YOUNGER GENERATION: WHAT IS WRONG? See Editorial Page C, 4. r InkFr4A6 74Iztt# CLOUDY High-72 Low-48 Mild through Sunday, chance of showers Seventy-Five Years of Editorial Freedom I VOjL. LXXVI, No. 15S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, MAY 21, 1966 SEVEN CENTS SIX PA I Civil Rights Picture: From Intolerable to Dep lorab EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the concluding part of a four-part series on the racial climate in Michigan. By GENE SCHROEDER Associated Press Staff Writer A cross is burned in front of a Negro home in Bay City. Pickets protesting segregated housing pa- rade at Ann Arbor's City Hall. A white student is stabbed by a Negro outside a Detroit sports stadium. To the outsider, these events of recent years might indicate Michi- gan is a seething racial volcano, ready to erupt into violence. But to most informed observers of the civil rights scene, the state- wide situation is not as volatile as it may seem. In the Bay City incident, the cross burners turned themselves in to police, apologized to the Ne- gro family and the episode was written off as a prank. In Ann Arbor, the City Council approved fair housing measures covering virtually all real estate transactions. And in Detroit, authorities de- cided the stabbing was not strictly a racial clash but rather a result of the excitement stirred up by sports rivalry. Racial overtones were present in each case, of course, but not to the degree some believed. Generally speaking, the civil rights picture in Michigan has im- proved in the past few years. But as one observer put it: "In some places this merely means advancing from the intoler- able to the deplorable." While describing the situation as grim, Burton Gordin, State Civil Rights Commission executive di- rector, says the picture is far better in Michigan than elsewhere. In contrast to other major cities. for example, Detroit has escaped the widespread riots which brought terror to such widely divergent communities as Los Angeles and Rochester, New York. Detroit, with a Negro population of about 30 per cent has attracted nationwide attention for its rela- tively peaceful climate. No one is saying categorically that trouble will not break out this summer or at any time. But no responsible leader is predicting blood will flow in the streets, either. The secret of Detroit's success. observers agree, is the fact white and Negro community leaders are in almost daily communication with each other. Much of the credit goes to Mayor Jerome P. Cavanagh. "During the summer months, I estimate, about 70 to 75 per cent of my time has been devoted to matters related to civil rights -race relations, police problems and the like," says Cavanagh. When the mayor first took office five years ago, racial tensions were at the boiling point and Cavanagh plunged into the problem imme- diately. He called together leaders of the Negro community and the building trades unions to discuss complaints of discrimination. "After our meetings, 17 of the 18 unions represented opened up their apprenticeship programs to Negroes," Cavanagh recalls. "We kept the dispute off the streets and on the table. The key to solving our problems is not to await developments and then re- spond, but to anticipate trouble in advance." Cavanagh likes to point out De- troit was the nation's first major city to evolve a comprehensive antipoverty program to combat the despair and hopelessness that grips the unskilled and untrained slum dweller who cannot find a job even in the midst of prosperity. Kalamazoo has approached the problem of unemployment among high school dropouts in a dif- ferent fashion, with three private programs. One is called "Outreach Proj- ect." It was started a year ago by a group of community leaders who want to remain anonymous. With money from the Kalama- zoo Foundation, they made jobs for some 60 so called problem boys and girls along with some on the fringe of trouble. Three Negro men with back- grounds in teaching and social work walked the streets to per- suade youngsters to join the project and get paying jobs, re- ports Tim Richards of The Kal- amazoo Gazette. " 'Outreach' wasn't 100 per cent successful with 100 per cent of the youngsters," Richards says, "but it did help put many on the right path to useful employment, and it absorbed the energies of active youths who might otherwise have gotten in trouble." Employment practices play a major role in the Benton Harbor- St. Joseph area picture. Civil rights leaders say one of the most blatant displays of dis- crimination in the state can be found at one of the Twin Cities' largest manufacturing plants. Of some 700 employes, only one is Negro-a janitor. As a result, the firm's products are the target of a nationwide Negro boycott. .But some of the sharpest tension that existed in the area two years ago has eased somewhat, according to Jerry Krieger of The Benton Harbor News Palladium. Mrs. Mary DeFoe, secretary of the local branch of the NAACP, says more people are beginning to realize the existence and import- ance of the civil rights problems. The main problems themselves, however, still exist and still re- main to be solved satisfactorily, she adds. These she listed as better schooling, more and better housing and a stated policy of open oc- cupancy for housing and rentals, and improved government. Mrs. DeFoe says the urge for demonstrations is not as strong now, possibly because there is recognition more people are at least trying to see the problems of the minority. Judd Spray, president of the Twin Cities Human Relations Council, says a neighborhood in nearly all-white St. Joseph has done a good job of accepting a Negro family that bought a home last year after months of uproar. Spray's comment about the Twin Cities reflects the general outlook for all of Michigan: "Some gains have been made, but we've got a long way to go yet." Viet Civil War Rages as Regime, Rebels Clash Buddhists Continue To Strike * * * * * * * * * By The Associated Press SAIGON - Virtual civil war erupted in Da Nang early today as Vietnamese government planes bombed rebel positions there for the first time. In Saigon, thou- sands of Buddhist monks and nuns staged a sit-down hunger strike against the military government of Premier Nguyen Cao Ky. At Da Nang, rebel troops lobbed mortar shells into the big U.S. air base, jammed with aircraft to fight the Communists. Eight U.S. Marines were reported wounded. There were unconfirmed reports that U.S. Marine Phantom jets were ordered into the air against the Vietnamese government planes. The planes were reportedly recalled before they encountered the government aircraft. Tear-Gas Grenades In Saigon, riot police fired tear- gas grenades to disperse a crowd of 5,000 striking Buddhists today as unrest rocked the capital for the second day. Police moved into the crowd outside the main pogoda where yellow-robed Buddhist monks and nuns were on a hunger strike to back demands for the ouster of the military government. The showdown between the' Buddhists and the government was growing steadily and threat- ened further turmoil. Crowd Flees The crowd fled in panic as about 15 tear-gas grenades smash- ed into it. A pall of tear gas hung in the stifling noon heat. American servicemen in Saigon were warned to stay away from demonstrations and points of pos- sible rioting. From Hue, a Buddhist center 50 miles beyond Da Nang, the na- tion's leading monk, Thich Tri Quang, telephoned this ultimatum to the Buddhist institute here for relay to Ky: Resign or more blood will flow. Hunger Strike As the gulf between Ky and the Buddhist-led opposition widened, about 400 to 500 monks and nuns, some carrying First Aid kits, marched to Saigon's main Bud- dhist institute to begin their hun- ger strike. They were quickly Joined by hundreds of others. Thich Thien Minh, one of the powerful institute leaders, urged the Buddhists to "pray for the people of Central Viet Nam" where, he charged, hundreds of persons have been killed or wound- ed in the civil strife.? At daybreak in Da Nang, four Skyraiders from Ky's air force made a low pass at rebel troops on the east side of the Da Nang River and dropped four or five 250- pound bombs. Soldiers Strafed Regents Approve Granting They also strafed rebel soldiers. No bombs were dropped into the city itself and it did not appear the government troops were mov- ing on the pagoda strongholds held by antigovernment ,forces.Pr Heavy firing broke out as the planes attacked. It was the first time air power oW had been brought into the battle of Da Nang, although there .were reports that Vietnamese air force planes yesterday strafed outside - Doctoral Certificates Gain fights U' First in fighting in Da Nang yesterday. In Saigon, U.S. Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge returned from Washington conferences to on- the-spot duty in U.S. efforts to help work out a solution. The Buddhists are demanding an end to military rule. 'Feels Fine' "It feels fine to be back in this beautiful country to which I am so attached," Lodge said, smiling. "I like it here." Shouting against b o t h the United States and the Vietnamese -~ ~~ military government, about 1,000 youths sallied from the Buddhist In Libraryk I o Sihare Privileges In Borrowing Book: ; TFO Applauds Move The University Regents yester- day approved changing library regulations to have teaching fel- ° lows considered members of the faculty. The Regents voted to have the following changes made: 1) The loan period for faculty' was established at eight weeks; 2) The teaching fellows were gr anted the same loan pr ivileges as the faculty; 3) The loan period for students and other members of the Univer- sity staff was lengthened to three weeks; 4) The loan period of all borrow- MEMBERS OF THE BOARD OF REGE ers at the Undergraduate library was lengthened to three weeks; EXAM GIVEN TODAY: and * 5) The regulation that all suchL books are subject to recall after f r 7t - ie k rta inr d1/1 7'TC c NEWS WIRE Late World News WASHINGTON OFP)-PRESIDENT JOHNSON called top ad- visors to the White House last night to talk over the U.S. position on revamping the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. A new idea for modernizing NATO has been reported under official study. It would allow the Atlantic alliance to work ultimately with the Soviet Union if Red China emerges as the world's third superpower. "In reorganizing NATO we should concentrate less on keeping it as a purely defensive organization to meet military threats," said an authoritative British source. "We should see it more as an organization of Western nations that could negotiate from strength with the aim of arriving at some common ground with Russia about attitudes to the world of the 1980s and 1990s when we might have to contend with a third superpower," The informant, who made plain he was thinking of Com- munist China as the third superpower, said this idea is under consideration by various allied officials concerned with plans for streamlining NATO. THE PAPER, WITH ITS NEW PRINTER, went on sale at Michigan State University yesterday, a day after its scheduled publication date. The question of whether or not The Paper can be distributed was apparently settled when MSU university secretary Jack Breslin ruled the university will take no action to stop its distribution. ROOSEVELT UNIVERSITY STUDENTS yesterday resumed a sit-in outside the school's administrative offices in a protest Institute for a rampage in Saigon streets reminiscent of previous disorders halted by a mid-April truce. The torch-bearing mob, includ- ing some screaming children, smashed windows, stoned police and hurled fire bombs. One ban- ner proclaimed: "No Vietnamese lives for Ameri- can dollars." Other Developments Among developments rounding out the picture: -Reports from the agitaion- ridden northern provinces making up the 1st Corps Area spoke of two convoys of government troops deserting to join the rebels, pre- sumably at Da Nang. One con- voy of defectors, from the town of Hoi An, was reported strafed by Ky's planes. -American, officials expressed hope that economic pressure on the northern dissidents would help to achieve a settlement. They spoke of plans to cut off sup- plies in order to bring the rebels to their knees. - Sporadic fighting went on throughout the day in Da Nang, a hotbed of antigovernment agi- tation that the shooting has con- verted into a city of confusion and fear. Several rebel soldiers surrendered, emerging with hands up from the rebel-held complex of pagodas. Machine gun bullets chewed at the government's Da Nang garrison headquarters. Gov- ernment tanks and rebel gunners staged a 10-minute duel by night across the Da Nang River. -Monsoon rains and wind lim- ited air strikes against North Viet Nam for the sixth straight day. U.S. air cavalrymen fought on against a Communist force in the Central Tighlanis near An Khe. -Daily-Paul Berneis ENTS are shown before the start of yesterday's meeting. I Lwo wee s was reamea . After the announcement a spokesman for the executive board of the Teaching Fellows organ- ization issued a statement on the action. The statement said, "We welcome the granting of staff library privileges but consider it only a first step toward clarifying the status and improving the working conditions of teaching fellows at the University." Also at yesterday's Regents meeting it was announced that the $55 Million Program has reached a total of $42,307,063. This in- cludes $1,838,942 accepted since last month's meeting. Eight $55 Million field offices have been opened in large cities near centers of University alumni concentration, Regent Paul Goebel reported. Nearing the peak of the cam- paign next fall, it is expected that some 5,500 alumni will be actively working as volunteers in all 50 states, soliciting a1u m n i and friends of the University. Also announced at yesterday's meeting was the appointment of Prof. Morris Bornstein of the eco- nomics department as director of the Center for Russian Studies. Pnfa Willim Rolna.r.f fhoan- r ! etctsu ofJ lege Draft Delay Big Ten. To Take Action Await Similar Moves By Other Universities Before Using Degree By MICHAEL HEFFER The University Regents yester- day approved the granting of a Certificate to graduate students who have completed all doctoral requirements except the disserta- tion. The Certificate is the first step toward. the establishment of an intermediate degree between the master's and the Ph.D. It will serve as formal recognition that those who receive it have reached the stage of Candidate, en route to the Ph.D. Vice - President for Academic Affairs Allan Smith, in announc- ing the granting of the Certificate to 164 graduate students, said the University "should not create a degree unless it becomes accepted" elsewhere. The University is awaiting sim- ilar moves by other Big Ten uni- versities. Although this type of Certificate is being started in a few other institutions, the Uni- versity is the first Big Ten school to adopt it. The move was recommended by Dean Stephen Spurr of the Rack- ham School of Graduate Studies, who was the chairman of a meet- ing of the Committee on Institu- tional Cooperation on this subject last month. At that meeting, which included graduate school deans from the Big Ten schools, the concept of an intermediate certificate recog- nizing formal admission to can- didacy to the Ph.D. degree was approved. Spurr said "there is a great need for this degree. The Candidate's certificate is proposed to give not only recognition to the many stu- dents who have completed all their requirements except the dis- sertation, but also to meet the needs of students who wish to be- come thoroughly exposed to the subject matter of a particular field of specialization, and yet who are not interested in the type of detailed and extended scholar- ship required by the doctoral dis- sertation." DALLAS OP)-Very few if any college students will be drafted unless the monthly quota jumps over 30,000 men, the director of the Selective Service System says. Lt. Gen. Lewis Hershey said yesterday nonstudents and college dropouts are in sufficient num- bers to fill current military needs. Hershey, in Dallas to attend the annual meeting of the National Council of the Boy Scouts of America, made his remarks to a Dallas Times Herald reporter. He said college students are not deferred because they have "any inherent right or special quality come down from haven," but rath- er because colleges must plan for Michigan Netmen Clinch, Conference Championship By BUD WILKINSON match 6-4, 5-7, 7-5, by complete- Special To The Daily ly changing his style of play. .LM According to Wolverine Coach EAST LANSING-The Michi- Bill Murphy, Hedrick played "a gan tennis team wrapped up its very cautious, careful game, most second straight Big Ten title yes- unlike his normal power game. He terday by mathematically elimi- showed remarkable control con- nating all other teams from con- sidering the strong wind, which tention when the Wolverine net- seemed to bother Power more than ters advanced to the finals at Hedrick." eight of nine positions. After the match while drinking Michigan finished the day's a Coke like Arnie Palmer in the semi-finals action with 126 points commercials, Hedrick explained in 109. forr unner-un Michigan mi .p .n, eA n snmp hie tvlD n f the future manpower needs of so- ciety. Selective Service assumes that a college graduate will make a more productive citizen than the non- graduate, Hershey said. Considering how long it takes to train a professional man, and since we don't know how many doctors, for instance, we'll need 15 years from now, we must consider the importance of the students who will eventually graduate," Hershey said. "What we're trying to deter- mine in testing and evaluations is, who in school is not likely to fin- ish school; because if they're not going to finish, then what are they doing there?" He said the student who is like- ly to drop out will benefit from military service, perhaps "find himself," and then when he goes back to college, will "be ready to really do something." He said experience after World War II and the Korean War prov- ed this statement conclusively: "Those who came back brought more with them." Draft quotas this year, largely