THURSDAY, OCTOBER 12,1967.,' THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE R, R _% THURSDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1987 THE MICHIGAN DAILY A 1 'FURF4CiIJ ar,,, CORE To Abandon SETTLEMENT DELAYED: Ghettos of Brooklyn Steel Strike Vi iolence Continues sed Peace Pact NEW YORK (P) - As weaken- ing sunlight and chill fall air foretell the coming of winter to the littered streets of Bedford- Stuyvesant, angry members of the Congress of Racial Equality are preparing to abandon Brook- lyn. Disguted by a year of bitter, debilitating, sometimes violent fights with the city administra- tion, the police, the antipovertyj program, school teachers and moderate Negro leaders, the ac-I tivists have decided to head forj a rural retreat, and a simpler life. "We will buy our land, settle, there and till the soil," said Ro- bert Carson, 32, director of Brook- lyn CORE. "We want to clean federal and state, should all get together and get behind this. We'll begin with cooperatives. It's farmland. Not very good land, I understand, but we are creative people, we will be able to do something with what we get. We just want something to call our own.'' Carson said the idea came to uespite Propoi I PITTSBURGH (P - Striking steel haulers served notice yester- day that a proposed peace pact hadn't ended their tumultuous, two-month walkput. Strike break- ing rigs were fired at and stoned from Chicago to Pittsburgh. several people because of the In Ohio, a group of drivers about to vote on the proposals troubles of Brooklyn CORE. tra- hammered out Tuesday by a sev- ditionally an active, militant en-state mediation panel jumped chapter. up and left when they heard some World News Roundup trucks by stee Mike strike 1,000 m around Tube p men bl empty Thre one fir vania I bullets hurt. Willi and ot peatedl Kusley the ag said th engine panies "The; were moving out of a near- Teamsters Union officials in l plant. Pittsburgh approved the pact, but Boano, a Youngstown i acting national President Frank leader, said , half of the Fitzsimmons said in Miami he had nen poured into the streets nothing to say to the press, now or the Youngstown Sheet and ever. lant gates. Police said the One group of truckers-repre- ocked trucks and stoned an senting 50 firms-set a meeting one. immediately to vote on the pact. e trucks were stoned and But the 68-member National Steel 'ed on along the Pennsyl- Carriers Association said it Turnpike. Two were hit by wouldn't be able to vote before near Chicago. No one was Saturday. The strike had claimed one life am Kusley of Gary. Ind., as well as a score of injuries when her strike leaders have re- the mediators representing gov- y deplored the violence. ernors from seven states drafted said he was happy with the pact in Pittsburgh during a reement, but the strikers t wo-day session. ey aren't kicking over an A tentative greement was reach- until the trucking com- ed between the Teamsters and agree to the settlement. strikers nearly two weeks ago, but re's non oint in havin the independents turned it down Daily-Richard S. Lee PAX' MARKS THE SPO'T The "torch of peace" is carried down State Street as Ann Arbor citizens demonstrate against the war in Vietnam after a rally on the Diag yesterday. The torch is on its way to Washington, D.C. for a huge anti-war march on Oct. 21. FURTHERS DECLINE: Death of Guevara Weakens Castroism in Latin America ourselves out spiritually, get away By The Associated Press from this disease that the power WASHINGTON -Speaker John structure has become. W. McCormack lashed out at Viet- "We want to get away from nam war dissenters yesterday and these cold, cold ghettoes. Not drew a standing ovation from only the temperature, but the House members of both parties. cold, calculating exploitation that In a speech to the House, Mc- 1leaves our brothers and sister nar- Cormack quoted Vo Nnguyen Giap, cotics addicts, winos, drunkards the North Vietnamese defense and prostitutes." minister, as saying U.S. dissent Carson, 5 feet 8 and powerfully represents "a valuable mark of built, "black and bearded like sympathy for North Vietnam." my ancestors," says he and 300 While he said he does not ques- follwers will leave quietly, but tion the right of dissent, McCor- hardly in dispirited defeat. mack said those who do criticize Evacuation plans have not no- in and out of Congress, should ticeably disrupted routin in I'consider their responsibility in CORE'S storefront office on busy doing so. Nostrand Avenue, where what- ever is being done is constantly JAKARTA, Indonesia - Acting interrupted .by two insistent tele- President Suharto shook up his phones and a constant stream of Cabinet yesterday to give himself visitors. greater powers, dismissing nine of that relations with Britain are de- teriorating because of what he called Britain's "flirt" with Egyp- tian President Gamal Abdel Nas- ser. He said that Britain "is causing us a lot of trouble at the United Nations." Other Israeli sources said that Britain was pressing for an unconditional Israeli withdraw- al from areas occupied in the.June 5-10 fighting, without the direct Israel-Arab peace negotiations de- manded by Israel. In London, there was no imme- diate British comment on the Is- raeli statement. VATICAN CITY-A Congress of 2,500 Roman Catholic laymen seeking a greater role in their Church opened yesterday andwas told to consider its week-long meeting "a prolonged love-in." The congress took the focus of attention away from the 13-day- old meeting of the laymen's spirit- ual leaders at the Catholic synod of bishops, who are groping with new aspects of their own role in the church. 11,'10 o Liu livid(, 41 1 115i meetings until we hear what the 9- 1 companies are going to do." said They said they wanted the David Haugh of Pittsburgh. Teamsters to reopen negotiations. By WILLIAM L. RYAN AP News Analysis Even before Bolivia announced the death of Ernesto Che Guevara, the Castroist movement in Latin America was gasping for breath. Convincing proof that Che is gone f can be a blow from which the ex- port brand of Castroism may never recover. If Castroism had a symbol in Latin America, it was not Fidel Castro himself, but Che Guevara. Che was one of a disappearing breed, the professional revolution- ary, apostle of guerrilla war and incessant violence, prototype of the romantic underground con- spirator whose appeal primarily was to the young. There are not many aspiring Ches left in Latin America. Pictures of the body of the fallen Che are convincing evidence,,and it will be difficult for the revolu- tionaries to dispute them. For the guerrillas in Bolivia as elsewhere, the symbol of their revolutionary hopes has been snatched away. The movement, without its knight in armor, easily loses its luster. Castroism already was becoming a negligible force outside Cuba. Indeed, Che himself personified its weaknesses. He was the standard- bearer for what Fidel Castro had represented years ago, but certain- ly not for what Castro became. There is reason to believe, in fact, that Che had broken with his one- time "maximum leader." If the final chapter of the Gue- vara saga means the decline of the guerrilla movement, Fidel Cas- tro can lay much of the blame upon himself. His failures brought Castroism into disrepute and the Communist movemest to confu- sion. Castro began the process soon after he reached power by turning on heroes of his own revolution: Huber Matos, Camilo Cienfuegos, Anibal Escalante and many an- other. At the same time, the econ- omic confusion reigning in Cuba dulled much of the glitter of Cas- tro as a champion of the people. He soon mortgaged himself to Moscow and owed his very ex- istence to the Soviet Communists. Meanwhile, the Soviet Union was finding it more profitable to rely on traditional means of in- fluence and infiltration in Latin Amei'ica and was cautiously shying away from overt connection with guerrilla and terrorist violence. Castroism lost important support. Castro himself frequently gave vent to his bitterness on this score. But probably a more serious blow I to Castro's hopes was his own fall- ing out with the Che Guevara. That came in the spring of 1965, after Guevara had made a trip to Red China and Africa. Guevara palpably had been un- happy about Soviet interference in the Latin-American revolutionary movement in the wake of 1962 Cuban missile crisis showdown with the United States. In 1963, he wrote an article in- sisting it would be an "unpardon- able error" to neglect armed struggle. Probably Castro felt the same way, but he relied wholly on Moscow. Summoned there in 1964, Castro got the full treatment and later appeared to compromise with the cautious view. Guevara took off for Peking and then Africa. He returned to Havana in March 1965. All the evidence indicates he had a violent row with Castro, then. Che disappeared, and Castro' said- he was on a revolutionary mission elsewhere. Tonight & Friday The Music Room, dir. Satyajit Ray, 1958 The great Indian director presents Chekhou's tale, with music by Ravi Shankar. From the director of THE APU TRILOGY "Each of his works is a version of perfection." -TIME magazine 7:00 & 9:05 ARCH ITECTURE AUDITORIUM , STILL ONLY 50c m A sign in the front window gives the only clue: "Black Power Means Land. Help us acquire this by donating $1." Brooklyn CORE has put a down' payment on 100 acres of land, Carson said, and hopes to settle on it by spring. He won't say where it is, other than it's "out- side the north." It's "where our people are," and it's "close to Africa." All that makes the South the most likely location. Suharto announced that he had rearranged the structure of the military to put it under his direct command. He retained the port- folio of defense minister. He added that changes in the Cabinet were necessary because the Parliament elections scheduled for 1968 could not be held on time, but did not elaborate. Informants said it was unlikely elections could be held for at least two years. hi "We need more, much more," he JERUSALEM-An official Is- said. "We think the governments, raeli spokesman said yesterday is 23 ministers. NOW SHOWING "AN EXTREMELY EROTIC MOVIE!" --Playboy Magazine "EACH SCENE A WORK OF ART." - Cue Magazine Presented by act & The Research Association for Michigan Negro History, Inc. "SIMPLE" Speaks His Mind in Ir ir 11 presents the 3rd annual HUMPHREY BOGART Film Festival! Beautiful Bogie in- FRIDAY-The Big Sleep Casblanca SATURDAY-The Petrified Forest The Maltese Falcon SUNDAY-All Through the Night Treasure of the Sierra Madre double features-starting at 8 P.M:-$1.50 with FREE FOOD EXCLUSIVELY ONI WWarner Brothers Records Lansing Civic Center SUN., OCT. 15, 7:30 P.M. Tickets: $4.50, $3.50, $2.50, $2.00 Mail orders: Civic Center Box Office 505 W. Allegan East Lansing, Michigan Detroit Masonic Temple 500 Temple SUN., OCT. 29, 8:00 P.M. Tickets: $5.00, $4.00, $3.00, $2.00 Mail orders: Include self- addressed, stamped envelope. IA E KTTERLING'S Starring INGRID' Nig9ht GamesIGD THULIN 7:00, 9:15-Mon.-Thurs. 7:00,9:15, 11:30-Fri. & Sat. 6:00,18:15, 10:30-Sun. A DRAMATIC PRODUCTION WITH MUSIC Directed by POWELL LINDSAY SATURDAY, OCTOBER 14, at 8:00 P.M. TRUEBLOOD AUDITORIUM Huron at State Tickets $1.00 & $2.00 at Auditorium Box Office open thropgh Friday 12 to 3, & 5 to 7 P.M. and an Saturday 12 to 5, & 6 to 8 P.M. ' -, 01 I IN UNION-LEAGUE AE UNION-LEAGUE HOMECOMING '67 presents THE SIXTH ANNUAL DANCE FESTIVAL Three Performances in Hill Auditorium HARKNESS BALLET . . . . . . .. Fri.,dOct. 13,8:30 Program: Night Song; Feast of Ashes; Zealous Variations (Schubert, Op. 83) ; and Time Out of Mind OLAETA BASQUE FESTIVAL . . . . Sun.,Od.22 830 Dancers, singers, and instrumentalists combine to provide dances and music of the Basque country-seven provinces on both sides of the Pyrenees, both in Spain and in France JOSE MOLINA BAILES ESPANOLES... Fri., Oct. 21,8:30 Program of Spanish songs and "ancing, including folk, classical, and f"amenco HOMECOMING '67 presents I presents THE DOORS with THE RAMSEY LEWIS TRIO The Long Island Sound and BUFFY SAINTE-MARIE Fri Oct. 20 .M. Bld 9 12 3 IIv Iiv. "' 0 lki t""/"%kl " dT II III