Thursday, March 7, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Thursday, March 7, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY .P-ZF-T..ree Senate Approves Anti-Riot Bill Outlawing Transport of Arms WASHINGTON (P) - The Sen- Long proposal to make it a feder- ate adopted a ban on transport- al crime to engage in sniping, ing Molotov cocktails and other shooting, destroying property or explosives for use in riots Wed- other violence in a riot. nesday, but killed a second pro- Sen. Robert F. Kennedy (D- posal which its sponsor said was N.Y.) supported the Long move, aimed at Black Power militants. asserting it would "change the Sen. Russell B. Long (D-La.) whole complexion of r the civil author of both proposals, urged rights struggle in the United the Senate to adopt them if, as States:" he put it, it wants to do some- He said it would bring the fed- thing about such militants as H. eral government into local law Rap Brown and Stokely Carmi- enforcement "to a degree we never chael. contemplated when I was at- Sen. Jacob K. Javits (R-N.Y.) torney general." protested that Long's proposals Under terms of the Long pro- would mean moving directly into posal, Kennedy said, "any time the creation 'of a national police a group of three people anywhere force. in the United States get together Javits contended the states now and commit any act of violence or have the police and the laws to any disorder, the Federal Bureau cope with riots. of Investigation would have juris- The ban on transporting or diction." manufacturing "in commerce" any But the New Yorker's brother, firearm, explosive or incendiary Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D- device for use in civil disorders Mass.) opposed the provision. was adopted by a vote of 72 to 23. He said there had been no de- It was made a part of the civil termination of whether the FBI rights open housing bill on which wanted or had the manpower for the Senate has been working the expanded duties it would have since Jan. 18. under the proposal. The Senate defeated 64 to 2 a; Edward Kennedy said the pro- * WifNINNER 7 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS!I " BEST PICTURE W BEST ACTOR DUSTIN HOFFMAN f BEST ACTRESS ANNE BANCROFT SEPHELEVINE BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS MIKE NICHOLS KATHERINE ROSS LAWRENCE TURMANZ " BEST DIRECTOR P TMIKE NICHOLS /M* BEST SCREEN PLAY 0 BEST CINEMA- I %X TOGRAPHY I THE .,. GRADATE t t . S f L 1 posal would "extend the jurisdic- tion of the FBI into every city and town in this nation." Sen. Roman L. Hruska (R- Neb.) said the amendment would bring the federal law enforcement machinery "into any tavern brawl on a Saturday night." All the Republicans voted against the proposal and most of the support came from southern u Democrats. Long derided an anti-riot pro-: vision adopted by the Senate Tuesday as adding up to zero. This proposal, patterned after a bill passed by the House last sum- mer, would make it a federal crime to cross state lines with intent to incite a riot. Long and some other critics ob- jected that this would require federal prosecutors to prove what a defendant was thinking about ; when he crossed from one state to another. The Louisiana senator proposed POLICE TANGLE with demonstrators outsidec making it a federal offense simply against the hanging of three black Africans in Sa to incite a riot that obstructs or - adversely affects commerce. All the government would have OPPOSE SOVIET POLICY: to prove then, he said, was that a person started a riot and that the riot hurt commerce. " 55 o~ He said the present adminis- RominanIans Hil tration - and he supposes the, next one- doesn't want to prose- cute those who start riots. But "if we pass this," he said, a "they will have to." Sen. Phillip A. Hart (D-Mich) SOFIA, Bulgaria 0') -Leaders I ence, saying it1 moved to kill the proposal. of the Warsaw Pact nations open- in small counti Hart did not try to derail Long's ed a summit conference Wednes- limit armament Plan New Probe Of VietOfficials U.S. Adviser's Report Discloses Wholesale Corruption' in Saigoll WASHINGTON (AP) - A new velopment (AID) would cut his investigation of corruption in the team to 20 persons by July 1 de- South Vietnamese government was spite what he called its success in promised yesterday by Sen. Ernest stimulating increased customs Gruening after disclosure of U.S. collections. adviser's repqrts stating "grave The adviser's recommendations doubts.that there is any possibility for stern U.S. measures went to of ever achieving any reasonable the "Public Administration Ad Hoc degree of honesty and integrity in Committee on Corruption in'Viet- Vietnamese officialdom." nam" last Nov. 29, shortly after The Alaskan Democrat, chair- the committee was established by man of the Senate foreign aid ex- AID. of Rhodesia House in London folio alisbury by the Rhodesian governm -Associated Press wing a protest ent. reaty ace t Nuclear T oc Con fere placed restrictions Romanian sources spread the ries and failed to word that the leader of their dele- ts of such major gation here, president and Com- proposed ban on transporting Molotov cocktails before it came to a vote. But he urged its re- jection, terming it "very dan- gerous" legislation. Before it was adopted, Long told the Senate this amendment is aimed chiefly at those who make and distribute Molotov cock- tails, or gasoline bombs, and clay- day and Romanian opposition ,to powers ast Soviet policies was expected to Still fre produce some fire works. Cominunis Communist sources said the leaders wa two main items on the agenda are an interna Vietnam and the Soviet Amer.- munist pa can draft of a treaty to prevent week afte the spread of nuclear weapons, China's we now under consideration at Gen- Commui eva. pean secu n d more mines to kill people or burn Romania assailed the treaty at but it migi down stores and cities. the Geneva disarmament confer- Romania's - the other demning M Since t summit m Romania CINEMA Iif matic rely many des German ai The me SEAN CON NERY Bulgaria, Germany, mania anc MCH AEL REDGRAVE 'scheduled a late star eon for de in business w day. The su been sche( hard on t "THE ILL"ont pest meetiz parties. Both Rc which Ron riendly re cow-Pekin "Stark realism portrayed against a back- in Budape ground of naked reality-a classic", East Ger S.P.B.Q.S.A. Also: Chapter Nine "FLASH GORDON" Aud. A.-Angell Hall BOC Friday, March 8 CUSTI 7:00 and 9:15 P.M. Saturday, March 9 Seventy-Five Cents 213 S the Soviet Union. munist party Secretary General ssh in the minds of the Nicolae Ceausescu, would not tol- t party and government erate any criticism here of his as Romania's walkout of party's Budapest attitude or any- tional meeting of Com- thing else. arties at Budapest last This contained a hint that Ro- r its policies and Red mania might walk out if discus- re criticized. sion of a nuclear treaty got rough nist sources said Euro- or if Soviet bitterness over the rity could be discussed Budapest flareup surfaced here. ht be avoided because of refusal to go along with Romania's argument that major bloc members in con- powers as well as small ones West Germany. should be required to accept con- he last Warsaw Pact trols has infuriated the Russians. aeeting 20 months ago, Their Communist party news- has established diplo- paper Pravda said Saturday it is ations with West Ger- inadmissible for any limitations pite Soviet and East to be put on big powers. nger. eting of leaders from Czechoslovakia, East Hungary, Poland, Ro- National Ne d the Soviet Union was to last two days. But c penditures subcommittee, said the reports show "wholesale corruption on every level." The adviser said in reports to the U.S. mission in Saigon that the United States must initiate bold action to stamp out corrup- tion "and, once having started, must continue with it." "Vietnamese government offi- cials are so involved that very few have hands sufficiently clean that they can make an immediate ma- jor contribution," the reports said. He told of corruption reaching even the now deposed director general of South Vietnam cus- toms, Nguyen Van Loc. Gruening said he would start new hearings in about a month. Asked if he would summon the U.S. adviser who wrote the re- ports, Gruening replied, "We'll do what is necessary to bring the facts out.' The monthly reports to Wash- ington and the adviser's recoim- mendationsato the U.S. mission in Saigon were made available to the Associated Press on condition the adviser's name not be used. He is chief of a 22 man advisory team that has been working with Viet- namese government officials for four years. At the same time the adviser offered his recommendations he told his superiors in Washington of previous problems in winning support for get tough proposals, and blamed "hearts and minds purists" in the U.S. mission. In January, he told Washington the Agency for International De- ws Roundup In Washington, an AID spokes- man told the Associated Press Tuesday: "The committee never really got started. And it's possible it won't get going. "Wlien you get into the busi- ness of trying to make another government clean, under inter- national law, you get into the question of sovereign nations." Gruening said U.S. efforts to curb corruption "are not effective because some of our agencies aren't concerned about it. It's tolerated from the top in our gov- ernment." Speaking of the South Vietna- mese last Friday, President John- son said in a speech at Beaumont, Tex., "Certainly, they have cor- ruption and we also have it in Boston, in New York, in Washing- ton and in Johnson City." XK Asslls Rhodesian Executions LONDON (k) Rhodesia's hang- ing of three black Africans Wed- nesday despite a reprieve from Queen Elizabeth II brought threats of retaliation from Britain and condemnation by the United States and other nations. Commonwealth secretary George Thomson told a tumultuous ses- sion of the House of Commons that Britain's attorney general, Sir Elwyn Jones, "is giving ur- gent consideration to all the legal implications of the execu- tions. These implications, he told a Laborite questioner, Andrew Fa- ulds, include prdper retribution from those held personally res- ponsible for the executions -got- ernment officials, judges, war- ders and the hangman. Faulds had asked if the Brit- ish Authorities would seek. to punish - even with the death penalty - the "judges, officers of the so called government of Rhodesia, the - warders and the hangman." The hangings were assailed by African nations and the United States at a meeting. of the UN Human Rights Commission in New York. Morris Abram, the U.S. dele- gate, declared his government had no hestitation in condemning Rhodesian authorities for "this atrocity." A spokesman for UN Secretary 4 t after a formal lunch- legates might mean the ould continue into Fri- mmit conference had duled earlier but came the heels of the Budd- ng of world Communist 'mania and China, with mania has tried to keep lations despite the Mos- g split, were criticized st by the Soviet Union, any and Poland. ATYN)" INC. DTS LEATHER 'OM + UNUSUAL s_ Bsy ie Associated Press WASHINGTON - The Selec- tive Service System confirmed last night the existence of a plan circulated nationwide a m o n g anti-war organizations to harass draft board members. A spokesman responded after the New York Daily News said in a copyrighted story that groups opposed to the Vietnam war had received a blueprint for sabotage and destruction of draft offices and personal harassment of board members. SELMA, Ala - Three Negro candidates for Selma's City Coun- cil began planning runoff cam- paigns yesterday in the city's first Democratic primary since the voting rights campaign of 1965. The Negroes won a second chance at party nominations when no' one polled a majority of the votes in Tuesday's first primary. The runoff will be April 2. WASHINGTON - A group of House Republicans proposed yes- terday that $6.5 billion be cut from next year's budget and $2.5 billion of the saving be used "to meet urgent human needs and the urban crisis." Eight GOP members joined in sponsoring the shift in budget priorities and said they had the. support of 38 others. None of the party's top leaders were among the supporters, how- ever, and the proposal to add $2.5 billion in selected areas of hous- ing, employment and education runs counter to a determined Re- publican effort to slash spending. CLOTHING S. State, 2nd Floor mamaama ........ .......................................mmmm m General U T 4j"shocked to he Thompson s PIZZA Various hompson s 4Azed British former colon i~ Elizabeth had TH IS COUPON IS GOOD FOR lat to . r Saturday to o c tences of the "-- imprisonment. :o5oHanged in ON A MEDIUM OR LARGE ONE ITEM prison for mu (Ok MORE) PIZZA were Duly Mlambo and *, COUPON Is Good Only Monday thru Thursday, t The blacks w I March 4-7 bers of an #mi mimmnmm mmmmmm nmmmmm mmjGang." STARTS Ends Thant said he was ear the news." ican nations critici- policy toward its y, although Queen d issued an order commute the sen- three blacks to life Salisburiy's central urder. and terrorism Shadreck, Victor , James Dhlamini. ere said to be mem- outlawed "Leopard PPESENTS trattorb - National Theatre of Canada SHAKESPEARE'S "A Midsummer Night's Dream" with Tonight OM THE FRIDAY I I PLU "FAR FR MADDING CROWD" "'Richard Brooks' adaptation ru-, of Truman Capote's bestseller la the - : . < ; (01 , J1kt~vd 4 MSJf%f} ykJ ~ t , : ' i J t DOUGLAS RAIN MARTHA HENRY as Bottom as Titania Directed by JOHN HIRSCH Designed by LESLIE HURRY screen is o hell of a motion ie m SOLE U.S. ENGAGEMENT! 4-- _. i i ..THE BEST PICTURE OF THE VEAgDIe Aprii 1-6 Mendelssohn Theatre ..... _......, r .. ,.. _. 7 r lAt:._._...... ...:I1 4. .. ,. L.,......., C.. ....:.t.... "T .fl(1 ...,.,.! f .f1 I 11 I i I