Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILtY Saturday, July 8, 1 972 Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAIlY Saturday, July 8, 1972 CAL DELEGATES: DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN McGovern setback Poor peoples' coalition disrupts Dems' meeting SATURDAY, JULY 8 Music School: Gale Kramer, organ doctoral, Hill Aud, 8 p.m. SUNDAY, JULY 9 TV Center Film: 'Challenge of Chal- lenge," WWJ-TV, Channel 4. noon. MONDAY, JULY 10 SACUA Meeting: 4 fl., Admin. Bldg., 2 s~i,. Audio-Visual Center Films: "Eth- nic Minorities: Chicano," "Ballad of Crawlast," "Nort1hAmerlean Indan,, Pt. I: Tatis ade , ' ea sB oken Eskimo Fight for Life," Aud. 4, MLB, 7 p.m. Carillon Concert: William DeTurk, Burton Memorial Tower, 7 p.m. Music School:. Michael Stoune, flute doctoral, Sch. of Music Recital Hall, 8 p.m. CAREER PLANNING AND PLACEMENT 3200 SAB INTERVIEW: Foremost Insurance Co., Gd. Rapids, July 13, for a Pub. Relations Asst., pref. MA in advs., jxurn.,en . orerelated field BA iA aspac, in pub, rel. or witing sili; sal 764-7460 for appts, beginning July 5, or come in; resume by July 10. ANNOUNCEMENT: UCLA has four yr. grad fellowship to be filled within a month. Mich. grads with good scho- lastic standing contact: Prof. N. Alex- opuolos, Div. of Elec. Sciences, UCLA, L.A., Calif. 90024. (Continued from Page 1) reques's by both the party and the Daley contingent for a full hearing on the issues. The circuit court ruled two days ago that the Credentials Committee overstepped its au- therity in ordering the Califorsia dolegf'tes apportioned among all the winner-take-all primary. The Supreme Court said "In light of the availability of the convention as a forum to review the recommendations of the' Credentials Committee, . . . the lack of precedent to support the extraordinary relief granted by the Court of Appeals and the large public interest in allowing the political processes to func- tion free from judicial super- vision, we conclude the judg- ments of the Court of Appeals must ha stayed." The decision came at a special session of the court, only its fourth in history. Voting in the majority were Chief Justice Warren Burger, and Justices Harry Blackmun. Potter Stewart, Lewis Powell, William Rehnquist, and William Brennan Jr. Brennan was not present at the court but the unsigned ma- jority opinion said he concurred in the decision. Dissenting were Justices Mar- shall, William Douglas and Byron White. (Continued from Page 1) ed to remain and the committee resumed its session. Those involved with convention planning told the disrupters snace for 750 unofficial "dele- The Yippies and the Zippies set up camp in Miami Beach (Continued from Page 3) Rubin. Abbie Hoffman, and poet Allen Ginsberg. Ann Arbor was represented by Rev. Mark Harris of the Can- terbury House. Harris is one of 400 members of the Religious and Community Members Con- cerned, who have arrived here. Aside from the organizational activities of rumor control groups and the Yippie leaders, most of the action centered on rapping with shuffle-board playing sen- ior citizens, looking for dope- the price of marijuana here has inflated to $25 an ounce - and watching television crews watch the campers. Little of yesterday's activity seemed to have a great deal to do with the Democratic Conven- tion, the reason why most of the campers came to Miami in the first place. Although a few young people discussed the economy, the war and the presidency with a seem- ingly interested audience of older people, most of the talk was about dope and much of the ac- tion mere frolicking. Things may change today when Rev. Ralph Abernathy and his supporters arrive to set up their Resurrection City II in the park, and when more of the ex- pected 5,000 demonstrators show up. In the meantime, Miami Beach's Flamingo Park, with its solitary Bunyan tree, is a far cry from p r e v i o u s revolutionary campgrounds. In fact, the most heated mo- ment of the day came when an elderly lady shouted at her in- credulous husband, "those hip- pies are very nice people. There's nothing wrong with them, so shut up." He did. I~~~ iUnIE 3UE Youll Enjoy It Ribeye Steak Lunch $1.39 3035 Washtenaw across from Lee Oldsmobile lfO.J IiT OUTTIIEACII Summer Half-Term TENTATIVE LIST OF PROJECTS TO BE OFFERED: > Child Care Action Center Investigations of Mental Instit. and Prisons Northville State Hospital Project Transition T-group Wayne County Child Devel. Center IF INTERESTED, YOU MUST ATTEND MASS -MEETING ON MONDAY, JULY 10, 7:30 P.M., AUD. A, ANGELL HALL. gates" simply isn't available. Instead, they have suggested that the group be granted 10 seats in the visitors gallery-an offer the coalition has scoffed at. NWRO's George Wiley has threatened "direct action both inside and outside the convn- tion floor" if the 750 aren't al- lowed in, More significant however, is a threat to withhold support of the Democratic nominee if an agreement isn't reached. "if the Democrats close the doors against the poor people," SCLCi Rev. Ralph Abernathy warned yesterday, "we will have to cloe the voting booths to the Demo- cratic Party." Following the disruption of the committee meeting, DNC chair- man Lawrence O'Brien-who had left when the protesters entered -returned to announce that a subcommittee would attempt to negotiate a reasonable compro- mise" with the protesting groups. The first subcommittee mee ing yesterday afternoon was un- eventful and it remained very unclear whether anything would be worked out in time for the convention's opening Monday. Rennie Davis, who represented PCPJ in the meeting, said, "I really don't know whether the Democrats will offer anything that we can accept." For the Democrats, the most crucial issue is the election. While it is hard to believe that the poor people's groups would actively support Nixon; their apathy could have a chilling ef- feet on Democratic election chances. Such groups as SCLC and NWRO exert a considerabl influence in the black and poor community -traditional sources of support for the party. Also, charges that the conven- tion underepresents the poor hit hard in a year when party lead- ers have boasted of their "open convention" under the McGovern- Fraser reforms. For the coalition, there is no particular advantage in sitting out the election, especially .f the nominee is George McGovern whom many of them see as pref- erable to President Nixon. As Abernathy said yesterday, "We want to beat Nixon, we just don't want the Democratic party to take poor people for granted." Any solution which will be ac- ceptable to both sides will be hard to come by. DIAL 668-6416 FOR SHOW TIMES NAME YOUR POISON! W. BEATTY-J. CHRISTIE MRS.MILLER WORSHIP FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH On the Campus- Corner State and William Sts. Rev. Terry N. Smith, Senior Minister Rev. Ronald C. Phillips, Assistant FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH AND WESLEY FOUNDATION State at Huron and Washington 9:30 and 11:00 a.m.-Sermon. Broadcast WNRS 1290 am, WNRZ 103 fm, 11:00-noon, CANTERBURY HOUSE Canterbury House, meeting at its own place (603 E, William St.-over Mark's Coffee- house), 11:00 a.m BETHLEHEM UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST 423 S. Fourth Ave. Telephone 665-6149 Ministers: T. t. Trost, Jr., R. E. Simonson 9:00 a.m.-Morning Prayer. 10:00 a.m. - Worship Service and Church School. PACKARD ROAD BAPTIST CHURCH 2580 Packard Road-971-0773 Tom Bloxam, Pastor-971-3152 Sunday School---9:45 a.m. Worship-11:00 a.m. and 7:00 p.m. Training Hour-6:00 p.m. FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST 1833 Washtenaw Ave. SUNDAY 10:30 a.m.--Worship Services. Sunday School (2-20 years). Infants room available Sunday and Wednesday. Public Reading Room, 306 E. Liberty St. -- Mon., 10-9; Tues.-Sat., 10-5. Closed Sun- days and Holidays. For transportation call 668-6427. CAMPUS CHAPEL 1236 Washtenaw Minister: Rev. Donald Postem HURON HILLS BAPTIST CHURCH 3150 Glacier Way Pastor: Charles Johnson For information, transportation, personalized help, etc., phone 769-6299 or 761-6749. LORD OF LIGHT LUTHERAN CHURCH, formerly the Lutheran Student Chapel and Center 801 South Forest at Hill Donald G. Zill, Pastor Sunday, 10:15 a.m.-Fol Mss. Wednesday, 5:15 p.m -Eucharist. ST. ANDREW'S EPSICOPAL CHURCH 306 N. Division 8:00 a.m.-Holy Eucharist. 10:00 a.m.-Holy Eucharist and Sermon. UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL (LCMS) 1511 Washtenaw Ave. Alfred T. Scheips, Pastor Sunday morning at 9:00-Bible Study. Sunday morning at 10:15-Worship Service. Wednesday evening at 9:00-Midweek Wor- ship, FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 1432 Washtenaw Ave. Services of Worship--9:00 and 10:30 a.m.- Sermon: "One-Ness in Mission." Preach- ing: Howard F. Gebhart. Bible Study at 10:30 a.m. Holy Communion-5:15 Thursdays. -PLUS- DEALING: OR THE BERKELEY-TO-BOSTON FORTY-BRICK LOST-BAG BLUES DEALING tells the story of the weed "underground railroad" between the coasts. From the filmmaker who brought you "The Revolutionary"