POLITICIZED STUDENTS: NEW FOCUS See editorial page Y A6F 41P an ~E~aitj SAINESS high-73 Low-50 A pall hangs over the nation. Vol LXXIX, No. 1 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Thursday, August 29, 1968 Ten Cents Twelve Pages HU PHREY 0 I TED 0 FIRST TTLE B LOT; LOOP POLICE, DE 0 STR TORS B I Daley attacked from podium From Wire Service Reports A CHICAGO-Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey received the Democratic nomination for the presidency early this morning after the most tumultuous 'convention session inE years. Humphrey received 1761 votes on the first ballot. Sen. Eugene McCarthy tallied 601, Sen., George McGovern 146. Nearly all black delegates 'voted for District of Columbia favorite son the Rev, Jesse Phillips. There were a scattering of other votes, including three for Alabama football coach Paul "Bear" Bryant. Humphrey did not receive the nomination until after the' fallout of the battle between police and demonstrators in Chicago streets had reached the floor of the convention. The loyal delegation of Georgia cast its votes, only two of which went to the' Vice President, "with reluctance," pro- testing what'its chairman called "the atrocities in the streets - of Chicago." Protest march turns to brawl 1 w Chicago Mayor Richard J. Da-' ley, Illinois delegation chairmano 1 O~el'was denounced on the floor of the convention. When Illinois was reached in the robl call of statesE for presidential balloting, many delegates started to boo and hiss and continued- until after the dele-} gation had cast 112 of its 119 votes for Humphrey. 011n11n u "Daley was earlier attacked in Connecticut Sen. Abraham Ribi- By STEVE NISSEN coff's nominating speech for Mc- TGovern, "With George McGovern The Regent's cdecsion ont Julyas President of the United states, 19 to postpone action of contro we wouldn't have to have Gestapo versial revisionsin the bylaws tactics in the streets of Chicago." averted a major confrontation be- tween student leaders and the Daley waved furiously at the niversity administration. But podium, trying to get Ribicoff to !he controversy is far from over. step down. When the uproar on the' floor died down, the senator Reforms in the Regents' byla\vs stared at Daley and said, "How are still high on the priority lists hard it is to accept the truth." of the students and administra- Ag tors for the fall semester. At issue'A o adfo delegate "Ishte arethestrctue o th Oficeoffrom a floor microphone, "Is there. are the structure of the Office of amy rule under which Mayor Daley] Student Affairs and the can be compelled to end the police ptive and judiciary systems of the state of terror being perpetrated." University comniunity. ] Daley later told the Associated Twice during the summer de- Press: "The security is needed to' bate became heated when bylaws prevent violence. The same forces were suggested which included re- creating disorder outside the con- strictions on public speakers, vention hall are creating it in-' classroom behavior and several side." other controversial proposals. Stu- Humphrey, who watched the dent leaders felt the proposad by- battle in Michigan Ave"ue'from laws were not in the best interests his 26th floor suite at the Hilton of their constituents and had been Hotel, denounced the demonstra- formulated without their proper tors. consultation. "They don't represent the CONDUCT RULES ., people of Chicago," he said. But the Regnts' lack of action "They've been brought in from without machinery to legislate all over the country. We knew left the University Community this was going to happen. It was without machinery to legislate all programmed."{ end adjudicate conduct rules. Immediately before the roll call University President Robben W. began on the nominations, there Fleming filled the void by in- was an abortive attempt to re- structing each of the University's cess the convention for the pur- 17 schools and college to pass "in- pose of moving it out of Chicago. terim rules" governing disruptive Permanent convention thairman student behavior. Carl Albert refused to recognize] the delegate wishing to make the, That decision met with severe motion as pandemonium broke disapproval of students leaders:otion aheandonr who now privately say they ex- It on the loor. pect to provide opportunities to delegation could be gaveled back challenge the interim rules asseddtobr.a by the faculties.esasd to order. Alter the roll call was com- The regulations approved by the pleted, Illinois moved to make the various colleges were, almost with- nomination unanimous. out exception, identical to Stu- On the vote on the consent mo-z dent Government Council's own tion, there was a loud chorus of, rules which prohibit "individual no votes. or mass acts that destroy Uni- Chairman Albert ruled the vote versity property .or significantly was unanimous. 3 Chicago's Richard J. Iesnfin h l By DAN OKRENT Special to The Daily CHICAGO - As the busses carrying delegates and newsmen to the International Ampitheater passed through the largely Irish and Polish section of Chicago ringing the Stockyards, the only phenomqnon more visible thain the lily-white character of this island suspended in the sea of the black ghetto is the control one man exerts here. Lining the streets on both the ride to the Amphitheater and the ride back are the residents of the neighborhood. Little kids dressed in dirty tee-shirts and their par- ents in "sit-on-the-stoop summer apparel stand at the curb, waving uniform plastic American flags and smiling their greetings to the visitors. And, pasted on the front win- dow or door of almost every house is a machine-printed sign in green and white: "Welcome Democrats -- Richard J. Daley, Mayor." TENTACLES OF POWER The tentacles of Mayor Daley's power reach throughout Chicago. All city buildings and all con- struction projects are signed with the mayor's name in mammoth script: the striped-vest Chicago Host Committee, a corps of sev-' eral hundred youths who serve as guides for the delegates and other convention visitors, have his name written on their hatbands and most members of the Illinois dele- gation, as well as several in other state contingents, are wearing "Daley for -President" pins in their lapels. I asked Mayor Daley the other day, if he has all this support, why doesn't he actually run? His answer came in a guffaw: "Who says I'm not running?"' But beneath his jest, there is a truth which Richard Daley re- cognizes well: He has no needto run for President. The job, should he win, might diminish his power. ASTONISHING INFLUENCE The, influence that ,Daley has within the Democratic party is astonishing. It was fairly well manifested Tuesday night, when convention chairman Carl Albert ruled Wisconsin's motion to ad- journ out of order, then quickly made an about-face when Daley chose to move adjournment him- self. But it actually goes far deeper than the surface obeisance and homage that Democratic bigwigs pay to the short, squat m'ayor. Daley's actions this week have, indicated perhaps better than could any amount of honorary courtesy exactly how powerful he' is. Long before the gavel camea down to open the first convention session Monday, almost all observ- ers had conceded the nomination to Hubert Humphrey. But Sunday night, the mayor of Chicago opt- ed to hold out on an endorse-! ment. Only then did the Draft Kennedy movement, first put into gear by former Ohio Gov. Mike; DiSalle in mid-July, gain any credence. SCREAMING HEADLINES When it was reported that Daley was in contact with Sen. Kennedy's office, the newspapers jumped into screaming black headlines; when he finally en- dorsed Humphrey, Daley's name was back on top of the page in larger type than before. He is a master of timing, a savvy politician who knows vell the import of the well-placed pause just as much, he is an actor who isbgrounded solidly enough in the basic principles of upstag- ing to manage to constantly re- tain the attention of the cameras. But this is not to say t h at Richard Daley is a creation of good stage-managing and easily- duped journalists; within the party, his might is derived from actions that never make the news papers. One Illinois delegate who lathered himself in oaths of what he would do to any news- m11 ,, xr ,11rar a ,nn p tn- and high-sounding authority that they all foolishily believed him. But the delegate, after our con- versation, insisted on retaining his anonimity. It is clear, then, how Daley op- eratest why he does it is another matter altogether. It is not out of principle, this is quite sure; any man who publicly endorses Hubert Humphrey primarily because of his position on the war, and who barely one day earlier had been saying that Teddy Kennedy would actually be his first choice, cannot be motivated by principle and belief. What does drive him. and this is important because it is generally symptomatic of both of the major parties and the ,people who run them, is not the politics of opinion but the politics of domination. First and foremost in the mind of Richard Daley, the man who is generally credited with "deliver- ing" the 1960 election for John F. Kennedy, is victory. What dis- tinguishes the men chosen by the Daley organization to run as the party's candidates is their ability to attract votes. Thus, Barrett O'Hara, the aged congressman from Chicago's south side who has been a cog in the Daley machine since the time when it was still the Kelly' ma- chine, was dropped from t h i s year's slate in 'favor, of young, glamorous-and-liberal-Abner Mi- kva. Mikva has publicly said that'' his views vary widely from those of the mayor, but Daley well recognizes that Mikva, this year. Police drag.protester fror ndemonstration BULLETIN Large crowds began gathering again outside the Conrad Hilton Hotel last night after Vice President Hubert Humphrey captured the Democratic presidential nomina- tion. Heavily armed national guardsmen moved in, ap- parently replacing Chicago police forces at the downtown hotel. By JOHN GRAY Special to the Daily CHICAGO - An attempt by opponents of the Vietnam war and of Vice President Hubert Humphrey to stage a pro- test march on convention headquarters at the Hilton Hotel , ;ended in a club swinging, tear-gas drenched melee yesterday. No good estimate on injuries was immediately available, but witnesses said at least 300 were probably hurt. The brawl between about 3000 demonstrators and Illinois National Guardsmen and police reached riot proportions. It began in the afternoon when demonstrators, mainly Yippies and members of the National Mobilization to End the War in Vietnam began congregating in Grant Park in preparation for the planned march. There was one incident in thea'-' _.." '.._.' Ass4ociated Press park when demonstrators at- tempted to 'haul the American rushed in to stop them.,i er a flag down to half-staff and policeAmruhditospte. Then the demonstrators, kept in o lin e by Mobilization mnarsha ! iebyMblzainmasas 1 a e.started, to march out of the park eight abreast. They were met byd p a four-deep skirmish line of Chi- cago police, armed with clubs andt tear gas grenades. The demon -jj jJ jU J lo litie s strators were told that the march was illegal and that they would GUATEMALA W) - U.S. Am- be arrested if they proceeded. bassador John Gordon Mein was March leaders began negotiations machine-gunhed to death yester- can accomplish that which with police officials, ' day on a street of Guatemala City O'Hara might be incapable of- BRIDGES BLOCKED by unknown assassins. The attack winning. Meanwhile, groups of demon- on t h e 54-year-old ambassador DOC TRINE OFE DN strators began to drift away from occurred about 5:30 p.m. as he the crowd toward the Hilton, was driving along from his home 'The doctrine that the Daley which is located across the Illi- to the embassy. types ascribe to is one of exped- nois Central Railroad tracks and The ambassador's car was ap- iency. They want simply to win, Michigan Avenue from the park. parently intercepted by a vehicle and once they have won they As they approached the tracks, carrying assassins w h o- blocked wallow in the fruits of "control. th f d that all brides over in sin For its own sake, nothing more.teyfundgethe mtersection. Although. Daley is perhaps the the railroad were blocked by re- Mein apparently tried to escape m.ost efficient and the mpst suc- cently moved-in National Guard but was cut down by bullets a few cessful practitioner of this politi - troops. yards from his car. cal style it would be quite unfair -What happened next is uncer- Last Jan. 16 leftists killed two to say he is alone. Even men like tam, but somehow demonsti'ators American diplomats a few blocks Michigan's Sen. Philip Hart, an and police began clashing. Tear from where the attack on Mein gas clouds began forming a n d occurred. politician who is noted at least some of the gas drifted across The daylight terrorist killings for his honesty, suffer from t h e Michigan Avenue to the vicinity underscored the savagery of civil plague of American politics, of the Hilton. Many demonstra- warfare that was believed to have tors were beaten, several of them taken more than 1,000 lives---per- LIKES 'EM BOTH to unconsciougness. haps as many as 4,000-since All during this campaign, Hart Meanwhile, many demonstrators President Julio Cesar Mendez has said, "Humphrey great, Mc- had gotten out of Grant Park and Montenegro took over in July Carthy great. I like 'em both. I'll had begun to congregate at the 1966. support which ever one I think Hilton, which was to become the Extremist groups of both the can win." While Humphrey and scene of the bloodiest violence of right and the left have been re- McCarthy may not be as dissimi- four days, of demonstrations. The ported behind the bloodshed, with lar as some of the "Clean for crowd began to chant: "Peace gangster elements profiting from Gene"' people. would like to be- now; Daley must go, We want both sides. lieve, it would be remiss to say Daley dead." Constitutional guarantees were that it could possibly be easy for INDISCRIMINATE ASSAULTS suspended because of the violence a principle-oriented politician to Then, without warning, police, but were restored June 17. accept either man with the same with clubs swinging, charged into In Washington, the State De- amount of ease. the ranks of the demonstrators. partment said President Johnson, So it is probably unfair to single People on the sidewalk in front of Secretary of State Dean Rusk and out Richard J. Daley for attack as the hotel were beaten indiscrim- all the colleagues of Mein were the man who is solely responsible inately. One man, dressed in a suit "shocked and grieved by the slay- for the "Old Politics" and the and tie, was beaten unconscious ing." vitality that particular style still and two cops continued to beat A spokesman said the United has within the American system. him about the abdomen as he was States "will request the govern- But when you stop to think that carried from the scene. ment of Guatemala to conduct a this one man is' so tremendously A cameraman for the National full investigation of all the cir- See RICHARD, Page 2 See DEMONSTRATORS, Page 2 cuistances of the tragedy." KELLEY REPORT: interfere with the free movement of persons or things on the campus." ' The SGC regulations also pro- hibit "intentional disruption of University functions by depriv- ing 'others of needed quiet, light, heat, or other physical conditions of work." The interim ,rules will .be ,en-} forced by the judiciary bodies in the schools and colleges which normally adjudicate cases involv- ing classroom conduct such as cheating and plagarism. SEEK COMPROMISE These rules will apply, Flning says, until compromise bylaws can be worked out by an ad hoc committee which is presently drafting bylaws dealing with the. proposed University Council-a MSUs Harlan not in conflict From Wire Service ReporU Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley rul- ed Tuesday that Michigan State University trustee C. Allen Har- lan is not guilty of conflict of interest. But, in' a separate statement released simultan- eously, Kelley said he could not support Harlan's bid for renom- ination. Kelley explained the decision to not support Harlan for re- election was unrelated to his le- gal opinion which was requested by state representatives William P. Hampton and Martin Buth. Hampton and Buth are both Re- Republicans requested a con- flict of interest report -on him in an effort to embarrass him because he had criticized May's financial dealings. In Chicago where he is at- tending the Democratic Nation- al Convention, Harlan said: "If tone of five specified Democrats) feels that I have taken any position that is not in the best interest of the total university and political party of which I am a part, I will not seek renomination. "If you get one to agree with Fe. n- Z'all n t ie vn,, -n 'None was available for imme- diate comment. Harlan added that he did not feel "this opinion of Frank Kel- ley hurts my possibilities in any way whatsoever" for renomina- tion at t h e Democratic State Convention this weekend in Grand Rapids, In his press statement, Kelley said he was "not speaking in my role as chief legal officer of the state, but rather as a concerned public official and as one given leadership responsibility by my political party." Kelley listed two questions; conclude that while I am sure that Mr. Harlan has made sig- nificant contributions to the un- iversity, I cannot under the present circumstances support his renmination as a member of the board... Kelley's formal ruling said Harlan is former president and director of Harlan Electric Co.. whose subsidiary firm, Central' Electric Co., has financial deal- ings with MSU. But, it added, Harlan re- signed as director of Harlan Electric in 1957 and as presi- dent in 1963. His son, John M. ' anaarem am