Page Twv THE MICHIGAN DAILY s Thursday, June 6, 1968 Page Twi. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, June 6, 1968 Kennedy's condition Police arrest 27 protesters rmeains ver -ave during MSU demonstration drama- Barbara's OK .AL 14L/.JL.JL'JLwWJL-MLJLk-P T -EL -ML qbA& (Continued from Page 1) decided to charge and arraign him with no word to press or public. Police sources reported that the two wanted to avoid any possi- bility of a repeat of the slaying in Dallas of Lee Harvey Oswald, ac- cused assassin of Kennedy's broth- er, President John F. Kennedy. Oswald was shot while in police custody by a bystander, Jack Ruby. Municipal Judge Joan Dempsey Klein came to court at 7:30 a.m., more thanan hour before normal starting time, and arraigned Sir- han on six counts of assault with intent to commit murder. A public defender was called in to represent him. Bail was set at $250,000. Sirhan was taken in handcuffs to County Jail. In additional swift action, the Count Grand, Jury was briefed yesterday morning and will Bear.' the case tomorrow, which is ex- pected to make unnecessary a pre- liminary hearing set for next Monday. Meanwhile, a stunned nation and a shocked President Johnson prayed yesterday for Sen. Robert F. Kennedy and for the country where violence and political as-. sassination have become so com- monplace. "There are no words equal to the 'horror of this tragedy," John- son said shortly after Kennedy was critically wounded by a hail of bullets fired in a Los Angeles holtel. Five other persons were less seriously hurt. "Our thoughts and our prayers are with Sen. Kenedy, his family and the other victims," the Pres- ident said. "All America prays for his recovery. We also pray that divisiveness and violence be driven from the hearts of men every- where.", Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey, one of Kennedy's two rivals for the Democratic presi- dential ngmination, said, "Our hopes and prayers are with Sen. Kennedy and those others who have been the victims of this dreadful act of violence. It is a shocking and terrible thing that has happened. Our hearts go out to Mrs. Kennedy and the children and the families of the other wounded." Kennedy's other opponent, Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy, said no words could express his feelings. "It is not enough in my judgment to say that this was the act of one deranged man," he said. "The nation, I think, bears too great a burden of guilt . . ." McCarthy- said he was indefi- nitely suspending all political ac- tivity. Former Vice President Richard M. Nixon, the leading candidate for the Republican presidential nomination, said he was shocked and appalled. "My deepest sympa- thies go to the Senator's family which already has known more than its share of tragedy," Nixon said. New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller, also a GOP presiden- tial aspirant, said, "All Americans of good will are stunned and ap- palled. What strikes any one of us strikes all of us. We are gravely wounded..I am filled with sorrow for the Senator and his family. And this sorrow extends to all our nation: For such an assault on one man is an assault on our whole national life." Mrs. Martin Luther King Jr., whose husband was killed by an assassin on April 4, sent Mrs. Kennedy a telegram saying in part: "I am praying for your husband whom I so much'respect and I am praying for'our coun- try in this period of great nation- al tragedy and peril." -uche- loses to Raf fert LOS ANGELES (AP) - Educator Max Rafferty, an avowed conserv- .ative, ousted Serf. Thomas H. Kuchel yesterday from the U.S. Senate, where Kuchel has been assistant Republican leader since 1959. With 78 per cent of the GOP primary vote tallied, Rafferty held a slim margin of 49 per cent to 48 per cent, an edge of 15,308,1 in a five-way contest. Much of, the unreported vote was in coun- ties where Rafferty was running well ahead of Kuchel. (Continued from Page 1) -that the MSU Public Safety Lept. (the carppus police) be dis- banded; -that the school refuse to as- sist police in informing on or ar- resting students; -that students and faculty have complete control of the or- ganization which will replace the campus police. After yesterday's demonstrations' and arrests, a fourth demand was added: that Richard Bernitt, di- rector of the campus police,. be dismissed. However, it was clear from dis- cussion before and after yester- day's sit-in, that the protests are being precipitated by a iore widespread dissatisfaction with the university's administration. Both the Associated Students of MSU (ASMSU) and the faculty committee on student affairs, yes- terday discussed the student de- mands, but neither group took any action. ASMSU President Pete Ells- worth and other campus leaders met with Bernitt last night, but the content of their discussion was not disclosed. Their meeting followed yester- day's activities which began with a day-long discussion. After this session, several students entered the administration building as early as 2 p.m. yesterday despite a 45-30 vote by the ad-hoc group in which they participated. The sit-in quickly grew until approximately 50 students crowd- ed into the narrow hall of the building, leaving a path open to avoid disrupting the use of the building's facilities. t c Meanwhile, the remainder of the ad-hoc group remained outside to demonstrate their support of those who were sitting in. At 3 p.m. only a handful of demonstrators indicated they would definitely remain in the building after its 5:30 p.m. clos- ing. "I'm not with this group outside that has determined to make only a vocal commitment and has . . refused to make any other com- mitment," said Linda Knapik, 19, of Cleveland, who said she with- drew from MSU following winter term. Miss Knapik said she wanted MSU "restructured" and hoped to "prove that one may stand against the system --- the admin- istration, the cops and the gov- ernment of this United States." "I feel strong enough" about wanting MSU restructured, and "I am willing to suffer the conse- quences," said Doug Sterrett, 18, of Lansing, who also has dropped out of MSU. The university is part of so- ciety," he said, "and every person should be interested." By RICHARD KELLER SIMON The last two-thirds of the University Players production of "Major Barbara" is very good. Once the secondary char- acters take the stage (in the Salvation Army shelter of Act II) the play comes alive and stays alive. In Act One, the cast seemed straining to find the right pace. It never did, and the comedy failed to develop. Act One is the most delicate to perform (it merely sets up the situation for the rest of the play) and if it is not funny, it is Shaw at his most tedious. The great achievement of Act Two was that it made the audience sit up and really care about the play. Most of the credit goes to John Slade (as Bill Walker), Suzanne Zoum- baris (as Rummy Mitchens) and Melvyn Buchner (as Snob- by Price) who put on exciting and skillful performances. The entire cast found the pace in Act III, and the play worked beautifully. The three central characters became peo- ple, not merely puppets of the grand master of talky plays. Maureen Anderman (as Bar- bara) did an excellent job with a difficult part (to play a dead- ly serious role in a Shaw play)., She worked best when inter- acting with her father, Andrew Undershaft (George McCloud), in all the scenes of the play. Undershaft himself seemed out of place in the first two acts of the play - he was do- ing a transplanted Mephistoph- eles, and his eerie glints in the eye were only distracting. In Act Three hp supplied most of the electricity, and the glints made perfect sense. Joel Hencken (as Adolphus Cusins), aside from swallowing a few important lines, was very good. His weaknesses as a Euripides added force to the ironies of the play, and his strengths as an egomaniac exe- cuted the final coup de grace to the audience. There were two moments in the play where it became near- ly impossible to follow the dia- logue - once in Act II in a lengthy confrontation between Undershaft and Cusins, and once at the very end of the play. In the first case, the ac- tors were swallowing words, in the second, they were racing through line delivery. The place where it hurt the most was in Act II. Cusins, when quoting Euripides, must make himself understood - for Shaw is not throwing out witty repartee here, but setting up the necessary background for the final confrontation between Undershaft and Cusins at the end of the play. Burnette Staebler (as Lady Britomart) and Michael Fire- stone (as Charles Lomax) were the only two disappointments. Lady Britomart has to carry much of Act One by hetself. Her comic pace was off, and instead of coming through as a bombastic overbearing battle- axe, she sounded more like a Jewish - Mother - without - the-accent. Firestone played Lomax in high farce, and only managed to remove himself from the play. What he did he did very well, but it was not part of "Major Barbara." The only other burlesque element (also off the mark) were the stage businesses of Bilton, in the final scene. James Coakley's direction succeeded both in maintaining a consistent comic tone (aside from the small burlesque mo- ments) and in maintaining the difficult balance between Bar- bara and Undershaft. It never became sweetness and light against the devil, and it never lost the distinctions Shaw was driving at. The set by Frederika Merri- man is non-realistic until Act III, and it only distracted me until Act III, where it was particularly good. As the Brito- mart house it looked like the cave of the Flintstones, with the added encumbrance of pil- lars of melted bananas. As the Salvation Army shelter it look- ed like a plastic greek temple. t Pan Am Group Flight Detroit-London Jet Round Trip $325 Children $180 July 28-August 31 For information, call sponsor Vi ns de France, 1900 W: Stadium CalE761R-4146 days-663-3969 after 6:30 H EL D OV ER BY POPU LA R DEMAN D .!~ -4 4 Presidential race in (chaotic uncertainty Associated Press News Analysis WASHINGTON - The burst of gunfire that critically wounded Robert F. Kennedy yesterday drove the 1968 presidential sweep- stakes into a state of chaotic uncertainty. - Kennedy's presidential oppo- nents promptly imposed an in- definite moratorium on campaign appearances. Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy, whom Kennedy defeated in Tuesday's South Dakota and California pri- maries, said he would confer in Washington with Kennedy's aides, President Johnson and Vice Presi-, dent Hubert H. Humphrey "before taking on other political activ- ities of any kind." Humphrey who was not entered in any of the primaries, also can- celed political appearances. So did the two announced Republican candidates, Vice President Rich- ard M. Nixon and Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York. The moratorium comes at a critical time in the campaign- just as Kennedy and McCarthy prepared to turn from the bitterly contested presidential primaries to do battle with Humphrey in states that pick delegates in con- ventions. With victories Tuesday in the California and South Dakota pri- maries, Kennedy has 2741/ votes in an Associated Press tabulation igan and Pensylvania. He ap- peared this week to be making headway, but this behind-the- scenes maneuvering could be stall- ed indefinitely, depending on Kennedy's condition. f If the New York senator is un- able to resume his campaign, there likely will be pleas for his younger brother, Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mass) to carry the Kennedy banner onward-either in his or his brother's name. The pleas probably would be strongest from men like Lawrence O'Brien, Pierre Salinger and Theo- dore Sorensen, family friends who had served John Kennedy in the White House and this year joined in Robert Kennedy's well-financed and well-organized quest for the presidency. But the nation's politicians wouldn't discuss this or other pos- sibilities Wednesday. They had as one put it. placed prayers above politics. The third dissident, Jan Heid- rick, 19, of Lake Odessa, another winter term dropout, said she agreed with Sterrett and Miss Knapik. Many undecided students were persuaded to leave the building by reports of adverse reaction from the Faculty Committee on Student Affairs. Most students left the adminis- tration building at 4 p.m., but three women remained. As the 5:30 p.m. deadline for entering or leaving the building approached, the sit-in faction continued to gain support. At the last moment, Prof. Jack Kanes of MSU's physics depart- ment joined 18 students inside the building. Campus police arrived at 5:30 to lock the building and give tiem- onstrators a final opportunity to leave without being subject to ar- rest. Two students left at this time. Reporters were also threatened with arrest if they did not vacate the building at 5:30, and all left. Both supporters and hecklers of the demonstrators witnessed the police action which followed. - I 20th Century-FOX presents PETER COOK DUDLEY MOORE and ELEANOR BRON in STANLEY DONEN'S "bedazzled" RAQUEL WELCH as Lust Produced and Directed by STANLEY DONEN Screenplay by PETER COOK From the story by PETER COOK aind DUDLEY MOORE Misic by DUDLEY MOORE -PAWAISION' Color by DeLuxe .MON. thru THUR.-7:00-9:05, FRI.-7:00-9:05-11 05 SAT.-3-5-7-9:05-1 1:05, SUN.-3-5-7-9:05 a -w. m. 1I at r NOW T N G 7 and 9 I .9"Certainly the, best musical i n some timrel" HT P.M. a Dial NO 2-6264 CLASSIC WESTERNS I Congress ready to pass gun controls (Continued from Page 1) . f x GMM DIAL 6-6290 "SUPERIOR ENTERTAINMENT!-warmth and wisdom make the laughter even more enjoyable!" -Life Magazine LUCILLE BALI 'HENRY FONDA -New York Times A dazzling new musical treat from the creators of "Umbrellas of Cherbourg." IN COLOR FROM WARNER BROS.-SEVEN ARTS %4 NEXT: "LIVE FOR LIFE" Use Daily Classifieds I I retary George Christian was asked of national convention delegates if Johnson might now seek con- already selected. Humphrey has gressional approval of a stronger 308;/2 and McCarthy 2341/' in the gun control bill. AP tabulation. "Let's just wait for develop- The key states of New York and ments on that," he said. Ilinois are among those yet to While the shooting of Robert select their delegates. Hours after Kennedy built new pressures on Kennedy was wounded, it was Congress to broaden the watered~- unclear what effect the shooting down version, it would have passed would have on these state conven- anyway. And they acknowledgedC or on the Democratic Na- they would have had great diffi- tional Convention scheduled to culty winning stronger controls if begin Aug. 26 in Chicago. the measure had gone to confer-, n Humphrey has been concen- trating his efforts on winning over ence. already selected but uncommitted Gun control advocates In both delegates in big states like Mich- houses pledged, however, to work for a tougher law at the next session. Sen. Joseph D. Tydings, (D- Md.), a close friend of Robert Kennedy and one who publicly endorsed his presidential candi- dacy, promised to fight for "much stronger" limitations. But he said 0 Jg even such federal laws would not be enough - that "states as well must act to stem the gun traffic." From David 0. Selznick, producer A leading advocate of gun con- of'one With the Wind," from rleadiengadocate.Ddd D the masterly Chas. Dickens, from trols, Sen. Thomas J. DOdd, (D- America's great director, George Cenn.), said "I think the time has Cukor come when we shall have to follow the examples of the other civilized with the great W. C. FI ELDS countries and make registration of COPPERFIELD all guns compulsory." About 150 persons picketed the DAVID headquarters of the National Rifle Association here in protest against ' x. the group's opposition to gun con- trols. "Disarm the NRA" said one of the placards. The protest was organized by labor, congressional and civil rights groups. The executive vice president of the NRA, Franklin Orth, issued a ' statement repeating opposition to the gun control bill and saying "I know of no law now in existence, or proposed, which would have CO~StJAN JOHNSON Shows at 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 P.M. Cb De 1 S. , . . _ _ . ._ . . _ _ . a _ . _ _ HELD OVER 2ND WEEK NATIONAL eENElRAL CORP'ORATION FOX EASTERN THEATRES W FOX VILL -E 375 No. MAPLE RD. "769.1300 Mon.-Fri. 7:00-:925 Sat. 2:25-4:30 Sun. 7:00-9:25 I ' 3020 Washtenow, Ph. 434-1782 Between Ypsilanti and Ann Arbor -SHOW TIME-- WED.-SAT.-SUN. 1:10-3:50-6:30-9:15 OTHER DAYS 7:00 and 9:15 4 I EXCLUSIVE SHOWING! rl \1 20-5:25-9:30 W I I-4E) in fl'/QQriMUN~I Lfl ______________ - IIIFMVE .. orTw' m . 1 , ,.