'The Trials of Trinkabell': if the chute fits EDITOR'S NOTE: Trlnka Of course, there are times when you A car appeared on the scene, and I was On the first lift I found myself thinking • • • C l l n e , I n t r e p i d State N e w s r e - could avoid one or half a dozen trees, but whisked away. how cool it was in that plane after stand- p o r t e r , m a d e t w o Jumps w i t h t h e a whole forest . . . Just like driving a But those guys jumping,even though they ing in the hot sun so long; why get out? But M S U P a r a c h u t e C l u b S a t u r d a y to car when someone else suddenly drops In get their laughs at each other and everyone I got out and then I knew why. do a s t o r y on t h e p o p u l a r and to use your lane. else, don't consider it a game. It has its They told me on the first jump paople g r o w i n g s p o r t . She r e t u r n e d S u n - It's easy to write a humorous story about thrills and chills for them too, like foot- are " s w e e t , dumb and happy." Right. I day with several assorted my two parachute Jumps last Saturday, ball does for its heroes, but It Is a sport, hazily remember climbing out, looking b r u i s e s , a s p r a i n e d ankle and even though 1 have a painless hemotoma, start to finish. for the canopy, shutting off the reserve the f o l l o w i n g account. " a swelling filled with blood," on my right sentinel, checking for landmarks and that They have natural qualms about any be- ankle. oh-so-soft first landing. By T R I N K A C L I N E ginners, especially girls. It seems that State N e w s S t a f f W r i t e r After a l l , I landed In the middle of a busy many girls have to be picked up and set I was also forewarned I'd never feel the Parachuting Is as dangerous as the day of golfing at a nearby course. And, outside the plane when jump time ap- canopy open, but would have to look up. I jumper makes It; like driving a c a r , you you might say people stopped dead in their proaches. But it's simply a matter of pull- could get yourself killed If you tried. tracks, some midway through a swing. ing yourself out there and standing. ( p l e a s e t u r n to the b a c k page) STAT e Monday MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY V o l . 60 N u m b e r 4 East Lansing, Michigan June 2 6 , 1967 8 P ages ]Qc * % Going down Summit talks remain cordial; At the ready S h o r t l y a f t e r her chute opened, State N e w s s t a f f w r i t e r T r l n k a S t a f f W r i t e r T r l n k a C l l n e heads Cllne p r e p a r e s for her f i r s t p a r a - e a r t h w a r d for a " s o f t " landing. House leader leaders hail understanding GLASSBORO, N J . I.fw-Nearly 10 hours After the session had been under way ly as Kosygin and Johnson saluted them c h u t e jump S a t u r d a y . of intensive talk between President John- 41/4 hours, however, rain began fall- and thanked them for being hosts to the sees passage son and Soviet Premier Alexei N . Kosy- gin concluded Sunday night with the two ing and winds swept the campus, rustling the elm and oak leaves. historic summit. " I want to thank you all very sincere- leaders pledged to remain in direct and The rain scattered the crowd of a ly for this very warm welcome and may indirect communication on explosive world for tax reform issues. That was the main promise for peace thousand or so who had maintained a long vigil. Many of them went home. Just before the two leaders emerged at I salute the friendship between the Soviet and American people," Kosygin observed. A cheer went up at this, that came out, initially at least, from 6:27 p . m . the downpour stopped and the " T o all of you," he continued,grinning, By M I K E B R O G A N the seventh U.S.-Soviet summit meeting sun began to break through. " I want to wish every success and happi- State News Staff W r i t e r since the '40s and the first since 1961. Those on hand near the campus of Glass- Emerging from their two days of con- boro State College cheered enthusiastical- ( p l e a s e t u r n to the b a c k p a g e ) House Minority Leader William A . Ryan, D-Detroit, said Sunday that an "equitable" versations in the academic atmosphere of fiscal reform package for the state might be passed by the House within a week. this little college town, the leaders of the two superpowers hailed their meet- O ing as profitable. Ryan made the statement following ex- tensive tax reform talks between Repub- licans and Democrats that began Thursday night and appeared to end In near agree- " W e have gone more deeply than be- fore Into the greater number of great questions between our two countries and Kosygin remains firm; ment Friday. the world," President Johnson said. With Gov. George Romney presiding at the sessions and trying to head off the necessity of an austerity budget for the " W e have also agreed to keep in good communication t! * iuti.re." He called the talks " v e r y good and Israel must withdraw next fiscal year, the two sides are still very useful," and Kosygin said, "Both UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. P — Soviet " O n Vietnam, the area of agreement faced with obstacles to total agreement sides believe these talks were useful." Premier Alexei N. Kosygin, fresh from is s m a l l , " Johnson said. " I t is defined --corporate income taxes and sales tax Much of their talk was private, person his summit meeting with President John- by the fact that the dangers and difficul- credits. to person without aides present. They son, insisted anew Sunday night that Israel ties of any one area must never be allowed met 4 hours and 35 minutes Sunday and be condemned as an aggressor in the Mid- to become a cause of wider conflict. The austerity budget that the governor 5 hours and 20 minutes Friday. dle East. "Yet even in Vietnam, I was able to make and the legislators are trying to avoid The talk touched on a number of inter- The Soviet premier, who took the same it very clear, with no third party between would cut Romney's proposed general fund national issues, and President Johnson stand as the U.N. General Assembly con- us, that we will match and we will out- budget of $1.15 billion down to $946 pictured him self convinced that the summit vened last week on the Middle East emer- match every step to peace that others may million, $108 million less than Michigan's had produced progress in mutual under- gency, said that the danger remains of be ready to take," he said. present level of spending. standing. Neither leader in his remarks conflict breaking out again. Summit at Glassboro The Democrats are asking for a 6 per Speaking of the talks with Johnson, at the leavetaking mentioned either Viet- He said the only Insurance against re- Kosygin said the meeting showed the "pro- cent corporate tax while the Republicans nam or the Middle East specifically. newal of fighting would be withdrawal of found differences between the Soviet Union say they will go no higher than 5-1/2» per cent. And there is still question wheth- The summit ended as it had begun In Israeli troops to the armistice lines—the and the United States." P r e s i d e n t Johnson g r e e t s P r e m i e r K o s y g i n at G l a s s b o r o , N . J . , er a $3 per person sales tax credit should the 22-room, 2 1/2-story mansion domi- lines as of June 4 before the fighting broke f o r t h e i r s e c o n d s u m m i t m e e t i n g , w i t h L y n d a B i r d along. nating Glassboro State College's campus: out. Principally these were listed by the be allowed. UPI Telephoto with smiles and handshakes between the He expressed these views at a news con- premier as the Middle East and Vietnam. The tax negotiations will resume at 10 chiefs of the two great nuclear powers. ference at U.N. headquarters. a . m . today to decide If and how the stale- mates can be broken. This was the first Sovlet-U.S. summit The U.S. stand on the Middle East is since John F. Kennedy met Nikita S. that the Arabs and Israelis should negoti- Coeds on collegiate sex-, The talks were called by Romney after the House for the second time Wednesday Khrushchev in Vienna, Austria, six years ate their differences with third-party help. defeated a Republican-sponsored fiscal ago—at a time when the burning world issue was divided Berlin. P resident Johnson returned Sunday night reform package 50-56 with 50 Democrats from the summit meeting and told the na- and 6 of the 56 Republicans voting against The U.S.-Sovlet summitry began at Yalta in 1943, continued through Tehran tion that talks at Glassboro, N.J,, have the bill. meaningful relationship' and Potsdam during World War II, Post- made the world " a little less dangerous." After the talks F r i d a y Ryan said war summits were at Geneva In 1955, " W e continued our discussions today In he thought " w e made a lot of progress." Camp David, M d . , in 1959, and Vienna in the same spirit in which we began on Fri- Ryan said the two sides were very close 1961. day—a spirit of direct face-to-face ex- to agreement and that a solution would The Glassboro meeting grew out of a changes between leaders with heavy re- probably be found. war crisis In the Middle East which sponsibilities," Johnson said. E D I T O R ' S N O T E : T h i s is the sex was not wrong or immoral If contra- As of Friday the compromise plan in- brought Kosygin to New York for an emer- "You will not be surprised to know that f i r s t of a f i v e - p a r t s e r i e s on ceptives were used. cluded: —A 2-1/2 per cent personal income tax gency United Nations General Assembly these two meetings have not solved all our s t u d e n t s e x u a l b e h a v i o r at M S U . " . . . A coed expressed But the majority opinion was voiced meeting. p r o b l e m s , " he said. " O n some, we have by a Junior who said it was no one's with a $1,000 deduction. The defeated GOP made progress—in reducing misunder- F o r her series, Miss Laskey In- her opinion that pre-marital plan called for a $60 deduction. President Johnson said he believed t e r v i e w e d various University ad- business what other people did. —Either a 5-1/2 or a 6 per cent cor- that the summit produced progress in standing, and in reaffirming our common sex was not wrong or im - commitment to seek agreement. m i n i s t r a t o r s , a physician, police porate Income tax with the Democrats mutual understanding. moral if contraceptives were Yet sex and sexual experiences are " I think we made that kind of progress, d e p a r t m e n t p e r s o n n e l and s t u - calling for the higher figure. The communication between the Kremlin talked about frankly and freely. This it- —A 7 per cent tax on financial institu- and Washington will be through the aides for example, on the great questioaof a r m s dents r e g a r d i n g sexual b e h a v i o r , us&d." self Is evidence of changing attitudes of the two leaders "and also directly," limitation, and we have agreed this after- s e x u a l d e v i a n c y and c h a n g i n g s t u - toward personal standards. tions. the President said. noon that M r . Secretary of State Dean Rusk dent a t t i t u d e s t o w a r d s e x . —A 3 cent Increase on cigarette taxes and M r . Soviet Foriegn Minister Andrei to 10 cents a package. " I believe more strongly than ever Talking is experiencing, but even talking that these have been very good and very A. Gromyko will pursue this subject in with Alma College, Albion or even Western with fellow students at a modern multi- —A sliding scale for city income tax By D O R O T H Y L A S K E Y useful t a l k s , " he added. New York in the days ahead," he said, Michigan University." versity gets boring. credits applied to the state income tax "focusing on the urgent need for prompt State N e w s S t a f f W r i t e r for individuals. The summit provided opportunity to Informed university sources, however, Tomorrow: Sex on the campus. . . is it agreement on a nonproliferation treaty." promiscuous? Agreement was also reached on repeal review the state of Sovlet-UjS. relations " A book of verses underneath a bough, reveal that venereal disease, unmarried and to compare positions on outstanding Johnson said that no agreement is readi- pregnancies, miscarriages and abortions of the business activities tax—a cost of a jug of wine, a loaf of bread, and thou questions, Kosygin said. ly insight on the Middle Eastern crisis, and have been increasing markedly at MSU $142 million to the state—and the in- beside me. . . " "Both sides believe these talks were differences over Vietnam continue. in the last two years. tangibles tax at a cost of $13 million According to the author of "The Erotic which would bring the total of new rev- useful," Kosygin said. The leaders met In an air-conditioned Johnson said he spoke frankly with Kosy- gin and that he thought the Premier re- Revolution," the grassers along the Red These sources—administrators, a phy- sician, police department personnel and Soviets issue enue down to $326 million. Cedar River—a blanket, some beer,a coed room while spectators outside sweltered. turnee the same frankness in their dis- students themselves—cite the growing ( p l e a s e t u r n to the b a c k p a g e ) Temperatures were in the mug^y 90s. cussions. and a grassy spot are variations of that old theme. campus community and an increasing milder doctrine A weekly news magazine said "when liberal attitude toward sex as the causes. MOSCOW (P —The Soviet Union's ruling fraternity boys at Michigan State Univer- A New York paper headlined the cur- conmunlst party issued Sunday a 25,000 IN TRUSTEE DISPUTE sity excitedly talk about grassers, all rent "sexplosion" on campuses through- -word statement of policy stressing that they are describing is an elaborate ver- out the United States. The most popular the main Soviet task now Is to build eco- sion of the old-fashion blanket party." courses on any campus today are " g i r l s , nomic strength at home while following A 20-year-old from Birmingham, Mich., dope and booze," the newspaper suggested. State Dems table Smith censure said when she and a girl friend were pack- ing for their first term at college, she noticed her friend had birth control p i l l s . The Institute for Sex Research at In- diana University, noted for its Kinsey Reports, says that promiscuous sexual a policy of peaceful coexistence abroad. A Kremlin summation of 50 years of Communist power In the Soviet Union said " t h e domination of imperialism on the members failed to act on it at the con- issue instead be dealt with at the con- The friend said her mother had given intercourse among young people, partic- By L E O Z A I N E A world scene has ended," because of the vention last February in Grand Rapids. A vention, when the trustee from Plnconnlng them to her, so she could "have fun ularly middle class girls, is increasing. State News Staff W r i t e r growth of Soviet military might. The resolution concerning the exclusion from needs an endorsement for releectlon In without worrying that something might The sexual vocabulary is changing. statement was relatively restrained on Congress of Rep. Adam Clayton Powell, 1968. Staebler served notice, however, that happen." Promiscuity denotes something indis - Michigan Democrats rejected Sunday, cold war Issues. D-N.Y., sparked heated debate and forced his proposal should not be Interpreted These are not examples of life at a criminate and shoddy. That is not col- at least temporarily, a move to censure The Soviet idea of peaceful coexistence the convention to postpone any action on as a defense of Smith. typically conservative school. legiate sex. Connor D. Smith for his refusal to support aga in wa s defined broadly to Include peace- Smith. " N o Democrat can condone the actions Yet an administrator on the MSU student What is sought is a "meaningful rela- Don Stevens for chairman of the MSU ful competition with the West while at The resolution would have denied Smith of anyone who doesn't play on the t e a m , " affairs staff describes the university as tionship." A fulfillment, an experience. Board of Trustees. the same time supporting so-called na- an endorsement for the MSU seat and "any he said. There seems to be very little concern The 26-22 vote against the resolution conservative, generally with typical mid- tional liberation movements against the other party position." S e v e r a l party members spoke out about what is right or wrong, moral or tabled It for future consideration, prob- western morals. West. National Committeeman Neil Staebler against the resolution and argued that amoral. ably at the next state convention. "Conservative In relation to the Uni- But the emphasis was clearly on build- cautioned against such a "public wrist versity of Michigan and the schools back During an informal discussion a coed The-action came at a state central com- sl-- -g" and suggested that the Smith ( p l e a s e t u r n to the b a c k page) E a s t , " she notes, " b u f liberal compared expressed her opinion that pre-marital ( p l e a s e t u r n to the back page) mittee meeting in the Union, after party STATI N I W S LAIIRIL PRATT James D. Spaniolo Susan Comerford editor-ln-chief advertising manager For possession Monday Morning, June 26, 1967 EDITORIAL of marijuana' A day in the life The PAPER office has been busted. Ten people, released on bond from Ing- F o r possession of marijuana, less habituating o r harmful than socially- accepted alcohol. ham County J a i l in Mason, now can either of our busy Congress demand an examination or go directly For the possession of marijuana, of to Circuit Court. If the charges against which George Washington (yes, the first them can be proved, they could be sen- President of the United States) was a tenced to from six months to two years major producer. (Grass was a major crop in jail. The United States House enemies they really are." during colonial and Revolutionary t i m e s - were the Founding Fathers all heads?) U n d e r the b i l l , any p i c t u r e For the possession of marijuana. of R e p r e s e n t a t i v e s did not For possession of marijuana, which the spend l a s t Tuesday d i s c u s s - or representation o f the handy dandy Webster defines as "(2b) For possession of marijuana, which flag--not just a c t u a l f l a g s o r the dried leaves and flowering tops of until 1937 formed about 15 per cent of the ing f o r e i g n a i d , V i e t n a m , the usual cigarette. (In 1926, the first woman the pistillate hemp plant that yield can- M i d d l e E a s t c r i s i s or the standards — destroyed could nabin and are sometimes smoked for to appear in a cigarette ad—for Chester- domestic scene. c o s t the v i o l a t o r $1,000 o r t h e i r intoxicating effect." (Note intoxi- field—was saying, " B l o w some my way." cating, not narcotic.) The House did spend m o s t a y e a r in j a i l o r b o t h . For possession of marijuana, which has For possession of marijuana, which of Tuesday r e a d i n g p a t r i o t i c Opponents of the b i l l c l a i m been determined by medical studies to have has been called one of the most mis- that it is i m p o s s i b l e to l e g i s - to harmful physical effects; no harmful understood drugs in existence. (It isn't poems, d e n o u n c i n g flag mental effects; no addictive effect. a drug—drug being translated as nar- b u r n e r s and i m m a t u r e col- late p a t r i o t i s m o r m o r a l i t y For possession of marijuana, which can cotic—it's a euphoric or intoxicant.) a n d suggested the b i l l vio- put one inside or outside his mind, turn lege students and a t t e m p t i n g colors and sounds more beautiful and For possession of marijuana,legal until to define,a flag,, lates the c o n s t i t u t i o n a l g u a r - clear, help him learn love and seeing and 1937, used In Moslem countries and rec- E v e n t u a l l y , by a 385 to 16 antee of free s p e e c h . give him a sense of wonder—something ommended by Mohammed to the faithful. many of us lose along the line as we pre- v o t e , a n d m o t i v a t e d ap- A l l states and the D i s t r i c t pare for the serious ratrace we'll have The PAPER office has been busted and p a r e n t l y b y anti anti-Viet- of C o l u m b i a p r e s e n t l y h a v e to enter someday. 10 people are waiting for the chance to No, M r . President! You mustn't pick up For possession of marijuana, which prove the state police had no reason to n a m s e n t i m e n t , the House laws against flag d e s e c r a - someone classified as a narcotic al- bust them, p a s s e d a b i l l to m a k e it a t i o n , although p u n i s h m e n t s the new-born baby by the ears! though it has little in common w ith narcotic " F o r the possession of m a r i j u a n a , " substances, such as heroin. f e d e r a l c r i m e to p u b l i c l y vary widely. m u t i l a t e or o t h e r w i s e dese- We suggest the b i l l i s un- c r a t e the United States f l a g . necessary and a waste of PUR READERS' MINDS The b i l l now goes to the busy C o n g r e s s m e n ' s t i m e . Senate where s e n a t o r s w i l l R e t u r n the flag waving to get t h e i r chance to pledge a l l e g i a n c e to the flag. Between poetry l e s s o n s , the quiet A m e r i c a n s who d i s - play p a t r i o t i s m d u r i n g t h e i r daily routine without Dorms impede the significant m a r c h e s and b a n n e r s , the Ir. reply to the article entitled "Students tern Consider th< fact that the great for some strange reason, the heat is mumbled something on the order of " m o s t the House h e a r d s u g g e s t i o n s say dorm life impedes academics," I r^n majority of students are in some way turned off at midnight every night. students go to bed after 12 anyway." to " t a k e flag b u r n e r s 200 y o u n g s t e r s w h o know the would like to say that this is certainly dissatisfied with the food they are eating. Many times I have had the unpleasant Situations like this make a person pledge of a l l e g i a n c e and the the understatement of the year. In my But what can they do? experience of helplessly watching the wonder when the University is going to m i l e s out to s e a , tie stones temperature in our %ocm slowly drop on wake up to the fact that listening to humble opinion, dorm life impedes just Bureaucracy has provided no channels a r o u n d t h e i r necks and d u m p Peace Corps crew; Congress about everything of significance. a cold winter night wlUe attempting some students (sometimes) might not be such for student opinion about this, so the lit- them o v e r b o a r d " and to has o t h e r things to do. To see how this comes about, one must tle dissatisfactions build up and up until late night studying. ^ ^ a bad idea, after all. analyze the atmosphere prevalent in the they are big ones. Then we have a food Believe it or not, !%ecorded (unoffi- When are they going to see that if " t r e a t these people as the --The Editors typical MSU dorm. From my experience, cially) what 1 think is an all time low they, just once in a while, asked how we riot, or a spring term finals riot. dorms tend to be a rather sterile, im- one night winter term of 55 degrees. liked living in " X " hall, that perhaps I suggest that cafeteria food is prob- personal place where one easily contracts instead of having 20,000 unquestioning, ably better than most students get at The next day I sneezingly contacted the feeling that he is merely a number, mechanical dorm rats on their hands, r.ome. the building manager about this grave CRACK TROOPS KILLED or a cog in a vast wheel, rather than a they might have an equal number of real It is the "eat it or starve" attitude situation, and was greeted with uncom- live people, with a sense of direction person with ideas and characteristics. of the food managers that is one of prehending, blank stares. I finally gath-. and purpose. It seems to me that dormitories, rath- the causes of low morale among students. ered, however, that this practice was er than being a community of people liv- "University policy." When asked if there Bob Waber Egypt's fighting forces ing together, like they should be, are merely a collection of people existing separately, with little direction or pur- There are many other-distances, too lumerous to count, such as the fact that, was any particular reason for it, he Otsego senior pose. From, lack discipline, training Dormitories are a place where all it takes is one or w o uncooperative people, and life can be made unbearable for a l l . Greenwich Village, New York All it takes is someone waking you up By DENN S NEELD will pour fresh a r m s into Egypt as a prop- at 3 a . m , the morning ycu have a 7:45 AP News Analyst aganda gesture, rather than with any real hope of revitalizing Nasser's army final to make you question seriously the Direct to intents and purposes for which a dorm ATHENS, Greece P. —An Egyptian army to battle readiness. stands, if, indeed, there are any such driver was taking newsmen to the Sinai front in the Arab-Israeli war when sud- What happened to Soviet-made material on the sands of Sinai is something that intents and purposes. The Card Shop I think the underlying cause for most denly his truck broke down. surely made the Russians shudder. of the inherent ills in dorms today is He seemed puzzled. The fact that he The Egyptians abandoned hundreds of a result of the niggardly attitude taken had been running without oil didn't seem truflks and armored vehicles after' they by the "powers that b e . " to make things any clearer to him. broke down for lack of maintenance be- For instance, there are so many peo- The incident shows why even with a fore getting ne?r the battlefront. Other ple crowded into such a small place massive new flow of Soviet arms, the columns of tanks and trucks were aban- in a dorm, that there is little chance Egyptians won't be ready to face the doned for lack of fuel. for privacy. Israelis again until they can demonstrate A high percentage of Soviet-made Egyp- a capacity for what they lacked in the This in itself is not necessarily bad, tian fighter planes were mechanically un- Sinai rout: technical knowhow, organiza- but when, for example, there is a total ready for flight when the war began. tion and discipline. absence of sound-proofing, you some- The Egyptian radar warning system ap- times think your neighbors are in the To blacken the picture still more, peared to have broken down completely. same room with you. many of Egypt's crack troops, veterans In Cairo, alerts were sounded minutes of the Yemen campaign, were killed in It seems to me that if the University after Israeli planes had dropped their the march that riever reached Israel. can afford to build a multi-million dol- bombs and turned for home. On several Observers in Cairo have pointed out lar dormitory, they can also afford to occasions the " a l l clear" was given while that most Egyptian soldiers hail from make it a little more livable. enemy aircraft still were overhead and relatively backward agricultural areas antiaircraft guns were blazing. In terms of numbers, which admin- and are unable to assimilate technical istrators seem to understand better, the Troops returning from the Sinai front training quickly. To train new tank crews, cost would be only slightly more. spoke of a failure of logistics and commu- for instance, will be a long undertaking. Another case in point is the food sys- nications. Whole regiments were sur- Egypt's Gamal Abdel Nasser in three rounded and badly mauled when their days of talks with Soviet President Nik- flanks were exposed by uncoordinated re- olai V. Podgorny almost certainly asked for tanks and other weapons to replace treats. Egyptian army headquarters had little Letter policy those destroyed or captured by Israel. The State News welcomes all letters. control of their forces once the battle Please keep all letters under 300 words; BASIC OUTLINES It also was reported from Moscow that began. the Soviet Union has promised to re- we will reserve the right to edit any letters Discipline often collapsed in the face of build Egypt's fighting forces to their over that length. All letters should be typed the Israeli assault. Even before the war, strength prior to the war. and triple spaced and include name, uni- newsmen visiting forward Arab troop Some think, however, that the Russians concentrations noted discipline was lax. versity standing, phone number, and ad- dress, No unsigned letters will be printed. ATL NAT SCI SOC HUM COURSE PEANUTS rl?CM CAMP; , \[ ?Ack -SOM / ^ELu 'C fl'MMER ¿AMP.. I a)Aé AiOAs ; WBACK) í-CR Ta.'C 7C fCMMER camp: j OUTLINES enameled earrings. 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MICHIGAN 48912 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Monday, June 26, 1967 3 NEWS U.S.' may cut arms soles to summary A c a p s u l e s u m m a r y of the d a y ' s e v e n t s f r o m the 'explosive' foreign oreos WASHINGTON If! ~ Because cy amendments into the foreign this policy has badly backfired any—of it will be replaced by the Associated Press. w e a p o n s stamped 'Made I n aid bill. against our own best Interest." United States, but sources said U.S.A.' again have been used by S ince 1950, the se two progr a m s The Mideast arms race began this rearming, with a proper in earnest about 1955 when the ceiling, must eventually be done International News b o t h sides in a regional war, Congress may restrict sharply have totaled $50 billion and have scattered a massive arsenal-ev- Soviet Union and France joined to prevent the Soviet Union from the flow of American a r m s into erything from jet fighters and the United States and Britain in b e c o m i n g the exclusive arms A In a 25,000 word paper Issued Sunday by the Soviet Union's sending weapons into the area. supplier of the Arab world. potentially explosive areas. missiles to trucks and tugboats- ruling Communist Party it was stressed that the main Soviet According to the Institute for The move on Capitol Hill coin- t o a l l corners of the e a r t h . Although past shipments of U.S. task now is to build economic strength at home while following Strategic Studies, nearly 200U.S. cides with the administration's The great bulk of the U.S. arms into the Middle East have a policy of peaceful coexistence abroad. The document is to be military Jets had been delivered diplomatic efforts to curb con- arms aid-one rough estimate is been extensive, they are dwarfed differentiated from similar ones in the past in that the doctrine to countries in the Middle East ventional arms races in the Mid- four-fifths-has gone to indus- by the infusion of Soviet weapons. of world revolution first was explicitly rejected. " T h e domina- and North Africa by the end of dle East and elsewhere—a cru- trialized nations such as West When fighting broke out, an esti- tion of imperialism on the world scene has ended," the document 1965. The s a m e area had re- cial issue discussed in President Germany and Japan. It's the small mated $2 billion in Soviet arms stated. See page i . ceived 713Soviet jets, 298 French J o h n s o n ' s summit conference percentage of shipments to de- had been supplied to Egypt alone- veloping countries of the Near craft and 300 British planes, the much of which littered the desert ^ The Soviet-American summit conference continued Sunday, Friday and Sunday with Soviet and Far East, Latin America and institute said. after the lightning Israeli ad- with a news conference given by Soviet Premier Kosygin at the Premier Alexei N. Kosygin. Africa that is causing congres- S i n c e then, g o v e r n m e n t vance. United Nations capping his visit to the United States. Barring an unexpected major sional and diplomatic concern. sources say, the United States T h e Institute f o r Strategic See page 1. shift in sentimOTt, chances ap- S e n a t o r s say Secretary of agreed to supply Israel with 30 Studies, in a report published ^ T h o u s a n d s of Israeli and Jordanian Christians were able to visit previously closed portions of Jerusalem Sunday, marking It9s a trap! pear good that Congress will clamp some type of restrictions State Dean Rusk and Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara will A4B Skyhawk tactical bombers, while at the same time shipping last year, estimated that four countries are selling about $1- the first time, at least for the Israelis, that free access has on the U.S. arms sales and mili- be questioned closely about the 20 F104 interceptors to Jordan, billion worth of arms each year been available. See page 7. the grass! the B e a l B o t a n i c a l G a r d e n s ! B e - tary grant programs, either by a r m s flow, and the status of dip- one of Israel's Arab enemies. to countries in developing re- ware! S t a t e N e w s photo by G l e n O w e n s chopping funds or inserting poll- lomatic moves to curb it, when Jordan also began receiving an gions. £ Soviet Union President Nikolai V. Podgorny returned t h e Senate Foreign Relations allotment of 100 U.S. M48 Pat- It estimated U.S. sales at about Sunday from his week long trip abroad which included talks Committee resumes hearings on ton tanks In 1965; At the same $150 million, Soviet at $400 mil- with Yugoslav President Tito and Egyptian President Nasser. 'FACT-FINDING' MISSION the foreign aid bill, probably this time, Israel was receiving an lion, French at $200 million and Podgorny is thought to have offered free replacement of all week. estimated 200 of the same type British at $150 million. The U.S. Arab military equipment lost in return for a Soviet role in the The opening volley in the con- tanks under a joint U.S.-Ger- estimate is apart from the $300 rebuilding. See page 3. gressional move to cut back arms man deal. million in grant aid, the institute S Egypt, Syria and Jordan may face serious food shortages >re the end of this year as a result of the Arab-Israeli war. Russia is expected and able to offer only token assistance. Podgorny ends Egypt trip, shipments also could come this week. Sen. Frank Church, D-Idaho, M o s t of Jordan's military h a r d w a r e was believed de- stroyed during the fighting. It said. COUPON who last year engineered a $100- remains unclear how much—if See page 3 t million cut in military grants, Right Guard ^ Eighty men were killed and 34 wounded as a 130-man unit of the U.S. 173rd Airborne brigade walked into an 800-member promises Soviet military aid said he is preparing a major policy speech on the subject. unit of well-trained North Vietnamese regulars, it was reported Saturday. MOSCOW UP — President Ni- Egyptian officials, described Reports in Moscow and Cairo Church added in an interview that he will make every effort Repeal Reg. Deodorant 1.00 490 There was no large communist follow-up of Saturday's suc- Podgorny's visit as largely a indicated Soviet military aid was " t o reduce the scope and size cess, although scattered Viet Cong successes marked the action kolai V. Podgorny returned fact-finding trip, reviewing the continuing uninterrupted, but that o f the program very substantial- this past weekend. See page 4,7. Sunday from his mission to Cairo where he is reported to have damage to the Soviet-supplied Egyptian armed forces. it would take some time to replace the Egyptian equipment lost In the l y " again this year, moving first i n the Foreign Relations Com- refused Limi» 1 0 Israel, in a reversal of a decision made last week, is now promised Soviet military aid to Expire Kfter 7-1-67 They said the Russians war. Israel put these losses at 357 mittee and, if unsuccessful there, allowing Arab refugees who fled thé Israeli-occupied section of Jordan to return to their homes. Many more Arabs continue rebuild Egypt's battered armed forces. Cairo informants said, however, the Kremlin wants a were insisting that Nasser ac- cept Soviet military and economic planes and about 600 tanks. There also were reports from carrying the fight to the Senate floor. for H o f f a$. COUPON to flee than return. See page 3. advisers who would give the Cairo that the summit meeting " I f it were left to the execu- CHATTANOOGA, T e n n . ,F— greater voice In the rebuilding Kremlin a voice In the rebuild- between President Johnson and tive department," Church said, U.S. Dist. Court Judge Frank W, A Israeli Foreign Minister Abba Eban said Sunday on the process. Podgorny left Moscow early ing process, as a condition for Premier Alexei N. Kosygin had "the program would go on in- Wilson refused Thursday to re- Subdue NBC TV program Meet the Press that if Israel hangs on to the extending aid. triggered gloom in Cairo over definitely a n d tend to prolif- last week, stopped In Belgrade duce or suspend the eight-year territory it gained in the recent war, Egypt will be forced to Nasser had refused to accept possible Soviet-American coop- erate." D a n d r u f f Shampoo for a conference with President prison sentence of James R.Hof- negotiate in order to gain some territory back. Egypt in the past Soviet advisers previously and eration to Egypt's disadvantage. In winning the arms aid cut- Tito of Yugoslavia, then con- fa, president of the Teamsters has refused to negotiate with Israel on anything. See page 4, the original Soviet military did Egypt already is in debt for back last year, Church and other Reg. 1.49 490 ferred with President Gamal Ab- Union. came without such strings at- more than $1 billion worth of So- senators cited the fact that L'.S.- In a 75-word ruling, Wilson del Nasser of Egypt in Cairo for tached. viet military equipment, much supplied weapons had been used said, "The court is of the opin- three days. He stopped off again National News in Yugoslavia on his way home and Marshal Matvei V. ¿akharov, of which was lost In the war, by both sides in the India-Paki- ion that the motion should be the Soviet chief of staff, remained plus another billion or more In stan fighting. denied and no modification in [Expire \fter 7- 1 -67 conferred again with Tito, closely A A Philadelphia school teacher, who was fired after he re- In Cairo to complete the talks, economic aid. According to re- The same situation existed in the sentence imposed be m a d e . " tied with Nasser In matters of fused his principal's order to call in all copies of a student adding to speculation that a ques- ports here the Russians have the Mideast war, Church said, Hoffa, who is imprisoned at nonallgnment in foreign affairs. COUPON pamphlet containing controversial samples of his students' tion of Soviet advisers was in- agreed to send Egypt replacement providing "ample evidence that the federal penitentiary in Lew- A communique Saturday night volved. weapons free of charge. writing, was ordered reinstated by the new school superintend- isburg, Pa., asked last week for ent. See page 4. stressed " m u t u a l understand- ing" in the Podgorny-N'asser a lighter sentence, claiming he Crest 0 James Meredith continued his march, begun Saturday, " t o and his wife are ill. talks, but made no mention of T o o t h p a ste fight f e a r . " "1 never saw a man with so much courage," a by- Justice Department attorneys agreement on specific issues and opposed the motion but later stander said. A Teamster President James R. Hoffa's appeal of an eight- See page 4. said nothing about military aid. Informed sources In Moscow said the Russians hadpromlsed to Arab exodus continues dropped one additional count of a conspiracy Indictment which has been pending against Hoffa for R e g . 95c F a m 11 y Size r - l x year prison sentence was rejected Thursday by a U.S. District rebuild Egypt's armed forces up Limit 1 Court. See page 3. four years. to their strength before the A The fact that U.S. arms have been used in both sides of the Middle East war has brought concern both on the executive and crushing defeat by Israel In the Middle East war. Reports from Yugoslavia said a despite new Israeli policy Hoffa was convicted here in 1964 on charges of tampering with the federal court jury try- E x p i r e \fler 1-67 According to unofficial esti- t h e i r household possessions. ing him on conspiracy charges COUPON legislative level. Congress is expected to place limitations on military pact had been signed mates, between 4,000 and 5,000 S e w i n g m a c h i n e s , tape re- in Nashville a year earlier. a r m s shipments to potential trouble areas, while at the same but diplomats In Cairo indicated people crossed eastward a n d corders, tables, chairs, beds and Convicted w i t h Hoffa were time this subject was important on the agenda of yesterday's summit conferece. See page 3. difficulties on the aid issue. These diplomats, quoting ALLENBY BRIDGE, Jordan F —Israelis let Arab refugees re- more than 100 went westward by bulky mattresses were carried Thomas Ewing Parks and Ew- Coppertone midday Sunday either to return across the rickety improvised ing King, both of Nashville, and turn to their homes in the Israeli- home or to bring out members footbridge placed on the broken Larry Campbell of Detroit. Suntan L o t i o n occupied sector of Jordan on Sun- of their families. steel girders. Wilson refused Thursday to day, apparently in a reversal of a previous policy. But the stream of The refugees moved eastward Three Israeli guards on the reduce t h e three-year prison Food shortages 59C R e g . 89c refugees i n t o eastern Jordan into Transjordan at a rate of 600 f o o t b r i d g e assisted refugees. term of Campbell. The Judge from the Israeli sector continued. a n h o u r at the peak period. Clad in combat fatigues, they earlier had granted a change in There was no panic and little slung their weapons to free their King's sentence to allow his re- Limit 1 Israeli guards, on Allenby hysteria, in marked contrast to hands and c a r r i e d babies or lease at the discretion of the E x p i r e \fter 7-1-67 Bridge were allowing Arabs who the rush days of the exodus in helped lift bulky bundles. U.S. Board of Pardons and Pa- had flew the Israeli occupation face Egypt, Jordan of the 1.5 million tons of wheat earlier to return to their homes on the west bank of the Jordan River. Arabs seeking to. return last w e e k were turned back. the middle of last week. The refugees appeared to be better organized. They were able to b r i n g with them more of A Red Cross project to reunite J o r d a n i a n children caught in boarding schools in Jerusalem had to be postponed. roles. In his petition for a lighter sentence, Hoffa said he is suf- fering from diabetes and a hernia ••¡COUPON Barnes & Hind ROME .?!--Egypt and Jordan total trade boycott of America, a year the United States used The day's exodus from the may face critical food shortages o r , the Soviet Union dips into its Wetting Solution to send to the Middle East. Israeli sector ran smoothly in before the end of this year in own recently built grain r e - Russia has large commitments contrast to previous days and the aftermath of the Arab-Is- serves to fill the enormous gap for wheat to the East European no shooting was heard from the Reg. 1.50 between the Arab nations' food 890 raeli war of June 5-10. western end of this damaged supplies and their food needs. countries, and she badly needs The situation in Syria may bridge across the river. It seemed probable that Rus- to sell or trade the rest on be only slightly less grave. Several groups of women and Limit 1 sia, which had a bumper wheat the commercial market to gain Experts of the U.N. Food and children were allowed back, even Expire U t e r 7-1-6 crop last year, would make at hard currency for international Agriculture Organization—F AO being helped by Israeli soldiers. least token shipments to help trade. —give that appraisal of the con- F a t h e r s seeking contact w i t h restore its image as the Arabs' A near-record crop had been COUPON dition in the Middle East, un- families on the west bank also friend. expected this year in almost less: were able to get over. every country of the Middle East. The U n i t e d States resumes But it was regarded as unlike- ly that Russia would go much Aqua Net massive grain shipments to the countries which have called a beyond token shipments, far short H a i r Spray SAVE • SAVE • SAVE EXPERIENCE SUMMER CLEARANCE 490 Reg. ¿.00 Soviets cover summit Limiti » NEW YORK .P.—Soviet news- leaving for the second summit THE WONDERFUL WORLD OF WINGS S The Voice of Music session with President Johnson E x p i r e A f t e r 7-1-67 men and photographers appear- FREE! ed outside the U.S.S.R.'s United in Glassboro, N.J. Stereos Nations Mission building Sunday Tape Recorders for the first time since Premier The first summit conference Components Alexei N. Kosygin arrived here. rated only 37 words on the bot- Specials good at The photographers took pic- tom of page one of Pravda, the tures of Kosygin's motorcade Soviet Communist party paper. E.Lansing Store Onl I The State News, the student newspaper at Michigan State and color TV's See The Campus From The Air STATE black & white TV's University, Is published every class day throughout the year stereos - radios As Part Of The Winged Spartans9 with special Welcome Week and Orientation Issues In June and September. Subscription rates are 912 per year. Member Associated Press, Unfced Press International, Inland Dally Press Assoctatkm, Associated Collegiate Press, «• , EVER YTHING MUST GO Discount ('osmetics Michigan Press Association, Michigan Collegiate Press As- sociation, United State Student Press Association. Second class postage paid at East Lansing, Mich. Editorial and business offices at 347 Student Services y of East Lansing Summer Membership Drive iV I it a mi ns 619 E. Grand River >e C o m e to the a i r s t r i p just south of the t r a c k s on F a r m L a n e W e d n e s d a y , Building, Michigan State Untv«rsMy t East Lansing, Mich. 541 F G ' a n d R i vet June 28 any t i m e f r o m 1 2 - 8 p . m . f o r a f r e e f l i g h t in one of o u r club a i r - \r ; il-, ! ; ul 11 : 1 ''1 c r a f t . F i r s t come f i r s t flown. Phones: Daily V a. m. - 6 p.m. Editorial Classified Advertising 355-8252 355-8255 ia c 1 1 -*"" 0 0 Wed. 9 a.m. - ) p.m. •1 1 ' • - • i Display Advertising Business-Circulation . . . . . . . - . 353-6400 355-8299 •— -i Shop Mon. and Wed. The Winged Spartans F ree P a r k i n g Photographic . 355-8311 . 'til 9:00 Sat, 'til 5.00 p . m . Monday, June 26, 1967 4 Michigan State News. East Lansing. Michigan Nat SDS confab « Mauled troops opens at Mich igan Several local c h a p t e r s , in- bers, is the largest SDS chapter recount horror By E R I C P I AN IN State News E x e c u t i v e E d i t o r cluding Voice, are convinced a in the country. It will have the ad- change is necessary to remedy a vantage of having g r e a t e r at- DAK TO, South Vietnam f — " E v e r y once in a while ANN ARBOR—It is midway in lack of democracy in the national tendance because the convention someone on the right or left would yell, ' Here they come the summer session of the Uni- organization. Is in Ann Arbor. againl' And they would come, and everyone would f i r e . " versity' of Michigan. First-half " M y squad leader took eight men and broke through to a finals are over and the city is Primary areas of discussion Davidson arrived here Tuesday small perimeter. When they got there we could hear-our deserted of its student popula- will be the national office's re- to lay the ground work for the guys all yell 'yea* but none of them every came out again. tion, with one exception. lationship with the press, the or- probable showdown. He said most " A s I came down the trail it sounded like the crowd at a That exception is the 30 be- ganization of the SDS internal pub- of the objections to the national football game. The North Vietnamese would yell and we would draggled and exhausted persons lication, New Left Notes, and the p o l i c y a r e "unfounded' and camped out on the second floor training of teacher-organizers. of the Student 'Activities Bldg. A controversy developed out of The 30 constitute the first ar- a recent inter.vie.v by the New called the national office» " f a r t o o c o n f u s e d to be undemo- cratic." ?öfc yell and we would be shouting commands. It was quiet some- times, you could hear a twig snap, then there would be another r o a r . " Those were recollections Sunday of the men of one com- rivals to the week-long national York Times with SDS National The convention will get under- pany, a 130-man unit of the U.S. 173rd Airborne Brigade convention o f Students f o r a Chairman Greg Calvert. Some of way today with sessions dis- which lost 80 dead and 34 wounded in a fight with about 800 Democratic Society (SDS). Re- Calvert's personal opinions were cussing three papers focusing on B well-drilled and equipped North Vietnamese army regulars. gions spanning from New York to a l l e g e d l y interpreted as SDS the overall goals of the organiza- The battle began Thursday when the two units walked into Hawaii will be represented .at the policy. tion. each other 5,000 yards west of Dak To in the jungle and conference. T u e s d a y will be devoted to bamboo of the rugged central highlands. This might be an issue in the Meanwhile, b a c k in. E a s t seven strategy panels meeting in The company had been in the field three days. election of a new president for Lansing, Mike Price, chairman of Haven and Mason halls to dis- The second platoon was in the lead followed by the third SDS. Carl Davidson, SDS vice the MSI' chapter,was still unsure cuss the university, the draft, platoon. The company commander, Capt. John Milton p r e s i d e n t , a candidate a n d of how many representatives MS-U liberation o f w o m e n , foreign of Dallas, Tex., and his radiomen came next, followed by several of his critics, including would send. policy, electoral politics, labor the weapons platoon. The first platoon was bringing up the Chester, may run against him. Price planned to attend the con- and professions. r e a r . The North Vietnamese, not seen in three days, had The entire national structure Who will buy? ference today. Plenary sessions scheduled for notched steps in the trail. lership lives will be altered if a propose'dcon- "Some of the met Thursday and-Friéay l-n the Nat- As the second platoon approached the bottom of the t r a i l , stitutional amendment is adopted in Ann Arbor, an others are ural Science Auditorium will con- the point men took some fire, scrambled for cover and re- 5 country. 1 by the council. It would abolish scattered around sider constitutional amendments, ported five or six snipers. the office of president and vice D o u g D e L i n d , O k e m o s j u n i o r , and E l l e n P i e r s a n t e , D e t r o i t s o p h o m o r e , o p e n e d ' just don't know who 11 show up," policy questions, reports from In an hour, the Communists attacked in force. president a. id substitute thr the " P o t S h o p " a r t g a l l e r y at 2 1 3 2 E . G r a n d R i v e r , O k e m o s , w i t h i n s p i r a t i o n - he said. workshops and the election of "They would come at us in a mob and keep coming. It was secretaries in their place. T f r o m L o u i s J. W o l t e r , i n s t r u c t o r in a d v e r t i s i n g . S t a t e N e w s photo by Bob I v i n s Changes sought Korea all over , again," Sgt, Leon P . Hostak of the second three would constitute the n officers. , .Eric Chester, a member of reported. tional office. Voice political party, the Ann At least three times, the men said, the North Vietnamese Arbor chapter of SDS, is charged V o i c e c o n t r o l SUPT. INTERVENES charged the forward position. They had the paratroopers with coordinating the convention. T h e N a t i o n a l Council i s surrounded. The paratroopers said they could see the North He said policy making important composed of delegates from the Vietnamese troops scrambling through the bamboo, wearing to the national organization would chapters at the ratio of one dele- black and green berets. not take place until the National gate for every 25 national mem- Artillery and air strikes kept up without break. Council meets next weekend, im- bers. Voice criticisms of the na- Sgt. John Smith of Middlesex, N . C . , said, " Y o u couldn't mediately after t! e convention. tional office will have significant T h e focus of t h a t meeting weight, since it is estimated that should be or. the relationship be- it will have as much as 25 per cent tween local chapters and the na- of the votes a: the convention. Philly teacher rehired see the flashes but the bullets would come through and the bamboo would f l y . " "Anyone who stood up was dead," a buddy said. Paratroopers were hit and cut off. Hostak was hit PHILADELPHIA P--A substi- students deeply involved in learn- Shedd said " t h e r e is little back on grounds he had issued a tional office. Voice, with 180-paid-up mem- three times, hard. "Everybody there was hit at least once," tute high school English teacher, i n g . " doubt Harlem handled himself publication without proper au- Hostak said. fired when he refused to recall less than wisely in his confron- thorization. Harlem refused. It's Great For A Date! copies of essays written by his Reinstatement of S t e v e n H, 3tudents or. such topics as pre- Harlem came at the special re- tation with the principal but he is a talented young man who " H a r l e m did disobey the or- der of a principal and in doing " R a d i o contact was l o s t , " said Pfc. Lee Villarreal of El Centro, Calif. " A lot of guys were told to pull back. The Lanes Available F o r Open Bowling marital sex, civil rights and quest of D r . Mark R. Shedd, was doing an interesting and so his Judgment and manner left word was passed. They said they wouldn't because they Vietnam, was reinstated Thurs- who becomes superintendent of first-rate job of teaching." much to be desired. For this he wanted to stay with wounded friends, They never did come m F r i d a y , S a t u r d a y and Sunday N i t e s / • 4 0 Lanes • Lounge day because " h e had the guts to Philadelphia's p u b l i c schools The incoming superintendent should be admonished," Shedd back." take a few chances. '. . to get Aug. 1. said Harlem, a graduate psy- said. • Billiards »Snack Bar chology student at Temple Uni- versity, " i s the kind of teacher Open Every Day at 9 A.M. we must not only tolerate but The Air Conditioned - Firm Israeli stand encourage in the school sys- M best way to peace bne said, "When a bureauc- racy becomes unwieldy, its tol- Meredith's trek 'fights Mississippi, wore the new yellow fear We're going to surprise t h i s SARDIS, Miss. —A footsore [ HOLIDAY LANES | NEW YORK I --Israeli Foreign Minister Abba Ebar. said Sunday erance for the new, the ur.usual J a m e s H. Meredith greeted a walking boots he had on when he state. We're going to get some that if Israel hangs on to the Arab territory it won in the six-day and the risky diminishes," Of began his 1967 trek down U.S.
'. He more' Orioles to an 9-3 victory-
lead reduced to 2 - 1 / 2 games over Reds, giving lefthander Bob Veale
the Cincinnati Reds. his ninth victory against two Dickinson repeated the effort in the seventi .,
capping a five run rally. K A N S A S C I T Y <,L'PI)--Rick
over the Washington Senators.
The Orioles rang up two first»
losses.
Lock hit his eighth homer of Hands pitched hltless ball until innlng runs on singles by Paul
the season in the first inning of Victim of both Pirates homers
was Milt Pappas, who suffered
wins Open the sLxth Inning.of the first game grand slam homer in the first B l a i r , Mark Belanger, Frank
SOFTBALL
FIELD 6:45
the second game. The blast drove when Dave Adlesh led off with a inning Sunday carried .the Cali* Robinson and Curt Blefary, The 5 Chemaths-Marcus
his sixth loss against sever, vic- CLEVELAND, O h i o (L'PI)—
In left fielder Billy Cowan, who single. The triumph was his firs: forhla Angels to u 4-3 victory Senators countered with a run In 6 Synder Nads-Setutes
tories. V e t e r a n Gardner Dickinson,
had reached base on an error complete game in 28 starts in the over the Kansas City Athletics. the second Inning on Mike Ep- 7 Nads-Owen Bombers
by shortstop Ed Bressoud, L-. The home runs by Alou and playing it close to the vest, Reliever Minnie Rojas pre- stein' s triple and Ken M ;M alien's FIELD 5:30 8 Windjammer-Winshire
major leagues.
Jimenez were their second of the scored his first tour victory in 5 Spyder-Superstition
the thifd, Tony Taylor reached The double victory stretched - served the victory for southpaw sacrifice fly. 9 Wildscats-Wight
season. It was the first game five years Sunday with a four- 6 Relics-Botany
base on Bressoud's second error the third place Cubs' wLining George Brunei who was coasting 10 Alberts-The Traumas
for Jimenez since his purchase stroke margin in the $113,500 In the third, Frank Robinson 7 Wisdom-Wilding
and scored on Richie Allen's streak to sL\ games, their long- along with a two-hitter until the
yesterday from :he Columbus Cleveland Open Golf Tourna- led off with a double and came 8 Psychotics-Communicators Games are to be played on the
double. After Lock walked, both est In four years, and nine In eighth when the A's erupted for
runners scored on a double by club of the International League. ment. two runs on four straight hits. home on a t h r e e - b a g g e r by 9 Ossicles-Univer. Villa IM softball fields, located near
their last 11.
Gene Oliver. Atlanta's third baseman Clete T h e 39-year-old Dickinson John Donaldson doubled with Brooks Robinson. Powell's sac- 10 The Eulls-Softballs the LM building.
Boyer drive In four runs with a played his poorest round of the Los Angeles' Ler. Gabrielson rifice fly made it 4 - i .
Lock homered ir. the fifth Lin- singled with two outs in the bot- one away and scored on Ken
ing of the first game to drive In
Allen with the winning ran and
snap a seven-game Cardinal win-
double and two singles before tourney with a par 70, but was
leaving the game In the fifth Inn- steady enough to survive the
ing with a pulled muscle to lead challenge of Miller Barber and
tom of the ninth to score Willie Harrelsor.'s pinch single. Bert
Davis with the tie-breaking run Campaneris' single chased Bru-
for a 2-1 Los Angeles Dodgers nei and Ramon Webster greeted
Brooks Robinson accounted for
a fifth-inning Baltimore run when
Summer
Bicycle Rentals
the Braves to a 4-2 victory over young Homero Blancas, whose he singled, took third on Powell's
ning streak. Lock also had three
the New York Mets. win over the Sar. Francisco Gi- Rojas with a single to right,
singles in the opener. hopes of c a t c h i n g him were scoring Harrelson and sending single and scored on an infield
ants.
Boyer singled home Tito Fran- dashed when they both got bogles out.
In other National League re-
cona, who had walked, lr. the on the par three 17th hole. Dickin- Frank Llr.zy took the loss, Campar.erls to third.
first inning, doubled home Har.k son had a total nine-under-par while the victory went to Don In the seventh, with the margin AT
struck out pinch hitter Jim Gos-
College Bike Shop
Aaron, who also doubled and 271. Drysdale. cut to 5-3 by Washington pinch-
ger and Danny Cater to stop the
hitter Dick Sen's two-run homer,
rally and save Bn.r.et's fourth
Frank Robinson started a three-
victory agair.st 11 losses,
run rally with a double. 1 le scored
U.S. pins net hopes Q
on Brooks Robinson's single and new and u s e d b i k e s
Powell's sacrifice fly. Two more
Bosox win runs came across on Vic Roz-
p a r t s and a c c e s s o r i e s
5 factory trained mechanics
W A / ^
novsky's bases-loaded single.
BOSTON (L'PI)--Home runs by
1 34 N. Harrison 332-4117
Carl Yastrzemski, Bob ITllman
on Charley Pasorell and Joe Foy Sunday powered the
Boston Red Sox and f o r m e r
Cleveland pitcher Gary Belltoan
S' golfers
WIMBLEDON, England (L'PI) ite to become the first man in Ashe, is presently serving in 8-3 victory over the Indians.
—Fifteen American men begin 30 years to win the title three the U.S. Army. Yastrzemski l i l t a two-run finish 8th
play in the All-England Lawn times. At present he is halfway No. 3 ranked Clark Graebner homer, his .18th, while Tillman
Tennis Championships Monday, to completing the grand slam of of Beechwood, Ohio, meets Nikola got iiis first and Foy his 10th, in NCAA's
highlighted by Charley Pasarell's tennis, h a v i n g won the 1967 Spear of Yugoslavia, while fifth- both with the bases empty, to
MSU's golf team finished eighth
bid to throw the seedings into French and. Australian titles and ranked Cliff RicheyofSan Angelo, hand Cleveland starter Luis Tiant
last weekend in t h » i C A A Golf
chaos when he meets the top- needing only victories at Wimble- Texas, battles Ronald Barnes of ills second career loss to Boston
Championships at Shawnee-On-
seeded defending champion Man- don and in the U.S. charnoion- Brazil. S e v e n t h - r a n k e d Marty after seven victories.
Bell picked up his fourth win Delaware, Pa.
uel Santana on W i m b l e d o n ' s ships to complete the sweep. Reissen of Evanston, 111., grap-
Sets record famed Center Court. ples with Indian Davis Cupper against a single loss since being
Ramanathan Krishnan, eighth- traded to the Red Sox for Don
ihe Spartans had 59 points, 12
points behind the team champion,
Although no American has keen Among the other Aussies who
Jim Ryun, a Univei— the University of Houston.
seeded in men's singles for the dominate the seedings are: third- ranked prank Froehling of New Demeter and Tony Horton. Bell,
sity of Kansas sopho- Hale Invin, football star from
first time since Wimbledon offi- seeded John Newcombe (winner York should have little trouble m a k i n g his f i r s t appearance
the University of Colorado, won
m o r e , e s t a b l i s h e d a new
cials began the custom 27 years of the London Grass Courts) who with Dmitri Sturdza of Switzer- against the Indians, needed relief
the NCAA individual champion-
w o r l d ' s r e c o r d in the m i le ago, London bookmakers have meets F r a n c o i s Jauffret of land, and ninth-ranked veteran help from Jose Santiago after al-
ship with a stroke total of 286,
F r i d a y night at the N a - made the Santurce, Puerto Rico F r a n c e , fourth-seeded T o n y Vic Seixas of Villanova, Pa., lowing three runs on six hits
two strokes ahead of the second
tional AAU Track and native the best American hope, Roche who faces Jan Kodes of takes on Jorgen I'lrich of Den- in 5 1/3 Innings.
place finishers.
Field C h a m p i o n s h i p s at although rating him- at the un- Czechoslovakia, s i x t h - s e e d e d mark.
Bakersfield, Calif. Ry- impressive odds of 25-1. Ken Fletcher who meets Bill In the only All-American first IF YOU KNOW W H A T ' S GOOD FOR Y O U
u n ' s new m a r k is 3 : 5 1 . 1 , The no. 4 ranked American Hoogs of Berkeley, Calif., and round match, Donald Dell of Be-
e r a s i n g the o l d one of might be rated higher if he did eighth-seeded Bill Bowrey who thesda, Md., meets Gene Scott Y O U ' L L STAY AT
not have to tangle with Santana. tangles with Patrice Beust of of St. James, N.Y. J i m McManos
3 : 5 1 . 3 w h i c h he set l a s t
The Spanish Davis Cupper, who France. of Berkeley, Calif., faces Nicola
year. Class
took Dennis Ralston of Bakers- Pilic of Yugoslavia.
field, Calif., in straight sets to
win the title last year, was elim-
Fifth-seeded Cliff Drysdale of
South Africa battles Stan Ma-
In other opening round play, UNIVERSITY INN of '67-'68
11th ranked Stan Smith of Pasa-
thews, J r . of Britain and seventh-
inated early in the annual Wim- dena, Calif., takes on Juan Gis-
Steele takes bledon tune-up, the London Grass
seeded Jan Leschly of Denmark
takes on Jose Arilla of Spain In
bert of Spain, John Pickens of
At the campus" of Michigan State University
I 100 T r o w b r l d g e Road in E a s t Lansing
C o u n Championships. Tuscaloosa, Ala., plays Hans Jo-
other opening round matches.
4th in AAU's However, he has apparently re- No other American besides.
covered from an ankle operation Pasarell is rated better than a
achim Plotz of Germany, Bob
Lutz of Los Angeles meets Onny
>202 D e L u x e R o o m s the L a r g e s t m o t e l in L a n s i n g a r e a ^
Parun of New Zealand, Chauncey Sumptuously furni shed in decorator colors of Mandarin
Bob Steele, senior S p a r t a n and most experts agree that he is 40-1 shot to take the 81st Wim- Gold, Tiffany Gold, Majestic Blue, Blue Elderberry
Steele III of Cambridge, Mass.,
track member, finished fourth in near the top of his game and is bledon Crown. Chuck McKinley, Autumn Gold, Absinthe, Midi Blue and Grape. Ä CgK X
tackles Britain's Roger Taylor,
the intermediate hurdles in the well prepared for the biggest who scored the last American
National AAU Track and Field
Championships at Bakersfield,
roadblock to a title repeat, sec- men's victory here in 1963, is now
who s h o w e d some outstanding
tennis in reaching the London
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