Wednesday, August 18, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Wednsda, Agus 18,197 TH MIHIGA DALY ageFiv POLICY EXPLANATION DEMANDED: Veterans blast Carter NEW YORK OP) - The Vet- erans of Foreign Wars, meet- ing in national convention here, sent a telegram to Democratic presidential candidate Jimmy Carter yesterday demanding that he appear and outline his a... 2stand on veterans affairs. The telegram, signed by Thomas Walker, commander in chief of the organization, was read to a cheering convention crowd by Cooper Holt, director of the VFW's Washington, D.C., office. "WE BELIEVE THAT you owe this nation's overseas veter- ans a personal appearance at this convention to explain first hand your philosophy concern- ing the future of those who fought so you might have the privilege of running in a free election for the office of presi- dent of the United States," the telegram read. Carter was not immediately available for comment. Halt said Carter had been in- Dogged determination vited six weeks ago to appear atth convention, but a Carter Peppy, a one-year-old French poodle, howls through worker had notified the organiz- the scales while accompanying himself on the piano. ation several days ago that the The dog, owned by Eric Cates of Oakville, Ontario, can former Georgia governor would also dance and play the organ. not attend. HOLT SAID CARTER pre- etroit police tighten security ETROIT (AP) - Police troit area were beaten and positive results. a tight ring of security robbed as the violence spilled Only two major incidents were nd the downtown area out into the business district. reported. A fireman was stab- n yesterday night in a con- One girl said she was raped bed while he and his colleagues ng effort to curb lawless- and another was attacked in fought a garage fire, and six of teen-age gangs. the concert hall area. Whites young persons were detained e first of 450 laid-off De- fled from the hall area and the temporarily when they refused police officers returned to blacks then robbed many of the to leave the area of a roller jobs yesterday as part blacks at the concert. skating rink when ordered to n all-out crackdown on law- Many of the policemen had do so by police. kers, been laid off in an economy Fireman Thomas Breitscut, move but after the Sunday vi- 29 was stabbed in the right )R SECURITY reasons, of- lence, police and city officials shoulder by youths who taunted Is said, they would not dis- said they would find the money firemen as they fought the exactly how many police somewhere to pay salaries of fire e as te t the conentate .i th don-the officers recalled to duty. blase. He was treated at a concentrated in the down- hospital and released. i area. POLICE SAID that by night- _ _ _ viously had been slow to answer a questionnaire from the VFW regarding his stand on veterans issues. "This callous disregard to- ward those who fought for their country is inexplainable to our membership," the telegram read. Walker also included in the message "one last invitation" for Carter to appear at the con- vention. Y E S T E R D A Y, veter- ans also heard speeches from Richard Roudebush, adminis- trator of the Veterans Adminis- tration; Rep. Ray Roberts, (D- Tex.) chairman of the House Veterans Affairs Committee, and Sen. Jennings Randolph, (D-W.Va.), member of the Sen- ate Veterans Affairs Commit- tee. Rondeb'ush detailed achieve- ments of the Veterans Adminis- tration under the Ford adminis- tration and said President Ford had realized that "expendi- tures by the VA are necessary expenditures; they're as much a part of war as guns and am- munition." Nonetheless, "there's no question that we have to make many improvements in the VA," Roudebush said. He cited the need to adjust to the age and the needs of the veteran popu- lation. 'Legionnaire's disease' toll hits 26; probe continues ..... DE kept arou agar tinui ness Th troit their of an brea FO ficia close were town P H I L A D E L P H I A (A) --As a new team of investiga- tors beganslooking yesterday for a toxic substance that could have caused the "legionnaire's disease," authorities reported the 26th death caused by the disease. Health officials also announc- ed that a third person who at- tended a recent Eucharistic Conference, a worldwide gath- ering of Catholics held here 10 days ago, had been hospitaliz- ed with the disease. ALL THE OTHER 165 victims, including the 26 persons who died, were connected with a state American Legon confer- ence held here last month. Three investigators, all ex- perts in industrial toxins, or manmade poisons, were looking at possible environmental fac- tors for the disease, including air pollution, construction sites, and weather patterns. The investigators were from the National Institute for Oc- cupational Safety and Health, the research division of the fed- eral Occupational Safety and Helenth Administration. AN EARLIER investigation had concentrated on the hotels where the legionnaires stayed, including the Bellvue - Stratford headquarters for the July 21-24 convention. The latest death was that of Harold Stump, manager of the legion post at Milton, Pa. Stump, who had attended the convention, died Monday night at a Milton hospital. Numerous possible causes, such as bacteria or virus, have been ruled out by researchers, who still say they're stumped by the outbreak. WIILE THE LATEST inves- tigation began, officials of the Bellevue say they think their hotel has been unfairly singled out. They said 8,000 persons had stayed at the hotel, one of the city's largest, during and since the legion convention and only the legionnaires became sick. The intensified police activity followed a Sunday. night out- burst which Police Chief Philip Tannian termed "a small-scale riot." He said the trouble developed when roving gangs of blacks at- tacked whites and blacks alike at a rock concert in Cobo Hall, near the Detroit riverfront. POLICE SAID about 400 per- sons tried to crash the concert without a ticket. A number of pedestrians in the downtown De- fall yesterday, 5,310 police offi- cers were available for duty, just a couple hundred short of the normal complement. Police imposed a 10 p.m. cur- few on everyone under 18 years of age. Tannian said 25 adults and 55 juveniles were detained for their part in the Sunday night dis- turbance but most were releas- ed. POLICE CONTENDED thei Monday night tightening of tht young gangs had shown somi S I~~ SKY KING Aug. 18-22 STUDENT NIGHT 50c Admission with Student I.D. COMING AUG. 24 13 RASPUTIN HOURS: Fri. & Sat. 8 p.m.-2 a m WEEKLY HOURS: p.m.-2 a.m 516 E. 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