Five members of Congress may draft Sen. Kennedy By KEITH RICHBURG committed to the program for which Special to The Daily the Democratic party had traditionally WASHINGTON - The campaign to stood," including national health in- draft Sen. Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.), surance and a social service budget. "I as the 1980 Democratic presidential and my colleagues believe that the nominee received a new impetus 'someone' who best fits this prescrip- yesterday, while at the same time tion is Sen. Edward Kennedy," said drawing a sharp rebuff from the Richard Ottinger, Democrat Rep. from national Democratic party. New York. Five liberal members of Congress - Ottinger was wearing a red, white, including Rep. John Conyers (D- and blue button which read: "Draf- Detroit), a long-time critic of the Carter TED." presidency - held a press conference Kennedy later disavowed any con- to officially announce their break with nection with the draft effort, and the president. Democratic National Committee "I CAN NO longer support Jimmy chairman John White called his own Carter as leader of the Democratic par- press conference later to denounce the ty or as a prospective candidate for five congressmembers for splintering reelection for president," Conyers said the party. in his press release. THE FIVE liberal politicians insisted "Time has run out on Jimmy Car- that their break with the administration ter. .. We feel betrayed and President was in the best interest of the Carter has lost our respect and con- Democratic party. "The first four fidence." primaries cannot be won by Jimmy At the same time, the four other Carter," Conyers said. "But maybe he congressional liberals announced the can do his party and the working people formation of the first nationally of this country a favor by not even of- organized effort to draft Kennedy for fering himself." the nomination. The draft organization Rep. Richard Nolan (D-Minn.) said will be called "Committee for a unless Kennedy declares himself a Democratic Alternative," and candidate, the senator may end up represents the first serious movement "like Thomas Jefferson, who found to force the popular Massachusetts himself dragged to Philadelphia to Democrat into the 1980 presidential write the Constitution." race. The congressmen all but dismissed "I AM HERE today to announce that California Gov. Edmund Brown as their I have joined with four of my colleagues alternative candidate for Carter. "Rep. in forming a national effort to insure Tete Stark (D-Calif.) said of Brown, that the presidential nominee of the "I think when he grows up and decides Democratic party in 1980 is 'someone' what he wants to dohe could qualify." Attorney General will fight inmate's stay of execution Contnur(tram Page 3 with candles in hand. Inside the prison, stays fail and the present warrant ex- inmates chanted, pounded on the walls pires. and bars of their cells, and set small HOWEVER, said counsel Robin Giv- fires. son, "the intent is to carry out the laws. BUT LEGAL efforts continued. If there is no change in the law, there Earlier in the day, defense attorneys will be no change in the governor's ap- had assembled an alliance of three proach." specialists, former U.S. Attorney The orders temporarily sparing General Ramsey Clark and Atlanta at- Spenkelink and fellow Death Row in- torneys Millard Farmer and Marjorie mate Willie Jasper Darden Jr. from the Hanes. chair came in a hectic day of The three lawyers argued before Tut- maneuvering that reached the nation's tle in Atlanta that Spenkelink had had highest court and reportedly even ineffective legal counsel, basing their reached the White House. There was no case on a recent Florida Supreme Court immediate comment from the White ruling. By the old rule, a defendant had House. to show his trial was a "farce and a As evening fell Tuesday on the mockery." The change meant he need meadows around Florida State Prison, prove only he was denied "reasonably protesters prayed, wept, and marched effective representation." The Ann Arbor Film Coopertfive presents at Aud A $1.50 THURSDAY, MAY 24 POPI (Arthur Hiller, 1969) 7 only-AUD A Praised by the New York Times as "one of the warmest, funniest, most original and most contaious screen comedies in years" this film concerns the hilarious, determined and often profoundly poignant efforts of a Puerto Rican father to liberate his two impressionable sons from their squalid Spanish Harlem en- vironment. ALAN ARKIN gives a brilliant performance as the tough-minded, soft-hearted "Popi." With RITA MORENO. THE HEART IS A LONELY HUNTER (Robert Ellis Miller, 1968) 9 only-AUD A The story of two deaf mutes, John (ALAN ARKIN) and Spiros (CHUCH McCANN) who have little else but each other until Spiros must enter a hospital, leaving John alone in a world he does not understand. "Alan Arkin's performance is a masterpiece."-N.Y. Daily News. "Alan Arkin is extraordinary."-N.Y. TIMES. "Alan Arkin triumphs."-Judith Crist. With SANDRA LOCKE, STACY KEACH, CICELY TYSON. Tomorrow: MLB 3-VIGILANTE FORCE and 2W0M MANIACS . . ... '"'tobyJIMKUZ" Birzeit University Prof. Henne Nasir claims the Israelis are unnecessarily sup- pressing what he says are the Palestinians' "basic human rights." Nasir is currently on a lecture tour of the United States to raise Amercan support for his cause. Prof speaks out against Israeli academic restraint By TIM YAGLE A professor from a university on Israel's West Bank accused Israelis of infringing on "academic freedom in Palestine" in a speech last night before an audience of about 80 in the Michigan Union Kuenzel Room. Bir Zeit University Prof. Henne Nasir focused on the May 2 closing of that university, a liberal arts college on the West Bank. Nasir claimed the Israelis closed the school because "it was threatening public peace" and the Israelis thought its students were "sub- versive." The student population at Bir Zeit University is dominated by Arabs. NASIR, WHO WAS deported from his Palestinian homeland in 1974, asserted that Bir Zeit's graduate students were forbidden by Israelis to student-teach in West Bank high schools because of the students' alleged subversiveness. The Israelis "can't make collective statements about these students," Nasir claimed. According to Nasir, the 1,200 students at Bir Zeit University "are being deprived from ptirsuing their higher education, which is our strongest weapon for survival." Many of them, Nasir continued, are sent to the United See PROF, Page 12 ANN ARBOR CIVIC THEATRE Proudly presents THE TONYAWARD WINNING MUSICAL oooooooooooooooooooooo Stephen Sondheim's 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Book by James Goldman o 0 First time in this area May 31, June 1-3, 1979 Tickets available by mail: Follies, P.O. Box 1993, AA 48106 ($3.50-12.50. *See diagram.) or at Tix-Info Jacobson's J-Shop, State St. 662-5129. 35 8.508.S pia 2.50 S O FSLLIES TG sTAGE at Power Center