Friday, March 29, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Pooe Five Frd__Mrc 9_1. TEMCHGN1AL Paae Fi"vy 0 CAMPAIGN ROUNDUP: McCarthy, Kennedy Face' LBJ Forces in Indiana By The Associated Press Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy said. yesterday he had taken steps to enter his name in both the Indiana and Florida primaries. The Minnesota Democrat thus will have a face-to-face showdown with Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, who was to file his entry last night for the Hoosier state primary May 7. McCarthy, who is facing Presi- dent Johnson in the Wisconsin primary April 2, said he also had sent papers to be filed in the Flor- ida primary May 28. Papers entering Indiana Gov. Roger D. Branigin as a stand-in for President Johnson were expect- ed to be filed this afternoon. Branigin said he agreed with recent statements of Presidents Truman and Eisenhower that to show "division and discord at home" during the Vietnam war is "bordering upon treason." Conflict Meanwhile, in Milwaukee, Rich- ard Goodwin, long-time Kennedy ally who has become a high of- ficial in Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy's organization, said yesterday it would be "very hard" for him to stay with McCarthy when the campaign moves on to primaries where McCarthy and Sen. Ro- bert F. Kennedy clash directly. In Florida, Democrats qualified two national convention slates to- day - one strongly favoring Pres- ident Johnson and another pledged to Sen. George A. Smathers. Johnson Slate Allan Milledge, a Miami attor- ney and chairman of the McCarthy slate, called the Smathers group a "masquerade" for people sup- porting Johnson. "The delegates from our slate will never cast one single vote for Lyndon Baines Johnson," Milledge said. If McCarthy fails in his presi- dential bid at the convention, Mil- ledge said, the McCarthy delega- tion would swing to Sen. Robert F. Kennedy of New York. Besides Smathers, a strong sup- porter of Johnson in Congress, the regular party included on its list of delegates Florida Atty. Gen. Earl Faircloth, running for the U.S. Senate as an advocate of Johnson's conduct of the Viet- nam war, and former Gov. LeRoy Collins, Faircloth's primary op- ponent, a former under secretary of Commerce and once a racial troubleshooter for the Johnson ad- ministration. Nixon Hits Dems Richard Nixon, faced with a po- tentially heavy Republican cross- over vote in the election next Tues- day, told a Sheboygan audience on his final full day of Wisconsin campaigning that "It would be very easy to stand before an au- dience such as this and say, as do the two Democratic opponents of Lyndon Johnson, that the way to get out of Vietnam is just end it, whatever the cost may be." "I can say that and many might cheer, for the moment. But my friends, I say that too often in the past we have found that American diplomats have lost at the conference tables what our fighting men have been fighting for on the battle field and we're not going to let it happen here." Anti-War Riot Closes Madrid U MADRID (A') - Police clashed yesterday on the campus of Ma- drid University with students protesting U.S. policy in Vietnam. The incidents led to an order clos- ing theduniversity indefinitely. The disorders started at noon when police entered buildings to tear down posters attacking the Vietnam war and teaching regu- lations. By midafternoon, helmet- ed riot police, some on horseback and swinging whips, were battling students at various points on the campus. Students at the law building erected barriers to try to prevent the police from entering. About 200 other students staged a sit-in at the school of political and economic sciences and barred doors and windows with heavy wire. About 20 mounted police charged into a group of shouting students waiting for a bus. Students re- taliated by stoning police vehicles. Reports from Sevilla said riot police battled an estimated 1,500 university students demonstrating to protest recent detentions of students. Police finally dispersed the stone throwing groups. By HARVEY WASSERMAN Daily Editorial Director, 1966-'67 CHICAGO (CPS) - With the entry of Eugene McCarthy and Robert Kennedy into the race for the Democratic Presidential nom- ination, general interest in the Chicago convention this summer grows each day. But New Left interest in the convention was born long before the race for the nomination gained its semblance of conflict. Debate within the New Left over whether or not to go to Chi- cago to demonstrate and what forms the demonstrations should take has been going on for some time. At least one group, the newly formed Youth Internation- al Party (YIP) will definitely be in attendance. The new party, popularly known as the Yippees, has an of- fice in New York and is setting one up in Chicago. The Yippees, according to one of their leaders, Jerry Rubin, will establish a com- munity in Chicago's Grant Park. "The New Left invented the teach-in, the hippies invented the live-in and the Yippees have in- vented the do-in," he says. Each day a pot will be passed for money with which to buy food; there will be bands (Coun- try Joe and the Fish, Arlo Guth- rie, the Fugs among others), Tim- *SATYUN4 INC. BOOTS " LEATHER CUSTOM + UNUSUAL CLOTHING 215 S. State, 2nd floor i E s i a r r r . . Yippees Set Up Shop In The Windy City othy Leary, Allen Ginsburg, and many others who have indicated that they will attend; the Beatles have been invited. The, Yippies will hold a press conference an- nouncing an end to the war, will nominate a pig made of vegetables for president and eat him. The Yippees' idea is the dem- onstration of a cultural revolu- tion, the illustration that com- munity is possible, even in Chi- cago, and the introduction to a new and healthier style of life. Other groups of the New Left have been opposing a mass con- frontation in Chicago largely on a political level somewhat apart from the substance of the Yippee approach. They argue that such activities are not only unneces- sarily physically dangerous, but might well be turned against the radicals by Johnson forces or might be used by the liberal peace forces of Robert Kennedy and Eugene McCarthy. Jones and Spiegel argue that it would be politically safer as well as more productive to concentrate on draft resistance and local or- ganizing on specific political is- sues rather than removing the radical base to a mass Chicago confrontation. Ann Arbor Civc Theatre Presents A Musical Fantasy FINIAN'S RAINBOW Mail To: Ann Arbor Civic Theatre, * Box 1993, Ann Arbor t t t. t Wednesday, April 10 ($2.25-2.00) t k Thursday, April 11 ($2.25-2.00) t t No. of tickets Friday, April 12 ($2.50-2.25) desired for: Saturday, April 13 ($2.50-2.25) t t Sunday, April 14 ($2.25-2.00) e t E Name Address - (Please enclose self-addressed, stamped envelope if you t t wish tickets mailed to you)mm ii aswaarrrrwwrw inmmininm"mmm""""" ninmmm""" nin" mm " SUBSCRIBE TO THE MICHIGAN DAILY _j r i C l 1 I r - ALL CAMPUS MIXER West Quad Friday, March 29 f ;iris ree 9-1 Guys 50c 11 Featuring SUMMER SEMINARS I Find it with a Daily Classified Robert Kennedy Addresses Utah Students D 1 I Downtlown HONDA stat Sales 4 WENK Sales & Service, Inc. Service o tn 211 E. ANN ST. 6 5Parts-8 7 't" ANN ARBOR 665V8637Accessories Ma e St. Son St. Ave. SAve. uN St. SPAGHETTI DINNER T IME Is Sunday, March 31, at SDT sorority, 1405 Hill St. from 5:00-8:00 P.M. PRICE: $1.25 ALL ARE INVITEDI BRING YOUR FRIENDS! in American Maritime History and American Literature and the Sea June 24-August 2,1068 The University of Connecticut and The Frank C. Munson Memorial Institute of American Maritime History at Mystic Seaport Mystic, Connecticut For details write: Office of the Director Munson Institute Mystic Seaport Mystic, Connecticut 06355 - -- B'NAI B'RITH H ILLEL FOUNDATION 1429 HILL STREET PASSOVER SEDARIM & MEALS * APRIL 12-20, 1968 U PLEASE READ CAREFULLY s Hillel Non-Members N I Members and Guests 1 Special Package Rate for all 16 Meals ... . ... $33.00 $37.50 Each Seder (Complete Ceremonial & Dinner) .. $ 4.25 $ 4.75 * Each Lunch...............................$ 1.50 $ 1.95 * Each Dinner......................... .... $ 2.50 $ 2.95 I a Enclosed is my check_. , money order-- (check appro- * priate space) drawn to "B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation Trust ; Account" for $ __ to cover the sfollowing: (BE SURE c TO SPECIFY.); .QI ALL 16 MEALS Q Seder, Friday, April 12 [ Dinner, Tuesday, April 16 * QI Lunch, Saturday, April 13 Q Lunch, Wednesday, April 17 7]Seder, Saturday, April 13 ] Dinner, Wednesday, April 17 ! Q]Lunch, Sunday, April 14 ] Lunch, Thursday, April 18 * QIII Dinner, Sunday, April 14 7 Dinner, Thursday, April 18 I ii Q Lunch, Monday, April 15 [ Lunch, Friday, April 19 ] Dinner, Monday, April 15 7 Dinner, Friday, April 19 a Lunch, Tuesday, April 16 ] Lunch, Saturday, April 20 i --- ------.---_---- --------------- -------II. I NAME (Please Print) CAMPUS ADDRESS ___.__ _ PHONE_ ._ I NOTE Ui 1. Make your reservations now, in person or by mail. Not by phone * 2. Payment in full must be made at the time of reservation. 3. There will be no cancellations or refunds. 4. Reservations will be filled in the order they are received. I * 5. Hours: Seder 7:00 p.m. * Lunch 12:15 p.m. * Dinner 6:00 p.m.I CUT OUT THIS ADVERTISEMENT AS RESERVATION FORM 5728-1968 * I I - ---- inmmminmmmmiinmmmmmmmmmmmmminmmm mmmmminmmminmmmmmmmm ininmmmmininmmmmm rmh on After, Hor every Friday and Saturday 1:30-4:00 A.M. featuring the Ron Brooks Trio Plus Two admission still only $1.00 the Fifth Dimension 216 W. Huron Phone 761-7866 r __ ..® i I I 11 I I "THEMST THE NEGRO ORY OF AMERICAN" I I PETITION I -Al Blixt Bodypainting Ann Arbor 8mm F.F. Winners We the undersigned students of the University of Michigan respectfully request that the University of Michigan History De- partment alter its decision to offer a course on the "History of the Negro American" announced on February 16, 1968, in the following manner: 1. We believe that the course should be called the "History of. the Negro American" and offered as a separate course, because it has been effaced from the history textbook in the United States of America, therefore, we ask that the University of Michigan Department of History concede the "History of the Negro American" and teach the course until the "History of the Negro American" is totally integrated into American History textbooks. 2. We believe that the course should - be offered beginning August 1968 at the very latest. There is no reason to delay it until the winter of 1969; by January of 1969, the His- tory Department will already have had over 2 years to prepare for the course; 3. We believe that the course should be a 3 or 4 hour, non pre-requisite course opened to graduate and undergraduate students for credit toward a degee. 4. We urge that the History Department take the opportunity to add a qualified Historian to the faculty who has spe- cialized in the "History of the Negro American." 5. We urge that the History Department take this opportunity to comply with the Greene report and appoint a qualified Negro professor from tke list of 14 (9' Negroes and 5 Whites) names submitted to Dr. W. B. Willcox by Richard H. Ross February 1, 1967. (see attachment). 6. We believe that the University could procure the services here to, if the University is unable to recruit someone from The original list given to Professor Willcox February 1, 1967 is as follows: NEGROES: HISTORIANS 1. Dr. John Hope Franklin, Chairman of the History Depart- ment, University of Chicago 2. Dr. Joseph Harris, Political Science, Univ. of North Carolina 3. Dr. Benjamin Quarles, History Department, Morgan State University 4. Dr. St. Clair Drake, History Department, Roosevelt Univ., Chicago 5. Dr. Otey Scruggs, History Department, Univ. of California, Santa Barbara 6. Dr. Edward A. Toppin, History Department, Virginia State 7. Dr. Nathan Huggins, History Department, Massachusetts Univ. 8. Dr. George Woolfolk, History Deportment, Prairie View College, Texas 9. Dr. August Meier, History Department, Roosevelt Univ., Chicago WHITE HISTORIANS 10. Dr. Kenneth Star'npp, History Department, Univ. of Calif- ornia, Berkley 11. Dr. Leslie Fischel, History Department, Univ. of Wisconsin 12. Dr. Dwight L. Dumond, History Department, Howard Uni- versity 13. Dr. Louis Harlem, History Department, Univ. of Maryland 14. D. Gilbert Osofsky, History Department, Howard University The list of names recently obtained of young scholars im historv: 1. (Dr.) John Blossingame, Yale University (complete PhD in June '68) I UNION-LEAGUE SYMPOSIUM 68 presents FCUA LA LY A SHAW LIVERMORE ROBERT SKLAR BRUCE WHITE I ice ! Pn r-! +k n 'I I