Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, MAY23, Don 't Underestimate Wallace' -Daily-Thomas R. Copi ON THE EDGE of Detwiler Marsh, a distracted Rock Whittington, the "play-by-play announcer" describes the battle while military officials look on. Close by, protesters who wanted him to read their literature were arguing with Military Police. Whittington stuck to his notes while the debate grew into a shoving match. Sar-ival-like Atmosphere Surrounds Toledo Rally (Continued from Page 1) ists moved over to the slope on gan moving between them. The people on the edge laughed the edge of the park and passed "Where's your badge?" said one d the hippies howled in laugh- out their literature. of the activists. "When you show r. A man in a crew cut, his little "I got communist literature it to me I'll leave. You have no n dressed in Army fatigues and right here," said a man seated authority here. This is a public rched on his shoulder, shouted, next to his wife on a blanket. park." se the club on 'em." 'Here ya are,"'-he said waving it The MP's began to push them "All part of the show, folks," in his hand. "That's all there is to protestor, who was later arrested, inned an MP Iit." back, and there was a brief shov- By ARTHUR EDSON Associated Press News Analyst George Wallace should not be underrated. The former Alabama governor is running a smart presidential campaign and has worried both Democrats and Re- publicans. The odds aaginst a third party candidate are great, but Wallace is clever and a mas- terful speaker. It is usually agreed that Wal- lace's potential to damage both major parties is immense, even, though no one seems sure whether the Democrats or the Republicans would suffer more. ,' Wallace surveys the scene cheerfully. "I think I'll hurt the Republi- cans in the South and the Demo- crats in the North," he says. "I think I'll hurt the Democratic party more." So far few, if any, observers give Wallace even an outside shot at the White House. But a Gallup poll credited him with 13 per cent of the vote- phenomenal for a regional candi- date - even before he began to campaign. And although he remains off i- cially coy about his political future -he hasn't formally announced his candidacy-his backers aren't. They're betting big money-his campaign plans call for spending between $10 million and $15 mil- lion-that he can go all the way as a third party candidate. At 47, Wallace starts with a curious but important distinction: few in public life can stir such heated emotions. So intense are the feelings it's almost impossible for most to look at Wallace dispassionately. But it should be done; already he has a campaign setup rivaling that of Gov. George Romney of Michigan, who wants to win the Republican nomination and is the only other candidate unabashedly seeking support this early. Normally no one is more im- potent than a politician out of office, but routine rules don't apply to Wallace. .. Whether his wife, Lurleen, who succeeded him as governor of Ala- bama, makes some of the deci- sions, as Wallace insists, or whether he calls the shots, as many suspect, isn't important. His' base remains firm. He attacks Democrats and Re- publicans. 'There's not a dime's worth of difference between the two parties," he says. He attacks the courts. "The Su- preme Court has just about turned this country over to the anarch- ists. Nine men play God." He attacks judicial decisions which he claims protect the crimi- nal and hamstring the police. "You almost have to have a law- yer with you when you commit a crime in order to be convicted." Wallace ignores a multitude of problems confronting any modern president. Should the space pro- gram be slowed down? Would the U.S. Post Office Department do better as private business? Whatj about,a tax surcharge? The draft? Air and water pollution? On Vietnam-which has caused Romney so much difficulty-he is hawkish without bothering over details. "We should de-escalate the war,' he says, "but the best way to de-escalate the war is to destroy the supply routes." If, in any state, 34 per cent of the voters are unhappy because of unending civil rights strife, be- cause of Vietnam, because they're tired of President Johnson, may these discontented people turn to Wallace. If the remaining 66 per cent split evenly between Republicans and Democrats. Wallace would win all that state's electoral votes. A minority president is nothing new. As Wallace enjoys pointing out, the most recent was John F. Kennedy, who won with 49.7 per cent of the popular vote. The odds against Wallace are fantastic-and those around him know it. But nevertheless, the planning goes on. Wallace may run in a few pri- maries, just to do a little hell-rais- ing, but he concedes n'either party is likely to accept him. So he's more likely to go as a third-party candidate, a road that, since each state has its own com- plicated election laws, can be so rough as to be almost impassable. Wallace likes to maintain that the little people will shower him with petty cash. His backers concede they are going to need big money, and LIKE KOREA: Salisbury Sees Chinese War If Vietiia in Conifliet Escalates since they speak so confidently of well known and well informed- the future, the implication is that but well ignored. they have lined up large commit- The picketing, the shouting, the ments. rocking of his car generate n- Wherever Wallace goes he totes terest and guarantee publicity. a bit of Alabama with him. On Wallace loves it. his first campaign trip, his own Wallace contends much of his party included about a dozen per- support is unlike that of other sons. politicians. In the group were four security "People are afraid to come out guards. When Wallace was asked and say they're for Wallace." he how he justified four state-paid says. "But I've had women whis- troopers on the trip, he said First per, 'I'm for you.,'" Ladies get protection and so he When Romney made his open- was entitled to it, too. ing Western swing, governors There's no doubt be needs pro- sprang forward, some more will- tection. His hotel room often re- ingly than others, to greet him, sembles an armed camp. A watch, When Wallace took his first is kept on his chartered plane at trip, the highest official he met night. Bodyguards hover about was a Cleveland councilman, hime. Arthur N. Kruczyk. Paradoxically, this is Wallace's Yet the memory of 1964 re- greatest asset. Few politicians mains. Wallace entered three create excitement. They may be Democratic presidential primaries i i e rl e 0 C ti t, By WALTER SHAPIRO "The critical question of our day ... is whether America and China. are to engage in a land war in Asia. The peril of escala- tion of the Vietnam conflict in- to that catastrophe . ..is real and present," Harrison E. Salisbury warned recently. Salisbury, assistant managing editor of the New York Times, last year became the first Ameri- can correspondent to visit North Vietnam and wrote a well-pub- licized and controversial series of articles during his trip. He ex- pressed dire predictions on the possibility of war with China in a book review in the May. 20 Newj Republic. "Over a year ago I was told by responsible Chinese that they were preparing for war with the United States-war which we would pro- voke by our escalation in Viet- nam," Salisbury revealed. "They said that to their way of think- ing Vietnam was merely a 'place d'arms'-a jumping off place for attack upon China." Salisbury also noted that the Chinese felt especially threatened by permanent air and naval in- stallations which we have built in South Vietnam and Thailand. Salisbury saw "a deadly paral- lel with the events which brought Chinese troops pouring in across the Yalu River almost to drive MacArthur and his men into the sea." He noted that the problem in Korea was American blindness to Chinese warnings of possible intervention. 'Ostrich Mania' He decried the scant attention that similar warnings about Viet- nam have received. "The very ex- istence of the peril seems to be concealed from the thought and vision of the White House, Pen- At the opposite end of the tarsh, the show was considerably lore intense. The defenders there ho broke onto the marsh were ragged off by MP's, handed to he Toledo police, and booked and iled. Now it was time for Operation eace Power to begin, and a voice ame over the loudspeakers in- oducing "your play-by-play an- ouncer, Toledo's foremost mil- ary expert Rock Whittington." rhittington, a retired major who olds the Congressional Medal of :nor for action in Korea and ho now works for the Lucas ounty Welfare Department, be- an with a brief version of Viet- amese history. "The insurgents ur boys -are fighting in South ietnam are the , same guerillas ho the French Foreign Legion ad colonial forces were fighting fter World War Two," he said. As the Cong guns began crack- rig from the center of the marsh nd the long line of Marines began advance, the, remaining activ- Vanishing Sunday Smiles, Jolting booms began to come with the crackles now. The sun went behind ' the clouds and the Sunday smiles began to vanish. People held their ears and clutch- ed their ribs as the advancing marines hurled mortars at the villagers. An army monoplane dropped bombs, sending dirt flying into the air and showering people on slope. The activists walked over a small fence which set off the announcer and a few men reviewing the ma- neuver. They wanted Whittington to read their literature as part of the play-by-play. A man in a straw hat who seemed to be in charge met them and said firmly, "We have a per- mit for this park; you don't. Please go back behind the fence. Please." The activists pressed their point; one began shouting about legalized violence. "Please go behind the fence. Please. Please," the man in the straw hat pleaded again. He got no response and the MP's be- ing and shouting match with a tearing a wrist watch off an MP. 'Rescue Mission' By now the Marines had the guerillas running full speed in re- treat. And the helicopter landed in the center of the marsh to con- duct a simulated rescue mission. Two marines deposited a mock casualty in the helicopter and it flew off. More dirt showered the crowd and the booming grew louder. A final series of bombs sent the nausea of a cloud of gunpowder fumes onto the slopes, and the people began to cough. The guer- rillas reached the edge of the marsh and the long line of Mar- ines joined them. Whittington was saying thank you's and inviting everyone to free refreshments in the park. Operation Peace Power was now over, and as the parents went for coffee and lemonade, the kids rushed out onto the marsh and into the foxholes to gather empty shell casings. tagon and Foggy Bottom by an ostrich mania, for closing ears, eyes and minds to ominous facts." American war with China could come about in various ways. Salisbury cited several possi- bilities, saying war "might ensue in response to a call from Hanoi -a call which Hanoi's leaders told me in January would be posi- tively issued in event of a land invasion across the 17th parallel, an amphibious landing in the Gulf of Tonkin or the carrying of the war 'too close' to China's fron- tiers." He continued, "Or it could come by simple act of Peking itself, moving to defend its concept of national interest just as in the Korean War. Is this likely? Judged by the statements made by the Chinese to me it seems not unlike- ly, Salisbury's assessment of the danger of war with China wag shared by two Demoeratic mem- bers of the Senate Foreign Rela- tions Committee. Senators' Warning Senators Albert Gore of Ten- nessee and Joseph Clark of Penn- sylvania warned Sunday that Communist China's leaders advis- ed the U.S. months ago that they would intervene in the Vietnam war if the U.S. invaded North Vietnam. Gore said that China would en- ter the war in either of two con- tingencies: "One, if the United States invaded North Vietnam with a land invasion and two, to prevent a capitulation of the Ha- not government." Clark added a third possibility: "If we invaded China or bombed China." +.... ....... v-r. v: o.".Y" a- aw ".".^.": a^." s^:."mv .{s-r.{n' r-v . :: '.": f:.":.w:.: ..v::: r. s-.vt-v w.:c :.v:::::.. xJ::.::- "r w:.., A.. L...... ... { ~ . M1.SM1 .. . ."....... . ... .4 ...,.. 1 4.. . ... . ...................".J........................:.:.....11M1 ., e.;J::Sti S'«^'h'1 Y::.'i. .. . . . .... :t7:...5':"::h1:":"":" . ::"::::'::': : "SJ. S. .may ". Y $ } :. .::": sr.J f.. 4.... ...._..:°"I . ..k:":::.'.". ....'}°........ .a:":"....{. fi::+... . 'Y"tFJ.".v J. {.r ovR ..r {i. 1... .. t.1...o r: y A . t ;a 'v' {+P{. 'i . - .. r . .. r .. .. . y.. . Kt .. . .. . h. "A" ~^." Ste. rrr M.M1Y::: Jr.Yr. ': r:::".".11 .«.'."J.".': r. ..'.« L"r:.,",. L.......:......... 1..., . .. 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Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3564 Administration Bldg. be- fore 2 p.m. of the day preceding publication and by 2 p.m. Friday for Satarday and Sunday. General Notices may be published a maxi- mum of two times on request; Day Calendar items appear once only. Student organiztiov notices are not accepted for puhilcation. For more iniormation call7564-9270. TUESDAY, MAY 23 Johnson, Physiology; thesis: "The Role of Histamine during Damage to the Gastric Mucosa," Wed., May 24, 1967, Room 4017 East Medical Bldg., at 9 a.m. Chairman, H. W, Davenport. Doctoral Examination for Jerry Ralph Kress, Philosophy; thesis: "The Prob- len of Synonymy," Wed., May 24, Room 2213 Angell Hall, at 4 p.m. Chairman, W. P. Alston. Foreign Visitors The. following foreign visitors can be reached through the Foreign Visitor Programs Office, 764-2148. Jean-Georges Ritz, dean, Faculty of Letters and professor of English litera- Day Calendar ture, University of Lyon, France, May 21-24. Michigan Nurses Association-"Keep- Chang, Koo Kim, director of National ing in Step with Change": Rackham Theatre, Ministry of Public Informa- Bldg., Registration, 9:30 a.m. tion, Korea, May 22-25. Dr. A. M. T. Welkenhuysen, lecturer Donald E. Johnson Cancer Lecture - and curator, University Library, Univer- Dr. Francois Jacob, renowned French sity of Louvain, Belgium, May 22-June biologist and 1965 Nobel Prize winner, gm13. to speak on "Regulatory Mechanisms Mongi Ennaifer, museum administra- in the Bacterial Cells": RackhamnLec- tor, National Museum of Carthage, Tu- ture Hall, 8 p.m. nisia, May 24-25, __ _ Mrs. Marcela Dragomirescu, teacher of English, Rumania, May 24. General ]VoticeStephen Sebesan, director, General Minister of Education, Rumania, May Computing Center Course The Cors Traian Demian, professor, Bucharest "T Center announces a 7hort course Institute of Technology, Rumania, May tern, including Fortran IV." Fri., May . engrg. Chemist or ChE with interest in corporate educ., or teacher strong in chem. and math. William Merrell Pharmaceutical Co., Flint and Grand Rapids Territories - Sales oriented person for pharmaceuti- cal sales, mktg. major excellent, other fields with sales interest. Contact Bu- reau for interview information. Oakwood Hospital, Dearborn, Mich. -Occupational Therapist, full-time for Psychiatric unit. Adult therapy, require degree, man or woman, previous exper. not necessary, Local Detroit Retailer-Employment Supervision, personnel work, prefer un- dergrad degree in Industrial Relations. Personnel Mgmt. Consider BBA and 2-3 yrs. exper in personnel duties, re- cruiting, employment, job evaluation, wage & salary admin., etc. Prefer man out of school 2-3 yrs. Olympic Maritime S.A., Monte Carlo, Monaco-Applicants of any nationality who are Greek speaking are invited' to apply for career positions in all areas of one of the largest independ- ent shipping companies. International Student Association of Greater Boston, Cambridge, Mass. - Program Pirector, assists executive di- rector of private, non-profit, organiza- tion serving 4100 students, foreign and American, studying in greater Boston area. Coord. dev, programs, supv. staff & volunteers, represent publicity to col- lege and community media, mgmt. of ski lodge and other facilities. Valchenm, Chemical Division, United Merchants, Langley, S.C.-Plant Man- ager, Chem, Engrg. degree BS level or more, degree in other related fields, but chemical plant experience, 10 yrs. in supv. capacities, is necessary. * * * For further information please call 764-7460, General Division, Bureau of Appointments. 3200 SAB. ORGAN IZATION NOTICES USE OF THIS COLUMN FOR AN- NOUNCEMENTS is available to officially recognized and registered student or- ganizations only. Forms are available in Room 1311 SAB. * * * Deutscher Verein, Kaffeestunde: kaf- fee, kuchen, konversation, Wed., May 24, 3-5 p.m., 3050 Frieze Bldg. A t * Michigan Christian Fellowship, Lec- ture-discussion, Tues., May 23, 7:30 p.m., Michigan Union Third Floor general conference room, Dr. Harvey Bodine, minister of Detroit Metropolitan Meth- odist Church, "Put Your Best Faith Forward." DIAL 5-6290 RODGERS.. HAMMERs ROBERT WISE W rflVivian Discuss U.S. Asian Involvement By BOB SKOGLAND ative in seeking negotiations, but Visiting professor of political isdoing so secretly- science David Wurfel, regarded as hoe was challenged by Wurfel', an authority on Southeast Asia,wo observed that President said Sunday that the United States Johnson speaks more convincingly must negotiate with the National of his determination to win than Liberation Front in order to end of his desire to negotiate." the war in Vietnam. Strongly opposing Senator Burs- F o r m e r U.S. Representative ley's views, Pierce argued that we Weston Vivian opposed Wurfel at should not take the attitude that a panel discussion sponsored by since we are in the war, we should the Interfaith Committee for a win it. He said that our military Conference on Religion and Peace. presence li South Vietnam is "un- Vivian declared that his purpose justifiable." in the discussion was to force peo- ple to separate fact from fantasy, T e n P re s and asserted that Wurfel's sug- en Pr tester gestions were "fantasy." Police Force Wum'fel suggested that the most realistic goal for Southeast AsiamabA tcA rmasiFo may be "peaceful transition to Communism." After. negotiations, (Continued from Page 1) he said, it would be necessary to Viet Cong and American troops, establish an international police and dubbed "Operation Peace force to supervise free elections. Power." "We must recognize political s the festivities were to begin, realities in South Vietnam. The the demonstrators divided into two Viet Cong must have a role in the groups and approached the mock postwar government," W u r f e 1 Viet Cong-held village where five added.tTNT charges and white phosphor- Vivian declined to explain his ous grenades had been set. opposition to Wurfel. Both groups were removed forci- Other members of the panel bly from the village area by MP's, were state senator Gilbert Bursley, but only one of the groups was former city councilman Edward C. arrested, Pierce and Fred L. Kitchens, a ."These people could have killed Vietnam veteran. Kitchens de- themselves out there," explained scribed the Vietnam situation but Maj. William Koogan, company did not express an opinion on commander of the Marine reserv- withdrawal. ists acting as the Viet Cong in Bursley said that although the the mock battle. "The SP's and the United States cannot afford a long MP's removed them for their own war in Vietnam, we should not safety." admit this to the enemy. He de- When arraigned, the demonstra- clared that he is convinced the tors issued a joint statement de- administration is taking the initi- claring: s Arrested ireProgram "We are charged with being en- gaged in the promotion of disturb- ance to the annoyance of other persons. We must admit that we did disturb other persons when we lay down in the field where a mock battle was being held." "That those engaged in a mil- itary exercise should be disturbed by the presence of non-violent demonstrators," the statement continued, "bearing personal wit- ness to the obscenity of this per- formance is not surprising. That this is a crime in the city of To- ledo may be surprising but it ap-' pears to be a fact." F 6 CINEMAI I 2,1-5 pm.,Rom 1400 ChemistryBldg. Registration not necessary. Inquiries may beaddressed to Prof. Bernard A. Ga ler. Doctoral Examination for Paul Wem- ple Brubacher, Education; thesis: "A Study of the Effects of the College Entrance Examination Board Advanced Placement Program upon Student Aca- demic Experiences at the University of Michigan," Tues., May 23, Room 4018 UHS, at 9 a.m. Chairman, J. I. Doi, Doctoral Examination for Leonard Roy Program Information * NO 2-6264 LAST 2 DAYS ! Placement POSITION OPENINGS: Rohm and Haas Co., Phila., Pa.-BS/ MS degrees in ChE, ME, Chem. and Pharmacology. Varying experience lev- els, several locations. New and exper. grads, engineering positions, service, sales and research. Dow Corning, Midland, Mich.-Train- ing supervisor, corporate programs in plant operation, technical courses & supv. dev. in areas of chem., math and ThffATE - Use Daily Classifieds THE POPPY IS ALSO A FLOWER Show Times: Tues.-Thurs. 7/9 presents JACK LEMMON MARILYN MONROE TONY CURTIS in Billy Wilder's SOME LIKE IT HOT (1959) "Outrageously Funny! 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