A BLAST AT USA See editorial page Y Sfi r i an 4Ia i1 MURKY High-88 Low--62' Chane of showers; cooler tomorrow, 41 Vol. LXXVIlI, No. 51-S , IV Vol. XXV 111, No. 51-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, July 24, 1968 Ten Cents Four Pages I I } j Radical politics: For those with By WALTER SHAPIRO As9ociate Editorial Director Ann Arbor will host its first na- tional political convention Aug. 17 and 18 as the combined Peace and Freedom - New Politics Parties will gather in the Union Ballroom. But the Ann Arbor convention should be considerably different from most political gatherings. Douglas Dowd, a professor of econ- omics at Cornell University, ex- plained, "We're not interested in votes, we're interested in forming a party.' "The New Politics and Peace and Freedom Parties are radicalizing parties, rather than radical parties," said Bert Garskof, local New Poli- tics candidate for Congress. "We need to take people who come from the campus, who know they don't have a voice in the other po- litical parties to come off the campus to get involved and stay involved," he added. The convention's composition is "limited to organizations committed to building an independent radical party." Indications are that approximately 250 delegates will gather from more than 20 states to nominate Black Panther Minister of Information Eldridge Cleaver for President. "The feedback I get from the peo- ple in the field is all for Cleaver," !out a. With the exception of the Michi- gan New Politics Party and small groups operating in Wisconsin and Utah, "all other groups at the con- vention will be Peace and Freedom Parties," Hyland said. said Rick Hyland of the California PFP who is in charge of convention credentials. However, there is some support for the candidacy of rights-leader and. former entertainer Dick Gregory. The Michigan delegation to the convention is strongly behind the Cleaver candidacy although a formal endorsement won't be made until the state convention in mid-August. The New York Peace and Freedom Party met last Sunday and unani- mously backed Cleaver for President. Dowd was selected as interim can- didate for Vice President. According to Hyland, California's delegation to the convention, casting about one-quarter of the total vote, will be split with the largest segment backing Cleaver. "One of the main reasons I'm sup- porting Cleaver is because the most significant and most radical seg- ment of the black community think it's important," explained Garskof. "Cleaver is a genuine radical and not a single issue candidate like the alternatives - Gregory and Spock - are," said Eric Chester, Grad, local New Politics chairman. , "Compared to Spook and Gregory, Cleaver's political advantges over- come his prticular liabilities," he continued. These "particular liabilities" stem from several sources: 1) Cleaver's age, which is two years below the Constitutional requirement for Pres- ident; 2) his conviction for rape and subsequent prison record; and 3) the possibility that his parole may be revoked and the uncertainty whether he will be able to leave California to campaign. Garskof called the question of Cleaver's ability to campaign the "most significant drawback." But he stressed that "Cleaver's wife, Kathleen, will be able to do a lot of campaigning and that can make up for it a lot." In San Francisco, a spokesman for the Black Panthers explained, "Right now Cleaver is out of the state, but after all that's happened who knows what they'll try to do to us." He explained that the party had sent out about izers to different parts of try "to act as catalysts". California 20 organ- the coun- voice would be on the ballot in more than 15 states including New York, Cali- fornia, Pennsylvania. and Michigan. According to Barbara McQuittey, a California organizer working in New York, "a petition drive to get on the New York ballot will start Monday. "It will be a nip and tuck fight to get on the ballot," said Dowd. "The problem is that you need 50 signatures in each county. And there are some counties where it's goddam difficult to find, 50 people 'who know the 20th century has arrived." In Boston John Meuser, another California organizer, conceded yes- terday that an effort to put Cleav- er's name on the ballot in Massachu- setts had failed. But Lucille Birnbaum, a comnmun- ications secretary of the Gregory campaign, claimed, "All this national organizing was rigged: The organizers who were sent out were chosen be- cause they were for Cleaver." Hyland predicted that the candi- date of the Ann Arbor convention 3 SIX DEAD: Guard called Into Cleveland CLEVELAND (P,- Police used armored cars last night to seal off an East Side black area after six persons, including three po- licemnen, were killed by bursts of automatic rifle fire from snipers in an apartment building. At least 15 other persons, in- cluding policemen and civilians, were wounded. As reinforcements rushed in, disturbances broke out sporadical- ly in other nearby areas. Gov. James A. Rhodes ordered all 15,250 Ohio National Guards- *nen to duty and said 700 guards- men in summer training at Camp " t -X Strikers . S re.turn to /aw1ork By The Associated Press r * Striking electrical workers and the Illinois Bell Telephone Co., agreed yesterday on an emergen- cy plan for installation of com- munications equipment for the Democratic National Convention scheduled to start Aug. 26. Robert A. Nickey, chief spokes- tnan for the International Broth- erhood of Electrical Workers, met with ranking labor leaders and Mayor Richard J. Daley before announcing that the union would allow 300 volunteers from among its 11,800 strikers to enter the In- ternational Amphitheatre to in- #stall the elaborate communica- tions systems. "This in no way affects the gen- eral strike now in progress against Illinois Bell," Nickey said. . IBEW members have been strik- ing Bell since May 8. Nickey added that the conven- 1ion truce is confined to the Am- phitheatre, South Side home of many national political meetings. "This will not be extended to hotels," he said. The exclusion of hotels from the agreement poses difficulties for: segments of the news media with temporary workrooms and offices in various hotels. Newsmen from these sites cover activities in delegates' and candi- dates' headquarters in downtown Chicago. Nickey said he hoped union and Bell officials would meet later yes- terday to work out details for the work in the Amphitheatre. He added, "Our men will work1 around the clock if necessary to complete the work." "We did not intend the Demo- cratic convention to be an issue in our dispute with Illinois Bell," Nickey said. "Our position has been and remains flexible.", Earlier yesterday the Republi- cans in Miami Beach joined Dem- ocrats in sweating out labor dis- putes seriously hampering prep- aration for both national party onventions. Yesterday was the fourth dlay the IBEW pickets were outside the convention hall. BULL ET MIAMI BEACH, Fla. WP)- Perry, Ohio, would be sent to Cleveland. Police used high-powered rifles and tear gas to clear the apart- ment building, from which the shots came. Two bodies were found in the building. PULL BACK Once the building was cleared,l police pulled back and used the armored cars to seal the area. Policemen would go into the trouble area only if they got a call from a policeman or firemen in trouble, Coffee said. "We're not going to get suck- ered into that area, because they're shooting to kill," he said.! There were widely scattered reports of fires in other Negro areas and some looting of stores. Mayor Carl B. Stokes rushed to the disturbance area and later made a television plea for calm. Last night's shooting was the first serious racial flareup here since Stokes began his campaign for mayor more than a yearI ago. Cleveland has more than 300,000 Negro residents out of a total population of over 800,000. SHOOTING The scene of the shooting is not near the Negro Hough area, scene of four days of racial disturbances' in the summer of 1966. Witnesses said the shooting started when five men opened fire on a passing police task force car. at Beulah Avenue and Lake- view Road.% The car, riddled with bullets, backed off and called for help. Police surrounded the building and took what cover they could find to stay in darkness. Police said shouts came from inside the apartment house:! "We'll shoot anything white." Three policemen were pinned down by gunfire and pulled to safety about one and one half hours later as officers returned heavy fire ,into a brick apartment building on Lakeview Avenue and tried to help the wounded. The area was blocked off. Police started shooting out streetlights because one, policeman yelled, "We're sitting ducks down here." -Associated Press ... All, Al HBOSTON[ YOU'RE MY HOME ... And there were some who said that the Boston beat went out with the Irish cop. Others said it lasted until "Love that Dirty Water." Evidently some people thought the Boston Common was going to be the scene for some new tea parties after hippies took up summer residence around the Common a few weeks ago. Now there's a 10 p.m. to 7 a.m. curfew and a noise ban each night. Enforcing this creates the new Boston beat. POLITBURO IN PRAGUE: Soviets start -maneuvers St rack named By DAVID WEIR Sports Editor The Board in Control of Inter- collegiate Athletics last night ac- cepted the resignation of head basketball coach Dave Strack and appointed him to the newly- created position of business man- ager for University athletics. Strack leaves after two medi- ocre seasons which followed three straight Big Ten championships. Athletic Director Don Canham will name a successor to the head coaching job tonight. SPECULATION It is speculated John Orr, cur- rently assistant basketball coach will be named to succeed Strack and that a Iblack 'high school coach from the Detroit area will be chosen as his assistant. Several names have been men- tioned as possible-choices for the job as assistant coach, including Fred Snowden of Detroit North- western, and Will Robinson of De- troit Pershing. Strack, 45, takes over a post which entails handling all the business operations of the athletic department. "I'm glad to be able to select the time to leave basketball. My coaching career has been a suc- cessful one, but deep down, I think' that I was maybe getting a little LE tired of the recruiting grind - EV it's a terribly competitive field." NO LINK Strack said that a current Big S 1 Ten investigation of alleged ir- regularities in recruiting athletes! for the University had "absolute- 1 ly nothing" to do with his decision to resign. "I have no knowledge whatso-! Tw ever of the proceedings of the in- vember vestigation," he said. In his eight years as head In coach, Strack led the Wolverines announ to a 113-89 record on the hard- at the court. indicat "It is certainly a difficult de- New Po cision to leave coaching," Strack Tw said yesterday. "I am experienc- ing withdrawal pains at the mo- Fredric ment. However, I had already de- present cided that if a good opportunity "I wa came to enter the field of athlet- that s ic administration I would take it. should 1 Strack said he expects to work students closely with Canham in the ad- be a s ministration of several new pro- said. grams. Chest "I think that the current sports economi clinics being conducted for area of Voice youngsters are an excellent inno- Oak. H vation. The athletic department, local o: like the academic section of the Politics7 University, must become more in- He ch volved in community problems," last nig he said. radicale FINANCING ternativ "Some of my responsibility will I thi be to find ways of financing these on the activities," he continued. portantd Strack holds a masters degree in Levin sa business administration. He was Levin, an a sistant basketball coach at oiked the Univerity for 11 years before late Sen taking the head coaching jobat Indiana, the University of Idaho for one primarie manager resigns, athletics From Wire Service Reports The Soviet Union yesterday an- nounced the start of huge mili- tary maneuvers along her entire 1,000-mile western frontier with the reported departure of the en- tire Soviet ruling Politburo to Czechoslovakia. Moscow newspaper Izvestia an- nounced the maneuvers and the unprecedented 11-member Polit- bero mission to a confrontation with Czech reformists aimed at negotiating, Czechoslovakia's re- turn to a normal alliance with the East Bloc. It was the first time in Soviet history the entire Politburo had left the country and it under- lined the urgency the Kremlin forthcoming talks between Czecho- attached to holding Czechoslo- slovak and Soviet leaders in vakia within the Communist camp Czechoslovakia will not stop their as a major unit in Soviet defense liberalization drive. strategy. "The Soviets would lose more A Soviet source said the Polit- than they would gain by a military buro already had left Moscow. intervention," said one Communist It includes President Nikolai party official. Podgorny. Premier Alexei Kosy- "Moscow will have to get used gin and Party Leader Leonid I. to what is going on here. There Brezhnev. can be no turning back the clock. In Prague, Czech officials were We are not going to compromise confident yesterday the Soviet and are determined to continue Union will never resort to military on the present course." intervention if the country stands Party officials said they regard united behind the reform Com- a Soviet note, d e m a n d i n g munist leaders headed by Alex- strengthening, of Czechoslovakia's ander Dubcek. western borders as "just another They also declared that the step in the war of nerves." Coach Strack after Big Ten victory IN, CHESTER: tudlents may seek J', Regent positio6ns vo students may run for University Regent in the No- 'general elections. unprecedented moves, Mark Levin, editor of The Daily nced yesterday he may seek the Democratic nomination party's convention in August and Eric Chester, Grad, ed he will seek the nomination for Regent from the ilitics Party. vo positions on the board are up for election this year. k Matthaei and Lawrence Lindemer, both Republicans, tly hold the positions. nt to present a programpTe ays that the University be run by the faculty and COUNTER STARVATION Groups I! plot Biafran ai d By NADINE COHODAS Reports indicate at least one million 1 iafrans will die of starvation in the next 30 days. Six million more may die in the next six months. Because of the plight of Biafran refugees the Newman and, Ecumenical Campus centers jointly are sponsoring a relief fund drive for starving Biafrans. "We want this drive to be on non-sectarian, non-political grounds," explained George Coakley, Newman Center adviser. "This is a humanitarian appeal." The group plans bucket drives, informal group discussions, and an August dance to raise money. Coakley said any funds collected will be channeled through Caritas, the international Catholic relief fund, and Church World Service. Both organizations have already flown tons of food and supplies into Biafra at "very great risk," Coakley said. All relief efforts must be done in secret since the Nigerian government has prohibited any such activity. The government has blockaded entries into the new nation. The note is reported to have said Czechoslovakia's army could not adequately defend this coun- try's western borders and that "this situation must be solved." This implied that Soviet troops should be stationed in Czechoslo- vakia. The note has not been pub- lished. In what looked like a direct rebuttal of the Soviet note, the commander of the Czechoslovak frontier guard units said the coun- try is strong' enough to defend its borders without foreign help. "Fears regarding the safety of Czechoslovakia's borders are quite unfounded," Maj. Gen. Jan Pep- rny said in an official statement carried by the new agency CTK. "The Czechoslovak Socialist Republic has enough strength to safely protect its state border with its capitalist neighbors." But is was noted that Soviet Defense Minister Marshal Andrei Grechko had cut short an impor- tant visit to Algiers late last week and hurried back to Moscow, pre- sumably to direct the war games the Kremlin apparently found necessary at the last minute. and the Regents should ounding. board," Chester er. a graduate student in cs, is a former chairman e-SDS and is from Royal e has been active in the rganization of the New Party. allenged Levin to a debate ht. "I want to present a alternative to Levin's al- e," Chester said. nk a student perspective board is extremely im- in determining the direc- I focus of this University," aid. who is from Detroit, on the paid staff of the a. Robert Kennedy in the Oregon, and California es. UAW aly CHICAGO VP) - The nation's two largest labor unions - the United Auto Workers and the Teamsters - announced yester- day the formation of an Alliance for Labor Action aimed at re- cruiting unorganized American workers and sponsoring programs for social development. Officials stressed; the alliance does not constitute ahmerger of the two unions. The announcement was made jointly by Walter P. Reuther, president of the 1,600,000-member UAW, and Frank Fitzsimmons,- general vice president- of the 1,800,000 Teamsters. Neither union is a member of +AMT. - ArlTfl A, li" " , m "