STAT c Inside today . . . Tuesday Snow... . . . windy and c o l d e r . High MICHIGAN Step drive p.4 t o d a y , 21. L o w t o n i g h t In t h e B e n i n g t o n s h u n s t r i c k e r y p.5 low t e e n s . M o r e s n o w e x p e c t e d STATE US A d a n g e r to p e a c e ? p . 7 for Wednesday. UFO report p.8 . UNIVERSITY V o l . 59 N u m b e r 106 II East Lansing, Michigan J a n u a r y 17, 1967 10c Four experts launch explained, "but rather in t e r m s of what "A new ethos can be developed only Symposium taking a strong moral position. He recalled Lewis Feuer, professor of sociology The University College Symposium at the University of Toronto, and Paül commenced Monday night with speeches by we can do about i t . " by interaction between the younger and Goodman, author of "GrowingUpAbsurd" the older generations," he explained. the furor caused by conservative Barry four noted experts and professors. and ' T h e Empire City" were scheduled L e r n e r described his optimistic out- " T h e r e needs to be a c r o s s - f e r t i l i z a - Goldwater's remark that "extremism in look as one of "possibilism and cited defense of liberty is no vice." He noted to speak at 9:30 p.m. The United States has probaly the most tlon to gain that needed ethos." revolutionary society in the world today, legislative changes in voting rights, the that strong moral stands from either end Max L e r n e r told an estimated 4,500 faculty civil rights movement and the war on Edgar Z. Friedenberg professor of s o - of the political continuum meet hostility and students. poverty as part of the tradition of Amer- ciology at the University of California in a time when, apparently, "extremism ican "possibilism." It is within the • a v i s , crows at Conrad Auditorium that in pursuit of opportunity is no vice." L e r n e r , a Brandeis University pro- realm of what can be done. the so-called " r a d i c a l " student activists Friedenberg added that Goldwater's f e s s o r said the revolution is of a social L e r n e r pqinted out, however, that "we a r e closer in style to conservatism than " l i b e r t y " differed from that of the new nature. He added that it is up to the have not had inner changes in our value to radicalism. student left, but emphasized the parallels nation's universities and colleges to train systems to keep pace with the rapid In the approaches of the two, and that the Friedenberg said the student activists' people to ride atop it--not to become caught outer changes. j current political structure permits neither p r i m e concern is for the defense of civil in it. to voice " m o r a l clarity." " T h e r e hasn't been a change In the liberties. In this respect, he said, they Lerner, a professor of world politics resemble conservatives and look to the He concluded that the New Left, while and political science, said part of the way we look at our fellow man and in courts, the more traditional branch of it shares the "root values" of conserva- problem of an individual's "inner world" some cases ourselves," he said. government, for support. tism, Is unlikely to look to U.S. conser- i s to master things in the "outer world" Lerner said the present conflict of Friedenberg said that most of the vatism for support. that a r e disliked. generations must be resolved in hopes hostility and fear created by the student Nor, he said, would it be likely to find "I don't ask what is going to happen of finding a new "ethos", which, he ad- Friedenberg Feuer activists is caused by their very act of support there. MAX L E R N E R to us as if it is inevitable,"' Lerner ded, is badly needed. MANCHESTER CLEARED Today's Symposium topics Mrs. Kennedy drops lawsuit T h e f o l l o w i n g e v e n t s of t h e U n i v e r s i t y C o l l e g e s y m p o s i u m a r e scheduled for today! ( R o b e r t C o l e s of H a r v a r d will not a p p e a r due to i l l n e s s . ) I n f o r m a l m e e t i n g s with s t u d e n t s at 3 - 5 : 3 0 p . m . ! P a u l G o o d m a n , R o o m I, W i l s o n H a l l , 4 s 3 0 - 5 ! 3 0 ; Max L e r n e r , E a s t M e e t i n g R o o m , Akers, 4-5; Lewis Feuer, Brody Auditorium, 3-5. 7:30 p . m . W i l s o n A u d i t o r i u m : L e w i s F e u e r , " T h e Hope and T r a g e - NEW YORK JP - - Mrs. John F.Kennedy publishers, and William Manchester have questions in dispute could not have been 3. Each book will contain a publisher's dy of t h e S t u d e n t M o v e m e n t s . " R e s p o n d e n t : P a u l G o o d m a n . Monday ended her lawsuit a gainst William resolved the differences which led to legal settled e a r l i e r . " note which says: 7:30 p . m . C o n r a d A u d i t o r i u m : R o b e r t L . G r e e n , a s s o c i a t e p r o f e s - Manchester and the publishers of his book, action. Certain personal passages of con- Ah informant said some of the points in " H a r p e r & Row wishes to make it clear cern to Mrs. Kennedy have been deleted s o r of e d u c a t i o n , " S t u d e n t I n v o l v e m e n t in C i v i l R i g h t s . " R e s p o n - " T h e Death of a President,;" in a legally the agreement were: that neither Mrs. Kennedy nor Sen. Robert or modified by mutual agreement of all 1. Letters to Mrs. Kennedy and her F. Kennedy has in any way approved or d e n t s : J a m e s M c K e e , p r o f e s s o r of s o c i o l o g y , a n d Allen L a c y , a s - approved agreement. the parties. children, Caroline and John, from endorsed the material appearing in this s i s t a n t p r o f e s s o r of h u m a n i t i e s . State Supreme Court Justice Saul S. Streit signed a consent decree, clearing the President Johnson will not be published book. The author, William Manchester, and 9:30 p . m . S t u d e n t d i s c u s s i o n s : G o o d m a n , B u t t e r f i e l d H a l l ; F e u e r , way for publication of the book next April. " T h e r e f o r e Mrs. Kennedy has termin- without his consent. the publishers assume complete and sole North C a s e Lounge; Green, East Holmes Lounge. Representatives of all the parties to the ated her lawsuit. All parties agreed that the "We don't object to the contents of the responsibility." dispute issued a Joint statement which historical record has not been censored in l e t t e r s , " the source said. "In fact, they The agreement includes the publishing of read: any way." a r e friendly and kindly. But we insist a hard cover edition under the Harper Si Friend of Baker testifies " M r s . John F. Kennedy, Harper & Row The statement expressed regret "the that the President should approve them Row imprint and, no sooner than one year before publication." later, the publication of a soft cover 2. The tape recordings of Manchester's edition. Deletions in other JFK books interviews with Mrs, Kennedy, totalling to bugging' L.A. talks 10 hours, will be deposited under seal A source close to the erstwhile con- tv, the Johr« F. Kennedy Memorial Li - troversy said he had heard the estimated b r a r y . The tapes have been in Man- royalties to Manchester might ..amount to c h e s t e r ' s possession. more than $2 million from sale of the book. NEW YORK (AP) — P r o f . J o h n K e n n e t h G a l b r a i t h of H a r v a r d Baker, Clifford Jones, former lieutenant WASHINGTON (JR - The listening de- d i s c l o s e d M o n d a y t h a t M r s . J o h n F . K e n n e d y got c h a n g e s m a d e in vice concealed at a man's beltline, a governor of Nevada, and himself. 1 wo b o o k s a b o u t h e r h u s b a n d l a s t y e a r in a d d i t i o n to W i l l i a m M a n - microphone on his T - s h i r t , loomed in The jury was excused from the court- c h e s t e r ' s " T h e Death of a P r e s i d e n t . " the background at the Bobby Baker trial room while Bromley gavi luni testimony e?v o r i i e l e in the m a g a z i n e S a t u r d a y R e v i e w , G a l b r a i t h - - w h o Monday, about the bugging. U.S. District Judge Oliver Gasch took L a t e r , with the jury back, he told of w a s K e n n e d y ' s a m b a s s a d o r to | n d i a - - i d e n t i f i e d t h e b o o k s w e r e " W i t n under study a motion to dismiss the receiving checks made payable to him, K e n n e d y , " by P i e r r e S a l i n g e r , a n d " T h e P l e a s u r e of His C o m p a n y , " of cashing them and turning the money by P a u l B. F a y , J r . charges against Baker because of eaves- dropping incite c a s t , and the trial con- over to Baker. His testimony included G a l b r a i t h s a i d h e r e a d b o t h m a n u s c r i p t s f o r M r s . K e n n e d y and h e r accounts of: tinued. b r o t h e r - i n - l a w , S e n . R o b e r t F . K e n n e d y , D - N . Y . and t h a t at h e r Baker, 38, one-time secretary to the ' - P a y m e n t of a $5,000 fee to be split b e h e s t , d e l e t i o n s w e r e m a d e in e a c h book p r i o r to p u b l i c a t i o n . Senate Democrats, is charged with in- between Baker and Bromley for expe- come tax evasion in 1961-62, conspiracy diting the charter for the Redwood Nation- and other ofienses involving financial al Bank, San Rafael, Calif. dealings. -Checks totaling $14,000 from first Wayne L . Bromley, a Washington a t - Western Financial Corp., Las Vegas, Decrease in buying torney who said he is now unemployed in 1963-64, made payable to Bromley. and once was a close friend of Baker, -Checks totaling $6,000 from United testified that he carried the "bugging" States Freight, New York, also made device ,pn his person at a meeting in payable to Bromley but cashed for Baker, may hurt economy a Los Angeles hotel room, March 26, -A series of $1,000 checks from Har- 1965. He said those in the room included vey Aluminum, Torrance, Calif, Michigan's economy will be hurt in the lowest in a number of y e a r s , and Classes will be offered 1907 by the consumers* refusals to p u r - such plans are not likely to be improved chase durable goods at a time of eco- by removal of the investment tax credit. nomic uncertainty, Leo (J. Lrickson, di- One area of optimism, Erickson noted, next term in fraternities rector of MSU'~ Bureau of Business is in state tax reform. and bcohom'ic K. search forecasts. Erickson a s s e r t s that the consumers' " T h i s y e a r , " he said, " t h e r e seems to lack of confidence in the Johnson ad- be a greater willingness on the part of ministration i1- creating a hesitancy to f r a t e r n i t i e s will participate in a mod- form a separate cluster college for all concerned to tackle the problem of purchase. " T h e consumer knows he ha i taken increased state expenditures through tax reform than through tax increases. Hope- Another Chicago fire ified version of the living-learningconcept this spring when class sections a r e held G r e e k s , " wrote Morrow in his recom- mendation to I'rovosl Howard H. Neville. in two Greek living a r e a s . "It is rather to pull them closer to home more dollar1- but can buy'less with fully, we should end up with a more equit- n e a r l y M o n d a y m o r n i n g fi.re n e a r l y d e s t r o y e d C h i c a g o ' s $35 the University that they are a part o f , " them, so he think- he's not much better able tax structure with a considerable i l l'ion e x h i b i t i o n c e n t e r , M c C o r m ' c k P l a c e . T o t a l d a m a g e to t h e "Beginning next term on a trial basis, Morrow continued. "Holding u cla -s in a of!," Erickson explained. portion of our state revenues coming h a t a n d e x h i b i t s f r o m a h o u s e w a r e s s h o w w a s e s t i m a t e d a s high a s the two classes will be numerically small Ericksoft's economic outlook and r e - from taxes on income." S 100 m Ml- i l l i o n_ . IIFII UPI T_lTelephoto and informal. The two sections offered, ( p l e a s e t u r n to t h e b a c k p a g e ) view of the past year ,will appear in which will be 200 level or above, will the January i ^ m of the Michigan State Runaway fire ravages be open to all undergraduate students. 8,000 vote leaflets Economic Board Record, a publication of MSU's Bureau of Business arid Eco- It is hoped to offer Education 415, nomic Research. He is specifically con- student leadership training, and a Hu- to be distributed cerned with the sale of autos, applian- manities or a speech course. IFC is now ces and furniture and their effect on working through the Provost's office in Chicago convention hall Michigan's economy. setting up instructors and times. He contends tliat the consumer is un- Fraternity houses in which the classes About 8,000 leaflets will be distribu- certain of the impact .of the proposed will be held have not been selected yet. ted to students before Thursday to ex- safety standards on automobiles in 1968. Larry Owen, IFC. (Inter-fraternity plain the four proposed amendments to "He may reason that the auto prices Council) president, called the basic aim the ASMSU constitution. The amendments are too high now ( which incorrect) loss, said Edward J. Lee, general manager of the project a method to provide closer, will be voted on in an all-University r e f e r - F i r e Commissioner Robert J . Qulnn and that they will be significantly safer F r o m Our Wire S e r v i c e s of McCormick Place. contact with the faculty in an informal endum Thursday. made the loss estimate. next year (which is probably equally in- Lee said Insurance would cover the loss. situation. The first and second amendments would CHICAGO — A spectacular fire Monday "If we had all the water in Lake Michi- correct) and plans right now to get an- The roof of the huge structure collapsed "Hopefully there will be no time ele- change the ASMSU Student Board appointed destroyed a major portion of McCormick gan it wouldn't have mattered a bit," other year out of the old bus," Lrick- shortly after firemen arrived, carrying ment involving a mad rush to get in and female seat to an elected female position. Place, a three-block lakeshore exhibition Quinn said after touring the ruins. "1 son explained. couldn't believe what I saw when I got with it a 200-foot section of the west wall, get out of the c l a s s , " Owen commented. The second amendment would change hall visited annually by thousands of con- " T h e class will be over when the students the male appointed member at large to The home appliance and furniture in- there." while another 75-foot section collapsed and ventioneers. The loss was estimated at a r e through talking." an elected sophomore position, either dustries, two other important Michigan He said the hall, which opened in No- left a gaping hole further along the wall. $20-$150 million. J he notion of physically extending aca- male or female. To be eligible for this durables, will be adversely affected by vember 1960, was at least 50 per cent Destroyed were about 1,200 exhibition The body of a watchman was found in demic facilities to the Greek system Seat the student • must have under 50 consumer attitudes, and by the dismal destroyed. booths, some valued as high as $100,000, the rubble. originated five or six years ago, but the credits the term he runs for office. state of residential construction, Erick- Qulnn said the cause of the f i r e had not constructed for the national housewares He was tentatively identified as Ken- exhibit, scheduled to open Monday to an idea was not carried out due to faculty The student board then would be com- son said. been established. neth S. Goodman an employe of a guard expected 60,000 wholesale dealers. uninterest, explained Edward Reuling, IFC posed of six elected representatives, in- One of the most crucial areas for An official of the Chicago Convention service who did not return home from Officials said the fire started at the adviser. stead of four, if these two amendments Michigan and the nation ahead will be Center said Chicago will lose some $100 McCormick Place after his tour of duty. r e a r of a booth set up in the west sec- a r e ratified. the negotiation of new wage contracts with million in convention business this year 11 C began re-studying the possibilities a limited labor reservoir and with in- Flames destroyed part of the $35 million tion of the main exhibition hall. The third amendment would give the because of the fire. of classes in fraternities last spring, led creases in the cost of living, Erickson 10-acre building and a large part of $100. A security guard, Vincent Mathews, 51, comptroller and secretary of student loard by Owen and Dave Morrow, chairman of predicted. million of exhibits set up for a housewares said he spotted the blaze as he crossed a ex-officio positions. Exhibitors met today to change plans for lFC's Academic Affairs Committee. The show. catwalk near the main entrance on a regu- The fourth amendment would remove " T h e unions will be going after money some of the biggest trade shows and public provost's office approved Dec. 5 the in a form that will insulate them from Every available fir.eman and most of the lar f i r e check. the State News editor-in-chief from his exhibitions In the country. proposal to hold two classes sections in cyclical declines in industry." city's f i r e equipment fought the blaze Mathews sounded the alarm, then ran ex-officio position on the Student Board. in 15-degree weather which froze water The main exhibition hall, an area as two fraternities spring t e r m . Erickson added that business plana for through the west end of the building, shout- It has been over a year since the editor large as six football fields covering the investment in new capital facilities are mains and fire hydrants, rendering many ing warnings . " The purpose of this proposal is not to has sat at a board meeting. upper level of the structure, was a total useless. STATI NEWS * fr •• •' •*> ' « ... K y f e CT. fnanagfftf editor edltor-ln-chlef James Spaniolo, campus editor Thomas Segal, editorial editor Lawrence Werner, sports editor Andrew Mollisorç, executive reporter Joel Stark William G. Papclak, a s s t . ad manager advertising manager ruesday Morning, January 17, 1967 EDITORIALS SDS anti-draft union will be futile foul-up The Students for a D e m o - e x c i t i n g , but l e g a l l y s p e - c r a t i c S o c i e t y have d e c i d e d c i o u s . Laws depend upon the to try a new a n t i - w a r t a c t i c , c o n s e n t of the g o v e r n e d , and a nationwide network of words on a p i e c e of p a r c h - unions for d r a f t - r e s i s t e r s . ment will not change the fact T a c t i c s would include such that the v a s t m a j o r i t y of the a c t i v i t i e s as disrupting draft A m e r i c a n people want r e - d e f e r r a l e x a m s , fouling up f o r m , not abolition, of the the p r o c e s s i n g of d r a f t e e s , Selective Service System. Salary cut unfortunate and h a r a s s i n g m i l i t a r y r e - cruiters. Morality. It i s c r i m i n a l to waste t i m e and e n e r g y T o m o r r o w night the MSU on unworkable plans when as ASMSU backs lecture chapter of SDS will publically d i s c u s s i t s plans f o r f o r m i n g people are dying daily in the wrong war in the wrong ASMSU wins the political should by now be an e s t a b - such a union h e r e . T a c t i - place. lished and accepted fact i n - c a l l y , this approach will be Men. Women. Children. t e a r - j e r k i n g award of the stead of a political football. i n e f f e c t u a l ; l e g a l l y , it will be A r e . Dying. year. The board m e m b e r s c l a i m unjustified; m o r a l l y , it i s a The draft i s i n c i d e n t a l . At their regular weekly they were backed against a cop-out. meeting l a s t Tuesday, Stu- dent Board m e m b e r s voted financial wall in this c a s e . T a c t i c s . The aim of a b o l - — The E d i t o r s unanimously to take away They either had to cut funds ishing Selective Service $1,500 from their own s a l - for a number of worthwhile would depend on b r o a d - b a s e d support, y e t few will join RICHARD PHILLIPS a r i e s in order to finance the ASMSU p r o j e c t s , or trim their own s a l a r i e s . such a f a r - o u t o r g a n i z a t i o n . Humanity in heart of Dixie Winds of Change S e m i n a r . B e c a u s e of demands not ASMSU should be c o m - The Peace movement provided for in the ASMSU mended for saving the two would s p l i t . Public d i s c u s - budget, the two p r o g r a m s w e r e in danger of folding j l"e c t u r e s e r i e s . But by next year there i s no r e a s o n that sion would turn f r o m c o n - s i d e r a t i o n of war and p e a c e M E D I T O R ' S N O T E : T h i s Is t h e Alabamians are friendly. They talk easily and honestly. though the head barber knew where I could get some local brew. to c o n s i d e r a t i o n of the p r o s f i r s t of a f o u r - p a r t s e r i e s b y If my skin was brown, I probably would this y e a r due to lack of f i - their s a l a r i e s can't be r e - I played pool later on. The cost was a R i c h a r d P h i l l i p s b a s e d on h i s have been treated differently. But I went straight 10 cents a game. The local crowd nancial support. instated and the l e c t u r e s and c o n s of i n t e r f e r i n g with C h r i s t m a s hunting t r i p to A l a - to Alabama to camp-out and do some deer didn't bother my brother or myself. They It is unfortunate that the provided for also. It i s the draft, a situation the bama. hunting, not to march or picket. only asked a few polite questions and then hawks would r e l i s h . Fellow northerners, you have been de- Just for the hell of it, how much would minded their own business. only method to obtain the m e r e l y a matter of financial ceived. People are pretty much the same we like to see a surge of migrating Grocery store clerks, hardware clerks, needed funds for the s e r i e s , foresight. Law. The a r g u m e n t that in America after all. Alabama, that hideous Alabajnians picketing the city halls of gas station attendants . . . they were all the draft i n v o l v e s " i n v o l u n - state pictured as a forbidden planet, a c - Kalamazoo or Detroit . . . calling for us friendly. I think they were even friendlier was by s a c r i f i c i n g c o m p e n - tually is populated with people . . . human- to forget our heathen ways and accept than people from Michigan. sation. The ASMSU s a l a r i e s - - T h e Editors tary s e r v i t u d e " i s v e r b a l l y type people. their culture? Most of the Alabamians I met probably Most of them have two arms and two In any event, I found Alabamians to be never graduated from high school. legs. They have heads, too, just like ours. rather hospitable. In Columbiana, I got a Alabama admits this problem. But I e x - THE NATION'S PRESS Sometimes they don't use their brains, but that's fairly typical of all mankind. haircut for $1.25. This llSo' marked the first time I've had my hair trimed by a pected to find the "cracker" element here, and I didn't. Oftentimes, these people went Why a Soviet anti-missile system? As a camper in Alabama recently, I woman barber. Ye gads, she was efficient. out of their way to help me. In Michigan, discovered a plenitude of interesting But she didn't seem to mind trimming you take care of yourself, because no one items. I found that Alabama is actually hair for a Northerner. will help you.« a beautiful state, much like Michigan. Of course, the "problem" was avoided. Alabamians talked to me as if I were Their winter is so close to our Indian Hanging on the wall was a blunted, canoe an old friend. Sure, they take time saying E D I T O R ' S N O T E : In h i s S t a t e Soviet Union several years hence, and Leonid Brezhnev showed himself to be Summer that I resented coming back to the paddle with some affectionate inscrip- things, and drawl out a sentence in the of t h e U n i o n m e s s a g e P r e s i d e n t even if the estimates for 1968 prove a c - much in favor of this, while P r e m i e r crummy slush of MSU. tions: "Shop's Nigger Clippers." So I time that we could say a paragraph. But curate, the U«b. will continue to have a Alexei Kosygin lavished great p r a i s e on Oddly enough, people are friendly in talked about Alabama's football team in- then, the abrupt dismissals of Michigan J o h n s o n i m p l i e d t h a t t h e U.S. substantial superiority'' without taking any the country's steel industry - in a manner Alabama. Except for my brother, I was stead. Afterwards, I Inquired about buying voice patterns are nonexistent too. w o u l d not b u i l d an a n t i - m i s s i l e actions beyond those already planned." calculated to suggest that it was quite system. This statement high- alone, and didn't know anyone. So I found beer. I was told in the usually offended Every state has bad cops, so it would But it is precisely this massive U.S. big enough. that southern hospitality is no myth. manner that Columbiana was "dry," seem idiotic to deny this fact in Alabama. lighted the growing national con- superiority that has caused the Russians But it seems the nasty picture painted by t r o v e r s y o v e r w h e t h e r t h e U.S, s h o u l d e q u i p i t s c i t i e s with an to st-ek an ABM defense, and has helped to defeat the "economic" faction in the Industry strained Huntley-Brinkly and others is also mis- leading. The policemen 1 met in Alabama anti-mis«ile s y s t e m as the So- Soviet leadership, which has fought to were as courteous as any I've ever limit the expenditure on defense in gen- Now, according to figures newly r e - v i e t s a r e now doing. leased' in Moscow, the Soviet investment found. They had several opportunities to e r a l , and on ABM in particular. ticket me for speeding. With obvious Mich- Why h a s t h e USSR c h o s e n to in the steel industry for this year is to McNamara has often argued that this igan license plates, I expected to hear b u i l d an a n t i - m i s s i l e s y s t e m ? be Increased by 21 percent, which is 4:1 ratio is not designed for aggressive blaring sirens several times. But they The following article, f r o m the considerably higher than in any other purposes, but is calculated to provide the never bothered me. New Republic, a n a l y z e s the So- branch of Industry, So the metal eaters strength necessary to assure the Rus- v i e t s ' d e c i s i o n . It w a s w r i t t e n have won on this point« Moreover, the So laskeda native Alabamian why e v e r y - sians that they could not get away with chairman of the planning board has a d - one was so friendly, when I expected open by V i c t o r Z o r z a , t h e S o v i e t a f - on attack on the U.S. His argument makes mitted to the Supreme Soviet that the hostility. His answer? f a i r s s p e c i a l i s t of t h e G u a r d i a n good strategic sense, but the Russians steel Industry's plan Is " s t r a i n e d , " Yet "When yer wantin fer trouble, y'all of L o n d o n , can hardly be blamed if they don't see it has been Kosygln's theme song, ever a find it," he said. it in quite the same innocent light as The victory of the " m i l i t a r y " faction since the fall of Khrushchev, that in- I guess that's true, even in progressive McNamara does. In the Soviet leadership, evident in the dustrial plans should not be " s t r a i n e d , " Michigan. massive increase in the defense budget for this y e a r , has coincided with signs Between the lines But on the question of steel, the i m - portance of which for defense production OUR READERS' MINDS of a real concern in the that the When the late President Kennedy, d u r - is being emphatically stressed by Soviet Russians might soon be able to deploy ing the Cuban missile c r i s i s of 1962, military spokesmen, Including the chief an anti-ballistic missile system (ABM). compelled P r e m i e r Khrushchev to climb of staff, Kosygin has been overruled.This The fear of this is real enough to have Bus almost hits students down by the threat of nuclear retalia- is one of the many signs which show the caused the UJS. to seek discussions on tion, he proved to the Soviet leaders ascendancy of the military faction in the an ABM moratorium with Russia. Yet that their military strength was not suf- leadership. the American understanding of the polit- ficient to enable them to stand up to the ical forces at work In the Kremlin Is Other signs show that the struggle U.S. Khrushchev's resistance to t h e p r e s - continues. But if the " e c o n o m i s t s " a r e students to board a bus In the middle of the so limited that this commendable p r o - sure from his colleagues for greater de- To the Editor: always stop in the middle of the street, posal has been made in a context which to stand any chance of winning, o r even so that's where we waited for one. drive, if we are going to have men driving fense allocations led to his removal in of delaying some of the decisions now Let me first say that I understand our buses that act like they really want to might well ensure its rejection. 1964, but, because the evidence of this In preparing the ground for the ap- pending on the new military programs, perfectly well the bus problem, and I All of the students planning on board- be in a boxing ring. Naturally, the middle struggle was hidden between the lines of so that the possibility of an ABM m o r a - am very sympathetic to the bus drivers ing the Spartan Village bus were crowded of the street Is easiest for the students to proach to Moscow, Secretary of Defense the Soviet p r e s s , it was not generally Robert McNamara has revealed that U.S. torium might be fully explored, they must who must cope with thousand's of people. near the curb, and as the bus came roaring gather. Who wants to be last In line and accepted in the West. find some powerful arguments with which 1 also believe that most all of the drivers in, horn ablast, it nearly hit 20 people. miss the bus? In order to get on, you have estimates of the Soviet missile buildup has been wrong. McNamara was speaking But the scarcity of resources which to convince their militantly-minded col- are kind and courteous men who are willing Then as the driver brought his bus to a to be right at the door when the bus stops, only of Russia's intercontinental ballistic caused Khrushchev to set his face against leagues. to help students as much as they can. stop, I watched him wave his arm and or you're out of luck. missile (ICBM) arsenal, which, on p r e s - high military spending soon made itself Only the U.S. can give them these argu- However, the Incident that happened to scream at the people to get back on the To the many bus drivers who are kind, ent evidence, will be g r e a t e r by the felt again, and the struggle within -the ments - not in the form of threats that me today was a bit beyond the acceptable curb. helpful and friendly, I give my heartiest middle of 1968 than was predicted by the Soviet leadership broke out with renewed it is determined to maintain its super- behavior for a grown man. I was waiting 1, too, was in his way, and jumped toward congratulations for a job well done, despite U«S» intelligence estimate a year ago. f o r c e . Once again the signs were much iority, but through assurances that it at Shaw, along with probably 200 kids, the group waiting for a Fee bus. The the unfortunate circumstances. To the guy the same a s in the earlier round, and would be prepared to accept a balance of for a Fee bus. After missing two of them driver of the Spartan Village bus promptly who nearly ran over me, and upon missing, once again they were largely ignored, a r m s , and not just the absence of ABMs. because they were full, I remained in the tried to hit me with his doubled-up fist, Substantial superiority pushed open his window, swung his arm for much the same reasons a s before. For a Western politician to accept the middle of the drive in a group of about 30 out the window at me, and shouted, "Get I say I'm glad my life isn't in your hands, In the meantime, the Russians had got view that his communist counterparts a r e people, waiting for another Fee bus. the hell outa the wayl Get back on the because I don't have to ride that bus. However, the same estimate predicted on with reequipping their conventional engaged in a political struggle much like curb where ya belongl" How could I? Our group left a gap along the curb almost exactly - to within five or 10 f o r c e s , grossly neglected by Khrushchev, his own requires a very real effort of There were a million people there already! Leonard Hook in case a Spartan Village or Case-Wilson missiles - the number of ICBM's Rus- and have now come to the brink of d e - imagination and of intellect. So long as Birmingham freshman bus came. It seems that the Fee buses Therefore, I believe it is dangerous for sia has today. And at present, the UJS. cision on an ABM. this understanding is missing from the THE PIZZA PIT has three or four times as many ICBM's One of the " s i g n a l s " by which the shaping of Western policies toward the 50% off as the Soviet Union, and is determined, course of political struggle in the Krem- communist countries, toward Russia as according to McNamara, to "maintain lin could be judged from time to time well a s China and Vietnam, a s it is its superiority." was the importance attached by the v a r - largely missing now, Western " i n i - The has today as many ICBM's E^ious Soviet leaders to increasing the out- tiatives" and proposals will be little a s these latest estimates predict for the put of steel.- Communist Party Chief better than groping In the dark. Hot HtXJ CMtT UAlK ACfWSSTÖUW! I'LL PROBABLY NEVER ^ on bargain table books! I»» A M I S MOUÏÎE 60lN6To\ | j( Y\ùUALK CLEAR ACR0& VOU'LL GET LOST! , SEE THEM A6AIN.. J Delivery: "T0U)N "TO TELL PEPPERMINT (WIY TOU'LL SET MU66EDÍ • Pizza • A6Ö(/TTM£"6REÄT j • Foot Longs • • Submarine» ® Spartan Bookstore e e e Corner of Ann & MAC 203 MAC ED2-0863 ; I Tuesday, January 17, 1967 3 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan INO new hepatitis Peking asks rebét cases reported to repent, correct mistakes No new cases of hepatitis have nel to be especially careful In * . . . . . . ing said the »Um Communist Pftmmilnlet I"party been admitted or diagnosed at personal hygiene. handful of reactionary port au- More than 100 students have The Hong Kong Evening Post, thorities" a r e still in power in has issued directives apparently OUn Health Center since Sunday, TOKYO .?) ~ Radio Peking designed to economically stran- reported Dr. James S. Feurlg, received gamma globulin serum Monday night called on " s t r a y e d quoting diplomatic sources In Shanghai, the big port where Peking, said Liu had left the bloody clashes between support- gle the opponents of Mao. Olln Health Center director late injections at Olin since Dec. 20 l e a d e r s " to repent and "Join the Monday afternoon. This leaves according to Feurlg, who says burning force of the great cul- Chinese capital with several e r s and opponents of Mao were Yugoslavia's Tanjug news the number of hepatitis cases hospital officials a r e doing their tural revolution." It admitted trusted friends and gone to Shih reported earlier this month. agency in a dispatch from Pek- In the campus hospital at five. best to contact roommates and there was " a handful" of forces chiachuang, a railway center 160 Railway, transportation, elec- ing said photographs appeared sultemates of infected students. opposed to Mao Tse-tung in Com- miles to the southwest. tricity and water supply systems on the city walls showing a num- However, Feurig notes, the Roommates and sultemates of munist party and military The paper described Shlhchi- were said to have been paralyzed ber of high leaders "with posters number of student inquiries con- Infected students a r e given the circles. achuang as a Liu stronghold for a time. of shame on their shoulders" cerning hepatitis has greatly in- "double G " Injection at no " 1 he Chinese Communist p a r - where he has widespread sup- 1 he Chinese-language broad- kneeling at rallies of Red Guards, c r e a s e d . Feurlg feels this in- charge. Other students must pay ty Central Committee calls on port from factory workers. The cast charged "the reactionary the teen-age spearhead of Mao's c r e a s e is good because it shows from $4-5 for the injection. leaders who made general m i s - paper added that he was "ready port authorities" unsuccessfully purge. student interest and concern In The reason for the high cost takes and those who made m a - for an all-out attack against Mao attempted to paraly/.e port ac- the situation. of the shot is due to the fact jor mistakes but are not anti- Tse-tung." tivities late in December. Among them were Peng Chen, Feurlg said he feels the number that the hospital supplements its Socialist to immediately correct Only .Sunday, Red Flag accused Peking's official New China former mayor of Peking and of cases of hepatitis on campus Is limited supply of the serum from their mistakes," said the broad- Liu of forming a private army, News. Agency in a dispatch from member of the Politburo; Lo "on the downswing," but advised the state with purchases from cast, quoting an editorial In the but said the 2.5 millionman Red Shanghai said pro-Mao revolu- Jui-chlng, former chief of the students and University person- wholesale drug houses. ideological journal Red Flag. Chinese army is loyal to Mao. tionary rebels took to the streets general staff; Lu Tlnh-yi, a f o r - The editorial was aimed at Radio Moscow, in a Japanese and hailed Mao. "The young reb- mer propaganda chief in the p a r - language broacast, asserted r e - els were not- afraid of hard- ty Central Committee; and Wu New Cabinet member followers of President Liu Shao- Negro becomes chi, the chief target of the purge, sistance to Mao's cultural rev- ship. suppression nor death," Leng, former director of the M r s . L y n d o n J o h n s o n w a v e s to a f r i e n d tn the a u - it apparently did not cover Liu olution was picking up force the agency added. official New China News Agency d i e n c e f o l l o w i n g t h e s w e a r i n g in of A l a n S. B o y d himself, since he has been de- among p e a s a n t s and workers A Japanese report from Pek- and People's Daily. ( l e f t ) a s t h e f i r s t S e c r e t a r y af T r a n s p o r t a t i o n . nounced as bourgeois - or anti- throughout the mainland. UPI T e l e p h o t o Socialist. Radio Peking admitted " a TONIGHT! Alabama sheriff MSU SKI CLUB MEETING TUSKEGEE, Ala. if) ~ An ex- paratrooper, Lucius D. Amerson, was sworn Monday as the f i r s t Negroes hold six other elective offices in this east-central Ala- bama county where they a r e in the majority. Charges fly in M ici-East M e m b e r s h i p Sign*up 7:30 p . m . Negro sheriff in Alabama since 100 E N G I N E E R I N G B L D G . reconstruction, and he appointed A small crowd of Negroes Syria to discuss frontier troubles side as reported by Thant. The Israel has not attended regular JERUSALEM ft ~ Israel and a white chief deputy. jammed the portico of the red that have brought the nations communique from the Foreign Israeli-Syrian armistice com- SKI MOVIE - WARREN MILLER'S Syria exchanged angry words "1 don't foresee any prob- brick courthouse as Amerson close to war. lie warned, how- Ministry charged that Israel mission meetings because of Monday following an appeal from •BE CONTINENTAL, SKI COLORADO*'! l e m s , " said Amerson, 33. and his chief deputy and two ever, that Israel had "the alone was responsible for ten- Syria's insistence that the first U.N. Secretary-General U Thant Coming Trip Plans " T h e only thing I'm interested Negro deputies walked up the to maintain the peace. strength and the will" to face up sion along the 50-mile frontier. order of official business be in is doing a good Job," A m e r - steps. A Negro standing on the to Syrian threats and "we have "The Syrian government," the the sovereignty of demilitarized Israel declared it cannot tol- son said standing on the front lawn said with a grin, "Man, reached a limit." communique added, "holds Israel zones along part of the border. erate any more "aggressive steps of the old Macon County that s u r e looks goodl" a c t s . " while Syria accused the A communique in Damascus responsible for any aggression Israel contends the demilitarized NATIONAL TEACHER EXAMINATIONS courthouse after taking the oath Amerson and his deputies went Israelis of "aggressive inten- said Syria received Thant's ap- and emphasizes the conspiracies zones are Israeli territory. of office. into the office of probate Judge tions." peal and cabled its delegation to that a r e being hatched against Earlier the military reported C h i c a g o P u b l i c S c h o o l s will u s « Amerson, a former postal Preston Hornsby, a former s h e r - inform Thant o'f Israel's aggres- the interests of the Arab people. Israeli Foreign Minister Abba a culvert and part of a road t h e s c o r e s a s p a r t of t h e i r clerk and infantry veteran, won iff. The judge refused to allow sive intentions, and its military "We reiterate our firm and Eban told the United Nations that damaged by mine explosions in the sheriff's office last year by newsmen in the office during the buildup which is being mounted steadfast stand, supported by the CERTIFICATE EXAMINATIONS for Israel would be willing to meet northern Israel about one and half defeating the white incumbent, swearing-in ceremony. to bring pressure on Syria. Arab people everywhere, to crush miles from the Syrian border. ELEMENTARY TEACHERS Eban admitted that Israel had any aggression from Israel." Three unexploded land mines Presenting an attitude of will- ALABAMA GOVERNOR built up a r m s along the border, later were discovered in a field a's reported by Thant in his ad- ingness to talk, Eban still warned Filing Deadline is Feb. 17, 1967 south of the Sea of Galilee. d r e s s Sunday. But he said Syria Syria that threats against Israel Mrs. Wallace promises began to escalate border clashes must halt. (NTF Registration) by using tanks and mortars in Eban told the chief of staff of Published by the «tui ts of Mi. (Direct s c o r e s to Chicago Board of violation of the armistice agree- the U.N. truce supervision o r - SUte .University every el , day thr.n ment forbidding heavy armament ganization, of his warning to the year snd s special Wei F xam ine rs) to renew rights struggle tn September. SubscHptloi in defensive zones. Syria and his willingness to meet. Authorised by the Board > Filing Deadline is NOON tlons. "When the existing weapons Eban declared that Syrian Member \s*m iate«l I'r at our disposal were not able to "shooting and bombing must first International. Inland DfjiU April 5, 1967 Associated Cdllteglat«' Pi- silence them, we decided to bring stop to make such a meeting (Chicago Application, Fx. 5) MONTGOMERY, Ala. If) - Mrs. you would send us, we will go. up tanks Into the a r e a , " lie added. possible." It would be the first Mrs. Wallace told a cheering Syria, on the other hand, men- meeting'between the two nations George C. Wallace became Ala- throng gathered at the foot of The inaugural ceremonies in eight y e a r s . Details in the Placement Office or tioned no a r m s buildup on its b a m a ' s first woman governor the Capitol steps that she ran were dedicated to the fighting Write for the packet to; Monday and quickly Joined her for governor to enable her hus- men in Vietnam, and in d e f e r - CHICAGO BOARD OF EXAMINERS husband, a likely candidate for band to "take our fight for states ence to their sacrifice, Mrs. Chicago "Public Schools • Room 624 president, in a renewed promise rights to the final court of ap- Wallace and her husband can- 228 N. LaSolle Street to continue the struggle for peal - the people of the United celed the traditional inaugural Chicago, Illinois 60601 "freedom." States."- ball. Her words and those of the An estimated 100,000 visitors, outgoing governor In their p r e - joined residents of Montgomery Romney speaks pared remarks left little doubt that Wallace expects to run for along the route of the Inaugural parade and cheered the new gov- president again in 1968 as he ernor as she rode in an open on civil rights did three years ago. The new governor, a blonde car. M r s . Wallace told her listen- LANSING, Mich.l/P)—Michigan 40-year-old mother of four chil- e r s that her election last No- Gov. George W. Romney Monday dren who has accompanied her vember i.-- proof that the deter- combined a promise to crack husband on many of his polit- mination of a free people to gov- down hard on future racial vio- ical journeys, took the oath as ern themselves "will not be sup- lence with a warning that only governor standing on the spot pressed by force, from China, action at the local level could where Jefferson Davis was sworn from Russia, from Cuba, and prevent future racial outbursts. in as president of a rebellious from Washington, D.C." Romney, a potential Republi- Confederacy 106 years ago. " I t is noticed that the people can presidential contender, d e - of Alabama, whose motto is 'We parted from remarks prepared Wallace, introducing his wife, Dare Defend Our Rights,' are for a civil rights conference of recalled his campaign trips into not in a mood to sit idly by state and local officials to deliver Wisconsin, Indiana and Maryland and surrender our constitution- what might have been intended during the 1964 presidential race al system of government or a as a position statement on a major and declared: "-Where you sent single one of its freedoms by national issue. us we have gone. And now, where default," she said. The governor warned that the nation's civil rights movement " h a s reached a critical stage," R£D CEDAR REVIEW The civil rights movement, Romney added, has reached a MAIL THIS COUPON AND $1 point at which Congress and the WE WILL SEND YOU R C R 5 states have done about all they * * can in legislating on minority (campus mail, no postage necessary) rights. III Ihm* companies "Changing a law or writing a 325MorrilI Hall law doesn't change the practice In local communities, and d i s - nun offer you the moon illusionment has set in because Name the people haven't seen the pro- g r e s s they were led to expect." Address. "o otters > mi hard work, a (hnnrc lo learn something, and A New Service At Our Newest Store ma\he I he moon with a ribbon around il THE COPY STATION If you have ¿t genuine desire to go on learning and to continue growing there's u demanding and rewarding caree 1- position for yon at Philco YES! See how you too can save We are a major subsidiary of Ford Motor Company, fast approaching S1 billion in annual sales to both time and money at one of We Can Copy Anything. Crisp, Clear, consumer industrial and government markets We our 3 convenient locations. are dedicated to major areas of endeavor from Permanent Copies Made While You Watch. the vastness of outer space to the microcosmos of SAVE TIME... SAVE MONEY! ultrainuiiaturi/ation from advanced color TV Sunshine Center technology to vocational c l a s s e s in depressed Sizes As Small As You Like-Or Up To communities from re entry to refrigerators Interested in finding out more? We will be visiting 11" x 17" On A Single Sheet. Also Excellent your campus on January 18 and 19 Contact your Placement Office Stop by and talk to us about Book Copies your future or write to College Relations. Philco ,'i (ireat Locations tor ):> • WSHH DRY CLEAN 507 E. GRAND RIVER PHILCO ... Join Those Wt And S «ve ACROSS FROM BERKEY I VIM D i l P V I 4 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Tuesday, January 17, 1967 Michigan State Roar on, gadflies- visitors win dialog Jan. 27 , » Industrial Nucleonics, since 1951, has concentrated on developing on-line analytical E D I T O R ' S NOTE: As a As it turned out, it did. Lew- s t r o m , David Z . Ring, Cynthia measurement and control systems for the country's basic raw materials processors. With over is Feuer was trying to elicit Stankowski, Janet A. Tuffley, 98 percent ot all systems ever built still in daily service — a n d providing the customer with s u p p l e m e n t to State News a student response which he could Cara L . Ulum, H. A. Vanhol- tangible economic benetits through guaranteed results —AccuRay systems Nave become a c o v e r a g e of t h e U n i v e r - use a s ammo in a scholastic lebeke, Frederick R. Whims, standard of reliability and performance. sity College symposium With a record of doubling in size every four years and increasing markets across the U.S., debate with Paul Goodman over J a m e s D. Xenakls and Cheng I. Canada and Western Europe, I.N.'s field staff has become a most important elemgnt. If you on " T h e Student Scene how many non-students should Yang. are interested and qualified for one of the following positions, additional information and campus T o d a y , " Andrew Mollison be allowed to dance on the head We a r e 38,000 others. interview schedules may be obtained from the Placement Office. will r e l a t e d a i l y h i s p e r - of a Berkeley pin. We a r e what we a r e today, and Supervise installation and calibration of I.N. process sonal reactions. Berkeley, we're going to have tomorrow we will be what we will FIELD STAFF ENGINEERING control systems at customer locations; train cus- to remember, is a real place be • • tomorrow. • BSEE or BSIE with electronics option tomers' operating and maintenance personnel in By A N D R E W M O L L I S O N to our visitors. It's not, as it proper and effective use of equipment. Executive Reporter is to us, a four-minute f i l m j "Only those who a r e wise to Roar on, gadflies, r o a r . In clip on Huntley-Brinkley or a the words a r e the wise to whom Each of these career positions offers rapid advancement and opportunity to broaden your Monday's television discussion collection of articles in a 75- words a r e sufficient." technical Knowledge, plus liberal compensation, company automobile, expense account, permanent assignment, and full benefits program. ... . ,, on Channel 10 the four visiting cent paperback. So said Wendell Johnson once. If our interview times are not convenient for you. send your resume in confidence to Mr. savants downed the home team In return, they're going to System, popular, generation, Philip J Robinson, Assistant to the President. Industrial Nucleonics Corporation. 650 Ackerman students by a substantial m a r - have to remember that an alien- dialog, young, elite, polls, fink Road, Columbus, Ohio 43202. An Equal Opportunity Employer. gin. ated generation, or a peer group, (hypocrite), community, society: Substitute any words you o r the Americans de Tocque- these a r e the words of the week. » *» choose In the following sentence. ville was writing about, o r n a r - "If A and If B and if a sub- odniks, or Joe and Jane Multi- Worst Pun of the Day Award stantial majority said C, would versity, we're not. goes to Edgar Z . Friedenberg, you believe D o r do E or would We a r e Jack A. Alderink, John for " W e all have a stake in H p ' Z become L in your T under G. Baker, Ruth E. Carleton, J u - this society, but the young a r e the proviso. Z, tally, that Q dith C. Dillon, Alexander Emodi, more • • • likely to be burnt at i t . " becomes N o r , alternatively, D- Peter A. F r a m e , Kathleen Gal- sub-2 tomorrow?" lagher, Aurelio Huerto, John W. Most neglected truism c l a r i - Sunset from Hubbard What, the students obviously Isbister, Donna F . Justus,Steph- fied during the TV show was The r e w a r d r e c e i v e d by a puffing student upon wondered, was their interroga- en M. Kelley, Justin H. Libby, that students disagree among r e a c h i n g t h e 12th f l o o r of H u b b a r d Hall Is t h i s v i e w tor talking about? Did his v e r - Ann M. Moorhead, Lavern K. themselves as much as they do of t h e c a m p u s e x t e n d i n g Into t h e h o r i z o n . bal map have referents in a real Nygren, Sandra A. Odom, Juan- with non-students and f o r m e r ita J . Przekup,HowardL.Qvarn- State News photo by Paul Schlelf world? students, such as parents. Dave Ring," Baltimore, Md., sopho- STEP opens drive m o r e , first brought it up. « »» Items the visitors would do well to ask MSU students about; the Orange Hall vigil, the Aca- to raise $19,000 demic Freedom report, Spiro's nee Kewpee's, the Gables, Bub- ba, NatSci,pizza-and-Coke study b r e a k s , luxury apartments, con- f o r m i s t s as small-group and d i s - While one portion of the STEP An orientation meeting will be sidents a s large-group p a c e - s e t - (Student Education P r o j e c t ) c o m - held at 7 p.m. Wednesday in 201 ters. mittee concentrates on recruiting Bessey Hall for all applicants. * * • student volunteers, the steering Aimed at aiding Negro high Hang-up in dialog I became committee will open its fund- school graduates improve their aware of during the TV show: raising drive with a $1,000 r e - study skills before entering col- generally speaking, the more quest before the ASMSU Student lege, the institute will last five succinct and pointed a general- Board tonight. weeks. The first program at Rust ization seems at first hearing, STEP officials initially asked College, in 1965, ran six weeks the less likely it is to stand ASMSU for $3,000 of their needed and was compressed into four the up when applied to specifics. $19,000. However, ASMSU C h a i r - following year. man Jim Graham reported the STEP is an educational, not a agenda committee had reduced UNIVERSITY^;,? the request to $1,000. civil rights, project, said Miss Shulton. This point, she added, »CAUTV SALON > 7 W " Graham explained that it will is widely misunderstood. be recommended to the board to STEP presently has around move $1,000 from the legal aid $900 in " r e a d y cash or pledges" fund to the general fund. Then, f r o m churches and civic groups, Graham said, the board will prob- noted Miss Shulton. MSU r e s i - ably allocate $1,000 each to STEP, dence halls will be contacted Winds of Change and Provost within the next two weeks for con- Lecture. tributions. " T h e r e Is some consideration Annually STEP approaches 68 within the board that more may foundations for donations, but a r e be allocated to the three groups turned down because Rust Col- later this t e r m , " Graham con- lege is presently unaccredited In tinued. "We think all three a r e Mississippi, Miss Shulton said. I ii i: ^ H B v f ^ „ equally worthwhile, and right now Federal government agencies 'A girl may vtf^n a tennis we just cannot afford m o r e . " have also refused to help. outfit and not play tennis. She L a r r y Klein, STEP student co- Last summer STEP sent 35 may wear a swimming suit and ordinator said, "we hope to r e - student volunteers and four f a c - not go near the water, but when ceive the full $3,000, which is ulty members to Holly Springs to she puts on a wedding gowi only $200 above last y e a r ' s a l - give academic assistance to she means business , " siih; location. Our budget has risen, R u s t ' s incofning freshmen. »assy. of necessity, and we could have increased our request propor- tionally." Linda Shulton, STEP r e c r u i t - 'Saint Joan' gets ment committee chairman, said, " I feel they should give $3,000. critic's praise East Lansing's O N L Y After all, they allocated $2,800 VISA Beautician last year, and we a r e partially TORONTO, Canada (JP — The sponsored by ASMSU." Performing Arts Company of UNIVERSITY l^A BEAUTY SALON Miss Shulton added that she would like 100 applicants during their recruiting drive today and Michigan State University won a c r i t i c ' s praise Sunday for its presentation of George Bernard tomorrow from which to select Shaw's "Saint Joan" in a weekly 20 participants forthe third s u m - series at York University. mer STEP institute in Holly Urjo Kareda of the Globe and Springs, Miss. Mail said the production under Applications are available director Frank C . Rutledge was today and Wednesday in Brody, " t a u t and rational" and used (2DOOK EAST Of C M M S THEATER) Conrad, International Center, the the open stage with ingenuity and 413 E GO. RIVER Union and the STEP office, 911 taste. EAST LANSING HICH E. Grand River. " T h e excellent costuming by Duane Reed and the evocative lighting complemented the. s i m - pay your bills NOW! plicity of the stage p i c t u r e , " Kareda said. "What was most impressive was the richness and depth of Many of our top executives Pay them all right now with a Credit Union loan. One low interest rate. One the acting company." monthly payroll deduction. never spent a day in a teller's cage, No checks to sign, stamps to lick, or creditors to howl. Save as much as 100% on interest arid carrying charges. CALL 353-2280 They're personnel and administrative men, investment to grow here, room at the top. This means rewards come FOR IMMEDIATE SONATA $128 stars analysts, marketing experts, finance men, real estate fast and are based on ability, rather than years of service. a l s o t o specialists and salesmen. But they're all bankers. If you're getting your Bachelor's or Master's Degree soon, SERVICE K e e p s a k e O I A M C"> K I N O That's because today's banking is a vital, creative, excit- talk with the man from Bank of the Commonwealth. Keepsake artfully blends exquisite ring design with a perfect diamond . . . a flawless ing endeavor. And we re one of the reasons why modern ^ MSU EMPLOYEES gem of fine color and modern Register now for an interview. He'll be on campus cut. There's nothing finer . . . forever. banking has a new look. We're the fastest-growing Tuesday, January 24, Placement Bureau; Student -, « HuetiMac/ », * J N Rings rnUrgrd to ihcw • GMtfNOMMkNpHM • d« Uil. Tfad«- Mark HrC major bank in the nation.* Which means there's room Services Building. V mumIt ^tnmmm**^ Thompson * American Banker, August 1, 1966 1019 T r o w b r i d g e R o a d Jewelry Phone 353-2280 B A N K O F THE C O M M O N W E A L T H MEMBER (EDI RAI DEPOSIT INSURANCE CURPUHA1IUN C r e d i t Union M e m b e r s Have The Advantage 223 MAC Tuesday, January 17, 1967 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan SPORTS SATISFIED WITH WIN INTERVIEWING - - Michigan State Benington not fooled Jan. 27 ÂÉS1 1 Opportunity to work in a technically stimulating environment . . . at the state of by Hawkey e trickery the art . . . among high caliber professionals (over 3 0 % engineers and scientists) . . . with R , D expenditures of over $2 million annually . . . , , Industrial Nucleonics is an acknowledged leader in the development and manufacture ot on-line analytical measurement and control systems for the country's basic raw materials proc- essors. In its 16 year history, the company has compiled a record ot doubling in size every four years with combined sales now totaling over $15 million annually. knew that Chapman is basically an Lafayette missed his f i r s t eight MS and PhD Candidates Logic and Solid State Circuit Design By D E N N I S C H A S E outside shooter who doesn't like shots, then came back to score Electrical Engineering Control Theory and Systems Engineering A s s o c i a t e Sports E d i t o r to drive in. So, every time Chap- 17 points, high man for the Spar- Nuclear Engineering to be Digital and Analog Computer Programming Mechanical Engineering interviewed Mechanical Mechanism and Structure Design man took a pass, a couple of tans, and made two key baskets Physics for: Radiation Interaction with Matter It's nice the way MSU b a s - Spartans would move over to his late in the game when the out- Computer Science Isotopic Radiation Generation and Detection ketball coach John Benington and Allied Fields Project Engineering side and guard him tight. Chap- come was still In doubt. keeps right on top of the s i t - man got three points. "Lafayette came In handy In the If you are interested in a major technical challenge with opportunity to move into man- uation where his team is con- Steve Rymal, who was assigned second half," Benington said. " I agement to participate in a full college tuition refund program, and to be located in a pleasant cerned. All week he had wondered to Chapman, picked up 15 points knew they were going to switch residential area of Columbus, adjacent to The Ohio State University, consult the Placement Office who the Iowa Hawkeyes would for further.information and your campus interview schedule. Or, send your resume, in confidence, f r o m a man-to-man p r e s s to a start at guard, and whc :e Sam in his finest game of the season. to Mr Philip J. Robinson. Assistant to the President, Industrial Nucleonics Corporation, 650 "Rymal is a slashing, driving zone p r e s s , so I had Lafayette Williams would play. Ackerman Road, Columbus, Ohio 43202. An Equal Opportunity Employer. p l a y e r , " explained Benington. take the ball down the court He had every combination "We've been playing agaiffst instead of the guards. After a worked out. Art Baylor would zones our last couple of games, couple mistakes, we got some cover Williams, who wouldprob- and he hasn't had an opportunity ably start at forward, and the to get inside. This time he got easy shots off. " T h e race for the Big Ten title Hindustrial guards, John Bailey and Steve a few good feeds and he was Is still wide open," he said. Rymal, would cover Ron Norman hot." and Dave White. Benington was pleased with " J a n u a r y has been an easy month for us—only four games— but Ifflf/ucleonics I / c a m m it m /k-r t a *t So Iowa Coach Ralph Miller put Lee Lafayette's performance. February and March should be Williams and Tom Chapman at much tougher. If our bench keeps MSU's Big Men guards and Dick Agnew at f o r - Big 10 Standings coming through like it did against ward. Iowa, especially guys like John Jack Z i n d e l , ( f r o n t ) a 1 8 7 - p o u n d e r who w a s 7 - 1 as M S U ' s h e a v y w e i g h t , t a k e s a d e f e n s i v e p o s i t i o n "Agnew?" Benington said. w L PCT. Holms, we'll be in good shape." "Agnew? Who the hell is Agnew?" on t h « m a t t o J e f f R i c h a r d s o n , a 2 6 0 - p o u n d e r who At a p r e s s luncheon Monday, N o r t h w e s t e r n 2 0 1.000 won back t h e h e a v y w e i g h t job w h e n h e r e t u r n e d Benington appeared calm and sat- M i c h i g a n S t a t e 2 0 1.000 f r o m p o s t - s e a s o n football action. isfied. He was asked why he W i s c o n s i n 2 1 .667 started guard Shannon Reading I n d i a n a 2 1 .667 BOWS TO WW in place of Bailey. "Reading looked real good In O h i o S t a t e Illinois 2 2 1 1 .500 .500 NG Jack (Zindel) p r a c t i c e , " Benington said. "You .500 Purdue 1 1 can't keep a player as good a s that on the bench. He gets rusty Iowa 1 1 .500 and discouraged. So I gave him M i n n e s o t a 0 3 .000 his chance and he did a good M i c h i g a n 0 3 .000 the giant killer job. He covered Williams real well in the first half, and picked Saturday's Results up ten points himself with some M i c h i g a n S t a t e 79, Iowa 70. hot second half shooting." MICHIGAN Illinois, 99, Michigan 93. By G A V E L W E S C H Besides his attitude, Zindel's Benington's strategy on Iowa's I n d i a n a S I , O h i o S t a t e 8 0 . State News Sports W r i t e r biggest asset against the heavy- leading s c o r e r , Tom Chapman, P u r d u e 86, M i n n e s o t a 73. worked to perfection. Benington MSU wrestler Jack Zindel is a weights is his speed. David who had to face one too " I t ' s the only thing that is CAMP COUNSELOR OPENINGS in mv f a v o r , " Zindel said. many Goliaths. UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTS Up until last week, Zindel was "Everybody I've wrestled has ( Mm. oq* 19 & completion of ot loa»» I y«or of collog* ) MSU's regular heavyweight and been stronger than me, but I've G R A D U A T E STUDENTS a n d FACULTY MEMBERS had a winning record despite been able to work my single and being small for the weight class. double leg take-downs against THE ASSOCIATION OF PRIVATE CAMPS But Jeff Richardson returned them, and. outpoint them." . . . comprising 350 outstanding Boys, Girls. Brolhor-SisUr and Co-Ed Camps, located throughout tha Naw England. Mid- f r o m post-season football bowl Zindel's only loss came in dle Atlantic States and Canada. play last week and took the heavy- the Midlands Tournament when . . . INVITES YOUR INQUIRIES concerning l u m m e r employment a s H*ad weight position away from Zindel. he was knocked out and forced Counselors, Group Laadars. S p a d a l t l a s . G e n e r a l Counselor«. Until Richardson 1 s return, to forfeit by a doctor. Writ«, Phone, or Call In Person Zindel had been a giant killer, Association of Private C a m p s — Dept. C Resorts racking up seven victories and "I made a mistake in that only one defeat, though usual- bout,'' the hard-nosed sophomore Maxwell M. Aleiander, f«eeulire Director ly spotting opponents 20 or 30 r e m e m b e r s . "1 let the guy pick «..IS West 42nd Street, OX 5-2656, New York 36, N. Y.::i pounds and once more than 100 me up off the floor and had no pounds. defense when he slammed me to A 187-pounder himself, Z i n - the mat. I should have hooked Equipment d e l ' s opponents were usually well something so he couldn't do that." over 200, and one, Indiana's Wrestling against the giants Chuck Wertschnig, tipped the was an entirely new experience " scales at 295. B u r Zindel beat for Zindel, who was a 154-pouriii- - htmi • —*•' sr V.JrT/svng High. T h e r e seem to be two main "I was the biggest one left reasons for Zindel's success, over when Jeff was gone, and we one which Assistant Coach Doug needed somebody at heavyweight Blubaugh observed and the other so I figured it irilght as well Zindel's own thoughts regarding his success. be m e , " Zindel said. When asked if he, was afraid Fashions "Zindel's a fighter,"Blubaugh before any of the matches, Z i n - said. " H e ' s got a lot of guts. del grinned and said, "Every He makes mistakes but doesn't t i m e , " but went on to say, "not stop trying, and h e ' s willing to of the guy I was against but try anything. I'd classify him as that I might let the team down. a liberal w r e s t l e r . " I've never been in the position llllllllllllllllillllllMI" 11111 where 1 had to win at heavy- With the cooperation of the MSU weight if the team was going Ski Club, the Michigan Tourist Grid scholars to win, and I'm glad of that." Now that Richardson is back, Council and other skiing and tour- Defensive tackle Pat the future for Zindel is some- ist groups, the State News will pre- Gallinagh and offensive e n d A! B r e n n e r h a v e b e e n selected as Academic what uncertain. "He can chal- lenge at heavyweight again, or go down to 177 or 167," head Here's 25$ sent a special If)-page "Ski in Michi- gan" tabloid. All-Americans College Sports Informa- by t h e Coach Grady Peninger said. "But what we'd like to do is keep him at his present weight and use him to help get you It's packed pictures on the MSU and Lansing with features and t i o n Di r e c t o r s of A m e r i - ca. Gallinagh, a senior, at 191 in exhibition sand the NCAA meet." If Zindel dues stay at his p r e s - through Ski clubs, the MSU Ski Team, Michigan ski resorts, ski slope » m a d e f i r s t t e a m with a 3.33 a v e r a g e fall q u a r - t e r , and B r e n n e r , a jun- ent weight and wrestle when lie can at 191, it would be the first time a s a Spartan that he'd be mid-year exams conditions, ski fashions, equipment and tips for beginning skiing (When you can't afford to be dull) i o r , m a d e t h e s e c o n d unit picking on somebody his own skiers. size, something that seven heavy- with a 3.67 fall-term weights wish he would have done average. sooner. Twenty-five cents is mental b e s t . . . it will what you get back on aid your concentration Hmrnrn, the purchase of any size and intellectual effort package of NoDoz Keep through hours of Alert Tablets or new studying. TASTY! Chewable Mints. Safe as So go ahead,sharpen coffee, NoDoz helps your wits with NoDoz. restore your mental Help restore your mental vitality at a time when vitality, pass your you really can't afford exams, then mail us the to be dull. front panel or label from It's a McDonald's any size package of NoDoz won't make you NoDoz* with this coupon. Fish Sandwich a genius. But it will help bring you back to your When you can't afford to be And we'll mail you a quarter (25£) in return. (A little extra cash for your post-exams party) TOMORROW'S dull, sharpen your wits with _., m 'f® NoDoz . . . mail us the front from any size NoDoz package and we'll return 6 3 A oz 25« to you. Tablets or new Chewable Mints But hurry, offer ends Feb. ?8. No refunds after March 7. 1 967 Mail coupon today! Bristol-Myers/Grove Division, P.O. Bo* 4808, Clinton. Iowa 52732 •Enclosed is (check one): • Wrapper from NoDoz Mints, or a Front panel from package of 15 or 36 NoDoz Tablets, or • Front label from bottle of 6 0 NoDoz Tablets. Please return 2 5 cents (one quarter) to: Name Address McDonald^ City State Offer void without this coupon. Zip Code na»". 1 '¿«3a T u e s d a y , J a n u a r y 17, 1967 6 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan MUSICAL iMSmaMtifr f a t h e r i n g dust? * r*«> Call 355-8255 Call 355-8255 SELL IT FAST WITH A STATE NEWS WANT API The State News does not Automotive Employment For Rent For Rent For Sale Peanuts Personal EKGAGEO: Mike Fisher and permit racial o r religious FURNISHED NEAR OAK Park, close to L.C.C. BOLEX H16-Rex 25 mm, 75mm, i discrimination in its a d - Auto Service & Ports TYPIST: FULL time, neededim- COMPLETELY medlately. Some office exper- three room apartments avail- Cute furnished with one large 150 mm lens. Excellent condi- Plane Kollsch. 1-1/1.7 vertising columns. The MEL'S AUT6 SERVICE: Large ience necessary. 487-3616. able immediately. Also one sin- bedroom. Yard, garage. $95plus tion. Call 489-0980. 3-1/18 Real Estate State News will not accept gle room. 351-5125 after 3:30. heat. Call 337-1598 or Eaton BOOKS USED - over 50,000 hard HAMILTON AVENUE 915 by own- WANT AD or small, we do them all. 1108 5-1/18 advertising which d i s c r i m - E. Grand River. 332-3255. C RADIO ANNOUNCER for morn- 3-1/17 Rapids 243-8418. 3-1/17 covers, 10# each. North of Lan- e r . T h r e e bedrooms, Cape Cod, inates against religion, CAR WASH: 25f. Wash, wax, ing, evening or weekend work. ONE OR TWO girls for four man sing on US-27. Call 669-9311. aluminum siding. Good access r a c e , color o r national o r i - Rooms AUTOMOTIVE gin. vacuum. U-DO-IT. 430 S. Clip- Should have some experience. apartment. University T e r r a c e . 3-1/18 to campus. Immediate occu- p e r t . Back of KOKO BAR. EMPLOYMENT P r e f e r third class license. Car 351-7643. 5-1/19 MEN SUPERVISEDdouble.$9.00, STRUELE DOWNHILL, skis, ko- pancy. $18,500. 393-3086. 3-1/17 FOR RENT C - l / 1 9 needed. Mr. Casey at WSWM. GlRL NEEDEDfor two girl apart - cooking, parking. Two blocks flex bottoms, 6 ' 1 1 " . Henke FOR SALE NEW BATTERIES. Exchange 337-1318. 4-1/17 ment. Quiet, close to campus. from Berkey. 332-4978.5-1/17 boots, size 13, $45.00.351-5842. Recreation LOST & FOUND p r i c e from $7.95. New sealed STUDENT FOR occasional r e - 3-1/19 SPRING SUBLEASE lower half 5-1/18 PERSONAL Automotive beams, 99; Dutch unci« $75 per student. Modern, fully for rent 372-1224. $75.00. Phone IV 4-5534. miles. 3-1/17 >2. Mollici ol deeply (leslruclion 0>. Flower •Engine & transmission, r e a r furnished. On Abbott Road, TWO GIRLS needed for house. Faculty & Grad. container 21 Storage axle, front axle •Brake and electrical systems walking distance to campus.* Single bedrooms, 337-9324after Phone 372-5300, Mr. Dick C a - 6 p.m. 3-1/17 Students » 2 3 4 S « 7 à 9 IO II crib EAST LANSING AREA 12 i 13 23. Sp planta- hlll. 6 - 1 / 2 0 THREE GIRLS to share house, IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY tion TWO GIRLS needed for four-girl '64 VW - Sunroof, blue Evergreen Apartment. Winter. $10.00 week plus utilities. 337- PRIVATE LAKE 14 IS % lb 24. Perl, to with whitewalls, gas, heat- e r , radio. 351-7858. NEED GIRL for two girl apart- 5-1/17 7116. , 3-1/17 Enjoy ' boating, swimming, ice skating on fishing, 17 % 16 19 % fields 25. Diocese 2(>. ( Urcuit '64 Falcon - Red with'Stan- ment. cluded. Parking, Near Campus. utilities 351-7569 in- Burcham Woods, your own private lake and beach, 2-bedroom a p a r t - %2fc to 21 % 27 22 21 i 29 23 24 25 ')7 1F a v o r i n g nephews dard transmission, good or 351-6928. 5-1/19 Eydeal Villa, ment only $160 including 2<). Pile tires THIRD MAN.Quiet, luxury a p a r t - air conditioning, carpet, drapes, refrigerator, oven 30 31 % 32 i l . Obscure *15. H at lie bird '66 Mustang Deluxe disc. ment. Winter, spring. Norwood Apartments. 351-9269 . 3-1/17 completely furnished, for and range, laundry f a - cilities . W o r r y - f r e e year 39 % 34 35 % iAO 37. Antidote 38. Handle Super deluxe Interior. FOUR MAN Avondale apartment 1-2,3,4, students o r single working people. Swim pool, around maintenance, f u r - %%% 37 36 43 3» 4(1. Spirit lamp PHIL GORDON VW 41. Jehovah available immediately, 351- nished o r unfurnished. 41 42 43 44 4372 after 5 pan. 6-1/20 call Fidelity Realty Adults only. 5 min. from 42. Corroded USED CARS NEEDED TWO girls for three campus. Chalet Park 46 «T % 46'" 43. F.ntangle 4.r>. Hange of E . GRAND RIVER AT HOWARD 484-1341 * girl luxury apartment. Close to campus. 351-6690, or 351- 5904. 4-1/20 332-3041 Apartments at Lake O'The H i l l s . Ph. 332-8704. 339-8258 or 49 % 50 knowledge 47. Near T u e s d a y , J a n u a r y 17, 1967 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Fòrth grant benefits 1 i „ ; V. / GREATER THREAT THAN CHINA linguistics studies Profs soy U.S. is danger MSU, along with other mid- western schools, has been award- the Far Eastern languages and has led to a marked Increase to peace and stability ed part of $230,000 to accel- in the number of students earn- erate training In Japanese and ing doctorates in Japanese and Chinese languages. Chinese. The grant was given by the MSU representative on the Far Ford Foundation to the Commit- Eastern committee is James P . be setting the example for peace, tee on Institutional Cooperation Wang, chairman of Linguistics s e r i e s of inter-faith seminars on the back when he's not looking," By F A Y E UNGER continues to expand the greatest (CIC), an association of the Big and Oriental and African Lan- the Vietnam war. G r e e r said, referring to our r e - S t a t e News Staff W r i t e r war machine in history. Ten schools and the University guages. He said that MSU sends They said the United States is lationship with the Soviet Union of Chicago. several students to the clinics more a danger to world peace (2) All nations must learn to and Eastern Europe. The United States is taking a Under the program, a student every summer. and world stability than the much- compete by other means than war. (4) All nations must drastically lead in breaking down all pos- taking courses during the reg- The CIC program " h a s c e r - accused " belligerent" China. They must recognize we live in a reduce their armaments. As long sibilities for long-range stable ular academic year can com- tainly helped institutes that did Greer charged that in waging pluralistic world. The right of a s the United States continues to world peace, two p r o f e s s o r s ' p r e s s four years of language into not have a full Far Eastern pro- the Vietnamese war the United self-determination should be use war as an instrument of charged Sunday. 15 months by attending two sum- g r a m " , said Wang, because now States violated the United Nations guaranteed to all nations. her national policy, continues The Vietnam war is but a mer institutes. their students can benefit from c h a r t e r and undermined the sta- The United States violates the waging war and continues de- symptom of the breakdown of the Cliairman of the CIC Far East- the combined efforts of many bility and effectiveness of the UN. right of self-determination in veloping more weapons, It is i m - whole international system, said ern language committee, Joseph universities. He listed six " n e c e s s a r y , Viet Nam by its intervention, possible to expect other nations Kenneth Boulding, professor of Greer said. K. Yamagiwa of the University The summer program Is usual- economics at the University of minimal" conditions for peace, to d i s a r m , Greer said. (3) Relations between nations of Michigan, recently said that ly composed of 150-200 students Michigan. all impeded by the United States (5) World law and organization must be relaxed and " n o r - the CIC program has helped dev- mostly from the United States, in fighting the war. must be strengthened. " T o d a y ' s malized." elop Instructional materials in Canada and England. He and Thomas G r e e r , c h a i r - (1) All nations must reject war international organization isn't man of the Humanities Dept. at a s a tool of national policy. The "We can hardly expect to make worth two cents," Greer said. MSU, spoke at the second of a United States, a nation that should peace with someone we knife in (6) Nations must eliminate the causes of external and Internal d i s t r e s s , especially the problem New theater trends Most high-school seniors of a food shortage. By diverting its attention and resources to war, the United States has " v i r - topic of critics talk Harold Cturman, theater critic Among the awards that he has tually abandoned" international and d i r e c t o r , will speak at 8 p.m. received for contributions to the pi an additional schooling economic effort, Greer said. Wednesday in the Music Auditor- art a r e honorary degrees from Boulding charged that U«>. do- mestic programs a r e as much Book sale ium on "New Trends in American Bard College and Carnegie Tech. Theater." Clurman received the George " f r a u d s " as Its international S t u d e n t s a t t e n d i n g t h e ) n t e r f a i t h C o n v o c a t i o n on Jean Nathan Prize for drama* Clurman will also conduct a last fall by Project MEMO:, a per cent a private college or non-military effort. W a r a n d P c a c * at People's C h u r c h b r o w s e t h r o u g h seminar in the Arena Theater at criticism In 1958,and the Donald- By A N D R E W M O L L I S O N university. " T h e war shows'up the fraud b o o k s d e a l i n g with t h e V i e t W a r a n d Red C h i n a . cooperatave program sponsored 10;30 a . m . Thursday, said Eric son Award in direction for "A Executive Reporter by all the state's community col- Not too surprisingly, 90 per of our domestic program. W e a r e Member jf the Wedding." S t a t e N e w s p h o t o by P a u l S c h l e i f Somers of the MSU Performing leges and Michigan State, and cent of the seniors with B and not making any serious attempts Arts Company. There will be no The percentage of Michigan financed by the U.S. Office of higher grades plan to continue to solve the problems of poverty admission charge, high school seniors who want to United Students meet go to college is even higher than Education's "Talent Search" their education. Interestingly, of o r transportation," Boulding Clurman began his theatrical Got a small budget division. others with C and lower averages, said. it was when you went to high 65 per cent want to go on. c a r e e r as a proptnan in 1924. Sixty per cent of U.S. brain- school. MEMO: stands f o r " M o r e E d u - He then joined the Theatre Guild and a to plan store boycott cation, More Opportunity," and " T h e r e is a place in some kind power goes into the space o r Either t h a t , o r somebody really as an extra and stage manager this assumption that there Is a of program In some school or col- military efforts, he said, and co-founded tiieGroupTheatre missed the boat in earlier r e - causal connection between edu- lege for every Michigan high "We haven't put any fresh and became a manager-director. BIG APPETITE? search studies, judging from the school graduate who really wants thought into our domestic pol- cation and opportunity underlies a While directing plays on results of a new survey of stu- to learn m o r e , " Schultz said, icies in 3 0 y e a r s . Until we release United Students' committees all doors must be open r e g a r d - dents enrolled in 745 of Michi- suggestion made by Project "and there is some kind of aid that brainpower we will make a a r e meeting this week to organize l e s s of whether or not students Broadway and In New York, Clur- Eat hearty! You'll find MEMO: ' s director, David man was theater critic for many gan's 763 public and private high available for every boy and girl hash of our domestic policy." plans for a boycott, grading have guests. United Students Schultz, at the time the. survey schools. More than 100,000 stu- results were made public. who has proven financial need." Boulding said present U £ . changes, open house policy and a wishes to revert to the f o r m e r magazines and wrote several right prices and dent responses were received. coffee house. policy which stated that only r e s - books and a number of reviews "Michigan could use some kind But he added, "not every stu- problems spring In part from too The survey indicates that 73 idents with guests were required on the theater. of every 100 Michigan high school of central clearing-house that dent is making a realistic choice much success. The committee planning the to keep their doors a j a r . Daily SPECIALS would help students find the right of school or college really suited " W e ' r e just lucky. We do all boycott of East Lansing stores MoaNAw iNroHM.TiOh ^ 4 0 3 - 6 4 8 3 seniors want to go on for some to his ability level." will meet at 8:30 tonight in 34 colleges, and help colleges find the right things for the wrong kind of additional education a f t e r students who will succeed," Some C and lower average reasons and then think we have Union. The possibility of a d i s - Plans a r e also being made for Q l A P M E f t at they a r e graduated. Most say a coffee house. The site selected they will attend college. Schultz a s s e r t e d . seniors indicated they want to no mistakes to learn f r o m , attend a college o r university Boulding said. count in Lansing stores will be discussed as will plans for c o m - is the deserted garage at the TODAY . E a r l i e r studies by other r e - Of those who said they wanted corner of Charles Street and From 1-00 P.M.! to attend college, 89 per cent whose standards make their Because of Its "victory c o m - paring prices with East Lansing searchers usually covered only Grand River Avenue. The owner choose a college In Michigan. "academic success" entirely too plex," the United States hasn't merchants. Presently the boycott Feature at 1:10 a small part of the state. They of the garage has not yet been One-fourth hope to attend a pub- improbable, Schultz explained. shown the courage and sense to i s scheduled for the first of March 3:15-5:20-7:201 , generally reported that from 50 located so plans are still tena- lic community-junior college, Such institutions properly advise admit " w e ' v e made an a s s of March, Blanton, Hodgen- 9:30 V f M M t , to 67 per cent of the seniors tive. "BREATHTAKING!1 two-thirds a public four-year these students to go instead to our self" in Vietnam. vllle, Ky„ senior, said. planned more schooling. a less competitive campus, he Ten thousand questionnaires college o r university, and eight Both professors called U £ . • The new survey was conducted added. labeling of ligerent" a distortion. China as " b e l - a r e being distributed this week in order to determine student 'Free U ' reading -'Ntwswrck "An objectively operated EUROPE TRIPS 'Michigan college admissions "Any objective observer would opinion on the plus-minus grading system, the pass-fail system, as Students who plan to attend "BRILLIANT!" say the United States is more J a m e s R. Hooker's Free Uni- The New Vbriw center',..would benefit the entire well as the possibility of con- a g r e s s i v e , " Greer said. "China versity course at 7 tonight in 4 state by making an opportunity Flight sign-up today has no bases abroad, yet we ring sidering Items other than tests available to every boy and girl Wilson Hall are required to read her with b a s e s . " in determining final grades. The for the maximum amount and an additional article by George 2820 F . Grand River "If the Chinese army were questionnaires a r e being distrib- kind of education he could ab- Shepperson. ft MWCfl M O M PH.« Mi COMMI These costs cover round-trip moving up through Mexico, we uted In conjunction with ArtTung, The article, "Notes on Negro EXTRA I CARTOON F UN-NEWS L a n s i n g , Michigan Sign-up for the annual sum- s o r b , " Schultz said. ASMSU member-at-large. m e r flights to Europe sponsored Jet transportation between De- would not be so peaceful a s American Influences on African NEXT-"THE LIQUIDA TOR Phone 487-3761 Unlike Project MEMO:, which China," Boulding said. "China is The committee for changing the by Union Board begins today troit and London. Full payment Nationalism," may be found in LAST DAY! In many ways It resembles, the a s yet too weak militarily and new open house policy will also 1:00-3:00-5:10-7:20-9:25 from 1-5 p.m. in 33 Union Build- is required at sign-up. Volume I of the "Journal of proposed clearinghouse would in too busy with i n t e r ^ l problems meet at 7 tonight in the Union African History" in the Library. NAM lùronMArtoN ^ 3 d ? » H 4 4 ing. Land tours include a four- week plan for $475 and a seven- elude all sorts of higher edu- to be much of a t h r e a t . " Grill. The new policy states that s j n m e c M U R n MSU students, faculty and staff week plan for $790. Included in cation institutions, rather than She Is also the only nuclear and their Immediate families a r e [ATTENTION CAR OWNERS! these programs are hotel r e s - just Michigan State and the pub- power so far to openly promise ILFIE eligible for this program, which offers reduced rate transporta- ervations, nearly all meals and comprehensive sight-seeing. lie community-junior colleges. It she will not use her nuclear would be permanent, and P r o j - weapons f i r s t , Greer said, H i tion. Land tours a r e also offered. On Thursday sign-up will be ect MEMO: is a temporary p r o j - Mo«.*« iNTOftM.TfON I» 4 S 2 3&OS Flights available a r e : an eight- usmwcoiwi held In the Union Board office ect which has once been ex- week charter flight - $300; two four-week group flights; an 11- on the second floor of the Union. tended, and which could expect I V B I C H I ^ N to receive at most one more c o m p l e t e front e n d r e p a i r a n d a l i g n m e n t week group flight and a 12-week For further Information call 355- TODAY . . from 1:00 P.M. 3362. one-year extension when Its group flight - each $353, present authorization runs out on 1:20-3:25-5:30-7:40-9:50 • b r a k e s * s u s p e n s i o n June 15 of this year. DEAN ANN- • w h e e l b a l a n c i n g » s t e e r i n g c o r r e c t i o n s BEST IN FOREIGN FILMS MARTIN MARGRET Placement Bureau KARL MAI DC; N • m o t o r tune u p s " Y o u may hate yourself in the morning, but I think you LISKEY'S Auto Safety Center Students must register In p e r - Syracuse University, Food son at the Placement Bureau at Service Dept: hotel, restaurant, M O K B E K E K S •re going to enjoy'Alfie'very much.'Alfie'uses people- least two days prior to the date of interview. and institutional management and M f —mainly women-and throws them away like tissues." institution administration (B). Friday, Jan. 20: NEXT: Battle Creek Public Schools: Whirlpool Corp.: accounting TODAY . . . From 7 P M . SHIRLEY MacLAlNE 124 SOUTH LARCH IV 4-7346 early and later elementary edu- and financial administration, IN "GAMBIT" cation, art, mentally retarded, marketing, management and MELINA MERCOURI mathematics (B,M). nursery, physically handicapped, ROMY SCHNEIDER TWO WAY STREET and camp teachers (men), Eng- Wyandotte Chemicals Corp.: lish, English/social studies and chemical, mechanical, electrical PETER FINCH business education (shorthand) and civil engineering (B); chem- (B,M). istry (B,M,D) and accounting, « 1 0 : 3 0 P . M . Bell Aerosystems Co.: chemi- cal, civil, mechanical and elec- finance and economics (B). Hummer" Like many things, working for AC Spark Plug Division of General Moiurs is a two way s t r e e t . Vou give and you get. trical engineering, metallurgy, Yeo and Yeo Certified Public pÜCHNICOCOr; lonm Remus UKW»'"» mechanics, materials science, Accountants: accounting and f i - Here's what you give. Yourself, 'tour energies and ambition. Your talent and lime * * * * * * C S ) People are going to chemistry and mathematics nancial administration (B,M). FEATURE AT Your ideas and abilities. All that you are and all that you want to be. 7:47 & 9:51 P.M. stop talking about 'Virginia Woolf' (B.M.D). City of Milwaukee: civil and SUMMER EMPLOYMENT •STARTS FRIDAY* Here's what you get. Unlimited opportuni' ics wlththe largest manufacturer of automo- tive parts and accessories in the world. Challenging and meaningful assignments in mechanical engineering (B,M). Holllster Newspapers: jour- Friday, Jan. 20: Camp Tamarack, Fresh Air every a r c » of the business—engineering, research, accounting, sales, producrion and so on. A diversity and scope that permits a choice of assignment area', to .suit alinosi and start talking about 'Alfie' t , ^^ > JtA.J » nalism, advertising and English any background and Interest. Society: men and women as camp (B). counselors. Illinois Teachers College, Chi- cago-South: art, biological sci- City of Milwaukee: civil engi- As an employe of General Motors, you also get GM's excellent iniploye benefits— ence, business education, educa- neering for undergraduates and group life Insurance, income protection, hospital, surgical and medicai coverage, tion, English and speech, home graduates. vacations, holidays, stock savings program and retirement program. economics, industrial education, Holllster Newspapers: jour- TONY RICHARDSONS ' ?) "MADEMOISELLE nalism, advertising and English We're not through yet. \dd this excellent opportunities to continue your education mathematics, modern language, . . . and the encouragement and financial assistance to >1o so. The chance to move music, women's physical educa- for Juniors. tion, men's physical education, Morton International, Inc.: ummmu « iwtm «cluni commi» into any area of General Motors where your skills and abilities a r e needed. The fact that AC benefits from the resources of the world's largest industrial organization, yet chemistry juniors and above. NWWISKW* t «OOOHU '«.« » physical sciences, psychology, has the flexibility of an independent company. social sciences, sociology, ••Bubbles with Impudent humar and rtpe, modern special education and student teaching. GRANDMAS You get a lot from the community, too. Flint is the second largest city in Michigan, . . 65 miles from Detroit and about the same distance 1rom Ann Arbor and East Lansing. Wit... i-m-, Johnson Service Co.: civil, It lias a $30 million dollar Community College and Cultural Center. Excellent schools. electrical and mechanical e n - Hundreds of lakes within a 35-mlle radius. Nine winter sports a r e a s with ski towj gineering and physics (B); elec- within 60 miles. Great hunting, 13 golf courses and 434 churches. im trical, mechanical engineering y plea and physics (B,M). We've talked more aljoui what you can get than what you can give, but that's only Morse ChainCo., A Borg-War- because we don't know much about you. You can fix that by registering with the place- ner Industry: all majors of the ment office for an appointment with the General Motors principal interviewer who'll College of Business (B). be on campus January 23-27. Ihen tell him you'd like to talk with the AC Spark Plug r ' S J t TAKE - HOME Morton International, Inc.: Division interviewer who'll be there January 26th. chemistry (B,M,D) and chemi- |«ECOMMEWOED R * MATURE AuOCMCES) ALFIE cal engineering (B,M). Chicken . Shrimp. Fish GM IS AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER Ortho Pharmaceutical Corp.: MICHAEL CHINE* MUCENT MARÍN'JULIA FOSIBNANE A S H » a l l majors of the colleges of Business, Human Medicine, Nat- OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK M U Y A N * F E U M / M B I MHDMNT'HEANOR BROS* UN S H E U E Y M N I B 6 A S M V ural Science and Social Science 1900 E . K a l a m a z o o Phone:484-4471 T E D M O t O H ' TECHNISCOPT < I t W I S O L B H I T PTODUCTWH A P A R A M O U N T P I C T U R E (B). Tuesday, January 17, 1967 8 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Vv V Crews of students working with Charles E, Cleland, curator of The fort built by the French in bring new rinds the Mackinac Island State Park tion of the fort in co-operation guards to keep prisoners in hand. Stone estimated that 50 per 1715 to protect the fur trading in- Commission in 1904. Excava- with the MSU Museum. The c o m - anthropology at the MSU museum, dustry and promote diplomatic tions by the park superintendent mission sponsors the excavations cent of the work has now been have excavated what scholars relations with the Indians, was in 1932 led to the location and and the Museum personnel c a r - completed, and that 20 more have labelled the finest unspoiled taken over by the British in 1761 reconstruction of the original ries out the work. Work crews buildings have yet to be recon- historical sites in America. and then abandoned in 1751. stockade walls'of the fort. a r e composed of men supplied by structed. From the f i r s t excava- notion sale This summer the students un- the state correction dept., Camp tions in 1959 and from documents, earthed new artifacts and sites of The people of Mackinac City In 1959 the commission under- Pell ••ton and groups of MSU stu- letters and maps in libraries, 20 buildings of Fort Mlchilimack- converted the grounds of the fort took a program of archaeological dents. enough Information was un- inac, an 18th century'trading post into a park in 1857. The park's and historical documentary r e - covered to rebuild the command- in northern Michigan. administration was taken over by search for complete reconstruc- Most of the 250,000 artifacts ing o f f i c e r ' s house, the king's unearthed in the past seven y e a r s storehouse, a British t r a d e r ' s have been traced to British occu- house, soldiers' barracks and the MICHIGAN SIGHTINGS pants of the post, according to Lyle Stone, Lyons,Neb.,doctoral candidate who has been assisting church. Sifting through three-inch lay- UFO p/x look real 8 8 ' each 3 for 2 . 4 9 the project. Wedgewood china, e r s of ground divided into 10- pieces of Chinese porcelain, a foot squares, the archaeologists King George III cufflink, British have excavated from three to coins and a brass clock gear eight feet of the entire site und manufactured in 1670 were part have gone down as far as 12 feet for basements and 25 feet DETROIT f — One of the also to verbal description's I've there were no witnesses to the of the findings. for wells. The excavation of the nation's leading experts on un- taken from ostensibly reliable sighting other than the two boys. Attributives of the French in- burial grounds under the church identified flying objects said people," he added. "Since the two witnesses a r e habitants a r e pipes, Indian beads, yielded the remains of 35 indi- Monday that photographs of a The disc-shaped object fits related, this makes it essentially religious jewelry and coins. Gun viduals. "flying s a u c e r " taken near here into a definite UFO class, Hy- a one-witness case. As in so many p a r t s , fire-produced slag and All finds are taken from the last week are apparently au- nek said. other cases, it is unfortunate chimney brick have also been field to the museum where they thentic. " T o the best of my recollec- that there a r e not corroborating uncovered. a r e restored and identification Dr. J . Allen Hynek, chairman tion even the 'antenna' shown w i t n e s s e s , " Hynek said. recorded. Some of the be ^ s p e c i - of the astronomy department at on the back has been previously reported, as has the tall s t r u c - However, broken artifacts a r e difficult to identify. One mystery mens a r e now in Washing^Bbeing rmt Northwestern University, also photographed by the Smithsonian Visitor restriction said the pictures were strikingly t u r e , " he said. find is a hinged metal imple- ment with nail-like protrusions Institution, and a part of the r e - similar to other pictures of UFOs The pictures were reportedly constructed fort and artifacts arranged in a semi-circle which lifted at Olin he has investigated. taken around 2:30 p.m. last Mon- taken from it a r e currently on day by two Harrison Township could be anything from a dog collar to a weapon worn by display at the MSU Museum. Hynek is a scientific adviser youths, Grant jaroslaw, 15, and Olin Health Center will no to the Air F&rce's Project Blue his brother Dan, 17. longer limit the number of v i s i - Hardwood t r o u s e r h a n g e r s . Hardwood skirt hangers. Book, which coordinates all UFO The youths said the object t o r s per patient starting Monday. Firm grip, non slip. Spec- reports for the military. hovered over Lake St. Clair be- Holds s e c u r e l y , won't slip. Only two visitors per patient Hynek's comments on the pic- hind their home before speeding were previously permitted, and Set of 2. ial by the set of 2. t u r e s were reported today in the off to the southeast. this number was controlled by i s - Detroit News from whattheNews Hynek said the negatives a r e suing p a s s e s . said was "an exclusive inter- being analyzed by his photograph- Because of the difficulty of view." ic consultant, Fred H. Beckman. maintaining a staff to distribute Hynek had examined negatives "So often these reports and Campus Center passes, Olin will experiment with copied by the News from the investigations go only to the head- the " n o - p a s s " system. original Polaroid- prints taken scratching phase and no f u r t h e r , " " P a s s e s were issued before last week near the Detroit suburb Hynek said. "I want j o go as because we were concerned about of Mount Clemens,. far as we can on thesepictures.' patient privacy and welfare," "Analysis so far does not show Beckman. an expert in e l e c - . said J a m e s . W. Cooke, adminis- any indication of an obvious tron microscopy and precision t r a t o r of Olin, "but we feel v i s i - hoax," Hynek said. photography, said it was "the t o r s can be put on a honor s y s - " T h e striking thing to me is first time there has ever been tem." jt CET the similarity these pictures.have such a concerted scientific ef- Olin will continue to hold visit- S to other photos I have seen and fort to get to the bottom of a ing hours daily f r o m 2 - 4 p . m . and report." 7-8 p.m. Classes Hynek said it was unfortunate (Continued from page 1) fraternity house would remind it's what's happening Suit hangers with t r o u s e r Combination hanger for its members and the public that A n n o u n c e m e n t s m u s t b e r e c e i v e d b e f o r e 11 a . m . bar. Hardwood, nickel suit; jacket plus t r o u s e r s it is more than a social organ- the day b e f o r e publication. ization and that its objectives t r i m . Set of 2. or skirt. Hardwood. a r e consistent with those of the The critical population growth will be of special importance to University." and the dwindling supply of nat- winter term graduates. • • • Reuling and Owen contend that u r a l resources will be the topic the proposal Is not entirely con- of a talk by J a m e s H. Fisher, Abram Barch, professor of sistent with the present r e s - associate professor of geology, psychology, will speak to m e m - idence hall living-learning con- at the Outing Club meeting at 7 tonight in 140 Natural Science. b e r s of Psi Chi at 7:30 tonight cept. In. 3C|| Olds Hall. His topic will " T h e idea i s not. to offer be "Psychology: Where It Has c l a s s e s for the fraternity's r e s - Been and Where It Is Going." idents," Reuling said. " T h e more All members are urged to attend. people they can get to the house Les Gourmets will hold its first who don't live there the better meeting of the term at 8 tonight it will b e . " in 126 Anthony Hall. Forrest " I t s purpose is to enhance Kelsey, manager of the dairy The reactivated International learning," he said. " T h e main plant, will conduct a tour of the Relatons Club under sponsorship benefit to students will be in- cheese processing division. of Justin Morrill College will f o r m a l classroom interaction." have its first of four meetings this term at 7 tonight in 33 " T h e idea is not where the Union. c l a s s e s a r e being offered but Beta Beta Beta, National Biology The meeting will feature a E l e c t r i c i m m e r s i o n heater S p a c e-a-hanger metal the atmosphere they a r e being held i n , " Reuling said. Honorary, will meet at 7:30 to- film on foreign aid entitled, for quick boiling of soups, aids, keep 30 g a r m e n t s tan- night in 35 Union. The meeting "Good Money, Bacj,Money." Possibilities of placing class liquids. Easy, s a f e . gle f r e e . Set of 5. sections in sorority and Indepen- dent off-campus living units is under study, said John E. Dietrich, assistant provost and director of the educational de- velopment program. W h e n four nice boys Go Ape— u y The Monkees There's Monkee gum, Monkee caps, Monkee boots, Monkee pants, two hit Monkee singles, Expaiision hat and coat Folding laundry dryer. over 3 million copiés of the Hangs on shower rod, p l a s - Monkees' first album and soon rack. Lacquered wood. 10 there may be Monkee depart- no-snag pegs. tic pins attached. ments in over 1,600 stores. However, the Saturday Eve- ning Post report on America's h o m e g r o w n B e a t l e s shows that being a Monkee is not quite as much fun as a barrel of monkeys. Their records fancy this! \ were "prefabricated" and, ac- cording to Monkee Mike Nes- mith, "totally dishonest... the sun-colored cotton knit tent shifts music had nothing to do with us." But Monkees owner and creator, Screen Gems, has big- ger problems than its stars' Simply super smashing shifts disenchantment. It's wonder- ing how the fans will react when they discover that the ¡yionkee sound isn't really their ^ - W n . T h e n there's a reported special sale on the short side for juniors who d r e s s for the t i m e s . Mod- ified tents in novelty cotton Dingo $6.85-million lawsuit charging that the Monkees TV show for- knit bonded to acetate. Show- mat was stolen. And there's Foam hanger c o v e r s fit O v e r-the-door garment the question of whether Eng- ing h e r e , two from a c o l l e c - over wire hangers, protect hanger, fits over all d o o r s . land's Beatles will yell foul. snow boots tion in the hottest pinks, sun- But otherwise . . . c l o t h e s . Set of 15. Adjustable. niest y e l l o w s , m o s t dazzling In the same issue read a oranges as well as white and major Post report on America's NOTIONS-SECOND LEVEL EAST LANSING 11" sex-crime rate, the world's Men's lightweight hoots navy. Solid color with square highest, and what's being done Shop Knapp's East Lansing Wednesday about it. That's the January 28 with houndog suede or neck, baby doll s l e e v e s , 11.98. issue of The Saturday Evening Chickenwire patterning with Post. Get your copy today. brown leather uppers, warm f l e e c e linings. bands of solid c o l o r . 14.98 12:00 to 900. Thursday 9:30 to 5:30 * CUWTlS MAQAllHt POST ON M I C NOW STORE FOR MEN STREET LEVEL SPORTSWEAR'CAMP US CENTER