Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, August 1, 1972 Page Eight THE MICHIGAN AILY Tuesday, August 1,197 Eagleton withdraws from ticket (Continued from Page 1) . has literally dominated the news, dominated the political dialogue of this country since the convention," McGovern said. "I had hoped," he continued, "this election could be decided on the record of the Nixon ad- ministration vs. the alternatives I'll be offering in the months ahead." McGovern said he would try to choose a new running mate as quickly as possible but add- ed he and his aides would be "very cautious and very care- ful" in checking the background of the new choice. That choice requires approv- al of the party's national com- mittee, which is expected to follow his recommendation as the national convention did in picking Eagleton. The most frequently men- tioned names for possible suc- cessors have b e e n former tee Chairman Lawrence O'Brien, Sens. Gaylord Nelson of Wisconsin, Frank Church of Idaho and Edmund Muskie of Maine, and Mayor Kevin White of Boston. O'Brien, now national cam- paign chairman for McGovern, was notified of the Eagleton step-down about an hour before the news conference announce- ment, but an aide said he was not consulted. Both McGovern and Eagle- ton were interrupted frequent- ly during their brief statements by members of both men's staffs and bystanders In the Caucus Room in the Old Senate Office Building where many important announcements, in- cluding presidential candida- cies, have been made over the years. The conference between Mc- Govern and Eagleton was the first direct meeting of the two since Eagleton's revelation of his medical history. The faces of Eagleton's senate staff members telegraphed the decision even, before it was an- nounced. They stood grim and unsmiling in the marble-walled room where many other candi- dates, John and Robert Ken- nedy among them, had begun presidential campaigns. McGovern, tanned, wearing a dark blue suit, smiled as he strode into the room. IHagleton tried to match the smile but failed. His mouth was pinched, his body tense. Beads of perspiration appear- ed on Eagleton's forehead as he stood beside McGovern. By the time the press conference had ended under the hot television lights, small rivulets of perspira- tion were running down his cheeks and neck. Eagleton went into the session saying he would give McGovern statistics showing mail and tele- Quaalude--Nobody really listens (Continued from Page 3) on Quaalude "difficult to get hold of," and pointed out that "drug companies aren't going to do anything unless they're made to do it." In spite of the increasing evi- dence of the addictive poten- tial of Quaalude, the William H. Rorer Co., which manufactures Quaalude, has been slow to send out any warnings on the drug. Pamphlets on Quaalude which are distributed to doctois by Rorer claim that "even after wide use, physical dependence has not been clearly demon- strated." Charles McCallister, executive vice president of Rorer, still claims that "this addiction thing, as far as we're concern- ed, has not been established." He also claims that "scads of research" was done before the drug went on the market, and Dems batti Esch in No (Continued from Page 1) cite a cutoff of funds as the remedy to the Vietnam problem. Shapiro not only is asking a cut off of funds but is in favor of anything that will end the war. "I will do anything I car. in Congress to end the Vietnam War-including supporting the impeachment of Richard Nixon." Although the only feature of abortion reform which is con- nected with national politics is national health insurance, all of the candidates are asked to ex- press their views on it at one time or another. Stempien has argued that abortion should not be legal- ized on the grounds that legis- lators are required to protect the rights of the unborn. He says, "Our constitution does provide legal constitutional rights for unborn children. From the mo- ment of conception it has a. separate life of its own." that "lots of work is stfll go- ing on." When asked -why Rorer's ex- tensive research didn't reveal the addictive potential of Qua- alude, McCallister explained "No responsible people would take patients and put them on 10 to 15 tablets a day to test for addiction." Quaalude is currently consid- ered a legal drug, since it is not yet included in the Controlled Substances Act. A spokesperson for the Bu- reau of Narcotics and Danger- ous Drugs said that he felt it was only a "matter of time" un- til Quaalude was included in the act. He added that a survey is currently being conducted in major cities across the coun- try to evaluate the dangers of the drug. Based on the find- ings of the survey, the Bureau will determine which of the le to face vember, Turner has stated that he supports abortion "to a limited degree." Turner says that if a married woman is having an abortion and is living with her husband, then the husband should have some part in the decision. Schwall, like Stempien, also opposes abortion reform while Shapiro is much in favor of reform, calling for legalization and coverage under national health insurance. Marijuana is the source of numerous questions posed to the candidates and the answers cover all the possibilities. Shapiro wants legalization of marijuana and all drugs. Turner does not want legalization of marijuana, but rather, reduced penalties for use. His reasoning is that not enough is known about the drug. He says, "I think you should have enough facts to make a good judgment." five schedules of the act the Quaalude will be included in. , Reclassification of Quaalude as a controlled substance would make it illegal without a pre- scription, and would provide for a penalty of from one to five years in prison. The new act would also re- quire drug companies to keep accurate records of the amount manufactured and who it was sold to, in order to cut down on diversion of the drug into illegal channels. McCallister claims, however, that his company already exer- cises the precautions called for by the act. When asked where all the Quaalude on the streets is coming from, McCallister said forged prescriptions, illegal sales by druggists or over-pre- scribing by doctors may be the source. He says he has found no evi- dence of leaks within the com- pasny. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN TUESDAY, AUGUST 1 Audio-Visut Oenter Films "weed" ansd others, Aud. 4, MLB, 7 pm. Music School: The Baroque Trio, Rackham Aud., 8 pm. University Payers: Albee's "who's Afraid of virginia woolf?," Power Center, 0 pm. phone response running in his favor. "I feel very good," he said as he strode into the meeting. "I felt very good all day." Eagleton said he felt the con- troversy would have blown over if given enough time. McGovern apparently disagreed. "It was my subjective political judgement that in another two or three weeks . . . that pretty soon the issue would run out of gas," Eagleton said. After the announcement Eagle- ton said he would continue in public life despite the furor which had dogged him for the past week. "My conscience is clear and my spirits are high," Eagleton said. "This is definitely not my last press conference and Tom Eagleton is going to be around for a long, long time." It was the first time in Ameri- can history that a vice presi- dential nominee has resigned dur- ing the campaign. The only other vacancy on a nationat ticket was the death of Republican vice presidential n o m i n e e James Schoolfield Sherman of New York six days before election in 1912. "I have consistently support- ed Sen. Eagleton," McGovern said. "He is a tatented, able United States senatordwhose ability will make him a promi- nent figure in American politics for many years to come." "I am for George McGovern and I am going to continue work- ing to see him elected president of the United States," Eagleton responded. CARL F. KOCH for SHERIFF * EXPERIENCED * INTEGRITY Vote Republican on Aug. 8 MAN RENT RELIEF deaoderat state representative Paid PolistscaiAdvesemaeot Defendant's case dropped (Continued from Page 3) a prosecution request for a pre- trial hearing onAugust 7. The pretrial gave the prosecu- tion opportunity to present amendments to the original destruction of property charge if filed by Friday, July 21. No amendment to the charge would have accused the "Crater Four" of "digging up the lawn and the earth beneath the lawn on the Diagonal" without Uni- versity permission, in violation of an 1887 state statute dealing with cranberry and huckleberry groves. Goldstein said that if the case against all four is dismissed, any further prosecution under the so-called "cranberry law" would require a whole new proceeding, University Safety Director Fred- erick Davids, named as plaintiff in the original case, would have to signdnew warrants against Plamondon, Goldman. Hack, and England. The place to meet INTERESTING people! EXTRAVAGANZA Bruce Gustofson, harpsichord Arthur Lawrence, harpsichord playing concertos for two harp- sichords by Blanco, Krebs, Bach. And more Thursday, Aug. 3, 8p.m. South Quad, WNest Lounge Assorted Wiesa ondCheeses served afterwards 75 CENTS No musical knowledge needed. Absolutely EVERYONE invited! 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