Thursday There isn't. MICHIGAN Partly cloudy TATJCl MEWt ... _ ATATf . fljtd rw)»r « • tTM-m JZ "9 ' "• '"J- wHj t * " 0 *■ • *>., »* * • ,^,4. ,* ■> - W Averell Harriman. "I asked for a list of those being held men-a . . Elect 31 more Republican congress- majority-ffnd we'll work with a Republican president to really move this country forward. limited bombardment if our restraint is act of It would mean an end to the feeling on U.S. peace negotiator, announced Wed¬ as an humanity." Harriman told matched by restraint on your -side." he the part of the American people that the nesday the forthcoming release of 14 newsmen. He world is coming apart before their very North Vietnamese sailors held by the appealed especially for the names Lau replied: "We reject those propo- United States. He asked freedom for more of those injured, and of those held for a eyes. U.S. airmen held in North Vietnam. long time Freeing the sailors was a gesture of The chief North Vietnamese delegate goodwill like the recent North Vietnamese at the session. Ambassador Ha Van Lau. 'U' employes release of three American pilots, he said said his government takes a humane atti¬ after meeting at the peace table with tude toward the men it holds. The North Hanoi's delegates Vietnamese claim to have captured about 1,000 American airmen. They have released six this year. 6 per wage cent Ike making A U.S. tacked U.S. spokesman said the 14 sailors, captured in 1966 when torpedo boats at¬ vessels, are the last North By JIM SCHAEFER tract either will pay Union dues or an equi¬ State News Staff Writer valent service charge Vietnamese in American hands and A contract for the new fiscal year, rati¬ Exempt for the time being are 23 em¬ progress after they will be freed soon. Lau said he would consult his govern¬ ment about how to handle the release. fied by the nonaeademic employes union Tuesday, was signed Wednesday by rep¬ resentatives of the union and the Univer- ployes who signed letters of personal conviction against joining a union of any kind. Settlement on that is pending be¬ Most North Vietnamese captured by U.S. tween legal representatives and the Union. Victory for poor major attack forces have been turned over to the South A The contract, the third annual, pro¬ cost-of-living allowance beginning Vietnamese. vides for a basic 6 per cent increase in July 1. 1969 was included among the other Rev. Ralph Abernathy, leading a poor people's campaign, makes Harriman had no progress to report wages, ranging from 12 to 23 cents hourly, provisions and benefits. A first for MSU, a it is based on a one center-per-hour boost V for victory as he arrives on the floor of Convention Hall to tell from the 16th session of the talks, which retroactive to July 1.1968. WASHINGTON (APi -- Former Pres¬ for each 0.5 point increase in the average Republican delegates that the nomination of Richard Nixon would be are now almost three months old. Another A previous version of the proposal, sub¬ ident Dwight D. Eisenhower was reported Consumer Price Index for the first three "a sad day not only for black people but for the Republican party." meeting will be held next Wednesday mitted by the union's bargaining commit¬ making some progress Wednesday, a day The North Vietnamese insisted, as they tee on July 15. had been rejected by union UPI after suffering what doctors called another (please turn to page 9) Telephoto have from the start, that the United States members. The issues were reportedly an major heart attack. increase in pay rates, an across the board The outlook was still "guarded." Army must stop bombing them before the talks can go on to other subjects. Harriman re¬ raise and a cost of living proposal. doctors explained that the word meant that "in this early period after any heart called that President Johnson already had limited the bombing. Robert Grosvenor. the vote on a union official, said the proposal was by secret >RT attack, the outcome is unpredictable ' ballot with 56.5 per cent approving the In his suite at Walter Reed Army Hos¬ So far. he said, there had been no re¬ recommended ratification. pital, Eisenhower was being given oxygen sponse thaLwould justify the risks that a In the agreement signed Wednesday, the Ellsworth praise mixed continuously. He was being fed a low salt, complete bombing halt would bring for Union obtained an agency shop measure liquid diet by mouth U.S. troops. with the provision that all MSU employes Doctors said they were not permitting "The United States is ready to end our in the classifications covered by the con¬ him to watch the proceedings of the Re¬ publican National Convention on televis¬ ion. But there was backing for their re¬ EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the last in as it now exists and substitute the ASMSU the commission in its current form would a four part series by staff writer Deborah Activities Commission. be a bit too autonomous for the board's port of progress in the additional word that "he has been appropriately advised by his aides" on what goes on in Miami MSU student Fitch on the Blue Ribbon Committee and report re-evaluating ASMSU struc¬ ture and functions. This fourth article "The section on the cabinet is most comprehensive," Ellsworth said. "It is a complete re-evaluation and there are liking. He also has his doubts about the ad¬ visability of the commission electing its deals with the ASMSU chairman's re¬ some good ideas there. " bid Visitors were restricted to the immed¬ chairman, even though the board state own iate family, including Mrs. Eisenhower, the recommendations. He said that hiS" concern represen sponse to the plan over would have to approve any election be¬ who has been with her husband since would lie with the fore it went into effect. Another com¬ he was brought to Walter Reed last May, p r oposed commis¬ An MSU student lost a bid for the Demo¬ In the race for the Republican nomina¬ plaint about the commission idea is the and their son. John Eisenhower. sion's ties-or the cratic nomination for state representative tion for Ingham County prosecuting attor¬ commissioner in charge of personnel plan¬ Eisenhower. 77. had been recovering lack thereof-with from the 59th district, and the Republican ney. Raymond L. Scodeller smothered his Peter Ellsworth, board chairman and ning. Ellsworth says the problem with from a major heart attack of June 15 the board. incumbent. Charles J. Davis. Onondaga, opponent Norman C. Farhat by the unof¬ champion of the infant Blue Ribbon Com¬ cabinet personnel is "not recruiting peo¬ when he was stricken again early Tues¬ mittee, doesn't like everything the ple, but keeping them." easily defeated his opponent in Tuesday's ficial count of 10,559 to 5.704 Democrat com¬ day with his sixth attack since 1955 and James J. Weed was unopposed for the mittee had to say about ASMSU. Ellsworth thinks primary election. and third this year. He thinks they did a thorough job of that as long the His other commission same post and will face Scodeller in No¬ as complaint is Asked how the new attack compared See related story, page 10 board still retains that, in the report, five of the seven com¬ vember. exploring the areas designated in the re¬ with the seizure of June 15, which had There was no race for the nomination port, but that other ASMSU areas should financial responsi¬ missioners are listed "undesignated as to been termed a major one, the doctors Mario Fundaro. Warren senior, lost to for Ingham County sheriff as Kenneth L. have been covered. He does, however, rec¬ bility for the ac¬ area" of responsibility. His opinion is that said. "Equal severity." Terry Black by an unofficial count of tions of the com- the areas of responsibility should first be Preadmore, Republican, and Thomas ognize the importance of the areas cov¬ The doctors have referred to the lat¬ 1.269 to 397 in the Democratic contest, ered. mission," they categorized, then be assigned commission- Steinfatt, Democrat, ran unopposed. est attack as a myocardial infarction, while Davis defeated Republican chal¬ The two nominations for judges of the Ellsworth spoke first about the com¬ should retain some characterized by damage to the heart lenger Victor H Meier by a count of 4,528 2nd district Court of Appeals were won by mittee's cabinet re-arranging recommen¬ sort of authority ELLSWORTH muscle. to 1.438 over its planning as well. In other S. Jerome Bronspn and John F. Foley dations which would disband the cabinet words, (please turn to page 9) Jame« S. (.r+nelli. managing editor MICHIGAN Trinka (.line, ramput editor Jerry I'ankhurtt, editorial editor SJATP jsHjw.C - i Six-lime recipient of the Pacemaker award for outstanding journalism. Thursday Morning, August 8,1968 EDITORIAL The System: bigger undemocratic and archaic in¬ major accomplishment under "Diimp the Hump" groups his belt. But the system is big¬ stitutions in this country--the have had one of their under¬ draft. With the need for in¬ ger than Hershey. For real pinnings pulled out from under creased kill-power in Vietnam, progress, that system must be them. The vice-president-who- totally revamped. Hershey has had to stoop to No matter who is nominated hcjpes - to - become - President some rather low tactics to lafet week announced that he and later elected; Republican make sure that the armed has his own "dump" campaign forces are filled up. Suggest¬ or Democrat, one of his pri¬ -aimed at Lt. Gen. Lewis B. ing a blank check for drafting mary tasks must be that re¬ Hershey, director of the Selec¬ dissenters, and confused in¬ vamping job. The Republican tive Service System. vective against graduate platform calls for a voluntary •Echoing Eugene McCarthy, army after the Vietnam war schools, are two examples. is ended, and the Democrats Humphrey has promised that Hershey has had his post for if* he is elected he will fire may come up with a similar a long time-too long. He was Hershey seemingly because, proposal. Hopefully, the nomi¬ automatically retired in 1953 nee who makes it to the Presi¬ a$ Humphrey stated, Hershey when he was 60, but President "The convention is going wild--all "has indicated that George Wal¬ dency will carry out such a Eisenhower reinstated him and America is on the edge of its seats . lace would be the best candi¬ he still remains. move. . --The Editors date for the presidency for his office to work with." Humphrey But even though Hershey is open to strong criticism, Con¬ •Humphrey also said that he motive, deserves wholeheart¬ gress has hindered him very tdkes a dim view of Hershey's ed support. little. The latest draft law re¬ DEBBIE FITCH adamant stands against any re¬ Though Gen. Hershey is un¬ flects the current mood of forms in the Selective Service doubtedly sincere in his of¬ "guns and little butter." In System. fice, his conduct is alien to a this case, it is the butter of Whether Humphrey's motive i$ sincere or a political move to responsibile democracy. Though 74-years-old and education and individual hu¬ man development. If Humphrey were elected How (not?) to save yourself rfteet McCarthy's challenge is nearly blind, he is among those and the only thing he did was most responsible for perpet¬ Uncertain. But the promise to remove Hershey, he'd have a •lump Hershey. regardless of uating one of the most unequal. EDITOR'S NOTE: "I've sat through hur¬ ricanes, but tornadoes are new to me," said Debbie Fitch, Tampa, Fla., junior and State News staff writer, when she sub¬ JOSEPH ALSOP mitted this column describing her experi¬ ences (all true) Monday evening when the was under "tornado warning." i area I was sitting in my garage me. room¬ Those uninvited guests . . mates Ina and Sue. our two dogs, one ger- bil and half a bottle of Mohawk wild cherry brandy We were waiting for the tornado. By i be sure until No- to go home and shut up. you find that, as the time I had downed one brandy, I was | EDITOR S NOTE: At the time of writ of now. Nixon would have a commanding beginning to feel far more like a wet idiot jng, neither Joseph Alsop nor the editors know who will be the Republican nominee majority in a race against Humphrey. And Copyright (c) 1968, The Washington Post (the garage door was open) than Dorothy lor the Presidency as you probably do you further find that if Nixon could dly Co. Distributed by Los Angeles Times Syn¬ with two Totos. now. But whether it is Richard Nixon or steal 60 per cent of Wallace's current sup¬ dicate. Ina was a great help She provided us hot, Alsop has some valuable comments port. he would still be in the lead, albeit oji the political mood of the nation. by a mych narrower margin, in the coun¬ try as a whole and even in the states above ? MIAMI BEACH-- The wiseacres now say that, if nominated by the Republicans. the Mason-Dixon line OUR READERS' MINDS with her mattresses, a couple of Cokes and screaming that she couldn't find a pot that fit. Sue looking for candles and giving or¬ As of now. in short, adding Nixon's old- enough panic to last through several tor¬ Richard Nixon will assume a middle-of- line Republican support to Wallace's racist nadoes. a hurricane and a good-sized mon¬ ders and me laughing, the concentrated at¬ the-road posture instead of seeking to win soon. She completed her tornado precau¬ tack on Gus (the gerbili subsided in gen¬ and white supremacist support, you find ( majority in November by stealing votes Theology eral damp confusion action tions by fitting her head into our various that the country's mood is further to the jrom former Gov. George Wallace. The fiajority of old-fashioned politicians are itill urging right than it has been in a good many dec¬ ades This is the real meaning of the sudden vs. kitchen pots as protection for when "all that junk falls on me." After about an hour of waiting for a tor- nado~any tornado- I was beginning to get bit restless. Not Ina. Sue. Alfie and Luke, this decision; and Nixon is a Sue. the calm one. supervised our hasty a stir of conservative resistance to Nixon To the Editor: jretty old-fashioned politician himself. springs from a love of God. and lack of exodus to the garage. She figured out that however. • Yet. in order to judge the real mood of balancing the ticket with a running mate I am disappointed to see an article such social concern violates scriptural injunc¬ we should be in the south west corner of Ina consumed the brandy and some of from the opposite wing of the Republican as ReligionV Moilern Statue, with the Ihe country, one must look beyond the con- tions. Miss Anstett is evidently unaware our abode for the best shelter from torna¬ her logic course. Sue seemed absorbed Party. worst inaccuracies, and the most consti¬ that the Church's central function is God's tines of the Republican National Conven¬ does. This would, in truth, place us in the in an interesting-looking book of dubious Whatever that stir may lead to. one thing pated jargon, by an author who apparently tion. as yet so dreary and routine, to the worship. She speaks of how. "Even many garage! How grateful we all were to Sue character. Alfie passed out from lapping is already clear. If Nixon is the final Re¬ has no idea of what she is saying. Standing among the voters of the rather scripture-based denominations are modi¬ when the radio announcer told us to take up the brandy that he knocked over and Jonspicuously uninvited guests. If you publican choice, the campaign he will wage Miss Anstett speaks of". . truly progres¬ fying their religious direction." and "If shelter in an inside closet if there was no Luke concentrated on discovering excit¬ will be directly keyed to this national sive theologians'' fighting for social re¬ the ideal priesthood of the believers is to J»egin with Wallace, you can easily see why accessible basement, which there wasn't. ingly different and exotic ways to relieve mood. By October he will be seeking to forms, and cites William Sloane Coffin exist, the church cannot subordinate lay¬ That's when we entertained thoughts of himself. Iome of the harder-nosed Nixonfarpeople ^ave been tempted by a bolder, more pick up votes among the Wallace enthusi¬ and the directors of St John's Student men to the 'firm believer' role of a sorrow¬ transporting the whole crew to the bathtub, In the face of all this activity, I went asts. without regard to his vice presiden¬ Center, who allowed a black student lead¬ ful penitent." If the church !right-wing electoral strategy. is only a so¬ but I suppose that would have been even through great strain trying to figure out tial choice. er to speak there Rev. Coffin and St cial action agency, why not put our reli¬ more ludicrous. how we were going to explain our pres¬ That leads, in turn, to the other uninvit¬ John's directors may be commendable, £ The fact is that gious energy into VISTA-' But if it insists ence in the garage with all our survival P ed and conspicuously absent guest here but are not theologians, nor are these ac¬ on recognition of man's imperfect nature Sue was philosophical, though "You guys Hoo many people equipment to our other roommate when in Miami Beach Vice President Humphrey tivities theological Such muddiness indi¬ and provides spiritual and moral regen¬ look ridiculous in there,'' she said from lave been bemused she came home. $>y the more glarfi- is the virtually certain Democratic nomi¬ cates that the distinction between theol¬ eration. so that then men will be better able her vantage point in the middle of the Ina is optimistic about the whole exper¬ nee. He will inherit the leadership of a dis¬ ogy, and social involvement is for her non¬ to initiate social reforms, why does Miss driveway. "Come out and look at this in¬ 5>rous opinion tests, ience. "Next time." she says, "we'll be contented. divided and depressed party. existent Anstett seemingly approve the turning teresting cloud formation." She's intellec¬ between Nixon and able Ufevacuate in about 68 seconds " Even without reaching for the Wallace While Christian social action inevitably tual as well as calm Frankly, I think she's J?or Gov. Nelson away from theological necessities of re¬ You and who else. Ina Baby? voters, Nixon is also the unique Republi¬ been hanging around the dogs too much. SPockefeller against pentance. regeneration, and obedience, can, except maybe Gov. Ronald Reagan, which necessarily motivate the Christian yice President Hu¬ who can be counted on to unite and to re¬ Alfie, the more insane of the two dogs, bert Humphrey and to social involvement? And anyway, why S'or Sen Eugene a vivify the Democrats If the Republicans should make a public nonsense of the Sewage ditch is she so sloppy that she calls social ac¬ managed to get back inside the house even though he was chained to the garage side Letter policy McCarthy Yet the obviously correct way wiseacres by nominating Rockefeller, the To the Editor: tion theology, yet appears to discount the of the kitchen door. In doing so. he nearly So gauge the national mood is quite dif¬ theological reasons for Christian social throttled Luke, the puppy, who was salvation of the Democrats would then be I suggest that you run an editorial on involvement? The State News welcomes all letters. ferent. unhappily chained to the same side of the same door s The glamorous tests appear to indicate unimaginable Their divisions, their dis- that sewage ditch er, Red Cedar River, Luke didn't yelp or anything, just pee-ed. They should be typed and signed with the piritedness. their backbiting would all be that runs through the campus. That pollu¬ home town, student, faculty or staff stand¬ £that the American center is still dominant Rockefeller, nearer to the pre¬ cen¬ stimulated instead of cured. ted sludge is the only sore spot in an other¬ Miss Anstett means well, but should since he is still at that charming stage ing. and local phone number included. No learn the difference between theology and of "pee now, think later " Only he never tner than Nixon, regularly does better As of now, to be sure, the conventional wise beautiful campus. The rulers around social action, and the Christian teaching on unsigned letter will be accepted for publi¬ gets to the thinking part. cation, and no letter will be printed with¬ Jjthan the former vice president. When it wisdom is that even Nixon cannot work a here should decide to have a sewage dump worship and social concern, before she The gerbil wasn't particularly upset: out a signature except in extreme circum¬ tjis Nixon versus Humphrey, the latter, rapid cure of the Democrats' internal ills. or a river. If they want a river, they should tagain nearer to the center, looks like a But anyone who looks a few weeks ahead clean the Red Cedar and dump their sew¬ speaks again on "Religion's Modern he probably knew more about tornadoes stances. All letters must be less than 300 Stance." than all the rest of us put together. He did ivery good bet But this superficial appear¬ can see that the conventional wisdom is ers elsewhere Jack Flemming words long for publication without edit¬ I realize that that would take money. jump a trifle when both Luke and Alfie ance leaves out two key facts. pretty certain to be proved wrong by the East Lansing started for him at once, but what with Ina ing. I; The first is quite simple The 35 per cent middle of September or the beginning of However, through student and alumni con¬ '•;plus of the voters who automatically October. Given the patterns of national tributions, and grants from anti-pollution Jchoose Nixon are the basic, old-line Re¬ publicans who would go for Nixon if he feeling, Nixon can hardly refrain from doing and saying just those things that will organizations, I think enough money could be gathered. For an applied project, per¬ At East Lansing STATE BANK J; had Fidel Castro on the ticket with him bring the Democrats together again. haps various departments (Chemistry, J The second is also simple. The people who Yet the question then will be whether a Natural Resources, etc.) could get teach¬ working it. You'll $ave with | choose Wallace would all be Nixon sup- united Democratic Party, with a decent, ers and students on Richard Webb | porters, if the Alabama racist could just St. Clair Shores Associated Press, t'ni ThriftiChecks f be induced to go home and shut up. moderate, obviously good man at the head of the ticket, can compete successfully in Youth Music student Low-cost student checking accounts. The only | If you look at what would happen if j* Wallace, by some miracle, were persuaded the disturbingly right-wing climate that (age 14 years) charge Is 10 Display Advertising MM»» GRAND RIVtiR AT ABBOTT EAST LANSING. MICHIGAN Business-Circulation I56-829S Branches In Okemos, Haslett, & Brookfleld Plaza Photographic JSS-Mll Metr.ber Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Thursday, August 8, 1968 3 NEWS summoryi. /^rrv Navy more .K1CM than M4 million was fun- *U £>■». VJVwMI-V. - supplier Techfab. Di vision nt AJsro Inc. Techfab Division of Alsco. have klsco.^jiave government. Vhefni payees Western Molded made *. mi&ouii 1irm* rewiveo' !lf W"* \u « ..... l.R-mwwmn, to • Vv ^* ~ $13 9 milfion contract for rocket Swiss banks could and would that the firm's previous con¬ used for folding fin aircraft says, and the funds eventually uary to May 1966 launchers only two weeks ago be disguised and concealed" by tracts were involved in a fed¬ rockets-missiles fired either landed in the hands of Hans Last spring, Alsco issued a was charged Wednesday with co-conspirators, eral grand jury investigation air-to-air or air-to-ground Senn of the Bank Fur 'Handel public announcement that it creating phantom, suppliers and A Navy information officer Chromcraft Corp., which The indictment says the de¬ and Effekten and Walter A was under Justice Department receiving kickbacks on previous said the indictments will have merged with Alsco in 1966. was fendants set up two firms- Lips at the Union Bank of Swit¬ investigation and said Stone and contracts of more than $47 mil- no effect on the new contract named a defendant along with Scientific Electronics and zerland. Senn and Lips and Rosenbaum had resigned. Stone lion. awarded by the Nqval Air Sys- the successor firm. Individuals Bregman Electronics Inc.- Senn's bank were listed as co¬ and Rosenbaum hrd been "The United States is ready- The indictment charges that terns Command on July 23 to named as defendants were An¬ each to be "a dummy corpora¬ conspirators but not as defen¬ barred a year earlier as pro- to end our limited bombard¬ drew L. Stone, principal stock¬ tion subject to the direction, dants. c u r ement sources pending holder, chief executive officer control and use by the defen¬ investigation. ment if our restraint is and a director of Chromcraft; dants as a conduit for the diver¬ The amounts transmitted to Switzerland listed A telephone call by the As¬ matched were as U.S., Viets clash by restraint on your Francis N. Rosenbaum, the sion of monies fraudulently ob¬ sociated Press two weeks ago $2,227,592.13 and $1,180,692.10 side." firm's counsel in Washington tained." to Techfab headquarters in St. and a director; Evelyn R. Price, These dummy corporations, Another count said Stone and Ambassador Averell Harriman Louis, determined that Stone executive secretary to Stone; the indictment says, prepared Rosenbaum • caused Western is listed president of the sub¬ in rocket belt' as and Robert B. Bregman, owner purchase orders and invoices Molded Fibre Products Inc. of sidiary and Rosenbaum is a of Bregman Electronics Inc., for items "that Chromcraft Gardena, Calif., to pay kick¬ member of its board of direc¬ of New York City. would not and did not purchase backs of $663,481.05 through tors. They could not be reached SAIGON (AP) - A U.S. bat- sanctuary virtually untouched Chromcraft, and later the nor acquire," but for which the International News checks made out to five foreign for comment. talion clashed with an enemy by government troops for more • U.S. Ambassador Averell Harriman announced at the force Wednesday in the "rocket than 20 years Spokesmen credit- belt" 12 miles south of Saigon, ed U.S. Navy gunboats, armored Paris peace talks the release of the 14 North Vietnamese Vent-O-Top said to be a staging area for troop carriers, U.S. helicopter seamen who have been held captive in South Vietnam. Har¬ rocket and mortar attacks gunships and artillery with kill- riman also asked freedom for more U.S. prisoners. See page 1 against the capital. ing most of the enemy dead. • U.S. infantrymen battled the enemy i the so-called "rock- Military spokesmen said They said the allies smashed a et belt" which is south of Saigon. See page 3 sketchy reports indicated at Viet Cong factorV for repairing • The Kremlin, ignoring concessions made to Czechoslova¬ kia. is seeking to depict itself to the Russian people, as a win¬ ner in last weeks Bratislava showdown The conference at Bra¬ least killed. 50 of the enemy were weapons. overraX an artillery Infantrymen of the 9th school and seize^m^bandoned Division, supported by helicop- ter gunships, were stiil engaged command post Jwrr'prisoners were captured and the allies Ironing Tables tislava was supposedly an attempt by the Soviet Union to end in heavy fighting at nightfall. seized 73 rifles, about 200 Prague's liberalization movement. See page 10 The new battle coincided with pounds of documents, a radio intelligence reports that the ene- system and an old French 75mm • Twenty-seven South Korean seamen, marooned on a my plans to launch battalion- howitzer, freighter that was within sight of Manhatten for six months, sized ground probes around Sai- U.S. Marines and South Viet- almost starved to death before anyone discovered them. gon or the key northern cities of namese paratroopers reported See page 10 Hue and Da Nang. Stepped up killing 75 Viet Cong and North terrorist attacks and shellings Vietnamese in two clashes Tues- National News also are expected this week. day south of Da Nang. The al- The U.S. Command reported lies lost 11 dead and two miss- • Former President Dwight Eisenhower's latest heart seiz¬ that a task force of 1,000 U.S. ing. ure has been diagnosed as a major attack compared to his pre¬ 9th Infantry troops and 500 North Vietnamese troops also vious ones. Doctors say Eisenhower, who is under intensive South Vietnamese marines have attacked a small U.S. Marine care, is in very poor condition. See page 1 killed 219 soldiers in a week of unit on Hill 606, near the aban- scattered fighting deep in the doned Khe Sanh combat base Mekong Delta. No allied sol- Four Marines were killed and • A price battle between the steel industry and the White diers were killed, and six Amer¬ six were wounded. Enemy House appears to be diminishing, as both the government and icans and three South Vietnam¬ ualties were unknown. the industry appear ready to settle for more modest increases East of Khe Sanh enemy gun¬ ese were reported wounded. than were originally proposed. See page 5 The fighting in three provinces ners shot down a Marine CH46 centered about 125 miles south¬ helicopter, but the crew and • A firm that received a $13.9 million contract for rocket west of Saigon on the fringe of passengers were rescued un¬ the U Minh Forest, a Viet Cong harmed. launchers, has been indicted for claiming subcontractors that did not exist and also for U.S. B52 bombers flew 10 mis¬ receiving kickbacks See page 3 sions Tuesday and Wednesday against enemy targets near the Cambodian border and in the MISSOURI SENATOR northern provinces south of Da Nang. Some of the raids were within 23 miles of Saigon. Over North Vietnam. U.S. pi¬ Long calls pr lots flew 109 missions Tuesday and reported destroying or dam¬ aging 35 supply-laden junks, 15 trucks and seven gun emplace¬ -coated Cover Pads 'victory By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ing a familiar name, nominated for sought by Republican State Sen. w ments. North Vietnam claimed Wed¬ nesday it. killed or captured 12 commandos sent north by the Regular $3.49. No-scorch heavy cotton duck cover, non-slip vent-o- Missouri's Democrats dumped James W Symington to Con¬ Orval Hansen-no relation-and United States and South Viet- foam pad. Nylon draw incumbent Sen. Edward V. gress in the 2nd District. Sym- Democratic State Rep Darrell to pinpoint bombing tar- CHARGE rr on Sears Revolving Charge, Long in Tuesday's primary and ington, who resigned as U.S. Manning, gets and conduct sabotage he promptly called his defeat chief of protocal to seek the In Michigan. 19 congressmen HOLIDAY AIR "a great victory for the wire- nomination, is a son were renominated, only three tappers, snoopers and federal souri's senior senator, RESERVATIONS bureaucrats who violate with token opposition. the Symington, SHOULD BE RESERVED constitutional rights of our He will run against another Democratic Rep John Con- citi¬ NOW! zens.' familiar name-republican Hugh yers Jr. was assured of re-elec¬ COLLEGE TRAVEL tion, with no opposition in either Long had been under fire by Scott, namesake of Pennsylva- 351-6010 Life magazine articles suggest- nia's Republican senator. party. ing he misused his office to help Elsewhere in the nation, Rep. Teamsters Union President Bob Dole won the Republican James R. Hoffa and to make nomination to the Senate in a work for the Steamfitters' Union Kansas primary, defeating for- EARN WHILE TEN NEW KNOCK-OUT ALBUMS and Great artists in their most requested an attempt to influence the inson, a Wichita attorney, for primary. the seat of Republican Sen. most exciting hits! As the returns neared comple- tion, Long wired congratulations Wednesday to Lt. Gov. Thomas Frank Carlson, who is retiring, Rick Harman, businessman and former college basketball YOU LEARN Special price *O.OU F. Eagleton. who snatched the star, was nominated by the Democratic senatorial nomina- GOP to contest the Kansas gov¬ tion from him PAID SUBJECTS NEEDED ernorship with incumbent Dem- "The citizens of Missouri have ocrat Robert Docking, who spoken and the campaign is unopposed for renomination. FOR BIOLOGICAL AND over," Long said State Sen Keith Sebelius beat Then he gave a newsman his two fellow Republicans for the PSYCHOLOGICAL RESEARCH bitter appraisal of victory for right to seek Dole's House seat: the "wiretappers, snoopers and George Meeker was the unop- CHOOSE YOUR federal bureaucrats." Long. 60. was appointed to the CATEGORY BELOW Senate in 1960 upon the death of U.S. attorney, won the Demo- Sen Thomas C Hennings Jr. cratic nomination for Congress and won election to a full term in the 3rd District. in 1962 Idaho's Sen. Frank Church, In Missouri's 1st Congression- strong critic of the administra- al District, William Clay won tion's Vietnam policy, was re¬ I. UNDERGRADUATE MALES tire Democratic nomination and nominated by the Democrats FOR BIOLOGICAL EXPERIMENTS: Curtis Crawford the Republican without opposition, while the nomination, guaranteeing that Republicans chose Rep. George $1.50 FOR 45 MINUTES. CALL Missouri would send its first Hansen, also unopposed, to chal- 353-8675 FOR APFT. black to Congress this year. And the Democrats, approv- > House seat will be II. UNDERGRADUATE FEMALES U.S. sees lowest birth rate FOR MEDICAL EXPERIMENT: $1.50 FOR 45 MINUTES. CALL since 1945 Census report 251-0727 FOR APPOINTMENT WASHINGTON (AP) - The lion birth, offset by 1.9 million lowest U.S. birth rate in history deaths and 443,000 persons ad¬ was recorded in 1967, the Cen¬ ded by immigration. sus Bureau said Wednesday. The bureau reported also that Featuring "Dead End Street" The net increase in popula¬ as of Jan. 1, there were only III. COUPLES WHO HAVE BEEN tion was 1.08 per cent, lowest 96.7 males for -every 100 fe¬ since 1945. males. Until the 1940s, men DATING STEADILY FORCREATIV- The 1967 birth rate was 17.9 were in the majority. ITY RESEARCH. $2.00 PER births per 1,000 population, the The median age of the total COUPLE FOR ONE HOUR. CALL iscount records inc. bureau said. The previous low was 18.4 in both 1933 and 1936. population was 27.7 years. In 355-2030 FOR APPT. the mid 1950s, the median was Total population last Jan. 1 was estimated at 200,248,000, an 30.2 years but the nation's youth increase of 2,138,000 in 12 mon¬ wave is ebbing, the bureau said, 225 ANN ST. as the number of births de- SAT. 9:30 6:00 ths. The gain last year, the bu¬ PH. 351-8460 OPFN DAILY 9:30-8:30 - reau said, resulted from 3.6 mil¬ Thursday, August 8, 1968 j| Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan -SPORTS 'Futbol Ame TOM BROWN a woitf jhe. .-dil foi * fli AidUpturni .\U.f» SA." felevise theif debut the in Mexico Detroit Lions Sunday 'when and Phila¬ who games of the border and have a sofrtfl | huge | \ot b gym'diriit' delphia Eagles meet in the first following in Mexico City U.S. professional football game Many Mexicans ever played outside the coun- portedly "fascinated by the After shepherding MSU's National Gymnastics Clinic, Coach try. lust for brutality" Americans George Szypula says he is starting to really enjoy the job Thousands of Mexican fans show and wonder how they can "It is really getting exciting," Szypula said. "This is the are expected to witness the feel sorry for a bull facing a best clinic we've ever had. exhibition contest between the matador and then cheer for I know that every coach that holds a clinic says that it's two National Football League human beings getting smashed the best he's had. but ours has really improved in the last teams in a game that will be around three years." televised nationally across The sport„ wm be Szypula says that the clinic has had great success in the last several years in attracting an outstanding clinic staff a ;* ...;n Although it will be the first ila r; . complete with the American- One of the biggest factors, the Spartan coach allowed, is ^ ha,fUme show comp,ete a move toward greater cooperation between the Amateur with dancing girls and also Athletic Union and the U.S. Gymnastics Federation. Szypula said that this has made it much simpler to secure the services reporter, Arthur Constantine, Indian dances. of many outstanding female gymnasts. helped finance the first team Gym dandy at the national university Today, interest is mush¬ In the past, Szypula noted, it was nearly the clinic, the MSU coach moves around like a Over 200 young gymnasts combine with top coaching and thousands of dollars impossible to attract the ladies because they highly charged yoyo. rooming and high schools and ever, are the riots which fre- were threatened with possible suspension if Apparently incapable of standing still, no worth of equipment In the second floor gymnasium of Jenlson Fleldhouse during colleges are fielding teams and quently take place after soccer they participated in the clinic. matter of the clinic is so insignificant nor the National Gymnastics Clinic held annually at MSU. forming leagues. A great deal matches And then there are the kids any would-be Olympian so small to not war¬ State News photo by Bob Ivlns rant Szypula's attention. Hustling about the Jenison gymnasium, the Why Pay More! Why Pay More! Why Pay More! Why Pay More! Why "These kids are said. just tremendous." Szypula "They get better every year, especially the little ones. man with the bandy legs and the big chest confers with judges and 10-year olds with equal .GIRLS SWEATERS "You'd have a hard time convincing the big ones." Sypula added smiling, "but I think the little kids are better." amenity. One part of the clinic that remains a Szy¬ pula favorite is the annual "Nite of Stars" Smart Bulky Orionc* Cardigans spectacular, scheduled at 7:30 tonight in the I.M. Sports Arena. In the past ten years, Szypula's clinic has LADIES' $097 been instrumental in popularizing gymnastics in Michigan. The effect is felt strongly in the high schools where Szypula said a program did not even exist until about six years ago. Featuring some of the greatest performers in the nation in addition to the cream of the clinic, Szypula uses the clinic to show people what gymnastics is all about Enthusiasm runs high among the partic¬ Admission is $1 for adults dnd 50 cents for children and those who attend will leave ipants and that enthusiasm rubs off on Szy¬ amazed by Szypula's "little kids." Step-in pula. While Szypula is officially the director of But then they amaze Szypula, too. Roll up .BLOUSES and 3/4 sleeves. White GILES WILL WAIT and colors. Montreal reprieved Slacks $178 MONTREAL Montreal's major ball ambitions may ceived (UPI) league base¬ have re¬ lems not be to "What team but today. that impossible. solutions may couldn't Aug. 7. be agreed might be viously had been set aside as the home of the still unnamed Montreal baseball club "It's important to get into yet another reprieve agreed to by the 15th," Giles the Autostade. There's a prob¬ Wednesday following talks be¬ said. lem about the lease, and it's tween civic officials and Na¬ Giles said he "doubted" a late development that just # tional League President War¬ .SKIRTS any final decision on the fran¬ up," Giles said. came ren Giles. Giles, emerging for a lunch¬ chise recently given to a Mon¬ treal group of financiers head¬ eon recess from a meeting ed by distillery heir Charles Plaids, checks in with Montreal Mayor Jean Dra- Bronfman would be reached IM news peau and top aides, indicated Dacron ® and Or Ions the almost star-crossed ven¬ Wednesday. Bronfman himself did not The entry deadline for Sat¬ We bring you fashion . . . pull ture had encountered new prob- attend the morning meeting, urday's student - faculty - staff $968 on elastic waist stretch bond¬ HOLIDAY AIR but was represented by legal golf tournament is noon today. ed knit slack, Easy care wash The Forest Akers tourna¬ RESERVATIONS counsel. n' wear bonded knit slack of ment features best ball, low Giles said the latest prob¬ 100% Acrilan Acrylic fiber. SHOULD BE RESERVED lem to plague the promoters gross play. Wear dated. Assorted colors. NOW! centered on leasing of the Entrants may pay the $1.50 COLLEGE TRAVEL Why pay more? Autostade, the Expo '67 Island green fee at the intramural of¬ 351-6010 World's Fair site which pre¬ fice. .GIRLS STRETCH America's Famous Optical Name Comes to Lansing! 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THOROUGH EYE EXAMINATIONS • FIRST-QUALITY GLASSES • CONTACT LENSES THRIFTY ACRES IS OPEN FROM 9 A.M. TO 10 P.M. DAILY, EXCEPT SUNDAY, FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE. SUNDAY HOURS 9 A.M. TO 7 P.M. Capital/Pearle OPTICAL Or. M. G. STOAKES • R»«ist»r»d Optometrist 5125 West Saginaw & 6200 South Pennsylvania 311S. Washington, across from Knapp's. 482-7434 Vv /1 y Pa v i\1 < Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Thursday, August 8, 1968 5 Bv CHB1S Of IIS MEAD foreign students and university unrest war wachiite in A kmepca vrnmrrtt""ft, rwJtQjff ' ■ «< * .. 7..**V "'** " irlgipjjjfj, jjesiio.. L—————— """ . "" ' *" i„r n»i„ T**""4 t_j •. - \4fsiyJ)V4 ■' ■ -/?■>vi Vjm ' Ik '.v<£. -Tu ■ NfJtwiV -f.x revolution, hippies-f a m i liar He said that urtiversities on file part of the administra¬ can students should make legal¬ was Bever said that one def terms to American students which are tied up in research tion There is a big gap be¬ ization a rallying point. inition might be a'person who what do they mean to contracts and consulting rela tween what they say and what Drugs a minor point took Timothy Leary's advice students from another coun- tionships with government are they actually do, he said Bever explained that drug to tune in, turn on and drop try, another culture? fertile ground for student un- Cafagna called Melby an "en- legalization is only a minor out but skipped the first two Representatives from the rest. lightened administrator" but point in student unrest and is University community ranging "Faculty members in our said there were inherent con¬ one which the press and the In response to a question on front a distinguished professor universities have many respon- tradictions in his statements government likes to play up what will become of radicals to a member of Students for sibilities beyond teaching," condoning student power and beyond proportion What stu¬ in the future, Bever admitted a Democratic Society (SDS) Melby said, teaching has gone his condemnation of the Colum- dents want is not just drug that some would probably set¬ tried to answer these and other down on the priority list for bia rebellion tle down into a comfortable legalization. Bever said, but questions of American student many professors, he added. Citing the need for students the right to decide for them¬ middle-class situation. unrest in a panel sponsored Melby urged student acti- to teach the teachers. Cafagna selves what they may or may Mealymouthed liberals by the Foreign Student Orien- vists to go to their professors said, "Columbia is one of those not do as long as it is not "The radicals of the 30's tation program in Case Hall and administrators and demand lessons." the mealymouthed lib¬ harming other members of are now Tuesday night meaningful dialogue and warned Melby adopted the position society. erals of the 60's," he said. The panel was composed of against the type of rebellion that gradual change, not revo- Speaking from the vantage Cafagna said he doubted that Ernest Melby. distinguished that occured at Columbia lution was what is needed in int of a foreign student, Vaj- today's radicals would become professor of administration and higher education; Albert Cafagna. instructor of philos- "I believe that student pro- test is a good thing," Melby said. "especially when it student unrest movements, "With all of America's A Prof power peyi said that he thinks foreign students should stay out of stu- tomorrow's middle-class lib- erals because current student faults, more has happened in panel discussion on student unrest was conducted at Case Hall for the student dent movements while study- unrest is a unique situation, ophy; Jack Sattel. SDS; Ron doesn't take violent forms." social change in America than orientation program. State News photo by Bob Ivlns ing in the United States. He "Students have become dis- Diehl. The Paper; Dhirenda Referring to the recent mari- under any other government,' cited several examples of for- affected from their country, Vajpeyi, president of the In- juana busts. Melby said that he said, characterized student unrest on on the public. According to Gilbert said that public reac- ign students being sent back they have no love for it, they ternational Club; Jim Bever "students can't decide what Attacks contention international scale. Sattel Bever they have had very little haven't made peace with the an tion to the demonstrations was to their home country as a re- of Student Liberation Alliance laws they can obey and what Bever attacked Melby's con- said that students from all na- direct effect so far but they political system." Cafagna said. largely determined by the mass suit of taking part David Gilbert, director laws they cannot obey." tention that students should tions tend to be anti-imperial- did serve to make people more media. The local radio sta- activities. "Students of this and other of Collage. "The University is run like "Our job engage in dialogue with ad- ist. anti-bureaucratic and anti- aware of problem situations tions took every opportunity to as native students countries," Bever said, "usu- Elaon Nonnamaker, associ- a business," according to ministrators rather than take authoritarian. and draw previously uncom- is to make this a place where ally come forth as the con- give bad coverage of the situ¬ ate dean of students, was in- Diehl, "and some administra- more direct action He said The foreign students also mitted people into activism. ation, he added, foreign students can partici- science of society." vited to participate but did not tors come from business back- that those with power seem wanted to know what effect attend grounds." to be willing to talk only to the MSU demonstrations had By bringing together mem- Business 'U' vs. Academic 'U' those who also have power and bers of the University commu- Diehl said that much student not students, HOLIDAY AIR ORIENTATION nity of varying opinions and unrest stems from the conflict "Students are out to get more RESERVATIONS encouraging dialogue between between running a university equal distribution of power SHOULD BE RESERVED the panel members and the in a business way and society, not to destroy so¬ audience, the program NOW! broadly academic way. ciety." Bever explained. intended to determine who the When asked by a foreign stu¬ COLLEGE TRAVEL Vajpeyi. an Indian student, "unrested" are and what are sajd that there really is not dent if there was anything that 351-6010 STUDENTS; the issues they rally behind student much power in the "Not all students are ac- United States when compared tively dissatisfied." Bever stated. The degree of dis- sidence and awareness varies, to his native India. jn India meet the are not so troopers." he said, "Students afraid to ATTENTION CAR OWNERS but the greatest amount of * He explained that policemen Complete front end repair and student unrest can be found cannot enter Indian universities The place to purchase your in the large, urban universi- unless the president of the alignment books and supplies is ties, he said. university specifically "in- Ma.nly foreign students Brakes Suspension MSU BOOK STORE - the vjtes„ them Speaking to an audience that student in the audjence added Another Indjan only official Michigan State was made up mainly of foreign that there are no university University students who will be studying ' Wheel balancing Steering book store. It's just a few ,icemen on Indian campuses.' at several American univer- , , blocks from Wonders Hall. sities and MSU student acti- Jack Sattel of SDS differed vists. lems Bever said the prob- with one of the Panel members facing the student are who sai(* students are P°ten- LISKEY'S Auto Safety Center 124 SOUTH LARCH two-fold-those arising from tial revolution-makers, his relation to the university "It is a revolution when the and those arising from the structures that maintain the UEBERMANN'S= community at large. power of society are de- MSU "The people who make the stroyed." he said "Students YOUR SHORT most noise and are tive in protest movements are most ac- will lution." never make such a re vo¬ NOW. .. SAVE 20% ON BOOK the intellectuals." Gilbert Columbia was right WALK TAKES STORE said. unrest Much of the intellectual at MSU, he added, is "The students at Columbia ATLANTIC because many of its course were absolutely right in doing what they did." Sattel said, YOU BY —► IS HERE offerings are not challenging. there are no regularly sched- uled debates and no forums He said that they argued for f0Ur years with the adminis- tration Columbia's de- GRANITEX SPARTAN STADIUM for speaking out. over fense contracts and 21 Vz years LUGGAGE "Many professors don't en- over its slumlord business courage contributions from in Harlem without any result students." Gilbert maintained. The Columbia rebellion was Intolerant professors, huge their only recourse, he said, classes and the quest for grades Bever pointed out that the all combine to frustrate stu- earliest universities were dents and foment unrest, he formed and run by students CENTER FOR added. and were later run jointly by INTERNATIONAL War machine in America students and faculty. "It seems PROGRAMS "Industry in America, the now to be a coalition of gov- YOU ARE STAYING LBJ compromises HERE AT on steel price PITTSBURGH (AP) - A price battle between the White WONDERS HALL House and the steel industry appeared ended Wednesday with both the government and companies compromising on modest price increases. U.S. Steel, the nation's biggest producer and usually the pacesetter, announced it was boosting prices on steels used in making such major products as auto bodies, refrigerators, stoves, machinery and buildings But the hikes were not as high as the nearly 5 per cent We have all books and you'll need (presently available). supplies ATL • Chem across-the-board increases announced a week ago by the No. If something isn't ready 2 producer, Bethlehem, and Bethlehem line, chopping its boost to 2.4 per cent. immediately fell in It seems almost a certainty that the rest of the industry yet, just say the word, and Nat. Sci. • Math Outfit we'll send it to you when will follow suit. Two other big firms. Inland and Armco. an¬ yourself with this great fly weight luggage now nounced within hours that they would remain competitive, meaning that their prices would be brought in line with U.S. ... and save. Tough Granltex covering In handsome heather green, fitted with dependable wing-sweep zip¬ available. HPR • etc. Steel's All the price hikes are effective Aug 16 pers and strung handles. For a limbed time only, so At the Texas White House, President Johnson was quoted as saying the moves by U.S. Steel and Bethlehem are a "substantial improvement from the general inflationary trend." Arthur M. Okun. chairman of the President's Council of Aerotote NOW 9.60 THE ONLY OFFICIAL MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY BOOK STORE Economic Advisers, said. "It is gratifying that the U.S. Steel 21" Week-end 16.00 12.1 action significantly reduced the threat of a large and general 24" Pullman 19.00 15.20 inflation in steel prices." 26" Pullman One industry observer described the price adjustments as a Man's Val-a-Pak 33.00 26.40 compromise. Another commented that the day's developments Ladies' Val-a-Pak 36.00 28.80 appeared to mark the end of the latest government-industry hassle over prices. The confrontation between the White House and the com¬ panies was the most dramatic since 1962 when the late Presi¬ dent Kennedy angrily forced the industry to roll back a general $6-a-ton price boost Since then, the industry has soft-pedaled its price boosts, in¬ creasing a produce here, another there, But Bethlehem. Republic. Armco and Inland broke this prac¬ tice last week by announcing virtual across-the-board price hikes after the industry had reached a billion dollar-plus labor settlement with the United Steelworkers union. Other firms, including U.S. Steel, had remained selective. U.S. Steel boosted prices on tinplate products-used for beer . and soft drink cans-and the construction industry. lent until Wednesday. some structural steel shapes-used in The big steel firm then remained si¬ EAST LANSING- 209 E. Grand River BOOK STORE DOWNTOWN-107 S. Washington In the Center for Even with its latest selective that more price increases may increases, U.S. Steel indicated be in the offing. International Programs Thursday, August 8, 1968 ^ Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan FINALLY GETS PERMISSION Attorney urges law Pastor visits ik 1 «Lr' . \a\ if A < tKi^v.c.1 be?ng ^ JS , talked t tto one "of tHe cal 'parish or the University Orthodox student group, in as ^kelenfr mw3»g see a* tauovdt ft the prisoners and when first Russian attorney ever to prisoners and was*told by a addl^ss an American Bar Asso¬ desk clerk that he could talk much as none of the people he went to see them the under- ciation'Convention said Wednes¬ to the rest Friday morning arrested are members of the sheriff, according to the Rev. day "international law must be¬ The Rev Keleher said that parish or had requested that Keleher, apologized and said. come a force for the establish¬ rau.'ss! k£" the Rev. Brian Keleher was them. ,rom ,te v,s" :^s..^•m^,"• nism anvwav ment and maintenance of world admitted Wednesday to the Ing¬ I„g- f" According to a Michigan sta- The Rev Donahue took his peace." ham County Jail to speak with «*«« • ■ . „ncino • tute, prisoners are allowed to action. Keleher said, because Alexander F. Volchkov, presi¬ the persons arrested in last Pastor of the East Lansing see clergy from their own con- he believes that clergymen dent of the Moscow Bar Asso¬ week s narcotic raids. fussia" '"p gregation and after that it is should not become involved in ciation's foreign department, The Rev Keleher Dastor formed Jai1 officials that the up to the sheriff to decide marijuana issues, twitted U.S. lawyers for creating of a Russian OrSo, ChuS f Keieher did not toe "a what clergy can be admitted to Sunday about 12 to 18 students a slogan "world peace through in Baltimore. Md.. said he was ll«nsfJ° Pract,che " Ln3"S'"* see prisoners. handed out leaflets in front law" then failing to label the School Convention and •«Hso"^ Lansing attend,^ a Sunday allowed to see the prisoners The Rev. Keleher called 0f tj,e Rev. Donahue's church, Vietnam war as aggression. "To us the use of law as an in¬ The undersheriff also said, the American Civil Liberties strument for peace must not be ready to leave when he heard according to Keleher, that Ing¬ Union in Detroit which advised The leaflet protested actions dbout the busts Thursday. ! He went to the Ingham Coun¬ ham County checked with the University officials had him to get in touch with Ken- of the Ingham County nethLaing. a Lansing lawyer 1'ce and the Rev Donahue in Jail po- Repair crew . allowed to become an abstract concept, unrelated to the events that are actually taking place in ty Jail, where the persons ar- police and found that Keleher The Rev Keleher filed an allegedly aiding denial of con- Grand Trunk Railroad workmen recently repl aced the most eroded sections of tim¬ the world," Volchkov. one of the had "communist leanings" on affadavit with Laing stating stitutional rights of the pr.son- ber covering tracks at the Harrison Road crossing. The repairs were made after Russian judges at the Nuren- his record. his denial of access to the ers. Donahue however, stated that prisoners and threatened to 'The kids are going stii a group of Spartan Village Residents protested the condition of the crossing. berg Trials after World War II, State News photo by Bob Ivlns said. he had told both the Rev. Kele¬ get a lawsuit or an injunction crazy ,n varying degrees,' He called for collaboration of her and the police only that against the authorities the Rev. Keleher said. Aftei Soviet and American attorneys the Rev. Keleher was repre- On Tuesday the Ingham Coun- seejng the rest of the prison¬ in support of international law ers Wednesday morning, Agency rules railroads, Rev. Keleher returned to Bal¬ and said such cooperation "would bring greater honor to timore. SPARTAN tWIN THEATRE i Posting bonds of $10,000 our profession." Volchkov also hit at "a funda¬ m FRANOOW SHOPPING CtWTIH • 3100 EAST 8AQINAW • Www Ml 0030 j each on charges of selling MSU must repair crossing mental misconception" of Rus¬ At 1:15-3:15-5:20-7:20-9:40' marijuana were Kenneth A. sia's legal system, reporting OPEN AT 6 P.M. Carlisle, 18. 361 Bailey St.; that Soviet citizens-like Ameri- Connie Lee Comstock, 19. 116 NOW PLAYING N. Clemens; and Michael Hick- repairs were needed, and with cans-have the right to own and initial demand that it oe ok, 23,2046 Phillips. Holt. The Michigan Public Serv- gave the Grank Trunk railway his freely use private property, through August II » Commission ruled Tuesdav 45 days-'andard,l° br!n*at the cross,ng proven that his company's "It has therefore been a — wu-u *■—' crossing had caused damage source of disappointment to us DRACULA T^iirdRoadrrwas34f5reedLa5n ttatThe"Ctesa^akTa^^iohio UP £ standard inspection at which time to any vehicles. that for more than a quarter of Reservations: Call 627-7805 or PARA $5,000 baifon a dwrge of seH- and Grand Trunk Western rail- -other inspect.on would be After the representative left, a century your legislatures and condUitlornePaofr t MOUNT NEWS Reduced rates for MSU students. Coming August 13-18' TWELFTH MCHT. — PLUS CO-HIT— in*LSD . Charles Fink, 20, 400 Gun- * TbtSdlrf railcrossings at Harrison Road, The C&0 repeated a promise made last week to weeks their repair when Clarkin picked up a still warm muffler shaken from a passing courts have deprived the citi- zens of my country of the right THE PICTURE YOU WILL son St., who was arraigned on a member of a local interest crossing within vehicle and promised to give to receive the property which the necessary timbers are de¬ it to the Grand Trunk repre- their relatives in the United NOT SEE ON TELEVISION two counts, possession and group said Wednesday. . sale of marijuana, waived pre- livered. he said. sentative at a later date. Wal- States have left to them in their "THE PENTHOUSE Dick Walter, of -the VICTIMS MSU, which owns a spur ot tersaid. estates," he said. liminary examination and will of the Harrison Road Rail be bound over to Circuit Court the railway, has already con¬ Crossing, said Hugh Clarkin, an tracted for the siding to be re¬ Friday. inspector for the commission. :NOW! ALL COLOR! 2nd Big Week! paired and the work should be done within a month, Walter PHONY DISTRESS EXCLUSIVE SHOWING AT 9:20 & LATE | Friday & Saturday, Aug. 9 & 10 said. At the hearing which was 108 WELLS 7 & 9P.M. held at the Harrison Road cross¬ Passport THE CYCLES... THE SURF... ANOTHE 1, awoman; makes 'DEAR JOHN' look like fairy tale. Would believe a 50C DONATION Peter Sellers • George C. KybrkJ's^ Scott ing, VICTIMS presented in a petition which had been signed by 1,752 residents of Spartan Village, protesting the unsafe condition of the cross- Clark¬ cut; abuse SWINGERS THAT VIRGINIA WOOLP looking like a you Dr. Strangelove . . , said thf ™berkS 0f VICTIMS present at the hear- , . WASHINGTON (APi - The tries on Saturdays and Sun- State Department said Tues- days." Sunday ao-to-meetin'?" World Journal Trlbunt •r Hnr I lumri Ti St* Wtrnrta| JM Lm T)m 6m* day that falge distress appeals Within the past two weeks MAKE ing were satisfied with the over- permission to go abroad several countries have corn- IT ALL GO! all results. but expressed dis- without pr0per passports, are plained, and one country has the hot-line satisfaction with the Grand forcing it to curtail the waiver served notice that any U.S. suspense comedy Trunk representative s at- priviiege has been granting citizen arriving without a valid tempts to evade responsibility for emergencies. passport will be refused entry by claiming that only minor porejgn governments have and returned to the origin point 2a complained about the growing of his flight, Miss Knight said, MSU INTERNATIONAL FILM SERIES number of growing number of Miss Knight explained to a re- presents Ex-husband kills Americans who show up with- porter that she introduced the »• A NOMINEE: days off by the phony distress immediately, before - WHEN A GIRL LIKE LULA GETS Hollywood hat manufacturer, abroad pleas, said Frances G. Knight, passports could be issued. WITH A MAN LIKE CLAY SHE "BEST PIGTURE"BEST DIRECTOR* his wife and two daughters were director of the Passport Office. The practice has been for the shot to death Wednesday, pre¬ Miss Knight sent letters of CAN LOVE HIM. OR KILL HIM- I 'BEST STORY AND SCREENPLAY' sumably by the estranged hus- about the growing Passport Office to call the U.S. The^kweet OR MAYBE police said. Fred Chegwin. 31. allegedly Friday to the heads of all the airlines and steamship com¬ consular officer meet the per¬ son. get him through the entry tide BOTH! EUA KUANS shoved his way into the $100.- panies serving the United procedure and escort him to the embassy to document emergen¬ 000 home of Phil Weinstein. States. cy papers. ANKRICfl 46. at about 8 a m He shot Weinstein. his wife. Rosemary. 38, and their daugh¬ She said the false claims of need to travel without passports because of dire emergencies But as usual there are al- ways people who press a good frank _ sinatra MMMICR" ters. Debbie, 19. and Myra Chegwin. 24. have come particularly from New York's Kennedy Interna¬ thing to the extreme, 1 advantage and thus terminate or restrict efforts to help who take Chegwin then apparently tional airport. Istonty turned the ,38-caliber revolver She said it appeared that serve." Miss Knight said in the rome on himself. some persons apparently had letter. coached potential passengers, FAIRCHILD THEATRE HOLIDAY AIR RESERVATIONS when they showed up for Euro¬ pean trips without passports, Eight wounded All the urgency and tension of the Award Winning play by Le Roi Jones is now on Frl., Sat. - Aug. 9 & 10 NO 3NI UNOtH 16 «*RS OF ACE Will BE ADMITTED Shown Once Only At 8:50 Admission 50^ SHOULD BE RESERVED NOW! about requesting waivers. That is indicated, she said, by during gunfire PROGRAM INF. 485-6485 COLLEGE TRAVEL stereotyped answers to ques¬ HARVEY, 111. (AP) - Sev¬ tions about the nature of the TODAY it)HA 351-6010 claimed emergencies. Miss Knight added that re¬ en were policemen and a wounded by gunfire dur¬ woman At 1:25-4:00-6:30-9:10 ing a disturbance by black quests for waivers occur so fre¬ youths late Tuesday night THE SPECIAL ONES! quently on weekends that "we Scores of state, county and can only conclude that dire ill¬ __ THE ness, accident and death strike local police brought order to the troubled area shortly after Green most heavily in European coun- midnight. Authorities said ing hours passed without inci¬ the morn¬ dent, and out-of-town officers left Harvey, a suburb south of Chicago, after a curfew was lifted at dawn. Three of the injured police¬ men were admitted to hospitals and reported in good condition. • The others were treated and re¬ leased. All of the policemen are white. The wounded woman, a black, was treated at a hospital and released. City and county officials planned a meeting for later to¬ day to determine if extraordi¬ nary measures would be needed tonight. The police department issued a report at midmorning saying -.rdOHN _ DAVID that in its opinion the trouble was "a spontaneous movement Wayne Janssen Shown Twice I ALSO CHARLTON - 9:20 & Late HESTON IN VAN DYKE by a small group of malcontents who were bent on causing a disturbance." ww JIM llirrmiT a batjac production wMDftROBiNSON "It was not a racial conflict," the police report stated. "It HUllUN os^ALDO RAY RAYMOND ST JACQUES MMfflrPKMNE Rp should be strongly emphasized that these few individuals who, BRUCE CABOT • RWRJCK WAYNE • LUKE ASKEW JAMES LEE BARRETT modwidskus* "H! Cartoon & Sport* Novelty starts TODAY: mmdMCHAEL WAYNE OMUJOHN WAYNEMRAY KEWOGG"-*---*»MMW* caused way this disturbance in no reflect the attitude of this 1:30, 4:05, 6:45, 9:25 P.M., Fri., Sat. 9 wci—CBtorw>N«wwimiimm mmm wii-iwiMti if 1:45, 4:20. 7:00, 9;40 P.M. NEXT . . . JAMES GARNER - "HOW SWEET fT IS" JILlll 11 LATE | community." Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Thursday, August 8, 1968 7 KILLIY RULES Administrators teach r. "It :■& opinion id ^ A cutftroiyvng p' oi the All five. -ept Opp£w£M i tart.' lie went ( V y rul^d Wednesday that mem- quested the information KeV vTfcV tfteT* no rtMJiwpatinility Yinnsfituwo^ji between the position of employe cwtia wmfc the planning of future • public iittn bersof the State Board of Edu- >ey 331(1 that.although the board ln 0pp«wall s 75m- who is 3 of a Michigan institution of professor 0f Knglish at Calvin institutions of higher institu¬ caUon may teach at colleges has the power to make recom- tions of higher education based and universities while serving mendations to the legislature higher education granting bar- College Kellev lsslJed a sep- on the board. on financial requirements of calaureate degrees and the pub- yrate rullng holding that 0ppe- upon his own experiences as an lie office of member of the educator in a private institution At the same time, Kelley colleges and universities, a state board of education." he wa|j s employment by a pri- of higher learning." held that persons serving on board member who teaches at a sa'<'- vate col,ege and as a board , state profession licensing college does not hold incom- Five board members. Car¬ member were not incompatible. boards may also serve on the patible positions. Kelley also ruled that boarfl. men L. Delli Quardi of Hough- "There is no basis to assume members Board of Education. "Based upon a study of the serving on state ton, Marilyn Jean Kelley Stout that the person occupying the boards of licensing-apparently, of Ann Arbor, Peter Oppewall office of member of the state meaning Board of Education of Grand Rapids. Charles E board of education will not fair- President Edwin Novak of Detroit paperboys Morton of Detroit, and Leroy G. Augenstein of Holt all have taught-or are teaching-at col- ly discharge his duties cause he is employed by a pri- vate institution of higher edu- be- Flint who was a former mem: ber of the State Board of aminers in optometry-did Ext not leges and universities. cation ." serve in incompatible jobs. win pay increase . . DETROIT - Carrier get a 4.5 cent increase. boys will get about 70 per cent Negotiators for the two pa¬ of their pers also were mopping up re¬ requested increase Love is . when the city's record newspa¬ maining contract agreements with small, nonstriking unions per blackout ends The Detroit The 700.000 pre-strike circu¬ , but this cat-napping kitty will have News and Detroit Free Press State News lation afternoon News plans photo by Joe Tyner are working on a deadline that to hit the streets with a first should see them on the streets edition Friday morning, and Friday. the 600.000 circulation morn¬ But the publishers empha¬ ing Free Press plans a first ABILITY TO COMMUNICATE sized Tuesday that the carrier edition Friday evening. pay increase was decided, as A Teamsters strike last Nov. a part of the delivered news¬ 16 closed the News and trig¬ paper price increase, before Education gered the 266-dav shutdown. The help the last of the seven major ITU mailers, the last of the sev¬ striking unions settled the two papers Monday. en striking unions to reach "The boys began protesting agreement, ratified a new con- tract Monday. reach marital before they knew they were get¬ ting more money." said a HOLIDAY AIR spokesman for the Free Press RESERVATIONS circulation department In a feeble two-day protest. SHOULD BE RESERVED NOW! 203 E. Grand River EDITOR'S NOTE: The rela¬ MSU Psychology Clinic noted satisfaction with love increased leSS jh*n 3" parfents and boys COLLEGE TRAVEL Open Wed. Nights till 9 tionship between marriage and that college educated couple education is discussed below in are likely to be more verbal with the amount of education. *Ski%f,?r 3" pe""y^ 351-6010 the third of a four part series by and introspective, a distinct ad¬ The authors explained that greater skills in communication PaP^'ncrease „ • ' . There are 17 500 Pat Carrel on married students. vantage in facilitating commu¬ By PATCARREL nication and habits of self-expression \ , are developed by high school ^ week y,s"bs™ber at Welcome Freshman State News Staff Writer Few Americans praise the ed- ter "Educated couple.5 learn bet- i„ graduates a.,u s,auuai„ and those »,use whom.u Ku * to go io the nrofit News, ... profit hf»r or a total ofweek. per rnstnmpr 26 cents customer aa wppIc At At problem-solving methods „ , 1*11 , college. Such skills make it eas- ucation they received at their and counseling is more effec- the Free Press, the boys will - ier for couples to express affec- alma maters or high schools for tive as a result There is also tion as well as to communi- helping them attain a success- a more equal relationship found cate information and opinions. ful marriage relationship Yet evidence exists that perhaps in couples from i higher socio- economic level, Mrs. Parker Many marriage counselors Detroit papers Pick up your contend that undergraduate . such praise is long overdue. According to the 1960 Census. marriages can be relatively inCr6G56 rof©S the combined divorce and sep- happy ones despite their uni- aid M Wolfe, in a survey of 909 que problems ' "" DETROIT (UPI) Home de FREE - aration rate for the male popu- families in the Detroit area dur- lation having one to three years Mrs Cecille Frogh a Fam- livery rates for the Detroit ing the years 1955-59. measured jjy Service Agency counselor. News and Detroit Free Press of high school was 1.2 per cent the effects of education and said that financial and aca- have been increased to 90 cents higher than those who gradu- other environmental factors demic pressures for ated from college. For the fe- undergrad- a week. IS cents more than the brought to a marriage uate couples are no greater than service cost when the news- male population, the difference other pressures and are not a papers were shut down by a was 1.8 per cent. They found that companion- A recent study fh. cincio crjtical problem if the couple strike nearly nine months ago measured the ship,rn was the single most val- ismature Subscribers were told Wed- attitudes of 80 couples after ued aspect of marriage among A Campus-Pbc eight years of marriage and study of the undergraduate nesday both papers had boosted the young, childless couples, , , ,, . ■ found that marital satisfaction ' 1 and single population at Syra- home delivery charges, as well Among these couples, educa- (.use University supports Mrs as increasing the price of Sun- was not related to the number of tional differences had a great- tjonal ereat- cv^rhv Frogh's views. day editions from 25 to 30 cents. years married. Marital satisfac- er effect on companionship tion and The study found that the ma- Daily newsstand prices remain years of schooling, than age differences. Hence, jority of married students sur- at 10 cents a copy however, showed a positive re- couples with the greatest edu- ■ved expressed no displeasure Spokesmen for Detroit's two lationship Age at the time of cational similarities ranked the over marrying early major dailies revealed the price marriage also appeared unre- companionship rewards of mar- — ALL you have to do is show us your survey ironically con- boost Tuesday, when telling trasted these relatively happy 17.500 carrier boys they will get found that Orientation name-tag. Stop in and get couples to the few single stu- about 70 per cent of an earnings dents who rated their personal increase they requested. The acquainted, we're looking forward to lives as mostly happy and with- carrier boys staged a two-day meeting you. out worry over academic pres- demonstration to demand a Clay conviction sures. Tomorrow: Pre-Marital Counseling Importance of penny-a-paper an more, increase already had been unaware granted appeal opposed l/lfa WASHINGTON (APi -- For¬ scientious objector based on mer world heavyweight cham¬ his beliefs as a member of pion Cassius Clay's appeal against his conviction and sen¬ the Black Muslim faith Clay also asks reversal of ASHIONS tencing for refusing induction his convicfion because of al¬ into the armed forces was op¬ leged systematic exclusion of posed by the Justice Depart¬ blacks from the local and ment Tuesday appellate draft boards which Mr^otaCa^r In a brief filed with the U.S. decided his draft status Individuality is the keynote of today's fashion Across from the Union Across from Berkey Hall Supreme Court, prior to the The Justice Department said picture. Stop in and select a new curve and court's reconvening Oct 2 in its brief, however, that curl coiffure that will enhance your fall fashion following summer recess, the Clay consistently referred to department urged denial of himself on Selective Service 501 1/2 E. Grand River E. Caff Clay's petition to the court to forms and questionnaires as Lansing (Jm pooK^roRes review the appeal "professional boxer." "heavy-' Across from Berkey Hall CD 2-Q9Q4 The former weight champion of the world" 24 H«. Hhw« Srvic boxing cham¬ pion, who prefers to be called and other such terms describ¬ Muhammad Ali, last month ing his occupation. asked the Supreme Court to overturn his conviction, his "On various dates in 1966, five-year jail sentence and prior to his assertion to a $10,000 for refusing induction. ministerial exemption. he Free on $5,000 bond. Clay wrote letters seeking permis¬ is seeking either a ministerial sion of his local draft board to exemption or status as a con- leave the country to defend his boxing title." the Justice De¬ MSU's Official Iftfifif partment brief said. Noting a Court of Appeals ^JM denial of a ministerial exemp¬ Peter Sellers and Scott will star in Stanley tion for Clay George C. clared "there Ku- the record to the brief de- is nothing indicate he in is TODAY IS RECORD THURSDAY brick's "Dr. Strangelove: In our record department across from Berkey or the leader of a congregation How I Stopped Worrying and 0r a group of lesser members Learned to Love the Bomb.' The Flick will be shown at 7 and 9 p.m. on Friday and Sat¬ of his sect." The brief further states that LOOK AT THESE PRICES - urday in 108B Wells Hall. Clay "did not have a conscien¬ tious scruple to participation Mfg. List Prices Our Reg. Low Prices RECORD THURSDAY PRICES Walter C. Neale, of the Dept. in all war, but only to certain $1.98 $1.69 $1.49 of Economics at the University wars depending upon particular 2.50 1.98 1.79 of Texas, will give two lectures circumstances." 2.98 2.39 2.19 today. At 3 p.m. in 115 Erickson Hall, he will speak on "The 3.98 2.87 2.59 Role of Government Policies. , , . . . 4.98 3.84 3.49 Economic Institutions and Mar- eud as members of draft boards, 5.98 4.69 4.29 ket Forces in Agricultural De- theJ J"st»ce Department con- velopment in India." At 7:30 tended. there tw*s no bias 6.98 5.79 5.19 p.m. in the McDonel Kiva. he ?r Prejudgement of Clay s case Every Thursday reduce prices on . will speak on "Indian Land Re- ^ thue 'f3' boards allowing we our entire record stock. New stock weekly. forms vs. Social Structure Poli- f<* th<; f*ct th^ d,d not ,n" elude black members. Thursday, August 8, 1968 State News State Newt Classified Classified 355-8255 Easy to use and hard to beat... That's low cost, hard working WANT ADS! 355-8255 T 6r ?or Rent *Mi i ^1—« permit racial or rfellglous . 41^'; I>rive " sit** and uUlitie* ' inrftided Hon month discrimination in its ad¬ Special $5 00 offer 48*1»4 Alio apartment in WilBamiton In vertising columns. The quire. »-OM8 28 9 State News will not accept PILOTS PRACTICE writte NOW LEASING I STTIDENT UNITS Thrw a advertising which discrim¬ • AUTOMOTIVE inates against religion, nent. ATR See you man urati still available for [Houses Hold ber leasing Lowebrooke Univ< • EMPLOYMENT race, color or national or¬ HASLETT TWO-Bed room duplex type • FOR RENT igin. Completely carpeted including kitch¬ en and bath Appliances furnished • FOR SALE r $140 month plus utilities Avail¬ • LOST & FOUND 1200 E. GRAND RIVER able September 1, Drive by 5874 MASON BODY SHOP. 812 East Kala¬ • PERSONAL TWO BEDROOM top location 533 Okemos-Haslett Road Call GOVAN mazoo Street-Since 1940. Complete MANAGEMENT, 351-7910 After 5 • .PEANUTS PERSONAL Automotive auto painting and collision service Evergreen *140. one year lease Call 351-7114 between 5 and 7 p.m p.m., 332-0091 O • REAL ESTATE American and foreign cars IV5- 3-8/8 • SERVICE CUTLASS SUPREME Convertible 19 TO SHARE my three-bedroom home 12,000 miles. Still under warran • TRANSPORTATION MELS AUTO SERVICE Large or ARBOR FOREST APARTMENTS with male, age 21-26 All utilities IV 5-3598 H paid Close to bus line $70 Call • WANTED small, we do them all 1108 East 3-8/9 Trowbridge Road, East Lansing. Fac¬ Grand River 332 3255 C ulty members Deluxe one and two- Rog. after 5 p.m .482 8635 3-8/9 Burcham Drive. New bedroom apartments available Pri¬ DEADLINE ACCIDENT PROBLEM? Call KALA vate patio and swimming pool Chalet LOVELY, FURNISHED one. two, three deluxe furnished three man. House for private parties Within bedroom houses for fall. Lease, de¬ MAZOO STREET BODY SHOP Small Air-conditioned, laundry, walking distance of campus. No posit Students welcome 351-5696 1 P.M. one class day be¬ dents to large wrecks. American and 10-8/1# fore publication. foreign cars Guaranteed work 482 parking, storage. Phone Mrs. children or pets Phone 337-0634 for appointment C-8/8 1286 2628 East Kalamazoo C Addams, 484-1579, days: Cancellations - 12 noon one EAST LANSING - Three-bedrooms class day before publica¬ DUNESBUGGY VOLKSWAGEN en¬ CAR WASH: 25c Wash, wax, vac¬ Evenings, 372-5767 or 489- BURCHAM DRIVE New d b fur- IVi bath, unfurnished duplex Large 1656. kitchen with breakfast bar, com¬ tion. gine. fiberglass body $750 Call uum U-DO-IT, 430 South Clip- pert, back of KO-KO BAR C-8/8 CAMPUS NEAR 227 Bogue One laundry, parking, storage. PHONE pletely carpeted, nice yard $200 372-1412 IV2-0285evenings 5-8 13 1659 Haslett Call GOVAN MAN¬ Miss Adams. 484-1579. days; eve¬ girl to share for balance of sum¬ PHONE Small one bedroom furnished nings, 372-5767 or 489-1656 C-8/8 AGEMENT 351-7910 After 5 p.m Scooters & Cycles mer. 332-0091 O apartment, carpeted $75 Phone 355-8255 489-5922 5-8/12 NEWLY MARRIED? AUTHENTIC DEALER for Yamaha FIREBIRD SPRINT, 1967 excellent Triumph, and BMW Complete line TANGLEWOOD Rooms RATES of parts, accessories, leather goods, 1 DAY 3 DAYS $1.50 $3.00 condition Must 4383 after 5 pm. sell Call 393- 4-8/9 and on helmets Vt mile south of 1-96 South Cedar SHEPS MOTORS Phone 694-6621 C 4EES /a\ ^7 Front GIRLS WANTED to share apartment 1 APARTMENTS Bdrm., unfur., from 2 Bdrm., unfur., from 351-7880 119.50 139.50 EAST LANSING Parking. for school year ED7-2225 For men Cooking Furnished Available now 4-8/9 5 DAYS Four blocks from campus Before EAST LANSING Four girls Cooking . $5ipc 332-0143; after. 337-0246 3-8/12 noon. Parking Furnished Available now for (based on 10 words per adj BRAND NEW furnished deluxe one- school year ED7-2225 4-8/9 bedroom Ideal for two people Over 10,15f per word per day Lovely home for newly-weds 332- There will be a 50tf service and bookkeeping charge If this ad Is not paid within week. irm ROOMS and apartments Male. Clean, quiet, cooking, parking, supervised. one BURCHAM DRIVE Close in. 487-5753 or 485-8836 O JUST COMPLETED The State News will be TWO AIR CONDITIONERS LIVING AREA, kitchen facilities. responsible only for the PER UNIT Four boys. Remodeled Close, im¬ first day's Incorrect inser¬ 489-9651 mediately available 332-2414 3-8/12 tion. ing September. 1968. Two-bedro. partments for $240 month. Swim¬ LENS PRECISION ground in our own lab OPTICAL DISCOUNT, 416 Tus- ming pool G.E. Appliances, gar- furnished for four- sing Building Phone IV2-4667 C-8/9 ». Call 351-4275 after WANTED: ONE girl for foo 1968-69 school year Contact Andrasi at 351-0463 COLONIAL SOFA - $95; Five-piece bedroom suite - $135: Plart-block shelves; Ten-speed bike Call 351- 8915, after 6 p m 1-8/8 MEN — WOMEN GERMAN FOOD And Other Food From Most Fo Encyclopedia Britannica now hiring. " • eign Countries-including U.S. time $350 month. Full time $800 inth If you meet our require SHAHEEN'S FAMILY i, must be able to start imme FOOD FAIR diately. Must have car. Call 484-4880 1001 W Saginaw 485-408 for personal interview. Michigan Bankard Welcom Apartment Store If you are investigating apartment living, a visit or call to our office definitely can eliminate the "legwork" of apartment-hunting. EAST LANSING MANAGEMENT CO. 351-7880 Our New Location: 317 M.A.C. saa ana assa □ma aau im□□ annanae 0011a 29. Mischievous □□DO SnOBS child asrsna nrana 30. Principal □□an ncna □□□ 33. False nas gas aaga appearance 36. Cheerful □nan aQocns 37. Modernistic aamnni HHnca 13. Unit of weight 38. Brusque □Has n»[j for nails «• ^°. . nssn asa □□□ 14. Genuine 45. Cruising ansa saa cass 15. Raining hard 46. King topper 47, Caviar 17. TV equipment r™'" 48.Seines 6. Smallest 19. Swab 2. Ipecac source 49. Spoil integer 20. One; Ger. 3. Purl in 50. Prosecute 7. Foe 21. Species of knitting 8. Ship's captain 51. Migration DOWN 4. Slumbering 9. Mother 5. Of great size chicken 1. Grape refuse 10. Cake 5 6 7 8 9 10 ingredient 2 3 4 % 12 % % 13 16. Extinct bird 18. Kind of coffee II % 15- 16 22. Ital. 14 % 19 19 daybreeze 23. Nothing 17 i 21 24. Delve 25. Flightless bird %% % 20 % 27 28 26. Shiny fish lure 27. Heir 21 is % 30 %% 31 31. Arrest 32. Despot 29 %% d 34. Dry, as wine y!" 3* 3<6 35. Pitchers 33 V % 38 39 40 HI 39. Consumer %1" % 44 45 40. Man's nickname 42 HZ i 40 41. Stint 42. Cambridge's 4fc VA 5l % Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Thursday, August 8, 1968 9 For Sale SEWING MACHINE clearance frand new portables. (MM ft * tftidw«r u« Whites 4 Necchii macr»w. New Ttane talc $500 ^ an) „.Yy~ V *' MINNEAPOLIS, Minn l^lo, Viett$elJout-HHH 1AP> HXiatnr*. American 1 ne- 1 *1 happen either " warned about the dangers of ... 'Erfsr; '4«eccci* w.- religious services, voting and those with a minimum of one was TOYOTA I'm black other uses lush Thanx But unconditional sur route . . . year's service will be increased render still isn't fair Beware' The I would be the last to argue -Increase in annual Union to $2 08 an hour. Those em¬ CLASSIFIED ADS GET YOU EXTRA Education leave. CASH for back to school needs Sell that everything was perfect ployes in dormitories and food things you longer Dial 355-8255 will be either -Amendment of the short- CORONA NOW S THE TIME TO SELL house hold goods you no longer need Sell no use then abroad or or ever at home, but we were term military leave clause to services presently in Grade II classified as grill room assist¬ allow 10 days absence to handle things you no longer use Dial 355- Typing Servic making genuine social and eco¬ ant managers and service lead¬ civil disorders. will remain in Grade II nomic progress, raising still fur¬ ers PAULA ANN HAUGHEY: Professional All employes in the physical you'll he amazed BARE WALLS FILL UP FAST Check for "household" items in the theses typist IBM Selectric Multi- lith offset printing. 337-1527 ther the highest ing in the world. standard of liv¬ plant, dormitories and food but will receive an increase of 6 cents an hour effective Jan. C services covered in Grade I FOR SALE column today There were no riots, no stu¬ 6.1969 MARILYN CARR, how much you get for legal secretary Electric typewriter After 5:30 pm AIRPLANE: 1947 CESSNA; 90 and weekends. 393-2654 Pick up and delivery C Blue Ribbon Committee h.p.. Jump Seat, New Trim, so little at: New Prop, Hangared,SHARP ANN BROWN: Typist and multilith, —$2490. offset printing. Dissertations, the¬ ses. manuscripts, general typing. IBM 17 experience 332- FALCON, 1967: Six, Two years (continued from page one) of such should be "left to the the ASMSU secretary Consti¬ does like the reduced tuitior • WHEELS of Lansing Door, Stick Shift, Low Mile¬ age, $1295. FINE CONDITION — BARBI MEL. No job too large or too off campus. 332-3255 typing, multilithing. small Block The commission give committee as set up they did to members of the activ¬ the discretion of the board." and that there should be a hole" in such a new procedure "loop¬ tutional status, but thinks that the details of their offices should not be "spelled out toe idea as a substitute, however. Compensation important "The important thing is thai t - C ities and programs area a re¬ in order to recognize the im¬ much It'san individual thing. 2200 S. Cedar - only minutes from people should feel they art , newed pride and sense of re¬ He is also in favor of having the campus - go west on Mt. Hope, HOLE IN ONE! Maybe not. but chedt portance of having "someone being compensated for their ef- . the graduate student acquire a then 2 blocks south on Cedar CALL: 351-5323 today's Classified Ads for good buys ingolf clubs! sponsibility in the planning and experienced" as boiird chair¬ forts," he said. This could be done, he seat on the board but thinks development of both old and man. Louis Hekhuis. ASMSU board by adding a clause stat¬ that the Council of Graduate new programs, eliminate any says, adviser and adviser to the Blue conflict which may have exis¬ ing that if a majority of the Students (COGS) would rath Ribbon Committee also had Place Your ted in the past between the board members voted to waive er remain autonomous for the some comments to make on its - board chairman and the cab¬ a new electing procedure in a present. "If they decide the} accomplishments. inet president," and "guaran¬ specific case, it could be waived. want a seat, that's good." ht "I think it would be valuable i PEOPLE REACHER WANT AD tee a two-way flow of ideas and information rather than the On Retain female seat the members-at-large. said. In the same vein, he thinks to do this every year," he said.: "It's a real service to the stu¬ the inclusion of part-time stu Today . . . Just clip, complete, mail. current one-way flow: new Ellsworth said he is "not con¬ dent board; sort of does their ideas for vinced that the elimination of dents into the ASMSU voting STATE NEWS will bill you later. programming should homework for them and fo¬ be coming from within the pro¬ the female seat is good citizenry is another good idea cuses on the problem areas in gram area itself as well as "It still hasn't been demon¬ even if only from a financia which they will have to make from the board," according to strated that a female could standpoint. decisions." "We would have to set Transportation the report. beat a male running for office. a Hekhuis said that the activ-, Ellsworth moved on to the The female seat is to insure limit, though," he said. "I' ity commission recommenda¬ sections on the members-at- the inclusion of a female on would be ridiculous for some tion had merit and would "re-, the board. After all, there's one who takes only four credit; daily Call 651-5351 large and the board chairman. organize the cabinet in order; Experienced persons disregarded some things that females are a term to be able to vote ii to provide a more coordinated*, He realizes that the commit¬ just better able to take care of, ASMSU elections." way of going about providing; Wanted tee recommended the chair¬ like women's hours. " Backs communication increas< services. It would relieve the BLOOD DONORS needed $7 50 for man's election from among on¬ Ellsworth does, however, Ellsworth is strongly in favoi board from some responsibility all posiUve. A negative, B negative, ly the newly-elected members- think it a good idea to increase of the increased emphasis or so that they could concentrate Print Ad Here: and AB negative, $10.00. O negative, . at-large to bring about the elec¬ the number of members-at- communications evident in th« on policy." $12 00 MICHIGAN COMMUNITY Blue Ribbon Report. He doe: BLOOD CENTER, 507* East Grand tion of a chairman "more re¬ large from six to eight, but does He went on to say that the- River. East Lansing, above the new sponsive to the electors," but not think the "area of interest think, however, that the pub commission could offer a "bet¬ Campus Book Store Hours: # a m - wants to know "what about the designation" idea need be re¬ lie relations function could b< ter way of defining the roles of 3:30 p.m. Monday, Tuesday, and Fri¬ people incorporated within the secre those involved in the total AS¬ day; Wednesday and Thursday, 12 on the previous session's quired. Peanuts Personals must be placed in person. p.m. -•:30p.m., SS7-7183 C board who know the ropes and "It's a good thing to put tary's office since "tyie offict MSU organization. If one group are ineligible to run." members-at-large in charge of of secretary lends itself to pub (the board) does everything, it's Ellsworth said that the chair¬ certain areas," Ellsworth said, lie relations." He ii "slightlj self-defeating. The plan is de-. 10 Words or Less: man's first responsibility is to "but it shouldn't be mandatory; inclined" toward making th< signed to breathe more life in-; Over 10 Words Add: MANY HAPPY USERS remember the the board; his responsibility to the chairman should be given public relations position a sal to the cabinet area." name "Want Ads" because they know the student body is indirect, some discretion. ariedone. Hekhuis answered the board's they work. Try one and you'll see! while that of the elected board "They did suggest some good Ellsworth disagrees with th« fears by saying that "there is Mail to: members is direct. If a change areas, though," he said. committee's >ecommendatioi always the risk of creating Michigan State News 346 Student Services Bldg. WANTED - GRADUATE student to in the procedure of electing a Approves status change for discontinuation of the pres something unmanagable," but rtare older home in Lansir* 351 chairman is needed, Ellsworth Ellsworth applaudes the idea ent rewards system. "It shoulc that the Blue Ribbon Commit¬ , MSU East Lansing, Mich. SOB 3-8/8 be more, not less," he said. Ht thinks that the implementing of giving the vice chairman and tee had done a good job. ■ Thursday, August 8, 1968 10 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan —. Korean vcwx „xr> „ ,_k r seamen 'heinr? ii) marooned ftorf'a while theiY were fuH"rf trTi T&x*# firm, * < 'halvesion m< .tittup inc anu Ar*.tW*H •F"'-*-. for CisbicrtDn'. A/ nip- 5' near Conditions were ~ "worst Manhattan Islanders and an exterminating "-vr /Vj i "~CC sX""xA *o take care Meanwhile, neth an JJam^brqypht imf 'V attorney. Ken¬ cOUrt.^Alon HJiHorsjfr'eir f have been easitir fp>r the anyone lu'i rv;—, ..... were yjg . remains marooned on a ' ■<+ V' — -a./- , v...'* • " • ' i . . * . ■* , • % • m v %'Ate o( rruroortM *on a "\tJnety tM?' W " *" known the Galveston Mer When they were discovered He told of roaches moving in vision set and games From The court orneral''\ti* Then they could have foraged sat idle Wednesday aboard their' .gry. frightened .ind lonely as recently by a Seaman's Church solW brown sheets across the other donors came bed linens, the vessel to pay off the com¬ Island has taken them chant for food and water anchored freighter." the Indo¬ Staten Institute official. Peter Van galley and storerooms, said rice, cabbage, cigarettes, sum pany's debts nesian Star, ^playing checkers to her ample bosom and small One of the sailors said they But Nam said the ship can But for six months they have the food was nearly gone and mer clothing and laundry ser¬ boats bring food, fresh water, were on board three months Wygerden, he said he found not be sold until the cargo is been marooned within sight of and worrying as they have they had received no wages the sailors had no soap and vice. done since February about medicine and amusements for before they received any pay The National Maritime Union removed. the skyline of the richest island since April 30, the $1.25 per little water. and then got only 70 per cent in the world-Manhattan-and what is happening to .their the wayfarers The story brought immedi¬ offered medical services, and Through all this, the ship¬ The 26 sailors and their of the money owned them man per day allowance for owners remained silent. And ate response. Two turkeys, took the men ashore for visits Korean captian. Hong Jo Yoon. When they arrived in New supplies had been paid only their New York lawyer says vegetables, canned goods and to the union's recreational fa¬ York last February, with an sporadically to the captain and began their global trip in the the cupboard was bare. cash were contributed by Staten cilities. he can not comment now They 800-ton cargo of mahogany and Kremlin claims sprftig of 1967 in Korea Prague loyalty The Kremlin leadership ap¬ oslovakia. It did not mention parently wants to show the Rus¬ the acknowledgement that sians it handled the confron¬ each Communist party has the tation with Czechoslovakia suc¬ right to "consider national char¬ acteristics and conditions" in cessfully and is assured of con¬ tinued loyalty to Soviet-style running its own country. communism. The communique was in line That seems to be the pur¬ with earlier press comment in w Q...... Tk« Riokt To Limit Prices And Coupon* Good Moscow on the showdown at pose of a communique, front¬ Bratislava. paged in the Moscow press Wednesday, which proclaimed This appears to have a double satisfaction that the six-nation purpose: PATPICK CUDAHAY meeting in Bratislava Satur¬ -To counter possible charges that the Kremlin bungled by day produced a pledge of "ir¬ reconcilable struggle against playing up the crisis with Canned Picnics bourgeois ideology and against Czechoslovakia, then backing 3-LB all anti-socialist forces." down and accepting the liberal¬ SIZE I This document, issued by the ization movement. Soviet Communist party Polit¬ -To remind Prague the So¬ viet Union takes a dim view, of USDA CHOICE TENDER AY buro. ignored concessions to the reformist leadership of Czech- the freedom of speech and press which last month produced such Rib Steaks things as attacks on the War¬ Vofers saw Pact and accusations of Kremlin interference in Czech¬ 99c oslovak politics. BONELESS The Presidium of the Czech¬ approve oslovak Communist party ob¬ viously got the message. It ap¬ Leg 0 Park pealed to Czechoslovak news¬ reforms men in a communique issued in Prague Wednesday to show re¬ LB 89< straint in commenting on na¬ DETROIT (UPI) -- Michi¬ tional and international affairs, VALUABLE COUPON gan voters approved the first amendments to the state's five "especially in the field of for¬ eign policy." Rib Roast year-old constitution Tuesday. The three amendments Although some reports from COUNTRY OVEN create a commission^) inves¬ abroad interpreted Bratislava POTATO CHIPS as complete Soviet acceptance tigate allegations of wrong¬ Rnftm At Kroger Thnt SUN., AUG. 11, 1968. of the Czechoslovak liberaliza¬ Limit One Por Ci doing by judges; establish a tion movement, the indications commission to set the salaries INSTANT-START here have been that it fell short of the lieutenant governor, governor, legislators and su¬ of that. The Politburo communique, PLEASE ORDER ME THE FOLLOWING Mi" VOLUMES A Orange Drink preme court justices, and re¬ read out on television and radio ■ □ VOL «4 □ VOL til □ VOL #1* □ VOL <21 ■ r 4-oz $4 store to the governor the auth¬ !□ VOL #2 □ VOL «7 □ VOL *12 □ VOL #17 □ VOL #22 | J WT PKGS I ority to fill judicial vacancies. Tuesday night in advance of publication, appeared to be fur¬ ■ □ VOL >1 □ VOL #( □ VOL >1} □ VOL (II □ VOL *23 ■ Although hundreds of amend¬ ments have been proposed by ther confirmation that Moscow {□ VOL #4 □ VOL •* □ VOL #14 □ VOL #1* □ VOL #24 J 7