THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1968 TAF MICHIGAN U.&IF V PA!' i r .....! M I.CeuI1avnT 1b EIT~ ~AIV~t rt m r 1 L n -Associated dress MEMBERS OF THE COUNCIL of Economic Advisers yesterday briefed reporters on President Johnson's economic report which will be released today at noon. House Expected Expanded Trutl WASHINGTON UP)-The House about credit ter wrote sweeping provisions yester- vertisement sim day into a bill requiring practical- credit" would no ly all lenders and sellers to tell details, but one customers the cost of credit-in- month" would.1 terest and other charges - in the wording wo terms of annual percentage. advertiser, not t. The House is expected to pass ing it. the measure today in a substan- Forbid Ga tially broader form than approved Awaiting a vo by the Senate last year. tion limiting the Categories Named nishment to co Specifically, the annual percent- would forbid ga age requirements cover these first $30 a week categories exempted by. the Sen- allow only 10 Pe ate: mainder to be d Revolving credit plans in itor. Dismissal o which customers add on to their cause of his wag charge accounts and pay install- bidden. ments each month; transactions The House ado in which the credit charge is less backed amendm than $10, and first mortgages on would put fed real estate. agencies behind 40 1 The House bill also requires The amendme disclosure in advertising of the federal crime annual cost of credit, if the ad- money at ratesi vertisement is at all specific prohibited by t To Approve i-in-Lending Bill State Prison Under Study In Arkansas CUMMINS PRISON FARM, Ark. {A) - Authorities said yesterday that three skeletons taken from unmarked graves here would be sent to the FBI for tests that they hope will shed some light on whether the bones came from a paupers' graveyard or a secret burial ground for murdered in- mates. A, spokesman for Gov. Winth- rop Rockefeller said no digging for more bodies would be done until the pathological tests are completed at the FBI laboratory in Washington. He estimated it would take 10 days to three weeks for the tests "We want to see if there is any evidence that these were homicides or natural deaths," said Bob Scott, the governor's prison adviser. The skeletons were found Mon- day after Prison Supt. Thomas O. Murton ordered an investigation of long standing rumors among inmates that convicts in past years had been murdered and secretly buried at the farm. One inmate, Reuben Johnson, 59, says he help- ed bury 10 or 12 inmates who were slain. Maj. W. C. Struebing, head of the Criminal InvestigationdDivis- ion of the State Police, declined comment on the investigation yes- terday, but reiterated that he thought the bones were from an old papuers' cemetery. He had support from state Rep. Loid Sadler, a member of the Prison Board from 1945 to 1949 and again from 1955 to 1965. He said he knew the prison pasture where the bones were uncovered Monday was a graveyard for un- claimed bodies. "Everyone in Arkansas of any age knew those bodies were there," Sadler said. "I think it's a crime and a disgrace for them to dig thoseabodies up. My personal op- inion is that it's a publicity stunt." Prison officials have not dis- counted the possibility of it being a prison cemetery, but Murtpn said they had not found any records of it. W. P. Ball, who retired as state pardons and paroles director late last year, termed as "ridiculous" Johnson's claim that about 20 in- mates were killed during an es- cape on Labor Day in 1940.. NEW YORK (P) - Everything' points to it: Richard M. Nixon: will announce today his candidacy for the Republican presidential nomination, and leave imme- diately on a campaign swing through New Hampshire, Wiscon- sin and Oklahoma.j The three states afford the first' tests of the strength of the former1 vice president, leader in all the polls of GOP voters. He carried all to John F. Kennedy for the presi- to oJhn F. Kennedy for the presi- dency. New Hampshire's first-in-the- nation primary is March 12. The Wisconsin primary follows on April 2. Oklahoma holds the first GOP state convention on Feb. 24, to elect delegates to the August Miami Beach convention. A spokesman in Nixon's New York headquarters said only that' he will have a statement on his candidacy, but the campaign schedule left no doubt about- its nature. Nixon holds a news conference in Manchester, N.H., on Friday. Nixon's New Hampshire man- ager, State Rep. David Sterling. had said he would file the papers in Concord to put Nixon's name on the ballot. The only other major c .ndidate on the ballot will be Gov. George Romney of Michigan, who re- turns to New Hampshire Sunday for a third campaign swing. There may be write-in campaigns for Gov. Ronald Reagan of Califor- nia and Gov. Nelson A. Rocke- feller of New York, both noncan- didates. Nixon has chartered a jet to fly him from New Hampshire to; Wisconsin on Monday, where he has set up a news conference, tele- vision interview and dinner speech in Green Bay. On Tuesday he will breakfast in Appleton, speak to Wisconsin State University stu- dents in Stevens Point, and ad- dress a Lincoln Day dinner at St. Mary's School in Fond du Lac. on a program with former Gov, Henry Bellmon, chairman of the Nixon for Prseident Committee] based in Washington. Bellmon is' expected to announce soon as a candidate for the Oklahoma Sen- ate seat held by Democrat A. S. Mike Monroney, and step down as Nixon chairman. His replacement: hasn't been decided. Sen. John G.: Tower (R-Tex.), has been con-] sidered, and might be co-chairman; along with the more liberal former Rep. Robert C. Ellsworth, 41. of Kansas, now executive director of+ the Nixon for President Commit- tee. On the Democratic side Sen. J. McCarthy (D-Minn), is entered as! a peace candidate to test senti- ment against President Johnson. The latter's supporters have a J BEGINS PRIMARY RACE: Nixon To Declare Presidental Candidacy University Club Requests Additional Faculty Facilities On Wednesday he will fly to Ok- write-in campaign going for the lahoma City, where he will appear President. Another Democratic group is working on a write-in for Sen. Robert F. Kennedy (D-NY), de- spite his publicly expressed op- position. The Democratic side has four entries. Another final day entrant is pe- rennial candidate Harold F. Stas- sen, the "boy wonder" governor of his home state of Minnesota 30 years ago. Florida Gov. Claude R. Kirk Jr.'s name also was filed on the final day as entrant for the Republican preference roll. The other entrants are largely unknowns. Former Gov. George Wallace of Alabama, who has been appearing across the nation as a candidate for the presidency, also failed to file in New Hampshire. Come eat lunch and talk with THICH NHAT HANH Vietnamese Buddhist Monk and author of "Lotus in a Sea of Fire"j ims. Thus, an ad- ply offering "easy tf have to go into e saying "$15 a Responsibility for ould rest on the [he medium carry- garnishment te today is a sec- use of wage gar- ollect debts. This rnishment of the of earnings, and er cent of the re- iverted to a cred- f an employe be- ges would be for- opted a Republican ent that inleffect eral enforcement state usury laws., ent defines as a the lending of in excess of those the laws of the state in which the transactionI takes place. Rep. Gerald R. Ford of Michigan, House Republican leader, said the measure is aimed at loansharking by organized crime. Federal penalties would range from five years imprisonment and $5,000 fine to 25 years and $10,- 000 fine,nin cases involving vio- lence or conspiracy. Democratic Triumph The House votes broadening the bill constitute a triumph for Rep. Leonor E. Sullivan (D-Mo.), chairman of a consumer affairs subcommittee, who insisted on a farther reaching measure. than the Senate version. The House voted 135 to 19 to include revolving credit in the disclosure by annual percentage section. Johnson's board of Economic Advisors is expected to release their annual economic report to- day. The report will list the country's growth over the past year and issue several predictions for fiscal '69. (Continued from Page 1) The faculty are also at odds with the administration over the financing of their facilities. It is estimated that the cost of a fac- ulty center would be $2-3 million. Funds for this purpose can be raised by donation, state appro- priations, or by users of the fa- cility. To date, no donor has contrib- uted any sizable sum of money for the construction of such a center. Although it was included on the list of priorities of the $55M program, only $4474 was contibuted. Development of Radrick Farms into a University recreational fa- cility is a possible solution. This land was given to the University by an anonymous donor and is being used as a golf course. In 1964, Regent Litta Matthaei gave the University funds for the pur- chase of 138 acres of land adja- cent to Radrick Farms. This land contains a house which could be used for some faculty functions until funds are obtained for a larger building. State Interests ' UIn view of many urgent needs, the University is reluctant to ap- propriate funds for a facility which would be primarily for fac- ulty use. It is felt that a request for state appropriations for such a purpose would be harmful to the interests of the University. University President Robben Fleming, at a meeting with an ad hoc committee of SACUA last De- cember, observed the declining membership of the University Club and pointed out, "There are a great many issues facing the University on which there are burning demands. The adminis- tration should focus on them, rather than on things in which nobody is interested." Faculty members while for the most part willing to support bet- ter facilities of some kind, are re- luctant to pay the initial cost. Many consider faculty facilities to be fringe benefits to which they are entitled. A spokesman for the ad hoc committee said, "The committee is not taking a bargaining posi- tion seeking common facilities in lieu of salary increases. Rather, we would like the administration to consider and decide what fa- cilities it thinks would be appro- priate." TODAY!! at NOON! Donation will be token to help him in his travels F 1111 11 DE'S OSCAR WI L I,;SALOME our faculty's own ... .OR D CHAMBERLAIN PLAYERS U- Thurs., Fri., Sat., Feb. 1-3 8:00-foyer of Angell Hall I I Sociologists Claim Drug Use Outgrowth of Youth Alienation Tickets: $1.00 at Union desk (Continued from Page 1) reports drug violations directly to the city police. McKay, on the other hand, has referred three of his six "suspects" to the Univer- sity'8 Bureau of Psychiatric Serv- ices. Another problem which the housing staff faces is 'detection of users. As McKay says, "Our staff is not trained to distinguish mari- juana, odors from others." And the possibility of busting into a suspected room 'is surrounded by legal questions. There are other drugs, of course, in current use on campus. LSD has been aound for a while, although Krasny insists its use is not very widespread. Various prescription drugs (notably am- phetamines) expand in appeal FOR FUN AND PROFIT- Read and Use The Daily's Classified Ads ! and use each year near exam time, and the most recent discov- ery is amyl nitrite, a non-pre- scription drug available in many pharmacies. An amyl nitrite capsule, called an "amy" or "popper" in popular jargon, is legitimately used for heart patients, and creates a floating sensation when opened and sniffed through an empty Vicks inhaler. But local druggists have personally clamped down on distribution. One druggist put it quite suc- cinctly. "I began to wonder when all of a sudden all these kids claimed they had sick grand- mothers at home," he said. UAC L UNION-LEAGUE CONTEMPORARY DISCUSSION . Gilbert and Sullivan Society MASS MEETING Mikado Touring Company SUNDAY, FEB. 4-6:45 P.M. j 3rd Floor Union THURSDAY- Courtl-and Cox EXECUTIVE SECRETARY, SNCC 7:30 P.M. FEB. 1 I AUDITORIUM C BLACK POWER a -Tell it like it is GUILD HOUSE 802 Monroe FRIDAY, Feb. 2 NOON LUNCHEON 25c FRIDAY- JOHN SONQUIST, Survey Research Center: "What Would You Do If ... C.O. and the Use of Violence" Henry Austin I i °--