Betty Ford recuperating WASHINGTON UPI) First Lady Betty Ford ig - "two or three days ahead" of the recovery schedule set by her doctors and doing "very, very well," a smiling ]'resident told some White House visitors yesterday. It discussed his wife's illness briefly with May Wallace. Bess Truman's sister inta-w-, who was with a group invited to-the Cabinet Room to view a portrait of Harry S Truman which Ford had ordered placed opposite a picture of Abraham Lincoln. Wallace. the widow of Bess Truman's brother, told Ford. "We have you and your wife iri our prayers," and Ford replied: "She's doing very well. She's two or three4ays akrad of what the doctors said would be the progress." Ford had more comments about his tfe's condition while photographers were taking pictures of the first meeting of his lab Or-management advisory committee. "She's sleeping well, she's eating well," Ford told AFL-CIO President -George Meany, who was seated on his right at the Cabinet table. "It's amazing what they db," the President added, noting that his wife was walking frequently just five days after her operation. Her temperature had been as high as 101 dggrees but is normal now, he said. Dr. William Fouty, the First Lady's •urgeon, also said in a medical bulletin Town senator sought The Organization of Town Independent Students will hold interviews tomorrow for students interested in becoming an Undergraduate Student Go'vernment town senator OTIS president Thomas Doc" Sweitzer said he will ABORTION Proved ures Centers Out Patient Hospital Care at ifelinic price Call collect till 10 p.m. 0-215-646-2500 yesterday that 'Mrs. Ford was in "ex cellent spirits" after "a most restful night." He said she slept late in the presidential suite at Bethesda Naval Hospital. She "has not regained her full strength, but I would describe her post-operative course to date as uncomplicated and her present condition - as excellent," Fouty added. The hospital said the twice-daily repkts ilow u ill be reduced to one a day "in light of Mrs. Ford's excellent recuperation." Ford visited her Wednesday night and reported that she had felt well enough to talk to their three sons Mike in Boston, and Jack and Steve in Utah. The President told The Truman group that his wife had ,received thousands" of good wishes from all over the country. A group of congressional wives is organizing a volunteer operation to help Mrs. Ford answer the mail, flowers, ielegrams and other expressions of good will which have poured in since the an nouncement that the First Lady faced cancer surgery. One of the most meaningful was a note I rom Alice Roosevelt Longworth, who has had two mastectomies, and wrote "a line, to wish you well from one who a number of years ago had the same experience you had." Mrs. Longworth is 90. consider "overall experience Sweitzer said he "will not of and experience in USG ask questions concerning and its workings.'-"" their stand on the im- Applicants will be asked if peachment issue." they are informe 3 / 4 1 on the USG insurance scandals and if Interviews will beheld at they have attended the USG the OTIS office in 20 HUB and Senate meetings on the the decision will be an matter. flounced Sunday. r IMIN MI MO EMI IMON INIII NMI MI IMIN IMINI NM MI MI i - GEoRGE °DELL 1 1 *OO itiw; LE 9 ANDANiMAL FARM\ 1 19 I FRI -s4r-•soN „ 1 ocr 4. s • o:. 0 Pm ONLY Nobel prize for presented to 2 STOCKHOLM (UPI) Swedish authors Eyvind Johnson and Harry! Mar tinson. relatively ,unknown outsle their country; were named yesterday to share the 1974 Nobel prize for literature and — the $123.000 it carries. Some of Sweden's younger literary figures immediately attacked the choice on grounds the prize winners had won little international ac claim. One young author said their selection smacked of corruption within the prize awarding Swedish Academy of Letters. Sources close toy' the academy had leaked the news three days ago. They said the choice was made not to up stage exiled' Russian writer Alexander I. Solzhenitsyn, scheduled to pick up his 1970 award when the prizes are formally presented by King Carl Gustaf Dec. 10. Solzhenitsyn, unable to receive his prize at that time because he was still in the Soviet Union, is expected to make one of his rare public speeches at the December ceremonies this year. The 18-member academy cited Johnson, 74, for "narrative art, farseeing in lands and ages, in the service of freedom." The citation of 70-year-old Martinson was for T3EArOIE 1 1 75 KERN "writings that catch the dewdrops and reflect the cosmos." Both are members of the academy. It was the first time in 23 years that a Swede had won the literature prize. The last was Per Lagerkvist in 1951. Sven Delblanc, one of Sweden's leading younger authors, said "there exists no strong international opinion advocating these authors. The choice reflects lack of judgment by the Academy. "And lack of judgment in a serious context like this, can only 'too easily be interpreted as corruption through camaraderie." Delblanc added. "Mutual admiration is one thing, but this has a smell 'THRIFTY BOTTLE SHOP (Behind The Train Station) 35 BRANDS COLD BEER OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK *************************** RECYCLE THIS PAPER :************************** 3 l 1 .••••••••• i•• mmmmm w•••••■•• mmmmm 0••••••• re • • GODARD "Sym i llathy or the Devil (1+1)" •il l II TODAY at 2:30-5:00-7:30-9:55 "MOVIE OF THE It's the kind of m you rarely see th days, a pleasure and a delight!" —ED MILLER, Seventeen Magazin Ptone Prints by Movielab and aU Eastman Color •an Avco Embassy release AU 4.> Swedes of embazzlement." "Of course, this is a happy occasion", said Martinson at an afternoon news con ference. "But all the critical comments from authors and journalists have added bitter taste to it" Johnsson, who is writing a new book at present, agreel but added that "there, can never be just one author that is the world's best". Only three of Johnson's 44 books have been translated into English and his best known work in that language is the novel "Return to Ithaca." Martinson, a former sailor who went to sea at the ag#, of 14, has had only four books translated into English. The 'A movie experience of major importance ... beautifully and carefully composed, a kind of testament to Godard's very original, creative Impulse, which is undiminished by the world be would annihilate." — l / 4 nbent Canby N Y TIMES 'A song of revolution unlike any that's ever been sung Godard a use of a Rolling Stones • recording session as • grand metaphor for • 'growth lie denotes had the movie's running • time to this. Scenes of the Stones rehearsing • alternate with sequences of pop political • cartoon, . the antoirneng idea is sheer genius.' • -Jose.OK Morgenstern NEWSWEEK op • One of the major films of the decade... A great hlm•maker at the absolute peak of his form. Whether your primary interest is in Mick Jagger, the state•ot-Ihe•revolution, or pure-eas dynamite cinema. Sympathy for the Devil is simply not to be missed." -THE DAILY CAL BERKELEY 'Sympathy for the Devil, - is of and for our time. It ts a mix of the Rolling Stonei sound and the revolutionary's voice jammed together electronically and cinematically. • • • DAILY NEWS I toyed 'Sympathy for the Devil.' ■ Let it bleed." I , .L A FREE PRESS • Saturday 1 Forum : • 10 & 9:30 • $l.OO • • • 11C. presents in association troth level Productions tinted and Lorimar Productions. Inc a Blake Edwards film Julie Om Andrews Sharif literature best-known are "The Road and "Aniara", later made into a Swedish opera. Speculation as to who would get this year's prize originally focused on British author Graham Greene. American Saul Bellow, V.S. Naipaul of Trinidad. and the late Swedish author Vilhelm Moberg. STARLITE Fri - Sat - Sun YAMAHA PRESENTS ON ANY SUNDAY A 11W •Y ARUCE BROWN The Rolling Stones GIMME SHELTER ,GP, THE FLICK 129 S. Atherton St./237-2112 0 ,-„, e 4, .., ....• .- " i cl v : ,: p.- ' , 1 1 .1 1 ), L J l l-- , , --",,,, ~„..-77f . ........,---- • ; . ......- / +=mo,L . l , l ,F"...., II I s ^'.7 0 I -- C C. T • C isi I%ll j 1 , 0 ASH 0 CINEMA 2 116 Heisler St./237-7657 WINNER OF 6 ACADEMY AWARDS METRO-GOLDWYN-MAYER PR A CARLO PONTI PRODUCTION! DAVID LEAN'S FILM OF BORIS PASTERNAKS DOCtOR ZHIVAGO . EG , PANAVISION° METROCOLOR 'Released triru Untied Artists MGM CATHAUM 118 W. College Ave./237-3351 mission • . a JEM production • for USG • The Dail• Collegia THE BIGGEST "WITHDRA WAL" IN BANKING HISTORY! 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers