TUESDAY, JULY 25,1967 TRF. Mif'.UTC A N 11 ti Tr:v ," A,&*.& TUEDAY JUY 2,l167T VA M >11iEl 1I1 lbA ZN Y PAGE TA Johnson Delays Sending "T" AvFEDERAL PANEL: Increases In Guarantees of Tenant Rights Could End Violence in Slums ederal roo s Int t All Sectors Feli pTaylor, Clifford In Saigon on Toi stop DETROIT (A')-Federal officials said last night they had decided not to use, nearly 5000 regular Ar- my troops to quell Detroit's riot problems unless the situation worsens. Mayor Jerome P. Cavan- agh said he thought it was a bad decision. "I certainly see some hopeful signs," the mayor told a news con- ference. "But Ifstill share the con- viction that I would like to see the commitment of federal troops at this time." Cyrus Vance, special assistant to Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara, announced at the same news conference that the federal troops were being kept on standby. He said, however, "we will con- tinue to follow this on an hourly basis throughout the night," and pledged to act as developments require. He declined to say what developments would make use of federal troops necessary. , Johnson had announced dis- patch of the troops less than two hours after Gov. George Romney and Mayor Jerome P. Cavanagh had wired a plea for help. Units of the 82nd and 101st Air- borne Divisions were airlifted to Selfrldg Air Force Base about 20 % miles north of downtown Detroit, after Republican Gov. Romney of Michigan said: "Without help the situation could become uncontrollable." Federal troops never have been used to quell Negro uprisings. But paratroopers of the 101st were us- ed against white segregationists during the Little Rock, Ark., school rioting of 1957. The White House granted the Romney request, in a telegram, after conferences Johnson. held with Atty. Gen. Ramsey Clark, Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara and Warren Chris- topher, deputy- attorney general. Christopher was directed to fly to Detroit with Vance. They were to determine the situation and whether to send the troops into the, smoke shrouded, debris littered city. I The regular troops would have joined more than 7,000 Michigan National Guardsmen, city and sub- urban police, and state police troopers who have braved sniper fire, fire bombs and missiles in; trying to halt the violence. In. announcing his plea for fed- eral help, Romney told news men experience had shown that the second night of racial violence "usually was worse than the first." Republican party leaders said yesterday the United States is "rapidly approaching a state of anarchy" and that President Johnson has failed to recognize and deal with the intense problem of racial violence in the cities. They said violence like 1that raging in Detroit may be the re- sults of a conspiracy - organized planning and execution on a na- tional scale.'' They demanded an emergency congressional investigation of "the' planning, organization, method of operation and means to bring an end to rioting and civil disorder." The statement was adopted un- animously by the Republican Co- ordinating Committee. Former President Dwight D. Eisenhower was among the party leaders who voted for the declaration. The legal basis for sending fed- eral troops to the aid of state govs ernments has been on the books since 1795. It says the President may, at the request of a state legislature or its governor if the legislature cannot be convened, call in the armed forces "whenever there is an insur- rection in any state against the government." Romney's request gave the Pres- ident the option of directing reg- uilar Army troops to the scene, federalizing Michigan National 3uard units already there so that the Army commander would be in charge of all military actions. Residents Critical of Police Force Tactics DETROIT (A') - The Negroes who live near 12th Street hate what their own people have done to the neighborhood, but they hate the police even more. They claim the police showed uk too late with too little, dealt brutally with those arrested and failed to help the sick and wounded. But when a group of residents gathered yesterday at the corner of 12th and Taylor, one block from the illegal after-hours sa- loon where a Sunday morning raid touched off mass violence, they spoke of the looting and store-smashing with revulsion. :? "}}; r'. :' '4"?.}}}"::ig 4r:"}': k st G:>":?J"i?:4s r }}}",." rcw t v. :Jgg ".".""v: :"n:::gi .": ::.:.... t. ,. y 4. r.". "rr .,,. i:" ,",}:'" . h. r. ., .:. ". t. .:'G?' 4t ,?;r " ,$ t . . r., r i? ... rn 4 : 'Sr Sv ':." J. r " ."",r" w tt"".""o.."."" 1 :".~ v ". r ""."": .w ; v ":.av: .": v v ."..r* Johnny Le Duece, 26, said it reminded 'him of Vietnam where he served with an Air Force res- cue team until seven months ago. "We'd go to the small villages that had been bombed," he said. "People would go through the garbage looking for food. This reminds me of that - and it's sickening." "What did they accomplish? "If the police had gotten here right when it started, it wouldn't have gotten so bad," said a slim girl in yellow. "The police didn't come until nine o'clock that morning. Six hours after the vio- lence began. By then it was too late." "With daylight, we thought that'd bring a little quiet," she added. "But 'with dawn, people just got more bold. They'd been shaking their heads - but about five or six o'clock, they just de- cided, 'Mgiht as well get us some, too.' ' "You know, they keep saying 'Turn the other cheek,'" said an-, other man, "but after a while you start running out of cheeks." At about that point, a car full of blue-helmeted state policemen drove past. One man in back was poking a riot gun out of the win- dow. "You'd better watch out," the policeman snarled. "It's loaded." "Now, was that necessary?" Johnson asked as the others on the corner shouted indignantly after the retreating car. -- Of Strategy Talks SAIGON (M)-Allied commands reported stepped up activity on both sides in the Vietnam war yes- terday all thenway from the de- militarized zone to the Mekong Delta. While no major clashes were reported, signs pointed to in- creased fighting, road mining and terrorism. At the same time, two top en- voys of President Johnson con- ferred in Saigon, apparently to pave the way for the leaders of the nations fighting the Communists. Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor and Clark Clifford made Saigon first stop of their tour o the allied na- tions, amid speculation they would be pressing those governments to increase their manpower in Viet- nam. The U.S. Command reported no major clashes since troops of the U.S. 4th Infantry Division wiped{ out a North Vietnamese company in a fierce 41/2 hour fight in the central highlands near the Cam- bodian border Sunday. South Viet Patrols South Vietnamese headquarters disclosed that government troops again were patrolling the southern' half of the demilitarized zone di-. viding South Vietnam and North Vietnam. Spokesmen said 25 North7 Vietnamese troops had been killed in one engagembent in that area Sunday. U.S. Marines and South Viet- namese troops had swept into the zone in mid May -in an effort to clean out North Vietnamese units1 and gun positions. They pulled out+ after a few days, and Americanr forces have gone back into the zone only once since then for a+ brief period. The South Vietnamese spokes- man indicated that government troops, at least, would now make+ zone patrols part of their routine.a Guerrillas Busy Elsewhere, ground fighting was light and scattered in the normal pattern of the war, but guerrilla bands were busy. The main highway from Saigonf south into the delta was mined# again, and Communist mortarmen1 laid down an accuratebarrage, early in the day on a field hospital at a brigade headquarters of the U.S. 9th Infantry Division, about 45 miles southwest of the capital. World News Roundup By The Associated Press BEIRUT, Lebanon () - Presi- dent Gamal Abdel Nasser has sounded a call for a long, slow struggle against Israel, with only one faint note for a peaceful settlement. Most of the Arab press and radio in the Middle East empha- dsize the need for unrelenting con- flict with Israel in the Egyptian president's speech Sunday calling for belt tightening for a "long difficult road." . '. BUCHAREST, Romania -Ro- mania served notice to the Krem- lin yesterday that it will hew to its independent course despite Soviet pressure to abandon its doctrine of national Communism. Nicolae Ceausescu, the nation's Communist party chief, spelled out the doctrine in a foreign policy declaration that sounded like an invitation to other East European regimes to follow the Romanian example. * * * THREE RIVERS, Que.-Presi- dent Charles de Gaulle carried his message of French Canadian sepa- ration into rural Quebec yesterday, whistle-stdpping through thun- derstorms and humid weather like a candidate running for elections. The Quebec government had made efforts to drum up popular enthusiasm for De Gaulle's pass- age and there were predictions that great masses wouldline the highway and congretate in the towns. But, the turnouts did not measure up to the forecasts.' SACRAMENTO, Calif. - Gov. Ronald Reagan and former Vice President Richard M. Nixon say they made no deals at a "summit" they held Sunday, but agreed the Republican party must nominatej a candidate who can beat Presi-' dent Johnson next year. It was the first meeting of the two since Reagan's stock as a po- tential candidate began rising. Nixon jokingly referred to the weekend as "the summit of Bohe- mia." * * * FLAT ROCK, N.C.-Carl Sand- burg, who rose through the ranks of working men to achieve a deli- cate and humane touch in the literary world, died Saturday at age 89, was cremated yesterday at St. John's in the Wilderness Epis- copal Church, near Connemara. WASHINGTON A')-A federal panel suggested yesterday that greater rights for tenants-includ- ing possible withholding of rent- might help clean up the nation's slum housing and eliminate at least one cause of vandalism and rioting. The panel reported that present. laws governing private property date from feudal England, are heavily weighted in the landlord's favor and hinder efforts at slum rehabilitation. It concluded also that the courts usually take the landlord's side and the complain- ing tenant winds up being evicted. The findings are outlined in a 40-page report on a conference held last December and sponsored by the Department of Housing and Urban Development, the Justice Department and the Office of Economic Opportunity. The report notes that no votes were taken and the suggestions should not be considered as ex- pressing the views of the conferees in general or of the sponsoring federal agencies. But Asst. Atty. Gen. Frank Wozencraft, who headed the group that prepared the report, said a news briefing that a "general ca sensus seemed to emerge" from panelists. He said most of the forms listed would have to be ma at the state and local leyel, though the federal governmn could be a strong participant. Robert C. Wood, undersecret of Housing and Urban Develc ment, said at the briefings department already is using financial leverage- to try to p suade municipalities to make sc improvements in slum housing. said some federal aid has been e nied communities that make lit or no effort. Wood's department expects have ready by Sept. 2 tighi standards w h i c h communit mustmeet to qualify for feds grants for public housing andt ban redevelopment. Suggestions Among the panel's suggestio for giving tenants greater rig are: -Permit tenants to pa3f rent a court in cases where serious A lations of building codes exist. --Suspend entirely tenants' co gations to pay rent "if serious 'v lations are permitted to contin for an extended period." -Allow the tenant to sue t landlord-and collect damages- case of willful disregard of bul ing maintenance-unless the to ant also is at fault. -Give tenants, acting as group, the right to have th building placed in the hands of court-appointed receiver. I. The Daily Official Bulletin is an oftieial 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 once only. student organization notices are not accepted for publication. For more information call 764-9270. TUESDAY, JULY 25 Day Calendar Dept. of Gerontology Conference - "Twentieth Annual Conference on Ag- ing": Physics Astronomy Bldg., 8:30 a.m.. Audio-visual Education Center Film Preview-"Blindness, Every Second Car" and "Time of the Horn": Multipurpose Room, Undergraduate Library, 1:30 p.m. ORGANIZATION NOTICES USE OF' THIS COLUMN FOR AN- NOUNCEMENTS is available to officially recognized and registered student or- ganizations only, Forms are available in Room lo11 SAB. *, * * Michigan Christian Fellowship will hold a. lecture discussion at 7:30 p.m. in the Michigan Union Rm. 3-G. The speaker, Arthur' Funkhouser, will speak on "Christ and the Hippies." Deutscher Verein will sponsor kaffee- stunde: kaffee, kuchen, konversation, on Wed., July 26, 3-5 p.m.,. 3050 Frieze Bldg. * * * Far Eastern Language Program spon- sors a lecture on "Chinese Poetics: Reg- ulated Verse of the Tang Dynasty" with Prof. Hugh M. Stimson, from Yale University, as speaker. The event will be in Angell Hall on July 25 at 7:30 p*m ' Far Eastern Language Institute pre- sents Prof. Richard T. Thompson, of Georgetown University, who will speak on "Chinese Lexotactics: From Clause to Sentence" at 7:30 p.m.,, July 26 in Room 25 of the Michigan Union. Linguistic Institute Forum Lecture- Prof. Einar Haugen, Harvard University, "The Rise of Standard Languages in Scandinavia": Rackham Lecture Hall, 7:30 p.m. General Notices Dept. of English Lecture: Prof. R. M Ohmann, Wesleyan University, will lec- ture on "Syntax and Style," Aud. C, Angell Hall, on Wed., July 26, at 4:10 p.m. All interested persons are invited to attend. Dept. of Political Science/Center for Russian and East European Studies: Are co-sponsoring a lecture by Dr. Jerzy Wiatr, of the Institute of Philosophy and. Sociology, Polish Academy of Sci- ences, entitled "Local Politicsas an In- strument of Socio-Economic Develop- ment" in the Sixth Floor Conference Rbom, Institute of Social Research Bldg., 4:10 p.m,, Wed., July 26. Center for Japanese Studies: In coop- eration with the CIC Summer Asian Languages Institute present Prof. Wil- liam P. Malm, professor of music at the University of Michigan, giving a public lecture entitled "Left-Wing Music of East Asia," Aud. A, Angell Hall, 8:30 p.m., Wed., July 26. Doctoral Examination for Allen Ed- ward Blaurock, Physics; thesis: "X-Ray Diffraction Studies of the Myelin Sheath of Nerve," Wed., July 26, Room 629 Physics-Astronomy Bldg,, at 3 p.m. Chairman, C. R. Worthington. Foreign'V isitors The following foreign visitors can be reached through the Foreign Visitor Programs Office, 764-2148.% Mr. Nair, professor of accounting, University of Nigeria, Nigeria, July 26- 29. Placement POSITION OPENINGS: Mobil Chemical Co., Plastics Division, Macedon, New York 14502-Manager- Compensation and Benefits. 5-10 yrs. exper. in personnel field, with 3 in this specialization. Rockwell-Standard, Pittsburgh, Pa. 15222-Supervisor-Mktg. Info. Services. To set up info., center at corp. hdgrts. M.A.L.S. or equiv. trng. In info. han- dling methods and several yrs. exper. in mktg. res. library or tech, library. G. D. Searle & Co., Chicago, Ill. 60680 -Chem. Research Div. has position available for recent grad with BS in organic chem. and interest in bio- chem. Work to consist of biochem. prep. at pilot plant stage of develop- ment. Can continue tech. education Ingalls Shipbuilding Corp., Pascagou- la, Miss. 39567-Openings for engrs., naval architects, auditors, accountants, finan, analysts, systems analysts, pro- grammers, and draftsmen."Spec, Infor- mation available at Bureau. For further information 764-7460, General Division, Appointments, 3200 SAB. please call Bureau of TEACHER PLACEMENT: The following schools have listed vacancies for Sept., 1967: Grass Lake, Mich. - Elementary, Grades 2,and 6. Imlay City, Mich.-Elem., J., Math, H.S. Math. H.S. Biology/Math. Napoleon, Mich.-Commercial. Newberry, Mich.-H.S. Chem./Math, Elmwood Park, 11. - Earth Science! (Coaching if desired). Artesia, New Mexico-J.H. Choir (7-8- 9th grades). Will consider someone of retirement age. For additional information contact Education Division, Bureau of Appoint-j ments, 3200 SAB, 764-7462. . ENDS WEDNESDAY . CINEMA II HELD OVER 3rd WEEK "In the tradition of 'Dear John' makes Dear John' look like a fairy tale. Would you believe 'Virginia Woolf' looking like a Sunday go-to-meetin?" -World Journal Tribune aI a . . , enjoyed!" 1I A Womn" Show Times: Mon. thru Thurs. 7-9 Dial 8-64#16 ENDING WEDNESDAY Whenever they talk about great suspense motionh pictures, , they always seem to mention. DIABGLIQUEU AND PRESENTS TO DIE 1 Phone 434-0130 n E r t r vc e 0 4 C A AP fN T E l I R D A I I FIRST OPEN 8:00 P.M. FIRST RUN NOW SHOWING RUN r IN Seven Arts Produchopresents Robert Dhru r111Fl A Guide For the Married Man By America's Most famous Swiogers SOR<;i MADID Snown at 9:3a Only Also Shown at 11:35 Only, PLUS-"RODEO DAREDEVILS" COLOR CARTOON The Do's And Don'ts For The Married WI Man Who's Thinking Single - or The Single Man Who's Just Thinking! WAITER MATTHAU - ROBERT MORSE - INGER STEVENS SEE FEATUR E AT 1:05-3:05-5:10-7:15-9:25 T H U RSDAY!rr I:. (1965) "Masterpiece !" -Crist, N.Y. Herald Tribune "Masterpiece ." --O'Doherty, Life Ann Arbor, Michigan 210 S. Fifth Avenue 782-9700 AN ADVENURE IN DHERYLAND I FRIDAY and SATURDAY Auditorium A Angell Holl 7 and 9:15 P.M. 50c 1! lo A fEVW ARTS 1 I p U MICHIGAN. DIAL 5-6290 ENDING THURSDAY I NOW - THIS WEEK I --COMING FRIDAY "Barefoot In the Park" WILLIAM WYCHERLY'S Riotous Restoration Farce Ihe CountrqyWlee 6t FALL FESTIVAL (SEPT. 19-NOV. 5) 3 NEW PRODUCTIONS I I I the eastern michigan university summer theatre presents e' " iv'+ i Michel de Ghelderode's t'.4 J ../ UNIVERSITY PLAYERS-DEPARTMENT OF SPEECH i * J rr I w4forf AAanr4alccrib n T hgmrffrg% 11 I = IL" Au .s'n-,4 . ! S I I I I I I