Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, July 14, 1976 Humphrey speech dr (Costinued frsom Page1) firm our independence and seem tepid by comparison. vote out the Republican Tories. Few of the remarks made in "IF THEY (the Republicans) lttnsphrev's ten minute ad- wish to be hesrd let them go to dress to the Democrats receiv- Kansas City," he said. "There ed less thn the warmest of ap- they will find the Republican pro-al. President and his tired old par- Taking a stih at the onnos- ty who tell us we do not need ing Rrnrblion party, H1um- fresh imagination and new phrrv told the delegates, "In ideas. 1776 the American neople pro- "After right years of phases, cl-imed their independence freezes and failure; of start- and throw out the British Tor- uips and slow - downs, of high ies. Well, I'm here to tell you prices and fewer jobs, we are tonight that in 1976 the Ameri- still being asked for just a lit- can people will once agoin af- tle more time and patience. Go Televi viewing t aws cheers Carter platform receives slow, not now, no, no, veto -L i c v said the Minnesota senator. This is their policy. Well, we've had enough of this defeatism." Touching on an issue remi- niscent of his party's last gath- ering four years ago, the sena- tor said, "In the 1960's, a rele- tively few Americans out of our 200 million were involved di- rectly in the war in Vietnam. It was a war ten thousand miles away. It's burden was borne by few. Never the less, the pain and the suffering of those few grew into widespread guilt, dis- sension, and bitterness at home as if the whole spirit of this nation was sapped. le continued, "Today, just as the war in Vietnam ultimately poisoned the whole politic of America, so will the continued loss of income and the failure to provide jobs for a minority of our people ultimately sap our strength and the spirit of our people." Continuing his address to the unemployment issue - an is- sie which has been the subject of much controversy in this 1976 presidential race - Hum- phrey declared, "We must bring every willing and able - bodied American into the mainstream of American economic life. Work, not welfare. Paychecks, not the dole. I f ? 7 fl 13 NEws C I1ID)tEAMYOF JEANNiIE 20 ('IS('o KID) 30 ZOOM 50IM MADV BUNCh 6:30 4 13 NBC NEWS --Chan-ellor Brinkley ii Cus NEws-waIter ('enakitef 20 DANIL (O()NE 50 I ILOVE LUCY 7:00 3 Cns NERS S-aler 13 IEMIn('RATIC CONVENTIOS 7 ABC NEWS-Ilarry ANII)Y (GItIFFiTII 11 FAMIIY AFFAIR 30 RO0FRT MaeNEIL RI POH1T 511FAIII AFFAIR 56 IGACY AMERIICAN% 62 SPEAKING (OF SIORTS 7:30 2 11 DEMOCRATIC CONVENTION 7 COIiTROOM 5 ROOM 222 20 STUMP TIE STARS 30 CROCKETT'S VICTORY G A RDEN 50 IIOGAN'S HEROES 56 ROBERT MacNEIl. RE- PORT 62 NEWS THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume I.XXXVI, No. 45-S Wednesday, July 14, 1576 is edited and managed by students at the tniversity of Michigan News phone 764-0311. Second co epostage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 40109. Published d a i I y Tuesday through Sunday morning during the Univer- sity year at 420 Maynard Street. Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109 Subscription rates: $12 Sept. thni April (2 semes- ters ;$13 by mail outside Ann Arbor, Summer session published Tue- day t h r o u g h Saturday morning. Subscription rates: $6 50 in Ann Arbor; $7.50 by mail outside Ann Arbor. 8:00 7 BIONIC WOMAN T9 ) TIlE SEA IN STIIPS 20 1IT TAKES A TIIIEF 30 56 NOVA 50 MERV GRIFFIN 62 MOVIE "Fighter Attack" 9:00 7 DEMOCRATIC CONVENTION :>0 700 CLUB 30 56 GREAT PERFORMANCES 50 MOVIE "Garden of Evil." 9:30 9 MUSIC MACIIINE 10:00 DE10CRATIC CONVEN- TION 30561.IFE OF I.EONARDO DA VINCI 62 PTL CLUB 10:30 20 TIlE ItOCK 11:00 4 13 NEW NS 20 ADVENTURES IN PARADISE 50 BEST OF GROUCHO DEMOCRATIC CONVEN- TION It the rcnvention runs over- tim, neatwork coverage Bmay pre-empt or delay the start of scheduled programming. 11:30 2 11 NEWS 4 13 JOHNNY CARSON 9 CBC NEWS 50 MOVIE "San Quentin" 56 ABC NEWS 12:00 2 MARY HARTMAN, MARY HARTMAN Mary gives instructions to Tom's sex therapist, and hears the story about Muriel's scar from Loretta 7 62 NEWS 11 MOVIE f"The Fixer" 12:30 2 MOVIE "The Fixer" 7 24 MOVIE "Returning Home" 1:0f 4 TOMORROW 13 NEWS 2:00 4 CLASSROOM 7 NEWS 2:20 11 NEWS 2:30 4 NEWS 2:50 2 PROTECTORS 3:50 2 NEWS (Continuedfrom Page 1) AT THE convention's mara- thon second session, nearly nine hours long, the party's last two presidential n o m i n e e s, Sen. George McGovern of South Da- kota and Sen. Hubert Humphrey of Minnesota, took turns assail- ing the Republicans who defeat- ed them. Two of the vice presidential prospects, M u s k i e and Sen. Frank Church of Idaho, were among the party leaders who spoke on platform planks. Both drew cheers centered in their state delegations, and there were chants of "We want Church" after his denunciation of Republican foreign policy. Humphrey said the voters will t h r o w out the "Republican Tories" and make Carter presi- dent. (See related story below). McGovern called for the kind of Democratic unity his 1972 ticket was denied, and said America cannot afford four more years of an administration in which the veto has been used "53 times . . .. to paralyze the elected representatives of the American people." THEN CAME platform time, but it was a show, not a de- bate, a succession of speeches by party leaders on each sec- tion of the document that was set in advance. That brought Muskie to the microphone, to accuse Presi- dent Ford of saying no, no and no again, to economic and jobs programs Americans need. "We need not government by veto but government by inspired leadership," he said. JACQUELINE Kennedy Onas- sis, widow of John Kennedy, at- tending her first convention, received a standing ovation from the delegates. When her husband was nominated in 1960, she did not attend the conven- tion because she was pregnant. Alabama Gov. George Wal- lace was chosen to speak of government reform, which is covered in the platform with a plank pledging the kind of ov- erhaul and consolidation for which Carter has campaigned. Wallace put his own stamp on the issue, and in a line he used from a hundred platforms in his own quests for the presidency, told the convention: "Some of these bureaucratic briefcase toters ought to have their brief- cases thrown in the Potomac River because the American people would be better off." Udall releases delegates (Continued fromPage1) Udall, who will be nominated by former Watergate Special Prosecutor Archibald Cox to- night at Madison Square Gar- den, told his committed dele- gates that he was relinquishing his legal hold over their votes to allow them to cast their first ballot this evening for the can- didate of their choice. "I ADVISED Governor Carter in June that I would not stand in the way of any Udall dele- gate who wished to be with the obvious first ballot winner," he explained, "and I will take nec- essary action to guarantee that each delegate under my banner will be able to vote his con- science." That statement drew the first set of hisses heard yesterday in the Gold Ballroom of the Statler Hilton, where Udall made his statement. The second display of delegate disappointment came when a re- porter asked the Arizona repre- sentative if his decision to ac- cept Cox's nomination tonight wasn't "just a charade to take up time." UDALL WAITED for his dele- gates to quiet and then said to the reporter, "I think you've heard the answer from my sup- porters." Although Udall released his delegates yesterday, many of the campaign die-hards are still sticking with their man. "I worked on his campaign in Arizona and feel very close to him," said Arizona delegate Karen Scates. "I'm still going to vote for him. I can't help but to feel that he still has a chance. Where were all these people when we needed them?" she asked, motioning to the cheer- ing crowd. "IT'S KIND of saddening, like election night '72," she added, "but it's not a wake. To know Mo is to love him. He's really dynamite." "He's beautiful," gushed New York delegate Miriam Jackson. "I love everything he says. The Carter supporters are very thin, they don't have the same strong commitment to the campaign that we Udall supporters have. You bet I'm still going to vote for him." Udall's daughter Bambi, 22, who accompanied her parents yesterday afternoon, applauded her father's announcement to accept Cox's nomination. "I'M REALLY pleased with what he decided to do," she said. "His decision to put his name in nomination is a natural decision after all he's stood for, And if the showing in that room is any indication, then he will probably lose very few votes by releasing his delegates. "I'm coming out of this with something much more impor- tant than the nomination and that's tremendous pride in him," she said. As Udall's smile began to drop while fielding more serious questions from the press, one of his delegates sighed to no one in particular, "Jokes, Mo. Come on, Mo, give us the jokes." "Oh, he's got some new ones," another supporter said to her. "He's getting into animal jokes. It was turtles yesterday, and frogs on Sunday." "It must be from hanging around with all these tigers," she responded, smiling. HOUSING DIVISION. BAITS HOUSES, Resident Staff Applications For 1976-77 Academic Year AVAILABLE STARTING JULY 12, 1976 IN HOUSING OFFICE, 1500 S.A.B. POSITION Resident Advisor, Baits Houses OPENING: (Graduate Coed Hall) Advisory positions reouire Junior status or above for the Resident Advisor positions. OUALIFICATIONS: (1) Must be o resistered U. of M. student on the Ann Arbor Campus in onod academic stand- inn during the period of employment. (21 Must have lived in residence halls at University level for ot least one vear. (3) Must hove o 2.5 orade point overooe at time of oppli- cation. 14) Preference is given to applicants who do not intend to carry heavy academic schedules and who do not have rioorous outside commitments. (5) Proof of these ouolifications mov be required. Current staff and other applicants who have an applicotion on file must come to this office to update their application form. DEADLINE FOR APPLICATIONS: 3:00 P.M., JULY 16, 1976 A Non-Discriminatorv Affirmative Action Emplover THE YOGA CENTER OF ANN ARBOR Invites You to Come Celebrate the 76th Birthday of GURU ESTRADA July 1e6thFri WELCOME: Meditation; Concert; Puppet Show; Dinner 5:00 S1h .p.m. at the YOGA CENTER Juy in '501 gt JOIN US EVERY MORNING FOR: Psychophysicals, 6:00 a.m.; l , 1 -LL Cosmic Ceremony and Teachinq led by the ELDER BROTHER, 7:00 a.m. YOGA CENTER Sat. Lecture: "PEACE: FROM WORLD CONFLICT TO WORLD Ju ORDER"by the GURU, 8:00 p.m. YOGA CENTER Cosmic Ceremony and Teachina iven by the ELDER BROTHER Ju 8th, . 0:00am.SYOGA CENTER; POTLUCK PICNIC in the Abrtmat 2:00 p.m. July 19th, Mon. MEDITATION led by the GURU, 7:00 p.m. YOGA CENTER Oth, cs Lecture: "SOLAR INITIATION in the AMERICAS" by Juv . the Guru, 8:00 p.m. YOGA CENTER Panel Representing a SYNTHESIS of SCIENCE, ART and ul 2ste'1 YOGA by: YEN. ELDER BROTHER ESTRADA, Prof. Max .T H Heirich, Prof. Richard Mann, Prof. Albert Mullin, 8:00 p.m. af FRIENDS MEETING HOUSE, 1420 Hill Street, Ann Arbor 500 MILLER ST--769-4321