Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Coed Tells Role In S She before Lansing Township toward Grand River when a man, cept his calls. If he did try to explained that University ►goes contact me, and to agree to Police told her they had been Justice Court on July 28. seemingly seeking directions, meet him." investigating reports of obscene O'Brien, who contends the girl gestured to me from his car and was turned down for a secre¬ pulled over. She said the police told her. From an Olin hospital bed phone calls and could arrest a tarial position, was quoted as "As 1 approached he said this two other girls were involved but Friday, Marion Lukens told her suspect on a minor charge, but asked for her cooperation in telling a friend, "It's a frame." was a coincidence because he she didn't know anything about story. Miss Lukens said she didn't was a photographer who was them. The slender blonde senior ex¬ assisting them. She said all this time he made probably be given the opportun¬ realize that "the polite, busi¬ looking for girls of my descrip¬ Miss Lukens said she then plained the aid she gave police After working directly with ness-like man," who Initially tion to model sportswear on cam¬ no physical advance toward her. ity to seek psychiatric help be¬ that led to the arrest of Michigan Detective Sgt. Daniel E. Han- fore court sentencing." waited nervously for any calls. asked her to model sportswear pus. I told him I wasn't inter¬ People were coming and going by legislator Bernard F. O'Brien Jr. kins of the University Police for "It was then," she said, "that "In a few days It began. He and later suggested she pose ested, but he said it wouldn't during the discussion, she added. week, her assistance led to I decided to report the incident would call a few times, some¬ (D-Detroit). a nude and engage in Intercourse, take much time. "When 1 returned to the dorm O'Brien arrested May 27 the arrest of O'Brien in the times he was polite, almost was "He began to talk about time my ride to Detroit, where 1 was to police. was a Michigan legislator until pleasant, and other times. on charges of soliciting and ac¬ Capitol two weeks ago. The sen¬ and salary. He was quite pleas¬ spending the Memorial Day week¬ "But," she continued, "when . . the Investigation was completed costing Miss Lukens and two ator stood mute in court on the end, was waiting. I was hurried, I returned to the dorm the RA "Whenever I got a phone call," and she had signed the com¬ ant and business-like. I asked other Butterfield Hall coeds. morals charge. so 1 briefly mentioned what had notified me that the head resi¬ she said, "1 typed up a formal plaint. for his card, but he said he Miss Lukens, 22-year-old mu¬ happened to my RA. dent and the police wanted to report for the police. I was up¬ The coed, hospitalized during "1 never saw him before that left his material at the ad build¬ sic therapy major, said that after "In Detroit I told a policeman talk with me." set, and I was trying to study for the term break, is recovering afternoon," she said. ing. her Initial encounter, the Incident friend what had happened and The RA, she assumed, went finals and write a paper that from the strain of that week. The incident occurred May 27. "We talked along this line Was reported to University au¬ asked him what authorities would directly to the adviser when she week, too. Miss Lukens, who said she for eight or 10 minutes and I thorities by the head adviser of Unless the 31-year-old legis¬ do to the man. I said. I thought learned of the encounter. Butterfield. She was then asked lator pleads guilty to charges hadn't been previously contacted gave him my phone number. "The next day he called, and for public comment, gave this "Then he began to say things the man was sick and needed "The police," she continued, I agreed to meet him. Campus to meet "the man," O'Brien, so of "lewd and indecent conduct" "told 1 knew something was wrong. help. me they had an idea who Miss Lukens will be prosecu¬ ... (continued that police might make a positive MARION LUKENS "1 was walking along Abbott I thought he must be sick." "My friend said that he would the man was and asked me toac- on page 3) tie-in. tion's chief witness when the case Poles Crush MICHIGAN Catholic Riot UNIVERSITY STATE STATE MEWS WARSAW, Poland Pi--Trun¬ The demonstrators regrouped and marched off in the opposite Vol. 59, Number 4 Monday, June 27, 1966 cheon-swinging riot policemer broke up an attempt by. 1,000 direction still chanting and sing¬ demonstrating Polish Catholics ing. to march on the headquarters of Their slogans included "Cath¬ olics, Unite," "Pri-mas, Pri- 500 Guard With Riot Guns the ruling Communist party Sun¬ day night. mas (primate)" for Cardinal Wy¬ Other Catholic demonstrations szynski and "We forgive, We continued late into the night else¬ forgive." where in the Polish capital fol¬ The forgiveness chant appar¬ lowing a tense evening of con¬ ently was in support of Cardinal frontation between supporters of Wyszynskl's appeals for forgive¬ Stefan Cardinal Wyszynski, t"he ness to the Germans over World As March Reaches Climax Catholic primate, and party War II and also to forgive Com¬ workers out in force to block munist authorities who in recent the streets. weeks have restricted the move¬ ment from city to city of a reli¬ Warsaw's sharpest civil vio¬ lence in perhaps a decade flared gious painting, the "Black Ma¬ donna of Czestochowa." briefly at the corner of Nowy Swiat and Oly Cross streets when two dozen helmeted police charg¬ ed Into a chanting crowd of most¬ ly young men advancing on the POLICE WARY 15,000 Swarm party headquarters 300 yards away. There were minor newsmen an saw at injuries and least one wom¬ and child struck by the fly¬ Cleveland Mo raj On Miss. JACKSON, Miss. Capitol (UPI)--Fifteen thousand ing rubber clubs. screaming, chanting demonstrators surged Patrolmen horseback joined "abusive" behavior. Police ob¬ CLEVELAND (UPI) —Special on toward the tense, heavily-guarded State Capi¬ them to help maintain some or¬ tained treatment for him at a police riot squads were keeping U.S. Reds a wary eye on the downtown Ne¬ gro ghetto Sunday, hopeful the der in the section. Detectives said the two shoot¬ fourth came hospital, but Henry be¬ so angered there that he tol Sunday to climax the "freedom" march that James Meredith began nearly alone three racial violence of the past four ings were "Just regular Satur¬ ripped bandages from his bruised Re-Elect nights had come to an end. Hundreds of Negroes milled day night calls." Alphonse Henry, a Negro who gency room. shot in the leg with a shot¬ face and stalked out of the emer¬ In the second incident police weeks ago. The marchers streamed through a Negro through the area Saturday night was in the latest outburst, hurling gun blast, was intoxicated, ac¬ said, David Mayes was shot in section enroute to the Capitol and when they Old Heads rocks, bricks and fire bombs at the police, newsmen and pas- cording to detectives. Three hos¬ the leg with a revolver after a pitals refused to treat Henry's dispute over a radio. No charges emerged into a white residential section, their ranks had tripled and they appeared to be sersby. wounds because of his alleged were filed. NEW YORK (UPI)--Gus Hall and Henry Winston, two old- The roving mobs apparently barely under control of their leaders. line Communists who once serv¬ set fire to a grocery store in The marchers streamed through a Negro section enroute to the the area, causing an estimated ed prlsion terms, were elected Capitol and when they emerged into a white residential section, the top leaders of the American Communist Party Sunday and called upon the American people $45,000 damage. Officials said the cause of the fire known, but it seemed likely the was not 'Worse Than their ranks had tripled and they appeared to be barely under con¬ trol of their leaders. to "defend our right to function." blaze was touched off by a flying The noise was deafening. A sea Meredith Watts'—Hannah The restoration of titles to the fire bomb. of humanity filled the two-lane leaders of the party for the first Six "molotov cocktail" fire¬ street to the Capitol as far as the 1 time since it went into a shadow bombs were hurled into an in¬ could see. Again and again, existence in 1961 opened the way tersection, but caused no harm. Hits Racism eye Negroes surged out of the line, for federal prosecution of Hall Two men were shot Saturday Plaster falls into her tub. Na¬ grabbed Confederate flags away night, but police maintained the ked, shorted wiring fizzles in the and Winston as agents Soviet Union. of the incidents were not "directly" bathroom and kitchen. In South from whites and shreds. ripped them to But Hall announced: "I do not connected with racial disorder. Just three months after the Mrs. Turner didn't say any- JACKSON, Miss. (Vi—JamesH. There were persistent reports anticipate arrest." Neither man was seriously hurt. federal Commission on Civil tlng about rats in her apartment. 'Meredith told nearly 15,000Mis- ti,at the more militant groups Hall, 55, owns a $30,000 sub¬ At least 12 persons were ar¬ Rights tried to plumb Cleveland's A Mrs. Hattle Mae Dugan, from sissippi civil rights marchers Would try to storm the "ring of urban home and is driven to rested, but police said 10 of civil rights problems, that city another apartment, said rats MARCH FOR FREE DOM-- F reedorr Sunday "the fear that grips the steel" that 500 heavily-armed work by a chauffeur, said h« those were charged with dis¬ is getting a taste of discrimina¬ crawled into her bed night. at ing flags and wearing hats < Negro in America to his very state Troopers and National was elected "co-equal" with turbing the peace. Eight were tion-rooted violence. bones" must be erased if civil Mrs. Turner pays $85 a month blue set out on the final leg of their Winston—but was it was clear he first among equals. He did Juveniles. It was the youths in the city's Hundreds of Negroes milled for her five-room apartment, sissippi state capital at Jackson Su rights are to be won. (continued on page 3) through the Negro ghetto in the almost all the talking at a news Hough section who started the central (continued on page 4) He spoke at the climax of the city, throwing rocks, marathon march—a great rally weekend of Violence after one of conference. Hall was named general sec¬ Communist Party, their group by white youths. allegedly was beaten bricks and fire bombs. Negro youths from the city's behind the state Capitol, an im¬ posing limestone structure Cool Spots retary of the USA. Winston, a blind Negro, A white motorist fired a shot¬ Hough section touched off the vio¬ lence after one of their group RIGHTS GROUP ringed "by heavily armed police was elected national chairman. Hall's- title was his old one, gun blast from his car window Thursday night, wounding a 10- was youths. allegedly beaten by white and National Guardsmen. Officers estimated 16,000 Ne¬ Are Scarce but came he had dropped it and be¬ known merely as "party year-old Negro youngster. Special riot-trained police squads cordoned off the area and The Hough area of Cleveland is one of the most segregated Urban League groes, flowed with a few hundred whites, through the streets like a spokesman" to avoid prosecu¬ tion. moved in to break up groups be¬ in the United States, President The league hopes to create a river of humanity to pack a por- t n of the Capitol grounds and ^mpus^thiTweek found Hat the John A. Hannah, commission Thirty-four executive direc¬ Llbrary and ^ ,M pools# Hall was vague about the elec¬ fore they could grow out of hand. chairman, said when he got back tors of Urban League, a civil meaningful dialogue in matters of adjacent areas. Wlth temperatures shooting up tion process. At one point he from Cleveland. agency administration and mana¬ rights organization known for They were led by Meredith, into the 90's, students lined the said his election was not unani¬ Hough's problems outdistance gerial skill, she said. being more interested in effi¬ the slender, intense man who is Library stacks and the poolsides mous, although he was unopposed. Watts' and Harlem's, he said. Javits ciency than militancy, began a hero figure to Mississippi Ne- to duck the heat, a Later, grinning, he said, "We "The Urban League is fre¬ Hough, and the rest of Cleve¬ five-day conference Sunday eve¬ groes, and a cluster of national "it's fantastic," Carl Sharr, were elected by acclamation to land's inner city, is paintless, quently regarded as one of the ning in Kellogg Center sponsored civil rights leaders who included lifeguard at the Men's IM Pool, thunderous applause." grassless and garbage-littered. organizations in the civil rights The feet on applause and stomping of the floor of the Com¬ For Nix area. Hough is an urban renewal Homes have been razed. by MSU's School of Labor and In¬ dustrial Relations. movement," she said. "We are interested in improving the total Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. "There's a thing in Missis- s a id of Saturday's 2,385 -man crowd. The average class day munist convention could be heard WASHINGTON (UPI) —Sen. Little rebuilding has begun. Whitney M. Young Jr., execu¬ community life by closing the sippi that is preventing white this week has had 1,700 pool- by newsmen who were barred Jacob K. Javits, R-N.Y., Sun¬ People, mostly Negroes, have tive director of Urban League, gaps between minority groups people from being decent," cried side gatherers. The average for from it and who waited in the day scratched former Vice moved out, often to areas as was scheduled to speak Sunday and the total society." Meredith, speaking into a forest finals week spring term was basement 2 1/2 hours for the President Richard M. Nixon as of microphones set up on a big 1,500. segregated and as sub-standard evening on "From Civil Rights results to be announced. the possible Republican presi¬ as Hough. to Human Rights," but confer¬ Young was recently quoted as flatbed truck which served as The Library, Kellogg Center, dential candidate in 1968. saying: "Demonstrate only if a platform. Bessey Hall and the Union should Unskilled and deskilled, many ence officials said he probably Demonstrations are prove to be popular spots this Javits, who has been widely of them can't get jobs that pay wouldn't be able to leave Mis¬ necessary. "That thing is white suprema- summer, since they are among Christine mentioned as a possible vice presidential candidate, enough to buy better housing, sissippi for the conference. called They can't find public housing not enough." I started three weeks ago today ^ few buildings on campus which Concerning the differences be¬ air-conditioned. Nixon "a distinguished Republi¬ large enough for their large fam¬ Ella Campbell, assistant di¬ was to point up and challenge Has Baby can who had his chance." "I think the public now wants ilies. rector for personnel and train¬ ing for the National Urban tween the Urban League and other civil rights organizations, Mrs. the thing; at the base of the sys- , . , - tem-fear. A fear that 8rlPsthe . „ .. UUiertU CUCU ICiilUCiaiuicoiiou^ As the richer white residents LONDON (UPI)—Christine new fresh faces on the part of Campbell said, "Each of them gradually from 87 degrees Mon- will be ARRIVES HERE—Whit¬ Keeler, who has sought anonym¬ the Republican party," Javits leave the central city to live in League, said that there the suburbs, the poorer Negroes no policy changes at the confer¬ ney M. Young Jr., exe¬ has a separate role to play. The Negro in America to his very .es< ^ hot ^^ degrees Frlday> But ity since her love life nearly television program for organizations often are In con¬ the spell seems to be over, said in a in. But the landlords raise ence. cutive director of the Na¬ toppled the British government in move cert and work together towards Meredith pointed out that he said, beginning today with New York stations. rental tional Urban League, was prices for deteriorating "There will be Internal train¬ was shot on the second day of a hlgh of g0 degrees, • 1963, was in the limelight again "We've got lots of new people a common goal." buildings. expected here Sunday his march "but as you can see Although the week's tempera- Sunday—as the mother of a six- coming along and they may rate ing changes because the Urban from Detroit to address In the inner city live' people League affiliates are undergoing here, that dldn t end a thing. ture's were not record-setters, pound, 11-ounceboy. consideration." the four -day Institute of Placing Negroes in jobs is a like Mrs. Cornelia Turner, a Miss Keeler, 24, was reported Javits said these included expansions in their programs," E xecuti> s Directors of direct service of the league, she The rally, he added, would for this time of year, they were to have given birth to the baby Negro. She lives at the Alhambra, Mrs. Campbell said. said. The 'league is also con¬ let Gov. Paul B. Johnson and unusually high. Two years ago Ronald Reagan, the GOP guber¬ U rban uiuum Leagues meeting last Wednesday at London's Prin¬ an apartment building furnished cerned with total economic op¬ President Johnson know that "we the record highs were in the natorial candidate in California. at Kellogg Center. Young with sewage running open in the The conference will be the cess Beatrice hospital and then Reagan, the senator said, "may flew to Detroit from Mis¬ portunities, including the small are not going to let it-white su- mid-90's, and the highest ever returned home to her husband, basement, old stoves that blow first cooperative effort of the businessman, and equal oppor¬ premacy-live on, being blamed recorded for this time in June be Sen. (Barry) Goldwater's up and tubs that take four hours Urban League with a university, sissippi, site of the Mere¬ James Levermdre, before news dith tunities in housing. on a few whites in Mississippi." was 98 degrees in 1913. (continued on page 5) to she continued. Freedom March, of the birth leaked out. empty. Michigan State News, East Lansing. Michigan Monday, June 27, 1966 MARINES REPORT TATE NEWS E 2 Shake VC Detention DA NANG, South Viet Nam They had survived the last four Both men reported that when (UPI)—The U.S. Marine prison¬ days of their ordeal on water they arrived at the camp their er made a desperate leap, from streams and rice paddies feet were blistered, cut and swol¬ grabbed the carbine of one of his and three pieces of candy a day. len. They said a Vietnamese doc¬ captors, cocked it, and looked Their over-all condition was de¬ tor treated them. They were also EDITORIALS straight down the barrel at the three surprised Viet Cong. scribed as good. taken to a stream to wash and On one occasion they came given more rice. And then it was a whole new within few feet of being re¬ a Each e v e n i n g, the Marines ballgame. captured. Law Should said, the Viet Cong leader of the Support Tills was part of a harrowing tale revealed Sunday—the of how two leathernecks, captured in story Dodson, who arrived In Viet Nam in July, 1965, is a member of the 3rd Engineer Battalion, camp came to the hut where they were held. They were taken from the hut and forced to listen separate incidents in early 3rd Marine Division. He holds for a half hour to an English- Journalistic Ethic May, escaped from their captors and walked for four days before finally reaching friendly lines. the Purple Heart for a sustained last December. He has a 10-month-old son he has never leg wound language Hanoi. Communist newscast They also from Radio were given newspapers and A UNIVERSITY OF Oregon coed can obtain information that free The Marines are Sgt. James seen. pamphlets to read. editor is caught in the midst of a society should have only by promis¬ S. Dodson, 23, of York, Pa., He was working on a road- The Marines said that on oc¬ battle ing to keep his news source secret. and Lance Cpl. Walter VV. Eckes, over journalistic ethics. building project seven miles casion they were questioned about Annette Buchanan, 20-year-old He makes the promise because he 20, of New York City. southeast of Da Nang when he military matters but refused to managing editor of the University of deems the information essential to The two met for the first time was captured. answer. They said there were no Oregon's Daily Emerald, goes to his readers. The identity of his news on May 12 in a Communist de¬ He said there were six Viet attempts to force information rial today and faces a possible six- source should also be tention camp where they had been ♦ privileged in¬ Cong and they subdued him and from them. i nth Her formation. led—bound and barefoot—at the bound his hands with rope, then Dodson and Eckes said they charged with contempt of court Journalists have long followed the end of ropes. removed his boots. often discussed the possibility of for refusing to divulge the names of unwritten ethic of protecting news They were suffering from hun¬ After a while, he said, four escaping. seven student marijuana smokers she sources. But they have the legal ger, minor lacerations, Infec¬ of them led him off in a south¬ On June 14 they were being irterviewed for a story on the use of right to do so in only 12 states, tions and near exhaustion when westerly direction. They walked taken to another camp. GLORIFIED OUTHOUSE ?—No, this is a new post the narcotic. including Michigan. And the con¬ they made contact with a Marine for three days and nights until "They said they were going JOURNALISM IS A profession, just stitutionality of several of these laws office, just erected on Shaw Lane at Farm Lane. unit June 20 at An Hoa, 20 Photo by Chuck Michaels they arrived at the detention to take us there to school us as is medicine and law. Neither doc¬ has not been tested. Quite often, miles southwest of Da Nang. camp. about the National Liberation tors nor lawyers are required to dis¬ journalists have served prison sen¬ Dodson said his captors did Front and other things," Dodson close confidential information about a tences for withholding the identity of him not treat roughly during the said. patient or client in court. The infor¬ WANT TROOPS TO STA Y trip and that they gave him rice "I told Eckes we were heading mation they obtain in performing and water. He said they arrived North, toward Da Nang," Dodson their work is privi leged because of the MISS BUCHANAN'S INDICTMENT at the camp in the mountains said. "Then after some time we nature of their work. ' a grand jury is one more chapter on May 9. could even hear the artillery fir¬ This creates a better professional relationship between doctor and pa¬ tient, lawyer and client. It helps both the long fight to legalize the jour- ilists' right to protect confidential Dominicans Fear Pullout an team Eckes, a radio operator with artillery forward observer attached to "Charlie" Com¬ ing and I knew toward Da Nang." Dodson said that we were heading on the SANTO DOMINGO evening perform their work better by increas¬ what ' (UPI)— lie are against the move, results I am going to renew my pass¬ pany, 9th Marine Regiment, was of June 16 he and Eckes were ing the amount of information their More than 75 cent of Do- of the poll showed Sunday, per port to the U.S." hitch-hiking back to his company seated in a circle with three Viet clients are willing to give them. minicans surveyed on the de- The average resident viewed A local drugstore operator felt from regimental headquarters at Cong guards eating rice. He said cision to withdraw the Inter- the move by the Organization of THEIR SITUATION PARALLELS differently. He lamented the the time of his capture on May their captors had left their car¬ ulist's. Ofte alist American Peacekeeping Force American States (OAS) with dis- LAPF's departure, but saidPres- lour 10. bines against a tree about 10 (IAPI ) from this island repub- may, doubt, pessimism and fear. ident-elect Joaquin Balaguer He said three armed Vietna¬ feet away. About 50 per cent of those should have the internal situa¬ mese, whom he thought were "I kept looking over there to¬ questioned said they felt OAS tion under control before the South Vietnamese soldiers, lev¬ ward the carbines, trying to intervention in the Dominican troops pull out. eled rifles at him. figures the distance, how quick revolt 14 months ago was jus¬ Dodd, His A mechanic said, "Thank God W "I was stunned and it was too 1 could jump over there," Dod¬ tified. late to do anything," said Eckes. son said. "For a while I almost The survey was conducted by The Viet backed Cong took his .45-cal. out of it." four reporters in a cross sec¬ they should do is to get more automatic, bound him and took But Dodson said he jumped up tion of neighborhoods in Santo work in the country." him to HJNC T< >N (UPI)—Sen. Klein is on a business trip Jack Anderson. They said Dodd Dodd is that he flew to West a nearby village. and grabbed a carbine. Domingo and outlying districts. These remarks were in sharp He later led toward the J. : "o.'d and h'.s wife of with West Germany, and will not acted as "an errand hoy" for Germany in April, 1964, to was "They looked at me," the ser¬ help Several of the more than 40 contrast to the opinions received south. Two ar 30 years are to testify testify until his return, now ex¬ Klein. Klein. Dodd's defense already has per- days later he reached geant said. "I looked at them. sors interviewed lived in areas in earlier polls. Previously, al¬ the And then they ran." a closed Senate hearing pected in mid-July. Mrs. Dodd, a slight, grey- come out in cross-examination camp where Dodson was held. normally associated with deep most all Dominicans interview¬ res of misconduct against On the completion of the cur¬ haired mother of six, will tes¬ and through David Martin, an anti-American feelings. ed joined with politicians in want¬ lecticut Democrat, rent hearings, thecommitteewill tify briefly today. Her testimony investigative analyst assigned to "A month after they leave we ing the IAPF withdrawn. sstimony of the 59-year- pursue other allegations against will primarily concern three ori¬ the Senator. Itor will virtually com- e first phase of the in- Dodd, including charges that he pocketed $200,000 or more in ental rugs which former aides of Dodd is expected to reject the the senator claim appeared mys¬ accusation that he went to Ger¬ will have fighting again," said one housewife. "We don't like "The decent people do not want them to go," said a peasant, reflecting the change. "It is the Legislature Finished lon. This opening part campaign contributions. teriously at the Dodds'home here many at Klein's behest to praise intervention, but we know it can¬ agitators and politicians, they ;r.a'e EthicsCommittee's deals with IXidd's rela- The whole range of miscon¬ duct charges grew out of a ser¬ critical columns' about toward the end of 1964. his old friend to Germany's high¬ John F. Sonnett, Dodd's chief est officials, including Chancel¬ not be any other way." At first, she and several others want a free hand so they can start it all over again." With MSU's Budget to Julius Klein of Chi- ies of counsel, said Mrs. Dodd will lor Ludwig Erhard and former interviewed refused to believe istered agent for Dodd Military circles predicted the Michigan legislators are going 2—nearly $1.2 million for the L'. West over the past half year by testify that she bought the rugs. Chancellor Konrad Adenaur. the news reports reaching here— withdrawal would start with the business interests. columnists Drew Pearson and into overtime again Wednesday, $4 million Conservation-Fores¬ The key accusation against Klein was alleged to have asked that the fifst of the 8,000 men In the IAPF will begin to leave departure of the U.S. artillery but the MSU budget is already try Building; Dodd t« make the trip to keep and tank companies heavy equip¬ out of the game. him from losing some lucrative before July 1. The lift will fol¬ 3—$1.3 million for the $4.5 ment aboard two ships now en All mention of an MSU law low within 90 days. million food science structure; route to this country. The ships school has been eliminated from Dodd is expected to tell the Said a waiter, "It is just a 4—$2 million for the $5.4 mil¬ are due to arrive Tuesday and the state-wide education appro¬ committee he made the trip as a grandstand play by the U.S. to lion Math and Statistics could begin loading Wednesday. Building; representative of the Senate In¬ help (provisional President Hec¬ priation bill. In the ranks, most of the en¬ If Governor 5 — $1.9 million toward the ternal Security Subcommittee to tor ) Garcla-Godoy save face. Romney approves listed men were accepting the MSU's $55.5 million budget, it building of a new $5.4 million Interview a Russian defector des¬ They will not go." projected departure with dis¬ will go before the Board ofTrus- Administration Building; cribed as a member of a Soviet A man standing beside him belief mixed with cautious opti¬ tees in mid-July for final approv¬ 6—$1.5 million for work on murder apparatus. interjected: "If they do leave, mism. al. It includes $44 million for the $4.3 million library addi¬ Many of the American para¬ the East Lansing campus; $4 tion; troops felt the withdrawal would million for MSU Oakland; $4 7—$480,000 for the renova¬ only be a prelude to their being million for the Agricultural Ex¬ tion of the Kedzie Chemistry shipped to South Viet Nam. periment Station, and; $3 million Building; and The OAS decision to start pull¬ for the Cooperative Extension 8—$1.7 million for a pesti¬ ing out the troops caused little Service. cide research center ($1 million stir among the diplomatc com¬ Student fees and grants are coming from federal funds and munity here. expected to provide an additional the balance from overhead reve¬ $20 million revenue on the East nue to be received from its re¬ Lansing and Oakland campuses, search projects). Not Shot, But MSU will also than one-third of the receive more to The total over capital outlay comes $12 million. Joined with $24 million BERLIN (U PI)--Communist in state and $7 million in federal the regular budget and tuition border Guards Sunday fired about funds fo r capital outlay in state fees, MSU will be spending just 50 shots at a man trying to flee construction projects. short of $100 million during the to West Berlin. The bullets The University will receive: next fiscal year. missed but the would-be refugee 1—$2.1 million toward com¬ was captured, Western police pletion of the $10 million new reported. power plant; It's Picnic Time! .. 355-8252 .. 355-8299 . 355-8311 I CON^iOeR MV BROTHER A. Straightens poet. mam mm Excellent vlEN: LARGE rooms, 1/i block summer opportunity. apartment. Utilities.Couple. 17. Form ol 48. Evades from campus, many extras, good details. 3-6/29 Write Dept. S, 1585 N. High St., Bus line. Center 0 f Okemos. study atmosphere; doubles, John risk (>. F.xists 17. Neuter Columbus, Ohio, 43201. 1-6/27 Available now. ED 2-5112. 18 Keel-billed 7 Slicker IMMEIJlATh OPENINGS for key 3-6/28 singles. 332-0844. 5-6/29 Personal cuckoo DOWN 8. Possessive 20 Among punch and contometers with ex¬ SUMMER APARTMENT, three FURNISHED ROOM: Male senior YES, NEJAC rents TV's for Pen- 1'J. .Strategy 1. Walk in pronoun 2 1 Knight 23. Redolence water 0. territory perience. Apply in person at or four girls. Near campus, or graduate. Single or double, nies a day. Free service and 22 Icelandic 25. Sport shoe 2. In a line 1(1. Repair Kelly Services Inc. 400 S. Wash¬ nicely furnished. $9.00 each per' :• year-old miler turned on the power in the last 200 yards and ter was a sizzling 0:52.6. Steele Th POOL HOURS won by eight yards. His time ATLANTA til—Sandy Koufax In AAV TRYOUTS was 3:56.6. Dvrol Burleson of Eugene, won his 14th gamfe—tops in the major leagues--as the Los FRaNKSiNaTRa :$ Mon.-Thurs. Friday 1 1:30 a.m. - 8 p.m 1 1:30 a.m. - 9 p.m. . (10 p.rn.)* (10 p.nn.)* Angeles Dodgers edged the Braves, 2-1, before 51,275 fans NEW YORK — Bob Steele, NCAA 440 intermediate hurdles "A Trilogy on Love" ComiBiow v Il:30a.m, - 6 p.m. (8 p.rn. !* champ, finished third with a $; Saturday Sunday 1 - 5 p.m. (8 p.nn.)* Coed Wins —the largest crowd ever in At¬ lanta stadium. clocking of 0:50.3 and qualified The Collection Your Horn t? for the United States team here The Creditors Koufax who has lost twice, rTlCHKICOlOR | , hours will extend to later hoi»rs if Saturday in the 79th National *Closing Swarranted by weather and number of swim mers in Golf Crown scattered seven hits and struck out 11. AAU Track and Field Champion¬ ships. The Lover JULY PRODUCTION PARAMOUNT- PlNiviSlON pools. COLUMBUS, OHIO—Joyce Steele will compete in the Shown 2nd at I 1 ;45 Kazmierski, Detroit senior, used CHICAGO (#)—Third baseman British Empire Games July 9. Sunday, June 26 - Monday, June 27 her powerful driving game to win Ron Santo of the Chicago Cubs From there he returns to this 2:00 to 5:00 P.M. the Women's Collegiate Golf suffered a double fracture of country for the dual meet be¬ 2 Complete Shows Room 49 Auditorium MSU Graduate Student Championship here Saturday. Miss Kazmierski was the win¬ his left cheek bone when he was tween the United States and Po¬ ner of the MSU intramural golf hit by a pitch in the first game land at Berkley, Calif., July 16- Everyone Welcome!! Nightly - See It of Sunday's double-header 17, followed bya meet with Russia Mich. Amateur Golf Champ tournament, last spring. against the New York Mets. Santo at Los Angeles July 23-24. Michigan State has no exten¬ will undergo surgery today. It is CHARLEVOI-X (#)—Bob Meyer, the State Amateur which pitted sive Women's golf program and estimated he will be out of ac¬ of East Lansing, is Michigan's two outstaters in the final for no women's team. According to tion for 10 to 12 days. new Amateur GolfChampion.The the first time in 20 years. Women's IM Director Carol Har¬ Santo was hit by a pitch thrown Michigan State graduate student Meyer advanced to the cham¬ ding, Miss Kazmierski had "a by Jack Fisher in the third inn¬ defeated Cliff Taylor of Spring pionship round with a 3 and 1, minimum amount of coaching" ing. He was carried off the field Lake 5 and 4 in the champion¬ victory over 1960 champion Don at MSU. on a stretcher. ship match, here, this afternoon. Stevens of Birmingham, andTay- Dorothy Parker of the physical Santo was playing in his 390th Meyer is a former Miles City lor eliminated Jim Smith of De¬ education department did instruct consecutive game and had ex¬ the newly-crowned champ some¬ champion and was co-medalist troit 3 and 1 in their semifinal tended his hitting streak to 25 with Jim Gillteman of Alma in match. what in play at Forest Akers games with a single In the first Golf Course. inning. Santo was the third player to Javits Call Men '.s IM be hit by a pitch in the first three innings. Chicago outfielder Adolfo Phillips, who had homered Michigan Gov. George W. Rom- For (continued from page I) choice rather than Richard Nixon ney. Softball Info in the first, was hit above the left elbow, also by Fisher, in the "The battle lines are being second. And Mets second base¬ come tomorrow." Representatives of all teams drawn and I am in the fight all entered in the IM summer soft- man Ron Hunt was hit In the Goldwater has said Nixon cur¬ the way so that my party be¬ ball league are requested to call back by a pitch from Curt Sim¬ rently appears to be the leading comes a true challenge to the the Men's Intramural Office at mons in the top of the third. contender for the GOP presi¬ Democrats and so it becomes dential nomination two years 355-5250 today. Games begin to¬ a viable alternative for a na¬ hence and public opinion polls night. tional mandate," Javits said. generally rate him ahead of Javits called Romney a prom¬ ising moderate aspirant but add¬ ed, "He can't be considered a Summer Services serious candidate unless he is * Attend school three quarters and e re-elected." For the first time regular "There are others, of course your college expenses during Catholic services will be held other ...I don't think you can say that quarter. at the Alumni Memorial Chapel the moderates are confined even * Live in free, furnished 1 on campus. to one possibility, to wit Romney Priests at St. John's Student apartments located on 110-ac even though he seems to be the Parish announced that special leading man a t the moment." property with swimming pc permission was granted by the bishop to have mass said there cated four miles from job. for the benefit of the many nuns * Learn while you earn. There • housed in NlcDonel and Phillips dormitories for summer term. openings in several intc.re phases of agri-business. The Andersons of Maumee, Ohio «4Ui4ersons of the nation's are leading agri-busine instituting a unique work pro for college men. Although preference MAUMEE, OHIO will be given to students with agri¬ • cultural background and education, any GRAIN DIVISION student may apply. This will be a continuing program which will en¬ WAREHOUSE MARKET DIVISION able you to work the same quarter FERTILIZER DIVISION each year until you graduate. ENGINEERING DIVISION Applications are being accepted for STEEL FABRICATING DEPARTMENT fall and spring quarters. Our great¬ CONSTRUCTION DEPARTMENT est need is for the fall quarter. FEED MANUFACTURING DEPARTMENT For application forms and additional SPECIALTIES MANUFACTURING DEPT. information, apply immediately to: ANDERSON COB MILLS, INC. Tom Karlv ANDERSON GAROEN CENTER, INC. Placement Bureau-Student St i .• Builtlu SIGN UP AT THE PLACEMENT BUREAU - By July 2nd. 6 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Monday, June 27, 1966 AMA Head Backs Medicare CHICAGO (UPI)--Dr. JamesZ. Appel, speaking on the opening between the patient and the phy- participate in the ranks of both strict compliance is difficult, Appel, outgoing president of the day of the AMA's 115th annual sician. It is now a political is- political parties and have a voice consideration might be given so American Medical Assn., Sunday convention, said that since Medi- sue, the merits of which will in the determination of party pol- that those who need hospital care warned militant foes ofMedlcare care placed a "foot in the door" not be determined solely on sci¬ within the AMA they will "only toward government control and entific grounds but i Invite hostility" from the mass regulation of health care, "ef- getting appeal by individuals s own membership sitting in the of Americans a statement. . . (waiving). . . any by denying patients forts are being made to open the at all well informed on quality >ats of Congress," he said, claim for benefits under Medi- care under the new law. door wider and wider until com- health care," Appel said. Appel warned physicians to care." Appel, who is openly brand- plete socialization of health care "If the medical profession "restrain any inclinations ed an "appeaser" by some phy- will be upon us. wishes to contain or roll back denly raise their usual fees" slcians unreconciled to the Medi- 'The health care of the people the present socialistic trend in the start of Medicai Doesn't See r care Act, which goes into effect is no longer a personal matter s country, its members n he said, "under July 1, told the AMA's policy making house of delegates: _ ^ Medicare, the patient's low in¬ come should not be taken into Tax Hike Now "Refusal of care, or depri¬ WASHINGTON' (UPI)--Com- consideration in estimating the vation of the patients'legal rights will only invite hostility for the profession in the very people who Nixon Urges AMA usual and present customary fee. . TThe usual fee for services merce Secretary John T. Connor saic* Sunday it was still "an open are the only ones who can you render to non—beneficiary pa- question whether the adminis— change tients should prevail." tratlon would ask a the present erroneous course of the nation. On To Political Power Appel also: —Criticized the Food and Drug year. Asked during a television in- "Eve:, under the harmful at- CHICAGO (UPI)--Former Vice Nixon said that he was in fa- Administration for "precipitous terview about his recent pre- >sphere created by Medicare, President Richard Nixon told vor of "free medicine" as op¬ action taken (and) non-scientific diction that there would be no tax pression's first concern physicians Sunday that extension posed to socialized medicine. 'judgments made" in enforcing increase unless there were wide- the patient. It must" 0f Medicare to MORE EFFICIENCY IN LIBRARY—Karen Vollman, St. Clair Shores se e to render the best qual- persons under 65 But he predicted further steps federal legislation, and question- ranSing changes in the economy, is inevitable "unless the make- demonstrates the complex Collectadata machine, which is part of the new e that is possible, ' Appel ^ toward socialization by a "one- lng "the competency of practic- Connor said he still thought a tax Up 0f the present Congress Is party Congress." lng physicians to pass judgment hike unlikely this yea- su^erized library facilities. Photo by Tony Feri ————~~————— changed." In a television appearance on elther ^ safet>' efficacy Connor added, however, that Nixon urged the American of the drugs they prescribe." President Johnson has made it early Sunday, Nixon said the only Medical Assn. to "redouble its clear he would "take whatever way to bring about peace in Viet —Warned against allowing ra¬ SCIENCE VS SHAKESPE efforts" litical force. to become a major po¬ Nam is to convince aggressors that aggression won't work. cial or religious discrimination fiscal if this measures situation are necessary looks as if it within the medical profession or Nixon, speaking to a meeting Nixon repeated his view that might get out of hand." of officers of state medical as- within hospitals. "Race should While still concerned about heavier bombing of military in- not be a criteria on which mem- sociations, said the AMA should inflationary pressures, Connor Computer Used In Library stallations in North Viet Nam , be y,, oiauauons in rxortn viet mm bership hip in •medical medical societies, said the economy had t discouraged by the would convince the Viet Cong "settled passing of the Medicare bill in physician privileges in hospitals down" during the last three that they could not win the war- nor patient assignment to hos- the face of protests by many months, as shown in the slower and thereby lead them to nego- pltal facilities is based. rise of consumer prices in May Bv DON SOCKOL with rising circulation. The dit- $1.22 n illlion. growth of the Library I am against u , Physicians, through the AMA, tiate." "In those communities where and slackening retail sales. State News Staff Writer ference in costs of the two sys¬ Chapin would also like to any fee for students," Chapin should go on to exert their in- tems is pictured below: charge non-L!niversity users a said. fluence In other areas of Ameri- The computer has finally fee for use of the Library. This SQUARE SHOOTING "I view the Library as a serr caught Chaucer Newi up Freud with Shakespeare, and Sir Isaac Chapin pointed out another ad- vantage of the computer. When service is provided at no cost now. vice and something the Univer- sity must provide as part of the cans politics, Nixon said. "We need the brains of this profession in both parties," he Get a KEEPS THE PRICE RIGHT! It begar. ordered to do so, the computer "In spite of the tremendous student's education," he said. said. spring win Prlnt a report noting which ttUDAS ■— — September, 1968, 11 the books bQoks are WE'RE SQUARE And in the MSU Library will be com¬ frequently used nd which are not being circu- You'll Like It! puterized along with the stu¬ lated. Extra copies of high-de- RESEARCHERS POOL EFFORTS dents,who use them. FAMOUS MIDAS GUARANTEE About one-quarter of the Li¬ mand volumes can then be order¬ ed and little-used books can be for as long as you own your brary's 1,250,000 volumes are New Center B SQUARE car. If replacement is ever already being handled by the com¬ put in storage. necessary, you pay only a serv- Another feature being added puterized method, according to to the Library will be a mag¬ Richard E. Chapin, director of libraries. netic "door check," Chapin said. By BEVERLY TWICHELL There will also be special rooms business and financial affairs, FAST Installation FREE This is the way thenewsystem Each book will have a magnetic State News Staff Writer for offices- sPray testing, bio- and the contractors have been MIDAS Till device in it that will lock the assays, material storage and cold working on change orders to re- I Flpis • Shockl • IrMtl works. The library clerk places gvenieen MSU departments DEAL . . if the book has not storage. duce construction costs to $541,- the book "pocket card" and the pooling their knowledge and "Such a setup would provide been checked out properly. This 500. 2209 E. Michigan student's identification card into "battle of bugs"— the most efficient means of con- The will eliminate the time consum- buildings are scheduled to Phone 4S7-3~41 a data transmitter. The trans¬ Pesticide Research Center, ducting research on diversified be completed March 15. Plans action is aut< lly"recorded Ingemploye checker at the door. Other Steps arp also hf>incr also beintr center may we" make but related pest problems," Guy- for the financing and construc- 3800 S. Logan or. tape and the card returned its pocket in the book. When the taken to improve the Librarv the Pesticic*e re" er said. "Specialized and expen- tion of the main building of the Expert brake service at S. Logan St. Shop' Phone 393-1230 ^ rhl search in the Midwest," said sive equipment can be provided " ' " - center have not been finalized. book is returned the card Is iess cost un£jer .gain placed In the transmitter Entomology Dept. and director present conditions where sev- which cancels the checkout en- construction and will be com¬ of the research program. eral laboratories must be equip- WHY SHOULD YOU PAY IOC A COPY FOR pleted in the summer of 1967. It will be utilized as srdisciplinary ped," he explained, The computer prints notices to graduate students. a library for appr'oach research enables The center has actually been matrons whose books are over¬ scientists of various areas to in existence for about three Graduate-level reference 1, due and automatically assesses . . . . , battle pests whilemeasuringside years. Some 20 staff members ' terials will be increasingly INFERIOR COPIES ? ... . j.j It has even been adapted 3nimalS' Cr°pS> S°U ;rom , . var'°us on . , departments „. have . . . _ . demand here, here, as as the cradu the graduate i timeclock for Library and water. been working group is growing in percentage . research prob- ployee: "Growers, chemical compan- lems in 15 on-campus and two Use of a computer makes Li- flgUr6S faSt6r tha" '*ny ^ group on campus. MSU 1 ies and others will get fast, off-campus locations. ThePesti- brary operations faster and workable answers to pest prob- cide Research Center will pro- about 8,000 graduate students. cheaper, said Chapin. lems," Guyer said. vide one large centralized facij- An extensive remodeling is "The old methods are just not " ITie program will be housed also to be done on the current lty to house the program, goir.g to work any more," Chap¬ in a $2.2 million central facility V.I. Vandenberg, physical plant in said. building. By eliminating wide haiiwavQ anH maHntr ni-hcr- ai t0 be located south of the Plant construction superintendent, said He pointed that the number „„ Science Research Building. It is that construction should begin of books in the Library has in- top priority item on the Uni- this week on a greenhouse and creased 25 per cent over the ersity budget." an environmental control struc- ^ made available, Chapin said, three years. The center will include green-- ture t ; he took He also noted over as head sm {urther 1 ^lu A q houses, laboratories houses, laboratories and and control- control- (headhouse). A precontract bulletin was of the MSU Library in 1959, the number of books t lrculated science complex , *T on the south- . , led environment chambers for signed last week for $558,972 has doubled. ern part of the campus is being planned. Roughly 900,000 books were MSL' librarians are also seek¬ taken out of the Library during ing to eventually set up an auto¬ Closed For the past year. In addition, there mation system for the 200,000 is t least a one to one ratio of periodicals, brochures, pam- Resurfacing and Remodeling books used in the Library to we will books actually taken en out,uui he ue said. saiu P^ets etc*« which are sent to the The turnstile exit from the CaJT'^USjjf^ In additionyear. Library has tabulated about 1.5 million turns during the past year, Chapin said. struction to special budgets, the overall library budget this year is ex¬ con¬ OPEN Fri. July 8th at 9 A.M. In addition to the pected to top J2 million with computer cards grants. Three years ago it was Bowl in Air-Conditioned Comfort being placed in the books, each student must pick up a Good Food Billiards Lounge matching card with his name and student number on it at the Secretary Hurt Library. Only about half of these cards have been picked up,Chap¬ In Car Accident HOLIDAY LANES in said. New students may orth of Frandor Phone 487-3731 begin pick¬ ing up their cards said. Books Friday, he |njure<^&oFriday collision car already being pro¬ cessed by computer cannot be Hope and Harrison Roads, East Lansing Police said. BASIC OUTLINES taken out without these cards. The computerized system will cost the Library about $35,000 Dorothy A. Ross of 5251rving- ton Ave., Lansing, was driving 1 year for checking books Mt. Hope when out. This is more expensive than the present $30,000 outlay, but bound car driven by L Shafferi 44, 0f 8889 Weston, Mor- James AIL, Nat. Sci., SOC, HUM, it has two First, advantages. is about four times encl made a turn tQ Harrison Don't settle for inferior, hard to read copies. COURSE OUTLINES it Road MrS- RoSS told pollce sh as fast, said Dale H. Pretzer, did not have time to stop, S.B.S.'s assistant to the director of li¬ braries. Mrs- Ross was treated at Spar- New XEROX 720 gives you Second, the cost will remain steady as the size of the Library r°w Hospital for bruises to her right arm and shoulder. Her MATH 108,109,111,112,113 collection increases. Up to now, circulation costs have increased daughter, Barbara, 18, treated and released at was also Sparrow. excellent DRY copies in 4 seconds. CHEM101,102, 111, 112 *cn °^h STAT 121,123, MATH 122 published by T.agle Press Bator Opticians 223 Abbott (Next to State Theater) * » Sunglasses Repairs while you v available Campus Music Shop only ai ^^tudent ook tore Look for Beaumont Tow and Sparty FREE PARKING IN LARGE LOT AT THE REAR OF THE STORE