Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, January 11, 1973 Page Eight THE MiCHIGAN DAILY Thursday, January 11, 1973 Splits threaten HRP unity (Continued from Page 1) The splits within the party are t not new ones. They have always been present in some form or an- other. But the well-defined caucus lines now present have their oni- gins in the party's nominating con- vention last August. The controversial questions then were who to nominate as the par- ty's state representative and coun- ty sheriff candidates. The main contenders for the state representative nomination were Eric Chester and Steve Burghart. Chester, who had been out of town for many of the previous months, had the backing of what is now the Chocolate Almonds. Burghart had the support of most of the party's middle. When Burg- hart was chosen, Chester declared he could not support the nominee because Burghart had not declared his candidacy until just before the nominating meeting. This caused much bad feeling within the party. The other disagreement occurred when the convention decided not to run a candidate for sheriff. The two prime candidates withdrew just before the convention and there were no candidates acceptable to the party. The Rainbow Party was out- raged. They disliked Democratic candidate Fred Postill and wanted very badly to run a candidate against him. They charged that "party regulars" discouraged the two candidates who were consider- ing running. The Rainbow Party U.S. battles Sets. (Continued from Page 1) mese casualties stood at 100. Twenty aircraft and many fuel and ammunition dumps in the huge air base were blown up. U.S. and Saigon sources said five jets last Monday dropped bombs on Da Nang airfield by accident. The jets were flying in cloudy weather on a tactical bombing mission in South Vietnam and were unable to see their target when the accident occurred, according to U.S. reports of the incident. A U.S. military spokesman call- ed the Viet Cong reports of fight- ing between South Vietnamese and American soldiers at Da Nang air base "a lot of bunk." "We have no reports of any dis- turbances," the spokesman said. was also angry over the conven- tion's refusal to endorse Sen. George McGovern (D-S.D.) for President. The Rainbow People walked out of the convention and did not work on the fall campaign. But the Rainbow People came back to run against the Chocolate Almonds for the various party po- sitions. The people in the middle were upset with the idea of one "sect" battling another for control of the party. "We don't want to give the im- pression that HRP has only two extremes," said one member yes- terday. "A great number of people in the party, in fact a majority of the party, isinot represented by either faction." So the middle is running a slate for the internal party positions. At a Tuesday night meeting the "mid- dles" chose not to formally endorse any candidate for City Council or mayor but decided to support a. slate for steering committee and. party coordinator. "Our battle cry is get back to the issues," said one middle man. Pilot b alks (Continued from Page 1) Heck is serving his Southeast Asia tour as a member of a B52 crew and is the only member of the six-man crew he commanded who is facing the charge, the SAC spokesman said. Heck is permanently assigned to SAC's 2nd Bomb Wing, a B52 unit, and his normal duty station is Barksdale Air Force Base, Shreve- port, La., SAC said. SAC denied a report that other B52 crew members had been sent back to the United States "quietly" for balking at flying missions over the heavily defended Hanoi area. SAC said the report was contained in a dispatch filed from Guam, where many B52s are based, by a New York Times correspondent.. "There is absolutely no truth to that," a spokesman said. SAC provided the information on Heck in response to questions from the Omaha World-Herald on wheth- er members of B52 crews had dis- obeyed orders to fly over the Hanoi area. SAC said Heck flew 56 bombing missions during his first B52 tour; 61 missions during his second tour, and 39 missions on his current tour. He also flew 106 missions as a forward air controller. Heck was residing at Whittier City, Calif., when he was commis- sioned in the Air Force in 1966. He is married and has two children, it was reported. He has served aboard B52s 31/2 years. Pleas entered (Continued from Page 1) merly top lieutenant in the White House communications office and deputy director of President Nix- on's re-election campaign, and Herbert Porter, scheduling director of the re-election committee. Hunt, who once worked for the+ Central Intelligence Agency, faces a sentence of up to five years on+ the conspiracy charge, from two to+ 15 years on the burglary charge] and up to five years on the wire-+ tapping charge.+ It had been expected he would provide substantial information in- to the motives of the break-in and, would be closely questioned on who was behind the attempt to eavesdrop. The Senate Democratic Policy Committee agreed Tuesday there should be a Senate investigation of the Watergate affair, but Demo- cratic officials had hoped the evi- dence would come out in court. Siddha-Kundalini YOGA MICHAEL SHOEMAKER of Rudrananda Yogash- ram will talk on Siddha * Kundalini Yoga and dem- onstrate its technique. THIS IS THE PROCESS OF CONSCIOUSLY D E F I N I N G ONE'S LIFE ENERGY. LECTURE Fri., Jan. 12 Mod. Language Building 4 P.M.-LEC HALL 2 Subscribe to The Daily FOCUS the other side of learning Short term & weekly groups with trained leaders to explore issues of growth and identity. AVAILABLE THIS SEMESTER- Sex Roles Workshop Art Workshop Massage Workshop Self-Awareness for Students in Helping Professions Couples Group Workshop on Men's Issues Workshop for Divorced People Workshop on Black Women's Issues Consultation to living units-dorms, fraternities, sororities, communes, coops, etc. available on request Come to a Group Orientation Meeting Wed., Jan.10Oth or Thurs., ian. 11 th AT 7:30 IN 25 ANGELL HALL FOR INFORMATION CALL BART-764-8437 OR ANN, JAY, OR JOHN-764-9179 FOCUS-sponsored by Counseling Services, Office of Student Services and Project Outreach 0 Pompidou lashes out President Georges Pompidou of France declared Tuesday that a meeting of Socialist international leaders scheduled in Paris next weekend is an intrusion on France's internal politics. Pompidou flies to Moscow today. Local labor council urges cutoff of war funding (Continued from Page 1) fluenced by liberal and radical em- CIO's- refusal to endorse George ployes of the University, Veigel McGovern in the last election. said they are "certainly not in aI Fred Veigel, president of the majority" in the council. STUDY IN ENGLAND FALL, 1973 Students may now fill out applications for remain- ing places for study at the University of Sheffield or the University of Keele, Fall term, 1973. Applicants who are enrolled in Education or intend to be in the teacher certificate program are eligible. You must be a first or second semester junior or first semester senior in the term you plan on going. APPLICATIONS MUST BE RECEIVED BY JANUARY 12, 1972 Additional information: 764-5496, room 4115 School of Education ~e Ope of- y ,,~/ . 1 I. Human Rights Party OPEN MEETING Steering Committee Elections 1. I4 2. Election Guideline Report Huron Valley council, told The Daily yesterday that while "the people have usually supported the President in everything he did," the recent resumption of the bomb- ing has "bewildered and befud- dled" many. Although c o n c e d i n g that the union's action was "definitely" in- While urging an endstosthe war, Veigel declined to endorse upcom- ing anti-war demonstrations plan- ned to coincide with President Nixon's inauguration, Jan. 20. Any disruption of the inaugural ceremonies, Veigel said, would "turn off a lot of the citizenry." I Faculty Lounge Michigan Union Thursday 7:30 p.m. January 11, 1973 I Jewish Community Service Students wanted for challenging training w and career opportunities in American Jew- ish Communal organizations. Scholarships and placement assistance available. Information: Jonathan Entin, Hillel 663-4129 p' New HRP Office Location-516 E. William M IXE LEAGUE BOVA/LIN G SIGN UP UNION Read and Use Daily Classifieds Y I 4 1 11 'Ai W IN TER 1973 Sign up at Student Counselling Office, 1018 Angell Hall 4 (DIVISION 351 -CLOSED COURSES DELETED FROM LIST-ALL COURSES PASS/FAIL UNLESS OTHERWISE NOTED) College Course No. Cr. Hrs. Title Prereq. College Course No. Cr. H rs. College Course No. Cr. H rs. Instructor (s) Title Prereq. Instructor (s) Title 302 Breakdowns of the Free Enterprise System 303 Consumer Investigation in Medical Research 304 Comparative Study of Small Group Living Situations 305 Institutions and the Individual 306 Consumer Mediation and Investigation 307 American Anarchism 308 Prnblems nf the lnhal 3 Econ 201 Gordon Sellon or 400 Kay Weiss/ NONE Joe Thomas Previous living exp. in a small grp. living situation Robert Rorke/ David Morgan 312 Public School Law 313 Law and Psychology 314 Introduction to the Legal Process 315 Rudolph Steiner's Road to Sensible and Super- sensible Knowledge 317 Law and Social Change 318 Environmental Law 319 Constitutional Criminal PrneripdrP 3 (graded) 3 (graded) 3 (graded) 3 3 (graded) 3 (graded) 3 (graded) NONE Bill Harris/ 1. Williams NONE Kris Lamar/ Andy Broder NONE Lee Atkinson/ Gilbert NONE Prof. Katz NONE Jack Pulley NONE Pete Schroth NONE Gary Victor 321 History of Chess 322 Philosophy, History and Practice of Non-violence 325 Congressional Politics 326 Management Cooperatives 3 3 3 3 Prereq. Must be seasonably conversant with rules of Chess 1I NONE Edwards/ Schoem NONE C. Miller/ S. Hanstein NONE D.R.M. Friedrichs Instructor (s) Ben Crane NONE Gary Bass NONE John Knapp NONE R. Bennett/ Joan Monheit NINF Mvp Fllhartv 331 Independent Legal Study 1-3 one of Cs. Mt. 316, 37, 318, or 319, & P.1. Steve Kushner 334 Dimensions of Religious Experience 2 NONE Mari Shore I , . I I.