pag rki t t~~e three U I 1t 1 I~1 STEAMY High-i92 Sunny, humid, chance of showers - -- - k _ -nNews -. h ezone: O'-tIIO) Friday, July 21, 1972 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN News Phone: 764-U552 i A ! . ROTC: Aiming at freshmen By JIM KENTCH Money was the thing that swayed me. I might not have done it otherwise," said Dean Smith. This was Smith's major reason for joining ROTC. The N a v y awarded Smith, a freshman in the College of Engineering, a four year scholarship totaling $12,000. In addition to offering scholar- " ships and a possible chance to ' "see the world", the campus ROTC branch gives entering freshmen a chance to look over its various programs every Mon- 9 day through Thursday at 3:30 in North Hall. Attendance for these sessions vary, according to one office. x from zero to over ten persons At yesterday's session six of the i eight persons present were en- rolled in the College of Engi- neering. Instructors of military science (who are commissioned officers of the Army, Navy, and A i r Force) conduct the information sessions On one wall of the lectre room are pictures of U.S. military men in action, either mnanning ra- dar screens, beaking through the polar icecap in a nuclear sub- marine, flying planes in o i'oa- tion or standing beside a Marine Corps flag in full dress nilfo i with a photo - of a WWI d'ugh-s boy in the background. A slide presentation g r a c e s - another wall. There the potential soldiers and sailors can see hel- icopters and aircraft carriers, planes dropping bombs on an un- Drillinn in W t'tei ta1 Gym See ROTC, Page 12 N. Viets push to Hi*ghwvay1 By The AEria'Ited Press North Vietnamese forces out- flanked Saigon troops yesterday in Quang Tri Province and threatened to cut their Highway 1 supply line to the south. Infantrymen responsible for highway security behind the ad- vancing units battled a 200-300 person North Vietnamese force with heavy fire support from tanks and U.S. Phantom jets. Some communist troops were re- ported only 200 yards from the highway. AP photographer K o i e h i r o Morita reported from the front that repeated Phantom strikes sent shrapnel skittering across the highway and forced the South Vietnamese soldiers to take cover in their trenches. Meanwhile in Washington. President Nixon's official spokes- person said yesterday he has seen "no evidence of any bomb- ing of schools or 'homes" in North Vietnam by U.S. aircraft. Press secretary Ronald Zeigler added he had seen no evidence of "any extensive or massive damage to dams and dikes" which Nixon has ruled off-limits to American bombers. Zeigler was questioned about a report from Hanoi by syndi- cated columnist Joseph Kraft. who reported seeing bombed out homes and schools during a visit there. Kraft also wrote he had seen "two undoubted examples" of bomb hits on dikes. In Paris yesterday, a North Vietnamese off i cial1indicated that Henry Kissinger brought no basic change in the U.S. posi- tion to his recent secret talk" with Le Due Tho, member of the North Vietnamese politburo. Asked if President Nixon's na- tional security adviser had offer- ed anything new during the 6% hour session Wednesday, Hanoi spokesperson Nguyen Thanh Le flatly replied, "The Nixon ad- ministration has persisted up to now in its position of aggression and neocolonialism." In the air war yesterday, the U.S. Navy disclosed that Marine helicopters are being used for the first time in the war against North Vietnamese water craft trying to unload supplies from Chinese freighters. U.S. jets ranged widely Wed- nesday over North Vietnam, beaming laser bombs into three MIG bases and striking rail lines within 40 miles of the Chinese border. Air Force F4 Phantoms drop- ped 2,000 pound laser bombs on the Cao Nung railroad bridge, 40 miles from the Chinese border. Local police dlef use uabomb planted here By DAN BIDDLE Witll seconds to spare. an Ann Arbor police officer defused a live 18-inch bomb discovered at the door of the Army recruit- ing Station early yesterday mornitg. According to police Chief Walter Krasny, Sergeant Daniel Cullin tore the bomb's rapidly burning fuse off only a minute before the bomb would ignite. Police said the bomb con- tained about 29 ounces of ex- plosive powder and "could have done substantial damage" had it exploded. According to Krasny, an un- identified passerby sin e 11 e d smoke near the 212 So. Fourth St. recruiting station and dis- covered the bomb at about 2:55 a.m. yesterday. The person ratn to a nearby psatrol car and police quickly closed off the surround- ing area to pedestrians and traffic. Cullin, who was acting com- mand officer in the area, arrived moments later as the bomb's fuse continued to burn quickly. The bomb was wrapped in a paper bag and lay less than two feet from the recruiting station's door. Cullin, who is not a demoli- tions expert, chose to pull out the live fuse and succeeded. Police determined later that See BOMB, Page 12 Weekend Whirlwind Music Among the Trees People's Plaza - Leaves of Grass (Fria) Stone School Road (Sat.) ...... Otis Spann Memorial Field-Up, Wild Boys, Knock Down Party Band, Wet Naf Teez (Sun.) . . Pine Knob Music Theatre-Isaac Hayes (Fri.) Music Ark-Bob White (Fri., Sat. only) Golden Falcon-George Overstreet Quintet (Fri., Sat. only)- Lum's-RFD Boys (Fri., Sat. only) Bimbo's-Gaslighters (Fri., Sat., Sun.) Odyssey-Gold Rush (Fri., Sat., Sun.) Blind Pig-Lightning Slim (Fri., Sat. only) Yellow Dog River (Sun, only) Pretzel Bell-Honky Tonk Angels (Fri., Sat. only) Mr. Flood's-Spider (Fri., Sat., Sun.) Del Rio-jazz improvisations (Sun. only) Huron Lounge-George Kinfman (Fri. Sat. only) Village Inn-Meadowmuffin (Fri., Sat. only) Other Events Art Fair-(Fri., Sat. only), E. University and S. Uni- versity Antique Sale-Fri., (Sat. only), N. University Michigan Invitational Art Exhibition-Rackham Gal- leries, (Fri., Sat., Sun.) The Hostages-Power Center, (Fri. only) Love's Labour's Lost-Power Center, (Sat. only) The Birds-Hillsdale College Theatre, (Fri., Sat., Sun.). Canoe Rental-4325 Jackson Rd. Farmer's Market-(Sat. only) Movies Michigan-What's Up Doc, continuous daily Campus-Fritz the Cat, Shows at 7:00, 9:00 Fifth Forum-The Great Dictator, shows at 6:30, 9:00, 11:05. State-Clockwork Orange, shows at 1:30, 4:00, 6:30, 9:00 Fox Village-Joe Kidd, shows at 7:00, 9:00 Cinema Guild-Bringing Up Baby (Fri., Sat. only), shows at 7:00, 9:05. OBien to head Dem campaign WASHINGTON ()--Democra- tic presidential nominee George McGovern yesterday named for- mer Democratic National Chair- man Lawrence O'Brien to be his national campaign chairperson. O'Brien will be given a role concerned with unifying the support of Democrats and other "concerned Americans." In an interview, O'Brien em- phasized that while he will hold the title of national campaign chairperson his role will be es- sentially separate ft-em the existing McGovern political or- ganization. McGovern told a news con- ference O'Brien will "be a fore- most consultant on the over- all policy and strategy of my campaign." He described his campaign hierarchy as a three-way split among O'Brien and McGovern's previous campaign chiefs, Frank Mankiewicz and Gary Hart. One McGovern aide privately summed up O'Brien's role as "out link to the party establish- ment." O'Brien said he will establish a separate headquarters for his operation in Washington within the next 48 hours. McGovern said O'Brien will be his liaison with Democrats in Congress, Democratic governors, mayors and state legislative leaders. He said O'Brien will also be his chief contact with officials of organized labor, The senator said he has se- cured the support of Sen. Hu- bert Humphrey (D-Minn.) for the O'Brien appointment. He said he expects Humphrey and the other former Democratic presidential contenders not only to endorse his candidacy but campaign vigorously for it. -Associated Press Git along, little... With cattle drives just a memory in the Old West, this one was staged north of Cheyenne yesterday. It was held to bring opponents for rodeo cowboys at Frontier Days, which -gets under- way this weekend.