Monday MICHIGAN Sunny... STATE NEWS Inside today ... MSU's Tiger, P. 5 STATE . . . less humid, a little cool¬ er with a high of 82. Tuesday "Othello," P. 7 "Shocking" smoking cure UNIVERSITY sunny and pleasant. Vol. 60 Number 22 East Lansing, Michigan Trustees base tuition on income Union r 'Gigantic' problems seen U' pact 5*, A in implementing system 6% wage By JAMES SPANIOLO State News Editor-in-Chief their positions either for or against the proposal. provided that students from families with incomes less than $5,000 be exempt from f The University had reportedly offered tuition. Students from families with In¬ By MIKE BROGAN an alternate proposal to the trustees, but comes between $5,000-$8,500 would have The task of working out the adminis¬ State News Staff Writer it was flatly rejected by the four Demo¬ paid the pre sent tuition rate, $354 per year. trative details of MSU's new "sliding crats—Don Stevens, Okemos, Clair White, And students from families above $8,500 The University's non-academic union scale" ability-to-pay tuition structure would have been charged a flat rate in¬ begins today. Bay City, C. Allen Harlan, Southfield and rejected Sunday a proposed contract that Frank Hartman, Flint. crease over the present tuition. called for a 6 per cent wage hike. A University official noted after the The University's proposal would have Tuition was also raised again for out- The increase would have amounted to trustees' meeting Friday that the staff of-state students. Complying with the between 10 and 22 cents hourly. The con¬ work would be "simply gigantic" to put the new system in effect for fall term Legislature's formula that state supported tract also included fringe benefits, an institutions charge out-of-state students increase in maximum sick leave days and registration. Letters informing students 75 per cent of their educational costs, in the employer's contribution to hospital- and parents of the change were being the trustees raised out-of-state tuition drafted over the weekend for immediate medical coverage. AFL-CIO Local 485, by $60 a term of $180 per year. This which represents the employes, turned mailing. raised non-resident tuition to $1200. Last back the contract by a 139-127 vote, after After 20 hours of private talks with year, out-of-state tuition was raised by a two-hour meeting at Lansing Everett University officials Thursday and early . $150 per year. High School. Friday, the trustees finally adopted the Graduate student tuition was raised Robert Grovesnor, director of the Mich¬ ability-to-pay plan by a straight party vote 5-3. MSU is believed to be the first for the first time to a higher level than igan State Employees Union, said the pay charged undergraduates. Beginning in the increase and the hospitalization clauses in the country to institute such a fee fall, non-resident graduate students will appeared to be the biggest stumbling blocks pay $410 per term, $10 more than non¬ to ratification. The new structure, supported by the resident undergraduates. Tuition for In¬ Another minor block, he said, is the Democrats and vigorously opposed by the state graduate students was set at $10 union membership's concern over union Republicans, provides the following: security — whether union membership should be a condition of employment. Ho-hum, ho-hike-it gross In-state students from families with incomes of less than $11,800 will more uate per term than for their undergrad¬ counterparts with similar family In¬ comes. He fa lied to mention whether the question T rustees Me Harlan and Hartman focus attention or pay the present tuition rate of $118 per But it was still undecided whether the they faced at Friday's meeting. term of $354 per year. of mandatory union membership would be maximum tuition for graduate students State News Students from families with an income brought up in further negotiations, but said photo by Bob I would be $500 or $530. And it has yet to of more than $16,666 will pay $167 per that presently those who object to union be determined how the incomes of graduate term or $500 per year. membership because of strong personal students would be calculated. Students from families with incomes convictions, usually religious, are not DORM RATES UP $10 r inrine between $11,800-$16,666 wliij^v There was some speculation that since required to loin. , fc • *Ly. • . J? *r3t" fng anf# .ft •• 'contract negotiations will call for an cent uf their gross family income,, which <4f£ ykxvf4,-' "How. yo\rtar> a £scw»ef ik? Day Vnder the pfan, trfl" 1n-snfie**rtic«s!r»fs> .. # rnecVcal and hospitalization benefits. " t?acji'ia t-i.- fb fux under the command of Brig. Gen. Noble to "And we're damn well going to give it them." Free Press, was struck on the arm by a brick and on the head by a bottle. He was Moore, deputy commander of the 46th AFTER WEARYING SESSION Infantry. 'The situation is out of control," Rom¬ hospitalized. The soldiers and the troopers will be ney said. under the over-all supervision of the "It's a case of lawlessness and hood- (please turn to the back page) State Police director, Col. Frederick New fees defended, denounced Davids. Mayor Jerome P. Cavanagh said an hour earlier that the situation was "critical, Puerto Ricans vote to keep By JAMES SPANIOLO Smith said that he had always.opposed creased and the minimum should be left but not out of control." He announced, The State News Editoi—in-Chief atmosphere surrounding the MSU a fee schedule based on abillty-to-pay, but the positions were too firmly taken by the other trustees; further compromise was where it is. It's time that we begin to tap the money that is available," he said. Stevens, initiator of the ability-to-pay however, that he was imposing a curfew. At least 12 persons were Injured, more 9 p.m. 15-year commonwealth status Board of Trustees Friday afternoon was not in sight and without approval of some proposal which was a modification of a than 80 arrested for looting, and millions SAN JUAN, P.R. (f«--Puerto Ricans one of victorious elation mixed with the kind of tuition voted emphatically in favor of keeping Pre-election forecasts gave 60 per increase, there could be more graduated structure he pi-oposed a in damage' done by arson or looting. dejection of jobvious defeat. their 15-year-old commonwealth status cent of the vote to commonwealth status, no budget. year ago, was openly happy with the re¬ Great clouds of smoke from flaming The trustees passed an unprecedented in a plebiscite Sunday on the future of the 39 per cent to statehood and only 1 per C. Allen Harlan seconded Smith's mo¬ sults. tenements and bashed-in businesses lay abillty-to-pay tuition plan. Connor D. island, returns indicated Sunday night. cent to independence. tion and launched into a short speech spiced He noted that the sytem now puts the over much of the city as the violence Smith announced that he was joining his With about one-third of the vote in, Most independence groups boycotted the with personal experiences and colorful pressure on the larger part of society, coursed crazily. Democratic colleagues in supporting their descriptions. not the lower income part. A thrr-2-mile section of Grand River commonwealth had 136,362 votes com¬ plebiscite, as did the main statehood group, proposal. This broke the 4-4 deadlock pared to 87,423 for statehood in the the Statehood Republican party. which had up to then prevented the trus¬ "We must give every advantage to those "It alleviates the pres'sure on the seg¬ Avenue was. enveloped in looting and United States and About 50 ballot boxes were smashed and ment of the population with incomes from firebombing, which raged along 18 blocks 1,093 for "independence. tees from approving a budget. who don't have the money," he said." Why The island has been under the jurisdic¬ a government vehicle was set on fire in $10,000-$14,000 who can't show need for of 12th Street, with other incidents break¬ The three Republican trustees, Stephen should anyone have to come up with a cup in tion of the United States since 1898. two isolated incidents. S. Nisbet of Fremont, Frank Merriman, his hand begging for a scholarship from scholarships under the system," he said. ing out in scattered areas a mile distant from both 12th and Grand River. Voters were favoring statehood only But as of 2 p.m. there had been nothing Deckerville, and Kenneth Thompson, De¬ the University? With this proposal, we have Republicans Merriman and Thompson At one point, beleaguered firemen pulled in Ponce, the island's second largest to support pre-election predictions of troit, sat silently as the Democrats ex¬ turned the corner; we are embarking on a strongly voiced their dissent to the pro¬ out of the blazing areas, saying they had city and home of industrialist Luis Ferre, widespread leftist-inspired violence. plained their plan. new era." More than 10.000 special policemen posal. insufficient protection from bricks, bottles a chief supporter of statehood. President John A. Hannah, visibly tired After the meeting Harlan noted that the "I am very much opposed to an abillty- and other debris thrown at them. Election officials forecast a 70 per were assigned to assist the regular 6,000- from the long hours of discussion and at¬ new sliding scale system of fees was only to-pay system of tuition; it is legalized cent turnout of the 1,067,000 registered man police force. There was at least one tempts at compromise, stared blankly a beginning. They left their hoses in the streets. stealing," Merriman said. "I favored the voters. Scattered rain showers had little at the ceiling, alternately massaging his " If tuitior. must be raised again in the Block-long sections of tenements and brow and shaking his head. , then the maximum should be in¬ (please turn to the back page) small businesses went up in smoke. effect on the voting. (please turn to the back page) STATE MEWS Eric Planin, executi e Lawrence Werner, editor managing editor IF! Bobby Soden, campus editor Edward A. Brill, Joe Mitch, sports editorial editor editor § 0 Monday Morning, July 24, 1967 EDITORIAL An over-shadowed Though shadowed now somewhat by the Mich¬ over¬ m V. dence Adams, director of resi¬ hall programs, ex¬ pects a pattern of returning igan budget tussle and the to the halls to develop. University's unavoidable tuition increase, the issue Considering academic of women's hours has final¬ loads, no drastic shift to ex¬ ly been resolved. ceptionally late hours is an¬ Wednesday, President ticipated. Nor is such a John A. Hannah affixed his sudden, alteration needed. long-sought signature to the Mature and responsible AWS women's hours pro¬ handling of this new "privi- posal, initiating approxi¬ ledge" remains for coeds to mately $70,000 worth of im¬ Uiufi display fall term. If liberal¬ plementation. The signature marked an end to over a year of dis¬ cussion and debate by AWS, ASMSU has more to accomplish in its drive for ized hours reasonably, in the future more are significant freedoms dealt with aJEL and responsibilities can be WIC and ASMSU to gain more "individual citizenship within the University com¬ Then this rioter with an eye patch came obtained. liberal hours for woman stu¬ munity." up to me. . . . said his name is Moshe X. dents. --The Editors The University's progres¬ For student government of the proposal called for increased freedom and re¬ sive step shifted s o m e de¬ the success is a major one. But ASMSU has more to ac¬ sponsibility for junior and gree of responsibility from OUR READERS' MINDS senior coeds only, even the "U" to the individual. complish in its drive for ' 'in¬ benefited Parental permission has be¬ dividual citizenship within freshmen by the the University community." For students themselves final plan. Freshman coeds will be come a thing of the past for sophomore, junior and se¬ To save mankind from destruction nior women. Even signout will the decision is of major the only students required to The fact that State News is the official namese government," South and North To the Editor: file be optional except for over¬ concern. Implementation parental permission Comparing the student papers of other publicaticn of the MSU student body, together in a coalition or any other form, night absences and when institutions I have attended, I have ob¬ coupled with such an assumption, gives an is a matter which should be left to the cards authorizing overnight costs--hiring of night re¬ served that the State News is wider in cov¬ impression to the reading public that its Vietnamese as a whole entity. absences, but even at that leaving the Greater Lansing ceptionists to let coeds in erage, deeper in intellectual quest, and editorial position is representative of the My disagreement with your editorial and out of the dorms--will they gained a half hour on area. varies in cultural presentations. I feel overall views and opinions on campus. lies on your assumptions that the U.S. safe to assume that your paper in general The conflict in Vietnam is one of the is fighting to win a victory for "a single weeknights and three 2 a.m. Following a "periodof ad- Vietnamese government" r ' |jome from their pockets. T.;\f "■ maintains a popular support on campus. r •" ^ v* a* j ja *• "* »-•- most 0 controversial issues of today's v • i:. • that her -j}JL ■ - r- Y >■ V* ■' " f; '■*, . manitarfan, economic, $6fttYCafatW*SQ-a - *r. 'vc» sfr'gctr.-'kT '.'i Vietnam h sents as to why we are fighting to main¬ fully depending on our flone, ljut tain the South Vietnam, goyectimem. as It I am atcati $Ja.e history requires both tfie JQS&PH £1SQP I iSi' isr.f*i i■**&( ^aw:' r, «• J tFST- The primary and basic reason on our ING OF MINDS, if mankind is to be pre¬ side, however, seems to me that securing served from total destruction. South Vietnam is essential to the mainte¬ nance of the world power balanceandbene- Ignatius S. K. Kim Key Viet decision put off ficial to the well-being of the American Glendale, Calif, public. Whether it is possible to secure graduate student South Vietnam, whether losing it would tilt the power balance and threaten American security, are matters which belong to fu¬ ture uncertainty. The U.S. Vietnam policy WASHINGTON—There was the photo¬ and it three divisions. barely reached the strength of boldly confident predictions of eventual victory on the ground that the Americans been learned whether the South Koreans can contribute another division and the appears to be formulated upon the predic¬ tion that maintenance of South Vietnam afid Intercoms OK Australians a brigade, for example. What will eventually give up and go away. Pre¬ shift of balance in case of loss are prob¬ graph for world publication of the Presi¬ After that--indeed quite recently—an can be done to increase American troop- To the Editor: mier Pham Van Dong has Instead most able. dent, Gen. William Westmoreland, Gen. attack of two-division strength was ex¬ availability will also be known. In worldhistory, there is no model iden¬ Earle Wheeler and Defense Secretary- recently described the war asbeing"sans pected to be launched from the enemy's In short, Gen. Westmoreland's im¬ tical to the present Vietnam situation.The We, the residents of Van Hoosen Hall, Robert McN'am^ra. There was the strange Cambodian-Laotian sanctuary Into the issu," which means "no way out." mediate needs have been met; yet the evidence to prove or disprove develop¬ would like to reply to Stephen Walton's press conference, with all registering central highlands of Vietnam. The cap¬ Finally, the answer's third part is to evil day of choice about such matters as in Vietnam is not available. The letter in the State News on Monday, July be found In the nature of Gen. Westmore¬ ments emphatic agreement. What really hap¬ ture of Kontlm, a major provincial cen¬ a call-up of reserves and even mobili¬ 17. The Intercom system has beer "tol¬ pened, however? land's request for more troops. He put projection of past developments into the ter, was momentarily feared. But this zation has also been put off. This was erated" by Van Hoosen residents for ten forward two phased programs, each ex¬ future may have assured the U.S. policy This question, about the true nature of attack, again, fell much further short of perhaps the logical course to take, in makers of their prediction. It seems also years for many reasons, .eluding use in tending over periods of two years and the new Vietnam decisions taken 10 days expectation than one could have hoped. Two view of the symptoms of diminishing emergencies and con'"niierce in making more. The optimum program called for possible that others project the same past feints were made, but neither was even capabilities and rising disagreements in announcements to all apartments. ago. Is still being hotly argued, both a bit more than four additional divisions. into different direction. In any case, the in full regimental strength. minimum program called for two Hanoi. made editorial dated This device Is not used to "bug" any¬ privately and publicly. The answer comes In the big-unit war. In short, there were The statement on your additional divisions, plus a brigade. It It means that when Gen. Westmore¬ one's apartment, and we do not feel any In three parts. July 18 -- 'There is no evidence that clear indications that the Hanoi war- land and Gen. Wheeler told the White invasion of privacy. Upperclassmen living was specified that the new troops could any kind of military victory will achieve The first part of the answer Is simple planners were finding the going increas¬ be South Korean, Australian, American House press conference that they were this end" — is true and valid, assuming in Van Hoosen do not feel the need to enough. The party that Secretary Mc- ingly rough. Meanwhile—and this Is prob¬ fully satisfied, they were really saying listen in on each other, and our advisers or from some other Allied source. that our "primary concern in Vietnam N'amara led to Vietnam, before the pub¬ ably. even more Important—there were they were satisfied for now. It means, is win a victory that will gain wide¬ certainly show by the tolerant and trusting It is important to note, first of all, to licized White House gathering, was some¬ also clear indications that more efficient too, that the President's evil day of atmosphere they provide, that we have no air tactics and new weapons, plus the that both programs were phased and that spread support for a single Vietnamese what surprised to find the war going a choice may quite easily recur in another need to be "bugged." sheer accumulation of bomb damage, were the first phases of both programs, ex¬ government." good deal better than they had expected. six months or less, depending on what Also, because we more or less operate tending approximately to the end of this According to my knowledge, the goals And on this point they found, too, that beginning to Increase the toll of the happens on the war fronts in the interval. of the U.S., and her allies for that matter, this unique dorm, any of us has the right bombing on something resem¬ year, were very nearly identical. In this Gen. Westmoreland emphatically agreed Northern The fact remains that the President's to have our intercom turned off at any¬ period, it appears, both programs called are to keep South Vietnam free from with them. bling a geometrical progression. (Hence, for something like one additional division interest and the national interest is to threatening forces so that her people can time. We are capable of expressing any the old questioning of the bombing, In¬ go on intensifying the pressure—not ir¬ make a free choice as to which form of complaints to our adviser and do not see To begin with. North Vietnamese per¬ plus an extra brigade. side the government, has been all but The real decision, therefore, was evi¬ rationally in the big-bomber general way, government to establish, with genuine Steve's need of concern for our privacy. formance had fallen far short of the . silenced.) but coolly and remorselessly—until it predictions of the staff in Saigon. On the dently to give Gen. Westmoreland every¬ hopes that they will choose a policy more As to the second part of the answer. It becomes too much for Hanoi. If the similar and friendlier to ours than to our so-called demilitarized zone, the enemy the first part. No doubt for thing that he had asked for the first hooks onto phase and to promise to review the prob¬ choice has to be made, that must surely adversary's. Formation of "a single Viet¬ had been expected to mount an attack of. the precise reason cited above, the first be the choice. five-division strength. The attack, when lem, In the light of new circumstances, signs are beginning to be observable of toward the end of this year or the begin¬ it. occurred, was costly enough; but it divisions of council In Hanoi. Certain was repulsed with fearful enemy losses. longer making the old, ning of next year. By then it will have II a.m. to 8 p.m. SPECIALS Roast Beef Sandwich . 35C Corned Beef Sandwich 35C Steak Sandwich .... 450 The State News, the student newspaper at Michigan State Submarine 65£ University, is published every class day throughout the year oc^ with special Welcome Week and Orientation issues in June Varsity-Dog . 35£ JX and September. Subscription rates are $14 per year. No delivery on specials Keepsake Member Associated Press, United Press International, Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press, Unforgettable . . . unsurpassed ... the brilliance and Michigan Press Association, Michigan Collegiate Press As¬ OF AMERICA beauty of a flawless Keepsake diamond. It's guaranteed per¬ sociation, United State Student Press Association. Jimrrre Caras — Joe Balsis P.S. Don't forget about fect (or replaced). 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OPEN AT 11:00 a.m. ED 2-6517 201 SOUTH WASHINGTON Photographic 355-8311 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Monday, July 24, 1967 3 NEWS Eban says Israel fearful summary of renewed Suez fighting NEW YORK <1PI Israeli For- Denying that Israeli use of the relationships are between Israel belligerency the Arab refugee is A capsule summary of the day's events frorr — presented to Israel, not as a Associated Press. eign Minister Abba Eban said eastern bank of the Suez Canal and her neighbors, Sunday his government is con- is provocative, the Israeli mln- Eban went on to say, In re¬ peaceful citizen but as the spear¬ question about the head of an offensive design to do cerned about possible new fight- ister said that "what isprovoca- sponse to a what Is called liberate Pales¬ lng with Egypt along the Suez tive is the Egyptian assumption fate of the Gaza Strip captured from Egypt, that his government tine." International News Canal. that Israel has less rights in the Speaking on a television ques- canal than any other state." He has yet to decide what its exact Eban also said Israel would tion-and-answer program shown went on to say that he under- demands will be during negotia- negotiate in secret with the Arab tions. Q President Gamal Abdel Nasser of Egypt said Sunday that Sunday, Eban sad Israel "has stands an agreement exists at issue of Arab nations if they wanted. He added for Arab countries there are two alternatives: "unconditional to be concerned because the the moment under which either The refugees that if fighting should break out submission or to struggle on." Nasser spoke in a radio and Egyptian government has made both nations use the canal or also was tied to peace negotia¬ his nation would do what ever is television report to his nation. See page 3 statements and carried out ac- neither does, tions. necessary to Insure its preser¬ tions which Indicate a lack of Questioned at length about his "I do not think that you will vation. Any crossing of the Suez firmness in support of Che cease- government's position get a successful integration of £ Alluding to Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara's re¬ fire." on peace efforts, Eban said there has been refugees in conditions of war or Canal would be determined by cent statement about inefficiency»in the use of troops in Viet¬ tactical military requirements, nam, the ll»S. commander in South Vietnam, Gen. William C. The Israeli official was inter- no hardening of Israel's stand, belligerency," Eban said. "It Is he stated. Westmoreland, said Sunday that "I don't think he (McNamara) viewed on ABC's "Issues and which he stated was and still is very hard to have a coherent In other matters, Eban said: Answers." that his government's forces settlement policy until the final meant those remarks to apply to the men under my command." He leaned away from an Inter¬ See page 8 Eban also said the Soviet Un- "cannot withdraw without a clear frontiers are agreed; and. . . so nationalizing of Jerusalem ex¬ ion has altered the balance of and radical definition of what the long as there is a situation of 0 Speaking Sunday on the ABC-TV show, "Issues and cept the holy places; had advised power in the Middle East since his government before the June Answers," Israeli Foreign Minister Abba Eban said the Soviet the end of the June fighting by Union has, through arms shipments, altered the balance of fighting that Israel would get extensive arms shipments to much sympathy but little physic at power in the Middle East since the cease-fire. He said that at least half the Egyptian air force has been replaced, and a quarter of their tank force. See page 3 •*£ Arab countries. "According to my lnforma- tion," Eban said, "the Soviets Nasser aga support from the United still hopes for a resumption of satisfactory relations with t_.-; might have made good at least French President Charles de 0 Twenty-two men were killed and 39 wounded Sunday when half of the original Egyptian air U.S. troops attacked a North Vietnamese company near the Cambodian border. The Viet Cong suffered 124 killed and eight prisoners taken. U.S., forces were supported by heavy Cloth carver force, and perhaps their tank force." Eban, will need when a asked quarter if Israel of U.S., Israel CAIRO (.I') — President Gamal Abdel Nasser said Sunday Egypt Gaulle; he doesn't think "that the United Nations presence was Indispensable peace." to the cause of artillery fire. new weapons soon from the United States or other na¬ will not close the door to a political settlement of the Middle East Donna Nicholas, < lint Junior College instruc- tions, answered tha^hls govern¬ crisis and that it has no objection to talks with the United States. 0 Puerto Ricans voted decidedly in favor of maintaining their tor doing graduate rk here this summer, cuts ment intends to maintain an ade¬ But at the same time he accused the United States of "diplomatic commonwealth status in a national plebiscite Sunday. With glass cloth to reir ce her plastic sculpture at quate arms balance, and If It Is deception" which he said helped Israel win the Arab-Israeli war in approximately one-third of the votes in, results showed K resge Art Center. 136,362 votes in favor of commonwealth, 87,423 for statehood necessary to maintain equilibri¬ June. in the United States and 1,093 for complete independence. It State News photo by Chuck Mich' um it will seek As for the Arabs, he said, there are two alternatives: "uncondi¬ had been expected that 60 per cent of the votes would be in tional submission or to struggle on." favor of keeping the present commonwealth status. "The nature of our masses imposes on us to struggle on," he See page 1 said. "The struggle in this case will be hard and long, very hard. ATTACK COMMANDER 'PLEASED' We are no less determined than the people of Vietnam." In his first public speech in six weeks, the Egyptian leader also National News repeated his charges that the United States was in collusion with 0 Eighty-nine-year-old Carl Sandburg died Saturday at his farm. Formal tribute to "the poet laureate of the common Bomb raids over N. Viet Israel in the June 5-10 war. The United States has denied this. Nasser spoke in a radio and television report to the nation. The last time Nasser made a public speech was on June 9, with Israeli forces at the Suez Canal, He announced then he was cutting supply flow people" will be paid today as relatives and friends gather in resigning as president, but next day withdrew his resignation when Flat Rock, N.C., for the funeral. See page 3 seen the National Assembly refused to accept it. Speaking Sunday Nasser declared: " I say that the full responsibil¬ A Earth tremors continued to shake areas of Turkey around By the Associated Press in direct hour-to-hbur control of in the bombing policy and that ity for what happened rests wholly on me." manbul Sunday in the aftermath of Saturday's disastrous ,,. U.S. air attacks on : orth\iet- ... . Navy raids. The Job of Yankee the military men on the scene In this address on this 15th anniversary of his overthrow of StatIon commafider changes as have hand in earthquake. Sixty bodies have been recovered so far, as -some of them launched can a initiating Kir.g Farouk, Nasser declared: "There was collusion between the carrlers arerotatedontheUne# these< rescuers continue to pick bodies from the debris. See page 8 from the U.S. aircraft "t carriers car United States and Israel. in the Gulf ofTonki eljs De Polx,whowasthefirstcom- "We can recommend targets "America, whicli announced its adherence to the Kennedy proc¬ . „ a?t>are!!t ? mander of the nuclear-powered that areprohibited, theMlGfields lamation guaranteeing the borde.rsof the Middle Eastern states, does 0 Two Seattle psychiatrists reported they have a system to to curtailing the flow of supplies CommunisMWgforces in Enterprlse when shewas for exar£ le if we feel ,t ig ru_ not today mean the whole Middle East but only the borders of Israel. ^ V<*V #*** recrtnm^n*- f t« eU-cir:^. - ,'$*** a Tit". $iot V* . j: « ukOs feje 'cajk&ri ' /sT&ffPtftictt* enemy tor&j e bombiag pi the jiarih "basically tJon Jn hMthev echelons. ".><> "" "-Si.'* war .r\iin*t •Vni.T'Tca. "j- h "• IruifciTedt he A Republican memtefs of (he Hous< Education and Labor This is the,view of Rea; military men in wartime believe determination to fight Vincent P.'de Poix, who runs the "1 do --ay that this does not weaker >ur v .muv- e°Y'rty >vw Doiirv gf ?Uwi losscs on th'at would cost the federal government Vietnam from the 7th Fleet's that "in these cfeys" somethings missions Wer TNon"h Vietnam—'" ica:; pressure was," herald. time generating more funds through the participation of private , Just "aren't feasible" becauseof 615 officially announced from all Yankee Station off the North Viet¬ "This all means that the struggle i continuing despite all the enterprise. See page 8 the nature of international pol- service—De Poix said: namese coast. icrlfi'cea," lie said. itics and Involvements. "We certainly are losing more "We are doing a heck of a lot De Poix, who will be leaving Planes than 1 would like 10 see ^ Racial tension flared briefly ii of good up here in limiting and soon^or"Washington take over lost, but I feel the ratio has gone WHILE THEY LAST ingham, Ala,, during the weekend. slowing down the movement of material down south," he said in as assistant chief of naval opera- down.^ While I regret the losses, tions for development, noted that I don't consider them high for i an interview planes thundered Michigan News aloft from the carrier deck. there ^ feeen some changes the results we are gaining. 12 "I see no evidence that we are f not going to be allowed to con- f Summer prices on tipping, 0 Gov. Geroge Romney authorized the mobilization of 1,100 tinue doing it." » body perms and bleaches. National Guardsmen Sunday afternoon as weekend rioting in Detroit spread. Violence initially broke out in the city Satur¬ De Poix contended there has been what he called | a "quantum day night when Negroes rioted against the raiding of a Negro night spot allegedly serving liquor illegally. See page' 1 jump" in the success of inter¬ diction from air strikes in the last few weeks. HOAJmacl plus Fed. Ex. Tax $1.55 to $2.05 (depending on size) and old tire. "I think it is excellent that we have been able to crowd in on Sandburg funeral the Hanoi-Haiphong area," he said, referring to N o r t h Viet- nam's capital and its chief port, | f Wig and Hair Stylists (Across from "3-T" Nylon Cord "All-Wcalhor" lire "They must have a terrific State Phone E D 2-4080 224 ABBOTT RD. Theatre) I pipeline, with a lot of stuff in it. f slated today It is a matter of slowing down and reducing it, not complete gran- gulation. I would never claim tives FLAT ROCK. N.C. Ul-M.- ... anrt fH.nH, will and friends will pay„.v , -ere "Chicago and Fog. His writing career, consisting that, but they appear to be eating ^into He their reserves." gave no specifics, but he ICE SHOW formal farewell Monday to Carl of 30 volumes of poetry, biogra- indicated that the attacks have TALENT ON ICE Sandburg, "poet laureate of the ^jes novel and stories, was curtailed the flow of supplies common people," Lincoln biog¬ capped in 1954 with his Pulitzer overland from Red China and rapher and twice winner of the Prize-winning biography of WED. JULY 26, 8:30 p.m. Pulitzer Prize. Haiphong down through the south- Abraham Lincoln. era panhandle to forces above and The white-haired friend of la¬ borers, tradesmen Sandburg drew many and presi¬ lels between Lincoln's life and paral- below De the demilitarized zone, Poix, a youthful looking50- WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP dents died peacefully at 89 Sat- his own—the poor upbringing, year-old, is commander of the , 1 I . ft gCf _ f00 Che scant>' education and the af- three U.S. carriers on the line off SKATERS good/Vear vTaUh health. He ^j I, ° «eaij recent had suffered ° ' finity for the common man. North Vietnam, and as such, is MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY heart attacks. ICE ARENA SERVICE STORE The Rev. George C.B. Tolle- son, pastor of the Unitarian Monday Evening Special TICKETS AVAILABLE Opposite Sparrow Hospital I Church in Charleston, S.C., will RINKSIDE SFATS SI 00 Harry Kost, Manager NOW AT ARENA conduct the funeral service. BALCONY 75c 1110 E. Mich. IV 2-1426 BOX OFFICE Sandburg's ashes will be spread about "Remembrance Rock" in Galesburg, 111., w'lere he was born of Swedish iirmi- grant parents. Italian In a statement after Sand¬ burg's death, President Johnson said: "He needs wrinen for all in no epitaph. It is the fields, the cities, the face and heart of the Spaghetti NOW! Interviewing Fur Fall Term Night Receptionists In Women's Residence Halls E. Specials good at Lansing Store Only STATE land he loved and the people he celebrated and inspired." All you Sandburg, born into a home of low income, worked his way up can eat $1.75 per hour Hours: 11:30 p.m. to 7 a.m. through a series of inferior Jobs 3, 4, or 5 DLsivmnl —some reached by hoboing on nights a wMk freight trains—until he arrived in the field of Journalism. Picking up a haphazard edu¬ cation along the way—including '1.49 Including a tossed salad, Will consider 6.) "Older" student wives ( osmetics A. J it a mi us 1.) Female Graduate Students an unsuccessful examination pe¬ rolls and butter, Monday AIR CONDITIONED FOR 2.) Third year, female R.A. (Seniors) 7.) "Pre-middle-aged" women 619 E. Grand River riod at West Point—Sandburg served as a foreign correspond¬ YOUR ADDED COMFORT. 3.) Married, female, Past R.A.'s 8.) Undergrad junior or senior women nights 5 p.m. till 10 ent for a feature syndicate, fol¬ 4.) Married, Male, Previous grad. 9.) Single male graduate or undergraduate lowing which he was hired by 5.) Married male graduate students student E njoy the ation's the Chicago Daily News. He collected a vast library of finest at n &vua. folklore, both poetic and musi¬ Contact Tom Dutch, Brody Hall, 355-7480 cal. He took his guitar and salty EAST GRAND RIVER wit to concert stages across (North of Frandor) the Monday, July 24, 1967 Michigan State News, East Lansing. Michigan Appointments, /eaves, Tfie Board of Trustees gave mathematics: Lee. M. Sonneborn, professor, mathematics; Anna L. Additional appointments ap- to Nov. 30, to work for U.S. De- proved included (all Sept. l):Carl partment of Agriculture; James Home, assistant chemistry; GlenD. Anderson,as¬ professor, professor, mathematics; tor Human Learning Research _ and Robert C. Anderson as - " ^ admlnIstrationi Sept. 1 (he had been assigned to the Turkey Project). sor, counseling, personnel serv¬ ices and educational psychology, Sept. 1 (cancellation); James D. approval Friday to 54 appoint¬ sistant ments; 23 leaves; 87 transfers, Eggers, associate professor, V. Page, assistant professor, P. Bebermeyer, instructor, corn- Ronald C. Hamelink, assistant sistant professor and assistant The Board also changed the Hoffman, associate professor, nursing: Patricia Whiteside, in¬ science program; munication, June 1 to June 30, to special educa- assignments and miscellaneous structor, nursing; Alfred Haug, computer Stuart H. Sanfield, instructor, work in India; Stanley E. Smith, professor, mathematics; Marvin director, Institute for Community appointment 0f MahabanooN.Ta- elementary and educatlon, Dec. tion, and teacher ■ changes; 6 retirements; and 34 associate L.Tomber, professor, mathemat- Development, July 1. ta, assistant professor, statistics professor, MSL'-AEC. computer science program; associate professor, Journalism, ics; Michael J. Harrison,, asso- The Board approved assign- and probability, from temporary 31; William E. Gleason, instruc- resignations and terminations. Plant Research Laboratory and Charles A. McKee, assistant pro- Sept. 1 to Dec. 31, to study in — - ... Among the resignations was fessor, continuing education; and Yugoslavia and East Europe; and ciate professor, physics; and ment of these communication arts appointment to regular appoint- tor» secondary education and cur- that of Adrian Jaffe, professor of botany and plant pathology, Nov. Marilyn M. Wendland, instructor, Joanne B. Eicher, assistant pro- Richard Schlegel, professor, faculty members to speech and ment_ Sept. 1; and reinstated Eli i. u—- riculum, July 31; and Douglas M. Anderson, specialist, teacher .v 1; and Michael Jost, assistant English and chairman of compar¬ Counseling Center. fessor, textiles, clothing and re- physics. theater, effective July 1: Her- p# £ox as professor and director education, Sept. 1 (cancellation). ative literature, effective Aug. professor, MSU-AEC Plant Re¬ Dual assignments to Madison bert J* °yer (acting chairman), of the Bureau of Business and 31. He will become chairman of search Laboratory and botany Other appointments were ap- lated arts, Aug. 1 to Aug. 31, College were approved for: Wes- F-G. Alexander, Jerry Anderson, Economic Research, Aug. 1. Cox The Board approved these res¬ the humanities division at the and plant pathology, Nov. 1. proved for: Paul V. Robinson, to travel. ley R. Fishel, professor, political John Baldwin, Sidney Berger, had been assigned to the Turkey ignations and terminations: Kozl newly created Kirkland College professor and coordinator, In- Additional leaves were ap- science, May 1; James B. McKee, James Brandon, Anthony Collins, Project, Asada, research associate, structional Media Center and proved for: Morton M. Gordon, botany and plant pathology, Aug. in Clinton, N.Y. Other appointments education, Sept. 1; Ena Meng Ho, professor, physics, July 1 to professor, sociology, May 1, 1967 John E« Dietrich, Mariam Duck- 31; Alexander MacDonaldJr., as¬ Appointments approved In¬ Other appointees included: N. librarian, Library, Sept. 18; Bar- July 31, to work at Indiana Uni- to Aug. 31, 1968; and BruceCur- wall, Kenneth G. Hance, Ted p gjj fgmentS sistant professor, chemistry, cluded: Bernard R. Jardot, 4-H— Jean Enochs, assistant profes¬ bara B. Klein, librarian, Sept. versity; Shepley S.C. Chen, re- tis, assistant professor, Ameri- Jackson, F. Craig Johnson, W. B. _ ' Aug. 31; John A. Schillinger, as¬ youth agent, Tuscola, Huron and sor, Science and Mathematics 18; Carole J. Widiger, librarian, search associate, MSU-AEC can Thought and Language, Sept. Lashbrook, James McCroskey, terminations sistant professor, entomology, Sanilac Counties, July 20; Diane Teaching Center, Sept. 1; Charles Sept. 1; Ronald A. Faut?, instruc- Plant Research Laboratory, June 1 to Aug. 31, 1968. David C. Ralph, DuaneReed, E.C. The Board approved these re¬ June 30; Alice H. Eagly, assist¬ L. Barber, home economist, Van 16 to Aug. 31, to teach at Tai- The Board also gave approval Reynolds, Farley Richmond, tirements (first year of MSU em¬ Crapo, assistant professor, labor tor. Counseling Center, Sept. 1; ant professor, psychology, Aug. Buren, Berrien and Cass Coun¬ and industrial relations, Aug. 15; Barbara S. Jennings, assistant wan University; Martha J. Soltow, to dual assignments for: Herbert Frank Rutledge, GordonThomas, ployment in parentheses): Emma 31; Stanley C. Ratner, professor ties, July 1; Judith A. Brown, M. Garelick, associate profes- Donald Treat and Allen S. White, J. Reinbold, home e^pnomist, Edward V. Wood, instructor, la¬ librarian, labor and industrial , , psychology, Aug. 31; Robert E. .. home economist, Lapeer and professor. Counseling Center, sor, philosophy and Justin Mor- Assigned audiology and Emmeti Cheboygan and Charle- Genesee Counties, July20;Allen bor andindustrialrelations, Sept. Sept. 1; and Cecil L. Williams, relations, Aug. 1 to Sept. 15, rill College. Sept. 1 to April 30, speech science, effective July 1, voix Counties, July 1(1946); John Schell, assistant professor, psy¬ 1; Bernard Finifter, assistant associate professor, Counseling to do research with h»band; and 1968; Paul M. Hurrell, associate were: Herbert J. Oyer (profes- F. Cooper, foreman in physical chology, Aug. 31; and Jack D. E. Shapley, assistant professor, professor, sociology, Sept. 1; Center, Aug. 8. Robert E. Morsberger, associ¬ professor, philosophy and Mor- sor and chairman), JamesR. An- plant, July 15 (1940); Martin R. Minzey, instructor and assistant dairy and agricultural econom- Donald ate professor, ATL and Madison director, Mott Institute forCom- J. Weinshank, instructor, cs, Dec. 1; Robert C. Herner, rilUCollege, Sept. 1 to April 30, drews, Leo V. Deal, Elsie M. Ed Fitzpatrick, laborer in physical assistant natural science, Sept. 1; George professor (research, S. Paulus, assistant professor, Sabbatical J leaves college. to lecture i to AUg. Sept. New 3i. 1968, Mexico State 1968, FauziM. Najjar, professor, wards, Edward Hardick, Richard plant, May'l, 1968 (1950); Alvah munity Improvement, Aug. 21. exten.-n-n)horticulture, Dec. 1; social science, Sept. 1; and David Sabbatical leaves approved in- University, social science and Morrill Col- Nodar, Chajrles Pedrey, Patricia ^ Vlo'riock maintenance in mar- Additional resignations and Robert N. Monney, assistant pro¬ H. Blng, assistant professor, mi¬ eluded: John R. Brake, associate The Board approved leaves lege, Sept. 1; James L. Fairley, Radcliffe, LillianR. Richesonand rIed hous'lngi Aug# u M948); . terminations, effective Aug. 31, fessor, romance languages, Sept. professor, v. 1 biochemistry and __j uiiHnm Rinteimann V\ illiam Rintelmann. George Pope, stockman, physical were approved for: J. Richard 1; and Horace R. Brock, profes¬ crobiology and public health, Dec. professor* agricultural econom- f°r: Willard G. Warrington, as- Brlggs College. Sept. 1; Glenn D. The Board earlier approved plant, Nov. 6 (1946); and Irene CtauBen, assistant professor, so- sor and adviser, Turkey Project, I. ics, Sept. 1 to Aug. 31, 1968, to sistant dean, University College, Berkheimer, assistant profes- formation of the two departments hipple, food service helper, cial work; Robert S. Fogarty, ",a' c c Aug. 1, 1967, to Jan. 31, 1969. Appointed visiting professors study and do research at Brook- and professor and director, eval- sor, Science and Mathematics —speech and theater, andaudiol- Kellogg Center, Sept. 1 (1951). instructor, ATL: John K. Law¬ in pharmacology, July 1 to June ings Institute; Robert F. Lanzll- uation services, Aug. 3 to Aug. °gy and speech science—from the Resignations and terminations less, instructor, ATL: William S. Also appointed were (Sept. 1 Teaching Center and education, unless otherwise noted): Richard 30, 1968, were: Donald R. Ben¬ lotti, professor and chairman, 30, to be consultant at Univer- Sept. 1 to Aug. 31, 1968; and Department of Speech. were approved for: Elaine A. El- Groat, instructor, ATL: Wolf D. nett, Perry J. Gehring, Duncan economics, Oct. 1 to March 31, sity of Philippines; Daniel M.Sei- Fuhrig, assistant professor, so¬ Lippke, assistant professor, A. McCarthy Jr. and James R. 1968, to study in East Lansing, fer, assistant professor, man- Jane C. Church, assistant pro- . Other assignments approved -H—youth agent, us> 4_n__youm agenl> Huron, nuron, cial science; Luther W. Smith speech and theater; Alice E. Weeks. Washington and Europe: Frank agement and regional director, fessor, Counseling Center and '"eluded: Sergey N. Andret/, as- Tuscola and Sanilac Counties, Jr., instructor, social science; Jones, specialist, health, physi¬ cal education and recreation; The Board approved these D. Borsenik, associate profes- continuing education, Sept. 1 to psychology. July J to June 30, *is»f Pressor, to German and A 31 Fred RuSSlan 3nd the de3n S 0ffIce. striirrnr. „aH«.l».ir«1 A# M Innnm, agricultural"'Econom- ln. and John E- Nolan, instructor, July 1 appointments in veterinary sor, hotel, restaurant and insti- Aug- 31, 1968, to work atTuske- .QAR 1968. .trow, Dorothy 1. Popejoy, assistant surgery medicine, and veterinary tutional management, Sept. 1, gee Institute; Donald A. Blome, Other dual assignments ap¬ Morrill College, Sept. 1 to Aug. 31, 1968; John Shlckluna, associ- ics, June 20; Deran Markarian, mechanical engineering, Aug. 31. professor, health, physical edu¬ clinics: Gretchen L. Flo, instruc¬ 1968, to Dec. 31, 1968, to study assistant professor, continuing proved included: John A. Waite, „ , u associate professor (research). The Board also approved these cation and recreation; R. Arden tor; Kenneth C. Gertsen, instruc¬ in East Lansing and Ann Arbor; education, Sept. 1 to Aug. 31, ssociate professor, to English ate professor, soil science, to the hortlculture, Aug. 15; John R. resignations and terminations: Moon, Instructor, teacher educa¬ tor; and Janver D. Krehbiel, in¬ and Richard L. Featherstone, 1968, to teach at Indiana Univer- and Educational Development Ryukyus u.-u Project, Sept. 15 to Sendee, instructor (research), ioaq. —^ D-»<- Jogindar S. Uppal, assistantpro- fessor, social science. Aug. 31; ... March 14, 1968; Harry G. Brain- tion: Phyllis E. Leuck, Instruc¬ structor. Program, Sept. 1 to Aug. 31, forest productSt June 30. Roger tor, home management and child professor and chairman, admin- sity; and Robert Repas, profes- ard, professor, economics, Shuy, associate professor, E«p- Horace C. Hartsell, professor, Also approved were the istration and higher education, sor, labor and industrial rela- 1968; Charles C. Cumberland, lish, and Linguistics and Orienll* development; Charlotte J. Mc- professor, to historyandHuman- Turkey Project, July 1, 1967, secondary- education and curric- appointments of: Judith A. June 1, 1968, to Aug. 31, 1968, Carty, instructor, home manage¬ Schroeter, home economist, Tus¬ study in the Southwest and at th" ities Research Center, March 1, ► June 30, 1969; Robert L. Blom- and African Languages, Aug. 31; ulum, and associate director, ment and child development: cola, Sanilac andHuronCounties, to Hawaii. 1968, t(5 June 30, 1968; William - strom, professor, hotel, restau- and Hug0 Nurnberg, assistant and Institutional manage- professoI.( accounting and finan- Instructional l5; -MIdorl Y- Media Center, Battlstini, Sept. bibliog- Peter O. Ways, associate profes¬ B. Lashbrook, assistant profes¬ Aug. 1; James W. Fleming, as¬ Other sabbaticals were- ap¬ and management to the Cial administration, July27(can- raPher, Library. Sept. 8; W1I- sor, medicine, Aug. 1; andAbner Transfers sor, to audiology and speech sci- sistant professor, * elementary 1 ioa7 proved for: Raymond N. Hatch, llam Borodacz, librarian, Aug. _ ... S. Baker, assistant professor, and special education, Sept. 1; professor, counseling, persojipel ence, and speech and theater, Tur,keV Pf° e«, July 1. 1967, Ceiiation). Other resignations and termi- 20; Klaus Musmann, librarian, Madison College and history. Arthur H. Steinhaus, visiting pro¬ services and educational psy¬ The Board approved transfers Sept. 1; Norman T.Bell, assist- t0 June 30- 1969; a"d Robert V. nations included: Boris P. Pesek, SePt« f5-' Josephine Morse, pro- The Board also approved these fessor, health, physical education chology, Jan. 10, 1968, to July for: Charles L.Lang, 4-H—youth ant professor, to Learning Sys- Pentield, assistant professor, fessor, Counseling Center and appointments (Sept. 1 unless and recreation, Sept. 16 to Dec. agent, from at-large designation terns Institute and counseling, management, to the to Turkey professor, -economics, Aug. 31; otherwise noted): Kenneth J. Cos- 15 and April 1, 1968, to June 30, 10, 1968, to study in the South¬ to Calhoun County, Aug. 1; Agnes personnel services and educa- ^ y ' t0 June \iurray A. Hewgill, associate psychology, July 31; andBarbara west and Mexico: Dorothy J. professor, speech, Aug. 31: Carl Griesinger, assistant profes- kran, assistant professor, chem¬ 1968; George E. LaPalm, assist¬ Parker, associate professor, M. Gregarek, home economist, tional psychology, July 1; and 30, esen, associate profes- Sor' social work, Aug. 31. istry; George E. Leroi, associate ant professor, civil engineering, health!' physical' "education and from Alc°na and Oscoda Coun- John W. Zlmmer, assistant dean, Additional assignments professor, chemistry; Stanley G. Sept. 1; and Derek T.A. Lam¬ recreation, Jan. 1,1968, to March ties to at-large designation, July to College of Natural Science and aPP™ved for: Carl Goldschmidt, Wellso, assistant professor, en¬ port, assistant professor, MSL'- 1: Gwen Andrew, associate pro- Educational Development Pro- associate professor, to urban tomology, June 19; James M. AEC Plant Research Laboratory, 31, 1968, to study in South Ameri- ca; O. Donald VJeaders, associate fessor, from social work andHu- gram, July 1 to June 30, 1968. Panning and landscape architec- —. . I fI I 4v, » social work and human medl- and curriculum, Jan. L 1.968, " ' Changes OKd ^ ' *^fuwanrVniiam T^elia," proitiAbr x*- ^ ' we WETTING SOLUTIONS: issocU>; were lice kept on stand-by, but po¬ said the dawn looked like professor, marketing and trans- Program leader, 4-H—youth pro- ^ York's East Harlem East Harlem just another Sunday. There also -was a brief dis- MSU Book Store MSU Book Store MSU Book Store MSU Book Store MSU Book Store roZTs:~tion-Sept- crowd—mostly Puerto Ri- turbance in Kalamazoo, Mich., sabbatical leave for'Daran Mar- can but with some Negroes— 150 miles west of Detroit. When The Board also approved these karian, associate professor, hor- enraged because an off-duty of- police went to investigate a do- changes; leave of absence for ticulture; continuation of Bea- ficer had shot and killed a Puerto mestic quarrel, in which a Ne-.< John D. Donoghue, associate pro- trice Paolucci as acting chair- JOIN Rican youth, fessor, anthropology and continu- man, home management and child Polic rocks and bottles, some gunfire the officer, was heard, a few stores were Reinforcements T. Staley, instructor, microbio- date of JeanN. Harvey, librarian, looted and minor fires set.Scores to the scene an logy and public health, from July from July 31 to Aug. 31;.rein- of people were hurt and three crowd, 1 to Aug. 1; and sabbatical leave statement of Kullervo Louhi a for Mllosh Muniyan from Sept. 1- professor and associate dean of arresteo. THE WAR Sept. 1-Aug, 31, 1968. business, July 1, and in contir" e strt Canal treaty ~ ing education, July 1, 1967, Aug. 31, 1968 (he had been as- bottles, but at one point the signed to the Turkey Project); and reinstatement of John L. crowd sang and chanted in Span- lsh a happy interlude before hearings start WASHINGTON !/P) — Congres - t into the area and shook sional hearings begin today on ON the still officially secret treaty hands with the crowd which had which would shift to Panama the dwindled to 75 people. He was cheered, and met later sovereignty which the United official residence with spokes- States long has held over the 1 Panama Canal Zone. men for the neighborhood. BOWLING.... POVERTY provides more fun and relaxation than any partic¬ ipating sport in the world. Offers a year-round hobby for every age - helps maintain normal health- y weight and muscle tone. Paves way to making new friends and meeting new people. Sell HOLIDAY LANES t North of Frondor Phon. 487=3731 your used books now for top cash - and Summer Bicycle Rentals become affluent, AT MSU BOOK STORE College Bike Shopnew and used bikes parts and accessories Ifg/f in the Center for International Programs 5 factory trained mechanics 134 N. Harrison MSU Book Store MSU Book Store MSU Book Store MSU Book Store MSU Book Store Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Monday, July 24, 1967 5 -SPORTS- fc State MSU's Marshall relief star for Tigers By JOE MITCH News Sports Editor strates major that I leagues." can pitch in the wrapped in a towel and a bottle He turned to full time pitching er working out with the Tigers of pop in the other hand. only last year at Montgomery in in spring training. It took Marshall six years be¬ in the infield has him as a pitcher. definitely helped "Having played the infield, I doctorate in physical education. "I have all of my studying done Since early June, when the "You've just got to learn to the Southern League, after the to write my thesis," he said. live with it. Last year with Mont¬ Tigers had purchased him from fore he reached the majors, but know how the infielders will re¬ "I'll be writing it on child growth Tigers called him up from its DETROIT—Mike Marshall is Toledo minor league ball club, gomery I relieved five games Philadelphia. he says that didn't mean he act," he said. "If I throw strikes, and development." a confident young man, both on the Marshall has been called in to straight several times." The Phillies signed Marshall wasn't ready to play major league they'll be alert. They know that But he says he doesn't recom¬ Marshall said he doesn't rely after high school at Adrian. baseball. 1 understand what they're doine. pitching mound and when he talks pitch in situations that a veteran mend combining baseball and ed¬ reliefer on Just one certain pitch to use "I don't think the Phillies liked "And they have confidence in about his brief but successful might shudder at. "The Tigers made a deal with ucation. tenure with the Detroit Tigers. He pitched in his third straight against a batter. the way I combed my hair," he me," he added. "Friday night me," he said. "I was to play "I had to work hard," he said. The 24-year-old right-hander, game Saturday, and limited the "My best pitch depends on the shortstop and third for a month said. "They thought that intelli¬ (Bill) Freehan called my name "It took me five years in the who earned his bachelor and Yankees to Just one run and a hit situation and the hitter," he ex¬ and gence and an education can't help to pick up a bunt. Maybe if it pitch for another month to off season to get my bachelor's master's degrees from MSU and in the final three innings. plained. "I thrBw whatever seems see which position would offer me you in baseball. "But the Tigers were differ¬ was some other pitcher he degree. is now working on his doctorate the best on that occasion. Also it the best chance of It was his fourth save and moving up to wouldn't have." "If a high school boy thinks he ent. They gave me a chance and here, has become one of Man¬ depends on what I threw at him the majors." boosted his innings pitched to realized that someone with a Marshall went to MSU in the wants to play baseball and go to ager Mayo Smith's top relief last time. 37 and one-third, giving him a Marshall turned in an 11-7 college education just won't stand off season to get his bachelor college too, he should go to col¬ specialists in little over a month. 'There are a lot of variables, respectable 1.2 earned run av¬ record at Montgomery and was still. He'll try to better himself." and master's degrees and will lege first and then try baseball," "I'm going to let my record but I'll try anything to get them erage. this fall to finish up his he said. I'd stand on my head and placed on the Toledo roster aft¬ Marshall feels his experience return speak for Itself," Marshall said out. prior to Saturday's game with "I don't mind pitching every throw if I had to." the New York Yankees. day," Marshall said in the Tiger Marshall was an ex-All Star MIKE MARSHALL "I think my record demon¬ lockerroom with his right arm infielder in the minor leagues. WIN NIGHTCAP BEGINS TODAY 2 tie for Tigers split with Yankees DETROIT four-run fourth inning rally with choice to load the bases. Hiller "P a homer to Bill Rob- (UPI)—Home runs ' his 13th homer of the season, singled in two runs with his inson in the sixth. The Yankees took advantage by Jim Landis and Willie Horton Norm Cash kept the rally going first major league hit and Dick and a two-run single by relief of three errors in the last three in PGA tourne pitcher John Hiller staked the Detroit Tigers to a 7-3 victory with a single, Mickey Stanley walked with two out and Ray Oyler was safe on £ fielder's McAuliffe singled in Oyler, Hiller worked 2 1/3 Innings for the victory although he gave innings to bring a 2-2 tie and snaP the a six"game losing streak in p.m. MDT Monday and will be Sunday after the New York Yan¬ opener. DENVER (LiPI)--Tall Texajis carried live on national television kees won the opener of the double- Horace Clarke singled in the Don Massengale and Don Janu¬ seventh inning and scored when (ABC) from 3 p.m. until conclu¬ header, 4-2. roared from far off the sion. ary Sunday with sub-par rounds The split sent the Yankees to Cards take NL lead Roy White's single went past pace Sikes stayed in front or tied their seventh loss in eight games, right fielder Jim Northrup for an of 66 and 68 to tie for the 49th ST. LOUIS (UPI) — Dal Max- error. In the ninth inning, Mickey for the lead most of the after¬ while the Tigers picked up their The double victory moved the PGA championship and set up an noon, but a bogey 6 on the 13th fifth victory in the last seven vill's run-scoring single in the Cardinals one game ahead of the Mantle singled, v t to third O! 18-hole playoff for the $25,000 seventh broke a 3-3 tie and led Chicago Cubs in the National Oyler's double error and scored and bogey 5's on the 15th and to stay in the thick of the Amer¬ first prize. 17th the league-leading St.LouisCar- League pennant race. The Cards on a single by Robinson. spelled his doom. ican League race. Massengale and January each January's lone birdie on the Landis led off the game a gainst dinals to an 8-3 victory over the play the Cubs Monday night in the New York's Joe Pepitone had turned in 72-hole totals of seven- front side came at the fifth hole loser Fritz Peterson with a line Atlanta Braves Sunday and a first game of a key series. Chi- four hits, including a two-run under-par 281, enough to best with a 5-footer, but he had to drive homer and Horton began a doubleheader sweep after the cago split with San Francisco homer in the second inning off their nearest challengers by one Cards the opener 3-1 be- Sunday to drop out of a tie for loser Mickey Lolich. Don Wert turn in a spectacular save at the won stroke. ninth to salvage a par that let hind Julian Javier's two-run first, had a solo homer off winner Mel They got their chances when third-round leader Dan Sikes him turn in 35. He drove the right rough, tried to hook around Litwhiler's hit homer. Stottlemyre in the fourth inning. Stottlemyre and Steve Hamilton wasn't able to turn a scrambling a tree and the ball landed sub¬ throttled the Tigers on five hits. round birdies into to enough stave pars and off the Texas merged *in deep grass. He hit the green, but was 30 feet away streaks batsmen It was Stottlemyre's eighth vic¬ tory against 10 losses. Hamilton Dons' charge from the pack. on the fringe, but sank it for a blanked the .Tigers over the final Sikes wound up with a 36-37— 73 and a six-under-par 282 that par that was his round. the turning point of to 4th straight two Innings after Stottlemyre was lifted for a pinch-hitter. left him in a tie for third place January picked up his second MSU's summer baseball team SCOREBOARD with pre-tourney favorite Jack Nicklaus, birdie on the first of the back-to- back par 5's on the home nine— stretched its winning streak to four games with a 3-2 victory ame rican le ague NATIONAL LEAGUE Football Cords It will be the second playoff the 12th—with two putts from over Emil's Bar of the Lansing for the PGA crown for the 37- 30 feet. Headed forfall City League Friday at Old Col¬ W L PCT. GB release Lucas year-old January, who tied Jerry He lege Field. Chicago 51 40 .560 Barber dropped an 18-footer from . — LAKE fQREST^Ijl. f —'The ^over the 72 hi The irinsys. iat a. tvwUp. >■ u?r el JohnsolS, Chesler^ieVo; leme/tf, iV.C., "t N.C~, graduate gr sfStfent, run leased 14 rookies at their Lake jjjjd 2 ■) -footer i / u: -• v - v . Kjf ±2 jv; • ; Nicklaus shot 'a final round Sure himself .< MSU k Judo Club. •'-£& sr*. News photo by ji r '~5 •' " \vinnlng pitcher, \!wv>y5e Vff* California "52 4-4 .526 2 Mir rranctecb -fi or including All^nTetfca defensive" S 15.0QQ secQivi xt ..sco^ Jay „ attorn- > yttts'rvrg *6 44 .511 ,6 ruMe -»>rci>d Irvm a . „ ius Boros also "came from well „ Lltwhiler pitched the final in¬ Cleveland 4-) -t9 .473 8 Philadelphia 44 46 .492 8 1/2 igan State. back with a final round 33-35— ning and a third, giving up no Baltimore 42 51 .452 10 Los Angeles 40 52 .430 131/2 Lucas was making his second and no hits. Roland Wal- Kansas City 40 53 .430 12 New York 37 54 .409 16 2,500 athletes to compete runs bid to gain a job with the Car¬ 68 that put him at 283 and a tie cott started for the Spartans on New York 39 52 .429 12 Houston 37 57 .394 17 1/J dinals. He left camp a year ago for fifth place with defendjpg the mound. after checking in at 325 pounds. champion A1 Geiberger. Geiber- Two Spartan pitchers limited (Does not Include Sunday's games) He reported this year at 284 ger birdied the final hole f«*• %£ter 5 njrcu Jfi »>«.. call Wore > »' ** bjA ■ U'9 '£fi+ *v— , ..jpi -iV ' ' ' r- m I! Speciaf $5.00 "fNo-*- offS'fNi.-*- _4 V_ sales work. $1.50 per hour.'Call Automotive _ barn. References required. 351-£790. 3-7^.^ C - - •niicK - *mr, *«>.• iswi-w • ilww *' * "" "*■ >> ' 3,000 mita. t'OWr* JS? iH*.'.ai.g-tJit "Tick. h b--7/25-' recorder, " Royal typewriter, .ON LilL. niove?Sell those leave- $400, 355-2879 5—7/24 SITTER, LIGHT housework, live 3-T/2b behlnds quickly with a low cost in, out. One baby. Faculty. 337- MALE SHARE bedroom pica. 351-5809. 3-7/76 take over payments. 482-6136. - wo State News want ad. Phone 355- house off campus. Before 3pjn. BUICK 1965 - Electra 225. Cus¬ 3-7/26 1423 . 5-7/24 HERMES PORTABLE typewrit- '• 8255 to place your ad and turn H0NDA SCRAMBLER 1966. 305 for 485-1342. 3-7/25 tom. Four door, hardtop. All op¬ TRADE four man apartment er, year old. Excellent condi¬ TRIUMPH TR4-1963. Excellent c'uick cc."2,000 miles. Extras. $650. TEACHERS: FALL openings all tions Including air conditioning. University Terrace four man. tion. 372-9230, ext. 211, before condition. $1,050. Phone FE 9- IV 2-4839, after 6 p.m." fields. CLINE TEACHER'S 332-6007. 3-7/24 GIRLS NEEDED, Split level 4:30, Joan. 1-7/24 Excellent condition. 351-9550 10-7/27 2372. 5-7/25 AGENCY, 129 East Grand River. house, your own bedroom.Com¬ or 337-2424. 5-7/26 Telephone 332-5079. 24-8/18 HASLETT APARTMENTS: pletely furnished. Must likeani- BICYCLE SALES, rentals and Roommates needed second five mals. Call 393-2482. 393-0734. services. Also used. EAST For Rent weeks. Call 351-7249. 3-7/24 5-7/28 LANSING CYCLE, 1215 East Grand River. Call 332-8303. C TV RENTALS for students. $9.00 SEPTEMBER 1967 - August 1968 month. Free service and deliv¬ ONE GIRL to sh-^cO.-f ex with east of East Lansing. Ten min¬ other girl" cX^\"*id. Deposit I NEEDED: ery. TV RENTAL Call NEJAC, 337-1300. We guarantee same - day service. C 19" GE portable with stand. Free service and required, v* .*282. NEAR WHITEHILLS, one fur¬ nished and one unfurnished. Ex¬ clusive adult living. FABIAN 5-7/24 utes from MSU. Completely fur¬ nished, Bath and three bedroom home. a half, fireplace up and down. 655-2725. 3-7/26 Faculty Sc Grad. Students EAST LANSING AREA IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY delivery. Call STATE MAN¬ GIRL TO share house. $8 a week. REALTY, ED2-0811, IV 5-3033, AGE M EN T CORPORATION. Two blocks campus. 332-0153. PRIVATE LAKE ED 2-1438. 5-7/26 13 JOBS FOR PEOPLE TV 332-8687. RENTALS for students. $S 10-7/31 EAST rooms, SIDE, furnished three bath, no children, pets. EAST LANSING - Okemos. TWo 3-7/26 Enjoy boating, fishing, swimming, your own pri¬ vate lake and beach. Effic¬ and bedroom furnished duplex for iency 1 and 2 bedroom per month including tax. Alsc IV 2-4265. 3-7/24 term rates. UNIVERSITY TV four men, swimming pool. 337- apartments from $120 in¬ C 0364. 5-7/28 cluding ^air conditioning, WHO CONTINUED TO PHONE RENTALS, 484-9263. TWO MEN needed for Cedar Vil¬ carpeting, drapes, refrig¬ lage fall through spring. 351- TWO-MAN, cooking facilities, Apartments erator, oven and range, 7761. 3-7/24 1111 Hickory, east of Pennsyl¬ laundry facilities. Worry- WANTED: FOURTH man for Bur¬ vania. $60 month. IV 4-2449. free year around mainten¬ cham Woods, fall term. 489- NEEDED: THIR[>^5 rl luxury 3-7/26 ance, furnished or unfur¬ AFTER THIS STATE NB/VS WANT 6358. COMPLETELY FURNISHED 5-7/28 apartment.^*V\ role July 26. Reduced ^£*>466. 3-7/2 4 SHARE across FOUR campus. bedroom $8 week. 351- house nished. Adults from campus. Apartments at Lake only. 5 min. Chalet Park O'The NEED TWO girls, luxury apart¬ Spartan Village one bedroom 7754. 3-7/26 Hills. Ph. 339-8258. ment. Air conditioned. $43.1225 apartment. Sublet July 27- North Grand River, apartment AD HAD BEEN FILLED September 4. C&ll 355-9846. 3-7/26 104. 355-0482 , 372-1971. 5-7/25 ataa □□aaaHian tauciuu LET'S TALK TIRES 24. Drtadlul JU ^ :HQ □□□ 27. Mist 28. Factual □□□□□no □□no □□□a anuaaraR FREE USE OF COKE 29. ('.olive urn 33. Auricle :u Fabricate ana aasnoH □□□ aaaua ^ TYPIST, PART time executive ib. ile Frail typewriter, office located on WITH EVERY PAIR OF TIRES 36. Incentives uaciuiirarau □□□ South Cedar, Lansing. 3-7/17 :18. Ital. wine □□as aaa ana (PURCHASED AT REGULAR PRICE) ana aaa :<9. Radiator M@bil Service 40. Male part 41. Grades Center 42. Merit KALAMAZOO & 1-496 from Dag's DOWN 3. Crude l; across 7. Cr. Husk Phone 489-8467 1. Appropri- tar 8. Burn 9. Adept 12. Uncivil 9 FOR FAST ACTION ON JUST ABOUT ' 6 1 9 ♦ 1 Z 3 15. Prophet ' 11 17. F.gg-shaped |% % " 10 20. Malaria IS 21. Shake- 14 13 ANYTHING CALL... * IT £1 IB a 23 Few 9' w ZD <5 25. intense P % %% it % 26. The Erinys sr » 'ft ZT %n 355-8255 » (4 » 30 3i 31 29! Dried or¬ chid meal 39 >4 30. Panorama 93 94 %37 36 31. Coininu- 32. Govern STATE NEWS CLASSIFIED % 1 4z 34. Silent 37. Doily 1% ■ 41 38. Peer Gynt^ mother Monday, July 24, 1967 7. Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan For Sale WELL WORTH THE DRIVE Fees h 21" televi¬ by •WHY RENT? 40 G.E. Ferri this tragedy sions. Reconditioned. $20-$50. Tom, 337-97S1. 10-7/31 Cast triggers and WM BORDER COLLIE mixed puppies. By STUART ROSENTHAL ■ played kS°'s dupe as a duU- wlrted, love-struck fool without 12 weeks old. $5 each. 372- Tuition was raised Friday at Othello" is the current pro- as so frequently occurs In pro¬ Western Michigan Universityand 6046. ... 10-7/27 auction of the Ledges Playhouse. _. located at Fitzgerald Park In Othello ducing "Othello," turning him Into a comic character. He man¬ Ferris State College as well a> POODLE PUPPIES. AKC, show Grand Leclge about ten minutes at MSU, making a total of five aged to f eta In the credibility of state schools which have raised dog quality. Pedigree ma_les. outslde of Lanslng. The play is the pathetic foil—a delicate Job Call IV 2-6130. 5-7/26 %yell worth the short drive. Ledges Playhouse.. requiring a great deal of skill. their fees since the Legislature passed the higher education ap-j ,""DIrc""cm ,11 » Covette was more than equal to " "I~ DACHSIND ~* PLPP ■ . TheLedges'sthrust-Stagepres- proprlations bill July 12. entatlon ls quite ingenious in its the task. Western is raising in-state b}aCk ^ota^neS' shots. 882-2970. 5.7/28 scene transitions and direction. Andy Baclcer as Iago. After j-je was particularly good in his John Peakes In the title role tuitipn from $300 to $370 a year The Elizabethan Inner stage has rc ls ing considerable re- asides when he raised an eye- did his best work during Backer's and charging the 1 per cent of been replaced by a raised center strait throughout the opening brow and drew back his upper appearances. He was most bril- its students from other states platform and full use is made of scenes, Backer finally unleashed up t0 produce one of the finest liant in his direct confronta- level en- Iago's evidence of Des- $800, instead of $600 as last balconies and upper an exquisitely evil character, ieers that has ever graced a tlon with COLONIAL 10x50, 1961. Excel¬ demona's infidelity. The Moor's year. More than two-thirds of trances. taking a strategist's pride in Shakespearean production. lent shape. Lake lot. 882-0257 WMU's budget comes from state The real star of this rendition placing his lies and innuendos. Peter Covette as Roderigo inner torture was mirrored after 3-7/26 funds. 6 p.m. strikingly in each of Peakes' restless movements and facial Ferris State at Big RifpMs VENTURA, 1965. 12x58 luxury raised its In-state tuition from trailer. Air conditioned, auto¬ 2 PROFS IN FLINT contortions. $275 to $300 a year, and non¬ Linda Carlson's Desdemona matic dishwasher. Living room resident fees from $590 to $750. was just a bit stilted. This ls 12x24. Located near campus in Room and board there was re¬ understandable though. Shake¬ beautiful wooded trailer park. cently hiked from $792 to $846. Clinic aids city teachers speare's dilineation of Desde¬ Excellent condition. Call 351- Less than 300 Ferris students mona ls somewhat unsubstantial 4306. 5-7/28 live outside of Michigan. Itself. The Ledge's production is well Saginaw Valley College, the Some one hundred and twenty shops operated for teachers by teachers have a more significant newest of the 11 state schools, RITZCRAFT 10x50, located near elementary school teachers are MSU. impact on the educational staged and fully costumed. campus. Automatic Gun furnace, .. , in the Mildred B. %mlth, director of achievement of low-income chil- "Othello" is being played in has promised to keep its tuition bullt-i. washer ,'„d dryer. Many ' The Taming of the same as this year. classroom as students. Flint elementary schools and dren than they do on the achieve- repertory with extras. 53000. 337-0184. 3-7/26 MSU and the Flint Public workshop chairman said that ment of the middle-income chil- the Shrew" until August 5, Schools are sponsoring three those who have worked closely dren. performances dally at 8:30 p.m. BEAUTIFUL ^965 Windsor 12x two-week workshop sessions in with the disadvantaged areaware " We are trying to raise the ex- Monday through Saturday. The ,n ... furnlshed. Set ud in Flint on teaching the disad- of the importance of teacher at- pectations teachers have of their two plays alternate over two day ' w 00 dede trailer 1 court. $5 550 ' vantaSed. The program is an ex- titudes tension of the in-service work- toward these youngsters, students," she said. "We want intervals. "We believe" she said, "that them to realize that the prob- with the current season of Phone 882-1610, 882-19e>0. lems of the disadvantaged are MSU's Summer Circle Theater -7/26 brought about by an environment coming to a close with this week': Pensive tragedy The Christian Science Organi¬ over which the children have no production, the Ledges Play- zation will hold its weekly meet¬ MOBIL HOMES sell quickly when Cyclotron control." house should provide fine theater ing Tuesday at 7:15 p.m. In 34 you use a State New! Miss Smith, who earned a de- for the Michigan State community A scene frorr "Othello," being staged at the Union, Just call 355-8255. gree from MSU's College of Edu- for the remainder of the summer. Ledges Playhous* In Grand Ledge. cation, recently became the first ■ A revival rally for teenagers STAR 10x45 1959 on lot near c pus. 337-2765 after 5 p.m. new laundry Negro named to a key position in the Flint Public Schools. She is one of the three directors of ele¬ of the Lansing, Holt, Mason and Jackson areas will be held at the Lost & Found Construction of a larger,more automated laundry plant for MSU $550,000 addition to the Lansing, $127,795, and Rapistan, Inc'' Farmington, $55,982. „ u° mentary education, responsible poverty ols section as well In the city's s the 41 busted in Bethany Baptist Church In Lan¬ sing at 7:30 p.m. Friday. A team of 12 high school and college students from Bowling hi h ro LOST: BLACK and orange cat in cyclotron on lahnrarnrv will twin laboratory will begin ™nOraU which will be used to middle income gection. section. Three persons v :sted Leary's son, John, 17. Leary Spartan Village, ('all 353-7913. trarfSport clean laundry from the Assisting in the workshop pro¬ M1LLBROOK. N.Y. f—Police for was not arrested. Green, Ky., will lead the rally. in August. possession of marijuana 5-7/24 ashers to the extractors and r># Brookover, irrested 41 persons Saturday Sheriff Lawrence Quinlan said which opens a week-end youth The Board of Trustees award¬ , ... , ri , «. gram gram are are Wilbur wnour B. di uwuvci , They were identified by police ed contracts for these facilities the pressing, folding and flat- Qf ^ ^ Soclal Scl_ nIght at the as Nancy De Fleur, 25, of Elklns the roundup was the result of revival, work ironing Teaching Institute and pro- rim°thy Leary, leader of a cult the hallucinogenic drug Park, Pa.; James Hammeman complaints from Leary's neigh¬ In the The two-story cyclotron labo¬ 22, of Philadelphia, anJ Rober bors of reckless driving The 66,000 square foot laundry ratory addition will extend from i religion. Most of the area. Leary appeared atthelocal made on traffic Gilson, 17, of MUil.rooko l-'/24 wijj be constructed nstruciea on Service the existing building west toward hall with flowers in his professor of educational arrests were maae on iramc Among those taken into custo¬ town Road neai Power Plant 65 at a the Chemistry BuUding on South P specialist in violations and disorderly con- dy for traffic violations was long grey hair and accused the FOUND: SMALL tiger kitten in 1.5 million including Sh,. Lane. 1, .01 provB. office ' police of "harassment of private vicinity of Grove Street. 351- utilltie' ■qulpment and site de- and laboratory space fortheunl- ^ property. " n. ^ C1\OhSL#t.X itfw....Tr? tmr**, tmnet, s0me 4oJ,0(jff7^und5 (dry ^om'e 4ofcodO>ui ' height; roofn' ^iit *Vill" pTOvider-- for (fj* "^Ifprogrtir. Information 482-3905 HAWAII"' four bedroom bl-level. Two car iaun(jry every week. Current- servation of the cyclotron's con- attached garage, patio, family j the old plant handles about trol, data and computer rooms, cool room with fireplace, carpeting md, In the basement level - ' MICHIGAN gifts, grants, scholarships 150>000 ds weekly. and drapes, kitchen bullt-ins, landscaped. $26,500. Phone 372- 4611. 5-7/21 An overhead track monorail system and automatic loading and library-conference room. The addition is scheduled for in ■r^rwx/ Shows at 1.00-2:55 TODAY -5:05-7:15-9:30 AT BOX OFFICE OR MAIL Performances at 1:30& 8p.m. Dally Except Sunday Eve. at completion in July of 1968. unloading of washers are two Trustees awarded the general Gifts and grants totaling de Agronomia, Balcarce, Argen¬ 7:30 p.m. A $100,000 renewal grant from Adults Eves. & Su.iday $2^X)— EVE REIT - KENDON area, four modern features of the plant, construction contract for the ad- $5,023,629 were accepted Fri- tina. This is the third annual AID ^ Resources bedrooms, 1-1/2 baths, finished Low bidders awarded contracts dition to Ackerman Construction day'by' MSU's Board of Trustees, grant for the program. Law- Research will fund the opera¬ IDU0MI Adults $1.50 Weekday Matinees Children $1.00, AH basement, large lot. TU2-4330. for general construction, me- - Company —■ - It sub¬ — - •Lansing. of- East - 1— ton is campus coordinator of the . . . tion of the MSU Institute of Water Times. 3-7/25 chanlcal and electrical work a re: mitted a bid of $310,921. Included were two grants from project. Research for the next year. Dr. National Institutes of - Hanel-Vance Construction Co., Other contracts were awarded the United States ®fice of Edu- umrto UTSTS | ~ 7^ 1 Robert C. Ball, professor in the cwwsion TICWUCOLW" Recreation East Lansing, $670,000; United to Fox Electric Company of Lan- cati0n totaling $1,080,000 topro- Health granted $118,054todevel- of NEXT: "EL DORADO" PROGRAM INF. 485-6485 slng, electrical work, $68,623, vjde additional funds for fellow- op a program or the study of wndlif lg director of the in_ HORSEBACK RIDING - by the Piping and Erecting Company, and Bosch Plumbing and Heating ships under the National Defense animal behavior in laboratory and Thg m uged for hour. Closed Mondays. Hay Lansing, $363,000; CentralElec- field situations. Fivepredoctoral BEST IN FOREIGN FILMS Company of Grand Rapids, me- Education Act. wa[er research lraKUUi.i vi^ andother at MSU rides available. Recreation hall, trie Motors & Construction Co., TODAY Western saddle and clothing chanlcal work, $157,340. 0ne of the grants, $976,400, students and one postdoctoral un1veVs"y^mpuses in\ncWm'"n. Part of the addition s construe-win be used to assist 185 pre- student will .participate during Jhe united States Office of shop. WHITE BIRCH STABLES, SOrVtCt tlon will be financed by a $200,000 doctoral graduate students in the the first year. Dr. James C. Education granted $99 066 for the THURS. Mason. Phone 677-3007. 5-7/28 grant from the National Science physical, natural and social sci- Braddock, professor of zoology ^evelopmem of collections and pAULA ANN HAUGHEY, typist, Foundation. NSF has so far pro- ences. The other grant. $103,600, and administrator of the grant, 2-FEATURES programs in IBM Selectrlc and Executive. Service vided some $4 million for use In wlll pr0Vide funds for 26 graduate said the emphasis will be on be- thg UniVersity library. This is Multillth offset printing. Pro¬ construction and students, most ofwhomwille havior as related to ontogeny. The Most Talked About Picture 1 the second grant that has been re- fessional thesis typing. 337- The program, he added, is in- DIAPER SERVICE, Lansing's operation. special education. ceIyed under the () her Educa_ 1527. C MSU's 55-million electron volt Dr< jaCob Vinocur, associate — tended " tlon Act of 1965. !)r, Rictmrd E. finest. Your choice of three cyclotron was first operated in dean for advanced graduate petent to teach and do research Chapin, director of the library, types; containers furnished, no jj's A great time to sell those in animal behavior. February, 1965, and reached full studies, will administer the will administer the grant. deposit. Baby clothes washed things that have been cluttering Dr. Lawrence Sarbaugh, in¬ „ SHOWN AT 7:10 & Later free. Try our Velvasoft process. Up y0ur storage areas for the capacity in December, 1965. grants. A grant of $95,400 from the The Board also awarded con- jhe other grants include structor in communication, will 25 years in Lansing. BY-LO paSt several months. The best National Aeronautics and Space ALSO THE UMBRELLAS of CHERBOURG tracts to Ackerman Construction $615,830 from the National administer a $106,416 grant to Administration will be used to 1 DIAPER SERVICE, 1010 E. Way to sell them is with a State SHOWN AT 9:10 P.M. ONLY Company for $32,900 for renova- cancer Institute on canine leu- continue a series of communi- Michigan. IV 2-0421. C \ews want ad. Dial 355-8255 support the training of six new tion of the Big Ten Room and kemia. The funds will cover the tlon "JULIET of the SPIRIT" and "RED DESERT" today and place your ad. seminars^for^orel^^sjj- dents who are returning to theii .™«Himiwtnr * r predoctoral and some other pre- FRII ROUND UP all those still useful Centennial Room in Kellogg Cen-Cost of the research through vjousjy enroned students in viuuat longer needed items gARBI MEL, Professional typ- ter, and to Madias Bros., Inc., ^ay 3i( 1968. Dr. Gabel H. Con- native countries. The grant from g sciencesTnd^ech- BOX OFFICE OPEN AT 8:00 around your home. Sell them No job too large or too of Detroit, for exterior restora- ner> professor of surgery and the Agency for International De- n ^ vlnQCUr v,m admln_ tlon work costing $51,896 on Mary medicine in the College of Vet- velopment covers t h e present ister the grant> quick with a State News want small. Block off campus. 332- six-months period to Dec. 30. NOW! ALL COLOR ad. All you have to do is phone 3255. C Mayo and Mason-Abbot residence erinary Medicine, is director of The board aiso accepted funds Halls. the research project. The seminars are conducted at {or schol rships ' 355-8255 and a pleasant State EXCLUSIVE SHOWING News ad advisor will take your Transportation Dr. T. Wayne Taylor, pro- MSU during the summer and in $84,742.91. WomQn hUrt r Dellroy, Ohio, during the ad. The cost is low and the re¬ sults are fast! WANTED: RIDERS to Boston fessor of education and science, will administer a maining months. The claws of terro r the stings of death! | $192,500 grant from the United 'WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHY. High area. July 26. Call 351-9087, 3-7/24 as cycle flips States Office of Education to pro- quality and full coverage, $29, Wanted A young motorcyfclist suffered vide one year of advanced tram- $49 aibum. 337-060' -7/26 ^ minor injuries Saturday when her ing for 25 elementary school NOW SHOWING! BLOOD DONORS needed. $7.50 cycle nipped over in a field near teachers In reading, mat■hemat- DIAPER SERVICE, Diaparene for all positive, RH negative Rickard Lane in Bath, Mich. *«, and sc ence. The groupi ■ EXCLUSIVE! Franchlsed Service Approved with positive factor - $7.50. State police said Clenda Lee the seC0" . . ""h ih mL the JUST 2 DAYS LEFT! by Doctors and DSIA, The most modern and only personalized A negative, B negative, and AB Steinkamph, 24, 5019 Pleasant gram which is held m>der - treated for direction of the MSU Science the negative, $10,000. O Negative - Grove, Lansing, nd Mathematics Teaching Cen- service in Lansing, providing $12.00 MICHIGAN COMMU- bruised kneesanda sore shoulder er. The grant provides insti- Short Subject Color Cartoon you with diaper pails, polybags, NITY BLOOD CENTER. 507 at SparrowHospital and released. OU(lirUYvnU3uuaiaiiuicw»^ui ■ , , STARTING WEDNESDAY deodorizers, and diapers, or use East Grand River, East Lansing, An Indiana An Indiana man man received received head head tutional suPPort and fellowship ' your own. Baby clothes washed Hours: 9-3:30 Monday and Tues- cuts Saturday after his parked assistance, Jerry Lewis at 'The Big Mouth' also 'Ride Beyond Vengeance' free. No deposit. Plant inspec¬ day; 12-6:30 Thursday. 337- car was sideswiped on Moechel Th® ^"5™" °™*Te tion invited. AMERICAN DIA¬ 7183. C Road in Ingham County. granted $150,000 to support ^e OPEN NIGHTLY AT 8:00 PER SERVICE, 914 E. Gier. Troopers reported that an auto MSU educational assistance pro- Call 482-0864. C WANTED: PERSON to buy mem- owned by Donald A. Whitaker, Sram at the University of the NOW! EXCLUSIVE! bership in a flying club. Phone 33, of Starke, Ind., was struck Ryukyus for the 17th year- • lALL COLOR PROGRAM TUTORING FRENCH, all levels. 694-4631. 3-7/25 on the side and its door ripped Glenn Taggert, dean of the Of- and beginning Italian. 355-1190. off> as vvhitaker sat inside. A Ace of International I rograrns, 5-7/24 — IT,g EASY it's fun it's inex- . passenger, ° . Sue Richardson, 19, wl11 administer ^ the grant. $134,077 grant from the pensive, it's resultful ... it' Munith, Mich., was unhurt. Whit¬ J v?Lnq. .*Lc-" '-- State News want ads. Call ou aker sought his own medical ° National 1_ _ A Science Foundation v. nrAnA«~i1 be used for general univers ■: imivorc. treatment. ANN BROWN, typist andraultllith ad advisor at 355-8255.' support of programs in research, SHOWN TWICE AT 9;22 & Late offset printing. printing, ui Dissertations, Two youths, one an MSU stur -- - , ,ctivlties theses, 5, manuscripts, general PRIVATE ROOM or attic. Close dent, were arrested Saturday on ®^"tIon, Dr MiitonMuel- —2nd TOP HIT— typing.;. IBM. 16 years experl- to campus. Can occupy tame- Kalamazoo Road and charged with Jj^ ^ prSitot and dean of ence. 332-8384. C diately. 332-2912 after 8 p.m. 3-7/24 being minors in possessiui, liquor. the School for Advanced Graduate fun Studies, will admlnilster the EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Uni- versity Village. 355-5854. BABY SITTING, my apartment, car Troopers said they stopped the and found a brown paper grant. rait? 6-7/29 sack containing two six-packs of Dr. Kirk Lawton, director of 3-1/2 days week, September 196. 5- j. 355-6196. 5-7/28. _ beer in the back seat. Because . Che institute of International Ag- CHAD EVERETT g of their age, names were riculture, wJll dminister " SHOWN AT DUSK & LATE SHOWN AT 11:00 ONLY TECHNICOLOR' PANAVISION' FROM WARNER BROS. sertations, theses, manu- WANTED: APARTMENT to sub- released. They face examination a $130,000 grant from the Agency 2nd at 11:30 WEDN'-SDAY: "Those Fantastic Flying Fools" scripts, general typing. Electric let part or an 0f August. 353- sometime this week before Jus- for International Development for typewriter. Call 484-4218. 35Q5 3-7/26 tice of the Peace James Edgar. technical assistance to Facultad Sharon Vliet. 5-7/28 Monday, July 24, 1967 8 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan "Trustees comments (continued from page one) cut everything but faculty salary House GOP program recommended by the ad- Increases, ministration under which the Unl- "This decision was dominated verslty would have done more for by political considerations, it is the $5,000-$8t000 income groups, discriminating and Is not " In any fee structure.no unl- ed," he said. "No qualified stu- verslty can go It alone, and this dent has ever been is what MSU is now doing. I :avor from the University because of turned need- away new WASHINGTON f! — House Re- One of the poor-aid chief GOP sugges- whether they can fill the open¬ public education and this is a de- lack of money." ings. It would be designed to publicans are promising to give tlons Is for Industry YouthCorps, finite step in the wrong direc- "This is the biggest give-away the poor a bigger boost for a buck in which high school dropouts keep potential dropouts In school. tion." program I've ever seen, and I by enlisting private industry In would be given on-the-job train- In what is probably the most Thompson claimed that the want no part of it. I :hink it University budget could have been will be disastrous." GOP „ p. members of the Educa- JnK federal by private government with the lndwtry,paying 25 _ being made by the Republicans, cut by another half-million dol- Later, Clair White, D-Bay tion and Labor Committee say per cent of their wages, they estimate that this program, lars, which would have then ne- City, said he thought the new fee their Opportunity Crusade would In his appearance before the which has worked successfully cessitated only a moderate fee system was a big step forward cost less than the admlnistra- committee. Secretary of Labor in several communities, would Increase. He said he would have and added that he saw no creat tion's program but generate far W. Wlllard Wlrtz strongly op- put a million students into part- B administrative problems In put- more money for helping the poor. posed a™ laea of the the Idea u,c govern- time jobs. The employer would Rptrnit tln8111,110 effect* Getting ready to do battle in committee over legislation t o meet his payroll, t helping a private employer pay ^ full wage. L. .continue Jt ro p "We're not going to make this continue the antipoverty pro- Another GOP program would University a kind of country Gangs of Negroes bashed in ciut>," White said. "We can'task gram, the Republicans have come enlarge high school guidance the fronts of stores and carted 70 per cent of the people of Mlch- up with figures intended to show staffs to include a coordinator which the members will spend off the goods—lamps, chairs, igan who aren't affected by the that a federal outlay of $1.7 who would work closely with another week or two visiting golf clubs, beer or whatever was university to pay for its facil- billion would produce total spend- private industry In the commu- various cities for a closer look there—with impunity. ities. Ing of $3.5 billion through match- nlty, keeping track of Job open- at how the antipoverty programs Stores marked with "Soul ing state and local funds and ings and employers' needs and are working. Then the battle be- Brother," meaning Negro-owned "This new program of fees Is salary payments to trainees by testing the students to see hind closed doors will begin, or Negro-sympathizer, did not the modern version of the land- private Industry. escape destruction. grant philosophy. I: used to- help Plainfolk poet The administration ls propos¬ Crowds of angry Negroes rural youth who needed help; surged throughout the embattled now the University will help the Carl Sandburg, shown with his amara r referred also aisu w , , , , , roads opened, canals are In da1- . . , would be tragedy if it were strengthen the appeal of the Re- (continued from page one) The first disturbance came on publican proposal. Au ^ fee inCreases, except McNamara s statement that UA forces of South Vietnam and the ly use> the populatlon Is under the heels of a police raid on a being other nations contributing troops As was expected, residence those for residence halls, were Negro nightspot in the predomi¬ to South Vietnam. They are Aus¬ hall fees were raised $10 per attribute^ to a $4 million dif- nantly Negro area. Officers ar¬ tralia, South Korea,New Zealand, term, from $290 to $300 per ference between MSU's state ap- rested 73 persons, but later re¬ "I don't think he m those the Philippines and Thailand.The term. This was based on rising propriatlon and what the Univer- leased 61 of them. Police Stidthe nightspot was remarks to my apply to the under command," Westmoreland transport... Thai group 6i„v is made up of air ' Current way food additional and labor costs and the costs of hiring night sity considered its minimum needs. ' ■ 9* •*. /• - V,-. .. "-river oajrol r - * « i making his ninth in- ■ Cavanagh sklcfan investigatior Namara was Westmoreland; relax. Take out a'clgarette. Light "eve the subjects mu ieam t( ing a puff and the existence of an The final budget approved by "entffit-s. «lso included in the showed there was no truth to the spection visit to Vietnam. Johnson and McNamara had con- up, inhald, puff—zapl associate the craving for a ciga- unpleasant state of affairs." the trustees included$66,513,255 final budget was about a 5 per At the end of that trip McNa- charge. ferred at d ^ publlclzed meet. , Electric _ shock w _ to discourage rette with punishment. 'However, rherp "Hnwpvpr. there Is is no reason What about general applica¬ for the East Lansing campus, an cent salary increase for faculty, ing In Washington just before the smoking? Yes, andnowisecracks tion if the system works? increase of $5,632,286 over last President Hannah reported that to expect that it will make a general s departure. At that please. This is serious and sci- "I think," said Dr. Armstrong, year. Also included was $6,163,- the 5 per cent increase in fac- meetlng President Johnson had entiflCt person stop thinking about 589 for Oakland, $5,525,010 for "Ity salaries kept the University 'that it is a reasonable enough called In newsmen to emphasize smoking. ' Each volunteer undergoes four thing in terms of expense and the Agricultural Experimenta- in a competitive position among complete accord among the three Conditioned therapy in opera- half-hour sessions. The electric effort to be a means for use by tion Station and $6,128,908 for major colleges and universities, men on the question of sending tion they 03^ the Cooperative Extension Serv- presently ranks sixth in more troops to Vietnam. Two VounS University of Wash- charge is increased until it professionals to help people stop ice. the Big Ten in faculty salaries. Westmoreland told the airport ington psychologists have re- reaches the individual' 3 toler- smoking." news conference that if additional cruited as subjects 60 persons ance. troops are to be sent to South who say thfy want t0 st0P smok" One man who had only one ses¬ Vietnam they could be supported but c®0'1* sion later pulled out a cigarette at a party. He said he could feel without a great increase in sup- Drs. Hubert Armstrong and Al- a throbbing in his finger. ply operations. bert Carlin seat the subject with Nona This approach using It apparently was the vast an electrode attached to a wrist American supply operation that and finger. While the person is primitive instincts, said Dr. Car- McNamara was referring to when smoking, the operator depresses lin, might be more effective than he hinted that not enough troops a key discharging a surge of elec- an intellectual appeal, were actually doing the fighting, trlcity. "You could present a man Westmoreland would i A definite, tingling shock re- with graphs and testimony that how many more troops he had suits. continued smoking is detrimen- TO asked President Johnson'for, or „This lg a very baglc melhod tal to health . . ." he said, how many he might get. He said he learning" said Dr. \rm- the person would respond with the 'other guy' attitude. It is sim¬ ^ asked for any specific str0ng. "Teaching byglvinga re¬ ilar to safe driving campaigns Be whiskered number, "I have asked for troop units," ward for ble performing a desir- action or punishing for con- ... him." he feels it can't happen to ORIENTATION STUDENTS he 5aido tinuing an undesirable action This kangaroo rat is part of the live animal re¬ When asked If he could say fundamental.'" search conducted the top floor of the Museum. on It is the opposite of Pavlov's will be allotted time while at MSU to peruse and to pur- j State News photo by Chuck Michaels experiment. The Russian sci- the electrodes? entist conditioned dogs to asso- "A sh°ck is not delivered at se your books for Fall Term. For your assistance we elate Ijell ringing with food so every puff," Dr. Armstrong ex- uld like to point out the following: their mouths would water at the plained. "It is more effective when every puff is not followed Earthquake rocks Turkey aoun(j, "Through our method," Dr. by a shock. The MSU Book Store is located in the Center for ADAPAZARI, Turkey i — tially of wide devastation, with lion residents. Buildings jiggled Earth tremors shook Istanbul fears of up to 1,000 dead, first in vertical movement and • Prescription lei International Programs on Shaw Lane just East and a devastated area of western The U.S. Consulate in Istan- ground of the Stadium. The map on the back of your and central Anatolia again Sunday as more bodies were pulled from bul said it had no reports of Americans killedorlnjured.That caTsinTpaL^ThirSen ^^1^- ^ One person died folder will point out the exact location. ings collapsed. the debris of Saturday's disas- included a check of personnel at and six were injured in Istanbul. quake. two big American rubber plants The first strong shock, fol¬ • Sunglasses There will be extra personnel especially trained Experts predicted shocks —U.S. Royal and Goodyear— lowed an hour later by a weaker would continue through Pope near this city of 110,000 halfway one and all night by repeated to assist you in selecting your books. Paul's visit to this country Tues- between Istanbul and Ankara. tremors, came at an hour when • Repairs while you v day and Wednesday. The Saturday earthquake many villagers were in open pub- The Book Store will be open 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 The Sunday tremors caused rumbled through Istanbul and lie markets buying fruits and no reported damage. The Kan- dilli Observatory outside Istan- southeastward in a wide arc vegetables. They returned in around the Sea of Marmara that terror to wrecked four and flve- Bator O p.m. Monday-through Friday. bul said the after-shocks could touched 456 villages and towns, story apartment buildings, It was the second major earth- 223 Abbott (Next to State Theater) All book list information will be available at be expected to continue for the Broken communications pi 10 days. vented word on casualties from quake In Turkey in a year. On next the store. many of those communities. Aug. 19,1966,2,500 persons were Rescuers toiled here and in The tremor was felt strongly estimated to have died in quakes 1/4 lb. 456 villages and towns under a by Istanbul's almost three mil- which shook eastern Turkey. There will be a complete selection of new and scorching sun to remove the dead and the rubble-entombed living from flattened communities. LUNCHEON SPECIAL . . . iw*' used texts as well as paperback books and references. CAFETERIA GROUND BEEF Officials refused to specific estimate of casualties, give any STEAK BURGER 72< N ASSfMIir LINE O BURGER except to say that 60 bodies had FRENCH FRIES A fine selection of MSU sportswe'ar, giftwear, been counted far and that the jewelry--along with art and engineering supplies so toll could reach into the hun¬ dreds. REGULAR MENU and equipment will be available to you at 55C CATERING The Turkish Health Ministry Filet Steak . . . $1.37 Sirloin Steak . . . $1.33 TO PARTIES OF ANY SIZE reasonable prices. and the Turkish national radio Pork Chops . . . $1.18 gave the figure on recovered . . . Including Texas Toast, Baked Potato, bodies and said there were at Tossed Salad. ' / Lightning ng y least 110 injured, half of them In critical condition. ED 2-2913 Turkish newspapers, however, THE BEST STEAK HOUSE EAST LANSING .. Fast service ADVERTISEMENT said the toll could reach several 218 ABBOTT RD. hundred. The semiofficial Ana¬ tolia News Agency had told ini-