The Michigan Daily Vol. LXXXV, No. 53-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, July 31, 1975 Ten Cents Twelve Pages Ford sees progress on arms talks HELSINKI, Finland (A) - President Ford said his meet- ing with Soviet Communist party chief Leonid Brezhnev moved negotiations forward on a nuclear arms treaty and that a second discussion Saturday will bring even more progress. Meanwhile leaders of some 35 European and North American nations, including Brezhnev and Ford, opened a ' supersummit here which has heen described as a turning point in the bloody history of Europe while cautioning that basic differences between East and West are not easily overcome. BREZHNEV and Ford also discussed yesterday the sim- mering Israeli-conflict, and one American source said this was a happy surprise. The Middle East was not due for discussion until the Saturday meeting, Ford said, but was moved forward when the arms limitation issue went so smoothly. The minisumnit, lasting 2 hours and 15 minutes, be- tween the U. S. president and the Soviet leader dealt pri- marily with a strategic arms limitation treaty. Ford said afterwards: "When we meet again on Saturday further progress will materialize." HE -AND BREZHNEV made their optimistic assessment in a joint, unscheduled news conference. Ford added that the "discussions concerning strategic arms limitation . . . were very constructive." "It was businesslike and very friendly," the President said. Ford did not elaborate, and neither did Secretary of State Henry Kissinger in a late afternoon briefing with re- porters. HOWEVER, Kissinger said that he and Soviet Foreign See FORD, Page 9 ARCHBISHOP MAKARIO of Cyprus (left) talks with President Ford and Secretary of State Henry Kissinger last night in Helsinki, Finland, at a state dinner held in the Presidential Palace. Detroit quiet after two nights of disturbances DETROIT (UPI) - Police moved into a west side neighborhood in force yesterday to guard against a third night of disorders there, but officials said it was so calm they did not even carry out plans to cordon off the area. There hasn't been one incident," a police spokesman said. "It's even quieter than norm- al nights." A MAN was struck on the head with a tire jack about two miles away, but police said it was not related to earlier disturbances in the 18-block trouble area. About 200 riot-ready police took up positions in the area, where gangs of youths looted, birned and showered police with bottles, rocks and debris in two previous nights of unrest. The trouble erupted late Monday after a white tavern owner shot and fatally wounded an 18-year old black he said was tampering with his car in a parking lot. MORE THAN 100 persons were arrested, at least 11 persons .injured and several cars and buildings set alight in the area. Damage was not estimated, but one official said it was l '.ver than first reports indicated. Police also reported scattered looting, some of it in shops more than a mile from the trouble area. The predominantly black, lower middle class neighborhood was quiet yesterday after a second night of sporadic rock-and-bottle at- tacks on police. PEACE was restored to the area early yes- terday after police used tear gas to disperse the, angry crowds who set fire to 13 business places and looted several markets and stores, Police and clergymen circulated through the streets, mixing persuasion and police pow- er in an operation called "Campaign Cool It", hoping to maintain the calm that settled over the neighborhood. Police Chief Philip Tannian mobilized most of the city's 4,500-man force to prevent fur- ther disturbances. The first 2,000 police went on 12-hour duty at 3 am. yesterday morn- ing. AT THE same time, Mayor Coleman Youig and other prominent black officials renewed appe as for an end to tensions sparked late Monday when a white tavern owner fatally shot a black teenager in the bar parking lot. Tavern owner Andrew Chinarian, 39, told police he shot Obie Wynn, 18, when the yoath advanced toward him with an object in one hand. The object, police said, was a screwdriver. See related story, Page 5 Chinarian was charged with second degree murder Tuesday and freed on $500 bond by a Detroit city judge. Scores of enraged blacks, some shouting for volunteers to burn down Chinarian's tavern, protested the low bond. BEFORE the night was done, according to official reports, 13 businesses were set alight several shops were looted, police deployed in two separate areas came under two concen- trated barrages of debris, botles and rocks and another 51 persons were arrested. See DETROIT, Page 5 AP Photo AN UNIDENTIFIED youth hurls a brick at police during the second night of disturbances Tuesday in Detroit's northwest side. An estimated 259-300 teenagers threw bottles and bricks, set fires, and broke store windows near a bar where a black male was shot to death Monday night. -