THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREJ WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1964 t Detroit's Pa per s Settle One Strike Pressmens' Walkout Keeps Papers Silent; Row Centers on Single Issue DETROIT ( ) - Detroit's lengthy newspaper strike moved a step closer to settlement yesterday as tentative agreement on a labor contract was reached with one of two striking craft unions. Federal and state mediators announced the agreement between the Detroit Newspaper Publishers Association and Local 10 of the Plate and Paper Handlers Union. Adoption of the settlement - details of which were not dis- closed - will be unanimously recommended at a ratification meet- ing of the union membership Schools Hit REVOLUTION: ---..-_" Labor Wins Second Vote LONDON R) - Prime Minister Harold Wilson's Laborite govern-. ment won a new test of confidence in the House of Commons last night by a 21-vote margin. Thanks to unexpected support from Liberals, the vote was 315- 294 against a Conservative motion expressing no confidence in the new government's entire program. The vote was Wilson's second parliamentary victory in two nights. On Monday night the Lib- erals voted against the govern- ment, joining with the Conserva- tives in supporting a motion criti- cizing Labor's plans to nationalize the steel industry. The govern- ment just scraped by on that vote, 307-301. The vote last night demonstrat- ed how the Liberals can give Wil- son room for parliamentary ma- neuver when they agree with his proposals in the difficult months of legislation ahead. On paper, Wilson's majority is only five in the 350-member House of Commons. Illness has cut this down to three. Fog al- most wiped it out Monday night. tomorrow, the mediators said. Four Months The publishers association rep- resents the afternoon Detroit News and the morning Detroit Free Press, which have not pub- lished for nearly four months. The Plate and Paper .Handlers and the affiliated Pressmen's Union walked off the job last July 13 over such issues as Saturday night premium pay at the Free Press, wash-up time or clothing allowance, wage scales and con- tract duration and medical and hospitalization benefits. Mediators have disclosed that "areas of agreement" have been reached on all issues except the key question of how many men shall operate new eight-unit presses at the News. Minimum Crew The publishers have remained firm on their insistence that the minimum crew should be pegged at 15 men, while the union in- sists on 16. Some observers feel that if neither side is willing to budge on this major stumbling block, the strike may continue for some time. Publishers and the Pressmen's Union are scheduled to return to the bargaining table Thursday morning in the Detroit office of the Federal Mediation Service. CHAOS CONTINUED in the Sudan yesterday as crowds stoned the embassies of the United States, Great Britain, and Egypt. The three countries registered no protests, with Egyptian Presi- dent Gamal Abdel Nasser voicing support of the regime of Gen. Ibrahim Aboud and Premier Sir El Khatim El Kahlifa. Sudanese Demonstrate As Disturbances Go On CAIRO (1) - Street crowds made attacks on the American, British and Egyptian embassies in Khartoum yesterday during new demonstrations in the Sudanese capital, Cairo radio reported. The attacks on the U.S. and British embassies appeared to be mainly ineffective rock-throwing incidents, but the attack on the Egyptian building was said to be more serious. There was no men- tion of any damage or casualties, however. Sir El Khatim El Khalifa, JPrime Minister of the harassed, 11-day-old Sudan government, ap- Staebler G ets pealed to demonstrators in a broadcast last night to halt at- a Posttacks on foreigners. He made no mention of the embassies. I Diplomatic sources in Cairo LANSING (P) - Rep. Neil said Khartoum was gripped by a Staebler (D-Mich), unsuccessful general strike engineered by the candidate for governor in last government itself to stifle any Tuesday's election, was named possible coup. chairman yesterday of the Demo- Earlier Tuesday the government cratic Party's policy committee. denied that a military counter- Staebler proposed after his loss revolt had broken out against the to Republican Gov. George Rom- regime. By Walkout BrazilP Of Teachers RIO DE JANEIRO (M) - Brazil today, seven months after a near- ly bloodless revolution ousted LOUISVILLE () - Striking Joao Goulart and his left-leaning teachers left an estimated 3,000 government, looks confidently to youngsters stranded in the class- the future -- more so than in room yesterday while they pushed years. their battle for higher wages on Under the guidance of President two fronts. Humberto Castello Branco, Bra- Picket lines appeared at a num- zil's image at home and abroad ber of schools despite a court or- has become more impressive. der forbidding such activity, and The revolution abruptly ended leaders of the teachers' union a Communist threat to take over filed a suit asking for the ouster the nation. of the county tax commissioner. Rabble-Rousing It ended rabble-rousing and The.suit charged that assess- flash strikes that menaced indus- ments in Jefferson County (Louis- try, communications and trans- ville) are far below the fair cash port. value required by the state con- It also ended a round of arbi- stitution. Property is assessed at trary pay increases that ranged 35 per cent of its actual value, as high as 100 per cent and which one of the highest ratios in the together with skyrocketing prices state. threatened to blow the top out of Disputed Figures the nation's inflation. After classes were called to or- Pay increases now are more or- der this morning, school admin- derly. Price increases are regu- istrators announced that 199 lated. But inflation still is at a teachers had failed to report for dizzy pace. The Cruzeiro is at the duty. Their figure was challenged almost all-time high of 1,700 to by strike spokesmen who claimed the United States dollar after that 200 to 300 teachers were having steadied temporarily at. missing. .1,200 immediately after the revo- "The movement is stronger now ution. Two years ago it was 600 than it has ever been before,;" said to the dollar. Robert L. Burton, a teacher and Target Datev chaiman f th prtestgrou. .inance minister Otavio Gou- chairman of the protest group. veia de Bulhoes has optimistically1 He said that at one junior high set next June as target date forI school only 18 of 53 teachers checking the galloping inflation were present. and stabilizing the economy. "Crippled" "I'm sure that school has been crippled in its operation," said or dj City Supt. Samuel V. Noe. "It's' W orne cIsey g unfortunate because some young- sters are bound to lose their in- structional periods.(__ presses for Stability i i PRESIDENT BRANCO For the government, it is still a time for massive financial assist- ance. Economic Planning Minister Roberto Campos, back from a money-hunting mission in Wash- ington, said that Brazil needs a billion dollars to meet the defi- cit in its balance of payments in 1965 and 1966. More aid will be 7s Roundup needed to grease the machinery of development necessary for the firm future of this nation whose population in less than a decade will total 100 million people. Average Brazilian For the average Brazilian, it is still very much a time for belt tightening in the face of mount- ing prices for food, clothing and shelter. But for both citizens and gov- ernment, prospects for help are brighter than they were while Goulart's leftist anti-Alliance for Progress administration frighten- ed foreign investments. Alliance for Progress aid has in- creased sharply since. the revolu- tion. Foreign investment interest has revived. Washington Trip Campos' Washington trip set what is generally considered to be a favorable groundwork for aid discussions that continue here with arrival of an International Monetary Fund mission, and, later this month, with arrival of a spe- cial mission from the U.S. Agency for International Development. These missions will take a first- hand look at Brazil's accomplish- ments and its needs for the fu ture. Campos says Brazil will en- deavor during these discussions to obtain enough to cover its 1965 and 1966 deficits. Efforts will be made to get aid not only from the United States, but also from international credit agencies, from European governments and from Japan. Past Success However, all has not gone well since the revolution. Prices of food, medicine are sharply up. Meat has gone from 630 to 1,200 Cruzeiros a kilo (2.2 pounds). Beans, a Brazilian staple, have gone from 130 to 250 cruzeiros a kilo; rice from 140 to 240; milk, from 85 to 180; sugar, from 53 to 218, coffee from 90 to 200. Two years ago, the minimum wage in Rio was 12,000 cruzeiros Today it is 42,000. Many workers here and in other industrial areas such as Sao Paulo and Belo Hori- zonte earn more than that. Even so, it is extremely diffi- cult for the average Brazilian to make ends meet. And beyond that average, there are millions, es- pecially in the nation's northeast, who do not earn that much and face even greater difficulty. t r E f ney that an advisory board ber created. But the proposal was vetoedl in favor of naming Staebler to the policy committee post.3 DAILY OFFICIAL BU LLETI N ,s:... ....r......... ... ...+5...r ..........r..t.. ....::. 4..J: Jt:r::-:::: .r"f.o..........r............................... Mass Turnout The demonstrations appeaed to be a mass turnout in support! of the national front government in a seeming power struggle with' some elements of the army. The front grabbed nominal power last month after similar street demonstrations resulted in the ouster of a military regime. But the front left Gen. Ibrahim Abboud as President in command of the army. A small Communist party emerged with four seats in Students at ten schools spent! the day in study halls. Noe also said the school board; may draw up another referendumj calling for a tax increase that might be more attractive to the public. The walkout began last Wed- nesday after the voters refused to endorse proposals for higher taxes on wages and property. The1 money would have been used to now $4,400 to $6,600 a year.1 Teachers now are demanding an increase of $1,500, or five times what the tax would have provided. Raise Assessments In filing its suit, the Louisville Federation of Teachers expressed1 hope this would force action onj raising property assessments.J "They're way too low," comment- ed Richard Miller, president of the LFT, which represents some of the city's 1,900 teachers. Miller's office also was served with a copy of the restraining or-I der outlawing picketing by any1 of the union's members.i An attorney for the union said,t however, he would seek to have the temporary order set aside. By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - The Housing and Home Finance Agency called a temporary halt yesterday to the approval of any more financing for urban renewal projects now under way in California because of what an agency, spokesman called the clouded legal situation since California's Nov. 3 vote against laws forbidding racial discrimination in home sales. * * JOHNSON CITY, Tex. - President Lyndon B. Johnson sized up preliminary figures with Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara yesterday and saw a good chance of holding the next defense budget below $50 billion, which will increase the prospects of keeping the entire federal budget to less than $100 billio'n for the second year in a row. WASHINGTON - West Germany is reported ready to purchase three American destroyers during a new round of defense talks. Kai Uwe von Hassel, the West German defense minister arrived last night for the discussions. * * ,* NEW DELHI - Trains sped food last night toward Kerala State, a Communist stronghold hard hit by the hunger that troubles much of India. A food rationing scheme ~ instituted by Prime Minister Lal~ Rhhal~r liavril ernav~w wf %re' (Continued from Page 2). Including 1. Mental Health Program Director, degree in psychiatry, 3 yrs. exper & license .to practice Med. in Mich. Lansing location. 2. Chemists, Degree in Chem or Chem Engrg or rel. field. I yr exper. Located in Ingham & Washtenaw Counties. 3. Unemployment Claims Adjudication Exec., admission to Mich. Bar required, exper not need- ed.' Wayne County. Application dead- line Nov. 23. For further information, please call 764-7460, General Div., Bureau of Ap- pointments., 3200 SAB. FOREIGN JOBS: The International Student Travel Center Directors-will be in Ann Arbor Nov. 23 & 24. Any student interested in working abroad for the summer should talk to them. Come to 212 SAB & sing up for one of 14 group 'meetings held both days 9 a.m. - 4 p.m. American Student Information Serv- iee has sent us more application forms for European jobs. Students who want to apply pick up forms in 212 SAB. For further details come to Summer Placement Service, 212 SAB. ANNOUNCEMENT: Peace Corps-representatives will be on campus Nov. 16-21, in the lower lobby of the Union 8 a.m.-10 p.m. and in the Fishbowl 8 a.m.-5 p.m., to give information on the activities of the Corps. Speakers will be available to groups and organizations. Make ar- rangements through the Bureau of Appointments. subjects. Training course in Carto- graphy. Men and women. Cook County Dep't of Public Aid, Chicago-Degree Majors in Soc., Psych., Poll. Set., Lib. Arts, and Soc. Work. Trainee opport. In areas of Child Wel- fare, Aid to the Blind, Disabled, Old Age, Institutional Service and related fields. Scholarships avail for further study. Men and women. College Life Insurance Co., Indiana- polis,. Ind.-Management Training and Sales for majors in Liberal Arts with spec. interest in Econ. Located through- out U.S. THURS., NOV. 19 The B. F. Chamberlain Real Estate Co., Royal Oak, Mich.-Liberal arts ma- jors with interest in sales and mort- gage work. .,Engineering Placement Interviews- Seniors and grad students, please sign schedule posted at 128-H West Engrg. FRI. NOV. 13 Sylvania Electric Products Inc. All Degrees: EE. BS-MS: ME. BS: E Math, E Physics and IE. Men and Women, R. & D., Des. & Prod. Texaco Inc., Res. & Tech. Dept., N. the 15-man cabinet and a Mos- Texao Ic.,Res.& Tch.Dep ., .., lem brotherhood with one. Texas. Al Degrees: ChE. MS-PhD: EE w & ME. PhD: Math/Stat. Men and Womn- Atakon meinadBr- en Can consider non-ii AtkensAifma nB coming a U.S. citizen. R. & D., Des. California, Univ. of Los Alamos1 Scientific Lab., Los Alamos, N. M. All Degrees: ChE, EE, EM, ME, Met. MS- PhD: Nuclear. BS: E Physics. Men & women. Postdoctoral appts. also open., R. &D. Consumers Power Co., Lower Mich.- BS-MS: ChE, CE, EE & ME. Also BS- MS: Business w/major in Personnel, Ind. Rel., Mktg., or Econ. Cummins Engine Co., Inc. Columbus, Ind. BS-MS: ME & Naval & Marine Dec. grad. Can consider non-citizens if becoming a U.S. citizen. R. & D., Des., Prod. & Sales. General Telephone Co., Muskegon, Mich. MS-MS: EE. Des. & Communica- tions. ish embassies are attributed gen- erally to Communist students, who are a strongly organized minority element in street demonstrations. Reactionary Egyptian officials of the gov- ernment of President Gamal Ab- del Nasser said the attack on their embassy was "a reactionary im- perialist plan" to harm Sudan- ese-Egyptian relations. The government radio said the Egyptian ambassador in Khar- toum had been told to inform the Sudanese government that Cairo does not hold the Sudanese gov- ernment responsible for the at- tack. -U------ B2ahadur Oastri s government was in ruins and the trains were in- tended to ward off a mounting crisis. KEEP AHEAD OF YOUR HAIR!! * NO WAITING 0 5 BARBERS "Headquarters for Collegians" U-M BARBERS Near Kresge's FRIDAY and SATURDAY Europe-U.S. Student Exchange EXPLORE EUROPE This Summer With OHS Of The UNIVERSITY OF VIENNA ' $66400 For eligibility details mail coupon to: International Student Exchange 409 Waldron, W. Lafayette, Ind. Name Telephone Address Home Address___________________ Placement Interviews: Bureau of Ap- pointments-Seniors and grad stu- dents, please call 764-7460 for appoint- ments with the following: MON., NOV. 16 Housing and Home Finance Agency, Wash., D.C.-Men and women. Majors in Econ, Poli. Sci, Soc., Law, Arch, Land. Arch, and Planning. Positions in Banking, Econ., Mgmt. Trng., Personnel, Pub. Admin., Soc. Work (AB), Trans- portation. Many locations. TUES., NOV. 17 Allstate Insurance Co., Skokie, Ill.- Seeking Lib. Arts, Econ, Ed., Fine Arts, etc. for positions in Insurance claimsI and sales, office mgmt., mgmt. trng. profram. Locations in U. S. and Can-r ada. WED., NOV. 18 Aeronautical Chart and Information Center, St. Louis, Miss.-Majors in the physical sciences: geog., physics, geol., math, C.E., or 6 hrs. math, and 18 hrs comb. of two of these listed or rel. 'inmmmmu .inminmmmmm-nu *mmi SUNDAY THRU THURSDAY OFF Soc OiFF ; * Phone 761-0001; r LARGE PIZZA a THOMPSON'S * RESTAURANT Free Delivery or pick up. * One Coupon Per Pizza " Begins Sun., 8th- * Expires Thurs., 12th wwwwwwrfrmwwwwwwwwr*m rww== I pile-lie>d - eather SNOW BOOTS.. ; fashion-right warmth for the coed set A T off...our snow and water repellent boots with soft * acrylic ple linings and nnsi bedrubber soles. 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