STATE MEWS MICHIGAN Water Carnival Parents' Weekend STATE UNIVERSITY Vol. 58, Number 149 East Lansing, Michigan Friday, May 13, 1966 RIFT THREATENS RED EUROPE BLOC Ramparts Nationalistic Course Staffers Asked By Romania LONDON (UPl)--A rift among East European Communist bloc To Testify nations is so serious Soviet Communist Party leider Leonid I. Brezhnev flew to Bucharest on a fence-mending mission, diplo¬ matic sources reported Thursday. By LEO ZAINEA They said the growing friction in the Communist camp stemming State News Staff Writer from demands for more independence from Moscow already had A Michigan House subcommit¬ forced a red bloc July summit meeting to be shifted from Bucharest tee investigating MSU's role in to "another East European capital," probably Warsaw. Viet Nam will hear testimony It was believed that Brezhnev was still in the Romanian capital Monday from two of the men but the secrecy surrounding his visit was so great that any form of most responsible for the con¬ confirmation was not available. troversy surrounding theUniver- The diplomatic sources said Brezhnev's surprise trip was sity's aid mission. Warren Hinckle III, co-author prompted by a Romanian demand last weekend for virtual political and economic independence from Moscow. Of the explosive Ramparts' article which appeared last An alarmed Brezhnev was trying to avert a new threat to the cohesion of the Communist bloc alignment in the Warsaw Pact month, and Stanley K. Sheinbaum, a project member who supplied Alliance, they added. the magazine with background in¬ Romania's party chief Nikolae Ceausescu in a speech Saturday formation for the story, agreed challenged Soviet leadership of the Communist movement and en¬ dorsed an Independent and nationalistic policy line by his own Thursday by telegram to appear before the House Higher Educa¬ ON WITH THE SHOW--Water Carnival committee WATER, WATER EVERYWHERE — Unbrellaed students walk across a soggy cam¬ government. tion sub-committee to substanti¬ members make final preparations for tonight's pus to andfrom Bessey Hall Thursday after two solid days of rain. But the weather¬ Ceausescu's move was the latest in a series of recent develop¬ ate the magazine's accusations. show, which begins of 8. The annual event will kick man says it will end today, in time for Water Carnival and all the other events ments that threatened the unity of the Warsaw Pact, formulated The two men will fly in from off other Parents' Weekend festivities. scheduled for Parents' Weekend. Photo by John Castle on May 14, 1955 as a collective security agreement to c California at their own expense balance the North Atlantic Treaty Monday, Hinckle from Organization (NATO). Its mem¬ "Ramparts," headquarters in bers include the Soviet Union, Sheinbaum T San Fransisco and Subject Albania, Bulgaria, Czechoslova- Carny in another "act of indepen- from Los Angeles. kia, East Germany, Hungary, Po- dence," Radio Bucharest an¬ In addition to hearing Hinckle land and Romania. nounced Thursday that Romania and Sheinbaum, Rep. Jack Fax¬ The Romanian "break' coin- had Joined Communist North Viet on's committee will confront d partly! appeal to "large anti- President Hannah, University of¬ Although ran md doesn't rain Saturday night, Due t0 rain Wednesday and Saturday is for partly cloudy and of the n had not cided with growing pressure from ngement: imperialist forces...to draw ficials and members of the pro¬ for tonight, Wni onight's performance will be Thursday, the deadline for the aofficials little warmer. Water Carnival lighting the rain. East European countries for a closely together" to confront U.S. ficials have mat :hanged to Sunday night. completion of floats was ex¬ the event would not be rained expressed thebelief that been completed due greater voice in the political and ject, including Wesley Fishel, tended from 5 p.m. Thursday to Timing, continuity and correc¬ military decisions of the War¬ policy in Viet Nam. Ralph H. Smuckler, acting dean scheduling pe fo tions were checked, with the Pact. They have rejected The joint Romanian - North for International Programs and weathermai In the event that tonight's per- 5 p.m. today. out. hestra at Brody. The lighting, saw Vietnamese Adrian Jaffe, associate professor in case of ra formance is canceled, ticket Work on the non-perishable In its long history, WaterCar- integration" with Soviet message ' of English. Saturday night, oiders will receive refunds. De- components of the floats--the nival has never been canceled however, could only be checked nomic planning and are insisting tained In a communique signed of the refunding procedure framework, the supports, etc.— be ause of rain, f the theoretically, looser ties within Comecon, by respective government offi- Another member of the mis- performanc - yet been worked out, was allowed to continue until I'he dry run whichprogram Tickets for Saturday night's the Communists' version of the cials in Hanoi, according to Radio sion, Robert Scigliano. professor val P1'°£1"a:: 11 p.m. Thursday. The entl e 'ursday night, was to performance have been sold out. of political science, is had There are still about 1,500 tickets flopts must V" finis,ied by 5 p. n. ve ' een hf>ld on the riv In still another development, pected to appear. today. to be moved to Brody Auditor- available for tonignt's perior- it was learned dut Communist The session begins at 10 a.m. o f the July summit meeting. for today and lurn. This was partly because mance. Party officials from 15 West Monday in the Court of Appeals European countries held a secret chambers in Lansing City Hall. It is expected to last most of U.S. Asia Po three-day meeting in Vienna ear¬ lier this week for a unity-seeking the day. Hinckle and Sheinbaum, now Pol Sci Profs Explain Resignations conference Communist but Party that 'no Soviet official was Re coordinator with the Center for Helping a present. Democratic Studies in Santa Bar¬ past larshlp Program, "a fine gim¬ bara, indicated they would appear By ANDREW MOLLISON Rumors spread that other de- : r e c y surrounding in the morning session since they about the Chinese interest in State News Staff Writer partment members were going They praised their department mick which was ruined by the Br*ezhnev" visit to Bucharest on leave only as a prelude to and thei olleagues. Research unabashed huckster is ~ ""'*u Viet Nam,'' said Murphey. off speculation of a possible plan to fly back to California that The department of political resigning. These men have de- funds ■verc adequate, teaching which it promoted." afternoon. The two men said they ' North Viet Nam has returned meeting there between him and science is faced with what is nied the rumors, loads reasonable and pay com¬ Student quality, which used to Communlst China premier Chou want to hear Hannah's testimony to the propriety relationship it - problem, is now "truely Southeast \sia is s I as 1 ad for two millenla." at best, a minor crisis. Th~ee The men who resigned—chair- parable to that of other major En_La|| who ,s expected in the before testifying. universities, they said. excellent," Adrian said. "Wehad Communist China 's faculty members with a total of man Charles R. Adrian and pro- ian capital later this Faxon said his committee is The Chinese haven't been in- 33 divert funds that might have there, accordi: t years service at Michigan fessors AlfredG. Meyer and Rob- They denied that the Viet Nam month looking for, "clear stscewcf.f" ■ ..w : i'jpt fiitr* miV&rlly state vesfjneU ia tto» trAv.it. ere G. Scigliano—deny s'y sparked by an article been used to hire additional facul¬ as to what the University actu¬ authorities specie . / But the possibility Wjsxi- and 1 ve fiven ho indication of t0 ta), A rf) , m . o - and Lua,st >'ea being ranked seventh in national then college president Joseph R. men begar. the ae- <-■;> ..ert methods and tactics necessary to nesia, the Arab States, Turkey, drafts f21* ™plays . able t< :-c—do its curriculum, and process. Williams. of higher education. 1 Ley studied combat enemy planes and other Latin America, the Philippines ® 0 na ions w . I think we improved it greatly, competition. Your attention Iscalled In his address Williams de- a r i t h; geo- systems which attack U.S. air- and Wales. _i e asement an « weren i m straitjacket in any anaii.jacis.cL The Spartan Guard exhibition to the Parents' Weekend fended Michigan's educational grapliy craft operating over North Viet The television production will classrooms. a.m.-11 p.m. These will be open in the relationship team P*Fto™ wlth fllent schedule and coverage of Details Nam show only a sample of the variety of hours to credit hours." commands. Their national re- the International Festival, experiment in the establishment mar of the first land-grant college of the course of instruction were Sometimes that would involve of the International Festival stage See features < He also praised the Honors cognition was rated on original; Patriarchs' Day, Alumni in the nation. Williams consider- to be developed from experience, direct attack on operating basis, show, which can be seen at 2 and tional Festiva College concept, and contrasted .. . ... „. ">'• showmanship itrpsc dress and cover friflt^. and c over precision, (rifle), difficu¬ difficul¬ Day, and the other week¬ end events. . lt with the National Merit Scho- ed the college a new citadel of Williams said ; ' " ~ ' " "* section. ty and floor coverage. democracy. speech. JIM SPANIO TATE NEWS Answer To Published every class day throughout fall, winter, and spring terms MICHIGAN STATE is a NegativistsUniversity of many colors, with a unique and twice weekly summer term by the students of Michigan State Uni¬ set of students, problems and programs. But chancing a generaliza¬ versity and authori7ed by the Board of Student Publications. tion, the students seem to fall into three different categories. First, there are the negativists who delight in picking the Univer¬ Page 2 Friday, May 13, 1966 sity apart. They wait, poised to strike at the University's every action. If there isn't a good issue to castigate the University on, then they find one or retell an old one. And lately they've had lots of EDITORIALS material to work with. Second, there are the loyalists who think that MSU is the greatest thing since the "tube." They love to sing the MSU fight song, go to football games and hit all the top social events. They accept aca¬ Peace Corps Or Army? demic life as necessary, but not too enjoyable and seldom question a professor or the administration. After all, they know what's best for us. ,-j Finally, there are ti e "don't give a damns" who really don't. Let Students Decide They came here because everybody goes to college nowadays and graduating from a large university should help them get better jobs and more money. They don't like to study or go to class and will do anything for the big Grade—that's the important thing. THE GOVERNMENT COULD THOUGH WE FAVOR a program achieve a more efficient use of man¬ that offers alternatives, sufficient They're unconcerned about campus, local, state, national, inter¬ national or academic issues and spend most of their time watching power by letting qualified college safeguards should be included to in¬ that out for number "1." • * - students choose between serving in sure draft'dodgers wouldn't take BY FAR THE MOST vocal are the Negativists. At times they are the army and the Peace Corps or advantage of the opportunity. the anti-poverty program. But many qualified students might the most irritating and obnoxious. But at others, especially when Though many college students have be tempted to apply for the peace they add a little constructive criticism to their harangues, they add a beneficial element to the University. long favored a program that would Corps because the Peace Corps obli¬ The negativists offer a variety of criticisms and complaints. offer alternatives, the Pentagon and gation is shorter than the six-year A typical list would include the following: administration news Washington have always been cool military requirement. If the alterna¬ towards the idea. tive program does become a reality, management, many important decisions and activities are with¬ the time that must be served should held from students and the information is often flavored; classes BUT THE GOVERNMENT'S at¬ be the same, In all services. are too large and the campus is too crowded--the whole system titude may change in the near future. is too impersonal; and MSU doesn't have an academic atmos¬ The National Service Conference, MOST IMPORTANT, the needs of phere, culture is lacking. the armed services should not suffer Most of these complaints are correct but not entirely, and per¬ composed of educators and manpower experts from all over the nation, has at the expense of the alternative pro¬ haps there's a better eay of looking at them. Certainly the ad¬ ministration manages the news, it doesn't tell the whole story. advocated an alternatives program. grams. One's military obligation still This program would give college stu¬ must have priority, and if a case of And we do deserve to know. But isn't this the same situation dents and other youth the opportunity insufficient manpower would arise, we find in society? How many times has Lyndon Johnson spoken to serve in the Peace Corps or anti- the alternative program should be frankly with the American people? curtailed until the needs of the mili¬ THE PROBLEM IS the same in American society today. Ana poverty program instead of the armed which services. tary are met. is better, facing the problem now, struggling with it, and If the government does adopt this Students should be able to select OUR READERS SPEAK attempting to solve it? Or is it better to meet it unprepared, the after four or five or six years of wishful and theoretical con¬ proposed program, only those who are way that they want to serve the best qualified for the alternatives nation. But they should have this templation? should be permitted to serve inthem. After all, the purpose of the program would be to use manpower most ef- opportunity only If it Increases the manpower efficiency. With the safe¬ guards we have listed this goal of Publish Attack The overcrowded mass same -is campus. true with the deplorable size of classes and the When the college graduate steps out into society, it won't be any less crowded or less impersonal. increased efficiency can be achieved. To the Editor: !:c convince And isn't it better to wrestle with the problem now and perhaps piper is one cause for the our girls to be more irst two phenomena mentioned careful with themselves than they come up with some tentative solutions, rather than wishing for When I entered MSU three bow • the dearth of reported in- are now. four years that the problem will be solved by then? years ago, I was struck imme¬ ider.:.- lulls our young ladies into Regarding civil liberties and freedom of speech, at times they Study Causes Of War- diately by the apparent safety of the campus: even the smallest coed felt free to go out -i lone aft¬ er dark, and girls saw no danger .•'Mi ' nv. -e : well be isks with a false sense ity and leads them to take their bodies lives. Miss "Withheld" have been ignored or perhaps infringed upon. But again, how much regard for civil liberties is there in society? Not too much. (His¬ tory tells us that Negroes were once lynched, German books were once burned, first and second generation Japanese Americans 1 r EDITOR'S NOTE: The A Timely Proposal in hitch-hiking on the town's streets. The feeling of security was enhanced by the State News, ■ : - this point very cogently in "( r in Wednesday's rvrli.ps, therefore, itwouldbe paper, State News checked with Campus Police and dis¬ covered that the rape of were once herded into concentration camps and "once," Ameri¬ cans saw Communists around every corner.) Here we have the chance to deal with it first hand and perhaps overcome it. which never published stories of ■ 'or ill concerned if the AND THEN THERE is the charge that MSU has an unacademic THE INEVITABILITY OF CON¬ and war? Ignoring the cries of idea¬ "Withheld" did not occur attacks on women on the campus. t He News were to publish a brief atmosphere with an absence of culture. This is only partially true. FLICT between nations, of limited listic or impractical, such studies on campus or in the City One might not find any culture or an academic atmosphere at "skate Now it occurs to me that per¬ 'o when i young lady was at- of E ast warfare and perhaps nuclear war is could add a much needed insight to Lansing. haps the lack of such stories in icked; perhaps this would help to board row" next to Bessey Hall, but he would if he tried the the problems The reason there has accepted without question by most In the world today. Honors College Lounge or Kresge Art Center or attended one of the been a lack of such stor¬ Americans--but not by Sen. J. William BUT MORE IS needed than univer¬ numerous lectures or symposiums given on campus. ies is simply because in Fulbright. sity sponsored studies and research. Probably the negativist wouldn't agree. It's too realistic, too the last five years only The controversial chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee Assuming that such studies are made and some conclusions are reached, Tower Dwellers one ported rape has been re¬ on campus. In that pragmatic. It might be the attitude of someone who views the University in perspective, who sees the good intermingled with the proposed that universities take up it would then remain for the poli¬ bad, who takes advantage of the desirable, while attempting to the challenge of probing for the undei— time there have been two and policy makers to take Offered ticians lying and psychological reasons for war. A constant critic American foreign policy, especially in of recent heed and thoughtfully consider them when formulating present and future Challenge attempted rapes, both re¬ ported in The State News. change or overcome the undesirable aspects of the University. Though the negativists keep us from complacency, we need to convert some of them, along with the loyalists and "don't give policies. volved as wellasexpressingcon- a damns," into a more constructuve role at MSU. Viet Nam, Fulbright is often labeled As Sen. Fulbright said: structive alternatives. 'WHAT DOES this mean? It means that any sensitive MSU ivory tower idealist but many of an his proposals, like this one, go deep¬ crats "N#ne of us—professors, bureau¬ or politicians—has yet under¬ Now maybe this isn't citing as compiling a bibliography as ex¬ Restrooms graduate won't be subject to acute culture shock when he leaves the University and enters society. He'll already have been facing er than the everyday problems with a taken a serious and concerted ef¬ on the life of Frederick the the same problems and complexities here at MSU, but on a small¬ more ful distant goal. Far from a wish¬ platitude, Fulbright challenges fort to put the survival or our species on some more solid foundation than I too am frustrated in Viet Nam and unable to by the war c om¬ Great's court jester, but I be¬ lieve. it would offer a significant Not 'Bugged' er scale--and hopefully, he will be better able to cope with them on the societal level than the generation before him. universities and nations alike to con¬ prehend all the factors involve d contribution the academic cli¬ an unending series of narrow es¬ to To the Editor: vert the called in the conflict. I am also frus¬ so impossible into capes." mate of the University whicti you the possible. trated by the stifling bun. lucracy gentlemen think is so much in It is a pleasure to report that THE TIME has come to look deep¬ of Michigan State where the pri¬ Col Ittgiate jeopardy. least TODAY . UNIVERSITIES involve er and farther ahead than the day to mary function appears to be a at one allegation In the re¬ Editorial and b if 341 student s«r cent issue of Ramparts Magaxk\e themselves in many and far—flung day tactical profcAetivs; some basic processing plant, rather tfvav, an must be false; namely, that the projects both here and abroad. In questions should be asked. Here is educational institution. Put the the sciences great strides have made where the scholars and universities implication that the university disgusting and vile practice of towards combating disease, techno¬ could provide the Initiative. is responsible for the turmoil dressing police officers in stu¬ logical advances and discoveries have Regardless of the idealistic in Viet Nam is just a little too dent clothing and stationing them Hopeless na¬ been astounding. ture of much to take, fellows. in rest rooms to act as human Fulbright's proposal, it de¬ But how many universities have serves at least the careful con¬ But what seems to be even lures in order to trap homosex¬ A initiated programs or studies to sideration of universities around the incredible uals was practiced on this cam¬ into the cause of international corTTict country. And It could begin at MSU. more cern over is your "con¬ projects of dubious Cartoons pus. I was assured by A. F. Stewardess Brandstatter, director of the scholarly merit." This is noth¬ To the Editor: School of Police Administration, Career ing more than a thinly veiled in¬ sult against a certain political The Michigan Daily carries John Marston, chairman of the is a Challenge! science professor who has seen Advisory Committee to the Dept. Bill Mauldin and Jules Feiffer. of Public Safety, and Richard 1 Saw A Chevy In China1 as his duty to be actively con¬ While these artists may be too Bernitt, director of Public Safety, cerned with contemporary world sophisticated for the relatively that there is no police entrapment problems rather than being a backward State News, there must smugly detached observer. To at Michigan State at present, and, be SOMETHING you can run in¬ further, EDI"! OR S NOTE - Dorothy Henry, 46, secre¬ The withdrawal has hit them hard. disagree with his policy analysis by Mr. Bernitt, that not stead of the hopelessly inane car¬ tary of the 8,540-member Institution of British We also visited a workers' settlement, which is one thing, but to hint that he only is this vicious method not toons which have been appearing Engineers, led a party oflSBritishbusinessmen we would call a slum clearance scheme. has "seriously compromised the employed today, but that it was ia 1 pa ' and engineers on a 12-day visit to Communist People are being moved from old dilapidated never used. reputation of the University" of c China l ist month. In the following article, she homes into modern blocks of flats. I visited sev¬ reeks with the stench of pro¬ describes the visit, her first to China. eral of these flats in Herbert Garelick Shanghai. They seem to'be fessional Jealousy. about the same size, consisting of two or three And so 1 feel a challenge Dept. of Philosophy PEKING ft-ln Communist China today four K. Foster men do one man's job. rooms, kitchen and lavatory. Sometimes a kitch¬ should be issued to you poten¬ is shared with another tial Kearny, N.J. senior Everyone works in China. All the women have en family. The rooms guardian angels^ scholarly about 12 10 feet of forming Jobs. Most families have a convenient grandmother are x and rents are By Western standards the flats would be suit¬ cheap. endeavor: instead board of inquisition which would a EDITOR'S State News has attempted NOTE: The LBJ Resign? able for a married couple or possibly a couple pass judgment on heretical pro¬ to obtain the right to use who stays home to look after the small children. To the Editor: with one child. But in China the whole family - fessors, why not combine your Bill Mauldin cartoons, but If there is no grandmother the children are put grandparents, married children and their chil¬ brainpower and come up with in this area, the Lansing in a weekly children's nursery. dren - live under one roof. So the average for Concerning your editorial of INTERVIEW some sort of faculty position State Journal has exclu¬ From outside, the factories look efficient and Wednesday, May 18 each flat is about five or six people. May 10 attacking ex-Senator modern, but inside there seem to be four oper¬ paper on Viet Nam which would sive rights to them. And 5 p.m.-9 p.m. The average wage rate for a worker at, say contain your own expert inter¬ it refused our request to Barry Goldwater. for suggesting ators for every machine. You are struck by the that Senator J. William Fulbright Jack Tar Hotel a machine tool Mauldin cartoons. fact that there are no multipurpose machines. factory, is between $25 and $28 pretations of the problems in¬ American Airlines Suite per month. The boss doesn't get much more, A resign as chairman of the Senate There is no automation. NO APPOINTMENT NEEDED chief engineer, for instance, might earn $61 per Foreign Relations Committee: We saw a canal being built. There seemed to Senator Fulbright is only taking No Phone Calls, Please month. For an equivalent job in the West he be 20,000 or 30,000 people moving earth in bas¬ his turn on the receiving end of would expect $1,000 a month. kets. such talk. Y- ' There are very few cars on the streets in .... The most alarming thing to me about China China. Party officials can be seen going to their During the administration of is the propaganda used on young children^ offices in cars, quite often American ones. I al¬ Harry S. Truman a certain young I was informed at one school that only 35 per senator made the brilliant sug¬ cent of class time is devoted to what we know as ways used to point these out to our Interpreters and say with glee: 'That's a Chevrolet. I thought gestion that the President resign educational subjects. The other 65 per c&t is de¬ from office, seeing as he had the voted to you wouldn't have Americans here." They politics:The history of the "liberation," audacity to disagree with Con¬ Marxism, and the works of Mao Tze-tung. laughed. Clothes seem to be quite expensive.Thoseblue gress on certain aspects of for¬ The propaganda thing starts from threeyears eign affairs. The author of this tunic Jackets that everyone wears, for instance, upward. In the children's ballets and plays the cost about $8.40. arrogant remark was a certain J. subject is the Viet Nam fighting and the villain William Fulbright. is always Uncle Sam. The'main street In Peking was the longest, I don't believe that we will be There are posters about Viet Nam every¬ straightest, widest street I've ever seen. Hardly hearing any ridicule of Goldwater where. The Viet Nam war is providing a medium a car in sight. A few trucks. Some bicycles. from Fulbright. He would only be for hate, with the Americans as the hated Apart from some splendid new buildings, the laughing at his own previous "imperialist aggressors." Chinese capital struck me as a drab place. All "reasoning." There is plenty of hate too for the Soviet the houses were gray, somehow, and although the The president resign yet! "revisionists." new blocks of flats are well designed, there is The Chinese are very bitter at the Soviets this grayness. No gay touches of paint. No win¬ for Withdrawing financial aid and technicians. dow boxes. Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, May 13, 1966 World News Yank Planes Hit SAM Sites, at a Glance Ground Casualties On Rise Lodge Favors Free Viet Elections SAIGON (UPI) — American planes devastated Communist time U.S. losses exceeded those of government forces. site 10 miles from Haiphong ; brought the sights and sounds of ; war to the port's 150,000 resi- Farahpress supply lines in 87 missions over The Americans lost 82 men In j WASHINGTON (UPI)—Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge told senators Thursday he favors free elections in South Viet Nam and hopes they oan be held by North Viet Nam and destroyed two missile sites 10 miles from combat and 21 In the crash of giant Chinook helicopter, a total Haiphong in the closest raid of of 103. Another 615 GI's were a dents, who could hear the 250 and 500-pound bombs dumped by navy A4 Skyhawks from the atom- \ j : Slacks autumn to choose a constituent assembly. the war to the vital port, U.S. wounded. South Vietnamese loss¬ ic carrier USS Enterprise ex- : The assembly is to draw up a South Vietnamese military spokesmen said Thurs¬ es were placed at 61 killed and plode. constitution. After that there will be elections for day. 154 wounded while the Commu¬ Black smoke rose 2,000 feet j never, never a civilian government to replace the military junta into the News of continuing U.S. suc¬ nists had 456 killed and 121 sky from one SAM site. • headed by Premier Nguyen Cao Ky. The two batteries had invited • cess in the air was tempered by were Elections for the constituent assembly originally scheduled for August or September. Ky has captured. South Vietnamese casualty figures released in Sai¬ forces outnumber the Americans destruction by launching three • need ironing! missiles at the U.S. planes. All ] gon which showed more Ameri¬ about three to one. said he intends to remain in power for a year, until missed and t .e American pilots • can troops died last week than The raid on the Communist after the elections for a civilian government. South Vietnamese, the second surface-to-air missile (SAM) turned on the Communist gun- \ ners. Four anti-aircraft batter- : 8.00 ies also were knocked out in the : Chinese Plane Downed Relax same region. The action took : . . . these casual TOKYO (UPI)—Peking Ra- dio charged Friday a flight of battle occurred in an area north-northwest of Makwan, a British S place Wednesday, U.S. spokes- men said. An Air Force F105 Thunder- : slacks new by Farah are of a five U.S. planes shot down a strategic city on an important : masterply poj)lin wo¬ chief was downed by conventional Communist Chineseplane with a missile in an air battle over Southern China Thursday railroad route into Communist North Viet Nam. Threaten ground fire while attacking near coastal Dong Hoi Wednesday. The ven ance. for distinctive appear¬ long wear, and that LONDON (UPI)—Prime Min¬ tried to work out an interim pilot was listed as missing. It afternoon. Makwan is situated about "just pressed" look--even ister Harold Wilson Thursday agreement between the union and was the third U.S. plane lost in The Communists said the 170 miles northwest of Hanoi. held a crisis Cabinet meeting shipowners. two days of massive attacks on straight from'- the wash! on the threat of a merchant The seamen are asking an im¬ North Vietnamese supply lines. Good fitting, tapered slacks strike that could throttle Bri¬ mediate cut in the work week (The North Viet Nam news Roosevelt Enters Gubernatorial Race tain's economy in a matter of from 56 to 40 hours with over¬ agency, m on i10red in Tokyo, with belt loops--the most days. time pay for more than 40 hours claimed four L:.S. planes were NEW YORK (UPI)—Franklin D. Roosevelt Jr., comfortable, carefree The 62,500-member National and a pay boost of $1.75 a month. shot down in the raids Wednes¬ flashing a smile reminiscent of his famous father Union of Seamen (NUS) vowed An able seaman now makes $168 slacks you'll ever wear. In and recalling the words of his mother, Thursday day, "populated to stop work at midnight Sunday a month. host of entered a crowded race for the Democratic nomina¬ a new colors. unless its demands for a shorter tion for governor of New York. work week and higher pay are It was the second time in a dozen years the big, MEN'S WEAR- met. 51-year-old Roosevelt had actively sought the Albany The strike would idle Britain's EAST LANSING STREET LEVEL governor's mansion, the office that propelled FDR 2,500-ship merchant fleet—the WttvX- into the White House a generation ago. world's largest—and cut the na- £: tion's lifeline to the foodstuffs £ and raw materials markets of the Germany-Israel Compromise world. The walkout would be the £: merchant navy's first since 1911. BONN (UPI)-West Germany after 10 weeks of delicate and Wilson met with Labor Minis- Thursday granted Israel a long critical negotiations. reDres- ter Ray Gunter and other Cabi¬ term as a The credit of $40 million new token of good will, agreement, reached ents a compromise between the conflicting views of both countries. net members at No. 10 Downing Street, but details of any emer- gency action they considered x x Campus were kept secret. :j: , 4 Wilson was receiving hourly Draft Tests Can Help reports on the situation and in¬ formed sources said he might intervene personally in the dis¬ pute this weekend, as he did In Holding Deferment earlier this year when a nation¬ wide rail strike was threaten- Draft deferment tests, which ney said. "Without adequate it The 48-member executive will be given here Saturday, will formation, the local boards may co*ncVtf"the s union be an aid to helping students give the student an unfavorable Thursday unanimously rejected maintain their deferments, the ranking." The deferment tests, Gunter's plea that the strike he felt, were an aid, not a detri- MSU coordinator of draft defer¬ be postponed while negotiators ments said Thursday. Col D.R. Rodney (ret.) said ADVERTISEMENT the armed forces are usually willing to let a student com¬ plete his college education be¬ cause the military needs col¬ Still 25% off at lege-trained personnel. The number of persons taking the test Draft here is confidential. deferment tests are SPARTAN BOOKSTORE needed, Rodney felt, because they provide additional information on which college men will be judged. "The Selective Service re¬ views a student's status with all "I just love people," declared Mr. Charles Wiley, the information available," Rod- manger, "and in a fit of altruism I conceived the idea of giving students this break. "It came to me in a dream, and now that I've started Exam Deadline letting students and faculty buy vital books and supplies and wonderful summer reading, I just have to extend Next Friday is the deadline for receiving this sale one more day." permission to re¬ peat iina'i examinations (or Uni¬ Avail yourself of these great 25% off deals today, and versity College courses. Per¬ make the generous mission may be obtained from people of the Spartan Bookstore as the assistant dean happy as they want to make you. of the Uni¬ versity College, 170 Bessey, or the Student Affairs 1 iffices at 109 Brody and S33 Wonders. summer Op en Invitation snow job Brookview Zeta Beta Tau - M Spanking white and fresh as a knit shirts by Puritan frosty morning, this chic pique House Dedica in chalk white will sweep crisply, happily through summer. A-line Again this year washes in a . wink, . . the best selling Banlon shirt . . . wears like a wonder, wash after, skirt, boy jacket. Chalk white wash after wash, and looks as fresh as the day you 1:00 P.M. on Saturday, May 14 only. Jr. Sizes. 19.98 purchased it. Full fashioned for full comfort . . . ideal for golfing, boating, or just casual wear. All 855 Grove Street the * newest colors for spring and summer. Sizes E. Lansing YOUNG AMERICAN SHOP-LOWER LEVEL, DOWNTOWN small, medium, large, extra large. 9.00 AND EAS7 LANSING CAMPUS GENTER Rebuilt by H.T. Graham Const. Shop East Lansing 9:30 to 5:30 4 Friday, May 13, 1966 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Batsmen Gamble By JOE MITCH Michigan and Ohio State do this Against Bucks, Gophers The Gophers have been get¬ gulars on the club in hitting with Against Iowa, the Spartans face of its regular 15 players are hitting below the .230 mark. State News Sports Writer weekend. ting solid hitting from their pitch¬ a .349 mark in overall games, an opponent that lost three games followed by Ed Bruksch at .323 to Minnesota last weekend. The Donn Haugen is the top Hawk- But the two undefeated schools ers as well. Brosseau, who and Brosseau at .314. Hawkeyes are 3-4 in the con¬ eye pitcher in the conference. doubles as a centerfielder when Any arid all hopes for a Big appear to be strong going Into ference, tied for sixth place with He has a 2-1 record with a .21 Ten Conference baseball cham¬ the next to last week of con¬ not pitching, ranks tenth in league Speed has also been a key Illinois. Overall they are 13-12. ERA in 22 1/3 innings of work. ference action. The chances that hitting with a .364 mark. factor for the Gophers' success pionship could be washed down Iowa does not have one hitter Haugen is likely to see action the drain for the Spartans this either team would match the Wickman is hitting .364 with to date. They have stolen 108 two home runs while McNair is bases this season in 34 games, among the conference's top 20 against the Spartans as is Bob weekend when they travel the three Spartan losses In the six and its leading batter in overall Schauenberg, who is 1-1 in lea¬ conference road to Minnesota games remaining seem unlikely. batting .333. surpassing their previous high Dave Hoffman leads the re¬ of 71 in 1960. games is hitting only .288. Ten gue play with a 2.08 ERA. and Iowa. The Spartans are to meet then switch opponents Saturday day and meets last-place Purdue One loss could end the title Minnesota today in a single after¬ with the Spartans at Iowa for a in a doubleheader Saturday. chase for Coach Danny Lit- noon contest while Michigan Is at doubleheader and the Wolverines Minnesota is the Big Ten's whiler's nine, depending of Iowa City playing the Hawkeyes. at Minnesota for two. winningest team with eight vic¬ course on what league-leaders The two Michigan schools will Ohio State is at Illinois Fri- tories. Like Ohio State and Michi¬ gan, Minnesota is undefeated in conference play, but a 1-1 tie He Likes It Be 20-YF.iR STAR BREAKS with Purdue mars its record. Though not rated as strong By GAVEL WESCH State News Sports Writer contenders before the season be¬ If anyone has a lucky number, it's Bill Kiesler, and the Howe All-Star For 9th Time gan, the Gophers have been the number is three. surprise team in the league, com¬ Kiesler, a junior from Flint, won the National Inter¬ bining strong pitching with hit- collegiate Three Cushion Billiards Tournament at Coral 90 for each half of the season. Gables, Fla. April 29. He has been playing the game for MONTREAL f —Gordie Howe, during 11 consecutive seasons. Overall, the Gophers are 24- "three" years and outpointed "three" other finalists to Detroit's famed 20-year star, Three members of Montreal's Howe and the retired Maurice 8-2. gain the title. and Chicago Goalie Glenn Hall Rocket Richard of Montreal pre¬ NHL and Stanley Cup champions Minnesota is first in the lea¬ set records Thursday when they viously had shared the mark of Representing- MSU, Kiesler took the first step to the title —center Jean Beliveau, right eight first team All-Star selec¬ gue in team pitching. Its pitchv in February when he was among the winners at the Region were named to the official Na¬ winger Bobby Rosseau and goalie tions. mg stall has turned innine-com- Seven Assn. of College Unions Tournament at Western tion.! 1 Hockey League's All-Star Lome Gump Worsley—made the . plete games while compiling a Michigan. Region seven is comprised of all the schools from first team. second team. Others on the sec¬ Hall made the first team for nifty 0.60 earned run average. Michigan, Ohio and Indiana and the victory assured him a Chicago placed three other ond squad are defensemen' Pat Junior Mike McNair, a left¬ mer., headed by record-breaking the sixth time, tying the record place in the finals. Stapleton of Chicago and Allan set by former Montreal goalie hander, heads the Gophers' top "Normally I play about two or three times a week," scorer Bobby Hull at left wing, Stanley of Toronto, and left wing¬ Bill Durnan. The Chicago net- tl ree starters with a 0.00 ERA. Kiesler said, "but I practiced three hours a day the week on the first team. The others er Frank Mahovllch of Toronto. on the first team are Chicago's minder also has been picked for He has a 2-0 record and three before the finals." Stan Mikita at center and Pierre The 38-year-old Howe cele¬ the second team three times. His complete games, including the tie Besides Kiesler, Vern Saeger of the University of Buffa¬ with Purdue.. total of nine selections eclipses lo, Ken Lango of Arizona and Bill Tucker of Bates College Pilote at defense, andMontreal's brated his 20th season in the Another the goalie record of eight set by lefty, Jerry Wickman, made it to the finals. +». Jacques Laperriere at defense. NHL by making the first team faced each other Frank Brinsek, retired Boston The contestants once in a 25-point Hull was the only player to for a r.ecord-breaking ninth time receive the maximum vote of and to either squad a 17th time game, with the winner decided on a total points basis. 0.72 ERA in 25 innings. Kiesler lost his first match, 25-24, to Saeger but de¬ feated Lango, 25-21, and Tucker, 21-16, for the victory. Frosh Golf Tucker was second with 65 points, Saeger, third with 63, and Lango, last with 61. MSL Golf Coach Bruce Fos- Kiesler took up the game when he came to MSU three sum has scheduled a freshman years ago and had little trouble becoming adept at it. golf tournament for the week¬ "It's basically the same as pocket pool," he said, "and end of May 20-21. All freshmen anyone who is good at pocket pool can do well at billiards." NATIONAL CHAMP—Bill Ki. shot at a who have contacted Fossum and Needless to say, he's no slouch at pocket pool, and some¬ billiards table in the Union, Kiesler won the Na- have attended the frosh golf times has trouble finding a suitable opponent. tional Intercollegiate 3-Cush on Billiards Tourna- team's meetings are asked to Kiesler, an economics major, is not certain as to his merit at Coral Gables, Fla., April 29 with 74 of c check the bulletin board at the future plans, but probably will not defend his title next possible 75 total points. Photo by Tony Ferrante Forest Akers Golf Course for further details. • Sunday • Golfers Stage Invitational Forest Akers will be the site players and count its top four versity, Aquinas College, Alma • MSU Men's Glee Club £ of the first annual tational p.m. Spartan Invi- Golf Tournament today with nine schools en- tered in the 18-hole meet. at 1 scores. The schools entered include olivet College, Oakland Univer- sjtyt Calvin College, Ferris State College, Detroit College ofBusi- ness and MSU with two or Head Coach Bruce Fossum will three Each college will enter five College, Central Michigan Uni- enter an "A" team consisting INMH of his five top players and one When school's out, or two other teams, comprised of squad members who have had little chance to play this sea¬ son. DOUBTING THOMAS. get in on a good deal. . . Many universities expressed IS GOD DEAD? interest in this new tournament, but had to decline invitations, be¬ Spring Concert HOPEFUL AGNOSTIC. . . cause of previous engagements. Sixteen teams have already shown interest in next year's tourna¬ and Would you ment. like to know? There is an infallible supernatural proof (Luke 24:49 & Acts 1:4-5) that The Spartans' scheduled match Variety Show is as convincing and dramatic today as it was with Michigan Thursday was can¬ celled because of wet grounds, in the beginning of Christianity. .You select your but MSU will face the arch-rival Church, I merely point out the way and for free. Erickson Kiva 3.00 & s:oo p.m. Wolverines Monday on the Spar¬ tans' home course. Interested? "Experience what sixty-five The Questing Beast enthusiastic men can do 211 Abbott Road- M. W. Hart • Box 53 • Glen Ridge, N. J. 07028 Next to State Theatre with good music." Tues.-Sat., 10:30-5:30 Wed.-'til 8:00, Closed Mon. TWA 50/50 Club. Mnd out ®hat others Dill do next year.. j 7WA^CLUB -COMPLETE COLOR RELATED WALKING SHORT ENSEMBLE ndable. DO NOT mail cash TWA 1 2 off for tra\el in the USA! Going home or just going places, you can get 5(i'. off the regular Jet Coach fare in the U.S. when you fly TWA. As long as you're under 22, you're on — most any day of the year except a few holiday peak-travel periods. Seats are on a stand-by basis —but service includes everything: meals, movies and music, depending on the flight. Here's all you do: fill out the application, prove your age, pay $3 for an ID card. Call your nearest TWA office —and we'll make it easy. We're your kind of airline. look at FASHION LEADERSHIP FROM AMERICA'S FAMOUS SHIPBUILDERS AT FINER Ishirtbuildersl yadotljf CAMPUS STORES EVERYWHERE Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, May 13, 1966 Trackmen Face N By DAN DROSKI ball players Jim Summers and aiming to improve his 4:17.7 yard run. Martens will be out to The last running event of the State News Clint week. better last week's record time Sports Writer Jones. time of last day, the one-mile relay, will Summers will Join Co-Cap¬ of 1:18.9. MSU's Steele, Rick Dunn, MSU's track team will meet The Spartans will have three see tain Das Campbell and senior of the fastest runners in the con¬ Tompkins and Rick Dunn are Campbell and Spain face a very Notre Dame Saturday on the Spar¬ scheduled for the Jim Garrett as the Spartans' ference entered In the 120-yard 440-yard run, strong Notre Dame team. tans' home track, andHeadCoach three entries in the lCK^yard with Steele the Spartans' lone Fran Dittrich feels the Irish high hurdles as Washington, Roland Carter, James Stew¬ dash. Gene Washington will head Jones and Bob Steele give MSU entry in the 440-yard interme¬ art and John Wilcox will head will be very formidable foes. diate hurdles. Steele's time of MSU defeated Ohio State last the Spartan contingent in the great depth in this event. They the Spartans in the pole vault finished 1-2-3 In the Big Ten 53.2 set a new field and meet while Saturday, 104-37, but Notre Dame 220-yard dash, with Summers, Big Ten champ Mike Bow¬ Campbell and Garrett in the thick Indoor championships and should record in this event last week, ers and hurdler Fred McKoy will is expected to field a much of the race. be Just as fast outdoors. the first time the event was held, lead MSU in the high Jump. Jim stronger team. so the winning time automatical¬ In the mile run, Keith Coates Garrett is the Spartans lone en¬ Dittrich will go with the same The most exciting event of the and Art Link are expected to ly set the standard. try in the long Jump, but the Big basic line-up he used last week, the entries, with Coates day may be the 880-yard run MSU has three entries in the Ten with the helpful addition of foot¬ pace as sophomore John Spain will be champ Is expected to give two mile with senior Dick Sharkey MSU a first place in the event. aiming to break the record he set expected to lead the field. Shar¬ Dennis Lamb, Tom Herbert and last week with a time of 1:49.1. key holds the indoor record for Dennis O'Meara are entered in Spain's time was the lowest the two-mile run, and he set a new the shot Netters TakeOn Three half mile ever run in the state. He has two more years meet standard with of eligi¬ clocking last Saturday. his 9:07.5 put, with Tom Kuester joining this trio throw. in the discus bility and should set a new record In Dual Meet Finale before he graduates. Another record may be set Saturday when Mike Martens and By DAN DROSKI State, News Sports Writer Rich Tompkins enter the 660- Put the "Sharp Look" PASSIVE CASSIUS—Heavyweight champion Cassius Clay < beat group, "The Trogs," while training for his May 21 bout with Henry Cooper in London. Clay has asked his local draft board to classify him as a conscientious The" Spa run tennis team finish its dual meet season with will The Hooslers were second in in your casual wear objector. UPI Wirephoto a flourish this weekend by facing the Big Ten last year and have three first-line singles players DINING three league opponents at Purdue Is Such A Pleasure returning. Clay Objects May 21. Stephenson said he had no idea T University. MSU will have dual meets with Indiana, Iowa and Purdue on Fri¬ day and Saturday. Indiana's strength is at No. 1 singles with senior Dave Power. He was runner-up at No. 1 last And The Food Is So Good At The CAPITOL PARK Make the FRANKFORT, Ky. Heavy¬ er on when the appeals board would State sports a 5-1 dual meet year and is ranked 28th among scene during weight champion Cassius Clay Clay said in London "I have record and has racked up 24 men nationally. He teamed wants to be classified as a con¬ no comment" on the proceed¬ rule on Clay's request. these great spring He said the board's decision points in league dual meets this with thepraduatedRodMcNerney scientious objector, and this re¬ ings. season. Each point, plus any ac¬ to take the Big Ten champion¬ PHONE quest is being studied by his would be posted in Louisville weekends in Stephenson said if Clay's ap¬ "and until that happens it is cumulated at the Big Ten cham¬ ship at No. 1 doubles last year. Selective Service appeal board peal is granted, the champion pionships here next Thursday RESERVATIONS classified Information. I am sure, in Kentucky. Col. Everette S. Stephenson, would be placed in one of two categories: however, that as soon as Mr. Friday and Saturday will be total¬ ed to determine the league cham¬ from Iowa has five lettermen back a team that finished seventh Mr. Howard Louis Cleaned Clay gets the word, he will let last season. The Hawkeyes are Kentucky's Selective Service di¬ pion. IV 2-1491 1-A-O making him available everyone know about it." 2-2 rector, said today Clay has filed for noncombatant military serv¬ A Selective Service spokes¬ The regular Spartan line-up In league dual meets this Sport Clothes Season. the necessary papers but de¬ ice only. man said some Black Muslims of Rich Monan at No. 1 singles, clined to say whether the appeal 1-0 making him eligible for have been deferred as conscien¬ Mickey Szilagyi at No. 2, Laird Purdue was last in the Big SATURDAY, MAY 14 is based on religious grounds. work in places like non-profit Warner at No. 3, Jim Phillips Ten last vear with a mere 21 8 tious objectors while others who A.M.-11 P.M. listed themselves as members at No. 4, Vic Dhooge at No, 5 points overall. The Boilermakers We Feature Fast The champion, a Black Mus¬ hospitals because of his opposi¬ SUNDAY BUFFET tion to both combatant and non- serving in the and Mike Youngs at No. 6 will have six returning lettermen Service & Dorm Pick-Up. lim, is in London preparing for of the sect are 8:30 A.M.-8:30 P.M. his title fight against Henry Coop¬ combatant training and service. armed forces. be doing triple time for Coach from that squad. Of the six, No. 1 Stan Drobac this weekend. singles man Wayne Svoboda's 10-10 record was the best last Monan and Stilagyi will be at No. 1 doubles, Phillips and season. CAPITOL PARK WHILE THOR THUNDERED Dhooge, at No. 2 and Youngs MSI' beat both Purdue andlowa, MOTOR HOTEL CLEANER AND and Warner, at No. 3. 8-1, last season while losing to SHIRT LAUNDRY Towson Stole AAU Show 500 S. CAPITOL Indiana should be the strongest Indiana. 7-2. 3 blocks south of the Capitol the While Dave Thor was earning States right to represent the United at the World's Games "I couldn't believe said with a grin. "I it," Toby thought I and on Towson, who faced NCAA, AAU Olympic greats, has his eye the National Collegiate floor ARMSTRONG HALL Phone IV 2-1491 could get in the top three, but this fall at Dortmund, Germany, didn't think I could beat Saka¬ exercise crown. Presents STORE HOURS: MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 9:30 AM TO 5:30 PM > WEDNESDAY NOON UNTIL 9 PM Spartan freshman Toby Towson moto." "The NCAA will be harder for was knocking the old pros cold at the National AAU Champion¬ Towson, who claims he's never felt as detached as in that final me," "but he other said, than looking ahead, that, the AAU Indoor Street Dance WELCOME PARENTS TO M.S.U. is the toughest. I'd love to be an ships last weekend. performance, just forgot com¬ May You All Have A Pleasant Weekend Thor, who also placed fifth pletely about every thingand Olympian, but it seems so far © in floor exercise, is among the worked. It worked. away, and there's so much more dozen gymnasts who will com¬ "I could tell exactly when I to do. Right now, I'm looking pete again In early June at an¬ hit or missed," he recalled. "I to the nationals and meet¬ other AAU affair, at which time can't remember how long I stood ing Frank Schmitz." the official group of six will be there when I finished the rou¬ Before he starts thinking selected. tine. It's almost a blank from Olympically, Towson will have to Towson stole the show from when I was shaking Dave's (Thor) expand his specialization to the Friday the 13th 8-12 p.m. the nation's best and joined their hand and he told me I'd won." Olympic all-around events. ranks, earning the National AAU Rrody Multi-purpose Rooms floor exercise title. He took third in tumbling and capped the week¬ Nick's Villa Venice The Canterburys end by being named the meet's outstanding performer. FORMERLY MARIA'S Towson was sixth at the con¬ clusion of the compulsory round. He pushed Into second place after Authentic Italian Foods the first round of optionals with a 9.5 score, two-tenths of a point Steaks, Chops, Sea Food behind Makata Sakamoto. Sakamoto, a freshman at USC Pizza • In or Out and the AAU all-around champ, held onto the lead despite his And, Of Course, Your Fo.on1» lower 9.3 compulsory score. The Beveroge final round clinched it as Toby Bonquet Facilities Available Nick Laskons Phone IV 9-5751 hit for a sizzling 9.65 routine, rated as one of the finest In¬ 1810 S. Washmgtoi lenty of Free Parking dividual performances. Put Your Parents Sellers Standard On A Honda! Second Anniversary Customer Appreciation Atlas Tire Sale or Bring your parents to tomorrow. We'll be i n the I.M. Building today arena one from 10 a.m. Check to 9 p.m. Or bring them out and let them test our Quality B-4-U Buy drive a Honda 50, or 90, or even the new Scrambler 160. They'll see how exciting life May 13-14 on even a Honda can be. Who knows, maybe they'll put you on a Honda for graduation of just Fri. Sat. for summer fun. HONDA of We check tire conditions with the Atlas Electronic TireTester-Check your tires yourself-Free. HASLETT ♦ he city travelers take cool route to summer a No Money Down and interesting places 12 Mo. to Pay in breezy, lithe icrseys by Doflnno that move with easy-care freedom. Sizes 8 to 16. 15.00 Free Electronic Test on your car A. Paisley print arnel triacetate skimmer. Gold, blue engine. We use the most modern equipment in theare^ ATLAS AMA 9 TUNE-UP For Spring. B. Arnel/nylon pin stripe shift. . .rope belt Black, green. Welcome Sellers Standard ^pOKEMOS PIN MONEY DRESS Sellers Standard MSU Service #2 Just 7 minutes from campus. Service Parents Michigan & Highland 1561-1 Haslett Rd. Ph. 339-2039 Jacobsons Harrison & Towbridge 337-9180 ED 7-9075 Hours: AAon.-Sat. 9 a.m.-8:30 p.m. TV STAMPS S & H STAMPS Sun. 12-8:30 p.m. Keep Your Car Warranty Valid. Ask us about "Security Cor Co Friday, May 13, 1966 6 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan S.M. Eisenstein's "Ivan the Terrible, Part II" (1943) score by Prokofiev Vet 23 awards, some as Alumni Med Students Awarded Award, Maralyn Jack, E. A total of wart McKinney, South Britain, Greenfield, Mass.; Michigan V. a lost masterpiece independent of "Part I" high as $500, were presented to Pontiac; Women's Auxilliary Conn. M.A. Award, Wallace E. Voeks, professional veterinary medicine Award, Joseph E.LeBeau, Wyan¬ Others receiving awards were: East Lansing; Borden Award, students at the seventh annual dotte; Patton Memorial Award, Pfizer Award, Samuel W. Tate, Lauralee Marshall, Sat., May 14, Conrad Aud. 7 P.M. Honors Convocation Thursday. East John Hartwick, East Lansing; East Lansing; A.S.M.T. Award, Lansing; Norden Award, Dr. The following awards were re¬ Runnells Award, Nancy Smith, Richard Ogar, East Lansing; Vet¬ Wade O. Brinker, Okemos; Bar- also Upjohn Awards, Freder¬ Gaylord; Sholl Memorial Award, erinary Faculty Award, David "Cyrano de Bergerac" ceived: Andrea Mullenbach, Guttenberg, P. Nelson, East Lansing; Nancy rien Award, Gary J. Kociba, Har¬ ick A. Zydech, East Lansing; bor Beach; Sayer Award, HughT. ' Richard J. Kociba, Harbor Beach; N.J.; Gail Hawley Scholarship T. Norris, Arlington, Va.; Vet¬ Fauser, Wyandotte; Merck with Jose Ferrer Carol A. Neal, Kalamazoo; Gor¬ Award, Harland W. Renshaw, erinary Public Health Award, Award, Wayne D. Oxender, East don C. Gilbert, BigRapids; Clinic Athens; Dean Clark Award, David Hylon Heaton, Boyne City; Phi Lansing; John Simon, Huntington Academy Award, "Best Actor" Awards, Frederick a. Zydech, P. Nelson, East Lansing; Ste¬ Zeta Award, Gretchen L. Flo, Woods. at S:45 following "Ivan" East Lansing; David L. Luhring, Lansing; Medical Technology each film is fifty cents LATINS LINK LEVELS Economic Integrati activity in conservation, but from vation program is not only con¬ key a broader level to interest Latin cerned with development of na¬ in Latin America, said Robert American governments in pro¬ tural resources, but also with Dorney of the Dept. of Scienti¬ grams concerned with their com¬ economic, social, cultural and fic Affairs of the Pan American mercial interests," said Dorney. educational improvements. Union. The U.S. is one of 19 mem¬ Dorney said that the problem Dorney, who is envolved in the ber countries belonging to the may well be a human one and Organization of American States OAS and donates 10 of the 19 those in power in Latin Ameri¬ Program, stated that the United 'million dollars received an¬ ca must realize the need to edu¬ SAY CHEE-E-SE — This reproduction of the famous States must bring the modern nually into the program. The the smiling lady, Da Vinci's Mona Lisa, has been cate people to modern meth¬ techniques of American planning money is distributed according ods. added to the Holmes Hall lobby. It v4NB done by Den¬ and technology into the backward to national needs and desire for "A stable government cannot nis Roberts, Birmingham junior, and Bob Swedel, areas of Latin America. internal development. Oak Park freshman. Photo by John Castle exist without an enlightened "There must be a renewed Dorney said that the conser- people," he warned. The Latin American govern¬ ments have recently realized Not A Protest, But MSI) INTERNATIONAL FILM SERIES their need and co-operation. are giving their presents A Satiric comedy that the Cavana,ifJ^^roup SmileWhen Saying So question-should an imdeH&ker Two "junior Da Vinci's" from "1 don't want to cast any re¬ fibmMadtid marty an executioner's xLuJ^HTve Local UemocuflHive organ¬ organ- Hovel House decorated the sixth flection on the University's ef¬ :eers TOr Cavanagh ized a "V olunteers daughter to get ahead ?n Committee" to aid the Detroit floor elevator lobby of East Holmes with a reproduction of ficiency," said Bob Hamilton, Birmingham sophomore, who Mayor in his bid for the Party's the Mona Lisa Tuesday night. viewed and photographed the en¬ Senate nomination. tire proceeding. "I think this be¬ Lansing Attorney James E. Bob Shwedel, Oak Park fresh¬ longs in the same classification Burns is chairqian of the com- man, and Dennis Roberts, Bir¬ as goldfish swallowing," he com- mingham junior, copied the fa¬ tinued. "It wasn't any big pro- The next committee meeting mous portrait on a damaged por¬ will be at 8 p.m. May 24 at the tion of the wall between the ele- M.L. Upcraft, head resident Ingham County Democratic Head¬ adviser of East Holmes, was quarters, 126 Washtenaw St. The vinyl wallpaper had been amused by the painting, and said, Petitions for Cavanagh are torn from the wall last term "It looks pretty good to me— available from Burns at 440 Tus- and had not yet been replaced. very creative." sing Building, phone 472-4220. seats available for all perform ances1 Winged Spartans winner OF BUY TICKETS TODAY! Entertainment Night 5 NEXT ► 2 Features Plus-Bourvil in "THANK HEAVEN FOR SMALL FAVORS" "Wings Aloft" HOBLKT Wist ACADEMY / k Short Subject: "Big Show Tonight" ELECTRIC IN-CAR TONIGHT: Friday, May 13th (French Circus) Friday-May 13, 7:30 P.M. Engineering Auditorium AWARDS / "fx® "MVSf- Sound- FIL MS-Co lor 7:00 and 9:00 p.m. '^1 HEATERS Fairchild Theatre Admission: 500 "Wings To Baja" "Wings To Caribbean"' Admission 15< BEST DIRECTION „ F all seats reserved! seats now on sale at the box office or mail •NOW THRU SUN. (3) BIG HITS! ^ladmier: DRIVE ELECTRIC IN THE EXCLUSIVE FIRST LANSING SHOWING -IN HUM CAR HEATERS jT>. MHm Southw^Mt Sortlwwil of Lansing Lani on M-78 wL«"THE SIlENCERS" jj^flCHOQAN ioday at 4:10 Sc 8:50 only LOVE OR LUST! GLORY OR DISASTER! NOW THRU TUES. (3) BIG HITS! TODAY-SUPER BARGAIN DAY ALL DAY PREVUE OF 2 FEATURES! in the greatest racing spectacle of our time! EXCLUSIVE FIRST LANSING SHOWING! rMATT HELM A iI . BmJ I % When . in Southern California visit Universal City Stud/os - ^ SHOOTS THE & WORKS! It's the first film ::,s. (v/; that adventure for playboy rYou'LL BE trouble-shooter who always SCARED knocks 'em til you laugh ■ ( ySILLY! dean Martin HARRY MILLARD JUDY LEWIS JH|. as MATT HELM NANCY BERG MIKE BRADFORD TECHNICOLOR Silencers Produced by William NAUD Written by George BAXT A WillPat Prod. Released by MPI Hit No. (1) at 10:30 JOAN STALEY LIAM REDMOND DICK SARGENT Demolition RESTLESS, RECKLESS, R0VIN6 I Wriiien by JAMES FRITZELL and EVERETT GREENBAUM • D.recied by ALAN RAFKIN 1 Produced by EDWARD J. MONTAGNE • a universal picture Derby" Th rills, Chills, I Hit No. (2) Color at 8:05 | Q Fri., Sat. Only Shown at I 1:28 and Spills! First Lansing Sho' HER HUSBAND...HER ROOM...ANOTHER WOMAN.! Featurette #2 A NEW HIGH IN HARROWING SHOCK-SUSPENSE! at 8:05 PUDpURPHY "Battle of the .L- ROBERT WEBBER JAMES GREGt Drag Racers." Plenty of Action Galore Box Office Opens at 7 P.M. . _l\ FREEMAN • ERICKSON • John rich • anthony lawrencj techwemwr tecmniscopc* [p^ m ,v allan wiss iuHfomt JOMAM lERCMEL^ilJOCHARISSt | Original Sound hi Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, May 13, 1966 7 Buy Your Tickets NOW APPROVAL STILL DOUBTFUL Auditorium Box Office CIA 'Watchdog' Idea NOW OPEN 12:30-5:00 P.M. /J TD1\ ^ , . i_ favor of to modify and even eliminate" legislation authorizinga$150,000 sHTNjnTON; WASHINGTON (UPI) - Conn,*, Senate . have J better look at its opera- Chairman J. William Ful- the committee was in critics of the Central Intelligence tjons bright D-Ark", said he thought McCarthy's proposal. criticism which has sometimes committee Inquiry into the effects Monday Thru Friday Agency's secrecy-hidden power Sen. Eugene j, McCarthy. D- the defeat of Hickenlooper's mo- Fulbright said he personally arisen from past CIA operations, of CIA operations on American 355-0148 won an opening victory Thursday Mlnn-i introduced a proposal in In their attempts to let Congress the Senate tion showed that "as of today" feels that its adoption would "tend McCarthy had planned to offer foreign policy. Foreign Relations Committee to let three members Penn Frosh of the group sit on the congres¬ Can Get Aid sional body which oversees CIA activities. Sen. Bourke B. Hickenlooper, Guaranteed Annual Income Seen must be free to do what he thinks FreshmanstudentsfromPenn- R-Iowa, the committee's senior By PATRICIA KOTZAN is relevant. Eventually there will sylvania may apply for scholar- Republican, promptly moved to Guaranteed income will be a idea. Theobald society de- nQt be an authorltarian structure ship aid under the new Pennsyl- km ll- The victory came when the major political subject this sum¬ Older people will always cling veloping into one similar to that in society. With guaranteed in¬ vania State Scholarship Program, committee, on a 11 to 6 vote, mer, according to Robert Theo¬ to the Protestant ethic that labor of "The Brave New World' come cwn,e people wui use power for eu ie will Awards range from $200 to $1200 rejected Hickenlooper's motion, bald, a British socio-economist. and toil are the only means of "1984" unless we immediately the'commotTgood. for those needing financial as- Next Tuesday the group hopes satisfaction. It will be necessary take steps to restructure our sistance. t0 complete action on McCarthy's Theobald told a group of social economic values. Applicants must be 1965 high proposal science students Thursday that Our greatest risk, according to Man will learr school graduates who scored at would give formal Senate teed income of $3,200 Ivan, Cyrano Theobald, is to let our ~ society life around self-development, and not around money. Employment least 800 (combined verbal- sancti°n to a nine-member group per family of four would ellmi- continue the way it i uld mathematics) on the College Board SAT. 10 keep "fully informed" ( operations and exercise "legis- ed States. nate poverty intheUn Films To Run lead to the ruin of our within the next 50 years. economy my will not be a problem of the fu- Immediate Pennsyl vania freshman who did latlve oversight," including sup- Theobald sees guaranteed in¬ Theobald not receive an application by mail guaranteed ervismn of the CIA budget. This mine the income come as the solution to theprob- emphasized that it is may obtain one in the Scholar- ls said t0 total some $500 million type of society we will piece, "Ivan the Terrible, Part lem: of our economy. He be- the task of the young and future 5-10 y generations to focus their atten- ship Office, 201 Student Services annually and ls hidden In the re- Conrad Hall people are not inherently * the importance of learn- Building. quests of the Defense Dept. and tial action According to Theobald, the ini¬ Saturday. The deadline is June 1. other government agencies. concerning guaranteed Completed in the early 1940': better them- Ing how to deal with our abun¬ dance. Guaranteed income is the the film was put in cold storage selves and society, to Stalinist repression and first step. due According to Theobald, Organizations the confusion following the death of its director in the late 1940's. It was not publicly shown until 1MPUS Detroit sophomors 1958 at the Brussels World's McDonel Officers dent, Kenneth F Fair, where it was hailed by the Newly elected officers of Mc¬ sophomore; treai Ernie London Times as "a triumph of Donel Hall for '66-'67 were re¬ Delta Upsilon Elects Cromartie, Columbia, S.C., jun- film a The score of film, by Sergei cently installed at a candlelight Delta Upsilon fraternity i •okofiev, should be of interest ceremony, Lisa Mower, Grosse Pointe cently elected officers for next Also elected ing Si i werecorrespond- ry, K e •th La students of both cinema and jsic. The film co Junior, will be installed as pres River Rouge sophomore; dean of dent; vice president, NanB. Mar- story of Czar Iva begun in Part Ridgefield, N. J., junior; j.. j Lansing Junior; vice president, pledges, Samuel Jones, Detroit j i,™. contains a recapitulation Secretary, Judi Jahns. Holland William C. Strudwick, Muskegon sophomore; parliamentarian, of t|ie earlier fil at its start, SIDNEY-.SHELLEY L freshman and treasurer, Terry junior; treasurer. Dona Id G. Bre- Riggin.il Wiggins Detroit senior. and stands by lts If as an inde- Poplawski, Athens sophomore.ophomore. ;n to be in- mer, Elkhart. Ind., Junior, secre- tary, Richard L. Sheehan, Royal officers will begin terms pendent wm-w. n-, of office after the fr;Uernlty's utes last 15 min¬ of the film contain E'isen- POITIERS WINTERS *1 Committee chaii stalled are: Culture, Elizabeth Prant, Chevy Chase, Oa^ sophomore; pledge master, Md., junior; Raymond B. Dhue, Farmington Sweetheart Danci May 21. The stein's color only experiment photography. with ELIZABETH HARTMAN PANAVISION' 'I sophomore: rush chairman, crowned~ at~thedlnce a^| SI publicity, Marcy Waiting, Wyo., Richard L. Valente, C icero, _ At 8:45, the society will show 111., Hughes, Detroit Sophomoi -I Cyn- "Cyrano de Berrerac" with Jose sophomore; activities, N a cial chairman, Law Extra! Academy Award Cartoon Ferrer, who won the Academy Harper, Detroit freshman; scho- junioi thia Rush, Pont'.i The Dot And The Line" la sties, Andrea Hall, Birming¬ J. Avery, Okemos fresh- Robi„son, Far Award for his performance in ham freshman; social, Toni Me- and Twnsthr Johnson, Wayne the title role. Admission to each Next- "The Ten Commandments" Alumni relations chaii film is 50 cents. gas, Hamburg, N.Y., sophomore; and AWS, Karen Kelley, Lansing Murdoch T. Campbell, Harper freshman. Woods sophomore; and public The officers will a leduties relations chairman, DavidR. Mc- in the fall. graw, Bloomfield Hills sopho¬ more, were elected Monday night. RENT Sweetheart Selected Asher officers Omega Psi Phi Fraternity has Officers for the coming year chpsen Gretta Lee, Greensboro, ere recently elected by the N.C., junior, ..as its sweetheart women of Asher.They are: presi- HONDA 1966-67. She was crowned dent, Dianne Wedemeyer, North- by Diana Taliaferro Westfield, ville sophomore; vice president. N.J., Junior and outgoing queen, Lee Olson, Royal Oak sophomore; at the fraternity's Annual Sweet¬ recording secretary, Donna Fay, heart Ball which was held Satur- Cheboyg, in, Wis., junior. MMMER CIRCLE IHE/IJfiEfi6 MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY DEPARTMENT day night at the Lansing YWCA. Othe ! are corresponding sec- OF SPEECH PROUDLY PRESENTS THE SIXTH FUNCYCLE Members of Miss Lee's court retary, Connie Kelley, Haslett SEASON OF ITS UNIQUE THRUST STAGE are: Patty Burnett e, Detroit sop ho sophomore; treasurer, Sally THEATRE LOCATED ON THE CAMPUS IN sophomore; L a V e r n e Key, De- Herrington, Herri Gun Lake sopho¬ DEMONSTRATION HALL troit freshman; and Tonya Wea more; house manager, Beverly therford, Albion freshman. Hall, Jackson junior; house ste¬ 4 Cycle RASHOMON June 29-July 2 Several members of MSU'i ward. Dianne Chenault, Jackson Sigma Chapter were recognized freshm; nd social chairman, at the dance. Stanley Washington, Gail Eva Glenview, 111., fresh- OHV CHARLEY'S AUNT July 6-9 Detroit Senior and Spartan eager, man. received the chapter's THE DAYS BETWEEN July 13 -16 Automatic Clutch standing Athlete of the Y Ronald Goldsfeercy, Wilmington, Evans, Glenvir.u,. ill., freshman; TH£ 35V$^nuivi Del., graduate student, Sue Alexander, East Lansing jun¬ 3 Speed Transmission named "Man of the Year," and ior; Sunny Chapin, Syracuse, SYRACUSE July 20-23 Leroy Bobbin, Buchanan senior, N.Y., freshman; Dianne Chen- nault, Jackson freshman; Jacquie SECRET SERVICE July 27-30 Zahn, Milwaukee, Wis., fresh¬ man; Sue Hugon, Riverside, 111., RECREATIONAL ENTERPRISES, INC. freshman; and Earleen Philip, Omega Psi Phi 134 North Harrison SAVE $5 00 SCOTCH SEASON STRIP • 1 OUPONS sb 00 Plymouth freshman. Others are Julia Hunt, Detroit 332-5981 Introduced as members of f r e s h m a n; Mary Archey, Mt. Omega Psi Phi's spring term Plea sant sophomore; Alice pledge class were: Micheal Pye, OPEN 8 A.M. to 10 P.M. Woodworth Kalamazoo fresh¬ sophomore; William , Detroit Ware, Beaumont , Tex., fresh¬ man; Dale Duesenberg, St. Joseph Friday-Saturday-Sunday freshman; Marcia Knapp, G r a n d man; Mike Bradley, Ypsilanti sophomore; Clyde Swan, Detroit Rapids freshman; and Linda transfer; Clinton Harris, Beau¬ Moore, Milwaukee, Wis., sopho¬ more. New! Self Serve Now! Now! Now! mont, Tex. freshman, Willie Maull, Inkster sophomore; Stan A Ipha Phi A Ipha Giant Hines, Savannah, Ga.; Virgil Har¬ Restaurant! Fast (4) Unit Show ris, Detroit sophomore; Gene Alpha Phi Alpha has selected Washington, La Porte, Tex., jun¬ officers for the coming year. Fast Service Drive Out! AMCIMA n_ ^ Free Elec. Heaters (AST IlAN$INO ■ ACT A4 n ior; Paul Jenkins, Detroit sopho- They are president, Carl Tyson, Unit No. 2- 10:39 Unit No. 3 at 12 p.m. Mon. May 30th-10:00 A.M. Unit No. 1 at 8:39 Civic Center ins i ■ LIVE j COMPLETE! GIANT CLOSED- * 4 HOURS when the ALL TIME greats of pkriorminc; arts COMPANY 19()()-()? ROCK'N ROLL CIRCUIT SCREEN * start to finish TRADITIONAL BLUES St (>\V DAM I (>N I 111 COUNTRY WESTERN Kil l I\<; GROUND ()>: 2 and FOLK ROCK SAINT JOAN Nov. IV came together for the ARSKNK ANT) Oi l) "Tjjggest bash in (he LACK l-i-l,. 27 Mar. I history of show business! 1111 DVBBtJK April IH2H The BIG I .M M May 2(1-27 A MAN'S A MAN Nov. I 12 DIM HI INDl.H IIII- I T .MS |av 2 I 1 el, I 'T IS PIT A SI IK S A 4th Unit All Seats Reserved-$5.00 Color Featurette "Fire Away" plus cartoon Tickets on-Sale at Civic Center 18 FAT .NT S 1 < >K S7 and Arbaugh's Dept. Store Sunday-Wild Wild Winter - plus - Agent For Harm Doors Open 10:00 A.M. 'Meet Your Friends At The Crest" The Go Go Drive - In Telecpst starts 10:30 A.M. Hurry For Choice Seats Q Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, May 13, 1966 Of Skirts And Morals State News By MIKE BROGAN was important in bringing a and early 1900's and said such change in manners and morals in catalogs show that by 1920 the the United States. The key to the short skirts formerly worn only can Flappers' short skirts signi¬ fied a broad change in Ameri¬ social thought rather than change in morals, Ostrander said, is the short skirt of the by worn young by girls were also being women. Ostrander quot¬ Pictures In Ph an outright rebellion against so¬ flapper because it symbolizes a ed a Sears catalog of 1918 as ciety, a history professor sug¬ reverence for youth. saying "The trend is toward Four State News photographers ton, Mass., junior; Dave Laura, photo annual, entitled "My Fav- gested Wednesday. Ostrander pointed out that simplicity. Styles are suitable have h id pictures included in the Southgate ft eshman; Dean Lyons, 0rite Pictures" has been pub- prior to World War I the United for young and old." 1966 Photo Annual, published by Detroit sophomore, andJoeMes- Hshed. Most of the pictureswere Speaking in the Union on "Why States was a society holding the Ostrander said the change in the Michigan Press Photograph- sicci, St. Paul, Minn., sopho- taken by professional newspaper Flappers Wore Short Skirts, a elderly in great respect but that the way Americans saw them¬ ersAssn. more. . photographers. Social Interpretation of the Twen¬ by 1920 America found itself selves and their children in the They are: Tony Ferrante, Bos- This is the first year that the Ferrante's photo, "Go 'Way, ties," Gilman Ostrander, asso¬ oriented toward youth. twenties is represented by Doro¬ Dog" was published in the State ciate professor of history, told "Thus the twenties signify a thy Dix, a widely-read columnist News. the MSU Chapter of the Ameri¬ reversal of the order of venera¬ of the decade. Miss Dix, a bio¬ can Studies Assn. that his inter¬ tion," he said. logical determinist, told her "Three Cheers," by Laura, est in the knee length skirts did The twenties were unique in readers that children should be appeared in both the Wyandotte not come out of idle curiosity fashion, according to Ostrander, allowed to have as much fun as News Herald and the Trenton but rather from an attempt to because never before had women possible in their early years be¬ High School yearbook. understand the development of exposed their legs in public. cause after they married they Lyons' picture, "Spun of^ social thought in America after Ostrander cited the fashions would find life to be hard and Steel," was taken for Associated World War 1. depicted in the Sears and Roe¬ grim. Newspapers in Wayne. Ostrander said World War 1 buck catalogs of the late 1800's Ostrander said such thoughts Messicci's picture, "Cold explain why women strived for Journey," has not been prev¬ the little girl look. "Women wore iously published. It was taken on short skirts because they didn't the Grand Trunk railroad between want to grow up. Theyhelda rev¬ Lansing and Chicago at 3 a.m. Summer Earnings Program erence for youth," he age in said. "Old the twenties became a use¬ less category. The twenties want¬ during winter term break shows between two snow frozen cars. on and the door FOR COLLEGE MEN ed to ignore old people." The Michigan Press Pho¬ offers tographers Assn., which spon¬ sored the contest, is made up of 180 press and television pho- • • Above Average Earnings 15 $1,000 Cash Scholarships Student "Three Cheers" Photo by Do-- tographers • 3 All Expense Paid Trips Abroad Writing FOR FURTHER DETAILS WRITE TODAY: On Spain Peter Barba, graduate student, Placement Director is writing a book on inexpensive Summer Earnings Program travel in Spain. The book, de¬ P. F. Collier, Inc. signed especially for the student 640 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y. 10019 traveling through Spain, will go to press late this summer. Please Mention Both Your Summer and School Addresses Barba, who has lived in Spain most of his life, has spent every summer since 1959 traveling around Spain getting material Welcome Parents! for his book which will include information on what places to visit, how to use the buses in the While you're in town enjoy the large cities and what to eat and drink. Barba said that he got the idea for the book when he was attend¬ ing high school in Spain. At the time Spain was closed to tourists, but there were rumors that it soon would be reopened. Barba decided to write the book in an¬ way, Dog" Photo by Tony Ferrante ticipation of the time when tour¬ "Spun of Steel Photo by Dean Lyon; ists could again visit the coun¬ try. #11,000.00 POETRY UN Not Allowed Viet Role-Thant CONTEST UNITED NATIONS(UP1)— Sec- ProbdblY Britain—do not want it 11 years ago when the Southeast North Borneo and Sarawak dur¬ in Viet Nam)—and in my view retary General U Thant said t0 do so- Asia issue went to the Geneva ing the formation of Malaysia, more basic—is disagreement Thursday the United Nations Thant told a meeting of rep- Conference—most of the princi¬ and Yemen and Cyprus. among the big powers involving could not undertake a peace- resentatives of non-government- pal antagonists, especially Com¬ In the Dominican Republic, he the projected involvement of the Open to ALL poets keeping role in Viet Nam be- al organizations that another rea- munist China, were not members said, the world organization was United Nations in Viet Nam," cause some of the big powers— son whV there was no U.N. role of the UN. unable to perform its peace¬ Thant said. the Soviet Union, France and in viet Nam was the same as keeping functions or maintain He said his assessment also Earlier Thursday, replying to .!aw ond order because "at least JIM HARVIN TRIO criticism of the big powers did not was that the great majority of by U.S. Sen. Wayne one all UN members- both big and Morse, D-Ore., that the United want the United Nations involved small powers--did not want the The Hi Nations should have a new sec¬ there." He did Style Light Weight Hot Scrambler From t mention the retary general because Thant United States £>y name. organization involved in Viet Montesa Kawasaki 50 cc to 650 cc: Nam. TIIE PROMETHEAN LAMI' . Helmets & Accessories could not control the Security "The conclusion," he said, "is 2174 34th St, Sacramento, C alif. . Complete Stock of Bikes Council, Thant's spokesman said that the United Nations can be Across trom the State Capittf * oti msn Parts & Service the UN Chief Executive would involved effectively in situations Pictured . . Service on All Makes Terms not comment, except to say it was not one of his functions to con¬ threatening international peace and security if the big powers People Arranged 482-4019 Dept. F.N. trol the council. agree that it would be Involved'' ANNOUNCEMENT: Cully's Cycle Center Thant told Thursday's con¬ ference the United Nations was Whereas only France was a UN member when the crisis first Identified W rong The photo of the children play¬ 3029 E. Kalamazoo, Lansing not strong enough to perform arose in the former Indochina, all ing on page 7 on Thursday's the tasks outlined for it in only the United States, among State News incorrectly identified CHAPMAN the charter and the organization the COLLEGE, located in Orange, California, one of major participants in the them as Negro. They are Fili¬ would "remain" weak if that is Viet Nam conflict, is a member, the oldest colleges in the West, is accepting applications for admis¬ pino. The children live in Spar¬ Opens what its members wanted. while both Red China and North tan Village, not East Lansing. sion for two 107-day semesters for the fall of 1966 and the spring He mentioned UN peace-keep¬ Viet Nam are outside the orga¬ Fri. & Sat. On page 1 of the same issue, of 1967 aboard Holland-America Line's s.s Ryndam. This is the ing activities in the last five nization, he said. Chuck Stoddard was incorrectly May 13 & 14 years during the crises in Cuba, "Another reason (for non-in¬ Identified as chairman of the second year of operation of Chapman College's floating campus. West Irian (West New Guinea), volvement of the United Nations student board. He is president of the senior class. Outstanding college and university students are invited to spend these semes¬ ters at sea, enrolled for 12-15 units of credit, applicable toward the Bachelor Free This Week: Fri. & Sat. of Arts, Bachelor of Science and Bachelor of Music degrees, or 9-12 units Outdoor Living & Recreational Indian Trails Inc. toward the Master of Arts degree. Onboard, students will experience a situation of intense academic concen¬ Vehicles & Mobile Homes tration, supplemented by personal meetings ashore with men who are the world's leaders, monuments which are the world's heritage, and people whose apparent differences often prove to hide human similarities. Sponsored by COTTAGES College classes will be held during 56 class days at sea in modern, air- conditioncd classrooms and laboratories equipped with all facilities necessary Lansing Mobile Home Dealers . CONVENTIONAL NEW • A-FRAME for course work offered. & AG Council . CUSTOM-BUILT NONSTOP ITINERARIES: Fall 1966 Semester Spring 1967 Semester leaves Los Angeles >rth of Spartan Stadium at MSU leaves New York October 20, duration . COTTAGES . VACATION LOTS February 7, duration 107 days; to La 107 days; to Lisbon, Barcelona, Marseille, Civitavecchia (Rome). Piraeus (Athens), Guaira (Caracas), Port of Spain (Trini¬ dad), Salvador, Montevideo, Buenos (ON LAKES AND RIVERS) SERVICE! Istanbul, Alexandria (Cairo), Port Said, Aires, Rio De Janeiro, Lagos, Dakar, Suez, Bombay, Colombo, Port .Swetten- Casablanca, Cadiz, Lisbon, Rotterdam WESTERN ham (Kuala Lumpur). Bangkok, Hong (inland to France, Belgium and the Neth¬ RED Kong, Kobe, Yokohama (Tokyo), Hawaii, erlands), Copenhagen, London, Dublin arriving Los Angeles February 4, 1967. (overland to), Galway, arriving NewYork CEDAR City May 25, 1967. (Tongue and Grooved) ADMISSION: Students admitted to the program must meet regular admission qualifi¬ cations of Chapman College and upon fulfilling its requirements will receive grades and TO KALAMAZOO-CHICAGO credits in accordance with its regularly established standards. Leaves E. Lansing 2:15 P.M. (Fridays & Sundays) See the new models! Other Servi (Daily) Complete modern homes Director of Admissions with furnishings and Westbound (to Chicago) 6:40 appli¬ Chapman College, Seven Se ances for every room! A.M., 8:30 A.M. 11:15 A.M. Light¬ Orange, California 92666 2:10 P.M., 5:05 P.M., 10:45 weight travel trailers for Present Status | weekend, vacation fun. P.M. College / UnWerflty j | Name . Freshman Sophomore ' □ □ | See our display at the Outdoor Living and Eastbound 9:25 A.M. (to Flint) 5:40A.M. , 12:40 P.M., 2:55 | Address_ >• | Recreational Show P.M., 5:25 P.M., 7:50 P.M., □ I Junior Senior □ j McKay Free Time Sales ' 11:20 P.M. j City Graduate □ i i FREE ADMISSION McKAY LUMBER CO. ■ <*" Presented by your local dealers in Phone 332 2-to The Ryndam is under Netherlands registry. | cooperation with the AG Council at MSU 2235 W. Saginaw 484-7721 Evenings except Sat. 7-9 p.r Indian Trails Inc. Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, May 13, 1966 9 New Latin American Club Promotes Internationality can A group of MSU Latin Ameri- students is organizing aLat- in American Club i hopes of American Exhibit is "Unity." There will be slides national music and items of Interest from The group holds regular meet- ings at 5 p.m. Fridays in Inter- national Center. Election of of- STORES ACROSS FROM UNION - 337-9879 all the countries OPEN UNTIL 9:00 P.M. WEDNESDAY & FRIDAY promoting understanding of na¬ represented, ficials is expected to be held tional differences and a feeling Latin American students inter- before the end of this term, MARGIN""""""' of International among ested In Joining or learning more members. about the club are Invited to at- Further Information miv be Reg. 45C L The'ldea tend a social meeting in the Big obtained by contacting Tullo Ce- 29( j of organizing a Latin American Club was first con- group " " of students Ten Room at KelloggCenter from 9-1 tonight. Husbands and wives coni, 355-1008, Amaro Zavaleta, 355-0905 or Mario Vilches, 355- Tampax 10's are welcome. 4106. began to meet informally in Owen ■■■■■■■■■■■■MARGIN"■■■ and as interest grew the idea of a campus-wide organization be¬ came more appealing. Head Of Ne ing Alcohol 15$ I The group now includes mem¬ bers representing every Latin American country guay, Honduras except Para¬ and Haiti. To Speak I ■ The policy of the club was ■ outlined by Mario Vilches, Chil- Aron Gurwitsch, professor in ■MARGINa SOUNDS OF MUSIC—The Bud Spangler Quartet was one of four small groups that e of the New School for Social Re- entertained jazz fans at Phi Mu Alpha's jazz show Wednesday. The MSU Jazz jan graduate student and c the members of the group. Hi search, will deliver an Isenberg lt \s What's ■ Reg. 53.50 5 Ensemble also performed. Photo by Dave Laura Memorial Lecture at 8 tonight j Toni Curl Free $2.49 j said that Latin ns come to the United St; from whe and benefit they learn here. The in Conrad Auditorium. His topic will be "Husserl's Conception of Happening ated, will be one of the Intentionality of Concious- ■ ■ policy, hi Olin Report ■ ■■■■■■■■■■■ im a rgi nfc ■■■■■■■■■■■•■ active participation in midwest ness. Angelo B. Machado of the Uni¬ culture. versity de Minas Geraes, Belo ■ The Reg. 59c ■ The club will have both cul- College of Veterinary Horizonte, Brazil, will speak at j Olin iitfRlth Center admissions and 29< j Cynthia Caulum, Webster, 11:30 a.m. today in 304 Natural remaining hospitalized late N.Y., junior. Thursday afternoon included the Admitted Thursda> were: tended to Latin American edu¬ in 335 Giltner Hall. Science. His topic tors will be "Fac¬ Governing Sexual and Ovi- ■ J&l Baby Oil ■ following: Michael Clark, Mt. Pleasant cators visiting in the U nited *** position Behavior of the Bra¬ Admitted Monday were: Jean freshman; Shirley Kath, Pontiac States. Rosemary Blyth, graduate zilian Damsel-Fly." ■■■""■■■■■■margin ■■■■■■■■■■■■■ Nardin, Middletown, Ohio, fresh¬ freshman; Barbara Schoch, Otta¬ The club also plans to form ssistant in foods and nutritions, ■ ■ man; Susan Wilson, Northfield, wa Lake freshrnail Richard St. welcoming committee greet will speak on "Effects of Addi- ■ Reg. 79c ■ Alpha Kappa Psi, professional 111., sophomore; and John Kru- James, Rochester, N.Y., fresh¬ new MSI.' Latin Amer , stu- tion of Water to Threonine Im- business fraternity, will conduct soe, East Lansing special stu¬ man; Sharon 'Harrison, Morton dents and make them feel more dent. Admitted Tuesday were: Grove, 111., freshman; Gayle comfortable intheir new environ- Gary Gawura, Grosse Pointe Anderson, Jackson junior; Gerald ment. Vilches said that most new- balanced Diets Fed to Rats," at 12:40 p.m. Economics, today in 102 Home a car wash 9 a.m.-6 p.m. Satur¬ day at Larry's Gulf Station, 504 W. Michigan Ave. Cost is $1 ■ Right Guard 49$ ■ freshman; Claudia Pocock, Mt. Rains, Falls Church, Va., sopho¬ ly arrived foreign students have except for green and Clemens, freshman; Douglas more; Suzanne Decker, Flint difficulties at first, especially J.T. Fourie of General Motors whlte ca^Si whlch 11 be charged ■ ■margini will speak on "The Nature of Dykhuis, Grand Rapids sopho¬ freshman; and Cassandra To- during registration. 75 cents more; Dessa Stepanovich, Pitts¬ bara, Roseville freshman. The clubfe future plans include Work Hardening In Stage I of ' * i "e9->'-«9 COME BLOW YOUR burgh Pa., sophomore; Rose¬ participation in the International Deformation" at 4 p. today A1 Smith, Flint city commis¬ AA i HORN—Bob Cur now, leader and' arranger for the MSU Jazz E nsemble, mary Calderone, Grass Lake sophomore; Robert Gaylord, Berkley freshman; Frederick IDenis E Festival. The theme of the Latin HILLEL FOUNDATION in 146 Engineering. sioner, will speak on "Religion, Patriotism, and Politics," at a meeting of Chi Alpha at 8 to¬ s VO-5 Shampoo 99{ g Strautz, Stanton junior; Leora plays a trumpet solo at night in 34 Union Building. ■■■margin ■■■■■■■ W Phi Mu Alpha's jazzshow ednesday. Jullie, North Muskegon sopho¬ more; Judith Rogers, De¬ MSU Sen (319 Hillcrest at W. Grand River) Latin American students in¬ Photo by Dave Laura troit sophomore; John Frede¬ Pete White, Bay City senior terested in joining or learning Special Of The Week rick, Mt. Clemens sophomore; and son of MSU trustee Clair Sunday, May 15 6 p.m. more about the newly formed Robert Helt, Pittsburgh, Pa., White (D-Bay City), was elected Latin American Club are Invited styrofoam the Hillel House. j t senior; John Lurtsema, Hudson- Sunday first vice chairman of ZBT House to attend a social meeting in the Dedication ville junior; and Carole Filbert, the Michigan Young Democrats Flint sophomore. Admitted Wednesday were: Club. White, an economics major, Russell Lowefeld, Roslyn, N. V., has been active in Young Demo¬ SUPPER DR. CHARLES FORUM HIRSCHFELD, Professor of MOVIE Big Ten Room at Kellogg Center from 9-1 tonight. Husbands and wives are welcome. ice buckets & coolers f 29< senior; Barbara Mowers, East crat work the past five years, Humanities, will discuss the background of A special seminar sponsored The Zeta Beta Tau fraternity Lansing senior; Suzanne Weiss- serving as chairman of a Young by the Associated Student Micro¬ house, 855 Grove St., will be man, Detroit freshman; Deena Dem club at Delta College, a "The Dybbuk" dedicated at 1 p.m. Saturday. biologists (ASM) will be at 4 ALL COUPONS EXPIRE MAY 19, 1966 Morguloff, Detroit freshman; state central representative for following which the film classic p.m. today in 101 Giltner Hall. The dedication marks the offi¬ Frances Storkan, Spring Lake MSU in 1963, first vice chairman cial opening of the chapter house junior; Marilyn Smith, Lansing for the group here in 1964, "The Dybbuk" will be shown. which was closed for a year freshman; Thomas VanHeynin- Also elected at the Young Everyone Welcome. No admission charge after a costly ^ire in February of 1965. The entire chapter will sere¬ gen, Alto sophomore; Corrlne Dems' State Convention were Jennings, Providence, R. I., president David Vaughn, Uni¬ graduate student; Neil Scharaga, versity of Michigan senior, na¬ For Rfcdes call 332-1916 If you haven't examined nade the renovated house and Mt. Vernon, N.Y., freshman;Na- tional committeewoman Regina ribbon-cutting ceremony will Chevrolet since a dine Foster, East Detroit fresh¬ Rozak of follow. George Hlbbard, past in¬ ter-fraternity adviser and na¬ Royal Oak and treasur¬ man; Sandra Schnetzky, Bloom- er Curt Grant of U-M. Double a new field Hills junior; Barbara Neu¬ tional ZBT officer, will cut the mann, Lansing sophomore; Don¬ ribbon. An open house for the whole na Ward, Detroit freshman; LANSING This Wee Telstar II, the twist Carolyn Grant, Saginaw fresh¬ WE TEl. EGRA^:, university community will be held in the 47-man house, which has man; David Sloan, Huntington FLOWERS MARSHALL or electric toothbrushes, Woods junior; Gerald Moore, WORLD WIDE enlarged rooms and increased Butler, Pa., sophomore; Susan facilities compared to the house Balberor, Southfield freshman; 5 ANN ED? 0871 iHt I HUM JkAiMli which burned. "Good lovin" by the Young Rascals "Gloria99 by the Shadows of the Knight 19M Impala Sport Sedan—a more powerful, more beautiful car at a most pleasing price. shame on you! BOTH NEW SMASH L.P.'s AT You've been missing out on a lot that's new and better since '62: • A more powerful standard Six and V8 (155 and 195 hp, respectively). New Turbo-Jet V8s with displacements of 39(1 and 127 cubic inches that you can only $2.25 • each Reg. $3.79 • order. A fully synchronized 3-speed transmission as standard. • A Turbo IIydra-Matic transmission available. THIS WEEKEND ONLY!! • Deep-twist carpeting on every model. • Six-month or 6,000-mile lubrication intervals. • Self-adjusting brakes. ,PLUS- • A Delcotron generator thai extends battery life. • Self-cleaning rocker panels. The Great Smash Single by • I'p to 3" more shoulder room; increased leg and head room. • A smoother coil-spring suspension. • New sound and vibration dampeners throughout. Tommy Roe, "Sweet Pea" • A longer body, a wider frame and tread. • Items you can add, such as AM-F.M Multiplex Stereo radio, Comfortron automatic Friday and Saturday heating and air conditioning, and a Tilt-telescopic steering wheel (or one that tilts I was a cuRly hAiREd bAby. But bAby look at me now ! 590 Only, May 13, 14 • Standard safety items on all models, including front and rear seat belts, back-up lights, windshield washers' padded instrument panel, padded visors. 2-speed electric Get CURL FREE... the new curl relaxing discovery! Comb out wipers, outside mirror, shatter-resistant inside mirror and non-glare wiper arms. (I'se them to best advantage.) natural curls with the cool, creamy CURL FREE lotion. Natu¬ • And of course the great buys you can get right now from your Chevrolet dealer. r ral body remains. You enjoy hairstyling freedom for months! What if your curls resist? Hang on! All natural curls respond to CURL FREE. Keep using it. You'll be a smoothie for sure! Marshall Music Jjg> Move out in May GM the Chevrolet Way 307 E. GRAND RIVER See your Chevrolet dealer! CHEVROLET ■ CHEVELLE • CHEVY n Friday, May 13, 1966 10 Michigan State News, East Lansing. Michigan 'USE RULE OF REASON' BACKGROUND OF ADECISION Bible In School Bishop Prefers Scholar Role SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)—The his unorthodox theological views, is dead" theology. Pike often means "of presenting the faith Citizens who believe religious practices should have a greater place in our public schools can work for constitutional changes the Supreme Court rulings. Three of them —The were: Supreme Court of the United States has ruled that the this the "All that has been said about matter cannot take away simple fact that this is a , religious nation and that we are resignation of the Rt. Rev. James Pike said he would devote the affirmed his belief that Chris- in a way which is more relevant allowing them, Michigan's at¬ state may not require as a reli¬ a religious general, Frank J. Kelley, people," Kelley said. Pike as Episcopal bishop of rest of his life to studying "the tlan doctrine, written by men, to contemporary man." torney gious exercise either the reading "Faith and religion have been said Thursday night. California did not come as a paradox" of the church "in our may be wrong. In order to continue these re- of the Bible or the recitation of powerful factors in the creation renunciation of his faith in his changing times" in the role of a flectlo"s* he sal(J. he had to get Kelley spoke in the Grand prayers in the public schools no- infaltihle in and maintenance of the Ameri¬ church, but a reaffirmation, the "scholar-teacher" at the Center There iis noth ng 1.aW8y "°m administrator- Rapids Civic Auditorium at a even if individual students may can way of life." 53-year-old churchman said for the Study of Democratic In- any earthlyasvessel. the creed Idon tregard infallible." he told leader" role op of a diocese, he carries as bish- public lecture sponsored by the Christian Service Club. He ex¬ absent themselves upon parental That religious heritage has Wednesday. stitutions in Santa Barbara, Calif. * audience at a Hayward, Calif., an plained the guidelines set up by request. been acheived without the inter¬ He said his leaving the post . Charges1960 ;« ri of_heresy when he against Pike suggested SJ Y nitrhf plke has not limited his out- spoken views to purely theolog- the U.S. Supreme Court on Bible —A strictly voluntary program ference of government, of student prayer or other reli¬ he continued. God's work has however, was only "to better fulfill my reading and prayer In public vocation.' He said that vocation article that Joseph might "j worship God in Christ and ical matters. In 1965 he crlti- gious exercise is permissible if been left to the have been the human father of so did Jesus worship God. . . dzed Luci Baines Johnson, schools. people, to the it does not take place during was to undertake "an explora- The founding fathers built se¬ family and to the church. Jesus. Last year he was again there is only one absolute God," daughter of President Johnson, regular school hours, and If the t.on in depth of the present accused by 15 Episcopal clergy- pike said. for asking to be rebaptized when paration of church and state into authority of the school is in no status of the church. men on the basis of his writings she the Constitution because they felt Joined the Roman Catholic way utilized to organize or main¬ The controversial frequently been under fire, even prelate has 0n the Trinity, the Virgin Birth and other doctrines. The prelate's intention tore- sign was announced through the Church. He applauded Miss John- son's conversion as an example Injured Driver governmental interference or sponsoring of religion was not an aid to religion, but a threat tain the the exercise attendance of or to secure the pupils. Dedication from within his own church, for While not an advocate of "God diocesan office at Grace Cathe- of American "independence." but --Courses in religion given To Hospital Sunday 1 It, he said. " dral here. The standing commit- to called the rebaptism a "direct as part of a secular program tee of the diocese accepted "with slap" at the Episcopal church, _ , 'They felt that their religion of education are not prohibited Robert M. Bruce, 1162 Arbor regret." Pike said he wouldcon- was strong enough to stand on City Commissioner tinue to serve the church on spe¬ cial committees. her original faith, He has been a leader in be¬ Or., Sparrow was taken to Edward Hospital Thursday W. its 0wn," he remarked. Kelley said the citizens of the when presented objectively. The attempt to Indoctrinate towards of John F. A. Taylor, professor philosophy and director of' the morning after receiving serious any particular belief or disbe¬ humanities center, will deliver Talk half of the civil rights move- Unlted States shouid fonow the lief is prohibited. In his letter of resignation, ment. He criticized California injuries in a two-car accident. the dedicatory address this Sun¬ Will Relig ruie Qf iaw> even when disagree- ion Pike said he had been consider- farmers who he said paid farm Bruce, who was going south lng with a iaW| while working to In carrying out the guidelines, day morning in the new sanctuary Abbot school authorities should apply of Edgewood United Church. ing the move for some time, workers low wages and failed to on Road, collided with change the law with which they driven the "rule of reason," Kelley A member of. the building com¬ "I have, over recent years, provide decent living conditions. a car by Stephen Corey, disagree through the democratic , ioversial city commis- controversial figure in Flint poli- also of East Lansing. said. mittee of the Edgewood Church, i increasing He was ordered out of Rhodesia process. .pc,. at 8 tonight to mention and Damage to the cars is estlmat- "Carrying general doctrines to Taylor will speak on "Archi¬ Chi Alpha members in 34 Union stituents and ;spected by his last year after assailing thegov- Kelley named 10 guidelines he absurd limits either to dramatize to finding a ernment's racial policies. a total of $2,500. summarizing tecture.and Communion." colleagues, though they often dis- energy, issued last year Building. th objectives or out of plain timidity Also participating in the for¬ At Smith, Flint politician, plans agree with him. does not further the cause of mal dedication services at 9:30 Smith also teaches government to talk on the topic, "Religion, understanding," he continued. and 11 a.m. Sunday will be Gor¬ 'Bias' Judges Life Of God In a Flint high school. Patriotism and Politics." In over forty Grand Rapids don L. Thomas, moderator of The former religious educa- schoolrooms Bible instruc¬ Being a staunch, fundamental the Edgewood Congregation, has made Al"Smith a tion director at the Riverside tion consistent with the Supreme mayor of East Lansing and pro¬ Assembly of God Church in Flint, Court decision is now being con¬ fessor of Smith is a Sunday School teach¬ speech. ducted. The Sunday dedication service E DITOR'S NOTEs George ever-present force in our times. Scriptures to them. Let's term no. er there. is the culmination of a month- Reynolds served as reli¬ The Bible is the basis for this "positive bias." In the words of Frank Basel, gion editor on the State traditional Christianity, but not long series of special days. The Alpha Omicron Chapter of The method which gives the Lansing Christian businessman, Gamma Delta, International As¬ sociation of Lutheran Students, News last year. Here he contributes his thoughts ill who read it agree on its veracity or pertinence. One of most information and satisfac- ti0n, arKj is 0f the m0st worth "T° those who say, God is dead, I say, 'I agree-your Godls dead.' Harp Recital The new sanctuary uses cir¬ cular seating around a centered to the "God Is dead" de¬ the reasons for this may lie altar. Louis Raynor, professor will host Gamma Delta repre¬ in the individual, is often taken But they should come sentatives from Central Michigan bate. the way they read it. be the best. my God, the everliving, unchang¬ For Sunday of art, designed the soon-to-be The question which these days Some read the Scriptures with ing, personal Lord the Bible completed fountain in the adjoin¬ University and the University of Qualitatively, this appears is confr ting religion, negative attitude, just to find Lauralee Campbell, harpist for ing atrium. The new building also Michigan at a Sunday dinner here. a be the method of "positive bias' r _ talks about. He is my constant contains a chapel. philosophy and the common is ys to pick it apart. Let's call the Lansing Symphony, will pre¬ The dinner will be held In the a—»• for those individuals can enjoy friend and companion, and I know sent a recital of solo and chamber The Edgewood congregation in He lives." "Is God dead?" „ - ... . .. Martin Luther Chapel and Stu- dent Center, 444 Abbott Road, at As unlikely and ridiculous as The question, "Is God dead?" music for the harp at 8 p.m. April 1963 engaged Gordon Corn- this question may seem to those mind, but apparently get nothing be answered Sunday at the Edgewood United well, an architect from Traverse Scriptures. They can find i cannot conclusively The movie "How Do I Love who hold traditional views, many out of it, except perhaps its and enjoy scriptural "truth." eryone's satisfaction, for : Church, 469 N. Hagadorn Rd. City, to design the church. Mrs. Campbell is a graduate The congregation had begun Thee?" will be shown and dis- people are beginning to ask this literary merit." Is God dead? The Bible says escapes empirical testing. cussed after dinner. question in earnest. Others read it with a belief The book of Hebrews tells Man's answer this question of the Eastman School of Music. discussing the architecture in Some deciding yes and and de¬ She holds a performer's certifi¬ January of 1962. Members Afterwards, a student-pre- are are in God, and a belief that it is us about "Jesus Christ, the same WH' be subject error cate in harp. Presently she is studied both the history'of Pro¬ pared Vesper service will be adopting the "Neo-Christianity" the Word of God. Some have yesterday, today and forei bate. His answer will very likely be wrong harpist with the Lansing, Grand testant architecture and their given by Kenneth Kueker, Mel¬ (Christianity without Christ). faith that as they pray and read and in traditional Christianity unless his decision is rose Park, 111., sophomore, pres¬ Some are deciding no—God is the Bible, the Holy Spirit will Christ and God are one. guided by someone whose wisdom Rapids and Battle Creek sym¬ own needs in planning the new tot dead, but very real, and an phonies. church. ident of Alpha Omicron. open their eyes to reveal the Is God dead? Many people say exceeds his own. Services 10 & 11 a.m.6&7p.m. UNIVERSITY Saint Andrew.Eastern REVIVAL First Christian Central Methodist St. Johns Student Orthodox Church Reformed Church Across From the Capitol CENTRAL Parish BAPTIST CHURCH MAY 18-22 9:00 A.M. Prayer Group and Student Center Mary-Sablna Chapel FREE METHODIST 240 Marshall St., Lansing Each Evening 7:30 p.m. WORSHIP SERVICE Phone ED 7-9778 1216 Greencrest, E.L, Evangelistic Preaching Kev. John M. Hofman, Pastor (9:45 and 11:15) CHURCH Morning Service 9;00 and 11:15 Divine Liturgy Sunday 9:30 a.m Gospel Singing (WJIM 10:15 a.m.) 828 N. Wash, Sunday School 10:15 at Oakland Who Wants A Prophet Around?" Sunday Masses Worship lOW a.m. Bethany Baptist Church Evening Service 7 p.m. Follow Highway 43 to Lansing Church School 11:10 a.m. Vespers and Confessions- Dwight S. Large :15-8:30-9:45-ll :00-12:15- Minister: Rev. Howard C. Artz Sat. 6:30 p.m. South Penn. at Lincoln Those in need of transporta¬ Crib Nursery, So Bring The 4:45, & 6:00 p.m. Nursery Provided— 10:00-12:00 a.m. YOU ARE INVITED TO ATTEND Evangelist tion call - Mr. Henry Bosch- Baby. Take home a copy of the For Transportation Call: ED 2-2223 Rev. "What Then Are We To Do7" at American Legion Center -nursery open each service- or Hofman WENDELL BELEW sheet for study and application. at 5-3650. Campus Bus Service 355-8084, 489-0343, 372-3867 EAST LANSING EPISCOPAL SERVICES * CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE CASTfllinSTCR PRCSBYTCRian CHURCH ALUMNI MEMORIAL CHAPEL 149 ALUMNI MEMORIAL CHAPEL 7375 Abbott Rd. Highland Ave., East Lansing cost ransinc. micniGan Holy Communion & Sermon 9:30 a.m. WORSHIP SERVICES Sunday School 10:00 a.m. SI .NDAY SCHEDULE Featuring a college age study group ALL SAINTS CHURCH Worship Services— — 9:00 and 11:00 a.m. directed by Dr. Bruce Wilkinson Church School, Cribbery-Thlrd Grade —9:00 and 11:00a.m. (800 Abbott Road) Morning Worship 11:00 a.m. Churcti School, Fourth Crace-Aduits, Students — 10:00 a.m. Evening Service 7.00 p.m. Sundays General Protestant Service "One Hour of Sermon and Song" 8:00 A.M. Holy Communion For transportation phone 332-6271 or 332-8901 For Transportation Phone 332-1446 9:00 A.M. Morning Prayer and Sermon 11:00 A.M. Rev. R. L. Moreland MINISTERS Rev. H. G. Beach Rev. Glenn A. Chaffee, Pastor Holy Communion and Sermon - - WOULD YOU LIKE TO KNOW ABOUT THE MORMON CHURCH? TRINITY CHURCH Kimberly Downs LUTHERAN WORSHIP Church of Christ Martin Luther Chapel Lutheran Student Center Church Of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints 120 Spartan Ave. Interdenominational 444 Abbott Road 1007 431 E. Saginaw-East of Abbott Rd. Kimberly Drive, Lansing Two Blocks North of Student Union SUNDAY WORSHIP SERVICES (2 blocks W. of Frandor SUNDAY: university 9.45 University Classes Shopping Center on 9:30 and 11:00 Holy Eucharist lutheran church E. Grand River) Nursery both services. Sunday School 9:30 alc-lca 9:00 A.M. Priesthood Meeting S:30 i. j .qq Morning Worship IV 9-7130 Open House 3-5 p.m. 10:30 A.M. Sunday School "The Conscious Awareness Of God" 5:00 P.M. Sacrament Meeting Rev. Theodore Bundenthal, Lutheran Chaplain SUNDAY SERVICES Special Welcome to Parents and Alumni 7;00 Evening Worship Deseret Club 8:15. 9:15, 10:30 and 11:30 "Dimensions Of Morning Worship 10:00a.m. Free Bus Service Prayer" Bible Study 11:00 a.m. Evening Worship 6:00 p.m. EAST LANSING 8:15 Trinity Collegiate Fellowship Wednesday evening Bible FRIENDS MEETING Study For 7:30 p.m. "Will God Arrive To Judge?" Wed., Eve. 7-9 p.m. Memorial Chapel M.S.U. Campus (Quakers) Discussion 10:00 Transportation Call 'AS iORS: E. Eugene Williams, David L. Erb, Norman R. Piersma What Does History Reveal? FE 9-8190 Meeting for Worship Will America VISITORS WELCOME-CALL 355-8102 FOR RIDES OR 332-8465 FREE BUS SERVICE- See schedule in your dorm. ED 2-1960 or ED 2-2434 Escape God's Judgement? and First-Day School 11:00 Special Music Featuring, Clare Hess, Tjenor, Capitol Grange First University Methodist Peoples Church Owen Munk, Baritone Male Quartet Edgewood United First Church of TrowbridgeRoadatArbor Drive Presbyterian For Information 332-1998 East Lansing SUNDAY 7:00 469 North Hagadorn Road Christ, Scientist Ottawa and Chestnut Church Interdenominational (5 blocks north of Grand River) University 1120 S. Harrison Rd. 9:45 & 11:15 SOUTH BAPTIST CHURCH * WORSHIP SERVICE Seventh-Day 1518 S. WASHINGTON LANSING a.m. and 11 a.m. 9:30 Sunday Service 11 a.m. Adventist Church WORSHIP SERVICE "Jesus Said, "Follow Me" Sunday, May 15 Sermon SUNDAY SERVICES Dedication Service Temporarily Meeting at "Mortals and Immortals" University Lutheran Church Ministers 9:30 and 1 IKK) COLLEGE BIBLE CLASS 9;45 A.M. Dr. F.A. Taylor 9:30 a.m. and 11:00 a.m. SUNDAY SCHOOL Division and Ann Sts. will be held Michigan State University Dr. Glenn M. Frye "Love Has at the State Theater THOUGHT-PROVOKING, BIBLE CENTERED TEACHING 11.00 a.m.-regular SATURDAY SERVICES and "Mission Beyond Time" Church School (9:30 & 11-Unlverslty Students) 9:30 a.m. Sabbath School Wilson M. Tennant Good Manners" Dr. Wallace Robertson 9:30 and 11 a.m.-crib room 11:00 a.m. Worship Service WORSHlP-9;45 & 11:15 a.m. CHURCH SCHOOL 11:00 A.M through Senior high. WEDNESDAY 'God Comes To Rescue" Edgewood University Group Preaching 9:30 and 11:00 8:00 p.m.-Evening Meeting Saturday, May 14th Nursery During Services 5:30 p.m. Supper and program. Dr. Norval Pease Dr. Seth C. Morrow CHURCH SCHOOL Bus Schedule Andrews University Crib through third grade in Film 8:30 P.M. 10:35-10:40 Conrad Free Public Reading Room church bldg. 4th-12th grade " 9:45 to 10:45 a.m.-Program "Prescription For Doc" 10:40-10:45 Lot between 134 West Grand River A warm and friendly welcome Union bldg. for all ages McDonell 8i W. Holmes OPEN REFRESHMENTS ANDFELLOWSHIP FOLLOWING iwaits you at FlrstPresbyterlan 10:45-10:50 Owen, Shaw Hall Weekdays—9-5 p.m. 11:15 a.m.-Chlldren, 2-11 Affiliated with the Mon.. Tues., Thurs.,Frl. years 9:45 Membership Class CALL IV 2-0754 For Free Bus Each Sunday listen to "The "Collegiate Fellowship" Supper 6 p.m.-50^ United Church of Christ, Evenings 7 p.m.-9 p.m. 6:00 p.m. Voice of Prophecy," 9:30 a.m. Service Information Congregational-Christian, All are welcome to attend WOAP, (1080 kc.) and "Faith Supper 50tf Program Following Dr. Howard Sugden, Pastor Dr. Ted Ward, Evangelical, Reformed, Church Services and visit and - Minister Of Music For Today," Channel 8 at 8:30 Rev. Alvin Jones, Minister WELCOME!! use the reading room. Alumni Chapel vice around the campus. of Education And Youth a.m., Channel 2 at 10:30 a< Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, May 13, 1966 11 DRAFT 'COLLUSION' PROTESTED CHICAGO (UPI)—A group of Chicagoblockaded the six-story adminis¬ spokesman said it was impro- The Ustudents were protesting Stud protesters said that, under the tration building and brought office teble campus the administration's decision to system, "The teacher would haggard and bearded University police would make be¬ of Chicago students talked down operation to virtual halt. any effort to eject the demon- supply a student's grade average come a judge, not only of the Untve President and his class ranking to his draft student's knowledge, but of counter-demonstrators Thurs¬ ,:v George his W. I. issued The protesters board if the student approves right to live and die. day and kept an around-the-clock ...e a statement began the sit- the demonstrators of the action. sit-in going in protest against in Wednesday afternoon and "By working harder, one stu¬ "cot :ac;lcs" anddeclaring The demonstrators contend dent becomes another's a policy of supplying students' .. »• camped all night in the building. execu¬ that r! sit-in had not At a mass meeting Thursday they that supplying grades and par¬ grades and class rank to draft ■„ changed tioner—sending the other to war boards. the school's policy. voted by show of hands to keep ticularly class rank—even at the in his place." Beadle said the the protest going a second night student's request—is "anti-edu¬ Ken Shelton, The estimated 350 to 400 pro¬ University Galveston, Tex., "has maintained its traditional and meet in the building's lobby cational collusion" with Selec¬ who led a counter-protest group testers, armed with sleeping posture" toward "the right to at 10 a.m. Friday to consider tive Service. into the administration building, bags, lunchbags and evenwalkie- dissent," and a University their "When the raric is compiled, said he talkies for communication next move. hoped to persuade the sit- the student has little choice," inners to clear out of the build¬ said Ron Tabor, 19, Briarcliff ing. Manor, N.Y., one of the protest "Those students who are sit¬ WILLIAMS AT ZBT HOUSE — Frederick Williams, associate pro'essor of history Early May Car Sales Lower leaders. "If you don't want your rank to be given out, you'll pro- bbly get drafted." A handbill ^distributed by the ting down. ton with . .are radical," Shel¬ said. "That's all the matter them. They're so radical' they're irrational." DETROIT (UPI)—New car and chairman of the Faculty Committee on Student Affairs, gave an informal sales dropped sharply during the talk Wednesday night at the Zeta Beta Tau fraternity house. The discussion was first 10 days of May, the first sponsored by t^*. ZBT's. and. Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority. period since auto makers report¬ MIDLAND r—Dow Corning Photo by Tony Ferrante ed past safety defects to congres¬ Corp. Thursday announced plans sional critics, manufacturers an¬ for an $8 million expansion of nounced Thursday. its silicon production facility at COMPUTER Sales by the "big four" auto tive from suburban Ada com¬ Hemlock, Mich., to be complet¬ ed by the end of 1967, makers toppled 36 per cent from mented in the wake of Gov. George the previous 10-day period and Romney's appointment of Rep. KALAMAZOO if—The income Suspicious Americans? "Americans tend to besuspic- 15 per cent from the level of May's first 10 days last year. General Motors, the industry giant which makes and sells more Robert P. Griffin, R-Mich., to the vacancy created by the death of Sen. Patrick V. McNamar.i, D- Mich. tax evasion clared a trial of long-distance walker Marion Pearson was de¬ mistrial Thursday when U.S. District Court jury failed American businesses seem to be tics can vastly and dangerously a ious of anything that can't be than half of all U.S.-built cars, "I'm delighted for Bob," said after retreating to the "measurable oversimplify the complexity of eight hours of deliberation reported the steepest slump of Baker. "It's good to have a Re¬ programmed into a computer," statistic." advertising. to reach a verdict. William Steers said "We needfreedomfromstatis¬ all. GM's sales were down 40 publican in the seat. It certainly Wednesday. He believes that even sports Pearson Is a Grand Rapids Steers, chairman of the board fans are getting too wrapped tical claustrophobia which can per cent from the last 10 days adds a great deal to his candi¬ businessman. of April and 24 per cent from dacy and it makes of both the American Assn. of up in the score of the game and lead to intellectual laziness," he my job more Advertising Agencies and of are losing sight of how well the said. the first 10 days of May 1965. difficult. The sales reports represent¬ Needham, Harper and Steers Ad- vertising Agency, said that ball is carried, Since ideas can't be used that This over reliance on statis- statistics can't back up, one's ed the first sharp break in a . If intention of College Bowl two-year period of record auto¬ own judgement is used less and motive prosperity. Team Repeats less. 2 Profs Collab The solution for this Steers proposes, problem, is the care and TR \ VERSE L?5 Northwestern CITY If— A b Michigan Col- u Hall Hedrick House and VanHoosen the ASMSU GRAND RAPIDS f—Deane won off-campus feeding of ideas, freedom for e^e students recently spent ai Baker said Thursday he Intends College Bowl for the second con¬ creative minds and "to stop test¬ vour collecting discarded bev- On Christianity ing half-baked ideas which can lead to the abdication of real to stay in the running for Repub¬ lican nomination to the U.S. Sen- srage boi'les from roadside* hroughi i t Grand Travers* secutive year. The four-member team of Margaret Dowsett, Annapolis, responsibilities and to the paral¬ ourty. 1 got 12,225 bottle.-, Md., senior, Diane The construction firm execu- Reeser, Two MSU faculty members are ysis of the advertising busi¬ Owosso senior, Clifford Camer¬ co-authors of a book entitled "An ness." on, Dallas, Tex., senior andjohn Introduction to Christianity." Robert T. Anderson, associate To increase the effectiveness of advertising we should learn Placement liu reau Cunningham, Cincinnati, Ohio, senior, beat a field of 12 teams professor of religion, and Peter from the past, develop an under¬ competing since the beginning of B. Fischer, professor of human¬ standing of how advertising pro¬ Friday, May 20 winter term. ities and religion, collaborated cess works and enlist everyone's on the book, which is being pub¬ gan," and Lansing Public Schools co-operation toward more effec¬ Aristo Foods: hotel, restaurant lished by Harper & Row, Pub¬ lishers. were in of Dice award-winners for a class "Writing for Publication." succeeded Alfred Storey the University of Michigan tive advertising. Steers spoke in a program and institutional management. Burroughs Wellcome and Co.: sponsored by the Alpha Delta all majors, all colleges. Manistee Public Schools: early The no-drag shaver. Peter B. Fischer, professor Sigma, advertising fraternity, to all Extension Service. majors of the Collej audience of over 50 people. elementary education: science; In 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, of an religion, is traveling in Eu¬ le Fv onomics (institution rope, with emphasis on Italy. Francis M. Donahue, associate professor of religion, recently returned Pa., where he a from Buck Falls Hill, was a delegate to meeting of the World Council longhair needs and 5th. of Churches. The Remington- 200 Selectro Shaver is a new Shortcut- model. Different from anything you've used before It has a dill with 5 positions that lets W. Fred Grahi you shift over all the different parts of your face. professor of religion, and Harry H. Kimber, professor of reli¬ gion, recently attended the 100th conference of the Church History Society at Richmond, Va. In 1st, you "get a smoother In 3rd, you get this wild 5th is the finishing line. Eugene Dice, MSU natural re¬ start on your neck. Gets all drifting sensation as you g< You couldn't get straighter sources specialist at Flint, was .. Jhe whiskers in pure comfort. over your cheek. No burn side-burns.at tkie-barber'b installed recently as president of the Adult Education Assn. of Michigan. Milton Hagelberg, regional di¬ rector of MSU's Continuing Edu¬ cation Center at Traverse City, named president-elect. -becauseSkortCttt--^fives wore body H was MSU was among 11 winners of awards for creativity in adult education, for the evening col¬ me manacreabi7/ty..fnorfi coafrd-morf lege program sponsored -by the of GJflrytininrf you need. Want proof-PTiyit I I Continuing Education Service. WKAR, the MSU station, also ShortCat H3ir6t^ byO(dSpiG?TubecydrJ^oz- on\y5~o<{. . won an award, for its public af¬ fairs program "Midweek Michi- Students For A Democratic Society Presents Elektra Recording Artist PHIL OCHS In 2nd, you can knock off a couple of days' growth without any trouble. By (he time you shift to 4th, you're in and out of corners, around curves, over tricky tender spots. No skid marks in Concert Hill Auditorium 6th is for cleaning oi don't expect to pay r It's actually a little le University of Michigan Remington also mat luie of cordless shav Friday, May 20,8:30 p.m. RK YIIXCn ON 200 Tickets: $3 - $2.50 - $2 available at door and J->oloci( i•< > JShuivc *i • BY MAIL in EAST LANSING ANN ARBOR Voice-SDS Office Discount Records Student Act. Bldg. PARAMOUNT NEWS Centicore Bookstore U of M-Ann Arbor 12 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, May 13, 1966 77 3 days - $2.50 - Save 50 ^ Tim ^ 332_8635i batteries, and accessories in pus. Phone 332-2936. 1-5/13 TWO MEN needed for luxury SUMMER, FALL. Three-bed- PLYMOUTH 1956. Excellent run- 3-5/13 Lansing area. Permanent, part- PHONE gine. $295. Call Jerry, 351-4167. four-man apartment. Summer furnished. Five minutes 3-5/16 ning condition. Radio, heater. HeLlS ANGELS bike. Guar- time employment. Contact Mr. Lansing-East Side term. Riverside East. Sun room, to MSU. Four or five students. 355-8255 Calhoun, IV 5-7144 between 9- Two bedroom Apt. furnished DODGE 1964 station wagon, 440, 1# a.m. for 3 porch. 351-5263. 3-5/12 ED 2 -4420 . 3-5/13 RATES 5-5/13 or 4. $50 deposit. Also V-8 automatic, power steering, ONE GIRL needed for Rivers PONTIAC 1963 Catalina convert- .V"" one bedroom furnished for 1 SUMMER, ONE or two-man 1 DAf SI.50 radio, clean. $1,775. In lot East of ible. Power steering and brakes. HONDA 1965, 160 Scrambler. Ex- WOULD YOU like to study and or 2. No children, no pets. Edge apartment, Summer term. apartment, two blocks to cam¬ 3 DAYS .53.00 Physical plant. License LA- Excellent condition. New tires, tras. $550. 353-7459. 3-5/13 goodJ money at the u" same" Phone IV 9-1017. Call 351-4386 after 6pm. 3-5/13 pus. $110. Phone 351-5343. 0228. Ralph Wight, Portland, MI time? If you have some free 5 DAYS 55.00 s. $1,595. 655-2649.5-5/17 HONDA 150, 1963. $325. Excel- WOMEN OVER 21. Summer only WANTED: ONE or two room- 3-5/12 7-7697. 3-5/13 time mornings and a first class PONTIAC 1959 convertible 589 lent condition. Recent overhaul. (ten weeks plus). One 3-girl mates for Summer term. Cedar FOUR GIRL apartment to sub¬ (based on 15 words per ad) FALCON 1963, 6 cylinder, FCC license, WITL radio may 4- cu. in. buckets, power. $400 or Electric starter. Call Bill, 355- apartment, one 4-girl, one 6- Village Apts. $45 month. Tom, lease summer, pool. Burcham Over 15, 10e per word per day. speed convertible. Take over 2760. have an opening for you. For girl. Close. ED 2-2276. 10-5/20 Woods. 351-4721 best offer. Phone Alec, 332- 3-5/13 351-4074. 5-5/17 after 5 pm. further information contact John There will be a 50e service payments. Call IV 5-0121. 8635. 3-5/13 LUXURY TWO Man apartment, THREE MEN to sublease Rivers 3-5/12 Erskine, 332-5604 . 5-5/13 and bookkeeping chorre it 5-5/19 sublease for SUMMER: Four-man luxury PONTIAC 1965 GTO. Burgundy, Avio summer. Pool, Edge apartment for Summer this ad is not paid within FIAT HOOD 1964. Original LEGAL SECRETARY for Lansing air conditioned. Burcham Call 351-5569. apartment. One block from Ber- 4-speed, performance options. FRANCIS AVIATION will teach term. 3-5/13 o ne week. Good condition. Call weekends law firm. Experienced prefer¬ Woods. 332-0275 after 3 p.m. key. Air conditioned. 551 Albert Call 351-4663. 3-5/13 LARGE THREE room furnished or weekdays after 6 pm. 332- you to fly. Take a group any¬ red. Full time, permanent. Call 5-5/13 (#3). 351-5598. 3-5/12 2825. SUNBEAM ALPINE 1964 black. place, anytime in airline type 484-2563. apartment for three men. Avail¬ 5-5/13 ONE OR two girls needed to sub- planes or sell you a plane and SUMMER, ONE-half Early able June 11. Prefer rental FORD 1960 V-8 automatic. Pow- Excellent condition. Extras in¬ State News does not American ranch duplex, for agreement until June 10, 1967. lease Eden Roc apartment"for The er brakes, steering and seats. clude tonneau cover, luggage teach you to fly it. See and fly ADDITIONAL INCOME. Average Summer term. Call ED 2-3043. four. Charming setting, 600 Deposit $40 each. Approximate¬ permit racial or religious Nice automobile. $325. 372- rack and more. $1,525. Call 484- $2 per hour and up. Operate Cornell. Phone 332-2936.1-5/13 3-5/12 discrimination in i t s ad¬ 6225. 6923 weekdays after 5 pm. your own business and choose ly $9.25 per week. Parking. Call 5-5/16 IV 9-2389 6-7 pm. only. 3-5/13 SUMMER, FOUR -man air con¬ vertising columns. The FORD 1963 convertible. Galaxie 3-5/13 your own hours. We train you. State News will not accept 500. Black, white top, red in¬ TEMPEST CONVERTIBLE 1962, Employment Scholarships to those who qual¬ WANT YOUNG married couple TWO GIRLS for Cedar Village ditioned apartment. Avondale, in need of accommodations and third floor. $180. Call ED, or advertising from persons maroon. In excellent condition. OPENING ify. 485-7326 , 8-10 a.m. and Apartment. Summer. 351-4214. terior. $950. Call 489-4834. for part-time summer employ- board next fall. Can offer, bed¬ Darrell, ED 2-3577. 3-5/13 discriminating against re- $1,095 or best offer. Call 482- 4-6 p.m. C 3-5/13 3-5/16 ment. Ideal for summer school room, bath, TV, separate en¬ 'ig:on, race, color or na¬ ACCOUNT MANAGER: Credit FORD 1961. New engine, good 5390 after 1 pm. 3-5/16 and small WANTED: TWO roommates for ONE GIRL needed to share four- tional origin. students. Phone Mr. Misemer, collection and Accounts Receiv¬ trance salary in re¬ condition. Radio, excellent TRIUMPH SPITFIRE, 1965. Two for assistance with chil¬ five-girl apartment. Waters girl Avondale Apartment, Sum¬ IV 9-2481, Ext. 152. 3-5/13 turn tops, overdrive, good shape, able experience. Thirty miles Edge, Summer term. Call 351— mer term.Call 355-2468 or 353- tires, clean interior. Phone 655- dren, house and yard. Charac¬ 2473 after 5:30. low price. Call 482-6980. 3-5/16 EXPERIENCED LEGAL Secre- from Lansing. Submit a com¬ 42 7 8 3-5/16 3498. 3-5/13 Automotive 5-5/19 ter references required. Phone . tary, four-member downtown plete resume of age, education, 351-6512. SUBLET LUXURY two-bedroom iLFA ROMEO. Own the best. FORD 1 957 2-door fR-4 1964, Red, hardtop and ton- 1-5/13 APARTMENT SUBLEASING in hardtop. iaw firm. shorthand, experience and wage require¬ Dual webers, double overhead neau. Must be sold. $1,400 or ments. Box A-l, State News. apartment for summer. Air- Capitol Villa for one or two. Clean, no rust, runs good, good typist. Call 489-t753. 5-5/17 ONE MONTH Free rent, one Bertone coupe body. best offer. 337-0798. 3-5/13 conditioning, top floor. $180 $42.50. Call 337-9614 after five. cam;, tires. Automatic transmission. DELIVERY MAN part time. Per- 5-5/13 male for Summer term in lux¬ $1,450 489-3095 5-5/19 monthly. Call 351-5061. 3-5/16 5-5/17 $185. 206 Bennett St. IV 9-1895. ' . . VALIANT 1961, White, 4-door manent. 6 • Mon- EXPERIENCED MILKER for a ury apartment. Call 351-4207. A! STIN-HEALEY 19 65 Sprite. 5-5/19 sedan. Automatic, radio, real THE APARTMENT; furnishedfor NEED TWO girls for four-girl day thru F .lay. all Dave, 489- large dairy herd. Good pay, -5-5/19 Blue. Only 20,000 miles. comfort. Available June 15th. Haslett Join¬ FORD 1964, custom, 4-door se- good tires. $475 . 372-6225. 5721. 3-5/13 modern facilities. Close to cam¬ SUBLEASE FOR summer", apartment. June 15- ing Peace Corp. $1,600. Phone 5 Two bedrooms, air conditioned. dan, V-8, stick. Excellent buy. 5/19 pus. 655-1801. 3-5/13 Waters September 15. $58.75. Call 332- 351-5336. BEAUTICIAN, FULL time. MAR- Edge, four-man apart¬ Year lease. 337-2080, 2-8 pm. 4551. 3-5/13 $1,150. 372-6225. 5-5/16 VOLKSWAGEN 1963 sunroof. Ex- ment with river view. Terms. 3-5/13 AUSTIN HHALEY 1964 3000Mark cellent condition. Low mileage. EXECUTIVE SECRETARY for a Avondale Apartments. 5-5/16 FORD 1965 Galaxie. Excellent Call 355-7134. 3-5/17 SUBLEASE luxury four-man church office position for one II, red, whitewalls, overdrive. Call after 6 p.m., IV 5-4183. CLERKS, IMMEDIATE full time GIRLS, STILL have some two- condition. 13,000. miles. Many year. 40-hour week. Typing and SUBLEASE TVVO-man apartment apartment with pool. Through Radio, tonneau cover, no rust. extras. Must sell. $2,149. Phone 3-5/17 openings for meat, produce and girl apartments and private shorthand required. Top wages for Summer term. Pool. Call September 1st. Save $115. Like new, sell for $3,000. Call rooms with cooking for summer. 484-6250. 5-5/13 VOLKSWAGEN 1964. Bahama grocery clerks. Good salary. 357-2382. "Beep" 332-4785 . 5-5/17 489-1577 after 6 pm. for a mature experienced wom¬ 3-5/17 ED 2-2495. 5-5/16 2-5/13 blue, sunroof, AM-FM, rear FORD 1950 custom coupe. Excel- Many fringe benefits. On the job an. Box C-3, Michigan State AVAILABLE NOW; near campus, BURCHAM WOODS apartment for \ US TIN HEALEY SPRITE 1964, TWO BEDROOM married hous- lent shape. 50,000 miles. British speaker, pusff out rear windows. management training. High News. 3-5/16 two-man furnished. ED 2-5374. summer. Two bedrooms, air- green. Only 17,500 miles. $1,275. Excellent condition inside and School education or equivalent. ing apartment. Sublease sum¬ racing green. Best offer above WAITRESS OR waiter part-time 3-5/17 condition, pool. Phone 351-5407. Phone 353-0220. 3-5/16 term. Cherry Lane. Call $275. Call Patrick Welbourne, out. Must sell. $1,195. Phone Apply at your local A & P mer Reduced rates. 5-5/13 BUICK 1965 Skylark GS convert- ED 2-5784 after 6 pm. nights. O'DEA'S HAMBURG, NEEDED STUDIOUS third man 355-8233. 5-5/17 485-6037. 3-5/17 6-5/13 SUPERMARKET or Michigan 1004 E. Michigan, Lansing. for luxury apartment. One block ible, 4-speed on the floor. Buck¬ Employment Security office. We PLEASANT THREE bedroom TWO GIRLS to sublease luxury F-85 1964 Stationwagon] V-8, VOLKSWAGEN 79527 3-5/18 from campus. Call Bijjan, 355- et seats. 12,000 miles. Must radio, A-l shape. $815. 3633 are an equal opportunity em¬ country home with stove, re¬ apartment, summer term. Delta Power Steering-brakes. $1600 ON-CAMPUS and 8749. 3-5/17 sell. 882-1368. 3-5/16 * summer jobs Arms. Phone 351-4145. 5-5/13 or best offer. Call ED 2-6801. Bayou Place, Lamoreaux Sub- ployer. 3-5/17 available. A frigerator, garden. Campus 14 great opportunity APARTMENTS for two-four, miles. $70. NI 6-4612. 3-5/13 RU1CK 1960 L.eSabre 2 - door 882-6518. 3-5/17 TEACHERS WANTED, South¬ 1-5/13 for aggressive college students sedan. Radio, power steering west and Alaska. summer. Nicely furnished, rea¬ TWO MEN needed to sublease ...... vv KARMANN GHIA 1963, red con- to earn a high income distribu¬ sonable. Near campus. Park¬ your business. Salestalk them and brakes. Beautiful condition. Salaries $5,400 up—Free reg¬ Cedar Village four-man apart¬ vertible.-Seat belts, radio, white ting material to college cam¬ with a' Classified "Business 55,000 miles. $595. Phone 484- istration. SOUTHWEST ing. ED 7-2345. 5-5/16 ment, Summer term. 351-4658. Op¬ sidewalls. A jewel. Call ED 7- puses all over the United States. portunities" Ad now. Dial 355- 3266. 3-5/17 TEACHERS AGENCY, h303 3-5/13 0906.- 5-5/13 Combine summer travel with 401 FAIR VIEW SOUTH. Onebed- 8255. . SHOW ME a 1960 Corvair Mo.iza Central Ave., N.£., Albuquer¬ CATALINA 1959 Hardtop. Body, MERCEDES BENZ 1961 220S, 4- in better running condition than large profits, or workpart-iime room apartment, ground floor, THREE MAN luxury apartment. engine, very good. $500 or best que, New Mexico. 1-5/13 on your own. campus. Fall jobs door. Grey with red leather in¬ mine, and I'll eat my hatl $325. furnished, including utilities. University Terrace. Air-cofi- offer. Call Richard 353-1827. hours. A few terior. Air-conditioning. Owner 4C/M CHOOSE YOUR n are also available. Contact: $125 per month. Phone 882- ditioning. Summer term only. Dr. D. M. Dean 3-5/17 hours a day can mean excellent COLLEGIATE-Dept. D, 27 East 5763. 3-5/17 351-4501. 5-5/13 drafted. 337-0282 . 5-5/18 Optometrist CHEVROLET 1963 Corvair Mon- earnings for you as a trained 22 St., New York, N.Y. 10010. MONZA 19632-door, four-speed. Auto Service & Parts LIVE WHERE the action isl Sub- za Convertible. 4-speed, radio, AVON representative. For ap¬ 2-5/13 NEED ONE girl to sublet four- Radio, whitewall tires, padded NEW BATTERIES, change let four-man Rivers Edge apart¬ heater, padded dash, special pointment in your own home, girl apartment summer term. Hours by wheel disks, 31,600 miles, one dash, tinted windshield. Phone from $7.95. New sealed Alona TEMPORARY JOBS for students, ment, summer term. Call 332- Appointment write Mrs. Huckins, student wives- needed imme¬ $56.25. Evergreen Arms. Phone 337-0353. 3-5/13 beams, 99/. Salvage cars, large 8824. 3-5/17 owner. V.G. condition. Call 482- 5664 School Street, Haslett, 355-1468. 5-5/13 3847. stock used parts. ABC AUTO diately. Stenos, draftsmen, gen¬ FOUR MEN. Sublet luxury apart- 210 Abbott Road 3-5/13 MUSTANG 1965 V-8, 4-speed Michigan, or call evenings, FE eral labor. Part/full-time. Call PARTS. 613 E. South St. IV 2- ment for summer. Rivers Edge. SUBLET FOUR man luxury CHEVROLET 1961 convertible 9-8483. Cl-5/13 ... burgundy convertible. Excellent 1921. C KELLY GIRL, IV 2-1277. Equal apartment. Summer. Water's automatic. Power steering, V-8. condition. Best offer. 337-7589. SECRETARY, DOWNTOWN law $230. Phone 351-4622. 3-5/16 (above College Drug) HUB CAPS- wheels- 1966 Olds- opportunity employer. 5-5/18 Edge. Best location, plus T.V. Radio. Good condition. 355- office. Shorthand and typing re¬ UNIVERSITY TERRACE. One 5-5/13 NURSERY SCHOOL teacher, two, and many extras. $235 month. 6895. mobile deluxe. Five lug wheels, 3-5/16 quired. Call 372-5960 . 3-5/17 girl to sublease summer. Two 351-4592. ED 2-6563 6" rims. Cheap. Bob, 353-6495; three or five mornings a week. 5-5/13 girls for last half Summer term. VOLKSWAGEN Generators and Starters 489-9667. 3-5/16 NATIONAL, FIRM lias four open¬ Degree required. Call 337-7014. 351-4476. 5-5/18 ings for travel within the state 3-5/16 RACING SLICKS 850 x 14 Thom- REPAIRS showing films to college sum- SUMMER, TWO-three man □□□□ OS □□□□ XfSS^l son tires plus tubes. Used once. For Rent apartments. Capitol Villa. Fur¬ Inspections S; Tune-ups New S. Used Engines Good price. Steve, 484-1554. students. Good pay. Men only. Thone" Mr7 Chiodo,"IV 3-5/13 9-2481, Ext. 152. 3-5/13 nomical rates by the term or nished, pool. $60 monthly. Dan, 351-4543; Jane 351-5699. 3-5/16 :£! □nar hhhw onanaaa □□ aiiga Specialized Repair Servics MANIFOLD: Bolt ~ H.P., Ouad ~ ' month. UNIVERSITY TV RENT¬ SINGLE OCCUPANCY, efficiency □DO □DBS 0G3S On Most Import Cars. for Chevrolet, 283-327. $13. Call BABYSIT1 ER NEEDED i.nmedi- ALS, 484-9263. C3-5/13 air-conditioned. June 15--Sep¬ aroQaaBMQ □□□ 351-5344. 3-5/13 atelV at least foUL" da>'s weekly tember 15. $300 plus electricity. nnaa □□ an in Spartan Village apartment. CAMERON'S . Apartments □□ do aaaca Phone 351-4312. 3-5/16 IMPORTS REED'S GARAGE VOU^"t. *3 s" Cl^S: CJ" 355-2W4- 5"5-/16 SUMMER SUBLET, partly fur- nished two-bedroom apartment. SUBLET JUNE 12 - September □□□ □□□ntHtlK-Ju! back of KOKO Bar. C3-5/13 STENOGRAPHER, EX PERI- Qui© sasas □□a 220 East Kalamazoo St. 2707 E. Kalamazoo One block campus. $150 plus 25. Single apartment. $50 per ACCIDENT PROBLEM? Call ENCED pi"eferred' shorthand month. Inquire 335 Linden, Apt. 14. Hdijes Hnaaaaa □□□□ 482-1337 489-1626 electricity. 332-4237 evenings. KALAMAZOO STREET BODY 6. 1-5/13 □□as □□ anaa 3-5/16 17 Mall <1 SHOP. Small dents to large □□□a HQ □□□□ recks. ^American'and"foreign policies fic.e maChln"" Good personnel FURNISHEDi and fringe benefits. APARTMENT .two students. 129 Burcham Dr. Now NEED ROOMMATE immediately, May 15-June 15. Cedar Village Downtown location. Phone 485- leasing for summer and winter. apartments. Male. 351-4361. You Know Yamaha, 4176 for personal interview. Summer $120 per month, winter 3-5/16 DOWN 1. Wild Scooters & Cycle 5-5/17 $130 per month. Call days, IV ONE MAN, summer and fall. 2. Old- M E L LI OF WANTED: NURSE for children's 7-3216; evenings 882-2316. Apartment 106, Eden Roc. $55. LANSING. 125cc S b1 5-5/18 But Do Your Parents? now available for c r a m those e r s trips camp. Eight weeks. Good pay and working conditions. PhoneMrs. Call 351-5404. 3-5/13 through the woods, $469. Im- Peck, 339-8046 or 339-8625. Hospital Career 9. Young fish mediate delivery. IV 4-4411. 10. least The only parents 5-5/17 Appointments College Men 1 holder lb. At home will know the way thrill your of cycling SEE THE ALL-NEW . Registered Nurses and Women I i 18 Chop 21. Pig . Instructor is to try it. Bring them out 24. Dejection Nursing Service and We need you for at least TOYOTA CORONA . this weekend and let them test At the Outdoor School of Nursing 12 weeks work this summer. i i 25. Corral 26. Mix. shawl drive a Yamaha. Even if they Recreation Show Living & Fr . Pharmacist Excellent working condi¬ Interesting and challenging work for capable young men i i 27. Threefold 28. Smoothly don't buy one for themselves, North of Spartan Stadiurr tions. Liberal fringe bene¬ who in can conduct themselves businesslike manner. 11 i a they might buy one for you. fits. Salary commensurate These with ability. jobs offer ideal work¬ Write or call ing hours with plenty of time for summer fun, plus an op¬ I 35. Blissful Bowker & Moiles Cycle Shop Personnel Director of portunity to win a $1,000 i 37. places Type scholarship. Salary $470 per square Butterworth Hospital month. For appointment call- 38. Bomb 2152 W. Grand River Presented By: $1714 100 Michigan Ave. Grand Rapids N.E. Grand Rapids 459-5079. Lan¬ sing 484-1078. Kalamazoo 41. Knzyme 42. President's Okemos Phone 332-6977 WHEELS OF LANSING GL-1-3591 -349-9421. nickname Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, May 13, 1966 13 For Rent For Sale For Sale Houses MUST SACRIFICE nine month old POSSE SEEKS KIDNAPPER furniture similar to furniture ONE BLOCK from Berkey. Fully on lot in East Lansing. Phone in luxury apartments. Phone furnished for,two-six men. Spe¬ 332-8991 after 6 pm. 3-5/16 351-5179. Girl. Seized 3-5/171 7, 1 cial rates summer only. 655- 1964 HOMETTE, two-bedroom, 1022 evenings. 3-5/16 GUITAR, BEGINNERS Folk, soft expando living room. Take over case, neck strap and book. Best TWO BEDROOM home. Fur- payments. IV 5-3905. 3-5/13 offer. Call Jann, 353-3126. nished, 10 minutes walk from NEW MOON 1960 50' x lO'.Mov- Almost every member of the (UPI)—A tains, part of the Allegheny Moun¬ dren ran home to tell their par- , Available summer. 3-5/17 SHADE GAP, Pa. campus. ing out in September. On lot. posse was armed. A helicopter Disciplined children welcome. WEBCOR STEREO tape record- Excellent condition. 351-4230 posse of 500 heavily armed men tain Range in south-central Penn¬ The children described the kid¬ and a few bloodhounds also were Box B-2, State News. 3-5/16 er, 4-track, plus tapes. Like after 5 pm. slogged through a rain - swept sylvania near the Maryland bor¬ 3-5/16 mountain region Thursday in a der. naper as surly, rough-voiced and used. new. Ask for Dan, 351-4543. TWO BEDROOM, onGrai^Riv- 3-5/16 RENT or BUY 50' Mobile home. desperate search for a 17-year- None of the sniper's victims in his late 30s. They said he wore The posse in the woods found a girl's slip er in Okemos. Available June 16' Century, 35 Johnson. 6335 old girl and her kidnaper, be¬ was killed, but two werewounded a mask which covered the lower Thursday, butpolice AIR CONDITIONER, Chrysler- said later it was not Peggy's. 25- year lease- $160 month. Call Park Lake Road. Lot 39. 3-5/16 lieved to be a long-sought sniper seriously. Several hundred per¬ part of his face, and dark glasses Airtemp. 6400 B.T.U's. New last Shade Gap once was named 337-2080 between 2-8pm.5-5/19 known in the area as the "Mys¬ sons were questioned during the and boots. August, seldom used. $150. 332- Lost & Found Peggy Ann was described by "Shades of Death" because of a 6197. terious Masked Mountain Man." sniper investigations. 4-5/13 her father, Eugene, who was laid narrow passage through the RING, GIRL'S blue opal. Gold After searching nearly 24 Peggy Ann and her three young¬ Co-op Fraternity QUALITY ROSE bushes, $2.39. band, size 6. Lost W. McDonel hours, the posse still had found er sisters and two brothers were off recently from his job with a mountains which the Indians used food packaging company, as being to ambush pioneers on their or Sorority Flowers and garden plants. rest room, May 7, 9 pm. Re¬ no trace of pretty, brown-haired returning home from school way west. PRINCE'S FARM MARKET, ward. 353-1562. 3-5/17 blue-eyed Peggy Ann Bradnlck Wednesday when the abduction 5 feet 2 and weighing 118pounds. Available 9-1-66 Grand River at Okemos Road. LOST: FEMALE black cat, ans- or the masked man who abducted took place. He said the girl, a high school Call 1-313-761-7268 Phone 337-2343. 5-5/16 her near her mountain home The children had gotten off a junior, was wearing a full-length "Foxy". Vicinity of MSU Swamped | wers to school bus and were nearing the red jumper, white blouse and THREE BEDROOM furnishec ENCYCLOPEDIA SET. Brand Harrison Rd. Any information Wednesday afternoon in the pres¬ ence of her five younger brothers end of a long walk up a dirt suede shoes. new 18 volumes of Our Wonder¬ please call 355-0965. 3-5/17 house, one block Mason-Abbot The posse, composed of state dorm. Summer couple. 484-0604. only. Students or 3-5/13 ful World, for ages 16. $100 . 351-4297. 10 through 1-5/13 Personal and sisters. State Police believe the sniper- road to their isolated home when the kidnaper stepped onto the road police, game wardens and area residents, worked In groups and By Frog Note kidnaper "knows these mountains from the woods, raised a lever- £.s.p. - e: MSU frog-jumpers unite! Your 1'KI DELTA House open for Sum- like the back of his hand." action rifle and said: kept in touch by radio with a livered; 8" cakes, $3.64. Also ception and related subjects state police "command post." honor, and the honor of MSU, mer term. $200 includes week¬ Since April, 1964, the sniper "I don't want any sass from sheet pies and cakes. K WAST taught. Flying saucer group are at stake. day meals. Inquire 332-0955. has shot at five residents and you kids...I'm taking the girl BAKERIES, Brookfield Plaza, The members of Mat Pica Pi, 5-5/13 fired numerous rounds into auto¬ with me." East Lansing; Frandor; 303 S. the Society of Printing Engineers CAN BE PICKED mobiles and trucks passing He shoved Peggy into the woods FURNISHED Cycling Club California State bedroom at THREE Washington. IV 4-1317. C3-5/13 WOULD YOL' believe the SAE's ahead of him, and the other chil¬ Polytechnic through the TuscaroraMoun¬ house. 417 N. Francis. Four ELECTROLUX TANK vacuum are having an IceCreamSocial? College in San Luis Obispo, Calif, UP IN ROOM 2 i adults, $150 month. Call IV have Issued an open challenge to cleaner with all cleaning at¬ Sunday, 3:00-6:00, front lawn. 5-4917 before 8 p.m. FURNISHED HOUSE, two baths, 3-5/17 tachments. Runs and looks ex¬ ceptional. $20. OX 4-6031. Entertainment, FREE! i I A 3—5/13 Thrilling hour of MSU Accepts Building Entries Place any organization at MSU to enter a frog in the Calaveras County Frog Jump. two kitchens, three blocks from C3-5/13 beauty. For appointment, call The MSU Cycling Club pedaled The Mat Pica Pi team will Union, for summer. 332-3617 or ENGAGEMENT AND wedding 484-4519. MERLE NORMAN a flashing finish in the 35- At Reception Thursday take on all comers in the col¬ 337-9412. le Belle Isle race last week¬ 5-5/16 ring. $175. Beautiful setting and COSMETICS STUDIO, 1600 F. Will show end. lege division of the annual con¬ THREE BEDROOM furnished stone. proof of value. Michigan. C3-5/13 test, to be held at ED 2-2359. Although it was the first race Angels Camp, house 3-5/13 MISS CLAIROL Creme formula, plus study, garage, appli¬ MSU officialsThursdayattend¬ will be finished in three years. the MSU Club has entered as a Calif., May 19-22. Near BICYCLE SALES, rentals, stor- $1.35 ed Informal The concourse will also In¬ Entries may be mailed to the ances. campus. Summer size- 79