The Oklahoma Daily (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 55, No. 14, Ed. 1 Friday, September 27, 1968 Page: 12 of 20
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PAGE TWELVE
THE' OKLAHOMA DAILY, University of Oklahoma,'Norman, Okla.*
FRIDAY, SEPT. 27.
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LONGERON PROBATION, 0UT PKlSiVfLY ANPC^J RUNKE^
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Muskie Dates Vietnam Error
Mexico City Worried
When Yon Think of
Music
CAMPUS
MUSIC ALBUM
Charge Account! Welcomed
Lake Thunderbird
7M Asp
JE 4-4622
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SUPER
SOCKS
win in a walk!
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-CARRY OUT ORDERS-
EDDIE’S PIT
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Fortas Case
Still Debated
ID
MM* HUN
MOONLIGHT
CRUISES
(Records, Tapea, Stereo, Sheet
Mule, Player*)
Senate
Mans-
You Just Naturally
Think of
'll.
528 Chesapeake
EDDIE ROSS
PARTY BOATS
Accomodate up to 36 people
(student discount)
coll
JE 4-9327
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Japanese Consul
Tours OU, Fair
bowl—a
Entrance Requirements Get Rough
OU Engineers are saddled with a new problem this semester
How to get to the Engineering Center without walking in mud or
falling in a construction pit. Or is it true what we heard, that en-
gineers can walk on mud?
South Campus
(Country Club Apts.)
INTRODUCING
EDDIE’S BAR B-Q
‘Where The Taste Matters”
Featuring
Pit Bar B-Q - Beef - Pork - Ribs
Chicken - Chili - Hot Dogs - Burgers
I Our Own TexasHotTink71
| Recipe Over 100 Years Old I
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LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS
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WA.
Super Bowl anklets thrive on
action because they’re knit of
65% super-soft Orlon* acrylic/
35% Nylon. Keep their shape
and good looks through months of
wear and machine washings.
Hi-Gard Heels and Toes (extra
Nylon reinforcement for longer
wear.) One size stretches to fit
10 to 13. In all the fashion
colors too! $2.00 pair.
ROTHSCHILD’S
Main & Harvey
Oklahoma City, Okla. 73102
7
Student leaders said a deci-
sion had been reached to avoid
‘‘provoking" authorities into tak-
ing over school grounds or for-
cing them into armed confronta-
tions. Instead, they said, stu-
dent rebels will create ‘‘Shock
brigades” to employ hit-run
tactics throughout the city.
Earlier in the day police re-
ported a terrorist dynamite at-
tack of a branch of the National
Bank of Mexico which caused
some damage and touched off a
burglar alarm butleft no cas-
ualties.
Police said the terrorists hurl-
ed the dynamite sticks at the
bank branch from a fast moving
car. They said eyewitnesses said
the attack was carried out by
four men and appeared to have
no motive other than to keep
city tension high.
More Violence Brews
MEXICO CITY (UPI) — Em-
battled students Thursday seized
buildings of the National Poly-
technic Institute and raised fears
of a new confrontation with army
troops and riot police.
There was no immediate gov-
ernment reaction to the move,
carried out by about 200 stu-
dents. But city bus drivers re-
fused to enter the area and traf-
fic police diverted cars and
trucks.
Motorized troops and armored
cavalry units had seized the
institute Tuesday in a nine hour
battle with students in which
three persons were killed, but
withdrew 24 hours later.
The students who took over the
campus again Thursday did not
seem in a belligerent mood.
They sprawled around on the
grass talking and reading books.
DETRTIT <UPI) — Sen. Ed-
mund Muskie in a face-to-face ex-
change with college students in a
packed gymnasium said Thursday
any "mistake” in Vietnam came
14 years ago, not during the John-
son administration.
Muskie spoke for 45 minutes at
Oakland University in suburban
Rochester, Mich. Nearly 2,000 stu-
dents piled onto the bleachers and
spilled out onto the floor, almost
at his feet at the lecturn.
“I can’t give any guarantee for
the future,” he told them. "I’ll
just give you my honest views.”
About 50 demonstrators heckled
the Democratic vice presidential
i_____
I WANT YOU TO CLEARLY UMPfSTANP THAT YOJ’IZE- NO
Mr. Arao Ota, consul general
of Japan, toured the OU cam-
pus Thursday before returning
to the Oklahoma State Fair for
a tour.
Ota is stationed in Houston
and is in charge of Oklahoma
and Texas trade with Japan
and also aids tourists in ob-
taining visas.
A reception held at Howard
Johnson's restaurant in Nor-
man Thursday evening was
given in Ota’s honor. The con-
cert master of the Oklahoma
City Symphony, Kobayashi, pre-
sented a violin concert.
The consul general's tour of
the campus was arranged by
Prof, of Meteorology, Yoshi Ka-
zee Sasaki.
VW
WASHINGTON (UPI) — A fili-
bustering opponent of Abe Fortas'
nomination as Chief Justice urged
colleagues Thursday to tie up the
Senate until Earl Warren sets an
actual date for his "politically
timed and motivated" retirement.
Sen. Howard Baker, R-Tenn.,
in a half-hour speech, objected to
"the political pressure implicit”
in Waren’s decision to make his
retirement as Chief Justice ef-
fective upon Senate confirmation
of a successor.
That condition, he said, forced
the Senate to choose between
Warren and Fortas as the nation's
highest judicial officer.
As the debate droned on in a
nearly empty chamber.
Democratic leader Mike ______
field said he would stage the first
showdown Tuesday in his effort
to end the filibuster
Sen. Jacob K. Javits, R-N.Y.,
told the Senate that it is “shame-
ful" that the filibuster was em-
ployed on a motion to take up a
nomination.
Only a handful of senators were
present at any one time while the
talk droned on and the galleries
were mostly empty.
Sen. Spessard L. Holland, D-
Fla., followed Baker and spoke
nearly as long against Fortas'
nomination.
Holland said Fortas' appoint-
ment "gives ground for jubilation
to the ultra liberals who wish to
see a continuation of the “War-
ren Court’ for the next 15 years
or more.”
Another opponent. Sen. Jack
Miller, R-Iowa, said an American
Bar Association committee should
withdraw its warm endorsement
of the nomination because it
reached its decision before "the
evidence was in.”
candidate slightly and walked out
on him before he finished.
Muskie brought down the house
by saying he was anti-war.
"In 1954 we probably made a
mistake in not taking advantage
of the Geneva convention to reach
a settlement in Vietnam," he told
the students.
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Chilnick, Larry. The Oklahoma Daily (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 55, No. 14, Ed. 1 Friday, September 27, 1968, newspaper, September 27, 1968; Norman, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1829256/m1/12/: accessed July 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Carl Albert Congressional Research and Studies Center.