Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, July 29, 1972 PageEigt TH MIHIGA DALY aturayJuly29,197 Eagleton says he'll I never qit (Continued from Page 3) Top McGovern aides are said to be keeping close tabs on newspaper editorials and the opinions of the prestigious Times and Post are bound to weigh heavily. Criticism mounted yesterday, not only of Eagleton's tardy ad- mission, but of the rushed se- lection procedure employed by McGovern's staff in choosing him. Although McGovern has said he would have made the same decision whether or not he had been aware of Eagleton's med- ical record, it is clear that Eag- AP Photo leton was given little more than a brief once over prior to the nomination. Is on Los ---- -- ed MAN -RENT BILLIARDS TABLE TENNIS FOOSBALL BOWLING UNION FRIDAY & SATURDAY D.W. GRIFFITH'S BIRTH OF A NATION Probably THE film clas- sic. Produced in 1914 this fi I m established cinema as a serious art form. Takes place during post C i v i I War Recon- struction. Its favorable view of the KKK seems outlandish today. None- theless, a v e r y impor- tant film. A & D AUDITORIUM 75c-7 & 9:05 " NEXT WEEK: Fritz Long's METROPOLIS Good luck! Former University of Michigan student David Schwartz spent $16000 for advertising placard Angeles buses in an attempt to locate a girl who picked him up while hitchhiking. U.S. STUDY: 'Minor' dike damage admitt (continued from page i) of major dike bombings were public, claiming that publica- "inaccurate." The denial was tion would only provoke further repeated the next day by Presi- allegations of d a m a g e from dential Press Secretary Ron Hanoi. Ziegler who said Nixon's state- The report of 12 bombed dike ment was "not meant to leave locations follows Nixon's June open" the possibility of acci- 29 press conference statement dental dike bombings. that reports from several sources In a new conference Thursday -night shopping: The American dream (Continued from Page 3) getting off work will come in and buy a week's groceries," the cashier continued. "But it's mainly young kids who come in and buy sna cks and stuff." When the mpnchies come, something must be done. State law, however, prohibits the sale of beer and wine from two to seven in the morning, and from two to noon on Sundays. Opening the store to customers 24 hours a day costs Wrigley's little additional expense. Tim Brower, co-manager of Wrig- ley's, said that "we can't lose" as far as profits are concerned. The lights are always kept on anyway, and the night crew num- bering six or seven hasn't been increased. But it isn't likely that all sup- ermarket chains will follow. the example set by the 43 Wrigley stares that are open all night. An assistant manager of the Great Scott store at Packard and Carpenter said he "wouldn't like to see this store open 24 hours a day. It'd be hard to stock . shelves with customers around." "It'd be good for factory work- ers if we opened around th e clock, but bad from a business standpoint, with the overhead and alt"he continued. "There are just too many student shop- pers for it to work around here." The management of Great Scott disagrees slightly, how- ever. Great Scott is now open to midnight six days a week and closes at nine on Sundays. In addition to the usual offers of free encyclopedias and bar- gains, Wrigley's has a Pinker- ton guard on duty from t e n o'clock to six in the morning. "I really haven't had any trou- ble," said the guard, who is a graduate business student. "My presence here is mainly a preventive measure," he con- tinued. "I prevent shoplifting and their fire insurance is low- er if a guard is here." But every guard on duty at Wrigley's carries a loaded re- volver as standard equipment. Nixon rejected a plea from United Nations Secretary Gen- eral Kurt Waldheim for the U.S. to halt bombing of the dikes, charging that Waldheim had been "taken in by propaganda" from Hanoi. Nixon stated that it is "not U.S. policy" to bomb the dikes because "we are trying to avoid civilian casualties, not cause them." He added that "there has been no report of any flooding nor has there been reports of any strikes on the major dike areas." The study claimed that "only a deliberate and large-scale at- tack" could substantially dam- age the widely scattered dike system. Far East specialist Eqbal Ahmed, who has loudly opposed the alleged dike bombings, call- ed the claim "an incredible lie," and claimed that enough U.S. bombs have fallen on the dike system to date that "all it will take will be a single bombing accident' to trigger flooding all over the delta plain." Ahmed said such flooding would cause "anywhere from half a million to a million deaths from flooding and starvation." Meanwhile, former U.S. Attor- ney General Ramsey Clark join- ed an international inquiry group that will fly to Hanoi today to inspect damage to the dikes. Cinema It PREtSENTS the Great FI ELU S IN The Pharmacist The Fatal Glass of Beer The Golf Specialist The Barber Shop plus selected shorts Aud. A, Angell Hall Friday and Saturday 7 & 9 p.m. admission $1.00 RELIEF democrat state representative 3. Paid Political Advertisement MICHIGAN REPERTORY '72 LAST PERFORMANCE-TONIGHT 8 P.M.! -H ' b5BRENDA d 00eS TAG F E NAa - INDIVIDUAL TICKETS $2.00, $3.00 in the air-conditioned POWER CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS Box Office open 12:30-$:00 Mon.-Fri Phone 763-3333 STUDENT RUSH TICKETS AVAILABLE DANCE FRIDAY-SATURDAY AT 9:00 AND HIS COURT OF RHYTHM With ROBERT SHEFF on Piano -and- SUNDAY AT 8:30 WA HBOARD WILLIE AND HIS Su er Souds of RKhythm Media Access Center 1st in a series of WORKSHOPS Workshop covers basic skills in using 1/2 inch portable video equipment and production. One weekly session for four weeks plus smaller group work meetings dealing with recording and editing. Workshop size is limited... For application or information, call 761-7849 Sun.- Mon.-Tues. Lab fee- $35.00 217 S. Ashley 2 P.M.-2 A.M.