Page Ten THE M fCH IGAN DAILY Thursday, July 8, 1971 Page Ten THE MICHIGAN OAILY Thursday, July 8, 1976 Carter to. By -'he Asoiuciated Press Jimmy Carter announced plans yesterday to speak with more prospective running mates, while Barry Goldwater suggested that President Ford tap John Connally as the Re- publican vice presidential nomi- nee. Ronald Reagan, meanwhile, Set oat to North Dakota in his quest for enough delegates to upset Ford's hid for the Repub- lican presidential nomination. REFORE leaving for a fund- raising dinner in Hollywood, Fla. Carter annotinced from his headquarters in Plains, Ga., that he would discuss the vice presidency today with Sens. John Glenn of 0hio and Wal- ter Mondale of Minnesota. hold more V.P. talks Alaska pipeline Carter's press aide, Jody Powell, said the likely Demo- cratic presidential nominee also plans to speak with Rep. Peter Rodino of New Jersey. But Car- ter himself later said that, while Rodino is among those heing considered as a running mate, he has not yet decided whether to interview him. Car- ter said he first wants to speak with his senior adviser, Atlanta attorney Charles Kirbo, who was speaking with Rodino this week. Carter also denied a report nohlished yesterday that Sen. Frank Church of Idaho has been eliminated from consider- ation, but he would not say whether he planned to inter- view Church face to face. * te. liiirb.rI .o Il. i iv TONIGHT! JIMI HENDRIX W 19731 AUD. A-7 & 9 n a < i -mn y in-k iii lii'0 . c t o(, ] cinite ar IO to- u n Dicl C vel h'i .1rv_ Top o 1 ni- a i s r,5 i- 5 0- 1i tl iandi MuN i Mite lei. $1 25 AUD. A ANGELL HALL S05 095055SSSE;A 0 w~ KING L), 50c DISCOUNT on U Admission With Student I.D. U COMING JULY 14 & 15 U DR. BOP U and THE HEADLINERS U HOURS: Fri. & Sat 8 p.m.-2 a.m. 1 WEEKLY HOURS: 9 p.m.-2 a.m. 516 E. Liberty 994-5350 L9 9 AS HE prepares for the Democratic convention next week in New York, Carter has said he hopes to speak with at least five persons he is consid- ering as possible running mates. He met Monday with Sen. Edmund Muskie of Maine. Goldwater's pitch for Connal- ly followed his endorsement of Ford last week, a move criticiz- ed by many of the party con- servatives who supported him as the Republican nominee in 1964. The Arizona senator said in an interview in Phoenix that Connally, a former Texas gov- ernor and secretary of the treasury, is the best person available for the GOP vice- presidential nomination. "JOIN Connally of Texas is a man that to me knows more about American business, American foreign policy, Amer- ican defense, and how to get it across to the people than prob- ably any other man in America including the President," God- water said. In Washington, President I o r d 's press secretary, Ron Nessen, denied a report by the ABC network that Rogers Morton would be replaced as Ford's campaign manager. 'I can flatly say that Rogers Morton is not leaving the Presi- dent Ford Committee," Nessen said. "The President says he has no intention of asking Rog- ers Morton to leave. He's very happy at the way Morton is running the campaign." L ebanese Christians advance (Coit,iid tosm 5-ie 5i Geneva, said hundreds of Pal- estinians captured in Lebanon and PLO troops were imprison- ed in Syria. - IN THE NORTH, a Western reporter said Christians retook Chekka, a strategic town on a deepwater ay at the edge of the Christian enclave. y He said he saw Christian fighters moving north in new armored cars and jeeps return- ing from the front line, drag- ging the bodies of Palestinian guerrillas through jubilant Christian villages. The leftist alliance punched sotth into the 800 sqare mile Christian enclave Monday in an unsuccessful attempt to relieve Christian pressure on Tal Zan- tar, a besieged Palestinian camp inI Christian held eastem Beirut. In Cairo,an Arab eage spokesmaissaid Arab foreign ministers would hold an emer- gency meeting in the Egyptian canital next Monday on why their mediation team has failed in its week old attempt to stop the fighting in Lebanon and sti peace negotistions. welds to be tested Hlghrise pln faces veto (Continued from Page 3) tactics on him, but he as mii worthy (D-4th Ward) voted the audience he had reached his against the complex in the face decision independently. of audible disapproval. "I guess When hands began clappii I'll be a bad guy," he said to for his about-face, Bertoi~ their hisses, "I'm willing to ienced them saying that his dv take the responsibility for this cision was "personally distase if it means that people will have fil to me." a helter place to lise in than flt e this site." When all was said and done, The critical point was the vote came on strict party reached when Roger Bertoia lines - six for, five against. (R-3rd Ward), who had origin- ally opposed the high-rise, THE ONI remaining uncer changed his position and agreed tainty lies in whether or not to support his fellow Republi- Wheeler will veto the measure cans. Bertoia related to the now that it has passed the room how the developers and Council. He has 36 hours in other groups had used pressure which to do so. DSO only just fair at Meadowbrook WASHINGTON l)P - Govern- ment officials are hoping a new technical device can test weld- ing from inside the trans-Alaska oil nipeline and avoid the need to dig up and X-ray some 18,000 welds- X-rays of the buried welded segments of pipe could delay completion of t h e pipeline, scheduled to begin pumping some 1.2 million barrels of oil daily in mid-1977 to Alaska's southern coast. An Interior Department source said yesterday the de- partment would consider sub- stituting "ac o u s t i c atI ho- lography," a still-experimental technique for the X-rays. Late last year, the Alyeska Pipeline Service Co. reported that 3,955 out of the 31,423 welds completed in 1975 were ques- tionable-either flawed or, more frequently, lacking the verifia- ble X-rays which the Interior Department needs to approve the pipeline. Now, however, the privale auditing him of Arthur Andei- sen and Co., hired to review Alyeska's audit of the X-rays for the Interior Department, has reported that it cannot tell whether any of the 31,423 welds were properly X-rayed and ver- ified or, if so, which X-rays belong to which welds. "There can be no assurance that radiograph X-rays for all physical welds made in 1975 were accounted for during the Alyeska audit," said a draft re- port from the Andersen firm, obtained by Ith e Associated Press. "This'is because there was no p o s it i v e accountability over weld number assignment or preparation of quality control documentation in 1975," it said, An I n t e r i o r Department source said laboratory tests of the new acoustical holography technique seemed to work, and the next step will be to take the device to Alaska and test it on welded pipeline in an assembly yard of Alyeska, the group o seven oil companie uildins4 the 80-mile line from uil fielis in the Arctic. If that testing show lthat "acoustical holography" can d the saise job as X-rays, this source said, it would be tested next in actual segments of in stalled pipeline. 12t s.umersY 03 lit berty TONIGHT at 7:00 & 9:15 TONIGHT at 7:00 & 9 :20 (Continued from Page$) The music, far from being one of my favorites from the baroque era, is repetitive to the point of being tiring, as if the composer were trying to fill out as much time with as little material as possible. Yet, the performance pleased me. Crisp string sound and a finely pro- portioned reading contributed to this impression. RODRIGO'S Concertata Sere- nata, featuring harpist Nicanor Zabaleta, follewed. As all those who are familiar with the com- poser's Concierto de Aranjuez know, there is nothing terribly profound or modern about Rod- rigo's music. But that is not to say that his compositions are somehow weak. His creative use of orchestral timbre spiced with modern devices (like an occasional bit of bi-tonality-the simultaneous sounding of two different keys) never pains or bores but entertains instead. The delightful Concertata, un- douhtaly written in a spirit of great fun, did not fail to warm the hearts of its audience on a rather cool Thursday night. Zabaleta, a true master of his instrument, is a delight to observe. Each phrase is shaped with the care of a Swiss watch- maker. However, while techui ally perfect, he is no mere tech- nician. The sound which issues from his instrument carrie- with it great feeling and dept of expression. His is the kind i harp playing which must sore go on in heaven. Manuel de Falla's music -i the ballet El Amor Brujo, comi posed in 1915, was presented af ter intermission. The story i- the ballet tells of a young mo man who is haunted by the ghost of her former lover, and the accompanying music range- in mood from tender yearnng to violent passion. Sadly, ti DSO's performance failedst convey this. The orche tr playing was certainly gct-- enough, but the performan was dull and lifeless. Overall, my impression In the orchestra h a s inprove greatly since I heard it last Technically the orchestra ;- near perfect. But this is only the first step, and there is still a long way to go. Because the members of the orchestra tend to ignore their conductor's ii structions, they play like a hundred virtuosos going their own way, rather than asone finely tuned instrument. THE .OI ..L. OUTLAW JOSEY r 4 a A UNIVERSAL PICTURE P !il , p1 Vafe B'° TECHNICOLOR@® PANAVISION@®t A ~ 1 am omnclnCmay