Sunday, February 6, 1977 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Sunday, February 6, 1977 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Reagan: Not giving up Republican leadership LOS ANGELES (AP) - Ron- servative Union and the Pro- s aId Reagan is 66 years old to- gressive-Conservative party of tl day - and he plans to spend Canada, lunch with the editorial g the day on the political "mash- board of The Washington Post, z ed potato circuit." a meeting with GOP leaders in c The former California gover-- Congress, three news conferen- ti nor, tanned and vigorous as ces and a fund-raiser in Peoria ever, shows no signs of giving for his old alma mater, Eureka 1 eve, sowsno ign of giingCollege, up his leadership of the conser-githr votive wing of the. Republican Although his face is lined with Ia; paty. An g he doen't ount wrinkles, Reagan retains the f pasety.otndfeden't acon-handsomeness that helped make- himself out of presidential poli- him a movie star. His face is tics in 1980}. tanned, there is barely a trace "I DON'T KNOW where I'll of grey in his hair, and he looks be in 1980," is Reagan's way of a decade younger than his 66 keeping the door open for 1980 years. without committing himself to REAGAN'S MESSAGE on the a campaign. stump also hasn't changed much Reagan is working to expand in the past decade - an ode to the conservative power base free enterprise and a collection which nearly won him the Re-; of horror stories of the govern- publican nomination for presi- ment bureaucracy. dent last year. "The bureaucracy has be- On his 66th birthday, for ex- come a fourth branch of gov- ample, Reagan scheduled a trip ernment, not subject to removal to Richmond, Va., to headline aiby your votes x ... Why don't fund-raising dinner for Wyatt more of us challenge the arro-1 Durrett, a candidate for Vir- gance of officialdom .. Busi- ginia attorney general who was nessnmen are fast becoming an Reagan's state chairman last endangered species ... Profit has year. become a dirty word ... Closing THAT APPEARANCE is part the loopholes is dexnagoguery. j of a five-day, cross-country The simple truth is business speaking tour designed to rein- doesn't pay taxes. Business col- force Reagan's personal politi- lects taxes for government." cal ties and his public image Reagan aide Michael Deaver as the nation's best-known con- agrees that a 1980 race is "cer- servative. tainly a possibility." But, Dea The trip also includes speech- ver says, actively supporting es before the American Con- some other conservative is also a strong possibility. "MY ATTENTION now is on 1978," Reagan says. "My atten-J /1% A .~h'-w - 4& tion is going to be on seeing ame CFR initials, "Citizens for :he Republic," with Ronald Rea- an as chairman and Lyn Nof iger, Reagan's longtime politi al adviser, as salaried execu- ive officer. The new CFER will use the 976 campaign surplus to help riendly candidates, and it will lso be a vehicle to raise more unds, said Nofziger. -~~ -'-i'-- ANNOUNCING a TRAVEL SEMINAR to MARCH 5-13 Spring Vocation FOR: Foreign Students and scholars and American Students. - i PURPOSE: - To learn about the traditions, culture, history, and problems of the people in the southeastern rural mountain area and to share participants' cultures with them. * To enjoy the beauty of the Great Smoky Mountains and surrounding countryside. COST: $90.00 COVERS ALL EXPENSES For information and registration - Ecumenical Campus Center, 921 Church, 662-5529 goo TONIGHT LYMAN WOODARD ' r..,.. .. .... WVVE WANT YOU" to help new students next fall apply to be a FALL ORIENTATION LEADER Come to the Orientation Office 2530 SAB from Monday, Jan. 24- Friday, Feb. 18 An affirmative action, non-discriminatory employer. ALL-CAMPUS SINGLES BOWLING TOURNAMENT SIGN UP NOW at the I.M. BUILDING Ronald Reagan, 66-years-old Train, wreck blamed or 16' I - am .A (Continued from Page 1) coaches. gers were hurt in a September western Memorial Saturdhy aft- Two cars lay in the street on 1974 wreck. ernoon. their sides. One came to rest The National Transportation Martin's train, a I"Lake-Dan wihh one end on the pavement Safety Board (NTSB) took juris- Ryan" train bound for the west- and the other leaningLgainst the diction in the investigation, ern suburb , of Oak Park, superstructure that supports 'the which also included police, state slammed into the rear of a Ra- racks. A fourth dangled from and regional authorities. venswood train headed for the the girders, one end restin. on NTSB vice chairman Kay Northwest Side, at about 5:30 one of the horizontal coaches. Bailey told reporters, "If the p.m. at Lake Street and Wabash, Working under floodlights in system was working, the motor- Avenue. The. lead train was the snow and 20-degree air, man would have gotten a steady stopped pn the tracks. c r e w s w i t h hacksaws and red signal if there was another Witnesses said there was a torches cut at the twisted metal train in the next block of tracks. loud crack and a flash of white for two hours to free those "After he had come to a stop, light as the coaches derailed, t r a p p e d. Ambulance sirens it would have gone flashing ied, sending passengers on a horri- waF ed in the Loop for 45 min- which would have allowed him fying train ride into space. As ues. to go up to 15 ,miles per hour, the cars fell, shrieking riders In 1974 four serious accidents but not over that. tumbled from windows and fell occurred on the CTA. The worst " Had he exceeded the 15 to the street only to be buried was a similar rear-end collision miles per hour, if the system under falling wreckage. Others on the South Side that injured was working. the train woold were trapped inside the mangled 224 persons. Another 41 passea- have automatically come to a stop. There is an ability to over- i ride the system - which the (;an stiik es '\ authorities have said ws Gandhi strikes out investigator Hubert Jewell said reports indic ited iMartin did stop the train after rereiving the steady red signal. But Bailey said that "under the rules of the company you (0ontinuedfronPaoe1) Several non-Communist op- ,;are supposed to call before you ant weather, but were largely position parties immediately proceed." unresponsive, often cheering formed a coalition aimed at Elmer Garner, -head of tye only when Congress workers ending Gandhi's 11-year-old railroad division of the NTSB, stationed throughout the crowd rule. said the motorman never noti- began shouting and clapping in tfled the controller of thie warn- support of the prime minister. LAST WEEK her senior cabi- ing light before he re s atr~ed the Gandhi reiterated her charge net member, Agriculture Mims-;train and apparently tri gerEd that the more than half-dozen ter Jagjivan Ram, resigned and the crashy opposition parties uniting joined other Congress dissidents A count of nine hosritals against her\rule were a "hotch- in forming a new anti-Gandhi sho pot of a combination." party. , They denounced "ten- wed 187 persons were taken "They have come together to dencies toward despotic rule" weaken the central govern- in the party and government. ment and cause instability in Of the defectors, Mrs. Gand- Isis ee d- the country in the name of de- hi said yesterday, "The main mocracy," she said. She pub- question to be asked now is licly reaffirmed her "total faith whether they had resorted to in democracy," declaring, their new course to promote "Democracy has been, is, and their narrow partisan ends or Te! ht will remain in India." the general good of the people." Edwina Drobney India's national news agency BUT SHE warned that her renorted vesterday that Nan- Janet Taylor Pickett government would not tolerate dini Satpathv, one of the Con- violence of- attempts to disrupt press leaders who resigned with feb. 8-27 the election. She said she had Ram, is being investigated by a recepton: feb. 11, 7-9 already received reports of at- snecial government commis- HOURS tacks on Congress workers, sion. and she said one member of the The disnatch said a commis- Tu.-Fr., 10-6 youth wing had been murdered sion in Orissa .state was investi- Weekends, 12-6 a few days ago. gating "v a r i o u s. charges" 764-3234 Gandhi relaxed her emergen- again Mrs. Satpathy, a promi- cy, rule last month, freeing nent leftist who was forced to many political prisoners and resign in December as the scheduling the March national state's chief minister after E n L elections, India's first in six feuding publicly with local sup- FIRST FLOOR MICHIGAN UNION years. norters of Sanjay Gandhi. _ -_--~-- --~-- 1 iriver in for treatment and 47 were ad- mitted, several of whom weref still in serious condition Satur- day. Martin, 34, a nine-year veter- an of the CTA, was ques*ioned} 'before he underwent abdominall surgery late Friday, ut he gave only "vague answers," McDon- ough said. Blood tests determined Martin was not under the influence of drugs or alcohol, auth,:)ities said. There were reports pedestri- ans were crushed by the falling cars but authorities could not confirm them. Renel Conner, 25, an attendant at a nearby park-' ing garage, said, "l\saw a cou- ple of people who were under- neath the car trying to run, butI they didn't make it.' if we can't whittle away at that D~emocratic majority in Con- gress and the state legisla- tures. To help him in that whittling process, Reagan has about $1 million left'over from his "Citi- zens for Reagan" presidential campaign fund. That money has been placed in a new organization with the r7 Find What You're Looking For in The Classifieds U WA I. I a I $ ,Joel i Attracloms TH INKING OF WAYS TO MAKE MONEY? Sell commissioned subscriptions y for Call or come down 764-0560 420 Maynard Featurnngan Pi / Wls Geoge Axer Guest Acor- February 16a20 ask for DEBBIE I The First Natkonal Toring Company of the THE f74 ANDrKgrirl AWARD-WINNING BEST MUSICALF February 25-27 Tickets available at PTP Ticket Office Mendelssohn Theatre Lobby, Mon.-Fri. 10-1, 2-5 Power For Information Call: 764-0450 Tickets also available at all Hudsons di a'D ily Classiieds Get Results, SAY: in a DAILY , classified ad. Valentine Messages will run on Sunday, Feb. 13 GLOBAL AWARENESS SERIES WEEKLY: Wed. 4 p.m.-LECTURE-Angell Hall Aud. "A" Thurs. Noon-LUNCH/DISCUSSION-Lord of Light Luth. (HILL & FOREST) i- 0* OLMI'S 1961 IL POSTOf The poignant, yet amusing, story of a shy young man's first job in a large impersonal industrial firm in Milan, A superb film-that surpasses most Italian neo-realist cinema in its penetrating documentation of working class life. Tues.: BONNIE AND CLYDE CINEMA GUILD TONIGHT AT OLD ARCH. AUD. 7:00 &s 9:05 Admission $1.25 JOHN SCHLESINGER'S 1965 DARLING An early Schlesinger film (MIDNIGHT COWBOY, MARA- THON MAN) that traces the mis-spent life of an untalented PARAGUAY Feb. 9-4 p.m. Feb. 10-noon MR. FRISCO GILCHRIST-He served in' Paraguay since 1952 at Colegia Interna- tional, the Disciples of Christ education program and most recently with Friendship Mission working with peasant/Indian com- munities. The current intervention of the government. resulted in his arrest and ex- niign F II I ,.