Page E g-' t THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, November 11, 1972 Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, November 11, 1972 Navy By the AP and Reuters WASHINGTON - The head of the U. S. Navy yesterday sum- moned about 90 admirals to the Pentagon and ordered them to stamp out racial discrimination in the Navy. Naval Chief of Staff Adm. Elmo Zumwalt called the meet- ing after three shipboard inci- dents, the latest Thursday when 124 crewmen, mostly black, re- fused to board the aircraft car- rier Constellation in San Diego, Calif. The crewmen were called in to- day for possible disciplinary ac- tion over their protest against alleged racial discrimination. They began their protest a week ago while the ship was on m a ne u vers off the Califor- nia coast. Capt. J. D. Ward brought the Constellation in to port last Tuesday to take a personal hand in negotiations with the dissi- dent sailors. Thursday, he promised the men that if they boarded the ship their problems would be worked out. They refused to go aboard until their grievances were dealt with. orders end to The crewmen claimed discrim- ination in promotions, frequent job transfers, low-work perform- ance marks and administrative discharges for under - achieve- ment ratings. The Navy yesterday ordered dent sailors, Electrician's Mate Fireman Leroi Templeton, said the men believe the Navy took the action in order to break a situaton that might have result- ed in violence. "We were afraid for our per-- "This issue of discrimination must be faced openly and fully . . . it is my view that these current racial incidents are not the result of lower standards, but are clearly due to failure of commands to implement (minority) pro. grams with a whole heart."' -Adm. Elmo Zumwalt :;.: msmnsmemasmnsmsmn 0 racism pect. He cited pressures of pro- longed sea duty and working long hours with aging equipment and increasing demands as being among other reasons. "It was in recognition of the " possibility that these duty pres- sures might burst forth in black- white confrontations t h a t I sought through my racial pro- grams to forestall such explo- sions," the naval chief said. He said he was not urging per- missiveness and discipline must be maintained, but added: "This issue of discrimination must be faced openly and fully . . . it is my view that these current ra- cial incidents are not the result of lower standards, but are clearly due to failure of com- mands to implement (minority) programs with a whole heart." The trouble on the Constella- tion followed other racial inci- dents Oct. 12 and 13 on the car- rier Kittyhawk and Oct. 16 on the oil tanker Hassayampa. YI AP Photo Call for unity West German Chancellor Willy Brandt praises his country's new treaty with East Germany Thursday, describing it as imperative for "a new era of secure peace." Brandt said, for Germany, "The cold war is at an end." individual trials for sailors charg- ed with unauthorized absence. Known as captain mast, the hearings began with each man going before the commanding of- ficer at a Southern California naval air station. . There was no sign of trouble involving the other 3,500 crew- men who remained aboard the Constellation. A spokesperson for the dissi- sonal safety aboard the boat," he said. "Conditions have not changed aboard." At the meeting with the admir- als in Washington, Adm. Zum- walt blamed senior officers for not implementing programs de- signed to stop discrimination. The Admiral, said many inci- dents aboard ships were only characterized as racial because that was their most obvious as- 7 OF 21 CHANGED: House committee chairpersons I to be replaced before Jan. 1 THE 1st UAC WASHINGTON (AP) - One-third of the House's 21 standing commit- tees will have new chairpersons in the 93rd Congress convening Jan. 3. Five of the changes are the re- sult of election casualties. The other two stem from retirements. Two of the committees involved are so-called major committees- Rules and Judiciary. The others are Interior and Insular Affairs, Merchant Marine and Fisheries, Science and Astronautics, Veterans Affairs, and District of Columbia. The most significant change will be in the leadership of the Rules Committee. This is the panel which decides whether and under w h a t conditions the House considers bills approved by other committees. The retirement of veteran Wil- liam Colmer (D-Miss) paved the way for Ray Madden (D-Ind.) to become chairperson of the 15-mem- ber committee composed of 10 Democrats and five Republicans. It will be the first time since 1952 that the Democratic H o u s e leadership can expect better co- operation from the committee created to serve as a "traffic cop" lican, Rep. Allen Smith of Cali- for the leaders by deciding w h a t fornia, is retiring. A more moder- bills to send to the House and ate member, Rep. John Anderson what bills to pigeonhole. of Illinois, will be the ranking Often in the past 20 years, the minority member. committee has either balked out- The shift in leadership of the right or required the leaders to re- Judiciary Committee resulted from sort to bargaining or compromise. the primary election defeat ofvet- The most recent liberal chair- eran Rep. Emanuel Celler (D-N.Y.) person of the committee was Adol- It put Rep. Peter Rodino, Jr. (D- ph Sabath.(D-Ill.) who died in 1952. N.Y.) in line for the chairperson- Since then its chairpersons be- ship. sides Colmer, have been Leo Al- The committee has jurisdiction len (R-Ill.) and Howard Smith over civil rights, impeachments, (D-Va.) both conservatives. and constitutional amendments, The committee's senior Repub among other things. It was Celler who squelched pro- posals to impeach Justice William jDouglas. He and the committee's esenior Republican, Rep. William McCulloch of Ohio, teamed up to push major civil rights bills through -The two youngest people ever the House. McCulloch is retiring. to serve in Vermont's house of rep- The primary election defeat of resentatives were elected. They Rep. George Miller (D-Calif.) could were Michael Obuchowski, 18, a result in two chairmanship chang- 0 0 A I I. 14 RULES: 1. Youth vote has som Send Answers on a postcard or letter with phone no. to UAC offices, c/o Mich. Union, 48104 your Ann name and Arbor, Mich. (Continued from Page 1) per cent more support than the to- tal electorate, which went to Nixon by a 61-38 margin. While the youth vote had little effect on the out- come, it would have been extreme- ly important in a close race. "The most you can say is that young people are maybe 10 per cent more liberal than the rest of the voters," said Edward O'Don- nell Jr., McGovern's youth vote coordinator. "You can't lose the rest of the population and win with what you pick up in the youth vote." McGovern did well in districts with a high percentage of college students, a group representing only about25 per cent of the first-time voters. Appproximately 14,000 under-21 voters gave strong support to Dem- ocratic candidates in Washtenaw County, enabling McGovern to be among the few Democratiic presi- dential candidates to ever carry the county. They also played a sig- nificant role in allowing Democrats to gain 8-7 control of the county Board of Commissioners for the first time since the Civil War. The under-21 vote was influen- tial - and perhaps decisive - in handing the sheriff's job to Demo- crat Fred Postill, and also strong student support of Shirley Bur- goyne may have secured her nar- row victory in the Circuit Court judicial race. Gary Owen, elected state representative from the 22nd district, has credited his win to the student vote and all the candidates in heavily student state representa- tive district 53 were under 30. McGovern staffers in Massachu- setts said the campus vote con- tributed to his victory there,, the only state McGovern carried. Ken Reitz, who headed the young voter effort in the Nixon campaign, said recognition of the President's accomplishmentswas responsible for what he called Nixon's good showing among young voters. The impact of young voters in lo- cal elections was visible in elec- tions around the country: -With all but absentee ballots counted, Steve Fowler, 22, a Uni- versity of Nebraska student, has apparently unseated state Sen. Wil- liam Swanson, chairman of the leg- islative council executive board. Fowler will have to drop out of school next term to assume his legislative post. i 7 2. All entries must be postmarked before midnight Monday, Nov. 13 3. In case of a tie the winner will be determined by the earliest postmark or if a further tie occurs by a drawing 4. Decision of the judges will be final Vermont resident now attending Harvard University, and Gregory Reed, 19, whose campaign staff in- cluded many people too young to vote. -Archie Hapri III, a 26-year-old Vietnam veteran, toppled the old- est member of Hawaii's house of representatives, 68-year-old Mindro Inaba, and Lottery to begin soon (Continued from Page 1) the post numbers of the winning horses in those racestwill decide which of the ten cups is selected. The association with the horse race is needed so that the state can avoid paying a 10 per cent federal tax on all lottery pro- ceeds. The two winning numbers will be posted at all ticket selling locations, at the drawing loca- tion and published in newspapers. Agents who sell winning tickets will get bonuses: $5,000 for selling a winning $1' million dollar ticket, $50 for a $5,000 winning ticket, and varying amounts in between. M$L was approved by voters in last May's primary. It is predicted to show a profit of up to $60 mil- lion per year and thus help to provide revenue without raising taxes. es. eslMiller heads the Science and As- tronautics Committee. Slated to suc- ceed him as chairperson is Rep. Olin Teague (D-Tex.) who now is chairperson of the Veterans Af- fairs panel. Since House rules forbid any member from holding two chair- personships of standing commit- tees, Teague's shift to the Space panel would put Rep. William Jen- nings Bryan Dorn, Jr. (D-S.C.) in position to take over the Veterans Affairs Committee. Defeats also removed the chair- person of the Interior and Insular Affairs and the District of Colum- bia committees. Rep. Wayne Aspinall (D-Colo.) will be replaced as chairperson of Interior by Rep. James Haley (D- Fla). Rep. John McMillan, (D-S.C.) will be replaced on District of Co- lumbia by Rep. Charles Diggs, (D-Mich.) now the fourth-ranking Democrat. Reps. Thomas Aber- nethy (D-Miss.) and John Dowdy (D-Tex.) who ranked ahead of Diggs, are retiring. Retirement of Rep. Edward Gar- matz (D-Md.) chairperson of Mer- chant Marine and Fisheries, will give the House its only woman chairperson, Rep. Leonor Sulli- van (D-Mo.) All the advancements are sub- ject to approval of the Democratic caucus when it meets in January. However, no opposition to the rou- tine promotions is expected. 1. What was the serial no. of Clutch Cargo's plane? 2. In My Little Margie what was the name of the old woman who lived across the hall? 3. What was the cook's full name on Wagon Train? 4. Who played the first Clarabel on Howdy Doodie? 5. What was the name of Sargent Preston's dog? Of Dudley Dooright's horse? 6. What was Juliet Prouse's TV series? 7. Who was the only member of the Little Rascals who is still involved in movies? 8. What was the name of Sky King's plane? i 9. Who was Jet Jackson's (formerly Capt. Mightnight) sidekick? 10. What was the shortest T.V. situation comedy? 11. Who was the original sponsor of I Love Lucy? Derelict dogs roam city 12. What was the food that Wally Harriet show? (Skip Young) ate that made him smart on the Ozzie and (Continued from Page 1) which they are put up for adop- tion if the owner isn't found," a Humane Society official explains. "The period of adoption de- pends on the adoptability of the dog or cat; we get a lot of mon- grels that are in good health but they just aren't adoptable," he says. In the first nine months of 1972 over 3,200 dogs were brought in by the police, the county dog war- dens, individuals and the society itself, Last year over 518 dogs that were not claimed or adopted, were destroyed. Police and Humane Society of- ficials recommend that Ann Arbor dog owners license and ID-tag their pets to prevent the disap- point of losing their furry friends. To obtain an ID tag, dog own- ers can send their name, address, phone number, along with the breed, color and size of their dog and one dollar with a self-ad- dressed, stamped envelope to the Huron Valley Humane Society, 3100 Cherry Hill Rd. 13. Who played on the TV series Adam & Eve? 14. Who was the male star of the Thin Man? 15. Who was the TV star of National Velvet? North Campus Cooperatives have Male and Female Openings for WINTER TERM about $120,/mo.-room, board, laundry, and a lot of fine people 16. 17. I Full name of Dobbie Gillis' rich friend and the girl played by Tuesday Weld? 18. What was Robert Serling's TV series after Topper? 19. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN FI. 2:+ '2::r"rri:i3:3?::?":'.::+{+?.g"+r:i"i'' ""r, Y"?v" rPdS4." :? fr::rr.r.yr.api"?':?~rvr+r." 20. 21. What were Walter Brennan's 4 TV series? SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 11 I the office of Career Planning & Place- DA'Y CALENDAR mSTUDENT CONSERVATION PRO- Apply now-ICC Office, Room 3-N, Rugby: Michigan vs. Univ. of Miami GRAM: Summer experience for stu- of Ohio, Palmer Field, 1:30 pm. dents interested in conservation & en- Education School: Saturday Semi- o ntal quality. Stipends ofup to or caI 662-44 14 nars, "Institutional Structures for ; $500 avail, for positions as Park or For-orcl624 14 New Constituencies in Higher Educa- est Assistants. Brochure available in tion," Rackham,. 10 am. this office. International Folk Dance : Macedon- ian folk dance workshop with Pece An- tanasozski; WAB, 10 am.-1::30 pm. & 2-4:30 pm. School of Music: K. Krazewski, so- prano, SM Recital Hall, 2:30 pm. Rive Gauche: Greek night, 1024 Hill School of Music: CoLegium Musicum,P, T. Taylor, director, music of the sev- enteenth century, Campus Chapel, 8 pm. from3to5o.m. School of Music: C. Moon, harp, SM ' 180 22. 23. Who played the husband in the TV series I Married Joan? 24. Who was the original Circus Boy? 25. Who played Jingles on Wild Bill Hicock? 26. Who played Cheyenne Bowdie? 27. Who played Sugarfoot? 28. Who played Bronco Lane? 29. Who played Eddie Haskel on Leave It To Beaver? 30. Who brought Spoach to the U of M Campus? (Bonus Question)