Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, March 7, 1968 Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, March 7, 1968 FEAR CAMPUS INVASIONS: Southern College Pre Denounce Orangebm sidents Czech General Defects, Requests U.S. Residence Johnson Calls Report on Cities ~Exhaustive' Study of Problems ATLANTA (CPS) - The pres-i idents of five black colleges here have recently sent a joint letterJ to President Johnson and law en- forcement officials appealing forl protection of college campuses from invasion by the "American version of storm troopers.m The letter was sent in reaction to the fatal shootings of three black students at South Carolina State College in Orangeburg, S.C. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., earl- ier sent a similar letter to At-+ torney General Ramsey Clark ask- ing for immediate federal action on the Orangeburg slayings, which he called "the largest armed as- sault undertaken under color of law in recent Southern history." At the same time, students in Atlanta have reacted to the Orangeburg incident by forming a Black Student Alliance which will be composed of students from all five colleges. Walter Dancy, a student leader, said the Alliance was formed be- cause of the "anger and frustra- tion of the powerlessness of black WASHINGTON UP)-The State from Rome to the United States g Slayin g s Department announced Wednesday on Feb. 28. Their point of entry the defection to the United States in this country was not disclosed. of Maj. Gen. Jan Sejna of Czecho- Sejna "applied for and was issued people. The most direct example slovakia, with his son and the son's a visitor's visa in Rome last week," is that of the killing of students fiancee. the State Department spokesman at black college campuses like Sejna, 40. is believed to be the said. Texas Southern University and highest ranking Soviet bloc of- "He came to the United States South Carolina State." ficer ever to cross over to the immediately and now has request- The letter from the college pres- West. ed permanent residence in thisI idenC s was addressed tohansdon While U.S. authorities kept tight country," McCloskey said. "His re-I and local police officials. It said secrecy on details, there were in- quest is under consideration." "The invasions offcollege am- dications that Sejna fled from McCloskey refused to answer puses by various police powers in Prague last week a step ahead of other questions from newsmen, in- the United States is a trend which a purge planned by the new Czech cluding where the Sejna group is can no longer be continued with- Communist leadership. now and what secrets he may have out public protest by responsible Sejna was a member of the brought with him. educators, and other persons in- Czech General Staff and of the The Central Intelligence Agency terested in preserving- the free- National Assembly Presidium and and other U.S. investigative unitsj dom of institutions of higher chief of the Communist Party normally question important de- learning in our country." Central Committee in Czechoslova- fectors before freeing them for The letter said America seems kia's defense ministry. public appearances. "to have adopted a "get tough" Shortly before he disappeared The official Czechoslovak ver-{ national policy based on the use from Prague Feb. 25, his commit- sion of Sejna's departure did notl of armored and armed police and tee came under political attack by speak of the power struggle in that guardsmen in killing American the new ruling faction which re- country. It said the general is citizens at the slightest provo- placed conservative Antonin No- wanted on criminal charges in cation." votny with Alexander Dubeek as connection with a $20,000 clover' The frustrations of our society, the country's Communist Party and grass seed swindle. the presidents said, "have led leader last January. The Prague account says Sejna many officials to believe that a Sena, accompanied by his 18 left by car at dawn a week ago resort to naked police power and y Sunday, without his wife, saying brualiy i th prperaveue oryear old son, Jan, and Miss Euzenie he was taking his son to visit brutality is the proper avenue for Musilova, 22, identified as Jan's handling major social problems, fiancee, apparently drove through relatives. That was the avenue taken by Hungary and Yugoslavia to Italy. Another officer who had the I rank of major general in a com- Nazi Germany and other police The announcement by a State munist Army, defected and is now power states. This has not been Department press officer, Robert in the United States is Bela Kir- the way of modern America." J. McCloskey, said the three flew aly, a Hungarian. WASHINGTON (U' - President for the hard core unemployed, Johnson said yesterday the re- would take "a massive private ef- port of his special Commission on fort, the likes of which have never Civil Disorders was "one of the been done before." most thorough and exhaustive "You folks have the financial studies ever made" of the problems horsepower" to help in this effort, of the cities. the President said. He did not comment on what Johnson referred to his rnes- he thought of the recommenda- sage on -the cities and said the tions of the commission, currently administration "undertook every- the object of nationwide discus- thing we could conceive of that we sion, but said it was "written by had the resources to undertake." a very distinguished group" and: reflected "a lot of talent." He said "We may have under Johnson recommended its read- 'taken more than Congress will ing, along with his own message to Congress on problems )f the cities. Tl,.. r~m v~ic~insn ,"n -4 -;A give us the resources to do," but he declared: "I want to do just as much as the traffic will bear -as much as Congress and the budget will permit." By reading both his cities nes- sage and the civil disorders re- port, the President said "peojlh will see first what we have al- ready done as well as what re- mains to be done." "The cabinet is trying, we are trying and I hope Congress will," the President said. #4 . ff The commission report said America is moving toward "two societies, one black, one white - separate and unequal" and de- clared that racism and riots will split the nation unless massive ard costly remedies are applied. Johnson made his comments in welcoming a 22 member joint com- mittee of executives of savings and loan associations and savings banks from across the country. They have pledged to get thrift institutions to give priority to pro- viding construction and mortgag- ing financing in the nation's new model cities program in 63 cities. Johnson met the group in the Cabinet room and told it he felt that solving some of the cities' problems, including finding jobs %s Uff on ALL PIPES STATE DRUGS State and Packard, 0 1 I1 7 MASONIC AUDITORIUM-SUN., March 10-8:00 P.M. TNH EL ETTE sE N and the WILSON BROWN TRIO $5.00-4.00-3.00 at Masonic Temple, JL. Hudson's & Grinnell's (Enclose stamped, self-addressed envelope) -Associated Press Two Heads Are Better . .. President Johnson and his new Secretary of Commerce, C. R' Smith, greet each other following the swearing in of Smith to his new post at a White House ceremony yesterday. 0 ir COLOR! li II What Does V.P. Cutler Say About the THIINK-IN: IN CONCERT BIG PICTURES! FRAT.-SORORITY SUPPLEMENT! 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