Negro Riot Friday MICHIGAN Flares Into UNIVERSITY STATE Third Day V o l. 59. N um ber 18 E ast Lansing, Michigan July 15, 1966 10c Manhunt Spreads For Killer C H I C A G O (UPI)--W est Side ed on the w est side Wednesday Negroes rioted Into Thursday night as rep o rts of fires and morning, continuing for a third looting came in. Some fired over day the racial violence that gush­ the heads of about 300 youths ed up from a dispute over a fire who had broken into and set fire hydrant. to a drugstore along Roosevelt Riot police fired over the heads Road, where Tuesday night’s vio­ lence boiled. Of Chicago Student Nurses of young looters, formed flying wedges to clear the s tre e ts In In another a r ia, firem en bat­ three w est side neighborhoods— tling a blaze started by another and dodged Molotov cocktails, mob w ere showered with bricks bottles, bricks and curses from and had to call police. apartm ent windows high above As the situation quieted some­ them. what, word came that the a rre s t of a robbery suspect had touch­ 6 T h r e e Negroes—one a 10- year-old g irl and another a 14- ed off c a r - s t o n i n g , window- year-old boy—w ere shot. Five policemen w ere injured and sev­ smashing and fire-bombing In the Fillm ore Street district three Ninth Coed Hid en other persons w ere hurt. Po­ lice reported 39 persons w ere m iles away w h e r e Chicago’s w orst rio ts of la st sum m er oc­ 8 Victims fCrimeOf O a rre ste d Wednesday night and early Thursday, bringing to 60 the total a rre s te d since Tuesday cu rred . Police quieted that trouble. Riot police then tried to clear a seven-block area of West Madi­ From Murderer night. CHICAGO (UPI)—Robert Hall was out walking his dog shortly The shifts of all Chicago po­ son Street by forming flying wed­ ges. From the darkened tene­ after 6 a.m . Thursday when he heard the woman’s scream : licem en w ere extended to 12 "All dead—all except mel I’m the only one alivel” hours. m ents cam e rocks and Molotov cocktails. Women and g irls lean­ The scream s came from the second floor ledge of a duplex "T he only way to suppress the apartm ent house. On it, hysterical and in night clothes, stood an violence recently experienced is ed from windows and scream ed at the policemen below them as attractive young woman. to put adequate manpower In to Hall flagged down Patrolm an Daniel Kelly, cruising by in his deal with crim inal activity," Po­ lightning flashed. "Go home o r go to Jail," po­ patrol c ar, as residents of the quiet far southeast side neighbor­ lice Supt. P.W. Wilson told news­ hood began stream ing out of their homes. men. licem en told a n y b o d y on the stre e t. Kelly hurried into the duplex—and into the horrible evidence About 350 policemen converg­ of one of the w orst m ass m urders in modern history. He found eight young student nurses—strangled, stabbed and shot to death. Augenstein Asks One g irl, nude, was lying on a couch on the firs t floor. The bodies of the other seven, clad in night clothes, were in two rooms M A R Y A. JORDAN V A L I C E N T I A PASSON G L O R IA D A VYS P A T R IC IA MATUSEK and a hallway on the second floor. The lone survivor of a long night of h o rro r—the girl on the ledge—was Corazan Anurao, 23, an attractive student exchange Seat On Ed Board nurse from the Philippines. Almost incoherently at firs t, s h e . told police how she rolled beneath a bed while a tall, young gunman killed her friends, one by one. She cowered there for nearly six hours, she said, then By L E O Z A IN E A P atrick V. McNamara, a Demo­ cra t. struggled from the bonds with which the k iller had tied her, forced State News Staff W r i t e r However, Augenstein concedes open a screen, and crawled onto the ledge. In a surp rise retu rn to Michi­ he has "done a little m ore home­ FBI agents and police w ere guided in their spreading search gan’s political scene, Leroy G. w ork," to prevent being over­ for the tall, white killer by eight words he spoke to Miss Anurao: Augenstein • announced Thursday looked at this sum m er’s GOP “ I need money to get to New O rleans.” he will seek the Republican nom­ state convention. Four men w ere a rre ste d within hours. ination to the State Board of Edu­ M embers of the party h ier­ Two young hitchhikers—a native of the Philippines and a man cation. archy meet Aug. 26-27 to choose with a Romanian passport—w ere a rre ste d on the N orthern Indiana T h e 38-year-old Augenstein, two men to oppose incumbents Dr. Toll Road. chairm an of the biophysics de­ Leon F ill and Donald M .D .Thur- At the downtown Chicago of­ partm ent, dropped out of the U.S. ber, whose two-year te rm s ex­ fices of Delta A irlines, a tall Senate race e a rlie r t h i s y e a r’ pire this fall. Both men will when GOP lead ers chose then- seek re-election on the Demo­ Rep. Robert Griffin, R -T rav erse cratic ticket. M A R L IT A GARGULLO P A M E L A W IL K E N IN G SUSAN F A R R IS N IN A S C H M A L E man with a splotch of blood on his sh irt attempted to purchase a ticket to New O rleans. He fled T ragedy City, to replace the late. Sen. F ill, a" D etroit physJicui.i, is when employees began question­ chairm an of the board’s medical education subcommittee now ing him but was taken Into cus­ tody for questioning. His de­ Reflects studying the possibility of ex­ scription as "unshaven, scrawny panding M SU 'snew tw o-yearCol- lege of Human Medicine into a FIGHT OVER WATER FLARES and looking like a Clark Street bum ," did not match the kill­ e r ’s description. Dangers full degree granting program . Without specifically plugging Another man was picked up as CHICAGO (UPI)—Pamela Lee MSU, Augenstein expressed hope he stepped off a bus at Kanka­ Wllkening, 20, one of the eight Israeli, Syrian Jets Clash that a third medical school be kee, 111., about 50 m iles south student nurses slain Thursday, established in the state, and said of Chicago, and was heldforC hi- w rote th ree years ago In her the facilities here provide an ex­ cago police. application for n u rses’s tra in ­ cellent opportunity for expansion. Police Supt. O. W. W i l s o n ing: But, he added, that even If grim ly told rep o rters at a mid­ " I have always wanted to be a the study group decides against A te rs e Isra eli communique and wounded two Israeli soldiers day news conference the killer nurse because I never liked to TEL AVIV (UPI)—Israeli Air Syrian and two Israeli Jets were expanding MSU’s school a grow­ said the attacks w ere launched riding with him In a command "slaughtered" his victim s. see people suffer.” F orce Jets bombed Syrian en­ shot down In what appeared to be ing need for doctors demands In retaliation fo r Syrian "a c ts c a r. The other Injured a 15-year- "Some w ere shot, some w ere Another victim , P atricia Ann gineers working to divert the the most serious border clash some provision be made for en­ of sabotage’’—an apparent ref­ old boy driving a tractor In the stabbed, some had their throats Matusek, 20, Chicago, w rote that precious w aters of the Jordan b e t w e e n Israel and its Arab larging schools at the University erence to two mine blasts Is­ upper Galilee section to the north. cut,” he said. "Undoubtedly the she had wanted to be a nurse River Thursday and clashed with neighbors. T h e Syrians also of Michigan or Wayne State. claim ed 10 persons—m ostly ci­ ra e l claim s were touched off by killer has blood all over him .” ever since she could rem em ber Syrian MIG Interceptors in a dog­ Augenstein s a i d he decided vilian fa rm e rs—w ere killed by Syrian raid e rs sneaking across because "th e joy one gets from fight over the troubled border three months ago, after urglngs from various GOP county c h air- just north of the Sea of Galilee. the raid which took place near the boarder. Senate Squabble Chief of detectives Otto Kreu- helping others cannot be taken z e r said no clues w ere found a w a y .". Conflicting rep o rts from T el the tiny Israe li border settle­ One of the b lasts—near A1 M asor—killed a ciVillanTuesday W A S H I N G T O N (UPI)—T h e among the mauled bodies of the The g irls, who w ere only a few c o n tin u e d on p age 2 Aviv and Damascus said one ment of A1 Magor. Senate met in ra re s e c r e c y nurses. L E R O Y G. A U G E N S T E IN weeks short of their goals, w ere Thursday to debate—and most "K illers like this seldom leave found slain in th eir tw o-story likely to re jec t—a proposal to a calling c a rd ," he said. " I townhouse apartm ent. They had broaden its scrutiny of the Cen­ pray to God that something will been stabbed, strangled and shot. Sockol Plans Cross-Campus Trek tra l Intelligence Agency’s sensi­ come up In the way of physical They w ere p art of a class of tive activities. evidence. 114 student n urses at South Chi­ Senate Democratic L e a d e r "Any Individual who could slay cago Community Hospital, and Mike M a n s f i e l d failed after eight people can certainly slay representative of the thousands weeks of efforts to compromise again." of young women who stream to Sockol, a New York senior, I am now," he said. 1947, but w ere forced to turn the Jurisdictional d i s p u t e and The victims were: Chicago’s m edical centers each State News staff w riter Don pack a sm all radio transm itter said he has been contemplating avert a floor fight. He predicted —Gloria Davy, 23, Dyer, Ind., year for training In a profes­ Sockol announced plans T hurs­ back. to relay sto ries on his progress the move to_glve the Senate F o r­ the trip for about two years and According to official records whose body was found on the sion in which difficult hours and day for a historic expedition In to the State News. began the actual planning for it nobody has ever crossed the Sockol will ca rry only a tent, He leaves Sunday from the ex­ eign Relations Committee a role fir s t floor. She was strangled. dangerous travel go hand In hand. which he will attempt to cro ss food, a rubber raft and a sleep­ in overseeing CIA o p e r a t i o n s In M arch. MSU c a m p u s on f o o t . T w o tre m itie s of the MSU farm s and conHnued on page 2 continued on page 2 the campus of Michigan State would be "defeated decisively." University on foot. " I ’ll never be m ore ready than Frenchmen made the attempt In ing bag with him. He will also expects to a rriv e at Kellogg Cen­ te r about two weeks late r. " If I can make t h i s t r i p suc­ cessfully,” Soc­ kol said, " p e r­ haps It will con- Seventh Annual Fine Arts v l n c e students and adm inistra­ to rs that closer com munications Festival To Start Sunday A highlight of Monday’s ac­ program Is the perform ance of A week of program s In the fine can and should tivities will be a lecture by Mark the Carm en de Lavallade Dance a r ts that should provide "som e­ b e established, Sockol Van D o r e n , re tire d Columbia Company at 8:15 p.m . In F a ir­ thing for everyone" begins Sun­ even at a huge University professor and chan­ child T heater. day. m ultiversity like MSU, cellor of the American Academy Miss de Lavallade has appear­ The Seventh Annual Fine A rts **I believe people a re basical­ Festival is sponsored by the Lec­ of Arts and L e tte rs. He will ed In theater, concert, opera, ly the sam e all o v er," he added. ture-C oncert Series In coopera­ speak on "W ords and M usic" in television and cinema and has "N o m atter what your m ajor, tion with the College of A rts and Fairchild at 4 p.m . won increasing recognition since your dorm o r your class stand­ L etters and departm ents of A rts, Another high point of Monday’s (continued on page 4) ing, we’re all a part of this Landscape A rchitecture, Music, great institution." Continuing Education, S p e e c h , Sockol believes that students Television and Radio and the at F ee, Wilson, L a n d o n and Audio-Visual Aids Center and Brody, despite the fact that they the Dance Section of the Dept, HHH Ride Under Fire WASHINGTON (UPI) — T h e president in a party that also a re separated by such great dis­ of Health, Education and Rec­ Justice Departm ent's antitrust Included Clifton C arter, execu­ tances, can learn a great deal reation. tive d irector and acting tre a su re r The festival begins with an chief said Thursday he and Vice from each other. President Hubert H. Humphrey of the Democratic National Com­ "M en In Holmes without cars open house for the new exhibit, flew to the A ll-Star baseball m ittee. •V think it’s too fa r to be able to "M odern T apestries, Rugs and T urner made the disclosure to game in St. Louis in an airplane walk to date a g irl In R ather," Wall Hangings by P ainters and V# totrsf he said. Sculptors," 3-5 p.m . Sunday In " I want to prove it can be the Kresge Art Center G allery. done." Confronted with the pos­ Monday morning at 10 Norman owned by Anheuser-Busch Inc., the brewery against which the government dropped an antitrust suit last month. UPI after a leading House Re­ publican Implied that $10,000 in contributions from Anheuser - Busch executives to the Demo­ Journey Without End? sibility that his trip might end F . C arver J r ., a Kalamazoo a r­ Donald F . Turner, head of the cratic party might have been the in failure, thus hurting his cause, chitect, will speak on "F o rm departm ent's antitrust division, reason the Justice Dept, dropped (upper le ft). Tents and n u m b ers Indicate places Sockol said: and Space of Japanese Archi­ Sockol w ill s ta r t at the MSU f a r m s (low er right) said he was a guest of the vice the suit against the brew ery. w e re Sockol expects to stop f o r the night. "1 won’t fa ll." tectu re." and a r r i v e a couple of weeks l a t e r at Kellogg C en ter STATENEW K y le Kerbawy S Joel Stark SOVIETS RULE OUT GENEVA PARLEY 'Selfish U.S. Politics Motivate LBJ' ed ito r-in -ch ief advertising manager the necessary a rm s ’’ to fight in M rs. Gandhi, speaking at an While Kosygin fell short of MOSCOW (UPI) — T he Soviet and ruled out a Geneva peace Union Thursday charged P re s i­ conference at this tim e. Viet Nam if Hanoi ask s for them. Indian embassy luncheon ea rlie r, publicly declaring rejection of dent Johnson Is motivated by Soviet P rem ier Alexei Kosygin He said the U.S. bombings near once again proposed ’’the imme­ M rs. Gandhi's plea, he said two Page F r i d a y , J u l y 15, 1966 "selfish dom estic" politics in renewed the K rem lin’s prom ise Hanoi and Haiphong in North Viet diate stoppage of bombings of days of talks with h e r in Moscow his conduct of the Viet Nam war to send Soviet "volunteers with Nam brought the United States North Viet Nam, the cessation of have revealed "d ifferen ces" be­ fa r beyond the "brinkm anship" hostilities and the retu rn to the ’ tween them. Diplomatic observ­ policy of the late Secretary of negotiating t a b l e within the EDITORIAL State John F o ster Dulles. framework of the Geneva agree­ e r s said these differences In­ cluded the question of reconven­ OUR READERS SPEAK The new U.S. bombings near m ent.” ing the Geneva conference. Hanoi and Haiphong "w ere also S h e s a i d h e r nation w a s Rx For M.D. Shortage-- The Soviet Union and B ritain considered in the (Soviet) plans "gravely concerned about the 6Bus Fee Facts a re co-chairm en of the confer­ for assistance which is being worsening turn of events,” ill ence and B ritain and the United rendered, and will be ren d ered ," Viet Nam. States have led appeals to reopen he said. A f t e r Kosygin’s m i l i t a n t it as a forum for Viet Nam peace MSI) Medical School Still Confused9 Speaking a t a K rem lin friend­ speech, M rs. Gandhi emphasized ship meeting fo r visiting Indian h er country's desire for univer­ P rim e M inister Indira Gandhi, sal peace, not only In Viet Nam talks. Other world leaders have urg­ Kosygin said the Viet Nam war but with her neighbors Pakistan ed the Soviets in the past year IT IS IR O N IC that the wealthiest, If the State B oard of Education ap­ proves M S U ’ s proposal fo r a d eg re e - is spurring increasing opposition and Communist China. to reconvene the conference but most tec h nica lly advanced nation in To the Editor: could be susceptible, It occurred granting medical school, it w ill be in the United States. While expressing India’s de­ the Kremlin has rejected them the w o rld would have a c r i t l c a l doctor to me that your rep o rte r visited all. shortage. taking a giant step in helping to r e ­ "In an effort to compensate term ination to safeguard its te r­ With my le tte r re: your "$12 the MSU math department Instead for th is,” he said, the United rito ria l integrity and indepen­ In the last 35 years the number of duce the doctor shortage this state M rs. Gandhi, who c a rrie d her Bus P ass Fee Unfair to Summer of logically visiting your account­ States government "goes in for dence, M rs. Gandhi said: "We doctors in p riv a te p ra ctice p e r 100,- faces. peace crusade to Moscow after Students" editorial, I hoped to ing school. ever new m ilitary ventures to are willing to come to a just and 000 people has dropped f r o m 108 to F I N A N C I A L L Y , MSU IS the best lo­ visits with United Arab Republic stim ulate you into a further sense Whether o r not sum m er bus gain the confidence of different honorable settlem ent with China 93. But the situation is f a r worse than cation in the state f o r tra in in g more P resident Gamal Abdel N asser of responsibility; I didn’t want to passes can be reduced in price extrem ist elem ents in that coun- a t any time (and) 1 am confident a n d Yugoslav P resid en t Tito, these s ta tistics indicate. The two groups re q u irin g the most medical medical students. The U n iv e rs ity a l­ ready has fu lly equipped departments project m yself and burden you with a dry treatise on accounting depends on the actual facts at MSU. A conclusion based upon try. 11 that there is no problem between leaves Moscow for home Satur­ c a r e - - t h o s e under 15 and those o ver in B io ch e m is try , Biophysics, P h a r­ "T hus,” he added, “ interna­ India and Pakistan which cannot day. for transportation system s on your past sto ries of overcrowd­ tional security, the security of be peacefully s e ttle d . . . " 6 5 - - a r e in creasing at a fa s te r rate macology, Pathology, Zoology and which you surely have enough ed buses during the heavily at­ H er departure will coincide than the re st of the population. Anatomy and other departm ents need­ the American people themselves, But her appeals to reconvene with the a rriv a l h ere of B ritish experts around your campus. tended sem esters and party-fill­ the lives of A merican soldiers the 1954 Geneva Conference that And the shortage is f u r th e r aggra­ ed f o r a medical school. P rim e M inister H arold Wilson Indeed, from my distance, It ed buses during the sum m er a re endangered for the sake of brought a truce of so rts to South­ vated b y ’ the medical demands of the One of the p r i m a r y costs of s ta r t ­ who will also try to get the So­ would have been unrealistic to sessions would logically follow selfish domestic political inter­ east Asia apparently fell on deaf w a r in V ie t Nam, M ed ic are and the ing a full d e g re e -g ra n tin g medical viets to reconvene the Geneva offer you can unsolicited con­ that "p assenger-m ile” operat­ e s ts .” general increase in affluence and u r ­ school would c en ter on building anew Soviet ears. conference. clusive professional opinion al­ ing costs would be higher In the banization which lead to increased hospital f o r c lin ic al work. though I re g ret to see you re ­ sum m er. Your editorial destroy­ demands fo r medical s erv ic e s . But this hospital would serve the peating yourself and still mak­ ed its own objectivity when it THE BIG Q U ESTION is why the de­ mand has not been met by training more doctors. The answer is that the e n tire state and Lansing a re a . Just as the U n iv e rs ity o f M ichigan hospi­ tal takes unusual cases f r o m all over the state, a teaching hospital at MSU ing a point over reduced expen­ ditures. Misunderstanding a rise s when term s used defy definition. The reiterated the circum stance of empty seats In the sum m er. If it may make you feel any better, I can rem ind you that Several Countries Trying f a c ilit ie s to tra in enough doctors to also would. As a re su lt m o re unusual end the shortage do not exist. If all the applicants to medical schools were accepted, the shortage cases would re ce iv e special attention. THE PRESSING N E E D f o r more doctors com pels the State B oard of looseness of y o u r terminology might indicate someone didn’t research the proper people or places. After I read the le tte r "big city " papers have made sim ilar m istakes. Unfortunate­ ly, frequently deliberate. In any event, the State News did bring To Dissuade Viet Trials would end. F o r example, 19,200 stu- Education to c re a te f a c ilit ie s f o r criticizing your graphic expo­ up a provocative subject on which W A S H I N G T O N (UPI)—Sec­ a m easure of doubt that the announcement from Hanoi that de nts applied to medical schools in training m o re doctors. su re of a vital danger to which it would be b etter and m ore in­ re ta ry of State Dean Rusk said threatened tria ls would be c a r­ the airm en would be trie d . But 1964. But the schools could take only If a medical school had been built an unknowledgable MSU c o e d teresting to read what MSU’s Thursday that several foreign ried out by the Red regim e. two east European Communist 8, 612. at MSU long ago, the doctor shortage accounting students might have governments w ere attempting to " I hope Hanoi’s sober Judg­ news agencies recently ca rrie d in Michigan would be less acute today. to say. dissuade N orth Viet Nam from ment will prevail at the end of dispatches suggesting that 60 U.S. AND THE S IT U A T IO N in Michigan is worse than the nation in general. A U.S. Public Health Service study This should be an incentive to the m em b ers of the board to work as fast as possible to approve a full d e g re e - Augenstein Marvin R. Zell C ertified Public Accountant trying captured American a ir ­ men as w ar crim inals. In testim ony before a Senate the day ," he told the Senate group. "T he t r i a l has b e e n threatened. I am not sure the captives would be tried, possibly la te r this month or In early August. showed that Michigan is one of the granting m edical school at MSU. (continued f r o m page I) subcommittee, Rusk also voiced th reat will be c a rrie d out, or, if A bipartisan group of U.S. Cleveland H ts., Ohio seven states most urgently in need of men, to seek a seat on the Demo- the tria ls a re held, whether the Senators warned Wednesday that more doctors. The E dltors sentences would be ca rried out." such an action would be " b a r­ cratic-controlled, eight-m em ber board. The secretary did not Identify b aro u s" and would p r o v o k e Still nursing sc a rs from Feb­ ru a ry ’s set-to with GOP b rass, Explosive Plant Blast the governments In contact with Hanoi, but he pointed out again that such trials would be In di­ A m erican demands for punish­ ment of those responsible. Roving Ambassador W. A ver- Tragedy Reflects Dangers Augenstein confidently said he en ters the state convention with endorsem ents of 24 county ch a ir­ Demolishes 6 0 Homes re c t violation of the Geneva con­ ventions. He told the Senate Refugees ell H arrlm an, who has been work­ ing to protect the in terests of U.S. p riso n ers, h a s observed t h a t (continued fr o m page 1) men, and will be “ stumping" for m ore this sum m er. CARTHAGE, Mo. (UPI)—Huge adm itted and perhaps twice that Subcommittee that It would be th ere has been no conclusive *‘We don’t want to exaggerate tragedy for the family of Mary Nina Schmale, 21, W h e a t o n , billows of fire swept through the many w ere treated and released. " a very grave development in­ evidence that the tr ia ls would be Opposing Augenstein will be the dangers but we a re very Ann Jordan. Her brother, Philip, 111., was the daugher of D r. John H ercules Powder Plant Thurs­ The injured came from homes deed" if the Communists were held. state Rep. Raymond W urzel, (R - conscious of the need for secur­ was engaged to Susan F a rris , 21, Schmale J r ., resident physician North Street) form er chairm an day, touching off explosions that in the v i c i n i t y of the plant. "s o misguided as to abuse" the On the other hand, the Hanoi ity,” said M rs. Anne Zim m er­ another victim. on the staff of the West Side demolished as many as 60 houses F ram es of many houses In Pow­ Am erican flyers. regim e has given no assurances of the House Education Commit­ man, executive adm inistrator of M iss Jordan’s father, Philip, V e t e r a n s A dm inistration Hos­ and shattered windows 20 m iles d er City, a community of plant State Dept, p re ss officer Rob­ it would abide by the Geneva tee, Robert Cotten, a Jackson the Illinois N urses Assn. Is a civil engineer employed by pital. away. w orkers, w ere left standing but e rt J. McCloskey la te r express­ p riso n er of w ar ru les. nursing home d i r e c t o r , and "T he white uniform, w h i t e the city of Chicago. She had four Her fiance, P e te r McNamee, the Interiors w ere w recked. The ed "stro n g concern" over the Rusk noted that while South Jam es O’Neill, a Dearborn busi­ M ore than 40 persons w ere in­ stockings and shoes point nurses brothers and a s is te r, and was 23, Wheaton, heard of the m ass community was evacuated. Communist th reats. Like Rusk, Viet Nam had cooperated with ness executive and unsuccessful ju red but m iraculously, all plant out as ta rg e ts ," she said. spending the night at the town- slaying on the c a r radio. Hercules headquarters In Wil­ McCloskey declined to name the the International Red C ross and P atricia Matusek, 21, was en­ candidate for the U.S. Senate employes escaped harm . "We tell our m em bers not to house. mington, Del., said the C a r­ f o r e i g n governments involved, opened p riso n er-o f-w ar camps nomination in 1964. Unchecked flam es threatened w ear their uniforms to and from Two of the other victim s also gaged to Robert Hlnkel, Jackson, thage plant employs 183 persons saying that secrecy was essen­ to inspection, no such relation­ w ere engaged. Mich. Augenstein, w ho r a n on a to set off still another blast and h o s p i t a l s , " M rs. Zimm erm an and makes industrial explosives tial if any resu lts w ere to be ship had been worked out between "m o re science in government” the plant a rea was blocked off said. fo r mining, quarrying and con­ achieved. the International Red C ross and platform for the U.S. Senate, and no one was allowed to go She said the m ass m urder struction. T here has been no official the North Vietnamese. promptly opened his campaign focused attention on the need for security around hospitals, "but Bridge Work Puts Squeeze Thursday with a blast at the state n ear. The Ja sp e r County S h eriffs board. Office and the county coroner how did those g irls know what was upstairs? This Is a case of On Farm Lane’s Traffic "T his highly partisan state said there w ere no confirmed EDUCATION BOARD ACTION board has failed to live up to its Inside surveillance as w ell." Construction work on the Farm has necessitated that southbound deaths. vital responsibility under the new The killings w ere a double Lane Bridge pedestrian walkways traffic be reduced to one lane, R.E. Good, plant manager, said WSU To Add Police School (state) constitution to coordinate A. John Zutaut, uniform com­ the activities of our state-sup­ an emergency w histle sounded P E A N U T 'S u)HV DON T UiE TELL MOM THAT SEE UHÄT VOI! mander of the University Po­ ported institutions,” he charged. 20 minutes ahead of the firs t I THINK Or THIS WE’RE 50RRVABOUT AR6UIN6 OVER lice, announced Thursday. Augenstein, after addressing b last and every employe managed I IDEA. THE TV ALLTHE TIME, AND PROMISE The closed southbound lane to run to safety. The warning T he State Board of Education State Board Member C harles need in the D etroit metropoli­ I** an E a s t Lansing Lions C l u b NEVER TO DO IT A6AIN7..THAT will reopen In about 10 days, cam e when a tra c to r tra ile r unit Wednesday unanimously approv­ Morton of D etroit commended tan a re a ,” Morton said. luncheon Thursday a f t e r n o o n , WAV.MAVBE SHE'LL F0f?6IVE US, AND he said. At that tim e one of the loading at a magazine caught fire , ed establishm ent of a Police WSU for working closely with WSU’s proposed police admin­ BRINS THE TV BACK INTOTHE HOUSE.. called for a coalition of state northbound lanes will closewhile spouting a ball of flame 200 A d m i n i s t r a t i o n program at Michigan State School of Police istration program was reviewed board m em bers andD em ocratic- the other walkway Is construct­ feet into the a ir. Wayne State University. Administration, State Police and for the State Board of Education controlled legislators to re-ev al­ ed. The state board said it approv­ local police agencies in the de­ by a special com m ittee of schol­ uate the state’s tax structure, The firs t explosion sent black a rs . They recommended unani­ The construction work, which ed the request after receiving a s­ velopment of a police adminis­ long a thorny Issue in Michigan smoke towering 1,000 feet Into is expected to be completed by surance from Wayne State that tration program . m ously that it be approved by the politics. the a ir . V irtually every sto re In the middle of August, will widen It would work closely with com­ "T his program will fill a real state board. He also cited the need for more downtown Carthage, four m iles munity colleges in southeastern each of the walkways to 16 feet. available education as "a c riti­ away, was damaged and the en­ Y I THINK IM Michigan to strengthen educa­ NEVER! STUCK UfTH A J BAD ALLIANCE! P u b lis h e d b y *h» stu de nts o f M ic h ig a n Stata U n iv e rs ity • v a r y c la s s day th ro u g h o u t th e yea r and a spe c ia l W elcom e Weak E d itio n In Septem be r. S u b s c rip tio n rata 510 p e r y e a r. A th o rls e d b y th e B e a rd o f Student P u b lic » * cal tool” in fighting inequality and depressed area s throughout the state. tir e business d istrict was block­ ed off. A radio station In Tulsa, Okla., 100 m iles away, said it tional program s for policemen and students of police adminis­ Nurses Murdered tration. paga 1) A re-evaluation of the state’s received scores of calls from At the sam e tim e, it asked In la n d D a lly P r e s s A s s o c ia tio n , A s s o c ia te d C o lle g ia te P re s s , M ic h ig a n P re s s A s s o c ia tio n , M ic h ig a n C o lla g la to residents who felt the blast there. (continued f r o m tax structure, he asserted, could 1^3 P r e s s A s s o c ia tio n . WSU’s Board of Governors to Second c la s s postage p a id a t E a st L a n s in g , M ich . re su lt in removing the heavy tax W i n d o w s w ere shattered In submit a report to the state board —Mary Ann Jordan, 21, Chi­ ged with a sheet, h er hands > E d ito r ia l and bu a ln a ss o ffic e s a t 341 Student S a rvlca a bound. B u ild in g , M ic h ig a n State U n lv o ra lty , E a s t L a n s in g , M ich . burden from local governments Ja sp e r, Mo., 20 m iles away. at the end of the firs t year on cago, stabbed repeatedly In the Phonoat E d l f o r l o l ................................ . 355-8252 which a re forced to rely on prop­ McCune-B r o o k s Hospital in the status of the program and on chest, left eye and back of the —Valentina Pasion, 23, the C i o n lH i d A d v e rtis in g . , 355-6255 D ltp lQ y A d v e r tis in g ...... B u s in s s s - C irc u la tio n 353-6400 355-62«« erty tax to subsidize educational Carthage said 16 persons, many cooperative arrangem ents that neck and left sprawled on a bed. Philippines. H er w rists w ere tied P h o to g ra p h ie ............. 355-6311 needs. „ of them women and children, w ere a r e made with other colleges. —Susan F a r r is , 22, Chicago, behind h er back, a torn bed- stabbed in the chest and chin and sheet was around her neck. She left In a hallway between two had been stabbed and strangled. Dance - Interested in Playing Guitar? Blow a whole week’s second floor bedrooms. —Patricia Matusek, 21, Chi­ —M erlita Gargullo, 21, the Philippines. Her throat was cut and she was tied at the ankles cago, whose w rists w ere tied Relax savings for a behind her with a bedsheet. She and w rists. was strangled. Although the coroner’s long M eet Y o u r Sunday dinner date??? —Pamela Wilkenlng, 22, Lan­ sing, 111., bound with a bedsheet, list of wounds did not Include gunshot in ju ries, Wilson said the F rie n d s stabbed and strangled. She, too, n urses had been shot. was on a bed. Police said the k iller appar­ —Nina Schmale, 21, Wheaton, ently sneaked Into the duplex See 111. She was on the floor, stab­ through a back door about 11 p jn . bed In the neck, strangled, gag­ Wednesday as six of the nurses w ere sleeping. The others, In­ The We h a v e a c o n v e n i e n t G u i t a r L e s s o n cluding M iss Jordan, a v isitor fo r the night, w ere out on dates. P l a n w it h R e n t a l s A v a i l a b l e . Wilson said the k iller awaken­ Chordovans Go ahead if you want to . B u t i f s really not necessary. ed Miss Anurao, pointed a gun at h e r and bound h e r. She said he Why not m a k e y o u r l e i s u r e tim e m o r e The Gas Buggy Room at Jack Ta r Hotel Is a pretty impres­ w as tall—about 6 feet—weighed (n i g h t l y e x c e p t T u e s . ) e n j o y a b l e a n d jo i n t h o u s a n d s of o t h e r s sive place to take a date: good food, atmosphere, friendly about 175 pounds, had short hair service. . . just sort o f all-around nice. and wore a black coat. who p l a y a n d s i n g . He rounded up the young wom­ Coral Gables C o m e in a n d s e e u s tod a y! A n d when It comes to The Big M om ent, you'll probably have some o f your week's savings left. Full-course dinners start at only $ 2 .75 . And that's a bit o f okay, right? en and, as the late-co m ers re ­ turned home, forced them to join the te rrifie d band. llforno Restaurant Dine a t the Gas Buggy Room soon. It’s a great way to begin “ Then he took one of the g irls out of the room ,” Flanagan quot­ Rathskeller Show Bar MARSHALL MUSIC an evening. ed M iss Anurao. "A fter a few minutes he cam e back alone and took another of the g irls. T h o s e who k n o w - G o to t h e C ro w ! CO. "H e kept this up.” Cook County Coronet' Andrew The Old C r o w - S a u g a tu c k , M ich. 307 E . G rand R iv e r Across from the State Capitol J . Toman said: "T h is is the c rim e of the century." M ichigan State N ew s, E ast Lansing, M ichigan Friday, July 1 5 , 1966 3 World News MSU Aids at a Glance Electronics Campus Center B a rd o t Becom es A B rid e Conference With the aid of Michigan State’s LAS V E G A S, Nev. ( U P I ) — Sex kitten B rig itte Bardot College of Engineering, Chicago was m a r r i e d to G e rm a n in d u s tria lis t-p la y b o y Gun­ will become the world’s elec­ t h e r Sachs Van Opel In a s u r p r is e c ere m o n y e a r l y tronics center Oct. 3-5. During T h u rsd a y morning and re m a in e d in hiding here these days the 1966 N a t i o n a l awaiting a honeymoon flig h t to T a h iti. Electronics C o n f e r e n c e will The b are -b o tto m e d s ta r of scores of French movies a ttrac t 25,000 e n g i n e e r s and and b rid e g ro o m Sachs slept most of the day at the scientists. home of A tto rn ey W i l l i a m C oulthard in which they According to J.D. Ryder, dean w e re m a r r i e d by a d is tr i c t judge in a po st-m idnight of the College of Engineering at c e re m o n y . MSU, the conference is “ an­ other form of continuing educa­ tion which this university ad­ Lynda B ir d T o u rs M unich vocates.” Ryder was the president of the MUNICH (UPI)—Lynda Bird The agents attracted Ger­ National Electronics Conference Johnson Thursday toured Mu­ mans as they radioed Instruc­ in 1952 and the chairm an of nich's chief to urist attrac­ tions to one another while Miss the board of directo rs in 1965. tions and h er every step was Johnson browsed in an antique He views the conference as a w a t c h e d by Secret Service bookshop, toured the shops T H E R E 'S A T IM E FOR C R Y IN G — R lc h a rd and Ron­ loose body whose prim ary pur­ agents with w alkie-talkies. At and visited Mypphenburg Cas­ ald S a n o ria did th e ir best to act like U.S. M a rin e s pose is to promote electronics tim es they drew m ore public tle . and keep f r o m cryin g . H owever, a ft e r meeting research . attention then she did. f o r the f i r s t t im e in 11 months, and a fte r seeing According to Hansford W. F a r­ that they both had lost t h e ir left legs as a re s u lt ris , president of the National o f battle in V ie t Nam, they b roke down. E lectronics Conference, Inc., and L B J And H o lt C a ll F o r Peace UPI Telephoto chairm an of the Department of E lectrical Engineering at th e U niversity of Michigan, this will W A S H IN G T O N ( A P ) — A u s t r a l ia ’ s P r im e M in is t e r U.S. Jets Down be a record year of the con­ H aro ld E . Holt and P res id en t Johnson joined T h u r s ­ day in callin g f o r an end of the V ie t Nam fighting ference. The t h r e e - d a y program of as soon as possible through peace negotiations. scientific sem inars comprising In a communique issued at the end of th e ir second round of talk s, tney welc om ed the in itia tiv e of India's P r i m e M in is t e r In d ira Gandhi in asking the Soviet Union to reconvene a meeting of the Geneva powers to consider the V ie t Nam settlem en t. 2 MIG Attackers over North Viet Nam began at a the technical side of the confer­ ence will Include m ore than 300 presentations of latest advances resulting from work in university SAIGON (UPI)—U.S. A ir Force o r industrial laboratories in the pilots shot down two Communist point Just 22 m iles northwest of United States, Japan, England and MIG21S near Hanoi Thursday in the capital city of Hanoi as the Canada, as well as government, A s tro n a u ts Go Through B ra in s to rm in g the first such double kill of the Communists stepped up th eir ef­ m ilitary and National Aeronau­ war. A U.S. spokesman said the forts to intercept Am erican w ar­ tics and Space Administration CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (fl— to blast off Monday. reappearance In force of Rus­ planes that have been hitting oil centers. A m erica’s Gemini 10 a stro ­ Said Gemini 10 command sian-designed MIGs means “ the depots and other strategic ta r­ nauts sat through a day-long pilot John W. Young: "One a ir war in North Viet Nam is gets in big dally raid s. flight plan brainstorm ing ses­ thing we like about our flight plan is It has a lot of flexi­ really intensifying.’’ A pair of Air Force F4 Phan­ “T he a ir war in North Viet To Explain Why sion Thursday and prepared Nam is really intensifying,’’ a fo r a m ajor physical exami­ bility and th ere’s nothing In tom jets knocked out the MIGs U.S. A ir Force spokesman told nation Friday needed to give th ere that’s not contributing with Sidewinder m issiles during UPI. ' I t looks as if the North He Quit Painting them a medical " a ll c le a r" In some fashion or another.” a th'ree-minute noontime dog­ Vietnamese a re unleashing their fight after the Communist jet Robert Rauschenberg, the win­ entire defensive system . T heir ner of the 1964 Biennale Inter­ fighters tried to intercept raid­ MIG21s a re beginning to latch ing U.S. planes. national Art Competition, will G ir ls F le e F ro m Flam es onto our strike force.” be presented on WMSB (Channel The new kills brought to three The spokesman said the Am­ the number of MIGs shot down 10) on the program “ U.S.A.: LAS V E G A S , Nev. ( U P I) — About 50 g ir ls f r o m New erican raid e rs now have to run a A rtists,” at 3:30 p.m . Sunday by American planes in two days. Y o rk and New Jersey, some s c re am in g h y s te ric a lly , gantlet of rad ar controlled 57, and at 1 p.m . Monday. It raised to 17 the total of 58 and 100 m illim eter a n ti-a ir­ w e re rescued e a r ly T h u rsd a y f r o m fla m e s which The program will examine the Communist MIGs shot down by gutted two rooms on the second sto ry of the M oulin craft guns, su rfac e-to -air m is­ a rtis t’s reasons for giving up Americans during the Viet Nam Rouge Hotel, f ir e m e n re p orte d . siles (SAMS) and “ with the heat­ his painting for experimental film w ar. The MIGs have downed three M a r i ly n Cohen Hewitt of New Y o r k was the only ing up of the a ir war, m ore and dance and sculpture work. g ir l in ju red . She suffered a la ce ra tio n on h e r left U.S. a irc ra ft. M1G21S." Film s of Rauschenberg at work In S a i g o n , a U.S. m ilitary leg while c lim b in g out a window to flee the spreading The prim e targets of the Com­ will be shown. P articu lar empha­ spokesman reported that 110 Am­ fla m e s , auth o rities said. m unist defensive f i r e a r e the sis will be placed on his dance erican servicem en were killed In fighting in South Viet Nam last F105 Thunderchlef Jets that a re piece, "P elic an ,” and his film, week. Another 620 Americans protected by the Phantoms. "C anoe.” were wounded and seven were 'Slow’ Use Taste Kit captured o r reported m issing. KOSITCHEKS T hursday’s a e r i a l dogfight Dr. Philip Lewis, vice p re si­ Slow le a rn e rs may soon be dent of the National Education tasting and sm elling their vo­ Fox’s Q uality Association’s Dept, of Audio­ cabulary lessons, a Chicago aud­ visual Instruction (DAVI), cited iovisual (AV) expert predicts. Jew elers S ince 1917 the ta ste -sm e ll vocabulary kits Now In experim ental use, these A s s e e n in B R ID E & H O M E a s one of the innovations revo­ kits c o n t a i n IBM -slze cards lutionizing classroom instruc­ stripped along one edge with tion. magnetic tape on which a word Lewis spoke this week to 120 o r sentence Is recorded. elem entary and secondary school teach ers from 21 states who are attending a five-week NDEA In­ stitute for educational media spe­ cialists at MSU. The space above the tape, he explained, contains the picture, printed word and taste sample of the object. CLEARANCE SENATE FLOOR Vote Macs For Snacks LOWER M A IN Put Your SPORT COATS V a l u e s to $23 V a l u e s to $35 Money NOW NOW $12 s15 Where Your 28 Suits VALUES TO NOW s24 $60 Mouth Is! Light W eight JACKETS 1966 V a l u e s to $14 NEW STYLES! WINTER ^ r t C a r v e d * i® t y 00 WEDDING RINGS D ress FALL Exciting m o dern designs with trad itio n a l craftsm an sh ip . SLACKS long and lean ... the M ore th an 300 styles to choose V a l u e s to $15 SUMMER from. See them today. H it A. HARMONY SET $ 4 1 .SO B. ALLEGRO SET H eri S37.SO $700 new shape tops are In HU $ 2 7 .5 0 Hen $ 24 .50 C. JASMINE SET SPRING H it FOX’S $ 3 2 .SO Hen $ 24 .50 M a in flo o r - - fu rn is h in g s c lo th in g - s p o rtsw e a r 6.98 s tra w hats and shoes C o t t o n g e t s a n e w l e a s e on l i f e . . . i t s a nd y o u r s . . . ELECTIONS Direct a ll at a ttra c tiv e p ric e s a s i t g e t s n e w l y s h a p e d a nd k n i t to s p a n t h e c a l e n d a r Diamond rou n d . T ake th e s e tops fo r in stan ce! N eat k n its . . . Drive in and Vote Importers in a t w o - t o n e j a c q u a r d o r a p s e u d o - c a b l e w it h c o n ­ t r a s t c o l o r b a n d s . B o th j e w e l n e c k e d a n d b a c k z i p p e d , F ra n d o r Shopping C e n te r itio s itc h e k iro s . in n a v y , p l u m , o r o l i v e . S i z e s S - M - L . McOomIA LA N S IN G -E AS T LANSING 203 S. W ashington and A u lh o . it c d j \ r t C ttr v e ii DOWNTOWN-LANSING P a i r e d f o r l e i s u r e with p a n t s t h a t f i t r i g h t n a t u r a l l y . N o - z i p p u l l - o n in c o t t o n / n y l o n . 8 - 1 8 . 7.98 4 M ichigan State N ew s, E ast Lansing, M ichigan Friday, July 1 5 , 1966 Scant Progress POTENTIAL LIMITED In Air Walkout WASHINGTON (UPI)—L i t t l e United, T ran s World, National Broadway Doubtful For Play p ro g ress was reported Thursday and Northwest Airlines, which By DON SOCKOL going p l a c e s while he, their In talks to end the nation's big­ norm ally c a rry 150,000 passen­ State News Staff W r i t e r teacher, is standing still. It’s gest airline strike, and pros­ g ers dally, o r 60 per cent of supposed to add poignancy to pects for an early settlem ent U.S. a ir passenger traffic. The Summer C ircle playbill David’s plight. It doesn't. rem ained gloomy. Thousands of nonstrikers at for a new play by Robert Ander­ The play started out slowly A ssistant Labor S e c r e t a r y all five airlin es also have been son reads: on opening night and picked up to Jam es J. Reynolds said nego­ laid off as an economy m easure. " It Is seldom that a mldwestern M iss Vary does an excellent job He appeared about 28, and she culminate at a high point in the tiato rs in the seven-day-old shut­ The strik e is costing the c ar­ audience gets to see a major in portraying a meddling person about 40. emotional last two scenes. down of five m ajor airlines w ere r ie r s an estim ated $7 million playwright’s work before it gets and arouses the proper amount of The script well indicated the At the end of the play, the act­ " s till far a p a rt." But he said daily in gross revenues. to Broadway.” animosity in the audience. uneasiness between him and his ing Is so good that we a re caught agreement had been reached on The 1AM walked out after the The audience that attends "The The problem, however, is that son, Roger, of whom he is jealous the cost of the union’s contract airlin es refused to comply with Days Between, ” here on a p re - she Is not credible as a grand­ and resentful. proposal and on other individual demands for automatic cost-of- Broadway tryout through Satur­ mother. When she fir s t appears But the author was trying to be item s. livlng wage Increases and other day, will not be enjoying this with her daughter, B arbara, play­ too psychological, Techniques of William J. Curtin, chief nego­ health and w elfare fringe bene­ privilege. ed by M iriam Duckwall, we must indicating psychological turm oil tiator for the airlin es, said he fits. Anderson’s p l a y will never try to reconcile the two as mother w ere obviously tecnlques. We can did not believe there had been Reynolds met separately with make Broadway. and daughter. We k e e p trying alm ost sit back and say: "That any m ajor movement toward a both sides Thursday morning, The play’ s hero, David Ives, throughout the play. was very clever how he brought settlem ent. and then held a joint meeting. is a teacher of creative w rit­ A girlish voice plus youthful that out.” Although Reynolds said labor "T h ere has been a very use­ ing who is struggling to write appearance, despite makeup giv­ But in a realistic, smooth- and management had r e a c h e d ful exchange," he said. Although TO B R O A D W A Y ? — David Ives ( W il lia m S akalau s- a book which he hopes will give ing Miss Vary 'gray hair, do not flowing 'play w i t h the proper agreement on the cost of the con­ negotiators w ere not close to das) t r ie s to com fort his wife, B a r b a r a ( M a r i a m him the feeling of accom plish­ convince us she is a woman over transitions we should not be able tract demands, he declined to agreem ent, he said, they w ere A. D uckwell). " T h e Days B etw een,” a new play ment that will end the m iserable 60. to do this w h i l e we a re "In­ disclose the figure. The airlines working "v e ry diligently to come by Robert Anderson Is here on Its last p r e - t r i a l life of him self and his family. Miss Duckwall gave the best volved,” but only la ter after some had placed it at $114 million a to an agreem ent.” B ro adw ay showing. Photo by Russell Steffey The c ris is explodes at the perform ance of the production as analysis. year, w h i l e t h e International a rriv a l of Ted Sears, a suc­ the wife with the trying, disturb­ Mitch Marion shows talent as Assn. of M achinists (IAM) had cessful novelist, w ho sympa­ ed husband. H er portrayal of Roger, the young son who hates claimed it would amount to $89 thizes with the wife and infuri­ torm ent is convincing and strikes his father reciprocally. He falls million. The strike by 35,4001AM mem­ bers has shut down Eastern, Yugoslav Vice President ates David into deserting his family. When his wife confesses she has had a se c re t abortion a chord in us. The problem here lies with the playwright. In some spots her off at the end, but does his best to fight his line6. John Dunlevy plays Ted, M rs. to free him of the burden of hav­ Ives’ friend whose wife has just transition of emotion rise s too Cheese Smeared On His Car Seat Gives Up Power In Purge ing another mouth to feed, he is jolted into facing the bleak truth about him self and his lim itations. Taken by them selves, the act­ rapidly. The dialogue indicated clearly that this is the author’s fault. died. The year before, Ted and his wife hosted B arbara in New York and she idolizes him as a husband as well as for his m ar­ Campus pranksters found a BELGRADE (UPI)—Vice P re s­ Rankovic, heir apparent to the geolsie who joined the Interna­ o rs do a good Job. But they don’t The f r u s t r a t e d professor, riage, which seemed so much bet­ new release for their fru stra ­ ident Aleksandar Rankovic su r­ 74-year-old Tito and Communist tional Brigade in Spain and fought quite fit together. David, played by William Saka- te r than her own. g t f .’ tions Wednesday night when they rendered his last vestige of power cz a r of the powerful Yugoslav for two y ears after completing M rs. Walker, played by Bee lauskas, had his ups and downs. Dunlevy plays a sympathetic sm eared cheese on the front as the nation's No. 2 man Thurs­ se c re t police, fell victim of a his studies at the Sorbonne in Vary, Is supposed to be a med­ Overall, Sakalauskas was good, character who accepts the adula­ I H A TE H I M ! — says Rog­ seat of a car parked near the day. The national assembly nam­ purge Initiated by Tito him self. P a ris. dling mother who is living in her but here again the casting was a tion, even needs it to a certain e r Ives (M itc h M a rio n ) Union. ed a French-educated form er Tito ordered the shake-up to He Joined Tito’s partisan arm y, daughter's household because of bit off. He and h is wife didn't degree, but knows his m arriage of h i s fa th e r. M a r i a m Donald Schwartz, East Lan­ m ilitary chief to succeed him. elim inate what he called anti­ ro se to the rank of general and illness and a deserting husband. seem, physically, to go together. was an idol with clay feet. He Duckwell consoles h e r sing graduate student, told Uni­ The assembly accepted Ran- party elements in Yugoslavia. He eventually chief ofYugoslavarm y is adequate, but doesn’t come i i . . . son. i i versity Police that the malicious kovlc’s resignation without com­ declared him self unsatisfied with general staff. He used his m ili­ ac ro ss as the m air-of-the-world ment and elected Koca Popovic, Photo by Russell Steffey mischief happened between 9 and the perform ance of the secret tary prom inence and close ties author he Is supposed to be. 11:55 p.m . Wednesday while his 58, his onetime rival, to the post police under Rankovic. with Tito to continue his c a re e r Most Important T heir mutual Infatuation, how­ up by the sheer emotion of it — c a r was parked at the Abbott as second in command to P re si­ Rankovic submitted a one-par­ In high government c irc les. ever, is not credible and the and can overlook the scrip t until Entrance. dent M arshal Tito. agraph resignation by le tte r. He In 1953 he left the m ilitary audience just listens and accepts the end when the play concludes had asked for a 20-day leave for a n d became foreign m inister, it because it is supposed to be weakly. t I I health reasons and was not p re ­ sent at the national assembly se s­ sion Thursday. " F o r well known reasons I am serving In that post for 12 years until he was rotated out—at the urging of Rankovic’s backers— In April, 1965. He has a repu­ Documents Wills there. George, a f o r m e r student of way out. David’s, is just written in to show " It w i l l never m a k e Broad­ Ed Abry, in the m inor p art of way,” a few people said on the “ It might make a very good D r iv e -In T h e a tre Legal wills a re the m ost im­ quoted 2 Kings 20:1, where Isai­ no longer able to carry out my tation as a quick-witted, intel­ that the la tte r’s s t u d e n t s are soap opera,” said one. portant documents men can sign, ah tells King Hezeklah, ” Sef South Cedar of Jolly Hood FU 2 - 2 4 ? 9 functions as vice president of the ligent and blunt man. a Michigan National Bank vice thine house in order; for thou Socialist Federation Republic of The Rankovic affair Is expect­ president and tru st officer stre s ­ shalt die, and not liv e." NOW THRU TUES (2) HITS Yugoslavia, and for these re a­ ed to have m ore reprecussions sed at the y ear’s larg est "C on- During the Wednesday sem i­ (2) FIRST LANSING sons I submit my resignation and request the federal assembly to accept it," the lette r said, In the Yugoslav government and Communist hierarchy. Tito reportedly was angered sum m er Information Sem inar” Wednesday in the MSU Employes nar F isher explained the func­ tions of wills and in co rrect con­ High Credit Market C redit Union Building. cepts concerning wills and tru sts. COLOR SHOWINGS Popovic is a product of the HIT NO. (1) FIRST RUN AT 8:35 - L A T E pre-W orld War I Belgrade bour- by reports that the secret police have tapped the telephones and eavesdropped on the "highest Bank official Robert F isher quoted the Bible in his address to 60 p e o p l e on "W ills a n d Wills, said the speaker, serve to distribute family heirloom s and provide for guardianship of Expected To Ease le a d e rs" In the country. T he credit m arket is the m ost 'cool down’ and th ere will be le ss NEIAC TV Rentals He ordered a special commis­ T r u s ts ." Religion or no religion, F ish er said, “ the will is the most children, funeral arrangem ents and tru st management. expensive in years. demand for credit. Then interest sion set up to revamp the Ser­ Because, of the tight money s it-, ra te s should e a se .” im portant document that you will In a question and answer p e r­ h e r sin as a woman $ 9 /m o . vian league of Communists to ever sign—bar none.” iod, F ish er denounced p arts of uation, borrow ers a re faced with B rake pointed out that there is which Rankovic and many mem ­ the dilemma of paying high inter­ no guarantee that cred it will 482-0624 Final speaker for the credit Norman Dacey’s book, "How to ...her shame as a wife b ers of the secret police belong­ est ra tes or waiting and gambling ease in six or even 12 months, ^halite ed. union's present se rie s, Fisher Avoid P ro b ate," as "v ery un­ that the situation will improve. but he said it was "typical” true and very unfair.” ...her sacrifice as a According to F ish er, who is a l­ The odds favor the gam bler. for the economy to adjust and in­ THE PICTURE YOU HAVE John R. Brake, MSU agricul­ te re s t ra te s should then drop. mother...is now D RIVE BEEN HEARING ABOUT so an attorney, state laws vary so much that such "e x p e rts” as tu ral economist, would not go so But right now, cred it is ex­ -IN far as to say that the credit sit­ pensive. a story to Vu* y N ? m Mm Um — Sftouihw— o u t h w e s tt o f L a n s i n g o n M h -78 ottani ON T.V. ALSO RADIO Dacey "have become so expert that they cease to be ex p e rts." uation would definitely improve. B r a k e pointed out that 15 Instead, he put it this way; m o n t h s ago many residential touch your F isher voiced disagreem ent with "W henever the money situation mortgage loans were w ritten at some of Dacey’s views regarding heart... NOW! (2) EXC LU SIVE COLOR H IT S! cases where no wills a re left. gets tight, interest ra te s ris e 5-1/2 p er cent In terest. Today, and people tend to put m ore into those same loans would probably The credit union announced savings. L ess borrowing occurs, cost 6-1/2 p er cent. Many are FIRST LANSING SHOWING Wednesday that F ish e r will r e ­ and the total economy begins to 7 p er cent. turn for two fall se rie s sem i­ slow down. n a rs to discuss estate taxes and "Eventually the economy will "vehicles other than w ills.” Yesterday they fought each other- Shown at 8:35 - Late P rogram Info - 332-6944 NOW SHOWING! Fine Arts A ROSS HUNTER Production Today they fight together to stay alive! CAMPUS Feature 1:00 - 3:10 - 5:20 7:30 - 9:40 (continued f r o m page 1) h er Broadway debut in "House LANA TURNER of Flow ers.” Tuesday M iss Emily Genauer, ' T r n u tim n i T echnicolor * n a e c s tY b lc t A . the New York H erald Tribune’s A rt C ritic, will speak at 4 p.m . CO STARRiNC JOHN FORSYTHE ’ RICARDOMONTALBAN Êk ** In Fairchild on "C ritical Stand­ ard s In a Tim e of Change." ...th e Wednesday and Thursday will BURGESS MEREDITH • CONSTANCE BENNETT w o rtd ’s feature panel discussions on a rt and the status of the a rts in and KEIR DULLEA THE "D A V ID A N D U S A ' S T A R A S C L A Y . JR d e ad lie st Michigan. Screenplay Dy J E A N H O LL O W A Y • Directed by D A V ID L O W E L L R IC H • Produced by RO SS H U N T E R A R o s s H u n te i U t e e U n iv e rs a l P ic tu re Wednesday evening Kay Britten nrçost will perform folk m usic In Erick­ dazzlirçglY son Hall Klva. Tickets for this H IT NO. (2) F IR S T RUN AT 10:40 perform ance a re available in the fendale Union Ticket Office. agerçt! Thursday evening the Congress U I When in Southern C a lifo rn ia v is it U n iv e rra l C ity Studios of Strings o rchestra will present a concert at 8:15 in the Univer­ sity Auditorium, under the baton T r a p p e d in t h e f sh o c k a n d of William Steinberg. Their pro­ C O LO R b y OC LUXE gram will Include selections by Hindemith, Stravinsky, William s u s p e n s e o f a / s t o l e n love! Schuman and Anton Dvorak. Friday night Joseph Evans and M O N I C A ^ V I T T I • TER EN C E STAM P • OIR K B O GARDE Theo Salzman will p resent a re ­ " D o n ’t force m e ... “ Maybe you can ^ HARRV ANDREWS-. iMlCHAELCRAiG] we m ustn’t ...i t ’s cital of Beethoven sonatas In the just loneliness, toss off what Auditorium of Kellogg Center at not love!” NJF h a p p e n e d ... but I won’t ! " B IL L I TRAVERS B IB IJ AND ALSO STARRING 1 D E N N IS ! Next! “ What Did You Do in the War, Daddy?” T O D A Y ... T h ru Tues.! I 8:15. Program Information 482-3905 Scieenpiay 6/ MARVIN ALBERT and MICHEL GRILIKHES / Based on the Novel Apache Rising' by Maivm Albeit/Owected by RALPH NELSON Produced by RALPH NELSON and FRED ENGEL M u s e - NEAL HEFTI C O LO R B Y O f I l l> F A "'K S w b S *1* “ fti»ifrm mqikir hciu »T sco»i m u m i or mmio m ists »corns 1 Released thru UNITED ARTISTS It 's a Laugh P e r Minute with. D o ris , Rod and A rt h u r In the h ila rio u s “ Glass Bottom B oat’ ROD ARTHUR JEAN HONOR SEAN H IT . NO. (2) IN C OLOR AT 10:40 [n e x t w ed ., J U L Y 20T H | TAYIOR GODFREY SEBERG - BLACKMAN * GARRISON r" I K THE U n it WOMAN ...H A M m i l O t IMSHmi F IR S T L A N S IN G Menyn LeRoy’s product™oi JACKLEMMON a SHOW ING êjÊËL Columbia Pictures M m e tfn M û w ù ïïr // HIRNA LISI v / i P JER R Y LEWIS TECHNICOLOR* "HOWID JANET LEIGH C O S T A R R IN G MURDER jebbzebd JOHNMcGIVER PAULIYNDE EDWARDANDREWS ERICFLEMING DOMDELUISE^ DICKMARTIN^ ARTHURHILL• GREGOIRE ASLAN Screenplay by JOHN IEE MAHIN and ALEC C0PPEL • Directed by MERVYN LEROY HENRY MANCINI VMMWIFE' TECHNICOLOR R e le a se d tt u u UNITED ARTI8TS CUI UMBlACOUm (A JfR R V IFW IS PKOOtlCtlON) A LSO - F IR S T RUN V starting Wednesday! N P A N A V IS IO N AND M ETR O C O LO R AH Walt Disney's Feature 1:00, 3:05, 5:15, 7:25, 9:35 p.m . A UNIVERSAL PICTURE C O - F E A T U R E IN COLOR 'Lt, Robin Crusoe, U.S.N.” Sun. 1:10, 3:20, 5:25, 7:25; 9:50 P.M. M ichigan State N ew s, E ast Lansing, Michigan Friday, July 15, 1966 5 AFTER NINE YEARS ] Litwhiler Proposes ( I New Pro Source i Brown Quits Pro Football L O N D O N (UPI) — J i m m y with a Louisville syndicate ex­ National Football League season By JOE M IT C H Brown, the most successful run­ p ire s. Brown presently is a m i­ but due to circum stances this Is State News Sports W r i t e r ning back in pro football his­ nor stockholder in Main Bouts Im possible,’’ said the m assive, tory, closed the book on his Inc., which had a hand in the 230-pound Negro sta r. T he controversial drafting of college and high school athletes spectacular g r i d i r o n ca re er promotion of Clay’s last two “ My main ambition right now has prompted Spartan baseball Coach Danny Litw hiler to suggest to Thursday and turned his atten­ bouts. is to devote as much tim e as baseball's top people a plan to insure a new flow of m ajor league tions to acting, race relations and A great all-around ath lete, possible to the National Negro talent. the possible handling of world Brown was offered $25,000 to Industrial and Economic Union Litw hiler has sent to Com m issioner B ill E ckert and his aide, heavyweight champion Cassius become a professional fighter project which stre s s e s full p a r - 1 Lee McPhail; the two league presidents, W arren Giles and Joe Clay. while he was still attending Syra­ ticipatlon of Negroes in the main­ Cronin; and Phil Pilton, chief of the drastically reduced minor The 30-year-old Brown, re ­ cuse University. stream of the American econ­ leagues, a professional program which would supply new talent to garded by many experts as the Brown originally had Intended omy,” he added. the m ajors at a cost less than a million dollars a year. greatest fullback in the annals to quit football after the close of Brown leaves behind him some The program , calling for an expanded number of minor league of the sport, form ally announc­ the 1966 season when his $65,000, of the m ost Indelible m arks In team s, is In response to the present shrunken minor league system . ed his retirem ent from the game tw o-year contract was up but the football history. T his y ear the minor leagues have been reduced from 30 leagues THE R IG H T O F A C H A M P I O N - - E m ile G riffith throws during a news conference at Met­ p re ss of his current picture forc­ In addition to his c a re e r rush­ and 217 team s to 19 leagues and 128 clubs. a right to the head of Joey A r c h e r in the m id d le ­ ro Goldwyn M ater Studios where ed the decision. Cleveland owner ing m ark (12,312 yards), Brown T h ree of the leagues a re in Mexico, which re s tric ts players who weight t it l e fight at New Y o r k Wednesday night. he is currently sta rrin g in a film, Art Modell had given Brown an set a season m ark in 1963 with a re not natives. Litw hiler points out also that in the last decade an G r i ff it h retained his title with a 15-round split de­ "T he Dirty Dozen.’’ ultimatum to r e p o r t to t h e 1,863 yards gained on the ground. influx of players from the Caribbean area has further re stric ted cision. UPI Telephoto Brown, who set 15 National Browns’ training camp Sunday He also holds the record of 237 opportunities for American youth. Football League individual re c­ o r face suspension and fine. But yards in a single game and his **The minor league system m ust expand to keep baseball moving ords and led the league In rushing filming of the picture was ex­ 126 ca re e r touchdowns a re the forw ard," Litw hiler has told E ckert and other top baseball people. eight seasons during his nine- pected to last into September m ost in pro history. He led the "Now baseball can accommodate only a sm all percentage of the high year ca re e r with the Cleveland when the NFL season begins. NFL in rushing in eight of his school and college boys it drafts. Browns, Is believed to have a "A fter much deliberation. I nine campaigns and three tim es " I think professional baseball can find a much needed new source prom ising movie c a re e r ahead have come to the conclusion that was selected P layer of the Year for talent. Where can a high school graduate or collegiate player of him. This Is his second motion 1 will re tire from professional by United P re s s International. get a chance to play professional baseball ifh e ’s not a bonus player? picture. football,” said Brown, who was He really can’t ." In addition to his acting, Brown perched on the edge of a chair Litw hiler proposes that the professional team s continue to stock in front of a Sherman tank and The Q uesting Beast high school and college graduates, on an expanded basis, and that hopes to devote as much time as J IM M Y BROWN dressed in the army uniform his 211 Abbott Road- the minor leagues be financially guaranteed by baseball. possible to the National Negro In­ p art req u ires. “ I can visualize these leagues operated by the com m issioner’s office and the two m ajor leagues giving opportunities annually to alm ost 1,000 youngsters," Litwhiler said. Intramural News d u s t r i a l and Economic Union He also may undertake the project w h i c h will ^.eventually job of handling Clay in October make loans to Negroes at p re ­ when the champion's contract "My original Intention was to try to participate in the 1966 Next to State Theatre Tues.-Sat., 10:30-5:30 W ed.-’til 8:00, Closed Mon. S a n t i a g o Diaz of the Owen Cabana forfeited to Carthage, ferre d in terest rates for the "T hese new leagues would be centrally located at various spring Youngsters fired a no-hitter at and Tony's Boys scored a 2-0 purpose of Improving their eco­ training bases which can house and feed the players. the Communicators in Wednes­ victory over University Village. nomic position. NOW! T h ru . Tues. - "If a university can feed and house a student for approximately day’s IM softball play. However, $3.60 a day, there is no reason these organizations could not come nine walks and four e rro rs kept within a $4-daily lim i t ." . The MSU student-faculty-staff 2 Top T e c h n ic o lo r H its the game close as Owen pulled best ball golf tournament will be Litw hiler said these leagues would be only for players who have not been signed by a professional club. "P lay e rs would be free agents signed by the com m issioner’s out a 4-3 win. Weaver’s Dennis Skog chuck­ played Saturday. Starting tim es: Tiger Mgr. BAST L A N S IN O O n M -4 3 C h ild re n under 12 F re e ed a three-lnning one-hitter In 9:20 Dr. W ebster-Ralph Honherd and the National and/or the American League offices. T hese boys would be subject to draft by the 20 clubs.” Litwhiler, who was a hard-hitting outfielder in the 1940’s with a game shortened by the 10-run -Jack Kaufman ru le. Weaver was victorious by 9:28 Carlton L udtke-Terry K ett- an 11-0 score. Tim Soule Bob Swift Philadelphia, St. Louis, the old Boston B raves and Cincinatti and a coach at Florida State before coming to MSU, said he proposed the new program so that more young players could make it into the m ajors. Lushwell AC came through with 9:36 L a rry Sierra-M ike Kirchen a 4-1 win on the strong right -H erb Olsen-Bob H eirford arm of Joel Stark, who limited 9:44 F red Stabley-Fred Stabley Taken III Tony Curtis Jack Lemmon While at Florida State he had 12 of his players on the 1957 team turn professional. While at State, none of his players have made it into the m ajors, although he has a few from last y ea r’s team with Abbot to just a p air of hits. It extra Innings. Jr.-E lto n Aberle was Hot Dogs 2, Z eros 1, In 9:52 Cliff Bedford-Jirri Bedford- Gary C revasse DETROIT If)—Acting Detroit T igers Manager Bob Swift was taken to Henry Ford Hospital C O M TW O SHOWS PLETE NatalieWood SHOWN T W IC E AT strong possibilities—John Bledenbach, Jim Blight and Dick Holmes. He thinks his program would give more players a better chance than under the present system. Craig Fox homered for the 10:00 M a x w e l l C a r t e r - J o h n at noon Thursday after a sud­ Cavaliers as his team won, 7-0, Saum-Eldridge Suggs over Cachet. Cambridge belted 10:08 Stu Gallagher-Bill Caul- Casino, 9-2, and the Impressions John Mandolla den illness at his home. Doctors diagnosed his case as N IG H T L Y EDW ARDsTheGreat Race” 8:39 AND LATE "T h ere a re players on my club and hundreds on other college " a c u t e g a stro en teritis" which beat Apartment 11, 9-5. The En­ 10:16 Rollin Simonds-E. K ern- they explained was a form of (continued on page 8) gineers socked McDonel, 10-1, Jim Bath-C. Beals virus infection. Swift was ex­ pected to be out of action at least several days. Intercollegiate Frosh Competition Tiger General Manager Jam es Campbell said Coach Frank Skaff would be in charge during Swift’s absence. Swift took charge of the T igers Result Of New Big 10 Sports Ruling after Manager C harlie D ressen suffered a second heart attack early In the season. D ressen T h e G r e a t P ie F i g h t . T h e M a d A u t o m o b i l e R a c e .. T h e W e s t e r n still is convalescing. S a l o o i . B r a w l . . T h e S h e ik 's T e n t T h e D e v ilis h D ir ig ic y c le .. .T h e By L A R R Y W E R N E R ering the other sports before in any unattached competition ball games, but frosh competi­ the winter season is completed. will now count as one of the com­ tion in other sports will not be The T igers opened a se rie s at F i e n d s D u n g e o n . . T h e S i n k i n g I c e b e r g . . . S o m e o f t h e g e m s in State News Sports W r i t e r Detroit Thursday night with the Intercollegiate competition for petitions that a freshm an is al­ decided upon until the December The life of a Big T en fresh­ man athlete has been one of hard freshm en has been bitterly op­ posed by many connected with lowed by the new rule. He also feels that it Is not meeting. T he frosh gridders will play Baltim ore O r i o l e s , American League leaders. T h e g re a te s t c o m e d y o i a ll tim e ! work and little chance for glory. college sports. However, John good to " a ll of a sudden, shut Indiana’s frosh at Bloomington, Program Information 485-6485 Big T en rules have prevented A. Fuzak, vice president for stu­ the door to competition after sometime during the Nov. 12 f intercollegiate competition for dent affairs and MSU’s Big Ten these athletes have competed for weekend, and the Notre Dame Sf ern»»f freshmen, and the athletic agen­ representative, is one of the several y e a rs." frosh will visit the MSU firs t- T X E A T f ti da of a frosh athlete has con­ supporters of freshm an competi­ The Big Ten faculty committee year men on the weekend of Nov. has given the OK for two foot- AT 1:20 - 3:20 sisted almost entirely of p rac­ tion. 19. “ There are some objections," NOW 5:20 - 7:20 - 9:25 p.m . tice, practice and even more practice. Fuzak said. “ Many feel that the H IS N E W E S T ! The rigorous frosh football practices have probably been e s­ freshm an year should be one of orientation and concentration on studies. However, I feel that MSU INTERNATIONAL presents FILM SERIES H I S B IG G E S T ! pecially hard to take, with oc­ casional bone-crushing sc rim ­ mages with the varsity the only lim ited competition will actually stim ulate freshmen academ ical­ !If Ml chance for actual game contact, ly, as there will be a minimum except for lntra-squad competi­ grade point average for eligiblity tion. which will force them to do bet­ Freshm an football players, and te r ." possibly all frosh athletes, will no longer have to endure a sea­ Many freshman, athletes, such as sw im m ers and w restlers, p ar­ THIS E-DOM son of nothing but p ractice. The ticipate in am ateur sports com­ IS THE il M ei i Movi f KUSS HiNRVMANCINI AI'AlKlClAJAl EMRfYNARDProduction r—™----------------- ■ .... N >W OirecM Ur BUKf EDWARD', («¡»I*«» «UMI»«H«»' «Fl Q 1 BUD Big T en has sanctioned in ter­ petition now. Fuzak sees limited TECHNICOLOR' PANAVISION FROM WARNER BROS. collegiate freshm an competition competition for a university team Two C om plete Shows F r i . & Sat. ‘ ‘ The G re a t R a c e " at 8:39 - Late for football, and a sim ilar ruling as b etter than unattached, indi­ is expected to be delivered cov- vidual competition. Participation - 2 n d C o lo r A ttra c tio n - S ta rting Wed., July 20th THE SPY WHO CAME PiCKAPiCH'C SPOT lù M -G-M ONET .. Most 28. Hast tion invited. AMERICAN DIA­ fortunate BICYCLE SALES, rentals and 29. While of Yamaha serv ice s. A l s o used. EAST PER SERVICE, 914 E. G ier— 8 I ) tut' 41. Distin­ CALL 482-0864. C 1 1. Father LANSING C Y C L E , 1215 E. guishes 12. Yale Grand R iver. Call 332-8303. C 33. Ship- HAVE ROOM in my licensed home 13. Belgian shaped clock SWEET MUSIC to you will be for day care. Full or part tim e. com mum' 14. Store up 34. Snoop the buyers for pianos and o r­ Playground f a c i l i t i e s , near Hi. lncarna- 35. Beast ol gans you get with Classified Frandor. 482-8340. 3-7/18 tion burden Ads. Dial 355-8255 now. 37. Ogles 18. Official 4(i. l’arched 4. Sprint sign ol 39. Cr. market- 47. Type 5. I.ive On a Swinging R iv e rs id e 55 Administrative Opportunities approval 20. Wide awake piftees 41. Momn 42. Celtic mensures 48. Croup (i. Wing 7. Operatic soloist 21. Fr. summer Neptune DOWN WARREN CO NSO LIDATED SCHOOLS 43. Menagerie 1. Intervals 8 . R e v e re n c e 22 Dowry 9. Segregated 50-60 M.P.H. 24 Wagers 45. l'n- 2. Hooked • D ir e c to r o f E le m e n ta r y E d u c a tio n occupicd 3. Speedily 10. Desserts 25. Selenium Rotary Valve Engine • H ig h S c h o o l P r in c ip a l 15. Closed car . S u p e rv is o r o f T r a n s p o r ta tio n 17. Set of Need a frie n d , a pet, a ro om , a c a r, anything at a ll? O f co u rse , you do! 211 Miles Per Gallon 4-Speed Gear Box • . S y s te m s D e v e lo p m e n t C o o r d in a to r ( D a t a P r o c e s s in g ) S u b u rb a n C o m m u n ity n o rth o f D e t r o it / a 2 3 4 'Û % .5 >9 6 7 1 8 13 9 10 records 19. Poison 23. Records the 16 h speed oi i4 15 % 20 26. Skinflint First, Look in Classified If it’s not PROGRESSIVE C U R R IC U LU M IB 12 19 % 13 24 27 Civilian clothes there— place an a d Come out and see us. We REASONABLE CLASS SIZE 21 % % 28 K c tn c n t- ca rry the full line of Yamaha’s 25 % 26 21 % bra lic e 29. Interstice %% and parts. $5,850 BASE SALAR Y FOR TEACHERb 23 23 30 30. Method MICHIGAN STATE NEWS 33 434 31. Burn with B ow ker & M o ile s 31 32 % Witter §% CONTACT PERSONNEL DEPARTMENT 3S 36 37 33 32. Anxious C ycle Shop 34. Sell-estcem CLASSIFIED 2152 W. Grand River Warren Consolidated Schools 39 40 41 36. l,oal 29900 LORRAINE 44 4s 38. Mine 43 355-8255 Okemos WARREN, MICHIGAN 4809 3 42 % % 43 entrance 40. Eternity Ph. 332-6977 Area Code 313 755-0400, 536-3572, 264-1840 46 % 47 % 44. Bone M ichigan State N ew s, E ast Lansing, Michigan Friday, July 15, 1966 7 YOUNG SKATERS DEDICATED Patch’ Is Worth Some Sleep By F A YE UNGER They presented t h e i r first Dan is a no-pref student at Ohio is as frequent as talk about how that g irl’s RA from last skating’s fun and then settle down State News Staff W r i t e r sum m er ice show at Demonstra­ State. boys among g irls. year that the guys didn’t like to working m ore seriously to tion Hall Wednesday night. Other A flock of 12- to 15-year-olds But there’s always fre e time ever got hersef engaged. And en ter competition. What's a 13-year-old boy do­ shows a re scheduled for July 27 sit around them In the Mary too. tim e to complain about the sour " O n c e you s t a r t you can’t ing walking on campus at 4:45 and Aug. 17. Mayo lounge, some on chairs Then there might be a raid on milk and, sometimes, the food. sto p ," Coco said. aun.? Why do they come here? and so m e. on the floor. They the older fella’s supplies for the But It’s ra re to catch a boy on " It’s like a bug,” a 14-year- That’s what the University po­ "O ur m others sent u s ," Coco tease Dan about his chasing g irls. shaving cream for a shaving the g irl’s floor, or vice versa, old girl adds. liceman wondered, so he stopped G ram , a 17-year-old champion, He pleads innocent. cream fight. even though the girls live a floor ."If you're serious about skat­ the boy to check. jokes. Since m ost of the skaters " I’ve only been here a few Or maybe 15-year-old Dave above the boys. ing, you'll give up the tim e to He should have guessed It. The a r e under 19 y ears old, the joke days." Batlin can fall into theR edC edar Most of these skaters started p ra c tic e ," Pam said. boy, Brian Kadar, was one of the Is partially tru e, however. Despite the wide range of ages, R iver again trying to catch a skating In grade school. They "Skating teaches you d isci- 50 am ateur Ice skaters at the Most of them come to take from early teens to 28, the skat­ duck. "hack around” awhile, find out (contlnued on page 8) sum m er Ice session. Kadar was training from a particu lar teach­ e r s mix and talk easily. They And th ere’s always swimming on his way to practice at the ice sh are a common world of skat­ and tennis and horseback riding. rink. e r. ing, but the comradeship goes A sk ater keeps active even in Nick’s V illa Venice He was unlucky enough to get “ T here a re hundreds of places deeper than just sharing a topic fre e tim e sp orts. a 5 a.m . "patch.” A patch is a like this, but MSU has some of of conversation they all know FO R M E R LY M A R IA'S the best fa c ilitie s," Coco said. well. "We play lots of cards too, section of Ice on which a skater The skaters will try to pass "In skating you know all about like crazy eights and hearts and Serving may skate for a specified amount te sts during the sum m er session the people in skating on the West p o k er," Pam Hamrick, a 14- of time. year-old New Y orker, said. Authentic Italian Foods The sum m er ice skating se s­ qualifying them for higher levels Coast even If you don’t meet of competition. them ,” Coco explains. T here’s tim e to talk between sion draws am ateur skaters from skating patches. Tim e to wonder Steaks, Chops, Sea Food the whole range of the competi­ Coco sm iles and shakes her They may spend six hours on tive scale, from world cham­ short brown-blond hair as she the Ice each day. Pizza - In or Out pionship contestants to those who talks. She’s a New York City "Even if you do try to goof watch fo r NEJAC ICE C U T IE — A lice Cook p e r fo r m s In the W o rld Champions On Ice Show, held at the MSU Ice a re Just starting out in compe­ tition. They come from all over the g irl headed for Barnard College, the undergraduate college for women of Columbia University, off, you can’t much or the in­ stru cto rs catch you," the skat­ e rs tell you. Most don’t want to com ing to A n d , O f C o u r s e , Y o u r F a v o r ite B e v e ra g e B a n q u e t F a c i l i t i e s A v a ila b le P h o n e IV 9-5 7 5 1 Ir Nick Laskaris „ A ren a, Wednesday night. M iss Cook is a cham ­ world, like Monica T orrlani, a as a pre-m ed m ajor. goof off. 17-year-old Swiss g irl, and Pa­ Beside h er sits Dan M iller, a They’re after championships, 543 e. grand r iv e r Plenty of Free Parking 1810 S. Washington pion f r o m the Lansing Skating Club. Photo by Chuck M ichaels trick P era of France. 19-year-old from Loraine, Ohio. and talk of winning a Gold Medal MSU B o o k S t o r e MSU B o o k S t o r e MSU B o o k S t o r e MSU B o o k S t o r e MSU B o o k S t o r e MSU B o o k S t o r e MSU B o o k S t o r e MSU B o o k S t o r e MSU B o o k S t o r e MSU B o o k S t o r e M T T n l i l i u U B MAKE LEARNING ERABLE Ml T h e W o n d e r f u l W o r l d of U AID CHILD LEARNING N u r s e r y R h y m e s $1.98 SOURCE MATERIAL TO ENLARGE WITH BOOKS AND CHILDREN'S EVEN THE MOST WELL READ RECORDS AT REDUCED PRICES ;o> $1.98 RECORD SALE and teaching aids MASTERS OF MODERN AR C H ITE C TU R E $5.95 TO o ff C h i l d ' s I n t r o d u c t i o n to A t o m i c $1. 98 E n e r g y a nd O u t e r $ p a c e EN C YC LO PED IA OF J A Z Z $4,95 I CAN READ AND W RITE $1.49 $2 98 C h i l d ' s I n t r o d u c t i o n to J a z z B U T T E R F IE L D F .D .R . 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H a rp e r & Row Pergam on H olden-D ay S tanford M a c M illa n Com pany Van N ostrand In The Center fo r International Programs M IT P re s s IT T T T T T I I Book S to re T T MSU B o o k S t o r e MSU B o o k S t o r e MSU B o o k S t o r e S M ichigan State N ew s, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, July 15, 1966 FAYE UNGER A Pacifist Minister-ls He Heard? Reconciliation of the enemy Is "We m ust attempt to under­ But several did challenge him. "You could also sense an Im­ were hurt too. That disturbed “They will say that it is a m ore Important than victory, the stand the causes of conflict rather " If I see an Innocent man in plication that the United States them. subtle ¿treat of a foreign power. m inister said. than make targets of the symp­ danger, a man being attacked, am was too self-righteous o r maybe Some criticized the U.S. Army But is not God a foreign pow er?" tom. We must not have the atti­ I to Just stand by and not use too confident the right was on her reports on enemy dead. To get "C hristians m ust realize that The 90 youths and 40 adults tude that the enemy is unchange­ force to stop the attacker?” side, a feeling that the United the count, the Army counts the although God is always struggling at the San Francisco church con­ able. T his leads only to a de­ Most agree the attacker must States is not sufficiently willing dead Vietnamese in an attack for them, he does not always ference listened quietly to this structive course of action, "Moon be stopped. to com prom ise," he sa’id. area. favor their direct, personal in­ pacifist m inister. said. But that’s on the individual The im personality of moderr "They figure all killed are te re sts. They m ust even be able Most of them could be des­ F o r a week, teenagers and level. T h at's simple. On the na­ war disturbed the young people. Communist Viet Cong, but many to understand that it is good that cribed as reluctant non - pac­ adults from the United Church of tional level, however, the re ­ "W ar has become so im per- people think close to four out ol God is not always obviously on ifists. They w eren’t m ilitarists, C hrist, Including Rev. William peated Idea was "You cannot sonalized today that Americans five killed are not Viet Cong, but th e ir sid e ," he said. but they were sure th e re ’s a point M atters of E ast Lansing, met a stop violence with violence.” have come to accept the use ol civilians, ’’ the Rev. M atters said. Several speakers presented a at which they would take up arm s se rie s of pacifist speakers at the The Viet Nam war came under napalm on women and children. And inevitably in the middle ol non-pacifist position to the con­ to defend freedom, human rights church’s annual youth forum. fire. Our society is willing to hold ar the discussion of peace cam e the ference, but the fluency of the and the whole host of generalized M atters rem em bers Rev. Mi­ "T h ere was a feeling, from entire population In hostage tc suggestion of a world govern­ pacifists ca rrie d the day. virtues. lan Opocensky, professor at Co- speakers and youth alike, that the get our own way," one pacifist ment o r at least a one-world ap­ “The church cannot afford any menlus Theological I n s t i t u t e , Industrial-m ilitary complex was speaker said. proach to solving the world’s gap between m ilitary people and The m inister, Rev. Robert W. Prague, Czechoslovakia, who in deceiving the public," M atters problems. the C hristian principles of jus­ Moon, chairman of the National his thick accent told the dele­ said. It was a fam iliar tune among "Many C hristians will oppose tice, love and reverence. While Council of Reconciliation, con­ gates that a C hristian cannot re ­ The predominant feeling was the pacifists, perhaps a little a one-world approach as a threat the church must seek solution to tinued his speech for peace. too strong for most of the youths. H R U M M P H — Cathy Rowe a t w o - y e a r - o ld C h e r r y sort to violence, period. that even If the United States won to their se cu rity ," Opocensky the problem s of war, it is also Lane A p a rtm e n t " ju n io r c o e d ," looks q u iz lc a lly Reconciliation is m ore impor­ "The m ajority of the youth the war, the war would have c re ­ But they did feel that it was said. ’T hey will say socialism obligated to serve the men caught at a photographer who caught h e r in the act of tant than stopping Communism. were open-minded to the point ated such conditions that there impossible to confine the ef­ is subversive. But is hot the Gos­ up in the w ar," an arm y chaplain * *sIid in g ** through another day’ s play session. It is more important than "law of not challenging him ," Mat­ could be no return to real peace, fects of bombing m ilitary ta r ­ pel, with all its social concern, reminded the conference. F o r most of the young people Photo by Tony F e r r a n t e and o rd e r," he said. te rs recalls. M atters said. gets to the m ilitary. Civilians subversive?" at the conference the question of pacifism came down to “ Could I deliberately pull the trig g er to Controversial Movie Asher House Offers Religious Unity kill another person?" "T o give a yes o r no answer to the question is difficult, and a straight yes or no answ er can Scheduled A t Wesley Prospective program . . . term serves the house on committees, All the students living at Asher A sher here in East Lansing. flesh rebuked." confuse the issue as much as parties. . . a brand-new h o m e... the Student Board of Governors, a re Christian Scientists and must The name "A s h e r" came not In the late 1950’s, the need for clarify it," M atters said. or in other capacities. belong either to the M o t h e r only in honor of M rs. Asher, but a home for C hristian Science The teenagers went home after T he controversial official film perience. Newseek said it was "O rg” . . . What is all this? But life at Asher is more than Church in Boston, a local branch because of the definition given of women was answered, and both a week of discussing the ques­ of the Protestant pavillion at the “ probably the best film at the "A ll th is" is part of living at an initiation or a committee. church or the C hristian Science tions of peace and pacifism . New York World’s F a ir, “ P a r­ f a ir." Asher Student Foundation, wheth­ Asher in the “ S c i e n c e a n d houses have continued to grow, Asher is 100 men and women Organization here at MSU, us­ The teenagers went home, urg­ ab le," will be shown at 7 p.m . “ Since there a re no words, the e r it be for men or for women. H ealth." even to this year, when the mem­ living in a new co-educational ually called "O rg " by its mem­ ed to sta rt discussions of their Sunday at the Wesley Founda­ interpretation depends upon what Asher House is a religious The definition reads: "A sher: bership if half again a s large home, enjoying conveniences and b e rs. own. They went home, m ost of tion, 1118 S. H arrison Ave. each person brings spiritually to living unit here at MSU, gov­ Jacob's son; Hope and faith; sp ir­ as it was last y ear, and the new erned much like a fraternity or a "new ness” they never dream­ The study of Christian Sci­ them still undoubtedly reluctant T he showing is open to all, the film ," F red N iles, the di­ itual compensation; the ills of the house is full to capacity. ed of having in their old houses. ence is an important p art of the n on-p acifists.________________ not just to Wesley Foundation recto r, said of " P a ra b le .” sorority, but with its prim ary purpose religious rather than Asher is a term party, held in lives of m em bers of Asher and students. Those who attend the Wesley social. the new student center of the a m ajor source of unity for the Foundation showing of the film The C hrist figure in the film When a new Asher man or house, where everyone works house. They have a special "quiet MICHIGAN LEGISLA TURE is a clown who rid es into the will discuss their interp reta­ tions and reactions after the woman comes into the house, he for weeks on decoi ations, food room ,” one for the men and one story at the end of the circus planning and music and finally, fo r the women, in which to study showing. o r she is known as a "prospec­ parade on a donkey. Romney ApprovesPayHike tive" for one term , or until the on the big night, set a the efforts the weekly lesson, the church The P rotestant Council of the rewarded. textbook ("Science and Health Several orthodox groups with­ City of New York named a 26- c e r t a i n requirem ents of the There is an Incre .sing amount drew from the pavillion in pro­ m em ber committee representing "prospective p r o g r a m ” a r e with Key to the Scriptures” by of unity between th j Asher men Mary Baker Eddy, the founder te st to showing the film there. t h e m a j o r denominations to completed. These include com­ and the Asher worn an since they of C hristian Science), or any LANSING W)—Gov. G e o r g e ment w ill have an increasingly lgan legislature will be frozen They said representing C h ris ta s chose, plan, and supervise the munity projects, informal and moved into their n aw home last Romney approved a $2,500 ra ise vital role to play in the future; at the new level until Jan. 1, a clown was sacreligious. production of "P a ra b le ." formal initiation, completion of other of the w ritings of C hris­ fall. in pay for Michigan legislators to adequately fulfill that role we 1971. The New York State Baptist The movie was filmed in color a first-te rm g r a d e - p o i n t r e ­ tian Science. need better state legislatures. However, each he use has main­ Thursday. "T he salary level in this bill Convention, h o w e v e r , called at the C ircus World Museum in quirement, and certain religious The Asher House for men was requirem ents. tained its own Stu lent Board of begun soon after World War II Lawmakers will receive $12,- Adequate compensation will help is m ore rea listic than some dis­ “ P a ra b le '1 a moving spiritual ex­ Baraboo, Wis. Governors, c a rrie s on its own 500 in salary starting next Jan. make this p o ssib le ." • cussed e a r lie r ," the governor After the prospective program by GI’s returning from active 1 and $2,500 in expense allow­ At the sam e tim e, Romney said. " It is re alistic when it is 977School Districts Left has been completed, the mem­ house meetings, a id is governed duty. They took up residence in ber is an “ active" Asherite and separately from the other. a home owned by M rs. Beatrice a n c e - ^ level of compensation signed bills to in crease the sala­ considered that m em bers of the that is "adequate," Romney said, rie s of Supreme Court justices legislature will be unable to take Services 10 & 11 a.m . 6 &7p.m . EAST LANSING St. Johns Student adding: from $25,500 to $35,000 a year any further pay action for at CHURCH OF “ I believe that state govern- and of Appeals C ourt judges from le a st four y e a rs ." C E N TR A L P a ris h The State Constitution prohi­ T he number of school d istricts tation improvements after the $23,000 to $32,500. THE NAZARENE 327 M.A.C. bits raising sa la rie s during a in Michigan has dropped below World War II, nearly 3,000 dis­ FREE METHODIST 149 Highland A ve.,East Lansing A LU M N I M E M O R IA L Michigan l a w m a k e r s a r e te rm of office, and the senate the 1,000 m ark for the first tim e tric ts were eliminated by 1956. Phone ED 7-9778 among the highest paid in the na­ s ta rts its f irs t four-year term since shortly after Michigan be­ Today m ore than 670,000 stu­ CHURCH Sunday School 10:00 a.m . CHAPEL tion, but, Romney said, the Mich- next January._________________ cam e a state in 1837. dents are transported to and Morning Worship 11 KM) a.m . T h ere now are 977 school dis­ from school each day. 828 N. Wash, at Oakland Evening Service 7:00 p.m. Sunday M asses U nitarian Service tric ts. Ten y ears ago there were Follow Highway 43 to Lansing "One Hour of Sermon and 7:15-8:30-9:45-11KX) & m ore than 3,000. 10:30 a.m . M inister: Rev. Howard C. Artz Song" 6:00 p.m. Within the last two years, al­ For Transportation P h o n e Weekday Mass Topic (continued f r o m page 5) m ost 600 d istricts h a v e been eliminated through reorganiza­ To End Parking F ree Taxi Service: 332-1446, Rev. G l e n n A. The Faithless Quest team s who would give th eir right arm to get an opportunity to play,” tion. 7:00, 8:00, 12:30 482-1444 or 484-4488 Chaffee, Pastor in Modern L iterature he said. They a re not bad baseball players. They don’t want money— In 1860, State School Superin­ Near Olds Hall Speaker just a chance to prove they can o r cannot make it. tendent John M. Gregory c riti­ UNIVERSITY C e n tra l M e thodist F ir s t C h ris tia n "When you tell scouts about a boy with great hustle and d esire, The parking lot east of Olds Dr. Joseph Waldmeir cized the lack of ru ra l school Hall will be closed beginning B A P T IS T CHURCH Across From the Capitol R eform ed C hurch but not in the bonus c lass, they say: 1 would like to help you out, d istric ts and urged that some­ Monday to make way for the dem­ but our ro ste rs a re filled. We have no place for another p lay e r.’ thing be done. By 1912 there were 9:00 A.M. P rayer Group 240 M arshall St., Lansing Bud Spangler Q uintet-Jazz olition of the old North Power fA m e r ic a n Bapt i s t ) “ Surely some of these players might develop into m ajor leaguers, 7,341. But because of tran sp o r- M ary-Sabina Chapel Plant and the construction of Rev. John M. Hofman, Pastor accompaniment because desire and hustle a re prim e fa c to rs." G erard G. Phillips, Pastor WORSHIP SERVICE steam tunnels, A. John Zutaut, ED 2-1888 (l0:00;i Morning Service 10:00 uniform commander of the Uni­ 10:00 a.m . (WJ1M 10:30 a.m.) B A P T IS T STUDENTS v ersity Police, announced T hurs­ Worship “ When Wrongly Commanded" Evening Service 7 p.m. caSTminsTCR prc sb ytc r iû o c h u r c h day. Church School 11:10 a.m. Dr. Large 13 15 A b b o t t Rd. Summer Study Series: “ A C hristian Looks At The World’s Persons who norm ally park in Nursery Provided— Crib N ursery, So Bring The Those in need of transporta- cost ¿ansino. micmcan Religions" these spaces should use Lot I 10KMD-12KX) a.m Baby. Take home a copy of the tlon call - M r. Henry Bosch- in front of the Men’s IM Build­ at American Legion Center "W hat Then Are We To Do?" ED 2-2223 or Rev. Hofman SUNDAY SCHEDULE ing, Zutaut said. i sheet for study and application. at 5-3650. Worship Services— — 9 :0 0 T ues., July 19th, B aptist Student The stre e t between the Herb­ Church School, for Sixth Grade and younger, C enter, 332 Oakhlll at 7:30p.m. ■ arium and the coal storage pit Edgewood U nited j including cribbery —9:00 LU TH ER AN WORSHIP a re a s will also be closed during M artin Luther Chapel Lutheran Student Center "Anim ism ” the construction period. 469 North Hagadorn Road 444 Abbott Road F or transportation phone 332-6271 or 332-8901 (3 blocks north of Grand River) U n iv e rs ity Two Blocks North of Student Union F o r further information, call Roger L . P arfitt at 332-0518. Rev. R. L. Moreland - MINISTERS - Rev. H. G. Beach Seventh-Day Summer Worship Service Hour Service and Sunday School 9:30 A.M. A d ve n tist C h u rch 9:30 332-2559 nursery K im b e rly Downs N ursery Provided Sunday, July 17th EPISCOPAL SERVICES T em porarily Meeting at C hurch o f C h r is t University Lutheran Church Rev. Theodore Bundenthal, Lutheran Chaplai-n Sermon by Division and Ann Sts. Bus Schedule: O w e n .................................... 9:15 1007 Kimberly Drive, Lansing Rev. Truman A. M orrison A L L SAINTS CHURCH (2 blocks W. of Frandor SATURDAY SERVICES M a so n -A b b o t......................9:05 C a s e ...................................... 9:20 M cD onel................................9:10 C h a p e l...................................9:25 Church School university Shopping Center on 9:30 a.m . Sabbath School Tem porarily meeting in 9:30-C rib r o o m through five! lutheran church E. Grand River) 11:00 a.m . Worship Service year olds. East Lansing High School Auditorium ale-lca The Ship That Stood TheStorm Affiliated with the United Church of Christ, Congregational-Christian, 8:00 A.M. Sundays Holy Communion IV 9-7130 SUNDAY SERVICES Sat., July 16th "The Longest Journey” P a sto r Lemon Second In A Series Of Unusual Jouineys Evangelical, Reformed, 10:00 A.M. Holy Communion & Sermon Morning Worship 10:00 a.m . WELCOME!! 8:15. 9:15, 10:30 Bible Study 11:00 a.m . M essages Setting Forth The G reatness of Our God In Life’s F or Transportation or Evening Worship 6:00 p.m . Situations Information Call 882-5007 U n iv e rs ity M e th o d ist Peoples C hurch F ir s t C h u rch o f F ir s t P re s b y te ria n Wednesday evening Bible Each Sunday listen to "T he SUNDAY 7:00 C h ris t, S c ie n tis t Study 7:30 p.m. C hurch E ast Lansing Ottawa and Chestnut Voice of Prophecy," 9:30 a.m F or Transportation Call SOUTH BAPTIST CHURCH 1120 S. H arrison Rd. 9:45 & 11:15 Interdenominational 200 W. Grand Ri' ’er 709 E. Grand River E ast Lansing ED 2-l9b0 FE 9-8190 or ED 2-2434 WOAP, (1080 kc.) and "F aith For Today," Channel 8 at 8:30 a .m .. Channel 2 at 10:30 1518 S. WASHINGTON LANSING at Michigan Sunday Service 10 A.M. " Is Believe In God Plausible?” WORSHIP SERVICE Sermon T R IN IT Y CHURCH C O LLE G E B IB L E CLASS 9:45 A .M . SUNDAY SERVICES 10:00 "L ife’’ 120 Spartan Ave. Interdenominational M inister THOUGHT-PROVOKING, BIBLE CENTERED TEACHING will be held 9:30 a.m . SUNDAY WORSHIP SERVICES Alden B. Burns at the State Theater SUNDAY SCHOOL TAUGHT BY DR. TED WARD-MSU University C lasses 9 :4 5 ‘B arnabas—How To Help” 10:00 a.m .-reg u lar 11:00 A.M . “ The M ig h ty “ F orm ula F o r L ife” WORSHIP-9;45 & 11:15 a.m . Dr. Wallace Robertson WEDNESDAY Morning Worship 11:00 N ursery During Services 8KX) p.m.-Evenlng Meeting M in o r ity ” “The Potential of P ro sp erity ’ A d u lt Y ou th CHURCH SCHOOL 8:30 P .M . CHURCH SCHOOL Evening Worship “ The Man F r o m A u s t r a l i a ” 10:00 F ree Public Reading Room 7.-00 "Evaluated V alues" Preaching w ith R e v . & M r s . D i c k I n n e s 9;45-Program for all ages 134 West Grand River C rib through Sixth Grade in OPEN Rev. John MScLachlan REFRESHMENTS AND FELLOWSHIP FOLLOWING church bldg. Weekdays—9-5 p.m. 11:15 a.m .-C hildren, 2-5 years of N iles, Mich. 8 :1 5 T rinity Collegiate Fellowship Mon., Tues., Thurs.,Frl. C A L L IV 2 - 0 7 5 4 F o r F r e e B u s Evenings 7 p.m.-9 p.m. F re e bus transportation 15 to Refreshment period in Church S ervice Inform ation p arlor following worship ser­ All are welcome to attend A warm and friendly welcome PASTORS: E. Eugene W illiams, David L. Erb, Norman R. Pie:¿m a 30 minutes before each s e r­ Church Services and visit and Dr. Howard Sugden, Pastor Dr. Ted Ward, Minister Of Music vice around the campus. vices awaits you at FirstPresbyterian use the reading room. FREE BUS SERVICE- See schedule in your dorm. Rev. Alvin Jones, Minister of Education And Youth_________