Page Six THE MICHIGAN GAILY Tuesday, November 12, k968 p 2 EARN YOUR MASTER'S DEGREE OR PhD WHILE YOU WORK High Court reviews free speech' cases AT MOTOROLA IN PHOENIX Motorola offers the student at the BS or MS level an op- portunity to advance his career and education concurrently. Work and achieve a Master's or PhD Degree in an environ- ment of constant challenge and tremendous growth. THE ENGINEERING TRAINING PROGRAM Open to BS or MS graduates in Electrical Engineering, Chemical Engineering or Physics with a B average or better. While pursuing ar. MS or PhD degree at Arizona State Uni- versity each trainee is placed in a rotational program cov- ering four engineering activities at Motorola. THE MARKETING TRAINING PROGRAM Open to BS graduates in Electrical-Engineering or Physics with a B-average or better. Marketing trainees may work toward an MBA or an MS or PhD degree. Rotational assign- mernts are in the marketing area. JERRY FULTON and RAY HUBBELL will be recruiting on NOVEMBER 19, 1968 By The Associated Press WASHINGTON -- Two appeals testing the limits of free speech will confront the Supreme Court when it returns today from a two- week recess. One concerns two New Yorki groups protesting the war in Viet- nam and the other is based on the right to diskribute religious literature. Together, the cases question whether rights granted the Con- stitution should be interpreted by local authorities to spare cit- izens from so-called nuisances. Except for this comnon theme, however, their appeals are diverse. BUS TERMINAL The Vietnam protestk groups, Veterans and Reservists to End the War in Vietnam and the Fifth Avenue Vietnam Peace Parade Commitee, decided in the fall of 1966 to take their arguments into the Port Authority bus terminal' on Manhattan's West Side. They handed out literature to businessmen and many service- men and then attempted to set up tables to hand out anti-war leaf- lets. The terminal police threat- ened arrest if they did not leave. A ruling last March by the U.S. Circuit Court in New York City said the terminal building is an appropriate place to express views on provocative and controversial subjects precisely because it is heavily used by the public. TheI appeal was asked by the Port Authority. The appeal of the Rev. Vernon C. Lyons, a Baptist minister in Chicago, was ruled the opposite way in lower courts. PARKING LOT Rev. Lyons decided totake his ; wife and four, of his chilren' to a large parking lot to place under the windshield of parked cars small paper pamphlets containing the biblical book "the Acts of the . ~ Apostles." Aftera while they were stopped and told there would be no ob- PARAGON RAPID COPY CENTER' 311 E. L BE RTY COPIES WHILE YOU WAIT OFFSET COPIES' AS LOW AS 6/1Oc Per Copy DROP IN OR CALL 662-3748, jection if they stood at the lot's entrance and exit to distribute the tracts to motorists-but that they could not remain on the lot iself. The minister refused to obey, was arrested, convicted of vio- lating a littering regulation and fined $25. Mr. Lyons asserted the First Amcndment's guarantees of free- doin of, speech and freedom of t religion but lost in Illinois state courts. LITTER Justice Robert C. Underwood, speaking for the State Supreme Court last March, said the min- ister had to give way in the in- terest of keeping the parking lot clean and not bothring the mo- torists. Not only were pamphlets swept up by the wind and left all over the, lot, Underwood said, but they were "a source of annoyance to numerous car owners." Reinstate 'Purdue editor. Special To The Daily LAFAYETTE, Ind. - William Smoot II was reinstated yesterday as editor of the Purdue Univer- sity student newspaper - the Ex- ponent - pending a two-week re- view of the newspaper's operations by a student-faculty committee. The action was taken at a meet- ing between the senior editors of the paper and Purdue President Frederick Hovde and Executive Vice 'President Edward Mallett. Smoot was fired Friday by Mallett because of the Exponent's publication of elleged obscenities. The staff of the Exponent rejected the firing, claining that they were the legal publishers of the paper. Hovde and Mallett originally proposed that Smoot be suspended from his post during the commit- tee review. The editor was reirn- stated after the senior editors unanimously rejected the propos- al. A number of student groups had threatened a boycott of classes for today if Smoot were not rein- stated. Direct Placement at all Degree Levels for... a Electrical Engineers a Organic & Physical Chemists a Physicists a Chemical Engineers a Metallurgists in Research and Development, Quality Control, Marketing, andProduction. f you are unavailable for an interview at this - time write directly to:,Director of College Relations, Motorola Inc., Semiconductor Products Division, 5005 East Mcpowell, Phoenix, Arizona 85008.; MOT'OROLA INo. MSemlconductor Proeducts Oivisirn I EQUA --I m *f-AN E HOPE I i _ _ i I I .1: D0 G FOR YOU? I I :: > , }r:;> rw: ...# ,_: .;:;. y} .ti .li : Yii'.? ti: : t{':{j::i;j ; t "4F ( " kri ,I B LAST SCHOOL YEAR ,: ..# ,.;: Y } ! ~ t dy K Aw LA .. ... t{::: ~.." : : ...., }}s <'- .- '4 j :t .4'* ft S° "0 }? t { # fr } Qft Spent $533.15 for Exec. Board, ieals and for coffee & doughnuts v I I Spent $1186 for salaries including $250 to Mike Koeneke and $350 to Bob Neff for summer room and board Spent $1729.94 to attend various political conferences Lost $1119 on its imaginative Vist Program SO FAR THIS YEAR Appropriated $100 to Columbia "U" strike committee Toyedwith $1500 for bail fund money K iY. . ..) r" 3 r:. F r.}:. - i r # I.C.- ' '8 y.... m ¢' ,l : f t,. :' t '.' y Allocated funds for Sharon Lowen to attend the Conference on Revolutionary Politics in New York City Allocated funds in support of the SDS-inspired student strike Gave SGC, Inc., a separate private corporation, $100 get into the bra slip and down to a bare minimum I o'underdressing. . . a once-over-lightly combination of bra and slip in one smooth, sleek nylon tricot garment. A. Hotlywood Vassarette lace-iced chemise length, elastic back. Lemon white or blue. Sizes 32 to 36, B and C. 8.00 B. Vanity Fair white bra slip with fiberfill underwire cup. 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