Michigan turns Nam y wave into rippe See story, Page 9 TIGERS FLOP, 3-2 See Page 8 C, 4c gitigAu 4 Ait A UTUMNAL High-60 Low-35 For details, see today.. Vol. LXXXIII, No. 28 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, October 8, 1972 Ten Cents Ten Pages today... McGovern to hit Say fight please University marching band members retali- ated yesterday against those people in the "damed North end" of Michigan stadium who insist on yelling "shit" instead of "fight." While the small team of bandmem- bers circled the field to get the crowd cheer- ing, they displayed a giant set of letters spelling out, "SAY FIGHT PLEASE." The crowd seemed split between the diehards and those who were prepared to go along with the message. Hard luck award This week's Hard Luck award goes to a young Greenwich Village poet who impul- sively cancelled a Vermont vacation this weekend to come to Ann Arbor to meet ex- iled Soviet writer and University poet-in- residence Iosif Brodsky. After two days on the road, and four hours of wandering the streets of Ann Arbor, the young man came to The Daily for help. We located Brodsky all right, but in New York City, guest lec- turing at Queens College. Happily, Brodsky is supposed to be back in town later today, and the young man says he will wait for him. GROUP, RAP and... The latest in a series of bizarre candi- dates for SGC has surfaced. He is Dave Hornstein, the president, secretary, treas- urer, "emperor" and, so far, only member of the Bullshit Party. Hornstein, a LSA jun- ior, says his group is "the only party on campus with an honest name." His 'cam- paign platform is to, "set up a student dope cooperative which will use SGC funds to buy lots of dope and then distribute it free to the students." He further promises to move SGC meetings to local bars, and adds, "if elected I won't resign, drop out of school or leave Ann Arbor." The election is Oct. 31 through November 2. SGC paper snagged Many people may be wondering why they have not yet received their copy of The Michigan Student News, SGC's latest news- paper. According to Bill Jacobs, SGC presi- dent, people putting the address stickers on the 30,000 plus copies of the newspaper used too much water in the glue and all the copies stuck to each other, making the local post office somewhat unhappy, to say the least. They have been trying to separate the newspapers for the past six days, but so far few of them have managed to find their way to mailboxes. Happenings-... . . . if you haven't been over to the Uni- versity's Exhibit Museum recently, today might be the time to go, especially if the weather starts to deteriorate. Featured to- day will be a planetarium show at 2 and 3 p.m. And in the rotunda of the museum is a collection of Chinese and Indochinese cer- amics presented by Justice and Mrs. G. Mennen Williams (Soapy to you) . .. if you like media work and are interested in wo- men's issues, check out Her-Self, a new monthly magazine which describes itself as Ann Arbor's "community women's news- paper." They are having a mass meeting tomorrow at 8 p.m. in the third floor con- ference room of the Union . . and if the weather is nice today, one good trip to take would be to the Matthaei Botanical Gardens, 1800 N. Dixboro Rd. It's a 20 minute bike ride to acres and acres of nice things. It's that day again If you want to cash a check, talk with Uncle Sam or go to Circuit Court, don't try tomorrow. It's Columbus Day and finan- cial institutions, federal and county offices and the postal service will all be closed. The University takes a different attitude towards this relevant national holiday: business as usual. On the inside . .. . he Sports Pages spotlight the tu- multuous victory of Michigan's Wolver- ines over the inept middies of Annapo- lis . . . Diane Levick, staff writer turned Northern states By WALTER MEARS AP Political Writer KANSAS CITY, Mo. - A sharpening of the attacks upon President Nixon and a con- centration on large northern states seem to be emerging as the two main elements of the McGovern campaign strategy with elec- tion day just a month away. McGovern denies publicly that he is writ- ing off any states, but his strategists ack- nowledge that they are. The South Dakota senator has not yet campaigned in the gen- erally hostile South, although he said he will make one swing into the region before David Dellinger election day. McGovern's is essentially a Northern stra- tegy with Texas thrown in. And that strategy is evident in McGovern's usual whereabouts. His personal campaigning is concentrat- ed in nine of the ten biggest states. le said the populous industrial states are where the election will be won, and he _-!aims he is going to win it. Since Labor Day,. he has been to N e w York seven times and will go there twice more during the next 10 days. He has worked Ohio five times, with more to come. He has spent three campaign days in Cali- fornia, will devote parts of three more to that biggest of all electoral prizes during his next campaign journey. He calls win- ning California imperative to his hopes for an upset victory. The other states that command the most attention are Pennsylvania, Michigan, Illinois, Massachusetts, New Jersey, and Texas. These nine states have a commanding 242 electoral votes between them. It takes 270 to win, but McGovern figures if he can take the big ones, enough others will fall his way to put him over. Texas is the only Southern state on the real target list. Florida is the only one of the ten biggest states that is not; McGov- ern campaign strategists view it as a lost cause. Everywhere he goes, McGovern is telling his crowds that he has good news, that the polls are wrong and that he is going to win. Moving into the final weeks of the cam- paign, McGovern has also toughened his campaign rhetoric and intensified his cor- ruption charges against Nixon. It is an evident effort to claim the offensive role. But he says, "It's certainly not an act of desperation because I've been convinced all along that we would win." Another clear McGovern goal is to goad Nixon into open, if long distance, campaign debate. That has not succeeded, at least so far. And the old problems are still with the IDemocratic nominee. Money is one. "I think a lot of people do play the polls," he said. "It's sort of like the horse races. They look at the odds and put their money on the guy who's ahead in the polls." Another problem, and one that particularly irritates McGovern, is credibility. He is ask- ed, for example, about the dumping of Sen. Thomas Eagleton (D-Mo.), as his running mate, about the impression that he wants to sharply increases taxes for welfare, about a survey indicating Nixon's credibility rating is higher than his own. McGovern is frustrated, too, at the way the campaign is being described to the na- tion, at the media play given Nixon stand- ins, and at what he contends is a different standard applied to him and to the President. "It's my own view that if seven of my top aides had been caught burglarizing the Re- publican National Committee, that I would have been forced out of this race," he said. For all of that, McGovern maintains he is catching up and will score a rerun of Harry Truman's 1948 upset victory. "I think we are narrowing the gap everyday," he said. War'protest planned for Hill Tuesday By WILLIAM LILLVIS A conference on the Indochinese war and U. S. responsibility for the conflict will bring together the son of an imprisoned South Viet- namese presidential candidate, the mother of an American POW, a former Saigon Uni- versity student and anti-war activist David Dellinger Tuesday night. The "Endless War" conference, sched- uled for 7:30 p.m. in Hill Aud, is sponsored by the Indochina Peace Campaign, (IPC), a coalition of student and community organiz- ations. According to IPC co-ordinator Thomas Weiskopf, the program's speakers will focus their remarks on Vietnam as "just one manifestation of American imperial- ism." The conference's list of speakers includes representatives from a variety of anti-war groups. Dellinger, a former member of the Ber- traid Russell War Crimes Tribunal, defen- dant in the Chicago Seven trial, and long- time peace activist, last month accompani- ed other anti-war leaders to Hanoi to act as liaison in the release of three American POW's. AP Photo SENATOR GEORGE McGOVERN reads the words as Jim Martin sings a song he said he composed for McGovern's presidential campaign. Martin auditioned the song as McGovern left his Kansas City hotel yesterday to speak before the Missouri Radio-TV News Association meeting. Martin titled the song, "Come Home America," in reference to a McGovern theme introduced by Rep. Walter Fauntroy (D-Washington, D.C.) at the Democratic National Convention. PROGRAM FOR POOR Prisoner awai ts trial in dorm . By JIM KENTCH In most cases, a poor person charged with some criminal offense must spend the time before his trial sitting in jail, simply because he does'not have the money to make his bail payment. But under the provisions of a new pro- gram, initiated by the Committee for a New Understanding of Justice, some people in this situation will be able to spend the time awaiting trial in a room in one of the Uni- versity's dormitories. Allen (not his real name) has been living at Mosher-Jordan for almost three weeks. He is a 25-year-old black employed by the University plant department and he is charged with armed robbery. Allen says that students have generally been friendly since he moved into the dorm. "Most people are nice when they don't know who I am," Allen comments, "but if they find out that I've been charged with armed robbery, their attitude changes. Trust is the main problem." The problem of being a black in the dorm has also affected Allen, as there are very few other blacks living in Mosher-Jordan. "I'm a black man and I'm going to carry myself like one," he states. "Living in the dorm is not cool, especially for a grown man, but it's good to have a place where I can get myself together." The program, which has been operating since last March, has placed four people thus far. Mosher-Jordan is currently the only, dorm in the program, although several other dorms are considering participating. The Public Defender's Office refers the cases of people who are in jail simply be- cause they cannot pay bail to the dorm coun- cil, the dorm's governmental body. The council reviews each case individually, and does not accept anyone, addicted to a drug or anyone its members feel could -possibly cause harm to the property or residents of the dorm. The dorm council allocated money for the project last spring, and they pay approxi- mately $6 a day for the participants. Allen is staying in what used to be a cloakroom. Dave Ermann, a resident advisor in 'the dorm, complains that the dorm is being over- charged. , I Schmitz guarded tightly by police for Dearborn speech CULTURES CLASH Middies discuss the hip' U' By ALLEN LOWE $33.50 will buy a round trip bus ticket from the Naval Academy and a ticket to the Navy- Michigan game. And for the Middies who flooded into Ann Arbor yesterday, it also bought a chance to interact with students from a college environment vastly different than their own. Most of the visitors were just here for a good time, but some did stop to talk about issues other than football.' One might have expected some friction to develop between the Middies and Ann Arbor students, who have never been known for their love of the military, but according to the visitors, such cases were rather isolated. One midshipman from Indiana, however, encountered a student who sarcastically sa- luted him on the street. He did not salute back. "I have better things to do," he said. But another middie from Mason, Mich., commented that he had not encountered any hostility. "People have been very friendly. I heard about attacks on the ROTC build- ing, so I exnected some kind of abuse." By LORIN LABARDEE Special To The Daily DEARBORN - Possibly anticipating some- thing similar to the shooting of Gov. George Wallace, Dearborn police, Wayne County po- lice and State Police were out in force last night when American Independent Party (AIP) presidential candidate John Schmitz spoke at the Dearborn Youth Center. As the police kept watch outside, Schmitz told his listeners inside that Arthur Bremer was not alone when he stalked Wallace at the same hall five months ago. Schmitz said, "Bremer was not the lonely man that the press portrayed him to be. He worked together with other people, many of whom belonged to such leftist groups as the SDS." Schmitz spoke before a full house of about 600 middle-aged people. A bloc of about 100 seats had been reserved for party members. The candidate's speech was frequently punctuated by standing ovations on the part of the crowd. They had been "warmed up" by the singing of "America the Beautiful," "It's a Grand Old Flag" and "By the Light of the Silvery Moon." Schmitz not only attacked the news media's treatment of the Wallace shooting, but also on its entire coverage of the AIP. Schmitz charged, "The press in this country is con- ducting a conspiracy of silence against the AIP." Armed with more jokes than 'politics, Schmitz also lashedi out at his onnonents Speaking on the issues, Schmitz said his main concerns were: busing, gun control, Vietnam and welfare. "The real issue in Vietnam," Schmitz said, "is that the United States is furnishing the Soviet Union with technological knowledge and the Soviet Union is using it to produce a product which it is sending to Vietnam.' The real enemy, he maintained, is the Soviet Union. "We could stop the war in a most humane way by cutting off the aid to the enemy," he added. Claiming that he supports the party plat- form on all the issues, Schmitz said that he has nonetheless condensed the AIP platform to only two planks: "Don't go to war unless you intend to win," and "Those who work should live better than those who won't." A campaign button seen at the speech pos- sibly best explained the AIP position on bus- ing. It read: "Happiness is walking to your neighborhood school." -.____.mn....T" ...__ __ -__...