Sunday, March 24, 1968 rHE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Sunday, March 24, 1968 VHE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three CONCENTRATE ON PLATFORM: Thompson's PIZZA tt TH IS COUPON IS GOOD FOR Repubican Governors Abandon off 50c off- O osition to Nixon Nomination 0N1A MEDIUM OR LARGE ONE ITEM N rnr A & I n17-7A f s (Ok MOKE) PILLA COUPON Is Good Only Monday thru Thursday, March 25-28 National Negro History Week Committee TODAY: BLACK STUDENT INVOLVEMENT AT A WHITE UNIVERSITY Aud. A-Angell Hall 3: 00 P.M. WASHINGTON (v) - Republi-, 1 can governors are abandoningi their efforts to line up supportj i for a moderate to oppose former . vice president Richard M. Nixons for the GOP presidential nomina- tion. Instead, Gov. John H. Chafee of Rhode Island said the GOP; state executives will concentrate on developing recommendations for what he called progressive planks in the party platform. Chafee, who heads the Repub- lican Governors Association, pre- viously had urged other moderates among his colleagues to line up1 behind Michigan Gov. George Romney. When the latter withdrew from- the race, Chafee backed New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller, but_ Rockefeller eliminated himself as an active candidate last Thurs-; day.I 'Not Picking' "After having Scranton, Rom- ney and Rockefeller shot out from under me, I'm not picking anybody else," Chafee said. The Rhode Island governor in- dicated doult that there will be1 any national movement of any1 consequence to draft Rockefeller, Platform Hearings Chafee said Rockefeller has assured him that he will partici- pate in a swing of GOP state ex- ecutives around the country for regional hearings on proposed platform planks. Beginning May 7 in Seattle, Wash., the governors will sound out grassroots sentiment in the although Gov. Raymond P. Shafer may fly to Boston May 10 after of Pennsylvania said that Rocke- a morning hearing in.-Detroit. feller could not be ruled out. Chafee said he thinks Rocke- Rockefeller has said he would feller's presence will help make accept a draft but doesn't believe the touring group an "exciting, there will be one. active road show." Rockefeller, who heads the GOP governors' policy committee, has said he expects to speak on issues in an effort to "help my party- and its presidential nominees- define the great issues with clar- ity and to face them with cour- age." Nixon already has announced that he intends to confer with all Say Army Nerve Gas Kills Sheep SALT LAKE CIT'Y ' -- State officials are convinced that a mist of lethal nerve gas was blown 30 miles from a top secret Army chemicalwarfare testrarea on March 13, killing 6,400 sheep in western Utah's Skull Valley. The Army said yesterday that its investigation will continue in the remote region 50 miles south- west of Salt Lake City- and that "no definite cause of death" has yet been determined. The head of a special Utah in- vestigating team said yesterday that "we are as positive as med- ical science can ever be" that nerve gas tests conducted at the Army's top secret Dugway Prov- ing Grounds killed the sheep. Dr. D.- A. Osguthorpe said he feels "sufficient tests" have been made to link the deaths with Army operations March 13. Gov. Calvin L. Rampton also said he is convinced the Army was to blame. He has urged the fed- eral government, to reimburse sheep ranchers for their estimated $300,000 loss. "We have narrowed the cause of death to an organic phosphate compound - the kindthat is a component of nerve gas," Osgu- thorpe said. To Wild party's course. 26 Republican Chafee said final arrangements gestions on are not complete, but the group planks. governors for sug- possible platform May Take Seat Powell Returns Crowd; Harry Myles-"Are You Turning White?" Dr. Al Loving-"Does Your Education Make You a Bad Nigger or a Good Nigger?" Ernie Attah-"You Sho' Are Lazy" Dr. Charles Innis-"What's More Beautiful than Onyx?" DISCUSSIONS TO FOLLOW NEW YORK (P)-Adam Clayton Powell, back from Bimini with a defiant message of Black Power, was mobbed and cheered in a wild, rain soaked Harlem parade yes- terday. Although he was silent on his own plans, others hinted Powell might try to retake his seat in Congress, from which he was ousted a year ago. Bare headed and smiling in a driving rain, Powell stood on a ladder on a street corner in the center of Harlem and shouted through loudspeakers: 'Sock It To 'Em' "Let's sock it to 'em. I want LBJ to hear me in Washington." Powell hasn't been home for more than 18 months for fear of arrest for court contempt stem- ming from a $211,500 libel judg- ment Non-Violent "We're non violent, but we've got to walk with chips on our shoulders, and if anybody knocks them off, kick the hell out of 'em," he cried. Powell waved a dog eared copy of the report of the President's Communists Discuss Czech cLiberalization Commission on Civil Disorders - which concluded that last sum- mer's riots were caused mostly by white racism. Powell made the three finger salute--"W" for Watts-and, he said, double V for victory over white racists and Uncle Toms. Arrived Friday Powell arrived in New York Friday night, surrendered to au- thorities and was- paroled on promise to appeal the contempt conviction within two weeks. He said he viewed this trip as the opening of his re-election campaign. "Any Negro crazy enough to run against me is the first Negro to be crucified in the North," he said with a smile. Special Election One of his former aides, John H. Young, who had declared he would enter the June 18 primary, said he will bow out if Powell "makes a real effort to take his seat in Congress this coming Monday." If Powell does not claim the seat he won in a special election last April, Young said he would oppose him. James H. Meredith, first Negro to enter the University of Missis- sippi, also had announced for the Democratic nomination b e f o r e Powell's return. District Democratic leaders en- dorsed Powell last Thursday. Newman Social Action Committee Presents: A Forum on Seasonal Farm Workers A FILM. "HARVEST OF SHAME" -a CBS Documestary with A Panel Discussion: FATHER JOSEPH MELTON REV. WILLIAM BENALLACK MR. JACK CARPER PRAGUE ()-An official Czech announcement s a i d yesterday that party chairman Alexander Dubcek and other officials went to Dresden, about three hours from Prague byucar, to discuss "economic and political issues" with orthodox Communist party leaders. News media in Communist Eu- rope outside Czechoslovakia were silent on the meeting and its par- ticipants, but informants here said they included Leonid Brezhnev, Poland's Waldyslaw Gomulka and Walter Ulbricht of East Germany. All are orthodox Communists. Concernedj Despite assurance from Czecho- slovakia that it remains committed to the Moscow alliance, its allies are known to be concerned about repercussions from Prague's wave of "socialist democraticization." Poland has just gone through two weeks of antigovernment stu- dent disturbances. The liberal trend was under scored by a statement yesterday from Romania, a rebel in terms of foreign policy, but dogmatic at home. Party chief Nicolae Ceausescu announced every R o m a n i a n "should be able to freely express his views on policies of the Com- munist party," indicating this also applied to criticism. "We must not fear public de- bates," he said at a Central Com- mittee meeting. Meet at Dresden1 The choice of Dresden for the meeting put it virtually out of reach for the scores of Western correspondents here and its selec- tion was assumed to be deliberate. Since taking over in January from Stalinist Antonin Novotny as new first party secretary, Dub- cek has met with Brezhnev, Hun- gary's Janos Kadar and Gomulka in separate talks. He was reported turned down twice when he asked for a similar session with Ulbricht, head of Czechoslovakia's fourth Commun- ist neighbor, and a critic of the liberalization program. Criticize Poles In public debate here, Polish Communist leaders have been cri- ticized for supressing student demonstrations with undue harsh- ness. The East German press was chided for giving a one sided pic- ture of the Czechoslovak domestic situation by emphasizing the views of the anti-reformist party wing. Czechoslovakian n e w s p a p e r s have been confiscated in East Germany and Czechoslovak news- men have been expelled from Po- land. There also were reports of other travel restrictions and rigid searching of Czechoslovaks bound for the two countries. '.Polish Students End Sit-In Demonstration Nelson A. Rockefeller WARSAW, Poland OP) - War- saw's defiant students ended three sit-in demonstrations yes- terday after gaining an appre- ciable measure of popular support. At Polytechnic College, 4,000 students yielded in the face of threatened mass expulsionscand an awesome show of police force. At Warsaw University and the College of Agriculture, several thousand students abandoned 36 hour and 12 hour sleep-ins. The protests were basically against alleged' police brutality in stopping demonstrations against what the students call "slander- ous and false" reporting of events in the state controlled press. . The students appealed to have their arguments receive publicity. Since a March 8 campus dem- onstration at Warsaw University, students across this Communist ruled nation have taken up the. crusade for more liberalization of their socialist society. At the two day Polytechnic sit- in, students painted their resolu- tions and slogans on signs and draped them on the administra- tion building, which faces busy midtown streets. Hundreds of Warsaw citizens flocked to the campus to contri- bute food to the bivouacked stu- dents. More than 10,000 Poles as- sembled in front of the school Friday night to shout support for the students. School officials promised im- munity to the demonstrators if they broke up during the night instead of carrying the sit-in to its scheduled morning conclusion in defiance of the college rector and Communist authorities. Hundreds of helmeted police encircled the school to bolster the rector's demand. Singing the Polish national anthem, the stu- dents packed their cards, guitars, text books, and blankets and went home. By dawn, police had removed all signs from the school buildings. Posted notices said yesterday's classes were cancelled. The Communist party news- paper Trybuna Ludu accused in- ternational Zionist centers of a canrpaign of "slander and spittle" against Poland. "On the pretext of acting in protest against cases of alleged anti-Semitic incidents in our country, Zionist centers are or- ganizing an international spitting campaign," the newspaper said. By "alleged anti-Semitic inci- dent," the newspaper apparently was referring to a Polish propa- ganda campaign putting the main blame for student demonstrations and eruptions of street rioting on Zionist enemies of the state. In a speech Tuesday night, party chief Wladyslaw Gomulka attempted to tone down .the at- tacks .on Zionists. But 'there are persistent signs that he has not been entirely successful. These in- clude crude slogans such as "He- brew Jewish Aggressors" at a party staged factory rally protest- ing the Israeli attack on Jordan. Adum Clayton Powell Arab Backed Resolution CodmsIsraeli Raids UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (P)- India, Pakistan and Senegal laid before the U.N. Security Council last night an Arab backed resolu- tion calling for condemnation of Israel's massive raid against al- leged terrorist camps in Jordan. The proposal also warned Is- rael that in the event of further such actions, "the Security Coun- cil would have to consider such measures as are envisaged in the U.N. charter" - economic or mil- itary reprisals. The three sponsors acted after compromise efforts stalled after the United States and other Wes-1 _\ I I I CINIBUILD Saturday and Sunday Picnic o The Grass Directed by Jean Renoir, 1959 tern nations insisted that the res- olution also deplore "violent acts" - interpreted to mean Arab com- mando raids on Israel. Just before the three nation resolution was made public Is- raeli Ambassador Yosef Tekoah urged the council to act against the so called Arab "freedom figh- ters" to make sure they did not interpret the absence of UN ac- tion as indifference. Freedom Fighters Some council members doubted that the resolution could muster the nine votes required for ap- proval, since it made no reference to anti Israeli operations origin- ating on Arab territory. The council meeting was de- layed for more than six hours while negotiators sought to find a formula which could; win un- animous approval. Settled Soon Some expressed hope the issue could be settled before long so the 15 nation council could convene. receive the compromise resolution and adopt it by unanimous vote. The council had been called to meet at noon, and the members were all present, but they delayed the meeting while the negotiations went on in basement conference rooms. DELI HOUSE resumes next Sunday, March 31 at 5:30 P.M. (No Deli this Sunday) PAUL MEURISSE "Wholesome farce; a fa pagan moral; Panic ont Review. 75c 7:00 & 9:05 Call 662-8871 CATHERINE ROUVEL antasy with a somewhat the Grass." - Saturday ARCH ITECTURE AUDITORIUM I - lq THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN GILBERT & SULLIVAN SOCIETY presentts PRINCESS IDA I I I