Friday Cloudy Inside today .. . . and w a r m e r today with a T h e " N e w m o r a l i t y , " p. 6 MICHIGAN h i g h n e a r 30 A 4 0 % c h a n c e of s n o w by l a t e a f t e r n o o n a n d a l o w C o n g r e s s of s t r i n g s , p. 8 C e d a r R e v i e w , p. 7 STATI tonight i n t h e 20's. Saturday, snow e n d i n g and c o l d e r . UNIVERSITY 10c East Lansing, Michigan V o l . 59 N u m b e r 99 RECRUITING PROBLEM ARISES Board's tie hurts med school By MIKE B R O G A N He added that in the past the I nive lot MSI s intent He indicated that many people across State News Staff W r i t e r ties built the state are reacting to the delay. has done very well in recruiting top f The State Board of Education's\failure iut rather "There has been a very real response people. to pass the MSU four-year njedicalechool in the form of letters and phone calls Without authorization by the state t from people around the state over the de-. proposal in December is creating "prac- it also becomes difficult to make det in any delays. He lay in the training of more doctors," he tical problems," according to the head plans with many hospitals seeking dents one per cent per said. "People are angry that any further of the present two-year College of Human rangements with MSU for medical stu eat deal of money delay has gone on J.' Medicine. to practice in them. onsideration will Knisley said he was optimistic about William Knisley, director of the Insti- " I n terms«of delay, we cannot con rs it the onset. the proposal. tute of Biology and Medicine, said the lat- toward detailed planning with hos] " I think MSU's proposal is creative and est delay, a Dec. 21 tie vote on the pro- across the state until we are author i; x construction of plan for the clinical years," he innovative and one of the most economical posal, is creating a recruiting problem. he campus would Knisley said he feels MSI 's inte being offered," he smiled. "Because of With a delay now existing Knisley said federal matching sometimes misunderstood by manj p this I feel it will be accepted." recruiting medical faculty is similar to ley. asking a student to attend MSU and major and he stressed the fact th.it the pro ibout one federal in journalism when a journalism school school would supplement existing rn< dollar," he said. facilities. hasn't been built. Negro to file housing claim 'May I help you\ If s t u d e n t b o o k - b u y e r s s e e m h a r r i e d , h o w do t h e c a s h i e r s a n d with Board s a l e s p e r s o n n e l f e e l ? B u t i t ' s a l l p a r t of t h e f u n at t h e I n t e r n a t i o n a l By B E V H A L L Center bookstore. P h o t o bV M e a d e P e r l m a n State News Staff W r i t e r East Lansing's Human Relations Com- mission recommended Wednesday night 2 . 2 AVERAGE NEEDED that an MSU foreign student refer his complaint of housing discrimination to the Michigan Civil Rights Commission. Fraternity rush parties Early in the fall an African student was refused rental of a room,¡.but later discovered the room had not been rent- ed, as the landlord allegedly reported. will start Monday night The conciliations committee of the Human Relations Commission worked with the student and the landlord separately, but were not successful in arranging a Fraternity rush will begin Monday even- Students may obtain rides by calling meeting with both at once. ing, Jan. 9, and end with parties in each each house. " W e didn't feel we could pursue this house on the weekend. Formal pledging will take place Monday, Jan. 16. Usually one out of three freshman males goes through rush,Owen said. He explained First-day enthusiasm case effectively any longer," said Wil- liam Bopf, the commission secretary. " E v e r y freshman owes it to himself to that rush is basically an opportunity for " W e have offered our help to the student, participate in the open rush to be able to the rushee to meet the people of the houses E v e n the t w e n t y d e g r e e t e m p e r a t u r e s f a i l e d to d i s c o u r a g e s t u d e n t s f r o m a t t e n d i n g c l a s s e s f o r the f i r s t though, when he presents his case to the make an Intelligent decision as towhether informally, see the sort of things they t i m e y e s t e r d a y . Here students pack a l a r g e l e c t u r e h a l l . P h o t o by L a r r y F r i t z l a n state commission." or not he'd like to join a fraternity," do, learn about costs, and to decide if Bopf reported that Human Relations L a r r y Owen, president of 1FC, (Inter- he would like to live with these people for Day, 'celebrated^ by a coffee hour for FOR JUNIORS, SENIORS fraternity Council), said. the next three years. international student- on .December 10, Open rush will be held in houses east was well-received. He expressed the Com- Rush booklets compiled by IPC will be of M.A.C. Ave. Monday, in houses west mission's hopes that similar gatherings of M.A.C. Tuesday, and in all houses distributed in all freshman males' mail- boxes Saturday. may be held regularly. Wednesday. Hours for open rush are "Next y e a r , " Bopf said, " w e may work 7-10 p . m . all three days. All males with an all-University grade point of 2.2 or above are eligible to rush. Each may visit as many houses as he " T h e bulk of the rush booklet," Owen said, "consists of a write-up from each house. It also has r i ^ h aids, such as a map, introductory material, and a chart AWS to recommend with the Greater Lansing United Nations Organization for our special human rights program. It would probably be earlier in the fall,perhaps in October,and wouldn't likes in the three nights of open rush. new no hours ' policy with relative costs of each house." conflict with finals and commencement, Closed rush will be held Thursday as our coffee hour d i d . " evening, ana parties, ranging from semi- MSU operates a deferred rush system The commission also adopted a pro- formal to various themes, will be held in which freshmen have no contact with cedure for calling special meetings, which Friday and Saturday nights. fraternities fall t e r m . is a modification of the plan followed by ization working on the proposal. However, In order that the women themselves By D O R O T H Y L A S K E Y the East Lansing Planning Commission. she said that the committee has been work- would have a voice in determining alter- A special meeting may be called by the State News Staff W r i t e r ing with the personnel from the student native measures to the present policy, AWS secretary of the commission or by the Reasons behind policy A study on the possible revision of wo- men's hours in the dormitories and soror ities which began last year will end this affairs office as an advisory source. . The . original proposal formulated last spring term would have released all wo- circulated a questionnaire on closing hours. The responses were discussed and evaluated by the dormitory and house residents with one of their staff repre- written request of no fewer than four members of the commission, or by the chairman of the commission. Any special month in an official proposal by AWS (As men students, except freshmen, from meeting of this nature will be open to the sentatives. for fee refunds obscure sociated Women Students) recommending policy change to the office of student af fairs. hours restrictions. This proposal was not voted on because of implementation prob- lems, but was recommended for further It was the women themselves, through this questionnaire, who asked for a no hours privilege for junior and senior wo- publ ic. New missile changes his total credit load from full The proposal, as read at the last AWS study. Joe Spartan, out-of-state student, signs men, and all women over 21, regardless time to part time or from one part- assembly by project chairman Carolyn When the study was initiated it was hoped up for H credits, then decides to drop of class. time fee group to another, a refund of Stapleton, abolishes hours for junior and that a new policy would be in effect by a five-credit course and add a three- However, the women asked for a night half the difference in fees between the senior women and may provide for fewer last term. foils to trock credit course in its place. two'groups will "Be m a d e . . . . " watchman in each residence if there were restrictions for sophomore women in the Miss Fisher said that last year MSU co Joe originally paid $340 for tuition. Thursday two top administrators said any open doors. University living units. eds became aware of liberalizing trends in But now that he is carrying only nine they weren't sure why the policy exists, Seven feasible alternatives to the exist- The no hours policy would be imple- women's regulations in colleges and uni- credits, he is a part-time student whose ing policy were suggested. They included erront drone although one was willing to hazard a mented for junior and senior women living versities throughout the country, and reg- tuition is $235. He gets $52.50, half the guess. under time restrictions by a variation on a lifting of all hours requirements, an v istered their discontent. She ac^pd that establishment of a designated late hour difference, back. " I assume i t ' ^ j e c a u s e of the extra the sign-out procedure. the incentive toward the hours change may "lock u p , " a specified number of late Next week as several hundred Michigan paperwork involved," said J a m e s H. Den- Jean Fisher, AWS president, said that be found in the U-M - MSU rivalry: permissions taken at the coed's discre- WASHINGTON (¿Pi — A new air-to-air State students voluntarily drop courses ison, assistant to the president. "Probably the proposal will be voted on at the next U-M women do not ha ve any closing hours. tion, any special late permission upon missile under development by the Air for which they were already signed up, there was thought of placing a limit of assembly later this month. From the wo- 1 he discontent was voiced on the " i n request, and an establishment of honors Force flunked a test of operational capa- many of them will be in Joe's position. sorts on shopping around." men themselves, the proposal then goes to loco parentis" question of whether or not or upper class residences. bility when it failed to down a runa- Why do they get only half their fees Denison, pointing to the fact that the rule the administrative offices, ASMSU (As- parents expect theUniversity to determine way missile streaking toward Cuba. is long-standing, commented, " I suppose sociated Students of Michigan State Uni- U-M's house key method was also dis- back? the hours their daughters keep. An F4 Phantom jet fired two secret there was a rationale worked out at one versity), and a faculty committee. cussed. Because of aUniversity policy, as stated On campus the liberalizing trend was rockets Wednesday without hitting the time. Probably it was proposed by the Miss Fisher clarified the current role The implementation of any new policy in the Winter, 1967, T i m e ^Schedule for Courses: noted in the relaxing of evening and over- errant Mace missile. The fighter's cannon faculty."- of the office of student affairs by saying can only be speculated on. But itcouldbe- 'If a student drops a course which night sign-out regulations and off-campus fire damaged the missile but not enough that AWS as the governing body for all come effective during the next academic housing eligibility which had already been to destroy it. The Pentagon said the Mace, women students, has been the only organ- year. effective last year. an old cruise missile converted into a robot plane for target practice, apparently 20,000 soared over Cuba and splashed harmless- VISA cords fail UP TO 6 0 , 0 0 0 RIDERS, B U T - ly into the Caribbean. It carried no war- head. The A i r Force declined to provide de- to arrive; 5,000 di stri bu ted Buses may not be o v e r c r o w d e d tails on the air-to-air missiles, but they could have been a heat-seeking type simi- lar to the Sidewinder used in Viet Nam. proximately 47,000 students were using Secrecy shrouds research and develop- Buses should not be too over-crowded i n g the total to 26. Three of these were " M a y b e they f l e w to A c a p u l c o F r e e V I S A d i s c o u n t c a r d s and ment work to prevent the enemy from purchased new, and three used buses were buses daily fall term. c o u p o n s w i II b e a v a i l a b l e f r o m 2 this term, if the expectations of the campus learning what approach the United States f o r the h o l i d a y s , " said John bought in October. The bus schedule is arranged, Jolman t o 5 p . m . t o d a y at t h e U n i o n , bus system prove true. is taking in weaponry. Jacobs, vice president of A S - said, so that 30 buses complete their International Center, Conrad, " W e ' r e better prepared now than we MSU's financial services and Jolman estimated that 60,000 people may routes each hour. The Sidewinder electronically locks onto ever have been," Henry Jolman, foreman o p e r a t i o n s , c o n c e r n i n g the V a r - Bessey, Wilson, Brody a n d B e r k - be riding the buses each day this term.. There are no changes in the bus routes. heat waves given off by a jet plane, trails of the bus system, said. s i t y International Sales A s s o c i a - e y . O n M o n d a y a n d T u e s d a y at Last winter term had an average of 52,000 The express buses will operate agkin. it and explodes upon catching the craft. There are six more buses operating on the s a m e h o u r s , students can students riding 20 buses each day. Ap- These buses follow the same route as the tion (VISA) c a r d s . . campus than there were last year, bring- p i c k up t h e c a r d s i n 3 1 7 S t u d e n t Brody-Fee buses, Jolman explained.From Wednesday 'not goodtest' T h u r s d a y 5,000 of the 25,000 the Fee-Akers area, the express buses order arrived via V I S A ' r e p r e - Services. make all stops up to Owen Hall, where they Officially the A i r Force said Wednes- s e n t a t i v e , but the o t h e r 20,000, " W e are e x t r e m e l y s o r r y for turn down Bogue Street to head for north day's incident should not be considered s e n t b y e x p r e s s , f a i l e d t o ai— the m i x - u p , " Jacobs c o m m e n t e d , campus. All stops on the Circle Drives a good test of the new fighter missiles. rive. The cards were distributed " a n d we h o p e t h e g r e a t r e s p o n s e are made. "The drone was never engaged by the b e t w e e n 2 and 5 p . m . T h u r s d a y as o n e a r l y T h u r s d a y c o n t i n u e s . 1 he "express buses do not stop at Uni- two F4 aircraft airborne for the test," the as l o n g as t h e s u p p l y l a s t e d . The discount c a r d s are usable versity Village, Shaw , or at stops between Pentagon said. J a c o b s s a i d he a s k e d t h e c o m - i n 16 L a n s i n g a r e a b u s i n e s s e s u n - Shaw and the C i r c l e Drives. Nevertheless, a third Phantom jet with p a n y to s h i p a s e c o n d s u p p l y til A u g u s t 1967. A n a d d i t i o n a l All bus drivers have been instructed to the same ordnance did pursue and catch eight coupons are being handed insist that all students show their entire the subsonic Mace, and fired its pair of so t h a t d i s t r i b u t i o n w i l l con- bus passes. This is to prevent students missiles without luck. t i n u e as s c h e d u l e d . out w i t h the c a r d s . from using half - or forged passes. Kyle C. Kerbawy Eric Pianln, manag.ng editor editor-in-chief James Spanioto, campus editor S T A T E N I W S Thomas Segal, editorial editor Lawrence Werner, sports editor Joel Stark Andrew Molllson, executive reporter advertising manager William G. papciak, asst. ad manager jjllll'W- Friday Morning, January 6, 1967 EDITORIALS A dollar's worth of static So far all the a l l - c a m p u s of F e b r u a r y was a c c e p t e d as tax was levied to i n s u r e student r a d i o has p r o d u c e d a s t a r t i n g date. quality output as soon as for the students has been As things now stand the e q u i p m e n t c o u l d be a c q u i r e d . static. c o p p e r w i r e has a r r i v e d , but The s t a t i o n did not accept W M S N , which originally needs to be i n s t a l l e d , and the lowest bid for e q u i p m e n t intended ' to . s t a r t b r o a d c a s t - only two of the required in o r d e r to get on the a i r ing fall t e r m , now plans to five t r a n s m i t t e r s have been before M a r c h . This s a c r i - start b r o a d c a s t i n g in Febru- completed. Parts for the fice of m o n e y to g a i n t i m e , a r y . It is an iffy p r o p o s i t i o n . other three will be f o r w a r d - in t h e i r view, j u s t i f i e s the When it b e c a m e apparent ed as Ihey b e c o m e a v a i l a b l e . tax. t nat the J a n . 4 date was im- Since students hftve been Since they m i g h t not get F.H. Akers, p o s s i b l e . the station planned for J a n . 15. Rut c o p p e r , it taxed this t e r m to s u p p o r t W M S N , an i s s u e of t a x a t i o n started much before March anyhow, the point seems an Aggie turned out, was needed m o r e in Viet Nam than in student without tintinnabulation would s e e m to a r i s e . s i m p l y that WMSN w a n t e d , or needed, the m o n e y . r a d i o s t a t i o n s , and the month The station e x p l a i n s the The q u e s t i o n i s , c a n a to prize silent radio station figure out a way to give taxed F o r e s t H. A k e r s , who died Without credit students s o m e s o r t of re- turn? Dee. 8 in D e t r o i t , 13 days be- . . . and then at r e g i s t r a - Think for a m o m e n t about --The E d i t o r s fore his 80th b i r t h d a y , was tion we c a m e to a table where the p o s s i b l e r e a s o n s s o m e one o f M i e hi gan St a te' s fi r m -• a plastic g r e e n and white b u r e a u c r a t i c g e n i u s had for est and most generous identification c a r d , neatly i n c l u d i n g that f i n a l t i d b i t . TOM SEGAL friends. tucked into a two-sided plas- Is it s i m p l y a h u m b l e at- / Upon M i c h i g a n State M r , tic envelope, was handed to t e m p t to c o r r e c t w h a t o t h e r - Akers l a v i s h e d m o r e than 20 y e a r s of his life and much us. wise might h a v e been an honest e r r o r on thé p a r t of That booming Bobcat of his c o n s i d e r a b l e fortune. N a t u r a l l y , it was punched students? Tangible m o n u m e n t s to his have been designing a super-safe auto.The blend that will not stick to marshmallow. in true I B M f a s h i o n . On it O r , does the n o t i o n , in a In safety-conscious 1967 all automobile e n e r g y , f o r e s i g h t and citi- manufacturers are losing sleep in their at- research alone cost $10 million. But as This makes it possible for the occupants was written four bits of in- p h r a s e , s u m up s o m e in- tempts to cope with the government's new Thropton said at a press conference last to leave the car after it lat^ds. We even zenship are two golf c o u r - Tuesday, "It was worth it. Our new baby is included a miniature bunsen burner so that f o r m a t i o n : a n a m e , student herent distrust ofstudents-- safety ( ^mands. ses. a r e s i d e n c e h a l l and a But o le auto manufacturer couldn't be the safest thing on wheels." the occupants can roast the marshmallow number, "Michigan State the b e l i e f "that s t u d e n t s m i g h t Thropton's "baby" is his new Bobcat. and keep warm if they land in. an isolated s c h o l a r s h i p and loan fund happier with the tighter restrictions. He is U n i v e r s i t y , " and the s e e m - The Bobcat, to be introduced later this area. try to use the thing as a c r e d - Thorton Thropton, head of the little-known today valued at m o r e than Placebo Motor Corporation of Bismarck month, is a sleek, sporty machine that Placebo has loaded the Bobcat with many ingly i n n o c u o u s notice that it c a r d ? looks similar to any other auto from the other innovations, mainly of interest to the $200,000, N. D. " t h i s is not a c r e d i t c a r d . " --The K d i t o r s For seven years the people at Placebo outside. But that's where the resemblance auto buff. A m o r e i n t a n g i b l e expres- between It and all others ends. Some of the more interesting of these siorP"»f his devotion were the Though the Bobcat does not actually meet special features are remote control ash- the exact requirements listed in the gov- trays to prevent fires in the backseat, a 18 y e a r s , 1939 to 1957, he THE READERS' MIND ernment guidelines, it has one special counter-reciprocating carrot dicer for served on the school's feature that makes it the safest car on snacks, a mosaic mural of Washington the road: a hydrogen-thyratron ionizer, crossing the Delaware to add atmosphere governing board, a period when M i c h i g a n State C o l l e g e g re w t-o M-io-higan State U ni - Prof says draft rankings harmful dubbed the "hydrothyro" by the people at Placebo. When a miniature computer In the Bob- to the car's early-American interior, and an optional transistorised whoopee cush- ion. cat's radiator ornament signals that a No one can accuse the Bobcat of being To the Editor: versity, collision is unavoidable, the hydrothyro a slow poke. At a special performance kicks on. preview Placebo's Bobcat speedsters out- M r , A k e r s ' s r e c o r d is re- At Iowa, Wisconsin, Michigan, Wayne Immediately the auto Is coated by 1,100 accelerated a highly touted drag racer. State, University of Chicago, San Fran- m a r k a b l e in i t s e l f , and the gallons of marshmallow that squirts from Said Thropton, " i t was the proudest cisco State, NYU, City University, and m o r e so b e c a u s e he was ex- ten nozzles hidden under the trunk and moment of my life when I saw that Bobcat several other universities students and hood. A rocket ignites (energized by the woosh over the finish line in a cloud of pelled f r o m M i c h i g a n Agri- teachers have expressed their dismay and hydrothyro) lifting the Bobcat to an altitude purple marshmallow," (as an optional disapproval over the new Selective Serv- c u l t u r a l C o l l e g e d u r i n g un- of 20,000 feet in one-fifth of a second. feature, Placebo will equip Bobcats with a ice initiated class ranking program. Yet, A redlight flashes on, warning the pas- marshmallow coloration device.) dergraduate years in the MSU, that 40,000 body monument to che stitiis quo has remained (predictably?) sengers not to leave the auto. In speed-minded, yet safety-conscious 1900s for p e r s i s t e n t indis- silent on this vital national and educational '67, the Bobcat may be the top seller. question. But Thropton is not one to rest on his cipline. Fortunately the Special blend laurels. He has already hinted that he may May I buttonhole you before the basket- p r a n k s t e r never lost capa- ball race takes over to point out a few unveil an ever safer model if the Bobcat Finally, three parachutes fly open to sells. city for f r i e n d s h i p and hu- things? First, the U.S. is the sole per- petrator of a big, cruel, illegal, immoral, bring the Bobcat back to earth safely. The typically tight-lipped technicians at m o r. grade point average is an Identical 2,188 issues fully and by deciding what we ought and Impractical war, out there, now. The The marshmallow makes the car water- Bismarck won't say much, but word has goes off to war because his last name is to do about a matter which is educational In 1920 he moved to the government in its execution of this evil tight, in case the landing is in water. leaked out that the improved version will be Young and ties are broken by alphabetical not merely administrative. policy is sticking its hawkish beak into As Thropton said at his press confer- called the Polecat and will swing from Dorlg\ o r g a n i z a t i o n , b e c o m - ordering of the first letter of last names. our campus to tell us that it wants Bertram E, Garskof ence, " W e thought of everything. The para- tree to tree, avoiding dangerous highways Those of us who are students, by requesting ing m a n a g e r of the D e t r o i t us to compute statistically invalid and the University to send their ranks to their Assistant professor Psychology chutes are made of a special silk and nylon altogether. region in 1930 and vice pres- educationally unnecessary class rankings draft boards, also play a role in deciding for male freshmen, sophomores, and PEANUTS which classmates (who took the same silly ident in 1938. He r e t i r e d in juniors so that it has a way, no matter multiple guess tests) march off to the . IS THAT THE U/HERE5 THE 1947 and m a d e MSU the chief how fraudulent, to decide which students sounds of distant drums. N E E D L E ? IS NÉEDLÉ? go and Which complete their education, In my opinion teachers and students T H A T IT?A8£i outlet of his e n e r g i e s . those of us on the faculty, by turning YOU DOING IT UIHEK'S t # t have both a right and an obligation to ARM? WHAT It is p o s s i b l e M r . A k e r s in grades as usual and by turning away decide whether their university complies NOW? WHAT our heads as usual are an integral part with the request for the computation of HAPPENED T O ARE YOU.. has made further gifts to SUGAR CUBES?/ MSU in his w i l l , but he could never have b e c o m e so rich or of the selection process. In fact, we play a leading role. We say A,B,C,D, or F so that a boy with (say) a 2.190 stays rankings. I call upon the students and teachers of this university to express this right and to accept this most serious AAUGH! in school to complete his education while obligation. I am convinced that the rankings given so much that we would a boy who only achieved (for example) are an educationally unnecessary and po- not be the p o o r e r for his a 2.189 goes off to kill or die or both. tentially harmful intrusion of the state into MSU Book Store MSU Book Store MSU Book Store MSU Book Store MSU Book Sto re We say A,B,G,D, or F so that a boy with the University. Others, even most, com- p 1 assing. -r, -- T h e ... Editors a 2.188 stays in school while a boy whose munities of scholars by discussing the M U FOR YOTFR S W* DOROTHY LASKEY CONVENIENCE WE'LL BE OPEN U B VL Those cheating hearts o o k A coed confided to me, "1 cheated, and I'm ashamed". During an AWS general assembly dis- cussion in December another coed said she had seen a student and a graduate assistant ing it off as one's own was raisedand em- phatically brought down again. Even the gallant student who thought about taking an exam for a flunking friend, fellow student cheat, nor the women who agreed that "cheaters are cheating them- selves" felt strongly enough about what they had seen, or what they said they be- Saturday S t "so that he wouldn't have to go to Viet lieved to do something about it. "blatantly" cheat during an exam. N a m " was graciously condemned. From o And the discussion will probably go on Still another coed said her " A " paper A report stating that one-half of all col- had been stolen after her professor had and on . . . Students will do it, others will r lege students in the U.S. cheat on their see it, and perhaps other organizations will put the stack of graded papers outside his final exams or plagiarize term papers also condemn it. e office door to be retrieved by his students. was read and commented on. The fact it p.m. The women spoke of a "new morality" in which the value system seemed to be disclosed, that the most effective way to deter cheating in a collegecommunity was Do the students here conform to the na - tional average which claims one-half of M 8 : 3 0 - 4 : 0 0 M one of "live and let live." to show strong student disapproval, was them are cheaters? Are faculty members S Their rationale was that the pressures of delicately blessed. aware of what is going on? How do MSU U U students feel about cheaters in their MSU BOOK STORE getting through school were perhaps too demanding. Other reasoning was, " I don't And then a vote was taken to set up a classes? committee to look into these aspects of cheat, but who am I to tell another student cheating as they appear on the MSU cam- Who are we cheating by admitting these B B not to cheat . . . " wrongs and not challenging the apathetic Collegiate values'in vogue and various pus and effect us as students, and students, attitude that they thrive in? o as a society. forms of academic dishonesties wereaired Or are we not even admitting they are o and condemned. The show of hands followed. Or perhaps it should read: "A lack of show of hands, vrongs? Located in the Center of International Programs k Another idea which construed education She confided to you, " I feel cheated, and as a "learning experience" of any kind, followed." Because no one -- not the coed I'm ashamed." even taking someone else's best and pass- who had seen her grad assistant help a But, so what. MSU Book Store MSU Book Store MSU Book Store -M.SU Book Store MSU Book Store Michigan state News, East Lansing, Michigan AS CONGRESS CONVENES World News a at a G l a n c e " Members plan inquiries Assassin called countryman of Algerian WASHINGTON - The 90th on charges against Sen. Thomas will question whether Rep. Adam world situation, with particular Congress opening Tuesday is ex- J . Dodd, D-Conn. Clayton Powell, D-N.Y., Educa- emphasis on Vietnam, the North, M A D R I D , Spain (AP) — A b r o t h e r - i n - l a w of M o - pected to turn its investigation The charges claim Dodd used tion and Labor Committee chair- Atlantic Treaty Organization and hammed Khider, assassinated Algerian opposition towards its own members as well campaign funds to his own use, man, should be permitted to take East-West trade. l e a d e r , s a i d T h u r s d a y the k i l l e r w a s an A l g e r i a n . as electronic "bugging" and the accepted improper gifts, and was his seat in the new Congress, The pacification program in A b d e l - H a d i B a r a k a , the b r o t h e r - i n - l a w , s a i d K h i - Vietnam war. paid by both the Senate and pri- Powell was sentenced in New South Vietnam, the bombing of The Senate's bipartisan Eth- vate sources for travel. York to a year and 60 days in North Vietnam, and the Ui>.com- d e r ' s wife and another b r o t h e r - i n - l a w , M u k r a n Ait ics Committee has issued over In the House, Rep. Lionel Van jail for contempt of court for mitment in Thairland.are among H a m e d , w e r e w i t h K h i d e r w h e n he w a s s h o t in f r o n t the topics to be explored with 80 subpoenas for its hearings Deerlin, D-Calif., announced he nonpayment of a $164,000 libel of h i s a p a r t m e n t T u e s d a y n i g h t . lead v.»mess secretary of State judgment against him. R e l i a b l e s o u r c e s s a i d p o l i c e w e r e w o r k i n g on The Senate subcommittee in- Dean Rusk. c l u e s M r s . K h i d e r and H a m e d gave on the k i l l e r and vestigating invasions of privacy Other subjects ticketed for on t h i s b a s i s p o l i c e h a d r e c o n s t r u c t e d a p i c t u r e of him. Wifemay succeed M a o by federal agencies will conduct hearings on FBI bugging and Senate investigations include mail order insurance trauds, wiretapping practices. high-risk auto insurance, con- LONDON l.f, ~ A British spe- that of Prime Minister Indira The Senate Foreign Relations sumer credit advertising and the Communist seen as U.N. Assembly head cialist on Chinese affairs fore- Gandhi during the last years of Committee will examine the military pilot shortage. UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. f away, it appeared Manescu cast Thursday that Mao Tse- Nehru. — Romania's affable foreign might win the key U.N. post tung's eventual successor as minister, Corneliu Manescu, without a contest. Communist leader of Red China may be his was reportedThursday to have candidates never came close wife. received the necessary com- in the past. Roderick MacFarquhar wrote mitments to assure his elec- Informed sources reported in the leftist weekly New States- tion as ghe first Communist the only other known candi- man that Defense Minister Lin president of the U.N. General dates, Emilio Arenales Cata- Piao, now rated No. 2 to Mao. Assembly. lan of Guatemala and German appears to be a lame duck and Although the 22nd session of Zea of Colombia, had bowed may be only a temporary suc- the 122-nation assembly is out in favor of the Romanian cessor. If so, he said, Mao's still more than eight months foreign minister. wife, Chiang Chlng, may take Police quell Indian riots over. MacFarquhar, editor of the S I-i IC • C A L C U T T A (AP) — One man was k i l l e d and s e v - China Quarterly magazine, lis- e r a l o t h e r s w e r e i n j u r e d when police f i r e d and used ted the steps in Chiang Chlng's rise In "-Peking's"'battle of the t e a r gas on r i o t i n g m o b s T h u r s d a y i n e a s t e r n I n d i a s P r e s i d e n t Johnson p r e s e n t e d a photo of a W h i t e w i v e s " at the expense of the B i h a r State. spouses of President Liu Shao- H o u s e b e a g l e to D o n n a D i l l , 5, t h e 1 9 6 7 N a t i o n a l P o l i c e f i r e d to d i s p e r s e m o r e t h a n 2 , 0 0 0 r i o t e r s chi and Premier Chou F.n-lai. M a r c h of D i m e s p o s t e r g i r l , when she v i s i t e d h i m in w h o s e t f i r e to a c l o t h s h o p , s o d a f o u n t a i n a n d a b u s W a s h i n g t o n d u r i n g the o r g a n i z a t i o n ' s J a n u a r y d r i v e . " M r s . Mao is playing for big- depot in the h e a r t of the s t a t e c a p i t a l , Patna, about UPI Telephoto ger stakes than the right to 300 m i l e s n o r t h w e s t of C a l c u t t a . serve tea to Albanian V l P s , " he wrote. " H e r rising star may be sending shivers down the backs of historically minded Chinese. 389,000 from U.S. in Viet damaged 77 North Vietnamese " M r s . Mao has emerged from virtual political and social ob- centration 60 miles south of Da scurity to take on a leading role SAIGON, South Vietnam ¡Pi — rose to 6,664 killed and 37,738 supply barges and junks, boosting Nang early Thursday in another In the cultural revolution. Her The buildup of American forces wounded. • their two-day score of such water phase of t h e air operations. position is even stronger than in Vietnam had 389,000 service- The roll of the dead actually craft to 188. HAIR men on the rolls at the year- numbers 8,175. Disease, acci- Against the claims of North end, the U.S. Command disclosed dents and other nonhostile cases Vietnamese that they shot down f ^ FASHIONS Thursday. There was a net in- have claimed the lives of 1,511 three planes, U.S. briefing offi- crease of 13,000 last week, aweek Americans. cers said two were lost. Ihese that saw 128 killed In action. U.S. air operations were busy were a single-seat A4 Skyfiawk Pentagon figures showed 5,008 as Hanoi's envoy in Paris, Mai and a two-seat 14 Phantom, V Americans were killed and 30,- Van Bo, demanded a definite, downed over the Gulf of Tonkin. 093 wounded in 1966, a year of prompt and unconditional halt A helicopter from the Carrier O n l y two things can put that steadily increasing U.S. involve- to the bombing of North Viet- Bennington rescued all three B l o o m in y o u r h'air - - one is ment, and totals for the war nam as the only way to create a crewmen. L o v e , the o t h e r is M r . John. situation favorable to a search American authorities have now Puhltahed iy the s t u d e n t s 'if M i c h i g a n for a settlement of the war. State l'nl.er ty e v e r y cin'ss ijny t h r o u g h o u t acknowledged the loss of 453 John Carver OPEN SIX DAYS A WEEK the year and S p e c i a l W e l c o m e Week E d i t i o n American Air Force, Navy and .planes and four helicopters in the 24 hr. answering service In Septem hei S u b s c r i p t i o n r a t e $10 p e r y e a r , Marine pilots flew 116 multi- 501 1/2 E. Grand Rivet- Authortzed I the H o a r d o f s t u d e n t P i i h t t c a - campaign to cut supply lines and ttons. plane missions above the border Across From Berkey Hall I 332-0904 I erase other military targets in Member Associated Pres», t'ntte Wednesday and loosed 4.8 million International. Inland Daily Press As« the north. ' M e m b e r Michigan Hair Fashion Committee Associated i"otl< itlate Press Mlchlg psychological warfare leaflets .Kvery i t e m i s f r o m o u r r e g u l a r Rod .vood & R o s s s t o c k Association. Michigan l'ollegiate P B52 jets from Guam bombed a along with explosives. Navy fliers Graduate C l a i r o l Color Institute aociatlon. suspected Communist troop con- and c a r r i e s the s a m e g u a r a n t e e of a u t h e n t i c t r a d i t i o n a l Stcoira cla»> postnee pald at K ist l a l n g reported they destroyed or How far does a bookstore Mich. E d i t o r i a l and b u s i n e s s o t f i e e s at 341 s t u d e n t s t y l e and q u a l i t y . N o t e v e r y t h i n g i s on . s a l e , but t h e r e Services Building. Michigan state University. East Lansing. Mich. is a p l e n t i f u l assortment to g i v e you a f i n e s e l e c t i o n Phones: Editorial Classified Advertising • 355-S252 SSS-HJo at s a l e p r i c e s . Display Advertising 353-8400 go to serve its students? Business - Circulation 353-H2S9 Photographic J5S-S311 SUITS: LOOK GROUP I - All wool h o p s a c k s . 3-piecc Sharkskins, whip- c o r d s . h e r r i n g b o n e s . V a l u e s to 85.00 FAMILIAR? 68.00 e v J > % | r.T; GROUP II - Domestic sharkskins, plain weaves, herring- b o n e s . R e g u l a r l y to 7 5 . 0 0 . 58.00 inn Ulf Í }tni SPORT COATS: GROUP I- Imported Harris Tweeds, Scottish shetlands, h e r r i n g b o n e s , h o p s a c k s , p l a i d s . V a l u e s to 49.50 34.00 to 38.00 Kl H GROUP II - Domestic herringbones, plaids, hopsacks. i his is the new KLH F o r m e r l y to 3 9 . 5 0 . Model Twenty-Four high- 28.00 performance stereo music system. At first glance it looks like the Model TOP COATS: > customers park Twenty, the moat demanded music system we sell. Imported hopsacks. Irish tweeds, herringbones, twills. The. Twenty-Four costs a hundred dollars less than V a l u e s to 89.50 the Twenty. But when it 68.00 to 78.00 Free in the Lot at the rear of the store comes to sound, It's almost impossible to tell them apart. We don't generally use SWEATERS: superlatives to describe I m p o r t e d l a m b s wool V-necks, s h e t l a n d c a b l e s , w o o l / m o h a i r the performance of prod- ucts. But the Twenty-Four b l e n d s . R e g u l a r l y to 22.50 doesn't call for understate- more centralized, and m o r e friendly „1 S M e n l Book. Shop today 14.00 ment. We have never been prouder of any product. at S. B . S. w h e r e y o u r s a t i s f a c t i o n i s o u r m a i n concern. We suggest.that you lis- ten critically to.,¿lie Model DRESS SHIRTS: Twenty-four and measure C h a m b r a y s , o x f o r d s , and b r o a d c l o t h s in s t r i p e s and solid.- it against your own re- V a l u e s to 6 . 9 5 . quirements. The bookstore with a difference! 3.00 & 5.00 Take another look KMOSS \ \ W W® * fr °m Oli,, at fteàwooà % Ross Disc Shop InuliHotull exi t'lh'iK f 323 E. Grand River E. Lansing tudent tore w 205 E . G r a n d River 9-9 Weekdays 9-6 Sat. F r i d a y , .January 6, 1967 4 4 MiThi-an State News, East Lansing, Michigan SPORTS C agers face 'fired-up' By DENNIS CHASE 15 minutes. Matthew Aitch wasn't in Big 10 opener I'm more worried about the Beuingcon will go with Aitch fund used for assistance In re- Assoc late Sports E d i t o r cruitment and for financial aid much better. games than the practices." (6-7) ac cencer, Lafayette (6-6) to athletes was uncovered. " N o , Aitch isn't jumping as But Benington was plainly dis- and Art Baylor (6-6)atforwards, The floundering Spartan bas- The fund, set up by private well as he should," Benington couraged. The Spartans aren't and Sceve Rymal (6-1) and John ketball team, which had Its bubble benefactors, was used to trans- said. " B u t he's shooting and "talking it u p , " on the court.and Bailey (6-0) ac guards. Baylor pricked over vacation, opens the port athletes to the campus, for moving better then he did in our Benington has beenon their backs has fully recovered from a recent Big Ten season tomorrow at entertainment, financial assist- last few games. to move quicker and Chink faster bout of tonsillitis. Champaign, 111., and this chal- ance and for miscellaneous pay- " W e ' r e not a real quick U-am. then they have been. Light - game statistics show lenge couldn't come at a worse ments. Last year's quickness just isn't Illinois, meanwhile, has beaten Aitch Lading Che Spartans in time. Jones, one of the starters sus- there. But we'll be all right. Arizona, Georgia Tech, and, in scoring and rebounding. He has The University of Illinois bas- pended, was averaging 24 points Practices vary. When the guys Chelr only Big Ten acdon whipped 143 poincs for a 17.8 average and ketball team is flying high even per game this year, became the. are missing shots from three Wisconsin, 87-74. The Ullni have 82 rebounds. Lafayecce is next after the exposure of an Illegal greatest sophomore in the his- feet out there's nothing you can a 14-9 lifetime record againsc with 128 points fora I6.0average " s l u s h fund" cost the 111 In 1 two tory of the Ullni by placing sixth do. Before the Loyola game we MSU, buc lasc year Che Sparcans and 74 rebounds. starters, Including leading scor- in Big Ten scoring with a 20.6 had two of our best practices this beac them 68-66, in Jenison. As a team, the Spartans have e r , Rich Jones, through suspen- average last season. season, and look what happened Illinois will start Scholz (6-8) out-scored their opponents 600- sions. (lost, 74-70). at center, Deon Flesser (6-5)and 509 and have averaged 75 points The other suspended starter, Illinois Is 7-2 for the season, "Three-fourths of thetfuy'sare Bob Johansen (6-5) at forwards, a game to opponents' 63.6. MSU junior Ron Dunlap, is a 6-8 took third place In the Los An- giving 100 per cent, and there's and J i m Dawson (6-0) and Pres- also lead opponencs in rebounds Center who averaged 6.1 points geles Classic tournament and nothing more Icanaskthemtodo. ton Pearson (6-1) at guards. 426-368. per game last year. Dunlap's has won three out of four games replacement, sophomore Dave since the scandal. Scholz, scored 22 points in a vic- " T h e y ' r e up psychologically," MSU Coach John Benington said, " a n d don't forget, this will be tory over California the day after the suspensions. The spirit on the Illinois squad FOR SWIMMERS their first home appearance since is superb. All the ingredients the illegal fund was discovered." are there: a coach who offered to Ron Dunlap... Seven football players and five ba kecball players were indefi- nitely suspended and foutball Coach Pete Elliott and basket- resign and take all the blame but who's team wouldn't let him; suspended players sitting on Che bench shouting " s c o r e one for Relays open 1967 ball Coach Harry Combes were m e " to their substitutes and a By JOHN L A D D The season will open this Sat- team has never placed lower than s t a r t i n g c e n t e r , 6 - 8 and 222 p o u n d s , w i t h put on a year's probation. The student body that has rallied to State News S p o r t s W r i t e r urday in Minneapolis with the Big third. Michigan and Indiana must considerable umping ability • • suspended, penalties came when a special the support ofchecoachandceam. Ten Swimming Relays. be expected to bring strong and And, as if that wasn't enough, The Big Ten Conference swim- Klghc teams participated in che deep teams to the relays and the Spartan practices have looked ming teams begin and end their relays lasc year. IndianaUnlver- should spile first and second Feature Lock dazzlingly beautiful diamond sets., like IM pick-up games between the " s k i n s " and " s h i r t s . " seasons in conference - wide meet?. The seasonwill close with slcy won che meec. followed by places between them. University of Michigan in second Ohio State finished fourth lasc Leo Lafayette has looked slow. che Big Ten Swimming Champion- and MSU in chird. year, just behind the Spartans, but K In Wednesday's lntrasquad game ships March 2-4. This year this Ohio State, Wisconsin, Iowa, the Buckeyes face a cough meec he didn't get a shot off in the last grand finale will be held at MSIJ. Northwestern and Minnesota against University of Minnesota J placed fourth through eighth. Conlght. Southern Illinois and lowa State Both Minnesota and Ohio State HILLEL FOUNDATION Rich Jones... ; A have also been invited to chis have traditions of strong swim- year's relays. ming teams, and the winner . top Illinois s c o r e r , Michigan State won two of the 11 of this dual meet will be a threat events in the relays last year-- in the season'slater competition. lost through suspension. 319 Hillcrest at \V. Grand River rhe 2,000-yard freestyle and the 100-yard medley relay. Three IjjBiizO members of last year's winning 150 00 195.00 175.00 SABBATH SERVICES SATURDAY SUNDAY JAN. 8, 6 p.m. 10 A . M . 2,000-yard freestyle relay ¿re available iliis year — Rollle Groseth, I'd Click and Ken W'.ilsh. 'Perfect' wrestlers What a wonderful way to s t a r t the Now Y e a r Opening Supper & Social Pete Williams should be able to These rings harmonize happily in every way. Diamonds set in 14Kc. white or yellow gold that makes .LOUIS ROME Director Michigan Crime Commission replace the relay's fourth mem- ber, graduated Denny Hill. Glick and Gary Dilley can also at Northwestern them even more enchanting. En- repeat a victory in the 400-yard With a perfect record to show In last season's quadrangular, w i l l speak on gagement and wedding rings cannot medley relay. But to do so either for the 1966 segmenc of Che will be gunning for repeat per- twist or turn because they're inter- NARCOTICS, YOUTH, C R I M E Carl Weber or Jack Marsh will schedule, che MSU wrestling ceam formances. Rehm is 8-1 and locked. And the prices are harmoni- Buffet Supper, Everyone Welcome have to fill for last year's top Cravels co Evanston, 111. Co open C a r r 7-1 In bouts this year. ous too. breastsiroker, I.eeI)river.Soph- '67 againsc chrce Rig Ten oppo- Roth men suffered their only For Rides Call 332-1916 omore sprinter Don Rauch will nents in che Norchwescern Quad- loss in the Midlands cournament, FOX'S be called on for the hard task of rangular meet Comorrow. replacing graduated J i m Mac- Mlllan. Besides the Spartans, and hose Dec. 29. Dale Anderson a n d George Radman are in che opposice po- Direct Diamond Importers Norchwestern, Purdue and Min- Diver Fred Whiteford suffered nesota will participate in the siclons ofBehmandCarr.NeiCher Frandor Shopping Center an ankle injury over Christmas meet. Lasc season MSU finished won a championship at North- vacation, but the diving " r e l a y " second co Minnesota with North- wescern last year, but they both and 203 S. Washington rails for only iwo entrants. Huane western third and Purdue fourch. were champions ac Che Midlands C O N V E N I E N T TERMS Green and Doug Todd should be tournament, a nd boch have perfect MSU will hive two champions able to handle the job if Whiteford from last year's meet, and records to date. is unable to dive. another pair who will be ouc to Radman was second In 167 at |"he 200-yard medley relay keep perfecc records. Northwestern last season, while should see Dob W o l f in the back- Don Hehm and Dale C a r r , who Anderson was unable to compete stroke, Weber or Marsh in che took the 130 and 147-pound tides at 137 due to an elbow injury. breast stroke, George Booth or Radman and Anderson are boch John Muslin at butterfly and Gary 8-0 for che season. f .ahgley on (he final freestyle leg. Rounding ouc Che Spartan line- c ireg Brown, I Jan Pangborn and Steve amamoto will aid the team in i lie breast stroke, distance and Sport up will be Gary Bissell, (123), Dave Campbell, (152), Rod Oct, (160), Mike Bradley, (177) and Jack 7indel ac heavyweight. sprint freestyle events. Dick Fortune and Chuck Geggie may also accompany the-team. One of the big questions for the Shorts Despite Che fact that North- wescern was Chird in the quad- rangular and sixth in Che Rig l i m e trials for the MSU ski MSU swimmers is whether the ream will be held a t 9 a . m . S a t u r - Ten lasc season, Spartan Coach depth of the squad will be suffi- day on Tournament Hill, at Grady Peninger is looking for che cient for a repeat of last year's Caberfae near Cadillac. Cose for Wildcats to be MSU's coughest excellent record — third in the the day's skiing is >2.50. competition. Big Ten and fourth in the NCAA. Last year Lite team took second Norchwescern has a largely Above all else, relay meets place at the Michigan Interschol- inexperienced team with six demand this depth. In the 11 astic Ski Assn. meet and in the sophomores leading the way, but events there is need to fill 38 NCAA qualifying meet. At the the Cats were impressive in their McDonald's places, though one man may swim NCAA national ineeC the team opening meet ac Che Illinois In- in as many as three events. placed sixth in the slalom. vitacional. * * * 'Northwestern has a po- Michigan State initiated the Big Ten Relays and won them in the There will be a meeting forall tentially strong team; Minnesota initial year, 1956. Since then, the freshman fencers Monday at 5 has three good wresclers, and LANSING-EAST LANSING Purdue haschreealso," Peninger p . m . in che fencing room ac Jeni- son fieldhouse. Anyone noc able said. co accend should concacc Coach " I chink chls meec is going to All Eligible Sorority Rushees Charles SchmiCter Immediately. Fencers who do noc atcend or con- be a lot cougher Chan a lot of our guys chink--even though ic cacc SchmUCer will noc be con- seems like kind ofananci-climax Don't Forget Post Office! sidered for che fencing team. after winning che Midlands." HAPPY NEW YEAR Start the year off right by bringing your cleaning loads to one of our 3 convenient locations. SAVE T I M E SAVE MONEY! We Feature: Sunshine Center Hot P i z z a Foot Longs Submarines Steaks 3 Ureal Locations tor Your Convenience Non-alcoholic cocktai THE PIZZA 1 - 213 A n n S t r e e t 2 - C o r n e r of H a r r i s o n & W i l s o n R o a d e 3 - N o r t h w i n d D r . Facing Yankee Stadium Plaza e FRIDAY JANUARY 6 e -o». a n u n i ) e WASH mNI DRY CUM COM OrtWATtO WASH H DOT CLEAN II n I I I ' l lT>M For Delivery Co D o w n s t a i r s at: 2 to 7 p.m. U N I O N BALLROOM 203 MAC ED2-0863 Join Those Who Expert More . And Save • • • • • • • • • • Frid a y , . J a n u a r y 6, 1967 5 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan SPORTS UNITED Skaters shuffle' for B y JOE M I T C H forward lines might light a spark time Nino Cristofoli, Bob Fallat, and co-captain Tom Mikkola as Doug French and Robert De- w e r e the only WCHA team which Marco were the number two de- d i d n o t compete in a holiday in the skaters' attack. State News Sports W r i t e r the No. I line. fensemen and Bob Brawley and tournament. " W e need to do something," said Bessone. " T h e Tigers are Not included among the four Richard Bois were listed as nurn-v T h e Tigers enter the weekend Home town fans will see a lines was All-American wing ber three» - %5eries with a 7.7 goal per game a good skating team with a lot " n e w look" in the Spartan hock- Doug Volmar, who leads the team Colorado College will be offer- scoring average compared to the of speed. They beat Minnesota ey team this weekend when the in scoring with 10 goals. Bessone tag the Spartans one of the most Spartans' 3.5 average. Colorado handily and with their new coach skaters engage in a pair of games had Volmar instead manning a severe challenges of the season. has allowed just 2.2 goals per (John Matchefts) they have a lot against Colorado College in the defensive post, where the team The Tigers arethtonlyunbeaten, game, while MSU ha sallowed 4.6. of new s p i r i t . " Ice Arena. is the weakest. untied team in the WCHA with Spearheading the Tigers' of- In experimenting with four for- Faceoff time for the Friday ward lines, Bessone had at one This is the first time Volmar an overall mark of 6-0. They fense is senior forward Bob Lind- and Saturday night Western Col- has played defense, but Bessone are tied with Michigan for the berg, who has scored five goals legiate Hockey Assn. (WCHA) feels the Cleveland Heights,Ohio .top _spot in the league with a and five assists in two league games is 7:30. senior can handle the position. '2-0 record. games. Lindberg, team co-cap- The Spartans, back from seCr "He's a good skater back- This will be the first road trip u i n , earned All-American hon- ond place finishes in three holi- day tournaments, ha,ve been going wards," said Bessone, " a n d he can hit. That's what we need of the season for the Tigers, who ors last year while leading the have scored dual home victories Tigers with 37 points. Hula Bowl Hello through various forward line back there." over Lake Forest, Minnesota and Gaye Cooley will be in the S p a r t a n h a l f b a c k C l i n t o n Jones and r o v e r G e o r g e W e b s t e r a r e w e l c o m e d to shake-ups this week in hopes of Manning the other defensive Ohio University. nets for the Spartans, while H o n o l u l u , a l o n g w i t h O r e g o n State f u l l b a c k P e t e P i f e r , on a r r i v a l in the I s l a n d s finding the right scoring com- position with Volmar was Nelson Inactive for over a month, Colorado will have either Don f o r t o d a y ' s Hula B o w l game. MSU defensive end Bubba Smith w i l l play in S a t u r d a y ' s binations against the visiting DeBenedet, a sophomore from Colorado's last outing was a 7-0 Gale, John Gerbert or Dick S e n i o r B o w l at M o b i l e , A l a . . UPI Telephoto Tigers. Copper Cliff, Ont. shutout of Ohio on Dec. 3. They Engelstad. Coach Amo Bessone hasn't been pleased with his team's 4-6 overall record or 1-3 league mark and thinks a change in the AT MINNESOTA 5 games Gymnasts in (knee) trouble We Need open play Knee injuries aren't limited to fall sports. Spartan gymnasts showing good progress, and Dick Hinricks, also a senior. vault (8.5). He also works tram- Smith, will work side horse. Vet- He hit for an 8.7 score. Dave poline. • Engineers in Big 10 Dave Thor and Toby Towson can testify to that. eran Keith Sterner heads the Stende is a threat in that event trampoline unit, along with Ray Walker, a junior college trans- d possibly in rings, Bill Armstrong is the high bar leader, with captain Dave im Nelson, who'll be working Naftalin a leading Gopher per- * Chemical Saturday's meet with Minne- CHICAGO (UPI) — T h e B i g T e n fer. Walker was an excellent high -around for Minnesota, is former on floor exercise, tram- basketball chase opens Saturday with five games after a warm-up sota, at Minneapolis, finds Thor, the all-around ace, hampered by an aggravated knee. He'll see school performer, and has shown good work, although he's been out ongest in parallels (8.05) and poline and vault. . * Mechanical campaign which produced a Defenseman? limited action. of competition for two years. better-than-expected 54-33 rec- ord and indicated a wide open Doug V o l m a r , MSU Diehl and Gunny will be work- Towson, the top sophomore, ing horizontal bar. Diggins, Smith LOOKING FOR S E L F - F U L F I L L M E N T ? SHERUT L A ' A M - - ISRAEL V * . * Electronic race for the title. will have to waitt to make his and Diehl are set for parallels, The Solid Propellant hockey A i l - A m e r i c a n and The pre-season title favorite, leading scorer in the varsity debut. He s out for one C o a c h George Szypula is uncer- M A Y BE YOUR ANSWER and a half weeks with a sore tain of his rings line-up, and all Michigan State, wound up with a Western Collegiate Hock- knee. of the event's performers—Lar- TO: Sherut La'am (Service to the People) Field Offers Y o u - 5-3 record against non-league ey A s s o c i a t i o n last year, rivals and the leading contender Missing from the lineup this r Y Goldberg, Gunny, Dave Croft 515 Park Avenue m a y be p l a y i n g d e f e n s e season is two-year veteran Ron a n d D a n Kinsey—will make the New York, N. Y. 10022 to the Spartans, Northwestern, posted a 4-4 mark. Iowa earned when the Spartans face Aure. He's been declared trip, a darkhorse rating with a 7-2 Colorado College tonight. scholastically ineligible. I am a graduate - undergraduate (underline one) be- A challenging, e n l i g h t e n e d , and Minnesota, ranked in the lower tween 19-30 and would like you to send me, without mark equalled by Illinois, and With Thor limited to side division of the Big Ten's gym rewarcing future w i t h opportunity Ohio State was a surprising 6-2. obligation, FREE information telling how 1 can serve But the conference openers might throw out all the warm-up Gilmer fired? horse, parallel bars and possi- outfits, shows strength primarily bly trampoline, sophomore Norm in side horse and parallel bars, Haynie will get his chance at the with a possible challenge in vault- a full year in Israel for only $670 which includes round trip fare. (A limited number of long-term loans are available.) 1 understand a knowledge of Hebrew is not / for further s t u d y , professional atmos- pr.ere, p r c i e c t r e s p o n s i o i l i t y , and records. Buckeye Coach Fred DETROIT (UPI) - - A all-around job. ing. a prerequisite. management e x p e r i e n c e . Taylor said, " W e all play dif- Detroit Lions spokes- Back for the Gophers on horse ferent basketball once the con- man said Thursday owner Towson leaves vacancies in j S gob Hoecherl, a senior, who ference games begin." W i l l i a m Clay Pord will floor exercise and vault. Dennis scored 8.6 in the Midwest Open, d e c i d e next week w h e t h e r Smith and Bill Diggins will be held last December. Right behind NAME (PLEASE PRINT) Taylor's team, with B i l l Hos- U. S . Naval Propellant Plant to fire Coach Harry working the' first event, with him in the event is sophomore ket regaining his top rebounding Smith, Cliff Diehl and Ed Gun- John Noel, who registered an 8.3 form and two standout sopho- Gilmer. There were re- ny in the vault. in the meet. MAJOR F I E L D OF STUDY COLLEGE OR UNIV. mores in Jeff Miller and Bruce ports, meanwhile, that £ Indian H e a d , M a r y l a n d Ed Witzke, a soph who's been The parallel bars leader is Schnabel, gets a test from Min- G i l m e r had a l r e a d y been F r i d a y , 13 January nesota in the first televised game released. of the Big Ten season, on the Gopher floor, in one of four F o r d , whose t e a m f i n - ATO STREET ADDRESS PHONE (OPTIONAL) I n t e r v i e w s w i l l fce h e l d on Campus. ished in a last place tie C o n t a c t your placement o f f i c e for Saturday afternoon matches. i n the National Football Wants CAMPUS Minnesota wound up the Decem- CITY STATE ZIP further i n f o r m a t i o n . League's Western Divi- ber action with a 4-6 record, losing to Loyola of Chicago in its sion, returned f r o m va- cation Thursday and You last outing. Early showdowns also could s t a p t e d to w e i g h . - h i s d e - cision. AcTiOn Monday- be expectid in the Michigan State at Illinois and Northwestern at The D e t r o i t News said it had l e a r n e d t h a t f o r m e r Jan. 9 Michigan battles, also in the or f Lions linebacker Joe afternoon. S c h m i d t had been signed Wisconsin plays at Purdue in the fourth afternoon game, while b y F o r d to a f i v e - y e a r Indiana travels to Iowa for the contract. Open Rush BOOK only night contest. 451 Evergreen Jewelry & Art Center Call E D 2 - 0 8 4 6 for rides ART STUDENTS Choose your ART SUPPLIES Welcome - F r o m East Lansing's Most Complete Selection f) Back to STORES • PRINTS • TRAVEL POSTERS • FRAMES A c r o s s F r o m The H o m e E c . B l d g . JEWELRY "nil ART CENTER 319 E. Grand River MSU and.». . If you know what's good for you, ANNOUNCING you'll stay at 1967 WINTER T E R M EVENING C O L L E G E Class THE DEPARTMENT STORES UNIVERSITY I N N of '67-'68 N ON-CREDIT COURSES OF SPECIAL APPEAL AND VALUE TO THE UNI- VERSITY COMMUNITY OF FACULTY, o/fk CS^fuiYcMie^aoti Qbtf C(&um FOR STUDENTS 1100 Trowbridge Road in East Lansing STAFF, STUDENTS AND THEIR SPOUSES. g. 202 D e L u x e Room-S..the Largest motel in Lansing area NEW & USED TEXTBOOKS A program of University-level and Uni- Sumptuously furnished in decorator colors of Mandarin Goid versity-quality instruction. An opportunity to supplement credit- Tiffany Gold Majestic Blue Absinthe Midi Blue and Grape Blue Elderberry Autumn Gold ALL ART & SCHOOL SUPPLIES course programs and to extend intel- / Heated Swimming Pool-Patio-Kiddie Playground lectual stimulation and enjoyment. • Executive Suites • free Continental Breakfast • Bridal Suites • Free Wake up Coffee • Kitchenette Apartments TWO LOCATIONS • Free TV and Radio Special tuition rates for wives of stu- • Conference & Meeting Rooms • Free ice dents—for man and wife registrations-- • 24 hour Switchboard Service • Free Pafkmg for retirees. " T h e Motel With a College Education" • Electronic Bedside TV Controls • Bedside Radio .. itrois 507 E. G r a n d R i v e r 131 E . G r a n d R i v e r r ' . A S S E S BEGIN WEEK OF JANUARY 9 • Electronic Message Waiting Signals • Room Status Signals • Electronic Wake up Buzzer System • Maid in Room Signals Across f r o m Berkey Across F r o m Union • Touch-Tone Telephones in Every Room • Electric Bathroom Wall Heaters 53 Sections - 49 Courses • Touch Tone direct phoning for speed and privacy • Individual thermostatic controls for heating and cooling For descriptive brochure, see your res- idence hall advisor or telephone 355- / •'' Write for reservations or call Area Code 517 351 550C 4562. Register at the Registration Desk, Main Lobby, Kellogg Center, or by mail. . . . your guests will love it too . . . Where East Lansing And MSU Meet Phil Whitney - Manager ^ Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan F r i d a y . .January fi, l!Hj7 'NEW CHRISTIAN MORALITY': Pacifism called By F A Y E Sex views ill-defined UNGER college students and bachelor satisfactions for themselves or practice it be mature and prac- ineffective policy businessmen, rarely adhere to even for each other, but as they tical and honest with themselves. Absolute pacifism can hardly that the occasions for war would State News Staff W r i t e r that Playboy creed. work together for the welfare That's a tall order. be a self-sufficient position for a increase." In meeting the challenges of Most advocates of the "new of the larger group. nation or for those directly re- Consequently, he states, The conclusion about pre- sponsible for foreign policy or peace-lovers should seek new the "new morality," some m o r a l i t y " come closer to the "Sex without affection is de- marital sex in the "new national security, says the pres- alternatives to nuclear pacifism. Christians are devising a new "if-you-love-(him or her)-it's humanizing because it mech- Christian morality" runs some- ident of Union Theological Semi- " T h e fact that pacifism is morality" of their own. all-right" creed. They dislike anizes sex and regards persons thing like this quote from a nary. not permitted to be a public force And in its refusal to say a using people as things. And at as things. But unrestrained sex " F r o n t i e r s " article: definite " N o " to premarital sex- first glance the "new Christian even with affection is declviliz- John C . Bennett, president of in the Communist countries ual relations, the "newChristian m o r a l i t y " seems to come close ing in that it obstructs the high- " I t would seem that it is gen- the seminary, urges peace- creates dilemmas which pacifists morality" can be upsetting to the to this concept. est possible achievements of cul- erally fitting—given our society lovers to seek new alternatives in the United States should rec- traditionalists. But there is an undertone of ture." and Christian outlook—to refrain to nuclear pacifism. ognize," Bennett says. It can also be just as con- something that doesn't jive with This line of thinking reflects from (premarital) sexual re- " I n a sinful world wnere many Bennett, who also is chairman fusing to the "liberalises," for the "lf-you-love-him-it's-all- Freud's claim that we are forced lations. Although, again, no ab- nations have military power, and of the interdenominational mag- like its secular counterpart it right" theory. to suppress impulses to suit and solute rules can be imposed." when there is always a threat azine "Christianity and C r i s i s , " is not well-defined. That undertone shows in these: serve society. of violence in civil conflict, a is not a pacifist. . The "new Christian morality" "New ways must lie found to This "newChristian morality" quotes from two articles in "To- A second writer in " T o g e t h e r " strong case can be made for is in one sense an " if-you-iove- is based on acting in Christian gether" magazine, a Methodist continues; military resistance to external protect the consciences of those h im - it' s-a 11- r ight" creed, but love and concern for the persons publication. "Traditional answers re- its concept for love goes far be- Latin reactionaries agression, and an even stronger who find that participation in the case for the use of force to main- killing in Viet Nam is Incom- you are involved with. " A person who self-lndulgently garding sex a r e no longer yond that of romantic love and The rules are all but gone. makes love without loving treats adequate. In today's world the J o h n T a m p l i n a n d h i s d a u g h t e r , M a r g a r e t , a w a i t ai— tain order within -a nation," patible with their deepest con- even marital love. victions and commitments," he What is moral will increase trust, persons as things and --o never decision on sexual relationship r a i g n m e n t in D e t r o i t on c h a r g e s of s h o u t i n g L a t i n Bennett said. understanding and love and help realizes what it means to be is up to the individual." says. And it can be confusing. Only responses during Roman Catholic masses recited At the same time, he wrote the persons involved come closer an authentic person." " H u m a n sex is incomplete if time will tell how well it meets " A s tlie ideological conflict in E n g l i s h . The two have been a c c u s e d of d i s t u r b i n g in a recent magazine article, to fulfilling their potential as per- " W h a t advocates of the new unaccompanied by a union of per- the challenge of the "new se- between Communist m d non - s e r v i c e s at t h e St. R i t a C a t h o l i c C h u r c h f o r a m o n t h . many American pacifists are sons. The immoral has the op- morality consider to be intense sonalities, as well as bodies." cular morality." t omniums! nations loses its ab- UPI Telephoto performing a great service in posite effect. passion is likely to be only a One form ofthe"newChristian solutism," Bennett predicts, helping to break down the psy- The "new Christian morality" superficial sentiment in com- n u r a l i t y " springs from the be- " m o r e people will question chology of the cold war. definitely is not in agreement with parison with the full depth lief that the believing Christian, whether there is any issue for He commends the pacifists for what is commonly called "the of love." redeemed by Cod and trying to NARCOTICS, VATICAN criticizing frozen positions on which one should risk annihila- tion." I'layboy philosophy." "The Play- "Christian compassion is out- please God, will act according to our side of the conflict. boy philosophy" in this context going and places the needs of Christian love. As St. Augustine Bennett says " a l l of u s " should means simply sex any way, any time with an> one (provided both parties are agreeable), with or others ahead of one's own de-ires. The Christian concept of sex is a shared total relation- put it, " A Christian should love God and do as he pleases." Religious groups to hear While Bennett defends pacifist thank pacifists for daring to crit- protests against nuclear war, lie icize assumptions which are un- does not think that unilateral popular to criticize and to chal- Such a position gives plenty nuclear disarmament today would lenge national policy makers— without love. ship." But then, contrary to popular belief, most people, including " T h e deepest love betweent-wo people piatures not as they seek of room to human freedom, but little guidance to those who are contused morally, its critics crime expert, clergymen prevent nuclear war. It might even though pacifist convictions even, lie continues, "create such are not self-sufficient for policy great international Instability making in today's world. complain. Even Christians aren't The director of the Michigan the winter term series of Sunday the Christian Science answer to 3 <2-2^59 nursery ¡ Services 10 & 11 a . m . 6 & 7 p . m . "What is Your Potential?" at always sure what Christian lovi crime commission, an Eastern supper-forums at Hillel. For requires. Orthodox priest who attended the rides phone 332-1916. a lecture 8 p.m. Monday In the CENTRAL FREE METHODIST The usual conclusion from this position is that pre-marital sex Second Vatican Council and a Christian Science practitioner Home has worked with teen- agers at the Drug Addict Hos- pital, Riverside Hospital, in New East Lansing Junior High School auditorium. During World War II Miss Viet war to be topic CHURCH is inconsistent with Christian will be speaking to campus-re- Robbins served as pilot and group university love. , lated religious groups this week. York City. He was the director lutherar. church alc-lca 328 N. Wash, at Oakland Follow Highway 43 to I.ansing A :ontextual morality demands the persons involved be aware not Louis Rome, executive direc - tor of the Michigan crime corn- of Juvenile Court Services and Referee at Ann Arbor and has commander in the Women's Air Force services. She has also flown as a bush-pilot in the Nome- of five-way seminar Minister: Rev. Howard C. Artz only of how their actions affect mission, will speak 6 p.m. Sun- lectured in the department of The question is "What is the of food science, who believes each other but all those Involved day at-the Hillel House, 319 Hill - social work at MSL'. Point Barrow area andworkedas war dangerously accelerates the A Special Invitation To war doing to u s ? " with them. And it says sexual crest Ave., on problems of youth • • # a representative of an Illinois world's food shortage, will open All MSU Students The answers coine from all relations can be immoral inside a n d delinquency, emphasizing the A Christian Science practi- aircraft corporation. sides—from professors at MSU the discussion Sunday. Respond- Free Taxi Service: Since 1955 she has devoted her marriage as well as outside. narcotics problem. tioner, Jane O . Robbins, will give and other universities, from rep- ing to him will be Lawrence Witt, ,s; 15, 9 : 15, 10:30, 11:30 482-1444 or 484-4488 It also requires that those who Rome is the first speaker for full time to Christian Science resentatives of the selective professor of agricultural eco- 1 healing. service and of peace groups, from nomics, and the Rev. Joseph EAST L A N S I N G EAST LANSING Calvary Church Edgewood United ministers, and from the "audi- Green, auxiliary bishop of Lan- CHURCH OF University Methodist FRIENDS M E E T I N G sing (Roman Carbolic). THE NAZARENE Evangelical United Church ence." (Quakers) 469 North Harjadorn Road Church An Eastern Orthodox priest The occasion is a winter term University students are admit- iM^ Highland U e . , h a s t Lansing Brethren Discussion 11:15 a.m. who advised Patriarch Maximos seminar of five sessions on the ted free of charge by showing 1919 S. Pennsylvania blocks north of G r a n " River) 1120 S. Harrison Rd. Meeting for Worship IV of Antioch at the Second Vat- war in Vietnam. > their IDs. Non-student regis- ; Sunday School I 0:00 a.m. (at Mfc. Hope) Worship Services Worship at 10:00 a . m . ican Council will speak on " R e - The first session will be held tration for all five seminars is I .Morning Worship 11:00a.m. 9:30 a.m. and 11:00 a . m . Capital Grange newal Before Reunion" at 7 p.m. at 8 p.m. Sunday in the social S3 before Jan. 8 and 54 after. Worship 8:45 8:30 - 9:30 - 11:00 . Evening Service 7:00 p.m. Trowbridge Road at Arbor Drive Wednesday in Room 34 Union. hall of Peoples Church. The Registration lor individual meet- 11:00 Sermon by The New Morality and I "One Hour o f Sermon and For Information 332 -1998 topic for this Sunday is "What ings is SI. Church School . . . 9:45 D r . Truman A. Morrison The priest, the Rt. Rev. F r . |Song" The Old Commandments: | rides call Bill Rushby 182-5234 Joseph Raya, was an official Rev. Morris E. Bauman is the War Doing to Us..«in the The sessioiis will delve into Church School "No Other G o d s " For l't insport m o n P h o n e Pastor " p e r i t u s , " or expert on the East- International Socio-Economic the political, educaiional, social, 9:30 a . m . and 11:00 a . m . Crib by Rev. Burns Central Methodist World?" : 532-144(3, Rev. G l e n n \. Free bus service ern Church, for the VaticanCoun- economic and religious implica- room through Junior high Ministers Across From the Capitol -cil. ' George Borgstrom, professor tions of the war. Chaffee, Pastor 489-7963, 482-9589 High School Group at 11 a.m. The Michigan Catholic Con- Rev. Alden B. Burns WORSHIPS SERVICES Edgewood Bus Stops Welcome Students UNIVERSITY ference, the Michigan Council of Rev. Keith U Pohl 10:35 a . m . - Conrad Hall (9:45 and 11:15) Churches, the MSU Faculty Com- Christ Methodist BAPTIST CHURCH mittee on War and Peace, the 10:40 a . m , - Parking Area UNIVERSITY REFORMED Between McDonel and Holmes Nursery During Services (WJlM Broadcast 10:15 a . m . ) Church A m e n can Baptist) Fellowship of Reconciliation and M> fi,tu SV ni, p.Islni MUi-lii-l 10:45 - Owen Hall CHURCH SCHOOL " I Accept Responsibility" the MSU Office of International i 17 W. Jolly Rd., Lansing Gerard G. Phillips, Pastor Kxtension are among the groups 10:50 - Shaw Hall Dwight S. Large, preaching Wilson M. Tennant, Minister ED 2-1888 9:30 to 10:30 a.m.-Program involved in the seminar. Other Stops Added by Request Melnte Schuurmans, Worship a>m * for all ages C r i b Nursery, So Bring The University Student Group Associate Minister Church School ll:10a.m. '5:30 p.m. supper and program 11:00 a . m . - Children 2 11 yrs Baby. Take home a copy of the UNITY Worship Services Nursery Provided— " W h a t Then Are We To D o ? " East Lansing 1 nity Center Transportation, phone 332 -2906 10:00-12:00 a.m. 11:00 \ M AIIJMNI MEMORIAL CHAPEL 9:30-11 a . m . 425 W. Grand River at American Legion Center 7:00 ¡ M UNION ROOM 35 Free bus transportation 15 to University College Age Fellowship 332 1932 Kimberly Downs 30 minutes before each ser- On Vallev Ct. off Sunday, 6:30 p . m . W. Grand River, East Lansing Church of Christ vice around the campus. Seventh-Day Sunday Service 11:00 i . m . 1007 Kimberly Drive, Lansing Adventist Church Wednesday ("lass • 7:3,0 p.m. F i r s t Christian EPISCOPAL SERVICES AT MSU (2 blocks W. of Frandor St. Johns Student Temporarily Meeting at peoples Church Daily Meditation - - 12 noon University Lutheran Church Reformed Church East Lansing Shopping Center on Rarish Consultation by Appointment • ALUMNI CHAPEL E. Grand River) 327 M.A.C. Phone ED 7-9778 Division and Ann Sts. 240 Marshall St., Lansing Interdenominational Sunday Masses SA IURDAY SERVICES Rev. Hofman Minister: Richard D. Billings (Auditor ium Drive, East of Kresge Art Center) IV 9-7130 200 W. Grand Ri-er 7:15 - 8:30 - 9:45 - 11:00 (Church of the Daily Word) 9:30 a . m . Sabbath School preaching at Michigan SUNDAY SERVICES 12:15 - 4:45, & 6:00 p.m. 11:00 a . m . Worship Service! Morning Service 9:00 and 11:15 SUNDAY SERVICES 9:30 a.m. Holy Communion and Sermon When necessary Sunday Morning Worship 11:00 a.m. THE CHURCH OF 5:15 p.m. Holy Communion and Sermon Masses will be doubled up Saturday, January 7th " P r o b l e m s In P r a y e r " 9:30 and 11:00 Bible Study 10:00 a . m . with masses In the chapel and speaker will be held JESUS CHRIST OF Evening Worship 6:00 p.m. University Class 10:15 All Saints Parish downstairs lounge. Elder Roger Coon at the Church L A T T E R DAY SAINTS 'The Meaning " A r e Our Creeds C h r i s t i a n ? " 800 Abbott Rd. Wednesday evening Bible Weekday Masses of the Memorial' "Mormons" Evening Service 7 p . m . Study 7:30 p.m. 7:00 - 8:00 - 12:30 - 4:30 "Focus on the Future" 431 E. Saginaw For Transportation or "Empty Vessels F i l l e d " 8:00 a.m. Holy Communion Masses at Alumni Chapel Communion Meditation West of Abbott Rd. 9:30 a.m. Holy Communion and Sermon Monday - Friday 4:15 Information Call 882-5007 Campus Student Center For Transportation Call SUNDAY SERVICES Saturday Masses 217 Bogue St. Apt. 1 by Dr; Wallace Robertson 11:15 a.m. Morning Prayer and Sermon FE 9-8190 Each Sunday listen to " T h e Priesthood Meeting 9:00 a.m. ED 2-1960 or ED 2-2434 8:00 - 9:15 - 11:45 Voice of Prophecy," 9:30 a . m . , Phone 351-6360 Those In Need of Sunday School 10:30 a.m. Canterbury WOAP, (1080 kc.) and " F a i t h Sacrament Meeting 5:00 p.m. LUTHERAN WORSHIP For Today," Channel 8 at 8:30 Transportation c a l l -- Sundays 6:30 p.m. Old College Hall, The Union 8821425 485-3650 CHURCH SCHOOL Martin Luther Chapel -- Lutheran Student Center a . m . , Channel 2 at 10:30 • • m . Tuesday Evening 444 Abbott Rd. Two Blocks North of Union 9:30 - 11:00 Youth Meeting 7:30 p.m. 9:30 - 11:00 a . m . Holy Communion for transportation, SOUTH BAPTIST CHURCH 9:30 Children's Sunday School Hour caSTcmnsTCR P u c s B Y T c m a n CHURCH C r i b through 12th Grade in call 332 -84h5 or 355-8180 1315 Abbot' Rd. church bldg. Bus Schedule 9:30 11:00 c o s t ¿ a n s i R G . tnicmcari Refreshment period in Church parlor following worship ser- A Warm Welcome Extended 1518 S. Washintgon Lansing Abbot 8:50 10:20 ftL'NDAY SCHEDULE vices to All Visitors W. Akers 8:55 10:25 Worship Services— ' —9:00 and 11.-00 a.m. Hubbard 8:56 10:26 W. Fee Church School, Cribbery-Third Grade — 9 « ) and 11:00 a . m . " L I F E DEPENDS ON LOOK" 8:57 10:27 Church School, Fourth Grade-Adults, Students -10:00 a.m: First Presbyterian First Church of W. Holmes 9:01 10:31 Owen 9:03 10:33 Ottawa and Chestnut Christ, Scientist S U N D A Y 7:00 P . M . W. Shaw For transportation phone 332-6271 or 332-8901 9:05 10:35 709 E. Grand River N. Case 9:10 10:40 By 6;00 p.m. Saturday WORSHIP SERVICE East Lansing V I O L I N T R I O -- S O L O I S T -- C H O I R Kellogg 9:15 10:45 Rev. R. L. Moreland - MINISTERS - Rev. H. G. Beach 9:30 a.m. Sunday Service 11 a.m. 11:00 a.m. Sermon OKEMOS BAPTIST CHURCH TRINITY CHURCH C o m m u n i o n Sunday 9:45 A.M. 8:30 P.M. "Sacrament" 4684 Okemos - Haslett Rd. 120 Spartan Ave. . Interdenominational An Inquiring Church? COLLEGE BIBLE CLASS YOUTH FELLOWSHIP 2 miles east of Hagadorn SUNDAY WORSHIP SERVICES by Dr. P a u l H u r e l l SUNDAY SCHOOL Dr. Ted Ward, Teacher 1/2 mile south of Grand River Three Courses of Study University Classes Department of Philosophy 11:00 a.m. - regular MSU Learning Systems 9:45 Refreshments at MSU (9:30&11-Universlty Students) Institute 10:00 a . m . -- C o l l e g i a t e C l a s s 8:30 and Morning Worship WEDNESDAY 11:00 a . m . - 7:00 p . m . -- W o r s h i p 11:00 6 p.m. Collegian Fellowship "With God Sidelined" 8:00 p.m.-Evening Meeting at Alumni Chapel 8:15 p . m . -- C o l l e g i a t e F e l l o w s h i p showing the film 11:00 A . M . " E N C O U N T E R WITH G O D ' \ - 0 0 Evening Worship Free Public Reading Room LISTEN: / "Spiritual Cost Analysis" " B l a c k Like Me" 134 West Grand River OPEN WVIC, 9 a.m. Sundays 8:15 p.m. Free Bus Transportation Weekdays--9-5 p.m. F R E E BUS S E R V I C E M o r n i n g and E v e n i n g Trinity Collegiate Fellowship Around Campus Mon., Tues., Thürs.,Frl. Welcome To and From Church Evenings 7 p.m.-9 p.m. D. R. A l l b a u g h , P a s t o r All are welcome to attmd C A L L 482-0754 F O R I N F O R M A T I O N PAS IORS: E. Eugene Williams, David L . Erb, Norman K. Piersma A warn and friendly welcome Church Services and vis'-, and - transportation call 332-2133 FREE BUS SERVICE- See schedule in your dorm. awaits you at First Presbyterian jus« the reading room. F r i d a y , J a n u a r y 6. 1967 7 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Qualityabounds RED CEDAR REVIEW, in Cedar the mother's womb in a sea of manuscript, the selectors in last each case apt Visually, vocally tional rather than ornamental. student literary maga/lne. « The lavish use of white space Note: The artwork is of high blood and a chaos of bitter de- year's English Dept. creative and verbally. q u a r t e r l y m a g a z i n e of t h e Editor Peggy Case and V.Glen and the Intelligent italicizing of quality, my favorite being struction"—these are marks of writing contest did their job well. a r t s p u b l i s h e d b y students Washburn, who supervised lay- Bettis's story, which could so "Christian Activity," a collage a story few readers will ever I m Station Lincoln Nebr 68505 KRAMER 800 E. Kalamazoo AUTO PARTS Phone 484-1303 hospitality make the Caucus Room a must for your weekend enjoyment. across from the state capitol Open 11a.m. 'til 2 a.m. A j JJllff&H&teK 8 Michü'.an State No ws, K a s t I-ÍVhsinu;, M i c h i g a n F r f d a y . J . j m u a r y ß . l'J67 CONGRESS OF STRINGS OPEN TRYOUTS: 'IT loses program * Arsenic and Old Lace \ substitute program for the annual Congress of Strings, which James Niblock, chairman of the MSU dept., noted that no meals', housing and recreation. Two sites would reduce trans- will not be returning this summer definite type of replacement pro- portation expenses, Niblock com- after six years at Michigan State, gram can be named until the mented. is being sought by the dept. of dept. heads talk with the ad- The new arrangement, financed * The Dybbuk music. The \merican Federation of Musicians (AIM) notified MSI' ministrators. The type and size of the new project will depend on funds available, he added. by a $60,000 grant from the Rockefeller Foundation, will es- tablish eight-week sessions this week that in order to cut Annually about 100 qualified under the Saratoga Performing costs. East and West coast student string musicians from Arts Center, Inc., in Saratoga branches of the Congress will across the nation and Canada are Springs, N.Y., and at the Uni- * 'Tis Pity She's a Whore be established instead of the single MSI' program. provided transportation to and from the Congress, along with versity of Southern California in Los Angeles. The Congress of Strings was initiated in 1959 by the AFM to Mon. and Tues. reduce the growing shortage of qualified string instrumentalists. Art or arty? January 9 - 1 0 Int'l films, t r a v e l series Students between 16 and 23are S t u d e n t s c o n t e m p l a t e a b s t r a c t s at K r e s g e ' s l a t e s t e x h i b i t , " T h e P l a t e , T h e B l o c k , chosen at open auditions and The Stone and The P r i n t . " Photo by L a r r y F r i t z l a n 7:30-10:00 p.m. provided the opportunity to work present w i n t e r t e r m d e b u t under prominent Instructors and Room 49, Auditorium directors. Mi) I International Film Stanley and Richard Atten- Congress of Strings orchestras Serios an World Travel Series borough, and was written and di- All Students Welcome will p L-ent the films "Seance rected by Bryan Forbes of " The at MSU have performed under Fric l.einsdorf, Josef Krips, Wil- LESS CASH, MORE RICE on a W t Afternoon" and a n d " Athens L-Shaped Room." liam Steinberg, FugeneOrmandy, and the Greek Is la s " this ,'eek- "Athens and the Greek Is- B E S T IN F O R E I G N FILMS \ If red Wallenstein, Michel Pias- end as their fir wint el tet'm lands," narrated by John C r a i g , iro, Synion Goldberg, Henry TODAY: R ( )\! 7:00 P . M . oflerin-'s. "Seance," a Brlti gical thriller, will shown at will be shown at S p.m. Saturday p s y c h o lo- in the Auditorium. Tickets for all seven films in Lewis, Howard Mitchell and Don- ald Johanos. Johanos served as dean of the Peasant 'currency' switch 7 a n d 9 tonight i F a i r c h i l d the International Film Seriesare Theater, file f i l m s t a r s K i m available m advance in the L'nion Congress faculty for the past two SAT s SI N FROM 1:00 P.M. f. E I S E N S T E I N ' T • mo i n (h e S u n S Ticket Office for $30. Single ad- mission at the door is 50 cents. Admission to the World Travel years, following Paul Oberg, The Rockefeller grant will not alier the American Federation of follows Cong tax boost LIE'S All u / R O N q ÍN hofsq koisq... Tonight, S p.m., Fast Lansing Library. Series is free to holders of Series Musicians' sponsorship of the program, said Herman Kenin, SAIGON — Vietnamese to rice for tax payments may be harvest reaches its peak this AÜ WET ¡IM TibET... Adults & Students A and B season tickets for the international president of the peasants are paying less taxes in to replace rice stocks sei/ed by month. Experts describe the crop $1.25. 3 admissions. Lecture-Concert Program. Sin- j|\ A TRAUMA Wiîh A LAMA... Exp Cinemo S o c i e t y . At M, AFL-CIO. cash to the Viet Cong than they L'.S. and Vietnamese army units, as good but not great. The fertile gle admission at the door is $1. il\ tMe QRip Of MÍSS STRip... were a year ago, but are forking but more likely is aimed at easing Mekong River delta once pro- s > 33-5 f *44 over a bigger share of their rice the duced sufficient rice for the coun- 7:30, 35 P.M. H E L D OVER! widespread resentment buj dONJ WORRY- -Sat., Snn. (T^&Wñ P U S A u d i t i o n s set crop, intelligence experts said caused by last year's stiff tax try with enough left over to ex- 3 : M t -5:30, V ^ F tÁjatft, 2nd Laugh Week Thursday. boost, sources said. port, but the war has reduced 9:45 P . M . for PAC p l a y s The total tax is probably about harvests and 448,000 metric tons Harvest time is tax time for were imported last-year. y o u CAN T kEEp A I eature 1:2Ü-3:25-5:30-7:35-9:40 the same, these sources said, but \n.litions for parts for three the Viet Cong and the annual rice major Pe rforming Art-Company rural Vietnamese find it easier qREAT AdvENTURER WATCH YOUR GIRL! ' GUARD YOUR GOLD! HOLD YOUR J E W E L S ! productions will be held from to pay in produce than in piasters. Drop,adcl procedure 7:30-10 p.m. Monday and Tuesday 'Ihe Communists imposed a 20 dowNÎ in 49 Auditorium. to 40 per cent tax increase a year Jepn-Paul Belmondo The first of the plays, Joseph ago on those livi/ig in areas under Kesseli i n g ' s ' " A r s e n i c and Old their control. They tried then to Ursula Andress wi II beg in Monday r L a c e , " is to -be presented collect most of it in money on the Feb. 27-March 4. theory it was simpler to transport S. Ansky's " The Dybbuk*," a and they could purchase rice later tragedy dealing with tile super» when and where they needed it. Drops and adds will be Diploma Application Cards Il natural» will follow from \p;"ll American sources in Saigon processed beginning Monday. during registration. : V 1(3-23. The third is John Ford's concede the Viet Cong have firm Students who want to drop or He urged students who expect ' " l i s Pity She's A Whore, 1 ' to control of 17 to 20 per cent add courses need approval sig- to graduate at the end of winter be presented May 2-13, of South Viet Nam. The Commu- natures from their academic ad- term to fill out such a card as soon as possible in 106Adminis- \1I interested student-? areen- nists probably exert their influ- viser or his representative, and ence over much wider areas by from the department concerned. tration l3Wg. ritoso cards are coufaged to try out regardlessof used to determine the spelling on previous experience oracadeir.ic night. PÉTgH SELLERS major. The recent switch from cash Details on drop anti add pro- a student's diploma. cedure will be printed In Mon- Late registrants should get a JTfT£/t THB*Foyi Mwdite DRIVE - I N day's State News. Permit to Register and Section Reservation - fclnrollment card Registrar Horace C. King re- from their departmei t or college, liMs V m TTT •y¡y y N ? M M — t d L a n l n g o n IW-78 ported Thursday that fewer stu- and then report to 107 Adminis- dents 'than expected filled out tration Bldn. NOW THROUGH TUES. (2) HITS! CotoningVlCTfjR. MÂTURE E L E C T R I C IN CAR HEATERS I ansi n g • i D r i v e - l n T h e a t r e " ^ PREROISI KR'f CÜWI BRITT EKLAND BURI ! & »SA , EXCLUSIVE D R I V E - I N - S H O W I N G ou'h C»BOf al Jolly t o a d TU 2 2479 FRI. SAT. SUN. (3) COLOR HITS EASTMANCOLOR PANAVISION [COLOR by DeLuxe] UNITED ARTISTS DIRECT FROM ITS ROADSHOW EN6A6EMENT! Added: M R CHAT 8. C A R T O O N FUN I'ink Pa nth. r Cartoon & Npv.ifflk SPECIAL POPULAR PRICES 550 E L E C T R I C - I N - C AR-HE ATERS Melina M e r c i uri R :ny Schneider Peter Finch M XTI " D E VII III-. \l ÖN \ MI..KRV-GÜ-ROL NO' SPECIAL SCHEDULED PERFORMANCES NEXT . . . "10:30 P . M . SUMMER Starts TODAY Oevil may -care dogfights in the skies... Only UZ could devil may-care love affairs on the ground. play these women! C O L U M B I A PICTURES Presents An IRVING ALLEN Production SHOWN A T 8:50 Cat ELIZABETH TAYLOR LAURENCE HARVEY DEAN Tin Roof EDDIE FISHER -JOHN OHARAS MARTIN ELIZABETH TAYLOR BUTTERFIELD PAUL NEWMAN WlflTT HELM "The Blue Max' is visually magnificent.' NCWSWËEK BURL IVES M A T T HEL<* BLUE Shown o n c e at 8 : 3 0 M A X :;ÍíO!lBPMDpiSMASON IMMI1K 8UJ F Ufi , ' '.Í\ ,,iV-:.,¥n,,j J , -V 1. Y « : , IM ,... -s : i V tfS -V S ,. s.». ^ . .:. ...V - .iMÜMSCOfl ÍC'íí 61 Dilli« CO-FEATURE IN C O L O R A T 6:50-12:30 ROMANCE AND RACING ARE IN THEIR BLOOD) JAMES PAMELA DOUG JOANIE M o u e k e k s R O W DARREN TIFFIN URE SOMMERS H I T N O Í3) I N C O L O R AT 7 P.M. THE C O L L E G E C R O W D CRASHES CAMILLA S U V JAMES 6BEG0HY BEVERLY MAMS COLOR BIGGEST B I K I N I BEACH! TECHNICOLOR' CO-starring I n t r o d u c i n g D I N O D E S I a n d BILLY - F e a i u n n g the " S l a y g i r l s " Screenplay by HEHBEKT BAKER B a s e d o n t h e novel b y D O N A L D H A M I U O N EDP BYRNES M u s i c by l a l o Schifrin • P r o d u c e d by I R V I N G A L L E N • Directed by H E N R Y LEVIN A M e a d w a y Claude Picture r v CHRIS NOEL Added: Color Cartoon Fun U n i v e r s a l World N e w s Noy*- mCAI. R>-EY M a c L A I N E MICHAEL CAINE L!l> ^ THE SUPREMES w 1 BlfM Friday, .January 6, 1967 9 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan ASMSU DIFENSIVE Mathematics prof dies in California Summer tax here to stay John D. Hill, professor of mathematics here for the past An expert on summabillty, M r . Hill was the author of numerous research papers and a member of 30 years, died Wednesday night There is no Indication that the This secretary, Graham con- cited a $200 need for freshmen not a "money-build-up" tactic, the American Mathematical So- in Los Angeles. 50-cent summer term tax levied tinued, would be the focal point orientation. Greg Hopkins, Off-Campus Coun- ciety, Mathematical Association M r . Hill, 59, had been visiting by the ASMSU (Associated Stu- of summer student government Concerning a tax less than cil representative, called the of America and Sigma Xi scien- relatives in Los Angeles. The dents of MSU) Board will be programs. She would also be 50 cents, Graham said money summer tax a " b u m p e r " in case tific research society. cause of death was not reported. droppe4,or altered, J i m Graham, involved In typing, planning and would be lost rather than gained. something goes wrong elsewhere. Born Aug. 22, 1907, in Hop- He joined the faculty In 1930 board chairman said. correspondence work which must New registration cards would Arthur Tung, member-at- kinsville, Ky., M r . Hill earned and became professor of mathe- A 25-cent summer tax had beeu be done during the summer for the have to b* printed at a cost of large, supported the 50-cent tax: a B.A. degree from UCLA, and matics In 1949.In 1958 he served previously considered, but at its annual leadership conference for several hundred dollars, Graham " T h e r e may not be any tangible master's and Ph.D. degrees from as acting chairman of the Mathe- last meeting fall term, the student resident advisers and student said, plus processing and book- goodies, such as the Supremesln Brown University. matics Dept. board voted a 50-cent tax for all leaders. keeping problems. July, but I think the tax is r i g h t . " four terms. Hiring a full-time, adult book- Tung said he would like to see Graham repeated, " I t is not an Graham said no major pro- keeper, Graham said, helps elim- more questionnaires on student MSU INTERNATIONAL F I L M SERIES grams could feasibly be or- Presents attempt to hoard money. We real- inate an " a m a t e u r i s h " aspect. opinion and thought summer term ganized for this summer, but " I ' m sure the students do not was an opportunity for this. ize that if we levy the tax, we must return services for i t . " felt the loan, legal aid and mime- want our quarter-of-a-mlllion KIM STANLEY AND ographing services were worth- A board member who asked to As an experiment in "good faith," a full-time ASMSU secre- while. Graham left major proj- dollars handled lightly." Graham Indicated that the remain anonymous commented, RICHARD ATTENB0R0U6H ects, such as dances, for possible " W e couldn't give $1.000 for the tary will b e hired to handle board had voted unanimously and SEANCE future attempts. 18-year-old vote, because the mimeographing, silk-screening, that there seemed little chance M loan and legal services. Graham Money collected summer term the decision would be changed. students didn't think we could ON A WET said the board had found It neces- will be spent summer term, ac- Although Graham said all sum- afford it. OK, then we need the cording to Graham. Besides the summer tax, a minor 50 cents, sary to hire at least one sec- retary on a yearly basis. full-time secretary, Graham m e r tax money would be spent during that term and that it was to afford other major things." Grounded? A k AFTERNOON CAPT. NEWMAN' FIRST A l t h o u g h the R e d C e d a r W R I T T E N A N D UI,MEOTFIÏ BV B R Y A N F O R B I I h a s n ' t yet f r o z e n s e v e r a l of Its inhabitants a l r e a d y Thürs., Fri. -- Jan. S & 6, 7 & !) p.m. prefer higher altitudes. Faire hi Id Theater Photo by Chuck M i c h a e l s MHA, WIC plan film series Admission 50C p O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O T •FREE! IN-CAR 8 the present program Will be Popular recently made movies Such movies as "Captain New- be shown three nights a week per student, to cover costs of Electric Heater shared by MHA and W IC. will again be presented by Men's ™n. M D " ''Good Neighbor at different campus locations. the film, equipment and person- nel. MHA and WIC obtain the Locations for showing the Hall Assn. (MHA) and Women's S u m , " "Day of the Trlffies, One movie will be shown each movies for $135 each. movies were chosen on the basis STAY WARM! Inter-Residence Council (WIC), " M a r n l e , " " C h a r a d e , " and^"The week, In 21 Union on Tuesday of the s u e of past audiences. ,600000000000000003! A committee of five students, beginning next week. Americanization of Emily will nlehts, in Wilson Auditorium on chaired by Torn Leach, East Williams said that the pro- Thursday, and in Conrad Audi- Lansing junior, re-evaluated the gram is designed to be a ser- torium Friday. MHA movie program fall term. vice to the students, rather than From the bedroom of an All shows will be presented at The program lost $2400 over to maKe a profit. It is also hoped that a pro- These roles t old Southern mansion to Honors College 7 p . m . , with an additional showing the last ten years, MHA pres- at Conrad at 9 p.m. Friday. ident Roger W illiams explained. Although MHA and WIC are not posed mass media program, with short subjects, may eventually gave L I Z her the boudoir of a Fifth Avenue penthouse, reputation! The first movie will be " C a p - . tain Newman, M D ; " which will looking for a profit in the present be presented with the movies, she shows men what begin Tuesday, Jan. 10 In the program, Williams--aid,any pro- Williams said, " t o provide both fe is all about1 sets procedures Union. fit made will go toward retiring Admission will be 25 cents the debt. Any loss resulting from entertainment and direct com- munication to students." illDAlN * IT'S FREE! Cat One of the first actions of the scrihed the standing committees IRuGOIOWYN WAVER. - ,„. as "semi-scholastic units." newly re-organized Honors Col- lees Student Board was the ap- Projects tentatively planned ELIZABETH TAYIDR proval of procedural guidelines for this term include a series of student-faculty dinners and in- oft* Hot LAURENCE HARVEY, that would give the two-year-old organization continuity. formal discussions, a study of the T i n Roof EDDIE FISHER format of the monthly Honors ELIZABETH TAYLOR BUTTERFIELD s.lDHN UIIAUAS This fall the board lagged in College Bulletin, a n d the col- initiating a program because of lection and categorizing of faculty election and organizational prob- doctoral dissertations and vari- With Every PAUL NEWMAN lems, according to Robert E, Andrlnga, assistant director of ous articles. These monographs are to be used by students as BURL IVES the Honors College. source materials or as a way JACK CARSON JUDITH ANDERSON DINA MERRILL to get to know instructors better. . ..WCHABOBKOUHS- .lAMtS POt RED BÄRN The board is now under the WMMI'íMÍv/iK general chairmanship of Steven A Library-Lounge committee I"UNNI Sift »liuAMS . BflWiflfi IIIHi', (>NN tV Ml¡IIOHI) MISAN , . P I I : H A « [ > BROOKS „,.. ,M«iíHAR|fSSCHNÍt »«JOHNMICHA! Hayne-, Beulah junior. Haynes Will head an executive will also have the responsibility of selecting facilities within a new .... . ,.lAWHfNt'[ WflNGARIfN •s »ox «m««» N MirnocoiOR £ ... „ M N l H W W l tPANIMI iHSHMIWW! CINEMASCOPE AM, METROCOIOR AN M C M Hl RFLEASE A JÊk locale should the Honors College AN M G M RE Rf l £ A S I MINI PEN committee composed of three standing committee chairmen and Lounge and offices be moved a member-at-large. when remodeling of the Library FOOD AND DRINK ORDER - A The general chairman de- is completed next summer. PMOOflAM INFUÄM.TIO^ • 405-6489 TODAY & SATURDAY THE NEW MANAGEMENT OF THE RED BARN INVITES YOU E 3RD The ONLY FEATURE TODAY AT 1:15- to come In and get acquainted, to have a good meal and to start 3:20-5:25-7:40-9:45 P.M. X Color WorkJs 4 Miles off the NEW TERM AND NEW YEAR RIGHT. I m m o r t a l T Hit SHE'S THE WORLD'S MOST BEAUTIFUL BANK-ROBBER! JUST EAST of the CAMPUS on GRAND RIVER! R I ç j l d w n t u r e ' EAST pietra •goKJwyn mayei At OF MSU A 7:0 7 nataliewood NEED EXTRA POCKET MONEY? S h o w n 1st at' 7 : 0 7 "penelope ian bannen dick shawn eterfalk peter talk ilila tu Mima loujacoM IF S O . . . NOTICE TO STUDENTS WINTER QUARTER Jonathan winters ill F'anavision and Motrooolor Ticket Distribution begins January 6 SHOWN SA I'URDAY AT 3:15-7:10- LATE -J STARTING TOMORROW! UNION TICKET OFFICE SUPER B A R G A I N D A Y SHOWN SATURDAY AT 1:15-5:15-9:15 P.M. One Stop Shop - Coupon plus 50C Who are HCONDS? Coupon Coupon B A UKRAINIAN DANCERS, I N D I A N A P O L I S S Y M P H O N Y , J a n . 12 Jan. 9 - 1 0 (choice of nights) C H I C A G O S Y M P H O N Y , J a n . 23 ( c h o i c e o f programs) Coupon C H A L F A S I X P E N C E , J a n . l 7 o r 18 P O R G Y A N D B E S S , F e b . 15 ( c h o i c e of o n e ) (h.uch student allowed to prudent 4 coupon iKjoks) Full-time students, (12 or more credits), may svcuiv in aOvaace aiLUtejr evburvwd SL'ut tickets to concerts for winter term by pay In« a convenience fee of per ticket. Plus plan also applies to part time-students holding validated II) cards and \CTIVITY COL I'ON l3UOKS>. Any tickets left on the day of tlu pro-ram will he available to stu- dents, without cost. A validated ID card plus a reserved ticket stub i- m v . s-ary for admittance at the Auditorium. . . . READ THIS IN 5.6 SECONDS, ASIAN-LATIN AMERICAN-AFRICAN SERIES MAKE IN ONE MONTH! INDEPENDENCE o f t h e f i n a n c i a l " P i n c h " c a n be y o u r s . . . to p a y f o r p m J^KME™* H i •• fiMBxS- s o c i a l l i f e , unique c l o t h e s d r a p a r t of your school expenses. FULLY P A I D s t u d y b r e a k s c a n be y o u r s , M I T C H E L L - R U F F TRIO Jazz Artists TEAMSHIP with bright, friendly persons your o w n age is also a f r i n g e benefit. Jan. 24 R E L A X E D , but b u s y , d e s c r i b e s the w o r k i n g a t m o s p h e r e . . . Students, 50C Public, $2.00 $56.00 Per Month Pocket Money Is Yours ( I D c a r d n e c e s s a r y at d o o r ROCK HUDSON In an astonishing change of pace as a Second in For Only 10 Hours («$1.40) Per Week! SURE, YOU'RE INTERESTED... with all student tickets) THE JOHN FRANKENHEIMER FILM Call One Of The Following Campus Offices INTERNATIONAL F I L M SERIES . . . Now! Seven Great Films - Only $3.00 A JOEL PRODUCTIONS INC PRESENTATION • UNION BUILDING »LAUNDRY * KELLOGG CENTER for quarter. Single admission, 509 at door. LEWIS JOHN CARLINO * MARRIED HOUSING * FOOD STORES UNION TICKET OFFICE DAVID ELY ÉDWARD LEWIS . . . Or Call Any Dorm Managers Office. Open 8 a.m. - 5 p.m., Monday through Friday M JOHN FRANKENHEIMER Si Friday, .January 6, 1967 10 1 0 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Call 355-r255 GET THE HABIT • USE FAST ACTION WANT ADS! Call 355-8255 The State News does not Employment For Rent For*Rent For Rent For Sale Persona I permit racial or religious CHILD CARE in my home, near with 3 WANTED - Bus-Boys. Contact NEED THREE for 4-man apart- LAST LANSING: One room-mate THREE GlRLS TO SHARE GUITAR, KAY, round top, beauti- discrimination in its ad- Frandor. Full or part time. HOUSE. $10 week plus utilities. ful natural finish. Like new. low cos 1 vertising columns. The State News will not accept Miss Krueger, Health Center. 3-1/9 ment, Eydeal Villa or sublease wanted by two girl graduate all. Swimming pool. 351-6190. students. Walking distance to 337.7116. 3-1/9 $25. 337-1254. 3-1/10 References 5101. furnished. 372- 5-1/11 WANT AD advertising w hich discrim- WANTED NURSES AIDE - girl. 3-1/10 campus. Cooking, parking. NEED FOURTH—girl for large STEREO SPEAKERS: brand new 9 to 3:30. Five days per week. Available now. 3 5 1 ^ ^ 8 . 3-1/9 4-bedroom house. Completely Electro-voice Model 7, $95, THE WOOLIES and other great inates against religion, Graduate and Married Students 332-5176. 5-1/12 EAST LANSING - 800 S. Har- furnished. Near campus/Fire- pair. Call 353-0655 afternoons. bandsl TERRY MAYNARD, 482- race, color or national ori- AUTOMOTIVE BAY COLONY rison-Marigold. One bedroom place. 351-5946 after 5:30 p.m. Ask for John. 3-1/10 4548, 482-4590. C-l/6 gin. WOMAN, PREFERABLY student EMPLOYMENT APARTMENTS furnished apartments. Open for 7-1/13 SKIS, BOQTS & BINDINGS: men's SPANISH LADY will tutor Spanish wife. Must be available 12-5:30 FOR RENT 1127 N. HAG ADORN inspecticWclaily 6:30 to 8:30 PM. BEAUTIFUL HOME WITH swim- size 12. Used only four times. or Italian. Experienced; trans- p.m. and all day Saturday for FOR SALE Now leasing 63 ii>its. 1 and 2 Saturday 12 noon to 6 PM. Sunday ming pool. Near campus. Will $30. 337-1254. 3-1/10 lations. 355-3007. 7-1/13 the CARD SHOP, 309 East Grand LOST & FOUND bedrooms, furnished and un- by appointment. Call IV 9-9651. consider four students at $60 CAMPER SHELL: very sturdy, PARKING IN East Lansing, be- A utomot I ve River. Apply in person to Betty furnished. Close to campus, 10-1/18 each. Utilities paid. 337-0364. hind Polacheks, across from PERSONAL Mukalla at the Lost Mariner, paneling and stove included, MUSTANG, 1965. Blue.Good con- shopping center, downtown, 2-1/6 Berkey. Convenientl $20.00 per PEANUTS PERSONAL 956 Trowbridge Road. 2-1/6 MALE GRADUATE student for $200. IV 5-4048. 3-1/10 dition. Will accept trade of older term in advance. Call Mark BUS BOYS - meals plus money. and bus line. Model open 2-7 apartment'in Lansing. Johnson, Rooms GIBSON GUITAR, Model S-J-N. • REAL ESTATE model car or pickup. 355-7452, White — 332-3947. 3-1/9 THETA DELTA CHI, 139Bailey pan. Dally and Sunday. 353-0809. 3-1/9 Excellent condition. Call after • SERVICE 7 am-5 pm. Can be seen at er ,nonth "THE TONICS" — Every great Street, 332-2563, 332-5456. rents from ] 35.00P ONE MAN for 4-man furnished MEN: SINGLES and Doubles. Five. 351-5285. 3-1/10 • TRANSPORTATION 2515 Bennet Road, Okemos. sound imaginable. 351-9359. 2-1/6 Rental Agent Model 337-0511 Spartan Hall, 215 Louis. One BABYHOOD WONDA - CHAIR, • WANTED 5-1/11 apartment. Clean, quiet, 3-1/10 block from campus. Approved, ideal for families with limited OLDS 1959 Convertible ¡58. New FEMALE HELP - Credit Clerk. Mrs. Lauch Res. 482-3379 approved, near Union. $9 supervised, large, warm, fully DEADLINE Rubber. Good mechanical condi- Neat appearing. Age 23 to 45. 'ONE MAN needed for Riverside weekly. 351-4062. 3-1/9 furnished rooms. ED 2-2574. space. Can be used ten ways - Peanuts Personal tion. Best offer takes. 332- Benefits and advance. Call 485- East luxury apartment, winter, TWO' PERSON apartment to share from stroller to high-chair Something there is that likes a 5-1/12 1 P.M. one class day be- 3617. 10-1/18 1781. 3-1/10 spring terms. Move in imme- with graduate student. 1-1/2 337-2525. 2-1/9 Bell that rings with a Texas- diately. 351-9440. 3-1/10 GIRL ROOMMATE: Furnished BOOKS USED - Over 50,000 hard fore publication. PLYMOUTH 1903 station wagon, BABY SITTER needed after- blocks from campus. 351-5118. Missouri accent. 1-1/6 room. Walking distance MSU covers, 10£ each. North of Lan- 6 cylinder, standard transmis- noons. Call 355-7822 after 4 PM. DEEDED ONE man for four mar. 3-1/9 WE J: Happy 21st. Best Luck No cooking: ED 2-6954. 3-1/9 sing on US 27. Call 669-9311. Cancellations - 12 noon one sion. Good condition. S700. IV9- 3-1/10 apartment. Private entrance A l l RACTIVE! 3-room, fur- always. Signed Alice and Tris- class day before publica- 9696. 3-1/9 CHOOSE YOUR own hours. A few 351-9491. 3-1/10 nished garden cottage. Suitable ATTRACTIVE ROOM in area of 3-1/1) cuit. 1-1/6 tion. PLYMOUTH, I960. New radiator, hours a day can mean excellent ONE MAN for married couple. $60 month- beautiful homes. For graduate Frandor Fox Hole P ' i wanted for Delta snow tires. $240. 351-5807. earnings for you as a trained Apartment. 351-7543. 3-1/10 ly. Phone 332-8913 for appoint- student or professional man. Real Estate PHONE 3-1/10 AVON representative. For ap- m e n t ^ 2-1/6 Phone ED 2-1176. 3-1/9 Navy watch caps - $1.00 up EAST LANSING - Three bed- WATER'S EDGE. One girl, win- NEED ROOMMATE for three- 355-8255 PONTIAC TEMPEST, 1965, good pointment in your own home ter/spring terms. 351-4386. man luxury apartment Close MAN, SUPERVISED, cooking, « a r band - $1.00 room ranch, two fireplaces, 2- write Mrs. Alona Hucklns, 5664 private entrance, close in, Spic Gloves, boots, coats, car garage, large improved lot. condition two-door, sedan. RATES $1,795. 484-5566. 3-1/9 School Street, Haslett, Michi- 3-1/10 to campus. Tom, 353-6987. & Span. ED 7-9566. 3-1/9 sweatshirts, thermal un- Many extras. $24,000.00 Owner gan, or call IV 2-6893. C-l/6 NEED 1-3 MEN. Burcham Woods 3-1/9 derwear, and much more. will hold contract. 339-2589. 1 O A i SL.BO VOLKSWAGEN 1$61. Good con- MEN: ONE single, three 1/2 Apts. Available immediately. SUBLET NEW luxury apartment, doubles. Close, quiet. Call 332- COLOR TV. Zenith Console, wal- 5-1/11 3 DAYS S3.00 dition. New tires. $550.00. In- YOUNG MAN interested inwork- 351-4187, 351-7257. 3-1/10 good location. January rent free. 5 DAYS ¿5.00 quire 1004 Johnson Ave. Lans- ing with youth. Must be free ONE MAN wanted for Avondale OR switch for room in house 0939. 5-1/11 nut cabinet, six months old, like Service ing. 3-1/10 from 2:30 to 5 p.m. and have NEW HOME - Men. Private bath, new. Beautiful color, excellent apartment. Call 332-5842. 3-1/9 with area for dog. 351-9129 CHILD CARE in my home by the (based on 10 words per ad) V.W., 1966. Black sedan. Vinyl transportation. Call Parkwood carpeted. Call ED 2-1183. buy. Phone 372-1599. 3-1/9 FOURTH GIRL for Haslett apart - 3-1/9 hour, day or week. Playroom interior. Bargain priced. 372- Branch YMCA. 332 - 8657 . 3-1/9 3-1/10 CAMERA: ARGUS C-3 with Over 10, 15 BUSBOYS: ALPHA DELTA PI Terrace, apartment 2-E. Call AVAILABLE FOR winter term. r q ^ T i E. S_ 0 m] Apartment for two men. $110.00 NEAR MSU. One bed-room apart- 1 MEN SUPERVISED Double $9.00. E c Ti house, 337-0719. 3-1/10 351-7437. 5-1/12 ment. Students welcome. Pri- Cooking, parking. Two blocks KiJjIi&JlF E - E tV It i w IL_ and $150.00. Call Peter Barba. -o e m WAITRESSES PART time or full time. East Lansing Big Boy. ONE MAN needed immediately for 3-man apartment. Call 351- 351-6789. 5-1/11 vate Entrance, Parking. 393- 0517. 3-1/9 from Berkey. 332-4978. 3-1/9 SINGLE OR DOUBLE room for ACROSS P i t ' 0 L E. aaOH • a d HIHQ \K S E cl A 3-1/10 HOUSING BY NEJAC: Several n - i Apply 401 E. Grand River or 7537. TWO-MAN apartment, EYDEAL rooms and one apartment still ONE OR TWO girls. Northwind men. Private entrance. Campus 1. Flirtatious 4. Banana 31. Kind 33, Wanderer man raoa • • • a phone ED 2-8659 for appoint- ment. 3-1/9 VILLA. Swimming pool, for available. All utilities paid. Call Apartments. $56.25. Call 332- close. Parking. No cooking. ED 2-6405. 3-1/9 genus 8. Flat fish 35. Alternative 36. Emblem ot BB aanoaa spring. 351-5673. 3-1/10 NEJAC of East Lansing. 337- 0234 after 5 PM. 5-1/11 E3E3QQS3Q • • Yo.r if 1300. C-l/6 11. Fruit juice Wales CHALET - ONE, Two, or four DBOB OOa BOB Join the FURNISHED APARTMENT for Hous*« For Sale [2. Mimicked 38. Expelled i* - to sublet 4-man apartment. 355- four, $220. Student apartment, NEEDED: FOURTH man for 3- ONE PORTABLE electric type- 13. Utmost 40. Pinch E IN IA ! L1 G !E t S H SWNGJtffi WORLD 0442. 5-1/12 hv per bole 42. Auction S $110. Unfurnished, two-and bedroom house. $50 plus util- writer and one single track tape 14. Experience 43. Kitchen E S ¡Miti O Y S T E. of Yamaha ONE MALE roommate forChalet Apartments. No damage deposit three-bedroom duplexes, $135 ities. 484-0173. & $185. Rooms, $50-$60. ED 2- NEED ONE male graduate student 3-1/10 recorder. Cheap.Call 353-7769. 1-1/6 16. Light lunch in India utensil 46. Valleys È u H M V T E. E S required. 351-5499. 3-1/10 0480 . 5-1/12 or upper classman to share For WEDDING and practical 18. Canopy 49. Simple large house" with four others. shower gifts, complete line of 20. Drive sugar Ano Mô<° ò u'! 50. Cooking DOWN entrance 313 North Logan, Lansing. basket-ware. See ACE HARD- slantingly M O N E v MATT ERS. Phone IV 4-9755 after 5:30p.m. WARE'S selections. 201 East 21. Least herb 1. Wolframite 8. Overthrow 3-1/9 possible 52. Female 2. Poem 9 Fourth Grand River, across from '3. Hanker caliph 24. Unwise sandpiper SUBLET 6-man house winter and Union. Phone ED 2-3212. C 53. Congeal 4. Wild rice 10. Prohibition Mere He^e 27. Paid notice spring. Parking. Near campus. STUDY DESKS, small chests, 54. Deuces 5. High 15. Make /"SQ PI ^ ^ 5 Our used bugs won't 351-9369. NEED ONE girl for 3-bedroom 7-1/13 roll-a-ways 8c bunkbeds. New and used mattresses—all sizes. 28. Black and blue 55. Evergreen tree ti. Coterie 7. Mine muddy 17. On behalf 30. Article Things i Warn il Ca Seil . at drive you buggy. house. Call 351-7836. 5-1/12 Study lamps, typewriters, tape recorders, metal wardrobes, i z 3 4 S « 7 è » H of 19. Goodwill FURNISHED TWO bedroom house 21. Letters MSU's Yamaha Y o u c o n d e p e n d o n o u r used V W s . W e ' v e r e c o n d i t i o n e d the b o d i e s , for two or three graduate stu- portable TV sets, large selec- il i 12 i 13 22. Unoc- tion new & used electric fans. li 17 cupied tuned u p the engines, t i g h t e n e d up the works, a n d g u a r a n t e e d them dents. $115 per month plus util- 1 Headquarters 1 0 0 % f o r the r e p a i r o r r e p l a c e m e n t o f all m a j o r mechanical p o r t s * ities. ED 2-4770 after 7 p.m. Everything for the home. WIL- 15 % 23. Citrus iruit 13 20 f o r 30 days o r 1000 miles. So they'll d r i v e y o u a n y w h e r e but buggy. COX SECOND HAND STORE, 3-1/10 V 25. Brogan Bowker & Moi les * e n g i n « • transmission • rear a«le * broke system • e l e c t r i c a l system • front o»'e assemblies SHARE HOME, Baby sit nights 509 E. Michigan, Lansing, Phone IV 5-4391, 8-5:30 p.m. C 'ti i 2122 %21 24 2Ì M %% 26. Drove 29. Compensa- Cycle Shop THIS WEEK'S SPECIALS while mother works, in exchange for rent. 373-1224. 3-1/9 BICYCLE SALES, rentals and services. Also used. EAST 27 YÄ2i % 29VÀ34 tion 32. Dog house '61 Ford Galaxie WANTED: ONE man for house. Y/t /A 34 33 34. PTaytfiing • b '64 Porche. 4 Dr. Sedan. V-8 automatic. LANSING CYCLE, 1215 E. 31 Si 33 37. Rtlatives » f u l l line of Yamahas Red with black interior. Radio, heater and yours $40.00 month. 205 Leslie. Block off Michigan. 1-1/6 Grand River. Call 332-8303. C àn 3$ û3» 39. Wilson's Only 19,000 miles. Like for only LENS PRECISION Ground in our J«* 1 % thrush * fast and expert service new and ready to go. 295.00 TWO MEN needed in fully fur- nished house.Close. 223 Linden. $55 month each. 337-2511. own lab.- OPTICAL DISCOUNT, 416 Tussing Bldg. Phone IV 2- %% 4344 40 41 ÀI %45 4« %% 47 4» 41. Plague 43. Heavy mist 44. Handle CALL STATE NEWS 2152 W. Grand River PAU QvuLa'*fadedGcM m 3-1/9 4667. TYPEWRITER: ROYAL C-l/6 SAFARI % S* SI properly 45. Custom CLASSIFIED Okemos, Michigan Ph. 332-6977 E. GRAND RIVER AT HOWARD FURNISHED Three bedroom, two baths, located on several acres. In South Lansing. $200.00 per portable. One year old. Like new. List, $125. Will sell for $65. 337-1254. 3-1/10 41 53 % % i» 34 i SS 47. Born 48. Baste 51. Proceed 355-8255 484-1341 month. Phone 332-6932 . 3-1/9 Friday, January 6, 1 967 11 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan NO COUNTER OFFER Placement Bureau Students must register in per- son at the Placement Bureau at least two days prior to the date arts, men's physical education, history, mathematics and English majors (B). N. Viet envoy demands prompt end to bombings of interview. Michigan Dept. of Social Serv- Military Obligations: Students ices: sociology, psychology, should interview with employers social work majors (B,M). All even though they have not com- majors, all colleges (B) for social casework positions. on a press article which was not contrary to the Geneva agree- pleted their military service. Modine Manufacturing Co.: PARIS l i -- Mai Van Bo, the United States and South Viet- necessarily the position of his ments." Most employers will be inter- accounting ma jorfe, and mechan- head of the North Vietnamese nam had refused to sign the 1954 government. The envoy took a line from ested in the student before and ical engineering (b). mission in Paris,today demanded agreements. " H o w e v e r , " he added, " t h e French President Charles de after his duty with the Armed Monarch Life Insurance: all a definite, prompt and uncon- The envoy was asked if Ha- North Vietnamese position is that Gaulle and described the Amer- Forces. majors, all colleges (B). ditional, halt to the American noi' s four points were now sim- the United States must recognize ican intervention in Vietnam as bombing of North Vietnam. ply a " b a s i s for negotiation" the National Liberation Front- an " u n j u s t , detestable w a r . " Wednesday, Jan. 11 Pennsalt Chemicals Corp.: Bo declared the United States instead of precondition, as re- Viet Cong-as the sole authentic American Enka Corp.: Chem- chemical and civil engineering He said that if the United has no right to require any reci- ported from Hanoi by the New representative of the people in ical engineering, electrical, me- majors (B,M). procal move from Hanoi. York Times. the south and should negotiate States did cease botnbing North chanical engineering and chem- Charles Pfizer and Co.: all Vietnam definitely and without Addressing a luncheon meet- Bo said he could not comment with i t . " istry majors (B,M). majors of the College of Agri- conditions, only then would the culture (B). ing of the French Diplomatic Bo took a cold attitude toward Aurora (East) public Schools: Rohm and Haas Co.: chemical Press Association, he called the recent peace initiatives by the situation be favorable to a search early and later elementary ed- United States the aggressor in U.S. ambassador to the United for a settlement. ucation majors "(B), and coun- and mechanical engineering and Vietnam and said the Ameri- 14-year-old dies Nations, Arthur J , Goldberg; by seling and guidance majors (M). chemistry majors (B,M). In this connection he was asked cans muist withdraw. British' F o r e i g n Secretary if such a halt would in fact be Avco: agricultural a n d me- Union Carbide Corp.: civil, Asked what the Hanoi author- in bike accident George Brown, and by U.N. an opening toward peace and chanical engineering majors electrical, chemical, mechanical engineering, metallurgy, me- Engaged ities might do if the Americans A 14-year-old bicyclist was Secretary-General U. Thant. Re- would evoke reciprocal action (B.M). ' ferring to Thant's latest pro- from the north. It was in this chanics and materials science G e o r g e S c o t t R o m n e y , 25, i s e n g a g e d to R o n n a did halt the bombing definitely struck and killed Wednesday night Caro State Hospital: account- posal, Bo said: " W e reject all context that he said the United and chemistry majors (B,M). E i l e e n S t e r n , 23, o f B l o o m f i e l d V i l l a g e . H e r p a r e n t s and without conditions, he said by a car driven by an MSU ing and financial administration, Wednesday-Thursday, Jan. 11-12 this would be examined by the student. , intervention by the United Nations States has no right to ask for hotel, restaurant and institu- made the announcement s h o r t l y after the G o v e r n o r s in Vietnamese affairs as being any counterpart whatsoever, Hanoi government. He passed John Francis Leshock, 1018 tional management, foods and i nauguration. UPI Telephoto W. R. Grace and Co: All up a question whether such a Lantern Hill Dr., died in the nutrition, labor and industrial M.B.A.'s for accounting, finan- halt would lead to negotiations. emergency room of Sparrow Hos- relations and political science The majors (B,M). cial analysis, internal auditing \--ked about Hanoi's attitude pital of complications arising THIS AND Chemical Abstracts Service: chemistry and biochemistrv ma- and materials research. Pack- aging tenology majors (B,M), all majors of the College of it's what's happening if Washington proposed talks with Hanoi after a cessation- of the bo in b in'g, Bo replied: from a skull fracture. The accident took place near the Intersection of Burcham EVERY FRIDAY Jumbo jors (B,M,D), physics and math- A n n o u n c e m e n t s m u s t be received before I 1 a.m. Business (B,M). " I believe that such a proposal Drive and Lantern Hill Drive at ematics majors (B). Hotel Corp. of America: hotel, the day b e f o r e p u b l i c a t i o n . would be examined and studied 8:40 p.m. The Copper-Bessemer Co.: restaurant and institutional man- by the Hanoi authorities, too." Leshock had been traveling finance and accounting and Eco- agement majors (B,M). The International Club will 8 tonight in 35 Union. Nativemu- He repeatedly accused the east on Burcham Drive when his nomics majors (B,M). Davison Community Schools: early and later elementary ed- sponsor a mixer at 8 p.m. Satur- Packaging Corp. of America: day in the Union Ballroom. Gene social science, business, arts Healey, WILS disc jockey, will sic wii'l be played * * *at coffee time. The India Club will show the United States of violating the 1954 Geneva agreements 011 In- dochina and insisted that the bicycle was struck from the rear by a car driven by Daniel Dale Dean, Coldwater graduate stu- T6JE ucation majors (B), English, and letters, agriculture and com- be the host. The mixer is open movie "Dhool Ka Phool" at 7:30 Hanoi government's four points dent. The boy was thrown onto mathematics and biology majors, munication arts majors (B), all to the public. No charge for ad- tonight in Anthony Hall Auditori- remain the basis fur the North the hood of the car and carried also' special education majors majors of the College of Bus- mission. um. Tickets are $1 for members Vietnamese approach to the prob- for a short distance. 4:30 to 7:30 pm for mentally retarded, speéch iness, and packaging technology, and $1.25 for #nonmembers. lem. Dgan told East Lansing police correction and emotionally dis- * * • * • fen tu ring chemical engineering, chemistry '["he Humanities Dept. Record He did not acknowledge that that he didn't see the bicyclist. turbed majors (B). and accounting majors (M). Program will be at 7 tonight in An Arabic Language Study will ing, Fairmont Foods Co.: account- financial administration, 114 Bessey Hall. Music by Bach, Park Motor Iftn: accounting, Mozart, Brahms and Beethoven he sponsored by the Arab Club this term. The class will meet Volkswagen Service "Me and Dem Guys" marketing and transportation ad- financial administration, hotel, will he featured. one night each week, atjthe con- SIX NIGHTS 4 WEEK ministration, dairy manufactur- restaurant and institutional man- venience of the majority of ing a n d food science majors (B.M). agement and foods and nutrition # # + The first meeting of the Ever- its members. The class is free. and Repair Flint Community Schools: majors (B). green Wives is at 8 p.m. Monday Interested persons- may sign up in Don't Forget in thé F aculiy Lounge of the Na- the U.N. Lounge in the Union early and later elementary Wednesday-Friday, Jan. 11-13. tural Resources Building or call Suliman Sindi, A l l m a j o r and m i n o r w o r k undertaken For The Finest In Bldg. Mrs. education, remedial reading, 351-6616. Food It's Sky Chefs, Inc.: hotel, res- Stephanie Winkler will lead a dis- Ample parts supply CORAL special education Type A, speech UNIVERSITY FOREIGN CAR correction, physical therapy ma- taurant and institutional manage- cussion on textiles and clothing. the BARNES FIORAI - " V ment majors (B,M). • * * jors (B), mathematics, science, 11 for no Room industrial arts, special education The Michigan State Film GABLES Type A and vocal music, sec- summer employment Society will present its first Rathskeller Fo - F lowfs ondary school(B). interviews program at 7 and 9 p.m. Monday The Goss Co.: mechanical and electrical engineering majors Wednesday, Jan. 11. in the Union Ballroom. The first film will be Charlie Chaplin's ì r-fesh and F a i l i onoble 3 0 2 9 E . K a l a m a z o o at C l i p p e r t 482-5832 489-8211 And the Show Bar "Modern T i m e s " . Admission is 215 ANN ED 2 0871 Open 7:30 t i l l 9:30 weekdays (B). Avco-New Idea Farm Equip- 50 cents. P. R. Mallory andCo: account- # * * ing, financial administration, ment Division: juniors and above economics, management, labor in agricultural and mechanical The Filipino Club will meet at and industrial relations, soci- engineering. Location: Cold- ology, mechanical, chemical and water, Ohio. tNTE(OHE*6, INTERVIEWS electrical engineering, chemis- • Camp Oakland, Inc.: men and NOW, G R E G . L T try and metallurgy, mechanics women as camp counselors. Lo- Writing course yOU SÖONDED INTERVIEWS! but C A N T BE T H A T B A D . SO y o u ' R E i v u y BE ye>U*RE R l & H T VIVIAN. I J u S T H A V E N ' T s o DEPRESSED! NOBOD/ UNDERSTANDS, Au_ I and materials science majors cation: Oxford, Mich. I CAME AS SOON H E A R 15 ' S A L A R y . SECuRrry G E T T I N G OUT OP FOuN D T H E CO MPANy (B,M,D). Caro State Hospital: juniors offered for grads AS i c o u l d OOPPOKTUNtry. COOJEGE, T H A T ' S T O WORRY AOOUTS y t T I ' V E G O T TO HANG IN THERE. WHy P A N I C ? Maple House Restaurant: hotel, and above in accounting, finan- IT"} \ DON'T T H E / KNOW you'RE GoiNG TO AFTER-AU.. I'M restaurant and institutional man- cial administration, hotel, res- \n advanced writing course for MAKE I T G ^ I SMART A N D r o agement majors (B). taurant and institutional manage- doctoral candidates will be of- Jd if\ > RELffTCf GOOD LOOKING Mason Public Schools: early ment, foods and nutrition, labor fered winter term by the School cNJ I\E.GCRR-TT> F I N D ...you THINK SOMETHING- r o 'M G r o o D education majors (B), music, and industrial relations and po- for Advanced Graduate Studies. physical education, industrial litical science majors. Location: The course consists of six ses- IDENTIFY WfTH. LOOKING-, Caro, Mich. sions, which will be held 7-9 00NT p.m. Thursdays, and individual you conferences. Hub caps stolen VIV? Who's The course will begin Jan. 12 and will be directed by Herman Four hub caps, valued at $60, R. Struck, associate professùr of Whose were taken from a car parked English. Applications are avail- on West Brody Road Thursday able at 201 Morrill Hall and must morning. be returned by Jan. 10. Further Pinnings: The owner of the car is Ed- information may be obtained by- Janice Putz, Trenton Sopho- ward Grant of 425 Bryan Hall. calling 355-9656 or 355-1790. OF COURSE,SiL.Ly! Q.UIT GUESSING so LARRy RELATED) more at Western Michigan to i ABOUT VCHJRSEL*VTURN O N THE O L D s o T H E r o w N S A G-A5SBR! Ronald Raade, Trenton Sopho- LARRV AND CLEVELAND WMA I" D e e s MB t o PRoM C H A R M r r WORKED FOR ÛT E T ALONG FINE» S TO 5 ? CHANGE UC=WT more, Theta Delta Chi. M y BROTHER LARRy, BVG- C u y SCENE ! B U L B S A N D DESt&N _ Germaitie M. J a r v i s , Dearborn HE MADE rr 0 l € r EVERYTHING FROM WVTH THAT E L Ê C T R I C —»<111 •^rr > WALL P L U G S ? Sophomore to J a m e s T. Schultz, BACH T O B E R M A N U N l i t v IN ^ ^ ^ A I N U . N Y ! H GOOD LARRY I DONT KlD Detroit Junior, Pi Kappa Phi. GOSH ALMIGHTY VIV, y o u WANT" uoves • n M E VIVIAN. uviNG- Engagements. TO PUT ME O U T IN „ T O PASTURE OËV&AMD Cathy IJaane, Manistee Junior A T T H E RIPE AGE to Dennis Dust, Manistee Junior, Beta Theta Pit, General Motors what O F 4 ? 2 : I WANT T O DO THINGS, Institute. CONTRIBUTE1- Catherine Francis, Orchard W A N T . . . I VJAWT T O Lake Sophomore to Michael Cal- wAKjT TO RELATE! caterra, Grosse Pointe Sopho- more. Mary McPherson, Lowell Jun- ior to Christopher Gaffield, Ply- mouth Senior. Rebecca Trager, Traverse City Senior to Robert Carstens, Gross Pointe, Graduate student, U. of M. G R E & . y o u R E FAST APPROACH iNG- I'LL A D M f T I N E V E R T H O U G H T -TH& i D t O T XOWfc. L A R R y OF WORKING, FOR A N E L B C T R C Wanted CONTRIBUTES, HE WORKS UTiLiTy VIVIAN, M A y e E I w n v i MICROWAVES, r r ' s SHOULD WRITE TO STAFF NEEDS ride "from Sunset "TODAX..RI , 7-1/13 m o l d