Tuesdoy, June 5, 1973
THE SUMMER DAILY'
Page Three
For draft dodger Len Granneman,
it's a long way home to Missouri
Botulism warning
Lloyd Kempe, a University chemical
engineer, yesterday claimed that canned
goods are rampant with botulism because
of the ineffectiveness of processing meth-
ods. "Problems with thermal processing
of foods are well recognized in the indus-
try, but are not generally known to the
public at large - except when a major
poisoning incident occurs," he said. He
contend, that the principal source of
botulism poisoning stems from the eat-
ing of preserved or commercially steri-
lized food that has become tainted with
the bacteria "Clostridium botulinum"
which can . produce the most poisonous
substance known to humans.
Antioch
Police moved onto the Antioch College
campts in Yellow Springs, Ohio, yester-
day for the second time during the cur-
rent battle between students and admin--
istration over financial aid. The police
were present to enforce a court initnc-
tion forcing the re-opening of the college.
The striking stidents haie asked for
"noranteed financi,,t aid until graduation,
wic h the clina it cannot pro-
mi-s. So f-r th: aist trl hadismissed oxGs-
en iu'tx iinimh and twenty st idvnt,
ltof dispte.
Happenings . ..
. . . cover a wide range of interests to-
d.y. Bishop Taos-s Gumbleton, of the
trttoil Airclidioes, will talk about his
recei visit to Saiin aid his discissioiis
iviti lormer piiliticat piisiiiiers. le will
spek at 8 p.m. at the First Presbyterian
C'uirchi. Meanwhile the AA Film Co-op
is featring Fellini's "8" in Angell hall
Aid. A it 7:30 and 9:30.
A2's weather
Cloudy and rainy. We're expecting a
southeasterly flow to bring an area of
thuinderstoris upon us today. Highs be-
tween 70-75 with lors tonight 60-65.
Counter-
graduation
to feature
By RICHARD E. MEYER
WINDSOR, Ot. f-Down on the riverbank, alone, Len
Grasnemann eats his lunch sometimes and thinks: "I'm a
damn good swimmer. I could swim it if I had to." It makes
him uneasy.
The Detroit River separates Canada from the United States.
To Len Grannemann, it represents safety. It stands between
him, the Federal Bureau of Investigation and arrest. Still, there
are those tites . . . when he thinks, about swimming . . . or
canoeing . . .
SIX HUNDRED fifty yards. So near. And yet ...
A "deserter" to his President, a prodigal to his family, an
embarrassment to many of the folks back in Washington, Mo.,
his hoimetow, Len Grannemann, 27, is by any definition-an
exile.
GO HOME? "Good for three to five years. Not worth it."
Yet, of all such exiles-among the only remaining prisoners
of the Vietnam war, albeit by a choice of their own-Granne-
mann is among those closest to home. He lives less than a
mile from the river.
And the tug . .
The tug, sometimes, is almost irresistable.
"'D LIKE TO be given a couple of day's pass, you knoiv
he says, dropping his hornrim glasses into his lap and fixing
his blue eyes on the ceiling of his upstairs apartment, near the
Ambassador Bridge in northwest Windsor.
"What's the weather like down in Missouri? Tulips are
out . . . I'd say to my brother, Virgil, 'Look, let's go get its a
case of beer and let's get that damn canoe out, or whatever,
and let's go back on the Gasconade, and let's take a couple-day
trip, and let's talk.' That's a beautiful river. 'Let's go back in
the bush a couple of days. Let's take a trip. Let's talk."
Not that he wants to go back to the United States to live. But
maybe, he thinks, he could explain.
NOT TO THE President, probably. Richard Nixon has made
it perfectly clear: "Those who served paid their price. Those
who deserted must pay their price . . . The price is a criminal
penalty for disobeying the laws of the United States . . .
Amnesty means forgiveness. We cannot provide forgiveness ...
Let us not dishonor those who served their country by granting
amnesty to those who deserted."
Nor, probably, to the men who gather at Leo's Barber Shop
across from the Elks' Hall back in Washington, Mo. They
watch in the big mirror while Leo Meinershagen trims their
See DRAFT, Page 8
A family's ordeal
D r. S JA wounded Cambodian soldier and his infant son share the same hospital bed in Phnom Penh where most war casualties re-
cuperate. It's customary in Cambodia and other Southeast Asian nations for the patient's family to live with his in the hospital
By KATHLEEN RICKE until he is well enough to leave. (See related story on Page 9)
Not alt medical students are happy -.
with the' school's choice for a speaker
t chmmencementhisFridaysnight: CARNEGIE STUDY SHOWS:
Marcus Welby (Robert Young), M.D. To
protest, some med students have gotten
together a "counter commencement"
topped by a speech from Benjamin A e c r0 o~e e e
Spock, the controversial baby doctor.
The graduating class had originally
voted in fav of Spock, who is as welt
own frhisradicaltr . polit a as his ir educational go ls
Executive Committee decided in a closed
meeting to call on the TV talents of NEW YORK (P)-America's colleges and to be whether higher education should THE INSTITUTIONS' performancei
Robert Young instead. universities are doing a generally ade- serve as a base of action against existing advancing educational and developments
in
al
NUIEROUS STUDENTS have been
quick to point out that Young, unlike
Spock, knows literally nothing about medi-
cine.
Dave Morens, a graduating med student
and one of. those- responsible for bringing
Spock here for the counter commence-
ment, blasted the executive committee's
decision, calling it 'a power play by med.
school-a bunch of bushit."
See DR. SPOCK, Page 10
quate, somewhat uneven, job of fulfilling
the basic purposes of higher education,
the Carnegie Commission of Higher Edu-
cation said yesterday.
But the commission observed that a re-
view of the purposes themselves was now
under way, and said there could be con-
inued conflict about them during the re-
maining quarter of this century.
THE MAIN POINT of aonflict is likely
society on behalf of a different future
society, the commission said in a new re-
port, "Purpose and Performance of Higher
Education in the United States."
The 134-page report was issued at a
news conference by Clark Kerr, commis-
sion chairman.
Until now, the commission said, Ameri-
can collees and universities have done
a superior job in enlarging human capa-
bility throughout society, and in forward-
ing pure research.
growth of students was rated satisfactory.
But the commission said more attention
should be paid to the general education
of students, to opportunities for their oc-
cupational preparation, and to the en-
hancement of their creative abilities.
On two other purposes of higher edu-
cation-expanding educational justice and
assisting critical evaluation of society for
the sake of society's self renewal-the
-See CARNEGIE, Page u*