Y, AUGUST 411966 THE MICHIGAN DAILY rAGE TR EIS ~Y, AUGUST 4,1966 THE 1~HCIHGAN DAILY PAGI! THIU~'W A fz"- a as a a:. as a,;; House Votes Homeown er in Favor of AIRLINE STRIKE: Congress Approves Plan To Resume Flights for 30 Days Exemptions WASHINGTON (P)-A contro- versial open housing provision that would exempt an estimated 60 per cent of the nation's housing units was tentatively written into the 1966 Civil Rights Bill yesterday by a dramatic one-vote margin, 180-179. The narrow victory in the House saved a compromise provision that would open. large apartment houses and newly built tract homes but exempt individual homeowners from a proposed ban against ra- cial discrimination. Other pitfalls lay ahead for the measure, including a motion to eliminate it from the bill and a separate roll call vote on it before final passage. It also still faces trouble in the Senate.- Improve Chances However, House leaders were hopeful yesterday's vote would im- prove the bill's chances for final passage. The vote came on an amendment, by Rep. Charles M. Mathias, Jr. (R-Md) that made clear the na- ture of the exemption for home- owners, which was originally ap- proved by the, House Judiciary Committee. The proposal is aimed at real estate agents, builders, bankers, and others in the business of sell- ing and renting houses. It says they cannot discriminate in any of their transactions. Homeowners Since homeowners are not in the business of selling or renting houses, they would not be covered. The committee said an exempt owner could use a real estate agent to carry out his transac- tion, but the interpretation was challenged. The Mathias amend- ment was intended to clear up any confusion. The amendment achieved far' greater significance, however, when Northern liberals saw it as a chance to get a stronger provi- sion that would exempt only home- owners who handled their own transactions without using a real estate agent. Liberals 'Against' Spurred by civil rights groups, they voted against it, undismayed by the fact they were joined by Southern Democrats and conserv- VIET NAM WAR: Kosygn Criticizes U.S. Foreign Policy, Pledges Increasing Support for Hanoi ative Republicans who wanted no open housing provision and figur- ed the best way to defeat it would be to keep it as strong as possible. Rep. William R. Ryan (R-NY) sounded their battle cry when he said, "We should vote against the Mathias amendment because it is right to vote against it as a mat- ter of principle." On a standing vote the amend- ment was defeated 150 to 138, with about 20 liberals standing with the opponents of the measure. Another Vote The losing side has an option to get another vote, taken by count-. ing members as they file down the center aisle between tellers, and supporters of the amendment got one. After the first surge of both sides, the amendment was still trailing by 24 votes but 24 lagging supporters-many ofthem liber- als who had stood up against the amendment-came through just in time to produce a=179-179 tie. Rep. Richard Bolling (D-Md), presiding over the session, then cast his vote for the amendment and the chamber echoed with a roar of victory from the bill's sup- porters. The House quit for the day after disposing of an amendment that would have made any federal law inactive in states with open hous- ing laws unless a court ruled the state law was not being enforced. The vote was 131 to 48. WASHINGTON (P)-A compro- mise plan under which Congress would end the airline strike for a month, then look to President Johnson for action, was drafted yesterday. A Senate decision is likely today. With organized labor bitterly opposed to an enforced halt in the walkout, the Senate's leaders and lawyers turned out a bill which involves orders from both Capitol Hill and the White House. Still before the Senate is a measure endorsed by its Labor Committee which would leave it to Johnson alone to send the mach- inists back to work for up to 180 days. Sponsors of the new plan, the Senate's leaders among them, will seek today to have it substituted for the committee proposal. Sen. Jacob K. Javits (R-NY),, who helped draft the compromise, said it would have Congress order an end to the strike for 30 days. Earlier in the day, the Senate rejected compulsory arbitration as an ultimate answer to the airlines strike. The 81-6 roll call vote which turned down final, binding arbi- tration if there is no contract set- tlement in six months left unan- swered the key question before the Senate: should it be Congress or President Johnson who issues any order imposing a 180-day halt in the walkout? Against a background of elec- tion-year politics, creators of the compromise plan sought a way to spread the responsibility. Cloakroom Conference While they conferred in cloak- rooms and offices off the Senate floor, Sen. Frank J. Lausche (D- Ohio) argued that only final com- pulsory arbitration by a five-man board can guarantee a perma- nent end to the walkout which has shut down five major air- lines since July 8. And he said the threat of even- tual arbitration would spur nego- tiators for the AFL-CIO Interna- tional Association of Machinists and the five grounded airlines to work out their own contract terms during any government-forced cooling off period. Not Ready "In my opinion," countered Sen. Joseph S. Clark (D-Pa), "the Sen- ate is not ready for compulsory arbitration. I'm not ready for it yet, and certainly not in this case." Clark is the sponsor of the Joint resolution which would have Con- gress empower Johnson to stop the strike for up to 180 days with one order or a series of commands. Compromise Javits conferred with Atty. Gen. Nicholas Katzenbach and with Senate Republican Leader Everett M. Dirksen of Illinois on the plan which empowers Johnson to ap- point a special airlines dispute panel which would seek a contract settlement. If none came, Johnson, with ad- vice from the board, would be au- thorized to extend the back-to- work period-which could run for six months. 'More Steelmakers Raise Price Levels By The Associated Press MOSCOW-Premier Alexei N. Kosygin said yesterday the Viet- namese war is isolating the Unit- ed States from the rest of the world and jeopardizing Soviet- American relations. At the same time he pledged to do, everything possible to bring about a Com- munist victory in Viet Nam. He urged a change in American policy in Viet Nam to help nor- malize Soviet-American relations, In a broad statement of policy delivered to the Soviet Parlia- ment, he told applauding deputies that his government "will do ev- erything 4n its power to help the Vietnamese people expel the Amer- ican occupationists from Vietna- mese soil as quickly as possible." The somber-faced premier, with- out disclosing any details, prom- ised increasing Soviet military; economic, moral and political aid to Hanoi. Kosygin said U.S. policy in Viet Nam: has placed the United States "in a situation of growing inter- national isolation" and caused the present state of what he called a mile from the Cambodian bor- bad Soviet-American relations. I der. As Soviet conditions for a nor- malization of relations, he listed American respect for internation- al law and an end to what he call- ed American interference in the domestic affairs of other coun- tries. This view is used by the Soviets in backing Hanoi's demands for a U.S. withdrawal from Viet Nam. Kosygin' said his government would react favorably towhat he described as "common sense ten- dencies" in the United States, an apparent reference to American groups protesting the war in Viet Nam. In South Viet Nam, clashes erupted in the central highlands yesterday for the third day in a row and heavy U.S. reinforcements were thrown in to thwart any North Vietnamese drive toward the coast. Eight-engine B-52's came in high from.Guam and bombed a suspected North Vietnamese troop concentration and base behind the battle lines in the mountains The U.S. 25th Division reported killing at least 81 North Vietna- mese in the three days of fight- ing. U.S. casualties were describ- ed as light. Navy pilots returning from Tues- day's raid on an oil depot on the outskirts of North Viet Nam's port of Haiphong reported the area was engulfed in flame and smoke, preventing a full assess- ment of bomb damage. Hanoi radio claimed a U.S. plane was shot down while bombing "a populated suburban area" of Hai- phong yesterday but made no ref- erence to a large-scale raid. Ob- jectives of new air attacks on North Viet Nam were not given in Saigon, but a spokesman said bad weather curtailed operations yesterday. World News Roundup By The Associated Press WASHINGTON-In line with French desires, the United States begins this month to withdraw all remaining operational Air Force units from France-six reconnais- sance squadrons with 4400 men and 7000 dependents. North Atlantic Treaty Organiza- tion military alliance, and wants foreign troops out of his country by next April. The six squadrons, which are equipped with 90 RF-101's, RF- 4C's and RB-66's, will be out of Fra'nce by October, the Pentagon The move is dictated by French said yesterday. President Charles de Gaulle, who * * * is pulling his nation out of the NEW YORK-The stock market rallied sharply yesterday after In- DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN .:".... . . ...:....:."-.x.:...... .................... ::::w:J . ... ..X..n{g : . ..h.. ~ ..... ".:-v. .:.........r...."?...... .:cr .: ... :^r.."r.... :..a... ::"..".r:1...~....}v"}:4$ir.:..:. NE TILYOFFCIAL U LLETIBNFA ID at~miigmia s~igsniliiltes.re.^". :i:si im: r:" .vsss~aWeMn"."{ r iY":+Y r3'4':"iisiM~isiaAA 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. THURSDAY, AUGUST 4 Day Calendar Bureau of Industrial Relations Sem- inar-"How To Install Theory Y": Mich- igan Union, 8:30 a.m. Audio-Visual Education Center Film Preview-"1964": Multipurpose Room, Undergraduate 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 - Jonathan Bolduan, pianist: Recital Hall, School of Music, 8:30 p.m. General Notices Student Government Council Approval of the following student-sponsored events becomes effective 24 hours after the publication of this notice. All puablicity for these events must be withheld until the approval has become effective. Approval request forms for student i, sponsored events are available in Room 1011 of the SAB. Catholic Voice Lecture Series, Oct. 8, Nov. 11, 1966; Feb 18, March 10, 1967, Agell Hall, Aud.,A, 8-9,30 p.m. 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. Language Examinations: Language ex- aminations for master's will be given the week of Aug 8-12. Students wishing to take the examination, make an ap- pointment with the secretary in the Linguistics Office, 2223 Angell Hall. Doctoral Examination for Walter Anthony Hackler, Nuclear Science; thesis: "Study of Lithium Mobility in Irradiated Silicon," Thurs., Aug. 4, Con- ference Room, Auto. Lab., at 10 a.m. Chairman, Chihiro Kikuchi. Doctoral Examination for James Leonard Montour, Radiation Biology; thesis: "Radiobiological Studies in the Young Chicken," Thurs., Aug. 4, Room 2111 Natural Science, at 1:30 p.m. Chairman, C. J. Shellabarger. Placement POSITION OPENINGS: Great Lakes Carbon Corp., Niagara Falls, N.Y.-Interested in graduates in Engineering Physics, also any graduate engineers in chem., mechan., ceramic, metallurgic and elect., categories with the BS and, for manag. trng., the Ind. Mgmt. masters. Chas. Pfizer and Co., Inc., Groton, Conn.-Director of several technicians on studies in Industrial Fermentation. PhD in Microbiology or Biochem., an- tibiotics, organic acids, vitamins. bkgd. J. L. Hudson Co., Detroit, Mich.-As- sistant to the editor of a new maga- zine Hudson's will put out featuring teenagers and their cars,clothes, sports, etc. General handyman (woman), some journalism exper. needed, degree not necessary. City of San Diego, Calif. - City planning dept. needs junior planner and assistant planner. Degree and 0-1 year. exper., or masters. Assist in prep- aration of community and neighborhood plans, every phase of the field open to these persons. For further information please call 764-7460, General Division, Bureau of Appointments, 3200 SAB. TEACHER PLACEMENT: The following schools have recorded vacancies for the 1967-67 school year: Bloomfield Hills, Mich. - Develop. Reading. Bridgeport, Mich.-Elem. Davison, Mich.-Sec. English, HS Bus- iness, HS Math. Dearborn Heights, Mich. (Dist. No. 7) -'Elem. Phys. Ed., 5th Grade, 6th Grade. Goodrich, Mich.-JH English, Elem. Reading, Elem. Type A, 6th Grade. Monroe, Mich. (St. Mary's School)- JH Social Studies. Montrose, Mich.-Typing/Bus. Train. Pontiac, Mich. (Waterford Twp. Sch.) -HS Bus. Ed., JH Math, JH Girls PE, Elem. Vocal, HS5 Library. Unionville, Mch.-Elem. Ment. Ret. Type A, 2nd Grade, 3rd Grade, 4th Grade, Chem./Math. Whitmore Lake, Mich. (W. J. Maxey Training School)-Ind. Arts, Spec. Ed. Emot, Library, Math. Whitmore Lake, Mich. (Boys Training School, Lansing, Mich. (Boys Training School), Adrian, Mich. (Girls Training School)-Special Education Teachers, Phone 482-2056 Exnta"W owlCARPENTER RD. OPEN 7:00 NOW SHOWING Shaown at 8:25 & 12:40 Art, Geography, Recreation Instruc- tor, Motor Mechanics, Vocal and/or In- strumental Music, Bus. Ed., (Typing and/or Bus. Machines). Teacher Train- ed Librarian, Math, Physical Science, Physical Education, Industrial_ Arts, Remedial Subjects, Upper Elementary, Vocational Counselor, Lower Jr. High. * * * For additional information contact MissCollins, Bureau of Appointments, Education Division, 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. * * * Christian Science Organization, Tes- timony meeting, Thurs., Aug. 4, 7:30 p.m., 3545 SAB. Folk Dance Club (WAA), Folk dance, with instruction, open to everyone, Fri., Aug. 5, 8-11 p.m., Barbour Gym. land Steel announced it was rais- ing prices by $2 to $3 per ton. Trading was moderate. Gains made by steel issues spread through the list to other key groups, including autos, oils, rails, airlines, aerospace issues and elec- tronics. Prices rose from the start of the trading session. Volume totaled 6.22 million. shares, up from 5.71 million on Tuesday. * * * UNITED NATIONS - The UN Security Council yesterday voted down a resolution seeking to con- demn Israel for an air attack against Syria July 14. The resolution needed nine votes to be adopted. It got only six. All of the council's nine other members abstained. Syria had complained that two Arabs were killed in the attack by Israeli jets. Israel said the raid was in retaliation for sabotage actions from Syria in which two Israelis were killed. BUENOS AIRES-Resignations of personnel at the University of Buenos Aires in protest of its seizure by the government mount- ed yesterday to more than 500 de- spite official promises that the school's autonomy would be re- stored. The resignations ranged from college rectors and professors to secretaries and extension workers. The university has about 2000 pro- fessors, associates and assistants. * * * MANAGUA, Nicaragua-Presi- dent Rene Schick Gutierrez, 26, died yesterday. The National Con- gress elected Lorenzo Guerrero, one of the three vice-presidents, to fill out the term. Schick possibly was Latin Amer- ica's most outspoken foe of Cuba's Fidel Castro. He offered Nicaragua as a base for a Cuban invasion to overthrow Castro. * * * DAMASCUS-The Soviet Union has pledged to meet all Iraq's arms needs to defend itself, Iraqi Premier Abdel Rahman Bazzaz announced yesterday. Baghdad radio said Bazzaz made the statement on his return from an official visit to the Soviet Un- ionI. WASHINGTON (I)-Two more steelmakers-Armco and Jones & Laughlin-followed the lead of In- land Steel Co. yesterday and boosted some basic steel prices $2 to $3 a ton. But the Johnson administration was reported still undecided on whether federal action is called for. The White House said President Johnson's Council of Economic Advisers hasn't reached the point where it can advise him as to whether the'price increases are in- f lationary. The steel firms maintained the boosts are "modest" and necessary to meet rising costs. Telegrams But Council Chairman Gardner Ackley was reported to have sent telegrams to U.S. Steel, the No. 1 producer, and at least one other firm. A U.S. Steel spokesman who said Ackley sent the firm a tele- gram, would not reveal its con- tents or whether Ackley was seek- ing to persuade the firm not to join the price rise. Both Inland Steel and Armco conceded that they would have to pull back their price increases if the other steelmakers refused to go along with them. But an Arm- co spokesman said all face press- ing costs problems. Strip and Sheet Metal The major price increase is for strip and sheet metal, which is used extensively in automobiles and large appliances. It accounts for about 30 per cent of the steel market. The editor of Steel Magazine, Walter J. Campbell of Cleveland, said it would mean only $1.50 add- ed to the cost of the average auto. Ackley told Press Secretary Bill Moyers that although he could not yet advise the President con- clusively on the increases, he could reaffirm administration op- position to any inflationary price hike. There was a hint from Capitol Hill of an investigation if the price increases are not rolled back, although some members of Con- gress were cool to the idea. (Continued from Page 1) to approve general medical con- duct guidelines, but "not under- take specific operational and di- rectional capacities." These would be reserved to the AMA which' would adopt a procedural code. A proposed code dominated a great deal of the debate at the convention. Known as the Declara- tion of Helsinki, it is now awaiting approval by the AMA membership. Established in 1954 under the sponsorship of the World Medical Association, the document was in- tended as a worldwide statement of the obligations of a doctor in- volved in research to his patients and the profession. The main precept of the decla- ration is that human experiments should be performed only by quali- fied doctors with the "informed consent" of the patient. Its defini- tive statements, if adopted, would clarify a researcher's position and make drug experimentation rela- tively safe. Its national accept- ance would be spurred by an in- formation campaign aimed at urg- ing individual researchers to un- derstand their responsibilities. But experts are looking for a better solution and may well soon put technology to use to eliminate the need for human subjects in experimentation. Computers are continually finding more import- ance in making evaluations. Re- cently, a doctor announced devel- opment of a machine which sim- ulates the activity of several hu- man organs, opening the possibil- ity of robot subjects with variable controls which check for adverse reactions in people under an as- sortment of conditions. There is certainly much to be done before the day in which doctors can be certain of the ef- ficacy of the cure he prescribes for each patient, but an admirable start has already given medicine a remarkable safety record. In order to reach their goal, the medical profession must have an ethics code, established and operational as soon as possible. Controversy Grows Over Drug Controls ,, FRIDAY, AUGUST 5 6:30 P.M. IMPORTANT! NO ONE UNDER 18WLLBE ADMITTED UNLESS ACCOMPANIEDSY HIS PARENT. ELIZMBETEE TmVLURi lcaumnOu um mum W ERNET LEMIMA"S PRODUMTON OF EDWARD AMMBE'S W-"5 *FEEEEĀ® alF vmnnnmin WOUua? Ii//el tidtepnr pen/ic* ' A mirthful scene of merrymaking or glee. Thursday, Aug. 4 Hillel Foundation 8 P.M. 1429 Hill ">Q < ""> """> """> <""> ""> <" >""> <""><"'""><""""> Ak - M- -A DIAL 5-6290 Shows at 1:30-4:00-6:30-9:00 Eves. & Sun. $1.50 Matinees $1.25 _________________________________ ____________ -~ .-.-----.-.-.--..----.. I if anyone can handle three men... w"m wswwssmrmsmm mmmm"srrwmmin mmmminminmin uminmmm I I I 1 1 / r 1 CHARLIE CHAPLIN I I 1 I I 1 1 'i1 1 I I I 1 1 I1 1 1 I I One of the 10 Greatest films ever made! /I 1 1 I 1 1 1 I I I I S S I I I I I -I I I lql - 5 WMWAMMWOW I I I i I I k;''