THURSDAY, AUGUST 3, 1967 THE MICHIGAN DAILY' PAGE THE MICHIGAN DAIlY PAGP Place Riot Blame On Subversives' Report Cites Black Power Groups As Force Behind Violence in Cities SIMME RING MIDDLE EAST: hicidents Disturb Cease-Fire; Arabs Split on Summit Talks $ By The Associated Press Staff investigators for the House Committee on Un-Amer- ican Activities yesterday pointed the finger of blame for violence in the cities at such groups as the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, t h e Revolutionary Action Movement (RAM), and a militant Negro rights group called ACT. In a report recommending a full committee investigation of the role of subversive elements, the staff said the chief activity of communits has been to whip up hatred, rather than to directly instigate riots. 'Extreme' Hatred The report said the hatred thus generated is "so extreme and vio- lent in nature that riots "can be sparked by a perfectly normal and proper police action." The still-secret police report said that the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee initiat- ed rioting in Atlanta last year and in Nashville, Tenn., last April, and that an August 1965 riot in Chicago was "deliberately planned in advance by certain leaders of ACT who are also ago's Puerto Rican section, al- though it said subversive groups have tried to take advantage of them. In the early phases of the Watts riot, it noted, "the Communists were afraid to go into the Watts area" although later "in typical fashion, however Communists at- tempted to exploit and take ad- vantage of the riot." Communist Incitement The only specific instance of direct Communist incitement of riot cited was in New York's Har- len riots of 1964. "Evidence contained in the re- port makes it clear that a Com- munist organization, the Progres- sive Labor Party, played an im- portant role in instigating the 1964 Harlem riot," the report said. The preliminary report also in- cludes material on riots in Cleve- land in 1966, based primarily on a grand jury investigation, and in Cambridge, Md., last month,{ based on news accounts. Newark and Detroit Committee investigators are now in Newark, N. J., and De- troit, looking into last month's widespread rioting in the Negro -Associated Press ADVISORY COMMISSION MEETS Sec. etary of Labor Willard Wirtz, foreground, testified yesterday before President Johnson's Ad- visory Commission on Civil Disorders. Seated around the table from left are: Police Chief Herbert Jenkins of Atlanta; Charles Thornton, of Los Angeles; Rep. Charles Corman (D-Calif); Mayor John Lindsay of New York; Gov. Otto Kerner of Illinois, David Ginsburg, executive director; Roy Wil- kins, executive secretary NAACP (head turned) and I.W. Abel, president United Steel Workers. TRIM FOREIGN AID BILL: Committee Recommends Hike By The Associated Press Jordanian and Israeli troops ex- changed gunfire across the Jordan River yesterday for the second straight day. Each side blamed the other for the breach in the cease- fire. Military sources in Amman said Israel suffered losses in men and vehicles while the Jordanians hadI no casualties. In Tel Aviv, an Is- raeli spokesman said three Is- raelis were wounded slightly. The fighting, the fifth inter- ruption of the cease-fire on the river since the six-day Arab-Is- raeli war in June, broke out about two miles north of the Damia Bridge. It began in the morning, was broken off, then resumed and continued until midafternoon. .Summit' Difficulties In another development in the simmering Middle East crisis, Arab foreign ministers meeting in Khartoun, Sudan, were report- ed in difficulty in their efforts to prepare for a summit meeting to work out a unified approach in dealing with Israel. Delegates from the 13 Arab Na- tions, who long have feuded among themselves, met for three hours of heated discussion. The conference opened Tuesday.- Jordan River In the Jordan River fighting, thte Israeli spokesman said Jor- danian troops fired first on a routine Israeli patrol on the west bank and the Israelis replied. That fight lasted about 55 minutes, he said. Fighting erupted again a short time later in an exchange also initiated by Jordan, the Israeli spokesman said. A Jordanian military commu- Arab nations, led by Egypt, nique issued in Amman said 12 geria and Syria, to halt prof Israeli military vehicles, including ganda attacks on them bef four armored personnel carriers they will agree to a summit me and four cars armed with heavy ing. machine guns, rolled down to the The Sudan News Agency river and opened fire on Jordanian ported that, in an effort to av positions in the hills east of the reopening old wounds, two k river. items have been removed fr Returned Fire the conference agenda. Jordanian forces returned the They are proposals that all A fire, the communique said, and it nations break diplomatic relatic added: "It was believed that many with the United States, Bata losses were sustained on the West Germany and any other 1 mechanized forces of the enemy." tions regarded as having heb After a brief interruption in the Israel in the war, and that A firing, the communique said, the currency reserves be withdra exchange of gunfire was resumed from banks in those countt and lasted for more than four The moderate Arab nations hours. opposed to these demands. Conference In Khartoum, delegates to the Arab foreign ministers conference were tight-lipped and grim as they emerged from their morning meeting. The conference chairman, Pre- mier Mohammad Ahmed Mah- goub, told reporters the ministers "began to study the agenda, and it was a deep and frank study." "The discussion concerns con- certed efforts to eliminate the re- sults of Israeli aggression," he said. Conference sources said Saudi Arabia, Morocco and Tunisia, moderate Arab nations, are in- sisting on a pledge by the leftist Advisory Council In Amman, in an attempt resolve his domestic political pro lems, King Hussein has establish a royal advisory council to ass in formulation of policy. He a accepted the resignation of Pr mier Saad Jumaa and asked hi to form a new government. Hussein had tried to set up broad-based coalition cabinet lb month but was unable to find willing candidate to head it. The advisory council is made of all of Jordan's former premie who. represent various politic factions. It will have no execut power, the day-to-day administr tion of affairs being left to Jumi members of the Revolutionary areas of the two cities. _ Action Movement and are using The report was written by the in ACT as a RAM front." committee's staff director Francis The study said many of the dis- J. McNamara, and approved by; orders were spontaneous, includ- Reps. William M. Tucks, D-VMA., WASHINGTON (P)-The House health services by the states, authorized ceiling at $2,72 ing the Watts riot in Los Angles and Albert W. Watson, R-S. C., Ways and Means Committee yes- Some states, notably New York, 500. All the amounts wo in 1965 and a 1966 riot in Chic- members of a subcommittee terday approved legislation carry- had expanded such programs to subject to later appropriati S.......... * ,......... ..... .NA................ ... ......ng a 12 per cent increase in take in a large proportion of their Military aid was undistu Social Security benefits. populations. the House committee. The DA ILY O FFIC IA L BU LLETIN At the same time, the House After seven weeks of closed ses- panel chopped this fron Foreign Affairs Committee com- sions, the House Foreign Affairs million to 391 million. Th 25,496,- uld be ions. rbed by Senate m $596 e Sen- HELD OVER-4th Week The Daily Official Bulletin is an t 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 E 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. THURSDAY, AUGUST 3 Day Calendar Bureau of Industrial Relations .sem- minar-"Evaluating the Effectiveness of the Personnel-Industrial Relations De- partment": Michigan Union, 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.E Audio-Visual Education Center Film Preview-"You're No Good'.' and "Da- vid and Hazel": Multipurpose Room, Undergraduate Library, 1:30 p.m. International Center Tea-603 East Madison, 4:30 p.m. School of Music Concert-David Her- man , 'carillonneur, Burton Memorial Tower, 7:15 p.m. m Linguistic Institute Forum Lecture- Prof. Charles F. Hockett, Cornell Uni- versity, 'Reconstruction and Episte- mology": Rackham Lecture Hall, 7:30 p.m. School of Music and Dept. of Speeh Opera-Mozart's "Don Giovanni". Ly- dia Mendelssohn Theatre, 8 p.m. General Notices Astronomical Colloquium: Fri., Aug. 4, 2 p.m., Room 807 Physics-Astronomy Bldg. Dr. Peter Bodenheimer, Princeton University Observatory, will speak on "Dynamical Phases of Eary Stellar Evo- lution." PLANS FOR' SUMMER COMMENCEMENT EXERCISES Sunday, Aug. 6, 1967, 2 p.m. Time of Assembly-1:15 p.m. Places of Assembly-Regents. Presi- dent and other executive officers, min- ister, speaker in the Kalamazoo Room of the Michigan League where they may robe. Deans and other administrative of- ficials taking active part in the exer- cises, in the Hussey Room of the Michigan League, where they may robe. Members of the faculties in Room 2071 Natural Science Bldg., where they may robe. Students of the various schools and colleges, in Natural Science Bldg. as follows: Section A-Literature, Science, and Arts - Front part of auditorium, west section. -Education-Front part of auditor- ,un, center section. Architecture-Front part of audi- .RR<. ." ti: :r o pleted work on a $3.1-billion for- eign aid bill which is only 2i9 torium, center section (behind Educa- million below President Johnson's lion). -Law-Front part of auditorium request. A tough fight in Congress east section. was forecast for the bill. Dearborn Campus-Front part of au- The Senate had passed by voice, ditorium, east section (behind Law). vt Section B-Graduate - PhD candi-{vote yesterday a compromise bill dates, Room 1053. authorizing $4,865,750.000 for the -Masters candidates, rear part of space program this' fiscal year. Section C-Engineering-Room 2054 This was about $235 million less -Business Administration - Room than the President asked. 2042 The amount was agreed upon -Public Health-Room 2033 (behind by a Senate-House conference. Music). The House, which initially voteds -Pharmacy-Room 2033 (behind Pub-, a lesser reduction, now must ap- lic Health). poetecmrms eoei -Nursing-Room 2033 -(behind Phar- prove the compromise before it Macy). goes to the President. -Dentistry-Room 2033 (behind Nurs- 'Tax Increase ing),.a nces -Medicine-Room 2033 (behind Den- The Socal Security measure is tistry) Resources-Room 2023 (west a slimmed-down version of Presi- end). dent Johnson's proposal to pro- -Social Work-Room 2023 (behind vide larger pensions and other Natural Resources), benefits, would increase Social -Flint College-Room 2023 (behind Social Work). . Security taxes paid by wage earn- March into Hill Auditorium: 1:45 p.m. ers a maximum of $44 next year. Academic dress. Thn,. .arriir..-nn. -tha Committee completed work on the aid package authorizing $3,168,- 919,000 for the global military and economic aid program in the current fiscal year and $3,495,-1 800,000 for 1969. This contrasts sharply with ac-1 tion taken last week by the Sen- ate Foreign Relations Committee which limited its version o fthe bill to one year and set the ate bill has a section designed to discourage arms sales to under- developed countries through the Export-Import, Bank. The House bill does not. Another feature of the House bill which probably will create a fuss is a new section under which the Foreign Affairs Committee would assume jurisdiction over the Food for Peace program. i L t a CINEMA 11 MAYR A KENNETHI flOOU ON presents ROBERT ROSSEN'S LI LITH Phone 434-0130 At&n4 Ot CARPENTER ROAD The Area's Finest Drive-in is easy to reach - 2 miles south of Washtenaw Rd. on Carpenter. BOX OFFICE OPEN 8:00 P.M. I-' (1965) "One of the most haunt- ingly beautiful films in FIRST RUN NOW SHOWING FIRST RUN 1 years. As impressive as 1 , Doctoral Examination for Ralph An- drew Luken, Natural Resources Admin- istration; thesis: "Planning-Program- ming-Budgeting System: A Strategy for Project Evaluation," Thurs., Aug. 3. Room 2020 Natural Resources Bldg., at 9 a.m. Co-Chairmen, Ayers Brinser, R. L. eWier. Doctoral Examination for Jerome Ra- bow, Social Psychology; thesis: "Orga- nizational Goals and Teachers' Role Behavior: A Comparative Study of Five! (Continued on Page 4) Th ose earning no more tnan $6,600 would pay no additional taxes. The tax would apply, for the first time, to income up to $7,600, or $1,000 above the present base. The legislation i sexpected to go to the House for debate in' about ten days. The bill also. would put restric- tions on medicaid-not medicare -programs of federally aided: RECOMMENDEDFOR MATURE AUDIENCES Shown at 9:25 Only _ _ ALSO-SHOWN AT 11:10 ONLY TONYRANDALL ' 0 ' SENTABERGER * mEERTLOM nWiFHYDEWTEIT*. 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HENRI GARCIN in JEAN-PAUL RAPPENEAUS "A MATTER OF RESISTANCE" with MARY MARQUET and CARLOS THOMPSON "'GREAT HELD OVER FOR "G RAT AMUSEMENT PURPOSES ONLY FUN " W They blamed him~ for the Population explosion! serviced Whole V ,townt PRESENTED BY ANGELO RIZZOLI ANOUK AIMEE UGO TOGNAZZI GIOVANNA RALLI wiH PIERRE BRASSEUR DIRECTED BY ALESSANDRO BLASETTI SHOW TIMES: Mon. thru Thurs. 7-9 O 92 STARRING"+. JASONf 8t GEORGE SEGALe 11 . ' X & -a -hjm -' I