THE MICHIGAN DAILY Su~nrivAnri 7. MAR ____ ___ ___ ___ ____ ___ ___ ___ ___ ____ ___ ___ ___ ____ ___ ___ ___ ___..--. .'.l uy/ i-,NI II I 17uo X {ashington Rioting Subsides s '12,000 Troops Move In i i (Continued from Page 1) ning had a steady flow of reports of indidents that- indicated the city had not regained complete calm. There were several small fires, a gun battle when police stoppedi a car near the Maryland line, a' policeman who reported he was. shot at, and several looting reports., Civilians were reported in two in- stances to have dropped tear gas grenades into- cars. A day earlier,'the capital city's skyline had been ablaze with more than 250 fires. But there were no major fires last night, al- though smoke still could be seen' drifting over the downtown area. The mayor said there were no plans to move the troops, despite the calm. There were scattered incidents yesterday, including two instances, of sniper fire, said Cyrus Vance, P r e s i d e n t Johnson's -trouble- shooter. - The mayor said 5,000 people had been given food through churches and welfare agencies. Smoke still tinged the chilly, night air Friday night from 250 fires that gutted small stores on 7th street and 14th street north- west and along H street north- east, not far from Capitol Hill. There were a few new fires, but firemnen worked unhampered in the predominantly Negro areas. Army patrols extended beyond .the three major Negro areas that suffered the bulk of the damage into northwest Washington's em- bassy row and outlying streets. Two-thirds of Washington's 800,000 population is Negro, but the damage- was primarily in the poorer Shaw and Cardozo areas. Heavily - guarded g o v e r n m e n t' buildings, including the White House and Capitol, were never threateiied. Mayor Washington was con- sidering using city schools to billet homeless families.. Police had reported arresting about 1,000 persons, most for vio- lating a dusk-to-dawn curfew dur- ing a relatively quiet night Fri- day. But soon after the curfew, ended at 6:30 a.m., reports of loot- ing began to flow into police head- quarters. Then, about noon, looting re- ports dipped after Deputy Police Chief Raymond S. Pyles ordered the city's Civil Disturbance Unit to arrest all looters. Earlier, of- ficers had been told to arrest only, felony offenders and ignore those committing lesser crimes. About 100 yards from a precinct, police station on New York Av- enue, three white men were in- jured iwhen a crowd of Negroes smashed the windshield "of their sports car. The crowd overturned the vehicle after the men fled. In one block of 7th Street, eight stores had been destroyed by fire. Nine others had been looted. Four businesses with "Soul Brother" signs in their windows appeared Marines from a nearby Quan- stores on Pennsylvania Avenueza tico, Va., base guarded looted stores on Pennsylvania Avenue southeast of Capitol Hill. The Capitol building, normally toured by 45,000 visitors daily during this Easter season, was closed to tourists. Large, olive-drab Army trucks were parked at the Capitol's main steps, where sol- diers lounged in the afternoon sun. A machine gun' that had been placed on- the steps Friday ,night was gone. The annual Cherry Blossom Festival, which brought thousands of tourists-many of them school children-to the capital, had been canceled earlier. Eight ,WIn G uggortheim: Fellowl.ships Eight University professors have, been, awarded .1968 Guggenheim Fellowships in the arts and sciences. The University was sixth In the country in the number of grants received along with MIT. Some 291 fellows were chosen from more than 2000 applicants on the basis of past contributions in their fields and quality of the project which the grants will sup- port. Receiving' the most fellowships was the University of California at Berkeley with 19. Columbia University received Z5, Yale Uni- versity 13 and Harvard University 12. UCLA and Princeton Univer- sity each were granted nine awards, followed by the Univer- sity and MIT. A total of 91 colleges and uni- versities were represented. Fel- lowships are open to all residents of the Western Hemisphere and the Philippines. Fellowship winners from the University and their departments include Profs. Richard D. Alex- auder, zoology; Albert Cohen, music; Eric . Lonneberg, psy- chology; and Shaw Livermore, Jr., history. Others are Profs. J.M.E. Mora- vosik, philosophy; Roy A. Rap- paport, anthropology; L U n e 1 Rothkrug, history; and Alfred C.T. Wu, physics.U Paratroops Move Into Windy City (Continued fron Page 1) ery. Among them were 150 Juve- niles. In addition to the nine fatali- ties traced to the disorders, one of them killed in an exchange of shots with police, two other deaths were being investigated for possible relation to'the riots. One was a 10-month-old boy, burned to death in his home. The other was a 35-year-old woman, shot to death. In his telegram to the President asking for "up to 5,000 troops," Shapiro said: "Under existing cir- cumstances the law enforcement resources of the state are unable to suppress the serious domestic violence in or near the city of Chicago. Shapiro said he was asked to make the request by Mayor Rich- ard J. Daley of Chicago. Earlier in the day Mayor Daley clamped a strict 7 p.m. curfew .on persons under 21, and the National Guard was beefed up by two more battalions. But last night the curfew was defied by 200 youths on the South Side who marched arm-in-arm on 63rd Street. Police reported sev- eral small fires, shattered windows and overturned autos in the area. The area hit harQest Friday night-west Madison Street-was reported relatively quiet last night. Armored personnel carriers car- *'ying guardsmen with rifles and .38-caliber machine guns patroled the street, which was virtually de- serted except for police and guardsmen. On the near North Side-the scene Friday night 'of some loot- ing-police were reported running out of ammunition after returning the fire of 'snipers for hours. All lights in the area were out. Police and National Guards- men swooped into a near North- west Side area where; another sniper was reported yesterday af- terrioon and rounded up 50 per- sons. Another rifleman was re- ported trapped in a South Side building. But the most critical area was? a stretch about five miles west of Chicago's Loop along Madison Street, the city's north-south me- dian, where nine new fires broke out. Firemen trying to close hy- drants were targets of a sniper. The stricken area ranges west of Chicago Stadium, a West Side landmark. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN - -tSS ' The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan for. which The Michigan Daily assumes no editor- ial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3564 Administration Bldg. be- fore 2 p.m. of the day preceding publication and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday. General Notices may be published a maxi- mum of two times on request; Day Calendar items appear only once. Student organization notices are not accepted for publication. For more information call 764-9270. SUNDAY, APRIL 7 Day alendar Bureau of Industrial Relations Semi- nar - Program-for Institutional Man- agement Education --,"Leadership for Women Executives": Statler-Hilton Inn, 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. School of Music Degree Recital - Chester Hampson, Double Bass: School of Music Recital Hall, 2:30 p.m. School of Music Degree Recital - Sarah MacNeal, Viola: School of Music Recital Hall, 4:30 p.m. Cinema Guild-Carl Dreyer's "Pas- sion of Joan of Arc": Architecture Au- ditorium, 7:00 and 9:05 p.m. School of Music Degree Recital - John Strobel, French Horn: School of 3020 Washtenow - 434-1782 Wednesday-Saturday-Sunday Music Recital Hall, 8:30 p.m. School of Music - University Arts Chorale - Maynard Klein, Conductor: Hill Auditorium, 8:30 p.m. Events Monday Bureau of Industrial Relations Sem- inar-"Management of Managers No. 56": Michigan Union, 8:15 a.m, to 5:00 p.m. and 7:00 and 9:00 p.m. Bureau of Industrial Relations Sem- inar-Program for Institutional Man-: agement Education - ".Leadership for Women' Executives": Statler-Hilton Inn, 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. (Continued on Page 10) HIGH CAMP MATINEES!! ALL SEATS 75c Thurs - :00-3:00; Fri., Sat. & Sun.--I :00 SEE ALL NEW HIGH TARZANADVENTURE! CHALLENGE THE WORLD'S MODERN WEAPONS! HENRY KOVACK , . DAVIDOPATASHU 4. 7 Everyl one is waiting ~for. k oX'I President Johnson Cancels Joint Session (Continued from Page 1) ments, "the matter \of a military adviser or advisers for Ambassa- dor Harriman, for anything he might be called upon to do. This reference gained meaning for another overseas indication that North Vietnam is preparing for a direct contact. The pro- Communist Japanese Denpa news agency said that Hanoi has ap- pointed its representatives to es- tablish contact with U.S. repre- sentatives. ,Soviet sources in London said two days ago plans were afoot for a meeting in Moscow within a few days.t Westmoreland's Successor By Christian's account,- much of yesterday's White House con- ference was devoted to discus- sions of a successor to Westmore- land, who will step out of the Vietnam command in July to be- come Army chief of staff, and to the filling of other military posts now vacant or soon to need filling. The two also discussed the sit- uation in South Vietnam and the panhandle of North Vietnam,. Christian said, as well as the re- lief of the garrison at Khe Sanh, the bombing restrictions in North I of Congress Vietnam imposed by Johnson last Sunday, and the moderniza- tion of the Army of the. Republic of Vietnam.* The general and the President apparently met alone all morn- ing, but were ' joined at lunch time by others-Secretary of De- fense Clark M. Clifford, Under- secretary of State Nicholas Katz- enbach, Gen. Earle G.. Wheeler, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, retired Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor, Director Richard Helms of the Central Intelligence Agency, Walt Whitman Rostow, presi- dential assistant for national se- curity affairs, and other White House staff members. President Advised "Throughout the morning, ;the President has been kept advised, of the situation here in Washing- ton and other cities where dis- turbances have bheen occurring," Christian told reporters. Under Johnson's proclamation Friday authorizing the use of troops and national guardsmen to maintain law and order in the capital, sources said that the fed- eral troop strength was being in- creased to 12,500 in a major effort to quell the disorders. j TECHNICOLOR@ rISTE8UT1ONCO., Shows at 1-3-5-7-9 Continuous from 1 p.m. every day April 7-13 Read and Use Classified Ads ! r s F Shows at -3-5-7-9p.m. y IY M U U You'll laugh Sunday, April 7th 7 and 9 P.M. Angell Aud. "A" FELIX GREENE'S O"Perhaps the most beautiful movie in history." -Brendan Cill, The New Yorker. all the way to the funeral!., W ty t- F ,.. t 4th and Final Week! Dial 8-641 - INSIDE NORTH VIETNAM a documentary film in color "Its articulate and reasorable approach in the narr'ative and the eloquence of its scenes would shake even a hardened mili- torist."-Boston Herald Traveler. "A beautifully photographed movie."-New York Daily News with the AFSC film "TIME OF THE LOCUST" 75c at the door Sponsored by S.P.U. and S.D.S. 4 6 -a t' If you're sick, you go to a doctor Al sr54 "t John Conron's "Dorothy" featured in : +f'%F. }; ' :i r;. '1 r 'r,:;: ti':4 ::{" J ti' f t: l+,. . :f , i f } ': f t f1 JrS r Ji : i V" ti r NATIONAL GENERAL CORPORATION STARTS FOX EASTERN THEATEST 375 No. MAPLE RD "769.1300 SUGGESTED FOR MATURE AUDIENCES e IN COLOR FROM WARNER BROS.-SEVEN ARTS' FRI. 7:00 a- 9:20 - 11:20 SUNDAY 1:00 SAT. 3:00-5:00- 7:10 - 9:20 - 11:20 --3:00 - 5:00 - 7:10 - 9:20 Mon.-Thurs. 7:00-9:20 UNION-LEAGUE (not a UL) IF YOU'RE GOING TO EUROPE, FLY WITH EXPERIENCE TWA (C.A. B. scheduled airline) EXTRA BONUS FEATURE Academy Award Nominee "BEST ACTOR" in his finest role THE NEW SPRING ISSUE OF GLEERATION May 20-Aug. 12 SALE APRIL 9 & 10 DIAG & FISHBOWL only $230 Call 662-4431, Ext. 23 for inforrmation m -11 i a :. THE MIRISCH CORPORATION presens A BLAKE EDWARDS PRODUCTION nA. ." '.. .. .. .-d ?-... :. Saturday and Sunday JOAN OF ARC Directed by Carl Dreyer, 1928 "A succession of close-ups, filmed from Joan's point of view, both physically and emotionally, NOMINATED FOR SO ACADEMY AWARDS! BEST PICTURE OFTHE YEAR! BEST ACTOR SPENCER TRACY BEST ACTRESS ? 4 KATHARINE HEPBURN BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR CECIL KELLAWAY BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS BEAH RICHARDS BEST DIRECTOR STANLEY KRAMER BEST SCREENPLAY WILLIAM ROSE BEST FILM EDITING BEST ART DIRECTION BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY I I 4 E COLUMBIA PICTURES presents a Stanley Kramer production SHOW TIMES FRIDAY and SATURDAY- .qnpnp a Sidney Katharine h A, V -J * ' ''r 'v N I %J7j% I II j