Wednesday, October 2, 1968 THE-,MICHIGAN DAILY Paae Three Wednesday, October 2, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Paae Three .... China toenarge purge of party' TOKYO (R5) - Red China marked its 19th anniversary yesterday with an announcement that'Mao Tse-tung's 26-month-old purge is to be widened and deepend to "purify" the 17 million members of the Chinese Communist party. Mao's top aide and heir-apparent, Defense Minister Lin Piao, told a half million cheering Chinese in Peking's Tien An Men-Gate of Heavenly Peace-Square at the height of nationwide celebrations: "We definitely will liberate Taiwan, Formosa, and are ready at all times to Fort as backers fail in Senate cloture vote Treaten new strike NEW YORK VP) -The teachers' union threatened yesterday to call another city-wide strike of the 1.1 million-pupil school system un- less the Board of Education en- forces an agreement that red to a settlement over. the weekend of the teachers' three-week strike. The board of the Ocean Hill- Brownsville experimental school district, which set off the first strike, ignored key elements in the peace pact yesterday and a brief clash between parents, pupils, tea- chers and police erupted at police barricades outside one school. Another school in the district Was closed because of trouble.' "The possibility of another strike should not be ignored," Al- bert -Shanker, president of the AFL-CIO United Federation of Teachers said at a news confer- ence. "It is very real. We don't want it. But our patience is run- ning out." Under the agreement, that end- ed the strike, teachers were to re- turn to their jobs in. Ocean Hill- Brownsville. The local board in Ocean Hill said it would defy the agreement., %wipe out all enemies who dare to invade us." Despite these tough words broadcast from Peking, the accent was more on the internal politics of the proletarian cultural revolu- tion than on the oft-repeated fear of an American attack as Mao and his associates reviewed the annual parade through the huge square. Japanese correspondents report- ed workers and peasants dominat- ed the march, reflecting Mao's new priorities for these classes. The fanatic Red Guards-stars of last year's show-bi'ought up the rear, evidence they have been down-, graded. Army troops carried no weap- Qns.; In' a National Day joint edito- rial, the People's Daily, Liberation Army Daily a n d Theoretical Journal Red Flag. said the purge- which has been concentrated at the top - will now "lay the basis for the work of consolidating and building the party by conscien-' tiously purifying the class ranks." The objective is to shake up the party's now predominantly intel- lectual-military structure to in- clude "advanced elements among, the industrial workers" - t h e class Mao has decreed shall hence- forth lead the cultural revolution. The editorial also advocated making room in the "party's bas- ic organizations and t h e party committees at all levels" for Com- munists who have "stood firmly" by Mao's line. This presumably would include activists such as Mao's wife, Chiang Ching; Lin's wife, Yeh Chun; and others. Delas foiht kWASHINGTON W) - The Sen- ate refused yesterday to cut off a filibuster against Abe Fortas' no- °' rmination to be chief justice and Ithe appointment was put aside at least temporarily. :On motion of Majority Leader Mike Mansfield, D-Mont., the Sen- ate took up the defense appropria- tion bill after the anti-filibuster vote fell 14 short of the required two-thirds majority. The vote to halt debate on a motion to take up President'John- son's nomination of Fortas was 45 for and 43 against. Voting for cloture-that is, to ompi n' nChicago close off debate-were 35 Demo- crats and 10 Republicans. Against Chicago police came to grips with a black youth yesterday during disturbances at the Waller High j were 19 Democrats and 24 Repub- School over a black history course. licans. BOMBING HALT: SHanoi'denounces HHH pledge' b A DTO (lM A, 'ATr v 1- STw n rin _ if nlnntnrl nrncirinvtt 1,%tiit ^"lta if hn . .hn+c rIS( V") - A Norn viewa1- 1 eiecteu presuiue, uut uxuny i ne bev mese spokesman rejected yester- saw "evidence of Communist will- dipJ day Hubert H. Humphrey's quali- ingness to restore the demilitariz- he's fied bomb-halt pledge as "abso- ed zone between North and South C lutely nothing new." Vietnam." gati "It's still the same demand for The North Vietnamese have of-on reciprocity, which we reject," said fered verbal assurance that "posi- orde Hanoi Politburo member Le Duc tive effects" would follow an un- Tho, who is one of the North Viet- conditional American 'bombing A namese delegates at the Paris stop but sources close to Commun- Yor peace talks. ist authorities said Humphrey's fron Humphrey made the qualified pledge was by no means uncondi- the pledge to halt the bombing in a tional. - vers campaign speech Monday. "This looks suspiciously like an by Humphrey said in that speech instance on the principle of reci- he vould stop bombing the North procity which Hanoi in the past Lu has had nothing to do with," said "a one informant. "And it looks sus- con piciously like the position of Pre- sident Johnson's administration inr spite of its new formulation." The Soviet news agency Tabs echoed this skepticism, saying "no new approach' could be detected in Humphrey's announcement. It said Humphrey's speech was "clearly calculated to win over to his side the numerous voters reso- lutely denouncing the dirty war OCTOBER 1-13 in Vietnam and demanding that it be ended." Some foreign diplomats feel, however, that Hanoi might sur- prise its Moscow supporters, as it did when it accepted President Johnson's offer of preliminary peace talks in Paris. They reason that Hanoi could calculate Humphrey will prove easier to deal with 4han any of his rivals. Following this logic, the North Vietnamese might decide to make a response to his speech, thus hoping to ease his way into the White House. Ellis Rabb "The North Vietnamese would' pad Susa taking a risk," said one Western lomat, "just like Humphrey said s ready to take a risk." )fficials in the U.S. peace dele- ion here declined all comment Humphrey's speech, obeying ers to steer clear of the presi.- tial election campaign. .t the United Nations in New k, visiting foreign ministers m the Philippines and The Ne- rlands demonstrated the di- se overseas reactions sparked Humphrey's pledge. JM.A-H. ns of The Netherlands called if real concession" and "a very structive proposal.'' Mansfield said he would an- nounce in the next two or three days whether another attempt would be made to win Senate con- firmation of Fortas. In the meantime, while the Senate returns to legislative busi- ness, he said the nomination will remain the pending business on the executive calendar. "The Senate has refused to face squarely the issue of the nomina- C tion of Mr. Fortas," Mansfield said after the vote defeating the mover - to put the Senate's debate-limiting T r cloture rule into effect. IRT Mrs. Fortas was in the visitors gallery for the vote. The vote came on the fifth da'y of a filibuster against a motion by Majority Leader Mike Mansfield, D-Mont., to take the Fortas no- mination up for consideration. Fortas' chances for nomination W 1 suffered setbacks within Congress last week. i'' WASH Senate Republican Leader Ever- terday pen ett M. Dirksen, once an outspoken dissented f supporter of confirmation, said Friday he would not vote to shut Cardin off a filibuster against the nomi- District of nation and said he was now un- "absolutely decided on whether to back For- posed upon tas. this archdi Dirksen said he switched posi- tion because of new information The c which he did not disclose. cyclical ba There "are things that still don't and the c meet the eye," Dirksen said. openlysup At the same time, the president In a st of the American Bar Association, I t which endorsed Fortas, said the Archdioces ABA's committee on federal judge- dinal O'Bc ships did not have all the facts dissenting when it backed the nomination. cyclical bu "I do recognize that all of the qualifying facts were not before the commit- The seni tee," .said William Gossett. "Some said: "Spa of the facts brought about by the decide acc Senate committee were not pre- conscience sent before it voted." ception in Gossett, however, said any move permissible to take a new look at endorsing to preserve Fortas would have to be made by and sacred the chairman of the ABA com- The card mtitee, Albert Jenner of Chicago. the encyc Jenner could not be reached im- Father ma mediately. soever for; Dirksen's reversal was hailed by The autl the leader of Senate opposition to tain priest: Fortas as "very significant." drawn fron Michigan Republican Robert P. ing fromt Griffin also said he expects the fessions to switch to prompt other defection. to' teach. f ,justice nominee Abe, Fortas H CONTROL: rrdinal 1putnishes ashington priests INGTON (,)-Patrick Cardinal O'Boyle announced yes- nalties for 39 priests of the Washington area who have rom his view on the birth control issue. nal O'Boyle, who is Roman Catholic Archbishop of the Columbia and part of Maryland said his action was y necessary if I am to fulfill the solemn obligations im- Ln me as the shepherd and teacher of all, Catholics in ocese. I had no other choice." ontroversy involves full acceptance of Pope Paul's en- anning artificial birth control. Some priests dissented, ontroversy received public notice, with some parishioners porting their dissenting priests. A Contemporary Approach to S peareS A4 atement issued by the e of Washington, Car- oyle said some of the priests accept the en- ut insist on adding a sentence. hence which he quoted ouses may responsibly ording to their own that artificial contra- some circumstances is and indeed necessary and foster the values ness of marriage." inal said: "Nowhere in lical does the Holy ke any provision what- such an exception." ,ority to exercise cer- ly functions was with-- m the 39 priests, rang- the right to hear con- the right to preach and HHH "As Now as a Nehru Jackett" ... Los Angeles Times Directed by Music by Can IFC COMMENTARY '68 Sv atican asks dialogue VATICAN CITY W-) - The Va- tican appealed yesterday to Ro- man Catholics to join with other Christians and members of all faiths in an international program of contacts with atheists to help make the world "more human'. The appeal, issued in apolicy- making locument by the Vatican's Secretariat for non-Believers, said such a program of dialogue was not intended to convert people but to express "brotherly love" and to meet the needs of "a humanity, come of age," Such dialogue, said the deu- ment, would by "every form f meeting and communication be- tween individuals, groups and, * mmunities to bring about a greater grasp of the truth and to achieve better human relations in a spirit of sincerity, respect for persons, and mutual trust." Communists w er e included among the nonbelievers. The Vatican recommended that all types of atheists should be met in contacts and discussions a't the local, national and international levels. Debate: DR. TIMOTHY LEARY vs. DR. SIDNEY COHEN Tickets: $1.50Available in LobbyofS.A.B. HILL AUDITORIUM-Oct. 6-8:00 P.M. Monday thru Friday 9-4 or at Hill Box Office after-5 on Oct. 6 CINEMA II BLOW-UP Dir. Antonioni with David Hemmings; Vanessa Redgrave THREE SHOWS 7-9-11 Fri.-Sat.-Oct. 4-5 Aud. A 75c ID req. LONDON {P) - Fifty-five Roman Catholic priests signed a letter published in the Times today to warn their bishops they could not loyally o b e y Pope Paul's teaching on con- traception. Among the signers w e r e, Father Paul ;Weir, assistant priest who was suspended for, speaking out publicly against the Papal encyclical, and Father Kenneth Allan, a parish priest in the same diocese. U I I1 FRONTLASH '68 Help fight voter backlash and apathy. Do grass-roots voter registration to elect liberal candidates Nov. 5th. I TV-HI F RENTALS Locally Owned and Operated Expert Service and Student Rates HI F STUDIO 121 West Washington DOWNTOWN ANN ARBOR-NO 8-7942 across from Old German Restaurant Things Are Really Jumping At THE APARTMENT So make the best of an evening out . . Enjoy your favorite, cocktail and the best in gourmet food while listening or dancing to THE DON BAILEY ORCHESTRA Every Friday and Saturday Night On Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday hear Ge'r arinan CREWSpare working daily, canvassing and telephoning in Monroe, Ypsilanti, and Ann Arbor CALL: 662-7394, 665-9836, 662-4476, 662-447- for information. Tell us when you can 5 I I