Partly Cloudy . . . History. STATE MEWS and warmer. High in is the science of MICHIGAN _ Ifl'e the 80's. never happens twice. —Valery STATE UNIVERSITY East Lansing, Michigan Wednesday, June 29, 1966 Vol. 59, Number 6 COUP OUSTS ARGENTINE Military LEADER Junta New Id Fears Peronists Offered BUENOS AIRES (UPI) —A military junta On Draf Tuesday deposed Argentine President Arturo Illia for being too soft on Peronist extrem¬ ists and Communists. Retired Gen. Juan Pentagon Report Carlos Onganio was installed to succeed him. Due Thursday suspended diplomatic relations and WASHINGTON (UPI) — House called the coup a rupture of members tossed new ideas Tues¬ constitutional processes. The day into the bubbling stew of de¬ fate of a U.S. loan to help pull mands for Selective Service re¬ Argentina out of an $S00 million forms. One suggested that young men have the choice of enlisting U.S. C hole Illia, was a in doubt. 65-year-old former for two years or being drafted country doctor, left the big pink for three. As the House Armed "Services FINED $300 FOR CONTEMPT Argentine Casa Rosada. the Argentine presidential p a 1 a c e, Tuesday Committee heard repeated morning and pushed his way charges of inequities in the pres¬ ent draft system, Rep. F. Ed¬ TROOPS GUARD CASA ROSADA--Army troops set Relations through a crowd of supporters ward Hebert, D-La., observed that "it's easy to make changes, but what changes?" Coed Editor up a from recoilless rifle in the plaza across the street the Casa Rosada, the presidential palace in Buenos Aires. A three-man military junta deposed Presidpnt Arturo Illia in a bloodless coup Tuesday WASHINGTON United States (UPI) - The deplored the mili¬ shouting, "Death to dictators!" and "Death to evil Red-eyed, he drove off in a car. military men." Troops ringed the palace and a Some long - awaited answers (UPI)—Coed were subject to the same rules and installed retired General Juan Carlos Ongania 75 mm recoilless rifle was aimed will come from the Pentagon EUGENE, Ore. tary coup in Argentina Tuesday UPI Wirephoto _ as other citizens in the absence President. at the front door. befor< editor Annette Buchanan, who suspended diplomatic rela¬ as eils before and Thursday, when it unveils of a shield law. He said the is¬ kept her promise of secrecy to tions with the new regime. A government official inUru- the committee details of a mili- of freedom of the press would go into tary manpower study ordered in informants, Tuesday was con- sue U.S. Embassy officials inBue- guay said Illia should be raised before the state exile there, 1964 by President Johnson. victed of contempt of court for nos Aires were instructed to have MSU legislature. Ongania, who resigned a s com- Programs The report, climaxing i refusing to identify students in- no formal contact with the mili- "It was astounding to me to than a year of work by more than volved in her "scoop" involving hear editor say traditions of tary junta that suddenly and for- mander of the army last spring 100 staff aides, was expected to campus narcotics. an cibly ousted President Arturo in a dispute with Illia, was named the press should rise above the reject the once-considered Pert Annette cupped her head Illia, president. The junta suspended law," declared Frye, referring tion that the draft system might be abolished sometime; decade. But it probably will pro¬ in her hands when Lane County Circuit Judge Edward nounced his decision. Leavy an¬ The jurist to testimony Monday by several editors. "The case before the doesn't Involve freedom of Grow Overseas The State Dept. In a statement Argentina's government down to expressed regret and "concern the provincial level, over the displacement of a demo- In Washington, Sen. Jacob Ja- cratic government and the rup- vits, R-N.Y., who visited Ar- court pose ways of making the induc- imposed a $300 fine but with- verslty of Colombia in the de¬ tion chances of various youths as held execution pending appeal of the press. It involves the law of ture of constitutional processes gentina recently, said the coup the land and dignity of the court. -iter velopment of two agricultural in a member of the Organization was "a tragic development for nearly equal as possible. the case. "She has violated the contempt colleges at Medellin and Pal- Rep. Otis G. Pike, D-N.Y., "I didn't expect anything," de- Michigan State is sys of American States (OAS)." Argentina and the hemisphere." statute by disobeying a lawful companion move, the de- Argentine Ambassador to the told UPI many colleagues liked clared the 20-year-old managing order of the court. This i ; in- ally developing its international It continued to involve itself in In a his idea of giving youths a choice editor of the University of Ore¬ volves only whether ai order dimension. International programs in Brazil, partment said other OAS mem- United States, Norbert N. Bar- renechea, resigned in Washing¬ ■ the of induction for three years gon's student newspaper when ,„lated."' To date, MSU has cooperative where it helped establish a school bers would be consulted of this court has been violated." ton "in solidarity" with Illia. enlistment for two. asked if she anticipated the ver¬ of business administration. dict. She then left the courthouse Miss Buchanan twice refused to programs underway with 13 in- a ted developments, Nor- In Moscow, the Argentine im- Rep. Charles E. Bennett, D- disclose the names to a grand sjitutions in Asia, Africa and in Viet Nam, MSU helped the - ' ' t and the Fla., a commiti member and with her attorney. ANNE TTE BUCHANAN government train civil service bert M. Barrenechea, Argentine bassador a1 wounded veteran of World W; Leavy*s decision came after jury—the second time after be- Latin America, and has acontln- ambassador to the United States, government press reported the II, won a promise of hearings on day and . half i i-jtiry trial throughout the nation. Oregon has ing ordered to do so by Leavy. However, her attorney claimed uing contact and association with and police administrators many other and submitted his resignation to the coup with a description of On- a bill he has introduced that would rhich attracted support for the n0 law recognizing the journalis- new government ganio as a "fierce anti-Commu- university junior from Seattle tic tradition. her case should be decided on More than 300 faculty i In Congress, Sen. Jacob K. nist." make better use of poorly edu¬ i long or short- Pakistan to help establish i cated young men. "The c t finds the J of the circumstances which show- t>ers are n Javits, R-N.Y., called the coup The military junta was made term overseas professional as¬ academies for rural develop- Under Bennett's plan, the arm¬ Oregon was defied and defeated ed she was innocent. "a tragic development for Ar- up of Lt. Gen. Pascual AM Pi- "Any contempt," said Johnson, signments to assist in develop¬ ed services would draft men who Pravda Hits Ban by the action of the respondent, intoned the jurist, who also could "has been purged by her appear¬ ment of emerging nations. There MSU engineer¬ gentina and the hemisphere." He advocated an immediate meeting starini, 50, army commander in chief; Rear Adm. Benigno failed educational standards and The number has grown consid¬ ing professors in India, audio¬ here and her Varela, Navy commander in give them special schooling. On Commie Visas have imposed a six months' jail ance she promised to keep her erably since 1951 when five MSU visual specialists in Brazil, of OAS ministers to work out a Rep. Chet Holifield, D-Calif., term. unified .policy toward the new chief, and Air ForceCommander Her word has been her faculty members crossed the Pa¬ members of the College of Agri¬ proposed that state Selective Ser¬ MOSCOW (UPI)—Pravda said Leavy's verdict came after a secret. ship. Their des¬ regime in Buenos Aires. Brig. Adolfo Teodoro Alvarez. bond." cific on a troop culture faculty in Taiwan and vice directors be directed to set Tuesday U.S. State Dept. refusal morning session of closing argu- tination was Okinawa, and theii Costa Rica, and education pro- Javits said the United States Military fears that ousted die- Editors testified in behalf of should withhold immediate tator Juan D. Peron, 75, might uniform procedures for all their grant visas to foreign Com- ments in which Defense Attorney assignment was to help estab- feSsors in Guatemala and Mex- Miss Buchanan that if she broke recognition of the junta to avoid return to power from his Spanish local draft boards. He charged niks is munists is part of a campaign Arthur Johnson and Dist. Atty. lish a new university for the iC0> of "intimidation, police repris- .William Frye—a member of the the tradition she might be drum- the sort of mistake he said oc- exile on a wave of economic that 85 per cent of present Ryukyus. Twenty-seven University de- med out of the business. But, curred in the Dominican Repub- discontent was primarily respon- screening and classifying is per- als and terror" against the U.S. newspaper staff when he attend¬ MSU was one of the first Amer- the jurist suggested the court partments are presently involved lic when of military sible for the coup, the fourth in formed not by businessmen and Communist party. The foreign ed the University—hammered ican universities to sign a con- in international programs, a group points of law and merits of A would be condoning extra-gov¬ officers overthrew the elected Argentina and the 35th in Latin other community leaders on local Communists were to have attend- ernmental activity if it failed to tract for an overseas project. It "We are going to continue all board but by cle: government Of Juan Bosch. ( nued on page 2) cooperated with the National Uni- 0f our overseas projects," said grade civil servants." Frye argued that reporters find Annette in contempt. Ralph H. Smuckler, acting dean of international programs, ' "That's the general picture of U.S. Troops Olin, Married Students MSU's international programs. "We'll strengthen som# and loosen others," he continued, all depends on the needs of seeking nations." From Santo May Get Medicare Money a provision called "Title House Bill 4003, which deals According to Smuckler, the present trend of international programs is towards research SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican pletion expected Republic (#)—To the sprightly months. strains of "Carolina in the Morn- itial There were no hitches in the in¬ two-day phase of the evac- which gives each state and county with qualifications of the indigent, activity, with a lessened empha- ing," the first units of the U.S. that will involve the bat- the power to define who will be is pending in the legislature this sis on technical assistance, in armed forces in the final with- able to qualify on the basis of eek. emerging nations. drawal from the Dominican Re- talion s 458 men. U.S. 6th Marine units occupied Olin Health Center may get financial need, as well as age Cooke said he believes the "We're working with the people public : through the federal gov¬ 1 nearby beachhead when they funds and physical disability. question on student eligibility has directly than we did be- day. irst landed in this country, ex- ernment's Medicare Program. : it stands since never been raised, and that it f0re," Smuckler said. The Landing Ship Tank Waldo James W. Cooke, administra- June 24, would include anyone _ _ should perhaps be asked in Wash- been urging the federal govern- County loaded with Jeeps, trucks actly 14 months ago Tuesday. tor at Olin, said Tuesday that ' below the poverty income level ment to support such projects, md 96 men from the 1st Bat- Evacuation of the battalion is e: married students with families of J3 Q00. Asked if he thought married and only recently has Congress 320th Artillery, sailed Pected to be completed Wednes- may be eligible for medical care Cooke said anyone who would studems and their dependents shown any interest." for Ft. Bragg, N.C., headquar- ^y- Lt. Gen. Arturo alves da Silva funds under certain sections of qUalif7^under the Michigan provi- wQuid fQr Medlcare Rob_ The most recent researchpro- Braga of Brazil, commander of ert N. McKerr, administrative Ject conducted by MSU is In Bal- the inter-American peace force, asslstant in the Social Service carce, Argentina. I ni t ia t ed In Thus began the dismantling of called the departure "an historic Dept., said, "I see no rea- I960, the project is coordinated nter-American moment in the forces mission" son why the married student sup- by Kirkpatrick Lawton, professor the S.OUU-t tore in a farewell to the departing porting a family would not be of The science. sponsored by the peace soil project, force that helped Rusk Tells covered under the 'need clause' if qualified as medically Indigent. Agency f or International De- constitutional government long-troubled Caribbean country. this troops. Across the Haina River, at the The withdrawal will be carried sugar mill docks, a knot of kids His being a college student should (continued 7) with screamed "Go Home Yankees." U.S. Won't have no bearing." This would broaden the scope on page out Jn various stages CANBERRA, Australia (UPI)— over to North Viet Nam or trying of Medicare to encompass all health centers in Voters Test RFK's Power the Secretary of State Dean Rusk to make a deal with Hanoi, campus told the SEATO Council of Mini- An American spokesman spok< Michigan. sters meeting Tuesday America meanwhile said there had beei McKerr said that to be eligi¬ would not withdraw from Viet great progress among Asian ble the student would fall in the nominee of Democratic other judges declined. The s NEW YORK (UPI)—Sen. Robert The then campaigned w;tM Silver- Nam until the Viet Cong quit tions during the past year. $3,100 below income category. or F. Kennedy's campaign to wrest regular i throughout M a ; §a t tan, He said there are also property c;ntrol of ^ "smostpow- _ scores of strlet corn- . specifications and personal cir- erful Qernocratic machine from the Republican nomination, and speaking in one of the worst be taking great risks If it moved desire among the Asian nations cumstances taken into account. -parnmany Hall got the acid test Kennedy claimed this smelled er rallie: heat waves in a decade. in to support North Viet Nam. It at the conference to stand on Cooke said that Olin is aware Tuesday_.at the polls. - J~' " n obvious reference to Red their 0 of "possibilities" but has not Kennedy called for an lnvesti- Qver 100 party nominations He said that whereas ; year made any specific provisions. were decided by voters in state- election to the Senate two years gation of surrogate bench patron- None of the other nations at- the U.S. and South Viet Nam He feels that all medical care ge by the state legislature. Sil¬ ag0 wjde primarieSl but interest was ago, Kennedy abandoned his verman suggested the Surrogate tending the 11th meeting of the stood alone against the VietCong, facilities be prepared to riveted on a race for the Demo- tralist position in intra-party Southeast Asia Treaty Organi- now five nations had committed make internal policy changes courts be combined with state cratic nomination for oneofMan- battles in New York and laid his troops against the Communists. supreme courts. zatlon (SEATO), however, volun- the many facets of Medicare be- hattan's two surrogates, a judge- prestige on the line by picking a teered to send any more troops of the eight SEATO members, come refined, reform candidate to oppose Klein. Kennedy admitted it would be ship which controls rich patron¬ "a close race" but said he BUS DRIVER TAKES TIME —Bus driver Ron Sande- to aid the United States. three—the United States, New legislation is passed, a low- Kennedy got State Supreme age in the form of guardianship, fer takes time each day to help Mary Butler, a blind Rusk said there had been no Zealand and Australia—have range program would find the referee and administrator ap¬ Court Justice Samuel J. Silver¬ student, from the bus across busy Shaw Lane to signs of any leader of signifi- flatly declared themselves active man to go on the ballot after two (continued on page 10) North Case where she lives. Photo by Russel I Steffey cance in South Viet Nam going military participants. (continued on page 5) pointments. Ifc Michigan Stat( News, East l.ansi:: . Michigan Wednesday, June 29, 1966 DON SOCKOL STATE NEWS :8r was ft Budget column—Today's column written by Drew Pearson's If ten There is Indeed here. You something rot- You might that Denmark had say, no Figure and rightly so, planetarium housing is more expensive Danish housing. But public funds than MSU about 95 cents year, or 32 . a student a cents a term, to te, Don Sockol. How come Denmark, with a in 1900. are not used for student housing, operate. This comes out to about navy and army, customs, public But not one penny of MSU's Going a step farther, if it cost $35,000 in toto. When the MSU budget was fi¬ projects and a population of over $97 million in public funds and Danes $19 million to operate an In summation, I must introduce EDITORIALS nally decided, University offi¬ 20 million needed one-fifth of the tuition was used to build our entire country of 20 millions, it grave doubts that MSU's money cials complained bitterly it was cost it takes to operate a single planetarium. should, by comparison, only cost is being spent thriftily, not enough. university? You might say that student Newspapers Don't Need dents They tearfully assessed stu¬ an extra $1.7 million in Library Receives tuition to make up for the dif¬ ference. The Board of Trustees charg¬ Lansing Snow Job ed "political collusion and ma¬ neuvering" between the governor and legislature. Historical Writings "There's something rotten In the state of Denmark," they A collection of historical writ¬ ters are numerous photographs, seemed to say. ings from a former Lansing man and Russian and Finnish postal I decided to get to the bottom who was in Russia in 1916 was cards. -.c a ♦ c:IW to reporters, of it. recently contributed to the MSU "This is one of our most valu¬ 't to-- !ong for the word to After spending days investigat¬ library. able recent accessions," Cain n th'-c . gh the ranks of Lan- ing the local scene I came up Mrs. Eleanor B. Waldo has said, "and we are pleased that !. 1 00-ci* ^ emp'o/ees: with nothing. It was then that the Mrs. Waldo presented these p .your mouth shut. All infor- deposited papers of her late hus¬ weak link in the chain revealed papers to us so that students ■ s to be channeled through te band, Mortimer A. Waldo, with itself to me. the University's historical col¬ of current history may examine .-•> occasional "Denmarkl" I jumped and lections, Marvin R. Cain, curator them." soertdi-g fode-- forays into Lan- cried one morning, hitting my of manuscripts said. The collection will be available oper, :• reoorters have had head against the top bunk. to students at all levels of study cooperation from city em- * tr.-ing.tp sno*. Waldo, a Lansing business man If there's something rotten In PHOTO EXHIBIT —A after it has been cataloged, said We don't want to see this public exhibition of profession¬ since 1931, served as a repre¬ al Richard Denton, collector of his¬ But rore importantly, the the state of Denmark, go to Den¬ photography from the traveling loan collection of sentative of the Y.M.C.A. in Rus¬ mark and find out what it is, I the Professional Photographers of America is now torical manuscripts for the sum- r irg newspopei alreadytoo sia from 1916 to 1918, caring opr. public meetings and thought. on view in the State News Photographic Dept., 301 for prisoners of the Central • ease' for its coverage of Student Services. Tony Ferrante, News photographer, The Library has need for other I decided to fly to Denmark. Powers in prisoner of war camps. is shown hanging one of the prints. collections of this type. Unlike polit .-^--would, because of But halfway out over the Atlan¬ In 1918, he was appointed vice Photo other university libraries they do ;po'istic position, have even tic, I discovered I had missed by Chuck Michaels counsul in Helsingfors, Finland, entlve *o give its reporters not purchasecollectionsandmust the plane, so I returned to cam¬ for the U.S. Dept. of State. r" thorough, professional re- depend on contributions. Anyone pus and did my research in the Waldo's letters to his family "Stateman's Yearbook," to be knowing of such material could Murray Aw • thb w colors, Max. And during these years form the bulk contact the dept. of Historical found in the MSU Library. of the material acquired by the Collections at the Library, phone ed the flag down, Wanting to be fair in my com¬ University. Included with the let¬ 353-1737. you do that, we'll parison, I could not match Den¬ mark of today with MSU. has So I devised seven a That leaves four. Four times 15, plan. Denmark letters. MSU has three. Top I. Murrav. nrofessor Dairy provide funds funds for his college for his college H Honor. m U* III llvl * t w the average credit load per term, Donald L. Murray, professor provide is 60. of dairying, was named last night Then, adding 6, the number as the nation's outstanding Exten¬ of b—s in Set For Walkout a six-pack, I came Romney, Nixon Confer sion dairyman at the award ban- retail customers each morning up with 66. Subtracting this from the current year of 1966, I came quet of the American Dairy Sci- before attending classes. ence Assn. in Corvallis, Ore. up with 1900. He received a plaque anda$1,000 mercial da: WASHLNGTON (UPI)—TheMa- issued the call to 35,300 union In the year 1900pDenmark had he attended Kansas State Uni- chinists Union alerted Its members, mostly airline me- Silent After JC Meet check. mem- about 21 million people. MSU has - about 36,000 today. Murray has been in dairy edu- versity, Manhattan, as a grad- bers on five major U.S. airlines chanlcs, for a possible strike that From catlonal work for 29 years, the "ate assistant and received his Tuesday to be prepared to walk would affect virtually every com- public funds and student 1 deled, "We talked about tuition, MSU will operate on a last 20 of them at Michigan State. M.S. degree in dairy production, off their jobs July 8 if there is mercial airport in the nation. For 15 years hehascoordinat- Murray then returned to North no "major toward "We are still trying to settle ii..'s weather, too," budget of about ,$97 million this contract dispute, laughed aloud when a ed the Extension program for the Dakota agricultural college in settlement of this dispute without Interrupting year. and served as an Exten- P. L. (Roy) Siemiller, presi- the work," he said. "We want a MSU Dairy Dept. asked,. "Did you two In 1900, Denmark operated on a Murray was active in bringing sion dairyman there until 1946 dent of the International Asso- decent settlement, not a strike." hicl. one; was to head the total budget, including defense, about the when he came to East Lansing, ciation of Machinists (IAM) The airlines involved are :et....?" Neither he nor commerce, roads, Danish pastry uniform dairy inspection code United, Trans World, Eastern, said a word in reply. subsidies, etc., of $19,125,426. under the enforcement of the Northwest and National. Argentine Michigan Dept. of Agriculture rather than many city health de¬ Would-Be E A "unless union a statement said major movement can be achieved through negotiations that Senate Auto Bill on»: n_ed from page I partments. In recent months, he has worked with other agencies still under way at the labor de¬ Of partment, the union members will Negroes in conducting meetings to explain the new regulations to dairymen stop work at 6 a.m. local time throughout Michigan. Friday, July 8. Blocked In House He was active in organizing the Michigan Dairy Memorial 1955 LOS ANQELES(UPI)—Herman Lee Henry, 41, was convicted today for his part in master- Negroes by selling them poison- ed gelatine. Henry de denied the charges. He President Johnson has urged that the machinists and the air- lines accept a settlement pro- WASHINGTON (UPI) ~ The The Senate Friday unanimously minding a "diabolical plan" to claimed, in that the plan posed by a presidential emer- ummerce Committeere- passed a bill to compel auto mak- $70,000. The earnings from the kill the e s U.S. Negro popu- conceived by Roderick Duff, gency boardheadedbySen. Wayne : sed Tuesday to accept a Sen- ers to comply with mandatory funds are used to provide annual lation by poisoning foodstuff to president of the Greater Los Morse, D-Ore. •c—p.sssc-d auto safety bill as a federal safety standards for all scholarships for a dozen or more olj w them . at a discount. Angeles • - Citizens Council. - Three •*"- weeks ago, Labor Secre- ' >t;ti:tc for a measure of its cars to be sold In the United worthy dairy students at MSU. Super Judge Maurice T. defendant claimed he tary W. Willard Wirt'z Invited States. merely went along with the plan both sides to Washington for Murray has also participated in many MSU Extension programs see if Duff was connected with negotiations centered on the spe- 1ns . !. -,!u committee voted to The Senate bill directs the sec- and dairy organizations In the mit murder, termed it "a dia- the Ku Klux Klan so he could cial panel's recommendations, a drafting a separate bill. reury of commerce to set in- bolical plan, well preconceived "expose this organization for with which neither union i standards—based on pre- The national award was what it was." agement expressed satisfaction. . n;i : Harley O. Staggers, sent knowledge—by Jan. 31,1967. pre¬ sented to He also maintained that Duff Since then, talks have plodded I>A. \\i., said its final resem- They probably would apply to Murray after his selec¬ to the Senate measure 1968 tion by a committee from more The judge added that the Sun had offered him $10,000 to kill along with the Federal Mediation models, - uki than 25 nominees from other Valley, Calif., welder's plan was Rev. Martin Luther King. Board and Assistant Labor Sec- depend on actions still to be It orders him to issue re- Duff denied Henry's charges, by th< committee. Staggers "BBci s 3. The plaque and check the product of a "sick mind." retary James J. Reynolds. vised, tougher standards—based "Progress has been very that | of the , . were presented by the DeLaval However, he added, he did r new research—a year later. — Sion will be offered Co., a dairy supply firm. slow," a department spokesman ients to the rough draft The Senate also passed a sep¬ 1,200-acre North point where he could not coop- the undercover agents' tape re- said. House with his counsel at the cording statements by Henry oi Disagreement over proposed arate measure authorizing a $375 million program to spur state and lining his plan. wage increases, and fringe bene¬ fore entering North Dakota State fits are at the center of the dis¬ local highway and driver safety Henry also had been accused "We College at Fargo. The home farm tried to solicit three persons, of possession of brass knuckles. pute. pr°srams- A machinists' walkout would Staggers indicated a settle¬ affect 60 per cent of all com¬ ment was being worked out In a mercial airline flights in the ney's office, in the plot to kill dropped. Jurisdictional dispute with the country. He s nd he htid hoped his group House Public Works Committee, Poles Licensed IT IS! HE SENT ME A LITTLE Siemiller said the responsi¬ ..,;;ld finish its work this week, which has already approved is N / IT LOOKS LIKE \ BlrtCH-BARK CANOE FROM CAMP! bility for any strike would rest r cu:.ceded it was a "wild own highway-driver safety bill. To Build Fiats f uIhAT<5\ S0METHIN6 FROM I HE SAit> HE MADE IT HIM6ELF... with "the short-sighted men who (THAT ?J y . LINUS... direct the affairs of these car¬ He said his committee had TURIN, Italy (UPI) — The Fiat riers." agreed to work on legislation em¬ Co. has given Poland license to The 1AM president said the bracing auto safety, research and build Fiat automobiles in that five airlines netted YOUR OPPORTUNITY TO ENTER THE FIELD more than national registration of bad driv¬ country. The agreement is the $200 million in 1965. "They are ers — but not highway-driver first between the company and enjoying the greatest prosperity OF MENTAL HEALTH safety programs. This would cor¬ Poland since the beginning of in their history, "he said. "There respond to the division In the two World War II, when the Poles is no question here of ability to Senate bills. stopped producing Fiats. pay. The issue is whether the one ■ : the largest and SOMETIMES I THINK Y I HAVE cBoah. . employes deserve to share in the try. In ,ts search for ATTENTION New Students and Old Friends I DONT DB£RV£ ' OFTEN THOUGHT A Nice 0KOTHER THE 5AME prosperity In their Industry and ^ke greater use of in- how much." Let's Oct Acquainted... . LIKE LINUS... A^THING^ urhvv S d e -ne opport t\ \pite :: oi this special working with ex- is East Lansing's Newest Jeweler iVo, He's Not lealth fields, i.-i.l work, psychology, i.-a potential r farther training may Robin Hood Department jr graduate training in Featuring PARIS (UPI)—Georges Stasse liked Robin Hood as a child, jAyTt Carved ° AMOND RINGS but now he's got as much use : fringe I DREAM WEDDING RING LONGINES and Summer | CE SKATING for tingham. him as the Sheriff of Not¬ Stasse's trouble with Robin is | Special 50C A dm. for MSU Students | that his telephone number here BULOVA '^\ic jar j t/z is ROB-1233. And that, by chance, Contact- Watches EVENINGS - Thurs-Fri-Sat - 8:30 - 10:30 is the number composer Pierre Ivan E. J ewelry AFTERNOONS - Sat & Sun - 3:00 - 5:00 Vassillu chose to put in his new Estes, Personnel Director Skate Rentals Available song "Ivanhoe." Michigan Department of Mental Health The song is a great hit. But Lewis Cass Wells Spectators Free-Balcony one of its lines runs "Hello, is < Building Charms, Earrings And Pins that ROB-1233? Is Robin Hood L ansing, Michigan Ice Show-Talent on Ice-July 13th there?" He isn't, but Stasse is, and he Michigan State University told a Paris court JEWELRY and fl Thursday his An Equal Opportunity Across From ART CENTER V phone now rings non-stop. Callers seldom ask for Home Ec. Building 319 E. Grand River • Ice Arena they usually ask for Robin Hood. Stasse, > Wednesday, June 29, 1966 « Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan DE GAULLE CHEERED IN VOLGOGRAD Paris. Soviet Pl ed an entire German of VOLGOGRAD, U.S.S.R. (UPI) Moscow for emergency com¬ stroyed but already beginning to army Top Secret Commando Raid —French President Charles de munications between de Gaulle rise again and with a spirit of 250,000 men and captured its Gaulle and Soviet leaders have and the Kremlin. hopefulness everywhere." commander, Marshal Friederich SAIGON (UPI)—American and Vietnamese forces They said the line, a special It was at Stalingrad in 1942- Von Paulus. agreed to increase political con¬ carried out a commando raid on the coast of Com¬ 43 that the Russians halted the Before returning to Moscow tacts and to establish a "hot telephone and not a teleprinter munist North Viet Nam two weeks ago when U.S. line" between ParisandMoscow, such as exists between Moscow Nazi advance and turned the tide Wednesday de Gaulle will tour jets shot down an unidentified propel lei—driverplane, informed sources said Tuesday. and Washington, will be used for of World War II in Eastern the city and visit a few World informed sources disclosed Tuesday. The imminent confidential emergency com¬ Europe. The Soviet Army broke War II ruins kept as memorials agreements to , Details of the raid remained top secret. There was munications. through a German seige, destroy¬ to the battle. forge closer links were reported no word as to the nature of the raid or the number of At the same time usually re¬ as de Gaulle neared the end of casualties suffered when the North Vietnamese open¬ liable French sources said de his historic, 5,000-mile swing ed fire on the raiders. Gaulle and the Soviet leaders through the Soviet Union and pre¬ raid A screens U.S. military spokesman announced that when the occurred on June 14, U.S. 7th Fleet radar picked up two unidentified propeller-driver pared to return to Moscow Wednesday for more formal talks with the Soviet leaders. probably will sign an agreement to hold regular twice - yearly meetings of their foreign mini¬ Ousted Principal - planes. They said U.S. Navy jets shot down one and De Gaulle Tuesday returned sters to promote political con¬ chased the other away from the coast. to Volgograd (the former Stalin¬ sultations between the two coun- Congo Leaders Head Off Rising grad) for the first time in 22 years on a mage sentimental pilgri¬ and paid tribute to the They said the new agreement would allow France to open a consulate in Leningrad and the No Bitter Feelings city—site of Russia's greatest DETROIT Arthur T. Carty, But he added there were spe¬ LONDON f—Political Premier Ambroise Nouma- World War II victory. Soviet Union to open one in Mar¬ cial difficulties at Northern be¬ zalia announced in a nation¬ seilles. temporarily reassigned from his leaders of the Congo Brazza¬ The 75-year-old Ftench presi¬ cause of the type of students post as principal of Detroit ville Republic acted swiftly wide broadcast monitored dent, looking fit and refreshed De Gaulle received another attending the school. Northern High School following today in an attempt to head here that he had assumed despite a rigorous six-day tour warm welcome by an estimated He blamed whites for many student boycotts, said Tuesday off a threatened rising by supreme powers in the ab¬ of Russia, arrived from Kiev, 5,000 Soviet citizens at Volgo¬ of the problems besetting North¬ he is not bitter but thinks the army men wanting to end the sence of President Alphonse in the Ukraine, accompanied by grad's airport ,.nd later more ern, as well as other inner city than 500,000 Russians jammed action may have set a precedent. country's one-party system; Massemba-Debat, who is vis¬ Soviet Premier Alexei Kosygin. schools. the streets of the city and cheer¬ Carty was switched from his said reports reaching' here. iting the Malagasy Republic. Between flights and official "The main problem at North¬ ed him as he drove past In an post April 29 by School Supt. receptions, the two men managed Samuel M. Brownell after most ern is a part of the total Negro _ to continue political talks started open car. The French president of the school's 2,300 students problem," he said. "It has de¬ Moyers Declines Discussion - ■ when de Gaulle arrived in Mos¬ cow June 20 to start his 12-day last visited the 1944, on city in December, his way to Moscow to boycotted classes, demanding veloped over a long period of Carty's removal and charging time. A great deal of the blame WASHINGTON (UPI)—The White House refused to sign a French-Soviet alliance is due to the Caucasian race, with they were receiving an "inferior comment Tuesday on a broadcast report that U.S. Informed sources said the Josef Stalin. education." who in many ways have kept air strikes on Hanoi and Haiphong in North Viet Nam RAIN, RAIN, GO—Tuesday's downpour caught • Soviet Union and France have In a speecti to an airport crowd "I have no sense of bitter¬ the Negro from enjoying life as were cancelled because of security leaks in Washing¬ students prepared and others not so prepared. The agreed in principle to establish de Gaulle said: "At that time I ness, although I do get mad as ton. cooling rain gave some relief from the recent heat a "hot line" between Paris and saw Stalingrad almost totally de¬ hell sometimes when I think about Carty said that because of wave. Photo by Chuck Michaels discrimination in housing and White House press secretary Bill D. Moyers de¬ it," he said. "But I do believe clined to discuss a (CBS) broadcast from Saigon and it has set a precedent. I under¬ employment there is little in¬ would not comment about possible security viola¬ centive for a Negro to get an stand that students at Northern tions within recent days. MARRIED MEN TO GO are now challenging the teach- education. "It is the policy of the White House, the President Another problem, he said, is and his staff not to discuss military decisions of an a lack of parental interest in Technically Carty is still prin¬ Michigan's Draft Quota: 21,980 their children. operational nature or matters relating to those de¬ cipal, but has been working at In defending Northern's edu¬ cisions," Moyers said. the School Center Building, sev¬ eral blocks from the predomi¬ cational quality, Carty said the school has become known na¬ Presque Isle 8; Roscommon nantly Negro high school. LANSING --Michigan draft 50: Genesee No. 26, 29; No. 246, 40: Oakland No. 321, 24; Oakland tionally for its methods of teach¬ 2; Saginaw 82; St. Clair 44; Carty denied charges by stu¬ Civilian Soldier To Go Home boards will call up 21,980 men 39; No. 24S, 33; Gladwin 8; Go- No. 323, 25; Oakland No. 67, dents that they were receiving ing culturally disadvantaged St. Joseph 10; Sanilac 11; School¬ for induction gebic Grand Traverse 15; 41; Oakland No. 328, 39; Oak¬ craft 2; Shiawassee 20; Tuscola an inferior education, maintain¬ children. processed and other formali¬ August, Col. Arthur Holmes, di- Gratio 23. land No. 331, 58; Oceana 11; Asked if he would be reinstat¬ SAIGON (UPI)—David Stuc- 15; Van Buren 30; WashtenawNo. ing that the qualify of education ki, 21, the 4F civilian who ties taken care of so he can rector of the State Selective Ser¬ Hillsdale 14; Houghton 12; Hur- Ogemaw 90; Ontonagon 6; Osceo- ed as principal next fall, Carty 85, 3; Washtenaw No. 341, 23; offered at Northern was equal almost got into the Viet Nam go home. vice, said today. 16; Ingham 80; Ionia 21; Iosco la 9; Oscoda 2; Otsego 3; Ot' said he had no idea. Wexford 11; Wayne 918. to any school in the area. war in another man's uniform, The consulate also passed ; Isabella 1"; Jackson tawa 39. Holmes said he expected many will be going home soon, of¬ along a message from the it : Kalamazoo 99; Kalkaska 2; commander of the 65th Engi¬ local boards to call up regis¬ Kent No. 42, 27; Kent No. 43, ficials reported Tuesday. trants married before Aug. 26, neer Battalion, the outfit Da¬ 4iv Ken No. 281, 35; Kent No. And he wants—as a he may go home as soldier. The U.S. consulate informed vid "joined" in a borrowed uniform and almost went into action with. His masquerade 1965, in order to fill their quo¬ The quota 283, 46. Lake 1; Lapeer 13; Leelanau by counties: Alcona 2; Lenawee41; Livingston 9; Luce Incoming Freshmen: was discovered within the the slender San Franciscan 6; Alger 13; Allegan 30; Alpena 1; Mackinac 5; Macomb No. 52, sound of the battlefield. 9; Antrim 5; Arenac 10; Barry 3s; Macomb No. 300, 55; Macomb Buy Now, We that his exit visa was being 34; Bay 54; Berrien 56; Branch No. 303, 43; Manistee 12: Mar- 12; Calhoun Board No. 13, 6; quette 7; Mason 16; Mecosta 11; Calhoun No. 21", 41; Cass 21; Menominee 10; Midland 26; Mis¬ Casaroli Returns To Rome Charlevoix 2; Cheboygan2;Chip¬ saukee 5; Monroe 47; Montcalm Montmorency 2; Muskegon Already Have 5; Clare 7; Clinton 18; 12; BELGRADE (UPI)—Msgr. Agostino Casaroli, who pewa signed the agreement establishing quasi-diplomatic relations between the Vatican and Yugoslavia last weekend, returned to Rome Tuesday. The historic agreement calls for an exchange of representatives between the seat of the Roman Catholic church and the Community country at a quasi-diplomatic level and recognition of Vatican jurisdiction over spiritual North Viets Fall Term matters. As'oco*ec C: 'eg;a»e Press, v.chigo- tr«. A-sc: Moscow, P Book Lists : las^ pos'oge oa.d ot Eos' La-sing, Mich. Nam war effort but East Euro¬ ■ I w business Ot 341 S-..de " Services P„ d -< LONDON (UPI) — North Viet¬ East Lansing, Mich. namese President Ho Chi Minh pean diplomats said Red China apparently has gone to Peking to is bent on undermining Soviet confer with Red Chinese leader prestige and influence In Hanoi. The question of tighter coor¬ Mao Tse-Tung while other Hanoi aides have gone to Moscow for dination of Communist military 25% SAVINGS ON USED BOOKS emergency talks on the Met Nam supplies for North Viet Nam is to war, diplomatic sources said be considered at the forthcoming Tuesday. Warsaw Pact Meeting early next Both North Vietnamese mis¬ month in Bucharest. sions were believed linked to Pe¬ Poverty Ignites king's continued refusal to coop¬ erate in a joint communist aid effort for North Viet Nam and State Gets TEXTBOOKS EOR ALL UNIVERSITY COURSES possible diplomatic initiatives. Argentine Coup In one of the three, one mili¬ clear There also was diplomatic speculation that Ho wanted to with the two communist Overtime FAIR PRICES AND FRIENDLY SERVICE By PHIL NEUSOM powers North Viet Nam's atti¬ UPI Foreign The News Analyst once-prosperous city of tary man succeeded another. In the other two, the army ousted President Arturo Frondizi in tude towards velopments, possible peace de¬ or alternatively a Pay Order ART SUPPLIES 1962 and now Illia in 1966. stepped up war. The S_tate Civil Service Com¬ Tucuman, nestling in the Andes The diplomatic reports said mission has authorized time- Both were accused of being foothills near the border with Bolivia, is the cradle of Argen¬ soft on Peronism. Peking, however, has turned down an attempt by Romania to per¬ and-a-half pay for overtime for 29,000 of the "state's 35,000 civil NOTEBOOKS AND PAPER tine independence which the Ar¬ Although the Peronist move¬ suade Communist Chinese Pre¬ ment is split between labor lead¬ gentines observe on July 9. mier Chou En-Lai to allow war State Civil Service Director When in the ■ early hours of ers who would have Peronism without Peron and a faction led equipment for North Viet Nam Frankli:: Dewald said it has been Tuesday, 820 miles away in Bue¬ from Russia and East European estimated the overtime will cost nos Aires, the government of by Peron's shapely third wife, countries to be moved swiftly the ; an additional $2.2 mil- President Atturo Illia collapsed Isabel, recent elections have through Chinese territory. The lion i shown that the exiled dictator's under pressure from the mili¬ Romanian bid w State workers paid GIBSON'S now are name still has magic among tary, it was Tucuman's poverty Chou's recent vl o Bucharest, straight time for overtime or workers who have suffered most that played an important role. it was reported. allowed compensating time off. For Tucuman is Argentina's from Argentina's stagnant econ- The Chinese leader was under¬ Starting Friday, they will be paid Appalachia, an area of unem¬ omy. stood to have firmly rejected the premium rate for hours Another army charge against ployment and mounting violence any suggestion for joint action worked in excess of 40 hours a where unpaid workers have seiz¬ Illia is that he had done little with Russia because of its bitter week. ed sugar mills in retaliation to control the cost of living which in the last two years rose ideological dispute with the So¬ Executive and top supervisory and at least one person has viet Communist leaders. personnel will not receive the died. 63 per cent. The diplomatic reports said overtime premium.Thecommis¬ There were other more famil¬ Argentina has a huge foreign Hanoi sent top representatives debt and Its budget this year sion said the cutoff point for iar factors in Illia's overthrow: to Peking and Moscow, and it is expected to run $800 million overtime pay generally will be the revolution which ousted dic¬ tator Juan D. Peron in 1955 but in the red. was believed the 78-year-old Ho went to Red China for talks with for those making $8,500 a year- For Savings, It Is found no political substitute for The timing of the coup had its the Communist party chairman. The State Civil Service pay¬ his millions of "shirtless ones" ironic aspects. There was no official confir¬ roll for the next fiscal year is ... the appalling general state of the Argentine economy. . . the It was only a that an Argentine few days ago financial mis¬ mation of the Hanoi moves. estimated at slightly more than Well Worth The Walk sion flew home with new hope of But the reports coincided with $220 million. fear among the military of a re¬ signs of major diplomatic and In a companion action, the of Peronism. U.S. financial aid. turn Tucuman was perhaps the trig¬ The mission had completed military activity in Southeast commission o r d e r e d overtime Asia. for State Police Troopers when To ger. Illia had hesitated to carry preliminary negotiations for Red China has been hampering they work fnore than 40 hours out military demands for federal credits totaling $200 million for the shipment of Communist war a week. intervention in the province a steel plant, electric power and where military leaders saw not rural development. material for Viet Nam either by Troopers now are required to 'EAST LANSING'S The credits were to be granted demanding payment in advance work 48 hours s week before, only a rise in Peronism but also or holding up the war material on the basis of Argentina's pre¬ they are eligible for overtime. heavy Castroite infiltration indefinitely. The situation is re¬ The normal state trooper work among the workers. sumed political and economic ported to h^ve become serious. week is 45 hours, so the order FRIENDLIEST BOOKSTORE' 128 W. Grand River Since Peron's ouster Argentina stability. Peking has officially denied will mean a substantial increase has had five governments, three Rumors of a coup were label¬ charges it was hampering the Viet in take-home pay. of which fell to military coups. led "distorted." • Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Wednesday, June 29, 1 966 9 CHAMBER OF COMMERCE Urban League Needs To Evaluate Program The Urban League must es¬ leagues all over the country.The ing your program and carrying it Hall stated that a number of that the directorate of the vari¬ available but those In charge of tablish clear and specific points Urban League is an organization out in a long-range, constructive points must be examined in the ous leagues had to be evaluated. the funds must use sensible Judg¬ by which to evaluate their pro¬ interested in equal treatment of Urban League program and, if "The directors must have pres¬ ments In appropriating them. grams and then sell these pro¬ Negroes in housing and other The "crying fire" analogy necessary, improved. tige in the community," Hall He said that there are some grams to the public. areas. was in reference to the civil He emphasized the necessity of said. "The stature of your board leagues that have done much This was the advice given by The league is known as a mod¬ rights programs which, accord¬ determining the function of the of directors determines the suc¬ with little money and others which Harry Hall, president of the erate civil rights organization, ing to Hall, seem to specialize league and making the goals clear cess of your programs. In some have ample financial aid but have Michigan Chamber of Commerce, and Hall advised the directors to in putting on demonstrations. to the public. communities, you should make wasted the funds. Tuesday in a speech to the semi¬ continue along this line. "These demonstrations mere¬ "What are your goals?" Hall sure you have good political bal¬ Program promotion and public nar for executive directors of "It's easier to stand up and ly point out the problem and asked- "You must show the re¬ ance on the board." relations were given special em¬ Urban League, meeting at Kel¬ cry fire than to do something make the public aware of the lationship of the objectives and Another point emphasized by phasis by the Chamber of Com¬ logg this week. about putting the fire out," Hall existence of a problem but do how they relate to the basic Hall was the need for a healthy merce boss. Hall detailed a number of eval¬ said. "You have to do a thor¬ nothing to solve it," Hall con¬ needs of the community." financial situation. He pointed "You must have some solid, uation points for the directors of ough job of evaluating and sell¬ tinued. Hall also stressed the point out that not only must funds be long-range plans for promoting your program," Hall said. "You must also maintain close-work¬ ing relationships with other or¬ "SUPER-RIGHT" QUALITY ganizations, with the news media and with the public." Evidence of improvement must Chuck Roast be shown to gain public according to Hall. When asked how to gain sup¬ port of the league from the Cham¬ support, ber of Commerce, Hall replied 49•S that the league representatives BLADE must put the Chamber of Com¬ CUT merce offices around the country on the spot. "You call them. Don't wait for them to call you," Hall said. "You must put the Chamber of "SUPER-RIGHT" 2 TO 3-LB. SIZES Commerce on the spot and try to persuade them to help you." "Super-Right" Skinless Hall concluded by mentioning SPARE RIBS Semi-Boneless the support given by the Michigan Chamber of Commerce civil rights endeavors. "The Catholic dioceses In to recent Prices Effective Through FULLY COOKED Michigan have recently refused to 69' Saturday, July 2nd. purchase from firms exercising STORE HOURS LB. discrimination," Hall said. "The Catholic Church is one of the ma¬ HAMS LOOK OUT BELOW—Workers trimming trees jor purchasers in the country, All A&P Anthony Hall came close to hitting CounselingC Super Markets and we are supporting them in freshmen this decision." as they walkedby. PhotobyChuck Micl Open Friday and Saturday July 1st and 2nd i-^'SUPER RIGHT" BLADE CUT Until 9 p.m. Chuck Steaks . . . 59* Campus Computer Checks Closed Monday, July 4th. WITH RIBS ATTACHED A&P HARDWOOD Fryer Legs 59' CHARCOAL SUPER-RIGHT" Chuck Roast "SUPER-RIGHT" SKINLESS BONELESS or Breasts . . , 79 lb03 S Michigan Recreation Needs An MSU computer may know jected supply for the activity, use the informatiur, and method Boneless Fully Cooked BRIQUETS what your outdoor recreation may Chubb explained. o/ research in preparing a state¬ All Meat Franks 55' be before you do. The computer will summarize The computer summarizes analyzes material and In 2 1/2 wide recreation plan. This is ne¬ cessary for continued federal aid 10-LB. BAG ) ^ 20-LB. BAG FINE FOR Halibut Steaks. BROILING 69c Canned Hams movements of residents and tour¬ ists in a Michigan in order to plan state recreation program for minutes researchers to do. which a would tak° the number of days to state and local outdoor recrea¬ tion. "Intensive studies of Michi¬ the future. The Recreation 49189' Systems An¬ gan's rural and urh..-. t-c. e. ti< 6 4" . CAP'N JOHN'S "The recreation system in alysis (RECSYS) is divided ir.to potential are necessary because Fish Sticks ... 59c sVIE Michigan its unusual Is complicated, with shape, its shoreline, Inland lakes and 83 counties," 12 activity groups for study: driv¬ of the surging demand fo- out¬ ing for pleasure, swimming, door recreation," Chub! shd. sight-seeing, picnicking, walking "The computer shou'. i help ».s said Michael Chubb, Instructor in and riding, fishing, boating, hunt¬ make these studios* r.-.ore effi¬ DEE-LISH BRAND park and recreation administra¬ ing, camping, winter sports, ciently.' ' 33' tion. watching outdoor events and play¬ SAVE 20c Dill Slices "To in begin to measure activity, ing sports. Chubb is currently investigat¬ even one tjpe of recreation Coffee Sale HELLMANN'S is impossible," he said. Using a computer to general¬ behavior ing boating to find out the number of "boat-days" available no wand Papers End 65 ize the of Michigan's those needed in the future. Nine Week Mayonnaise population will save time and The program began with the money In setting up a "supply Michigan Outdoor Demand Study Eight O'Clock SUNNYBROOK—ALASKA .... and demand" relationship in the future, Chubb explained. that the Dept. of Resource De¬ velopment was doing for the state N.Y. Strike 79* The computer will be fed with in 1964. The report for that pro¬ Red Salmon 1 -LB. information concerningpopu- 79 ject will be published soon. NEW YORK (UPI)—The New 3- t j SIGHT • • • € CAN lation, income, and recreational RECSYS itself was initiated June York Newspaper Guile ar.d the and transportation facilities I 0 CLOCK BAG ■ ANN PAGE around the state. 15, 1965. "The difference in our ap¬ World Journal Tribune Inc. came :o contract terms early This information de¬ Tuesday was proach to the problem of a 25 to end the nine-wee':; guiid'strike Mustard veloped into amathematical recreation program is that it is A&P BRAND formula against :he newly-merged pub¬ by Jack Ellis, then a dynamic, it's not static. We are lishing company. Half & Half - 39c ANN PAGE graduate student and now a pro¬ fessor of electrical engineering at the University of Waterloo in able to interrelate things and easily make reappraisals," Chubb said. paper merger .r. L.S. . istory, 18* NET WT. V If C Ontario. the World Journal rribu Chubb JANE PARKER FEATURES! Tomato Ketchup 14-OZ. BTL. Through the use of maps as well as figures, the computer can project demand for an ac¬ hopes to wrap up the pro¬ gram by the end oftheyear.Then the Recreation Resources Plan¬ not expected ;o editions before negotiations were continu publish i July 5. C A&P OUR FINEST ning Division of the Michigan De¬ SAVE 16c QUALITY fM AA tivity and the present and pro¬ two other unions. partment of Conservation may Fruit Cocktail.. 3 B 1°° Still ;o ae resolved ao Apple Pie Orientation Students company reached ae the i mion. 1 YUKON CLUB ROYAL DANISH 39* 1 LB. craft unions ha 8-OZ. Clip Out This Ad guild's strike. Luncheon The walkout began >.?•-:I J4. Beverages SIZE the day oefore the comparv — SAVE 8c PER DOZEN—FRANKFURTER 0R PKG «*** And [7] This Coupon formed through a merger of ;r.c Meat Herald Tribune, the U'orlc-1 elc- Assorted Flavors Sandwich Rolls OF ,2 Xrf COUPON gram and Sun, and the journal- SAVE 20c—ALL-BUTTER NET WT. M A| □ ATL 111 publish its first edition. Choc. Brownies 49 7 C 13-oz. 12 FL. OZ. 100 NET WT. During the strike, the second FOIL PKG. ~ " CAN "NEW PACK" 12-OZ. CANS □ NAT SCI 181 longest in New York's newspaper history, the craft unions con¬ Potato QQ □ HPR 105 tinued Chips negotiate their own con-' to 8-OZ. BOX Q7 tracts with the company. Terms of the guild settlement, □ which were not immediately dis¬ SHERBET COVERED—ICE CREAM BARS WATERMELONS □ closed, tion Guild were subject to ratifica¬ by the union membership. Executive Vice i'resident Creamsides QUARTERS ADDRESS Thomas fication, J. Murphy said picket lines would remain up until rati¬ expected to come up 49' i 89cj 27* F riday. COUPON 12-49* The chief stumbling block in Just fill out this coupon and mail it into Student Book Store and we will Pre-pack and hold your books for the guild negotiations was in de¬ next fall. All textbooks are fully returnable up to 10 termining which workers would be laid off as a result of tne days after classes start Fall term. If you can't stop in MEL-O-BIT AMERICAN OR PIMENTO WESTERN GROWN mail the coupon. merger. The guild, with 1,797 . , R mm editorial ana office workers a;:: e Cheese Slices Bing Cherries -491 three papers, wantedeipployes to . . ■» OV«« be retained A&P BRAND _ *Cr°sS / trOr\ on the basis at the of new company • n seniority. I"he Potato Salad • . p£s,l,c 59 publishers wanted own staffs. to select their MARVEL—5 FLAVORS ■ Ice Cream m . . . V2-GAL. •c™ _■ 4^ CQC 3" FRESH CORN .. 6 » 49" Student 421 E. Grand River ^^ook S East tore Lansing The company plans morning, evening and Sunday edi¬ tions—the Herald Tribune the World Journal and the World Journal Tribune. to publish Wednesday, June 29, 1966 S Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan AND THEY'RE OFF!— McAULIFFE REPEATS I The IM summer Softball I league go.t off to a flying I start, Monday night. Here I three of the more note- I,worthy members of the 1 victorious Lushwell Ath- | letic Club team are shown action. At left, Joel NEW YCRK All-Star f —Third base¬ Orioles could not vote for their Infielders I Stark, pitcher-manager, man Brooks Robinson of the I follows through on arast- Baltimore Orioles, the top vote Willie McCovey, first baseman I ball delivery. "Hammer- getter with 257, and shortstop of the San Francisco Giants, led ~1' Leo Zainea (center) Dick McAuliffe of the Detroit the National League voting with I watches a pitch sail past Tigers were the only repeaters 214. Joe Morgan, Houston second "m. Zainea rapped a on the two starting infields named baseman, and Ron Santo, Chicago I home run on his firsttrip for the July 12 All-Star base¬ Cubs, third baseman, both were to the plate. Jim Spani- ball game at St. Louis. picked to the team although they olo (right) offers moral were Injured over the weekend. Robinson and McAuliffe were Leo Cardenas, Cincinnati short¬ tured cheek bone when hit by a lineup, except for the pitchers, encouragement, complete Is released at the same time. with appropriate ges- joined by rookie first baseman stop, was the fourth member of pitched ball in Sunday's game George Scott of the Boston Red with the New York Mets and Eckert's office will release I tures, as he stands on the the National League infield. Sox and second baseman Bobby underwent surgery Monday. the names of the starting out¬ ■'sidelines. Stark is the Morgan suffered a broken right Knoop of the California Angels Presumably, substitution will fielders Thursday and catchers H State News advertising knee cap In batting practice be¬ on the American League infield. fore Saturday's game and will be be made if they are unable to Sunday. The pitching staffs and manager, Zainea, a re¬ the rest of the 25-man squads of action for at least three play. It will be up to Manager porter, and Spaniolo, the out Walter Alston to ask. Sam Mele will be named later. campus editor. weeks. Santo received a frac- of Minnesota is the American The National League finally Photos by Tony Ferrante took the lead in the series last League manager. The two starting infields were summer by winning the game at 1§-17-1 Record announced by Commissioner Wil¬ Minnesota for an edge. \ Ralston Tigers Post Best liam D. Erkert's office in a change from the usual procedure. Normally, the entire starting The Nationals have won a row decisions. and seven three in of the last eight \ Aussie SCOR E BOA RD For June In 10 Years vote Starters were selected of by the players, managers and coaches in each league. NATIONAL LEAGUE AMERICAN LEAGUE had a particularly impressive McAuliffe Due to the varying numbers [Of ANAHEIM, Calif. .1—Sunday's They were 20-8 going into Tourn of players on the rosters when W L PCT. G , W L PCT. G3 month but the bullpen has come double loss to the Minnesota Tuesday's game and even double the player representatives con¬ .630 Twins somewhat overshadowed setbacks to the Angels would through to keep the team in con¬ WIMBLEDON, England [K, — Baltimore DETROIT 48 43 24 26 .667 . . . .623 3-1/2 San Francisco 46 27 Pittsburgh 40 29 .580 . 4 , the fact that the Tigers will fin¬ ish with their best record for leave them with a 20-10 record for the month, a good enough tention. Wickersham, back in the start¬ Going Great ducted their balloting last week, there were 294 ballots in the | Wimbledon's tennis king is dead. Cleveland 41 28 .594 5-1/2 Los Angeles 40 31 .563 5 DETROIT i/P) —Detroit Tiger National and 287 in the Ameri¬ And Dennis Ralston, United Houston 39 33 .542 6- '1/2 the month of June in more than clip to win the pennant most ing rotation after a stint in the California 38 34 .528 10 Dick McAuliffe, named shortstop can. I States No. 1 tennis star, is right Philadelphia 37 34 .521 8 10 years. bullpen, has won four games this Minnesota 34 36 .486 13 month and will go after No. 5 on the American League All- The closest contest was be¬ fighting for the vacated Chicago 35 35 .500 9- 1/2 who opened a two- The Tigers previous best in in there 32 37 .464 14-1/2 Cincinnati The Tigers, Wednesday night. Star team, takes to the game a tween Knoop and Bobby Rich¬ I crown. New York 30 37 .448 15-1/2 St. Louis 33 37 .471 11- 1/2 game series with the California the past decade was an 18-13 ardson for second base in the mark in 1959. The 1961 team, Denny McLain is 3-1 for the .300 batting average and a talent Roy Emerson, the wiry Aus- Kansas City 30 40 .429 17 Atlanta 33 42 .440 14 Angels Tuesday night, havecom- American League. Robinson won which finished second, was 19-16 month and Hank Aguirre 2-1. for getting on base. I trailian who has won the Wim¬ Washington 30 43 .411 18-1/2 New York 29 38 .433 14- '1/2 piled a winning record in June landslide and both Scott The "relief corps has come McAuliffe, a 26-year-old left- in a bledon title for two years run¬ 22 48 .314 22- 1/2 only four times since 1956. in the month of June. Boston 25 46 .352 22-1/2 Chicago handed batter, has been leadoff and McAuliffe had comfortable Other records over .500 for the through with six victories and ning, 'was eliminated Monday by added seven saves. batter for the Tigers in their margins. month were posted in 1958 (15- | countryman Owen Davidson. Larry Sherry has three wins last nine games. In eight of them, Santo beat Jim Ray Hart of Emerson took a tumble dur- 11) and last year (14-12). he started the game by getting San Francisco 151-125 in the [ ing the opening set of his quar¬ MEET RUSSIANS JA TRACK The individual leaders in the and four saves; Fred Gladding two victories and Johnny Podres, on base—with two walks, two third base competition in the ter-final against Davidson, and June surge? National League, the closest con- Take your pick. a win and two saves. Orlando singles, two triples and two home strained a ligament in his left Dick McAuliffe leads the club Pena has added the other save. 'Kids' To Run For U.S. Team shoulder. The partly crippled with eight home runs so far this champion went out, 6-3, 3-6, month and is fourth in runs 4-6, 4-6. KRESGE'S batted in with 14. Three players now have the chance to break the Australian NEW YORK If the United the Russian team in a dual meet mittee of the \mateur Athletic Al kaline has hit six homers Union, contained the top per¬ domination of Wimbledon—Ral¬ States regains the superiority at Los Angeles July 23-24—and but has come through with a in track it lost to the Russians the Polish team the week before formers in last weekend's AAU number of other timely hits and ston, Spain's Manuel Santana and South Africa's Cliff Drysdale. in Kiev last year, much of the at Berkeley, Calif.—are a suck championships. has 25 RBls going into Tuesday's Added were Tommie Smith, the Ralston plays Drysdale or Tony credit will belong to youngsters, of teen-agers and near-teens. game. Scattered throughout the list The list, released Monday by sprinter from San Jose State, Norm Cash, the team leader Roche, another Australian, in the JULY SStVML semifinals. Santana has to play of the competitors who will face the men's track and field com- and Gerry Lindgren, the long¬ in runs knocked in, added 19 Ken Fletcher of Australia in the quarterfinals, and the winner will distance star from Washington State. Both missed the meet be¬ this ::.onth to bring his total to 41. -V cause of various ailments. Willie Horton, continuing a take semifinal. on Davidson in the other Summer B Lindgren is the elder states¬ slow climb back to a more re¬ Pow Ralston played his best tennis of thetournament Monday, crash¬ man 20. to of the young stars—lie's spectable batting average, has The fraii youth was named the team at 10,000 meters, contributed four homers and 15 RBI's so far. SALE m ing Bob Hewitt of Australia, 7-5, 6-2, 11-9 in the quarterfinals. Ralston's service—a night¬ For \S' Bats the event that thrust him into prominence two years ago when he beat the highly favored Rus¬ Outside of Dave Wicker sham, none cf the Tigers starters has Zap mare at times last week—was Spartan baseball players, re¬ Heights, and Blight, a pitcher sians in the dual meet. in good shape at last. He hit five turning next year for Coach Danny from Flint, are playing for Stur- Top performer among the teen¬ Plastic MSU aces and 38 service winners, and at the same time collared Litwhiler, will keep active this summer in NCAA-approved sum¬ gis, S.D., the same team play¬ ed for last summer. agers is Jim ' Ryun, 19, who Olin Ladies'Nylons Short sleeve Hewitt's service and scored mer leagues and other leagues Last year, MSU had nine play¬ is America's best at the mile. Seamless & Mesh Insulated Drapes points with a stream of effective sponsored by their home towns. ers in the Basin League—Bin¬ kowski, Blight, John Krasnan, He will run the 1,500 meters and will be heavily favored. In the (continued from page I) Sweatshirt Since the Big Ten Conference AAU meet, he ran the mile in Reg. 2 pr./86c 10 8'" 87'' In last year'stournament, Ral¬ has yet to formulate a summer Bob Speer, JohnBiedenbach, Dick medical school taking an active x long Reg. S2/3 3:58.6. ston was eliminated by Emerson league of its own, conference Holmes, Jim Goodrich, John Frye part in student care, says Andrew and Q.Y. Lowe. Lee Evans, also 19, from San D. Hunt, dean of the new College the semifinals. 2*/56< in $183 players move *to other areas The last American to Wimbledon title was Chuck Mc- Kinley in 1963. Otherwise, the win the sponsoring summer ball. of To compensate for the lack a regular program of compe¬ Going to a league in this summer are Canada Jose City College, will run the Robert Gorski, junior pitcher from Taylor, Steve 400 meters against off the the Russians strength of his 45.9 victo¬ ry in the 440 at the AAU meet. of Human Medicine. "From my experience atStan- ford University, where we took $1°0 Australians have an unbroken ting universities in the summer, Rymal, junior infielder from Ad¬ Then there are the pole vaul- care of students and their famil¬ H ardwood run of success since 1960. the NCAA has set up a high rian, Dick Litwhiler, senior 7 Piece Plastic caliber summer league designed pitcher from East Lansing, and tgrs. Bob Seagren, 19, of the Southern California Striders, ies, 1 found it mutually benefi¬ cial for the school and the stu- ALL Skateboards Rusk Urges primarily for collegiate ball players throughout the nation. John Walters, senior outfielder from Trenton. holds the pending world's rec¬ jent community," the dean said. Bathroom Set Spring Clothespins The NCAA carefully regulates the operation, providing players Last summer year only Walters played ball in Canada. ord of 17-51/2 and Paul Wil¬ son, a Strider teammate, holds However, he said, community Reg. 770 y2price 72 count pkg. United Front with a summer job while they Litwhiler played in the new the national high school mark of support and extra facilities would CANBERRA, Australia are playing ball. Indiana-Kentucky College 16-3 3/4 set only last year. Stan Albright, of the Cleve¬ have to be considered. 5" now 396 57< — no pay for League, Walker was in the Cen¬ Hunt, John C. Howell, asso¬ 5 7< Players receive land Striders, named to the high Secretary of State Dean Rusk was tral Collegiate League in Illinois their efforts on the diamond. ciate dean of the College of Hu¬ reported Tuesday to show of haveurgeda solidarity on Viet Nam They, however, must pay their and Iowa, and Gorski played on jump squad, turned in a 6-8 1/2 a home-town team. performance lastyear, while still man Medicine, and Charles R. 2" now I44 own expenses, including room in high school. IJowns, biology and medical edl- by Southeast Asia Treaty Or¬ and board. tor with Information Services, ganization countries in the hope Last year the Russians upset of bringing Hanoi to the confer¬ in Others who are NCAA-approved summer unable to play Four Qualifiers the favored American squad 1 IS— said they are waiting for the Im¬ pact of Michigan legislation, Hooded Clairol ence table. U.S. sources said Rusk stress¬ leagues, scattered throughout the country, elect to live at home 112, marking the first time in DETROIT (yP —Four more hy¬ seven dual meets with the Soviet which isn't expected until next Power Lawn Mower Raincoats Summer droplanes qualified Tuesday for that the United States had lost. fall.. ed the importance of a united and play on local teams. next Sunday's Gold Cup Race on 3 1/2 h.p. - 4 cycle front by SEATO during a 45- • olive color • Most college players look to the Detroit River. Miss Chrys¬ Impulse starter Blond minute speech behind closed Reg. $2.77 play in the Basin League, which ler crew posted the fastest time Reg. $45.66 | I doors. covers both North and South Da¬ of today's qualifiers with an aver¬ The conference ends Wednes¬ kota. It is one of the oldest of of 105.847 miles per $147 age speed day. A U.S. government official said Rusk reviewed the Viet Nam situation for the seven other the loops and is generally con¬ sidered the best. "The best college boys in the hour. and My Gypsy, Wayfarer's Lady Dollar Bill also qualified $4288 $2oo SEATO members, stressing that country usually play there," with speeds of over 100 miles Coach Litwhiler said. "There Peking and Hanoi must be made to realize that the efforts of the they develop real well." per hour^ Seven boats have qualified so Ladies' Magnetic Rollers Ladies' MSU has two players in the 'far and at least 10 more are United States and its allies in South Viet Nam are determined Basin League this summer, jun¬ iors Tom Binkowski and Jim expected to try. Head Scarf 22 assorted rollers Straw Purses and will not be abandoned. 20 roller pins Rusk also was reported to have Blight. Reg. SI.99 spent much of his time going - Both were picked up by major league clubs in the recent draft, Planetarium Reg. 27c Reg. 88c over U.S. initiatives for a peace¬ but decided to come back and Showings Set 47 ( $]77 ful settlement of the war and was 17< said to have described theAmeri- play with the Spartans next ican attempts as unparalleled spring. Binkowski, a first baseman- \bram£ Planetarium will give for a nation at war. outfielder from Dearborn five presentations this weekend of He was reported to have men¬ tioned four points on which he its current program, "WhatTlmt Is It?" Presentations will be Double Neck Colorful said North Viet Nam apparently bases its —That thinking: Hanoi might think it Intramural given at 8 p.m. Friday, at and 8 p.m. 2:30 Saturday and at 2:30 Lap Board Desk Lamps Pole Lamps and 4 p.m. Sunday. could achieve a military victory for many uses "What Time Is It?" one of and its tactics are sound, but Rusk added that now they must News the continuing series of public Reg. 99c1 Reg. $4.99 Reg. $5.94 Planetarium programs, deals be in doubt. IM SOFTBALL SCHEDULE with the history of timekeeping —That there might be apoliti¬ $444 from the sundial to the modern WITH *377 5:30 p.m. 57* cal collapse in South Viet Nam, Field 5 Apt. 11 vs. Abbot atomic clock. but Risk said he did not think any collapse was likely. Field 6 Tony's Boys vs. Owen It explains how to tell time by WONDERFUL MEALS & SNACKS the stars, pointing out differ¬ —That the United States would Youngsters Field 8 Owen Youngsters vs. the ences between sun time and star in the air conditioned be affected by opposition In in¬ ternational opinion. —That there would be criti¬ Paperbacks Field 9 McDonel vs. The Im¬ time. Also included is a dis¬ cussion of the necessity of time zones in the world, and the pur¬ comfort of the 1 Kresge's Campus Store 1 cism in the United States itself. pressions poses of the International Date I Across from the Union Open 9:30-5:30 Wed. 9:30-9:00 1 Here Rusk said there was a ficulty of their understanding that expressions of opposition could dif¬ 6:40 p.m. Field 5 University Village vs. the Zeros Line. The next program in the series, dealing with the summer skies, UNION CAFETERIA ") ou Can Charge It at K rente's" be accepted in the United States' Field 6 The Communicators vs. will open Friday, July 8, and run Basement of the Union but would not be tolerated in Communist countries. the Hot Dogs through Sunday, Aug. 7. 1 Michigan State News, East Lansing. Michigan Wednesday, June 29, 1966 Klansman Defendants Big Savers In Interest Impassive At Trial ATHENS, Ga. (l'PI)-ThreeKu even know the meaning of inter¬ Myers "actually participated" a WASHINGTON i/P)—The Feder¬ al Home Loan Bank Board gave the savings and loan associations new weapon In their bitter In¬ fornia where competition for sav¬ ings Is especially keen—may pay up to 5 per cent annually on six-month saving certificates In Klux Klansmen sat Impassively state travel." in the Penn killing. terest rate war with commercial denominations of not less than chewing gum Tuesday while a In a courtroom left with only The Negro educator was trav¬ banks Tuesday—a 5 per cent divi¬ $1,000. federal prosecutor scathingly de¬ a few spectators because of strict eling with two companions back dend rate on six-month saving Savings certificates are simi¬ nounced them as "criminal con¬ security precautions, defendants to Washington from military duty certificates. lar to certificates of deposit. spirators" in a plan to rid the Joseph Howard Sims, Cecil My¬ at Fort Benning, Ga., when he This was the second time in Under both systems, a savings highways of out-of-state Ne- ers and George Turner watched was shot dead on a rural highway as many days. that a federal and loan association or bank as U.S. District Atty. Floyd Bu- before dawn July 11, 1964. agency has stepped Into the bat¬ agrees to pay a relatively high . ford tried to send them to prison Buford charged that the Klans¬ tle surrounding the certificates interest rate if a customer leaves A lawyer for the trio—first of fof 10 years. men "Joined in a common under¬ of deposit on which •commercial money on deposit for a specific six to be tried in connection with Buford, prosecuting under the banks can pay as much as 5.5 taking" to prevent Negroes from period—In Tuesday's case, six the 1964 highway slaying of Ne¬ 1870 Civil Rights Act after the "achieving equal status to that of AH, JUNE — The warm weather prevailing in East Lansing the last few days has per cent interest. months. gro educator Lemuel Penn of state once lost a bid to convict white people" and furthermore made every free moment a time to relax and cool off. Here a student grabs 40 In both'cases, the pressure on The home loan bank board W ashington—told a federal court two of the six on murder charges, undertook "to keep out-of-state winks before going on to his next class. Photo by Chuck Michaels savings and loan associations earlier had authorized a 4.75 per jury the defendants are "just told the Jury of 10 men and two Negroes from the Athens area fie poor old country boys" who don't women, all white, that Sims and and If they came In here to run should The ease^ Fedeofi Reserve Board cent dividend on $1,000 six-month certificates beginning July 1, with them out." approvedVfonday what it termed a 5 per cent rate for the West FEDERAL APPOINTMENTS MADE a moderate restraint on bank Coast. Judge William A. Bootle quick¬ time deposits "by increasing from U.S. Blasts Soviet ly overruled Defense Atty. James Hudson who leaped up to protest 4 to 5 per cent the reserves Associations now may pay 4.75 per cent on $1,000 certificates Nuclear Arms Demands Buford's line of argument. Hud¬ son had won the state court quittal for Sims and Myers. ac¬ David Bell Quits AID Post which must be held against cer¬ tificates. Chairman John E. Horne of if they are held for one year, while on the West Coast the 5 per cent rate is valid on six- ' Western allies WASHINGTON (UPI)—Presi¬ White House Press Secretary- Gables, Fla., lawyer, was named the Federal Home Loan Bank GENEVA f—'The Soviet Union in preparation As the first witness, Athens month certificates in denomina¬ dent Johnson announced Tuesday Bill D. Moyers said the Presi¬ to be Judge of the U.S. District Board said, however, that this has injected new ,.nd "unrea- for defense against possible nu- Police Chief Edward E. Hardy, tions of $2,500. sunable" demands for the resignation of David E. Bell dent accepted Bell's resignation Court for southern Florida. "minimal action" by the federal an agree- clear attack, stepped to the witness stand, two Pass book savings are not director of the Agency for with deep regret. He said John¬ The President also named af¬ me: t to stop the spread of nu- Foster expressed doubt that of the three other Klansmen to as reserve was a determining fac¬ fected by either Tuesday's International Development (AID). son considered Bell "one of the these five U.S. District Judges tor in Tuesday's action or clear weapons, the United States the Communist Warsaw Pact ob- be tried later leaned forward by his William S. Gaud, deputy aid most imaginative, distinctive and for Texas: Woodrow B. Seals, agency, taken after two days of Monday's actions. charged at the l"-natlon dis- serves the demands made in from places in the spectators' armament conference in Geneva the Soviet draft and noted that director, was named to succeed effective administrators the U.S. district attorney at Houston, meetings with the presidents of Commercial banks are limited section. They were Herbert Guest Bell. economic assistance for the southern the 12 federal home loan banks. to a maximum 4 per cent inter¬ Tuesday. Soviet - built delivery vehicles and Denver Phillips. program district; Jack The chief U.S. delegate, Wil- capable of using nuclear weap- The resignation of Bell and lias ever had." Roberts, a county judge in Austin, The U.S. Savings and Loan est on pass book savings w"hile Hardy told of Negro and Klan the home loan bank board's guide¬ liam C. Foster, said a proposed selection of his successor were for the western district; Ernest League, which also had criti¬ ons have been seen with the counter demonstrations at the The nine federal judges are Russian nonproiiieration treaty among a series of new federal A. Guinn, El Paso lawyer, also cized the federal reserve move lines call generally for a maxi¬ armed forces of ce'rtain Soviet Varsity Drive-in, a favorite eat¬ all from the south and southwest. seeks to ban consultation between allies. appointments announced by the for the western district; John as insufficient, referred to Tues¬ mum 4.5 per cent rate. ing spot across from the Univer¬ Named to the 5th Circuit Court White House. Included were nine V. Singleton Jr., Houston day's action of the home loan sity of Georgia, about four months of Appeals, with headquarters lawyer, Beginning July 1, savings and new federal judges. for the southern district, and bank board as wise. loan associations in before Penn was killed. in New Orleans, were U.S. Dis¬ California Bell is leaving June 30 to be¬ William A. Taylor Jt., Dallas Beginning July 1, savings and The government apparently in¬ trict Judge Robert A. Alnsworth may pay 5 per cent on pass come vice president of the Ford lawyer, for the northern dis¬ loan associations throughout the book savings without loss of bor¬ troduced the testimony to develop Jr. of New Orleans, John C. Foundation for international acti¬ trict. country—not just those in Cali¬ an argument that the Klansmen Godbold, a Montgomery, Ala., rowing rights. vities. He has served as direc¬ Barbara M. Watson, former¬ were committed to a pattern of lawyer, and Irving L. Goldberg, tor of the foreign aid ly in the mayor's office in New intimidation and threats against program a Dallas, Tex., lawyer. since December, 1962. York City, was named a special Negroes. C. Clyde* Atkins, a Coral also The was then-segregated Varsity In the center of large Gaud, 58, a native of New York City, is a lawyer and has been in the assistant to the deputy under¬ secretary of state for admini¬ Vatican Co scale racial demonstrations six government since stration. Miss Watson, 47, a years ago at the time of the 1961. Johnson named him deputy New Medical Negro, had been serving as exe¬ state university's riotous regation transition. deseg¬ aid 1964. administrator in February, Head Named cutive director of the New York City Commission Nations. to the United Birth Control Johnson also announced his VATICAN CITY (UPI)—The artificial contraception, Vatican intention to nominate Barnaby Papal Birth Control Commission sources said. JAMES STEWART IN A the appointment of Dr. William Keeney, f ° rm e r president of Tuesday Brown University, to be chair- presented to Pope Paul The sources said there was one Diamond as medical superinten- VI its final report presenting point of agreement: qualified en¬ MOTION PICTURE PACKED WITH dent ofVeM'^PleT^tSute for °f transportation females shape. $1,000. Phone 355-5945. Corvette. Half price. Call Bill. East Side Apts. parking. Room for one or two. » wanted Phone 393-1114. C3-6/30 $15. Males $20. Call 669-7215. Phonograph, AM-FM Stereo 3-6/29 351-5630. bedrooms for 3, $50.00 $60/month. Sublet for summer :HEYROLET 1951, 2-door. Good 3-6/29 two or school 3-6/29 Radio, for only $15 per month. THUNDERBIRD V-8 NEW each. 4, $45.00 each. Also year. 332-2 566. Ask Call NEJAC, 482-0624. C2-6/30 DEADLINE tires, excellent transportation. 1956, 3- BATTERIES, for W. Johnson. SAINT BERNARD puppies, AKC speed transmission, power price from $7.95. New sealed 1 bedroom at $f25 for 1 3-7/1 registered. Phone 489-0318. First $50 takes it. Call 355- FILMS FOR children from nine class doy be- or 2 persons. No children SINGLES DOUBLES avaii- 0S54. steering, radio, white sidewalls. beams, 996. Salvage cars, large — 3-6/29 nations. Five Wednesday even¬ e publication 3-7/1 able summer/fall terms. $8 a Excellent condition. Jet black stock used parts. ABC AUTO or pets. Phone IV.9-1017. GERMAN CORVAIR 1964 Monza convert- week summer. Kitchen facilities SHEPHERDS AKC ings starting July 6. Phone 485- Cancellations 12 finish, $1,795. SIGNS FORD Snow-white. Black-silver. Pup¬ 3912. - noon one ible. 4 on the floor, in excel¬ available. 5-7/6 SALES, 162 W. Grand River, Contact Les, 351- 3Sf day before publication lent condition. Original owner. apartments near campus. One pies. Studs. Ruth's. 14645 Air¬ GERMAN WILL tutor graduate Williamston. 655-2191. 4490. and two bedrooms. Some avail¬ 5-7/6 port Road. Phone 484-4026. Call ED 2-0080. 5-6/28 Scooters & or other levels. Call 351-4498. C3-6/30 Cycles MALE STUDENTS, 3blocksfrom PHONE CORVAIR MONZA 1961. Make 1958 LAMBRE 1TA scooter. 125 able for summer session. Res¬ 3-6/30 3-6/30 VOLKSWAGEN 1961, radio, seat- ervations for fall. Call Rita Berkey, home privileges. Phone ENGLISH SPRINGER SPANIELS 355-8255 offer or trade for anything ex¬ belts, whitewalls, low mileage. cc. Good condition. Must sell. 332-5671. Ebinger 372-5066 or Ingham 3-7/1 puppies, liver and white, AKC Franchised Service Approved cept car. Phone 355-8229. Clean. Engine excellent. One Phone 332-6984 5-7/1 RATES 3-6/29 . Home Realty 372-1460. 3-6/29 MEN: LARGE rooms, 1/2 block registered, good hunters, phone by Doctors and DSIA. The most owner. $650. 482-2057. 3-7/1 from campus, many extras, HONDA 50, 1965. Red and white. ■VANTED IMMEDIATELY good 372-3449. modern and Only personalized 1 daf si.50 CORVAIR 1963 Monza automatic- man 3-6/30 VOLKSWAGEN, 1962, gray, sun- Driven three months. Perfect for two bedroom study atmosphere; doubles, service in Lansing, providing 3 days .s3.00 radio, very nice. $"75. Phone luxury apart¬ SIAMESE KITTENS, eight weeks, roof, whitewalls, radio. Motor condition. $215. IV 2-6925. singles. 332-08 44 5 days .55.00 372-6225. ' ment. Riverside East. $50. Call . 5-6/29 seal point purebred. BeautifuL you with diaper pails, poly bags, 5-7/6 rebuilt 4100 miles ago. One 5-7/1 evenings 351-5030. 3-6/29 LARGE, COOL, fully furnished deodorizers and diapers, or use FA1RL.ANE 1 960 4-door six One male and three female. owner. Call 332-0555. 3-7/1 BENELl. I of LANSING has your iased on 15 words .per ad rooms, hot and cold water in Reasonable. OR 6-1862. 3-7/1 your own. Baby clothes washed cylinder automatic. Light blue. 200 cc road STUDENTS: supervised VOLKSWAGEN 1965, blue. Ra- -oad bike ready for test each; singles $10, doubles $7.50. free. No Deposit. Plant inspec¬ Runs fine. Lists at $345. Will trial at your convenience. We r00ms_apartments> Cooking, Mobile Homes dio, whitewalls. $1250. Call 355- Quiet study atmosphere. Super¬ tion invited. AMERICAN DIA¬ Ther 3 50c sell for $200 cash. Call even- parking, 1 1/2 blocks Berkey. 3240 after 7 p.m. 3-7/1 are giving a free helmet with Phone IV 5-8836. vised. One block from campus. 1966 PARK WOOD. Three bed- PER SERVICE 914 E. GIER - s IV 2-5137. every purchase during June. 5-7/1 VOLKSWAGEN 1963, 1500 sta- Spartan Hall, 215 Louis. 332- CALL 482-0864. C7/5 FIAT 1100 D only 14,000 miles. room, 12x60 mobile home on STRATTON SPORT CENTER, FURNISHED TWO bedroom. 2574. tion wagon . AM-FM radio. 5-6/29 lot. 482-7935 after 6 p.m. for GUITAR ANDAutoharp lessons— Must sell immediately. $900. 1915 E. Michigan Avenue., Available summer and fall. Call Whitewall tires. Excellent con¬ MEN OVER IT. Five details. 3-6/29 finger-style and bluegrass flat- Call 332-5615 after 5 p.m. Phone IV 4-4411. 337-2080 or 332-2911 after 6 parking dition. $1100. 337-7021. 5-6/30 spaces. Three single rooms. picking. Beginning through ad¬ 1-6/29 LOOK OUT, SUZUKI is here! 5-6/29 VOLKSWAGEN 1964 blue sedan. Bogue Street across from cam¬ Lost & Found vanced. Call 351-6690 5-7 p.m. FORD Galaxie 1960 500 con- World's finest Excellent condition. Low mile¬ motorcycle.FOX NKW: TWO-bedroom apartment pus. 332-3870. 5-6/29 AUSTIN HEALEY 1962, 3,000 SPORT 5-7/5 LOST CARAVELL wrist watch, CENTER, 2009 South avallable for immediate occu- DIAPER SERVICE, Your Author- age, luggage rack. Reasonable. VERY NICE without board. black band. On campus. Reward. Mark II. Excellent condition, power steering, radio, white Cedar, 372-3908. C6/30 room sidewalls, wheel covers, many Call 351-4866. 5-7/5 pancy. One block from campus. Private entrance and Call 353-1039. ized Diaparene Franchised Ser¬ all extras. Call 484-4582 after TRIUMPH-650 cc. Custom. parking. 1-6/29 VOLKSWAGEN 1962 convertible. Fully furnished. Air condition- Near campus. Call after 5:00 vice Approved by Doctors. We're 5,. 3-6, 30 other extras. Jet black with Beautiful shape. See before 4.-00 ed. Special summer rate. 332- the most modern and the only matching interior and top, Radio, white sidewalls, rebuilt or weekends. 372-2875. 5-7/5 Personal p.m. Phone IV 9-0865. 5-6/29 0255. 5-6/29 personalized diaper service in $1,795. SIGNS FORD SALES, engine. Like new condition. CLOSE TO Union. Girl, share YES, NEJAC rents TV's for Pen- Light green with white interior. 1^65 furnished Lansing, providing you with dia¬ 162 W. Grand River, William- DUCAT1 250 cycle. Lots THREE BEDROOM two rooms. Limited cooking, nies a day. Free service and .. per pails, poly bags, deodor¬ ston. 655-2191. C3-6/30 $995. SIGNS FORD SALES, 162 of extras. Phone 332-3476. apartment, $150 a month in¬ refrigerator. Phone 337-1598. delivery. Same day service izers and diapers, (or you may FORD 1959, wo door sedan. Very W. Grand River, Williamston, 5-6/29 cluding utilities. Near campus. guaranteed. Call 482-0624 right Summer only. Phone 337-2345. 3-6/30 use your own). Baby clothes may CHEVROLET 19?" Tel A:r 2- good condition. Call Pete 351- 655-2191. C3-6/30 now! C ROOMS FOR girls, across from be included at no additional doqr hardtop. With. 1965, 32~ 4- 5103. 338 M.A.C, 3-6/30 VOLVO, 1961 PV 544. Owner 5-6/30 STUDENTS; WHY leave thecam- Kellogg Center. Cooking privi¬ cost. No deposit. Plant inspec¬ speed, bucket seats. S"50. I\' MERCURY MONTEREY lW, returning to school, must sell. LEARN TO FLY at our Govern- AVAILABLE NOW near campus pus—when BIMBO's will deliver leges. Reasonable. Phone 393- tion invited with trained per¬ 4-0865. 3-6/29 power brakes, power steering. $600. Phone 351-4121 evenings. ment licensed school with ex- Pleasant 2-man, furnished. 332- your pizzas to you. Call 489- sonnel to answer your questions. CHEVROLET 1963 Bel Air 2- Excellent shape. $775. Phone 5-7/6 perienced instructors. It's easy 5374. 3-6/30 3634. 3-6/29 2431. C6/30 and fun.' Approved by DSIA. Call 482- . 372-6225. 5-6/30 Open Every day I For FOUR MAN furnished apartment; WOMEN: ROOM available in su¬ CAMERAS IN Kathmandu, Nepal- 0864, AMERICAN DIAPER SER¬ the best, come to FRANCIS 2 bedrooms; summer and fall. pervised OPEL 1960. Good condition. Eco- Volkswagen bus, 12,000 miles. housing. Cooking can be covered with American VICE, 914 E. Gier Street. C AVIATION. Call IV 4-1324 for $45 per man. 332-0511 or 352- ■ facilities. Close to campus. $10 foreign Insurance and Bubolz. nomicai to run. New tires. Must Fully equipped, ready to go. an appointment now. c 6642. 3-7/1 a week. Phone 332-1638. 3-7/1 220 Abbott. 332-8671. C3-6/30 JET YOUR own eye. TV's for sell. $150, Call Mary. 332- $1995. Call Kevin 655-2644 eve¬ VOLKSWAGEN rent, dishwashers also. Call 3570. 3-7/1 nings. ONE ROOMMATE for 1 bedroom TWO SLEEPING rooms for boys. FREEH I A 3-6/29 thrilling hourofbeau- State Management Corp. 332- REPAIRS PLYMOUTH 1964. Radio, auto- Employment Burcham Woods apartment. No cooking. Private entrance. ty. For appointment, call 484- 8687. matic Auto Service & Parts FARM E30Y for $77.50 per month each. Phone Some parking. 4519 MERLE NORMAN COS¬ 7-6/30 transmission, power gardening $10 weekly. . Inspections \ Tune-ups brakes. East 351-5515. 3-6/30 Excellent condition. ACCIDENT PROBLEM? Call Lansing. 3-4 hours week, Phone 337-0241. 3-7/1 METICS STUDIO, 1600 E. Typing Service N»w i l sec Engines Pursuit special. IV 2 -6926. KALAMAZOO STREET BODY entire summer. Mornings pre- HASLETT Apartment FURNISHED ROOM, male sen- Michigan. ' C3-6/30 Specialized Repair Servic 5-6/29 SHOP. Small dents to large ferred. Phone 332-5176. wanted J one girl *" to share " four ior or graduate. Single or 4(3% Dn>COUf*rr-orTirn—Monarch PAULA ANN HAUGHEY, typist. PONTIAC 1960 Bonneville con- girl apartment. Location-great. IBM Selectric and Executive. C'.'. Mos: Import Cars. wrecks. American and foreign 10-7/18 double. Quiet. SunsetLane. 332- study notes. Now 60and up vertible. Power steering- 351-4898. 3-6/30 Multilith Offset cars. Guaranteed work. 482- 3617, 337-9412. with this ad only. MAREX REX- printing. Pro¬ 5-7/6 fessional theses typing. Near CAMERON'S brakes, automatic, radio, re¬ 1268. 2628 E. Kalamazoo. C Evening Employment CHALET APARTMENTS, East MATURE, SERIOUS student, ALL DRUG PRESCRIPTION verberator, new top, bucket CENTER campus. 337-1527. c CAR Top earnings for those who Lansing. Two Bedroom Luxury at Frandor. C6/30 IMPORTS seats. Good condition, good WASH: 25 featuring six professionals as ln- consin. According to Newton D. Committee. He s a senior partner In a | „ structors. Glick, professor of urban plan¬ L.A. 480 carries four term ning, Lewis' "Regional Re¬ Bennett, a Utah Republican, Wall. Sfreet law firm which has , .. h JL , ^ , credits and is open to all stu¬ search" may cover an area as was stunned. Chairman Sen. John some 100 attorneys with offices He leans T casually into the ! dents who have completed at big as Wisconsin. Stennls, D-Miss., said "just a In Washington, New York and microphone to speak, teetering minute now." A hush fell Paris. least their junior year of land¬ Glick said regional research on the edge of his chair. study of everything "from the large paneled hearing room "This Is an astonishing case," scape design, as well as to in¬ is the Sonnett first Dodd when and Mrs. Thomas J. Dodd clasp¬ met terested professionals. various historical sites. . . such Sonnett said In an interview. ed her hands. as lawyers they both tried Ger¬ The first topic, "Urban Plan- as routes of historical trappers," "Astonishing. I don't believe a man espionage cases during ' The man speaking, John F. ning," was presented last week to soils. By superimposing this United States senator should have World War II. Sonnett, 53, is no newcomer to by Patrick Horsbrugh, a profes¬ information, the regional re¬ to forfeit his constitutional rights courtroom drama, although this sor in the School of Architec¬ searcher can help decide, for when elected." native of Throggs Neck, is his first participation in a ture at the University of Texas. example, the best location for a ROSE BY ANY OTHER NAME—250 vari ties of roses are now in bloom in MSU's Senate hearing. He isSen.Dodd's •His personal papers should N.Y.. he got his law degree at This week's session on "Land¬ national park. scape Design" is being conducted Norman F. Carver Jr., a grad¬ Students enjoy visiting the gardens and showing them to lawyer and an old friend of the protected against llle- New York City's Fordham Law Photo by Russell Steffev Connecticut Democrat hose gal search and seizure. He should School in 1936, by Carl D. Johnson, a graduate uate of Yale University, and, have be confronted sistant U. S. of the Dept. of Landscape Archi¬ according to Glick, the recipient opportunity r with oral and written evidence. World War II, a special assist- tecture and a partner in the of Fulbright scholarships to Ja¬ Secretary of the Navy He should be judged ater £ firm of Johnson, Johnson and pan and Pakistan, will instruct James Forrestal and an assist- Men Killed, impartial court hearing, after- Roy. teach Stuart O. "Basic Dawson, who will the following session in "Space and Form in Design" in the July 18-22. Japanese Design," 4 and only after—a full hearing." ant O. S. o attempt to * in charge of claims, antitrust. He was the prosecu- general then of third session, July 5-8, is a The last session, from July 25- Bennett came because he said tor ln the John L> Lewls coal had partner in Sasaki, Dawson, De- 27, will cover "Office and Con¬ a preconceived strike case ln 1946. ' May Associates, Inc., W'atertown, struction Procedures," and will Mass. be taught by Philip D. Simonds, a partner in the firm of Simonds and Simonds. According to Pro¬ In British Tanker Blast a rescue craft that swarmed judgment against Dodd. Stennls rejected the plea and Bennett denied bias. "My real concern here,1 During a break Sonnett chats amiably, then photographers ap¬ proach, camera lights go o jv explosion and fireerupt- \ commercial tug, maneuvered fessor Glick, such a firm employs said, "is that this case is he checks his watch: "Sorry, the Alvar Cape's ancorage ln MEA Says 30-40 landscape architects. Glick explains landscape ar¬ encore to tragedy, ex- cu »i 3:49 .p.m. Flames raged with cool courage, made its way to less than two hours, leaving the close to the burning vessel to the lower bay. Helicopters flut- an illustration of what is hap- gentlemen, It's back to work." chitecture as "the design of out¬ ploded'and burned anew Tuesday 546-foot British ship belching shove away the naphtha-pumping tered overhead, ready to provide - - - - Brooklyn anchorage. Less steam -earn and listing to starboard, barge that lay alongside the Alva assistance. Don't Go door space" including, scale- A section of the starboard bow Cape. The Alva Cape was anchored A se Dodd Probe than two weeks ago she was in- wise, anything from back yards eboats darted through within sight of the heavily ti to national parks. The landscape volved in a collision thatclaimed of the Alva Cape was blown 33 lives. away by the latest explosion, and smoke and flame duplicate the eled Shore Parkway that runs architect also helps design build¬ i fire fighting beside Gravesend Bay. Emer- To Ecorse ings, bridges and housing devel¬ were This time at least four men counted dead, with six oth- the fire was confined to the for- ward part of the vessel, dangerous, methods close- employed only a fewdays gency equipment created a miles- long traffic jam, Awaiting Reports opments. Disaster units with ambu- ago, when the collision occurred LANSING (*)--'The Michigan MSU's School of Landscape ers missing. Education Assn. Tuesday announ¬ Architecture dates to the 1880's, Once again it the volatile lances, doctors and nurses, sped In the Kill Van Kull, between against the Ecorse when every student was required naphtha cargo aboard the 11,- to the Brooklyn shore, as they Island Stater^Fire and New Jersey, ced sanctions School District, where teachers to take a course in landscape 252-ton British ship that sent had 12 days ago to the Staten Dept. lieutenant was To Contact WASHINGTON (UPI) — Senate The allegation that Dodd pock- have been on strike since early gardening, according to Glick. explosions and flames ripping Island waterfront, lest a sky- blown off the Alva Cape by one investigators said Tuesday they eted campaign contributions for through her fire-scarred hulk as high explosion of the AlvaCape's of the explosions Tuesday and his own use was originally made this month. The strike itself was not men¬ He of our noted that "there are more grads practicing profes¬ she lay Just offshore in Grav- entire naphtha cargo spread ca- Surveyor planned to check out every charge of misconduct leveled at Sen. by syndicated columnists Drew Pearson and Jack Anderson. tioned in the statement in which sionally than any other school." esend Bay. , tastrophe ashore. PASADENA, Calif, Thomas J. Dodd, D-Conn. The Alva Cape's 143,000-bar- The money in question was the association urged educators ientlsts planned Tu< •sday night hoped to finish the Inquiry before raised at several Connecticut not to seek employment in the rel cargo caught fire after a June try to contact A me; •ica's sur- Congress adjourns. 16 collision with the American the n Sources close to the Senate testimonial dinner school district. spacecraft Super Elephant yor in 1961 at which then Vice tanker Texaco Massachusetts at whether it survived Ethics Committee indicated that Ironically, it is the MEA's rival teacher organizing group, the narrow entrance to Newark the 260 degree below tempera¬ public hearings on a new phase of President Lyndon B. Johnson, a the American Federation of Bay. Flames 100 feet high swept tures of the lunar "night." the charges against Dodd may long-time friend and colleague, the chief speaker. " " Teachers, AFL-CIO. which is the bargaining agent for T ransport both tugs. tankers and two escorting Small Girl The earth moves into so that the Goldstone tracking position start in the latter part of July, The new round of hearings, ac- was Johnson also appeared at a 1963 the Ecorse teachers. A Coastguard hearing into station in the California Mojave cording i the sources, covdddeal testimonial dinner at which Vice The Ecorse School Board has this disaster, the worst in New Desert, will be able to contact with the sensational allega- President Hubert H. Humphrey, MADISON, Wis. (UPI)—A 7,500 the elephant tossed the child over the cr.i ft at about 5 p.m. PDT, tion against Dodd—that Displayed gave the main .i— - — Harbor in six years, was refused to negotiate contract York he kept then a interrupted in midafternoon by pound elephant mauled a young its head. It was not known if the (8 p.m. EDT) Tuesday. terms with the teachers while for his own use some $200,000 address. news of the new mishap. More girl to death at the Vilas Park female Indian elephant, called The sun was scheduled to rise in campaign contributions, James P. Boyd, Dodd's chief they are still on strike, leading to an impasse. BUJJJ3ANK, Calif. J1,—A mil¬ than $11 million in federal dam- zoo Tuesday as the youngster "Winkle," stepped on the girl, on the moon early Wednesday Another area under investlga- accuser and leader of a group "A marginal educational pro- lion-dollar mock-up of Lockheed age suits already have been filed tried to feed the animal pop- Mel Bollig, the animal's train- ni"6 and scientists at the jet tlon involves the loan of which removed some 4,000 docu¬ '' , gram" and failure to build a new Aircraft Corp.'s proposed 1,800- in the wake of the collision, corn. er, entered the cage and brought He said the propulsion laboratory here said from Assoclates Inc., 8 ments from his office, said the Zoo Director Olive Nelson said the girl': body c mile - an - hour supersonic jet 5 The new fire occurred as a junior high school were cited by the MEA as the. main reasons transport went on display Mon¬ barge was pumping the remain- the girl climbed a chicken-wire girl was s not 'badly mangled." The they hoped to determine if the Connecticut"c o ii t r~a c tin g firm immediately lden- ^U^ed d*7®1"810" of was the "heart" moneY bY of the day, a huge gray gull of a plane ing naphtha from the tanks of the fence in front of the cage and victim w; case against the senator. for announcing sanctions against eral government. that: Alva Cape. Of her original car- held her hand out. The elephant tified. ^ In testimony last week, Boyd the district. The MEA said the sanctions Could fly 266 people from Los ^gtwLe§s than 25,000 barrels re- grabbed her leg and pulled her Bollig said the elephant was two-week lunar "night." Chairman John C. Stennls, D- accused Dodd of "a misappro- imposed because the dis¬ Angeles to New York, at 13miles mainedl ' through foot-wide bars into her standing overtheglrrsbodywhen "If we have enough power in Miss., declined t say what the prlatlon of hundreds of thou- were trict, "although among the weal¬ altitude, in two hours, 10 min¬ The Coast Guard Said one of outdoor cage. he entered the cage. the battery we 11 turn the solar thiest in the state, has imposed utes. its cutters and a New York City Nelson said several children It trumpeted three times and panel toward >ak up energy," sun and the risinga spokes- marginal educational program At 273 feet measures just 27 fireboat were standing by when witnessed the incident and said stepped back as he entered. n said. ahead in other areas.'1 a libel suit against Pearson a feet shorter than a football field. — Winkle is 23-years-old and committee members and Anderson, Dodd said he be- upon the children of the commu¬ Has a 30-foot beak that for has been a resident of the zoo However, he said scientists nity through its refusal to levy landings drops 15 degrees to give for 18 years. did not know if there was any were equally tight-lipped about lieved "that the use of all funds adequate tax money for school building facilities^.." the pilot a bay window view of runway and horizon. Romney, Nixon Appear Her cage had been widened re¬ cently, Nelson said, because the emuining in the battery, j succeed in turning the the next stage of the investiga- tion, which marks the first time contributed to him was proper and lawful return and that his federal fully reflected The MEA said the professional with Boeing panel, and the battery a senator has faced a tribunal income tf " x J At National JCs Meet «.Lockheed is vying staff of the school district sup¬ for award of a U.S. supersonic He said the cage was construct- charges, we will try to take a of his peers since the Senate his taxable income and, in this ports its findings. It said until transport contract. Boeing's i , . ed so the elephant could not reach picture Wednesday night," the censured the late Sen. Joseph S. regard, plaintiff (Dodd) relied on the problems identified are mockup showing was reported DETROIT P,-Speeches by two An off:iclal of the National 8°™«JP ° spoke spokesman si said. R-Wis.. in McCarthy, R.Wis.. MrParthv. 1954. ln 1954. Independent legal independent legal judgment." judgment." solved it will "continue to urge here to be slated for next Sep¬ prospective Republican candi- Aeronautics and Space Admin- trunK over ti e oars. its >Thl5 t0 show V°u a11 Po educators not to seek employ¬ tember. dates for president v, :o spice istration (NASA) urged delegates ment in the school district." Boeing's designfeaturesa var¬ Tuesday's national convention of Monday to undertake an eariy animals to the zooare danger- iable sweep wing that moves into some 10,000 Jaycees. detection system of their own- °us, Nelson said, visibly shak- Service Gov. George Romney was to looking for young people with en- ,, position for supersonic flight. Lockheed's is a fixed delta wing, welcome theWtesUich leadership potential. Typing Service igan at 10 a.m. immediately ahead Walter Wiesman, internal dead on arrival, sharply pointed toward the front, gullwing curvature when of the keynote address of former communications coordlnator at JOB RESUMES, 100 copies, with Vice President Richard Nixon. $4.50. ALDINGER DIRECT viewed head on. the NASA center at Huntsvllle. MAIL ADVERTISING, 533 N. Lockheed claims itswinggives Today the Jaycees will hear a Ua _ ^ a „K^y Man„ lunch_ the michigan state welcome from Detroit Mayor Je¬ university Clippert. IN' 5-2213. C maximum safety at lowspeedand eon that young people needed to rome Cavanagh, a candidate for maximum efficiency in superson¬ lead today must have drive, know- TYPING: TERM papers, manu- Democratic nomination scripts, theses. Iris Banks, 487- ic flight. , „ ledge, enthusiasm and conviction, U.S. Senate, and and must also be activists as 0650. T ransportation 5-6/30 In a Vast hangar, about 100 newsmen walked through the long, handsomely furnished interior of p.m. Humphrey. from Vice President Hubert realists. GRAOIIATION A Parade of States also will be He urged- the Jaycees to set the mockup and took turns at the | 1 highlight today, as will a gi- up a program to detect these RIDE WANTED TOConnecticut- N.Y.C. this Thursday or Fri¬ day, back Monday. Share driv¬ dummy controls in the pilots' seats, raising and lowering the "weathervision" nose. gantic Detroit River fire works characteristics and suggested display inaugurating the annual they establish contacts with guld- RING ing expenses. 355-2080. Freedom Festival of Detroit and ance counselors and parent- Movable panels of scenery gave 1-6./29 views of various flying condi¬ neighboring Windsor, Ont. teacher groups. RIDE WANTED to Western Mich- now available tions -- clouds, coastline,"run¬ igan Upper Peninsula July 1st. A diamond in lieu ways, mountains. Share expenses. Call IV 5-7839. The long craft, depicted in full of a stone, 3-6/29 sc^le plywood mockup, is sleek WANTED THREE riders toPhil- and slim, with red and white adelphia, New Jersey area. trim. It suggests some sharp Round trip. Leaving Friday, beaked bird poised in flight. back Monday. ED 2-1677. Or, seen from above, its pro¬ soak up 3-7/1 file could be a funnel with a ball-point pen protruding through the sun- Wanted it fore and aft. The United States' supersonic ONE GIRL to camp to Califor- nia and back, August 1 to Sep¬ transport will compete with the British - French Concorde for glamorously tember 3,1966 Volkswagen. Call Marsha, 372-2756 after 5 p.m. world air traffic supremacy in 3-6/29 the 1970's. General Electric and Pratt & (but safely) SET OF four 1965 Corvette hub caps. Call 332-0466. 3-7/1 Whitney are competing for the with engine award. Air frame and TWO OR THREE bedroom un- engine designs are to be submit¬ fumished house or apartment ted to the FederalAviationAgen- Wallace needed immediately by MSU cy next Sept. prote®or. One or two year lease deposit. Phone 332-0458. sunglasses QoaJI 5-7/5 Want Cartoonist WANTED: A cartoonist: Some¬ Across From GRADUATE STUDENT desires one with a sense of humor, per¬ Home Economics Bldg. 2-bedroom house or apartment. ceptive mind and an artistic hand. ED 2-6753 For July only. Jerry Kiekover, The State News needs a car¬ inutions by DR. W.C. JtlW.N, registered optometrist Y.M.C.A. IV 9-6501. 3-6/29 toonist for the editorial page. BLOOD DONORS needed, $6 for Anyone interested should bring Ga/ul £>kxpp, DIRECTLY ACROSS RH positive, $7, $10, or $12 for RH negative. DETROIT BLOOD SERVICE, INC. 1427 E. Michigan Ave. Hours 9-4 Mon¬ samples of his work to the State News editorial office, 347 Stu¬ dent Services Building.. Subject matter covering cam¬ WALLACE OPTICIANS 3040 Vine 'Opposite Frondor) Phone IV 9-2774 A+uiex, Spartan Center FROM THE UNION BLDG. day and Tuesday; 12-7 Thurs¬ pus life and political issues is ■ISO offices jowntown at 10" N. Open Monday Thru Saturday Washington. Ph. IV 2-1175 day. 489-7587. C preferred. 10 Michigan State News. East Lansing. Michigan Fair Housing Passes WASHINGTON (UPI) dent Johnson's request for a fed¬ eral fair housing law narrowly ~ Presi¬ ing section would have to be mod¬ 1st ified to attract the kind of bi¬ partisan support necessary In the WELCOME! M.S.U. SUMMER STUDENTS... passed its first congressional past to get civil rights bills test Tuesday, but it still wasn't through Congress. There was some suspicion In DISCOVER THE LOW PRICES, FINEST SELECTION OF QUALITY FOODS in the clear. these quarters that a deliberate The House Judiciary' Commit¬ tee, in tentative action that sur¬ attempt was being made to keep AT DIG E... CLOSE TO CAMPUS AT 3301 EAST MICHIGAN AVE. the bill tough so Its chances of prised even some of the firmest defeat on the House floor would civil rights advocates, voted 17 be heightened. to 15 against a motion to elim¬ The committee did adopt c inate from the administration's 1^66 civil rights package the pro¬ change In the controversial pro¬ vision that would exempt housing vision to outlaw racial, religious and ethnic discrimination in the operated by religious or frater¬ nal groups for their own mem¬ sale or rental of housing. bers. But It rejected proposals The vote was subject to re¬ consideration as the committee to exempt owner-occupied rent¬ worked als, such as boarding- homes. to complete action on the The other less controversial entire bill. features of the bill Included: It already has approved sec¬ —Jury selection: discrimina¬ tions designed to forbid discrim¬ tion on the basis of race, reli¬ ination in jury selection, gion, sex or national origin o strengthen penalties for racial lawed; new system for random violence and speed desegrega¬ selection of federal juries pre¬ tion of schools. scribed. Provision made for fed¬ After Tuesday's closed ses¬ eral court challenges of jury se¬ sion, Committee Chairman lection methods used in state and Emanuel Celler, iVN.Y., said local courts. only that the open occupancy sec¬ —Racial violence: reconstruc¬ tion was "held*lntact" with ten¬ tion-era criminal law updated to tative defeat of various amend¬ protect specific types of civil ments aimed at killing it or re¬ rights activities;penalties, rang¬ ducing its effect. ing from one year to life de¬ It was reported, however, that pending on seriousness of the of¬ 14 northern Democrats and three fense. Republicans voted against the —Desegregation: Justice Dept. motion to eliminate the housing given specific authority to Ini¬ section, while eight Republicans tiate suits to desegregate schools and seven southern and border and other public facilities with¬ state Democrats were said to out waiting for complaints, and have supported it. general authority to s Civil rights supporters pri¬ action to protect other civil vately expressed belief the.hous- rights. AMA Drafts Policy On Medicare Bill CHIC \ CO (UPI)—The new and other medical personnel em¬ president of the American Medi¬ ployed by the New York City cal >ss;„ (AMA) said Tuesdayhe Health Dept. , said he does not anticipates no immediate, major favor "concerted action" by doc¬ tors in a labor dispute. problems in administration of the Medicare progr.-m when it He said,„however, he believes goes into effect Friday. individual doctors have a right Dr. Charles L. Hudson pre¬ to strike to enforce demands. He dicted th..t hospitals and doc¬ said he was not fearful that the tors will be able to take care New York strike would damage o: .all emergency patients and the image of doctors. s..:a, "1 do not foresee great "If we do a good job and confusion or clutter within hos- demonstrate our abilities, our pitals." image will take care of itself," The 62-year-old Cleveland, he said. Ohio, physician told newsmen, however, that Medicare could pose long-range threat to doc¬ and the quality of medical Primary tors "We have opposed and will continue to oppose the inclireion (continued frorr page of everyone under a government social insurance plan," he said. thought Silverman, who won Lib¬ Hudson held a news confer¬ eral party endorsement, would ence at the- .MA's 115th annual win. If he does, Kennedy's po¬ convention as committees tried litical hand will be considerably to ''.rite Medicare policy that strengthened and he might con¬ wuuld satisfy militant medical ceivably wrench control of Tam¬ opponents of the government pro- many Hall from New York Coun¬ gra:n and still fulfill ethical ob¬ ty Democratic party leader J. ligations to patients. The policy¬ Raymond Jones. making house of delegates will Jones is the only Negro coun¬ receive committee recommenda¬ ty leader in the nation and could tions Wednesday. be expected to command heavy Even as Hudson assessed the support in Harlem for regular situation on the eve of Medi¬ Democratic nominees. Klein care's inauguration, President forces, wary of the magic of the Johnson in Washington urged full¬ Kennedy name among minorities, est possible cooperation with the have charged that the senator's program by hospitals, doctors anti-Klein campaign has had ra¬ cist overtones. The President issued the ap¬ Kennedy, just back from a peal after Welfare Secretary John much-publicized tour of Africa, W. Gardner informed him that paid little attention to the ra¬ numerous southern hospitals still cism charges. have not qualified under the civil Much of Klein's campaign lit¬ rights section of the Medicare erature has been aimed at Ken¬ program. nedy, rather than Silverman. Hudson said hospital beds al¬ Even Silverman has complained ready are fully occupied in many- that on campaign walks with Ken¬ areas of the country. nedy most people asked, "Who is "I b e 1i e v e under Medicare that with man Kennedy?'' there may be longer waiting Even if Silverman wins, he lists," he said. "This in itself is would face his opponent .again not go.;d, but I believe we'll be at the polls in November because able to take care of the emer¬ Klein would be the Republican gency patients." candidate. There is a third con¬ He said Medicare calls for tender for the Democratic nomi¬ "greater responsibility" on the nation for surrogate—Criminal part of both the doctor and the Court Judge Thomas Rohan—but public. he was expected to be an also "After all, it is still the phy¬ sician' who certifies a patient During a final campaign ap¬ to a hospital," he said. "There pearance Monday night, Kennedy still must be a demonstration of shrugged off an interviewer's need." suggestion that he engineered the Hudson said he would imple¬ Klein bid as a personal power ment any policy adopted by the play. house of delegates In regard to "I didn't need this," the sena¬ racial discrimination within the tor commented. medical profession. But he said He was followed on the air by he would oppose ousting of state a Klein supporter, Attorney Mor¬ medical societies which do not ris Ernst, who described Ken¬ comply vmi. AMA policies. More nedy as "the greatest peril to than 200 doctors, nurses and this state and nation" because of other medical personnel have his "ruthless ambition." picketed convention sessions de¬ manding ouster of some south¬ ern state societies. Mariachi Singers "I'm a moderate person," Hudson said. "1 believe in the At St. John's slow and logical approach. I be¬ lieve there has been progress and The Monterrey, Mexico, Boys' this can be expected to clear up Town Mariachi Singers will per¬ situations that exist." form at the St. John Student Hudson, commenting on a Center Auditorium, at 8 tonight. strike of 1,500 doctors, nurses There is no admission charge.