4100 VOTI IN REFERENDUM ASMSU amendments approved appointed member-at-large seats. This, from his non-voting seat on student board. elections personnel time to prepare for All three proposed amendments to the The seat has not been occupied for over it. amendment provided for the addition of ASMSU constitution appeared to be over- a year and Kyle Kerbawy, State News For the first time students used IBM a sophomore (a full-time student with whelmingly ratified in Thursday's all- editor-in-chief, said he did not ever cards to indicate either a "yes" or " n o " fewer than 50 credits the term he runs University referendum, according to a intend to fill the position. vote. Mike Levine, ASMSU elections com- for office) elected at large. It also pro- preliminary, unofficial tally. missioner, indicated that this form of vided that the female member-at-large be The third amendment called for the No official figures were available. voting maybe used again to elect the new elected, instead of appointed. addition of the ASMSU secretary and Voter turnout was light with approxi- student board in spring. Before the referendum four members comptroller to the student board in ex- mately 15 per cent of all eligible students of student board were elected directly offlclo capacities. It was hoped that this voting. ASMSU election officials estimated Complications in this procedure arose, by the students. amendment would give the voting mem- the total vote at 4,100. hdWever, when the ballots did not arrive bers of the student board immediate access "This was probably due both to lack This amendment called for a change in to the knowledge of the day-to-day work- at MSU from Toledo until just a few of publicity and lack of controversy over the student board voting structure to two ings of ASMSU by guaranteeing that hours before the polls opened. They were the issues," noted Mike Levine, ASMSU these two ASMSU members be present at distributed to polling places by ASMSU seniors, two juniors, one sophomore and elections commissioner. student board meetings. members at 7 a.m. Thursday. one female. The second amendment called for a Ratified amendments take effect im- The first amendment called for a change The referendum was originally sched- mediately. in both the male and female student board removal of the State News editor-in-chief uled for Dec. 7 but was postponed to give Little boxes E m p t y ballot boxes await the r e t u r n s of T h u r s d a y ' s election on p r o p o s e d a m e n d m e n t s to the ASMSU c o n s t i t u t i o n . State News photo by Karl S c r i b n e r Friday MICHIGAN 25 « N T S DAILY STATE Chapin recommends UNIVERSITY J a n u a r y 20, 1967 10c library fines increase East Lansing, Michigan V o l . 59 N u m b e r 109 Library director Richard E. Chapin recommendation as a "working document" BOARD SPLITS VOTI: 4-4 recommended to the Student Library Com- to amend or reject after an examination N o chairman for Trustees mittee Thursday a proposal raising the of current student opinion is made. No present five cent per day per book over- vote for accepting or rejecting the recom- due fine to 25 cents per day per book mendation was taken. and charging a 50-cent fee for sending The committee plans to approach cam- a "week overdue'' notification. pus organizations for reactions and sug- The committee agreed to use the gestions before submitting any official meeting that they would not change their was defeated in his November bid for re- Clare White, D-Bay City, pointed out proposal. By K Y L E K E R B A W Y position. election. that the Republicans control both the Last term the 12-man appointed stu- State News E d i t o r - i n - C h i e f " I ran for chairman and voted as I The University president, rather than governor's office and the legislative ma- dent committee recommended a $1 per did for the good of the University," the board's chairman, is required by chinery. book per day fine to the ASMSU Stu- Republicans on the MSU Board ofTrus- law to preside over board meetings. Powell probe dent Board. tees won a political victory Thursday Smith said. He declined explanation of his statement. " I thinkflihe University But last year was the first year the "Last year, Democrats controlled the legislature. It was only natural that our ASMSU decided to investigate student as a Democrat broke party ranks and board voted to make the University's case could be presented best by a Demo- prevented election of a new board chair- can operate well without a chairman." opinion before giving its sanction to the Democratic board members were crit- budget presentation itself, rather than crat. to be headed fine increase. The board has taken no man. The board, weighted 5-3 in favor of ical. "Smith walked out on his party," let the administration handle it. "Today that is not the case. Repub- stand yet. one board member said. "It appears he Republican Merriman saw the split licans are in charge. And I would think, Chapin said his staff discussed the the Democrats, was thrown into a dead- a s a ' 'purely honest difference in opinion. since President Hannah is a well-known now associates himself with the Repub- by N.Y. Democrat fine increase and decided to suggest the 25-cent rate after the student com- lock when senior board member Connor D. Smith, D-Pinconning, led the three licans." " I ' m sure that all members of the board voted in a sincere effort to do what is Republican, that our cas» will be made clear to them." Republicans in opposition to ••the Dem- 9 ' The trustees' by-laws state that "at WASHINGTON 1If) — Rep. Emanuel Cel- mittee passed the $l-a-day proposal, since in the best interests of the University. Merriman said he b e l n e d the Uni- he was not sure the latter adequately ocratic caucus selection, Don Stevens the January meeting following each bi- ler, D-N.Y., chairman of the House Ju- We ( the Republicans) believed Smith's versity administration, leMby Hannah, reflected student opinion. of Okemos. ennial fall election, the board shall elect diciary Committee, was named today to • past experience as board chairman quali- should always make the formal presen- In theory, he said, the $1 fine is sound The struggle, which took place in a one of its own members to be its chair- fied him best for the post. tation of the appropriation request to head the special panel that will investi- gate Adam Clayton Powell's qualifications because a fine should be high enough closed informal meeting Wednesday night, man who shall hold office for two years..." " I don't believe MSU will be hurt at the legislature. to be seated in Congress. to get a book that is needed out of ended in a 4-4 deadlock. Frank Merri- In the past, board chairmen have acted all by not having a chairman." "Some of our presentations have had the students, not just back on the shelf. man, R-Deckerville, said both sides primarily as spokesmen for the board. Both Democrats and Republicans agreed political overtones that they shouldn't Celler, dean of the House in terms of He said more problems could arise under agreed to operate for the next two years Last year's chairman, Warren M. Huff, that MSU's appropriation request would have had if the best interests of the Uni- service, will have five other members of the $1 fine system because students would without a chairman. D-Plymouth, also handled some of the not be hurt for the lack of a chairman as versity are to be served," Merriman the Judiciary Committee on the investi- realize it was cheaper to say they had Both Stevens and Smith, the two can- University's relations with the princi- spokesman. said. gating panel. lost the book and pay the ceiling $6 or didates for the post, indicated after the pally Democratic State legislature. Huff Besides Celler, those named by Speaker $10 fee than the accumulated fine. John W. McCormack to the committee He said the finfe increase is necessary were: G O P urges revamp of to provide students with available ma- James C. Corman, D-Calif.; Claude terials; some students find it cheaper to pepper, D-Fla.; John Conyers Jr., D- " r e n t " books at five cents a day than Mich.; Andrew Jacobs Jr., D-Ind.; Arch to buy a text. A. Moore Jr., R-W.Va.; Charles M. Tea- "Theoretically," he said, "thereshould anti-poverty programs gue, R-Calif.; Clark MacGregor,R-Minn., and Vernon W. Thomson, R-Wis. be no fines at all. But unfortunately, stu- dents don't think about other students, The committee will have five weeks to especially when a reading is assigned report back to the House, which then could or a paper is due." vote to seat Powell or exclude him from The "frustration factor" involved when of federal tax money for presidential Congress. WASHINGTON if) - House Republican Of the five Democrats on the investi- a student repeatedly comes to the library campaigns. Leader Gerald R. Ford of Michigan un- gating committee only Pepper, a liberal seeking an unavailable book spurred the 2. A system of tax sharing involving veiled Thursday a broad GOP legisla- Southerner from Florida, is not on the fine increase study, according to Chapin. return of some federal revenues to the tive program of "sensible solutions for Judiciary Committee. His recommendation will also go to states without strings. the Library's faculty committee. The the 70s" and said Americans "see the One member of the group, Conyers, is decade that dawned in hope fading into 3. An eight per cent Social Security committee, an advisory standing com-' benefit increase, retroactive to Jan. 1, a Negro. frustration and failure, bafflement and mittee of the Academic Council, will send and an escalator clause which would The Republicans selected two members boredom." its reactions to the Provost's office. The have "Social Security benefits rise of the Judiciary Committee, Moore and Giving the Republican response to MacGregor. domestic aspects of President Johnson's automatically with rising prices." Ford (please t u r n to the back page) State of the Union message, Ford cal- said the two would not require an in- led for increased Social Security and crease in Social Security taxes. veterans benefits, revamping of federal 4. Passage of anti-riot legislation plus A S M S U scuttles plan education and anti-poverty programs and protection of "individuals in the exer- commissions to study city problems, fed- cise of their constitutional rights," which eral government structure and the nation's were approved by the House last year in defense posture. the ill-fated civil rights bill of 1966 which died in the Senate. for shoe store boycott Ford, who last week termed the Pres- ident's proposed six per cent surtax on 5. A complete review of the nation's individual and corporate income taxes labor-management laws and the opera- a "tragic mistake," said first priority tions of the National Labor Relations should go to "the growth and prosper- Board, plus selection of a commission edly said the survey was incomplete. By T R I N K A C L I N E ity of our economy" and warned "there to recommend emergency strike legis- United Students' suggestions included are ominous signs of an economic slow- lation. State News Staff W r i t e r printing a price list of all area stores down this year." 6. Revision of education programs to so students could see what stores charge A proposal to recommend an ASMSU Likewise, GOP Senate Leader Ever- put all preschool programs such as Op- most and let students decide where to buy. boycott against an East Lansing shoe re- ett M. Dirksen, giving the Republican eration Head Start into the Office of Edu- They also suggested the committee be pair store was defeated by the group's position on foreign policy, reaffirmed cation and to provide grants to the states expanded to have "enough personnel to price study committee Thursday. support for the administration's stand "without federal earmarking or controls." conduct a worthwhile and detailed survey." The committee voted three-three,auto- in Vietnam. 7. "Total revamping and redirection of Following the meeting, Jim Friel,chair- matically defeating the proposal to initiate Among the specific proposals outlined the poverty w a r , " including GOP pro- man of the United Students price study the boycott. by Ford were these: posals rejected last year to shift some committee, said, " i f they had passed that 1. Repeal of the campaign-financing emphasis from the federal government During an open discussion with several proposal, they'd have blown everything bill approved last year providing for use to local government and private industry. United Students members, a shoe repair we have planned." Nanooks of the North store representative and the chairman of the East Lansing Chamber of Commerce, Jim Sink, member of the ASMSU com- POSSIRLE PORNOGRAPHY the committee agreed further information mittee, said more information will be should be collected. gathered, but that the committee must re- W i n t e r ' s z e r o - d e g r e e weather doesn't prevent these hairy- The shoe repair store representative tain its method of individual communi- c h e s t e d m e n of Alpha Tau O m e g a f r o m p r a c t i c i n g for the J r . said its "grade A " material and rent cation rather than employ a general attack. 500, which will be held M a y . 11. State News photo by Mike Beasley and labor costs were responsible for price discrepancies. U - M film show raided EDITOR SCOFFS AT U.S. PROPOSAL Questioned about these price differences Roger E . Jonas, executive chairman of the ANN ARBOR (fl — City police raided with William Delhi, Washtenaw County East Lansing Chamber of Commerce, re- a movie showing Wednesday night on prosecutor, on whaiher obscenity plied, "Competition sets the price sand ob- the University of Michigan campus charges would be filed in connection Soviet attacks arms reduction plan viously there is competition here. You and confiscated a film on grounds it with the film -showing. must also consider such factors as rent may be pornographic. and labor." Miss Ellen Frank of .petroit, co- Detective Lt. Eugene Staudenmeier chairman of the Cinema" Guild, said The open meeting was originally planned of Ann Arbor Police said the film was the film includes scenes of nudity, to compile suggestions from interested leaders. Washington sources said the mes- titled "Flaming Creatures" and was rape and masturbation. students to guide expansion of the ASMSU MOSCOW {fi — A Soviet magazine at- UJS. view is that Soviet disarmament plans being shown to about 300 students by tack Thursday on President Johnson en- sage is intended to open the way for talks The film has no plot, she said, and price survey, said Tim Pickard,chairman are unworkable. the Cinema Guild. The Guild is an couraged diplomatic speculation that the on a moratorium for missile systems. is considered an experimental movie. of the ASMSU committee. But it became In denouncing Johnson's appeal for both But coming as an indication of the Soviet agency of the U-M Student Govern- Miss Frank said the movie was pro- more of an ASMSU-United Students battle- Kremlin will spurn U.S. efforts for a freeze ment Council. on building antiballistic missile systems. the Soviet and the United States to slow duced in New York City and has been ground. the arms race, Kraminov took the ususal Kraminov's comment might herald a Seizure of the film sparked a sit-in banned in New York State. Denouncing Johnson's appeal to slow by some 13 U-M students for several step of translating Johnson's Jan. 10 significant development in the debate in the Referring to a rape scene, she said, The philosophy of the committee, ac- the arms race, the editor of the magazine hours at the Ann Arbor police station. cording to Pickard, is to conduct the price State of the Union remarks on foreign United States on the need for a U.S. sys- " I question why Americans can't see "Abroad" said the Soviet Union seeks dis- The university does not have a campus study on an individual basis. Rather than policy and then commenting on them. tem and whether the Russians have one this. It's one of the most violent and armament, and not control over arma- police force. propose a general boycott, business firms His attack came as the new U.S. am- already. unjust social crimes that can occur. ments. Staudenmeier planned to confer today will be approached separately by ASMSU bassador, Llewellyn E. Thompson, waited Some diplomatic analysts suggest the Control is purely an American concept, and a chamber of commerce official. in Moscow for an appointment to deliver Soviets already have spent too many rubles wrote editor Daniil F . Kraminov, and one United Students representatives repeat- a secret message from Johnson to Soviet on missile defenses to turn back. the Soviet Union always has opposed. The TATE NEWS Kyle C. Kerbawy editor-in-chief Eric Pianin , managing editor James Spanlolo, campus editor Thomas Segal, editorial editor Lawrence Werner, sports editor Andrew Molllson, executive reporter TiN Joel Stark William G. Papclak, asst. ad manager "PA/fr advertising manager Friday Morning, January 20, 1967 EDITORIALS Buses should sell advertising • The University bus sys- ses and the occasional sale tem i s n ' t n u m b e r two, so of tickets. it doesn't try h a r d e r . This is one of the few Nor is ' it n u m b e r one: systems which rely exclus- it doesn't m a i n t a i n the high ively on ticket sales; most s t a n d a r d s that n u m b e r one is bus companies receive a expected to m a i n t a i n . substantial part of their in- üJLf It's the only system we come from the familiar ad- have so it doesn't have to vertising on the bus ceiling. provide the kind of service Why doesn't the MSU bus that a line in competition system sej.l.advertising? The must provide. administration has come up Transportation during with several reasons, all of c l a s s hours is inadequate and them lame. overcrowded. B u s e s often Jolman states that, first, must pass students waiting some 2,500 additional stu- bus system informed the the advertising might inter- at stops. dents live in East Campus. State News that improve- fere with the University's Theres a new thing spreading all The weekend schedule is The overcrowding, hardly ments in the system, such policy of "deferring to pri- over town. Yay. Yay. C'mon, baby, abominable. Before a bas- a Pepsi-generation experi- as increasing the number vate enterprise whenever do the Hepatitis! ketball game, a pop enter- ence, could be eliminated if of buses running on week- possible." tainment concert, or any the University would put one ends and evenings, would The advertising wouldn't Other major event, the mad or two extra buses into serv- not be economically feasi- interfere with private enter- OUR READERS' MINDS rush of passengers crowd ice on special-events week- ble under the present sys- prise, for the bus system the buses to intolerable lev- ends. tem of financing. is not in competition with els. The reason? Since fall Why hasn't this been done? In a word, the answer is •Currently the bus sys- private enterprise. The Lan- sing system doesn't serve Phillips' column •1964, buses have followed MONEY. tem, which is self support- intra-campus traffic so the the same weekend and eve- ning schedule. But today, Henry W. Jolman, gen- eral foreman of the MSU ing, gets all of its revenue from the sale of bus pas- advertising would not detract from their sales pitch. missed point Secondly, Jolman states that the University would RICHARD PHILLIPS have to require "tight con- A n d how t r o l s . " Why? The students To the Editor: Register those min d s ? don't need to have their ad- I was glad to hear—as I'm sure we vertising material censored, To the Editor: all were—that Richard Phillips ("Human- and it certainly would not The social insight that is so dramatically ity in the Heart of Dixie," State News, apparent in the writing of Richard Phillips Jan. 17) had a "nice t i m e " in Alabama Yet it's not the historical significance, strewn about in remote places. Yeah. require tight controls to keep is certainly a surprise for the State News! on his recent hunting trip, that he dis- or the death itself, that makes murder Newsy, alh't it? the advertising within good After the shocking news that Alabamians covered that Alabamans have anatomical E D I T O R ' S N O T E : This is the worth reading. It's the method that gives are physiologically Hortio sapiens Mr. features similar to Northern homo sap- America a vicarious kick of pleasure- taste. iens, that he got a haircut for $1.25, ; last a r t i c l e in a f o u r - p a r t s e r i e s Phillips makes the profound statement . ' w r i t t e n by R i c h a r d P h i l l i p s . pain when someone dies unnaturally. Gripes have answer? Finally, Jolman said that that Alabamians are nice people (to Mr. that "Alabama's finest" didn't give him Phillips anyway). Apparently the fact that a ticket, etc., etc., etc. That's really In Alabama, over Christmas vacation, All week long I listened to radio " g r i p e " the move would not bring in he is a nice, white American tourist with swell—and Irrelevant. If he wanted to •' Murders are an everyday occurrence. write something which may have been of They're barely notlcable In today's robot- the bodies of three Birmingham young- programs where people phoned in to tell a significant amount of $$$ does not enter the picture. sters, two were originally fromMlchigan, whoever would listen of their sorrows. some interest to somebody reading an tstic computerizing of events. Looking at money. The actual amount ' I f my skin was brown, I probably would were found. Had they died In a car wreck, A depraved mind (commonly called a editorial page, perhaps he could have the situation coldly, the result is the same, have been treated differently. But I went no matter what the circumstances. only relatives would remember more than homosexual) was arrested for the mur- would not be known until to Alabama to camp-out. . . not to march commented on what Lurleen's and a day or two. ders. Naturally some Idiots told disc- George's Inaugural address portended for 'I People die dally in automobile accidents, jockeys what they thought. the plan was tried. But even or picket." That, Mr. Phillips, is all that bastion of "Humanity in the Heart plane crashes, and in dark alleys. And too evidentl And has it ever occurred to rjot too many people pay attention to the But too many juicy ingredients for sick Jolman estimates that it you that all the marches, pickets, and other of Dixie." (Kind of ironically, I thought, minds to gush over make corpses the cen- " I think homosexuals ought to be re- the Wallaces' inaugural article appeared statistics. ter of nationwide attention. They were quired by state law to register them- would be $2,000-$3,000. civil rights work was not done so that right next to Phillips's piece.) What the public likes to gobble-up for selves," cried one voice over the radio. white tourists like you could go camping, Indigestion are the brutal details. The nude, I understand. And they were bru- Others clamored for the same thing. When the bus system is but to enable a sizable minority of the tally murdered. Their ages of innocence Curiously enough, the most telling news isn't important, but the gore is. (under 14) added an extra flavor of hor- pressed for funds, why turn inhabitants of that state to live without '. Think of Richard Speck, Charles Whit- Governor George Wallace, by merit fear and to be treated as equals? Of point made by Phillips was made rather ror. of his position, was drawn Into the spot- up one's nose at possibly course you're not going to march. You're off-handedly~"If my skin was brown, man. Lee Harvey Oswald and that "kid iYi Arizona." Sick minds, of course. But Buddy, that's "news." And you can't light. He expressed sorrow and sym- $3,000? Even this sum would going to enjoy yourself and like most I probably would have been treated dif- 4re they any sicker than the law-abiders pathy, just as any other governor would A merlcans to keep your head well buried • ferently." (To maintain his mood, he entirely blame the news media for serving have done. be enough to defray the cost in the sand of apathy. should have prefaced this with 'Inci- who crave for a tingle of shock at each it on a creepy platter. You (and me). . . new Incident? the public. . . everyone. . .wants it. And of course, some organizations im- of paying a few extra drivers No, Mr. Phillips, informed and con- dentally.") All his other tripe about the friendliness, etc., of Alabamans pales mediately campaigned for the prohibition for special-event weekends cerned Americans are all too aware of Into insignificance when this point is I was in Alabama at the time. And I of guns, knives and broken beer bottles. the differences between Alabama and Three killed slobbered over the slaying like you did. Perhaps all guns should be registered. and evenings. Michigan. And if the time comes that considered. Then again, maybe it doesn't Kalamazoo and Detroit begin to ruthlessly when we see Mr. Phillips's white face After all, the bodies were found less Perhaps homosexuals should be forced It was University secre- peering out to us. How many times did newspapers and than three miles from where I was camp- to register. And what about the sick minds beat Negroes and deny them even the most TV-radio obligingly reprint photographs ing. Policemen discovered crimson- that thrill to read and hear of guns, sick tary Jack Breslin, though, basic freedoms that our Constitution guar- I hope his next three articles will <>f Oswald's collapse when Jack Ruby shot stained undershirts only a short distance minds and brutal murders? who explained the real rea- antees, I would sincerely hope that South- deal with something a little more meaty him in a Dallas jail? from my tent. Other bits of clothing were Should we register? erners too would come to protest. But we son MSU buses don't carry can well be asssured that then, as now, than some trivial Impressions which miss the point. If not, since it was a hunting advertising: like so many people would sit back in their self-cen- trip, I suggest you put it on the sports tered world and write how "friendly" good ideas, it probably " h a d BOB IMLER page. everyone was, and how much fun they had By the way, I don't doubt that Ala- never been considered." without a thought of helping others. bamans are humane—to white folk. Timothy J . Wernette D.J. Kullck The Editors Plymouth sophomore Watts new in dresses Carteret, N.J., graduate student You meet the nicest The electric dress, according to re- ion is Walpole Culpepper. PhJD., Georgia hookup into a white AC wedding grid. cent fashion news articles, has arrived Tech, '47, who creates fashion's most Culpepper feels battery longevity and on the scene. daring circuit prints at his salon, the rain-proof dresses, two quality control At a recent showing, a people who are Volt-Age, in Menlo Park. problems, are the industry's most im- paid to write about current fashions watch- " I was lucky to get in on the ground portant concerns. ed dresses glow throbbing red hearts, floor of this business," Culpepper said Few women, he say», grasp technical flickering strips, whirling patterns and as he bustled about the Volt-Age, his maintalnence problems and think telling blinking spots. pockets full of siiderules and tape meas- their husbands, "Button me up and turn '"• The hip-slinger batteries are a bit ures. me on, hon," is all the attention one FOR THE CAR ! bulky, but miniaturization is in the works, Culpepper first became involved in of his creations needs, a s are signs that flash " l o v e " or "get the fashion world when he successfully "Also, men have no more patience l o s t " at the owner's discretion. This Should please any guy who ever wanted mediated the long and bitter labor dis- pute between the I.L.G.W.U. and Con- with 'All my dresses are In the shop' than they did with 1 haven't a thing to "TapeDek-8" jto date the Time Square News Sign or Edison. "In those days it was pretty wear,"' Culpepper said. fcad a romantic attachment to a pinball much General Electric for fall and West- ''I think the college piale strapped machine. inghouse for spring," he said. for cash appreciates these new fashions SOLID STATE Stereo Tape Player : Presiding over this new phase of fash- Culpepper's articles on electrical ap- most," he said. "They call up the girl plications of fluid dynamics have appeared and say 'Let's Just watch your new dress tonight."' Highest Quality Fits Any Car P u b l l a h e d by the s t u d e n t , of M i c h i g a n Stata Untveratty « v e r y c l a a a day throughout in Vogue and Redbook, and his critical appraisal of hemlines will appear in next Meanwhile, the gas and oil industries 129 the year and a apectal W e l c o m e Week Edlttoa In S e p t e m b e r . Subacrlptlon rate 910 per y e a r . A u t h o r i z e d by the B o a r d of Student Publica- month's I.E.E.E. Specter. "My biggest are working feverishly on a butane eve- 95* tion.. contribution, I feel," said Culpepper, ning gown with adjustable flame. •Plus Modest Installation Price M e m b e r Aaaoclated P r e a a . United P r e a a I n t e r n a t i o n a l . I n l a n d D a l l y Preaa A a a o c l a t l o n . "has been interesting the great bouti- ques in campus recruiting and research. Letter policy Aaaoclated Collegiate Preaa. Michigan Preaa A a a o c l a t l o n . M i c h i g a n C o l l e g i a t e P r e a a Aa- aoclatlon. I've come to regard the Dior Chair at Second c l a a a poatage paid at E a a t L a n a l n g , M.I.T. and the Glvenchy Professorships Mich. at Cal Tech almost as my personal "SERVING GREATER LANSING FOR 50 YEARS E d i t o r i a l and bualneaa offlcea at 341 Student monuments," he said. The State News welcomes all letters. TG TT"* 'Me and Dem Guys' -Wholesale & Retail - Servlcea B u i l d i n g . M i c h i g a n State U n l . e r a l t y , KRAMER Eaat Lanalng. Mich. " I ' m also proud to have led the fight Please be brief and type all letters Pbonea; Editorial SiS-1352 for federal regulation of the industry,"» triple spaced, If possible. Please, also, • W 4:30 7:30 SIX EIGHTS A WEEK\ AUTO CORAL GABLES PARTS C l a a a l f l e d Advertising 365-8368 Dlaplay Advertleiag 383-841)0 he said, recalling an unfortunate incident include name, address and university Baeineae - C i r c u l a t i o n 386-8389 at a cafe-society wedding when an attempt standing. No unsigned letters will be Photographic 388-8311 800 E. Kalamazoo Phone 484.1303 was made to patch a black formal DC printed. Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, January 20, 1967 3 Anti-Maoist groups hold out in 2 cities TOKYO Iff! — Opponents of Mao to Harbin, Dairen and Mukden, In Shenyang, one Japanese re- Tse-tung were apparently holding northeast of Peking. port said six persons were ser- out stubbornly Thursday In two The reports were based on iously Injured, scores suffered key cities while clashes between Peking wall posters and their injuries, and 16 were arrested the factions in Red China's power accuracy could not be Judged. Jan. 6 during "armed violence" struggle were reported spread- Anti-Mao textile workers in between pro-Mao and pro-Liu ing throughout the mainland. Chengchow clashed with Red forces at a rally of 200,000. Maoist-controlled radio and Guards Jan. 7-8, resulting In one The Industrial city was said to press reports admitted that his dead and 81 injured, 23 seriously, be threatened by the possibility enemies, believed led by Presi- the reports said. of cltywlde strikes. dent Liu Shao-chi, continued to put up resistance In Peking and Shanghai. The Japan Broadcasting Corp. reported from Peking that a wall Hannah to meet LBJ today at White House poster announced the arrest of Liu's son, Liu Yun-jo. It quoted Mao's wife, Chiang Ching, a key Medal winner leader of the purge, as labeling President John A. Hannah Is young Liu " a rotten element scheduled to meet twice today Ford Foundation and'theCarnegie P r e s i d e n t Johnson c o n g r a t u l a t e s A i r F o r c e M a j . who secretly had contacted a for- with President Lyndon B. Johnson Corp. of New York, Is concerned I chiefly with the activities of ÍÍ B e r n a r d F . F i s h e r , who was a w a r d e d Wednesday eign country." in Washington. American colleges and univer- the C o n g r e s s i o n a l Medal of H o n o r in a W h i t e House There was no confirmation of Hannah will first attend a White sities in international relations. c e r e m o n y . F i s h e r is the f i r s t m e m b e r of the A i r some reports that Liu himself House conference as a repre- F o r c e to win the m e d a l f o r s e r v i c e in V i e t n a m . had been arrested. sentative of Education and World At his second meeting with the The wording of a statement in Affairs, a private, non-profit President, he will present a re- the People's Dally Indicated educational organization which he port from the U.S. Civil Rights 12 IN O U N Mao's enemies still held firm in helped found In 1962. The group, Commission. Hannah is chair- Peking. established with aid from the man of that commission. Hepatitis cases As quoted by the New China News Agency the paper said: "The fighting task that the pro- Mao proletarian revolutionaries must courageously shoulder is continue decline the recovery of all the usurped power from the handful of per- sons in authority within the party Campus Center kitchens on campus for cleanli- who are taking the capitalist By L A U R E L P R A T T road." ness, especially the temperature State News Staff W r i t e r Peking-based Japanese corre- Two more hepatitis patients of water in automatic dish- spondents reported bloody left Olln Health Center Thurs- washers, which must be at least clashes between Mao's followers day to convalesce at home, low- 180 degrees. Checks are made and pro-Liu elements spreading ering the total of students hos- without. warning. pitalized on campus for the dis- ease to 12. There have been no hepatitis admissions since 10 a.m. Tues- 4 0 senators urge iS Europe policy change day, according to Dr. James S. Feurig, director of Olln. Two hepatitis patients were dis- charged earlier this week, and duced—and allowed to die— in WASHINGTON Iff).— More than II D r . Feurig said he feels the the 1966 session. Incidence of the disease is "def- 40 senators of both parties Joined in a challenge to U.S. policy Mansfield said the Senate would initely on the wane." throw a searching light on the Meanwhile, standard daily in Europe Thursday, reofferinga troop problem by turning the tests of food and water sources resolution urging a sustantial resolution over to the Senate S have been stepped up all over reduction of American forces Foreign Relations and Armed campus; county health authori- in NATO. Services Committees for Joint ties are checking sources out- The resolution-generated as it hearings. side the campus; and state health was last year by members of The resolution is expected to officials are corresponding with the Senate Democratic Policy receive a friendly airing in the officials in other states concern- Committee—Immediately set off hearings since its cosponsors ing students who gave hepatitis the Senate's first full-blown for- » include the two committee chair- as their reason for withdrawing eign policy debate of the 90th man, Sen. J.W. Fulbright, D- after fall term. Congress. Ark., of Foreign Relations, and i Since the disease is primari- In reintroducing the measure. Sen. Richard B. Russell, D-Ga., ly communicated by contaminated Senate Democratic Leader Mike of Armed Services. foods and beverages, personnel Mansfield of Montana told the In the debate, Fulbright said from Food Stores, Foods and Senate he saw a disconcerting he and Russell had agreed to set Ii Dormitory Services and the san- tendency "to beg or bug allies" up a Joint subcommittee and added itarian's office of the Dept. of Into sharing an American view that he hoped Mansfield would act Public Safety have been involved of NATO needs that they don't as chairman. in the search for a hepatitis necessarily agree with. Fulbright said that he did not source on campus. The Senator said other Euro- think the resolution was "an in- So far they have found nothing. pean nations might, like France, fringement at a l l " on thè powers The search began* Dec. 20, become tired soon of having large of the executive. • 1966, triggered by letters of with- American contingents on their The resolution would express I•ft drawal from students In several soil. states who named hepatitis as that it was the sense of the Senate •ft He said the administration that the UJ5. forces in Europe their reason for not returning. merely had been marking time on should be substantially reduced, Water sources, normally the troop - reduction issue since leaving it up to the President to checked once a day, have been the resolution was first intro- fix the actual figure. double-checked. Wells and direct sources In residence halls have both been checked at least twice daily. Officials have been inves- tigating the possibility that sewer and water lines may have been crossed producing sewer leakage % Into the water supply because of construction work. All tests of drinking water have been negative. Food Stores, the source of, all food on campus, has been checking the food purchased by the University and the persons who handle it as well, A team of inspectors checks to charm you off a ON SAIE perch...wild canary NOW by Vanity Fair NEW FOR 1967 An exciting new sunshine shade for spring! Wild Canary, a yellow that sings with clothes and com- plexions, and livens up the lagging days of win- here to spark ter. Come see our aviary...and uncage yourself a flock of delights in nylon and L y c r a * spandex. your spring Nylon tricot slip with bodice of lined Alencon lace. 32-40 average, 32-38 short, petite 6-8-10. $6. and summer Every Body's bra, with 3-section Alencon lace cups. 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A Million Facts Novelty knit top, 5.98 LINGERIE EAST LANSING GARDEN LEVEL at Your Fingertips •jf.v Michigan Statte Ñéws, East Lansing, Michigan F r i d a y , J a n u a r y 20, 1967 SPORTS C A M CLAMI SATURDAY MSU 1st, M' last in turnabout By H O W A R D KOHN once and champion twice in the State," joked Strack to r.- bevy Strack predicts that Michigan while they're here," he adds. three-year stay of its all-time of Illinois reporters after last can still finish above .500 this Irrespective of the past and Michigan Daily Writer weekend's loss to the Illini. future, though, the present is scorer, but is wlnless in three season. " I ' m confident that these ANN ARBOR Irrespective of Big Ten games this season as Michigan is returning to Yost kids are going to be big winners the name of the game. Big Ten championships, John it bumps up against the unbeaten after two straight road games. Spartans Saturday. In its last 39 home games, over Benington on U-M Benington and Dave Strack do share a unique title. Since the Wolverines'planned- four years, the Wolverines have Both are former basketball for all-events building "The lost only two—including a sea- players who've had their numbers House that Cazzie Built" is still son opening beating by North- retired. half-planned and half-finished, western two weeks ago. Michi- MSU b a s k e t b a l l Coach John Benington had the fol- At* San Francisco, where he the season's lone game between gan did defeat fourth-ranked lowing to say about S a t u r d a y ' s game/with M i c h i g a n : played as an undergrad, the Dons the Intra-state rivals will be Houston and stolid Davidson at " I expect the U n i v e r s t i y of M i c h i g a n to use g u a r d enshrined Benington's old num- played at archaic Yost Field- Yost before Christmas. J i m P i t t s in the low post p o s i t i o n , right u n d e r the ber six when Bill Russell grad- house, at 1:30 p.m. In Its three conference games, Michigan's man-to-man defense basket w h e r e C a z z i e R u s s e l l used to p l a y . He gets uated in 1954. Some 12 years later, Last year's gambit between has actively allowed 93, 98 and a lot of rebounds t h e r e . Michigan sequestered alumnus the teams, won by the Spartans Strack's number 33 when Cazzie was anti-climactic because the 99 points, for a conference-lead- " T h e y ' l l a l s o t r y to set up double s c r e e n s under Russell graduated. Wolverines had already clinched ing mark in self-defeating frui- the basket to free C e n t e r C r a i g Dill f o r a shot. However, without Russell, 01- the title. This year, even though tion. Against Illinois, the defense They've done that a lot t h i s s e a s o n . lie Da rden and their three tourna- things are already looking anti- wasted the offense's 53.4 shoot- " I ' l l tell you one t h i n g . They've the best 0-3 t e a m mates, Strack and Michigan have anti-climactic fof Michigan, the ing percentage. in the c o n f e r e n c e . Two of t h e i r three l o s s e s , to de-graduated to the bottom of the game does mean survival to the Both of Michigan's leading W i s c o n s i n and I l l i n o i s , c a m e on the road, and the Big Ten this year while Ben- Spartans and prestige to the Wol- scorers, 6-10 center Craig Dill and 6-6 forward Dennis Stewart, o t h e r loss was to Northwester+i, one of the best t e a m s ington has extended his crusade verines. to bring Michigan State com- "It'll be a funny feeling to know are wizardly outside shots who in the c o n f e r e n c e . pletely out of retirement. that this year you'll be rooting get outwitted underneath the bas- " M i c h i g a n has good s c o r i n g and p e r s o n n e l . When Benington gets the tip in '67 Michigan was co-champion for us instead of for Michigan ket. Stewart finally grabbed 11 e v e r y t h i n g is put together, they'll give anyone a p r o b - rebounds last Saturday, but Dill again picked off only four. " D i l l has been playing w e l l . They have two good U-M invades Spartan pool Actually, Dill plays the high s o p h o m o r e s in Dennis Stewart and Bob S u l l i v a n . And post in Strack's 1-3-1 offense; P i t t s will be o u r biggest ^problem. Stewart, Bob Sullivan and J i m " M i c h i g a n is a c t u a l l y in the s a m e boat we c o u l d Pitts play wing; Dennis Bankey have been I n . They played two g a m e s on the r o a d plays the point; and no one plays low post. and a fough N o r t h w e s t e r n at h o m e . I v i s u a l i z e d us By JOHN L A D D the Spartans, 70-59, in dual meet men. The entries in each event Kingery's- 1:58.5 victory in the breaststroke and should give the Consequently, there has been b e i n g 0-2 p l a y i n g at I l l i n o i s and against Iowa. W e ' r e competition. are submitted just shortly before 200-yard backstroke in Michi- Michigan's medley relay team a a dearth of rebounding and a in much b e t t e r shape/than I a n t i c i p a t e d . State News Sports W r i t e r Michigan, on the basis of their the event. gan's loss to Indiana last week- valuable lead. Spartan breast- plethora of 20-foot hooks, jump- " W e ' d be g l a d to fate 1-1 right now. past performances, would have to Assistant Coach Richard Fet- end compares to Dilley's 1:59.6 strokers Craig Brown and Carl ers and set shots. " A g a i n s t M i c h i g a n , we'll put Matt Aitch on D i l l , I The MSU swimming team has be a slight favorite going into the ters said, " I ' m looking forward season mark. Bill Groft will Weber have improved over last " W e can't overpower anybody. their first home meet of the term don't know who wl/l g u a r d P i t t s . I expect man-to- meet. But the individual races to It. It's going to be very inter- probably face Dilley in the 50 year, but the NCAA breaststroke In order to win, we have to play Saturday at 2 p.m. in the Men's m a n and zone defenses f r o m M i c h i g a n . T h e y ' r e should be very close, andwinnlng esting to see where they place free. Groft was twice Big Ten Champion will probably be out of hard each minute of the game. IM pool against the powerful l i a b l e to t r y s o m e s u r p r i s e s , being 0-3, and such enough of the close ones could men like Carl Robie. You can bet Champ In the 50. If Dilley could reach. If we let up, we can quickly Michigan Wolverines. This first a big g a m e f o r t l ^ e m . " give the Spartans victory. " I t ' s they'll be interested in our win both these events It would go drop behind by eight or ten home meet Is likely to be the The one- and three- meter going to be a whale of a meet," choices." along way toward a Spartan vic- points," analyzes Strack. best and most closely contended : diving events may give the Spar- said Coach Charles McCaffree. tory. Fe ncers in Detroit meet of the season. Robie, Michigan's team cap- tans one of their best chances for Pitts, Russell's replacement at Swimming strategy consists of tain, is a swimmer who could be Pete Williams, the fourth of the guard, has been Michigan's most a surprise victory over the Wol- In last year's Big Ten cham- choosing which swimmers to dangerous In just about any posi- Spartans' All-Americans will aggressive rebounder and inside verines. Fred Whiteford, Duane pionship and NCAA title meets swim In which races, and such tion. Robie was an All-Amerlcan possibly face Robie In 200-yard shot. At 6-3 he moves like he Green and Doug Todd will give the Wolverines twice finished just one place ahead of the Spartans, with U-M finishes of second in choices will be very Important to the coming meet. Most of the between-race tension in swim- In six events last year. He is likely to swim against either or both the Spartan co-captains, Ed individual medley. Williams de- feated Robie in the 400-yard in- dividual medley at the Big Ten stiff competition to Michigan's Fred Brown and Jay Meaden. could be the world's first 26- foot high jumper. Stewart and Sullivan—both for Iowa State meet Meaden and Todd will be reviving The fast Improving MSU fenc- feated fencer last week, Warren the conference and third in the ming results from speculation as Glick and Ken Walsh, In the free- meet last year, but Robie finished sophomores—were high school a rivalry that stretches back to ing team faces Iowa State In a Lucas, Bill Wunch and Tom "two-A's." They also defeated to how the opponent.will U9e his higher in the All-Amerlcan list- All-Americans. Stewart's forte style or butterfly events. their Illinois high school days. dual meet ¡Iiis Saturday at De- Moore will compete in sabre, Russ Kingery may provide ings In that event. is a fadeaway jumper from the troit. The two teams meet on the while Bill Kerner, Gus Schubert, Paul Scheerer will probably JAZZ! some strong competition for But neither MSU or U-M can corner while Sullivan's Is a one- J i m Davey and Ken Summerville neutral site because Iowa is fenc- Spartan Olympian Gary Dilley. prove unbeatable in the 200-yard count on just a few good swim- handed push shot from either compose the epee squad. ing there Friday, and a limited mers to win the meet for'them. side of the key. traveling budget prohibits them "We have not fenced Iowa In a meet as close as this one the Bankey, co-captain along with from doming to East Lansing. race for third place may be as Dill, has sagged into impotence State in several years, so it is For your Dancing pleasure swing with important as that for first. as an offensive threat but still Spartan Coach Charles Schmit- hard to say just what type of team the Michigan State adds stability to an inexperienced ter will be starting the same team they have," Schmitter said. that' defeated Illinois Chicago Jan. 27 t Such swimmers as George team. "After the shakedown we had last RED WINN QUARTET MBA'is with Technical Background Booth or John Muslin in the but- terfly and Rolf Groseth and Don Strack is slowly grooming 5-8 Circle last week, 14-13. Roger Loutzenhiser, Terry week, we should be tougher though." speedster Ken Maxey, a high AT THE WORLD LEADER IN A RAPIDLY GROWING FIELD+%. Rauch in the freestyle will have to win these secondary races If school grad from " C a z z i e " Car- ßlvens, Serge Montalvo and Don Satchell, .will compete in foil, Schmitter also noted that Ker- RECORD OF DOUBLING IN SIZE EVERY FOUR Y E A R S . . . ver in- Chicago, to fill Bankey's j KoKo Bar the event MSU won 7-2 last ner was elected by the team as Michigan is to be defeated. COMPANY-FUNDED R/D OF OVER $1 MILLION slot. / week. fencer of the week, after winning ANNUALLY... 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FOX'S McDonald's waiter I matthau JMOmmtA amtuscortcoumbosuas F r a f l p r Shopping C e n t e r DOWNTOWN-LANoIMj LANSING-EAST LANSING AND DOWNTOWN Friday, January 20, 1967 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan SPORTS s* SIDELINES Toby Towson: * Skaters meet Tech in sellout battle playing four games in five days have not participated in any out- tional championship, after having All are double letter winners who were sophomores when the NCAA up with a consistent scoring punch in their western road trip, are gymnast By JOE M I T C H boy against Colorado College and side games in two weeks. won the WCHA crown. title was won In 1965. State News Sports W r i t e r hoping a change of scenery will Denver, have had only one day s The Huskies, having one of But the Spartans knocked the Heading the list are goalie Huskies from title contention with do the trick. Doug Volmar, the Rugged Michigan Tech, tough practice to prepare for the Husk- their poorer years after cap- Tony Esposito and defenseman a 4-3 victory and then went on to WCHA's scoring leader last sea- on MSU hockey teams over the ies. turing the WCHA crown the last Bruce Rlutta. Both received A11- take the NCAA title. son, continues to lead the team By L A R R Y W E R N E R years, meets the Spartan skaters MSU lost three games on its two years, stand 4-2 in the league Amerlcan honors last season. This was one of the few times in scoring., He has fired in 15 State News S p o r t s E d i t o r road trip west, losing twice to and 7-5 for the season. Tech is Esposito, who alternates with tonight and Saturday night at the goals this season, but was able to in third place in the WCHA be- that an MSU team had beaten a another senior Rich Best, Is sec- Ice Arena in a pair of sellout Denver and splitting with Col- get only one in the four games hind league-leader Michigan and Huskle team. During the season, ond in ,the WCHA in a goals- Western Collegiate HockeyAssn. orado College. That left the Spar- out west. Toby Towson is a great name for an athlete. It sounds good on the second place North Dakota. the Spartans lost two games to against-average with a 2.0. In (WCHA) games. tans with a 6-9 record in over- MSU Coach Amo Bessone will loudspeakers. The last time Michigan Tech Tech at Houghton. three games, he has given up six Faceoff time is 7:30 both all play and a 3-7 mark in the go with two goalies as willTech'3 Toby Towson Is the name of a Michigan State gymnast—a very WCHA for sixth place. appeared on the Spartan ice was Tech Coach John Maclnnes, goals. nights. Reserved seats are all Coach Maclnnes. Jerry Fisher good gymnast, by the way. He's a national champion. Michigan Tech comes into the last March during the WCHA voted the WCHA's "Coach of the Best, ranked equally with Es- sold, but students will be admitted and Gaye Cooley split the duties Toby is a sophomore floor exercise specialist but has been out for 25 cents and an ID. two league games more rested playoffs when the Huskies were Y e a r " last season, brings a sen- posito in the mind of Coach Mac- of action with a knee injury. Towson will make his varsity dual-meet seeking their second straight na- ior dominated team to play MSU. out west, with Fisher scoring one The Spartans, worn weary from than the Spartans. The Huskies lnnes, has a 3.0 goals-against- debut Saturday against Southern Illinois, the NCAA champion. win and a loss and Cooley losing average in the WCHA. In three It would be hard to distinguish the Blue Mound, 111., sophomore twice. The Spartans, unable to come G y m showdown set at SIU from the typical MSU male student. He's average in size. Handsome. Well- built. He's unassuming, almost shy. (Which actually isn't so typical of MSU males.) But, in essence, Towson casts an excellent image. MSU INTERNATIONAL FILM SERIES However, the image I remember—of my first meeting with Toby By R O B E R T A Y A F I E Ron Aure has now been de- Smith and Diehl will be working Towson—wouldn't be termed excellent, and certainly anything but State News Sports W r i t e r clared academically eligible for parallels. presents typical. A pair of impressive winning the season. The Spartan team Rings, one of the Spartans' "LITTLE PETER" The encounter took place In California, where strange things are streaks are laid on the line to- captain had had a deficiency from strongest events, features Dave known to happen. It was at a place called the Sportsman's Lodge— night in the Southern Illinois the previous terni that hadn't Croft, Larry Goldberg and Dan a hotel—near Los Angeles. arena when the Spartan gymnast« been removed. Kinsey. All three were impres- The date was Jan. 2, the day after the mighty MSU football team battle SIU at Carbondale, 111. in Both men will be working floor sive in the last two meets. what could be a trial run of the exercise and vault. Aure andThor Szpula said he rates Southern (Pikku Pietarin Piha-Finnish) blew the 1966 Rose Bowl. NCAA Meet that will be held there will also perform on trampoline, as the favorite, but is confident A technical problem forced cancellation of the flight until the In April. along with Keith Sterner and that the Spartans can pull an up- following day. It seems that one of the engines decided to take a Southern, the reigning national Ray Walker. set. Gunny defeated Fred Dennis P r o d u c e d by the l a r g e s t and most up-to-date ^ r e m e m b e r the day well. It's not easy to forget sitting in a plane, Bill Diggins is set for floor last year for the NCAA ring» title, gym champ, will be after its 53rd f i l m c o m p a n y in F i n l a n d . The f i l m depicts hundreds of feet above Burbank. Calif., and learning that one of the exercise. The fourth spot in vault and Towson beat SIU's floor exer- straight win. The last time the the every day life of c o m m o n people, t h e i r propellers just wouldn't spin. The travel agency arranged for the is a toss-up between Diggins and cise ace, Paul Mayer, In the Mid- Salukis lost in dual-meet compe- p l e a s u r e s and s o r r o w s . tition was In 1961, at the hands Cliff Diehl, while Diggins or west Open last December. ' T S Z ^ S S E ^ Z afternoon after the flight Norm Haynie will work in the He considers floor exercise of the Spartans. Awarded the Finnish State Prize in January, 1966. before. It was a lovely California day. MSU posted its 13th consecu- fourth berth on parallel bars. and side horse the key events, As I walked past a first floor room. I inadvertantly glanced into saying that the Spartans should tive victory last Saturday against Ed Wltzke, Dennis Smith and the full-length window. Ohio State. The Spartans had a Gerry Moore make up the side have a good lead following them. T O N I G H T : 7 & 9 P.M. There he was. Toby Towson in all his splendor, standing on his perfect 8-0 record In '66. Their horse unit, with Ed Gunny, Haynie He expects that they'll do very hands in the middle of the room. He was clad in nothing more than a pair of jockey shorts. And fortunately, nothing less. . last loss came In February of '65, at the hands of Southern. and Diehl scheduled for high bar. well on vault andhlghbar a#,well. FAIRCHILD THEATRE I couldn't pass up the opportunity for a good bit of humor. Swing- STARTS The only ailing Spartan is Dave BEST IN FOREIGN FILMS ing back the glass partition, I boldly entered the room. Thor, who jammed his wrist in Admission 50€ Towson—realizing that someone had just entered the room from the OSU meet when he ran into An"ap^okigy,6^introductions and a vow by Towson that he would never again, practice his routine in front of a window, concluded the horse on his first vault. He had limited workouts this week. TODAY! fl/lEST NOW SHOWING Coach George Szypula has him 29 & 9:36 P . M . 3 - Color - Hits planned for all-around, depending L V i 1 TTT2nrV7?S7 th V o b i d w a s a freshman at the time. Later in the year, he partic- on the condition of the wrist. nUrtANWN* Free C a r Heaters ipated in the national AAU gym meet and the Midwest Open. Toby Towson, who missed the Dec. 3. He won the floor exercise title in both. first two meets due to an injured Towson has apparently recovered from a minor knee injury and knee, is at full strength for his hopes to be in top shape for Saturday's meet. If you force him to talk about himself, he says, "I'd like to go Initial varsity competition. As a freshman, Toby made an im- QUICK! QUICK! HEAD THESE HAVES undefeated in floor ex and Improve in my vaulting." pressive showing in the Midwest AND flUN TO THE T H E A T R E ! ! ! ! Towson is of the breed of athlete who excels in the classroom. Open, followed by a strong per- " I think I'll major in psychology," he told me. formance last spring when he won Toby Towson the NAAU floor exercise title. And I had visions of a psychiatrist handstanding in front of a win- A HILARIOUS TROUPE TELLING dow, wearing jockey shorts. A HILARIOUS TALE IN A HILARIOUS WAY. 60. ENJOY. A OKI ROUSINGLY FUNNY C0ME0Y TAKES OFF IN WILD FLIGHT!" — N e w York Times Wrestlers foce biggest test 4-2 at 137, Dickie Haxel 4-2 at ' * * * * ! YOU WILL ALMOST DIE LAUGHING BUT YOU WILL LIVE TO TILL OTHERS TO SEE THIS WILD By G A Y E L W E S C H who). MSU has lost twice to Ok- with a grain of salt. They've got men lined up five deep on the 145, Cleo McGlory 4-0-2 at 177, TONY RICHARDSON'S () AND WONDERFUL COMEDY! MADEMOISELLI State News S p o r t s W r i t e r lahoma State in the past, and three bench just itching for a chance Bud McDaniel 4-2 at 177, and EXCRUCIATINGLY FUNKY!" ^ N.„. times to Oklahoma. Tony Bennett, 3-3 at heavyweight. — - • Oklahoma is currently ranked to get in." Oklahoma — where the wind Peninger isgoingwiththesame —From an Peninger went on to say chat it 'THE FUHNIEST AMERICAN Y Editorial in first nationally, Oklahoma State lineup that blanked Ohio State, The Washington comes sweepln' down the plain, wasn't a disgrace to have lost COMEDY TO COME ALONG!" Daily News: JEANNE MOREAU % second and MSU fourth in wres- 37-0, last weekend. Gary Bissell where the waving wheat can sure twice to OSU because only two smell sweet, but mainly where tling. teams had ever beaten them, Ok- (8-2) will be at 123, Don Behm —Saturday Review "WILDLY SHAKEN wrestling's the big game. A glimmer of hope for the Spartans against Oklahoma State lahoma University and Iowa State (11-1) at 130, Dale Anderson BY LAUGHTER, Apologies to Rogers and Ham- is that they are reportedly having in the past. (11-0), at 137, Dale Carr, (7-2) ETTORE MANNI 5cen.no b, JEAN GENET Directed by TONY RICHARDSON PANAVISION* r "RUN, DON'T WE FEEL IT OUR at 145, Dave Campbell (5-2-2) at mersteln, but the way Oklahoma problems with injuries, but Pen- Probably starters for OSUwill 152, Don Cox (4-2) at 160, George A WOODFALL FILM Distributed by 10PERT PICTURES CORPORATION WALK! SEE BOUNDENOUTY signifies wrestling, they should have 'worked It into the song inger is still worried. be Tommy Green at 123, Herb Radman (9-0) at 167, Mike Brad- ADDED A STAR BORN. TO WARN OUR Jlmmerson at 130, Richie Leo- some way. Missing from the Cowboy line- nardo at 137, Jim Stone at 167, ley (7-1) at 177, and Jeff Richard- "THRU THE YEARS" AND 'MADCAP MAGOO' HIS NAME IS REA0ERSTHAT up will be 1966 NCAA 137-pound A pet phrase of Spartan Coach champion Gene Davis (dislocated Bill Fozzard at 177 and Dave son (1-0) at heavyweight. ALAN ARKIN. THEY MAY NEVER Grady Peninger, an Oklahoman shoulder), Jim Rogers, fourth at Wilhelm at heavyweight. YOU CANNOT BE QUITE THE SAME AGAIN!" T^JDAYe 1 M B r^j^Uil^^^^tftefee himself, whose team faces both Oklahoma and Oklahoma State 145 intheNCAA (knee Injury,) and Oklahoma boasts a trio of un- defeated wrestlers In Bryan Rice, TAKE YOUR Jay Robinson at 160 (bad ankle). this weekend, is that the trip is "The OSU meet will definitely 123, Wayne Wells, 152, and Roger EYES FROM "going into the shadow of death," be our best chance," Peninger Mickish, 167. David McGuire is HIM, HE'S "ALAN ARKIN and he says it like he really means It. said. "But take those injuries 5-1 at 130, Sam Al-Karaghouli GO AHEAD-TELLTHE ENDING-IT'S THAT 6000!" —United Press DESERVES AN OSCAR!" TOO HILARIOUS TO KEEP SECRET! The Spartan wrestlers take an International —Time Magazine unblemished record to the Sooner State, and they'd sooner keep it S U N D A Y NIGHT F I L M S E R I E S than lose it, but two victories (BUT PLEASE DON'T REVEAL THE BEGINNING!) "ONE OF THE would amount to a minor miracle. Jan. 22 Eisenstein's "Battleship Potemkin" BEST IN A Jan. 29 Fritz Lang's "Metropolis" (The "1984" of 1926) Oklahoma State, MSU's oppo- Feb. 19 Orsen Welles "Citizen Kane" LONG TIME!' nent Friday night, is the defending —Life Magazine NCAA champion, the 25th such Mar. 5 David Bradley's "Julius Caesar" ("A shoestring championship for them. And masterpiece" -N.Y. Herald Tribune.) THE MIRISCH CORPORATION Presents they're the weaker of the two SUPER teams. Oklahoma, third nation- LOCATION: S T U D E N T U N I O N , ROOM 31, 7 p.m. ally last season, has defeated B A R G A I N DAY OSU three times this season. The Donation: $1.50 for series of 4 films. PROGRAM! "THE flUSSIAHS ARE COMINfc Sooners have won six national titles (second only to you-know- SPONSOR: THE STUDENT RELIGIOUS LIBERALS. ALL-DAY PREVUE THE HUSSIAHS ARE C 0 M I N R " OF THESE 2 FEATURES 1[nill t hcmmi jtimvNi mooucM ' LIFE CARL REINER E¥A MARIE SAINTAUW ARWN BRIAN KEITH JONATHAN WINTERS THEODORE BIKEL PAUL FORD "-"::WUMMVSC WMAKOWOI CHM BY OELd« N W i ' l B I I I S S R u s s i a n s A r e C o m i n g - Twice at 7:07 & Late H SPLASHY, SURF-SOAKED SLEEPER! 2nd C o l o r Hit BREATHTAKING! IMAGINATIVE! THE SCREEN STEPS ON A MINEFIELD! The nicest surprise to happen in a long time. Unless you just enjoy turning your back entirely on life, you should not miss the MICHAEL breathtaking shots!" Today 1:20, 5:10, 9:05. SHIRLEY Sat. 1:20, 3:25, 5:30, 7:40, 9:50 M a c L ñ I N E raises C f U N E - Shown O n c e At 10:15 E x t r a Added 3rd C o l o r Hit The Mess Summer SM ALSO:— Today DEAN ANN- "GAMBIT TECHNICOLOR* Splendors of Paris 3:25, MARTIN MARGRET AT 9:40 7:15, H E R B E R T L O M - r o g e r c carmel-arnolo moss •««* ****** NOW . . . 2nd Week PftOMAM INFORMATION ^ 4 8 8 * 6 4 8 9 later M o k i E*K*S tolrtt, JtCX OMESmlWMSMKNl From a Story b» SBNf* CWHXL NEW! Restaurant - Free H e a t e r s Feature At 1:15-3:15- 5:20-7:25-9:30 P.M. ^tirffr »V-S * 6ÄUCI ••OW» ru.» COLO* raw becied In RONALD N M * Produced b» I t O L FUCHS » U m o a l P C t « Michigan Statte Ñéws, East Lansing, Michigan SPORTS Friday, January CAMPUS MINISTER SAYS SINCE 1850 Baha'i religion 'Playboy sex taboo By D A L E S C H W A R Z L E R College students seeking the " W e have gone from consider- culture passes on misconceptions stresses unity Religions often seem to have ariseth to promote the best in- meaning of sex are really asking ing sex as being an act and a about women." he says."Women State News Staff W r i t e r consequence to sex as being a tend not to refute them or to set their roots in the ancient days. terest of die peoples and kin- what It means to be a man or a component of the total person," the guy straight about what they But the Baha'i world faith was dreds of the earth . . . It is not "Thou shalt not exploit another woman, he says. The so-called he explains. "A kiss can be really feel." born in the 19th century. for him to pride himself who person's sexuality": this is the "Playboy philosophy" does not exploitive or It can be a construc- Virginity, birth control, con- Its founder was Husayn 'All, loveth his own country, but rather commandment the Rev. Don answer this question satisfactor- tive means of communication be- ception and venereal disease are later called Baha'u'llah, which for him who loveth the whole Ward, United Campus Christian ily, and in the past the church's tween two persons." other areas in which misconcep- means the Glory of God. He was world. Fellowship (UCCF) minister, be- role has too often seemed to be lieves should be applied to sexual Looking at sex as a meaning- tions exist, Ward savs. an Iranian. "The earth Is but one country, "saints sitting in Judgment of relationships. ful interpersonal relationship He spent most of his life In and mankind its citizens." passionate sinners." puts the stress on the individual's "Boys, and girls too, are sur- prison writing about the essential Followers of the Baha'i faith maturity and sound judgment, prised to learn some of this," unity of God, religion and man- follow a strict moral code. They War, cities, draft Ward continues. If the person he says. "Girls are basically kind. The government officials do not drink alcoholic beverages, Judges wrongly, the consequences quite uninformed about male and reactionary leaders of the take narcotics or gamble. are suffered. arousal and some of the.p^ycho- ruling Islam faith did not trust loglcal overtones of the arousal this new prophet. "Women, especially, deceive themselves in this kind of Judg- act. Today followers of the Baha'i Summer head week's talks ment," he said. "There still exist certain road faith live In more than 250 coun- College women who had had signs which must be obeyed which tries. In the United States there volunteers premarital Intercourse, when tell a person whether a relation- are followers In 1,500 cities and Michigan's selective service Education and the Draft?" asked whether they had loved the ship Is moral, not legallstically towns, and on the MSU campus. director and a pacifist discuss The convocation, which will be- man, replied " y e s " everytimein or religiously, necessarily, The Baha'i faith calls for a world government. It advocates sought what the war in Vietnam is doing gin at 8 p.m. Sunday, has switch- one study. But only 13 per cent though these are Implied," he to our youth and education. ed Its location from Peoples of the men in the same study continues. a universal language and system That's Sunday's inter-faith Church to the social hall of St. said they had loved the woman. of weights and measures. It asks convocation on the war in Viet- John's Catholic Student Center. Similarly, 60 per cent of the A moral relationship increases for universal compulsory educa- women said they had planned to a person's capacity to trust, he tion and lauds scientific and ar- Volunteers for summer serv- nam. Col. Arthur Holmes, state di- Utt ice programs in inter-faith and A missionary talks of theprob- rector of the selective service, marry the man at the time. Only says. It brings forth faith and tistic attainment. nine per cent of the men planned confidence in mankind, enhances The basic teachings of the faith inter-racial projects are being lems of the Far East. That's this and Roland Young, national sec- to marry the woman involved. one's self-respect, fulfills Indi- are these: the one-ness of God, sought by the Board of National retary of the Fellowship of Rec- weekend's missionary confer- ence at East Lansing Trinity onciliation, will be the major dis- A genuine difference in male vidual potential and gives a zest Just think what our fees would be the expression of His will for Missions of the United Presby- terian Church. church. cussants at the meeting. and female sexual makeup tends for living. on a funeral like that man through the Prophet, the Students will be admitted free to make sex without love worth- spiritual one-ness of the proph- They are being organized to The inter-faith convocation on ets, the progressive character service from one to three months the war In Vietnam delves into the to the convocation by showing less to a woman but satisfying question, "What is the War Doing their IDs. For others the cost will be $1. to a man, Ward said. "It Is Imperative to see the dif- TIMES DON'T CHANGE of revelation, the one-ness of mankind, the equality of men and under the Rev. William H. Mil- ler, director of the Home Mis- To US . . in the World of Youth, women, the essential harmony of sions Agency's Dept. of Volun- By the year 2000 A.D., 80 per ferences and the distinction in Prof says G o d is dead science and religion and the as- tary Services. LUTHERAN cent of the world's population image or identity the sexes have surance of immortality for the Projects will be located in will be living in cities. of themselves," Ward empha- WORSHIP Already one out of 20 persons sizes. human soul. Michigan and many other states, from Alaska to North Carolina, in the world lives In a city of College students are not as w i ; A follower of the Bab, a re- for N e g r o congregations Martin Luther Chapel over a million population. ligious leader executed in 1850, and Puerto Rico. Informed about sex as they should Lutheran Student Center Recently returned from six Baha'u'llah came to believe that Activités will range from be, he adds. Despite current so- weeks In the Far East, Arm- he was the universal prophet teaching in programs of cultural 444 Abbott Rd. phistication and openness in deal- strong will speak about the foretold by the Bab. enrichment, music and art, and Two Blocks North of Union ing with sex, there are still many and of their congregations all believes in God, then God is problems of the Far East and By F A Y E U N G E R The "Hidden Words of Baha'u'- recreation to community organi- misconceptions about anatomical decked out in back-home finery. dead. 9:30 - 11:00 a.m. the populous cities this weekend State News Staff W r i t e r llah" reveal the religion's zation and development in both phases of sex, especially There are the texts of two He asks how God can be alive Holy Communion at East Lansing Trinity church. " I s God dead?" the orange- emphasis on unity. urban and rural areas. response. shouting sermons, the kind you for black people whose God has The conference begins with a On the one-ness of religion, Purpose of the United Pres- 9:30 Children's Sunday "While men often feel they and-red cover shouts. shout " A m e n " to and clap to. not delivered them from their seminar for undergraduates at .It's a little book, only 34 pages oppression. He asks how God Baha'u'llah writes: byterian Board of National Mis- School Hour know it all, the masculine sub- One sermon was recorded in 4 p.m. Friday in 34 Union. long. can be alive for white people who " A s a token of His mercy and sions voluntary service program, a rural Macon County, Ga., Miller said, is "to meet human . EAST LANSING Open It up. There are fuzzy in inflicting oppression or ig- as a proof of His loving-kindness, church in 1942. The other in a EAST LANSING Calvary Church FRIENDS MEETING pictures of old-time and new- Michigan church in 1966. noring oppression deny a belief He hath manifested unto men the needs through physical labor, teaching, studying and working CHURCH OF time shouting • Negro preachers in God by their actions. Day-starts of his divine guidance, THE N A Z A R E N E Evangelical United (Quakers) But in both sermons, the author' If a reader is interested in the Symbols of His divine unity, with others so that the Church writes, the shouting ministers might be more effective in prac- 149 Highland Ave., East Lansing Brethren Meeting for Worship Klmberly Downs show that for them and th'eir how the shouting preacher moves and hath ordained the knowl- edge of these sanctified Beings ticing what it preaches." at 10:00 a.m. his congregation, then the com- Sunday School 1 0:00 a.m. 1919 S. Pennsylvania Discussion 11:15 a.m. Church of Christ people the all-powerful, all-just plete texts of the two sermons to be identical with the knowl- Persons interested in obtain- (at Mt. Hope) 1007 Kimberly Drive, Lansing God is dead. edge of His own Self. ing additional information re- Morning Worship 11:00a.m. Capital Grange will serve a good purpose for Worship 8:45 The author, William Pipes, garding both summer service Evening Service 7:00 p.m. Trowbridge Road atArbor Drive him. "Who recongnizeth them hath 11:00 (2 blocks W. of Frandor professor of American Thought and/or longer term voluntary "One Hour of Sermon and For Information 332 -1998 Most readers, however, will be recognized God. They are re- Church School . . . 9:45 Shopping Center on and Language, is concerned with garded as one soul and the same opportunities are urged to con- Song" I rides call Bill Rushby 482-5234 E. Grand River) the idea that if man no longer more interested in the con- Rev. Morris E. Bauman person." tact the Department of Volun- clusions he draws from the ser- Pastor tary Services, the United Pres- For Transportation P h o n e Free bus service Welcome Students IV 9-7130 St. Johns Student mons. For these readers there One the one-ness of mankind byterian Board of National Mis- 332-1446, Rev. G l e n n A. Chaffee, Pastor 489-7963, 482-9589 Christ Methodist SUNDAY SERVICES FVarish could be less text and more com- he writes: 'The Great Being saith: sions, 475 Riverside Drive, Room ment. Church Morning Worship 11:00 a.m. 327 M.A.C. Phone ED 7-9778 332-2559 nursery Blessed and happy is he that 1206, New York 10027. Central Methodist UNIVERSITY 517 W. Jolly Rd., Lansing Bible Study 10:00 a.m. Sunday Masses UNITY OF Services 10 & 1 l a . m . 6 & 7p.m. Wilson M. Tennant, Minister Evening Worship 6:00 p.m. 7:15 - 8:30 - 9:45 - 11:00 Across From the Capitol BAPTIST CHURCH Meinte Schuurmans, 12:15 - 4:45, & 6:00 p.m. GREATER LANSING CENTRAL WORSHIPS SERVICES 'American Baptist) Associate Minister Wednesday evening Bible When necessary Sunday East Lansing Unity Center FREE METHODIST Study 7:30 p.m. Masses will be doubled up , (9:45 and 11:15) Gerard G. Phillips, pastor Worship Services with masses in the chapel and university 425 W. Grand River CHURCH (WJIM Broadcast 10:15 a.m.) ED 2-1888 9:30-11 a.m. downstairs lounge. lutheran church 332-1932 Worship 10:00 a.m. For Transportation Call 828 N. Wash, at Oakland College Age Fellowship Weekday Masses alc-lca Sunday Service — 11:00 a.m. "The Wages of Sin Is Church School llsJO ®*m- FE 9-8190 Follow Highway 43 to Lansing Sunday, 6:30 p.m. ED 2-1960 or ED 2-2434 7:00 - 8:00 - 12:30 - 4:30 Wednesday Class - 7:30 p.m. 'Aaaughhl'" Nursery Provided— Minister: Rev. Howard C. Artz Masses at Alumni Chapel 10:00-12:00 a.m. Daily Meditation — 12 noon A Special Invitation To Rev. Francis F. Anderson Monday - Friday 4:15 Crib Nursery at American Legion Center Y University Edgewood United Saturday Masses Consultation by Appointment All MSU Students So Bring The Baby On Valley Ct. off Seventh-Day Church 8:00 - 9:15 - 11:45 8:15, 9:15, 10:30, 11:30 Minister: Richard D. Billings Free Taxi Service: W. Grand River, East Lansing 469 North Hagadorn Road 482-1444 or 484-4488 Adventist Church (Church of the Dally Word) Temporarily Meeting at (5 blocks north of Grand River) T H E C H U R C H OF First Christian OKEMOS BAPTIST CHURCH University Lutheran Church Worship Services JESUS C H R I S T OF Reformed Church peoples Church First Presbyterian 9:30 a.m. and 11:00 a.m. 4684 Okemos - Haslett Rd. Division and Ann Sts. Sermon by L A T T E R - D A Y SAINTS 240 Marshall St*, Lansing East Lansing Ottawa and Chestnut 2 miles east of Hagadorn SATURDAY SERVICES Dr. Truman A. Morrison Interdenominational WORSHIP SERVICE "Mormons" Rev. Hofman 1/2 mile south of Grand River Church School 9:30 a.m. 9:30 a.m. Sabbath School 431 E. Saginaw preaching 200 W. Grand Ri"er 11:00 a.m. 7:30 p.m. - Saturday - 7:30 p.m. 11:00 a.m. Worahlp Service 9:30 a.m. and 11:00 a.m. Crib West of Abbott Rd. Morning Service 9:00 and 11:15 at Michigan forty-voice Moody Bible Institute room through Junior high SUNDAY SERVICES "The Prayer for Forgiveness" SUNDAY SERVICES Male Chorus Saturday, January 21st High School Group at 1 1 a.m. Priesthood Meeting 9:00 a.m. 9:30 and 11:00 "Remember Who WELCOME! "Date Line - Earth" Edgewood Bus Stops Sunday School 10:30 a.m. University Class 10:15 " I s Christian Morality will be held You Are!" Speaker - Roy Lemon 10:35 a.m. - Conrad Hall Sacrament Meeting 5:00 p.m. at the Church 10:00 a.m. — Collegiate Class Relevant" by Rev. Gerald T. Krohn 11:00 a.m. - 7:00 p.m. — Worship 10:40 a.m. - Parking Area Evening Service 7 p.m. Tuesday Evening 8:15 p.m. — Collegiate Fellowship For Transportation or Between McDonel and Holmes "The Demonstration of God's Youth Meeting 7:30 p.m. Power" Rev. Hofman 6 p.m. Collegian Fellowship information Call 882-5007 10:45 - Owen Hall "Thought Control" LISTEN: 10:50 - Shaw Hall for transportation, Campus Student Center at Alumni Chapel Each Sun. listen to "The Voice WVIC, 9 a.m. Sundays of Prophecy," 9:30 a . m . , Other Stops Added by Request call 332-8465 or, 355-8180 217 Bogue St. Apt. 1 Phone 351-6360 by D r . Wallace Robertson Supper 50£ WJIM 1240 and "Faith For University Student Group Those In Need of D.R. Allbaugh, Pastor Today," Channel 6 Sun.after- 5:30 p.m. supper and program A Warm Welcome Extended Review by several students Transportation call of the book - "The Cross noon, Channel 2 at 10:30 a.m. Transportation, phone 332-2906 to All Visitors 8821425 485-3650 transportation call 332-2133 CHURCH SCHOOL and the Switchblade." "Does God Still Speak To- 9:30 - 11:00 day" SOUTH BAPTIST CHURCH CASTfllinSTCR PRCSBYTCRian CHURCH Crib through 12th Grade in Free Bus Transportation UNIVERSITY REFORMED CHURCH 1315 Abbot* Rd. church bldg. Around Campus COST ransinc. nucmcan Mr. lorn Slnrk, ftmlnr 351-7164 Refreshment period in Church To and From Church SI 'NOAY SCHEDULE parlor following worship ser- A warn and friendly welcome 1518 S. Washintgon Lansing awaits you at First Presbyterian vices Worship Services— —9:00 and 11.-00 a.m. Can we trust the Bible?-Part I "Man With A Broken Neck" Church School, Cribbery-Thlrd Grade —9:00 and 11:00 a.m. University Methodist Church School, Fourth Grade-Adults, Students—10:00 a^r* First Church of Is there a Reason for Life's Evident Prpblems? 11:00 A. M ALUMNI MEMORIAL CHAPEL Christ, Scientist Church Where is God in Life's Crisis Hours? For transportation phone 332-6271 or 332-8901 7:00P M. UNION • R O O M 35 709 E. Grand River 1120 S. Harrison Rd. By 6:00 p.m. Saturday East Lansing SUNDAY 7:00 P.M. Rev. R. L. Moreland - MINISTERS - Rev. H. G. Beach Worship Sunday Service 11 a.m. 8:30 - 9:30 - 11:00 TRINITY CHURCH EPISCOPAL SERVICES AT MSU Sermon "The Name of the Lord" 9:45 A.M. 8:30 P.M. "Truth" 120 Spartan Ave. Interdenominational ALUMNI CHAPEL Rev. Pohl COLLEGE BIBLE CLASS YOUTH FELLOWSHIP SUNDAY WORSHIP SERVICES Ministers (Auditorium Drive, East of Kresge Art Center) SUNDAY SCHOOL Dr. Ted Ward, Teacher Three Courses of Study University Classes 11:00 a.m. - regular Rev. Alden B. Burns 9:45 MSU Learning Systems Refreshments 9:30 a.m. Holy Communion and Sermon (9:30&11-Unlverslty Students) Rev. Keith I. Pohl Institute 8:30 and Morning Worship 5:15 p.m. Holy Communion and Sermon WEDNESDAY 11:00 "The Flexibility Factor" 8:00 p.m.-Evenlng Meeting Nursery During Services rhe Reverend Philip E. Armstrong All Saints Parish 11:00 A.M. "God Breaks Down Walls" 7:00 Evening WorsJ>ip^ CHURCH SCHOOL 800 Abbott Rd. Free Public Reading Room " A r e We Willing to Stretch Dr. Howard F. Sugden, Pastor 134 West Grand River 9:30 to 10:30 a.m.-Program Forth and Spare Not" 8:00 a.m. Holy Communion OPEN for all ages 8:15 p.m. 9:30 a.m. Holy Communion and Sermon Weekdays—9-5 p.m. FREE BUS SERVICE Morning and Evening Trinity Collegiate Fellowship 11:00 a.m. - Children 2-11 yrs 11:15 a.m. Morning Prayer and Sermon Mon., Tues., Thura.,Fri. Evenings 7 p.m.-9 pan. PAS TORS: E. Eugene Williams. David L. Erb, Norman R. Piersma Canterbury All are welcome to attrnd Free bus transportation IS to CALL 482-0754 FOR INFORMATION Church Services and visit and 30 minutes before each ser- FREE BUS SERVICE- See schedule in your dorm. Sundays 6:30 p.m. Old College Hall, The Union uae the reading room. vice around the campus. Michigan Statte Ñéws, East Lansing, Michigan SPORTS F r i d a y , January 20, 196 SUI JMS UNITED STUDENTS " Johnson's surtax plan Boycott said studied by 'U' economists The ast resort Boycott Committee of ers to advertise more locally, United Students was termed " i n - and try to arrange a free shuttle raise their prices, government tends to decrease the rate of the economy can be watched. By R O D E R I C K MclLQUHAM appropriately named" by its bus. surpluses should be sold to bring economic growth, "but as long Cline, who recently co-auth- President Johnson's proposed those prices down, he said. chairman and several members If the situation did not im- as government spending remains ored the book "Michigan Tax six per cent surtax on individ- at the committee's meeting this prove then, he continued, the Adams said that Inflationary high one need not worry about R e f o r m , " said that last year ual and corporate incomes may week. committee would " d e m a n d " that pressures have built up as John- the long range growth r a t e . " this time a tax increase was be unpopular with the voters and J i m Frlel, Glen Ellyn, 111., the merchants lower their prices. son's consensus has weakened. Mandelstamm said that a cut needed to control inflation, but face rough sledding in Congress, senior, the committee's chair- Only if this failed, he said, would " A year ago Johnson was able in Johnson's Great Society pro- that this is not the case now, but it has one economist here man, stated that the group had a selective boycott be under- to keep the producers at b a y , " gram could also cause a down- Johnson needs the increase be- staunchly behind it. received "bad publicity" due to taken. he said. Adams now believes turn in the economy. A cut in cause of the war in Viet Nam "Walter Adams, professor of that the White House doesn't the name. He explained uiui " W e want to s t r e s s , " he said, government spending when com- and the size of his budget, he "that we would much rather set- Business with pleasure want to use such measures as group viewed a boycott as the pared dollar for dollar with a said, last resort, to be used only if all tle this in an amicable m a n n e r . " selling government surpluses, tax increase,hasa slightly great- The question mark in the econ- for political reasons. A l t h o u g h m a n y s t u d e n t s p r e f e r the q u i e t of t h e i r other methods for lowering Friel discussed the establish- er effect on the economy. Such omy today, Cline said, is wagi prices had failed. ing of coordinators in the resi- He said that recent economic a cut is even more likely to push inflation. If labor's demands o w n r o o m s f o r s t u d y i n g , s o m e f l e e the f o u r w a l l s to The committee member re- dence halls, and among the fra- conditions have been uneven and overshoot the mark and cause for high wage increases are h i t the b o o k s in the g r i l l o r c l a s s r o o m s . sponsible for contacting mer- ternity and sorority members. some industries have suffered a downturn, he said. met, additional inflation could from the high Interest rates on chants and general publicity, '*These are the people who Mandelstamm said that he result, he said. Here, "serious S t a t e N e w s p h o t o by M e a d e Perlman spend the most money in East borrowing. A tax increase would Leonard Lax, elaborated^the would go slow in recommending inflation potential exists despite Lansing, and these are the people permit easier credit conditions, group's four-point program. The any tax increase, even if gov- soft spots in our economy, " C l i n e we want to r e a c h , " he said. first step, he said, was to talk Advisory body not penalize a particular sector said. of the economy, he said. to the merchants in East Lansing The committee will conduct a The President has the choice price study of stores in the area, "Cutting government expendi- and ask for a lowering of prices of Increasing taxes, cutting his with the goal of comparing prices tures to pay for the war in Viet- and a better attitude toward the budget or greatly increasing in East Lansing to those in Lan- n a m , " he said, " I s sheer sui- students. national debt, he said. But, Cline petitioning open " W e think that students should sing, other towns In the vicinity, cide." emphasized that " t h i s is a boom be treated as people in the and to other college towns in the Adam's continued: "The war t i m e and now is the time to s t o r e s . " Thus far, Lax said, he country. against poverty is just a skirmish have a surplus, to pay off debts." against the agitation of social un- had talked to four local business- Cline said that he also favors DENZEL CLINE rest. If we cut back expenditures a tax increase for its psycholog- Only six petitions for the seven ing system and curriculum and men and had received favorable BARNES FLORAL °^, s N t gi in any way a duplication of the treatment from all of them. ical advantages. " T h e people positions on the recently formed instructor selection. The com- Watts riots could occur on a In addition, the committee will For Flowe'S economics, says that he is un- ought to know that the war is Academic Co-ordinating Com- mittees' duties may vary from national s c a l e . " encourage students to patronize F r e s h ond equivocally in favor of an im- costing them something," he mittee have been received by the college to college. Basic guide- F a s h , onable businesses which have lower mediate tax increase. "How can we afford to spend said. Honors College Board. lines will be made by the Aca- prices. Lax revealed that he Three other MSU economists $330,000 to kill a single Viet Cline said that he would pre- The deadline for Interested demic Co-ordinating committee. 215 A N N ED 2-0871 plans to ask Lansing store own- however, take a different stand. C ong and not afford the hot lunch fer a temporary tax, one not students to contact SteveHaynes, Opinions vary but Allan B . Man- program In Detroit?" he asks. Instituted until after J u l y 1, and chairman of the Honors College delstamm, associate professor Mandelstamm however, be- one that doesn't require another Board, is Saturday at 353-1483. of economics; Denzel C. Cline, lieves that a tax increase at this act of Congress to stop. A l l full-time students are eli- and Thomas R . Saving, profes- time would be unwise. WALTER ADAMS Saving takes a different ap- gible for the committee estab- Mandelstamm said that some Your masterpiece of sight and sound: sors of economics, generally proach to the problem of a tax lished under Joint sponsorship ernment spending requires an in- suggest restraint.Congress, they inflation exists, but that it is increase. Its necessity, he said, of ASMSl! and Honors College. creased deficit. believe, should wait and de- minor when compared with other depends on the goals and ex- The ad hoc committee, com- Congress, he said, appears to termine the direction of the econ- countries. Inflation may be dying pectations of the people. posed of five members appointed be against taking quick action omy before acting. down recently anyway, he said. Saving said if the recent up- by Honors College and two se- on the tax increase and will Explaining his position Adams Mandelstamm said that most lected by ASMSU, will set up probably delay action for sev- ward price movement conflicts said: " W e have this war in Viet- economists would have recom- committees within each college eral months to see what di- with the nation's goals, then in- nam" "and we ought to finance it mended that taxes be raised last creased taxation can effect a to act as a student advisory rection the economy takes. on a "pay as you g o " basis. year. Johnson for various body to that college. Cline likes the Idea of a tax change. In this case, he said Additional taxes that are re- reasons decided not to act he Increase but prefers having it he would suggest that the gov- These committees may handle quired should be raised as long said. put off for several months, so ernment reduce spending. questions on the pass-fail grad- as the war Is going o n . " During the past year the Fed- Adams said that the tax in- eral Reserve Board's monetary crease "should have come a policy has been the p r i m a r y ¡v - 40 coeds vie for Miss MSU iw r • ? • i : ***4 year agp, but ... better late means of controlling inflation- Altec's Flamenco than n e v e r . " ary pressures, Mandelstamm *> ' ' ì í ; «$% • * Adams emphasized that he was said. The Board's policies re- sulted in higher interest rates Preliminary judging in the competition will be Judged by a lected to participate in the Miss jüfewo Bosemble not supporting the war In Viet- n a m . " B u t if we are going to and until late November, caused Miss MSU contest began Thurs- panel of faculty members from MSU Pageant to be held Feb. 18 fight let's pay for I t , " he said. certain distortions in our econ- day night and will continue to- the Departments of Art, Com- In the Union Ballroom. Talent omy, he said. night as 40 coeds vie for the munication Arts, Physical Edu- and beauty as well as evening Current Inflation, he said, has Borrowers and the housing and Miss MSU crown and the right cation, and Music and a rep- gown and bathing suit competi- resulted because prices have automobile industries have been to compete In the Miss Michi- resentative of the East Lansing tion will be the criteria by which been pushed up unnecessarily Look! listen! The Flamenco demands both. nent cabinet in the center can hold the Altec 711A hurt by the non-availability of gan pageant. clothing stores. Miss MSU and her two runners- by industries that profit from It's furniture for the decorator who loves to all-silicon transistor stereo receiver (100 watts of war. funds for financing, he said. The candidates,whowerenom- Ten finalists will then be se- up will be chosen. power and FM radio plus facilities for tape and listen. It's s o u n d for the listener who loves to Mandelstamm believes that inated by on-campus living units, look...at beauty. record player). The matching cabinets on either the Board decided in November fraternities and sororities are Sight and sound for the discriminating. Science side contain Altec's famed "Voice of the Theatre"® that such distortions had gone being interviewed by members of and styling from Altec. The world's leading manu- speaV.ej systems (or other Altec speakers of your far enough and began to loosen some of its controls. This Excalibur and Blue Key and sev- eral directors of the Union Board. SUNNY NASSAU FOR facturer of professional sound systems for broad- cast and recording studios, theatres and concert choice.) A w s o m e I y good B r e a t h t a k i n g l y hand- Ì 1 meant that more use of taxa- Judging in the preliminary rounds halls, since 1937. tion would be required to fight any further inflationary pres- is on the basis of personal ap- pearance and poise. SPRING BREAK It's a complete stereo ensemble of solid oak with an authentic Spanish flair. The spacious compo- some. Prices start under $1,200 complete. C O M E I N FOR F R E E D E M O N S T R A T I O N T O D A Y ! ONHINQ sure, he said. On Jan. 31 and Feb. 2, the Any tax Increase, he said, 20 remaining coeds in the talent # J o i n 3 , 0 0 0 o t h e r s t u d e n t s t o the b e a c h e s o f HI-FI BUYS NASSAU. T h i s is the O N L Y t o u r t o N A S S A U . Air Force p a y s C h a r t e r e d P a n - a m jet. 8 nights 9 days,Trans- p o r t s to a n d f r o m a i r p o r t in N A S S A U , 1st c l a s s h o t e l s . A l l f o r $221. education of 3,000 CALL: TAPE RECORDING INDUSTRIE! 3,000 cadets will be awarded ship cadets also will receive a P E T E R BARBA 351-6789 scholarships this year by the U.S. non-taxable $50 per month. UDÌ EAST GRAND RIVER Phdni'S 3 3 7 2 3 I O JOHN DENTON 353-2091 TOM SAVING A i r Force in its four-year ROTC Lt. Colonel Gerald T. Hey- 3 3 2 CIS 9 7 DICK OSGOOD 351-7433 EAST LANSING. MICHIGAN program, it was announced by boer, professor of aerospace stu- Adams said that one of the Brigadier General Donald F. dies, said Friday that 20 MSU functions of the President's fis- Blake, commandant of the Ohio students particpatlng in the Air HURRY!!! ONL Y 4 DA YS LEFT' GUESS WHO! i cal policy is to balance the econ- A i r University Air Force ROTC, Force ROTC program have been omy. This he said, should pro- Friday. awarded scholarships the past duce a surplus in good times. These scholarships, to take two years. " I f we are going to run a defi- effect in the 1967-68 school year, Do you know... cit in boom times, how are we will be given to qualified sopho- going to manage when times are more, junior and senior cadets b a d ? " he asks. at over 140 colleges and uni- How to get a scholarship...where to get OUR FAMOUS MAKER HAS Adams believes that the versities participating in Air country hasn't reached the price Force ROTC's four-year pro- control stage yet, but, neverthe- an educational loan...the tuition costs gram. less, the present level of in- Scholarships cover full tuition PLACED ALL OUR PASTEL flation should not be tolerated. fees, laboratory expenses and When the metal industries an allowance for books. Scholar- in other colleges...the capital of the Malagasy Republic...the difference LINE ON SALE between Taoism and Confucianism... what the moon looks like...who won the THEREFORE! National League Batting title in 1956? Our whole line ofA-line and straight skirts, sweaters in fur blends, wools, pullovers. cardigans and nov- elties and all our slacks and jackets intangerine and n i a c heather; tur- quoise, l i m e and jonquil are all Whether you're writing a term paper, trying to preserve your bankroll or playing trivia, you'll find all the answers in the New Revised 1967 Reader's Digest Almanac and Yearbook. Here are 1/3 OFF 1024 pages, 300 new photographs, the main events of the year in every field and 1,000,000 facts—indexed for quick and easy reference. Pick up a copy at your college bookstore or wherever magazines and books are sold. Only $1.76, now on sale. USowfa 4hieocL SPARTAN BOOK STORE Michigan Statte Ñéws, East Lansing, Michigan SPORTS Friday, January 20 TODAY'S BUDDING MUSICIANS ARE LOOKING FOR GOOD Call 355-8255 Call 355-8255 USED INSTRUMENTS - SELL YOURS WITH A STATE NEWS WANT AD Employment For Rent For Rent For Sale Real Estate The State News does not EXPERIÉNÓ¿U GÏÏÏU WANTED River's Edge ONE GIRL needed. Four girl TELEVISIÓN, G.E. Portable, SEVEN ACRES of magnificent BABY SITTER permit racial or religious luxury apartment. $55.00. After 12" and table. Good condition. Four month boy. 20 daytime Apartment. $55 per month. 351- garden, four miles south of discrimination in its ad- 9319. 5-1/2° 6 p.m., 332-2644. 4-1/20 Reasonable. Call 332-5303. Brevard, North Carolina. Super hours weekly. 353-7946. vertising columns. The 3-1/24 3-1/20 view Blue Ridge Mountains.Co- SECOND GIRL for luxury apart- State News will not accept STUDENT WlVES:part timework East Side ment.Graduate or professional. BICYCLE SALES, rentals and lonial design clapboard house: advertising which discrim- Large beamed ceiling, living available - cashier and wait- apartment for4at (50each. 351-5183. 3-1/24 services. Also used. EAST inates against religion, room with fireplace, family kit- resses. FRANDOR BIG BOY, Apt. for 2at $125.No lease, LANSING CYCLE, 1215 E. race, color or national ori- PENTHOUSE LUXURY apart- no children or pets. Utili- Grand River. Call 332-8303. C chen with fireplace. Three bed- gin. 3425 East Saginaw. ED 2-0815. 3-1/20 ties paid. $100 deposit. Phone IV 9-1017. ment wants one,-two-three, or four girls. Good location. 332- SKI JACKET, men's ice skates, rooms, two full and three 1/2 battis, two large glassed por- Who's LEGAL SECRETARY: Excel- 3570 or 332-3579. 3-1/23 size 9-1/2. Both worn once. low (C'y lence in English, spelling, THREE-MAN and four-man 353-8278. 3-1/20 ches. Full basement and attic. Two car garage/Excellent stor- Whose Automotive grammar, typing" required. apartments available immed- Hou»*s WANT AD OLDSMOBILE T9KT I960 Automatic, Shorthand and dictaphone de- iately. Call STATE MANAGE- ACROSS FROM Kellogg Center MISCELLANEOUS ental Handicraft ITEMS - 6ri- collection, age. Water, electricity, tele- phone, oil heat, television sired. Call ED 2-8444 for ap- MENT Corporation. 332-8687. - two girls to share home. wrought iron fireplace set, Ger- Pinnlngs four-door, heater, radio. $200. aerial, stove, two refrigerators, AUTOMOTIVE pointment. 5-1/25 C-l/30 Furnished $51.00. Phone 351- man language library. Blue washer and drier. $50,000. EMPLOYMENT Uema ED 2-6522. 3-1/20 MAN NEEDED f o r custodian Carole Clemensen, Trenton, PENNSYLVANIA. CLEAN,well- 7798. 5-1/23 flame kerosene space heater. Slides available for viewing. FOR RENT OLDSMOBILE, 1962, F-85, 4- work. Hours 12 to 8. Five days Michigan Sophomore to David furnished, basement, private FURNISHED HOUSE needs fifth 482-5329. 3-1/23 Ready for occupancy. Cal 484- door, deluxe, V-8. Excellent week. Starting wage will depend entrance, parking. Employed FOR SALE male roommate. Five minute STEREO: MUNTZ, AM-FM 2984 after 5:30 p.m. 1-1/20 Kohler, Trenton, Michigan Soph- LOST & FOUND condition. 489-4834. 3-1/23 on ability and past experience. gentlemen preferred. 482-0325. omore Triangle. drive. Available immediately. radio. Excellent condition. PERSONAL OPEL 1966, fast-back, roof, stereo. 351-6805. 5-1/25 red, sun Males offered year-round ployment. Apply at Bill Knapps em- 3-1/24 489-2615. 3-1/23 Phone TU 2-5416. 3-1/23 Recreation PEANUTS PERSONAL SUMMER TERM only - furnished TWO GIRLS needed for 4-girl GUltARS: MARTIN 6-string,and Carol Cowan, Birmingham, REAL ESTATE PLYMOUTH Belvedere 1966. 6- restaurant," 2151 E. Grand WEAR T H E T R A D E M A R K Michigan Sophomore to Fred house for family of six who will house, 1/2 block from Berkey. SERVICE cylinder, automatic transmis- River, Okemos. 3-1/23 Gibson 12-string. 353-2101. O F T H E P U E R T O R I C A N SUN Mulhauser, Huntington Woods, treat your property better than 351-6464 after 5:30. 3-1/20 sion. Will take any trade or con- WANTED: BABYSITTING In my 3-1/20 Seven sun filled days and Michigan Sophomore Theta Delta TRANSPORTATION you do. Write or call: Donald WANTED: ONE girl to share sider $125 and take over pay- Spartan Village home. One child. J . Reppert, E-216 Owen Hall, WANTED ments. Phone 485-3351. 5-1/23 355-1110. 2-1/23 MSU. 355-4045. house. Own room. $43, 351- Lost & Found six fun filled nights in exciting San Juan. Chi. 10-2/2 5451. 3-1/20 LOST: PAIR prescription sun DEADLINE PORSCHE "1600" coupe. Low X-RAY TECHNICIAN. Part time, SPRING SUBLEASE lower half N EED ONE male student for large glasses in brown and black $21700 Donna Bowers, Farmington, mileage. Looks and runs good. afternoons only. Four days per Michigan Freshman to Marty house, 3 girls, $55 monthly. house. 313 North Logan, Lan- leather case. Reward. 355-1569. includes: Lechowicz, Villa Park, Illinois 1 P.M. one class day be- $595 or best offer. THE CHECK week. Private office in East 351-9438, 1-1/20 sing. $32 month plus utilities. 3-1/24 Sophomore Pi Kappa Phi. fore publication. POINT. Phohe 332-4916. C-l/20 Lansing. Call 484-2136. 4-1/20 Hotel accommodations SEEKING FOURTH girl. Pos- IV 4-9755 after 5:30. 3-1/23 LOST: SASIENE Reigate pipe in Direct non-stop DC-7 TEACHER'S Volkswagen, 1962. MEDICAL ASSISTANT for M.D. slble arrangements for two. NEAR MSU: New three-bedroom leather pouch. Reward. Call Barb Ladd, Detroit, Michigan Cancellations 12 noon one Sunroof, snow tires, new brakes, in Lansing. Orthopedic surgery Burcham Woods. 351-9082. air service. house. Available March 1, six 355-8778. 3-1/23 Senior Alpha Gamma Delta to class day before publica- clutch. $495. 332-2882. 5-1/25 office. Part time, afternoons. 3-1/20 Limited Space A v a i l a b l e month lease. Completely fur- MISSING: FENDER Bassman Ray Tucker, Midland, Michigan tion. TRIUMPH SPITFIRE 1965. Con- Will train. Call 484-2136. For Reservations 355-6364 THIRD MAN: quiet, luxuryapart- nished. $225 plus utilities. 482- Amplifier top. White. Reward. Senior SAE. vertible top, tonneau cover, lug- 4-1/20 ment. Winter/spring. Norwood PHONE gage rack, radio, sideview mir- CHOOSE YOUR own hours. A few Apartments. 351-9269. 3-1/20 6961. 5-1/25 353-0171. 3-1/20 I Service Myra Sharon Biehl, St. Louis, 355-8255 ror. 22,000 actual miles, owner hours a day can mean excellent MEN NEEDED for apartment, FOURTH GIRL for house near Brody. $60 including utilities. Personal WANTED: IRONING in my home. Michigan to Ross T. Paulus, must sell. Phone 482-7986 after earnings for you as a trained $1.00 per hour. Call 351-4010. Breckenridge, Michigan Senior RATES 5:30 week-days. 3-1/20 AVON representative. For ap- block from Berkey. Call 351- 351-9503. 3-1/20 FANNY HILL says, " 0 0 6 0 0 < 5 . " 3-1/20 Phi Mu Alpha. 6375. 5-1/20 FOURTH" GIRL needed as soon THE TONIKS say "AAAAAAH." 1 DAY SI.50 TRIUMPH SPITFIRE, 1955", pointment in your own home, DIAPER SERVICE, Lansing's fi- 3 DAYS S3.00 $1000. Phone 482-7986 week- write Mrs. Alona Huckins, 5664 TWO GIRLS wanted for five- as possible to share house. Ecstasy. 351-9359. 3-1/23 nest. Your choice of three types. Carolyn , Kay Balcom, Ravenna, School Street, Haslett, Mich- room apartment, $50.351-5684. Winter. 627-6653. 3-1/20 Containers furnished, 'no de- Michigan Junior to David G. 5 DAYS ¿5.00 days after 5:30 p.m. • 5-1/24 TV RENTALS for students, $9.00 igan, or call IV 2-6893. C-l/20 3-1/23 DOCTOR ON sabbatical - girls posit. Baby clothes washed free. Thaler, Lowell, Michigan Grad- TRIUMPH,' 1965 TR4-A, I.R.S. month. Free service and deliv- ONE - THREE MEN needed, share lovely nine room tri- ery. Call NEJAC. 337-1300. We Try our Velvasoft process. 25 uate Student. (based on 10 words per ad) PHOTOGRAPHERS Spoke wheels, AM/FM radio. Burcham Woods. $62.50 month. level home; furnished, own guarantee same day service. years in Lansing. BY-LO DIA- Must Sell. $1600. 351-4687. Over 10, 15< per word, per day No contract. 351-7257. 3-1/23 room, many extras. 351-7248. C PER SERVICE, 1010 E. Michigan 10-1/23 • No experience needed COMPLETELY FURNISHED 1-1/20 HE IS RISENIII The Australian IV 2-0421. C There will be a service VALIENT '64. Standard trans- E engagements • We train, furnish equip- three-room apartments avail- Aristocrat has returned! All and bookkeeping charge if mission, radio, heater. Excel- MATURE STUDENt to share DIAPER SERVICE, Diaparene ment & film, & we pay able Immediately. Also one sin- friends and true believers - this ad is not paid within house. Private room, parking. Franchised Service Approved by Rita Brown, Bellwood, Illinois lent condition. Call 332-8325 you. gle room. 351-5125 after 3:30 one week. $100 for term. 485-0961.1-1/20 Wear I LIKE KANGAROOS but- Doctors and DSIA. The most Sophomore Alpha Delta Pi to Bob after 6 p.m. 3-1/20 • Weekend evenings at p.rp, 3-1/23 tons (hand lettered by the faith- modern and Only personalized Franclose Schenectady, New VbLksWAGEN 1957*. Excellent University social func- DELTA APARTMENT nee3s Rooms full) Call 351-7539 for intimate service In Lansing, providing York Graduate Student. 1965 engine. Light blue con- tions fourth girl immediately. No details. 1-1/20 you with diaper palls, polybags, Automotive vertible. $200.00 cash. 339-2897 Contact Frl. thru Sun. damage deposit. 351-7687. WOMAN'S: One block from cam- pus and town. $12.50 week. 351- THE ROGUES: The exciting sound deodorizers, and diapers, or Janice H, Mattison, Northvllle, BEL-AIRE 1961, V-8 automatic. after 6:30 p.m. M r Swoap-Rm. 34 4-1/24 3-1/23 4019. 3-1/20 of east campus. We book them. use your own. Baby clothes Michigan Sophomore to Keith R. No rust. Phone 351-5748 after Amity Hall FOURTH MAN wanted. Close to ROOM: BLOCK from Berkey. Phone TU 2-9345. 3-1/20 washed free. No deposit. Plant Knobloch, East Lansing, Mich- 5 p.m. 7-1/20 VOLKSWAGEN 1963 stationwag- campus. 351-4456. 2-1/20 337-9781 Unsupervised, $215 now through JOIN RUSSIAN rifles. rifles ROTC. inspection invited. AMERICAN igan Junior. CADILLAC, 1959. New through- on. 1500 series. Not microbus. NURSES: REGISTERED, profes- STUDENT APARTMENTS: $50- June 17. Phone 337-7196. 355-0520. Bill. 3-1/24 DIALER SERVICE, 914 E.Gier. Excellent. 393-2614. 5-1/24 out, full power. $1000. Bill, sional. 3-11 for two extended $75 per student. Modern, fully 3-1/20 CalTO2-0864. C Linda Marie Zmich, Saginaw, VOLKSWAGEN, 1958. £250.00 or •GET ON THE TRAIL of big 355-0520. 3-1/24 care facilities specializing in furnished. On Abbott Road, SAVE LATER - BUY NOW at Michigan Sophomore to Daniel best offer. 355-8211 after 5 p.m. values In all sorts of things. CHEVROLET Impala Sports care of geriatric patients. Lib- walking distance to campus. MEN: SUPERVISED double. NEJAC of EAST LANSING, Ze- Alan Katz, East Lansing, Mich- 3-1/20 $9.00, cooking, parking. Two Check " M i s c e l l a n e o u s " in Coupe, 1965, 327, 4-speed, dark eral salary, benefits and differ- Phone 372-5300, M r . Dick Ca- nith radio, stereo, & TV, in- igan Senior. VOLKSWAGEN, 1964. Red, runs hill. 6-1/20 blocks from Berkey. 332-4978. Classified now. cluding color TV In stock, 543 blue. Must sell. 351-7111. ential. Apply in person or call 3-1/24 well, good condition. $750. 646- 5-1/24 THE SOUNDS: THE SbNDETTES: Jean M. Kennedy, Winna, Min- / Director of Nursing, PROVIN- 63 NEW L U X U R Y E. Grand River, next to Para- 5064. 3-1/20 PLEASANT SINGLE room for Present the Motown sound on nesota Sophomore to Leslie L. CHEVROLET IMPALA, T95F, CIAL HOUSE. Monday through sound proof units mount News. C rent. Student or working girl. campus. 351-9155. C Leone, Berkley, Michigan Jun- two-door, E Z I, power steer- VOLKSWAGEN, 1963. Excellent Friday. ED 2-0817. 10-1/20 UNIVERSITY VfLLA A P A R T M E N T S Kitchen privilege. 332-3259. THE WOOLIES and other great Typing Sorvico ior. ing, radio, $2350.00. 355-2880. condition. Best offer. 351-5904 NURSE AIDES: experienced for 3-1/23 after 6 p.m. 3-1/20 two nursing homes - Monticello - 635 ABBOTT R O A D . 3-1/20 bands! TERRY MAYNARD 482- TYPING DONE in my home. 2-1/2 - WALK TO CAMEUS Janet L. Sykes, Chicago, Illinois CHEVROLET 1959. Good me- VOLVO 1958, 30 miles per gal- House and Provincial House, 7- IMMEDIATE OPENINGS girls 4548, 482-4590. C-l/20 blocks from campus. 332-1619. - COMPLETELY FURNISHED Junior to Paul Valette, Vicks- chanically, good tires, battery, Ion. $100.00 Allen, 351-9267. 3, 3-11, 11-7. Liberal salary only. $40 per month. Two girls MEETING PLACE for buyer and 5-1/24 STUDENTS 2-BED burg, Michigan Junior Triangle. and transportation. ED 2-2628. * 3-1/20 and benefits. Apply Monday to occupy each room. Two blocks seller . . . the Classified Ads. PAULA ANN HAUGHEY, Typist 2-1/20 VOLVO, 1963, radio, air condi- through Friday 9 a.m. - 4 p.m. FLEXIBLE UNITS from campus. ED 7-2022. Something to sell? Dial (Phone) IBM Selectric and Executive. Louise - LET. US HELP YOU FIND Lange, Philadelphia, COMET, 1§64, two-door, six- tionlng, snow tires. 882-8557 Director of Nursing, PROVIN- 3-1/24 now. Multilith Offset Printing. Pro- Pennsylvania Nurse's Residence after 5 p.m. 3-1/20 CIAL HOUSE, ED 2-0817. A ROOMMATE fessional theses typing. Near at Philadelphia cylinder, stick shift. New con- OUTSTANDING VERSATILITY: to William dition. 332-1405. 3-1/24 VOLVO 1961, 4-door sedan. Low i0-l/20 3 Man Units For Sale The BUD SPANGLER BAND can campus. 337-1527. C Planer, Wilmington, Delaware 6 5 . 0 0 each per month COMET 1961. Good Mechanical mileage car, fully guaranteed, TYPIST: FULL time, neededim- STUDY DESKS, small chests, play anythingl TERRY MAY- BARBI MEL, Professional typist. Junior Triangle. 2-Man Units available condition, good tires, $230.00. $795. We take trades of a new medlately. Some office exper- roll-a-ways & bunkbeds. New NARD, 482-4590 , 482-4548. No job too large or too small. Furnished Model Open Days& 351-7655. 5-1/25 type. STRATTON SPORT CEN- ience necessary. 487-3616. and.used mattresses—all sizes. C Block off campus. 332-3255. C Sue Scott, Birmingham, Michigan evenings: See Manager or call Study lamps, typewriters, tape DINNERS MONDAY -Friday 5:30 CUTL.ASS-1963. Excellent condi- TER, 1915 E.. Michigan. IV 4- 5-1/25 332-0091 or 332-5833 ANN BROWN, typist and multi- Junior Alpha Omicron Pi to Rich- recorders, metal wardrobes, PM and Sunday at 1 PM. Good tion. Four-speed hurst. Good 4411. C-l/20 WOMAN ADVISORS for Junior SPACIOUS FOUR man duplex. ilth offset printing, disserta- ard Zimmer Dearborn Heights, portable TV sets, large selec- fraternity house cooking. Near tires. ED 2-2628. 2-1/20 High clubs after school. Call Near campus. $200. Basement tions, theses, manuscripts, gen- Michigan Senior Alpha Kappa Psi. , Auto Service & Parts tion new & used electric fans. Abbot and Burcham. Call Don, FORD 1962 convertible. Low mll- YWCA teen-age department. storage. 351-9586. 3-1/20 eral typing. IBM, 16 years ex- 332-5092 between 5 PM and eage. Excellent condition. New MEL'S AUTO A Ù t Ô SERVICE: Large 485-7201. Terms to be discus- THIRD MAN needed. Luxury Everything for the home. WIL- perience. 332-8384. C Lucille M. Stomack, Minden City, COX SECOND HAND STORE, 6 PM. 4-1/25 Michigan Junior to Harry W. Day- exhaust, tires and battery. Must or small, we do them all. 1108 sed. 5-1/26 apartment, Burcham Woods. PROF ESSIONAL CARTO- kin. Warren, Michigan June 1966 509 E. Michigan, Lansing, Phone sell. 353-1776 days, 351-9245 E. Grand River. 332-3255. C HOUSE BOY: Sorority house. One Winter and spring. 351-9488. IV 5-4391, 8-5:30 p.m. C Peanuts Personal GRAPHER: experienced in the Graduate of MSU. after 5:30. 5-1/24 NEW . BATTERIES. Exchange to two hours a day. More on 3-1/23 production of maps. References. price from $7.95. New sealed P AND M ski poles, gold, 54", BILL: HAPPINESS is being your FORD 1964 country sedan. Nine Saturday. $1.40 per hour. 337- WOULD YOU believe? Oneapart- rubber basket, replaceable fiancee. Happy 2nd. Love, St. John's. 224-4379. 10-1/27 Wanted" beams, 99f. Salvage cars, large ment available for students, 0719. 3-1/24 passenger station wagon. V-8, stock used parts. ABC AUTO completely furnished, all util- shaft, like new, $10. Bill, 355- Michele. 1-1/20 Wanted ßLOÖÖ ÒÓNOkS needed, $7.50 cruisomatic, power steering and PARTS, 613 E. South Street, BUS BOYS wanted. Good meals ities paid. Call Nejac of East 0520. 3-1/24 TO J.M.: Snort 1 - Gonkosity. LEAVING FOR California Jan- for RH positive, $10, $12 & $14 tail '£ate. Radio and heater, re- IV 5-1921. C plus short hours. Five days a 1-1/20 week. PHI SIGMA DELTA. Ask Lansing. 337-1300. 2-1/20 STEREO SPEAKERS: H.H. Scott, uary 28. Need one rider. Call for RH negative. DETROIT mote control mirror. $1,295. ACCIDENT PROBLEM? Call for Steve. 332-0875. 5-1/20 Graduate and Married Students save $60.00 a pair. MAIN ELEC- TAKE THE INITIATIVE . . . ED 2-0623. 2-1/20 BLOOD SERVICE, INC., 1427 0*ner. 482-5707. 3-1/20 find that Job you want in to- DIVORCEE 23, needs woman to East Michigan Avenue. Hours: KALAMAZOO STREET BODY TRONICS, 5558 South Pennsyl- OLDSMOBILE 1966 Delta 88 con- SHOP. Small dents to large For Rent BAY COLONY vania, Lansing. 882-5035. C day's Classified Ads u n d e r babysit or live in. Luxury apart- 9-3:30 Monday and Tuesday; vertible. Loaded with extras, APARTMENTS "Help Wanted". 12-6:30 Thursday. 489-7587. C wrecks. American and foreign MEN'S SKIS, poles, S-l/2 boots, ment. 355-8314. 3-1/20 low mileage, priced right. Pri- TV RENTALS for students, $9.00 1127 N. HAGADORN BUSBOYS: Thank you for serv- cars. Guaranteed work. 482- trunk ski rack, $50.00. Call vate owner. Call 882-8835. 3-1/24 12 86. 2628 E. Kalamazoo. C month. Free service and deliv- ery. Call NEJAC. 337-1300. We Now leasing 63 units. 1 and 351-7895. 3-1/24 ice above and beyond the call • • •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• • OLDSMOBILE, 1961. Full power, MASON BODY Shop. 812 East Kalamazoo Street - since 1940. guarantee same day service. C 2 bedrooms, Close to campus, shopping unfurnished. TV FLOOR MODEL. ture tube. Needs tinkering. Good pic- of duty. Your Loving Pi Phis. 1-1/20 •• •••• •••• new tires, completely tuned. center, downtown, and bus TO GRANDMA: Happy 20th| Complete auto painting and col- FOUR PARKING SPACES avall- line. Model open 2-7 p.m.. $15.00. 355-1163. 3-1/24 ACROSS • • • HHHH a a a Best offer, 351-7822. 5-1/23 You're over the hllll The kids. 1. Balloon 21. Ill-temper lison service. American and foreign cars. IV 5-0256. C able. Call Don Rynbfandt, ED Daily and Sunday. TELEVISION $40, sofa bed $15 1-1/20 basket 23. Health • • • • n a n a e h 2-4511 after 5 p.m. 2-1/20 er chests, beds, book shelves. 351- 4. Yelp resort • s o n a a e r a o s PARKING SPACES. $20 term. one rents from 1 35.00P month 6680. 1-1/20 7. Sword 24. Missing • • • • • Q I S C I B O Avoition Join the FRANCIS AVIATION will finance block to campus. 337-2345. Rental Agent Mrs. Lauch Model 337-051*1 Res. 482-3379 NEW G.E. CARTRIDGE Tapere- Problem: People handle 25. Percolate • • « ! • • [ ! • • • 2-1/20 corder. $50.00. Doug Smith, 11. Flatter 27. Not ilianv don't believe our • a s a a a a a c r a « W I M » « ' WORLD your flight training. Trial les- FOUR ROOM apartment on farm, 355-2370 before 5 p.m. ¿-1/20 servilely 28. Hesitated TV RENTALS for students. Eco- a n n a n a a a • • son, $5.00. Single and multi- close to campus. Want tenant PLAY DRUM? New Hinger Tym- 13. Stent 30. Impair nomlcal rates by the term or used VW's are used. 14. Baking 33. Farewell a a a a o a a o n a of Yamaha engines. 484-1324. C who will help part time with pani sticks, bus pairs, hard month. UNIVERSITY TV RENT- 34. Writs" ATTENTION AVIATORS: The ALS. 484-9263. C dairy work. ED 7-7175. 3-1/20 and soft. $12 each. Bill 355- dish 35. High wind •BKiEiB a a n a AVONDALb APARTMENTS: one ¿5. Stab Red Baron is coming January 0520. 3-1/24 This must be because we 16. S-shaped ifi. Be furious 24th. Watch this space for de- Apartment» girl needed Immediately. $50 MOVING OUT of state. Must recondition our used Volks- molding 38. I.¡gin spear talis. 5-1/23 ROOMMATE NEEDED for 4-girl monthly. Phone 351-4615. sell IBM Executive typewriter. wagens to the highest standard 17. Drowse 40. Seasons DOWN ox 3-1/20 Three years old. Excellent con- we can achieve. Then we 19. Spelling 41. Food 1. Ricochet V Bullish Employment apartment. $50. 337-2115. 5-1/20 ONE MAN needed for three man dition. $400. Also, steel age guarantee them for* 100% for contest 42. Fender nick 2. Saving <>. Punitive MORNINGS 8-12 reliable mature YOUNG MAN to share furnished apartment. Unsupervised. Near secretarial desk. Excellent con- thirty days or a thousand 20. Chess 43. Skirt edge 3. Cud 7. Swine pieces 44. Witness 4. Grunting 8. Sun-dried young man. THE CHECK POINT. campus. $55 month, includes dition. $90. Assorted household miles. bricks luxury apartment with same. Sports cars sales and service. utilities. 351-7734, 337-2345. items. Washer, dryer, lamps, •Engine & transmission, rear 9. Woodland Reasonable. 482-4045 after 6 1 2 3 4 s 6 e 9 10 MSU's Yamaha at 2285 W. Grand River, Okemos. C-l/20 p.m. 3-1/20 DORCHESTER CIRCLE. 11300. 4700 South Logan. Large two 5-1/24 tables, dishes, etc. Inquire2846 S. Hagadorn Road. Phone 337- 2583 or 332-2961. 1-1/20 axle, front axle •Brake and electrical systems 11 % i% 13 10. (lorncrs 12. Shelter 18. Heaped bedroom furnished $190. Un- F ENDER JAGUAR electric guitar '63 Falcon. 4 Dr. 6-Auto- 14 >5 21. Superior Bimbo's 22. l itis min- Headquarters furnished $150. Formal dining matic. Radio^,Heater. White room, carpeting, stove, oven, in excellent condition. Perfect for profèsslonal. 355-4828. wall tires. Ready to go 16 % 17 16 % 19 ute 23. F.stablishcd Bowker & Moi I es Are now delivering air conditioning. Parking. 393- 32 83 , 882-8877 . 5-1/26 OVER 25 years experience. OP- 3-1/24 $695.00 20 i ZI 22 25. Brutal %%% 26. Football 23 2 4 %'À i EAST LANSING, furnishedapart- '65 Futura. Economy 6 team TICAL DISCOUNT, 416 Tussing Cycle Shop on campus again! stick. Radio. Heater. White 27. Ladylike i rnent for two or three men or Building. Phone IV 2-4667. es 26 2r women or married couple. Close wall tires. Only $1195.00 28. Unit ol elec- %4 C-l/20 (We're sorry we cannot deliver on gift check coupons.) 2» 30 91 32 tric capacity to campus. No parking problems 28 29. Hani's hus- » f u l l Une of Yamahas here. Call C. Beachum, 332- FÜR WËÔbINfl "and practical '63 Fiat 1200 Roadster CALL 8760 or 332-3583. 3-1/23 shower gifts, complete line of conv. $795.00 33 Í4 » band basket-ware. See ACE HARD- 30. Men • fast and expert service 37 3» 3 1 . Straighten ONE OR two men for four man PHIL GORDON VW 36 i 38 489-2431 WARE'S selections. 201 East apartment No damage deposit. 32. Fr. annuity Grand River, across from i 351-5499. USED CARS 40 41 35. Muffin 3-1/23 Union. Phone ED 2-3212. C 2152 W. Grand River 37. Superlative NEEDED - ONE girl for four SKIS - HART Pros, 6*9", two I. GRAND RIVER AT HOWARD 43 44 Okemos, Michigan Ph. 332-6977 for the finest pizza in town. girl apartment. Waters Edge years old, boots, Bob 351-9524. apartments. 351-7633. 3-1/23 5-1/20 • 484-1341 4Z % ending 39. Vigor Friday, January 20, 1967 9 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan PLAY 'M' TODAY •Alfi e*, a a d y kill er Fr os h in first 'test who lives by rules The only real flaw in " A l f i e " By D E N N I S CHASE Associate Sports Editor The movie houses these days at center; and the guards to be picked from Lloyd Ward, 5-9, of Romulus, Steve Kirkpatrlck, 6-1 of Lafayette, Ind, and La- mann expects to see everything: man-to-man, zone and press de- fenses and some razzle-dazzle on offense. By JON C L A R K Michael Caine is Alfie, and like to show "Previews of Coming Marr Thomas, 6-2, of Markham, "Our boys are coming along State News R e v i e w e r he is excellent. His smile and half-shut, gleaming eyes per- is in the editing. Within scenes, the editing is alive and exciting, Attractions" in addition to the 111. real well," Nordmann said. "We main feature to give the customer "Who I start will depend on had about a month layoff over *1 never want to hurt any- fectly portray the perfect satyr. and several scene transitions are •:•: a chance to see what is coming who they start," Nordmann said. Christmas which set us back a body." As an actor, Caine is clever, cleverly done, but most of them In the future. He will have between eight and bit, but we're accomplishing what , "But you do, Alfie, you do." subtle and thoroughly engaging are clumsy shifts in time, set- Basketball Is following suit. ten players of his 15-man squad we set out to do, that is, get Alfie hurts girls, mostly. Un- in the part of an absolutely self- ting and tone — quick cuts which Starting this year, Big Ten fresh- available- intentionally, understand. He is ish young man of dissolute prin- divert attention and cause the $ man basketball teams will be al- Nordmann has seen Michigan's these boys ready for varsity not the typical rake, who en- ciple. film to seem jagged and dls- X; lowed to play three games, and frosh play once and expects 6-3 ball next year." joys leaving them after loving Other fine performances are Jointed, at times. tonight at 8 p.m. In Yost FiAd- Rich Bloodworth and 6-7 Rudy The plan Is that Michigan will them. turned in by Shelley Winters, Bill Naughton, author of the house the Spartan frosh will play bring its frosh team to MSU next Seniors of the week stage play, has written a tight x TomJanovlch to give the Spar- Alfie lives by rules — rules playing her usual role as an Its first game against the Uni- tans the most trouble. Former year for a return match. which he is only too glad to ex- over-sexed hag (Alfie calls her but emotional screenplay, chal- :£ versity of Michigan. U-M star George Pomey Is Mich- Admission for the game will plain to the audience personal- his "little lust-box" and tells lenging the actors to turn in ex- jjj: J e a n F i s h e r , an E n g l i s h m a j o r f r o m G r a y l i n g , The game will give onlookers igan's freshman coach, andNord- be $1, at the gate. ly, as he narrates his own comic us that she's in great condi- ceptional performances, which and G a r y D i l l e y , a zoology m a j o r f r o m Huntington, an Idea of the kind of basketball tragedy. He works with married tion), and Vivien- Merchant as they do. Ind,, a r e being honored t h i s week for t h e i r s e r v i c e to expect from the two schools women, if possible. They don't the guilt-ridden, wayward wife " A l f i e " is a sophisticated look to MSU. Jean is a m e m b e r of Delta Zeta s o r o r i t y , in the future and the players to it's pvhat's happening make many demands. He guards of one of Alfie's friends. at some of the games people and A l p h a L a m b d a Delta and Kappa Delta Pi hon- watch for. against attachment (he avoids "Alfie" is a fast-moving, play during good times, hard '<[ o r a r i e s . She is also p r e s i d e n t of AWS. Freshman Coach Bob Nord- the word love). It leads to pain. nearly flawless conglomeration times, happy times and sad times. § D i l l e y , the nation's o u t s t a n d i n g b a c k s t r o k e r , was mann expects Michigan's fresh- He says, in a terrific cockney of scenes and moods which change You would think that Alfie had the i.: men to be very tough. "Their A n n o u n c e m e n t s m u s t be received b e f o r e 11 a . m . at the drop of a " b i r d . " It con- best of it — that life was, as a s i l v e r medal winner at the 1964 O l y m p i c s . He is a accent, "Ah down want no bird's forwards look awfully good," the day b e f o r e p u b l i c a t i o n . respeck. Ah woon't know what stantly involves its audience in he says, "a giggle." But he ad- :•: m e m b e r of Delta Tau Delta, V a r s i t y C l u b , E x c a l i b u r , Nordmann said. ''Their front line irony and tragedy, by compres- mits that, "Ah ain' got me peace B l u e Key and S p a r t a h o n o r a r i e s . , to do wi' it." He lives for him- Is big. They gave the varsity sing scenes into artful mood of mind. And wi'out that, you ain' :•: 5tate News photo by Mike Schonhofen All-Nations Forum and Fellow- self, avoiding dependence on any- team a rough battle In the fresh- Current trends in mental health pieces, and through masterly got nothin'." ship at 7 p.m. Saturday in the one. man-varsity game earlier in the in the UJS. and Great Britain It's all part of what he calls juxtaposition of action and still- season." will be the topic of the Social Alumni Chapel Social Room. ENTERTAINMENT "human bleedin' nature." In the ness, noise and silence. In MSU's freshman-varsity Work Dept. colloquium in parlor Wood will speak on "Hunger, process of following his philo- The color photography is quick battle, the score was 92-44, "and C of the Union at 10 a.m. today. Havoc and Hope in Latin Amer- sophy, he loses two of his own and alert, utilizing off-focus, I don't have tb tell youwhowon," Milton Wittman, chief of the i c a " . Jackson's topic will be Films, hockey, mixers children, uses and gets rid of slow-motion, and still-shot mon- said Nordmann. Social Work Training BranchNa- "Trends in the Religions of some girls, Is used and gotten tage to enhance the unassuming This is the first intercollegi- tional Institute of Mental Health, Asia." rid of by some women, contracts settings. ate competition for freshmen will be the speaker. tuberculosis, gets into a bar A jazz background is sparingly ever in the Big Ten. The rigors A colloquium for undergrad- provided by Sonny Rollins. Sur- G r a d e s group highlight this weekend brawl, seduces a friend's wife, and expense of travel, and first- uates will take place 3-5 p.m. arranges an abortion in his kit- prisingly, there is no use of, or year academic pressures, have in Conrad Auditorium. improvisation on the " A l f i e " • * * chen, makes love in his hos- pital bed, and attends a bap- theme song, except at the end of made officials wary of fresh- man competition. Nordmann says The Baha'i Club will meet needs members the film. Trio, celebrated Jazz group, will he is in favor of the games on at 3 p.m. Sunday at 820 Mich- tism. The MSU Lecture-Concert Only six petitions for the seven This weekend students may Series will present the Chicago perform at 8:15 Tuesday in Fair- a "limited basis." igan Ave. Speaker Keyvon Naz- positions on the recently formed well ask themselves why they Likely starters for the Spar- arian will present his program Symphony conducted by Jean child Theater. Academic Co-ordinating Com- ever came to the frozen tundra On Tuesday and Wednesday, tan frosh are: BoS Gale, 6-5, "Around the Baha'i World Mtrtinon at 8:15 p.m. on Mon- mittee have been received by the Spring concerts of Michigan State instead of en- day In the Auditorium. Selections Eugene O'Neill's "Desire Under of Trout Creek, and Ron Bonge, through Slides." Honors College Board. rolling at the University of * • • of Haydn, Britten and Rozsa will the E l m s " will be presented in 6-5, of East Detroit at forwards; The deadline for interested Miami. The People-to-People Assn. be presented. The Mitchell-Ruff the Arena Theatre at 8 p.m. Jim Gibbons, 6-6, of Blissfield students to contact Steve Haynes, Unfortunately, the cold weather will meet at 6:45 p.m. Sunday in chairman of the Honors College still indefinite is bound to stay, so one may Room A of Snyder Hall. either dream sweet daydreams of • • • Board, is Saturday at 353-1483. Prof lectures in Sweden spring vacation in the Bahamas, All full-time student! are eli- Members of MSU's Arab Club or make the most of this week- gible for the committee estab- will sponsor their annual Arab- Bob Hope was considered for end and get out and do something. lished under Joint sponsorhsip of With the Suprernes signed as ian Dinner Saturday in the Uni- spring term, but Platt said he There's plenty going on. ASMSU and Honors College. the only popular entertainment versity Methodist Church. After- Tonight's International Film The ad hoc committee, com- for winter term, plans for spring was too expensive. Peter, Paul Georg Borgstrom, professor lum is the editor of a new book, dinner entertainment will include posed of five members appointed and Mary and the Smothers Series presentation Is "Little of geography and food science a movie and a stage show. Tickets term remain Indefinite. "Philosophy and Educational De- by Honors College and two se- Brothers refused all dates, ac- Peter," winner of last January's lectured Thursday at Stockholm are available at the Union U.N. Mitchell Platt, ASMSU popular velopment," published by Hough- lected by ASMSU, will set up com- cording to Platt. The Tijuana Finnish State Prize. It will be University in Sweden. His talk, Lounge 8 a.m. entertainment chairman, re- ton Mifflin. » • -» 5 p.m. today. mittees within each college to act Brass was not seriously consid- shown in Fairchlld at 7 and 9. "Technology Facing the World's ported that he is waiting to sched- as a student advisory body to ered because of cost involved In hockey, MSU will meet Mich- Hunger Crisis," Is being spon- The book Is based on papers There will be an admission- ule Jenison Fleldhouse before that college. and dates open. igan Tech tonight at 7:30 p.m. in delivered at the 1965 National free mixer in the Mason Hall continuing the search for spring Questions these committees shows. Signing the Supremes contract the ice arena. Conference on Philosophy and lower lounge from 9 p.m. to The Mutations will entertain Educational Development. may face Include the pass-fall A two-and-a-half-month wait marked ASMSU response to Art group sored by the School of Engi- midnight Friday. The Grim Reap- at the Shaw mixer from 9-12 grading system, curriculum and for the Supremes ended in suc- student opinion. Platt said the neering at Stockholm. ers will provide the music. instructor selection. Basic Supremes polled the top position tonight. • * • cess, but not so with Bill Cosby. guidelines will be made by the on a survey of entertainers taken Armstrong Hall is sponsoring . a. * » » platt said Cosby was not available for winter or spring terms. on campus last year. Henry Man- a mixer from 8:30 to 12 tonight cini and the Beach Boys, fall term at Brody with the Sounds and the planning Five faci^Ö members of the Edward M. Smykay, professor of transportation will be chair- Garland Wood, professor of agricultural economics, and Her- Academic Co-ordinating Com- mittee, though the committees' man of a workshop entitled "Car- bert Jackson, associate profes- duties may vary from college to entertainers, rated fifth and sixth Soundettes making the music. Social Work dept. will attend Music ru sh on the opinion poll. A mixer at Mason Hall from " W e try to get the names the 9-12 tonight will feature the Grim student drive a "Council on Social Work cation" in Salt Lake City, Jan. Edu- rier Agency Coordination," to be held March 15 In St. Louis, Mo. sor of religion, will speak to the college. set Sunday students want, but they have to Reapers. realize the dlfficultues Involved, "Good — Neighbor 1—w Sam," spon MSU's Committee to Rescue 23-27. -.- — Italian Art (CRIA) ended Its fac- The workshop Is under the Members attending will be: sponsorship of a division of the Volkswagen Service and may have to gettle for lesser sored by Men's Hall Association { u n d d r l V g this and has Daniel E. O'Keefe, director of U.S. Dept. of Commerce, known All music majors and minors with a 2.5 all university average names Platt. occasionally," added and . - j », Women's Inter-Residence Council will be shown at 7 and among the students. started plans for a major drive the department; Lucille K. Bar- as the Office of Emergency ber, professor; Katharin Den- Transportation (OET). Bleyker, assistant professor; agency is instrumental in the co- This and Repair and a 3.0 in music courses are Tickets for the two Supremes 9 tonight In Conrad Auditorium. There will be a violin recital Erling" B. Brauner, director Rachel F. Smith, assistant pro- ordination and utilization of eligible to attend the winter rush shows will •go on sale in the Union All m a j o r and m i n o r work undertaken and Campbell's Suburban Shop with piano accompaniment held of the committee, is chairman of fessor; and Ethelbert Thomas transportation during times of parties of Delta Omicron and Sig- the Art Dept. Jr., assistant professor. Qational emergency. ma Alpha Iota, professional Jan. 25. Student ID cards will be at 8:15 tonight in the Music The Michigan division of the » • » A m p l e p a r t s supply music sororities for women. needed to purchase tickets the Auditorium, Smykay is a regional assist- UNIVERSITY FOREIGN CAR first day only In order to give Saturday brings another hockey national CRIA of which MSU is a ant director for carrier agency The rush parties, set up by J _ _ . . . . . . . • s+l + ^A r o r p n t l V George Barnett, professor of game at 7:30 p.m. with Michigan subcommittee was cited recently secondary education and curricu- coordination and llason. the professional Panhellenic mu- student priority. for contributing a major percent- sic committee will be held 2-4 Platt repeated that only two Tech and a swimming meet with tickets may be purchased by any the University of Michigan at age of the total funds collected HILLEL FOUNDATION p.m. Sunday and 6-8 p.m. Jan. in the United States to aid the 3029 E . K a l a m a z o o at C l l p p e r t one person with an ID. 2 p.m. 24. Saturday's travelogue will be restoration of Italian art damaged 482-5832 489-8211 "Bravo Portugal" at 8 p.m. in by floods last fall. 319 Hillcrest at W. Grand River O p e n 7 : 30 t i l l 9:30 weekdays The CRIA was created last Placement Bureau the Auditorium. The Saturday night South Com- fall to supply the aid necessary Sabbath Services Saturday 10 a m. plex mixer will be held from 8- to hire and train more people 12 at Wilson Hall with the Arthurs and to supply the materials nec- S U N D A Y , J A N U A R Y 22, 6 P . M . Tuesday, Jan. 24: The Upjohn Co.: chemistry and entertaining. essary for restoration. It has Anaconda Wire and Cable Co: biology (B), electrical engineer- Interfaith Supper with Canterbury On the same night, the Last been estimated that as many as all majors of the colleges of En- ing (B,M,D), chemical engineer- Rites will play at the Holmes 30 years may be required to bring Club at Hlllel House. gineering, Arts and Letters, Bus- ing, accounting, all majors of Hall East Complex mixer from some of the art works back to Rev. Robert Gardner and Rabbi Zemach iness, Communication Arts and the College Business and mathe- 8 - 1 2 . their pre-flood state. will lead discussion. Social Science (B). matics (B,M), marketing (M) and At the theaters this weekend is Mrs. Jacqueline Kennedy is For rides call 332-1916 Bank of the Commonwealth: personnel and labor and Indus- the Cannes Film Festival Award the honorary president of CRIA. all majors of the colleges of trial relations (B,M). winner, "Alfie." It's an adulf Arts and Letters, Business, Tuesday-Wednesday, Jan. 24-25: comedy starring Michael Caine Communication Arts and Social Consumers Power Co.: for- and playing ait the Campus Thea- Science (B,M). estry (B), accounting,civil,elec- ter. Cargill, Inc.: all majors of the trical, and mechanical en- I N T E R V I E W I N G AT and treat them to The surf-soaked "Endless College of Business,agricultural gineering (B,M), metallurgy, Summer" continues its run at Michigan State economics (B,M); chemistry (B,- mechanics and materials science the Gladmer In downtown Lan- M,D); accounting, chemical en- (M), mathematics and statistics sing. Jan. 2 7 our secret gineering (B,M) and all majors (B,M) and personnel and labor of the colleges of Arts and Let- and industrial relations (M). Jeanne Moreau is starring in "Mademoiselle," the story of a process.. ters, Communication Arts and Corning Glass Works: metal- school mistress and her love Social Science (B). dose lurgy, mechanics, materials sci- affair in a French village. It's Industrial Nucleonics, since 1951, has concentrated on developing on-line analytical E.LDuPont De Nemours and ence, mechanical, electrical and playing at the State Theater. measurement and control systems for the country's basic raw materials processors. With over by hand. Co., Inc.: chemistry, physics, chemical engineering, econom- 98 percent of ah systems ever built still in daily service - and providing the customer with The suspense drama "Oambit" tangible economic benefits through guaranteed results — AccuRay systems have become a mechanical and chemical engin- ics,« all majors of the College is showing at the MlchiganThea- standard of reliability and performance. ^ eering (D). of Business, mathematics, sta- ter this weekend. With a record of doubling in size every four years and increasing markets across the U.&., Equitable Development Corp.: tistics, physics, chemistry and Canada and Western Europe, I.N.'s field staff has become a most important element. If you building construction (B). all majors of the colleges of are interested and qualified for one of the following positions, additional inlormation and campus Lansing General Hospital: nur- Arts andLetters,Communication interview schedules may be obtained from the Placement Office. sing (B). Arts, and Social Science (B,M). Car accident that ; RING Supervise installation and calibration of I.N. process L.H. Penney andCo.: account- E.L Du Pont De Nemours and FIELD STAFF ENGINF control systems at customer locations; train cus- one optlon Co., Inc.: mechanical, chemical BSEE or B S I E with electron tomers' operating and maintenance personnel in ing (B.M). Perfect Circle Division, Dana and electrical engineering and injures proper and effective use of equipment. gives Corp.: accounting and manage- chemistry (B,M) and physics (M), An accident at the intersection ment (B); labor and industrial and all majors of the College of of Farm Lane and Wilson Road Each of these career p o s i U n s offers rapid advancement and opportunity to broaden your then ai antique technical knowledge, plus liberal compensation, company automobile, expense account, permanent relations (M) and mechanical en- Business (B,M). resulted in one injury and ap- gineering and metallurgy, mech- Swift and Co., Research and proximately $600 damage to the a S S i W i n t i t 1 i n m 1 s \ K m c o n v e n i e n t for you, send your resume ¡" confidence to M r anics and materials science (B). Development Center: chemistry two cars Involved. Pittsburgh Plate Glass Co.: (organic), biochemistry (D), Man M. Johri, research assist- Philip J Robinson Assistant to the President, Industrial Nucleonics Corporation, 6 5 0 Ackerman Road, Columbus, Ohio 4 J202. An Equal Opportunity Employer. finish...i civil, chemical and electrical chemistry (B), food science ant in the Plant Research Labor- engineering (B,M): mechanical (dairy) (D), home economics (B), atory, a passenger in a car FREE! engineering (B.M.D); accounting chemical and mechanical engin- driven by John V. Jacobson, re- (B,M) and all majors of. the eering (B,M) and microbiology HIndustrial ceived a cut on the right side of College of Business (B). (B,D). his head. Pittsburgh Plate Glass Co., Jacobson, 703-103 Cherry Chemical Division: chemical, SUMMER EMPLOYMENT REGAL SHOES IW/ucleonics Lane, was headed east on Wil- civil and mechanical engineering, son Road and had stopped at chemistry, accounting and elec- Tuesday, Jan. 24: the Farm Lane intersection. F R O M C O A S T TO C O A S T trical engineering (B,M). Bank of the Commonwealth: i / comfamjKTiON ^ When he pulled out to cross Corner of ANN & M ^ . C . United Press International: all majors of the colleges of the Intersection he collided with journalism, English and all ma- Arts and Letters, Business, a vehicle driven by George W. East Lansing jors of the colleges of Arts and Communication Arts and Social Shooter of Webberville, Uni- Letters, Communication Arts and Science going on to graduate versity Police reported. Social Science (B,M). school (B,M). Michigan Statte Ñéws, East Lansing, Michigan SPORTS F r i d a y , J a n u a r y 2 D E M O N S T R A T I O N S FIZZLE ..,„,.. , „ 0 . • Goodman stresses Ky imprests Australians CANBERRA, Australia (#) — 'professionalism' The Sydney Dal the 35,218 persons that have "Come along with me, there Premier Nguyen Cao Ky of South which last week said 1 l i d T ^ i d not been kidnaped by the Commu- is room on my plane," Ky told Vietnam neared an end to his want to see Ky, referre3 to his nist Viet Cong during the past reporter Harry Stein of the Com- visit to the Australian capital wife's "dazzling beauty and five years?" he asked. munist Sydney Tribune, "and I Thursday night on a happy note. charm." He offered to take a Commu- will fly you around and show you Demonstrations that had been Friday morning, Ky flies to nist reporter to South Vietnam tions of participation in the pres- "loses himself in the pursuit of threatened fizzled out. There how we have pushed the enemy By P H I L VAN HUSE N Brisbane. He will visit Sydney and show him that his govern- ent society which allow non- his objective discipline," and were never more than 200 dem- back to the borders and into Paul Goodman, author, social on Saturday, and Melbourne on ment controlled a majority of critic and self-described''medi- professional consideration to in- because the regimentation in to- onstrators, kept behind barri- the jungles." Sunday and then fly to New Zea- the land and people. eval guild-socialist," concluded fluence the decisions of profes- day's schools makes it nearly cades, and many of these were land. the University College Sympo- sionals. impossible to emerge from col- children. The worst he heard lege as a professional. Earlier, Ky had told reporters sium Wednesday night with a plea The true professional, Good- were cries of " F a s c i s t " and the at the largest gathering In the for old-style professionalism. man states, is not only com- petent and autonomous but pos- To permit the exercise of this "honest, earnest and competent" charit, "Go home Ky" from op- ponents of Australia's role In history of theAustralianNational Student court seeks jurors "The methods and organiza- Press Club that he wondered Students interested in joining who are interested in the conduct sesses a sense of social re- professionalism, Goodman pro- the Vietnamese war. tion of the professions are turn- why there was so much criti- the All University Student Judici- and welfare of their fellow stu- sponsibility. posed anarchy, which he defined He charmed newsmen who be- cism of "accidental and regret- ary can obtain membership peti- dents. No experience in student To illustrate his definition, as horizontal organization and PAUL GOODMAN gan by asking barbed questions table deaths" from U.S. bomb- tions through Jan. 27, from 308 government is required. he hypothesized, " I f physicians cooperation instead of "top- but ended up drinking whisky with ings of North Vietnam while lit- Student Services Building. AUSJ works with the Dean of acted as professionals, the down" organization. "apj ailed at the lack of dignity- him as he answered all their tle is said of. Viet Cong terror- Membership is open to anyone Students Office in handling dis- sources of smog svould be ban- This combination of anarchy the disciplines have in schools," queries. ism. in this year's freshman, soph- ciplinary cases within the Uni- ned. If educators were profes- and professionalism, or "con- and advised students who would And his wife, the beautiful "What of the 7,277 civilians omore or junior classes. The ju- versity. Members serve as jus- sional, the 'vast wasteland' of flict and thought," he said, rep- achieve real professionalism to Tuyet Mai, has become Austral- that have been murdered and diciary is looking for students tices at these hearings. TV would di-appear." resents the most promising pos- begin insisting that they be taught ia's pinup girl. Her picture is Goodman suggested that re- sibility of political change in the the "beauty and utility" of their on front pages all over the coun- forms could be achieved by United States, where democracy .disciplines and the contribution try and reporters have referred CAREER strikes, if necessary, and that is "virtually dead." those disciplines can make to to her as a "stunner." the only ones competent to judge Goodman concluded that he was " a world worth living in." WANT A when and w here these should take place are the members of the professions who were auto- nomous and dedicated to their ZOLTON FERENCY discipline. So far, the student activist N O T JUST groups have been ineffective be- cause they have not realized the value of professionalism in Dem head to quit JOB! achieving change, Goodman said. LANSING #1 - Citing a de- Among those being discussed pect in their judgment, "The student movements won't sire of state party leaders for as possible successors, Ferency Ferency said. get anywhere without a program, a "new face" and a "new said, are State Sen. Sander Levin Ferency said party leaders and they won't get a program WATCHFUL EVE image," Zolton Ferency said of Berkley, former State Rep. have not decided whether to con- without the realization of the Thursday he will not run for John C. Mackie and Deputy Sec- tinue to have a full-time chair- ing the professionals into mere value of the professions." re-election as Democratic state retary of State Richard Cook. man. We are willing to bet that you have personnel who carry' out the pro- However, Goodman also in- dicated that student distrust of the chairman. Democratic National Commit- He said he had no firm plans not thought of the food business gram.- handed-down by non-pro- for the future, but definitely would professions is understandable Ferency, who lost in the 1966 teeman Neil Staebler and Sec- as a likely place to consider build- fes.••ionals," Goodman tolda rec- not run for any elective office- because most students never see governor's race to Republican retary of State James Hare have ing YOUR CAREER. ord crowd at Anthony Auditorium. in 1968. a true professional, one who incumbent George Romeny by suggested Levin " a s a goodpros- Goodman criticized the condi- more than half a million votes, said he would not endorse any candidate to succeed him. Romney voices favor "It is the considered and hon- est opinion of many party leaders SDS signs-up 25 We don't expect everyone to think the Food Industry is the best thing and elected officials that, at this going, but we would like the oppor- for oriti-draft move point in time, the Democratic tunity to show you how good we for unified, open party party should begin to develop think it is and let you draw your a new image, and that a step own conclusions. in that direction can be accom- About 25 students and young link with SDS or any anti-draft plished with ,the election of a non-students signed up Wednes- moves on its part. LANSING, Mich, t — Michi- groups, Romney said that "Re- W. C. Blanton, chairman of new face a«r"state party chair- day night for an anti-draft cam- gan Gov. George Romney said publicans have generally recog- In the operation of our stores, we need Store Managers, but we also need people In m a n , " Ferency said. paign, according to Michael United Students, asserted that his today that although Republicans nized that this is not a healthy Merchandising, Distribution, Real Estate,Personnel, and Accounting. Price, the former MSU student group's concerns are "confined have generally recognized that thing for the party," adding that Only one person - State Agri- who reportedly now has the list to the campus and East Lansing," splinter groups "are not a healthy- "there has been a move to get culture Commission member and that the organization does not of those who signed up. thing for the party," he is in favor away from it. Richard Stout of Marshall - has Intend to become Involved with Stop by and talk to us. We are confident you will of "an open party." so far announced his candidacy The sign-up sheet was avail- "The attitude of the Republi- able immediately after the meet- national or international issues. be pleasantly surprised about the Retail Food In- for Ferency's job. Ferency said i ßoger Romney made the comment at Blanton stated that the United dustry of today and the 70's. can governors at Colorado he was certain others would come ing at which the MSU chapter of Students provide an opportunity a news conference held while or- Springs made it clear that the forward before the state party Students for a Democratic Society for ganizers for the United Republi- students " i n the middle recognized leadership would like convention next month. publicly endorsed a national SDS cans of America were holding a ground" to work for causes they to get away from splinter directive calling for the forma- I n t e r v i e w i n g on C a m p u s J a n , 25 & 26 conference of their owninanothei Ferency said that, although support within the University groups," Romney said. tion of anti draft unions. part of the Capitol building. "many party leaders and elect- community, without committing The chairman of the United "But you can't have an open ed officials" urged him not to Price told Associated Press themselves to a particular C o n t a c t your P l a c e m e n t O f f i c e Republicans, D. Bruce Evans, party unless people have the run, he found "very enthusias- Thursday that the signers will ideology. said the group Is dedicated to privilege to do It," he added. t i c " support among the party's meet again next Wednesday to Anyone In United Students, he working for conservative candi- "You have to have a vigorous, rank and file. discuss methods. said, is free to work only on is- dates within the party and indi- open party. I'm for an open He said he was certain he Meanwhile, another activist sues he feels to be important EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER cated that it would support a party." could have won re-election if student organization, United Stu- "and not show up for anything candidate other than Romney in Romney saldheplannedtomeet he had sought it. dents, moved quickly to deny any else." any bid for the 1968 GOP presi- later in the day with Evans, whose dential nomination. g^oup has held meetings In sev- Questioned about splinter eral Michigan cities. Fine increase (continued f r o m page one) committee is not directly con- after that was proposed, but no action was taken. IN THE LANSING - EAST LANSING AREA „„ cerned with fines because the A new fine would eliminate much of the nuisance factor of On this page you'll find a directory of fine area establishments for your dining, dancing, and entertainment this weekend. members are exempt. The quarter fine is standard current paper work, he added. The Library is understaffed BRING IN YOUR VISA Quick Carry-Out Restaurant Serving Daily at other Big Ten schools, said now—137 staff members in com- Chapin. He said nearly $30,000 in over- parison with 200-400 member staffs at other Big Ten univer- CARD AND SAVE for Lunch or Dinner for gracious and due fines was collected in 1965: sities. AT "At a nickel a day that means For easier implementation, delightful dining too many books were kept out too long." He noted that last winter term any new fine system would be- come effective at the beginning THE PIZZA PIT 11 a . m . - m i d n l g h t , S u n . - Thürs, 11 a . m . - 2 a . m . . F r i . & Sat. of a term. He speculated that Daily 7 a.m. to 2 p.m. a fine increase of five cents for Added s a v i n g s with s p e c i a l VISA coupon. a new system may be in effect the first three days and 25 cents S o r r y - s p e c i a l offer does not apply to and 5 to 9 p.m. by this spring or summer. deliveries. Sundays 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Private Party Rooms Open daily 5 p.m..Midnight, Fri. and Sat. 5p.m.-1 a.n 270 W. Grand River 1427 West Saginaw 203 MAC Avenue P h o n o E D 2-0863 East Lansing Ph. 337-1741 A Liddle Dabble Never Dooya! presents the Spaghetti Steak Lasagna Chicken CO WITH Submarine Sandwiches Mairzy doats and dozy doats and liddle ambzy PIZZA Shrimp divey — but not "Shakey's Happy People"! YOUR FRIENDS' They'd rather eat our pizza (world's tastiest!) JO REO BARN WHERE EVERYBODY'S A WINNER! "The Cook's In" at II Daily, 4 Sun. Drink g o o d ? ? ? ? Or root beer or soft drinks! Sing with our ragtime piano and banjo! Have SIB B A R N E Y 211 M . A . C . EP 7-1668 FUN! A kiddle eat pizza t o o - b u t t a heckuvva 39« GRANDMA'S A delicious double-deck hamburger with lot more'n-a-liddle, when it's Shakey's! SHOTS PIZZA FASLOB k 2 big patties of grilled beef, crunchy fresh lettuce, creamy melted cheese, tangy pickle... and special savory sauce! V" y Ye P U B I I C house / GORED pited tffodten 'South Cedar at Pennsylvania ( Q aucus oom (Just north of 1-96 Expressway) The warmth and atmosphere of a Yorkshire inn TAKE - HOME BARN your favorite beverages, and the famous Jack Tar hospitality make the Caucus Room a must for your weekend enjoyment. Chicken . Shrimp . Fish OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK Open 11a.m. 'til 2 a.m. across from the stale capitol 1900 E. Kalamazoo Phone:464-4471