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May 07, 1968 - Image 3

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Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1968-05-07

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Tuesday, May 7, 1963

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Paae'

T__dy-My7,198TH ICIGNDAL

_ .. ...

ELECTION '68 ROUNDUP:
RFK HHHE
in capital

to clash
primary

By The Associated Press
Sen. Robert F. Kennedy and
Vice President Hubert H. Humph-
rey get their first tryouts at the
polls today in their quest for the
Democratic presidential nomina-
tion. ',
The New York Senator is a
formal contestant in two of the
day's five primaries, while
Humphrey is represented in only
one but is a standout background
figure in the other.
The big test is in Indiana, but a
more direct Kennedy-Humphrey
collision will come in the District
of Columbia where two slates of
candidates for delegates to the
party's national convention are

running for the vice president
while one slate backs Kennedy.
On the Republican side in the
national capital there is a con-
test between an agreed regular
slate ' divided among backers of
Nixon, Gov. Nilson A. Rockefeller
of New York - the second ma-
jor avowed GOP candidate - and
a rival group, running together
but still split in allegiance to Nix-
on, Rockefeller and Gov. Ronald
Reagan of California, who still
talks about himself as only a
favorite son.
There are 23 Democratic and
nine Republican convention votes
at stake.
The other primaries are in Ohio,

Florida and Alabama, with only
Democrats involved in Alabama.
In all those cases the bearing of
the outcome on presidential poli-
tics is questionable.
Humphrey stayed away from
the Indiana campaign. Sunday he
was in Chicago where he failed
to pick up an endorsement from
Illinois Gov. Otto H. Kerner but
did get. a boost from Chicago
Democratic committeeman Jacob
Arvey.
Yesterday he was in New York
for a meeting with businessmen
backers and returned to Washing-
ton for a speech to a labor group.
OHIO CONTEST
Ohio interest centers on the
Democratic contest between Sen.
Frank J. Lausche, seeking a third
t.erm, and John J. Gilligan, form-
er congressman who is now on
the Cincinnati city council. Gilli-
gan has AFL-CIO and Ohio
Democratic Executive Committee
backing.
Organization support is behind
Sen. Stephen M. Young's favorite-j
son bid for Ohio,s 115 Democratic

House
votesI
WASHINGTON OP) - President
Johnson's drive for a $10 billion
tax increase lunged forward yes-
terday when the key House com-
mittee voted to work on the basis
of an administration accepted
settlement.
The Ways and Means Commit-
tee told a Senate-House confer-
ence, headed by its own chairman,
Rep. Wilbur D. Mills (D-Ark), to
work out the increase.
SPENDING CUT
It agreed also to use the ac-
companying $4 billion spending
cut worked out by the Appropria-
tions Committee last week as a
basis for discussions-adding that
the reductions should be at least
this great.
Committee members, including
Mills, who had been holding out
for deeper cuts, accepted the ac-
tion with the understanding that
they could still fight in the con-
ference for a spending reduction
in the next fiscal year greater than
the $4 billion.
BLACKMAIL?
The Ways and Means action
came after an emotion-charged
weekend that saw Johnson over
h nationwide television telling op-
posing congressmen not to try to
blackmail him on spending as the
th price of what he called the ur-
til gently needed tax increase. Some
al members fired back indignantly.
f- Johnson followed up with a Sat-
n- urday letter to House leaders tell-
f ing them further delay in passing
th 10 per cent surcharge would be
"a ticket to disaster."
One highly placed committee

for

committee

tax

hike

member, asking not to be quoted
by name, said its action was taken
"in spite of and not because of"
Johnson's appeal.
In any case, the push for a tax
increase gained these two impor-
tant objectives with Ways and
Means' 17-6 vote cutting across
party lines.
For the first time, the tax writ-
ing committee is on record for a
tax increase.
It recognized-with the qualifyi-
ing "at least"-the spending re-
ductions listed by the Appropria-

tions Committee, instead of in-
serting higher figures of its own.
The Senate-House conference
resumes today with the House con-
ferees now Instructed by the two
House committees concerned.
The Appropriations Committee
formula, which Johnson said he
would accept reluctantly, calls for
a $10-billion reduction in appro-
priations for the year-beginning
July 1 under the figures in his
budget and which applies to ap-
propriations extending over sev-
eral years.

AT A PREMARCH RALLY for the first leg of the Poor People's
Campaign, Mrs. Martin Luther King, Jr. and the Rev. Ralph D.
Abernathy greet organizers of the caravan from Memphis to Ed-
wards, Mississippi and ultimately to Washington, D.C.
UAW CONVENTION:
Reuther overcomes
4 N .-. -

Poor people's march

convention votes. Young switched j a' a t efo (iti o n
ident Johnson pulled out of the
race but now is plugging for an ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (A) - Mich., are co-leaders of th
uncommitted delegation. Laying his leadership on the line ' rebels.
Gov. James A. Rhodes is a fa- and moving boldly to the attack Both have lost in past tangle
vored favorite son for the 58 Re- on rebels challenging his admin- with Reuther, but their strengi
publican votes. istration, Walter P. Reuther, pres- appeared greater this time, unt
ident of the United Auto Workers, tested, because 39 different loc
WRESTLING routed the opposition yesterday. unions had proposed varying ref
The real wrestling in Florida is A convention of 3,000 delegates erenda systems to require union
among aspirants for the Senate representing 1.4 million UAW wide referendum in election of of
seat being .vacated by Democrat members overwhelmingly adopted ficers and settlement of such i
George A. Smat'ers. Former Gov. an administration supported pro-
Leroy Collins and Atty. Gen. Earl ' nnal to continueithia e c, tion f f sues as dues increases.

begins 'ot
By The Associated Press
The "Southern leg" of the Poor
People's Campaign began calmly
yesterday as four one-time rural
school buses, loaded with 136 pas-
sengers, cruised from Edwards,
Mississippi toward Selma, Ala-
bama -and toward Washington,
The buses took to the highway
after the group made a symbolic
two-mile march from their Mount.
Beulah Conference Center to Ed-
wards.
Mississippi Highway Patrol
cars guarded the march but there
was no particular tension. Whites
in this small town placidly ig-
nored the entire demonstration.
In Edwards, the marchers held
a rally with the Rev. Ralph Aber-
nathy and other Southern Chris-

ithern leg
tian Leadership' Conference offi-
cials speaking.
Abernathy, who favors a guar-
anteed annual wage, told the
marchers that money in their
pockets would' end segregation
problems.
"When you get that gold, all
these white folks . . will forget
your color because they want the
gold," he said, "and we will live
together as brothers."
Planners of the campaign have
said they expect from 3,000 to
15,000 demonstrators to be in
Washington by May 27, many of
them staying until congress en-
acts legislation to provide jobs,
housing and income maintenance
programs for the poor.
Meanwhile, in Washington, Rep.
William M. Colmer (D-Miss.),
said yesterday the nation's capi-
tal can expect nothing but trouble
if the proposed Poor People's
Campaign in Washington ma-
terializes.
"You're dealing with people
who have made extraordinary de-
mands and who are very emotion-
al," Colmer told a House sub-
committee. "They are easily
stirred up. 'They, will get out of
hand."
Colmer said the primary objec-
tive of the campaign is to cause
trouble despite whit its leaders
say.

Sen. Kennedy and Vice President Humphrey
Wednesday through Saturday
Dance to The Ugly Rumors
at
SCHWABEN INN
215 S. Ashley

jIV %11111 Q11L t~ . %ui. Qal
Faircloth are the Democratic
bidders. The Republicans are U.S.
Rep. Edward Gurney and Herman
Goldner, three times mayor of St.
Petersburg.
Party conventions May 28 will
assign Florida's 63 Democratic
and 34 Republican convention
votes.
There appears no doubt form-
er Gov. George Wallace will gath-
er in the 32 Democratic delegates
to be picked in Alabama, though
there are two opposition slates.
Wallace, running outside of Ala-
bama as a third party candidate,
called off a television broadcast
last night on behalf of his home
state slate of presidential electors. 1

pkJaob tA) e1±1u LaU u u u
international officers by conven-
tion vote.
Rebels proposed election of offi-e
cers through a unionwide refer-
endum, which they contended
would carry out the union's in- ;0
sistence- upon A "one man, one- IM
vote" theory in election of public rO Vem
officials.
Reuther interrupted considera- 'HOUSTON, Text P)- Doctor
tion of a lengthy resolutions com- said yesterday they are please
mittee report to take up the reb- with the progress of two men wh
els' challenge. have received heart transplant
Jack Wagner, president of a from teen-age donors in relatively
giant Buick local in Flint, Mich., swift operations.
and Christopher Manning, presi- The surgical team emphasized
dent of the local representing speed in both transplants and
workers at the General Motors completed the surgery muc
Technical Center in Warren, quicker than had,'been the cas
-- -- ----- -- - - - -- -- - -

splant patients show

ent after a
s in some of the previous trans-
d plants.
o Removal of the heart and actual
s suturing in a transplant last Fri-
y day required 35 minutes. Sunday's
required 42 minutes.
,d St. Luke's Hospital now has two
d of the world's four living heart
h transplant patients. It is the only
e hospital to have had two such
operations, both performed by the
same team within three days.
James B. Cobb, 48, an Alexan-
dria, La., salesman, received the
heart of a 15-year-old Conroe,
Tex., youth Sunday night. Cobb
was reported awake yesterday with
normal blood pressure.
Doctors said Cobb was removed
from a respirator briefly to test
his ability to breathe. He did, they
said, but will be kept in the re-
spirator for 24 hours as a pre-
caution.
The same surgical team headed
by Dr. Denton R. Cooley, Friday

-St surgery
night transplanted the heart, of a
15-year-old house wife into the
chest of Everett Claire Thomas,
47, a Phoenix, Ariz., accountant.
The second surgery was a dual
transplant with a dead youth's
kidney being implanted in William
C. Kaiser, 41, of Odessa, Tex. Doc-
tors said Kaiser had suffered ad-
vanced kidney damage as the re-
sult of diabetes.
Thomas talked, drank tea for
the second straight day and was
visited by his wife. Doctors said
his heartbeat, blood pressure and
other physical signs were normal.
Thomas said, "I want to thank
all my well wishers. My special
thanks to the doctors of Texas
Heart Institute."
Cobb's heart transplant was the
11th in the world. With the death
Sunday of Joseph Rizor at San-
ford Calif., only four recipients
still lived ,the two here, one in
Europe and one in South Africa.

Our desmigner
camne home from,
London with
a Beatle haircut,
a cricket bat,
a case of kippers,

"They're not concerned about
the welfare of the average poor
person," he said. "They're coming
here to cause trouble."
Colmer also said -- without
clarification - the Communists
in their desire to bring division
in this country, always move in
on demonstrations of this sort."
Colmer testified before the
House subcommittee oA buildings
and grounds, which is studying
.proposed measures to prevent the
scheduled camp-in later this
month.
Soie of the bills would deny
the demonstrators access to the
Capitol and its grounds and to
campsites on public park land.

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and an idea
Because as soon as he got back-in a fever of crea-
tivity, he began designing the Bounder.
He made it brash and dashing-like a Lon-
don ankle boot. He made it rugged and supple,
soft and durable-like a moccasin.
And when he finally revealed the Bounder
to us, it was just that-half a moccasin, half an
ankle boot.
With top grain leather from ankle to heel
to hand-sewn toe. A buckle or twin eyelets. And
smashings colours.
Ingenious! We wonder what'll happen
when our designer visits the Continent. More
savoir faire? A new Weltanschauung?
Who knows? But we know he'll be hard

Everybody has an Uncle George.
He's the one who knows which car is a piece of
junk. And where you can get practically anything
wholesale.
Uncle George is a real expert with other
people's money.
But when it comes to your diamond, we're going
to suggest that you ignore him.
Because unless Uncle George is a trained
gemologist, he probably knows little more than you
do about diamonds.
Every ArtCarved diamond is inspected by a
gemologist and backed by a written, PVPSM
guarantee. Hedevaluates it for carat weight, color, cut
and clarity.
And at any time during your lifetime, if you
ever want to trade your ring in for a more expensive
ArtCarved ring, we'll take it back. At it's full
value.
Can Uncle George give you that kind of
guarantee?e, Car ed
SA beautiful 200 page wedding guide and free
style broehsures are available at the ArtAaved
dealer listed. Just try on an ArtCarved
diamond ring and ask for details.
See ArtCarved Diamond Rings at
Allegan- Ludington-
PAUL McFARLAND SCHOHL JEWELRY CO.
JEWELERS Kalamazoo-
Alpena- SCHUMAKER'S JEWELERS
RENE'S JEWELERS WALTER E. RING JEWELERS
Bad Axe- Mdad
CLARENCE J. SAGEMAN R. J. ROBINSON JEWELERS
JEWELERS Muskegon-
Cadillac- PARMELEE'S JEWELRY
REED & WHEATON JEWELERS Oxford-
C'or- ACHESON JEWELERS
WILLIAM MANASSE Owosso-
JEWELERS CAMPBELL'S JEWELRY
Cheboygan-
TRAVIS JEWEL RYLOU-MOR JEWELERS
Detraoi-t-- Rofal Oak-

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FREE 10%oDISCOUNT CARD,
-------------- APPLICATION BLANK -------------
NAME
ADDRESS
CITY PHONE
-------------------- --------------- -,.,_
10% SAVINGS ON ALL Cough and Cold Remedies - Dental
Needs-Cosmetics-Toiletries-Hair Preparations-Baby Sup-
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MARSHLL'S DRUG STORE

GET YOUR NEW CARD FOR '68
. Fill out application below. Bring it to our store and receive
your discount card absolutely free, entitling you to 10% DIS-
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