WON'T JOIN FU AT Wednesday MICHIGAN ^ ^ games' victim c u ts UNIVERSITY STATE £ l ' school for term It had been planned and we (the pledges) By B O B B Y S O D E N were not looking forward to it," he said. State N e w s Staff W r i t e r "It was regarded as an intensive chal- V o l . 59 N u m b e r 112 East Lansing, Michigan J a n u a r y 25, 1967 10c The fraternity pledge who suffered lenge and the 'last hurdle' before initia- severe acid burns during a "hell week" tion." Bonus explained that his neck had begun Johnson proposes record; game said Wednesday he is leaving school this term and will not become a member to sting immediately but he had finished of Sigma Alpha Epsilon. the race, anyway. "It was the least of Joseph A. Bonus, Detroit junior, was my problems'," he said. treated at Sparrow Hospital two weeks "Later, I was walking practically hunch- ago with third degree acid burns to his backed from the pain of It," he said. No- BStk and neck. He first told doctors body was very concerned about it, he said. and police the burns were the result of "They seemed to think if you waved your asks sacrifice to pay costs an accident, but later admitted he had hand it would go away." received the burns during a pre-initia- Cowell said Tuesday that he had not tion activity. known Bonus was in "any appreciable Bonus said he was dropping out of school amount of pain" at the time. because of the emotional stress following Fraternity members applied salve to the the incident. He Indicated that his parents burned areas and called Sparrow for treat- had also urged him to leave MSU for the ment instructions, Bonus said. Bonus r e - WASHINGTON Of) — President Johnson leaders agreed that Congress would "I assume the appropriate committees remainder of the term. turned to his room in West McDonel at unveiled Tuesday a record $l35-biIlion apporve something less than the $135 will go over it very carefully and that SAE president Craig D. Cowell, Royal about 3 a.m. that night. administrative budget designed, he says, to billion Johnson proposed to spend in the there will be cuts here and there, and Oak sophomore, said Sunday that Bonus Bonus called Cowell the next morning defend freedom abroad and promote dignity "The budget still has some year starting July «1, but they gave no additions here and there," Mansfield said. had been burned accidently during a relay to tell him how severe the burns had at home. It includes the largest request gimmickry in it," said Sen. figures. He expects Congress will approve less race when a towel containing a chemical become. Cowell told him to go to Sparrow f o r military outlays - $72.3 billion - since than Johnson recommended. varnish stripper was placed on his neck Hospital in Lansing instead of Olln Health World War II. Everett Dirksen, R-Ill. Mansfield agreed that " i t is a large Dirksen declined to estimate how much to prevent him from seeing his pledge Center so that the University would not budget" that Johnson proposed, but he said 1 learn about the incident. Bonus said. Measured by other standards budget the budget might be cut, but he said he brothers. The cloth had been used earlier spending could go as high as $172.4 a major portion is earmarked for defense felt there could be a further stretch-out in the day in a work project of revarnish- Cowell said Monday that he told Bonus billion, but it's the administrative budget and another $25 to $35 billion " f o r things in the space program and that Congress ing the fraternity house's foyer. to go to Sparrow to avoid a long wait at on which Congress will work. that can't be avoided," like interest ortiftie could do "infinitely better" than it did Bonus said the relay race was not a Olln because it was Sunday. Society is scheduled to increase by $1.9 Johnson asked sacrifice in the form of national debt. last year In cutting antipoverty funds./ " s p u r of the moment" game. ( p l e a s e t u r n to the b a c k p a g e ) billion to $18.3 billion in such fields as higher taxes and higher postal rates in the education, health, economic opportunity, 478-page budget book and four other doc- welfare, regional development, pollution Building site uments he sent to Congress, one of them control, labor and community develop- an appendix as big as a major metro- ment. _ politan telephone directory. The projected administnrcive budget The budget for the fiscal year beginning deficit of $8.1 billion is held in check, chosen f o r S ' July 1 ranges from increased Vietnam Johnson says, by reducing or postponing spending to escalation - on a moderate programs wherever possible. scale - of the antipoverty program. He cautions Congress against making Sandwiched between are what the P r e s - substantial changes for fear of Jeop- ident call's modest increases in other Great Society programs, the beginnings of a space venture aimed at an unmanned ardizing the economy, the budget itself and the aims of society. Reactions from con- retiree co-op gressional leaders were mostly along landing on the planet Mars in 1973 and party lines. possible first production of the Nlke-X By KURT HAHN Senator Mike Mansfield, D-Mont., said antiballistic missile. President Johnson "has done the best he A site has been selected for a pro- The only major spending cut apparent could to keep the budget within the minimal, posed apartment cooperative for r e - in the budget comes in space, down $300 manageable limits," but Sen. Everett M. tired University employes. million from the current fiscal year. Dirksen, R-Ill., said the budget "still Bookkeeping techniques obscure total John N. Winburne, asst. dean of stu- has some gimmickry in it." dent affairs, University College, made the spending figures for some other programs. The Democratic and Republican Senate announcement to the MSU Faculty Club Officials said spending for the Great at the Tuesday luncheon meeting in a report on an MSU Credit Union commit- tee for retirement programs. Preamble to be a d d e d Winburne also announced that the proj- ect has been formally incorporated at the MSU Services Cooperative. The project, which was first announced to final freedom report in October, 1965, is expected to be com- pleted by September 1968. Initial con- Murphy on the move struction has been estimated at about 125 units. The site acquired consists of 80 acres As the final version of the Academic form the recommendations of the report S o m e 6,000 student.s a s s e m b l e d on the U C L A c a m p u s T u e s d a y to h e a r C h a n c e l l o r F r a n k l i n D . M u r p h y located south of the end of Interstate Freedom report goes to press, a four- into constitutional form. ( l o w e r left) d i s c u s s the f i r i n g of U n i v e r s i t y of C a l i f o r n i a P r e s i d e n t C l a r k K e r r a n d G o v . R o n a l d R e a g a n ' s 496 and bordered by Sandhill, Pine Tree, man faculty committee will meet T h u r s - Reinoehl, chairman of the committee a d m i n i s t r a t i o n tuition p r o p o s a l . UPlTelephoto and Dell Roads. day to write a preamble for the lengthy which completed last week the editorial Members will be expected to pay a document. revision of the report, said "no substan- $10 membership fee and $l-per-month R e a g a n claims UCs Kerr The report, concerning student rights tive changes" were made. dues to start the project, and a $1,500 at MSU, has been inthehandsofan editor- The system of numbering was modified rent deposit per person prior to taking ial revision committee since the Academic slightly, he said. occupancy of an apartment, Winburne Council approved the report Jan. 10. Louis L. McQuitty, dean of the College • said. Monthly rent has not yet been de- The committees 'ma in task was to traivs- of Social Science, moved at the Jan. 10 termined. initiated own dismissal meeting that a preamble to the report The initial $1,500 deposit is entirely be written "to put the report in context," refundable if a member does not occupy said John F. A. Taylor, chairman of the Librarian awaits committee writing the preamble. an apartment in the cooperative, Win- burne pointed out. "It was suggested since the report will teaching, a foundation spokesman said ture—narrowly controlled by Democrats Official retirement from the Univer- be circulated beyond this campus that a SACRAMENTO i/P) — California Gov. student opinion Tuesday in New York. —also have made it clear this week they sity will be the eligibility requirement preamble would be fitting to accompany Ronald Reagan Tuesday called'the firing for residence in the apartments, Win- of state university President Clark Kerr " M r . Kerr had accepted the Carnegie feel Kerr's dismissal will react against it as it goes abroad," Taylor explained. assignment before the University of Cal- Reagan's demands for a cut of roughly burne explained, thus allowing retirees necessary but ill-timed, and said Kerr on later hours "The preamble will indicate to an outsider ifornia regents dismissed him," the 10 per cent in planned higher education with part time jobs or advisory posi- the social and academic context of theUni- himself Initiated the abrupt action that tions to maintain eligibility. surprised the state. spokesman said, "but no formal an- spending for the next fiscal year. versity's land grant f r a m e . " . nouncement had been made." Reagan said it is too early to ¡--peculate Proposals for the facility include apart- If action is to be taken on extending The preamble will not "affect, qualify or The new Republican governor also took ments of up to 1,000 square feet in size Kerr's firing brought an uproar of on who might succeed Kerr at the -uni- library hours, such a move should be modify" the report, however, Taylor e m - strong exception to criticism that poli- with and without kitchen facilities. A protest from students and faculty through- versity, but, he added, " I think Cali- initiated by the student library commit- phasized. tics played a part in the 14-8 vote last out the state, and expressions of support fornia can get a man of the right quality." tee, Library Director Richard Chapin said "It was provided specifically in the Friday of the University of California ( p l e a s e t u r n to the b a c k p a g e ) Tuesday. board of regents that fired Kerr imme- for the deposed president by leading edu- council meeting that the preamble would cators from all over the nation. " I like to consult the students on these not be construed as part of the report," diately. The firing renewed sharp attacks on the N e w Zealand greets Ky things," he said. Taylor said. " I voted as one of 14," Reagan told a crowded news conference. He added a chief executive by students and teachers Norma Foster, East Lansing junior and McQuitty has made a draft of the p r e - pledge that during his term as governor, already vehemently opposed to Reagan's member of the student committee, said amble which will be considered at the com- there will be "no arm-twisting" of the announcement that he supports imposing that the question of longer hours had been mittee meeting Thursday afternoon, T a y - regents on his part. tuition at the university and 18 state discussed only briefly since the main con- lor said. colleges, now tuition-free for Califor- w ith b rawl,airport lie-in cern at the present time is the issue of The report's next stop will probably be Reagan told newsmen some "regents nians. fines for over due books. in mid-February when it is considered by had come to me and told m e . . . that they believed a majority of the board felt he Five speakers at a noon rally of 2,000 The student and faculty library com- the Academic Senate, a body of 1,500 should resign. They did not know whether on the 25,000 student Berkeley campus mittees will be meeting jointly in the next tenured faculty members. The Senate can a majority of the board would favor urged students and faculty to organize into few weeks, Mrs. Foster said. She felt not modify the document, but can only vote church, Ky had turned in an impressive stronger action." Kerr, the governor said, a power block so they could have the it should be discussed among both groups approval or rejection. AUCKLAND, New Zealand (0 — Police- performance as a President Johnson-style "was still given an opportunity to resign," say in who will be the new president. before any recommendation is made. More than 2,500 copies of the final ver- men with dogs broke up a wild brawl crowd pleaser, shaking hands, kissing old but didn't. Asked about plans for a student march at Auckland Airport'tonight after demon- " I have not given too much considera- sion of the report will be separately ladies and holding hands with babies. Reagan agreed with reports try other on the capital to protest Reagan's higher strators stopped South Vietnamese P r e - tion to extending hours at this time," distributed sometime after February 1, in- In Wellington earlier he met with Prime regents that Kerr, head of the university education policies, the governor said "I'd mier Nguyen Cao Ky's car by throwing Chapin said, although he did indicate that dicated a spokesman from the office of Wil- Minister Keith Holyoake and his Cabinet, for eight years, had asked a few of them certainly receive it." Sharp student pro- themselves on the roadway. the hours can be longer. liam H. Combs, secretary of faculties. and waved at or shook hands with many for some sign of confidence. Kerr has dis- tests—he has been hanged in effigy at Hours were extended this term on Sun- If approved, the freedom report will be Women hurled themselves in front of of the thousands of office workers who puted this. several campuses—are "based on a great days, with the library opening at 10 a j n . referred to President Hannah and even- the speeding black limousine, and men turned out to see him pass by. lack of information," Reagan remarked. I as a study area. Regular library serv- tually be acted upon by the BoardofTrus- Kerr has accepted a post with the Car- pounded on the windows with their fists Demonstrations in Christchurch and ices become available at 2 p.m. on Sun- negie Foundation for the advancement of Top Democratic leaders in the legisla- as a shower of eggs splattered against tees. Wellington had been orderly and gener- days, at 8 a.m. weekdays. The library the c a r . ally polite. now closes at 11 p.m. every day. Screaming and punching at policemen It was recently suggested that the library Snow job seen for spring-lovers who tried to stop them, the demonstrators remain open until midnight. forced the driver of the car to brake Chapin has pointed to understaffing and lack of use by students.as problems in quickly. Police dragged two women and several men from the road as the crowd Supremes tickets lengthening the library hours at this time. of about 300 surged around the vehicle. He said he would like to see how the longer Sunday hours work out before any further Enjoy it while you can, because the unexpected warm weather is coming The c a r ' s interior light was on, and g o on sale today to an end. Ky appeared anxious as a burly New action is taken. Zealander thumped the window and cursed Tickets for the two campus perfor- Provost Howard R. Neville responded to Today's, forecast calls for occa- sional showers with morning tem- him. The booing, jeering crowd chanted mances by the Supremes go on sale the student request for longer Sunday peratures in the high 60s. In the "Ky, go! Ky, Gol " and "Fascist! F a s - today. library hours by allocating $40 per hour afternoon it will get cloudy and colder, cist! " Students with ID cards may purchase two needed to operate the library with a skele- ton crew. This is in addition to the regular with a 20 per cent chance of precipi- The crowd tried to stop other cars tickets between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. In the annual allocation from the provost's office tation. in the motorcade, and fights between Union and between 9 a.m. - 5:30 p j n . to the library. Thursday's outlook: cloudy, colder, police and demonstrators continued for -and 7 p j n . - 9 p.m. at Campbell's Sub- If Chapin recommends that library hours with a chance of snow. In short, back several minutes after. Ky was on his urban Shop. be extended, he would first approach the to the winter grind. way to a downtown Auckland hotel. There Starting Thursday, ID's won't be neces- provost, but Neville did not indicate if the One year ago today, the high was another crowd of about 200 hurled ink sary, but the limit of two tickets per person money would be available. 16 and the low, one degree. The at policemen and kept up a continuous will continue. No blocks will be sold to "Most of it is committed, but I don't warmest temperature for this day booing that could be heard for several any organization, reported Mitchell Piatt, know how much," Neville said. was in 1950, when the mercury hit blocks. ASMSU pop entertainment chairman. Neville works with funds allocate«! to 57 degrees. The coldest? In 1963, Earlier, the South Vietnamese leader's Platr said there are 7,800 tickets for the academic programs of the University from J a n u a r y o p p o r t u n i s t s c a u g h t a few r a y s a s the t e m p e r a t u r e tour had appeared to be turning into an 7 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. performances in the it was 13 below zero. Today may be the total University budget. s o a r e d to 60 d e g r e e s M o n d a y . K a r l e n e G r a y b ' r e l , C a p a c f r e s h - unexpected success. Auditorium. the last chance to go skateboarding Chapin said that the'cost of $40 an hour m a n and H o w a r d F a l k e r , R o m e o s o p h o m o r e lounge near C a s e Before his arrival, most newspapers General admission tickets are on sale until—who knows when? covers a skeleton crew to operate* the Hall. State N e w s p h o t o by B o b B a r i t had urged the government to call off the for $3. Reserved area tickets may be library, but does not include operation and visit. But since his arrival in Christ- purchased for $3.50. maintenance. STATI NEWS Kyle C. Kerbawy editor-in-chief Eric Planin, managing editor James Spanlolo, campus editor Thomas Segal, editorial editor Lawrence Werner, sports editor Andrew Mollison, executive reporter Joel Stark William G. Papciak, a s s t . ad manager advertising manager Wednesday Morning, January 25, 1967 EDITORIALS U of C's integrity Kerr-rrunched It is possible to write punish the "filthy dem- no matter what the precip- take. Yet it s e r v e s to under- off the firing of Clark Kerr onstrators.'' itating cause. Kerr has statr line one of the most p r e s - from his post of chancellor He was always in a curious ed that the "University sing problems of university of the University of Cal- position: unpopular with the should serve truth, not pol- today. ifornia as just one more i r - students for the control he itical partnership." responsible political act in still exerted and unpopular This applies to far more Re-establish integrity a state that has become a with outside elements in the than just the University of state for his apparent image California, and strikes home Hopefully, Kerr's s u c c e s - symbol of political irration- of leniency. particularly hard in a state- sor will somehow manage to ality. It is still not certain exact- supported institution. r e - e s t a b l i s h the integrity of But to do this would be to ly what prompted the re- his position. Otherwise, as miss the overwhelming s i g - the Daily Californian sug- nificance of last Friday's ac- gents' decision to fire Kerr. Precarious position tie*?* Reagan had charged Kerr g e s t s , four years fron now tion by the California r e - with politicking because of Kerr's c a s e demonstrates "people will be wondering gents. Kerr and California his support for Pat Brown in the precarious position of a how he (Reagan) managed in Governor Ronald Reagan the recent gubernatorial university president. He such a short time to turn the were engaged in a c l a s s i c election. And there had been must absorb p r e s s u r e s from University of California into struggle of state university a second-rate 'college on the versus state government. increased friction recently above, from the monetary I'll need more I.D. than your between the chancellor and powers that keep his institu- coast.' " And in one swift, totally un- The Editors Lyndon Johnson Fan Club card. expected move, government and governor over Reagan's tion functioning. And yet, at reigned dominant. plans to cut the University's the s a m e time, he must r e - When he was a faculty budget and raise student tui- spond to the demands of an NEWS ANALYSIS member at Berkeley in the tion. increasingly r e s t l e s s faculty early '50s. Kerr established Reagan had also sparked and student body. his liberality by fighting against the firing of c o l - a dispute with his demand that Kerr "clean up the beat- Struggles over financial support are inevitable, if North Viet civilian centers bombed leagues who refused to sign niks," referring to the stu- unfortunate. But the mone- E D I T O R ' S N O T E : The follow- only two miles southwest of downtown been h e r e when the bombers came on the tary control of the politicians ing c o p y r i g h t s t o r y w a s written Hanoi, and very much in the city limits, afternoon of Dec. 14. At 3:30, the all clear loyalty oaths. Shortly there- dent activist movement at the t h e r e is no question about what caused die sounded. The planes had been headed for must not extend to the point by B i l l B a g g s , e d i t o r of the M i a m i after he was named Chancel- Berkeley campus. extensive damage. One bomb m ' s s e d the another target. A fe w minutes later, a r u m - F l a . N e w s . B a g g s spent eight buildings and clawed a c r a t e r , 30 feet lor of Berkeley, and in 1958, What is certain is that where it violates a university d a y s e a r l y t h i s month in N o r t h ble in the distance was heard. The bombs a c r o s s , out of the e a r t h . fell several miles west of the city. was made president of the the far-ranging implications president's intellectual and Vietnam. B a g g s was accompanied One or more bombs carved a t h r e e - Bombs also landed on Nguyen Thlep of the firing are political, educational control over his on the t r i p by H a r r y S. A s h m o r e , story c l a s ' »-oom building into half. Street, only one-half mile, northeast, from entire university system. c h r i r m a n of the executive c o m - institution. downtown Hanoi, and said to be the most rr ittee of the C e n t e r f o r the Study Hit dot ..titory populous neighborhood in :he city. Strong hand At this time of heightened o f D e m o c r a t i c Institutions, and As a reporter was examining the rubble, T h e r e was no military target visible by A m b a s s a d o r L u i s Quintanilla in the vicinity. The only possible target Kerr was out of the coun- questioning of the univer- a i r alert sounded. It was 3 o'clock in the nearby was a rail line leading to the s e a - of M e x i c o . B a g g s a l s o i s a d i r e c - afternoon. The loud speaker, and they a r e try when the now-famous sity's role in our society, t o r of the c e n t e r . H i s Jan. 14 everywhere in the city to announce a p - port of Haiphong. No roundhouse. Just a it i s important that the state proaching aircraft, said American planes single r a i l line. FSM rebellion at Berkeley delayed dispatch follows. were 50 kilometers f r o m Hanoi. Late in the afternoon, the reporter f o l - erupted He s u b s e - university especially strive lowed information that a general school, By B I L L BAGGS In minutes, the loudspeaker was sound- quently tppk a strong hand to demonstrate its internal E d i t o r of The M i a m i N e w s ing again. The planes were 40 kilo- five kilometers south of Hanoi, twice had m e t e r s f r o m the city. been bombed. This was the Viet Ba against snftient l a w l e s s n e s s , integrity and separateness School, grades f r o m one to 10 and it HANOI, North Vietnam (f) — The f r e - Quang Tu, a student at the school, but refused to follow the from any external control. quent complaint a visiting American looked nervous, and he seemed entire- assuredly had been bombed. Eight large in Hanoi hears, and he h e a r s it from intel- ly willing to conclude the conversation with bomb c r a t e r s were counted around the bidding of some conservative K e r r (standing), The d i s m i s s a l of Clark the American r e p o r t e r and break for a school. One of the two large buildings _ lectuals and government persons and peas- regents who told him how to R e a g a n ( s e a t e d right). Kerr was a regrettable m i s - ants and soldiers, is; shelter. Quang Tu and a friend, Tran Huu had- been smashed into half. The rubble Why does the American government say Minh, had some right to twitch. They had was not even two feet high. The other i t s bombers only strike at steel and con- large building had no roof and no win- OUR R E A D E R S ' MINDS c r e t e in the a i r war against north Viet- dows. Smaller buildings were damaged PK A N U I S nam? to various degrees. On the other side of the world from T h i s school is situated pretty much by Orders' killed 250,000 children America, you hear in the radio broad- itself out in the country. It is at leas: one- cast that the r e p o r t s of the bombings by half mile away from the highway and the H a r r i s o n Salisbury, of the New York rail. T i m e s and the f i r s t American reporter Not a mile away, a few farm houses To the Editor: merely wounded, they a r e hideously We as members of the mightiest nation and a church were obviously bombed and who got into Hanoi, have raised doubts and After the Second World War the German wounded—by napalm, by white phospho- the world has ever known should seriously even denials by some persons that the city mostly destroyed. people were asked what they had done to rous, by fragmentation bomb, by gas and ask ourselves: why a r e we killing the has actually been bombed. The second The bombing of the school was strange. prevent the atrocities of the Hitler regime by defoliants and brush killers. Files peasants of Vietnam? And if our response American r e p o r t e r to make It into Hanoi A mile away, a c r o s s the highway, was a and they answered, " I didn't know" or swarm over festering wounds because of is a Pavlovian " w e a r e preventing the evil can confirm what Mr. Salisbury wrote large park for trucks, which might be was a f r a i d " or " I was under o r d e r s . " inadequate sanitation and llrribs a r e spread of 'communism' " or " w e a r e about the bombings in this city. considered a military target. And not a William L. Pepper, Executive Director amputated for lack of medication. Worse curbing Chinese expansionism" we should HAVE YOU EVER SEEN A KITE IN You a r e told that the bombs were dropped A TREE ? HAVE YOU NOTICED mile away, up the road, was an enormous of the Commission on Human Rights in than the wounds a r e the disease and s t a r - answer two further questions: by American planes out on a r i s e near the supply of large construction pipe on the New Rochelle, N.Y. and member of the vation which accompany the destruction of 1.) Are the Indians under a f r e e enter- HOW IT HAN6S THERE FOR CJEEK6 ? Red River, about 700 yards south of the long ground. Neither the truck park nor the faculty at Mercy College, Dobbs F e r r y , homes and food supplies. Bubonic plague p r i s e system as happy and progressive bridge. T h e r e is no question but that a p - construction pipe had been touched, but N.Y. reports that approximately one fourth and cholera are on the increase according as the Chinese under a communistic proximately 300 homes were destroyed by this school had been bombed out of busi- million children have been killed in Viet- to Martha Gellhorn, writing in the Man- system? f i r e here. But there is no evidence of blast ness. nam since 1961 and three fourths million chester Guardian, and hunger sickness is 2.) Is China really warlike, aggressive damage, which would seem to rule out have been wounded. The wounded a r e not everywhere. and expansionist? One informed opinion on ordinary bombs. Perhaps f i r e bombs could Unconvincing these questions is a positive " N o " given have done this damage, or it could have by Felix Greene In his book, "A Curtain been caused by a runaway air-to-ground So, the natives here complain: The A S M S U d o e s it a g a i n of Ignorance." ** When we begin to realize the enormity missile. American government tells its people 9,000 men in dorms, the 9,000 women in However, at the school for trade unions, 7HEN,$ÜP0fNlV, ONE and tells the world that It only bombs steel To the Editor: of our c r i m e in Vietnam will we be able and concrete. And then they show you the dorms, the 2,000 fraternity men, the ^ DAY IT'S 60NE 1 T to say " I didn't know" or " I was a f r a i d " bombed schools and churches, and ask you ASMSU voted $50 for Jim Graham to 1,500 sorority members, and the 500 co- or " I was under o r d e r s " ? to explain that. Outlook go to Washington to a s s i s t in drafting a op residents have the same number of James Harrington No answer is going to convince these letter opposing the war in Vietnam. Ap- representatives. ("All students are equal, associate professor people. You tell them that mistakes parently no attempt was made to find out but some students are more equal than agricultural engineering a r e made in war, that the announced policy if the students agree with Mr. Graham's others.") of the American government is to only position. The fact that in October, 1965, 15,937 signatures were collected here on Even if there were a representative stu- dent government here, an objection still 'Study* helps little bomb military targets, but that mistakes a r e inevitable companions to war. a petition supporting American policy in might be raised to appropriations such as the $50 to Mr. Graham. Assuming a m a j o r - To the Editor: How large can mistakes get, asked Vietnam indicates that Mr. Graham's po- Whatever the reasons for the non- one Vietnamese. The entire little city sition might not have the support of a m a - ity does support this appropriation, what right has the majority to require the attendance of those of us of the History of Phu Ly was destroyed. The whole jority of the students. Nevertheless, Mr. Dept. who signed a letter urging the town demolished. And, he said, the only Graham was voted $50 for his junket. minority to contribute to a project the minority does not approve? If a majority use of plus and minus grades at the Industry in town was a handicraft factory. What right has ASMSU to spend tax United Students Jan. 12th meeting, may And he was right. Phu Ly was destroyed. money on a project of this type? Perhaps of the voters in a state adhered to one religion, would they have the right to e s - I point out, in response to M r . Blanton's Fulbright advocates treating So, the people around here a r e not moved viewing the situation from a different letter on this subject in the Jan. 18 when you suggest war e r r o r . They only perspective will point out the strength tablish that church and require all the K y like a puppet if he d o e s n ' t citizens of the state to contribute to that State News, that 1 believe the last thing know that soldiers and war production of their rights Suppose ASMSU Leader X we need is " s t u d y . " The last time grad- f o l l o w the U . S . line. were not present on Nguyen Thiep Street decides to support Worthy Cause Y. He church? ing was studied, the relevant committee, o r h e r e out in the country at the Viet Ba persuades a majority on the Student What should be done? F i r s t , the students as is wen known, came up with a pro- School. E n t r o p y r e m a i n s steady. Board to'approve the Worthy Cause Y. He have the power to petition for a r e f e r - posal so inadequate (after no little'study') he goes around to each student and tells endum. They should use it, as they did in that it was rejected very substantially Agricultural Industry Seminar Special For M . S . Ü . Studente him, in the name of ASMSU, that he must the 18-year-old vote issue. Each time by the faculty. My own feeling is that contribute to the Worthy Cause or leave ASMSU passes some unjust appropria- what is needed by way of pressing for MSU. Few would say that ASMSU has the right to do this. But consider what they tion, the students should petition for a referendum Second, a system of fast implementation is a deluge of student (and parent) letters and petitions to P r e s - Special Offer actually do. Each undergraduate must pay the ASMSU tax at registration if he wishes proportional representation should be adopted for the Student Board and the ident Hannah and the Board of Trustees; M o o r m a n Feed This ad is worth $1.00 on any V the sooner the better. Clearly once a pipe purchase of $5.95 or to enroll here. Then ASMSU votes to spend this money to support Worthy Cause General Assembly. Third, a constitutional amendment should be adopted forbidding ' study' gets underway the matter will get buried amid the hemming, hawing, M a n u f a c t u r i n g Co. more. Y. Is there really a difference between the the spending of tax money on political and procrastination which usually char- two methods? In both, the student is forced campaigns, charitable ventures, and any >We have the most complete to contribute to some Worthy Cause, similar projects. acterizes such efforts. In this letter, of course, I speak solely Thurs. Jan. 26, 7 P.M. MEDICO selection of pipes & a c c e s - whether he wants to do so or not, if he If student government leaders feel that G.B.D. wishes to attend MSU. for myself, although I might add that since COMOY s o r i e s in Central Michigan. some project should be supported, let them the letter of 15 of us appeared, several Student Services Lounge MACS But, it may be objected, the appropria- ask for donations for it. Let the students of our colleagues have indicated their SASIEN1 Stop in! Open tion for the Worthy Cause was made by who wish to contribute do so, but do not support for it and their regret that they KAY WOODIES Mon. - Fri. nights a democratic vote. This, however, p r e - force everyone else to contribute. Michael J . Saxton weren't reached in time to sign it. Refreshments 120 North Washington Till 9:00 Paul J . Hauben r e senta ti ve government. f ASMSU, the Gary, Ind., senior Asst. P r o f e s s o r , history We dm Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan American em ba ssy settles KEEP THE FAITH, BABY' N i c a r a g u a n 20-hour revolt Powell on new disc MANAGUA, Nicaragua i f ) — Gran Hotel, which had been t u r n - e r s in the hotel he was going Before the shooting stopped, UJS. diplomats were credited ed into a f o r t r e s s . The rebels out to try to get the shooting stop- two tanks brought up by the Na- NEW YORK i.f! - - Adam Clayton Powell doesn't hesitate on Powell's versions of brotherhood: not, he says, the kind Tuesday with ending a 20-hour surrendered their a r m s and were ped, then grabbed the sheet and tional Guard had fired on the to compare his demise—temporary though it may be—to offered by the white man, but the kind earned and taken by uprising against the Nicaraguan allowed to go f r e e . yelled "Who will go with me?" hotel, shooting some large holes the fall of Julius Caesar. The only difference, according to the black man. government, an uprising that kill- The American role was d r a m a - The nuns spoke up and volun- in the north wall. Walls of the Powell, is that he lived to tell about it. "Burn, baby, burn. This was a cry of last r e s o r t . It was ed 21 and wounded more than tized when Bill Gaudet.publisher teered, and the three made a building were pocked by bullet " C a e s a r was stabbed to death by a band of his colleagues," the cry of the oppressed. Burn, baby, burn. The scorched 100 Nicaraguans. of a New Orleans monthly, the dash to a corner where there marks. says the Harlem congressman on his record album, "Keep earth policy of black people who had nowhere else to go. But Through UJ5. Embassy m e - Latin American Report, followed were National Guard officers. the Faith, Baby." burn, baby, burn, is not the policy I believe in. The hotel, operated by a Mi- diation, the rebellion ended Mon- by two American nuns ran out After Gaudet asked the officers ami, Fla., chain, was closed Powell may not have to wait for history. He may regain "Baby, it's learn, baby, learn. We need education to com- day night when the rebels freed of the hotel waving a bedsheetasa to hold their fire, he and the after the last occupants came out. the congressional seat he was denied for the duration of a pete in this modern world. When you learn, baby, learn, you 117 foreign hostages, including white flag. nuns were taken to the UaS. National Guard officers said the probe into his activities. can earn, baby, earn. And black power doesn't mean any- 89 North Americans held in the Gaudet said he told rebel lead- Embassy. Besides the investigation, Powell's problems include pay- interior of the hotel, the only thing unless you have green power. large one in the city, was heav- ing off a $164,000 libel judgment against him won by a Har- " E a r n , baby, earn. Get that green in your pocket, baby.' ily damaged. The hotel covers a lem widow he once called a graft collector for the police. Powell's profit? from the recording—about 22 cents per a l - White man only respects two things, your vote and your square block. bum—are expected to go toward fulfilling that judgment. dollar." The rebels against the Somoza The album, produced by Jubilee Records, sells for $4.97. And then, finally, is the gospel according to Adam: family, which has ruled Nicara- While attorneys argue and congressmen probe, the voice " T h e new trinity in the United States is God the Father, gua for more than 30 y e a r s , had stilled in Washington can be heard on the recording. God the Son and God the almighty dollar." holed up in the hotel and b a r r i - The album of sermons and thoughts also contains a lecture And the recorded congregation answers, "Amen." caded doors and windows with beds and mattresses. Primaries: test for Romney NEW ORLEANS .4') — Gov. tion opponents gave the Demo- the Michigan governor's standing George Romney's supporters in crats the ammunition they need- in the popularity polls will be a the GOP National Committee ed to defeat him. major factor in whether he gets Monsoon storms seen cutting U.S. raids agreed Tuesday that Romney will Romney, who Is running be- the nomination. h i v e to test his strength in the hind former Vice President SAIGON, (AP) ~ H e a v y s t o r m s f r o m the n o r t h - i p r i m a r i e s if he hopes to win the Richard M. Nixon In support e a s t m o n s o o n , a l r e a d y in e v i d e n c e , a r e e x p e c t e d to r e d u c e a i r r a i d s on N o r t h V i e t n a m f o r the next 1968 party presidential nomina- tion. among committee members and state chairmen, has delayed any S D S to plan National Chairman Ray Bliss decision on entering the pri- six weeks, a U.S. s p o k e s m a n s a i d Tuesday. T h i s c o u l d m e a n r e s p i t e of a s o r t f o r the m o v e m e n t of wound up the committee's two- m a r i e s . He cancelled a proposed draft action First smoke of the day R e d t r o o p s arW s u p p l i e s . day campaign planning session with an • appeal to the party's trip by Michigan committeeman John B. Martin to New Hamp- Plans for forming an anti-draft The t r u c e f o r the l u n a r new y e a r Tet, which presidential hopefuls to be kipd shire to confer with leaders there union will be discussed at 8:30 M S U ' s p o w e r plant is p i c t u r e d at dawn as it b e g i n s another day of lighting c o i n c i d e s with the b e g i n n i n g of Lent, is to put to each other in next year's about 1968's first presidential tonight in the Union. primary. Harvey Goldman, who chaired a n d w a r m i n g with a long d r a g . State N e w s photo by R a y W e s t r a the A m e r i c a n b o m b e r s and f i g h t e r s e n t i r e l y out primaries. " I take a dim view of any But Martin said, " I can't f o r e - the meeting at which the MSU of a c t i o n f o r f o u r d a y s , F e b . 8 - 12. candidate attacking another see now the developments which chapter of SDS (Students for a IN DORMS Democratic Society) voted to Wilson, De Gaulle, discuss Market candidate of his p a r t y , " Bliss said. "Our candidates should would take the governor Into the convention with such a lead that form the union, said Tuesday PARIS Iff] — Prime Minis- aspects of Britain's European campaign for office on what they would assure him of getting the that the meeting will be open A S M S U distributes ter Harold Wilson told P r e s i - policies but without giving any a r e going to do to solve national nomination. He's going to have to the public. dent Charles de Gaulle today indication of whether he will prdblems. to do well in the primaries and All SDS members will be able Britain sees its entry into support or oppose British en- Bairry Goldwater, the 1964 the polls to win." to vote at this meeting. Local / dues a r e $1 a y e a r . Payment of the European Common M a r - try. presidential nominee, has con- George L. Hinman, New York grade questionnaire ket as a way of curbingAmer- The two men met at the tended that the charges fired at committeeman who is offering these dues qualifies anyone to ican industrial domination in Elysee Palace for nearly two him by his primary and conven- Romney help, said he thinks that vote. Europe and of developing an hours in which the British case active partnership with C o m - for joining the European Eco- present grading system a c - tional Policy Committee (EPC). munist nations of the East. nomic Community — EEC — By E L L E N Z U R K E Y State N e w s Staff W r i t e r curately measures your academ- The EPC subcommittee will In response, De Gaulle was outlined with some force ic performance?" and "Would study the present grading system quizzed Wilson about various by Wilson. Over 10,000 questionnaires are you regard the introduction of and then suggest possible plus and minus grades a s a changes. being distributed by ASMSU to help its newly formed committee significant improvement?" Portugese face boycott in Macao Instead of nominating one stu- on grading to interpret student Other questions ask if the stu- dent to the committee, however, dent would actively support a M A C A O (AP) — P r o - C o m m u n i s t Chinese leaders opinions on the present grading Graham decided to establish an change in the present grading tonight o r d e r e d food, s e r v i c e s and taxes denied to system. ASMSU grading committee to k The questionnaires, prepared system and inquire about p a s s - represent the views of many stu- P o r t u g u e s e o f f i c i a l s of M a c a o . by Art Tang, ASMSU member - fail and straight percentage s y s - dents, not just one. The boycott announcement f o l l o w e d a b r o a d c a s t at-large, ask "Do you feel the tems. by the g o v e r n m e n t of the tiny c o l o n y on the C h i n e s e More than 1,500questionnaires The chairman of the ASMSU m a i n l a n d that it had been unable to a g r e e with have already been returned. They grading committee and student delegate to the EPC subcommit- C o m m u n i s t C h i n a on w o r d i n g of a C o m m u n i s t - a r e being distributed through tee on grading is Skip Rudolph, d e m a n d e d a p o l o g y f o r the deaths of eight C h i n e s e dormitories. Anti-filibuster "The grading systems com- mittee will evaluate the results, Detroit Junior. Other members of the ASMSU d u r i n g p r o - C o m m u n i s t r i o t s e a r l y in D e c e m b e r . committee are: Chris Loveridge, Military pledges support to Mao move cut off but the information will be avail- able to everyone," Tung said. Kirkwood, Mo., sophomore; Steve Crocker, Watervliet sophomore; TOKYO (f! — Radio Peking government apparatus. Other Circulation of the question- reports told of Mao's forces naire was started when J i m T e r r y Heinsler, Rochester, N.Y., said Tuesday military leaders Junior; Sally Kovach, Dearborn complaining they were in a by Senate Graham, chairman of ASMSU, the nation over had vowed junior; andBevTwitchell.Inkster to help Mao Tse-tung wrest minority. was asked to nominate a student The roster of military to a subcommittee of the Educa- junior. party, government and finan- WASHINGTON Ifl» ~ This cial power from his foes. And "commanders and fighters" y e a r ' s drive for a tougher Senate another broadcast said Mao- who pledged to help Mao fight ists had seized control of "those in authority who a r e S' N e w s truck overturns, antifilibuster rule was abandon- ed Tuesday after a second de- Shansi Province, next door to taking the capitalist road" was Peking. impressive. feat. T h e r e have been somewhat A vote to end debate on taking up proposed changes in the p r e s - driver safe, paper delivered The first broadcast seemed to be an admission that Mao's similar pledges of support b e - fore, but so far the army has ent rule fell 13 short of the r e - Daily News, where theStateNews The State News almost didn't enemies are solidly e n - taken little action in the Chi- quired margin. is printed, another truck was sent a r r i v e Tuesday. But some quick trenched in the party and nese tumult. The rule under attack — and immediately to the scene of the thinking and a little luck made it the rule under which Tuesday's accident. possible to deliver the papers on vote was taken — required a Tuesday's papers were then time anyway. BAHAMA'S two-thirds majority of senators transferred to a different truck voting to pass. The problem was createdwhen and arrived on campus only a few Democratic Leader Mike the State News truck swerved minutes after the normal arrival Mansfield of Montana said the off the highway, rolled over, time of 5:30 a a n . A Go-Go size of the vote against ending finally coming to a stop upside- debate showed "the futility" of down. Damage to the truck was Published by the student* of MtcHlg.n carrying on the effort for a severe, but the driver was more Stit. L'nlv.riity every elm d«y throughout fortunate. the year Bitd a .pectal Welcome Week Edllton stronger antifilibuster rule. tn September. Sub.c-rlptton rate $10 per year. PARTY TOUR James M. Taylor, Livonia jun- Authorised by the Board of Student Publica- He had said that if the vote tion!. were close, a second attempt ior, apparently fell asleep around M e m b e r A a a o c l a t e d P r e s s -United P r e s s at cloture would be made later 4 a.m. en route to campus, but I n t e r n a t i o n a l , Inland Dally P r e a s A s s o c i a t i o n . 8 Exciting Days 7 Thrilling Nights A s s o c i a t e d Colleitlste P r e s s M I c h l f s n P r e s s this week. escaped serious injury, with only A s s o c l s t l o n . MichiRsn C o l l e f l s t e P r e s s As- soclstlon. In advance of the vote, Mans- a cut on the head requiring nine Second ( I s s s p o s t s g e paid st F.sst l . s n s l n g field emphasized that the p r o - stitches. Mich. $ 1 8 9 on,y E d i t o r i a l snd b u s i n e s s o f f i c e s st 341 s t u d e n t cedural question before the The accident occurred on U.S. s e r v i c e s Building M l c h l f s n s i s t e U n i v e r s i t y . Senate since Jan. 10. was not 27, three miles south of St. Johns. East Lansing Mwh. Phones: asking to change the rule itself Taylor crawled out of the truck, Editorial but whether to cut off debate of walked to a nearby home and tele- Classified Advertising Display A d v e r t i s i n g a motion to consider proposed phoned for help. alternatives, After contacting the Greenville Photogrsphlc « INCLUDES • round trip air transport • 7 action nites-Freeport inn « ALL on Grand Bahamas Island I LOS ANGELES COUNTY ANNOUNCES: I * THIS • 8 sun and f un-filled days Miss Antoinette loves to plan weddings. Stop in any * PLUS • round trip, yround tt ansfers « MANY E X T R A S air port-hotel-airport Monday evening for a pleasant chat. ovKatcmxaimnes « Miss Antoinette will be happy to show you all the just - C A L L OR WRITE FOR F R E E BROCHURE arrived wedding and attendant gowns. She will help you Tour Departs March 18 select your trousseau and answer a thousand questions. R e p r e s e n t a t i v e s of L o s A n g e l e s C o u n t y will be on c a m p u s J a n u a r y 30 to i n t e r v i e w g r a d u a t i n g S e n i o r s f o r e n t r y - l e v e l p o s i t i o n s in the f o l - Gown pictured by Pricilla of Boston, two-nine-five. Other lowing c a r e e r fields: VACATIONS I N T E R N A T I O N A L , INC gowns from $50 Attendant gowns from $26 20930 M A C K G R O S S E P O I N T E WOODS, M I C H . CIVIL ENGINEERING A S S I S T A N T - $735 mo. to s t a r t with B . S . , 48236 $776 witn M . S . G a i n e x p e r i e n c e that will qualify^ you f o r r e g i s t r a - 8 8 6 - 0 8 2 2 o r see o u r c a m p u s representatives: tion. Sei ction i n t e r v i e w with no f u r t h e r e x a m i n a t i o n r e q u i r e d . TOM PRICE 129 W. McDonel 353-1338 PEG RANDALL 391 S. Wonders 353-2436 JIM RANDALL 675 N. Hubbard 353-8300 V i s i t y o u r P l a c e m e n t O f f i c e now I MIKE IRVINE 1712 E. GRAND RIVER 351-4694 C o u n t y of L o s A n g e l e s D e p a r t m e n t of P e r s o n n e l O f f i c e of C a m p u s and F i e l d R e c r u i t m e n t S P A C E r s L I M I T E D - M A K E R E S E R V A T I O N NOW! 222 N. G r a n d Ave., L o s A n g e l e s , C a l i f o r S25 Deposit confirms and secures your space LANSING S T O R E " 6 W. A L L E G A N 4 Mie h i t Wednesday, January 25, 1967 4 A C'A s. East Lansing, Michigan SPORTS Coge nemesis., foreign floor " I t ' s like going to a party in the eye, and you can hear how to handle the zone right." in the Big Ten, the Spartans are By D E N N I S C H A S E and not knowing anyone. You everything they're yelling." • Last year the Spartans were holding to Benington's standard; Associate Sports Editor feel uncomfortable. Then again Lee Lafayette, the Spartans' 5-6 on the road, and 10-1 at home. they are 1-1. What happens to a team when some players like the road. sophomore forward, said he Benington said this is a good rec- Benington pointed out that when it plays away from home? Is They like the contest .the struggle doesn't hear the crowd in away ord. you play the team is more im- playing on a familiar surface against all those odds." games, even when he'sonthefoul "To succeed in the Big Ten, portant then where the game is in front of friendly faces that The Spartans won four straight line. I feel satisfied if my team wins played. "Michigan opened the much of an advantage, or, to at home before losing to Loyola "At home, the crowd is a big all their games at home, and season badly, and if we'd have put it another way, why is the in New Orleans on Dec. 20. factor. Their cheering can really splits the road games." So f a r . played them then we might have • Spartan basketball team 5-0 at They beat Tulane the following get everyone excited," he said. won," he said."Nowlookatthem. home and 2—4 on the road? day, then lost to Villanova and "But, at away games, t h e r ^ a r e The big question in my mind is Bowling Green in the Quaker other factors besides the crowd how they ever lost three games." "The experts say the home court is a six to 15 point ad- City Tournament in Philadelphia that sometimes bother me more. If the Spartans are affected on Dec. 26 and 29. The crowds The floor itself takes awhile psychologically when they play vantage," said MSU basketball in Philadelphia are .packed ex- to adjust to, that is, how hard on the road, Benington is not Coach John Benington. " I t ' s the tremely close to the benches of or soft it is. And the lighting alone in this dilemma. Consider human element that is the prob- lem. When you play in another both teams. can be a problem too." Lafay- ette said the Spartans have had the plight of Detroit Red Wing's Coach Sid Abel. His team play- oreign city you're playing among stran- "Basketball is not like foot- ball," Benington said, "The to face more zone defenses on the ed 20 road games without a victory Y o s t F i e l d h o u s e , above, w a s the s c e n e of the S p a r t a n c a g e r s ' w o r s t defeat gers. Everything's foreign to the road and "we're just learning this season before they finally of the y e a r . The l o s s in Y o s t w a s typical of the tvDe of s u c c e s s the S p a r t a n s crowds are looking you right players. won one last week. have had o n the road. State N e w s Photo by D a v e L a u r a WISCONSIN GYM MECCA Braves decision rapped MADISON, WIS. (UPI) — The U.S. Supreme Court's decision not to hear Wisconsin's case action and too little interstate commerce for federal action to reach violations of anti-trust "Organized baseball may con- tinue as the only non-regulated industry in the United States The boys from Butler (Pa.) By R O B E R T A Y A F I E after Curzi. His prime competi- laws." completely free to flout both state Western Pennsylvania, mainly have turned into a pied piper against the Braves baseball club and federal anti-trust laws," La State N e w s S p o r t s W r i t e r tion was right In Jim'sown back- through the efforts of Uram, affair. Following in the Curzi resulted in a "judicially created La Follette began anti-trust yard at Penn State—Coach Gene action against the Braves and the Follette said. There's a granite obelisk have turned that -region into a tradition at MSU are Dave Croft, no-man's land," state Atty. Gen. Wettstone. J e r r y Moore and Cliff Diehl. National League when the club "Every one of the eight (U.S. standing at the entrance to the gold mine. Bronson La Follette said Monday. " P r i o r to this time, most of In Butler, Pa., gymnastics is left Milwaukee for Atlanta after Supreme Court) judges who con- city of Butler, Pa., ' T h e Home The court refused to recon- sidered this case on its merits of the Jeep." It is a monument the great gymnasts in Penn- With Lyndora School, the Junior No. 2 behind football. At Mich- sider its decision not to review the 1965 lame duck season. concluded that our laws had been to the Jeep, developed there in sylvania felt they had to go to high, serving as a feeder, things igan State, Butler is No. 1. the case. The Wisconsin supreme court flagrantly violated," La Follette 1938, with an inscription read- Penn State. It was the mecca in "It leaves a legal situation overturned a lower court decision said. "But, four crucial votes ing, "The vehicle that won World the East," Szypula said. finding the Braves guilty, and the which is absurd," La Follette said. "Baseball is too much in- terstate commerce for state U.S. Supreme Court refused to review that decision. said that we were powerless to do anything about it." War II." A new monument may be des- tined to take its place. In the This was Curzi's belief too, according to the Spartan coach. "When he was a freshman, Intramural Men's IM News 8:00 McRae - Mclnnes past decades, Butler has been Jim still had difficulty believing that he was competing for a state Basketball 9:00 Bawdiers - Bayard better known as "The Home of the Gymnasts". university team that wasn't Penn- Gym 1 Court 1 sylvania, Szypula noted. " A s Gym III Court 6 Gymnastics owes a debt to 6:00 Twinks Tigers-Outsiders time went on, he realized that 6:00 Univ. Village - Thunder- football here, for the man most 7:00 Akat -Aku-Aku- responsible for the high-caliber he'd made the right decision." birds 8:00 Hornet - Horrendous 7:00 McNab - McBeth gym tradition in Western Penn- Szypula, a native of Philadel- 9:00 Schular Mets - A.L,Ch.E 8:00 Cookies - Tonys Boys sylvania is Paul Uram, MSU phia who competed as a collegian Gym 1 Court 2 9:00 Augies Aces - Dukes football recruiter for that area at Temple, gathered some local Perpendicular and head gym coach at Butler Philly talent when he began his 6:00 7:00 East Shaw 7-8 Zookeepers - Manor Men Court 1 Jenison High. coaching at MSU. Cliff Diehl, sophomore It paid off. Mel Stout, Carl 8:00 Balder - Bardot 6:00 Wee Five - Botany The man who started the gym from B u t l e r , Pa., h a s Rintz, Don Leas,and GaniBrowsh 9:00 Evans Scholars-Tretrahe- 7:00 Hole - HoNavel dynasty from Butler was Spartan given strong, consistent gymnast Jim Curzi,who began his all went on to win Big Ten and drons 8:00 Archdukes - Archaeopteryx NCAA titles. Stout is the only Gym II Court 3 9:00 Hubbard 4-5 performances f o r the winning ways when he began to compete in the seventh grade. man in the Big Ten ever to win 6:00 Winecellar - Winshlre S p a r t a n s t h i s s e a s o n . He Court 2 He won six all-around Western five individual championships, a 7:00 Felch - Fenian s c o r e d 9.05 on p a r a l l e l feat he accomplished in 1951. 8:00 Abaddon - Aborigines 6:00 Hallucinations - Men of Sci- b a r s last weekend- Pennsylvania championships, a ence record that has yet to be equaled. John Robuck, who was compet- 9:00 West Shaw 4-5 Photo by P a u l S c h l e i f ing as a diver when Szypula came Gym II Court 4 7:00 Hubbard 1-6 Tom Darling, then assistant 8:00 House - Hospiciano coach to George Szypula, men- to Michigan State, became the 6:00 Wormwood - Worship 9:00 Soil Tech-Nursery II (SC) BARNES FLORAL l ^ G tioned Curzi when the ace was first of his trampoline and tum- 7:00 Holy Land - Horror in the ninth grade. Szypula then bling champs. John Furry, now 8:00 Balldoons - Rejex a Big Ten gym official, was also Bowling For Flowe-s expressed his Interest to Uram, 9:00 DTD - Alpha Phi Alpha from the area. ALLEYS 6:00 p.m. F r e s h and who cooperated with the Michigan Gym III Court 5 F a s h o n a b le The Philadelphia area has t r a - 1-2 Superstition - Setutes State head coach in interesting 6:(JU Winchister - Wildcats Curzi In MSU. ditionally been a stronghold of 3-4 McDuff - McLaine 215 ANN ED 2 0871 7:00 Under Achievers - Four 5-6 Akrophobia - Akohol Szpula wasn't the only one gym talent. The developments in Spades 7-8 Cavalier - Cambridge 9-10 Woodbridge - Woodward ALLEYS 8:30 p.m. I-2 Ares - Arsenal 3-4 Caribbean - Cameron 5-6 Felloe - Fenwick 7-8 Worthington - Wolverine 9-10 Carleton - Cache II-12 Akeg - Akrojox 13-14 Stalag 17 - Spyder Hockey Time 10:00 Fiji Flyers - Dull Blades 10:30 Akers - Windjammer Handball Time 7:00 Phi Kappa Tau-ATO (Courts 1-2-3) ZBT-Sigma Nu (Courts 4-5-6) Pi Kappa Phi-Beta Theta Pi Last year, thousands (Courts 7-8-9) Time 8:00 DTD-LCA of lawyers, bankers, (Courts 1-2-3) SAE - Theta Chi accountants, engineers, (Courts 4-5-6) Sigma Chl-Delta Upsilon (Courts 7-8-9) doctors and businessmen Time 9:00 Delta Chi-Phi Gamma Delta (Courts 1-2-3) went back to college. COMING - FEB. 3 ADULTS ONLY SON OF And not just for the FREAK-OUT football games. Starring Reprise Recording Artists We'd like to clear up what appears to be a Center in Princeton, N. J. Selected THE SPIKE DRIVERS misunderstanding. It is somewhat popular employees are sent there from all sequel to that classic of on campus to decry a business career on over the country for a year's concen- high-adventure the grounds that you stop learning once trated study leading to a master's THE PAPER'S FIRST you start working for Cliché Nuts & Bolts. ¡ANNIVERSARY FREAK-OUTi degree. SORRY, That idea is groundless. You get the idea. We're for more learn- We can't speak for Cliché, but we can ing in our business. After all, Western for ourselves—Western Electric, the man- Electric doesn't make buggy whips. We ufacturing and supply unit of the Bell Sys- make advanced communications equip- tem. 6 out of 10 college graduates who have ment. And the Bell telephone network will joined us over the past 10 years, for exam- LIFE Magazine has described Julian Bream as "the the need even more sophisticated devices by successor to the great Andrés Segovia himself." MARSHALL ple, have continued their higher education. the time your fifth reunion rolls around. How're these for openers: The state of the art, never static, is where Nowhere is his brilliance more clearly displayed than in W.E.'s Tuition Refund Plan lets em- JULIANJBREAM this performance on the lute of these 16th-century the action is. MUSIC ployees pursue degrees while work- LUTE MUSIC " airs and dances by eleven composers. Such music as At Western Electric, what's happening FROM THE ROYAL ing for us. Over 6 thousand have at- is the excitement and satisfaction of con- COURTS OF EUROPE Dowland's Queen Elizabeth's Galliard and Besard's tended schools in 41 states under tinued doing and learning. If this happens Air de Cour achieves its authentic flavor In Bream's this plan. We refund more than $1 to appeal to you, no matter what degree hands. Here, in fact, in Bream's latest album, is a royal record sale million in tuition costs to employees you're aiming for, check us out. And grab feast for modern ears—for every music lover! a year. a piece of the action. is postponed To name another program : advanced engineering study, under the direc- tion of Lehigh University, is con- Western Electric MANUFACTURING & SUPPLY UNIT OF THE BELL SYSTEM RCA V i c t o r i a @The most trusted name in sound until next ducted at our Engineering F -ear v week. * Wednesday, January 25, 1967 5 SPORTS Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Dennis Chose Willard soys Spartan cagers RICHMOND, Va.(UPI)—Soph- me or I'll quit' Forty-Niners. I will just quit Air and is in the insurance busi- omore fullback Ken Willardof the pro football." ness during the off-season months. no powerhouse San Francisco Forty-Niners said Tuesday that he planned to quit Willard, a 230-pounder who placed fifth in the National Foot- "My family wants to stay here, professional football unless he is ball League rushing race this and I feel that if I'm to get the traded to either the Baltimore past season, said, " I feel I cannot maximum out of professional The Spartan basketball team reminds me of a " P e a n u t s " Colts o r the Washington Red- continue to play in San F r a n c i s - football, I must remain in this cartoon that appeared last year. In this one, Linus was In his skins. co, give my best to the team and, a r e a , " Willard said. familiar pose: sucking his thumb and holding that old wool blanket Willard confirmed e a r l i e r r e - be happy. I am willing to give " T h e conditions in San Fran- next to his cheek. ports that he wanted to play in up professional football if nec- cisco a r e great and I have en- Suddenly, he took his thumb out of his mouth, considered it either Baltimore o r Washing- essary." joyed my two years t h e r e , " he ton so that he could be closer to In 1965, the first professional said. f o r a moment, and said, " I t ' s a good thumb, but not a great thumb." his family and home h e r e . season for the former Univer- " I don't want to continue to He said " I ' m not bluffing. I sity of North Carolina s t a r , move my family every six The Spartans a r e a good team, but it is obvious, a s Coach am not planning to return to the Willard placed fourth among the months. There are many who do John Benington himself warned, they have problems. ••••mi league's top r u s h e r s . this, I know, but it isn't fair to Even when they win games, the Spartans show a lack of con- Willard lives in suburban Bon your family," he said. sistency. They score In streaks, sometimes pumping in ten points in a row, and other times missing more baskets then Reggie Harding. In a 79-70 victory over Iowa, the Spartans took 86 shots Volleyball to make 35 baskets, and many of the baskets came simply because the Spartans were taller; they could take the wild shot because Race for Washington The s e c o n d annual I n - they knew they'd get another try. t e r national Club V o l l e y - Gene W a s h i n g t o n (left) k n o c k s e v e r a hurdle in t i m e t r i a l s as he l o s e s groufW b a l l T o u r n a m e n t will be As a result, the Spartans have the lowest shooting percentage in the Big Ten - .400. Their f r e e throw percentage is a poor .617. to s o p h o m o r e s e n s a t i o n C h a r l e y P o l l a r d . The S p a r t a n t r a c k m e n open t h e i r h e l d this weekend in the What does all this mean? It means that Michigan State m i s s e s s e a s o n at O h i o State S a t u r d a y . State N e w s photo by M i k e B e a s l e y M e n ' s Intramural Build- RECORDS SET Stan Washington and Bill Curtis. It m i s s e s their speed and ex- ing. perience. Benington pointed this out at his f i r s t press luncheon, but most r e p o r t e r s thought it was Just talk. It wasn't. The t o u r n a m e n t i s open Center Matthew Aitch is hitting at about the same pace that to all students, both m a l e Track trials bright Washington did, averaging i8 points a game, and he has improved a n d f e m a l e , and a r e g i s - over last year, especially, his outside shot. But he is slow, a poor t r a t i o n fee of $2 m u s t be ball handler, and can be beaten on the boards, as Craig Dill and p a i d at s i g n - u p t i m e . A n y Dennis Stewart showed last week at Ann Arbor. t e a m m a y r e g i s t e r In the Lee Lafayette is only a sophomore, and no one doubts that he is the indoor record, a "slow* The team opens its indoor U N lounge at the U n i o n going to be a great one, but he's no Curtis. Against Iowa, he By N O R M S A A R I missed his first eight shots, and took a total of 26 to get 17 9:01.4 run last y e a r . season this Saturday in a t r i - b e f o r e the F r i d a y noon State N e w s S p o r t s W r i t e r " I was surprised at the t i m e , " angular meet with Ohio State deadline. points. Michigan's Jim Pitts completely nullified Lafayette last Sharkey said, "because we ran and William & Mary at Columbus, week, allowing him only eight points, all in the f i r s t half. In If time trials a r e true indica- hard the day before trials and Ohio. (•••••(•iiiiiMiiiaiiimiiiiiiii other words, Lafayette's still green. The defense has been the bright spot. Opponents a r e scoring tions of the coming season, the I didn't expect that good a t i m e . " MSU indoor track team is in for Head Coach Fran Dittrich said, only 66.7 points per game. John Bailey and Steve Rymal have a record setting year. " I have been waiting for him to used their year of experience to good advantage. The winning Big Ten title break nine minutes for three However, the Spartans still have a hard time winning on the road times f r o m last year were bet- y e a r s . He has been close but (two wins, four losses) and hive yet to cope with the zone defense. tered last Thursday and Friday never got there. They a r e a good team. Only one other team in the Big Ten in time trials by Dick Sharkey, " H e should run right around has a better record, and, in a conference where all the teams in the two mile, and Das Camp- 8:50 one of these t i m e s . " a r e either equally good or equally bad, the Spartans a r e off bell, in the 300-yard dash. Campbell's time for the 300 to a fine s t a r t . Sharkey was clocked in 8:55.0 was 0:31.0, which bettered the As Benington said, the Spartans have many problems to over- for the two mile, the fastest he winning time last year by two- come. They're a good team, but not a great team. has ever run the event. He holds tenths of a second. He also ran the 440 in a relatively slow 0:49.7. PLAY '»»' TODAY Another top time trial p e r - formance was in the 70-yard high hurdles, as defending in- door champion Gene Washington Intercollegiate battle ran the event in 0:8.4, Just one- tenth of a second off his record time. Washington did not run un- challenged in trials though, as for freshman skaters top sophomore hurdler Charles Pollard finished in 0:8.5. In the 70-yard lows, Washing- ton ran a 0:7.9, two-tenths off By JOE M I T C H mage the varsity for game e x - we give only one or two." the indoor record he also holds, State N e w s S p o r t s W r i t e r perience. Those freshmen receiving while Bob Steele ran 0:8.0 and MSU freshman hockey heads the Coaching the freshman team scholarships this y e a r w e r e T e r - Pollard finished In 0:8.2. last two years has been the r y Cooper, Pat Russo, Bill Watt £ilverplated Qrysta! 'Dredger into its f i r s t intercollegiate c o m - Steele also ran a 440 without petition today when the Spartans job of Alex Terpay, a former and Steve Edwards. Panorama - Reg. $1.09 meet the Michigan frosh at Ann Spartan goalie under Bessone. Arbor. He is being assisted T h i s is the f i r s t of three games by Bob Taylor, a graduate stu- this year most experience," said Terpay. Watt was tabbed by both B e s - any competition and finished in " T h e s e a r e the boys with the 0:49.6, the best MSU time so far this year in that event. Savory gift idea, and a boon to your own culinary triumphs. Our handy crystal dredger with sifverpfatetf top Sfmpl/fies your seasoning Orion Varigated Yarn 770 allowed by the Big Ten C o n f e r - dent f r o m Canada. sone and Terpay as the best Mike Bowers, counted on as the problems. Makes zesty foods easier to achieve. Columbia Minervai (2 oz.) ence under the latest rule grant- "Basically, we have been t r y - skater on the team. A high school top prospect in the high jump, $4.00 ing freshman games with other ing to get these freshmen boys product from Duluth, Minn., he cleared 6 ' 6 " , and Don Crawford schools during the regular s e a - lsed to the varsity's s t y l e , " said will be playing on one of the f o r - cleared 22'6" in the long Jump son. Terpay. "We've been empha- ward lines. two weeks ago but did not Jump SINCE"! 876 Fisherknit - Reg. $1.49 100% W o o l - B u l k y L o o k 770 Spartan Varsity Coach Amo sizing defense and the power Other Slop forwards include in trials last week. by U n g e r (2 oz.) Bessone said his frosh will meet play." Russo, from Sault Ste. Marie, Pole vaulters Roland Carter the Wolverines in a return game T e r p a y said that this y e a r ' s Bob Patullo, from Dearborn, and and John Wilcox cleared 14'8" next Wednesday, in the Ice A r e - team is lacking the experience T e r r y Cooper, from Winnepeg, and 14'7", respectively. Qmo/amâ Calypso - Reg. $1.59 $1.22 na at 7:30 p.m. of other frosh teams in the past. Canada. Dittrich and Assistant Coach J JEWl JEWELERS N y l o n & W o o l Knitting W o r s t e d Bessone also said he is trying "Most of these boys have come Among the top defensemen a r e Jim Glbbard a r e still lacking Columbia Minerva (4 oz.) to set up a third game, hope- out on their own," he said. "We Alan Swanson, from Marquette, a top sprinter, as Jim Summers 121 S. W A S H I N G T O N LANSING, MICHIGAN fully with Notre Dame. "That try to get them in good condition and Ron Springer, from St. Clair has not yet reported out for the Duet - Reg. 890 would draw a big attraction," to take up the slack of their in- Shores. he said. " T h i s freshman rule Is the experience." MSU was only able to give four squad. Nylon & Wool - Lusterous by S p i n n e r i n 660 (1 oz.) best thing the Big T e n could scholarships to freshmen hockey do," said Bessone. " I t was a players this year, two below the long time coming. If the f r e s h - maximum number of six allowed Ski Sprint - Reg. $1.19 men have games it gives them a for hockey. little incentive during the y e a r . " " T h e r e just wasn't enough Before the freshman rule was money in the Ralph H. Young Wool & M o h a i r - Scotchquard by S p i n n e r i n 770 (2 oz.) passed by the Big Ten for other Athletic Scholarship Fund to give sports besides football, f r e s h - m o r e , " said Bessone. "It fluc- men were only able to scrim - tuates over the years. Sometimes Alpaca - Reg. $1.69 Soft a s a Kitten $1.22 U nger (1 oz.) Satisfied Bulky Boucle - Reg. 590 diners Mohair Blend - Reg. 59C Nylon & Wool 440 time after time (1 OZ.) by C o l u m b i a by the Frostlon Petite - Reg. $1.00 UNION Reverie L u s c i o u s M o h a i r by 770 Spinnerin & Columbia (1 OZ.) CAFETERIA Romantica - Reg. $1.19 Wool & Rhovyl The T w i s t L o o k 770 by U n g e r (2 oz.) ITEM: "Today's Special" After Ski - Reg. $1.49 W o o l & V i n y o n - The S p o r t y L o o k $1.22 by U n g e r (2 oz.) Luncheon 1.15 The Bunker-Ramo Corporation, a Southern Cali- • design / systems engineering—circuit design, development and engineering checkout of Dinner 1.50 fornia firm that specializes in advanced elec- tronics, is holding on-campus interviews. If you're gradueting with a B.S. or M.S. in electri- advanced communications receivers, trans- mitters, related antenna hardware, and micro- electronics No Layaways • No Roturas cal engineering or physics, and you're interested Polachek's in: • field engineering—supervise installation, Available to checkout, maintenance, customer liason and training • research and development e n g i n e e r i n g - s t a f f , faculty, applied research, design, development, and we'd like to talk to you. One of our engineers will test of digital computers, digital displays, peri- be at your placement office on the date shown below. 305 S. W a s h i n g t o n 417 E . G r a n d R i v e r students and pheral equipment, and undersea warfare E ast L a n s i n g equipment An Equal Opportunity Employer L anslng general THE BUNKEH-RAMO CORPORATION public D E F E N S E S Y S T E M S D I V I S I O N 8433 F A U B R O O K AVENUE • CANOGA P A R , CA( 1FORN1A 91304, Bunker-Ramo representatives will be on campus interviewing at the Placement Office on Union basement Fri., January 27 W e d n e s d a y , J a n u a r y 2 5 , 1967 6 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan WANT AD READERS ARE ALWAYS LOOKING FOR Call 355-8255 Call 355-8255 A BARGAIN - SELL YOUR BARGAINS NOW! Automotive For Rent For Rent For Sale Personal Service The State News does not ONE FEMALE to share duplex. BICYCLE SALES, rentals and LAUNDRY, CLEANERS, Pay less MASON BODY Shop. 812 ÊTst DORCHESTER CIRCLE. 11300. ANN BROWN, typist and multi- with a permit racial or religious discrimination in its ad- Kalamazoo Street - since 1940. 4700 South Logan. Large two Furnished, immediate occupan- services. Also used. EAST for the best. Wash - 204. Mod- furnished. Private entrance and exciting San Juan. general electric typewriter. PHONE ified for camping, $75.00.351- LEGAL SECRETARY: Excel- East Side parking. Close to bus and cam- FOR SALE: Registered Dalma- Fast service. 351-6135. 5-1/30 lence in English, spelling, pus. Call after 5 PM. 372-2875. tlons. Puppies, two months old. $21700 355-8255 4262 after 6 p.m. PLYMOUTH 1953: Six, stick, 3-1/27 grammar, typing required. apartment for4at$50each. 3-1/26 Phone 655-1015. 3-1/26 includes: TYPING TERM papers and thesis. Electric typewriter, fast Shorthand and dictaphone de- Apt. for 2at$125.Nolease, SIAMESE KITTENS: weaned, box RATES overdrive, runs good. Body and sired. Call ED 2-8444 for ap- no children or pets. Utili- MEN: APPROVED, supervised, trained, with no leftist learn- Hotel accommodations service. 332-4597. 6-1/31 tires excellent. $125. IV 5- cooking, parking. Close. 327 Direct non-stop DC-7 ties paid. $100 deposit. 1 DAf SI.50 pointment. 5145. 725 N. Pine, Lansing. 50 BED GENERAL HOSPITAL 5-1/25 Phone IV 9-1017. Hillcrest. 332-6118, 337-9612. ings. 332-0101. 5-1/27 air service. Wanted 3 DAYS S3.00 3-1/26 3-1/25 SEAL POINT Siamese kittens has need for professional help. TWO GIRLS needed for a four MEN: SUPERVISED, 1/2 double Limited Space A v a i l a b l e BLOOD DONORS needed, $7.50 5 DAYS 55.00 for sale. Call 351-7535. 3-1/27 for RH positive, $10, $12 & $14 PONTIAC G.T.O. 1966, tri- R.N.'s and licensed practical For Reservations 355-6364 girl apartment Spring term; call $9.00, cooking, parking. Two for RH negative. DETROIT •(based on 10 w o r d s p e r ad) power, four speed, solid red. nurses. Salary commensurate FOR SALE: Boston Terrier.Call $2095. Call days 8-4 p.m. Phone 351-7493. with experience, differential for FURNISHED — ONE bedroom 3-1/27 blocks from Berkey. 332-4978. 5-1/31 ED 2-1191 after 6 p.m. 3-1/27 Service BLOOD SERVICE, INC., 1427 Over 10, 15< per word, per day. IV 4-1033. 3-1/25 evening and night duties. Li- apartment near campus. Sub- ATTRACTIVE, DIAPER SERVICE, Diaparene East Michigan Avenue. Hours: WELL - fur- Mobil* Homes PONTIAC Grand Prix, 1963. Ex- beral personnel policies. Easily lease springterm. $150.00. 337-. nished, clean room two blocks, Franchised Service Approved by 9-3:30 Monday and Tuesday; There will be a,50if service COLONIAL 8' x 38' Full bath, Doctors and DSIA. The most 12-6:30 Thursday. 489-7587. C and bookkeeping charge if cellent condition, extras. $1195. reached from Freeway 127. Well 1289. 3-1/26 from Union. ED 2-1760. Phone 882-8206. 3-1/27 lighted, ample parking area. oil heat, four rooms. Carpet- modern and Only personalized this ad is not paid within L U X U R Y ' 3-1/25 service In Lansing, providing GUITAR LESSONS (folk) for two PORSCHE "1600" coupe. Low Pleasant working conditions. 6 3 N E W ing. 676-2010 after 5 p.m. one week. sound proof units GROVE STREET. Rooms for you with diaper pails, polybags, children, eleven and fourteen. Apply MASON GENERAL HOS- 3-1/-25 mileage. Looks and runs good. UNIVERSITY VILLA girls. Kitchen privileges. Very DETROITER: 10 X 50. Two be£- deodorizers, and diapers, or Mile from campus. ED 2-0402 $595 or best offer. THE CHECK PITAL, 800 East Columbia APARTMENTS clean. One block to campus. Call or IV 4-5444. 5-1/30 rooms. Leaving state. Take over use your own. Baby clothes POINT. Phone 332-4916. C-l/26 Street, Mason, Michigan. 48854. Automotive SIMCA 1964. Excellent condition. 10-2/7 - 635 ABBOTT ROAD - WALK TO CAMPUS 351-7205 between 10 and 4 PM. 3-1/27 payments. 372-2512. 3-1/26 washed free. No deposit. Plant WANTED: AN architectual stu- inspection invited. AMERICAN dent, interested in practical ex- CAMERO SPORT coupe, light New tires, very economical. PART OR full time men needed. - COMPLETELY FURNISHED TRAVELO, 8' x 31'. Great con- blue. 6-stick, white sidewalls, Must sell. Call 694-0290 after New division of Alcoa Alumi- STUDENTS 2-BED For Sale ditionl #25 Life O'Riley Trail- DIAPER SERVICE, 914 E.Gier. perience, in planning a restau- Call 482-0864. C radio. Only 6,500 miles. Me- 5 p.m. 3-1/25 num. Cash-scholarship oppor- UNFINISHED FURNITURE: bar er Park, 6726 S. Washington. rant. For more information, FLEXIBLE UNITS DIAPER SERVICE, Lansing's fi- write Jack Smit, St. Johns, chanically perfect - $2,295.Call THUNDERBIRD 1960, new tires tunities. Mr. Centilla. 339-8610. - LET US HELP YOU FIND stools, night stands, chest-of 3-1/25 353-1573. 3-1/26 2-1/26 nest. Your choice of three types. Michigan. 3 -1/26 and interior. Excellent body and A ROOMMATE drawers, bookcases, prefin- 1964, ID x 50, two' bedroom, Containers furnished, 'no de- WANTED: MALE roommate to CHEYELLE 1964 Malibu Super motor. Call 372-6402 after 5 AUTO WASH help, full or part 3 Man Units ished picture frames, and more. carpeting, porch, on E.L. lot. posit. Baby clothes washed free. share four man supervised Sport. Excellent condition. Aqua p.m. 3 -1/26 time. Apply Campus Gas and 65.00 each per month PLYWOOD SALES, 3121 S. 332-6135. 3-1/27 Try our Velvasoft process. 25 apartment. Campus view apart- blue. 655-1965. 3-1/27 Wash. 244 West Grand River. 2-Man U n i t s a v a i l a b l e Pennsylvania. TU 2-0276. CHEVROLET'S, 57's to60's.The TR 3 ROADSTER: Wires, radio. For sports car enthusiast with East Lansing. Phone 337-9331. Furnished Model Open Days& C-l/27 Lost & Found years in Lansing. BY-LO DIA- PER SERVICE, 1010 E.Michigan ments. 332-6820. 3-1/26 sharpest in town. JOHN'S AUTO 5-1/31 evenings: See Manager or call TWELVE STRING guitar, like LOST: PAIR contact lenses in persuasive ways. Definite per- LEGAL SECRETARY: Shorthand IV 2-0421. „ C WANTED: FOUR pairs of one SALES. ExclusivelyChevrolets. 332-0091 o r 332-5833 new. Must sell. Steve 355-0532. black case near McDonel. Re- sonality. Fair condition. Carl, BRIDGE CLASSES starting Feb- piece flannel pajamas. Will pay 816 R. G. Curtis, two blocks required. $80.00 to $100.00. ONE MAN needed for Colonial 3-1/26 ward] 353-1208. 3-1/27 ruary 6th. Basic, intermediate, 351-4490. 3-1/26 IV 4-2805 before 3 PM. 3-1/26 House Apartments. $55 month. rental. Call 355-6817. 1-1/25 north of Miller and Washington. supervised, play duplicate. VOLKSWAGEN 1963. Excellent STEREO SPEAKERS: H.H. Scott, Personal 'Bahamas C-l/26 351-9419. 5-1/30 Taught in my home in Okemos. condition. $700 or best offer. NEEDED IMMEDIATELY: Part FRANDOR AREA, downstairs save $60.00 a pair. MAIN ELEC- CHEVROLET, 1955. V-S stick. or full-time teachers for draft- TRONICS, 5558 South Pennsyl- GIRLS: FALLS, wiglets, wigs. Bettie Brickner, certified. 332-3425. 2-1/26 Special' Good engine, tires, battery. De- ing and industrial arts. Contact five rooms, couple preferred. vania, Lansing. 882-5035. C Finest human hair, discount Phone 337-9476. 3-1/26 VOLKSWAGEN 1963, Blue, ex- pendabl^UMBportation. After cellent body, motor and tires. - Superintendent Potterville No children. 372-2468. 5-1/27 ANTIQUES - VICTORIAN fur- prices. 337-0820. 5-1/27 HELEN DeMERITT. 393-0795. 5:30 p . m f / m - 4 6 0 8 . 3-1/27 $650. 439-6013. 3-1/27 High School. 645-9371. 3-1/26 Burcham Woods niture. lamps, glassware, prim- TV RENTALS for students, $9.00 Accurate typing, IBM Selectric, Holiday CHEVROLtlNmpala SS, 1966, PARTY PLAN. Dealers wanted itives, pretty things. Call IV 2- month. Free service and deliv- Multilith Offset Printing. Will VOLKSWAGEN, 1964, Sedan. Ex- V-8, hardtop, Vinyl roof, radio, cellent condition. $700.00. Call to sell gadgets, gifts or hats. Eydeal Villa 0956. 5-1/30 ery. Call NEJAC. 337-1300. We pick up and deliver. 3-1/25 stereo tape. CROSBY'S PON- Good reliable company. For in- THREE LADIES coats, size 8-9. guarantee same day service. FRENCH TUTORING - all levels 351-5960. * 3-1/27 • Completely furnished TIAC - BUICK. 482-9776. formation call 332-5863. Like new. 482-4791 after 5. C by expert French native. Rea- VOLKSWAGEN, 196|, sun roof, • For 1, 2, 3, 4 students or (WITH 4 O T H E R S C H O O L S ) 3-1/27 5-1/27 THE LOOSE ENDS - The sound sonable rates. 355-0967. new tires, $700.00. Bill, 373- single working people 3-1/25 CHEVROLET 1961, two door, EARNINGS ARE unlimited as an you can feel. Organ, guitar, 3-1/26 5704 after 6 p.m. 3-1/27 . • Swimming pool BRAND NEW Emerson T.V., 19" base, drums. Call Tom, 485- PLENTY OF you are going over- ON THE O C E A N automatic, good condition. $475. AVON representative. Turn • Caii Fidelity Realty portable. Cheap price. Sell VOLKSWAGEN Variant '67 sta- 0761; C-l/26 seas for research and study. 332-8064. CHEVROLET F9F9; four-door 5-1/30 tion wagon. Radio, sun-roof. your free time into $$. For an appointment in your home, write 332-5041 quick. Call 355-5420. 3-1/27 OUTSTANDING VERSATILITY: You can arrange your foreign B E A C H • SUN • FUN Heavy duty shocks. Call 351- Mrs. Alona Huckins, 5664School STUDY DESKS, small chests, TWO MAN apartment. Girl to roll-a-ways & bunkbeds. New The BUD SPANGLER BAND can insurance foryourcar, personal SPACE LIMITED, sedan. V-8 automatic. Good con- 7027. 3-1/26 Street, Haslett, Michigan or call dition. 882-5414. 3-1/26 share, or two people. 351-5558. and used mattresses—all sizes. play anythingl TERRY MAY- belongings, and the property VOLKSWAGEN F95JJ: Newly IV 2-6893. you're leaving behind with S I G N U P NOW! CORVAIR 1961 four door, auto- C-l/27 - '• 3-1/25 Study lamps, typewriters, tape NARD, 482-4590 , 482-4548. American Foreign Insurance • All Phones painted. Rebuilt motor, newly TYPIST: FULL time, neededim- TWO BEDROOM, mobile home. recorders, metal wardrobes, C matic transmission. Snow tires. Association and BUBOLZ IN- installed, wire wheels, radio, mediately. Some office exper- Extra sharp. Everything f u r - portable TV sets, large selec- DINNERS MONDAY -Friday 5:30 332-1968. 3-1/26 SURANCE, 220 Albert. C - l / 2 6 heater, must be seen to be ap- ience necessary. 487-3616. nished. Ten minutes to MSU. tion new & used electric fans. PM and Sunday at 1 PM. Good CORVETTE T555 Fastback. SAVE LATER - BUY NOW at Now Working preciated. IV 4-3094. 3-1/25 5-1/25 Just off Freeway.H.C.JEWITT, Everything for the home. WIL- fraternity house cooking. Near Sharpl Maroon, radio, ww's, VOLVO, 1962, B 18, 4-door, WOMAN ADVISORS for Junior 549 West Ash, Mason. OR 7- COX SECOND HAND STORE, Abbot and Burcham. Call Don, NEJAC of EAST LANSING, Ze- 5,000 miles. 882-4761. 1-1/25 nith .radio, stereo, & TV, in- black, red leather, AM-FM. MX High clubs after school. Call 3461, nites, OR 7-4693. 1-1/25 509 E« Michigan, Lansing, Phone 332-5092 between 5 PM and cluding color TV inv stock, 543 CUTLASS 1966. Low mileage, tires, $995.00. STRATTON YWCA teen-age department. STUDIO APARTMENT, $80. Re- IV 5-4391, 8-5:30 p.m. 6 PM. 4-1/25 C E. Grand River, next to P a r a - sharp car. Premium tires, ex- SPORT CENTER, 1915 East 485-7201. Terms to be discus- liable married couple or female IMPORTED CAR owners: Pirelli, FREE!!! A Thrilling hour of • MARY OLIMN tras. IV 7-5246. 3-1/25 Michigan. IV 4-4411. C-l/27 mount News. C 355-1987 sed. 5-1/26 graduate students. Telephone Inverno snow tires. "Theworlds beauty. For appointment call DISCOUNT 20% on" all new pre- e BILL RASTETTER DEPENDABLE I FORD '59 V-8, EMPLOYERS OVERLOAD COM- 7-2006 after 6 p.m. 3-1/27 best." From $14.10 up. THE 484-4519. MERLE NORMAN Auto Service & Ports scriptions with this ad. This OR automatic, two-door. Clean, so- PANY, Temporary assignments SEEKING FOURTH girl. Possible CHECK POINT. Authorized Pir- COSMETICS STUDIO, 1600 E. NEW BATTERIES. Exchange week only. Marek Rexall Drugs • BOB DUNN lid, belts, Good rubber. $225 for experienced office girls. No arrangements for two. Burcham elli Dealer. Phone 332-4916. Michigan. C-l/26 price from $7.95. New sealed Prescription Center at Frandor. 332-4911 or best. I l l Shepard, Lansing. fee, top pay. Phone 487-6071. Woods. 351-9082. 3-1/25 OIL PORTRAITS from your fa- 489-0502 after 5 PM. 3-1/26 beams, 99 ALS. 484-9263. C HEPATITIS IS Contagious. So's 17. Artificial sub-lease. Air-conditioning, Guaranteed. Easy terms. ED- 45. Discourse gratitude music by the GOOD GUYS. 351- language 8. Ancestor parking. $55.00. 332-3185. WARDS DISTRIBUTING CO., 18. Gaunt oil This must be because we Apartment* . 3-1/27 1115 N. Washington. 489-6448. 4335. 3-1/26 9. A s s a m - 20. New-born 47. Racial DOWN recondition our used Volks- silkworm wagens to the highest standard EAST SIDE: nicely furnished, EAST LANSING, modern studio C - l / 2 6 THE WOOLIES and other great lamb "><). W i t h ice 1 riming 10. B r i t . . g u l l two-bedroom apartment for apartment to sublease. $125.00 KENMORE CANISTER vacuum bands !\ TERRY MAYNARD 482- 21. Caravan- cream 2. Kngorgc we can achieve. Then we 4548, 482-4590. C 1V You a n d I working girls. 489-3258. per month. 351-6094 after 6p.m. cleaner with all the cleaning sary 52. Bib. prepo- i Braverv guarantee them for*l00% for sition 4. Vale 15. C h a r l e s 3-1/25 3-1/27 attachments, six months old. JOIN PERSHING rifles. ROTC. 23. Epidermis Lamb thirty days or a thousand 25. Digraph 53. Congeal V Bestall r a n t miles, THREE-MAN and four-man" H o u t « « $20.00. OX 4-6031. C-l/26 355-0520. Bill. 3-1/25 <> Near 19. Fictional 2<>. M o l d 54. Burst apartments available immed- dog % •Engine & transmission, rear 7. Express 1 28. Bustard 5 5 . Laurel trees 2 1 . 1 Inge w a v e iately. Call STATE MANAGE- ONE TO three men needed for axle, front axle •Brake and electrical systems MENT Corporation. 332-8687. furnished home. 485-3448. ATTENTION 1 Z 3 4 5 6 7 a 9 10 22. S k i n ail- ment Corvair Owners! C-l/30 . n 3-1/26 II It 13 24. Very small REDUCED RENT. One to three DESPERATE: ONE girl; beautP quantity '60 14 15 16 Volkswagen $295. girls. Close to campus. Luxury ful house; Very close to cam- 27. Chester- % apartment. 337-7377 after 4PM. pus. 351-5918. 3-1/25 11 >6 1» 20 field 3-1/26 NEAR MSU: New three-bedroom % '64 Tempest. 2 Door. Our service department is well % 29. Worthless- 8-Automatic. 34,000 actual EAST LANSING apartment for house. Available March 1,« six ZI 21 23 Z4 lies s LOT6, Or- PEOPLE WILL equipped and experienced to service % % miles. R. H. Whitewalls. one or tw,o girls. 1/2 block month lease. Completely fur- 'ti 3 0 •Plant HE A* ABOuT WHAT >tXJ 26 27 26 29 30 32, Trial HAVE TO SELL WHEN Like New. $1,295.00. from campus. $115 per month. nished. $225 plus utilities. 482- or repair your car. 25 % 34. Small bar- YOU TE-LL TWEW WITH Utilities paid. ED 2-2495. 6961. 5-1/25 34 35 Call us for an appointment. 31 32 33 racuda %% % » FAMILY WANT-ADS Best selection of Volks- .5-1/30 FOURTH GIRL needed as soon 37. B a r legally wagen available. ONE GIRL wanted for four girl as possible to share house. 34 37 36 372-3900 39. Feather % % % apartment. Spring term. $55.00. Winteri 627-6653. 3-1/25 42 43 44 40. Smoker 40 41 CALL 41. Heraldic WHEELS of Lansing 351-7638. FOURTH MAN needed to share % PHIL GORDON VW EDGEMONT SHOPPING 3-1/26 area. house. Close to campus. $40 45 4fc 47 48 49 bearing 43. Preserve STATE NEWS USED CARS . New delux two bedroom apart- month. 351-7377. 3-1/25 50 51 52 4(i. M o r n i n g ment. Many, extras. Married ONE GIRL for new house. Single authorized TOYOTA dealer % E. GRAND RIVER AT HOWARD 48. N a v e % couples. $115.00. IV 5-4869. bedroom. Winter/Spring. 393- 355-8255 484-1341 3-1/26 2482. 3-1/27 2200 S . C e d a r St. 2 B l o c k s south of M t . Hope A v e . 53 54 55 4 9 . U'ttuce 51 ..Serve — W e d n e s d a y , J a n u a r y 2 5 , 1967 7 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan CAMPUS ISSUES VIA FILMS Free U. courses win Mass media study set The mass media and multi- tween student government and the versity will be the continuing student body on campus issues. concern of a new five-man com- "We feel that using visual Plans Include the showing of 10 minute video-taped films be- fore each of the WIC-MHA mov- students' approval " I felt the living-learning com- phy, as expressed in her books, mittee established last week by communication will greatly in- ies, thus entertaining and inform- pleases Anthony Davidson of the the ASMSU Student Board. crease the amount of information ing the students at the same time. plexes weren't doing their job, so I decided to sign up for a few Ayn Rand Club, but provokes The committee, established on retained by the students about The film subjects may vary Allan Lacy of the Humanitia»De- a temporary basis fall term, in- matters concerning students," from satire to straight informa- courses." "Ken Lawless was teaching the partment. Both will briefly pre- vestigated the possible use of Chuck Demery, chairman of the tion or panel discussion, Demery sent their views before a general short films or video-tapes to committee, told the student said, or they may highlight a cam- course, and that was a good enough reason for me.' discussion. improve communications be- board. pus activity. March 2: J . D. Salinger's These a r e sample comments Demery pointed out that the from MSU students who have "Franny and Zooey" with Mau- entire program has been student- rice Crane. signed up for Free University Placement Bureau initiated and will continue to be Guiding spirit of Free Univer- courses this t e r m . Free Uni- student-directed in conjunction sity is Michael Lopez, New versity has gotten off to a good with the major governing groups. Haven, Conn., sophomore, who start this year with a variety Students must register in p e r - University of Akron: biology/ An organizational meeting for organized all the courses and of atypical courses such as a son at the Placement Bureau at botany, chemistry, English, persons interested in working on found classroom space and teach- poetry workshop and course on least two days prior to the date mathematics, physics, psychol- the program will be held at 2 p.m. ers for all of them. He shrugged today in 324 Student Services. "black humor," both taught by of interview. ogy, sociology, speech and eco- off all the work as "heavy but Monday, Jan. 30: Ken Lawless. nomics (D). quite manageable." "This is an opportunity to ex- The first meets at 7 p.m. at Avis Industrial Corp.: mechan- West Hartford Public Schools: Lopez organized the courses p r e s s initiative, individuality and Classroom 3, Wilson Hall, and ical, electrical and civil engi- all elementary and secondary ed- "to combat the lack of academic ingenuity In finding interesting emphasizes' poetry writing. neering (B,M), accounting, m a r - ucation and speech and reading atmosphere around here, and to ways of capturing the minds of "Black humor," an hour later, keting, industrial management (B,M) and psychology (M.D). help give students and faculty students on campus and showing involves reading and discussing and all majors of the College Yale-New Haven Hospital: nur- a chance to get to know each such novels as " T h e Magic of Business (B,M). sing (B). them how things pertain to them," Demery said. Poise, polish, and precision Christian," "The Sot-Weed Fac- other." Baxter Laboratories, Inc.: all t o r , " and "God Bless You, Mr. "The faculty has been won- m a j o r s , all colleges, chemistry, Monday-Tuesday, Jan. 30-31: The committee needs script Jean M a r t i n o n c o n d u c t s the C h i c a g o S y m p h o n y in derfully co-operative," Lopez Rosewater." Approximately 55 packaging technology, mathema- writers» actors, directors and a p e r f o r m a n c e M o n d a y night in the A u d i t o r i u m students turned out for the first said. "Tney are genuinely in- tics and all majors of the Col- Cooperative College Registry: persons to work in the technical a s p a r t of the L e c t u r e - C o n c e r t s e r i e s . two sessions of these courses. terested in helping the students. lege of Engineering (B,M) and art, English, German, Russian, aspects of producing a film. State N e w s photo by M e a d e P e a r l m a n In response to students' r e - I only got a few refusals, and one all MBA's of the College of history, philosophy, romance quests, a series of discussions humanities professor said he'd Business. languages, education (all areas), of fictional works has been o r - teach a course even if only one KEN LAWLESS MUSICAL FEAST natural science (all areas) and CA D M I County of Los Angeles: civil ganized by Maurice Crane and student showed up." and sanitary engineering (B,M). social science (all areas) (D). Michael Lopez. Each class is P U Eastman Kodak Co.: Account- Lockheed-California Co.: me- open to all students and faculty Chicago S y m p h o n y led " int (B,M), all MBA's of the Col- chanical, electrical and civil e n - members who have read that lege of Business, mathematics gineering and mathematics and book. Each will be at 7 p.m. F .»"¡.'"."o-» 332 6844 \ tUtifU. 2nd Week for ALFIt and statistics (B,M), all majors physics (B,M,D). on Thursdays in Classroom 2, of the College of Business and 3M Co.; Minnesota Mining and Wilson Hall as follows: all majors, all colleges with to perfection by Martinon Manufacturing: chemical and m e - Jan. 26: Ken Kesey's "One mathematics, statistics or a c - chanical engineering (B,M), elec- Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest" F e a t u r e at 1:00-3:05-5:10-7:20-9:25 counting (B), economics (B,M) trical engineering (B). with Stephen Elliston of the ATL and all majors, all colleges (B). North American Aviation, Inc.: Dept. ** ± ± -X- (Highest The First National Bank of civil, electrical and mechanical engineering (B,M) and metal- B y F R E D T . H I M M E L E I N and gourmand alike. He began that modern music can be con- Feb. 2: EdwardAlbeeV'Who's You may hate « ^ ^ " fittingJ yourself in the Chicago: accounting and finan- cial administration, economics lurgy, mechanics and materials State N e w s R e v i e w e r with Haydn's "Drum Roll" Sym- phony, which sparkled with the temporary and melodic and tonal all at once. Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" with humanities professor Maurice People are g o i n g and all majors of the College science (B,M,D); and mathemat- To create a succulent ragout clarity of a fine white wine. Gone The prelude to Wagner's Crane. morning, but to stop talking about you are going 'Virginia Woolf' and of Business (B,M). ics and physics (B.M.D). du mouton a gourmet needs three was the pseudo-Romantic open- "Meister singer" closed the con- Feb. 9: Saul Bellow's " H e r - Geigy Agriculture Chemical North American Aviation, Inc.; things; a gifted and imaginative ing, replaced by what Haydn c e r t . Martinon tried his best to zog" with Joseph Waldmeir of the start talking about Co.: agricultural science, agri- Atomics International: chemical, chef, a fine instrument on which wrote, and gone was the p r e - offer a fresh ingredient here, and English Dept. to enjoy 'Alfie' 'Alfle'" — Wanda Ma/», very much. cultural economics, vocational electrical and mechanical engi- the chef may work, and superb tentious second movement, r e - the only thing that stopped him agriculture and all majors of the neering, metallurgy, mechanics, ingredients. To enjoy a delight- placed by excellent music well was that the attentive musician Feb. 16: Mary McCarthy's N. y. DAILY NEWS 'Alfie' uses "The Groves of Academe" with College of Agriculture (B). and materials science (B,M,D); ful concert de musique symphoni- conceived and well executed. in East Lansing has heard three Maurice Crane. people—mainly Gallon City Schools: early e l - and mathematics and physics (B, que, a listener, whether jaded Entirely fresh was the first "Meistersingers" in the last M,D). nine days. Yet, with such mag- Feb. 23: Ayn Rand's philoso- ementary education and music or novice, needs exactly the same ingredient prepared after inter- ••UNREELS MORE (vocal), mathematics, English, North American Aviation, Inc.; commodities. mission, theSinfoniaConcertante nificent brass, Martinon could BEST IN FOREIGN FILMS women —and LIKE A SCORE CARD throws them German, industrial a r t s and Tutonetics Division: electrical The first requirement is that of the Hollywood Hungarian, Mik- make mutton out of musical left - speech correction (B). and mechanical engineering, of a good chef, and without him los Rozsa. It is easy to forget overs, adding another fresh an-! Hayward Unified School Dis- mathematics (applied) and phys- all other preparation is destined that Rozsa writes other than exciting ingredient to a recipe THAN A SCENARIO." which, when completed, provided a w a y l i k e TIME Magazine tissues." trict: early and later elemen- ics (electronics o r i e n t e d ) to reach less than the heights. "Ben-Hur" music, just as it is tary education, girl's physical (B.M.D). The listeners at Monday even- easy to forget in the modern a veritable orgy of superlative education, mathematics, physi- North American Aviation, Inc.; ing's performance by the Chi- rush toward computerized chaos, listening. cal science, and general sci- Rocketdyne Division: mechan- cago Symphony Orchestra were ence (B,M), English and Span- ical, chemical and civil engi- provided with just such an expert, - LAST TIMES TONITE ish (M) and all special educa- tion majors (B,M). neering, metallurgy, mechanics, chef d-orchestre Jean Martinon. and materials science (B,M,D), This chef is a creative conduc- MSU INTERNATIONAL FILM SERIES Lear Siegler, Inc., Instru- electrical engineering (B), and tor, his feet planted with the in- chemistry, statistics and math- tensity of a musical Arnold Pal- presents 'MADEMOISELLE , ment Division: electrical en- JUME MEM A wJXSm gineering, mathematics and me- ematics (M.D). mer and his torso urging like a ftWMSXM*- AMQOMU F U V « R M chanical engineering (B,M). North American Aviation, Inc.; hawk making energetic circles A T . . . 7:30 & 9:35 P.M. Manufacturers National Bank Space and Information Systems in the sky; but far beyond this, of Detroit: all majors of the Division: chemical, civil, elec- Martinon provides the insight and • TOMORROW • College of Business (B,M). trical, mechanical and metal- imagination that transcends mere Michigan Dept. of Public ' Health, Division of Occupational lurgy and mathematics (B,M,D). time-beating. U.S. Naval Ordnance Test Sta- Yet to be at his creative best, JAMBS Health: mechanical, chemical and electrical engineering and chem- tists eioctrical, mechanical and even an Escoffier needs a fine DBJUII chemical engineering and phys- stove over which to work. Mar- istry (B,M). Univac, Division Sperry Rand ics (B.M.D). tinon has Just such an instru- IN TWO (RECOMMENDED FOR MATURE AUDIENCES) Monday-Wednesday, Jan. 30-31 ment in the chairs of the Chi- GREAT A M E R I C A N MICHAEL CAINE is A L F I E Corp.: electrical and mechanical cago Symphony, an ensemble and Feb. 1: engineering (B,M) and mathemat- United States Navy: all majors, honed to supple perfection by such CINEMA CLASSICS ics and all majors of the College of Business (B). all colleges, all classes. giants as Stock and Reiner. To MILLICENT MARTBMULIA FOSTER • 1ANE ASHER SHIRLEY ANNE FIELD •VIVIEN MERCHANT * ELEANOR BRON see and hear this orchestra in the act of creation is the high- "Rgsbsil party est order of sensory experience, Wvwmwm. win SHELLEY WINTERS AS RUBY TECHNICOLOR® TECHNISCOPE® * « » * » * « « Cause' whether It arises from twenty violinists trilling on a down bow as if one player, from the mel- A LEWIS GILBERT PRODUCTION Plus Fun Cartoon perfect... low Reiner brass with a new PROGRAM |*rOR«ATION • 462*3905 Feature at 1:05-3:10 French edge, or from the plas- ticity of ensemble that makes CINEMASCOPEI W a r n e r C o l o r • C H I Q Ai d—t* W TODAY -5:15-7:20-9:35 the Chicago wind section a thing of beauty and a joy forever. NATALIE WOOD ^ SAL m i n e o _ if* SHIRLEY MICHAEL Wallace eyewear The Twentieth Century Opt.m.st , anPIIRRE CASSEl GO AHEAD— » I L f M a c L A I N E raises CAINE AND . . . a r f i n g J E Still, given all this, a musical 5 I adds glamour TELL THE END! Jfc • r «• GAMBIT with Pierre B'asseur and Dahlia Lav • a Pi'he Cme^a Corporation presentation ragout can turn sour without the accents to fashions finest of ingredients. Martinon written and directed by Norber'Cartionnai.i departing 'roc the nove' by Voltaire BUT PLEASE for all occasions. selected his ingredients with a Union Films release DONT TELL THE ' I f TECHNICOLOR. Wallace's allow care, combining them with such BEGINNING! U < u w ,smp.OU« you to look your best skill as to taste well to gourmet seeing your best Thürs., Jan. 2 6 - F r i . , Jan 27 - 7 & 9 p.m. • • STARTS FRIDAY • • at all times. W A S K M CINEMASCOPE FAIRCHILD THEATRE WARNERCOLOR • STMffNN STERtOPHONiC SOUNÒ JUDE HARRIS-JAMES DEAN A d m i s s i o n 50£ RAYMOND MASSEY b w l n e s There's a good LIFE answer! A SPLASHY, SURF-SOAKED SLEEPER! BREATHTAKING! IMAGINATIVE! The nicest surpr se to happen in a long time. N o matter w h a t the problem - oi h o w vexing the situation — there s always a good answer. And it's basically pends on spiritual. how Often we-answer it de the Unless you just anjoy turning your back question " W h o Is Y o u r H e a r a p u b l i c lecture o n this s u b Maker7 entirely on life, you should not miss the BURT LANCASTER ject b y H E R B E R T E . R I E K E . C . S . B . . o f T h e C h r i s t i a n S c i e n c e B o a r d of breathtaking shots?' LEE MARVIN - ROBERT RYAN JACK BALANCE e y e e x a m i n a t i o n s by DR. W.C. J E N S E N L e c t u r e s h i p . E v e r y o n e is w e l c o m e . RALPH BELLAMY ^CLAUDIA C A R D I N ® I '—-— a s Maria J registered optometrist •Christian • • •science • • lectin The PROFESSIONALS e y e e x a m i n a t i o n s by D R . W. C . J E N S E N , r e g i s t e r e d o p t o m e t r i s t • • The Endless Summer WALLACE OPTICIANS „ . ,, .. , Written tor the Screen and Directed by Based on a novel by Music by n i/-»ui A n n DDATM'C T h u r s d a y , January 26 FRANK OROURKE- MAURICE JARRE • RICHARD DRLHJKb Union Ballroom A COLUMBIA PICTURES RELEASE • PANAVISION* TECHNICOLOR* 3040 V i n e ( O p p o s i t e F r a n d o r ) a l s o o f f i c e s downtown a t Phone IV 9-2774 107 N . W a s h i ngton. P h . I V 2 - 1 1 7 5 8:00 P . M . Admission Free • Everyone is welcome NOW 1:15-3:15-5:20-7:23-9:28 P.M. . AT G PROGRAM INFORMATION ^ ^•Pl Ü M, M . EJOttht 4 8 S - 6 4 8 S R * B R U C K B R O W N F I L M IN C O I O P . | Soundtrack album on Colgems Records Next! " F U N E R A L IN B E R L I N " V 8 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan W e d n e s d a y . J a n u a r y 25, 1967 Vernon G. Grove, math prof, dies Funeral services will be held the Mathematics Dept., as con- at 1 p.m. today at the Gof sline- sultant to the Army Air Forces NO COUPONS, NO STAMPS, NO GAMES, NO G I M M I C K S . . . I0ST THOUSANDS Runclman East Chapel for Ver- in Loredo, Tex., and as a non G. Grove, retired mathe- visiting professor at tfte Univer- matics p r o f e s s o r . sity of Puerto Rico. OF EVERYDAY LOW SHELF P R I C E S . . . SAVE CASH AT DIG E AT SHOPPERS FAIR Another service will be held at Mr. Grove was born Dec. 15, 2 p.m. Thursday at Schwartz 1890, in Mentone, Ind., and a t - Funeral Home In Kalkaska. tended high school in T r a v e r s e • 3301 E. MICH. AVE. • CLOSE TO CAMPUS! Burial will beatOakwoodCem- City. He received his bachelor's etery. T r a v e r s e City. degree from Olivet College, m a s - t e r ' s degree from the University Mr. Grove died Monday night of Kentucky and the Ph.D. f r o m in a Lansing hospital following the University of Chicago. a long illness. He was 76. Mr. Grove was a full professor He worked fortheMiami,Ohio, when he retired in 1958, he joined Conservation District and taught the MSU faculty in 1920 a s a n a s ^ at Cornell University before join- 8 A.M. • 10 P.M. sistant professor. ing the MSU faculty. Mr. Grove is survived by his The mathematics research wife, Elizabeth, 438 Rosewood library in MSL"s new Wells Hall, Ave., East Lansing; a son, now under construction, will be Wendall, of Flint; brothers Frank MONDAY THRU S A T U R D A Y named the Grove Memorial Li- of Alden, Mich., and Edward, of C L O S E D SUNDAYS brary. Williamsburg, Mich.; a s i s t e r , During his tenure at the uni- M r s . Inez Bowman of Kalkaska; versity, he served as chairman of and two grandchildren. iF^I&YS&TIJTTL^- A O N E P I N T CTN. O F ATL sponsors series CRANBERRY 37c V A L U E - P O L L Y A N N A L A R G E jm W JF B» 320 59$ V A L U E - P O L L Y A N N A of classic U.S. films SHERBET OATMEAL COOKIES HAMBURG BUNS DOZEN The American Thought and this twice more this year and WITH P U R C H A S E OF O N E P I N T AT R E G . P R I C E OF 29