Monkeys. STATE MEWS . in . . are this: when superior to men MICHIGAN Cloudy.. monkey looks Into a r , he . . . with afternoon or sees a monkey. STATE evening showers. High around 75. Saturday: Mi Id with UNIVERSITY possible showers. East Lansing, Michigan Friday, June 3, 1966 Vol. 58, Number 163 FINAL REPORT ON RULES TUESDAY Committee Calls Graduation For Student Voice Ceremonies The final report on a six-month-long probe into the University's At 4 June regulations and structures will call for a vote, as well as a voice, for The of the students in matters which affect their Faculty Committee on Student Affairs, a standing committee Academic Council, will report back to the council Tuesday academic freedom. Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey will speak to 4,735 degree afternoon. candidates at spring commencement at 4 p.m. Sunday, June 12, Members of the committee, including students named by ASMSU in Spartan Stadium. to conduct a parallel investigation, will be meeting this weekend Processional of the students and faculty will begin at 4 p.m. to put a final polish on the report. v. Humphrey will begin his address at about 4:40 p.m. and degrees Sections on a revised judicial structure, with greater-student will be awarded at about 5. participation, and on a recommendation to move ASMSU up to the President Hannah will then deliver his comments at about 5:45 level of a full-fledged faculty committee are to be completed this and the recessional will begin at approximately 6 p.m. weekend. ASMSU decisions are presently subject to veto by the Of those receiving degrees, 3,358 will be awarded bachelor, Faculty Committee on Student Affairs. 1,226 master, 33 doctor of veterinary medicine, and 118 doctoral Previously published tentative guidelines on student rights and degrees. —— responsibilities in three areas— Five men will receive honorary degrees. In addition to Hum¬ academic affairs, student rec¬ phrey, Glenn T. Seaborg, chairman of the Atomic Energy Com¬ ords and student conduct—have mission; architect Alden B. Dow; and Eni Njoku, recent appointee to the vice chancellorship of the University ofNigeria, will receive '66 Sen already been re-worked in re¬ sponse to suggestions from doz¬ honorary doctor of laws degrees. ens of faculty members and stu¬ An honorary doctor of science degree will be presented to Mark V. Burlingame, a 1926 graduate of MSU and executive vice president To Don dents. A new set of guidelines, recom¬ of the Natural Gas Pipeline Co. of America. mending sweeping structural and Also presented at the ceremony will be give MSU Distinguished regulatory changes in University Alumni Awards. This year's recipients are: Christian E.W. Baker, Class of 1955, president of Cottington College and Divinity School, Liberia, West Africa. Unisphere control of student has also been drawn up. The committee intends to ask publications Robert B. McCurry Jr., Class of 1950, a vice president of The class gift of the Class of that a permanent student-faculty Chrysler Corp. in Detroit. '66 will be a four-foot high repli- committee on academic rights Alvin L. Burridge Jr., Class of 1942, general manager in Tokyo ca of the Unisphere at the New and duties be established, ac- for Winthrop Laboratories, an affiliate of Sterling Drug Co. York World's Fair. The Uni- cording to reliable reports, UNISPHERE—A four-foot replica of the New York gift will be purchased out of seniors' donated John J. Korney, Class of 1931, vice president of Bank of the sphere will be placed in the lobby This committee would see that Commonwealth in Detroit. World's Fair unity symbol wi II be placed in the lounge l deposit refunds. of the International Center. the guidelines were followed by William A. McDonald, Class of 1913, retired general manager of the International Center by the Class of '66. The Senior CounciloftheClass University organizations, offices of McDonald Dairy Co. in Flint. of '66 selected the gift, which is and departments, Seating of the students for the valued at about $3,500. Don In order to give added weight commencement will be done by Strange, director of the develop- to the guidelines, the commit¬ college, with the oldest—College of Agriculture—highest. The stu¬ dents will be recognized in the same order. If rain prevents the ceremony Gemini 9's Third ment fund on the council, was in tee will recommend thattheAca- charge of obtaining the replica, demic Council approve them and which is being made by an eas- pass them on to the Board of tern steel company. Delivery should be before fall term. (continued on page 9) from being held In the stadium, CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) of America's greatest space ad- Wednesday and i space v walk byy 9's scheduled launching at 8:39 -■ ' • n day Thursday meeting with proj- officials and then reviewing A spokesman for the Office If successful, Gemini exercises will fie ventures today. Cernan. ™ v." Offi- of Alumni Relations said that the commencement in Jenison Fieldhouse. Hard-luck astronauts Thomas Stafford and Eugene Cernan got They had two chances, 96 min- Buoyed by the spectacular sue- would mark another giant step then revised reVised flight pi a fUgM p ^ Unisphere "portrays world unity Apartments, The entire event will be broad- the go-ahead signal late Thurs- utes apart, to get off the ground cess of Surveyor 1 s soft landing in America s bid to land a man on sarly dim i get in bed . by, and peace through under¬ cast exclusively on WMSB tele- day for thlrd attempt to at last for theIr rendezvous with drafted by mi- slide victory was in the mak- of Surveyor as a forerunner to solar panels that provide battery searing heat of the sun. The mysterious ing. The newspaper said its own American astronauts landing in poWer from the sun andcanfunc- The pictures were described nority members of the commit- Bat man- C poll showed Balaguer leading ^ same arid Sea of Storms by tion for an unlimited time. To Publish Daily as "excellent" and of "high qua 1- tee, Sen. S. Don Potter, R-Lan- says Batman may seerr Bosch by almost_100,000 votes— j969 and strolling over thip'dusty "it's not getting there first lty sing, charged the 86-page report bad, but it's "good junk." 319,374 to 225,776—with about flat terrain shown by the first that counts, it's getting there Today's is the last issue of Project scientist Dr. Leonard violated the Mount Pleasant Good Or Bad? p. 10. 50 per cent of the vote counted, pictures. ... exclaimed Dr. Edward best," the State News this term. Jaffe said that by using data school's constitutional antonomy Pnffpr adtfed he awaits "with Potter added he awaits with , /-* A four-by-six inch flag, pur- C* Welsh, a White House space However, the State News will returned by Surveyor and that re- STEP chased for 23 cents at a drug aSency coordinator. not vacation this summer. ceived by Luna 9, scientists "can great interest word from Atty. store, was furled in a section The close-up, fine-line pic- For the first time, the State draw a conclusion that rubble is Ge"' Jran^' ,el}ey ,°n ^ 'S°~ Rose Bowl trips andthe World Comes Received $14,885.87 of structural tubing of the three- tures relaved bv Surveyor to the News will publish daily, Monday fairly common over a large area called right of the Legislature CIA had the world looking Minimum goal $13,300 legged robot. jet propulsion laboratory's through Friday, during the sum- of the moon. to investigate a state university. at MSU. These and other To East Optimum Budget $16,000 The accomplishment of the pin- tracking station ln the Mojave mer months. In past years the 'The area where SurVeyor The report, in the making since events are Veviewed on Lansing point soft landing by the 10-foot Desert showed what appeared paper has come out only two landed would support the weight la®1 year, was neaaeaDy ben. high 620-pound robot was hail- to be boulders, rocks and peb- days a week. of man," he said. Edward J. Ko nson, ear- Michigan State News. East Lansing. Michigan m iVr p \ -I i\|1 pwr & m Our Girls Invade Ramparts Office EDITOR'S EDITOR'S Campus Editoi r NOTE NOTE: i~ □ famous-notorious "How the U.S. famous-notorious "How the U.S. Involved In C.nt Involved Got which the Ramparts article Nam." upon in Viet Nam," unon tion tion desk tnnps. desk andand talking in hushed ley. r. Promotions .■ „ n They asked whether j President n Hannah u and v we knew Wesley barger and Assistant Except for Dugald Stermer, quickly on the young staff. Sol Fishel, professor of political sci¬ Campus Editor Joan Sol¬ charging that MSU was a cover who looked as if he could be as Stern, another author of the MSU ence, and were amazed that two omon visited Ramparts for the CIA was based.) old as 30, most of them were article, was a research assist¬ coeds at a school overrun with po¬ Magazine office in San It was 2 p.m. and most of the young enough to have just left ant when he MSU to lice Published every class day throughout fall, winter, and spring terms came to gath¬ actually would have been al¬ Francisco over the Me¬ staff was out to lunch. Those who the Scheer for Congress benefit and twice weekly summer term by the students of Michigan State Uni¬ er information. He was "re¬ lowed to see the two men. They morial Day weekend. were there, still In their coats, art show last weekend at the Uni¬ search editor" .when the article also seemed to have real suspi¬ versity and authorized by the Board of Student Publications. huddled around the recep¬ were versity of California at Berke- appeared. cions that we had been sent by the In the heart of San Francisco's University on an official fact¬ Page 2 Friday, June 3, 1966 "topless" district, around the finding mission. corner from slliconeCarolDoda, They had heard of The Papar am is a nondescript office labeled and couldn't understand why we EDITORIALS simply "Ramparts." weren't working for it instead of That two coeds in San Francis¬ for the State News. co for only the weekend should „ The We had wanted to meet Warren university on the make 4 \ take time to seek out this office Hinckle, the third author of the 1965-66 For MSU: seemed extremely peculiar magazine staff that thinks of MSU to the article, but were told to come back the next day "around 2, as the home of the Central Intel¬ ligence Agency. wl when the orgies begin." Do they have orgies often? Controversy And Problems "Oh yes, Michigan State," said "Oh, yes, about every day," Art Director DugaldStermer with one of the group around the desk a wry grin. "We caused quite a replied. • little stir out there, didn't we?" We didn't go back for the orgy IT WAS A YEAR like all vears— THE NEW CONCEPT of a college The office was mostly bare, as on Saturday, but we did go to e\ceot not for MSU. If there is such within a college became reality when the magazine had just moved its Berkeley where the only places a thing as a typical school year, the Justin Morrill College was launched headquarters from Menlo Park, active on the Saturday night be¬ ■ ear 1965-66 was not one of them for last fall in Snyder and Phillips halls. Calif. The walls were covered fore finals were an Indian import MSU. Diversity, variety, success, It was hoped to blend the advantages with Ramparts covers and—get store and the Scheer for Congress failure, progress and setbacks all of a small college while maintaining this—a copy of the Michigan State Headquarters. combined to make MSU an exciting the atmosphere of a large university, News. They were surprised that we i( no' always desirable place to be in indications are that the innovation All of the people in the office knew Scheer was running for Con¬ has been successful. And there are were wearing Scheer for Con¬ gress and asked how on earth we plans to begin another college in a gress buttons and there were could have found that out. In short, MSU was the place where different area of study in the future. This from the worker who as many Scheer for Congress came the action was. To begin the year, posters In th£ windows as there asked why we went to such a a graduate student named Paul Schiff For the fourth successive year, were in Scheer's Berkeley head¬ "miserable, odious, ugly place" filed suit in federal court to force MSU attracted more Merit Scholars quarters. as Michigan State. MSU to readmit him after the Uni¬ than any other institution in the U.S. (For those who have forgotten, He'd never been here, he said, versity refused during the summer, By bringing top students to the cam¬ Robert Scheer is author of the but he knew what It was like. for non-academic reasons. pus, MSU cannot help but raise its academic standards. But top schol¬ ars can't do it alone—without the BEFORE THE CON T ROVE RSY was cooperation and active interest of OUR READERS SPEAK LETTER POLICY Over. Schiff V,as heard fc> the Faculty the faculty and administration. Committee of Student Affairs and The State News welcomes letters to the editor from all again defied readmission. Then sud¬ readers, whether they associated with Michigan This or not 'Number' are denly in January, Schiff was given PRESIDENT HANNAH celebrated State University. permission to return. The Univer¬ his 25th year as president of MSU. Letters must be no longer than 300 words and should be sity came out of the incident look- typed double space. i Regardless of the criticism that Han¬ ng a litt le tarnished. nah has been subject to at times, he, To the Editor: sity unless you wish to do so. 1 "learning experience" at MSU. Correspondents should include name and, if applicable, Uni¬ One beneficial more than anyone else, has been have never had agy time or pa¬ One is the academic work itself; versity standing. This information may be withheld upon re¬ aspect of the Schiff After six quest, but no unsigned letters will be printed. case was a scholarly brief filed in responsible for the continued growth long years of study tience with students who sat one is the realm of social and federal court by the local chapter of and stability of MSU in the last quar¬ at MSU it is with a good deal of around and proclaimed the im¬ extra-curricular activities. Most the A-nerican Assn. of University ter century. Twenty-five years ago, regret that I leave this univer¬ personal atmosphere of MSU. students experience these two Professors 'AAUP>. While criticiz¬ Michigan State was a small agricul¬ sity and community. MSU has 2. With attention and interest areas and profit from them. tural college. Today it is a large and provided me with much. The it is possible to go through MSU The third remains all too ing the University's position in the area Editorial and t Schiff case, it also praised MSU prominent university. John Hannah's things I have learned and done with good grades, but those of you often untouched. It is the area of Univ.rsity, East contribution cannot be overlooked. here will be of value to al¬ who Jo Bamberger as an outstanding place of higher me receive only A's and B's personal development with the learning and free thought. In the realm of student govern¬ ways. To the students who still have not truly discovered the lim¬ faculty and administrators. In ment, ASMSU began its first yiear carry out their endeavors at this it? of your potential. A poor grade four years a student should know under a new structure. It provided University I leave three thoughts. is as much an aid topersonalun¬ personally (as a very good friend) 1. It is Impossible to remain at least three major administra¬ THE ARREST FALL term of four consistently more service to the derstanding as a good grade. Viet Nam protestors, three students students in areas of popular enter¬ "just a number" at this Univer¬ 3. There are three areas of tors and/or full professors. and one former student, at Career tainment, closed circuit television Best wishes to those who seek Carnival of football games and also received a real education at MSU, and my brought more publicity to I'M 601N6 OUT HERE, AND humblest thanks /TOLETYOU PITCH..\ AWS Asks Coeds: student to the many ad¬ MSU. But the real news came when approval to begin campus PLAV LEFT-FIELD...! THINK IT the four were sentenced in Ingham radio next fall. But in other areas, ministrators, faculty, and per¬ THE TENSION UP HERE U)ILl HELP ME TO I^ELAX like student sonnel who aided in my quest ON THE MOUND IS I County Circuit Court to 30 days in a operated bookstore, me X TOO HARP ON A«V for understanding about myself, jail without bail. Then came the Sit— programs were stalled and littlepro- f TOMACH ...V ' in,-sleep-in hunger strike in front of Cowles House appealing to Presi¬ dent Hannah to take action. Though gress was made. The touchy ASMSU officials compensation issue for handled Justify Suffragettes the universe and life. was sloppily To the Editor: 1/ the judge's decision was over ly harsh, by the board, though student approval Attention students of Michigan State University. and later reversed by the Circuit was given in a referendum last month. If you were born in 1945. the year of 1966 has special significance Court of Appeals, neither the Univer¬ The new boardelected this term has ( for you: You, during this year will become 21. Besides the attrac- . sity nor responsibi lity President Hannah had obligation in the any gotten off to a slow start. It still tion the Gables holds, 21 year-olds also cm exercise the right to Need Decent or faces the problem of overcoming personal pettiness and parliamentary vote in local, state and national elections. The Associated Women Students (AWS) urge the students of MSU WHAT ABOUT The biggest issue of the year ex¬ to inquire about voting qualifications. Register to vote in your home Radio Station MV STOMACH? town this summer. ploded on campus on April, when And the Ramparts magazine hit the perennial problem of com¬ The women of AWS at MSU are disturbed by the lack of participa¬ To the Editor: iqy news- s»ands. In a sensationalized article, municating with students and being tion of women in our nation's civic affairs. Although relatively few effective agents of student grievances areas compile a breakdown of voter participation by sex, estimates It seems to me that people have MSU /-as taken to task for its Viet Nam infiltration, project during the 50's. a university buying guns CIA and ideas rerrroims a prominent ob¬ stacle to effective student govern- reveal that on the national level, only 50 per cent bf the eligible women vote, as compared with 73 per cent of the men. In the 1960 lost sight of the main advantages of a campus radio station. The simple fact is that there is ,#•: for a foreign government and the na- presidential-election, there were 20 million eligible women who did a crying need for a really decent but few of the issues raised. State laws differ the age requirement AM radio station to serve the a T HIS WAS on for voting. Information ALSO the of The 40- year East Lansing area. 1 consider the may be obtained through the local League of Women Voters, or your Paper, the maverick weekly publi¬ local government. two "popular" radio stations in AT cation which encountered numerous this area to be in bad taste for THE PARTIAL VALIDITY of the There has been great concern over students' rights and respon¬ difficulties, many because of outdated several reasons. charges was disturbing to be sure, sibilities. On a higher level, what about adult rights and responsi¬ distribution and publication but the bungled attempts by the MSU and the others created by its con¬ policies bilities? Many of us soon will become adults legally. Exercise your One very annoying character¬ For (Graduation .. . officials to istic of these stations is the repi- cover up and save face troversial attitude and actions. De¬ RIGHT to vote by taking the RESPONSIBILITY to register. with conflicting denials and affirma¬ titious announcement of the name, Or Any (rift Occasion ... tions have left deeper scars than the spite its shotgun-like criticism of the Jean Fisher location and other information Viet Nam project itself. University andanything remote I y con¬ which is surely known by heart by nected with it, The Paper at times of¬ at least 99.9 per cent of all lis¬ Just as the Ramparts incident be¬ fered worthwhile writing to its read- teners. For example, one local gan to simmer down a bit, the tical Science Dept. began to f a 11 Poli¬ apart. At other times, it turned to vul¬ An Aesthetic station recently, in the span of only one hour, subjected its lis¬ Three top men announcedtheirresig¬ teners to 17 playings of a jingle nations and several others decided to garisms and four-letter words in an To the Editor: In relation to participation in giving the name and frequency of leave ,MSU. Many reasons have been attempt to "stimulate" the University Since the REDCEDAR REVIEW the promotion of culture, we have the station. In the same hour, the community. The problems encoun¬ finds itself in the rather inter¬ offered in explanation for the exodus. tered with already made a beginning by call letters were mentioned no The Paper this year have But no single reason or group of shown the glaring need to modify and esting position of being reviewed sponsoring the appearance of less than 86 times. This station reasons has been substantiated. For (May 31, State News) by the editor Pham Duy, and we hope to en¬ must think its jingle is No. 1 on update existing publication and dis¬ of a magazine which has been sure though, no university or depart¬ tribution gage in further activities. Al¬ the hit parade. ment benefits when high caliber pro¬ policies.. Hopefully next writing editorials unfavorable to year, The Paper will make its edi¬ though we have a certain obli¬ Another annoying characteris¬ fessors depart and certainly the level RCR all year, 1 feel it necessary gation to represent student work torial comment more constructive and tic of local stations is their end¬ of instruction must suffer, at least that we clarify certain miscon¬ in the magazine, we no longer bring it in line with the caliber of less concern over relatively triv¬ some of its other ceptions inherent in the review limit our publication only to stu¬ ial details, such as the "public writing. by Michael Williams. dents. We did not do so this year. service announcements" heard The major body,of the review, That part of the review article often. For instance, an alert lis¬ MONEY PROBLEMS also that which discusses the merits which criticizes our organiza¬ plagued AND THE UNIVERSITY continues of the contents of RCR, is not tener might learn that a local tional faults might easily have MSU, as the Board of Trustees was to grow--both in numbers and the Okemos group is holding a church forced to raise dorm and married subject to discussion here. In been left unsaid, since it is com¬ supper three days hence, or that physical facilities. With the growth this respect the review was a menting on faults we admitted to housing rates, because of increasing comes the problems of improving the Lansing Jr. High leads in the costs. And the Michigan Legislature legitimate one. The label of "tra¬ the writer, and have no plans of latest post-card sending eontest. and Gov. George Romney had dif— quality of education and academic ditional" attached to thecontents repeating. Had the article been standards. The question of whether If one cares to listen to the (e-rences of opinion with the Univer- reflects a difference in aesthetic written by anyone but a competi¬ "local news," he might learn of there is a ceiling on enrollment in. s it y on how large MSU's appropri¬ judgement between RCR and the tor, these faults would not have such earth shattering facts as the forseeable future becomes more editors of the other publication. ation should be. Presently, unless been considered relevant to a re¬ important than ever before. John Doe of south Lansing crash¬ the Legislature appropriates an addi¬ It is in the first paragraph of view of the contents of the maga¬ ing his automobile ii*o a tele¬ tional SI.7 million to MSU, the Board So that the the review that clarification is zine. was year that was— phone pole. Certain Lansing sta¬ of Trustees will be forced to in¬ it's over and gone. It's a year that required. We do receive a finan¬ We hope the fresh start we en¬ tions have cial positively the best cov¬ crease tuition and fees to meet mini¬ won't soon be forgotten—though some subsidy every year from the vision for next year will be re¬ erage of automobile accidents of mum operational needs. would like to forget. It wasn't a English Dept., and we make use ceived as such, and that the mis¬ any stations 1 have ever heard of. On the positive side, a sweeping year that alumni, administrators, faculty or students will look back on of its office facilities, but our connection with the department takes of the past will be left in the past where they properly be¬ These are only examples. It e that BRITISH evaluation of all and University rules regulations affecting academic freedom was started winter term by with pleasant memories. But it can¬ not be considered a failure either, but ends there. We are in no censored and the organization of RCR as a publication is entirely way long. The most important ques¬ tion for the moment should still of 35,000 persons (supposedly of higher intellectual calibre) would STERLING EXCLUSIVE TOILETRIES fOR MEN j I rather a challenge and a preview of be whether the contents of RCR desire an entertainment media the faculty committee on student af¬ the increasing burdens a large uni¬ In the hands of the editors. represent worthwhile art or not. which would operate on a higher MADE IN U S A. ! fairs. Still struggling to meet its versity must bear and the increas¬ I must admit that the rest of We think they do. The cost of plane of thought. It seems stu¬ six-month deadline, the committee ing interest students take in the type the criticisms concerning our publication, though it might be dents would want something bet¬ has arduously waded into the mire of education they receive. failure to live up to our poten¬ relevant to us as an organization, ter than is offered, even at the and complexity of student rules. Thus tial as an influential voice in the is irrelevant to this basic ques¬ risk From $3.50 to $10.00 of University propaganda. far, several sets of guidelines have cultural community are fairly tion of aesthetics. It seems Headquarters for people would rebel been announced. Though the degree of success of the evaluation cannot be deter mi ned unti I the study has been AS ROBERT FROST'S poem says, "I have promises to keep and miles to go before I sleep and miles to go valid. The present editors have learned a great deal this year and our plans for next year in¬ It is on the level of aesthetic Judgement that we consider RCR a valid voice in the community against the junior high atmos¬ phere of local radio stations. But perhaps I am wrong. Orange Blossom Diamonds Vjl^VvV completed, hopefully, a codified and before I sleep." And so it is with volve extensive changes. We will for the present. Art Carved updated set of student regulations MSU in 1966, looking hopefully to publish more frequently, less Peggy Case Wedding Rings 319 E. Grand River ill r u.lt. the future. expensively, and more actively. Editor, RED CEDAR REVIEW Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, June 3, 1966 3 DIE-HARDS STOKE REBELLION FLINT, DETROTT Teacher Strikes Ky SAIGON (UPI)—G o v e r n ment Troops trying to oust Premier Nguyen Thlch Tam Chau tried in vain Buddhist Tak patriach "stronglypro¬ Hit5 Communities troops and armor took over the Cao Ky. to prevent the new demonstration tests the statement by the U.S. northern city of Hue Thursday President that self-immolations by issuing a communique claim¬ DETROIT (UPI)—More than 1,200 teachers boycotted schools in without In Saigon, Buddhist demonstra¬ .that firing a shot. But mili¬ ing that Ky and Chief of State of Buddhists are useless . . four Detroit suburbs and Flint, Mich., today, defying a state anti- Buddhist leader Thich Tri tors took to the streets again tant Nguyen Van Thieu had agreed to statement by the U.S. President strike law. Pickets patrolled 100 schools and one picketing teacher Quang apparently sought to keep despite the agreement to bring resign when the political settle¬ conveys evil intentions and lack claimed he was hit by a non-striking colleague. the rebellion alive by accusing civilians into the ruling military reached of respect." ment Wednesday Is put This mass walkout, called in a milit^it bid for higher wages, President Johnson of discounting Junta. into effect Monday. Tri Quang was referring to the quickly closed about a dozen schools, pushed others on half-day the fiery suicides of Buddhists Moderate Buddhist leader There was also some question six Buddhist nuns and lay per¬ schedules and crippled class operations for most of the more than about the loyalty of the troops sons who committed fiery sui¬ 60,000 students. committed to restore order in cides in the past week in an at¬ The Flint walkout and those in three suburbs were called in ad¬ Hue, the last rebel stronghold and tempt to bring down the Ky gov- vance. headquarters of Tri Quang, con¬ But about 188 teachers in the Crestwood District of Dearborn sidered the most powerful Bud¬ Johnson said in a Memorial Day Heights, a fourth suburb, caught officials by surprise as they threw dhist leader in the country. address at Arlington cemetery, up picket lines around six schools and refusedto work. The district's As the troops moved into stra¬ "It is tragic, in the present tur¬ six schools sent their students home at noon. tegic positions, Tri Quang re¬ moil, that some choose acts of The Crestwood and Flint walkouts were one-day protest boycotts leased the text of a bitter tele¬ desperation to express their po¬ called by local branches of the Michigan Education Assn. The gram sent to Johnson. litical beliefs." He called the Michigan Federation of Teachers called the strike in the other three Convoy Knocked Out The telegram blamed the at¬ suicides "unnecessary loss of suburbs and said teachers would not return to work until their wage tempt on the life of Thich Thien life" that only obscure the pro¬ demands are met. SAIGON (UPI) — U.S. Air Force planes knocked Minh Wednesday in Saigon on the gress being made toward a con¬ All five cities have a week or two remaining in the school year. out a 27-truck Co'mmunist convoy heading for the stitutional government in Viet Ky government and the United Simon Kachaterian, school superintendent of Taylor Township, Ho Chi Minh Trail during the third straight day States. It claimed the assassina¬ Nam. one of the suburbs, announced he would ask a court today to order of massive attacks against North Vietnamese tion attempt was organized by the Within minutes of the arrival TEACHERS ON ST R IKE — Teachers picket outside the teachers back work under to a Michigan Law banning strikes transport lines, American military spokesmen Ky government "with material of the government troops in Hue, Taylor Junior High School Thursday in defiance of by public employees. said Thursday. and spiritual support of the the student branch of the rebel¬ pleas by Gov. Romney not to strike. The Taylor The Michigan Federation of Teachers said about 75 per cent of the The spectacular raid on the convoy, which was U.S. President." lious "struggle forces" closed teachers, along with two other suburban Detroit dis¬ more than 1,000 teachers in the three suburban Detroit districts moving toward the Barthelemy Pass, came during The telegram, Issued in the its headquarters and previously tricts, are striking over the failure to reach a new one of 68 missions flown by Air Force and Navy of the senior monk in Viet contract with the school boards for the next year. were following the militant strike call despite pleas from Gov. name heavily - armed students went UPI Wirephotos. George Romney. pilots on Wednesday. They encountered heavy anti¬ Nam, Thic Tlnh Khiet, said the home. aircraft fire which reflected angry Communist Superintendents of the three school districts said their estimates of teacher absenteeism ran closer to 50 per cent. reaction to the two previous days of record bomb runs north of the 1 7th parallel. CONVICTED OF Discuss War On Poverty War WASHINCTON on (UPI) — The Poverty became a war of words Thursday as Sar¬ gent Shriver defended the pro¬ Sen Dragged into the fray was J. William Fulbright's charge that an "arrogance of power" may be evident in Ex-Congo Officials Hanged the African section of Then American foreign policy, and LEOPOLDVILLE, The Congo Leopold- e trap was sprung. gram against criticism from ville known The Cite. Only Bamba was trembling vis- (UPI)—Four former cabinet min¬ Campus Center the fact that Gen. William C. as his brother-in-law, House Re¬ Westmoreland, the U.S. com¬ isters convicted of plotting to Each man, hands tied behind ly and his legs gave way as publicans and Senate GOP tie scaffold. Anany Mahamba mounted the gallows mander in Viet Nam, is paid murder President Joseph Mobutu his back and h Leader Everett M. Dirksen. died on the gallows Thursday with a black sack, was escorted died sIovn even while Anany's body was be¬ about $34,600 a year. in a sun-drenched field before to the gallows by two soldiers, his neck was not bn ing placed in the coffin. 80,000 silent Congolese given the The black-robed hangman and his fall and he dangled t Need Space Law--Soviets The day off by the government. assistant tightened the noose focated. Questing Beast The crowd, summoned to the around the condemned man's The^fcil:cs were i MOSCOW(AP) The Soviet Union said Thursday the soft landings of Soviet and American space¬ executions by repeated calls from neck, guided him to a red circle for 20^J\gutes befoi the government whicli had de¬ over the trap door and held him down, examine.\ by w: craft on the moon point to the need for inter¬ national space clared Thursday a holiday, while four army trumpeters blew ed doctors who prone law. Watched somberly as the four men the Last Post. dead and then plac Tass, the official Soviet news agency, said dropped, one-by-one, through the steps should be taken to make sure that explora¬ tion of the moon and outer space are used only trap door of the high single-bar in the interests of peace and scientific progress. gallows. Three of the men died instant¬ ly, but the fourth dangled at the U.S. Bomb Production Increased end of the rope until he suffo¬ Washington u.—TheUni- This massive output of ex¬ cated. As each of the condemned, ted States plans to produce plosives is expected to be STORE FOR MEN about million bombs for the dressed in blue shorts with a a achieved after newly estab¬ white stripe downthe side and red Viet Nam war during the final lished production lines reach third of 1966, it was learned bands around the legs, dropped peak capacity in early fall,, through the trap door, the crowd Thursday. gasped. Then there was silence, broken only by the wails of fret- fin babies and children. Strike Creates Fuel Problems First to die was former Prime Minister Evariste Kimba, 40. He LONDON (UPI)--The 18-day-old British sea¬ was followed in death by Emanuel men's strike started Thursday to give this na¬ tion a fuel problem. Bamba, one-time finance minis¬ A chain of nearly 90 gasoline stations in the ter; Jerome Anany, 47, former defense minister and Alexandre Southampton and Portsmouth area in southern England reported they were running short because Mahamba, 46, who held a variety of posts in Congolese govern- they had failed to get their normal supplies from strike-bound coastal tankers. One station said its supply was exhausted. It Was swift retribution for their alleged conspiracy to mur¬ der Lt. Gen. Mobutu and his Hearings To Be Conducted On Dodd chief lieutenants and seize power. In less than four days, the WASHINGTON (UPI) — The In a brief announcement, it conspirators were captured, in¬ Senate Ethics Committee an¬ was said that the committee terrogated, publicly tried, con¬ nounced is continuing its investigation victed and condemned to die. Thursday it will begin hearings June 20 into charges of other allegations against Heavily - armed paratroopers of misconduct against Sen. Dodd. Among these have been and police ringed the wooden Thomas J. Dodd, D-Conn., in charges that Dodd, a friend scaffold built in a huge field in his relations with an agent for and close political associate West German of President Johnson, divert¬ business inter- ed campaign funds for his personal use. LONG STANDING TRADITIONS unmistakably yours alone the Arnold Palmer crisply cool white golf cardigan monogrammed blouse by Robert Bruce When you can't 3.98 3 for $11 22.00 Perfect for pairing with a suit, afford to be dull, pretty enough to go alone topping e sportsman and the sharpen your wits c. The Arnold Pal- skirts or new print pants. Easy- spectati Dacron® with care polyester-cotton NoDoz,. [nctive link stitch blouse with jewel neck, short NODOZ Keep Alert Tablets fight off cardigan of 60',' alpaca and 40',' sleeves and front monogram of the hazy. lazy feelings of mental virgin wool, in a host of favored 2 or 3 letters in any color sluggishness NoDoz helps restore colors. Authentic Arnold Palmer your natural mental vitality helps shown. Blouse white only. quicken physical reactions You be¬ design, a pro all the way. knit Sizes 28-38. upbeautifully for your summer fun come more naturally alert to people / lIL THIS YEAR AND ALWAYS and conditions around you Yet NODOZ is sharpen as safe when you can't as your wits with coffee Anytime afford to be dull, NODOZ by Robert Bruce. STORE FOR MEN-STREET LEVEL Monogram Colors . . White Pink . . Navy Gold . . Turquoise Purple SAFE AS COFFEE . Black . Yellow . Dark Green . Lilac . Kelly . Pale Green . Red . Aqua . Pale Blue Orange . Beige . Dark Grey Shop East Lansing Saturday 9:30 to 5:30 . . Brown Light Grey . . Camel Royal . Medium Blue 4 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Micftigan Friday, June 3, 1966 Juday,Fuller,Curzi Honored As Top Athletes By RICK PIANIN nls Hill, swimming; Mike Youngs, State News Sports Editor tennis; James Garrett, track; and Richard Cook, wrestling. Spartan athletes Steve Juday, Payton Fuller and Jim Curzi Gold footballs, watches, cer¬ were honored Thursday night at tificates and blankets were also MSU's annual all-sports banquet presented to various MSU ath¬ at Kellogg Center. letes. Juday, who quarterbacked Burt Smith, assistant athletic Stare's football1 team to a na¬ director, added a bit of humor son, to gold football. tional championship and a berth accept Lyman L. Frimodig, an alum- to the evening when he called up "Mr. Lucas, "called out Smith, in the Rose Bowl, was awarded nus, was awarded the first an- Harold Lucas, middle-guard "I call anyone with that much the Conference Medal of Honor. nual "Di stinguishedAlumnl State s football squad last sea- This is awarded annually, at money 'mister' each Big Ten school, to the stu- der,: demonstrating the greatest proficiency in scholarship and athletics. Juday, a senior, was named Dorm, Frat, I Cop IM the team's most valuable player In 1965 by his football team¬ mates, after setting 12 MSUpass¬ ing record s. He was named JIM CURZI—State's top gymnast, received the PAYTON FULLER ~ Another long, grueling year sports scene, Sigma Chi scored All-Sports badminton "b a c k-of-the-week" twice by Chester L. Brewer Award at MSU's annual all- Chester L. Brewer Award and handball cham¬ has come to a close for the 927 IM points. Sigma Chi ath¬ United Press International and sports banquet Thursday night. winner. pions. Jim Hardee coached the Men's Intramural program, and letic chairman is Mike Roach. won a berth on the all-academic Hippies. for distinguished performance In "I am happy and proud to ac- all-sports honors have been ac¬ SX teams won the all-univer¬ For the first time since thef athletlcs and scholarship, who cept this award, especially after corded the champions in the four sity basketball inauguration of the intramural championship, Jud.r, participating divisions. possesses a high degree of char- MSU had such a great year," fraternity badminton crown and program, each hall won at least Other awards presented In¬ Bailey Hall won the residence the fraternity golf title. Other acter, leadership and personal- said Fuller. one trophy. cluded 12 Varsity Alumni Senior hall overall championship, and A IM program is being winner lty" Sigma Chi honors include runner- summer This Is the first time In his- Curzi the NCAA high bar Awards. Sigma Chi took fraternity honors. up performances in frat paddle- was planned, with Softball, volleyball, who will return here for success The independent competition is ball tory that wo athletes received and parallel bar champ in 1965 Recipients were: Robert Speer, and basketball. golf and tennis to be offered. would like to take this in the years to come." this award. and again parallel bar champ baseball; Stan Washington, bas¬ divided into individual and team An oddity of the Sigma Chi Registration for Softball will take probably my last chance, Fuller, a top soccer player Fuller was twice named to the in 1966. He was Big Ten all— ketball; Steve Juday, football; sports divisions. The Red Tro¬ season was the fact that the place during the first week of ■k everyone for making my for three years, and gymnast \H_America team and was also around champion and high bar Mark Haskell, fencing; Kenneth jans reign in team sports, and SX's placed second In the fra¬ summer term. Curzi received the Chester L. the Super Hippies are tops In ere so enjoyable and suc- named t0 All-Amerlcan scholas- champion In his sophomore year. Benson, golf; Jim Curzi, gym¬ ternity basketball division but Other sports will be included Brewer Award, which is given tlc teams as he maintained a individual athletics. this 1,Juday said. "I'd like Curzi was also greatly nastics; Tom Purdo, hockey. came on strong in the playoffs summer if interest is shown. e my best wishes to those annually to the graduating senior 4.0 average. IM all-sports championships to win the all-University crown. pleased with the award, Also Nick Krat, soccer; Den- are accorded on a point basis, For the first time in several with more points awarded for years, the Evans Scholars failed participation than for winning. Points are allotted for final to pace the Independent sports. Red Trojans edged the Schol¬ Roach Nine standing, league runner-up and ars for the team trophy with league championship as well as for participation. 500 points to the Scholars' 495. The Super^ippies tallied 233 Bugs ZBT Bailey rolled up a total of and the Evans Scholars finished Congratulations A 14—hit attack and a nifty 846.5 points to win the dormi¬ with 225. four-hit pitching chore by Jim tory trophy, under Hall Athletic The Trojans, under Athletic Chairman Bill Reetz. The men of Chairman Clark Shady spelled victory and the Suchovsky, were all - University Softball cham¬ Bailey were runners-up In dorm block champs In volleyball and basketball and champions in resi¬ Softball and pionship for the Independent placed high in block Roaches, who whipped Zeta Beta dence hall volleyball. standings in the other sports. Tau, 11-0, Wednesday. In dominating the fraternity The Hippies were independent The Roaches scored in every frame but the second in the five- inning affair. Three walks and Good four singles brought three runs home in the initial inning. Four singles, a walk, a hit On Fin batsman and a by the Roaches' Tom Evans two-run homer ac¬ counted for six runs in the big third frame. Be Prepared With The Shady's surance teammates added in¬ runs in the fourth and fifth innings while the Roaches# starter mowed down the ZBT's Original Campus Summary in going the route. Larry Koltonow went the dis¬ tance for Zeta Beta Tau. Evans and BernieCermac for only M.87 paced the winners at the The former had a homer in three trips, and Cer- plate. single and a mac collected three singles in Congratulations to all four tries. graduating seniors. Have Enroute to the final game, the Roaches scored a 3-0 win over a nice summer and see you Felloe House of Fee and topped Case Hall's Cameron, 3-1. all next fall. Bryan Hall's Six-Pack and the Hustlers feii to the ZBT's before the fraternity titllsts were wal¬ Marshall Music r loped by the Roaches. Nats Bomb Boston 307 E. Grand River In Wild 12-2 Win BOSTON K—The Washington Senators packed all their scor¬ This is your chance, ing into three innings and cap¬ italized on the wildness of Bos«» Student #7026941. ton pitchers Thursday in a 12-2 romp over the sluggish Red Sox. Right-hander Phil Ortega scat¬ Drink Sprite and be tered six hits in the first seven innings and retired after his somebody. MR.BIG mates built top of the eighth. a 10-run lead in the Take heart. Take a dime. Miss Kristina L. Hensley, Michigan State University Then take a bottle of Spr Indian Trails Inc. Michigan College Queen from the nearest pop machine. Suddenly it's in your hand. Cold. Biting. Tart and Congratulations, Kris. The results tingling. You are in and you've just won the statewide the right to represent competition for cackle fiendishly and rub your handsi NEW Michigan in the National College together. (You Queen Pageant. We're really proud of should; they're you the best of luck at the National Finals in New York you . . . and we wish probably chilled the bone by now.) ^NON-STOP You tear off to a City next month. We're also proud to be one of the corner, alone, bu SERVICE! sponsors of this contest and have the within earshot of opportunity of your fellows. offering--as First Prize to this year's winner- a new 1967 Plymouth Sport Fury Convertible. TO KALAMAZOO-CHICAGO Leaves E. Lansing 2:15 P.M. idays & Sundays) Other Service And then? And then? And then you unleash it. (Daily) SPRITE! It fizzes! It roars! It bubbles with good cheer! Westbound (to Chicago) 6:40 Heads turn. A.M., 8:30 A.M. 11:15 A.M. Whisperings. "Who's that strangely fascinating student with the arch smile.And what's 2:10 P.M., 5:05 P.M., 10:45 in that curious green bottle that's making such P.M. a racket?" Easthound (to Flint) 5:40A.M. And you've arrived! Your Local Plymouth Dealer. The distinctive taste and ebullient character of Sprite has set you apart. You're somebody. uh...uh, whoever-you-are. 9:25 A.M. , 12:40 P.M., 2:55 P.M., 5:25 P.M., 7:50 P.M., 11:20 P.M. PLYMOUTH DIVISION ^CHRYSLERMOTORS CORPORATION Phone 332-2813 Indian Trails Inc. Michigan State News, East Lansing. Michigan Big Ten Cou On .6 1 Be Sure To Take Home By ROBERTA YAFIE Legisla A Souvenir Of MSI) State News Sports Writer The Ivy League c the blanket 1.60 grade average requirement for all NCAA-mem¬ ber Institutions infringes upon the college or university's poli¬ cy-making has been emphatical¬ ly expressed at Harvard. Last In A Two-Part Series When a Harvard student falls below three C's and a D, or has a record including two D's or one E, he is automatically sub¬ ject to either warning or proba¬ tion, depending on the decision of the faculty. A student on warning maypar- ticipate in varsity sports; a stu¬ dent on probation may not. The NCAA ruling takes this decision out of the University's hands and, according to Har¬ vard's Dean Monro, makes ath¬ letics an amputated arm of ed¬ ucation. "The NCAA Council believes that the best place for a student "Okay, Neander, off to wit ye: with a grade average under 1.6 "The whole concept of athlet¬ rule has gone into is in the library," he said. "I ics in the conference is a uni¬ r, applying only to say, how do you know? Perhaps be taken versal one," iie said. "There ore must a sport is the one familiar thing are those kids who participate for frosh competition in other which can help his adjustment and those who attend athletic con- sports to be scheduled. to a strange environment." "You're allowing the football Monro admitted that the NCAA Smith cited the Big Ten team toplay two freshman games, is not gunning for the Ivies, but leader in setting up as opposed to a full conference looking for colleges with low conference standards. schedule in the Ivy League and standards. the Big Eight," Smith said. "Ev¬ "An irony in the situation is "We've worked on minimu standards for the past fi' erything in the Big Ten is based that basically, we agree with on twos, of which only one can the effort to create some con¬ years," he pointed out. "Ou: ;way g is a grant in aid program, ba sed trol," he remarked. "But the ■ Leagt all i device they' solely on eligibility by acads ics. If a youngster is a g considered, finds itself anomalous position by ; :ident enough student and a good ath. the letej e'll be given aid. jection. The gripes, one would think, would he coming from >st severely those areas which, prior to the against students in institutions which have much spring practice, yet they recruit ruling, had no minimum stan¬ higher admis¬ just .is effectively ind emphat¬ dards to speak of. It leads one sion requirements than those ically as the large schools do," to think that the Ivies, finding specified In the legislation. He he pointed out. little satisfaction with the NCAA, claims that this will tend to make The Ivies operate a full-scale are looking for a graceful way students "play it safe" in their freshman program as opposed to choice of courses. a newlv-initiated limited frosh Dean Monro, weighing thevar In an editorial March 9, the schedule < eque f N'CA New York Times backed the Ivy "Here minim see the possi¬ stand, citing the group's admis¬ phasis on freshman athletics," bility of the Ivies dropping out. sion and academic standards as Smith noted. "The first year is "As to whether the Ivies leave higher than those of most NCAA one to indoctrinate yourself to the NCAA, that can't be deter¬ members, and calling for the now,'1 college living. By instituting a mined lie said. "This leg- NCAA to "get over its rule- freshman program, we're trying i slation forces us to give up things or-ruin ways." to increase the scope of parti¬ we feel quite valuable. We want cipating while putting a little to hold our views, not push them more pressure on the boy to on anyone else. We're not trying letie Council, ■ of I earn grades." to kill legislation for anyone else. i formulated the Participation is not mandatory, We're just trying to live under legislation. but is up to those schools in- it." The legislation has been in debate for four years, with plans made for. modification at last year's conference. It first endorsed at a "conference was the Save Time and Money! of conferences" at Denver 2 f,*'2 INST F A D t> F LUGGING THAT years ago. ^ . \\ A RD HOB I\ HOME. WHY NOT that the Ivy League is objecting to," Fuzak said. "No one in the H AV K IT (' I K A\K I) AM) STORK D Ivy League spoke out against it WITH I S i"xTIL F.u,UN¬ during discussions. It was the Southeast and Southwest confer¬ ences that were opposed to it." GUARANTEED AND LOW COST Fuzak pointed out that all NC¬ AA certain members are striving for assurances the student-athlete. "W'e want our in regards to athletes to he CLEANER AND SHIRT LAUNDRY Use Our Convenient Buy-Back Window legitimate college students," he 623 E. Grand River said. "The student-athlete is ED 2-3537 Sell Hooks In The Store .Voir <£ During Finals H eek ind thought of as somewhat repre¬ sentative of the student popula¬ Window H ill lie Often During Finals 11 eek loo tion of an institution. We want him to make responsible prog¬ ress towards a degree, both quan¬ titatively and qualitatively." For A Happy Summer ALBERT STREET There are mixed feelings in the Big I en towards the ruling, according to Fuzak. He said that On A Honda... 1 FREE PARKING l some schools are questioning LOT whether the NCAA should be *N getting into this area, althoug! , Drive-In Window generally, they like it. ' "The real evils exist when a BANK boy is exploited solely for his athletic ability," Fuzak pointed SBS out. EAST GRAND RIVER An institution does not have to accept the nation table, he ex¬ plained. A conference can worl out its own standard, as long as it sticks to the basic national ideas. I he same holds true for major independents. A conference may adopt leg¬ islation within major areas. \ny part of the NCAA's . espor..-;' ity to live up to. In reference to the claim that large institutions, such as those SEE US, found in the Big Ten, do not see athletics as part of the educa¬ tional scheme, MSU's assistant athletic firmly disagreed. director, Burt Smith, HONDA of HASLETT BARNES FLORAL BAST 1561-1 Haslett Rd. Ph. 339-2039 tudent tore WE TELEGRAPH Hours: Mon. - Sat. 9 a.m. - 8:30 p.m. FLOWERS WORLD WIDE Sun. 12-8:30 p.m. FREE PARKING IN LARGE LOT AT REAR OF STORE 6 Michigan State News, East Lansing. Michigan Friday, June 3, 1966 Trackmen MSU Sports: It Was A Very Good Year A new basketball coach, perfect season, with a 4-3 win To Notre the East, and the team MSU had defeated in the first game of the during the season, and a 1-0 Benington, and some scrappy John ta t 10-2 dual meet mark,' 15 straight bouts dur¬ The baseball team got off to a di'sappointing start, and even im¬ before the NCAA Six lal titles, four Big year got its revenge in the last, triumph in the NCAA final. players who loved defense, were ing the season. pressive late season wins could '.ir:i"-up for MSI '- : The 14-12 Rose Bowl loss to Sophomore center forwardGuy the ingredients for the most Te :owns and the league Senior Dick Cook led the Spar¬ not carry MSU above fourth in Notre Dame. all-sports u uuiiy, n aver- mill ail oici" UCLA knocked the Spartans from Busch set a school record with amazing comeback of the year. tans to a sixth place NCAA fin¬ the league. Left fielder Bob •al Collegiate Confer t • _ ^ , , The Spartans climbed from dead , cli.impionships will i^e score of 8.88 out of 10. tt,e t0P of the listings, but 24 goals, as he and ish, when he earned the 152- Speer, third baseman John.Bied- last in 1965, to second place in That was 1965-^6 the greatest Duffy ar,d the team continued to Nick Krat were named A ll-.\mer- the Big Ten in 1966, with an pound title. enbach and shortstop Steve Pol- year ever for Spartan sports. ip In post season honors. leans. isar kept State fans happy, how¬ In gymnastics, MSU finished Fall, winter, and spring, Mich¬ 'he Michigan State soccer The cross country team round- over-all record of 19-7. ever, with their heavy hitting all second in the Big Ten, and third igan State teams surprised the m can tell all about second ed out a successful fall by coming Seniors Stan Washington and season. In the nation, after going unde¬ Bill Curtis gave State fans some¬ experts is Spartan ithletes up- PLlce- as 11 finished second in in second 111 the conference ...cc feated in dual competition. Jim The tennis team had come in set nearly everyobstach-ifttheir the nation for the second year in Dick Sharkey came back from thing to remember when they second, and the golf squad had Curzi won the national parallel path to the top a row* ®nfy Jrch riva' St. Louis 1964 injury to pace the Spartan helped State knock off Big Ten tied for fourth as the spring bars crown, and Ed Gunney took h Ru-s Dunn, Das Ci The first of the fall flock of stopped the Spartans bid for a in 1965. champs Michigan, 86-77, in the the NCAA rings crown. season ended Just two weeks ago. students last game of their careers. It was just reaching East — was only in the game before that Lansing as Dufty Da-ugherty's Gary Dilley paced the MSU last place Indiana had ended all football team started the yearoff swimming team to a third place with .1 13-3 victory over UCLA. With sophomore fullback Bob Tigers Nip 7-6, Spartan hopes for a title in bas¬ ketball in Bennington's first year finish in the Big Ten. In the national competition, Dilley won Cavanagh as coach. both the 100 and \pisa ripping off yardage and 200-yard back¬ touchdowns, and Steve Juday The hockey team, under Amo stroke titles. On Campus McKoy, hi;' tossing to Gene Washington or halfback Clint Jones whenever the With Three-Run R Bessone, pulled a sudden turn about in the middle of the season, —Gene The magnificent MSU hurdlers Washington, Clint Jones Roland Carte long jump, tr: bell. 440-yari sle Jump and 100-y.v ground attack stalled, State rolled to victory after victory. ST. PAUL-MINNEAPOLIS f - Harmon Killebrew's throw on an un lien and Zoilo Versalles two- triple. and title. went on to win the NCAA Sophomore goaltenderGaye Coolie and wing Doug Volmar and a Bob Steele--led the way to Big Ten indoor track title by Wednesday They all fell. Penn State, 23-0: attempted torceout at home plate Jerry Lumpe's double drove finishing 1-2-3 in both hurdle Jerome P. Cavanagh, Detroit led MSU to the thrilling conclu¬ Illinois, 22-12; and then mighty wild and let in the tie- i two Tiger runs in the third. mayor, will speak at 2:15 p.m. sion of a year that started dis¬ In Michigan, 24-7. The great Spar- breaking ; Detroit rallied Killebrew's eighth homer, his fencing, the Spartans placed Wednesday at the Water Carni¬ mally. third in the league to finish off Red Sox Trade Radatz defense began to show as Ohio for three runs in the seventh fourth in the last four games, val site on the Auditorium lawn. State's ground game rolledback- inning to clip Minnesota, raised the Twins margin One of the most exciting home a spectacular winter for the Spar¬ Cavanagh will speak concern¬ wards in a 32-7 Spartan win. Thursday. in the fifth. events of the year was the play¬ tans. ing his candidacy for the United BG6TON f—The Boston Red ?cord in 16 Finally a come-from-behind Detroit knocked Twins' off game when MSU upset de¬ States Senate and will answer The track team headlined the Sox traded relief 14-10 win over Purdue elevated starter Jim Kaat with fending NCAA champ Michigan any questions, said Bill Mays, pitcher Dies two runs accomplishments of the MSU Radatz to the Cleveland Indians ,ige. G.ibe the Spai tans to the No. 1 spot in the sixth on Freehan's single. Tech, 4-3. Coach Bessone re¬ vice president of Young Demo- grounder and allowed A1 Kalu spring teams. In the outdoor Thursday for Paul called the tr , amble. the nation, and the Rose Bowl Norm Cash doubled to open ceived the coach of the year righthanders Lee to score. Kaline K.,w had doubled champtonships, sophomore John SUngt and Don McMahon. He s iid R. : tz ?n "a great bid allowed. Northwestern, Iowa, the seventh and after Kaline's award for leading the Spartans Following his first appear¬ the tying run. Reliever Garry Spain came from behind in the relief pitdier" s acquired Indiana and Notre Dame gave double, Don Demeter bunted for back from a sixth place league ance, Cavanagh will speak to Roggenburk then walked Dick mile relay to give the Spartans a by the Tribe "in >pe he will State a 10-0 mark as it enter- a hit and finish to the national the Democratic Academic Re¬ The 29-ye 1 Radat McAuliffe to force in the third Jim Northrup walked to crown. narrow win over Iowas. had bee: sensat:o::al :> f. r;n." ed the New Year's Day contest set the stage for Killebrew's State picked up Big Ten crown search Council at 3:30 p.m. ; rei.e.'p run and give Detroit a 7-5 edge. in wrestling when sophomores Gene Washington repeated as In case of rain, each speech cher for Boston from 1962 thn . J-year-old a^inst UCLA. error. Minnesota took 4-0 lead in Earl Mike Bradley, DaleCarr and Dale hurdles king, as Spain and Bob will be held in Erickson 1964 wt>e". he was twice : :n Stange, Cinderella season was all a Battey hit his second Kiva Fireman of The the second on run producing sin- homer leading off the last of the Anderson all won league titles. Steele also took home conference and both appearances are open Year, h d a d: " from gles by Earl Battey and Bernie ninth. Junior Don Behm paced the Spar¬ crowns. to all interested persons. ippointlng 1965 seas. i d so: is>es. MSU Bookstore MSU Bookstore MSU Bookstore MSU Book Store MSU Book Store MSU Hook Store MSU Book Store MSU Book Store MSU Book Store MSU Book Store M Hey gang! When you finally get your head out of your text books, take them to the MSU BOOKSTORE. They'll give you good hard cash for d has-beens. WE'RE OPEN DURING FINALS WEEK MONDAY, TUESDAY, FRIDAY 8;30-5:30 WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY 8:30-9:00 SATURDAY 9-5 MSU Agents For The Following Publishers Academic Press Addison Wesley American Elsevier McGraw-Hill Prentice-Hall John Wiley & Sons BOOK STORE Benjamin Company Princeton Univ. Press Blaisdell Johnson Reprint Corp. Dover Reinhold Pub. Harper & Row Pergamon Ho I den-Day Stanford in the Center for MacMillan Company Van Nostrand International Relations. MIT Press ML Bookstore MSU Bookstore MSU Bookstore MSU Bookstore MSU Bookstore MSU Bookstore MSU Bookstore MSU Bookstore MSU Bookstore MSU Bookstore MSU Bookstore Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, June 3. 1966 7 MSU Book Store MSU Book Store MSU Book Store MSU Book Store MSU Book Store MSU Book Owners' Greed Cause For Longer Season This is the last of a three-part series dealing with the langth of the profes¬ sional baseball, hoc¬ key and basketball schedules and their affect on the athletes. By BOB HORNING Ballplayers lived on trains 15 years ago when Danny Litwhiler was in the National League. Now ... they travel first class in jets. This change appears to have made basebal/ llfa easier, but it still can be tdugh, Litwhiler con¬ While you are enjoying your tends. Nbw Michigan State's baseball coach, Litwhiler was generally happy with conditions when he DANNY LITWHILER . . SANDY KOUFAX .... summer time break from school, played and thinks most ballplay¬ . . thinks the pro base¬ alona with Drysdale gang¬ ers are satisfied today, too. ball season should be cut ed up on owners to get He believes, however, that by 20 games. what they wanted. * shorter schedule would help to a we will be working to make our solve an.' unhapplness or com¬ And it is to say that many plaints among players. think it is a situation that could shorter schedules. Litwhiler suggested that about 140 games a season would be good be solved or partially alleviated Maybe there will always be enough players who figure that facilities more convenient and by club owners. (instead of the present 162). That their salary is compensation way a player could have a couple But the problem is convincing enough for their troubles. days off a week instead of play¬ the owners that a reduced num¬ Or maybe players will follow accurate for you when you return ing every day. ber of games would increase in¬ the lead of Sandy Koufax and Don Also, a day off could be used to terest per game. Also, that there Drysdale ir. ganging up oirown- play a rescheduled game, he said. wouldn't be a loss in the number ers to get what they want. in the fall. The way it is now, rainouts and of fans in attendance over the sea¬ Maybe fans will :;u\er lose in¬ games postponed early in the year son. terest in seeing a baseball game are all piled up into doublehead- every day and of having liiethree ers late in 'the year when the There are many "maybes" in sports overlap part of the year, weather is warmer, he said. looking for an answer to the prob¬ and will continue toattendenough If there Were fewer gtfnes, lem. games to keep the owners happy. teams would also have a day off It's a problem that may have a Maybe a shorter schedule to rest after flying to a different would draw fewer fans and be a solution-a shorter schedule. Or city, Litwhiler said. The owners of professional financial disaster to owners. there may be no solution. If you are in this area this teams receive most of the criti¬ cism when it comes to the length SPECIAL- will be of the schedules. In the past few years a number summer, we open to help of athletes have complained about OISE WEEK w ** the length of the seasan. Brooks you. Robinson of the Baltimore Ori¬ oles summed it up, (ear the end Bill Cosby of last year, in a na:ional maga¬ zine article: "They ought to cut a few games "WONDERFULNESS" off the 162-game Schedule so it wouldn't be such I schedule will cut/a rat race. guy's career. This Was S3.79 No~ ^2.64 A man who plays every day ought to get a raise even if he doesn't If there is a book or books have a spectacular year. B.J. Thomas * "II the owners are making Jnpney frojm the extra eight games, we ^ught to get some of So Lonesome I Could Cry" which you would like to have, we it. The product is being diluted, but I find it hard to sympathize with the owners because they have brought it on themselves." Woj S3.79 No» $2.64 will be glad to send it to you. Litwhiler also said he thinks the product is being diluted, and FREE! With the purchase of that the lengt'i of the schedule hurts attendance. As it is now, any Columbia Masterworks L.P. fans won't come today because "The Sound of Genius" they know the team will be in town for a Week or more. They can go to a game any time, tie, said. If there fewer gaffes, We happy were possibly Just on Saturday, Sun¬ are to special order any day, Tuesday and Wednesday, as In hockey, fans would have to come today because the team book which you would like at no would be gone tomorrew, Lit¬ whiler said. 1 A Protest Against The Viet Nam War All of the players'and coaches' comments about the* schedules By Students Ot The Honors College extra charge. certainly don't add up to the fact that ballplayers despise their jobs. Stan Musial, who wouldn't make We believe: an unkind remark about his moth¬ Have a nice summer. er-in-law, said that traveling gets to be a grind during the sea¬ son, but he also said he thinks most players enjoy the game or they wouldn't be In it. Nellie Fox, American League most valuable player in 1959, in the same article as Musial.said: "I have no complaints. As far MSU as I'm concerned, there's noth¬ ing tough about my life." It's only to sa^that. for most players, traveling, being away from home, abuse from fans and writers, etc., can become hard to take over the season. When San Francisco's Rick Barry, NBA rookie-of-the-year, We ask therefore; says the schedule is too long, how long must it seem for the older When players? four of the five Boston Celtics walk out on the floor in BOOKSTORE the playoffs with legs that look like advertisements for tape in the Center for International Relations. companies, you think they should be in a chair, not in a cham¬ pionship game. Pro Football War giver. su>. h ai. elc->. ti'-r troops, id th t :e ISears Showdown peacekeeping oper >t or . 5. Fur open a: c jh ect NEW YORK P--The pro'foot- ball war moved closer to a show¬ South Vietni iitst ^ovtr down Thursday when Ppte Ro- zelle, commissioner of the Na¬ phen Badnch How,:-. tional Football League, aaidthere was concern in both major pro ijrn R. leagues about lame duck players. H.nnes Bru Rozelle's comments about re¬ Nelson f-.ri Mich ie ported talent raids of jnen under Henry PI ,c ledge Geofire contract or option were made in Dough,; James Dukdi m1 an' interview while the 15 NFL Judy Elias coaches were finishing their two- Rebeci . Fewlt- MSU Book Store MSU Book Store MSU Book Store Msu Book Store MSU Book Store MSU Book Store day meeting.- 8 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, June 3, 1966 WILLIAMS ADDRESSES Aid To Africa Must Be Increased tion that life would be bet- Williams noted that tribal con¬ directly helping the people of chances in the coming senatorial r." ditions also inhibit social reform Africa, he said. race. While avoiding references Williams said that many Afri- in Africa. He described a "share American and British pres¬ to Detroit Mayor Jerome Cava- mer Gov. G. Vlennen Wil- can leaders must discuss fi- the wealth" tribal culture that tige in Africa may be lost, he nagh (who is pitted against Wil¬ said here Wednesday that n-lr'ct . lnd Qnl l5 of the ceM are scared off to other places will happen." rolling again." ar on subSahar,n Urlca- people can read or write." where they don't have to share He said the major question in Griffin is against progress, ii c t buy friends," he \fr cans can get discusted with with relatives. Many never come negotiations between the two Williams said. "but ti e last 15 years their overnments quickly when back, he said. countries is when majority rule As people filed by, circulars than 30 Africa:- nations they don't see an improvement in Williams said that only 10 per comes about." If Great Britain promoting Williams for senator emerged with a;-. expec- living conditions, lie said. cent • of American aid goes to grants independence to Rhodesia, were passed out. These circu¬ Africa, but over one-third of all it loses legal right to enforce lars, authored by Williams, gave the nations in the worldareAfri- majority rule. Vet the Smith his position on the Viet Nam war. Blow a whole week's government won't talk about ma¬ "Africa needs price supports jority rule until it achieves in¬ He between describes a himself as being "hawk" and a "dove," NEW PARKING PLACE— Whoe> »r left his car parked diagonally < and stablization more than direct dependence. street from the Student Services Juilding was imaginative, but still i saying that both a firm military savings for a financial aid," he said. "Its pri¬ After the class was dismissed, mary products don't command a Williams was asked about his defense and a vigorous effort must be pursued. peace gets a ticket from campus meter m lid, Genevieve Helmer. Photo by Chuck high enough price for economic Sunday dinner date??? recovery." African nations are basically agricultural, he said, and agri¬ cultural products can be pro¬ duced more cheaply in other He added helping Africa that the U.S. in areas other was Negro Racial consciousness is the of anguish at a European world," Writings Snyder said that Negro poetry been accepted as Ref individual in- than financial aid. biggest single aspect of African he said. today is no longer quality litera- The Peace 1930. he said, Negroes tellecty^s today," he said, "and Corps Is doing a great job sell¬ Negro literature today, an au¬ Until the West Indies.1 ture, as the successful techniques this the was primary aim of their thority on modern African liter¬ were thought incapable of being Negro writers after 1940 be- used by earlier Negro poetshave naissance." ing the United States and also rei Go ahead if you want to. But it's really not necessary. ature said here Wednesday. intellectuals by the white man. gan to idealize Africa, making been codified. Negro poets have Snyder concluded that Negro Negro authors before 1930 it into a 'Lost Paradise.' This restricted their methods, and The Gas Buggy Room at Jack Tar Hotel is a pretty impres¬ Emile Snyder, an American- "Uncle Tom' style, thus 'Back to Africa' poets must turn to other areas educated Frenchman, related his resulted on t vary. sive place to take a date: good food, atmosphere, friendly June 7 Deadline observations on Negro literature nt, Snyder said. "Negro poets and wri service... just sort of all-around nice. to an African Studies class. He "Self And when it comes to The Big Moment, you'll probably For Zeitgeist has traveled extensively in west¬ Defense," written by s e West Indian mulattos in 1930, have some of your week's savings left. Full-course dinners The deadline for submitting ern Africa. Confidence Is By-Product phasized the European white man start at only $2.75. And that's a bit of okay, right? material for the July issue of Speaking primarily on the in¬ was responsible for suppressing Zeitgeist has been extended to fluences of the French-Negro another intellectually capable Dine at the Gas Buggy Room soon. It's a great way to begin June 7. upon Negro poems and novels, race, the Negro. an evening. Manuscripts of poems, stories, Snyder said that a racial con¬ Written from a Marxian view¬ ^acj^aTjfoH plays or essays should be sent sciousness didn't actually begin to Zeitgeist, Box 150, East Lan¬ sing. Submfssions for the autumn is¬ until 1930. "Negro writers wanted the point, as were many Negro books after 1930, the authors blamed capitalism and industrialism for Of Surveyor Success the plight of the Negro race. reader to know the book was WASHINGTON (UPI)—Now will—were right. It has made all evolved. Like LEM it depended Across from the State Capitol sue may be submitted any time this summer. written from a Negro standpoint "Negro writers began to write they know. of us very happy." on a radar height meter to say of their own culture in an effort The who have been This when descent rockets should be men shap¬ feeling, stemming from to achieve racial pride," Snyder ing America's $21 billion Apollo the fact that Surveyor 1 had con¬ fired. Its ianding gear more said. "They held the African cul¬ firmed many reasonable certain¬ program to land men on the moon closely resembled LEM's than ture to be separate and digni¬ were sure, in their minds, that ties which had never before been an insect's legs do man's. fied." Of particular interest to space they were going about it the right tested in actual space flight, was Some Negro writers wrote that way. shared by everybody in the space engineers was the behavior of the the high Egyptian civilization de¬ agency from Administrator main braking rocket, which veloped from Ethiopia, a colored James E. Webb who said nothing slowed Surveyor to a safe landing tribal empire. This marked an ef¬ for the record, to a secretary speed, and the three smaller fort by Negroes to disprove the That is what Surveyor l's ama¬ in NASA's headquarters building rocket? which controlled the di¬ theory that Egyptian rule origi¬ zing first-try success has done who exclaimed: rection and final velocity of de- nated from white men. for the U.S. project to land a 'This is wonderful,. It's Just couple of astronauts on the moon like hitting the moonl" "The idea of a primitive Ne¬ in 1969. Said one official of the That, indeed, was what it was gro is a European invention, some Negro writers say. They wrote that African Negroes had National Aeronautics and Administration (NASA)? Space just like. Surveyor 1, which weighed Top Debaters a culture and heritage to be 'This has given us deep-down 2,194 pounds when it left the proud of," Snyder said. confidence, which isacomforting earth and 620 pounds when it landed with fuel exhausted on the Are Honored "The French-Negro was very thing to have. This has shown instrumental in developing Afri¬ that our basic assumptions—call moon, is in many respects dif¬ can racial consciousness," Sny- them educated guesses, if you ferent. from Excursion the Apollo Lunar Module At Dinner (LEM), or (foil "landing bug," which is to put The .MSU Spartan Forensic- the moon in 1969. Debate Squad announced James FREE! FREE! FREE! men on In many other respects, how¬ Hudek, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, sen¬ it is similar. ior, ind Richard Brautigam, Al¬ ever, Surveyor had three thick-shoed bion sophomore, are recipients landing of the Outstanding Debate Team STORE Your Typewriter legs, whereas the 22,000-pound LEM will have four. It did not Award at the annual awards and possess, as LEM will, the rocket recognition banquet, held at Eagle for the Summer power moon to soar away from the if landing conditions had Restaurant in Lansing. The Outstanding First Vear Student \ward went to Michael appeared to be inauspicious. But it was at least as closely Anderson, Bozeman, Mont, No Charge - No Obligation related to LEM as man is to the freshman. Named as the outstanding sen¬ primitive animals from which he iors were James Hudek andKer- Another Service Feature of mit Terrell, Derby, Kansas. The State News would like to thank all the students Pens For Books Kenneth Newton, Trenton, N.J. nl faculty of Michigan State and the merchants who Campus Book Stores The MSU Book Store in the In¬ ternational Center will give $1 Shaeffer Highlighters in exchange junior, won the Versatility Award. The Award for outstanding ACROSS FROM UNION ACROSS FROM BE RKE Y scholarship went for the fourth Jvertised in the State News for helping to make this the for the two-volume American straight year to James Hudek. Mind textbooks. I'he texts will Hudek has compiled a 3.8 grade •st year in State News history. be donated to southern Negro average in the Honors College To ill graduates, we would like to extend our congratu- What's New in Jewelry? colleges and African universi¬ ties. These ATL books have lost and will attend Yale Law School next year. The program included 66 un¬ hit s and best wishes for the future. So that you might dergraduates from all areas of the university. in touch with State, we are including a subscription if she doesn't give it to you... n for the State News. Fill it in and return it to our — get it yourself! . and the State News will be mailed to you. JADE EASf Michigan State News Subscription Rates; Subscription Dept. 345 Student Services East Lansing, Michigan Bldg. $6.00 per year NOW After June 10 the subscription DAISIES rate will go up to $10.00 per year THAT'S WHAT'S NEW!! EARRINGS, PINS, RINGS Gga& Addre ACROSS FROM HOME ECON. BLDG. City Zipcode ^Ike- GGAJL £lupp, Buddha Cologne Gift Packag Spray Cologne, $3.50 !, 12 oz., $8.50 Buddha Soap Gift Set. $4.00 After June 10th The Subscription Rate Will Be $10.00 A Year SPARTAN SHOPPING CENTER Cologne, 4 oz., $3.00 After Shave, 4 oz., $2.50 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, June 3, 1966 9 OFF-CAMPUS STUDENTS BEWARE It's Lease Prob CAMPUS BOOK STORE Off-Campus Council (OCC) cautions students to watch for problems arising with security deposits, contract terminations, evictions and sub-letting. A security deposit, usually approximately $100, is submitted A recent case in which a breach of lease suit was in favor of the students Settled involved, is the case of Robert Fleming and Carl Curchoe who leased an apartment in January. Their landlord notified them that they must make a new lease because APPRECIATION SALE to the landlord at the beginning of the term to cover payment of the old one was no longer valid. No explanation was given. apartment damages, unreasonable furniture damages and any The case was settled out of court in favor of Fleming and In appreciation for the continued patronage cleaning necessary before the apartment can be released. Curchoe. The court awarded them their $100 housing deposit, Landlords have the legal right to evict tenants for failure which would have been otherwise lost,« and $120 dollars for of our store at 131 E. Grand River and the to meet the rent deadline so it is not a good practice to use damages to their reputations and integrity. the security deposit for the final month's rent, said Jay Shirley. If a student has his lease broken unlawfully by his land¬ acceptance of our new store at 507 E. Grand Eaton Rapids senior and OCC vice president. lord, or if his housing deposit is not returned after damages River offer the Most managers have on file a standard for specific furniture have been subtracted, the student should see an attorney to we following: items and commonly occurring repairs, he said. But it is not pursue legal action against the owner, said Allan C. Dewey, unreasonable to ask the manager for a copy of estimates made legal aid to ASMSU. by repairmen if their services are necessary, he added. Dewey emphasized the fact that the services of a lawyer for A second problem is contract termination. Only upon agree¬ legal advice will be available for students every Friday after¬ ment of both parties may a contract be terminated before the lease expires. A breach of a lease is not the same as contract, Shirley said. However, a breach by a termination of a either lessee noon beginning again the second week of fall term. The fee is $2. Eviction is the third problem encountered by off-campus residents. If students fail to pay their rent on time they are at fault and may be evicted, Shirley said. But tenants cannot LP RECORD or lessor could lead to an agreed termination. be evicted for reasons not in the contract, he said. Examples of a breach by a lessor are failure to make major A seven-day eviction notice may be served by landlords for SALE repairs after repeated requests by the lessee or a case in non-payment of rent but a 30-day eviction notice must be served which the apartment leased was not in a clean and liveable for any other reasons. condition when lessees moved In. The last problem encountered by students has been that Failure to pay rent agreed upon by the agreed date or failure of sub-letting apartments. If an apartment is rented for 12 to secure advanced written consent from the lessor to sub-let months, lessees must pay for 12 months, Shirley said. Most or allow any guest to stay for over three days constitute a managers will permit students to sub-let for a specific period breach by the lessee. of time but this must be done through the managers office, he said. The apartment should be inspected by the manager Our entire stock of discount Shirley added that if any agreement in the written lease lot upheld by either party a breach has resulted. before sub-lessees move in, he added, or tenants may be billed for damages they did not make. records reduced an additional Academic Freedom (continued from page 1) Trustees for final approval. The for eventual Board of Trustees guidelines and most of the Judi¬ approval. Such approval would cial changes would go into effect legitimatize the guidelines, mak¬ 120 days later. ing them harder for a forgetful After board approval of the or hard-pressed administrator to ignore. guidelines, changes should be made only after they have been The guidelines would serve as a standard against which indivi¬ passed by ASMSU, the Faculty Committee on Student Affairs, the dual rules could be measured. PLUS Academic Council and the Board Future students who feel that of Trustees. rules do not measure up to the The report as a whole is based standards could appeal the sub¬ on the assumption that a Univer¬ stance of the rules. sity is a special type of com-- This situation does not exist in most universities. At Berke¬ 300 Jazz, Folk and Rock & Roll LP's munity with a unique duty to seek out truth and disseminate it ley, for example, three students and that rules and organization admitted they broke the school's of the University should aid, not distribution rules but tried to impede, the pursuit of this goal. defend themselves on the grounds specially priced at Using this very general state¬ that the rules themselves were ment and others like it as a basis unreasonable. Their appeal was for their study, committee mem¬ ignored. bers have been holding hearings; $1.39, $2.89, and $2.99 interviewing administrators, students and faculty members; plowing through stacks of half- forgotten rules and policy state¬ Olin Report Admitted to Olin Health Center FOX'S Direct Diamond Importert at our Record Dept.-507 E. Grand River ments; conducting committee and Wednesday were; Vonda Shepard, Convenient Terms Available sub-committee meetings by the Osseo sophomore; Cheryl Gie- score; and corresponding with low, Lexington freshman; Ann Frandor Shopping Center & 203 S. Washington outside organizations (such as Fori>est, Meadowbrook, Pa., the American CivilLibertiesUn- freshman; James Ghesquiere, lon) and other universities. Detroit freshman; Barbara The committee's battle cry has Flore, Pontiac freshman; Carol been "Maximum freedom and Stowe, Northport senior; Jon An¬ . ■ • Take A Study minimum order," and it is their derson, Erie, Pa., senior; Judith attempt to reconcile these two Apsey, East Lansing junior; John elements which has drawn the Messier, Royal Oak sophomore; most comment. James Arseneau, Union' sopho¬ Break Before DON'T FORGET- The Council on Academic more; Michael Todorov, Detroit Freedom (CAF), an ad hoc stu¬ junior; and Cheryl Fenske, Bir¬ SWEATSHIRTS dent-faculty group, has express¬ mingham freshman. ed fear that be over-emphasis will placed upon "order" at the expense of "freedom" once the Admitted Thursday were: Sha¬ ron Smith, Rushvllle, Ohio, jun¬ ior; Karen Ricketts, Midland Finals committee gets down to brass freshman; Ronald Mellon, Lup- tacks. ton junior; Frank Roberson, East Tuesday afternoon is brass Lansing junior; Alan Curtis, Ox¬ tacks Its time for the committee. report will include several ford freshman; Helen Thayer, Ann Arbor freshman; and Mar¬ Your brothers and sisters are proud CAF suggestions, Including a call garet Orr, Frankfort sophomore. Featuring to have you at MSU-Take Them A "Me & Dem Sweatshirt! Guys" Show Off Your Colors This Summer- Take Home A Couple Sweatshirts For Yourself!- SUMMER READING? We've just received hundreds of new paperbacks. Hey,Grads Buy enough for your relaxed reading. Do the Don't Forget collateral reading you couldn't do during the year. To Bring Your Parents & Friends Out To The Gables GET THEM AT CAMPUS SALCY DOG SGRIIBDENIM Soft as a puppy. yet rugged as an old hound dog. Salty Dog, the original all-cotton T.G. TODAY BOOK STORES , Scrubdenim by Canton . today's most exciting faoric with the ''lived-in" look. Coral G Ask for Salty Dog jeans, bell bottoms. CPO and ponderosa shirts, shorts. and other casual wear by leading fashion makers at your favorite store. ACROSS FROM UNION ACROSS FROM BERKEY SANFORIZED' 1/2 Mile East Of Campus U.S. 16. 10 Michigan State News, East Lansing. Michigan Friday. June 3, 1966 Psych-Man Is Bat Fan Batman is a violence-inducing fear the truth. Whosaidthat,any¬ than the final reinforcement of program?" way? It wasn't McCarthy or Keel- a crime rectified and virtue con¬ "Batman is actually one of the er, was it? Must have been Roose¬ quering. ed Dr. \ in- academy award more intellectually stimulating velt Franklin. Anyway, why "It's or terribly exciting for peo¬ WINNER programs on television today. else do you think Batman would ple to see Batman flying through I SHELLEY ' ' Not every thinking person who watches it can grasp all the very let a little whimpy guy like that hang around when he's got more the air, pleasing the audience with his insipid antics. And men subtle and artistic nuances which important things to do (like sav¬ particularly get a pleasure outo^ WINTERS it contain. Quite the contrary, ing the world from Evil) than it because, unlike James Bond, my friend. Just because a pro¬ to teach an apprentice how to go Batman is never seduced—for gram reeks intentionally doesn't around saving the world from obvious reasons. He is in total mean it actually reeks. Just be¬ Evil?" control of his great power." cause it's bad doesn't mean it "Dr. X, getting back to one "Dr. X, does the violence dif¬ really is; actually it is very of the original questions, what fuse to " good junk," said Dr. X. about violence?" From under his desk there "What was that, Dr. X? Good "Yes. It has been shown that emitted a beep. Dr. X jumped junk?" children who view aggressive from his seat, resplendent in his "Certainly, Batman is a so¬ responses on television will re¬ chartreuse Psych-man cloak phisticated parody which not all produce imitative aggressive re¬ wrapped about him in toga fash- the viewers have the depth of sponses. Children tend to imi¬ Ion. perception necessary to follow. tate what they see and naturals "To the attackl The villain who Why do yoit think more adults ly, if they don't view a certain robbed the bank, will pay I Be¬ than Children watch it? Obvi¬ action, there will be nothing to sides, the robber was a sociol¬ ously because children wftio do . imitate." ogist. These sociologists better liZiBEIH HARIMAN SHELLEY WINTERS °*BLue watch it only see a hero and excitementand motion while the "Are you saying that we are indoctrinated to violence via tele¬ quit pushing society aroundl" he cried viciously. adults have the maturity and in¬ vision and other mass media dis¬ "But Dr. X, sociologists don't tellectual capacity to more fully playing aggression?" rob banks, do they?" called the grasp the travesty, the --ubtle "No more than Chinese are in¬ interviewer as Dr. X fell from connotations and symbolism in doctrinated in anti-American - his basement window. Next Attraction the program. ism." "1 or example," said Dr. X, "Dr. X, why do people go THE TEN COMMANDMENTS" • leaning forward and lowering his 'camping,' that is, watch Bat¬ voice, "I have this theory that man?" Hatmaiv and Robin are homo¬ sexuals." "They get pleasure out of a chase and it gives them an out¬ Diversion Of P "Nol Really?" asked the let for violent wishes which, in -hocked reporter. "Oh yes," replied Dr. X in a this case, are under control since they actually have "Also there is a an passive role. Identifica¬ Is Prime Goal most satisfied tone, his state¬ tion with the evil as well as ment having achieved its intend¬ Drama is the product of man's "It's the dissatisfaction with tior.a 1. "Some feel it's irrational ed affect. good. The villain is in con¬ trol of the situation for the en¬ consciousness which reflects the hypocrisy that feeds the revolt, to want individuality in an imper¬ "Dr. X, do you realize the tire episode until he is caught. preoccupations of its creators, too," he said. sonal world," Brockett said. 1 implications of that statement? This is the only time when the Oscar Brockett, authority in the¬ Brockett feels that recent How to ichieve individuality That's like ater theory and practice at In¬ drama is not as guilty of nega¬ in J calling Joe McCarthy good guys are in control. The resist the pressure to con¬ a Communist or immediate gratification of see¬ diana University, said Wednes¬ tivism as charged. The play¬ form what causes anxieties starting a Chris¬ are tine Keeler-for-president cam¬ ing the villain escape (and the day night. wrights feel > sense of positiv¬ Many contemporary drama¬ paign." viewer identifies with his inde¬ "The prime aim of the drama ism in the sense of trying to sub¬ tists feel i marked hostility to¬ "Ah, my friend, we must never of any period is to divert the stitute a more truthful view in pendence of society) is greater ward science because it stresses popular audience," he said. "But place of ready-made values ac¬ the idea of progress even in this some playwrights feel they should cepted without question. irrational world and it acts asan A Mention Students! go beyond this and reflect the Another key idea in modern entranced authority seeking to problems and pains of life in thought arid drama is that the un¬ dehumanize man. Don't Miss The New Sound in Town their works." iverse is impersonal uid irra- "There's been a move from so¬ Visit the Exciting "Land of Bands" at AH drama attempts to reflect cial anxieties to person.il anxie¬ truth as the playwright sees it. ties in contemporary plays," It's his vision of what consti¬ i loe Joseph's Pro Bowl tutes the human condition. (,l Hill Certificates Brockett said, "When the redis¬ covered individual can Join others r There is a rebellion in exis¬ in the revival of the belief that tence today not only on the na¬ Due June 20-21 man is responsible to and for tional level but throughout the himself and society then soci il "The Acoustics" world, he said. There are two protest will return." sides to this rebellion: one side Starting Mon., June 6 2 Week Limited Engagement seeks to alter old values; the oth¬ cetime CI Bill No. 358 2122 N. Logan er seeks to renew them. should turn in the certificate at registration June 20 and 21 if they Econ, Chemistry are going to attend MSU summer EXCLUSIVE FIRST term. Exams Changed * No payment will be made for The finil examination for both June unless the studentis mend¬ sections of Economics 201 will LANSING SHOWINGS ing school on June 30, according not be held on the same day, as to the Veterans Administration was previously announced. Sec¬ office. tion 1, which meets 9:10-10 a.m., TONIGHT THRU SUN. (2) BIG HITS! A brochure defining credit re¬ Monday through Thursday, will quirements md explaining eligi¬ take the exam 7:45-9:45 a.m. THK PICTURE YOU HAVE BEEN HEARING ABOUT ON T.V. bility of students receiving other Monday, 'section 2, which meets federal funds will be distributed 1:50-2:40 Mond ly throughThurs- at registration. will I ; the £ 5:45- Applications for this bill are 7:45 p.m. Wednesday. still ivailable in 14 StuJentServ- Chemistry 353 exam will be i ices Building. 7:45 a.m., not 7:45 p.m. ^ HolO on...you've neV Lats or seen gSfc / gilder fun! fiROGl1 presents "Devil Doll" Shown First at 8:47 -2nd First Run Featun Sun., Mon., Tues. *wmm Hi HGRMilS Pay Nothing Now - Pay Only Dry Cleaning Charges Next Fall When You Pick Up Clothes! m ff PROFESSIONAL WxjCLAwl dry cleaners and M SHIRT LAUNDERERS aiso coin operated " FRANDOR SHOPPING CENTER and 2801 W SAGINAW Keewn Her/dione Iionel Asa CaimEEN Rob CummiNgs WUNN G'N90LD SENDER MaaNOR NesbitT MSU INTERNATIONAL FILM SERIES [ECHNiCOlOR A presents "FINE FRENCH IMPORT.' -2nd at 10:47 "3rd Exclusive Attraction HIT NO. (2) FIRST RUN IN COLOR AT GO/GO/GO/ The Coo/est 10:30 me Monster Shindig ">1 ofChicks andCM/sf leiusivo the Shown 1st 8:47 That's | CORPOR/ll DAVID NIVEN ^EACH6(RLS li' secret agent ' .Jason Love" 4 /RANCOISEDORLfAC JEAN PIERRE CASSEl p. who takes *&ASTER ( . V^vou where w. tMMMf [ •'fell —' the spies ^ i TONIGHT: Friday, June 3 FRANK SINATRA, Jr. GoOOBVO CMa*&fc» ualter matth/iu— * ,v. I '<> ,/ PAfVW I! HON'AM ) COLAH ' Fairchild Theatre 7:00 & 9:00 P.M. . JON HALL • SUE CASE r r II >.,i Admission: 50C Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, June 3, 1966 11 FOR SERVICE Enzian Initiates 19 Men dormitories with Circle Honor¬ next year. They are: president, Nineteen men were inducted land junior; Alan C. Van Dyke, ary and a program explaining Grand Rapids junior; Laird War¬ Al Foodym, San Francisco sen¬ Wednesday night into Enzian Hon¬ dress regulations to freshmen. ner, Dearborn junior; and Roger ior; vice president, Roger Wil¬ orary for outstanding service to The meeting ended with what liams, East Lansing freshman; their residence halls. Williams, East Lansing fresh- Enzian members secretary, Beverly Twitchell, hope will be¬ They are: Jim Andary, Detroit Romulus sophomore; and treas¬ come tradition. Past president sophomore; Dave Bombach, Ft. Cited for outstanding achieve¬ urer, Rich Hnatek, Berwyn, 111., Jim Sink was wrapped in the rib¬ Wayne, Ind., junior; A. Peter ment were: Glen Harmon, Mil¬ bons from the pledge paddles and waukee senior; John Mongeon, junior. Cannon, Charleston, S.C., soph¬ was deposited on the steps of omore; John Cauley, Bloomfield Fairfax, Va., junior; Michael the Library, singing "MSU Sha- Hills junior; Robert Centilla, Clapp, East Lansing senior; dows." Kalamazoo senior; Ernest Cro- George Gooch, New Buffalo jun¬ ior; Dave Davis, Grand Haven martie omore; Jr., Columbia, S.C., soph¬ Richard Hnatek, Berwyn, junior; John Zwarensteyn, Grand Nick's Villa Venice 111., junior; Stuart M. Jones, Rapids junior; Art Averbook, FORMERLY MARIA'S Mendon junior; Jeffrey A.Justin, Austin, Minn., junior; Ralph Watervliet sophomore; Harry C. Faust, Berwyn, 111., junior; and Alan Foodym, San Francisco sen¬ Serving LaBelle, Conshohocken, Pa., jun¬ ior. ior. Authentic Italian Foods Also: James McCutcheon, De¬ Induction ceremon'es were troit sophomore; William F. Motz conducted at the Alumni Chapel Steaks, Chops. Sea Food TOP MEN IN RESIDENCE HALLS—New members i, Dave Bombach, Robert Centilla; third Jr., Ashley junior; Larry New¬ by Jim Sink, Chicago junior and Pizza - In oi Out of Enzian Honorary, for residence hall service, are Justin, Al Van Pyke, Jim McCutcheon, berry, Reading, Pa., senior; Pet¬ president of Enzian, and John left to right, front row, Roger Williams, Art Tung, ion and Pete Sorum. Not pictured are John er Sorum, Rochester, Minn., Mongeon, Fairfax, Va., junior, Vnd, Of Cou.se, You- Favontc LaBelle and Larry Newberry. sophomore; Ray Speece, Raleigh, pledge master. Don Adams, di¬ Laird Warner, Rick Hnatek, Bill Motz and Jim An- arry rector of the residence hall pro¬ Photo by Russell Steffey N.C., sophomore; Art Tung, Mid- dary; second row, Ray Speece, Stuart Jones, Ernest grams, gave the Invocation, and Phone ' 9-5751 members of Circle Honorary as¬ sisted in the ceremonies. Plenty of Free F irking "The charter members have a Veterinarians Attend great deal of faith in the poten¬ tial of this group," Sink said. "It time is and not just the quantity of devotion which they Starts TODAY: 1DOCHIDOAN Following each hour-long ses¬ "Through this program, vet- Donald A. Schmidt and Richard have demonstrated; it is also the sion, there was time for a 30- erinarlans can continue their R. Bennett, all of the MSU Vet- quality, the concern and the com¬ SUPER BARGAIN DAY PROGRAM proved sue- Bruce W. Alderman, conference minute question-and-answer education without having to take erinary Clinic; Dr. Andre La- transmission has mitment which they have shown." All-Day Preview-2 Features! cessful. consultant from the Continuing period with the insti time from their practices or vignette of Purdue's Veterinary "Your accomplishments," he Through special eight-city Education Service. Dr. Robert G. Schirmir, direc- leave their homes for extended Clinic, and Dr. Robert Hamlin told the inductees, "have proven periods of time," Dr. Schirmer of Ohio State University. They Moved Mountain-Tamed Desert - " After ironing tor of the MSL' Small Animal telephone hook-up, veterinarians that there is apathy in student from 108 Michigan cities have chanical bugs in the early Clinic and one of the tele-lec- said. "They can also put into Alderman indicates that the programs only when leaders pro¬ and Stunned The World 'been able to continue their edu¬ ings, the remainder of the series turers, said the biggest prob- immediate use the information program will be continued next vide the kind of programs stu¬ cation this spring. hitch." lem for him was getting accus- they receive from the lectures." fall, witli the possibility of also dents will be apathetic about." with Their Incredible Victory! Offered by the College of Vet- insisted of eight tomed to talking to a micro- The lecturers also benefit from offering a similar series for Enzian Honorary was conceiv¬ erinary Medicine and Continu- evening lectures on various as- phone instead of a live audience. this kind of program, he noted, large animal practitioners. ed at the Big Ten Residence Hall Once this was overcome, the being able to teach in a com- Tapes and slides of the cur- Conference at Northwestern Uni¬ rest was easy, he added. fortable, familiar atmosphere, rent program are now being de- with all needed reference versity on April 24, 1965. It Lecture Series" has attracted Detroit (3), East Lansing, Flint, He thinks tele-lectures have ma- veloped, and will be available terials close at hand. for distribution to other schools was granted a charter by AS- 124 of Michigan's 348 small Grand Rapids, Kalamazoo, Sagi¬ tremendous potential for bind¬ MSU in May, 1965 and tapped Other lecturers in the series and veterinary associations mal practitioners within rea¬ naw and Traverse City. ing together people from the 28 student leaders in June with were Drs. Ulreh V. Mostosky, sometime next fall. sonable traveling distance of the Four faculty members of veterinary profession through¬ Sink and Mongeon as founders. MSL' 's College of Veterinary- out the state. He also adds that An enzian, a small blue flower eight locations. Medicine and one each from the as far as MSU veterinary faculty "Although we felt the mechani- | which grows in the Swiss Alps, for FINAL TRYOUTS . cal ; : i was chosen as its emblem be- sound, we TONIGHT! FRIDAY, JUNE 3 "CAST A GIANT SHADOW wide hook-up were ■ cause it is a symbol of achieve- naturally were somewhat appre¬ res. Their presentations education series has been of- hensive as to how the lectures supplemented with slides fered anywhere for veterinari- | "Enduring a nd worthwhile would transmit and how they shown at each location. | change comes out through the KIRK DOUGLAS - SENTA BERGER i realistic efforts of informed and FRANK SINATRA YULBRYNNER thoughtful Individuals," Sink ■ ' JOHN WAYNE colont, deiuw .nmvimt said. "Enzian can supply this The Paper Dance Tonight r kind of responsible leadership." Today at 1:30, 5:55 P.M. & Later > Following the induction cere- CO-FEATURE; i monies, a reception was held at "THE TROUBLE WITH ANGELS" the home of Don Adams. At this The James K. Polk Memorial ing expenses for The Paper. Today 4:00, 8:30 P.M. only. . , ' time officers were elected for Rock Band will play at a Itreet It's What's dance from 8-midr,ight tonight The Wesley Foundation senior to benefit The Paper. The dance recognition picnic will be held will be held at Parking LotsP at 6 p.m. Sunday. All persons Happening SUMMER CIRCLE THEATRE 66 ELECTRIC IN-CAR at the Lanes, corner Admission cents a person, of Shaw and Farm to will be 50 help pay print- attending are to meet at the Foundation. The bus will run between 5:30 and 6. A will 102 foods and nutrition seminar be Home held at 12:40 today in Economics Building. TRYOUTS Casting For RASHOMON | 1! NOW: EXCLUSIVE SHOWING! HEATERS Rights Group Backs The Humanities Dept. record concert 7-9 tonight in ll4Bessey CHARLEY S AUNT THE DAYS BETWEEN FIRST LANSING SHOWING Housing Ordinance Hall will include works land, by Cop¬ Bloch, Hoist and Haydn. 1 (All productions in July) East Lansing's Human Rela¬ a procedure where a person Chi Alpha will meet at 8 to¬ 7:00 P.M. AND ROOM 49 tions backed ination Commission unanimously a proposed anti-discrim¬ ordinance Wednesday claiming have that his civil rights been violated may com- the Human Relations night in 33 Union Building. Tom president of the Michigan 10:00 P.M. AUDITORIUM i Im UrnmT« evening at City Hail. Com'miss ionT whichif discover- °islri" Assemblies of God Young The controversial ordinance, which is expected to be voted A Man GetCould Killed on by City Council Monday eve¬ ning, has recently been drawn Wr r thrt'. Nf ,er OnSunday •up in legal form by City Attor¬ ney Daniel C. Learned. : EXCITING The ordinance declares the ^ opportunity ment and to obtain employ¬ housing ancMfco use EXPERIENCE! public accommodations "ranging Astonishing, Bawdy Fun! from billiard parlors to escala¬ A Miracle! Viewers are Likely tors "without discrimination solely because of race, color, to Quiver with Sensuous (and religion or national origin" a civil right. Sensual) Ecstasy at its Bold and "It shall be unlawful for any Bizarre Visualizations... and Sly person to deprne any other per¬ Devices of Erotic Stimuli!" son of this civil right," the or¬ -B0SLEY CR0WTHER, N. Y. Times dinance reads. The proposed ordinance sets up SEATS AVAILABLE FOR "A MASTERWORK! One of the most beautiful and ALL PERFORMANCES! stimulating films ever made! Afire BUY TICKETS TODAY with exotic and erotic! Fellini ex¬ Winner of 5 plores the universals of frustra¬ Academy Awards! tion and desire! Brilliant!" -JUDITH CRIST, N. Y. Herald Tribune Robert Coote • Gregoire Asian ■ Roland Cuiver • Duicie Cray QEPT PICTURE: Cecil Parker/... *u■rim»ii/-;:irbert Kaempfert fere:;.. DLOlOFTHEYEAR! Bold and Fascinating!" j HIT NO. (2) IN COLOR AT 10:35 | -KATE CAMERON, N. Y. Daily News M1 T&E JaiuesGaRNen DicicVdN DvKe Eicitemenl FEDERICO FELLINI t clin0s '0 gO ELK.eSoMMen about Awgie Dickinson 1 to him like a liHk.Uveliest^^W { dame! COLOR BY DELUXE Paul ALL SEATS RKSKRVFD! SEATS NOW ON SALE AT THE Newman BOX OFFICE OR MAIL is Harper CHNICOLOR PANAVISION FROM WiAHtfi BROS EiHeL IN TECHNICOLOR MeRMaN A GERSHWIN KASINER Production gladmer BEST IN FOREIGN FILMS Next Attraction: "THE LEATHER BOYS" 12 Michigan State News. East Lansing, Michigan Friday, June 3, 1966 ISSUES CHALLENGE The Concept Of Total Man' Billy LONDON (L'PI)—Preacher which had gathered long before Graham "A young man at Oxford said: world challenge. I disagree. You Employed By Medical Men, By RICHARD M. PHILLIPS Modern medicine must include Billy Graham opened his Greater the doors were opened. 'We don't care.We are living for have a missionary challenge that State News Staff Writer the clergy to administer the med¬ Londor. Crusade Wednesday night A choir of 2.500 drawn from today.' What a tragedy. People is greater today than in any time icine of meaning to patients. Man is meaningful and worthwhile. before a capacity crowd oflS,3S0 the churches of London heralded of Britain, you have meant too in your history. Forty per cent of no longer considered "Man is sicker than he has been Weaver concluded. filling Earl's Court Stadium by Graham's appearance with hymns much to the world. I challenge the world goes to bed hungry at a being with only physical ill¬ in This is what the AMA means nesses to be treated by only generations," sai$ John J. calling Britain to a new "finest which proved that the devil does you tonight to turn back to the night. Millions cannot read or Weaver, former dean of St. Paul's when it says the "total" man hour" lr. which the nation that not necessarily have the best God of your fathers before it is write and many more millions physical instruments by the med¬ be cared for in hospitals. ical profession. Episcopal Cathedral in Detroit. must helped save the world at war songs. too late. 1 challenge you to set a have no spiritual hope. "In 1963, there were over 300 Soon after the AMA set up its would lead it to spiritual victory Then the chairman of the exe¬ moral, and spiritual tone for a Man is recognized as an inte¬ "This could be your finest suicides in Detroit," he said. dept. of Medicine atjd Religion ir, peace. cutive committee of the crusade, world that badly needs your lead¬ hour! What a moment to bealivel grated personality with tensions "If those 300 had contracted all of the 50 state medical so¬ that can often worsen his total Maj. Gen. D.J. Wilson-Haffen- ership. What a thrill to live at this mo¬ smallpox instead, Detroit would cieties were freely participat¬ Spe-.king from .! flower-banked den. introduced "our beloved vis- "I challenge you to look about mentous hour in London when the health. be declared a disaster area." ing in the program. platform, in the well of the huge iled t: 12 The American Medical Assn. , .as you and see what is happening, people on every continent are Suicide is reaching epidemic exhibition hall, the American si:.ce Graham last spoke in both in America andBritain—the recently set up a dept. of Medi¬ Michigan itself has 30 county evangelist raised an audience crying for help.There are no peo¬ cine and proportions in the United States medical societies active in at¬ ipit.il 3: d sa.d that despite rebellion against authority, the ple in the world better equipped REVEREND BUNDENTHAL Religion to work with because man is suffering from clearly representative of the sexual immoralities, the secu¬ to answer this world-wide plea this new concept of a "total tempts to achieve closer com¬ ma :\ races of the Common¬ skepticism ..bout the suc- "give-up-itis," Weaver said. munication with the clergy, said i: ih it earlier crusade there larism and materialism of the like the British man." wealth to enthusiasm with a fiery people," he said. "Man is a whole being," said This is sufficient reason for Ralph T. Wills, community rela¬ call to'the chopath.ic world toh iltthc "psy¬ madness that could it least 50 priests in Lon- t'ho would rot have been :;.en if t had not been for people, the lust for pleasure, the silver-chromed gods that have been erected since the war. Graham warned that Britain was in danger of losing the Chris¬ Budenthal Dr. Richard L. Rapport, chair¬ man of the Michigan State Medi¬ religion and medicine to be con¬ cerned. tions director* for "The program the MSMS. includes all re¬ , tian faith that helped make it the "The great sickness of our age mea: racial suic.ide." cal Society's (MSMS) new Dept. 54 campaic;.. "There are those who say that ligions," he said, "and the re¬ To Head is aimlessness, boredom and the world's greatest nation and this of Medicine and Religion. "Man It was Graham's first crusade reference to heckling dur- since the empire has broken up lack of meaning," he said. "Stu- sponse from Jewish, Catholic was posing a challenge that would Ox: rJ and since you have become afflu¬ is physical, spiritual, social and and Protestant leaders has been here since 1954 and he was visit to University dies showed that almost 81 per call for greater sacrifice than it . this we;.k, Graham said, ent that you no longer have a emotional." tremendous." warmly welcomed by crowds r cent of the students on some displayed in the last war. "A weakness in any one area If Britain failed world would move dezvous with a he said, the "toward a ren¬ frightful destiny." Chaplains The Rev. Theodore K. Bunden- can militate toward illness in one or all of the others," Rap¬ American campuses confess Ralph H. Ruhmkorff, staff phy-, feelings of absolute absurdity." sician at Olin Health Center, These people need more than said, "Physicians on the whole port said. 100 Years Of Healing Seen "What do crusade?" he asked. we expect from this "Let's not make the mistake of thal, pastor of Martin Luther Chapel andLutheranStudentCen- ter, has been elected to serve as The medical profession takes the attitude that a patient's faith is a vital factor in complete pills, he said. They need the are very enthusiastic over the 'medicine of meaning." dept. of Medicine and Religion." expecting too much but let's not president of MSU'sReligiousAd- health, he said. In Christian Science Book make the mistake either of ex¬ visors Assn. for 1966-67. pecting too little. "We are not expecting London The Religious Advisors Assn. takes in all pastors, priests and "The confidence family places in its doctor and the average Personal Ev clergyman requires that the two to be dramatically changed over rabbis of the churches, syna¬ the imp. ments in physics, consult whenever necessary," ; t.n biochemistry ng on the lrires of and wo me:n in many p arts i : men the and m« to psychotherapy challenging explore more vigorously Documented healings recorded night in its moral and spiritual life." gogues and religious serving the University. centers Rapport said. "Their collective judgment can And The Ho But he said that he hoped thou¬ The religious advisors work world h.:S been publisn.ed ii Cc n- the relation of matter to mind, in the book, 100 of which are de¬ provide the means for the most sands would be encouraged im¬ with and through the vice presi¬ Christians nectior. vv ith the Cenitennial of the practic.i experience of scribed in some detail, extend effective care and treatment of must get back to nesses to our salvation, he said. mediately both to "determine not dent, of student affairs on cam¬ the whole man." more personal, evangelical work, This action of the Spirit is Christian :Sc.inee. Christian Scienti.-ts yields a kind from wartime prison camp ex¬ to surrender to the secular and im-( pus and co-ordinate religious The Rev. Wallace Robertson, the Rev. Calvin S. Malefyt, min¬ mediate and direct, rather than Issued jis a contribuition to the periences to healings of alcohol¬ Serest in spir itual he.il- where," The Christian Science ism, drug addiction, cancer, tub¬ immoral tide that is running." activities. pastor of the East Lansing Peo¬ ister of the University Reform¬ mediated through the Word and [nfamt'"' Board ■ Directors says in a erculosis and cyanide poisoning. ple's church, said in a recent ed Church, Ann Arbor, said at a recent conference at East Lan¬ the Church. •s, the book; foreword. However, the healings chosen speech to MSMS that the clergy In reaction to the coldness that and sing Trinity Church. appeared in the rationalistic- Chir,st: ir Scie nce Heal- Reformed Study Merger physicians share a common tury of The directors emphasize that for inclusion "are not necessar¬ thousarlds ofpub- the book lias a broader purpose interest in man. Christians need to recognize evangelistic religion, •s or. ily the most striking," say the groups Ma- "We that in their relationship to th'e1 ilSfyt calls "enthusiasts" grew fcshed ane 1 tape-recv r ded testi- than the commemoration of a de¬ directors. "A conscious effort are trying to bring men HOLLA ND f -Cla riflcation of a plan of union, but voted ?lso to into a meaningful participation in Lord there is a horizontal be¬ monies, vc lunteered arid verif.ed nominational anniversary. has been made to strike a balance up. by witnes sls, which have be- "It opens up," they state, "an between proposed union with the Presby¬ become a full participant in the their society," he said, "to in¬ liever-to-believer kind of rela¬ Some of these "enthusiasts" healings that would ordi¬ terian Church in the U.S. is consultation on church union.The troduce them tionship that they cannot neglect, come par't of churct' records. are. < f religious experience still narily be accounted 'miraculous' to the abundant went to such extremes as polyg¬ The bool: was prep.-.; ■ed by The and thosi closer to the level of among principal items for dis¬ Reformed church is not a mem¬ life." he said. not generally understood, bears amy. They believed the Holy cussion June 9-15 in Holland at ber of the consultation. "Otherwise First Chu rch of Chri st, Scien- concrete witness t<. the healing common experience." "Man finds himself as a mem¬ we may become Spirit would defend them against the general synod of the Re¬ so' heavenly-minded that we're tist, ir. Bo st- n, and is published dimension of present-day Chris- The occasion for the book is ber of the 'lonely crowd,' " he the armies of the world, he said. formed Church in America. Another major matter await¬ by The Li lr.sti ,r. Sc:t-nee Pub- t, n disciples!,ip and presents the Centennial of Christian Sci¬ said, "with a growing aware¬ no earthly good," he continued. Then in reaction to the en¬ Officials of the Reformed de¬ ing adoption by the general synod In a struggle to maintain evan¬ lis!.in,: Soc also the phenomena of spiritual heal¬ that nobody cares." j(|ty, which pub- ence, which traces its origins to nomination note that the recent is the revised liturgy with new ness thusiasts, formalism sprang up. lishes" T 1 ie Christia n Science ing not under the category of a healing experienced by Mary- forms for Robertson said that a man gelism without drifting into for¬ The "blue laws" are an exam¬ Presbyterian assembly voted to Holy Communion, bap¬ must be convinced that his phy- malism, the Christian church Monitor. miracle but at the level of a rea- Baker Eddy in 1866. ple of the formalists' attempts tism and orders of worship. continue- the authorization of the moves in a cycle of evangelism "With ci ir.tempor .ry develop¬ to regulate the Christian life by to enthusiasm to formalism to Mount Hope Services 10 & 11 a.m. 6 & 7p.m. law, Malefyt said. 332-2559 nursery First Christian Central Methodist evangelism throughout its his¬ St. Johns Student ! Assembly Of God Across From the Capitol CENTRAL tory, Malefyt said. "Today for any resurgence of Reformed Church the Lord in our society, we have Parish 725 Mt. Hope Ave., Lansing 9:00 A.M. Prayer Group The cycle is set in motion by got to get back to the evangeli¬ I Pastor Carl F. Graves: FREE METHODIST overemphasizing either the Bible 327 M.A.C. , 240 Marshall St., Lansing Mary-Sablna Chapel cal, personal work of the Word 482-0934 WORSHIP SERVICE or direct action as the confirm¬ and the Spirit in relationship^ 9:45 a.m. Sunday School Kev. John M. Hofman, Pastor CHURCH ing testimony of the Holy Spirit. Phone ED 7-9-7$ university Morning Service 9;00 and 11:15 (9:45 and 11:15) to ourselves and to each other," 11:00 a.m.^ Worship Service In New England the first gen¬ lutherar. church (WJIM 10:15 a.m.) 828 N. Wash, Oakland he said. 7:00 p.m. Evangelistic Service Sunday School 10:15 at eration of those who came to "How Much Religion Do Malefyt Sunday Masses alc-lca Wednesday prayer meeting Evening Service 7 p.m. You Have" Follow Highway 43 to Lansing America were "rationalistic emphasized that Dr. Large Christians must both study the 7; 15-8:30-9:45-11:00-12:15- 7:30 p.m. Minister: Rev. Howard C. Artz evangelists" who believed that direct action testimony of the Those in need of transporta¬ Crib Nursery, So Bring The 4:45, b 6:00 p.m. the Spirit comes to us and wit- "The fear of the Lord is the tion call Mr. Baby. Take home a copy of the Spirit to confirm the authority - Henry Bosch- Free Taxi Service: beginning of knowledge" ED 2-2223 or Rev. "What Then Are We To Do?" of the Scriptures and study the Daily and Saturday Masses Hofman 484-4488 8:00, 12:30, 4:45 8:15, 9:15, 10:30 and 11:30 (Proverbs 1:7) at 5-3650. j sheet for study and application. 482-1444 or University Scriptures as the Word to test the presence of the Spirit. Seventh-Day University Methodist Adventist Church Edgewood United Saint Andrew Eastern! Peoples Church | K imberly Downs * castminstcr prcsbytcrim cmjrch Temporarily Meeting at Orthodox Church Church East Lansing 1315 Abbot' Rd. Church of Christ ] 469 North Hagadorn Road 1 cost iansinc. micnican University Lutheran Church 1120 S. Harrison Rd. Interdenominational and Student Center Division and Ann Sts. | (3 blocks north of Grand River) I j 9:45 & 11:15 200 W. Grand Ri"er SI \T)AY SCHEDULE SATURDAY SERVICES 1007 Kimberly Drive, Lansing 1216 Greencrest, E.L. (2 blocks W. of Frandor WORSHIP SERVICE at Michigan Worship Services— —9.00 at?d 1J;P0 a.m. 9:30 a.m. and 11 a.m. Divine Liturgy Sunday 9:30 a.m. "Life's Greatest Decision" Church School, Cribbery-Third Grade —9:00 and 11:00a.m. j 11:00 9:30 a.m. SabbatVi School Shopping Center on a.m. Worship Service E. Grand River) SUNDAY SERVICES Church School, Fourth Grade-Adults, Students — 10:00 a.m. I Sunday, June 5th j Vespers and Confessions- | Ministers 9:30 and 11:00 Sat., June 4th IV 9-7130 Sat. 6:30 p.m. will be held Sermon by , Dr. Glenn M. Frye For transportation phone 332-6271 or 332-8901 "Forty Minutes to Live" at the State Theater SUNDAY SERVICES Rev. Truman A. Morrison j For Transportation Call: and Wilson M. Tennant That New Morality Rev. R. L. Moreland - MINISTERS - Rev. H. G. Beach Pastor Lemon Morning Worship 10:00a.m. Church School 355-SQS4, 489-0343, 3"2-3S67 J Dr. Wallace Robertson For Transportation or Bible Study ll:00-a.m. '9:30 and 11 a.m.-crib room) W0RSH1P-9:45 & 11:15 a.m. EAST LANSING Evening Worship 6:00 p.m. CHURCH SCHOOL Information Call through Senior high. UNIVERSITY 882-500| CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE , Nursery During Services 9:30 and 11:00 Wednesday evening Bible | Edgewood University Group BAPTIST CHURCH Each Sunday listen to "The ! 5:30 p.m. Supper and program. CHURCH SCHOOL 149 Highland Ave., East Lansing Voice of Prophecy," 9:30 a.m., Study 7:30 p.m. ' ' American Baptis II Crib through third grade in For Bus Schedule WOAP, (1080 kc.) and "Faith Transportation Call 10:35—10:40 Conrad 9:45 to 10:45 a.m.-Program church bldg. 4th-12th grade at FE 9-8190 > Gerard G. Phillips, Pastor For Today," Channel 8 at 8:30 '10:40-10:45 Lot between for all ages Union bldg. EU 2-1960 or ED ED 2-1888 a.m., Channel. 2 at 10:30 a-1"- 2-2434 McDonell & W. Holmes 11:15 a.m.-Children, 2-11 UCCF 10:45-10:50 Owen, Shaw Hall i Worship 10:00 a-m- years 9:45 Membership Class College Fellowship Hour 6:00 p.m. ^ Evening Service 7:00 p.m. First Church of First Presbyterian j Affiliated with the Church School 11:10 a.m. Supper 6 p.m. - 50avid Cla rk, 1966. He will become a member 67 at their annual spring formal sored an all-university forensic ing secretary, Stephen E. Mor¬ Arlington, Va., freshman. Fellowships of Alpha Tau Alpha when an MSU chapter is organized. events conference in April and gan, Albion sophomore; and cor¬ responding secretary, Susan R. last Saturday at Inn America. Officers installed are: master, 520 West Ionia (Until June 15) May. Deadline Set White is an ordained minister in the Reorganized Church of Harris, Flushing sophomore. Theta Delta Chi Jeffrey Pa., Friedman, Harrisburg, sophomore; lieutenant mas¬ UC.recr (J School PHONE 482-1093 Police Honorary DSR-TKA faculty advisor is Theta Delta Chi fraternity has ter, David F. Simon, Huntington 301 MAC Ave., East Lonsing Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. Jerry M. Anderson, assistant elected new officers. The deadline for applying for He is married and has a four- Twenty new members have They are: Woods, sophomore; exchequer, A Private Girls' School with University Atmospherel been initiated into Alpha Phi professor of speech. Steven M. Goldschein, Massa- the U.S. Office of Education fel¬ year-old daughter and a four- president, Richard J. Witkowski, Licensed by Michigan Board of Education lowship program will be June 10. month-old son. Sigma, national police honorary. Chicago, 111., junior; 1st vice pequa, N.Y., sophomore; scribe, Mary Skrocki is a member of They are: Ralph N. McKinney, Knights Of St. Pat president, Alan T. Rose, Roches¬ A.J, Traines, Mt. Pleasant soph¬ The program is offered to re¬ three literary societies—Kappa Daingerfield, Tex., sophomore; The Knights of St. Patrick, ter, N.Y., sophomore; second omore; and pledge master, Louis cent college graduates or other Delta Pi, Phi Kappa Phi and Stephen M. Cerovsky, Wyan¬ an Engineering social honorary vice president, Joseph C. Prus- A. Carson, Detroit sophomore. college graduates who have not Alpha Lambda Delta and is trea¬ dotte senior; Charles P. Olen- for Juniors and seniors, recently zynski, Pittsburgh, Pa., sopho¬ taught in recent years who are surer of Kappa Delta Pi. der. East Lansing junior; John elected new officers for the 1966- more; corresponding secretary, Pi Beta Phi interested in secondary teaching. She also is vice president of A. Novak, South Haven senior; 67 academic year. They are, Donald T, Trefry, Detroit soph¬ Phillips Hall, former scholar¬ William W. Deneau. Saginaw sen¬ president, John R. Arden, Holly omore; recording secretary, Newly elected and initiated of¬ The fellowship will support a ior; Larry D. Culp, Battle Creek senior; vice president, Duane S. Gary San ford, Grosse Pointe ficers for Pi Beta Phi sorority two year program starting this ship chairman of Phillips, Circle sophomore; Charles R. Conn, Preston, Quincy senior; secre¬ sophomore; treasurer, Dan are: vice president, Lucy Anders, September. Completion of the honorary, former Tower Guard Battle Creek freshman. tary-treasurer, William L. Phil¬ Marks, Detroit sophomore; her¬ Birmingham sophon rial program will qualify the student secretary, resident-of-the-year of Phillips, and former AUSG Other new members are Gor¬ lips, Jeffersontown, Ky., junior. ald, Joseph C. I'ruszynski, Pitts¬ chairman, Mary Sumner, Grossf for a secondary certificate and representative. don R. Davidson, Lancaster, Other newly initiated members burgh, Pa., sophomore. Pointe sophomore; assistant so¬ an MAT with a major in social science or one of the social sci- < ence disciplines. During the program students will not be required to have any teaching oblig&tion. They will be CASH required to take from 33 to 36 credit hours in the social sci¬ ences and 15 credit hours in education. Eight fellowships will be awarded based on the need, grade point average and the student's background. k The fellowships were made available through the Higher Ed¬ ucation Act passed in 1965. Those who are interested should (355-2368) contact or Daniel Jacobson Edgar Schuler FOR (355-2369). Announcements de¬ scribing the program in more detail are available in253Erick- son Hall. i * to CAN THE COLLEGE GIRL COPE? In June Redbook, college girls from nine colleges tell why they question the sexual codes of their parents.. what they hope gain from their so-called freedom "... and how the BOOKS Need the a term? little We money are. to help you finish out offering top prices for all moral liberation has created used books. new problems to replace the old. Don't miss this frank, revealing article in June REDBOOK masculine Beoe°°K . .. .that's the way it is with Old Spice that's the kind of aroma she likes be- ing close to. The aroma of Old Spice. / / / / \ GIBSON'S Crisp, tangy, persuasive. Old Spice BOOKSTORE unmistakably the after shave lotion for ityjSh- the untamed male. Try it soon . .. she's j flvff CORNER EVERGREEN AND W. GRAND RIVER waiting. 1 1.25 & 2.00 The Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States The Magazine for Young Adults ; (Qtd'Spuf -ONE BLOCK WEST OF THE U.NIl Now on Sale SHULTON 1^' '"'2J 14 Michigan State News. East Lansing. Michigan Friday. June 3. 1966 Good luck! Have fun! This js our LAST ISSUE for this term. We'll be back again June 22nd. It's Been A Pleasure Serving You. A utomotive Automotive Automotive Automotive Automotive Automotive The State News does not CHEVROLET 1955 station AIRLANE 500, 1958 352 I OL.DSMOB1LE 1955, good running VALIANT 1960, one owner, some HONDA 50. red and whit Per¬ permit racial or religious . !. SUZUKI 150, 1965. Low mileage, discrimination In 11 s ad¬ 6 stick engine, gine. Automatic transmission. condition and good transporta¬ rust, needs seat covers,mechan- fect condition. Great for sum¬ eight months old. Electric start¬ Good transportation. Must sell tion. $75. Gall after 4 pm.. IV $175. Must sell. Rog, 337- vertising columns. The Good body, needs work. $40/ ically excellent, good transpor¬ mer. er. Very fast. Asking $465. 332- State News will not best offer. Dick, 332-3563.1-6/3 immediately. $125. Call 355- 2-0541. 1029 E. Grand River. tation. $295. 355-8106. 0731. 5-6/3 6743. accept 2-6/3 4-6/3 6426. 2-6/3 OLDSMOBILE 1964, F-85 deluxe HONDA 50. Black and white. Per- advertising from persons CHEVROLET 1958, four-door, VOLKSWAGEN 1963. Excellent 1965 HONDA S-90. Mint condi- discriminating against re¬ stick, six cylinder. Dependable FIAT HOOD, 1964. Excellent con- 4-door, power steering and fect condition. $190. Call 332- tion. Less than 3,000 miles. dition. One shape. Low mileage. Deluxe > automotive ligion, race, color or na- transportation. $120. Call after owner. New battery, brakes. 28,000. Call 372-0083. equipment. Phone days 487- 4681. 3-6/3 $300. Call Dave, 355-6276.3-6/2 . employment 6 pm. 372-6606. good tires. 21,000 miles. $550. 3-6/3 3743; after 5 pm. 485-3366. 1964 HONDA 50cc. Excellent 332-2825. con- 1965 HONDA Sports 50. $200. for rent CHEVROLET SUPER Sport, con¬ 3-6/3 OLDSMOBILE 1963 F-85. 4-door, dition, only 750 miles.Sacrifice , VOLKSWAGEN 1964 red. Radio, Excellent condition. Phone 372- for sale vertible, red and white, white in¬ FIAT 600D 1964. Economical to midnight blue, good condition, $180 firm. Ron Esak, I\ 9-6221. 0347. 4-6/3 , Automotive four new tires. $950. Phone 355- heater, many extras. Asking , lost & found terior, power steering-brakes, run. Excellent condition. Abarth 3-6/3 , 0190. $1,045. Call 332-4705. See at 1963 WHITE CUSHMAN Eagle personal ! I R K SKYI.\RK 1966G.S. hard- First Owner. Call 355-3256. exhaust system. Sandy, 351-4563 2-6/3 HONDA S90, ten weeks old, tuned . 1025 Ann St. top. Many extras. Must sacri- after 6 pm. 4-6/3 9hp, $225. 1963 Schwinn men's » peanuts personal 2-6/3 . OLDSMOBILE 1965 Cutlass 442. VOLKSWAGEN 1300, Early 1966. weekly, $350 firm. Call 339-8161 black 3-speed, $25. Joe, 355- » real estate CHEVROLET 1959,2-door, stick. FORD 1959 Galaxie, V-8,Cruise- Burgundy hardtop, 4-speed. Sunroof. AM-FM radio. Auxil¬ after midnight. 3-6/3 0571. 4-6/3 service A most economical automobile. O-Matic. Power steering, Premium tires. 13,000 miles. 1964 HONDA 90. Have to sell be- , iary heater, whitewalls. Like LOOK OUT, SUZUKI is here! transportation riVK :^6, radio, ew battery $180. 1609 Gilcrest, East Lan¬ brakes. Call 484-5692 after 5 $2,250. Phone 355-3137. 4-6/3 Must sell. 625-3031, > new. Perry. fore end of term. Will take best World's finest motor ycle. FOX i'ood tires, excellent transpor- > wanted sing. 337-0327. 3-6/3 pm. 3-6/3 OLDSMOBILE 1959. Brand new -6/3 offer. 351-4119. 2-6/3 tat.or.. $65. 332-8475 or 337- SPORT CENTER, 2009 South CHEVROLET 1958, 2-door Bel FORD GALAXIE 1962, Convert- tires. Four-door hardtop. Des¬ HONDA 1965 qua re Super-90. Must sell. Cedar. 372-3908. C3-6/3 DEADLINE Air V-8 stick. Southern car, no ible, V-8, automatic. A sweet¬ ert gold. Must sell. $325. Phone sedan. Blue with whitewall tires. .'HEVELLE 196 4 Only $275. Also Helmet, worn HONDA 1965 cb 160, top condition, Super Sport rust. Sharp. $385. Phone 393- heart. $950. Phone 372-6225. 351-5404 4-6/3 $1,250 or best offer. Phone 355- 1 only once, $25. Call 332-1193. . P.M. one class day be- low convertible. V-8 automatic. Ra- 1114. C3-6 3 1139. -mileage. Call Larry 351- fore publ >ca»>on FORD 1961 Convertible, V-8, OLDSMOBILE 1965 Delta hard- 2-6/3 1-6/3 . . Very clea: . $1,500. Phone 4142. 3-6/3 CHEVROLET 1956, 4-Joor sedan. stick, radio, 8,000 miles on en¬ top. 18,000 miles, power steer¬ VOLKSWAGEN 1961, sedan, one PA NIC 11 1965 Hodaka 90cc. Will Conce'ta'iCis 12 noon one 355-5895. 5-6/2 SUZUKI 1966, I50cc., 900 miles.. • Standard shift, 6 cylinder, gine. Excellent condition. Must ing/brakes, whitewall tires. owner, very sharp, phone 337- sell cheap. Must go before end Like new. $425. Still under war¬ class day before publicat^oi :HEVELLE 1965, Malibu con- 47,000 actual miles. $150. 487- sell. 355-6361. Loaded! IV 9-3272 after 4 pm. 0072. of term. 337-2623. 2-6/3 vertible. Saddle tar., clean. V-8, 3275. 2-6/3 ranty. Call Bob at 351-5497. 3-6/3 FORD 1964 Gala/ie, 8 cyl. two- VOLKSWAGEN 1965, red sedan, HONDA 305. Must sell. Needs PHONE automatic. Must sell. Call 337- OPEL 1960. 5-6/3 COMET WAGON, 1961. Economical to run. AM-FM radio. Clean. Good con¬ little work. Bargain price, $275 7644 after 6 pm. Couple no door, hardtop, standard trans¬ HONDA 1965 Super 90. Excellent 355-8255 4-6/3 longer needs second car. Rust- mission. Good running condition. Must dition. 12,000 miles. $1,500. Call or best offer. 355-6289. 1-6/3 Very clean. Immediate condition. Just overhauled. niEVROLET 193" 2-door hard- free, "Southern car", good buy. sell. $200. Call Mary 332-3570. ED 2-4104. RATES sale. Phone 355-0865. 5-6/3 2-6/3 TRIUMPH 650cc Bonn. 1961. $325. Call Mike, 351-4618.2-6/3 ::y, 6 automat.c. 1960 Falcon 355-7890. 3-6/3 1-6/3 VOLKSWAGEN FORD 1957 station wagon. De- 1^63, 1566, AM- Mag., low mileage, beautiful STRATTON'S B E N E L L I OF 1 DAY SI.50 sticis shift. Both :;r.e cars.Must CORVAIR MON/A 1963, convert- PLYMOUTH 1960 2-door sedan, sell. 3~2-6225. pendable. Even the clock worksl t FM radio, whitewalls, seat shape. $800. Call 485-1833. LANSING. 125cc Scramblers 3 DAYS S3.00 3-6, 3 ible, 4-speed, radio, whitewalls, V-8, Hurst, low mileage. Excel¬ 'belts. Price $1,000. Call 1-6/3 $150 or negotiate. John Ladd, 337- now available for those trips 5 DAYS i5.00 metallic brown-black top. Phone lent inside and out. $450 351- 7021. 332-0841 afternoons. 5-6/3 . 2-6/3 HONDA 90 Trail. Excellent con- 351-6765. Bob. 4387. 3—6/2 through the woods, $469. Im¬ 10-6/3 VOLKSWAGEN ditiorf. Must sell!! $250. Call based on 15 words per od FORD 1963 Falcon. Hardtop, fast- BUS 1$64. Ideal mediate delivery. IV 4-4411. CORVAIR 1963. Black, power PLYMOUTH 1959, good shape. for 337-0736. 1-6/3 back, very good condition. camping. 20,000 miles. Ra¬ steering - brakes. Radio, ex¬ Standard transmission, $800. Much TLC, $190 . 353-2900 or dio. Call 351-6770. HONDA SUPER 90, $325. Depend- cellent condition. Make offer. 353-2898. Ask for Mr. Rochford. 2-6/3 T here * i be c 5Ce serv r< \ ROLET i ll'K-L'P 195". Call 355-8161. able transportation. 2,500 2-6/3 VOLKSWAGEN 1959, Mechanic- and Good body. Only $325. Phone Wada, 332-2927 or 353-1700. 4-6/3 bookkeepng charne FORD 8 Retractable hardtop, ally perfect. Must sell by grad¬ miles. Must sell. Call351-5062. LEARN TO FLY at our Govern- , th s ad s not pOi d withir 372-6225. 2-6/3 CORVAIR 196 3, three speed, PLYMOUTH 1965 2-door HONDA 1966 Model SO, never rid- licensed school with automatic, V-8. Very depend¬ hardtop. uation. Call 351-5497. Ask for ment ex¬ CHEVROLET 1955, six standard shift. $650. See at cylinder able. Sacrifice, $175. 355-3242 7,500 miles. V-8, automatic, Bob. Make offer. den - won in contest. Black, perienced instructors. It's easy Campus Mobil, 1198 S. Harrison. 5-6/3 automatic. Dependable trans¬ evenings. 2-6/3 radio, whitewalls, undercoated. white shields/trim. Asking and fun! Open every day! For 332-2797. 5-6/3 VOLKSWAGEN 1964 sedan. Low fi utomotive portation. $110. 410 Grove St. 1963 $2,200. Phone 353-0649, 8-5. $235. ED 2-1934. the best, come to FRANCIS FORD GALAXIE 500 con- mileage, excellent condition. 2-6/3 CORVAIR 1960, 4-door. Black. 3-6/3 305 HONDA SCRAMBLER, 1,500 AVIATION. Call IV 4-1324 for vertible. Standard transmis¬ Luggage rack. Priced to sell. :HL\ROLET lslsV IMPALACon- Looks and runs good. 1963 en¬ PON'TIAC 19 5 7. New battery, miles, semi-knobs, road tires, appointment i sion. Excellent condition. Phone 351-4866. 3-6/3 transmis- gine, new brakes, good tires. black and grey. Best offer over 2 rear gears. $750. Call IV MAKE A DATE with I $1,300. Phone IV 7-5789 after VOLKSWAGEN 1955 convertible, -:on. Radio, heater, seatbelts, TU 2-0764. 2-6/3 $75. Call 353-0029. 4-5158. 5 pm. 2-6/3 '• itewalls. Excellent condition. CORVWR i960 PON'TIAC 1964 Catalina convert- 52,000 miles, good tires, engine 1966 HONDA 50, white, electric lft, Lea ;iv state. ED2-8498. FORD 1960 Galaxie. Excellent and top. Excellent radio. $350. . 3-6/3 cellent condition. Call 353-7483. ible, burgundy with white top. starter. Brand new. Must sell. second car. $250. Call FE 9- ED 2-8246. Okemos. 3-6/3 Sharpest car in town. Phone IV Call 355-8578. CHEVROLET i96l IMPALA Con¬ ? 2-6/3 2598. 2-6/3 5-9332. 3-6/3 VOLKSWAGEN 1965, AM-FM ra- HONDA "SPOR'I 50, "red. Good Employment vertible. Power steering,' JAGUAR XK-E 1962. New dark dio. 12,000 miles. Perfect con¬ ; \ R T E N D E R-F U L 1. time, brakes. Radio, excellent condi¬ tops, rebuilt engine, four new PON'TIAC 1955"Stan luef convert- condition. $185 or best offer. tion. Must sell. tires, $1,100. 1572 K Spartan blue paint, overhauled. 17,000 ible. Runs good, some rust. 1201 dition. Must sell. ED 2-6421 or Call 353-7434. nights. Good pay. Apply in per¬ Make offer. miles. Must sell. 332-8164; 337- 355-4491. son, 9-5. COZY LOUNGE, 1146 337-9435. 3-6/3 Village. 355-3238. 2-6/3 Lorraine. Price $75. Phone IV 3-6/3 195F1TONDA" W, 4 week's old. 1059. 2-6/3 800 miles, knobby tire, tops! S. Washington. 2-6/3 CI ii:\ROLET STATION Wagon in CORVEITE 1965. Beautiful bur- 2-3652. 3-6/3 VOLVO 1958, Good condition. JAGUAR 1965 Roadster 3.8 E Phone 489-6441. $385 or best offer. 351-5649. MATURE GIRL to stay in East oo.! coi Jition with trailer hitch gundy color. Convertible. Like PONTIAC 1965 Tempest. Clean, REACH \N1 !'••• T -L< )\ r RS .v<:h an.! box trailer. Will sell with new. Call ED 2-5096. 4-6/3 type. 17,000 miles. Candy apple good condition. Owned by house¬ 1-6/3 Lansing home 6-16 to 6-19. No | red. Excellent condition. Two Auto Service & Parts "HONDA 250cc Scrambler. Com¬ particular duties but must like or w;t'out trailer. Price $360. CORVETTE 1956 with 1964~I^ wife. Must sell. Phone 484-5566. tops. Must sell. Going in serv¬ animals. Call 337-9462 after 655-2931. 3-6, 3 NEW BATTERIES. Exchange pletely rebuilt. Oversize tire gine. Everything new, immac¬ ice. $4,000. Call 5:30 pm. 2-6/3 351-4795.5-6/3 PORSCHE 1958 Blue coupe. price from $7.95. New sealed and sprocket, A-l. $500 takes. ulate. No reasonable offer re¬ Good COLLEGE Campers fused. IV 5-7990. 1500 Lind¬ JEEPSTER convertible. Alabama motor. Must sell. $650. Call beams, 99/ Co nip a n ion ship Accountant Retail Management . . $",000 $7,000 ✓ Casual Insurance Adjuster . . $6,200 tin porches overlooking the Red G ratification SALES ross the street) ... IF you enjoy STREET DANCE Publication^ .... $7,SOP Industrial $7,500 Benefit for Electrical ditioniii"'. $7,200 carpeting, dishwashers Pharmaceutical . . . $7,000 You give a Swinging World 'THE PAPKIC Institutional $6,500 IF ant lots of parking space . . .' YAMAHA It's the gift that keeps on of fun when you give a Yamaha 1 Campus 60 for graduation. going to college, to worl«, , featuring ' TECHNICAL everywhere! Big bike styling. Center tank, telescopic the beautiful 00 335 new front forks, upswept pipe, oil injection. Plenty of pep.. the famous Industrial Engineer ..$12,000 50-55 mph. Economical to own and operate. A Mechanical Engineer. Campus $12,000 60 is ideal since many colleges do not allow freshmen FULL PRICE Electrical Engineer .. $11,000 to have cars on campus. Put your graduate on a Low Down Payment .IJamos tit. Methods and Time Study . . . Yamaha, the top selling 2-stroke sportcycle in the U.S. $10,000 .Hlcmmnl luult &57 liur- LEAD or Rhythm guitar player, OKEMOS. THREE room fur- 2195. 4-6/3 vate entrance, parking. IV Two "visiting priests Sales & Service, at the nished. Utilities paid. $100 per campus. Summer only. 337- cliam Woods Apartment 15avail¬ must sing. I have summer bar VERY LARGE, top floor apart- 4-5898. 2-6/3 will be here Capitol Park Motor Hotel, 2345. 5-6/J able now. Reduced rate sum¬ month. Married couple. Call IV 2-1491. ext. 154.Thurs¬ job. Friday, Saturday nights. ment, sundeck. University Ter¬ and/or fall. St. John Student Parish West Detroit. 355-2645. 3-6/3 337-9676. 1-6/3 FRANDOR, NEAR. Large fur- mer 3-6/3 SINGLE ROOM, ii il .. Approved by WANTED: BIKE to rent for sum- could hear the duckling peeping inside the mits she doesn't "know how she's going :-i; Frandor; 303 S. Shaw Farm Lanes). 50£ DSIA. Call 482-0864, AMERI- mer. Men's or woman's. Prefer ner - shell," she continued. to carry them on the plane." IV 4-1317. C3-6/3 person. Benefit: "The Paper." CAN DIAPER SERVICE. 1914 3-speed with basket. 337-1537. Over 20 prospective "mothers" filled Judy will take the third duckling and ~f l/RN'TlURE; bar E. Gier Street. C 2"6/3 PSYCI1EDILIC SERVICES: Old the room to svatch the first hatching. "They Phyliss has spoken for the fourth one. DIAPER SERVICE, Lansing's RIDERS WANTED from New York "The others do not yet have homes," bottles collected free. Apart¬ stood on top of the desks, and sat on the finest. Your choice of three Nan said, "we're waiting until ments cleaned to landlords City to MSU, leaving June 19for bookshelves," recalled Phyliss Mosier, they hatch types. Containers furnished, no Summer term. 355-8891. 3-6/3 North Muskegon junior. before we find homes for them," she ex¬ specifications. Shuttle service deposit. You may include two to Detroit "One girl sat under one desk, Phyliss plained. airports.All pro¬ -i VlNf, MACHINE Sale. vided pounds baby clothes. Try our Wanted Large by desperate poverty Velva-soft process, 25 years GIRL'S BIKE (English pre- stricken students. 332-5652. in Lansing. BY-LO DLVPER ferred), must be in good condi- SER VICE. 1010 E.Michigan, Peanuts Personal tion. Call 355-5977 after 6 pm. , Necchi. $19.9 ..tee!. Easy l to rms. TING $39.95. ED- CO., IO THE KING of the Round Table: It's been a very jood two years. IV 2-0421. Typing Serv C 3-6/3 Senators Attack Report On CMU » . ton. 489-6448. JuSt tfrMcJu.sifeer June 20, ANN Trustees should review their BROWN, typ. ,. - (continued from page 1) probe MSU's role in a Viet Nam C3-6/3 more **freedies", you'll be in "f'l.rx IANK vacuum the big time and I'll be picking lith offset printing. Disserta- tions, theses, manuscripts, genr g2c5Sifled Ad' *^USt di31 355~ "but their fortune may not con¬ tinue. public assistance project last month. budget procedures, allowing faculty greater influence in de¬ peanuts! Good luck in DE-troit. eral typing. IBM, 16 years ex- WANTED TO buy: a copy of the "Indeed, the recent probing by The report said'proponents of ciding on money that is spent. Ru: looks excep- DEAR SAM, know, Marsha no perience. 332-8384. C 1962 Wolverine. Phone 355- a House committee at Michigan the investigation agreed that it Eliminate wide disparities in 1-6031. C3-6/3 even in my mind) 2796. 2-6/3 was not the intent of the investi¬ teaching load. EXPERIENCED manuscript and State University came very close fie careful i the big city this Consider Dissertation rV's - TABLE MODELS, Port- to getting out of hand." gation to interfere with CMU's a faculty member's I didn't say be Typist. Refer¬ , Near ables, wanted "Dead or alive." Potter also chose to criticize curriculum or its approach to participation on academic com¬ harass "Boston ences. Kellogg Center. mittees factor in $35. Call 669-9413.3-6/3 332-5545. TROTTER'S TV, 3811 N. U.S. the state Board of Education knowledge, but to view the situ¬ as a awarding 5-6/3 ;t fall, just take 27. Phone IV 2-4750. ation from an "employer - em¬ pay raises. 2-6/3 whose silence, he said, should . Love, Mother. have been ployee standpoint," and in par¬ Review CMU's organization * a subject of greater THE bell tolls and ticular, to determine if the right structure "in view of its tre¬ REGIS! ERED Alas! once furniture in good conditio... discussion on the part of the com¬ been great fun. Don't mendous growth." s Lansing Furniture Co. Phone mittee. normally i ncumbent on each t those poison pen Set board or court to IV 9-9041. 2-6/3 If Lynn M. Bartlett, former group which shaped academic up a letters, I'll be watching from FAST, EFFICIENT typing. Call superintendent of public instruc¬ policy was adhered to by this provide jury trials whenever a WlSH TO SUBLEASE apartment "peanut land". Boss. 1-6, 3 Shirley Me:.se, FE c>-2351. tion, had- not unwittingly de¬ university. case arises involving punish¬ Summer term. Single-bedroom ment by impostion or fine. U.J. YOU really have done a won- TERM PAPER, quickly and ac- stroyed some records while mov¬ Other recommendations cited dcrful job. It has been my plea- preferred. Lowest bidder. 332- Prohibit university officers curately done by experienced 3316. ing his office from the state by the committee included: sure for the past two years. thesis typist. Two blocks from 2-6/3 Blanketing all faculty mem¬ from sitting on bank boards in capitol to new headquarters, the A.H.L. Union. 337-2737. 3-6/3 HELP HELP! STRUG¬ bers under the teacher tenure banks where university money ... investigation probably would not '85 Kiva GLING new Boy Scout Troop is is deposited. . HELEN DeMeritt, ac have been necessary, the report badly in need of used uniforms, Board of Trustees adopt a The report emphasized it would ii. > Will pick-up and deliver. said. camping equipment, etc. Please practice of cost-of-living raises not recommend penalizing CMU . All a ; you. More 35tf page. Call 393-0795. 4-6/3 The chief recommendation call 355-5063 and quote us a to all faculty members. by urging reduction of appropria¬ made by the five-man committee, PAULA ANN HAUGIIEY, typist. tions by thelegislature. HE INITIATIVE EL BABY, keep that super hat price on what you have stored is that the faculty be allowed full Denial of pay raises to four IBM Selectric and Executive. andy for away in attic or basement. 8-6/3 particular faculty members super thinking, you'll Multilith Offset Printing. Pro¬ participation in determining aca¬ -•ed demic p ol i c y-ma k i ng "atall should be reconsidered. (1 won't be here to do Lit Awards ,t. fessional theses typing. Near WANTED: USED lathe, drill iuse things lor levels." Standard of usefulness to the you anymore... press and other machines and campus. 337-1527. C keep tell tools for home Also expressed was a hope that university should be daopped be¬ ^KK,LVK hobby shop. "■ le?) Best wishe ' enced typist.vuepg: MSU graduate. Phone 355-0865. 5-6/3 present members of the univer¬ sity's administration would soon cause it is ambiguous. Banquet Held " P \ RKWOOD, 12' x 5S Call 339-8751. 2-6/3 GET TENANTS QUICKER by de¬ JACOBSON'S head of the clas: Let's be replaced by leaders who are Winners of the annual MSU De¬ out. Many extras. Must si ribing your vacancies ou can make it out of T ransportation "new and vigorous." velopment Fund Literature appreciate, on beautiful Classified section. Dial 355- f:-• nt lot. Must sacrifice TUCSON, ARIZONA 8255 now. Hearings into alleged problems East Wilson Awards were announced Thurs¬ at CMU began May 17, 1965. day in Parlor C of the Union. 625-3031, Perry. rider. VANT GIRL'S ENGLISH bike. Leaving Jui 10. Call In all 105 witnesses testified with ' Award winners for poetry