PAOE THREE THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATU AY, Governor Orders Chinese Demonstrations Reveal IOSENDTOBSERVERS: AT .1 -rLiu Still Retains Much Power UN Deplores Old C :ity Annex; N~ewark ~ur ew Hughes Tours Riot-Torn Negro Area;' Clergy Asked To Help Find Peace + ' .. ' v v Y r Ar+ v v v Y v s v 1/ +. r .s. Y .+ V i v ..1. i.A" id Y V! TOKYO (A - Huge demonstra- tions against President Liu Shao- chi of Communist China broke out in Peking yesterday as the official People's Daily 'assailed him. The new campaign against the No. 1 foe of Party Chairman Mao Tse-Tung, cast additional doubt on a recent article in China's authoritative publication Red Flag saying Liu had been sands of Red Guards shouted, purge's propaganda chief after he "Down with Liu Shao-chi." was reported to have broken with Yomiuri's correspondent said Mao but it is possible he still is recent events appeared to herald a deputy premier now inactive as a new height of attacks against are several other deputy premiers Liu. listed as Mao's foes. 5!y[ } E Suez Artillery Fire Reported NEWARK, N.J. (R) - A gun- enforced curfew was ordered for midnight last night in all of Newark, and in advance 40 clergy- men were recruited to walk the city's riot-torn Negro ghetto streets in quest of racial peace. Police traded shots anew with rooftop snipers and street mobs began building in size despite the curfew decrees. One officer was reported seriously injured, with a hbullet near the heart. Hartford Calm, -1n Riot's Wake HARTFORD, Conn. (A) - City officials and Negro leaders, meet- ing after a second straight night of violence in . the predominantly Negro North End of the city, said yesterday that race was not a major factor in the outbreaks. "It's not a black and white issue," said Connecticut's first Negro member of the State Sen- ate, Boce Barlow. He said the vio- lence involving 200 to 300 young men and teen-agers appeared to be directed at one store, where the first fire-bombing and rock-throw- ing occurred Wednesday night. Mayor George Kinsella, who earlier declared a state of emer- gency, issued a statement at a special City Council session urging North End parents to keep their youngsters at home. He described the state of emer- gency as a technical move under the city's charter to allow him to take steps necessary to protect lives and property in the area. City Manager Elisha C. Free- man told the meeting that the first job of the city is to apprehend the persons responsible for the disturbances and "make this city a safe place once again." In ordering the curfew, Demo- cratic/ Gov. Richard J. Hughes called New Jersey's largest metro- polis "a city in open rebellion." Two nights of rioting already had claimed the lives of three Negroes, who were shot to death. Some 350 rioters and police were injured. Arrests were in the hun- dreds and city magistrates set up a production-line schedule of hearings. Helmeted police with riot guns and backed by an estimated 2,600 New Jersey National Guardsmen sealed off the Negro district, even as a ghastly carnival of looting continued in b r o a d daylight through the mile-long section. Mayor Hugh Addonizio enlisted the clergymen, both white and Negro, to go into the ghetto, with police protection. He declared: "My principal interest is the pres- ervation of law and order and re- storing it to the streets." President Johnson in Washing- ton talked by telephone with Hughes and offered to consider federal assistance - which could include federalization of the state National Guard, or the sending in of U.S. marshals or other law en- forcement help. - "At this point Gov. Hughes has not requested any additional help, said George Christian, pres- idential press secretary. Christian added that Hughes initiated the call to the President. City officials vainly sought on Thursday to head off further trouble by asking for a Justice Department inquiry under the federal civil rights law into alle- gations of police brutality in the arrest of a taxicab driver-the in- cident that ostensibly set off the riots. Huges told a news conference he did not think the rioting was the result of any civil rights pro- test., Wall posters quoted by Japa- nese correspondents in Peking also demanded the downfall of Teng and former Politburodmember Tao Chu. Tao was purged as the An official Chinese-language Radio Peking broadcast, said People's Daily renewed attacks against Liu and his wife. Wang Kuang-mai. overthrown._ A Yugoslav dispatch from Pe-T king attempted to explain this, saying Liu was ousted from his Communist party functions but remained president of China. Following Brief Lull in Riots This could be true, but wall UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (R)- The General Assembly yester- day deplored Israel's refusal to end its annexation of the Old City of Jerusalem and issued a new call; for Israel to give it up. The old sector of Jerusalem was seized from Jordan in the June 5-10 war. The vote on the Pakistani resolu- tion on Jerusalem was 99-0, with 18 abstentions. It was watered down at the last moment to take out a provision asking the Security Council to see that Israel complies with the new appeal. The United States was among those abstaining. The resolution is not binding, since the assembly can do no more than make recommendations. Is- raeli Foreign Minister Abba Eban made clear that his government would not comply, just as it did with the resolution of July 4. Egyptian and Israeli tanks and artillery fired away throughout yesterday along most of the Suez Canal in the heaviest fighting since the middle East war was halted. The United Nations an- nounced its cease-fire observers will begin their work on the canal Sunday in an attempt to halt fresh Gen. Odd Bull of Norway, the t outbreaks. special representative who' An Israeli communique said Is- been talking with Israeli i rael's jets strafed Egyptian artil- Egyptian leaders. lery positions in the Suez area at The newspaper Al Ahram the south end of the canal to end Cairo, which often speaks for Pr harassing fire and permit the ident Gamal Abdel Nasser, & army to remove dead and wounded. Egypt had told Bull that the pu Both sides claimed they inflicted ing of U.N. observers on the S punishment as big guns roared all Canal is "only a temporary pro morning and into the afternoon dure." from the canal's east and west Before Bull left to return banks. Jerusalem, his spokesman said The stationing of U.N. cease- nui'nber of observers to be static fire observers along the canal was ed along the canal is expected announced by Tel Aviv Israel. by total 30. Morse Clams Rail Unions To Avert Walkout TodayV posters in Peking still are de- manding the downfall of party General Secretary Teng Hsiao- ping. It is possible that the Mao- ists, controlling the party appar- atus in the Chinese capital, suc- ceeded in ousting Liu but found Teng still has backing. Liu and Teng are both power- less in Peking, but the strong support they have in government and party structures in the prov- inces has kept Mao from winning victory in the power struggle. Actually, Maoists control only a handful of provinces. National Congress Liu can be ousted from the presidency only by the National' People's Congress, and Maoists may be afraid to call it because of fear it will back the president. The Congress' Standing Com- mittee, which presumably would be the instrument to call the Congress into session, is headed by aging Marshall Chu Teh, who balked at Mao's purge and can be considered an ally of Liu and. Teng. The newspaper Yomiuri, in a dispatch from Peking, said the huge rallies against Liu were headed by high school students and soldiers. It reported two ral- lies, one near headquarters of the cabinet and the Communist party Central Committee, the other in Peking's main square. Kyodo news service said scores of thou- ! HONG KONG 1) - Roving bands of Communist Chinese sympathizers burned buses, bomb- ed a police car, fought with po- lice and staged sporadic demon- strations in Hong Kong yesterdayj as renewed antigovernment ter- rorism erupted after 12 hours of relative quiet. Small, well-organized bands of terrorists dealt their damaging blows and scurried through side streets, followed by police riot squads and crowds of curious spectators in a helter-skelter pattern. It was the second night that Hong Kong authorities had not~ imposed a curfew on the colony, however, after violent terrorist attacks broke out Sunday and where two buses were set ablaze along with several taxis and pri- vate cars. The Communists appeared to be taking reprisals against transpor- tation facilities and their em- ployes, who have refused to take part in a Communist-called gen- eral strike to bring the colony to a standstill. Fears have been expressed in London that Communist China may be laying the groundwork for an attempt to seize the 400- square mile British colony. World News Roundup WASHINGTON (P)-The White House sought yesterday to end a Senate-House deadlock on legisla- tion to prevent a rail strike, and Sen. Wayne Morse (D-Ore.) said he has been assured by the car- riers and the unions they will do everything they can to avert weekend walkouts. It was learned that Secretary of Labor W. Willard Wirtz and Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara had met at the Capitol with Congressional leaders of both parties to advise them of thex situation. White House press secretary George Christian confirmed that meetings were going on. He re-' iterated that President Johnson has said on several occasions that "a strike at this time would have grave consequences." Asked what the Administration might do, Christian replied. "I think you can assume the govern- ment is going to do everything it can." Pressed for more specif Christian said that the matter this point was in Congressio hands-a reference to a Sena House stalemate on a bill to av a strike. The strike threat was posed Thursday's decision of the shopcraft unions, reaffirmed a meeting yesterday, to rescind no-strike pledge as of midnig today. "Anything may occur out in field whether we control it don't control it," Joseph W. Ra sey, vice-president of the AF CIO International Association Machinists, told reporters. "We're ready for anything,' railroad industry spokesman si Morse, one of the 'Senate co ferees, said he sought assuran there would be no walkouts cause of "the rumor that' so strikes might occur over the we end on some railroad propert such as the Santa Fe and Southern Pacific." Monday and reached a climax By The Associated Press the entr Wednesday night. Ded Lt. SDA NANG, South Vietnam -~ and hal Just before dusk yesterday fire Twelve men were killed and 40 civilian swept through a six-story plastic wounded in a Communist rocket their ru factory and burned out of control. attack on the U.S. air base at It was in the same area where Da Nang early today, an Ameri- WASI pro-Communist plastic workers can spokesman said. Nine to 11 Marshal triggered the May 11 riot that planes were destroyed. The cas- to give started Hong Kong's summer of ualty figures were preliminary. preme 4 violence. Some residents of the The north and south ends of the sions bi area claimed they heard an, ex-' main runway were hit by '120 mm decisions plosionin the building before the and 140 mm rockets, the spokes- crime. fire broke out. man said. Four barracks housing Sen. The greater part of yesterday's a total of 320 persons were hit. insisted violence and destruction took'* * interpre place on Kowloon, across the SAIGON-The Provincial As- tion's I harbor from Hong Kong Island, sembly's election committee is re- protects ported recommending a sharp tion. .:::::.:"::,:"::.::":::::.:,::::..::.:.. ":.."::pruning of the 17-ticket field in M arsh South Vietnam's presidential race. ment Iz Vietnamese sources said yester- Amendn day the committeemen, who have disqualif been reviewing the legality of all touching ries, would eliminate exil- Gen. Duong Van Minh [f a dozen of the lesser candidates, along with nning mates. HINGTON - Thurgood 1 refused again yesterday his overall opinion of Su- Court rulings on confes- iut expressed belief such s have not increased Sam J. Ervin, Jr. (D-NC) that the nominee give his tation of the Constitu- Fifth Amendment which against self-incrimina- hall told him, "any state- made construing the Fifth lent woud require me to Ly myself" from cases g on this subjejct. DAI.LY OFFIC.IAL ,BULLI :r.St:. ..r}...:":... nr}d'.k{ttiS:e^........°.?{S....- '"A ~.......... 4:4{?"......r DIAL NO 2-6264 d -11 TODA) Fourteen Famous Swingers ForenF mu wnesGiveYou The Do's And Don'ts For The Man With A Roving Eye And4 The Urge To Stray GIL!Ys s EE lrFOP MUOWN PROrEcrONI C. Y! 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 Blg. be- fore 2 p.m. of the 'ay precediig publication and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday. General Notices may be published a maxi- mum 4 two times on request; Day Calendar items appear once only. Student organization notices are not accepted for publication. For more information call 764-9270. 44 SATURDAY, JULY 15 ORG AN IZATION NOT ICES' USE OF THIS COLUMN FOR AN- NOUNCEMENTS is available to officially recognized and registered student or- ganizations only, Forms are available in Room 1011 SAB. Graduate Outing Club, Sun., July 16, Rackham 'Bldg., Huron St. entrance, 8:30 a.m.-Lake Huron swimming trip; 2 p.m.-hiking, swimming. University Lutheran Chapel, 1511 Washtenaw, Sun., July 16, 9:45 a.m. worship service-Pastor Kapfer will speak on "Loving without Limit" in regard 'to the Fifth 'Commandment; 11 a.m. Bible class with discussion on "Civil Disobedience, Civil. Obedience, and Conscientious Objection"; and 6 p.m. Fellowship supper and program. Lutheran Student Chapel, Hill St. at Forest Ave., Sun., July 16, 10 a.m. worship service; 11:15 a.m. discussion group; and 6 p.m. supper followed by speaker at 7 p.m. "The Church and the Vietnam War"-Prof. David Wurfel. B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation, Tues., July 18, 8:15 pm., Prof. Edward Sta- sheff, prof. of speech at the Univ. of Mich., will present an illustrated lec- ture on "Antennas and Antiquities: Instructional Teleyision In, Israel," Hil- lel Bldg., 1429 Hill St. presents HIGH NOON' The original psychological western . Day Calendar Cinema Guild - Gary Cooper and Grace Kelly in "High Noon": Architec- ture Aud., 7 and 9:05 p.m. Dept. of Speech University Players Production - Friedrich Duerrenmatt's "The Physicists": Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, 8 p.m. Bihar Famine Relief Committee Pro- gram-"India Cultural Show": Michi- gan Union Ballroom, 8:30 p.m. School of Music Concert - Sydney Hodkinson, conductor, "Contemporary Directions": School of Music Recital Hall, 8:30 p.m. General Cotices Senate Advisory. Committee on Uni- versity Affairs: Senate Assembly meet- ing scheduled for Mon., July._ 17, has been cancelled. SUMMER C1OMMENCEMENT EXCERCISES August 6, 1967 To be held at 2 p.m. in Hill Aud. Exercises will conclude about 4 p.m. All graduates of the 1967 spring-sum- mer term may attend. Reception for graduates, their rela- tives and friends in Michigan League Ballroom at 4 p.m. Please enter League at west entrance. Tickets: Four to each prospective graduate, to be distributed from Mon., July 24, to Fr., Aug. 4 at Diploma Department, 555 Administration Bldg., except on Sat., July 29, when office will be closed. Academic Costume: May be rented at Moe Sport Shop, 711 N. University Ave. Orders should be placed imme- diately, and MUST be placed before July 15. Assembly for Graduates: At 1 p.m. in Natural Science Aud. Marshals will direct graduates to proper stations. Programs: To be distributed at Hill Aud. Candidates who qualify for a doc- toral degree from the Graduate School and WHO ATTEND THE GRADUA- TION EXERCISES will be presented a hood by the University at the cere- mony. Doctoral Examination for Spenser Woodworth Havlick, Environmental H-tealth & Conservation; thesis: "Atti- tudes Held by Water Influentials about Major Obstacles in Establishing Insti- tutional Arrangements in an Urbanized River Basin," Sat., July 15, Room 1034 Natural Resources Bldg., at 9 a.m. Co- Chairmen, L. E. Craine and C. J. Velz. Doctoral Examination for Suksan Kim, Linguistics; thesis: "A Phonemic Interpretation of the Vocalic Graph- enes of Old English Pastoral Care (Mrs Hatton 20)," Mon., July 17, West Lec- ture Room, Rackham Graduate School, at 16 a.m. Chairman, S. M. Kuhn. Doctoral Examination for Don Lee BIHAR (INDIA) FAA pres India Cull . Folk, Closical Dan * Pop, Classical Mu MICHIGAN UN Sat., July 15. TICKETS: at gate. .. $1. In advance from sponsors: International Center Ecumenical Campus{ Donations [ Fred Nilsen, Linguistics; thesis: "Eng- Iish Adverbials," Mon., July 17, Roomp "2217 Angell Hall, at 1:30 p~m. Chair- I man, A. R. Keller. HOPE ENTERPRISES pesent* 4 Doctoral Examination for Ismail Ab- del-Hamid Sirageldin, Economics; thes is: "Non-Market National Income," Tues., July 18, Room 205 Economics, at 10 a.m. Chairman, J. N. Morgan University Musical Society Fair Lane SFestival-Yehudi Menuhin, and the >: Bath FestivaluOrchestra - Dearborn Campus. University of Michigan, 3 and 8:30 p.m. :p. ; Dept. of Speech University Players Production - Friedrich 'Duerrenmatt's "The Physicists": Lydia Mendelssohn«^' " Theatre, 7 p.m.y School of Music Degree Recital-John- Ellis, Organ: Hill Aud., 8:30 p.m. (Continued on Page 4) > CtOby DELXE #n AM .£ MINE RELIEF COMM. Iural Show ce ! Costume Show sic ! Dance Drama ION BALL ROOM 8:30 P.M GRADUATION 50 ANNOUNCEMENTS , 764-9314 PURCHASE NOW Center, 662-5529 2503 STUDENT ACTIVITIES BUILDING s Welcome - - - - - - - - - - - 4: r :4 a ! j ' : i:. .1 . { :. ':; ti ..4;i v;, . A A GUIDE FOR THE MARRIED MAN "Starring WALTER MATTHAU - ROBERT MORSE - INGER STEVENS ' Guest Stars LUCILLE BALL JACK BENNY- POLY BEiiGrH -JOEl BISHOP -SID CAESAR - ART CARNEY - WADY COX- JAYNE MANSFIELD - HAL MARCH LOUIS NY': .- I -,PHIl SILVERS -TERRY-THOMAS - Produced by FPa. ( McCa Y -iretted by GENE KELLI Sci 'e'piy &yI l1 TA-hOf - ' 'L ii kh ut by FRANK ARLOFF - Muc by J 'nS W 4S - Panavii " Colo by itk. qwr. lp SEE FEATURE AT, Coming Soon "EL DORADO" HELD, OVER F CINEMA II presents ADOLFAS MEKAS' HALLELUJAH THE HILLS 1963) "A slapstick poem., an intellectual hellzapoppin, a gloriously fresh experimient and experience in the cinema of the absurd"-TIME "The wildest and wittiest comedy of the sea- son"-N.Y. TIMES j ACADEMY AWARD WINNER IN THE TRADITION.OF "DEAR JOHN" makes DEAR JOHN' look like a fairy tale. Would you believe 'VIRGINIA WOOL.Flooking like a Sunday go-to-meetin'?"_od~ra tln RADLEY H. METZGER presents S W F . 1, - an, ESSYPERSSON SHOW TIMES: Fri. 7-9-11,