THURSDAY, AUGUST 10, 1907 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Osrw nnmwiir THI HI A AI Yan S'l.f LlIL YHtit THREE p' FBI, Police Investigate Riot Deaths Check Negro's Death, Detroit Policemen Charged with Murder DETROIT (I)-Three new in- vestigations by city police and the Federal Bureau of Investigation into Detroit riot deaths came to light yesterday. Murder charges already have been filed in four other deaths, including charges against two po- licemen.' One of the new investigations prompted Maj. Gen. Clarence C. Schnipke of the Michigan Na- tional Guard to say: "First we are criticized for not shooting enough and then we are criticized for shooting too much." In another investigation, Homi- cide Inspector Albert Schwaller said the FBI was looking into the death of John Leroy, 19, a Negro who was shot at a National Guard roadblock. Schwaller said a report had been turned over to the Wayne County prosecutor's office, but there was no indication of whether i charges would be made. The FBI declined comment. In the third investigation, the Detroit News reported witnesses said they saw a policeman kill William N. Dailton, 19, a Negro while 20 other officers and Guardsmen looked on. Shot in Back The News quoted the witnesses as saying the policemen told the youth, apparently stopped for cur- few violation to run, then brought him down with one blast from a shotgun when he did. "That one is still under inves- tigation," Schwaller said. Toll in the rioting rose yester- day to 43 with the death of Na- tional Guard Sgt. Larry Post, 26, of Detroit. He was shot July 26, apparently by a sniper, authorities said. FSchwaller said investigations into all of the deaths were still open although reports on 23 had been submitted to the prosecutor's office. Two policemen have been charged with murder in two of three deaths that occurred at the Algiers Motel. Three teen-age Negro boys were found shot to death in the motel early July 26. Motel guests have said they were present when the boys were killed by "uniformed" men who ,lined several guests against a wall and beat them with gunbutts while seeking informa- tion about snipers. Two Negroes have been charg- ed with killing a policeman dur- ing the riots. Nigeria's Oil MAY EXPAND TO LAOS: Region Falls Tough Military Tactics Urged To Mutineers For Vietnam, More Bombing -Associated Press USE OF FUNDS QUESTIONED Rep. Thaddeus J. Dulski (D-NY) told reporters yesterday that he kept for his personal use the $11,- 000 that was raised at a 1965 testimonial dinner in his honor. He felt he had done nothing wrong because the funds were intended for this purpose. SUSPICIONS CONFIRMED: Chinese Press Stresses Split Between Mao, Rebel Factions Rebel Forces Aided By Invading Troops Of Breakaway Biafran LAGOS, Nigeria (A) - Radio Benin said last night that mu- tinous federal troops, helped by rebels from breakaway Biafra, have captured Nigeria's oil-rich Midwest Region. If true it could mean a further dissolution of Africa's most popu- lous nation. There was no official confirmation. Biafran soldiers, on the defen- sive in nearly five weeks of civil war, were reported to have mount- ed a counteroffensive with two drives into federal territory west of the Nige River. City, Oil Fields Fell The radio account from Benin, a provincial capital 65 miles west of the river, said both the city and the oil center of Warrn, 60 miles south of Benin, had fallen to the Biafrans and the federal dissidents. Warri, a river town, is a center of offshore oil operations. Of about 200 Americans living in the Mid- west Region about half were based there, many as employes of the Gulf Oil Co. Sources in Lagos said a number of the Americans were halted when they tried to get away from Warrn by sea. American Status Not Clear A Gulf spokesman in New York said, however, that all Americans had been evacuated from Warri. The U.S. Embassy said it was concerned about the safety of the Americans and was awaiting clari- fication. About 150 Britons also are involved., Hundreds of other Westerners had in recent weeks pulled out of Biafra, the Eastern Nigerian Re- gion which capped months of po- litical feuding with Lagos by pro- claiming its independence last May 30. That split pulled away 14 million of Nigeria's 56 million peo- ple. About 21/2 million people live in the Midwest Region, which was set up in 1963. Shooting was reported during the day in Benin's streets. All normal communications with Lagos later were cut. A government spokesman, while minimizing accounts of the rebel invasion, said there had been "dis- turbances" within federal army units in the Midwest. WASHINGTON (A') Several Senators who have advocated tougher military action in Viet- nam said yesterday their views were bolstered by testimony from the Pacific commander, Adm. Ulysses S.G. Sharp, Jr. Sharp testified at a closed ses- sion of the Senate Armed Services Subcommittee on Preparedness. Its chairman, Sen. John Stennis (D- Miss.), said Sharp's testimony "showed the need for continued bombing of additional military targets of value to the enemy." Stennis told newsmen the war in Vietnam may continue indef- initely unless there is a change in administration policy toward bombing what he termed "sanctu- aries for enemy troops in Laos and Cambodia." Sen. Henry M. Jackson (D- Wash.) a dv o c a t e d intensified bombing of "ports, power and pe- troleum," but said he does not favor mining the principal North Vietnamese port of Haiphong. Sen. Strom Thurmond (R-S.C.) said Sharp's testimony strength-# Representative Justifies Using Testimonial Funds, ened his opinion that more pres- sure should be put on the enemy. "Our full air and sea power must be used," Thurmond said. "Many important military tar- gets now are restricted. We can win if we use our full air power and sea power." A similar view was expressed by Sen. Howard Cannon (D-Nev.) who said military men in the Pacific have recommended bomb- ing of "many lucrative targets which have not been hit." "This is really handicapping our people in the field. Our forces are shackled, so to speak. We should leave the selection of military tar- gets to our military leaders," Can- non said. Stennis said Sharp's appearance marked the start of a series of hearings at which his subcommit- tee will "inquire into all of the important aspects of the air war, including the effectiveness of the air campaign, the lucrative tar- gets, the probable consequences of either increasing or decreasing the bombing and particularly the impact on our fighting men in South Vietnam, and all related matters." "The real question is whether we are doing what we can and should do in the opinion of our military experts to hit the enemy when and where and In a man- ner that will end the war soonest and thus save American lives," Stennis said. Stennis long has urged an ac- celerated air war. -r By The Associated Press A note of alarm has crept into the official Chinese Communist press. From its tone, there is a suggestion that much of China has been turned into a battlefield and that a climactic engagement is in prospect in the tense strug- gle to determine the nation's destiny. Everywhere in China, the party press appeals constantly for sup- port of those forces seeking to im- pose or restore total authority of the faction headed by Chairman Mao Tse-tung and Defense Min- ister Lin Piao against those back- ing President Liu Shao-chi. The sources of information from inside China seem to justify a conclusion that dramatic events are on the way. The Lin Shao- chi faction must be a big one. It has been strong enough to do battle, the reports indicate, even in provinces which have been re- garded as Mao strongholds. A pic- ture emerges of China's biggest city, Shanghai, turned into a main arena of struggle and of the im- portant economic center, Wuhan, turned into a nightmare of hand- to-hand fighting. There is also.,a strong sugges- tion of a powerful dissident move- ment within the armed forces, led by military figures who have been humilitated by Mao's Great Pro- letarian Cultural Revolution. Evi- dently, reported a Yugoslav Com- munist correspondent from Pe- king this week, the Mao forces are carrying on a persistent purge within the army. Other foreign Communist cor- respondents in C h i n a report bloody armed clashes. between Maoists and anti-Maoists in the provinces of Kwangtung and Fu- kian in the south and Kiangsu and Shantung in the east. Moscow Radio Assessing the situation for its domestic listeners, Moscow radio this week said: "Never before has the situation in China been as serious as now. The situation which has developed in the coun- try is fraught with the danger of further aggravations similar to the events in Wuhan." Right now, foreign correspon- dents in Peking report, Red Guards and Maoist "revolutionary rebels" surround the Chunghan- hai district of Peking, the site of the Communist party and govern- ment complex and the homes of party and government leaders. Apparently Liu Shao-chi is still there, holed up, possibly waiting for the final battle to take place. 'Bourgeois Headquarters' Liu's home is what the Peking press calls "bourgeois headquar- ters." Last August, Mao told the Red Guards to "bombard the headquarters." They tried, but they did not bring down Liu. Now,. says the press, the "bourgeois headquarters" is "the main objec- tive of the Great Proletarian Cul- tural Revolution-the main task is to strike them down." Clearly, the major battle was yet to be fought. Until recently, the commentator pointed out, "if anyone dared to hint that such a congress should be convened, it was considered heretical and a rabid attack on Chairman Mao." WASHINGTON (P)-The chair- man of the House Post Office Committee said yesterday he would "stand before a tribunal of any sort" to defend his personal use of $11,000 raised at a 1965 testi- monial dinner. "I've done nothing wrong," Rep. Thaddeus J. Dulski, (D-NY), told newsmen as he acknowledged having banked the dinner's pro- ceeds. "My friends generously raised about $11,000 as a gift for me and my wife. We gladly accepted the money to help defray the extra personal burdens a congressman must meet as related to elected public office for which reimburse- ment is not possible," Dulski said. He was responding to a Wall Street Journal article reporting that the dinner was attended by postal union leaders, lobbyists, and big-volume mailers with a finan- cial stake in the postal legislation processed by Dulski's committee. At the time of the dinner, the 51- year-old Buffalo congressman was third-ranking Democrat on the committee. He has been chairman since January. As he spoke with newsmen out- side his office, his committee was closeted in a nearby chamber, re- viewing subcommittee drafts of new postal rate legislation. Critics of the subcommittee proposal have charged that it is favorable to the big-volume mailers of third-class matter. Dulski, former tax accountant, handed newsmen a statement giv- ing his version of the affair. "My friend gave a personal testimonial dinner at Buffalo, N.Y., for me, my wife, and our five children," Dulski said in the statement. "It was a public affair, printed in the press, and about 300 friends at- tended. "It was meant as a personal- tribute . . . and not as a political campaign dinner . . . In my 81 2 years in congress this was the one, and only, dinner on our behalf. "The invitations and publicity surrounding the dinner made it abundantly clear that it was in- tended solely as a personal testi- monial to Mrs. Dulski and my- self." MISTERD FAMILY RESTAURANT 3325 Washtenaw, Ann Arbor (2 blocks west of Arborland) I I r I _ * SPECIAL." FISH & FRIES SANDWICH 29c FRIDAY, AUG. 1 1 « . «. t Senators Seek Quick Action On Laws to Curb City Riots World News Roundup JERUSALEM -- A former Jor- danian Cabinet minister known to be close to King Hussein told an Israeli newsman yesterday that Jordan would soon open talks with Israel. The former minister, Ismail He- jazi, was interviewed by the Arab affairs reporter of the Jerusalem Post as the two stood on the wrecked girders of the Allenby Bridge across the River Jordan. WASHINGTON - The Senate Antipoverty Subcommittee com- mittee completed yesterday tenta- tive approval of all of the major sections of the administration's $2-billion war on poverty bill. Sen. Joseph S. Clark (D-Pa), the subcommittee chairman, said, however, that Republican mem- bers had advised him they may have some amendments later to make changes in the bill. WASHINGTON - A 25-million program designed to help stem the rising tide of juvenile crime was approved yesterday by the House Education and Labor Com- mittee. It would include $5 million for construction of training schools, detention facilities and diagnostic centers. Grants under this pro- gram would go to states and local communities with the federal gov- ernment bearing 75 per cent of the cost. TAIPEI, Formosa - A Red Chi- nese defector from Hong Kong, publisher Wu Shu-tung, said yes- terday that anti-British violence in the city was instigated by Hong Kong Communists without outside direction and had failed to re- ceive full suppoit from Peking. WASHINGTON (-) - Picking up where House counterparts leftj off, a Republican-Southern Dem- ocratic coalition in the Senate spearheaded a drive yesterday for quick action on tough new laws to curb city rioting. Republican leader Everett M. Dirksen of Illinois predicted at a news conference that the Senate will sustain House action strip- ping the attorney general of di- rection of the --crime program and turning enforcement over to the states. Beyond that, Dirksen said he expects to work with Southern Democratic allies - specifically Sens. John L. McClellan of Ar- kansas and James O. Eastland of Mississippi-to "tighten up" the House-passed measure. 'Humdinger' Dirksen said the bill "will be a humdinger before we get through with it." He avoided details, but said he thinks that when the measure comes out of the Senate Judiciary Committee it will pro- vide for "strict, sharp enforce- ment" of police powers in civil disturbances of the type that have rocked the country this summer. Dirksen said he has consulted with Eastland, McClellan and Sen. Roman L. Hruska (R-Neb) about combining the measure with the anti-riot bill previously passed by the House. The latter legislation would make it a federal crime to cross a state line to incite or par- ticipate in a riot. The Republican leader said he is confident the Senate will up- hold House action revising Presi- dent Johnson's proposals for oper- ation of the anti-crime program through federal grants funneled by the attorney general into cities, states and other agencies. The House stripped this provi- sion from the measure. It adopted an amendment by Rep. William T. Cahill (R-NJ) providing block grants to states to administer the program. PAUL BUNYON at corner of Zeeb Rd. & Jackson off 1-94 takes this opportunity to announce a change in management and the new opening of the tap room, featuring a full line of li- quors, beers, by the pitcher and glass, and wines, served at popular prices. Discount Photocopies Immediate Service Sample Prices" 1 copy .08 25 copies 1.50 (6c each) 100 copies 3.00 (3c each) *From same original PERFECT COPIES MADE ON THE H IGH SPEED XEROX 2400 I FEATURING ON ITS MENU: Our special Paul Bunyon stea Hot corned beef sandwich spe (potato salad and cole slaw) OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK k $1.99 cia 1- $1.09 7-10 P.M. 1217 So. University 769-0560 Next to University Towers FRIDAY SPECIAL: Fish 'n' Chips $1.19 I { iI Keep Abreast of A The News-Order THIS WEEK ONLY! Look for a Sky of Blue... ;- ** C.. . 1. I' a rollicking musical satire set in the Colorado Rockies presents the lew O4 Philarmontc LEONARD BERNSTEIN, Musie Director and Conductor i1IP £fitfjgru ttil To subscribe for the Fall, just fill of the form below and mail it to 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor ... - - . - - . .. . .. . .. Wednesday-Saturday August 9-12 8 P.M. in Two Special Concerts LEAVE BLANK s TUES., SEPT. 12, 8:30 Program: Symphony No. 4, G major . . . . . . . Mahler Symphony No. 2 . . . ..... Charles Ives WED., SEPT. 13, 8:30 Program: Overture to'"Candide". ........ Bernstein Yes, I would like to be a subscriber to THE MICHIGAN DAILY. I agree to be billed later. $8.00 per year ($9.00 if by mail) $4.50 per semester ($5.00 if by mail) LEAVE BLANK Sunday, August 13 7 P.M. in l! - -i00!;Oe (Please Print) Last Name First Name Middle initial T Be Filled Out By Circulation Dept. I , I II' .. . ,