Wednesday, June 26, 196b TnE M1CH GAN DAILY WenedaJue 6,196 TE IriANDAL Gov. Rockefeller ,to name senator ALBANY, N.Y. (AP)-Gov. Nelson were considered sure for the gov- A. Rockefeller flew here yester- ernor. day to confer with state Repub- The governor was on home lican leaders on a Senate successor ground here in Albany and re- for the murdered Robert '. Ken- ceived a roaring welcome fron nedy and to receive the formal en- about 3,000 supporters as he con- 46orsement of New York's delega- tinued his campaign for'the presi tion presidential nominating con- dency. vention. Flying to Albany, the governor Of the 92 members, all but four said "there was absolutely no hnasis" to retorts that he had I r- to ni House OK's flag measure WASHINGTON (R) - Congress completed action yesterday on a bill to make burning or other! deliberate mutilation of the Amer- ican flag a federal offense. The House, by voice vote, ac- cepted Senate amendments to a bill it originally passed last June, sending the measure to the White House. # Actually, the Senate amend- ments restored to, the bill a pro- vision- applying its terms only to persons who knowingly desecrate the flag and returned the word "burning" to the forms of dese-1 cration the bill would penalize, gven up ideas of running with alifornia Governor Ronald Rea- gan. "He is an outstanding governor," he told reporters traveling with him. "Although Mr. Reagan him- self has said he would not be a candidate, there have been ,a great many people who have felt that there was a possibility of a ticket here." Rockefeller says he has not made up his mind whom to ap- point to fill Kennedy's term, which runs to 1970. Among those most prominently mentioned for the post are Mayor John V. Lindsay of New York City, Whitney Young, Negro head of the Urban League and John W. Gardner, recently resigned as secretary of Health, Education4 and Welfare. Rockefeller has been reported under pressure to appoint a Negro. i F' t -Associated Press rflLI(eall an d camiipaign chairman Jo ohn Nichol greet supporters' . P rnrlrt Tn ,in,, l. o lnttia '11111 NATO1 travel I REYKJAVIK, Iceland (P)-The - 15 North Atlantic allies told the Russians and East Germans last night they stand ready to keep open Berlin's lifelines to the West. In a communique winding up their two-day spring session; they condemned new Communist curbs on traffic to the divided city as "a deliberate attempt to jeopardize detente"-meaning East-West ac- coinmodation. With France standing aloof, the allies nevertheless offered the Communist part of Europe a chance to join in a program of balanced force cuts in the Eastern and Western parts of the con- tinent. To reinforce their negotiating position in case that offer is pick- ed up, the ministers ruled out any one-sided troop or armament withdrawals from the allied part of Europe unless the Communists do the same. This Move will en- able President Johnson's admin- istration to argue more effectively against congressional pressure groups wanting a cut-back of America's more than 200,000- strong garrisons in Europe. In another significant develop- ment, the ministers alerted their staffs to prepare for action coun- tering the buildup of Soviet naval power in the Mediterranean. On Berlin, the NATO Council chose with care their warning to the East: -They squarely pinned onto Russian responsibility for any- thing imperilling Berlin's right to preserve land, water and air links with the West. -They reaffirmed terms of a 10-year-old pledge binding each to join in defending "the security and welfare" of the former Ger- man capital. )NGERI. pledges to halli ians on Berlin MW J I I Ut*LA/ ..GE ..G I / 1 /U(,EA/ 'U'EGUjJE'/ ( G'/IG/ TORONTO {P - Canadians reviewing stand at a Montreal as head of the government April voted yesterday in their sixth na- parade by the St. Jean Baptiste 20. trudeau called the election tional election in 11 years. with Society. three days later in the hope of newspapers across the country Before the streets were cleared achieving a majority in Parlia- predicting that Prime Minister 135 persons had been hospitalized ment, an objective never reached Pierre Elliott Trudeau's Liberal and 290 arrested. The disorders by Pearson during five years in paty would win a majority in began as anti-Trudeau demon- office. Parliament dstration by Quebec separatists and' While the 1968 election shaped Early voting indicated a heavy turned into a wild clash in which up largely as a choice between turnout despite rain in some sec- bottles and other missiles were Stanfield's staid Maritime con- tions. hurled. servatism and Trudeau's tncon- What had been a hard-fought The campaign was largely a ventional intellectualism, there. but quiet political campaign personality contest between Con- were two issues which may have wound up in a bloody melee Mon- servative party leader Robert left their impact. day night when. the 48-year-old Stanfield and the prime minister, One was the question of Que- prime minister appeared on the who succeeded Lester B. Pearson bec and the other the country's ---economic difficulties. Stanfield hit hard throughout the campaign at what he called Liberal failure to halt inflation and deal with J -Associated Press A GROUP OF CUB SCOUTS exercise their own form, of gun control by breaking up the toy -gun stock of Chicago wholesaler David Perlin. The boys were asked by Perlin to smash the in- ventory of nearly 1,000 toy guns. Perlin says he will no longer sell toy firearms. Senatemay prove Subscribe Now to SUMMER.FESTIVAL '68 with University Players I. 4. GREAT PLAYS OPENING TONIGHT' with' 4. 4 || , ' 4't June 30, 8-11 P.Me. Welcome to new students Leave taking to Dr. Jacobs unemployment. Trudeau laid stress on the Quebec issues. r ii LIVE LC strong gun WASHINGTON (A) -President- Johnson's second shot at more stringent gun legislation 'appears, headed for approval by the Senato Judiciary Committee, but the House is cool to the administration bid. PresideAtial assistant Joseph A. Califano Jr., reported yesterday White House mail is running about 4 to 1 in favor of more effective gun laws, although there has re- cently been an increase in letters against Johnson's stand. Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield of Montana said mail from his home state protests stricter gun laws and is over- whelmingly opposed to federal gun curbs. The President has requested a law requiring the registration of all firearms and licensing of gun owners if states fail to enact laws meeting federal licensing stand- ards. conrol bil He signed a gun control bill passed by Congress a few days ago, but this was aimed at curbing sales only of handguns. The new bill would apply to all weapons. Senate Republican Leader Ev- erett M. Dirksen said a bill in- cluding elements df various pend- ing proposals to tighten firearms law will likely be approved Thurs- day by the Senate Judiciary Com- mittee. Dirksen, the .committee's rank- ing Republican, said he expects the levislation to be a compound of three bills. These include the original administration bill ban- ning mail order sales of rifles and shotguns, and bills from the ad- ministration and from Sen. Joseph D. Tydings (D-Md) requiring reg- istration and licensing. Dirksen said he hasn't yet de- cided which bill' to support; but added: I am going to support something that has teeth in it." Stop or Reduce Smoking with music by Art Ba rtne r I refreshments ADMISSION: FREE Participate in experimental smoking con- trol program. No charge to participants. Phone: MISS LYNN NI LLES, 764-5409 for appointment. 1429 H ILL All Ar e Welcome I _ _ I __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ ___. __ __F._ . _ mr.. 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