THE MICHIGAN! DAILY Page Seven t' r .. s THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven i wmwm.; ;o a CITES DISTORTIONS: Professor blasts TV role in politics Congolese rebel executeLeMay rejects FB4E..................... using nuclear weapons for Vietnam By RICK PtRLOFF' Professor Edgar Willis of. the speech department proposed Mon- day an open-ended debate not in- volving reporters between presi- dential candidates as one solution to the ptoblem of distortion in television coverage of campaign news.. Willis, speaking in Rackham Ampitheater as the first in a series "Six Evenings with a Professor", talked to about forty' persons on the topic "Television and the Vot- er." Willis suggested that political. Czechs*, Jlee~ng 9country PRAGUE (1) - Nearly 1,000 Czechs, and Slovaks appeared at the Austrian embassy yesterday applying for visas to leave their occupied country., Diplomatic sources said that) was ,.nearly twice the number that showed up Tuesday. The increase was attributed in -art to pessimism over the Czechoslo- vak Communist party's Tuesday communique foreshadowing a cutback in ref ornms and -a. swing back toward more Soviet-style rule. Party chief Alexander Dubcek conferred with town and regional 0 Communist officials to :;explain the communique and the com- mitments he made last week in Moscow. The commitments were to meet Soviet terms for partial withdrawal of 1 WarsavW Pact troops occupying Czechoslovakia since their invasion Aug. P0.. The communique showed that Dubcek promised strict Commu-] party direction of government nist control of newspapers, radio and televisionan Increase in'° party direction of government and a more pro-Soviet line bothf. .i foreign policy and on the part of all, Czechoslovak offi- cials. Several thousand Czechoslo- vaks, many of them professional people vacationing at the time of the invasion, have remained out- side the country trying to decide Whether to emigrate or to return. Some of those appearing at the Austrian legation said they were going pn long-planned trips. advertisements be made illegal since they are often too short and general. He also proposed the polls be opened for 24 hours straight" with a blackout on television cov- erage of the voting during that time. When the polls closed, the networks could then begin report- ing election results. With this system, Willis explain- ed, voters could not be influenced by election-day trends, thus elim- inating any bandwagon effect. Willis also criticized the meth- ods used by the major networks in reporting the national conventions this summer. He specifically de- graded the way in which commen- tators interrupted delegates on the floor and the lack of coverage, during the less exciting speeches. Willis' suggested that _television covers everything, no matter how dull it happened to, be.. "This may sound funny," he. said, "but we have to use more TV to combat the evils on TV." He pointed out a number of evils in ,he current ways in which tele- vision presents the news. Willis' main criticism was against the methods by which the networks created news themselv- es. The ever-impending arrivals of President Johnson, or Edward Kennefdy, at the Democrartic Na- tional . Convention were examples Willis gave of "created" news. Willis also blasted the networks for tryingto create interest and controversy where it didn't exist. He noted TV's portrayal of bad guys against the good guys at the convention in Chicago through, the matching off of Daley vs Mc- Carthy. Willis claimed that there is an inherent danger in this em- phasis on personal inages over personal qualities. gun crackdown Senate OK's WASHINGTON UP)-The Sen- ate voted a sweeping crackdown on gun and ammunition sales yesterday,, pointing thecnto versial issue toward a fresh-and probably final - fight in the House. By voice vote, the Senate ap- proved the broad-gauged com- promise bill that would ban all majl sales': of firearms and am- munition' across state lines and would require records on all over- the-counter purchases. The House, which had calledj earlier for exempting rifle and shotgun ammunition from the ban, is expected to 1 tackle the compromise tomorrow. EDITOR'S NOTE: Before he left for his campaign trip to the West Coast, Gen. Curtis LeMaywas in- terviewed at length by an Associat- ed Press writer. His report, ranging over a number of issues, follows. Gen. Curtis E. LeMay says that neither in Vietnam "nor any place else" does a situation exist right now which calls for the use of nuclear weapons. But George C. Wallace's running mate declared in an interview, "There is some place where you're going to use nuclear weap- ons," although "where it is I don't know. "There will be a point where you have to defend yourself," said the 61-yearold retired Air Force chief of staff. LeMay said an all-out U.S. ef- fort to win a military victory in Vietnam would run "some risk- that Red China might come in, maybe the Russians even might come in." He expressed the view, however, that the Red Chinese "haven't got any weapons capabilities to do us any damage anyway, at least not now. Later on maybe yes. But now they haven't." The interview developed these questions and answers: Q. Gen'eral, you've seen in the cities where you've appeared with Gov. Wallace that you some heckling. can expectl A. Oh, yes, I expected that. I knew it was going on buit I was surprised at the amount of its that was going on and the fact that it's organized by groups that I know to be Communist oriented. Q. How do you know that, General: A. I have more information than a lot of people. True, I haven't received any top secret briefings for 3%/2 years now, since I retired, but I remember, a lot from back then and I remember the names of sorie of these or- ganizations. One of the things that surprised me is, here we're conducting a democratic process and these people are trying to in- terrupt it, using methods that would put them in jail for dis- turbing the peace just a short time ago~ Q. General, you've said you con-' sider a nuclear weapon as just another weapon. A. It's a weapon. A more power- ful one, yes, than the other weapons. Q. And that it would be foolish to tell the enemy in advance whether you intend to use them or not? A. Well, if you're going to sit in a poker game with a bunch of card sharks, and if you tell them 'i' not going to bet $10 unless1 get four aces," or "I never bluff,. or "I never draw to an ace-high straight," I guarantee you -you'r not going to make much money in a poker game. Q. Am I correct in saying tha there are some situations in whici you would conceivably use nuclea victory : weapons but no such situation ex- I ists in Vietnam now? ", A. Yes, nor any place else. There is some place where you're going to use nuclear weapons. Where it e is I don't know. If you're walking y down the street and somebody starts molesting you, at what point t are you going to use your fist? I h can't tell you, you probably can't r tell me either. m ' CANVASSFOR JILEWIS NEW POLITICS SHERI FF'S CAMPAIGN ORGANIZATIONAL MEETING. THURSDAY, OCT.10 7:30 P.M.-3rd Floor SAB COME AND TALK WITH "JOE"! Dead -,rebc KINSHASA, Congo firing squad has exec Mulele. who led blood tions in' eastern sect Congo in 1961-64, theg announced, yesterday. were reported to have at a secret site about Mulele was a 39-yea ing- trained leftist ;wl against the central after serving as educa ter in the Patrice Lu gime, which took co: 71 le ader Pierre, Mulele (/P) - A Belgium granted this African ter- uted Pierre ritory independence in 1960. y insurrec- A special military court had ors of the sentenced Mulele to death for the government 1961-64 rebellion after a 15-hour The guns trial Tuesday, 10 days after he felled him returned from exile in the neigh- dawn. boring Congo Republic of Braz ar-old Pek- zaville, under a presumed am- ho turned nesty. government Brazzaville broke off diploma- tion minis- tic relations with the Congo last mumba re- night in protest against the trial ntrol when and execution. { muse ourself? Contribute prose, poetry, d p non-fiction, lfiterary criticism """"" """"""""""' -almost anything, in fact, or in fiction, to generationl the inter-carts magazin EVER SPEND THANKSGIVING SEN IOR PICTURE in the 1969 Michiganensian if you don't go over to the Student Publications Building before 5:00 P.M. today and ask them to squeeze you n before the photographers Yae tonight for their studio in Main. HUR RY LAST DAY HURRY Excite Your Senses to ..... "THE DEAF ERUPTION"1 FREE MIXCER Friday, Oct. 11, 1968 Bursley Cafeteria 9-12 P.M. STUD. PUB. BLDG. 420 MAYNARD ST. deadline, first issue: October 12 Ii . . ; I _( I' I College Is a waste of time.: . . .. unless ydu find a job that turns you on and makes good, use of your education. Inland Steel wants orly people who want to use everything they've learned, in college-and strongly desire to grow personaJly and professionally. Inland's future depends on the creativity and productivity of its people. If you want a really challenging opportunity to contribute-with the re- wards and responsibilities that go with it-Inland wants to talk to you. We need action-seeking graduates with degrees in most fields for management opportunities in sales . . . production . . . research . . . engineering ./finance . . . administration . . . or you name it. Think it over. If you have high aspirations and a good record, take time to find out about a career with us. Lilt i~au For information, see us on campus, OCTOBER 17, 1968 INLAND STEEL COMPANY 11 !l1 11111H s _