ANN ARBOR. MICHIGAN Fridoy, August 4, 1972 News Phone: 764-0552 Page Three DEATH LIKELY Anti-war measure OKd WASHINGTON (') - A tug of war between the House and the Senate took shape in Con- gress yesterday over the Sen- ate's end-the-war measure, with little expectation it would clear the House. Senate Republican Leader Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania told reporters that he imagines "the half life of this amendment is about five minutes in confer- ence.' Democratic L e a d e r Mike Mansfield said he expects that passage by Congress will be "ra- ther difficult." The House quickly sent the full military procurement bill, to which the anti-war measure is attached, to a House-Senate conference yesterday for a com- promise. The military procure- ment bill adopted by the House contained no anti-war amend- ment. House conferees in the past have rejected the Senate's antiwar measures. The latest Indochina with- drawal provision approved by the Senate Wednesday took a careful middle line through chamber sentiment. While the toughest Senate language on the war yet. it was not as tough as some in Senate would have preferred. It was the first time a provi- sion cutting off money for all U.S. combat operations in Indo- china - an important exception is Thailand - has cleared the Senate. Nixon has referred to the score of end-the-war moves as "pro- long - the - war amendments," and his allies in the Senate have repeatedly argued against any action that may tie the President's hands in reaching a settlement. State of emergency declared by Britain LONDON UP) - The British strike "constituted a threat to But if the Senate was inevit- ably to act, Nixon felt it should act in a way acceptable to him. In a telephone call to Sen. George Aiken (R-Vt.), he relay- ed to the Senate his support of Aiken's amendment on the war which embraced all the Nixon conditions of May S for a with- drawal from Vietnam only. In a series of eight votes. Aiken's a'mendment carried but was substituted for by the even- tual winner, the amendment of Sen. Edward Brooke, (R-Mass.). Stauncher advocates of with- drawal such as Sen. George Mc- Govern (D-S.D.), and Sen. John Sherman Cooper, (R-Ky.) sup- port bringing all Indochina forces out with no conditions at all, relying on Hanoi's pledge to release American prisoners. By inserting any conditions. they argued, Nixon would have too much room for maneuver. too many reasons to continue bombing and shelling. Cooper oisposed and voted against Brooke all the way. "You have authorized Nixon to continue this deadly war. You cannot have it both ways," he said. But in approving Brooke, the Senate stopped far short of more summary proposals made by Cooper, Majority Leader Mike Mansfield, and Sens. Clif- ford Case and Frank Church. As passed, the latest provi- sion cuts off all money except for withdrawal and protection of withdrawing U. S. troops, within four months, if prisoners are released in that time. The four months was borrow- ed from the presidential time frame. The prisoner clause, Brooke said, was absolutely nec- essary to "attragt any broad support." And the word "pro- tection" is interpreted by amendmetstbackers as provid- ttng the President llexibiiity. The amendment, leaving out Thailand and its bases, applies to Laos. Cambodia, and South Vietnam, air. ground and naval forces. Military aid to South Vietnam forces continues. Brooke's amendment carried by a vote of 49 to 47 with 11 Republicans helping i through. government proclaimed a state of emergency yesterday, enabling it. to shift supplies through the nation's strikebound ports. The week-old work stoppage by 42,00 longshoremen has already dwindled stocks of fresh fruit, vegetables and essential food for farm animals, and tied up ex- ports worth more than $245 mil- lion. Queen Elizabeth II. cruising aboard the royal yacht Britannia off the west coast of Scotland. signed the emergency proclama- tion after it was rushed from London by Home Secretary Ro- bert Carr. The state of emergency allows the government to requisition transport to move essential sup- plies, control food prices a n d draft troops to unload the 500 ships idled in British port areas. Carr told legislators in t h e House of Commons the dock the essential of the life of the community." Serious shortages are not ex- pected for some time. although meat traders were worried by dwindling stocks of New Zealand lamb. However, supplies of cit- rus fruits and bananas were due to run out by the weekend. Hardest hit by the strike were the islands of Guernsey in the English Channel and the He- brides off northwest Scotland. Stevedores at Glasgow plan to meet today to discuss appeals to load vital shipments for the He- brides, where fuel supplies have already been exhausted on the thinly populated islands of Coll and Tiree. Local officials on the island of Lewis said residents had ouly a week's supply of flour e"'. Lead- ers of the dock workers in Gla gow said they expected 'he strik- See EMERGENCY, Page 12 Workman Bud Mason gets the signs ready for yesterday's opening session of the American party convention in Louisville, Ky. Alabama Gov. George Wallace has sad that he would not accept the party's presidential nomination. Rep. John Schmitz (R-C'alif ) will probably be the party's second choice candidate. U.S. dIkeraids irise, Hanoi*sayS From Wire Service Reports American planes and naval guns hit Quang Tri with a massive bombardment yesterday, paving the way for a new assault on western sections of the city by more than 2,000 South Vietnamese marines. Meanwhile, Hanoi claimed yesterday that the United States has stepped up its bombing of the dikes and dams in North Vietnam. Chief negotiator Xuan Thuy, at the 153rd session of the Vietnam peace talks, said the American attacks rose from 18 in April to 63 in July. He said a total of 149 hits had been scored on sluices, dams and dikes. Thuy called the bombing "a crime more monstrous than those of the Fascist Hitlerites" and scaffed at President Nixon's statement that any damage to the dikes was ac- cidental. U.S. spokesperson David Lam- bertson said later at a press briefing that Ambassador Wil- liam Porter had called Com- munist charges of U.S. syste- matic bombing of the dikes "of- ficial propaganda." He added that Porter had urged the Hanoi delegates to comment on a photograph in a North Vietnamese newspaper showing a gun mounted on or behind a dike. The Communists said last week there were no military installations on the dikes. Lambertson said Thuy refused ts reply' directly, sayintg ontly tat "the United St ates ias tt riht to attack any objective in North Vietnamttt In the fighting yesterday, heavy Communist artillery fire and house-to-house fighting slowed the marine attack aimed at destroying the North Viet- namese garrison inside the 1th century Citadeln the heart of the city. More than 40 U.S. B52 bomb- ers hammered North Vietnamese troop concentrations on the northern front, up to 18 miles from Quang Tri, while F4 Phan- torn jets and carrier-based planes pounded positions on the fringe of the battle, the U.S. Command announced. Britain1)Ians to take poll in N. Ireland BELFAST I' - The British government announced yesterday it plans to hold a plebiscite in Northern Ireland soon to dete"- itine whether the people want to uite with the Irish republic or remain tied to Britain. William Whitelt. Britain's ad- ministrat or for the province, told ltsts s' Hor sss st 'as ainLondoss ts gostin ts essud undertas's the pll after the House approved enabling letislation. Whitelawv g ve no date fs s the plebiscite bt in the past has talked of September ' r October as a like- 5y titte The canvas of public opinion has been demanded by Ulster' 'ne millicn aProtestants, most of wom want to remain Briti.ish subjects. Opinion among the half- msilli'n Roman Catholics in the minority generally favors unit- ing with the republic and i t s overwhelmingly Catholic popula- tion. Whitelaw told the Commons it would be advisable to hold a plebiscite "as soon as it can reasonable be done." See BRITAIN, Page 12 When I' n64? This dried-up old fellow is the apple of the eye of Alan Scharf, a teacher at the School of Perform- ing Arts in San Diego, whose hobby is carving apples into faces, then letting them mature with age,