Vol. LXXXII, No. 48-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, July 25, 1972 Ten Cents Eight Pages Wants more drug arrests President Nixon is joined at the White House today by Myles Ambrose, his special consultant on drug abuse law enforcement, and a chart showing 16,144 arrests for drug violations this year, about double the figure four years ago. The President said he wanted the number doubled again next year. THOUSANDS WALKOUT London hit by wildcat strike; threat of national shutdown LONDON (A')-Wildcat strikes country's ports, idled 200 ships, Miners left their pits. Prin- spread across Britain yesterday and diverted dozens overseas. ters walked out, leaving London in protest against the jailing of Pressures built up on the giant without newspapers for the sec- five defiant dockers and raised Trades Union Congress (TUC)- end straight day. the possibility of a total nation- representing 10 million organ- Workers quit the capital's wide walkout. ized workers-to call the coun- meat, fish and vegetable mar- The stoppage, led by 42,000 try's first general strike in half kets. Fisherman refused to un- longshoremen, shut down the a century. load their catches. Drivers parked their trucks up and down the land, warning 4 all would be off the roads in 4 two days. - The developing crisis was a further blow to Britain's Con- servative government, already fighting high unemployment and rampant inflation while trying r to halt turmoil in Northern Ireland. TUC leaders trooped into an <. emergency night conference with Prime Minister Edward Heath carrying a demand for the release of the jailed long- shoremen. Significantly, they shelved - s= . until tomorrow consideration of x,, . insis'ent calls from member unions for a general strike. The five dockers were jailed during the weekend, nominally eforcontemptofdcourt. They had N defied an order to halt un- official picketing in a dockland dispute. In reality, wider issues were at stake. The longshoremen tradition- ally have leen the most radical of Britain's organized workers. For months they have been squaring off for a confrontation with the Heath government and f fits Industrial Relations Act. This aims at regulating and modernizing worker-manage- ment relations. But it is being fought tooth and nail by the laboi unions because it con- tains penal clauses that could .; put workers in jail and because they think it undercuts the right of collective bargaining. -Associated Press As massive support built up, across the country for the long- ResC Je attempted shoremen, the g o v e r n m e n t Drilling began yesterday in an attempt to reach and communicate sought desperately to cool the yh in a mttemptoneabcansdomunicae situation. This focuses on the with nine miners trapped in a mine owned by Consolidation Coal need for the two sides to hit Co. of Blacksville, W. Va. The 750 foot hole will be used to lower upon some face-saving way of a microphone to listen for sounds in the mine, having the jailed dockers freed. Wal eimto seek halt to dike raids By DAN BIDDLE and Wire service Reports United Nations Secretary General Kurt Waldheim has appealed to the U.S. government to halt reported bombings of flood dikes in North Vietnam. Waldheim told a news conference yesterday that he has received information from "unofficial sources" that U.S. bombs have damaged North Vietnam's complex dike system both by direct hits and by nearby explosions. Waldheim said he could not be sure whether the dike bombings were intentional, but added that regardless of intention he was deeply concerned by reports he had received of damage to the dikes. Secretary of State William Rogers responded imme- diately, calling Waldheim's -- -- information "part of a care- fully planned campaign byF e - the North Vietnamese and their supporters to give worldwide circulation to this falsehood." Rogers has asked U.S. Am- a bassador George Bush to meet e'vote quickly with Waldheim and "point out to him that the WASHINGTON (A) - The information he has received Senate voted late last night to concerning alleged deliberate kill the $1785-billion military- bombing to damage the dikes in foreign-aid bill. The action North Vietnam is false." came after the bill was amend- ed to provide withdrawal of U. William Powell told the Daily orcfromIn na in ou monthsifAeia prsns last night that the meeting with o American prisoners Bush would occur immediately, and that a statement concern- The amendment had been ing further actions by Waldheim written into the foreign aid bill would soon follow, earlier by a 50-45 vote. A mo- Powel sid te Scretry- tion to strike the amendment at Powell ,said the Secretary- that time was rejected In a 9 General's "information" includ- 46 vote. ed a report of dike bombing4ve n from Swedish Ambassador to Republican Leader ugh the U.S. Eric Erikson which was Scott told the Senate shortly denied by President Nixon at before the later roll call that he his June 29 press conference. felt compelled to vote against Powell said that the question passage after adoption of the of any contact between Wald- troop-withdrawal amendment. heim and official sources in He said the bill, as it stood, Hanoi was "at this time a mat- would "not help the chances for ter of private information." peace or the negotiations in According to Powell, Wald- Par heim's latest information indi- Also voting against passage, cated that the reported bomb- but for different reasons, was ings could cause flooding of vast Democratic Leader Mike Mans- areas and "the loss of thousands field. He said all along that he and thousands of lives on North was opposed to continuing what Vietnam's coastal plain." he called a hodge podge for- Rogers, using unusually harsh eign-aid program. language in his answer to Wald- ,The authorization bill was a h ei s "W anner t o nald- first necessary step to appro- heim, said, "We cannot con- priation of funds to continue sider helpful any public state- , military aid to friendly nations ments giving further currency to around the world. these reports." The troop-withdrawal amend- Far 'ast specialist Eqbal Ah- ment was written into the bill med, who recently predicted in the face of claims that it "genocidal flooding" in North could hurt President Nixon's Vietnam due to dike bombings, attempts to negotiate an end to told the Daily he thought Wald- the Vietnam war. heim's appeal might be the re- The House has not yet acted sult of information and pressure on a military-aid authorization from World Council of Churches bill of its own. It cold send the President Eugene Carson Blake, Senate a measure on which ac- Ambassador Erikson, and several tion could be taken later, other members of what Ahmed Or the Senate Foreign Re- called an "unofficial investigat- lations Committee could bring ing group" that has gathered in- out another bill for the Senate See END, Page 8 to consider. Bodies ab ou . See story, Page 3