SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 22,1964 THE MICHIGAN DAILY FACM 1171 .13 SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1964 THE MICHIGAN BATTY ~Aflp 'I'UDVfl a ...m *aan rw Federal Judge To Rule China May Divide Red World On Rail Strike Legality By The Associated Press CHICAGO ()-A federal judge will rule today on a railroad re- quest for a restraining order bar- ring a strike against the nation's railroads at 6 a.m. tomorrow. Judge Joseph Sam Perry of United States District Court heard arguments from railroad and union attorneys for three hours yesterday afternoon. Then he set a further hearing for 10 a.m. to- day. "As long as negotiations are in progress, I do not want to make a decision that might give an ad- vantage or a disadvantage to one side or the other," Judge Perry said. Stop Traffic A strike would halt service on 187 railroads and terminal switch- ing companies that handle 90 per cent of the nation's rail traffic. Meanwhile, spokesmen for the Pennsylvania and Reading Rail- roads said last night that if the threatened strike of three na- tional railroad shopcraft unions comes off tomorrow, the two will be shut, down completely. Other unions are expected to observe the picket lines that would representatives of the carriers had be set up by the shop craft unions. been negotiating the contracts for The railroad, in asking for the 18 months. restraining order, told Judge Perry Somebody Agrees the union was asking for some- Earlier yesterday, eight of the thing not entered in the original,11 nonoperating unions came to contract demands during the bar- agreement on a new three-year gaining. contract that closely followed the The nonoperating unions and recommendations of a Presidential Emergency Board nearly two years ago. .:::. SECRETARY WIRTZ IQC-ASSEMBLY SING "Cities Around the World" Mon., Nov. 23 Aud. A 8:00 p.m Angell Hall FREE ADMISSION THE MYTH OF AMERICAN LIBERALISM HEAR JACK BARNES National Leader of the Young Socialist Alliance and Students for DeBerry & Shaw expose the hypocritical position of the "liberal establishment." The eight unions agreed to terms that provide that the more than 367,000 workers under their jurisdiction will get a 27 cents an hour wage raise over three years. Nine cents will be retro- active to Jan. 1, 1964, nine cents will be paid next Jan. 1, and the third nine cents will be paid start- ing Jan. 1, 1966. Close to Wirtz Francis A. O'Neill, chairman of the National Mediation Board, said he had been keeping in touch with Secretary of Labor W. Wil- lard Wirtz in Washington on the negatiations involving the shop craft unions. Railroad spokesmen said no shipping embargoes on perishables or livestock were in force, al- though most agreed that the em- bargo-if it comes would be de- layed until just before the strike deadline. James E. Wolfe, chief negotiator for the railroads, said he was hopeful and added: Please ... "I have asked-and this is ab- solutely essential-that embargoes not be ordered. I have further stated that not one step be taken by my people until it's cleared directly through me." Despite the management op- timism, one railroad negotiator said: "There's nothing to report. No progress. Nothing at all." Pay Us More! The shop craft unions contend that their members are underpaid in relation to other nonoperating rail workers and comparable jobs in industry. The railroads, in return, argue that it would not be equitable to the rest of the industry to break the uniform wage-package pat- tern now prevailing. By WILLIAM L. RYAN Associated Press Special Correspondent Red China has delivered its ul- timatum to the Soviet Union- plug up the holes in the Iron Cur- tain or the Communist move- ment will be irrevocably divided into two camps. No other construction can be! placed upon a 3000-word state- ment from the theoretical jour- nal Red Flag broadcast by Pe-' king yesterday. As matters stand now, it means the Soviet-Chinese dispute not only will continue, but probably will grow more in- tense. Peking, in breaking a sullen silence on its reception of the new regime in the Soviet Union, prob- ably has thrown a scare into the Communists of both Eastern and Western Europe. Weed Out Communists Almost openly, Red Flag was asking for a continuing and thor- ough purge in Russia to weed out all those Communists who supported Nikita Khrushchev's policies, and to return to Stalin- ism. The Chinese statement was a recitation of Pekings' terms for playing ball with Moscow within a unified world Communist move- SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR Stewart Udall, right, discussed proposals for "The Great Society" with President Johnson Friday, while Secretary of Agriculture Freeman, left, discussed a spring tour of the western farmlands which Johnson will make. Johnson, Udall View "Great Society' PFlans JOHNSON CITY (P)-President Lyndon B. Johnson has made final decisions on two more 1965 programs - to try to beautify American highways and, by 1969, to purify salt water through a crash program. These ambitious plans, a part of the "Great Society" proposals Johnson will submit to Congress next year, were revealed Friday by Secretary of the Interior Stewart L. Udall after a day-long visit at the LBJ ranch 15 miles west of here. Udall flew back to Washington last night. Remain in Cabinet? Asked by newsmen if he ex- pects to remain in the cabinet, he responded: "Yes, I do. And after my visit today I'll stay with a real sense of excitement." Udall said Johnson is probably the most conservation - minded President since Theodore Roose- velt. Seek $16 Million After his ranch stay, Udall said at White House press headquar- ters in Austin that Johnson told him to seek a $16 million supple- mental appropriation in January for research on desalting and purifying sea and brackish waters, with the aim of bringing costs down to 25-35 cents per 1,000 gal- lons by the end of the President's four-year term in 1969. Udall said the administration will also recommend as part of its "Great Society" program a plan to beautify and landscape more than 40,000 miles of federally sub- sidized interstate highways. With- out disclosing details, Udall pre- dicted this will be "very exciting." Secretary of Agriculture Orville Freeman reported that Johnson plans another farm tour - of imidwestern states-to "talk to people on the land." The agriculture secretary, wind- ing up a 22-hour stay at the LBJ spread, told a news conference he expects Johnson to make the trip early in the spring. He said John- son talked about visiting Iowa, Kansas and Nebraska, and may travel farther afield. Freeman also said Johnson wants him to stay in the cabinet and he will do so. But he couldn't report much about farm legislation that will go to Congress in 1965. He did say that he expected recommendations to "strengthen and improve" present programs. But he discounted the possibility of new or novel proposals. s t i f i t t 1 t i ment, but the terms are just about scrapped as hopelessly "revision- as tough as they can be. Indeed,' ist." if the Chinese conditions were No K Without K met, the present regime of party Finally, it demanded a purge chief Leonid Brezhnev and Pre- in Russia in its warning that there mier Alexei Kosygin in Russia must be no "Khrushchevism with- could not last long, out Khrushchev." Peking heavily assailed virtu- ally all the domestic, Communist The Soviet Union, as matters party and foreign policies develop- stand now, can meet none of ed in the Khrushchev era. these terms. Meeting all of them is utterly out of the question. Even End Cooperation if there should be a successful In almost so many words, Pe- new palace revolution in the king demanded that Moscow reas- Kremlin by an alliance of Stalin- sess and reinstate Stalinism. It ists and military men, it could demanded an end to cooperation hardly hope to go back all the between the Soviet Union and the way to Stalin after the past dec United States and virtually de- ade of Soviet social development. manded abrogation of the Moscow treaty partially banning nuclear At the same time, the Chinese tests. assault will do nothing to help the It further demanded Russians new Soviet regime. Even if there once again anathematize Presi- were a Soviet anxiety to muffle dent Tito of Yugoslavia and toss the dispute with Peking, it could him out of the Communist fam- lead to perilous paths. The pros- ily. It demanded that policy of pect could so alarm Europe - the Soviet 22nd Party Congress including even Communists in dealing with consumer goods de- Europe-that the cure for the Pe- velopment and the theoretical king-Moscow dispute could turn course of Soviet Communism be out to be worse than the disease. i- IPIERCIED JEARRJNGS A Christmas Gift That Will Be Worn and Remembered For Years to Come. Many imports from the world capitals of fashion: FRANCE and ITALY ... from $2.50 IBAVS arcade ewelry shop 16 Nickels Arcade-off State St. 11 World News Roundup I I By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - Rep. Charles A. Halleck (R-Ind) predicted aft- er a conference with Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower yesterday that Re- publicans will stick together to make a strong comeback in the 1966 and the 1968 elections. Halleck, the House minority leader, read to a news conference after his return from Gettysburg, Pa., a statement in which he and Eisenhower agree that all elements of the badly defeated party must be brought under one tent. VATICAN CITY-The most ac- tive and controversial Vatican Ecumenical Council session yet closed yesterday with proclama- tion by Pope Paul VI and the Council's 2000 prelates of three far-reaching decrees. Lavish ritual inside St. Peter's Basilica brought to a close the worldwide assembly of Roman Catholic prelates-the third ses- sion since Pope John XXIII open- ed the Council in 1962. ROME-Campaigning for to- day's nationwide municipal elec- tion has ended on a violent note as 33 million Italians prepare to vote. Police in Turin said 15 Fascists broke into offices of the Commu- nist newspaper L'Unita following a Fascist party rally in the north- ern city. The demonstrators in- jureda newspaper employe and smashed furniture and equipment before police restored order. Disorder in Rome also erupted yesterday when a bomb blew up the entrance to the national head- quarters building of Premier Al- do Moro's Christian Democrat Party. * * * NEW YORK-The mighty Ver- razano-Narrows bridge across New York harbor ceremoniously was opened yesterday, giving travelers a route around the clogged streets of Manhattan. A day-long program marked the opening of the $375-million struc- ture-the longest suspension span in the world-and the two new expressways, costing $167 million, which tie it to a network of super- highways. WASHINGTON-Vice Adm. Hy- man G. Rickover was selected yes- terday as recipient of the 1964 Enrico Fermi award for his con- tributions to the development of nuclear power for submarines and power generating plants. Rickover is the first engineer- administrator to win the Atomic Energy Commission's award, which carries with it a $25,000 prize, as well as a gold medal. * *: * MIAMI-An attempt by exiles to bomb Havana's baseball park while Fidel Castro spoke there Fri- day night was foiled by Cuban anti-aircraft fire, an anti-Castro leader said yesterday. A B-26 bomber flying to Cuba was damaged and one of three exile crewmen was wounded, said Dr. Orlando Bosch, head of the MIRR, a militant anti-Castro group. SAN FRANCISCO--Gov. George Romney declined Friday to say whether he agreed with the de- mands of some Republicans that Dean Burch be removed as Repub- lican national chairman. At a news conference he said, "the No. 1 objective should be to bring about an understanding that will broaden the Republican Party's base and unify it. The questions of candidates should be subordinated." Congo, Troops Move on City LEOPOLDVILLE (P)-The Con- golese Army moved closer to Stan- leyville yesterday while a Bel- gium paratroop unit was poised off Africa's west coast ready to liberate 1000 whites held hostage in the rebel capital. Premier Moise Tshombe's gov- ernment, meanwhile, rapped the United States and Belgium for attempting to negotiate with the rebels without its consent. It also warned Belgium that a unilateral decision to send troops into the troubled country would be aggression but expressed willing- ness to study a proposal for such an action. 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