100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

March 28, 1972 - Image 3

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1972-03-28

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Tuesday, March :28, 1972.

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Page Three

Tuesay, arc 28,1972THEMICHGAN-AIL

Page Three

KR IS
KRISTOFFERSON
APRIL 21, FRIDAY

Hill Auditorium

$1.50-$3.00-$4.50

Reserved seats now available: Michigan Union
12-6 p.m. and Salvation Records, Maynard Street
SOLSTIS SCHOOL presents_
A WALT DISNEY
FILM FESTIVAL
Tuesday, March 28
7:00 p.m.-"DAVY CROCKETT, KING OF
THE WILD FRONTIER"
9:00 p.m.--"DAVY CROCKETT AND
THE RIVER PIRATES"
NAT. SCI. AUDITORIUM
ALL SHOWS 75c
/I
s - aa
. i
1217 SOUTH. UNIVERSITY
- ;m

I-
news briefs
by The Associated Press
COMMUNIST TROOPS were reported massing near Phnom
Penh yesterday, indicating the possibility of a major assault on
the Cambodian capital.
In South Vietnam, U.S. B52 bombers blasted suspected communist
positions and American troop strength dropped below 100,000 for thef
first time in seven years.
President Richard Nixon has said that American strength in
Vietnam will drop to 69,000 by May 1.
However, U.S. strength reached its peak of 543,000 men in April
1969, two months before Nixon announced a phasefl withdrawal of;
American troops,
Meanwhile, in Paris, despite its indefinite suspension of the
Vietnam peace conference, the United States is keeping its 20-
member conference delegation in place and looking for indications,
that the Communist side is ready to resume the conference on U.S.
terms.
However, all the signs seem to reflect Communist furor at the
U.S. move.
THE JUSTICE DEPARTMENT today conceded in the Supreme
Court that the Army was overzealous in its sur'illance of civil-I
ians.
However, Solicitor General Erwin Griswold declared, "What was
done - as unwise as it might have been - does not violate a statutet
or the Constitution, and what 4as done was stopped."
According to the top department lawyer, not only has the surveil-
lance stopped, but the so-called "blacklist" has been destroyed ex-
cept for one copy and the data banks dismantled.
* * *

Aday
By JONATHAN MILLER
Special To The Daily
KENOSHA, Wisconsin - The
air was clear and the sky a
brilliant blue when the four
limousines and Mid-America
bus turned onto 40th Avenue
here and pulled up outside the
bungalow home of 84-year-old
widow Ella Nelson.
Small children gathered as
tall men in gabardine coats took
up positions on all sides of the
house and at each end of the
street
Out of a Chrysler limousine
stepped a tall, greying man in
a woolen suit. Escorted by other
men in raincoats and followed
by about twenty men and wo-
men who had scrambled off the
bus laden down with cameras,
tape recorders and notebooks,
he walked into Mrs. Nelson's
front room.
For the next half hour, United
States Senator and Democratic
presidential aspirant George Mc-
Govern of South Dakota - Mrs.
Nelson called him "Governor
George" - talked to the widow
about property taxes and the
cost of living, and how it was
hard on the old, and how as
President he would make things
easier for Mrs. Nelson and those
like her.
Mrs. Nelson in turn told the
Senator that her card club and
Rosary circle both would be vot-
ing for him in the April 4 pri-
mary election.
The Senator looked gratified.
The press corps seemed skepti-
cal. "'rhe old lady probably told
them all to vote for Governor
(George) Wallace,"'one reporter
quipped.
McGovern left the house smil-
ing and walked up to shake
hands with the swelling crowd of
small boys. "What do you guys
do around here?" he asked.
"Play basketball," came the an-
swer. "Want to play?" asked
the Senator. "Sure."
Followed by his entourage,
McGovern walked up the street
a block to the back yard of
Paul and Beverly Saftig 'and
heaved the ball through the net

KISSES BRIDES, BABIES
with Sen. Mc Govern

DR. JUDAH FOLKMAN, surgeon in chief of Children's Hos-
pital Medical Center in Boston and a professor at the Harvardj
Medical School, reported yesterday to an American Cancer Society
seminar that the chemical signal stimulating capillary growth has
now been isolated, and methods are being sought to block its
action.
In laymen terms this means that new discoveries have opened
a door to keep human cancers small, "asleep," and harmless.
Cancer cannot grow larger than a BB shot unless it gets its
own blood supply, which it does by sending out a special chemical;
signal that causes capillaries, the tiniest blood vessels, to grow'
toward and then into the cancer and allows the cancer to expand
to a, large and lethal size.
* * *
THE SUPREME COURT reaffirmed by a 7-2 vote yesterday,
the federal law that has kept. all cigarette advertising off radio
and television for more than a year.
Turned aside without comment or a hearing were appeals by the
broadcasting industry claiming that the ban restrains freedom of
speech and discriminates in favor of newspapers and magazines,
which carry cigarette advertisements.
The Justice Department's only comment supporting the ban
was that "legislative reform is not invalid merely because it does

-Daily-Sara Krulwich

Hoping along the Easter bunny's trail

gThe Michigan Daily, edited and man-
a cby students at the University of
Michiga n. News phone: 764-0562. Second

over the garage door twice in
three attempts. After shaking
everybody's hand;McGovern got
back into his car and with the
press bus in pursuit took off for
the Turnstyle Supermarket in
Racine. ten miles away.
Senator McGovern's carefully
orchestrated and highly expen-
sive campaign was entering its
final, critical movement: a do or
die effort to snatch victory in
Wisconsin and enough credibil-
ity nationwide to secure the
nomination of his party for the
presidency. After that, McGov-
ern speculated in an interview,
beating Nixon "would be the
easy part."
As a leading performer in the
Great American Electoral Dra-
ma, McGovern was whistle-
stopping it across the state,
stopping on campuses and at
supermarkets, union meetings
and teachers' conventions.
At the University of iWscon-
sin's Milwaukee campus he
would dance to rock and roll
music; in Greendale he would
pose with an Easter bunny on
roller skates and a girl in hot-
pants; in Racine he would kiss
babies and a newlywed bride at
a wedding reception; in Green
Bay he would address a Steam-
fitters local banquet and Meet
Corner of State & Liberty
mITATE
Program Information 662-6264

the Candidates Night on a joint
platform with rival Senators
Hubert Humphrey - the only
man in front of McGovern in
the latest polls - and Henry
"Scoop" Jackson.
In between times, he talked
with newsmen in his car and on
his plane as he drove and flew
to the outlying areas of Amer-
ica's Dairyland.
McGovern's schedule is more
arduous, and more expensive,
than that of almost any of the
other contenders for the Demo-
cratic nomination here. In com-
parison, frontrunner Hubert
Humphrey is spending less than
half the $117,000 which McGov-.
ern is investing, and only Mus-
kie is spending more. Governor
Wallace has not even been in
Wisconsin since Friday. Even af-

fluent New York Mayor John
Lindsay has sharply reduced the
scale of his television advertis-
ing campaign, slashing his bud-
get by more than half in the
wake of his disappointing Flor-
ida showing,
Although he entered the pri-
mary an underdog, and remains
one, McGovern was bouyant and
confident this weekend. With
his liberal rival Mayor John
Lindsay faltering, and the lat-
est - though no one knows how
reliable - polls putting Sen.
Edmund Muskie in fourth place
behind Gov. Wallace, the Sen-
ator had good cause for hope.
In Wisconsin, no one is writ-
ing off George McGovern. But,
as the pundits say, the only
poll that counts is the one on
election day.

FEDERICO FELLI N I'S
COMPLETELY EXTRAORDINARY!
Superbly acted... With 'La Strada'.
Federico F.#i& -takes his place as
the true successor to Rossel/ini
and De Sica. - Saturday ReriSw
Starring
ACADEMYAWARD WINNER
ANTHONY QUINN
ACADEMYd
AWARD ' a
WINNER BEST FOREIGN PICTURE!

"One of the 50
greatest films
of all times."
C rowthe r,
NY Times
"Excellent! An
unforgettable
experience!"
-Winsten,
Post

not
ciga
that
of a

gfaass postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich-
go far enough. an. 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor,
Meanwhile, a new study of Japanese men and women says that Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues-
day through Sunday morning Univer-
rette smokers suffer a higher death rate than nonsmokers and sity year. subscription rates: $10 by
carrier, $11 by mail.
the rate rises with the number of cigarettes smoked per day. summer Session published Tuesday
trugh Saturday morning. Subscrip-
In addition the study discloses a higher incidence}of cancer ;tionrates: $5 by carrier, $5 by mail.
11 types and of heart disease and stomach ulcers among smokers. tion rates: $5 by carrier, $6 by mail.

I

------

ALSO-2ND GREAT HIT!

Sunrise
214 E. Washington
Can dles
Leather
Art Objects
Handcrafted by
ISunrise
Comunal Farm

AUDITIONS
FOR
"ONCE UPON A MATTRESS"
dir. by JOHN REID KLEIN
Monday, March 26 --7:30 p.m.
Tuesday, March 27 - 10 p.m.
Thursday, March 29-- 10 p.m.

STUDENT SEATS ON
LSA POLICY BOARD
The Executive Council of the LSA Student Govern-
ment is accepting petitions for interviews for the
10 student seats on the Joint Student-Faculty Pol-
jcy Board. This board has the power to place pro-
posals before the faculty at their meetings. If you
are interested sign up at roor 3-M, Michigan Un-
ion from 2-5 weekdays, or call 763-4799.

DEADLINE MARCH 31st

AACT Building

201 Mulholland Dr.

__f

I

STARTS WED.: 'Willie Wonka & the Chocolate Factory'
Matinee Only - 1, 3:30 p.m.-All Seats 75c
Pi""EIV ENDS TONITE
"JOE"-7 P.M.
F A 7"LA STRADA"-9 P.M.
STARTING WEDNESDAY!
PARAMOUNT PICTURES IS PROUD TO ANNOUNCE THE RETURN
F THE GREATEST FAMILY ENTERTAINMENT OF ALL TIME!
TCHNICOLOR® ieit
THE PARTING OF THE RED SEA
The Single Most Spectacular Scene
Ever Filmed.

-TOMORROW-

TRANSCENDENTAL
MEDITATION
as taught by
Maharishi
Mahesh
Yogi
LAST COURSE
OF SEMESTER
Transcendental meditation is a natural spontaneous technique
which allows each individual to expand his mind and improve
his life-INTRODUCTORY LECTURE
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 29--7:00 P.M.
AUDITORIUM C-ANGELL HALL
for further info, call 761-8255

OPEN 12:45
Shows at 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 P.M.
"Full of funny, macabre
bit ... The best of the
Urban Life lampoons
I 'ye see n."1
-Michigan Daily
SHOCKING;
FUNNY!
VERY ADULT!

I

Join The Daily
CIRCULATION DEPT.
Come in any afternoon
420 Maynard
If,

I

t

GOOD
/iR/WJ

- . ____ _

M

1

CECIL B. DEMILLE'S-THE TEN COMMANDMENTS EST7ON
BRYNNER BAXTERROBINSONDECARO PAET DERK HAROWICKE FCHSCT.ANDERSON
PRICEp - -t fs ICOLOR L! LofeIJ

Loves of Isadoro
7:00 & 9:30
$1 contr. free cider, etc.
Conspiracy
330 Maynard

- -- - _

-F

i

"ADVENTURE
INTO
INNER
SPACE"

eastern michigan
university
april 9
bowen fieldhouse
8:30 p.m.
(an MEC production)
Nel
Diaon

I

DIAL 668-6416
Ends Tonight!
TWO HIT
ENCORES

RATED -R*
GRAD COFFEE HOUR
Wednesday, March 29
8--10 p.m.
4th Floor Rackham
Donuts, Cake & Cider
*RESTRICTED to GRAD STUDENTS

NOMINATED
FOR

6

I

OPENS TOMORROW

I
'
II

ACADEMY
AWARDS
"Summer of '42"
BEST EDITING
BEST SCREENPLAY
BEST PHOTOGRAPHY
RFBT SCORF

Arthur

INDIANS

Kopit

. .k

II. Ii

I

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan