The Michigan Daily-Friday, September 30, 1977-Page 3 Chinese welcome, FYCUSEE in HPDCALLED$JY - Y Shirtmongers Only in America can you wear your culture on your shirt. And only in Ann Arbor can you purchase T-shirts with the likenesses of such literary giants as Mark Twain, Virginia Woolf, Ernest Hemingway, and F. Scott Fitzgerald on the steps on the Michigan Union. Barney Pace, an unemployed English graduate who has been hawking his wares for several days, says the idea originated from a conversation in a local restaurant. "These other two people, both of deranged mind, suggested that we should manufacture inflatable literary sex dolls," Pace said." 'Wonderful,' I said, 'but not eminently practical'." Thus the T-shirts - Mark Twain sells the best. Pace's shirts will be on sale at Bass Shoes today, but he has his sights set on larger ventures. "Do you know of any art fairs within, say, 100 miles?" he asked yesterday. Not, quite Army-Navy Call up your brother stationed in Taiwan and tell him to have his radio on tomorrow as Michigan sits on the Aggies of Texas A&M. WUOM will install a special line to feed Armed Forces Radio, which has selected the game to broadcast to U.S. servicemen overseas. Ac- cording to Ray Clatt of WUOM, the service network includes stations which serve 90 per cent of the armed forces installations around the world. "They usually do one or another of the games every year," he said. "For instance, last year they broadcast the Michigan vs. Univer- sity of North Carolina-Charlotte game," Anyone who remembers the outcome of that basketball contest can only hope that the Aggies fare worse in the glare of international publicity. "S .Happenings.. . if you've got a hot date tonight at 8 but still want to be involved i an authentic Happening, you'd damn well better go apple picking with the International Center folks at 4 p.m., since all our other events begin promptly at 8. The expedition will leave at 4 from the Center, 603 E. Madison, and you are encouraged to bring a car if you have one ... first on the roster at 8 p.m. is a forum on "Current Civil Liberties in Washtenaw County," held at the home of Marilyn and Don Koster, 5761 Geddes ... and it's a good night for space buffs as the 1960 and 1977 ver- sions of the short film "Universe" along with Space Shuttle slides brought back from the recent California tests will be shown in Auditorium 3 of 'MLB, also at 8 ... lots of folk will;be dancing in the Michigan League between 8 and 12 as the University Folk Dance Club holds its weekly hoof fest ... but if you'd rather shout than twist, be at Trigon fraternity to hear Wolverine defensive coach Dennis Brown lead a pep rally for tomorrow's football game with Texas A&M. The festivities begin at, you guessed it, 8 p.m. On the outside It's certainly good to have our weather forecasters back after a sum- mer's absence (nothing worse than making up the weather outlook), but we're almost tempted to send them away on days like this. It'll be overcast, cool and moist today with intermittent showers and a high of only 66. Tomorrow will be just as miserable with one exception - the rain won't be intermittent. It will be, our weatherperson says, "ap- preciable. Cambodiai TOKYO (AP) - China's ardent, and sometimes frustrated, wooing of little Cambodia, begun seven years ago by that most urbane of suitors, the late Premier Chou En-lai, appears finally to have paid off. The arrival Wednesday in Peking of a high-powered Cambodian government- Communist party delegation, headed by new Premier Pol Pot, has taken on more the trappings of a love feast than of a state visit. WHEN THE CHINESE want to show their friendship for a valued friend, they turn out hundreds of schoolchil- dren and dance and music groups to welcome him at the airport. Wednes- day's reception went far beyond that, judging from Chinese and other news reports reaching here from Peking. Not only did most of the leadership, led by Chairman Hua Kuo-feng, show up to meet the delegation, but this was followed by a massive, noisy turnout of 100,000 in the capital's Tien An Men Square. At a state banquet, both Pol Pot and Hua exceeded themselves in Old World ni delegates politeness andJ praise. The Cambodian insisted on addressing Hua and all four of the Chinese party vice chairmen as "respected and beloved," an exuber- ance seldom matched by other visitors. BUT WHAT SEEMED to confirm that China's long-term policy has suc- ceeded was Pol Pot's declaration that his country had, for the past two years, imitated China - the sincerest compli- ment of all. More exactly, he said, "in the con- crete revolutionary struggle of our country, we have creatively and suc- cessfully applied Mao Ts.e-tung thought, from the time we had only em- pty hands down to April 17, 1975" - the day the Cambodian Communists, who now call their country Democratic Kampuchea, defeated the U.S.-backed regime in Phnom Penh. Pol Pot left little doubt at the dinner about the new Kampuchea govern- ment's feelings toward Moscow. Echo- ing the Chinese line, he castigated the Soviet "expansionists," along with im- perialists and reactionaries, for trying to "arrest the impetus of the people's struggle." SValuable Coupon Worth $1.00 I $1.501 * feeds 2at BUY TWO DELICIOUS MR. TONY'S SUBMARINE SANDWICHES (reg.) FOR ONLY $1.50 (and this coupon) SAVE $1.00 No Expires delivery *r10/6/77 Submarines State & Williarp 1327 S. University 769-9100 663-0511 ' (near Washtenaw) Publilc en.j MIAMI (AP) - Attorney Ellis Rubin is getting unexpected help in his de- fense of Ronny Zamora, the teen-ager he says was driven to kill by television violence. Suggestions are pouring in from the public and other lawyers who watch televised portions of the trial each night. "Tell him to get rid of juror No., 4," a woman telephoned Rubin's law office earlier this week after watching jury selection on Miami's public service TV channel. "I have a feeling about her," she said. THE ZAMORA CASE is the first major test of a one-year camera-in-the- courtroom experiment ordered by the Florida Supreme Court. Ironically, television also plays a part in Zamora's defense. Zamora, 15, and Darrell Agrella, 14, are charged with the murder of Za- mora's neighbor, Elinor Haggart, 83. Rubin says his client was insane be- cause of "involuntary television intoxi- cation." Still cameras and one television camera have been recording each day's oystrial proceedings. Highlights of the dramatic trial are being broadcast here in com- petition with the regular nightly net- work fare, including the police shows cited by Rubin in his defense. RUBIN, A FLAMBOYANT lawyer who once ran 75 miles to dramatize his fight against the television blackouts of local pro football games, says he's delighted with the interest in the case. "This is the first time a murder trial has been shown on TV and I believe the public is really into the case," he says. "I think it's one of the most educa- tionally valuable things that has been done with the courts." "There are two ways to look at it," he said. "Those against it argue it's an in- vation of the defendant and jury's pri- vacy, but I consider it part of the right to a fret and open trial." ANN ARBOR FIGURE SKATING CLUB Adult Skating Session: Sundays 7:30-10:30 P.M. at Yost Ice Arena One Hour Group Instruction Free Skate and Dance Followed by Dance and General Skating Program $102 for season (22 sessions) STA RTING OCT. 2 Call JERRY SCHULTZ 761-5431 The University of Michigan .y S YMPHON Y, RAND and WIND ENSEMHLE H. ROBERT REYNOLDS, Conductor JEROME JELINEK, Cello Soloist CONCERT FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30 8:00 P.M. Hill Auditorium Admission Complimenta. President WOOS G- OP. WASHINGTON-President Carter, who has been less than successful in convincing 'the ,'overwhelming pemocratic majority in Congress to toe his line, courted Republicans yester- day. He told them they have been "very helpful to me on crucial issues." aOne day after Republican leaders escalated their' attacks on the ad- ministration, the President invited GOP House members tothe White "louse and told them they have worked' more closely with him on defense and Internationalvaffairs than the Democrats have. WITH REPORTERS and photographers present, he told the group: "I don't ever want you to feel feticent about, coming to me with per- sonal problems or ones that affect a single constituent." "It's obvious your constituents are also mine." His comments were not likely to en- dear him to House Speaker Thomas O'Neill, D-Mass., Senate Democratic Leader Robert Byrd of West Virginia, or other Capitol Hill Democrats. The meeting followed criticism of Carter on Wednesday by Republicans meeting in New Orleans. GOP leaders laid the President's handling of the Bert Lance case may have given them a major issue for next year's congressional elections. DailY Official Bulletin FridaySeptember 30, 1977 DAY CALENDAR Guild House: Home-made soup and sandwich lun- cheon, 50t. Prof. Tom Weisskopf, "How a Radical Economist Looks at the U.S. Economy," 802 Monroe, goon. 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