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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 7, 1967)
THE BATTALION Page 6 College Station, Texas Thursday, December 7, 1967 Mystery Surrounds Rockefeller Threat SAN ANGELO (A*)—A cloak Times that he could locate nei- of mystery descended on a San Angelo prisoner Wednesday and his talk of an alleged assassina tion plot against Arkansas Gov. Winthrop Rockefeller. Law enforcement authorities working on the case were not say ing much. And the principal, Z a k a r Garooigian, 34, had dropped from view. Garoogian, held in jail here the past month on charges of bur glarizing a soft drink company, reportedly told Arkansas and Texas state police intelligence of ficers of the plot. Garoogian’s lawyer. Jack Ray of San Angelo, told the Standard- ther his client nor San Angelo Police Chief Melvin James Wed nesday. Ray said he assumed the two men were together. Speculation rose in this west Central Texas city that Garoo gian had been taken either to Austin or Midland for a lie de tector test, or to Little Rock, Ark., for more questioning by Arkansas authorities. In Little Rock, however, the state police director said there was “nothing to that rumor” that Garoogian was in Arkansas. He had only a flat “no comment” on questions concerning the alleged plot. Call 822-1441 Allow 20 Minutes Carry Out or Eat-In THE PIZZA HUT 2610 Texas Ave. DO YOU /CA/OW. . . That owning our College Career Plan demonstrates your financial responsibil ity to your future em ployer! LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY EXECUTIVE OFFICES, WACO, TEXAS Oakwood Professional Bldg. Bryan, Texas VI 6-7963 FLAG MARKS THE SPOT Helicopter lowers troops of the U. S. 4th Infantry Division to landing zone near American flag on ridgeline near Dak To, South Vietnam. The troops were setting up a new artillery fire base on the ridgeline. The flag of the unit (the 3rd Battalion, 12th Infantry, 4th Division) was a gift from friends in the United States. It is set up every time the battalion moves to a new location. (AP Wirephoto) Black Power’ Draws Approval From Large Paris Audience PARIS (A 1 )—Black Power ad vocate Stokely Carmichael shout ed to a cheering, stamping audi ence of more than 3.000 Wednes day night: “We don’t want peace in Vietnam. We want the Viet namese to defeat the United States of America.” “Our aim is to disrupt the United States of America, and we think our blood is not too high a price to pay,” Carmichael said with reference to his followers in the Black Power movement in America. Carmichael spoke at a six-hour rally sponsored by the so-called Vietnam National Committee, whose leaders say it has no link with the French Communist par ty. Speakers preceding Carmi chael mentioned Red China fre quently and the Soviet Union hardly at all as they denounced what they called American im perialism. One French speaker, a white man, called for a “black revolu tion in America to overthrow the capitalistic system and establish a separate black nation.” U. S. V. c. Command Watching Laos Trail Closely By GEORGE ESPER SAIGON (A*)—The U. S. Com mand is watching closely what appears to be an increase in North Vietnamese traffic down the Ho Chi Minh trail through Laos. “There’s a hell of a lot of move ment,” a senior American offi cer said Wednesday. “They are showing themselves a lot more.” U. S. fighter-bombers pound ing the trail in efforts to curtail the flow of men and supplies into South Vietnam are reported catching some of the enemy in the open. The senior officer said that, at this stage, it could not be firmly ascertained whether there is in fact an increase in infiltration over last year or whether more enemy movement is being ob served because of an improved detection system. He declined for security reasons to discuss the improved system. “Our detection is a lot better,” he said. “Frankly we’re working on it to determine if there is an increase or whether we now know more.” Each fall, just after the mon soon winds change from the southwest to the northeast and start the dry season in the South, the North Vietnamese intensify their infiltration down the Ho Chi Minh trail because the ground has firmed up and movement is easier. Sources said the southwest monsoon storms this year were not as severe as in 1966 and the Communists stepped up their operations down the trail earlier than usual. Some of the men may be ear marked as replacements for three North Vietnamese regiments mauled last month around D*l To in the bloodiest battle of tlj war. Dak To is in the central % lands 270 miles northeast of S«, gon and near the ill-defined mtei. ing point of the frontiers of Laos Cambodia and South Victim Sources said the three batterd regiments had fallen back tot|( south, possibly into sanctuario in Cambodia. In three weeks d fighting at Dak To, allied form said they killed 1,600 North Vitj. namese troops. American mi|| lost 277 men killed and Soul! Vietnamese reported 32 dead, Elsewhere, rows of dead vi lagers testified to the savagetj of an attack by a Viet Congtn. talion with flame throwers aij explosives Tuesday on the “No Life” hamlet of Dakson, neartl ( Cambodian frontier about t miles north of Saigon. Tex cer te season Texas the d Memo: A 3 San > San A jncrea: Confei A&I game Earza right i In £ tourna versit} on a i At t minute was ti< way tl period. Whe INDUCTED INTO FOOTBALL HALL OF FAME produc to be ( alty k hit the the oi game. B w Om day if p' 4 p Three r' icellent late. 8 STATE id weekl 10. Former football players chosen for induction into National Football Foundation Hall ol rpjj Fame pose in New York. Left to right: Francis Wistert, Michigan; Nathan Dougherty, Tennessee; Joel Hunt, Texas A&M; Earl Neale, coach at numerous colleges; Slade Cutter, Navy; Herb Stein, Pittsburgh ; Dr. Abe Mickal, Louisiana State ; Wear Schoonover, Arkaih “( sas; and Paul Schwegler, Washington. (AP Wirephoto) Sep4I mi lOIV PRICES EVERS RAY Phi SPECIALS! - IIIISH InftEIltfATlOltfAI, Steeplechase c m «S u/eeps ta i$es ' $1,000.00 WINNERS I J. Otis Watson Fort Worth Eleanor H. Lewis Bryon H. J. Wiili AbiUn* Dorothy J. Pick DilUi Joyce L. Hughs Carrollton Shirley Smith TyUr Mrs. Ella Kaplan Dallit Minnie Pollard Auittn SAFEWAY FOR FRESH QUA Bold Detergent Zee Napkins Soda Crackers Liquid Bleach Pooch Dog Food White Corn Meal (25* off lobal) Special!—King Sins Whit* & Aaaortad Colors. Spar/aJ/—BO-Ct. Ffcfl. Molroto—1-Lb. Pkg. Whlfo Magic—Gallon Flattie A Regular or AUvar IS'/j-oi. 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Can 5, (Thick Sliced ... 2-Lb. Pkg. $1.25) 65^ Pork Loin Rib Half—Lb. cca (Loin Half . ..Lb. it*) Pork Chops Sliced from Quarter Pork Loin. —Lb. Pork Roast Fresh FIcnIc. Whole. 4 te S*Lb. Avg. —Lb. USDA Impacfad ... Orada A. Everyday Low Price! Whole (Cut-Up... Lb. 350 Lb. Prlca* Iffactlva Thun.. Frt. and Sat., Dec. 7, ■ and 9, in We Reserve the Right fo Limit Quanfities. No Salet fo Dealers. SAFEWAY liii ©Copyright I960, Safeway Sterei, Incorporated. More Spectators Than Protestors SAN FRANCISCO Wl small force of Negro and whi) students brought San Francii State College to a deadsto;“ Wednesday in a riotous invasioi of the administration buildini and other centers on the campiB The activists, estimated by ob servers to number no more thu 100 of the crowd of 1,500 whid gathered, were protesting twoi related suspension incidents oi the 18,000-student campus. Members of the Black Students Union and the predominant^ white Movement Against Politi cal Suspensions smashed into tin locked administration building at lunchtime, broke windows ani tie for° P i doors, and milled through Hit Mice halls, shouting, “No suspensions. Hell No!” They then spread in small groups to the cafeteria, the book store and classrooms, vandalizing the interiors and seizing books and cigarettes. Classes on the usually bus!' campus in the southwest corntt of San Francisco finally were dis missed in mid-afternoon, andtke disturbance ebbed after about two hours. More Drug Contro Sought By Scions WASHINGTON <A>)_The Sen ate’s juvenile delinquency sub committee plans hearings next year to try to update federal laws on control of marijuana and dan gerous drugs. Sen. Thomas J. Dodd, D-Conn, the subcommittee chairman, said Wednesday, “We are now in th( absurd position wherein a youn? person can face a prison sentence of up to 40 years for conviction of a marijuana offense. 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