TUESDAY, JUNE 6, 1967 THE MICHIGAN DAILY * I SN.Y. Stock Exchange) Blame Riots RIGHT OF PRIVACY: In Boston High Court Requires Warran On Hoodlums~ In Searches by City Officials TakeI Dow Jones' Index Drops 15.54 Points Initial Drop Partly Offset by Reports Of U.S. Neutrality NEW YORK ()-The explosion of war in the Middle East rocked the stock market severely yester- day, sending prices tumbling. The market slumped on a broad front in heavy volume immediately after opening of trading on the New York Stock Exchange. The heavy loss was, almost halved in early afternoon after the' United States proclaimed its neutrality in the conflict between Israel and the Arab nations. Then prices slipped back part of the way. Dow Jones Loses The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials fell 15.54 points to 847.77. Its steepest, loss since it dropped 16.26 points last Oct. 8. At 11 a.m. it was off 20.77 points, lust below the 21.16 points it lost Nov. 22, ,1963, when President Kennedy was assassinated. The As- sociated Press 60-stock average de- clined 5.0 points to 314.5. Last Wednesday anxiety over the de- veloping Middle East crisis sent it to a loss of 5.3 points. Brokers said the- market's re- action was its typical pattern when crises arise. "Crises and calamaties - the really momentous events such as Cuba, President Kennedy's assas- sination, Stalin's death-have a momentary impact on stocks but rarely more than that," comment- ed Spear & Staff, Inc., a leading market analyst. Index Falls The New York Stock Exchange common stock index fell 81 cents in the average price of a share. At 11 a.m. It was down $1.10. Off 1,440 shares traded, 1,211 declined and 112 advanced. Volume totaled 11.13 million shares. In the first hour 4.07 mil- lion shares changed hands, the third highest figure for the period in New York Stock Exchange his- tory. Oil Stocks Stocks of international oil com- panies operating in the Middle East took losses, including Texaco $2.87 to ..70.12, Jersey Standard $1.25 to $60, Standard Oil-Cali- fornia $1.50 to $55.37, and Royal Dutch $1.75 to $35.25. At the height of the selloff the exchange's ticker tape fell four minutes behind in reporting floor transactions. The New York Stock, Exchange ticker tape lagged four minutes in reporting floor transactions. Heavy Losses * * * * * * Crisis Imperils Positions Of Kings in Middle East By WILLIAM L. RYAN Associated Press Special Correspondent Another dense cloud of confu- sion is descending over the Arab East. Before it lifts, the area may lose one or more of its three re- maining kings. At this moment their future is not bright. The fact of war can mute inter-Arab rivalries and hos- tilities, but it cannot end them. The kings are in danger if the Arabs appear to be losing the war with Israel or if any foi'eign in- tervention forces a cease-ifre. Hussein of Jordan, Faisal of Saudi Arabia and Idriss of Libya all hastened to announce their support of the cause of "liber- ating" that part of Palestine which is now Israel. Denounce Kings But even on the eve of the war's outbreak, the Syrian radio pumped propaganda into those countries de- nouncing the kings as "agents of American imperialism and Zion- ism" and calling on their peoples to overthrow the rulers. Damascus radio never mention- ed the fact that King Hussein flew to Cairo as the crisis developed, to sign a defense agreement with President Gamal Abdel Nasser of Egypt. The Syrians, the most volatile and warlike of all the Arab nations in this crisis were on their side. Young Hussein of Jordan is in trouble whatever happen,. At best, now, he can survive by the grace of Nasser, who once again has placed himself in the role of Arab hero. f Past Crisis With each succeeding crisis, the crowns of the Arab East are in more peril. The Jordanian and Saudi thrones were targets of pro- Nasser propaganda artillery in 1956 and 1958, when Nasser's image among young Palestinians and Saudis was that of a Saladin, a liberator who would drive out the "imperialists" and annihilate Israel's Zionists. With a war on his western bor- ders and his crack Arab Legion troops committed to it, Hussein again will be in danger. Idriss of Libya faces a sticky problem. Libya has rich new oil discoveries and the country is booming. The king would like to continue to market that oil. But if he does so he faces Arab con- demnation as an agent of im- perialism. Syrian propagandists as late as the end of last week were calling him just that. Egypt's propaganda against the kings ceased when Hussein signed the pact and Faisal declared him- self. But the Saudi king still op- poses Egypt's aims in Yemen, where Nasser has thousands of troops pinned down, and Saudi Arabia's contribution to the war on Israel is likely to be minimal. Damascus up to just a few days ago declared all three kings had their hands "smeared with blood," and it insisted all were doomed. Syria's propaganda demands that oil deliveries to the United States and Britain be halted at once, but it says Faisal of Saudi Arabia will not cooperate because he wants to honor his pledges to U.S. oil companies. In a time of full-scale war, such propaganda is potent among the volatile Arabs. Should there be a cease-fire and nothing to show for the Arab effort except another failure, the kings will be natural targets. The Palestine Liberation Organ- ization's leader, Ahmed Shukairy, although he ostensibly made peace with Hussein at the signing of the Cairo pact, has sown his com- mandos to elimination of the Tor- danian throne. Many of those commandos are Palestinians and apparently many now are station- ed in Jordan. The shooting war may not last long, given the urgent reasons the great powers have for averting a dangerous world crisis. But if past experience is any guide, revolu- tion ferment will remain and will grow in force even after the thun- der of the guns dies away. City Heads Estimate Damage in Millions ; Pledge Crackdown BOSTON (P)-City officials said yesterday that "young hoodlums" took over after a disorderly protest demonstration by a group of moth- ers on welfare to touch off a week- end rioting. The officials promised a crackdown on any future unruly protests by adults. The three nights of arson, loot- in, rock throwing and scattered 'sniper fire left property damage in the millions, more than 70 per- "The kids can take over" in a sons injured and 100 arrested. situation like this, said Richard J. Sinnot, the mayor's spokesman. He said most of the rioters-up to 1,000 the first night-were be- tween 12 and 21 years old. Stage Sit-In The trouble began Friday after a group of 30 women attempted to stage a sit-in in the district welfare department building say- ing they were tired of having their welfare checks cut off without notice and being "pushed around" by police assigned to welfare of- fices. The mothers used bicycle chains to secure the doors of the build- ing. When police arrived, a women inside screamed causing the crowd outside to grow restive. Someone threw a paving block against the building and then the ghetto ex- ploded. Police went in through windows to force the demonstrators out a's a crowd gathered. The incident spread into widespread prolonged violence. A small cement company on Blue Hill Avenue, which bore the brunt of the violence, had broken windows despite a large hand-let- tered sign in one window reading: "Caution! Please, I am your soul brother. Ruben Johnson." Down the street a few doors, Leonard Rudnick picked through his discount store, reduced to rubble and twisted steel beams af- ter a fire early Saturday morning. "I've been here for 20 years. What I did for these people here!" he said,. Mayor Collins said he would ap- point a fact-finding group to study the welfare operation in Roxbury. City Welfare Director Daniel I. Cronin said mothers would be given a voice in setting welfare policy and would be represented on boards to choose new sites for welfare offices in the area. WASHINGTON (P) - C i t y health, fire and building inspectors must obtain search warrants be- fore they can enter a man's home over his objections, the Supreme Court ruled yesterday. "Except in certain carefully de- fined classes of cases," Justice Byron R. White said in the 6-3 decision, "a search of private prop- erty without proper consent is un- reasonable unless it has been au-' thorized by a valid search war- rant." In a companion 6-3 decision the court applied the warrant regiure- ments as well as private homes and apartments, Justice Tom C. Clarkin bitter dissent, said the majority struck down hundbrds of city ordinances which permitted inspections with- out warrants, "jeopardizing there- by thehealth, welfare and safety of -literally millions of people." The ruling, Clark said, "pros- titues the command of the 4th Amendment that 'no warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause' and sets up in the health and safety codes area inspection a new fangled 'warrant' system that is entirely foreign to 4th Amendment standards." The ruling reversed a 1959 Su- preme Court decision that had Power Failure Hits Middle Atlantic Areal Israel Trails Arabs In U.S., Millitary Aid WASHINGTON VP)-The United States has, in the past, given the Arab nations now involved in the Middle East war more than twice as much military aid as it has given Israel, but the military aid on both sides is far outweighed by American economic assistance. Government records show $27.6 million in military aid has gone to Israel-mostly for tanks, a few jet fighter planes and some Hawk antiaircraftdefense missiles. But more than twice that amount-$66 million for war ma- teriel-has gone to Jordan, aligned with Egypt and Syria in the cur- rent fighting against Israel. Limit Help U.S. policy generally has been to limit military assistance to the ex- plosive area, but this country has sought to bolster Jordan's shaky position in the Arab world. "The danger that Jordan's dis- memberment might produce vio- lence throughout the area" was the reason given by the Agency for International Development for sending Jordan military aid. An- other $161.7 million in U.S. assist- ance has gone to Saudi Arabia, not involved in the war, and fractional amounts to Syria and Yemen. Egypt has received no military help from this country. But the military aid to Arabs and Israelis is far overshadowed by the, total of more than $2 bil- lion in U.S. aid for peaceful pur- poses that has gone to five Arab nations and $1.1 billion to Israel in the past 20 years. Israel has received more than half the total U.S. aid to the Arab states-some $1.1 billion, mostly through the Food for Peace pro- gram. Food shipments to Egypt stopped a year ago, but technical economic aid continued. Food to Egypt Egypt has also received some $9.5 million worth of food from private U.S. agencies. Most of this country's military aid to Israel was provided in the past two years after West Ger- many backed out of a deal to sup- ply armored vehicles, and after neighboring Jordan had received some U.S. aircraft. The United States got into the business of providing military and economic assistance to Jordan to fill a vacuum left when Britain was pushed out of the area some 10 years ago. Other Aid The United States has supplied an infinitesimal $100,000 in mili- tary assistance to Syria out of a total of $73.3 million in aid, and only $50,000 to Yemen out of a total of $41.8 million. This country halted all aid to Yemen this spring when two American officials were arrested there. The pair was later released and left the country. Egypt has stationed some of its best troops in Yemen, which has received an estimated $140 million in military and economic assist- ance from the Soviet Union and Red China in the past 20 years. NEWARK OP)-A massive power failure surprised a four-state area from Delaware to New Jersey yes- terday, snarling trade and traffic and exposing millions to the fleet- ing peril of fire and pestilence. The electricity was off about an than three hours, in Newark---the hour in Philadelphia, but more largest cities involved. Office workers cheered the restoration in Newark. In many areas, power began trickling back, then was interrupted anew before it finally returned. "The official cause is not at the moment know," said' a New Jersey utilities spokesman of the Second giant power failure in the East in 18 months. President Johnson was being. kept advised in Washington. Railroad trains, subways and elevators were halted on the spot when the electricity went off at 10:23 a.m. Thousands were, trap- ped and had to be rescued. Traffic jams were of such gi- gantic prportions that in Phila- delphia police simply brought all vehicles to a halt for a time. Raw sewage was diverted into the Delaware River by a break- down of the Trenton, N.J. sewage treatment plant. Philadelphia's water supply, some of it drawn from the river below Trenton, was disrupted. Residents were asked to conserve water. Woodbridge, N.J., was without any water for a time. Fortunately, fires were few. Television screens went dark. Household appliances wouldn't work. Refrigerators stopped and husewives were warned to. check possible food spoilage. Emergency units kept airports i in operation, and most schools' were able to continue classes. It-was, for many, a daytime version f'the great blackout of Nov. 9, 1965, which affected 30 million persons in the Northeast- ern United States and parts of Canada. SAIGON (A) - U.S. fighter bombers attacked a Communist MIG airfield in North Vietnam l yesterday and shot down one of three interceptors that scrambled to challenge the American planes. It was the third MIGr shot down in three days. U.S. planes hit two Saturday. The Americans made no mention of plane losses, but Hanoi claimed two were shot down yes- terday. Ground action, sharp over the weekend in some sectors, lapsed into a lull. No Contacts "There were no significant con- tacts reported in the 16 announced ground operations in the repub- lic," a communique' from U.S. headquarters said. 1 World News Roundup 4 . ~ : V " Y - .4S+ {.,{: {Y::: :" 1 4..... ::::S":'. "Y~:":" 1 J {4.... J 44 Y. . Y ..4 . an.aaa 1."................! .........".::..."4"...............{...................".:Y.....d........... "J:""_ _ y . a a a . A . . . . . . . . . a . . . . . . . . . . . . ... .. . t. S . . . . . ....y V 4 " '" Y ~ r R q . ~ . " " . . . . . .r . { { "Y. .... . . . . .. . 4 . + h ": ~ X : . 4 Y . { y " " { "fa '"" "" i tlY "JYL.A""YP. '1Mr 1V46"A"N.Y~iI Y~r~ ti~lj~f V ' KSY {{V:i:"t "Yt N Y":Y }"{1MP.": 4"I WY . {1 "1 ".14"{ :iY .r"..i4"~ t J '"414 .... ...1 YY : :~." :t441 V~ 1.... .... .... .....".....L~'"'[......."" L... .....^:^ti"1:.................................{{'::~"{.ta . * ,. ~ S V ~ a . ยง 5 f a a r .o f By The Associated Press NEW ORLEANS ()P) -Orleans Parish Dist. Atty. Jim Garrison said yesterday that Dallas night club owner Jack Ruby was part of a New Orleans-based conspiracy in 1963 to assassinate President John F. Kennedy. Garrison's first mention of Ruby came in a 93-paint document filed in answer to motions by at- torneys for Clay L. Shaw.. The answer to a defense mo- tion for a bill of particulars, Gar- rison alleged that Shaw made a trip to the Capitol House Hotel in Baton Rouge in the fall of 1963, and, met with Ruby and Oswald and supplied them with funds. MOSCOW OP)-An angry mob in Leningrad, waving signs ac- cusing Americans of killing a So- viet sailor off North Vietnam, spit at Washington's top diplomat now in the Soviet Union. The diplomat, John C. Guthrie, his wife, other U.S. Embassy couples and a. group of American youths, were forced to run .a gant- let of screaming, clawing Russians Saturday to reach safety in a bus -which was then stoned. The embassy sent a senior of- ficial to the Soviet Foreign Min- istry yesterday to make an oral protest. The official complained 1 GE3= 1 ' the incident had been "neprilich- ny," meaning indecent, improper or disgraceful. PARIS-France conducted the first in a series of new nuclear tests at its Pacific testing grounds yesterday. An announcement by the French Defense Ministry said a device of "small power" was exploded over a lagoon at Mururoa, an atoll in French Polynsesia. The yield of the blast was not reported. France had earlier announced it would conduct the tests as another ,step toward its first hydrogen bomb, expected to be tested in 1968. France conducted a previous series of tests at Mururoa in 1966. I They brought strong objections and a large antitank mine in from a number of countries, par- Mckong River delta, south of I ticularly in South America, and gon. The bunkers and the n from Japan. French officials said were destroyed. the fallout would cause no harm. PEORIA, Ill.-Richard Speck, 25, was sentenced yesterday to death in the electric chair for L uggCPlayer's murdering eight nurses in their Chicago townhouse dormitory 0 ED I pUS REX July 14, 1966. In pronouncing sentence, Judge June13-16 50 Herbert C. Paschen of Circuit Court carried out the recommen- CANTERBURY dation of the jury that convicted HOUSE Speck on April 15. The jgry rec- Tickets: Centicore ommended death but the judge wasBokh not bound to impose the maximum BokhP penalty. 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 Satsrday and Sunday. General Notices may be published a maxi- mum of two times on request; Day Calendar items appear once only. Student organization notices are not accepted for publication. For more nformatlon call ;764-92Z70. TUESDAY, JUNE 6 * Day Calendar Bureau of Industrial Relations Sem- inar-"The Management of Managers No. 31": 146 Business Administration, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., and 7 to 9 p.m. Bureau of Industrial Relations Sem- inar-"Basic Employment Interviewing Workshop": Michigan Union, 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. College of Pharmacy Seminar - "An- nual Seminar of the American Society of Hospital Pharmacists'?: Rackham Bldg., 9 a.m. General Notices Botany Seminar: Prof. E. D. Garber will speak on "A Biochemical-Genetic ' Investigation of Virulence in Three Phytopathogenic Penicillia," Wed., June 7, 4:15 p.m., 1139 Natural Science Bldg. Ushers: Ushers are needed for the series of piano concerts which will be presented in Rackham Aud. during July. Persons who are interested in ushering may sign up at the Box Office of Hill Aud. on Wed., June 7, from 7c to 9 p.m. See Mr. Warner.1 Educational Testing Service Frenchc and German Test: The Educational1 Testing Service Test in French and German administered by the Graduate1 School for doctoral candidates is sched- uled for Thursday night, June, 8, from- 7 to 9 p.m. in the Rackham Lecturer Hall. ALL students planning to take1 the test must register by 4 p.m., June 8, at the Information Desk in the lobby of the Rackham Bldg. The fee is $6. For further information call the In-1 formation Desk, 764-4415. Student Identification Number Fall 1967: Effective for the fall term 1967,I the official student identification num- ber will be the social security number with a check digit assigned by ther University. Any students who do not1 possess a social security number should make application at the Ann Arbor office (5th and Huron) or secure anF application at any post office. UponC receipt of this number, it is urgede that it be forwarded to the Registrar'sC Office for processing.f Concurrent with this change, all cur-r rent enrollments will receive a new student identification card prior to fall registration. A card is only being em- bossed for those who entered their so- cial security number on their last rag- istrationnaire. These new cards will be available with the fall registration materials. The Registrar's Office should be no- tified as soon as practicable of all name changes prior to the fall registration. This notification will allow name chang- es to the new ~student identification cards and materials. Doctoral Examination for David Earli Oliver, Electrical Engineering; thesis: "Impedance Characteristics of Pump- ed Varactors," Wed., June 7, Room 1300 East Engineering, at 3 n.m. Chairman, ciology, Tokyo Gakugei University, To- kyo, Japan, June 5-11. Miss Renate Bartsch, philosophy stu- dent from Germany now studying at Harvard University, June 6-8. Marc Cosse, head, Refining Section, Union Industrielle des Petroles, Paris, France, June 8-9.. . D. T. Lakdawala, director, Depart- ment of Economics, University .of Bom- bay, India, June 13-14. Placement POSITION OPENINGS: Bonded Guard Service, Inc., Detroit, Mich.-Openings on all shifts, day, aft:, & midnight, for guards at Ford Motor Plant in Saline. Man, no educ., or exper, required, 19 yrs. old and up. Summer only or through year on shifts not conflicting with classes. Up to 52 hour week, varying. Boise Cascade Containers, Dallas, Texas -Beginning openings in future man- agerial positions in sales or production depending on applicants interest and education. Experienced men in in- dustrial sales and production needed for manager positions. Aggressive, well- rounded graduates. Chrysler Corp., Automotive Sales Di- vision, Center Lane, Mich. - Legal Co- ordinator, review and process dealer- ship agreements, land leases, etc. Law degree or within 6 mos.-1 yr. from it, prefer person not having passed bar exams, no exper. needed, new graduate. Boulevard General Hospital, Detroit, Mich.-Assistant Administrator, MBA, responsible for all non-medical depart- ments of hospital. Dow Chemical Co., Midland, Mich. - Patent Attorneys or Patent. Agents, law degree with undergraduate degree in Chem,, Biochem., ChE, or pharma- cology. For further information please call 764-7460, General Division, Bureau of Appointments, 3200 SAB. SUMMER PLACEMENT SERVICE: 212 SAB- Summer Placement Service Hours -- 1-5 p.m., Monday-Friday, 212 SAB, Low- er Level. Read and Use Daily Classifieds DIAL 5-6290 24 RODGERS HAMMER.STEIN'S ROSEM T WISE ODUCTM E 11r , The Film Makers Who Brought You A TASTE OF 14ON EY and TOM JONES now take pride in presenting ... GIRL WITH GREEN EYES also CONTROVERSIAL... DIFFERENT...: ADULT... THAT'S MORGAN Man. thru Thurs. 7 P.M. M fr v}fr iM'1 "h f '4f r u f..L~ ! +++tr} .a' U h iN t il li" Clue: 1 ' r E I c t a i s ,, i :, %n r Phone 431-0130 SEtxanceOm CARPENTER ROAD FIRST OPEN 7:00 P.M.. FIRST RUN NOW SHOWING RUN MI 1w lA [ii"raZewcnIS b 7j I I " I DIAL 8-6416 ENDING WEDNESDAY "ONE OF THOSE RARE ENTER- TAINMENTS! FOR PEOPLE WHO REALLY LOVE FILMS!" -NewsweeK Milos Forman's ... ["A - .- Lost 2 Uays I fY'y .. 4 I 1I