HREE THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1967 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE TH THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 9,1967 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE TI fREE ::. GOP Expands in States; LOCALS STILL STRIKING: UAW Negotiates Three-Year Tentative Pact with Chrysler I Democrats Hold Big Cities -Associated Press CLEVELAND MAYOR-ELECT Carl B. Stokes (center), shakes hands with his defeated opponent Seth C. Taft (right), and smiles at incumbent Mayor Ralph S. Locher. 4 "_ Elections Produce Enthusiastic Response from Nero Leaders' WASHINGTON (R) - Republi- cans firmed up their base for the 1968 presidential contest by cap- turing the Kentucky State House in Tuesday's elections, but Demo- crats were cheered by retaining their holds on the big cities of Philadelphia and Cleveland. Democrat Carl B. Stokes, a Negro, demonstrated by his elec- tion as mayor of Cleveland that it is possible for one of his race to take the top office in a major city even where Negroes are a minority. He takes a place in history as the first Negro to accomplish that. The 40-year-old lawyer could be one of the big guns of 1968 Democratic campaigning, parti- cularly in areas with a large Ne- gro vote. Mayor James I. Tate's reelec- tion in Philaedlphia is another important one for the Democrats. The patronage and power that go with the mayor's office can be decisive in a close statewide elec- tion. Vietnam Referendums For President Johnson, who presumably will seek another term in the White House in next year's election, it was heartening that San Francisco decisively turned down a ballot proposition for U.S. withdrawal from Viet- nam. The referendum vote was 2 to 1 against a pullout. A Vietnam vote was also on the ballot in Cambridge, Mass., but the result may not be known for three weeks. On the other side of the Viet- nam question, there was the fac- tor that Louis B. Nunn, success- ful GOP candidate for governor of Kentucky, had made it an issue in his campaign. "Tired of the War?" one of his slogans asked. "Vote Nunn." In other city contests which attracted particular national at- tention, Richard G. Hatcher, Ne- gro Democrat, was elected mayor ,of Gary, Ind., and Kevin White won in Boston over Mrs. Louise Day Hicks, foe of busing Negro children to white schools. In Gary, where the outcome teetered. uncertainly thro u g much of the night, Hatcher was certified yesterday by the Lake County Election Board as the winner by 1,389 votes in the city of 180,000 population. But Republican Joseph Radi- gan, a white businessman, kept open the possibility of a court challenge. Democrat segregationist John Bell Williams ,was elected gover- nor of Mississippi by a whopping majority. Looking to 1968, Nunn's elec- tion as governor of Kentucky means that when he takes office next year the Republicans will hold a majority of 50 governor- ships for the first time since 1954. The division by parties will shift from the present 25-25 to , 26-24 for the GOP. Those 26 Republican states will have a total of 304 electoral votes, 34 more than needed to name a president. Aside from the Kentucky vic- tory, GOP National Chairman Ray C. Bliss pointed to the elections for the New Jersey legislature as: DETROIT (0) - The United Auto Workers and Chrysler Corp. reached tentative agreement on a new three-year contract covering 95,000 hourly rated workers last night. The agreement came only hours before a midnight strike dead- line, but too late to avert wide- spread local walkouts that crip- ples the company's production. The UAW announced te agreement after a 34-hour bar- San Franciscans Defeat Antiwar Proposition 2=1, gaining session in telegrams to local presidents. It said talks were being broken off without agreement on a con- tract covering 8,000 salaried workers because bargainers were "to exhausted to go on. A new dealine was set for local at-the-plant agreements, but the union did not immediately dis- close when it would be. The tentative contract was al- most identical to the record in- evidence his party is still on the upsurge demonstrated in the 1966 SAN FRANCISCO ( -This elections. Republicans took con- first major city in the nation to trol of both houses of the legisla- vote on Vietnam policy smashed ture from the Democrats. down by a nearly 2 to 1 margin Tuesday the idea of a ceasefire 'Very Significant' and immediate withdrawal. Bliss said the campaigning in The vote was 132,402 NO and New Jersey was on the national 76,632 YES by citizens of an area issue of "Why Wait Until '68" where there have been several and called the results very sig- massive antiwar demonstrations nificant. -the most recent an October at- Cleveland Republicans had put , tempt to force a shutdown of the up a highly attractive candidate Army Induction Center in Oak- in Seth Taft, 44, a liberal and land. active in civic activities. Attorney Joseph Alioto, the Gary is even more overwhelm- fisherman's son who won out ingly Democratic under normal Tuesday as mayor, shouted "good" conditions but plainly a white- over the outcome of Proposition Negro contest developed there. P, the Vietnam issue. BELKIN PRODUCTIONS PRESENT SUN.NOV. 19- 7:3 P. m. MASONIC AUDITORIUM ALL SEATS RESERVED: $2.50-$3.50-$4.50-$5.50 ON SALE NOW: All J. L. Hudson Ticket Centers, Downtown, Northland, Eastland, Westland; all met- ropolitan Grinnell stores and Masonic Auditorium. MAIL ORDERS: Send stamped, self-addressed enve- lope to Masonic Auditorium, 500 Temple, Detroit, Mich. 48201. In Washington, congressional supporters of President Johnson's Vietnam policy hailed the result as a victory. But advocates of de- escalation termed the result meaningless. Gov Ronald Reagan, a Repub- lican who recently has attacked what he describes as the Johnson administration's "credibility gap" on the war, opposed Proposition P. He said "I don't believe cities should have foreign policies." "When President Johnson sees these results, he's going to be shaken," John Richard Moran, coordinator for the Peace and Freedom Party, told 350 persons at a post-election rally. dustry pact won at Ford Motor Co. through a 46-day strike that ended two weeks ago, but in- cluded one major benefit not gained there - wage parity for Canadian workers. The company said Canadian workers, now some 40 cents an hour behind their American coun- terparts, would draw even with the U.S. workers over the three- year life of the pact. The Ford pact gave some 160,000 auto workers at that company wage and benefit increase over three years of roughly $1 an hour over the current scale of $4.70. That pact was valued at 6 per cent. With wage parity the Chry- sler pact likely will be somewhat higher - there are 12,000 Chry- sler workers in Canada - but neither side placed an estimate on it. Sudden suspension of the talks left several questions unanswered as bargainers hastened home for 'sleep before a scheduled return to the table Thursday. With the status of salaried workers still up in the air there was n6 way to gauge the impact on Thursday's production. Car output was reduced to 36 per cent and truck production cut to zero Wednesday as work- ers in four states jumped the gun on the midnight strike dead- line. THIS WEEKEND NEW YORK (P) - The broad victories, some of them historic, won by Negroes in Tuesday's elec- tion brought uniform - smiles to the faces of moderate and mili- tant Negro leaders yesterday, along with cautious predictions that a trend to disregard color may have begun. Few were as enthusiastic as A. W. Willis, defeated in last sum- mer's primary election as a can- didate for mayor of Memphis, Tenn. "We're going to see the elec- tion of more and more Negroes ... acceptance by the white com- munity of responsible Negro of- ficeholders will become. more and more a normal happening," Willis said. Elect Negro Mayors "The election of Negro mayors in Cleveland, Ohio, and Gary, Ind., signifies a stunning defeat for black militants who argue that gains can't be won by the ballot," said Sen. Edward W. Brooke (R-Mass.), himself the first Negro elected to the Senate since Reconstruction. ". . . It shows the American Negrohe can achieve through lawful means," Brooke said. But he warned that "the hun- gry, those with no jobs, those liv- ing in deplorable conditions are going to take little hope from the elections in Gary and Cleveland." 'Living Proof' Whitney M. Young Jr., direc- tor of the National Urban League, said Democrat Carl B. Stokes' successful battle in Cleveland, and the narrow election of Demo- crat Richard G. Hatcher in Gary, are "living proof of what polit- ical organization and wise use of the ballot can do to benefit any group." STARTS SATURDAY STOP WORRYINGI HELPI I$SON THE WAYI "HEC!I 'm H PHELP! I'm lostonla tropic island! HELPI'm Y i'~ q~Iyrn Those victories plus the defeat in Boston of Louise Day Hicks, an opponent of busing to provide ra- cial balance in public schools, show, Young said, "that while the backlash is there, it is not as pow- erful as the demagogues would have us believe." In addition to those and. other Northern victories, Negroes were elected for the first time since Reconstruction to the state legis- latures of Virginia and possibly Mississippi. Six Negroes captured county supervisor, constable and justice of the peace posts in Mississippi, bringing to 24 the number of Ne- gro officeholders in that state, while James M. Bradby defeated a white incumbent who had held the post of sheriff in Charles City County, Va., for 43 years. Y CARAWAN "Guy goes effortlessly to the heart of the song and performs it . .. as it was made to be sung .. doing the most creative field work in the South today." -Alan Lomax "Many thanks for your inspirational songs." -Rev. Martin Luther King at the 330 MAYNARD Fri., Sat., Sun. 8 p.m. $1.50, after 2nd set-$1.00 FREE EATS State Picks New Mayors; Hubbard Wains 13th Term By The Associated Press Orville L. Hubbard, Dearborn's mayor since 1941, got support from 87 per cent of those voting in the Detroit suburb Tuesday as he was elected to his 13th con- secutive term. Hubbard defeated challenger Charles J. Nemeth; 26;454 to 3,937. Hubbard's third oldest son, John Jay Hubbard, was successful in his 'first bid to be elected to the Dearborn City Council. 'In other elections in Michigan: Jackson voters defeated incum- bent Mayor Mary Bennett. They elected Maurice "Bud" Townsend Jr., 5,852 to 3,769. The incumbent favored a city income tax and a fulltime mayor. Townsend op- posed both. Grosse Pointe Mayor David Burgess, who was unopposed, poll- ed 1,013 votes in a light turnout. Kalamazoo elected a new may- or and four new City Commission members. Of three incumbents returned to office, Paul Schrier, 60, was elected mayor as the top vote-getter with 10.103. III COMING! Seats Now! I "HELP! j4citcen! The Colorful Adventures of rTHE BEAThES aremore UoG than eer.In C(LORI { EASTMANCOLOI A UNITED ARTISTS SHOW TIMES: SAT. 7-9-11 SUN 7-9 MON. 7-9 TUES. 7-9 I~. BY ASTRIKING AND ORIGINAL TRAGI-COMEDY S~TUSTR E I' I I 1 0 .1 4 rf - - 1 - - -- 4 - - A--II I