TUESDAY, AUGUST 9,1966 Union-Air Spokesmen Reconvene, Observers Express Little Hope Despite Congressional Urging WASHINGTON W - Congress %.increased pressure yesterday for a voluntary end to the airlines strike and the government brought the parties together and then withdrew to let them seek a face- to-face answer. A few hours after the renewed congressional appeal for voluntary ' settlement, Secretary of Labor W. Willard Wirtz brought representa- tives of the AFL-CIO International Association of Machinists and air- lines spokesmen into session with Assistant Secretary James J. Reynolds. After about an hour, Reynolds withdrew and told newsmen, "We are leaving them alone without the participation ofany outsiders" to consider a union proposal which Reynolds said the management negotiators described in advance as unrealistic. The meeting was the first since the striking mechanics on July 31 rejected an agreement negotiated two days earlier under White House guidance. And it was the first session between the parties without "the presence of outsiders since the strike began July 8, shut- ting down Eastern, National, Northwest, Trans World and United airlines. The unique confrontation came after both sides had been told by a congressional. spokesman that "you will regret it the rest of your lives" if they force Congress to act. In testimony yesterday before the House Commerce Committee, P. L. Siemiller, the union presi- dent, reiterated his belief that the companies are awaiting legislative action to bail them out and will make no new offer until Congress has acted one way or another. Last Saturday, the committee chairman, Rep. Harley 0. Staggers (D-WVa) made a strong appeal for a negotiated settlement but at that time the airlines' chief negotiator, William J. Curtin, told newsmen he knew of nothing to justify resumption of negotiations. THE' MICHIGAN DAILY lp A T__.CvG N DA L WIa. .. ..:.. YA __ . U.S. Unit Hits Troops! From North Rifle Company Acts To Decoy Battalion; Communists Flee SAIGON (A)-Moving up a rifle company as bait, the U.S. Cavalry, Airmobile, Division tempted a North Vietnamese battalion into battle on the central plateau late yesterday. The Americans went into hot pursuit of the enemy after pound- ing them with 2,000 artillery shells and tons of flaming naplam. It was a new phase of Operation Paul Revere, an effort of about 15,000 allied troops to sweep three North Vietnamese regiments - perhaps 5,000 men-from recently acquired footholds in the high- lands near the Cambodian fron- tier. The Communist battalion, per- haps 500 strong, had hit hard and all but surrounded the 150-man rifle company in the Ia Drang Val- ley, scene of a major American victory last November, before it was routed. The battalion fled north with cavalry units clawing at its flanks. Amercian authorities believe the North'Vietnamese moved three regiments from Cambodia into the highlands between the Ia Drang Valley and Duc Co under cover of bad weather in late July. What- ever their offensive plans, the Communists broke off contact after some heavy action early last week. Elsewhere N o r t h Vietnamese gunners shot down six U.S. planes and captured "many pilots" Sun- day, Hanoi's Viet Nam News Agency claimed yesterday. RACIAL TENSION: House Adds Anti-Riot Clause To Proposed Civil Rights Bil By The Associated Press ] Reacting to the long summer of' racial violence, the House wrote a federal anti-riot provision into the 1966 civil rights bill yesterday. With only a few voices raised in dissent, it shouted approval of' an amendment that would make it a federal crime for a person to cross a state line to either lead or take part in a riot.c Rep. William C. Cramer (R-l Fla), who offered it, said it would not apply to a peaceful demonstra- tion led by someone like the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr, but is, aimed at "professional agitators." Northerners and Southerners united on the need for such an amendment, which was added to a' section in the civil rights bill de- signed to protect Negroes and civil rights workers against violence. Meanwhile, leaders of a Negro drive for open housing in Chicago planned their next moves in the wake of mob-surrounded marches into all-white residential sections. A rally was organized for yes- No Concessions on British Policy Concerning Rhodesia terday evening in th Congregational church o Side, at which marchers onstrators were to recer tions. There were no march er demonstrations plan the joint sponsorship Southern ChristianI Conference and the Co Council of Community tions. The council isa federation led by Alber former Chicago teacher eran of Negro rights mar During the lull after of 1500 Negroes and xw pathizers Sunday nighi Northwest Side Cragin hood, the city's politicalI creased efforts to tone sentment by white reside Cramer, commentingf his anti-riot provision, high time the federal go which has no hesitation ing in the jungles or protects rights being upon in the racialv preaching of anarchy o phalt jungles here in t States." The Justice Departnm warned by.Cramer that offer his amendment, pr alternative that would7 ited its reach to person gage in a conspiracy t riot. The House later wrote vision that the proposed eral statute would not state laws dealing with m son and other violent cr might be committed dur -Associated Press VICE-PRESIDENT HUMPHREY shakes hands with a picket shortly after arrival yesterday at Kan- sas City's strike-bound Municipal Air Terminal. FARMER ABSOLVED: Probe Increased Bread Cost LONDON (P) - Prime Minister' Harold Wilson announced yester- day another attempt to come to terms with Rhodesia. But he made no concessions from his policy of trying to bring down the break- way colony's white government. Shortly before Wilson announced in the House of Commons that British officials would go back to Rhodesia this weekend, President Kenneth Kaunda of Zambia warned against any British con- cession to Rhodesia's government. Rumors of compromise with Prime Minister Ian Smith's Rho- desian regime had been spreading in London for weeks. But Wilson told Commons his government still is applying economic sanctions to force Rhodesia back under British control and point it toward rule by its African majority. Talks between British and Rhodesian civil servants went on for two months and ended in July. Nevertheless, he announced a British team would travel to Sal- isbury, the Rhodesian capital, this weekend for another round of talks-"exploratory and non-com- mittal as before." Wilson said he did not know how long the new talks would last- in particular whether they would still be underway when Common- wealth prime ministers meet in London Sept. 6-15. He would only say he did not expect a settlement during the two-month parliamen- tary summer recess, ending in mid-October. Zambia and Tanzania have threatened to lead a walkout of the Commonwealth unless Smith is brought to heel by next month. W A S H I N G T O N UP) - TheIand 3.9 cents now. The bulk of the American farmer got a rousing defense yesterday from everybody at a congressional subcommittee hearing probing the cost of bread. John Schnittker, undersecretary of agriculture, agreed with con- gressmen and a spokesman for the Farmers Union that the man with the plow can't be blamed for ris- ing bread costs. In fact, Rep. Graham Purcell (D-Tex), chairman of House Ag- riculture subcommittee on wheat, made it clear his group doesn't want to blame anybody. But Purcell said the subcommit- tee does want to get all the facts in fair hearings-not "any witch hunt"-as to what has caused recent 2 and 3-cent-a-loaf hikes. Schnittker said the farmer's share of a pound loaf of white bread was only 3.3 cents in 1965 cost, he said, goes to the baker. But he testified that statistics show the national baking industry profits "are quite low. when com- pared to other industry." Reuben Johnson of the Farmers Unon said everybody still blames the farmer for the bread-price hikes and he hopes these hearings, plus two other investigations, will set the record straight. In a speech on the House floor, Rep. Jamie L. Whitten (D-Miss) declared farm population is down' because return on investment is small, the work and hours too hard and long. Schnittker said there is little relationship between bread and wheat prices, saying it "takes a price change in wheat of almost 70 cents per bushel to make a dif- ference of one cent in the cost of the wheat in a 1-pound loaf." Schnittker's figures s h o w e d farmers, were getting 43 cents a bushel more for wheat in mid-July of this year over the same period of 1965. He said this price in- crease is thoroughly justified. Johnson claimed one bushel of wheat produces enough flour to make 68.4 one-pound loaves and said this would justify about six- tenths of a cent increase in the retail price of bread for the 1965- 1966 July periods. I I MPORTANT? NO ONE UNDER 18 WILL BE ADMITTED UNLESS ACCOMPANIED BY HIS PARENT. Schnittker said the price bread varies greatly from city city, depending on a variety factors, including competition. of to of ,x He cited a range of froni 18.5 cents per loaf in Detroit to a high of 28 cents in Los Angeles. His charts depicted a pound loaf' with an average price of 20.9 cents slices out like this: 3.3 cents to the farmer; 2.4 to the miller and others, transportation, etc.; 11.4 to the baker and 3.8 cents to the retailer. He agreed in questioning that baking industry labor costs have gone up from $1.15 an hour to: $2.50 on the average since 1947-49. inmmRn IN ERNEST EIIMAN S PMODUCO OF EDWARD AWEE'S VhEMNUE F VwarInIy DEMONSTRATIONI of DURA EDIT CONTR( AUTOMATIC WRITING SYSTEM Room 3C THE MICHIGAN UNION Wednesday, Aug. 10, 1966 9:00 to 4:30 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN '{''}"1,ri>:........:;{^.;'. ?Y}.{,a: r.".". t:v::rvv, ' a~~~w;,:..;.. } ..:. :., ~~~~~~~~~~ ~... ..... ...............}' F r4'!rf..r....,... .. .: .;' :..r .:6?f;i:" [[.r ..:d '"^:i$ras.r,:... ':....r 'r . } ::>x;' r r,' I WE THRE e Warren n the West and dem - ve instru-. es or oth- ned under of King's Leadership ordinating Organiza-. a Chicagoa t Raby, a and vet- rches. a march vhite sym ;-. hinto the neighbor- leaders in- down re ents, further on said, "It' vernment, z in fight- Viet Nam, trample wars and )n the as he United lent, fore-" he would epared an have lim- s who en- o incite a in a pro- Inew fed- preempt iurder, ar. rimes that ng a riot. -- r i1M~tQik_ Shows at 1:30-4:00-6:30-9:00 Eves. & sun. $1.50 DIAL 5-6290 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. TUESDAY, AUGUST 9 Day Calendar Bureau of Industrial Relations Sem- inar-"Managing Improvement Change": Michigan Union, 8:30 a.m. International Seminar on Teacher Education in Music-School of Music, 9 a.m. General Notices Recommendation for Departmental Honors: Teaching departments wishing to recommend tentative August grad- uates from the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, for Honors or High Honors should recommend such students by forwarding a letter to the Director, Honors Council, 1210 Angell Hall, by noon, Fri., Aug. 19. Teaching departments in the School of Education should forward letters di- rectly to the Office of the Registrar, Room 1513 Administration Bldg., by 11 a.m., Fri., Aug. 19. a... - . Attention August Graduates: College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, School of Education, School of Music, School of Public Health, School of Business Administration: Students are advised not to request grades of I or X in August. When such grades are absolutely imperative, the work must be made up in time to allow your in- structor to report the make-up grade not later than 11 a.m., Aug. 19. Grades received after that time may defer the student's graduation until a later date. Foreign Visitors Following are the foreign visitors progrsmrned through the Office of For- eign Visitor Programs, who will be on campus this week on the dates indi- cated. Program arrangements are being made by Mrs. Clifford R. Ciller, coordi- nator, Foreign Visitor Programs, 764- 2148. Duilio Modotto, vice director, i Grandi Viaggi Association, Milan, Italy, with a group of 120 members of the Federa- tion of Bookkeepers and Accountants DIAL 8-6416 ENDING TONIGHT "MONDO PAZZO" "Under- AND cover Rogue" One Show Only at 7:15 WEDNESDAY of Italy, Aug. 9. Ulrich Brink, exchange student from Germany studying at the Horace Mann School, New York City, Aug. 9-13. Manuel V. Soliven, assistant vice- president and manager of the Depart- ment of Economics, Research and Sta- tistics at the Philippine National Bank, Manila, Aug. 11-14. Hernando Pulido, professor, faculty of engineering, University of Cauca, Cauca, Colombia, Aug. 12. Eight students in electrical engi- neering, University of Cauca, Cauca, Colombia, traveling with Prof. Pulido, Alberto Botero, Marino Collazos, Luis Eduardo, Freddy Mera, Jose Vincente Mina, Jose Manuel Sandoval, John B. Sepulveda, Javier Villegas, Aug. 12. Four students from the Catholic University of Cordoba, Cordoba, Ar- gentina, Enrique Airasca, electrical en- gineering; Jose Costamagna, electrical (Continued from Page 4) -- TE DIAL 2-6264 ENDING WEDNESDAY SOPIA PAUL DAVID MI l" 'ok.,w s G ' 1 . I Passport Pictures Application Pictures Group Pictures Wedding Pictures Available at anytime Ready Quickly CALL NO 3-6966 I Phone 482-2056 &VSqw CARPENTER ROAD OPEN 7:00 NOW SHOWING ..[ Shown at 8:25 & 12:40 y Mis pullts a clever coup .she borrows the swinging new Irvington Placewool pantsuits from the boys and wears them with great swagger. Sizes 5 to 13. A. Dapper three-piece ensemble with matching vest, and cuffed pant. Black and white checked bonded wool. 40.00 B. Plaid double-breasted suit with back-vent jacket. Brown or berry. 35.00 C. Pea jacket suit with anchor buttons and shoulder epaulettes. Navy or loden green. 35.00 I IRI FRChLUU$IQN rsents fE SIGNORET ".YV/[S MONTANO ,nomn s-"wUIG 04 CECIL PAK[R WEECLA DAllUPHM I i ANAViSIONand EASTMANCOLOI Thursday FRANK SINATRA "ASSAULT ON A QUEEN" Ii . CANCELLED OSLUABY DEL UAE UNITED ARISTS TUESDAY NOON LUNCHEON - DISCUSSION Michigan Union (Anderson D) C I El 11 .. --momm.