Join The Daily-.-Meetings this week (See Today for details) HUBERT PREDICTABLE HUMPHREY 11 'IEHigh -18 See Editorial Page See Today for details Vol. LXXXYIII, No. 87 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, January 15, 1978 Ten Cents 10 Pages Plus Supplement Humphrey mourned at Capitol; world leaderslaud record WASHINGTON (AP)-Hubert Hum- phrey returned to Washington yester- day, mourned intdeath as he hadbeen revered in life by his family, colleagues and countless Americans. Hundreds braved the winter cold to pay last respects to Humphrey. Many wept as they filed past his body, which lay in state under the soaring dome of the Capitol-the scene of many of Humphrey's victories, defeats and most memorable orations. HUMPHREY, 66, lost his long and valiant battle with cancer at 10:25 p.m. Friday at his home in Waverly, Minn. A presidential jet transported Hum- phrey's body to the nation's capital yesterday morning. AS 19-gun salute-the honor due Humphrey as a former vice president-was sounded as Humphrey arrived at Andrews Air Force Base in suburban Maryland and again when the body arrived at the Capitol at the head of a 14-car motorcade. A military band played "God of Our Fathers" and "A Mighty Fortress is Our God." THE BODY of Minnesota's senior senator was borne by eight uniformed soldiers, sailors, airmen and Marines into the Capitol that was the hallmark and symbol of his long Washington career. Humphrey, who sought but never won the presidency, was lain on the black velvet catafalque first used in 1865 for the body of slain President Abraham Lincoln.. LMany who passed Humphrey's flag- draped, closed coffin were crying. More than one said, "He touched my life." "I DON'T THINK there's a move beloved figure' in American politics today," said Sen. Edmund S. Muskie (D-Maine), who was Humphrey's vice presidential running mate in 1968. "If the country had known him and thought of him in '68 as they do today, he would have won by an overwhelming landslide," Muskie said. President Carter, who hailed Hum- phrey as a champion of the poor, the oppressed, and the hungry, dispatched a presidential Air Force jet to return the body to Washington. HUMPHREY'S BODY will lie in state for 24 hours and then be returned to Minnesota and taken to the state capitol at St. Paul. The Capitol was to be open continuously for mourners desiring to pay their last respects. Funeral services are scheduled tomorrow afternoon at the House of Hope Presbyterian Church in Min- neapolis. Carter will speak at a memorial ser- vice for Humphrey at 11 a.m. today. The invitation-only ceremony is to be attended by hundreds of members of Congress and past and present gover- nment officials. FROM SAN CLEMENTE, Calif. it was announced that former President Richard Nixon was to fly to Washington to attend the service. Nixon has not visited the nation's capital since he resigned the presidency in August 1974. Immediately after Humphrey's See CAPITOL. Page 2 AP Photo THE FLAG FLIES at half staff over the White House Friday night following the death of Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey (D-Minn.). Humphrey died of cancer at his Minnesota home at the age of 66. MO VIEGOERS PERSIST DESPITE NEW ADDITION: Flick fans knock cinema ads' By JOHN SINKEVICS The lights dim, a few latecomers bustle to find seats and the first frames of film flash on the screen. But it isn't "Saturday Night Fever" or a "preview of coming attrac- tions." It's an ad for Seiko watches. YES, EVEN movie theaters have fallen prey to advertisements, and onie local theater operation, The Movies at Briarwood Mall, has been showing a commercial before all feature films. Although only one ten-second commercial featuring Seiko watches is run regularly before the films, Steven Flynn, manager of The Movies, admits that the recent trend has been unpopular with many movie-goers. "Here in Ann Arbor there has virtually been a revolt against the commercials," Flynn said. "Many of the people that have complained have said, and I agree with them, that if they wanted to see commer- cials they'd stay home and watch TV." However, Tom Rhoades, manager of Farrell's Ice Cream Parlour, one of the advertisers, predicted people will turn out for the movies anyway. "SURE, SOME PEOPLE might get turned off by the commercials," said Rhoades, "but movie entertain- ment is one of the last things people are going to drop from their list of activities." Flynn agreed. He said that a recent price increase has not affected his movie business at all, and that the introduction of commercials has only turned away a few movie-goers. "A certain number or people are bound to gripe about the advertise- ments," Flynn said, "but only a small minority of people will actually be so mad that they won't go back to the theater." THE MOVIES, part of the United Artists theater chain, began showing the nationally run commercial on November 22 of last year, about the same time that they raised the adult ticket price from $3 to $3.50. The rate increase was made to keep pace with other United Artists theaters in the Detroit area. Flynn said he delayed the price increase as long as possible because the Butterfield chain of theaters in Ann Arbor has kept its adult ticket price at $3.00. Since the Seiko commercial is national, only the United Artists Cor- poration itself profits financially by the running of the ad. "We didn't want to raise the price above the other Ann Arbor theaters," Flynn said. "Many people have complained that it's bad enough having to pay $3.50 and then having to watch commercials, too." THE BUTTERFIELD theaters in Ann Arbor are not showing any ad- vertisements before the feature films, and do not plan to follow that trend in the future. "We don't feel the public appreciates the commer- cials," said District Manager Dennis Gaines. "So as of now we don't feel it's necessary to begin showing them." Although no local commercials have been shbwn at The Movies, several "merchant ads" were run during the holiday season. The short ads consisted of a series of slides which gave the audience a "holiday greeting" from some of the mer- chants at Briarwood Mall. Rhoades placed a merchant ad for Farrell's with The Movies and said it was a very valuable method of adver- tising. "We're in a prime location, right across from The Movies," Rhoades said, "and although it's hard to judge how much more busi- ness we did as a direct result of the ads, we did take in $2,000 more in the first weeks of the advertising than the same time period last year. I think the 'experiment' worked." Rhoades said he did not expect to advertise regularly with The Movies because of the expense involved ($50 per merchant ad), but he did feel it was reaching a great number of people. Humphrey, 1968 Remembering lengthy Humphrey speeches 'Absolutely no hope' for settlement: Sadat WASHINGTON (AP) - It was sometimes said of Hubert Humphrey that he may have been born talking. Certainly few political figures of his time said so much about so many subjects. Associates say Humphrey, who died Friday night at age 66, was fully aware that he sometimes turned off his audiences with non-stop stump speeches that might run on for as long as 75 minutes or,in the Senate, for four hours. WHEN HE was running for a second Senate term in 1954, his cam- paign manager, Herbert Waters, suggested that Humphrey write down the most telling arguments that might be used against him. Humphrey's first item: "He talks too much." On another occasion he told report- ers: '"You people always write that I talk on every subject. I do - I like every subject. I can't help it - it's in the glands. BUT HE could defend his lo- quacity, nurtured as a debater in high school and college. It was in thei See HUMPHREY, Page 7 By The Associated Press Egyptian President Anwar Sadat, in a gloomy appraisal of Mideast peace ef- forts with Israel, said in an interview published yesterday he has "absolutely no hope" for an agreement on prin- ciples that could lead to a settlement. Israeli Prime Minister Menahem Begin responded to Sadat's comments by calling for a "cease-fire" on political statements. "SADAT SAID what he said," Begin told Israeli state radio after a meeting with Israel's negotiating team. "I won't get involved in a dialectic about Sadat's statement," he said. Sadat's pessimistic statement in the Egyptian magazine October came just two days before Israeli and Egyptian foreign ministers open crucial peace negotiations in Jerusalem. "I announce from now that I have ab- solutely no hope that such a statement of principle, can be achieved," Sadat was quoted -as telling October Editor Anis Mansour, a personal friend. THE EGYPTIAN leader has taken an increasingly tough tone in recent public statements on the talks. In the inter- view he seemed to stop just short of saying specifically that the entire peace effort was a failure. If it does fail, he said, "We shall have another attitude." Begin met for 1 hours with his negotiators and top government ministers to map out Israel's negotiating strategy for the next round of talks with the Egyptians. "WE ARE engaged in direct negotiations between the sides," Begin said. "Let's give a chance to direct talks." Sadat repeated his government's demands-already rejected by Israel-that Israeli troops must be withdrawn from all Arab lands cap- tured in the 1967 Mideast War and that agreement be reached on all aspects of the Palestinian issue. Israel has offered to settle the Palestinian issue, a key stumbling block in the search for peace, by gran- ting limited self-rule to the Palestinian Arabs on the West Bank of the Jordan Evaluating Jimmy's first year Mascoutah reacts to Carter' S Inept or efficient? Locals disagree' By JULIE ROVNER The Constitution says the president must give a State of the Union address. But tradition has added another feature to the mid-January speech-the State of the Presidency addresses delivered by anv sunnorters or detractors able to first year EDITOR'S NOTE - A year ago this coming Friday, Jimmy Carter took the oath of office as the 39th president of the United States. How has he fared? To take a measure of the man and his first year at the White House, and AP reporter went ti the midAl f Middlae America. 'm ile i