FRIDAY, JULY 28,196; THE MICHIGAN DAILY VA!.r, FRIAY JU Y 8, 96 T E 1 i-iI|AN D||Y||Af ||||||L L1 CAl]rI'. 'l tit Detroit Uprising a Ignite Political Fireworks By GENE SCHROEDER DETROIT (41)-A police raid on an after-hours "blind pig" speak- easy in Detroit may have launch- ed the 1968 presidential campaign a year ahead of schedule. The raid apparently provided the spark which ignited the flames of violence which led to a con- frontation b e t w e e n President Johnson, Democrat, and Michi- gan Gov. George Romney, Re- publican. Johnson is virtually certain to run for re-election next year, and Romney is a top contender for the GOP nomination. The President struck the first blow when he told a nationwide television audience Monday that he was sending paratroopers into Detroit to put down riots because of what he called Romney's dem- onstrated "inability to restore or- der." Romney's name was mentioned seven times in Johnson's brief speech. The governor's turn to retali- ate may come next Monday when he is scheduled to make a speech before the National Association of County Officials at Detroit's Cobo Hall. Indications are that Romney will uncorke a stemwinder, for the organization provides a logical for- um at which to tell government officials about federal-state coop- eration. There are public denials from all sides that politics played a role in the dispatching of crack federal troops to put down this week's near-insurrection in the nation's fifth largest city, But President Johnson came close to being denounced by a Michigan congressman from his own Democratic party, Rep. Charles Diggs of Detroit, for play- ing politics by withholding the use of troops for 11 hours while burn- ing, looting and sniping surged through the city. The Republican Coordinating Committee has been strongly cri- ticized for saying that the Presi- dent might have contributed to the Detroit violence by vetoing a crime control bill. And Detroit Mayor Jerome P. Cavanagh was the target of com- plaints that he didn't move fast enough with police to stomp out the incipient flames while they were still just a small spark. Gov., George Romney, an un- announced contender for the Re- publican presidential nomination, also was criticized by inference because he was to have attended the GOP Coordinating Commit- tee's meeting last Sunday at which the blast was unleashed against Johnson. Congressman Diggs said he call- ed the White House Monday night after Cyrus Vance, the President's advisor in Detroit, announced that the paratroopers were remaining at Selfridge Air Force Base, about an hour's drive from the city. "The situation was obviously out of hand," Diggs said. "That was admitted by the governor and the mayor, and Rep. John Conyers had issued a statement saying the same thing. Still Washington was hanging back. "It was obvious that there were political implications. "It should have been obvious to everybody we needed federal troops right then. I told the White House that in very strong lan- guage." Fifteen minutes later, Diggs got a return call saying the Presi- dent was going to move. Romney reportedly still is smoul- dering over Johnson's televised ex- planation to the nation of why he sent troops to Detroit. The governor believes the Pres- ident gave an inaccurate version of the events in implying that Michigan hesitated about asking for federal troops. Johnson stressed in his TV ap- pearance that the federal govern- ment acted because Romney had presented "proof of his inability to restore order." Said the Detroit News: "Mr. Johnson went far beyond the requirements of the occasion to make it appear it was Rom- ney's fault, or a result of Rom- ney weakness..." "In this matter of life and death, with the safety of thou- sands of people at stake and hun- dreds of millions of dollars in property values going up in flames, it was inexcusable for the Presi- dent of the United States to in- dulge in partisan politics." The News branded Johnson's be- havior "reprehensible." Elsewhere, similar conclusions were drawn-but with Republi- can leaders also being bludgeoned editorially. The New York Times said "the nation has cause for deep concern if the leaders of both political parties are unable to forget poli- tical considerations when murder, arson and looting are sweeping some of its major cities." The Times continued: "It is no disgrace to either the governor, a Republican, or to May- or Cavanagh, a Democrat, that the situation in Detroit slipped out of local and state control. "The fact that Gov. Romney may be the Republican presiden- tial candidate next year may ex- plain but not excuse President Johnson's nervous political pos- turing at this critical time ... "But . . . the statement issued by the Republican Coordinating Committee is a flagrant outrage . . This shabby statement in- sults the nation's intelligence when it asserts that President Johnson's veto of a loosely drafted 'Crime Control Bill' for the Dis- trict of Columbia contributed to an upheaval a thousands miles away in Detroit." The political backlash from De- troit's racial agony may also af- fect the career of Mayor Cavan- agh, who has his eye on the 1970 Democratic nomination for gov- ernor. Much of the mayor's poli- tical strength has been based in the Negro community. Cavanagh, who lost a primary election bid for the U.S. Senate last year, was the target of bit- terness among Negro refugees in- terviewed at random by an Asso- ciated Press staffer on the streets. "I blame Cavanagh," said Odell Williams, a Negro who lives near the riot area and whose estrang- ed wife and six children were burned out of their home Monday night. "I don't think he was tough enough when this first started." said Williams, explaining that he felt the mayor should have order- ed shooting by the police if nec- essary to stop mob actions when the violence first flared up Sun- day morning. "This would have scared the people enough to make them go home and keep others out of the streets." However, a Cavanagh aide said it was a moot question whether or not an initial show of force would have helped. "Many people our interviewers have talked to seem to think that if more strength had been used Sunday, the authorities may have lost the community," said Philip Rutledge, director of the Mayor's Committee for Human Resources Development, which is coordinat- ing much of the city's efforts to help refugees. Brown Attacks. Johnson ~As Cai SNCC, Head Released on $10,000 Bail WASHINGTON (R) - H. Rap Brown, the militant Negro leader, said yesterday the rioting in the nation's cities is caused by condi- tions for which President Johnson can be held responsible. Brown, director of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Commit- tee, said "Lyndon Baines Johnson started the rebellion because he doesn't address himself to the conditions' that cause them." Brown made his comments at a news conference in SNCC head- quarters here and then again on the sidewalk outside the building to a crowd of about 100, mostly young Negroes and newsmen.; In the sidewalk session, he call- ed President Johnson "a mad wild dog" and a "white honky cracker." Honky is a term Brown applies to whites. News Conference 'His news conference was held about 12 hours after he was re- leased on $10,000 bail in nearby Alexandria, Va., accused under Virginia law of being a fugitive from a Maryland warrant charg- I ing him with inciting a riot Mon- day night in Cambridge, Md. The crowd cheered the 23 year old Brown when he said "there is a conspiracy to run the black people out of America but we'll burn it down before we leave." "The white people are the vio- lent people," he said. "Black peo- ple don't know nothing about be- ing violent. We are just defending ourselves. Just wait until we want to be violent. "Get yourself a gun, brother. The honky don't respect anything but a gun." Brown said there was a con- spiracy between Maryland, Vir- ginia, FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover and the President to blame the riots in the cities on him and SNCC. Shift Blame He said they are trying "to dis- credit the organization and re- move the real blame of those re- bellions across the country from Lyndon Johnson. They tried to shift the blame to me. "We make it clear individuals do not create rebellions. Rebel- lions are caused by conditions which Lyndon Johnson can be held responsible for. "Black people have no recourse other than rebellions baceuse the government does not speak to these people nor do black leaders speak for these people." Brown was critical of four Negro leaders who called Wednes- day for an end to the rioting. They were Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., A. Phillip Randolph, Roy Wilkins and Whitney Young Jr. He said: 'Morally Wrong' "We look upon these leaders as being morally wrong, as having something very gravely wrong with them. "We have to understand that violence is necessary because America made it necessary. Vio- lence is part of America's culture. Violence is as American as cherry pie.; "Blacks should be nonviolent but they should be nonviolent in their community. And it should nd, f+hjprp A nv fr 4i m p aov use of Civil Strife "VIQLENCE IS AS AMERICAN as cheery pie," de clared SNCC Chairman H. Rap Brown at a news conference yesterday. Brown also denounced President Johnson as the cause of violence in many American cities this week. OVERSEAS COVERAGE: Pravda Labels Vietnam War AsCause of Urban Violence~ Medical Bill Spurs Heavy Opposition WASHINGTON () - Substan- tial opposition has developed against a Johnson administration bill aimed at trying to insure that medical devices are safe and effective before they are put in the hands of doctors. Critics argue the administration is reaching for the scalpel before making a diagnosis-at the po- tential risk of costing lives by impeding the development of new devices. The bill would give the Food and Drug Administration author- ity to set standards for some de- vices-such as bonepins, catheters diathermy machines and X-ray equipment-and to clear devices such as artificial kidneys before they are marketed. Present Policy As it is now, FDA offiicals say they may act to take a device off the market only after they have proof that it is not safe, reliable or effective. The agency argues that new controls, much like it has over marketing of drugs, are needed because of such revolutionary medical advances as surgical im- plants, heart pacemakers and ny- lon arteries. FDA officials privately cite re- ports of deaths and damaged bodies caused by faulty or mis- used devices. "What we are really concerned with," said Dr. James L. Goddard, FDA commissioner, "is that as technology develops, individual doctors and scientists are less able to judge themselves the reliabil- ity and effectiveness of these new devices." "It doesn't make sense in our society," Goddard said in an in- terview, "that we should have to wait until someone is injured by a device before we can act." Give Up Hope Although the FDA's bill was introduced in the House only last month, m a n y administration sources already have all but given up hope for it, at least fo rthis year. "The chance of passing any medical regulation legislation is so thin," confided one Capitol Hill source, "the administration is recognizing reality by not plug- ging it very hard." An opponent of measure, who also is an official of a medical device association, called the FDA bill "a monster. To administer it would be horrible. It would give a lot of power to the FDA, and they know nothing about devices." A number of medical and in- dustrial groups interested in de- vices have thrown their support to a rival bill. This one would set up a commission to study quality c o n t r o1s and manufacturing standards and to report recom- mendations within five years. presents THAT INCOMPARABLE PAIR, HUMPHREY BOGART and LAUREN BACALL in IKEY LAgRGOI 11Fatrn SAIGON (P)-South Vietnam's generals, who have ruled the country by decree for two years, are maneuvering to maintain as much power as possible no matter who wins the September presi- dential election. Informed sources report that the generals are forming a new military committee to represent them after an elected government takes over. If their own military presiden- tial ticket wins, the committee would act as a kitchen cabinet to help formulate policy. The ticket is headed by Lt. Gen. Ngu- yen Van Thieu with Air Vice Marshall Nguyen Cao Ky as vice president. Civilians But the generals apparently al- so are worried that one of the 10 civilians might win. In that case, the new committee might be the means by which the generals could exert pressure on him. The generals now rule through the Armed Forces Council, a pure- ly military group, and the Na- tional Leadership Council, made up of 10 military and 10 civilian members. Thieu is chief of state and Ky is premier. Both groups will go out of ex- istence after the elected govern- ment is functioning. Armed Forces Both Thieu and Ky have said that the armed forces would not stand for - a civilian government that "does not live up to the as- pirations of the Vietnamese peo- ple" or one that is neutralist or pro Communist. Ky said yesterday the Armed Forces Council was studying its course after the elections. But he told Vietnamese reporters: "We are discussing this among ourselves, we can't discuss it with newsmen. This is a military secret. If you write about it in any paper, you will be brought to court." Fight Communism Other Vietnamese newsmen re- ported Ky told them that a civil- ian president who did not fight communism or who did not "help the poor" would be overthrown by the people. If the people could not overthrow him, Ky added ac- cording to this account, the arm- ed forces would do the job. Some U.S. officials are upset by the aparent plan of the generals to hold onto as much of their power as possible in the event that a civilian wins. But the political reality exists in Vietnam that there is doubt any civilian government could survive unless the military was behind it. The leading civilian candidate, former Premier Tran Von Huong, said recently he would name a military man as his premier if he were elected. Thieu and Ky said their pre- mier would be a civilian. The military committee also would play an interesting role in intramilitary political maneu- vering. Most of its members, as presently set up, are Ky sup- porters. Ky stepped out of the presiden- tial race, supposedly in the in- terests of armed forces unity, to take second place on the Thieu ticket. There were indications then that he had lost considerable power and that he had been forced by the other generals to play second fiddle. There are even more indica- tions now that Ky has not lost his grip. Various sources report that in agreeing to step down from the race for president, Ky got an agreement that he would get strong powers as vice president. Negro Business Leaders Condemn .Cambridge Riots LONDON (P)-European news- papers, radio and television are giving extensive coverage to U.S. race riots this week, with sharp editorial comment as well. Hanoi and Peking too are watching. The independent Le Monde of Paris told its readers: "It must be said that Detroit was ravaged by war. The problem, for the mo- ment, appears insoluble." The Soviet Communist party paper Pravda blamed the rioting on the Vietnam war. It said the war diverted funds which could have been used to improve the' Negro standard of living.° Soviet radio and television have provided heavy riot coverage. The government paper Izvestia carried headlines such as "Terror in racist America,. social dyna- mite." Dutch papers put the news from Detroit and other riot areas on their front, pages all week. The independent De Telegraaf of Am- sterdam commented that the Black Power call for a separate black state was unfeasible and warned that the riots may be used to influence the 1968 presidential race. British papers put Detroit on Page 1 yesterday editions, but President Charles de Gaulle's Canadian trip and domestic issues got more play. The riot coverage included the looting on New York's Fifth Avenue. There was no editorial com- ment. FORM MILITARY COMMITTEE: Viet Generals Strive to Keep Power After September Voting World News Roundup By -The Associated Press ANKARA -- Turkey's second killer earthquake in five days ripped through a desolate eastern region Wednesday night, and local officials said yesterday at least 104 persons had been killed. But scores of villages had not been heard from, and it feared the toll would rise. The quake struck the disaster prone Pulumur district midway between this national capital and the Iranian frontier less than two hours after Pope Paul VI had left Turkey after a two day visit. WASHINGTON -Legislation to raise postage rates on first class letters and post cards to six cents advanced through a House Post Office subcommittee yesterday. The bill calls for higher rates all along the line. It is due to be considered by the full committee starting next week. In addition to raising letters from five cents an ounce to six (D-Mo.), who has urged greater use of air power in the conflict, said this country should not stop at halting bombing but should offer to halt all fighting. In a speech on the Senate floor, Sen. John Sherman Cooper (R- Ky.) said bombing of targets in North Vietnam should be stopped. Seconding the proposal were Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield of Montana and Sens. J.W. Fulbright (D-Ark), Clifford P. Case (R-N.J.), Joseph S. Clark (D-Pa.), and George Ailken (R- Vt.). HONG KONG - Bombs ex- ploded throughout Honk Kong Wednesday night and roving gangs set fire to taxis, buses and cars in a renewal of terrorist at- tacks afterealmost a week of rel- ative calm in this British colony wracked by Communist violence since mid May. Police used tear gas, clubs and riot guns'to break up and beat back thegangs of pro-Communist West German papers gave the riots big play. The influential Frankfurther Allgemeine s a i d there was "tragic irony in the fact that the disturbances occur in the North, which is more progressive in racial matters." East Berlin Communist East Berlin papers headlined "Detroit tanks against workers" and "Johnson's Guard masacred despairing Americans." From Al Baath, organ of the ruling Baath Socialist party in Syria, came a suggestion that the Negro "revolutionaries rioting in the United States should estab- lish contacts with other libera- tionist movements in the world." South Africa There was comment too in South Africa, which has race problems of its own. Mrs. Pyelen Suzman, an outspoken Liberal Party member of Parliament, said in a speech at Witwatersrand University the violence stemmed not from the extension of civil rights to Negroes, but was "the result of years of poverty and de- privation." However it is essen- tially mob rule, she said, "and such rioting should be put down as firmly as possible." From Red China came a decla- ration by the Peking People's Daily that "American ruling cir- cles have been thrown into a great panic." "Be courageous, Afro-Amer- icans, fight on resolutely " the newspaper urged. Phone 434-0130 6nAamm 0& CARPMNER ROM. FIRST OPEN 8:00 P.M. FIRST RUN NOW SHOWING RUN gttt mom... '* Tony Curtis Shown at CAMBRIDGE, Md. ()-A group of Negro businessmen and com- munity leaders condemned the Cambridge racial rioting yester- day. "The responsible citizenry can- not and will not condone the hatred that erupts into violence and riots, the ruthless. destruction of property and the disregard of human life, from whatever sources they may stem," the said. Charles Cornish, Negro presi- dent of the City Council, and the Rev. E. M. Dupree, head of the local chapter of the National As- sociation for the Advancement of Colored People, were among the 11 signing the statement. The others included a Boy Scout leader, a leader of the Elks Lodge and a member of the Community Development Committee. National Guard The Negroes made their decla- ration as armed National Guard troops stood watch over the usual daytime lull in this city of 13,000. The Guardsmen used riot gas to disperse a crowd of 300 rock throwing N e g r o e s Wednesday night about four hours after a street rally addressed by Stuart Wechsler, a white leader of the Congress of Racial Equality from Baltimore. Wechsler, associate director of CORE's Baltimore Target City project, was held in the county jail in $1,100 bond on charges of disorderly conduct, resisting ar- rest, inciting to riot and refusing to obey a police officer. Walter Lively, Negro leader of a Baltimore civil rights group called the "Union for Jobs" or "Income Now," also was picked up but later released. A heavy rain helped clear the streets after the incident. Negro Businessmen The statement from the Negro businessmen identified, them as leaders of the 2nd Ward, the dis- trict which contains most of the city's 4,000 Negro residents. "We all stand ready to aid per- sonally any agency to find hous- R4th & Final Week CINEMA 11 p res enit s TO DIE IN MADRID (1965) "Masterpiece !"-Crist, N.Y. Herald Tribune ing, clothes and other necessities to benefit the unfortunate, home- less people of the community." Another statement was made yesterday by a Negro whose gro- cery store was among a dozen buildings destroyed by the mas- sive fire which roared through two blocks of the 2nd Ward early Tuesday. The rioting followed a speech there by H. Rap Brown, director of the Student Nonvio- lent Coordinating Committee. "We do not believe in this Black Power business," said William Sweetheart Greene, the grocer. "We don't want outsiders com- ing into our community to preach hate. The responsible Negroes ii} Cambridge denounce the Black Action Federation and Black Power. "There are people in the 2nd Ward who need homes and cloth- ing because of the fire. We want to help them and bring peace to Cambridge." U' I "In the tradition of 'Dea r John' makes 'Dear John' look like a fairy tale. Would you believe 'Virginia- Woolf' looking like a Sunday go-to-meetin?" -World Journal Tribune "I, a man... enjoyed!" I, A Wo.ma'n' SHOW TIMES: Mon. thru Thurs. 7-9 Sat. 7-8-11; Sun. 6-8-10 STARTS THURSDAY VERY HANDY MAN with ANOUK AIMEE GIOVANNA RAZZI I .1