| Faculty Pub MICHIGAN An By JANE KNAUER State News Staff Writer Ethical students would be approximately $2.75 instead i UNIVERSITY STATE STATE MEWS of $5.30." Vol. 58, Number 97 East Lansing, Michigan Monday, February 14, 1966 Provost, professors, publishers and students Blair said he couldn't "quickly justify" the —add them together and the total is a "text- difference in price in actual costing, "but book-required-for-classes" dilemma. after 25 years or more In dealing with the Publishing books, for the writer-professor, publishing of books, I can tell you their economic Humphrey Promises has become a question of ethical and moral worth in exactly the same way a judge will value intentions, a cow in a cattle show." scholarly or "popular" writings, local or national marketing advantages and "I'd bet my bottom dollar that my estimate in this case in not 5 per cent off either the effects of all these on the academic world way," and the students. Blair said. "I commend Matthew J, Spiro for calling The book, Blair said, shows signs of being attention to the matter of professors requiring a private publication. books of which they have been authors for He said no publisher's name appeared on the their classes," Lyle Blair, director of the title page, and that commercial publishing U.S. Protection In Asia Michigan State University Press, said. companies have a standard practice of print¬ Blair said this is the sort of student vigilance ing their names on the title page of the book. needed and no student should hesitate to let An author publishing privately receives both the administration the author's royalties and the publisher's know, either through student royal¬ ties, Blair said. Books published by established commercial This Is The First publishers bring a certain percentage of the Of A Three Part Series On total book sales back to the author Some rules governing professors as royalties. publishing Assailant Praises books through the MSU Press are: Faculty Publishing. 1. Royalties don't begin until the press has regained the costs of the publications. Thailand's • government or the Dean of Students Office, of 2. Royalties will be paid on the basis of the retail price of the book. And R Vigilance such publications. 3. On books other than those published for Spiro, an East Lansing junior, wrote a Letter University college to the Editor of the State News Jan. 20, saying the costs of textbooks were exceptionally high lished under an agreement to courses which are pub¬ pay royalties to the department from which the book originates, Critical BANGKOK (UPI)—Vice Presi¬ and cited as an example, "The Would-Be a scale of royalties to the author exists. dent Hubert Humphrey assured Writer," by Clinton S. Burhans Jr., associate Both the Detroit rabbi and the Thailand Sunday that the United MSU Press royalties and data appear in the professor of English and director of Project Eng¬ substitute teacher who shot him States stood firm in its deter¬ 1950 publications, "The Michigan State College during Sabbath services Saturday mination to halt Communist ag¬ lish. Press—Guidelines to Its "This History & Objectives." remained In critical condition in (Burhans*) book, was not submitted to gression in Southeast Asia and Around 1954, the royalties paid on University Detroit the University press according to a Board of hospitals Sunday night. praised the country for its anti- Trustees' ruling," Blair said. College courses' textbooks was changed from a Rabbi Morris Adler, 59, was Communist vigilance. The Board of Trustees' rulling, stated in a sliding scale to a flat 10 per cent rate of the shot In the left side of the head Humphrey, accompanied by a books sold after costs of production were re¬ and in the left arm during ser¬ booklet, "Faculty Facts," said: delegation of other U.S. officials, "A faculty member producing a textbook covered, Blair said. vices in Shaarey Zedek Syna¬ arrived by presidential jet from The royalties are paid into the department's gogue, Southfleld. or other teaching material prepared and de¬ a three-day visit to the war zone account from which the book orginated and are His assailant, Richard S. Wish- signed primarily for the use of and compulsory in Viet Nam and went immedi¬ administered by the chairman of the department purchase by the students of Michigan State netsky, 23, of 1611 Lincolnshire, ately to the royal palace for in consultation with the dean of the college. Detroit, and a former honors stu¬ University must submit the manuscript to the private talks with King Bhumi- Blair said there would be no profit to the dent, then turned ms pisioiaruuuU bol Adulyadej and Premier Tha- Michigan State University Press, which was author of a book which is required in the Uni¬ and shot himself established for the purpose of publishing such through the head nom Kittikackhorn. material. versity college courses and published by the as about 900 members of the con¬ MR. MSU FINALISTS—Mr. MSU will be announced at the Spinster Spin Saturday. U.S. sources said one of Hum¬ "Material not prepared and designed for the press. gregation watched. The five members of the court and the houses they represent are: (front) Jim phrey's chief aims was to assure use of and compulsory purchase by the stu¬ Laboratory manuals and syllabi published Sink, Theta Chi; Chuck Stoddard, Pi Beta Phi; (back) Lou Benson, Alpha Chi the Thai leaders that recent U.S. for the University college courses also fall Rabbi Adler underwent emer¬ dents of Michigan State University may, of Omega; Brian Miles, Phillips Hall; and Gary Dilley, Delta Tau Delta. peace moves and the Honolulu under the provisions. gency surgery in Sinai Hospital, Photo by Lance Lagoni course, be submitted to the press or to com¬ conference on Viet Nam included Blair said the three paper-bound books used where doctors said he suffered mercial publishers at the author's ^scretion." no behind-the-scenes moves that serious brain damage. His arm Burhans" book, required in some classes of by the Humanities Dept. published by Harcourt would weaken the fight against Brace and edited by four members of the wound was relatively minor. English 213 and 214, is paperback book of Communism. 233 pages with printed "textbook" a materials humanities faculty, were chosen by an open vote of the Humanities Dept. as the best available Wishnetsky fired a bullet through his own brain and was DESPITE STATE SENA Before meeting the leaders he and a number of blank pages which constitute told a welcoming crowd at the published texts for their course. said to be near death early Sun¬ the fourth unit, the student journal. The book airport that their country had sold tor $5.30 for winter term classes. "The textbooks were contracted for by the day. Providence Hospital doctors "done much to protect and ex¬ Aptheker he suffered massive brain 600 Hear book publisher," Blair said, "and it was some said According to English Dept. records about pand the freedom of others" and time after the publication took place that the damage and was completely para¬ added: 150 students were enrolled In courses winter term in which the book was required. department, not the authors, decided to use lyzed, but might be kept alive for "I want to express the respect them.'' several weeks under forced oxy¬ "The blank pages at the end of the book and appreciation of the United "In order that the authors should not be gen treatments. their institutions as a forum ideas should not propel the Senate ■States for the contributions Thai¬ which the student must use to keep his journal, By BETTY LITTLE make the book self-destructive," Blair said. thought to be benefiting from their students," State News Staff Writer for Communists speakers. Into unconstitutional deeds. land lias made and Is now making Witnesses said the shooting oc¬ Blair said, "they voluntarily waived all royal¬ "The resolution has nothing Sen. Bernard F. O'Brien, A self-destructive book is one in which the curred about 11:45 a.m., just to the cause of freedom in South¬ ties on copies sold to Michigan State students Herbert Aptheker, a Com¬ to do with free speech," Dzend¬ "destroy" east Asia and in the world as a student must write or otherwise after Rabbi Adler had completed munist historian, (D)-Detroit, said that he was would be and directed those royalties be paid into a de¬ spoke before zel said. "Our institutions should whole." the book as far as re-sale value the sermon. surprised that the attorney gen¬ concerned. partment fund for the use of all members of a capacity audience of over 600 stop the enemy from ilflltratlng eral could not see the line drawn Dressed in a dark blue suit Wishnetsky, who had been seat¬ "On the presumption that we (the MSL' press) the department for furtherance of the academic ed among the congregation which in the Union Ballroom Friday upon a captive audience." in the resolution. and showing a red face from good of the department." night in spite of a State Senate Copies of the resolution, which "What not allowing three days in the tropical sun, would sell at least 2,500 copies of a comparably included his parents, stood up just resolution asking state univer¬ we are does not have the force of law, Humphrey said social and eco¬ produced book over a three- to five-year as Rabbi Adler completed his is that state funds should be (continued on page 8) sities to ban Communist speak¬ were sent immediately to all appropriated to advance the nomic progress under Thailand's period," Blair said, "the published price to sermon and walked down the ers on campus. state schools. anti Communist government main aisle. The State Senate voted, 15-14, spread of Communistic teach¬ - Dzendzel said that it was only sharply contrasted with Com¬ for the resolution Friday after¬ ings," O'Brien said. Wishnetsky walked to within O'Brien suggested that Com¬ munist terrorism in "wars of Indonesian Ambassador a few feet of the platform where noon which stated that "our pub- munist speakers should rent uni¬ liberation." Related Story On P. 3 Rabbi Adler was seated with a 13- llcly supported institutions He praised Thailand's parti¬ should be used to educate the versity facilities instead of the year-old boy who was being bar- cipation in such Southeast Asian minds of free men,, not to pro¬ a resolution inking a request of Legislature appropriating lo- mitzvahedr—being. accepted as a . catjpr®-foi"! r° speak. projects a-s the .Re(no«a,LEduca- , full mehiberof fhecongreagaflori. pagate the A'fery 'doctHfies thaT 'thexwliegts. • " Recalled From Red China xvep. Darnel. S. Cooper, (D- tional Conference and the Asian we are at this present moment "But we hold the purse- The boy was Steven Frank, 13, Oak Park), said that the very Development Bank and said this son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert at a battle with." strings," he said. "indicates that Thailand is firm¬ Frank, of 19767 Cheyenne. Aptheker, director of the Attorney General Frank J. Kel- nued on page 4) ley said that he was "shocked ly resolved to do its utmost in SINGAPORE Jf) — Indonesia ernment complaining about a army to investigate the cause oi Wishnetsky pulled a .32 caliber American Insitute for Marxist and disturbed" by the resolu¬ the common quest for peace. the coup. Studies, of three Ameri¬ has recalled its ambassador to demonstration against China pistol and fired one shot into the was one "In contrast, there is no in¬ Intelligence sources here say high ceiling of the synagogue. He who had their tion to restrict freedom of speech Communist China, Radio Jakarta staged by university students cans passports dication that the North Vietna¬ taken away by the State Depart¬ in public Institutions. reported Sunday. Feb. 3. It charged the demon¬ they are certain China had a ordered the boy off the platform, mese Communist leaders value stration was carried out with hand in the coup. They cite as then turned to face the congre¬ ment for making a trip to North "I despise communism and all Quoting First Deputy Prime peace enough to cease their un- evidence the fact that a large gation. Viet Nam. that it stands for, including its Minister Subandrio, the broad¬ government support. The Indo¬ provoked aggression against said Ambassador nesian government rejected number of Chinese Communist Senate Majority Leaders Ray¬ principle that those who dis¬ cast Djawato Before shooting Rabbi Adler, their neighbors." "advisers" visited Indonesia jusi mond Dzendzel, (D-Detroit), who agree with the government must will submit a report "concern¬ Peking's note and told China to he Humphrey is touring Southeast before the coup attempt, and that pulled a piece of paper from presented the resolution, not be allowed to speak," Kelly ing the unfriendly attitude" stay out of Indonesia's affairs. his pocket and read, "This con¬ Asia to spur support for the Chinese weapons were said. adopted by Red China. found lr requested that state-supported economic and social measures rebel hands. gregation is a travesty and an Kelly said that disgust for any The action, announced on the The government said it re¬ colleges and universities deny President Johnson abomination. It has made a mock¬ thinks are eve of a probe by military tribu¬ gretted damage done to the The Indonesian army is par¬ ery by its phonlness and hypoc¬ necessary for winning support of nals into the October coup in Chinese embassy in Jakarta. ticularly angry about the Octo¬ risy of the beauty and spirit of the people. He was scheduled to Indonesia, could be the first step ber coup because six army gen¬ Judaism. fly to the Laotian capital of toward a break in diplomatic re¬ lations with Peking. The broadcast, monitored in Reports are circulating here that evidence which will be pro¬ duced at the military tribu¬ erals volt The were was killed before the put down. Indonesian army re¬ "With this act, I protest humanly horrifying and hence un¬ chief, acceptable situation." the Fulbright Vientiane Monday and return to Thailand again before continu¬ ing his trip to Pakistan, India, Singapore, reported a warning Viet nals starting Monday may in¬ As Zealand, Austrailia and New 'Q Lt. Gen. Suharto, accused the He then shot Rabbi Adler first made earlier by Subandrio, who criminate Peking in the coup South Korea. Indonesian Communist party ol through the left arm and then is also foreign minister, telling attempt last October. The tribu¬ in the left side of the Thailand is one of the staging the coup and said ii head, be¬ Communist China not to inter¬ nals are being staged by the hind the Scott didn't specify just what staunchest U.S. allies in South¬ should be punished. ear. TRAVEL BAN BREAK- fere in Indonesia's internal af¬ WASHINGTON J) — Sen. Hugh east Asia andhasallowedAmeri- Fulbright criticized him for. E R — Herb Aptheker, pro¬ fairs. Scott, R-Pa., said Sunday that by Fulbright is directing a com¬ can troops to be stationed on its his own standards Sen. J.W. Ful¬ fessor of history at Yale, Peking last week sent a pro¬ mittee inquiry Into Asiatic poli¬ soil. It faces its own Communist test note to the Indonesian gov- bright, D-Ark., speaks Friday night to a threat - a guerrilla movement cies which has produced chal¬ is being irres¬ capacity crowd in the similar to Viet Nam's-in the lenges to Johnson's course in Union Ballroom. ponsible in crit¬ Viet Nam. He declined com¬ northeast and some anti-govern- icizing Presi¬ ment on Scott's remarks made Photo by Tony Feri inte ment activity in the south. dent Johnson's Miss Tolstoy Viet Nam stra¬ on a television-radio program taped for Sunday broadcast in tegy. Pennsylvania. To Lecture Saying that he is not one of the Appearing with Scott and Sen. Jacob K. Javits, R-N.Y., Sen. Blood Drive Sets Countess Alexandra Tolstoy, "qultniks" who Joseph S. Clark, D-Pa., chal¬ 1,700 Pint Goal want to get out daughter of Russian novelist Leo of Viet lenged the two Republicans, as Nam, Tolstoy, will be on campus to Scott added: Scott administration supporters, to say lecture today and Tuesday. "how many American boys are students between 18 and 21 "I am not one of those people Today marks the beginning of , She will be introduced at 8 you prepared to have killed in however, must have signed pa¬ who advised that we stop and the 1,700-pint blood drive which tonight at an informal gathering order to retake some of that will continue through Friday. rental permission. Permission halt and allow ourselves to be sponsored by the Russian Club real estate" held by the Viet Blood can be donated 2-8 p.m. slips are available in the dorms. beaten to death, and I'm not one in Parlor B of the Union. Cong. in the Union Lounge Monday and MSU Faculty and employes are of those criticizing the Presi¬ Miss Tolstoy will lecture at "Now that's demagoguery, also being urged to donate. dent. Sen. Fulbright is." Tuesday, 11 a.m.-5 p.m. in both 7 Tuesday in Conrad Auditor¬ sheer, pure and simple," Scott the Shaw Lower Lounges Wednes¬ The Red Cross will give ium on "Tolstoy and Russia Scott said that three years replied. awards lnfivecatagories—men's day, in the Brody 1956 Room Today." The lecture will be ago Fulbright, head of the Sen¬ He said any military decision Thursday; and 10 a.m.-4 p.m. residence halls, women's resi¬ sponsored by the College of Arts ate Foreign Relations Commit¬ is going to Involve casualties in the Akers basement on Fri¬ dence halls, fraternities, soror¬ and Letters, the Justin Morrill tee, "jumped all over me and "and you couldn't put the guilt ities and cooperative and reli¬ day. College and the Department of said I shouldn't be partisan in of Cain on any other member gious houses—on a percentage Shaw Hall will take O-nega- German and Russian. foreign policy." of the Senate or any other hu¬ tive blood and Brody will take participation basis. Miss Tolstoy, an author in her man being, because these are All that is required is a physi¬ "Sen . Fulbright said it was B-positive blood for open heart own right, is the president of the irresponsible to criticize the ad¬ decisions made by the com¬ surgery Wednesday and Thurs¬ cal exam. The entire process Tolstoy Foundation, a humani¬ FIRST MSU EXAM—Alumni Distinguished Students had a taste of college life last mander in chief." takes 45 minutes to an hour, the weekend when they took their first test at MSU. Most of them emerged from the ministration and he accused me day, 11 a.m.-3 p.m. tarian organization. She was Javits said there is "no talk actual donation 15 minutes. Cof¬ lecture room at Anthony with pained expressions on their faces. of all gf the things he is doing Anyone between the ages of formerly her father's secretary of victory" in Viet Nam. 18 and 60 may donate. Unmarried fee and donuts will be served. and edited many of his books. Photo by Russell Steffey STEP'S Goal STATE NEWS Is To Try EDITOR'S NOTE: The following article is written by Laura Leichliter, Munich, Germany graduate stu¬ dent and student coordinator for the Student Educa¬ Published every class day throughout fall, winter, and spring terms tion Program (STEP). and twice weekly summer term by the students of Michigan State Uni¬ BRENDA JONES—small, seventeen—leaned forward, suddenly versity and authorized by the Board of Student Publications. intense. "You know I don't think I believe in God, but I believe in heaven and hell. I believe in heaven and hell because life here is Page 2 Monday, February 14, 1966 hell." The room stilled. I looked around. I-our other girls slowly nodded, broke the spell. The stifling summer night closed in again. EDITORIALS THIRTY OF US—all Student Education Program (STEP) volun¬ teers—had arrived that evening at Rust College in Holly Springs, Mississippi, from East Lansing. Now I divided my attention between getting acquainted with my Blocking Repeal roommates and unpacking my - clothes and my stereotypes. At Brenda's words I stopped. I HAD COME DOWN to Rust College to see what could be done about the educationally deprived southern Negro. Instead here was Brenda—sensitive, bitter, questioning, whose unforgivable mistake In Best Interests U.S. was being born black in Mississippi. Here was Brenda from a high school like the one down the road from us with a library consisting of a 1936 set of encyclopedias. Here was Brenda who graduated in the upper ten per cent of her THE RIGHT TO WORK or not to organization of unions in these states would be greatly faci litated and.wages Negro high school graduating class and who was reading on an eighth work, that is the question. At least grade level. Here was Brenda, a product of over two hundred years and the standard of living would be that's the question facing the U.S. of frustration, who was somehow incredibly still fighting. Edu¬ raised. Senate. And it looks, at least for this cational deprivation ceased to be a problem. It became a person. year, that the Senate will decide in IT SHOULD BE POINTED out that WE WENT DOWN to Rust last summer with a lot of theories and favor of the right to work—in a nebu¬ in those states with right to work three main objectives. First we hoped to setup and operate a study lous sort of way. laws, though wage rates may be skills institute for 50 pre-college educationally deprived students. This all refers to the extended lower, costs of living are also low¬ Second, we wished to operate an educational, cultural, and recrea¬ debate or filibuster over the re¬ er. Thus, higher wages don't neces¬ tional program for 250 children from the Holly Springs community. peal of section )4B of the Taft- sarily mean higher living standards. And» third, we wanted to help Rust College in any way possible to Hartley Law. The controversial sec¬ But the major argument against gain accreditation. tion allows states to prohibit labor the repeal of 14B is the infringements We came back to East Lansing with fewer answers and in¬ on individual freedom and the agreements that make union mem¬ rights creased frustrations. We came back to probing looks and persistent, of the states to decide whether union bership a condition of holding a job. embarrassing questions: Was it a success? What did you accom¬ Presently, 19 states, mostly In the membership should be made com¬ plish? South, have such laws. pulsory or not. THE ANSWERS OF COURSE are elusive. We left at Rust a few Most organizations in America are tangibles: a better organized library and business office, a handful PRESIDENT JOHNSON PLEDGED voluntary. There is no reason why of students with increased study skills. These results are measur¬ to organized labor during the 1964 an individual should be forced to join able. campaign that he would seek repeal a union if he does not desire to do But in the words of one volunteer: of the "irksome" section. But in so. There are no laws making it com¬ "We were trying to enable the students to experience education this session and the last, adminis¬ pulsory to be a member of a politi¬ in a more fundamental wav—in a changed perspective on them¬ tration and labor forces have run cal selves and their abilities." party, to vote, or to join a trade i nto more trouble than they can handle. or commercial association. Changes in self-concepts are not easily measured. In the end, labor unions will bene¬ LAST SUMMER WE learned to cope with the realization that we LABOR'S BIGGEST GRIEVANCE fit most in seeking voluntary mem¬ were investing resources and ourselves in an enterprise whose against I4B is that in allowing right bership instead of governmental com¬ outcome would remain uncertain. WHERE THEN IS the satisfaction in large expenditures of time, to work laws, nonunion workers re¬ pulsion. By making themselves at¬ ceive the same benefits but don't tractive enough so prospective work¬ talent, and money and no "job well done," and no visible results? have to pay the dues. In most cases, ers to will have little choice on whether OUR READERS Perhaps an attitude like T.S. Eliot's evolves: ' "There is only the fight to recover what has been lost nonunion members do receive simi¬ join or not, unions will have lar pay and fringe benefits as do the achieved a much higher goal than any And found and lost again and again: and now, under conditions union members who worked to obtain law can provide. That seem unpropitious. But perhaps neither gain nor loss. them. It has been suggested that these nonunion members pay similar fees THE ISSUE ALL whether individual BOILS down to liberty and the right to join or not to join must be India Is A Democracy' For us there is only the trying. The rest is not our business." For Brenda Jones "What has been lost" is the ability to partici¬ pate in our society as an equal human being. STEP DOESN'T PROMISE that "happiness is helping." It doesn't To the Editor: those Communists back to the safety line. We for the benefits but not in form of sacrificed in order to strengthen the promise satisfaction for a job well done. It offers only one thing: union dues. But this isn't the solu¬ labor movement in don't have anything against them but we don't the opportunity TO TRY—to try to help students like Brenda thp South and In love them either, and so they will stay there tion that labor is seeking. across the nation. We think the price regard to Miss Rita Phipps' letter of Feb. "recover what has been lost," to try to make lives like Drenda's is too 8 in the State News, though I have heard many as long as we want. a little less like hell. They claim that by repealing 14B high. wild as well as childish reports about India, Finally, it will be greatly appreciated if Miss Phipps' has surpassed them all and she Miss Phipps uses her gift of creativity to NamilnH deserves congratulations for letting the Indians write fantasy stories for children. Walt Disney /T*Me J'.V, \ v MSU Not know that they are "ragged, poverty-stricken, skeletal human beings on their way to death by starvation." Thanks for considering us human can always use some. We Indian students are also grateful to the State News editor and staff for publishing such an informative and decent 1 iOPPOX? TO -x£ ! ^Thc PR.NOPAL / p^—, .-i— have RESIDENTS OF EAST LANSING MSU does not permit students to beings. Perhaps she should offer a three credit course on "how to be an expert in Indian af¬ letter about India. Kirit Patei 1 (TS w long complained that MSU is park on campus. This is a myth. Indian the of the lack of fairs without really knowing." After all she has graduate cause parking Parking lots X, Y, G and the park¬ the qualifications—she knows how to spell India. space in the city's business dis¬ ing ramp hold more cars than the As we Indians are deeply interested in India's trict. A report recently released by entire East Lansing business dis¬ East Lansing officials proves this trict. And these facilities are used future, we would very much appreciate her let¬ Poor Library Rule Lj" to be false. ting us know how "many million of Indians are predomi^ntly by students. The report clearly indicates that Thus MSU cannot be blamed for going to die this year of starvation" according (: >idn't mean tj A nou) ,'M the workers in East LaiHSFhtj are East Lansing's parking problems. to her estimate. (Will she use an IBM 1620 Causes Complaints VEu. ATnER..:attS TO S££ 7 the greatest users of available park¬ Also MSU students should not be or 3600?) By way of advice to Miss Phipps, I t>0R" Of JP$£7 AT trtt 1 PR.NCiPAu ing space. The ratio of employees penalized for parking in East Lan¬ it would be wise not to let the estimate exceed , To the Editor: vjime, ANi>...u)ElL...y/ of Lansing stores who use parking the total population of India. We recently discovered the poorly conceived sing if they chose to do so. We all shall be grateful to her for giving facilities to MSU students using the us policies and rules of the administration of the the~inside news of Red China "where for the parts.Lpg facilities is roughly five em- IT- IS-TIME that the people who Michigan State Library. Aiterreturning-a library have b.^en accusing first time in her history, there is no starva¬ book the date it was due, a bill was received Dloyepsto three ,student^., /A§U of creating on i'' . ,, , tion Snd "rto "aea'tns'fr6m nunger." One ol my for an overdue "boofcVNVe' proceeded' to1 inlorm parking difficulties stop making MSU lems EAST LANSING'S PARKING prob¬ could be reduced considerably their scapegoat and start looking for the real answer to the parking prob¬ nasty friends told me that last year China bought wheat from Canada. What was this for-- the but Library staff that we did not have the book, they had it. According to the Library policy, : if the employees of stores in the to feed the peacocks? (Or don't they have pea¬ whether you've returned the book or not, you lem. The cocks in China?) are responsible for it wherever it is. shopping district would park In less recent survey supplies city For her information, India is a democratic We deplore the unrational framework of this congested areas. The survey shows planners with enough information to that almost half of the start improving the situation. East country where the Communists have an equal administration. When a person returns a book to employees park within 700 feet of their desti¬ Lansing will not solve its parking opportunity to be elected and lead the country the Library, he has lost the liability for that nation. |f they would be willing to dilemma by closing its eyes to facts If they can acquire a majority in parliament. book. Why should we be responsible for the mis¬ But we "98 per cent who are duped by the Com¬ takes the Library staff makes in handling re¬ park farther away, they would pro¬ and blaming MSU as they have in the vide convenience for their munists into believing that the 98 per cent turned books to the shelvis? Furthermore, the more cus- past. The only clear solution is to should own at least 98 per cent" are holding staff refuses to make any attempt to locate a provide more parking space, and the sooner East Lansing realizes this, lost book, such as this one. One is threatened ALSO, IT HAS been alleged that the better. with, "Pay the fine or you will not be allowed We admire your spirit, Sees Sarcasm to register." Realization of any possible ounce of honesty in the person is completely re¬ but you just don't fit jected. into the team. To the Editor: We are amazed that in the fabulous world of In regard to Mr. Feldman's Mon¬ IS. yEEDSILEXWILITY day's State News, 1 cartoon in can only feebly attempt, administrative devices on this campus, such as m copy-proof bus passes, etc., the Library has as far as human limitations allow, to communi¬ no method of recording returned books. Ob¬ cate the profound awe I felt in recognizing viously, the Library operates outflow and in¬ the preternatural capabilities of the afore¬ Palace Coup Viet Solution flow of books on an arbitrary basis. mentioned artist in lucidly (if I may use so We are ashamed that this University con¬ starved an adjective) depicting the disgusting ducts its business so poorly for those who plight our students face in seeing a student support this Institution of higher learning. EDITOR'S NOTE: The following is munist north. If the adviser. We feel that the student is being held at bay U.S. could help the Viet¬ written by Mike Gilner, St. Louis, The "typical" student adviser is inexpress- namese solve these problems, it would have to this institution and furthermore, the indivi¬ Mo., sophomore, majoring in politi- their undying gratitude. ably caricature with a "key" in his back—a dual's integrity is being exploited beyond rea¬ feat of imagination surpassed only by those who THE U„S. should change its policy of "oppos¬ son I We feel that to pay a fine under these cir¬ dreamed of crossing the Alps astride a herd of ing aggression," sterile and negative as it is cumstances would be entirely at the expense WHEN from the Vietnamese point of view, to a posi¬ elephants. of the individual's honor. SOMEONE criticizes a policy, he is Of those alert enough to extract this first expected to propose tive program of "unifying the country and Pat Smith a better solution. Thus, delineated sarcasm from the cartoon, I'm sure when someoi.e protests our polic.es in Viet helping the people," and carry it out imagi¬ Niles junior only a few were in the superlative state of per¬ Nam we ask, "Well, what do you suggest?" natively. ceptual awareness necessary to catch the irony Jerry Griewahn and the reply is usually President Johnson is apparently trying to Adrian junior unsatisfactory. But inherent'in the terse dialogue at the bottom of aren't present policies essentially negative? implement the latter part of the formula with the square. Communism can be attractive when there increased emphasis on non-military programs. The contextual effect the "Clickety-pop... is sary no better alternative. "All that is for evil to triumph is for good men to neces¬ If aid it can means be understood and remembered that "helping people" and not "trans¬ Let your conscience be your guide...Clickety- World Law A Must ferring funds," and that Military operations pop" had on me can only be scantily described do nothing," All that is in sight fur Viet Nam To the Editor: is more of the unsuccessful same: can have beneficial political results, this phase (if I may quote Peter Paul Mounds) as "In¬ more in¬ The agony in Viet Nam and elsewhere demon¬ should be a success, describably delicious"—intellectually. terdictory bombing, morjt U.S. troops, more The finale, however, was a masterpiece of strates the fact that striped-pants diplomacy corruption-suspect aid, and more advanced IN CONNECTION with reunifying the coun¬ must give way to enforceable world laws. We creative cartoonism—the gadget ry. try, it would be well to remember that while lettering on the door. The door looks as though it were shut and the accept this principle in dealing with problems THE U.S. needs more flexibility in its policy only a small portion of the population nu¬ at every other level. It seems to lettering were mistakenly written from left imply some ("flexibility" here not being synonymous with merically, the strength of the Communists kind of world death-wish that we resist ex¬ comes from their political organization. Any to right, instead of right to left as one would "appeasement"), so that old successes will not normally expect when looking out from inside tending the principle of law to the level where be copied blindly, so that the true situation of a number of other groups, given the or¬ the office. Hahl—but this is the coup it is most urgently needed. Law exists not to can be charted and the enemy's weaknesses ganization, could take their place. The party de grace! The door is really open "bring people together" but to "keep them exploited. What are the facts in Viet Nam? apparatus, traditionally faction-ridden, could --hinting that though, it may look closed, the adviser's door is apart," to make it possible, and safe, for 1. The vast majority of the Vietnamese wish split right open under an appropriate stimu¬ always open to the student. An unmatched people with honest, and often violent differences eventual reunification lor their country. "From lus. Coca-Cola is of opinion to coexist. on everyone's team. That's because The administration should have the experts triumph in the sacred annals of devastating Dong Van to Ca Mau, Viet Nam is one." Someone says: "We have tried international Coca-Cola has the taste you and intelligence at its disposal to determine sarcasm! never get fired of . . . 2. ALL VIETNAMESE want advai cement for law and it doesn't work." I To you, Mr. Feldman, in the face of your say: "We have themselves and their country, though speci¬ the tactics and specifics of bringing about a tried always refreshing. That's why things go better with unfettered genius, I can never international law, and it must fics vary from peasant to city-dweller. popular revolution or a palace coup. only say...Clickety- work." Coke . . . after Coke . . . after Coke. A YEAR of limited bombing certainly hasn't P°P- 3. These two objectives are being held up by Richard Lockwood the proved to be the correct answer. Coca-Cola ich., Lar struggle between the south and the Com¬ East Lansing graduate student Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Monday, February 14, 1966 3 LBJ TO Marines, Cong In Three Battles 'Be President Of All People' SAIGON (UPI)--UJS. 1st Air Cavalry troops clashed with Viet Cong and North V engine jets rained bombs on V areas about three miles apart. U.S. Air Force and Navy Jets snakepit," accusing it of years of corruption, graft and troops in three battles near the also blasted targets in Commu- bureaucratic mismanagement. This had led some U.S. central coast Sunday, killing an nist North Viet Nam Sunday but estimated 68 Communists. U.S. details of the raids were not congressmen to challenge U.S. policy in Viet Nam. WASHINGTON—President Johnson delivered a critical marines battling farther north immediately disclosed, Despite wholesale changes at the top, critics say the message to Premier Nguyen Cao Ky of South Viet Nam dur¬ government actually has changed little. Only recently, some killed another 15 Viet Cong. Communist North Viet Nam ing the Honolulu conference. It boiled down to what Johnson Saigon government officials were reported wanting to ignore But pajama-clad Communists claimed Sunday it had downed likes to call "being President of all the people." ambushed a government convoy a U.S. pilotless high altitude 400,000 refugees who had fled from the fighting without The builder of the Great Society, accompanied by his homes, jobs or food. near U.S. Marine positions reconnaissance plane over Ninh around Da Nang, inflicting heavy Binh province, the New China chief architects, reminded Ky of the importance of winning During the past five years, the U.S. aid program has his people as well as the war. Johnson also sent Vice caused dramatic changes in the life of the South Vietnamese casualties on members of a South News Agency reported. President Hubert H. Humphrey to Saigon to help the 34- peasant. The United States, however, has been careful to WHAT NOTE IS THIS?—Hal Evans, Washington, D.C., year-old premier's efforts to promote social reforms and tell the peasant that it is the Saigon government that de¬ freshman, and Marti Damstra, Grand Rapids junior, reported traveling in the convoy munist troops some 280 miles defeat poverty. serves credit for successes caused by millions of U.S. dol¬ show Paul King, a student at Oak Park School, the but his fate was not known. northeast of Saigon on an area Unless more is done in this direction, the administra¬ lars. 15 to 20 miles southwest of tion believes the Communists in South Viet Nam never will According to U.S. officials, Ky is making headway in be¬ elements of guitai—playing. Theta Chi fraternity The Communists, about 40 to and Alpha Xi Delta sorority had a party for about 50, attacked with small arms Bong Son. be totally defeated. coming a popular leader of his nation. He has launched a 35 children at the Alpha X i house Saturday afternoon. and grenades from both sides A 1st Cavalry spokesman said Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara has noted that campaign of land reform, the most cruciail issue to the Photo by Jonathan Zwickel of route one at a mountain pass, the Americans suffered light cas- the vast majority of Viet Cong are South Vietnamese. Critics country's peasants. U.S. Marines and South Vietna- ualties while killing 57 Viet Cong say the war-torn peasants, 95 per cent of the country's At one point in the 1950s when the Communists held the population, have found little reason to be loyal to the cen¬ upper hand briefly in South Viet Nam, one of their first mese army troops rushed to the. whose.bodies were counted on the with armored cars and battlefields. He said the Caval- tral government. Critics also say that until recently, the Saigon govern¬ ment has thought only of its residents who own the vast acts was to give to the peasants the land they had worked for centuries. But it was quickly taken back when a new gov _rnment was created in Saigon. Air Force killed bushers wo of the Viet and captured Cong am- third. rymen estimated that 11 other Viet Cong were killed. In the air war, B52 bombers majority of the land, land that has been worked for decades With the U.S. aid programs spending $1.4 million a day of the in South Viet Nam, the United States is hoping that Ky Strategic Air Command by peasants in an unending chain of poverty and death. Some diplomats have dubbed the Saigon government "the can succeed in winning over his people. Spinal SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (UPI)~ cases but no Men deaths and offi- from Guam pounded Viet Cong supply areas in the western sec¬ tor of the Viet Cong's war "Zone D" only 35 miles northeast of WE TELEGR*PH Saigon. The high-flying eight- Red Histo physical checkup at Lackland Air Force Base Sunday by authori¬ ties working to check a spinal S.B.S. meningitis outbreak. Another Winner at Says End One Lackland death, and three others in military bases In other areas of the country, were blamed on meningitis. Lackland had five Soviet Nuclear Blast Detected both the National Liberation in serious condition men Sunday Front of South Viet Nam and of with the disease. The latest was WASHINGTON (AP)—The United States recorded seismigrophic signals Sunday from the Soviet Union independence the Nam. Democratic Republic of Viet added to the list Saturday. nuclear testing area in the Semipalatinsk area, the Lackland AFB, the world's lar- Atomic Energy Commission reported. „ ««j believe that the Vietnamese f* A*r For^ gaining center, The signals were equivalent to those of a nuclear forbidden, it would mean the people feel that their struggle is ^ad f h"ge Job.to stop the out- test in the low-intermediate to intermediate-yield end to war in Viet Nam, accord- a j^t war for national indepen- brea> Thousands of trainees are range, a spokesman said. ing to a Communist historian, dence," Aptheker said. "It is a* th® base and "J01"6 thousands Herbert Aptheker, director of a continuation of an anti-colo- of °th?r Pe™°™el go in and out British Defense Crisis Decision Due the American Institute for Marx- nlallst effort waged against the each day. The base switched its ist Studies, told a capacity aud- Japanese, the French-American tAr,alnlrng operations to Amartllo Air Force Base, 500 miles ience of about 600 at the Union ancj now the American govern- nrr" LONDON' ,f.--Prime Min- tegic defense of the future, the north, temporarily Ballroom Friday night that this until the ister Harold Wilson met with The crisis has built up to disease is checked. was the first point of the Four¬ his top defense advisers Sun- such proportions that all min- teen Point statement issued by Travel^i and out of Lackland day night for a final decision isters connected with the navy President Johnson on Dec. 27. was somwhat restricted and on the politically explosive and several high naval offi- issue of whether Britain will cers were reported to have Aptheker recently had his he said" "Does it honor our na- some off-base passes were can- rely on American Fill swing- threatened last week to re- passport withdrawn as a result tion t0 ravage, spread chemical celed for the time being. a December visit North Poison uPon the labors of farm- Trainees scheduled to go to wing bombers or aircraft car- sign if the government opts Viet Nam which broke a "travel ers and hurl phosphorus shells Lackland in the near future were rier-based planes for its stra- for purchase of the Ameri¬ on the bodies of millions?" ordered instead to Amarillo. ban." can planes. Lengthy applause followed Ap- ) the American The disease begins with the cold < flu theker's speech with only minor people in their multi-millions and symP10™3 of throat. Unchecked, it c Syrian and Israeli Troops Battle incidents of heckling from the tell them that this war is atro- audience. 1 and intensely hri"*> • , TEL AVIV, Israel (AP)—A border battlejnvolv- Aptheker's appearance, spon- harmful, Aptheker said, The number of cases in the i ng tanks, artillery and machine guns raged for about sored by the Students for a Dem¬ auntry's military establish- ' two hours on the Syrian-Israeli frontier in the Jor¬ ocratic Society and the Young The Vietnamese people value made the spinal meningi- dan Valley on Sunday. Socialists Club, caused the State the impressive efforts for peace tis outbreak the worst since 15 An army spokesman said two Syrian tanks were Senate to pass a resolution Fri¬ being waged by large segments deaths were blamed on the di- destroyed and one Israeli tractor driver injured. day asking state universities t of the American people," he said. sease at Ft. Ord, Calif., last In Damascus, a Syrian spokesman said two Syrians ban Communist speakers from "The Vietnamese are not seeking year. were injured, and that one Israeli tank andone Israe¬ their campuses. ... r the defeat of the U.S. They are Some bases reported a few li tractor were crippled by Syrian fire. Aptheker answered his critics seeking the defeat of American men stiu being treated for the with a quote from Abraham Lin- aggression upon their soil." disease. Ft. Polk, La., had nine coin who once accused President Christmas Didn't Get There Polk of "serious deception" dur¬ Larry Rose is shown receiving keys for a Honda 150 from Howard Ballein, CLEARFIELD, Utah (L'PI) More than two million ing the time of the Mexican War STUDENT BOOK STORE manager. Larry* in the Hondafor winning the Parker —A Christmas gift from the which Lincoln said was an "un¬ pounds of clothing, food, toys, American, people toObe war- weary South Vietnamese still housaibipld. tiem^4tugs, build-, ing materials and other gifts just and imm the-'rf&gir • • my i KEC' ■ierm. z: be -card leal the traitors," Aptheker 9,"00 miles from its intend- ed recipients. federal depot here during De¬ cember. among said. Aptheker said that after 25 Psychological tests prove that the right kind of music can ac¬ You Too Can Be A Winner years of war no people on earth tually keep the mind more alert. Buried Last Korean Queen craves peace more than those in Viet Nam. Try out the theory tonight with WJR's Night Scene. Elliot Field Check These Values at SEOUL, South Korea (AP)—The body of Queen "But those 25 years were in¬ will play you a little midnight oil Yun, last queen of Korea and last of the Yi dynasty, spired by the goal of the inde¬ was buried on this gray Sunday in royal and Budd¬ pendence and integrity of the music while you crack the books. Maybe something from Broad¬ S.B.S. hist rites in the tomb of her husband, King Sunjong, Vietnamese nation," he said. at Kumgek, 10 miles east of Seoul. She died Feb. "Independence was the heart of way, the movies, folk, Brubeck, 3 of a stroke in Changduk Palace. 'Geneva." Burial took place after a three-hour funeral pro¬ Basie, Ella. Once in a while he'll Aptheker said that acceptance cession which started from the palace in downtown of the Geneva agreements rep¬ butt in with some talk. If you Seoul, where she had lived nearly half a century. resented the essential point of have no assignment, don't feel reg. now bad. It's pretty good goof-off The Novels Of Henry James $7.95 2.98 listening, too. Night Scene Peter The First by Alexi Tolstoy 5.95 1.98 Monday through Friday ENGINEERING OPPORTUNITIES WJR/760 on your dial 6.95 2.95 The Last Horizon 8:15 'til 10:25 for Seniors and Graduates in mechanical, aeronautical, chemical, electrical, The Warfare State Forward by Bertrand Russell 4.95 1.49 and metallurgical engineering The Great North Road bv Frank Morlev 5.00 1.49 engineering mechanics applied mathematics physics and engineering physics Plus Many More Don't Forget Our Paperback Pound Sale CAMPUS INTERVIEWS 4Oo. THURSDAY, FEB. 24 o*s fi- O/ir Appointments should be made in advance through your College Placement Office ^Jtudent Pratt & U Whitney ft Aircraft ook tore CNT UTILIZATIONS INCLUDE Al Free Parking In Large Lot At Rear Of Store 4 Michigan State News, East Lansing:. Michigan Monday, February 14. 1966 RUSSIAN PROFESSOR 'Paper9 Editors of The Paper, a stu- To Fac with commercial advertising un- to the advertisement carried two dent-operated weekly publica - tion, will appear before All- University Student Judiciary less exempted by the Board of Student Publications. weeks ago in an edition of "The Paper." The advertisement was for the Student Book Store, Historians within a week to answer charges 2. "The Paper committee so- If The Paper is found guilty American writers misinter¬ of alleged violations of univer- liclted funds on Feb. 3 and 4 of the specified charges it is sity policy and the ASMSU con- pret Lenin and Leninism be¬ on campus without approval of subject to a fine of not more cause they oppose stltution. the ASMSU Student Board as than $100 and/or revocation of Communism, a history specialist from Mos¬ Mike Kindman, Franklin required in the Constitution of its ASMSU charter. The charter cow State University said here Square, N.Y., senior and editor ASMSU." presently permits The Paper to Friday. of The Paper, in a letter Charge one makes reference distribute on campus. Robert Maust, Chief Justice of Vladimir V. Alexandrov, cur¬ the Judiciary, asked for an open rently teaching at Indiana Uni¬ hearing to "provide an opportun¬ versity as part of a U.S.-U.S.S.R. Michigan Me cultural exchange program, told ity for public discussion of is¬ sues we consider vital to the a MSU audience that American writers think that it is their task preservation of freedom of the press on the campus." to criticize and negate Lenin A open defendant may request an hearing under a provision Get Mail From before they analyze him. "American scholars do not of the All-University Student Ju¬ 23-year-old Lansing resi- every Michigan boy in Viet Nam take Lenin as a whole," Alexan¬ dent has launched a program know that the people back home diciary. drov said. "They discuss only called "Operation Pen Pal" to care about them and what they're ASMSU Student Board voted to one side and many do not even insure that every Michigan man doing. "We should not stop our indict The Paper on two charges INTERNATIONAL DINNER — E ntertainment at the know the whole writings of in Viet Nam receives mail reg- at a meeting last week. gratitude just because theChrist- annual dinner of the International Club "Global Lenin." ularly from someone back home, mas season is over," stated A letter from the board i Connie Theisen, 450 West St., Gourmet," included students from many parts of Miss Theisen. the world. Included were Christine Stecuik, Detroit Student Judiciary, mailed Thurs- says her idea was conceived as Presently the names of%50 day, Feb. 10, lists the charges senior, doing an Ukrainian dance, and an uni- nents as sources as these a follow-up to the "Christmas Michigan men in Viet Nam have denified dancer. Photo by Russell Steffey *s: Viet Nam" drive promoted by been given to individuals and sources are not objective and 1. "Violation of all-University Gov. George VV. Romney in De- organizations all over Michigan are usually falsified. policy specifying that only stu- cember to send gifts to Michigan who have expressed a desire to "Non-Communist authors are dent publications recognized by men in Viet Nam. correspond with these soldiers, Forum Planned On conservative," either liberal or the Board of Student Publica- The objective of the program, ' All those interested he said. "Some analyze Leninism RUSSIAN PROFESSOR —Vladimir V. Alexandrov, tions may distribute publications says Miss Theisen, is program should send and argue the theoretical prob¬ history specialist from Moscow State University, discusses his lecture with students. He spoke on addressed, stamped envelope to lems while others simply quarrel Off-Campus Living "American Scholarship on Lenin and Leninism" "Operation Pen Pal," Ingham without proving their point of last Thursday in the Wonders Kiva. You'll County GOP, 308 Hollister Bldg., view." Photo by Jeff Fritzlan Lansing. An open forum for students ior, a member of the off campus Alexandrov said that American commission which will authors spend too much time try¬ "Lenin had new views and opin¬ are comparing it with 1964 thinking of moving off campus, Love It answer a sponsored by the Off Campus questions on the problems of ing to prove Lenin was not a ions but they were developed by U.S.A." Marx," Alexandrov said. "Marx¬ Aptheker Council, will be held at 7:30 complex living. Russian. Alexandrov said that these p.m. Wednesday in the Con-Con An example of non-complex "There is no such thing as a ism is not a dogma. It is always same critics say that Lenin was and it's (continued from Room of the International Center. living would be students renting pure race as every nation is com¬ developing." in favor of export revolution. page 1) A six-member panel will dis¬ rooms in a house while complex posed of different nationalities," Alexandrov said that the tran¬ "Lenin struggled against those "Life on the Outside." he said. "Communists are not sition of society from capitalism left-wing Communists who sup¬ process of young people's at¬ cuss living would be students renting tendance at forums where con¬ Members of the panel include an apartment, Greg nationalists so even if Lenin were to socialism is happening on ported export revolution," he Hopkins, Free troversial views was speakers air their of great importance Pat Smith, assistant director of off-campus housing; Tim Culver, Lansing sophomore, and panel moderator, said. not him." Russian, we would be proud of a world scale. "The first step was the Rus¬ said. "He believed that revolu¬ tion could only come from the in¬ representative of the State Alexandrov said that American ternal struggle of each country." in producing healthy minds able a Hopkins is a member of both sian revolution followed by rev¬ Folk Music to accept and reject ideas." Management Corp., an agency Off Campus Council and Off Cam¬ authors also try to prove that olution and transition to social¬ Alexandrov said that contrary which negotiates contracts be¬ pus Commission. Lenin was not of high moral ism in other to what is written by Americans "We should not sell our young European and Asian , tween apartment managers and "The council represents all character or that he was a spy the Communist party members people short," Cooper said. "To students countries," he said. off campus students," Hopkins and a traitor for Germany, Japan are not elitists with privileges. allow speakers who only express renting apartments; The third Come to the Folklore the U.S.A. step to world so¬ Kenneth Smith, an East Lansing said, "and has a seat on the stu¬ or "Hard work is the only privi¬ the philosophy of orthodoxy is a cialism was taken with the Cuban lawyer; and Michael Conlisk, di¬ dent board." "They try to prove this with lege party members have," he step toward totalitarianism." revolution according to Alexan¬ meeting Monday rector of East Lansing Planning He said the commission acts documents :hat deal with Lenin's drov. He predicted that Asia, said. "There are 12 million in Sen. Roger Craig, (D-Dear- Commission. more as a complaint bureau for attempts to return to Russia the Communist party in the Guitar Lessons Africa and Latin America would born), said that if unpopular ideas Also on the panel will be Mike off campus students. after 1917 by way of Germany," U.S.S.R., so this shows that it is were censored, there would be he said. "However, other Rus¬ go to socialism bypassing the elite Walsh, Lansing senior, and "The cross-section of panel¬ not an party." little difference between us and sians also crossed Germany and capitalist stage. Communists do evil 8 P.M. Room 31 president of Off Campus Council, ists should provide a maximum not use the Viet Cong. who will represent non-complex opportunity for the student to "American authors criticize they were not accused of being means to gain good ends, Alex¬ 3rd Floor Union Aptheker also spoke at Wayne living sides, of the issue; and Sue learn of the problems, spies." Lenin because he said that the androv said. compli¬ State University Friday. The Soviet historian defended proletarian revolution should Rathbun, Vermillion, Ohio, jun- cations and needs of off campus "Only if violence or terror Lenin against those authors who take place in developed coun¬ is used by the minority do the living and what has been and is he said accuse Lenin of not being tries although Russia was not de¬ Communists use violence to de¬ being done about this," Hopkins veloped," Alexandrov said. stroy it," he said. "Communists "But Russia was developed in consider the principles of peace 1916," he said. "These critics and national democracy." PAPER- i BACKS IN Soviet History Treated REVIEW In Scientific Manner Soviet history has become a a role in history," he said. This science, said V.V. Alexandrov, is contrary to the Marxist out¬ professor of modern history at look which says that the masses Moscow State University, in a have the primary role while the speech Friday. secondary role belongs to the What's new? Russia's history is based on individual. the Marxist theory of the de¬ Alexandrov insisted that no. Doobie Doo. A hardback novel by Ivan C. Karp that is not only unrequired, but, according to some early read¬ velopment of science and human¬ matter who ran the country, it' ity," he said. would still turn out the same. ers and reviewers, un-American. Marxist history analyzes tlwi He said'ihsi' ffi# '■Russiart'Rfc'f- Doobie Doo is the history of a pioneer of pleasure who role of the masses in history. olution was imminent, regard¬ has his cake and eats it without dire results. Except to It understands and interprets his¬ less of Lenin's role. the cake. It is an investigation into the dazed plight of tory in terms of the masses. He did not deny that Stalin sophisticated, husbandless city girls which raises the This doesn't mean that the played an important role in question: How much love should wisely be given to the role of the important individual late 1941 when the Germans were desperately needy? is ignored, Alexandrov said. It on the Russian doorstep. "We do Until it was published last month, we had dozens of means that important in¬ not negate this role. We are lines like this to use describing Doobie Doo. Now the dividuals are those who play against the "cult of personality" reviewers have taken it away from us. (See below.) a role in history in the interest not against the role of the in¬ Nearly all of us have had a marvelous time reading it. of the masses. dividual." One early school of Russian When Alexandrov was asked historiography practically ne¬ if it was true that Soviet com- - gated the role of individuals in munism wasn't really Marxism Soviet history. But the school at all, but a perversion of Marx-, was criticized for being too ab¬ ism, he said that "Russian com¬ stract, Alexandrov said. munism is Marxist com¬ This is what Another school developed munism." some early around the "cult of personality" He said that Marxist histor¬ DOOBIE DOO which stressed the importance ians believe that truth can be fans say of certain individuals. "One found through the analyzing of person can play too important historical events. ^The chief performers in the circus that roes BASIC OUTLINES whom'hhe0dWidraVisaeSeningsdfair'anTsquare'*°.'•Whoever"said tha^Hfe was real heroines, the was living in a dream world.' observes Clarissa (one of the 'wordl^' one)^ The book is full of such^profoundi^ies as this ATL, Nat. Sci., SOC, HUM, General Electric is an easy place to work. "A wildly funny avant-garde novel with a message. The message is: 'If everybody refused to sing commercials, there would be no singing commercials'." "An outrageously funny novel ... -charles pooke. n. Y. Times a little Rock and Roll'running amok might be just what the American novel needs at this stage. Hang on COURSE OUTLINES All you need is brains, imagination, drive Henry James. Henry James, hang on." "A doozey . . . Karp has i -donald d. jones, Kansas City Star MATH 108,109, 111, 112,113 and a fairly rugged constitution. and he can write." "Roy Lich i red-dotted girlfact ,t ar. Karp does It is not CHEM 101,102, 111, 112 ig from Today's Living. Fun Oh, yes. Something else that will we're faced with the task of pollution in our streams. Providing help you at G.E. is an understand¬ ing of the kind of world we live in, space, making life on earth more livable. There's a lot happening at G.E., better street transportation. lighting and faster STAT 121, MATH 122 and the kind of world we will live in. too, as our people work in a hun¬ This is the most important work DOOBIE DOO is published by Doubleday & Company published by Eagle Press There's a lot happening: The dred different areas to help solve in the world today: Helping to Inc., Garden City, New York, which usually devotes population is continuing to explode. the problems of a growing world: shape the world of tomorrow. Do this column to Anchor Books, but couldn't resist the The strain on resources is becoming Supplying more (and cheaper) you want to help? Come to General temptation to slip one special hardcover book in. DOOBIE DOO sells for H-SO, and like Anchor Books, available only at alarming. At a time when men are electricity with nuclear reactors. Electric, where the young men are i« available at one of the best equipped booksellers in being lured by the mysteries of Controlling smog in our cities and important men. progress Is Our Most- Important Product GENERAL# ELECTRIC CampusMusicShop Look for Beaumont Tower and Sparty ) Monday, February 14, 1966 5 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan major cause of accidents [American Funeral Satire Teens Speed, Is Offensive And Funny By DENICE State News ANDERSON Staff Writer that almost any activity that are under the influence of alco- draws a crowd also causes acci-^hol while driving that never get Michigan teenagers, while dents. Accidents also occurwhen caught, Silvernale said, The Blessed Reverend is the THE man responsible for Whispering capable of being excellent dri- there isn't anything to do, usually There are many possible solu- Glades, the resting place of vers, are often involved in out- from 7-9 pjn. tions to the teen driving prob- The film that bills itself as LOVED ONE "eternal happiness." Here the standing accidents, a teen panel On a nation-wide scale, alco- lem. Raising the age of license I something to offend everybody is loved ones can rest forever be¬ decided Saturday. hoi is involved in 60 per cent of holders to 17 is being discussed Teenagers constitute nine per the accidents, the teens from as is treating all teen drivers on t far from wrong. "The Loved side those of their own kind— I One" rides roughshod over Hol- -CAMPUS- there is a Poet's Corner, before cent of the state's drivers and various parts of Michigan were an adult basis. If treated on an I lywood, big-business cemeteries of Homer, an underwater are involved in 15 per cent of told. In Lansing, only one per adult basis, teens would be sub- I (Including pet cemeteries), the Richardson may even have top- burial ground for Fourth of July the state accidents, said Leslie cent of the teen accidents are ject to the point system and could nilitary, eating, astronauts, re- pe(j ^is "x0m Jones;" certainly boating enthusiasts, and even a R. Silvernale, assistant direc- directly related to drinking. But, be taken to court, said Silver- still many drivers who nale. | ligion, TV commercials and no one will say "The Loved Damon and Pythias Gardens, for there are tor of educational activities, i newspaper lovelorn colum- 0ne" is poorly edited or direct- loved ones who were "close in speaking to a six member panel | nlsts. e(jt It iS technically flawless, life." of the Youth Advisory Council. Now these are the things that Jonathan Winters excells in I America holds sacred and when another of his dual-role per- end finds that all available space But when the Blessed Rever- FACULTY BRIDGE —The wives of faculty members from The the panel found that ages of 17-20 cause males Grads May Try i film pokes fun at them it Just formances. He is the funniest at Whispering Glades will be met in the Union Thursday to play bridge. Show the most accidents but that they las to offend someone some- auve, and his characteriza- I where. But while you are being tions are littie sh0rt of brilliant, gone in seven years, he de- cides to convert it into a "sen- are Mrs. John Benington, Mrs. William Doerines and Mrs. Robert Nordman, Clarence Means. are Because the best drivers when alone. of the greater distances Traveling Scholar Plan ior citizens' city," at which the Mrs. offended you will nearly die Here he Is on 0ne hand the they drive, the males are more Graduate students may now first be recommended by his laughing. Blessed Reverend — a super- turnover would provide a steady exposed to hazards than the fe¬ take advantage of special re- graduate advisor, who will ap- However, these things are not eVangelist - businessman - satyr income, males. sources on any of the Big Ten apporach an appropriate faculty "There must be some way of Representative Urges .. what the film is about, and these who js gone over "precious duck , . member at the possible host , , Statistics show t at sPe "8 campuses and the University of are not what makes the audience babies," and on the other hand getting those stiffs off my land!" and id failure to yield the right of Chicag0j but not available at lnstitution regarding a visiting feel there is something blasphe- the soured-by-life brother of the the Blessed Reverend con- way are the main causes of MSU. arrangement. templates. mous about the film. attitude toward death. Terry "what the hell Is that?" Blessed Reverend who can break It is a satire of our culture's up the aucjience with a mere age Wha- else In our modern space than an orbit of eternal grace? 18-Year-Old Vote accidents among Michigan youth. The panel discovered that de¬ fective equipment is an immedi- The "Traveling Scholar" pro¬ gram is being sponsored by the The student will be registered Committee on Institutional Co- at his home university and his Southern and Christopher Isher- — — "Giving 18-year-olds the right tical game of politics i wood did the screenplay, and death is lampooned just as sex to vote could be beneficial both Michigan and to the United "to vince their elders of the merits ate cause o{ the 18-year-old vote," Starr of accidents. Drivers made'up of one mem- fees will be collected and kept trying to gain attention also con- bgr {rom each Qf thg n par_ by that jnstitutioru Credit fer was in Southern's "Candy." Harmless L States as well," James H. Starr, sald* They Should talk as often tribute their share in making the ticipating universities. the work it the taken home will be recorded university. This is easy to do because representative from the 5-ADis- as possible to every registered roads unsafe to travel. A CIC Traveling Scholar death has become the new ob- trict, told Young Democrats Democrat, he said. The YAC representatives found Typical Briti '' scenity in our society. It has Thursday. 'A good many of the^problems ' replaced sex on the shocking- to-say scene. we are facing today are vital Sex has escaped Victorian By BOB ZESCHIN to the youth of America and we YOUR i, strictures and is now bandied State News Staff Writer need their help in reaching the about in literature, films and even It's almost too tempting not rotten to right decisions," said Starr. DOUAR i the vast wasteland. What really begin this review with " 'Rot- These problems include Juv¬ _n to the Core' really isl" But the core delinquency, college spend¬ offends is death. People do not die, they pass that wouid be unfair. As it is, enile ing, and a proper kindergarten Buys away* Dead people are "loved the film is a harmless little -STATE- through 12th grade education for ones." f British comedy with just a few all. MORE The Candy of this film is a bacj Sp0ts. The visual effects make up Youth are more knowledge- Miss Aimee Thanotogenis (no "Rotten" is typical of many of of the comedy in "Rotten abie and informed of the issues ■HMi less). She is a cosmetician at the English comedies that have the Core". The directors have 0f American politics than many Whispering Glades, a caricature been seen here in recent years. dreamed ureameu up uu such original things 0f their elders," Starr said. of the'Forrest Lawn type ceme- it has wildly improbable charac- and the thieves trying knock "High school students are tery. Miss Thanotogenis is a ters and an equally improbable of{ a bank tank, which fresh out of required civics and girl in love with death. plot that grows more compli- then falls through the floor - American history classes. If the At work Miss Thanotogenis cated with each scene. The opening scene shows three .boards, student has not furthered his edu- Del Monte Catsup meets a young Englishman who Another goo.! section is the cation beyond high school, he see about burying addled young crooks being re- f°rgeJ most of what hKe h" has come to uncle. Robert Morse plays Sealed from priso'n w"ith thewar- montaSe of scenes ln the first them, "Do try Part of the film that shows the learned about government by the his the part, and he is perfect for den admonishing pensive-observer-of-Ameri- and ilmit yourselves to a little three thugs bungling caper after time he is 2L Betty Crocker Cake Mixes \tbe[ie™ ^ U J "m the can-life role. It says on his honest pilfering." But their • caP^- As for the lines, like many Economy Beef passport he is an AID (artificial minds are on bigger things, English most "eed sub" ™ ® fhemayballot " sa"i d Starr insemination donor), but his real namely the hundred thousand titlesaudiences. to be understood by Amen- » have a problem> s poetry. His uncle. Sir Francis Hinsley, pounds that they stashed away before going to jail. can convincing voters of its merit." The acting is generally good, Many voters feel that 18-year- Beef & Pork Liver ,,29' the only pathetic character in the The Duke, played by Anton with all the actors having the olds are too radical and too im¬ 59' film, becomes a victim of Hoi- Rodgers (and looking like Peter lightening-fast delivery and mature to vote. They argue that Rib Steak ib. lywood's callousness and hangs Sellers in a Beatle wig), who faultless timing required for this year- olds need more himself. The good nephew writes the eulogy: "They told me Fran- planned the job but didn't get kind a-a caught, has absconded with the nirh of comedy. But the majority o£ rtiAm Knand all their time experience with llle . tbam spend all their time make vot- Swiss Steak ,, 59' money and used it to set up a trying to act like somebody else. n°.— "The population of young peo¬ cis Hinsley, They told me you were hung, WTEh red protruding eyeballs, And black protruding nature clinic that fronts for his criminal operations. Even the most interesting 20 isbetween the ages of 18 and character, Ian Bannen as "Leff- ple vjstly exceeding the Round Steak „69< Duke and his boys want to hi- tenant Percy Vine", is painfully norm," said Starr. tongue." Rod Steiger plays Mr. Joy- jack an army train with six nr.!-- like Terry-Thomas. The only The problems facing this age rociems .^.-..1 uus a e Sirloin Steak 79' boy, an embalmer at Whispering lion pounds in payroll aboard, thing missing in Bannen"s dry, and have a computerized brain stiff-upper-lip ("I don't mind s ''"f^ p P rjehtprac- Glades and a competitor affections of Miss He lives with his for the Thanotogenis "Mom" center that vaguely resembles that the men call me Creeping S°„v'.fl,..,0,.... thp UNCLE'S headquarters. Vine") delivery is the gapped louth must learn tne p s nnw fBone Steak ib. 89' Shurfine Soft Drinks a Mynah bird. Anyway, with plot, subplot, counterplot and subcounterplot, front teeth, The only real original in. the Hamburger 3.b.s1" they manage to botch up the heist with everybody getting cast is Charlotte Rampling as the Duke's girlfriend. Slim, pretty 6/49c Thief Needed caught except the Duke. To de- scribe everything that went oh and dressed in a series of stun- ning mod outfits, she is perfect Peters 49c would require .at least half of as the well - bred young lady Ride-To Fee this page." turned to a life of crime. Giant Cheer, Rinso just wanted to ; probably take a rideThurs- BOBEBTS Swift Rasher Bacon 69° day a car when a students reported missing and called back 20 minutes later to report that 69jjr ^cuyi, - and the sprint due of Gary Dilley fessor of physical education and Baylor 1 2 4 Martins 2 2 6 Ed Click spurted in the final and Darryle Kifer Nesman, a graduate of Michigan totals 27 17 71 totals 32 17 81 50 yards of the 200-yard butter¬ barely touched out OSL' competitors in the 50- fly and passed Ohio State's Dick free, to give State a 28-20 lead. Gable for the win which broke Pete Williams broke the old a 33-33 tie. This put the Spar¬ 'S' Judo Club tan swimmers ahead to stay in a MSL record of 2:02.9 in the 200- — California, New York Students 75-48 victory here Saturday. yard individual medley with 2:02.3 effort. But national champ a Defeats ND Prior to the the Spartans and butterfly win, Buckeyes were Bob Hopper churned a 2:01.7 to lay team and had two individual- State over the Buckeyes in 26 Save 1/2 The MSU Judo Club defeated win the event and bring the Bucks event wins, and Kifer chipped in a encounters, neck-and-neck, but State's su¬ within pair of valuable second i time tocriti- Notre Dame in its first meet of seven points at 32-25. places State's splashers will be on the perior depth and the absence in the the Larsen and Knorr "slammed" sprints. road for their final duals before year, Saturday, 12-6. State of a pair of OSL front-liners Fred Whiteford and Ken Genova Driver concluded his home the BigTen championships March also took the overall champion¬ led to a defeat for the visitors in the three-meter diving to career with ship with Dave Bowlin, first de¬ from Columbus. pull a record-breaking 3-5. The tankers will swim 9 Your American Airlines Campus Ohio State into a 33-33 tie. breaststroke time. gree brown belt, defeating two OSL freestyler Wisconsin Friday and will invade Lee Danielsen The win of Notre Dame's black belts. and Following Glick's big win, was only the sixth for Minnesota Saturday. butterfly specialist Tom MacMillan and Kifer teamed up carc-er, to be happy a; J Sales Representative Will Be In The Bowlin won the heavyweight Fritz missed the meet for health Successful, For free in- division and teammate Garm reasons. Ohio State's tank team to win in a very tight 100-yard Gaffner placed second. Bob Ken¬ free. Dilley and Williams widen¬ 'Balanced' Fencers has been plagued by illness and mort Union Concourse Tomorrow 10:30-5. ed State's lead to 55-38 with 1-2 successful, write nedy was third for the Irish. injury throughout the dual-meet Jos:: Jewett Career finishes in the 200-yard back¬ Xairen Maruyama, first de¬ season. "I have had more injury School, 520 West Ionia, stroke. Walsh continued the Spar¬ gree black belt for Notre Dame, and illness trouble this year Lansing, or.phone 4-2- 1093, Mike Williamson 207 332-8696 won the lightweight division. Don Gross and Warren Clark, both of than I have ever Buckeye Head Coach Bob Bar¬ had," said tan surge with yard freestyle. a win in the 500- Win 3 At Wisconsin Bouge St. Driver surpassed his own 200- State, finished second and third, rels. yard breaststroke record of By GAYEL WESCH respectively. State Coach Charles McCaf- State New* free was elated by the decisive 2:18.5 by pacing Saturday's 200 Sports Writer with a 2:18.0. M A DIS O N—MSU*» victory over the team which has fencing Lund and Laska were the most won more national Probably the most exciting team launched a well-balanced championships race of the successful Spartans against Wis¬ than any other school. "This was day came in the 400- attack to defeat all three of its consin, both sweeping their three yard freestyle relay. Click gave opponents in a triple-dual meet a very good meet for Michigan bouts. Baer, Loutzenheiser and up a body-length lead to Buckeye here Saturday. State. We always have nip-and- epeeist Andre Lee contributed Tom Call in the first leg, and The tuck meets with Ohio State and Spartans defeated Kansas, two victories in the meet. have never beaten them badly in Dilley couldn't make up the dif¬ 19-8, Iowa, 16-1 l.andWisconsin, ference in his 100. Bill Scott 15-12. 25 years," McCaffree said. "We functioned as a team for Bob stayed close in his leg before State swept all nine bouts in the first time all season," said Wolf, Lee Driver, Click Ken Walsh sprinted 100 yards sabre against Kansas, while foil and Jim MacMillan breezed to coach Charles Schmitter. "We in 0:46.9 to win. and epee won six and four bouts, a 400-yard medley relay win to finally had the balance we've open the contest. Following Den¬ "We had many exciting races," respectively. Mel Laska and been striving for.''* said Mark Haskell each won three practicing engineer? ny Hill's 1,000-yard freestyle McCaffree. "But we won the close ones this time." sabre bouts, Charlie Baer, two, Laska, 8-0 in the three meets, See how LTV can help victory, the Spartans led, 14-7. and Lund National champion Randy Lar- . Swimming in,,the|r l> home, and Charlie Beam, one. (6-2) both received the find the field you're -team's- •'■'Fencer of >the Week''' sen and the Buck's No. 2 diver, meet, State's four seniors had The cut out for. Your Spartans took all three award. Laska has been a stand¬ Chuck Knorr, whipped State in the excellent -dayu. Capt. Denny Hill weapons from Iowa, winning out for the sabre crew all sea¬ whole career benefits neer who's at home in several specialties is a man one-meter springboard compe¬ scored a big win in the 1,000- sabre and epee, 5-4, and foil, son, while Lund's performance when you start i demand. LTV's tition, to knot the count at 15-15. yard freestyle for his finale. Jim 6-3, respectively. Don Lund, a cross-training and multiple projects lead the epee team to its best MacMillan's burst of speed MacMillan was on a winning re¬ senior epeeist, bounced back i/itri the right job roduce well rounded candidates for top-level positions showing of the year. from two losses against Kansas to. take all three of his bouts The three wins bring the team's against the Hawkeyes. Bill Sie- dual meet record to 5-3 for bert chipped in with two vic¬ the season. ^■t tories to provide the epee mar¬ The team's next meet will be gin of victory. Thursday against Wayne State. Steve Yore, Rodger Loutzen- The Spartans will face Ohio State heiser and T.S, Givens won a and Notre Dame Saturday. pair of bouts each in foil, while Haskell and Laska won three and two bouts, respectively, in sabre. Rugby Practice /orking LTV young recogni engineer from the start. Besides the satisfaction of on toprprionty CQNOCIiST! a Wisconsin provided the stiffest competition for the Spartans, but good showing by State in the epee and sabre units made the difference. The epee team de¬ feated the Badgers, 5-4, and the The MSL Rugby Club will hold its first practice of the year 8-10 tonight in the LM sports arena. All students tend. are welcome to at¬ projects, you'll be given the opportunity to work toward We're ready to JSW talk, engineers — about any advanced degrees question you ask. Training programs. Research through company facilities. Current projects sponsored programs and plans for the future. And you. If you're looking for a career of exciting growth and accomplishment, you're also looking for a company with the same qualities. Here at LTV Aerospace Corporation, LTV Michigan Division, young engineers and the company are growing in the fields of missiles, mobile surface vehicles, weapons systems and many others. Assignments are diversified, too. They include such areas as: Structures Dynamics • Structures Stress Analysis • Aeroballistics • Guidance & Control • Electronic Systems • Propulsion • Product Design • Project Planning • Industrial Engineer¬ ing • and others. For complete information about with a career LTV, consult your Placement Office or write College Relations Office, LTV Michigan Divi¬ sion, P. O. Box 404, Warren, Michigan 48090. LTV Michigan is a divi¬ sion of LTV Aerospace Corporation and is an equal opportunity employer. ami sunt iinsiHiiuiruisn TO PLAY AND PLAY AGAIN Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Monday, February 14, 1966 7 'S9 Runs Away With 5 Wins In clocked record times similar battle in the The shot put record of 58' By PHIL PIERSON in meet pected a State News Sports Writer of 2:13.8. lows but were disappointed as 10-1/2" was bettered by two The Summers added MSU's third Washington's winning time of men. Southern Illinois' George Spartans' track power¬ win in the 60-yard dash. With 0:07.8 was two-tenths better than Woods holds the new mark when house continued its surge Satur¬ a final burst of speed, Summers second - place finisher Charles he tossed the shot 60*11-3/4". day night by copping titles in five events—two more than any other nosed out favorite Charles Brown LeMon of Western Michigan. Eugene Crews of Missouri also team—to lead the field in the of Missouri.His winning time was Jones was third with 0:08.1, topped 60 feet with a distance of Michigan State Relays at Jeni¬ 0:06.3 to Brown's 0:06.4. Central Michigan's John Smith 60'-l/2". Both of the Spartans' other finished fourth in 0:08.2 and A record breaking perform¬ son Fieldhouse. wins were recorded by Washing¬ Steele was fifth with 0:08.4. ance in the mile by Sam Bair of State served notice to the other 25 ton in the 70-yard high and low Five other records were set Kent State still wasn't enough teams that it was the team hurdles. in addition to those in the shuttle to earn him the victory as North- to beat when it won 14 qualify¬ In the highs, Washington won hurdle and 1,000. western's Craig Boydston topped ing heats In the afternoon pre¬ with his best time of the year, Last year's champion, JoeNei- him. Bair's time of 4:12.2 was liminaries, including 10 in the 0:08.5. Jones was second by hardt of CMU, eclipsed the meet five-tenths of a second better hurdles, two in the 60-yard dash, SPARTAN 'GENE-IOUS'—Gene Washington, lane House. Moving up on Washingtoi are teammates inches with an identical time. and field house pole vault mark than the existing mark, but Boyd¬ four, sprints to a 70-yard low hurdle victory in Clint Jones and Bob Steele. 1,000-yard run and shuttle hurdle of 15' with ston was clocked in 4:09.5. relay. Spartan Steele finished third with a jump of 15' 3/4". Saturday's Michigan State Relays at Jenison Field Photo by D time of 0:08.8. State's vaulters, Jim Stewart and When the finals began, the a Air Force's sprint medley re¬ Spartans looked as though they After the close race in the John Wilcox, set a varsity record lay team of Douglas Withers, might run the other squads out highs, the crowd of 4,018 ex¬ when they jumped 14' 6". Royce Woddell, James Thomp¬ STATE ABOV of the field house as they grabbed wins in the first two events, the son and Dale Stovall equaled the meet and field house mark of long jump and shuttle hurdle re¬ 3:26.5, set by Michigan in 1956. lay. Jim Garrett won the long jump Matmen Win In East; Most of the crowd, didn't see¬ Skaters Sweep Badger Series the record set in the 600 as crown with a leap of 23' 7-1/2" Loyola's Bob O'Connor set the to best Northwestern*s Ronald Joseph who jumped 23' 3-3/4". For the second consecutive Wallop Cornell, 27-5 time in the ing with tenth afternoon's qualify¬ 1:10.5. This faster than the former was one- By JOE MITCH The scoring was well-balanced State split the goalie duties utes, but it was only tempor¬ ITHACA, N.Y.—State's wrest¬ Following Anderson's and Ott's State News ary. Four Spartan goals in the year the shuttle hurdle team of ling squad smashed eastern mark. Sports Writer with Sandy McAndrew, Mike Cop- again, this time between junior pins, Spartan 157-pounder Dick MADISON — Michigan State's second period put the game out Clint Jones, Bob Steele, Fred Cornell University, 27-5 Cook hooked up with Cornell's po and Mike Jacobson each col¬ Jerry Fisher and sophomore power of reach for the Bayers. McKoy and Gene Washington Saturday for its eighth victory top wrestler, Jeff Stephens, in hockey team climed above the lecting three points and center Larry Roche. Fisher started the broke the meet and field house STATE .500 mark for the first time this Tom Mikkola assisting for two opener, turning away 20 shots Volmar got his 23rJ goal of in nine meets. the best match of the day. Cook records in winning. with a weekend series and holding the Badgers score¬ the season when he powered a The gained a point in the final second season Spartans recorded wins "There real close less until the final period. shot from inside the blue line Their 1965 mark of 0:28.9 for a 5-4 decision. He had two sweep over non-Western Colle¬ were two in seven of the nine weight di¬ giate Hockey foe Wisconsin. games," said SpartanCoach Amo past Johnson with five minutes was bettered in the semifinals visions, with two coming on pins minutes of riding time, however. The skaters posted their 11th victory in 21 games with a 5-3 Bessone. "It did us good to have two tough games, especially with Fisher also started Saturday, gone in the second period. but gave way to Roche in the with a 0:2S.8 clocking. They Two goals by McAndrew. and equaled this mark in the finals by 137-pounder Dale Andersor and Rod Ott at 152. At 167, George Radman re¬ corded his sixth win of the year DISCOUNT second period. Roche, in his another by Faunt , with an as¬ and would have done better but with a 13-3 decision over Joe triumph at Madison Saturday- Michigan Tech coming up next week." second game of the season, gave sist from Volmar, put the Spar¬ Washington hit the last hurdle Fran Larson was dealt the onl> Moore. Cosmetics night, following a 3-1 win the two goals and made 11 saves. tans ahead, 5-2, after Mike Riley on his leg and was thrown off Spartan loss when he was de- night before at Milwaukee. It was the Spartans' seventh Wisconsin's goalie, Gary John¬ up pushed across Wisconsin's sec¬ stride, losing at least a tenth clsioned by Bob - Stock, 9-0, ir Mike of it Bradley had a hard time at 177, but finally won his & Vitamins son, was given credit byBessone Jacobson opened the scoring ond of a second. the 123 weight class. win in their last eight games and for turning in a "superb per¬ formance." Johnson knocked at in Saturday's game with a goal goal. Twenty-four hours earlier, the Don Behm remained undefeated third match of the year with a 12-7 decision over F ran Terraro. 619 E. Grand River their fifth in a row since losing MSU narrowly missed getting 17:16 of the first period. He Spartans had to come across its third straight win in the 300 for the Spartans as he picked up Heavyweight Jeff Richardson the first of a two-game set to away 51 shots in the Friday was assisted Minnesota three weeks ago. game and 40 more in the series by McAndrew and with two goals in the final period as Jim Summers finished fourth, his 15th straight win, a 13-3 was unable to pick up his fifth Daily 9 a.m. - 6 p.m. Coppo. before they could chalk up a vic¬ but decision over Herb Scherzer. win as he tied Dick Moore, 2-2. Wed. 9 a.m. - 9 p.m. Doug Volmar and Bill Faunt finale. only two-tenths of a second were the heroes for the Spar¬ "He's turned in the finest A goal by Wisconsin's Jeff tory. behind the winning time of 0:31.5 Volmar hit the net in the first tans as they each tallied four goalie job I've seen all year," Carlson tied the score at 1-1 by Southern Illinois' Ross Mac¬ said Bessone. at the end of the first 20 min- 10 seconds of play when he scored kenzie. After a slow start. Sum¬ points in the series. from 20 feet out on a powerful mers • Prescription lenses Swish rHI COUPON picked up speed and was slap shot. The puck appeared to rapidly gaining on MacKenzie ground Nail Polish have been stopped by Johnson, at the wire. but officials confirmed that it 5th Gym Win had g e in. After a scoreless second per¬ Spartan Coach Fran Dittrich did not choose to enter his team in the distance medley relay and reg. 29c 150 iod, McAndrew tallied at 6:24, > Sunglasses Toronto's unit of John Loaring, after picking up a pass from L.W.E. Sharge, Douglas Vlac- As Gunny Hits Jacobson. Forty-six seconds lat¬ er, goal Volmar scored his second of the night, on assists Dougall victorious and David Bailey was with a 10:01.0 time. » Repairs while you wait I COUPON! leading event with the Spartans from Coppo and Faunt. State's Big 10 mile champion, Bator Opticians By ROBERTA YAFIE Wisconsin's Ron Les/ezynski Keith Coates, lost the lead in State News Sports Writer taking the total edge, 27.45 - 25.5. tallied the only Badger score the last 10 yards of the 1,000, 223 Abbott (Next to State Theater) Bic MADISON — The Spartan gym¬ of the evening at the 15-minute to finish secorrd to Jesse Ney- nasts held on to a third of the Larry Goldberg, who began the season on the bench, has solidly mark of the third period. man of Air Force. Both were Pens Big Ten lead, while boosting taken over the No. 1 ring spot. their winning string to five here 19c 90 reg. Saturday, as they defeated Wis¬ consin, 188.25-174.6. The victory was their fourth He took -top honors at 9.2 with Wilson scoring 9.15. Side horse provided the Bad¬ gers' with their first win of the My boss gave me this space Limit 1 Expires the to tell you something about advertising, in the conference. Joining afternoon with Jerry Herter Spartans at the top of the chart are Michigan and Illinois, both scoring 9.45. Second was Dennis Smith at 9.15 and Wisconsin's undefeated. The Wolves won both ends of a triple dual meet Sat¬ urday, topping Iowa, 1S3»S-1"6.4, and Indiana, 183.8-146.6. ED GUNNY Rick Arvensen, third at 8.5. his "Dennis performed close to capability and almost pulled and the Leo Burnett Company. Groom certain fond Dave Thor, workingall-around out a first place," said Szypula. "I was—proud of kim because But with a man like that, and I have a & Clean for Stare," totalled 54.05' for'the faffing off to fmish' tRe routine. you don't make the same-mis¬ for money. Leo Bur he's hitting as he should. I ex¬ reg- si.x events, averaging a little This had him in a hole to keep take twice. You learn what Company has let me 1 above 9.0. He captured firsts in wo events, scoring 9.4 in floor his 9.0 average, but he came pect more from him as he gains experience." not to do. After a while, you ample portions of both. Limit.i /yg through nicely in the bar events. Bob Cordaro is still undefeated begin to know what to do. exercise and parallel bars. He His rings were beautiful." Now, about you. Do was second in high bar at 9.2, Rohs had been a doubtful start¬ in trampoline, scormg 9.2.There One morning about eight like to solve problems'.' was a tie for second between third in the vault at 8.95, fifth er in floor exercise, having turn¬ months after I started, I was Keith Sterner and Mike Todd of you prefer challenge to c ■■COUPON ■■ in rings at 8.85 and fourth on ed both ankles under during Wed¬ reading the pa|>er on my way fort? Do you like working Wisconsin at 8.7, with Ray Strobel side horse at S.45. nesday's practice. Szypula noted to work. There, in undeniable fourth at 8.6. with ideas and are you will¬ The highest individual per¬ that it looked as though he wasn't formance was by Ed Gunny, going to perform, but did come The trampoline totals slipped black and white, was my first ing to stand up for your own? Tek to 26.5-22.55, while long horse published ad. I won't forget registering a 9.65 in horizontal through well. Then you'd probably like Toothbrushes hit for a 27.35-27.15 score. The how it felt. bar. That event was the highest "Gunny turned in a fantastic honors went to Hennecke at 9.55 of the meet, with the Spartans performance in high bar," with Ron Aure right behind at There wasn't nearly as reg. 69c AQA picking up 27.75 points and the Szypula noted. "He also did a 9.5. And if you think d he Limit-1 tUV Badgers netting 24.2. Ted Wil¬ good job in rings. His vaulting long a wait for my second ad, "Ron had a fine day even though at home in a fast-moving » Expires Feb 16 son tied Wisconsin's Bob Rein- is getting more precise and or my third. You begin to get ert for third at 8.9. should be a top man to beat runner-up in two events," said I write ads for a living, and I guess the feel for it, and it gets mate where you can gr< State passed the 27-pointmark in the event." Szypula. "His vault was just easier. A little easier. along with your company shaded by Hennecke, who's one in three other events. It won Gunny had an 8.9 vault for of the best in the country." they asked me to write this one because I What do I do now? Last you place a high premium floor exercise, 27.45-22.95, with fourth and tied for third with the Hennecke was second to Thor in your shoes not so month, I made part of an quality, integrity and th< Ron Aure a strong 9.25 score second with a and Bob Hennecke of Badgers' Mark Kann in rings, at 9.1. Rings continued as the in parallel bars at 9.35. was long ago—a college annual presentation to top oughness— well, you'd fi Wisconsin third at 8.95. Fourth student, wondering what to do about a job. executives of a major client. plenty of people like you Leo Burnett. Skrip Ink for the Spartans was John Rohs assorted color1 Yesterday, I watched while at 8.8. 1 thought I was interested 11 still believe it, so you'll a commercial of mine I wouldn't change jobs wi was 29c "Thor had another fine said Coach day," George Szypula. "Al¬ No Matter advertising, but I didn't find a list of Leo Burnett ive the slightest idea what clients at the bottom of this videotaped. Today, I'm writ¬ anybody. And I'm pret reg. Limit 1 150 though he got into trouble on ing this ad. Who knows about was really all about. page. Next time you're the horse, he got back on after How You I liked to write, but that watching TV or reading a tomorrow? I thrive on responsibility, >esn't mean you have to. Figure It... There are lots of interesting think.) jobs in this business—account My first six months here, Interested ? A representative of Leo Burnett Those Fresh Dough work, media, research, art. I you name it. almost gave up. I worked Company will visit your campus in the next few weeks. If you'd like to talk with him, sign up at your Placement Jergens Pizzas From very closely with a brilliant Varsity Office. If you can't see him, write to: John Hershcv, Hand Lotion Just Can't Be Beat!! So I started checking the guy who wasn't at all shy Leo Burnett Company, Inc., Prudential Plaza, Chicago, agencies — which ones had about telling me when I'd which accounts. I figured the written a bad ad —which, I Illinois 60601. "tw;4' 990 best way to find out how good admit, hap|>ened as often as Want to know more? Ask your Placement Office for a If you have trouble cashing they are is to look at the ads not. Once, I remember, I al¬ copy of the booklet, "Becoming an Advertising Man at checks, call on us. We cash and commercials they make most quit as my fifth or sixth Leo Burnett," or write to the above address for a copy. for their clients. rewrite hit the wastebasket. more checks than the bank! SKI CLUB P.S. Have a happy Valentine's Day! We work for the following companies: Specials Available MEETING TUES. 7:30 At East Lansing Plans For Feb. 19 Store Only Trip To Boyne Highlands VARSITY Feb. Expires 16, 1966 SKI MOVIES SUPER FAST DELIVERY "Campus Renowned" ED 2-6517 8 Leo Burnett Company, Inc. CHICAGO • NEW YORK • HOLLYWOOD • MONTREAL • TORONTO • LONOON Free Parking At Rear of Store Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Monday, February 14, 1966 MARTIN TENOR guitar. Like BEAUTIFUL MUSIC HAPPY CUSTUMER ">»•< new with hard shell case. $140. ■ Automotive Automotive Employment For Sale FORD 1960 Fairlane 2-door se¬ dan. 292 V-8 automatic. Radio, Auto Service & Parts EMPLOYERS OVERLOAD Com- pany, temporary assignments TYPEWRITER FOR home RENT Zenith YOURrTVnf?om and GE NEJAC. portables for Books heater. 292 v-8 automatic. Rad¬ NEW BATTERIES. Exchange for experienced only $9 per month. Free serv¬ (conti nued from page 1) office girls. io. heater. $295. SIGNS FORD price from $7.95. New sealed No fee, top pay. Phone 487- :ment ice and delivery. Call NEJAC The fund, under the supervision future royalty payments, pos¬ SALES, 162 W. Grand River, beams, 99^. Salvage cars, large 6071. C30 TV RENTALS. 482-0624. C of the administration with ex¬ sible obsolescence of the book size, 4 speakers, floor model, Williamston. 655-2191. C30 stock used parts. ABC AUTO COLLEGE $86. Also radio and TV tubes. penditures approved by the dean and a small percentage STUDENT, route PARTS, 613 E. South St. IV of the college and the chairman • AUTOMOTIVE MUSTANG 1965, 289 v-8 auto- helpers, $2.50 hour. Must have 40% off. Open evenings. TUBE Have You for a reserve fund. 5-1921. C of the department, can be used "The • EMPLOYMENT matic transmission. 19,000 car. Contact Mr. Cochran for CADDY, 215 N. Clippert. 32-5 MSU Press, however, Scooters & Asked Your for travel to academic meetings is in • FOR RENT miles, still under warrenty. Cycles interview. 393-1830. 37-15 FIRST QUALITY MATERIALS in the field, buying books and an unusual position to offer • FOR SALE $1,995. Call 482-9232/482-2661. HONDA 160 cc. Half year old. and workmanship. Large frame Sir Prize? its services to the staff, student 28-3 For Rent subscribing to learned journals and community because of its • LOST & FOUND Excellent condition, $550. Call selection. OPTICAL DISCOUNT, SPINSTER'S in the field for the department, • PERSONAL MUSTANG 1965 Dynasty green after 2 p.m., 332-4198. 29-5 Apartments 416 Tussing Building. Phone IV SPIN FEB. 19 guaranteed sale of texts," the among other things, Blair said. PEANUTS PERSONAL 2-4667. publication said. The aim is to • hardtop. Power steering. Auto¬ GIRL TO share mobile home in C -REE KODAK instamatic bank In other books, published by Aviation have a publishing house free • REAL ESTATE matic transmission. Snow tires. with Lansing. Private room. Non- STEREO TAPE recorder with any roll of color film commercial publishers, Blair from commercial restrictions • SERVICE $2,150. 337-7553 after 6 p.m. FRANCIS AVIATION will fly you smoker. turntable and microphone. Like left for processing and this said, there would be a possiblity $50. Phone 482-7888. and necessity, TRANSPORTATION 32-5 ad. Color prints 19v^o rovtieo sale. 339- Mow thru Slav. Call ED 2-2559. Services college student in new apart¬ ACE HARDWARE, across from gan basketball game. Call 353- irterior, $575 627-767,*: 29-3 2725 30-3 '30-3 , . ment home, kitchen privileges, the Union. ED 2-3212. C ANN BROWN, typist and !7>»l*i- "3324. 30-3 VOLKSWAGEN CAMPER 1965. E ngagements COR \ AIR l964Monza club coupe. CHOOSE YOUR own hours. A lith offset printing. Disserta¬ parking. 489-9427 . 28-3 COUPLE NEEDS apartment 4-speed. A sparkling little red 12,000 miles. AM-FM radio. few hours tions; theses, manuscripts, gen¬ a day can mean ex¬ Animals Spring term. Would like to sub¬ Ronni Lee Gaines, Brooklyn, beauty with bucket seats, white- Must see evenings. $2,250,655- cellent earnings for you as a Hou eral typing. IBM. 16 years ex¬ lease married housing. No 2644. 30-3 FREE ADORABLE kitten to good N.Y., Brooklyn College junior and walls, and radio. See this and trained AVON representative. perience. 332-8384. C children. 353-2888. 32-5 MEN: 3 furnished double rooms home. Box trained. Call 351- many more compacts at OS- VOLKSWAGEN 1961, deluxe bus. For appointment in your own DIAPER SERVICE. Three types Berkley House to Stewart M. all utilities paid. Carpeted. 5320. 28-3 BLOOD DONORS needed, $6 for Cohen, Brooklyn, N.Y. graduate LORN AUTO, INC. 2601 E. Excellent condition. Mechanic of diapers to choose from. Bulk home, write Mrs. Alona Huck- Kitchen facilities. Parking. 516 RH positive; $10 or $12 for RH student and Pi Lambda Phi. Micnican, Lansing. C32 previous owner. Special $885. ins, 5664 School Street, Haslett, Mobile Homes wash for cleaner, whiter dia¬ Grove, East Lansing. 355-1643. negative. DETROIT BLOOD CHEVROLET 1958 4-door Impala SPORTS CAR CENTER. IV 9- Michigan or call evenings, FE pers. Fluff dried and folded. 30-5 1965 PALACE ultra-modern Co- Carole Sochor, Flint junior V-8 Powerzlide, easy starting. 7591. 29-3 9-8483. Use your own or rent ours. Con¬ SERVICE, INC., 1427 E. Mich¬ to C28 lonial Palace, 12'x60', fully LARGE HOUSE for rent. Spring igan Ave. Hours 9-4 Monday, Michael Krellwitz, Flint senior, Gooi running. $2S5. IV 9-294*. AT LAST—"The Pride of Lot G" furnished & carpeted. Priced to tainers furnished. No deposit. EMPLOYMENT FOR ambitious and Close to Carroll University, Cleveland, 34-10 for sale. 1959 Opel-$125. summer terms. 25 years experience. BY-LO Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, students living on campus. Must sell. On Trailer Haven lot, East Ohio. Bruce Christie—485-0071. campus. Students. Call 351— DIAPER SERVICE, 1010 E. 12-7 Thursday. 489-7587. 47 CORVETTL- 1965" convertible 4- have car and evenings free. 4402. 30-3 Lansing. 337-1311. Ask for Gee. speed, 365 h.p. 8,000 miles. 33-10 Call Michigan. IV 2-0421. C Jerry Cole at 355-0676 1-2 male roommates for new 3 PALACE 1958 10' x 50' 2 bed- e3qqei 3d0 0u P $500 down, take over payments. ATTENTION: BUICK 1954 4-door 6-8 p.m. 28-1 room, new carpeting, air con¬ I'M YOUR best friend—Marsha bedroom duplex. $50-$55 1730 □aoQ aaa no Call TU 2-7610. CORVETTE 1958, excellent con- 28-3 sedan. Good running condition. Very reasonable. Phone IV 2- PART-TIME. SEVERAL help develop local outlet for men to Haslett Road, 351-6516. 29-3 ditioning, on lot in East Lansing. 332 -6706. 28-5 but I don't know how to tell you this. Your rug is dirty. Sug¬ □□□□ !□□□ 1 5636. 30-3 gest you rent a Glamorene Rug ACROSS □bi□ □sb ej0 □ Rooms 1956 NEW MOON 40' iTFTOn dition. Rebuilt 283, bored and STATIONWAGONS. DID you know nationally recognized institu¬ Shampooer for only $2 a day 1 Mini en- A,Sit ana □ E Stroked to 301. Injection tional and commercial supplies. MALE STUDENT "wanted for half lot in East Lansing. Call 332- cam OSBORN AUTO has the largest Sales experience preferred. Car 0654 after 6 p.m. at DEAN HARDWARE, 2703 5 itlAjTiOl■ o|" aE and solids. Dual Houser quads. Offen manifold, Hew trans¬ selection of wagons in Central necessary. Box E-5, State News. of double room. Cooking, park¬ weekdays. 28-5 Turner, Lansing Michigan. 29-3 M 0 tHsIp ing. Living room, fireplace A, N 1 a □llu ij Y mission and clutch. Must' sell. Michigan? 20 in stock right now. 28-3 INCOME TAX Service, days and privileges. 351-5674. 28-3 t Leaving for Air Force. Paid All shapes, sizes and models. BEAUTICIAN, FULL or part- Lost & Found evenings. WALTER HAHN&Co. d 0 B □□□ □ R_ E. EjAlG £ Dm t AR OSBORN AUTO, INC. 2601 E. SINGLE ROOM, male student. 533 Cherry, Lansing. Call 484- L 1 n $1595, 5 months azo, make offer. time. U n 1 i m i t e d opportunity. FOUND: SILVER heart pendant. Michigan, Lansing. Two blocks from Union. Call 7002. 677-4919. Mason. 29-3 C32 BARBARA BOX, Hair Stylists. Vicinity of Student Services C47 E A ■G £ S sa I] _L_ lets El L_ S IV 5-4514 or ED 2-6189. 30-5 HOLY TRANSPORTATION! The ED 2-3601; ED 2-4080. House¬ Bldg. Wednesday. Call 353-1650 BICYCLE STORAGE, rentals, D FALCON 1961 , best offer. Call Batmobile is for sale. Black and identify. 28-3 sales and services. EAST LAN¬ 351-4413. 28-5 keeper also needed. 28-3 For Sale 1961 Tempest. Ready to eat SING CYCLE, 1215 E. Grand FORD GALANIE 1961 automatic PIECEWORK FOR Junior or Sen- GUITAR, GIBSON 12 string,con¬ road, at $300. Use hot line— Personal River, Call 332-8303. C transmission. Power steering. ior in Landscape Architect. Pay cert. Hard shell case. Must sell. call 351-5531. 28-3 NOTICE: ANY person who stayed THESES PRINTED. Rapid ser- Musi sell. 351-5108. 30-3 to be discussed. OX 4-0588. Call 351-4401. 30-5 UNCLE SAM wants you, but he at the scene of the fatal acci¬ vice. Drafting supplies. Xerox 28-3 FORD CONVERTIBLE 1962 V-8. got me first. 1957 Chevrolet HARMONY GUITAR, double pick- dent at the Harrison Road, Grand MAN OVER copies. CAPITOL CITY BLUE¬ Automatic transmission. Power 4-door hardtop. Radio, heater. 18, for full time up, Bigsby amplifier, reverb, Trunk R.R. crossing till the PRINT. 221 South Grand. 482- steering. Red. New tires. $975. Good employment. Must be neat. Able tremolo, 6-10"Jensen speakers. shape. $225 or best offer. to furnish character reference. train left at 4:30 a.m., Novem¬ 5431. C30 337-7553 after 6 p.m. 32-5 332-8024 . 30-3 Tom, 484-6742. 32-5 ber 7, 1965, is requested to Job offer steady, IRONINGS WANTED to do ki year round call Detroit, TU 5-8155 collect. work. For further information my home, 3176 Biber Street. 5 4 7 9 % 1 Z * 4 5 Don't You Get Caught contact Ron Wiezarek at TOWN TALK service station, 4601 N. Western sizes. fit! Now! Girl's all PERKINS LEATHER Particularly the two young men students riding a motorcycle. East Lansing. $4 a basket. C30 % " It % DIAPER .0 SHOP. 2410 S. Cedar. 28-3 SERVICE-Hospital pure Grand River. 35-10 32-5 20 Sill DO YOU have something to sefl? diapers. We're the most modern is 21. Finishes NURSES: LOVELY convalescent and the only personalized dia¬ Without Any Clean Clothes unit on North Hagadorn has evening employment Call us, TOM & JERRY'S, 484- 7838. 30-3 per service in town. Pails fur¬ 15 % lfc \7 % It 23 Attached openings Saturday and Sunday, nished. No deposit. Two pounds part-time work (male) 20 Bring your clothes in by 9 and 7-3 and 11. Tuesday - Thursday 3- 332-5061. 32-6 If you are free 4 evenings RESERVED SEAT tickets for Block and Bridle on sale horse of baby clothes at no extra cost. Try our new Diaparene Process. 19 21 %13 you can pick them up by 5, all GREAT LAKES EMPLOYMENT per week and Saturdays, you can maintain your stu¬ show. April 1 and 2. Room 204, Anthony. Entry's now open for AMERICAN DIAPER SERVICE, % 27 expertly cleaned and pressed. for permanent positions for men and women in office, sales, dies and still enjoy a part- time job doing those interested in exhibiting. 914 E. Gier St. IV 2-0864. DAY AND evening care in my C 14 %%% 3* 32 % Animal reference room. Anth¬ 2A technical. IV 2-1543. C30 licensed home. Near campus. 29-3 siskin special interviewwork ony. 489-9427. 34 35 Savant BABYSITTER. SINGLE to live in. Two children, one in school. that will bring an average STUDENTS: DOLLARS for future ACCIDENT PROBLEM? Call 28-3 35 3* % 37 31 % 39 31. Construct 32. Musical Light housekeeping. IV 4-3473. income of $55 per week. symbol delivery-from the Company that KALAMAZOO STREET BODY If you are neat 34. Trtra- A 30-3 appearing insures M.S.U. faculty-em¬ 4. 41 and a hard worker, SHOP. Small dents to large GIRLS PART-TIME 0-1. Moii- thord: Cr. call ployees. Call 332-5025, across wrecks. American and foreign 43 day-Friday. Telephone and fil¬ ing work. $1.25 per hour. Call Mr. Arnold, 351-4011, & Tues. between 10 Mon. a.m. & from LIFE. Abbot Hall. LINCOLN C28 cars. Guaranteed 7507. 1411 work. 489- % % 37. Cave --Your Satisfaction Is Our Specialty— I E. Kalamazoo. C 39. Twilight Sue, 487-3174 after 9 a.m. 28-1 p.m. (No other time). ) Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Monday, February 14, 1966 9 COLORADO EXPERIMENT Soviet Spy Says Student-Run' U9 He Tricked FBI BOL'LDER, Colo, if—A group system of large lecture classes," and is the property of the stu- in the United States, claimed government eventually would get of Colorado University students explained Steve Robinson, 20, a dents," has started a school-within-a- political science major fron Most educational institutions Sunday he disposed of a decoding him out of jail. school to stimulate their think- Denver. He heads the five-mem- face device and a radio message from His published a space problem and Unin¬ article to ap- Moscow under the eyes of the excerpts from ing. ver UU Steering Committee. corporated University is no ex- in the FBI agents arresting him. youth magazine The independent, student-run Joseph Smiley, Colorado Uni- ception. More than 350 students Abel was convicted in Brook- Molodoi Kommunist. venture is called the Unincorpo- versity president, described UU signed up for the first three- lyn federal court Oct. 25, 1957, Abel, 63, is now living in re- rated University and unlike some as "a normal experimental ap- week session but only 150 could "free university" projects on proach to a new learning ex- accommodated because the of spying for the Soviet Union tirement in Moscow and paints and sentenced to 30 years in for a hobby, other campuses it enjoys official perience" and noted that re- Steering Committee decided that prison. He was exchanged Feb. Publication of the article, the blessing. sponsible student leaders were 15 was the limit to a class. . "Free universities" else - instrumental in setting it up. Colorado's enrollment is 15,000. 10, 1962, for U2 spy plane pilot first thing to appear here under Francis Gary Powers, Abel's name, indicated Soviet where have tended to be anti- "The students on our cam- What courses does Unincorpo¬ authorities Writing in the newspaper for might have decided establishment forums for the stu- puses are showing more and rated University offer? young people, Moscovsky Kom- make use of him in the cold • dent left, particularly in the fields more concern for the quality of One group discussed "The somolets, he said he had radio war between Western and Soviet of civil rights and U.S. policy in education they are receiving," Church and Metropolis in Fer¬ Viet Nam. he said. "This Unincorporated contact with Moscow during the intelligence organizations. ment" while another worked on night before his arrest and the The Colorado students say University is a perfect example, "The God Question in a Chris¬ equipment was still in his hotel theirs is an academic proposi- and the faculty and administra¬ tian Perspective." room when the agents arrived. tion with no political overtones tion are receptive to this con- A literature class talked about "I knew it would be difficult SHOOTING SPREE--Among the games entertaining residents of the Northeast —they just want to improve their ceru. Boris Pasternak's Nobel Prize- minds. "It's something voluntary for Complex in Cupid's Capers were shooting table tennis balls off bottles with darts. to destroy everything under the e trying to promote dis- interested students and profes- winning novel "Doctor Zhivago" The affair was held Saturday night at Snyder-Phillips. Photo by Russell Steffey noses of six agents but I de¬ NOW' INUW. At 2:0°-5:1° and 8:25 P.M. and Edwin Albee's play "Who's cided that at a minimun, what¬ course and confrontation of ideas sors. The classes are held in Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" J ever happened, I had to get rid "We deliberately stayed away of the decoder and the recording Special Engagement from the political," said Robin¬ of the radio message 1 had re¬ At Popular Prices son. "There's nothing about Viet Nam: that has been pretty well thrashed out. There was a course Soviet Press Scorns Writers ceived a He during the night," dropped the decoder into toilet while a careless FBI on Marx but it was oriented Hannah To agent was supposed to be watch¬ As Trial Nears Verdict toward economics and was ing him, Abel said. iaDY taught—and that's not the right He said he used the tape rec¬ word—by a full economics pro¬ ording to wipe paint off an art- 'State Of U fessor and used dard texts as a guide." one of the stan¬ MOSCOW [R — The official Soviet press heaped more scorn The accused have pleaded not guilty on the ground they were Young Communist I members also are tlier ague and ist's palette and then flushed the tape down the toilet too. G Winner of 8 The faculty of the Unincorpo- argue for maximum sent ces, Abel's spy-cover was the role of President John A. Hannah will rate'd^ University Ts made" up^of Sunday on Russian writers An- e«rcising legitimate freedom of supporting the line taken the a struggling artist. Academy Awards deliver his annual "State of the regular faculty members, minis- dreI D* Sin>'avslcV and 1 • .J! . .* . . Leaving his hotel in a car with University" address at a faculty It's What's ters and rpr„ ,n(i nriet program ordlnaril ^ in their impose, Report- MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY ^7Tuerdayr'lnterviews" wUl be vation Dept., will speak on tech- there.s an held by Capt. Mayer at the Place- and equipment for photo- ne studenl> He has State's Smokers Light Up PERFORMING ARTS COMPANY mer.t Bureau for seniors and graphing wildlife at 7 tonight in 144 hours K_e of „f technical required r for each pack. PRESENTS ITS ARENA THEATRE News Photographic courses. But he wants to dis¬ Sinyavsky, the more famous of Michigan residents are "light- seven cents graduate students. A Dept., 301 Student Services. the two men. He has demanded ing up" in commemoration of the guidebook, "Smoking and Its cuss something in religion, All students interested ii five years in prison and three second anniversary of the U.S. Relationship to Health and Dis¬ philosophy or literature that in- ease" was financed by the two- R.F. Troxler of the Depart¬ Where he do in exile for D£miel- Surgeon General's report on the ing the STEP program a can ment of Botany, University of this As the court went into recess dangers of smoking, year-old Michigan Council on vited to attend a meeting in Par¬ intelligently and effectively? lor A of the Union at 8:15 tonight. Chicago, will speak on studies on In the Unincorporated Univer- until Monday, Moscow's Sunday An increase in sales of over Smoking and Health, and other Those attending will watch the formation ofphycoyanin.por- newspapers carried a report of 53,551,977 packs of cigarettes health agencies. It is aimed documentary, on J1Lr STEPonC unChannel PhVrins and a blue "le pigment the three - day proceedings by was made in the 1964-65 fiscal stopping youngsters from the government news agencyTass year, says O.T. Wharton, a re- ing smoking and helping them 10 from 8:30 to 9. The Rev. John b? of wild-type and mutant strains which labeled the pair "slan- search analyst for the State De- understand why many adults don't - , Duley, proglam coordinator,will discuss plans for next summer. 11 A EC cyanidium caldarium at ARrynlflnt plant seminar at research seminar research Olin Report derers and renegades." partment of Revenue. stop. The guidebook has been dis¬ 1:50 today in 110 Bessey. "They gave ideological weap- The state took in more than tributed by the State Department Off-campus students will hold Olin Health Cen- ons to our enemy in its struggle $74 million in cigarette Hormonal regulation of RNA de- of Education to 30,000 teachers general meeting at 8:30 tonight Friday were; Keith Robert, against our country." Tas: a ter in 35 Union. Nominations for synthesis and utilization will be •eceives of grades 5 through 12. next Breckenrjdge Junior; Deni se clared. year's officers will be held. All , j , the topic of a biochemistry sem- j i ..j... .. m„i,— Mowers>• pinckeny sophomore; Sinyavsky and Daniel smug- THE HOUSE OF members inar at 4 today in 101 Biochem- gled their works to the West and .... .. re urged to attend, james peppier, De *• • ♦ istry. J.R. Tata of the Depart- Heights senior: Heiehts Richai senior; Richard Aus- used pseudonyms to protect BERNARDA ALBA A seminar on AEC plant re- ment of Bioch^pistry, National tin, Scottville graduate student; themselves against punishment FEDERICO GARCIA IORCA FEB. 16-1 search will be held in 110 Bes- Institute of Medical Research, Myra DeZeeuw, Fayetteville, here. sey at 1:50 today. R.F. Troxler London, England, will be the N.Y., freshman; Margaret Pot- As "Abram Tertz" Sinyavsky of the University of speaker, Chicago Bot- ter, Davison freshman; Carol published abroad "On Socialist any Department will speak. * * * * McKellin, Wheaton, 111., fresh- Realism," "The Trial Begins," FAIRCHILD THEATRE BOX OFFICE OPENS * * David Schingoethe, graduate Robert Pea body, short "The Icicle" and "The Make- FOR COUPON EXCHANGE ONLY FEB. 14,15 Modern art in Ghana today will research assistant in dairy, will course student; Rubin Rubinoff, peace Experiment. Daniel, 12:30-5:00 CASH SALES 7:55 NIGHT OF be the subject of a lecture by speak on the amino acids required j^oit junior;"'Sherry Reinbold, ing the name of "Nikolai Arz- Ing the PERFORMANCE R. Sieber, professor of Fine for milk protein synthesis in vitro « Saginaw freshman; -• - ~ Russell Rod- haw." iwas represented by ,, o.j Arts at Indiana University, in at a dairy seminar at 12:30 to- 224 Anthony Hall at 8 toijight. day in 126 Anthony. gers, Flint junior; and Steven Moscow Speaking' and "The Department of Speech Rice, DetroiUreshman. Man from Minap." Saturday's admissions include The workds show Soviet life A seminar on Biochemistry Wayne'Tody, MichigartConser- Lorraine Cohen, Levittown, Pa., sfiot through with brutality, de- will be held at 4 today in 101 vation Department, will discuss freshman; Jeffry Wagnitz, Mid- gradation, corruption and hard- Biochemistry. Speaking will be species management at a fish- land junior; Keith Earl, Flat shiP- J.R. Tata of the Biochemistry Rock junior; Charles Brown, De- Tass quoted at length from For the guy who'd rather drive than fly: Chevelle SS 396 Department of the British Na¬ troit freshman; Alan F.Gravelle, Temushkin and witnesses for tional Institute for Medical Re- * * * Webster, N.Y., freshman; Je- the prosecution at Saturday's search. Olaf Mickelson, professor of rome Frank, Shaker Heights, court session. It gave none of * * * biochemistry and foods and nu- Ohio, freshman; and Robert Lar¬ A lecture on species manage- trition, will discuss evidences of son, Cadillac sophomore. ment of Michigan wildlife will be nutritional deficiencies at a foods Admissions for Sunday were: themselves, presented by Wayne Tody of the and nutrition seminar at 4:10 Richard Adams, Birmingham ■on»485-64B5 Michigan Conservation Depart- today in 101 Home Ec. freshman; Suzanne Nelson, St. ment at 4:10 today in 140 Na- tural Science Building. * * * * * * Sedimentological and other ge- Clair Shores sophomore; Fred¬ erick Barratt, Maple City sen¬ QLADMER ologic evidence of direction and ior; Arthur Lawrence, Sears jun¬ Now. .at 1:00«3:05«5:10-7:20-9:30) A seminar on Evidences of effect of paleowinds will be the Nutritional Deficiencies will be topic of a geology seminar at ior; Michael Tinti, Loretto sen¬ ior; Pamela Holcomb,Alamogor- HORST BUCH0LZ held at 4:10 today in 101 Home Economics. Speaking will be Olaf 4:10 today in 409 Natural Sci- ence. do, N.M., freshman; Kristi Wat¬ WWSH te r berg, Albuquerque, N.M., Mickelson, professor of foods and * * * freshman; and Alexandria Wade, ii*l9aTiBuL nutrition. Applications of germfree re- Rochester freshman. * * * search will be discussed at a Murray S. Klamkin, principal pathology seminar at 4:10 today research scientist at the Ford in 273 Giltner. SPECIAL REPEAT PERFORMANCE! Scientific Laboratory, Dearborn, * * * The Auditorium Box Office, Open February 14 thru 18 will speak on the Philosophy and B. Nefkens, University of Illi- and Feb. 21 thru 23 Hours: 12:30 to 5 p.m. Applications of Transform The- nois, will discuss an experiment GENERAL ADMISSION ory at a mechanical engineering on time-reversal invariance in 50c . space seminar at 4 today in the K-Meson decay at a physics col- CURTAIN TIME 8 P.M. Engineering Auditorium. loquium at 4:10 today in 118 * * * Physics-Math. Dale C. Redburn, general su- pervisor for reliability engineer- * * * V. Everett Kinsey, director HAMLET ing at Oldsmobile, will discuss of the Kresge Eye Institute, De- reliability concepts at an open troit, will speak ^^transport meeting of Delta Sigma Pi, pro- mechanisms in lenses at a phys- fessional business fraternity, at iology seminar at 4:10 today in 7:30 tonight in the Teak Room, 335 Giltner. i mi m Feature Shown NOW 1:00-3:10-5:20-7:30-9:40 This is about a Chevelle—a very special one—with a IKe MOEIOAI PICTURE With, SOMEElxiNG bulging hood, a black grille and red stripe nylon tires. IO OFFEND EVERYONE!! Start it up and you've tuned in on 396 cubic inches of Turbo-Jet V8. M-G-M and FILMWAYS present MARTIN RANSOHOFF S Tl\e Loved PRODUCTION PRESENTED BY THE THE CHEVROLET Get it moving gears to and suddenly you're a driver again. With shift. A clutch to work. Even a set of gauges to ^i\e MICHIGAN STATE WAY read, if specified. Now take a curve, surrounded by a machine that r„.. ^ ROBERT MORSE-JONATHAN WINTERS delights in crooked roads. JL ANJANETTE COMER UNIVERSITY PERFORMING This, you see, is an „ ROD STEIGER as "Mr, Joytov" ARTS COMPANY SS 396. A Chevelle, yes. I m "'Ivgy'Plus Road Runner Cartoon But what a Chevelle. "HARRIED AND HURRIED" Department of Speech place... at your Chevrolet dealer's CHEVROLET • CHEVELLE CHEVY D • C0RVA1R • CORVETTE Dl Next Richard Burton in All kinds of cars all in one • ^ "The Spy Who Came In From The Cold' 10 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Monday, February 14, 1966 U.S. Bols JM MSU Book Store MSU Book Store MSU Book Store MSU Book Store MSU Book Store MSU Book Store MSU Book Store MSU Book M Peace P MSU peace up force patrols were beefed Sunday after Sunday morning as the situation U.S, soldier quieted down. BOOK STORE'S a was shot The Dominican army was or¬ and critically wound¬ ed by snipers armed with auto¬ dered to quarters Saturday by matic weapons. President Hector Garcia-Godoy. This broke up the mixed police- The clatter of gunfire and bomb explosions Saturday night and army patrols roaming the city early Sunday was the most ex¬ recently. No immediate official ANNUAL reason was given for this meas¬ tensive heard here in months. The 82nd Airborne paratroop¬ ure. it was believed taken, how¬ ever, to remove as many sources er, shot through the chest while of provocation as possible. Anti- on guard duty downtown, was the only apparent casualty. His milltary sentiment is high among leftist nationalists, sympathizers condition was described as criti¬ of the rebel constitutionalist cal following an operation. His name was withheld by mil¬ Latin American contingents of itary authorities. the peace force, Brazilians and Sniper action reached such in¬ ter, sity, police patrols were with¬ Paraguayans, also came under drawn from the heart of the sharp sniper attacks but did not city STATIONERY return the fire. on orders of the natioal police Placement The foil, ons intei "ng c campus on the dates indicate P lacerr ulletin has specific information on degree levels and job locations. Appointments should be made at the bureau in the Student Services Building at least two days prior to date of interview. SALE Students should interview with employers even though they have not completed their military serv¬ ices. Most employers will be interested in the stu¬ dent before and after his duty with thearmed forces. Monday, February21 ing, social science, English, Carrier Corp.: mechanical, home economics; anthropology, electrical and chemical engi¬ biology, humanities, art, music, neering. philosophy, accounting, business Employers Insurance of Wau- education. LETTER WRITERS GET sau: all majors of the colleges The Glidden Co.: food tech¬ of Business, Arts and Letters, nology, chemistry, chemical and Communication Arts and Social mechanical engineering; all ma¬ Science; accounting; manage¬ jors of the College of Business. ment; insurance; mathematics. February 21 and 22 Harris Trust and Savings Bank: Arthur Andersen i Co.; ac¬ all majors of the College of Bus¬ counting, engineering, mathema- EXTRA SPECIAL iness. Kent-Moore Corp.: mechanical Caterpillar Tractor Co.: all engineering, accounting, finan¬ majors of the College of Engi¬ cial administration. neering; accounting, financial ad¬ .Vloser Secretarial School: all ministration, economics, col¬ majors, all colleges. leges of Business, Arts and Let¬ Riverside Unified School Dis¬ trict: early and later elemen¬ tary education, mathematics; ters, Communication Arts Social Science. Denver Public Schools: and early (Get the message ??) science; English; girls' physi¬ and later elementary education, cal education; industrial arts; women's physical education, art, foreign language; speech cor¬ mathematics, science, industrial rection; reading specialist; psy¬ arts, mentally retarded, deaf and chology. hard of hearing, blind education. Tee-Pak, Inc.: chemical and Hotel Corporation of America: mechanical engineering, chem¬ accounting, marketing, person¬ istry. nel, hotel, restaurant and insti¬ Texaco, Inc.: geology, chem¬ tutional management, psycholo¬ ical ar.d mechanical engineering, gy, all majors of the colleges of metals, mechanics and materials Business, Arts and Letters, science, electrical engineering, Communication Arts and Social physics, geophysics, mathema¬ Science. tics (applied). Texaco, Inc.: chemical, elec¬ trical and mechanical engineer¬ jors The J.L. Hudson Co.: all nffc- of the colleges of Home extra SPECIAL Economics, Business, Arts and ing, chemistry; physics, mathe¬ Letters, Communication Arts and matics. Social Science. Texaco, Inc.: all majors of the Insurance Company of North colleges of Business, Arts and America: all majors of the col¬ Letters, Communication Arts and Social Science; all majors of the College of Engineering. leges of Business, Arts and Let¬ ters, Communication Arts and One Group Social Science. Traverse City Public Schools: ai'i interested majors; ""'Type V' majors. The Martin Co.: electrical, civil and mechanical engineer¬ Of Clearance Unified School District No. 1 ing, physics, mathematics (ap¬ of Racine er plied), metals, mechanics and County: early and lat¬ materials elementary education, sci¬ science, psychology Stationery (experimental), biology and mi¬ ence (general science, physics and chemistry), mathematics, crobiology. foreign language (French, Ger¬ electrical and man and Latin), English, social The Martin-Denver Co.: civil, neering. mechanical engi¬ 39' studies, girls' physical educa¬ The Martin-Orlando Co.:elec¬ tion, industrial arts, home eco¬ or trical and mechanical engineer¬ nomics, psychology. United Church Board for World ing, metals, mechanics and ma¬ terials science, physics, mathe¬ Ministries: English, language, 3il°° matics. secondary education, majors of natural science, agriculture; home economics. Arizona State College: man¬ Why Do agement, economics, marketing, H physics, psychology, elementary You Read education, industrial education, chemistry, mathematics, nurs¬ So Slowly? A noted reports publisher in Chicago there is a simple tech¬ ~thuoUfirdJ^\juuL) nique of rapid reading which 'tZiuL LjVUM UrtlL. should enable you to double your reading speed and yet re¬ tain much more. Most people do not realize how much they could increase their pleasure, success and income by reading faster and more accurately. According to this publisher, msu anyone, regardless of his present reading skill, can use this simple technique to im¬ prove his reading ability to a "A girl may wear remarkable degree. Whether outfit and not play tennis. She reading stories, books, tech¬ may wear a swimming suit and nical matter, it becomes pos¬ ;o near the water, but whenl sible to read sentences at a she puts on a wedding gown, glance and entire pages In means business , " sighs! seconds with this method. 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