Paae Three Friday, July 25,1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY FrdyJl 2,169TEMIHGN AL fP%-AIj l IT II NATIONAL. GENERAL COR~PORATION N OW FOX EASTERN TH-ATRS SHOWING FOR VILLGE 375 No. MAPLE RD."769130O Feature Times 1:45-4:15- 6:45-9:15 Thursday Only. 4 :15-6 :45-9 :15 H ANDS-OFF HOMECOMING: Apollo astronauts Po lice search for missing EMU coed HILARITY SHIFTS INTO HIGH GEAR } KNx Ef/A rAs os e .R IECNNI(1)/ PANAES0N/ A AM ~i PICTURE go into qt -1*Arain f7YlLgh Program Information 662-6264 SHOWS AT: Sunday-Thursday 1:15-3:45-6:15-8:50 Friday & Saturday 12:30-1 :35-4:45 6:55-9 :05 HELD OVER 3RD BIG WEEK! The strangest trio ever to track a killer. hwrSJOHN WAYNEH ENPRODUCTION DARBY D BTechnicolor® A Paramount Picture G (Continued from Page 1) touchdown zone, 950 miles south- west of Hawaii. Three-to-six-foot waves turned the spaceship upside down after it landed. The astronauts righted it in 11 minutes by inflating flota- tion bags. Planes and helicopters were overhead in minutes and dropped frogmen into the water. "Our condition is all three ex- cellent. Take your time," Collins told the swimmers. Dark, hazy skies prevented Nix- on and others on the ship from seeing the splashdown. Only a faint flash of light in the south- ern sky as dawn broke heralded the arrival. As the carrier steamed toward the bobbing spaceship, one of the frogmen sprayed the hatch area with an iodized disinfectant to kill possible germs. Armstrong, Aldrin and Collins looked like strangers from another world as they stepped off the hel- icopter and walked the 12 stps to the quarantine trailer. They waved to acknowledge the cheers and applause of the NASA and Navy personnel on board. In mission control center in Houston, scores of persons broke out small American flags. On the display board were flashed Presi- dent John F. Kennedy's words of May 25, 1961, when he pledged this country to land men on the I I ,' 3 j . tat1 atl I '(Continued from Page 1 James Dwyer, 24, her boyfriend' seen at about noon Wednesday in of 14 months, said she was "a her dormitory and was reported cautious, smart girl." He added moon in this decade and return msiga bu 1pm that she never hitchhiked around them safely to earth, Michigan State Police have been the EMU campus. And while it was all happening, called in, A dorm official said Beineman the Apollo 12 astronauts received Friends of the missing coed said had never missed curfew before their flying orders yesterday: ; she was going downtown to buy nor violated any of the other dor- Blast off Nov. 14 for the moon's a wig. When she missed a 7 p.m. mitory rules. Ocean of Storms. class and the 11 p.m. curfew for EMU campus police, the Wash- Lt. Gen. Samuel Phillips, Apollo freshman girls living in Downing tenaw County Sheriff's Depart- signed the instructions shortly e- Residence Hall, roommates re- ment, and State Police spent yes- sgethintutossotyb-ported her missing.j terday trying to find her, but the fore the Apollo 11 astronauts end- Her family and her boyfriend officers refused to comment about ed man's first visit to the moon described her as the kind of girl the search. with splashdown in the Pacific1 Ocean shwho would not suddenly drop out Peter Hurkos, a psychic who all-Navy crew will fly Apollo of sight without letting them came to Ann Arbor earlier this 12: Cmdrs. Charles Conrad and kow. week to help solve a series of Richard Gordon and Lt. Cmdr. murders of young women in the Alan L. Bean. Conrad and Bean area tried to help in the search are to land on the moon while for Beineman. However, when Gordon orbits overhead. police brought a picture of her The astronauts late last night - for his study, Hurkos said he could were found to have no apparent not pick up any "vibrations." ailment except that one hasna Beineman has blue eyes, weighs minor inflammation in the ear, a about 100 pounds and is five feet, space agency physician said yes- two inches tall. When last seen, terday. she was wearing blue jeans with Dr. Clarence Jernigan, Houston, the monogram KSB sewn on a said there is "no indication what- back pocket, a blue and white soever at this point" that any of striped turtleneck sweater, a sil- the three brought any form of ver ring and no shoes. contamination back with them Three of the seven girls recently' from the moon. slain in the Ann Arbor-Ypsilanti The examination was made by area disappeared within blocks of Carpentier, the physician who has the area where the missing coed been quarantined with the astro- was last seen. nauts in a trailer-like facility Her father, Roland Beineman, aboard the recovery ship. was reported on his way from Dr. Jernigan said he had for- Grand Rapids to Ypsilanti last gotten which one of the three night to confer with police. The had the ear inflammation but it girl's mother and her sister re- was minor. Karen Beinenman mained at home. ::J.- - - - -- - --:::::::--" ..L:. gym, - ' - w :. STARTING TODAY TWICE DAILY Today 1:30 and 8:00 P.M. BEST PICTUR OF THE YEAR! t WINNER!. ACADEMY BEST AWARDS! SCORING FOR A MSICALW BEST . . OR E AM.P.A.S. ...".' DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN r~nk....r?..L.. {}.......{... "......{ .. J...4.nL.aJA ........r ................... I BEST OWIN! BEST DAILY OFFICIAL, BULLETIN Official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan. )Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN, f oremto Room 3528 L.S.A. Bldg., before 2 p.m. of the day preceding publi- cation and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday. General Notices may be published a maxi- mum of two times on request; Day Calendar items appear once only. Student organization notices a r e not accepted for publication. For more information, phone 764-9270. Day Calendar FRIDAY, JULY 25 University Players - Michigan Rep-1 ertory 69 - Hogan's Goat by William Alfred: Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, 8:00 p.m. Degree Recital. - Peter DeWitt, or- gan: Hill Auditorium, 8:00 p.m. Degree Recital - William Summer- ville, piano: School of Music Recital Hall, 8:00 P.m. Astronomy Department V i s i t o r s' Nights. Friday, July 25, 8:00 p.m., Aud B, Angell Hall. Richard L. Sears will speak on "Old and Young Stars:" After' the lecture, the movie "Apollo 10 - To Sort Out The Unknowns" and pho- tographs of an Apollo flight will be shown. Also, the Student Observatory on the fifth floor of Angell Hall will be open for inspection and for telescopic observations of the moon and Mars. Children welcomed, but must be ac- comnpanied by adults. -~General Notices -C-OREOGRAPHY! RO V MOODtY OLKRREED FMR ZVCMBJE ;3F7t s i s a8rr e * R~W~.D vcstLDNftBART t g] Suggested for GENERAL sudnces. Original soundtrack album available on Colgems Records SUNDAY EVENINGS AT 7:30 Fri., Sat. & Holiday Eves...$2.50 All Other Evenings at 8 P.M. Sun. thru Thurs. Nights ...... $2.00 Matinees Every Day at 1:30 Holiday & Sunday Mats.......$2.00 Children With Parents $1 any, time ALL OTHER MATINEES ...... $1.75 I - HILLEL I L L E L presents ., A FOLKSING with * A real folksinger " Genuine chips " Relevant conversation Regents' Meeting: September 19. Communications for consideration at this meeting must be in the President's hands no later than September 4. Doctoral Exams Nott Gowri Sankar, Mechanical En- gineering, Dissertation: "Unload Emis- sion Behavior of Materials and its Re- lation to the Bauschinger Effect," on Bring Your Guitars I SUNDAY AT 7:30 f 1429 Hill St.-663-4129 ----- ------ THOMPSON S PIZZA, ,I 761-0001 $1.00 OFF - i One a large one item (or more) pizza. One coupon per pizza. s Pick Up Only 211 E. Ann St.-Next to the Armory i Expires Aug. 1 f -- -- - -- - --- emu summer theater Thursday ( Hon aFriday roof 8:00p.m. GENERAL ADMISSION: $1.75 , FOR RESERVATIONS: 482-3453 Box Office Open: Week days 12:45-4:30 p.m. AIR-CONDITIONED DANIEL L. QUIRK AUDITORIUM' Thursday, July 24 at 10:00 a.m. in 2307 East Engineering, Chairman: D. K. Fel- beck. Philip Gardiner Van Every, Educa- tion, Dissertation: "Socioeconomic Sta-' tus Differences in the Social Respon- siveness of Trainable Mentally Retard- ed Adolescents," on Thursday, July 24 at 7:00 p.m. in 2nd Floor, C.C.B. Build- ing, Co-Chairmen: D. B. Ryckman and Percy Bates. Richard Erwin Packard, Physics, Dis- sertation; "Detection of Single Quan- tized Vortex Lines in Rotating Liquid Helium," on Friday, July 25 at 10:00 a.m. in 618 Physics-Astronomy Building, Chairman: T. M. Sanders. Larry Bruce Sawers, Economics, Dis- sertation: "The Labor Force Participa- tion of the Urban Poor," on Friday, Ju- ly 25 at 10:00 a~m. in. Room 1, Eco- nomics Building, Chairman: D. R. Fus- feld. Gordon. Leni Swartzman, Industrial Engineering, Dissertation: "The Statis- tical Analysis of the Arrival Process of Three Major T y p e s of Hospital Pa- tients," on Friday, July 25 at 2:00 p.m. in 243 West Engineering, Chairman: R. L. Disney. Placement Service .GENERAL DIVISION 3200 S.A.B. Current position openings received by General Division, call 764-7460 for fur- ther information.; State of Maine - Field Investigator, courses in psych, personnel or bus. ad, exper in legal investigation of social work. Indian Dev. Spec, exper in social casework, G & C. Department of Medicine and Surgery, Veterans Administration, positions na- tionwide in all medical areas,. psych,' engrg, acctg, rehabilitation, recreation, soc. wk. The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning. Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $9 by carrier, $10 by mail. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $2.50 by carrier, $3.00 by mail. the news today />y The Associa/ed Press and College Press Sereie NLF AND NORTH VIETNAMESE negotiators in Paris re- jected South Vietnamese President Thieu's proposal of Commun- ist participation in national elections. North Vietnam's delegate Xuan Thuy said that the South Viet- namese right of self-determination could not be exercised in elections organized by the Thieu regime and in the presence of American"oc- cupation troops." Thuy also charged the U.S. with aggression against Laos, claims ing that 12,000 American troops were stationed there, after U.S. am- bassador Henry Cabot Lodge declared that North Vietnamese troops are being maintained in Laos and Cambodia. * * * DESPITE A LULL in war action, the number of Americans killed last week in Vietnam rose to 182, a 23 per cent increase over the previous week. Although the number is below this year's weekly average of 235 killed, it is the highest since the lull set in. EGYPT AND ISRAEL each claimed to have downed seven of the other's jetfighters in day-long fighting over the Suez Canal, The conflict was marked by Egyptian President Gamal. Abdel Nasser's report to a special session of the Arab Socialist Union Con- gress that 40 Egyptian planes had raided Israeli positions. Nasser, also reiterated his pledge that "Egypt will fight to libi. erate the occupied lands" held by Israel since the June 1967 war. INCREASED FEDERAL SPENDING for education and hos- pital construction was approved by the House Appropriations Committee wiich voted to add a net $155.8 million to President Nixon's budge request. Nixon faulted Congress on Tuesday for approving $1 billion to date in expenditures over those he has requested, after the committee approved $58 million in other additions. The Health, Education, and Welfare appropriation request ap- proved by the committee includes $7 billion for welfare and medical payments, up by $1 billion from last year. The committee added riders to its approved funding bill designed to clamp down on student "rioters" and to prevent school authorities from requiring busing of students to overcome segregation. SEN. EUGENE McCARTHY announced that he will not run for a third term next year, opening the way for fellow Minnesota Democrat Hubert Humphrey to seek the party's senatorial nomi- nation. Sources close to Humphrey reported that there is no question that the former senator and vice ,preident will run for the office in 170. It is also speculated that Humphrey will use a successful senatorial campaign as a base from which to bid for a second Democratic presi- dential nomination in 1970. * * * FOREIGN MINISTERS of member nations of the OAS will meet in Washington Saturday to 'discuss sanctions against El Salvador if Salvadoran troops are not withdrawn from Honduran territory. Although no resumption of fighting was reported at the end of an OAS sponsored ceasefire, Salvadoran officials have said their troops will not be withdrawn from Honduras unless that country guarantees the safety of Salvadorans living there. * '* * SENATE DEMOCRATS offered to extend the income surtax five months while work proceeds on tax reform, but Republican leaders rejected the compromise. The offer was made by the Senate Democratic Policy Committee, which has insisted that the surcharge extension be approved only if accompanied by reform of income tax laws. But Treasury Secretary David Kennedy and Senate Republican leader Everett Dirksen contended that a short extension "vilfl not do the job" of discouraging inflation. Leaders of both parties in the House, which has already accepted a full year extension of the surcharge, also spoke unfavorably of the new proposal. SEN. EDWARD KENNEDY faces arraignment today on a charge of leaving the scene of his auto accident in which a woman was killed. A spokesman for the Massachusetts senator announced that he has waived a show-cause hearing which was to have been held Monday. The announcement was made after a day of conferences between Kennedy and political advisers, including World Bank President Robert McNamara and speechwriters Richard Goodwin and Theodore Sorensen. A CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT providing for direct popular- election of the president was sent to the House for ex- tended debate by the Rules Committee. The proposal calls for a run-off election in case no candidate receives 40 per cent of the popular vote. * * * ABM OPPONENTS in the Senate may seek a second secret session to present newly received classified data which they beleve casts doubt on the workability of the Safeguard anti-ballistiv missile. Meanwhile, Sen. Charles Percy is preparing an amendment to the proposal that Safeguard research be continued without deployment, an amendment which would approve production of vital components which Safeguard would need if a future decision was made to deploy the system. The new developments are expected to delay voting past next , week. "LET IT SUFFICE TO SAY THAT ILJS A MASTERPIECE."Leoy CINEMA SCORPIO! FRITZ LANG'S "1000 EYES OF DR. MASUSE" and "THE MIDNIGHT OF FEAR" Epic inthe calmness with which they recount fantastic horror? FRI., July 25 8 and 10 p.m. AUD. A 75c I FRIDAY ONLY IR~tH(Y1)OUSB PRESENTS FLOW MuSIC! 9 P.M. FRIDAY ONE DOLLAR -11000 "THE MOST INTERESTING FILM SO FAR THIS YEAR. AUGUST 1-2-3 Fuller Rd. Flatlands Ann Arbor, Michigan Friday Eve.-Aug. 1-6:30 P.M. Jimmy "Fast Fingers" Dawkins M J.B. Hutto and His Hawks 0 B.B. King * Fred McDowell 0 "St. Louis" Jimmy Ggden 4 Junior Wells Saturday Workshop-12:00 Noon Workshops and Lectures Saturday Eve.-Aug. 2-6:00 P.M. Luther Allison * Clifton Chenier " Sleepy John Estes 0 Otis Rush 0 Roosevelt Sykes Muddy Wot- ers@ Howlin' Wolf WINNER "BEST FILM" CANNES "IF YOU'RE YOUNG, YOU'LL REALLY DIG -COfOpouTAN I.V wil nor e ardmitte