Collegians Service MICHIGAN STATE STATE MEWS OnlyFrom Boston to Cool Berkeley, America's college students Sunday Vol. 58, Number UNIVERSITY 155 East Lansing, Michigan Monday, May 23, 1966 gave a cool nod to defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara's call for young men and women to donate two years of their life to their Force In Da Nang country, in uniform or out of it. Anti-Ky Most made it clear they preferred to serve in civvies if serve they must. A weekend sampling of campus opinion by United Press In¬ ternational drew a variety of responses ranging from a Rad- cliffe coed's "as for women serving—that's the greatest thingl" to the pragmatic comment of Memphis State freshman Daniel Vows x Fight To Last Man' Young: "it beats going to Viet Nam." The L'PI sampling led to these conclusions: Men students by a three to one margin endorsed McNamara's plan to permit them to serve as peace volunteers, at home or abroad, as an alternative to military duty. By a smaller margin, the men agreed that women should not be exempt. Coeds were by and large en¬ thusiastic about n on-military service for men and about evenly Children divided over whether they should serve. The students cidental benefits in found some in¬ McNamara's Faxon Probe Enlisted To LANSING (L'PI)—An attempt will be made Petipren also said he would "be interested in divorces and lower birth responsibility for inves¬ hearing" about the hiring of Carry War er a this week to wrestle a University of tigating MSU's role- in Viet Nam from state Michigan sophomore at $150 per week to assist But most students were un¬ Faxon in preparing a report on charges of MSU's representative Jack Faxon, D-Detroit, and to certain about exactly what he had turn the probe over to a standing house commit¬ involvement with the Central Intelligence Agen¬ in mind and whether he wanted DA NANG (UPI)—Buddhist-led tee instead. cy. American to be com¬ rebels vowed Sunday a "fight to every young Admissions by top house leaders that Faxon The student, Mark Levin—an editor of the pelled to give up two years in the last man" against loyalist acted individually and not as a chairman of a service of his nation. Michigan Daily, the U-M student paper—who South Vietnamese troops who house subcommittee when he held a dramatic In speech Wednesday in Mon¬ completed his freshman year just this month, surrounded a pagoda garrison and a hearing May 16 have prompted the chairman of was hired by the legislative service bureau treal, McNamara suggested in¬ the house committee on colleges and universi¬ gave the crumbling anti-govern¬ equities In the draft could be May 15, at the request of house speaker Joseph ment forces until sundown today ties to seek control over further investigations resolved by "asking" every J. Kowalski, D-Detroit, to work as a research to surrender. "if any are needed." assistant until Aug. 15. young American "to give two "Eighty per cent of the rebels Rep. Vincent J. Petipren, D-Wayne, said he At Faxon's request, he was then assigned to have surrendered," said Gen. years of service to his country— would call Faxon before his committee Wednes¬ him full time, to do "some of the spade work" Genn Du Quoc Dong, commander whether in one of the military services, in the Peace Corps or day. to ask him to turn over findings of the on the MSU case. of the pro-government groops in some other volunteer develop¬ hearing, which had been billed as being con¬ Donald J. Hoenshell, director of the bureau, ringing the Tinh Hoi pagoda. ducted by the subcommittee on higher education said temporary student assistants were normally South Vietnamese Premier mental work at home or abroad." But he did not say whether by of the house ways and means c hired at a rate of $2 an hour. Nguyen Cao Ky Sunday sent an¬ Petipren, who last year was other battalion of paratroopers "asking" he meant "requiring." William Lee, 21, editor of the prevented by Kowalski from con¬ into the country's second largest ducting a private investigation city, torn for seven days by bloody Daily Collegian at Penn State liked McNamara's idea. "The Selective Service Sys¬ Coed Is Miss Lansing into the scandal-ridden People's Community Hospital Authority in Civil strength war. in It brought loyalist Da Nang to about tem is rotting from top to bot¬ his district in favor of a com¬ 6,000 troops. Annette Abrams, Lan¬ mittee and attorney general's Buddhist demonstrations con¬ tom," he said, "and with the law expiring in 1967, now is the sing sophomore, was nam¬ probe, protested that Faxon was tinued through the weekend in ed Miss Lansing Saturday time to make changes which would "infringing on our committee's Saigon. Charging Vietnamese include social welfare service. night at the annual pageant prerogative." paratroopers Sunday drove rock- and crowning ceremony at "We have intention of letting I feel two years doing social no hurling anti-government demon¬ Everett High School. work in say Africa would be more him bypass our committee,' Pe¬ strators inside a pagoda com¬ Miss Abrams was sec¬ beneficial than two years on a tipren said. "If you let a rep¬ pound and lobbed dozens of tear ond runner-up in the Miss resentative go shooting off on gas shells over the wall. military outpost in Germany or Lansing Pageant and first investigations you're going to Monks beat drums warning a rice paddy in Viet Nam." runner-up in the Miss MSL' have a lot of problems." their followers the church was How about drafting women? Pageant last year. in danger but the rifle and bay¬ "My immediate reaction is nega¬ She is an accomplished Both Kowalski and ways ana tive," said Lee, who intends to STILL AHEAD AT THE FINISH—Sigma Alpha E psi Ion won the Junior 500 for onet equipped soldiers stopped means chairman lner Erlandsen, gymnast and dances with short of an actual attack on the volunteer for the Peace Corps. various orgaiiizaLions on >, D-Escar.aba, said in inter". ie..r '1-5 second year in a row. Driver is Dick Hart, Northville sophomore. Pushing sanctuary. But Harvard junior Terry A. ■: last week that Faxon was him on this lap of the race is Mike Jolly, Mt. Clemens senior. B a r n e 11 turned thumbs down. campus. This year she late Photo by Russell Steffey The Buddhists and dissident spent seven months in Swit¬ acting entirely on his own when 'The McNamara proposal sug¬ > he summoned MSU President army troops were reduced Sun¬ zerland with the MSL" Cul¬ gests that the administration day to enlisting Boy and Girl tural Exchange Program. > John A. Hannah and writers for Scouts to their cause and 134 never expects to get this country Ramparts magazine to the hear- SAE Takes Ho She lived with a Swiss fam¬ • out of international crisis," he teen-agers were captured by gov¬ ily and studied and traveled • ing May 16. ernment soldiers as they rode said. "Where in the world are in Switzerland. Ramparts had charged MSU we planning to use these men?" toward Da Nang in a truck con¬ First runner-up in the : provided cover for CIA agents voy. Miss Lansing Pageant is Carol Susanne Major, and : in Viet Nam from 1955-59. "I told Jack that if he was In Junior A rebel army lieutenant was killed and several other soldiers Service Plan second anna runner-up is Jo¬ H. Aldrin, Glenview, : : going ahead with this thing, he wasn't going to do it as chair- Sigma Alpha Epsilon took all honors in Saturday's Junior 500 with the convoy were Marine wounded. A captain said his men 111., junior. Miss Congen¬ : man of a subcommittee of ways fought for 30 minutes against the Questioned ANNETTE ABRAMS iality is Patricia A.Thorn¬ ton, Grosse Isle freshman. I ; and means,"Erlandsensaid. "He would be doing it strictly on his Richard Hart, Northville sophomore, drove the SAE cart to victory, pushed by Chuck Maines, Owosso sophomore; Mick Forrest, convoy and did not realize so many children were involved un¬ Edmore sophomore; Mike Jolly, Mt. Clemens -enior; I lot) Sherwood,. til the white flag was raised. 10) By Pr&xmire on page Ovjsse junior. P-oi&Ae I'ark junior; and Doug Ttns'v. , 'junSak"',"Atateta, in 'The youngster^, most dressed Boy and Girl Scout uniforms, Nan Cobbey, Timonium, Md., were armed. The teen-agers— Washington (UPI)--Sen. Wil¬ NO INTEREST junior, of the Kappa Kappa Gam¬ 127 boys and seven girls—car¬ liam Proxmire said Sunday that if Defense Secretary Robert S. ma house, placed first in the women's division, being pushed $6,(MX) Sought ried six Browning automatic rif¬ les, two machineguns, 76 rifles, McNamara were proposing uni¬ For Strike City 71 carbines, a field radio and a versal service—civilian or mili¬ by four SAE men: John Hutson, tary—he was against it. The Wisconsin democrat refused to join the administration thus War Study-A Lost Cause 3. Problems of transition from strengthening world law and or- Muskegon freshman; Hunter Wendt, Mt. Clemens freshman; Bob man; Lyndall, Birmingham fresh¬ Craig Cowell, Royal Oak ASMSU and the dation "Strike are Wesley Foun- co- sponsoring a City Rally" May 31 to small Despite armed to soldiers mountain the of ammunition. fact they were the teeth, the loyalist treated the teen-agers in supporting McNamara's sug¬ war to peace economy; der; sophomore; and Jim Ziemba, raise $6,000 for the construction like errant children, herding gestion that all young Americans 4. Means of establishing the 6. Contemporary international Dearborn freshman. of a waterwell in the community them into a tennis court where serve their country for one or A campus center to study the social and economic foundations political issues. The second places were taken center of Strike City, Miss. an officer lectured them. They two years in the military or in causes and cures of war never WINNE R -- Nan Cobbey, such civilian pursuits. became a reality due to insuf¬ for durable world peace (coor- Although the committee in- Timonium, Md., junior, by Delta Sigma Theta, women's Strike City, the recent scene listened stoically. ficient interest, according to dinated attack on hunger, pov- creases to 50 members by fall art division, and Alpha Tau Omega, of racial unrest, was given per¬ In a television interview (Opin¬ shrieks as her p ion in the Capital, Metromedia), Thomas H. Greer, chairman of erty and disease); term, 1963, department chair- rounds one of the curve! men's division. mission to hold meetings in its "We'll feed them and find them 5. Institutions and plans for (continued on page 5) North Case placed third in the community c - only if it had someplace to stay tonight and to¬ Proxmire said, "You should only the dept. of Humanities. in the Junior 500 Satur¬ women's div morrow we'll send them home," take the number of people you Summer term, 1963, a group of day. Miss Cobbey repre' running water. six faculty members, under the House placed third The Wesley Foundation, which said Gen. Dong of the youngsters absolutely have to have to de¬ sented Kappa KappaGarrv from nearby Hoi An. fend this country. You should keep that at a minimum...." leadership of Greer, proposed that a campus war/peace re¬ Ford Speaks With Johnson ma sorority, winnerof th< division. New member: of Blue Key, now has $600, has received a kickoff donation of $200 from Inside the pagoda outpost, Thich (Rev.) Minh Chieu brushed Proxmire emphasized his op¬ search center be established. Photo by Jonathai ckel men's honorary, ASMSU, and is also receiving said would be inevitable if the aside a government ultimatum WASHINGTON (L'PI) —House after the cart race. The new free silk screening and mimeo- position to drafting persons to The proposal submitted to var¬ South Vietnamese cannot carry to surrender by 6 p.m. today serve in civilian programs, such ious department chairmen and Republican Leader Gerald R. members are: Jim Sink, Chi- graph service. as the Peace Corps, where "you college deans via letter and per¬ Ford called on President John¬ the major burden of fighting the I'm A cago, 111., junior; Larry Owen, Snyder Hall has contributed (7 a.m. EDT). "We will fight to the last man," the young monk anti^ommunist war. Detroit junior; Terry Hassold, $200 and It is hoped that every have to have people who are dedi¬ sonal conferences by the com¬ son Sunday to "Level with the An American people" in the face This was their reaction, in in¬ employe at the Dept. of organization and hall on campus said. cated and who are very care¬ mittee suggested that such a Royal Oak junior; Lou Benson, terviews with UPI, to the results Health, Education and Welfare Coral Gables, Fla., junior; Jim involved and make be established to' foster, of rising domestic dissatisfac¬ will bed fully screened and selected..." center tion with the civil strife in South of a Gallup Public Opinion Poll was asked at a hearing about his Graham, Detroit junior; cor- ntribution. Thirty-six bodies were stacked said he a financii However, Proxmire guide and disseminate studies on: title. inside the pagoda and holy men Viet Nam. showing that a majority of Am¬ responding secretary, Rick May- Canis s and posters are would support McNamara if he 1. The nature and social im¬ in saffron robes prayed amid ericans—54 per cent—favored "I'm a records management Sen. Jacob K. Javits, R-N.Y., were "appealing to young people pact of modern warfare and mili¬ technician," he said. the dead, dying and a compara¬ said the administration should pulling out of Viet Nam if full- tive handful of remaining rebel to develop a sense of morality tary preparation; scale civil war erupted in the And what does that entail? and responsibility and volunteer 2. Efforts and proposals to prepare for the possibility of a "I file records." (continued on page 9) troops, about 125 in all. South. in this area." control or eliminate war; U.S. troop withdrawal, which we The Buddhists said earlier The rally will feature enter¬ Sunday they would negotiate with tainment and a guest speaker. the government if U.S. marines Joel Higgins, Dayton, Ohio sen¬ from the nearby Da Nangairbase Driver Education''s ior, will be the master of cere¬ would guarantee their safety. monies. 1966 National Drivers Test will be drops to 45,000, that doesn't necessarily mean safe-driving I»T»j By DAYLE SCHWARZLER cast over CBS stations (Channel 6) at has increased, because the figure depends on the amount of Tuesday. The State News will publish driving done and because a drop may well' be due to medical There is no scientifically acceptable evidence that driver sheet in its Tuesday edition. * advances. education programs and motor vehicle inspection systems reduce • automobile accidents, according to an award-winning book co- "The death rate may depend as much on the availability of State News West Side Story, Band those which haven't revealed that those states had fewer acci¬ medical services rather than on the way people drive or oh the Concert and writer Nel¬ authored by David Klein, associate professor of social science. dents before the inspection programs existed. And there is no scientifically acceptable evidence tha teen- even number and severity of the accidents that occur." Reviews Arts son Algren pp. 4-5. This means that an expensive motor vehicle inspection pro¬ Ontario's death rate is three times as high as ours-<-but that worse drivers than adults, according to the book, agers gram is being planned for Michigan with no evidence that it will reflects the fact that the nearest ambulance may be 150 miles i exhaustive survey of the available literature by the^three be effective, he said. authors of "Accident Research: Methods and Approaches" has away when an accident happens. In New York City, the victim The reason such evidence is lacking is the lack of valid re¬ :urned up no good evidence that driver training makes people would probably be hospitalized within 20 minutes. search methods in the field of accident research. "avoid accidents more than they would otherwise, he said. "Millions of dollars and many hours are being used for such "The most important thing to be done is to devise methods of measuring exposure (how many people are on the road, for There is as yet no accurate way to determine how many miles people drive. The method now used to get the vehicle-miles Spartans Add figure usually given in statistics involves taking the fuel tax programs when there is no scientific evidence that they do any how long and under what conditions) and methods of accurately receipts and calculating the number of gallons represented and Another Title good," he said. reporting injuries and deaths." Moreover, investigations of the fact that stotes which have The current death rate is about 50,000 pe r year. If this figure (continued on page 9) motor vehicle inspection programs have fewer accidents than CHARLES STATE MEWS Cemetery—Life Not Death Published every class day throughout fall, winter, and spring terms Forest Lawn has finally come Forest Lawn is theWhite Chapel The memory garden is sound¬ The supplement goes on in pic¬ cause few are prepared for it and twice weekly summer term by the students of Michigan State Uni¬ to Michigan in all its grandeur. Cemetery near [Detroit. Embody¬ ing the death knell to the typical ture and story to tell the read¬ or have lived their lives in anti¬ versity and authorized by the Board of Student Publications. This famous cemetery near ing the "American way of death," grave yard, "a cold forbidding er that a new concept has come cipation of it. Los Angeles has been the topic which has caused undertakers to forest of gravestones with grim into vogue—a cemetery of "life" This lack of personal identi¬ Page 2 Monday, May 23, 1966 of debate by religious groups, become "morticians," cemeter¬ rows interspersed with barren rather than "death." fication with death is reinforced a subject of the television doc¬ ies to become "memory gar¬ earth mounds and sunken plots." The theme of the cemetery is by our faith in medical science, umentary, "The American Way dens,'' and dying to become the We learn this from a 12-page basically Christian. Burial plots to our materialism, and to the of Death," and a satirical movie, mere act of "passing on," White tabloid advertising supplement range in themes from the "Gar¬ adoration of "youth" in our cul- EDITORIALS 'The Loved One." Chapel has developed a totally to a Detroit daily. Of course, it den of the Prophets," to the In Michigan, the equivalent of different approach to burial. was in "living" color. "Garden of the Last Supper," to We begin to believe that death the "Garden of Brotherhood." is not just another stage of life, There are 18 gardens in all— but the ultimate end. In this Race Riots a place for nearly every phil¬ osophy of life or death. Grounds are beautifully main¬ « fallacy, we attempt to dead person "alive" by showing the body aslife-like,andbybury¬ keep the We've Got A Tiger tained and there are no tomb¬ ing it in a cemetery such as the Defy Simple Explanation for the bloody summer and the hos¬ In Our Tank! stones, only memorial plaques of "everlasting" bronze set level with the ground to make grass White Chapel. Eternity becomes a financial proposition. While the Dark Ages offers RACE RIOTS ARE the result of cutting easier. little to emulate, it did at least tility t.owards police. "White Chapel's founders have comple* social and economic envi¬ were one good aspect. And that ronmental problems. But in a recent IF THE RIOTS are to end, atten¬ idealistic, they were visionar¬ was the acceptance of jjie fact speech here, Judge George Edwards tion must be focuSed oh these eco¬ ies," the 'advertisement goes on. that death was not far off. of *he U.S. Cour* of Appeals said nomic and social maladies. Attribut¬ It doesn't say it, but it's true This acceptance brought the that 'he host; i i* between the Negro ing the riots to poor police-com- that they were also smart busi¬ Ash Wednesday practice of put¬ Communities in our large cities and munit relations could force the re¬ nessmen who knew how to exploit ting ashes on the foreheads of the the police departments is a major form efforts to be shifted away from the contemporary American view faithful with the admonition: cause for race riots. This is a the social and economic ills. of death. White Chapel is meet¬ "Remember man thou art dust simole explanation to a very com¬ As long as the adverse environ¬ ing a very real need today. But and unto dust thou shall return." plicated problem. mental conditions exist, Watts resi¬ should that need exist? This custom has been dropped dents will have no warmth for the Our society needs to put on by many of our churches because EDWARDS MADE THE ERROR OF police. But even if a ma'or cam¬ lavish funerals with large and it is "too pagan," while the labeling *he resj;t of the hostility as paign could ease some of the peoples' wasteful floral offerings. We need churches continue pagan burial ♦he c a_se of hosti lity. hostitlity towards the law, the.ghetto to dress up the corpses to look rites. conditions would almost certainly lead better than they were in life. But the ceremony is beautiful THE ■VATTS DISTRICT of Los to a resurgence of the hostility. And we need to bury our dead because it reminds us that life in "memory gardens." is not endless and we should at¬ THOUGH THE ELIMINATION of Angeles is a ghetto. Many Watts This is symptomatic of our so¬ tempt to make the economic and social ills of Watts Something of it be¬ Negroes live in unsatisfactory hous¬ fore it passes. and other big-city ghettos is an ex¬ ciety, a society that hasn't pro¬ ing. Some are hungr>. Most are poor. Men Man- do not have iobs, even in the tremely difficult task, the nation must gressed in its burial customs generally do not realize beyond the Romans or the Egyp- the significance of their lives t est of times. The cultural climate not shrink away from this task by tains. Our sickness, of course, until they comprehend the pos¬ leaves much to be desired. seeking simple solutions that would, is our horrendous fear of dying. sibility of their own deaths. Th< se- are a few of the real causes at best, treat results, not causes. Our society, while paying lip And when the majority of our serivce to Christian teachings society accepts this idea, there about life after death, doesn't will be no need for funerals that Rumania Slaps really believe them. We may place, "Ye, though I walkthrough the valley of the shadow of death, leave families financially ruin¬ ed or for entombment in mem¬ ory gardens like White Chapel I will fear no evil," on our or Forest Lawn. The Russian Bear's Paw funeral leaflets or hear the The memories will be in living words, "In my house are many one's life to the fullest potential mansions," but we just don't ac¬ and in placing money, high social crushed by cept it. position and power in their proper "THE SOVIET UNION is facing a Russian tanks. But now, it Death is a remote thing- prospectives. demand that it relinquish its mono- appears as if the Soviets might be Suitable burials, Yes. something that will happen, but reverent polv of control over the armedforces backing down. believe it is a long time But most perpetuation of memory by of E astern E urope. " off. spending huge sums of superfi¬ --NewYork Times, Wednesday RATHER THAN CRUSH the Ruman¬ The trouble is that death often cialities, NO. ians, the Russians are edging to¬ "MOSCOW ("UPD — The Soviet Union wards a dissolution of the pact, pro¬ comes sooner than expected and "Weep not for the silent dead, said Wednesday both the North Atlan¬ the result is tragic. Tragic be¬ Their pains are past, their sor¬ tic Treaty Organization (NATO) and vided, of course, the West disbands OUR READERS SPEAK rows o'er." NATO. i*s Communist counterpart, the War- Why are the Russians favoring a sow Pact, should be >unked." dissolution of the Warsaw Pact in¬ LETTER POLICY THESE significant TWO QUOTES struggle. Little Rumania tell of a stead of suppressing the Rumanians? Not even the experts are agreed on Pub Board L The State News welcomes letters to the editor from all is pressing the Soviet Union to ease the answer to this question. But this Russian-Rumanian con¬ To the Editor: Then I realized that the question was more readers, whether or not they are associated with Michigan its military grip on the east E uropean than the content of The Paper. I now question State University. satellite nations. It has askedforcon- troversy indicates that the relation¬ trol over its own forces plus greater ship between the Russians and their As a student representative on the Board of the procedure of the board itself. No hearing Letters must be no longer than 300 words and should be was offered The Paper staff at all. When dis¬ typed double decision-making power inthe Warsaw European satellites has changed con¬ Student Publications, I believe it is my obliga¬ space. Pact. The Rumanians even requested siderably since the days of the Hun¬ tion to make known my position on the issue of cussing this with the board chairman, I was told the reason for not calling a representative Correspondents should include name and, if; applicable, Uni¬ that the command of the forces in garian Revolution. The Paper and the withdrawal of its authoriza¬ of The Paper to the meeting was that the board versity standing. This information may be withheld upon re¬ the pact be rotated among the member tion by our board on May 13. quest, but no unsigned letters will be printed. NO LONGER DOES the Red army's I was obliged to leave the Friday meeting "already knew what they (The Paper staff) presence in eastern E urope guarantee early because of a previous commitment. As I would say." I find this a rather weak excuse • left the meeting, I felt quite sure that while The for denying a hearing. P iper might be discussed informally, no specific From my rather unusual position as a mem¬ iction would be taken. My basis for such an as¬ ber of the board who was not directly involved in the decision, it appears to me that the board sumption came from a previous meeting when d.scussion of an important matter was refused not only acted unwisely, but has put itself in .* cather Siiepicioys-itgfc:. Ky Can Be Effective Neither was the matter of The Paper on the If I had voted Friday my vote would have been formal agend.i for May 13. At this time I had not to withdraw authorization. However, after not yet read the particular issue of The Paper reading the issue of The Paper in question, I in must clarify that my vote would not sanction question. What I saw was that certain mem¬ If He Really Wants To bers of the board were upset over the newest the issue, for I do consider it below-standard. issue. But it has been the nature of The Paper Rather, I would have chosen not to favor with¬ since its inception to upset certain people, so drawal of authorization on the basis of proce¬ I was not dure followed by the board itself. unduly alarmed. 5 ANDREW BORO'.VIEC This was, however, more than the usual It will now be the task of the board to rectify • controversy The Paper prompts. Saturday mor- this action by hearing the report ofThe Paper— American r i ning I was apprised that authorization of The if, that is, the other members can see that it have done : Paper had been withdrawn. was a mistaken action. prevent it. My first reaction was to agree with the More :::an ever before, South VietNam | withdrawal, as I had read the controversial is- Beverly L. Hall, Jackson junior is a powder keg and this crisis could be a : sue Friday evening and found it well below the Student representative to Board i standards I h id begun to ittribute to The Paper. of Student Publications slow-burning fuse capable of blowing it up. The crisis that pushed the country to i precarious position the brink of potentially disastrous civil Hawkins Backs Jaffe strife brou,,iu into the open the deep- seated ha;i'ui."i between the military direc¬ I it has been backing, torate and the Buddhist political appara¬ apparently staked its fu- tus. . To the Editor: tween MSU's big and little brass and the Ram¬ i.v: decision to send elite The Buddhists accuse the regime of parts representatives, but the excellent state¬ treason ai.d violation of pledges to honor You'll forgive trie, I ti t, but your reporting ment made by Adrian Jaffee. Ringing clearly a politica. t: uce before the elections, set of the house subcommitt hearings on theCIA- out over the antagonists was the dignified, for this fa!!. MSU-Ramparts busines s once again a sad direct and honest assertions by a professor The government is pictured as feeling example of the in which important telling how a non-member of the MSU Viet it had to act because the simmering matters that inte. the icademic community .. Nam team who was in Saigon in 1957-1958 Buddhist i. volt in the dissident northern are either sloughed felt about the disaster in which this University off ignored at this in¬ provinces was goig too far, and that the allowed itself to be involved. (Like Jaffee, I, Viet Cong was exploiting the dissension i professor, what terested me most too, was a Smith-Mundt visiting professor which should be stamped out before it t the hurly-burly i the controversy be- during the same period in Colombia, South spreads. America. There I observed the MSU project which was, and continues to be, highly com¬ mendable.) ■ • Ramparts Misquote was But as far concerned as your reporter at the hearings Jaffee never appeared. So per¬ Of A FOl/1 8Alu To the Editor: mit me to say to MSU 20-year veteran, Jaffee VOW'S© C? i>v -'CI'RMAS* from another MSU 20-year veteran, "Bravo. AND CATCri - ^ The report of the Ramparts hearing in Tues¬ Your statement makes me proud to be a teach- §5? S7 - day's State News contained particular exception to one error. a number of garbled quotations and other inaccuracies. 1 must take Stanley Sheinbaum did NOT say at the Monday Carroll Hawkins masculine Associate Professor ' $ hearing that "Charles Killingsworth. ..toldhim Dept. of Political Science .that's the way it is iv V the CIA men in Viet Nam were not under the .. MSU director, but were governed by Washing¬ with Old Spice ton." To the best of my knowledge, Sheinbaum He Wonders No Longer has never at any time claimed that he and 1 ever had any such conversation, and I can state with¬ out qualification that he would have no basis for making any such claim. If your reporter will listen to the tape recording of the Monday hear¬ To the Editor: I am matriculating to U of M next fall. After watching MSU's handling of the "CIA Affair," that's the kind of aroma she ing close to. The aroma of Crisp, tangy, likes be¬ Old Spice. persuasive. Old Spice . . . / \ unmistakably the after shave lotion for ing, he can verify that he misquoted Sheinbaum I wondered if I would miss the old school. After on this point. watching the treatment given The Paper, I no the untamed male. Try it soon ... she's longer wonder. waiting. 125 & 2.00 Charles C. Killingsworth University Professor of Labor SHULTON J (QldcSpuV and Industrial Relations Monday, May 23, 1966 3 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan PRINT NOW, PAY 6Paper9 Editor IT'S board severed The Paper's for¬ been drawn on a non-existent ac- Kindman, editor of Student Publications to de-au¬ Cuban Soldier Killed Michael mal connections with MSU. The Paper, may be arrested if thorize the weekly newspaper. Wednesday night, the normal The Paper, while authorized, he doesn't settle a dispute with Frank B. Senger, chairman of HAVANA 'AP)--The Cuban armed forces charged press time for The Paper, Brown had an account at First National his former printer by Wednes¬ the publications board, claimed Sunday a Cuban soldier was kiI led by gunfire from accepted a check for $127 signed as part of its University-super¬ that the issue "contained mater¬ the U,S, Naval Base at Guantanamo Bay in southeast day. vised business procedures. The ial that was utterly in bad taste." by Kindman. "They owed us for Cuba Saturday night. In a letter dated May 20, Don¬ two weeks. That was the limit of week of the May 12 issue—wheth¬ ald L. Reisig, Ingham County- Brown agreed. His firm had before or after the cancella¬ The soldier was identified as Luis Ramirez Lopez, their credit. The check was sup¬ er prosecuting attorney, advised printed the issue from plates of The Paper's authoriza¬ a sentry standing guard at the perimeter of the U,S, posed to pay for one week," tion Kindman to straighten out a "no- prepared by All-Star Printing tion it's still unclear—The Pa¬ base. Brown said. account" check charge within five Inc., Lansing. Brown reported A note from the armed forces ministry read over that "we were at all times hold¬ After taking the check, Brown per withdrew all its money from Cuban radio stations also said there was sporadic days. Otherwise, Reisig warned, informed Kindman that his firm that account. he will ask that a warrent be ing our nose" while printing This apparently was the ac¬ rifle firing into Cuban territory from inside the would print no further issues. sworn out for Kindman's ar- previous issues, but "things nev¬ which bank officials said American base for about two hours Saturday evening. "We'll never have anything to do count er reached the degree they did It did not say whether the firing was returned by the with such scum," Brown said of had been closed. Kindman slid Sunday afternoon then." Cubans. Kindman explained Sunday that Friday, May 12, he called The Paper. Kindman disagreed than he plans toheedtheprosecu- both with the substance of when he drew up the check to tor's warning. President Hannah and Jack Bres- Viet Cong Massacre Civilians lin, University secretary, to Brown's comments and with his Brown, he thought that The Pa¬ Jim Brown's firm printed the last-minute announcement that he per's business office had opened SAIGON (UPI)—Viet Cong The victims were canal May 12 issue of The Paper, the apologize for printing the issue. wouldn't print the newspaper. a new account at the same bank. guerrillas Sunday massacred workers and their families, issue which caused the Board of That afternoon the publications "Some sort of mix-up" had oc¬ Brown reportedly said that he 23 Vietnamese aptured as they slept in their curred; Kindman isn't sure just was going to call all local print¬ and children and wounded 12 quarters in Long Xuyen Pro¬ what. ers and tell them to "blacklist" other civilians as South Viet¬ vince, 110 miles south of Sai-( The Paper. Kindman demanded Saturday., after receiving the namese rescue the scene in a futile troops raced to effort to gon, and then led out to be shot in the head by an execu¬ ACLU Urges 'Paper' that his check be returned. Brown threatened to tear up the plates prosecuting : Kindman went to First National HELPING tion squad. prevent the mass execution. from the newest edition. Kindman and "straightened out the situa¬ Multi-Nation Launcher To Be Tested Suspension Repealed The ACLU suggested that an¬ grabbed the plates and left. Both men say that they were angered by the encounter. tion." The Paper now has an ac¬ count He containing over $500. plans to inform Reisig and WOOMERA, Austrailia i UP D--E urope's hopes for The Lansing Branch of the Kindman decided to stop pay¬ Brown of The Paper's future American Civil Liberties Union other meeting be called, that The combined development of a satellite launcher move plans in settling the dispute early ment on the check. closer to reality today with the test firing of the recommends that the Board of Paper be given notice of the con¬ this week. first stage of the biggest rocket ever fired outside Student Publications rescind its templated action and a chance The next day Brown, anticipat¬ the United States or the Soviet Union. The shot, de-authorization of The Paper. to speak in opposition to the ac¬ ing just such a move, took the check personally to First Na¬ YOU letter to Frank B. Senger, tion. by any standards of international cooperation, is a In a tional Bank of East Lansing. He remarkable achievement. It will be "blast off!" publications board chairman, the A single issue "in utterly bad local ACLU chapter attacked the taste" is a doubtful basis for reports that bank officials told in five different languages as the British-built "Blue Streak" rocket rips into the predictably method by which The Paper's withdrawal of authorization, ac¬ him The Paper's account had been closed the previous week. blue Australian heavens. authorization was withdrawn by the board May 13. cording to the local chapter. It referred to a 1963 statement Brown drove immediately to DISCOUNT by the national ACLU which the sheriff's department which 13,000 British Seamen Idle "No prior notice was given to states: referred him to the prosecuting Cosmetics the editors or faculty advisor "... While adult sensi¬ sources said Sunday. .... there was no opportunity Meanwhile, Kindman reports, & Vitam CLEAR LONDON (UPI)—Prime bilities may at times be offend¬ to be heard, and no official rea¬ Minister Harold Wilson prob¬ The walkout—first to hit the ed by youthful humor and lack of he found out that the check to ably will decide within 48 British merchant marine in sons were given for the board's taste, a policy of encouraging Brown and some other checks 619 E. Grand River action," charged the ACLU. hours whether to declare a 55 years—entered its second The speed with which the board the editors to use their best written the same day "may have of national emergency week at midnight Sunday with state withdrew authorization was judgement places the responsi¬ in Britain's crippling sea¬ nearly 500 ships and more men's strike, informed than 13,000 seamen idle in "precipitous," according to the bility where it belongs, on the letter, since "no imminent dang¬ editor and not on the college ad¬ British ports. er to the University existed, such ministration. In the long run, the Car Theft Report that a few hours' notice could editor's product will be accepted OUT!! or rejected by student readers." British, Germans Discuss NATO not have been given." Wasn't Needed LONDON (UPI)——British and German leaders meet A student's 1966 gold Pontiac here this week for talks expected to center around the structure and military posture of NATO fol¬ Frosh's Beer LeMans was stolen and recover¬ ed this weekend before it was lowing France's impending withdrawal from the discovered missing, Campus Po¬ Drink g lice reported, West German Chancellor Ludwig E^-hard was to fly here Monday for two days of talks with Prime Costs Weekend Edward A, Fritz, Troy senior, parked his car on the parking Minister Harold Wilson, Foreign Secretary Michael Six MSU freshmen spent two to be released at 6 p.m. Sunday ramp around 9;30 p.m. Satur¬ Stewart, Chancellor of the Exchequer James Callag- days m the Ingham County jail from the Ingham County jail in day. During the night, the auto ian and Economics Minister George Brown. weekend for drinking beer Mason. Spring Special last at the Red Cedar Golf Course. There has been $3,000 worth of State Police found the car aban¬ The six male students, all 19 vandalism done to the golf course, doned near Portland at 9:35 a.m. AWS Votes Thursday years old, were arrested day night by Lansing Parks and Fri- which is adjacent to the Brody Dept. Group, in the last three years, Campus Police officers. They sajd a Lansing parks officer, Sunday. By checking the registra- In owner. they discovered the car's :harged with illegal pos- Fritz, who did not yet know Last Two Weeks On'Reading Day' Plan "Recently we've found a lot session of alcoholic beverages. of broken beer bottles on the of the car's theft, was tele- Sentenced were Stephen R. greens," the officer continued, phoned. He Identified the Pon- The decision to present an of¬ see students. Dwelley, Bloomfield Hills fresh¬ "The fencg has been torn down tiac as his. An AWS committee, headed by- man; Joseph J. Kelley, Detroit three times and about 30 golf State Police reported no da- day proposal to the ficial reading office of the provost will be voted first vice president Karen Farr, freshman; Thomas A. Landa, De¬ flags have been stolen." Mage to the car. You Can is working with Green Helmet, troit freshman; Eric J. Larson, upon Thursday evening at the last Associated Women Students' the all-University sophomore Pontiac freshman: Brian \\\ Assembly of the year. The meeting will be held at men's honorary that initially pro¬ posed the project on a recom¬ Slaymaker, and Richard Jackson freshman; G. Weber, Palos YOUR WINTER WOOLENS Place Your Want Ads Heights, III., freshman. . 7 p.m. in Gilchrist Hall. An informal poll taken by AWS mendation. They cite as examples for The students pleaded guilty STORED FREE representatives in their living reading days the many universi¬ Saturday afternoon at Lansing municipal court to the charges of -Ask for details- And Save $$$ sjiciweci Chat upper class¬ ties in the countrv and the state men did riot"iavor' stocn rec¬ 22~ Ann St. C«m£U«£W ommendation, though freshmen ated pre-exam reading days into for 15 words or less and sophomores did. The major factor cited by the their programs. One of the major consideri- Reservations crT^TL'- OIK HOUR CLffWRS I upper classmen was that the "grace" prior to finals was un¬ volved. The last For Graduation necessary if the student knew suggestion was a one how to study and kept up with his day proposal which would neces¬ work during the term. sitate completing registration in Apparel Continues ■ low Also mentioned was the idea that reading days would only al- for more time to procras- one day; keeping the days per term of classes constant. Information from the League at Students the planning to graduate end of spring term can reserve .md be fitted for aca¬ 1 Day .... $1.00 of Women Voters for the women who have just turned 21 will demic apparel at the Union Desk Qn tiie other hand those f; ing ti -eading days benefit the student and the The student would not faculty. be under be distributed at the AWS meet¬ ing. The concluding activity of the any time during the present term. Union Desk hours are 7 a.m.- 11 p.m. Monday through Thurs¬ 3 Days ... $2.50 as much pressure before testing, year for AWS is Lantern Night, day, and 7 a.m.-12:30 a.m. Fri¬ and he would have the opportunity at which 50 outstanding senior day through Sunday. Apparel for to see instructors. The more time to faculty would also have prepare grades and women are honored. Lantern Night will highlight the last of classes. week graduation, which is Sunday, June 12, car, be picked up at the desk beginning today. 5 Days ... $4.00 Term Paper Time?? Don't Take Them We Can Fill All In One Ea Home To Mother, Typing Paper-All Kinds Typewriter Ribbon Sell Them Here! • Carbon Paper • Xerox Copy Machine Come To 345 Student Services. • Cover! • Construction Boards SAIJI'Y DOCS §S t f vo^ SOIUJHDIMIVI o*s "Ory Or,r Soft as a puppy. Specials Available ALL STUDENT yet rugged as an old hc^ind dog. At East Lansing Salty Dog. the original all cotton ADS MUST BE S Scrubdemm by Canton Store Only Student today's most exciting faoric with the "lived in" look,, VOID AFTE R PAID IN ADVANCE. Ask for Salty Dog jeans, bell bottoms, ook tore CPO and ponderosa shirts, shorts, and othpr casual wear by ;eadir,g fashion makers at your SANFORIZED favorite store. MAY 25, 1966 Frpt Pqrfctng At R«ar of Store Free Parking In Large Lot At Rear Of Store Monday, May 23, 1966 Michigan State News, East Lansing:. Michigan Past Casts For Mid-West Side Story The frenzy and frustration of New York's West Wide will be recreated in the Michigan State Auditorium Thursday through Saturday, when the Performing Arts Company and the Dept. of Music present Leonard Bernstein's popular musical, "West Side Story." The story of the vicious conflict between the two rival delinquent gangs, the Sharks and the Jets, and the moving romance between Tony and Maria is directed by Sidney Berger. Musical direction is by Romeo Tata, and choreog¬ raphy is by Larry Stevens of New York. Tony, ex-leader of the Jets, is played bjj^obert Peppel, Port Hope senior. He was seen last year as Basilio in "The Marriage of Figaro." Maria, sister of the leader of the rival Sharks, is por¬ trayed by Carol Robson, East Lansing graduate student. In contrast to this couple is the fiery Puerto Rican two¬ some, Bernardo and Anita. Bernardo, leader of the Sharks, is played by Dean Kyburz, Lansing senior. He was last seen as Laertes in the Performing Arts Company production of WHEN YOU'RE A JET —"Jets" and "Sharks" follow their leader, "Hamlet." choreographer Larry Stevens (with beard), as they practice the intri Jody Pearlman, Detroit steps for "West Side Story." Photo by Ton It's Great For A Date! Penn Freshmen freshman, makes her debut with the PAC in her role as _ # Lones Avai lable For Ope^ Bowling Every N itp 1 Con Get Award ^ - *... SHARKS, JETS REHEARSE - • 40 I anes • Lounge Freshman students from Penn¬ played by J. Michael Bloom. sylvania may apply for scholar¬ "East Lansing graduate stu¬ • Billiards -Snack Bar Open Every Day at 9 A.M. ship aid under the new Pennsyl¬ vania gram. State Scholarship Awards range Pro¬ from $200 dent. son Budd" He was seen this sea¬ as Claggart in "Billy and as Commodore Dance On The u The Air Conditioned to $1200 for those needing finan¬ cial assistance. Roseabove in "Oh Dad, Poor Dad." Baby "No, John didn't plie right. no, it's a half turn, Baby forming Arts Company-Dept. of Music joint production of "West staged the Grist Mill Music Play¬ house in Andover, N.J., and stag¬ part of the from ballet. The movements ballet are recognizable, Pennsylvania freshmen who did John," said the wiry little man Side Story." ed "Lady In the Dark," an in- while not predominant, in his receive an application by HOLIDAY LANES not mail r.-.ay obtain one in the Schol¬ Are You with the curly beard. "Plie. You Conducting the dance technique class is New York the-round production with Jane Morgan. choreography. "He has given me a few feel¬ o know what I mean? Otherwise choreographer arship Office, 201 Student Serv¬ you'll be doing like this. . Larry Stevens, especially "im¬ Stevens has done several off- ing for dance," said Harriet Da¬ ices Building. I he deadline is June 1. Really Alive? a And still smiling, he went into quick turn that turned into a ported" to stage the MSUproduc¬ tion. Broadway productions and staged "The Eddie Fisher Olympic vidson, Lansing junior, a "Jet girl." "He has a flowing, smooth tangle of legs. Stevens studied in New York Spectacular" for Euravision, style that gives life and polish under Leon Fokine and Madame German TV. to the show. He notices every- Effective May 26 Baby John smiled, '00, and did it right the next time. Fedorova, famous Russian dan¬ Besides Jane Morgan and Eddie "The question is not whether For the next 90 minutes Baby cers. Fisher, Stevens has worked with And what does Larry Stevens, Among all the trunk air lines...only God is dead, but rather, is man alive," Nelson Algren said Fri¬ John and 15 other Sharks and Jets As a choreographer he has such stars as Van Johnson, Phyl¬ lis Diller, Howard Keel, Forrest popular New York choreograph¬ "Arabesqued" and "rond-de- worked with The Chicago Melody er, say of his Midwestern Sharks 1 day as he addressed the MSU jambed" their way down ima¬ Top, The Milwaukee MelodyTop, Tucker and Gordon and Sheila and Jets? American Studies Assoc. the Cleveland Music Carnival MacRae. "They're great!" he exclaim¬ ginary alleys of New York City Delta "The concept of God being dead in the Women's IM, as they the Flint Music Tent and the Stevens has his own particular ed. "Beyond all my expectations. is not nearly as frightening as Detroit Music Theater. jazz style. To him, jazz is a We're really going to surprise practiced. .. and practiced... and the concept of men in the third Last summer he directed and "bastard art" derived in large some people." practiced for the upcoming Per¬ person," said Algren, author of Walk on the Wild Side and Man with The Golden Arm. "A third person man mensional, he lives according to the image that he has created" is one di¬ Americans Do Read More, he said. But Avoid Quality Literature "The campus atmosphere is largely third person," said Al¬ gren. "It goes against individu¬ ality. It is a mold with everyone off sordid sequel rules." runs into a of sexual offers a elses By ART GITTLEN escapes. "Many of our leaders today are Pathos in the third on a grand scale is the standard person, mere Whom are you reading and why? motif of the contemporary author. Men who images," he said. At first glance, more people in America face up to life are the forgotten men in "Out of this kind of third per¬ today are readers than ever before. Paper¬ American letters.Instead, characters suf¬ son world we get a one dimen¬ backs, a late bloomer in this century have fering sexual horrors and Freudian black sional man, like Hubert Hum¬ come of age, and the distribution of cloth- madness—with seemingly no surcease— reserved phrey with a key in his back covered editions flourishes. (Overlooking are the stuff peculiar to present fiction: parading around imitating a pre¬ entirely the slick magazines, who—with it is only the unique author who tries to sident," said Algren. NELSON ALGREN their enormous circulations—week after buck this strategy. "Or we get comic book char¬ week provide the American public with a Unquestionably, it is exceedingly dif¬ acters like Premier Ky and his piece of its brain.) ficult to create reader interest in the good wife parading around in their his and hers batman suits." African Students To be sure, there are some sad spots in the growth and maturity of American ana commonplace. Deviance, whether be¬ low or above the norm is the reality of "But these characters also Aid Homelands seat have an aura of terror about publishing. living people. In a day when ideals are Some say that if poetry is not dead, it few and ideal people fewer, to present a them because they are the ones A "War on Illiteracy" is being has moved so far afield into structural view of Adam before the fall seems both who sentence the black market waged by MSU's African Students experimentalism and ideas wedded to an less than realistic and hardly compre¬ businessmen to death," he said. Assn. The group is joining with esoteric ecstasy that it hardly survives, hensible. "A Negro woman was being other Africans and their friends and certainly the thoughtful journals, prov¬ evicted from her home in the Regrettably, however, it has become abroad in providing assistance ing grounds that once celebrated the early a habit of the artist to order together South and a reporter asked her if to their home governments. works of such giants as T.S. Eliot, Ernest sordid bits and snippets apparently adopt¬ Youth she thought LBJ really cared and Two means have been sug- Hemingway and William Faulkner, seem ed from his experience and then call it would do anything to JjpiKxrf. ■I'i&ftz.'&t. Axsaez,« "aestiWA'^. wi'lKflKSMV ' "tne entire picture "She answered, 'Are you kid¬ president of the association, for But the basic observation remains un¬ John Dos Passos in the early thirties ding." students to help: by donating old, challenged that the printed work today has attempted such a composite panorama of "She was right," said Algren. used and neglected books, espe¬ a vast audience. the American scene in U.S.A. It failed, "Johnson is a out; dimensional cially school texts, children's What is disturbing in the face of this as all ambitions of this kind must fail, man. He doesn't really care." books and literary texts; plus, success is the lack of quality statements because the complexity of human and social Fare... "Living in one dimension, contributing any amount of money involvement exceeds the scope being produced. of any one solely by one's image may be to help with the work in indige¬ What has artist or his expression. all right for businessmen but happened to an American prose nous languages. when the critics of society have that once not only captured the imagina¬ But many have tried since. Whether it be Books and contributions may tion of the popular reading public, but fiction about good Negroes made baa by a to devise an image that sells it be either taken to East Lansing combined in its efforts the ideas suf¬ deliberately hostile society, or adolescent is much more critical," he said. area churches or collected by- ficient to satisfy critical considerations? rebels who choose to expatriate them¬ Many of the writers today are contacting Asseez at 355-0807, % off! Why, for example, do the authors of selves from family and fortune—the tex¬ (continued on page 9) or Alfred Opubor, chairman of today depend for their very artistic being ture of these novels inevitably finale in the scholastic committee, at 353- on what has been done over andover in the the same way. 1700. American novel since the beginning of this Turn the cover of a piece of fiction century? and chances are excellent you will read Indian Trails Inc. Since Sister Carrie walked into a tale a tale of a rebellious hero on the road about good girls in big bad cities and the of life stifled by spiritual and physical painful consequences that naturally follow, impotency in a world he did not make. the world of the American author has Observe also how this familiar figure— morbidly dwelt on sorrow and suffering tormented, tormented and finally torn— —characters who are not only down on yields and becomes one more servant of the NEW their luck but forever out of joint with their world. Decade theme that meaning in life is silence. What is especially interesting in all this by decade, the vast majority of is the striking parallel between fiction and talented writers have progressively re¬ the so-called new social protest. Irving ^NON-STOP hashed this tedious theme of damaged Howe in a recent issue of Dissent char¬ persons put upon by a hostile culture and acterizes the 'New Left' as "vicarious indifferent universe. indulgence in violence, often merely the¬ SERVICE! It is therefore not remarkable that oretic and thereby all the more irre¬ currently the literary model of excel¬ sponsible." How easy for the vindictive lence has become a Norman Mailer's artist—like his political counterpart—to "American Dream" where romantic love gain recognition through loud lament: how is a bad scene and sex is sodomy, and a difficult after isolating all the causes of John Updike's "Rabbit Run" hero—a nei¬ man's disenchantment to offer amielora- Say Good-bye to Stand-by...get a seat for sure! ther good nor bad young man bewitched A Make linn reservations h\ by the responsibilities of wife, child and phone in advance . . . no more uncertainty! TO KALAMAZOQ-CHICAGO job—who simply refuses to face life and A mst it bit more and he sure: 1 off regular Da\ Jetourist fare. Or do you? Leaves E. Lansing 2:15 P.M. (Fridays 8. Sundays) In one way the book business A (iood from noon Monday to noon Friday, pin-. Sat. pm. Sun. am. Other Service is better than ever. Yet under¬ » Prescriptio lying this financial harvest is A Just yet a (Daily) S3 I.D. card from Delta or other I S. scheduled airline. ground the fundamental issue that lit¬ Westbound (to Chicago) 6:40 erature's moral emptiness exud¬ Typical Delta Youth Fares from Detroit: A.M., ft:30 \.M. 11:15 A.M. » Complete s ed by faceless and directionless 2:10 P.M., 5:05 P.M.. 10:45 of frames characters is not necessarily Atlanta s26°° Houston $4900 P.M. the whole truth of American real¬ Miami >49 Orlando $4100 Easthound (to Flint) 5:40A.M. > Sunglasses ity. 9:25 A.M. 12:40 P.M., 2:55 New Orleans $4000 , Dallas $43 «o Repairs wh P.M., 5:25 P.M., 7:50 P.M., » LANSING Tampa $42°° 11:20 P.M. WE TELEGRAPH Bator Opticians H FLOWERS See your Travel Agent Phoi.t 332-2M3 WORLD WIDE or call nearest Delta 223 Abbott (Next to State Theoter) offic REPRISE A1BUM 6203 Indian Trails Inc. 215 ANN ED 2.0871 Monday, May 23, 1966 5 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan This Week 'Sequences' review of Theodore Roethke's The Far Field Have Monday Channel 10—7:30 p.m. U.S.A.—The Opposition Theatre. Jon A Voight and Sor ell Booke perform a shortened version of the (New York, Doubleday & Co., 1964) S3.50. 95 pp. drama "Do Not Pass Go." By George Wolff Channel 12—10 p.m. (color) In Search of Man. Hour-long docu¬ Graduate Assistant in English mentary special explores the bonds that link all men, despite individual ethnic and environmental differences. The poet, Theodore Roethke, was born in Saginaw, attended the University of Michigan and taught briefly at MSU and T uesday then at Penn State and the University of Washington. Channel 6--CBS Reports (color). National Drivers Test. A He won the Pulitzer Prize in 1953 and twice won the Na¬ program designed to help people test their driving ability. tional Book Award, the second time for "The Far Field," published posthumously in 1964. Thursday The various poems in the four "Sequences" that make up "The Far Field" appeal to readers with the most diverse Channel 10—7 p.m. The Great Society. "The Role of Congress." tastes. The richly descriptive poems of "North American A panel of U.S. senators and representatives discuss the extent Sequence" use slow-paced, subtle rhythms: to which the President can rely upon congressional support of 1 dream of journeys repeatedly: the Great Society programs. Of flying like a bat deep into a narrowing tunnel, Channel 10—7:30 p.m. Lorne Greene at the London Palladium. Of driving alone, without luggage, out a long peninsula, The first of six special musical-variety programs taped at The road lines with snow-laden second growth. London's famed music hall theatre. A fine dry snow ticking the windshield .... These poems narrate the spirit's "long journey out of the Vj self." The natural descriptions often represent psychic UNIVERSITY states, many times focusing on tween two such states, as in the lines: the moment of change be¬ War uwn HUM I remember a. stone breaking the eddying current, s the poet himself plays the role of persecutor, as Neither white nor red, in the dead middle way, 'when he describes a geranium that he slowly killed by feed¬ men and deans did not rank the Where impulse no longer dictates, nor the darkening ing it " . . . gin, boobie pins, half-smoked cigars, (and) study important enough to ap¬ shadow, dead beer . . . . " And when that snuffling cretin of a maid propriate the necessary funds to A vulnerable place, . . . establish a research center. Threw her, pot and all, into the trash-can, Surrounded by sand, broken shells, the wreckage of A project not considered 'high I said nothing. In the last group, "Sequence, Sometimes Metaphysical," priority' by the faculty and ad¬ The group of love poems is a bit disappointing. Rather ministration, said Green "does than being passionate and convincing, they are mostly luke¬ ' the poet struggles with his fear of death. Many of his lines not receive the necessary finan¬ achieve a beautiful intensity: warm comments on loneliness. One of the better stanzas cial support." runs: My shadow pinned against a sweating wall .... The proposal tor a campus And: 1 sing the wind around center was submitted on the basis Dark, dark my light, and darker my desire. NO DEPOSITS, NO RE TURN —Melted-down beer And hear myself return that the University would estab¬ To nothingness, alone. My soul, like some heat-maddened summer fly, and Pepsi bottles were only some of the many lish and finance the center until The loneliest thing I know Keeps buzzing at the sill. Which 1 is 17 attractions at this weekend's sidewalk art show. A fallen man, 1 climb out of my fear. The bottles were melted into vases, ash trays and it could become self-supporting Is my own mind at play. bowls. Photo by Jonathan Zwickel explained Greer. The "Mixed Sequence" treats from various points of view the relation between victor and victim. Sympathizing with Sweet Christ, rejoice in my infirmityr "Millions of dollars are avail¬ There's little left I care to call my own. able outside the University to fi¬ the victim, the poet thinks about a pet meadow mouse, which Today they drained the fluid from a knee has escaped To run unde.- the hawk's wing, And pumped Thus I conform to my a shoulder full of cortisone; divinity London Flutist Joins Dept. nance peace/war Arms Control research. The and Disarmament A well-known flutist with the here and performing with the Agency, under the auspicies of By dying inward, like an aging tree. ■ federal s but To live by courtesy of the shrike, the snake, the London Symphony Orchestra will Richards Woodwind Quintet. ; tom-cat. The craftsmanship in many poems throughout the book is one source," said Greer. "Many Join the MSI Music Dept. be¬ Murray, principal flutist with And the poet meditates: impeccable. The imagery, which at first may appear to be the London Symphony for 10 private foundations also appro¬ ginning in September. I think of the nestling fallen into the deep grass, purely descriptive, after several close readings reveals priate funds," he added. rich patterni: i. The intensity of emotion and the depth of Alexander Murray, who has years, has appeared as soloist The turtle gasping in the dusty rubble of the highway, also been principal flutist with in his native England as well as "Two years ago I was asked The paralytic stunned inthetub, and thewater rising,— vision are things that each reader will want to gauge for a number of cities throughout the by the ACDA to submit a pro- himself. the Royal Opera House Covent All things innocent, hapless, forsaken. Garden, will be teaching flute world. posal to undertake certain peace/ He has studied at the Univer- war studies, said Greer. "But sity of London, the Royal Col- 1 could not submit a bid as we lege of Music and the London did not have an appropriate or- ganization." Refreshing Treat Royal Academy of Music. 'S' Concert Band A By FRED T. HIMMELEIN There are few treats more re¬ a mars not-unheard-of practice which the basis of the work. Weber's "Invitation to the paid handsome dividends to the band. From brass to reeds, the players turned in a top-drawer peters," Messrs. Docksey and Fletcher and Miss Nelson, and the flute soloist in the Massenet deserve plaudits for some re¬ This is ner or no; band with brass th^^pical Big Ten enough for Wag¬ plumbing: delightfully, the Michigan State Concert Band The no-drag shaver. Dance" was cut in order to pare performance, providing some ex¬ freshing than to be talked "with" cellent ensemble and some taste¬ markably fine playing. plays extremely well and with a rather than to be talked "down away some dead wood, but the cut¬ restraint that, if not always ar¬ carried over You might not shift Their success to." Such into the ting spoiled a beautiful chance ful playing that goes a long way a treat, put toward explaining the high status into the rest of the organiza¬ tistically the best policy, is con¬ for the band to show off its language of music, was provided of band music on this campus. tion, which supplied some en¬ sistently enjoyable. restrained style. by Leonard Falcone and the MSU semble work that many more This is a group with which It Concert Band Sunday on the ter¬ The extremely Wagnerian pre¬ In particular, the three solo¬ ists in Agostini's "Three Trum¬ professional organizations lack. is a pleasure to "talk." race of Kresge Art Center. lude to the third act of "Ktin- to 3rd until Conductor Falcone filled the lhlld" also seemed to lack pow¬ er and a sense of drive that is bright afternoon air with some vital to such music. pleasantly restrained music, 123-456-789 some of it delightful and some Possibly the least success¬ ful work on the program was the you're 17. of it disappointing. FIRST NATIONAL CITY BANK final section from Moussorgsky' s On the plus side, Falcone and the band brought remarkable fi¬ "Pictures at an Exhibition." nesse to such pieces as Shos¬ Here the band's restraint led it - TWENTY DOLLARS — takovich's "Festive Prelude" astray. In the "Hut of Baba and Massariet's "Overture to Yaga" there was a drastic change Usually 17 is the time peach fuzz turns into hard bristle. Then you've got trouble, . Phedre." of pace in the middle section unless you have a shaver that can grow up with you. Like the new Remington" 200 In the Shostakovich, Falcone which robbed the piece of con¬ Selectro Shaver with the dial. Alias no-drag. We gave it an alias because you can subdued what can often become siderable momentum. An inex¬ :aooa»ooofi«: i ? 3*.s&?a^»- shift all over your face and adjust to your particular beard. Any variety from fuzz to plicable key change in the pas¬ all-too-pervasive rhythms, and th£ ..festive situa¬ sage leading to "The Great Gate i ' ' ' ^ T~7^T1 w\ scrub brush. Turn the dial to 1st. Vou can your neck. No drag In 2nd you can go trough a take off uphill tion encouraged by a raised eye¬ of Kiev" left the transition fur¬ wink rather than a jab ther split in two. couple of days' growth No pull. In 3rd you can take on anything without leaving skid Other travelers checks brow and marte. Shift to 4th and you're in and out of corners. You drift over tender spots like a in the ribs. The magnificent finale was cut The Massenet was the most down by an almost embarrassing your upper lip. 5th is the finishing line. Straight sideburns. In 6th you clean out the successful piece on theprogram, attempt to rush the final, pom¬ whiskers. The Selectro Shaver is up there in the Ferrari class, but we've managed bringing with it some excellent ensemble playing a real French pous phrases. Such embarrass¬ ment could well have been the are every bit as good as to make it cost less than a lot of regular shavers. We're not out to take you for a ride. We also make a complete line of cordless shavers, in case you're interested. flair and some exquisite flute by-product of the taste and re¬ First National City Banks straint which made the rest of playing. The overture itself is not top- the program so easy to take. drawer Massenet, but one would However, in toto, the restraint have thought it was from Fal¬ cone's interpretation. On the minus side, Falcone's Who Chickened? restraint and some poorly edited Hens seem to be the latest scoring combined to sap much objects of student pranks. of the program's artistic suc¬ Six white laying hens were cess. stolen Thursday night from the Motion" poultry research area on Jolly ..until you lose them! Strauss's "Perpetual was not perpetual at all but was Road, campus police reported. supplied with a concert ending, The hens were valued at $3each. BASIC OUTLINES (11, Nat. Sci., SOC, HUM, COURSE OUTLINES MATH 108,109,111,112,113 KK V1IN( J TON CHEM 101,102,111,112 Other leading travelers checks, like First checks, you don't have to worry. There are more Selectro JSli than 20,000 places around the world authorized National City travelers checks, can be cashed give you a last refund—right on the spot! STAT 121, MATH 122 all over But if you the world. think all travelers checks are alike, to First National City travelers checks come from the leader in world-wide banking, and have you may be in for a rude shock if you should published by f agle Press lose your checks. been in use over 60 years. They are known and With other leading travelers checks, elaborate accepted in more than a million shops, hotels, restaurants, air terminals, etc., the world over. available only at and time-consuming inquiries often have to be made. It may be days-even weeks-before you Next time you travel, Insist on First National get your money back. Who wants to wait? City travelers checks. But, if you lose First National City travelers They cost just one cent per dollar. Campus Music Shop Look for Beaumont Tower and Sporty First National City Sold by BankTravelers Checks banks everywhere 6 Michigan State News, East Lansing- Michigan Monday. May 23, 1966 Trackmen Win 2nd Straight BigTen Crown Miler Art Link 3 as favorites on the basis of bet- don't win a championship on pa¬ role in MSL"s indoor track cham- performances by Sharkey, wer* just trying too hard, and Tom Herbert als< ter times to date. The Spartans per. You win it on the track." pionship last winter. Coates, Garrett and Bowery Dit- this is bound to cause mistakes." , points for MSL. L were ranked as a close second With only four first places, "It was strictly a team ef- trich chalked this up to pres- The trackmen have the Fed- ' In his even: wit'", a orltes with the Hawks, the Spartans won the Big Ten fort from start to finish," Dit- sure. A eration Meet at Kalamazoo and ing. Herbert was ti; . Iowa had crown with the depth which has trich said, "We won mostly on the Central Collegiates at Notre better times," Dittrich said, been instrumental in success this seconds, thirds and fourths.' Dame on the slate before the Most experts !\ "They had it on paper, but you spring and which played a key far as the disappointing champs," Dittrich said. "They NCAA Meet, here June 16-18. DHOOGE DOUBLE CHAMP Netters Second By GAYE L WESCH ships at No. 4 and No. 6 singles ship. He then teamed up with second set, 3-6. The win avenged State News Sports Writer and No. 1 and No. 3 doubles. fellow Junior Jim Phillips to de¬ an earlier loss to Stewart in a But MSL took some of the luster feat dual meet. Michigan ran away with the Teeguarden and Jim Swift from the L-M's performance by- to take the No. 2 doubles crown. Szilagyi had little trouble dis¬ 1966 Big Ten tennis champion¬ winning championships at No. 2 Dhooge's double championship posing of Nolan, 6-2, 6-4, Fri¬ ship meet here this weekend, and No. 5 singles and No. 2 made him the first Spartan net- day. but MSL' captured three indivi¬ doubles. ter since 1953 to win twice in Dhooge, who was the runnerup dual titles to finish second and Mickey Szilagyi, the sopho¬ one season. Stan Drobac, now at No. 5 singles last season, serve notice that it will be a lefthander from Milwau¬ was not to be denied Saturday. more coach of the Spartan betters, did league power next season. kee, Wis., upset top-seeded Mike it in 1953. He repeatedly broke Teeguard¬ The Wolverines racked up 138 Nolan of Indiana in the semifinals Szilagyi, who possesses one of en's powerful serve and held points, four less than their win¬ and then disposed of second- the best overheads in the Big his own to win, 6-2, 6-2. , ning total last year. MSL tallied seeded Jerry Stewart of L'-M in F riday had been slightly rough¬ Ten, slammed one past Stewart 113, which is 31 more than its er for the junior from Grosse the finals to become Big Ten to give him a 6-3 victory in the fourth-place total of 82 last sea- Pointe, and he scrambled for a Champion at No. 2 singles. third set and the championship. Meanwhile, Vic Dhooge, who The little lefty had used his 7-5, 6-3 victory over Tom Gavin Indiana was third with 881/2 second-seeded at No. 5 sin¬ of Ohio State. followed was powerful overhead and service by Illinois, 85 1, 2, Wis¬ gles, handedMichigan'sRonTee- to come back from an early- Dhooge and Phillips started consin, 72, Northwestern, 45, guarden his first loss of the service break and win the first strong in the championship match Minnesota, 40, Ohio State, 30 1/2, at No. 2 year in capturing that champion¬ set, 7-5, before dropping the doubles and won the Iowa, 291 2 and Purdue, 12. first set, 6-0. But Teeguarden and Michigan captured champion¬ Swift found the range in the sec¬ ond set and defeated Dhooge and Phillips, 1-6. But the Spartan twosome re¬ sponded with an early service break and then held their own serves to take the third set and the championship, 6-3. Szilagyi had a chance to du¬ plicate Dhooge's feat, but he and sophomore Rich Monan were de¬ feated at No. 1 doubles by Ste¬ wart and Karl Hedrick of Michi¬ / Szilagyi follows way to the Big Ten gan, 9-7, 7-5. Monan and Szilagyi had de¬ _ _ ,, Szilagyi defeated /art, 7-5, 3-6, 6-3, to gain feated second-seeded Dave Pow¬ Photo by John Castle er and Nolan of Indiana in the semis, 6-2, 6-4. Friday had been black Friday for Spartan seniors Laird War¬ Clay B ner and Mike Youngs. Warner was eliminated at No. 3 singles by Indiana's Mike Baer, 6-1, 2-6, 6-4. Baer then went Cooper on to win that position. the championship at Youngs was also eliminated at BloorfyTKO Ten championship at No. No. 6 singles by Illinois' Rick Wurtzel, 2-6, 6-4, 6-1. f The pair then lost at No. 3 5 singles and thenteamed , • doubles to Steve Levenson and with Jim Phillips to win FOILFD IN FINALS—MSU's No. 1 doi Jerry Johnson of Illinois, 6-4, at No. 2 doubles. Dhooge of Rich Monan (foreground) and Micks zilagyi 3-6, 6-3. is the first Spartan net-, made it to the Big Ten findlsbefor ing de- Monan, who had been elimi¬ ter to take a double crown feated by Michigan's Karl Hedrick and y Ste- nated by Hedrick at No. 1 singles since Coach Stan Drobac wart. Both Monan and Szilagyi are s in the quarterfinals, came back did it as a student in and have two more chances at it to tally 31/2 points for the Spar¬ 1953. Photo by John Castk tan cause by winning the conso¬ lation championsiiip at No. 1 singles. The Coral Gables, Fla., na¬ 'M' Lefties Chill Batsmen, tive beat Tom Mansfieldof North¬ western, 6-2, 6-2, and Arden i . St.okstad of Iowa, 6-2, 6-3 in the consolktion preliminaries and Wayne Svoboda of Purdue, 6-2, CAUGHT IN THE ACT—Spartan second baseman Jerry Walker tags Michigan's Smash Big Ten Title Hopes 6-2 in trie finals. semis Phillips was eliminated in the by Ed Waits, the eventual Ted Sizemore in a run down between second and third in the first inning of By JOE MITCH champion at No. 4 singles, 6-4, State News 6-1. Friday's MSU-Michigan game at Old College Field. TheSpartans won Friday, 6-5, Sports Writer Wisconsin's Todd Ballinger r.ehind the pitching of John Krasnan but lost two to the Wolverines Saturday, 2-1 ANN ARBOR—Michigan's left- defeated Michigan's Karl Hedrick and 5-3. - Photo by Russ Steffey handed pitching pushed Michigan to become the champion at No. 1 State "right" out of the running singles, 8-6, 6-4. for the Big Ten Conference base¬ ball championship here Saturday Michigan's Bill Dixon won the BUCKEYES WIN TITLE afternoon. championship at No. 6 singles by Two Wolverine southpaws, defeating Wurtzel, 6-4, 6-3, and k then teamed with Waits to cap¬ Geoff- Zahn and Jim Lyijnen, whiler- "We just weren't able to Krasnan provided the hitting ture the No. 3 doubles crown by stopped the Spartans from \S' Golfers 4th sible shot at the title in the final day of conference action by pitch¬ a pos¬ hit left-handers," he kept re¬ peating in the Spartan dressing room after the game. .punch, too, as he tripled in the winning run in the fifth after his teammates had pushed across defeating Johnson and Levenson, 6-3, 3-6, 6-2. ing L-M to a doubleheader sweep "They got the long ball and we two runs earlier in the inning. B . DAN DROSKI ate News Sports Writer was if very pleased with the John Bailey," said Coach Friday, and wound up his day by shooting scores of 70 and 72 over The State, 2-1 and 5-3. day before, MSU kept its didn't. What was it—they won botli games on home runs?" Top hitters for the Spartans in the weekend series were John Bengal Bunts • Fossum. "f^a i ley played Saturday. Seehausen is the first slim title hopes alive with a re¬ The Spartans were held to only Frye, who had five hits Saturday )W \ CITY—MSL's shed fast in the last 18 holes golf team steady golf and proved he is ile of p! lyii g golf in the Big individual champion that North¬ western has had since 1939. sounding 6-5 victory over Michi¬ three hits in the first game by after being held hitless Friday, Beat Birds gan at Old College Field behind Zahn and couldn't get the big Bob Speer, whose total of three :ie Minnesota for fourth place Ohio State had a team total the strong relief pitching of left¬ hit did BALTIMORE P Don Wert as Michigan. Mel Wak- hits included a double Friday — Ohio Suit- won the 47th an- n Seehausen of Northwest- of 1480 while Michigan was sec¬ hander John Krasnan. that bro^e a Spartan record for drove in two runs with suicide <■ abayashi, a little Japanese-Ca¬ 1 Hi: Ten on the individual cr.uvn with ond 1502; Wisconsin third The two losses gave State a Championship here at nadian who was an All-American the most doubles in one season squeeze bunts as Detroit edged da;, ind Saturday, o-over-par score of 2bi">. with 1509; Minnesota and MSU final 8-5 conference record and hockey player for Michigan a Baltimore 3-2 Sunday. was five shuts better than (12), and Steve Polisar and Tom 'he Buckeyes clinched the title had 1519; Indiana sixth at 1521; a fourth-place finish. The Tigers scored two runs year ago. won it for Zahn with Blnkowski, each with four hits. 22 shots in the four-round \ lex of Ohn Purdue seventh with 152i>; North¬ Overall, MSU is 23-13-1 and in the third without hit and ' a home run off Dick Kenney in first a In the game, Frye, a they swept t western eighth at 1546; Illinois has a game with Western Michi¬ the ninth. transfer student from Claremont, added another riin in the fifth. ind title in the 1; x ye Defending champion Bill New¬ ninth with 1561; and Iowa 10th with gan Tuesday at Kalamazoo to State had-111 hits in the night¬ All three came across after Wert Fla., got two of the three Spar¬ fol- ton of Michig in was in third 1569. wind up the '66 season. executed successful suicide cap but Lyijnen stopped the Spar¬ tan hits with Kenney picking up place with a total of 292. One of the tournament's big¬ Michigan finished ahead of the tans from getting a big inning. squeeze plays. Seehausen paced the tourney by the other. Frye's double in the gest surprises was the seventh- Spartans in the conference in He held on for 6-2/3 innings be¬ After Ray Oyler walked lead¬ Indians Beat The Spartan* were in sixth firing rounds of 71 and 73 on place finish of defending cham¬ third place with a 10-2 mark. fore Bob Reed came on in relief sixth run drove in the of the game. only Spartan ing off the third, Oriole pitcher ;>! ice at the end of the firstd ;. 's pion Purdue. The Boilermakers Ohio State won its second con¬ in the seventh to preserve the Frank Bertaina fielded Mickey defeated runnerup Michigan by secutive league crown with a Michigan tied the score in the Lolich's bunt and threw wildly Chicago, 3—2 play, but moved the end of the up to first 18 fifti holes. u Ruggers Lose l(i strokes last year, and had four of their top players back. 6-0 record after beating runner- victory. The Wolverines used the home seventh until and then had to wait Wakabayaski's blast in the on an attempted force, Oyler Saturday State caught Minne¬ up Minnesota, 6-4, Friday, and run ball again to win—this time reaching third. the last hole of the tour- Purdue placed five golfers in ninth to win it. The home run sota on being rained out of a doublehead¬ off sophomore Jim Blight, who Wert's bunt scored Oyler, and ney as the entire Gopher squ. d To U-C, 3-0 the top seven positions last sea¬ er Saturday. was starting his first Big Ten was to straight-a-way center- field, 380 feet from home plate. when Bertaina again made a wild b'j ..ed the hole to open the duor son, but this year had only one After the double defeat to Mich¬ game. Chandler Simonds and Dick throw, Lolich also scored. MSU's in the top 13 slots, and In the nightcap, State jumped to for MSL. rugby club dropped a man only igan, words came slow for a Schryer had the blows that ac¬ Another walk to Oyler, Jake a quick 2-0 lead on runs in the John Bailey led the Sparta tight 3-0 decision to the Uni¬ two in the first 15. stunned MSU coach, Danny Lit- counted for all of the Wolver¬ Wood's bloop single and Wert's first and second innings. Frye 72-hole total of 301. Bail¬ versity of Chicago here Satur¬ Spartan golf fortunes improv¬ ines' runs. squeeze bunt which, went for a ed this season scored the first on an error and ey had rounds of 77, 75, 75 ind day, The only score of the game as the teamjump- Reed, was the loser against hit, scored another Detroit run "4 in finish 13th in the indivi¬ was a field goal by Chicago's ed from last season's seventh- Bill Steckley, the second on a hit in the fifth. Krasnan Friday as the Spartans dual tournament. Senior Rick John Hunter. place finish. The Spartans should greeted the little, junk ball right¬ by Jerry Walker. Lolich held the Orioles to one Mackey was one shot back of 1}ie game was almost com¬ continue to move up the ladder hander with two three-run Michigan then tied it on Si- hit until the seventh when they Ohio State innings pletely dominated by the de- of monds' homer in the Bailey with a 302 score, follow¬ success next year as they for the win. two - run scored two runs on Woody Held's M i nnesota ed by Capta.n Ken Benson t lose only two of» their top six Krasnan relieved Jim Good¬ fourth. It was his first hit in 21 double. When he gave up his fourth 305. MSU had several chances to score players, and five from their 17- chigan rich in the second inning with two at bats. hit, Frank Robinson's one-out on field goals, but the Spartans MSU Rounding out the Spartans' six- on and no out. He got out of the Schryer's homer then followed double in the ninth, acting mana¬ MSL will lose Captain Ken Ben¬ Indiana 6 5 0 .545 ma team were juniors Sandy Mc- were always just a little wide. inning without a run scored, and in the fifth—a three-run blast ger Bob Swift brought in Larry Andrew and Doug Campbell and Rookie John Harris was out¬ son. the team's No. 1 golfer, Rick 111 ir then went on to finish the game to left field; Blight, before serv¬ Sherry. W isconsin sophomore Steve Benson. Mc- standing for the Spartans, despite Mackey, the squad's No. 2 play¬ for his second win of the year. Brooks Robinson greeted ing the home run pitches to Si- Andrew had a four-round total of the fact that he didn't score. er, and able substitutes Doug In his seven-inning stint, he monds and Schryer, had held Sherry with a single, but Frank 30>>, while Campbell carded a The ruggers close out their Hankey, Bob Workman andTerry was out at the plate on Willie gave up two runs on seven hits, the Wolverines' hitless for three 309 and Benson fired a 322. season with a 3^-5 record. Norden through graduation. struck out five and walked two. Horton's throw to Bill Freehan. innings. Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Monday, May 23, 1966 7 ITPA TESTS... 'Diary9 Lacks 5Sg=5gj How Does John Direction, Acti The way a child learns and communicates with others is in¬ on around him. But he is sometimes weak in expressing himself verbally or getting in- formation by listening to people talk. He also has much trouble dicative of his social and physi¬ with grammar. By BOB ZESCHIN - cal abilities and disabilities, ac¬ State News Reviewer Barbara Bateman, 'Diary of a cording associate to professor from the In¬ The reached In nouvelle a "Diary of vague film has pinnacle of vagueness a Chambermaid." Chambermaid' stitute for the Study of Excep¬ tional Children and Adults, De- Match Up: Program Paul University, 111. It has no plot, even less action, and is overloaded with atmos¬ phere and symbolism. A film can occasionally the observer. chateau as the all-seeing The film threatens to get in¬ cent Miss Bateman discussed re¬ developments in special edu¬ cation with participants in a Spe¬ To Exceptional Child cial Education Seminar on Fri¬ Teaching the philosophy of edu- cannot be taught in the same be transformed by either bril¬ teresting two-thirds of the way day. cation must receive greater em- way as children with sensory liant direction or acting, but through" when a child gets raped battery of called phasis in order to cope with disabilities, "Diary" shows only sporadic by the handyman and Moreau is the ITPA hds been m developed children's learning disabilities, outbursts of the former and even determined to expose him. Even New learning programs, ac- less of the latter. this gets smothered in a sea of by psychologists in answer to a according to Barbara Bateman, demand by educators for meth¬ meth- associate professor of the in- cording to Miss Bateman, will Jeanne Moreau is thoroughly discussion and symbolism. ods of getting usable informa¬ emphasize matching a learning miscast as Celestine, a maid who Throughout all this, the usually tion about teaching children with tional children i program to the child. There hires out to a biz-rre household reliable Moreau contributes a to¬ EAST COMPLEX WEEKEND—The Rogues provided the music for the E ast should be no strict program in tally automatonic performance. Complex dance Saturday night. Photo by John Castle differing abilities, Miss Bate- versity. 111. in provincial France. The mast¬ man said. Tests also could tell Miss Bateman, in ; educa- dealing with learning disabilities. er of the house is a would-be She ambles from scene to scene with a minimum of acting, seem¬ where the problem was with the tion colloquium held here last As opposed to the ideas of many lecher, his wife is a frigid hag, :hild instead of just indicating week, discussed new ideas in doctors, in the area of remedial and Grandpere is a foot fetishist ingly determined to get through with a collection of high button the film with her reputation and HEGEL ON-REASON that a The problem existed. ITPA tests the way a the area disabilities. of remedial learning learning disabilities educators shoes. makeup completely untouched. Teachers must focus on be¬ child decodes information- Despite such potentially inter¬ Director Luis Bunuel is re¬ hears and sees, the way he en¬ havior of the exceptional child esting characters, nothing hap¬ sponsible for the evening's bore¬ No 'Ivor According to Miss Bateman, codes—speaks and acts— and and decide and how to decide how modify these to modify these pens. The major fault of the film dom. Only in two or three scenes y the ease with which he behaviors in order to benefit educators suffer from the lack is that it's basically a collection does he establish any real at¬ of clear cut behavorial goals, day the child, she said. ■ fers grammer into of unrelated episodes, trying to mosphere, and they're not enough In discussing studies Schools must decide on defini¬ establish a mood but failing. In¬ to relieve the banality of a film speech. An underprivileged child in the area of learning disa- tive patterns before they can re¬ stead of one basic plot, there's that's rarely entertaining, only timately self - knowledge. This scientist, rather than a discovery lates to the world with action bllities Miss Bateman explained improve their educational pro- several minor plots, none of Uy interesting, and al- State means that any externa 1 phenom- of natural laws of objective real- and is aware of what is going that children with brain injury gram. which are able to sustain the constantly pointless. ena that we experience are de- film. Only if he lives in community pendent on interior thought-pro- The husband is cheating on the with other men can man be truly cesses for their validity, wife, fights with the neighbors, free, Father Quentin Lauer, S.J., From Schelling, finally, he got a war is brewing, and the hus¬ 'Thank Heaven said Friday. his idea that though!*reality is band, neighbor, and the handy¬ A consciousness of self can identical with reality as it is, man all compete for Moreau's For Small Favors' only be developed in relation to that whatever one thinks to be true attention. The handyman wants to open a brothel with her. All these scenes are punctuated with Slightly more palatable is "Thank Heaven for Small Fa¬ the consciousnesses he stated. Lauer, a of others, must be true, Another important part professor of phil- gel's philosophy was his sense of of He- Has your yen to be osophy at Fordham, spoke to history as a necessary ingredi- a fireman cooled off? scenes of Moreau walking around vors," a pleasantly aimless faroe about 125 persons in Conrad ent of philosophy. For Hegel, the about an impoverished aristocrat Auditorium on the topic "Hegel: philosophizing of any man at any who makes a comfortable living the Phenomenon of Reason." He time is conditioned by everything 6Tania9 Selected raiding poorboxes from Parisian was the third lecturer in the that happened before him. churches. Arnold Isenberg Memorial Lec- For Hegel, Lauer said, it was The United States Marine Band George Lachesnaye figures tures series for spring J£rm. impossible to philosophize with- and the Eastern Illinois Univer¬ that the Lord takes care of His Coming to a consciousness of out taking into account the French sity Concert Band will both per¬ own and since the poorboxes are and one Revolution. For Hegel, there form a selection composed by an for souls in distress, why needs other individual; no "ivory tower" philosophy, MSU music student. shouldn't he take his percen¬ late t< aid. completely divorced from the The composer is Edward tage? He becomes quite wealthy Because istory was so im- world, because everything that Weiss, Detroit senior, and his (even hiring an. assistant) until factor in Hegel's phil¬ has happened and is happening the local gendarmes begin clos¬ composition is 'Tania." osophy, Lauer outlined the his¬ in the world will condition the ing in. tory of philosophy up to Hegel, thinking of any philosopher. "Tania" is only one of 10 Unfortunately, Andre Bourvil, and noted the major influences Closely related to this is He¬ compositions that Weiss has an otherwise excellent farceur' written. The piece was also se¬ on Hegel's philosophy. gel's belief that experience is who plays George, bears a dis¬ Heeel had three main influ¬ reason, that the two are insep¬ lected for performance at a meet¬ tracting resemblance to Art ences: Immanuel Kant, Johann arable. The "phenomenon of rea- ing of the American Bandmast¬ Linkletter. And everybody knows Fichte and Friedri on Schel- son" cannot be separated from ers. that Art Linkletter wouldn't go oftheGer- ling, all philosoph the phenomena which we exper- Weiss is a member of Phi around robbing church collection Idealist school, Lauer Mu Alpha music honorary. boxes. plained. Another integral part of He- From these three philoso- gel's philosophy was taken from phers, Hegel got much of the sub- Rene Descartes, a 17th Century stance of his philosophy, Lauer French philosopher, Lauer said, Literary Magazines continued. From Kant, he took This is Hie belief that science, his idea that appearances are as well as philosophy, is not in reality the objects themselves, totally objective. In Midwest Discussed Just as the. shining of a light cannot be differentiated from the There is also an element of subjectivity in both fields, which light itself, so.' the appearance is the individual thinker's "in- cited as examples cannot be differentiated from the tellectual insight." For Hegel, By BE RNICE BRUCKMAN the Centennial Review from MSU object itself, he said. Descartes and for many modern Midwestern literary maga¬ and Criticism from Northwest¬ From Fichte, Hegel took the thinkers, a scientific theory is zines have been plagued in the ern. belief that all knowledge is ul- almost an artistic creation of the last half century with financial Literary magazines from the- setbacks, amateur writers and Midwest could not attract national an over-emphasis of regional attention, said Flanagan, or com¬ aspects, John T. Flanagan said Friday. pete with such magazines as Har¬ pers and Atlantic Monthly. Sororities A Flanagan, .profftssoe of Eng¬ In specialized area5 of bgpk ptfbiisning this section Ws been lish at the University of Illinois, said that as early as 1870 lit¬ more successful. Publishing houses in Milwaukee and Grand Actives And erary magazines in the Midwest were competing with the already Rapids have supplied the country Kathy Hwass, Short Hills, N.J., dards and charm; and Michele If it has, you may be facing the successful magazines of the East. with religious books and Minnea¬ Mahler, Little Neck, N.Y., soph¬ The general format of these polis has served the West in the freshman, received the outstand¬ ing pledge award of Kappa Alpha omore, reporter-historian. problem of disposing of some hot early magazines was a combina¬ area of law books. JulieChamber- tion of varied fictional and non- Flanagan said that the Midwest Theta sorority recently. Other new actives are: Bette Others include lain, East Lansing junior, chap¬ equipment. Don't be red faced fictional articles, comprehensive has never had a sophisticated detailed book reviews and al¬ literary magazine that combined Back, Muskegon freshman: Bar¬ lain; Nancy Stephenson, Grosse about it. Use a STATE NEWS Want bara Sue Bradley, Buffalo, N.Y., Pointe Woods sophomore, acti¬ s'ection. literary qualities with regional ways a poetry Numerous literary magazines aspects. In other words, it has freshman: Merilee Byle, Grand vities and honors; Rae Kasper, Ad. never had a Harpers. Rapids freshman: Susan Cooper, Racine, Wis., sophomore, maga¬ originated in the beginning of Plymouth sophomore; Cheryl zines and services; Margie Mc¬ the century from midwestern cit¬ Flanagan ended by saying that Fenske, Birmingham sophomore: Queen, Grosse Pointe Woods jun¬ ies of Chicago, Des Moines, St. the Midwest will hot lack in its Louis and St. Paul. However, the magazines. There will always be Margie Foren, Pontiac freshman: ior, sports; Cheryl Johnson, Sun¬ Galen Frank, Cincinnati, Ohio, nyvale, Calif., junior, music; There is hardly anything sd un¬ literary' magazines that come critics, crusaders and protest¬ from the Midwest now, said Flan¬ ers who will launch publications freshman; Mary Hampton, Jackie Billing, Flat Rock junior, usual that it can't be sold through B loomfield Hills sophomore; scholarship chairman; and Carol those sponsored by uni- to project their ideals. And of agan, are Lois Hendershot, Bay City soph¬ Johnson, Lansing junior, and Marie Dusha, Bay City sopho¬ Want Ad. omore; Pamela Hughes, Wheaton, 111., freshmar; Cindy Johnson, more, members-at-large; and course, the more commonplace Norwalk, Ohio, sophomore; Kath- Jeanne Jeffery Puce, Ontario, ryn Kruse, Royal Oak sophomore; senior, efficiency and second vice articles sell quickly too. That Jane Lau, Evansville, lnd„ fresh¬ president. man; Marie Ellen Luc .s, Bloom- is why there are so many Want sentation of scientific papers will field Hills freshman; Sue Lyn¬ The Gamma Omega chapter of Marian Kinget, professor of psychology, will speak on "An be held by the Dairy Dept. in da 11, Birmingham sophomore; Alpha Delta Pi has recently ini¬ Ads in the paper every day. 126 Anthony Hall at 12:30 today. Linda Nelson, East Lansing tiated 13 new members. They Approach to Authentic Living" at 9 tonight in 137 Akers Halls. freshman; Susan Stackhouse, are: Rita Brown, Bellwood, 111., Thousands of people have dis¬ The lecture is sponsored by the East Lansing freshman; Debbie freshman; Nancy Harvey, Brook¬ Stuart L. Petrie, an aeronau¬ West Akers Cultural Committee. tical and astronomical engineer Stelter, Birmingham freshman; lyn sophomore; Hollace Kern, St. covered how quick and econom¬ from Ohio State University, will Sally Van Vleck, Hinsdale," 111., Clair Shores sophomore; Joan freshman; Kathy Vargo, Dear¬ MacMillian, Saginaw sophomore; ical they are. Skateboarding Club will meet speak on "Boundary layer stud¬ 7-8 tonight in 208 Men's born f eshmar; Francine Weav¬ Cheryl Nielsen, Columbus, Ohio, from ies in rarefied plasma flows" er, Brecker.ridge sophomore; and freshman; Kay Peckham, Fenton IM Building. Sweatshirts will be at 4 today in Engineering Audi¬ distributed to those who ordered torium. Kay Woodworth,, Huntington freshman; Ellen Shong, Lansing freshman; Sue Southern, Lower them. Woods sophomore. Burrell, Pa., sophomore; Caro¬ Now whether you have an old "Superconducting mixed state: lyn Stapleton, Wheeler AFB., Ha¬ A series of films on Arctic and R.F. studies" Sue Lundstrom, Milford jun¬ steam pumper to sell or not, Sea ice and the Polar Sea will microwaves ior, has recently, been elected waii, freshman; Monica Starr, will be the topic of a speech by president of Alpha Delta Pi. Other Parma, Ohio, freshman; Sue be presented by theGlaciological Bruce Rosenblum of RCA Lab¬ new officers include Mary Bode, Stork, Flint freshman; Pat Wank, keep in mind the many ways a Institute in 140 Natural Science oratories, Princeton, N.J., at Birmingham junior, vice presi¬ Detroit sophomore; and Ann Wil¬ 3-5 today. 4:10 today in 118 Physics-Math. dent; LuDean Tindal, Detroit jun¬ liamson, Grosse Pointe sopho- Want Ad can serve you. The Animal Husbandry Dept. ior, treasurer; Paru Shaw, Dear¬ A proposed center for police born suphomoe, rush chairman; will sponsor a discussion on "Interaction of sex and limited planning and research will be dis¬ Sue Kirvan, Brighton junipr, feeding on performance and car¬ cussed at a police administration house manager; May Ericks, Fire Destroys Car cass traits of swine" at 4 today and public safety colloquium in South Holland, 111., sophomore, in 101 Biochemistry. 202 Olds Hall at ":30 tonight. recording secretary; Pam Free¬ Fire completely destroyed MICHIGAN TATE MEWS man, Chatham, N.Y., junior, cor¬ early Sunday morning a 1952 Ellis K. Fields of Amoco The Food Science Club will be responding secretary; ElaineAn- Chrysler used as part of the East STATE selling hand-packed, specially- derson, G a y 1 o r d sophomore, Complex Carnival, Campus Po¬ Chemical Corp. will' speak on UNIVERSITY "Production and Chemistry of seasoned pork sausage 2-2:15 to¬ guard; Judy Portz, Hartford, lice reported. Wis., sophomore, registrar; Jane The blue and white car, which 355-8255 Arynes at High Temperatures" day at the Meats Laboratory. Or¬ at 4 today in 136 Chemistry. ders may be called to 355-981S Miller, Toledo., Ohio, junior, so¬ was located behind Akers, was or 355-8452. The price is 80 cial chairman: Cheryl Johnson, completely smashed when ac¬ A group discussion on the pre¬ cents per pound. Sunnyvale, Calif., junior, stan¬ quired for the carniv.il. 8 Michigan State News. East Lansing, Michigan Monday. May 23. 1966 student ads 1 day $ 1.00 must be END OF TERM SPECIAL!!! 3 days 5 days $2.50 $4.00 paid in advance The State News does not Automotive Automotive Automotive Em| For Rent For Rent LAST FIVE weeks, summer, one storage. Yamaha-1555". SOcc, 1,000 miles. permit racial or religious CHOOSE YOUR own hours. A few NEED ONE girl for Avondaie discrimination in i t s ad¬ ver grey, black interior. 340 $290. Call 355-6110. after six. hours a day can mean excellent apartment, either all summer man needed. Also two for sum¬ Very good shape. Will sacrifice vertising columns. The horsepower. Four speed. Good at $450.PhoneIV4-4874.3-5/24 3-5/23 earnings for you as a trained or second half of term. 355- mer term. Rivers Edge. 351 - State News will not accept condition. $2,425. Phone 351- AVON representative. For ap¬ 1.366. 3-5/24 5569. 5-5/27 HONDA S-90, 1965. Must sell. advertising from per- : s 5263. 5-5/25 pointment in your own home, $300 . 339-2434 . 5-5/24 TWO GIRLS to sublet Burcham CEDAR VILLAGE need one male discriminating against re- DODGE DART 1964 GT. Have to write Mrs. Alona Huckins, 5664 ' Woods apartmer.t. Swimming for luxury four-man apartment li-g, r.. race, color or na¬ sell. Excellent condition inside HONDA 50, 1965. Electric start- School Street, Haslett, Michi¬ pool and air conditioned. $5".50 for summer. $42.50 monthly. • AUTOMOTIVE tional origin. and out. Automatic 6. 351-4775. ing. $200 cash. Call Jim, 353- gan, or call evenings, FE 9- monthly. 337-0250. 5-5/24 351-4698. 3-5/25 • EMPLOYMENT convertible, standard shift, ex¬ 2150. 1-5/23 8483. CI-5/23 3-5/23 • FOR RENT cellent condition. Call 485-9969. FOUR MAN luxury apartment ium- DODGE DART 1963, GT convert - 1965 HONDA 50, white. Excel- ORGAN PLAYER-portable elec- . FOR SALE 3-5/24 sublease for summer. Close to mer term, third floor, air con¬ Automotive ible, red with white top. Excel¬ lent condition. 1,400 miles. tric. Call Jim, 669-9802 after VOLKSWAGEN 1959, $50 per month. 337- ditioned. $180 per month. Phone • LOST & FOUND lent condition, 33,000 miles. take over $200. Call anytime, IV 9-2109. 6 pm. for further information. campus. CHEVROLET 1065 Eel 2483. 5-5/23 Ed or Daryl, 332-3577. 5-5/23 • PERSONAL Call IV 9-6423. 5-5/24 payments. 353-1584. 655-1451 3-5/25 da:.,. (2,i, ex..client cc 3-5/23 SUBLET FURNISHED • PEANUTS PERSONAL evenings. 5-5/24 NEED ONE-three male room- luxury >00 E. Gran,d River, 1 FALCON 1960, stick .shift, six HONDA SPORTS 50. Going to COMPETENT GIRL to clean two-man apartment for sum¬ • REAL ESTATE 3-5 23 VOLKSWAGEN, 1963. Black sun- mates for summer,- or possible "461. cylinder, 2-door sedan. $295. Hawaii. Must sell, best offer house and iron, 4 hours weekly. • SERVICE roof, radio, heater, whitewalls, sublet to four. Riverside East. mer. Riverview, next to cam¬ Ci iLVROL E"! 1$6$, 40-5 cam and 372-6225. 5-5/25 low over $200. 351-4698. 3-5/25 $5. ED2-2496after 8pm. 3-5, 23 351-6746. pus. Call 332-8076. 5-5/23 • TRANSPORTATION mileage. A-l condition. 3-5/24 DODGE 1962 Lancer. Low mile- $950. Phone 353-7018. 5-5/23 BARTENDER, BUS BOYS, sec- GRADUATE STUDENTS. Fur- • WANTED 1965 HONDA CB160, excellent SUMMER APARTMENT for four. 18,000 actualI miles. $1,250. age, good tires, ho rust. Ex¬ ond cook wanted. Murray Hotel, nished efficiency apartments, VOLKSWAGEN 1966, six months condition, many extras. Must Lowered rent, private dwelling, 487-3409. i-5 23 cellent gas mileage. Call 485- Mackinac Island, $150; two-bedroom apartments, deadline old. 5,000 miles. Must sell. see to appreciate. $495. Don Michigan. close in. Unsupervised. After CHEVROLET ayn« 2- 7619. " 3-5/25 355-8873. 3-5/23 $200; one-bedroom apartment, $1,495. Call 484-2894. 5-5/26 3-5/24 5:30 p.m., 332-0109. IS »ta: ., ard a--.eel FALCON I 06 3, V-i, 4-spee :. Good shape wit':: extras. Best offer. Call 625-3093 after 5pm. VOLKSW \c;..\ 1962, 2-door se- dan. Jet black beauty with red HOUSEK EEPER: LI VL-1N or out Three children, general house¬ work. Good pay. Call 332-0726. . 3-5, 25 $125 an J $150. Call Rita Ebinger, 372-5066 or Ingham Home Real¬ ty, 372-1460. 5-5/23 mce 0'ions • 12 noon on< 95. SIG.V; I ORD 10-6/3 trim. Radio, heater, whiteside- HONDA 1965, 65cc. Fast, good 5-5 24 SUMMER LEASES for two avail- as' day before publicatioi SAt ES, 162 pick-up. Excellent condition. BABYSITTER FOR mfa: t son able Edgewood Apartment C3-5 25 W.i- $<> <5—N/v $800. SIGN'S Helmet, saddlebags included. across from campus. 332 -0811 PHONE lck. Runs in our home, near M.S.U. 8 NEED ONE mar., summer term. 1965 Imp; I ORD SALES, 162 W. Grand $275. 353-0075. 3-5/23 a.m.-5 Riverside East Apartment. afternoons or 337-2474 eve¬ p.m., Monday-Friday. Two 355-8255 River, Williamston. 655-2191. $25. 337-9389. nings. 5-5/23 p. Low BMW R-25/3, 245cc. Only one of i-5/23 sunpdrches , air- conditioned. rates C3-5/25 its kind in Lansing. In beautiful SALES-PHONOGRA PH records, $62.50/mo. 351-5306. 3-5/25 ; :'or FORD Fair!a::e 1563, 500 2-door 5-5/27 VOLKSWAGEN 1964, radio, gas condition. $400 337-0397. male TWO THREE man, one bed- 1 DAf SI. 50 hardtop, V-8, automatic. $850. . or female. Must have car. or ,rk, heater. Lugra-je rack. Recent 3 DAYS... ..$3.00 i :!.\ Ki.-LE'I . '55, r.eeds a 372-6225. 5-5/2 3 5-5/25 Able to travel 50 mile radius. room luxury apartment. Lowe- 5 DAYS .$5.00 $2*. 1 hate meslsing wit! cars. tune-up. Excellent condition. Call 694-0537 51/2 day week. Good starting brooke Arms. 5140 monthly. FORD 1957 Fairlane V-S auto- after 5:30 p.m. Aviation 351-5256. TWO-MAN LUXURY salary, car allowance, expense Summer. 3-5/25 apartment matic. Burns no oil. Great con¬ 5-5/27 lased or 15 »o'ds per ad : iRVAJR V IN/A 1063, c LEARN TO FLY at our Govern- account. Hospitalization, paid to sublet for summer. Air-con¬ GIRLS, SUMMER fall, tc" aT" dition inside and out. 4248. $195. 351- 3-5/23 VOLKSWAGEN 1962, gray sedan. New tires, recent tune-up. In ment licensed school with ex¬ vacations, other fringe benefits. cious accommodations or spa- avail¬ ditioned, close. Call Ricn, 337- Can start immediately. Contact perienced instructors. It's easy able, two blocks from campus. 351-6765. Bol 10-6/3 MERC I R Y METCOR-1961. Six sjood condition. Phone 355-6021. Mr. Ed. Griesmer, Handleman and fun! Open every day! For Phone 332-2936. 3-5/25 SUESTANTIAL LOSS ""to cylinder, automatic. Four-door 3-5/23 Co., 4604 N. East St. 484-1386. COR \ AIR ' 965 j Mor./a c o- ■ ert- the best, come to FRANCIS sublet two-bedroom Avondaie sedan. $375. 372-6225. 5-5/25 VOLKSWAGEN 195 7, running 5-5/27 ONE MAN to share three-man •p. AM- AVIATION. Call IV 4-1324 for apartment. Summer only. 355- condition. For parts or trans¬ OFFICE luxury apartment Summer term. , .vhite- MGA 1962 Roadster, low mile- an appointment 'now! C GIRL, summer only. Air conditioning, swimming 0611 between 6-10 pm. 6-5/23 portation, $50. Phone 485-7510. hours five walls. $1,6.50. 627-5567. age, no rust, mechanically per¬ Five days weekly, WANTED: TWO girls to sublet 3-5/24 pool. Eydeal Villa. $58. 351— fect. Many extras. $995. Call Employment mornings preferred, beginning _ Automotive Clear in.) Ed, IV 4-6742. 5-5/23 VOLKSWAGEN 1962 convertible, GENERAL OFFICE help. Must June 13. Able to type, mimeo¬ 7268. 3-5,24 Delta Arms apartment, Sum¬ .iieage. FURNISHED APARTMENT, two mer term. Call 351-4166. 5-5/25 Sep eNn7abh)955. 3-5/23 MGB 1964, Red roadster. Radio, rebuilt engine. Excellent condi¬ tion. $695 or best offer. 482- be thru able to type. 8-5 Monday Friday. Local doctor's graph, light bookkeeping. Con¬ tact Mr. Ed. Griesmer, Handle- students. 129 Burcham Dr. Now DELTA ARMS: need four or five man Co., 4604 N. East St. 484- leasing for summer and winter. to sublet top floor luxury apart- 1864 or 353-1010. 3-5/24 office. Mrs. Howery, ED 2- COME! .'"32 s New exhaust system and bat¬ 1386. Summer $120 per month, win¬ mert for summer. 351-4641. 0895. 5-5/27 5-5/27 Radio, teries. 5.,550. 485- >474. 3-5, -4 VOLKSW \GEN !964. Excelle ter $130 per nicrr . Call days s!'-T10r-'.o d Riile- BEAUTICIAN, FI LL time.MAR- SECRETARY FOR downtown Ua l\ 7-3216; evenings ^82-2316. i; SUMMER - 5-5/25 t 6 pm. TIN'S HAIR FASHIONS, East firm. Experienced preferred. 5 -5/23 Lansinc. Call ED2-4522. 5-5/25 Phone 484-2563 for interview. MONZ\ 1965 Sport; coupe. Re., *>V1 iOOSl i THERE . th.it sharp \OLNG MAN, 21-35. Neat and 5-5.27 1960 Cnc-.\. Vrooom! Listen to aggressive. High school gradu¬ LOT ATTENDANTS w ante d. 4-speed, red interior, bucket BURCHAM WOODS, sublet two- ate. Full time opening in re¬ Hours 8-1:30, six days weekly, seats, seat belts, like new. Take it scream! Wow: A good looking, 6 pm., 332-4084. ^ 8-3/26 overpayments. 339-2261. perfect runmn::, grey. 3-on-the- tail sales with Lansing's lead¬ ing tire dealer. Good oppor¬ except Wednesday, 8-3. Contact Mr. Chadwell, ED 7-1731. 5-5/24 TRAILER 1 332-6812 Paul, Bob 351-5422 Margot, Vicki 351-4318 service you'll receive. Bruce, Joe 332-4098 Louis, Larry 332-8904 wages beginning These jobs offer ideal work¬ Jon, Andy 351-4549 Mine), Denny 351-5205 Don, Rick 351-5554 Judy, Sharon 351-4721 at S2.34 per hour. ing hours with plenty of time Tom, John John, Ron 351-4218 332-2623 Dick, Denny Dale or Don 351-4039 332-2866 Jane, Linda Roger, Don 351-4557 351-4559 Transworld Campbell, Wyant & for summer fun, plus an op¬ portunity to win a $1,000 SAVANT'S s Roger, Brian 351-4174 Tom, Lyle 351-4898 Cannon Foundry scholarship. Salary $470 per Service Company month. For appointment call- Grand Rapids 459-5079. Lan¬ *427 Albert *362 Trowbridge Employ sing 484-1078, jKalamazoo Clip Out And Save Apply Henry Street 349-9421. --In By 9, Out By 5-- Office, Muskegon Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Monday, May 23, 1966 9 For Rent For Rent For Sale For Sale GOP Courts Romney For'68 APPROVED, supervised rooms 30" SOFA-BED, full GENERAL 1958, 10' x 47', avail- SUBL^Ti*" TWO- bedr for men. Spartan Hall, 215 Louis. box spring. Plaid cover in¬ able September. Close to cam¬ Who's dale apartment. $180 per month. One block from'campus. Now cluded. Cool-spray vaporizer, pus. Many extras. Perfect for Air conditioned. Call 332-2911. renting for summer, fall. Sin¬ used twice, one gallon capacity. young couple. $2,000 . 351-5092 Under the normal rules of pol¬ WASHINGTON (UPI)—National Republican gains in the Legis- 5-5/23 gles $10, doubles $7. Two double cooking rooms. Large, fully- Both 1104. excellent condition. 355- 3-5/23 after 6 pm. CENTURY MOBILE home, 3/-5/24 Whose Republican leaders believe they lature, a pickup of a few con- itics, delegates to a national MEN, SUBLET Summer term, convention want to nominate a furnished rooms, washbowl in 8'. Excellent condition, $1,700. have convinced Gov. George gressional district seats and the luxury apartment, one block SCHWINN TANDEM (for two) bi- winner, a candidate with a chance each. Large lobby with TV. May buy on lot. LIFE 'O' Riley Romney of Michigan that he must election of Sen. Robert P. Grif- i from campus. Air conditioned, cycle. Only six months old, to win the White House while reduced rates. 351-4658. 3-5/23 Grade point average 3.2. ED ridden very little. Superb con¬ TRAILER PARK. 882-4850. be a team player if he wants to fin to the seat left v *1 'u~ 2-2574. 3-5/23 5-5/26. Charlene Young, Honolulu, Ha¬ dition. Paid $100, will sacrifice GIRL WANTED to share Cedar ALPHA XI D£LTA Sorority open for $60. Loaded with equipment. FOR SALE or rent, 50 ft. mobile waii, junior, Tesh. to Leighton Village apartment, September 10 weeks summer school. For Hence, they looking to Griffin goes into the campaign candidates. Call 882-4205. home. Available immediately. Lee, Honolulu, Hawaii, senior. 15-june 15 with three others. info«nation call Mrs. Jones, 6335 Park Lake Rd., Lot 39. Triangle. Romney to fight for a party vie- with acknowledged liabilities be- 1964 HAIG ULTRAS-4 woods and Call 332-4049 . 3-5/23 ED 2-4659. 3-5/25 tory in Michigan next November cause of his identification with irons 2-9. Good condition. $100. 3-5/24 Denni be supplied this year that Romney Locke, Huntington Woods in his own drive for reflection, the Landrum-Griffin Labor Law. Houses SUMMER HOUSING at Kappa Del- Call 355-6732 . 3-5. 24 VINDALE, 8' x 40", two bedroom. sophomore, Zeta Tau Alpha, to A party victory, in contrast That law was unwelcome to the can provide strength for the en¬ House. Close in. Reasonable tire Republican ticket. SIX BEDROOM house, 1-1.2 ta GAS DRYER. Kenmore Deluxe, Very good condition. Located Steve Radcliffe, Dimondale jun¬ to a personal victory, would mean labor movement, which swings The Republicans learned while blocks from Union. Available rates.' 528 M.A.C. ED 2-5659. four heat controls. $50. Ozone on East Lansing lot. 351-4447. ior, Sigma Chi. much weight in Michigan poli- 3-5/23 3-5/23 Dwight D. Elsenhower was Pre¬ June 10 - September 15. Very lamp. Call IV 5-4817. No Sat¬ sident that they could go down- Gov. G. Mennen Wil¬ tasty. 351-5613. 3-5/23 Summer Housing . . . urday calls. 3-5/23 NEW MOON 8' x 40', one bed- Sharon Glendening, Kalamazoo Summer STEP liams and Mayor r Jerome Cava- hill under a popular leader who BALDWIN ORGAN—Walnut, full room. May be left on East Lan¬ junior, Alpha Gamma Delta, to FIVE LARGE rooms, gas heat, seemed allergic to partisanpoli- at FarmHouse Mike Simpson, Battle Creek naugh of Detroit are competing modern. Built-in stove. Unfur¬ across size. Percussion, pre-sets, ex¬ sing lot. $1,400. Call between Volunteers Named in the Democratic primary Aug. nished. Glassed-in front and street from campus. cellent condition. Leslie speak¬ 1-5 pm., 337-2088. 3-5/23 sophomore, Phi Sigma Kappa. Eisenhower Doubles $8.00, 2 for the nomination to oppose barely pulled the singles er included. IV 5-4817 except STEP volunteers for the 1966 rear porch. $150. Garage. 393- $15.00, per week. . . 332- Lost & Found Sandra K. Dieleman, Grand Rap¬ Griffin. GOP into control of Congress 0226. 3-5.23 Saturdays. 3-5/23 summer project are: Don Had- when he first was elected by a 8635 ids senior, to Roger Warren, Romney, completing his second Synder Hall; Bill Skocpol, . DIAMOND RING, 15 pt., 14 carat LOST ON campus, man's plain win, ONE HOUSE and several apart¬ Dearborn term, is going for a landslide in 1952. The Demo¬ PRIVATE ROOM-for summer or senior, Delta Sigma Robert Caminski, and Steve Bal- two-year band. $60 - or best offer. Phone white gold wedding band. Call ments available for summer fall. Unsupervised. Close in. Phi. four-year term provided by the crats regained control in 1954 351-6751. 3-5/ 23 882-2929 after 4 p.m. 3-5/25 lance, Wilson Hall; Theda Bar¬ and held it through the last six and fall, three-four students new -tate constitution. He is Clean. After 5:30 p.m. 332- black rimmed ron and John Swenson, Case per unit. Call NEJAC, 482- KINGSTON GUITAR, brand new. FOUND: Ladies Sally Batdorff, Lansing sopho¬ heavily favored to win re-elec- years of the Eisenhower admin¬ 0109. 3-5/25 Hall; Kit Coolidge, McDonelHall; 0624. 1-5/23 $20. Phone Terry, 353-3071. glasses, Friday the 13th in Com¬ more, Alpha Omicron Pi to Lee istration despite another land- UNSUPERVISED HOUSING for and Jim Diamond and JimKrath- GROSBECK HILLS. Furnished 3-5/25 puter Center. Call 337-0567. Buchele, Twin Brooks, S.Dakota, Frorii the time his first slide for Eisenhower in the 1956 serious, studious men. Summer wohl, Akers Hall. four-bedroom, for summer. Ex¬ 21" CROSLEY console. Good 1-5/23 junior. Alpha Phi Omega. election, he was regarded warily presidential election. Other volunteers ard: Linda cellent only, with cooking. Near cam¬ condition. $11.67. Call 332- by Republican professionals be¬ The next two years may pro¬ neighborhood. Dish¬ NECKLACE LOST in vicinity of Garcia, Van Hoosen Hall; Car¬ washer, many extras. Call 484- pus. $8 weekly. 337-1166. 0129. 3-5/25 cause of his reputation as a loner duce new faces as candidates for Union and St. Johns. Black oval rie Bird and N'eila Johnson, Owen 5-5/27 E ngagements who wanted to stay above the the Republican Presidential nom¬ 0334. 3-5/25 CLASS RING, B.S. 1966. Sell for with white rose. 351-5617.3-5/24 Graduate Hall; Joan Janiten and ( EAST LANSING, for girls. battles of partisan politics. They ination in 1968. But the men now TWO MORE men for lake front $25. Perfect condition. Call MAN'S PR ESCR1PTION sun- Andrea Mooer, Butterfield dor¬ Across from campus. Cooking Judy Cross, Dearborn junior, nqw view him as a more parti¬ in front are Romney and former house on Lake Lansing, start¬ after 5 p.m., IV 9-6757. 1-5/23 Fred mitory; Margaret Buist, Won¬ privileges, bus stop in front. glasses, thin gold frames. Lost Delta Zeta to Crowley, san Republican. Vice President Richard M. Nix- ing June 1st. Ideal summer lo¬ Reasonable. 393-3634. 3-5/23 WEDDING" GOWN-size 8. $20. early last week, around Phy¬ Grand Rapids senior, Triangle. ders Hall; Pat Warner, Gilchrist Romney offended Republican 0 jrrently a tireless traveler cation. $50 plus utilities per Party dresses, red, blue, pink. sics-Math building. 355-0835. dormitory; David and Judy Hol- conservatives in 1964 by falling f< Republican fund - raising month. Call Dick or Tom, 339- Sizes 9-12. $8 to $10. Phone 3-5/24 Margaret Provenzola, Redford lister and Pamela Syfert, Spar¬ to embrace Barry M. Goldwater Co-op Fraternity e' 8750. 5-5/26 337-0873. 3-5/23 sophomore to Robert .Walbridge, tan Village. as the nominee for president. His Nixon, who i Off Campus volunteers are: or Sorority CHEST FREEZER and Fngi- Personal Dover, New Jersey, junior, Delta Elwood Linney, William Bildner, could argue that of Goldwa four girls/men to rent. Four CANOE TRIPS-South granchAu- Sigma Phi. epted party man. But after his Available 9-1-66 daire refrigerator. GE refrig¬ Laura Leichliter, Pete Shaft, Ric he simply followed the law of bedrooms, big living room, kit¬ erator. Call IV 9-7200. C Sable River. Call or write, Hi¬ survival because lie was easily failure to win the presidency in Call 1-313-761-7268 Suretta Bronstein, Southfield jun¬ Rohlin, Harold Shelton, JohnDul- 1960 and the Governorship of chen, fully carpeted, nicely fur¬ GERANIUMS, 59* each. Wideva- awatha Canoe Livery, Roscom¬ re-elected while Goldwater was nished. Near campus. Summer. mon, Michigan. Phone 375-5213. ior, Alpha Epsilon Phi, to Bruce ey, lecturer in religion, Frank buried under a Democratic ava- California in 1962, he is also a MALE STUDENTS: Supervise riety of flower and vegetable Beeman, Wayne Albertson, and 332-0717. 3-5/24 1-5/23 Selik, Southfield junior, Zeta Beta housing, two blocks Berkey. plants. By dozen or flat. Spe¬ Tau. John Speck. SUMMER TERM, completely fur- Cooking, parking. Summer term cial new California potatoes, 10 THE LOOSE ENDS, four-man Other volunteers are Barbara nished house. Quiet neighbor- with first choice for Fall. IV pounds, 65*. PRINCE'S FARM rock band, featuring organ, gui¬ Margaret Peggs, Dearborn sen¬ Fox, Irma Hooker, TomKissner, Okemos at Grand Algren ' hood. Ideal for advanced study. 5-8836. 20-6/2 MARKET, tar, bass, harmonica, drums. ior to Gene Currier, Dearborn, Pat Perrotti, John Schuiteman, Married couple only. 882-8559. River Ave., Okemos. 5-5/23 Call Tom, IV 4-6742. 5-5/23 Detroit College of Law. Christine Lundberg, Eileen How¬ MEN, DOUBLE and single, close, 3-5/24 GRADUATION ANNOUNC E- ell, Carlton Krathwohl, Delta quiet, approved. 332-0939. SEE: AMERICA FIRST. English- MENTS with your name printed College Dean of Students, and (continued from page 4) country is thinking in the FURNISHED HOME available 5^5/24 maji seeks partner(s) to travel Cherrie Goldman, Detroit sopho¬ on them, 2-day service. MYERS Benjamin Hickok, professor of person, he said. summer. Garage, dishwasher, MALE, SUMMER housing: park¬ to West Coast by car this sum¬ more to Charles W. Festian, dissenters but not ct itics. "They PRINTING, 1421 E. Michigan. American thought and language. criticize a particul; r work such John Brown did things i many extras. Must see. Family ing, kitchen privileges, 11/2 mer. Dates, route, etc. subject Detroit senior. blocks from campus. Many ex¬ IV 2-2554. 14-6/3 a book first Persona or couple. Very reasonable. to discussion. 33--0650. 3-5/23 literature whereas $7-$9.50. 332-0844. 5-5/27 FOR WEDDING and p r a c t: c .-. 1 482-3421 after 5. 3-5, 24 tras. STUDENTS: WHY leave your Sharon Yount, Charleston, S. Canoe Winners Goldwater would ROOMS AT KAPPA Alpha Theta shower gifts, see ACE HARD¬ dorms—when BIMBO'S will de¬ Carolina senior, Alpha Xi Delta, though he has cr home, furnished for four or five House for ten-week summer WARE'S selections. 201 E. to Stephen Sacks, Monticello, New Kenneth M» Reitz,Salina,Kan., liver your pizzas to you. Call Pants, he said. students. $65 month each. Call school students. $210 including Grand River, across from Junior and Erik D. /emper, 469-2431. C 3-5/25 York, senior. "The purpose 01 Rita Ebinger, 372-5066 or Ing¬ meals. Call 337-1482 or 332- Union. Phone ED 2-3212. C Howell junior, won the MSU ca¬ WOULD YOU BELIEVE that we e is to pre ham Home Realty, 372-1460. 5001. 7-5/27 ENGLISH LIGHT-WEIGHT j- noe race Saturday. rent TV's for only pennies a Charles H. Versteeg, lnkster 5-5/23 GIRLS, 1 '2 of two-girl arrange¬ speed bicycles. $39.77 full Service Available now. Special day? Free service and deliv¬ graduate student, placed sixth in with all hi ment. price. Rental-purchase terms DIAPER SERVICE, Lai ing's ! Algren. "Only show what it is really like t ED 7-1598. 3-5/23 available. We also have tennis ery. Call NEJAC rv RENTALS, the Men's Racing Class. no image, house available summer only 482-0624. C finest. Your choice of three The :i: this way can he experience events were among sev¬ Near campus. $200 a month. racquets, golf balls, badminton furnished, no For Sale PADDLE YOUR own canoe or types. Containers eral sponsored by the Michigan things in the first person." birdies, gifts and housewares. Garage. Phone 337-2345.5-5/23 GOLF CLUBS, new, used, good deposit. You may Include two Canoe Racing Assoc., the MSU It is important for a writer to If a boy ! joey Hitler" ACE HARDWARE, across from rev up the motor! Be confi¬ selection. FAIRWAY GOLF pounds baby clothes. Try our be behind his book in the first ind icks ti the Union. ED 2-3212. C dent! BUBOLZ has it insured. Outing Club, the Greater Lansing 1 Rooms Velva-soft process, 25 years RANGE. Five minutes East on $2.40 per $100 of insurance. Jaycees and the Grand "R" Ma- person. But it is hard to write ter who tries to dissuade him MEN, SUMMER, approved, ccok- Grand River. 3-5/23 BICYCLE SALES, rentals, stor- BUBOLZ INSURANCE. 332- in Lansing. BY-LO DIAPER in the first person when the and finally goes to the headman, ing, close to P.O. Spic n' Span. age and services. EAST LAN¬ SERVICE. 1010 E. Michigan. still saying fooey Hitler, this .» N1KKOREX F with 50mm, f20 8671. C3-5/25 Call ED 7-9566. 5-5/26 SING CYCLE, 1215 E. Grand IV 2-0421. C is an act of literature and this lens, lightmeter, case, other THE SNAKE Pit, what's in a accessories. Year old. $135. River. Call 332-8303. C is what should be written about, name? Our pit has walls roof. Singles ana and a Double, and Dick. ED 2-6084. PORTABLE STEREO.' THtS IS 1-5/23 FIRST QUALITY materials and workmanship. Large frame se¬ RO Peanuts Personal Typing Service M.O.—A306B. Are you a man ANN BROWN, typist and multi- Junior 500 said "A Algren. writer needs to be square or a mouse? Wake up! Concern¬ lith offset printing. Disserta¬ two apartments for summer and THE EL Y OF THE YEAR. Co- lection. OPTICAL DISCOUNT, (continued from page 1) Bzovi, Trenton junior; and Jim to a certain extent however," fall. Pat. 332-0318. 3-5/23 lumbia* with a Y-M Changer. 416 Tussing Building. Phone ed. 1-5/23 tions, theses, manuscripts, gen¬ ~"Carb ine, Muskegon junior. he said. cine, Wis., junior; vice presto IV 2-4667. C eral typing. IBM, 16 years ex¬ feel that be MEN: APPROVED supervised, Cost 5250 plus when new. Com¬ dent, Marty Rosenfeld, Flint sen¬ Blue Key is a junior-senior Some one h£ singles, doubles.Cooking,park¬ Real Estate perience. 332-8384. C men's honorary with member- a drug addict to be able pletely overhauled last BOAT 14' Cherokee, 35 Evinrude ior; and secretary-treasurer, ing. Two blocks to campus. 327 best offer. Call MARIGOl.D TYPING IN my Mason home. Pick si, ip based on excellence in lead¬ for drug addicts but Algren feel: Only S60 electric, light and speedometer. STREET. Owner Rob Berglund, Berkeley junior. Hillcrest. 332-3906. 3-5/24 332-5142. up and deliver, if desired. Call that t far Master Craft trailer. Excellent transferred, needs immediate Also member- of Blue Key: ership and service to the Uni¬ sale. Three-bedroom home, 676-2041. 5-5/24 Goodman, Valley Stream, versity. In closing \lgren g ------- Coupon- condition. $795. IN' 2-6718. Steve N.\.. junior; Jeff Marcus, Ocean- Five students were injured vice to prospective writers. 3-5/23 fireplace, 1-1/2 baths, base¬ TYPING, THESES, term papers, during the race. Three had to be He said that "men who want to FAIRWAY GOLF RANGE G UITA R-GIBSON (HUMMING- BIRD), Gibson's finest hand¬ crafted flat-top guitar, over 200 ment, large lot. Call Mrs. Fitz¬ gerald with Ora Teed, Realtor. IV 5-1553,'evenings IV 4-1679. pica type, manual typewriter. Mrs. Balow, phone 882-0633. '-5 23 side, N.V. junior; Gary Dilley, Hunting, Ind., junior; Art Tung, Midland junior; Jerry Neuman, carried by stretcher to Olln. The five were: Ronald Rob-, write should go out practice every day. Women who and practice, FREE 3-5/23 Betheleh erts, Detroit freshman, heat ex- want to write should look out for guitars in stock, all styles, TYPING. TERM papers, theses, PROFESSOKS" ice, Ei it.Laa i dgar Jpvjtv cjj/sxvi the Jnei) wiju^.int nract.cc every ATTENTION m&raxscvipxs, reports. Call 3ear. . priced, from $16.95 up. Kay ano electric bass, $75. New Gibson grad students, Three bedroom Schaibly, FE 9-8305. 5-5/24 Kerbawy, Bloomfield ■ Ju"- right leg; James Brmidt'. White day." Round electric basses $239.50 and up. Selection of bass amplifiers. brick ranch, recreation 1-1, 2 baths, large fenced lot. room, JOB RESUMES, 100 copies, ior; John Cauley, Bloomfield Hills junior; Chuck '-'toddard, (.'loud junior, cuts to the leg; John Kusmich, sprained right "Never play cards with named Doc. Never eat at a .1 man place $4.50. A L DINGER DIRECT shoulder; and Randy Middleton, named Mom's. And never sleep Electric Phone 337-1172. 3-5/24 East Lansing junior; John \lon- MINIATURE GOLF I struction guitar pickups. In¬ books and records. MAIL ADVERTISING, 533 N. Clippert. IV 5-2213. C geon. Sharky, Fairfax, Va., junior; Dick Detroit junior; Dan Cadillac sophomore, cuts to the right foot. with anyone greater than your whose troubles are own." he said. Tenor and 12-string guitars, Service P \U'LA ANN HAUGHEY, typist". I One FREE round admission of miniature golf with one paid and this coupon'til Fri.,5-27-66. | J banjos, ukeles, used and new GRADUATION ANNOUNC E- band instruments. All recon¬ MENTS with your name printed IBM Selectric and Executive. Multilith Offset Printing. Pro¬ | | ■ I I, 5 Minutes East On Grand Riber ED 28745 ditioned and guaranteed used ac¬ cordions. New drums, drum sets and accessories. The new plas¬ on them, 2-day service.MYERS PRINTING, 1421 E. Michigan. fessional theses typing. Near campus. 337-1527. C Accident Research IV 2-2554. 14-6/3 BARBI MEL, professional typist. -Coupon . tic drum brushes. Cymbals, mi¬ (continued from page 1) These objections were refuted only through LONG DISTANCE moving and No job too' large or too small. ■ crophones and stands. Used tape then the number of miles traveled. a. long, difficult and expensive study which * ■* £ P!E:N A L storage. Anywhere in the world. Block off campus. 332-3255. C - s s recorders. Easy terms, trades, But the taxable gasoline may go into power proved that: For a free estimate, call ■mVP. o;c OK 1 B 1 layaways. WILCOX MUSIC, 509 LYON'S VAN LINES, IV 5-2241. lawnmowers or boats, and the number of miles (a) a person is five times more likely to be T ransportation killed if he is thrown out of the car. H ill* Zl ■ E;P O M E. Michigan. Phone IV 5-4391. 10-6/1 gotten per gallon may vary considerably. for less A L^U JX □ nay Hours 8 to 5:30 daily. C GUESS WHO will come to you MANHATTAN' VIA 1962 Chrys- Counting the number of cars people buy is (b) entrapment accidents account than 2 per cent of all accidents and hence are ler! Memorial Day weekend. not a good measure of how much driving they B AMP Mrif as no with wedding invitation samples Round trip, door-to-door, $20. practically insignificant. A N !T' 1 Fi aaaa Animols do, because in two car families each car may at reasonable prices and give Craig, 353-1354. 3-5, 25 be used less than It would be otherwise. (c) the human can successfully withstand the □□□as aaaaa AFGHAN PUPPIES, choice of you free reception napkins. pressure of a seat belt in a violent collision.. Similarily, the number of drivers in the □□ □□□u □ana colors. Top bloodlines. Terms PAMELA PRINTING SERVICE, Wanted No other programs or hardware have been suit. Phone 393-0446. 5-5/23 population is a doubtful basis for an calcu¬ □□□ aoaa ana to TU 2-7324. C3-5/25 BLOOD DONORS needed, $6 for lation because many older people retain their empirically tested for a long enough time to □BBC □□as □□ SAINT BERNARD puppy. Beauti- THESES PRINTED, rapid serv- RH positive: $7, $10 or $12 for licenses but may do little or no actual driving. justify their use, said the book. □ansa □□HEG3 ful male, six weeks old. AKC ice. Drafting supplies, xerox RH negative. DETROIT BLOOL Statistics 011 teen-age drivers are subject Furthermore, "unsophisticated people who arann registered. $150. IV "-0855. SERVICE, INC. 1427 E. Michi¬ to the same kinds of research problems. look, at the figures will see that cancer, heart 2600 W. Washtenaw. 5-5 2~ copies. CAPITAL CITY BLUE¬ kidney diseases are a much more gan Ave. Hours 9-4 Monday There is evidence not only that teen-agers disease and PRINT. 221 South Grand. ,482- SIAMESE KITTENS, beautiful and 5431. C3-5/25 & Tuesday; 12-7 Thursday. 489- tend to drive more than adults but also that significant cause of death than auto accidents." 7587. C "What they don't realize is that these de- registered. Call IV 5-;0913. SAVE ON your moving expenses. they are more likely to drive in hazardous 3-5/24 COUPLE WANTS to sublease weather. ■ generative diseases hit old people, whereas Make your reservation now for apartment in married housing, auto accidents don't." POODLE, SM^LL a new 16 ft. enclosed truck. One "If a teen-ager drives twice as much .is his , Marg.mn, Summer term. No children. When fatalities are measured in terms of father and has twice as many accidents, this way rentals. IV 5-9831. 10—6/1 Phone 355-5919. 3-5/23 number of life-years destroyed rather than shows he is just as good a driver as his iiiijsc drops DIAPER SERVICE, YourAuthor- father." by counting bodies, auto accidents are re¬ ized Diaparene Franchised GET TENANTS QUICKER by d %27 25 LaSalle 1957 40' x 10' • $2,200. Plant inspection invited with from June 20 to July 30 while and said. have not been empirically validated, he voted to safety...so these should be devoted 25 trained personnel to answer Michigan State. Arthur C. that are proved to save the 2» % 31 31 3J May leave on lot. Small Acres Lane, Okemos. ED 2-4658. your questions. Approved by at Thompson, 326 Oakwood, Mar¬ Seat fatal belts, the one proven way to reduce automobile accidents, provide an ex¬ to measures greatest number of lives per dollar." % 3i 37 %% 3-5/25 DSIA. Cail 482-0864, AMERI¬ CAN DIAPER SERVICE. 1914 ietta, Ohio, 45750. 614-374- 4417. 1-5/23 cellent illustration of common sense versus Klein was cited for his contributions in accident prevention research Thursday night % =4 empirical checking. HOMETTE 1964, two bedroom, E. Gier Street. C Three major objections were originally raised by the National Safety Council at the annual 39 40 At expando living room. Take over lish bike. Must be in meeting of the \merican Society of Safety %% 45 payments. Call IV 5-3905. APPLICATIONS AND pictures taken by HICKS STU¬ passport good con¬ dition, but can't pay more than against seat belts: (a) it is safer to be thrown clear of the car . Engineers. 43 4- % DIO, ED 2-6169. One or same $12. Call 332-5227 after 3 p.m. 5-5/27 than to be pinned in it. Similar certificates of recognition will be awarded Klein's co-authors, William Haddon 4. % W VAGABOND 1961, 50' x 10'. On lot 421, Trailer Haven. Call ED day service. C REACH ANTIQUE-LOVERS with (b) there might be no escape if a person were trapped on a railroad track, for example. Jr. of the New York State Dept. of Health 49 5D IRONINGS—$3 a bushel. Pick up W "-0286. From 8-5, Tapp, 353- and delivery. Prompt.. Call 646- an Ad in Classified. Dial 8255. 355- (c) the pressure of the seat belt would cut a human body in half in any violent collision. and Edward A. Suchman of the University of Pittsburgh. 6893. ' 5-5/26 10 Michigan State News, East Lansing. Michigan Monday, May 23, 1966 PUBLIC HELP Probe Buy Your Tickets NOW (continued from page 1) own, and he wouldn't have my Auditorium Box Office Police Need blessing on it." But three other members of the subcommittee and three mem¬ bers of the full ways and means NOW OPEN committee 12:30-5:00 P.M. participated with Fax¬ them," Berlo said. "No one goes "Be resigned to the fact that to ask the public for their help." in time of crisis you're the on at the hearing. Some of them Monday Thru Friday have since disassociated them¬ There is a willingness to help scapegoat," he concluded. "It's selves from the probe saying it 355-0148 Today's polic have become so j,ut an increasing hesitancy to part of the nature of the process had competent that the public doesn't nothing to do with appropria¬ volunteer, he continued. Police of law." think it needs to help them, said tions and so shouldn't be part of should call on the public forhelp. "Police and law enforcement their reponslbility. David K. Berlo, chairman of the Members of the leg I estab- ire no more the reflection Dept. of Communications,Thurs- iishmer.t serii->uslvu : J resti- Petipren concurred, "If this 0f the community," said Donald day night at Kellogg Center. ipabilitie the pub- Reisig, Ingham County prose- - report Jack's working on goes Addressing the 442 partici- lie," Berlo told the p cemen. beyond fiscal implications it cer¬ "You are guilty of the : tainly belongs in our committee." There is a pervading need for i Insti Polic and interpretation they havi a greater understanding of the But he added he "wouldn't tions, Berlo '1 believe that the n i to advise police role, Reisig said. Police wait any six weeks"—the time le of three speakers for "The of pol: work has always been shrouded Faxon said it would take to com¬ stitute Theme--•, Police Exe- pie," in shadow. a plete his investigation—to take itive's View." the trust giver, t "The public has a tendency over if further studies were need- "There is an increasing ten- the public." FAREWELL TO MSU--Retiring after a combined to remember the abuses and for¬ •ncy to allocate jobs to the parts Work to teach, to le total of 88 years of service to MSU are E.D. our society established for anticipate, Berlo said. get that the police agency is Devereux, assistant dean of the Col lege of Veteri¬ Hannah assured Faxon at the there for the community," he nary Medicine, left, and W.L. Mailman, professor hearing that no state funds were continued. of microbiology and public health. involved in the seven-year MSU Police training, education and Photo by John Castle • project in Viet Nam. compensation need to be upgrad¬ Police-Chiefs Clarify ed in order to attract the best people to police careers, Reisig Even Kowalski, who said he "couldn't prevent any member said. Science Clinic July 10—14 from saying he's going to inves¬ tigate something if he wants to." Stand On Civil Rights more Police . should try to become involved in community life, Reisig said. The citizenry should For High School Students admitted it "probably wouldhave been more proper" for the col¬ In a:, executive committee position to segregat r, housing also become more interested in leges and universities commit¬ This summer about 200Michi- ious areas of agricultural sci- tee to conduct an investigation meeting at State Police Head- and education; equal quarters Friday, the Michigan opportunities "lim Police"and the public should San hlSh sch°o1 students will ence. of the MSU-Ramparts affair. Assoc. of Chiefs of Police adopt- fitness and ability vork together to strike at the come t0 -NISL' for a new kind of Last year s clinic, which acted Faxon, who said he was in¬ ed a decl.tr.it;or. on civil rights may "enjoy the fruit •auses of crime " he said science clinic. as a pilot study, featured dem- terested only in "seeing if MSU "to allay any fears or clear up perity" and one of "At no time in the history of To be held JulV 10"14' the °nstrations by the Poultry Sci- was being misused instead of and poverty ,■ be re- his njtion have we been so clinic ls designed to show young ence and Dairy departments, misrepresented, said he planned President William Johnson, duced; and equj hallenged by the delicate bal- scientists how scientific investi- The dairy demonstration on on contacting at least three U.S. superintendent of police of Grand the law and protectio of nee between the protection of Satlon is v1131 t0 man>' of today's controlling sex during reproduc- senators and the former head Rapids, said that any repression "regardless of race, co creed the public and the rights of the agricultural careers. tion intrigued students with re- of the CIA to see if the five of equal rights can be costly, or national origin." individual," said Philip Purcell, The Science Clinic will feature search which may someday allow men associated with a counter dangerous and unjust and ad- president of the International demonstrations conducted by out- dairymen "to choose the sex of subversion training program verselv >:'fects ail elements of the The MA CP also Assoc. of Chiefs of Police. standing faculty members in var- calves. conducted by MSU in Viet Nam responsible exerci: of the Police must work ;ndadded actually were CIA agents. schism between rights of each person the help of John Citizen," said SEATS AVAILABLE FOR ALL >s and police al- that none could choc: what law purceil. PERFORMANCES! Petipren, however, said he WINNER OF s distrust of the he will obey. It charged that "Before 1000 A.D. all able BUY TICKETS TODAY! would ask Faxon to turn over his imittee issued the prejudices are passed bodied men were required to 5 findings to date and that his com¬ ich supports: op- eration to gi ition when chil- bowrtwise (gj, 1 mittee would then decide whether stand guard," he said. "Now, ACADEMY / < injustices and dis- however, with the decline ofper- to dig more deeply into the MSU crimination, sked that people sonal involvement, there has been AWARDS / case. reduce the causes of ind a decline in Book Sa disorder and called for "ts nd law and order." personal interest in • RAM ,SFOB«1T'OS » 482 3£05 impartial" law enforcement by "We hear continually about the BEST PICTURE MICHIGAN Nets SI,2 police. rights of citizens," Purcell ex¬ ALL SEATS RESERVED! SEATS NOW ON SALE AT THE TODAY 0» 1 30-3:30*5:25-7:30.9:30 plained, "But not too often about BEST DIREC BOX OFFICE OR MAIL Over 2,000 books were sold in their responsibilities." 483-6485 DEAN MARTIN the Library Book Sale last week, "We'd better start right here Olin Report adding $1,200 to the Library's to tell the public of their re¬ sponsibilities," he said. "Let's QLADMER. TheSILENCERS The money from the sale has spread the gospel for public sup¬ Students remaining in Olin been used to purchase .1 collec¬ Health Center Sunday afternoon port." tion of Russian r.istory books that after being admitted during the was- selected in Washington, D.C., weekend were: Carole Long, by Arthur E. Adams, professor gAMPUS CHICKEN DELIGHT Nlerritt freshman; Thomas Mc- Cloud, Alameda, Calif., sopho- -,ry C. Koch, 2nd Week! more; Harba Gill, Dar Es Salaam, charge 1:10-3:15-5:20-7:2 5-9:30 Tanganylka, sophomore; Anthony ; sale, stated .thi e aas Javoroski, Dearborn junior; Anne Try Our Academy Award Winner S1IHMEI CIIICLf THEATRE 66 • pleased with the results Shelley Winters sale." The Library plans Strayer, Niles freshman; Stephen FOR Chicken Delight "Best : Ihrig, Birmingham sophomore; Supporting Actress" MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY DEPARTMENT Michael Clancey, State College, Rib Delight Pa., freshman; Sharon Johnson, ONE OF THE YEAR S OF SPEECH PROUDLY PRESENTS THE SIXTH SEASON OF ITS UNIQUE THRUST STAGE Dearborn freshman; Harold Fish Delight Gurewitz, Benton Harbor junior; FREE DELIVERY 10 BEST! THEATRE LOCATED ON THE CAMPUS IN DEMONSTRATION HALL Nancy L. Payne, Wayne junior; Shrimp Delight Larry Schmida, Detroit fresh¬ K and RASHOMON June 29-July 2 7 man; Penny Johnson, St. Clair Shores senior; Sharon Stinson, CALTT*484-9446 Pizza Dearborn junior; Jeralyn Mar¬ CHARLEY'S AUNT July 6-9 vin, Huntington freshman; Nancy Lapin, Southfield sophomore; and Rctch Andrew Tor ok, Birmingham I 5 Mi nute P ick-up 1317 E. Michigan 1/2 Block East of Sparrow Hospital THE DAYS BETWEEM July 13-16 THE BOYS FROM NEY SHELLEY i\ - SYRACUSE July 20-23 SECRET SERVICE July 27-30 ■VJjARMN EXTRA AWARD ACADEMY] CARTOONll jM§T i\ "The Dot ffl And The Line" | I I j SOON • —' 'THE TEN COMMANDMENTS" PERFORMING ARTS COMPANY 19(ki-()7 When you can't THANK HEffllEN afford to be dull, Shown once only at 8:40 SAINT JOAN Nov. 29-1 -FRIDAY I- sharpen your wits ARSKNIC AN1) OI.1) LACK Fcl>. 27-Mar. I with NoDoz,., "A MASTERWORK! THL DVIW'k April IE One of the most beautiful and NODOZ Ki Alert Tablets fight off stimulating films ever made! Afire FALS I" the hazy, :y feelings of mental with exotic and erotic! Fellini ex¬ May 2