PAGE STX THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 17,1966' PAGE STX TIlE MICHIGAN DAILY F .rIDA.. . y ...,.........wSPM ER1. 15165 w DIIHG OUT .. TOTHIGHT -2 7le VIRGINI/IN RESTAURANT Most head for California and New York North America 1'5'1 Immigrants admitted 40.5% to the United States July 1, 1960-1964. South America RATIO OF FEMALES TO 7.5% - MAIN OCCUPATIONS (OF THOSE EMPLOYED) Europe 43% ROAST YOUNG TOM TURKEY Served with sage dressing, whipped potatoes,165 tossed green salad, roll and butter, coffee, tea, or milk ................... 7 A.M.-8 P.M. Daily Closed Tuesdays Residents of Watts Begin To Rebuild Negro Workers Get New Jobs by Helping To Haul Away Debris LOS ANGELES (A)-A month after the riots, Watts reaps a small reward from its self-de- struction. Negro laborers have employ- ment cleaning up the rubble. Dump trucks, shovels and strong backs toil amid blackened skele- tons of supermarkets and twist- ed clumps of small businesses. In one block of East 103rd St. a touring newsman estimates 40 business establiohments have been destroyed. The piles of debris blend so an accurate count is im- possible. Blood Brothers A youth with a hatchet chips crusted cement from bricks. Stack- ed neatly in piles - one labeled "bluod brothers working here." They '11 becoaxe the used-brick trim so attractive on suburban tract homes. "Iot work." says the bare-chest- ed youth, .sweating in a hot sun. How much does he earn? "A dollar thirty-five an hour." Hauls Debris A handsome young man with a rickety truck has his own busi- ness-"mostly haulin'" He loads the truck with acetylene-severed lengths of sewer pipe. "That's right. We'll sell it for junk." For five days starting Aug. 11 an orgy of pillaging, gunfire, fire- bombing and looting raged in a broad Negrc area on Los Angeles' South Side. Thirty-six persons died, $45 million worth of private property was destroyed. Federal Report A preliminary federal report has blamed, among other things, mid- summer heat, hostility toward po- lice, high unemployment, large numbers of poor Negroes arriving from the rural South, poor living conditions and out - of - school youngsters wanting excitement. Official probes swing into high gear this week. The coroner is holding inquests. A governor's commission starts hearings. Many Watts businessmen await government help to put them on their feet. Hatcher Emphasizes Role of Universities Old Ieidelberg 211-213 N. Main St. 668-9753 Specializing in GERMAN FOOD, FINE BEER, WINE, LIQUOR PARKING ON ASHLEY ST. Hours: Daily 11 A.M.-2 A.M. Closed Mondays I ---------- I The underdeveloped countries of the world expect their universities to help them close the economicI and cultural gaps between their own nations and the more de- veloped ones, University President Harlan Hatcher commented yes- terday. Hatcher recently returned to the United States from Tokyo, where he was head of the American dele- gation at the conference of the International Association of Uni- versities. most attention from the delegate 4 were those of access to higher edu- cation and the contribution of higher education to economic de- velopment, Hatcher said. Hatcher said that educators at the international conference were in virtually unanimous agreement that "universities are responsible for managing their own affairs in academic and research matters." The educators believe that such autonomy includes independence from dictation by government, private organizations, and stu- dents. * The topics which received the dV 0R 20.7% Clerical and Sales 19.2% Professional and Technical 13,3% Craftsmen and Foremen 11% Laborers 10.3% Machine Operators 7% Farm 18.5% Others It's here n aa va mthe new, Honeywell Pentax Spotmatic.1$28950 A milestone in 35mm single- lens reflex photography-that's-Q * the trim new Honeywell Pentax Spotmatic camera with through- the-lens CdS exposure system. The new Spotmatic's expo- sure system is uncannily accu- rate. It sees exactly what the lens sees, regardless of lens focal length or the use of filters, extension tubes, or a bellows unit. Even under the trickiestlighting conditions, your Spotmatic will assure you of perfect exposures, picture after picture. It's easy to use, too. Settings can be changed without removing the Spotmatic from your eye. You'll capture the fastest action ... the most fleeting expressions. You'll get the pictures others miss! Lightweight and compact, the new Honeywell Pentax Spotmatic has an amazingly sharp Super-Takumar 50mm f/1.4 lens with fully automatic diaphragm;'shutter speeds to 1/1000 sec.; built-in self- timer, and many more quality features. Priced at just $299.50, the new Spotmatic is the best camera value in the world. Come in for a demonstration soon! ,~d'MCCAMERA SHOP Ann Arbor's Only Exclusive Camera Shop 1115 S. UNIVERSITY 665-6101 E 0 New Immigration Law To Alter Admission Basis r THE PIN. ROOM ICOLONIAL LANES 1950S. INDUSTRIAL HIGHWAY 662-3808 I By The Associated Press At flood tide, in the decade 1900-1910, immigrants came to the United States at the rate of 880,000 a year. Now the figure is about 300,000 annually. With the full support of Presi- dent Johnson, Congress is about to pass a new immigration law, the first major change in some 40 years. It will change the basis for admission to this country, but will not substantially change the num- ber. Where do immigrants come Under the new immigration law, from these days? Europe is still the system of national origin JUMBO COCKTAILS, CHARCOAL BROILED STEAKS, CHOPS, AND SEA FOOD iI J L. DEPENDABLE IMPORT SERVICE We have the MECHANICS and the PARTS. NEW CAR DEALER Triumph-Volvo- Fiot-Checker We lease cars as low as $4.50 per 24-hr. day. HERB ESTES AUTOMART the biggest supplier, 43 per cent in the period July 1, 1960-64. But North America (meaning largely Canada and Mexico) is close be- hind, with 40.5 per cent. The remainder of the 1,153.615 immigrants in the four-year per- iod came from Asia, 7.6 per cent; South America, 7.5, and all others, 1.4. Three countries in Europe - Germany, United Kingdom and Italy - are currently supplying one-fourth of all immigrants to the United States, and nearly three-fifths admitted. Numerical- ly, Mexico and Canada supplied more immigrants in the four-year period than any other countries, 185,143 and 136,492 respectively. More Women There are more women immi- grants than men, a ratio of about one and one-fourth to one, and 65 per cent of all immigrants are less than 30 years of age. A little more than half of all new arrivals in this country are single, only 3.5 per cent are widowed or divorced. About half of all immigrants have no occupation, they are mainly housewives, children or students. Among those with skills, the largest group falls in the cler- ical and sales class, about 20.7 per cent, and professional and technical, 19.2. Craftsmen and foremen make up 13.3 per cent, laborers 11, ma- chine operators 10.3 and farmers 7. The remaining 18.5 per cent run a wide variety of skills from household workers to executives. Where Do They Go? Once here, where do immigrants settle? Nearly half of them go to two states, California and New York, about 70,000 a year to the former and 65,000 to the latter. Next in order of preference are Texas, Illinois, New Jersey, Flor- ida and Massachusetts. quotas will be abolished. Entry in the future will be based mainly on reuniting of separated fami- lies, and on recruiting of skills most useful to the nation. As presently developing, the legislation will limit immigration to 170,000 annually from outside the Western Hemisphere, with a top limit of 20,000 from one country. 4 UMBRELLA BACK, REVERSE FLAP POCKETS, FULLY LINED IN BEIGE AND LODEN -- FALL CUDA-JACKETS SALE PRICE ;. 4 :U : $ 95 l ..y : l 4o f LEVI'S GALORE FOR GALS AND GUYS up Over 2000 Pairs in Stock COTTON TURTLE NECK$69 "T" SHIRTS-15 Colors......... SA-M S STORE 319 W. Huron 665-3688 RESTAURANT 3050 JACKSON ROAD NO 5-3636 BEER-PIZZA-BANJOS BIMBO'S 122 E. Washington Open Mon. & Fri. Nights i AP I _..-g /L "e ( 2 . L~6JA2I9// "RUB RAW THE SORES OF DISCONTENT" THE CREDO FOR ORGANIZATION OF THE POOR Keynote Speaker of the Challenge Lecture Series: CAN A MASS SOCIETY BE A GREAT SOCIETY? SAUL ALINSKY presented by * t \-'M - ......M / _ ,,,,/ ,/ V / v . s 0+ traces of f ie ' tia/ lace... Miss J's enchanting look for romantic fall nights 01 d Wine and rTNIFjY 11 The line is empire with a froth of cotton lace atop a slightly A-line I I