PAGE TWO THE. MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, JANVARY 173 1967 PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, JANUARY 17. 1967 _ยข ., rs. Wallace Now Governor Promises Alabaman Freedom' STARTED IN PEKING: Red Guards Chosen from High School Students; Admission Only for Select Group MONTGOMERY, Ala..A)--Mrs. Wallace expects to run for presi- George C. Wallace . became Ala- dent again, in 1968 as he did three bama's first woman: governor yes- years ago. terday and quickly joined, hei The new governor, a blonde 40- husband, a likely candidate for year-old mother of four children president, in a renewed promise to who has accompanied her husband continue the struggle for "free- an many of his political journeys, dom." took the oath as governor stand- Her words and those of the ing on the spot where Jefferson outgoing.governor in their prepar- Davis was sworn in as president ed remarks- left little doubt that zf a rebellious Confederacy 106 M ichiga Advisor Pa nel To Revamp Teacher Codes LANSING - Former U.S. Com- missioner o Education Francis Keppel and two of the nation's leading authorities on teacher ed- ucation and certificaiton, Drs. Ro- bert J. .Schaefer and Donald J. McCarty, have accepted invita- tions to assist Michigan in devel- oping a new State Teacher Certi fication Code. State Superintendent of Public Instruction Ira Polley said that Dr. Robert J. Schaefer, Dean of Columbia University Teachers Col- lege, and Dr. Donald 'J. McCarty, Dean of University of Wisconsin's College of Education, as well as Dr. Keppel, agreed to serve on a special advisory panel to help Mi- chigan revamp its educational standards for teachers. Dr. Schaefer and Dr. McCarty have been in Michigan to meet with all members of the State Board of Education and Dr. Polley in a preliminary appraisal of pre- sent and proposed educational re- quirements. Dr. Keppel was unable to attend this initial meeting but will serve at future panel sessions. Concern With Teaching Standards "Educational standards for our teachers.,are at the very heart of educational quality for our youth," the State Superintendent contin- ued. "Therefore, the qualifications we set for the education of our teachers deserve the most inten- sive examination, authoritative analysis, and reasoned decisions that are possible. Desire Quality Education Dr. Keppel, a former dean at Harvard University, served as U.S. Commissioner of Education from 1962 until 1965 when he was ele- vated to an Assistant Secretary in the 'Department of Health, Educa- tion and Welfare. He is now Chairman of the Board of Direc- tors, General. Learning Corpora- tion in New York City. Dr. Schaefer, a former assistant dean of the Graduate School of Education at Harvard University, was. made dean of Columbia's Teachers': College in 1963. Dr McCarty, who was -appoint- ed Dean of Education at Wiscon- sin University last year, had prev- iously served as a professor of ed- ucation at Cornell University for seven years. years ago.I Along with her family Bible, she! also used the one with which Da- vis was inaugurated. Mrs. Wallace told a cheering throng gathered at the foot of the Capitol steps that she ran for governor to enable her husband to "take our fight for states rights to the final court of appeal-the people of the United States.". The inaugural ceremonies wereI dedicated to the fighting men in Viet Nam, and in deference to their sacrifice, Mrs. Wallace and aer husband canceled the tradi- tional inaugural ball. They said .he merrymaking would be inap- propriate. An estimated 100,000 visitors joined residents of Montgomery along the route of the inaugural paradeand cheered the new gov- ernor as she rode in an open car. Mrs. Wallace told her listeners that her election last November is proof that the determination of a free people to govern themselves will not be suppressed by force, from China, from Russia, from Cuba, and from Washington, D.C." "It is notice that the people of Alabama, whose motto is 'We Dare Defend Our Rights,' are not in a mood to sit idly by and sur- render our constitutional system of government or a single one of its freedoms by default," she said. Both Mrs. Wallace and her hus- band denounced federal bureau- crats, who, they charged, are threatening the nation's freedom. She spoke resentfully against what she called an attempt to "gain control of the hearts and minds of our children" through guidelines laid down to regulate the schools. EDITOR'S NOTE: The Red Guards, you ths manipulated as propagand- ists and activists in the "cultural revolution" taking place in China, are often mentioned-collectively- in dispatches. Here is a look at an individual Red Guard, interviewed by an Italian journalist who has just returned fron a trip to China. By ALESSANDRO CASELLA Written for the Associated Press Yang Chu-tting is 16. He is a high .school student and comes from the city of Hopei in Anhwei province. His father, who fought in the Red army during the civil war, died two years ago and his mother works as a seamstress. Yang Chu-tung is a Red Guard. I met him by chance in the streets of Canton, dressed in his father's uniform. "How did the Red Guards get started?" I asked him. "It all started in Peking," he said. Last July, students of the high school attached to Peking's Hsin Hua University'formed themselves into a Red Guardhbattalion. Whose idea it was he did not knod. Anyhow, Aug. 18 the Red Guards descended on Tien An Men Square in Peking and. Mao Tse-tung appeared, wearing a Red Guard armband. Next day the stu- dents in Yang's school, after hear- ing this news spread by radio and press, decided that they also would start a Red Guard group. A small group of students from among the more politically active ones de- clared themselves Red Guards. Other students who wanted to be- come Red Guards had to apply for membership and be approved by the original group. Not everybody who applied could become a Red Guard. One had to belong to one of the five pure classes-workers, middle and poor peasants, soldiers, cadres or re- volutionary martyrs. A student from a bourgeois background could be approved, but this happened seldom. Yang Chu-Tung applied for membership to the Red Guards about two weeks after the move- ment started. With his "pure" class background he had no dif- ficulty in gaining admission. After admission he suggested to station and wait until he finds a train to take him home to Hopei. Next spring his school will or- ganize a long march to Yenan, which should last six months. the Red Guard group of his school that he should be sent to Peking. Shanghai and Canton to exchange ideas with other Red Guards. After one day of waiting he found a train that was going to Can- ton. Money was no problem as the Red Guards can travel free of charge on any train. Food also was provided. On arriving at Canton, after a two-day trip, Yang Chu-tung and his friend reported to the Central Reception Committee set up by the city authorities. There he was given a map of the town and sent to the school where he now lives and where food is provided for him. Once settled, he and his friend started to print leaflets in which they "encourage people to follow Chairman Mao." Other ideas for his pamphlets he gets from Mao's quotations-he says he can write whatever he wants. Then he dis- tributes his 'pamphlets in the street. The printing in batches of 100, he does by means of a simple wax stencil which, together with the paper and ink, is provided free to him by the school. Yang's future projects are rather vague. He likes Canton and has given up his project of going to Peking. Sometime this month he will go to the Canton railway CINEMA 1I presents The'Guns of Navarone (Cinema Scope and Color) GREGORY PECK ANTHONY QUINN DAVID NIVEN FRIDAY and SATURDAY 6:30 and 9:15 P.M. AI I Aud. A, Angell Hall 50c LU NCH-DISCUSSION TUESDAY, January 17, 12:00 Noon. U.M. International Center" I student or faculty ID required per group SUBJECT: "THE IMPACT OF AMERICAN INFLUENCE ON NIGERIAN EDUCATION" SPEAKER: MR. JOSEPH ADESOLA LAOYE (Nigeria) Graduate student in Public Health For reservations, Sponsored by the call 662-5529 Ecumenical Campus Center Join The Daily "SUPERIOR OFF-BEAT, AND ORIGINAL!"-N.Y. TIMES COLUMIA PCRES aMes MASON Bau B~trS LYNNE D9GRaVe SUGGESTED FOR MATURE AUDIENCES Tuesday 7 and 9 Ann Arbor, Michigan 210 S. Fifth Avenue 761-9700 UNION-LEAGUE I CREATIVE ARTS FESTIVAL '67 AND JOHN BARTON WOLGAMOT PRESENTS THE P.A.P. REPERTORY COMPANY in a reading of 'PATAPHYSiCAL POETRY Across Campus TUESDAY, JAN. 17 Guild will present Special Wednes- 7:30 p.m,-School of Education day Night Experimental Series Lecture: Dr. Carl Senichel, direc- Program. No. 1: Jack Smith's tor of the 'League School for Ser- "Flaming Creatures" and Mike iously Disturbed Children; will Kucha's "Sins of the Flesha- speak on "School lExperiences for poids" at thp Arch. Aud. Seriously Disturbed. Children" in 7:30 p.m.-College of Engineer- Aud. A, Angell Hall. ing Lecture: Assistant Prof. Brice 8:00 p.m. .' Packard Avenue Carnaham will speak on "An In- Playreaders presentation in Aud. troduction to Digital Computers C, Angell Hall. and the MAD Language" in Nat- WEDNESDAY, JAN. 18 ural Sciences Aud. 3:00 p.m.-Erick Sjoqvist, pro- 8:00 p.m.-Packard Ave n u e fessor of classical archaelogy at Playreaders presentation in Audi- Princeton University, will present torium C, Angell .Hall., the Thomas Spencer Jerome Lec- 8:30 p.m.-The University Sym- ture on "'Hellenization ,in Archaic phony Orchestra, conducted by Times" at the Kelsey Museum.,' Prof. Joseph Blatt, in public con- 7-00 and 9:05 p.m. - Cinema cert at Hill Auditorium. Shows at 1:00- NOW 2:55-4:55-6:55-9:05 MARTEN i MATT HELM, KARL MALDERNf ' A [tOWM 8A PICTURES RELEAStf, TECHNICOLOR' NEXT: "THE ENDLESS SUMMER" AUDITORIUM C ANGELL HALL. JANUARY 18 and-19 8:00 P.M. FREE I if 'i Dept. of Comparative Literature presents V THE EMPEROR JONES by Eugene ONeill and Le Roi Jone's DUTCHMAN Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre WED.-SAT., JAN. 18-21 $2.00, $1.50, $1.00 Box office opens 10 a.m. Monday before performance pim f 1 49 NOW rjn,.CAM-PUS DIAL 8-6416 "A BEAUTIFUL -z FILMi"-The New Yorker 4 A 4 GRAND PRIZE WINNER 1966 CANNES FILM FESTIVAL 'A a f r JPRESENTS ANMAN' _....Jd A WfOMAN NEXT MELINA MERCOURI ROMY SCHNEIDER PETER FINCH "10:30 P.M.Sumier" DiWm6 by LOPERT 'VTUS M COPuON TECHNICOLOR* I ,i Of TATE start January 16 TODAY ! THE LIQUIDATOR GOES FROM ONE HOT-BED OF INTRIGUE TO ANOTHER! @ur E t Lydia Mendelssohn Box Office 10 A.M.-5 P.M. All Seats $2.50 Performances: the new musical II II I sWV. II I