Page Fourteen THE MICHIGAN DAILY a Friday, May 20, 1977 Page Fourteen THE MICHiGAN DAILY Friday, May 20, 1977 Carter i chiding WASHINGTON (P)--President Carter ordered the immediate recall of the third-ranking U.S. Army general in South Korea yesterday after the general questioned Carter's plans to withdraw Anerican troops from that country. Cater ordered the general to report to him at the White House. THE RECALL order was sim- ilar to the action Harry Truman took in 1951 when he recalled Gen. Douglas MacArthur in a dispute over the handling of the Korean war. Deputy Press Secretary Rex Granum, who announced Car- ter's action, declined to say whether Maj. Gen. John Sing- laub, chief of staff at U.S. recalls general for presidential policy Nixon calls crimes by a President legal Forces Headquarters for Ko- rea, would be reprimanded, fired or reassigned. A White House official, asked if Carter was upset by.Sing- laub's public questioning of the President's policy position, re- plied: "HE WASN'T happy. Here you have a general making a policy statement when he (Car- ter) is the commander-in-chief." Another Carter aide urged a reporter to keep in mind the President's own former career as a professional Navy officer "and the attitude he would have toward one who said something like that." Sin glaub got his orders through the chain of command yesterday morning, Washington time, and was boarding a com- mercial airliner last night for the long flight home. He is ex- pected here late today. A WHITE HOUSE spokesman said he did not know whether Carter would see the general Saturday or next Monday. Granum acknowledged that Carter had acted on the basis of a Page one dispatch from Seoul in yesterday's Washington Post that quoted Singlaub as questioning the President's plan to withdraw American ground forces, from South Korea in the next four to five years. "If we withdravy our ground forces on the schedule suggest- ed, it will lead to war," Singlaub was quoted as saying. (Continued from Page 1) had evidence that somebody at Brookings was going to put something out, I would have taken very strong methods to get them back." The first part of the interview focused on the war in Vietnam and the invasion of Cambodia but the forrfler president offered little that was not known before. NIXON RESERVED his bit- terest comments for leakers and protesters. Referring -to the protesters who continually picketed the White House to protest the war, Nixon said: "Oh, I could hear. I could hear even if I had plugs in my ears; it was that loud at times with people marching around." And at another point in the interview: "NOBODY CAN know what it means for a president to be sit. ting in that White House work- ing late at night, as I often did, and to have hundreds of thou- sands of demonstrators around, charging through the streets. "No one can know how a pres- ident feels whep he realizes that his efforts to bring peace; to bring our men home; to bring our POWs home; to stop the kill. ing; to build peace, not just for our time, but, for time to come, is being jeopardized by indi- viduals who have a different point of view as to how things are to be done." If it had not been for leaks, Nixon said, "the war in Vietnam would have been brought to a conclusion sooner than it was . . - their actions had the effect of delaying the negotiations by giving the eniemy hope that they would win in Washington diplo- matically or in Paris what they could not win on the battlefield in Saigon." FROST ASKED about the White House atmosphere ibat caused one staff member to note in a metmdo "those who are against us, we will destroy." The atmosphere, Nixon said, had to be understood in the con- text of the time. He recalled a conversation w it h Kissinger, then his national security ad- viser, when the New York Times disclosed the bombing in Cam- bodia in May 1969. "We said, 'Henry, it's pos- sible, it might be somebody on your staff,' and Henry said, 'i will destroy them,' " Nixon re- counted. When Pitt's Tony Dorsett was a 1973 freshman he set a col- lege record of rushing for 1,516 yards " I k k t'I ! ? ti . ~ ' I 1g . _ 1 I Put your expensive eye behind our inexpensive System 35..and WOW. Just about any of the great photographs you see 9 volt alkaline battery. VivitarAutomatic could have been taken with Vivitar System 35. 135mm f2.8 lens Super focal length Plus one good eye. Vivitar System 35 is a most for portraits/About 21/2 times larger than Inexpensive way to get serious about photography. normal image. Vivitar 2X Tele Converter The basic limitation Is your own creativity and skill, Doubles the effective focal length of your Vivitar 220/SL 35mm camera Center-weighted lenses/Converts the 50mm lens to 100mm! match needle metering system/Speeds from the 135mm lens to 270mm. Vivitar Enduro 1/1000to 1 second plus "B" for time expo- Case Carries the entire system com- sure/Electronic flash sync at 1/125th fortably and securely while hiking, cycling, second/Universal thread mount 50mm skiing, etc Find the nearest Vivitar dealer and f1.8 lens/Built-in hot shoe/Self timer/ ask for a demonstration. Film-in-chamber indicator/ASA Range Marketed in lbs U.SA by PanderA Bast, Inn 25-1600. Vivitar Automatic Electronic Corporate Offices- 183 Stewart street, Santa Monica. Flash Up to 200 flashes from one single - CA 90406 In Canada: Viitar Canada Ltd. /Lte I Z I SO CAT STEVENS on A&MRecords & Ta is £'o ced by Cat Stevens wttivid aKrshennaum LP's Now Only $98 t li-Cellr .Pander & Best, in 19177