THURSDAY, AUGUST 11, 1966 Strike-Endgin THE MICHIGAN DAILY ' ! 'AGE ;T away riCHiV111" A~taayir 1A Proposal Hearings Falls Apart In WASHINGTON (P)-The last- approve arbitration without a pri- ditch proposal of a politically or commitment on major contract queasy Congress for ending the issues involving wages, fringe 34-day airlines strike without leg- benefits and working conditions. islation fell apart yesterday. An Both Siemiller and Curtin ear- airlines spokesman accused the lier yesterday agreed to the sug- union of sabotaging it. Chief airlines negotiator William J. Curtin said Machinists' Union President P. L. Roy Siemiller's 1 had made it clear that "the union does not desire to end this dispute by voluntary arbitration." Curtin's statement came after Siemiller said there is "little or no prospect" that the 35,000 strik- ers of five major airlines would gestion of Chairman Harley 0. Staggers (D-WVa) of the House Commerce Committee to try to work out an arbitration agreement in order to avoid back-to-work legislation. The members of Siemiller's AFLCIO International Association of Machinists 10 days ago reject- ed a contract proposal negotiated in the White House, crushing it by a margin of nearly 3 to 1. "Prejudging the vote by the in- ternational president clearly indi- cates that the union does not de- sire to end this dispute by volun- tary arbitration," Curtin said of the latest effort to get Congress and the Johnson administration off the hook by settling the strike without legislation. "Mr. Siemiller has done two things which have underminedj this effort by congressman Stag- gers to end this burdensome 34- day strike," Curtin said. "First, he has publicly declared that he does not believe his mem- bers will accept arbitration. Sec- ondly, he has said that he does not believe he can convince them to accept it." What this apparently meant was that the two sides never would get together on an agreement as to the issues which should be arbitrated. Meanwhile, Staggers said his committee expects to complete ac- tion by tonight on some kind of strike-ending legislation, but not necessarily the Senate-passed bill that would order the strikers back to work for up to six months. The developments dashed hopes briefly raised at yesterday's hear- Reshuffles Government In England LONDON (I)-Prime Minister Harold Wilson reshuffled his cab- inet last night, appointing For- eign. Secretary Michael Stewart to the strong man post of director of the British economy. Wilson's deputy, George Brown, was named to succeed Stewart as foreign sec- retary. The announcement came as the government won a 58-vote major- ity in the House of Commons on its bill to freeze prices and wages The majority was nearly 40 votes short of the Labor government's nominal margin in the house. Despite Brown's continuing des- ignation as deputy prime minister and his new duties as foreign sec- retary it was clear that Stewart's move is the real promotion of the whole reshuffle. He emerges, next to Wilson, as a new strong man 'in the govern- ment. The other major change is that Herbert Bowden takes over as sec- retary of state for the Common- wealth. This is the job which involves solving the long-drawn crisis over Rhodesia. Arthur Bottomley, for- mer Commonwealth minister, be- comes minister of overseas devel- opment, a job which means little now that Britain is short of cash to spend overseas. JAKARTA (A') - Indonesia and Malaysia will sign a formal peace agreement today to end their three-year-old undeclared war, There were fears President Su- karno, although now only a fig- urehead, might try some last- minute sabotage. Some officials were worried that Sukarno, who initiated the, con- frontation in 1963, might insult' Razak and cause him to walk out. They hoped Razak would ignore any outburst as he and other Ma- laysian leaders ignored Sukarno's anti-Malaysia tirade late last month. Sukarno tried to smash the British-backed Federation of Ma- World News Roundup UNDECLARED CONFLICT: Indonesia, Malaysia To Sign Peace Agreement Ending War Anticipate Korean-Si In Viet Conflict By Ei ing before Staggers' committee for /) x p e a possible solution short of legis- SExpenselation. Curtin said Siemiller told the House committee that he "would ] o f Y e r i urge his members to grant author- 1 d o f Y ea ity to submit all unresolved issues to voluntary, binding arbitration." 500,000 to 600,000 might be neces- Curtin added that, "The five sary to defeat the Communists in airlines immediately agreed to ar- South Viet Nam. bitrate unconditionally." By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - A divided Senate headed yesterday toward a showdown tomorrow on efforts to bring up for debate the House- passed civil rights bill before La- bor Day and to keep it from being bottled up in committee. CHICAGO-A band of 200 civil rights protestors marched through downtown Chicago and picketed the Chicago Real Estate Board office yesterday after a series of confusing decision changes. The demonstrators have been protesting against alleged housing discrimination for three weeks. CALCUTTA-Five persons were reported killed and 71 injured when the army opened fire on rioting students yesterday in Shil- long, capital of Assam, India. According to reports reaching Calcutta, the students swept through the state secretariat, smashing doors and windows and then burst out of the building and into other areas of the city. HONOLULU - Gen. William C. Westmoreland said yesterday that more troops will be needed in Viet Nam. But, the top U.S. military leader in Viet Nam declined to get into questions of troop ratios needed to defeat the Communists. laysia on the grounds that it wa a form of colonialism. He calle this action a "policy of confron tation." The new government c Indonesia is determined to en this expensive and potentially ex plosive conflict. Indonesian Foreign Ministe Adam Malik was scheduled to fi to Kuala Lumpur with Razak fo further celebrations there of th peace agreement to exhibit Indo nesian enthusiasm. Indonesia's Nationalist party one of the most powerful politica groups in the country, renewed it support of Sukarno and his poli cies yesterday. The party, domi nated by the 65-year-old presiden for 38 years, is strongest in centra Java where the new government i weakest. The war also had global reper- cussions. Indonesia walked out of the United Nations when Malaysi was admitted; Britain, Malaysia' Commonwealth partner, had t keep 50,000 men in the area to defend her former colony. Th trade ban was a blow to Singa pore, the natural market for In donesia's exports, and port of en try for imports. Singapore took it self out of the Federation of Ma laysia largely because of the con frontation policy. WASHINGTON (RP)-Viet Nam appears well on the way to be- coming the biggest foreign war in American history outside of the two world wars. There is a general expectation that by the end of this year the Vietnamese conflict will assume Korean-size proportions, and could reach much higher levels. "It's very apparent we're going' to need more men there," Sen. John C. Stennis (D-Miss), chair- man of a Senate Armed Services subcommittee, told a reporter yes- terday. Stennis, who predicted in Jan- uary the U.S. commitment in Viet' Nam could reach 400,000 men by the close of 1966, said an eventual U.S. Marines Smash Viet Cong in-H Fighting SAIGON (A) - South Korean troops and U.S. Marines smashed the enemy yesterday in two battles about 140 miles apart, and report- ed killing at least 310. In their biggest battle of the war, South Koreans, in company strength, and five U.S. tanks shot to pieces a battalion of 600 North Vietnamese who charged in hu- man waves through the central highland jungles. The Koreans reported 170 enemy dead and many arms captured. To the north, elements of the U.S. 5th Marine Regiment, which fought alongside the Koreans in the Korean War, attacked a Viet Cong force and estimated they killed 140 in a battle 35 miles south of Da Nang, the northern Leatherneck base. Fighting con- tinued after nightfall. In both actions, military spokes- men said allied casualties were light. There were other developments as the tempo of fighting picked up: -U.S. planes launched hun- dreds of strikes against military targets in North and South Viet Nam Tuesday and for the first time in three days the U.S. Corn- mand reported no planes were lost. -The U.S. Air Force said the Viet Cong captured a village in the Mekong River delta Tuesday, fired on a spotter plane, then held the villagers at gunpoint when two U.S. jets attacked, killing 15 Viet- namese and wounding 182. Help was rushed to the village later when it was learned that the Viet Cong had provoked the air raid. President Johnson has said that whatever forces are required will be sent to Southeast Asia, and Congress, despite a hotbed of cri- ticism over his Southeast Asian' polices, has backed his requests. Already U.S. forces associated with the Viet Nam war amount to an estimated 375,000. This includes 290,000 on the ground, 60,000 off- shore in Navy vessels and at least 25,000 in supporting bases and supply units in Guam, Thailand, the Philippines and Okinawa. A 400,000-man ground force in South Viet Nam, plus the 85,000 offshore and in war-related oper- ations in the general area would exceed the 475,000 men used di- rectly and in support of the Ko- rean War at its peak in 1953. The prospect of . a Korean- sized war around next Christmas stands in stark contrast to the late 1964 prediction of Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara that the United States could wind up major Viet Nam operations in 1965. Communist actions led to a change in U.S. planning. U.S. planes now are bombing targets in North and South Viet Nam at three times the rate of Korean bombing. The annual rate of bomb tonnage being directed against Communist infiltration routes and supply and troop areas totals more than 600,000 tons, al- most the amount used in three years of the Korean War. The apparent blowup of any arbitration agreement tossed the hot political potato of the airlines strike back to Congress. Initial Reaction Initial reaction from strikers was mostly negative to the pro- posal to go back to work volun- tarily while submitting unresolved issues in the contract dispute to binding arbitration. Siemiller appeared to indicate the strikers would first have to be promised most of the hefty gains in the proposed White House con- tract the strikers rejected by a crushing vote 10 days ago. That provided for an estimated 72 cents an hour over three years in-wages and fringe benefits. "We expect to meet the car- riers-to find out which issues we agree on and which issues we can- not agree on," Siemiller said. "We are prepared to ask our members for authority to submit l the unresolved issues to arbitra- tion," the union chief said; add- ing: "In my opinion, unless there is agreement on most issues there is little or no prospect of member- ship ratification or approval." However, the proposal was ac- cepted in principle by Curtin. Staggers, in making the arbi- tration proposal, said it was "the last thing we could possibly do" before going on with proposed leg- islation to force the union to call off the strike. --------- m....m..mmm.m..mmmminm..mmmmmmm--mmmmm * I I I FRIDAY and SATURDAY 1a II I I I I | JOH N FORD I I I THE MOHAWK Ii ! 1 DRUMS ALONG' U(1939) I II. .I 1 I I , SHORT: "Paladin" * COLOR 1 , 1 I 1 , Starring: HENRY FONDA, CLAUDETTE COLBERT, I I i JOHN CARRADINE, WARD BOND . I I I , I , * I I , I I * I * IN THE ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUMI ADMISSION: FIFTY CENTS .. I , Immm mmmmmmmrmmmm mmmmmmmmmmmm minmmmmmmmmmm mmmum BRIDGE NIGHT I Ar " V C o-ommL. .40mak. Rooms 3R and S II THURSDAY, AUGUST 11 7:30-11:30 I; FUN FOR ALL Beginner, Novice, and Life Master I j}7'> °r "y {: it {iif >- "" r° .:.'r,"r, vx.}r.;r; 4y {a" , r rv." r:rl:>r;:: rr".f., 'd:. }:wr$wa; .: { n .. 4i.'..:. ..-. f. fl .%.. .: : .; >:: >: ' t - rr'. i "'"'{:4"r r , , r s+n".nv. ... ... .. .:. >: : .> :: . r. :.. . ":, F! v{. " .:.::::..:::: ..." .: - tr. ..f. ::r:rr ^.r:: , wrr: .x"v.:"v: rrw.:; ra v. .::: " Sf: ;: ?: ::.>t :i i:' ..ri":w".w { .. r ",.'":{"}:.;{."r.",{"5;,}:;x: ,.' ."tr~r:r.... :.........,...:......_,,,<. ;::i:w,, "fr:?{ctr :. . r,:'" ." a "rx fr...,,.., .:.:.i :"r. "':... r..r.r rf..,, :r:w:: :" :a:rt::{ :: ':^: :: .. r..*.. . .. ... _ , .. K., r.... r......d{..~.i%. r .;v.:v::^i%>. :v:: r.. ......:: s.:l: *%:^.::::} .'r,:{ " .?.,, DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN :":.. : 1 IS ' . ::.r"::P''w't'' _ "_ :fFJi'fY 'A.}1:"l1:ii{ti'"rf :r.. .,.... " ,,.. :, ,.rvi. tt:.: r .. .. .... ..::.:::: w.:i ::.V:r.:: r: rrt........::.. _. :,. .......,., ................... ._._._.__ -- .: The Daily Official ulletin 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 11 Day Calendar Bureau of Indusrial Relations Sem- inar-"Negotiating for School Admin- istrators": Michigan Union, 8:30 a.m. International Seminar on Teacher Education in Music-School of Music, 9 a.m. Dept. of Spech and School of Music Opera-Mozart's "Cori Fan Tutte," Jo- sef Blatt, musical director and conduc- tor, Ralph Herbert, stage director: Ly- dia Mendelssohn Theatre, 8:30 p.m. General Notices Grade Sheets: Grade sheets have been distributed to all departments for the reporting of Spring-Summer full term and Summer half term grades. Grades for students receiving degrees at the end of the summer term should be submitted to the Office of the Reg- istrar within 48 hours after the exam- ination has been given. Grades for stu- dents not candidates for degrees should be submitted to the Office of the Reg- istrar not later than 72 hours after the examination. To assist instructors in reporting grades, the Office of the Registrar will provide messenger service to departmen- tal offices on the central campus on a regular basis during the period Aug. 17-19 and Aug. 22, 23 and 24. Grades may be submitted directly at Window A in the Administration Bldg. Any questions concerning grades may the student's graduation until a later applications available dt Bureau of Ap- be directed to this office by calling date. pointments. 764-6292.- -1 i 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. 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 Placement ANNOUNCEMENT: Peace Corps Placement Test-Deter- mines in what capacity you may serve. Test will be given Sat., Aug. 13, at the downtown Post Office, Main and aCth- erine, at 9 a.m. To take test applica- tion must be completed. Details and POSITION OPENINGS: New York Air Brake Co., Syracuse, N.Y.-Openings in engineering fields, Project, Process, Industrial, Manufac- turing, IE, ME, EE with 3-5 yrs. exper. These in Watertown, N.Y. Other oppor- tunities in R.I., Mich., Ill., Mass. Open- ings in marketing in NYC. (Continued on Page 4) . .. 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