'U' SHOULD IMPROVE ON MSU TUITION PLAN See editorial page cl: 4 r gi~tiga4n 4Iatiti FAIR AND COOLER High-75 Low-55 Partly cloudy tonight with a chance of showers Seventy-Six Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXVII, No. 57S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, JULY 29, 1967 SEVEN CENTS FOUR P Poor s Despair Brings Riot to ntegrated Detroit By AUSTIN SCOTT Associated Press News Analysis DETROIT-Black fists pound- ed the steering wheel in anger as the Negro driver sped along the new Chrysler Freeway less than a mile from downtown De- troit. Turning east, the driver swore at the towers of new middle in come housing projects rising from acres of grassland created by urban renewal. "Space!" he shouted. "Look at all this space!' this used to be Hasting Street, a teeming, im- pacted Negro area. Hundreds of thousands of Negroes lived here. Where did they go, man? Where a did all these pedple.go?' The cleared land was galling to the man who once lived near by acres - of tumble down single family homes. As buildings were condemned over a dozen years, large num- bers of families streamed into the small apartment and room- ing houses of 12th Street, help- ing it to become the most heav- ily populated, solidly Negro neigh- borhood in this integrated city of 1.7 million. A week ago it was the Negro community's sin strip - an area of 22 bars and 15 liquor stores, pawn shops and barbecue joints. Today it is a 17 block ruin of jagged, fire scarred walls, ceil- ings collapsed into basements, broken water pipes dripping in- cessantly onto pretzeled remnantst of steel beams. From this initial trouble area, violence leap-frogged helter- skelter across 20 per cent of the nation's fifth largest city. Thirty nine died, 2,000 were wounded and nearly 5,000 were arrested in what was to become the nation's cost- liest riot. Property and long-term business damage soared to an estimated $1 billion. Detroit, a city that prided it- self on advanced race relations, asked over and over again. Why here? The Motor City seemed to have a good reason for asking. Its 33 per cent Negro population is gen- erally scattered over the entire city. Poor Negroes live next to poor whites in the slums, while middle class teachers, clerks, and city employes live in a pepper- salt pattern in modest frame homes throughout the tree lined streets of the mid-Northwest side. Near the city limits, it is im- possible to say whether the doc- tor, lawyer or other professional who owns one of the old but beau- tifully maintained 15 r o o m homes, set well back from the streets amid tall oaks and pop- lars, will be Negro or white. "They've got to live with us,' said a Negro man. "That's why you didn't see Negroes out to 'get Whitey.' They see him every day." Detroit has built a unique job pattern around the auto industry, which makes short term work available for even un-skilled Neg- roes. Federal statistics show they will earn $400 to $600 more a year than Negroes on similar jobs any- where in the country. A record number own their own homes. Negroes enjoy heavy par- ticipation in government civil service. Mayor Jerome Cavanagh and Police Commissioner Ray Girdardin have won nationwide praise for quick use of federal urban aid funds, and for an open door policy toward Negro views and complaints. There are Negro congressmen John Conyers and Charles C. Diggs Jr., Negroes on the board of education and one Negro city councilman. The sullen young man on the corner of 12th and Pingree, watching a bulldozer reduce a burned out hulk to a pile of char- red bricks, frowned when he heard the question. "I'll tell you, brother, but you'd better not put my name in the paper," he said. "I cain't speak for nobody but me, man, but I decided aint no one giving me nothing' like them Uncle Toms has out where they live, and I just went and got some of what I want." He looked to be no more than 18, the same dark walnut color as the schoolteachers, barbers and undertakers who head home each night to their spacious, integrated neighborhoods. But neither he nor the dozens of ypung men and women, from mid-teens to mid-twenties, who hung around similar corners, were the same breed of cat. That was clear in the way the "Cat" on 12th Street talked about how "Whitey' is holding him down by setting up education and job qualifications which he can't pass while training unqualified whites. It was clear in the way he sympathized with some idea of the black nationalists who warned that "Whitey is out to kill you, you got to get him first." It was clear in he way he talked about how "beautiful" the riot was, while Negroes of his par- ents' generation huddled in their darkened, crowded apartments and tenements just off 12th Street and deplored the destruction. "It seems as if the young people are leading the old,' said Harold Brown, a community organized in the West Central Organization set up several years ago by pro- fessional organizer Saul Alinsky. "The young people don't want to accept things as they are. They are coming up with new ideas. They don't like the way the gover- nment is run. They want to do something about it." But why riot? Negro leaders say the answer may lie right in the middle of the good race relations the city thought it enjoyed. Good, yes, but for whom? Whey refuse to call the violence a race riot, terming it instead a war uetween the haves and have- nots. "The people down there have been forgotten by the power structure,' said Robert Tindall, executive secretary of the Detroit National Association for the Ad- vancement of Colored People. "The Negro can't get up to the lower-middle and middle-middle classes from the bottom. There are education and job standards he can't meet. If you continually give people the impression they can move when in fact they can't, you're going to have an ex- plosion." On 12th Street, it's the have nots who set the tone, apparently in part because most Negroes who do manage to "make it' on 12th Street move away. "They are a leaderless com- munity," said U.S. Rep. Conyers. "They're alienated from us. We don't speak their language. We ,throw $100 dinners and some of these people don't see $100 in a month." . NO UNITED FRONT: Board of Education Asks 3-Mill School T ax Boost Paratroopers Draw Back; i Stay National Guardsmei By JILL CRABTREE The Ann Arbor Board of Ed- ucation at a special meeting yes- terday approved a proposal to seek a three-mill school tax increase in the city millage election slated for August 28. The only Trustee to cast a "no" vote was Paul H. Johnson. The meeting had been called after attempts at unanimous pas- sage failed at a board meeting last Wednesday. At that time Johnson spoke out in favor of a one-mill levy and use of a $766,000 "working balance" contingency fund to make up the difference. A motion by Trustee Joseph R. Julin to put three mills on the ballot was withdrawn at the Wed- nesday meeting because board members said they wanted to pre- sent a "united front" to the voters on the issue. A proposed .5%/ -mill increase, designed specifically to obtain ex- tra money for teacher's salaries, was defeated by Ann Arbor voters last June. The new, lower. increase pro- posed yesterday, if passed, will -be earmarked to restore cuts in ed- ucational programs in the city's public schools. I a ,jvin A1iri~t u ~iLg NEWS WIRE ALAN N. CONNOR, of the school of social work, has been appointed as interim director of Ann Arbor's Human Relations Commission. He replaces David C. Cowley, whose resignation takes effect August i. Connor will hold the position for approxi- mately six weeks, until a permanent director is found. City standards require that the new director have a "master's degree in social sciences or related areas, supplemented by at least three years' experience in inter-group relations work, or an equivalent combination of experience and training." A TEAM OF FACT-FINDERS Thursday declared conditions are good in a Washtenaw County Jail cell-block in which one of 48 Detroit riot prisioners died. The six-man team, including three Negroes, inspected the cellblock and said it found "no cause for complaints about treatment of these prisioners. "Right to a man, these prisioners had praise for their treat- ment in the Washtenaw County Jail," said John Burton, Negro mayor of Ypsilanti who spoke for the committee. * * A THREE MAN QUAKER action group asked the State Department yesterday for passports to travel in North Vietnam aboard the peace yacht Phoenix. "We want," they said, "to deliver medical supplies and pos- Bible hospital volunteers to Hanoi." The Department agreed to consider their applications, a spokesman said. State Department officials indicated that the question of medical aid to civilians in North Vietnam is one of the issues to be weighed in considering the passport validation. There is no provision for inspection teams or other verification of the des- tination of medical supplies, it was noted. Cuts tentatively planned by the Board of Education include plac- ing first grade classes on half days and eliminating several elec- tive courses at Ann Arbor High School. Economizing Criticized The Ann Arbor Teacher's As- sociation (AATA) last week pass- ed resolutions condemning these cuts. One resolution stated that placing first-graders on half days would "cause serious damage to the elementary school children's education . . . and, in fact, in- crease the first grade teacher's work load." "Therefore be it resolved that the Board of Education be urg- ed to reconsider this cut and to seek alternatives that do not ad- verselly influence the education- al program or wvork load." Donald Newsted, AATA presi- dent, said yesterday that he was "doubtful the 3-mill increase will pass. Minor cuts won't threaten the voters to vote yes, and -we (the AATA) won't let the board make the major cuts that will threaten them." AATA Plan The AATA has also drawn up a master agreement on teachers' salaries which has been approved by the Board of Education and will be sent out to all area teach- ers next week for ratification. The agreement asks for a $1.58 million salary increase instead of the $2.1 million Increase originally sought before last June's millage defeat. The master agreement will be mailed out to teachers on August. 1. Newsted indicated they have 10 days to return their ballots. Newsted said he did not feel the board's millage action will af- feet the teacher's ratification of, their salary agreement. Ratification Planned "I fully expect ratification," he said. We won't have a large ma- jority, but it will be a majority." However Newsted said he would not announce ratification of the agreement until the board an- nounces a definite list of cuts it intends to make in educational programs. Ann Arbor teachers voted at a mass meeting last April to strike in the fall if they are not ablel to negotiate a contract raising their salaries to an "acceptable level." City MustBeian Massive Cean-up Arrangements Made to Release 1000 Prisoners Without Bail DETROIT UT)-Federal paratroopers relaxed their armored grip on the riot ravaged auto capital of the world yesterday, after two days of relative racial calm. Ahead of the city of Detroit, now, as violence subsided in its shattered streets, lay a massive rebuilding job-along community relations lines as well as property lines. Arrangements are being made for the courts to release without bond as many as 1000 prisoners held on minor charges in connection with the riot. Negro leaders complained that high bail was set for nearly all the more than 3000 persons arrested, regardless of the severity of their alleged offenses. Some 4700 crack paratroopers from the 82nd and 101st Airborne Divisions, helmeted, with gas grenades hanging from their battle dress, were with-. drawn from Detroit's East Side.La sn ,.v Cyrus Vance, President John- son's emissary in Detroit, said Vote Aid or lthey will Ic inTeserve... ..« -Associated Press Police searched for arms, yesterday, at 14th and and Pingree in Detroit's riot area after they flushed occupants of nearby apartments out on the street. They acted on the basis of a tip that Negroes in a car bearing Ohio license plates got out and entered the building with arms. Only loot was found and two of the men lying on the sidewalk were arrested. Detroit Poverty Program Head Describes ~oo-Natured Riot' RECRUITING BOOM: Demand Raises Salary Levels Offered Recent U' Graduates By AVIVA KEMPNER and HACK NAGLERj Special To The Daily DETROIT-"None of the tradi- tional theories that hide unem- ployment, inadequate housing and an administration insensitive to the needs of the people cause a riot as bad as the situation in De- troit," Phillip Rutledge, director of Detroit's poverty program, Hu- man Resources Development, em- phasized yesterday. Potentially explosive conditions which cause the bitterness and frustration seen in other troubled cities, Rutledge contended, were not evident in the "criminal in- surrection" of the Detroit situa- tion. He described much of the activity as "good natured, inte- grated looting." From personal observations he noted that the looters were inte- grated racially and by economic class. "Although many have-nots were involved," Rutledge said, "re- spectable, middle-class citizens were sometimes caught up in the hysteria of the moment." Snipers Show Training Asked if 'he thought outsiders were involved, Rutledge said there was an incredible degree of so- phistication in the art of guerrilla warfare among the snipers. He al- so noticed that the looters fol- lowed a somewhat professional pattern. Critics might blame the occur- rence of the riots on a failure of caused by overcrowding in the vestigation including extensive in- cities. terviews with those arrested is Discussing the contributing fac- needed to illuminate the causes of tors Rutledge mentioned the pub- the riot. "This study should be a licity other riots had received scientific and quantative anal- giving people the feeling that a ysis." he added.- riot in Detroit was inevitable. The He referred to militant negro final outbreak of violence was like leaders, H. Rap Brown, and Stoke- a "self-fulfilling prophecy," he ley Carmichael as dangerous peo- said. ple. "In giving these men such dis- At this point any theories can proportionate publicity the press only be speculation, occording to is doing a disservice to our coun- Rutledge. A thorough local in- try," Rutledge stated. Rioting Latest Political Blow To Hurt Cavanaghs Career they will be held in reserve within the city limits, with1 the streets left to 10,800 feder- alized National Guardsmen and city and state police. "The situation hopefully willf allow withdrawal from the city sometime next week," Vance said of the paratroopers, many of them blooded veterans of Vietnam. High Cost Estimate The troops realignment follow- ed the quietest night in Detroit since the ugly uprising began Sun-1 day. Estimates of overall damage; rose to $1 billion, in this costliest of riots in the nation's history.- Thirty-nine lives were lost in Detroit, where 30 per cent of the population of 1.7 million is Negro. there were thousands of injur- ies and arrests. Gov. George Romney asked President Johnson to declare De-, troit a disaster area-a designa- tion allowing special federal aid, including low interest property re- building loans, to be allocated to victimsof natural-not manmade -catastrophes. Disaster Area Rep. John Conyers (D-Mich), ne of the state's two Negro con- gressmen, said he talked to John- Son on the telephone Thursday. Conyers added: "He said the problem is that if we start it as a precedent in De- troit, every city in the country in- volved in riots will want it." The White House, however, of- fered food, drugs and hospital equipment-but avoided going to the disaster designation. Black Nationalists Spokesman for Detroit's black nationalists denounced selection of a city reconstruction commit- tee, charging it was composed lar- Torn Cities LANSING (W--Legislative lead- ers are willing to dip into Michi- gan's meager anticipated budget surplus to help the state's bat- tered cities repair their riot dam- age. House Speaker Robert Waldron (R-Grosse Pointe) said he and Senate Majority Leader Emil Lockwood (R-St. Louis) will in- troduce next week a resolution allowing state agencies to extend needed aid to violence-ripped communities. Among the expenses would be overtime pay for state workers such as state police, the cost of extra National Guard duty, upper welfare costs and added expenses to prisons holding those arrested during the riots. Possible Friction "We'll just have to see where we are," said Waldron, when asked if the Legislature might consider direct aid to riot-torn cities. Waldron was asked if he ex- pected any friction among House members because of strong feel- ings about the riot situation. Rep. Arthur Law (D-Pontiac) shot and killed a Negro youth attempting to break into his store. Rep. James Del Rio (D-Detroit) was arrested for inciting to riot, but later was released. Waldron said he was "review- ing" the work of the special com- mittee headed by Del Rio to in- vestigate the total action on his poverty program in Detroit. "We just want to see if it will be fruitful at all," Waldron said. New Laws New antiriots laws are needed in Michigan, Waldron said, but By HACK NAGLER Increased recruiting and higher starting salaries reflect greater demands this year for graduates of the University's schools of busi- ness administration, engineering and law according to the schools' placement services. There are more job offers than candidates to fill positions offered ho iap smnrIwnLrr to Arthur S. The Law School also reported greater efforts had been made to recruit their graduates with 236 firms interviewing law students this year-almost 100 per cent more than five years ago. Law, Engineering Greater competition for Univer- sity engineers also showed in sala- ry increases-last year averaging pointments in the SAB reports a total of 2,667 requests from various governmental agencies for grad- uates with a liberal arts back- ground including a request from the Peace Corps for 10 new grad- uates from any field. Holder of MBA's who studied undergraduate engineering re- ceived slightly higher average salaries than those who were =in DETROIT P) - "The die is fairly well cast," Mayor Jerome P. Cavanagh said yesterday. "Let's face it," he said. "There are a lot of people who - even if we rebuilt this into a model city in the next six months - would have nothing to do with me." The explosion of violence was the latest in a series of trip- hammer political blows to the 39 year old mayor - once among the brightest stars on the Demo- cratic party horizon. "Politics Aside" "In no way could these events be described as a plus," Cavan- agh said. 'They're a negative.' talk of an eventual confrontation with New York City Mayor John Lindsay for the presidency in 1972. Since then, he lost in the Sen- at Democratic primary to former six-term Gov. G. Mennen Wil- liams, who lost in the election to Sen. Robert Griffin, the Repub- lican who campaigned with Gov. George Romney. The city's rising crime rate led to criticism of Cavanagh and a campaign was launched to recall him from office. Except for riot- ing, looting and arson this week, crime has diminished in the past two months. The recall petitions remain in circulation. Political Oblivion