jReagan makes his run as Nixon shows hi s cards By URBAN LEHNER and WALTER SHAPIRO Special to The Daily MIAMI BEACH - California Gov. Ronald Reagan became an avowed candidate yesterday when he smil- ingly, yielded to the urging of the unanimous resolution of the Califor- nia delegation that he "declare his active candidacy for the Republican presidential nomination." With the announcement, "as of this moment, I am a candidate," Reagan abandoned the thinly-veiled fiction of his favorite son designa- tion. Up to now Reagan has sought delegate votes while he explained that he was a favorite son candidate of the California delegation, but 'would become an active candidate when his name was placed in nom- ination Wednesday night. The rationale behind Reagan's moving forward by 48 hours the an- nouncement of his active candidacy was explained by former Sen. Wil- liam Knowland, speaking on behalf of the California delegation, who said, "There are delegates in all sec- tions of the country who would sup- port Reagan if they can be sure that he wouldn't drop out as a favorite son." However, many observers inter- preted the surprise Reagan an- nouncement as a last-ditch attempt to offset the failure of the Reagan forces to pick up the delegates nec- essary to deny former Vice President Richard Nixon the nomination on the first ballot. By announcing his active candi- dacy, Reagan will probably be forced to drop the low-key manner with which he has made a favorable im- pression on a large number of south- ern and western delegations; The typical Reagan caucus meet- ing consists of the former actor ex- plaining his favorite son candidacy, answering effectively a series of pol- icy questions from interested dele- gates, and when before southern delegations, arguing forcefully that the nomination of Nixon would aban- don the South to George Wallace. But favorable impressions and promises of second-ballot support are of little value to Reagan, if he can't pry away enough votes to stop Nixon on the first ballot. While there have been gains of a few delegates in some southern states Reagan has given no indica- tion of the ability to make large scale breakthroughs in vital centers of Nixon strength. There are contradictory estima- tions as to whether the California resolution was spontaneous or en- gineered by the governor himself.,, When questioned, Knowland denied strongly that Reagan knew any more than the reports of field agents that some delegates would prefer that he become an avowed candidate. Meanwhile, Nixon supporters con- tinued to convey the impression that the former Vice President was rolling inexorably toward a first-ballot nom- ination, as Maryland's Gov. Spiro T. Agnew released his favorite-son dele- gation and "vigorously" endorsed Nixon's candidacy. Agnew was one of a list of favorite son candidates including Gov. George Romney and Ohio Gov. James Rhodes upon whose backing Nelson Rockefeller had counted to sustain their delegations' pledges in an ef- fort to block an early Nixon triumph. The Agnew announcement had been the subject of speculation for several weeks, and had been predict- ed by many observers as a certainty for the 'past few days. Reports had indicated that Agnew would refrain from making the announcement un- til Nixon thought his endorsement would create the greatest impact. Despite these reports, the Mary- land governor said he made his final commitment only 15 minutes before ? }:: .%V.e W fl.%" t. .%RR: "..n. ".~l. ?va ~. ~i:""e. :":'. r..~i:r The GOP Agnew refused to speculate on how many of Maryland's 26 first ballot votes. would accrue to Nixon as a result of his announcement. Asked whether members of the delegation had been happy with the governor's decision, Agnew replied that one -delegate had voiced his dis- approval but that it was an expres- sion of personal feelings, and there had been no other' comment. However, a Maryland delegate with a blue and white Rocky pin in his lapel said, after the governor's press conference, "a majority" of the state's delegates would vote for .Rockefeller on the first ballot. Agnew, the delegate observed, had informed the caucusing delegation only 10 minutes before his press conference of his decision to make the announcement, and had left the Sans Souci Hotel caucus room for the hotel's conference area imme- diately after the disapproving dele- gate had voiced his'tsentiments. The Maryland delegate did not indicate whether a straw vote of the delegation had been conducted after the governor left for the press conference. in MiAnmi his early evening press conference. However, Agnew made it clear that Nixon had been reasonably assured of the governor's decision several, weeks ago. -Associated Press 'Nixon plays to a full house Republicans: Same Old Party By URBAN LEHNER and WALTER SHAPIRO special To The Daily MIAMI BEACH - The one thing that seems fairly certain after a couple of days of roaming through the vast constellation of hotels in this insufferably humid city is that the 1968 Republican National Convention may be the Grand Old Party's last flirta- tion with liberalism - and that it will be only a flirtation. Throughout the past month, the Republicans have conveyed this image of a party awakened. There has been a certain amount of deceptively infectious talk about a "new" (and presumably more liberal) Nixon which to an extent has been transferable to the party as a whole. There has been, as well, Nelson Rockefeller. The platform which the Resolutions Committee proposed here two days ago is, if ambiguous in some of its rhetoric, certainly the most unambiguously liberal Republican platform in recent memory. The question, of course, is what lies behind this progressive veneer. The man who in the short run has more at stake on the answer than any other American is Nelson Rockefeller. The most popular post-mortem analysis of the events of the past few weeks depicts Rockefeller as having been forced to adopt a contingency plan after being detoured from his original strate- gy. This earlier idea had been to focus on the governor's presumed grass roots popularity through a carefully cultivated sequence of massive newspaper, radio, and television advertisements, and tri- umphantly pro-Rockefeller public opinion polls. Through this strategy, his ideological liabilities with conservative delegates would be de-emphasized. At the same time, it would be implicit that a Rockefeller victory in November would spark widespread Republican Congres- sional and lower office victories, without necessarily discriminat- ing between conservative and liberal Republicah candidates What destroyed the effectiveness of this scheme were the discrepancies in the latest poll results. Despite the joint Gallup- Harris agreement that Rockefeller has an "open lead," the almost absurd variations between the prophecies of the two major oracles has undermined whatever influence the polls may have had on the decisions of the delegates. This leaves Rockefeller with his contingency strategy: work * in tacit tandem with California's conservative Gov. Ronald Reagan to prevent a Nixon victory on the first few ballots, thus nibbling steadily away the former Vice President's support; then pick up enough delegates formerly committed to Nixon to defeat Reagan on a later ballot.' And the great assumption upon which this Rockefeller analysis" rests is that the Republican Party is genuinely intent on a liberal J course for the future. In other words, Rockefeller's feeling is that the majority of the 600-odd delegates who will support Nixon on the early ballots will later be inclined to move toward Rocke- feller instead of Reagan.' There is a good chance, of course, that the assumption will be deprived of a test by a first ballot Nixon victory. That Sen. Hiram Fong of Hawaii, Gov. Dewey Bartlett of Oklahoma and Gov. Spiro ,g. Aghew of Maryland, have released their delegations and thus buttressed Nixon's total by a few votes is significant not so much for the votes gained - which alone are inadequate to give Nixon the nomination - as for the implicit threat that Nixon has much more such endorsements or withdrawals on tap. The former Vice President is merely waiting for strategic times to play them. But if Nixon is eliminated early, and the stew boils down to a Rockefeller-Reagan fight on a late ballot, Rockefeller's chances do not seem encouraging. If the Republican delegates we have seen and talked to in the last 'few days represent any semblance of a cross-sampling, then the Grand Old Party is still the Same Old Party: generally See ON, Page 2 gilt 43au :4aii4g Vol. LXXVIII, No. 60-s Ann Arbor, Michigan--Tuesday, August 6, 1968 Four Pages Union ratification ends Detroit strike -Da iy--Thomas R. Copi Stauch meets Gillon at Wines Field , i 1Demonstrators bloc Wsing By DAVID WEIR Sports Editor Leaders of the newly-formed Club Sports Associatior. (CSA) met twice with University Presi- dent Robben Fleming Saturday, after several dozen protesters halted a premature attempt to pave Wines Field Saturday morn- ipg. Picketers consisting largely of members of the rUgby, lacrosse and soccer clubs, prevented the Ann Arbor Construction Company from asphalting all but a small portion of the north playing field of Wines for use by the University Band. Members of intramural and sports clubs have been verbally protesting since last Thursday the conversion of Wines Field into a surfaced practice area for the marching band. The blacktopping was planned to start yesterday, but adminis- trators moved the starting date up 48 hours, after student leaders announced last 'hursday their in- tention to block construction. Within an hour of the begin- ning of work, over 30 protesters were on the scene with picket signs. When it became apparent that the blacktopping would con- tinue, CSA pro-tem president Bob Gillon, of the lacrosse team, de- cidednthe students should phys- ically block any further trucks loaded with asphalt from entering the area. A University security officer, George Stauch, advised the stu- dents not to block construction,: but Gillon said the protest would continue until Fleming was con- tacted. Fleming, who was advised of the situation by Stauch and by SGC Executive Vice-President Bob Neff, agreed to see the students. The president and the students agreed: 0 That the blacktopping is a temporary solution to the problem of locating practice space for the band. * That the Advisory Committee on Intramurals and Recreation be charged with finding adequate fa- cilities for ALL sporting and rec- reational facilities for University students by the spring term, 1969. * That adequate facilities be located for the band after Decem- ber, 1968. 9 That support for intramurals ultimately come from the Univer- sity rather than the Athletic De- partment. The reaction of student leaders to this settlement was mixed. In a letter to Fleming, the pro tem committee of the CSA, con- sisting of Gillon, David Mildner, Robert Nicholls and Neff stated "We agree to the compromise of a temporary asphalting of one field in so far as we recognize the legitimate interest of the band. However, we wish to go on record as opposing absolutely the blacktopping of Wines Field re- gardless of the temporary nature of the asphalt." Mildner added yesterday that he was "extremely skeptical about the blacktop being temporary. "Many problems still remain to be ironed out with Athletic Direc- tor Don Conham. This is only the beginning of a new attempt to solve an old problem: the lack of communication between admin- istrators and students." Club sports leaders are sched- uled to meet with Canham this From wire Service Reports DETROIT - Detroit's 265 day old newspaper strike ended calm- ly yesterday as the mailer's union ratified a new contract. The union, the lone outstanding employes in the longest newspaper strike on record, voted in favor of the contract 127-24. Both city papers-the Detroit News and the Detroit Free Press -have announced plans to re- sume publication this weekend. The News said it will begin reg- ular editions Friday, and the Free Press plans to publish Saturday. The terms of the mailers union contract which extends over the next 34;/ months include wage and fringe benefit increases which will amount to $33 weekly by the and of the contract. The mailers, formerly members of the International Mailers Union, had continued their strike after other major unions involved had settled. H o w e v e r, both newspapers found themselves with a new la- bor problem yesterday as carrier boys began picketing to support. demands for a pay increase and a scheme under which customers would pay their bills directly to the newspapers. The newsboys aren't organized into a union, but the 12 pickets who showed up yesterday had the support of four mothers marching with them. A spokesman for the newspa- pers, which have hundreds of car- riers said, "They're really not our employes, you know, they're inde- pendent contractors." Mrs. Ann Gregory, marching with son, Stephen, 14, said they'd been unable to get an audience with publishers.' The boys are asking a penny-a- paper increase across the board, which would give them 31/ cents for weekday deliveries and 6 cents for Sunday papers. They're also demanding that the newspapers bill their custom- ers directly, with customers mak- ing monthly remittances to the newspapers, instead of carrier boys. - Between them, the Detroit dailies employ 4,600 persons. A Teamsters strike against the News in support of a new contract triggered the shutdown last Nov. 16. Two days later the Free Press closed its doors under terms of an agreement in which the news- papers hold a strike against one. is a strike against both. McCarthy to debate HHH' MINNEAPOLIS (-) - Negotia- tors for Vice President Hubert H. -Associated Press Detroit newsboys: A children's crusade DELAY HOUSING ACTION: JCity Clreil allows Sunday liquor sales By MARCIA ABRAMSON City Council approved Sunday liquor sales last night, but delayed action on two important local issues. Council did not pass resolutions for a housing survey and authorization of planning application for 300 additional pub- lic housing units. Instead, a conference will be held with private contractors. Councilman resolutions, said Len Quenon, who sponsored the defeated he was "very discouraged" by the delay, A POSITIVE ALTERNATIVE Student power: Focus. on reality' By ANN MUNSTER The student movement is fi- nally getting down to the "nitty gritty," said Peter Camejo, a leader of this summer's protests at Berkeley, California. Camejo, a suspended student from the University of Califor- nia at Berkeley who spoke in the Union yesterday, believes that student power, like the black revolution, is rapidly coming to focus on the lives of the disenfranchised. "In this whole society, people do not have control over their strators protested, slapped a curfew on Berkeley. Protesters and police later clashed over the curfew. Camejo intimated that the student community at Berkeley is engaged in a prolonged con- frontation with the police. The oppression that the students feel, Camejo suggests, is part of a widespread social evil. . "All current movements are trying to end a system where people live under violence every day," Camejo said, with refer- ence to racial and urban strife. "U to nnw the student an- James Eastland (D-Miss}, re- ceives not to plant crops, while people elsewhere are starving. But Camejo feels U.S. foreign policy' is as deplorable as do- mestic programs. "The tech- nique of 'red-baiting' is basic to the whole way the U.S. ar- gues with the world," Camejo said. This country justifies its intervention in other countries on the ground that it is trying to stamp out communism. "Until this hysterical anti- communism begins to break down in the mass minds of the nnnlatinn" the leader ex- and accused opponents of ad- ditional public housing of stalling tactics. Two hundred public housing units currently are being con- structed by the city., Council also postponed the ap- pointment of Mrs. Ruth Hobbs, to the Human Relations Commission. Council had been scheduled to approve the appointment of Mrs. Hobbs to a vacancy created on the HRC by the resignation late last month of Phil Spear. Meanwhile, by an 8-2 vote Council decided to allow liquor sales by the glass after 2 p.m. on Sunday. Mayor Wendell Hulcher and Councilman H. V. Curry op- posed the action. In other action, Assistant City Administrator .Donald Borut re- ported that two of the accelerated human relations programs author- ized after the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King in April will ,Primary vote today Ann Arbor area voters go to the polls today in primary elections for 'sheriff, Congressman, , state legislators, county supervisors, dis- trict judge, and other local posts to be contested in the November general election. Also included on the ballot will be referendum proposals for the State Constitution concerning a judicial tenure commission, gub- ernatorial appointment of judicial vacancies, and a compensation commission for state officers: In a closely contested race, three Democrats and six Republi- ,f", 'r Iyc