RADICAL MEANS FOR LIBERAL ENDS See editorial page Y gik it3au Da iii ENNIS ANYONE? ligh-6 Low-34 Partly sunny, rather pleasant all-in-all Vol. LXXVII, No, 160 Ann Arbor, Michigan, Wednesday, April 10, 1968 Twelve Pages Violence Strikes Kansas City, Tren ton, Florida Report 34 Dead * * * * * * * * * * * * In National StrilfeBlack Students Stage Lock-In; San Francisco, New York City Also Report New Outbreaks of Riotin By The Associated Press Fires and looting spread in Kansas City last night and new outbreaks of racial viole ce hit Trenton, N:J., and Jack- sonville, Fla., in the hours after the funeral of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Deaths in Trenton, Baltimore, Kansas City and' Jackson- ville brought the national toll since Dr. King's assassination to 34, all but five of them Negroes. Nearly a dozen fires broke out almost simultaneously last night in a racially mixed Brooklyn sluri That hael been the scene of violence twice since King's slaying in Memphis last Thursday: There were sporadic outbreaks of fire-bombing and loot- ing in half a dozen suburban Call for Riot towns on Long Island, near New York City spread as darkness fell, despite a cur- InveSigaion few enforced by police and mated 1,000 Negroes were National Guardsmen. An Osti- l By Congres Kansas City Hall earlier 'in routed by tear gas outside the WASHINGTON OP) -- Rep. John the day. R. Rarick called yesterday for a A Kansas City police spokesman congressional investigation of the said a Negro man was shot to looting and arson that hit the na- death in a .store in a heavily Ne- tidn's caPital after the assassin- gro area, the scene of looting. At ation of Dr. Martin Luther King least nine persons were wounded Jr. in other incidents as looting The Louisiana-Democrat offered spread to a fashionable down- a resolution urging the investi- town business district, police said. gation after the District govern- A Negro youth was shot to ment estimated $13.3 million in death by a policeman in Trenton' propeity damage and as 14,000 and officials sealed off the New federal troops continued to guard Jersey' capital. Police said the against further violence, youth, was looting a shop across Rarick said a special investiga- ( from City Hall.' tion by a select bipartisan com- Trenton police declared a ±state mitte would answer questions of emergency, imposed a curfewl which he said are ton the minds 'and called in state troopers to of Americans. 'help fight the disorders. Crowds Police and federal troops "have of young Negroes 'smashed win- all but been rendered ineffective dows in' furniture and clothing 1 because of orders from someone stores in the downtown part of which, in effect, utilized the forces the city. of law and order to protect the In Jacksonville, A Negro teen- looters and rioters from an angry ager was shot to death from a citizenry." passing car full of white youths "In many cases police and Tuesday night during a wave of soldiers have even been photo- firebombing and rock throwing,. Sgraphed standing idly by while police said. 4 private property is taken out of Duval County Sheriff Dale Car- stores and shops," he added. son said Rudolph Hargett was shot Rarick said many Americans through the head as sat on his also "want to know why some 20 bicycle in front of a Jacksonville hours elapsed in our nation's ca- grocery store. pital before federal troops were Carson said witnesses told him called to offer at most an image the bullet was fired from a druis- of concern over wholesale burn- ing car full of white teen-agers. . ing and looting." Police said the shooting occur- The district's estimate of pro- ed about two blocks away fiom perty damage did not include the z where firebombs had been hurled value of household effects, equip- at the home of a white family ment and business inventories. a short time earlier. Hold Ad Building for 5 Hours FlemingBl1acks ree to Talks Demionstrators List Giievaices- Others March To Support Actii By MARCIA ABRAMSON More than 100 black students yesterday locked the ministration Bldg. from inside and refused entry for nearly five hours. The lockout ended when University President Robben W. Fleming met with the students and agreed to discuss their grievances next Monday. The students demands were duplicated and distributed to passers-by. They called for: -Immediate appointment of a black man as assistant director of admissions. --Appointment of' black men to the athletic staff. --A MartiA Luther King Scholarship fund and an en- lowed chair to be filled by a -> j --Daly-Thomas R. Copt President Fleming Emerges from his Discussions with Black Students 'UNREPRESENTATIVE': NAAGP's Wheeler l 3. i i i I '"" I f i t t k S Files. Suit black man. -Immediate implementation of the suggestions of the Defense De- partment Greene report, which labeled the University a place for "rich, white students' and called for measures to ensure more em- ployment of blacks on non-aca- demic and academic staff. -"University activity in the community." The statement did not elabor- ate on what was meant by ,"Uni- versity activity." The grievances concluded, "We the black students of this Uni- versity 'do believe that unless these grievances are met, we will continue to live in a basically racist university. Immediate res- titution is necessary." The students entered the build- ing at 7:15 a.n. and secured all the doors with chains before most of the office and adminis- trative staff arrived. Only Flem- {k tt i I Students To Prevent Board Appointments By DAVID SPURR private citizen, appealed to council, met yesterday to elect Ellis vice Wheeler said his group is plan- Dr. Albert H. Wheeler of the Monday night specifically to re- chairman, despite the fact that his ning to show up at city hail then University's Medical School filed ject the mayor's, choice of Cecil re-appointment has not been con- for what may be "more involved a suit in Washtenaw County cir- O. Creal, Bent F. Nielsen, and O. firmed by City Council. than a demonstration." cult court yesterday challenging Herbert Ellis to, be re-appointed, Although the city's Democratic The NAACP leaderuaccused the extended appointments of ten charging they are "unrepresenta- councilmen were able to block the Mayor Wendell E. Hulcher of city representatives to the Wash- tive of the black community and official appointments Monday making purely political appoint- cihy representativess, andstodttheewWash-n enaw County Board of Supervisors., the city's poor." night, council will reconsider the ments, and said the new appon- Wheeler, who is chairman of the The county board of supervisors issue at next Monday's meeting. See WHEELER, Page 5 Michigan conference of the NAACP, contends that the mayor's e right to appoint the supervisors,' Is unconstitutional. .. He bases, his argument on the Supreme Court's Wo *te recent one-man-one-vote decision applying to local governments' . tension of the old appointments By NADINE COHODAS tM.&T.R.O. is designed "to build player then makes decisions on by C_. y Coi'ncil is illegal. As part of their new PhD pro- computer models that can tell pol- how to correct the problem situa- The ten former appointees will gram in Urban and Regional iticians and decision makers what tions existing in the city. continue in their posts despite Planning the School of Natural is really going on in city growth The decisions are fed into the( .. ..,. . ,.t ..... r.. TaT - xn rnr~ "compute__r,.as tney are.... mA- e. .ne Protest at Duke Sit-In DURHAM, N.C. (CPS) - About 1,000 students are camping out on one of the quads at Duke Uni- versity here in i protest over several demands they have made on the university administration. The protest began last Friday when about 200 students went to the home of President Douglas M. Knight to press their demands. They spent two nights in his house, then went to the quad Sun- day to camp out, where they were joined by about 300 more stu- dents. The group has grown steadily until it now includes about one-fifth of the Duke stu- dent body. Most of the group are white. The students are demanding that President Knight: -Ask the university trustees for enough funds to raise the mini- mum wage for non-academic em- ployees to $1.60 an hour. -Recognize a collective bar- gaining unit for non-academic employees. -Resign his membership in' a segregated club. -Sign an advertisement in fa- vor .of open housing which will appear in the Durham newspaper. The university's dining hall em- ployees struck Monday night in support of the demands. BULLETIN. PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (P)-North Vietnamese sources in Phnom Penh said early to. day the Hanoi government i- sists that preliminary peace talks with the United States be held here in the Cambodian capital. The U.S. government is strongly opposed to Phnom Penh as a conference site be- cause it no longer has diplo- matic relations with Cambodia. See .earlier story, Page 3 Officials said a total of 14 fires had been reported in the Jacksonville area Tuesday as well as sporadic rock throwing. Carson said Hargett "was in his late teens," and had just en- listed in the Air Force In San Francisco a municipal bus driver was shot and killed last night in the predominantly Negro Hunters Point area where police reported some sporadic sniping' activity. Police said they had no imme- diate details on how the shooting occurred or whether it was con- nected with the sniping. See MORE, Page 2 'TIME (AC ing and Dr. Albert H. Wheeler, chairman of the Michigan NAACPx were allowed inside. The students lefp shortly after noon. A picket line of white \students began forming around 8:30 a.m. in support of the protest. Some 20 or 30 students carried signs reading "Support Our Black Brothers" and "Ann Arbor - All- American City for All." Support- ers collected enough money to buy the protesters' lunch which was passed through a briefly un- chained door. Fleming termed the demands "very reasonable and constructive proposals" in a general statement See BLACK, Page 5 the fact that their terms have expired. City Council voted Mon- day night to maintain them in office after a walkout by the four Democratic councilmen prevented the appointment of ten new super- visors. Wheeler. who filed the suit as a )NFLICT' Resources has set up an environ- in a numerical sense.We cannot. mental simulation system, called predict attitudes or feelings. This the Michigan Educational Train- is a mathematical modeling ofI ing and Research Operation people and of dwelling space," he (M.E.T.R.O.) to be used in met- adds. ropolitan planning. M.E.T.R.O. was formed as a Program originator and director joint project with Michigan State. Richard Duke explains that The initial computer system was set up in Lansing and was moved to Ann Arbor January 1. computer as they are made. The computer processes them and is- sues the results, predicting what effect player's solutions would have on actual city problems. Canham To Relinquish Business By HOWARD KOHN Executive Sports Editor Don Canhami, a pretty good amateur photographgr, shot a film clip of German track meets in the summer of 1945 to use in coaching his Michigan track team. The film, which cost Canham only $250 to produce, impressed several American track coaches who bought copies to show to their teams. From that inauspicious beginning, Can- ham built a multi-million dollar business, Don Canham Enterprises Inc., which now manufactures and sells sports equipment, playground equipment and elementary-level teaching aids. But Canham has agreed to give up the entire business, except for its legacy, to be- come the University's next athletic direc- name yet to be determined, will be man- aged by the trust group until Canham's death. Then it will revert back to his heirs. Regent Fred Matthai, Jr. said the reason the Regents stipulated a lifeterm trust rather than a career-term trust was to prevent the possibility of Canham using the athletic directorship to cultivate busi- ness contacts which he might capitalize on if he quit the directorship. Canham will have no voice in the man- agement of the business and will receive no profits or stock dividends or be charged with any losses. The only money-making avenue open to Canham will be through the sale of shares of stock, a possibility Canham said he may use. Net result of such a sale, however, would only be a reduction in the inheritance I.,- P'I 7P Duke said the newly instituted PhD program provided a "strong inducement to move the operation -here." M.E.T.R.O. is located at 420: Church Street in the basement ?f new office buildings there. Duke said the operation is financed through grants from different i agencies which total about $50,000 a year for various aspects of the program. The Ford Foundation has spon- sored the technical personnel: the federal department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) has supplied needed data foi the IBM 130 computer and the Na- tional Science Foundation an: General Electric have provided necessary equipment. M.E.T.R.O. is set up "like war games". Duke explains. The IBM computer simulates a city envir- onment and subjects react to the environment by "playing a game" with the computer. 'Fl i inl,Qtrlenvirnnft is : :Mll