Republicans invade Miami Beach (yawn) By SARA FITZGERALD Special To The Daity MIAMI BEACH - The Repub- lican, Convention has hit - or rather happened to - Miami Beach. Just three days before the convention is scheduled to begin, you can't get a parking space at the Fontainebleu Hotel. Inside, the hearings go on - with the only excitement being whether platform planks will be released in time for newspaper deadlines. The dissidents have had their moment of testimony - and have been then ignored. Paul McCloskey, who had managed to garner one delegate in New Mexico, couldn't get one of his suporter into that spot. Instead a Nixon man will duti- fully and quietfully pass one vote for the California congressman. Even Jill Ruckelhaus, the able, yet moderate spokeswoman for the past National Women's Political Caucus (and wife of a top member of the Nixon ad- ministration) praised a women's plank that includes no mention of abortion. So for excitement, the party is holding Youth Appreciation Day, a worship service with cabinet members and a breakfast, cute- ly entitled "See How She Runs," designed to honor women candi- dates. The convention will feature films - on Pat Nixon, Richard Nixon and Dwight Eisenhower. And it will have its own retinue of superstars-praying, singing, pledging allegiance to the flag -in the form of Charleton Hes- ton, Jimmy Stewart, J o h n Wayne, Pat Boone and Bart Starr. Dissension, if any, is found in Flamingo Park, where nondele- gates are arguing over who gets to sleep where, who gets to rep- resent whom, with the anar- chists versus the action organiz- ers. Under agreement with city of- ficials, the campers are policing themselves and "theoreticaly" there's to be no pot, no skinny- dipping this time. THESE NON-DELEGATES show their feelings for the Republican's convention by their "Vomitoriun" set-up in Flamingo Park where they are camping. ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN Saturday, August 19, 1972 News Phone: 764-0552 Page Three GOP Platform committee writes pro-Nixon planks MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (P)-The Republican Platform committee dpproved planks yesterday that were understood to mirror Presi- dent Nixon's program for the Indochina war and foreign policy generally. In its preamble, the draft plank of the platform said the Democratic party has been "seiz- ed by a radical clique which scorns our nation's past and would blight her future." One plank which mimicked Nixon's policies pledged to achieve peace through continua- tion of the administration's Viet- namization policy if negotiations fail, and it insisted on return of prisoners of war and an account- ing for servicemen missing in action as a prerequisite for with- drawal. "Here and now we reject all proposals to grant amnesty to those who have broken the law by evading military service," the committee-approved plank declared. On defense spending, the docu- ment denounced proposed "meat- ax slashes with which some Americans are now beguiled by the political opposition." The plank pledged "to press on toward a lasting peace" with- out "a unilateral slash of our military power." It expressed wholehearted sup- port of an all-volunteer armed force and said the goal of ending the draft should be reached by July, 1973. Its final version goes to the Re- publican National Convention on Tuesday and is expected to get prompt approval. Five hundred U. S. Secret agents, charged with the safety of the President, vice president, and their families, were scurry- ing about outside as the Plat- form Committee worked yester- day. The agents are just part of the massive security force which will total more than 8,600 police and troops by the time the Re- publican National. Convention opens Monday. -AP Photo MIAMI BEACH policeman Kenny Glassman, 25, isn't much older than the demonstrators he'll meet Monday when he'll be in the front line guarding the convention's opening. House votes in favor of Soviet missile agreement WASHINGTON (F) - The five- But Rep. Samuel Stratton (D- year U.S.-Soviet missile freeze N.Y.), said even the temporary was passed overwhelmingly by agreement "has a lot of loop- the House yesterday but remain- holes. ed stalled in -the Senate. He said the loopholes incltde Approval came after only 1 superior numbers and size of-Soy- hours of debate, and there were iet over U.S. missiles frozen and no attempts to revise it such as ambiguity over how much Sov- the one by Sen. Henry Jackson, iet missile silos could be enlarg- (D-Wash.) that has talled it in ed. the Senate for weeks. House Foreign Affairs Chair- The five-year offensive weap- man Thomas Doc Morgan (D-' ons interim agreement was sign- Pa.) said the five-year agree- ed in Moscow May 26 by Presi- ment could save the United Stat- dent Nixon and Soviet party es $10 billion, $2 billion a year, leader Leonid Brezhnev along by slowing down the U.S.-Soviet with the treaty which limits de- arms race. fensive antimissile sites. Isn't gravity wonderful? These three Michiganders take a break from summer's dold- rums with an orgiastic ride on a roller coaster at the Wayne County 4-H Fair in Belleville. ECO-NO TES, By ZODIAC News Service * The daily newspaper delivered to your door may be the next great health hazard, warns Dr. Morris Joselow of the New Jersey Medical School. Printer's ink used for newspapers contains lead. The depart- ment of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW) has officially defined the maximum acceptable lead intake for children at 300 micrograms a day. Joselow says that since most people take in around 200 micrograms of lead each day from their food and from the air, a child who habitually chews only a few spitballs a day from the family paper could easily exceed the 300 micro- gram limit. *Environmentalists are launching a drive against a new form of pollution-Ecopornography, any attempt on the part of a com- pany to show that it is "ecologically concerned" when, by the standards of the ecology-minded, it is not. According to a com- plaint filed with the national advertising review board, one such company is Johnson's Wax of Racine, Wis., which advertises its wall cleaner named "Regard" as containing "organic oils." According to the complaint, filed by Rich Meislin of Emmaus, Pa., there are two ways to define the word "organic" and John- son's Wax is expoliting the popular use of the word. Although the petrochemical definition of the word "organic is anything con- taining carbon compounds," the popular definition has come to be "pure" or "natural." To environmentalists, "organic" is, among other things, anything grown without pesticides, artifical fertil- izers, and processed without antibiotics or preservatives. Johnson's "Regard" is made from paraffin oils-a product of crude petroleum.