page three al4e 1Mit-ii-an Iait AWFUL High-75 Low-55 Mostly cloudy. showers likely Thursday, July 27, 1972 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN News Phone: 764-0552 British court frees ja-iled longs oremen. . LONDON(A -- Britain's Industrial Relations Court freed five jailed longshoremen whose arrest sparked waves- of wildcat walkouts and thrust the nation toward a gener- al protest strike. But the court's decision yesterday, along with a sur- prise judgment by the House of Lords, plunged the coun- try's already-snarled labor laws into chaos. The judicial committee of the House of Lords, the highest court in the land, ruled in a separate decision that labor unions are responsible for what their representatives say and do on the factory floor. This means the giant Transport and General Work- ers' Union can be brought to court for the sort of actions U Sponsors yearly speech conference By DIANE LEVICK Allen Whiting, a highly-respect- ed China, scholar, and H e n r y Hewes, drama editor for t h e Saturday Review, will be just two of the speakers at the 32nd annual Summer Speech Con- ference today at Rackham. Sponsored jointly by the Uni- versity and the Michigan Speech Association, the conference will present a series of speeches and demonstrations to the public, free of charge. C. William Colburn, chairper- son of the conference and an as- sociate professor in the Univer- sity's speech department, feels that one of the "most outstand- ing programs" includes Henry Hewes' presentation on "Chang- ing Criteria in the American Theatre." Hewes has directed plays himself, edited drama col- lections, and served on the Pulit- zer Prize Jury for Drama. Another fascinating speaker, according to Colburn, will be Al- len Whiting, now with the Uni- versity's political science de- partment. He is working with the State Dept. and was featured on nationwide television during President Nixon's China trip. Registration for the s p e e c h conference will begin today at 9 a.m. that put the five stevedores behind bars. An hour after the court's re- lease order, the five stevedores emerged from London's Penton- ile Prison: They were greet- ed by 2,000 cheering comrades, who carried them shoulder high from the prison gates. The crowd was only a frac- tion of an estimated 112 million union members who put down their tools to protest Prime Minister Edward Heath's con- troversial Industrial Relations Act. The new law was designed to cure this strike-ridden -coun- try of labor-management trou- bles. Instead, more days have been lost through work stop- pages in the first half of this year than in the whole of 1971. The wildcat stoppages yester- day bit intovirtually everysec- tor of national activity. The ports were shut. There were no national newspapers. Many coal mines closed. Lon- don's red double-decker buses stopped running. Meat and fruit markets in the capital stayed shut, Hundreds of ships were idle. Flights in and out of London's Heathrow airport vir- tually halted. The top command of the Trades Union Congress, which governs 10 million organized workers, had threatened a one- day national stoppage from midnight Sunday if the steve- dores were not freed. The release of the stevedores temporarily eased the nation's political and industrial tensions without ending them. Unions See BRITISH, Page 8 AP Photo TRADE UNIONISTS REJOICE outside London's National Industrial Relations Court yesterday on hearing of the release of five imprisoned dock workers. Their release averts a general nation- wide strike scheduled for next week. PRAISES RUSSIAN OUSTER: Meir proposes peace talks with Egypt as solemn Sadai sneers JERUSALEM (P) - Premier Golda Meir praised Egypt's ex- pulsion of Soviet military advis- ers in a speech to the Israeli parliament yesterday, and pro- posed face-to-face peace talks with Egyptian President Anwar Sadat. Taking a moderate stand, Meir said she was refraining f r o m "polemics with the president of Egypt" because "it would seem that this hour in the history of Egypt . . . should be the ap- propriate hour for change." "We don't want to be occu- piers," she said. "We call for peace - peace so that our coun- tries can live together." The Israeli leader told a hush- ed house that the Soviet exodus was a positive development. Then she addressed Sadat directly: "Let us sit down together to discuss the peace settlements. Let us search for a way to break the deadlock, to seek a way out of the ossified situation. Lest a war be renewed between us, let us advance toward complete peace." But as Meir was making her peace overtures to the Egyp- tians, Sadat was saying on a Cairo broadcast: "Our enemies the Israelis must understand . . . that the path is long but nature and history are on our side . . . Allah will give victory to those who be- lieve in him." A dispatch from Cairo s a i d there was no immediate Egyp- tian reaction to Meir's personal appeal to Sadat. However, Sadat has said re- peatedly Egypt would not sit down with the Israelis so long as Israeli troops occupy part of Egypt, because such a meetig would be tantamount to surrend- er. REJECTS FLEMING'S PLAN SGC plans study of 'U' athletic dept. By DAVID STOLL Rejecting a proposed Regent- approved study of University recreational sports facilities, Student Government Council (SGC) has announced plans for its own study of campus ath- letics. In a press release, SGC call- ed the study, proposed by Presi- dent Robben Fleming and ap- proved last week by the Regents, "totally inadequate, unaccept- able" and a "blatant attempt to avoid conflict over the issue of athletics on campus." Fleming's proposal, made in response to requests from the Regents, SGC and the Advisory Committee on Recreational, In- tramural and Club Sports (AC- RICS) will involve investiga- tions only of alternative kinds of new recreational facilities and financing. SGC plans to investigate: -Athletic department struc- ture, including "linkages and various segments of the depart- ment. They will also focus on the "role of the athletic direc- tor", especially "his relation- ship to the Board in Control of Intercollegiate Athletics." -The department's decision- making processes. This area in- volves the alleged "secrecy that surrounds board meetings, the information monopoly of the athletic director, and the de- partment's special ability to in- fluence decisions by granting special privileges." -The use of existing facili- ties. SGC proposes to also ex- amine the financing of new fa- cilities and "the proper use of general fund monies" which are allocated to the department. -Racism and sexism in the department. Alleged charges of discrimination "in both hiring and department policies" and the "plight of women partici- pants in athletics" will be looked into. "club sports athletes, varsity athletes and the faculty to co- operate" in the study. One of the controversial is- sues involved is the need for more recreational facilities, in- cluding the possibility of a new Intramural Bldg. The building has yet to be constructed due to lack of funds. Some observers, how- ever, trace the problem to the fact that recreational, intra- mural, and club sports are run by the athletic department, which allegedly favors varsity athletics at the expense of re- creation for the mass of stu- dents. In a statement to the Re- gents, Fleming said the prob- lem of the athletic department's organization and operation has already "been studied extensive- ly" and therefore "most of the things" which SGC wishes to study "are already well-known." Canham says he has "no strong feelings" about keeping intra- mural and recreational sports tied to varsity athletics. But he says that it is most "econom- ically reasonable" for the two to share facilities. "I don't know what they mean," he responds to SGC's allegations of racism and sex- ism in his department. "We have all kinds of wom- en in the department,." he says, and adds that 30 per cent of the athletes, as well as many of the coaches, are black. A visitor is present at "near- ly every meeting" of the board and minutes go, not only to its members, but also to thse Re- gents, according to Canham. He says there is "no secrecy" in department decision-making processes. "Anyone who comes to me, I'll Golda Meir This position leaves the door open to possible direct talks should the Israelis withdraw from the Suez Canal and Sinai Peninsula, which Israel has oc- cupied during the 1967 war. An Israeli official stre sed this was the first time Heir had td- dressed Sadat directly. *This was not a mistake," he s sid. "We have done this delibu:at- The Knesset-Israel's parlia- ment endorsed h e r statement fblafii, rN ^ - 1 -1 4-11-