Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, June 19, 1970 Friday, June 19, 19713 THE MICHOGAN DAILY Labor-backed anti-war groups sponsor meeting in Cleveland Friday, June 19, 1970 Friday, June 19, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Upset scorec -Associated Press You. can't get ever ything you want . Alice Brock chats with a neighborhood child in the yard of her home in Lenox, Mass. where she disclosed she is scrapping her plans to open a second "Alice's Restaurant." She says she can't live down her reputation as a dope-taking, free-loving woman as portrayed in the movie. "Alice's Restaurant," a highly successful Arthur Pen movie starring folk singer Arlo Guthrie. Local citizens had expressed the rear that the restaurant would become a hang-out for "hippy" types. Mrs. Brock said she has no plans for ever going into the restaurant business again. By JANE BARTMAN An "emergency" national anti- war conference called for this weekend by a Cleveland peace group has been backed by a num- ber of labor leaders, among them Gus Scholle, president of the Michigan AFL-CIO. The "National Emergency Con- ference Against the Cambodia- Laos-Vietnam War" will open to- day at Cuyahoga Community Col- lege in Cleveland and will last through Sunday. The purpose of the conference is to. organize sum-I mer and fall offensives for the anti-war movement. Scholle and 12 other area lead- ers, including Tom Tunner, presi- dent of the Metropolitan Detroit AFL-CIO and Grady Glenn, pres- ident of the UAWs Ford Local 600 in Dearborn have written a* letter endorsing the conference and encouraging the labor move- ment to become involved in pro- tests of the Vietnam War. "The American l a b o r move- ment," the statement from the union officials reads, "can no longer avoid comning to grips with the unconstitutional, undeclared war in Southeast Asia, except at its own peril and at the peril of the United States . . . the time has come for responsible union leaders not only to speak out but to act." The Cleveland conference or- ganizers have said the number of laborrunion officials endorsing the conference has risen to 22. Scholle spoke at a press confer- ence held by the Detroit Coalition to End the War last month to an- nounce the conference. He de- clared at that time that labor leaders have a "moral responsibil- ity" to help organize protesters. Vice President Spiro Agnew will be speaking Saturday night at a $250-a-plate R e p u b 1 i c a n fund raising dinner, and will be met by a demonstration organized by planners of the conference. I The emergency conference is sponsored by the Cleveland Area Peace Action Council, organizers of past national planning confer- ences, and one last spring which eventually gave birth to Novem- ber's massive demonstration in NEW DOUBLE ALBUM SPECIAL BOB DYLAN Self-Portrait ONLY HI-Fl BUYS Ann Arbor-East Lansinq 618 S. Main 769-4700 "Quality Sound Throuqh Quality Euipment" Washington drawing an estimated purported. Many came away feel- 200.000-500.000 protesters. ing that the organizers of that Organizers h a v e stressed that conference railroaded proposals this weekend's conference, is to be through without really involving an entirely "open" one, each in- those who attended it. dividual attending the conference Ann Arbor Student Mobilization being entitled to a vote on pro- Committee organizer D a v e Ruh- posals. A conference organized by land estimates 50-100 people from the same group held this spring Ann Arbor will be attending the has been criticized by some pro- conference. People interested in test leaders as having only a sem-: going should contact the organi- blance of the democratic structure zation. ources hit Nixon's f ires on troops British elec WASHINGTON (R ')- Although President Nixon has said "the great majority" of U.S. forces would be out of Cambodia by now' authoritative sources say half the number of American troops sent into that nation is still there. The President also has promised to have all American troops out by June 30. He repeated the pledge Wednesday in his televised report to the nation on economic condi- tions. As of Wednesday, however, the Heath scores surprise win in UK voting (Continued from Page 3) to see more results." Shortly after that his party was showing a net gain of 40 Commons seats and; Labor a net loss of 36. sources said about 10,000 American troops remain in Cambodia "still searching, still sweeping and still removing enemy supplies" from the jungle sanctuaries along the South Vietnamese border. In his May 8 news conference, Nixon said: "The great majority of all American units will be out by the second week of June." The Defense Department has said the U.S. troop level in Cam- bodia reached 20,000 men soon after the incursion started April 29. The White House denied this week the President's words about the mid-June target constituted a pledge. A spokesman contended the President had merely voiced an expectation based on field re- ports from Saigon. Since the Cambodian operation began with the announced purpose of cleaning out communist sanc- tuaries, the White House and Pentagon have used different fig- ures on the number of troops in- volved. LONDON (PA--Edward Heath will become prime minister at the head of a new Conservative government, on the basis of incomplete but indicative election returns available at dawn today. It was evident that the Conservatives had made a stun- ning comeback in yesterday's election, with Heath setting the pace in much the way that Harry S. Truman pulled suc- cess out of predicted defeat in the 1948 U.S. election. The outcome was one of the greatest electoral surprises in many years, and the pollsters who had Harold Wilson going back to No. 10 Downing St. were hiding their heads. As prime minister, Wilson had a 65-seat majority in the House of Commons when he called this election in an effort to give Labor a total of 10 years in power. But on the basis of results de- clared early today Wilson had lost his majority. Computer projections 't ( k) by the British Press Association -Associated Press THE WINNER IN Britain's general election yesterday, Con- servative Party leader Edward Heath, smiles broadly as he is escorted from Conservative Party headquarters in London around. 3 a.m. this morning, London time. FOURTH STRAIGHT DAY: Miami racialviolenc on a police rel ax cL Conservative /U/ 6X.7 q, irf ew MIAMI (-Miami entered its day night as blacks in all troubled tempting to break into the school. fourth straight day of racial vio- areas defied a city and county He was reported to have been shot lence yesterday as a school secur- dawn-to-dusk curfew. Nearly 60 in the leg. ity guard shot and slightly wound- ed an alleged intruder. a truck driver was beaten and roving mobs' bombarded police with rocks and. bottles. persons were arrested but the ma-j Officers said the driver was jority. charged with curfew vio- dragged out of a soft drink de- lations, were released without bond livery truck. beaten and his ve- after early morning court sessions. hicle taken. It was found later, None of the six wounded Wed- I abandoned and emptied of its! and others predicted a majority of 20-30 in the 630-seat House to back Heath, a 53-year-old bache-. lor who was a top official in the Conservative government t h a t Wilson ousted in 1964. The figures available at that time did not prove this, but Heath's party could rely on a stream of victories to be declared later in the day in traditionally i Conservative strongholds. With more than 400 of the 630 districts reporting, the Conserva- tives had won 183 seats for a net gain of 48. Labor with 224 seats showed a net loss of 42. The Liberal party had won only one seat for a loss of three. Wilson, however, refused to ty concede defeat, saying at 2 a.m. bi i tcangeverin government, In his June 3 report to the na- if final results decree it, will take In oh Je roress o the Ca- plae wthi 24hous. her istion on the progress of the Cam- place within 24 houis. There is bodian operation, Nixon had said nogwatin2"mnt31,000 troops tooks part and 17,000 inauguration, y'had been pulled back across the It seemed generally agreed that border into South Vietnam. The Powell, a maverick on the Con-' Pentagon at th~e time was using a servative right wing, had made afge ofa20,000. significant impact in the areas figure of 20,000. where nonwhite immigrants have Pentagon spokesman Jerry W. concentrated. Powell first injected Friedheim sought to clear up this the race issue into British politics apparent discrepency by explain- in 1968, and this year he pressed ing the following day that the the view that immigration must 31,000 figure used by the President be stopped and the nonwhites al- represented the total number of ready here subsidized to return U.S. troops who had been in Cam- home to the West Indies or else- bodia since the start of the Cam- where. bodian incursion. Police agreed to relax a curfew nesday were reported to be in ser that covered nearly half of Miami ous condition. Two of the fiv last night in an effort to restore wounded Tuesday night, howeve peace in black neighborhoods after were critically injured. four nights of shooting, looting The sheriff's department said and firebombing. private detective agency guard a As the announcement was made signed to the now-closed all-blac by Mrs. Athalee Range, a black school shot an armed youth a city commissioner, reports of gun- fire, rock throwing and vandalism continued to flow into police head-!ps quarters. R Scattered sniping was reported in Miami's Brownsville and Liber- ty City areas and the sheriff's of- efo fice said police were being pelted ,r ; 0 with rocks and bottles by roving: gangs "all over the area." WASHINGTON P> - A sweepin A meeting of black community overhaul of the mails designedt leaders and adults was broken up put them on a self-paying bas last night by youths demanding by 1978--plus a retroactive 8 p an end to the curfew, which police cent pay raise for mailmen--pas said "we'll use only if we have to." ed the House yesterday and we One of the disrupters said to the Senate. Passage came on through a bullhorn "Liberty City roll call vote of 359 to 24. belongs to blacks and no racist The historic reform-pay bill wa pigs are going to come and set up passed after resounding defeato roadblocks or curfews. If they're a second attempt to scrap the r going to impose a curfew here it form plan and give mailmen t has to be extended to the whole pay raise. country." Opponents claimed the b: The iolece tartd Modaywould turn Congiress' controlo The violence started Monday thedails over togapolitically-a after reports that a white grocert had insulted a black housewife. pointed board not answerable Six persons were shot Wednes- n p .a o ny. i- cargo. ve The ft E!", outbreak marketi a section, ;s- partment ck yesterday A- meat con ises a to ocal point of the violentI the Pic-N-Pay super-1 in Miami's Brownsville was entered by state De- t of Agriculture agents y and 3,000 pounds of. ndemned and seized. r London time, "It could narrow thing." He had; ed that his deputy in be a very ac just learn- as leadership la 1 of the Labor party, George Brown, was a loser. ) U RL I The racist views of Enoch Po- well, a Conservative firebrand, ap- peared to be a factor in the party's showing in some areas. The election was for 630 seats in the House of Commons. Wil- son's nnrty held a 65-seat maior- s: Ri sei A th ir Valid through June 21, 1970 0 Limit one coupen per customer 211 N. Main, 663-7758 '1 I) . __ r f ~1 BORT CARLETON SANDALS HAN DBAGS BELTS Sandals from $16 JUST RECEIVED NEW SHIPMENT CAMPUSMAST' SHOP 2 STORES Main S r : I Boas $995 SELECT YOUR OWN SIZE, SHAPE, AND SHADE OF REPTILE FROM OUR WIDE ASSORTMENT I ANN ARBOR PET SUPPLY 1200 Packard 761-4785 OPEN FRIDAYS TILL 9 g ture the mail system, not reform ! b'Ju to "aeigity when he called the e e is "Labeling something r e f o r m sengowae ofago er does not make it reform," said fseeming wave of good s- Rep. Wayne L. Hays (D-Ohio). dieting nt "You can label a garbage can re- Pollsters, most of wh a form and what's inside is still forecast a big Labor vista garbage." I red-faced. For the first t as But the motion by Rep. H. R. national electorate includ of Gross (R-Iowa, to scrap reform, of 18,.19 and 20, but theE e- which would give mailmen an 8 this was yet to be analyzed he per cent pay raise, and let them About three hours after reach top pay in 8 years instead of sults started coming in ill the present 21, was defeated 306 said he was much enci to 77. then added: "I am ready Then--with scores of blue-gray over the government-bu uniformed mailmen watching from talking about that I wou the galleries-the House went on See HEATH, Page 1 to pass the reform-pay bill. - --- An expected fight over making u s the pay boost retroactive to April1e. Cost of the raise is estimated at $538.2 million for the full fiscal: year starting July 1 plus $107 mil- lstrhnauiy lion fox' the retroactivity. - re iet Nixon and Postm ase7 said the system is needed to wipeg w out deficits now running more MOSCOW {k' - The than $1.2 billion a year. }Soyuz 9 spaceship comp] In other related action yester- days in space yesterday a day, the House turned aside a seemed to be going strong. Southern-rural effort to block There has been no hin higher pay for mailmen in New the ship will be brought York City and other high cost-of- Official reports describe living areas. thing working well on bot The House then approved 120 to say cosmonauts Andrian N 59 a provision that area wage and Vitaly Sevastyanov fe negotiation be flexible for the Meanwhile, it was an areas that need it, and not man- that the Cosmos 348 un } datory for all areas of the coun- earth satellite, launched S2 try. was another in a cooperati Rejected, 124 to 67, was an being carried out by Eas amendment by Rep. Sam Gibbons pean Communist countries (D-Fla), to prohibit postal unions The series started in D and the new postal service fromr 1968. It is aimed at study negotiating any higher wages for upper layers of the earl the same work in one section of mosphere, polar lights an the country than in another. netic storms. LL, 111UJ..L - ction in age of a will re- li. mic con- w co om hadT Dry, were gt time the of ed voters fe effect of: o d. the re- , eath ac ouraged, to take t before ld want at 10 th - a< vil sh2 he] Ad co pC sex tro rS I 662-4251 740 PACKARD 662-4241 CLIDTCWith Hangers H RDry Or 22.a Cleaning Packaged Order HOURS COIN OPERATED LAUNDRY OPEN Mon. thru Fri. 7:30 a.m. to 8 p.m. MON.-SUN. 7:30 A.M. TO 11 P.M. Saturday 7:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. WASHERS STILL ONLY 25c, DRYERS Sc I Soviet ga eted 17{pr and still or t when th t down. tic every- ici ard and th ikolayev Ut el fine. ink I nounced manned aturday. ve series t Euro- S. ecember ying the h's at- id mag- sa of ch us ne ' pu sa -Associated Press TWO YOUNG GIRLS throw a fire bomb into a grocery store in the Brownsville section of Miami, setting a small fire, which fire- men soon extinguished. The extent of the damage was unknown.