Black GI's miserable says Pentagon aide WASHINGTON W -- Pentagon civil rights chief Frank Render warned months ago that some black servicemen in the Pacific area were tongue-tied by pent-up fury and there was "potential for serious racial disorders." tender's warnings were based on a swing through American installations in the Far East last March and April. Since then, racial flareups have occurred in South Korea. His report, completed in late May, be- came available this week. His findings on the Far East were not distributed widely by Pentagon leaders, in contrast with the handling of Render's report last year on U.S. military racial problems in Ger- many. After the European study last fall. stiff anti-trust discrimination orders were is- sued by Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird. Render wrote after his trip to bases in Korea, Japan, the Philippines and Oki- nawa that frustrations of some black servicemen were "so great and their pent-up fury so high that many of them have exceeding difficulty expressing themselves." He told of finding some men so over- whelmed "that it was producing a verbal paralysis" and that he met some Ma- rines who "burst out in tears and un- ashamedly cried" while trying to articu- late what was wrong. As he had following his European trip, Render reported complaints by black servicemen of discrimination in promo- tions, unfair treatment under military jus- tice, and "that they were given the menial and dirty tasks." "We found that blacks and whites were moving farther and farther away from each other, resegregating through acceler- ated racial polarization," Render said. While saying there had been "a sig- nificant demonstration of positive con- cern and action by most commands" in the Far East, Render told his superiors that "there is still much to be done," Among other things, he complained that "many of the affirmative policies and programs developed at the higher eche- lons were not being transmitted down the chain of command to the lowest trooper." A 35-year-old Republican from Syra- cuse, N.Y., Render was brought into the Pentagon about 14 months ago as deputy assistant secretary of defense for civil rights. This makes him one of the high- est - ranking black officials in the De- fense Department. Render has expressed confidence pub- licly that Defense officials will carry through on anti-discrimination practices. Some other blacks in and out of unform have complained privately that there has been considerable foot-dragging. page three T r£itMin atj MODERATE High-70 Low-55 Cooler, may clear slightly Friday, August 13, 1971 Ann Arbor, Michigan News Phone: 764-0552 Riots flare, army morale deteriorates Fas the .Assoriate r ess0 Street clashes, sniping, fire bombings and arson hit Belfast and Londonderry yesterday and Roman Catholics < in ever increasing waves streamed into Eire to escape the orgy of death and destruction. Northern Irish officials said 5,149 refugees had streamed across the border to Eire since yesterday. An- other two thousand Roman Catholics were expected to leave Belfast by the end of today. Some residents, who moved out of fear, set their homes Uriish security f push- - Royal Army soldiers move past a damaged car and the remains of a burned-out bus ye continue to push their way towards the civil-war-stricken Crumlin Road area of Bel the British troops is deteriorating, according to the Associated Press, after almost a w in strife-torn Ulster. HAZARD TO BABY CITED: Police on Long Island ar woman, lecturer after sex HUNTINGTON, N.Y. (/') -- Police charges that a birth con- trol lecture endangered the wel- fare of a 14-month-old baby have stirred a controversy on Long Island. Three plainclothes policemen arrested the lecturer, William R. Baird Jr., and the baby's moth- er, Nancy Manfredonia, 28, at the lecture Friday night. The baby was apparently the only minor the police could lo- cate in an audience of 25 or 30 people. Baird, who operates a birth control clinic, was charged with endangering the baby's welfare by "exposing" her to birth con- trol devices he explained how to use. His lawyer said it was legal in New York to give birth control information to minors. Baird has had conflicts with the law in other states where he has lec- tured, and once served a jail term in Boston. Mrs. Manfredonia was charged with endangering her baby's wel- fare by taking her to the lecture. She said the baby understands only four words - mama, dada, cookie and milk. Nobody touched the baby or paid any special at- tention to her. She sat in paja- mas on her mother's lap during the lecture and made no outcry, her mother said. Mrs. Manfredonia said she took the baby to the meeting because no sitter was available. Suffolk County Executive H. Lee Dennison first called the ar- rests "ridiculous," but after conferring with County Police Commissioner John L. Barry said he was satisfied that the ar- rests were legitimate, "Not everything that trans- pired at that lecture meeting was part of the publicity," Dennison told a reporter. Be refused to elaborate, saying it was a mat- ter before the courts. He did say, however, that he did not mean to imply that the child had been physically abused, or that any obscenity was involved. Both defendants were held overnight in jail, although the baby was released in her father's care. Mrs. Manfredonia's shoes and glasses were taken away. She was taken before a judge Saturday morning, her hands cuffed behind her back. After a minute-long hearing, the judge released the pair with- out bail pending trial Sept. 30. Conviction could mean a year in jail and a $500 fine. Baird charged the arrests were inspired by political opponents and "the politic Roman Catholic Baird is a Hempstead Towi Mrs. Manfredoni Islip Town Coun Liberal party ti- Mrs. Manfred never had met lecture, although of him and ado China tr i Japanese TOKYO P)-AI istry spokesman that "some Jape some extent" ha future relations and the United od developments ington and Pekin The spokesma newsmen that " Japan is not th ing President Ni country. Japan was not plan to visit Pek minutes before h on July 15, and Japan was not caused c o nce:i spokesman said. afire as they left, "so the other side won't get them," one said. This swelling tide of refugees, both Catholics and Protestants burned out of their homes or flee- ing from fear of gunfire. emerged as the government's ssociated Press most pressing problem. For the first time since Mon- day, authorities w e r e hard sterday as they pressed to find shelter for the fast. Morale of homeless in cities that had acute reek of riot duty housing shortages even before the fighting began. In London, Prime Minister Ed- ward Heath called in senior cabinet ministers, including De- fense Secretary Carrington, to review the sagging morale of Bnitish troops. Beath v-as said rest to be determined to s tamp ot terrorism in Northern Ireland by military force before attempting ta k a political solution. ta IRA spokesman said that. "We can continue the campaign of cal arm of the the past few days at the same Church." level for a further fortnight at candidate for least, if we can get additional n supervisor and arms and ammunition we hope a is running for to continue the campaign much cil, both on the longer." cket. Prime Minister Jack Lynch tonia said she blamed the Northern Ireland Baird until the government yesterday night for she had heard the bloodletting in the province tired his work. and demanded its removal. Lynch, after an emergency meeting of the Irish Cabinet, p makes called for the creation of an ad- ministration in Northern Ireland u hapy r which would give equal voice to u h p the province's warring Protest- Foreign Min- ants and Roman Catholics. said yesterday Lynch told a news conference anese people to that the N. Ireland Government ve doubts about has "consistently repressed Ro- between Japan man Catholics and bears i espon- States because sibility for recurring violence in between Wash- Northern Ireland. He urged that 1g. "as an immediate objective . . . the Northern Ireland government .t told foreign should be replaced by a govern- at the moment" ment in which power and deci- inking of invit- sion making will be equally xon to visit this shared between Protestants and Catholics." ified of Nixon's Lynch urged Northern Irish ing only a few Catholics to be patient and re- te announced it ject violence "because not only "the fact that would violence preclude the duly consulted achievement of their civil rights r n" here, the but it would perpetuate the divi- sions amongst the Irish people." War hurts families of Ulster St. BELFAST, Northern Ireland (I') - The war came to Harro- gate Street in the small hours yesterday, announced by the clatter of garbage can lids ham- mered on the sidewalk. The lids core wielded by tie "duck squtad." They are women and girls whose job it is to keep lookout in the Roman Catholic back streets of cost Belfast in case the British army comes on "search-and-find" operations. Margaret Caddell, 79-year-old widow, heard the clamor, then came a crash. Her unmarried daughter, El- len, sleeping in the same room, wanted to get up. She thought the house might be burning. Her mother said: "No, don't move." "We lay there petrified for three hours while the racket went on," said Ellen. Joseph Caddell, one of the widow's sons, pointed to the cause of the crash. The front downstairs window of the four- room house, identical with80 others in the red brick terrace, had been shattered by bullets. Some were imbedded in the in- side walls. Others had chipped the brickwork and bent the iron railings outside. Joseph, 35, spent five years in the U.S. Army at Fort Dix, N.J., and in West Germany. His home for 11 years was Norwalk, Conn. His two, young children are American citizens though he is not. Citing his military training, he said: "Every soldier is taught that concentrated fire should be used only at a primary target. This was concentrated fire. There was no targethere. So this was indiscriminate fire. See WAR, Page 10