Page 12 THE BATTALION WEDNESDAY, APRIL 25. 1979 Lost: GI buddy, 34 years ago United Press International LOS ANGELES — “Why is (it) one has to commit crime or to do something daring before the news people will do any write up? I see and read of people who are united quite frequently, so why not me? If you can help I will be so grateful to you.” So wrote Michael Kan in a letter to United Press International. It was an appeal for help in a mission to Freshman Ag Society End of School Dance Friday, April 27, 8-12 p.m Kleberg Center $1 For Members $2 For Nonmembers (nonmembers must be accompanied by a member) All members come and bring your friends. For the Price of a Dozen Roses, You Can Give a Piece of Real Gold! SEE OUR SELECTION OF BRACELETS, EARRINGS, CHAINS, AND RINGS: TOWN & COUNTRY CENTER 3731 E. 29th 846-4708 Carl Bussells lAMOND Room Member American Gem Society V which he has devoted 30 years with out success. Kan wants to locate an American corporal he met in a Chinese town on the Burma road near the close of World War II. He was an 18-year- old Chinese boy fascinated by GIs and he became a close buddy of the corporal, who was only 20 himself. They were together only about six months. Then, in 1945, the soldier was shipped home. Kan came to America in 1948 as a student, joined the U.S. Air Force, became a citi zen and now is married to an Ameri can woman and living in the Los Angeles area. All Kan knows is that the Air Force corporal was named Stuart (he can t recall the first name). He was a disc jockey for the Armed Forces Radio Network in Kun- Ming, the base of the Flying Tigers. He thinks — but is not sure — Stuart was from the Midwest. He has a 34-year-old photo of the two of them together in China. Why is Kan so eager and deter mined to find Stuart? “Well, he was my first American friend. And he was a very good friend. Actually he was the first male friend I ever had. I had been raised by an American missionary and I was surrounded by women and girls. “I met some other GIs, but I noticed that very soon they were asking me to find girls for them. They didn’t put it quite that way, but I understood. Stuart wasn’t like that. He justed wanted to be my friend.” Kan’s original name was Kan Man Loh. He was 3 months old when his father died. His mother remarried and he was adopted by Cornelia Morgan, an American missionary and granddaughter of John Tyler Morgan, Alabama’s senator for 30 years. When he was 18, Kan began hanging around the Air Force base. He got an unofficial job as an in terpreter. From that early contact, he decided he wanted to come to America. Kan spent four years in the Air Force and had an exporting business for 10 years. So, all right, Mike Kan. You don’t have to commit a crime to get in the papers. “LOST: One good GI buddy of 34 years ago. Answers to name of Stuart. May be in the Midwest. Could be working for a radio station. If found, contact Michael Kan through UPI Los Angeles. Reward: Gratitude.” Fingertip save Soccer is booming among College Station’s lads. Here, the Schlitz team is having prob lems with the opposition’s quick goalie. The Energy plans get ‘rude jolt’ United Press International WASHINGTON — A House committee gave President Carter’s emergency energy conservation plans a rude jolt Tuesday by reject ing the idea of closing gasoline stations on weekends. The House Commerce Committee voted 26-15 against sending the full House the proposal for weekend closings, which is one of four major ideas Carter proposed for handling fuel shortages. The commit tee voted to send a plan for controlling advertising lights to the House, but with a recommendation the House reject it. A third proposal, to control non-residential heating and cooling, won a recommendation that the House approve it. The committee votes, although in a sense a formality, are an impor tant indication of the fate of the measures. They indicate a tough time for Carter’s fourth and most important proposal, which will be con sidered today: a standby system of gasoline rationing for the severest shortages. The Energy Department estimated the heating-cooling proposal could “save” 364,000 barrels daily of oil or its equivalent, the lighting idea 4,400 barrels, and the weekend closing 246,000 barrels. “Sav ings” in this case meant consumption below expected levels. Right to silence altered game was played on the field at Andersoni Holleman Streets. Battalion photo by Ahmed H. Atilt ||P—fcalfra* courts ana ■ swimming pool with a kixunoualy furmanad dock PLANNED ACTIVITIES THROUGHOUT THE YEAR WITH ENTERTAINMENT. REFRESHMENTS AND PRIZES ALL YEARLONG NOT JUST ONCE A YEAR! Doux Chen« otters all ttiis plus ttw nicest staff m town So do yourself a favor Stop by ttie Doux Chene Apart ments. and wm an year round /^>artments 693-1907 693-1906 WE’RE TRAVELIN YOUR WAY! 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He was given Miranda Bl 1 ings, but refused to signaslJ*™^ 1 and continued to talk to FBI At trial, the court tumec his effort to suppress as en r‘ I: the incriminating statefliel tou P made to officers. f’ j 1 The Supreme Court, own North Carolina’s top court, case back to lower courts, said 10 of the 11 U.S. appa and courts in at least 17 stal made similar holdings. —» Justices William Brennan! MF 1 good Marshall and John Pad P vens dissented. Justice Lewis Powell didri » part. 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