Tuesday Inside today. Partly cloudy.. . MICHIGAN STATE MEWS .. . . . and mild today, high 83. of showers tonight, low Face of a riot p.4 STATE Chance 62. U.S. swimmers at Pan-Ams p.8 'Dirty Dozen' reviewed p.5 UNIVERSITY East Lansing, Michigan August 1, 1967 Vol. 60 Number 28 CITES TROOP DELAY Romney charges LBJ played politics' in riot Washington time table as repcitei DETROIT .PI—Gov.%eorge Romney Times. accused President Johnson Monday- of He cited no specific inaccuracies having "played, politics during a period "Xobody realized better his own chronology instead. of tragedy" in riot-torn Detroit last week. than I did. that my request¬ It was in answer to a question th His assertion alluded to a delay by the White House In the commitment of federal ing the troops might be a ney said: "I think the Fresider.i United States playeJ ixslitics In j troops to quell racial violence In the na¬ tion's fifth largest city. factor in the reluctance to of tragedy and riot." To protect the Great Society or commit them . Romney, an unannounced candidate for ban-ass you? he was asked. the Republican nomination for pres u'll hav m," Romney re- in 1968, also told a hews conference in Plied. of events leading up to troop commitment effect that delayed commitment contribut¬ At another point, he was if lack the one The New York . that differed from ed toward the toll of at least 41 killed of action by the President for 20 hours Milwaukee and property and related damages of an rimes attributed to Washington officials. And In repeating his chronology at Mon- could have contributed to the toll of lives estimated $500 million. and property. The governor measured d.iy'« n«we oncet Ramnry referred Suspected looters lean against the glass of a beauty shop on Milwaukee's north side. The city was his words care¬ fully In the nev s conference that followed a several times to "inaccuracies" in the (please turn to the back page) declared to be in a state of emergency Monday after a night of looting, sniping and burning. UP I Telephoto speech before the National Association of Counties. U.S. Atty. Gen. Ramsey Clark, who also Milwaukee by Romney, canceled a teenagers was criticized rem scheduled appearance before the associa¬ tion on Wednesday. Vice President Hubert m H.Humphrey is to speak Wednesday night. Negroes Romney also accused President Johnson of "a complete and absolute distortion" In in riots, as tional tanks MILWAUKEE, Wis, if; --Police andNa- Guardsmen swept Milwaukee's charged with eight counts of attempted murder, but would not be charged with the patrol area emergency workers, only uniformed men moved downtown. a televised announcement of the dispatch of federal troops last Monday night. to of Several times the President referred Romney's request for help and inability Michigan authorities to control the DETROIT f—Two young Negro men charged Monday that they watched, hor¬ ror-strive as shotgun blasts from a raid¬ the wall and picked the knife i:p and the police told him to stab him (the officer) with it," Davis said. "The boy started crying and said no and murder of Moschea at this time. But beneath the superficial calm, ten¬ situation. ing p?: tv ■ uniformed officers killed two dropped the knife," he said. streets clear of traffic Monday and unarm / ,\e.;ro youths. The two killed Two units of the 2,400-man guard force sion still seethed In the riot area. Squads Romney told Relman Morln, Associated "And that's when another policeman hit declared its riot-torn Negro district tem¬ Press special correspondent, in an exclu¬ called out by Gov. Warren P. Knowles were posed to move quickly and disperse were of a trio slain mysteriously me in the head and told me to keep my porarily secure, but the paralyzed metro¬ small groups of Negro youths who gathered sive interview Sunday night that "we were at the he! lit of Detroit's riot. face toward the wall and then in the next took over patrolling of the inner core politan area waited tensely for nightfall. and drifted and formed again near Third pleading for federal troops as fast as we The iir itions Ignited a sweeping in¬ second I heard a shot," Davis said. "I where more than 90 per cent of Mil¬ "We don't know what will happen," could get them" during the early hours of vestigate : by lav. enforcement officers heard somebody fall to the floor." waukee's 86,000 Negroes live, providing Street, where shattered glass and debris Police Lt. John Davis, heading city forces the Detroit riots. a respite for some of the 1,000 or more from the stores that serve the district ranging ::om the FBI and U.S. Depart¬ Davis said officers later ordered the at a joint command post, said. still Grimly, Romney told Morln that nearly ment of Justice to Detroit police. others to "run home" but "Fred asked policemen on duty since Sunday afternoon. lay in the street. Eighteen armored personnel carriers 24 hours elapsed between the time he The victims, Aubrey Pollard, 19, Carl If he could get his shoes and shirt and armed with .50 caliber machine guns. The riot was preceded by a downtown altercation between two Negro women Mayor Henry Maier, who had asked for first asked Washington for help and the mo¬ Cooper, 1", and Fred Temple, 18, were the policeman told him he could." "They're better for street fighting than the guardsmen and proclaimed the emer¬ ment federal troops were committed to riot found shot to death on the ground floor That, said Davis, was the last he saw tanks," one staff officer explained— early Sunday. Police broke that up, but gency that permitted quarantine of the zones. At that time, however, he refused of an annex to a flashy mldtown motel, of T emple. headed for Milwaukee from Eau Claire sporadic unrest continued through the day city, told a news conference he would not r.o draw any conclusions, saying he would "The Algiers." and Camp McCoy as local and state of¬ until window-! rer Icing touched cff the hesitate to ask for federal troops if he comment specially later on. "We have reasonable grounds to be¬ major disorder about dark. ficials Joined to keep the disorders that left two dead and more than 60 injured thought they were necessary. The governor gave Morln a chronology lieve a felony has been committed," said William L. Cahalan, Wayne County New tremor hits from rekindling. Milwaukee was a city doubly sealed. prosecutor. Both of the victims—Police patrolman Byran Moschea, 24, and elderly Mrs. The inner core, five square from the very miles reaching edge of the downtown busi¬ "Everyone |hey shot they shot for no reason at all," said Roderick D. Davis, Caracas as death Charred district through the seamy near north Forrest ness Ann Mosley—were white. Their bodies a 20-year-old rock 'n roll singer who were found Monday in the ruins of a side, was shut off by barricades. And police from the 20 overwhelmingly said lie was staying at the motel to avoid count rises to 80 burned-out sniper's nest where four other being on the streets during the riots. officers were wounded before the shooting white suburbs ringing the central city of CARACAS, Venezuela P — The second Davis told the Associated Press that 750,000 manned road blocks to prevent earthquake in three days struck battered stopped. Dlst. Atty. Hugh O'Connel said 55- year-old Orey Tucker, a Negro, would be entrance. parking lots were Freeways stretched emptily, deserted except for 129 killed "punctured and ignited " sparked the in 16 or stormed after seven the 17 police and National Guardsmen second into the motel annex at 1 a.m. or or eight shots cracked from third floor of the three- Caracas Monday and the number ofknown dead reached 80. Thousands of persons were reported In¬ SL'BIC BAY. Philippines Iff]—The car¬ jured and 100 or more were missing. disaster, according to Lanham. He said story, converted mansion. They smashed The U.S. Embassy said eight Ameri¬ rier Forrestal, ravaged by fire and ex¬ AUG. 31 DEADLINE plosions off Vietnam Saturday, docked the "cause of the puncture is unknown "at this time." through doors, looking for snipers, he cans were killed, all in the quake that said. hit this U.S. naval base Monday night Saturday. at The flames spread and exploded ammu¬ He said the officers, cursing and swing¬ bringing the bodies of some of the 129 nition, bombs and rockets on other planes A garment factory collapsed in Monday's Fee reduction outlined men who died in the disaster. Even Subic Bay small fires still blazed aboard the carrier. in heavily armed at the time for an air strike against North Vietnam. Many of the dead were trapped in ing their shotgun butts, rounded up two white girls and about three or four Negro men. They had "about eight or nine of us standii,-; against a wall," including two tremor, and 10 persons were feared trapped in the wreckage. The tremor spread panic among-city residents still Seven men were unaccounted for, and unnerved by the weekend nightmare. living compartments below deck. Most of friends from Davis' room, Cleveland Reed, in notices to students 64 were injured in the worst U.S. naval tragedy in a combat zone since World War II, the ship's officers reported. them were crewmen of night shifts catch¬ ing up on their sleep. Most deaths oc¬ curred during the first 30 minutes, as the 19, and Temple. Davis said one officer, who he described as a Detroit policeman holding a shotgun The government reported that more than 1,500 persons had been injured by Sat¬ urday's quake, and Gov. Raul Valera of About 42,000 notices are being mailed fill out an application on the back of the One fire alarm sounded aboard the initial fire touched off a chain reaction of the Caracas district predicted Sunday that in one hand, "pulled a knife out of his and submit the family's 76,000-ton carrier as she moved into the death toll might climb to 300. to MSU students to announce the new full- announcement, explosions and blazes, Lanham said. own pocket and dropped it on the floor. time fees and outline procedures for ob¬ 1966 federal income tax return with all Subic Bay and two others after she had Lanham and Beling had only the high¬ "He told the boy (an unidentified Negro) The earthquake struck in the evening, relevant W'-2 forms. docked. Officers said the fires were est praise for the performance of the its sharpest Jolt coming at 8:05 p.m. taining the fee reduction by Income. to pick the laiife up," Davis said. "He Students who qualify and apply by Aug. caused by smouldering mattresses and ship's of 4,300. Five apartment buildings in the Altamira Full-time Michigan undergraduates not crew (the Negro »y) said he wasn't going to 31 will have their fees reduced fall term. other material in compartments In the Beling said the tragedy had produced section, one 16 stories and another 10 subsidized by federal, state or private do it. The policeman said if you don't If a student's application is approved carrier's shattered stern. a "concrete demonstration of the worth we're going to kill you. stories, collapsed in seconds beforeresi- grants or scholarships are eligible for between Sept. 1 and Oct. 6, he will re¬ fees less than the ceiling $167 a term if All the fires were quickly put out, but (please turn to the back page) "So the boy reached down slowly against (please turn to the back page) ceive a refund about Nov. 1. officers said more were likely. their parents' gross annual income is less Applications after Oct. 6 will be con¬ Rear Adm. Harvey P. Lanham, com¬ than $16,700. sidered for fee reductions beginning win¬ mander of Carrier Division II, who made Michigan graduate students will pay ter term. the Forrestal his flagship, and the ship's $167 a term or $500 per year regardless The reduced-fee provision applies only commanding officer, Capt. John K. Beling, of Income or financial aids. to full-time Michigan undergraduates. told a news conference aboard the car¬ Fees for out-of-state undergraduates are rier that 21 planes were destroyed and 42 Final approval for the in-state gradu¬ a flat $400; fees for Michigan graduate ate fees was given informally Friday by damaged in the carrier's complement of students are $ 167 and for out-of-state| 80. the trustees. They had left question of graduate students, $410. resident graduate fees undecided at their The 52 bodies aboard the Forrestal In-state part-time fees are based on July 21 meeting. the maximum in-state full-time fees: were placed in canvas bags, wrapped in 1-3 credits, $51: 4-6 credits, $81; 7-9 U.S. flags and borne ashore within an This increases resident graduate fees hour after the ship docked. They will be $49 per term or $147 per year. credits, $116. Out-of-state part-time fees are based flown to the U.S. air base at nearby Clark Tuition for undergraduates who qualify on the new out-of-state full-time fees: Field for the final trip home. will be 3 per cent of their parents' gross 1-3 credits, $122; 4-6 credits, $193; 7-9 The other bodies were aboard the hos¬ annual income, but not less than $118 a credits, $278. pital ship Repose, which also took many term, the present tuition rate for in-state Zero-credit registration for graduate of the "badly wounded. Other wounded were students, students who have completed sent to a Subic hospital. their re¬ search and are still working for their Of the dead, only 62 have been iden¬ "Gross parental income'" includes the tified, the officers reported. Many of the degrees is now $51. Research fees are earnings of the father and mother—even bodies were charred or mangled. $40 per unit, and off-campus courses are if they are separated or divorced. An A4 Skyhawk's fuel tank which was To get the reduction, the stucTent must $17 a credit. Thant: GREENSBORO, N.C, ,0 — U.N. Secre¬ VC particularly against Americans," he said. fighting struggle against foreign intervention, but tary-General U Thant has disputed direct¬ A surge of applause came from the au¬ he added the same situation existed In the ly the U.S. version of its fight in Vietnam. dience of about 8,000 Sunday night in the American Revolutior He says lt is against a nationalist inde¬ Greensboro Memorial Auditorium as part The Burmese diplomat, who previously pendence movement, not against Commu¬ of the Friends World Conference. nist He said, "I am convinced that the war had questioned the U.S. course in Vietnam aggression. Thant chose an international forum of cannot be brought to an end until the United in less blunt terms, yld he considered the "totally unnecessary." Quakers, long-time advocates of peace, for his strongest criticism yet of the U.S. States and her allies realize that lt Is being fought by Vietnamese, not as a war of war He there told a news conference before his Cleanup deck after the fire which has claimed over 70 address that if the bombing onNorthViet- military action. Communist aggression, but as a war of The crew of the carri< r Forrestal cleans up the flight nam were halted, there could be "mean¬ "It is nationalism, and not communism, that animates the resistance movement In national independence." He said it was argued that only a minor¬ ingful talks within a matter of a few lives. Holes in the deck ere caused by exploding v a bombs. The wreckage of charred aircraft hangs ®v®r UPI Radiotelephoto weeks." the sides. Vietnam against all foreigners, and now ity of Vietnamese were involved in the CI Eric Planln, executive editor fATE NEWS Lawrence Werner, managing editor Bobby Soden, campus editor Edward A. Brill, editorial editor Joe Mitch, sports editor ems°s Tuesday Morning, August 1, 1967 EDITORIAL This riot called SoLl-BtoTtjEH Meanwhile, Mayor Jerome city officials quibble over II A nation's leaders should statements that state and lo¬ cal authorities were unable P. Cavanagh dumped at least organization and adminis¬ have been asking "Why is a tration. Far too much to control the situation in partial blame for the fire- significant segment of our of poverty funds fail to filter Detroit. White House offi¬ bombing and looting that hit society susceptible to riot¬ down to those in the slums; cials also stated that Gpv. his city on the doorstep of ing, whether spontaneous or success reaches neither far George Romney favored. Congress. organized?" nor wide. layed commitment of sol¬ Cavanagh charged that But the question was polit¬ "all our priorities areoutof This is Detroit 1967, ically translated to read, diers, which Romney firmly balance," and said he hoped Newark 196»7, Grand Rapids "i. ould the Great Society denied. it would not be years before 1967, Cambridge, 1967, and be protected or should a po- Romney had withheld Congress took action on ed¬ Spanish Harlem 1967, atime tential 1968 Republican statements about the polit¬ ucation bills, anti-poverty to evaluate the immediate presidential candidate be ical aspects of the. troops' measures and the like. causes in light of the under¬ embarrassed?" delay with a promise to speak Yet even Detroit's mayor lying reasons, a time to find And while hundreds of De¬ later. Monday he did, ac¬ out why a rock was thrown, favored what Congress and troit residents rummage cusing Johnson of playing not who threw the first rock. politics in a "period of trag¬ panic-stricken citizens will through their shattered concern themselves with This is not Election Time homes worrying about the edy and riot." 1968, not a time to make or The partisan game spread first--military suppression next dollar, the next meal --when he suggested a fed¬ break political reputations, or the next place to sleep, to include public statements eral government program to not a time to solicit public the powers that be remain by Congressmen expressing train and pay for 1,000 ad¬ support by "instant" solu¬ more concerned with polit¬ amazement and an inability ditional police in each of the tions or sugar-coated legis¬ ical maneuvering. to believe the possibilities nation's largest cities. lation promising an end to The partisan Jousting ap¬ of a Democratic President All too often poverty pro¬ poverty and a beginning of a parently began with the none- trying to injure a 1968 Re¬ Great Society. grams fall short of worth¬ too-subtle implications be¬ publican presidential con¬ while achievement because --The Editors hind President Johnson's tender. Attacks studen OLD, NEW MINGLING To the Editor: and with the rising costs of education, it is difficult enough to meet these costs I would like to bring it to the attention without having the personnel department of everyone, that the students who are say we are not even worth the minimum deeply rooted ih past working for the University this summer wage of our classifications. The expe¬ France are being discriminated against by the personnel department. During winter term, all students who rience which many of us have is garded. 1 disre¬ have talked to various union repre¬ By JUDY BELL France is famous, have mellowed through were working 40 hours a week were made sentatives and most agree that what the the years. No good wine, as any French¬ "regular employes" because they were To many Europeans, America seems personnel department is doing is wrong, to be a land of skyscrapers and big cities, Judy Bell Is a Stat# News summer corre¬ man knows, can be produced In a day, doing the -same work, but not getting the and even against the union contract. A spondent In France where she Is participating same wages or benefits, as the regular wrapped in a shiny tissue of modernity for it is the aging process which brings grievance was written but the chief ste¬ and tied wjtfi a multicolored ribbon of in the Experiment In Internationa' Living. In with it Just the right bouquet and taste. employes. ward would not approve it so it was sent Now the University personnel depart¬ automobiles stretching from coast to her second article, she discusses ho// French The methods of production, which date back. No action has yet been taken by ment has reverted back to its old policy coast. history blends with the present to make France back as far as French history itself, the union. for the summer. We students who are not What brings this picture even more what it is today. Miss. Bell is the editor oF the dictate a process of painstaking care going to school this summer are being Since I could get no satisfaction through clearly in focus for the French is that which cannot be hurried. Winemaking student daily, the SMU Campus ai Southern forced to work for less money an hour, regular channels, 1 am writing this let¬ American history seldom extends further for the French is more than preparing Methodist University. not permitted to Join the union, and not ter to let all know what is going on. hack than Jamestown, 1607, while France a beverage. For them the spirit it em¬ traces its own civilization back to pre¬ bodies expresses the very principles of permitted to work overtime. dearly for. the right to enjoy the freedom For many students, working in the historic times. Hardouin-Mansart, the famed architect life itself—and dates back almost as far. In which they live. summer Is. our only source of income, Nowhere is this symbiotic relation of a of Versailles. modern France deeply rooted in the past Many of the small details of daily life ■ An apparent contradiction is Charles Indeed different. At the same time de Gaulle. Most will admit that their noticeable than in Dijon, a city STATE NEWS are more which boasts of inhabitants even before much is similar, but those who speak president exercises powers almost worthy "Americanization" of present-day of a king, but at the same .time they the Gallo-Roman era. As early as the of an choose to let the chain of events that will Europe must delve more deeply. In most WELCOME WEEK eleventh century Dijon was the capital one day remove him from power run its of the duchy of Burgundy which stretched cases what is being transformed is not natural course rather than themselves across much of today's France and in¬ really attitudes or patterns of thought, but cluded Flanders, Belgium, Luxembourg more simply the outward means of exist¬ upsetting the balance that now exists. and Holland. Certainly no spot is without some his¬ ence. the A people, like the French, so woven in and woof of history that they One who seeks such a natural balance in life can easily accept a government that most feel drawing closer and closer ADVERTISING IS tory, recorded or otherwise, but the in¬ warp scarcely notice its effect, still do not to socialism as the state provides more habitants of Dijon have become conditioned to this ever-present mingling at the old and new. Like the perspective of many of the people living in France today, their easily break loose of Its intangible hold. A crisis in the Middle East, a new Soviet satellite or even race riots in Newark are little more than stretching behind and more benefits of services. For the French the such a society clearly out¬ weigh the detriments and they can only gaze in wonderment at those who would TWO-FACED . . . outlook both on themselves and the world them. allow the workers to be used for the around them has been deeply affected by profit of rich capitalists. The French, of course, remain vitally this Juncture, interested in international happenings (at History has indeed taught her lessons At first glance, traffic in downtown least 66 per cent read a newspaper a day, well, for the country which has already Dijon could be the traffic in any American dealt with the problem of Algeria and 21 per cent read two or more and only herself driven from Vietnam can see city—if the conglomeration of Renaults, nine per cent read none at all), but at was Citroens and Opels were converted to little reason for the present conflict. the same time they carefully pinpoint their Fords, Chevrolets and Oldsmobiles. But Neither can those who seek only equili¬ own activity on a more personal level. brium understand why an assassin's bul¬ nowhere In the U.S. would this same traf¬ fic pass the Mas Ion du Change, a building Life still remains profoundly simple for let in Dallas replaced the epitome of restored from the thirteenth century, con¬ most Frenchmen. They are a people who culture and savoir-faire with a cowboy tinue on to the Church of Notre Dame, understand human rights and the dignity politician from Texas. At the same time constructed between 1229 and 1250 and of man. Backed by a multitude of think¬ the French look with disdain on those highlighted by a facade of gargoyles unique ers and poets who have expressed such who would draw out the conflict in the in gothic architecture, and finally reach ideas for ages, the French are quick to Suez merely for national aggrandizement. the Hotel de Vllle (town hall) designed by point out that they have already fought French attitudes, like the wine for which H0U) L0N6 ARE <!?oom sputtering a —an average of nine per cent a wage controls, him abandoning only once—just racist, rapist, religious fanatic, department would have required bit after its phenomenal growth. year since 1960. Per capita : Jack the Ripper-type psychopath. 70 tons of explosive to destroy; The cost of living is going up. grown 55 per cent Maggot Is portrayed beautifully the set was then renovated so that Investors seem to lack their old the same period. by Telly Savalas who probably hundred thousand Span¬ 2 clinics holds the record for doing this sort of role. only one ton was required. If audience response Is any confidence. They're holding onto their money Wages have been more and more. climbing fast¬ iards have deserted the farms to enter industry. In I960 manufac¬ One actor, who was not even indication of the effectiveness of tured goods accounted for 12 here agiven billing Walker, brings with Lopez and off his part just a motion picture, then "The Dirty Dozen" is amazingly suc¬ er than production. The servers, way many economic both foreign and Span¬ ob¬ per cent of sales abroad. In 1966 they accounted for 34 per cent. ELEGANTE $7.50 Almost every man can use , as well as any of the film's cessful. The movie seemed to Industrial investment is de¬ watchband. And what teachers ish, see it, Inflation must be a new Oscar winners. Vernon Pinkley elicit laughter and applause from contained before it reaches a clining because a cost squeeze as played by Donald Sutherland the assembled crowd with great better gift than the world's breakaway stage. cut profits, and perhaps be¬ Two is one of the most intriguing frequency. cause investors worried over most wanted watchband—a workshops aimed at im¬ semi-retards that I have The best thing, they believi .. ever, that proving the quality of mathemat¬ This is a motion picture would be Yo cut back govern- tighter money policies at the Speidel TWIST-O-FLEX. He seen In a motion picture. sends you home satisfied. ics and science education pro¬ ment spending in order to cut beginning of 1967. The govern- can twist it, turn it, even tie grams for elementary school The most convincing of the FINAL WEEKS! demand. Many believe spending it in a knot. So why wait? teacher candidates haveattracted hasn't been cut because of poli- t'011' Performances at 1:30& 8p.m. Come in today- 61 college and university profes¬ grip Daily Except Sunday Eve. at tics. small number and m e- Ml MEIIII HI 1111 Rolling Stones sors here this month. looks as If A 7:30 p.m. Both will give participants lab¬ Two the If this is true, it inaction may November when continue until big political Jil businesses went to the Wages have gone up faster than wall. Adults Eves. Si Adults Sunday $2,00— Weekday Matinees JOHN RICHARD UHI JUl HI Mllll 8IDH1I Mill in Thompson oratory experience with mate¬ RUN Mint HUT Cllll changes appear to be due within productive capacity and the gov- $1.50 . . . Children $1.00, All released in drug cases m 11 ih hum linn rials and projects in the new ele¬ mentary curricula. Fifteen of the nation's fore¬ the government of 74-year-old Gen. Francisco Franco. heavily has been spending on roads and other in¬ dustrial infrastructure. These Times. METROCOIOR Plus Fun Cartoon Jewelry 223 MAC most educators In science and LONDON .? — Rolling Stones against conviction June 29 of The need to reduce demtnd PROGRAM INF. 485-6485 Next I WOMAN TIMES SEVEN factors in the inflation. Jagger and Keith Richard allowing the smoking of marijua¬ are mathematics will be guest lec- Mick by a cut in public expenditures Navarro called for a number of were freed Monday from jail na in his country home on Eng¬ isn't a secret. The governor of sentences for alleged drug of¬ land's south coast. The appeal the Bank of Spain, Mariano Na¬ unpalatable measures. STORE HOURS: WEDNESDAY NOON UNTIL 9:00 P.M. Many of them are presently fenses by Britain's lord chief judges quashed his H e wanted .prices on public varro Rubio, said it publicly MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 5:30 P.M. Involved In developing andwrlting •ed. The government justice and two other appeal 12 months' imprisonment. long summary of current 6 per CLOSE D SATURDAY the major new curricula in sci¬ court judges. Richard was not in the troubles. He also warned of the has be?un t0 Jo this' hike on state railroads, in¬ ence and mathematics for use In London's hippies and so-called room but waiting in a nearby need for sacrifice among Spani' creased water costs. elementary schools. flower children immediately de¬ office. His defense counsel said ards. He wanted salaries controlled E.G. Begle, director, School cided to celebrate with a "pray- he had chicken pox. "Going on indefinitely Mathematics Study Group in" at the evening prayer serv¬ Lord Parker, summing up aft¬ more or less controlled infla- within the frame of productivity, (SMSG), and Robert B. Davis, ice of Westminster Abbey and a er two hours of argument, said tion," said Navarro, of Such firm control probably can't be made effective in less than a director, the Madison Project, "love-ln" in Hyde Park. prosecution evidence about a girl the question. are among those scheduled to Jagger, 23, long-haired leader in the nude at Richard's house "The true option is betweei year to 18 months. Sheffield goes to address the two-week mathemat¬ of the pop group, failed in his party when police raided It in determined policy of restoring He asked that something be ics conference which began Mon¬ appeal of a conviction by a low¬ February had a very prejudicial equilibrium at home and abroad done to lift the \ er court of illegally possessing effect. with the necessary sacrifices, surpluses. Soon matin** lengths. . . day. "She was in a merry mood," and a policy without sacrifices record wheat crop, too big for pep pills. But the court upheld Richard Netzel, American As¬ his appeal against sentence of said Lord Parker, "but one could BEST IN FOREIGN FILMS to keep you on time and sociation for the Advancement of three months' imprisonment and expect a house guest after a good Science (AAAS); and Richard substituted a conditional dis¬ dinner to be in a merry mood. TODAY Suchman, Inquiry Development charge. "Finally, one is left with the THRL compliments coming < Program, will speak during the "If you keep out of any trou¬ evidence of her undress, the sug¬ four- week science curriculum THURS. ble for the next 12 months," gestion being that this was only workshop which opened Sunday. Lord Chief Justice Parker told consistent with her inhibitions 1-FEATURES pendant watches guised Both Institutes are sponsored Jagger, "what has happened will having been freed by cannabis by the National Science Founda¬ not be on your record as a con¬ marijuana smoking," he said. The Most Talked About Picture ! tion, the Science and Mathemat¬ viction." "No Jury could possibly be sure n golden cases. From our ics Teaching Center and MSU. Keith Richard, 23, the group's she smoked it merely on that W. Robert Houston, associate lead guitarist, won his appeal evidence." ROD STEIGtR THE PAWNBROKER collection, actual size: professor of elementary and spe¬ SHOWN AT 7:10 & Later BOX OFFICE OPEN AT 8:00 cial education at MSU, Is director A. Round B. Stylized. S0M of the mathematics conference. ALSO THE UMBRELLAS of CHERBOURG Julian R. Brandou, acting direc¬ | ' NOW! ALL COLOR SHOWN AT ');10 P.M. ONLY tor of MSU's Science and Mathe¬ EXCLUSIVE SHOWING Classic round. matics Teaching Center, Is di¬ FRI! "JULIET of the SPIRIT" and "RED DESERT" r rector of the science workshop. The claws of terror...the stings of death! | LAST 3 DAYS! Program Information 482-3905 COOL Mi Detroit Gl: Don't send me home' LSHOWN AT DUSK S, LA~i LP* ■ SHOWN AT 11:00 ONLY1 PANAVISION' TECHNICOLOR' DETROrr If)—"Don't send me Short Subject dd Color Cartoon home, please Lord# For home STARTING WEDNESDAY 1:00-2:55-5:05-7:15-9:30 Is the height of folly. After all, here In Vietnam we have but Jerry Lewis at The Big Mouth' also 'Ride Beyond Vengeance^ one airborne unit, and at home Starts FRIDAY we have two." OPEN NIGHTLY AT 8:00 Thus wrote Spec. 4 George Mason from Blen Hoa, Viet¬ NOW! EXCLUSIVE! nam, In a letter to the Detroit Free Press Monday. kl_L COLOR PROGRAM Mason added: HERE COMES I "President Kennedy said that man and can be as big as that no he wants problem of human UMULeAGAjNlj . destiny Is beyond human beings. Was he right? "I am from an all-white sub¬ urb of Detroit. Living In the same barracks with me here at Blen Hoa Is a friend of mine, a Negro, from the city of De¬ troit. We two have no problems except worrying about our homes, families, neighborhoods and country. "No, don't send me home. Lord, I'm too young to die and EDNESPAY:' 'Those Fantastic Flying Fools^_ IbV^RD FoiTpA BOTER NATWKK Jacobson's too old to cry." Tuesday, August 1, 1967 7 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Air power restored; Cadets end training jets rip N. Vietnam with fatigues, claimed one U.S. UjS. plane was de¬ SAIGON !*— fortifications and water . The rioting produced an after¬ nal, Red Flag. For the first traffic. check it. .. close your packetl" to do "whatever is necessary" math of speechmaking In Con¬ Typing Service time, the Journal criticized t The UJS. Command said "there After remaining in the gas- to meet the national riot crisis, gress Monday but only one con¬ ilitary leaders that were filled chamber long enough to be were no significant actions re¬ regardless of what the war In crete action. Both chambers ap¬ ....... — . Multlllth offset printing. Pro- fAfiQlnnal rnAQlQ fvnt . nor. _ 337— n said: "For » v»iwy historic period after seizing state . , power, the proletariat is faced fairly long - . ported" In any of the operations being conducted by allied forces, Following their usual pattern, enemy units apparently had elect- Moscow fighting certain that the masks were func¬ tioning correctly, the cadets were marched around to the decontam¬ ination circle outside with a new¬ Vietnam costs. There was a hint that he might have higher taxes in mind. perhaps proved President's a resolution granting the investigative com¬ mission the power of subpoena. Various congressional com¬ EXPERIENCED TYPIST. theses, with the danger of losing state power; similarly, after estab- Dis- ushing the army, it still faces ed t0 remain out of sight, await- a time of thelr Qwn for another outbreak In the Chooslng ground rising crime rate gan category that covers every¬ ly-gained respect for the gas mask. After hours of instruction in map reading, the coeds again The riot problem w.:S i top topic at a hews conference which Johnson opened by announcing mittees are expected to conduct their own inquiries Into the causes, effects and possible sertations, manu- danger of losing the army, MOSCOW In fighting cures of the disorder. thing from public swearing to donned their battle gear and he had tapped Washington attor- scripts, general typing. Electric "Should the army be lost and There were no accounts of crime, the Soviet Union's top drunken attacks on policemen. 484-4218. jts power usurped by bad ele- new fighting In or near the de- policeman said Monday, "It is marched to the field. Paired In ney David Glnsburg to be execu- On another facet of the sec¬ Official statistics are kept se 3_8/2 ments, then everything achieved militarized zone dividing Viet- niuiwoi necessary to nece&aary iu talk laifv lessir 3 a avubo u t _ . i . inHlrUtinns flr» teams of two, they hiked through IcdlllD ui nicy bMiwugu tive director of the new presi- f - ond-guessing on Detroit, John¬ , by the proletariat and the work- nam, where 23 UJS» Marines rights * and more about duties." ' that crime has become an in- . gullies ® and woods and crawled dential advisory commission .... son said that he did not care to brush with only their civil disorders, approval, on the basis of j_ . . . . , voice . killed and 191 wounded in Nikolai A. Shchelokov, minis- through TYPING: TERM papers, reports, in8If Pe°Ple cqM tVio It oaiU said the w111 comenH10"tho s people wm turn* iu n«u6«v. flrmv and "the a naught." r^V- were ambush ^luiuayi Saturday. They re- for me protection of the pruiccuuu public _rp,sin_lv serlous Droblem compasses to guide them. Mi- The news session took place the information he had at the • 332- 11 UiC army aL 41 v t41^ rev- an ojiiuusii a" *^ ter ior ier d„_lt Hpsnirp tu_ rhp nreachine of Com- nrparhinp C = 0/3 olutionary masses must enthusi- ported killing 40 enemy In that order, declared greater efforts HlUm St p ldCOlOgy ... tliat CTlme IS. . a~ raculously, of 75 were ylost. # __ only two teams out before one of Gov. -X lhis George own \n i- nv,r, Romr.ey held Detroit and in nptrOit and moment, of a proposal by Mayor J control "hooli' + 4 _ (|l AV%<_ t Jerome Cavanagh of Detroit for _• astlcally respond to their great engagement. were needed were neeueu to vu wuunui uw..- r9ri..ai.sttf. eopruntion The long-awaited two-day trip accused Johr.son of playing poll- creation of a 1,000-man federal ANN BROWN, typist and multlllth offset printing. Dissertations, le«?er Chairman Mao's battle call to support /-< eimnnrt army and theo arrtiu 3nH In the Chleu nrrtoram program, fho Hoi or Open nnmh^rrtf thenumberof Arms gans and drunkards, thieve-and Hpfp^fnrc defectors rapists" and other criminals n 1 c ir in some Pshcheiokov Shchelokov claimed areas claimed . i that single crime . in to the Army Infantry Center and tic- "in period of tragedy and riot force. cherish the people." from Communist ranks swelled Russia. School at Ft. Benning, Ga., gav^, riot" in the nation's fifth larg- "I would see a good many theses, manuscripts, general had been committed recently." look at the "real city. The key word in the statement to 518 last week, about 100 more jn an article in the Soviet But, he admitted, crime preven- the coeds a problems connected with it," typing. IBM, 16 years experl-i indicated that Mao than each of the previous two Coit Army," not just Jthe WACs. Johnson said* Johnson was asked for his f^rty neu spaPel" — ence. 332-8384. C hchelokov wrote that tion work does not touch many' The cadets werfe welcomed by still was encountering resist- weeks, officials said, Pravda, Shchelokov ■ , thoughts about what a reporter "I haven't received his sug¬ BARBI MEL, Professional typ¬ ance to a campaign he launched The ~ new total brings to 19,505 juvenile delinquency is a prob- P*°Pie- the real Maj. Gen. John M. Wright, Jr., :allec Komney's hicreaslng gestions. All 1 know is what I ist. No Job too large or too last August to oust Liu. the number of defectors who Jem, "the fight against alcohol- "I" some place commanding general, who de- criticism 'er the weekend of saw in the paper, I will be glad small. Block off campus. 332- The Red Flag article Sun- have come over to the govern- jSm has decreased recently," fight against crime" is only ver- scribed the goals of the spl-aWl- {he administration han¬ to have them evaluated and con¬ 3255. C day called for the overthrow of ment since the first of the year. and something needs to be done bal, h® wrote. "Many indignant ^ 285-square-mile military *c- ing dled the dispatch of federal troops sidered by the executive and "the handful of people in au- Of the week's total, 447 were about "apartment hooligans" whu words are addressed to drunk- tablishment as "putting a rifle to Detroit. " legislative branches." thorlty" —a tag used by Mao- military, 56 were political and make life miserable for others ards, hooligans^and other antl- properly trained and "I don't think anything is to " jg were from other Viet Cong in crow ded Soviet housing blocks, social elements with little el- equipped on the ground and sus- be gained," Johnson replied,"by cultural revojJlUoiu Shchelokov's Public Order 'e(^ 'One t of the serious factors talning it." trying to justify or explain." ^ Llu and his followers. Gen. Maxwell Taylor and Clark Ministry was created last year Thg women saw the schooI ^ He said he thinks the civil dis- crisis such as those of the racial PRINT* 221 South Grand, 482- The article did n : single o Clifford, President Johnson's ag part of a campaign to com- inciting violations of^public or s they visited orders commission would beable disturbances there are calls for Liu and it was not clear if its special envoys, arrived in Well- bat crime. Police powers were d®r ls hard drinking. ' illage and to^ shed ^ light on "all of the things rethinking about priorities and . SOLVE YOLR buying, renting, latest choice of words was an lngton, New Zealand, on their increased and punishments made Shchelokov warned of prob- saw demonstrations of guerrilla Jhat " entered "into"the problems foT'7pend%j"le"ssr"in Southeast attempt to backtrack from the tour of capitals of allies In the stlffer, especially in the hooli- lems in the planned conversion tactics, utilization of armor, and in Detroit." Asia and more on the home selling or locating problems eariier boast. Vietnamese "" war. by November of most Soviet " " city airborne training. He added; front. fast with a State News want ad. workers from a 41-hour week The "buddy-seat" ride,a sim- "So f^r, 1 do not have knowl- "Do you think," a reporter Call our friendly State News ad spread over six days to a five- ulated parachute jump, appealed edge as to* the whys, wherefores asked, "this country can sustain advisor at 355-8255 for help day 41-hour week. "Many new to the more daring.of the cadets. and causes of the riots." both viewpoints?" in placing your ad. problems in guaranteeing public Strapped by pairs into seats sus- Johnson said he was called order appear" in the change be- pended by a line from a tower, upon l0 make tVk0 Daslc decl_ The answer was a crisp "yes." Pressed for his thinking on Transportation cause "not everyone knows how the cadets were lifted 250 feet sionc. to use with maximum utility" into the air and dropped — this point of view, he said ^he —To direct that federal troops national product ls big WANTED: ONE girl to ride to i day off. line. gross Los Angeles area, leaving Au¬ be sent Into the Detroit enough, he thinks we are rich gust 11th. 372-3832 after 5:30 Other Soviet writers have sug- A visit to the Infantry Offi- stand by for riot duty, enough, and he thinks It ls lm- 5-8/' gested the two-day weekend might cers Candidate School (OGS^ pjn. just mean longer drunken binges highlighted the two-day trip. The —To sign . proclamation and P°"ant enough to meet our re¬ sponsibilities at home without WANTED: TWO males—Califor¬ 24-week school has recently ex- executive order providing the neglecting those in the world. nia. August 7-September 7. Bob, • panded to graduate 23,000 second legal iiasis for actually sending "I would hope that not many 332-1437. 1-8/1 lieutenants each year, them into the riot /.one. people would feel," he added, "A sense of urgency prevails s®ld the second step was "that because we have a prob¬ the Infantry School," said a taken on the unanimous recom- ON THE move?Sellthoseleave- behinds quickly with a low cost Gas station at colonel. "We are obviously or- mendation of his man on the lem at home is any indication that we would ignore or surren¬ State News want ad. Phone 355- iented to the war In Vietnam." scene, Cyrus Vance.former dep- der our interests abroad." ut> secretary of defense, and 8255 to place your ad and turn those leave-behinds into quick robbed of $50 "OCS molds these candidates cash. Two men robbed a service station attendant of about $50 lp Wanted cash outside the Tulsa Oil Sta¬ tion, 1008 S. Cedar St., Monday BLOOD DONORS needed. $7.50 for all positive, RH negative mprnlng and Bed. with positive factor - $7.50. The attendant, Montgomery J. A negative, B negative, and AB Jones, Jr., told Lansing police negative, $10,000. O Negative - that a Negro, between 19 and 23, $12.00 MICHIGAN NITY BLOOD CENTER. 507 East Grand River, East Laming, Houre: COMMU¬ 9-3:30 Monday and Tues¬ 12-6:30 Thursday. 337- Yes, really had asked him to fix a tire but was told the station didn't have the equipment. Five minutes lat¬ er, Jones said, the man returned with another, described by Jones FREE day; 7183. C as Mexican, and they ordered for freshmen A tractor. Near Wells Hall. And what would YOU plant in the middU of campus him outside the station and de¬ WANTED: FURNISHED house or if you were planting things? When it's not planting buildings, the University plants manded the money. Campus-Pac State News photo by Bob Ivi apartment for graduate student, wife. August 12-September 1. 374-5181. 4-8/1 LUNCHEON SPECIAL . . . THREE GRADUATE students in¬ P. M. declares STEAK BURGER 72< DURING SUMMER ORIENTATION ONLY terested in apartment for fall. INCLUDING TEXAS TOAST, rCAMPUS BOOK STORES! $125-180. Furnished or par¬ BAKED POTATO tially furnished. Write: Steve Porges, 343 Felton Avenue, no Thai-highs! REGULAR MENU Highland Park, New Jersey Both a Shore School and a Filet Steak . . . $1.37 Sirloin Steak . . . $1.33 08904' 10"8/8 meeting of the MSU Sailing Club BANGKOK UP) — Thailand has Pork Chops . . S1.18 . 131 E. GRAND RIVER will be held at 7 tonight In 31 Across From banned the wearing of mlnlskirte Including Texas Toast, Baked Potato, IT'S A great time to sell those The Union Union. by models In televised fashion Tossed Salad. things that have been cluttering • » • shows. Prime Minister Thanom up your storage areas for the Anyone Interested in working Klttlkachorn, who Issued the past several months. The best with underprivileged children can way to sell them ls with a State attend ChrlSto-Rey*s recreation order, said miniskirts are coiw trmry to Tl*i culture. Tradi- THE BEST STEAK HOUSE DAILY across from the 218 ABBOTT RD. News want ad. Dial 355-8255 program organizational meeting tional Thai dresses reach the 11 a.m. - 9 p.m. STATE THEATER today and place your ad. tonight at 8 pjn., in 33 Union, ankle. Tuesday, August 1, 1967 ® Michigan State News, East Lansing. Michigan Romney (continued from page one! Of the "political Implication scores needed those troops." U. S. tankers again involved in commlttln federal After that, Romney said he called aside and Christopher Romney reported he told dominate Pan-Ams was "I don't think there is any ques¬ troops, asked If he were ready "to cer¬ tion that If we'd had federal troops Cyrus Vance, President John¬ tify that you have a insurrection on the street before dark Monday son's representative In Detroit, that's out of control." that It would have had an effect. and Deputy Atty. Gen. Warren Miss Ball, of Jacksonville, Fla., WINNIPEG, Canada (UPI) tennis, following 1963 winner Ron the streets Christopher between Q:30 and — They didn't get on Romney earlier had told Morln led qualifyinginthewomen's 100- Four United States swimmers Barnes. until 2 ajn. Tuesday. We made 9:45 p.m. Monday: that Clark had demanded "certi¬ meter breaststroke in 1:16.2:and Fitzgibbon, 26-year-old for¬ "Nobody realized better than fication of an insurrection," but set game records in their new every effort to get our National events Monday as the Yanks made Hick cox, of Phoenix, Ariz., mer Princeton player whowas the Guard people on the street be¬ I did that my requesting the troops that "my basic point was that another trip to the gold mine opened his bid for a second gold surprise of the tournament here, fore dark Sunday night." might be a factor In the reluc¬ federal troops should be sent be¬ medal by leading the qualifying in threatened to score an upset as tance to commit them, but that cause I didn't want to let the sit¬ that swimming has been for them Rioting erupted after a police in the Pan-American Games. the men's 200-meter backstroke he took the opening set, 7-5. I was running the major risk in uation get out of hand." raid on an Illegal after-hours in 2:16.5. But then Koch got rolling and was Claudia Kolb, fresh from a drinking spot In a predominantly requesting troops, that 1 wanted Romney said newsmen had Going into the five events Mon¬ well in command the rest of the them regardless of the conse¬ misconstrued his remarks the world-record gold medal victory Negro West Side area early Sun¬ day night, the United States had completing the match in two quences to me personally—that day following the outbreak, and Sunday, came right back to join way, day morning. with Mark Spitz, Catie Ball, and won 15 out of 19 events. Only hours, 15 minutes. that at no time had he withdrawn double victories by Jose Fiolo Charles Hlckox in leading the Arthur Ashe of Richmond, Va„ an original request for federal qualifying competition in all four of Brazil in men's competition previously won the bronze medal Carrier disaster modern in the world, was troops. Romney quoted from President Johnson's televised dispatch of events on the daytime program, each being credited with a new record. —the first Pan-Am defeats handed U.S. men swimmers since 1955— andCanada's MissTanner In men's singles. The final-round match in (continued from page one) most Pan-Am "In good shape except for the troops to support his contention The United States, with 66 in women's events had prevented women's singles tennis was re¬ of American youth." He said the chief executive had made "a after section," which was.j. mass gold medals already in the bank a perfect U.S. sweep. sumed Monday at the point where "there were many examples of of seared and tulsted steel. complete and absolute distortion as a result of a big weekend Koch was the second straight it was interrupted by rain Sun¬ heroism" and "not one single of what had happened." Brazilian to win the men's splurge, clinched still another singles day with the favored Miss example of cowardice." He pointed out the Forrestal when its women's volleyball team Subirats leading Miss Rippy, 2-0, . Lanham cited the action of had sailed to Subic from the routed Cuba 3-0 to take an un¬ In the first set. other ships and aircraft on Yan¬ gulf under her own steam of 27 kee Station in the Gulf of Tonkin knots. Lucas traded beatable lead in that competi¬ IM news The 5-foot-3 Mexican girl, a tion. that took part in fire-fighting "The propulsion of the ship half-foot shorter than her U.S. and rescue operation. He said iio.vevar, the United States had Softball is totally unimpaired, and that's foe, began In wobbly fashion and settle for second place in both two destroyers touched along¬ side the burning carrier to train a fundamental point," he said. Both the captain and Lanham to Pittsburgh to men's and women's tennis singles when Herb Fitzglbbon and Patsy Field 5 The 5:30 - p.m. Bulls-Typhoon the even blonde at Miss Rippy pulled 3-3. But Miss Subirats their fire hoses on the flames, said they were confident the car¬ Victory bound Rippy !v- t in the finals. Thomas 6 University Village-No Ac¬ caught fire and ran off the next while helicopters dropped on to the flight deck tc pick up wound¬ rier would be back in action be¬ fore very lone, althoueh thev by Cardinals Chris McCubbine (r, 276) of Enid, Okla., splashes Koch of Brazil won the men's title by beating Fitzgibbon of Garden 7 counts Short Shot-Spastics three games. She reached match point in the ninth gtme with a ed. conceded the full assessment of water on his way to win the 3,000-meter steeple¬ 8 brilliant volley return down the Harold Lucas, former Spar¬ City, N.Y. 5-7, 6-3, 6-3, 6-3, Paperbacks-Physiology the damagu still had to be made. chase at the Pan-American Games in Winnipeg, 9 W indsor-W lldcats right baseline off a hardforehand tan All-American who was re¬ and Elena Subirats of Mexico A team of naval experts was by Miss Rippy. Miss Rippy then leased by the St. Louis foot¬ Canada, Sunday. UPI Telephoto defeated Miss Rippy of Shawnee, 10 Sabs-D-Dodgers being rushed herefrom Yoke suka Field 6:45 p.m. double-falted to lose the set. ball Cardinals twoweeksago, has Okla., 6-3,6-2. Naval Base, Japan, Washington been acquired by the Pittsburgh 5 Wlnshlre-Winjarnmer Caracas Rippy won the first :.vo and Norfolk, Va. Miss Kolb of Santa Clara, Miss Steelers of the National Football 6 Manor-Vet. Medicine Vice Adm. John Hyland, com¬ Calif., seemed to be within reach games of the third set but Miss mander of the U.S. "th Fleet, League. of another world record in her 7 Agr. Econ-Lushwell Subirats reeled off the next six (continued from page one) Lucas, cut by the Cardinals 8 Nads-Communicators came to Subic Bay to join in the qualifying heat of the women's games to finish the match. dents had time to flee. after 12 days in the training 10 New Yorkers-Villagers consultations. 200-meter butterfly swim but she The walls of many other build¬ camp, was the Cardinals No. 1 ings continued to fall The Forrestal through Sat¬ brave picture as she steamed presented a draft choice in 1966 and signed SCOR E BOA R D eased off because she had a nearly half pool-length'lead on Can¬ ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ urday night, and thousands of into Subic Bay in murky mon¬ for a bonus reported at over ada's Elaine Tanner. persons left their homes and soon weather. Her band played $250,000. AMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE Claudia, who broke the world camped out or slept in their cars, lively marches add sailors He quit the team last year, mark ir. the women's 200-meter away from tall buildings. manned the rail in Navy tradi¬ however, and then rejoined the W L PCT. GB W L PCT.GB individual medley swim Sunday, Other buildings that stood club after trimming down from Chicago 57 42 .576 St. Louis 61 40 .604 — tion of a ship entering port. Offi¬ thus settled for a Pan-Am record through the quake were severely cers on shore noted, however, 300 pounds to 250 pounds. Boston 55 44 .556 Chicago 58 44 .569 31/2 of 2:28.8. In the final Monday * TUESDAY: THE INK SPOTS damaged, and ,the public was "1 thought I was doing pretty DETROIT 53 45 .541 31/2 Cincinnati 55 49 .529 7 1/2 barred from entering them. that the crewmen were dressed good," Lucas said. "1 was be¬ Minnesota 53 46 .535 Atlanta 51 47 .520 81/2 night, her target was the world * 8:00 P.M. The in dungarees and T-shirts in¬ quake zone stretched from stead of the usual uniform. ginning to feel sharp again, so I was surprised when they told California 55 49 .529 San Prar. 53 50 .515 9 mark of 2:25.3 held by Ada Kok of Holland. ^ 8:00 P.M. yL * INGHAM COUNTY FAIRJ Caracas west to the Andean bor¬ Aboard the ship some of the Washington -51 53 .490 Pittsburgh 49 50 .495 11 der with Colombia. Many of atmosphere of the nightmare at me.they didn't need me." Cleveland 46 55 .455 47 51 .480 12 1/2 Spitz, also of Santa Clara, LiicSs was obtained from the Baltimore 45 54 .455 12 Los Angeles 46 54 .460 14 1/2 Calif., who .Is shooting for his 15,000 Americans in Venezuela sea lingered.rT&e wrecked after- - live in the affectedarea.Caracas section smellecnKTChloride fpom. itself, in the midst of celebrat¬ batteries, smoke and death, -ft O r^na I sJ^foflUn. undisclosed jJJe.w York draff, choice, fle 'reported^o the K'ar.sa^ 44 55 .444 13 City "43 59 All IS 1/2' (New -Houston- Voffk .45 59 .433 39 60 .394 21 17 1/2 third gold medal of the games, •won his heat in the men's 100- J July 31 through August 5 ^ ing its 400th anniversary, has a was still littered with Jumbled St&lers'- training camp in La- j[6oes not Include Monday's games',) meter < butterfly In 58.1 ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ population of about 1.7 million. and sodden vyeckage. trabfi, Pa,, Saturday. • Why Pay More! Why Pay More! iyiiiib m mm mum VUVKTAI CHEESE SPREAD bl£ I PIZZA MIX TREET ARMOUR'S FAMOUS "MEAT IN THE CAN" 12 OZ. WT. CAN FISHER'S PALATE PLEASING 13 OZ. mixeo irrj"sAVE"8r"Tf8"i nuts WT. CAN 30(t y SAVE 30"""i30< with this coupon toward with this coupon toward ■30<» ■ f with this coupon toward 0^ the purchase of ^ I-* ___ the purchase of 1^^^ IFISHER'S TASTY the purchase of 13 OZ. CHEESE SPREAD VELVEETA CS£H«.63< I " I JENO'S WITH CHEESE — ■PIZZA MIX Any or redeemable with $5.00purchaseoi - all coupons rede lAIXED NUTS Any or CAN COUPON all coupons redeemable with $5.00 purchase or 49^1 thrifty acres Any or all coupons redeemable with $5.00 purchase or excluding beer, wine, cigarette Items or coupon AND excluding beer, wine, cigarette items or coupon® more more - more excluding beer, wine, cigarette items or coupon Limit one per customer. Expires Sat., Aug. 5, Items. Limit one per customer. Expires Sat., Aug. 5,1 . items. Limit one per customer. 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