Y, AUGUST 1, 1967 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE 7 t Forrestal Death Toll Up; Ship Forced Back to Port SUBIC BAY, Philippines VP)- The carrier Forrestal, ravaged by fire and explosions off Vietnam Saturday, docked at this U.S. naval base yesterday bringing the bodies of some of the 129 men who died in the disaster. Even in Sulbic Bay small fires blazed aboard. Seven men were unaccounted. for, and 64 were injured in the worst U.S. naval tragedy in a combat zone since World War II, the ships' officers reported. One fire alarm sounded aboard the 76,000 ton carrier as she moved into Subic Bay and two others rang after she had docked. Officers said the fires were caused by smouldering mattresses and other material in compartments in the carrier's shattered stern. . Small Fires All the fires were quickly put out, but officers said small fires had been giving trouble since the main blaze was, extinguished early Sunday and more were likely. Rear Adm. Harvey P. Lanham, commander of Carrier Division II, who made the Forrestal his flag-' ship blamed the disaster on an+ A4 Skyhawk's fuel tank which was "punctured and ignited." He said the "cause of the puncture is un- known at this time."; The flames spread and ex- ploded ammunition, bombs and' rockets on other planes heavily{ armed at the time for an air, strike against North Vietnam. Lanham and the ship's com- destroyed and 42 damaged in the carrier's complement of 80. The 52 bodies aboard the For- restal were placed in canvas bags, wrapped in U.S. flags and borne ashore within an hour after the ship docked. They will be flown to the U.S. air base at nearby Clark Field for the final trip home. Bodies Unidentifiable Of the dead. only 62 have been Negro Area In Portland Quiets Down Guard Dispatched; Sunday Outbreak Never Became Riot PORTLAND, Ore. ()P) - Port-y land's Negro district, where bands of vandals smashed windows and tossed fire bombs Sunday night, was quiet yesterday and people! shopped and strolled about much as usual. "Things are a little tense," said a grocer whose shattered window was covered by a sheet of ply- wood. "But except for curiosity seekers driving by. things look normal." Gov. Tom McCall drove through the area and an aide said he was astonished by the lack of debris. Much of the broken glass had been swept away and boarded win- dows were the chief reminder of the night's violence. Guardsmen Stand By Some 500 National Guard troops remained at Portland Air Base where they were dispatched Sun- day night by the governor. They, and a force of state police trained in riot control, could reach the area in 10 to 15 minutes, the gov- ^:{tit{ F: ;:: '""v }jM1. "t.":5 :: ti tiy':tiV y't ." 1 .: {.+ },h."}t,.'{.h^{ : }*, y .',..},:..:tiff:"t" .}:v:: v. 'ti'y ;:::ti:; }ti:.:{ :;}:{{;r:ti'rth. '" :"4'''.-:titi" "t .^:",hMltt^::'.'tf':?: ::1:' V: fi'l:":::' Ji".^}.h"}.4 JL:h'i{.: Yl'.".{..' i :."}i : ?.tL{'k'.: i'.ti".' X"}J.t. {"Y:':titi:{1':{: t':V:^:: ".L":Lt"".'..::.h.$. ,ti, }t::.i':{:1' '.l":" 74":L"T,.\.{'Cti ."};+{M1 The Daily Official Bulletin is an1 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.. 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, AUGUST 1. !Day Calendair Audio-Visual Education Center Film Preview-"The Rise of English aocial- ism" and "Rink": Multipurpose Room, Undergraduate Library, 1:30 p.m. Lecture: Sofia Kirillovna Folomkina of the Moscow State Pedagogical In- stitute for Foreign Lenguages will speak on "Language Teaching in the Soviet Union."' Tues., Aug. , 4:15 p.m., Rackham Amphitheatre., Linguistic Institute Forum Lecture - Prof. Kenneth L. Pike, University of Michigan, "Monolingual Demonstra- tion": Rackham Lecture Hall. 7:30 p.m. Center for Chinese Studies and CIC Summer Asian Languages Institute Lec- ture-Prof. Donald I. Monro, assistant professor of philosophy, University of Michigan, "The Control of Man in Con- fucian and Communist China-The En- during Assumptions": Aud. A, Angell Hall. 8:30 p.m. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN BA RRICA DES REMA IN: Milwaukee Temp orai Prepared for More, V Vl "Ic u~~~~ilu, vl zIau1G~ manding officer, Capt. John K. identified, the officers reported. Beling, told a news conference Many of the bodies were charred aboard the carrier 21 planes were or mangled. Many of the dead were trapped in living compartments below deck. Most of them were crew- men of night shifts catching up * on their sleep. Most deaths oc- iy uiet curred during the first 30 minutes, as the initial fire touched off chain reaction of explosions and MILWAUKEE, Wis. (RP)-Police and National Guardsmen swept Milwaukee's streets clear of traf- fic yesterday and declared its riot torn Negro district temporarily secure, but the paralyzed metro- politan area waited tensely for nightfall. "We don't know what will hap- pen," Police Lt. John Davis, head- ing city forces at a joint command post, said. Eighteen armored personnel carriers armed with .50 caliber machine guns headed for Mil- waukee from Eau Claire and officials joined to keep the dis- orders that left two dead and Camp McCoy as local and state more, than 60 injured from re- kindling. Two Deaths Both of the victims - Police patrolman Byran Moschea, 24, and eldefly Mrs. Ann Mosley - were white. Their bodies were found yesterday in the ruins of a burned out sniper's nest where four other officers were wounded before the shooting stopped. Dist. Atty. Hugh O'Connel said 55 year old Orey Tucker, a Negro, would be charged with eight counts of attempted murder, but would not be charged with the murder of Moschea at this time. Two units of the 2,400 man guard force called out by Gov. Warren P. Knowles took over patrolling of the inner core where more than 90 per cent of Mil- waukee's 86,000 Negroes live, pro- viding a respite for some of the 1,000 or more policemen on duty since Sunday afternoon. The riot was preceded by a downtown altercation between two Negro women early Sunday. Police broke that up, but sporadic un- rest continued through the day until window breaking touched off the major disorder about dark. City Blocked Off The inner core of the city, five square miles reaching from the very edge of the downtown busi- ness district through the seamy north side, was shut off by bar- ricades. Police from the 20 overwhelm- ingly white suburbs ringing the central city of 750,000 manned road blocks to prevent entrance. Except for emergency workers, on- ly uniformed men moved down- town. At one point, near the smould- ering ruins of several dwellings that burned during a police gun fight with a sniper, two officers in riot gear stood beside a squad car while Negroes screamed curses 1olence from a window across the street. Mayor Henry Maier, who had asked for the guardsmen and pro- claimed the emergency that per- mitted quarantine of the city, told a news conference he would not hesitate to ask for federal troops if he thought they were necessary. Suburban officials generally followed his lead, closing liquor stores and banning the sale of firearms as suburban residents re- ported a flood of hate calls threat- ening fire bomb raids into the fashionable white areas. blazes, Lanham said. 'No Cowardice' Lanham and Beling had only the highest praise for the per- formance of the ship's crew of 4,300. Beling said the tragedy had pro- duced a "concrete demonstration of the worth of American youth." He said "there were many ex- amples of heroism" and "not one single example of cowardice." Both the captain and Lanham said they were confident the car- rier would be back in action be- fore very long, although they con- ceded the full assessment of the damage still had to be made. chapel pastor, will speak on "Sex and the New Morality, A Christian View." August Teacher's Certificate Candi- dates:. All of the requirements for the teacher's certificate must be complet- ed by August 4. These requirements1 include the teacher's oath, the health statement, the social security num- ber, and the Bureau of Appointments material. The oath should be taken as soon as possible in Room 2000 UHS. The office is open from 8-12 and 1-5. Monday through Friday. SUMMER COMMENCEMENT EXCERCISES August 6, 1967 , To be held at 2'p.m. in Hill Aud. Exercises will conclude about 4 p tm. 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 7 at west entrance. Tickets: Four to each prospective graduate, to berdistributed from Mon., July 24. to Fri., Aug. 4 at Diploma Department, 555 Administration Bldg., except on Sat., July 29, when office will 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- mnony. National Association of Laymen: "Megaphone for the Lay Voice"-brown bag lunch and discussion, Wed., Aug. 2, at noon, Guild House, 802 Monroe. Dept. of Political Science/Center for Russian and East European Studies: Are co-sponsoring a lecture by Dr. Jerzy Wiatr, of the Institute of Phil- osophy and Sociology, Polish Academy of Sciences, speaking on "The Peasant in Polish Society," at 4:10 p.m. Wed., Aug. 2, in the Sixth Floor Conference Room of the Institute of Social Re- search Bldg. Botany seminar: Dr. Jaime Mora will 'speak on "A Mutation Affecting the Exogenous Distribution of Aminoacids in Neurospora Crassa," Wed., Aug. 2, 4:15 p.m., 1139 Natural Science Bldg. Doctoral Examination for Gail Ann Rushford Corbett, Botany; thesis: "Field Vegetation Development and Responses to Management in Washte- naw County, Michigan," Tues., Aug. 1, Room 1139 Natural Science, at 1:30 p.m. Chairman, W. S. Benninghoff. Doctoral Examination for Thomas Os- born Calhoun, English Language & Lit- erature; thesis: "The Poetics, Unity and Continuity of Henry Vaughan's 'Silex Scintillans'" ,Tues., Aug. 1, Room 2601 Haven Hall, at 2 p.m. Chairman, F. L. Huntley. New Quake Hits Caracas; Rescue Work Continues ernor said. School of Music Concert - Fernando One of the governor's aides, Laires, piano, artist in residence, Ok- Marko Haggard, said it appeared lahoma College of Liberal Arts: School that Sunday's outburst had failed of Music Recital Hall, 8:30 p.m. to produce any momentum. ,N Outside Agitators GeneralNotices But he said it revealed "An ap- Rotunda Display: The Exhibit Mu- seum, is featuring a new display in palling lack ofcomnatn the Rotunda: Ceramic wares of China, with young people."mi Korea, Thailand, and Annan from the Collections of the Museum of An- The outbreak came shortly I thropology, University of Michigan. after speakers in a nearby park assailed whites for the condition - ---- -._ of Negroes. . (' nRA NIZA TI Haggard, who is McCall's co- ORGAN IZAT IONI ordinator for War on Poverty pro- F grams, said it was apparent that NOTt ( CEp some outside agitators were pres- -_____ ent. He added, "Don't oversimplify! this. There were local people in USE OF THIS COLUMN FOR AN- ,,to"NOUNCEMENTS is available to officially it, too." 'recognized and registered student or- Contained by Police ganizations only. Forms are available in Room 1011 SAE. The violence never got to the I . point of rioting. Police, armed Deutscher Verein will sponsor kaffee- with shotguns, stood at street in- stunde: kaffee, kuchen, konversation, tersections or drove up and down on wed., Aug. 2, 3-5 p.m., 3050 Frieze the streets. B l d Bands of young Negroes, most- Inter-Cooperative Council will host a ly in their late teens and early discussion on "Co-op Housing in Slums" ly with a speaker. The event is open to 20s, roamed the area. Occasional- the public; it begins at 7:30 p.m., at ly they threw rocks or fire bombs. 1017 Oakland St. on Aug. 1. CARACAS, Venezuela (P) -- A destructive new tremor shook Caracas yesterday as weary rescue workers continued to probe huge piles of rubble in search of vic- tims of the devastating earth- quake that hit the city Saturday. The number of known dead from the Saturday disaster rose to 58. The US. Embassy reported that five Americans had been killed in the quake and that three other Americans were among hundreds of persons unaccounted for. Unnerved by Weekend A garment factory collapsed in yesterday's tremor, and 10 per- sons were feared trapped in the wreckage. The tremor spread panic among city residents still unnerved by the weekend night mare. The government reported that, more than 1,500 persons had been injured by Saturday's quake, and Gov. Raul Valera of the Caracas district predicted Sunday that the death toll might climb to 300. The earthquake struck in the evening, its sharpest jolt coming at 8:06 p.m. Five apartment build- ings in the Altamira section, one 16 stories and another of 10 stories, collapsed before residents had time to flee. The walls of many other build- ings continued to fall through Saturday night, and thousands of persons left their homes and camped outor dlept in their cars, away from tall buildings.' Debris Searched Rescue workers used bulldozers and cranes to search through the debris for quake victims and sur- vivors. Fifty bodies were uncov- ered Sunday, and a number of survivors were brought out yes- terday in addition to more bodies. World News Roundup Firemen answered 26 alarms in eight hours in the area. Half were false alarms. Nine resulted from fire bombs-jars of gasoline with lighted wicks-tossed into build- ings. Only one fire was of con- sequence,heavily damaging a two story frame building. Investigators estimated the loss in all the in- cendiary fires at $27,000. Far Eastern Language Institute spon- sors a lecture by Prof. Kun Chang of the University of California. He will speak on "The Phonological System of the Chinese Language during the Sul-Tang Period," on Aug. 2 begin- ning at 7:30 p.m. in Rm. 102-103 of the Michigan Union. Michigan Christian Fellowship will have a decture discussion on Aug. 1, 7:30 p.m., In the Michigan Union (3G). Rev. Donald Postena, campus CINEMA II presents ROBERT ROSSEN'S , .._.._ By The Associated Press HAVANA -'The Cuban domi- $ nated Organization of L a t i n A m e r i c a n Solidarity convened, yesterday and immediately under- scored its commitment to revolu- tion by naming Ernesto "Che'" Guevara honorary president. His selection left little doubt OLAS would endorse Guevara's call for creating a series of new. Vietnams in the Western hemi- sphere. k * E WASHINGTON - Sen. J. Wil- liam Fulbright (D-Ark) proposed yesterday that the Senate take the position a national commit- ment abroad exists only if Con- gress joins with the President in declaring it. The Arkansan 'said the resolu- tion expresses his concern over "the mounting problem created by the gradual erosion of the role of Congress, and particularly of the Senate, in the determination of national. security policy." * * * ANCHORAGE, Alaska - A vio- lent summer storm pinned down a rescue team yesterday on 20,320 foot Mt. McKinley and left in doubt whether a search would continue for four climbers miss- ing and feared dead. Bodies of three others in the climbing party were found Satur- day at about the 18,000 foot level. Dial 2-6264 IrT THIE IG ONE W Hope for the others was almost gone. Nothing had been heard from them for 13 days when they conquered the mountain, highest in North America. The five man rescue team checked every major crevasse and snow cave Sunday between the 18,000 and 15,000 foot levels where the missing men might have taken refuge. Phone 434-0130 Entonce NCARPENTEFR RDARR FIRST OPEN 8:00 P.M. FIRST RUN NOW SHOWING RUN when youhe got made... Tony Curtis .ShOwn at 9:35 Only inpanavisione and metrocolor ALSO... I. LOOK FOR A SKY OF BLUE ...: "GREAT -Timesakeup ROBERT SANE CHARLES N MILDRED REDFORD FNDA-BOYER- ATWICK M-G-M PRESEITsANALVIN GANZER PRODUCTION David MCdallum shown at 1 11:20 Only 1n PANAVISION' and METRpCOLOR PLUS ... "GRANDAD OF RACING" COLOR CARTOON SHOWS AT 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 P.M. . MICHIGAN I I I HELD OVER - 4th Week I I LAST 2 DAYS 1:00 - 3:05 - 5:10 - 7:15 - 9:30 STARTS THURSDAY! I OnrurY.FoicDrp7- q JL -1m yll 'I i 5 Y'h h~ B INU'QIChSMrI 0 ruvunm'u " \niE