MICHIGAN WIIK Cloudy.. . Hospitality Day michigan university State STATE NEWS . . ture the . with little tempera¬ change today, high in high 60's. Sunny and warmer Saturday. East Lansing, Michigan Friday, May 20, 1966 Vol. 58, Number 154 STUDENTS PASS PAY PROPOSAL Slim Margin For Trustees Stal ASMSU Salaries On Raising By TOM WALKER State News Staff Writer negative votes is indicative of the work that liesaheadforASMSU." The total number of votes cast Top-level ASMSU officials will in the election Thursday was The MSU Board of Trustees has t0 the $44 million East Lansing dependent other than the student, receive salaries, students voted 5,5"9, about 19 per cent of the adopted a "wait and see" ap- campus budget. 'The fact is that tuition is un- Thursday in an extremely close eligible voters. This compares proach to the possibility of a if the $1.7 million is not ap- constititional under the statf con- election. with 8,492, the number who voted tuition hike for Michigan State propriated, trustees said they stitution," Stevens said. "What The final tally was 2,825 for in the tax-hike election last Oc- students. will have to raise fees. One pro- the legislature has made the the proposal and 2,754 against, tober, and 9,300, who voted in the They are waiting to see if the posal would raise them $10 per governing boards of our Michi- Webb Martin, former vice- election to ratify the ASMSU house ways and means commit- term for in-state students and gan colleges and universities do chariman of Student Board, said Constitution in March, 1965. tee restores at least $1.7 million $30 per term for out-state stu- is to become tax collectors for immediately after the results Under the proposal, to the MSU budget for East Lan¬ dents. public education." were announced, "I think it indi¬ dependent committee on compen¬ sing campus operations. The to¬ Board chairman Warren M. The legislature is, in effect, cates that when students are sation will be created. Up to 2 tal MSU budget request to Gov. Huff (D-Plymouth) indicated that punishing MSU for taking the ad- given information to evaluate on of the last year' Romney in January was $65 mil- MSU might consider a program ditional 6,000 students that MSU a controversial subject, they con- gessment on students will be lion. similar to the one at the Univer- had not planned on taking when it ivailable to the committee each It suffered successive cuts of sity of Michigan. This would be had made its budget request, :erm for compensation of high- $9.5 million by Romney and the a graduated rate—one rate for Stevens indicated, with a decision on the issue level ASMSU officials, senate to bring it down to $55.5 freshmen and sophomores, The legislature and the gov- that they think "is best." _ million. Trustees agree that at another for juniors and seniors, ernor seemed to have slammed "They have arrived at a de- Winter term, the ASMSU Stu- least $1 million must be restored and a still higher one for grad- the door on MSU for meeting its cision that will improve in the dent Board granted itself corn- uate students. responsibility in taking the stu¬ THE VOTE IS CAST —A long run the efficiency and ef- pensation. It later reversed its A third rate proposal was an¬ dents wanting to be admitted, he student drops his ballot fectiveness of student govern- decision under pressure of stu- nounced by Trustees Clair White said. into a voting box to cast ment " dent opinion. LBJ Backs (D-Bay City) and Don Stevens Frank Merriman (R-Decker- (D-Okemos) which calls for a ville) said he thought it is un¬ WHICH POP IS TOP —In addition to voting of ASMSU his opinion on ASMSU compensation and the Jim Graham, chairman of Stu- dent Board, said, "This can only The ballots were counted by a high-speed tabulator in theCom- _• I "progressive" tuition rate. fair for the board to prejudge compensation, students also registeredtheir opinions Popular E ntertai nment be interpreted as a narrow vote puter Center, after sorting by V J 1^ TFional I M £1 I Under this plan students com- what the legislature's final action Thursday on popular entertainment they would like to Series. of confidence in our present stu- members of Alpha Phi Omega ing from a family where the an¬ Photos by Russell Steffey dent government. The number of see on campus next year. honorary under the direction of nual income is under $5,000 would (continued on page II) Mike Levine, election commis¬ pay no tuition. Where the annual sioner of ASMSU, and a State Service income is from $5,000 to $10,000, News reporter. Name 2 be $324 per year— Trustees the fees would which MSU students now pay for No recount will be permitted WASHINGTON (UPI)—Presi¬ as the only method would be to dent Johnson's backing was given The r - for $10,000 to $15,- run the ballots through the tab- Thursday to Defense Secretary 000 would be $350; from $15,000 e and the benefits derived from ducts, resource development and ulator again, according to Levine. Robert S. McNamara's proposal The MSU Board of Trustees Cooperative Extension Service sources education program the fisheries and wildlife. that all young Americans serve t0 $20,000 it would be $870 and has approved a new director of that experience. Departments in these areas their country for one or two families with incomes over $20,- Natural Resources Dept. and a "And today's child born in a in military c civilianpur- 000 would pay $1,020 per year. more than trees for timber, fish big city apartrnent and playing on will be housed in a new $4 mil- Last ChttilCe years suits. Out-state students' would'pa'y new chairman of the Dept. of Agriculture. rb- fisherman, or deer for a piayground paved with asphalt lion Natural Resources Building McNainara, it wasiearned.be- $1,020. Families v. ,„ld . ~ al- Business Law and Office Adm'x- Mlss Ma sport-it is the whole concept of doesn., have that experience, scheduled to be opened on south Today Is the deadline for per- lowed $1,000 deduction for each istration. man being able to get close to na- campus in September. mission to repeat final exami- lieves that the proposal must Named Thursday to head the Conserving our natural re- be publicly discussed with the Business Law and office Admin- A major emphasis will be given nations for University College Natural Resources Dept. of the stration. She has been acting to resource programs of the Co- courses. aim of reaching a consensus on chairman since Nov. 1, 1965, operative Extension Service. Permission may be obtained a plan for universal service be- when former department head, County Natural Resource Agents from the assistant dean of the fore any legislative recommen- <5 Milton Dickerson, was named as¬ MSU's work in natural re¬ are located in 20 Northern Mich- University College, 170 Bessey dations are made to Congress. includes teaching, re¬ sociate dean for graduate affairs. sources Hall, or the Student Affairs Of¬ The defense secretary also search and extension work in the fices at 109 Brody and S33 Won¬ Miss Moorealso servedasact- would emphatically oppose for areas of forestry, forest pro- (continued on page 10) ing chairman from i960 through ders Hall. the near future, at least, any 1962 when Dickerson was in Bra¬ idea that civilian service could zil. be a substitute for military serv- Jack Breslin, University sec¬ Tanner, now chief of the Fish Course Plan Rather, McNamara looks on his Division of the MichiganConser- retary, said Thursday that The proposal as a means for the hun¬ dreds of thousands of young men Paper can be sold on campus vation new Dept., will assume his duties July 1. He will have Due May 27 today. who are not called into military His announcement killed wide- charge of MSU"seducationalpro- .Students should complete their service to serve their mtion in. -gr.vms in natural rescratfuas. academic advising for summer spr£aft~ spetviiaflxjst * Vna\ l-a-st another way—meeting a moral week's de-authorization of the Commenting on Tanner's ap¬ and fall terms by Friday, May27, if not legal obligation. weekly newspaper would affect pointment, President Hannah registrar Horace C. King re¬ His proposal, made Wednes¬ its said: right to distribute on campus. minded students Thursday. day in a speech to the American In other developments: "This involves more than just Students should prepare in dup¬ Society of Newspaper Editors in —The Paper had to find a new the appointing of a new head for licate for submission to their Montreal, came under bipartisan natural education. academic adviser a plan of all printer Thursday morning. resources fire in Congress. Some House —The former printer threat¬ ' 'It involves a commitment that courses that they expect to take member, who apparently beli ARY V. MOORE ened to have it "blacklisted" HOWARD A. TANNER MSU will give the natural re- through spring term, 1967. ed he was advocating universal locaUy because of aneged ob- King requested students to conscription, said there were gceni ln the May 12 lssue. leave a forwarding address if better ways to remedy inequi- —He also revealed - that he call¬ they do not plan to be home this ties in the draft law. A resolution also was intro¬ duced in the Senate by Sen. Gay- lord Nelson, D-Wis., calling for ed University officials Friday, May 13, to apologize for print¬ ing the issue. The Board of Student Publi¬ Farm boy Sticks To Story summer. Fall term schedule booklets and section reserva¬ tion request forms -will be mailed to the same address as spring About Kidnaper Slaying a commission to study and pro¬ cations withdrew its recognition grade reports, he explained. pose o-haul^of that K'~'" cedures. Nelson said draftpro- 'k"' D"K- "Pub' o{ The Paper as an authorized King emphasized that it is to the student's, as well as the newspaper May 13, apparently lie confidence in the draft is at because of the content of its May University's, advantage to com- an all time low." SHADE GAP, Pa. (UPI)—Larry old Peggy Ann Bradnick rested was taken to a funeral home White House support for Mc¬ The which usually a 15-year-old farmboy in ibeck, a 15-year-old farmboy Rubeck a hospital bed, recuperating nearby Mifflintown, Pa., Funeral piete advising and enrollment Namara's proposal was voiced Paper, 1 nursaay, was de- Thursday, .lose bullet may have killed a whose buUet maV have kllled 3 from seven terror-filled days services will be held there Sat- before fall term registration be¬ comes outit on ae- kidnaper-sniper .stay- « the hands of her abductor, urday. TO PAY OR NOT TO PAY—Students cast votes i by press secretary Bill D. Moy- ers who said the defense chief s s-tE-A During the afternoon, she - ■—«- -- was Hollenbaugh, who was cut down ballot boxes all over campus Thursday to determim whether or not ASMSU officials will receive salaries was "Talking about a concept wondering if he would get any of questioned by FBI men and State Wednesday by a single shot out- print any more issues. of public service, a concept which It was printed yesterday at a the $2,400 reward money to use Police and was examined by her side the frame and stone Rubeck Step It Up! the President has had for some family physician and a psychia- farmhouse, is survived by two trist. brothers, James of Shade Gap time." (continued on page 10) $10,825 The body of William D. Hoi- lenbaugh, 44, former convict, and Charles of Lewistown, Pa., and a sister, Mrs. Mary Palm God N eeded 513,300 $2,475 Junior 500 mental patient and town char- of McCoysville, Pa. There was doubt as to who OPEN HOUSING OPPOSED acter who abducted Peggy Ann and later killed an FBI agent, killed Hollenbaugh. But for young Contributors should tact John Duley, con¬ STEP At 1: 30 p.m. — Larry, it was no mystery. project director, 507 E. On your mark, get set, GO to ancj part-time coach for the him," Grand River Ave., East 500 cart r ace around Cleveland Browns football team, Will "I know I had to hit the Junior 6Bias Bring 4,735 Degrees June 12 To Receive Larry said Thursday. (continued on page II) U#>sing. West Circle Drive at 1:30 p.m. Saturday. Entries from 80 living units win this A be year's the official starter for race. parade will preceed Opponents of EasrLansing's proposed open ordinance on principle—because they don't will compete for first, second the noon race. Starting on MAC in occupancy amendment will have to contend think the city government should have a say and third place trophies in the of the Kappa Kappa Gamma with "college groups who want more teeth in to whom they sell their property—are going Approximately 4,735 students front built into the punitive structure of the ordi¬ have to contend with this element." are now eligible to receive de¬ .#] 19th annual 500 race sponsored and Alpha Phi sorority houses, to * , uj • v by Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity ^ mrn leftonGrand nance," a local attorney said Wednesday The controversial amendment objected to grees at the Spring Commence¬ night. by the 22 persons gathered in the basement ment, according to figures re¬ Conducted on the same basis as the Indianapolis 500, several RJy£ ^ AbbQtt Roai ^ ^ leased Thursday. Stating his opinion at the fifth meeting of of the Capitol Savings and Loan Assn. build¬ heats will compose each race. Included in the figure are 1,248 the East Lansing Property Owners' Assn. ing in Okemos, was proposed by the East Sororities and women's living bachelor and master degree can¬ (ELPOA), Everett R. Trebilcock, 65 Uni¬ Lansing Human Relations Commission last didates who will receive the re¬ Whew! and Linus retur units will compete in the women's versity Drive, said that local "taxpayers" month. Page 2. divisions. Coeds will steer their Carol Emmett, Romeo fresh- will encounter a situation like that found in The proposed amendment to Ordinance quired number of credits daring carts around the circular track man and Junior 500 queen, and racial discrimination issues on the national No. 130, which established the Commission while teams of men, selected will reign i in 1963, reads as follows: Breakdown of the figures is: level. by each entry, push. parade and the race. Miss Em- "Local college students, as evidenced by "Acts of discrimination in public education, bachelors degrees—2,605 spring Students in the men's divi- selected from a group editorials in the State News," Trebilcock worship, access housing, employment or pub¬ term, 753 summer, for a total of sion will do both jobs, steer of coeds selected by each n said, "think that the proposed housing ordi¬ lic accommodations against any person solely 3,358; masters degrees—731 Bacteria and push as they compete to living unit and fraternity to rep- nance will not be at all effective, since it because of religion, race, creed, color, sex or spring, 495 summer, totaling 1,- The Red Cedar is too 226; doctor of veterinary medi¬ polluted for anything but isn't powerful enough to be enforced. (continued on page 10) cine, 19; education specialist, microbes. Page 7. Love It "East Lansing residents who oppose the Lou "The Toe" Groza, kicker the r 14; and doctorates, 118. Friday. May 20, 1966 STATE NEWS EDITOR'S following Smuckler Explains Viet Project NOTE: are the major The ministrative services of the new Vietnamese government through recruitment. Included ing police administrators were lead¬ lic works and aid was public health. This fully known and open to iod of gradual reduction. In 1962, the Vietnamese government de¬ excerpts of a report sub¬ training, research and advisory screened, recruited and hired inspecion by the International cided against contract renewal, mitted by Ralph Smuck¬ services. from state police forces within Control Commission. MSU police mainly because it objected to Published every class day throughout fall, winter, and spring terms ler, acting dean of inter¬ MSU staff members also ad¬ the United States, from city po¬ administrators gave advice on what it considered unfriendly and and twice weekly summer term by the students of Michigan State Uni¬ national programs, to the vised the U.S. aid mission di¬ lice and other civil police organ¬ the purchase of such equipment. overly critical attitudes and writ¬ versity and authorized by the Board of Student Publications. Academic Council on the rectly on matters within individ¬ izations. At peak strength in 1958 the ing by various members of the merits and ramifications ual fields of competence, such as Since police advisory services group consisted of about 50 staff group and because it realized the Page : Friday, May 20, 1966 of MSU's Viet Nam Pro¬ tax reform, economic analysis, and training were being provided members, about half in police ad¬ University would not impose con¬ and projections, civil police com¬ to the various components of the trols ject. ministration. During most of the on its staff. munications and organizations, Vietnamese police force, a wide project's life, the group num¬ What are some of the lessons In some respects reviewing and similar fields. range of specialists had to be a bered less than thirty. In 1959 EDITORIALS the Michigan State-Viet Nam The program was negotiated part of the MSU team. Some of and 1960 the group entered a per¬ (continued on page II) Project is like delving into old during the crisis period of late these police specialists were in history. It was among the first of 1954 and began in early 1955, the counter-subversive field, a this university's technical coop¬ Lessons To Be Learned when the security of even the city main task which the Vietnamese eration projects abroad. of Saigon was still in doubt. At police faced. ANDREW MOLLISON The old Foreign Operations the outset, To provide programs of an im¬ these advisory Administration which sponsored mediate services the MSU group hired impact nature were the project, was succeeded years stressed From MSU's Viet Project including studies and ago by the International Cooper¬ recommendations leading to the ation Administration which has rehabilitation of 900,000 refu¬ persons nominated by the U.S. government. All such individuals, a relatively small number in Let's Hope, since been replaced by the pres¬ gees who had just arrived from total, were involved in training ent Agency for International De¬ the North, and to administrative FLURRIES OF CHARGES and de¬ press conference. He said there was or advisory functions, More were nials, capped by a legislative hear¬ ing have climaxed the last five weeks since the controversial Ramparts only suspicion of CIA agents and if there were any, they participated in no espionage or counter subversive velopment. Within Michigan reorganization efforts to help State, the project's origin pre¬ bring central government pro¬ dated by several years the es- grams to rural and remote areas of the country. known to the Vietnamese govern¬ ment, and were under the author^ ity of the University team in Viet Namep of the House Subcommittee on Education didn't article hit the newsstands. Numerous activities. The obvious civil The members public statements over the natureand On the other hand, Lyman Kirk- insecurity which prevailed in 1955 There were no "undercover seem to know why they were holding a hearing Monday. Neverthe¬ propriety of the Viet Nam project have patrick , former director of the CIA brought about almost an imme¬ operating agents" withintheMSU less, the state Legislature's hearing on MSU's involvement in Viet circulated around the campus. at the time of the Viet Nam project, diate expansion of the police ad¬ group, but there were individuals Nam did manage to answer the on\y question worth asking in 1966: w said it was his "distinet iimpression" ministration side of the program. involved in training and advising What has the University done to prevent another international Clearly, many mistakes were made on the project, and its close relation¬ that MSU knew about the CIA's in¬ In 1957, the MSU program Vietnamese civil police officers boo-boo? volvement in the project. shifted to longer range program who had to deal with counter- According to President Hannah, MSU has done two things. ship with the South Vietnamese gov¬ ernment is not the type of activity a ROBERT SCIGLIANO, professor of goals. This meant that the new subversive problems. First, after a series of professorial seminars—some of them university should become involvedin. political science and member of the National Institute of Administra¬ The MSU civil police efforts convening regularly over a three-month period—the ground rules tion, whose establishment MSU were considered by the Vietna¬ for participation in overseas projects were rewritten. University officials would agree. And project, said "We used to call them MSU would not and has not become in¬ CIA men." Scigliano is also co-author had assisted and which was mese and American observers to It was decided that MSU should deal only with other educational volved in such a project again. of a book on the Viet project, used by viewed as the main vehicle for be of high quality and on several institutions (university would be too charitable a term to describe both Ramparts and the University to bringing anewand liberalized ad¬ occasions an expansion in the ef¬ centers of higher learning in many underdeveloped countries) or THE VERY NATURE of MSU's in¬ defend their positions. ministration to the country, re- fort was urged upon the Univer¬ with ministries of education. ternational programs has changed It now appears quite c lear that there sity. Second, control over overseas projects was vested in the de¬ since the beginning of the Viet Nam were CIA men on the project, though MSU staff members did i However, because the size of partments concerned. Thus, for example, the school of business the kind of things they did will per¬ search on the organization and the Viet Nam decided what kind of a project would be started in Brazil, Today, project in 1955. Projects are now Project had made established in connection with a uni¬ haps never be known. But this is not operations of Vietnamese gov¬ it overly demanding on Univer¬ MSU is withdrawing from that project, having been extremely versity or educational institution in an important issue now. The project ernment agencies and advised sity staff resources, because too effective in helping set up the first system of business schools the particular foreign country. A 20- has long since ended and nothing can them in such fields as budgetary many outsiders had to be em¬ south of the Rio Grande. member faculty committee also be done to change it. and fiscal administration, civil ployed to fulfill responsibilities, Ramparts magazine alleged that the four men who decided MSU serves as an advisory body to inter¬ RALPH SMUCKLER service reform, and organization and because the University itself should get into Viet Nam didn't meet "as a group" until they THE MOST DISGUSTING aspect of national programs. Great strides have and management. Direct MSU ad¬ had been re-thinking the overall buckled their seat belts on the plane to Saigon. the whole incident is the University's made in the improvement and sophis¬ tablishment of the International visory services to agencies de ¬ basis of its international efforts, University officials said that the men had actually been meeting intentional lack of candor, its hedg¬ tication of our programs abroad, Programs office and the system¬ clined. as emphasis on the work the University decided after sev¬ in private homes for a couple of months prior to their investi¬ ing, shading, and refusal to present atic for the but even greater faculty interest and clear and frank concern University's of the National Institute increased eral years of experience to re¬ gation trip. concern is needed, as indicated by a explanation of the international role which that of¬ over the years of the project. duce the size of the group, par¬ Who cares? The point is, who did they report to when they came Viet Nam project and the CIA in¬ a recent proposal by 14 members of fice represents. MSU also counseled the U.S. ticularly the civil police admin¬ back? They reported to the administration. volvement. Its efforts to maintain its the History Dept. Since those days over eleven aid mission on the construction istration side. In 1957 the reduc¬ Today, it appears, if MSU sent a team to Albania, for example, image and prestige backfired and re¬ to investigate the feasibility of teaching avian nutrition to Albanians, The biggest fault with the Univer¬ years ago, as a result of experi¬ of new in-service training facili¬ tion was set in motion, and by sulted in at least a temporary loss sity in the whole incident is the manner ence in Viet Nam and elsewhere, ties in the countryside, and on mid-1959, a1 good share of the re¬ the team's recommendations would go to the Dept. of Poultry Sci¬ in both. Students and faculty alike in which it handled the whole Ram¬ we have learned much aboutUni- new buildings for the National duced police administration divi¬ ence. Then the professors there could decide whether they had the have been appalled by the Univer¬ parts issue. University officials knew versity cooperative efforts Institute, which were completed sion was actually drawn from the manpower and knowhow to conduct an Albanian bird food program. the Ramparts storm was coming sev¬ sity's handling of the incident. In the end, the Viet Nam project abroad, about technical assist¬ in the early I960's in Saigon. MSU campus staff and a number Things wouldn't be quite that simple, of course. Anyone who eral months in advance, but appeared ance projects and means of en¬ The Michigan State project in¬ of police administration activi¬ walks through MSU's Center for International Programs, knows will be forgotten, but the scars left to be taken completely by surprise. couraging social, economic and cluded a major effort to help ties had been reduced or elimi¬ that a building that big and that beautiful must have committees from MSU's method in handling the political development. We still train and reorganize the civil po¬ nated including specialized train¬ hidden all over the place. THE ISSUE OF CIA involvement or incident will linger. Hopefully soms don't know as rrtuch as we would lice forces of the new South Viet¬ ing programs such as those in There's probably a committee to decide whether or not the Michi¬ infiltration in the project is the most lessons have been learned. The Uni¬ like to know, but the search for namese nation. When the first the counter-subversive field. gan State legislature would get ticked off if one of our professors embarassing. At first there were no versity should continue and expand went to Albania. There's probably a committee to decide what to CIA men involved saidthe University, its international projects, but with knowledge goes on. members of the MSU advisory It should be emphasized that all The project in Viet Nam was group arrived in Viet Nam in 1955, persons working for the Michigan do if one of the poultry profs rents a house bigger than his little then officials saidthere were. Various closer faculty and administrative co¬ large and complex and operated civil disorders in the form of State team in Saigon were inter¬ three-room shack in Okemos. And so on. newspapers and magazines carried operation. And more important, the But the Bept. of Poultry Science would have the key during its seven year history in frequent terrorist activity in the viewed and hired by the Univer¬ decision stories affirming the CIA's presence. University should have learned that to make. If they did decide to handle the problem, then it And then President Hannah held an environment of varying de¬ streets of Saigon and extreme sity. It maintained control over wouldn't a honesty is always the best policy. be necessary to hire outside men to do the job. grees of instability and difficulty. insecurity in the countryside all of its personnel and could We went into the project at the were a part of the reality of the have removed any of its staff MSU served as an employment agency for the Viet Nam project. request of U.S. government aid situation. The civil police ad¬ from Saigon. All were involved Many of the police administration technicians came from outside program and of Vietnamese Pre¬ ministration program whichMSU in training and advisory serv¬ the University. Some of them then embarrassed us.by acting like FISHEL CLAIMS mier, later President, Ngo Dinh had contracted to undertake in be¬ ices clearly known to the Viet¬ spies. Maybe they were CIA men. Many American spies are. Diem. half of the U.S. aid mission was namese government and re¬ That's where all the trouble started. That, according to Hannah, Both governments sought ways given high priority. quested by it. N'on? were engaged will not happen again. Ramparts Article of fostering economic and social The MSU Department of Po¬ in spying or counter espionage. Let's hope so. We wouldn't want to become another Harvard. progress and our program in pub¬ lice Administration provided Those hired outside were desig¬ Harvard's "nameplate projects," in which the school lends its lic administration and police ad¬ substantive and administrative nated as specialists or advisors. name to a project manned by outsiders, are scandalously un¬ ministration was one part (less support for this part of the ef¬ They were not given academic controlled. EDITOR'S NOTE: The Keating (all Ramparts editors) Berkeley. Why not equate Mich¬ than 1 per cent of a very large fort in Viet Nam. Members of rank or title. Harvard may like the cash its gets from the overhead rake-off, following artfele written indulge in deliberate character igan State University with the Un¬ and comprehensive U.S. econom¬ its staff but the nameplate which it affixes to tln.se "research" projects participated in the plan¬ Equipment for the Vietnamese by Wesley Fishel, pro¬ assassination? Why have they iversity of California; raise the ic and technical aid program to is tarnished further each time an outside hand touches it. ning of the program and in car¬ civil police forces were made fessor of political sci¬ falsified the facts about a con¬ battle cry of "Viet Nam"; lie a Viet Nam, running between $100 ■ rying it out. In order to carry cut available by the L'.S. a«d mis¬ As for Che rest of MpgJay'.'v hearip^ forget it. I listened to J/, ence,. appeared in sev¬ structive university technical as¬ little here, embellish a little and $200 million per year. the police training responsibility sion in Viet Nam. Except for on WKAR in the comfort of my living room. For the first time eral newspapers in re¬ sistance program? One does not there (when their accusations The MSU Advisory Group was Michigan State recruited and small amounts of equipment for since Ramparts hit the news stands in East Lansing, I was able action to the controvei— have to look far for the answers. were challenged, the writers ad¬ composed of specialists in var¬ hired people with various types to listen to a discussion of the whole affair without taking notes. irts irticle. For one thing, Scheer, Shein- mitted having used training purposes, such equip¬ "literary hy¬ ious fields of public administra¬ of police experience and know¬ ment was not handled or pur¬ I didn't record many of the details, but the overall quality of the baum and Keating are running for perbole" — a fancy phrase for The editors of Ramparts have tion, political science, police ad¬ ledge. chased debate came through loud and clear. It was sophomoric. Congress in California. All are falsehoods); tell a few titillat¬ by the University but in¬ perpetrated a brazen deception on ministration, economics and oth¬ The department faculty was not stead was part of the normal flow What's enlightening to me, as a Michiganite, is that even then it the American reading public. For ing anecdotes, and stir into the er social sciences. The central seemed to be pitched at too high a level for most of the House large enough to meet the needs of US aid support in many fields, partisan political purposes, they frothy broth the nasty name, purpose was to strengthen the ad¬ in Viet Nam without this outside committee members. e.g. agriculture, education, pub¬ have skillfully and maliciously "CIA"? Such a formula could built an image of what the St. hardly fail. Louis Post-Dispatch, in an ap¬ Just what was the MSU proj¬ proving editorial, called "A Uni¬ ect in Viet Nam? Was it a "spy versity Which Sold Out." As experienced journalists, the people at Ramparts were cer¬ tainly aware that a refutation never quite catches up with the operation?" evil? ect THE was one Was MSU VIET NAM of it something more proj¬ than 300 Principle Of Viet Project Unquestioned E DITOR'S NOTE: Adrian to frequent classrooms than de¬ Michigan State University, and "aura," and I value it very high¬ that doubt that the University initial accusations. Jaffe, acting chairman of tention centers. hence the professional standing ly- might suffer? university-run technical assist¬ In all this sorry affair there Their pages are filled with comparative literature What I have opposed in our of all the faculty, has been im¬ pect that it pains me to see the ance projects overseas spon¬ University placed in so intoler¬ was apparently nobody connected distortions, half-truths, and quo¬ sored by what is today called has been a critic of MSU's Viet Nam Project since 1958 peached, and the fact that the able situation: -this is far with the project who ever stopped tations used' out of context. At Viet Nam Project. Here is the danger inherent in it that Ramparts article may have been a a the Agency for International De¬ to think that rightly or wrongly least 53 of the "facts" in their he discusses what he con¬ ultimately the University would motivated by selfish consider¬ better institution than it allows velopment (AID). It originated suffer from its association with ations does not change this. In itself to appear. the University might lose its good 12-page article on the Michigan siders the basic issues very early in America's active The ultimate question, hardly name; nobody who ever applied State University project in Viet involved in such a pro- addition, the important work involvement in Viet Nam, short¬ the test of principle to his actions. Nam are altogether untrue. abroad done by our own staff and raised at all, is this: why, when ly after the Korean War ended, it proposed that MSU should It is from people of this sort, In the same magazine's July and in a period of serious inse¬ by the other American universi¬ was 1965 issue, two of the same IT IS REGRETTABLE that so ties has been made more diffi¬ engage in counter-subversion ac¬ glad to be of use, that the uni¬ curity and instability in South¬ versity needs protection, not writers published a broadside WESI.EY FISHEL much of the recent discussion of cult. tivity in Viet Nam, did nobody east Asia. French colonial rule from intemperate journalists. of vicious accusations and mali- MSU's involvement in Viet Nam THIS IS A HIGH price to pay, voice the doubt that since this campaigning on a "Get the U.S. was ending in Viet Nam, and a THERE IS LITTLE indication ciou innuendoes should have been characterized so high, in fact, that one won¬ was inappropriate for a uni¬ against a num¬ Out of Viet Nam" platform. new, independent, Nationalist even today that this is under¬ ber of prominent Americans who by insensitivity to the moral ders why there was not more con¬ versity, MSU might find intself Sheinbaum, a one-time instruc¬ government in Saigon appeared to stood. I am certain that if Presi¬ have Supported the idea of a free issue. The University has treated cern before our credit was spent compromised? Why, when it was tor in economics at MSU, who offer hope for the still free people the matter as if it were being clear that members of dent Hannah had been made fully and independent South Viet Nam. failed so lavishly. This credit isnotthe our to complete the require¬ of South Viet Nam. called before the aware, by the men in the field, At that time, the editors were ments for his doctorate and left This Internal property of one department or faculty, in our name, were ad¬ new regime, headed by a Revenue Bureau to informed by letter (which explain a dis¬ of one group, but of each and vising and supporting a detest¬ the faculty, is running in Santa nationalist prime minister, Ngo allowed deduction and hasargued all of us. It should have been able dictator, did nobody raise (conti m i page II) Ramparts never saw fit to print) Barbara. Scheer is running in Dinh Diem, asked the U.S. gov¬ technicalities rather than prin¬ held more dear. that their statements were un¬ Berkeley, home of the University ernment for technical assist¬ ciples. Stern, in a talk on campus, true. One can only conclude, of California. ance from Michigan State Uni¬ accuses me of defending theUni- (tM DAD CHAN6£D\ llWAT KIND Of A NEIGHBORHOOD voo'reA If HI6 therefore, that whereas they may Why should Caliofrnia politi¬ It has thrown up a series of MIND.. HE versity in the areas of public 1$ TH£? IT DIDN'T CHANGE have been honestly mistaken last cians go all the way to Michigan administration and police ad¬ defenses against Ramparts versity and President Hannah as DIDN'T LIKE THE July, they are now deliberately lying. for a campaign issue? That isn't difficult to answer, either. What ministration, areas in which MSU is particularly qualified. magazine, not realizing that what it should defend itself against is if this not were realize a crime. He does that I am reluctant ^acfojl v NEW J Ob... J A BIT WHILE WE WERE GONE! to see the baby forgotten because is "big" in Berkeley these days Early in 1955, when the MSU the unawareness of many of its S Q WHY SHOULD Robert Scheer, the bath water spills. I would not is the Viet Nam issue. Scheer program began, the security of own advisors that moral distinc¬ Warren Hinckle, Stanley Shein- have invested 20 years of my was an active leader in the Viet even the city of Saigon was in tions exist. It sees itself as the ADRIAN JAFFE baum, Sol Stern, and Edward Nam victim of malice rather than professional career in Michigan day protest doubt, and the countryside was as State if I had not respected the almost in a state of anarchy. the victim of its own failure to the unsavory Diem afd his op¬ pressive regime. And it has, to president and the University for a The MSU project included a put things in a broader context. their protection of academic my sorrow. icily Press major effort to help train and While the freedom and for their absence thought that CIA As President Hannah said a associated Collegio'e Pr.ss, Mic Michigan reorganize the civil police serv¬ operatives may have been in¬ few days ago in Lansing, theUni- of bigotry. don't people ever progress 6HE'$ BACK TOO. of the South Vietnamese around here? what a i postage paid at East Loosing, « ices volved in our Saigon project does In all those neither higon state government, versity is a "big place." Many years npus »ditc The police force was literally not make me happy, this which concerns me it is not in the things go on within its borders, most of them worthy and distin¬ President Hannah versity official has nor any Uni¬ ever directly 5tupip neighborhood" orts editor in the process of being wrestled main. If you recruit staff from or indirectly interfered with na e .tor ^ ^ Qjem government from guished. The entire academic my the hands of the notorious Binh murky areasyou should not really community, unfortunately, has to freedom to express myself in or "7 (•£>"> 1 be surprised at what turns up out of the classroom, even though bear the blame for the actions of 355-8252 Xuyen gang (a sort of Vietna- on your payroll: you cannot pre¬ only one part, and this is what it is probable that many of my !! 355-8255 the infiltration of police views did not reflect theirs.This '■si- vent is so upsetting. .. 355-8299 (continued on page II) agents, but is true academic freedom, they are less likely The professional standing of not an Friday, May 20, 1966 3 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan NEW NEXT FALL come view the arton exhibit during Greenwich Internship For College Instructors By JO ANN BAER of humanities, and will meet two ed to offer help have been ini¬ tiated before but consisted of his course who are serving as discussion leaders in ED 200 and will attempt to tie together vari¬ ous parts of the course and bring Village Days ... on now State News Staff Writer nights a week for three quarters. a series of voluntary meetings ED 450. unity to the lectures of several Previously, society has been different faculty members. He concerned which were not well attended, —provide a weekly seminar on The first course designed to only with the quality will also work closely with Sweet¬ of elementary and secondary Sweetland explained. They were the problems of college teaching make college teaching more ef¬ land for evaluation and in¬ teaching, said Sweetland. This unrealistic in the light of the for these graduate assistants. course fective will be initiated fall term struction in the course. program is an attempt to see many other things that graduate —give individual attention and by the College of Education. help to graduate assistants ir#he Senior faculty members who if something might be offered students "had" to do, he said. have proven themselves to be "Internship in College Teach¬ to students, on the doctorate Dean asserted that to his know¬ group. ing" will be a requirement for —work closely with the course outstanding lecturers will lec¬ level, to make them better uni¬ ledge there were no other courses ture on portions of the course all graduate students in the Col¬ of this nature in existence. This coordinator in integrating the versity teachers, he continued. discussion sessions with the lec¬ which are within their particular lege of Education, stated Leland The program is sponsored by is the first organized effort In Dean, assistant dean of the col¬ ture sessions to achieve total area of interest and competence. the Educational Development which credit is granted to faculty- course goals. The faculty members will only lege. Program (EDP) originating with members and graduate students for —serve on a selection commit¬ deliver between three to six lec¬ It will hopefully help meet the the Ford Foundation Grant. The internship teaching. tee for graduate assistants for tures and will receive credit textbook has yet been de¬ Dean and Sweetland are anti¬ challenge of maintaining high not the forthcoming year. for their contributions, said quality courses with large sec¬ termined, said Sweetland, but cipating few problems with the Dean. will be decided upon course. They agreed that so far A challenging task faced by tions, he said. summer Aside from the large large universities is providing lecture The class will be instructed by term. the reaction of prospective en- quality programs for large num¬ sessions, small discussion Orientation programs rolees has been enthusiastic. William E. Sweetland, professor design- bers of students, commented groups, numbering less than 35, Sweetland's role as internship coordinator will be to: Dean. The difficulty of the task will meet twice weekly and will is accentuated by the shortage of be conducted by a graduate stu¬ —supervise the work of the dent. Students enrolled in the graduate assistants enrolled in competent college teachers, he said. class will have the opportunity Next term approximately 1,400 to have their questions and theor¬ students will enroll in ED 200. ies discussed and clarified. A course coordinator, a graduate The graudate students who will Soviets Pledge Support Ky Tro assistant, will be coordinate the appointed to operation of large lecture sections, numbering ap¬ assist in lecturing and discus¬ sion groups, like all other grad¬ uate assistants in the college of proximately 450 students. education, will be enrolled in the MOSCOW (UPI)-- Communist Party Leader Leonid I. Brezhnev warned Thursday that Communist coun¬ Blockade He will not be a lecturer, but course Instructed by Sweetland. tries will give Hanoi increasing support if the United States steps up the war in Viet Nam. "The Soviet Union firmly supports supporting the just cause of Viet Nam," saidBrezh- and will go on Rebel nev in a speech at ceremonies in Vladivostok award¬ DA NAN'G (UPI)—Premier ing the Order of Lenin to the maritime territory Nguyen Cao Ky clamped a block¬ of the Eastern USSR. ade on the ancient capital of Hue Thursday in his military and economic offensive to wrest con¬ Agree On Peace Talks trol of the rebellious northern provinces from Buddhist-backed JAKARTA (L'PI)—Indonesia In Kuala Lumpur, Malay- dissident forces. and Malaysia have agreed to sian Deputy Premier Tun Ab- Rebel troops and government open peace talks toendPresi- dul Razak said he would meet dent Sukarno's three-year-old campaign to "crush" the Ma- with Malik "in a couple of days" at an apparently still marines fought an hour-long pitched battle in front of a Budd¬ hist pagoda in Da Nang while the once a year savings! laysian Federation, Indone- undecided neutral site, prob- premier cut off vital supplies sian Foreign Minister Adam ably Bangkok, to start the Malik said Thursday. Both sides predicted success. negotiations, to Hue, 60 miles to the north. At least five persons were killed and 68 wounded, mostly Belle Sharmeer civilians in the Da Nang pagoda battle that threatened to trigger Lodge In Korea SEOUL (UP I) — U.S. Ambassador to Saigon Henry Cabot Lodge stopped off Thursday in Seoul for secret all out civil war. An American correspondent suffered a shrap¬ nel wound in the foot. legsize stockin talks with South Korean government leaders, bring¬ Ky warned in Saigon that he ing charges the American envoy would ROK troops in Viet Nam ask for more plans to use whatever force necessary to clear the heavily armed rebel troops from Budd-' 1.17 pr 1.28Pr 1.4V 1.66F Lodge, who was continuing on to Saigon today, de¬ hist pagodas in Da Nang despite clined to answer questions from newsmen. He said Limited time offer. Your chance to save on the sheer, threats by monks to burn them¬ only he was in Korea to "talk things over and ex¬ selves to death in the worsening sheerer, and sheerest hosiery you love most. Seamed change views on the Viet Nam situation." political crisis. A dispatch from Hue, where and seamless styles, that offer the ultimate in per¬ Government Outposts Attacked rebel troops are digging in fear¬ fect fit. because Belle Sharmeers are leg-sized. ful of a government attack, said Brev. for short or slim. 8-10 1/2. Modite for aver¬ SAIGON (UPI)—A Commu¬ day. the city's fuel supply was being nist battalion of 500 to 600 The demilitarized zone, used up rapidly by truck, jeeps age legs. 8 1/2-11 1/2. Duchess for long, or full troops Thursday poured roughly 5-1/2 miles deep on and armored personnel carriers across the 17th parallel de¬ each side of the border, was loaded with rebel troops. Stu¬ legs. 9 1/2-11 1/2. militarized zone and attacked set up by the 1954 Geneva dents set up barricades on HOSIERY-STREET LEVEL EAST LANSING two government outposts in Conference which ended the tegic South Viet Nam. It was the French Indochina war. It is Bui first such direct invasion in known as the DMZ to the lenged Ky's military govei strength of the war and came military. The width varies by calling a mass rally Friday on Ho Chi Minh's 76th birth- up to about 12 miles. to protest the Da Nang pagoda incident. Combat police and sol¬ diers moved into Saigon under Dtefortbcdcer -- Recognize Rtrt China orders to break up any demon¬ strations. MONTREAL (UPI)—Former Prime Minister John As the situation in the nor¬ Diefenbaker told the American Society of Newspaper thern provinces rapidly deterio¬ E ditors (ASNE) Thursday that both the United States rated, the Viet Cong for the first and Canada are already 15 years late in granting time publicly offered its armies diplomatic recognition to Red China. to tiie anti-government forces to Diefenbaker told about 600 editors the two North help overthrow Ky and Chief of American nations should have granted recognition at State Gen. Nguyen Cao Thieu. the time Great Britain did in 1950-51. In another abrupt change of command in the rebellious first corps in the northern provinces, Rusk Endorses McNamara reliable sources in Da Nang said that Maj. Gen. Huyhn Van Cao, WASHINGTON (U PI) — The Press Officer Robert J. Mc- installed only Wednesday by Ky State Department Thursday Closkey said Secretary of personally, had already been re¬ endorsed Defense Secretary State Dean Rusk was fully lieved of power. Robert McNamara's proposal aware in advance of the con- The sources said Ky put con¬ that the United States try to tent of McNamara's address trol of government forces in the "build bridges" to Red Chin;' in Montreal on Wednesday. area in the hands of tough para¬ in an effort to reduce the p Other officials said Rusk had read the text before it was trooper commander Brg. Gen. of war through misunder¬ delivered. Du Quoc Dong because Cao did standing. not move in fast and strong enough to crush rebel troops in pagoda sanctuaries. The reports could not be officially confirmed. Michigan Universities on In Hue, a rebel troops opened fire Vietnamese government plane dropping leaflets urging Aid Farmers By Research unity in the fight against the Communists. is combining the A Catholic-Buddhist confron¬ Michigan citizens, from bean Project e than 450 scien- tation also loomed in Hue after farmers seeking a better yield efforts of nd rural leaders or- Catholic charges that hand gre- from crops to students in inner ganize complete inform- on nades were hurled Wednesday city schools, have a common ally in universities. Michigan's outlook for popula- night from a Buddhist pagoda a tion, agricultural production and the grave of former President special purchase Michigan universities are do¬ natural resources. Ngo Dinh Diem's father. ing research to aid farmers as well as educate students. Agricultural scientists are do¬ famous make 2-pc. ing zinc research which could Hillel Foundation The easy way to keep benefit state bean million. growers $4 '. Grand River) junior's swim suits legs slick - as - a - Research is also being done whistle all summer in human learning to train stu¬ dents ers to become skilled teach¬ in classrooms inhabited by 14.99 long. Sleek, the gen¬ tle depilatory is even "disadvantaged" youth. Sunday, May 22, 6 P.M. In the past two years Michigan Get set ... to get wet. in safe for face and has led the nation in teacher Supper - Forum •Social pert 2-piecers from this raz- arms. Apply a whip- production, said the American RABBI LEONARD CAHAN of Assn. of Colleges for Teacher zle%-dazzle collection for jun¬ ped-c ream coating, Education. Adas Shalom Congregation. Detroit iors'. C o t! o n-Dacron®poly- wait 10 minutes, Agriculturally, MSL" has ap¬ Will Discuss •Mcrdern Jewish Writers'' ester blends in stripes . prints, rinse it off. 1.50-2.25 proximately 350 projects under¬ way in the Agricultural Experi¬ Everyone Welcome No Admission Charge. dots, in almost all colors. mentation Station, much of the COSMETICS-STREET LEVEL research centering on food pro¬ For Rides Call ED 2-1916 5 to 15. duction, marketing andconsump- SABBATH SERVICES SATURDAY 10 A.M. AT HILLEL. tion. 4 Michigan State News, East Lansing. Michigan Friday, May 20, 1966 Spartan By JOE MITCH the Good weather is one factor Spartans need if they hope to with a 8-2 mark. n3-Game Finally, the Spartans need help I'9x The Showdown With U-M Spartans, riding a nine- game winning streak that includes mound in the doubleheader Satur¬ day. Bob Speer is the onlv other Spartan in the Big Ten's top 10. losses of the season, losing to Iowa and Minnesota. State News Sports Writer five in a row in the Big Ten, Heading the Spartan attack will He's hitting .359 with 14 hits in win this year's Big Ten cham¬ from the rest of the league. Ohio Reed, with a 1.22 earned run will go with their best in an be third baseman John Bieden- 42 at bats. pionship and a right to compete State, which is leading the league average, has pitched the most A hectic Big Ten baseball sea¬ .ittempt to pull ahead of the bach, the Big Ten's third leading In all games, shortstop Steve son draws to -i close this week¬ for the national title. with a 5-0 record, must drop all innings in the conference (44-1/3) Wolverines in the final league hitter at .405. His 17-hit total Polisar and Speer are the top end with the Another is a sweep of the three of its games this weekend, and posted the top strikeout mark Spartans in a cli¬ while second place Minnesota standings. is tops In the league. hitters the team with .333 series over the Wolverines. The on (41). matic three-game series with Biedenbach two schools meet at Old College must lose two of its three. MSU needs two victories to is going after a averages. Catcher Bill Steckley Asa team, however, the Spar¬ the University of Michigan. claim a third place tie with Michi¬ Field at 3 today and then battle Ohio State and Minnesota spot on the All-Big Ten first is third at .325. tans the Wolverines in pitch¬ me^f top and three to take the spot team a second time. He gained The In a season that has had 12 in a doubleheader at Ann Arbor in a single contest today at gan Spartans are expected to ing. State is third in the league Columbus. The outright. this honor last season as a Jun¬ see Michigan's classy right¬ with a 1.92 ERA while Michigan of the 60 scheduled league games Saturday. Buckeyes are to Coach Danny Litwhiler will use ior plus was selected for the hander Bob Reed, who has tied is fourth with 2.11 mark. cancelled because of inclement The Spartans are in fourth play two with sixth-place Iowa a six-game winner Jim Goodrich All-American second team and the Big Ten's victory record with weather, sunny skies have finally place in the conference with a Saturday while Minnesota has a In hitting, the Wolverines have doubleheader the same day with today and will have Dick Kenney led the Spartans in hitting with six wins. Last weekend he suf¬ been forecast for all Big Ten 7-3 record and an overall mark seven men among the top 18 hit¬ I BIEDE NBACH (5-0) and Jim Blight (2-2) on the a .390 average. fered his first two conference A1 Bara and Les Tonona games this weekend. of 22-11-1. Michigan is third fifth-place Indiana. ters. are fourth and fifth in the league with .389 and .361 averages, res- ■ pectively. MONAN OUT OF BIG 10 CHAMPIONSHIP In team hitting, Michigan is second in the conference with a .398 average to State's fourth place and .333 average. Ohio Netters, U-M Storm State tops the league, hitting at a .473 clip. By GAYEL WESCH Indiana tallied 17 points to up Power of Indiana. The other State News Sports Writer their total to 76 for third place. Illinois is fourth with 68, Wis¬ semifinal match second - seeded pits Minnesota's Jerry Noyce 7 Spartan MSU' s tennis squad stayed consin fifth with 54, followed by against Wisconsin's ToddBailin- close on the heels of league- leading Michigan by getting all but one player through the pre¬ Northwestern, 41, Minnesota, 37, Ohio State, 27, Iowa, 25, and Pur¬ ger. State's Mickey Szilagyi semi's ad¬ No. 2 Swimmers due, 10. vanced to the at liminary and quarter final rounds singles by defeating Dan Spies of Only Rich Monan's loss in the of the Big Ten Championship tournament here Thursday. quarter finals at No. 1 singles kept MSU from a perfect day. Ohio lefthander State, 6-2. 6-2. The little will face top seeded All-America The Wolverines did the Spar¬ Mike Nolan of Indiana today. Seven MSU swimmers have tans one better, however, and Monan was defeated by Karl Michigan's Jerry Stewart, the been named to the 1966 NCAA got their entire squad into the Hedrick of Michigan, 9-7, 6-1 and champion at No. 4 last year and All-America swimming squad. semifinals. will play Dave Lamon of Ohio second - seeded at No. 2 this The nominations are based pri¬ Michigan racked up 30 points State in a consolation round to¬ season, will square Off against marily on performance in the during the day to MSU's 27 to day. Minnesota's Ron Keith in the NCAA finals, with first and sec¬ increase its lead to 102-89 going other semifinal contest. ond in that meet automatically into today's action. State's Laird Warner's 6-1, ranked as one or two on the All- 6-1, victory over Wisconsin's America ratings. COLLAGE Wulf Schwerdtfeger advanced him Selected from State are Ken- > to the semifinals against Mike neth Walsh, sixth in the 100- Baer of Indiana. Baer is second- yard free style and fourth in Rights Speech seeded at No. 4 Illinois will take singles. First-seeded Dave Holden of on Jim' Swift SOUTHPAW SWINGER —Mickey Szilagyi, the Spar¬ tans' No. 2 singles player, sets himself for a fore¬ the 500-yard fi ee style; James MacMillan, 11th in the 200-yard free style Edgar Glick, seventh of Michigan In the other semi¬ head shot while warming up prior to his match Not Their Ticket in the 1650-yard free style; Denny final match. Thursday morning. Photo by John Castle Hill, 10th in the 1650-yard free MSU's No. 4 singles man, Jim style. Phillips, advanced to the semi's By RICK PI AN IN with a 6-3, 6-3 victory over Bob Also Lee Driver, third in the State News Sports Editor Scott of Indiana. Phillips will 200-yard breaststroke; GaryDil- face top - seeded Ed Waits of FORE HAND SMASH--Vic Dhooge follows through ley, first in the 100 and 200- Policemen have always made me nervous. Maybe it's because 1 Michigan today. yard backstroke; and Pete Wil¬ after returning the ball back to his opponent in always encounter them at embarrassing moments. Like when I don't Vic Dhooge, MSU's No. 5 sing¬ Thursday morning's practice session. Dhooge is liams, eleventh in the 200-yard see the "No Left Turn" sign, or when my foot gets a bit heavy or. individual medley and fifth in the les man and second - seeded at scheduled to play No. 5 singles when the Spartans the gas pedal. 400-yard individual medley. the position, defeated Tom Boice battle for the Big Ten championship this weekend. I've never really seen a police officer smile. Wait a minute—I of Minnesota, 7-5, 6-3 to advance The 400-yard medley relay take tK a Da, to the semi's and will face Ohio team of Dilley, Driver, Glick I nc v re<- .il vividly that once I was stopped for speeding, in*. State's Tom Gavin today. and MacMillan was named sec¬ 30 miles-per-hour zone, and I boldly asserted that 1 was not, in fact, speeding. U-M's Ron Teeguarden, top - seeded at No. 5, will face Steve SPARTANS, IOWA ond. The team of Walsh, Glick, Dilley £nd MacMillan was se¬ "How fast, were you going, then7" the officer asked me. lected third in the 400-yard free¬ Levenson of Indiana in the other "Thirty miles per hour, sir," I answered. semifinal contest. style relay and placed sixth in > yS' Trackmen To Defend Title He broke out in a big grin as he handed me the ticket. the Spartan captain Mike Youngs, 800-yard freestyle relay. So it was unusual that I should find myself among a large group second - seeded at No. 6, sur¬ of policemen and administrators, Thursday afternoon, at the 12th vived the day with a 6-3, 7-5 Annual National Institution on Police and Community Relations. victory over Gerry Krause of Jackie Robinson was addressing this group at the Kellogg Minnesota. Youngs faces Rick Stewart should be in contention considerably on this season's The team race should be a WE TELEGRAPH Center, however, which naturally prompted me to show up. Robin¬ By DAN DROSKI Wurtzel of Illinois today. all the way. times. four-way affair with Iowa and FLOWERS State News Sports Writer son's topic didn't concern sports, but instead dealt with the need The Top - seeded Bill Dixon of U'-M Michigan may dominate the first-place ribbon in the MSU listed as co-favorites, and WORLD WIDE for better understanding between police and Negroes. A squad of 19 athletes will made it to the semifinals also, discus and the shot put. Wol¬ 660-yard run is up for grabs, Wisconsin and Michigan also ex¬ Robinson's speech was pretty good, but the comments from the carry MSU's bid to retain its with several athletes 215 ANN ED 2.0871 anj, will take on Indian's Stan verine Bob Donnelly is the fav¬ having a pected to finish high. cops, sitting around listening to him, were far more enlightening. Cleveland. outdoor track title at the Big orite in the discus, and Jack chance to win. Mike Mondane One officer, turning to a group of his cronies, observed: Ten Meet, Friday, and Satur¬ could be the favorite, but he All three MSU doubles teams Harvey looks very strong in the "If he couldn't hit a baseball, he would be just another nigger." day the Indiana University scored double victories to ad¬ on shot put. cannot compete in both the 440 Meanwhile, Robinson was saying, "In my youth, 1 was somewhat fearful of the police in my neighborhood. There was always a cer¬ vance to the semifinals. campus at Bloomington. The Spartans' Tom Herbert and the 660. Another Shipment From Monan and The Spartans have four re¬ Michigan's Alex McDonald and Szilagyi will face will give the favorites a rough tain amount of obvious belligerence on their part. turning lettermen who are back the Spartans' Mike Martens are top - seeded Nolan and Power of battle, and he could win either "The sooner some policemen get over their fears of the Negro," to defend five individual titles Indiana today at No. 1 doubles. both events. expected to battle right down to Greenwich Village or said Robinson, "the sooner it will be better-«fcr aii." won last "/Civ at the Iowa Ofty tf* Phillips and Dhooge, second - The 100-yard mill ue a > I quickly turned to see how some of the policemen were re¬ meet. MSU's seeded at the tourney's outset, two-man race, with MSU's Gar¬ John Spain has by far sponding to this criticism. One turned to a buddy with an extremely will face the team of Dave Crook Jim Garrett is the defending rett and Michigan's Dorie Reid the best time in the 880-yard disgusted look on his face. and Jerry Riessen of North¬ champion in the long jump, cop¬ run, but defending champion Bar¬ Another had fallen asleep. expected to pace the entries. Reid western. ping the crown last year with is the defending champion, but ney Peterson and Michigan's Jim "Unless some of the police improve their attitudes," Robinson Youngs and Warner, who start¬ a leap of 24'51/2". He is the Garrett could win the title this Mercer both have an outside warned, "it will be a hot summer this year." ed the tourney seeded No. 1, will favorite in this season's con¬ chance at the crown. One policeman turned away in utter disgust. year if he has a good day. . face Illinois' Levenson and Jerry test on the basis of his 24'2 1/2" Iowa's Larry Wieczorek is the The question now arises as to why am I citing these examples. Indiana's Randy Weedle and Johnson today. jump recorded in a meet ear¬ favorite in the mile run, but • Is it to give a distorted view of the police's attitutes towards the lier this year. Iowa's Dennis Kohl have looked MSU's Keith Coates and Art Link Consolation rounds will start Negro? at 9 a.m. with the finals sche¬ MSU is also expected to be very strong this spring and one are both expected to finish high Isn't it an unfair generalization? very strong in the high jump of them may slip past duled for 1:30 p.m. the two with Coates having a good chance The police, in recent times, have come under severe criticism, with Mike Bowers back to de¬ favorites. to take first. mostly by civil rights workers and student protestors. The cry is fend his title. Bowers won the Garrett is the defending cham¬ Northwestern's Craig Boyd- "discrimination and brutality." This conference, which Robinson addressed, was comprised of Ruggers Face event last year with a 6'7", but he has already gone jump of pion in the 220-yard dash, but.his times this spring have not been as ston and the Spartans' Dick Shar¬ key should battle for first in the about 50 per cent police administrators, and the rest social worker, 6'8" in competition this spring. good as they were last season. two-mile run with Sharkey having and religious leaders. Many of these representatives, from 30 states, applauded Rob¬ Chicago Here Michigan's Rick Hunt could give Bowers a lot of trouble, MSU will also haveGene Wash¬ ington and Das Campbell entered, the best spring. time recorded this inson's speech and took his criticism. They respected the man, The MSU Rugby Club will play having recorded a 6*7-3/4" leap and either one could place first. MSU is expected to dominate mostly for his climb to fame and success in the sports world, the Its only home game of the year this season. Kohl and Weedle are definite the hurdles with Gene Washing¬ ■ business world, and his work in the civil rights movement. against the University of Chica¬ The pole vault should be a threats in this race, too, al¬ ton and Bob Steele hoping to Some, however, couldn't care less about Robinson, and let it go , 2:30 p.m. Saturday at the closely contested event, with sev¬ though Weedle's best event is the finish 1-2 in the 120-yard high be known. After all, he ain't nothing but a nigger anyway. football practice field on Shaw eral Individuals given a shot at 100-yard dash. hurdles. Steele is looking for a These men are influential members of police forces, who make a first place. Iowa could dominate the 440- win in the 440-yard intermediate certain amount of policy. If they got hot under the collar listening State's starting forwards are Wisconsin's Wes Schmidt has yard run with Mike Mondane and hurdles, a new event this year. to someone like Robinson criticizing them, I shudder to think of Capt. John Thurman, John gone higher than anyone else this Fred Ferree the strongest con¬ The mile relay is the day's how they would react to a Negro kid giving them some lip. Brandt, Bob McGillicuddy, Mike year, butMichigan'sGeorgeCan- ference, runners in this event. last event, and it could b§ the This is not a condemnation of the police. It's just an observation McCarthy, Mark Olsen, AndyMc- mare is back to defend his title. MSU's Rick Dunn has a chance deciding one with Iowa and MSU that ti -• problem of discrimination within our police forces is far Entee, "Tiny" Yere and Tim MSU's Roland Carter and Jim at the title, but he must improve battling for first. from solved. Costello. As Robinson explained, we are headed for an extremely hot Backs will be Don Gardner, summer. Civil rights protests and, protests against thewar in Viet John Harris, Bill Bringle, Greg Nam will come to a head, and most of the pressure will be put on Gessert, Ron Bacon, Roger Par- the police forces to keep the peace. fitt and Vera Emberts. Red Cedar Review It has been predicted that violence, like the kind that errupted in California lar ,""troit. Femme Netters Robinson claims the Negroes are fed up with the treatment they've been getting and might very well fight back. Beat Kalamazoo "We're like the cat hemmed in the corner by a dog," he said. The MSU women's tennis team New brightly colored, "The cat has nowhere to go.' The dog ends up badly scratched or even killed. "These cats can take pretty good care of themselves," he warned. evened its Wednesday season with a record at 3-3 7-2 victory Student Magazine of the Arts enameled earrings. over Kalamazoo College here. Penny Dlbert defeated Linda Swalm, 6-2, 6-3, in No. 2 sin¬ Pierced or Fake Maris Knoe Injury blight gles, and Vicki Beste extended knee NEW YORK Roger Maris' injury turned out to be slight and the outfielder is ex¬ the night's won, third game 7-2. inning of Wednesday which the Yankees her winning streak with a 6-1, 6-0 win over Nancy Southard in No. 3 singles. Pam Dlbert continued the Spar¬ On Sale Today Gcuid ACROSS FROM HOME ECON. BLDC. pected back in the New York tan victory parade with a 6-4, "It didn't even require medi¬ Yankee lineup here Friday night cal treatment," a Yankee spokes¬ 6-3 decision over Helen Heidel Union against the Minnesota Twins. in No. 4 singles while Jill Ma- International Center The Yankees, making the an¬ man said. whinney defeated Aniko Visalvy Gga& Amt&x, nouncement Thursday, said After the collision, Maris by scores of 6-2, 6-3 In the fifth Spiro's (in front) Marls suffered only a bruise on played a few innings and then spot. his left knee when he slid into retired from the game. He said State's Sarah Thorkelson de¬ SPARTAN SHOPPING CENTER Tiger catcher Bill Freehan in his knee hit Freehan' s shin guard. feated Tina Rose, 6-2, 6-2. Michigan State News, t Lansing, Michigan Friday, May 20, 1966 5 • Y'?:1 '• •' v T GS]0@(H)0<&&K] I lj| MAY 10*21 U- u tfflMll Ml Mflf ITffWJdf » I ART AND ARTISTS ON DISPLAY I The third annual GREENWICH VILLAGE .... DAYS Sidewalk Art Show is Village Shoppers | being held today and Saturday under the combined sponsorship of the East FRIDAY NIGHT-SATURDAY I Lansing Chamber of Commerce and the Lansing Art Guild. More than ninety artists from the entire lower peninsula will be dis¬ • ■■■■■■MARGIN" ■■■■■■■■ Perfect playing their works, in addition to many foreign student groups and high school students. Special entertainment is scheduled for the two day event on MAC Avenue, Many retail stores will {Hidden Magic Hair Spray 99$ j with bands and dancers highlighting the program. Parallels remain open Friday Evening as a special accommodation to shoppers. Reg. SI.50 ■ ■ ■ ■■ ■■■■■■■■ ■MARGINbbbi " These Reg. SI.00 Greenwich Village buys Days ■ Secret Roll-On Deodorant ■■■■■■■■■■■MARGIN ■■■ 59(| ■ 59<| Reg. 99C Cigarettes opt Premium Bra Helene Curtis Hair Spray i "MARGIN! Spray Starch If You Purchase A Come ■ Complexion Size Camay Soap ■■■■■■■■■■■MARGIN ■■■< *1 I? 380 Piece of Art Reg. $1.00 During Shop Command After Shave 39< j ICH VILlAGE GREENWICH Imprevu Cologne Right Guard VILLAGE DAYS, Our ■ ■■■■■■■■■■(MARGIN ■■■■■■■ Reg. SI.49 QQ Bring it To , BAYS ARE HERE! Special Of The Week r:r $2.49 Leon G for Expert Picture Framing IjtMwshall Music Co. Art & MSU Imprinted Quality Work at Toothbrush & Holder Cover Girl Make-Up Personna Double Edge 5's Reasonable Prices Do It Yourself It's What's Happening Craft Reg. 65c 49 whlch are ^ feet vices. He is spending half his by 5Q feet cost the student $5.50. time this term teaching and half 'tpn by JAMES FRITZELL m EVERETT GREENBAUlt- Directed by ALAN RAFKIN Roger E. Jonas, executive di- This price includes tilling and in doing research in floricul¬ -• EDWARD J. MONTAGNE • a universal picture rector of the East Lansing Cham- discing of the soil and also 50 ture. Stinson has been with the ber of Commerce said, "Since pounds of fertilizer," said Rich- MSU faculty for 11 years. STARTS WED. MAY 25th Friday is "Hospitality Day" of ard F. Stinson, associateprofes- HIT NO.(2) IN COLOR AT 10:10 Michigan Week, we feel that in- sor of horticulture, ELIVIS PRESLEY IN viting people from all over Cen- "If a plot is properly manag- Market "FRANKIE tral Michigan is a fine way to ed>" Stinson continued, "and all show some real East Lansing the 50 feet by 50 feet is used, AND hospitality." it should take care of the fresh and frozen vegetable require- Shambles JOHNNIE" Saturday morning, traffic will ment of a family of four or five IN COLOR be blocked on MAC Avenue from Albert Avenue to Grand River for a year." Predicted The land was to be prepared SAN FRANCISCO P—Eliot Avenue to make way for a pro- with plowing and discing Monday, Janeway, owner of a New York gram featuring local folksingers The rain, however, caused a de- and folk-dancers. As part of publishing and financial research lay. Stinson says that the land firm, told a news conference this program , J.W. Knapp's should be prepared by the week- Thursday: Dept. Store will present a style end. "The stock market has only ELECTRIC IN THE show, introducing the new spring "N'ext year we hope to have a begun to retreat. By next iU4*ihfeJ year and summer fashions. bigger plot of land available be¬ it will be shambles and we'll CAR HEATERS cause of the growing interest in a be in a money panic." "Greenwich Village Days" will the ldea>'' stinson said, At the conference, preceding begin at 9:30 today and continue Previously the available plots an address at a trade luncheon, through the daylight hours. The were on land owned by Marble Janeway also said: NOW! (2) FIRST RUN COLOR HITS! exhibit will re-open at 9:30 a.m. school. The school, however, is "The best businesses are now Saturday and continue until 5 now in need of the land to con- unable borrow to money from p.m. tlnue building. THE PICTURE YOU HAVE BEEN HEARING ABOUT ON T.V. the best financial institutions. The big investors have already V "V HiCXENS— R ak'\ng a piot of tercvd ne-av " ed. ' but"fte U rhaY r.c: pro¬ gg — wild and exciting! AWARDS f Frondor, is Margaret Fisher, Glencoe, III., fresh¬ duce unemployment "because un¬ BEST *MJSic man. sors The land is rented by a group of MSU profes¬ and graduate students. Photo by Larry Car Ison employment is no longer an index of economic health." Janeway said the Viet Nam war PICTURE ALL SEATS RESERV ED! now is costing $2 billion a month, SEATS NOW ON SALE AT THE will rise to $3 billion a month BEST DIRECTION BOX OFFICE OR MAIL Folksinger Show Tonight before year's end and he re¬ garded additional emergency tax¬ inevitable. qladmer. Eleven top names singing world will assemble in In the folk- for the Folklore Society's first Spring Sing, es as the Erickson Kiva at 8 tonight In what Adviser Charles Smith promises will be "the biggest folk music concert ever in Michi¬ Exceptional Child See Both Features gan," the show will feature gui¬ TONIGHT Tonight at 7:00 and 8:40 tarist Ed Henry, Chuck Taylor, Cwroup To Organize -Saturday_& Sunday- the Nonesuch female trio and 8- The university chapter of the complete shows at year-old Amy Joyce'. National Student Council for Ex- ROBERTTAYLOR FROM 7:00 P.M. 1:00-2:40-4:05-5:45 7:15 and 9:05 Other performers include A1 Finney, blues guitarist; Jim and ceptional Children will hold its organizational meeting at 4 p.m. GERALDINE BROOKS 2 OUTSTAND MG FEATURES! Jean, a student duo; Ron and Dwight, a banjo-guitar blue grass team; and Gloria Hecht, "a Monday, in 507 Erickson Hall. At this meeting the fledgling council will hold elections, de- CHAD EVERETT S© SOX §® OKBlMlEllKfii' green-eyed, long-haired blonde with a voice like Mary of PP&M." Ken Neher, the Honeyman Trio termine the group project, introduce members. The university chapter, formed and . ''story of mi® miwoyfcMxyjs wa? and the Ad Hoc String Band will under the direction of Douglas social ©GOB? FlSlKKSffi] ©Mil® also entertain. Admission to Spring Sing is Gilmore of the special education department, has its parent group protest KM^d ®P OIL 35 cents per person and 50 cents in Lansing. and per couple. The Monday meeting is open to sexual | Smith predicted that the 400- the public, and anyone with an obsession - seat kiva. its steps and floor interest in special education is would be filled for the show. inVited. in a film that eouldnt BRENDA SCOTT be more ' - -""on NOW! 2nd BIG WEEK! ► 33? p?44 Feature Today & Sat. i Marc Lawrence • Ford Rainey BUN1JEL!" A 11^0 P US 1:15-3:25-5:30-7:35-9:45 ACADEMY AWARD WINNER BOURVIL FRANCIS BLANCHE JEAN POIRE' r. HIT NO.(2) FIRST RUN IN COLOR AT 10:25 ][ STARTS WED. 25th JEANNE MOREAU FIRST LANSING SHOWING Starts with a LUIS BUNUEL'S scream...ends with a shocked whisper! 'DEO QRATIAS* thebov DVJ ^ - wmt mCOLOR Extra! Academy Award Cartoon The Dot And The Line" Also "Tarzan and the Volley of Gold" i -J Next- "The Ten Commandments" Friday, May 20, 1966 7 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Red Cedar River Water Band's Open A Mother's Milk To Microbes On Kresge Terra A custom which dates from the bile," a virtuoso piece in the of Kiev," are exciting and majes- The Red Cedar River is two worse until it reaches an ex- There is also some seasonal fluc- sarllest eras of musical history literature of orchestra as well tic closings to a work which, although written for piano, has million times too polluted for traordinary low of about 18 per tuation the river. in the pollution content of the rainy will be perpetuated 4p.m. Sunday, as concert band. drinking, Alvin Jensen, graduate it oxygen near Brody. During when the MSU Concert Band pre- Weber's familiar ion often- and to the achieved popularity piece for either band or symphony student in Fisheries and Wildlife, The chief cause of pollution months the river is less polluted sents an open-air on the parodied "Inv said Thursday. been sewage matter dumped because the river becomes dll- Kresge Art Center Dance" will also be heard on orchestra. luted by rainfall. fitting In case of inclement weather, Jensen said that a sample of the into the Red Cedar which con- Outdoor performances by con- Sunday's program i Red Cedar revealed two million tains nitrogen, phosphorus and The purpose of Jensen's study to determine how much sew- t bands pre-date the period of representative of the early school of German Romanticism. the concert will be held in the parts of bacteria. He said that if other polluting matter, he said. Haydn and Mozart. From the Also included are two inter¬ the river contained just one part The building of the Bogue Street age could be dumped into the riv- classical era on, some of the before the oxygen content was esting works that are not so well Leadership • bacteria that the water would Bridge and other highway con- world's finest composers have ruined and the river would be¬ known. The first of these is a be unfit for drinking. struction has aided in polluting written or had their works tran¬ come contatninated. Toccata by the early Italian mas¬ Jensen said that the RedCedar the Red Cedar. Such construction for outdoor concerts. is polluted before it reaches has left the bottom of the Red He said that much of his study scribed, Sunday's concert, under the di- ter, Giolamo Frescobaldi. This Meet Set depended on the rate at which rection of Leonard Falcone, will Toccata, rearranged for band, campus by sewage drains outside Cedar coated with about two bacteria consume oxygen. He said The Collegiate Council for the of East Lansing. inches of organic polluting silt. present an assortment of such represents Falcone's conviction early music of the United Nations (CCL'N) National Jensen said that he does not that other factors must be taken that the At Hagadorn Road where the n- Student Leadership Institute will Red Cedar enters the MSU cam- know the exact chemical ele- into account, for example, the fact The opening work will be the gan can be presented by < to meet June 11-18 at the United pus, the oxygen content is 75 ments that are causing pollution that fish and any vegetation also "Festive Overture" of Dimitri ' cert band in such a way a Nations Headquarters in New per cent, which is the lowest in the Red Cedar. Shostakovich, a modern Soviet make it doubly llstenable. York. considered to be safe by A s many as 90 samples were composer firmly planted in the The second work, also rarely Attendance at United Nations taken from the Red Cedar, he Brody has helped eliminate much UNDER UNION SKIES--The Activity Band's open air Romantic tradition. Also heard, is Jules M«ss< biologists. po s t - of the problem, but it has i___ concert was held" in the Union Ballroom Tuesday Phaedra."Tliis meetings and discussion groups As the river flows throughtthe said. Samples taken near Haga- raised the oxygen content to 75 featured on the program are two ture to Racine' night due to rain. William C. Moffit conducted the is to provide students with the gets considerably dorn Road revealed tremendous Armenian Dances by Aram Kha- overture was the prelude daily fluctuations in pollution. per cent, he said. concert. Photo by Larry Carlson chaturian, another Soviet com- of incidental music written for opportunity of exploring in depth poser. Khachaturian, widely the play by Massenet, and the those areas of international af- known for the powerful "Sabre overture clearly illustrates the fairs in which they a Dance" from "Gayne," continues powerful style terested. All participants will live at Te with a of t ury French mas- Chemistry to surprise western ears Sarah Lawrence College. Room dash and musical flair that rise Sunday's ci scheduled and board costs $70 plus a $20 directly from his native Armenia. to close with the final registration fee. Two works from the Germanic tions of Modeste Moussorgsky'i For further information stu¬ American literature this sum- contest lor the past seven repertoire have been program¬ dents may call Sally A. Murphy, Two chemi st ry professors "Pictures at an Exhibition.' mer throughout Eastern and eight years, said Senger. med by conductor Falcone. The Malarial have thoroughly revised an or¬ ganic chemistry text which is used by students in medicine, Southern Asia. presents the wards, he will advise the n why they did not win. losers first of these is JohannStrauss's whirling study, "Perpetuum Mo- Floyd Windal, associate pro¬ dentistry, pharmacy, agri¬ fessor of accounting and finance Drugs culture and home economics here. The book, written by Harold administration, has been awarded a scholarship at the 11th annual NEW ! SELF SERVE RESTAURANT OPEN 3 DYNAMIC HITS! FRIDAY AND SATURDAY al adviser on organic alumni banquet of Beta Alpha ADMISSION $1.00 Tested Hart and be Robert D. Schuetz, will published this month. This basic text will replace the one chemistry for a text publishing house and the editor of two pro- Psi, national accounting honor- ry. Windal will study computers AT 6:30 COME EARLY A UCIhlA CAST IIANSINO lilf n_ LA 41 atStanfordUni- — and mathematics JACKSON ,P —More than 50 currently ln use by the depart- fessional journals. Jpprrn inmate volunteers at Sou- versity as a visiting professor. Negro inmate volunteers em Schuetz, the co-author, is a thern Michigan Prison here took The publishers consider the professor in the Chemistry De- part in a drugs, official revealed The inmates test of antimalaria " Thursday. "rs av" took increased s completely revised and uP^d. It emphasizes the area of heterocyclic chemistry and partment and the assistant di- •ector of the Institute of ind Medicine here. Biology tor Jerry M. Anderson, assistant professor of speech of forensics, and direc¬ is one of teachers honored at the Central 12 The man who makes no mistakes! replaces the classic molecular States Speech A ssn. Conference. dosages of two antimalaria drugs structure David Anderson, for a four-month period to test Hart, who has been on the MSU professor of American Thought William A. Bradley, professor 20th CENTURY-FOX - : ,v faculty for twenty years, is the and Language, will lecture c of metallurgy, mechanics and increase anemia, a shortage material science, has received red blood cells. one of 14 annual national awards Dr. George Brewer of theUni- SHOWN 2nd AT 10:40 versity of Michigan, rector, said Negroes were used project di¬ because of greater susceptibility to anemia. He said the tests Author Of 'W from the American Society for Engineering Education. Frank B. Senger, chairman of School of Journalism will At 10 the showed, however, that the dos¬ ages severe can be increased without effects. Speaks present Trucking sales awards at the American Association's annual council advertising awards Monday. Y PSI LA NT I (fi— Eastern It's What's MSU has been in charge of this Michigan University Regents Man with the Golden Arm," will have approved three programs address a conference on "The offering masters degrees in Midwest in Twentieth - Century Happening speech and dramatic arts, math- America" at 10 a.m. today in WKAR Presents ematics, and chemistry educa- the Con Con Room of the Center division: artificial parthogenesis tion. for International Programs. will be discussed at a zoology seminar at 11:30 a.m. today in 'The Early Show9 DETROIT .P.—The State Civil The Latin American students 304 Natural Science Building. Service Commission gave its of MSU will sponsor a round table blessing Thursday to time-and- discussion on, "Opiniones delos Union Board will show the one-half for overtime for 29,000 Professores Americanos acerca vie "Good Neighbor Sam" star- debut on MSU of the state's 35,000 Civil Ser- de la Universidad Latinoameri- ring Jack Lemmon, RomySchnei- WKAR-AM Mi vice workers, starting July 1. cana" at 5 p.m. today in 106 der and Edward G. Robinson at 9 broadcast daily 7-8 o'clock. However, the commission said International Center, tonight and Saturday night on the "The Early Show" will feature legislative approval will be re- Speakers will be: Donald Yates, lawn by the Auditorium. Viewers a special guest each morning, quired before the overtime pay associate professor of romance are to bring their own blankets. along with brief news, sports, instead of straight time or com- languages, John Hunter, profes- Admissi.on is 25 cents. In case of Wftjtbpr r-jipnr; s,.vvj music. t>eT) strung umt ull~c.*vi „5v iS ccanomfcsv «-«<- • inclement weather the film will be tive. kins, associate professor of po¬ shown in the Union. The program will be hosted litical science, and C.W. Minkel, by Richard D. Estell, East Lan- SAGINAW -P—Critical patients ass0ciate director of the Latin Tonight's Humanities record sing graduate student and WKAR- in a crowded little hospital in \merican Studies Center and as- incert will include works by AM-FM station manager; Steve South Viet Nam stand a better sociate professor of geography. Bartok, Janacek and Meuche, East Lansin| senior and chance of surviving today because The presentations and discussion Scarlatti , Tschaikovsky. The concert w'll producer-director; and Gordon American doctor fell in love will be ln Spanish. - with them and found help among be held 7-9 o'clock in 114Besspy Gainer, program director of the Hall. radio station. Milton Powell, assistant pro¬ T fessor of American thought and 2ND BIG WEEK dren and other residents are col- ianguage> ancj his jazz band will lecting money shooting for the on t[,e program at the Wesley MICHIGAN $450 needed for a one-week sup- Foundation( m8 S. Harrison JAMES COBURN ply of Chloromycetin, an anti- Roadj at 7 p,—A New sale at jacobson's beginning at CINEMASCOPE COLOR B* DE LUXE York Central freight which caused an estimated derailment 9.30 a-m- Saturday, ' * » * DEAN $75,000 damage at Three Rivers Muslim Students' Assoc. will has been traced to a pair of 11- meet at 2 p.m. Sunday in Parlor MARTIN Starts Sunday 3rd Feature 12:45 year-old boys, authorities said ct uni0n, to elect officers. in^|||> as MATT HELM 2nd Exciting Hit at 8:27 Thursday. » * * Emory Dailey, Three Rivers ^ foods and nutrition seminar •lllJsNGIsH youth officer, and railroad de- on enZyme-substrate relation- tective said the boys told of ghips to browning in peaches will The Kingpin of All Public Enemies! SINATRA playing with a switch which they be held at 12:40 p.m. today in TREVOR apparently left open into a siding jq2 Home Economics Building, before the accident Mon- * » * HOWARD Experimental initiation of cell VON. RYANfc EXPRESS MSU Film Society Presents 2nd Feature Five Comedies by NICK Max Sennett ADAMS Master comic director of the silent era JYOUNG Sat. May 21 8 P.M. Wilson Auditorium STELLASTEVENSDALIAH LAVI VICTC DILLINGER 50C ' ARTHUR OCONNEIL ROBERT WEBBER JAMES GREGORY The film selections for ROGER CGARMELBTOAMSjCYD CHARISSE ROBERT CONRAD JOHN ASHLEY VICTOR BUONO MRUMMOBW 4 mi. E. of MSU DAN TERRANOVA next fall will be announced 8 Michigan State News. East Lansing. Michigan Friday. May 20. 1966 FAYE UNGER Bishop Urges Doctors To Disobey Abortion Law SAN FRANCISCO (I'PI)— Epis¬ The prominent churchman said Board of Medical Examiners to Those little green men who Ungerings Noises we followed over the lacks, Joe. They're real healthy feet this time, he decides to play Return too far. Just shut your dirty copal Bishop James A. Pike such "civil disobedience is en¬ file charges against 21SanFran- hill came from four bipeds about people. Why, they three weeks ago scurried back never even it safe. He finds a Negro in the traps." Wednesday urged California phy¬ tirely called for. cisco doctors believed to have to Mars to analyze their find¬ two-and-a-half times our height. commit suicide. You know why? bar, sidles over to him, and says, sicians to disobey the state law "Let us hope that it spreads The unscrambler deciphered (Here the Joe grabbed the biped performed therapeutic abortions ings on earthlings returned to Well, just put yourself in the 'Wanna hear a good Polack joke?' that talked about Negroes and against abortion In cases in¬ sufficiently—and openly—so that on women who had contracted planet Earth Thursday for a sec¬ their noises. poor Polack's place. Did you "Well, the Negro knocks the shoved him to the ground.) volving German measles or men¬ the attorney general and the board German measles during preg¬ ond observation. "Hey, did you know Joe here ever try to commit suicide by drunk to the floor, too. The mix¬ tal stress for mothers. of medical examiners dare not a Polack? Aren't you, Joe?" "Get him, Joe." nancy. The log records a second is jumping out of a basement win¬ ed-up drunk gets to his feet and revoke the licenses of a large Medical journals have esti¬ earthling conversation: "Aw, shut up. Can't you ever dow?" Says, 'Man, what did you hit me (We left before they could find leave that Polack rot alone for a us. We still do not understand percentage of the physicians of mated that the chances range Marta 12: This was the trip (Here all the bipeds except for? You can't be Polish.' earthling actions and we do not Augenstein the state, thus risking ever great¬ from 20 to 50 per cent in such of the Polack. change?" the Joe Polack made noises "And the Negro says, 'No, but "Lemme tell you want to encounter earthlings until er outcry from the public who are cases that the baby will be born We landed at night. about Po- Earthlings call laughting.) mah wife's one.' thus denied proper deformed. "I've got one for you. Why does we do. medical at¬ (The Joe throws his drinking tention." Pike said, "The action of these it take ten Polacks to paint container against a tree and (We suggest our scientists Asks S California law forbids abor¬ physicians and of many others house?" a speaks.) study the earthling phenomenon tions except in cases where life of the pregnant woman the is in this state is to be praised as a commendable form of civil Film Drama Studies "Dunno. Why?" "It takes one to hold the brush "Damn it, you guys, Polack jokes 24 hours a day are bad in \Miich conversations end with shoving and hitting as a first step Of Chur in danger. disobedience against the evil law and nine to jack the house up and enough, but when you link Po¬ in understanding these crea¬ BENTON HARBOR f—'The ed Pike, who last week he would future as bishop for northern announc¬ resign in the near which the legislature has had every opportunity to amend. The Episcopal diocese . has Religion, Communism down." ' groom 'Do you at know how to tell the a Polish wedding?" lacks to niggers, that's going tures.) California Episcopalians, issued joined other groups, including The award-winning full-ler.gth many who must decide whether "How?" "how far science car go" in the to become a confirmed Christian Psychiatrist the st itement in the wake of an the California Medical Assn., in feature film "Question 7" will be "He's the one with the new Monday by the urging liberalization of the abor¬ shown at 6 p.m. Sunday at Mar¬ or remain a non-member and at¬ announcement bowling shirt." State attorney general's office. tion law. Stiff opposition has tin Luther Chapel. tend a Communist university. "Yeah, and did you ever hear The state agency said it had come from the Roman Catholic The film concerns a young The film follows a dinner at about the garbage truck in Ham- Leroy Augenstein, professor of biophysics, issued the challenge been asked by the California Church. man in Communist East Ger- 5 p.m. Mrs. Sara Lee Stadelman, di¬ tramck that carried the sign: We cater to Polish weddings." Situational Wednesday ni;! t at a harquet rector of the Performing Arts (The Polack speaks.) In the Sermon On The Mount, controls, limits and clear ex- , Workshop, Detroit, combines "Lay off, you guys, damn it." Jesus asked: amples of standards and values." ROLE IN CULTURE ballet and drama In an interpre¬ "What's the matter, Joe, can't "What man of you, if his son But they feel cheated when adult tation of 15 Shakespearean son¬ asks him for bread, will give him authority-figures fail to lay down you take a joke?" Sunday at St. John Catholic a stone?" nets "Just lay off." explicity guidelines which they Holy Spirit To Student Center. "We're It was a rhetorical question. can "fight against outwardly, and just getting started. The Shakespearean presenta¬ Listen, I've got one just for you, The implication was that no par¬ inwardly comply with." tion, "Dark Lady Within," is the Joe, my friend. ent would be so cruel. last In the spring series of 7:30 "You see, this drunk goes into But a noted psychiatrist de¬ The Rev. Calvin S. M'iefyt entire seminar and baby-sitting of University Reformed Church, \nn Arbor, will lead discussion^ for those bringing small chil¬ dren. Reservations for the supper p.m. Sunday forums at St. John's. Drawing on her training at Columbia University, Pasadena a bar, taps a guy on the shoulder and says 'I've got a good Polack joke to tell ya.' The guy hauls clares that many parents today are ren guilty of giving their child¬ stones when they hunger for Law-giving of how the Holy Spirit works in Playhouse and Yale University off and belts the drunk one. 'I'rn bread. Holiday culture and in individuals Satur¬ can be made by contacting the School of Drama, Mrs. Stadel¬ Polish,' he tells the drunk. Dr. Graham B. Blaine Jr., chief day at a conference at East Lan¬ church office. East Lansing has written and directed of man a "Well, the drunk pulls him¬ psychiatry at Harvard Univer¬ sing Trinity Church. Trinity Church is located at 120 number of original plays. self to his feet and tries to tell sity Health Services, told a re¬ The Jewish holiday of Shavuot, The Saturday conference is the Spartan Ave., East Lansing. She is also a veteran actress, the bartender the joke, but the cent meeting of the Academy of Eighth Annual Seminar on Chris¬ Beginning in 1961 with a nu¬ which commemorates the giving both on and off Broadway. bartender clobbers him cause Religion and Mental Health that of the Ten Commandments to tian Thought. cleus of 30 people, Rev. Malefyt ipulatlon of here The presentation follows a din¬ he's Polish too. the figurative substitution takes Malefyt will give a formal built up a university reformed Moses on Mount Sinai, will begin said. ner at 6:45 p.m. "So when the drunk gets his place when children seek moral at sunset Tuesday. must help forr ..Jdress , "The Holy Spirit and church at Ann Arbor that now guidance. Culture," at 2 p.m. Open dis¬ draws 500 people for services The holiday is celebrated for What young people need and cussion will follow. weekly. two days by Orthodox and Conser¬ Augenstein. "It is important to He will also lead off discus¬ sion with addresses on "The Malefyt, 22 ordination, was at the time of his then the youngest Quintet Asked To Festival secretly want, he said, are vative Jews and for one day by "clearly-defined guidelines." Reform Jews. get the proper guidance and know¬ But what they often get—from minister of his denomination, the Shavuot began as an agricul¬ ledge :o young people who could Holy Spirit and Personal Iden¬ Michigan State's Richard's The group, which was to leave churches as well as from par¬ tural festival marking the gath¬ be the scientists and provide tity" at 4 p.m. and "The Ful¬ Reformed Church of America. Quintet, formerly the Faculty the campus Thursday, was to ents—is alot of vague talk about ness of the Spirit'1 at 7 p.m. He received his Th.B. degree Woodwind Quintet, has been in- perform two concerts enroute ering of the first crops of spring The 7 p.m. session will include from Westminister Theological vited to perform Sunday at the morality being dependent upon wheat and barley. It is referred to the festival—one at Youngs- circumstances. American Music Festival held to in the Bible (Numbers 28:26) a study of the tongues move- Seminary, Philadelphia, in 1948. town (Ohio) University last night Earlier this year he received at the National Gallery of Art Theologians who strive for as "The Feast of the Harvest." and one at Frostburg (Md.) State his doctorate degree from Har¬ in modernity may believe that Over the centuries, it acquired to the U.S. Senate and now seeks CALVIN MALE: FYT Washington, D.C. Teachers College today. vard they're appealing to youngpeople additional meanings. Among oth¬ a State Board of Education post. University. Comprising the quintet are: when they assure them that the er things, it is regarded as the Services 10 & 11 a.m.6 Elsa Ludewig, clarinet; Ramona First Christian &7p.m. Central Methodist only absolute requirement of birthday of King* David. But its ! UNIVERSITY CENTRAL Across From the Capitol Dahlborg, flute; Douglas Camp¬ bell, French horn; Edgar L. Kirk, Christian morality is to love principal significance today is Reformed Church 9:00 A.M. Prayer Group God. But, in fact, they are "fail¬ as a festival of thanksgiving for BAPTIST CHURCH bassoon; and Daniel Stolper, FREE METHODIST Mary-Sabina Chapel ing to provide the firm guidance the Torah, or law. 240 Marshall St., Lansing oboe. Assisting will be Theodore that young people need and in¬ WORSHIP SERVICE In Conservative and Reform CHURCH Johnson, violin, oftheMSU Beau¬ wardly seek." Kev. John M. Hofman, Pastor (9:45 and 11:15) mont String Quartet. synagogues, Shavuot is a tradi- t university Morning Service 9;00 and 11:1 "You don't have time to study tional time for confirmation (WJIM 10:15 a.m.) Orchestral, vocal, cham¬ lutheran church 828 N. Wash, at Oakland the situation in the context of the Sunday School 10:15 "People In A Hurry" ber and piano music will be fea¬ ceremonies in which young men alc-lca love of God when you're in the Worship 1U:UU a-m- Evening Service 7] Follow Highway 43 to Lansing David S. Yoh tured at the festival. and women who have completed back of an automobile," he ob¬ Church School 11:10 a.m. Minister: Rev. Howard C. Artz Crib Nursery, So Bring The their religious education are Those in need of transporta¬ served. blessed by their rabbis and are Nursery Provided— tion call Baby. Take home a copy of the University He said young people, "be¬ Mr. Henry Bosch received into adult 10:00-12:00 a.m., - What Then Are We To Do?" membership of their need to feel self- at American Legior. Center ED 2-2223 or Rev. Hofman sheet for study and application. Seventh-Day cause reliant, in their congregations. 8:15, 9:15, 10:30 and 11:30 at 5-3650. cannot openly ask for Campus Bus Service Adventist Church St. Johns Student P University Methodist Kirnberly Downs Temporarily Meeting at Edgewood United First Church of First Peoples Church Church of Christ University Lutheran Church Parish Presbyterian 469 North Hagadorn Road East Lansing Church Division and Ann Sts. 327 M.A.C. Christ, Scientist Ottawa and Chestnut 1120 s. Harrison Rd. 1007 Kimberly Drive, Lansing (5 blocks north of Grand River) Interdenominational SATURDAY SERVICES Phone ED 7-9778 (2 blocks W. of Frandor WORSHIP SERVICE 9:45 g. 11:15 Shopping Center on 9:30 a.m. and 11 a.m. Guest Speaker: E. Grand River) Sunday Masses iday Service 11 a.r Sunday, May 22 WORSHIP SERVICE sunday SERVICES Sermon IV 9-7130 Saturday, May 21 Ministers "What Would You Like?" Sermon by "Soul and Body" 9:30 a.m. and 11:00 a.m. SUNDAY SERVICES Pastor Lemon SUNDAY SCHOOL Dr. Glenn M. Frye Rev. Truman A. Morrison at the State Theater and Morning Worship 10:00 a.m. "Love, Sex "That Next Step" Bible Church School Wilson M. Tennant Study 11:00 a.m. Evening Worship 19:30 and 11 a.m.-crlb room Saint Andrew Eastern ; (9;30 i 11-Universit) & Dr. Wallace Robertson 6:00 p.m. Marriage" CHURCH SCHOOL WQRSHlP-9:45 & 11:15 a.n Each through Senior high. WEDNESDA Wednesday evening Bible Sunday listen to "The Edgewood University Group Orthodox Church Voice of Prophecy," 9:30 Preaching 9:30 and 11:00 Nursery During Services Study 7:30 p.m. a.m., 5:30 p.m. Supper and program. WOAP, (1080 kc.) and "Faith Bus Schedule and Student Center CHURCH SCHOOL For Transportation Call Dr. Seth C. Morrow Crib through third grade i For Today," Channel 8 at 8:30 FE 9-8190 10:35-10:40 Conrad 1216 Greencrest, E,L. Free Public church bldg. 4th-12th grade i ED 2-1900 a.m.. Channel 2 at 10:30 a.m. 10:40-10:45 Lot between Reading Room 9:45 10:45 a.m.-Program or ED 2-2434 134 West Grand River Union bldg. for all ages McDonell & W. Holmes Divine Liturgy Sunday 9:30 a.m. ; A warm and friendly welcome OPEN 10:45-10:50 Owen, Shaw Hall awaits you at FlrstPresbyterian 11:15 a.m.-Chlldren, 2-11 EPISCOPAL SERVICES W eekdays—9-5 p.m. Affiliated with the Vespers and Confessions- years 9:45 Membership Class United Church of Christ, Sat. 6:30 p.m. "Collegiate Fellowship" Supper 6 p.m.-50^ j Evenings 7 p.m.-9 p.m. 6:00 p.m. Free bus transportation 15 to ALUMNI MEMORIAL CHAPEL Congregational-Christian. Program Following 30 minutes before each ser¬ Evangelical, Reformed, For Transportation Call: Supper - 50^ Holy Communion & Sermon 9:30 a.m. I Chi vice around the campus. WELCOME!! 355-8084, 489-0343, 372-3S67 ?adir.g j Alumni Chapel ALL SAINTS CHURCH LUTHERAN WORSHIP (800 Abbott Road) t CASTflliriSTCR PRCSBYTCRian CfiURCh Martin Luther Chapel Lutheran Student Center Sundays 'God And The Moral Crises" 444 Abbott Road Two Blocks North of Student Union 8:00 A.M. 9:00 A.M. Holy Communion 1315 Abbott Rd. cost ransinc. cmcmcarj Holy Communion and Sermon SUNDAY SCHEDULE Spec, il Music Featuring, Owen Nlunk, Baritone 11:00 A.M. Morning Prayer and Sermon 9:30 and 11:00 Holy Eucharist Worship Services— — 9:00 and 11:00 a.m. SUNDAY 7:00 Nursery both services. Sunday School 9:30 Church School, Cribbery-Third Grade —9:00 and 11:00a.m. Church School, Fourth Grade-Adults, Students — 10:00 a.m. Open House 3-5 p.m. SOUTH BAPTIST CHURCH Rev. Theodore Bundenthal, Lutheran Chaplain ALUMNI MEMORIAL CHAPEL 1518 s. Washington Lansing For transportation phone 332-6271 or 332-8901 Special Welcome to Parents and Alumni WORSHIP SERVICES Free Bus Service Rev. R. L. Moreland - MINISTERS - Rev. H. G. Beach COLLEGE BIBLE CLASS 9:45 A.M. WOULD YOU LIKE TO KNOW ABOUT THE MORMON CHURCH? TRINITY CHURCH THOUGHT-PROVOKING, BIBLE CENTERED TEACHING Church Of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints . General Protestant Service 120 Spartan Ave. Interdenominational 431 E. Saginaw-East of Abbott Rd. Speaker: Ernest F. Dunn, SUNDAY WORSHIP SERVICES - Acting Director of Wesley Foundation 9:45 University Classes 11:00 A.M -Christ! Who Is He?" 4 9:00 A.M. Priesthood Meeting EAST'LANSING 8:30 & 11:00 Morning Worship 10:30 A.M. Sunday School CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE "Divine Blueprints For The Church" 8:30 P.M. 5:00 P.M. Sacrament Meeting Guest Speaker 149 Highland Ave.. East Lansing Dr. Howard Sugden, Evening Worship "A Challenge To The Council" Deseret Club Musical Festival Election Of The Council by Music Department of Church REFRESHMENTS AND FELLOWSHIP FOLLOWING Max W. Craner , Director 332-8465 6:00 p.m. Will meet, Tues, andThurs, 4-5 P.M. Trinity Collegiate Fellowship 7:00 p.m. CALL IV 2-0754 For Free Bus "One Hour of Sermon and Song" Service Information Wed., Eve. 7-9 p.m. Memorial Chapel M.S.U. Campus Dr. Howard Sugden. Pastor Dr. Ted Ward, Minister Of Music For Transportation Phone 332- 1446 PASTORS: E. Eugene Williams, David L. Erb, Norman R. Piersma Rev. Alvin VISITORS WELCOME-CALL 355-8102 FOR RIDES OR 332-8465 Jones, Minister of Education And Youth Rev. Glenn A. Chaffee. Pastor FREE BUS SERVICE- See schedule in your dorm. Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, May 20, 1966 9 Board Of Trustees Approves The Board of Trustees gave approval Thursday to 53 appoint¬ American thought and language; Kenneth J. Harrow, 129 Faculty, Staff Changes nomics, to the Consortium for the Study of Nigerian Rural Deveop- E. Kawal, Instructor, forest cliffe, associate professor, products, Aug. 31; Byron M. Rad- forest product#, Aug. 31; Michael ments; 19 leaves; 26 transfers, assignments and miscellaneous humanities; Walter R. Martin, instructor, humanities; ment, April 16 to May 15; J. Oliver Hall, professor, social science, Steig, assistant professor, English, Aug. 31; Huling E. USSery, , William J. Huff, assistant professor, natural science; Wesley to the Nigeria Program, July 16 to July 15, 1968; Archibald B. Shaw, changes; 4 promotions; 2 retirements; and 25 resignations and assistant professor, English, Aug. 31; Elizabeth R. Redstone, in¬ terminations. Krawiec, assistant professor, natural science; Lois J. Zimring, professor and chairman, administration and higher education, to the Thailand Project, April 21 to June 16. structor, business law and office administration, Aug. 31; Carl E. The Board held its monthly meeting at MSU's Gull Lake Bio¬ assistant professor, natural science. Noble, professor and director, Institute for International Business Appointments also were approved for: John N. Collins, instruc¬ Reassignments were approved for: Lewis K. Zerby, professor, logical Station. Management Studies, June 30; Elizabeth M. Drews, professor, coun¬ tor, social science, political science and African Studies Center; philosophy, to the Nigeria Program, July 1 to July 31; Kullervo Louhi, professor and associate dean, business, to the Turkey seling, personnel services and educational psychology, Aug. 31. Ronald Puhek, instructor, social science; Charles H. Sander, as¬ Other resignations and terminations included: Thomas L. Drake, Appointments sistant professor, pathology, July 1; Henry W. Overbeck, assis¬ Project, Aug. 1 to July 31, 1967. In other actions, the board: appointed Mary Virginia Moore assistant professor, electrical engineering, June 30; KatherineG. tant professor, physiology and medicine, July 1; Judith E. Hall, Appointments approved included (effective Sept. 1 unless other¬ chairman of business law and office administration, June 1; re¬ Davenport, instructor, home management and child development, instructor, intramurals and health, physical education and rec¬ wise noted): Charles D. Kesner, district horticultural agent, instated Robert L. Green, associate professor, counseling, per¬ Aug. 31; Huda J. Giddens, instructor, home management and child reation; William Borodacz, librarian, Library, Aug. 1; Ina L. Northwest District; Larry J. Connor, assistant professor (re¬ sonnel services and educational psychology, Sept. i (ne naa oeen development, Aug. 31; Nancy K. Ginnings, instructor, home man¬ Twyman, librarian, Library, Aug. 1. agement and child development, June 30; Barbara Lee Loder, in¬ search) agricultural economics, Aug. 1; Walter M. Urbain, pro¬ on leave); corrected the title of Mary J.E. Woodward to assistant fessor, food science, July 1; William H. Carlson, assistant pro¬ structor, textiles, clothing and related arts, Aug. 31; Robert D. professor (extension), and program leader, 4-H youth programs, fessor (research, extension), horticulture, June 7; Donald A. Dun¬ Leaves Feb. 1; designated Paul C. Morrison, professor, as acting chair¬ Bullard, assistant professor, textiles, clothing and related arts, bar, instructor, horticulture, June 1; Howard A. Tanner, profes¬ The board approved sabbatical leaves for: Richard S. Austin, man, geography, June 21 to Sept. 20; changed the title of Bernard Aug. 31. sor and director, natural resources, July 1; Fred R. Schwartz, V. Alfredson from professor and acting chairman, pharmacology The board also approved resignations and terminations for: agricultural agent, Mason County, July 16 to Sept. 30, to com¬ associate professor, art; Joan V. Smith, associate professor, art. and physiology departments, to professor, pharmacology, July 1; Richard D. Neff, assistant professor, Science and Mathematics plete M.S. degree at MSU; Ellsworth A. Netherton, farm man¬ The following were appointed assistant professors of English, agement agent, Cooperative Extension Service, June 1 to Sept. reinstated Charles R. Kaufman, Cooperative Extension Service, Teaching Center, June 30; Charles R. Adrian, professor and effective Sept. 1: E. Frederick Carlisle, Avron Fleishman, Barry 30, to study in Chicago, Indianapolis and Milwaukee; Alvin L. Rip- July 1 (he had been on leave). chairman, political science, and professor, continuing education, E. Gross, Philip C. McGuire and Randal F. Robinson. June 30; Alfred G. Meyer, professor, political science, Aug. 31; pen, associate professor (extension), food science, Nov. 1 to April Other Sept. 1 appointees included: William B. Hixson Jr., in¬ Robert G. Scigliano, professor, political .science, Aug. 31; David 30, 1967, to visit food laboratories in the U.S. and to study at Retirement structor, history and Justin S. Morrill College; Ruth Brend, MSU; Bernard J. Paris, associate professor, English, Jan. 1, 1967, Gottlieb, associate professor, sociology and secondary education assistant professor, Linguistics and Oriental and African Lan¬ and curriculum, May 31; Frederick Feied, instructor, American to June 30, 1967, to complete a book. Retirements, effective July 1, 1967, were approved for: Carl guages; Robert A. Elson, assistant professor, music; Eunice A. Other sabbaticals were approved for: Lendal H. Kotschevar, L. Strong, associate professor, business law and office adminis¬ thought and language, May 31. Other resignations and terminations, effective Aug. 31, were Wilcox, instructor, music; Mildred Zimmerman, instructor, mu¬ professor, hotel, restaurant and institutional management, Oct. 1 tration; and Stebelton H. Nulle, professor, humanities. Strong, sic; John T. Cummings, assistant professor, romance languages; to March 31, 1967, to gather data for textbook; Alden C. Olson, who Joined MSU in 1949, will serve a one-year consultantship approved for: Wallace P. Strauss, associate professor, American John W. Bonge, assistant professor, management. associate professor, accounting and financial administration, Oct. beginning this July 1, and Nulle, an MSU faculty member since thought and language; Daniel Walden, assistant professor, Ameri¬ can thought and language; Irving H. Smith, assistant professor, Also appointed were (Sept. 1 unless otherwise noted): Eugene 1 to March 31, 1967, to study at financial centers; Roland F. Sal- 1945, will serve a six-months' consultantship beginning Jan. 1, 1967. humanities; Maurice Finkel, assistant professor, natural science; C. Beck Jr., instructor, advertising; Samuel A. Moore II, asso¬ monson, professor, accounting and financial administration, April Resignations and terminations approved included: Donald L. Charles Crapo, instructor, social science. ciate professor, administration and higher education and con¬ 1, 1967, to June 30, 1967, to study and write in East Lansing; Dal- Stormer, program specialist, 4-H youth programs, July 31; Donald tinuing education, June 1; David C. Smith, assistant professor, ton E. McFarland, professor and chairman, management, Jan. 1, administration and higher education; Joe L. Byers, associate 1967, to March 31, 1967, to be visiting scholar at Arizona State professor, counseling, personnel services and educational psy¬ University; Austen J. Smith, professor, metallurgy, mechanics chology; Norman T. Bell, assistant professor, Learning Systems Institute; Dale V. Alam, assistant professor, secondary educa¬ tion and curriculum; Marvin E. Grandstaff, assistant professor, secondary education and curriculum; Jacob Stern, associate pro¬ and materials science, April 1, 1967, to June 30, 1967, to study and travel in Europe. Other leaves approved included: Maurice E. Voland, 4-H youth a^ent, Muskegon County, Oct 1 to Sept. 30, 1967, to study for Grants Commission Totalgranted $53,769 for the research. Gifts and grants totaling $1,- course and transmissibility of fessor, secondary education and curriculum. Ph.D. at MSU; Robert J. Geist, professor, English, Sept. 1 to The board also accepted grants 246,435.88 were acceptedThurs- canine leukemia and its rela¬ a study in the Dept. of Food Appointments also were approved for: James A. Resh, assis¬ Aug. 31, 1967, to write textbook; Arthur J.M. Smith, professor, Science to extend the shelf life for scholarships totaling $22,- tant professor, dean of engineering office; Rita Zemach, assis¬ English, and poet in residence, Sept. 1 to Aug. 31, 1967, to be day by Michigan State Univer¬ tionship to human leukemia. Gordon A. Sabine, vice presi¬ of fruits and vegetables. The re¬ 152.66. tant professor, dean of engineering office; Jacob Vinocur, asso¬ visiting professor at Dalhousie University; Milton C. Taylor, pro¬ sity's Board of Trustees. dent for special projects atMSU, search'Will center on the irradi¬ The National Cancer Institute ciate dean, graduate school, and professor, English, June 1; fessor, economics and continuing education, Sept. 1 to Aug. 31, The Barbara Ferrar, instructor (research, extension) home man¬ 1967, to serve on staff at the University of Ubadan, Nigeria. of Bethesda, Md., granted $468,- will administer a $100,000 grant ation of the fruits and vegetables Questing Beast from the Dept. of Health, Educa¬ with a cobalt 60 source pro¬ 495 for continued support of a agement and child development, July 1; Carol Lou Young, in¬ Also granted leaves were: Byron H. Von Roekel, professor, vided 211 Abbott Road- leukemia research project. Re¬ tion, arid Welfare for a project by the AEC. Bernard S. structor, home management and child development. elementary and special education, June 27 to July 8, to direct Next to State Theatre searchers under the direction of called 'MEMO" (More Education, Schweigert, department chair¬ Additional appointments included: Hilliard Jason, director, med¬ a workshop in San Diego, Calif.; Henrietta Eppink, assistant pro¬ Tues.-Sat., 10:30-5:30 Dr. Gabel H, Conner, professor More Opportunity). man, Pericles Markakis and ical education research and development, and associate professor, fessor, nursing, Sept. 1 to Dec. 31, to continue studies at Wayne Wed.-'til 8:00, Closed Mon. The Richard C. Nicholas will conduct medicine and Human Learning Research Institute, July 1; Lee Up- State University; Charles H. Kraft, assistant professor, African of surgery and medicine in the program, Sabine points College of V eterinary Medicine, out, is aimed at that half of Mich¬ craft, assistant professor, Justin S. Morrill College, July 1; Studies Center, and Linguistics and Oriental and African Lan¬ David K. Winter, assistant professor, Justin S. Morrill College; Chi Yeung Lo, assistant professor, mathematics; Gerald D. Lud- guages, Sept. 1 to Aug. 31,1967, to accept Fulbright Award for re¬ search in Northern Nigeria. are attempting to determine the igan's high school students who could profit from some post- secondary education, but who fail Beach Boys den, assistant professor, mathematics; Glenn D. Berkheimer, as¬ Other leaves were approved fo: David Stoller, librarian, Li¬ to continue or drop out before sistant professor, Science and Mathematics Teaching Center. Also sor, appointed were: Eugene L. Huddleston, American thought and language; Maurice assistant profes- N. Hungiville, in- brary, June 20 to Aug. 12, to study a: Longwood Gardens, Pa.; Thomas A. Collins, instructor, continuing* education, June 16 to Sept. 25, to serve with Peace Corps training program, Clare- Kell Awarded finishing high school. MEMO, he explains, will seek to identify Special! and encourage greater perfor¬ mont, Calif.; Carl Goldschmidt, associate professor, contin¬ uing education, and urban planning and landscape architecture, Psi Chi Honor mance by students in this group who appear to have the drive and Their New July 1 to Aug. 31, 1967, to continue work on Office of Civil Defense motivation to succeed in post- Contract through University of Tennessee. William L. Kell, professor of secondary education. Cooperat¬ psychology and assistant director ing in the MEMO program are "Pet Sounds" Transfers of the Counseling Center, was 24 community colleges in Michi¬ The Board approved these transfers: Martin Davenport, county agricultural agent to natural resources agent, Iosco County, from unanimously elected "Teacher of gan. the Year" by the MSU chapter of A study of electroacoustic Album Psi Chi, the national student waves "in ionized gas will be un¬ Oct. 1, 1965; Stanely A. Mahaffy, from agricultural agent to county psychology honorary. dertaken by Kun-Mu Chen, as¬ agricultural agent, Genesee County, Oct. 1, 1965; J.B. Poffen- sociate professor of electrical berger, from agricultural agent to county agricultural agent, Presque Isle County, Dec. 1, 1965. Tranfers were also approved for: Valeria M. Owsiany, home The award, based on teaching engineering, under a $55,100 excellence, was originated by grant from the National Science Psi Chi in 1960. Foundation. The research is in¬ *2.39 economist, from Van Buren County to Van Buren, Cass and Berrien counties, April 1; Carroll H. Wamhoff, from 4-H youth Kell, who teaches graduate lev¬ tended to yield information that With This psychology and psychother¬ nomena in explanations of phe¬ will add to agent, Huron, Tuscola and Sanilac counties to program assistant, el 4-H youth programs, June 1; Albert S. Mowery, from associate apy, coordinates the internships space. v- COUPON The Division of Isotopes De¬ professor, Cooperative Extension Service and continuing educa¬ of the graduate students and sup¬ velopment of the Atomic Energy tion to professor, continuing education, May 16. ervises practicums in clinical psychology. "GOOD NEIGHBOR ANDRE'S Assignment This mon t!i "Impact and RECORD SHOP The board approved dual assignments in Justin S. Morrill College Change: A Study of Community SAM" for the following: Donald N. Baker, assistant professor, history, Relations," a book co-authored S. Wash, off Kalamazoo Sept. 1 to Dec. 31; Marjorie E. GeSfcer, associate professor, by Kell and William Mueller, 489-9423 31, 1967; Paul J. Hauben, assis¬ also of the psychology depart¬ v\ / Fri. & Sat. history, Jan. 1, 1967, to March "Pet Sounds" tant professor, history, April 1, 1967 to July 31, 1967; Alan L. ment, will be published. ^ May 20 S 21 Scljaffer, .assistant professor, history, Sept. 1 to Aug. 31, 1967. A? 9;00 I . p.m. Also given dual assigranelKs ft'Momli iShkj! '-i *v<>' Pickering of Spartan study at the University of Chi¬ On Grass Beside EXPANDING A LOT —David Aug. 31, 1967) were: Maurice A. Crane, associate professor, it# * Village watches as a Kegle Construction Co. worker humanities; Frederick I. Kaplan, associate professor, humani¬ cago, will officially be present¬ the Auditorium ed as "Teacher of the Year" puts in new parking bays to solve some of the parking ties; Karl F. Thompson, professor, humanities. to his colleagues at the1 depart¬ Admission 20£ j^ ' shortage there. Photo by Bob Barit July 1 promotions approved included: Louis F. Twardzik, to ment picnic Saturday. Sponsored by Union Spore Lucy has been crabby all clay . . . associate professor, resource development; John E. Kraeer III, to assistant professor, business law and office administration; Except for the one bright spot in the Spink, to assistant professor, Biology Research Center; Presenting The Drinking Song for Sprite: day when we Stopped at a good old Tonight Gordon Thetas Serenade E. Cleland, to assistant professor, anthropology, and Detroit freshman; Charles curator in MSU Museum. "ROAR, SOFT-DRINK, ROAR!" McDonald's drive-in for a McDouble Having initiated seven new verne Key, The board approved these assignments: Rollow W. Van Pelt, burger, french fries and a big coke. members into their ranks, mem¬ Alma Walker, Valhalla, N.Y., assistant professor, to veterinary surgery and medicine and path¬ (To the tune of "Barbara Fritchie") I even let her eat the lightest ones. bers of Delta Sigma Theta soror¬ junior; Tonya Weatherford, Al¬ ology, Feb. 1 to Jan. 31, 1967; James D. Shaffer, professor (re¬ ity will serenade their three bion sophomore; Kathleen Wil¬ search), agricultural economics, to Latin American Studies Center, It looks like this trip, is going to sweethearts and give a brief son, Detroit freshman; and San¬ dra Wilson, Saginaw sophomore. April 26 to May 8; Glenn L. Johnson, professor, agricultural eco- need lots of stops at McDonald's . . . concert at Beaumont Tower to¬ Following the concert at 8:15 Your Friend. Linus. night. New members of the sorority, p.m. Friday, the girls will sere¬ which recently was a winner in nade Andre their Lee of three sweethearts, Alpha Phi Alpha, Students For A Democratic Society the Greek Sing competition, are: Ronnye Covington, Chicago Sterling Armstrong of Omega Psi Phi and Donnell Moorer of Kap¬ Presents Traditionally, a lusty, rousing fight song is Heights, 111., freshman; Synka de rigeur for every worthy cause and institution. Curtis, Detroit sophomore; La- pa Alpha Psi. But we wrote a song for Sprite anyway. We'd like you Elektra Recording Artist to sing it while drinking Sprite, though this may cause some choking and coughing. So what? It's all in good, clean fun. And speaking of good, clean things, what about the taste of Sprite? It's good. It's PHIL OCHS clean. However, good clean things may not exactly be your idea of jollies. In that case, remember that Sprite is also very refreshing. "Tart and tingling," in fact. And very collegiate. And maybe we'd better in Concert quit while we're ahead. So here it is. The Drinking Song For Sprite. And if you can get a group together to sing it--we'd be very surprised. Hill Auditorium Roar, soft drink, roar! ^ You're the loudest soft drink University of Michigan we ever sawr! So tart and tingling, they Down couldn't keep you quiet: Friday, May 20, 8:30 p.m. The perfect drink, guy, To sit and think by, Or to bring instant refreshment QUIET ""Sh To any campus riot! Ooooooh-- Roar, soft drink, roar! Flip your cap, hiss and bubble, fizz and gush! Oh we can't think Tickets: $3-$2.50-$2 Of any drink That we would rather sit with! available at door and Or (if we feel like loitering) to hang out in the strit with! Or sleep through English lit' with ANN ARBOR Roar! Soft drink! Roar! Discount Records Yeahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh, SPRITE! Centicore Bookstor FOX'S in EAST PARAMOUNT NEWS LANSING SPRITE. TINGLING. SO TART AND WE JUST COULDN'T KEEP IT QUIET. Convenient Terms Available LANSING-EAST LANSING Frandor Shopping Center & 203 S. Washington 10 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday. May 20, 1966 Robinson Asks White-Negro Rights Action "Why are so many of us who groes, they too will have abetter he said. Negroes today have become fed cent of the people in the world By BOBBY SODEN 'have it made' Involving our¬ understanding," Robinson said. "I am positive that we have up with these Incidents designed are colored. State News Staff Writer provoke them, he continued. "Chinese Communist leaders selves in equal opportunity?" he "Too many are fearful of people many dedicated policemen work¬ to asked. in minority groups." ing throughout the country." "We must establish some kind are asking that the non-whites Jackie Robinson, who has been Higher income Negroes, such "When I was young I was some¬ "When I in of communication or rapport be¬ band together to overthrow those named to the Baseball Hall of was Birmingham, as the late Nat King Cole, and what fearful of the police in my we were told that all a Negro tween Negroes and whites," he who have oppressed them for so Fame, asked that whites and Negroes unite to work for mi¬ Willy Mays, "are all subjected area," he continued. "1 had heard had to do to get arrested was said. long, he said. nority group rights in his ad¬ to the same kind of treatment stories about them, as they had go outside," he said. "When we The Negro is more interested Fortunately, Negroes in Am¬ that any Negro in this country heard stories about us." went out, a police officer delib¬ in being your brother than your erica are not looking at what dress to the National Institute on Police and Community Relations is," he continued. "Only a few policemen take erately tried to provoke an in¬ brother-in-law, Robinson said. happened yesterday, Robinson "If police can understand the advantage of their blue uniforms cident with us." We must take a good look at the said. The Negro is not interested at Kellogg Center Thursday af- desires and ambitions of Ne¬ and bring aboutpollcebrutality," Police must understand that world, Robinson said. Eighty per in getting back. The 12th annual institute has brought to MSU 400 police ad¬ ministrators and community Top Educators leaders from over 30 states.The six-day conference will conclude HRI HONORS—James Lappe, right, accepts the this afternoon. I ). Minor Corp. achievement award to the out¬ "We must join together and standing senior at Tuesday's annual Honors Night work together to face the prob¬ for the School of Five internationally prominent will retire from MSU July 1. lege of Education. cellor of the University of Mon¬ lege of Education's first retiree Hotel, Restaurant and Institutional lems which exist," Robinson educators will receive distin¬ Floyd W. Reeves, distinguish¬ The speaker for the 6:30 p.m. tana and past president of Mon¬ in July. He is a noted specialist Management. Photo by Chuck Michaels said. "We are not going to allow tana State in the field of educational guished service awards Saturday ed professor emeritus of educa¬ banquet at Kellogg Center will University. Before mea- the Negro to be held down any- at the annual spring recognition tion. be Francis S. Chase, former coming to MSU, he served for 11 banquet of Phi Delta Kappa, pro¬ Carleton Washburne, profes¬ dean of the graduate school of years as professor and dean of Before coming to- MSU, he Any group of people that wants to hold the Negro down must be down themselves, he said. This fessional education fraternity, here. sor and emeritus of administration higher education. education at the University of" •education Chicago and currently professor sity. at New York Univer¬ taught high school science, and was on the faculties of Columbia Bias In Housing George S. Counts, former MSI' of education at New York Uni¬ An articulate spokesman for University, Minnesota and Rhode The award recipients include (cont from page I) group will hold the country down. education, Melby Island State College. Noll is a four faculty members and one distinguished professor of educa¬ versity. contemporary "1 am grateful for the oppor¬ former Fulbright lecturer and national origin within the juris¬ If investigation concluded that former educator. They are: tion and now distinguished pro¬ In addition to the awards pre¬ Is active as a speaker and writer tunities that have been given author of several books and ar¬ diction of the City of East Lan¬ the violation had, in fact, Ernest O. Nlelby, distinguish¬ fessor at Southern Illinois Uni¬ sentations and Chase's address, on topics ranging from education¬ me," he continued. "But not so 75 MSU graduate students and al inequality to the role of educa¬ ticles for professional journals. sing are contrary to law." occurred, the commission would ed professor of administration versity. grateful that I will sit idly by Each of the honorees will re¬ area professional educators vvill tion in the nation's future as a Reeves, whose career includes Though the proposed amend¬ make an attempt to conciliate and higher education. while the majority of Negroes ment contains no punitive mea¬ the grievance. Victor H. Noll, professor of ceive plaques as the first win¬ be initiated into the fraternity. world power. university teaching and state, na¬ aren't making enough to keep Noll, an MSU faculty member tional and international service, sures in itself, a procedure for ners of the awards cosponsored Melby, who joined the MSU fac¬ If the commission them out of the poverty classi¬ counseling, personnel services was unsuc¬ since 1938, will become the Col- joined MSU in 1953 as distin¬ expressing grievances was also and educational psychology, who by Phi Delta Kappa and the Col¬ ulty in 1956, is a former chan¬ cessful in eliminating the alleged fication." outlined by the Commission. guished professor and consultant unlawful practice, the problem to the president. The person allegedly discrim¬ would be passed on, with recom¬ inated against would file his com¬ He has taught at Transylvania mendation by the commission, to College and the universities of plaint with the Human Relations the city attorney. Injunctive re¬ Commission which would attempt Kentucky and Chicago, and serv¬ lief might, in turn, be sought by ed with the Tennessee Valley to determine whether a violation the city attorney in the Circuit $ of the ordinance had occurred. Authority, in the executive of¬ Court of Ingham County. fice of the U.S. President, with The ELPOA passed a motion to the Office of Price Administra¬ tion and on several other Presi¬ meet privately with the City dent's committees. Washburne joined the Michigan 'Paper' (continued from page I) Council 31, members at 7 p.m. May after that time had been offered to them by Mayor Gor¬ • State faculty in 1961. He was print shop in Highland, Ind., a don L. Thomas, said Mrs. Step¬ graduated from Stanford Univer¬ hen L. Sander, chairman of the sity and earned the Ed.D. from town near Gary. The printer was the University of California. recommended to The Paper by the group. Mrs. Sander was appointed national headquarters ofStudents to select four or five members to Following a stay at San Fran¬ cisco State College, lie became for a Democratic Society. represent the group at that meet¬ Michael Kindman, editor of The ing. superintendent of schools inWin- netka, 111., a post he held for 19 Paper, said Thursday that nearby City Attorney Daniel C. printers were not contacted for Learned was requested at the last years. During this period the Winnecka schools became noted the issue because of wo factors: meeting of the City Council to 1. The Paper's former print¬ compose t h e proposed amend¬ as a center for research and er, James Brown, told Kindman ment and present it at the May use of new methods and mater¬ that he had called other area 23 meeting. Action to be taken ials in instruction. He has written more than a printers and told them not to by the property owners' associ¬ print it. ation hinges largely on the re¬ dozen books and is internation¬ 2. Kindman was not informed sults of this composition, accord¬ ally known as an educational of Brown's refusal to print fur¬ ing to Mrs. Sander. philosopher. ther issues until 9 p.m. Wednes¬ Counts, a specialist on Rus¬ A "flier" being distributed by sian education, joined MSU in day, The Paper's normal press the ELPOA this week was passed 1959 and left in 1962. He traveled time. He did not want to spend out at Wednesday night's meet¬ widely in the Soviet Union and Thursday morning checking to ing. Included in the official state¬ see if Brown carried out his wrote several books and articles ment was a request for East > on Russian education over the "blacklisting" threat. Lansing residents to call City past 30 years. Kindman said Thursday even¬ Council members and express He has taught at Delaware Col¬ ing that he plans to call area their opposition to the Droposal, lege, Harris Teachers College, printers today, to see if Brown which, it states, "will*likely be has, in fact, called for a local but the first step in regulating University of Washington, Yale University, University of Chicago boycott of the newspaper. your exercise of choice." The ASMSU Student Board also and Columbia. The sheet concludes by saying discussed the alleged "black¬ that "more drastic laws will listing" at a meeting Thursday afternoon. Members had learned surely follow including criminal ■ Cut A long This Line1 TV Offe of the distributed charge through handbills on the MSU campus ordinances. If you desire to pre¬ serve your right to prefer and choose freely respecting your Thursday. property without control by muni¬ Driver They postponed action on a pro¬ It's Easy ... It's Fast posal that they give all their printing contracts to any local firm which would' print The Pa¬ cipal bureaucracy, you must actk decisively and now!" A second sheet distributed at This Blank Folds Into An Envelope Tuesday As a prelude to Michigan's per. They wish ,to cocfec.wiUj Kindman, Breslin and James H. Denison, assistant to President the meeting compared the 20th century with the in the words of fifthv"century," British his¬ . , most dangerous driving months, Hannah, before making a deci¬ torian, Thomas Macaulay: the summer months ushered in sion. "...your republic will be fear¬ Fold-Down Here First Place 1 word In Each Box by the Memorial Day holiday At his Wednesday night con¬ fully plundered and laid waste weekend, the second annual safe frontation with Kindman and other by barbarians in the Twentieth P lace driver program, "The National staff members of The Paper, Century as the Roman Empire Drivers Test" will be shown at 5C Stamp Brown said he had called Breslin was in the Fifth, with this dif¬ 10-11 p.m. Tuesday. and Hannah Friday to apologize ference; that the Huns and the Here For Michigan's nearly four and for printing the May 12 issue. Vandals who ravaged the Roman a half million drivers, this pro¬ He had printed that issue from Empire came from WITHOUT1 gram may be of great interest. plated prepared by Wonch and your Huns and Vandals will "We don't want a repetition of Graphic in Lansing. He said he have been engendered WITHIN Michigan State News the more than 2,100 deaths re¬ had not read the issue before his your own country, by your own corded in Michigan last year firm printed it. institutions." 347 Student Services Bldg. along with the 155,000 people who were injured and the more than 310,000 reported acci¬ East Lansing, Michigan dents," chairman said James M. Hare, of the Michigan State New Heads Safety Commission. (continued from page I) He accepted the position in The question, how is your driv¬ Colorado after completing both Miss Moore is the first woman ing "IQ" these days, can be an¬ undergraduate and graduate de¬ to head a department in MSU's swered by the viewers them¬ grees at MSU. He received his College of Business. selves. The program, although doctorate in zoology in 1952. Born in Meadowville, W. Va., not a rerun of last year's show, she received a bachelor's degree In June, 1961, after 10 years will be carried out in the same at Colorado State, he became in 1940 from Davis and Elkins i Circle Number of Days to Run manner with a test form. chief of the Fisheries Research Send Bill To College. She received a master's Division for the Colorado Game, "Key aspects of the all-new degree from the University of program will include how to drive Fish and Parks Dept. He served Kentucky in 1947 and doctorate Address at night, expressway driving, in this capacity until he returned 1 Day 3 Day 5 Days degree from Ohio State Univer¬ proper car maintenance and foul to Michigan with the Dept. of Con¬ weather driving," Hare said. sity in 1953. servation in August, 1964. Student # "The new test will also be use¬ She joined the MSU faculty in 1955 as an assistant professor. ful to the persons in the family Phone # who do not drive. The non driv¬ ing wife can learn maintenance She was named an associate pro¬ fessor in 1958, and professor in 1966. Miss Moore has also been Isenburg pointers and youngsters of pre- • Cut A long This Line > driving age can pick up pointers on the faculties of West Virginia At 8 Toni that would help them when they Wesleyan College, Wisconsin State College and Ohio StateUni- start to drive." Father Quentin Lauer, S.J., Again this year two well-known versity. of Fordham University, will de¬ A native of Kalamazoo,Tanner newsmen will narrate the pro¬ liver the third of the Arnold Is- TATE returned to Michigan two years Now it is gram, Walter Cronkite and Mike enberg Memorial Lectures for even easier to buy, sell, rent Wallace. They handled the pro¬ ago after 12 years aL Colorado spring term at 8 p.m. tonight find in the State University and the Colorado or MICHIGAN STATE NEWS gram last year. in Conrad Auditorium. 'The new test, in color, has Game, Fish and Parks Dept. Lauer will speak on the topic WANT ADS. Just clip out this simple He was on the staff of the added new and more diversified "Hegel: The Phenomenon of Rea¬ want ad form that folds into its own situations to test Cooperative Fisheries Research son." a greater area j of Unit at Colorado State Univer¬ Lauer born in 1917 In envelope and mail it to us. We will pro¬ driving IQ and the need for was defensive tactics in driving tech¬ sity from 1952-61 at Ft. Col¬ Brooklyn, N.Y., and was educated cess your ad and have it in the next lins, Colo. He served as director niques. Each question will be at St. Louis University, Wood¬ MEWS available issue. illustrated with of the research unit for eight stock College, and theUniversity specially pre¬ pared film which will be shown years and during this time de¬ of Paris. at slow motion and at regular veloped a graduate program, He became instructor in phil¬ speed to allow the drivers to serving as major professor for osophy at Fordham in 1954, and Share actual 22 candidates for advanced de¬ has been there since. He is driving experi¬ now ence," Hare said. grees. an associate professor Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, May 20, 1966 ]] Smuckler Fishel Tuition Decision Delayed (continued from page learned which now influence uni¬ 2) (continued from page 2) MSU group — were under the Gifts To School (continued from page I) reservoir, room, coal storage, boiler coal bunkers andde-aere- ice Electrical and will be telephone serv¬ built to the new mese Mafia), which had brought authority and control of the uni¬ on restoring the $1.7 million ating room. Also included are the Pesticide Research Building lo¬ versity international efforts? First, the University is now in¬ terested in programs which are it from the Emperor Bao Dai versity team in Viet Nam. just two years earlier for $1.2 million. Thus the civil police pro¬ The accusations of Ramparts Add To Gardens might be. Touching on the halls' increase of $15 residence per term, west section of the old garage and part of the turbine room. cated east of the greenhouses on Farm Lane. Lansing Electric notwithstanding, there were no The temperate house will per¬ The former offices of the Phys¬ Motors received the $26,302 con- , of service abroad and at the same gram was given high priority. A gift of a plant conservatory Chairman Huff said that MSU • "agents" operating under "cov¬ and greenhouses for Hidden Lake mit expansion of Hidden Lake's ical Plant Dept. will be left time provide a maximum of er" in the MSU group, nor were would reduce residence hall fees "feedback" the academic pro¬ The MSU Dept. of Police Ad¬ Gardens, a popular MSU garden indoor ornamental plant collec¬ standing over the summer. The An $84,652 steam tunnel and to there any if the legislature would give the ministration was asked to pro¬ MSU specialists pro¬ and landscaping attraction, was tion. wrecking company will receive water line will be built to serv¬ grams in East Lansing. The Viet viding the "base and the arms University a supplement to the vide advisory support for this reported by President Hannah to Hidden Lake Gardens has tra¬ the two generators, which will ice the Pesticide Research Build¬ Nam project predated the MSU for the secret police." amount needed for campus opera¬ Asian Studies Center and most part of the MSU program. But its the Board of Trustees Thursday. ditionally emphasized plants probably be scrapped, said Philip ing. Granger Construction Co. tions. faculty was too small to meet the The new facilities have been common to Michigan, explains J. May, vice president for busi¬ will do $40,400 general construc¬ other organized international immense needs in Viet Nam and INTELLIGENT and Milton Baron, university land¬ The $1.7 million is not enough ness and finance. offered by Ray Herrick, president tion work and Shaw-Winkler of concern on campus including the tive debate of the issues of our to reduce residence hall fees, he still meet its on-campus obliga¬ of Tecumseh Products Co. scape architect. A $99,267 steam tunnel will Detroit will do $44,252 mechani¬ International Programs office. Viet Nam involvement is essen¬ said. But if the legislature were tions without recruiting addition¬ Mr. and Mrs. Herrick pre¬ Baron estimated the proposed be built from the Administration cal trades work. This may be one reason why tial. Intelligent and constructive to give MSU $600,000 more than al personnel. Leading police ad¬ viously contributed $250,000 for facilities will cost $225,000. Building to the North Campus there was not enough observable, debate of the role of the public the $1.7 million, the dormitory The trustees also ministrators and specialists a new reception-orientation cen¬ Hidden Lake Gardens was Power Plant site. Granger Con¬ approved a organized academic "feedback," screened, recruited and university is also in the public hike would be repealed. struction Co. of Lansing will do $20,649 contract to replace the were ter which was dedicated last started in 1926 by the late Harry although research and writing by When asked about the rate of house at the Lake hired from other universities and interest. week. Herrick has been listed as A. Fee, a prominent Adrian bus¬ $47,700 general work and Bosch City Experi¬ individual members of the group faculty turnover, Provost Howard ment Station for the director. from municipal and state police But what Sheinbaum, Scheer one of the 10 wealthiest men in inessman who had great interest Plumbing & Heating of Grand did occur and numerous Vietna¬ R. Neville said he would have a McBain Builders of Lake City forces across the United States. in scenic land formations and Rapids will do $51,567 mechani¬ mese students came to MSU in and their colleagues have done Michigan. better picture in July when most cal trades construction. received the c is to twist facts and confuse Hidden Lake Gardens, which beautiful landscapes. academic pursuits. Overseas TO MEET THE NEED for spe¬ appointments and changes have myth with reality for their own had more than 150,000 visitors In 1945, Mr. and Mrs. Fee been made. programs are now conducted so cialists in counter-subversive political ends. It would be nice last year, is a 407-acre garden gave Hidden Lake Gardens to faculty turn¬ Kidnaping as to increase the value to aca- He indicated that techniques, it was necessary to to be able to say that the charges site in the Irish Hills, about 25 MSU and set up trust funds to demic interests at Michigan State over was not much more than t hire men from the U.S. govern¬ southeast of Jackson and insUre the future maintenance against MSU and its staff were miles said he was en¬ University, through expanded re¬ ment. These individuals who normal and — simply uninformed, and that its west of Tecumseh. and development. (continued from page I) Larry and his brother, David, search emphasis, graduate stu¬ couraged by the number of bright totaled only 5 per cent of the writers committed naive errors. There will be two greenhouses, said that FBI personnel 16, spoke unhesitatingly about dent fellowship arrangement and young scholars joining the staff. He Unfortunately, the truth is other¬ a temperate house, a reception The trustees may hold a spe¬ who talked to him told him "they the shooting. Their version dif¬ in other ways. Somehow the Viet Nam project did not result in any wise. The charges are false, mis¬ lobby and a service house in the Concert Tonight cial meeting before the next were certain" it was his shot fered slightly from the storytold leading, and thoroughly irrespon¬ proposed facilities. Viet Nam language and area stud¬ ies at MSU. In this respect an im¬ laffe sible. Behind mask of piety and Planning will begin this sum¬ mer and construction is expected Music to the from the 17th century 1940s will be featured at scheduled one, June 15, if the legislature does not give them the amount they are asking for. through a window of his home Wednesday. that cut down the "mysterious Larry said Hollenbaugh had mountain man" who had ter- crossed nearby route 522 on foot portant opportunity was lost, and (continued from page 2) a to start in the fall. tonight's Humanities Dept. con¬ "and Peggy Ann was right in back the University therefore has not righteousness, the Ramparts cert. The performance, which They also approved demolition •pized this central Pennsylvania , of the implications to the uni¬ writers have concealed their real One greenhouse will house a been able to contribute to the begins at 7 p.m. in 114 Bessey of the North Campus Power Plant cOTnmunity the (bast two years. of him." versity of what they were doing, tropical rain forest with an ' which will take 'The FBI took my gun. . . the When Hollenbaugh passed the much needed continuing expan¬ purposes—the persistent effort Hall, will include Scarlatti's place this sum- he would not have a llowed the pro¬ assortment of tropical fruits, sion of expertise and specialists to rewrite the history of the past FBI still has it," Larry told a side window of the house, I fired "Sonatas for Harpsichord," Bar- Viet Nam. This mistake would ject to continue as long as it 12 vegetables, timber, nut, spice, Dore Wrecking Co. of Kaw- UPI reporter in the living room and he 'disappeared,' 'Larry on years in Viet Nam. tok's "Piano Concerto No. 1," did. fiber, perfume, dye, medicinal said. "After I shot him, I saw probably not have occurred had kawlin was low bidder for the of the modest two-story Rubeck The president, and our faculty, Truth is the first casualty in and beverage plants. The other Janacek's "Slavonic Mass,'' and her (Peggy Ann) run past the the project been started three or $46,440 project. It includes tear¬ home near Ft. Littleton, about 10 in different ways, are victims of war. The Vietnamese war is no will resemble a desert and con¬ Tchaikovsky's "Sleeping window." four years later. ing down of the chimney, water miles south of here. irresponsibility and of a lack of exception. tain cacti and other succulents. Beauty.' A second lesson pertains to the concern for the academic com¬ size of the project. TheVietNam munity. It would be encouraging project was too large for the Uni¬ to report that in the future other versity to staff appropriately, definitions of professional value particularly in view of the spe¬ will be made. cialized programs involved.This This is not the time to count meant that too many outsiders had the number of errors in a criti¬ to be hired. Although many of the cal article. This is not the time outsiders were of very high qual¬ to discuss whether Professor ity and contributed well in Viet Fishel drove a Plymouth or a Nam, they changed the nature and stripped-down Cadillac, nor the tone of the team, and affected the number of rooms in his Saigon homogeneity and cohesiveness of villa. This is not the time to the group. discuss whether an intelligence They diluted the chance for academic feedback to the campus. agent was a "specialist" or an This situation was recognized "assistant^Vfessor." This IS uie time to ask why early in the project's historyand had improved greatly by 1959. nobody ever raised the question of the propriety of the whole But the University would not a gain affair from the beginning and why, become responsible for such a after the project started, the large project which could no": be staffed mainly by interested MSI university was not unequivocally informed that unless it were faculty members. Nor would it hire people nomi¬ halted, Michigan State Uni¬ nated by US government agen¬ versity, and all who have worked cies without being completely hard for it, would be placed in an infamous posture. sure of the legitimacy of their backgrounds. Personnel with ties to the CIA would not be accept- Indian Trails Inc. , able. Out of the Viet Nam and other experiences has come a clear and strong preference for pver- seas development projects which stress the building of new educa¬ tional institutions. Experience ^DONT= has shown that the University AMISS " can best denote its talents to teaching, consulting, and re¬ searching in relation to the build¬ Pomplex Uarnival Happening ing up of educational institutions (preferably universities) and the strengthening of abroad. scholarship Behind Conrad Hall FUN FILLED WEEKEND The University attempts to stress institution-building ef¬ fects in £loss collaboration with local academic leaders. In Viet Nam, institution building was im¬ TO KALAMAZ00-CHICAG0 portant in both the police and pub¬ lic administration programs, it was not sufficiently dominant but Leaves E. (Fridays Lapsing 2:15 P.M.' *r N0VV $1595 1965 VW sedan. Bahama blue, $6,681. END OF FIRST YEAR $ 1,445 and Women 1 1:30 P.M., May 21 »t;11 3 P.M., May 22 $7,328 AND ANNUAL IN¬ Ask anyone of 1964 VW sunroof, sedan, black, CREASE THEREAFTER FOR VOLKSWAGEN CONVERTIBLE, Ae^ $ 1,195 We need you for at least eet^Tv Stan '62 Bahama blue with matching interior, FIVE YEARS. College gradu¬ our 400 customers. 1964 KARMANN-GHIA coupe, 12 weeks work this summer. heater, radio, whitewalls, was ates only. Must be willing to $ 1,695 Interesting and challenging work and live anywhere in jxsr NOW $695 1964 VW sedan. Bahama blue, work for capable young men Michigan. Age 22-50. Good $ 1,195 who conduct themselves can physical condition. Mileage 3o^su • 1963 VW sedan. Anthracite in a businesslike manner. and expenses in addition to BeW fh. If,c MG MAGN'ETTE, 4-door, burgundy grey $ 1,095 These jobs offer ideal work¬ salary plus Michigan State , Come On Over , m 'ij, "A '61 with matching interior, heater, ra¬ 1961 VW sedan, white $895 ing hours with plenty of time civil service benefits. Train¬ dio, 4-speed transmission, white- .... Bowker & Moiles wall,. „six NOW $195 1963 PEUGEOT 404 sedan, blue $ 895 for summer fun, plus an portunity to win a op¬ $1,000 ing school will start in August, 1966. Write for interview to - Cycle Shop DONATE scholarship. Salary $470 per Michigan Liquor Control PHIL GORDON'S month. For appointment call- Commission, Director of En¬ 2152 W. Grand River ONE BUCK STORY OLDSMOBILE VOLKSWAGEN, INC. Grand Rapids 459-5079. Lan¬ forcement, P.O. Box 1260, Okemos Sponsored by 2845 E. SAGINAW sing 484-1078. Kalamazoo Lansing, Michigan. An equal 1153 Michigan, East Lansing Ph. IV 2-1311 PHONE IV 4-1341 349-9421. Ph. 332-6977 LIVESTOCK IMPROVEMENT ASSN. OF MICHIGAN opportunity employer. Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, May 20, 1966 13 For Sale Personal Service For Rent For Sale For Rent For Rent For Rent GUITAR-GIBSON (HUMMING- 30" SOFA-BED, full 2.S.P. - EXtRASfeNSOftY Per¬ APPLICATIONS AND passport ONE MAN to share luxury apart - WOMEN OVER 21. Summer only FURNISHED HOUSE for BIRDl, Gibson's finest hand¬ pictures taken by HICKS STU¬ box spring. Plaid cover in¬ ception and related subjects ment, summer. Five minutes to (ten weeks plus). One 3-girl Three bedrooms, near campus. crafted flat-top guitar, over 200 DIO, ED 2-6169. One or same cluded. Cool-spray vaporizer, taught. Flying saucer group | FURNISHED APARTMENT, two Bessey. $60 month. Phone 337- apartment, one 4-girl, one 6- 332-8567. 3-5/20 used twice, one gallon capacity. guitars in stock, all styles, talks and discussions. Call 372- day service. C students. 129 Burcham Dr. Now 9549. 3-5/20 girl. Close. ED 2-2276.10-5/20 GRACIOUS LIVING for the sum- Both excellent condition. 355- priced from $16.95 up. Kay 1845. 5/24-20 IRONINGS—$3 a bushel. Pick up leasing for summer and winter. mer at the Tri Delta House. electric bass, $75. New Gibson GIRLS WANTED to share an TASTY AIR - CONDITIONED 1104. 3-5/23 and delivery. Prompt. Call 646- Summer $120 per month, win¬ SEE AMERICA FIRST. English- double, balcony. Four or five Sunken garden for sun bathing. electric basses $239.50 and up. 6893. 5-5/26 ter $130 per month. Call days apartment in Hawaii for the PORTABLE STEREO. THIS IS man seeks gartner(s) to travel Call men, Haslett apartment. Sub¬ $210 includes weekday meals. Selection of bass amplifiers. IV 7-3216; evenings 882-2316. summer. Vicky, 355-6981. THE BUY OF THE YEAR. Co¬ to West Coast by car this sum¬ 3-5/20 lease for summer. $255. 351- Inquire 332-0955. 3-5/20 lumbia with a V-M Changer. Electric guitar pickups. In¬ Typing Service r' 5-5/25 5649. struction books and records. mer. Dates, route, etc. subject RIVERSIDE EAST, two bedroom 5-5/20 GRADUATE STUDENTS, new Cost $250 plus when new. Com¬ to discussion. 337-0650. 3-5/23 ANN BROWN, typist and multi- | ONE MONTH Free rent, one luxury apartment available for UNIVERSITY TERRACE 4-man home, furnished for four or five pletely overhauled last year. Tenor and 12-string guitars, WOULD YOU BELIEVE that we lith offset printing. Disserta¬ male for Summer term in lux¬ corner apartment for $240 students. $65 month each. Call Only $60 or best offer. Call banjos, ukeles, used and new tions, theses, manuscripts, gen¬ summer. Air-conditioned, top All rent TV's for only pennies a ury apartment. Call 351-4207. floor. 351-5030. monthly, for summer. Call 351- Rita Ebinger, 372-5066 or Ing¬ 332-5142. band instruments. recon¬ eral typing. IBM, 16 years ex¬ -5-5/19 3-5/20 ditioned and guaranteed used ac¬ day? Free service and deliv¬ 4167. 5-5/20 ham Home Realty, 372-1460. UNFINISHED FURNITURE; bar perience. 332-8384. C '1'HREE, FOtJtt. or five-man cordions. New drums, drum sets ery. Call NEJAC TV RENTALS, | TRAILER TO sublease for the apartments for summer. Unap¬ DELTA ARMS: need four or five 5-5/23 stools, night stands, chest of and accessories. The new plas¬ 482-0624. C TYPING IN my Mason home. Pick summer, behind the Poplars. to sublet top floor luxury apart¬ drawers, bookcases and more. proved, reasonable. Close to EAST LANSING—Fern and Ever- up and deliver, if desired. Call $85. Phone 332-8159. 3-5/24 ment for summer. 351-4641. PLYWOOD SALES, 3121S. Penn- tic drum brushes. Cymbals, mi¬ Peanuts Personal 676-2041. 5-5/24 campus. Call 332-5040. 5-5/24 green near Abbott. Duplex, cor¬ " crophones and stands. Used tape I HASLETT APARTMENT needs 5-5/25 ner, hillside lot. New bath, kit¬ sylvaftia. TU 2-0276. C3-5/20 Querido ■iejito sucio Felici- TYPING TERM papers and the- PARTICULAR? OUR sunny third recorders. Easy terms, trades, I SUMMER SUBLET. Wanted, one bedrooms. Living, ELECTROLUX TANK vacuum dades. El proximo ano puedes Electric typewriter. Fast one girl to sublet Summer term. floor Riverside East apartment chen, two layaways. WILCOX MUSIC, 509 ses. 351-5173. girl to share one-bedroom lux¬ cleaner with all cleaning at¬ beber. Pobrecito. Carinosa- service. Call 332-4597, 3-5/20 Air conditioned. is for you. Two girls. Call 353- dining rooms carpeted. $160 E. Michigan. Phone IV 5-4391. 3-5/24 ury apartment. Pool. 332-3380 month. Married couple or two tachments. Runs and looks ex¬ Hours 8 to 5:30 daily. mente, C. 1-5/20 TYPING. TERM papers, theses, 3344. 3-5/20 C after 5 pm. 3-5/23 adults. Available June 1. 332- ceptional. $20. OX 4-6031. ROBBI: GOOD Morning. Don't manuscripts, reports. Call Jean j SPECIAL OFFER, summer sub- FOUR MAN Luxury apartment. BURCHAM WOODS, sublet two- 4605 or weekends, 332-1248. C3-5/20 cut TRA 380 just 'cause its Schaibly, FE 9-8305. 5-5/24 let for four at $45 per person. Summer sublet. Five minutes Animals Avondale Apartments. Call 351- man apartment for summer. Cl-5/20 SAILBOAT, SKIS, poles, 9years. AFGHAN PUPPIES, choice of your special day. Happy 21st. THESES, MANUSCRIPTS, term from center of campus. $210. 5-5/26 Pool, air conditioned. Call Playboy magazines, enlarger, Fortuitous Serendipity. 1-5/20 papers, typing, IBM electric 5366. Phone 332-4150. 3-5/20 FURNISHED HOME available colors. Top bloodlines. Terms Elliott, Bob, 351-4310. 3-5/23 antique cash register. Call after Courier typewriter. Marilyn Garage, dishwasher, to suit. Phone 393-0446. 5-5/23 | FURNISHED APARTMENTS. 1-3 POOL, PARKING, 6urchai many extras. Must see. Family 5 pm., IV 5-3820. 3-5/20 SIAMESE KITTENS, house brok- Real Estate Smith, IV 2-6113. 5-5/20 bedroon apartments, $100- $175 for four-man SEVEN ROOMS, four bedrooms, roommates luxury Woods, Apartment 15, for two. GAS DRYER. Kenmore Deluxe, RESUMES, 100 copies, a' month. Summer only. Near or couple. Very reasonable. en. $15 . 332-1127 . 3-5/20 JOB 1-1/2 baths, 2-1/2 car garage. - apartment, near Sparrow Hos¬ Summer sublet, option for fall. 482 3421 after 5. 3-5/24 four heat controls. $50. Ozone $4.50. ALDI.N.GER DIRECT* campus. ED 7-2345. 5-5/23 pital. 355-3612. 3-5/20 Available June 10th. 5-5/24 lamp. Call IV 5-4817. No Sat¬ BLACK LABRADOR Retrievers ■Fireplace, disposal, patio. MAIL ADVERTISING, 533 N. ' SUMMER HOUSE, Linden St. registered. Ready to go. Born $25,900. Call 332-1748 . 3-5/20 | - LEASE FOR summer term. AVONDALE APARTMENT Sum- COOL BARGAIN available for urday calls. 3-5/23 Clippert. IV 5-2213. C Furnished, for 2-4 grad stu¬ to hunt, retrieve. Good family Four-man luxury apartment, on mer term, third floor, air con¬ summer sublet. Third floor air- BALDWIN ORGAN—Walnut, full river. Fully furnished. 337- ditioned. $180 per month. Phone dents. $55 month each. 337- size. Percussion, pre-sets, ex¬ dog. IV 7-6240. 3-5/20 transferred, needs immediate BARF3I MEL, professional typist. conditioned two-bedroom Avon- 0847. 3-5/20 SIAMESE KITTENS, beautiful and No job too large or too small. 1159. 5-5/20 Ed or Daryl, 332-3577. 5-5/23 dale apartment. 353-1813. cellent condition. Leslie speak¬ sale. Three-bedroom home, Block off campus. 332-3255. C | TWO GIRLS to sublet Waters SUBLET FURNISHED luxury 5-5/25 FURNISHED THREE bedroom er included. IV 5-4817 except registered. Call IV 5-0913. fireplace, 1-1/2 baths, base¬ Edge apartment Summer term. two-man apartment for sum¬ TWO GIRLS needed for house available summer only. Saturdays. 3-5/23 3-5/24 ment, large lot. Call Mrs. Fitz¬ PAULA ANN HAUGHEY, typist". four-girl IBM Selectric and Executive. 337-1539 before 4—after 4, 332- mer. Riverview, next to cam¬ Near campus. $200 a month. DIAMOND RING, 15 pt., 14 carat POODLE, SMALL miniature, sil- gerald with Ora Teed, Realtor. apartment. University Terrace. Multilith Offset Printing. Pro¬ 4904 5-5/26 pus. Call 332-8076. 5-5/23 Garage. Phone 337-2345.5-5/23 band. $60 or best offer. Phone ver, male, eleven weeks. AKC IV 5-1553, evenings IV 4-1679. Call 353-6032. . Summer term. 3-5/23 fessional theses typing. Near GRADUATE STUDENTS. Fur- 3-5/19 351-6751. 3-5/23 registered. $125. 646-4341. | ANYONE INTERESTED in sub- Rooms SEWING MACHINE SALE. Large 3-5/24 campus. 337-1527. C leasing an apartment in married nished efficiency apartments, AVAILABLE SEPTEMBER 15. ATTENTION PROFESSORS and MEN, SUMMER, approved,cook¬ selection of reconditioned, used housing, phone 489-0690.1-5/20 $150; two-bedroom apartments, New two-bedroom deluxe apart¬ FREE TO loving home a beautiful grad students. Three bedroom EXP ERIENC ED MAN USC RI PT ing, close to P.O. Spic n' Span. machines. Singers, Whites, Uni¬ $200; one-bedroom apartment, seal grey, 4-1/2 month female brick ranch, recreation room, and dissertation typist. Refer¬ EAST SIDE furnished two-room ments. 5 minutes to campus. Call ED 7-9566. * 5-5/26 versal, Nechhi. $19.95 to $39.95. kitten. Completely trained. 351— $125 and $150. Call Rita Ebinger, 1-1/2 baths, large fenced lot. ences. Near Kelloiv; Center. apartment. Private bath, utili¬ $147.50 month. ED 2-6131; ED 372-5066 or Ingham Home Real¬ MEN: APPROVED supervised, Guaranteed. Easy terms. ED¬ 5599. 3-5/24 Phone 337-1172 3-5/24 332-5545. 5-5/20 ties, garage. Available June 1st 2-2759. 3-5/19 . ty, 372-1460. 5-5/23 singles, doubles.Cooking,park¬ WARDS DISTRIBUTING CO., permanent. Quiet refined male STUDY COOL, by pool or in lux- ing. Two blocks to campus. 327 1115 N. Washington, 489-6448. Wanted SUMMER LEASES for two avail- Mobile Homes Service graduate student or teacher. No ury air-conditioned apartment Hillcrest. 332-3906. 3-5/24 C3-5/20 BLOOD DONORS needed, $6 for able Edgewood Apartment 1959 GREAT LAKES, 42' x 10'. drinking or parties. IV 5-0685. for four. Adequate parking. 351— TV 21" GENERAL Electric. $25. GRADUATION ANNOUNC E- RH positive; $7, $10 or $12 for 1-5/20 across from campus. 332-0811 THE SNAKE Pit, what's In a Available July 31. $2,195 or best MENTS with your name printed 4557. 5-5/25 Call George, 332-3025 . 3-5/20 RH negative. DETROIT BLOOC POOL SIDE apartment, fur^- afternoons or 337-2474 eve¬ name? Our pit has walls and a offer. Call 332-6275. 5-5/23 on them, 2-day service.MYERS SUBLET SUMMER, two bedroom SERVICE, INC. 1427 E. Michi¬ nished, two bedroom .air-condi¬ nings. 5-5/23 roof. Singles and Double, and GERANIUMS, 59£ each. Wideva- MARLETrE TRAILER 1961. 10' PRINTING, 1421 E. Michigan. luxury apartment. Eydeal Villa. gan Ave. Hours 9-4 Monday . tioned, barbecue facilities. Sub¬ TWO GRADUATE students for two apartments for summer and riety of flower and vegetable x 50', two bedroom, carpeted. IV 2-2554. 14-6/3 Pool, air-conditioned. Call after & Tuesday; 12-7 Thursday. 489- let summer. Call 337-0547. fall. Pat. 332-0318. 3-5/23 plants. By dozen or flat. Spe¬ Summer term. Four-man, three Call after 5 p.m., 351-4288. LONG DISTANCE moving and 7587. C 3-5/24 5 p.m. 332-6812 . 5-5/20 APPROVED, supervised rooms cial new California potatoes, 10 5-5/20 bedroom luxury apartment. $45 424 Trailer Haven. storage. Anywhere in the world. WONDERFUL, marvelous, pounds, 65(t. PRINCE'S FARM NEVVLYWEDS desire to live in EVERGREEN ARMS. Need four- month. 332-1942 . 5-5/24 IT'S for men. Spartan Hall, 215 Louis. HOMETTE, two-bedroom, ex- For a free estimate, call MARKET, Okemos at Grand homes while owners vacation, five to sublet top floor apart¬ fabulous, beautiful! Luxury One block from campus. Now LYON'S VAN LINES, IV 5-2241. TWO-MAN LUXURY apartment pando living room. Take over Ben, 332-5092. apartment for four. Pool, air- renting for summer, fall. Sin¬ River Ave., Okemos. 5-5/23 10-6/1 iruexchange for house - proper¬ ment. Tom or to sublet for summer. Air-con¬ payments. IV 5-3905. 5-5/20 ty upkeep, etc. Goo.! references. 5-5/26 conditioned. $230. 351-4318. gles $10, doubles $7. Two double GRADUATION ANNOUNCE- DISSERTATIONS EDITED. Arti¬ ditioned, close. Call Rick, 337- VAGABOND 1961, 50' x 10'. On Call 351-4404. 3-5/20 5-5/20 cooking rooms. Large, fully- MENTS with your name printed | LUXURY FOUR man apartment 9371. 5-5/23 furnished rooms, washbowl in them, 2-day service.MYERS lot 421, Trailer Haven. Call ED cles cut for publication. Call COUPLE WANTS to sublease to sublet Summer term. Third ONE GIRL needed to share four- on Students' Rewrite Service, 353- LUXURY APARTMENT for four. 7-0286. From 8-5, Tapp, 353- floor. $180 monthly. 355-1653 girl Cedar Village apartment each. Large lobby with TV. PRINTING, 1421 E. Michigan. 3693. Foreign students' prob¬ apartment in married housing, Summer term. Close to campus. 7880. 5-5/26 No children. 3-5/24 Grade point average 3.2. ED' IV 2-2554. 14-6/3 lems accepted. 3-5/20 Summer term. or 355-1654. June 15 - September 15. $170. $49/month/person. Parking. 355-8579. 3-5/23 2-2574. 3-5/23 GENERAL 1958, 10' x 47', avail- Phone 355-5919. 3-5/23 BROWN SOFA bed, excellent con- SAVE ON your moving expenses. Call 351-4695. 3-5/20 SUMMER HOUSING at Kappa Del- able September. Close to cam¬ GET TENANTS QUICKER by de- INSTANT MONEY FOUR MAN basement apartment dition, $25. Metal study desk, Make your reservation now for SUBLET THREE-four person ta House. Close in. Reasonable swivel office chair. Both $12. pus. Many extras. Perfect for 16 ft. enclosed truck. One scribing your vacancies in tht (Just Add Work; close to campus, supervised. a new air-conditioned, across from rates. 528 M.A.C. ED 2-5659. Bunk bed frame, $12. Call 489- young couple. $2,000. 351-5092 rentals. IV 5-9831. 10—6/1 Classified section. Dial 355- Men needed for a wide variety Renting for summer, fall. 351- way Snyder Hall. Summer rates, 3-5/23 3-5/23 after 6 pm. 3/-S/24 8255 now. of Jobs and work locations. 4062 after 4 pm. 3-5/23 5953. CENTURY MOBILE home, 40' x DIAPER SERVICE, YourAuthor- Cedarbrooke Arms #7. 332- APARTMENT OR home needed Your choice of Daily or Weekly REDUCED RENT. Luxury two- WEDDING GOWN-size 8. $20. 8'. Excellent condition, $1,700. ized Diaparene Franchised 5674. 5-5/20 Pay. Register at office ne; bedroom apartment. University Co-op Fraternity Party dresses, red, blue, pink. Service Approved by Doctors. for summer session, near cam¬ SOESTBrFKrTSSS""taken May buy on lot. LIFE 'O' Riley est your home. No Fe to Terrace for Summer term. Call or Sorority Sizes 9-12. $8 to $10. Phone TRAILER PARK. 882-4850. We're the most modern and the pus. Call 489-0690. L-5/20 sublet two-bedroom Avondale 337-0873. 3-5/23 only personalized diaper serv¬ REACH ANTIQUE-LOVERS with Charged. 353-2466. 3-5/23 5-5/26 apartment. Summer only. 355- Available 9-1-66 ice in Lansing, providing you an \d In Clast -ied. Dial 355- CHEST FREEZER and Frigi- 0611 between 8-10 pm. 6-5/23 TWO GIRLS for summer. Eden FOR SALE or rent, 50 ft. mobile with diaper.'pails, poly bags, Roc apartments, $60. 332-6440. Call 1-313-761-7268 daire refrigerator. GE refrig¬ Available immediately. WANTED: TWO girls to sublet erator. Call IV 9-7200. C home. deodorizers and diapet-s,' (or 5-5/25 6335 Park Lake Rd., Lot 39. Delta Arms apartment, Sum¬ ONE SINGLE room, $10 weekly, you may use your own). Baby term. Call 351-4166.5-5/25 3-5/24 clothes may be included at no STATE NEWS mer FOUR-MAN furnished apartment cooking privileges, parking. speed bicycles. $39.77 full VINDALE, 8' x 40', two bedroom. additional cost. No deposit. for summer or full year. $180. Apartment for four, cooking. price. Rental-purchase terms good condition. Located Plant inspection invited with Action Call 485-5048 after 5pm. 3-5/23 $10 each. ED 2-5776. 3-5/20 Very available. We also have tennis EAST LANSING, for girls. on East Lansing lot. 351-4447. trained personnel to answer SUMMER, ONE girl 10 weeks, one racquets, golf balls, badminton last five. Block from Berkey. Across from campus. Cooking 3-5/23 your questions. Approved by Want-Ads birdies, gifts and housewares. DSIA. Call 482-0864, AMERI¬ NEW MOON 8' x 40', one bed- $45. Free parking. 351-7200. privileges, bus stop in front. ACE HARDWARE, across from room. May be left on East Lan- CAN DIAPER SERVICE. 1914 Get 3-5/23 Reasonable. 393-3634. 3-5/23 the Union. ED 2-3212. C E. Gier Street. C SUBLET TWO-bedroom Avon- MEN, DOUBLE and single, close, BIRTHDAY CAKE 7" $3.12 de- Dl A PER SERVICE, Lansing's Quick dale apartment. $180 per month. quiet, approved. 332-0939. livered; 8" cakes, $3.64. Also finest. Your choice of three Air conditioned. Call 332-2911. 5-5/24 sheet pies and cakes. KWAST Lost & Found • types. Containers furnished, no 5-5/23 BAKERIES, Brookfield Plaza, Results MAN'S PRESCRIPTION sun- deposit. You may include two EASY LIVING. Luxurious one Summer Housing . . East Lansing; Frandor; 303 S. glasses, thin gold frames. Lost pounds baby clothes. Try our bedroom apartment for sum¬ at Farm House across Washington. IV 4-1317. C3-S20 early last week, around Phy- Velva-soft process, 25 years Call 355-8255 mer suiiiec. Pool, aii^-condition- Wi'-LC "QtA.PSJ. street frov# ing. $155 monthly. 332-8486. Doubles $8.00, singles designs, button holes. 3-5/24 SERVICE. 1010 E, Michigan. NOW. 5-5/20 Sells at give-away price. Call KecklaCi, LoS' inity of IV 2-0421. C $15.00, per week. . . 332— 351-5219. 3-5/20 Under 21 ? SUMMER TERM 4- apartment close to campus. luxury 8635 . STUDENTS: Supervised FOR WEDDING and p r a c t i c a 1 and St. with white rose. Johns. Black oval 351-5617.3-5/24 Waters Edge Apartments. Call MALE blocks Berkey. shower gifts, ACE HARD¬ LOST: BRACELET, three strand Nick's Villa Venice You Can Still Live Off-Campus housing, two see 351-4276. 5-5/20 Cooking, parking. Summer term WARE'S selections. 201 E. pink beads. Neighborhood card FORMERLY MARIA'S at Campus View Apartments MEN, SUBLET Summer term, with first choice for Fall. IV Grand River-, across from shop. Sentimental Value. luxury apartment, one block 5-8836. 20-6/2 Union. Phone ED 2-3212. C Please? so sad. ED 2-8003. Across from Williams Hall 1-5/20 RUMMAGE SALE Saturday 10 from campus. Air conditioned, INTERNATIONAL HOUSE: Cook- Superviesed Luxury For Men reduced rates. 351-4658.3-5/23 am., 5380 Park Lake Rd. Cloth¬ Authentic Italian Foods ing, LR, Private entrance, sum¬ Personal mer or fall, men only. Call ing, golf clubs, cart. Hi-fi, rec¬ S50 per month Ph. 332-6246 WANTED: THREE men for Eden after 5:30 , 332-2195 . 5-5/20 ords, books, baby needs, mis¬ DON'T MISS "Good Neighbor Steaks, Chops, Sea Food Roc apartment summer term. cellaneous. 3-5/20 Sam," May 20 and 21, 9 pm. Call 351-4201. 10-5/27 ROOMS AT KAPPA Alpha Theta Behind the Auditorium. Bring Pizza - In or Out BICYCLE SALES, rentals, stor- House for ten-week summer your blanket. 3-5/20 GIRL WANTED to share Cedar age and services. EAST LAN¬ An J, Of Comse, Your Favor, te school students. $210 including Village apartment, September SING CYCLE, 1215 E. Grand THE ROGUES will try to help Br.-age meals. Call 337-1482 or 332- make East Campus weekend 15-June 15 with three others. River. Call 332 - 8303. C Banquet F oc 11 it >e s Available Call 332-4049 5001. 7-5/27 rock. Won't you? Dave. IV 4- . 3-5/23 FIRST QUALITY' materials and Phone IV 9-5751 GIRLS, 1/2 of two-girl arrange- 7594. 3-5/20 workmanship. Large frame se¬ Houses ment. Available now. Special lection. OPTICAL DISCOUNT, FREE!!! A Thrilling hour of Plenty o< Free Parking rate. ED 7-1598. 3-5/23 beauty. For appointment, call SIX BEDROOM house, 1-1/2 416 Tussing Building. Phone 484-4519. MERLE NORMAN blocks from Union. Available IV 2-4667. C Mon. May 30th-10:00 A.M For Sale COSMETICS STUDIO, 1600 E. June 10 - September 15. Very BOAT 14' Cherokee, 35 Evinrude Civic Center- tasty. 351-5613. 3-5/23 STEREO SYSTEM, Fisher 440T Michigan. C3-5/20 FM stereo receiver, Girrard electric, light and speedometer. THE LOOSE ENDS, four-man LIVE * COMPLETE! FIVE LARGE rooms, gas heat, Master Craft trailer. Excellent lab 80 automatic turntable. Two rock band, featuring organ, gui¬ modern. Built-in stove. Unfur¬ condition. $795. IV 2-6718. JB Lansing speakers and en¬ tar, bass, harmonica, drums. nished. Glassed-in front and 3-5/23 closures. Six months old. Mike Call Tom, IV 4-b742 . 5-5/23 rear 0226. porch. $150. Garage. 393- 3-5/23 Thies, 332-2563. 3-5/20 GIANT CLOSED- * 4 HOURS ALL BENTLEY Butane lighters, CIRCUIT SCREEN * START TO FINISH! bedroom Summer term house for students. only. Phone 655- 40% off with this ad. MAREK REXALL DRUGS PRESCRIP¬ TION CENTER at Frandor. Of¬ MIN-A-MART 2555. 3-5/23 fer ends June 15. Cl-5/20 TWO MORE house on men for lake front Lake Lansing, start¬ 1964 HAIG ULTRAS-4 woods and Open Every Day irons 2-9. Good condition. $100. ing June 1st. Ideal summer lo¬ 2 3 4 5 6 7 a ■ 9 Call 355-6732 . 3-5/24 7 a.m. 11 p.m. %% § % " 12. 1U 14. .111 Hrcukwat Sp cation. $50 plus utilities per month. Call Dick or Tom, 339- MOVING, MUST SELL extra fur- - a % 13 '5 17. Towards 8750. 5-5/26 niture. Two maple (with cush¬ ions) chairs, $15 and $12. Three for your convenience % 20 TWO-THREE four men to girls/men to rent. Four share or end tables, $5 each. Two lamps, complete Kwast Bakery Dept. % 16 17 18 w, 24 25 bedrooms, big living room, kit¬ $3 each. Black teachers' desk and chair, $8. Small desk and Ice Cream Cones! % 21 25 chen, fully carpeted, nicely fur¬ % 21 27. Ik-lot nished. Near campus. Summer. matching chair, $6. Call 332- 29 than 21 flavors! WORLD'S GREATEST SPORTS SPECTACLE % 26 more 2t 29. Wicked 332-0717. 3-5/24 5227 after 3 pm. 5-5/26 31. Tart 31 31 31 SUMMER TERM, completely fur- SCHWINN TANDEM (for two) bi- Groceries! MONDAY, MAY 30th, MEMORIAL DAY % 30 Kent* 34. Ascended nished house. Quiet neighbor¬ cycle. Only six months old, 37 34 35 3fc 36. Confidence ridden very little. Superb con¬ Party Supplies! All Seats Reserved-$5.00 % m 4t 39. Departed hood. Ideal for advanced study. Married couple only. 882-8559. dition. Paid $100, will sacrifice Tickets on-Sale at Civic Center % 35 AO 36 41. Dilatory You Name It! W44 45 4fc 41 44. Season 3-5/24 for $60. Loaded with equipment. Call 882-4205. and Arbaugh's Dept. Store 43 % SO f' SI 46. Yale 49. Type SHARE HOUSE, Summer term, $10 per week. Fireplace, air- GOLF CLUBS, new, used, good 221 Ann Street Doors Open 10:00 A.M. u % 48 4» conditioned, dishwasher, ga¬ selection. FAIRWAY GOLF Telecast starts 10:30 A.M. 53 rage. 337-2304 after 5 pm. RANGE. Five minutes East on 51 % 3-5/20 Grand River. 3-5/23 across from Knapp's Hurry For Choice Seats LAMBDA Cm ALPHA JR. 500 SATURDAY MAY 21 1:30 PM - - WEST CIRCLE DRIVE THE MEN OF LAMBDA CHI ALPHA WISH TO THANK THE UNIVERSITY, THE COMMUNITY AND THESE EAST LANSING MERCHANTS FOR THEIR ASSISTANCE AND CONTRIBUTION IN HELPING TO PRESENT THE 19th ANNUAL JR. 500 .. Max Coral Curtis BOB Ford Gables BAKER RAMBLER m TOM'S 3003 East Michigan Ave. Phone IV 4-4491 Just West Of Frandor BARBER Campbell's Suburban Shop 1231 E. Michigan Lansing Redwood SHOP Dells The Jr. 500 Trophies will be on display in > 8 Ross 621 E. Grand River "The Grooviest Spot Around" Campbell's bus BISSELL during the race NORM Bud INC Jguil. KESSEL Sag Kouts 1 The Stora^with the Red Door CLEANER AND SHIRT LAUNDRY FLORIST Skffler CUSTOM SHOP Chevrolet Co. Across 109 E. Grand River From Student E. Services Building Lansing East Grand River 2801 E. Michigan BIG TEN CLUB on the Campus STUDENT on E. Michigan, Just East Of F randor BOOKSTORE |Mo£H] Gibson's ACE ACROSS FROM BERKEY HALL BUD's Book Hardware See you at the 19th Hole 421-25 E. GRAND RIVER Before and After the MOBIL Store PAUL 201 E. Grand River Race. REVERE'S East Lansing 128 W. Grand River 639 F. Grand River BAR