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September 05, 1970 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1970-09-05

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

THE MICHIGAN DAILN "

Saturday, September 5, 1970

THE MICHIGAN DAIL~ Saturday, September 5, 1970

I
.. I R.

_ 4

Antiwar groups r
as Ky plans speer
WASHINGTON (R) - Antiwar organizers rea
day in stunned disbelief to the announcement th
ident Nguyen Cao Ky of South Vietnam plans1
Vietnam victory rally in Washington Oct. 3.
"Wow!," said theology student David Hawk
organize last October's nationwide Vietnam mor
that right? Wow! That's really something."
Hawk gathered his thoughts and said, "My
sion is that we should let it happen. I think that
speak to the American people as to what the
government we are supporting in South Vietnam
The news came as a thunderbolt to activists m
floundering in attempts to stage a mass demonst
nation's capital this fall.:
"Oh, you're kidding," said Ron n'

Young, one of the leaders of the
coalition that forged last Novem-
ber's massive antiwar demonstra-
tions in Washington and S a n
Francisco. "That's fantastic.
That's interesting food for
thought."
Young said the development is
certain to be discussed Sept. 11
when activists gather in Mil-
waukee for a strategy conference.
Ky's office in Saigon announced
Thursday that the vice president
had accepted an invitation ex-
tended by fundamentalist radio
preacher Dr. Carl McIntire to ad-
dress a rally sponsored by Mc-
Intire's "March for Victory As-
sociation."
Rally sponsors say they hope
500,000 persons will gather.
Young shared Hawk's caution as
to the wisdom of any counterde-
monstration. "For Ky to asso-
ciate himself with McIntire says
not at all for Ky," Young said. "If
Ky came at the invitation of the
government that would be another
thing." The State Department
said the forthcoming Ky trip to
Washington will not be an of-
ficial visit.
A movement personality in Chi-
cago said Ky's visit may well be
ignored but he pointed out that
hundreds of demonstrators as-
sembled in Washington - with-
out any apparent movement plan-
ning or sponsorship - in reaction
to Honor America Day last July
Fourth.
"If the Honor America D a y
with some one as relatively moder-
ate as, Billy Graham, if people
came out for that . . . Ky and
McIntire. That's bizarre. What a
double dip."
Hawk noted that the Ky visit
will coincide with the release of
thousands of college students for
work in behalf of peace candidates
running for Congress this fall. Not
all, he said, would be absorbed in
campaign organization. Some
might be attracted to Washington.

ILLEGAL RESIDUE?
Federal drug unit

Army
case o
protes
RICHMOND,' Va.
eral appeals court:
right of the Army
Vietnam war prote:
military bases and
tion of antiwar pet
sentation to Congr
The 4th U. S. C
Appeals took the
holding the U.S.
of Eastern North C
had rejected an ar
decision of the con
eral of Ft. Jackson,I
In the trial cou
and the commandin
summary judgment
validity of regulati
meetings without
sion and the print
bution of unautho
pamphlets.
The trial court
man wasn't shorn o
der the First Ame:
noted that the, r
speech "is not abs
just as in the case
ians, a serviceman
be legally circums
character of hisx
ment or the circur
which he seeks t
right."
The appeals cour
the trial judge for
ancing "the comp
founded on the Fir
and the constituti
power for the go
regulation of the n
The appeal was s
sel for Stephen Da
well and eight othe
at Ft. Jackson.

rues on 5

(Continued from Page 1)
in rooms where infants and the
elderly were confined.
The USDA did order Shell to
re-label its products to protect
small children and infants. Shell
promised the committee that it
would place a warning on the strip
that it should not be used in areas
where food was exposed.
In September of 1969 the USDA
reneged, saying it would talie no
action until the FDA had decided
whether DDVP contamination of
food was safe. The Fountain com-
mittee was assured that the FDA
would make a decision within 90
days.
Twelve months later, one can
go into many restaurants and even
private homes anywhere in the
United States and see a No-Pest
Strip dangling from 'the ceiling
while food is being prepared.
The decision whether the No-
Pest Strip was safe. when used
around food, which was expected
in three months, has been lan-
guishing in administrative limbo
for 12 months.
Moreover, a massive advertising
campaign by Shell has made the
No-Pest Strip the most heavily
promoted pesticide in consumer
history.
Now that the FDA has acted,
the next step is for the USDA to
cancel the registration of the No-
Pest Strip for use in food areas.
Even if the USDA acts swiftly,
however, it may be many months
and even years before one can
buy a meal in a restaurant with
assurance that it has not been
flavored with DDVP residues.
Doubts about the objectivity of
the experimental data establishing
the safety of the No-Pest Strip
arose last fall when the Justice
Department began an inquiry into
conflict of interest charges in-
volving USDA personnel associ-
ated with Shell. .
DDVP, the insecticide in the
no-pest. strip, was 'discovered in
1955 by the Public Health Service
but Shell managed to obtain ex-
clusive patent rights.
Three federal consultants in-
volved in the regulatory problems
of the no-pest strip have been
associated with Shell.
John Leary, in his position as
head of the pesticide regulation
division's pharmocology section,
continually urged approval of the
product before leaving to join
Shell in 1966. Dr. Mitchell Zavon
and Dr. Roy Hansberry super-
vised testing of the No-Pest Strips
relied on by Shell to show that the
product produced no harmful res-
idues and was no danger to in-
fants and elderly people who in-
haled its vapors.
During this period, Zavon was a
paid consultant to the USDA as
well as to Shell. Hansberry was a
IAUT I c~rru rac

hell strip,
member of a USDA committee on
criteria for registration of pesti-
cides while employed as a Shell
executive.
Another serious problem re-
mains to be resolved-the as yet
untested long te'm effects of
DDVP vapor inhalation. A pesti-
cide "which is inhaled and passes
into the body through the lungs
is far more dangerous than one
which is drunk or eaten. Poisons
which are eaten may be destroyed
or !not absorbed in the stomach
or detoxified in the liver. Poisons
which are inhaled go directly into
the bloodstream from the lungs.

eact
acted yester-1
at Vice Pres-
to address a
who helped
ratorium. "Isy
first impres-!
would really!
goals of theI
m really are."
who had been
ration in the
wins
ver
ters
()- A fed-
has upheld the'
to ban anti-
st meetings on
the dissemina-
titions for pre-
ess.
ircuit Court of
action in up-
District Court
arolina, which
ppeal from the
nmanding gen-
S.C.
rt, the Army
ig officer won a
upholding the
ons prohibiting
prior permis-
ing and distri-
rized flyers or
said a service-
f his rights Un-
ndment, but it
ight of f r e e
olute." It said
of some civil-
's right "may
cribed by the
public employ-
nstances under
o execute the
t complimented
r carefully bal-
eting interests
st Amendment
onal grants of
vernment and
military."
ought by coun-
,sh, Mance Se-
r enlisted men
00
eleven churches
coalition to
DL and WRO.
osed giving any
a coalition of
NAACP, Model
s well as BEDL
groups expand-
rch, occupying
ist Church at
until Thursday
)mmitted itself
for the "poor
d" of the coun-

)nths, although
gnize BEDL as
dminister the
that
look
rCuts
LA
BERS
ising
i;.
1ers,

The Daily Official Bulletin is an
official publication of the Univer-
sity of Michigan. Notices should beI
sent in TYPEWRITTEN f o r m to
Room 3528 L. S. A. Bldg., before
2 p.m., of the day preceding pub-
lication and by 2 p.m. Friday for
Saturday and Sunday. Items ap-
pear once only. Student organiza-
tion notices are not accepted for
publication. For more information,
phone 764-927T.
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 6
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 7
Day Calendar
Cinema Guild: Weekend directed by
Jean-Luc Godard: Architect. Aud. 7
and 9:05 p.m.
Placement Service
General Division
Ann Arbor area jobs listed, nationwide
on file at 3200 SAB.
ORGANIZATION
NOTICES
Free University Steering Committee
Meeting - first one - if you're inter-
ested, you're invited. 2nd fl. Michigan
Union (UAC Offices) Sunday, Sept. 6,
7:°00.
The Ageless Science of Yoga. In-
struction in the yoga exercises as
taught by qualified instructors.'Spon-
sored by the Selt-Realization Fellow-
ship. Call Linda after 6:00 p.m. at
761-9825.
Search Committee for a women's Or-
ganization Advocate in the Office of
Student Organizations forming Sun-
day 1:00, 3rd floor SAB. All interested
are wetcome.
Christian Science Organization fall
picnic, Sunday, Sept. 6th. Meet in
front of SAB at 4:00 p.m.x

-Associated Press
Tribute to Lombardi
Mourners pay their respects to former Coach Vince Lombardi
of the Washington Redskins. Lombardi, who died of cancer
Thursday morning, will be buried in New Jersey on Monday.
Earlier yesterday football commissioner Pete Rozelle visited the
funeral home.,

Marketing Manpower Development,
sales reps. for highly respected pro-
duct - service., direct sales exper., pre-
fer systems sales.
National Assessment of Educ. Pro-
gress, admin. asst. for analysis dept.,
prefer degree, 1-2 yrs. programming
exper.
State of Mich., civil, service, dead-
line for filing Sept. 21. Mortgage serv.-
analyst 12, 4 yrs exper. in acet., finance,
or loans. Economic analyst 10-14, bach-
elor'sdeg. plus 2-5 yrs, exper. Level
requires MA.
Southfield, asst. traffic engr., degree
in C.E. or cert. as Engr.-in-Training,
exper. desirable,
Further info. and booklets at career
planing, 3200 SAB, call 764-6338.
New Issues of Vocations for-Social
Change. and Sociocom are in: leads,
directories, and organizations working
toward non-standard, type jobs in soc.
sei., health, housing, manpower, educ.,
etc.
Opportunities Overseas booklet' of
AID announces Int'l. Dev. Intern
Frogs.
Mich. Educ. Assoc. student programs
intern, part-ti meto travel in S.E.
:Mich.

f---

I

mm"

DOWNTOWN
HONDA

M-M-m-m-m, yummie!
A giant hamburger of lb. U.S.
Govt. pure beef topped with let-
tuce, tomato, mavonnaise, onions,
pickles and ketchup .
*MILtIW EEOY SRViCE
West of Arborland

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DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN'
:,1. 2>"r,:}}:"?::: ,f r.X}:i;::i;;;:S "v r 2:rY,:,^q..:.rr;{. ".ra7:'Yi" ....,.,, p

4

"'OBSCENE,LEWD
LASCIVIOUS, FILTHY
OR DISGUSTING."
These are the words which Chief Assistant Prosecutor Casper H.,
Kast used to describe our books and magazines when he filed
suit against us.
SEE FOR YOURSELF
AT THE
FOURTH AVENUE ADULT NEWS
217 S. Fourth Ave.
Open daily and Saturday 10 A.M. 1 P.M., Sunday 2 P.M.
11 P.M. (Look for our' huge red-and-yellow blcklite paint-
ed sign .. don't be attracted to cheap imitators.)
We are Ann Arbor's largest erotic bookstore, featuring an
unspeakably complete line of paperback books, magazines,
newspapers, rcords, cards, still photos of local models, and
8mm color and black-and-white movies, plus a marvelous
selection of "novelties." Not to mention the individual movie
viewing machines in the back.
Note: the long-haired freak who manages this most excellent
bookstore Iias recently installed a stereo system, and will
eagerly assault ,your ears with all manner of raunchy de-
cadent music.
Peace ...

*1

44

Unitarian Church votes $5(
to two county welfare group

CB 100

1

CYCLES * PARIS - ACCESSORIES

310 E. Washington

Ann Arbor

(Continued from Page 1)
farther than anyone else, I don't
know what else to tell you. Give
us the money and let us prove it,"
said WRO members Mrs. K at e
Emerson at a meeting with the
board of trustees of the Unitarian
Church last night.
The groups made their original
demands last winter when the na-
tional program of the "Black
Manifesto" called for $500 mil-
lion in national reparations from
churches. The Manifesto set up
self-determination programs for
which the money would be used.
Although the BEDL is not tied
to the national program and is
working solely for programs in
Washtenaw County, the local
group "supports the goals s e t
forth in the national program,"
said Hank Bryan, vice president
of BEDL.
BEDL, according to its leaders,
is open to "anyone who is poor," ir-
regardless of race. Several white
members of WRO are /also on the
board of -directors of BEDL, and
WRO has authorized that funds'
collected from it be turned over
to BEDL.
"BEDL is incorporated and

WRO is not," Mrs. Emerson ex-
plained. "If an unincorporated
group accepts such funds, we
could be charged with extortion."
The chain of events leading up
to yesterday's injunction started
when BEDL and WRO members
took over the office of the First
Presbyterian Church on Aug. 10,
and demanded $50,000 immediate-
ly and a commitment of another
$50,000 annually from the church.
Negotiations with that church
broke off Aug. 21 as a temporary
injunction was granted against
Charles Thomas of BEDL and
Mrs. Sandra Gerard of WRO. The
injunction also included t h e i r
"agents, representatives, em-
ployees and servants."
It was the threat that this in-
junction would be enforced that
caused the demonstrators to leave
the Presbyterian Church this
morning, according to Bryan.
On Aug. 25, the groups held a
brief sit-in at St. Francis of
Assisi Catholic Church, but the
sit-in ended abruptly as Thomas,
Mrs. Emerson, and two others
were arrested on trespassing
charges. They are now out on
bond.

Early this week, e
formed an ad hoc
negotiate with BED
However, they prop
available funds to
such groups as N
Cities, and OEO, as
and WRO.
On Tuesday, the.
ed to another chu
the First Method:
State and Huront
morning.
That church co
to raising $25,000
and disenfranchise
ty within three mo
they failed to reco
the agent to ad
money.

M

WORSHIP

Haircuts
don't I
like hai
TRY US-
DASCO
UM BAR

.4x' ? , d .«r..:.. . f.:.:.: .:. . ... . .._.. ..... .. .... . . : i +"sg ;;f.: . ;;;y tit;
' , .
Advertising Care
The University of Michigan only offers classroom exposu
(i.e. theory and prerequisites).
en
offers you EXPERIENCE in selling and servicing lo

FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH'
On the Campus-
Corner State and William Sts.
Terr N. Smith, Minister
Ronald C. Phillips, Assistant
10:09 a.m.-"The Carpenter and You"
FIRST UNITED METHODIST
CHURCH AND WESLEY
FOUNDATION
State at Huron and Washington
Church-662-4536
Wesley-668-6881
Dr. Hoover Rupert, Minister
Bartlett Beavin, Campus Minister
R. Edward McCracken, Campus Minister
9:30 and 11:00 a.m.-Sermon by Dr. Harrell
F. Beck, professor of Old Testament at the
Boston University School of Theology
"A Tale of Two Cities"
Broadcast WNRS 1290 AM - WNRZ 103 FM,
11:00 a.m. to 12:00 noon
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
1432 Washtenaw Ave.
Ministers:
Robert E. Sanders
John R. Waser
Donald A. Drew
Worship at 9:00 and 10:30 a.m.
Preaching: Dr. Drew

UNITY CENTER OF
PRACTICAL CHRISTIANITY
310 S. State
663-4314
Mrs. Eleonore Kraft, Minister
Sunday Service-11:00 a.m.
Study Class-Mrs. Kraft-7:30 p.m. Tuesday.
Prayer and Counseling-10:00 a.m. Wednes-
day.
Center Is Open-Monday, Wednesday, Friday,
11-2; Tuesday, 3-6 p.m.
CANTERBUR* HOUSE
330 Maynard
11:00 a.m.-Holy Communion, Hippolytus
Rite-bring bread, cheese, fruits, vege-
tables, or some such thing for you and
your neighbor.
4:00 p.m.-Open House (for a somewhat
more freaky dnd more informative an-
nouncement check the Sunday Daily).
PS.: You may have to look hard. We
can't afford a very big ad.
UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL
(The Lutheran Church--Missouri Synod)
1511 Wcshtenaw Ave.
Alfred T. Scheips, Pastor
Sunday at 9:30 and 11:00-Services, with
communion in 2nd service.
Sunday at 2:30: Meet at chapel to go to Con-
cordia campus for outing. Return to cha--
pel at 5:30 for picnic supper. ,New stu-
dents especially invited.
Wed. at 10:00 p.m.-Midweek Service
Friday at 7:0.0 p.m.: Choir rehearsal
Friday at 8:00 p.m.-Contemporary Worship
Rehearsal

FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST,
SCI ENTIST
1833 Washtenaw Ave.
SUNDAY
10:30 a.m.-Worship Services, Sunday School
(2-20 years).
WEDNESDAY
8:00 a m.-Testimony Meeting.
Infants room available Sunday and Wednesday
Public Reading Room, 306 E. Liberty St. -
Mon., 10-9; Tues.-Sat., 10-5. Closed Sun-
days and Holidays.
"The Bible Speaks to You, Radio WAAM,
1600, Sunday, 8:45 a.m.
For transportation call 662-0813.
LUTHERAN) STUDENT CHAPEL
A.L.C.-L.C.A.
Hill St. at S. Forest Ave.
Donald G. Zill, Pastor
SUNDAY
9:30 a.m.-Contemporary Liturgy (Holy
Communion)
11:00 a.m.-Matins
6:00 p.m.-Kick-off Banquet
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
AND
BAPTIST CAMPUS CENTER
SUNDAY, SEPT. 6, 1970
10:00 a.m.-Worship: "Getting It All Toy
gether"
11:00 a.m.-Student Fellowship
5:30 p.m.-Picnic for Students (on the
Church lawn)

4d

.er ?
re to advert

M l# Lf LE
Interest on damage deposit
for $72.50 per man:
(4-man apt.)

cal advertis

BETHLEHEM UNITED!
CHURCH OF CHRIST'
423 S. Fourth Ave.
Telephone 665-6149

I

<I _________

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