, 1,2 :COPIES Mostly, sunny, an d continued warm today. High near' 78.. Mild tonight; low near 53. Partly sunny and a little cooler , tomor.; row; high 65. Except for a slight chance of a few showers or thundershowers late tonight, no rain is expected through Sunday. VOL. 68, No. 92 SG Boycotts Downtown Bookstore Boycott Receives Favorable Reaction Student reaction to the boycott of the Student Book Store yesterday appeared to be favorable, according to Undergraduate Student Government officials promoting the boycott. USG members in front of the store trying'to persuade students from entering estimated early in the day that the attempt was at least "60 per cent effective." By actual count, during the first hour 'of the boycott, 23 'students either definitely agreed not to buy or sell books there, or they' turned 'away at the door and went uptown to purchase books, During the same time period, 16 stu dents entered the store, some without reading the infor mation on the boycott being distributed by USG. One student said, "I want to go in here and, buy some books, not talk about it." Another stopped to tell a USG member that he had imported books from England last term and that, even with the import taxes, the books had cost less than if he had bought them in State College. • Several, students asked where they were supposed to buy and sell books if not at the Student Book Store. They were advised to go to any of the other downtown stores. Several students said that they received the best prices at the SBS, plus the best service. "I'm surprised at your choice," said one man. "I think it's - by far the best store. On new book prices they're all about the same, but the service is better." Two boys at different times during the day approached' the store 'carrying stacks of books to sell. One, carrying 19 textbooks, agreed to sell them elsewhere instead of the Student Book Store if someone would help him carry them uptown. A USG member promptly took half the stack and escorted the student up College Avenue. McCarthy, Kennedy Go, Go SUPERIOR, Wis. (AP)—Sen. Eugene J. McCar- he would enter his name in their state primaries. thy said yesterday that the South Vietnamese goy- McCarthy had announced earlier \ that he in ernment had collapsed, and urged that President tended to go into Indiana and was considering the Johnson and Gen. Creighton W. Abrams consider urging of supporters, that he enter the primary ways to rebuild it. contest in Florida. Johnson has been conferring with Abrams, - All told, this makes nine primaries that the who may be picked as Gen. William Westmore- senator has entered—including the one in New land's successor as commander of American forces Hampshire and the upcoming confrontation with in Vietnam. Johnson in Wigconsin. The Minnesota Democrat, campaigning in Wis- McCarthy said he would be able to carry on consin for his contest with the President in the only a limited campaign in the Hoosier state be state's primary Tuesday, told an' audience at Super- cause of .the press of time. for State University that it "is really too kind" to / ' But once- again he expresied confidence that describe the South Vietnamese government as cox/ he had an even chance against Johnson and Sen. rupt and a dictatorship. Robert F. Kennedy in the California balloting, • 'We Mean...' which McCarthy sees as the showdown state, To say that a government is a dictatorship or * * * corrupt indicates that "we mean there is a govern ment," McCarthy said. And, McCarthy argued, the heart of the diffi culty in South Vietnam is the failure to build a viable government in Saigon. He said even U. S. government officials admit that there is fraud, swindling and embezzlement of U. S. aid. The Minnesota Democrat announced that he had told his supporters in Indiana and Florida that MEMBER OF Students for McCarthy, center, deliberates yesterday afternoon with interested students at the newly formed McCarthy group's College Ave. booth. w.......