Saturday, December 7, 1968 THE MICHIGAN: DAILY Paige Th reP Saturday, December 7, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three NATIONAL GENERAL CORPORATION FOX EAL RN HER ATFiON' LIMITED FOX E AGVIL E ENGAGEMENT 375 No. MAPLE RD. '769.1300 J iNo M A L R . O U S A N D S D E M A N D HE LD. A CHANCE TO SEE IT! NATIONAL AIP A Wallace party without Wallace rN 9 POSITIVELY NO ONE UNDER 18 ADMITTED TO THESE THEATRES DURING THE SHOWING OF THIS WILD SOCK-IT-TO-ME MOVIE! A F0OWAR0 1FIMSIM000 101 DANA WYNTEB SHeBAYMONU ST IJACQUES 3 - KEVIN . o -- McCADIVYII I WASHINGTON (A-Despite a A paid coordinator for Wallace 3 receiving "a few thousand dollars total lack of direction from George in this year's presidential cam- a month-enough to keep us go- C. Wallace's headquarters, Wal- paign is establishing a national ing." None of it. he added, is com- lace backers across the country are I third-party mechanism in Los An- ing from Montgomery. going to work to keep his third geles aimed at coordinating state In Montgomery, the Wallace or- party movement alive. and local activity by supporters ganization is grinding toward a, Whether Wallace's 45 electoral of the former Alabama governor. halt. Jones said only about 15 votes and his 13 per cent of the The coordinator, 27-year-old people are still on hand to han- popular vote will provide suffi- Robert Walters, said he flew to dle the half-sack of mail that cient impetus for establishing a Alabama last month for two comes in daily, permanent American Independent days of conferences with Wallace's ON FINANCES party remains to be seen. closest advisers, and was told that Jones claimed the organizatio Third parties have a history of thewnae no pganiation establh is still just working out its fi- disintegrating after the presiden- anationa oaasto in ont- nances and doesn't know yetl tial election for which they are monmerh at least for five or six whether it will have any money! formed. :left over from the campaign-or But party workers in at least ,'JUST FADING OUT' where it would go if there is any.j six states have already held post- Wallace himself has avoided: He said when the headquarters election organization meetings, the press and said little about his is closed, Wallace himself will get and similar gatherings are sched- plans, but Bill Jones, one of Wal- the files. The most important of uled in eight more, lace's top strategists, agreed with these from the standpoint of any There is talk in Arkansas, In- Walters. future organization contamnthe diana and elsewhere of running "We're just fading it out as names of millions of petition sign- candidates in state and local elec- fast as we can," said Jones of the ers, workers and contributors toi tions under the banner of Wal- Montgomery headquarters opera- the Wallace campaign.1 lace's American Independent, or a tion. "We have no plans whatso- The Wallace group has not beenj similarly named party, next year ever." sent any of the files, said Jones. and again in 1970. "Since Montgomery is not going "They've been told just like every- to be taking an active leadership body else, 'do what you think is role nationally, we're setting up best for your situation.'" an association of Wallace voters to In Delaware, the AIP thought set up coordination," said Walters it best to throw out its Alabama- i in a telephone interview. chosen chairman and declare some I - i "We are attempting to hold the independence from Montgomery. In about one-third of the states, either the original petition drive to put Wallace on the ballot or his percentage showing in the election is sufficient to qualify the third party for the next state- wide election. The next meeting of a state organization is scheduled for to- day in Arkansas, one of five states' I I' ~ Udu~llBARBARA McN AI R £ lotSpeia Gust SatApT RJJ IaU'. N l $RF"4CRC ATU uIIIL FATURE _. MON.-FRI.-3:15-9:20 FESN-1:0-3:00-5:10-7:15-9:20 carried by Wallace. The Arkansas leaders plan to run a candidate for governor in 1970, and they want to start preparing now for the campaign SEGREGATIONIST Principal spokesman for the Arkansas party is Jim Johnson, an outspoken segregationist who as a Democrat lost the 1966 gu- bernatorial election to Republican Winthrop Rockefeller, and the 1968 U.S. Senate Democratic pri- mary to Sen. J. W. Fulbright. Floyd Kitchen, Wallace cam- paign chairman in Missouri and , now a member of the party's state committee, said the all-volunteer effort is aimed "at setting up the vehicle which we can do since we got more than the legal minimum 2 per cent of the vote." FUTURE UNCERTAIN Dr. Francis Sommer, newly elected Kentucky AIP chairman, said "it amounts to nothing more than organizing the party and so forth for the future. What hap- pens in the future will depend largely on w h a t Gov. Wallace does. We'll just f e e 1 our way along." Indiana and North Carolina are among states where Wallace lead- ers are pledging to field a full slate of candidates for U.S. House I THIS WEEK ONLY ! national organization together and strengthen it until such time as Montgomery reassumes national control. We're not feuding with Montgomery-we would welcome them back." The third party has tentatively, scheduled a national meeting in. Texas or Oklahoma for Jan. 11-12 to make plans-and possibly to. decide whether to call itself the American Independent party or simply the American party. Walters said his operation is -- - - A party meeting late last month picked David Colatriano, 34, a former Marine sergeant, to re- place William O. Phillips, who got only one vote. FIGHTING COURTS In California, the Wallace regu- lars have been fighting a running battle through the courts against William K. Shearer, who broke with Wallace and has been trying to set up his own American Inde- "FASCINATING and GRIPPING!" -Kenneth Tynan London Observer BOLD and DAR ING!"P -West German Press Tired of Selling Out? Sell in!! at Student Book Service Best prices in Town on books. Saturday and Sunday EAST OF EDEN dir. Elia Kazan, 1954 JAMES DEAN Starring in his greatest role Based on the novel by JOHN STEINBECK 7:00 & 9:05 ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM 662-8871 75c pendent Party. seats in 1970. Walters estimated that an In Alabama, ironically, there is American Independent Party-by no state AIP. There, the regular that or another name-exists in Democratic party electors were only about half the states, even pledged to Wallace and Democrat though Wallace was on the ballot Hubert H. Humphrey was in es- in all 50. sence a third party candidate. NEXT WEEK-NEXT WEEK-NEXT WEEK GO WEST YOUNG MAN Thursday and Friday starring: MAE WEST Dec 12, 13 Short: HIS MUSICAL CAREER (Charlie Chaplin) The Lavender Hill Mob Saturday and Sunday ALEC GUINESS Dec. 14, 15 STANLEY HOLLOWAY The best British comedy ever made Laugh. it up during exams! the d ' news today b cy The Associated Press and College Press Service THE U.S. ARMY announced yesterday draft calls would be increased by 3,000 a month from March through July to replace 20,000 reservists and National Guards- men scheduled for demobilization. At the same time, the Army indicated that an easing of fighting in the Vietnam war might bring earlier release for the National Guardsmen and reservists. As currently planned, however, 10,000 of them will return from active duty to civil- ian life by the end of next year. If the Paris peace negotiations are successful, the sch- edule could be moved up. It is also possible that the new pres- idential administration may decide to reduce the over-all size of the Army, now about 1.5 million men, in the event of a war settlement. If that happens, it is conceivable the draft calls may not have to be raised. MEANWHILE, VIET CONG and North Vietnamese mortar and rocket attacks shelled 37 South Vietnamese towns and cities yesterday in the heaviest attack since last month's bombing halt. The well-coordinated operation appeared to be a re- sponse to the Viet Cong command's orders to launch a new wave of attacks while negotiations in Paris drag on. Rockets rained on five provincial capitals ringed around Saigon, killing 16 and wounding 82 South Vietnamese per- sons. 11 more were killed when Communist troops rampaged a hamlet 60 miles north of Saigon, burning 25 houses. 0 . WITH EXPANDED PEACE TALKS nearly ready to begin in Paris, the United States and North Vietnam have agreed on all points except the shape of the negotiating table. The allies want two rectangular tables, with the 'U.S. and South Vietnamese negotiators at one end, and Hanoi and the National Liberation Front spokesmen at the other. This is because Saigon recognizes the NLF as only part of the North Vietnamese team. North Vietnam wants a square table, with the NLF on one side by itself to show its status as an independent dele- gation. THE PENTAGON announced yesterday 12,000 Ameri- can troops and 96 Phantom fighter-bombers will be sent to West Germany for military maneuvers. The North Atlantic Treaty Organization maneuvers will be held near the Czechoslovakian border, as part of NATO's response to the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia. The war games will be conducted near Grafenwohr, West Germany, and will last a few weeks before most soldiers re- turn to the United States. Four Phantom squadrons, however, will remain longer to complete additional training. * 0" 0 TWO AMERICAN DESTROYERS will be sent to pa- trol the Black Sea in the next few days, the Navy said yesterday. The announcement brought immediate protest from the Soviet newspaper Pravda, which called the planned mission a provocative sally close the Russian shores. Although the move is seen as an American reminder to Moscow that the Black Sea is an international body of water and not a Soviet .lake, the Navy described the new mission as routine, No American warships have entered the straits leading into the Black Sea since last June. DEFIANT PARISHONERS IN FLORENCE, Italy, have called on all Italian workers to stage a protest before Pope Paul VI when he says Christmas Eve Mass at the Toranto steel mills The planned protest is over the ousting of a rebel priest, Don Mazzi, who was dismissed from his parish Thursday for publishing a controversial catechism. The catechism showed Christ as a leader of the poor against the upper classes The appeal to Italian workers came in the wake of a march in which thousands of the working-class parishoners demanded reinstatement of their priest. " 0 * REPUBLICAN GOVERNORS meeting with Vice Pres- ident-elect Spire Agnew yesterday demanded the federal government share more of its power and money with the states. In a conference at Palm Springs, Calif., the governors asked for more state freedom in administering federal pro- grams. Gov. Winthrop Rockefeller of Arkansas charged that the Johnson administration had hurt the poverty program in bypassing experts at the state house level. Rockefeller joined others in asking President-elect Rich- ard Nixon for "block grants" of federal money - funds given with few strings attached. Directed by Dist/n'aished Broadwav Casts! MARCELLA CISNEY I I ____________________ -____________ ~i < -II. 1! This is a picture of the perfect embezzler! Enjoy Yourself - Join the Daly Staff Today! The Endless Summer "Dazzling ode to sun, sand and surf."-Time i e Sat., Dec. 7 Elvira Madigan "Perhaps the iost beautiful movie in history." New Yorker Sun., Dec. 8 Nobody Waved Goodbye "A marvelous movie." -The New Yorker Mon., Dec. 9 Nothing But A Man THE ARK MOVIE OF THE WEEK MOONRISE Directed by FRANK BORZAGE He was that rarity of rarities, an uncompromising romanticist. He imparted an aura to his characters, not merely by soft focus and fluid camera, but by a genuine concern with the wondrous inner life of lovers. "Moonrise" is one of his masterpieces. "A great movie. A revolution in the cinema."-Life Tues., Dec. 10 DEG. 1 1 l I