Friday MICHIGAN STATE NEWS Now welcom ... Warmer . . . . . . somer, with thy sonne STATE . . . and partly cloudy, with a high toft, that hast this wintrei of 85 degrees. Low tonight^* 60. vrden overshake. UNIVERSITY II. )J partly ciouay and warm. Vol. 61 Number 18 n nm East Lansing, Michigan Trustees set fee hike, record budget shifted $15-$52; Board d Sliding non-resideni ~ .. . By EDWARD BRILL j Editor-in-Chief j - Predicted upward revisions in the grad - • j students $18,400 *18,400 or scale from more. or more. Thus, a student families whose with income from fami,'es with income of srrnss gross income is between $12,300 and $16,666 will of familv family \, the married the rotes housing married housing increase because of new federal judges Fong said "there was a proba¬ Policies Rigid Thuy has been reported keep¬ scores bility" Fortas would not be con¬ President Johnson in Washing- public opinion on the United have been nominated while r President Ho Chi Minh in But the policies which govern ing close contacts with Commu¬ States to end the rest of the firmed and Thurmond said if nist diplomats. North Vietnam¬ the judges they were to re¬ the Fortas-for-Warren switch is bombing. Unless the bombing place were still sitting. ese authorities are in frequent ends, he says, the talks will fail "It is vital for the President a precedent "each retiring jus¬ touch witl. the French Foreign tice in collusion with the presi¬ and the United States will be to ASMSU Office. The Soviet Union and France have been mentioned blame. N. Viets See Win and Congress to keep the judi¬ ciary full so it can perform its dent could influence the choice of his successor." most often by American diplo¬ service," Clark said of Earl In the judgment of U.S. au¬ Warren's decision to stay on to create mats as possible go-betweens So far French and Soviet au¬ thorities, the North Vietnamese as chief justice until Abe For¬ By DEBORAH FITCH thorities apparently that the time for have judged intervention are war still intent on winning the in South Vietnam. Failing that, they want to go into seri¬ tas is confirmed. Choice Influences Romney State News Staff Writer was not ripe. Beyond that, Clark rejected hedges ous negotiations from a position the produce of "a conspirato¬ Student-business relations and University-Legislature good will Military Decisive as of military strength. They would rial view of life" the notion that are summertime interests of the ASMSU Cabinet, department of The difficulty for the diplo¬ like to upset the South Vietnam¬ Warren tried to influence the external relations. mats is that the military opera¬ ese government, a major reason Director Jim Jackson is working on the functions of a newly created Better Business Protection Bureau within the ASMSU tions in Vietnam are still the decisive field. North Vietnam has been striving for a victory they have concentrated their attacks and threats against Sai¬ Soldier's Son choice of Fortas as his succes¬ sor. Still, Sen.'Sam J. Ervin, Jr. on Reagan structure under the jurisdiction of the secretary. By United Press International gon since the talks began. that would give it the upper hand D-N.C., and a group of commit¬ Michigan possesses only two such bureaus, one in Detroit and The Americans are also con¬ Gov. Romney Thursday called in Paris- The United States has The four-year-old son of Capt. Euripides Rublo Jr. tee Republicans appeared intent one in Grand Rapids. Contact has been made with the De¬ vinced that North Vietnam does salutes Gen. William C. Westmoreland during cere¬ Gov. Ronald Reagan "the great¬ been trying to defeat this strate¬ at least trying to stall For- troit bureau to determine just how such a bureau should on not want to break off the meet¬ est pseudo noncandidate in his¬ operate. gy while seeking an agreement ings here. As long as they con¬ monies to posthumously award the Congressional tas's confirmation. tory" and flatly refused to say Jackson has also contacted the. Division of Consumer Pro¬ here that would reduce the level Medal of Honor to his father. Rublo Is the first After the two-hour session tinue, in fact, both sides get he would actively support him tection in the Attorney General's office and has received the of the war. Puerto Rlcan to win the nation's highest award for with Clark broke up, Ervin told should the California governor some credit from peace advo¬ division's approval of the program plus the assurance that the The fact th^t the talks now ap¬ heroism In Vietnam. UPI Telephoto reporters he would question become the Republican nominee cates for keeping in contact. Fortas about his "judicial philo¬ Bureau will have the Division's 100 per cent backing, even to pear to be mired in rhetoric may for president. the point of prosecution. increase pressure on both Hanoi sophy" at a committee session Romney was asked five or The Bureau would be set up so that students with com¬ and Washington to find some Tuesday. six times whether he would sup¬ way to get them moving again Since Fortas already is a Su¬ plaints against a merchant, apartment owner or some other port Reagan should he win the business person could enlist the Bureau's assistance. After con¬ tacting the businessman involved, the Bureau would take further action if an agreement could not be reached, such as After Johnson limited the bombing of the North on March 31, both sides won acclaim foi ACLU accuses preme Court justice and may be reluctant to reply to such ques¬ tions, the confrontation is likely nomination. AH Romney would say is: "I expect to support the convention's candidate." asking the assistance of the Attorney General's office. the Apr. 3 agreement to talk anc to be sticky. Won't meet delegates The importance of the program rests in the fact that the Bureau would give the student a definite channel through which to conduct his grievances against the business com¬ the May 3 agreement, after £ month's haggling, to meet in Par is. But the gloss has beer of active discr Nominees questioned Ervin said the committee has Romney's remarks were made at a news conference questioned many court nomi¬ to Reagan's refusal to come to nees about their philosophy, but in response munity of greater Lansing knocked off those initial moves NEWARK, N.J. (AP)--Rich- tion, hosted a reception at the however, that "Mr. Nixon Revival of the legislature relations program is also a cur¬ toward peace by the reality oi wasn't born yesterday." he did not respond directly Michigan to meet with the state's ard M. Nixon was accused club Monday for state dele¬ 48 national convention delegates. It called Nixon's statement of when asked by a reporter if rent project of external relations. The main focus of the the continuing war. Thursday of "participating ac¬ gates to the GOP national Both Richard M. Nixon and Gov. Repeated Demands discrimination from such questions had been put to a project is to aid the University in its appropriations struggle tively of discrimination against convention. fighting Nelson Rockefeller, declared with the State. The 12th session of the Pari; Nixon asked then at a within a "mockery of the fight sitting justice. Negroes and Jews" by the New was candidates, have explained their held Wednesday against discrimination in public The Republicans who bore in Cabinet President Greg Owen said that the program would talks was Jersey Chapter of the American news conference why he be¬ positions in question-and-answer facilities in New Jersey and on Clark were Sens. Roman L. strive to show the legislators that the students are worth their Thuy demanded once more tha Civil Liberties Union. longed to a club that excluded sessions with the delegates. money and demonstrate how the funds are being used. One the United States stop attacking The ACLU issued its state¬ minority members. throughout the United States. Hruska of Negraska, Hiram L. Reagan indicated that he idea would have the legislators visiting living units-both on- the North unconditionally, anc ment in connection with the for¬ "What has he done 'from Fong of Hawaii and Strom would be happy to meet with and off-campus-to see what is going on. once more Harriman demandec mer vice president's member¬ "I'm against any restrictive within' to stop discrimination Thurmond of South Carolina. the delegates at the national Integrated with this program is the coordination of persons reciprocity. ship in the Baltusrol Golf club," he replied. "But I be¬ at Baltusrol up to now?" Hrisky suggested a "constitu¬ convention in Miami Beach who have student seats on the various organizations within The highlight of the sessior Course and Club in lieve in working for a change The ACLU also sent a tele¬ tional crisis" could develop Spring¬ starting Aug. 5. the community, such as the Chamber of Commerce, the East was a point made by Thuy witl from the inside." gram to the Newark office of from the way he said Warren field. Nixon, seeking the Re¬ Asked if he considers Reagan overtones in U.S. domestic poli the U.S. Attorney requesting made his retirement conditional Lansing-MSU Liaison Committee and the East Lansing Human publican presidential nomina- A Baltusrol spokesman said presidential timber, Romney Relations Committee. the club does not have restric¬ that the Dept. of Justice in¬ on approval of a successor. said, "I haven't reached the vestigate the golf club under For example, Hruska said, tive bylaws preventing member¬ one could occur if- Fortas is point of weighing that." the 1964 Civil Rights Act. ship on the basis of race or reli.- Romney said he remains "un¬ ; The department acknowledged turned,down fey Senate, the committed and undecided" about gion, but he added that "to my new president who takes over in ■ ■ I - receiving the telegram but de¬ whom to support for the nomina¬ knowledge there are no Negrf clined further comment on the January makes Warren's retire¬ tion. or Jewish members." ment effective immediately and Romney will be nominated ACLU's charge. The ACLU said Thursday, as a favorite-son candidate by On other political matters, d iscount records*101 Romney said: -Third party candidate George Wallace is "absolutely feudal" and is using the issues of centralization of government and lawlessness to 225 ANN ST. cloak "an effort to continue racial segregation on the basis of state's rights." "It would be disasterous if he were elected," The Only Complete Record Store Romney said. -The candidate the Repub¬ licans nominate for president In East Lansing is more important than the plat¬ form- the party adopts. -He will not attempt to get the convention to adopt a plat¬ The Best Of Glenn Yarbrough form before nominating a candi¬ date, as he did in 1964, be¬ cause "the circumstances were different then." In 1964, Rom¬ On RCA Victor Records ney tri^d to get the convention to enact a liberal platform and then elect a candidate whose views conformed in an attempt to head off the nomination of 1 Sen. Barry Goldwater.. FOR ElflilV., UHCnEVCH I WAV Fit© HER Rockefeller's appeal for a na¬ ■■ •:; msmms tional poll of republican senti¬ ment is "an effort on his part to try to convince the dele¬ AucfU^t gates they ought to support him," Romney said. FINAL CLOSE OUT ON ALL '68 MODEL STEREOS \ All Glenn Yaitrough Albums On RCA On Sale Jacobson's Only 3.32 each SALE Good thru Wed. July 17, 1968 BY ZENITH discount records 225 ANN ST. inc. fiupyw'ti/A Mil SO. CEDAR HOURS-- LANSING. MICHIGAN Mon. thru Fri. 9-9 PH. 351-8460 • OPEN DAILY 9:30-8:30 SAT. 9:30-6:00 Sat. 9-6 Sun. 2-6 Friday, July 12, 1968 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan NEWS Defense secretary summary hfinrls for Vietnam from Vietnam late next year gaging in personal criti- K capsule summary of th« day's events from WASHINGTON Secre In the absence of some de¬ cTsm"'of »hn S Foster, the * I our wlr» service*. tary of Defnese Clark M. Clif¬ velopment in Paris that would Pentagon s chief scientist and ford is going to Vietnam Satur¬ affect the presence or withdra¬ Alain C Ethoven. his systems day for battlefield talks in ad¬ wal of Americans in South Viet¬ analyst vance of an expected new ene¬ nam, I would be unwilling at this Rickover criticized Foster my offensive. time to predict the withdrawal and Enthoven in recent Senate It" will be his first trip to the of any American troops in 1969," testimony on th» U.S. ™ the it s submar¬ =..hmar. defense chief. ine program. "Ronald Reagan is the great¬ war area as Clifford said. Clifford said Thursday Gen. "I believe we must proceed on Clifford also rapped a sugges¬ est psuedo-noncandidate in Earle G. Wheeler, chairman of the assumption that if the ene¬ tion by Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy history." the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and my chooses to fight that we must Democratic presidential hope¬ Gov. George Romney other high officials will accom¬ remain there. " ful, that the United States halt pany him for a war appraisal After spending "a certain work on new offensive and de¬ from the new commander. Gen time" in Saigon and South Viet¬ fensive strategic missile sys- CreightonW. Abrams. nam, the Clifford team will go to terns to help get an arms limita- Clifford told a news confer¬ Honolulu for President John- tion agreement with the Soviet ence that intelligence reports n's scheduled conference with Union the North Vietnamese and Viet Thieu. Land-based Minutemen International News Cong have built up their strength The Clifford group will in¬ Clifford said that until an • Secretary of Defense Clark Clifford said he anticipates a to eight divisions or more, just clude William Bundy, asst. sec agreement is reached at forth¬ below the Demilitarized Zone, retary of state for East Asiar coming U.S.-Soviet talks he fa¬ new enemy offensive this month or next and therefore will fly as well as increased enemy acti¬ and Pacific affairs and Paul vors proceeding with the Senti¬ to South Vietnam Saturday to survey the war situation. The trip vity around Saigon Warnke, asst. secretary of de nel antimissile defense system will be Clifford's first since.he took over the post as defense secretary. " See page 3 Very Junior Achievement "So I believe we must antici¬ pate the possibility of a new of¬ fense for international security affairs and others and with deploying new land- based Minuteman and subma¬ Enterprising pre-schoolers sell lemonade at three cents a glass In front of Stu¬ fensive on ^he part of enemy Clifford disclosed he has au rine-carried Poseiden nuclear • The rising tempo of U.S. air blows at North Vietnamese missiles. storage areas and communications networks has apparently dent Services Bldg, State News photo by Bob Ivlns forces in July or possibly Au¬ thorized initial work on a new gust and Gen. Wheeler and I super high speed" nuclear sub Otherwise. Clifford said. lured enemy MIG jets into the Vietnam struggle. *m-o pag> 8 will wish to talk this out in great marine to bolster U.S. capabili "There would be no incentive detail with Gen. Abrams and his ties for tracking and destroying left for the Soviet Union to sit • The Paris peace talks have begun to bog down in endless PROTEST SUNDAY chief commanders in the field,'' rnemyttnderwater vessels. down and negotiate with us " arguments about de-escalation, and an opportunity for secret he said More Sub Work Clifford continued putting em¬ diplomacy appears to be opening up. See page 2 Clifford said the level of com¬ At the same time. Clifford sug¬ phasis on the improvement of bat has stopped some in the past South Vietnam's army as the • Britain announces the assignment of powerful sea and air gested Vice Adm. Hyman Group few weeks and. "some would key to eventual reduction of U.S. wonts units-some with nuclear punch-to join the NATO fleet in the Rickover spend more time or reinforcement of Hong Kong. look at this as possibly a hope¬ submarine work and less on "en- forces in that country. ful sign.'' An historic vote admits Roman Catholics for the first time Clifford said he believes "we WEEKEND SPECIAL • must face the reality" of stepped full members of a World Council of Churches Commission allow as which is currently meeting in Sweden. Sn-pagi 12 to 18-year up enemy activity and the tial for new attacks. poten¬ • Mao Tse Tung's fiery-tempered wife apparently is emerg¬ ing as a possible powerful rival to Defense according to informed sources. Minister Lin Piao. pag' 8 get a state-wide referendum for September, but Schroeder pre- The group expects about 1.000 people at the demonstra- Clifford than South Less optimistic was less optimistic Vietnam President Nguyen Van Thieu. who said CREAM National News dicts it will not be voted til November. on un- tion from Sunday Ann including Arbor, people Detroit and Wednesday it might be possible Wheels of Fire to withdraw some U.S. troops • Atty. Gen. Ramsey Clark struck back at the contention that 1966. Michigan voters Kalamazoo. there is no vacancy on the Supreme Court and therefore no onstratjon at 2 p.m. Sundav on turned down such a proposal for 2 Stereo LP's need to examine the qualifications of the two appointees, Abe the steps of the Capitol Build- 18-year-old voting after it had Fortas and Homer Thornberry. See page 2 ing. passed the legislature by a two- Lindsay finds jobs • U.S. defense chiefs are backing the nuclear nonprolifera- tion treaty but they oppose abandoning the U.S. anti-missile defense system just because of prospective peace talks with "The Campaign Student for Non-Partisan the 18-year-old Vote" will make public its de- mand that the legislature amend thirds vote in both houses. the A bill will be introduced in venes legislature when it con- July 23. It will be co- for 10,000 teenagers °n|y $5*77 the Soviets. See page 3 the constitution year-olds to vote. enabling 18- sponsored by a Republican and a Democrat. NEW YORK (APi - Mayor John V. Lindsay dug into what Disc Shop • Gov, Ronald Reagan's top aide says there is "no-way' The demonstrators intend to Each legislator he had described as the city's empty purse Thursday and came Your One-Stop will receive Reagan would announce his candidacy for the Republican show public support for the 18- letter from the up with $3 million for 10,000 more summer jobs for youthful Stereo Center a organization presidential nomination on a July 21 televised news confer- vear-old vote and to call for slum dwellers. And he indicated there might be an additional 323 E. Grand River ence~or any other time before the Republican National Con¬ a ind will be personally con¬ very large state-wide demon¬ tacted. Schroeder said. $2 million available. Phone 351-5380 vention which will be held in August. The Republican mayor stration on July 23. Dennis Recently President Johnson acted less than 24 hours after 1.500 OPEN • After almost four months of operation, the two-price gold Schroeder, the Lansing area co¬ has been asking for a nation¬ youths staged a wild demonstration outside City Hall, demand¬ Mon. thru Frl. ? to 9 ordinator for the group, said. wide 18-year-old vote. And two ing an increase in jobs for teenagers as one price for a riot-free system which stopped wild speculation in the metal is living summer in Negro and Puerto Rican neighborhoods Sat. 9 to 6 The group is also trying states already have 18-year-old tip to the expectations of the U.S. backers. to voting-Kentucky and Alabama. Lindsay, told a news conference: "Hope for adequate fed¬ eral financing has been dead since the meat-ax reduction by "Ejghteen-vear-olds have the House of Representatives in the supplemental appropria¬ been'put in areas of responsibil¬ tion for antipoverty programs." ity other than the military.'' Defense chiefs Schroeder years come young more said. "In the people have be¬ interested in past the "We are consequently authorizing a further expansion of1 the Youth Corps to be financed from the city funds," the mayor continued. "The additional city commitment is at least $3 democratic million. New York City is again the only city in the nation to process.'' he added. nuclear contribute substantially local tax dollars to the Neighborhood "Every major political can¬ on wea didate has received help from young volunteers." Schroeder Youth Corps program.'' The $3 million, Lindsay estimated, will add 10.000 jobs to said. "These volunteers have the 25.000 already funded. The city hopes to bring the sum¬ WASHINGTON (AP) - U.S. de- ers ^ reach further disarma" DefensehadRobert S. McNamara made the vigorously opposed of issues country more aware mer job level to the 43,000 of last year. fense leaders backed the nu- ml agreements once rather than person¬ Referring to Wednesday's disorder, Lindsay said: "I can the ABM idea costly and fruit- clear Besidefs barnn« tlje nuclear as assure you that the demonstration at City Hall came close to nonproliferation treaty Thursday but opposed abandon- ing a U S. missile defens# sys- Powerts from ^ at°mic wea; ""It P°nsht0 "onnuclear nations and trary to the spirit if directly seems to me con- alities.'' Support for the "Student Non- making it impossible to go forward. And if we had not been able to go forward, it would have been because of the demon¬ PLAIDS not the letter Partisan Campaign for the 18- tem just because ot prospective missile-curb talks with the So- viets. the hav«"not statfKs from acqu.r- nf HPtPniP _ rplatinns" "* s"ch a""s' "?e trea* tcalls f de}en\e ceasin8 rela,tlons ,0 Lny groups of voteTs and "it also for good-faith negotiations launch a U.S. antimissile system : to year-old Vote is coming from stration." Shortly after the mayor met newsmen, about 300 youths staged a new march on City Hall, chanting. "We want jobs." ARE is important that it i . Gen. Earle G Wheeler, chair¬ man of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, soon on race ment. and restraining the nuclear on general disarma- at this time. Symington said But uui would Nitze muc be maintained .iiciimaiiKu Tmista'ke toehold up .. Partisan organization.'' roeder explained. They circled the building before they were restrained be¬ hind barricades. Later they left. SOCKO told the Senate Foreign Rela¬ tions committee the Joint Chiefs The senators showed special interest in this provision be- the development of the ABM. until there is an agreement with i support the treaty's aims-to out¬ law the spread of atomic arms- cause they have voted to begin the Russians, multibillion-dollar antiballis- The Defense Department's M.S.U. Canoe Service a and view the pact is "not inimi¬ tic missile defense system testified that Mc¬ cal to U.S. security interests." Sen. Stuart Symington, D-Mo. Namara changed his judgment Deputy Secretary of Defense about the ABM around a Paul H Nitze called the treaty ^time secretary of the Air year . •an important step forward to- ward new forms of security." Force, led hose arguing against ago after ?Itartinf a UfS ABMcsySte,m "0Wf ments had made ,he ProPosed technical improve_ has been swamped He added its negotiation by the He noted former Secretary of system more promising. United States and the Soviet Union leads to cautious encour¬ LUNCHEON SPECIAL W agement that the two superpow- YOUR CHOICE | SAVE ON Dine-In or Fast Take-Out TYPEWRITERS SUPER HAMBURGER 1/4 lb. pure beef, with lettuce and dressing, cole slaw, french fries. CHICKEN 1 large portion of chicken. The Stale Newt, the student newspaper al Michigan S Rave reviews from every fashion opening: big published every clan day throughout the \eur size, bigger style, biggest lmpactl And size Is A COMPLETE LINE OF Welcome Week and Orientation issues in June and Sept •crlptlon rates are $14 per > ear. only the curtain-raiser: colors are smash, separ¬ REGULAR AND ELECTRIC ates styled to take bow after bow, fabrics you'll TYPEWRITERS ited Press, lulled Press cheer. Come see the hacking suit . .. and every Dciation. Associated Coltegial BY Daily Press Ai headllne-plaid that'll be starring In your Fall Ward¬ Press Asiocialioi Michigan Collegiate Press robe Revuel Slate Student Presi BBS* Second class postage paid Editorial and business al East Lansing. Mich. oflices al 34* Studt Michigan State University, East Lansing. Mich. Due to the heavy rains and high waters, the Canoe Service has temporarily been discon¬ Editorial SSi-Wil 5411 SO. CEDAR LANSING, MICHIGAN Classified Advertising tinued. The dock area is being repaired and HOURS— Display Advertising we should be back in operation by July 19th. Business-Circulation • ISS-ttW Iis-8.il 1 Mon. thru Fri. 9-9 Sat. 9-6 Sun. 2-6 Edward 4. Brill Hobby Soden, acting managing editor MICHIGAN STATE NCWS Stan Eichelbaum, Jerry Hank hunt, editorial editor UNIVERSITY Friday Morning, July 12,1968 Six-time recipient of the Pacemaker award for outstanding journalism. EDITORIAL Police disarming reason that guns are carried is A proposal to disarm the Uni¬ rector of the School of Police that he is "intrigued" with the for purposes of intimidation. versity and East Lansing po¬ Administration, says that 99 per proposal and hopes that it will What is needed, then, is a be fully discussed and con¬ lice for a period of one year cent of all encounters between police and citizens do not re¬ new legal philosophy in which sidered, particularly where it has been sent to several Uni¬ the policeman is not an intimi- quire the use of weapons. This relates to the University. versity and city officials for dator but wholly a peace offi¬ their reaction. fact alone poses a serious ques¬ The proposal to disarm cam¬ cer, and this can best be effect¬ The proposal was advocated tion to the necessity of an pus and local police deserves armed police force in such low ed by the disarming of the po¬ full consideration and trial im¬ by Milton Rokeach, professor lice force. Relations between of psychology and member of armed-crime areas as MSU and the citizens and the police are plementation as soon as possi¬ a committee appointed by the East Lansing. ble. It will give MSU the chance Of course in areas in which probably at an all-time low and to be Number One in experi¬ East Lansing Human Rela¬ it is obvious that something tions Commission to consider the citizenry is armed it would mentation and innovation in needs to be done to correct this. be impractical to disarm the one of the most pressing areas the implications of the Ker- police force until the people of the day. ner report for the East Lansing Rokeach emphasized that his --The Editors area. have been likewise disarmed. proposal is not a radical one--it , Basically, Rokeach's appeal However, this is not the case is an experiment. Dissent-Bobby Soden MM I bet my grandfather has a better He asks a is this: "If they (President on campus. Furthermore, if missile defense than yours!' one-year trial period for his Hani, h, East Lansing Mayor an emergency situation arose disarming proposal, and if Gordo.i Thomas, Richard Ber- requiring the use of guns, an¬ after that period it shows nega¬ other police force could quick¬ nitt, director of the Dept. of tive results, then it can be Public Safety and other local ly be called in. abandoned. DAVE GILBERT officials) are truly concerned Disarming the police force is over the murders of President Ideally, the University not without precedent. Police¬ Kennedy, Dr. Martin Luther Great Britain and Po¬ should be fertile ground for the the in Academila men King, Jr. and Sen. Robert F. Kennedy~if they are truly re¬ land go law about their day-by-day enforcement duties un¬ spirit of inquiry. The role of the University is to innovate f Pursue muse, pulsed by this-then they will armed. And in Suffolk County, and experiment, and the dis¬ truly want to do something Mass., (an area which includes arming of the police force is about the causes of this vio¬ the city of Boston), the sheriff just such an innovation. If the Every now and then some of us be¬ lence." University cannot perform the The vast majority of students rarely, if ever, ordered his deputies disarmed. gin to wonder why we ever came to Rokeach, a noted psychol¬ role of innovator, who can? college. At the time we graduated get a chance to air their views ics and have them from high school, work was unthink¬ ogist, says that scientific evi¬ Considering the relation of There is a grave danger that able. and the draft only a vague threat dence shows that violence firearms to the police force, this proposal will be stifled be¬ in someone else's mind. I'm afraid challenged at length. Thi, pretty sad for an breeds violence. Therefore, the important question is, "Are fore it is even debated and will to say. one of the reasons for making institution ivhose avowed purpose i the pursuit our debute at MSU was not to find an violence in the cities has to guns used for purposes of law be lost in numerous letter files of knowledge. (Dare we hope wisdom ? ) academic climate worthy of our fledg¬ some extent been caused, enforcement or for purposes across campus and East Lan¬ ling intellects. knowingly or unknowingly, b£ of 0f intim|,dation?'' intimidal sing. This must not happen; the Once we arrived at good ol' MSU. however, some of us were told that we I. for one, am Inot about to tell a club, etc., with a view toward If police officers who were too Rokeach Rolterch believes that since issue must be kept alive. Ri¬ ting creative people get together toi were now officially "members of an prof with a couple of Ph-D.'s that ready to'use their weapons un¬ guns are so seldom used by the chard Chapin. director of li¬ academic community." with, of course, he's all wet, even if I can back it up. no other purpose than ti tall. %>out necessarily in emergency sit¬ policemen (and where is this braries and former chairman all the rights and privileges thereto But someplace, there should be an out¬ their respective arts. uations. accorded. Not to mention the responsi¬ let for that sort of thing. What is 6. Encouragement of more professors more true than at MSU and in of the East Lansing Human bilities. required are several duly instituted, to conduct seminar-type classes; Miss Arthur F. Brandstatter, di¬ East Lansing?) then the only Relations Commission, said But in spite of the presence of resi¬ regular gatherings, perhaps on the or¬ Devine of the English Dept. does a dential colleges. Honors College, honors der of the Honors College Sunday night brilliant job getting phenomenal dis¬ freshman programs, colloquia. lectures suppers with faculty members. May I. cussions going in classes of 100. s<> and whatnot, the average student really with all due respect, suggest some long- it can be done. has to search for that academic com¬ overdue additions to our multi-faceted- And there is much more that can br MAX LERNER munity we're all supposed to be a part versity? done. The vast majority ol students of. 1. Regular debates on current issues, rarely, if ever, get a chance to air Admittedly, some of us have not held with an introductory panel, to be their views and have them challenged up our end of the bargain. Few of us followed by any speaker-student or at length. This is pretty sad f«-r an -faculty-with the courage of his con¬ institution whose avowed purpose is Political dream study adequately for tests and exams, teams let alone read all the material for classes. And let's face it. how many of us bomb over to the library to do victions and the intellect and facts to back up his stand. To be held in the same place every time where the pursuit of knowledge hope wisdom?) more when we have to express our¬ (Dare we After all. we learn those "recommended readings?" discussions could continue until LATE. selves. if only that we should have shut The University, however, has also 2. Regular speak-out forums to be up in the first place. failed in its responsibilities in pro¬ established on campus. Say, one or Should anyone become inspired and strong in the Kennedy family to be Much more of a dream-and my sixth moting an intellectual atmosphere. Wit¬ two semi-permanent lecterrts to be set actually come up with a suggestion or I thought of calling this piece "Cou¬ daunted by the danger of death. A greater one-would be a Humphrey-Eugene Mc¬ ness the ridiculous numbers of the up around Beaumont Tower with any two. why not call up the STATE NEWS ples," but readers of John Updike might obstacle is that Edward Kennedy may pre¬ Carthy ticket. The two men understand 600-member lecture classes, and the University member free to speak, and let me know, and who knows, have been misled. So let us talk quite and respect each other. The fact that they but open to challenge from any quarter out of the one or two of us concerned, fer to wait until the 1970s and then try scarcity of seminars for non-Honors simply about a number of possible dream for the No. 1 spot. come from the same state would not be College students. Witness 400-level 3. Better advertisement of established we might accidentally accomplish the teams. University's purpose; education. There has been recent bad blood of fatal, any more than a Nixon-Rockefeller courses where professors require more colloquia. and more of them-the A dream team is one that a candidate or Nixon-John Lindsay ticket. The diffi¬ STATE NEWS will be sorts between Rockfeller and Reagan, memorization than we suffered in grade delighted to and his supporters dream about, because it is the perfect pairing, not in the Amer¬ but no more so than is normal between culty lies with McCarthy's more fervent followers and how sensitive he is to their school. The extreme emphasis on grades, 4. help out. Professors to dine at every resi¬ Correction any two rivals for the presidential nom¬ too, prevents many students from giving ican sense of a love match but as a con¬ True Believer trust that he could never dence hall once a week, with dis¬ It was incorrectly stated in the last ination. Rockefeller has said that the their views in a class where their tinental marriage of convenience that ful¬ issue that the Urban Action Project is ideological difference is not a chasm. compromise their anti-Humphrey crusade. grades might suffer. And aside from cussions open to anvthing-dedicated fills completely what both partners want. sponsored by the Urban Cadre of the Uni¬ If Reagan finds at the start of the con¬ My last three dream teams may seem three or four lecture series, there are to the proposition that professors Each gives the other the one thing he even more far-out. If the Democratic Na¬ might just be people, too. ted Campus Ministry. It is sponsored by vention that he has no hope of being No. no places where students and faculty lacks, on terms acceptable to both and tional Convention leaves enough McCarthy 5. There all of clubs. the Urban Cadre of the University Chris¬ 1, he may resign himself to being No. 2, can really pursue the fair muse Aca- are sorts why most of their followers. followers tian Movement. which would transform Rockefeller's intransigent enough to form a demia with no holds barred. poets' club, a playwrights' In each case the presidential candidate fourth party, they might try to draft chances with the uncommitted delegates. needs the vice presidential one to give John Lindsay to cross party lines and run him glamor with a group currently sus¬ Reagan's strength is within the party, with McCarthy. It would make a whirl¬ like Richard Nixon's while his weakness picious of him, while the vice presiden¬ tial candidate needs the presidential one because he can't get to the White House on his own. but might get there in time is outside; Rockefeller's strength is out¬ side the party, his weakness inside. That is why Rockefeller needs Reagan as in¬ wind campaign team and (along with the Wallace candidacy) would throw the elec¬ tion in the House. Or it is conceivable that the order might be reversed and that iTsioaccAX RAcesfa HAPPINESS: deed by the same logic Nixon needs by normal succession or by an act of God. ical This is roughly true of almost all polit¬ presidential pairings, hut a dream Rockefeller-if he could persuade the end to take second place. him at in some fashion a Lindsay-McCarthy team could be formed which might pack IS A The Nixon camp is talking of Sens. even more political dynamite right across team is one which~if it could be nom¬ the nation, in both parties and in every inated-could scarcely fail to be elected. The two obvious dream teams are, for the Democrats, a Hubert Humphrey-Ed¬ Charles Percy and Mark Gov. Romney, but none dramatic enough to Hatfield and of of the three is give Nixon the section. My final dream team, least likely but PLACE strength he needs outside the party. Rock¬ not impossible, might happen if for some ward Kennedy ticket and, for the Repub¬ efeller would, as I have said. Lindsay Humphrey's campaign should fal¬ CALLED reason licans, a Nelson Rockefeller-Ronald Rea¬ gan ticket. Humphrey needs the kind of would too, and a Nixon-Lindsay ticket is my fourth dream ticket. A fifth would ter badly or he should become unavail¬ able. hi that event, instead of turning to FRIDAYS bolstering with the antiwar groups that a McCarthy, I suspect that a majority of be Nixon and a liberal Negro-if Nixon Kennedy on his ticket would give him- the delegates might turn back to Lyndon were bold enough to risk losing his South¬ Super Stocks SUKEfS^Si • and the Kennedy strength now-right after Johnson and that he in turn would seek ern support, which will probably go to Robert Kennedy's death-is greater than it out the most vigorous antiwar candi¬ is likely to be four years from now. George Wallace anyway. I think of some¬ • Mid Season date as his running mate-Eugene McCar¬ one like Whitney Young, a moderate Ne¬ Many people would be horrified at the idea of exposing a third Kennedy to the gro who has just come out for his ver¬ sion of black power, which is compatible thy. A Johnson-McCarthy ticket was a possibility in 1964, and one cannot say it Championship Figure 8 race * • • SONGS! ■ liilGHS! - GREAT FUN! • hazards of murderous hatreds that have is impossible in 1968. with Nixon's speeches on Negro economic already killed two brothers. But the thrust toward the highest political power is too self-help and homegrown Negro capital- Copyright 1968, Los Angeles Times . AT THE TRACK THE ' STARS CALL HOME . Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, July 12, 1968 5 -SPORTS Gibbard By TOM BROWN new harrier coach parate responsibility for the two compiled the worst record during Dittrich's tenure. The I guarantee that you be eighth in the Big will not State News Sports Editor sports. Ten next The long-anticigated apooint- "I'm basing my decision on the harriers finished eighth jn the year." ■»» auoraon to bis dutiee as coach csa* duties .'between the * Mco mark in *ne dual meet competi¬ campus was cross country coach, Gibbard firmed Thursday by the State coaches," Munn safd. "This cer¬ tion, the first time the Spartans will continue to serve as as¬ Board of Trustees. tainly has nothing to do with Dit¬ had ever finished below second sistant track coach. Gibbard, asst. track and cross trich's record in cross country since joining the Big Ten. this He has been a great The possible replacement was Gibbard. a former Spartan country coach at MSU for the season. coach and of our most suc¬ hinted at by Gibbard during a running star of the late 1940s, past 10 years, replaces Fran Dit- one trich who will continue as head cessful ones." cross. country banquet when he started his coaching career fol¬ track coach at MSU. Dittrich directed the Spartan told the team that things would lowing graduation in 1950. After Gibbard was first mentioned harriers to five Big Ten crowns, be different in 1968 nine years in the prep ranks, as Dittrich's replacement on three IC4A titles and two NCAA "I can tell you this," Gibbard Gibbard s cross country and Nov. 30, 1967 when MSU Athle¬ cross country championships. said, "things will be a lot dif- track teams had amassed 101 tic Director Biggie Munn re¬ In 1967, however, the Spartans ferent around here next year dual meet wins against 16 losses vealed plans to separate the du¬ ties of the cross country and clinic track teams. At the time, Munn said that he intended to recommend Gib¬ Mcrf ope bard for the job in order to se¬ Two-hundred Others the staff Fred high school and ucational," Peninger said. on are JIM GIBBARD Davis, coach at Brigham Young younger wrestlers will begin ar¬ "There is no competition. '' riving on the MSU campus this The clinic is open only to University; Dave Hengsteler, weekend for the first of two one- wrestlers in their junior year El Camino Junior College (Cal¬ week sessions of the 1968 Spar¬ in high school or younger and if i coach; Charles Hetrick. tan Wrestling and Coaching also to coach at Blaekwell, Okla., High high school coaches. Clinic at the Men's I.M. Bldg. Peninger has a staff of six School; Karl Kitt, Air Force The first session will begin instructors for the clinic, in¬ Academy coach and Hal Si- Sunday and continue through cluding assistant monek. Cerritos Junior Col¬ wrestling July 20 and the second session coach Doug Blubaugh. lege (Calif, i coach. will run the following week, (July 21-27). In all, 400 wrestlers have enrolled for the ic, now summer clin¬ in its sixth year under LA releases Rocky the direction of Spartan wrest¬ in his family residing at Tem¬ LOS ANGELES (UPI)-- ling coach Grady Peninger. Veteran ple. Pa "This is to wrestling what major league out¬ fielder Rocky Colavito was giv¬ Manager Walter Alston used Interlochen is to music," Pen¬ Colavito primarily against left- en his unconditional release inger said of the clinic. handed pitching and he saw Thursday by the Los Angeles "What is more heartening infrequent action. Colavito in Dodgers after waivers were 113 times at bat had an about the clinic over the years average obtained on him for that pur¬ is that high school coaches have of 204 and hit three homeruns, pose, the club announced. said that their wrestlers im¬ driving in 11 runs. Colavito came to the Dodgers Colavito proved greatly the next year." during his career Peninger said the clinic is during spring training from the spent most of his playing time designed to give prep wrestlers Chicago White Sox in a cash in the American League with new knowledge and increase transaction. He was forced Cleveland but also saw action their proficiency in the sport. to leave the club twice in re¬ with Kansas City. Detroit and MSU OLYMPIC HOPE DAVE THOR "The clinic is 100 per cent ed¬ cent weeks because of illness the White Sox. SPORTS WEAR SALE Spartans to compete FAMOUS MAKERS in six A sizeable Olympic trials number of pres¬ Three UP TO 1/2 OFF present Spartan divers. ent and former MSU athletes Doug Todd, Jim Henderson and will be competing this summer Duane Greene, also are eli¬ •Suits • Slacks -Dresses in various trials for the 1968 gible for the trials, but they Olympics this October in Mexico have not decided to compete at •Tops • Skirts -Culottes City. present. •Hosiery -Purses .Jewelry The contingent of participants Don Behm, 1967 graduate, and represents four varsity sports- Greg Johnson, a sophomore this ' OPEN WED. & FRI. OTHER NITES TILL 5(30 P.M. swimming. wrestling, track fall, will represent MSU in and gymnastics-and two club the wrestling trials at Alamosa. sports-weightlifting and kayak canoeing. Colo., Sept. 17-23. will attend a wrestling camp The two MARION'S The first Spartan to perform in Colorado, Sept. 9-15, before BROOKFIE LD PLAZA 351-7224 in the Olympic tryouts will be competing in the trials. Dave Thor. all-around gymnast Behm, 1331 E. GRAND RIVER 130-pound Big Ten Thor. winner of the 1968 Nissen champion and second in the IN THE EAST LANSING BANK BUILDING Award which goes to the out¬ NCAA in 1967. will wrestle standing senior gymnast in the in the 125.5-pound weight class country, will compete against 25 in the trials and Johnson will other (July State gymnasts 12-151 at this weekend Northwestern College in Natchitoches. wrestle in the 114.5-pound class. Bob Steele will take part BE COOL This Summer La. in the Olympic track training Thor must finish among the camp at South Lake Tahoe. Nev.. Sept. 9-17. Steele was WITH top six to advance to the final trials at Los Angeles in late given special permission to THE miss the first trials in June August. due to broken FINEST IN Six swimmers could repre¬ a leg he suffered sent MSU in the swimming trials last winter. Steele was the at Long Beach. Calif.. Aug. 440-yard NCAA hurdles cham¬ 30-Sept. 1. Pete Williams, pion in 1967. Stereo senior captain of last year's In club sports, Joe Puelo, a swimming team, will compete 1965 MSU graduate, will compete in the 200 and 400-yard in¬ in the 181-pound weight class Component dividual medley and the 200- in the weightlifting trials in yard backstroke events Ken Walsh, a 1967 graduate, New York, Aug. 31-Sept. 3. Puelo won a gold medal in Systems and Jim MacMillan. a 1966 the light-heavyweight division graduate, will swim in the 100 in last year's Pan-American and 200-yard freestyle events. Games. From HAVE A CARE FREE VACATION THIS SUMMER WITH MARSHALL MUSIC COMPANY 245 ANN INSTANT CASH, MEMBER GREATER EAST LANSING CHAMBER OF COMMERCE' Any where, any time, with anyone Instant cash is a revolving line of credit loan service that goes right with you anywhere wide Use It as you need It for vacation the you go. needs, travel expenses, or emergencies. For more information call your credit union today. on WHO COULD SAY NO the new corduroy beat New shape, new pulse, new pow. Juniors make things hap¬ W> don't want to complicate your life by giving you such beautiful rings from which to choose. pen on the fashion scene in wide wale cotton corduroy. Real We just want you to know-whichever style she likes, keen classics to be included in we have it in abundance. any pace-setter's autumn wardrobe. Marquis* solitaire, $1,025. Pear, $1,095. Emerald cut, $825. Round cut, $795. (Price* vary with diamond selected.) A. Cleverly compiled corduroy jumper to take a blouse Extended Terms Available, of Course! or sweater, or even go out unattended. Ribbed horizon¬ A Morgan Diamond Is for Now and Forever! tally, even on the center inset. Navy or green with brass accented belt. 13.98 I Visit Our New Mezzanine Gift Dept.! I B. Plushy, deeply napped wide wale corduroy in navy green, demurely fashion to a gentle A-line, with placket MORGANS or concealed front zipper, lace edged white collar and cuffs. Jr. sizes. 18.98 C4MHI S CEXTER - EAST LA.\SI\C Friday, July 12, 1968 6 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan 10 V GROUPS Tefo Fine Arts Festival to open University groups tion on the sitar in Fairchiw paintings from theMSU perman¬ pany will be presented at 8:15 IOa.rrt inKresfge. sponsor special programs next week as part of the 9th Annual ent collection; it will remain Monday in Fairchild Theatre from 1:30-3:00 p.m. Wednesday. Four art professors will Fine Arts Festival Sunday on display through Aug 4 Tuesday's program begins Art in Michigan will be dis- participate in a "Symposium on Monday's events include a with Hilton Kramer, art critic cussed at a 10 a.m. program American Art" at 1:30 p.m. in through Friday. The festival is a summer lecture on "Landscape Arch¬ of the New York Times, speak¬ Wednesday in Kresge. , Kresge. An exhibit of the a«d the Arts" at 10 ing on "The Problems of the Ed McCoy, associate pro- works of Michigan artists will entertainment program which itecture a m in Fairchild Theatre. The Limelight," at 10 a.m. in Kres¬ fessor of communication, will also be included in the program, replaces the • Lecture-Concert Series of cultural entertain¬ speaker will be Boston archi¬ ge. Experimental films of the show a film, "Never a Back- McCoy will present "Another tect Stuart O. Dawson. 1960's will be studied at 1:30 ward Step," and lead Look at Documentary Films' ment held during the regular academic year. Experimental films of the p.m. in Kresge; this program cussion on the documentary on Thursday at 3:30 p.m. in will be followed at 3:30 by a film at3:30p.m. Wednesday begins at 2 p.m. 1920's will be shown and dis- The festival Kresge. CU3S2J in Kresge Art Center panel discussion on recent styles A faculty ensemble, the Rich¬ Sunday with the opening of a in American painting. Gerald Goodman, folk singer ards Quintet, will present a Kresge Art Gallery exhibit, at 1:30 p.m. followed by a Tuesday evenings special and harpist, will present a three-part musical program "From Synchromism For¬ speech on the "Dynamics of vocal and instrumental concert performance at Fairchild fea¬ Thursday evening at 8:15 in Fair- ward," which focuses on ab¬ Shape" at 3:30. tures Nikhil Banerjee on the at 8:15 Wednesday evening in child. An evening performance by stract art in America. The Fairchild. sitar in a concert of music Also included as part of the from North India. Thursday's programs open festival is an exhibit of the with a repeat of Monday's dis¬ Following his Tuesday even¬ architectural design of civic cussion and showing of experi- ing program, Banerjee will "Design for Cities- areas, Yesterday, Today and Tomor¬ Nature Study row," in the Union through Coeds In an elementary art class had i chance recently to draw under "field con- July 26. dltlons." State News photo by Jim Richardson nnmmir MSU INTERNATIONAL FILM SERIES presents Composite ir,„- E " fa f» «' i Brl Uwl UsuiKmd SaT P'/V ,w "ANNA of presidents it.Mgrwcv^. nr> SOUND I Jv'ji.!; His wife could have been NEW YORK (AP) -- If your named almost anything, be¬ fox i»Itcrn thcatrcs CHRISTIE" name is James and you are a Harvard-educated resident from a New York Virginia family, cause the research failed to dis¬ cover an aggregate name for her. It was found, however, that ,SPARTAN TWIN FRANDOR SHOPPING CENTER • 3100 EAST WEST SAGINAW Phon« 351 0030 Eugene O'Neill's dramaof a worldly-wise woman who you.have a lot in common with the men who have served in the the wife's name usually has two finds true love. A film classic starring Greta Garbo, syllables and frequently was Charles Bickford, George F. White House. Marion, Marie Dressier similar to her husband's--as An encyclopedia company has TONIGHT AT 7:30 AND 9:30 Directed by Clarence Brown. Lyndon Johnson and Lady Bird. produced what it calls "The The compleat president had SAT & SUN MATINEES FROM compleat president"-a total of been married 26 years and had 1:30 PM- 3:30 - 5:30 - 7:15 & 9:15 Frl., Sat. July 12 & 13 the basic characteristics of the three children-two boys and a past presidents rolled into one girl.-when he assumed office. P when you've Fairchild Theatre imaginary man. The researchers concluded He was a war veteran and wrote l got it made., that the compleat-armchair of at least one book during his —STARRING— public service career. TONY CURTIS - 7:30 p.m. complete-president is 54 years There never has been a presi¬ , old, 5-feet-lO inches tall, fairly named Hubert, Eugene. S CLAUDIA CARDBS'ALE Admission 50C dent trim with blue eyes and light SHOWN ONCE ONLY -11:00 " Nelson or Richard. hair. There was a George. He start¬ A visual picture of the man ed the whole thing. was produced by superimposing pictures of the 36 men who have held the post into one composite JFK supporter photograph. The company does not pretend to back HHH the composite will help predict EAST BRUNSWICK, N.J. 1968 the man who will be elected in November. But;Jojin S. Fones| who handled the project for the Encyclopepia Americana, sug¬ (AP)--A New Jersey Dem- ocrat .wbp was one of .thf^KM PreShWrtf'"John F. Kennedy's early supporters lined up Thurs¬ gests it can be used as a "ba¬ day behind Vice President Hu¬ JULY rometer to see how your candi¬ bert Humphrey. date stacks up." John V. Kenny, leader of the Research revealed that the powerful Hudson County Jer¬ compleat president was born sey City Democratic organiza¬ in the fall, the eldest son in his tion, told newsmen he and his SteveMcQueen family. When he was 28. he mar¬ group's delegates would support ried a girl four years younger Humphrey for the presidential FayeDunaway,, than himself. nomination. A Norman Jewison Film BEST IN FOREIGN FILMS T%7 Cirwn Afjlah" 2 BIG COMEDY HITS TODAY . . . FROM 7:15 P.M. Raul Burke JackWfeston SAT & SUN . . . CONTINUOUS FROM 1:20 P.M. Italians make love like they makeantipasto... witli a little bit of everything...! SPARTAN TWIN EAST „'FRANDOR SHOPPING CENTER 3100 EAST SAGINAW Phon« 351-0030 DAILY AT There are l:*0 "Westerns" 3:45 and 5:50 "Westerns!' 7:45 & Every now 9:45 and then conies a NEW kind of Western. This is BANDOLERO! FRIDAY THE GREATEST PLACE IN TOWN FOR A DATE dazzling new GIRLS FREE musical treat from the creators GUYS FREE BEFORE 8:00 of "Umbrellas of Cherbourg." 8 Friday, July 12, 1968 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan U.S. attacks in panhandle Pompidou lure enemy nomtor ot, jets to battle I'mnniini.}! MlliS ue- iim missions over uie nvi political pAHiS (AP) - In the political universe oi r ranee tact* is l tempo of U.S. air blows at stor¬ ployed in. North Vietnam*" . Wednesday destroyed or dam¬ room for only one sun. and ttyt sun is Charl^; de Gaulle age areas and communications There have been previous re- aged 93 sampans and 22 barges This is the lesson Georges'Pompidou has learned from Ins southern ports that some of the MIGs had araf knocked out 23 trucks, two in North Vietnam's abrupt dismissal as premier Wednesday after having held the panhandle has apparently lured been flown to bases around Ha¬ highway bridges and one rail¬ post longer than any other man in modern times. MIG jets out to battle, U.S. noi. the capital and Haiphong, way span. The longer he directed the governmAlt from his official the principal port, since John¬ Intensive ground sweeps went residence at Hotel Matignon, the more respected sources said Thursday and popular on around Saigon to break up an They pointed to two MIGs shot son issued his order. Pompidou became. down in dogfights Tuesday and Now apparently some of the expected new enemy drive on He was rightly credited with contributions to the solution the capital. U.S. 25th Infantry Wednesday in the panhandle, North Vietnamese planes have of the explosive May-June crisis and with engineering the Division troops reported they where no enemy planes once been flown to bases south of Ha¬ Gaullist election victory which returned a National Assembly noi to meet the U.S. planes blast¬ killed 23 enemy soldiers in a dared to appear majority unprecedented in size. Most of North Vietnam's 75 or ing away at North Vietnam's 7 1/2-hour battle Wednesday 32 He was one of the rare French public figures to come out of miles northwest of Saigon. so MIGs were based in Red Chi¬ men, weapons and supplies mov¬ the crisis and its consequences with increased status, and South Vietnamese troops na to escape the wrath of U.S. ing southward into South Viet¬ with it he appeared to have established the beginnings of a air power until President John¬ nam. found four weapons caches power base independent of President De Gaulle. son on March 31 declared most Intelligence reports have told Thursday 15 miles northwest of De Gaulle himself paid recognition to this in a letter to of North Vietnam off limits to of increased North Vietnamese Saigon. The caches include au¬ Pompidou: "I wish you would hold yourself ready to fulfill infiltration into South Vietnam tomatic weapons and ammuni¬ bombers. any mission and to assume any mandate that the nation One U.S. source said**there for weeks, and U.S. planes have tion. might one day confer on you." But the implication was has been "an increase in the been making a concentrated U.S. Air Force B 52 bombers Face Lift clear--"one day" meant after De Gaulle had gone drive to disrupt it. dropped their huge bomb loads If Pompidou erred, as some high government sources think, For example, the U.S. Com¬ early Thursday in three prov¬ A Lansing urban renewal pi oject now underway wll I change the look of many down- on the side of popularity, it is not considered probable that DINING OUT IS mand reported U.S. planes fly- inces around Saigon. town blocks. State News photo by Bob Ivlns his successor will do the same. Maurice Couve de Murville. the new premier, is the text "IN"... book civil servant-aloof and years as foreign minister, Couve de coldly intellectual. In his 10 Murville earned the repu¬ AT "JIM'S" SAVE ON FOR LANSING tation as an unquestioning agent of De He seems to have given a twist Gaulle of Machiavelli's advice to the prince that "it is better to be feared than to be loved;" • GREEK FOOD FEATURED EVERY DIVING for Couve de Murville "respected" could replace "feared. " ► SATURDAY EVENING BROILED CHOICE STEAKS AND EQUIPMENT Urban renewal Some well informed in the new sources see this cool, aristocratic strain premier as an asset in his dealings with De Gaulle, but as a liability in carrying out what De Gaulle has set as the top political priority in the coming months. By JIM ROOS "First Block," is part of a munity redevelopment, esti¬ Although acquisition of the De Gaulle has promised to "revolutionize" the relations SEAFOOD NIGHTLY 48-acre Lansing urban renewal mated that construction will property within the re-develop¬ Following nearly three years between the worker and his working place by a reform of frustrations and delays, con¬ It involves a pro¬ ment area has been primarily pro¬ program. probably begin by late Novem¬ gram he calls "participation." Though the plan remains sket¬ tractors will soon be able to posal for the construction of ber. financed with federal funds three buildings on a land area from the Dept. of Urban Re¬ chy, it seems to center on codirection of factories and busi¬ begin work on one Lansing's "We've been working on land nesses by workers and their employers. most important urban renewal of 90,000 sq. ft., bounded by newal. the job of redeveloping acquisition for three years." projects. the 100 blocks of North Wash¬ Zimmerman said. "What I've the area commercially has "Participation" has already drawn fire from labor unions The project, known to Lan¬ ington. East Ottawa. North been exposed to is the impa¬ been left to community enter¬ and the business community, making it clear that the head ' sing area redevelopers as Grand, and East Michigan ave¬ tience of people wanting to see prise. of government could use a large reservoir of good will to create nues in downtown Lansing. something happen. We've been The "First Block" project public acceptance of the reforms. Schedule for construction purchasing properties, clear¬ consequently represents a col¬ within this proposed redevelop¬ lective. but If, as some sources say, De Murville does not believe in the ing land and wanting to proceed private, invest¬ reforms, then the task will be that much more difficult. Black power, 'U/ ment site is a sprawling two- with redevelopment but not able ment of approximately $15 mil¬ "How can a man whose instincts, temperament and train¬ story shopping center, a 16- to do so." he added. lion by a group of 13 business¬ story office building and a 360- "In the total urban renewal' men known as the Lansing Area ing are of the right be expected to carry out a reform of the left" symposium topic room Holiday Inn Motor Hotel. project there are 107 properties Redevelopment Corp. one perplexed official asked. The hotel will feature a roof¬ of which we've acquired 97." A symposium entitled "The top restaurant. he said. "The problem is Student, the University and The development also in¬ that the properties, as we've Black Power'' will be held Wed¬ 5411 SO CEDAR LANSING. MICHIGAN HOURS— nesday at 8:30 p.m. in the Case multipurpose room. The symposium will "explore cludes the construction special bridge across Ottawa Street joining the "First Block' of a acquired them have been spot¬ ted inconveniently and have confronted us with physical Summer cabinet operation 116 E. Michigan Ave. shopping center with a 1.200- problems in development of the centers a round revision Mon. thru Fri. 9-9 the relevance of the University Downtown Lansing 1.500 car parking ramp in the to the black power movement land," Zimmerman said. IV 9-1196 200 block of North Grand Avenue. Sat. 9-6 Sun. 2-6 and determine how the Univer¬ "We've taken down 60 or 70 Although difficulties in ac¬ buildings, but have not been sity can be made more rele¬ quiring three remaining proper¬ chants of the vant," according to Fletcher able to start actual construc¬ During summer term, cer¬ feasibility of such ties within the development site tain a plan. Other schools with Allen, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla, jun¬ tion," he added. departments of the ASMSU continue to delay work on the Cabinet are in operation, con¬ discount services have been con¬ ior. Also considered for expan¬ so/i/Am has mmmto prick. The discussions are open to "First Block" project, Richard Zimmerman, director of tinuing their fall-winter-spring tacted for information on their sion is the insurance department. com SUM hun* the public. com¬ Supreme Court term activities or working on revision and expansion of serv¬ relative success. The elections department is How to best expand the number of benefits at the lowest cost THE WHOLE FAMIIYI in disfavor ices. Cabinet President Greg Owen working this summer on re¬ vision of student government to the -student and exploring the different types of insurance said that this is the first time election laws, hopefully to be with Americans for some of the cabinet de¬ completed by fall term. The are the main interests of the revised election procedure would department at present. partments to extend work PRINCETON, N.J. (AP) ~ An eliminate the possibility of bo¬ Course evaluations is await¬ through the summer. There is increasing number of Americans ing the publication of its book¬ still the possibility of others gus ballots, as were discovered are taking an unfavorable atti¬ opening if the need arises. in the last election. let containing the results of a tude toward the U.S. Supreme Departments now in opera¬ Travel services, which may year of research. It is ex¬ Court, the Gallup Poll report¬ tion are the loan service, legal be expanded, are also facing pected to be completed some time ed Wednesday. aid. (the ASMSU lawyer is re-evaluation and revision. Owen this month. Gallup said unfavorable atti¬ in the office on Wednesdays), tudes outweigh favorable senti¬ HELP BONANZA FIGHT ments by a 3-to-2 ratio. elections, ance, NSA travel, insur¬ Great Issues and exter¬ BIBB SINNER PRICES! But in July of last year the poll reported that Americans showed mixed feelings toward nal relations. Owen said that the mimeo¬ Mao's seen graph and silk screen service $139 the High Court, with about as FRIED •/, CHICKEN DINNER many giving it "excellent" or will go into operation if enough people are willing to work. as Lin rival FRIED PERCH DINNER $119 "good" marks as those rating it "fair" or "poor." "We would like to be able to BONANZA BURGER 89c Gallup also said that rank and give people, especially the TOKYO (AP)--Mao Tse- dispensable in the final analy¬ groups endorsing presidential sis. file Republicans are most criti¬ tung's peppery-tongued wife, Have Sunday Dinner With Us cal of the court, with about 60 candidates, the benefit of our Chiang Ching, is emerging from The Maoist Shanghai organ. inexpensive service," he said. the new chaos and contusion on Wen-hui Pao. on May 29 touched per cent giving it an unfavora¬ ble In the area of student the Chinese mainland as a pos¬ off the campaign to glorify Mrs. rating. Democrats, mean¬ serv¬ BONANZA * while, are about evenly divided ices. cabinet members sible rival to Defense Minister Mao. Seen in translation here are in their feelings. working on a discount service Lin Piao. Thursday, it called on the masses , Thus, Gallup said, a person's with student I.D.'s for "mem¬ Phrases are beinning to be to "learn from Chiang Ching." called her "by far the most SIRLOIN PIT #205 opinion of the Supreme Court is bership" cards. Owen said used in official publications correct, the bravest, the firm¬ 600 N. Homer at E. Saginaw closely related to how he identi¬ the main issue here is con¬ once applied only to Mao and fied himself politically. Lin. est. the most honest and fer¬ near Frandor Shopping Center vincing the East Lansing mer¬ One reason for this may be vent Communist fighter in COME AS YOU ARE • OPEN 11 A.M. TO 9 P.M. For the fastest cleaning the recent outbreak of factional¬ fighting against the enemy ism within the ranks and cadres That was a description once In town—plus pick-up reserved for Lin Piao. vice and delivery service. who claim loyalty to Mao. In¬ chairman of the party and stead of dying down it has Mao's designated successor. flared up in recent weeks, breaking out into violence on widespread fronts. The pick McDonald's Thus, the army is being cast in the part of preserver of the Height shrinkage Look fbr the Golden Arches-where quality starts fresh...every day status quo; aligned against it, Mrs. Mao stands for purge, crit¬ may result from for picnics 623 E. Grand River icism, change. All the signs in¬ dicate the two are on a collision stress-filled day 234 W. Grand River course. East Lansing 332-4103 MILFORD, (AP) - If you feel The conflict between the Large group or small . . . •Across from Student Services' depressed at the end of a day, army, headed by Lin Piao, and don't worry about it. It is per¬ McDonald's doubleburgers Mrs. Mao dates from February 1024 E. Grand River fectly natural. shakes and fries are when influential military men So reported two General Mo¬ great for the whole gang. 332-6647 BIGGEST led by the acting chief of staff, Yang Cheng-wu, decided it was tors styling technicians Thurs¬ day at an auttf safety seminar. time to call a halt to the nation¬ They said a person could be eating value wide purge. dons for They sought par¬ prominent purges, no¬ almost an inch shorter at din¬ ner time than at breakfast. tably Vice Premier Tan Chen- in town Hn. Dr. Peter Kyropoulos and Ronald W. Roe said the change in height occurs when the Chiang Ching fought this movement savagely. Yang and spinal column relaxes and some high-rahking military as¬ stretches during sleep, then sociates were fired. compresses during the load of a day's activity. Smarting from this rebuff, the THE BIC SHEF army recently has folded its They said the change is so no¬ hands while the students, work¬ ticeable in some people that "You'll Love It" they have to readjust their auto ers and peasants fought for rearview mirrors before they power. Its attitude seems to be: When the situation becomes bad can drive home each night even 622 N. HOMER (Across from Spartan Twin) enough, even Chiang Ching will though the mirror was in fine< recognize that only the army position at the beginning of the can restore order, making it in¬ day. Friday, July 12, 1968 9 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Trustees approve Wood app tfin ilfr\/ ctmf.f nrti Biochem » It ^ 1, rn m , Willis A. Wood, profes- music; Alan B. Poland, instructor, mu¬ 10 years, has been appointed H Ferres, associate professor, Amer¬ MSU's Board of Trustees gave ap¬ ican Thought and Language, Sept. I to sic. Sept. 1 (cancellationI, Inge E Whit¬ chairman'of the Dept. of Bio¬ proval Thursday to 41 appointments; II ing. instructor, romance languages; Bren- leaves; S promotions; 28 transfers, as¬ Aug. 31, 1969. to be visiting professor at da chemistry. Hofstra University, and Daniel M. Sei- Dervin, instructor, business law and signments and miscellaneous actions; office Wood's appointment, effec¬ fer, assistant professor, management, administraUon; John H. Boyd Jr., 3 retirements and 30 resignations and assistant professor, journalism. tive immediately, was approved and regional director, continuing educa¬ terminations. tion, Sept. 1 to Aug. 31, 1969, to continue Other resignaUons and terminations Thursday by the University's Included were the appointment of Wil- work at Tuskegee Institute were approved for: Kenneth H. Sum- Board of Trustees. • * Us A. Wood, professor, as chairman of merer, assistant professor, adminis¬ the biochemistry department, effective tration and higher educaUon, July 31; He succeeds R. Gaurth Han¬ Promotions from instructor to assistant July 1, and designation of Charles A. Mc- professor were approved for: Julia A. John E. Garrett, assistant profeaor, sen, who resigned to become kee as director, Evening College. Aug. 1. vice president for academic Falk, linguistics, oriental and african elementary and special education; Har¬ Appointments approved were: Jo M. low M. Judson, associate professor, elec¬ affairs at Utah State Univer¬ languages. Aug. 1, Jean A. McFadden, Sharp, 4-H-youth agent, Chippewa. Luce foods and nutrition, and institution ad¬ trical engineering and engineering re¬ and Macinac counties, July 15; Richard ministration, Sept 1; Vera Borosage. search. July 15; Myrtle B. Van Home, as¬ sity. M Hageman, visiting professor, bio¬ home management and child develop¬ sistant professor, foods and nutriUon and Wood was graduated in 1947 chemistry, July 1 to Aug 31; Arthur H ment, July 1; Richard A. Anderson, urban continuing education, July 31; Werner from Cornell University and Steinhaus. visiting professor, health, physical education and recreation, Sept. planning and landscape architecture. Giggenbach, research associate, chem¬ istry, Aug. 15, and James W Hart, re¬ Trustees Meet received the Ph.D. degree in WOOD Sept 1, and R Glenp Wright, American 1950 at Indiana University. and in 1955 he received the 16-Dec. IS and April 1. 1969-June 30. 1969; search associate, MSU-AEC Plant Re¬ Thought and Language. July 1. The Trustees deliberate actions In their meeting Thursday. Richard E Terry, assistant professor, Transfers approved included: Eliza¬ search Laboratory, July 26. Wood taught for eight years Eli Lilly Award in microbio¬ teacher education. Sept. 1; John S. Nic- olis, associate professor, electrical en¬ beth L. Horrocks, home economist, from The following resignaUons and termi¬ nations were also approved: Anna L. State News photo by Mike Marhanka at the University of Illinois, logy and immunology. He Presque Isle, Alpena and Alcona joined the MSU faculty in 1958. gineering and engineering research. Sept ties to Presque Isle County, ' . 1, and Eggers, associate professor, nursing; Jan¬ 1 and Charlotte M. Thompson, instructor, et L. Merrill, assistant professor, sociol¬ He is a member of the Von Del Chamberlain, from associate t foods and nutrition, Sept. 1. Other appointments were approved for curator to etarium, July 1. acting director. Abrams Plan¬ ogy; Robert E. Morsberger, associate professor, American Thought and Lan¬ FOR BUILDING, RESEARCH editorial board of the Journal of Bacteriology, a consultant Norma J. Frank, instructor, textiles, Dual guage; Marvin E. Reed, instructor. Amer¬ Assignments to the National Institutes of clothing and related arts, Sept. 1; Ar¬ The Board approved dual assignments ican Thought and Language. Sept. 1 (can¬ thur F. Kohrman. assistant professor, for: Lester V. Manderscheid. associate cellation:, Robert G. Franke. associate Health and a consultant to the U' granted human development, Aug. 1, Arthur S. professor, to agricultural economics and professor, natural science, and William Army Chemical Corps at Fort Elstein, associate professor, medical ed¬ D. Lindquist. professor, microbiology ucation research and development, and Educational Development Program. and public health. Dietrick, Md. July 1 to Sept. 30; James H. Soltow. Wood's research centers on psychiatry, Aug. 1; Akihiro Matsumae, professor, to history and labor and in¬ The Board also approved these resig¬ visiting professor, botany and plant nations and terminations: Andres Nigro- microbial enzymology. and he dustrial relations. Sept. 1 to Aug. 31, will administer t pathology, July 1 to June 30, 1969; H. 1969; Lee Shulman, professor, to coun¬ Vilar. research associate, physiology. Gifts and grants totaling $6,683,532 06 _ cooperatives in Tanzania under a $136,000 has done extensive work in The National Institutes of Health Bradford Thompson, visiting professor, June 30; Samuel M. Getty, assistant were accepted Thursday by the board of grant from the Agency for International Aaron Galonsky. director of the MSU chemistry, June 15 to Sept. 15; Marilyn seling, personnel services and education¬ granted $381,327 to support research in Development The study will concentrate Cyclotron, will direct the purchase of development of automatic labora¬ al psychology, and Briggs College, Sept professor, veterinary surgery and medi¬ Long, instructor, nursing. Sept. I and 1 to June 30. 1969; Baruch Boxer, asso¬ cine, and veterinary clinics, Aug 15, Included in the total were two previous¬ the Center for Laboratory Animal Re¬ on the structure of the board and coopera¬ $94,000 worth of additional memory equip¬ tory instruments. sources. This is the second of five an¬ Vernon E. Rich, instructor, police ad¬ Robert G. Harris, instructor, institutional tives to determine if improvements in ment for the cyclotron's Sigma 7 compu¬ ciate professor, to geography and the ly announced grants from the U.S. Public nual grants scheduled to total $1 million. ministration. Sept. 1. research, July 31; Joseph L. Saupe, as¬ Health Service's Bureau of Health Man¬ their operations can be made. ter Funds for the purchase came from the dean's office, College of Social Science. More appointments approved were: Edward M. Convey, assistant profes¬ Sept. 1 to Aug. 31. 1969; Henry G. Blos- sociate director, institutional research, power to be used for MSU's Life Sciences Atomic Research The fifth annual renewal of a grant to Seminar Aid A $123,150 institutional National Science Foundation. The National Science Foundation grant¬ Czechs freed ser, professor, to physics and Morrill and professor, counseling, personnel Building. grant to the Uni¬ do theoretical research in the structure sor (research), dairy. Sept. 16; Harold services and educational psychology: R One of the grants is for $2,534,035 from versity for science was made by the Na¬ ed $80,000 to continue abstract mathemati¬ College, July 1 to Dec. 31; Norman N E B. Humphrey, assistant professor, civil engineering. Sept. I; James A. Miller, assistant professor, to political Stanford Terhune Jr., librarian, Library; Donald W the division of Physician Manpower in and nuclei of elementary particles was received from the Atomic Energy Com¬ tional Science Foundation. To be admin¬ istered by Milton E. Muelder, vice pres¬ cal research. This is the third annual grant for the research. Dyung W. Swun, profes¬ of Soviet troops science and African Studies Center. Sept. Larson, specialist. Latin support of the portion of the building mission. The grant of $152,854 is under ident for research and development, the sor of mathematics, is director of the re- Webster, assistant professor, entomol¬ American Studies Center, June 14, and which will be devoted to medical teach¬ 1 to Dec. 31; and Philip M Marcus, as¬ the direction of Hugh McManus. profes¬ ogy. June I; Carol R. McCarthy, instruc¬ John P Whitney, specialist. Nigerian grant will be used to bring outstanding PRAGUE (AP) - Soviet troop sociate professor, to sociology, and labor ing. The Division of Nursing granted sor of physics, and Peter S. tor. nursing, Sept. 1; John G. Scanda- Consortium Project, June 30 $1,047,832 for the facilities to be used for Signell, pro¬ speakers to the campus for seminars and Dr Virginia H. Mallmann, assistant pro¬ units, whose continued presence and industrial relations, Sept. 1 to Aug fessor of physics. / lies, assistant professor (research), Additional resignations and termina¬ special research projects * fessor of microbiology, will administer a 31.1969 nursing instruction The National Institutes of Health grant¬ after the end of June troop MSU-AEC Plant Research Laboratory, tions approved included: Tom W. Car¬ The National Institutes of Health grant¬ $75,000 grant from the U.S. Department Assignments were approved for: Rob¬ The new building will house the Dept ed $139,970 to continue support of research ed $108,166 for research into the chem¬ of manuevers caused alarm Aug 1. and Peter C Wolk. assistant ert A. Solo, professor, to management, roll. instructor, communications, Aug of Medicine, the School of Nursing, the Agriculture to continue research Into on the transmission of leukemia professor, MSU-AEC Plant Research economics and international programs, 31; Kathryn J. Riedel, instructor, textiles, Dept. of Pharmacology and the offices among istry and metabolism of sphingolipids. a the causes of animal and human tuber¬ throughout Czechoslovakia, will Laboratory. Sept. 1. dogs and from man to dogs. Dr. Gabel special kind of fat that develops in ani¬ culosis This is the ninth renewal of the be withdrawn beginning Satur¬ July 1, and Erlins S. Jorgensen, associate clothing and related arts, April 30; Doris of the Colleges of Human Medicine and H. Conner, professor of veterinary sur¬ E. Moses, assistant mals. plants, insects, and man Dr. grant professor, to television and radio. In¬ professor, nursing. Veterinary Medicine The building will day, the Czechoslovak govern¬ gery and medicine, directs the research Charles C. Sweeley, professor of bio¬ Fund structional Media Center, closed circuit Aug 31; and Harold E. Gray, professor, be located on the south campus ment announced Thursday. More Appointment! Glenn L. Johnson, professor of agricul¬ continuing education, and director. Eve¬ Dr. William H. Knisely, director of chemistry, will direct the research. The Additional appointments approved in¬ television, and secondary education and tural economics, will direct 13-month ning College. Sept. 16 the Institute of Biology and Mediane, a objectives of the research are to examine cluded (all Sept. 1): William D. Crano, curriculum, Sept. 1. study of market board operations and how sphingolipids are made and distribut¬ assistant professor, psychology; Clayton ed through the systems and to study any T. Shorkey. assistant professor, social These changes were given approval: lalities they cause resignation date of Allen W Knight, as¬ Audio Library J A>\ of cancellations ciology; James W Atkinson, instructor, Riots sistant professor. Kellogg Biological University Library was granted natural science: George E Drum, as¬ sistant professor, natural science; Bery- Station and entomology, from June 30 to July 15; resignation date of Walter E cause $102,015 by the U S. Office of Education • volumes and to establish an (0 man E. Murray Jr.. assistant professor, Freeman, professor, sociology and con- audio library The audio library will have natural science; Eileen R. Van Tassell, tiruing education, from June 30 to July a collection of music, drama and poetry assistant professor, natural science, and Rollo W Van Pelt Jr., associate pro¬ fessor, pathology The Board also approved these ap¬ 29; appointment date of Frederick E Smith, librarian. Library, from July 15 to Aug 1; appointment date of Annette K. Buurstra, librarian, Library, from of liquor store's insurance on tapes. There will be 132 listenings posts where students may make selections from 20,000 different voices. Richard E. Chapin, director of libraries, will admin- pointments: Robert M. Corwin, assis¬ Sept. 15 to Sept. 1; Herbert C. Kriesel, ister the grant. DETROIT (AP)--Dave Bel-- brick party store he built 16 tant professor, microbiology and public from adviser, Nigerian Consortium Proj¬ premiums," he said. His busi¬ health. Julv 1; Herbert W. Cox, associate ect. to chief of party, Tanzania Project, man reached under the counter years ago. ness is "better now than it was 00 feminine professor, microbiology and public health, July 1; Robert J. Moon, instructor, mi¬ Aug. 19 to Aug. 31. and Charles K. Lau¬ rent, professor, from Nigerian Consor¬ of his beer and liquor store and , pulled out . ....... a handful of cancelled ... This month, Berman's insur- . . ance agent located a firm--the . before the riot," mostly because Reagan on CBS ' crobiology and public health. Aug. I; Gladys M. Thomas, specialist, micro¬ tium Project to Tanzania Project, Sept. 15toDec 31. insurance policies. Jefferson Insurance Co. of New three other ijquor stores in the area were burned out and never and fabulous biology and public health. July 1; Rus¬ The Board approved these designa¬ "It's a very frightening way to York-willing to reopened. sell Taussig, visiting professor, account¬ ing and financial administration, June 17 tions: Einar Hardin, professor, as asso¬ ciate director labor and industrial rela¬ stay in business," said the 54- worth of his inventory, which uch hehe Along with insurance protec- 8an had purchased a half-hour diamond fashions to July 24. Donald A. Barnum. visiting year-old Berman, whose store is values at $23,000. The„J!re tion. Berman has added a bur- block of time Sunday, July 21. professor, microbiology and public health, tions, Sept. 1: James L. LeGrande, as¬ sistant professor, police administration located in a predominantly black miums on this policy are $800 a glar alarm system--"that's $30 from 7:30 to 8 p.m. EDT. The Her choice of section of Detroit's West Side. year. Similar insurance used to program will be seen at 7:30 July I to July 19. and public safety, as assistant dean, so¬ doUars a month"-and steel fabulous Appointed librarians in the Library cial science. Sept. 1; James R. Gibbard. Berman and scores-possibly cost Berman $96 a year. "And fes on all his wjnc|ows and Pm local time in the Moun- >0 were: Marianna T. Choldin, July I; Rose as assistant professor, health, physical hundreds--of other Detroit shop- you don't get full coverage. It DIAMOND ann K Hammill, July 1; Donna R. Han- education and recreation, assistant track ■, Ki/4 .i—i: doors--"they cost $950 " tain and Pacific time zones fashions, —<>- na. Sept. 9. and Marietta Nelson. July 1. coach and cross country coach. July 1; keepers have had their liveli- doesn't cover vandalism and it barricaded in here like and at 6:30 P ™. in the Central The following were appointed visit¬ hoods threatened by loss of in- has a $500 deductible clause," zone. The time spot is normal¬ your choice of and Oscar Taboada. assistant profesor. a fort," Berman said. ing professor in marketing and trans¬ natural science, as acting chief of party, surance since last summer's he says. ly occupied by "Gentle Ben." portation. administration. George D. Downing. June 17 to July 24; John F Argentine Project. June 25 to Sept. 30 In other actions, the Board approved: riot. Some small businessmen un- fabulous Grashof. marketing and transportation continuation of Ted W. Ward as acting Michigan officials currently able to obtain insurance in riot diamond values administratioa June 17 to Aug 30. and director. Human Learning Research In¬ are investigating the cancella- areas have gone out of business, Robert G. Wyckham. June 17 to July 24 stitute. July 1; cancellation of SepL 1- tion of 318 policies by a London- Berman says his store is ex- 00 fvnilahle in 14KT u hi* or xelloit gold Aug. 31. 1969 leave for Floyd V Monag- Sabbaticals The Board approved sabbatical leaves han, professor, natural science: reinstate¬ ment of Nicolaas G. M. Luykx II as asso¬ based insurer, the Royal Globe Insurance Group. pected to tally a gross income of $350,000 to $370,000 this year. Paraphernalia > for: Jonathan W. Wright, professor, for¬ estry. Jan. 1. 1969. to March 31, 1969. to ciate professor, agricultural economics (he had been assigned to the Pakistan ance Berman had another policy cancelled last week, insur¬ "Fortunately cover the my volume will increased insurance OX JEWELE travel in Japan and Taiwan; Carl F Hartman. associate professor. English. Project), and reassignment of Richard C Henshaw. professor, management, to his fourth cancellation since the FR ANDOR -DOWNTOWN April 1. 1969. to July 31. 1969. to do writ¬ riot nearly ing at home; J Allen Beegle. professor, sociology. Sept 1 to Feb 28. 1969. to the Turkey Project to Aug. 31. 1969; and reinstatement of Robert Repas. profes¬ sor. labor and industrial relations. Sept. During a year ago. last July's distur¬ Hughes gets study, write and do research at heme; 9 (he had beenon leave). bance, rioters broke into and, Frederick B. Waisanen, iology and professor, soc¬ communication. Oct. 1 to Retirements approved included i first year of MSU employment in parentheses i: looted his store on West Warren, two miles west of 12th Street, anti-merger Dec. 31. to study-at home, and Robert Margaret E. Linsell, Kalamazoo County where the riots first flared up. H. Davis, director, learning service, and professor, psychology. Sept. 1 to Nov. 30, home economist, Oct. 1 (1937); Ralph H. Ruhmkorff, staff physician, health cen¬ He estimates they took more court order to work in Switzerland than $20,000 worth of beer, ter, July 1 (1948), and Denzel C. Cline, NEW YORK (AP) -- A federal Other leaves approved included Mary professor, economics. July 1, 1969 (19381 wine and liquor. E. Wahl, home economist. Midland, Dr. Cline will serve a one-year consul- judge Thursday signed and Saginaw and Bay counties, July 1 to Dec. 31; Harry L. Case, professor, education. tantship, effective this July 1. "My whole life's accumula- mailed to financier Howard R. * Resignation tion is in this store," he said. Hughes an order to defend in We admire your spirit, July 1 to July 31, to work for Ford Foun¬ Resignations and terminations ap¬ dation in Philippines; Mary E. Zabik, proved included (all are effective Aug "I'm no youngster. I can't court his offer to buy a control- but you just don't fit instructor (research), foods and nutri¬ 31 unless otherwise noted i: David D van just walk out and get another ling share of the American into the team. tion. S«jpt. 1 to Aug. 31. 1969, to study Zon, 4-H-youth agent, Delta, Menominee job " Broadcasting Companies, Inc. 541 E. Grand River at MSU; George A Colburn. instructor, and Schoolcraft counties. July 31; Doug¬ U.S. District Court Judge Dud- American Thought and Language, Sept las J. Gerrard. a: K profes: r, fcr< Berman, whose pale, lined iey Bonsai mailed the show 1 to Dec 31. to study for Ph D ; John Perris, it professor, face is topped by wavy, grey cause orc|er obtained by ABC 11 a.m. - 9 p.m. hair, said that without insur- attorneys, to Hughes at the De- ance he would be afraid to con- sert inn Hotel in Las Vegas, strikes attractive tinue running the Virus SAVE ON psjev. TAPE RECORDERS IS YOUR CAR cancels al WASHINGTON (AP)» A Los Angeles Mayor Samuel stubborn virus plagued Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey Thursday and wiped out his W that Yorty suggested Wednesday Humphrey's affliction "might be a case of diplomatic MOte, 331-OWV S-T/tt cellent condition. Mu»t sell Son ii Lovely home for i7 %% hyperbole 3a 39 MO Ml 35. Apple acid Mr. & Mrs. George Patterson Apt. B-10 A Service are V/i % MM 15 37. Compound ether il 4* UV- Sold First n 39. Roster 46 ALCO MANAGEMENT CO. 4. H7 i Si 40. Wading bird 41.Jargon 3900 CAPITOL CITY BLVD. 543 E. Grand River Auto Air Conditioner Sales and Strvlca 800 E. Kalamazoo Y/< Y/< 42. Flower plot 43. Creeper LANSING 337-1300 484-1303 44.Insect Friday, July 12, 1968 11 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan For Sale For Sale ULREY HOUSE MARLETTE 1958 46' x 10' - Side fall room-4' x iff - On lot in East Lan¬ sing - Good condition sell. Phone 332-4640 - Priced to 3-7/12 CoedR* VIORM A r.RF.FN co-op opens in ,f»««vr rxf qvrinilhip1 wvuinmip n«4\lar,vw»- «ill be proposed next fall. AMPEG FRETLESS electric t&u sunt News sun i»nw ics. and tounOer ot TttsO co-ups • tuny be eimnnaveo. (ulUr offt •r.T' «**•-. rr**-- t&. "■A r "Uity.-JSciiae will help create said, "tint will be able , 0701 3-7/U Lost & F ootid , to expand and eventually con¬ ience will fee in store for 20 Road. the first coed governing group LOST BENRU,S watch on Tennis coeds when the move into MSU's « It will be the first women's coming from the living areas," struct a'coed co-op.'' ' Animals Courts Saturday. Phase call 356- new women's co-op this fall. Back in thfe '30s, before fe¬ 9255 3-7/12 co-op in over 12 years. Edwin Reuling, asst. director male residence hall construc¬ GERMAN SHEPHERD puppies, AKC, Ulrey House is named after "Improved dorm systems and of student activities and ad¬ shots and wormed Ten weeks 337- Orion Ulrey, associate pro- the economic problems of keep¬ viser to the cooperative sys¬ tion, all women lived in co¬ 0B2 1-7/B ing a housemother did away tem, said. ops. As dorms were built, DRAFT INFORMATION CENTER New with the women's co-op," Fred The residence halls and the women moved on campus and location: 911 East Open Tuesday. Wednesday. 1-5 p.m., Grand River. Who's Fry, president of Intercoopera- tive Council, said. Greek system both have separ¬ ate men's and women's coun¬ many men co-ops. moved into the Thursday, 7-9p.m. 351-5283 3-7/10 months Since the University recently DALMATIANS Champion - sired. THREE Reasonable to TOM'S BARBER SHOP Three bar¬ Whose lowered its restrictions and cils. Fry is encouraged by the MSU's eight men's co-ops re¬ quire that a prospective mem¬ good home 646-2401 3-7/15 bers. 8-6 p.m. Tuesday - Friday trained graduate assistants will enthusiasm about the women's ber be of sophomore status, until noon. Saturday. 3007 Vine be allowed to replace house¬ Street across from Frandor 0-7/12 co-op. He sees it as a step with at least a 2.0 GPA. Mem¬ mothers in the co-ops, the towards incorporation which bers are expected to assist FREE!) A thrilling hour of beauty Jackie Winchell, Birming¬ in performing some of the For appointment call 484-4519, MER¬ ham senior to Gregory Blair. ADORABLE PUPPIES Golden re¬ LE NORMAN COSMETICS STUDIO, duties around the house and triever mother, paternity in ques¬ 1600 East Elmhurst, 111., MSU Graduate. to attend house meetings. Michigan C-7/12 tion 15.00 Call 351-7846 5-7/15 Real Estate Real Estate Backless Women's co-ops will be run like the men's, but men will help with the house mainten¬ BRICK THREE-bedroom ranch ance in order to keep costs ished basement, fully carpeted, with home near MSU with carpet, fire¬ place. screened garage, fenced yard, large porch, attached trees stuns pa low. Students living in co-ops pay drapes. Call owner after 5 p.m. or 130 North lawn. $25,000 337-9389 AKC REGISTERED male Dachshund weekends. ED2-2903 10-7/16 6-7/12 MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) ~ "I asked her if she had anoth- from *155 to *170 Per term Theatre East pups. Mother show-dog. 337-0966 Miss South Africa's psychedelic er gown,'' Landon said. "She for room and board, as corn- 3-7/12 HOLT - TWO 4-unit apartment houses evening gown took a trip Thurs- said she had one and I said, pared to the $300 per month Members of the Theater Dept. presented Rama- Maintenance free. Built in 1967 in the residence halls, Will trade for vacant land. Call Ken day-right out of the Miss Uni- 'Then wear the other dress." dents may save <= from $130 to ♦»- charlta (the Story of Rama), an Indian play, as a DIAPER SERVICE Diaparene Anti¬ verse Pageant. Weaver, 694-9445. 393-0450 5-7/16 special segment of the bi-weekly South Asian Lec¬ - septic Process approved by Doc¬ A top pageant official said the $150 per term with co-op living. HOLT EAST tors. Same Diapers returned all ture series. State News photo by Bob Ivlns gown's revelations were ex¬ - lr-bedro times, Yours or Ours Baby Clothes washed free. No deposit treme. Cape Cod, fi two full baths, two-car garage. On AMERICAN DIAPER SERVICE, 914 The audience of 2,100 at eve¬ Candidates' quips help TRAILER - IN a pleasant park East Gier Street - Phone 482-0664 Accommodates family with three chil¬ large restricted lot. Yard sodded ning gown judging Wednesday Call Ken Weaver. 694-9445. 393- dren. Screened porch - near campus - 0450 Will be open Sunday. 1-6 p.m night gasped when 19-year-old reasonably priced. 351-8174. 3-7/12 DRIVEWAYS. PATIOS, porches, Monica Fairall pirouetted at the ALSO. Four-bedroom Colonial with steps, bricks, blocks, garage floors, head of the runway. The back of smooth over rough spots ON LOT. 10' x 55' 1963 Fully car¬ family room, formal dining room and two-car garage 5-7/16 basement floors. Beautifully done.' her sequined gown was cut as peted. Small down and take over Call CHARLIE WATSON, IV4-5223, far below the waist the law . . - as payments, $70 month. D. Schmidt, Ten minutes 489-8940 C RED CEDAR River Winslow's Park, 734 West Grand allows, even lower than her to MSU. Redwood and brick L- River Highway, East of East Lan¬ sing. 2-7/15 shaped ranch family home. Three backless bathing suit. NEW YORK (AP)--A funny vious reference to the antidraft the campaign trail this year bedrooms. 1 1/2 baths, convenient With advice from the reigning thing happened on the way to movement quipped about the wearing a toupee, put down ATTRACTIVELY FURNISHED 1967 U-shaped kitchen, dishwasher, dry Miss Universe and strong per¬ the White House In fact, college senior who told his fath- those who jested about, his per¬ finished basement, bookshelves, fire¬ 12' x 50' Belmont mobile home suasion from pageant officials, several funny things happened ennial candidacy and his new Excellent condition. Washer included place, air-conditioning, patios, large er he wanted an apartment in the 135-pound Miss South Africa look by telling of a farmer who Phone 626-6303 3-7/lg landscaped lot. Call 337-2391, 489- as candidates tried to inject a Montreal for a graduation pres- 1419.393-1017 5-7/12 decided her brand new gown little humor into the campaign said: ent. 342 University Drive, Easl must go. for the nation's most serious job. "Mr. Stassen I'm gonna vote HOUSE TRAILER 8' Some candidates have learned bedroom, on lot near Monica wept when she came Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller of to laugh at themselves in efforts for you, just like I voted for or best offer. 337-2459. off stage after her gown's debut. New York perhaps best summed to smooth over any * jugh spots y01"" father." The stunning dress which up the significance of jokes when in their images. Thus Richard Rockefeller frequently refers PAULA ANN HAUGHEY: Professional reached from chin to floor he told a college audience: M. Nixon likes to tell about the to the fact that he and Nixon PART TIME MANAGER WANTED theses typist. IBM Selectric. Multi- in'front and arrived by mail only "For a long time I've been teen-ager who asked for an au- I've in the same apartment lith offset printing. 337-1527. C hours before from South Africa, convinced that the way to know tographed picture and said: building and are getting along where a dressmaker handfitted what people are really con- "That's a wonderful picture well MARILYN CARR. legal secretary $400 worth of material to her cerned about is to pay close at- of you, Mr. Nixon. He's offered me his makeup Electric typewriter. After 5:30 p.m. It doesn't If you are free 5 nights a week and weekends. 393-2654 Pick up 35-24-35 curves. tention to what they are joking look like you at all!" man," said the governor, "and and Saturday morning you can earn and delivery. C "When everybody roared about." Former Minnesota Gov. Har- I offered him my plan for solv¬ when I turned about, I thought Then Rockefeller in an ob- old Stassen, who appeared on ing the garbage strike." an average of $100 per week with ANN BROWN: Typist and multilith, either they liked it or they must Similarly, Sen. Eugene J. offset printing. Dissertations, theses, $200 weekly potential. Call 2-4 manuscripts, general typing. IBM, be shocked," she said Thursday. McCarthy of Minnesota, once 17 years experience 332-8384. C "I guessed it was a little- of said of his rival for the Deno for confidential personal interview. both but I don't think it would be cratic nomination. Vice Presi¬ 351-6170 BARBI No job MEL, too typing, multilithit*. large or too small. Block off campus 332-3255 C a good idea to wear it again. I didn't have any idea people Labor contract dent Hubert H- Humphrey: "He said he would not neglect would react like that. his duties as vice president "It made quite a sensation (continued from page one) faculty salary allotments," said while he is running for presi¬ and I can't repeat that or the White in a statement. dent. How a vice president neg- IMPORT'S judges might think I was push¬ nonacademic personnel, were "I believe it is time to establish lects his duties I just do not ing myself on them," said the one of the factors in the hike a pattern which eliminates a know." $100 •67 TR 4-A ROADSTER - low mileage In excellent 5-foot-9 student from Durban. "What will my mother say?" Herbert K. Landon, executive Dareback Miss South Beauty Africa, Moni¬ in residence hall and married housing fees. Clair White, D-Bay City, sug¬ 'trickle down' system of faculty salary allotments based on hier- archialcontrol." Gov. Ronald Reagan. ofCali- fornia, who likes to jab at cam- pus rebels and hippiedom, de- REWARD director of the Miss Universe White said he wanted to en- fined a hippie as someone who condition, wire wheels and gested at the meeting of the trus- ¥vnuetusdl" "euwd,,leu T ca Fairall, paraded In a u button declaring Pageant said, "It's not within wears a I.RJS. option, white with MANY HAPPY USERS i the context of our pageant that daring backless evening tees that academic personnel *ancf the facu ty s opporturu- " 'Make love, not war,' but black top. anything too extreme be worn. gown during preliminary might bargain collectively for t.es to part.c.pate m the alloca- tion of funds, and to increase doesn't look capable of either." their wages also. $2295.00 That's in the same context of the judging for the Miss Uni¬ "the number of dollars which But it is former Alabama "I particularly cannot accept rule that they don't wear arti¬ verse pageant. go into the pay check." Gov. George Wallace who has *65 B.M.W. 700 2 Dr.-red Transportation ficial padding in the swimsuits. UPI Telephoto our present system of spreading Later in the meeting, Milton had the last laugh on hippies. Cedar Village with bucket seats, 4- E. Meulder, vice president When one young man with speed, with 2 cycle en¬ for research development, not- shoulder-length hair tried to in- gine. ed that the faculty do participate terrupt his speech, Wallace Apartments $395.00 Wanted in the allocation of funds, in the form of grants. said politely: "Would you re¬ peat the question ma'm." We'll give a reward of *67 FIAT 124 4Dr.-LIGHT BLUE with Blege Leath¬ ONE FEMALE i Tuition, housing fees increased $100 for Information that erette Interior, AM-FM results in the prosecution radio. 8,000 miles. Good (continued from page one) dent fees and dormitory costs BLOOD DONORS needed 17 50 for for Oakland University. of anyone doing vandalism combination of perform¬ Oak¬ all positive A negative. B nega¬ land resident to Cedar Village property. ance and economy. tive, and AB negative, J10.00. O "I voted against this because undergraduates $12j00. MICHIGAN COM- I am opposed to any sliding The total MSU budget of $94.8 and graduates both received a $1495.00 munity blood center, 507 1/2 East r.rand East Grand Ri River East Lansin* scaie tuition fee based on gross million was up $10.5 million, a fee boost of from $15-$45 per {amily incomei" Thompson gain of approximately 9 per semester. This sets the under- inn '•« • won*, iignx * jmv position that some war" but not in Vietnam, Rob¬ sic Christian wars are just and some unjust. nam A presidential advisory com¬ Tnajor American Protestant tween parents and children. Phillips said he found "im¬ ert Gilliam, a college honor churches is dead When it's unjust, the sover¬ mittee last year held that to al¬ pressive uniformity" among the graduate, recently was locked low an individual to make a dis¬ Such "selective" conscien¬ J.H. Phillips says a study in federal prison in Minnesota eign court of conscience forbids tious objection has been upheld he conducted revealed a "major various churches in describing their participating in it. Yet tinction between just and unjust for refusing to comply with milk breakthrough" in church at¬ man as a sexual being and in wars would take "away the gov- by two major denominations- tary draft laws. present draft law does not allow titudes toward sex and a will¬ explaining sexulaity. "This is no coward, this is no for such specific conscientious er nment "s "otrtigation "of makfng the Lutheran Church in AmerL- "Nowhere is the origin of sex it for him" ca last month and the United ingness by churches to accept < kook," commented Auxiliary objection-only for the sweeping responsibility in sex education. explained as consequence of Catholic Bishop James P. Shan¬ generality. However, Christian tradition Church of Christ in 1967. Most Results of the study, which the fall of man or is sex as such non of St. Paul-Minneapolis. The issue, intensified by the has always held that the individ- others have debated it worriedly was financed by the Duke Uni¬ ever equated with sin," he said. "This is a very intelligent, well- conflicting views about the Viet¬ ual himself is morally responsi- and turned it down, versity Research Council, were nam war, has leveled a sharp ble for his acts. Furthermore, in "The repeated interpretation read follower of Jesus Christ." If a Christian concludes in recently published by the Na¬ challenge at the churches, the Nuremburg trials of Nazis, of sex as an integral part of Others have faced similar conscience that a war doesn't tional Council of Churches of roused stormy debate at their the Allied court held that obey¬ creation and that it exists as a fates. They are among a growing meet those standards, Father Christ in the U.S.A. number of young governing assemblies, and re¬ ing state orders was no excuse gift of God affirms man as a men whose Sheerin said, his religious duty Phillips' survey included the sulted in mixed, ambiguous for atrocities. sexual being in unitive terms. " consciences have pitted them is to stick by his conscience. Episcopal Church, the Lutheran stands about it. Father Sheerin, an attorney, against demands of govern¬ It also has troubled Congress, Paulist priest, editor of the Asked if it might not encour¬ Sisters Stride Church in America, the Luther¬ Phillips found that premarital ment. age slackers, he said draft an Church, Missouri Synod; the sex was the issue that received They're not pacifists, taking which historically has been Catholic World and member of ^^ Nuns are a common sight around campus as many Methodist Church; the Pres¬ the most attention of the chur¬ the perfectionist attitude that keenly protective about rights of the steering enng committee oi of cier- Cler- biUt Qf determining sinCerity "• of take advantage of the summer session. byterian Church; the Southern ches. , it's always wrong to fight in all conscience. However, Congress gy and Laymen Concerned about individuai objectionI State News photo by Bob Ivlns Baptist Convention and the circumstances and whom the has turned aside moves to ex¬ Vietnam, said there now is a Although the churchs' stand United Church of Christ. strongly that of chasity, growing possibility for recog¬ was nizing the rights of conscience These represent a combined Phillips said he found that the of nonpacifists. support for this position was Church relief jobs In San Francisco, court suit demanded of the right of Christians to a federal recognition Roman Catholics elected church membership of about 40 million. In his study, Phillips said he neither moralistic legalism nor judgmental. found most denominations now He said the churches now un¬ abide by their consciences re¬ garding a specific war. The Uni¬ to World Church Council have provisions for sex edu¬ derstand a young person's con¬ keep self-respect versity Christian Movement, in¬ volving most Protestant and campus groups, has urged UPPSALA, Nine Roman Sweden Catholics (AP)-- were liberations on the fundamentals of Christian faith. Their election, without the Ro- prof. Walter Burghardt of Wood- stock College, Woodstock, Md.. cation at one or more aee levels. He said he found no opposition among churchmen to sex educa¬ tion in the public schools. fusion and dilemma after being bombarded daily by sexual stim¬ uli. By ASSOCIATED PRESS member of the ruling Council similar policy. So did a recent elected Thursday for the first and the Rev. Raymond E. Brown Most of the denominations in¬ The church of today, he con¬ Catholic institute at Boston Col- time time to to full full membership on a man Catholic Church being a 0f gt. Mary's Seminary, Baiti- tinued, attempts to teach young A sturdy, middle-aged man of 12 of the Church of Jesus j ~ member of the Council, was volved in the study, the Duke packed a crate with free gro¬ lege. commission of the World Com- more, Md. people simply that Christians Christ of Latter-Day Saints, possible because the Faith and educator said, agreed that the ceries and other items from A pledge to refuse military cil of Churches, The other theologians were: have a decision to make on commonly known as Mormons, service in Vietnam recently was The vote-another milestone Order Commission has a sep- primary responsibility of sex counters at Welfare Square in said. the pjev Umberto Betti of education should rest with par¬ chastity. on the long way to Christian arate constitution. This enables Salt Lake City. To bring out In a period of growing wel¬ signed by 100 present and for¬ f{ome. tj,e r6v j chibangu ents. However, most of the his attitude for some visiting fare rolls, of difficulties in re¬ mer presidents of college stu¬ unity-was taken unanimously churches outside the Council to rector' of the Catholic Universi- UNIVERSITY observers, a church official dent bodies and campus editors. by show of hands in the Coun- be represented. Such large non- t Kinshasa the Congo the asked him, "Don't you feel em¬ habilitating the distresses and Nevertheless, the churches l's general assembly. cirs assembly, member churches as the South- Rev Bernard Dupuy director BAPTIST CHURCH of intensified attacks on per¬ The decision gave Catholic (American Baptist) barrassed at getting these com¬ disagreed about it. They affirm ern Baptist Convention and Sev- of Istina Parjs. Dom Emannuei sisting poverty, the church's 'KLhrte&m modities without charge?" time-tested and highly effec¬ the supremacy of conscience, theologians a voice and a vote ^ Council de. enth-Day have Adventists the commission. already Lanne a French.born Benedie- flUfurclj Gerard G. Phillips, Pastor but hesitate to say officially for the first time men on Une who teaches jn Rome; Pro{ ED 2-1888 "Hell, no," the welfare reci¬ tive welfare program may of¬ 310 N. Hagadorn Rd. First the assembly approved pient replied, "I worked for it." fer some apt tips. j Medjna of the Catholic East Lansing Worship 10:00 a.m. & 7:30 p.m. That's the unashamed, self- by show of hands a resolu ion Universit of Santiago, Chile; Church School 11:10 a.m. "If you want to preserve a respecting view of partici¬ welcoming the Roman Catholics Prof j h Ratzinger of Tue. Donald L. Stiffler, Minister pants in one of the largest, most unusual church relief operations person's and sense of independence self-respect.'' Lee said, "you have to give him some¬ Commander's as members of the commission. There was no further separate reference to them as the assem¬ w University and Prof Samel Rayan of Lu. Germany. Midweek Meeting — Wednesday 7:30 p.m. Nursery Provided 10 to 12 a.m. in the world. Spurning the dole Now at Wardcliff School thing to do in order for him to bly simply approved a list of 134 systen, it enables the needy to retain their pride while receiv¬ ing help-by giving them a job feel easy about what he re¬ ceives." That is a key point of the urges Pueblo new members. Two Americans elected were SEVENTH-DAY 3 blocks north of Grand River River, off Park Lake Road Sunday Bus Service Provided to do for it. church's massive and extraor¬ SAN DIEGO, Calif. (AP)- "Remember the Pueblo" bum- "The element that preserves dinary system, which aids a "These letters have helped sus- Per stickers said I ve started LUTHERAN » ADVENTIST Central Methodist their dignity is that they have a constantly changing clientele tain me. They are the voice of ajampa'gn back. to get the Pueblo WORSHIP Services Saturday CASTminSTCR chance to work for what they of up to 80,000. It includes a America," says Rose Bucher. ar"You have made me, as an Martin Luther Chapel Across From the Capitol receive," Harold B. Lee, a ; the wife of Cmdr. Lloyd corner of Ann & Division vast chain of productive fa¬ Lutheran Student Center PRCSBYTCRI&n CtlURCh WORSHIP SERVICES cilities and its aim is to work M. Bucher. skipper of the U.S. American, wake up and realize Sabbath School 9:30 a.m. 10:00 itself into extinction. intelligence , B ... r Pueblo which ship . . wha wrntp 18 happeningfrnm a uinman aroundWirhita me 444 Abbott Road Morning Worship 11 a.m. 1315 Abbott Rd. a.m. "We want to take the sting has been held captive since Jan. Summer Worship Service casT ransinG. nucmcan "Jesus—His Sense 23 by North Korea. 9.-30 Minister L. G. Foil of Mission!" out of charity, remove the dif¬ Office: 337-0183 fidence a person has in receiv¬ Mrs. Bucher has received 332-2559 Rev. David A. Kruse Dr. Howard A. Lyman, about 12.000 letters and tele¬ Hear the "Voice of Pro¬ ing aid and make him com¬ Missouri Synod preaching fortable and happy about it so grams since the seizure. She phecy" on radio. See said they've been coming in at a "Faith for Today" on Church School 10:00 a.m. he won't lose his confidence Free Bus Service and and determination to get going rate of 300 a day since mid-June University Lutheran television. Crib Nursery Nursery Both Services when she appealed to AmerU So Bring the Baby again," Lee said. To carry it on, the church has cans to "remember the Pueb¬ Church lo." Kimberly Downs EDGEWOOD UNITED built up a huge agricultural, in¬ Most letters merely express Church of Christ First Christian University Methodist dustrial and business network, CHURCH including 650 farms, 30 can¬ sympathy to Mrs. Bucher and 1007 Kimberly Drive, Lansing 469 North Hagadorn Road Reformed Church Church all Pueblo families. Many ap¬ see sign at 2729 E. Grand neries, a soap factory, coal 1120 S. Harrison Rd. IV 9-7130 Worship Service 9:30 a.m. Forest View School mine, flour mill, a rug and plaud her campaign to keep the River Sunday Worship public from forgetting. Others SUNDAY SERVICES 3119 Stoneleigh, Lansing clothing plant and five salvage processing plants. call for action to free the ship Morning Worship 11:00 a.m. 9:30 and 11:00 The main outlet for supplies and crew. Bible Study 10:00 a.m. Church School — 9:30 a.m. is Welfare Square, a big de¬ "I do remember the Pueblo, First Church of Evening Worship 6:00 p.m. Crib Room through Sixth Grade Evening Service 7 p.m. Blessed Are Munkybusiness partment-store type establish¬ ment in Salt Lake City, the and I don't want the public to forget," wrote a woman who Christ, Scientist Wednesday evening Bible Study 7:30 p.m. Call 332-8693 or 332-0606 Rev. J. Herbert Brink Those Who This furry campus resi¬ said her husband was an officer 709 E. Grand River For Transportation Call morning service church's headquarters. Else¬ FE 9-8190 Forgive dent Is one of many forms on the lost submarine Scorpion. East Lansing Rev. Alvin L. Hoksbergen where are 10 other church stores ED 2-1960 or ED 2-2434 of wildlife which can be She asked, "Is there anything I evening service and 104 bishops' warehouses. Sunday Service 10:00 a.m. found In the bushes and on can do to help?" The program emphasizes pri¬ Campus Student Center the grass. A disabled World War I veter¬ vacy. "No one but the person SERMON 217 Bogue St. Apt. 3 State News photo by Jlrp Richardson who receives aid and his bishop knows about it," Thomas S. an from Dierks, Ark., wrote: "I am 100 per cent for our govern¬ All Saints Episcopal Church Phone 351-6360 Nursery During Services CHURCH SCHOOL ment to go and get the Peublo Those In Need of Monson, also a member of the and its men." Transportation call— Council of 12, said. "That way SUNDAY SCHOOL 800 Abbott Rd. 9:30 - Program for all ages Prof sees his pride tained." and dignity are main¬ An 11-year-old girl from near¬ by National City, asking for 10:00 a.m. 882-1425 351-6360 during June, July, and August education YOU CAN AFFORD STEAK EVERY NIGHT AT BEST STEAK HOUSE #16 8:00 p.m. WEDNESDAY Evening Meeting SUNDAY SERVICES SOUTH BAPTIST CHURCH to triple - church 337-1066 8:00 a.m. 10:00 1518 S. Washington Lansing People will have to be re-edu- Free Public Reading Room a.m. "NEED LIFE BE DRAB" oated three times in their lives 134 West Grand River Is there a way to escape the monotony and to keep up with technology, OPEN boredom of life?" Louis Stomatakos, associate pro¬ j Sunday at 10 a.m. Weekdays — 9-5 p.m. fessor of counseling and person¬ Mon., Tues., Thurs., Frl. "An Infantile Church in SUNDAY 7:00 P.M. a Hostile World" nel service, said Thursday. Evenings 7 p.m. - 9 p.m. "Education will become Dr. Howard F. Sugden, Pastor a way All are welcome to attend will be the sermon tSpic at of life," he forecast to the Insti¬ Church Services and visit and 9:45 A.M. YOUNG ADULT tute for College Student Person¬ nel Workers. use the reading room. EAST LANSING TRINITY CHURCH College Bible Class In the fireside room FELLOWSHIP 8:30 p.m. Religion is becoming irrele¬ refreshments Dr. Ted Ward, Teacher vant as an influence in life he said. In five surveys spanning Peoples Church 'Truth that Charges Forth" 7:00 P.M. 11:00 A.M. "God Opens the Door" 11 years, it was found that other East influences are crowding reli¬ Lansing Trlnity Collegiate Fellowship FREE BUS SERVICE Morning and Evening INCLUDES TEXAS TOAST, SALAD, 8:30 P.M. gion out. Free BUS SERVICE See schedule in your dorm. Call 482-0754 for information. "With the rise in AND BAKED POTATO Interdenominational - - immorality, crime, and materialism coupled with the churches' teachings ir¬ relevant to life today," he said, SIRLOIN $1.33 PERCH .. . $1,10 OKEMOS FIRST *PTIST CHURCH UNIVERSITY REFORMED CHURCH "people are becoming non- committed." 1/2 ROASTED SHRIMP . . $1.35 4684 OKE MOS-HASLE TT RD. Rev. Tom Stark, pastor 351-7164 "Trends in America will de¬ All 5 Include Texas termine the progress of higher CHICKEN $1.10 (2 mi. E. of Hagadorn—-2 blks. S. of Grand River) Toast, salad, and education," Stomatakos said. "It PORK CHOP . . $1.18 baked potato "Nehemlah—On is up to student personnel work¬ 10 a.m. Collegiate-Careers Class Being Responsible" ers to lead college students ef¬ 6 Adult Classes by Dr. Robertson fectively." SPECIAL - STEAKBURGER 720 The trends for the last 30 Dr. Robertson II a.m. and 7 p.m. Worship Services years, he explained, are con¬ cerned with the areas of popula¬ tion, economy, industry, medi¬ cine and education. Stomatakos said that year 2000, when the population by the BEST STEAK HOUSE #16 Crib through 6th Grade 8:15 p.m. Collegiate-Careers Fellowship (Nursery at every service) 11:00 am • Memorial Morning Worship . Alumni Chapel, one block east of the auditorium. 10:00-10:40 am coffee and • Discussion doughnuts. Group • will have reached seven billion, D. R. Allbaugh, Pastor For Transportation Refreshment period in Church Nursery at 10:00 & 11:00 am there will be 10 million students Eugene Dawson, Ed. minister Call 332-2133 7:00 pm • Evening Worship KALAMAZOO AT CLIPPERT ACROSS • Union . . . parlor following worship serv¬ 351-4003 in junior colleges and 15 million FROM CADES NEXT TO KWIK STOP Building* Room 34, third floor . . . ices. in four-year schools.