T uesday The State News . . Cloudy. •• . . .operations, philoso­ Windy and cooler with M IC H IG A N possible showers In the phy, and stru c tu re are afternoon. High i n t h e m id EW S thoroughly discussed by E d i t o r - I n - C h i e f Kyle STATE 6 0 ’ s. Kerbawy in a two-page a r t i c le on pp. 8 - 9 in to­ U N IV E R S IT Y day’ s paper. E a st Lansing, Michigan O cto b er 4, 1966 P r ic e 10c V o l. 59, N um ber 53 Ik e S a y s Q u ic k End N e c e s s a r y In V ie t W ar terview with U.S. News and World Re­ We must wage this war in such a way "The Congress is entitled to know WASHINGTON (if) —The political up­ port released Monday, as to win it as quickly as possible.” and if the matter is to be considered roar over Viet Nam welled up Monday during an election campaign, the voters 'T he popular philosophy that we can The former president said he was not in a fresh win-the-war-now demand by of the nation are entitled to know,” the by cautious and timid military tactics, trying to set himself up as a competent Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower and a stout keep the war from escalating into a authority to criticize the President. E i­ Montana senator declared. defense of President Johnson's peace larger conflict is the ultimate in mili­ senhower said he gave his advice only efforts by Senate Democratic Leader Mike The arms-length exchange of Demo­ tary blindness,” Lemay said. when requested, but he conceded Johnson Mansfield. cratic and Republican viewpoints came had not asked for It at this time. after retired Gen. Curtis E. Lemay, ‘The only way to win a war is to He added: 'I f I had the responsibi­ At almost the moment Mansfield was former Air Force chief of staff, had escalate it one way or another above what lity, just as soon as I could I would bring telling his Senate colleagues the voters called present strategy in Viet Nam “the the enemy can take. If we feel we can’t this thing to a conclusion. Everything have a right to know whether Eisenhower ultimate in military blindness.” win without unacceptable risk, we have must take a backseat to winning a war is advocating nuclear attacks, the Repub­ Lemay recorded his views in an in­ no business fighting in the first place. and that goes for social programs.” lican former president was saying he would not automatically preclude the use of such weapons in Viet Nam. "I would do anything that would bring the war to an honorable solution as ra­ pidly as I could,” Eisenhower told news­ NORM iG RESS?’ men after attending a meeting of the Re­ publican Coordinating Committee of which he is a member. In response to a question as to whether he included the use of nuclear weapons, he replied: "1 would not automatically D e c is io n u p to d ra ft b o a rd preclude anything.” Although Eisenhower Indicated he was speaking in terms of holding the threat of By S T E V E G A T ES pendent of the definition used for Selective Thus the 12-credit minimum is suf­ nuclear weapons over the North Vietna­ State News Staff W r i t e r ficient to qualify a student as full time. Service purposes. mese and not advocating their actual use Though students now carrying as few as He said that the University will follow But It is usually not enough to be consider­ at this point, his views were likely to be 10 credits pay full-time fees, resulting the national guidelines, as set by the ed "normal progress” If maintained for given a wide variety of interpretations from action taken by the board of trus­ Selective Service and endorsed by such more than one or two terms, because a around the world. tees, they must continue to carry a groups as the American Council of Educa­ student must average 45 credits per year Mansfield, a critic of administration po­ minimum of 12 credits to be classified tors, the U.S. Office of Education, and to graduate in the normal four -year period. licies, attacked those at home and abroad as full-time students for draft purposes. state and national associations of college who question the "honesty of President Previous to this term, the division for registrars in determining whether a stu­ King emphasized, however, that the Johnson’s flexible proposals” for peace fee purposes was 12 or more credits for dent is full-time or part-time for draft student’s local board determines what is in Viet Nam. “I do not doubt his honesty full-time fees, which decreased fees for purposes. normal progress, not the University, Agony Of War and sincerity,” he said. Did Eisenhower’s earlier statement 10-11 credits and further reductions for King also noted that the Selective Service It is the student’s responsibility to keep 6-9 credits, 3-6 credits, and 0-3 credits. considers not only whether a student is mean he would employ up to two million However, at its June meeting, the board the local board informed of any special Pain is a constant elem e n t of war. Wounded in the battle f o r the ‘‘ Rock full time, but also whether the student is men, invade North Viet Nam and use of trustees eliminated the 10-11 credit fee circumstances which may slow his pro­ P i l e ” , a hill overlooking North Vietn am e se in filtra tio n routes, these making '‘normal progress” toward a de­ nuclear weapons, Mansfield inquired? category as part of its across-the- gress in school, he added. M a r i ne s have learned the meaning of pain firs th a nd . - - U P I Telephoto gree. board fee increase. Students carrying 10-11 credits now cross Grand River pay full-time fees. However, national MSU - UM game set to follow S^’e^tive Service guidelines still set 12 credits as the minimum for men to be considered full-time students for draft 8 0 0 purposes. World Series on TV Saturday Thus, students carrying enough credits to be classified as full-time by theUniver- slty will not be considered full-time for draft board purposes if they are carrying t o h e a r F e r l i n g h e t t i only 10 or 11 credits. By A N D R E W M O L L IS O N Groat warned his audience that they were Wolverine and Spartan fans alike will Registrar Horace C. King explained that State News Executive R e p o rte r about to hear poetry. He also praised the be able to view whatever portion of the the new definition for fee purposes was Michigan-Michigan State football game people for coming, and told them: set by the board of trustees for purely "That’s what happens when the Univer­ remains following Saturday’s world series 400...300...200... 100 F a n s h e l d n i g h t v i g i l financial reasons and was completely inde­ sity fails to realize that banning us just baseball game on Channel 10. 500 gives us more publicity than anything Exactly how much of the game will be 600 else." for telecast depends upon the length of the 700...800...Poet Then Ferlinghetti. From the door of the State Theater A real live speaking zen-symbol-chain- series game to be played in Baltimore, 5 0 - y a r d - l i n e s e a t s (marquee reading SEDUCED AND ABAN­ on-his neck poet. Engaged in real free Md. starting at noon. DONED and TO BED OR NOT TO BED) enterprise with something to say about Hopefully, however, as under similar It didn’t m a tte r that tick et d i s t r i - Some of the group were among to the corner of Abbott and Grand River underwear and LBJ and Christ and God circumstances two years ago, more than b u t i o n fo r the M S U - U - M g a m e those to re ceive the f i r s t block of Ave. (WALK DON’T WALK) to the corner is Alive and is consciousness and we should half of the contest, which starts at 1:30 wouldn’t begin f o r 17 hours — the tickets f o r the M S U - - U - M game two of Grand River Ave. and Evergreen, then expand our consciousness and Viet-Mind p.m., will be telecast. f i r s t students sta rte d to wait in y ea rs ago. for a time back down Evergreen St. and a rebirth of wonder and I am waiting The group actually re ce iv ed tic k ­ Monday stretched a long long llnq of but no longer for Billy Graham (and even “Every attempt will be made to show line Sunday at 3 p.m . A lb e rt J. Jetty, Negaunee gradu­ ets s ev era l yards off the fift y y a rd - Lawrence Ferlinghetti fans and poetry dropped the line saying I’m waiting for television viewers a play-back of thehigh- lin e . lovers. ate student, and R ic h a rd L . Powell, atomic tests to end) and applause after lights of the early game action,” says A group of men f r o m E a st Shaw Maybe. M t. Pleasant graduate student, stood every poem and parents who have sown Jim Adams, WMSB sports director. Hal! stood second in line. Would you believe, students who were f i r s t in line when the ticket office their wild seed and seen them grow up Permission for the telecast was granted The line outside the Fieldhouse sympathetic because Ferlinghetti couldn’t opened Monday at 8:15 a .m . into potted plants. by the National Collegiate Athletic A sso­ g re w to 50 Sunday at 11 p .m ., to speak on campus? Thousands of grey The two men re p res en ted a group Charming withal, and mildeyed, with a ciation acting on a request from Biggie 250 Monday at 6 a .m ., and had grown eight-and-one-half by eleven broadsides of 24 graduate students who decided clear husky voice, he gave the squares Munn, MSU’s athletic director. to o v e r 1,000 when d istribution be­ were deposited in the dormitories this to keep an a ll-n ig h t vigil at Jenison hell, did he not, fellow Infolk? Telecast of the game is made possible gan. weekend, Fieldhouse. by the willingness of WILX, the commer­ Students kept w a rm with blankets, "ZEITGEIST CONGRATULATES M.A.C. “ We wanted seats on the 50 y a rd - cial affliate of WMSB, to relinquish its Zeitgeist’s summer issue is considered normal programming time following the lin e ,” Powell said, “ and two hours each wasn’t too long to w a it .” sleeping bags and coffee throughout the night. pornographic by ranking members of the S ta te N e w s h o ld s baseball game. MSU administration. Allen Ginsberg is coming. Too.” And so on. annual open house While fan after fan (or poetry lover The State News will hold its annual after poetry lover, or rebel after rebel fall-term open house for students in­ LA W RENCE F E R L IN G H E T T I or whatever) moved into the State Theater C o n s tru c tio n e lim in a te s ” L B J and underwear too” Warren O. Wardwell, city manager of the W. S. Butterfield Theaters, marvelled. terested In joining the staff or in learn­ ing more about State News at 8:30 p.m. Thursday in Student Services Lounge. Downstairs in the lobby of the men’s State News operations will be discussed room, Ferlinghetti sat and chatted with and explained by the editors and other 5 0 0 p a r k in g sp a ces his own, and the remainder of the de­ I n e z is r o u g h Gary Groat, Zeitgeist editorial adviser, After the seats upstairs were full, staff members. Refreshments will be served. partment will still face the first come, By B OBBY SODEN State News Staff W r i t e r First of two parts first serve parking arrangement. Drivers with graduate employe per­ b u t B a h a m ia n s mits which allow specific north campus Six construction jobs in a half-mile area leave north campus 500 parking does not affect north campus, is up to lot use will meet the same problem . . . no space in the lots north of the Cedar. a re u n flu ste re d spaces short, causing a situation which 9,332 at this point. Student organizations who have in the All-University Traffic Committee mem­ The once-coveted Faculty-Staff permit past received grad employe permits when MIAMI, Fla (JP1 - - Coastal residents which enables its owner to drive and park needed have been drastically curtailed of Grand Bahama Island huddled with tour­ bers term critical. The parking shortage will become more anywhere on campus except in rented by the committee. ists In luxury Freeport hotels Monday noticeable Oct. 10 when the 128 spaces parking, is now useful only as a "hunt­ "We’ve been most lenient in the past in night as gale force winds and torren­ in Lot W behind Bessey are vacated, ing license." With the end of individual granting these permits," Reed said. tial rain from Hurricane Inez lashed ironically, to build a parking ramp, and reserved spaces for faculty and staff, Reed indicated that students with gradu­ the resort. will reach its worst point when professors many professors, administrators and Uni­ ate employe permits to be used while Tourists continued gambling at the Lu- begin moving into the new Kedzie addition. versity employes are finding themselves working for their organization, such as cayan Beach Hotel casino while the hur­ Construction workers will take one- walking from lots south of the Red Cedar ASMSU, had violated these permits in the ricane thrashed closer. The U.S. Weather River to their place of work. past and drove their cars to classes. Bureau sa id . it was expected to gain third of the parking spaces in Lot G near Giltner, according to Charles F. Beginning this fall, one reserved space The committee has even had to start strength before battering the northern Reed, assistant dean of veterinary medi­ per department is available only "for turning down graduate employe permits Bahamas. cine—continuing education and chairman use by one or more persons,” said James used by paralytic students, Reed said. of the All-University Traffic Committee. Tanck, Waterford, Wise., graduate stu­ Parking Lots E near Erickson, S near Her movement -- although generally More vehicles on the campus will pre­ dent, and member of the traffic committee. Shaw, D near Abrams Planetarium, P northward - - was erratic and the Weather sent another major problem, Reed ex­ Each space is Intended to serve several near Anthony, and C near the Judging Bureau raised gale warnings along the department personnel for a $30 annual Southeast Florida coast from Stuart to plained. fee paid from departmental funds, Tanck Pavillion will probably handle most of the overflow from north campus. All are Key Largo. Overflow Crowd Dept, of Public Safety figures show explained. metered or gated lots. A sudden lurch to the west could still The State T h e a te r was fille d to capacity today, not to see a movie, but 6,602 faculty-staff and 2,169graduateem- In actuality, the chairman of the de­ send Inez smashing into Miami, weather­ to listen to poet L aw ren ce F e rlin g h e tti. Some of the many who atten ded ploye vehicles registered at 5 p.m. F ri­ Next: What is being done to solve the partment will probably use the space as men warned. a re shown lined up to get in. — State News photos by John C astle day. Student vehicle registration, which parking problems on north campus? Kyle C. Kerbawy Eric Pianln, managing editor editor-ln-chlef James Spanlolo, campus editor STATI NEW Thomas Segal, editorial editor Laurence Werner, sports editor Joel Stark Andrew Mollison, executive reporter advertising manager Tuesday Morning, October 4, 1966 E D IT O R IA L S A S M S U M ust H a n d le O w n F u n ds L ast su m m er th e u n iv e r ­ w hy th e tr a n sfe r s w ere lie v e th a t th is e d ito r ia l had s ity b u s in e s s o ffic e tr a n s­ m a d e , b u t tw o p o s s i b l e r e a ­ s o m e th in g to do w ith th e fe r r e d several d e fic its in son s have been su g g e ste d . t r a n s f e r s . W hen R u m p sa w a s s p e c ia l a c c o u n ts of A SM SU ask ed fo r a rea so n fo r th e in to o n e a c c o u n t . E d ito rial to b la m e ? tr a n sfe r he r e fu se d to g iv e T h is w a s d o n e a r b it r a r ily one -- s h o w in g th e r e p o r t e r O n e e x p la n a t io n i s th a t th e w ith o u t t h e c o n s e n t o f a n y a c o p y o f th e e d i t o r i a l w h ic h B u s i n e s s O f f ic e a c t e d in r e ­ ASM SU o ffic e r s . he h a d e n c l o s e d in p l a s t i c . a c tio n to a S ta te N ew s e d i­ If th is w as a rea so n fo r to r ia l c o m p la in g th a t it h ad R e c e n tly , at th e u r g in g o f th e c h a n g e , w e c a n ’t h e lp b u t th e pow er to im p o s e a r ig id J im G raham and o th e r s of w onder w hat k in d o f o ffic e s t u d e n t ta x str u c tu r e on A SM SU, th e B u s in e s s O ffic e w o u ld m ake i m p o r t a n t In fla tio n .* r e v e r se d th e se tr a n sfe r s. A SM SU . c h a n g e s in r e t a l i a t i o n The e d ito r ia l, w h ic h w as a g a in s t an u n r e la te d e d it o r ­ T h is la tte r m ove w a s th e ia l in a stu d e n t n e w sp a p e r . T h e S p ir a l p r o p e r th in g to d o c o n s i d e r ­ c r i t i c a l of P au l R u m p sa, M SU c o m p t r o lle r , s a id n o th ­ in g th e c ir c u m s ta n c e s , but it s h o u ld n o t h a v e b e e n n e c ­ in g a b o u t d e f i c i t s in a n y a c ­ W ro ng p r o c e d u r e H ere A t M SU essary. The b u s in e s s o ffic e c o u n t s a n d m o s t c e r t a i n l y d id The o th e r rea so n w h ic h I n fla tio n is in th e new s s h o u ld not have m ade th e not urge th e r e s u l t i n g change. has been su g g e ste d is th a t th is year. B u t to m o s t p e o ­ o r ig in a l t r a n s f e r . T here is r e a s o n to b e - th e b u s in e s s o f f ic e m a d e th e p le it is s o m e th in g o u t t h e r e No one e x p la in e d e x a c tly changes as an a d ju stm e n t in th e econom y. N ot so fo r f o r th e y e a r l y a u d it. M S U s t u d e n t s l i v i n g in r e s i ­ ELLEN Z U R K E Y If th is is tru e, th e b u s i­ d e n c e h a lls . n e s s o f f i c e , r a t h e r th a n j u g ­ up I n fla tio n p u s h e d d o r m f e e s $15 th is te r m . A nd s tu ­ A r t Is N o t A T h in g . g le a c c o u n t s , s h o u ld im p r o v e An i m m o d e s t p r o p o s a l i t s b o o k k e e p in g s y s t e m . d en t e m p lo y e s w e r e p le a s e d to d is c o v e r th e m i n i m u m I t ’s A M e t h o d no T h e d e fic its a r e th e r e and am ount of ju g g lin g w ill o r , m o t e ls u n v i s i t e d w age on cam pus w e n t u p to A few days ago Don Sockol wrote a He sm iles unbelievingly. erase th e m . To even a t­ column on this page for the benefit of the "You bring a deck of cards and I’ll $ 1 .4 0 f r o m $ 1 .2 5 . entine builders put as much art into hang­ Never, in the whole garrulous history tem p t is to tr y fo r an ar­ fledgling coed. He told her of the dif­ bring a monopoly game. Sounds like B o th th e $15 r o o m -a n d - ing a lavatory door (you can still see that ferent types of men-wolves to be found on fun, huh?” of human imbecility, has so much piffle tific ia l s o lu tio n to a real board h ik e an d th e w a g e in ­ by the quality of the hinges) as the paint­ the MSU campus. He pauses and then says, "I forgot been written about art. T oday we are now ers put into the pictures which now hang p r o b le m . But—alas—like so many other male I have to walk my dog tonight.” crease are tie d to g e th e r in art conscious and culture-minded . . . . in the Uffizi Gallery. Whereas we have reporters before him he offered no solu­ The next girl matches wits with her We subsidize art, genuflect before it, and W h a te v e r th e r e a s o n s fo r an in fla tio n a r y s p ir a l: one truncated living by removing art, ampu­ tion as to how she might handle the sit­ suitor when he says, "Let’s go to a mo­ at empt to popularize it. Festivals of tated culture from work and delegated th e t r a n s f e r , it r a is e s a fu n ­ uation. tel tonight." o f th e p r im a r y reason s fo r art spring up ih the oddest places. Hav­ ing established the Welfare State, we are it to leisure. This is degenerate. Being a senior, 1 too have had time to She says, "John, I didn’t know you f We inhabit the shoddy, we eat the pro­ d a m e n ta l q u e s tio n a b o u t th e r a is in g th e dorm c o sts w as moving busily towards the Artistic State, study the male and female types who roam cared so much." cessed, we ride about in a rattle and com ­ b a s is o f stu d en t g o v e r n m e n t. campus. "Sure,” he reassures her. to pay fo r th e h ik e in stu - in which every town will have its art gal­ pensate for this tawdriness by venerating Like Don, I am all for helping the poor "Then I can bring my sheep too?" she lery and every city a civic theater. If th e r e i s r e a l l y g o in g to dent w a g es. W ages go up what was well-made in previous civiliza­ freshman in her social life at MSU. asks. To me one aspect of this movment is tions . . . . be a s tu d e n t g o v e r n m e n t it After her first full week-end on cam­ "Sheep?” he says. and p r ic e s go u p - w a g e s - g o - nauseating. For underlying it is the fallacy The current notion that art is some­ s h o u ld b e o p e r a te d b y s tu ­ pus she may have already realized that "Yes, I have to count sheep to fall u p -p r ic e s -g o -u p -w a g e s -g o - that art is a commodity: Something to thing produced only from studios in Mont­ each type needs to be handled a little asleep nights,” she says. do with leisure and nothing to do with d e n ts and n o t b y th e B u s i ­ martre or Chelsea or Greenwich Village differently — each is a special case unto u p -p r ic e s . . . living. Indeed, the way we pad around is as barbaric as the belief in witch doc­ n e s s O ffic e . him self. T h is v ic io u s c y c le ca n n o t gawping at museums of art (in our le i­ tors. There is more chance of finding Of course all girls—in the end—say sure moments from manufacturing the hi­ e a s ily be sto p p e d , fo r it deous and shoddy) is a kind of necro­ art in factories making bicycles or frying "no" to going to a motel for the night. No p lac e like hom e c u ts th r o u g h th e e n t ir e e c o ­ philia. With these double standards we pans. ASMSU a facade? But it’s the (subtle) way she says it that Wouldn’t it be strange if a trade union counts. Then there’s the absentminded type. are schizoid. struck, not because its members wanted nom y, not ju st M SU d o r m s . The overzealous male is straightfor­ He’s forgotten things all night long and The notion that art is something we more money, but because they wanted If th e B u s in e s s O ffic e ward but no doubt he dates a girl who now at the end of the date he pulls up For e x a m p le , th e n a tio n a l reproduce to hang on our walls, when more scope for their skills—if they want­ is , too. in front of a motel. ed to turn out Rolls-Royces instead of w o n ’ t a llo w s t u d e n t s to m a k e r is e in th e cost of liv in g we can afford it, that it is something we He says directly: "Didn’t I tell you?" he says. read when we’ve nothing better or more mobile tin cans? That would be an in­ d e c is io n s ab ou t stu d e n t a f­ "How’d you like to go to a motel "No.” p u s h e d th e s tu d e n t m in im u m crease in culture and art. But there is useful to do, is degenerate. fa ir s , th e U n iv e r s it y s h o u ld tonight, baby?’’ "I must have forgotten. But yotl haven't w age up. T h is c o m b in e d Art is not a thing. It is a method. It little chance of it happening. She replies with enthusiasm: anything against staying in a motel tonight, is not tangible or saleable. A rtis not the Meanwhile we pursue the sickening do aw ay w ith o p e r a tin g be­ "Sure. How about the Sands in Las have you?" w ith r is in g fo o d p r ic e s to picture on the wall but the skill which notion that art is something which is in­ Vegas? We can fly round trip for only "No," she says. h in d a fa c a d e o f stu d e n t g o ­ fo rce dorm c o sts up $15. goes into building the wall itself . . . . tended to amuse and divert us. As Plato $108.82 apiece now that we both have our "Mom and Dad own the place and they’ll The m in im u m w age had Many paintings and poems are paint­ said: "If it is that, it is a mere toy.” v e r n m e n t. stand-by ID cards." be happy to see me home.” ed so clumsily or written so shoddily to­ With these values about, I often regret On th e o t h e r hand, if He concentrates intensely. to go up. But le t ’s not day that they contain no element of art that I am a poet and not a plumber. She continues with more enthusiasm whatsoever. They communicate nothing, The plumber still knows he is useful. A SM SU is to c o n t in u e u n d e r than ever: r e jo ic e about it. It’s ju st are only examples of self -expression, an But in an age of mass literacy, poetry th e r u b r ic o f s tu d e n t g o v e r n ­ "We can even make it back for our one m ore ste p up th e in f la ­ expression of vacuity. was the first thing to go down the drain. 9 o'clocks on Mondayl” We have forgotten that the word "har­ m e n t, it s h o u ld be a llo w e d tio n a r y la d d e r -- a la d d e r w h o se to p rung is out of mony” —harmonia--in Greek means Join­ — R O N A L D D U N C A N , poet and to be a stu d e n t g o v e r n m e n t The sub tle negativ e ery or carpentry--that is, something made d ra m a tis t, in the Weekend in f a c t a s w e l l a s in p h r a s e . Then there’s the shy girl. s ig h t. by craft and s k ill. . . . Telegraph of London. "Want to go to a motel tonight?” he --T h e E d ito rs At the time of Renaissance the Flor­ - - T h e E d ito r s says. ->H u ll-Ill S i i m i "Well, Mike . . .’* I I :m -int; Mi< "Yes," he encourages. TED M ILBY "Gee," she manages a sm ile. "Anything you say is all right with me* "Well, Mike, ok," she says. R o b b e ry in th e d o rm s presidents, who decide what is to happen with the establishment until he has moved is all right because the dorm government to the money, have a vested interest in If you live in a dorm, you’ve just been in and is settled, and by that time it is is operated on a democratic basis. the dorm government. They have the status But this argument loses much of its STUDENTS held up. too late to do anything. of being presidents of a house of fifty The collection of dorm dues, as it is In some dorms the system is so well effectiveness when one considers certain people. They have their names on a bulletin commonly done around here, is little more developed that if a student doesn’t have aspects of how dorm "democracy” oper­ board in the hall lobby, and above all than a University-operated extortion mill. the money with him he is required to sign ates. they find themselves in the position of This extortion mill operates on a system a statement saying that he will pay the At the first of the year, when most people having final say over several thousand that is practically foolproof, for it seems dues within a certain time. are still getting acquainted with the people dollars of other people’s money. to be cloaked in all the authority of the To be sure, the perpetrators of the on their floor, a floor president is elected. Since it would decrease the importance University, and catches the student at an system are not villains. They are doing He is the floor’s representative to the of dorm government and thus lessen their awkward moment so that even those stu­ what they think is best for the students, general council and thus the person who own new found status, they are not likely dents who wish to object, admittedly a and the money is used to provide services makes decisions about what is to be done to either return some of the money to for the students who pay it. with the money. K eep your p a r e n ts in fo r m e d of th e is s u e s minority, are in no position to do so. the students or hold an election to see if The way the system works is that before The trouble is that in doing what they Two points now show up which makes students want a dorm government. and e v e n ts at M ic h ig a n S ta te w ith a s u b s c r ip ­ you are allowed to move into your room, think is best for the students, they fail this floor democracy less effective than to respect individual rights. its defenders would have us believe. tio n to th e S t a t e N e w s . a smiling gentleman with a receipt book What can be done about it? says in effect "nine dollars in dorm dues Furthermore they are paying attention First, the money has been collected If by any chance you got into the dorm please — no money, no key!” to what they think is best for students, before the general council first meets, without paying dues make an issue of Even if the student does feel that it not necessarily what students prefer. or is even elected. the whole thing by refusing to pay. But is unfair, he is in no position to argue Defenders of the system claim that it Second, and more important, these house unless several people are willing to try this at the same time, this approach is F o r d e ta il s s e e page 9. .0-4 not likely to settle very much. PEA N U TS (JELL, U M T DO VOU THINK ? A more realistic approach, however, is to put pressure on your house president to have an election held to determine exactly what the residents of the hall want. The existing system is formidable and well entrenched, but it is not immune to correction if enough people decide to try to reform it — will you help? M ichigan State N ews, East Lansing, Michigan Tuesday, October 4, 1966 3 C areers '6 6 ' o p e n s W aiver exams aim ed at top 10 pet. of class M o n d a y a t U n io n By L Y L E HANSON models of car engines and a medi­ day and then they will have to State News Staff W r i t e r Careers *66 is triggered to keep the plan flexible enough to cal association brings in a model W a iv e r exams In the U n iv e rs ity College o ff e r no go. of the human body. make necessary changes as the panacea f o r th e average student, according to W i l­ With less than a week before displays are hauled in. the University’s vocational infor­ Several years ago a telephone la rd W a rrin g to n , d ir e c t o r of Evaluation S e rvices. display complete with dlalable There’s always the chance that U n iv e r s ity College students in the upper 10 p er mation show opens, the executive the display meant for the second telephones blew a fuse in the cent of t h e ir class a re encouraged to undertake committee’s main worry is plan­ floor turns out to be too large Union. independent study, leading to some of the twelve ning where to put the displays to be carted up the steps of The student executive com­ e xa m s o ffered. from the 83 companies partici­ the Union. It stays on first, and mittee and the Placement Bureau E x a m s a re available In the areas of natural pating. won’t begin mapping out whereto last-minute shuffles have to be Formerly known as Career science, social science, A m e ric a n thought and lan­ place the displays until Wednes­ made. guage, and h u m anities. E x am s a re taken on the f i r s t Carnival, Careers '66 will give students from freshmen to doc­ day of re g is tra tio n each t e rm . toral candidates a perspective of T h is f a ll s data reveal that 51 p er cent of the the 1966-67 Job market. W E E K ’S S E C O N D 2,809 e xam s taken September 26 made passing C a r e e r ‘6 6 ’ Representatives from the par­ scores. It is possible f o r any department to o ffe r w a iv e r Getting ready f o r c a re e rs *66 a re this y e a r ’s cha irm e n ; M a r t y Rosenfield, F lin t, s enior, Betty Ann H arvy, Akron, Ohio, senior and Tom P r ic e , East Lansing, ticipating companies will answer questions from students visiting their booths set up on the first N e w A frican nation e xa m s , said E d w a rd C a r lin , dean of U n iv e rs ity C ollege. In pra ctice , however, few w a iv e r exams s e n io r. C a r e e r s ’ 66 w ill take place O c to b e r 10 and 11 in the Union. and second floors of the Union. are given outside U n iv e rs ity College. - - S t a t e News photo Careers ’66 opens at 6:30 p.m. Monday and runs through Tues­ declqred to d a y “ T h ey are a reasonable test of whether o r not a student has m a stered the m a t e r i a l , ” said Dean day evening. Last year 15,000 C a r l in . “ H o w e v e r,” he added, “ w a iv e r exams can students visited the show. MASERU, Basutbland (i) - the weekend for the ceremonies. n ev er wholly substitute fo r actual c lassroo m ex­ R IO T IN G IN A F R IC A Independence for Basutoland p e r ie n c e s ." The companies participating Africa got its second new nation Involve a broad scope of inter­ within a week at one minute past leaves nearby Swaziland, sche­ ests. They include Dow Chemical midnight today as Basutoland, a duled for independence in 1968, Co., the Bell Telephone System, British enclave surrounded by and rebellious Rhodesia the last STORE HOURS: MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 5 0 0 b e l i e v e d d e a d i n f o r a y British territories inAfrica.Ba- 9:30 AM TO 5:30 PM insurance companies, m e d i c a l South Africa, became indepen­ WEDNESDAY NOON UNTIL 9 PM groups, the armed forces, the dent Lesotho, Sutoland has been a British pro­ National Association of Social Last Friday Botswana, form­ tectorate since 18o8. Workers, the Hotel Corporation erly Bechuanaland, became the b e t w e e n N i g e r i a n s , I b o s of American and even the Reli­ first black-ruled country to bor­ the flight of thousands from the gious Advisers Association of der white-ruled South Africa, LAGOS, Nigeria (AP) — Re­ were massacred in fighting over OUPON vast northern region. Special MSU. Princess Marina, Duchess of sentment smoldering for decades the weekend at Kano International Varied employers bring in Just Kent, represented her n i e c e , planes chartered by large firms in Nigeria between proud north­ Airport and in the Sagon Gari - erners and the ambitious Ibos *'the stranger’s quarter” - out­ are flying out workers from their as widely varying displays. Judi­ Queen Elizabeth II at the in­ Secret cial-looking pillars surround a dependence ceremonies, as she of the east has flared again side the ancient walled city of northern branches, although the Kano airport still is closed to display of the Michigan State did at Botswana. Representatives into bloody violence in which Kano, once the depot for Sa­ commercial flights. About 6,000 Bar. General Motors brings in of 43 countries arrived over DtNmrt more than 500 persons are be­ hara caravans. One source said lieved to have perished since the estimate of 300 was conser­ Ibos have fled the north in the last two months to their tribal U N IV E R S IT Y Reg. 1.00 Wednesday. vative. LBJ p le a averts Perhaps 300 - mostly Ibos - The clashes have quickened homeland in the east. Most of Nigeria’s eight million Ibos live in the east, which contains BEAUTY SALON 7 / W “ Lim it 1 580 World Nows areas with a population density of 1,200 persons to the square m ile, among the most crowded G.E. strike WASHINGTON lif) - At least Void 10-5-66 at a Glance 14,800 union employes of Gener­ OUPON in Africa. At least 200 other persons al Electric walked off their jobs have been killed since Wednes­ at three plants today. But a h a i t SMfers day, according to body counts in nationwide strike against the huge hospitals and morgues but the defense supplier appeared to have Shampoo (tube) Rioting to be inv estig ate d toll is considered incomplete. been averted by a presidential A spokesman for the military plea. W A S H IN G TO N ( A P ) — Rep. Edwin E . W i l l i s an­ regime said "a move is being President Johnson asked the Reg. 1.09 nounced today that the House C o m m itte e on Un- made” to arrange a meeting be­ company and unions to maintain A m e r ic a n A ctiv ities w ill investigate the possible tween the head of the govern­ plant operations while negotia­ ro le of subversive elem en ts in recent mass violence ment, Lt. Col. Yakubu Gowonand tions continued, c o n t e n d i n g a L im iti 7 7 ( the four regional military gover­ strike would damage the Viet and rioting. Void 10-5-66 W illis # c om m ittee c h a irm a n , said the in q u iry will nors, including Lt. Col. C. Odu- Nam war effort. deal with " o n ly one thing — planned and organized About 13,300 workers walked “A husband is whai is lett over megwu Ojukwu of the east. after the nerve has been ex* violence by subversiv e e le m e n ts .” No public h ea r­ off their jobs at GE’s Schenec­ OUPO tady, N.Y., plant. Some 1,100 traded.” sighs Sassy ings have been scheduled. The north vs. east bitterness employes struck the firm ’s Car- was a problem long before the current crisis and has its roots boloy Products Division at War­ YitaninG in the differing traditions of two ren, Mich,, and 400 union drafts­ Ike r a p s c r i m e and violence regions. The north ruled it­ men struck the GE plant at Pitts­ 100 mg 100's self for three centuries before field, Mass. Union spokesmen WASHINGTON if) — Former ating Committee. ”1 think the P r e s i d e n t Dwight D. E isen­ Republicans ought to take the the British colonized the area said these walkouts involved lo­ Reg. 69< S t a n le y B la c k e r e n d o r s e s the hower said Monday Republi­ strongest possible position to at the beginning of the century and cal issues. cans s h o u l d advocate stern steps to deal with crime and remove this curse,” Republican National Chair­ retained the autocratic emirs as important figures in a system known as "indirect rule.” The The remaining 105,200 union employes apparently were hon­ oring the President’s plea for a Limit 1 290 tre n d to th e d o u b le - b r e a s te d b la z e r violence, man Ray C, B liss, reporting Void 10-5-66 "I think the public is right­ on the committee meeting, said northerners, most Hausa tribes­ two-week postponement in a na­ In d isp u tab le lea d er o f fall casual fully very definitely angry,” Viet Nam remains the No, 1 men are proud of their tradi­ tionwide walkout which had been Elsenhower told reporters after concern of voters. tion. scheduled for 12:01 a.m. OUPO f a s h i o n . . . the d o u b l e - b r e a s t e d , four- a meeting of the GOP Coordin- Desert Flower button b lazer, tastefu lly tailored Iowa State b o m b e r p lea d s guilty A M E S , I o w a (A P )'A n Iowa State U n iv e rs ity chem­ i s t r y student pleaded g uilty Monday to making a S.B.S. a n n o u n c e s!!! Hand & Body Lotion 2.00 Value of w o o l fla n n e l by S t a n le y B la ck er. C o o r d in a tin g fine c h e c k w o o l s l a c k s , bomb that tore up the sod in Clyde W illia m s Field 680 t h r e e hours before Saturday's N e b ra s k a -lo w a State football game. M unicipal Judge John McKinney sentenced John G ale Stotz, 20, of Davenport, Iowa, to th ree months THE BIG WINNER... Limit 1 Void 10-5-66 b e l t l e s s in t h e B r i t i s h m a n n e r . B la zer,5 0 .0 0 S la ck s,2 2 .5 0 in the Story County Jail and fined him $500. OUPON McOtais Toothpaste Large F r e je l Reg. 39# 41 Limit 1 >90 Void 10-5-66 OUPO tr a n s is to r Dippity - Do r a d io ■ Reg. 1.25 B eautiful. P ow erful POWERTONE Limit 1 890 Jo hn sto n • 6 transistors Void 10-5-66 & Murphy • Earplugs for Personal Listening W o t at rear • Leatherette Carrying Case with Handy Wrist Strap S p ecia ls good at • 9 Volt Battery ## E. Lansin g S t o r e only • 90 Day Parts Guarantee jbAÉ • Worth $7 or More! . . . Jim Larso n , F arm in g to n junior, recieves his new 12“ G .E . p o r t ­ with anY shoe purchase as low as *11at our modern able f r o m S.B.S. m a n a g e r> Howard B a lle in . Jim was one of many who en te re d in the S . B . S .- W J IM drawing held last week. Stop and shop at S.B.S. and you might end up as a big winner, too. S TA TE t h r e e - e y e l e t wingtip . . . D is c o u n t NEW STORE! C o s m e tic s oak brow n or black lla m a -g r a in e d At last, you can get the shoe styles you want, at a price you can afford And bet we have your Ss c a lf s k in , fo r the m an d e s ir in g size! Yes. REGALis in town And to make 'Ai & V ita m in s new friends and customers, we want to ° L lS a tastefu l ligh tw eigh t shoe give you a Free transistor radio with any shoe purchase of $ 11 or more at our new store 619 E. Grand River fo r b u s i n e s s and s o c i a l w e a r . Always remember that we make our own A c r o s s fr om Student Sei vlec., shoes m our own big factory. And this means that you can be certain of getting the finest • D a i l y 9 a . m. - 6 p.m. quality —at the fairest price So stop In for $30.00 your new shoes and new radio, today! e Wed. 9 a . m. - 9 p.m. Hurry! offer ends Oct. 8th R EG AL SHOES tudent tore Void After* S a t . , O c t . 8, F r e e 1966 P a rk in g MEN’S SHOP - 210 ABBOTT ROAD 255 ANN S T R E E T FROM COAST TO COAST F r e e P a r k i n g a t the r e a r of the s t o r e at R e a r of S to re Jacobsons Tuesday, October 4, 1966 4 M ichigan State N ew s, East Lansing, M ichigan YO UTH S BAYO N ETED GO ALS OUTLINED In d o n e s ia n s r io t H u n t e n th u s ia s tic segments of the army. Monday, knives as they tore into the panic- JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) - they clashed with palace guards, stricken students. Combat troops, cracking down with full force for the first time on student demonstrators, bayo­ mobile brigades, military police and regular troops. The students r e g r o u p e d re­ peatedly and drove toward th e a b o u t m ed sch ool The combat troops in Jungle palace despite the beating they neted and clubbed s c o r e s of camouflage repeatedly repulsed took. They got no closer than Innovation without purpose is graduate study with the first year and follow up with em­ s h o u t i n g , defiant Indonesian the mob of 5,000 which shouted 200 yards from the steel fence worthless, c o m m e n t e d Dr. two years of traditional med bryology and neuro-anatomy the youths who tried to storm Presi­ ••Dogs!" at the soldiers and hurl­ around the palace. Andrew D. Hunt, Dean of the school. Students are prepared second and third.” dent Sukarno's palace Monday. The youths had demonstrated The bloody clash between the ed stones. The troops shoved College of Human Medicine, on for transfer to M.D. degree- He noted that anthropology, ammunition clips into their ri­ before Sukarno's empty palace MSU’s new medical s c h o o l . g r a n t i n g institutions at the so c io lo g y and psychology will ( troops and students appeared to fles, but did not fire. for two days during the week­ junior level. also be stressed. "Already 60 represent a new and possibly "We have both.” At least eight students were end, demanding that he be tried Dean Hunt and his colleagues Medical education belongs in per cent of many hospitals bed dangerous shift in volatile Indo­ for involvement in the abortive nesian politics. bayoneted, and s c o r e s w e r e regard medical education as a a university, replied Dean Hunt the mentally ill. The specific hammered to the g r o u n d with Communist coup last year. They continuing process rather than to the big-city-more-patients task of the physician is not Until Monday, the students had were dispersed at rifle point. carefully maintained close ties clubs as they broke through a separate premedical and med­ argument. only u n d e r s t a n d i n g in depth with the army even though some cordon of troops and raced to­ Subandrio testified before a ical fragments. Although their the human body, but also work­ military tribunal that he had He cited the recent contro­ youths were shot and killed by ward the palace, shouting that present curriculum can be con­ ing with the entire human being heard Communist plans of the versy over anatomy reduction troops in demonstrations some Sukarno was a Communist leader sidered a three-year program, in a helping relationship.” Such coup but did not tell Sukarno as a nation-wide movement and therapeutics, he felt, ought not time ago outside Jakarta. and should be brought to trial. it is more accurately a six- because he thought the presi­ described MSU’s position as But in the previous clashes, Sukarno was out of the city. year program that combines to be left to chance, but effected dent knew of it._____________ moderate. "We’ll o f f e r 180 the students fought only certain Some of the troops brandlghed^ the usual four years of under­ through deliberate planning in hours of dissection this first the behavioral sciences. RED BARN OCTOBER SPECIAL AT KRESGE Dean Hunt w a s reassuring about present accreditation and A vailable At The RED BARN Now Through O ctober 31 f u t u r e transferrals.The new school has b e e n properly en- 1 dorsed at both ends. B r a z i l i a n a r t i s t He r e f e r r e d to the joint Liaison Committee between the Association of Ame: lean Med­ ical Colleges (AAMC) and the d i s p l a y s w o r k s AMA, which a c c r e d i t s the Metal Heart nation's medical schools once every five years. Normally this An acetylene welding torch and a bold imagination The works of Mario Cravo, Brazil. committee won’t consider a med w e re the ingredients u tiliz e d in this " w e l d i n g " . It foremost Brazilian sculpter and “There is a fair variety of s c h o o l until it has been in can be seen behind Kresge A rt C en ter, along with winner of several international style represented here," said operation for two y e a r s , H o w ­ o th e r s i m i l a r l y constructed works. awards, went on exhibit in the Paul V. Love, gallery director. ever, to q u a l i f y for federal 9M i - - S t a t e News photo by Chuck M ich a els North Gallery of Kresge Art Center Sunday. "The pieces portray at least five years in Cravo’s develop­ matching binds (as MSU needed to), an immediate letter of rea­ ment.’’ sonable a s s u r a n c e to the The exhibit comes to MSU Federal C o m m i t t e e of Ed­ L i m e y b e s ts A t l a n t i c The thirty-five pieces of sculp­ ture are in iron, melted brass from its success at the Insti­ tute of Contemporary Arts in ucation from the Liaison Com­ mittee was required and in MSU’s and copper. The exhibit includes case g r a n t e d . This first ac­ FALMOUTH, England (JP) — attempted to cross the Atlantic some of Cravo’s early stylized Washington, D.C., and Cravo’s in a yacht with others aboard, appearances at universities and creditation - a c t u a l l y a ten­ John Guthrie, a British free­ realism and his later progres­ art schools. The Brazilian gov­ tative preliminary a p p r o v a l - lance journalist, completed a solo but failed. sion into abstraction. This style holds good for one year after G H iC K G N M F R jG S crossing of the Atlantic Ocean today in a 30-foot sailboat, the Guthrie, 2 7, departed from New York and crossed the Atlantic won him prizes in the Biennale Sao Paulo and gave him his one- ernment advanced a grant en­ abling the exhibit to travel to several U.S. universities, which it must be renewed. Askadll. man exhibition at the Biennale Wayne State, which wants to It was his first solo attempt. in 34 days. He reached the Azores expand its medical school to 200, in Venice, 1960, representing Cravo was an artist-in -resi- Three times previously he had in 17 days. welcomes our transfers, explain­ dence in B e r l i n u n d e r the auspices of the Ford Founda­ ed Dean Hunt. The University 4 chunky chicken pieces, golden fried to „ e g ■ ■ ■ tion and then went to Washing­ of Michigan is a littel more cau­ perfection, served with a heaping helping p . t ‘ ton as a Fellow of the Insti­ tious. It has already reached the of french fries— and a frosty cold coke! tute of Contemporary Arts. 210 limit, bur will try to replace The exhibit will be on dis­ itfs drop-outs with our students, play until Oct. 30. he stated. R E D B A R N 1010 E a s t G rand R iv e r , J u s t O ff T h e C a m p u s A V A IL A B L E O C T O B E R 1 T HRO UG H O C T O B E R 31 u rtn cietyfa cg / Alcohol theory tested by Texans w WASHINGTON (¡/PI) -T estsw ith will partially make up for this hamsters given alcohol - some to impairment. the point of drunkenness - have In the hamster tests, 42 ani­ suggested a new theory on the mals were given p r e l i m i n a r y cause of human alcoholism, two treatments with alcohol, some of Texas researchers r e p o r t e d them getting this liquor diet for Monday. periods up to more than 10 P e r m a n e n t P re ss The admittedly-tentative theo­ months. ry is that chronic, uncontrolled After such drinking sprees, all boozing may be due to a more the hamsters were forced to go SLACKS or le ss inborn defect, in cer­ tain individuals, in the brain’s ability to metabolize or burn a on the wagon, and were deprived of alcohol for 24 hours. Then all received injections of glucose Save Time. . . . Save Money certain kind of sugar called glu­ cose. They said the theory appears labeled with radioactive carbon- 14, so its use by the brain could be studied. Im portant to students? Y ou b e t! So, sto p in at any o f our to explain why candy and su­ gary soft drinks often are help­ After the glucose was inject­ 3 con ven ien t L o cation s and see how you can really $ave. ed, the higher drinkers showed ful to drunks seeking to recover from a drinking bout; the extra a higher level of glucose uncon­ sugar thus provided to the blood sumed in the brain than did the stream may compensate for the lower drinking animals, the re­ S u n s h in e C e n te r theorized brain defect in the sugar-handling department. searchers said. The concept was offered in a report in the proceedings of the 3 Great Locations For Your Convenience National Academy of Sciences by researchers Roger J. Williams "’XZ'T' 1 - 2 1 3 Ann Street and Mary Kay Roach of the Uni­ 2 - C o rn e r of H a rr is o n & W ilso n Road versity of Texas at Austin. 3 - Northwind D r. Facing Yankee Stadium P laza \ In Monday’s report, the in­ m vestigators said an impairment COMOKRATID C O IN O P W A 1 IO of glucose-metabolism in th e SunsNne W A SH N D R Y CLEAN brain may be the missing link and that the craving for alcohol in some individuals may stem from a demand on the part of Join Those Who Expect More . . . . . . . And Save brain cells for something that he same excellent Caley & Lord Square Ply, now with 'i.m/ l/nu". presented by Redwood 6c Ross as the hardiest ot wash and w e a r tro u s e rs . FREE SALE W IL L IA M M IL L IK E N Cure and upkeep of this Dacron polyester and cot­ ton trouser is minimal —simply wash, dry and wear. Shape and press retention is guaranteed. PRETZELS during TODAY M illik e n Come in and sec* this outstanding value. 795 GRAND OPENING SALE at FREEDRAWmG sp eak s to d a y Lt. Gov. William Milliken will SPECIAL 12“ N E IA C TODAY — ■ speak 4 p.m. Tuesday on the sec­ ond floor of the Union. The MSU College Republican Club is sponsoring the 15-min­ ute speech. It w ill be followed 543 E. G r a n d R i v e r by a half-hour question period. All students and faculty mem­ Portable R e à w o o à %Ross (next to i? . s i ; bers are Invited to participate. Milliken is also co-chairman of the Michigan Human Resources P a r a m o u n t News) traditional excellence 205 E . G rand R iver $9 4 . 8 8 337-1300 Value $49.95 Commission. He served as Sen­ ate majority floor leader for two years and was a member of the State Senate for four years. Michigan State News, E ast Lansing, Michigan Tuesday, October 4, 1966 5 A r m vs. b a t is s e rie s th e m e NEW YORK (UPI)--Rarely in than the entire Oriole staff (27). Koufax, 27-9 and 1.73, is ac­ baseball history have the styles Both teams own outstanding knowledged to be in a class by of play been so clearly delineated bullpens but the Los Angeles him self. He will be supported as for the 1966 World Series uses theirs less, making It even by starters Don Drysdale (13- where the pitching - dominated .stronger. 16 and 3.42) and Claude Osteen Los Angeles Dodgers will de­ Phil Regan, who lost only once (17-14 and 2.85) and Don Sutton fend their championship against In 15 decisions, was the No. 1 (12-12 and 2.99). the power-packed Baltimore Ori­ reliefman for Los Angeles and oles. compiled a 1.62 era. Baltimore starters will be The Dodgers, the National League’s first repeat pennant Stu Miller, 9-4, with a 2.25 Dave McNally (13-6 and 3.42), winners since the Braves won era, heads the Baltimore relief Jim Palmer (15-10 and 3.46) back-to-back in 1957-58, did it corps, along with Dick Hall, Ed­ and Wally Bunker (10-6 and 4.28). for the second straight season on die Fisher and Moe Drabowsky, speed, opportunism, hustle—but most Important--pitching. The Baltimore Orioles, World Series participants for the first time ever, won in a walk in the T i g e r s c h o o s e American League with one main weapon--offensive power. And so it shapes up as pitching That9s My Boy versus hitting. M a y o S m i t h Dodger manager Walt Alston puts an a r m around In this case, statistics spell 2 7 -g a m e winner Sandy Koufax, Koufax won the it out perfectly. DETROIT (UPI)—Mayo Smith began his third stint as a major D o d g e rs ’ final game of the season against the The Orioles will field the P h illie s to clinch the pennant. - - U P I Telephoto player with the better average league manager Monday, grin­ at six of the eight fielding posi­ ning and speculating on what he’ll do with the Detroit Tigers. tions (excluding pitcher) and In most places a superior average I t ’s G r e a t F o r A D a t e ! is accompanied by heftier home The Tigers finished their man­ L a n e s A v a ila b le F o r run and runs batted In marks. ager-shopping Monday at a press O p e n B o w lin g E v e r y N ife! However, if the name of the conference when general man­ game truly is pitching, it’s the ager Jim Campbell announced * 4 0 Lanes « L o u n g e defending world champs all the that Smith, 51, had been signed way. to a two-year contract to man­ • Billiards «Snack B a r Los Angeles had an amazing age the club. Open E v e r y Day at 9 A.M. team earned run average of 2.63 H e ’s A H e r o N o w while the Orioles were a medio­ Smith will put together an en­ cre 3.35. The difference incom ­ tire new coaching staff to work with the Bengals. Onlyonecoach The Air Conditioned Pat Gallinagh (55) is shown in action as a defensive guard, usually a re la tiv e ly plete game performances is even unheralded position. The 220-pound D e tro it s en io r attained the d re am of a lineman — former major league Inflelder greater. Sandy Koufax had more by scoring a touchdown, Saturday. and coach Tony Cucclnello — H O L ID A Y LANES has been hired. The rest will probably be named by the end of the World Series. PA T GALLINAGH Mayo Smith T h e y ’ ll n o t i c e h im , n o w M .S .U . SKI CLUB “ I thought I was the slowest sacrifice, and the thing that most BY ED B R IL L State News Sports W r i t e r accompanies 220-pound defen­ sive guards. man In the Big Ten,” Gallinagh often goes Is social life. •’U n d o u b t e d l y you play the A d c o c k to The M S U i k i T e a m Will Have Its F i r s t Gallinagh took a lateral from joked afterwards, "but I looked Watch State back and saw that there were at game to win," Gallinagh con­ Pat Gallinagh ran 40 yards with a football last Saturday afternoon defensive end Phil Hoag, who recovered an Illini fumble late least two slower." tinued. "Anyone who plays Big m anage News F o r Meeting F o r ALL Interested Skiers. in Champaign, 111., — 40 yards in the second period, and raced But after the laughing stopped, Ten football for exercise Is a to the end zone and to a swift to the end zone with two Illinois Gallinagh wisely analyzed the 30 fool. But the athletic pressure F i r s t Ski Thursday-Oct. 6 rise from the obscurity that often guards chasing him. seconds that brought him the fame on a football player is like the knocking down b a l l c a r r i e r s social pressure on a fraternity In d ia n s Cl ub Room 35 Union doesn’t. brother. Both have to learn to LOS ANGELES (UPI) — Joe Meeting 7:00 P.M . "1 didn’t think I played as well make the best use of their time Adcock, a 38-year-old slugging today as I have,” Gallinagh said. In school." first baseman who has had no pre­ Co m in g We will m e e t all “ Last week, against Penn State, Gallinagh insists he is not the vious m a n a g e r i a l experience, S o c c e r s u c c e s s interested sk ie rs 1 think I played as strong a game exception, but the rule among signed a two-year contract Mon­ Soon! as anyone on the field, but no one the players, when academics are day to pilottheClevelandlndians, and d i s c u s s the fall noticed It.” concerned. No terms were announced but training p ro g ram . s h o u l d l a s t "It takes one funny play, a "1 don’t think It is ’work,’ as It was believed that Adcock, who l u c k y break, and you go from much as full application of your­ was released by the California •rags to riches’ in seconds." self to get 100 per cent out of F o r in fo : Soccer Coach Gene Kenney had Pittsburgh played a very strong Angels so he could accept his new your abilities. That makes a good said, before last Saturday’s 6-0 game up until Busch got his first post, would receive $35,000 a O n C lu b "I don’t deserve all this for football player," Gallinagh com­ victory over the University of goal at 18:40 of the second per­ what I did today,” protested Gall­ mented. year. pT' A rA n d T e a m Pittsburgh, ‘‘We’H find out what iod. That made the score 3-0, inagh, but he knew then that one For one of the most dedicated Adcock left no doubt as to what kind of team we are.’’ type of a manager he will be, C a ll: "Pittsburgh has at least five play had brought him the recog of all Spartans, there are just “We are going back to funda­ After the game he was enthused men who can run the 100 in nltlon his fine play had been seven games left. The odds are mentals starting with the first day G reg 3 5 3 -7 4 0 3 over the team’s unity on the for­ under 10 s e c o n d s , but t h e y meriting. g r e a t that Pat Gallinagh will ward line and defense. never again run 40 yards with a of spring training,” Adcock said. J im 3 3 2 -0 1 1 4 weren’t m o v i n g t o d a y , ” said Actually, the 21-year-old De­ Others were also enthusiastic. “ I am going to make it plain to Brourman. “Too many of Pitt’s troit senior merits praise both loose football, never again score my players that I did not take Said Mike Brourman, a sports men were dribbling the ball and for his football field and class­ a touchdown. this job to run a popularity con­ writer for Pittsburgh’s school It will probably be the last not passing it to open men. Pitt's room performances. Gallinagh test. I’ll be tough if I have to be. paper: Is a history major with a 3.11 time he can answer "yes” to a "The Spartans have remark­ defense seemed lax.” And there will be more bats in Whatever the reason for the GPA, and he Is quick to defend cute blond stewardess, who, on our club house than there will be able aim on their shots.” S p a r t a n s ’ success, one thing theoft-mallgned image of the the plane ride home, asks him Said George Sommer, Pitts­ golf clubs." U P -T O -T H E -M IN U T B seem s certain — it will last. college football player. if he "made a touchdown.’’ burgh’s freshman soccer coach: "To play college football, you With six sophomores, nine jun­ "We couldn’t pick up State’s men at the half field. If we had iors and only three seniors on the have to achieve a balance,” ex­ JAVTOAIRL* been switching on defense we might have stopped State’s short p a sses.” squad, the future seems secure. plained Gallinagh, "You have to Iattenhon car owners H O R 5A C R S L A C K S '- Said Leo Bemis, Pittsburgh’s coach: Wanted: c o m p l e t e fro n t end r e p a i r and a lign m ent "We knew State had too many guns before we came. There are very fast men on State’s team. We couldn’t make a m i s t a k e 4 Spartan Men * brakes * suspension * wheel ba la ncin g * s t e e r i n g c o r r e c t i o n s against them and not expect to suffer. for C h e e r l e a d e r P o s i t i o n s * m o to r tune ups “ State also has a pretty solid defense. My forwards are small C a ll I m m e d ia te ly : LISKEY’S Auto Safety Center and we couldn't work it through them. M is s H e ss 6 4 6 -6 7 0 9 "I’d be very surprised If State or 3 5 5 -4 7 4 5 doesn’t go u n d e f e a t e d . They IV 4-7346 should be able to get by St. M is s S m ith 3 5 5 -4 7 4 4 124 SOUTH LARCH Louis.” T A IIO R S t h e m SUM A N D TRIM FRIENDLY and COMPLETE FRATERNITY JEWELER ON CAMPUS Pro Basketball FAST, FAST DELIVERY Detroit Baltimore SERVICE Pistons vs Bullets IN A N E W J A Y B L A Z L ’ f a b r ic w it h Tues. Oct. 4 DACRON* 8 P.M. fO R . N E A T N E S S i ÌD* 1 W O N T Q U IT ! % L a n s in g C iv ic C e n te r T H A T K A L L - W K I G H T S L A C K S S H O W N : 5 5 'i D A C R O N * I ’O I.Y K S T K K , 15', W O R S T E D W O O L . T ic k ets $2.00 A b o u t $ 1 8 .0 0 in g r e e n / b r o w n h e a t h e r to n e a n d o t h e r fa ll co lo rs. *O u F o n t ’s registered t r a d e m a r k . D u P o n t m a k e s fib ers, n o t fa b ric s o r c lo th e s . ^Jie Cand, £h&p, P a r a m o u n t News: E a s t Lan sin g jU’Mi'l Things for Living . . . through Chemistry 309 E. GRAND RIVER P a r a m o u n t News: L an sing Get your Jaymar-Ruby slacks with "Dacron” at E. LANSING Se a rs : F r a n d o r J . W. Knapp Co. T uesday, October 4, 1966 (} M ichigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Riot-torn Jamaica W ilso n a v e r ts rio ts in em ergency state K I N G S T O N , J a m a i c a (A P ) - T h e g o v e r n m e n t de­ c l a r e d a s tate o f e m e r g e n c y M o n da y in p a r ts of W e s t­ a t L a b o r c o n v e n tio n e r n K in gs ton and n e ig h b o rin g St, A n d re w s , the scene o f gun b a ttle s and bom b e x p lo s io n s in the last few “ twister” and “ stop the sack­ B R I G H T O N , E n g l a n d If) — train and coach from Scotland, m o n th s . T ro o p s m o ved into the t r o u b le d a r e a . P rim e M in ister H arold Wilson South Wales and the English Mid­ ings” greeted him. T he wave of v io le n c e was d e s c rib e d as p o lit ic a l s o o t h e d n e a r l y 1,000 auto lands, demanding government ac­ Scores of police linked arms in n a tu re , although c r i m i n a l e le m e n t s a re b e lie v e d w o rk e rs threatened with d ism is­ tion to save or prolong their and braced to meet any attempted to h ave e x p lo it e d the s itu a tio n . sa l a fte r braving th e ir angry, jobs pending a revision of Wil­ breakthrough. The Prime Minis­ A r m e d p o lic e and s o ld ie r s w e r e re p o r te d to have h o stile taunts Monday In an un­ son’s massive program to slow ter’s own p e r s o n a l bodyguard, ra i d e d the o ffic e s of the J a m a ic a L a b o r p a r t y and p recedented s tr e e t encounter. down the economy. heavily reinforced, closed in an the o pp o s itio n P e o p le s ' N a tio n al p a r t y in W e s te r n T he d r a m a t i c confrontation, outward-facing ring. Wilson’s Kin gs ton a f t e r the s tate of e m e r g e n c y was d e c la r e d . Taut but determined, Wilson u nder the gaze of d elegates, v is- emerged from his hotel to face 84-year-old f a t h e r , Herbert, T r o o p s and p o lic e c a r r i e d out an in te n s ive h o u s e - to -h o u s e s e a rc h and w e r e re p o r te d to have s e iz e d h o m e m a d e bom bs and the m a t e r i a l to make th e m , i t i n g d i p l o m a t s , p assersb y , t h e m . C r i e s of ’’t r a i t o r ’’ n e w s m e n and police, av erted danger of the ruling L abor p arty s watched through the glass doors of the hotel. jar*] m o r e than 20 r e v o l v e r s , m ach e te s sh arp ened on both annual convention turning Into The Prime Minister took a microphone and, after several C o lle g e B o w l s id e s , and o th e r weapons. T h i r t y p e rso ns w e r e re p o r te d u nder a r r e s t . a roughhouse. T he d em o n strato rs had trekked M ayor ends minutes of trying to make him­ self heard, shouted: “ I think Asking questions, D r . W i l l i a m Sweetland, p ro fe s s o r of H u m an itie s, attempts to th is South C oast r e s o r t by em erg en cy ; you have a perfect right to come here to e x p r e s s your fears, to n a r ro w down the fie ld of about 80 who t r ie d out f o r the MSU C o llege Bowl team . D r . Sweetland w ill serve as a dviser to the tea m as it p re p a re s f o r Its T V m eet­ anxieties and thoughts.” l y - - S t a t e News photo by Russ Steffey c u r f e w lifte d PSI UPSILON SAN FRANCISCO If! — As the last 1,200 National Guardsmen He told the banner-waving crowd he had listened to their slogans for half-an-hour and if they wished they could send in a COLLEGE BOWL r %» rolled home Sunday, Mayor John deputation for a few minutes to es n F. Shelley lifted the curfew he talk privately and hear him. The imposed during San Francisco’s race riots. The mayor also ended the state men agreed. Nearly a dozen men trooped E lim in a tio n s h e ld Into the hotel and a 7-minute able to come to the first meet­ as many students as possible,’’ of emergency he proclaimed dur­ More than 100 undergraduates huddle took place in the corner QUt Sund fo£Tthe first ing, he’s welcome to come to my said Sweetland. ing the Tuesday and Wednesday of a lounge under the stares of q{ ellminations for MSU*s office and talk to me about try­ The second round will reduce disturbances. p e o p l e looking through glass ing out for the team. We want the number of potential contes­ Next, he said, is a drive to find i r r i V jobs for unemployed Negroes as a means of preventing future trou­ ble. Rioting started after a Negro doors. When the session broke up Wilson said it had been use- television A leader of the demonstra- ^ Nov. 20. H Qn the NBC on Sunday, The students were grouped into to give a chance to compete to tants to around 25, youth was shot and killed by a tors, Les Allen, told newsmen teams of four, playing each other white policeman while fleeing a Wilson agreed the government in proctored 20-mlnute matches S p o r t s S h o r t s • « l i f t f stolen car. But both city officials and Negro leaders declared the would study all the demands and complaints raised, and expressed to determine who would be asked to come back for a second round All rugby club members and Representatives of all frater- underlying cause was the lack of concern at the lack of consul Oct. 9 in Erickson Diva. anyone interested in rugby should nlty and independent IM teams employment among the city’s 80,- tation between car manufacturers "The committee was pleased attend a very Important m eet- must attend a meetlng tonight 000 Negroes. and labor unions on firings. at the large number of students ing tonight at 7 p.m. in room at 7:30, in room 208 of the Shelley urged employers to call who tried out and very pleased 215 of the Men’s IM. Men's IM. a special telephone number if they But although Wilson headed at the high degree of competition had a Job available. off the perils of an explosion at with which they played,’’ said • *• Labor unions, the Chamber of the convention, his government William E. Sweetland, Honors Commerce and other civic groups still faces big trouble in Its College adviser andCollege Bowl There will be a meeting for Students interested In coming are working with him, the mayor attempts to enforce a national all freshman Interested in try­ out for the wrestling team are co-ordinator. said, “ in a program to find these wage-price freeze. “We asked about 42-43 people ing out for the freshman bas- welcome at a meetlng at 5 p.m. needed jobs.’’ to come back Sunday,” said ketball team at 4 p.m. Wednes- w d d Wednesday, Qct Oct, 5 ln Room 208 Leaders of industry and labor Sweetland. "The number is rela­ day, In room 209 of Jenison. Men’s IM. ‘D i s a r m a m e n t t a l k s re c e sse d unions met here with Economic tive because we wanted any stu­ *** Secretary Michael Stewart on the dent who felt he was unjustly e li­ Any girls with some gymnas­ *• * in G e n e v a a lt e r se ve n m o n th s powers the government intends minated to come back and try tics experience are invited to o f Ir u itle s s n e g o tia tio n . D is a r m ­ to take this week to outlaw any­ again. attend the first meeting of the Freshmen interested in the a m e n t m o n th s recessed in f r u i t ­ The Me n of Psi U less a fte r seven ta lk s o f G e n e v a n e g o t ia t io n . N e g o t ia t i o n d i s ­ thing that might break the freeze. “Also, if any student was un- women's gymnastic c l u b to- night at 5 p.m. in room 34 of frosh hockey team should re­ port of Jenison Field House at the Women’s Intramural Build 7 p.m. Wednesday, Oct, 5 for a C O R D ÌA L L Y IN V IT E A L L a rm e d to t a lk less a n d seven meeting. ing. f r u its w e re recessed in G e n eva . E L IG IB L E M E N TO O P E N And e v e ry ­ *** b o d y re n e w e d B fof a f ,.. copy of the R U SH T U E S. & W ED . E V E N IN G S The men’s andwomen’s volley All women interested iiwryouts t h e i r / e a s e s ! « " " * " ' '*»"• of NA ball club will hold its first or- 810 G r a n d R i v e r Ave. 351-46(86)-(87)-(88) fo r J a n u a ry . „■llONAl REVIEW, writ. D, p, CM . ISO E. 35 St . N.Y., N Y 10016 ALPHA OMEGA ......................for ganlzation meeting at 7:30 p.m. Green Splash are asked to attend a non-swimming meeting Wednesday, Oct 5 ln Room 203 at 7 p.m. Wednesday, ,Oct. 5, OF Men’s IM. Barry Brown and Carol Davis will speak. in Room 137, Women’s IM. THETA X I r e c e n t addition to Michigan State IM News By L Y L E HANSON c o r d ia lly in v ite s Stale News Staff W r i t e r th e m e n o f M S U TOUCH FO O TB A LL to T ¡m e F IE LD 3 T im e F I E L D 1 6:00 Cavalier-Casino 6:00 Wimbledon-Wight O P E N RUSH 6:45 Wildcats-Winshire 6:45 Horror-Horrendous 7:30 Bacardi-Bacchus 7:30 Arhouse-Arlstocrats T u e s d a y ,R o o m 21 Union 8:15 Arch Dukes-Archaeopteryx 8:15 Hubbard 5-6 9:00 Superstitlon-Satans 9:00 East Shaw 8-9 W ednesday-S un P o r c h Union 9:45 McFadden-McKinnon 9:45 Fern-Fee-m ales for r i d e s call 355-7676 T im e F I E L D 2 T Ime FIE LD 4 6:00 Cambridge-Cabana 6:00 Wildlng-Windsor 6:45 Wivern-Wisdom 6:45 Wolfram-Worship 7:30 Hosppiciano-Holy Land 7:30 Spyder-Setutes 8:15 West Shaw 3-5 8:15 Arpent-Ares 9:00 Arsenal-Argonaughts 9:00 West Shaw 8-10 9:45 Stalag 17 — Sultans 9:45 McGregor-McLean DON'T BLOW YOUR COOL! BE SURE TO INCLUDE PI K A P P A PHI IN Y O U R RUSH PLANS is s c h o la r s h ip is le a d e r s h ip V is p e r s o n a lity is s o c ia l life M b# is 6 0 0 lo y a l a lu m n i ns# is 41 y r s . a t M S U B U is a s k i lo d g e h o u s e P I K A P P A PM I M IC H IO A N STATE U N IV E R S ITY ms# is th e f a s t e s t tu r tle o n c a m p u s nu c o u ld be y o u Rush ing S o p h o m o r e s only T u e s d a y and Wednesday C a ll u s a t 337-9734 121 Whitehills Dr. PI KAPPA PHI FRATERNITY M ichigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Tuesday, October 4, 1966 i $11,500 PER UNIT THE M E N O F N e w m a rrie d h o u s in g Within the next two weeks, the 228 new married housing units, now near completion, will be is r e a d y reason, such as national origin or skin color, a family cannot find a place to stay.” Roetman said. "In fact," he continued, "they have exactly the same floor plan A D E L T A finished and In use. But, he said, although the mar­ and will be furnished in the same “We already have students liv­ ried housing office tries to treat manner.” ing in 140 of the new apartments,” all p r o b l e m s individually, it There are 94 new one-bed­ reported John Roetman, director would be of little use for stu­ room units and 134 with two of m a r r i e d housing. “ Twenty more families will move in this week, and the rest within the dents to attempt to get around the waiting period unless the problem is of an extremely ur­ bedrooms, which brings the total that the University owns and op­ T A U erates to 2,468. Student apart­ next several weeks.” gent nature. ments number 2,284, and the rest The addition, on the southwest The new apartments are e s ­ are efficiency or one-bedroom side of the campus, cost $2.6 sentially the same as all other units for faculty and staff mem­ million, or $11,500 per unit. m a r r i e d housing on campus, bers. The new apartments will help to diminish the size of the wait­ ing list for housing, which has been a continuing problem for several years. "Right now,” said Roetman, "we have only 70 waiting for two-bedroom apartments, and 318 need one-bedroom units. This is i t ’s w h a t ’s h a p p e n i n g AWS will hold an open meeting In the Con-Con room of the In­ ternational Center at7:30Thurs- day, Jim Graham will give his International Relations C l u b will hold an executive meeting at 7 tonight in the Oak Room of A D E L T A WELCOME YOU TO the Union. Everyone is invited the shortest waiting list we've had views on changing the voting to attend. in years.” age to 18 at the meeting. The waiting list is a necessity, •*** he explained, so that distribution The MSU Christian Scientist The MSU Sailing Club will organization will hold its weekly of the apartments can remain impartial. "Once in a great while,” he hold its first fall meeting at 7:30 Tuesday in the Union Ball­ testimony meeting at 7:15 to­ night in room 31 of the Union. OPEN RUSH room. Novice as well as ex­ Students may call 332-3508 for said, “ we have to waive the per­ perienced sailors are welcome rides. iod on the waiting list if for some to Join. TONIGHT and WEDNESDAY 7 :0 0 p m -1 0 :0 0 p m GROWTH! A W O R D FOR MSU Delta Tau Delta seeks a diversified membership, and looks for unity among its members. The members of Delta Tau Delta are proud of their Moving In A W O R D WITH SPECIAL traditions and accomplishments, but are always mind­ ful of the greater heights to be reached. WË& F o r those couples lucky enough to get a m a r r ie d Delta Tau Delta offers much, and asks much of its mQ M p r student apartm en t, the task of moving in re m a in s . M r . and M r s . Jim B irk e s of 1579 Spartan V illa g e M E A N IN G S TO THE members. We look forward to meeting you, and personally welcoming you during rush. face s ev era l tr ip s up a long flight of s ta irs . - - S t a t e News photo by Tony F e r r a n t e SIG EPS T O O S igm a Phi E p s i l o n h a d a 20% i n c r e a s e in m e m ­ b ersh ip in the last year. -W e have over 55 Our new location is undergraduate B rothers and several B rothers in M SU ’s graduate program s. -E ach an in ­ 330 N. Harrison d ivid u al tied to the g ro u p by b o n d s o f B r o t h e r ­ hood. F o r R i d e s O r In form atio n Call ED 7-1721 tr a n s is to r So where do we h ou se them ? Just la st year we in crea sed our living area 66% with pur­ chase of a house ad joining our origin al h ou se. r a d io ■ And Sparty, The Symbol of MSU escorted by B eautiful. P ow erful POWERTONE the num ber hom e Sig Eps, of football away g a m es. gam es and has found he an w ill bask etb all in crea se be seen in the at — all g a m e s , and m a n y THETA CHI 90 Duy F ■Worth $/ <>'V ix MORE MEMBERS A RICH PAST with any shoe purchase MORE HOUSE A REWARDING PRESENT as low as *11at our modern NEW STORE! MORE SPIRIT A PROMISING FUTURE Mone Jleani 9k Jlean ti 0 ^ . Tj'id^Tpi shoe 'lli&ie ti/Ae Wean, *7he Jleani O f quality —at your nev, sh £ iam a P m ZpAuoK Hurry! offer ends Oct. 8th We invite you to Open Rush R EG AL SHOES FROM COAST TO COAST T u e s d a y & Wednesday nights, 7 - 1 0 P.M . Call F o r A Ride - 351-4160 255 ANN ST. 526 Sunset L a n e - W e ’ll show you o u r new ho use ______ "Fraternities are HYPOCRITICAL EXTENDS A CORDIAL SUPERFICIAL and DOWNRIGHT PHONEY” INVITATION TO “OH Y E A H ? ” C O M E A N D S E E OPEN RUSH PHI PSI TUESDAY NIGHT P H I K A P P A P S I C a ll 3 3 2 - 5 0 3 9 7 p.m. -10 p.m. 5 2 2 A B B O T T R D . o r a n d e . * •* 4 5 3 A B B O T T R D . C a ll 3 3 2 - 3 5 8 1 Tuesday, October 4, 1966 8 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan /. lb kA \ □ W EU V' IST- •< f . ./ <1 * A S S O C IA jfD É tìte The Line-up mV MB* r ;✓ V ! 1^1 The State News has been My / ! p resented the Pacernaker Award, signifying It one of Mb the top five college news­ papers in the country, fo r MCisW fou r of the past five years. Itpf! 1962 PACEMAKER m m IB ;1 ^ o l J STATE NEWS MICHIGAN STATI UNIVERSITY IAS? LANSING, MICHIGAN ?■’ .. . m i ' —— — — — T im e A n d T a le n t: P u b lis h in g A S tu d e n t D a ily By KYLE K E R B A W Y These are just some of the questions often asked; few persons The Pacemaker is given to the best College newspapers in the State News E d i t o r - I n - C h i e f could answer them accurately. country; only five are named each year. ■tei Below we will answer these questions and others. This is the State What’s more, no other college newspaper has received as many This a rtic le is rep rin ted fro m the News’ story—what it is and how it operates. of the awards. Welcome Week Edition, 1966 * * * * * * The car pulled up in front of the classroom building. It was rain­ Two goals provide the overall rationale for the State News’ oper- Last year the State News had an income of $443,058.36. Some ing and cold. The street was dotted with puddles filled by the night s ation. $340,405.89 came from selling advertisements. downfall. ................... . ... The first is to provide the campus with a quality newspaper. MSU The remaining $102,652.45 was collected through a $1 fee charged The driver jumped out of the car and pulled a large, bundled is large enough to merit a professional newspaper with full-time each full-time undergraduate student and some 1,500 mail sub­ stack of newspapers behind him. He headed towards the building. personnel staffing it. scriptions. The fee, originally established by a student referendum, It was 6 a.m. . We try to publish a professional newspaper with part-time, stu­ is charged at each term ’s registration. The papers were deposited in the building s paper rack. The dent personnel. As recently as seven years ago, the State News annually went into ■I ff1 d; iver returned to his car and drove on to his next stop. Secondly, the newspaper is a training ground for persons inter­ debt. In 1961, the debt for one year’s operation soared to $30,000. * * * ested in newspaper and advertising work. Most of its employes ma­ The deficit was financed out of the University’s general budget. m m At 7:30 a professor entered the building. He walked to the rack, jor in j o u r n a l i s m or advertising.The StateNews gives them valuable After that year and the hiring of a new general manager, the picked up one of the papers, and continued on to his office. training and experience. State News’ ad rate was revamped. The paper has not been in debt As the clock’s minute hand neared 8, more professors and stu­ The State News has two roles in the University community. The since; it has paid its debt to the University. dents entered the building. As each went by the rack, he picked up a paper and then con­ first is to report the news; its first obligation is to report local and campus news. But this is not enough. Reporting national and inter­ IS tinued on to his office or class. national affairs has become a second obligation in this news dis­ Fin a n cial Independence By 11 a.m. the rack’s papers were gone. semination role. A ♦ * * The StateNews’ second role is to comment on the news editorially. This income puts the State News in an enviable situation, almost The State News distributes 34,000 copies five days a week to the This role, of course, is to offer criticism —both good and bad—about students, faculty, and administrators of Michigan State. unique among college newspapers in the country: it is financially independent. \ f the events in the news. This is the newspaper’s own value judgment But distribution is the end product of a vast operation—an opera­ of the news. Few other college newspapers can boast of paying for all print­ tion that fur each day’s issue starts several days before it actually ing costs, salaries—and this includes salaries for about 90 students r comes off the presses. and seven full-time persons—wire services, telephones, etc., Although the State News is an integral part of the MSU campus, F o u r P a c e m a k e r s Won without relying on funds from their school’s administration or stu­ very little is known of its operation. Many have opinions about it, For their efforts, State News staffers have been awarded The dent government. but few speak with any knowledge. American Newspaper Publishers Assn. Pacemaker Award for four The only costs the newspaper does not pay are rent (for a third How big is the State News? How are decisions made and who of the past five years. floor wing of the Student Services Building), electricity or heating makes them? Is the State News censored? costs. Financial independence means operational and editorial freedom# Because the University and student government do not control its purse strings, neither can apply pressure to curb editorials critical to their operation. At many schools this is not true. And such freedom is essential. Newspapers are society’s watch­ ,8 dog. They exist to inform society about the affairs, including those W ****** of its government, that affect their lives. Newspapers must be free to report and comment on these affairs. Financial independence allows the State News more freedom than that given newspapers financed by the bodies they are supposed dk to watch. . , , ,, , i, Important to financial independence is the fee charged all full­ Racing The Clock time students. Besides providing revenue, the fee gives the State News an assured circulation of at least the number of students on Persons in the State N ew s ’ c ircu latio n departm ent cam p u s-th is fall more than 38,000. Added to this number are the get up at 5 a .m .; must have 34,000 copies d i s t r i ­ s f f ip buted by 8 a.m . faculty and staff personnel. This high subscription figure is used as a lever to sell advertis­ ing. (Advertisers cannot afford to pass up a medium that reaches so publication, regardless of whether he takes the time to read any­ many persons.) thing before it is printed. The State News’ publisher is Michigan State University—the And a large amount of advertising allows the State News more MSU Board of Trustees. They sign the contract with the company space to print more news and increases the chances that the paper that prints the newspaper. will remain financially independent. Should a civil suit involving the State News ever arise (only one This financial independence is not, however, absolute. has to date), the Board of Trustees would be responsible in court. It is obvious, then, that the board could exercise legally some T r u s te e s Are Responsible control over the paper’s editorial function. At the same time, how­ ever, because of public pressure against censorship of the press, it A! • The responsibility for all newspapers—from theNewYorkTimes would be most foolish for the trustees ever to do so. E d i t o r - i n - C h i e f Kyle Kerbawy: N e a rly 100 students Managing E d ito r E r i c Pianin: “ Good make-up is down—lies finally with their publishers. If the administration ever use to consider the State News another putting out a daily with a circulation of 34,000 essen tial to a good newspaper. An appealing page He is the one sued if the newspaper prints a libel or other error. house organ, it has learned better. Neither the paper’s staff, nor the 1 ! involving n early a h a lf-m iH io n dollars . . . and m otivates r e a d e r s h ip ,” He is the one ultimately responsible for all that appears in his student body in general will stand for it. named four times one of the nation’s best. T h e N e w s p a p e r ’s 5 Departments R A T E D V E R Y Sj w N V’ « The State News has five inner S ta te N e w s Is H i g h l y R e a d T v .\\ departments. The five are sep­ arate, but work together to pub­ lish. They are: editorial, adver­ Three out of four MSU students read the State News five times a week. Nearly 84 per cent reported reading some of page one, with nearly half saying they read it heavily. Editorial page was read by nearly 80 percent, with 40.1 per cent In a readership study prepared under the direction of Kenward saying they read it heavily. I tising, photography, circulation and the business office. The Editorial Dept, is the one most important to the reader. It * # * is responsible for all news and L, Atkin, associate professor of advertising, students were asked. opinion articles, pictures, car­ *__how often do you read the State News and other newspapers? State News readership patterns were broken down by sex, toons and headlines. Its opera­ how do you rate the State News? marital status, place of residence (campus or off-campus) and tion will be discussed in detail where do you learn about local and national news? class in school. FREQUENCY. Nearly 78 per cent report that they read every later. More than 82 per cent of the male students and 70 per cent of The Advertising Dept, is the issue. (Other percentages were 16.8 (three or four times a week), the female students reported that they read the State News five most essential to the paper's 5 (once or twice a week) and .6 (never).) days a week. operation. By selling advertis­ EVALUATION. The over-all mean rating given the State News More than 96 per cent of the single students and more than 89 ing, it provides roughly 79 per falls into the "very good” category, with men rating the paper per cent of the married students said they read the State News cent of the money necessary to slightly higher than women. Ratings, according to sex, by the at least three or .four times a week. Of these, 79 per cent of the pay the paper’s costs. students are: single students and 73 per cent of the married students said they The Advertising Dept, is di­ Excellent: males 11.3 per cent, females 9.6 per cent. read every issue. vided into two sections, classi­ Very Good: males 46.1 per cent, females 43.7 per cent. By undergraduate classes, the percentage of every-issue reader­ fied and display. Average: males 38.2 per cent, females 38.5 per cent. ship is juniors (84.8), sophomores (80.1), freshmen (75.9) and Deadline for classified ads Is Poor: males 4.1 per cent, females 8.2 per cent. seniors (71.7). 2 p.m., one day before publica­ LOCAL AND CAMPUS NEWS SOURCES. The State News was listed as a primary source of local and campus news by 90.6 per Most doctoral candidates (77.5 per cent five times, 16.1 per cent ¡L tion. Deadline for display adver­ tisements is' 3 p.m., two days three or four times, and 6.5 per cent once or twice a week) read cent, State News salesm en, all students, last y ea r sold o ver $312,000 worth of a d v e r­ before publication. NATIONAL NEWS. Radio and TV rank high as a primary source. the State News. More than 69 per cent of the masters candidates red the State tis in g . Above, A d ve rtisin g M anager Joel Sta rk, a s en io r, puts the fin al touches The State News is prominent as a second and third source. on a two page ad with James Howick, assistant manager of a local bookstore. The Readership of the State News was highest on page one and the News five times a week. Other percentages in this category are (continued on next page ) 15.4 (three or four times), 10.3 (once or twice) and 5.1 (never). fin is h e d ad may be seen on pages 8 and 9, section D. editorial page. Tuesday, October 4, 1966 9 M ichigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan The S tate News S tory (continued f r o m page 8) Some 25 students last year sold 87.5 per cent editor-in-chief, thought the documents should be of the paper's ads. The other 12.5 per cent printed before a ruling was given. The conflict were national display ads, sold primarily by a was WHEN to print them, not WHETHER. New York representative. Tempers were short. Things were said in The department employs a full-time adviser anger, but in the end, the argument was with and one full-time sales coordinator in the c la ss­ the editor-in-chief, backed by the adviser, not ified department. the adviser directly. • * * The impasse was created when the editor’s The Photography Dept, is staffed by students employes wanted to be the newspaper’s boss. —usually around seven a term—and supervised The editor-in-chief, however, made the final by a full-time adviser. The superviser advises decision, the decision stuck, and the four as­ his photographers—MSU has no photography sistants resigned. school and offers only one course in photo­ journalism—and is responsible for the more than T h e R e s p o n s i b l e E d it o r $20,000 worth of equipment used in that depart­ ment. Responsibility for the newspaper’s entire The department is responsible to the editorial operation lies with the editor-in-chief. He is department’s managing editor. He assigns pic­ named by the Board of Student Publications and tures to be taken, receives proofs of the result is accountable to them. The board is composed and picks the pictures that appear in every issue. of three students, three faculty members and Circulation is responsible for distributing three members of the administration. and mailing papers. A description of the de­ This responsibility means the editor is the partment’s work introduced this article. newspaper’s boss. He has the final authority over The Business Office keeps track of the paper’s the news and editorial content. income and expenses. Since the paper's fi­ This authority lies with the editor not only nancial volume amounts to almost a half-million because the responsibility does. Efficient news­ dollars, three full-time accountants are employ­ paper operation requires that one person be in ed to keep books, bill advertisers, etc. charge. Deadlines must be met; decisions must be What Does The A d v i s e r Do? made. A newspaper does not have time to func­ tion through a committee. In the end, one per­ H to n ir ir n fl R o n r H n tr Students rate the State News “ v ery good” ; three of four read . General Manager of the State News is a con­ son must have the final authority. M \" l£ U > tr U U e v e r y Issue (not always with this enthusiasm, of course.) troversial position. Most people outside the Ironically, the democracies that a newspaper paper and even some employed by the paper defends so vigorously in its columns are seldom plaining their dissent. That col­ all local and campus news. He moved by the UPI telephoto and The editorial editor or one of taken because it says, "This is think of him as censor—the administration’s possible in its own operation. The limitations are umn is published the day follow­ employs from 30 to 50 reporters batches of proofs submitted by his writers then takes the general the opinion of only this person.’’ pawn who keeps the State News uncontroversiaL too great. This appearance of unity does ing the editorial. Many persons believe he gives his approval to After his selection, the editor in turn names to cover speeches, accidents, the photography department. outline and writes the editorial. He then makes a list of pic­ His final draft is reviewed not eliminate the possibility of Columns, which differ from every article before it is printed. Others believe persons to fill the major positions on his edi­ press conferences, etc., and to tures for the inside pages and first by the editor - in - chief. dissent. The State News is a editorials in that they are sign­ he sees only certain articles—those that might torial staff. The core of this staff are his four write features and in-depth art­ ed, may be submitted by any­ icles on the events taking place. gives it to his night editor. Changes are made in meaning, student-operated daily; students arouse a controversy—before they can be print­ assistant editors—managing, campus, editorial one working for the State News. Another list is made of the style or wording. The edit may tend to be idealistic. For this ed. and sports. Anyone interested in news­ reason, then, an overt assurance M o s t columns, however, are Most of these same persons believe he rules These four are responsible to the editor for front page pictures. This list be completely rewritten. paper work can work for the the managing editor uses for of dissent is given. written by members of the Edi­ the State News with an iron hand. the newspaper’s operation. They also sit on the The process is long, tedious When editorials represent the torial Board and assistant&to the State News. making-up page one. Editorial Board, which advises the editor-in- and often frustrating. Members editorial editor. Fortunately, the general manager, Louis Ber­ Stories are played on page one beliefs of the editor-in-chief and chief on operational and editorial policies. Stories submitted by reporters of the Editorial Board are con­ Columns do not necessarily man, does not live up to this reputation. according to their relative im­ the entire Editorial Board, they Noteworthy is the fact that the editor-in-chief are screened for accurate,clear, sulted. Disagreements a r i s e ; agree or disagree with editorial When I was named editor, Berman said "Look, portance. A page one meeting are signed "The Editors.” appoints these editors and they are responsible concise w r i t i n g and t h e n each side must argue well in policy, although they may do you’re the editor, the decisions are yours. I’ll is held around 4 p.m. each day. When one or more members to him. He has the final authority. p a s s e d on to the m a k e - u p order to win its point. of the board disagree with the either. They are, generally, per­ advise you if you ask me and maybe argue with The editor discusses the day’s or night editor who activity with his campus, wire A completed editorial is not editor and others on the board, sonal insights into the news and you if you ask me. But you can win any argument offer an alternative to editorials. arranges them on a page. and managing editors. signed by its individual author. the editorial is signed "The Ed­ and have the final say.” The N e w s p a p e r ’s O p e r a tio n T h e editorial represents the The State News attempts also The power to censor is not absent. Berman's He then makes his final de­ itors, Dissent (by) . . . ” The wire editor is in charge of cisions and composes a front opinion of the newspaper. A sign­ Those dissenting are then re­ to act as a forum for ideas for Job is to handle the paper’s financial affairs; the At 5 p.m., two days before an issue appears the four national and interna­ page budget. The managing edi­ ed editorial weakens the stand quired to submit a column ex- persons outside its operation. person who controls the purse strings can wield on campus, the Editorial Department receives Columns and editorials by the tional teletypes and one tele­ tor works from this budget in a lot of power. from advertising between eight and 16 page photo machine employed by the paper's staff are supplemented But, the point is, he does not use it. making up the first page. lay-out or dummy sheets. State News. by letters to the editor and point He does not see any copy before the paper is Changes are made as late de­ Designed in specific spots on these dummies of view columns written by per­ printed unless he is asked to look at it; he rarely velopments merit them. are the ads that will appear in that day's paper; Wire stories are rated from sons outside the newspaper’s op­ advises unless he is asked to. What’s more, no the remainder of the page is blank and will be a schedule of the day’s top stor­ * * • eration. rule says he must ever be asked. filled with editorial copy. ies. The wire editor then hands The newspaper prints as many The editor-in-chief has the responsibility. The number of pages of the issue is deter­ these stories, like the local stor­ Making An E dito rial letters as space allows. The Something should be mentioned here about the mined by the amount of advertising sold: the ies, to the night editor for dum­ right to withhold and edit letters four editors who resigned last fall because, they more advertising sold, the larger the paper. mying. To this point, only the news is reserved, but, generally, ed­ say, they were being censored. The pages are approved by the editor-in- dissemination portion of the State iting is done only to delete li­ The dispute concerned when the State News chief and handed on to the managing editor, who After stories are dummied ac­ News' operation has been discus­ bels or obscenities and to cor­ should print documents from the Paul Schiff case. is responsible for make-up or placing stories cording to their importance, they sed. rect spelling and grammatical The editor-in-chief first believed the paper and pictures on each page. are passed on to the copy desk How are editorial and opinion errors. could print the documents before a ruling-was Good make-up is essential to a good news­ where the story is read for ac­ articles formed? * * • given by the committee hearing the case. Later paper: pleasant, appealing pages motivate read­ curacy, correct spelling, gram­ Editorials are, theoretically, The editor-in-chief has the he changed his mind, thinking the printing might ership of the paper. mar and style and then given a the voice of the newspaper. They power and authority to dictate the put public pressure on the committee members. Stories that appear in the newspaper come headline. represent the paper’s united front entire editorial operation of the Berman agreed with the latter appraisal; he from two sources, the campus editor's desk and on specific issues. State News. was probably instrumental in convincing the the wire editor's desk. Pictures are selected by the This editorial comment is di­ But, the editor is human. A editor. The campus editor is responsible for covering managing editor from t h o s e rected by the editor-in-chief in convincing argument by his four The four assistant editors, appointed by the consultation with his editorial editors on a proposed editorial editor and other members of the stand is not without effect. And Editorial Board. so it goes. Most suggestions for editorials * * * come from the editor, editorial (Any questions concern­ editor and his assistants. Sug­ ing the above a r t l c l e o r a n y gestions are discussed; e a c h o th er aspect of the State side’s argument is aired. N e w s ’ operation not c o v e r­ During this process, the editor ed h ere should be a ddres­ is advised by his Editorial Board. sed to Kyle C. K erbawy, Finally, an editorial stand is de­ Campus E d ito r James Spanlolo: Looking f o r re lia b le r e p o r te r s with talent In w ritin g . e d i t o r - in - c h ie f . ) cided upon. YOUR PARENTS LIKE TO KNOW After Others Go Home WHAT’S NEWS AT I i ._ _ i • . L £.„..„1 campus as well as possible; t h e ir work often c a r - Publishing e v e r y class day is a big |ob. s ev era l r r MICHIGAN STATE s ta ffe r s average 40 hours work a week. Many others *" ® n n o e g w o rk at least 20 hours. T h e i r goal is to in fo rm the Silk S c r e e n s $ 1 .0 0 -$ 2 .0 0 Som e O r i g i n a l s Lo rd y ! Keep your parents in touch w ith the events and i s s u e s at M ichigan State. A yearly ten dollar su b scrip tion to the State News w ill give your parents greater u n derstanding o f lif e at y o u r “ h o m e a w a y f r o m h o m e . ’ ’ I--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- I STATE NEWS Enclosed is my check fo r J $10 fo r o y e a r ’ s subscription ! 3 4 7 S tu d en t S e rv ic e s B u ild in g to ¡state News. T h e M od e rn s: Klee I M ic h ig a n S ta te U n iv e r s it y H e r b A l p e r t P ica ss o-M od ig l iani I East L a n s in g , M ic h ig a n M iro-C hagall-B rague B r i d g e F o r B lo o d I I K o r n m a n - Mondr ian S a v o i r F a i r e I I Nam e M ore , M o r e ,M o r e , M o r e S p o r t s I I A d dress - ---------------------------- ------- ------------------------ I ____________________________ ______________________________ C a m a b y S t r e e t SPARTAN BOOKSTORE BIG TFhl Arrives on Campus the First Week of October I C ity I________________________________________________________________________________________________ S ta te Z ip C ode C o r n e r of Ann & M.A.C. Get Yours Before They're Gone--It's FRFF % Tuesday, October 4, 1966 1 0 M i c h i g a n S t a t e N e w s , _ E a g t J L a n s i n g j_ M i c h i g a ^ CALL ?**Je PUT Y O U R AD WHERE THE BUYERS ARE STATE NEWS CLASSIFIED 355-8255 R e a d ie r WAtfT ADS Automotive Automotive E m p lo y m e n t E m p loy m en t F o r Rent The State News does not Automotive NOON HouR supervisors, East DRIVERS 5l or older. Full and 401 FAIRVtEW S. One bedroom, p erm it ra c ia l o r religious KAftMANN GHIA 1963, black with TRIUMPH TR-3, 1960. Recon- HONDA 1966, 3Ó5CC, must sell, Lansing Junior High School. 11 part. Guarantee to steady dri­ ground floor, furnished. $125 with a discrim ination In Its ad­ white top. Radio, heater, clean. ditioned inside and out. $650. accessories, Phone 484-1765 month, utilities included. 882- Phone 351-6144. 5-10/7 after 5 p.m. 3-10/4 a.m . to 1 p.m. dally. $1.40 vers. Apply VARSITY CAB J g f Ç i v ertisin g c o l u m n s . The One owner, $895. 645-7707. per hour plus 50$ lunch. Con­ COMPANY, 12 2 Woodmere, 5763. _______________ 5-10/7 low cost S tate News w ill not accept 5-10/5 TRIUMPH 1966 Spitfire, hard- hoN'da Sp o r t 6$; i9&5, good side door.___________ 10-10/12 LARiE 3-4 man apartment, fur- transportation, new battery, tact Mr. Oestrlech. 332-3546. nvnonw i ad v ertising which d isc rim ­ MERCEDES, 1962, 190SL Sports top convertible. Excellent con­ 3-10/6 NEED HELP for WINDROW’S nished, parking. 1214 East 1 W A N T A D dition. White with red Interior, $225. Call ED 2-2334. A & W RESTAURANT AND inates a g a i n s t religion, Coupe. Metalic grey, immacu­ 3-10/4 OFFICE NURSE, part time. Kalamazoo, Lansing. 5-10/6 ra c e , color o r national o r­ late, premium car. Collec­ $1795. Phone Pat 372-3731 DRIVE-IN, 315 S. Homer. Short TWO ROOM apartment, $75. U- HONDA 1965 S-vO". Excellent Please write. Include training, • AUTOMOTIVE igin. tor’s Item. Port Austin. 738- between 7-10 p.m. 5-10/10 Condition. $200. 332-3125 experience and references. Dr s. order cook, counter help, car tillties included. One or two. • EMPLOYMENT 6581. 5-10/7 VOLKSWAGEN ÉUS, 1?63. Semi- after 4 p.m. 3-10/6 D. B. Hlscoe and C. L. Adams, hops, 17 and over. Both female 351-5385. 3-10/5 • FOR RENT MERCEDES-BENZ I960, black, camper, radio, very good con­ M.D.’s, 2909 East Grand River, and male. 10-10/12 OKEMOS TOWN House Apart- red leather interior. Snow tires. dition. 355-5864. 3-10/6 HONDA 50, 1905. Good condi- • FOR SALE Automotive tion, $175. 332-6383. 3-10/6 Suite 104, Lansing. 3-10/6 MAIDS, DAY and night. Five ments. Spacious three bed­ • LOST & FOUND Must sell. $875. 372-5021. VOLKSWAGEN, 1965 sedan. Sun day week. See Mrs. Boggs, Uni­ rooms upstairs. 2 1/2 baths, CADILLAC 1955 Fleetwood. Good PART TIME work for male stu- • PERSONAL T ran sm issio n . Runs sm oothly. ____________ 3 -10/6 roof, 27,000 m iles, excellent HONDA $0, 1964. Excellentcon- dent Interested in construction versity Inn Motel, East Lan- conveniently placed. Large MERCURY, 1962. ExcellentCon- condition, $1200 or best offer. dition. Reasonably priced. 332- slng. 10—10/12 • PEANUTS PERSONAL Good T ire s . One Owner. Pow er 6946 after 6 p-m. 1-10/ 4 business. P o s s i b i l i t y of dinlng-kitchen area. Front and dition. Owner in armed forces. 355-8506 or 337-7027. 3-10/6 STUDENTS FOR gardeningwork. back entrance. Full basement. • REAL ESTATE Windows. $250. IV 2-2202. LAMBRETTA SCOOTER - 125cc developing into full time em­ $650. ED 2-0796. 3-10/4 VOLKSWAGEN 1$64 sedan, fully Full or halfdays. TWISSLAND­ Children welcome. F or appoint­ • SERVICE ________ 5 -1 0 /5 1964. Insurance included. Mint ployment. Call Mr. Linton 484- M.G. 1966; Midget, 4000 miles, equipped, 17,000 m iles. $1150 SCAPE CENTER. IV 4-7753. ment, call State Management • TRANSPORTATION CHEVROLET 1965, Impala, con- condition. 351-5805. 3-10/6 4546. 5-10/5 excellent condition. White with or best offer. One owner. 5-10/5 Corporation, 332-8687. v ertib le. Red with w hite top. • WANTED black top. Asking price $1750. 355-2841 or 353-0665. 5-10/6 LAMBRETTA MOTOR scooter, EMPLOYERS OVERLOAD COM- DESK CLERK, should be able to C-10/6 V-8, stick shift, w arran ty . Call 1958, for sale or trade for PANY, temporary assignments Phone 882-7228 8-10/10 VOLKSWAGEN 1300, 1966, Pearl type. Apply HOLIDAY INN, FURNISHED. 4 rooms. Ground DEADLINE M rs. Bayle, faculty extension Mini bike - Call after 5:30, for experienced office girls. No 57707 o r ED 2-5857. 1-10/4 M. G. MIDGET, lW>3. Excel- white. Condition like new. Seat North of Frandor. 5-10/5 floor. Private bath and en­ 1 p .m . o n e c l o s s d a y b e ­ lent condition. Must sell, go­ belts, steering wheel lock. Best 882-2157. 3-10/6 fee, top pay. Phone 487-6071. BUS BOYS, must be 1&, Apply CHEVROLET 19$9 im pala. Good _______________________C-10/6 trance. Married couple. ED fore publ ication ing into service. 339-2186. offer over $1400. Call 355- LOOK OUT, SUZUKI is herel HOLIDAY INN, north of Fran­ 2-5762. 3-10/4 Condition. Also 1965 SS. Call ____________________ 3-10/4 1199. 3-10/4 World’s finest motorcycle. FOX dor. 5-10/5 C a n c e 'i o t i o n s • 12 n o o n o n e 337-9842. 5 -1 0 /7 SPORT CENTER, 2009 South CHOOSE YOUR own hours. A FOUR MEN needed, part time, Houses MG, TD Roadster, 1953. Sharp I VOLKSWAGEN Ï553; radio, new c la ss day before publication CHEVROLET IMPALA 1963 S.S. Cedar. 372-3908. C-10/6 few hours a day can mean ex­ New paint and interior. TU tires, excellent condition. After hours v a r y . GORDON FOODi TWO-ROOM house. Graduate Convertible. 327 cu. In., 4 2-0764. 3-10/5 HONDA 160, 19Ó5. Excellent cellent earnings for you as a SERVICE. 484-5354. M r . student or instructor, pre- 6:00 p.m. OR 7-2976. 5-10/5 PHONE speed. Must se ll. Call afte r MGB 1%3, in excellent condition. VOLKSWAGEN l963 sedan. condition, $475. Call 351-7427. trained AVON representative. Boven.________________ 5-10/5 ferred $80, utilities paid. 351— 355-8255 7 p.m . 372-6659 10-10/12 Call Mr. DeYoung, 882-2329. 3-10/6 For appointment In your own 6328. 3-10/6 16,000 m iles. Good condition. LINEN ROOM plus sewing. Sin­ CHEVY II 300 1962 Standard 5-10/5 $800 or best offer. 669-3116. STRATTON’S SPORT CENTER, home write Mrs.Alona Huckins, ger Machine. See Mrs. Boggs, RATES shift. Clean. Good condition. MUSTANG 1965, V-8, convertl- 5-10/5 Benelli of Lansing, used bike 5664 School Street, Haslett, University Inn Motel, East Lan­ House for Rent 1 DA if............s i . 50 One owner. Phone IV 5-0745 ble, black, low mileage, straight VOLKSWAGEN 19ÓÓ Bus. Good sale. Yamaha 80 cc 1964, $249. Michigan or call 339-2198. C sing, Michigan. 10-10/12 afte r 2 p.m . 3 -1 0 /5 Benelli 125 cc 1966, $329. Be­ PART TIME Go-Go girl or fe- 4 or 6 students at 3 DAYS..........S3.00 shift. Call IV 4-9017 or NA tires, low mileage, auxiliary SECRETARY FOR law office. Ef- CHEVROLET, 1963, convertible, 7-7959. 3-10/6 heater. Reasonable. 351-6240. nelli 200 cc 1966, $529. Benelli male singer. Apply in person. $50 each. No Pets. 5 DAYS......... ¿5.00 ficient typist. Shorthand essen­ 409, all ex tra s, excellent con­ MUSTANG LATE 1965, red, 2*&, 3-10/5 125 cc Scrambler 1966, $395. Jo Joseph’s Pro-Bowl, 2122 N. tial. Salary commensurate with (based on 10 w ords p e r ad) dition. Phone ED 7-7279, Benelli 250 cc 1966, $569. Logan. 10-10/14 Phone IV 9-1017 289 V-8, cruisomatic, 735-14. experience. Write Box B2. Over 10, 15< p er word, p e r day, 3 -1 0 /4 Jet-air tires, radio, heater, Auto Service & Parts Suzuki 150 cc, $449. IV4-4411. IRON WEEKLY; provide own CHRYSLER 1962 , 4-door. One very clean, 11,500 m iles. MEL’S AUTO SERVICE. East 1915 E. Michigan. C transportation; hours can be MALE STUDENTS, discouraged 5-ROOM Bungalow with recrea- There — . i be c serv : owner, low m ileage, a ir condi­ SUZUKI, 1966. 250 CC model arranged. ED 2-6413. 3-10/5 tion room. Furnished, $150 $1,795. Phone 485-0976. Lansing’s only garage Is now trying to fit a part time job per month. 646 South Foster. and tool keeping chame tioned. 489-5346, 8-5:30. located at 1108 East Grand Ri­ T-10. Must sell, need money BUS BOYS; m eals. Theta Delta into an already busy schedule? s npt oo d * 1*h 3 -1 0 /6 5-10/10 IV 4-4097 3-10/6 t h .s J 1 OLDSMOBILE: 1965, Dynamic ver. 332-3255. C for school. $575 or best of- Chi House. 139 Bailey. 332- Earn $60 per week working 2 o ne * er« COMET 1961. Automatic, snow 88 convertible. Green, white ACCIDENT PROBLEM? fer. 351-7664.________ 3-10/4 2563, 332-2564. 3-10/5 evenings and Saturday. Car LARGE FIVE bedroom house, tir e s . Some ru s t. $250. 332- Call SUZUKI 80, 1966. Very reason- furnished. 4-6 students. 313 top. Sharp I 4 -speed, many KALAMAZOO BODY SHOP. ably priced. VERSATILE STUDENT female necessary. Phone 332-3506. 8795, 353-7971. 5-10/10 Call 484-6596 5-10/5 North Logan, Lansing. IV 4- Automotive extras. TU 2-1771. 3-10/6 Small dents to large wrecks. after 5 p.m. help, Cedarbrook Apartments; COMET 1962; autom atic, buc- 3-10/5- — .................. ■w i .i I . ¿r , 9 7 5 5 . _______________ 3-10/4 tLFA ROHEO ro a d ste r, i^ o i, OLDSMOBILE 1959 sedan, " W , American and foreign cars. pay range open. 332-0119. F o r Rent ONE MALE to share house. P rl- good condition, new tire s , ket seats, very good condition. full power. Excellent condi­ Guaranteed work. 482-1286. SUZUKI 1966. l$0cc, under 2,060 3-10/5 vate bedroom. 1007 May Street, brakes. Call evenings 355- $695. 355-5836. 3 -1 0 /4 tion. Edward’s Gulf Service 2628 E. Kalamazoo. C m iles, $475. 337-0571 after MEN INtERESTED in working PARKING SPACES available. Lansing. $60 month, 9 month CORVAIR” 1963, convertible, Yankee Stadium, East Lansing. NEW BATTERIES. 4:30 p.m. 5-10/7 part time with youth. Contact One block to campus. $20 6119. __________ 3-10/5 Exchange lease. 3-10/4 iLFA ROMEO, I960, excellent good condition. Call Ken, 351— 5-10/10 price from $7.95. New sealed CUSHMAbi SCOOTER; 4 - 9 / 1 0 Parkwood branch YMCA this term. 337-2345. 3-10/4 THREE MALE graduate students condition, many e x tra s. Call 7664 afte r 5 p.m . 3 -1 0 /5 OLDSMOBILE 19557 1327 4- beams, 99$. Salvage cars, horse power. Good condition. week for interview. ED2-8657, need fourth to share house. 489-1551. 10-10/14 CORVETTE 1964. Fuel Injec- speed, 12,000 m iles, Black large stock used parts. ABC 651-5566. 3-10/4 5010 Park Lake Road, E. Lan­ David TV Rental 482-7670. 3-10/4 ACS TIN HEAL Y S prite 196$ low tlon. Chrome m ags and slick s. with red interior. NA 7-6658 AUTO PARTS, 613 E. South YAMAHA 305, l966. Candy- sing. 3-10/5 m ileage, radio, h ea te r, blue. 484-1267. 5-10/10 3-10/4 apple, low m iles, $675 or trade GIRL TO prepare dinner, break- $20 p er term FURNISHED FOUR bedroom for St., IV 5-1921. C 351-7093. _________ 3 -1 0 /j FAIRLANE 500, 1958. Good OLDSMOBILE 1963; convertl- CAR WASH: .25$. Wash, wax, for car. 353-7688. 3-10/6 fast, stay all night, for one six or seven. $200 per month C a ll IV 7 - 5 0 4 9 plus utilities. Year lease - AUSTIN HEALEY 3000, 196Ü. dependable t r a n s p o r t a t i o n . ble, power steering, brakes, vacuum. U-DO-IT. 430 S. STRATTON’S SPORT CENTER person. No set schedule. ED October 1st. Fifteen minutes Excellent condition, new tire s . Must se ll. Call 355-6426. radio. Call 353-0985. 5-10/6 Clippert, back of KOKO Bar. has opened Suzuki of Charlotte. 2-5176.______________ 10-10/12 1025 N. Pennsylvania 355-5458. 3-10/5 _________________________ 5-10/7 We have just taken delivery of to campus. Call 337-2080 after OLDSMOBILE 1965; d y n a m i c , C-10/6 WANTED: WEEKEND board o- BU1CK 1957 good engine, good FALCCiST FUTURA, 1963, Six, a dozen X6’s . Don’t forget SPACE FOR three boats or cars, 6 p.m. 5-10/6 very clean, one year warranty 4-SPEED transmission: fits all perators with announcing a- in te rio r. New b attery . $135. standard, p erfec t condition . left, 9500 m iles. Call 372-4948. Chevrolet and Corvette. Ex­ we’re one of the few dealers billty. Experience not neces­ 128 N. Magnolia. 489-2593. THREE BEDROOM, $65, Oke- 355-0006. 3-10/5 Make an o ffer. C all John 10-10/12 cellent. Linkage. 351-9394. who will take a car in trade sary but desired. Auditions will 5-10/5 mos. Art Boettcher, 332-3583. CORVETTE 196$, convertible P ie rc e , 351-9792. 3 -1 0 /4 OLDSMOBlLË 98 1964 deluxe, 3-10/6 for partial or full p a y m e n t . be held 7:30 p.m., October 5th; SPACE TO park mobile home on ' Rooms with two tops, 365 hp., 4-speed, FALCONS: GREEN, 1961 - Ox- New tires and cruise control. MEL'S AUTO SERVICE. East Phone 543-1873, Charlotte. C 3rd floor, Auditorium. Call 1 1/2 acre lot. Nice yard, AM-FM radio. C all 882-0771 ford blue, 1962. Both excellent 669-9049. 3-10/5 Lansing’s only garage Is now CUSHMAN EAGLE Scooter. Low 355-6540 for information. patio and sidewalk. Seven miles SINGLE ROOMS. Preferably located at 1108 East Grand Ri­ mileage. Like new. IV 5-0745 3-10/5 from campus. Call 641-6427. boys. Near campus; parking or 353-2341. 5-10/7 condition, 2 -d o o r, stick shift. PEUGEOt 403, I960 , 4-door, ver. 332-3255. C after 2 p.m. 3-10/5 LEAD GUITARIST - Want to lr 1,0/4 available. 351-7280. 3-10/5 Good gas m ileage. Call 655- sunroof, one owner, good con­ 1793. 3-10/5 dition. 332-2489. 3-10/4 NEW BATTERIES' Exchange SUZUKI 1965, 130 C6. Excel- make money, record and have Apartments APPROVED HOUSING for women PLYMOUTH, 1955 4-door. Auto- price from $7.95. New sealed lent condition, 2 m irrors, car­ fun in a rock group? Call with cooking privileges. Close The Loose Ends FORD RANCH wagon 1963."Mw matic transmission converted beams, 99$. Salvage cars,large rier, windshield, and more. Dave IV 4-7594. 5-10/7 ONE MAN for two bedroom, two to campus. ED 2-1638. tom atic tra n sm issio n . V-8 En­ man apartment. 1105-1/2 N, 3-10/5 to floor. Runs good. Sharpl stock used parts. ABC AUTO $430. 351-4702.- 3-10/4 BEST FOOD on campus. Bus gine. $992. 646-5043. 3-10/4 Pennsylvania. 5-10/5 SINGLE ROOM in five woman a- Looking for a band with a $95. Days call 482-1303. PARTS, 613 E. South St., IV WHITE 250cc road bike, ¿¿Ucc at the ZBT House. Call 332- sound you can feel? FORD, 1964 G alaxie 500, V-b, 5-1921. C trail bike. EYDEAL VILLA and Burcham partment near campus. Call 3-10/5 Both new; must 3218, Ask for Rose or Gabe. We’re back for your enter­ hardtop, stick . P erfe ct condi­ Woods apartments. One and 337-1194. 3-1.0/ 6 PONTIAC. SHARP 1959. Runs ACCIDENT PROBLEM? CALL se ll. 332-8180. 3-10/4 5-10/7 tainment with the heavy beat of tion. 355-0865. 5-10/10 332 -3129. KALAMAZOO STREET BODY two bedroom, luxury furnished, SINGLE, BEHIND the Gables. well. Best offer. k a w a So k i i t s :— 1100 m iles, LOCAL APPLIANCE ciealer rock to rhythm and blues. FORD 1963, 2 -d o o r, V-3, stick ______________________ 5-10/10 SHOP. Small dents to large now available. Fully carpeted, Share spacious four bedroom electric starter, helmet. $500 needs 2 men. part time to as­ radio,: clean, econom ical. Best RAMBLER CUSTOM 190U. 4- wrecks. American and foreign General Electric kitchen, gar­ home. $51 per month. 351- or offer. 489-3638. 3-10/5 sist in business. Must be mar­ offe r. 3 5 1 -9 3 9 4 ._____ 3-10/6 door automatic. R & H. Good cars. Guaranteed work. 482- bage disposal, tile bath. Call 5305 after 4:30 p.m. 3-10/6. YAMAHA 1966 Big Bear, low ried and have transportation. F o r In f o r m a t io n C a ll FORD 1960 F a irla n e , 2-door, condition. $350. 372-6177. 1286. 2628 E. Kalamazoo. C Fidelity Realty. 332-5041. Standard, six cy linder, $250. 3 -1 0 /5 mileage, like new, $650. IV 699-2556. 3-10/4 3-10/6 F o r Sale T O M IV 5-0761 2-4734. 5-10/10 MEN INTERESTED in part time One GIRL needed for four girl SUMMER, Phone 332-0952. 5-10/5 RAMBLER 190Ü sedan. Best Scooters & Cycles WINTER clothes. 355-3003. 1966 BSA 650 Hornet; 3000 m iles. VESPA 125. Excellent condi- employment. Hours can be ar­ apartment. $45. Phone 332- Sizes 5-10, Call after 5 p.m. offer over $700 ranged. Apply KELLY TEM- 4431. 3-10/5 3-10/4 Excellent condition. $1100.489- tion, $150. Phone ED 7-1443, porary s e r v i c e s , 400 1/2 3-10/6 337-2188. RAMBLER 1962 c o n v e r t i b l e , 3-10/4 COMBINATION WASHER-dryer. 9415. 5-10/7 I S. Washington Avenue, between APARTMENT, GOOD location, blue, low mileage, 172 Gunson, BSA 6$0. Excellent condition. YAMAHA 1966 250cc, good con- all utilities included, nine month A -l condition, $65 . 4602 Brit­ N EED H E LP East Lansifig RENAULT 1962; very good con- 7-10/7 Will accept best offer. Call dition. $500. lohn after 6 p.m. at 351-9365. 9043. Must sell. 355- 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. 3-10/5 GIRLS TO answer phones, easy 5-10/6 lease. work, lots of boys around. Also AVONDALE FURNISHED two 351-5300. 1-10/4 ton, Perry. 625-3111. 3-10/5 GUiTAff: EPIPHONE Olympic dition. Runs two weeks on $2 3-10/6 YAMAHA 1964; 250cc, 2$0cc, excel- part time counter help needed. bedrooms. Apt. #44. Lease and Epiphone Tremolo Ampli­ lent condition, 5,000 m iles. OR NOW ? worth of gas. $325. Phone BRIDGESTONE^ 351-4260. THUNDERB1RD 1957 Classic. 3-10/4 1965, 30cc, electric starter. $225. Call 6-5088 or 489-9215. after 1 p.m. 353-6877. 5-10/10 BENELLI 1966 Scrambler, 50cc, 3-10/4 Varsity Drive In. KEY PUNCH and verifying opera- 5-10/6 required. Call 337-2080 after 1 p.m. 3-10/6 fier. Call evenings 353-7900. OVER 25 YEARS experience. 5-10/5 OP - 4-speed. Excellent woods bike. tors. Experienced. Days or FOUR MAN luxury apartment, California car, perfect body, HONDA 1965 S-90 rebuilt engine. Four-hour night shift. Apply TICAL DISCOUNT 416 Tussing Includes passenger seat, $235. one block from Berkey, park­ completely original. Show con­ Must sell. $240. TU 2-0764. Beurman-Marshall Corpora­ Bldg. Phone IV 2-4667. dition. 332-6300 after 3. 1-10/4 355-9337. 3-10/5 ing available. ED 2-4127. 3-10/5 C -5-10/7 THUNDERBIRD Î95Ï7 wïïîtë, HONDA 1963 305 cc, 4,600 m iles. YAMAHA, 1965. 250 cc. E x ­ tion, 821 East Kalamazoo. Per­ 3-10/4 cellent condition. Leaving for sonnel office. 5-10/6 power, duel speakers, good con­ Excellent condition. Two crash dition, $485. 332-1063. service. Priced to sell. L. DELIVERY BOYS, $2-$3anhour. I H helmets. Call Fred, 332-3563« 3-10/6 5-10/7 Elijah, evenings. IV 9-0166. 5-10/5 Also grill, counter, and pizza help needed. Part or full time. w mm ¡HONDA 1966 Sport 50; like new Varsity Drive In. 5-10/6 REGISTERED NURSES Aviation MALE HELP wanted: part or ACROSS 25. Hedact condition. $225. Phone ED 7- and L . P . N . ’ s full time at East Lansing’s new­ i. Soli sticky 26. Father 9296. 3-10/5 FRANCIS AVIATION now form- 27. I’ut on est drive-in: ARBY’S ROAST earth 165 bed JCAH accredited HONDA 50 1965. Good condition. ing MSU Faculty Flying Club. 28. H u m o r BEEF. Good pay; apply in 4. Hitler ■“t S " General Hospital with plans $200. 641-6394 5-10/5 Membership limited. For in­ H a g g a rd 29. H oney for expansion. formation, phone 484-1324. C person, 203 Evergreen. 5-10/6 HONDA SPORT 5(T, excellent con­ PRESSMAN FOR letter press novel 30. A d a m a n t dition, many new parts. $195. 7. Ira n ia n 31. Solid •OPEN HEART SURGERY 355-0006. 3-10/5 E m p lo y m e n t job shop. Hand feed and auto­ ruler alco hol matic p resses. MYERS PRINT­ hoNDA Su p e r 90 i 965. Red, DENTAL ASSISTANT wanted for ING SERVICE, 1421 East Michi­ 1 1. C o n ­ 33. H aw sers • INTENSIVE CARE UNIT many extras. ED 2-1860 after Orthodontist. Full or part time. sum ed 34. P rio r to gan. IV 2-2554. 10-10/12 three. 3-10/5 IV 2-4655; after 7 p.m., IV 12. S hack 35. K n a ck • CORONARY CARE UNIT 4-0702. 3-10/6 RESPONSIBLE MARRIED man 13. S e n a to r's 36. T w o h u n ­ in January 1967 HONDA 150, 1966. Excellent with good driving record for m essenger d re d y e ar condition. $500. Call ED 2 - STUDENT NURSE. Call EÙ 2- early evening campus laundry a n n iv e rs a ry i7. U n it of F.mhracc • GENERAL STAFF 5176. 10-10/17 14. Ice box F.ndlcss 5457.__________ 5-10/5 route. Must be available from 17. Form ol 42. C eiling energy POSITIONS HONDA $-90, 1S>65T Mirrors, WAITftÉSS, MORn ISiG shift. Ap- 7. risli eggs Excellent Progressive 5-9 Monday through Friday. Re­ Jo h n 43. H en fruit DOWN luggage rack, cover; good con­ ply Holiday Inn, north of Fran­ 8. C h a p e a u ferences. CAPITOL LAUNDRY, 18. T ier 44. Ry w ay ol 1 Blem ish Personnel Policies dition. $300. 355-6880. dor. 5-10/10 45. Social 2. Shu- 9. Past 2000 West Saginaw, Lansing. 19. Velvetlike 10. Fem inine Coll IV4-2511 3-10/4 BUS BOY for Delta Gamma So- 5 4 0/5 cloth insects shonean Ext. 207- 8am to 5pm p ro n o u n HONDA 50. T955T 700 m iles. rority. Call ED 2-3457. WAITRESSES: PART or full 21. U m lcr 46. Fem ale 3. E xplicit 3-10/6 4. Glisten 15. D eclaim Ingham Medical Hospital Perfect condition. $205. ED time. Contact PIZZA PIT after tw entv-one ra b b it 16. C ro ss 2-4732. 3-10/4 GREAt LAKES EMPLOYMENT 4 p.m. 5-10/5 19. C hurch PLACE A for permanent positions for BELL BOY, must be id. Apply Z to benches feffie Readier VET’S CLUB men and women in office, sales, technical. IV 2-1543. C-10/6 HOLIDAY INN, north of Fran­ dor. 5-10/5 14 15 tz I 13 20. E n tra n ce 22. Pliable 23. T ria n g u ­ HELP AT W ANTED YOUR AD M e e tin g MSU 19 20 ! r IP 2* Is 24 la r inset 24. F ra g ­ m ents 26. C anceled 27 29. Sun-up STATE NEWS CLASSIFIED TO-NIGHT Sailing Club zs 20 1 124 i30 30. A ntler 32. S h o als u------------ 33. Stove 3X1 33 36. Ital. town 8:30 p.m . 37. Electrified F i r s t F a l l Meeting 34 33 particle PARLOR ‘C ’ 134 m 1 ip 40 41 38. how Union B a l l r o o m 37 30 39 bedstead PH O N E UNION BUILDING 41 43 44 39. Sell i 1 40. S p re a d All Veterans With Over 21 Months 43 46 % 47 a b ro ad 355-8255 Active Duty Welcome 7:30 pm, T u e s . O c t. 4, W 41. D ally M ichigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Tuesday. October 4, 1966 || 1 F o r Sale_______ ENGLISH LIGHT - WEIGHT 3- F o r Sa le LEITZ MONOCULAR m icro­ Personal SEX ISN'T the only thing to talk ASMSU speed bicycles. $39.77 full scope convertible to binocular. about on WITL-FM Nightline, price. Rental-purchase terms 4 objectives, mechanical stage, 10 p.m._______________ 1-10/4 available. We also have tennis light, case. $300. Mel Robin­ racquets, golf balls, badminton birdies, gifts and housewares. son, 485-4173. MEN’S SCHWINN bike, like new 3-10/5 Real E s t a t e EAST LANSING, Bailey School, M a y b a c k d r iv e ACE HARDWARE, across from condition, $35. Call 351-5694 Three bedroom Cape Cod, many the Union. ED 2-3212. C desirable features, $21,500, man of the agenda committee, Carbine pointed out that ma­ anytime. 3-10/5 By B E V T W I T C H E L L XFFECTTOKa TÉ SIa MÈSÈ kit­ land contract. 332-0452. explained that a second motion jor governing groups were urged TWO RCA 21" TV’s, $40 each. S ta te N ew s S ta ff W r i t e r tens, $15. 351-6647. 3-10/5 ___________ 5-10/7 will be made under new busi­ at last week’s meeting to dis­ Call 694-0326. 5-10/7 The student Board of the A s- ^4 ---> HOUSE, EAST Lansing, by owner. ness to transfer $870 from the cuss the allocation during this F or w edding and practical s o c l a t e d S t u d e n t s of MSU Animals Moving. TWo bedroom, deluxe fall budget to the 18-year-old vote week. shower gifts, see ACE HARD­ (ASMSU) will consider the allo­ A factor that the board is also home. Garage, private fenced campaign. WARE’S selections. 201 E. SPECIAL GOLD wag swords, 79 iR )h .w b s s «ne Sh akes-Su n daes cleaner in good condition with All reserved seats have been to employ in his orchestral re­ fering 400 students the chance to GENERAL, 1964, Attractive, 12 free. Try our Velvasoft pro­ all the attachments. $18. Phone cordings. attend an MSU football game for 1 "'W E' 8:45 P.M. Only x 52, two bedrooms, carpeted ce ss. 25 years in Lansing. sold out for "Mancini’s Melo­ Mancini has earned three Os­ which tickets are sold out. OX 4-6031. C-10/6 GAS RAfiGE, Norge, 36” , ex- cellent condition, $30. 351- lot. $3,500 . 372-5769. 3-10/6 CADILLAC, 10 x 4 ? on East BY-LO DIAPER SERVICE, 1010 dies," the first in a series of cars, five Oscar nominations, 17 E. Michigan. IV 2-0421. C ASMSU Popular Entertainment Grammy Awards and 10 Grammy sored trip for 400 to the Ohio programs featuring w e 11-known The chance consists of a spon­ Sr&SEDUCEQ 5097. USED VERIFAX Bantam Copier. 3-10/6 Lansing lot, excellent condition, DIAPER SERVICE, D i a p a r e n e washer - dryer, Immediate Franchised Service Approved by artists in the musical field. General admittance tickets at nominations. State-Michigan State game on Tickets may be obtained at Oct. 15 in Columbus. _ andflBflflMflEQ Excellent condition. Phone 393- Occupancy. 332-5797. Doctors and DSIA. The most the Union, Marshall Music in East The price of $14 includes a mm mm plus TRAVELO 8 x 30. Furnished, modern and Only personalized $2.50 are still available for the L a n s i n g , Campbell’s Suburban game ticket, transportation, a 3054. Must sell. 3-10/6 Friday night performance which Alberto S o rd i. I on lot in East Lansing. $750. service in Lansing, providing Shop and Paramount News in lunch before the game, and a FURY 300 helmet. Good condi- you with diaper pails, poly bags, will begin at 8 p.m. in Jenison Lansing. tion. $20. 353-1038. 3-10/6 #212 Trailer Haven. 332-8093. Field House. box lunch after the game. f e d If no answer, 332-1947. 3-10/6 deodorizers and diapers, or use The New Christy Minstrels will The package deal may be pur­ DESKS, U.S. Navy metal officer’s The reserved seat area for the desks. Philco TV-, radio-, phonograph combination, $25 L o s t & Found PLEASE HELP I Malamute your own. Baby clothes washed free. No deposit. Plant in­ upcoming spection invited. AMERICAN mance Oct. 21, the Friday of Beacji Boys perfor­ perform Nov. 4 as a prelude to chased at 326 Student Services the MSU-Iowa football game. 1-5 p.m. today and Wednesday. t$ S d Homecoming weekend, has also 7:00 P.M. & Later ^ 8 each. 372-4849._______ 3-10/6 (Husky) female, six months, lost DIAPER SERVICE, 914 E.Gier. PROGRAMINFORMATION ^ 482-3c'0£» ROYAL STANDARD typewriter. near campus. $25 reward, 351- Call 482-0864. C been sold out. FRIDAY: Very good condition, $60. Phone It will be up to Mancini to com­ ft f f llC H I G A N 332-1131. 3-10/6 6647. 5-10/7 DIAPER SERVICE, Lansing’s fi- pletely plan his own show as to “ SLE EPING 2820 E. G r a n d River FEMALE KITTEN. Black and nest. Your choice of three Today . . . NOW SHOWING DESK, TABLES, chairs, golf white. Lost near Louis Street, types. Containers furnished, what arrangements his orchestra F ro m 1:00 P.M. MGMPfIM nll CAR MURD ER” Lansing, Michigan items, hair clippers, jig saw, September 6. Reward. 337- will perform and when the Four • no deposit. Baby clothes washed r C at TAYLOR• HARVEY Simone # Yves Phon e 487-3761 mattress. 627-2 845 . 3-10/6 0912. 5-10/6 Preps will appear, upon arrival F eatu re a t 1:00 free. Try our Velvasoft pro­ on » H o t Signoret Montand Skirts, blouses, coats, slacks. ELGIN WATCH, lost Tuesday. F riday afternoon. 3:10-5:15-7:20 T in R o o f FISHER c e ss. 25 years in Lansing. fimftol JOM NOM ARAS Sizes 12-16. IV 4-5689 after Return to Sallie Sampson, 407A The Four Preps, a popular -9:25 P.M . BY-LO DIAPER SERVICE, 1010 TA YÏ0R • N E WM AN BUTTERFIELD 5:00 3-10/6 Rather.________________3-10/4 singing quartet, h a v e made a Walt D isney Q ■,cmmucon PLAYBOY SUBSCRIPTIONS; special college rates of 8 Personal E. Michigan. IV 2-0421. DIAPER SERVICE, Diaparene C name for themselves in show business with such hits as "Down Franchised Service Approved By the Station,” Lazy Summer W WMI'I THtRsmnm . A. IVES *«moai* », NC . •( Shown a t . . . Q uoMIMMlM, .,„c.•.*,(.« 4® Shown a t. . , ATTENTION months, $5; 1 year, $6.50; 2 Save Sunoco Sunny Dollars? Let's by Doctors and DSIA. The most Night" and the recent "Letter to t n ( ÿ K X o f Do neg al! DORMITORY RESIDENTS! 3:00-6:50- 1:10-5:00- years, $12; 3 years, $16.50. match! Call Matt, 332-5537. modern and Only personalized the Beatles." & Later _________________3-10/4 8;55 Send name, address with check service in Lansing, providing The group, Bruce Belland, Glen payable to John Pence, P.O. AESOP'S FABLES—experienced Rock & Roll band. To play for you with diaper pails, polybags, Larson, Marvin Ingram and Ed Box 422, East Lansing. deodorizers and diapers, or use Cobb , have appeared on many Rush parties. Also have hall _________ SONY 260; $240. Perfect, two 5-10/10 to rent. Call Doug. 339-8112. _________________________3-10/6 your own. Baby clothes washed television programs and h a v e free. No deposit. Plant in­ made the nightclub circuit, en­ H U RRY! H U RRY! months old, $190. Call 355- MOTORCYCLE, MOTOR spection invited. AMERICAN tertaining in almost every ma­ 6033. 3-10/6 E n g lis h L i g h t - w e i g h t T- SCOOTER insurance. Package rates. BUBOLZ INSURANCE DIAPER SERVICE, 914 E.Gier. jor nightclub in America. Call 482 -0864._____________ C Among Mancini’s most famous REMINDERTOSTUDENTS... speed bicycles. $39.77 full Over Knapp's Campus Center. .Typing Service works include arrangements of price. Rental-purchase terms 332-8671. C-10/6 "The Pink Panther," "Days of THERE ARE STILL A LIMITED available. We also have tennis WHERE MUSIC counts, call the TYPING IN my home. Pickup, Wine and Roses," "MoonRiver," racquets, golf balls, badminton best. Pete Banting Quintet. deliver. Joyce McKenzie, 655- "Breakfast at T i f f a n y ’s” and NUMBER OF TICKETS birdies, gifts and housewares. 353-6930. 3-10/6 2804. 3-10/6 "Charade." ACE HARDWARE, across from the Union. ED 2-3212. C SOCIAL CHAIRMEN: Mozart JOB RESUMES, 100 copies, $4.50. A great experimenter, Man­ ALDINGER DIRECT MAIL AD­ cini is always testing new sounds AVAILABLE FOR THE . . . . D O R M IT O R Y F IN E A R T S and the Wolfgang play. The ENGLISH SETTER puppies. 4 months old. Ready to start best rock since Bach. Call Gabe, 484-3018. 3-10/6 VERTISING, 533 North Clippert. IV 5-2213. C- NEWYORKCITYDALLET SEASON C O U PO N BO O K S this fall. Vaccinated. TU 2- PAULA ANN HAUGHEY, typist. 7074. SEAL POINT Siamese kitten. 8 3-10/5 KODAK FILM, B & W, 626-127, .33^ each with this ad. MAREK IBM Selectric and Executive.. W ild about A R E N O W O N SALE! REXALL DRUGS PRESCRIP­ Multilith Offset Printing. Pro­ BRING COUPON ‘A’ AND 50C ¥ 3 PLAYS * 2 CONCERTS weeks old. Male, female. TU TION CENTER at Frandor. fessional theses typing. Near Harry TU 2-7074. 3-10/5 campus. 337-1527. C STUDY DESKS, small chest, roll- FREEH! C-10/6 A Thrilling hour of BARBI MEL, Professional typist. TO THE UNION TICKET OFFIC E * O N E DANCE PROGRAM * ONE OPERA a-ways & bunk beds. New and No job too large or too small. KANSAS CITY, Mo. (JP) — Sen. beauty. For appointment, call (MAIN FLOOR LOBBY) used mattresses — all sizes. Block off campus. 332-3255. C Wayne L, M o r s e , D-Ore„ has Study lamps, typewriters, tape 484-4519, MERLE NORMAN T hRSIS, TERM paper and manu- warm praise for former P resi­ T O N IG H T for only ^ 3 ^ recorders, metal w a r d r o b e s , COSMETICS STUDIO, 1600 E. script typing. IBM electric dent Harry S. Truman although, portable TV sets, large selec­ Michigan. C-10/6 typewriter, Courier t y p e . he said, Truman probably dis­ See y o u r C u l t u r a l C o m m i t t e e R e p r e s e n t a t iv e T u e s d a y , O c to b e r 4 th tion new & used electric fans. POP ROCK BOOKING AGENCY Marilyn Smith. IV 2-6113. agrees strongly with many of the f o r y o u r season t i c k e t. Everything for the home. WIL­ now booking fraternity and dorm _______________________ t - i n / 7 senator’s stands. COX SECOND HAND STORE, parties with ten great bands. BARBI MEL, Professional typist. “I think President Truman is MOORAM IN f '.BMAT ON ^ 332-6944 509 E. Michigan, L a n s i n g . Call Steve, IV 4-1021. 5-10/7 No Job too large or too small. going down in history not only L A S T 2 DAYS! ft r M r«3)n n c Phone IV 5-4391, 8-5:30 p.m. HOLY PICTURE TUBES, B at Block off campus. 332-3255. as one of the great Americans of D R IV E 1:30-3:35-5:40-7:45-9:50 _______________ C Man. Nejac now sells TV’s, C our time but as one of the great -I N fW A ftf BEDSPREADS, CURTAINS, rugs radios, and stereos. Visit NE­ PAULA ANN HAUGHEY, typist. p r e s i d e n t s of our history,” THE WILDEST COMEDY OF THE YEAR ! ! MMm SouthwM t of Lansing on WV-78 WOODYALLEN. in yellow - orange from Califor­ JAC at 543 East Grand River, IBM Selectric and Executive. Morse said Sunday night at a din­ AMERICANINTERNATIONALp WOODY ALLEN’S STRIKES^! nia. $20. 355-2437. 3-10/5 next to Paramount News. C Multilith Offset Printing. Pro­ ner in behalf of Israeli bonds. CAMERA, CANON 1.7Canonette, 35 mm, flash attachment, car­ rying case, $75. IV 9-0629. ARTHUR IS a Rock Band. Mix- ers. T. G.’s, Orgies, Wakes. 353-2134. fessional theses typing. Near campus. 337-1527, 5-10/7 ANN BROWN, typist and multi- C Wanted STARTS TOMORROW! E L E C T R IC -I N CAR-HEA TERS BACK S E E .« H E A R ' THlIOVINSPOONfUlS 71 ..-Â4„ whatètiptigerlily? A HENRY G SAPf RSHtN ¡NIERPRlSi PRODUCTION IN COLOR 3-10/5 "POW" ELECTRlU ÉASE guitar, Gre- WHAT'S A UNIT? Only the most Tith offset printing. D isserta­ NEED FOUR Purdue tickets. Fab Group around! Music for tions, theses, manuscripts, gen­ Have extra Michigan tickets. NA DINE WAS HER N A M E P lu s Fun C a rto o n And S p o rts N o v e lty gory amplifier. 332-4812. Will trade or sell. 353-1542. ___________ 3-10/5 the Wild ones! Call Craig 353- eral typing, IBM, 16 years ex ­ AND M E S S I N G ’ R OU ND 2802. 5-10/7 perience. 332 8384. C 3-10/5 STARTING THURSDAY ! BICYCLE SALES, rentals and DESPARATE: NEEtT ticket to WAS HER G A M E . . . services. Also used. EAST HOLY PICTURE TUBES, Bat JOB RESUMES, 100 copies, $4.S> Michigan-Michigan State game. LANSING CYCLE, 1215 E. Man. Nejac now sells TV’s, ALDINGER DIRECT MAIL AD­ Phone 355-3597. 3-10/5 ACADEMY radios, and stereos. V isit VERTISING, 533 N. Clippert. Grand River. Call 332-8303. BLOOD DONORS needed, $7.50 AWARD NEJAC at 543 East Grand River, IV 5-2213.____________ C C ANN BROWN, typist and mul- for RH positive, $10, $12 & NOMINEE: NEW MEN'S overcoat $10, small next to Paramount News. C $14 for RH negative. DETROIT "Best Foreign size formal, d resses. ED 2- "THE TONIKS” , here after a tilith o f f s e t printing. D i s ­ BLOOD SERVICE, INC, 1427 summer engagement in New sertations, theses, m a n u ­ Film Of The 2984 evenings. 3-10/5 scripts, general typing. IBM, E. Michigan Ave. Hours 9 - Year” York City. Available for rush 3:30 Monday and Tuesday; 12- k m FOR WEDDING an d practical 16 years experience. 332-8384. parties, T.G.’s, etc. Call 351- 6:30 Thursday. 489-7587. C s ' '— shower gifts, see ACE HARD­ 9359. 5-10/7 ____________________________ C WARE'S selections. 201 E. NOTICE ALL Marketing 300 IF YOU'RE moving we'll buy Grand River, a c r o s s Union. Phone ED 2-3212. C from students: The lecture session (section 901) of MTA 300 will Wanted TWO GIRLS for winter term only. your furniture. Call Shaft, OX 4-9081. 3-10/4 ATRULYAUULTLOVESTORY! BICYCLE SALES, rentals and Eden Rock Apartments. 351- TWO foON-STUDENT tickets to meet at 1:50 - 2:40, Mondays services. Also used. EAST 6321. 3-10/6 the Purdue game. Call Sandra, " I t Is A B e a u tifu l F i l m , F i n e l y M a d e ! ” and Wednesdays, room 109 An­ LANSING CYCLE, 1215 E. DESPERATELY N E E D two 355-2457. 3-10/4 - N . Y . H e r a l d T r ib u n e thony, instead of 4:10 - 5:00 Grand River. Call 332-8303. Mondays and Wednesdays as told Michigan - Michigan State tick­ BLOOD DONORS needed, $7.50 " T h e W h ole M o v ie S m i l e s . I t ’ s A B e a u tifu l C in registration, 3-10/4 ets. 353-7671. 1-10/4 for RH positive, $10, $12, & S to ry And E v e n Has A Happy Ending . . . HOÓVÉft UPRIGHT Sweeper. WANTED: FOUR tickets to the $14 for RH negative. DETROIT LAUNDRY, CLEANERS; Pay MSU-Michigan game. Call 485- BLOOD SERVICE, INC., 1427 Doc G r e e n e $25. Attachments. IV 9-0629. less for the best. Wash - 20£, 1162 after 6 p.m. 3-10/6 E. Michigan Ave. Hours 9- D e t r o i t News 3-10/5 Dry - 10£. Suits c l e a n e d , Sept. 7, 1966 STUDY DESKS, small chest, ro ll- pressed - $1.50, Slacks, WILL TRADE two Notre Dame 3:30 Monday and Tuesday; 12- a-ways & bunkbeds. New and sweaters, sport coats - 75£. tickets for two Purdue. 351- 6:30 Thursday. 489-7587. C used mattresses — all sizes. WENDROW’S 3006 Vine Street. 9059. 1-10/4 NEEDED IMMEDIATELY, small Study lamps, typewriters, tape One block west of Sears, Fran­ FOREIGN STUDENTS to trans- moderately priced furnished a- recorders, metal wardrobes, dor. 7-11 p.m. C-10/7 late semi-technical English into partment with bath for female portable TV sets, large se le c ­ tion new & used electric fans. Peanuts Personal Mother Tongue. Swedish, Dan­ ish, French, Dutch, German. graduate student. Walking dis­ tance to campus. Jeanne Kuo, N Everything for the home. WIL­ Portuguese, Spanish, Italian. 372-5881, or L. Wheeler, 332— COX SECOND HAND STORE, KITTEN: THE key is there Reply direct to G.C. Henninger 2357. 3-10/6 %)( E. Michigan, Lansing. Phone but will you use it? Tiger. VP-MKT. T&S Equipment Co. TWO TICKETS for Michigan 1-10/4 game, not necessarily together. IV 5-4391, 8-5:30 p.m. C Albion, Mich. 5-10/10 EXCELLENT CONDrriON; NUMMER IMPROVISATION Is RlDfe MONDAY through Friday Call 355-7354._________ 5-10/5 desks, lamps, household item s. great recreation even if done 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. frim Holt to LEAD GUITAR player wanted See after 7 p.m. Call 351- in a constricted situation. Yum- Erickson Hall. 694-0849 after for rock group. Call 351-7652. m er. 1-10/4 3-10/6 : Si gma ill presents D E A R J O H N starring Jarl Kulle and Christina Schollin 6726. 3-10/5 6 p.m. 1-10/4 Tuesday, O ctober 4, 1966 1 2 Michigan State News, East Lansing. Michigan ;; ^ F E A T U R IN G § B itte r s tu d e n ts s tru c k a im le s s ly B ill T H R E E turbance was just a fling with Students Involved in the so- called rio ts of finals week Spring groups Just shrug th e ir shoulders and say, "N o reaso n in p a r ti­ SECOND IN A SERIES little resentment in it at all." People living close together In dormitories build up a fund of TAKE HOME te rm can 't explain why they p a r­ c u la r ." d i s c o n t e n t , both a g a i n s t the A few students grum bled about By F A Y E UNGER ticipated. C O M P L E T E A p ro fe sso r of sociology points the adm inistratio n ’s handling of "system” and individuals they both the Schlff case and the Ram ­ must live with, Hundley said. to the close living q u a rte rs and p a rts controversy . the fad right now," said James lack of apartments In a suitable Add to the students with minor the quick com m unication of the w it h a ll th e t r im m in g s r e s i d e n c e hall com plexes as Hundley, assistant professor of grievances the small group who price range off campus. "don’t care” about their own or breeding grounds fo r crowd dis­ turbances . “ D ishonest ” sociology, "It gives the Univer­ sity prestige In their eyes." Some complained about what seemed to be a police crackdown another’s studies. Add the flunk- I ! G R A N D M A 'S C h ic k e n — S h r im p "T h ey seem ed to feel they w ere Still others said they were dis­ outs and those who are transfer— In the last three weeks of school. But these conditions have not getting back at the U niversity for gusted with the food. Then many lng. And the tension of just the "The role of a college stu­ always spawned riots before. Why being d ishon est,’’ said Donald would add that the food wasn’t F is h exams keyed up still other stu­ dent has a lot of Insecurity built »‘UP SMACKIN'«00# this time? Each student gives different A dam s, d ire c to r of resid en ce hall p ro g ra m s. really that bad, but food was a symbol of "The University” . dents. into it," Hundley said. "The nor­ mal sociological central con­ — in— reaso n s why he and his fellow Some students In the Brody O ther particip an ts, how ever, Exam tensions trols, like high school, parents students p articip a ted . To Uni­ v ersity officials, those reasons w ere proud of MSU’s "involve­ m e n t" with the CIA. group complained that "they” were planning to move the Brody "Some had everything riding and community, are gone and the student goes into a completely Buckets or Boxes y Frte& O te*** leave much unexplained. Grill. on one final exam,” Fuzak said, Some of the ac tiv ists from both " It fits In with the ’I Spy’ and new environment.” " s o m e t i m e s they thought the Brody and Southeast C a m p u s Jam es Bond image th a t's so much "That grill Is near and dear "We’ve got to watch out, too, to the hearts of the active rah- exams weren’t fair.” MSU can be a round of har­ so we don’t take the ‘reasons* rah crowd,” Hundley said. for the outbreak as a justifica­ assment and competition, from Nelson named chief Some grumbled about losing the recreation space of the Brody multi-purpose rooms to class­ trying to get through registration to trying to get the same book tion," Fuzak warned. No matter what vague reasons and discontents, or what images f f /h o itë everyone else wants out of the rooms. of a good time, brooded in the of Argentine project "We’ve got to improve our recreation facilities in the Brody Library, said Andrew Babyak, graduate assistant in sociology« "Resentments build up over the "rioters” minds, the students may have need to focus on a sym­ p ie c f fflfc k e n head of the Animal Husbandry area," said John A. Fuzak, vice- year, sometimes not even in con­ bol to really get moving, Hundley Ronald H. N elson, chairm an of Dept. president for student affairs. nection with the University," Fu­ said. PHONE: 4 8 4 -4 4 7 1 the Animal Husbandry Dept., has He has written articles on the Other students resented being zak said. "Maybe it’s the draft, been assigned to a technical as­ effect of environmental factors on forced to live in residence halls maybe a problem in personal The police became that symbol. 1900 E. Kalamazoo Open 7 Days A W eek sistan c e project in B alcarce, Ar­ reproductive performances o f either by University regulation or relationships. For a lot the dls- Tomorrow: the popular villain gentina. sheep and hogs. A recognized As ch lef-of-party, h e w i l l judge of beef cattle. Nelson will se rv e for two y ea rs helping A r­ judge breeds in November at gentina establish a land-grant the International Livestock Ex­ institution at B alcarce. Nelson and his family have position in Chicago. m mm m m joined Robert Rupp el, a m em ber of the Entomology Dept, who has been in B alcarce for nine months. They w ere accom panied by Kirk Lawton, MSU coordinator of the p ro ject. Lawton was to a s s is t Nelson fo r two weeks and inspect the program which is sponsored by MSU and the Agency fo r Inter­ Üf ” ¡’ Jk national Development. Nelson has been a m em ber of the Animal Husbandry Dept, for 20 y ears. He obtained his bache- ’o r 's degree from the U niversity of Wisconsin in 1939 and his m a s te r's degree from Oklahoma State U niversity in 1941. He re ­ ceived his doctorate from Iowa State U niversity in 1943. In 1950, N elson was nam ed Ronald Nelson H o u s e O K s p a c k a g e b ill, b u t c a l l s it i n e f f e c t i v e WASHINGTON P) — The House The legislation elim in ates Sen­ passed a ‘‘truth-in-packaging a te provisions for m andatory fed­ bill today that both c ritic s and su p p o rters contended a c t u a l l y e ra l packaging stan d ard s, but re ­ tains m andatory labeling p ro ce­ d u re s and gives the government \ does very little . The bill p assed on a ro ll call authority to reg u late such things vote of 300 to 8. a s slack fill, " c e n ts off’ p ro ­ m otions, d escrip tiv e te rm s such ? "M y com plaint is that it does a s "g ian t economy siz e ” and use so little ," said Rep. Leonor K. of servings to denote quantity. Sullivan, D-M o., one of the lead­ ing congressional champions of Meanwhile, the Senate planned legislation to help consum ers. to temporarily put off debate on -.cT- Rep. Samuel L . Devine, R - the antipoverty bill to take up Ohio, who charged that a Senate- a $2.4 billion federal health aid p assed p a c k a g i n g bill "would program asked by P r e s i d e n t have c re a te d a m onstrous bu­ Johnson last winter. However.no re a u c ra c y ,” said that the House House action Is expected this v e r s i o n "d o e s p r a c t i c a l l y year. yt nothing.” But Rep. H arley O. Staggers, Also on the House calendar for $ D-W. Va., chairm an of the House today w as a m e a su re to expand C om m erce C om m ittee, said he the federal p ro g ram against a ir VI if co n sid ers it " a good b ill." _____ pollution. 'w, eA $