PAGE TRREF WEDNESDAY, JULY 20, 1966 TUC MICUTGAN DATIN WEDNESDAY, JULY 20, 1966 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE TUREI~ r mals, Declared War Face Trials Formal War Declaration Not Issued Prisoners Not To Be Considered Under Geneva Convention By The Associated Press TOKYO-North Viet Nam's am- bassador to Peking said yesterday that captured U.S. pilots are "not -Associated Press PREMIER CHOU EN-LAI of Communist China greets Tran Tu Binh, left, North Viet Nam ambassa- dor to Peking. Johnson Wants Congressional dHold on Nondefense Spending WASHINGTON (P) - President anti-poverty bill which the House Johnson called yesterday for a is scheduled to consider Wednes- congressional holddown on non- day. defense spending, saying the al- A plea to the House to heed ternatives are substantial deficit Johnson's economy cry, at least financing or a tax increase. on the domestic front, came from He mentioned another alterna- a Democrat, Rep. George H. Ma- tive, wage and price controls, but hon, of Texas, who nevertheless virtually ruled that out. Few, if urged approval of a $58.6-billion any, recommend such controls, defense budget appropriation bill Johnson said. although it is $900 million over Johnson's request. "In my judgment," he said, "the President has already requested too much for nondefense spend- ing." Mahon said what Johnson was "really talking about" was a labor- welfare appropriations bill which "went through the House un- necessarily high"-$490 million over the budget. Concerned by what he called add-ons by Congress to his spend- ing recommendations, the Presi- dent urged that appr =opriations be held as nearly as possible to revenues. Already, he said, add-ons to his nondefense spending request s amount to almost $1 billion and that, barring reductions, they could run to $5 billion to $6 billion. The President's warning was described by one Republican as so strong as to call for postponing action on many remaining admin- istration bills. That view was given by Rep. Melvin L. Laird of Wisconsin who reported the request to a m. eting of House GOP members. Laird said the Republicans agreed to cooperate by voting against taking up the $1.75-billion Claims Javits Knew More Than Dodd prisoners of war but war crim- inals" and will be tried, Japanese correspondents in Red China's capital reported. The United States had warned the North Vietnamese against such action. The correspondents said Am- bassador Tran Tu Binh told a news conference North Viet Nam does not consider the case of the prisoners as coming under the Geneva Convention for humane treatment of war captives. The ap- parent reason is that there has1 been no formal declaration of war. Heavy Casualties In Saigon, thousands of U.S. Marines hunted near the 17th parallel for North Vietnamese reg- ulars who finally broke off a costly human-wave attack Monday after inflicting heavy casualties on two Marine platoons-90 men out- numbered about 10 to 1.1 Contact in and around the jun-1 gled Song Ngan Valley dwindled] to light and sporadic exchanges in the wake of a battle that an American officer estimated left' a Red regiment of 1,000 troops+ with 500 dead or wounded. The rest-survivors of Marine fire and the hammering of sup-1 porting planes and artillery-may have split into small groups. The reports of Tran Tu Binh's statement were the first to in- dicate the pilots wil be tried, al- though the North Vietnamesedhave been threatening trials for months.- In Prague, Czechoslovakia, North Vietnamese Ambassador Phan Van Su told a news conference: "The captured pilots will be sentenced; according to the character of their crimes." Increase Danger The correspondent for the French News Agency in Peking, reporting on the lecision to try the Americans, quoted unnamed ob- servers as saying the U.S. warn- ings only endangered the captured U.S. pilots. The observers were said to feel that North Viet Nam would appear to be giving way under U.S. threats if it did not try the pilots. A recent report from the Pen- tagon said there were 37 known American prisoners of war in North Viet Nam but how many are pilots was not known. Concern for their safety has ris- en in the United States since some of them were paraded July 6 through the streets of Hanoi, the North Vietnamese capital. Communist broadcasts said crowds cursed the pilots. Secretary of State Dean Rusk told a Senate subcommittee last Thursday that the abuse of any prisoner held by North Viet Nam would be "a grave development indeed." -Associated Press PEOPLE MILL AROUND RUINS in the Hough section of Cleveland, where rioting and looting occurred last night. NATIONAL GUARD CALLED: Racial Violence Continues n Cleveland By The Associated Press Ohio Gov. James A. Rhodes or- dered 1,000 National Guard troops into Cleveland last night because of racial violence in that city. Rhodes' office said he acted at the request of Cleveland Mayor Ralph S. Locher. The guardsmen were ordered to report to an armory in Cleveland to begin duty at 6 p.m. in the racially troubled Hough area, where some 200 armed police al- ready patrolled. Worst Violence The police were checking re-3 ports of sporadic brick and rock throwing in the wake of Cleve- land's worst racial violence, in which one woman was killed. In Chicago, Police Supt. O. W. jWilson announced N a t i o n a 1 Guardsmen would stay off the streets of the West Side riot zone last night-if there was no out- break of violence., The troops, he said, would be on standby duty. Four Days The troops arrived in the area Friday, the last of four days of major rioting that resulted in two deaths and 50 injuries. Relative peace has prevailed since then. In Cleveland, Police Chief Rich- ard Wagner said 400 policement were assigned to the predominant- ly Negro area. There were 200 men there Mon- day night when a 26-year-old woman was killed in an exchange of gunfire between police and snipers. Joyce Arnett was calling for her children from a second-floor win- down when she was shot in the head. No one was able to tell where the bullet came from. Six policemen and one fireman were injured in the rock- brick, bottle and fire-mob throwing, none seriously. "At one point it was sheer bedlam," said Capt. Richard Sherry. Two Negroes were wounded by gunfire and two others were hit by flying objects. None of the tour was seriously hurt. Windows Smashed Police cruiser windows were smashed and tires slashed. Roving gangs smashed store windows and Started at least eight fires, police said. Firemen needed police protec- tion when they were pelted with rocks and bottles. Some fire hoses were cut. One fireman said, "Wer'e not i hired to fight a guerrilla war, and that's what this is." Attention Contact Lens Wearers Save 35 % On Wetting Solution I I Wagner said the rioting Passport Pictures Application Pictures Group Pictures WeddingtPictures Available at any time Ready Quickly CALL NO 3-6966 "confined to a small band of hoodlums and opportunists." Just before daybreak a fire from a supermarket spread to an adja- cent apartment building. All occu- The eight-block section contains pants got out safely. about 75,000 of this city's estimat- ed quarter-million Negroes. Most live in dilapidated and old apart- ments in the Hough section. There were conflicting reports on what touched off the rioting. Wanger said he had heard two versions, one that it started at a bar on E. 79th Street and Hough Avenue. The owners are white. Trouble started when owners reportedly refused to serve free ice water to Negroes. Wagner said another version was that a woman had gone into the' same bar, soliciting patrons for money to help pay for the burial of a friend. The woman reportedly was ejected and told neighbors, who returned and started looting the bar's cash register. It was the second racial vio- lence to hit Cleveland in less than a month. There was sporadic trouble June 22-25. A 10-year-old Negro boy was shot and wounded June 23. Police said the shot was fired by a white man in an automobile. There area was along Superior Avenue in a racially mixed neigh- borhood less than a mile from the Hough section, was i i i i i WETTING SOLUTION-SOAKING SOLU'IION-CONL ACT LENS CLEANER SOLUTIONS DECONGESTANT DROPS CONACTISOL ALLERGAN Send Coupon To With Check or Money Order Contact Lens Solutions P.O. Box 2282 Lansing, Mich. ONLY $00 Ea. 1'°: - mum mumsmm - mm - mum g I I FlName I I Adrs I I WASHINGTON (P)-Public re- lations man Julius Klein testified yesterday that Sen. Jacob K. Javits knew more about his troubles with West German clients than did Sen. Thomas J. Dodd- and said both men helped him. The chunky, 64-year-old cigar- puffing publicist-who insisted he is no lobbyist and no press agent- gave sometimes contradictory tes- timony to Senate ethics investi- gators looking into Dodd's rela- tionship with Klein. World News Roundup "Would you have been satisfied if Sen. Dodd had done or said whatever Sen. Javits did or said?" asked Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy (D-Minn). "That's right," said Klein. Klein said he had been depicted as a Nazi sympathizer, and Javits defended him. Javits. a New York Republican, told a reporter he mentioned Klein's name in talks with former German Chancellor Konrad Ade- nauer. and Foreign Minister Hein- rich von Brentano. In both instances, Javits said, the discussion dealt with Klein's views on German reparations to Jewish victims of Nazi persecu- tion. "I thought Klein's position re- flected credit on him," Javits said. Klein testified he turned to Dodd. Javits and other senators for help after the Senate Foreign Relations Committee conducted an investigation into the activities of foreign agents. That was three years ago, and Klein said it hurt his image with his German clients. It's Easy To Place a Daily Classified . . . Just Call 764-0557 s By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - The Senate rejected 48 to 35 yesterday a move to give the administration's pro- posal for long-term foreign aid authorization a two-year trial, as the House had voted. The Senate vote upheld its For- eign Relations Committee's refusal to authorize the economic aid for more than the traditional one y e a r. President Johnson had sought a five-year authorization to make long-range planning easier. * WASHINGTON - Airline strike talks turned critical yesterday. The machinists union said it would put management's latest offer up to a vote of 35,000 strikers if there is no contract agreement by today. A vote among the strikers on the five major airlines shut down by the walkout would take from three to five days. The strike is now in its 13th day. rJAKARTA, TIndonesia-Fear of civil war in central Java increased yesterday as reports poured in of clashes between opponents and supporters of President Sukarno. Lt. Gen. Suharto, the Indone- sian strong man, made a speech at a student conference in Jakarta asking the memberrs to tone down their utterances. His talk appeared designed to cool off the powerful student group -called Kai-that led the fight resulting in stripping Sukarno of his once all-powerful authority. * * * PARIS - France dropped her first atomic bomb from a plane yesterday as she pursued her pro- gram of atmospheric nuclear test- ing in the South Pacific. A supersonic Mirage IV bomber, flown half way around the world for the tests, let go the device +htp atoll of Mururna lust the device was of 20 kilotons- that is, it exploded with the force of 20,000 tons of TNT. The French scheduled the test so it would not interfere with the flight of the U.S. Gemini 10 astro- nauts, John W. Young and Mi- chael Collins. They were due over the South Pacific explosion area an hour after the scheduled drop. . l'n4 Van Boven' s A- MmEN'S § Groups of French-Shriner, Johnston-Murphy, Bass Outdoor Footwear and British Imports at § Greatly Reduced Prices ! 20"- 50"N0 Reductions seeivindow display for styles 4 'a Miss 3J i ns they corduroy rebellion and season-suans the Jeune Leigue way with he liveliest cotton corduroy ensembles eve r.Sizes 5-15. . wo-piece suit. Burgundy, green, blue. 20.00 B. Jacket dress. Brown, cranberry. 25.00 ~4 ', Jacobson 's I iI