THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, September 15, 1968 PIZZA SPECIAL Carry-Out Only 50c off on any Large Pizza 40c off on any Medium Pizza 5c of onanySmall Pizza 30c off o he U.S. FLYERS VOLUNTEER: Nigerians get UN relief LAGOS, Nigeria VP) - Ameri- can pilots who won medals in Vietnam have joined former Peace Corps volunteers in an attempt to launch a million dol- lar helicopter shuttle to bring relief to starving refugees of the Nigerian civil war. ' Under the auspices of the U.N. Children's Emergency Fund-UNICEF-the project is a high-powered American oper- ation which already has made an offer to buy 10 helicopters the Nigerians have hardly used for lack of parts and pilots since their war started with the seces- sionist Biafrans in Eastern Nigeria 14 months ago. Former pilots with combat ex- perience in Vietnam and Korea have come from civilian jobs to fly helicopters in southeastern Nigeria where at least a quarter of a million refugees have crowded through lines into fed- erally held territory. Two weeks after landing in Nigeria after recruiting in the United States, pilots and sup- port crews await c1e a r a nce from the Nigerians to fly to Ca- labar two H 19 helicopters pur- chased for $50,000 from a used helicopter lot in Tucson, Ariz. The two helicopters will shut- tle at the rate of two round trips an hour between Calabar and Uyo, 30 miles west, in the heart of the refugee concentration, according to Charles C. Robards, 38, of Dansville, N.Y., head of the project. The aircraft will carry 1,500 pounds of food and medicine on each trip in a parachute hang- ing from a hook under the belly. Robards said the pilots will slip the chute off the hook, drop it at the destination and then return to base for another load without landing. Eventually he hopes to have 20 helicopters "daisy chaining" 500 feet over the rain forest and swampland. Hence the offer to buy 10 Nigerian helicopters, most of which are old British- made craft sold to the air force by Austrians. But two craft will fly the first two weeks "just to prove the concept," said Brandt Berk, 35, a financial analyst from Old Lyme, Conn. If the shuttle works it could move nearly 15 tons an hour. Food is now piling up in Cala- bar, 400 miles east of Lagos in and area recaptured by the fed- erals between last October and March. Distribution problems have hampered relief in the hardest hit area under federal control. The food is not designed immediately for Ibo tribesmen now encircled in Biafra but for non-Ibo refugees fleeing t h e fighting. Plans for the project started in August with a conference be- tween Robards and U.S. State Department officials. Although the program is under UNICEF, most of the money comes from the United States. In addition to the cost of the helicopters, $90,000 was spent to ship them in a huge "Guppy" Boeing 377 freighter plane. Estimates of early costs hit a quarter of a milion dollars. Most of the pilots volunteered for the jobs after getting leaves ob absence. Dick Lewer, 28, of Long Beach, N.Y., is a pilot for United Airlines. He won a Dis- tinguished Flying Cross in Viet- nam. So did Shepard C. Spink who is vice president in charge of operations of the company Ro- bards created specially for the venture. Spink temporarily has left his post as an advertising salesman for the iew Yorker magazine. The fourth pilot, John Mc- Laughlin of Springfield, Mass., piloted helicopters as an Army warrant officer in Korea. He is the only one in the crew who had flown an H19 before. He worked for an aviation supply firm in Windsor Locks, Conn. The Peace Corps volnnteers came from UNICEF. John Mc- Clure, now getting a masters degree in physics at the Univer- sity of Maryland, and Tom Mar- inkovich of Monessen, Pa., both taught in Eastern Nigeria as members of the first Peace Corps group in 1961. All are being paid for their work here, "They're not losing money but they make a lot more in the United States for the time they're putting in," said Ro- bards who has a contract with UNICEF. -Associated Press UNOFFICIAL BACKER-A Chicago police car sporting a "Wallace for President sticker isn't part of the official campaign, police say. Police officials claim the sign was the work of pranksters and they aren't officially campaigning for anyone. The squad car, carrying the campaign sign, patrolled Chicago's streets Friday night. Wallace draws jeers and praise, attarcis 'young leftist rotesters OMEGA PIZZA FREE DELIVERY and CARRY-OUT Corner of Huron and Forest 769-3400 LEXINGTON, Ky. (A')-George Wallace, pausing from time to time to scold young hecklers, told students at the University of Ken- tucky yesterday that "our system has fed and clothed people all over the world and if you don't like it, what other system would you use?" The third party presidential candidate was cheered repeatedly by most of the 10,000 students and a few adults in" Memorial Coli- seum, but there were some who Daily Classifieds Ge Results I disagreed with him vigorously and made no secret of it., Wallace poked fun at some of the hecklers with such jibes as "you need a haircut," and "I hope you stay in a good humor until I get away." Once when he was interrupted by catcalls, he retorted. "Alrightl now, you're not going to get pro- moted to the second grade if ypu don't watch out." One group of students who called themselves "Hippies for Wallace" sought to heckle him in a subtle manner by interrupting his speech with, chants of "We want Wallace," They carried signs which the third party candidate could not see, which made it clear they were attempting to make fun of him. One sign read "Get right with Goa. Go George;" another read "Down with sin and immorality." Wallace first told the group, "You fellows don't know how many votes you get me every time you show up at one of my meet- ings." He is sometims hard of hearing and apparently was unaware for the moment that they were chant- ing "We want Wallace." When he learned that he re- marked, "Oh, they're for us. Thank you fellows." In the serious portion of his speech, the Alabaman said, as he has before, that leaders of the Democratic and Republican par- ties, "succumbed to anarchists to destroy the property ownership system" by passing a new federal housing law. When they do that, he told the crowd. "they're not fit to lead this country during the next four years," Wallace also continued his de- fense of the nation's police and said the Supreme Court decisions in recent years have made them "second-class citizens." He insited again that he is not a racist and that he has never said anything against anyone be- cause'of the color of his skin. "You couldn't be elected governor in our state by being against people be- cause of their race,' he said, "and you couldn't do it in Kentucky either." Wallace told the students that the United States saved commu- nist Russia with its materiel in World War II and added: "I just want to tell the young leftists who don't like our mate- rialistic system that the commu- nists have never turned down any of our materiel." Agnew admits error in esoft on Reds' talk CHICAGO UP) - Gov. Spiro T. Agnew admitted again last night that his description of Vice Presi- dent Hubert H. Humphrey as be- ing "'soft on Communism" was a blunder. "I'd, forgotten about its un- pleasant connotations," he said. But the Republican vice presi- dential nominee defended his com- parison of Humphrey to former British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain, who is popularly identified as an appeaser of Nazi Germany in 1938. In an hour-long appearance on, a television talk show, Agnew said he thinks the comparison between Humphrey, the Democratic presi- dential nominee, and Chamberlain was "an apt comparison, particu-' larly when I see Vice President Humphrey attempting to jump' from the hawk to the dove back to the hawk position in an apparent attempt to placate the schism that exists within the Democratic party." Agnew's statements were taped for airing on last night's Kup's Show on WMAQ-TV. He again denied that he had been ordered by his running mate, Richard M. Nixon, to abandon his emphasis on alleged Communist influences within recent student disorders and to retract his cri- ticism of Humphrey. "He (Nixon) relied on my judg- ment and felt that if I couldn't extricate myself from that blunder unilaterally I was in trouble," the Maryland governor said. On other issues, Agnew said he is opposed to the busing of pupils to achieve racial balance in schools, favors some form of gun legislation, and believes the Sen- ate should be very cautious about ratifying a nuclear nonprolifera- tion treaty. "Soviet Russia is a party to that treaty," Agnew said, "and if the treaty is to be meaningful we must have confidence in the gen- uineness of their participation." TALK to: DON CANHAM New Director of Athletics The beginning of a new era in athletics on SPORTS HOTLINE 7:30 Monday night Call in: 761-3500 Listen on 761-3501 WCBN-650 761-3502 A .,ROBIN BROWN' jazz and other music for moderns 8 to Midnight turn ME on I'll. TI IKI~ MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 16th SRC and PROCOL HAREM Annnar IN PFRSON it