense Department "The general feeling is that there ought to be a shared respon- ment, issued in response sibility-if they can work it out,'' quiries from newsmen, sai he said. "There were numerous m Sen. Russell B. Long (D-La) by U.S. aircraft against PO quoted Katzenbach as questioning troleum, oil, lubricant) tar the legality of the bill that would North Viet Nam. One of have Johnson issue strike-ending missions was flown again orders. Haiphong POL storage are "No standards are expressed in liminary reports from the the resolution by which to guide indicate all ordnance was o the President in this extraordinary get." exercise of power," the attorney This was taken to mea general said in a letter to Long. the port itself was not hi Katzenbach said that would in- Pentagon did not elaborat vite court action challenging the ''That is all we are going action. at this time," a spokesman In the Senate, Sen. Peter H. A radio broadcast from Dominick (R-Colo) introduced hisA own compromise idea, a measure which would have Congress order P a 60-day end to the strike and p fesSi leave it to Johnson to extend that j for 120 more days if he chose. In the Senate and in private" huddles, lawmakers conceded that -nereasii the whole effort was clouded byant Lelectiohi-year politics and the vot- ing power of organized labor. (continued from Page ) Morse told the Senate that labor lobbyists are peering ovr the shoul- He cited other factors: der of the Senate, and he said As graduate studentsg sortie lawmakers-he did not name know their professors, the them-are reluctant to take re- many of them to be inte sponsibility for ending the strike people, living interesting liv with elections four months away. Along with the end of the "We've got some senators in about the dull, absent-minde Congress who say the President fessor, the myth about stun isn't a candidate in 1966 but we bureaucracy in governmentI are," Morse said. the dust. "The issue here is not compli- Mr. Munschauer strongly1 cated," he added. "It is as simple that, instead of lecturing t as election day." . dents for their lack of ap Morse said advocates of presi- tion of business, they might dential action want to pass the of the public image created buck to the White House and various competing sectors. avoid the blame by labor for a the modern student might forced return to work. loss to name "any mode He knows that labor backing and Andrew Carnegie," he rec contributions can be crucial to a the names of Nathan Pusey campaigning senator, Morse saidW.eGareaanC uke for he has had them-but he W Gardner, and Clark e added a lawmaker's responsibilities spectively president of I "go far beyond our obligations to Secretaiy of Health, Edu organized labor for° campaign sup- and Welfare, and president port." University of California. Sen. Frank J. Lausche (D-Ohio) Moreover, he warned, bu contended that Congress would be too often takes the negative ducking its responsibility if it conservative view on the ve passed Clark's bill authorizing the sues of social science which President to send the strikers back youth. He elaborated: to work. "Politicians and bureaucra Perth Amboy Scene Of More Riots Puerto Rican YouthsI Involved in Incidents In New Jersey City PERTH AMBOY, N.J. (R) Police arrested 26 adults and seven juveniles late yesterday as a rock- throwing disturbance broke out for the fourth straight night in a predominantly P u e r t o Rican neighborhood. The disturbance, involving about 100 youths, lasted less than an hour, police said. It was described as the worst of the four outbreaks. There were no immediate re- ports of injuries but police said several patrol cars were stoned. The 33 arrested were charged as disorderly persons. Sixty helmeted policemen of the city's 90-man force dispersed the crowd which had gathered in ap- parent defiance of a new anti- loitering law which some Puerto Ricans have charged was directed HARASSMENT REPORTED: Predict Exodus of Teachers From New Argentine Regime BUENOS AIRES ()--An exodus of university teachers and stu- dents from Argentina was preA dicted yesterday as a result of government seizure of the uni- versities and bloody police clash- es with students. "Many of the best professors will leave," said Warren Ambrose, a professor of mathematics from Massachusetts Institute of Tech- nology who has been teaching at the University of Buenos Aires. Amrose, 51, was caught in the battle Friday night, between police and students and reported he and other professors were beaten and insulted by police. In Washing- ton, the State Department ex- pressed concern to the Argentine President Arturo Illia, charging Illia had failed to promote Argen- tina's development. The government Monday night authorized three universities to resume classes, saying the rectors had agreed to government control. But the 150,000 students at the other six universities, whose rec- tors refused to submit to govern- ment direction, remained on an enforced two-week vacation. 'Police guarded the six campuses. ',ilario Fernandez Long, rector of the University of Buenos Aires, resigned, as did many of his fac- ulty. An Argentine chemistry profes- sor commented: "I'm leaving for Uruguay to seek work there." In the United States Senate, Se'n. Jacob K. Javits (R-NY) said the U.S. government had extended diplomatic recognition to the On- gania regime too hastily. He urged' President Johnson to withhold economic and military aid from the Argentine government on the ground it had suppressed academic freedom. Experiments Pose Embassy. It was not learned immediate- ly whether Ambrose would be among those leaving. President Juan Carlos Ongania's military regime, in a drastic ac- (Continued from Page 1) tion rare for Latin America, took cover may carry with it even more over all nine state universities serious implications than the aw- oblems -Associated Press T AIRLIFT from a rubber plantation 120 miles north of Saigon to an- other area, searching for Viet Cong. acks Hanoi Oil Depots, Residential Area Struck at them. Friday, contending that Commu- ful achievements of the ator Monday, just before the out- nists had penetrated the faculties. physicists." break that night, about 500 resi- Violence broke out when stu- Individual m o r a 1 judgme dents of the area met with city dents refused to leave the Buenos again must supplant legal def officials and anti-poverty workers Aires campus after the govern- ition in physical experimentati to discuss their grievances. ment orders suspending the uni- The rule which is supposedly gu Mayor James J. Flynn Jr. versities' autonomous status. After ing experimenters is incorpora promised to seek more Spanish- the disturbance, the schools were in a document known as the Ni ordered closed until Aug. 16. emburg Code, established by a t seakiyngorderstfor wslfare and edOngania, an army general, seiz- bunal committee after World W employment departments., ed power in a coup June 23 from~ II. After the meeting, however,_ about 100 youths left the hall to- - join another 100 youths gathered outside. Police began breaking up twhue began ~rorld New s Roundup the crowd and the disturbance g Meanwhile, in Nebraska, Gov. Frank Morrison emerged from a By The Associated Press WASHINGTON-The State I conference probing Omaha's near J KARACHI, Pakistan-About 45 partment said yesterday t North Side troubles yesterday and villages in a 2.300 square mile area Presidential Envoy W. Ave vowed, "We're having no truck were reported destroyed by a Harriman will go to Cambo with advocates of violence." severe earthquake which rocked early in September for talks w His statement and one from the Quetta region yesterday. the chief of state, Prince Norodo Omaha Mayor A. V. Sorensen sig- Officials estimated that 3.000 Sihanouk. naled an apparent change in tos5.000 families were left home- Officer Robert J. poiy;n h ra vrteless. PressOfieRortJM Aftercriots Closkey said the talks will d July 4 weekend, both Morrison NEW YORK - When Frazer with U.S.-Cambodian relatio and Sorensen met with represent- Dou~ herty paid off his overdue but he did not rule out the pos atives of the rioters to learn their parking tickets he sent the police bility that they would incl grievances. denartment a check for $2,100. American prisoners held by No] To meet two of the complaints The payment was part of more Viet Nam. -lack of recreational facilities than $5 million the city received L.i.e and jobs-the city afterward during a two week amnesty to mo- LONDON-Prime Miister H moved quickly with programs in torists before putting into opera- old Wilson told Parliament y both areas. tion a new computer designed to terday that President Johnson i "It was constructive then but it track down scofflaws who ignore told him of "the continuing de of the United States governmen was not normal procedure and parking tickets.for uncoUnitd altaks inme now we are going to follow normal Officers hand out about five uctn al procedure," Sorensen said. million parking tickets a year,V "There's no question about it. and less than half have been paid Wilson said his one-day meeti We're not going to deal with these voluntarily. with Johnson in Washington la hoodlum elements or teenagers. The last day for the amnesty week "ranged widely and deep We're not going to listen to a lot was Monday, and the 60 000 pieces over the entire field of mt of grievances that have been of mail that poured in brought national affairs, economically chewed over and over again." $1,260,000. well as politically." De- ,hat Drell dia ith om VIc- eal ns, si- ude rth ar- es- had ire nt" the ing ast ply er- as mric ent in- on. id- ted fur- tri- Tar The Nuremburg Code presents a strong recommendation, developed to prevent a recurrance of the Nazi German concentration camp experiments. In extensive wording, the Code advocates that the volun- tary consent of the subject is es- sential. It defines the extent to which a patient should be inform- ed of the nature and danger of the work and exhorts the one who engages in the experiment to take this upon himself as a personal responsibility.' The Nuremburg document is not binding by law in America and its precepts are often hazed over by clinical researchers. In fact, the writer of the Saturday Review article which quoted Kretch noted that in ,gathering information, he had found several doctors, includ- ing one on the New York State Medical Society Malpractice Re- view Board, who had never heard of the Nuremburg Code. Many of those he interviewed, however, gave their personal definitions of propriety in experimentation and these were quite inclusive. The variation in their defini- tions was striking. The wide range of ideas which prevail among doc- tors perhaps explains the difficul- ty they encounter in attempting to draft a uniform standard. The problem seems stifling and the implications frightening. Yet some officials are searching for means to ensure safety and unity of purpose in the medical profession. TOMORROW: Who they are and what they are doing. States time at outside of Hai- Wash- Nam raided sedimi- I quar- in the miles he city. state- to in- d: nissions, )L (pe- gets in these ist the a. Pre- pilots on tar- n that t. The ie. to say said. Hanoi, the North Vietnamese capital, said North Vietnamese army high com- six U.S. planes were shot down mand protested to the Interna- over Haiphong and one over the tional Control Commission against adjacent province of Hal Duong the "extremely savage crimes The U.S. has not announced the against the Vietnamese people." loss of any planes in the raids. Hanoi declared the Haiphong The U.S. has ordered its fighter area raid Tuesday was "an im- bombers to stay clear of both pudent flouting" of the Geneva Haiphong and Hanoi. agreements of 1954 that set up a Although North Viet Nam claim- divided Viet Nam and established ed that the target of the raid was the International Control Com- the port of Haiphong, the Soviet mission-made up of India, Can- news agency Tass said in a dis- ada and Poland-to supervise the patch from Hanoi that North Viet truce. Nam protested the "bombing of :........ Haiphong suburbs." The North Vietnamese also charged that U.S. planes Monday# bombed the Thai Nguyen iron and1 steel complex, one of the most important industrial facilities in . : s ': {"rc::.::-".:"::"::::"a::{" {. M;s the country. Ith counthrThe Daily Official Bulletin is an It was the first such claim from official publication of the Univer- Hanoi. There was no announce- sity of Michigan for which The ment in Saigon of such a raid. Michigan Daily assumes no editor- ial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to the bombings hit "many populated Room 3519 Administration Bldg. be- areas and economic establishments fore 2 p.m. of the day preceding publication adb ~.Fia and "what is particularly serious, for Saturday andSbyn p.m. Feneral U.S. aircraft bombed a number of Notices may be published a maxi- installations of the Thai Nguyen mum of two times on request; Day ,,t eCalendar items appear once only. iron and steel complex" Student organization notices are not A Hanoi broadcast said the accepted for publication. t r 4 4 x 1 i Phone 482-2056 s etw"e Ok CARPENTER ROAD OPEN 7:00 NOW SHOWING /00071"," at S-,w m~ {..{r". . . . . . . . . :........1.'.,..;:.... rF" .................. ..r::A v.:.. :" "...... ........ . ... . , .. ...... .. .... :.*.*v }t... . . r.1 .: ..: t. )ns Attract ng Num bers get to y findI resting es. legend ed pro- tifying has bit hinted o stu- precia- think by the While be at a ern-day ogiuzes , John rr-re- arvard, acation of the usiness ve and e'-y is- attract ts di,- played their faith in youth through the Peace Corps, and youth responded, while the con- servatives carped." Too often, he added, the conservatives represent industry and "lately, industrial- ists have made a habit of rein- forcing this impression." He cited their performance before Congressional committees such as when a young, research- and public-service-minded lawyer, Ralph Nader, took up the fight for auto safety and industry tried to discredit him. "We have built our railroads and opened the West, but we haven't reached the moon as yet," the Cornell official added, Of course, industry is a key ele- ment in the journey to the moon, and increasing numbers of up-to- date industrialists, instead of en- gaging in a Cold War with govern- ment, join Washington in running the Job Corps. But-implied the Harvard and Cornell experts--not enough of the business spokesmen realize that in this, the public service and technological adven- ture side of their potential, is the appeal to the cream of youth. Reprinted by permission of N.Y. Timesi WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 3 Day Calendar Audio-Visual Education Center Film Preview - "Long Day's Journey" and "Wild River": Multipurpose Room, Un- dergraduate Library, 1:30 p.m. Dept. of Speech University Players Performance - Noel Coward's "Blithe Spirit": Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, 8 p.m. School of Music Degree Recital - Wayne Hamilton, trombonist: Recital Hall, School of Music, 8:30 p.m. General Notices Regents' Meeting: Sept. 16. Communi- cations for consideration at this meet- ing must be in the President's hands not later than Thurs., Sept. 1. PLANS FOR SUMMER COMMENCEMENT EXERCISES Sunday, Aug. 7, 1966, 2 p.m. Time of Assembly-1:15 p.m. Places of Assembly-Regents, Presi- dent and other executive officers, min- ister, speaker, candidate for Regents' citation, and candidate for honorary degree, in the Kalamazoo Room of the Michigan League where they may robe. IDeans and other administrative of- ficials taking active part in the exer- cises, in the Michigan Room of the Michigan League, where they may robe. Members of the faculties in Room 2071 Natural Science Bldg., where they may robe. Students of the various schools and colleges, in Natural Science Bldg. as follows: Section A-Literature, Science, and Arts - Front part of auditorium, west section. -Education-Front part of auditor- lum, center section. -Architecture-Front part of audi- torium, east section. -Law-Front part of auditorium, east section (behind Architecture). Section B-Graduate - PhD candi- dates, Room 1053. -Masters candidates, rear part of auditorium. Section C-Engineering-Room 2054. -Business Administration - Room 2042. -Music-Room 2033 (north end). -Nursing-Room 2033 (south end, be- hind Music). -Public Health-Foom 2023 (west end). -Social Work-Room 2023 (center, behind Public Health). -Natural Resources-Room 2023 (east end, behind Social Work). March Into Hill Auditorium: 1:45 p.m. Academic dress, Doctoral Examination for Thomas Crandall English, Physics; thesis: "A High-Resolution Measurement of the Hyperfine Structure of the J-1 Rota- tional State of Cs133F19 by the Molecu- lar-Beam Electric-Resonance Method," Wed., Aug. 3, Room 629 Physics-Astron- omy Bldg., at 10 a.m. Chairman, J. C. Zorn. Placement POSITION OPENINGS: City of San Diego, Calif.-Librarians working in the extension division, re- sponsible for children's work in large branch, or take full charge of a small- er branch. Grad from school of Lib. Sci., or Lib. Arts degree with 24 semes- ter hours of library training. Local Laboratory, Ann Arbor - Re- search Asst., BS courses or exper. in quantitative analysis, or Med. Tech. trng. Man or woman, begin Sept. or Oct. No other exper. required. - Local Research Project, Ann Arbor- Research Asst Familiar with electronics or machine shop or general lab tech. Could be undergraduate. M . * * For further information please call 764-7460, General Div., Bureau of Ap- pointments, 3200 SAB. TEACHER PLACEMENT: Thee following schools have vavancies for the 1966-67 school year: Belleville, Mich.-Chem., Librarian. Bell River, Ontario, Canada - 9th grade Math. Chelsea, Mich.-J.H. Engl./Art or Sci- ence Garden City, Mich.-st, 2nd, J.H. Math/Sci.. J.H. Comm./Bus. Math, J.H{. Engl.n/SS, H.S. Id Arts, H.S. French, Emot Dist Highland Park, Mich. - Art, Speech The rapy', Psychol., Diag. Lockport, N.Y.-J.H. English. Ortonviile, Mich.-Lower Elem., J.H. Science, Sec. Ind. Arts, H.S. Band. Saginaw, Mich.-H S.: Biol., Counse- lor, Engl./Journ., Geog.; J.H.: Girls Phys. Ed. Southgate, Mich.-3rd, 1st, 5th, 6th, Lower Elem. Type A. Sylvania, Ohio-J.H. Counselor, Elem. Art, H S. Hist./Football, 7th grade SS/Engl. or Engl./SS, Elem. Music, 6th grade (man), 2nd grade. Washington, Ill.-- Primary, Math. * * * Science/ For additional information contact Miss Collins, Bureau of Appointments, Education Div., 3200 SAB, 764-7462. ORGANIZATION NOTICES USE OF THIS COLUMN FOR AN- NOUNCEMENTS is available to officially recognized and registered stundent or- ganizations only. Forms are available in Room 1011 SAB. B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation, Mid- term Frolic, Thurs., Aug. 4, 8 p.m., 1429 Hill St. University Lutheran Chapel, 1511 Washtenaw, book review: "Faces of Poverty" by Arthur Simon, and "To Mend the Broken" by Karl Tutze, Wed., Aug. 3, 9 p.m.; devotion service: "Chris- tian Goals in Interpersonal Relation- ships," by Rev. Scheidt;10 p.m. ALSO TOtNY CURTIS SIDNEY POTTIER Shown at 11.00 Only PLUS-IN COLOR "CHAMPION STUNT DRIVERS" 2 COLOR CARTOONS IMPORTANT! NO ONE UNDER 18 WILL BE ADMITTED UNLESS ACCOMPANIED BY HIS PARENT. EM .Zi ET 0 ERNEST LEMMAN'S PRODUCTION OF EDWARD ALBEE'S EFEEE is VhEA1 ® NI y WUr Mn MF7 iWz Shows at 1:30-4:00-6:30-9:00 Eves. & Sun. $1.50 Matinees $1.25 DIAL 5-6290 4- Cooled by Refrigeration DIAL 8-6416 ENDING TONIGHT NJUGAL ....w. .1 ,.. r, STEVE M0IUEEN L KARL MAWEN AAIIII KRITAl I UAC STREET DANCE On I! I, 4' is NOw-a name -"7B.oon a legend. "AN AMUSING GAME OF CO .. 1 . W&I stiV .1f . I" AIP .1 I I