Page 10-Wednesday, May 21, 1980-The Michigan Daily FRANCE, U.S.S.R. HOLD PRIVATE MEETING Muskie blasts French sunmmit 4 WASHINGTON (AP) - Secretary of State Edmund Muskie bluntly criticized France yesterday for failing to consult NATO allies before holding a summit meeting this week with the Soviets. "This is not conducive ... to the kind of mutual confidence and consultation which we all seemed to agree last week were essential to alliance solidarity and unity," he said. THE MEETING between Presidents Valery Giscard d'Estaing of France and Leonid Brezhnev of the Soviet Union was arranged secretly and held Monday in Warsaw. The French kept the meeting secret throughout a series of NATO meetings last week. The United States and other allies were not informed until Giscard d'Estaing was en route to Warsaw, and Muskie indicated that he had yet to receive any official briefing on what transpired at the meeting. Asked at a news conference what ef- fect the meeting had on East-West relations, Muskie said tartly, "Until I have a report from whatever sources are inferested in reporting to us on what took place at that meeting, it's difficult to answer that question." IN THE PAST year, the Carter ad- ministration often has been privately criticized by Western European of- ficials for changing old policies or an- nouncing new initiatives without infor- ming its allies in advance. The French, for example, let it be known that they were miffed that the administration did not consult the allies before anfnouncing support for an Olympic boycott following the Soviet in- tervention in Afghanistan. "IT SEEMS to me that such a meeting- is a proper subject for con- sultations. I had no message pressed home more firmly to me from our NATO allies than the importance of consultations regarding possible U.S. actions. "Consultation, to me, until this moment, has always been a two-way street. I hope that is what it means in connection with our NATO friends," he said. Muskie said he assumed the French objective in holding the session with the Russians "is to underline their deter- mination to be independent. It is frustrating at times ... I'm concerned that when I was being given a lecture on -consultation, the lecturer was not in- clined to practice what he was, preaching." University g-raduate named to 4 Could you pass this Red Cross swimming test? MSUpost SWIM: 1. Breaststroke --100 Yds. 2. Sidestroke- 100 Yds. 3. Crawl stroke -100 Yds. 4. Back crawl-50 Yds. 5. On back (legs only) -50 Yds. 6. Turns (on front, back, side).. 7. Surface dive-underwater swim-20 Ft. 8. Disrobe -float with clothes -5 mins. 9. Long shallow dive. 10. Running front dive. 11. 10-minute swim. Anybody who's taken a Red Cross swim course knows how tough it can be. There's a good reason. We believe drowning is a serious business. Last year alone, we taught 2,589,203 Americans not to drown-in the seven different swim courses we offer all across the country. (Incidentally, most of the teaching - as with almost everything American Red Cross does - is done by dedicated volunteers.) A good many of the youngsters not only are learning to keep themselves safe. Thousands upon thousands of them are learning to become lifesavers. And the life they save-may be your own. LANSING (UPI) - Gov. Williarx Milliken, in a surprising move yester- day, named Republican powerbroker Peter Fletcher - a loyal University graduate - to a vacancy on the Michigan State University Board of Trustees. Fletcher replaces Michael Smydra of East Lansing - a controversial Democrat who resigned earlier this year in the face of mounting criticism over his expense account. He will serve out the remainder of Symdra's term which expires Dec. 31, 1984. A Public Service of This Newspaper & The Advertising Council Heavy metal rock dies a noisy death (Continued from Page 9) ces' attention and make them wonder which gimmick will come next. The atmosphere is like a three-ring circus. This only serves as a reminder of Kiss' bubble gum rock stage show and the somewhat plastic imagery which accompanies it. In the end, one does not know whether to take them seriously. AT ANY RATE, some of the songs on the new album Progressions of Power deal with the perennial and trite themes of that harried anticipation of the weekend ("I Live For The Weekend") and how we'll "Tear The Roof Off Tonight" after en- during Triumph live. Gil Moore's excessively pounding drums, his seemingly incessant and sometimes annoying screaming, on top of Emmett's strident and numbing guitar work are displayed prominently throughout most of the album, especially on "Woman In Love" and "Nature's Child." And while Moore's fairly high-pitched and enthusiastic vocals are just about perfect for Triumph's brand of frantic rock and roll, his annoying and in- cessant screaming, which, unfor- tunately, is pretty much standard among hard rock bands (Van Halen and Aerosmith, to name a famous few), only detracts from the overall good (though adolescent) quality of his voice. This is what Triumph's high schoolish amp burning rock deserves. pro Red Cros onyou.