Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, October 18, 1968 WALLACE 'TIRED. Humphrey, Muskie on t te trail It anl II When he does, he tends to take care of his own kind. He designs a company that is one heck of a good place for an engineer to work.. You can tell LTV Aerospace Corporation is an engineering oriented company. The ratio of engineers to everybody else is exceptionally high. The computer support is tremendous. The Robert McCuloch research laboratory is the newest and one of the finest big labs in the country. not often engineer lets to design ;ompany. Humphrey DETROIT-Hubert H. Hum- phrey, pushing his presidential drive in this labor state, acknowl- edged Thursday that many work- ers favor George C. Wallace be- cause they think Humphrey favors Negroes. The Vice President trumpeted his own and the Democratic par- ty's record in helping workers and in pressing welfare legislation while he slammed at Richard M. Nixon and called Wallace "a union-busting governor." With Humphrey were two stars of the Detroit Tigers, winners of the World Series. Flanked by pitcher Mickey Lolich and out- In Wichita, Kan., a Wallace aide said the former governor was being flown to Montgomery, Ala., on orders of Wallace's physician. The aide said, "The governor is beaten down by complete physical exhaustion. They are taking him home and putting him right to bed." Wallace said he was tired but he would not change his schedule because of fatigue. Wallace told the Fort Worth crowd that Nixon "looked down his nose at Texans and Southerners. Show me one thing the Repub- licans have ever done for Texas or Alabama and I'll get out of the race for president." 4 r -~f Mij 1P,~ fielder Willie Horton, Humphrey told a crowd estimated at 10.000 CHICAGO - Sen. Edmund S. that the Tigers inspired him be- Muskie yesterday made his most cause they "came from behind to upbeat comment to date on the win the Series and I'll come from election prospects. behind to win the election." Humphrey told his audience in Detroit's John F. Kennedy : Square that he had heard some workers were going to vote for Wallace, former governor of Ala- -Associated Press bama and third party candidate HUBERT HUMPRHEY arrived at Kennedy Square in downtown for president. Detroit yesterday flanked my that city's mayor, Jerome Cavanagh "And I know why," said Hum- (lower center) and Detroit Tiger star outfielder Willie Horton. phrey. "Somebody told them that Humphrey addressed a large lunchtime crowd for nearly 40 ob. eHumph eetha sotake otr minutes. ,\workers will get your job and it Smost likely will be a black man." The Vice President said if he is elected president, there will be enough jobs for both blacks and whites and he denounced those who "spread rumors and hate, pitting one man against another." Wallace The engineer who wants to be a technical specialist here can do as well as the engineer who gets into administration. The engineer who wants to keep working on an advanced degree can. do it right here. And the projects: they range from deep space to the ocean floor-military and commercial aircraft, V/STOL; launch vehicles; extra vehicular activity research and development; high mobility ground vehicles; missile systems; computer, technical and management services. No question about it: the engineers at LTV Aerospace are taking care of themselves. An LTV Aerospace representative will tell you how to get in on it. CAMPUS INTERVIEWS WEDNESDAY, OCT. 23 Schedule an appointment or write: College Relations Office, LTV Aerospace Corporation, P. 0. Box 5907, Dallas, Texas 75222. An equal opportunity employer. FORTH WORTH, Tex.-George C. Wallace, American Independent party candidate, showed signs of a long, hard campaign, but drew a crowd, estimated at 9,000 to 12,000 Thursday in the second stop of his swing through Texas. He told a crowd in a downtown Fort Worth park, "don't think we're just strong in this region of the country," noting that he is now on the ballot for President in all 50 states. Wallace scheduled a fund-raising dinner and a rally Thursday night at Longview, Tex., a part of the "Old South" of this multiregion state and a place where he expects to have considerable strength in the Nov. 5 balloting. But he cancelled plans to spend the night in Longview, telling re- porters he is flying to Alabama to make television tapes. He said he is cancelling plans to appear in Kansas and Missouri today but will go to Washington' Saturday. He said that if he had ever felt as good about a Maine state elec- tion as he does now about the na- tional situation, "I'd be pretty con- fident" of victory. He qualified his statement be- fore a Chicago television audience, however, saying "but that's a mil- lion people and we're talking about 200 million and I'm not sure my exposure gives me an accurate pic- ture." He said new poll 'figures should be available about the first of next week. "I'll be very surprised if they don't show some movement in our favor," he said. "If they don't I'll be disappointed. If they do, we've got a horse race." Muskie rode in a ticker tape parade through Chicago's Loop to the Sherman House, where he ad- dressed a luncheon of the Cook County Chicago Democratic Com- mittee. Riding with him in an open con- vertible were Gov. Samuel H. Sha- piro and Mayor Richard J. Daley, both Democrats., Police officials estimated the lunch hour crowd at 100,000. In a speech to approximately 400 persons Muskie said that only Vice President Hubert H. Hum- phrey is qualified "by experience, by philosophy, by character, to as- sume the Presidency of the United States." He criticized Richard M. Nixon for refusing to debate with Hum- phrey and for "a lack of leader- ship" record. He called George C. Wallace a "threat to American society." He said whoever is elected "must be able to inspire his countrymen and elevate the human spirit'and neither Mr. Nixon nor Mr. Wallace is capable of providing that ;kind of leadership." W- A 6 51GA J4' O J-LV i~-TEA.4C9^VC?-~.CJG/~-f7IT 1NG t).4LiL.4 ~ AiY lQt" IO ~ d'U A e . K 4 P1 Wlir^ AC o f fQC C)CAA i TEFL rTC) 4 1NO) C)