Wednesday, November 6, 196$' THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Wednesday, November 6, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three r. Poor Richard's for fiii"LUNCH BEST FOOD, BEST PRICES IN TOWN Our Special Charcoal Grilled 1/3 Chuck- burger ...........45c Spicy Homemade DAILY SPECIALS Chili..........30c including main course, Charcoal-grilled potato, salad, beverage hotdogr.......,...20c 80c-90c Roast Beef Sandwich 45c featuring Paul's omelettes Ham Sandwich .... 40c authentic Chinese delicacies Tuna Sandwich ....30c Egg Salad Sandwich . 25c 331 THOMPSON Potato Salad .....20c NEWMAN CENTER BASEMENT desserts ..........25c M-F 1130-1:15 Beverages .. ...... 1Oc Try Daily Classifieds, THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN GILBERT AND SULLIVAN SOCIETY RHODESIAN SITUATION Smith faces increasingopposition SALISBURY, Rhodesia (/P) - Wide-ranging political dissent has surfaced in Rhodesia for the first time since its unilateral declaration of independence from Britain. Whatever the outcome of Sal- isbury-London negotiations to settle the constitutional dispute, Prime Minister Ian Smith faces increased opposition from out- side and within his ruling Rho- desian Front party. After independence was de- clared Nov. 11, 1965, Rhodesian whites united behind "good old Smithy" against pressure from Britain, black Africa, the United Nations and the black majority in this territory. Now seriouxs political protest from the right and left of Smith I can be heard. It promises to be- come louder. On the far right is a group Smitli once dismissed as "my lu- natic. fringe." These ultracon- servative elements demand an end to negotiations, declaration of a republic, entrenched white supremacy and closer ties with South Africa. Sewage engineer Len Idensohn bolted the R~hodesian Front in March because of what hensaw as its liberal tendencies, and launched the Rhodesian nation- al party. "The national government of this country has to be kept in white handsfor all time," Iden- sohn told a rally in Salisbury. His first priority would be to oust the 15 black members of Parliament. Among Idensohn's supporters is tobacco farmer Chris Phillips, who has described Prime Min- ister Smith as "a white kaffir." In this area "kaffir" means about the same as "nigger" in the United States. Others are trying to revive the defunct Dominion party. Those who call a phone number ad- vertised in the Rhodesia Herald are urged to band together to protect "the heritage of your children." This group is seeking a suit- able leader. Among the candi- dates are William Harper and Lord _Angus Graham who were dropped from Smith's Cabinet this year. Dominion party boost- ers also are flirting with any Cabinet ministers found unhap- py under Smith's leadership. Smith's Rhodesian Front dis- ciplined right-winger R o b i n James by pushing him out of the party this year. He now sits in Parliament as an indepen- dent and insists that the whole issue revolves around "the sur- vival of the European in Rho- desia." The Smith -party has 10,000 members and 49 of the 65 seats in-Parliament. Landlocked Rho- desia has only about 80,000 vot- ers among its 220,000 whites and four million blacks. To the left of Smith are a Center party, politically unaffil- iated businessmen who are press- Ian Smith The GONDOLIERS or the King of Barataria WED.-FRI., Nov. 13-15 8 p.m. Sat., Nov. 16, 7 p.m. & 10 p.m. LYDIA MENDELSSOHN THEATRE presents the MICH IGAN-ILL INOIS GLEE CLUB CONCERT Saturday, Nov. 9 7:00 & 9:30 Hill Auditoriur Featuring RUSSELL CHRISTOPHER Baritone - Metropolitan Apera Former Member U of M Glee Club Some Main Floor Seats Available Hill Auditorium Box Office Open 8 A.M.-6 P.M. Mon.-Fri. $2.50 $2.00 $1.50 ing for a settlement to end sanc- tions, and two weak African par- ties. Percy N1'Kudu, leader of the blacks' United People's party, was disappointed thattno blacks were represented at the latest British-Rhodesian negotiations. "How can the, future of this country be settled without 98 per cent of the population hav- ing a voice?" he asked. The UPP has 11 members in Parliament and represents lit- erate urban blacks. M'Kudu gets little support from white liber- als. Many black Rhodesians once supported either the Zimbabwe African Peoples Union or Zim- babwe African National Union. Both are now banned and their leaders are among hundreds of Africans held in detention camps. Unlike the two outlawed par-j ties, the UPP believes in working for gradual progress toward ma- jority rule within the narrowL political framework allowed by the white regime. Rhodesia would be renamed Zimbabwe under majority rule and Salisbury would be known as Harare. The strongest parliamentary spokesman for the African is a white independent, Dr. Ahrn Palley, who represents Highfield, a black suburb of Salisbury. Pal- ley has urged the government to settle on Britain's terms. Iirr the by The Associated Press and College Press Service U.S. NEGOTIATORS DELAYED the opening session of the enlarged Vietnam peace talks because of South Vietnam's refusal to attend negotiations which involved the National Liberation Front. Although the NLF challenged the Americans to proceed without the South Vietnamese representatives, U.S. delega- tion sources made it clear Washington would not agree. The first enlarged meeting involving both the Saigon regime and the NLF was to have been held today, a date ad- vanced by President Johnson when he called the bomb halt last Thursday. U.S. negotiators remained optomistic that President Thieu will reconsider his position and attend the Paris talks. The enlargement of the talks to include the four main parties was part of the American peace package that included the halt of U.S. attacks on North Vietnam and Hanoi's tacit acceptance of mutual de-escalation. This meant the presence of the NLF and prompted Thieu's boycott. In Paris a NLF negotiator, Mrs. Thi Binh lists the front's aims at the peace talks as: --Withdrawal of American and allied troops and closing of American bases in South Vietnam. - Self-determination in the South "according to t h e front's political program." - Gradual reunification with North Vietnam. An essential step in the political process, Mrs. Binh added, would be formation of a government of "large national coali- tion" to organize free elections in the South. A prime candidate for coalition with the front, she said, was the Alliance of National Democratic and Peace Forces formed last spring in Saigon and then outlawed by, President Thieu. * . 0 THE NORTH VIETNAMESE accused the United States yesterday of violating its sovereignty and security by flying reconnaissance missions over North Vietnamese territory. The charge was made in what Radio Hanoi said was an official statement of the government issued by the Foreign Ministry.. The statement also accused the United States of "inten- sifying its bombing and aggressive war against South Vietnam since being forced to unconditionally halt its bombing ofthe North." THE SAIGON GOVERNMENT claimed yesterday that Hanoi had urged its commanders to step up the fighting, terrorism and sabotage in South Vietnam. The orders, detailed in a captured document whose au- thenticity, and origin are still undertermined is now being examined by U.S. intelligence experts. Both the Viet Cong and North Vietnam have sworn to continue the fighting while the enlarged peace talks go on in Paris. The Saigon government quoted the document as saying regional and provincial political commissars should increase the guerilla movement and "military, political and enemy troop action activities throughout the territory of South Viet- nam after the United States stops the bombing of North Viet- nam." The daily communique from U.S. Command headquarters reported 80 "scattered small unit contacts with light casual- ties." The command also reported that preliminary figures in- dicated American combat casualties since last Friday, when President Johnson ordered the bombing halt, had continued at about the same level of the past two weeks. * . . PALESTINE COMMANDS are believed to have set fires near a Jordanian refugee camp yesterday, the latest in a series of harassments of King Hussein's army. The government had lifted a curfew for six hours yester- day afternoon but ,was forced to reimpose it as machine gun fire broke out in scattered sections of Amman last night. In l5amascus, Syria, representatives of guerrilla groups operating in Jordan said that a bloody showdown between Hussein's army and the commandos was inevitable. One representative asserted that the situation in Amman was explosive and the country was "teetering on the brink of war." Amman authorities said they had arrested the ringleaders of the Victory Phalanges, a splinter guerrilla group accused of being paid agents of a foreign power, which the govern- ment would not identify, whose aim was to stir up civil strife in Jordan rather than to fight the common enemy Israel. 1. I- Please send check and order form below to U-M Gilbert and Sullivan Society, Student Activities Bldg., ..Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104.. - ....m .m.i........ ...mminmmw mi. THE GONDOLIERS I enclose $ for tickets to THE GONDOLIERS on the date indicated below: Wed. All seats reserved! Thurs. All seats $2.50 each Fri. p.. Pleasemake checks Sat.7p.m) ThU(7 payable to Sat._____ (10 p.m.) The University of Michigan i ,_-- _ __ _ _ __1I. Ii . _ - - - .11 Petitioning for CINEMA GUILD Wednesday, Thursday November 6, 7 Sign-up 2538 S.A.B. NAME ADDRESS' PHONE CITY ZIP I ENCLOSE A SELF-ADDRESSED, STAMPED ENVE- LOPE. Please mail my tickets to me. I enclose NO envelope. Please hold my tickets at the Box Office. I will-pick them up during the week of the performance. Hours: Monday and Tuesday, 12:30-5 p.m.;, Wednesday-Friday, 12:30-8 p.m.; Saturday 6-10 p.m., beginning Nov. 11th Ell i .; I ___________________________' '_______ -I 1 , rte'.; ': <7 , .* What kind of man reads GENERATION ? THE PLAYBOY GENERATION Campus inter-arts magazine ON SALE BEGINNING NOV. 7 I Dial 8-6416 ENDS TONIGHT! KANETO SHINDO'S "LOST SEX" u NITED at its young-hearted is a quilted coat in~cludes with black tights... a clever, cozy way to spend your after-hours. The back-zipped coats with polyester fiberfill are cut short to show more of the opaque nylon tights. Small or medium. ART DRAMA * THURSDAY * 11 Ii E __ I I e vl THIS WEEK Thurs.-Fri. THE ThIRD MAN Dir.--Carol Reed, 1949 B. Black-on-white embroidered I w - U I I