Scenic Dallas The scene of President John F. Kennedy's assassination seems to have become one of the tourist high- lights of downtown Dallas, according to this charming souvenir postcard available in stores there. The card pinpoints the locations where Kennedy was struck by three successive bullets, and identifies the "sniper's perch" and prominent buildings. If you want one, send to All-Tom Corp., Box 3496, Arlington, Texas. Nixonphe right It's a mad, mad, mad, mad world (Editor's note: Mad world is a weekly collection of the most unusual -sometimes bizarre, sometimes comic-reports of the Associated Pees.) SACRAMENTO, Calif. - The California Legislature came up with a ZOWIE, SNAZY, SMASH, GOOD, GOODE, GOODY idea last year that raised an extra $885,500 in the past nine months. The idea was the personalized vehicle license plates, and those are samples of the 35,420 special plates Californians have purchased at an extra $25 each. Other states have the "vanity plates" - so dubbed because initials and names are such favorites - but in California the rules for what you can put on your license plates are relatively easy and the plates are selling like WOW and CRAZY. Plates sold so far range from AAAAAA to ZZZZZ, f r o m PRIEST to SINNER, from SCOTCH to SODA and from CHIC to CRUMMY. BEER, WHISKY, GIN and VODKA are on the road. So are GRASS and SPEED. Car owners may ask for any combination of six letters and numbers. But such words as POLICE, GOD and FBI, and swear words are not for sale. Odd letter combinations are also checked for what they spell backwards, so other motorists won't be offended. looking in their rear view mirrors. NEW YORK - A policeman was arrested yesterday and charged with growing marijuana plants near the precinct house in Central Park where he is assigned, police said. Patrolman John Gardellis, 26, and his brother, Arthur, 20, were taken into custody at the bachelor apartment they shared in Flushing, Queens. Both were charged with possession of a dangerous drug, sale of a dangerous drug and with growing marijuana without a license. Inspector Jules Sachson, commander of the Narcotics Divi- sion, said detectives and patrolmen worked "endless hours" on the investigation and even bought some of the illegal drug from the Gardellis for evidence. LONDON - Chasity belts, the devices used to keep wives and sweethearts faithful in the Middle Ages, are becoming one of Britain's fastest growing exports. Robin Hughessen, partner in a firm that has been making this protective apparel for the past three years, says that demand for the belts is booming. "Ever since the government took off the sales tax we have been inundated with orders from all over the world," he says. The treasury decided to abolish an 11 per cent sales tax on the belts after Laborite legislator Marcus Lipton argued in the House of Commons there should be no tax on protecting a lady's virtue. The government agreed to regard chasity belts as safety devices, which carry no tax. The belts, made of hand-wrought iron, are replicas of those made in the Middle Ages. Two keys are sold with each belt. Hughessen said his company also had been flooded with inquiries about chasity belts for dogs. "We consulted veterinary experts on this and they decided that the contraceptive pill was the answer," he said. Most of the belts - costing $13.20 in Britain - are used as ornaments, flower holders, or for locking auto steering wheels. "But they are not just a gimmick," said Hughessen. "Some of the letters we have received are very serious." BALTIMORE, Md. - The barber who gave haircuts to the last four presidents of the United States has been accused of failing to file $32,935 in income taxes and Social Security with- held from his employes. Stephen J. Egiziano, now of Palm Beach, Fla., and pro- fessionally known as Steve E. Martini, cut hair for Presidents Dwight D. Eigenhower, John F. Kennedy, Lyndon B. Johnson. and Richard M. Nixon. He is no longer the President's personal barber. By JAMES WECHSLER W ASHINGTON (P) - Eleven leaders of conservative politi- cal organizations and publications say they are suspending their sup- port of the Nixon Administration. Their statement criticized Nixon overtures to Red China "done in the absence of any public conces- sion by Red China to American and Western causes." The signers included three top officials of the National Review, including editor- in-chief William Buckley, the chair- man of the Young Americans for Freedom and two officers of the the equally clear threat that he will be risking a rightist primary challenge by pursuing his journey to Peking. SHORTLY BEFORE news of the Buckley blast arrived, Allard Low- enstein was decrying the murmurs heard in some liberal quarters that Nixon's "China coup" had "just about clinched his reelection." Lowenstein, pausing here in the course of his campaign for regis- tration of 18-21 voters, argued that the prophets of Democratic doom had missed the crucial point. In effect he contended that Nixon ....r. --In 1 :.. ° . r S , , . rc " !v :.". ,R 1 , ;. " " ;, 5 v H!j(0 S POLICY f rtp 1,* a . _- ; ° F : ,, >:.; ,. next Democratic nominee - re- gardless of his identity - as a "sure" winner. But he was taking sharp issue with the notion that Mr. Nixon had permanently and decisively "outflanked" his liberal opponents and staged an over- whelming political miracle. It was not many moments after Lowenstein departed that the news ticker brought official word of the right-wing rebellion against Nix- on's heresies. The statement not only rebuked him for his China maneuvers but also for "his failure to call attention to the deterio- rated military position in conven- tional and strategic arms," his failure to sound the alarm over Willy Brandt's "Ostpolitik" and his alleged non-response to Soviet thrusts in the Mediterranean. Much of the statement sounded like a plagiarism of an earlier Nixon's assaults on the "appease- ment" doctrines of Adlai Steven- son. FOR THE MOMENT Nixon may be sufficiently fortified by evi- dence of the public popularity of his China initiatives to discount the thunder on his right. But the predicament he faces could grow much stickier. For what is unmistakably clear three summers after his nomina- tion to the Presidency is his in- ability to build a dedicated per- sonal constituency. Whatever real devotion he evoked was among those radicals on the right to whom he was a symbol of hard- line ideology. Any chance he might have had to establish a firm new identity among liberals and mod- erates was largely dissipated by his promotion of the Mitchell-Ag- new frenzy. Those who most earn- estly welcome any faint beginnings of a thraw in the Far East may ultimately assign him some higli marks in history for that effort, but they have acquired no belated ardor for the man. As Lowenstein warns, this ap- praisal does not mean that Nixon's is a hopeless case; 1968 really did happen, and a Democratic Jack- son-Mills ticket next year could sweep him back into office. But it is surely premature to begin to depict him as invincible - even with Chairman Mao's blessing. O New York Post Letters to The Daily should be mailed to the Editorial Di- rector or delivered to M a r y Bafferty in the Student Pub- lications business office in the Michigan Daily building. Let- ters should be typed, double- spaced and normally should not exceed 250 words. The Editorial Directors reserve the right to edit all letters sub- mitted. = American Conservative Union. IT MAY BE ONLY a matter of time before Bill Buckley assures us that he and his cohorts were kidding, but their discomfort over Richard Nixon's China exercises seems entirely genuine. Yester- day's right-wing manifesto avoids a final farewell; it is more like the temporary recall of an am- bassador from a hostile capital for urgent consultation rather than a declaration of total war. "We do not plan at the moment to encourage formal political op- position to President Nixon in the primaries, but we propose to keep all options open in the light of po- litical developments in the next months," the disenchanted said. They sadly described their pro- nouncement as "an act of loyalty to the Nixon we knew in 1968." Implicit in the statement is the intimation that he can still come home if he gets off the Chinese sauce and sobers up. But there is had now created a "credibility crisis" in the one group where his credentials have heretofore re- mained strong - the GOP's right wing. "Now they are saying what much of the country has felt for a long time-that Nixon can't be trusted. "If he goes ahead with the China approach, we may really achieve the change in China policy that liberals have been fighting for since the Joe McCarthy days. And it will be pretty impossible for him to continue the war in Viet- nam and stick to the domino the- ory if he's reaching agreement with Peking. "But even if all that happens, he won't neatly win over many of the Americans who have mistrusted him for so many years. And if it doesn't happen, he will be vulner- able to the charge that it was a grandstand play signifying noth- ing." LOWENSTEIN hastened to add that he was not projecting the 420 Maynard Street, Ann.Arbor, Mich. Edited and managed by.students at the University of Michigan Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of the author. This must be noted in all reprints. Wednesdoy, August 18, 1971 News Phone: 764-0552 NIGHT EDITOR: JONATHAN MILLER III Summer Editorial Staff MARCIA ABRAMSON LARRY LEMPERT Co-Editor Co-Editor ROBERT CONROW .......,..............................Books Editor JIM JUDKIS ..... .......................... .......... Photography Editor NIGHT EDITORS: Anita Crone, Tammy Jacobs, Alan Lenhoff, Jonathan Bitter. ASSISTANT NIGHT EDITORS: Patricia E. Bauer, James Irwin, Christopher Parks, Zachary Schiller. Summer Sports Staff RICK CORNFELD .. . . . . ....... . . .............. Sports Editor * SANDI OaSIS ................Associate Sserts Editor Summer Business Staff JIM STORNEY ..,............. . . . ..Business Manager JANET ENOL ........................ Display Advertising FRAN HYMEN .. . . . . . Classified Advertising BECKY VAN DYKE... . . ..Circulation Department BILL ABBOTT .....................-. - ... General Office Assistant