SATURDAY, MAY 8, x.965 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAVIR TVU I' ' L. SATURDAY, MAY 8,1965 THE MICHIGAN DAIlY U~ A fiI~' ~'WV *suq.ua~~ ~AVZl iIlkM riva CONSERVATIVES MEET: Third Party To Ban Liberals For Direct Classified Ad Service, Phone 764-0557 from 1:00 to 3:00 P.M. Monday through Friday, and Saturday 10:00 'til 11:30 A.M. By ROGER RAPOPORT Special To The Daily CHICAGO-About 600 conserva- tive Americans representing 20 conservative groups ranging from the John Birsh Society to the Christian Anti-Communism cru- sade formed a "National Anti- Communist Party" here last week. The new party was rormed, as one delegate explained, "because of the failure of the Goldwater forces to purge the Republican party of liberals." Coming from every part of the nation, the dele- gates adhered to the words of a orange bumber sticker being sold at the convention which exclaim- ed, "27 million Americans can't be wrong." THE AMERICAN Opinion Book- store offered the widest variety of merchandise. There were rec- ords by Revilo P. Oliver, "Support Your Local Police" decals, and a phamplet by Ed Janish entitled "What We Must Know About the Overstreets." A new "constitution kgame" called "Allegiance" was also on sale. Bookstore manager Mrs. Roger Mossion of Glenview explained that "'McGuffy's Sec- ond Eclectic Reader' was selling quite well, because many parents find it more interesting and bet- ter for their children than 'Dick and Jane.' Mrs. Evelyn E. Jenks explained the need for a third party. "We've got to have a choice. Personally I would like to have Governor Wal- lace for president. He's a good man and he's interested in America. I was for Goldwater last summer, but I remember many people at the San Francisco con- vention wanted Wallace." But a man from Chappaqua dis- agreed. "I think we should have General Walker for president and Lester Maddox for vice-president." K e n t Courtney, convention chairman and publisher of the ' conservative monthly, "Independ- ent American," had called the convention together under the auspices of the "Conservative So- ciety of America." Courtney speaking at a banquet began: "As Dean Clarence Manion (Mutual radio commentator) once said, America can not fly on two left wings:" Then he began reading the new party platform: "God created peo- ple, people created the States, the States created the federal govern- ment, and God, not government is the rightful Master of the people. We rededicate ourselves, with GEN. EDWIN WALKER Charity, to the divinely inspired Ten Commandments and the Ser- mon on the Mount. . . . We recall with rising hope that in Novem- ber of 1964, 27 million Americans would not be seduced or intimi- dated by power, but voted the con- science of a Conservative-thus, in effect, constituting themselves a reserve army of freedom, and in view of subsequent political capi- tulations, a virtual committee of 27 million for the formation of a new national party-the largest u n 1e d articulate minority in America." THE APPROVING roar of the audience forced him to wait a full inute before going on into the 16 point platform of the new party, which included such ideas as "withdrawing from all world government organizations, break- ing relations with all Communist governments, restricting immigra- tions, and ending the news man- agement syndicate of big press, big government and big labor." Positive foreign policy ideas in- cluded a new plan to liberate Cuba by "capturing Chinese and Rus- sian Communists based on Cuba and holding them as. hostages pending release of Cuba from Russia and Red China." The per- manent solution to "Communist aggression in Southeast Asia is the establishment of free govern- ment on the mainland." The platform called for an ad- vance committee to lay the groundwork for the new party. The committee. will organize state parties, which will in turn call a ROBERT WELCH new national convention where the party will be officially named. The advance committee "shall be completely democratic." It will have no chairman, just a secre- tary and treasurer. After unani- mous approval of the new plan, Courtney asked General Walker to say a few words. The General s a i d sternly, "Ladies and gentlemen many peo- ple have asked me if this new party we are forming is the third party in the United States. Well I'll tell you this, we do not have a party in America today, we only have a dictatorship. Our party is not the third party in America but the first party." THE GENERAL then gave the rostrum to J. Bracken Lee, former governor of Utah and the incum- bent mayor of Salt Lake City. Lee, who has long spearheaded a drive to abolish the personal income tax, told of his deep regard for General Walker. "The Communists would like to have people like General Walker." The vehement applause for this assertion suddenly turned into a chorus of boos a few moments later when Lee said, "I don't ad- vocate calling your enemies names, I think there's a better way, after sensing he had antagonized his audience, Lee quickly added, "But if you want to call people names go ahead." The speaker also remarked, "A lot of people think there is some- thing wrong with us. They imply you have to be crazy to believe as we do." Lee's remark reminded a few in the audience of what Rob- ert Welch had said in his speech, "A Touch of Sanity," The John Birch Society president had said, "Not only is the country one vast insane asylum, they've let out the worst patients to run the place." AFTER LEE'S speech and the benediction, the convention ad- journed. The delegates were jubi- lant. A man from Azusa, Calif., told his wife, "This is the end of the Republican Party. Now that we're pulling out they'll be noth- ing left but thesshell." The delegates were also en- gaged in a bit of last minute shop- talk. One man told a friend how to put pressure on the local news- paper. "You go through the paper and make a list of the advertisers. Call them up, explain the cause and get them on the editor's back. It really works. Our paper used to be as left as you can get, but it's not that way any more." There were hurried goodbyes as well. John G. Foyer of Indianapo- lis told a departing friend, "Well at least you know where I stand, and I won't be changing." General Walker who had told a press conference earlier, "I bet there are more good Americans in the Ku Klux Klan than the Americans for Democratic Action," also had a few words for a college reporter. "The press just gets to- gether up there with U Thant and the State Department to just try and shape a myth. They're trying to tell us that China is the num- ber one threat to America. Did you see there in the Gallup Poll where they said that 57 per cent think that China is the enemy? I don't trust that for one minute. China isn't the enemy. We blasted their planes right out of the sky in Viet Nam." GENERAL WALKER continued, "You know who the real enemy is. It's the Communists right at home. What we need in this coun- try is a new state department. And those Communists and left wingers, they are at the schools, Berkeley, Southern Methodist Un- iversity and Texas. There's no use of a kid going to school with all those left wing professors who are living off public funds but have never worked a day in their lives. It would be better for the kids to go to work than to go to school and listen to all those left wing professors who should go out and get a job and work for a living." FOR RENT ROOM IN large, quiet, private home with refrig., linens turn. $11 per week. NO 2-9806 after 5:30 p.m. 7 NEAR CAMPUS on Greenwood St. - I double room and 1 suite for men. Avail. summer and/or fall. Kitchen privileges. Call 663-8244 evenings or weekends. C NO LEASE REQUIRED Large studio, unfurn., $70/mo., in- cludes all utilities. Unfurn. 1 bdrm. apt., $95/mo., all utilities. 663-7268. 3 RM. FURN. APT. Close to campus and downtown. Mod., clean, garage, laundry facilities, TV antenna, large sun porch, utilities except electricity, $145 mo. NO 3-5532 after 6 p.m. C8 ATTRACTIVE, 2 bdrm., large furn. apt. Piano, garage. Near campus. Heat, water included. Grad women students, married couples preferred. $150 mo. Call NO 5-4740 or see 1523 S. Univ. C5 HOUSE FOR RENT-3 bdrm., minutes from campus. Rent $200 or best bid. Call 662-7384. C9 CLOSE TO CAMPUS and downtown, avail. after May 15. 2 bdrm. turn. apt., mod, and clean, off-street park- ing, laundry facilities, TV antenna, utilities except electricity. $135 mo. NO 3-5532 after 6 p.m. C10 REDUCED CAMPUS-HOSPITAL 1 bdrm. apt. with study. Very attrac- tive, modern turn. Avail, now and fall. $80 mo. Call NO 5-0925 or NO 2-7992. C3 ATTRACTIVE studio apt. for grad. woman, private bath, 1st floor. $75. NO 3-8838. C11 4-MAN APARTMENT Modern, furnished 4-man apartment available now for either part of sum- mer, whole summer, or full year. Good location, off-street parking, garbage disposal, full basement in addition to kitchen. $31.25 per man during summer. $37.50 during school year. Call Ed, 662-1860, 5:30-7 p.m. C12 ROOMS FOR MEN $20 per month TV Lounge, Air conditioned Complete Snack Kitchen Call 8-9593 Cl FURN 3 bdrm house, ceramic bath, fireplace, newly decorated. Hill- Division area. Summer $180 mo. Fall $220 mo. Call NO 3-6528. C3 418 E. WASH INGTON WASHINGTON MANOR NOW LEASING FOR FALL, 1965 ONE BEDROOM & STUDIO APART- MENTS, LUXURIOUSLY FURNISHED, AIR - CONDITIONED, BALCONIES, SOUND-PROOF CONSTRUCTION, FOR APPOINTMENT CALL NO 8-6906 C6 TRANSPORTATION RIDERS WANTED to mid-New York State. Weekend of May 14. 662-9881. NEW CARS EUROPEAN CARS, INC. NEW CARS AND SERVICE 506 E. Michigan, Ypsilanti HU 2-2175 Washtenaw County's only authorized V.W. Dealer BARGAIN CORNER SAM'S STORE Has Genuine LEVI'S Galore! LEVI'S SLIM-F ITS-$4.25 "White," and 5 Colors For "Guys and Gals" Cord. SLIM-FITS-$5.98 LEVI'S STA-PREST PANTS Never Needs Ironing Asst'd. Colors-$6.98 ROOM AND BOARD CO-OPS are a good place to eat this summer. Board $11 per wk.rRoom & board $17 per week. Join for 1 or both terms. Contact Intter-Cooper- ative Council, 2546 SAB. Call 668-- 6872. El FOR SALE FOR SALE-Stereo tape recorder, Sony model 300, excel. cond. Call T. Gonalis at 764-5159 afternoons and evenings. Bi MEN'S BIKE, excel. cond. $22 or best offer. Call Al Siebert at 764-9152 days or 662-6145 eves. B2 21-INCH Console TV. Admiral. Good condition. Call 665-7056. B3 BUY AND SELL THROUGH The Clearing HouseF A listing service for privately owned articles. Autos, motorcycles, bikes, T.V., F Hi-Fi's, furniture, cameras, etc. PHONE 662-6574, 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. 2 3 4 .70 .85 1.00 LINES 1 DAY 3 DAYS Figure 5 average words to a line. Call Classified between 1 :00 and 2:30 Mon. thru Fri. Phone 764-0557 PERSONAL HAPPY MOTHER'S DAY from your long-lost child. F8 HI TO Andy. Jim, and Jim, Hi to Ken and Ken and Stan--Gee whiz you guys, it's beginningto sound like the Mouseketeer role-call. F6 BIKES AND SCOOTERS HONDA NOW! Buy, reserve, or lay- away before the spring rush. 24 hr. delivery on all 12 popular 1965 mod- els. 30 or more to choose from. See them at HONDA OF ANN ARBOR, 1906 Packard Rd., 665-9281. Z SEE IT NOW-The '65 Yamaha with the revolutionary new oil injection system. No more fuss or muss. NICHOLSON MOTOR SALES 223 S. First CAR SERVICE, ACCESSORIES RENT A TRUCK Pickups, panels, stakes, and vans. 59 Ecorse Rd., Ypsilanti, Mich. USED CARS 1955 PLYMOUTH, $50. Call 665-0386 between 6 and 10. N6 '61 VW, GOOD cond. Recent valve and ringe job. 663-3171 evenings. N5 TR3, 1959 ROADSTER, Red w/white top. Tunnel cover, Michelin X tires, very good cond. Highest offer. 662-6111. N4 TRIUMPH TR-4, 1964 roadster. Clean. 14.500 miles. Never raced. Four on the floor, wire wheels, radio, heater, windshield washer. Green, black top. Racing stripes, seat belts. One owner. $2500. Can be seen at 523 Neff Road, Grosse Point. Call TU 2-8535 for appointment. N3 ALPHA-1963 Sprint Speciale. One own- er. Mint condition. Best offer. 3150 Morgan Road. NI MGB 1964 AM-FM radio. NO 5-4620. N7 MGB '63. Blue Roadster, wire wheels, luggage rack, radio. 665-5620. N8 '59 OLDS, 4 door station wagon. Call NO 3-3547. N2 MUSICAL MDSE., RADIOS, REPAIRS A-1 New and Used Instruments BANJOS, GUITARS, AND BONGOS Rental Purchase Plan PAUL'S MUSICAL REPAIR 119 W. Washington MICHIGAN DAILY CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES 1.95 2.40 2.85 RENT YOUR TV from NEJAC GE and Zenith portables for only per month. FREE service and livery, Phone 662-5671 NOW. 5 DAYS 3.00 3.75 4.35 $10 de- WAKE UP SERVICE - Have your phone ring at any designated time- day or night-LOW RATES, DON'T BE LATE FOR CLASS OR WORK- AGAIN. TELEPHONE ANSWERING SERVICE, 665-8871 (24 hours). F42 AUSTIN DIAMOND--"The best buy on an Engagement ring in Ann Arbor." 1209 S. University, 663-7151. SEE MARK RICHMAN Prestige Party Favors for the most unusual line of party favors ever assembled by one company. Office and Show Room at 1103 S. University. NO 2-6362. F FOR THE FINEST in Dance Music-It's Johnny Harberd Art Bartner Ray Louis Maximillian Peter Clements Wadye Gallant Contact The Bud-Mor Agency 1103 S. University NO 2-6362 HELP WANTED PART TIME-Young woman to work at Univ. Hospital about 1 hr. daily. Ideal for someone living in Univ. Terrace or vicinity. Do not phone Hosp. Please write time of day avail. and describe any previous work ex- perience to Box No. 7, 420 Maynard, Ann Arbor. H5 BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED $6 for Rh positive; $7 and $10 for Rh negative. Hours: Mon., 9-4; Tues., 9-4; Fri., 1-7, 18-21 yrs. old need parent's permission. Detroit Blood Service, new location, 404 W. Mich- igan, Ypsilanti, Mich. H29 STUDENTS--Choose your own hoursI Scholarship offered1 Cali 761-27''9 8-11 a.m. H7 SUMMER SUBLET SUMMER SUBLET-2 blks. from cam- pus. Furn. for 2, until Aug. 19. Call 665-5582 after 5:00. U8 NEED THIRD girl for spring half. Across from IM Bldg., bi-level, air- conditioned. Call 663-2253. U6 MOD. FURN. apt. for 4-Air-cond. Heat- ed swimming pool. Call 761-2283. U9 REDUCED FOR THE SUMMER Furnished and unfurnished for 1-4 people. Call 663-7268. U7 SWIMMING POOL-2 blks. from cam- pus. 4-man, 2-bdrm. Rent negotiable. Call NO 3-6432. U10 725 HAVEN, 2-3 man furn. apt. Wall- to-wall carpeting, disposal, prkng. Will bargain. Call 761-0434. U2 WANTED--2 girls to share luxury apt. Close to campus. Cali 665-2805 after 6:00. U4 2ND SESSION, for 2, 3 or 4, new air cond. apt. Bargain summer rates, Call 668-8723, 665-8330 or 665-2689. U3 2 GIRLS to complete 4 man apt:, air- con'd., swimming pool, lounge, ne- gotiable. Call 761-0776. U3 MALE ROOMATE for air con'd. apt. Call 2-1477 evenings. U2 SUMMER SUBLET: Air-con'd., 1 bdrm apt. June 20-Aug. 20. $100-$125/mo. Purcell, 247A Bay, Santa Monica, Cal. Meet the Right Person The purpose of our organization, using established techniques of personality appraisal and an IBM system, is to introduce unmarried persons to others with compatible backgrounds, inter- ests and ideals. Interviews by ap- pointment. Phone 662-4867. MICHIGAN SCIENTIFIC INTRODUCTION SERVICE MISCELLANEOUS TODAY AND TOMORROW: TIRED OF those drab, common-place dorm meals?? Still hungry when you leave the table? Solve your problem here-We'll be glad to sell you second helpings. RALPH'S MARKET 709 Packard open every night 'til 12 Unilateral Dominican Policy Must End I PEOPLE to sublease apt. may Sept. 1. Furn and air cond. HU 3-6100, ext. 3960. 3 to Call US By WALTER LIPPMANN 'just prev~ 4UR IMMEDIATE NEED in the whe Dominican affair is to per- for suade the other American states ernm to participate in dealing with the If problem. For there is no denying out that our intervention was decided it m upon without prior consultation this with, much less prior authoriza- whit tion from, the Organization of be s American States. Furthermore, it orde is undeniable that the interven- wer tion is flatly contrary to Article year 15 of the charter. Procedurally Tb and legally we are in a bad po- prop sition. of H The fact is, however, that in the furt Dominican Republic the emer- pea gency was believed to be so acute the that there was no time for a ever thorough inquiry before acting Lati and that neither the charter of been the OAS nor the existing setup 100 provided the machinery for deal- this ing with the emergency. It can be said, as President Juan T Bosch is saying, that his support- trin ers were on the verge of winning cony when President Johnson stepped had in. But it appeared to President Am Johnson that Communists trained dat by Fidel Castro were very near to Bu seizing control of the Bosch re- Ame bellion. U.S. Ame IF THEY had done so, the situ- und ation in the Dominican Republic mak might well have been irreversible. mili There would then have been no pow more constitutional elections. F The United States intervention, was though it was unilateral and in ion violation of Article 15, has to be not 'THE GREAT DICTATOR': ified on the grounds that it rented an irreversible situation, reas now the way is still open' a democratically elected gov- ment. the United States is to come of the affair with clean hands, nust persuade its neighbors in hemisphere that the charter, ch was adopted in 1948, must upplemented and developed in er to meet the conditions which e not known or realized 17 rs ago in 1948. he charter was based on the osition that, with the defeat Hitler in 1945, there was no her external threat to the ce of the hemisphere and that problem was how to end for- r the U.S. interventions in n-American affairs which had n going on for something like years. Article 15 is directed to . HE U.S. AGREED to the doc- e of the charter, being itself vinced that the hemisphere nothing further to protect erican interests were out of ;e. ut what neither the Latin- erican governments nor the . realized in 1948 was that an erican republic, Cuba, was to ergo a revolution that might ke it, as happened in 1962, a tary outpost df a foreign ver. or this contingency the OAS not prepared, and public opin- in the American republics was prepared. Even before the Cuban missile crisis of October, 1962-as a matter of fact, as early! as the autumn of 1961-the Amer- ican republics have been talking about the problem. THE CONFERENCE at Punta1 del Este, Uruguay, was convoked in December, 1961, in order to discuss the problem of "the in- tervention of extracontinental powers directed toward breaking, American solidarity." The fact of the matter is that the OAS had not carried that dis- cussion to a point where the or- ganization was ready to deal with, the emergency which broke out last week. It is this deficiency which needs to be repaired, and only when it is repaired will our unilateralism in the emergency be overcome and our violation of the letter of an inadequate treaty be purged. IT IS, I believe, upon such a foundation of candor and humil- ity that we can bring about the solidarity of the hemisphere. On our part, candor and humility compel us to admit that we acted outside the law because we deemed it obsolete for the emergency. On the part of our neighbors, candor and humility call for a recogni- tion that the OAS is an under- developed institction for realizing the ideal which it proclaims. (c),1965, The Washington Post Co. I .. I / i . . ... ~ { x. OVERTURE, CONCERTO: Mozart Takes First In Festival Concert 'a ' ix By solving problems in astronautics, Air Force scientists expand man's knowledge of the universe. Lt. Howard McKinley, M.A., tells about research careers on the Aerospace Team. HE MAY Festival came up a notch in its second presenta- tion last night at Hill Auditorium. Thor Johnson's leadership pro- vided the difference. The Phila- delphia Orchestra lost a little of its slouch, although it was still far from enthusiastic. The con- cert was a Benjamin Britten sand- wich, flanked by two slices of Mo- zart. Unfortunately, the filling 'TaIkie '---Impediment for Chaplain didn't match the bread. Britten's "Spring Symphony" proudly presents Nature in Cine- mascope, a fit background for a Walt Disney Wonderland. Each movement is sanitarily wrapped in polyethylene, professionally packaged. The sound spectcular is matched by the visual delight of a large chorus, huge orchestra and an overwhelmed children's chorus. IT SEEMED a shame to import Janice Harsanyi, Maureen For- rester and Murray Dickie just to twitter bird-calls. In general, one could agree with critics who say, yes, the symphony orchestra is an old dinosaur dragging its weary bones past the point of no return. Mozart's "Symphonie Concer- tante" for violin, viola and orches- tra is one of the great concert of any era, it received a warm tri- bute from concertmaster, Anshel Brusilow, principal violist Joseph de Pasquale and the orchestra. The "Symphonie Concertante" really needs no explanation about the death of Mozart's mother and his disappointment in love to S-T-R-E-T-C-H LEVI'S For Gals and Guys "White" and Colors-$5.98 LEVI'S Supersim's-$4.98 LEVI'S Dungarees-$4.49 TURTLENECKS-$1.69 (15 Colors) Open Mon. & Fri. Nites SAM'S STORE 122 E. Washington At the Cinema Guild 'THE GREAT DICTATOR" is a most unique film. It is unique, in the first place, because it offers strong criticism -a wartime brand of criticism- of Adolf Hitler (Adenoid Hynkel in the movie) two years before the United States entered World War II. Secondly, the criticism of the LEVI JACKETS Blue Denim-$5.49 "White"-$5.98 ger man who does not understand why he and his people should be persecuted. In both roles, the best scenes are silent. Chaplin is in his own element, and he is still "king of the screen." For example, the barber shaves a customer to the rhythm of a Hungarian dance; or the storm troopers chase the Jews in the ghetto in an almost keystone- don't want to rule or conquer any- one, but I should like to help everyone . ." This is the Charlie Chaplin, who had been the favorite of audiences across the country in the years previous, trying to use the in- fluence he still had, or thought he had, to strike the consciences of Americans and warn them of Hit- ler. But as far as the film is con- (Lr. McKinley holds degrees in electronics and electri- cal engineering from the Georgia Institute of Tech- nology and the Armed Forces Institute of Technology. He received the 1963 Air Force Research & Devel- opment Award for his work with inertial guidance components. Here he answers some frequently-asked questions about the place of college-trained men and women in the U.S. Air Force.) Is Air Force research really advanced, compared to what others are doing? It certainly is. As a matter of fact, much of the work being done right now in uni- versities and industry had its beginnings in Air Force research and development projects. After all, when you're involved in the development of guidance sys- tems for space vehicles-a current Air Force project in America's space program-you're working on the frontiers of knowledge. What areas do Air Force scientists get involved in? Practically any you can name. Of course the principal many varied and challenging administrative-manage- rial positions. Remember, the Air Force is a vast and complex organization. It takes a great many different kinds of people to keep it running. But there are two uniform criteria: you've got to be intelligent, and you've got to be willing to work hard. What sort of future do I have in the Air Force? Just as big as you want to make it. In the Air Force, talent has a way of coming to the top. It has to be that way, if we're going to have the best people in the right places, keeping America strong and free. What's the best way to start an Air Force career? An excellent way-the way I started-is through Air Force Officer Training School. OTS is a three-month course, given at Lackland Air Force Base, near San Antonio, Texas, that's open to both men and women. You can apply when you're within 210 days of graduation, or after you've received your degree. SUBJECTS WANTED I I i