Sunday, October 6, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY S n do , c ob r 6, 19 8T H IC N D A L LOVE-INS, MARCHES: Students, peace organizations schedule election offensive' The Folks' and NEW YORK (CPS) - With the tions as irrelevant and illegiti-' presidential elections one month mate;1 away, leftist student and peace or- -Mass demonstrations at poll-. ganizations across a broad spec- ing places on Election Day, and trum have begun, planning a "fall various other activities, including election offensive" opening a new leafletting and guerilla theatre phase in the national protest of performances. the electoral system which began. in Chicago last month and which The / important point about Will continue through the inaugu- Mobe's planning," Potter said. "is ration in January. that it provides a chance to re- The National Mobilization tointroduce the war in Vietnam as End the War in Vietnam ('Mobe')', an issue nationally. a loosely formed organization T h e gathering, attended by which has coordinated many mass about 20, marked the first such anti - war demonstrations a n d meeting in the city of radical cam- which called for the protest in pus and peace groups interested in Chicago, is the one group so far protesting the elections, but al- to become specific about its plans. ready the lines of political differ- Mobe leaders say they are call- ence could be seen emerging. ing on students to "find new ways Jeff Shero, editor of the New of voting this year - in the streets York underground newspaper, Rat, rather than in polling places" objected to so strong a connection, since voting for one of the three between the elections and the war. major candidates gives no chance "We should try to tie the protest to vote for ending the Vietnam more to the on-going demands of war now. the movement," he said ,without At an initial planning session becoming more specific. "The war this week in New York, Paul Pot- is kind of an old issue." ter, a former SDS president who Objections wereralso'raised to is now on the Mobe steering com- the idea of counter-election polls mittee, said h i s organization is at which persons opposed to the aiming at a series of national, "de- three major candidates could cast centralized" p r o t e st activities their vote at an alternative polling "leading up to, but not including, place set up, for the day by, the disruption of polling places." protesters. The thrust of the activities, he prOteers. said, will be to link the continuing Other speakers emphasized the war in Vietnam with the concept need for clear explanation of why war in the election protest is being stag- rather than dealing with the sit- ed. While supporting the proposal. uatlon, tensIs to perpetuate it. The for a boycott, one activist contend- uaionrten'stoneretuare. to in- ed, "This is going to be the first program's main features day of the rest of the movement.r -On the weekend prior to the We have to give people good rea- elections, possible presentation of sons for what they're doing," anti-war generals at public hear- Students, Mobe says, are "draw- ings at which /the issues surround- ing the connections between ther ing the war would be presented; war and society as-they see the re- -Delegations of, anti-war dem- lationship of their universities to onstrators visiting the nation's "35 both the war, and the federal gov-r key military bases," locatedmostly ernment." in the East and South, staging Jeff Jones, a memlier of SDS, marches and "love-ins;" York regional assembly this wee -The declaration of November told the group that the Ne w 2 as Vietnam Sunday and urging York regional assembly this week- clergymen opposed to the war to end will be discusing the. possi- speak out against it to their con- bility of calling for a student, gregations; strike prior to election day in --The organization of mass ral- which students stop attending lies on the eve of Election D a y classes in order to participate in supporting a boycott of the elec- activities opposed to the elections. That same proposal will probably be discussed the following week- end at an SDS national confer- ence in Boulder, Colorado. On election day, it urges them to center their activities on "point- ing out the ties that exist between the war machinery and the uni- versity, through all-day teach-ins, confrontations with draft boards qr other actions aimed at forcing universities to e n d military re- search." Students are also urged not to attend classes November 5. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3528| L. S. & A. Bldg., before 2 p.m. of the day preceding publication and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sun- day. General Notices may be pub- lished a maximum of two times on request; Day Calendar items appear only once. ' Student organization notices are not accepted for publica- tion. For more information call 764- 9270. ,SUNDAY, OCTOBER 6 Day Calendar Bureau of Industrial Relations Sem- inar: "Management of Managers, Pro- gram No. 70": North Campus Commons, 8:15 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. and 7:00 to 9:00 p.m. School of Music Degree Recital - Thomas Warburton, Piano: School of Music Recital Hall,4:30 p.m. Cinema Guild: Kirk Douglas and Adolph Menjcu in Stanley Kulbrick's Paths of Glory: Architecture Auditor- ium, 7:00 and 9:05 p.m. Professional Theatre Program: APA Repertory Company in Shakespeare's Hamlet: Lydia Mendelssohn Theater, 8:00 p.m. MONDAY, OCTOBER 7 Electrical Engineering Research Re- view: Registration: Lobby, Chrysler Center, 8:00 am. Bureau of Industrial Relations Sem- iar: "Management of Managers, Pro- gram No. '70": North Campjus Comm~ons, 8:15 a.m. Botany and Human Genetics Sem- inar: Dr. E. R. Sears will speak on "The (Continued on Page 8) The Podium was ;a good fifty feet from the chain link fence that held back the homogeneous crowd yet the advance men had bridg- ed that gap and created a crowd equally as enthusiastic as any created by traditional political hand shaking. The crowd consist- ed of two factions; the true Wal- lace supporters, and the hecklers who, according to Wallace, were in need of a good barber. Be- fore Wallace spoke, the polarized gathering listened to country wes- tern music, and contributed hard earned dollars to Wallace via the Wallace girls who circulated in' the crowd. George Wallace is not a tall man and a good many views were blocked by the numerous micro- phones which recorded the ad- dress. This was a short stop for Wallace and he delivered his stock speech. He spoke of the issues that rang true to the crowd of sup- porters; returning control of the government from the intellectuals in Washington to "folks like yob. and me," stopping the "anarchist movement" that made the streets unsafe for the working man," and winning the war militarily if the Paris peace talks failed. The hecklers were effective enough to cause Wallace- to lose his place twice but also gave him the op- portunity to cut them down." If 3ny of you anarchists lie down in front of my car, it is going to be the last one that you'll even want to lie in front of." As Wallace walked off the plat- form, there was a short scuffle be- tween a few negro students, some police, and a few Wallace sup- porters. As a result of the con- frontation, numerous heated de- bates started between Wallace backers and those who opposed him. These debates were broken up by the police, and the two fac- tions dispersed without further in- cident. Yet one wonders what would happen if some of those anarchists actually did lie down in front of the George Wallace car. 4p ____ I___ _____________ photographed by Jay L. Cassidy pis ill H I L SUNDAY, Oct. 6,7 P.M. Methodist Church Wesley Foundation the corner of Huron and State PETER BERGER Author: Invitation to Sociology- (a Human- Perspective); The Noise of Solemn Assem- blies; The Precarious Vision; and TheSacred Canopy (elements of a Sociological Theory of Religion). ou-author, with Thomas Luck- mann of The Social Construction of Reality. ui BETWEEN TYRANNY AND CHAOS: Are we moving towards a tyranny of the right or a chaos of the left? Sponsored by the Ann Arbor Council of Churches interfaith Committee for Religion and Peace Advertised in cooperation with the Office of Religious Affairs, 2282 S.A.B. You11can't -get anycloser. !II Some men think the only way to get a good, close shave is with a blade. 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