B lo o d d rive 504 1,775 See details page 3 Inside to d a y . . . M o s tly . .. Rio t r a i n crash, P. 3 M IC H IG A N . . . cloudy and m ild, 55 to Duffy cites “ p r o b le m s ,” P. 4 60. Tonight occasional ra in and Peace Corps r e c r u it e r s , P. 7 S TA T E c o ld e r. F rid a y cloudy and cold­ e r with showers possible. L e a r y , saint o r sinner, P. 8 U N IV E R S IT Y V o l. 59 N um ber 83 E a s t L ans i ng, Michigan Novem ber 17, 1966 )0 c N D E A S H O R T A G E L o a n la c k a ffe c ts 1 5 0 By F A Y E UNGER finance more guaranteed loans under the Michigan Higher Education Act, said Henry ment for NDEA loans and on an increased Michigan Higher Education Assistance "But more students turn up every day wanting loans,” Dykema said. State News Staff W r i t e r C , Dykema, assistant director in charge The Office of Financial Aids helps the Authority (MHEAA) program . Nearly 150 MSU students, 100 of them of finances. They even committed most of the ex­ students it can, som etim es through sh o rt­ from Michigan, have been unable to ob­ L ast year President John Hannah an­ pected NDEA loan funds before receiving term MSU loans, sometimes by referring tain loans this term to help finance nounced that every Michigan resident them. the student to a home-town loan or th e ir college education. attending MSU would be guaranteed help Congress did not appropriate the scholarship program , sometimes by a Many are waiting for National Defense In obtaining all the financial aid the $1,300,000 for NDEA loans until the middle work-loan plan. and Education Act (NDEA) loans or other student needs. of October and Michigan banks have been But 150 students were still waiting for long term loans. University officials were counting on tightening up on their MHEAA loans. loans at the beginning of fall term . The loan shortage stem s prim arily from $1,300,000 (an increase of $90 thousand The result is a shortage of loan money. The office of Financial Aids will try the refusal of many Michigan banks to over last year) from the federal govern- Even though the NDEA funds came to increase the number of students on the through, the Office of Financial Aids MHEAA guaranteed loan program from can give no more loans under the NDEA 400 to 600 in the next two term s, Dykema program until winter or spring term b e­ said. cause of its form er commitments. T here Since banks can get six-and-a-half to L B J c h e e r f u l h o a r s e are now 2,500 students on NDEA loans. eight p er cent in terest on most private loans, they a re reluctant to handle MHEAA loans, who can command an interest ra te no higher than six per cent. a f t e r u n e v e n t f u l s u r g e r y Under the MHEAA program , a student ¡*ets his loan from a private financial institution in his hometown area at a WASHINGTON UP) — President Johnson from under an anesthetic and scribbling low interest ra te . The federal govern­ came through tandem operations on his notes to his doctor. ment, through the state, backs up his throat and abdomen in cheerful, s a tis ­ And a little before noon, four hours loan. factory shape Wednesday, out of surgery, he was smiling, forming "U.S. bankers say they lose $20 million The doctors reported no signs of cancer. thumb and fingertip in an ‘‘okay’’ sign, for every $100 million they loan under And this helped to lift a curtain of concern and actually talking a little in a 17- MHEAA, p art of it in processing the A T L S it- In the President said a few days ago had minute meeting with a group of re p o rters. loan and part of it by the interest they M o r e th a n 150 s t u d e n t s s p e n t th e nig ht in th e m a i n lo b b y and been hanging over him. It was in a hoarse whisper, might have got at the higher m arket m a i n s t a i r c a s e o f B e s s e y H a l ! T u e s d a y n ig h t . T h e s i t - i n w a s in T hirty-three minutes after one oper­ Johnson’s color was good and he looked ra te s ,” Dykema said. ation removed a polyp on a vocal chord less worn and pale than he did after a In the metropolitan D etroit area banks p r o t e s t o f th e A T L D e p t . ' s f i r i n g o f i n s t r u c t o r s G a r y G r o a t , J . and a second closed an old incision from kidney stone and gall bladder operation will loan money only to juniors, seniors K e n n e t h L a w l e s s and R o b e r t F o g a r t y . 13 months ago in the same hospital. a gall bladder operation, Johnson was out and graduate students under MHEAA. S t a t e N e w s photo b y K a r l S c r i b n e r M rs. Johnson was asked if she had In Lansing, banks have tem porarily su s ­ ever seen the President speechless before, pended any participation in the plan. "N o,’’ she sm iled. "And we’re going Other Michigan banks a re refusing to to make the most of it.” take on any new loans although they will N E W S A N A L Y S I S The President still has some physical renew old ones. Some will deal only problem s. The doctors ordered him "to with form er custom ers. Some have put make no formal speeches for a period of ceilings on the number of student loans four to five weeks and to keep the use they will finance. of his voice at a minimum,” White House B e s s e y : th e y c a ll it a v ig i p re ss secretary Bill D. Moyers reported. Moyers said the President will have three or four weeks of pain and discomfort B y A N D R E W M O L LIS O N as a result of the throat operation. He O p p o r t u n i t y it. Students are shaping it, even as you Perhaps it started when a Michigan B u b b a B u tto n s State New s E x e c u t iv e R e p o rte r also has bursitis in his right shoulder read this article. State graduate student who dropped out which Moyers said will require some heat How? Who? Why? of school for a term decided to ignore M a r g a r e t Jo h n so n , D e a rb o rn At 9 p.m . Tuesday there w ere 50 stu­ treatm ent and physical therapy. The b u r­ dents in the lobby and along the main Perhaps it began in 1958, when the cry school rules and pass out some pamphlets sitis was diagnosed after some examina­ s o p h o m o r e , s p o r t s s o m e of th e b o a r d ’ c o u l d of "V ot, shto letitl” (roughly translated in a dorm itory. “ K i l l , B u b b a , K i l l ” b u tto n s that sta irc a se in Bessey Hall. tions Tuesday, as "Look, Ma. It’s a (Sputnik!) convinced Perhaps. h a v e t u r n e d up on s t u d e n t s ’ At 4 a.m . Wednesday there w ere 181 of Americans that change must be encouraged But few of those perched on the Bessey The doctors expect to keep him in the them. At 4 p.m . Wednesday there w ere 31. in the American educational system. Hall stairca se are talking about such hospital several days and then let him c o a t s l a t e l y , a s th e S p a r t a n s r e p l a c e d r a f t L ast night, as classes ended for the day, go back to the LBJ Ranch to recuperate get re a d y fo r S a tu r d a y ’ s gam e. things. the crowd began to swell once again. Perhaps it began at Berkeley, when a as he did a year ago. M ik e S c h o n h o f e n photo WASHINGTON [IP] - Secretary of Labor They call it a vigil. They aren’t even in They mention the two-hour rally, at­ W, Willard W irtz, calling the m ilitary sizeable minority of the students and tended by m ore than 1,000 students and a agreem ent as to why it happened and why faculty decided that Clark K err’s m ulti­ draft unfair, proposed Wednesday a na­ it continues, but at least m.ost agree on sprinkling of faculty, they saw In front of tional "opportunity board” to reg ister versity was not just a term in an admin­ the name. It’s a vigil, not a sleep-in, not a Bessey Tuesday afternoon. youths for community service, education is tra to r's best-selling book, but an actu­ sit-in . ality, and one with serious personal and They point out the odds against their C o n d e m n I s r a e l f o r a t t a c k and job training as well as m ilitary s e r­ "Sleep-ins a re for radicals,” said a personnel im plications. being selected after the rally as one of “The United States then condemned this vice. UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. ¿P) -TheU nited petite junior in a black-and-red plain the 20 o r so whose Individual appointments raid, and condemns it now, deeming it in He said it could be tried on a volun­ Perhaps it began when the national head­ States and Britain joined Wednesday in jum per. "We’re not radicals.” with Edward A, C arlin, dean of the Uni­ c le a r violation of the solemn obligations tary basis firs t, and possibly make it qu arters of Students for a Democratic condemning Israel for a large-scale m ili­ “ Well, I am ,” emphatically declared an versity College, could be squeezed into undertaken by Israel in the general compulsory later if necessary. Society decided two years ago to send tary attack on three Jordanian border equally petite jeans-clad s o p h o m o r e . his chock-full calendar. arm istice agreem ents,” he said. Wirtz told Catholic University students organizers out from the Chicago office, villages taken in rep risal for Arab sabo­ "Students need m ore power here. It’s they w ere benefitting from " a Selective to spread the word about the New Left They refer again and again to the scene tage raids on Israeli territo ry . “ And what makes it, of course, m ost about tim e they woke up.” Service System m ore haphazard and in­ from the M ississippi to the Ohio. outside the locked door of the ATL Dept., But Jordan at an urgent session of the deplorable is the tragic toll in human Students started it. Students takep artin equitable than any method yet tried or when dozens of them m illed around asking U.N. Security Council blamed the United lives of this inexcusable action,” suggested for selection for m ilitary each other, "What do we do next?” States for rising tension in the Middle serv ice.” They talk about the vote taken at 5:54 E ast, said condemnation was not enough Muhammad H. E l-F a rra , the Jordanian In his prepared speech, he said the p.m . Tuesday, to abandon the idea of a and asked the council to consider puni­ delegate, described the attack as "vicious, present draft system “ almost compels, sit-in, after an eloquent speech by a stu­ tive action against Israel. m erciless and inhuman.” He listed the as I see it, some kind of lottery system dent who maintained they shouldn’t sit in U.S. Ambassador Arthur J , Goldberg casualties as at least eight civilians and A S M S U d e m a n d s r e a s o n until they knew what they were sitting in said his country was the first to issue a 12 Jordanians killed, in addition to many for selection for m ilitary service.” Wirtz was the second m ajor Johnson for. statement condemning the reprisal attack wounded. A U.N, report said 125 build­ adm inistration official to suggest a draft They mention the meeting in the Union at immediately after learning about it. ings were demolished. lottery, which is opposed by the Selective fo r A T L D e p t, d is m is s a ls 7:30 that night, when it was decided to Service. have a vigil, indoors if possible, outdoors Secretary of Defense Robert S. Mc­ By B E V T W IT C H E L L Advisory Committee, Dean Carlin of the if the police asked them to leave Bessey. Namara said in a Harvard University State N ew s S ta ff W r i t e r U niversity College, ATL Dept. Chairman They note with gratitude that the police interview e a rlie r this month that a na­ T . Ben Strandness, Groat, Lawless and did not do so. The ASMSU Student Board demanded tional lottery would help in "elim inating Fogarty. Tuesday night that reason be given for the (please turn to the back page) the deficiencies” of the present draft The resolution comments on the interest recent dism issal of Gary Groat, Kenneth system . dem onstrated by a great number of stu ­ Lawless and Robert Fogarty from the ATL Both Wirtz and McNamara said specific dents, the AAUP executive board recom ­ Dept, action should await the report of the mendation that non-tenured faculty m em ­ The board endorsed a resolution de­ National Commission on Selective Service manding that this reason be given to b ers have the right of review and appeal L E A R Y appointed by President Johnson. The of the term ination of their contracts, substantiate the dism issals, and that the report is due in January. and the refusal of Carlin, Strandness and three in structors be given an oppor­ The commission is also considering the advisory committee to give reasons LSD e x p e rt and advocate tunity for review and appeal of their " a broad-scale national service pro­ for the dism issal or to review or recon­ T im o th y L e a r y w ill speak in gram .” case by the ATL Advisory Committee, sider their decision. the A u dito rium today at 4 Wirtz suggested his national "oppor­ They also resolved to give full support It also states that "a registered stu ­ to any responsible action taken to promote p .m . tunity board” proposal be tried firs t on dent organization, United Students (whose an entirely voluntary basis. "a just and acceptable settlement of this Ad Hoc committee sponsored Tuesday’s controversy,” He proposed that every boy and girl rally), has undertaken a program of re ­ reg ister with the community at' age 18, Copies .of this resolution will be sent The speech, f i r s t in the sponsible action to dem onstrate the stu­ that the community have the obligation of to P resident John A, Hannah, Provost G r e a t Issues Series and spon­ dent body's desire tor orderly and just providing every youth two years of fur­ Howard Neville, the m em bers of the ATL procedure regarding academically com­ s o re d by ASMSU, w ill be free to the u n ive rs ity community ther education, job training or a job, or petent, non-tenured instructors, inasmuch a community service program , and that as a basic student right is that of com ­ but IDs must be presented at it be recognized as the youth's obliga­ petent instruction, the door. C -G o to e n r o ll to d a y tion, in return, to use this opportunity." " I think the student board’s actionT ues- On the possibility of making such reg is­ Students whose last names begin with day night is fully representative of the The topic of L e a r y ’s speech tremendous concern that is presently ex­ tration compulsory, Wirtz said: lette rs C-Go a re eligible to enroll for is “ LSD — God, Man, L a w .” Wirtz called the unfairness of thepres winter term classes today at the Men's hibited by the students of this university A u d ito riu m doors will open ent m ilitary draft system only part of Intram ural Building. over the dism issal of the three ATL p ro fesso rs, ‘‘Jim Graham, ASMSU chair­ at 3 p.m . and seating will be an infinitely larg er problem of providing Those participating in early enrollment on a f i r s t come, f i r s t serve M o o U . opportunity for all American youths. should report to the IM Building with their m an, said. "The student board is not saying that bas is . N o tre Dame students bulldogged this hefty H e re fo rd Tuesday; one "T h ere is a s much reason, and m ore, completed Student Schedule C ard, student to require every American youth to ‘ reg­ ID, and the Winter Term Schedule Book it agrees o r disagrees with the action,” See re la te d s to ry on page 8. of 41 s teers which got loose when a cattle tru ck ove rtu rn ed on the Graham said, " it is instead stating that Indiana Toll Road. The invading steer roamed around campus until is te r’ for living as for fighting,” he during a free period between 8 a.m . and we demand information on this question. the students could c o r ra l it. UPI Telephoto said. 4:30 p.m . Kyle C. Kerbawy Eric Pianln, managlng editor editor-in-chief jam es Spanlolo, campus editor S T A T E N E W S Thomas Segal, editorial editor Lawrence W em er, sports editor Joel Stark Andrew Molllson, executlve rep ó rter advertising m anager William G. Papclak, a s s t. ad m anager Thursday Morning, November 17, 1966 M/17L F ini i i E D IT O R IA L S r im MHO GAME OF TH£ j1 com une 1 A S M S U r e f e r e n d u m S A t iff? i s s t u d y i n t r i v i a \ i& * 1 T-K VW P W ^ ^ Ml A r e f e r e n d u m w ill b e h e ld T h e p ro p o sa l h a s m e rit. s o o n o n p r o p o s e d c h a n g e s in B u t it fa lls s h o rt. It a llo c a te s S t a t e s u p p o r t i n g S t a t e t h r e e s e a t s to s e n io r s , tw o th e in te r n a l s t r u c t u r e o f A S ­ M SU. S tu d e n ts o f triv ia to ju n io r s , a n d o n e to a s o p h ­ s h o u ld ta k e n o te , f o r th e o m o r e . It w o u ld b e m o r e d u r i n g ‘S 9V i c t o r y W e e k r e f e r e n d u m i s s h a p in g u p to re p re s e n ta tiv e to a llo c a t e - b e a s tu d y in t r iv ia . tw o s e a t s to e a c h c l a s s . In o n e o f h is f i r s t a c t io n s M S U w ill b e fig h tin g it s T h e fiv e s u g g e s tio n s o u t­ T h e o th e r p ro p o s a ls h a v e s in c e r e - e le c tio n . G o v e rn o r h a r d e s t to m a k e i t v i c t o r y lin e d in th e p ro p o s e d a m e n d ­ little su b sta n ce . O ne p ro ­ W a n t to b u y a 5 0 y a r d - 1 in e c a n e f o r $ 9 5 ? R o m n e y h a s d e c la r e d th is w e e k b o th in n a m e a n d in fa c t . m e n ts m a y b e o f im p o rta n c e v id e s th a t o n e m e m b e r - a t - w e e k S p a rta n V ic to ry W e e k . to th e A S M S U h i e r a r c h y . T o la rg e b e a w o m a n . T h e o th e r W e ho p e th is w o n ’ t b e o u r m a k e s th e c o m p tr o lle r an d JIM S P A N I O L O T h e m a s s iv e w e ig h t o f th e m o s t s tu d e n ts , h o w e v e r , th e o n ly v ic to ry w eek. W hen a m e n d m e n ts n e e d b e o f little s e c r e t a r y n o n - v o tin g m e m ­ s t a t e h a s b e e n p u t b e h in d G o v e r n o r R o m n e y s e n d s h is b e r s o f th e b o a rd . M S U g rid d e rs fo r S a tu rd a y ’ s in te re s t. N o tre D a m e g a m e . S ta te ­ b u d g e t a p p r o p r ia t io n s to th e O n ly o n e p ro p o s a l is o f T h e re fe re n d u m p ro p o s a ls M i l l e r ’s t a l e le g is la tu r e n e x t J a n u a r y , w e a n y s ig n if ic a n c e . T h a t is th e so la c k p r a c t i c a 1 s ig n ifi­ w id e s p i r i t i s c a l l e d o n to h o p e w e w i l l h a v e c a u s e to p ro p o s e d a d d i t i o n o f tw o c a n c e to th e s t u d e n t b o d y th a t s u p p o rt o u r s ta te in s titu tio n f o r th e b ig g a m e - - e v e n th e c e le b r a t e v ic to ry w e e k m e m b e r- a t- la rg e s e a t s to th e re fe re n d u m is a w a s te o f has obscure end a g a in . th e fo u r a lr e a d y e x is tin g on $20 0 and s tu d e n ts ’ tim e . Quietly sleeping aboard an old two- fighter, a hard nosed "p o l" an dapartisan U n iv e r s it y o f M ic h ig a n is engine plane, sputtering its way from debater. c a l l e d o n to g i v e s u p p o r t . - - T h e E d it o rs th e b o a rd . - - T h e E d ito rs F o r two y ears ago, when Goldwater Lansing to Detroit, sat a man who only two years before was crossing the coun­ warned against violence in the stre e ts, try daily by jet, hoping to shake every M iller openly courted the white backlash. hand and reach every ear he could find. When Goldwater spoke of corruption in ■ T H E R E A D E R S ’ M IN D S Now he sat in solitude, recognized by no government, M iller made the charges one but a young re p o rter, and apparently specific and personal by citing Lyndon happy with his fate. Johnson, Bobby B aker andW alter Jenkins. William E. M iller, the man only a And while Goldwater maintained a re la ­ T h in k s L e a r y le ctu re c o u ld b e d a n g e r o u s breath and 15 million votes away from the Presidency in 1964, was returning tively high plane in the ’64 campaign, M iller personally taunted Johnson and booths—this is too much. The day of the I do not question the value of oral to New York after addressing a te ach ers’ Humphrey from coast to coast. To the editor: If L eary is allowed to speak I urge final is not necessarily exempt from language p ractice, nor do I question the convention in Grand Rapids. The form er H istory will probably rate M iller a s one the students to keep in mind his back­ of the m ost obscure vice presidential can­ It is my opinion that ASMSU should ground and reputation and to seriously these difficulties, which makes the m atter practicality of a language laboratory in New York congressm an is now re tire d — not spend twelve hundred dollars to bring worse. Some students can maintain a calm providing th is. The question is one of the by choice (if any politician ever re tire s didates in the 20th century, both a s a consider that he is presenting a one­ candidate and in la te r life. T imothy Leary to our campus. sided opinoin. state of mind when their machines fall to usefulness of our labs in th eir present by choice). I worked on the Psychology staff of a pick up half of the oral final, and they deplorable condition. If they cannot be Miller appeared surprised and quite In his book "T he Making of the P r e s i­ Veterans Administration Mental Hospital must finish the exam at the instructor's improved im m ediately, they should be elated that anyone recognized him . He dent 1964,” Theodore H, White mentions H. B. Risley, J r . M iller only four tim es. M iller’s main this past sum m er. In an attempt to use Bethlehem, Conn., Junior house—but some cannot. closed. quickly dispatched a Grand Rapids paper, LSD in the treatm ent of alcoholic The language laboratory requirem ent M aty W. Davis, which carried a story abouthis appearance contribution to the Republican, cause ip . Police and Law Administration *64, according to White, was to a ttra c t a - patients it was necessary for us to do for many' courses is two hours a week, B annister, Junior there, as if to lend credence to what he quite a bit of research into the subject. excluding class lab; ” . , .and don’t spend said. substantial percentage of the Polish vote Because of this experience I feel that m ore than half an hour at a tim e th e re , Private citizen M iller spoke easily and —mainly attributed to his pretty Polish I know something about LSD and about L a b s o u t o f o r d e r because you soon tire and can’t make frankly, characteristic of a man with no wife. L eary. responses so quickly.” But the student candidate o r party to protect o r promote. As I understand it, under this program who must spend fifteen minutes looking It was akin to listening to an old man who Fa d e out G o o d le c tu r e ASMSU plans to bring speakers on "g reat for a halfway decent machine will hardly had once been at the top or alm ost, but The sputtering plane finally landed in controversial issu es” to campus. Can To the Editor: be in a fram e of mind conducive to quick was now forgotten, just another citizen, D etroit Metropolitan A irport. M iller p re ­ To the Editor: L eary and his lecture be classified under responses in the first place. another face in the crowd. pared to depart. The stew ardess sm iled this heading? To me LSD is only a It's tim e somebody did something. The new Akers lab has been greeted “ A lot of things have happened since at him, but she sm iled at everyone else I believe that if any classroom were in In the past y e a rs, I have become m ore problem sensationalized by the p re ss. with enthusiasm: " I t was just beautiful. 1964,” said M iller, "but now I’m just too. As he walked down the steps, he was a state of disrepair sim ilar to that exist­ and m ore concerned with the ratio of Heroin, marijuana and other such drugs I could hear every word on the tapel” practicing law in Buffalo. I haven’t seen greeted by no shouts from local partisans, ing in our language laboratories, that instructors per student population here. are under governmental control and illegal This is something to be excited about. much of Goldwater since the election. I no placards or signs. T here were no r e ­ classroom would be closed for improve­ It is becoming an everyday common oc­ for consumption by the general public. The projected lab on south campus will talked to him on the phone several weeks p o rters, no television cam eras, and no m ents. Our language labs, however, have curence to have these large lecture classes T here is a serious problem in traffic be a boon—when it is completed. In the ago, but that’s about a ll," he said with an autograph seek ers. No one even said hello. simply limped along in their sad condition. with 200 to 300 students p e r instructor and use of these drugs, but is it a "g re a t m eantim e, we supposedly grin and put up a ir of nostalgic indifference. And he faded into the atm osphere of Electronic equipment is expensive, and o r television instructor. controversial issue” ? LSD is now also with the situation in M orrill Hall. Y esterday, however, I was walking down Metropolitan A irport (perhaps symbolic of under strict control by the government and often difficult to repair; and equipment the fate of the conservative coup which any use of it by the public is illegal. used constantly by a large number of a hall in Hubbard and heard a stirring A d iffe re n t M ille r took over the Republican party in 1964). people is likely to develop problem s. The Published by the students of Michigan State Univer­ lecture coming from one of the c la ss­ One could alm ost sense a longing for Can it therefore be considered such an sity every class day throughout the year and a special room s. I looked in the door and to my William E. M iller, form er con g ress­ important issue? situation is basically sticky. But if we Welcome Week Edition In September. Subscription rate the power and prominence of political life, man, form er chairm an of the Republican can't solve these problems any better S10 per year. Authorized by the Board of student Pub­ su rp rise there were only two students in but it was checked by the equally poignant I do not feel that Leary should be lications. National Committee, form er vice p re s i­ than we are solving them now, why don’t the entire room. Yes, th at's right - two m em ories of the heavy burdens and grind­ allowed to speak in front of a relatively dential candidate, exemplifies the fleeting we just quit? Member Associated Press. I'tilted Press International. students to only one television. I walked ing pace that public office c a rrie s with it. uninformed college audience, I have Inland Daily'Press Association. AssociatedCollegiate Press. fame of American politics. Y esterday the read several articles by and about Most students can put up with some Michigan Press Association. Michigan» Collegiate Press to my next c lass feeling a little better. This was a different William M iller than Association. candidate, today only a name, tom orrow inconvenience now and then. But when one Bob B artlett the one who spoke to the American public L eary and he presents his side of the forgotten. out of five tapes is more than a little Second class postage paid at East Lansing Mich. E. Lansing, Junior story quite gloriously especially with in 1964, the man then described as a gut William who? reg ard s to intimate relations with mem­ incomprehensible, when a third of the Editorial and business offices at 341 student Services bers of the opposite sex. It is my opinion tape recorders are out of o rd er, when Building. Michigan State University. East Lansing. Mich. that his lecture could have a suggestive many of the ‘‘in ord er” machines either Phones: have a defect or develop one after half an Editorial............. 355-8252 and dangerous effect on an audience which Classified Advertising............................. 355-8255 knows little of the possible adverse m edi­ hour of use, and when it may take ten Display Advertising................................ 363-6400 Business - Circulation . . .................... 355*8299 cal or psychological effects in the use of minutes of class time to get the correct Photographic ....................................... 355-6311 LSD. m aster tape broadcast into the student T R IH K A C L IN E S t u d y , f i r e d r i l l d o n ’t q u i t e m i x 4 UMll Reverberating periodically through the the pile and join the procession to the halls of West Wilson come the pleas ‘“H i stairw ay. “ Quiet Hours]" "P lease hold it down to What do you mean I ’m going to the a dull ro a r,” "Where can I go to study?" wrong stairway? My roommate, suite- With those necessary evils called mid­ m ates, suitem ates from across the hall, and Ahl even my RA a re HERE. o f o u r a g e n ts have ju s t re tu rn e d term exams hovering above the necks of nearly all students, study lounges, iron­ fr o m r e -fa m ilia r iz in g th e m s e lv e s ing rooms, stairways and every nook and H eave-h o corner are occupied by studious souls. w ith w a r m w e a th e r v a c a tio n a r e a s : Many a re stocked up on eats, drinks and Jo stle awhile. Wait. A heave-ho and out those precious pills that keep them awake. we go. H a w a ii, C a lifo r n ia , M e x ic o , F lo r id a , Still, everyone is MOVING. Within an After all the contortions gals go through hour three faces that seldom darken (How to avoid being seen in cu rlers, etc., en B e rm u d a . S to p b y f o r s o m e g o o d about brighten?) my doorway appeared for route to the basement (such as riding the various reasons. elevator to the second floor and resorting Then it happened. to the s ta irs for the final distance only, H o t tip s . The monotonous racket of the fire cedures we found sometime ago in the packing g irls properly dressed before alarm lunged forth to sm other all present re c e sse s of our mailboxes said something them on the elevators in order to remain thoughts and words and to reverse all about opening the blinds (or was it closing out of sight when the doors open on the patterns of motion. them?) I choose to do the first. A step main lobby.), they toss us out into the At the first burst of practice warning, toward that goal; a change of mind and I cold, cru el world before closing tim e. a number of persons reclining on a top The tim e at the tone—approximately bunk found themselves somehow standing on the floor. reach for a coat and towel instead. Now about those windows. Lady Luck 11:10. Recovering from the initial shock, the COLLEGE sm iles again—my efficient roommate had house called Waikiki collects itself across elim inated that task. (Pause to rational­ the stre e t (it’s not that we really wanted Lu ck y ones ize—she’s a sophomore and has been to wait quietly and patiently through ro ll Then there a re those lucky ones of us through it a ll before.) Wrapped in one heavy winter coat and call, but we were cold), and our house president c a rrie s out the duty at hand. TRA VEL OFFICE who had just stepped out of the showers coiffured in a not-so-white-and-bright Liberation! I thought.. . but what were from washing our hair. . .D espair. towel (Tomorrow is linen change day, I Kathy’s last words? A second roll call 130 W . G ra n d R iv e r 351-6010 L e t’s see. That list of fire alarm pro­ reflect), I retrieve a pair of shoes from after we battle back to sixth floor. 207 S . W A S H IN G T O N Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Thursday, November 17, 1966 3 38commuters die IR IN in erash near Rio M1LOPOLIS, B razil (#1 - A O r b i CAPE KENNEDY, F la. (fl — t e r s b a Wearing blue flight suits and c k h o m technicians on a launch pad three e ness, ran through stop signals beaming with pride, the pilots crowded commuter train heading With k isses of Joy from relatives m iles away prepared a giant and slammed into the train head­ landed here in separate Navy for Rio de Janeiro from working- and ringing applause from the Saturn 1 rocket that is to hoist ed for Novo Iguacu. The crash planes at 11 a.m . after a two- class suburbs ran through stop launch team, A m erica’s cham­ the first Apollo spaceship with occurred 18 m iles northwest of hour trip from the a ircra ft c a r­ signals Wednesday and collided pion Gemini 12 pilots returned a three-m an crew on a 14-day Rio de Janeiro. r ie r Wasp, which recovered them head on with another train. to Cape Kennedy Wednesday earth orbital flight in January The first c a r of the th re e-car Tuesday from the western Atlan­ Police said 38 were known wishing "ev ery person in the o r February. tra in bound for Rio ripped open dead and m ore than 200 injured. w orld" could have squeezed in­ tic. Lovell and Aldrin will remain at impact and scattered passen­ A crowd of some 700 persons Fifteen of the injured were lis ­ side th eir spaceship. at Cape Kennedy until Friday or g ers and wreckage acro ss the —many belonging to the Gemini ted in critical condition. “ I’m so glad to see you,” Saturday talking to tape reco rd ­ tracks, witnesses said. launch crew that is now out of Police Inspector Joel Crespo bubbled command pilot Jam es e rs while experiences rem ain "T h ere was a sharp crash, b usiness—greeted the spacemen said he counted 30 bodies at an A. Lovell J r . 's mother, Blanche fresh in their minds. Then they then a lot of panic," said survi­ with loud applause and a large Improvised morgue near Olinda Lovell of nearby Edge water, Fla., fly to the Manned Space Center, vor Ned Barcellos P ereira, a red, white and blue banner read­ station. He said eight other p as­ a s the astronaut hugged her Houston, Tex., for m ore detailed passenger in the third c a r of the warmly. ing: sessions with experts. sengers had died in hospitals af­ commuter train. Spacewalking king Edwin E. Al­ "Welcome back, Jim and "W e've learned a lot and gained te r being removed from the tangle “ You could h ear scream s com­ drin J r ., who scram bled around B uzz." some m ore knowledge toward our of derailed c a rs and twisted ing from the front two c a rs ," orbiting Gemini 12 like a mon­ “ I feel humble,” Aldrin said, space efforts,” Lovell said, "and wreckage. he said. key, received a banana and pair stepping to a microphone, "and we’re anxiously looking forward Railroad officials said the Rio- P e re ira and other passengers of golden slippers from his aunt a t the same time proud to be a to applying this new knowledge bound train left the suburb of said all three c a rs were filled C om ing A b o a r d and uncle, M r. and M rs. Robert p art of this last flight in Gemini.” toward future program s.” Novo Iguacu in the predawn dark - with com m uters. The other train, B. Moon of Arcadia, Calif. "What we did up there and what Standing before the jubilant outbound from Rio, was lightly we saw was a tre a t to me. As Astronaut ‘ ‘ B u z z " A ld rin is hoisted into the re c o v e ry h elico p ter s ho rtly a fte r "We kept kidding Buzz about crowd, Aldrin, a West Point loaded, according to railroad of­ an individual I would like to have splashdown Tuesday. The Gemini 12 spacecraft is in the w a te r below, safe In its being a chimpanzee in space,” graduate, unfurled the sm all "Go C o rp s p ro g r a m s ficials. shared it with every person in flo tatio n c o lla r . UPI Radiotelephoto quipped Navy Capt. Lovell. Army, Beat Navy” sign he opened Soldiers, police and firemen the world. It was just fantastic," "And now I finally got the bana­ in space during his walk out­ Returned Peace Corps volun­ arriv ed to help the injured. An n a ," grinned Air Force Maj. Al­ he said. side the capsule. te e rs will present program s in e s t i m a t e d 3,000 o n l o o k e r s Gemini I2 ’s successful four- drin. Quipped Navy man Lovell: "I several residence halls tonight crowded the cobblestoned main concerning th eir work and ex­ stre e t and the unpaved s i d e S H E P P A R D T R I A L The slippers symbolized day flight concluded the historic told him he was in a very p re ­ golden slipper - like foot Gemini project and opened the carious position to be showing a periences. stre e ts at Olinda station to watch way for Am erica’s last and big­ re stra in ts Aldrin used for lever­ sign like that to m e. I was on The program s will be in the the rescue work. gest step to the moon-Apollo. age when hanging on the re a r of the inside and he was on the South Lounge of Campbell, 6:30 p.m .; Yakeley, 6:30 p.m .; Wilson As the injured and dead were removed from the wreckage, a J u r y g o e s into s e c l u s i o n Gemini 12. As Lovell and Aldrin spoke, outside.” _______________ Hall, 7 p.m .; East F ee, 7:30 pile of 20 unmatched, shabby p.m .; and Wonders Hall at 8 p.m . shoes stood by the track along Film s will be shown in the Wilson and Wonders program s. with a pile of bloodstained news­ papers being shipped from Rio. t o d e l i b e r a t e its v e r d i c t E a r ly S h o p p e r s !! W orld New s at a Glance CLEVELAND, Ohio - A jury sat secluded once again in judg­ m ent on Samuel H. Sheppard, following his second trial in the ahoga County Courthouse across the hall from the scene of Shep­ p ard ’s 1954 tial. The panel took with them a wife, blonde, G erm an-born A ri- ane Tebbenjohanns Sheppard. The state said Sheppard killed Marilyn during a quarrel over Here’s a Pre-Christmas Book Sale Just For You m urder of his wife, Marilyn, 12 copy of the indictment which his attentions to Susan Hayes, y ea rs ago. charged that "Samuel H. Shep­ pard on or about the fourth day then a young, attractive medical Seven men and five women technician at Bay View Hospital. ju ro rs got the case at 10:30 a.m . of July, 1954, in the county Sheppard, who since has lost his R o m n e y to v a c a tio n Wednesday in C o m m o n Pleas aforesaid, unlawfully, purpose­ medical license, served there as Judge F rancis J . T alty ’s sec­ fully and maliciously killed M ar­ L A N S IN G (AP) — Gov.. George Romney will va­ ilyn Sheppard.” a neurosurgeon in a family of ond-floor courtroom in the Cuy- cation fo r two weeks, in Puerto Rico, he said today. In a 40-minute charge to the osteopaths that included his two ‘ ‘ It's the f i r s t re al vacation I've had i n f o u r y e a r s ,” jury, Talty gave them three pos­ older brothers and his father, said Romney, who has just completed a strenuous N e e d more b lo o d sible verdicts with which to c li­ max a 3 1/2-week tria l that since deceased. Miss Hayes reportedly is m a r­ Books and Records Cyril Ritchard's 4 - R e c o r d A l b u m \ r e -e le c t io n campaign. rie d now and living in Santa Romney w ill wait until a fte r the Michigan State- N o tre Dame football game Saturday before leaving, fo r h eart surgery began Oct. 24: Guilty of second-degree m ur­ Monica, Calif. She and Shep­ pard both testified at the 1954 AT S.B.S. ALICE'S ADVENTURES Blood donated by MSU students der - punishable by life im pris­ IN W O N D E R L A N D he said. " I ’ m scheduled out on the 6:10 p.m . plane tria l, admitting their illicit r o ­ ON S A L E . P R IC E D FR O M Wednesday made two open- onment, with parole possible af­ S a tu rd a y .’ ’ h eart surgeries possible at Ann te r 10 years. mance. Neither testified at the With facsim ile first edition book \ Guilty of first-degree man­ cu rren t trial. $ 1°° (0 $|5 0 0 A rbor’s University Hospital to­ slaughter - carrying a one to 20 In the 12 years since the slay­ H it le r s a id tr e a te d fo r b lin d n e s s day, according to Walt Haney, year prison term , with parole ing, Sheppard has contended that campus blood drive publicity possible after 11 months. the bloody crim e was committed O n v o lu m e s o r ig in a lly FRANKFURT, Germany (#) — chairm an. by an intruder, who knocked him Panse said examination showed Acquittal - and Sheppard’s final A German psychiatrist, Prof. instead that the blindness was Twenty pints of A-positive unconscious after beating M ari­ p r ic e d f r o m $ 2 .0 0 - $ 2 5 .0 0 blood must be collected between release from a charge that has F riederich Panseof Duesseldorf, induced by hysteria. He was a hung over his head since 1954, lyn to death. testified h ere that Adolph Hitler 2..snd 4 p.m . today so that another w itness at a tria l of three Ger­ open-heart surgery can be per­ and h is already cost him nine In this trial, the defense raised SALE BOOKS vVAS NOW once had psychiatric treatm ent years in prison. a suggestion before the jury that for tem porary blindness, claim ­ man doctors accused of sending formed at the hospital. Sheppard, seated behind de­ two outsiders may have been The Movies 15.00 5.95 thousands of mentally ill Ger­ The 40 p i n t s for today’s ing it was an afterm ath of m us- fense attorney F. Lee Bailey, involved in M arilyn’s slaying, one Erotic Poetry 7.50 3.95 tard -g as poisoning in World War I. mans to gas cham bers. su rgeries w ere among 145 pints collected by 5 p.m ., Haney said. looked intently at the jury during of them a woman, and that they Gift of Prophesy 4.50 2.25 The total donation now stands much of T alty ’s charge. In a might have been known to the Film s of Jean Harlow L B J su rg e ry ad vances m a rk e t spectator’s seat was his second Sheppards. 5.95 2.98 at 504 pints, fa r short of the 1,776-pint goal. Awesome Challenge East Lansing NEW YORK (AP) — The stock m a rk e t advanced However, participation picked 4.95 1.00 up somewhat Wednesday, Haney M athematics in the Making Wednesday a fte r P res id en t Johnson’ s successful ¿¡fsT said, and the goal might still 9.95 4.95 I W AS $25 s u rg e ry . At 2 p .m ., the Dow Jones average of 30 industrial be reached. Antique C o l l e c t i n g for StateBank "T he heart surgery is really stocks was up 4.56 at 819.87. At 11:30 a .m ., it had Everyone 5.00 2.98 the most important thing,” Haney N O W O N LY 6 .9 5 been up 5.40. Pictorial H i s t , of Amer. said. "T he blood is absolutely The average p ric e p er share of all common stock Bird 12.50 6.95 necessary,” T H IS A N D M A N Y , M A N Y M O RE C O LLEC TO R S sold on the New Y o r k Stock Exchange was up 35 Man & Beast 15.00 7.95 The blood for Friday’s surgery T e a r s & Laughter by ALBU M S A L L A T G R E A TLY R E D U C E D P R IC E S cents at 2 p.m . T ra d in g was heavy. should be in by 3 p.m , if pos­ Gibran 2.751.00 Stockbrokers said Johnson’ s operation removed sible, Haney said. After its type Corner of Abbott and Grand River Relativity by Einstein SALE BOOKS one elem ent of u ncertainty overhanging the m a rke t is confirmed, it will be sent 2.75 1.00 and stim ulated buying along a broad fro n t. to Ann A rbor. Branch O ffic es of Indonesian Cookery The Johnson Wit 3.00 1.00 The blood drive will be held 3.951.69 T ales of the M ississippi at Demonstration Hall 2-8 p.m. O K EM OS H ASLETT B R O O K FIELD P L A Z A L iterary Essays by Sartre 10.00 3.95 today and 9 a.m . - 3 p.m . F ri­ M em ber Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. 2.75 1.00 Germ an-Eng. Dictionary day. Sea Food Cookbook 2.75 1.00 B a c k s t a g e talk s Now Open 5 Nights . . , Shop 9 a.m . to 9 p.m . Monday thru F rid a y Saturday 9 a .m . to 5:30 p.m. 2.001.00 Diet, of English Synonyms Ezra Pound Life & Its M arvels 5.00 1.98 6.00 2.98 7.50 2.98 The Kennedy Wit 3.00 1.00 A rts of Mankind 7.50 2.98 th e G i f t f o r th e M a n settle V ie t c la s h W ho E n j o y s K e e p in g SAIGON (if) — The w riters of new constitution for South Viet to continue sniping at the Junta. Much of the dispute centers H i s C a r in T i p - T o p S h a p e N E W ! 14 Complete Dictionaries in 1 Volume! lam planned to m eet in open se s - on A rticles 20 and 21 of the a s­ ion Thursday after a week of sem bly’s by - laws. A rticle 20 TH E ackstage maneuvering aimed at gives Ky’s regime power to O u r M o s t P o w e r f u l C a r voiding a direct clash between hem and the m ilitary govern- amend die constitution, the a s ­ sembly can overrule the amend­ D IC T IO N A R Y nent. Many in the Constituent As­ m ents only by a two-thirds vote. A rticle 21 calls for dissolution V a c Iu u m L IB R A R Y sembly warn they will not rub- of the assembly as soon as it fin­ ishes the new national cnarter. jer-stam p a constitution handed hem by P re m ie r Nguyen Cao C ritics in the assembly say the government should have no C le a n e r s N early 2 0 0 ,0 0 0 entries for use in School, home & officeI i y ' s regim e. • WEBSTER'S DICTIONARY BOOK of FAMILIAR veto power over their work; they QUOTATIONS • CROSSWORD PUZZLE After storm y sessions last veek, the 117-member assembly want to continue sitting until a civilian government is elected. Tentative plans call for elec­ a DICTIONARY i SYNONYMS, ANTONYMS & HOMONYMS idjourned to seek a face-saving FRENCH-ENGLISH & :ompromise. tion of a legislature sometime MUSIC DICTIONARY next year. Few here believe the ENGLISH-FRENCH Informed sources said a pub­ RHYMING DICTIONARY ic knockdown, drag-out battle m ilitary regime will — or can — SPANISH-ENGLISH & LEGAL DICTIONARY lad been avoided but that ex- give up real power because of the ENGLISH-SPANISH MEDICAL DICTIONARY irem ist elem ents were expected war. SCIENTIFIC TERMS OUTLINE OF U.S. HISTORY BIBLE DICTIONARY ■ ATLAS & GAZETTEER 928 RAGES SIZE 8Vi x 11 Ve A valuable new reference tool. These separate vol­ umes sell for many times this low introductory price. M A IL AND PHONE ORDERS F IL L E D A C R O S S F R O M O L IN H E A L T H C E N T E R F in e G i f t fo r D a d M ak eg c a r c le a n in g e a s y f o r D a d ! J u s t p lu g lo n g PROFESSIONAL 0^ ( a & k DRY CLEANERS AND 1 6 -fo o t c o rd i n t o l i g h te r s o c k e t. 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SAGINAW C H A R G E IT o n S e a rs R e v o lv in g C h a rg e 4 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Thursday, November 17, 1966 SPORTS 7 0 0 IN P R E S S B O X 'G a m e ’ d r a w s r e c o r d p re s s By RICK BROWNE assem blage in the history of d ressin g , s i x gallons of c ra n - at MSU several y ears ago is the collegiate football.” berry sauce, 60 dozen ro lls, production of game action pic- New York, Boston, Washington, Three national networks, one 50 dozen donuts and 500 packages tu res for newspaper and tele­ Los A n g e le s , Cincinnati, television and two radio, foill of ice cream . vision use while the game is Chicago, Philadelphia,Nashville, broadcast the thunder occurring At halftime the well-fed p ress Atlanta and Baltimore. being played. These photos are on the field. Van P atrick, Sonny can lunch on 1,000 hot dogs,m ore takenf pr0Cessed and captioned, Sound like a weather report, G randelius, Chris Schenkel, Bud donuts, innumerable gallons of and then handed t0 newsmen or maybe a travel agency? Well Wilkinson and Jim Morse are soft drinks and hot coffee and these and many other cities rep­ shortly after the game. some of the announcers who will “ an apple on the house." resent the hordes of p re s s , radio be heard by more than 20 million O ther services include the dis­ and television who will be avidly So when Michigan State is people from coast to coast. tribution of complete , statistics meeting Notre Dame on the field watching Saturday’s game from Look, Life, Times and Sports the p re ss box in Spartan Stadium. f f te r 76,000 fans can look up at the Illustrated will splash the game free distribution of program s, somber face of the p re ss box It is predicted t h a t 700 story to readers scattered around and so-called “ flip c a rd s” con­ m em bers of the p re ss will cram the 50 states, and in foreign taining ro s te rs , lineups, game and know that inside 700 peo­ and jam themselves into what countries. history and other pertinent in­ ple representing some 20 m il­ has previously been called “ the formation. lion fans across the country are most spacious p ress box in the Acting as host to the media is watching. MSU’s Sports Information Di­ An unusual service pioneered Nick Eddy (left) and Jim Lynch are two of the country." The previous high at­ recto r Fred Stabley, who is in reasons Michigan State coach Duffy Daugherty is tendance figure in the facility was the 553 who watched MSU charge of the p ress box and all w o rry in g about the M S U -N o t r e Dame game this beat Michigan e a rlie r this sea­ its facilities. weekend. Eddy is the leading Iris h ru s h e r this sea­ son. This Saturday the 700 will eat son with 498 yards gained and seven T D ’ s. Lynch C ities from Des Moines to a pre-gam e meal of turkey with is the tea m captain, and an A l l - A m e r i c a n linebacker. Kokomo, states from California dressing and cranberry sauce, D u f f y c i t e s ' p r o b l e m s ’ to Rhode Island, and even our ro ils, relish trays and a dessert Canadian neighbors are sending of donuts and ice cream . For representatives to East Lansing. this banquet the MSU kitchens In fact, the gathering has been have prepared 325 pounds of T e r r y & called “ th e greatest press turkey, over 500 servings of s a s ' g a m e ' p r e s s u r e m o u n t s • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • t h e P a p i s t s | TONIGHT! centration, Daugherty has banned jovial Irishman answered back. were the number one team at By E D B R IL L the p re ss from the sessions. Psychologically D a u g h e r t y the tim e. State News Sports W r i t e r “ If either team gets far behind, By R O B E R T A Y A F IE | “ It's not a m atter of secrecy," said he saw no problem in the The November a ir outside Daugherty explained,“ it’s a mat­ team getting “ too high” for the I think they’ll have great dif­ State News Sports W r i t e r $: was chilled and charged with t e r of no distractions. With game. ficulty catching up," Daugherty e x p e c t a t i o n Wednesday a fter­ 50-75 people watching practice said. “ This is because both The B rothers Clancy—Tom , Pat and Liam—along with Tommy “ Both team s have as much team s a re blessed with strong Makem, who make their own records by singing Irish folk songs the The Dells noon, as the Michigan State Spar­ there is no way of having complete tans started their final few days concentration." incentive going for them as two defensive squads.” way they ought to be sung, do an interesting a ir called “ The Old of preparation for the Saturday Tuesday, Spartan fullback Bob team s could possibly have,” he What does scoring first mean Orange F lute." showdown against Notre Dame. Apisa ran at full strength for commented. “ I don’t think being in a game like this? A curious aspect of the tune is that the Clancys a re of stout, Inside thehugeSpartanStadium the first tim e since the North­ an underdog makes that much of “ It’s always nice to score Republic-of-Ireland-Green-Catholic stock. It's only proper that p re ss box. Coach fluffy Daugherty w estern game. a difference—we were an under­ fir s t, he said rath e r sheepishly, Makem, a Protestant Orangeman from County Armagh, deep in the looked at the tarp-covered field “ Apisa ran quite well Tuesday dog last y ear, even though we “ . . »and second too." North Country, sings the solo. m a k e s a n in n o v a t i o n in below, and then talked to an night,” Daugherty said, “ but we The song’s tale is set in County T yrone, where Bob, a weaver assem blage of rep o rters from all a re still running Cavender num­ by tra d e, was thought by his chums as a “ stout Orange blade." over the country about the game. ber one." On July 12th every y ea r. Bob would play his flute in a grand pa­ S E N I O R N IG H T N otre Dame will present the Daugherty denied the charge rade commemorating the victory of William of Orange, the English Spartans with problems on both that pass defense is the weak R u g g e r s c l o s e s e a s o n king, over Scotland's Jam es II. p re s e n tin g offense and defense, Daugherty link in his team , “ The pass It seem s however, that Bob the weaver was an able deceiver as defense has been extrem ely ef­ well, for he got himself hitched to a young Papist wench and the p air said. fective in any game where the was forced to flee to Connaught, a province in the heart of the Irish "T hey have a unique concept a g a i n s t B l a c k r o c k Republic. Bob had, to boot, turned Papist him self. No. 1 P arty of defense,"explained Daugherty. “ And they have a great person­ outcome was still in question," he insisted. The MSU Rugby Club closes The flute, however, was Orange to the co re, and when some The game against Blackrock goodly Papist p rie st had finally persuaded Bob to accompany the nel, well coached in techniques. "In the Ohio State gam e, when M eet The “ They use a four-four, o r we were leading just 11-8 in the its fall season this Saturday with will be played at 10:00 a.m . choir, the instrument answered back by offering a sprightly verse a game here against Blackrock. Saturday morning on Old Col­ of “ The Protentant Boys." C la s s of ’67 gap-six defense," said Daugher­ la st period, we intercepted three The ruggers have a 1-2-1 rec ­ lege F ield. Bob tried everything, from dipping the flute in holy water to ty, " I t gives you problems block­ passes in the last five m inutes," ord for the y ear, with their only counting beads by the sco re, but the flute only responded with a ing, because it amounts to an Daugherty reminded the rep o rt­ win over Windsor, 8-6. They have chorus of “ Kick the Pope” and “ Boil W ater." N o tic k e ts . . . no c o v e r c h a rg e eight man front. e rs . not played Blackrock, a Canadian “ Offensively, they pose a He also said that the main The instrument went before the Council of P rie s ts which pro­ club, yet this season. A game S ’ s p ir it nounced it heretical and purchased Bob a new flute. g reater problem than any team objective of the Spartan defense Fire-up for Notre Dame we’ve played," he continued. “ P urdue's passing may have was not to stop the dangerous Irish passing combination of Han- was scheduled with them e a rlie r in the fall, but was cancelled. Leaders on the club this year, o n p a p e r It had the last word though. Tied to the stake, flam es whipping around it, the Old Orange Flute proudly whistled “ The P rotestant Boys.” equaled Notre Dame’s, but there ratty to Seymour. “ If we ganged Get ready f o r the big one tonight. Band who a re coached by Neville Do­ Which brings us to T erence Hugh H anratty, known to you and me wasn’t the running to go with up to stop the passing, we would Saturday Michigan State plays as T e rry , trigger-m an of the Baby Bom bers. w ill be playing fr o m 8 p .m . to 1 a.m . Senior herty, include Rick Allen, Ian it.” never be able to stop th eir great tickets will be honored at full cash value. Donald, Mike Auer, Kirk Louis, N otre Dame in what has been We’re all aware that T erry is of good Irish stock; Notre Dame’s The Spartans have practiced running,” Daugherty explained. Ron Bacon and Jim M oriarty. tabbed the "gam e of the y e a r," football guidebook tells us so, just in case we m issed something this week just an hour and fif­ One rep o rter wanted to know C o m e O a t E a r l y F o r T h is Allen and Louis a re seniors, the "gam e of the decade," and along the way. teen minutes on Tuesday and if the Spartan attack would be while the others are doing grad­ just "T he G am e." The question, however, a ris e s , what kind of Irish? N ig h t T o R e m e m b e r Wednesday, and will add one balanced o r unbalanced, Petitions of congratulation and uate work. Since the sport has At Notre Dame there seem s to be but one kind—Irish. There final hour Thursday. Because “ You’re talking about the team , only reached club status, the encouragement have been made really doesn’t seem to be much else. of the need for complete con- o r me being unbalanced?"' the graduate students and others available at the desk of each Checking into T e rry 's an cestry , we find that his surname o rig i­ affiliated with the university a re residence hall, at the Union desk, nated as O’Hanraghty, and that it’s one “ rarely found outside its eligible for competition. and at a table in Bessey Hall. original habitat." “ BABY, WHAT’B I SAY?” The club status has hurt the Students a re requested to sign The clan is a comparatively small one, descended from a chap team , though, as players a re not their name only once. named Ionrachtach, “ a scion of the great M aguires," and was excused from classes for games, Rick Browne, Battle Creek jun­ located at O riel. and many of the players m iss ior, who started the petitions, set However, we all know that th ere a re two kinds of Irish, the Good practices because of exams. a goal of 20,000 signatures in Guys and the Bad Guys, and the taks of defining them depends on Injuries have also played a support of the conference cham­ where your ancestors called home. m ajor role in the course of the pion Spartans. To his ancestors in counties Armagh, Louth and Monoghan, T erry G r e a t J u m p in g T a k e - U p R e e l s , If Y o u H a d R e c o r d e d It O n T h e season as one death resulted They will be collected on is a Good Guy from the word go. from the rugged play and sev­ Friday, taped together, and then To the Reverend F athers at Notre Dame, h e's a Baddie, even if N E W S O N Y 9 0 0 or 9 07 Y o u ’ d K n o w , B a b y !! e ra l other players were side­ presented to Coach Duffy Daugh­ they won’t admit it. lined with leg and shoulder in- erty and the team . Tommy Makem could tell you that. ju rle s._____________________ The Orange Society, a se c re t society originating in U lster, was formed in 1795 to maintain P rotestant ascendency. W M B S s h o w s M embers a re reputed to be fond of beating drum s and flaunting flags bearing the legend, “ No S u rren d er," a re enrolled in lodges, g a m e s p e c ia l and are known to drink some mighty strong and flowery toasts. An "MSU — Notre Dame Notre Dame fans react to orange as Superman does to Kryptonite. Special” will be telecast tonight From the consensus of public opinion, though, they seem to like $49.50 at 7:00 on channel 10, WMSB T e rry Hanratty. television. The only possible explanation to his popularity must be religious Or The show will feature film s of in n ature, but th ere, too, we’re stymied. Or the Spartan-Irlsh clash last year T e rry is a Catholic Orangeman. That gives him at least half of f. ;■ 3475 Pop 2475 Pop and will also present movies of the Olde Sod folk behind him—50% from each te rrito ry . B o ttle s the Notre Dame team against It kind of makes you wonder where they get their Vitamin C. It B o ttle s Purdue, Northwestern and Navy also gives me new hope. Maybe I can send my son to Notre Dame this year, WE’LL TAKE YOU after all WHERE THE ACTION IS CAMPUS BOOK’S GIANT The night life at Chicago. A BOOK SALE weekend in the NorthCountry. The big game. Home. T his is the action generation, and C o m p a c t-E a s ily slides under a c a r seat at the D r iv e In o r behind the shower curtain at w herever the action, INDIAN your next party. (What do they talk about in there?) TRAILS will take you there in style! Easy on a collegian’s B atte rie s o r AC O p e ra tio n -R e c o rd your class notes, catch your in s tru c to rs ’ e v e r y in­ pocketbook, too. c rim in a tin g word and com ment. The mike has an o n -o ff switch to control r e c o rd e r. S T I L L G O IN G S T R O N G Automatic Volume C o n tro l-A u to m a tic a lly retains the sam e recording level whether M a n y e x c e lle n t t it le s le ft to c h o o s e f r o m . she whispers o r s c re a m s . Keep proof of all those pro m is es HE makes. Vo lu m e s o rig in a lly Two Speed Capstan D r i v e - F o r music recording f i d e l i t y - r e c o r d your ro o m m a te 's new reco rd s before they get all s cra tc h y fr o m playing U F O with the guys down the hall. published at: $2 - $20 NOW O N LY $1 - $10 And M o re, too personal and in tim a te to discuss h ere. In c lu d in g T H E C O M P L E T E L I B R A R Y O F W O R L D A R T R E M E M B E R ! A SONY T A P E R E C O R D E R Is A F a r C r y F r o m A Tape W o r m . * *A n cien t Japanese saying? IF YOUR AC TIO N IS IN a t o n ly $ 1 .4 9 / v o lu m e CH IC AG O , SOUTH BEND, B EN TO N HARBOR, S T O P IN AND BROWSE — Y O U ’ L L F IN D MARSHALL MUSIC CO KALAM AZO O . F L IN T , M A N Y BOOKS A P P R O P R IA T E FOR T H A T S P E C IA L SAGINAW, OR BAY C IT Y . . C H R IS T M A S G IF T — AT G R E A T SAVINGS WE’ RE FOR YOU! Indian Trails i CAM PUS B O O K STO RES 307 E . G ra n d R iv e r 131 East Grand R iv e r — 507 East Grand R iv e r 408 W. GRAND RIVER (acro ss f r o m Union) (across f r o m Berkey) Phone 332-2813 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Thursday, November 17, 1966 5 SPORTS H a rrie rs en d ’6 6 K e y e s ’ to s u c c e s s ; w ith N C A A m eet By G A Y E L WESCH Seniors Dick Sharkey, George b o o te rs h a v e T o n y Balthrop and E ric Zem per will State News Sports W r i t e r be running their last race as By D EN N IS CHASE year’s All-American Payton Ful­ "M y parents wanted to send me MSU's cro ss country team will Spartan h a rrie rs . le r. to the States anyway." A ssociate Sports E d it o r compete in its third m ajor cham­ Sharkey was 24th la sty ear, far "In Jam aica, we play soccer Keyes plays inside right. With pionship meet in eight days, and below the 10th place finish which T here have been m ore pictures all the tim e,” Keyes said. " F ir s t Guy Busch they have scored 37 finish its season when it travels netted him All-Am erican honors of Tony Keyes in the newspapers you play in the street, like foot­ of their team 's 59 goals. He is to Lawrence, Kan.,’ for the NCAA in 1963 and Balthrop was 86th. than of any other Spartan soccer ball here, and then you play in a cinch for All-America honors. championship’m eet Saturday. Z em per did not compete last sea­ player. your high school.” Ask any spectator what he re ­ Keyes is only 5-7, 140 pounds. One of the m ost inspiring sights W estern Michigan, the winner son. this season was watching Keyes fo r the last two seasons, will be A rt Link, the only other r e ­ m em bers about a Spartan soccer He made the All-Jam aican team at College High School in Jamaica horizontally hanging in the a ir shooting for its th ird straight tu rn er from last year, was 91st game and invariably the play will and was also a track star. in front of the opposition's goal title but should get stiff compe­ in the meet. involve Tony Keyes. " I was offered a tender for still trying to swipe at the ball tition from IC4A winner ViUa- Sophomores Dean Rosenberg, It's em barrassing. with his toe. nova. Big Ten champion Iowa Roger Merchant and P at Wilson, The defense has been superb, track and soccer, but I like the competition and teamwork of soc­ Keyes is the quietest man on also stands a good chance for the who have been steadily improving allowing a record three goals in ce r much better than track ,” the team. It seems like he is title with MSU expected to be in the championship m eets, will nine gam es. Guy Busch has scored 19 goals. Gary McBrady Keyes said. "T h ere a re more always at a loss for words. He well up in the running. be making their NCAA debuts. hopes to playprofessional soccer The Spartans, who finished Sharkey, who was second in and Rick Nelke have been out­ skills involved.” Keyes is fast. A favorite play and is a p re-dentistry m ajor. second in the Big T en and third both the conference and IC4A standing playm akers. of the Spartans is to send a Stopping him is like pulling In the IC4A m eet this season m eets said he was "in hopes of K e y e s I n A c t io n Yet all that the fans rem em ber teeth. were 16th in the NCAA last sea­ winning this one,” but will have is Keyes. long pass down the center of the son, only one notch lower than some stiff competition. The many moods of Tony Keyes, Kingston, Jamaica sophomore. Keyes is exc itin g Keyes is a native of Kingston, field as Keyes waits mldfleld. th e ir w orst showing ever in the "I'm anxious to run against on the fie ld, but s u r p r is in g ly quiet off it. But he has s cored 18 goals this y e a r and Jam aica. Coach Gene Kenney Keyes then breaks into a dash m eet one year e a rlie r. (Jim) Ryan and (Jerry) Lindgren is a ‘ ‘key” man in the N C AA tournament game Saturday against Akron. heard about him through last toward the ball and the goal as R u g b y m e e tin g The NCAA m eet, which covers (both m em bers of the U.S. Olym­ the crowd rise s to its feet with excitement. a distance of six m iles as com ­ pic team, with Ryan the current Against t h e University of MSU’s Rugby Club is having a pared to four and five for the world’s record holder for the Akron, Oct. 7, Keyes scored meeting for all m em bers at 7 Big Ten and IC4A m eets, r e ­ m ile run) and (Charles) M essen­ M A N O F C O N T R O V E R S Y three goals in a 4-1 win. Guy p.m . Thursday, The meeting will spectively, annually draws the g er (winner in the IC4A this sea­ Busch was out with an injury be in room 208 Men’s IM Build­ best team s and, consequently, son)," Sharkey said. which kept even m ore pressu re ing. some of the nation's finest ru n ­ The Spartan captain didn’t think the added distance would affect on Keyes. n e rs. The opposition has tried to MSU h as .won the NCAA six him very much although it could B e a r d s l e y t a k e s g r i p e s COUPON double team Keyes this year, but tim es, most recently in 1959. have its effects on some runners. By R O B E R T A Y A F IE 50-yard line seats, that each Beardsley admitted that he "F ortunately on this campus, he proves too fast for even two men. In a 7-0 win over Ball Cigarettes booth only had tickets for every does get a sm all amount of "fan football season is not just for State University, Keyes got three State News Sports W r i t e r (except premium brands) T ic k e t d e a d lin e s e t five rows, and that, while there m ail” from students, as well as those who like football,” he con­ goals despite two men who were *‘A riddle inside a m ystery w ere 6,000 seats in sections phone calls, such as a nocturnal tinued, "but it’s the zenith of the all over his back. A deadline f o r picking up student tickets f o r the wrapped up in an enigma" — 9, 10 and 11, an approximate call midnight Monday, inquiring social season as well. Everything In the firs t game of the season, N o tre Dame game h.as been set due to additional that^s what Churchill said of total of 9,500 senior, graduate as to why there w ere no upper revolves around the football weekend." against Purdue, Keyes got five 4 /9 9 0 p re p a ra tio n planned by the ticket office. Russia. and spouse ticket cards had been deck seats. a ssists to tie Bill Schwarz’s T ickets will be d istribu ted Thursday at C onrad Hall The same can be applied to purchased. " I don’t solicit calls at home,” Speaking of seats again, Beard­ 1963 record. He ended the season between 10:30 a .m . and 3 p .m . The Jenison ticket Bill Beardsley. "T he paradox is that we know he said, "but at the same time, sley pointed out that it all works with 18 goals and 6 assists for Beardsley, MSU’s athletic students jam sections 9 and 10," I don’t have an unlisted number, out in the end. 24 points, second only to Guy \ old .i f i e i - 1 1 , 1 oo office w ill be open until noon on F rid a y . ticket manager, is one of the best he pointed out, "and of their own either. I just don’t appreciate "They all face the field,” he Busch. T ic ke t Manager B ill B ea rd sley noted that p re p a ra ­ tions f o r 500 w o rk e rs must be made by the ticket liked a n d most disliked in­ volition. T here’s no complaint dividuals in the opinion of stu­ about this. It’ s only when we try the position it puts my family in with calls like that.” commented dryly, "and th e y haven’t scored a touchdown at the Why come to Michigan State? "My friends told me about what ■^■■COU PO N H M H office f o r Saturday's game and there will be lim ite d dents. to make room for everyone that Beardsley said that no m atter 50-yard-Hne yet.” . a fine school it is, Keyes said. t im e to issue tickets. Students who w ill be unable to get t h e i r ticket due While he provides as many they make it a federal case.” seating opportunities at Spartan Beardsley pointed to the long what the difficulties, the main objective is achieved—seeing the One A Day to a schedule conflict should have friend s pick up Stadium as possible, the students lines that form Sunday evening game. T y p e Vi tom i n s t h e ir tickets. One student may pick up as many as gripe that they're too cramped. before the first day’s sales, "No one’s designed a stadium 12 tickets at a tim e so th e re shouldbe no excuse fo r Yet they gripe just as loudly noting that when he was in school, yet where all the seats are with­ when they see the "Sold Out" he probably wouldn’t have kept the in the 40s," he noted. "W e’d pay R eg 2 95 not getting tickets. signs at the Jenison ticket cages vigil. a premium for it.” B ea rd sley also asks that students a r r i v e at the stadium 5 -1 0 minutes e a r l y Saturday to avoid jam ­ ming at the gate. The gates w ill open at noon. for Ohio State, Purdue and Notre Dame. "We’ve suggested, s e v e r a l tim es, to go to a season book,’’ Beardsley mentioned that one of the aspects which students L im i t i 750 "If there’s something to gripe he said, "but the student body feel is the responsibility of his \ aid a fte r 1 1 , 17/ 60 about,” B e a rd s le y noted, doesn’t want it. Waiting in line staff is protecting them from " th e re 's always going to be seem s to be part of the campus rudeness of other students. someone to gripe at. I’m not spirit; it’s definitely part of the ■CO UPO NH callous enough to say that it campus scene. "In the final analysis, we enjoy G a m e o n n a tio n a l T V doesn’t bother m e, but 1 think "T he seniors started it and I understand human nature enough others followed,** he went on. it,” Beardsley said of his work, "especially when we can do Transistor goôd deal of skill and formula­ NEW YORK (UP1) - The Amer­ ican Broadcasting Company tion to circumvent previous rul­ to recognize- that, . a t tim es, "You can’t help but feel gratified there’s got to be a punching a t the interest that's shown. It’s everything possible, like selling adjacent seats at the Iowa game Batteries and the National Collegiate Ath­ ings concerning regional tele­ bag. phenomenal.” for friends and dates. (9 Volt) letic Association bowed to pub­ c asts of football games. "Actually, though,’* he added, lic p re ssu re Wednesday and an­ M o d i f i c a t i o n of the first " w e 're not responsible for some R eg 45c nounced jointly that Saturday's Notre Dame-Michigan State col­ doubleheader collegiate telecast by the NCAA-ABC p reserv es the of the situations they do gripe about.” Lini* 1 160 lege football game will be appearance of rules. A good portion of the com­ televised nationally. \ oui a lle r 1 I, 17/ öö plaints stem from the choice of One fly in the solution, how­ The Notre Dame-Michigan seats for home games. S E N IO R S ! e v er, is that a huge section of the State gams will be the first Monday morning, standing in COUPON country will see the game by p art of a gridiron twinbill in the the upstairs stands in the field- delated video-tape. E ast as planned. In certain Accommodating “ the greatest public demand for a sports sections of the W est, however, it will replace the originally house, Beardsley told the lines of students the ticket situation. Cedocol Speaking through a bull horn, Mouthwash event in television history" took a scheduled Tennessee-Kentucky. he announced that there w ere few Reg 97c 490 DID THE WOLVERINE V Ol d a l l e r Breck Shampoo OUPON I I , 17, t>6 PORTRAIT PHOTOGRAPHER Reg 1 00 4" 4*0Y MISS YOU? Limit 1 \ old a lte r 1 1 / 1 7, òò COUPON Old Spice Lime After Shove B i l l B e a r d s le y He’ll bebackfor a limited R eg L im it 1 1 50 V Old a lle r 11,1 7/ bb 990 w w y MSU’s FINEST time after Thanksgiving. S p e c ia ls g ood at DAWN DONUTS Call E L a n s in g S t o r e o n ly STATE 355-8264fromI-5 N o w F e a t u r in g Discount Chick-N-Joy C o s m e t ic s & V ita m in s fo r yo u r a p p o in tm e n t 619 E. Brand River \cross f r o m Student S e r v k . S p e c ia l R a te s f o r c h u rc h e s • Daily 9 a.m. - 6 p.m. - c lu b s -U n iv e rs ity g ro u p s C ALL NOW ! ! ! • Wed. 9 a.m. - 9 p.m. 101 V a r ie tie s F r e e P a rk in g I 332-2541 I 1.135 E . G R A N D R IV E R Thursday, November Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan W H Y M Y M O R E rcoaer T u r k e y s a r e U S D A G R A D E ' A ' T h e o M e re d ith L a n s in g T h e re s a Ja n c za re k 5 16 S e y m o u r L a n s in g M r s . M a ry K e rsh n e r D o w n e y S t. L a n s in g B ig , d e e p b re a ste d b ird s w ith M r s . B u d W ils o n D e lta M ills L a n s in g M r s . L u c ille N e g r i R o s e n e a th A v e . L a n s in g lo ts o f g o o d e a t in g m e a t , y o u r s K a re n J . L in g 15 18 J a m e s L a n s in g D o n a ld B id in g e r E . S ta te R d . L a n s in g a t K r o g e r L o w P ric e s . R u th W e b e r C re s to n A v e . L a n s in g Jo a n n e S tr in g e r N . S yc a m o re L a n s in g V iv ia n S h e n e m a n W o lf C t . E a s t L a n s in g M . G ille tt 2 9 2 0 W o o d ru ff L a n s in g Ä _ TO P VALUE 2 5 S T A M P S I H s s x B n E M W IT H T H IS C O U P O N each purchase of any ON I I A M E R IC A N C H A R M I | C O M P L E T E R U N IT | I (excluding Dinner Knife, Salad Fork, Dinner Fork. I I Teaspoon and basic 4-piece place setting.) I _ Redeem at Kroger thru Sunday, November 20, 1966 For that extra ,, imm mmm mmm mmm mmm mmm mmmmm mmmm mmm a anl holiday feast, try one o f these Extra Fancy Birds V A L U A B L E C O U P O N - S A V E 50c 1 Silver Platter S E M I-B O N E L E S S T E N D E R A Y U S D A C H O IC E on the purchase ol a 4 piece place setting Salad Fork. 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T h a t’s w h y K r o g e r c a rrie s this S u n ris e -F re s h G u a r a n te e , e v e r y ■ the purchase of j Powdered Sugar I p a c k a g e o f K r o g e r 's fruits a n d v e g e ta b le s , s e a le d b y K r o g e r 's c le a r p lastic I each pkg. of film , m ust b e su n ris e -fre sh w h e n y o u b u y it. If y o u a r e n ot c o m p le te ly G o l d e n Danish Pastry ■ 1-lb. pkg. 1 0 c . I Limit 1 w/$5 or more purchase I s a tis fie d , K r o g e r w ill re p la c e y o u r item o r re fu n d y o u r m o n e y . I LIMIT 4 Q ■ (excluding beer, wine, tobacco) | Redeem at Kroger thru m m ^ b Redeem at Kroger thru tmmmmm Plump Red In Shell 2-lbs 3-lbs. I Sun. Nov. 20, 1966 ^ P J Sun. Nov. 20„ 1966 C ra n b e rrie s 2 ^ 59c M ix e d N u ts * 1 .0 9 *1 .5 9 Y a m s V A L U A B L E C O U P O N First of the Season Calif. Pascal 18 Size 3 0 Size ■Kroger Special Label ■ ^SfiP ! N avel O ra n g es 1 2 /7 9 c C e le ry ea 3 3 c ea 2 3 c I FLO U R ■ 10-lb. bag 6 9 « ; ,C E CREA M ■ 1/2 * al- etn- 2 0 « 0,1 J u ic y -1 7 6 Size Red or W h ite lb. I limit 1 w/SS or more purchase! *-imi' ' w[ * 5 or more purchase I I lexcludina beer. wine.tobacco) I (excluding beer, wine, tobacco) | T a n g e rin e s 12»<” 5 9 c G ra p es 3 tbs 6 9 c . Redeem at Kroger “ - - T T J * edeem al * r0° * r *hruI------------ I Sun. Nov. 20, 1966 K f l U Sun* Nov* 20< 1966 J Juicy—125 Size Shelled W alnuts or T a n g e lo s 1 2 ««59c Pecans "= * 1 . 1 9 UIJUUÖUOÜUUUL m a mm top VALUE 4 _■ 4 1 TOP VALUE Ä p TOP VALUE p TOP VALUE CLIP THIS COUPON FOR YOUR FREE BRACELET YOUR CHOICE 5 0 STA M PS 2 5 STA M PS I 2 5 STA M PS 2 5 STA M PS I WITH THIS COUPON ON WITH THIS COUPON ON 5£ F R E E ] 24-kt. Cold Piafad DOUBLE-LINK OR MARI I ----------------- WITH THIS COUPON ON the purchase ol any ¡ar, bottle or tuba of I | BlfltlliltivmiB!! the purchase ol a 2-quart basket of I | .. t r 1-i-i-»,j-a ■ gyniiiiiitM’i'iirwiiB „ „ „ .s .... 0i a .. I I th. purchase ol a S-lb. or 8-lb. bag of | I WITH THIS COUPON ON the purchase of a pkg. of the purchase ol 2 heads ot any kind I the purchase of 4* or 6*lbs. of I C H A R M B R A C E L E T With thus coupon and purchase of any charm for SOc L E T T U C E I A P P L E S I Redeem at Krogar thru Sun# Nov. 20. 1966 I ,H Ä k k ° I “ c S T 1 1 " * Ä pO I C ra p e fru tt | T O M A T O E S j Redeem at Kroger thru I Redeem at Kroger thru Redeem at Kroger t h r u ^ ^ ^ «adeem at Kroger thru _ Redeem at Krogar t h r u ^ ^ a Rmham at Krogar t h r u ^ ^ Redeematat Kroner Red.em Kroger thru thru — ^ u n . Nov. 20, 1966 j g y Sun. Nov. 20, 19^ J Q R Q Sun. Nov. 20, 196^ ß j g | ^ 19^ , Q Sun. Nov.. 20. 1966 I Sun. Nov. 20* 1966 P-22I Sun. Nov, 20, 1966 f j V f Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Thursday, November 17, 1966 7 Spirited students ,E N T ' P e a c e C o r p s v o l u n t e e r s will rally Friday T h ree detachments of cheering r e c r u i t i n g h e r e t h i s w e e k tan Fans” on the second floor of Michigan State is the scene the individual volunteers. Corps­ Peace Corps as invaluable."The students will converge onLandon the Union. of a quest this week for what men find themselves placed In insights on world affairs, know­ F ield next to the Music building The week which Gov. George John F . Kennedy in 1960 called countries where social, eonomlc, ledge of other cultures, and the Friday night for an “ All for Romney has declared the “ Week " a tremendous pool of talent political and religious customs opportunity to travel extend be­ One” pep rally which will trig ­ of Spartan Victory” will be c li­ that could work modern m iracles may at first alienate them. yond institutional education, thus g e r one of the biggest weekends maxed when Notre Dame Invades for peace in dozens of under V o l u n t e e r s are working to enlarging greatly my c a re e r op­ of the term . Spartan Stadium at 1:30 p.m. developed nations." solve the basic problems of de­ portunities,” he said. Led by cheerleaders, Sparty Saturday, but the entertainment D u r i n g Peace Corps week, velopment in agriculture, health Jack A. Buege, a 1965 MSU and a mobilized pep band on the will continue on into the night. volunteers a re being sought to and education. About 50 per graduate, is now working with back of a truck, the main body of Fee Hall will sponsor a dance continue the program initiated by cent of the volunteers are teach­ fishing cooperatives in villages in students will leave South Campus from 9-12 for residents of the President Kennedy in 1961. Begun ing, 25 p er cent serving in health Panam a. He describes the work a t 7:30 p.m . and lead the march E ast Complex. The Rogues will as an experim ent, the Peace program s and another lOpercent a s "v a rie d , challenging, some­ along Farm Lane. At Shaw Hall play and a 10-cent admission Corps has become, as D irector involved in agricultural develop­ tim es frustrating, sometimes the m arch ers will be Joined by a will be charged. Jack Vaughan sa y s,a "n e c e ssity . ment. discouraging.” group from E ast Campus, which The Mutations will play at the It is solving the problem s of the Two returned Peace Corps vol­ "B u t, he continues, " I'v e seen will have formed at 7 p.m. South Campus Complex mixer world where the problem s a re ,” unteers with the six-man team on improvement. In one co-op the Reinforcements should leave In the Wilson Hall cafeteria from Corpsmen live with the people campus this week, commented on tre a s u re r finally began to keep Brody Hall at 7:30 p.m . and meet 8-12. Admission will be 25 cents. T h ie v e s 9 M a r k e t in th eir villages, learn th eir the program . Virginia Schramm, the books himself. Another co-op the others at Landon Field by 8 All students are invited to the languages, and work with them a 1964 graduate of MSU, said began to earn a profit. Fisher­ p.m . — In tim e to see Duffy West C ircle Snack Shop, “The T o m P o za ryc k I, F ra n k lin Square, N .Y . s enior, showed his photographic work to to develop their natural and that she considered the ex­ men in a third began to earn Daugherty and a few of his play­ P ub,” in G ilchrist Hall after the potential c ustom ers at Tuesday night's T h ie v e s ' M a rk e t A rt Show sponsored by human resources, perience “ a very practical and a decent living. T*hat's when e rs and to watch the cheer­ game. A band will play from Union Board. The show was open to all student a rtis ts . MSU has contributed 295 volun­ enriching extension of my aca­ I realize I've played an impor­ lead er’s skit "L ead er of the 4:30-7:30 p.m . and an informal State News photo by M ike Schonhofen te e rs to the Corps since its demic education." tant role. T eam .” hootenanny will follow. beginning. Five more MSU stu­ Tom Peterson described the “ What m ore can I ask?" Gary Hampel, cheerleading dents took part in the advanced captain and m aster of cerem o­ training program last sum m er, nies at the rally, will n arrate the skit which involves a g irl dressed John Edwards, John Murphy, The finest in 'Jazz’, Dixieland as T e rry Hanratty, Notre Dame Carol Rose, Jodean Schneider and Modern Music s ta r. The 600 students already r e ­ B u s s y s te m g e ts 'b e e f e d ’ u p and Jerald Vallender will com­ plete their training next summer F o r y o u r d a n c in g p le a s u r e before going overseas. T heir cruited for “ Block S" a re evi­ assignm ents will be In B razil, s w in g w ith th e dence that the theme of the pep Kenya, India, the Philippines and ra lly "A ll for One,” has taken effect. Columbia, respectively. Corpsmen a re supplied only RED WINNQUARTET T he Union Board, in conjunc­ tion with Spartan Spirit of AS- to h a n d le w in te r te rm lo a d to nations seeking th eir help. The demand for Peace Corps AT THE MSU, is sponsoring the pep By A R T K L E IN , JR. a re surprised by the great growth w orkers has continued to go up More students ride the buses versity to 26," said Henry Jol- rally , and will sponsor a dance afte r the rally. Two bands, The State News Staff W r i t e r The campus bus system has during w inter term than at any other time and in the past the man, director of the campus bus system. of interest in the system . When the system was instituted since the inauguration of the pro­ gram . KoKo Bar Canterburys and TheTonics, will in 1964 it had 12 vehicles and had L ast sum m er volunteers began O P E N S E V E N DAYS A W E E K provide "Music to Inspire Spar- been beefed up In preparation bus system has found itself ill- “ With that number of vehicles for the busy w inter season by equipped to handle the deluge. in service we should be able to handle an average of 32,000 training for the first tim e for F o r your fa v o rite beverages, dinner, the acquisition of three used “ The acquisition of the three to handle the expected 60-65,000 rid ers a day w inter term . assignm ents in Micronesia,South buses at $5,000 apiece from the buses brings the total number daily rid e rs ," he said. Last year the number of buses K orea, G u y a n a , M a u r i t a n i a , and p izza I t ’s the KoKo B a r adjacent to Assem biy m eet city of Minneapolis. owned or on option by the Uni- Each year the adm inistrators was increased to 20, but at the Chad, Bechuanaland and Libya. 1-496, Kalamazoo at C llp p e rt sam e time the number of daily O thers will begin training soon 0 rid e rs increased to 52,000. for work in Paraguay. sc h ed u led tonight Used buses w ere purchased The program is highly de­ because new ones must be custom pendent upon the initiative of The second meeting of the made at a cost of $26,000 and F o r e i g n s t u d e n t s b e n e f i t ASMSU General Assembly will would not be available until the be held at 7:30 tonight in the last part of February, "which Con Con Room of the Internation­ is much too late to be of use W M S N opens 3 al Center. to u s," said Jolman. Jim C arbine, ASMSU vice f r o m L a n g u a g e C e n t e r "T he acquisition of the extra jo b fo rm points chairm an and m oderator of the buses and the addition of the general assem bly, said that the Michigan’s sim ilar system , a c ­ Brody-Fee Express route means student board’s recommenda­ By T R IN K A C L IN E other countries whose English WMSN, the new all-cam pus abilities need strengthening. cording to Homer Higbee, asso­ that we can make substantial radio station, has opened three tions for the Academic Freedom Stale News Staff W r i t e r increases in the quality of serv­ Students in the second and ciate dean of International P ro ­ m ore distribution points to handle rep o rt, the resolution concern­ gram s, can train about 250 in ice given to the students," he applications for announcers. ing the ATL professors passed More universities, Including fourth categories may be enrolled any given school term . said. Interested persons may secure Tuesday by the board, and the MSU, have become concerned full tim e or only part time. Last year each station on the application form s at the Brody with helping foreign students P resently 180 students are Last week's meeting of the general decisions of the board main Brody-Fee and C lrcle-F ee radio station WBRS, the Wonders function efficiently under A m eri­ participating. C lasses of 12, to Committee on Institutional Co­ concerning the general assem ­ operation (CIC) attended by was serviced by 20 buses an hour. bly, will be among the topics can educational conditions, ac­ 16 each a re held in the five c la ss­ This year each station will be radio station WKME. Hall station WEAK or the Shaw cording to Shigeo Imamura, En­ room s of the International Cen­ Higbee, centered on foreign stu­ to be discussed. dents. The CIC, composed of Big serviced by 30 buses p e r hour, The general assembly is com­ glish Language Center director. te r. The study involves four class Ten schools and the University Jolman noted. posed of one representative from Originally, foreign students days and one lab session. The only basic need of the worked on their own initiative or Imamura, who predicted ap­ of Chicago, a re considering plans each living unit and five from off system now is additional per­ depended on the aid of room­ proximately 50 students will en­ for developing more E nglishlan- cam pus. Carbine pointed out sonnel. m ates, friends o r interested ro ll winter and spring term s, said guage centers o r expanding U of Tuesday night that other students "W e presently employ 30 teachers if their lack of fluency that roughly 40 per cent of the M and MSU facilities to aid the a re welcome to attend and may d riv e rs," said Jolman, "but we in English proved a hindrance, 180 now enrolled are MSU stu­ other CIC universities. express an opinion, but have no CIC campuses hold about 11 per will need five to seven more vote. he said. dents. cent of all foreign students in the drivers and one additional S T U D Y IN Today a growing need to sup­ T here is a shortage of this type United States and around 10 per mechanic for w inter te rm ." S O U TH ER N FR A N C E s plem ent these individual efforts program within the Big Ten, a c ­ 3 m e n in d ic te d has been recognized, and MSU’s cording to Imamura, and small cent of the foreign scholars, ac­ A University year in Aix-en-Provence under th e auspices of th e U niversity of Aix-Mar« recognition produced the English schools a re even le ss prepared cording to Higbee. The seven seille (founded 140 9). states represented in the CIC on bribe charge Language C enter. as their number of foreign stu ­ have 24 per cent of the total EUROPEAN AREA STUDIES A survey conducted by Imamu­ dents is so sm all. NEW ORLEANS (UP I) — A foreign student enrollment. FRENCH LANGUAGE r a in October indicated that many MSU and the University of AND LITERATURE federal Grand Jury Wednesday foreign student academic ad­ m indicted three Baton Rouge, L a., v isers' have little knowledge of HONORS PROGRAM men on charges they attempted to the C enter’s existence or pur­ (courses in French U niversity exclusively) bribe Louisiana State University pose. ART AND ART HISTORY football players this season. Imamura listed the types of SOCIAL SCIENCES The three a re Joseph Lee (Jo students involved: MEDITERRANEAN AREA STUDIES DIFFERENCE Jo) Nolan, Samuel F . (Freddie) —students admitted by MSU Classes in English and French satisfying Comeaux and Samuel J . G razia- knowing they need intensive En­ curriculu m and c re d it requirem ents of over no. glish training. 2 8 0 Am erican Colleges and U n iversities. S tudents live in French homes. T otal costs The indictment charged the —students admitted by MSU equ ivalen t to those at p rivate universities three conspired to “ carry into without a lack of the language, and colleges in th e United States. in IM AM BORGERS effect a scheme . . . and to in­ but who show a deficiency on the “SEMESTER PROGRAM IN AVIGNON" fluence by bribery certain sport­ English exam given during reg ­ D e s p ite “SUMMER PROGRAM ing contests,” in violation of istration. f ie n d is h t o r t u r e IN AIX-EN-PROVENCE" federal law. —students accepted by other W rite: The games were those between universities and sent to MSU’s d y n a m ic BiC D uo INSTITUTE FOR LSU and South Carolina, Rice, center for intensive English w r i t e s f i r s t tim e , AMERICAN UNIVERSITIES M iami, Texas A & M, Kentucky study. e v e r y tim e ! (founded 1957) and Florida. —businessmen, research p e r­ 2 bis, rue du Bon Pasteur m c ’s r u g g e d p a ir o f AIX-EN-PROVENCE, FRANCE sonnel and visiting faculty from s tic k p e n s w in s a g a in in Telephone: France (Code 91) 27.82.39 or (Code 91) 27.69.01 u n e n d in g w a r a g a in s t Th e E n te rta in m e n t E v e n t O f Th e Y e a r !! b a ll- p o in t s k ip , d o g an d s m e a r. D e s p ite h o r r ib le W e d . th r u S u n . N O V . 2 3 t h r u 2 7 p u n is h m e n t b y m a d s c ie n tis ts , m e : s till w r it e s Wed. - 8:30 PM fir s t t i m e , e v e r y t im e . o rm T U H n m C i r i r LC cmf t tt cofr Thurs- F r l. - _ 4:00 8:30 &PM8:30 PM A n d no w o n d e r, m e s “ D y a m i t e ” B a l l is t h e < ik .ie ik .is» L ANSI N O Sat*" sun. _ 2:30& 8:30 PM 1:30 8! 5:30 PM Ordinary 156 hamburgers are pre­ pared on a grill . . . natural beef h a rd e s t m e ta l m a d e , encased in a s o lid b ra s s i% un n o s e c o n e . W i l l n o t s k ip , juices are fried out, grease is fried in. Open Flame Broiling seals in flavor and beef goodness, it makes c lo g o r s m e a r n o m a tte r w lia t d e v ilis h d e v is e d fo r th e m a b u s e is b y F r e e to campus standout a difference in tenderness . . . a difference in the delicious "cook- s a d is tic s tu d e n ts . G e t th e d y n a m ic b ic D u o at C o lle g e out " taste. You pay no more tor the difference. y o u r c a m p u s s to re n o w . S t u d e n t s C a b le f r o n t r ib s a n d c r e w n e c k m a k e t h is s w e a t e r a tlie d e lic io u s 1 (7 ^ 9 25® to o th e rs c a m p u s s ta n d o u t. L u x u rio u s WATERMAN-BICPENCORP. A new booklet, published by a d i ffe re n e e MILFORD, CONN. non-profit educational founda­ Z e p h y r w o o l in w h it e o r s t r a w tion, tells which career fields lets c o lo r s . you make the best use of all your college training, including 2 2 .5 0 w i t h th e lib e r a l-a rts co u rses —w hie It h n t e r n a t i o n a l . career field offers 100,000 new a d d e d c o n v e n ie n c e TICKETS ON SALE jobs every year —which career CIVIC CENTER - 10 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. (Ex. Sun.) o f in s id e s e a tin g field produces more corporation ARBAUGH'S - Service Desk Reservations - 489-5339 presidents than any other—wliat S m all’s to o ! starting salary you can expect. B u rg e r C hef Just send this ad with your name an d a d d re ss. T h is 2 4 -p a g e , N ear Fra n d o r career-guide booklet, "O ppor­ BiC Medium Point 19C tu n itie s in Selling," w ill be 622 N. Homer mailcd to you. No cost or obli­ tw o e le v e n s. W ashington P h . 4 8 9 -1 3 4 6 ON E D O L L A R D ISCOUNTS ARE A V A IL A B L E TO YOU gation. Address: Council on O p­ m lc h lg a n the a te r b u ild in g FOR P E R F O R M A N C E T H A N K G IV IN G DAY - 8:30 P .M . portunities, 550 Fifth Ave., New open f r ld a y till 9 p.m , SE C U R E FREE COUPONS IN UNION OR ICE R IN K . Home of the Worlds Greatest 15C Hamburger! BiC Fine Point 25C York 36, N. Y., MSU 11-14-66. '8 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Thursday, November 17, 1966 S A I N T O R S I N N E R ? Students to vote L By E L L E N Z U R K E Y e a r y of LSD. He is also opposed by those who would uncon­ w i l l s p e a k t o d hallucinations. Within minutes he mostly on the clandestine byways, was swept Into the realm of ex­ of A m erica’s cam puses. a y on amendments Four proposed amendments to The stru ctu re of the voting State News Staff W r i t e r Leary and another ex-H arvard the ASMSU constitution will be m em bers of the board would ditionally ban the use of d ru g s, panded consciousness. Timothy Leary is either a saint by those who specifically oppose *‘I realized I had died, that p ro fesso r. D r. Richard A lpert, presented to students in an a ll- then stand at two seniors, two o r a sinner of the LSD move­ LSD, and by those who fe a r the I, Timothy L eary, the Timothy then started a research team University referendum Jan. 19. juniors, one sophomore and one ment depending on whether one consequences of public informa­ Leary gam e, was gone,” he later known as the International Foun­ The proposed amendments fem ale. views the drug as a panacea or tion on drugs. recalled. dation for Internal Freedom would a lte r the structure of the Concern expressed about the a plague. LSD is an extremely power­ “ More than that, I went back (IFIF) in Mexico. ASMSU Student Board In three deletion of the appointed seats, Leary is seen as a saint by ful psychedelic drug. It sends in tim e In an evolutionary sense The Mexican government, an­ ways. F irst, theStateNews editor and p articularly of the fem ale those who think his research users on fantastic journeys into to where I was aware of being ticipating trouble, demanded the would be removed from his ex- appointed seat, revolved around with p s y c h e d e l i c s (mind-ex­ a kaleidoscopic world of color a one-celled organism ." group leave the country. offlei <5 position on the board; two questions. Mary P arish , the panding drugs) is significant and and sound. When young New York million­ secondly, the ASMSU secretary p resen t appointed m em ber-at- meaningful to mankind. The chief Leary will speak on LSD at Leary, then a psychology p ro - a ire William Hltchock, also an and com ptroller would be given large, and Anne Osborne, p re s­ advocate and spokesman for the 4 p.m . today in the Auditorium, f e s s o r at H a r v a r d , became avid LSD u ser and supporter, ex-officlo m em bership on the ident o f Women's Inter-R es­ increased use of LSD, Leary al­ as the first of Great Issues extrem ely intrested In the learned of L eary’s plight he board. idence Council (W1C), said that speakers sponsored by ASMSU. effects psychedelics had on the turned over his 4,000-acre M ill- F o lia g e The third revision created the women would not run In an a ll- most singlehandedly thrust the drug from test-tube obscurity to His first contact with psyche­ mind. Of the many psychedelics— brook, N.Y. estate to L eary. Now that the leaves have fallen , tre e s a re bare of m ost discussion a t Tuesday University election. delic drugs came in 1960 while morning glory speds, nutmeg, The mansion, now head­ night's student board meeting. John Cauley, appointed mem­ public notoriety. foliag e. That is, most lack foliag e. Some Brody At the same time Leary is he was visiting a friend in Mexico. m arijuana—Leary became most quarters and mecca for would- This concerns the deletion of the b e r-a t-la rg e , pointed out the ex­ Group students must have fe lt s o r r y f o r this tree viewed as a sinner by govern­ That sunny Saturday afternoon interested In LSD because of its be LSD tra v e le rs, has been the two appointed seats on the student pense Involved In running an a ll- site of many of the most d ra­ and so wrapped its branches with to ilet paper. board In favor of one sophomore Unlversity election. ment officials who have enacted Leary ate seven native mush­ potency. m atic and significant encounters State News photo by Chuck M ichaels seat and one elected fem ale seat. " It Is difficult to justify the laws to curtail unauthorized use rooms which reportedly caused His followers in H arvard's between the followers andfoilers PROGRAM INFOBMATION» 33"? S944 number of appointed seats,” Jim academic commumity Increased of the LSD movement, STARTS and soon teachers and students Graham, ASMSU Chairman, said. C A M P U S Leary has characterized the 1 S T A T E S T U D E N T "Students a re not happy with _ _ _ _ _ _ _ tiuatu, TO DAY! alike w ere turning on with LSD. u se rs of LSD as “ white collar, th is.” Feature 1 :3 0-3:3 5-5:40 -7:45 -9 :50 It became L eary’s prim ary re ­ upper middle c la ss, college edu­ It was also pointed out that Peace Corps workers search tool. cated people.” fem ales would run only against PARAMOUNTPICTURESmm “ I t ________ _ L eary was “ regretfully" dis­ He has also been quoted as fem ales for this seat precisely m issed from his teaching posi­ saying, “ The three Inevitable because of the alleged hesitancy ANN* bun&t bunniest TONY tion at Harvard in 1963. By goals of the LSD session a re this tim e, however, tales of the to discover and make love with of fem ales to run on an a ll- MARGRET pffire FRANCIOSA ofthe & LSD wonderland already were God, yourself and a woman (or being sung on the highways, but man).” T H E M IC H IG A N S T A T E U N IV E R S IT Y ordered out of Guinea A form er Michigan State stu­ to be expelled from a host coun­ University campaign. Lou Benson, junior m em ber- a t-larg e, questioned this, asking, "If the fem ale m em ber-at-large safety could no longer be guaran­ Is representing all of the Uni­ year! P E R F O R M IN G A R T S C O M P A N Y dent was among the 65 Peace Corps w orkers ordered out of try, according to the Peace Corps division of public information. teed. versity, why should she run only Corps policy says volunteers against fem ales? Why shouldn’t Guinea by the Guinean govern­ The Peace Corps office said will not be evacuated In tim e she also run against m en?" PRESEN TS ment last week. the expulsion was totally unex­ of trouble unless absolutely Bill Vredevoogd, president of W i l l i a m Ramsay of G rosse pected, and that .despite past necessary. The Peace Corps Intercooperative Council (ICC) Polnte, and 64 co-w orkers serv­ criticism of the Corps by govern­ cited the Dominican Republic, added that women should run on She ing in Guinea a re the firs t group ment officials, the w orkers had Panama and Honduras as ex­ the sam e b asis as anyone else. swings received c o n s i d e r a b l e coop­ Jill eration at a local level. am ples of this policy. Despite The State News would be r e ­ nothing civil outbursts in the firs t two moved from the Student Board N a v y recruits The v o l u n t e e r s . Including and a tem porary break in diplo­ because the editor has not op­ SK W ngl\ \ \ Ramsay who attended MSU m atic relations with the la tte r, erated in his ex-officio position U.S. Navy surface and aviation between September 1961 and June Peace Corps volunteers re ­ since la st fall term , and does officers a re in the Union Building 1965, w ere given a week to leave. mained. not plan to retu rn to the board. th e n |g h t ¿ ¡ f ^ h u n t e r 9-4 today to give information on Five besides Ramsay a re The secretary and com ptroller Gunlea recently held the United would be added to the board commissioned officer program s Michigan residents. for students and graduate stu­ States responsible for the a rr e s t because of significant contribu­ dents. The officers will be here Peace Corps m issions have and removal of 19 Guineans tions they could add to the dis­ through Friday. been voluntarily withdrawn from from a Pan Am erican airplane cussion at m eetings. They a re adm inistering Officer Cyprus, Ceylon and Indonesia. by Ghanlan police at A ccra A ir­ The Student Board approved Qualification T ests. T ests for the The Ceylon and Indonesia pro­ port, according to the Peace the amendments Tuesday night. women officer program s will last gram s w ere de-activated by the Corps office. Anti-American T h e referendum , previously one hour, tests for the surface Peace Corps and the respective crowds later dem onstrated In planned for Dec. 7, was post­ program s will last one and one- governments. Conakry, the Guinean capital and poned until w inter term to allow BY D A V IS GRUBB half hours and tests for the Avia­ Volunteers left Cyprus over entered and damaged the U.S. m ore tim e for all elections p er­ PARPA M UO RIUNT am bassador’s residence. The sonnel to p rep are for it. GfORKSIDNEV— tion program s will last three two years ago during the is - iCT ROBERTCOOIE YVONNEROMM-HORWm m LAW RENCEROMAN-GEORGtSIDNEY DORY»: ANDREPREVIN (Replaces MSU JAZZ BAND) hours. land’s civil strife when their W IN N ER O F B A CA D EM Y AW ARDS I am bassador was placed briefly under house a r r e s t. PLUS FUN CARTOON and NOVELTY A D M . JA Z Z B A N D C O U P O N O R 5 0 1 AT D O O R | NEXT! DEAN MARTIN ‘ ‘TEXAS ACROSS THE R IVE R ” | METR0-G01DWYN-MAYER PRESENTS The expelled volunteers near­ ing the end of th eir tours may Press students M cOONEL KIVA NOV. 17 ARENA THEATRE NOV. 18 ’ A CARLO P0NTI PRODUCTION a , be released, according to the WAihlftgton ■ ' office, while' the m e e t h ere to d a y ; CURTAIN TIM E: 7:15 P.M . DAVID LEAN'S FILM IR others may be given .the choice o r i v e OF BO RIS PASTERNAKS of alternative assignm ents. Seven hundred high school stu­ - I N dents will be on campus today :MMm SoulhwMt of Lansing an M>7 S VMMTM NMI«K INFORMATION^ 482*3101 —ENDS TONIGHT— "THE FORTUNE COOKIE” DOCTOR BEST IN FOREIGN FILMS to participate in the annual News­ paper Day activities in the Union. D V B 'c h i g a n F eature at 1:45 - 4:20 - 7:00 - 9:40 Z H ilÄ G O Originally there w ere only 450 STA R TS TO M O RRO W ! E L E C T R IC - IN - C A R H E A T E R S F I R S T L A N S IN G S H O W IN G TOM ORROW Tony - 5:15 - 7:20 - 9:35 Virusa G e o ry e C FEATURE AT 1:00 - 3:05 ] IN PANAVISION” AND METROCOLOR EXTRA MATINEE NOV. 24 -$2.25-NOV. 25 .-$1.50 rnuvnan SCHEDULE OF PERFORMANCES AND PRICES noamnu inrunnni ivnp 4B5-Ì48S Eves, at 8 PM. . . .Sun. at 7:30. .2.25 in.o.mat.on► students expected to attend. T here will be representatives from the Lansing area media including faculty in the MSU School of Journalism In the News­ Sat. & Sun.Matinee 1:30 PM T O D A Y . . . 9: I f p . M . paper Day activities. FIR ST RUN IN C OLOR ONCE AT 9 P M C u r t i s y I J s i « 'S c o t t Q U A B -S S Sat. Matinee 1.50. .Sun. Matinee2.25 The MSU journalism faculty is th e y g o invited to a noon luncheon in the lansmg Union Ballroom. Wilbur Elston, w ild a b o u t d irecto r of the editorial page of the D etroit News, will be the R o sa n n a speaker. ■ ■ D riv e -In T h e a t r e * ^ The high school students will South C«Dor of J o lly Rood TU 2 2479 S c h ia ffin o 1 attend working journalist ses­ “Mìm Schiaffino la a splen­ sions, general convocation, and did mound of flaah! Qlva problem -solving round tables. [I T O M O R R O W F R I . S A T . (3 ) H I T S ! credit to Lattuada for mak­ ing Ihia with ona aye on tra­ dition and the other on aox. F R E E E L E C T R IC C A R H E A T E R S It la a aly film handeomely masquerading aa Renais­ w r e s t sance comedy!" - n.y. post lV i i n rn x ru T z r? «¡TIANJIN» MISS H 0iY ANollfllSS GALORE “Celebrated beauty" -NEWYORKER HAVE “Mott beautiful" TO M O RRO W JAMES BOND N.Y.NEWS 3 - C O L O R -H IT S ■CO-STARRING B R IA N B E D F O R D J U L I E S O M M A R S - J A M E S FA R EN TIN O BACK FOR “Tantalizing” TIMEMAGAZINE MORE! “Luscious” MISS HONEYancMISS galore A UNIVERSAL PICTURE -DAILY TELEGRAPH HAVE' TH IS COLOR F E A T U R E AT 7 P M “Gorgeous” -COMMONWEAL I America’s Funniest Family in their FIRST fwM ALBERI R.BROCCOLI „noHARRYSALT/MAN ALBERI R BROCCOLI .•1HARRYSALI/MAN " SEAN CONNERY :;; jan flemings“ dR, NO’' TECHN ICO LO R 1»ian h em in g s ' GOLDFINGER” SEAN CONNERY JAMES BOND IFRED GWYNNE YVONNE DeCARLO AL LEWIS1BUTCH PATRICK [TECHNICOLOR*1«*■Mr. : UNITEOARTISTS [TECHNICOLOR’] ....... UNITEDARTISTS H IT NO. (3) IN COLOR ONCE AT I0 S30 H IT NO. (3) FIRST LA N S IN G SHOWING SHE HAD EVERVTHINQ ALBERI R.BROCCOLI m HARRYSALT/MAN G IN A SUT A SENSE SOUTHEAST ASIA IS ABLAZE AS THE ENEMY ATTACKS •SEAN CONNERY IN HORDES FROM THE HILLS! IL0 LL0 B R IG ID A OF SHAMEI i. IANFLEMINGS “GOLDFINGER” I ITECHNICOLOR*! t, i» UNITEDARTISTS ANTHONY a 3« f iO N A K E D F R A N C IO S A ' ER N EST/ IM T H E W O R L D § SEANCONNERY AS JAMFS BOND IN B 0 R G N I N; E J:?s8 ___________ ! m CINEMASCOPE andMETROCOLOR \2 See# D T .N 0 ' ALBERI R.BROCCOLIHARRYSALI/MAN STARTS NEXT W EDNESDAY! t * .... .............................. '* "• IANFLEMING'S“DU fjQ” [ 1 min-drig-6‘11: noun, fern. 'the lovs root” SEAN CONNERY JAMES BOND MEET THE BOOBY BOMBS! SE’feï starring [TECHNICOLOR7-<>••.••• ' UNITEOARTISTS A N O R M A N P A N A M A P R O D U C T IO N ROSANNA SCHIAFFINO S T A R T S AT 7S07 PHILIPPE LEROY FIANCO \) “ CICCIO H 0 I B ol, GiRL c s ia m n g C A R R O L L O 'C O N N O R GEORGE TYNE JEAN CLAUDE BRIALY - ALSO - F i r s t Lansing Showing FiTiifi ' T i n t i n é and Italy's fam ouscommostedian TOTf) IUIU THE BO M BS EDDIE RYDER Screenplay b, NORMAN PANAMA, LARRYGELBARTand PETER BARNES! f