Friday More U.S. MICHIGAN SAIGON in Viet Destruction of a dozen U£. out bomb four raids in the 4-hour period up to Thursdav afternoon. They hit at Commu¬ UNIVERSITY STATE STATE MEWS August 25, 1967 Jets over North Vietnam In three days Vol. 60 Number 46 East Lansing, Michigan nist targets from east of Saigon and suggests that, while the Intensified drive through the central highlands to the north¬ claims heavy toll on enemy supply lines, ern 1st Corps area. the plane losses may reach a record North Vietnamese gunners opened up v submit this week. U.S. and Soviet Union early Thursday on a brigade command The North Vietnamese downed 15 planes post of the U.S. 4th Infantry Division In one week last August, the high in an near Pleiku, in the highlands 220 miles air war that is now in its 30th month. north of Saigon. • Six of the fighter-bombers, which cost They fired about 50 rounds of what about >2 million each, were lost in raids were believed to be 122mm rockets, but Monday that centered largely from the only seven landed inside the post's peri¬ Hanoi area to Red China's frontier. Six meter and no casualties were reported. for arms ban went down in strikes Wednesday. Of joint draft treaty more Six artillery batteries supporting the bri¬ the 21 filers manning these planes, three gade replied with suppressive fire. were rescued. The others are listed as While ground action was light and scat¬ missing or captured. tered, there were reports across the The U.S. Command announced twoMIGs country of increasing guerrilla and ter¬ were shot down by one pilot, 1st Lt. left blank largely because of disa¬ nuclear materials are not misused for rorist activity linked with the Sept. 3 from passing on nuclear weapons or was David B. Waldrop, 25, of Nashville, Tenn., GENEVA !\— The United States and by any nation which does national election. weapons know-how, and required nonnu- greement over the role of the International weapons purposes during a" series of dogfights Wednesday- the Soviet Union Jointly submitted Thurs¬ Atomic Energy Agency—IAEA. ■not now possess them. A gunman shot a South Vietnamese clear nations to undertake not to manu¬ while missiles from similar Soviet-de¬ policeman dead as he sat with other day a draft treaty to prevent the spread of The United States and the Soviet Union nuclear weapons. But left blank was*the facture or acquire nuclear weapons. West-Germanv and some other European signed fighters felled two of the American police officers at a sidewalk cafe on a Article 3 of the treaty, which is to con¬ agreed in principle that IAEA should even¬ Common Market nations object to IAEA planes, F4 Phantoms. crowded street In Saigon Thursday night. key article on enforcement that hasbeena tually have responsibility for ensuring that tain the controlandlnspectlonprocedures, controls and are still seeking a form of That brought the dogflghtlng score to Though the other police drew their guns, sticking point for years. 84 confirmed North Vietnamese and 22 the assassin escaped. Even though much hard bargaining lies inspection through the European Atomic 'American planes downed since the first ahead, U.S. disarmament negotiator Wil¬ Energy Organization, their own agency. Allied spokesmen disclosed the ter¬ aerial encounter In April 1965. Announced liam C. Foster told a news conference West Germany fears that IAE\ controls rorists' toll rose sharply last week while American plane losses over the North It was "a reasonable hope" that the treaty could result In commercial espionage If captured enemy documents reinforced would be signed early next year. from all causes climbed to 659. Communist Inspectors passed back to previous evidence that the Viet Cong Foster and Soviet negotiator Alexel The Communists threw everything in sought—through military action, terror¬ their government details of the latest their book—jet interceptors, missiles and A. Roshchin placed before the 17-nation German r ism, sabotage and propaganda—to disrupt withering barrages of antiaircraft shells— disarmament conference Identical texts the election. The Russians, always suspicious of Into the sky in an effort to stem the 122 Guerrilla agents slew 167 civilians last for further negotiation here and at the Germany's nuclear ambitions, refuse to missions Wednesday. forthcoming I'.N. General Assembly in week, nearly three times the 64 killed accept the European agency Inspection New York. the week before. Other victims were 52 idea. Roshchin reiterated the refusal at Returning pilots reported spectacular President Johnson, in a message to the destruction in the railway yards around wounded and 126 kidnaped. the day's brief meeting of the conference. conference, said the treaty would demon¬ The L'«S. Command reported 108 Amer¬ The Soviet acceptance of the Joint draft Hanoi, choked with rolling stock Immo¬ strate man's ability to "design his fate bilized by th6 cutting of nearby bridges. icans were killed and 883 wounded last before agreement on Article 3 nonetheless rather than be engulfed by it" and would The usual sharp, Isolated clashes week, which was marked by some increase represented a major East-West compro¬ be a great gift to succeeding generations. in action in the northern part of the coun¬ mise in the five-year-old negotiations. marked ground operations in South Viet¬ The President said he lias instructed nam. The U.S. Command said action re- try. India, Sweden, Romania and other coun¬ Foster to negotiate further .with "deter¬ ' mained generally light. By unofficial count, this raised to 12,605 mination to ensure that a fair and ef¬ tries have reservations about the lack of the number of Americans killed in combat security guarantees for nonnuclear Adding heavy tonnage to the ordnance fective treaty is concluded." and the wounded to 77,513 in Vietnam powers. Some also object to the pro¬ dropped by tactical air squadrons, U.S. The draft banned any signatory nation since 1961. posed provisions for changing the treaty Strategic Air Command B52s carried and to the veto status lt would give to pres¬ ent nuclear powers, the United States, Britain, the Soviet Union, France and Red China. Bus system ups France is due course and expected to sign the treaty in thereby obtain formal in¬ ternational recognition of its own nuclear Informants added. cost $20 power status. winter pass could The treaty draft allowed for possible nuclear explosions for The peaceful purposes. preamble declared that "potential benefits from any peaceful application of By ROBERTA YAFIE have gone up, Jolman said. Drivers will have an increase of over 40 per cent in term. est Last year, loss, the system took its great¬ dropping from 11,771 passes Fancy foo nuclear explosions should be available through appropriate International pro¬ State News Staff Writer wages they received three years ago sold in the winter to 6,099 in the spring. Leonard Sedillo, 3, holds back tears as police and firemen cedures to nonnuclear-weapons states" After three years of stability, the cost when the bus service began. During summer term, with the reduced work to free his left foot from a four-Inch pipe In a vacant lot provided the blasts were kept at low of mis passes has been raised, and with it (smviiiwiVit miz warmer weauiet, aaicc near his home on Wednesday. Leonard's foot was freed after power and could not be misused for comes a plan of inducing additional sales. equipment and remain self-sustaining," suffer most. Tickets are sold on three an hour of labor. It was a bad day for him, his mother said, he weapons development. Jolman said. "This year, for the first bases—full term, first-half term and Henry W. Jolman, director of the MSU time, we came close to breaking even but second-half term. The former cost $12; had had to go to the dentist earlier. UPI Telephoto (please turn to page 5) B u s Sy stem, a nnounced tha t regula r pa s se s still at a loss point." the latter two $6 each. for fall, spring and summer terms will Last year, Jolman said that fall term he This summer, sales were down to 245. now cost $14, an increase of $2. expected 40,000 daily passengers to use Last year, they dropped to 542; in 1965, Student unions proposal The winter term passes, however, will the service; he anticipated an increase to losses were down to 586. cost $20, unless the student purchased a fall term pass. If a student purchases 60,000 winter term. Paul V. Rumpsa, University Comp¬ a pass for fall term and then decides to Figures illustrate that, for 1964-65 and troller, said that at this point it is im¬ 1965-66, bus pass sales increased over buy a winter one, he can turn in his fall possible to determine where the system 3,000 winter term. Last year, they in¬ stands in terms of financial solvency. He term pass and will only have to pay $14. defeated at NSA meeting creased 2,600. All passes on the Commuter route have attributed this to the' 'newness'' of the sys¬ Sales of commuter passes, however, been raised from $6 to $8. tem and to the rapidly changing costs of declined from fall to winter. The first Jolman said that the increases have maintaining it. year, there were 154 less passes sold; the been spurred by the annual boom in pas¬ second year, 158 less. Last year, sales Jolman anticipates no extension of the MSU and chairman of the Michigan region They plan to-campaign-against John¬ sengers winter term and the need to buy service and called the present bus stops declined by 94. By JAMES SPANIOLO at the Congress, spoke against the resolu¬ son in forthcoming primaries and, at additional equipment. adequate. Concerning the opening of Holden Larger losses, however, are incurred State News Editor-in-Chief tion because it was "unrealistic and im¬ the same time, try to attract a Republi¬ 'The cost per bus had risen $1,000, Halls, he noted that there Is a bus stop between winter and spring. In 1965, sales possible to implement." can opposed to the war who, they feel, now about $26,000-$27,000 apiece," he directly across from Holden, which should COLLEGE PARK, Md.—A controversial would gain voter support. dropped from 6,164 to 3,232. In 1966, "We must remember that NSA is still said. "When these additional buses are adequately serve all residents. there were 4,101 less passes sold spring proposal to establish student unions in an association of student governments, In urging the antiwar demonstration, used for only three months, you can see member schools of the National Student NSA officials advised delegates to dress how costly it becomes." 60 per cent of which have arbitrarily Association (NSA) was overwhelmingly collected funds either through taxes or neatly and wear their congress badges. MSU now owns 22 buses. This fall, five defeated by delegates of the 20th NSA The original resolution had called upon all will operate on the Brody-Fee route, four money from the administration," Graham Summer Congress late Thursday evening. said. delegates but was amended to include only on Circle-Fee, four on Brody-Fee Ex¬ The proposal, which was supported by Graham added that under the proposal, region representatives because of sched¬ press, four on the Spartan Village route Ed Schwartz, newly-elected NSA presi¬ uled workshops. and three on the Commuter route. these student governments would have dent, and many of the more radical dele¬ one year to disaffiliate from their ad¬ The congress, which had already adopted All material costs, including wages, gates was voted down 283-105. ministration, if they wanted to stay in militant stands on the draft and black Under the proposal, traditional student NSA. power, called Wednesday night for the governments would have qualified as stu¬ "It is Just impossible genetically to abolition of what they consider "outdated dent unions only if they had voluntary laws" against birth control. make NSA, an organization of student individual membership, were independent¬ The resolution singled out William R. Reds attack ly financed, deriving no funds from college or university administration. the governments, into a movement-oriented union." A call for a White House protest, the Baird, director of the Parents A Id Society, for his efforts in opposing those laws. second since the congress opened here Baird has been arrested three times in Unless these requirements were ful¬ three states and faces a 10-year prison weeks ago, came Wednesday night Hong Kong two filled by Jan. 1, 1969, NSA would not have term in Massachusetts for violating such recognlzed.a student government as a stu¬ and is Just a small part of the growing "Dump Johnson" sentiment among dele¬ laws. dent union. gates. The Congress also passed a resolution Speaking in favor of the proposal, borderline Crowded conditions Schwartz said, "If a to be representative student government is then it must fight for A group of delegates, tical persuasions but all varied in poli¬ opposed to the Vietnam war, are working to defeat John¬ calling for an end to ^jgvemment prohibi¬ tion of marijcJJifS smoking on private those students." He said this type of com¬ premises. It called upon the federal and HONG KONG i/PJ — Mobs from Red The MSU campus buses are always crowded with passengers. mitment could be made much more ef¬ son in 1968. Sam Brown, a defeated can¬ state governments to evaluate their laws China repeatedly attacked British posi¬ The number of students using the bus service goes up each year fective under a student union arrangement. didate for president of NSA, heads the on halluciogenic drugs in light of current tions along the 17-mlle Hong Kong border and so the crowded conditions prevail. group. scientific research. State News Photo by Dave Laura Jim Graham, former chairman of AS- Thursday, set an Immigration office ablaze with fire bombs and finally were driven In other developments, James Graham, ex-chalrman of ASMSU who heads the back by tear gas. At one point the Michigan delegation here, was narrow¬ Chinese were restrained by their own soldiers. NEW COALITION MEETS ly defeated for a seat on the 10-member NSA Advisory Board. The board Is simi¬ The attack on the Immigration office lar to a board of trustees of a university came at dusk at the border town of Lowu. demand or college. leaders Jhe crowds hurled six gasollne-fllled Urban , bottles, one exploding on the office roof. Graham is now seeking the chairman¬ The fire was quickly put out. ship of the congress steering committee, Peking has applauded such attacks and which helps plan NSA's summer congress that the Negro has as much right to his promises to "smash the reactionary rule WASHINGTON |fW-Mayors of riot- The group's statement strongly im¬ calling the urban crisis the gravest domes¬ extremists." and sets up the agenda. of British Imperialism" In Hong Kong, tic problem since the depression of the only two. days left, several MSU scarred cities and leaders of business, plied—but did not say—that President With China's southern borders. 1930s. delegates said they felt they had bene¬ on labor, religion and civil rights groups Johnson's proposed model cities are far On jobs, the coalition said "when the The attacks apparently are designed to pledged their newly formed Urban Coali¬ from sufficient. Congress has shown little ••Henry Ford II, chairman of the Ford private sector Is unable to provide em¬ fitted from the congress. show solidarity with the Chinese Com¬ tion Thursday to seek a massive federal enthusiasm for even those slum clear¬ Motor Co., called lt "the greatest inter¬ ployment to those who are both able and Pete Ellsworth, vice chairman of AS¬ munists in Hong Kong, who have pushed a nal crisis since the Civil War—a crisis MSU, called membership In NSA "definite¬ program of providing jobs for die un¬ ance programs. willing to work, then In a free society campaign of rioting and terror since which demands no less than a massive ly worthwhile." employed. Mayor John V. Lindsay of New York, the government must of necessity assume May In an attempt to undermine British About 1,000 delegates to an emer¬ the keynote speaker, won spirited applause national response." the responsibility and act as the employer authority in the colony. What the problem is all about, Lindsay "The most significant things I gained, gency convocation of the group approved when he said without mentioning the war of last resort, or must assure adequate There were two attacks on Lowu during said, Is that "the system which has was to become more acquainted with avail¬ by a voice vote a statement calling for in Vietnam that the American commit¬ Income levels for those who are unable to the day. Both times Gurkhas, the tough a combined government-private effort to ment abroad "should not be allowed to worked so well for most of our citizens work." able programs in NSA," he said. "We have little British mercenary troops from Nepal put at least one million unemployed into weaken our resolve at home." Is falling the poor," gotten many ideas from teacher-course stopped the Chinese with tear gas and Whitney Young, moderate Negro leader In housing, the coalition called on the evaluation and environmental studies pro¬ productive work at the earliest possible "If our defense commitment, our com¬ jmoke bombs. Several Chinese were moment. mitment to space, or any other commit¬ of the National Urban League, inspired nation to "take bold and Immediate action grams here," he said. injured. The coalition, formed July 31 after a ment made before our urban areas were vigorous applause when he argued against to fulfill the national need to provide a But Ellsworth said that he felt too much After the second attack hit the lm- Aries of city riots, also called on the beset by agony In blocking a vigorous elimination of Negro extremists. decent home and a suitable living environ¬ time had been spent in adopting laws that mlgratlon office, Red Chinese troop? Young noted that many racial extre¬ for every family"—with "don't provide anything worthwhile to the nation to provide at least one million effort to end those agonies, those com¬ ment American halted the mobs on the Chinese aide ot tne mists have not been eliminated from campus, anyway." housing units a year for low-Income mitments should be reassessed," he said. guarantees of open housing. the white community and added: "I Insist (please turn to page 5) families. Lindsay joined with other speakers in MAX LERNER Eric Pianin, executive editor STATI NEWS Lawrence Werner, managing Bobby Soden, campus editor Edward A. Brill, editorial editor editor Political realities preclude Joe Mitch, sports editor Friday Morning, August 25, 1967 * EDITORIAL- revoking Tonkin resolution The bizarre aspect of the hot c If he is politically prudent he will also Fulbright had been the floor manager debate over the war power of the Presi¬ ask Congress to give him a confirming for the Tonkin resolution. He didn't expect th the war to go as far as it has gone. He Between dent and Congress is the reversal of resolution, as Woodrow Wilson did at the has changed his mind, as he had a right roles it displays: the conservatives, who time of Vera Cruz, Dwight Eisenhower . . usually support the power of Congress as for FormoS* and Lebanon and Mr. Johnson to. But this does not strip the Tonkin resolution of the broad language it had, against the Executive, find themselves for Tonkin Bay—and as Harry Truman failed to do for Korea. nor of its constitutional force. on Mr. Johnson's side because they are • The MSU Bus System has logic is with the Fulbright Sen. Gore came closest to the historical pro-war in Vietnam; the liberals, who In short, while traditionally called for increased camp (surely logic demands that if a war truth when he said, "If Congress acted come up with a unique plan have without understanding such import" (that Presidential power in crises of foreign is to be protracted for years it should at that can best be described is, the broad import of the resolution) policy, now find themselves arrayed some point be declared by Congress, to "then it the fault of the Congress." against a strong Executive power be¬ whom the Constitution has given the war- was as, "Ride now, or pay cause they are antiwar. Both groups cut declaring power), the practice of modern Can Congress undo what it did and with¬ through the nose later." the cloth of their constitutional theory nations and the experience of history is draw its support from the war? In theory, The price of bus passes to fit the positions they have assumed with the Johnson camp. yes. The strength of a virile Congress, on foreign policy. No matter how much one may hate the even in the face of a world which favors has gone up, to facilitate a The point'of the debate is the persist¬ Vietnam war, it is not easy to make a executive action, lies in its capacity in the end to say "no," whether quietly pay hike to drivers, an in¬ ent question that troubled so many, not strong constitutional case against Mr. or in thunder. crease in costs of bus main¬ only in America but abroad: how can Johnson. the United States be waging a war of This could not have been shown more The war has certainly changed since to 70 per cent over the erated. Expediency is not a tenance, and to build up a such magnitude in Vietnam, costing so clearly than in the verbal duel between Tonkin. The "limited objectives," which cost of a bus pass last win¬ sufficient rationale for this Katzenbach Insists make it something less reserve in the event that many lives and resources, without Con¬ Undersecretary Katzenbach and the Ful¬ ter is far out of line. De¬ plan. gress ever having declared war? bright committee, especially with Sens. than a "war," are harder and harder to additional buses need be pur¬ that wars are discern. Congress could say to the Presi- ' If increase in price is The fact is, of course, J.W. Fulbright and Albert Gore. I thought chased winter term. spite the fact that the option an rarely declared any longer. Decisions have that Katzenbach came off well in the ex¬ dent, "You have led us thus far, but we will go no farther unless you ask us to is left open to buy a pass indeed necessary, then an to be made too fast (witness John Ken¬ change, and that Fulbright--with £11 his nedy's decision to use force to stop the ability and his moral passion—was rtot *1 vote on a declaration." According to Henry W. fall and winter it's not much across the board hike is most Soviet ships during the Cuban missile US best. his Deal. ■* . .. r The 1 trouble " uuuic is 13 that mai things uurij have gone too Jolman, director of the bus of an option. Students are equitable. Possibly $15 per crisis), and mostly they have to be made Fulbright tri£?to draw a distinction'9- * for 'such farr for" such a "no" a "no" for for most congress- by the President. The initiative is his and n repelling an attack (which would ri Men, and what they could do in theory system, if you ride the buses faced with paying a penalty term should be charged to they will not dp in fact. President John¬ has to be his. quire only a resolution by Congress) and fall and winter term, it will meet the new demands. But waging a war (which would requires dec¬ son knows this, which is for making the "wrong" In the process he may present Con¬ why he could cost $14 per term. If you choice. it is unfair to penalize stu¬ gress with one fait accompli after anoth¬ laration of war). '' ^ safely say—in his press conference—that er—which is what happened under three But it is an impossible line to draw Congress is free to withdraw its consent¬ decide to use the buses only dents who don't go along for Presidents in the Vietnam war. He tries under the conditions of modern political ing resolution. The task now is not to argue Students are faced with the further about constitutional questions, but winter term, it will cost you the ride. to explain his actions to the people in and ideological war when the "attack" is to get out of the war itself, decision of either purchasing press conferences and TV talks and get interwoven with a whole network of strate¬ by negotia¬ $20. You will be charged -- The Editors their support. gies. tions, as fast as possible. two for a "reduced" price, $14 spring and summer or one for the price of $20. terms. If they follow the first Last year, passes cost course, they will be saving U.S. VS RUSSIA $12 per term. $6. If they follow the latter, War bout The intentof Jolman's plan they will be assuming the ad- is obvious. students to It encourages use the buses ditional expenditures re¬ quired by increased winter Soviet Union. Such a spursshowdown is vir¬ Ark„ of the Senate Foreign Relations graduates. He spoke of Soviet intentions to balk "Israeli aggression" and linked more fall term, rather than By WILLIAM L. RYAN Committee, called it a "mild warning." term service. tually a stated objective of Peking policy. the Middle East war to American "out¬ AP News Analysis " Sen. Bourke B. Hickenlooper, R-Iowa, walk or ride bikes. Ad¬ In this 50th year of Soviet commu¬ nism, its leaders still have been unable of the same committee, said it sounded rages" in Vietnam. The vast size of the Uni¬ Moscow's latest statement on the Viet¬ ditional passengers would like an echo of previous statements. But First versions of this speech in Is- to choose between expansion of the Com¬ war raises an important question: vestia, the government newspaper, were relieve the cost of main¬ versity often makes the bus nam munist system and true coexistence with neither thought it should be simply dis¬ How much control do the two super¬ far more bellicose than those appearing service a vital utility. the United States. It must be clear to missed. tenance of buses that would It's powers have over world events? later. Evidently the published version had them that they cannot have both. The way It was handled, the statement a service that should be pro¬ Neither the United States nor the Soviet seemed directed as much at Soviet au¬ been toned down after the Kremlin had otherwise not be in use. Union—at least at the level of civilian • Moscow continues to pour arms into diences as at the outside world. It sug¬ time to think things over. vided to students on an equal Buses that would normally leadership—appears to welcome the idea the Middle East and to arm and support Possibly, hawk elements smarted at gested sharp differences between Mos¬ be in basis. Virtually coercing of another bout of brinkmanship, North Vietnam. Washington continues cow's own hawks and doves, an attempt Soviet setbacks. There had beentheCuban storage fall term would Americans have been preoccupied with missile crisis of 1962, a backdown in people into buying two pushing the Vietnafll* war. Moscow was by the civilian leadership headed by party be added to the routes. •Red China and the possibility Vietnam* unable to keep its Arab clients from an Berlin, American buildup in Vietnam and chief Leonid I. Brezhnev and Premier But the unfairness of this passes, even for the sake could bring a clash with that tumultuous adventure risking world war. The Amer¬ Alexei N. Kosygin to perform a delicate other situations for which the Russians nation. The real danger—given no change icans far unable to thwart Com¬ found no adequate answers. of the bus system's economic so are balancing act. A hawk-dove debate seems plan is even more obvious. in present trends—may be of a show¬ munist designs on South Vietnam. The two to have been going on in Moscow, sharp¬ Now there is a perilous imponderable. An increase of $8 or close stability, should not be tol¬ down between the United States and the superpowers seem powerless to control ened by events in the Middle East and How many setbacks can the Soviet civil the course of events. the latest U.S. activity in Vietnam which leadership sustain without being pushed Now comes a new Moscow statement, included bombings close to Red China. by hawks into some sort of action? Will warning that "retaliatory steps" against Israel's Middle East victory, which Moscow continue withdrawing from the ESS U.S. escalation in Vietnam are possible left an expensive Soviet-supplied armory brink after edging up to it? Do civilian and that this could "bring the world to a in ruins, must have stung highly placed leaders—credited with an intention to give dangerous point." Muscovites. There were signs that the priority to the Soviet internal economy In this 50th year of Red rule—feel them¬ How much student influence? ( In Washington, porter both a critic and a sup- of President Johnson'^ war poli¬ cies discounted the statement as more of Soviet hawks were becoming more vocal. A month after Israel's victory, Marshal Andrei A. Grechko, the Soviet defense selves in peril into showdown United States? of being drawn inevitably or even conflict with the fully than if they are imposed from with wisdom and that exuberance the same. Chairman J.W, Fulbright, D- minister, addressed military academy The best way to make men re¬ on high. Colleges are institutions can lead to excess was prettyamply sponsible is to give them respon¬ demonstrated in two resolutions of higher learning; their students sibility. The truth of this has been too largely overlooked in colleges are men and women—not boys and adopted by the Student Congress. Party planning girls—and are entitled to be treat¬ The body voted to "organize and and universities around the coun¬ ed as such. support resistance to the draft" on is as slick try. There has been, especially in of the smaller institutions, an How much influence students ought college campuses; and it approved some to exercise in such curricular mat¬ a statement asserting that "Black as a whistle excessive paternalism, galling to ters as course requirements, ad¬ power is the unification of all black youth and in some degree foolishly at missions policies and the selec¬ peoples In America for their libera¬ NEJAC is having a stereo sale. frustrating. More and more, young tion of faculty is more difficult to tion by any means hecesfeary." Law¬ Visit us at 543 E. Grand River. men and women of college age have determine. The Student Congress ful action to change the Selective been demanding greater independ¬ called for joint control with the Service Law and orderly programs ence and a greater voice In the determination of policies that affect their lives. regular university authorities. We have no doubt that they ought to to protect the civil rights and pro¬ mote the welfare of Negroes are TOM'S be heard in these matters—and at¬ perfectly appropriate student PARTY STORE! We feel a large measure of sym¬ tentively. They are the persons causes. But these statements, if pathy, therefore, with some of the most vitally concerned. But in con¬ they are not mere rhetorical flour¬ 2780 E. GRAND RIVER resolutions adopted by the National Student Association's 20thCongress siderable degree these involve ques¬ ishes, seem to endorse illegal ac¬ at its meeting at the University of tions of professional judgment, nec¬ tion and even violence. As such, Maryland, if students are granted essarily governed by considerations they are indefensible in a country other than preference, popularity where the democratic process is major responsibility in framing a and current interest. We think the in full operation. Students need to DIAMONDS the campus regulations affecting dormitory hours, social intercourse and student activities, there is ev¬ role of students in this area has to be subordinate to the role of the faculty and the university admin¬ learn that the prerequisite erning oneself. is to for gov¬ be able to govern 'DON'T . the true expression of love ery reason to believe that these —Washington Post istration. rules will be sensible and that they will be observed much more faith¬ That youth Is not synonymous Aug. 22, 1967 CRY' AND HOli) ABOUT TH06E Tu)0 ? 606H, THAT SEEMS LIKE A HE HA4 A PICTURE OF EVERV 6UPPER Pl5HHP5EVER0u;NEr: we'll be U5N6 TIMEA60... here in _/SL 1 \\ 1 the FALL * The State News, the student newspaper at Michigan State The summer is University, Is published every class day throughout the year with special Welcome Week and Orientation Issues In June RECORD PRICES just about over and September. Subscription rates are $14 but look what per year. and you've got to look forward to, Member Associated Press, United Press International, Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press, REEL DEALS The BEST in Michigan Press Association, Michigan Collegiate Press As¬ sociation, United State Student Press Association. Stop in and browse the top FOOD, DRINK, and selection of albums and tapes From an inspiring collection of advance designs at bottom ENTERTAINMENT interlocking diamond rings to meet your budget. Second class postage paid at East Lansing, Mich. prices. — Editorial and business offices all next year! at 347 Student Services tk sc ttty mat tara ir ti Building, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Mich, The Disc Shop Direct Diamond Importers Phones: Editorial Cla-sslfled Advertising .355-8252 .355-8255 323 E. Grand River Open Evenings CORAL FOX'S Display Advertising 353-6400 GABLES . Business-Circulation . . . 355-8299 Friday, August 25, 1967 3 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan MRS. ROMNEY EX-MEMBER OVER ANTI-POVERTY BILL NEWS Detroit City Club summary keeps race policy LBJ at WASHINGTON /Pi — President odds with Senate Clark, D-Pa., attached a special had been circulated to some sub¬ Day. Clark, however, saidThurs- day he sees no possibility that $3-billion emergency riot dam¬ committee members but said no Johnson, bent on restraining do¬ one at the White House saw it in this could be done. A capsule summary of the day's events from the mestic spending in the face of age and job program for slum The administration reportedly Associated Press. DETROIT If! —The Women's longer would hold meetings at dwellers. advance. Califano said the docu¬ rising Vietnam war costs, is at has wanted the Senate to act first City Club of Detroit reportedly the club, which they accused odds with the Senate Labor sub¬ In a secret memorandum to ment correctly outlined adminis¬ on the bill because it faces severe has rejected any change in its of having a "restrictive policy the subcommittee, an official of tration misgivings about some committee over its proposed opposition in the House. controversial policy banning Ne¬ incompatible with our policies the Office of Economic Oppor¬ provisions of the subcommittee $5.2-billion antipoverty bill. gro guests from part of the as a professional organiza- tunity, the antipoverty agency, bill but it was inaccurate in a —Scrapping a special $105- Johnson asked for $2.06 billion million item to finance a slum club's facilities. for a one-year extension of the demanded that the $3 billion pro¬ number of respects. "The system which They were protesting the club's He said the administration's job program backed by Sens. Last May, Mrs. George Rom- controversial antipoverty pro¬ gram be deleted from the bilL policy of excluding Ne¬ primary goal is to get a bill out Robert F. Kennedy, D-N.Y., and has worked so well for ney, wife of the Michigan gov¬ unwritten gram, but the subcommittee au¬ Joseph A. Califano Jr., a spe¬ ernor, resigned on a conditional groes from facilities above the cial assistant to Johnson, ac¬ of the full Labor Committee and Jacob K. Javits, R-N.Y. The most of our citizens is thorized $2.2 billion and the pan¬ said, "this will invite • basis from the club. She de¬ second floor. The cocktail lounge passed by the Senate by Labor memo el's chairman, Sen. Josephs. knowledged Thursday the memo and dining room are on the third slashing amendments on the floor failing the poor," scribed her action at the time as floor. and will seriously affect passage -- John V. Lindsay, "Just a protest." Mrs. Romney resigned pro¬ of the legislation." The Detroit Free Press said mayor of New York visionally from the club after a today the policy was supported Negro educator sent her a tele¬ UNITED FRONT SOUGHT —Deletion of a requirement that the Office of Economic Op¬ in a survey of opinion made by gram critical of her member¬ portunity disclose the projected secret ballot, and the official ship. five-year cost of the antipoverty Report Buddhists plan result of the survey is scheduled "Must the Negro be constant¬ program. The memo said, "this International News to be announced to the mem¬ ly reminded that the Romney would create political problems bership at large in the Septem¬ family has memberships in in¬ for the administration in an elec¬ ^ A dozen U.S. jets have been lost over North Vietnam In ber issue of the club magazine. stitutions whose admission pol¬ three days, while the Intensified drive has claimed a heavy tion year." Vietnam election protests icies are based on race," wired Two other administration ob¬ toll on enemy supply lines. See page 1 Charges of discrimination • were leveled at the organization Dr. Robert Green, an associate jectives indicate that the White ® Mobs from Red China repeatedly attacked British positions last May by the Detroit Women professor of educational psychol¬ House wants more national ad¬ along the '17-mile Hong Kong border Thursday, set an immi- Writers, a group of published ogy at Michigan State University. SAIGON T—South Vietnam's erate head of the Vien Hoa Dao, tions after the election, march¬ ministrative control on antipov¬ *' authors who had been meeting Green apparently was refer¬ decided to throw in the towel, It also seeks to gratlon office ablaze with fire bombs and finally were driven militant Buddhists are again ing on government offices to erty programs. back with tear gas. See page 1 at the City Club for more than ring to the Romney's Mormon Quang reluctantly went along and the charter. give elected public officials more planning antlgovernment demon¬ protest new four years. faith, which bars Negroes from strations, this time against the never regained his power. of a voice in the operation of local If this brings no action, phase 2 ©Although there was no official word, black smoke of The writers announced they no the priesthood. civilian regime to be elected Chau's group has been favored programs. will see the Buddhist Youth or¬ possibly charred documents billowed from the Red Chinese Sept. 3, Vietnamese intelligence by the government since. ganization and novice monks join The,committee is also asked to legation In London, the usual preliminary to a diplomatic rup¬ sources said Thursday. the demonstrations. restore language specifically re¬ ture. ' See page 5 Thich Venerable Tri Quang, But other factions outside the militant fold may feel the recog¬ Phase 3 will call on lay Bud¬ quiring the elected chief execu¬ filter 46, and his splinter group hope tive of a city to be a governing ® Prime Minister Mohammed Ahmed Mahgoub of Sudan an¬ nounced in Cairo Thursday that President Carnal AbdelNasser of Egypt and King Faisal of Saudi Arabia have agreed to a New to avoid another humiliating de¬ feat such as all but destroyed nition by Thieu, a Roman Catho¬ lic, of a favored sect as the offi¬ cial Buddhist church threatens dhists to join the protests. It is believed government security forces would be forced to leave member of the community agencv. action their power in the abortive up¬ The also criticized a their own existence. The theory memo Sudanese formula for ending five years of civil war in Yemen. rising of 1966. Saigon to quell the various dem¬ in the subcommittee study is they might, therefore, join in onstrations. provision Like most everybody else they © The mitted a United States and Soviet Union Thursday jointly sub¬ draft treaty to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons. See page 1 , eva consider that Chief, of State Nguyen Van Thieu and Premier demonstrations to revive cal chaos. The latest blast from the politi¬ mili¬ With Saigon would see left open, phase 4 massive, and hopeful¬ ly decisive, demonstrations in bill which would give local com¬ munity action agencies the right to designate where half of their Nguyen Cao Ky, the military funds should be spent. ©South Vietnam's militant Buddhists are again planning WASHINGTON OP) - Gray¬ Williamson president, Edwin P. men who weathered the outbreak tants came Thursday after what Saigon. ■' antlgovernment demonstrations, this time against the civilian was called a national Buddhist son Kirk, president of Columbia Finch, said Strickman visited the last year with a combination of regime to be elected Sept. 3, Vietnamese intelligence sources convention at their headquar¬ University, said Thursday the company last year, and the firm force and negotiations, will win said today. See page 3 ran tests on a filter he provided. the ters, Saigon's An Quang pagoda. highly publicized cigarette filter presidency and vice presi¬ He said the filter was not sat¬ developed by Robert L. Strick¬ dency in the race against 10 In secret meetings Tuesday man will not reach tobacco coun¬ isfactory. civilian tickets 10 days hence. and Wednesday, Quang report- : National News ters without extensive testing Intelligence sources re-port edly asked the Buddhist repre- : "We ',o not know whether the and reevaluatlon— a process that the militants, under Quang's sentatives from each province if ; © About 1,000 political, business, labor, religion, and civil which could take years. present Strickman filter is the direction, have worked out a they felt strongly enough opposed : rights leaders pledged their newly formed Urban Coalition same as the one we tested," Sen. Warren G. Magnuson, D- four-pluse program to promote to the new charter to start dem- : Thursday to seek a massive federal program of providing Finch said. He added the com¬ disorder on a national scale. Wash., praised Kirk for what he onstratlons. jobs for the unemployed. See page 1 called a reversal of Columbia's pany man has arranged with Strick¬ to test his present filter. Hoping to win over all the two The intelligence sources said : Lake Lansing course on the filter. It could be ©President Johnson, bent on restraining domestic spending worth $200 million a year, and "In our million or so dedicatedfollowers testing," Finch said, of Buddhism in this predomi¬ the representatives, both mili- and nonmilitants, agreed : : Amusement Park in the face of rising Vietnam war costs, is at odds with the tants Okemos and Haslett Road the University owns about half "we foundthat thepressure drop- another "struggle movement" Senate labor subcommittee over its proposed $5.2 billion anti- nantly Buddhist nation of 15 mil¬ : 6 Miles East of Lansing of the invention. Kirk did not draw-required for significantly lion, they have made an issue of poverty bill. See page 3 was in order. describe present plans as any re¬ reduced tar delivery was so high Thieu's signing last month of a April WEEKDAYS 1-5 p.m. & 7-closing ©Dollar bills, thrown by hippies from a visitor's gallery, versal of course. that the filter was not practicable new Buddhist charter. As outlined by these inform¬ (JrtR Saturday & Sunday.l p.m. until closing Kirk said the University is Closed Monday for use In the production of a nonmlli- ants, Quang then disclosed this rained down Thursday on the floor of the New York Stock The charter sets up a confident the filter effectively smokable cigarette." program: Wednesday night is family night-reduced rates Exchange, where millions of dollars change hands, but where tant factioii%"the Vien Hoa Dao, cash is never used. See page 5 cuts tars and nicotines in ciga¬ able cigarette." as the mother church of South. Phase 1 calls for Buddhist Note: Organizations may make reservations for picnics, | rette somke. But. Sen Thruston B. Morton, R-Ky., said a Kirk said Columbia is contin¬ Vietnam's Buddhists. monks in all the side Saigon to provinces out¬ begin demonstra¬ at reduced rates, by calling FE 9-8221 | The Vien Hoa Dao and the ©Grayson Kirk, president of Columbia University, said Strickman filter already has been uing to investigate the problems militants have been at odds for Thursday the highly publicized cigarette filter developed by tested and rejected by a Louis¬ of pressure drop and cigarette Robert L. Strickman will not reach tobacco counters without taste. He said there is no point months, vying for control of the extensive testing and re-evaluation. ville, Ky., tobacco company. in marketing a safer but unac¬ Unified Buddhist Church, the na¬ See page 3 Strickman himself did not ap¬ ceptable cigarette. tional Buddhist organization that ©A high-ranking Ford Motor Co. executive, Lee A.Iacocca, pear before a Senate subcom¬ is united in name only. mittee investigating progress to¬ The university president said said Thursday the firm's estimates of new car sales "would his institution will work and co¬ The various Buddhist factions ward safer cigarettes. blow sky-high if there were a long strike or a serious work CASH Kirk said the inventor, who operate fully with the U.S. Pub¬ had banded together in 1963 to Interruption." See page 6 has said he could not even get lic Health Service in its re¬ help overthrow President Ngo into tobacco company offices search. Dinh Diem. Subsequent "struggle ©The NAACP and ACLU filed suit in a federal district when he tried to sell the new "And 1 want to assure this movements" were influential in court in Newark, N.J., yesterday seeking appointment of a filter, is ill and in a hospital. committee ihat until a testing the ousting of later regimes. receiver to take over and operate the Newark, N.J., Police Morton said it is not true that program—a very The failure to unseat theThieu- Department. See page 5 extensive pro¬ tobacco companies shunned gram—is completed and the re¬ Ky government last year was be¬ Strickman. He told the subcom¬ sults prove entirely satisfactory, lieved to be symptomatic of the mittee Brown & Williamson To¬ we will not license any cigarette fact that the Buddhists already bacco Corp. of Louisville tested company anywhere in the world," had started to drift apart. the filter with Strickman present, he said. When Thich Tam Chau, mod- 1ST COME, 1ST SERVE and found It unsatisfactory. "They didn't think according to their tests that it was worth much," Morton said. "I hope Fee office to send it is. "I hate to see the industry FOR berated on this for not letting him in the front door when the 1st reduction notices facts are that he got in the labo¬ ratory and that's by the back door." The first notices of fee re¬ Smith said he has received Morton said the tobacco in¬ duction will be mailed today, some applications from out-of- state students—but applying isn't dustry—"the lifeblood of my Kermit H. Smith, director of state"—is working itself to de¬ BOOKS fee determination reported doing them any good. If the fees velop safer cigarettes and "is Thursday. trying Just as hard as Columbia Notices will go first to parents office should happen to miss and send out a reduction notice, the University." >vhose 1040 tax returns and W-2 In Louisville, the Brown & forms arrived during the first computer will know because the week applications were taken IBM cards will not match. (Aug. 3-11) and whose forms in¬ •••••••••••••••••••••• dicated the parents supported the students, Smith said. More recent applications and applications from self-support¬ People Have ing students or other families special situations will be with More Fun answered according to the date they were received, or after rulings have been made on their Than Anybody Need a little money to help you finish out individual problems, he added. Smith said his office has re¬ the term? We are offering top prices for all ceived 5,917 applications for fee used books. reduction since Aug. 3. He started with a staff of five; now a total of 14 persons is Involved In processing the applications. The most recent additions to the staff are twoUniversity Busi¬ ness Office personnel working GIBSON'S on the final audit of applications. They are to check the tax forms to be sure the reduction indicated is correct. F1ZSUFUL0I& Cool it. Things could be worse. You could The original tax forms and Ye PubIic house be out of ice-cold Coca-Cola. Coke has application cards are being re¬ the refreshing taste you never get A t turned to the applicants. minimum of information from tired of. That's why things go better with the forms is being copied for the Coke, after Coke, after Coke. BOOKSTORE files. Only the amount of the fee re¬ CORNER EVERGREEN AND W. GRAND RIVER duction goes to Data Processing for the computer. Smith said. -ONE BLOCK WEST OF THE UNION The reduction will be shown on students' fee cards at registra¬ Coco-Colo Bottling Co. of Michig tion as a credit against the full amount of fees. Friday, August 25, 1967 4 Michigan State News. East Lansing. Michigan SPORTS By GAYEL State News Goovert's chances WESCH Sports Writer After gaining All-Am¬ erica honors on MSU's na¬ kept sionals. from the profes¬ among other good with Lions the rookies, the Involving the entire 17 victory over San Diego (the game in which Hllgen- chance of getting a good off- sea son "As far job around here." as Iknow,Coach Schmidt may be a reason as major why the Lions aren't concerned about Goo¬ tional championship team A season with Charles- camp, which kept Goovert berg was injured) Goovert Former Spartan line¬ played the second half and (Joe) Schmidt Is going to vert's size as Houston was. of 1965, Goovert tried out town, S.C., of the Conti¬ solidly entrenched, and backer Ron Goovert has second the team in keep five linebackers for He was a perennial All-Pro for the Houston Oilers of nental League, kept him In even though the Lions were was on pursued a job with a pro¬ the season, so things look linebacker at 6-0, 220, an defensive points, making the AFL, only to be cut. shape. After getting a rec¬ rich with linebackers, fessional football team the ommendation from MSU'- Goovert wasn't cut from the five tackles. real good." Inch taller but the same The Oilers figured he way he'd pursue an oppos¬ was too small, but offered offensive backfield Coach Goovert Is happy to be "The Lions have given weight as Goovert. ing quarterback—and the Goovert's playing weight him a chance on the taxi A1 Dorow, he signed as a An injury to ttally I 111— a Lion. He's a native of the me a good chance to prove tactic appears to be paying free agent with the Lion . genberg which sidelined suburb of Ferndale and has at MSU was 205, but he ad¬ off. squad. Goovert wasn't sat¬ myself during camp, and ded the extra 15 to enhance isfied with that and was re¬ Since then things have him for the season, moved always wanted to play with Pm glad I haven't let them Goove.. .cided. he his chances for pro ball. leased. been coming up roses for Goovert to second string them. down," Goovert said. "I wasn't going to fce stopped "Whether Fm big enough Goovert. but a Lion spokesman said "I'm real pleased with think we're going to have a short of his goal, and now had outstandir. he was never In real jeop¬ the way has always been the big The Oakland Raiders He an things have turned good team this year. he's almost certain to stick question, but Iknow I've got made a bid for him, but the performance in tralnln ardy of being cut from the out," Goovert said Thurs¬ Schmidt's doing a tremen¬ with the Detroit Lions for enough size now, and my Oilers had dropped him camp, including Impres¬ squad even when Hilgen- • day. "Everyone dreams of dous job and everybody's the coming seasonas back¬ speed and strength are as¬ too late for a tryout, and sive showings in the two berg was playing. playing with their home been working hard for up man for regular middle major scrimmages (one In the Lions' recent 38- team, and Til have a better him." sets," Goovert said. RON GOOVERT linebacker Mike Lucci. once again Goovert was Gym clinic Commissioner lures all kinds Bob Harris, former | Duffy's decision MSU gymnastics coach, on. Phillips resolve As watches Lucy Alix, of to Birmingham, as she per¬ forms on the parallel bars By JOE MITCH g NEW YORK (UPI) —Players of major league agreement con¬ Friday after an incident on a during the 10th Annual State News Sports Editor | MSU National Gymnastics the Kansas City Athletics Thurs¬ cerns the commissioner's au¬ recent plane trip by the A's trig¬ Coaches are a rare breed. Clinic being held this day called on Commissioner Wil¬ thority for looking Into disputes. gered the feud, which erupted into They must be a conglomeration of a little bit of everything— week in Jenlson Field- liam D. Eckert to resolve their Commissioner Eckert ac¬ complete dissent Sunday morning house. Appearing uncon¬ specialist, communicator, philosopher, counselor and consoler. week-long dispute- with team own¬ knowledged receipt of the play¬ when Finley fired Manager Alvin Football, in particular, is probably the most demanding of all er Charles O. Finley. ers' statement. "I have received Dark on the grounds that he was cerned about the whole sports for a coach. Here, his decisions affect more players on one After voting on the decision the request from the players," he unable to control his players. thing, however, is little team than any other sport. before Wednesday night's game said. "We are gathering appro¬ Dark's firing followed a public Blair Gifford, son of De- Qiffy Daugherty had one deci¬ with Baltimore, the Kansas City priate data Ln our office for a statement Issued by the Kansas lene Gifford, East Lan¬ sion to make that would have a players, acting through the Major hearing at a later date." City players condemning Flnley's sing graduate student. very definite impact on one of his The commissioner said no def¬ actions and accusing the owner of Leagu;- Baseball Players Assn. Blare is one of the young¬ star players. It certainly also and its Executive Director,Mar¬ inite date had been established "spying" on the team. est at the clinic, which would be felt in his team's signed state¬ for the hearing but added: "What¬ vin Miller, sent a .The entire affair may have^a chances for the Big Ten cham¬ I determine will be an¬ has drawn participants . ment to the commissioner which ever pronounced effect on Flnley's pionship this fall. nounce.' at the hearing at the later from all over the United read: plans to move the Kansas City The player, Jess Phillips, had "On behalf of the players of the date." franchise to either Seattle, Mil¬ Stgtes and Canada. Afinal been charged with forgery in In a surprise move before the exhibition free to the pub¬ Kansas City Athletics, the Major waukee or Oakland. American Kalamazoo during the break be¬ Athletics-Orioles game Wednes¬ League Baseball Players Assn. League owners rejected Flnley's lic will be held this morn¬ tween winter and spring terms. hereby certifies to you the cur¬ day night, Jack Aker, the team's request once before and may be ing in Jenison with senior player representative, announced Phillips, who had been an out- I rent dispute between the saic upset by the bad publicity the In¬ girls (14 and up) and sen¬ standing mainstay in the defen- | players and the management of the players' decision to call upon cident has caused. ior boys (15 and up) com¬ sive backfield the last twoyears, the Kansas City club for prompt the commissioner to settle the Finley denied that Joe Buzas only this week pleaded guilty to hearing and determination pur- disagreement. The move was to¬ of Plttsfield, Mass., the owner peting. State News photos by the charge. ;ar.t to article I, section 2D tally unexpected since matters of three minor league franchises, He will wait until Oct. 16 be¬ Jim Meade of t r lea seemed- to have been soothed had offered to buy the team and fore receiving a sentence. Please advise us" at your earliest Tuesday when Finley reinstated flatly declared the franchise was Daugherty had two choices in convenience of the date, time pitcher Lew Krausse, whose not for sale. dealing with Phillips. He could and place established for such original suspension caused the "I haven't seen any such of¬ feud to erupt. prevent him from playing ball JESS PHILLIPS hearing." fer," said Finley, "but ltdoesn't during his senior year and thus save the team and MSU from any Article I, section 2D of the Krausse's suspension last make any difference. The club Is embarrassment during the season. not for sale at any amount." Or he could invite him back forfait drills and let him play, pend¬ ing results of the sentence. # Daugherty chose the latter. It was not the easy way out, for let¬ ting Phillips play might bring repercussions, unfavorable to both Lansing YMCA Phillips and the University. But the way Daugherty tells it, his decision was the "only way > SCOREBOARD out." sets course "1 felt it was my responsibility as a coach to invite him back for AMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE fall drills," Daugherty said this week. W L PCT GB "I'm not in this business to wreck some one's life. If I thought it Chicago W 69 L 53 PCT .566 GB — St. Louis 77 47 .621 — in life -saving would help Jesse not to let him play I would. "But I think it would have just the opposite effect on him." Boston 69 55 .557 1 Cincinnati 67 58 .536 101/2 68 61 .527 A life-saving course will be Daugherty had no reservations about keeping Phillips on the side¬ Minnesota 68 55 .553 11/2 Chicago 111/2 offered to men and women at the lines this fall. DETROIT 69 56 .552 11/2 San Fran 65 59 .524 12 YMCA in Lansing, beginning Sept. "I felt Jesse was worthy of our help," he said. "If the coaches California 64 61 .512 61/2 Atlanta 63 58 .521 12 1/2 9. can't stand behind their players I don't know who can. 60 65 .480 101/2 Phila 63 59 .516 13 Washington The will for six Cleveland 59 67 .468 12 Pittsburgh 61 64 .488 161/2 course run "Jesse is in good academic standing with the University and I weeks and will be Mondays and know he conducts himself in an exemplary way off the field. Any Baltimore 57 68 .456 13 1/2 Los Angeles 56 66 .449 20 Houston 52 74 .413 26 Tuesdays from 7-8 p.m. and mistake he has done deserves to be rectified." New York 54 70 .435 16 Kansas 53 72 .424 171/2 New York 49 75 .395 28 Saturdays from 1:30-3:30 p»m. Daugherty explains that he wasn't inviting Phillips back for fall City foil Only those 15 years and older drills because "Phillips is a first string player." New York at TODAY'S Washington 2 (N) GAMES Chicago at New York (N) and able to swim a quarter of a mile are eligible for the course. An American Red Cross Life- DETROIT Tigers (UPI)--Harmon Kil- off Denny McLain, who was to laender singled homeRodCarew, "I want you to know that I'd do the same thing for a fourth string¬ er," he said. "I've done it in the pact." Hopefully, Phillips, presence in a Spartan uniform this fall won'lt Minnesota at Cleveland 2 (N) Pittsburgh at Philadelphia (N) Savlng Certificate will be given lebrew blasted his 34th home run touched for 11 hits and three who had doubled. bring any harsh publicity or criticism from visiting reporters. California at Baltimore 2 (N) St. Louis at Los Angeles 2 (N) those who complete the course. to over the left field fence in the runs in 7 1/3 Innings. It was The Tigers tied the game in Phillips should be judged for his abilities on the football field. Detroit at Kansas City (N) Atlanta at San Francisco (N) There is a basic membership eighth inning Thursday, enabling McLain's 14th loss against 16 the fifth when Norm Cash lined Unfortunately, though, All-American and conference honors don't Boston at Chicago 2 (N) Cincinnati at Houston (N) fee and a $5 skill course fee. his 17th homer into the lower take that into account alone. the Minnesota Twins jo defeat victories. the Detroit Tigers, 4-2. The Twins added an insurance right field seats. AlWorthington, "I hope this incident won't be blown way out of proportion," Killebrew's home run came run in the ninth when Ted Uh- who entered the game when start¬ Daugherty said. "1 would hope that athletes would be above re¬ ing pitcher Dave Bo swell injured proach and things like this unnoticed." his elbow sliding into third base, "But they're not and I guess we have to expect it." evened his record at 8-8. Daugherty is one of those rare breed coaches. Yankees drop Chisox, 5-0 Boswell had led oft the sev¬ enth with a triple and injured CHICAGO (UPI)—Charley Boston beat Washington, 7-5. his right elbow trying to re¬ Smith backed Bill Monbouquette's Monbouquette, in notching, his five-hit pitching with a pair of third victory and first shutout two-run homers Thursday as the of the season, set down the first turn to third when Uhlaender lined to Dick Tracewski at short. MSU frosh-to-be wins New York Yankees whipped Chi- 10 batters in order, walked three Boswell had given the Twins cago 5-0. The loss slashed the and struck out three. Four of the White Sox' lead in the American White Sox' hits were scratch in- League pennant race to 1 per- field singles. a 2-1 lead in the fifth by beat¬ ing out a bunt, moving to second on Carew's sacrifice, advancing in Olympic wrestling was able to win only one of four centage point as second-place to third on Uhlaender's single EBERSBACH, Germany (UPI) —The United States' Junior Greco-Roman matches for a IT RE ALLY ^ AYS TO BE A CREDIT UNION FAMILY. and scoring on Cesar Tovar's combined match score of 7-3. sacrifice fly. Olympic wrestling team swept six freestyle matches against a Greg Johnson, a Lansing resi¬ LOW COST AUTO LOANS Willie Horton doubled in De¬ troit's first run after Dick Mc- team from Baden-Wurttemberg Wednesday night to bring its West dent who will be a freshman at MSU this fall, decisloned Bill Auliffe opened the game with a German tour record to 2-0. Dowbiggen of St. Rose, Quebec, walk. However, the American team 12-4, In a freestyle exhibition at 123-pounds. FULLY INSURED FOR Larry Morgan of Bakersfield, Calif., defeated West German YOUR PROTECTION youth champion Anton Aaebele In S STEAK the 106-pound match, but John AT NO EXTRA COST, Miller, also of Bakersfield, and Greg Wojchlechowski of Toledo, plus Ohio, were beaten by West G^r- ALL THE PRICE INFORMATION FILET STEAK S1-37 YOU NEED TO SIRLOIN STEAK $1-33 New Yorkers GET THE BEST PORK CHOPS $1-18 , POSSIBLE DEAL. ... including Texas Toast, Baked Potato, and Tossed SalAd. win IM title The New Yorkers beat the Pa¬ STEAKBURGER SPECIAL S-72 perbacks, 3-1, Thursday, for the IM softball championship during ... including Texas Toast, Baked Potato. the second five weeks. The New Yorkers scored all of their runs In the first Inning and i the BEST STEAK HOUSE collected only three hits, also In MSU employees! 218 ABBOTT RD. the first Inning. The Paperbacks scored thpir only run In the fifth. They had 1019 Trowbridg* Road four hits. Friday, August 25, 1967 5 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan IGES British try to avoid break Newark police as China relations worsen hit w ith race suit LONDON (JP)--Black smoke and if possible. But it hopes to with¬ ignored a Red China ultimatum for some time," a Foreign Of- charred paper billowedThursday draw British women and chil¬ expiring Tuesday. fice spokesman said. take a l in certain other cit- Red China had demanded the NEW YORK t — The Na¬ from chimneys at Red China's dren from China. Hopson sent word to London ies." % release of all Chinese held for tional Association for the Ad¬ legation as if documents were Smoke also was seen rising that all 54 members of the Brit¬ The sedition in the strife-torn vancement of Colored People lawyers said they planned being burned, the usual prelim¬ from the chimney of the resi¬ colony ish mission were safe and back and the lifting of a ban on three (NAACP) and the American Civil a possible similar suit against inary to a rupture of diplomatic dence of Shen Ping, the Chinese in their homes in Peking's main Cincinnati. Liberties Union filed suit today relations. But there was no word charge d'affaires, a mile away pro-Communist Hong Kong news¬ diplomatic compound. There, The suit charged that the New¬ from the legation. papers. Chinese Communists in about half a mile from the sacked seeking appointment of a receiver of an imminent break. to take over and operate the New¬ ark Police Department, state Hong Kong are trying to under¬ legation, Hopson has set up a mine British authority. ark, N.J., Police Department. troopers and National Guards¬ Relations between Britain and Asked about the fires, a Chi¬ new office. Similar action may be taken men "under the pretext of civil nese official refused to answer In Peking, Donald Hopson, been official Red China are badly frayed by There has no disorders visited massive retali¬ EMtain's charge d'affaires, sal¬ in other cities, in NAACP attor¬ the burning of the British lega¬ "unreasonable questions." contact between the British mis¬ ney said. ation on the Negro community." tion building in Peking Tuesday vaged what Red Chinese mobs sion and the Chinese govern¬ The civil suit was filed in Fed¬ Di Suvero said that unlike the and the manhandling of British Hong Kong, the British crown had left of his legation and set ment since the mob violence. situation in Detroit, no official eral District Court for New Jer¬ diplomats by Chinese mobs. colony on the southern border of up shop in a small apartment. The Foreign Office here holds action was taken in Newark to China, is the center of the dis¬ "ft is obviously going to be little hope of any immediate re¬ sey In Newark. The suit, filed by 18 Newark remedy alleged police brutality. Britain Is determined to avoid pute. The British legation in Pe¬ extremely difficult to operate building of the British legation. "We seek a civil remedy a break in diplomatic relations king was burned after Britain any kind of effective office there "The building was completely Negroes, names .is defendants Newark Mayor Hugh J. Addoni- against police lawlessness and burned down," the spokesman' not a punitive measure," he said. said. "All we are thinking of zio, Dominick Spina, public "We are filing the suit because now is the safety of the people." safety director, and Police Chief no public official will act." Oliver Kelly. If Red China has decided to The complaint charged the "We don't minimize the diffi¬ break relations, Its diplomats Newark Police Department with culties of winning this suit,"Car¬ cannot get out of Britain right fight intimidation ter said. Ca "acts of violence, Latins . away. The British government A precedent, he said, was es¬ and humiliation to keep the Negro banned all Chinese Communist tablished in Cofo vs. Rainey in community in a second-class sta¬ diplomats and others from leav¬ Mississippi in 1964 which tus." ing this country after the Pe¬ charged sheriffs with harassing By ROBERT BERRELLEZ "There is no chance the Ha¬ means, he added, although the In Newark, Spina released a king incident. civil rights workers. Associated Press vana conference plans will suc¬ Romulo Betancourt government "If the Chinese try to leave statement branding the suit "ri¬ diculous." He pictured his office That suit followed the deaths ceed," said a spokesman of the as early as 1959 launched a pro¬ Britain while British subjects CARACAS, Venezuela (JP—Fi¬ Venezuelan Communist as being flooded in the weeks of three civil rights workers in gram of reforms to liquidate the del Castro's dream of insurrec¬ tion In South America is facing "Castro wll get the support only party. breeding grounds of social dis¬ are incarcerated in Peking they will be prevented from doing so," Later than you think following the riot with letters, Philadelphia, Miss. A federal court dismissed the of adventurers and anarchists." content that Marxists exploit. an official source said. phone calls, and telegrams com¬ tough resistance. Chances of sig¬ Chances of a Castro-type vic¬ Janitor washes the windows in Snyder Hall in complaint against the sheriff The Moscow-oriented Commu¬ The government is also con¬ mending the actions of the po¬ but the 5th Circuit Court of nificant success seem remote. tory in any Latin American coun¬ cerned for the preparation for the thousands of students who will lice department. , Ap¬ frustration defeat nist leadership in Venezuela safety of 190 be returning to campus for fall term in less than peals reinstated it. "We feel But the or try are considered improbable other Britons scattered through¬ "I don't believe I have had sharply censured the conference that our complaint will stand up of the objectives set forth at Ha¬ by Dr. Rafael Caldera, boss of out China. a month. State News Photo by Jim Mead more than seven or eight com¬ vana's recent "solidarity" con¬ objectives and refused to at¬ in federal court based on Cofo tend. In statement, the party re¬ the Venezuelan Social Christian plaints of abuse of authority and ference will not mean the end of these are being investigated," vs. Rainey," Di Suvero said. jected "the role of 'revolution¬ party, the country's second larg¬ unrest and political violence in est. It would require, he says, Spina said. ary pope' that Castro reserves " the hemisphere. Social and eco¬ the same set of circumstances ... I have requested the for himself." Where would Cas¬ nomic progress is lagging be¬ that brought Castro to power: corporation counsel for the City tro be, the statement asked, if hind an exploding population. identifiable either with Peking he had "unfurled the Red flag" Castro, by assuming a more na¬ before his revolution tionalistic attitude not readily ed? succeed¬ Castro gravely damaged the A brutal dictatorship, a demor¬ alized army and a political vac¬ uum. Most important, Caldera In¬ dicated, was Castro's use of Ugly When an adult will applaud. Duckling, Duckling'a marriagt problems; because she of Newark to decide whether or not there slander is a cause.of action for or any other reason against those parties who have Coffee for new can crown hobo king or Moscow, may arouse new sup¬ deception to gain control. lacks beauty, she's been unable filed the complaint . ..Theseare local Communist party's image rsity Theatre A port among restless young hot- "Castro never revealed him¬ The show will ;ed in to get her man. the kind of negative complaints BRirr, low a :*>' - Only nine bloods In the hemisphere. by prodding it into a violent self precisely for what he was," ent of But beauty, in tills case,Is only which frustrate law enforcement hoboes braved the rain Tuesday Studio 4-9, 111 til. These conclusions are based line, says Interior Minister Rei- Caldera said. "He did not prom¬ For Patty Wilson, Detroit Kin deep. And we discover that and make it more and more dif¬ to attend the 67th annual Hobo Fairchild and tl • on Investigation in three coun¬ naldo Leandro Mora. ise a Communist regime nor a senior, those responses have Curtain is 3:30 p all her life she's been beautiful ficult for a police department to tries currently afflicted with "At one time the Communists totalitarian system. Instead, pos¬ stimulated her to revive chil¬ is a 111; o uh, usingphysical stand¬ carry on its work." But it took five votes before guerrilla problems, Bolivia, Co¬ had 180,000 votes and elected ing as the leader of a liberation dren's theatre at Michigan State. ards of tin. day, it might lie hard Henry M. di Suvero, executive the Hardrock Kid could be The play is a deliriiw Written lombia and Venezuela. two deputies," he pointed out. movement of genuinely demo¬ to support such a claim. director of the AC LI" ir. New Jer¬ elected king of the hoboes and "Now they have none." cratic stripe, he offered two Im¬ A theatre major. Miss Wilson b> Milne, who ! ro... hi us While at the start she is plain, sey, and Robert L. Carter, gen¬ receive his coveted crown—a The latter two are the most The Communists might have mediate goals, restoration of the is fulfilling an independent study Winnie the Pooh, it is the story she becomes,according to proph¬ eral counsel to tije NAAC P, an¬ coffee can. important targets in the Cuban achieved more by peaceful 1940 constitution and elections in directing with "The Ugly . r': ' esy, beautiful on her wedding day. nounced the action in a joint The Kid, whose real name is dictator's scheme to proliferate within two years." S. Joan Uallach, as Princess statement at the ACLL 's office John Mislen, a New Jersey na¬ his brand of violent Marxism. Those now trying to emulate Camilla, actually does become tive, regained the crown he lost Strategically located on the con¬ tinent's northern rim and prac¬ him, says Caldera, run afoul "a 'LOVING GESTURE' beautiful a s t h e play progresses "This is the first -uit of its last year to the Pennsylvania Kid, tically next door to the Panama New Haven calm; grave inconvenience—recogni¬ tion by people who know exactly —her eyes, her face, her very self, all glow with loveliness. kind," said Carter. "We plan to Richard Wilson. Canal, they also are Latin Amer¬ what they stand for." Miss Wilson aimed at making ica's top oil producers, rich in minerals and capitalist goods that would make Marxism profit¬ curfew revoked 'such Even as a dedicated C a st ro ite the French Marxist writ¬ Hippies heap dollars the play a worthwhile experience for both children and adults, and her cast have done an Quakers decr NEW HAVEN, CONN. .?) — er, Regis Debray, admits diffi¬ she and on stock exchange able. culties for guerrilla movements excellent job fulfilling it. Mayor Richard C. Lee ended a s ta te They are also the two rfiost and lifted a curfew of emergency for New Ha ven while declaring that Castro's tri¬ umph can be duplicated in the the The princess gets ruse so her man, cleverly devised by os Viet war experienced and among the best noting an apparent ena to un¬ Thursday, thrown away $1,000. Observers BARNESVILLE, the grounds that "it is immoral hemisphere. Debray, arrested NEW YORK .PI—Dollar bills, h i r parents—substituting her Ohio — A prepared, militarily, to combat orders In predominantly Negfo last March in a Bolivian guer¬ could count only 20 or 30 bills lady-in-waiting for herself atthe Quaker peace group has asked beyond the limits of the con¬ thrown by hippies from a visit¬ guerrillas. Colombia has had neighborhoods. New Haven re¬ rilla area, is facing charges floating down to take their place initial meeting—is a success, Congress to refuse to impose a sciences even of those who hold ors' gallery, rained down Thurs¬ the 'just war' concept. them since 1949 and Venezuela mained calm for two nights, fol¬ of collaborating with the armed among the scraps of paper on even though they discovered each 10 per cent surtax to help pay to day on the floor of the New York the floor. for the Vietnam war. "The war began in error and since late 1962. Both countries bands. In his book, "Revolution other before schedule and fell in lowing three straight evenings of Stock Exchange. has escalated in miscalculation, have first-rate counterguerrilla disturbances. Within the Revolution," Debray The hippies also tore up sev¬ One girl, who said she was low without parental guidance. Instead, they called for a de- Morning Dow of the Croup Im¬ misinformation and misunder¬ schools and complementary so¬ The mayor said strong police says: "Missions from the Or¬ eral $1 bills and burned a $5 \\ e learn that Prince Simon, escalation of the war, with de¬ cial programs to neutralize, if patrols, bolstered by state ganization of American States, bill during their visit to Wall age, a hippie group from the having heard of her great beauty, standing," they said. fense money diverted to a "true Lower East Side, said "greed is In other action the Quakers: not win over, rural civilian sen¬ troopers, will remain in the city the Peace Corps--some throigh Street. was afraid she would find fault and major" War on Poverty in timent. Aside from some spec¬ and that "every step necessary hard work, patience and real primitive." with him and devised an identical the United States, and for non- —urged members to oppose the tacular achievements chiefly of to maintain peace and protect self-sacrlfice--have moved into Police did not arrive In the An exchange spokesman said ruse, substituting his servant. military aid to developing coun¬ rural zones taking advantage of until after they had left the money would be collected --created a fund for "victims propaganda value, the Castro- the people of area While satisfying the require¬ tries. our city will be returned if the owners could of war"; the lack of work by leftists." and no arrests were made. and ments for children's entertain¬ type subversion effort has failed. taken." be located. ment, the play is top-notch adult The peace group, the Religious --urged young members "We just want to make a lov¬ avoid the draft and set up ing gesture to these people," "Why did we do it? Because it fare. The comedy, innuendos, Society of Freinds which rep¬ to was fun," explained one hippie in the straight lines, are resents about 600 in Ohio, Mich¬ a fund if they are jailed for said one of the 15 hippies. "They Reds hit Hong Cong border even answer to questions. igan, and Western Pennsylvania, refusal; don't know what money is. They deftly performed. —set up a counsel to offer deal in stock certificates." It's a lovely way to spend an made the recommendations in its peasants armed with pitchforks China's province just to the north "I think they're nuts," said a afternoon. Especially for us old yearly meeting at Barnesville, youths alternative to military (continued from page one) and scythes tore through a bar¬ of the colony, for 50 per cent Ohio. They oppose the war on service. woman tourist from Warren, college kids. border. ricade on a road crossing into of Its food. Ohio. Permits ready Twice the soldiers were seen Hong Kong. They headed for a EXirlng Thursday's disorders The hippies were greeted with grappling with members of the new British border post 200 yards along the border, only a trickle for UC waiver mobs. One soldier was knocked from the border but were driven of food reached Hong Kong from cheers from the trading floor as down and the crowds cheered. Red China. they paraded out onto the visi¬ IK back by tear gas. Permits for fall term waiver At one time, the sound of ma¬ At the western end of the bor¬ Fel Yl-ming, a Hong Kong tors' balcony. examinations in University Col¬ chine-gun fire was heard on the der, three Chinese swam a branch Communist publisher and leader A guard had warned the young lege courses must be obtained Chinese side. It was not de¬ of the Pearl River to the Hong of the Anti-British Struggle Com¬ before Sept. 8. people no demonstrations would termined whether the army was Kong side, cut barbed wire en¬ mittee, has Implied Red China be allowed, but the hippies lined Permits arc available at 170 firing across the border or try¬ tanglements, then swam back to will cut off the food supply en¬ Bessey, £>33 Wonders, 109 Brody up at the rail and began tossing ing to control the mobs. China. tirely. Red China halted all food out dollar bills. Guards moved and G36 Hubbard. No student will Crowds attacked British posi¬ The Communists are expected shipments to Hong Kong for four In and ordered the hippies to be permitted to take a waiver tions elsewhere along the border, to step up border and terrorist days In June during an earlier leave. examination in any University but were repulsed by tear gas and attacks to force negotiations on smoke bombs. One crowd was an ultimatum laid down by Pe¬ period of crisis. To guard against a shutoff, a One hippie said the group had College course without a permit. IS made up mostly of women. king that expired Tuesday. government committee left Hong Four miles east of Lowu at Peking demanded release of all Kong to study the prospects of Man Kam To, upwards of 80 persons jailed during three months of rioting, labor strife and terrorism, and the lifting of food Imports from Japan and Nationalist Chinese Formosa. paying the ban on publication of three Treaty TOP CA$H ill small pro-Communist news¬ (continued from page one) papers. Britain Ignored the ultimatum, Library hours and the Red Chinese retaliated "Since 1945, five nations have Vacation library hours will be¬ with an attack on the British come effective Sept. 2 and con¬ come Into possession of these dreadful weapons," he added. diplomatic compound in Peking, "We believe now—as we did then burning out the, legation offices ■—that even one such nation is too and manhandling Britain's diplo¬ tinue through Sept. 20. Closed Sundays and Sept. 4 For Used Books (Labor Day), the library will be mats. many." open from 8 a.m.-6 p.m. Monday Officials Peking has another weapon up through Friday and 9 a.m.-5 p.m. • Buy your books for fall term . In Washington re¬ its sleeve—food. Hong Kong and avoid the rush. ported the United States and the Soviet Union are working on a upon Kwangtung, Red Saturday. STILL WET BEHIND method of assuring the atomic have-not nations signing the treaty that they will not suffer Monday Night Special THE EARS? from oun Ac*0ss F*Oh nuclear blackmail. /kC ROSS They said the assurances would EACH PIZZA ORDER WILL ENTITLE YOU TO A °L/N be put forward within the context SECOND PIZZA AT NO ADDITIONAL CHARGE. of provisions of the U.N. charter OFFER GOOD AFTE R 6:30. TAKE OUT ORDE RS The MSU crowd eats at providing for collective action. NOT INCLUDED. YOU MUST BE 21. f ^Jtudent^Jook U.S. sources said the draft also would prevent the THE NEW PUM treaty United States from supplying nu- clear weapons to a European force. But It was pointed out that non-nuclear nations In North Atlantic Treaty Organization and I TOWN 307 S.GRAND IV 9-6614 MoDonlft i§a Warsaw Pact countries already E. Lansing FREE PARKING IN LARGE LOT AT REAR OF STORE have anatomic shield—the United [ LANS|NG OPEN 10 A.M.-2 A.M. Lansing States and the Soviet Union. Friday, August 25, 1967 6 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan SEVERE PARKING SHORTAGE Receptions, trip in store Shaw ramp rule for newlywed Romneys SALT LAKE CITY If.—Newly- weds Mr. and Mrs. George Scott Romney and members of their families were in Michigan today, father, Kraus, Mr. and Mrs. were Will H. unable to attend Kraus home in Birmingham Sun- day, the couple will honeymoon Wednesday's temple ceremony in Bermuda, because they are not Mormons. They plan to live in Cam- undergrads fac noted then that all lots around would take "no time" to estab- They will hold a reception for bridge, Mass., where Scott is a was following Wednesday's wedding in Hundreds of undergraduate the intersection of Shaw Lane and lish the shuttle system. the Salt Lake Mormon Temple, the couple Friday at the Bloom- second-year student at the Har- drivers in the Red Cedar complex Scott, 25, the eldest son of field Hills Country Club. vard Law School. He received his face a long, long walk to their Farm Lane were nearing full When the committee proposed Gov. George Romney, and his new After another reception at the B.A. from Michigan State. cars this fall. capacity. When Wells opens an the bus system in connection bride, Ronna Eileen Stern, 23, Because of an increase of grad¬ additional 500 parking spaces will with the parking shift, they de- of Birmingham, Mich., were uate assistants and buildings in be needed. fended Lot Y as more practical married for "time and all eter¬ South Campus, about 500 student The new parking regulation, because: nity" in private rites of the drivers will be forced out of the effective Sept. 1, provides that —better bus service could be provided because of the larger Church of Qay Saints. JesusChristof Latter- Lehar operetta 1,000-space Shaw ramp and sent to commuter Lot Y, at Farm those in Owen and Van Hoosen Halls, and graduate students in Shaw, Mason-Abbot and Phillips- numbers of people; ■better police protection for Only the bride and groom and Lane and Mt. Hope Road. Grad assistants, under University Snyder park in the Shaw ramp. cars gathered in one, large light- immediate members of the Rom¬ ney family Elder Hugh were present when B. Brown, first coun- Lecture-Concert parking regulations, have prior¬ ity to available parking spaces. Faced with hundreds of stu- dents who needed to get to their ed lot; —Bogue Street would not hav selur in the First Presidency Franz Lehar's operetta 'The Two motion pictures this Sep¬ The Dept. of Public Safety cars, the traffic committee sug- to be extended at this time t of the Mormon church, performed Land of Smiles" will open the tember will open the International anticipates about 14,000 student gested that buses run to Lot Y service a new parking lot In the Film Series. from 6 a.m. to 1 pjn. Monday the marriage. 19t>:-68 L e c t u r e-Concert Se- 'Those drivers this fall, if last year's The director of the Dept. of Magnificent Men in An additional through Thursday, 6 ajn. to 11 Following the four minute ries and MSU's September En- trend continues. Public Safety, Richard Their Flying Machines," de- 6,100 faculty and employes reg¬ pjn. on Friday and 4 p.m. to O. Ber- ceremony, Gov. and Mrs. Romney tertainment. 1 a jti. on Sunday. nltt, told the committee then that were hosts at a wedding break- Starring the operatic tenor Picting the race of extraordinary istered their vehicles last fall. fast.honoring the bride and groom Gieuseppe Di Stefano as Prince flying^machines and Paris during between London the era of In recommending the action at a hotel rooftop restaurant Sou Chong, and featuring an inter- D*"'° infancy, aviation's A ' will *u~ ~~~ *' be shown last March, the All-University which overlooks themulti-spired national cast, the Viennese pro- Traffic Committee also pro¬ day he had received no word new one. from University officials t A group of students in the temple where the wedding took duction will be staged at 8:15 at ?;30French p.m. Sept. 22. film 'The Shame¬ posed an all-night bus service tablish such a system. He said Red Cedar complex had sug- p.m. Sept. 27 in the Auditorium, to get students to their cars. place. less Old Lady" will be shown A steal The committee made the pro¬ it would take acklitlonal manpower gested in committee hearings Shortly after the breakfast, with tickets available at the door, the Romr.eys and the bride's at 7:30 p.m. both Sept. 28 and posal to help alleviate the park¬ to implement and the students that a new lot be built across in 1912 Vierrna 29. The film centers around an Sign in the window of Savant's Cleaners shows the family boarded a commercial ing problem caused by Wells „ elderly widow, who after an ex¬ trend of the times. Apparently, it pays to wear jet at the Salt Lake Airport and *nd Chlna' *lls th« ove istence of drudgery, suddenly short skirts. State News Photo by Bob Ivins Hall, the language-math build¬ flew home to Michigan. Vlennef maiden and a handsome begins to savor life. ing, opening this September. It The bride's mother and step- oriental prince. Both cinema attractions will He said a 1,000-space lot, University be in Falrchild theater with tick¬ which is the size needed for that Edgewood United Seventh-Day ets available at the door. ALTER SALES ESTIMATES area, would cost up to $2 million. Church The 1967-68 World Travel James Tanck, a traffic com¬ Adventist Church Series has scheduled John mittee member, asserted last Worship Service 9:30 a.m. Temporarily Meeting at University Lutheran Church Division and AnnSts. Moyer's color travel film "New Face of India" for 8 p.m. Sept. 30. The documentary will be presented in the Auditorium with Ford executive fears strike ST. LOUIS — A Ford Motor Lee A. Iacocca, vice presi- future of ^ autoniotive busi- of material and spring that "there was no doubt that dent eventually almost all stu- i parking would be south of the railroad tracks." tickets available at the door. Most of the land north of the Co. executive said Thursday that dent, Car and Truck Group, out- neSs." August 27 Sermon by Dr. Edgar Knoebel estimates of new car sales lined his views at Lincoln-Mer- 1. "--Current contract talks donTknow" is how much they will tracks now has been set aside EAST LANSING wit^ CHURCH OF "would blow sky high if there cury Division's 1968 national ^ uaw. "The union de- go up and how the public will re- for construction of office and Church School THE NAZARENE were a long strike or a serious press preview of its new prod- mands are more sweeping than act to higher prices." classroom buildings. Saturday, August 26 work interruption." ucts* ever before and the prospects 149 Highland Ave., East Lansing Iacocca and Gary Laux, Ford 332-2559 nursery for an earjy settlement are not Sunday School 10:00 a.m. vice president and general man- encouraging. If there is a strike, Morning Worship 11:00 a.m. of Lincoln Mercury, agreed lead our estimates for 1968 and the Catholic ager Evening Service 7:00 pjn. the auto sales business was pick- rest of ^ 1967 model year would Affiliated with the United Wednesday prayer service ing up momentum in the final be off by hundreds of thousands of Church of Christ, Congre¬ 7:00 pjn. days of 1967 model sales. units." gational Christian; Evan¬ gelical and Reformed Each Sun. listen of WJIM to'The Voice Prophecy," 9:30 a.m., 1240 and "Faith for "One Hour of Sermon and For Song" Transportation Phone university lutheran ale-lea church Ford, second of the auto com- panies to show its new products 2. —The tax situation. "We agree with President Johnson on 'meaningful' Today," Channel 6 Sun. after¬ 332-1446, Rev, Glenn A. to the press, echoed the com- the need for a tax increase, but TORONTO (fl — Almost two "should" and "must" ideals on Chaffee, Pastor ments of American Motors top we must face the fact that loss years after the close of the Vat- w^at theCatholic Church has to do noon, Channel 2 at 10:30 a.m. brass at Its New York preview of spendable income through lean Ecumenical Council, Roman t0 11131(6 Its mission of preaching this week when it said current higher taxes—or even the threat Catholicism has still barely Christ in the modern world count, THE CHURCH OF negotiations with United Auto of higher taxes—could affect car scratched the surface in its at- The theological experts drew 8:15, 9:15, 10:30 sales." JESUS CHRIST OF Workers were a key factor in tempt to change its imageand out- this picture of the current LATTER-DAY SAINTS the automotive picture. 3. —Price. "We already know look. Church: "MORMONS" St. Johns Student Iacocca listed three major fac- prices will have to go up on That situation emerged clear- —The 1962-65 Vatican Ecu- which "make guessing so some 1968 models just to reflect ly Thursday international menical Council, which triggered All Saints Parish tors as an Parish f- hazardous these days about the some of the previous increases congress on the theology the renewal drive, posed many 327 M.A.C. Phone ED 7-9778 of church renewal went Into its Questions that had not been Welcome Students Central Methodist final day. thought about before in the half- SUNDAY SERVICES 800 Abbott Rd. Priesthood Meeting 9:00 a.m. Sunday Masses Across From the Capitol The best theologians inCathol- billion-member Church and still 7:15 - 8:30 - 9:45 - 11:00 Christ Methodist iclsm have been pouring fourth are not clearly grasped, Sunday School 10:30 a.m. Evening Services 5:00 p.m. & 6:00 pjm. Church WORSHIPS SERVICES since last Sunday, in more than —Many learned Catholics feel 8:15 40 papers running into hundreds unea9y and uncertain in the face a.m. Chapel 517 W. Jolly Rd., Lansing 10:00 of thousands of words, their ideas of a11 the challenges thrown up a jn. Sanctuary 8:00 a.m. Holy Communion and Prone Wilson M. Tennant, Minister and reflections on what must be t0 old waVs of thinking and acting; "Making God your Partner done to make Catholicism mean- --The broad body of average 10:00 a.m. Morning Prayer and Sermon Meinte Schuurmans, in Life" ingful in the current secularage. Catholics still contains millions 4:15 Alumni Chapel Dr. Howard A. Lyman Associate Minister "When the theologians come who cannot get rid of the old Preaching down from their ivory towers they Special Welcome to all MSU Worship Service 9:30-11 a.m. concept of a structure that im- Summer School Students. really have something to say," poses from above, requiring A Warm Welcome Extended commented a pastor sitting nothing but compliance from "This is my Father's World" to All Visitors. among the 2,000 participants lis- those below, tenlng to six cardinals and 45 The theologians outlined a First Christian UNIVERSITY Peoples Church theological scholars at the Unl- Church they feel must-be the University Methodist BAPTIST CHURCH versity of Toronto campus. Catholicism of TRINITY CHURCH Reformed Church East Lansing tomorrow, Church I American Baptist) The congress has no official terms of theology and guiding 1120 S. Harrison Rd. Gerard G. Philips, Pastor power. It has proclaimed no doc¬ Interdenominational 240 Marshall St., Lansing principles, it took this ideal form: Inter denomina tiona 1 trines and found no new dogmas. Worship ED 2-1888 Instead the theologians taking —Theology will be more con¬ 9:30 & 11:00 10:00 a.m. Worship 10:00 a.m. & 7:30 p.m cerned with man as a builder of 200 W. Grand River Church School 11:10 a.m, part have laid down a series of "A Slavery That Sets You Free" "The Justice of God" this world than with the classical at Michigan Midweek Meeting - themes that dwell SUNDAY: Church School Rev. Pohl, speaking Sermon by Rev. Hoffman only on heaven, Wednesday 7:30 p.m. the afterlife and the historical Morning Worship 10:00 a SUNDAY SERVICE Nursery Provided - 10-12 a.m. God* Ministers Now at Wardcliff School •A TIME TO BE" Rev. Alden B. Burns 3 blocks north of Grand —Pluralism of social-eco¬ Pastor DavidL. Erb Rev. Keith I. Pohl Sermon by Rev. Hoffman River, off Park Lake Road nomic ideas and religious beliefs CHURCH SCHOOL "Who Needs Us Now?" will be accepted by Catholicism 9:30 to 10:30 a.m. as due to man through Justice Campus Student Center Rev. Carl Staser 7:00 p.m. program for all ages and religious freedom, apart Evening Worship "Stones and Qist" 11:00 a.m. - Nursery 217 Bogue St. Apt. 3 LUTHERAN Phone 351-6360 from the continuing Christian by Associate Pastor Terry A. Smith Free Bus Transportation Those In Need of WORSHIP unity effort. WEDNESDAY: Mid-week discussionandprayerhour 7:00 p.m. 15 to 30 minutes before Transportation call— CHURCH SCHOOL each service around the Martin Luther Chapel —Theology will rely more on 882-1425 485-3650 10:00 a.m. the other intellectual sciences in Pastor: E.Eugene Williams and DavidL. Erb and Terry A.Smith campus. Lutheran Student Center working out its concepts and seeking fresh interpretations of Crib through 6th Grade . 444 Abbott Rd. the Scriptures. t COSTmmSTCR PRCSBYTCRIM OlURCh T\tro Blocks North of Union 1315 Abbott Rd. —The Church will concentrate Refreshment period in Church cost fansinG. micnican the major social Issues SOUTH BAPTIST CHURCH more on parlor following worship ser¬ 9:30 - Morning Worship vices. of the day, with practical instruc¬ SUNDAY SCHEDULE tion coming from local bishops rather than general statements 1518 S. Washington Lansing EAST LANSING coming from the Vatican. First Church of FRIENDS MEETING Dr. Howard Sugden, preaching —The Church will listen care¬ For transportation phone 332-6271 or 332-8901 Christ, Scientist (Quakers) NO MATTER WHAT fully to what the world ha;s to say By 6:00 p.m. Saturday on nontheologlcal matters, as the it All Saints Episcopal Church "God And a Violent Society" "DELLA WORE" Church seeks to formulate con¬ Rev. R. L. Moreland - MINISTERS - Rev. H. G. Beach 765 Grove St. E.L. tinually adjusting attitudes. Sunday Service 10 a.m. Meeting for Worship LOUIS CAN CLEAN 3 p.m. SUNDAY 7:00 P.M. SERMON at IT . . . New chaplain UNIVERSITY REFORMED CHURCH Christ Jesus 9:45 A.M. 8:30 P.M. For Information 332-1998 is a woman Rev. Tom Stark, pastor 351-7164 SUNDAY SCHOOL In By 10 — 10 a.m. - regular A COLLEGE BIBLE CLASS Youth Fellowship Out by 4— female chaplain associate "You Must Be Kimberly Downs has joined the University Metho¬ Ready" dist Church and Wesley Founda¬ In The Fireside Room (Refreshments) Church of Christ tion as associate director of the 1007 Kimberly Drive, Lansing Foundation. see sign at 2729 E. Grand Ann Kaiser, the minister, has Free Public Reading Room River 134 West Grand River IV 9-7130 attended three colleges and Dr. Howard 11:00 a.m. Sunday - SUNDAY SERVICES traveled through Europe and the 11:00 A.M. Sugden OPEN Alumni Memorial Chapel Morning Worship n K)0 a on. Middle East. Weekdays - 9-5 pjn. Bible Study 10:00 a.m. Miss Kaiser has worked in the Mon., Tues., Thurs., Fri. Evening Worship 6:00 p.m, "THE UNFINISHED BOOK" Monday Night Vespers 7-7:45 pm Evenings 7 p.m.-9 p.m. Methodist Church in Oklahoma Wednesday evening Bible 623 E. Grand River and North Carolina. Her special¬ All welcome to attend Study 7:30 pjn. ties are pastoral psychology, are East Lansing Union Room 22. For Transportation Call philosophical theology and Chris¬ Church Services and visit and Call 482-0754 For Transportation use the reading room. ED 2-1960 FE 9-8190 or ED 2-2434 :ross from Student Servict tian social ethics. Friday, August 25, 1967 7 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan ST. PE IS CAST PIVOT NORTH PRIVE-IN THEATRE SIDE' 2 Miles Worth on US-27.. 482-74091 Rollick-frolicking By STUART ROSENTHAL the humor of Schirner still has the production. far to go be¬ fore he becomes a convincing ABuideForTheMarriedMan army It is apparent that the French is not what it used to be. Granted it may still be cap¬ Waltz of the actor, yet he has given the Ledges the most uproarious moments of By America's Most Famous Swingers able of producing great Western the season. heroes like Charles de Gaulle, in Ledges Playhouse "Waltz of the Toreadors'' is but it would seem that the era a frantic, rollicking farce which of such- men as Gen. St. I'e' has does not let up for a moment. The Do's And Don'ts For The Married been permanently concluded. chambermaids and an equally fect complement to Peakes and The play is well produced in Man Who's Thinking Single — or French Army (ret.) General steady recessional of pregnant as Mme St. Pe's physician every aspect and is definitely St. Pe' is the central character chambermaids, along with a Thompsen offers a cool contrast the best entertainment in Lan¬ The Single Man Who's of "fhe Waltz of the Torea¬ young lady whose maidenhood he to the easily excited general. sing this week. dors," the third in a series of has respected for seventeen Just Thinking! Linda Carlson, looking like a Haircut five comedies at the Ledges Play¬ years. It is this last article in testpllot for a broom manufac¬ house. The play, by Jean Anouilh, conjunction with the first that turer, Janet Fairbrother, Caledonia, clips her ram pulled off the most delight¬ is the Ledges' best effort since triggers the comedy. ful bit of foolery in the play. lamb, Lambikin. Janet and her pet are partic¬ their Shakespeare festival; it John Peakes, as the rather con¬ While exalting her control over ipating in the 4-H Animal Exhibits this week. certainly manages to send its fused General, maintains his un¬ husband St. Pe', she threw her¬ Stqte News Photo by Nancy Swanson a udi ence into frequent pa roxysms strained but lively style at all self into an incredibly energetic of laughter. times. This is a major accom¬ frenzy, emerging from it con¬ The General has been as vic¬ plishment considering the length siderably less exhausted than torious in love as in battle, but and verbosity of the part. The her audience. Ed majors needed the valiant officer lacks the most role is such that everyone else essential prerequisite to amor¬ must play to the General and ous success—the ability and will¬ Peakes provides a well anchored Douglas Schirner once again lends his amazing comic streak to a character which might other¬ to teach poor youth ingness to hurt. As a result, in pivot fo* the rest of the cast. wise be of little consequence 1910 St. Pe' finds himself in Richard Thompsen" is a per¬ retirement, saddled with a hy- The Mott Institute forCommu- ract Mrs. Jacqueline Nickerson, pochondric wife, two brat daugh¬ FRIDAY, AUGUST 25 nity Improvement at MSL is try— Room 517 Erickson I iall, or call ters (aren't they ugly? he asks), ing to recruit more elementary- 353-6453. a steady- processional of new Summer Cinema Presents education majors to teach dis- A GUIDE FOR LUCILtE BALL JACK BENNY advantaged children how to read, write and solve arithmetic prob¬ BEST IN FOREIGN FILMS THE MARX BROS. THE MARRIED MAN" POLLY BERGEN * JOEY BISHOP SID CAESAR ART CARNEY 2ND BIG WEEK IN lems. WALLY COX-JAYNE MANSFIELD 2 FEATURES 2 WALTER ROBERT Instead of learning methods of MATTHAU MORSE HAL MARCH LOUIS NYE teaching on campus, students TODAY FROM 7:00 P.M. A NIGHT AT THE OPERA INGER STEVENS CARL REINER PHIL SILVERS would go into the actual school TERRY-THOMAS setting and expose themselves UNION BALLROOM 7 & 9 P.M. to live classroom situations. "BREATHTAKING!" ^ 50C Donation The institute at MSL', a part "MAGNIFICENT FILM. of the College of Education, Is a Shown Twice at 9 P.M. and Late NOT TO BE MISSED." J * y A 1 COOL MfoufifoMl/ branch of the Mott Foundation in ' 4th Flint. The philanthropic organi¬ zation granted MSL" $300,000 a LAUGHABLE PLUS Doctor! You've Got to Be Kidding year for the next lOyearsto work with community Improvement. WEEK! | MieHSaAWr«»'»| Shown once at 10:40 p.m. The funds are now being used to A BRUCE BROWN FILM IN COLOR help children who, because of low Feature Today Today Shown at 7;00 S; Later family income, and other eco¬ nomic problems, would not other¬ | CO-FEATURE 1 5th ACI!0N week; coolM, Si Saturday at 1:15-4:05-7:00-9:50 wise receive a complete educa¬ r-M.'.UU- tion. The institute plans to work "'""Morgan! May began when the mainly in Detroit and Flint inner- city elementary schools. Toda; Call him what you like Shown at "AK00K!"..."ANUT!" dirty dozen ^ No students' are required to continue in this program, for 8:40 p.m. only! were done! which they can receive up to 17 ...."AN ODD BALL!" credits for two terms, if they de¬ cide not to complete the training. * If, after the. first 10 weeks of next a [traction™ methods training, the student feels he is not ready or willing 'A Kind of-Loving' & 'Tomorrow DROWN CASSAVETES JAECKEL GEORGE IRINI RAtPH ROBERI to stay, he may simply ask to be dropped. Saturday & Sunday Continuous Showing From l JO P.M. KENNEDY LOPEZ MEEKER RYAN IELLY CLINT ROBERI Bux Office Open a No courses other than those required for all education majors SAVALAS WALKER WEBBER of junior or senior standing are Added! Magoo'Fun Cartoon necessary to qualify, although it is helpful to take a few classes NEXT! "UP THE DOWN STAIRCASE' in psychology and other behav¬ ioral sciences. ^ TECHNICOLOR' Interested students should con- 2 MILES SOUTHWEST OF IANSING ON M 78 | OQ'Recwds I (/jF EXCLUSIVE! THRU -TUES. NOW SHOWING ft"—ROBERT p JANE nCHARLES mm MILDRKO ALL COLOR PROGRAM Bedford Fonda Boyer Natwick 5 DAYS LEFT! See it! Women meet tony curtis Claudia cardinale NEXT ATTRACTION: REG. ADM. Color Twin-Bill WALT to discuss DISNEY] outo safety IE MOST SPECMMARKHtSIOffl EVER fUMED! Some 500,000 Michigan club I WINNER OF 3 ACADEMY AWARDS women will be represented here Aug. 29-31 as their presidents and safety chairmen meet at Kel¬ Sharon tate LSCI.,MV1, logg Center to discuss what they can do to improve safety on the panavision metrocolor showing _ "DON'T MAKE WAVES" Shown at Dusk & Late & The glamour AND ON THE SAME PROGRAM— highways. Some 70 women from 40 or¬ ... m i mm m cois mom ohi hoi bid or mm to mm h ^ and greatness... ganizations will participate in the fifth annual Highway Traffic €Qj]& THE ROD TAYLOR TREVOR HOWARD JILLSt JOHN X* The speedand Safety Conference for Michigan Women's Organizations. ^ LIQUIDATOR PANAVISION METROCOLOR ^ W spectacle! They will examine the stand¬ *^"sHOftN AT 10;50 Only inly for his exquisite wile Tonya... ards set by the national Highway- Far from the guns of war... far from the noise of Zhivagol Safety Act of 1966 and the state COLOR CARTOON STARTS AT DLS~ a world gone mad .. two lovers alone and silent' until the :nt he saw the enchanting Lara! and local problems in meeting these standards. They will also BOX OFFICE OPEN AT 7:30 examine new state traffic legisla¬ tion—the motor vehicle check- lane law and the up-coming im¬ plied consent provisions. ANSING A roster of speakers from the Drive In Theatre «:?n7 5 rfnad ctdcst MSU Highway Traffic Safety Cen¬ ter, the National Highway Safety- Bureau, the Michigan State TONIGHT - ALL COLOR Police, the newly formed organi¬ EXCLUSIVE FIRST AREA SHOWING zation, Traffic Safety for Michi¬ gan, and other university and Tammy's Takin' on governmental agencies will staff the school. High Society! In this setting of wealth and luxury, the lovely Lara becomes the pawn of the ruthless lawyer. THE METRO-GOLDWYNMAYER PRESENTS A CARLO PONTI PRODUCTION HARD HITTING DAVID LEAN'S FILM OF BORIS PASTERNAKS "SHANNON CANNON99 DOCTOR ZHAAGO A Feature-Length Hit From the TV Shovi in COLOR PLUS THAT "Rebellion Girl" is DODG1N' unbelievable perils! STARRING PAT BOONE AND PAMELA AUSTIN gSErSSS'MBlW OMAR SHARIF IAS/hivagoi ROD STEIGER RITATUSHINGHAM • . SUPER PANAVISION ROBERT BOLT DAVID LEAN IN panavision- AND METROCOLOR Reserved Performance tick¬ Joe Joseph9s 3rd WEEK! ets On Sale at Box Office Or DR. ZHIVAGO Shown First at 9:00 P.M. - Repeated in Part By Malll Two Performances Pro Bowl COOL Mi Daily at 2PM. and 8 PM. . . Adults Evenings & Sundays 2ND HIT VALLEY OF MYSTERY AT 12:30 in Color 2122 N. Login Emu $2.00 .. Adults week-day mat- SHOWN ONCE NIGHTLY AT 10:30 Program Inf. 485-6485 inees $1.50 Child. 75* 487-5418 Friday, August 25, 1967 8 Michigan State News. East Lansing. Michigan STATE NEWS STATE NEWS CLASSIFIED Good Luck-Have a Nice Vacation-See You in the Fall. CLASSIFIED 355-8255 So Long, 355-8255 The Mate NY Automotive Automotive Scooters & Cycles Employment For Rent For Rent permit racial discriminatioi ts ad- FORD FA1RLANE wagon, 1964. THUNDERBIRD HONDA 305 Dream, 1965. Good WAITRESSES: FRIDAY and Sat¬ TV RENTALS for students. $9.00 MEN: UNSUPERVISED, clean Clean. Sell or trade down. 1V2- '°^9, mechani¬ vertibing columns. Tno 3987. cally soui tQUD.wo 1-8/25 a good second car. owners, condition. Best offer over $300. urday night. Apply at Jolly Inn, month. Free service and deliv¬ apartment close 9566. in. CallED7- 4-8/25 State News will not acetyl 355-9959. Call 489-9570. 1-8/25 3809 West Jolly Road, or call ery. Call NEJAC, 337-1300. We 5-8/25 882-7641. 2-8/25 guarantee same day service. C WANT AD actverti- in;' whichdiscrirr.- inates a_..in.i religion, FORD 1965 Fairlane. Standard, SUZUKI 1966, 80cc. Trail Bike. NEEDED FOURTH man for V-8. Excellent condition. $1150 Good condition. Call Larry after DANCE INSTRUCTOR for YMCA Chalet apartments. Fall-spring. race, color or ■ ".Urn. 1 - ri- VOLKSWAGEN 1964, sunroof, TV RENTALS for students. $9 • AUTOMOTIVE or best offer.339-2891. 2-8/25 with radio. $800. IV 2-1371, 7 p.m. 353*0080. 3-8/25 dance workshop. Ballet, modern, month including tax. Alst 313-545-2592. Call after 7 p.m. fcln. per • EMPLOYMENT 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. 1-8/25 Jazz. Experience needed in term rates. UNIVERSITY TV 5-8/25 • FOR RENT FORD 1963 Galaxie convertible. HONDA 1966 S90. $280, including teaching or professional danc¬ RENTALS, 484-9263. C • FOR SALE Six cylinder, stick shift. Ex¬ VOLKSWAGEN 1965. Good con¬ helmet. Ask for Lynne. 351— ing. Call 332-8657. 2-8/25 • LOST & FOUND Automotive cellent condition. $550. ED 2- dition. Less than 13,000 miles, 5272. 3-8/25 • PERSONAL 1401 evenings only. 5-8/25 $1100. Call 355-2776. 5-8/25 YOUNG MAN or woman to work • PEANUTS PERSONAL BUlCK SKYLARK 1961 V-Sauto- HONDA . 160 Sport, 1967. 1,300 on promotion of a new concept MEN—SUPERVISED two bed¬ matic. Power steering and FORD I960 stick six. Runs fine. miles. $500. Excellent condi¬ in cultural development. Guar¬ room apartment. Also room with • REAL ESTATE brakes. $550. Call 393-2389 VOLKSWAGEN 1966 convertible. tion. 351-9304. 3-8/25 anteed earnings of $750 a month cooking. Call ED 7-9566. • SERVICE $225 or best offer. 351-5281. after 6 p.m. 3-S/25 9,000 miles. $1,350. Call be¬ if you meet our requirements. 1-8/25 • TRANSPORTATION . 3-8/25 tween 5-6 p.m. 351-5629. TRIUMPH BONNEVILLE 1966. Car necessary. Call 484-4890. • WANTED TWO FOUR-man, $240 per CHEVELLE 1964 : 3-8/25 Like new. 2,300 miles. Extras. 2-8/25 316 GUN'SON, furnished two man JAGL'AR 1957 XK-140 convert¬ month. One five-man, $280 per $995. 351-7565. 3-8/25 apartment. $140 per month.Call DEADLINE ible. Burgundy, wire wheels. VOLKSWAGEN 1966 red. $1275. MALE: PART time. 2-1/2 hours 332-6863. month. Call Mr. Andrews at 47,000 actual miles. 332-8139. 2-8/25 485-1733. After 5 p.m., 337- 1 P.M. one class day be¬ Call 355-7453 before 5 p.m. 1-8/25 A10 BSA 650 Sanitary '61. $525 daily. Man with jr for early fore publication. 2285. 7-8/25 3-8/25 with accessories. Call 351- morning nf ^,V - delivery. APARTMENT FOR five students, CHEVROLET He 3 Impala. Two OLDSMOBILE 1966 F-85. Stick. 6187. 2-8/25 Mileage ^\VV.nmission total furnished, all utilities included, NEXT TO campus, lovely fur¬ door hardtop, V--"? Can be seen Auto Service & Parti $100 weeXy. Prefer marriedor parking, five blocks to campus. Take over payments, plus $150. nished two bedroom. $220, all at MSI" Employees Credit Union, 663^8418. 4-8/25 YAMAHA 1*965, 80cc. Trail graduate student. Call 332-1154. $200 per month. Also a room for utilities MASON BODY SHOP. 812 East paid. One year lease. 1019 Trowbridge Road, Last model. Excellent condition. 5-8/25 two students. Call 669-3131 Kalamazoo Street - Since 1940. . 351-5696 or 351-6009. 3-8/25 PHONE Lansing. John DeBow. 3-S/25 OLDSMOBILE 1964 convertible. >225* 485-7969. 1-8/25 after 5 p.m. 2-8/25 Complete auto painting and col¬ SECRETARY: LAW office, short- 355-8255 Top conditionby original owner. lision service. American and BASEMENT _A. H T,NT: two CHEVROLET i960 \'-8 automa¬ Will sell for $100 less than mar¬ foreign cars. IV 5-0256. C Employment hand not essential. P ay com¬ MALE ROOMMATE to share lux¬ or three REN Call ED RATES tic, power. $195. Call 372-3501. ket. Call IV 4-4481 days; eve¬ mensurate with ability. Mr. ury apartment. Stoddard Apart¬ 2-3231. SPECIAL THERA PIST and school 3-8/25 1 Da 1 SI. 50 nings IV 4-2226. 3-8/25 AUTOMATIC CAR wash, only Morgan IV 4-1428. 5-8/25 ments. Senior or graduate stu¬ social worker. Write or call dent. Call 313-372-1330 after 3 DAYS S3.00 75if. It's the best in town. You Walter Nickel, St. John's Public TWO BEDROOM, carpeted, CHEVROLET ll162, six cylinder, RAMBLER 1967 power steering, TYPIST, RECEPTIONISTtowork 6 p.m. 2-8/25 5 DAYS .55.00 may sit in your car for 2-1/2 Schools, St. John's, Michigan. garage, unfurnished, 1-1/2 standard shift, new tires and ex¬ from now until school starts. brakes, radio, rear seat speak¬ minutes while your car is Phone 224-2394. 2-8/25 acres. $150 month, including based on 10 words per ad; haust system. Good condition-. Part time. East Lansing Cham¬ FACULTY, STAFF. Beautiful er. 882-9989. 1-8/25 washed and waxed. Also cleans utilities. Couples preferred. Over 10, 15f per word, per dav Phone 646-6611. 3-S/25 ber of Commerce, ED 2-0511. Elmhurst apartments, two bed¬ 484-0906 or 337-7644. underneath car. An Almost Per¬ WOMAN NEEDED: Fix lunch for 4-8/25 1-8/25 rooms, fully carpeted, Frlgid- There will be a 50* service SPITFIRE 1965, MK2, green. fect job. 430 South Clippert back three children and light house¬ CORVAIR 1963 Monza, three aire appliances, ton minutes g charge if Luggage rack, wire wheels. of Koko Bar. C-8/25 MUST SUBLEASE immediately: speed, radio, new engine. 353- keeping. 10 a.m. - 1 p.m. Mon¬ TEACHERS NEEDED: Junior campus, no children under 12, th.s ad i t paid \ $1400. 627-9116. 4-8/25 day-Friday. Own transporta¬ unfurnished, fully carpeted, high, English or math, fifth no pets. $167.50. TU 2-2468, GENERATORS AND STARTFRS- tion. East Lansing, 337-1585. carport, patio, $140 month, grade, first grade. Stockbridge after 6 p.m. 393-1410. 2-8/25 6 & 12 volt. Factory rebuilt, as utilities paid. Two miles from "iTie State News will be CORVAIR 1962 Spyder, two door, TR-3 1962 rebuilt transmission, 2-8/25 Community Schools. 851-2965. low as $9.70 exchange, used campus. 372 -4296, 3-6 p.m. responsible only for the four speed, radio, bucket radio. Many extras. Super con¬ 1-8/25 UNIVERSITY VILLA — Beal first day's Incorrect inser¬ 1-8/25 $4.97. Guaranteed factory re¬ 4-8/25 $250. 339-2734. dition. Call 332-0971. 4-8/25 apartments. Walk to campus. built voltage regulators $2.76 Room and Board TYPIST Wanted for evening work Two man apartments. $180. exchange; shock absorbers, DAIMLER 1964 Spor:, V-8 stick TR-3 1960. Excellent condition. in campus area. Hours 5-9 p.m. Three man apartments, $210. NEED ONE girl for Ha slett apart¬ shift, original cost $4,800. Bids Rebuilt engine. Wire wheels. each $2.99. ABC AUTO*PARTS, $170 Per Term and 60 wpm with accuracy on elec¬ Available fall term. See Model. ment, September through June. 613 E. South Street. Phone IV 5- over $1000. Call ON 4-0115. 351-6705. 4-8/25 5 Hours Work a tric typewriter. Call 337-2321 Govan Management. 351-7911. Call Pat, 351-6950. 4-8/25 Automotive 1-8/25 1921. C between 2-4 p.m. 2-8/25 Week . . . Coopera¬ BARRACUDA 1964, V-S auto¬ TR-4, 1962. Overhauled, new top. ACCIDENT PROBLEM? Call FORD FALCON station wagon, tive Living at its TRANSMITTER OPERATOR: EAST LANSING, near.Attractive matic, radio, ;,e'.\ tire's. Excel¬ 1962, automatic, radio, heater. Michelin X's. Mint condition.' fcALAMAZOO STREET BODY Full or part time. First class two man apartment, furnished, lent condition. 67c-5981. Excellent condition. $495. IV 5- 3 39-2 921 after 6:30 p.m. SHOP. Small dents to large Best: E I sworth in FCC license required.Call 482- quiet neighborhood. $65 each. 1-8/25 1-8/25 wrecks. American and foreign 6581. 2-8/25 House, 332-3574 1334. 13-8/25 Also need two men to fill four cars. Guaranteed work. 482- • man furnished apartment, $45 1286. 2628 E. Kalamazoo. C HOUSEKEEPER - LIVE in. Two each. Year lease starting in Sep¬ school age children in Okemos tember. Call 351-7124 akter 5 MEL'S AUTO SERVICE: LARGE area. Phone 351-6465, or 485- GIANT CARS HOSPITALIZATION or small, we do them all. 1108 E. Grand River. 332-3255. C EXPERIENCED needed to DRUMMER play steady Friday, Saturday jobs starting Septem¬ 2371. 3-8/25 p.m. NEED ONE man for three 2-8/25 man 1964 Pontiac Catalina—4 dr. Sedan; Turquoise with match¬ DEPENDABLE BABYSIT¬ Cedar Village apartment. Start ber. Mike Keen, 482-0215. ing interior. Automatic, P.S., TER needed in Cherry Lane fall term. Write immediatelyT. 1-8/25 P.B., Radio, Heater. White OPEN ENROLLMENT FRANCIS AVIATION. So easy to GIRLS TO do telephone solicita- apartments. Friday. 8 a.m. 355-8133. Monday through * - 4 p.m. Call 3-8/25 Halbritter, 615 Main, N'iles, Michigan. 2-8/25 Wall Tires. Low Mileage. only learn in the PIPER CHERO- tion from downtown office. KElftl Special $5.00 offerl 484-« our MEN WANTED to share apart¬ $1245.00 $1.65 an hour to start. Call Mr. PART TIME, married man need¬ AUGUST 23rd - 30th 1324. C Roche. 489-3131. 1-8/25 ed 6-10 a.m., Monday through Saturday. Phone Mr. Lucas, IV ment. and 9 p.m. 351-6220 between 6 p.m. 3-8/25 1962 Olds "98" convertible. EARNINGS ARE unlimited as an Automatic, Black with Red Scooters & Cycles Avon Representative. Turn your 4-0653. 3-8/25 FOUR MAN luxury apartment, interior, P.S., P.B., Radio, AMERICAN COMMUNITY MUTUAL free time into $$. For an ap¬ take over lease. Unlimited park¬ Reverbs, Heater, White Wall CHILD CARE with educational TEACHERS: FALL openings all pointment in your home, write ing, dishwasher. 351-6172,332- Tires. program. Hiawatha Pre-school fields. CLINE TEACHER'S Mrs. ALONA HUCKINS, 5663 0114. 1-8/25 center. MSU-Okemos area. AGENCY, 129 East Grand only Phone 337-7313. School Street, Haslett, Michigan 2-8/25 River. Telephone 332-5079. $695.00 or call IV 2-6893. C-8/25 TWO MAN luxury apartment. SERVING M.S.U. FOR 27 YEARS 4-8/25 Block from campus. $125 month. 332-1385. 1-8/25 1962 Plymouth Valiant Signet OPENING IN display work for 200, Automatic. Economy Six. APPLICATION BLANKS AT male students between 18 and TWO BEDROOIV Radio, Heater. White Wall 27. Call 393-4392, 2 to 4 p.m. tying room, kitcher- C forking girl. Tires. ADMINISTRATION BLDG. 13-8/25 ED 2-5Wr 4-8/25 Excellent Condition $695.00 MUST SUBLEASE one bedroom OR CALL apartment. Completely fur¬ 1964 Deluxe F-85, Turquoise nished, all utilities paid. Near with matching interior, P.S., 353-6390 485-9451 downtown Lansing. Phone after Automatic. Radio, Heater. 5:30 p.m., 372-4972 . 4-8/25 White Wall Tires. FOR INFORMATION OKEMOS AREA.One and two bed¬ room furnished apartments for $1095.00 two, three, or four men. Fall occupancy from $155 per month. Phil Gordon VW The Residence Halls Programs Office Graduate or married students USED CARS only. Call State Management Grand River at Howard Corporation, 332-8687. 484-1341 and 15-8/25 The Dormitories and Food Service Division □nana aaaaa MORRIS Auto Parts IE □□□□aa □raaan Are Now Hiring 484-5441 ■Lunn □□□ lann □H□□ any ana 814 E. Kalamazoo - 1 block West of Pennsylvania 1. Ward of ays mtmki Night Receptionists 6. Pant □□□□□ □□□ □□□ nrasj aaais 10. lieiel palm □aaa □□□ for 11. Scents 37. peasant BQBBQ □□□ana Large fis Eydeal Villa is... 13. Dormant 15. Animal fat □BQE1B □□□□□» Women's Residence Halls 17. Dan. fiord 18. Solution 40. Spoken 42. Cheer we □□HOB HQHBQ .20. Largest 44. Hindu cymbals Interviewing for the 1967-68 •Near... and yet, "away from it all," 21. Mackerel- like fish 4f>. Ancient b. Pro. ee, 7. Girl's n 23. Muffin 47. Easy 8. White a academic year 49. Dike 51. Unfasten. o. Gifi beginning Sept. 14th. • Spacious • ■ ■ and planned for student apartment- living, . 53. 1 Appear mil lord I t. Tuo-vr $1.85 per hour - 2 or 3 nights per week • Friendly , ■ ■ with a mixture of occupants, II II hours; 11 ;30 p.m. to 7:30 a.m. B9 TT~ 14 15 4 24. Hlend 27. Convene 29. Throttle Prefer: female graduate students married male graduate students • Sophisticated • ■ ■ with heated swimming pool, and out¬ door barbeque pits. W ~ IZ 16 TT 24 20 ZS 30. Place to student wives (21 years or older) 24 27 7E~ 2» mature women 31 3S~ 30 31 for September Leasing contact, 3T 36 37~ 38 31 For Further Information 34" 41 4Z" 43 please contact 40 Miss Kay White East Lansing Management Co. 45" 4t 4T~ si- 48 49~ 50 Residence Hall Programs Office 351-7880 i 1 5r iT telephone: 353-3780 _ _ — — Friday, August 25, 1967 10 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan MSU Book Store MSU Book Store MSU Book Store MSU Book Store MSU Book Store MSU Book Store MSU Book Store MSU Book Store MSU Book Store MSU Book Store IS POVERTY STALKING YOU? RETALIATE! GET CASH FOR YOUR BOOKS AT MSU BOOK in the Center for International Programs STORE e MSU Book Store MSU Book Store MSU Book Store MSU Book Store MSU Book Store MSU Book Store MSU Book Store MSU Book Store MSU Book Store MSU Book Store e