Thursday, October 3, 1968 TFfE MICHIGAN DAILli Page Seven Thursday, October 3, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAIL'i Page Seven BECOMING MORE VOLATILE: Report cites violence Oy JAMES R. POLK Associated Press Staff Writer WASHINGTON (P) -- The Unit- ed.States is among the world lead- ers in assassinations even though it lacks the political turmoil that usually surrounds such slayings in other nations, the President's Commission on Violence was told yesterday. Dr. Ive K. Feierabend, a polit- ical science professor at San Diego State College, ranked the United States in the middle ground of political violence in the world but said the nation was be-, coming more volatile. Feierabend linked the assassi- nation rate with a high degree of social instability, himan frustra- tion and oppressive government, * but said, "perhaps unexpectedly the United States a 1so belongs among the countries with the highest occurence of assassina-s t ions.", No specific mention was made rof the assassinations this year of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Seri. Robert F. Kennedy, which prompted creation of the commis- sion. Commission members questioned whether the recent outburst of assassinations in this nation could be classifiednas political violence. Albert E. Jenner Jr., counsel to the Warren Commission that in- vestigated the 1963 slaying of President John F. Kennedy, told Feierabend he found no political motivation in his own probe of the background of alleged assassin Lee Harvey Oswald. Instead, Jenner said, the causes that triggered the shooting ap- parently "went back to his early life and the continued frustration he experienced." Psychiatrist Dr. W Walter Menninger of Topeka, Kan., told the witness that, with the excep- tion of John Wilkes Booth's slay- ing of Abraham Lincoln, the as- sassinations of U.S. presidents were acts of distrubed men rath- er than political insurrectionists. Feierabend placed the United States in the middle of a scale of political violence that encompas- sed civil war, overthrow of gov- ernment, terrorism, purges, assas- sinations and rioting in the world in recent years. He listed Cuba, Indonesia, Laos, Columbia and Hungary as t h e most volatile nations in the 1955- 61 period covered by the study and said New Zealand was the most stable. He placed t h e United States slightly to the more peaceful side of the middle with other coun- tries such as Switzerland, Den- mark, Canada, England and East Germany. The political science professor said turmoil was increasing and added, "it seems the world we are living in is becoming more and more violent and revolutionary" The commission, created by President Johnson as Sen. Ken- nedy lay dying last June, turned to assassinations as it began its third weekly session of testimony in a wide survey of American vio- lence. Senate vote total on Fortas closure, New threat by N.Y.C. teachers NEW YORK (P) - The threat of a new teachers' strike loomed in New York City as city officials labored to restore the precarious school peace upset by renewed violence in a Negro-Puerto. Rican experimental school district in Brooklyn. Albert Shanker, president of the 55,000-member United Fed- eration of Teachers, raised t h e possibility of a new walkout against the 1.1-million-pupil pub-' lic school system after the vio- lence Tuesday in the Ocean Hill - Brownsville district. Ten policemen were injured and more than a dozen persons arrest- ed as angry parents, children and demonstrators clashed with police over the return of about 80 dis- puted teachersto the district. The city's puiblic schools were closed today because of the Jew- ish holy day of Yom Kippur, giv- ing all sides in the dispute over local control of teachers a day to cool off. Mayor John V. Lindsay, whose mediation efforts helped conclude the crippling three-week teachers strike that ended only Monday, pledged the full resources of the city to back that peace settlement. The central issue in the city- wide strike was' the union's de- mand for the return of a, group of ousted white teachers to the Ocean Hill district. But Tuesday, Rhody McCoy, Ocean Hill administrator, order- ed the district's eight principals not to assign /classes to the re- turning teachers. He acted under the direction of the district's local board. FORT DIX, N.J. - SP4 John Allen Myers was acquitted of charges of distributing subversive literature by a summary c o u r t martial here Tuesday. The military judge, CPT- Jef- frey A. Weiner, ruled that there wag "insufficient evidence" to justify aconviction. His ruling fol- lowed a trial lasting less t h a n three hours. Specialist Myers was charged with violating a post regulation prohibiting the distribution of lit- erature "prejudicial to good order or discipline, subversive or con- trary to the best interests" of the military. Myers was charged with dis- tributing a leaflet published by the Philadelphia Student Mobilization Committee to End the W a r in Vietnam. Leaflets distributed to troops near a post theatre on Aug. 19, called for the immediate with- drawal of American troops from Vie tnam.~ After the trial, Myers admitted, distributing the literature but his military attorney, CPT David Kahn, said the soldier was una- ware of the post regulation. Myers denied advocating diso- bedience of orders, but .safd he felt troops "should have the same con- ' -7 stitutional rights as civilians." "The army only carries out poli- cies of political leaders," said My- ers, "and I advocate denying sup- port to those leaders.' Myers, a 26-year-old irattee from Wisconsin, has seven months to serve before completing a two- year hitch. Asked if he would go to Vietnam if ordered, he s a i d "Yes, I would go." When asked if he would distrib- ute leaflets again, the soldier, a: graduate of the University of Wis- consin who holds the Army's med- al for expert marksmanship, smil- ed and said, "I'm not going to make any promises to violate or- ders." Had Myers been convicted, he could have been sentenced to 30 days hard labor, deprived of two. thirds of a month's pay and re- duced to the rank of private. Another Fort Dix trooper accus- ed of the same offense chose to accept punishment from his com- mander rather than face' a sum- mary court martial. He was re- duced to a private. The Emergency Civil Liberties Committee of New York has filed suit in a federal court asking that the post regulation be declared un- constitutional., Court martial acquits soldier of subversion I I U of M JUDO CLUB will start Classes in the Wrestling Room of the IM Building at 7:30 P.M. Newcomers and experienced players are welcome. The following is the roll-call vote by which the Senate refused to cut off debate on the motion to take up the nomination of Fortas to be Chief Justice (a two-thirds vote was required): FOR CLOSURE-45 Dpemocrats-35: Anderson (N.M.), Bayh (Id.), Brewster (Mo,), Burdick (N.D.), Clark (Pa.), Gore (Tenn.), Harris (Okla.), Hart (Mich.), Hartke (In.), Hayden (Ariz.), Inouye (Ha- waii), Jackson (Wash.), Kennedy (Mass.). Magnuson (Wash.), Mansfield (Mont.), McCarthy (Mnn.), McGee (Wyo.), McIntyre (N.H.), Metcalf (Mont,),, Mondale' (Minn.), Monroney (Okla.), Montoya (N.M.), Moss (Utah), Muskie (Me.), Nelson (Wis.), Pastore (R.I.), Pell (R.I.), Proxmire (Wis.), Randolph (W. va.), Ribicoff (Conn.), Symington (Mo.), Tydings (Md.), Wil- liams (N.J.), Yarborough (Tex.), Young (Ohio). Republicans-I0: Brooke (Mass.), Case (N.J.). Cooper (Ky.), Dominick (C01o.), Goodel (N.Y.), Hatfield (Ore.), Javits (N.Y.), Kuchel (Calif.), Percy (I1.), Scott.(Pa.).; AGAINST CLOSURE-43 Democrats-19: Byrd (va.), Byrd (W. va.), Cannon (Nev.), Dodd (Conn.), Eastland (Miss.), Ervin (N.C.), Ful- bright (Ark), Hill (Ala.), Holland (Fla.), Hollings (§.C.), Jordan (N.C.), Lausche (Ohio), Long (La.), McClellan (Ark.), Russell (Ga.), Sparkman (Ala.), Spong (Va.), Stennis (Miss.), Talmadge (Ga.). Republicans,24: Alott (Co10.), Bak- er (Tenn.), Bennett (Utah), Boggs (Del.), Carlson (Kan.), Cotton (N.H.), Curtis, (Neb.), Dirksen (Il1.), Fannin (Ariz.), Fong (Hawaii), Griffin (Mich.), Hansen (Wyo.), Hickenlooper (Ia.), Hruska (Neb.), Jordan (Idaho), Miller (Iowa), Mundt (S.D.), Murphy (Calif.), Pearson (Kan.), Prouty (Vt.), Thur- mond (S.C.), Tower (Tex.), Williams (Del.), Young (N.D.). Not voting but announced as pairedi on the motion (pairs are used to de- note positions of opposing Senators when one or more are absent). Morse (fl-Ore.) and Church, (fl- Idaho) for and Gruening (D-Alaska), against. Not voting or paired but announced as against cloture: Aiken (R-vt.), Mrs. Smith (R-Maine), Ellender (D-La.). a OPENINGS FOR MALE CHILD CARE WORKERS -HAWTHORN CENTER Work-Experience Opportunity with Emotionally' Disturbed Children. Hawthorn Center offers mature students a unique opportunity to work directly with disturbed children in a creative, well-supervised, in-patient treatment 'setting - a particularly rewarding .experience for potential professional workers in Education Psy- chology, Social Work, Medicine and related Be- havioral Sciences. Hours: 32 or 40 per week. Must be able to work days and weekends. Potential openings on evenings ar.d midnight shift Age Requirement: Minimum-20 years. Education: Minimum-Two credit years complet- ed and good academic standing in third year. - - ---- -=== e-- -------E--- IF YOU ARE a& 40"bom LOOKING FOR THANOS A HEAVY FRIDAY DOUBLEHEADER A MOVIE 7:30 P.M.--"The Prize" in the cafeteria A Little Club '111 you will find him at the NEW THANOS LAMPLIGHTER, 412 E. Liberty COMAE AND SEE US! Our Chow is as, good as at Thanos place. gins .4 fl I Salary: With Bachelor's degree-$6786 Without Bachelor's degree-$5992 Call or Write: 10:00 P.M.-] :00A.M.--"The John Hig Quintet" at the snack bar per year per year Director of Nursing Hawthorn Cente~r Northville Michigan Telephone: Area Code 313- FI 9-300 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m I FREE! Friday, Oct. Bursley Ha . _ . _ . . _. I ® I I TONIGHT! 8:00 P.M. J; Thursday,-Oct. 3 MICHIGAN UNION "The New Politics Perspective" SPEAKERS: All N. P. Candidates Sponsored by Student Friends of Citizens for New Politics r ?r r' ti I HELP ELECT GEORGE WALLACE PRESI DENT! JOIN STUDENTS FOR WALLACE I GEORGE WALLACE has said: FARAH sCs Ob\IM i , THE UNIVERSITY MAN WILL FIND OUR IMPORTED ENGLISH WARMCOATS A WELCOME SHIELD ON A COLD DAY They're a part of our British import collections, and we feel nothing could be more appropriate for sta- diurn wear and going to class. 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