US. investigates Army after race clash OPENING TUESDAY First Appeardnce in Ann Arbor EXCITING DUO WILLIAM and JOYCE BERLIN (JP) - A racial confrontation t h a t shook the U.S. Army's McNair barracks in West Berlin in August has led to the creation of an in- terracial fact-finding team. The Berlin confrontation and a near-riot in- volving U.S. troops at Schweinfurt in West Ger- many are the primary incidents to be investigated by the fact-finding team, which includes White House aides. Two of President Nixon's advisers on minority affairs, Leonard Garment and Robert J. Brown, are in a group of White House and Department of De- fense men who are to spend three weeks visiting American camps and bases in Germany, England, Spain and Italy. The incident in the McNair barracks apparently started when a white soldier called a black soldier "nigger." A white GI was then hit with a piece of wood. The fight escalated as soldiers poured out of nearby barracks and chose sides by color. Clubs, rocks and pipes were used as weapons. Five men were arrested. Eight were treated at a hospital, including one military policeman. Some 25 men suffered injuries of some sort. A group of angry blacks refused a direct order to disperse. Soldier informants say the Berlin Bri- gade's provost marshal was called a pig. They re- ported use of the term "boys" by a high-ranking officer, in an effort to calm things down, infuriated the blacks. The chance arrival of a unit from the field in full battle dress saved the situation from getting worse, an officer recalls. "They marched in the gate just as all hell was breaking loose and were immediately used as riot control with bayonets fixed. "If you could .figure out why this thing hap- pened," the McNair-base officer declared, "then you could do something about it. But when that thing got going, it was not a case of unit pride or even racial pride. All you! had was hate." The Berlin Brigade has been remarkably free of outbursts of racial unrest plaguing other Army un- its based across Germany. That it now has hap- pened in Berlin, too, underlines far-reaching racial sensitivity. Maj. Gen. George M. Seignious II, the Berlin commander, says firmly, "This situation is endemic to our whole society, not just the Army." In an interview, however, Seignious emphasized that regardless of the original cause, the Army's leadership must bridge a racial gap wherever it finds one. Seignious says a big obstacle is the Army's turn- over in Europe of almost 100 per cent each year. The main cause: manpower for Vietnam. Seignious finds it significant that those involv- ed in the McNair fighting were for the most part recent arrivals, men the brigade had not yet es- tablished real contact with. The Army in Europe - and the Army generally - says it helped pioneer integration among Ameri- cans. Seignious and others declare there is no dis- crimination in housing, schooling, job assignments, food or an'ything else that affects a soldier's daily life. Black soldiers say this is not always so. They claim discrimination in such things as promotions, "even if it is hard to prove." What seems to gall them most, however, is a belief in a hidden lack of acceptance that "bny a black nan can feel because he is black." They see an Army "power structure" that is mostly white. Some whites say they felt the blacks over- reacted at McNair and that a punch in the mouth for the offending white soldier would have been enough. The blacks say that the "officers do not listen to us," that the name-calling was just a public ex- pression of what a lot of whites really think, and that "a black man has to be better than a white man if he wants to get a job or promotion for which both are qualified." It is estimated that one eighth of the 185,000 American soldiers in Europe is black. The group may find that one of the underlying points that leads to friction is that there is more quiet than action in Army duty in Europe. 'The U.S. Army has been here 25 years since World War II. The soldiers in Europe have a lot more time to occupy themselves with personal problems than the men in action in Vietnam do. Tues. Night, Sept. 15 9-10 P.M. ALL BEER 25c 2800 Jackson Rd. 769-0700 --- y 5 PR ESENTS DAVE VEAN RONK Quite Simply, the Best That Is 330 Maynard... Up the Alley FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY 8:00 P.M. $3.00 threeNEWS -PHONE: 764-0552 pagethree BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Saturday, September 12, 1970 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three Murphy named NY police chief NEW YORK {M - Detroit Police Commissioner Patrick V. Murphy was named yesterday to head the 31,850-man Police Department in New York City. He began his law enforcement career as a foot patrolman in Brooklyn 25 years ago. "I'm glad to be coming home," said Murphy, 50, as he walk- 'ed into City Hall with Mayor John V. Lindsay. Murphy flew here from Detroit where he resigned earlier in the day. S"Pat Murphy's record is one of firm command,". Lindsay said as he introduced Murphy to a news conference. "In three cities during the past seven years, he has clearly shown that he is a take-charge commander who gives his men and the public strong and decisive leadership." Murphy thanked Lindsay for - "your pledge of support and f o r the broad authority you h a v e granted me." ouhv Murphy succeeds Howard R. Leary in the $41,000-a-year post effective Oct. 1. -Leary resigned last weekend to become vice presi- rop os dent in charge of security for- the Abraham & Strauss Department Stores.o g Murphy previously held high police posts in Washington, D.C. and Syracuse. N.Y. W A aixTTIr I13.-An. it -Associated Press Ammunition and food bearer A Cambodian soldier in his early teens marches to join a battalion of Cambodian ke-inforcements expected to be sent in . against communist troops in Srang, 30 miles southwest of Phnom Penh. DEADLINE MONDAY:. UA to strike ,m if demands not met DETROIT (")-General Motors will be struck at midnight Mon- day unless its, $1.9-billion wage increase offer to the United Auto Workers Union is boosted, a UAW official said yesterday after re- jecting GM's latest three-year contract proposal. "The total offer falls far short of the' mark," said Irving Blue- stone, codirector of the union's GM Department. He said GM would be struck if a better offer was not made by the time the cur- THE MIRISCH PRODUCTION COMPANY presents SIDNEY POITIER MARTIN LANDAU I A WALTER MIRISCH PRODUCTION THEYCAIME MISTER TIBBS! BARBARA McNAIRsvaerANTHONY ZERBE Screenplayby ALAN R. TRUSTMAN andi JAMES RWEBB Storyby ALAN R.TRUSTMAN t BsedDnthecbactre W by JOHN BAIL Musc -QUINCY JONES ExacutiPrducer WALTER MIRISCH Produced by HERBERT HIRSCHMAN Drectedby GORDON DOUGLAS COLOR by Didlys' SIGeINWALW MISICKST UR E S COT 6A I AI U AWON NITED AWISTSMC bI"td uft I Famous PIZZA & CHICKENI " from THOMPSON'S PIZZA 211 E. ANN ST. (Next to Armory) CALL 761-0001 FREE DELIVERY-7 Days a Week--FREE DELIVERY 1 rent three-year contract expires at midnight Monday. UAW President Leonard Wood- cock, advised of the GM contract offer by telephone, commented: "God has spoken. It is up to the subjects now to bow down to the ground. We won't do it.", GM's personnel vice president, Earl Bramblett, said he believes the new proposal is responsive to priorities established by the UAW. GM and Chrysler are the un- ion's twin strike targets. UAW leaders have said, either-or both -willbe struck unlessa pattern- setting agreement is written be- fore the expiration of current pacts. Ford, which was struck for sev- en weeks in 1967, was excluded as a strike target this year. The latest GM offer, included a higher limit on a wage escalator, tied to increases in the cost of living. The limit is 16 cents in the current contract. GM offered to raise the top to 28 cents an hour for the life of the proposed new contract, with a guaranteed mini- mum increase of 16 cents. GM moved closer to the union's demand for retirement after 30 years - regardless of age - at a monthly pension of $500. Announcing his resignation in Detroit, Murphy said he could not turn down the New York oppor- tunity. "Murphy has said in the past that he would like to be director of the FBI once J. Edgar Hoover is through," said a high-ranking Detroit police-- officer. "The New York position is the quickest way to get there." Murphy's 'transfer from the 5,000-member Detroit police de- partment to head one six times its size brought an angry reaction from Carl Parsell, president of the Detroit Police Officers Association. Parsell said: "He's trying to hitch his star to Mayor John Lind- say and putting all his eggs in one basket. He's dumping us because he figures if Lindsay is elected President, he'll be named FBI di- rector. "I feel this is very unfortunate for the city, that a guy can come in here, spend all his time with the national press and then take off like a big bird." Murphy takes 'over a police de- partment in the throes of an out- side investigation into reports of corruption, under a mayor who has been accused in the past of putting a reign on police officials for political purposes., Actually, Murphy is taking a $612 a year cut in salary. He drew only $31,800 in Detroit, but received a $9,812 New York pen- sion, which he loses upon his re- turn to duty here., w. a .tvtrvtv~ '1tanamen ment to eliminate the runoff pro- vision from the proposal for elec- tion of the president by direct popular vote was called up in the Senate yesterday. Sen. Robert P. Griff in, R-Mich., offering the amendment with Sen. Joseph D. Tydings, D-Md., as a co-sponsor, said it would strength- en the electoral reform plan and make it more acceptable. Griffin said he hopes for a vote on it early next week, but Sen. Birch Bayh, D-Ind., chief sponsor of the popular vote mea- sure, has served notice he will resist it. Griffin said he supports t he direct election plan but is disturb- ed by its provision for a ruloff election if no candidate. gets as much as 40 per cent of the vote. In place of a runoff election, the Griffin-Tydings proposal pro- vides' that if none, of the candi- dates received 40 per cent of the vote, the front-runner would be 'elected. if he had a majority of the electoral vote under the pre- sent system. ShouId no candidate be elected under either of these alternatives, the Senate and House would meet in joint session and elect a presi- dent. Griffin said this would 'be "far superior to and less hazardous than the runoff prodision." He said it would help tO discourage splinter parties and also increase the chances of making the first election decisive. I Kunstier' DOORS OPEN 12:45 __....... .w Coming!, I I SHOWS AT 1, 3,5,7,9 P.M. L '. 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