Tuesday NEWS Fair » Inside today . . . and continued G r a h a m on V i e t W a r P . 4 MICHIGAN cold today and tonight. High 15. No s n o w e x p e c t - STATE H o c k e y a n d the B i g T e n P . 5 Sherlock Holmes Studied P . 7 ed. W e d n e s d a y — c o l d e r . UNIVERSITY F e b r u a r y 7, 1967 10c East Lansing, Michigan V o l , 59 N u m b e r 121 GOP OBJECTS LBJ asks $350 million \ to finance war on crime \ \SHINGTJN if — President Johnson come a public malady, the President said, would, go into, planning the battle against so it is " o u r duty to seek its cure with crime and into research and pilot pro jects. asked Congress on Monday to declare Nicholas Katzenbach, the former at- every means at our command." legislative war on crime and to pump torney general who now is undersecretary As a starter, he asked for $50 million $350 million into the fight in the next of state, said what is in the miking is to finance a Safe Streets and C r i m e Con- two fiscal years. " t h e most comprehensive, reali.-tic.hard- trol Act in the l9o8 fiscal year which " W e can control c r i m e if we w i l l , " headed approach to crime ever undertaken starts this July 1. In the following year, Johnson said in a special message to in this country." he estimated an additional $300 million Congress. " W e must act boldly, now, to Katzenbach headed a commission John- would be needed. treat ancient evils and to insure the ?on named more thin a year-and-a-half public safety." But there would be heavy emphasis on ago to investigate th.' crime problem 3nd C r i m e and the fear of crime have be- getting state and local governments to come up w itli a report. Phi s report reached lllllllllllilllli O •••iimmim swing their own effort.- and funds into the Johnson'- desk two weeks ago and will be Hiahliahts anti-crime campaign. Over the two years, made public shortly, the Pre>ident said. they would be expected :o put u? about $253 Official- -aid the program Johnson laid million. W A S H I N G T O N (AP) — These The $b33-million total for two years ( p l e a s e t u r n to the b a c k page) are high.lights of P r e s i d e n t Official asserts CIA Johnson's crime m e s s a g e to C o n g r e s s on F r i d a y : To c u r b c r i m e a n d t h e f e a r of c r i m e , Johnson r e c o m m e n d - e d that the C o n g r e s s e n a c t the Safe Streets and C r i m e Con- t r o l Act of 1967 t o : - - P r o v i d e p l a n n i n g and p r o - involved in V project Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) men sold to the Viet Cong, stolen, or other- g r a m g r a n t s to s t a t e s a n d l o c a l wise lost. ware engaged in MSU's Vietnam project governments. This represents a two to five per several years ago, an administrator of the A b o v e a r e s o m e ' of the s t a t e s m e n i n v o l v e d in p e r s i s t e n t r u m o r s of f o r t h c o m i n g p e a c e in V i e t n a m : — E s t a b l i s h , in t h e D e p a r t - Agency for International Development cent loss out of the $25 to $30 million ( c l o c k w i s e f r o m l o w e r left) U S S R ' s P r e m i e r A l e x e i K o s y g i n , S o v i e t P r e s i d e n t N i k o l a i P o d g o r n y , P o p e m e n t of J u s t i c e , a d i r e c t o r . o f (AID) said Monday, worth of goods being shipped by AID P a u l VI U . N . S e c r e t a r y - G e n e r a l U T h a n t , P r e s i d e n t J o h n s o n , Sen". R o b e r t F . K e n n e d y , F r e n c h P r e s i d e n t a new o f f i c e of law e n f o r c e m e n t But the administrator, W i l l i a m S. Gaud, to Vietnam monthly, he said. UPI Telephoto C h a r l e s De G a u l l e , and B r i t i s h P r i m e M i n i s t e r H a r o l d W i l s o n . and c r i m i n a l justice a s s i s t a n c e . added, "that is the only instance of the CIA being involved in a university-spon- City clergy ask ."I a m r e q u e s t i n g $50 m i l l i o n i n f i s c a l y e a r 1968. O u r best sored project." estimate is that the f e d e r a l Last April, Ramparts magazine in an ; Ouster of President Liu, laymen to join i n v e s t m e n t in the s e c o n d y e a r article entitled "The University on the w i l l be a p p r o x i m a t e l y S300 m i l - M a k e , " accused an MSU project in Viet- nam of providing a front for the CIA. l i o n , " Johnson said. war protest fast The article stated that an MSU ad- To combat n a r c o t i c s use visory group of economists, police ad- party secretary reported J o h n s o n u r g e d p r o m p t a c t i o n by e v e r y l e v e l of g o v e r n m e n t . • ^ J o h n s o n also asked all levels of g o v e r n m e n t to e n a c t s t r i c t ministration specialists and political sci- entists served as a front for a unit of the C I A . It claimed that CIA agents staffed the five-man VBI Internal Security Sec- A group of East Lansing and Lansing clergy and laymen are calling on all re- ligious faiths to join in a three-day " F a s t For P e a c e " to express "personal 1OKYO if — Diplomatic sources in Pek- since last November. But continuing re- »roup said on arrivingat Irkutsk that some tion of. the MSU project during the 50s f i r e a r m s control laws. anguish" over the continuation of the war ing say Red China's President Liu Shao- ports from Peking of resistance to Ms o's of them were pushed and beaten, reported under the Diem government. Jnhnson also requested anew in Vietnam. chi and Communist Party General Secre- purge indicate that their supporters re- Mo'scbw Radio. Demonstrations continued f e d e r a l law b a n n i ng wi r e t a p p i n g When the article first was made pub- The fast, first called for last week by tary Teng Hsiao-ping have been ousted tain control of wide areas of China. outside the Soviet Embassy Monday for the lic, reaction was mixed on the MSU cam- These Other developments were re- and electronic snooping. 2,500 religious leaders meeting in Wash- from their jobs, two Japanese correspon- 10th day. pus. First, there was complete denial of ported from turbulent China during the • I I I I I I I I I I M l I I U I II11 H i l l I I H I 1*1 I I I I I I ington, begins W ednesday and will coin- dents reported from the Chinese capital the charges made in the article, including cide with the beginning of Lent, the Monday. weekend: CIA involvement. Then there were con- Buddhist New Year and the temporary 3 - 2 IN BIG TEN The New Cnina News Agency .controlled flicting statements made by University The reports to Asahi Shimbun and by Maoists, acknowledged that Mao's op- ceasefire in Vietnam. officials, and faculty members involved Y o m i u r i did no: say how or when Mao ponents still control the party machinery Those undertaking the fast will live on in the orolect. Tse-tung'.- two leading foes were removed. in southwest China, a vast area including water and fruit juice for the three days. As pressure mounted, President John Indiana dumps cagers, 82-7^- But resistance to Mao's campaign to re- Tibet,"Kweichow, Szechwan and the World They will be asked to join together each place their appointees in the party and A. Hannah in a press conference said evening of the fast from c-7 for prayer War II stronghold of Yunnan. The agency government machinery throughout China the University "did not have CIA people and a sacrificial meal of., rice a-nd tea at said the pro-Mao party headquarters in was expected to continue unabated. operating under cover provided by the the Wesley Foundation, 111S Harrison Kweichow Province reported the south- S' takes another loss on road University, or in secret from the Viet- Rd. The Yemiuri correspondent said Liu had west bureau of the central committee left both his government and party posts. namese government." Rev. Warren J . Day, head of United "actively implemented and stubbornly clung to the bourgeois reactionary l i n e . " But he added, the University had "sus- Campus Christian Fellowship's interna- Teng could have been expelled from the picions" that the project had been in- tional ministry, said the religious leaders It appealed for unity " t o recapture power party secretaryship by the central com- filtrated by the CIA and these "sus- presented a position letter to President held by the handful of persons within the ELOOMINGTON—Michigan State hit the With MSU Coach John Benington sub- mittee's plenary session last August. But picions" led, in part, to the project's Johnson and conferred with senators and southwest bureau in authority taking the road again Monday night, and the Spartan stituting Tom Lick and Richie • Jordan Liu could be legally removed from the phasing out in 1957. It was finally ter- congressmen in Washington. capitalist r o a d . " " r o a d j i n x " hit MSU« Indiana put five for Aitch and Steve Rymal, who had presidency only by the National People's minated in 1962. men in double figures as it sped past the gotten into foul trouble, Indiana kept Day said that on the suggestion of many Congress which elected .iim, and which is Red Guards demon.-trating at Peking Spartans, 82-77, in a race for first place eight points ahead for a time, until the Gaud also revealed in his press con- senators, the religious leaders are asking no: known to have r m : since 1965. airport delayed for six hoars the daparture in the Big Ten. Spartans closed the gap to two, 68-66. ference that as much as $1.5 to $2 mil- for local expression of their feelings. Neither Liu nor Teng have publicly for Moscow Sunday of 90 wives and children of Soviet Em'.assy officials. Women in the Northwestern, which lost to Illinois Then the Hoosiers spurted to a ten point lion per month in AID supplies to Viet- exercised :heir official dities in Peking ( p l e a s e t u r n to the b a c k p a g e ) last Saturday, is now in a first place tie margin, 80-70, and went into a stall that nam w e r i being "diverted"—destroyed, with the Hoosiers. Both teams have 4-1 MSU was unable to break. Viet air losses exceed records. The loss dropped the Spartans Inniger was high with 24 points. Payne to 3-2, good for a second place tie with had 21, Butch Joyner, 15, and Jack John- Illinois. Trailing at the half, 48-43, Indiana son had 11. Students offered vote in fig ures given to public guard, Erv Inniger, tied it at 50-50. Aitch had 20, Lee Lafayette, 14, Hay- Matthew A itch got the lead back mom- wood Edwards, 12, and Shannon Reading entarily, then Vernon Payne and In- 11. WASHINGTON f — The Pentagon dis- of helicopter losses was in the works niger hit, Aitch and Art Baylor scored, and Inniger hit again. The Hoosiers were off. The Spartans play Purdue Saturday at Lafayette, Ind. Chamber of Commerce student price study committee and all area closed Monday the United. States has lost which would change the announced figure" By E L L E N Z U R K E Y 550 more aircraft in the -Vietnam war of 255 to well over 600. cleaners. State N e w s Staff W r i t e r - than shown in plane loss totals released In all, the changes elevated the total The price study committee is currently to the public. aircraft and helicopter losses, both from investigating dry cleaning prices through- This pushed U.*S. fixed-wing aircraft combat and noncombat causes, from the MSU students will h a v e a voting member out the state. losses over Southeast Asia from the previously announced 877 to 1,700-plus. on the East LansingChamber of Commerce officially posted total of 622 to a 1,172. as a result of Tuesday's meeting between The additional losses mainly represent- ASMSU and the Chamber of Commerce. At the same time, an official revision ed aircraft or helicopters which were Today's low sets The invitation came at the suggestion of destroyed or irreparably damaged due to Roger E. Jonas, executive secretary of operational causes-accidents, for exam- Kennedy denies the Chamber of Commerce, in the hopes Lansing record ple-but also included aircraft burned or of ending hostilities between merchants blasted by the Viet Cong as they sat and students. peace overtures idle on air strips. T i m Pickard, chairman of the ASMSU The Pentagon listed fixed wing aircraft price study committee, said that dis- Lansing area residents will walk more losses this way: crepancies in shoe repair prices was the briskly today. "This morning's low of 15 WASHINGTON if)— Sen.Robert F.Ken- nedy, D-N.Y., after talking with President -622 combat-type aircraft lost to enemy immediate cause of the meeting. degrees below zero sets a new record "There is an increasing student concern for Feb. 7, beating the previous all-time Johnson, said Monday he did no: bring action while flying missions over North over rising prices in East Lansing which low 1934 temperature of six degrees be- home any peace feelers from North Viet- and South Vietnam. we also wanted to discuss," Pickardadded. low. nam from his recent trip to European —550 combat-type aircraft which went "The shoe repair Issue was just the cul- An added two inches of snow dumped capitals. down not as a result of enemy action; minating p o i n t . " on the Lansing area Sunday night accom- Kennedy told ,iewsm?n: " I never re- support aircraft such as cargo or ob- ASMSU representatives suggested that panied a sweep of bitter cold moving ceived the impression that I was any re- server planes; and " a l l other fixed wing student representation on the Chamber of south and eastward acorss the country. cipient of any peace feelers." aircraft losses in connection with the Commerce board of directors would as- Monday morning's three degrees below Newsweek magazine said Kennedy had war." sure permanent- . student voice In that zero recorded at Capitol City Airport received a message from North Vietnam Pressed on the " a l l other" aspect of group's policies. tied the 1936 record. via the French governmeit in Paris last the second category - sources indicated "Discussions are much better than boy- Today's temperature should creep to a week indicating willingness to negotiate this would include Air Force fighter- cotts," J i m Graham, chairman of ASMSU, high of 1"5 degrees, with partly cloudy on ending the Vietnam war if the United bombers which crashed in Laos while said. skies, 10-15 m.p.h. winds, and a prob- States would end the bombing of North bombing Communist infiltration routes " I n the past we have been on one side, ability of precipitation of less than 10 Vietnam. into South Vietnam; planes destroyed by the merchants on the other, and the State per cent. Kennedy and Under Sec. of StateNicholas such enemy action as border attacks while News as the go-between. This is a very Katzenback called on Johnson at the White 9 Though faculty and students may have Ground Hog got em on the ground in South Vietnam; or air- unhealthy situation," he said. < House after Katzenbach had :alked for two trouble starting their cars, campus buses craft downed in Thailand while en route To sit on the Chamber of Commerce, hours with the senator at his office on should not experience any stalling prob- to or from missions over North Vietnam. a $50 entrance fee is required. Graham Capitol Hill. lems, according to Henry W. Jolman, The more than 1,700 fixed wing and A eoe d p u t s the f i n a l t o u c h e s o h a s n o w s c u l p t u r e s p o n s o r e d will ask the student board to appropriate Katzenbach said he ana Kennedy had gone general foreman of the campus bus sys- helicopter losses - most of them during the money at tonight's meeting. over various subjects relating to Ken- by Gam ma Phi B e t a s o r o r i t y at W i s c o n s i n State U n i v e r s i t y , tem. the past two years - compares with 3,000 William Bunt, manager of Louis Clean- nedy's trip and came :o :hs White i ^ i s e Oshkosh. The t h e m e of the s c u l p t u r e i s " W h e r e h a v e all the aircraft lost during three years of the UPI Telephoto ers, proposed a meeting between the to g j over the same material w f ^ f t h e flowers gone." President. Korean War. STATI NEWS Eric Pianin, managing editor * ' càiror-irr^oMet V V James Spaniolo, campus editor Thomas Segal, editorial editor Lawrence Werner, sports editor Andrew Mollison, executive reporter Joel Stark William C . Papciak, asst. ad manager advertising manager Tuesday Morning, February 7, 1967 EDITORIALS Rights law is Hobson's choice c i v i l rights p r o b l e m s . Au- A strong civil rights law thors of the new p r o p o s a l s would provide that anyone have had to b a l a n c e on the who felt discriminated tight-rope of doing some- against could file a com- thing s i g n i f i c a n t or nothing plaint and go to c o u r t ; it at a l l . would provide for fines, j a i l Unfortunately, their pro- sentences and r e m e d y . posal fits into the l a t t e r Such a civil rights law category. East Lansing could arise only in a com- should put forth a better munity dedicated to the idea effort. But as yet the com- of equality of opportunity m u n i t y ' s attitudes w i l l not for all its m e m b e r s , a com- p e r m i t it. __The Editors • munity that found no eco- n o m i c interest in d i s c r i m i - D i s s e n t : J a m e s Spaniolo go to the E a s t L a n s i n g Hu- backing the c o m m i s s i o n has nation. man Relations C o m m i s s i o n in its work. Significantly, the proposed or to the Michigan C i v i l TRINKA CLINI a m e n d m e n t that would es- Rights C o m m i s s i o n or both. The problem Parking priority misplaced tablish a civil rights ordi- Still, s o m e good could nance in East L a n s i n g does But this is the p r o b l e m . c o m e f r o m its passage. Put- none of these things. and this L a s t spring the city coun- ting an o r d i n a n c e behind pol- reflects the mood of East cil defeated what was s i m p l y By 10:20 the class of approximately listened attentively while he smoked his t i m e he had missed lunch and was late icy and e n u m e r a t i n g c i v i l L ansing. a very weak p r o p o s a l . Now 17 had congregated. pipe and told his tale of woe. to work. rights in h o u s i n g , employ- Within half-an-hour all but six had That morning he had fully intended to I understand the difficulties presented ment and p u b l i c ' a c c o m m o - we have a second p r o p o s a l faded away. No Instructor. park his mother's car with a staff permit by all this snow, but I also sympathize The next morning came the explanation, sticker In the commuter lot on Mt. Hope with the Instructor who found her $18 The amendment dations w i l l , a c c o r d i n g to one that is even weaker than the where his brother would pick It up and faculty parking sticker didn't give her " I couldn't find a place to park. I couldn't c o m m i s s i o n m e m b e r , ease first.. park on Mt. Hope because the F A R M E R S drive to work. ,But he wasn't a farmer and priority over short-term visiting farmers. got to park there. I was already late to his attempt failed. And, I sympathize with the students who Last year East L a n s i n g the c o m m i s s i o n ' s collective It appears East L a n s i n g didn't have an instructor that day, the this class and my only other class is right He was already late for one class, and made quite c l e a r that a mind about the amount of doesn't want to solve its after this one. to park In the other lot and wait for a students who were late, or entirely missed " T h e attendant's excuse was 'it's the bus would mean missing another class. the classes, the students who missed meals strong civil rights o r d i n a n c e Alternative: park on campus, which he or were late to work for want of space administration's decision'. So, I decided was not possible. An ordi- did. to park, space given to F a r m e r ' s Week 9 if that's the way the administration felt Board s bickering open about it—I'd just go back h o m e . " Meanwhile, there's this brother of his participants. nance providing for u l t i m a t e " E n t r o p y " is costing students and fac- The same afternoon that she found she rushing to M t . Hope to drive to work. court adjudication of c i v i l didn't look much like a farmer, 1 got to But he had to retrace his steps, only to ulty more nowadays, and farmers get it play psychiatrist to an unhappy guy. I. find the car parked on campus. By this free. rights c o m p l a i n t s was not so much defeated as h a r d l y It always d e s e r v e s com- not be b a r r e d f r o m these DENNIS CHASI taken s e r i o u s l y . ment when the ASMSU Stu- preliminary gatherings of dent B o a r d does something student g o v e r n m e n t l e a d e r s . L a s t Wednesday, the Hu- right. As o r i g i n a l l y i n t e r p r e t e d , man R e l a t i o n s c o m m i s s i o n approved an a m e n d m e n t to Last Tuesday night board did just that, when they " c l a r i f i e d " the i n t e r p r e t a - the the meetings would have been closed sessions ASMSU Student B o a r d . The of the The rubbish about Reagan the city code of East Lan- Politics interfering with education? A boy, but get him on more solid ground sing. The a m e n d m e n t gives tion of the "informal recent "clarification" All right, Join the crowd if you wish, than one vote against an unpopular ad- curious charge, especially coming from statutory definitions to the meetings." They decided m e a n s that all ASMSU de- and come out against Ronald Reagan. the same liberals who for years have ministrator and the institution of tuition But before you do, at least wait until been yapping about cutting federal funds charges which the students at Berkeley three civil rights areas of that the p r e s s and public will bates and d i s c u s s i o n s will Reagan has had a chance to state his to any southern state that did not integrate have only Pat Brown to blame for. housing. employment and once again be open to the case so you can quote a few m o r e reliable its schools. Since when did government, sources than the Daily Callfornlan. which finances schools, separate itself public a c c o m m o d a t i o n s . The public. In the ousting of Clark Kerr from his Published by the atudente of M i c h i g a n from education? Since Reagan took office? State t n l v e r e l t y c r y c l a a a day throughout o r d i n a n c e provides only that Thus, the r e a l reasons position as chancellor of the University the year and a a peel ,1 W e l c o m e Week Edition Outlook Two years ago, as Reagan reported at In S e p t e m b e r . Subecrlptton rate $10 per y e a r . of California, 14 of the 22 members of a c i v i l rights v i o l a t o r can behind board members' the board of regents felt that Kerr had a press conference, the board of regents Authorlaed by the B o a r d of Student P u b l i c a - tion*. voted to do exactly the same thing to be i n v e s t i g a t e d , mediated votes will be less m a s k e d proved himself to be an incompetent M e m b e r Aeaoclated P r e e e . United Preen International. lnlandDally Preea Aaaoclatlon. K e r r as it did on Jan. 20, and former administrator and a spineless disciplin- Aeaoclated C o l l e g i a t e P r e a a . M i c h i g a n P r e e a and c o n c i l i a t e d . f r o m the students. What's arian, and they had good reason. Reagan Gov. Brown admitted that he "personally A M o e t t t l o n . M i c h i g a n C o l l e g i a t e Preea Ae- aoolatloa. m o r e , students will have the intervened" to stop the action. Politics voted as one of the 14. In light of his Mat. Second c l a s e poetage paid at Eaet L a n e l n g . and education. See, they do touch. campaign promises, he couldn't very well opportunity to see their lead- As for Reagan's cutting the budget E d i t o r i a l a n d b u a l n e a a offlcea at 341 s t u d e n t S e r v l c e a B u i l d i n g . M i c h i g a n State U n l e e r e l t y . do otherwise. E a a t Lanelng M i c h . Nothing changed e r s while they argue, de- Bat, of the 14 people who voted to oust of Berkeley, who can Justify the reaction Phonee: against the new governor? What is so un- Editorial 355-mi bate, fight and discuss all Kerr, only three could be considered reasonable about asking for economy in C U a e t f l e d Adverttelng 355-5251 "Reagan m e n " : Reagan himself, Lt. Gov. D l a p l a y Adverttelng 353-6400 Actually the a m e n d m e n t the i m p o r t a n t i s s u e s on c a m - Robert Finch, and Allan Grant. The others government to pay off an incredible debt Bualneea - Circulation Photograohtc 355-829» 355-3311 will change no p r o c e d u r e s . inherited from the previous administra- pus. had been appointees of either Pat Brown tion? The liberals must still be recover- The J o h n s o n f a m i l y TV sta- or Earl Warren, both former governors. It is only an attempt to give And this, after a l l , is what ing from the shock that, when Reagan t i o n in A u s t i n w i l l p r o b a b l y be Where does the record show that Reagan the local c o m m i s s i o n un- made certain campaign promises, he PEANUTS t a k e n o v e r by a b u s ad s c h o o l representative government did any more than vote his conscience meant them. They're not used to that. equivocal investigating au- drop-out. is all about. and let his feelings about Kerr be known HEAR^OuN /7M TH£>. thority. A c o m p l a i n a n t may to the people of California and to the rest Get Reagan if you will, and it is ob- I BEAT CHARGE ; ; CHAMP.1 J. E ntropy is r i s i n g . --The E d i t o r s of the board? vious that he is to be the new whipping BROoJN AT A ' RM I NESTLING" / OUI ^ 1 Ì "V Frat system does strive for maturity CHAMP ? HA OU u)0NT HÊÂ* ME CAU.IN6 VOU "CHAMP" UNTIL HÜI* 6ÉAT ME, VM OuiN BROTHER AND To the Editor: munity of people who have come here to non-Greek associations incurring the seek maturity and responsibility through same failings, rarely make as structured PERMT I MÉ1C l?EMINr fût THAT Nr'eOiS SN unfair to Greeks 66AT5 ME AT "ARM ÜÜ(?E$TLIN6" ! The State News (in an article en- education. or as concerted an effort toward maturity titled "Needed: responsible fraternities," It follows then, that the question must and responsibility as do the Greek as- February 2, 1967) made use of the il- be asked if the fraternity system is to be sociations. logical device of extending an incident castigated for its elements of immaturity The fraternity system should not be To the Editor: accident. It seems to me that the SAEs to prove a generality. The editorial des- and irresponsibility in the University castigated for its failings in maturity and have been raked over the coals long enough cribed the SAE " h e l l week" incident, setting which exhibits these elements in responsibility as much as it should be I would like to comment on the edi- and the matter should be taken off the which has been thoroughly reported in many of its associations. It is a sound praised for its structured efforts to pro- torial that appeared in the Thursday, front page. the pages of the State News. The edi- contention that Greek associations make mote these qualities. February 2, State News. The title of It is -obvious that the State News is torial then asked if it is not time for the attempt to promote maturity and re- J . William Brimacombe the editorial was "Needed; Responsible anti-Greek and I believe both sides of an fraternities to mature and develop re- sponsibility, though failing at times, while Silver Springs, Md. junior Fraternities," and it seemed to me to be argument should be heard. Granted, social sponsibility at a house level. And the State News cited only this one example very unfair. fraternities have their bad points but they as proof of this lack of maturity and The fraternity system was criticized also have many goodpoints that also should Add plus and minus to grades responsibility. for not being mature and stressing social be stated. coolness rather than academic success. Bob Connors Apart from the errors in the structure of the argument, could it not be justifi- This seems very strange to m e when you Portage, freshman ably said that non-Greek student associa- look at the facts. According to the office To the Editor: A4 4.3; A 4.0; A- 3.7; B+- 3.3; B 3.0; tions, of a more or less formal structure (as dormitory groups) are plagued by the I would like to join the'History Dept. B- 2.7; C * 2.3; C 2.0; C- 1.7; Df 1.3; of the registrar the average fraternity man's grade point is substantially higher 'Kooks' D 1.0; D- 0.7; F f 0.3; F 0.0. This change same problems of immaturity and ir- professors in advocating a change in the than the nonfraternity man's. I believe could probably be fairly readily program- To the Editor: responsibility? Certainly hundreds of in- grading system. I have often been un- this goes to show that the social fraternity med into the computerized grade program; cidents, including the recent " j u m p e r s " happy in grading students who were on the also stresses academic success. Further We love America. We cry for joy when existing grade point averages would be and the incessant towel and water fight borderline between a B and an A, or be- more, fraternities undertake many worth- we hear the National Anthem. We get left unaltered; and professors who did not injuries characteristic of such associa- tween a C and a B, because of the non- while civic activities. I would doubt that a lump in our throat when we pledge wish to take advantage of the new plus or tions, could be mentioned as indicative existence of any intermediate grade that anyone would consider a community aid allegiance to the American flag. We love minus options could simply go on giving of the pejorative effects of non-Greek as would accurately reflect what they de- program an effort to stress social cool- God. .We believe in civil rights for every their normal A,B,C,D,F grades. There well as Greek associations. The SAE served. ness. minority group, as well as for the majority. would not even have to be any special incident is no more reflective of the I would like to propose the following change in the computer grade cards that It was truly an unfortunate thing that We love our children. We love our parents. fraternity associations than it is of non- system change: that the existing 4-polnt professors fill out at the end of the term. happened to M r . Bonus and I believe We respect the police and the law. We must Greek associations. Both are comprised system be kept, but that professors be Glenn T. Wilson definite steps should be taken to prevent be kooks. of many immature and irresponsible in- allowed to give plus or minus grades, if asst. professor a reoccurrence of this sort of thing. SSGT. and Mrs. Philip Verna, USAF dividuals, as is to be expected from a com- they wish, on the following basis— Department of Management However, it was stated that it was an Senior, police administration Tuesday. F e b r u a r y 7, 1967 3 M i c h i g a n State News, East L a n s i n g , M i c h i g a n + Russians. irtMpscow protest Peking abuse MOSCOW .Pi — An orderly said militant young Red Guards the protest to an embassy gate. crowd of 300 Russians massed manhandled East bloc diplomats Later, Soviet police arrived outside the Red Chinese Embas- and that the last 50 dependents after the fearfulChinesereported sy Monday protesting Red Guard from the Soviet Embassy had to that "hundreds of banner-carry- abuse of Soviet citizens in Peking. run a gauntlet of shouting and ing Russinas" were descending A single banner displayed by cursing Chinese to board a plane on the embassy. Iri the tension- the crowd said: " W e resolutely for Moscow. packed atmosphere, the Chinese protest against the lawlessness The Japan Broadcasting app.i fearéd violence fol- and violence of Chinese people C o r p . ' s dispatch from Peking lowing their charge that 31 of their in Peking." said foreign diplomats linked diplomats were beaten up last / The demonstration followed the a r m s to wall off the Chinese as Friday by Soviet police. opening of meetings throughout the dependents walked to the Soon aftfer, a group of workers the Soviet L'nion to drum up anti- plane. It added that Red Guards from a / c a r and truck factory Chinese feeling. pushed the wives of the French a r r i v e / at the embassy and It also followed the arrival of and Danish ambassadors to the pourufed on the door. One of 97 dependents, 60 of them chil- ground. .the/f. said. " W e are not hooli- dren, from Peking who told of When the first Russian dem- gans. We are just ordinary work- their flight through Red Guards onstrators appeared Monday at e r s . We don't want to hit you. East, West meet shouting anti-Soviet slogans. the Chinese Embassy, they ' Just open the door." They said Red Guards broke brought a written protest. Ah Through the door, the Chinese British Prime Minister Harold Wilson (right) embassy official refused to ac- said the embassy was closed and into one bus and beat some of the w e l c o m e s Soviet P r e m i e r A l e x e i K o s y g i n t o L o n d o n cept it and said, " W e are the to take their protest to the For- passengers, then pounded the M o n d a y f o r t a l k s . B e t w e e n t h e m a r e (left) D o u g l a s sides of the plane before it took true friends of the Soviet/Work- eign Ministry to be transmitted J a y , p r e s i d e n t of the B o a r d of T r a d e , a n d G e o r g e off Sunday. ing people." / through regular channels. Brown, Foreign Minister. UPI Cablephoto Soviet reports from Peking The demonstrators th#n mailed In Warsaw, young PolishCom- munists defaced an anti-Soviet display outside the Chinese Em- SAGINAW SLAYINGS bassy with black paint. Then the Poles, about 200 strong, taunted Chinese diplomats who protested. , Seek link in SAGINAW, Mich. ,F — Po- found by their daughter-in-law, murders feet bound with cord. An autop- Radio Sofia said Bulgarian dip- lomats who had gone to see the dependents off Sunday in Peking downstairs bathtub. She had been " w e r e subjected to mockery and sy indicated he had been suf- drowned, police said. they were pushed down s t a i r s . " lice searched for possible links M r s . Arnold Middeldorf, 35, aft- Monday between the methodical er she stopped to inquire why her focated to death by a plastic bag The' bodies of Dr. Archer A . slayings of two Saginaw couples, husband's parents had not been which was wrapped around his Claytor, 73, a former U.S. com- Romney seen each of which the prosecutor's in church. head. An 8 1/2-inch steak knife missioner to the Virgin Islands, office feels may have been com- Middeldorf was found slump- protruded from his back. His and his wife, Marie, 58, were mitted by a pair of killers. ed across a bed, his hands and wife's nude body was found in a discovered in their $50,000 ranch style home Thursday. Robert B. Currie, Saginaw likely in 68 Orbiter path altered County prosecutor, said the in- Both had been shot behind the vestigation so far indicates that ear, apparently through a pillow " a t least two individuals en- used to muffle the sound. Their WASHINGTON K - House Re- tered the homes," in both cases. hands were bound behind them. publican leader Gerald R. Ford " I f .there is a team, the mode PASADENA, Calif, .f—Sci- The midcourse maneuver today C u r r i e was quoted earlier as of Michigan said Monday he con- of operation is somewhat simi- entists changed the course of Lu- slowed the speed of the space- having said, " A s far as I am siders Gov. George Romney as l a r , " C u r r i e said. nar Orbiter 3 slightly today and craft by 1.4 m.p.h., and changed concerned both sets of murders " s t i l l the front r u n n e r " for the said preliminary data indicated its trajectory to put it in a more were committed by the same GOP presidential nomination in Carl G. Middeldorf, 63, a Sag- the maneuver was " r i g h t on the desirable position Ahen it arrives people. And we have indications 19oS, in spite of criticism that inaw educator, ancf'his wife money." in the vicinity of the moon Wed- that they were committed by Romney is vague on the Vietnam Gertrude, 62, were found slain It takes several ho j r s of track- nesday. local people who are still in war issue. in their home Sunday morning, ing to determ\ne results ac- This will enable scientists at town." Romney has been viewed in three days after a prominent curately. Jet Propulsion Laboratory here C u r r i e later denied saying he some quarters as having least N'egro physician and his wife Previously the experts said the to put the 850-pound spacecraft in a proper m o j n orbit for the had definitely linked the two momentum because of failure were found shot to death in their lauich from Cape Kennedy, F i a . , to take specific positions on the Saturday night was with "fantas- subsequent photographing of the m u r d e r s . "1 couldn't say wheth- home about a mile away. safest sites for landings by UJ5. er they - the killers - were war in Vietnam and other is- The Middeldorfs' bodies were tic accuracy." local people," he added. " I t is a sues since his smashing re- astronauts. possibility." election win last Nov. 8. The correction was made today World News by burning the velocity control engine of Lunar Orbiter 3 for a! a Glance 4.4 seconds. Originally the spacecraft would have reached a point within 49 miles of the moon. The correction changed the Spanish students r e t u r n to u n i v e r s i t i e s — target to a point 295 miles above the northeast edge of the l u i a r MADRID, Spain ( A P ) -- M a n y of Spain's 70,000 disk. u n i v e r s i t y s t u d e n t s w e r e r e p o r t e d b a c k in c l a s s t o d a y A spokesman explained that a higher orbit was desired for Pure a f t e r a s e r i e s of d e m o n s t r a t i o n s and violent c l a s h e s greater ma leuverability. w i t h p o l i c e l a s t week. At the 21,000 s t u d e n t M a d r i d U n i v e r s i t y , t e c h n i c a l S U M M E R JOBS IN s c h o o l s with about 8,000 s t u d e n t s r e o p e n e d S a t u r d a y . T H E ROCKIES B a r c e l o n a U n i v e r s i t y , s e c o n d b i g g e s t in the n a t i o n Over 2,000 job opportunities w i t h 15,000 e n r o l l e d , wi 11 s t a y s h u t unti I next M o n d a y . with resorts,« dude ranches, s u m m e r camps, n a t i o n a l Kosygin, W i l s o n confer in s e c r e t LONDON ;•¥) ~ Alexei N. Wilson was reported working parks, construction compan- ies, oil fields, airlines,- etc.. shown in 1967 Rocky Moun- Highlander leather Kosygin and Harold Wilson toward at least a temporary t a i n Summer Employment plunged Monday night .into cutoff of American bombing Guide. Also: how to get F R E E world-ranging talks beginning with the quest for peace in in North Vietnam. Kosygin went into the dis- transportation to these jobs and special information on and suede jacket Vietnam. They ordered a total summer stewardess jobs (U.S. cussions determined to renew and overseas). Only S3, money blackout of news of their ex- changes. The examination by the So- Communist demands for an unconditional end to the bomb- ing before any international back if not completely satis- fied. Beat the rush, apply and coat values viet premier and British now! peacemaking process begins, Genuine leather and suede coats designed in High- p r i m e minister of possible Soviet sources said. Serving students since 1963. paths to peace came after l a n d e r ' s high fashion way, and now unbelievably UNIVERSITY PUBLICATIONS N i c a r a g u a n o f f e r s opponent gov't post Dept. 36, Box 20133, Denver, low p r i c e d . D r e s s y and c a s u a l styles in s l i m or Colorado 80220 full shapes with m e t i c u l o u s detailing. Some with M A N A G U A , N i c a r a g u a ( A P ) -- G e n . Anastasio Please rush my copy of the S o m o z a J r . offered the political opposition a place Summer Employment Guide. l u x u r i o u s f u r * t r i m s . Sizes 8 to 18 in b r o w n , red. i n h i s g o v e r n m e n t M o n d a y , but he got a p r o m p t re]ec- Payment of $3 is enclosed. g r e e n , beige, blue, gold, taupe and c a m e l . tion. ( S o m o z a m a d e the o f f e r as r e t u r n s f r o m S u n d a y s e l e c t i o n s h o w e d h i m as w i n n e r of the p r e s i d e n c y by Name sporty jackets 39 Address . 90 m o r e t h a n a 2-1 m a r g i n o v e r D r . F e r n a n d o A g u e r o , Assorted casual jackets, some c a n d i d a t e of the C o n s e r v a t i v e p a r t y . s h o r t , s o m e 3 / 4 length. Some with zip-out pile l i n i n g s , all special with latest fashion touches. NOWS ' THE TIME classic coats sale 59 S l i m and full shapes, s o m e with b e l t s , c o n t r a s t i n g t r i m s , T O S E L E C T YOUR VALENTINE zip-out pile l i n e r s . 3/4 and full length styles. G I F T S AND CARDS men's tie and I N S P I R A T I O N A L BOOKS fur*trim suedes 89 90 MSU J E W E L R Y slip-on casuals R e m a r k a b l e values at this low. THE SELECTION low p r i c e . F u l l and 3 / 4 length 99 8"& 10 coats with lavish mink* or fox* IS G R E A T accents. . AT furred* fashions 109 90 G r e a t values. J u s t 160 p a i r s L u x u r y c o a t s , with d r a m a t i c of penny mocs and wing-tip f u r * accents at c o l l a r s or CAMPUS BOOK STORES oxfords.Black or brown leath- cuffs, or both. Many one- er- u p p e r s . Broken s i z e s . o f - a - k i n d . Outstanding buys. • a l l imported furs labeled as to country of origin 507 E . G r a n d R i v e r 131 E . G r a n d R i v e r STORE FOR !•'• EN"STREET LEVEL COATS SECOND LEVEL EAST LANSING Across f r o m B e r k e y A c r o s s F r o m Union 4 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan T l e s d a y , F e b r u a r y 7, 1967 REPORTING FROM CHINA % University of Texas before by language speaking the language of the coun- times tend to cluster together in By MITCH M I L L E R on the*military for transporta- S t a t e N e w s Stoff W r i t e r coming to MSU this year. She try they are working in is that the large cities of the countrie - tion, and " m i l i t a r y men are not has traveled extensively through- " m i s t papers cannot afford full- where they are stationed. This always concerned with same An American reporter cover- out the world, and has been a time foreign correspondents,and is true, she noted, especially things reporters are. When the ing developments in Red China foreign correspondent in Latin so they send their reporters to if they want Western comforts reporter gets to the scene of a must face the difficulties of get- America. each crisis as though they were or are dealing only with the battle, he can only talk to a few ting his story from a totalitar- At the present time, -henoted, firemei." English - speaking elite of the men, and their view of the fight ian, underdeveloped country reporters are dependent on mon- In addition, she continued, country. is usually limited to what is through second-hand sources and itoring official Chinese sources, " T h e r e just are not that many In turn, she explained, " t h i s going on right around them, so the interpreters, and speaking to travelers from reporters who speak Chinese. can lead to a distortion of the reporter doesn't get the big pic- " I f we wish to get the full China, mostly through interpre- Many bright young people are whole picture of what is going ture. ^^ story," said Mary A. Gardner, ters. coming into the field with the on in the country, and this in- " I f the reporter stays in Sai- asst. professor of journalism, " I t is impossible to truly un- necessary background, how- breeding of stories. In fact, gon to get the overall picture of f; " i t is important for our cor- derstand a culture if you cannot ever." cases have been known where one the war, he misses the detail 'S respondents to be in there," speak the language, especially Even when reporters are sta- man would write the story and needed to fill out his s t o r i e s . " Mias Gardner, an ex-Marine an oriental culture," Miss Gard- tioned abroad for long periods the rest of the reporters copy The best solution, Miss Gard- lieutenant colonel, was an as^t. ner said. She explained that much of time, problem? arise co.uem- it. ner felt, is often for an editor professor of journalism a: the of the reason for reporters not " I n many countries, you can- If the correspondent is on the' back in the United States to not report something which of- beat for a very long, t i m e , she gather and correlate all the ma- fends the nationalistic sensibil- said, he may develop an emo- terial he gets on an event. ities of the government. Mes- tional attachment to a govern- Two years ago, she recalled, ment, party or program, " a n d English undergrods sages are garbled, delayed, or not notice other groups which coverage of the war was spotty. Gonna build a mountain never sent, or the reporter is may come to overshadow the " B u t today, there are over 500 told he cannot file the -tory." ones- he has developed an newsmen in Viqpnam, and per- to discuss This applies, according to M.'.ss identification with." haps that is too many. I don't Hawthorne Gardner, not only to Commun- ist countries, but to .-.uch coun- tries as Spain, South Africa and She added that many of the same problems apply to new know exactly how close what we are getting is to reality, T r u c k s above, a d d to the p i l e l o a d e d with s n o w f r o m M S U s t r e e t s , s i d e w a l k s a n d p a r k i n g lots b e t w e e n S h a w L a n e a n d the q u o n s e t h u t s a l o n g H a r r i s o n R o a d . Two approaches to literary viewers from the State News and Police estimated the m o u n t a i n to be o v e r 50 feet h i g h . B e l o w , J i l l K r a m e r , R o y a l the developing nations. coverage of the war in Viet- but on the whole, I think it is criticism will be presented by The Paper will lead a discussion closer than it was two years a g o . " Oak junior, plays mountain climber. S t a t e N e w s p h o t o s by P a u l S c h l e i f Western reporters do some- nam- Newsmen .are dependent MSU students at the second meet- on criticism of theater and films ing of the Undergraduate English March 1. VIET CONFERENCE Club at 4 today in 32 Union. Arnold Williams, graduate Matt bpiro, East Lansing jun- chairman of the College of Arts ior. and Karyl Swansor., Batavia, and Letters, began this term's 111., Junior, will apply historical discussion of the function of the and sociological methods to Haw- critic with a lecture, "The Four thorne's Goodman Brown." The short story, "Young psychological and new critical approaches will be dis- Masks of Literature," at . the club's first meeting in January. The group, formed this term, is MSU's first undergraduate Graham interprets policy cussed Feb. 15. A panel of re- English club. The United States wants total military victory in Vietnam and is not willing to make the neces- sary concessions to end the war, in Washington questioning U £ . policy in the war. He signed the letter as an individual to Presi- dent Johnson and not as a rep- adequacies in the rationale for that policy." " I think that any peace agree- ment would involve certain There is an increasing con- cern over the validity of the w a r , Graham said, " I f I believed in the war I'd t On CampusMaxwithShulman J i m Graham, ASMSU chairman, resentative of MSU, along with understandings on both parts and e n l i s t , " he commented. said after meeting with congres- 43 other student leaders. certain concessions on both " I ' m not a pacifist but sin;e sional leaders last week. The letter said that Sec. of p a r t s , " President Johnson said I cannot justify the war in my 'li !{<„, dllu Fing, Hoys Graham #111 summarize his State Dean Rusk's explanation of Thursday. mind I feel I have a right to •<ÙMt füllt*. recent trip to Washington, D.C., U«S, policy was inadequate since This is the first time John- question U.S. policy." at tonight's ASMSUStudent Board it failed :o define *hat a " m i d d l e son has ever spoken specifically Graham said that the paradox mreting. course" in the war was. The about concessions. of the war is that many people letter attacked the "apparent in- Graham also said that it is vocally support it but will not «f» Graham helped draft a letter STAMP OUT YOUNG LOVE his belief after speaking with fight when they are drafted. Tutors sought It happens every day. A young m a n goes off to college, Rusk that increased bombing will " T h e total war effort on the leaving his home town sweetheart with vows o f eternal not bring Hanoi to the confer- MSU campus consists of five Jove, and then he finds that he has o u t g r o w n her. W h a t , in ence table, girls in Landon Hall baking cook- such cases, is the honorable t h i n g to do? Students who could donate a classes. Students arealsoneeded " N o r t h Vietnam is becoming ies to send to service m e n , " IF -r Well sir, you can do what Crunch Sigafoos did. few hours a week tutoring are to baby-sit fo-parents attending united as they see a common Graham pointed out. needed by the Community Action the classes. enemy in A m e r i c a , " Graham Center, 305 E . Grand River Ave. The center is run by the Of- said. Help is needed tutoring back- fice of Economic Opportunity. New policy asks halls Graham attended the confer- ward children and assisting in- Those interested may call 484- ence because he said he had structors in adult education 8679 for further information. questions about the war which were not being answered satis- Ski With The factorily. to plan own open houses He recalled that last year he MSU Ski Club signed a petition which was cir- culated on campus supporting the war. " A t that time 15,033 students Planning and responsibility for managers and governing coun- the open house may close their This weekend. signed," Graham said. " I don't future open houses may rest with c i l s , but the policy will also be doors, Englund said. ¿ f l f e think you'd get nearly that many the individual residence halls un- more flexible and easily tail- Regarding the structure of the Sign up to ski at today." der the new open h®use policy ored • to the needs of the indiv- old policy, Englund said, " T h e W h e n C r u n c h left his home in Cut and Shoot, Pa., to go off to a p r o m i n e n t mkhvestern university 1 F l o r i d a S t a t e ) he said to his sweetheart, a wholesome country lass named 3 * 4 BOYNE MOUNTAIN Feb. 10-11, at the Draft test signup proposed by the Policy Review Committee. Women's Inter-residence idual halls. The proposed policy allows the managers, head advisers and governing councils of the various whole thing was chaotic and im- possible to implement efficiently because the guidelines and sug- gestion^ that had been added Mildred Bovine, " M y dear, t h o u g h I am f a r away in col- Council (WIC) and Men's Halls halls to initiate and to set pro- made it repetitious and confusing. '"«•SiSj, meeting The Selective Service College lege, I will love vol! always. I take a m i g h t y oath I will Association (MHA) gave their Qualification Test will be given cedure and frequency of open " T h e Policy Review Com- never look at another girl. I f I do, m a y mv eyeballs parch and wither, may my viscera w r i t h e like adders, may m y > TONIGHT! here March 11 and April 8. approval to the proposed policy this week. houses. mittee has tried to create one Registration deadline for the consistant policy that means the ever-press slacks go b a g g y ! " Parlors B & C 7:30 p.m. The policy must also be ap- Two main reasons prompted same to everyone." Englund said. Then he clutched Mildred to his bosom, flicked some examination is Friday. Applica- the review of the old policy, hayseed from her hair, planted a final kiss upon her fra- tions are available in the Coun- proved by residence hall man- The proposed policy is Englund said, the controversy g r a n t young skull, and,Went away, m e a n i n g with-all his seling C e n t e r , 207 Student Serv- agers and head advisers before flexible, he said, because the WARREN MILLER MOVIES being sent to John Fuzak, vice over the ruling that the student's heart to be f a i t h f u l . ices Building. door remain open if he stayed University is in a period of Hut on the very first day of college he met a coed named president of student affairs, for transition and the new policy must in the building during an open I r m g a r d C h a m p e r t y who was studded w i t h culture like a final approval. allow for change. house and the structure of the h a m with cloves. She knew v e r b a t i m the complete works The Policy Review Committee Committee member Pat Stone, of F r a n z K a f k a , she sang solos in stereo, she wore a black old open house policy. was established last fall to study Mason Hall president, said that leather jacket with an original Goya on the back. and revise the open house policy. The new proposed policy al- the new policy should allow for Well sir, C r u n c h took one look and his j a w dropped and It consists of two representatives lows that the doors remain open his nostrils pulsed like a bellows and his kneecaps t u r n e d " m o r e open houses because it from WIC-MHA, residence hall to unobstructed entry, only when respects both the majority and to sorghum. Never had he beheld such sophistication, such managers and residence hall head there is a member of the op- the minority rights in the living intellect, such savoir fain. Not, m i n d you, that C r u n c h was a dolt. He was, to be sure, a country boy, b u t he h a d a advisers. posite sex present in that room. units. Before, there were not head on his shoulders, believe you m e ! Take, for instance, Tom Englund, committee Students who wish to study in their many open houses because many his.choice of razor blades. Crunch always shaved w i t h chairman and Abbot Hall head room or are not participating in of the residents wanted to study." Personna Super Stainless Steel Blades, and if t h a t doesn't adviser, said greater responsi- show good sense, I am Rex the Wonder Horse. N o other bility will be placed upon the blade shaves you so comfortably so often. N o other blade residence hall h^ad advisers, b r i n g s you such facial felicity, such epidermal elan. Personna Super Stainless Steel Blades take the travail out Credit union will award car of shaving, scrap the scrape, negate the nick, peel the pull, oust the ouch. Furthermore, Personnas are available both UNIVERSITY ¿¡¡¡SS A 1967 Mustang will be the ber of comedy skit^ and Jane MAUTV SALON > 7 > ) f in double-edge style and in injector style. I f you're s m a r t grand prize at the 31st annual Ericson at the organ. - a n d I'm sure you arc, or how'd you get out of h i g h school MSU Employes Credit Union This year's meeting marks the —you'll get a pack of Personnas before another sun has set. meeting March 6. 30th year of operation for the B u t I digress. Crunch, as we have seen, was instantly The meeting will be held in credit union, wtjich will have as smitten with I r m g a r d C h a m p e r t y . All day he followed her the Auditorium with registration its theme " 3 0 Years, Bigger and a r o u n d campus and listened to her talk about F r a n z K a f k a beginning at 7 p.m. and busi- Better." and like that, and then be went back to his dormitory and ness meeting at 8, found this letter f rom his home town sweetheart Mildred : More than 3,000 members are Door prizes include three port- Dear Crunch: able television and three expected to attend, anincreaseof stereos. more than 403 from last year's Vs kids had a keen time yesterday. We went down to the pond and caught some frays. I caught the must of Entertainment will be provided meeting. anybody. Then we hitched rides on trucks rmd did lots by the Spartan Bra ss doing a num Admission will be free. nf nutsy stuff like that. Well, I must close now because I got to whitewash the fence. Your friend, "Some men who re.i'lly Mildred m a r r y to l e t mf> the N:s- P.S.... I 'know how to ride backwards an my skateboard. i n e s s , " says Sass\,"a<.,ni - er or 1 iter -_t ti e busi- Well sir, C r u n c h t h o u g h t about Mildred and then he ness." t h o u g h t about I r m g a r d and th<'n a great sadness fell upon h i m . Suddenly he knew he had o u t g r o w n young, innocent M i l d r e d ; his heart now belonged to s m a r t , sophisticated Irmgard. Sunshine Center Being above all t h i n g s honorable, he returned forth- w i t h to C u t and Shoot, Pa., and looked Mildred s t r a i g h t in the eye and said manlilv, " I do not love you any more. I love another. You can hit me in the stomach all your m i g h t if you want to!' " T h a t ' s okay, hey!' said Mildred amiably. " I don't love East Lansing's O N L Y you neither. I f o u n d a new boy!' V I S A Baautician " W h a t is his n a m e ? " asked C r u n c h . 3 Great Locations For Your Convenience " F r a n z K a f k a ! ' said Mildred. " I hope you will be very h a p p y " said C r u n c h a n d shook Mildred's h a n d and they have remained good f r i e n d s to 1 - 213 A n n S t r e e t 2 - C o r n e r of H a r r i s o n & W i l s o n R o a d UNIVERSITY this day. I n fact. Crunch and I r m g a r d often double-date 3 - Northwind Dr. Facing Yankee Stadium Plaza ftEAUTY SALON w i t h F r a n z and Mildred and have barrels of f u n . F r a n z knows how to ride backwards on his skateboard one-legged. COM WeHATID com QfHMATIO * * * ©I «;. Ma« shulman So you see, alV* well that ends well—including a shave WASH N DRY CLEAN WASH N DRY CLEAR with Personna Personna's Super Stainless partner in luxury shaving— Hurma-Shave. comes in menthol or regular; it soaks rings around Steel ttlades and any It PHUCO 8 . . . «to'.. (2MOK EAST Of CAHPVS TUCATER) Join Those Who Expect More 4 1 3 E GO R I V E R o h-r lather. And Save EAST L A N S I N G M I C H . T u e s d a y . F e b r u a r y 7. 1967 5 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan SPORTS Hockey GyrrCa vault top position the Big 10 By J O E M I T C H State News Sports W r i t e r but not in fans' popularity coaches felt that because it was may feel that he doesn't have to son, moving vaulting up from Only two of the 13 varsity sports at MSL' are not in a Big Ten By R O B E R T A Y A F I E the least appealing of the events work as much as for the other sixth to first on the card. The Conference—soccer and hockey. Both operate under Big Ten and State News Sports W r i t e r from the spectators' point of events, especially if he's an all- change was made for two reasons. NCAA rules, but neither belongs to a league composed soley of view, thr placement would " g e t around man. But the precision Big Ten teams. Of gymnastics' seven events, timing, skill and speed must be Because of the precision tim- the event over with." Hockey, however, has been making strides over the years to vaulting has pro/en to be the developed to a 'T' if he is going It looks pretty easy, flying over form a Big Ten league. Both Ohio State and Wisconsin have re- least popular with gym fans. But ing required, the performsr was to finish standing up. the horse. Not so. it is the lead-off event in meets. able to better benefit from his cently made hockey a varsity sport and now are eligible to help •Granted, it lakes less t i m i than These factors led to another , form a conference along with the three other Big Ten schools Big Ten coaches rearranged warm-ups if the event imme- the others and the competitor rule change. Each vaulter per- the schedule of events this sea- diately followed cftsm. Also, the which have had varsity programs—MSL", Michigan and Minnesota. forms two vaults. P r i o r to this ! Presently, just MSL', Michigan and Minnesota are in the eight- season, the higher of the team Western Collegiate Hockey Assn. (WCHA). The five other two scores was counted. This Dodd out as head coach; WCHA teams are non-Big Ten—Michigan Tech, North Dakota, y e a r , the two vaults a re averaged Colorado College, Denver and Minnesota-Duluth. together to get the score. " I ' v e been wanting a Big Ten league for a long while," said Coach George Szypula feels Spartan Hockey Coach Amo Bessone. "But we need at least six teams to make one, and right now we have only five with Varsity that this has increased the quality of the vaulting, along with The Vault programs. "There are seven conference schools who do have hockey on some sort of setup, either varsity or club. Northwestern and Georgia Tech shopping improving the judging. Judges are looking solely for form and exe- cution, as in diving. S p a r t a n g y m n a s t E d G u n n y i l l u s t r a t e s t w o of the important a s p e c t s of t h e v a u l t in last S a t u r d a y ' s meet against Wisconsin. At left, G u n n y is c a u g h t Illinois have just clubs and either could come in to form a league the 1950 season until the middle The natural vaulter is the boy just b e f o r e l a n d i n g on the s ide horse after a s p r i n g when they go v a r s i t y . " ATLANTA (L'PI)—Bobby Dodd and took over as athletic director who has had good tumbling and • t h r o u g h the a i r w h i l e at r i g h t he is s h o w n at the in 1950 when Alexander died. of 1953. Bessone explains that the tender program of the Big Ten Con- stepped down Monday as football trampoline experience as a " I n the history of football, Arkansas Coach Frank s t a r t of a f o r w a r d f l i p w h i c h c o m p l e t e s the m a n e u v e r . ference has been the biggest deterrent over the years in forming coach at Georgia Tech because youngster. The all-around man few men have ever coached 36 Brovles, a former Tech quarter- State N e w s p h o t o s by D a v e L a u r a and a league of Big Ten schools. of illness but will remain as usually doesn't find the event as years at the same institution and back and assistant coach who was Mike Schonhofen Hockey presently is allowed eight athletic scholarships a year athletic director. He said his interesting. had all these years to be pleas- long considered as Dodd's suc- MSU Stationery by the WCHA; but the tenders are not included in the total of 70 successor should be named with- A great vaulter, according to ant and exciting ones," Dodd cessor, said Monday he turned allowed for MSU by the Big Ten Conference. in the week. the job down. Szypula, has pre-flight of about said. As a result, Bessone claims that if a Big Ten league were formed Dodd, who has coached atTech seven feet. When he lands on the In his 22 years as head coach, With Broyles out of the pic- and additional tenders were given to all the Big Ten schools for a for 36 years, the last 22 as head teams won 156 games LUJL tr, 1 CLII I1COU UCICUOIVC tOacn horse and pushes off hp should . nn i_ 1 „ . j — ~ _u Dodd s coach, said he had been thinking varsity hockey program, schools like Purdue, Indiana and Iowa which do not have hockey, will use the additional tender for other about giving up since the middle while losing 64 and tying eight. Bud Carson was reported to be the He had 13 bowl teams and won leading candidate. Carson, a for- land another seven feet beyond the apparatus. reg. 1.35 $ 4 00 sports. of the 1965 season because of a nine bowl games, including eight mer assistant at Maryland, North " T h i s means the performer now only | kidney disorder that will require - Valentine gifts & doodads • "How I think this can be handled," said Bessone, " i s that the straight. His 1951 and 1952 teams Carolina and South Carolina, is can't sim;:\y have strength in Big Ten designate a certain quota for each sport. Let's say that surgery. were both undefeated and the credited with building the Tech pushing off the horse," he said. hockey be given only six tenders and they are not to be used " I gave serious consideration yellow jackets went 31 games defense largely responsible for " H e mvst have fantastic speed for any other sport, regardless if a school has a hockey team to dropping out after the Gator without defeat from the tailendof last season's fine 9-1 showing. in his approach and the courage or hot. Bow', game the previous season." to continue when he nears the " T h i s way there would be no squawking from anybody. Each school would be competing on an equal footing." Bessone claims that presently the WCHA is " i m b a l a n c e d " — there are other conferences to which each of the WCHA teams Dodd said in a low voice. "But I decided to go for one mare year and see how things came out. " I t was a gloomy day for me horse. The tendency is usually to slow up a little near the board to get a controlled takeoff." The Spartans have a wealth Spartan Bookstore belong, and quite often none of the conference policies coincide. Friday when I decided to ask of vaulting talent in Dave Thor, 223 MAC "Take Michigan Tech, for example," said Bessone. " I t has an the athletic board to accept my Ron Aure, Ed Gunny, Toby Tow- 18-game freshman schedule, whereas the Big Ten allows us just resignation." son, Cliff Diehl and Bill Diggins, three games. That kind of schedule allows for perfect recruiting. It was just 11 days ago that all of whom will be battling it When youngsters hear this, they'll pick the school that has a the tall, gray, 58-year-old Dodd out for the four starting berths. bigger freshman schedule." told United Press International The group's highest score When Michigan Tech was here to play the Spartans three weeks that he planned to coach for three . w came against Southern Illinois, ago, Huskie Coach John Maclnnes expressed desire for the for- or four more years, " I f m y h e a l t h 28.03-27.45. Because SIU is not mation of a Big Ten league and expansion of the WCHA. . permits." By T O N Y F E R R A N T E in the conference, the vaults " I t ' s up to the Big Ten to go out and recruit more varsity " I knew when people asked me were computed on a be'-t-of- t e a m s , " said Maclnnes. "But, I see a Big Ten league, in the about retirement rumors that I Drat! Too much snow for ice fishing. two basis. next three to four y e a r s . " was planning to q u i t , " Dodd said Tip #1. The twenty-odd inches of snow is nature's best insulating It was a Spartan sweep, by Thor Maclnnes, as well as Bessone, said they hoped the Big Ten Monday. " B u t I didn't want to say material, and since the weather was warm before the blizzard (9.45), Aure (9.4 3) and Towson schools and the WCHA teams will continue competing with each anything until I definitely made Hunting is at a low ebb, too. Except for the few hardy ones who (9.10). Saturday, MSU won the other, if a Big Ten league is formed. up my m i n d . " enjoy plowing through chest-high drifts. No rabbit's worth that event over Wisconsin, 27.30- Both speculated that a 20-24 game schedule could be worked kind of work. 25.25. Thor averaged 9.225 out so as to leave enough games for competition outside the Big Dodd, an All-America quarter- In fact, unless you're a skier, there's n o P * u c h to do except on vaults of 9.35 and 9.10, while Ten Conference. NCAA rules allow a 28-game schedule for hockey, back atTennessee, came to Geor- think about last fall's buck. For most people the memories end Aure had vaults of 9.25 and 9.0 excluding NCAA tournaments, gia Tech as an offensive coach with the last day of the Michigan deer season, but a few, who took for a 9.175 average. Maclnnes said he hoped Notre Dame could be " w o o e d " into the in 1931 under the late B i l l Alex- the trouble to check, found plenty of hunting throughout December. The favorite vault of th.' Spar- WCHA, when a Big Ten league was formed. The Irish have been ander. Only John Heisman pre- Naturally, small game is avaiiable everywhere, but many states tans seem - to be ths Yamashita, competing regularly with other varsity teams in the area and ceded Alexander as coach at also extend their big game seasons well beyond Michigan's. Take with difficulty of 10.00. It con- have just begun construction of a new ice arena. Tech. sists of a piked forward somer- the time to write a few letters. Other schools which could come into the WCHA are Western Dodd became head coach in 1945 sault from the near end of the For my part I took advantage of the Ontario forests between fall Michigan and Lake Superior State College in the Upper Penin- and winter terms. The Kenora region of the province offers ex- horse. sula. cellent deer, mooge, and bear hunting until Jan. 8. " L i k e everything else, it used UPI Poll After borrowing and hawking to the point of near destitution, to be acceptable to just get over " I f hockey does go Big T e n , " .said Bessone, "the WCHA def- initely won't be hurting. Hockey is growing everywhere. the cost of my hunt proved to be worthwhile. A 1,000-pound moose tlie horse," Szypula noted. "Now "And what makes hockey bright i s t h a t i t i s an income sport when is quite a prize, and having a freezer-full of meat will certainly you've got to flip four or five given the opportunity. feet over and land perfectly." HEY JOE - MAKE IT QUICK WITH NEW YORK ( U P I ) - T h e United defray the food budget this winter. "Such schools as Michigan Tech, Denver and North Dakota are Tip #2. The best time for hunting those monsters — if you're Press International major col- THAT HOT CHOCOLATE ORDER - already being supported by hockey." lege basketball ratings with first hoping for a Boone & Crockett trophy, that is — is before mid- With the increased interest among coaches in forming a Big Ten place votes and won-lost rec- December. The big antlers, being more susceptible to brush and Net manager? McDonald's league for hockey, it's apparent that one will be in operation within ords of games played through tree limbs, fall off early, and by January very few moose have the next few years. Anyone interested in serving as Saturday, Feb. 4, In parentheses: racks at all. Just last week, the Big Ten office indicated a desire for such a manager of the 196/ varsity ten- league. It sent letters to conference schools with hockey teams, POINTS Actually, I passed-up a number of cows and several huge, yet nis team should contact Coach inquiring as to the possibility of a Big Ten tournament this De- antlerless, bulls before finally connecting with one bearing a small Stan Drobac at 217 Men's I.M., EAST LANSING 1. UCLA (34) (17-0) 349 rack. LANSING cember. 2. North Carolina (14-1) 301 The entire Kenora district abounds with moose. Some of the o r c a l l 355_5271. 3. Louisville (1) (18-2) 266 Intramural News towns worth noting are Kenora (which is about 150 miles north of 4. Princeton (17-1) 179 International Falls, Minn.), and further north, Reditt, Superior — R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO COMPANY 5. Houston (15-2) 158 Junction and Sioux Lookout. For information, contact the Ontario 6. Texas Western (16-3) 154 Dept. of Lands and Forests, in Toronto'". 7 Kansas (13-3) 134 MEN'S I.M. Gym 111 The thrill of h u n t i n g in Canada's remote bush regions is immense. 8.. Western Kentucky (16-1) 116 TOBACCO PRODUCTS • PACKAGING MATERIALS Basketbal Court 6 Just-being in total wilderness and only 400 miles from the Arctic 9. Providence (13-3) 56 FRUIT JUICE B E V E R A G E S • FOOD AND INDUSTRIAL CORN PRODUCTS Gym ] C i r c l e lends an air of special excitement to the ardent woodsman. 10. Vanderbllt (15-3) 45 Court 1 6:03 Woodbridge - Worst The 35-below temperature means very little when one realizes Abudweiser - Abdication the abundance of game surrounding the hunter. Sioux Lookout 6:00 Tiiuidsrbirds - Halluci- 7:03 CAMPUS INTERVIEWS 8:03 Halocaust - HoNavel Second 10—11, Boston College boasted a phenomenal 75 per cent hunter success ratio last year, nations 9:00 Akhilles - Akat 35; 12, Syracuse 18; 13, Toledo and that makes it one of the best hunting hot-spots in North Amer- 7:00 Wivern - Wight 15; 14 (tie), Duke and Utah State ica. 8:00 Hubbard 7-9 14; 16, Tennessee 12; 17, Cin- Tired of dressing-up in a red circus suit and bucking traffic Fancy Fumblers - Wee Hock e y 9:00 Five Tuesday, February 7 cinnati 11; 18, "Northwestern 8; In the Michigan woods? Give Canada a try. FEBRUARY 20, 1967 SAE - Case 19, Tulsa 7; 20, St. John's (NY) Professional Careers in Cartography Gym 8:15 Untouchables - Hubbard 6. CIVILIAN EMPLOYMENT with the U. S. AIR FORCE Court 2 9:00 Other teams receiving three CREATING AEROSPACE PRODUCTS 6:00 Ballantinü - Bawdiers 9:45 Greek All-Stars - DjII or more points—Florida, New M i n i m u m 120 semester hours college credit including 5 hours 7:03 Under Achievers -Manor Blades college level math. The required math m u s t include at least 2 Men 10:30 Grosse Pointe - Ludi- Mexico, MICHIGAN STATE and of the following: college algebra, trigonometry, analytic geom- Horner - Hospiciano crists Seattle. 8:00 etry. differential calculus, integral calculus, or any course for 9:00 Hubbard 6-4 ACCOUNTING. B.A. CHEMISTRY. B.S.. WANT TO JET FREE which any of these is a prerequisite. Equivalent experience Gym 11 acceptable. Training program. Openings for men and women. Court 3 Application and further information forwarded on request. MBA. CIVIL ENGINEERS. B.S. 6:00 Brannigan - Brougham WRITE: College Relations ( A C P C R ) TO EUROPE NEXT SUMMER? 7:00 Arsenal - Arhoase Hq Aeronautical Chart & Information Center. CHEMICAL ENGINEERS. B S. MECHANICAL ENGINEERS. B.S. 8:00 Casopolis - Carleton 8900 S. Broadway. St. Louis, Missouri 63125 An equal opportunity employer 9:00 Aborigines - Abel Akers Hall • Arts and Letters Series Gym 11 Earn University credits abroad plus your 1967 summer Court 4 vacation at little cost. Let. your normal university Winter Term 1967 6:03 Archaeopteryx - Ares club contacts do most of the work for you. Your jet Are YOU interested in challenge and responsibility 7:00 Abundantia - Abortion transportation F R E E . No extra-curricular effort required •• Are YOU looking for a dynamic, diversified company 8:00 McTavish - McFadden from you on the trip. Write: Tom Turner, P.O. Box 59-2482, • Religious Trends in the Comtemporary World 9:00 Chinese Bandits - Shad- M i a m i , F l a . 33159. Are YOU seeking a growth-oriented opportunity ows Gym 111 Then WE would like to talk with YOU. II. RELIGION IN EAST ASIA Feb. 7 Episcopal Ash Wednesday Court 5 6:00 East Shaw 6-8 C o m m u n i s t I m p e r i a l i s m - Soka Gokai 7:00 West Shaw 10-7 P o l i t i c a l i s m or Neo-Confucian H u m a n i s m ? Visit with our College Recruiting Representative to discuss how you might 8:00 9:00 Wimbledon - Wilding Twinks Tigers - Augies Services D r . Herbert C. Jackson become a part of this growth. Interview arrangements and more specific infor- mation can be obtained through your placement office. Aces Alumni Chapel III. RELIGION IN MIDDLE ASIA Feb. 21 12:40 P.M. Penitential Office & Holy Communion Islamic Theocracy - Jewish Secularism L I B E R A L B E N E F I T S INCLUDE: Profit Sharing, Hospitalization, Retirement, or Arab Nationalism? Life Insurance, Educational Assistance, Relocation Assistance. Dr. Fauzi Najjar ALL Saints Church All positions are located in Winston-Salem, North Carolina 7:00 A.M. Penitential Office & Holy Communion IV. RELIGION IN THE WEST March 7 12:15 P.M. Penitential Office & Holy Communion C h u r c h e s - C h u r c h - o r No C h u r c h ? Penitential Office & Holy Communion D r . F r a n c i s M. Donahue 5:15 P . M . AN E Q U A L O P P O R T U N I T Y EMPLOYER 7:30 Evening Prayer and Sermon 7:30 p.m. • Tuesday Evenings • 137 Akers 6 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan T l e s d a y , F e b r u a r y 7, 1967 THE SHOE m m YCUW4HILD HAS OUTGROWN WILL SELL FAST WITH A WANTM CALL Automotive For Rent For Rent For Sale with a OLDSMOB1LE DELUXE F^ST, Employment OPENINGS NOW for a Beeline WANTED TWO girls to sub- CHARLOTTE: TWO bedrooms, GIBSON GUITAR and amplifier. MATH MAJOR wanted. Object: Peanuts Personal Missing reporter 1966, 330 cubic inch, 4-speed. Stylist. Part time Job with full lease Cedar Village apartment. unfurnished. $90monthly.Lease Like new. Any reasonable offer. volumes qi revolution. Reward. low cos f Excellent condition. Still under time pay. Make up to $5.00 or Spring term. Call 351-9456. with ownership care. 332-5891. IV 5-0147. -S-3-2/9 Call Jean. S-l-2/7 warranty. Take over payments. more an hour. Free clothes each 3-2, 7 S-3-2/8 FIRST QUALITY materials and WANT AD returns 627-5949 after 6 p.m. S-3-2/8 season. For further informa- One month F R E E rent. Two or Fourth man needed for house. workmanship. OPTICAL DIS- Servici VOLKSWAGEN 1963, Clean. Call tion, call Sharon Quinn, 882- four men. 351-5499. 5-2/7 $50 month. 575 Cornell. 351- COUNT, 416 Tusslng Building. DIAPER SERVICE, Lansing's fl- Dick, 355-3056 after 5 p . m . 9081. S-3-2/8 63 NEW L U X U R Y 6187. 3-2/8 • AUTOMOTIVE Phone IV 2-4667. C-2/10 nest. Your choice of three types. S-3-2/7 E X P E R I E N C E D SECRETARY - sound proof units DISHWASHER, USED, automatic, Containers furnished, no de- AN KHE, South Vietnam X — • EMPLOYMENT twenty hours weekly. Adjacent UNIVERSITY VILLA* Rooms • FOR R E N T VOLKSWAGEN 1959. Engine 5135. TERM—Available now. American Maid. Call 332-5682. posit. Baby clothes washed free. Michele Ray walked out of the overhauled. New snow tires. campus. Fair salary. 351-5326. APARTMENTS Try our Velvasoft process. 25 jungle in black pajamas and a - 635 ABBOTT ROAD Single room in a house on MAC, S-3-2/8 • FOR S A L E Runs real well in deep snow. S-5-2/9 years in Lansing. BY-LO DIA- peasant's conical hat today after • LOST & FOUND WANTED: PART time office sec- - WALK TO CAMPUS one block from campus. Included Animals Only $495. We take trade-ins at PER SERVICE, 1010 E. Michigan 21 days in Viet Cong captivity. • PERSONAL retary for East Lansing Educa- - C O M P L E T E L Y FURNISHED for $13.50 week is maid serv- STRATTON SPORT CENTER, TOY POODLES. AKC register^ IV 2-0421. c Twice, she said, she thought she • PEANUTS PERSONAL tion Association. Eight-twelve STUDENTS2-BEDROOM ice, air-conditioning and util- 1915 East Michigan. IV 4-4411. ed. Three females, two males. SAVE LATER - BUY NOW at might die. • REAL ESTATE hours per week. Typing. $1.50 FLEXIBLE UNITS ities. 351-5858. 5-2/13 C Phone 332-6493. 3-2/8 NEJAC of EAST LANSING, Ze- The first time was when the • SERVICE per hour. Contact Gerald Bart- - L E T US HELP YOU FIND 1318 East Oakland.Graduatestu- Auto Service & Ports nith radio, stereo, & TV, in- Viet Cong captured her as she lett. 332-0219 or 332-6551. A ROOMMATE dent preferred.,$30 a week. 489- • TRANSPORTATION Mobile Homes cluding color TV in stock, 543 repaired a flat tire on her small • WANTED NEW BATTERIES. Exchange 5-2/10 3 Man Units 4839. 5-2/8 French car on a road in the cen- 65.00 each per month MEN: NEAR Union, lounge area, ALMA 8 x 26. Good condition. E. Grand River, next to Para- price from $7.95. New sealed BABYSITTER in our home morn- tral highlands. The second time DEADLINE beams, 99^. Salvage c a r s . l ^ r g e ings until June for one child. 2-Man Units available $300 down. Take over payments. mount News. C one-half doubles, large rooms. was in a six-foot cave she shared stock used parts ABC AUTO 332-2752. S-3-2/8 Furnished Model Open DaysSi. ED 2-4483. S-3-2/9 C H I L D C A R E in my home. In- | 351-4311. ' 7-2/10 with eight Viet Cong during an PARTS, 613 E. South Street, FRATERNITY COOK: excellent evenings: See Manager or call fants accepted. Near Frandor 1 P.M. one class day be- 332-0091 or 332-5833 MEN: SUPERVISED, 1/2 double, Lost & Found artillery bombardment by South IV 5-1921. C conditions. Week days only 10- area. 487-3808. 3-2/8 Vietnamese army troops. She fore publication. $9.00. Cooking, parking. Two ACCIDENT PROBLEM? Call 5. 337-0346. S-3-2/7 WOULD YOU believe? One apart- blocks from Berkey. 332-4978. 1966 HIGH school class ring gold, DIAPER SERVICE, Diaparene said she thought she would suf- ment available for students, with blue stone, in Jenison Franchlsed Service Approved by Cancellations - 12 noon one KALAMAZOO STREET BODY FULL-TIME cook wanted for fra- focate. completely furnished, all util- 5-2/7 class day before publica- SHOP. Small dents to large ternity house. Flexible terms. locker room, Tuesday January Doctors and DSIA. The most Miss Ray, 28, a Frenchwoman, ities paid. Call Nejac of East SINGLE ROOM for male student 3lst. Initials: G. L . M. 355- modern and Only personalized tion. wrecks. American and foreign Call 332-0866. S-3-2/7 is In South Vietnam as a free" Lansing. 337-1300. C across from Abbott Hall. Call 9219. 3-2/9 cars. Guaranteed work. 482- service in Lansing, providing lance photographer. She once was DELIVERY BOYS wanted. Must THREE-MAN and four-man Don, ED 2-4511 after 5 p . m . PHONE 1286. 2628 E. Kalamazoo. C LOST: MAN'S wedding ring, Gen- you with diaper pails, polybags, a model and cover girl in France. have own transportation. Ital- apartments availalbe Immedi- S-3-2/8 SNOW TIRES for imported cars. ison lockers. Reward! 355-5911 deodorizers, and diapers, or She was captured Jan. 17northof 355-8255 PIRELLI Invernos. The world's ian Village, 1101 East Michigan. ately. Call STATE MANAGE- For Sale after 4 p . m . S-3-2/7 use your own. Baby clothes Hong Son, 290 miles northeast 5-2/10 MENT CORPORATION, 332- RATES best. $14.10 up. THE CHECK O.AQ-7 r"„2 /Q FOR WEDDING and practical LOST: MEN'S black framed washed free. No deposit. Plant of Saigon, wjiile trying to com- POINT, authorized Pirelli deal- 35 BED GENERAL HOSPITAL inspection invited. AMERICAN n lntn 1 w H ir il v. io. IpTKTfh ns if. 1 DA i S1.SC shower gifts, complete line of glasses, Wednesday A.M. Big p.VLV d U , U iCu^i.i er. Phone 332-4916. C-2/9 has need for professional help. DIAPER SERVICE, 914 E . G i e r . South Vietnam. 3 DAYS $3.00 Burcham Woods basket-ware. See ACE HARD- Boy. 351-9129. S-l-2/7 MEL'S AUTO SERVICE: Large R.N.'s and licensed practical Call 482-0864. C At the headquarters of the U.S. WARE'S selections. 201 East FOUND: PRESCRIPTION sun- 5 DAYS ¿5.00 or small, we do them all. 1108 nurses. Salary commensurate 1st Cavalry, airmobile, Division, with experience, differential for Eydeal Villa Grand River, across from glasses, B & L Rayban near Typing Service E. Grand River. 332-3255. C Union. Phone ED 2-3212. C she told of her capture. ( b a s e d on 10 w o r d s p e r ad) evening and night duties. Li- e Completely furnished Holmes Hall. 353-6740. S-3-2/9 UNFINISHED FURNITURE: bar 3ARB1 M E L , Professional typist. " T h r e e Viet Cong with rifles MASON BODY Shop. 812 East beral personnel policies. Easily • For 1, 2, 3, 4 students or I Over 10, per word, per day. No job too large or too s m a l l . came up on m e and harshly Kalamazoo Street - since 1940. reached from Freeway 127. Well single working people stools, night stands, chest-of- Personal bound my a r m s , " she said. " I drawers, bookcases, prefin- Block off campus. 332-3255. C There will be a 50tf service Complete auto painting and col- lighted, ample parking area. • Swimming pool CHEMISTRY STUDENT get in- JOB RESUMES, 100copies $4.50. was very afraid. I knew not lison service. American and Pleasant working conditions. • Call Fidelity Realty îs'ned picture frames, and more. stant answers to PH Logarithm and bookkeeping charge if ALDINGER DIRECT MAIL AD- what they intended to do with PLYWOOD SALES, 3121 S. this ad is nut paid within foreign cars. IV 5-0256. C Apply MASON GENERAL HOS- 332-5041 Pensylvania. TL'2-0276. C-2/9 problems with an ACID BASE CALCULATOR. Mail 96£ plus VERTISING, 533 North Clippert. me. I thought the worst about one week. PITAL, 800 East Columbia them. But within five minutes CAR WASH: 25£. Wash, wax, IV 5-2213. C-2/9 Street, Mason, Michigan.48854. INTERNATIONAL HOUSE - men. HOOVER TANK vacuum cleaner 4DO-IT. 430 S, Clip- 10-2/7 1/2 double, cooking. One block with all cleaning attachments. 216 Beal, apt. 4A. No cash ' THESES PRINTED, Rapid serv- pert, Back of KOKOBAR.C-2/9 kept only one a r m loosely t i e d . " to campus. 332-2195 after 5:30. Six months old. $20.00. OX 4- please, C-2/9 ice. Drafting supplies. Xerox The following day, she said, she The .state News does not. A v o i ti on For Rent 5-2/7' 6031. 3-2/9 THE LOOSE ENDS - The sound copies. CAPTIAL CITY BLUE- and eight of her captors hid in .permit racial or religious TV RENTALS for students, $9.00 THREE ROOM apartment,unfur- BOOKS, STERLING, china, fur- PRINT. 221 South Grand. 482- FRANCIS AVIATION will finance you can feel. Organ, guitar, the cave, six-foot long, three- discrimination"in it.- ad- month. Free service and deliv- nished. Available immediately. 5431. C-2/9 your flight training. Trial les- niture, jewelry, assorted odd- bass, drums. Call Tom, 485- foot wide and three-foot high. vertising columns, Tne ery. Call NEJAC, 337-1300. We Near Brody dorms. $100. IV 5- WILL DO efficient typing of any son, $5.00, Single and multi- ments. 337-9660 evenings. 0761. C-2/9 Miss Ray is 5 feet 9. State News will not accept guarantee same day service. 3033. kind.-Call TU 2-5161. S-3-2/9 engines. 484-1324. C 5-2/8 S-3-2/9 " A government military oper- ertising which discrim- C ONE GIRL needed for Univer^ TV RENTALS for students, $9.00 THE NEW Yorker: student-fac- TYPING IN my home. Academic ation was taking place above us inate- against religion, . m o n t h . . F r e e service and deliv- Tiict, color or nationalori- Employment TV RENTALS for students. Eco- sity T errace. Winter and spring ulty rates. 34 weeks $3.75. Box ery. Call N E J A C . 337-1300. We or general. Experienced, ac- and artillery fire was hitting nomical rates by the term or Reduced rates. 351-6346. 3-2/7 133, East Lansing. S-5-2/14 curate typist. Call 489-3141. n e a r b y , " she said. " T h e Viet gin. F u n r OR part-time men needed. guarantee same day service. New division Alcoa. Cash- month. UNIVERSITY TV'RENT- TWO T.V.'s, 16 inch.and 21 inch. Ask for Sue. C-2/9 Cong indicated to m e that I must A I R P O R T , N E A R . Carriage House C scholarships. Mr.Centilla, 339- ALS. 484-9263. C Work well. $50 each. Antique 7 PAULA ANN HAUGHEY, Typist stay down. But it was so stifling Apartments. 4401 North Grand THE SOUNDS: THE SONDET ES: 8610. 2-2/8 River. One bedroom, unfur- desk, $20, ED 2-4483. S-3-2/9 IBM Selectric and Executive. hot in there, and the air was so Apartments Present the Mopown sound on PART TIME, $50 to $60 per week, nished, luxury apartments. In- STÉRÉO, ÂM^FM multiplex Multilith Offset Printing. Pro- bad, that I wanted to climb out- campus. 351-9155. c Automotive four well-dressed men to de- G I R L WANTED for luxury air- cludes drapery and a i r condi- turntable, speakers. Excellent fessional theses typing. Near side. 1 would rather die in an conditioned Riverside East tioning. Completely carpeted. condition. Must sell. 355-6828. APPOINTMENT FOR passport or open field by bullets than to expire AUST1N-HEALY '66 Mark 111 liver advertising gifts for Alcoa. campus. 337-1527. C apartment, spring term. $60.00 application pictures now being in a horrid hole for lack of a i r . " 3000. Dark blue top and interior. Call M r . Roberts. 339-8610. Electric kitchen includes re- S-3-2/9 ANN BROWN, typist and multi- month. Call 351-9264. 5-2/8 frigerator, range, disposal. For HEAD STANDARDS 6 ' 3 " , used taken at HICKS STUDIO. 24 After four hours in the cave, Bes- offer. 351-9446. 5-2/10 2-2/8 lith offset printing, disserta- hour or same day service. ED2- five of the men climbed out, leav- CHEVROLET'S, 57's to60's.The Graduate and Married Students leasing information call: 484- once, bindings included. $100. 6169. tions, theses, manuscripts, gen- R E L I A B L E BABYSITTER for in- c sharpest in town,"JOHN'S ALTO 8272. Prefer married couple. Henke boots, men's 9-1/2, used DAVID "H1' J says: Call me for eral typing. IBM, 16 years ex- ing M i s s Ray and three others. SALES, Exclusively Chevrolets. fant, for occasional daytime sit- BAY COLONY two seasons. $25, 355-2862. perience. 332-8384. C " T h e r e was a little more room ting. ED 2-2192. S-3-2/9 3-2/8 terrific summer position. 353- APARTMENTS then and I could breathe more. 816 R. G. Curtis, two blocks FOUR-MAN luxury apartment. 3-2/9 2803. 5-2/8 T YPING TERM papers and the- HOUSEKEEPING HELP one-half 1127 N . HAGADORN north of .tliller and Washington; sls. Electric typewriter. Fast It was a little less suffocating. day pel- week. Own transporta- Now leasing 63 units. 1 and Pool, parking. Spring, summer, Snow shoes, boots, many sizes TERM PAR TIES ' and all that C-2/9 service. 332-4597 . 5-2/7 But we stayed there for a whole tion. ED 2-2192. S-3-2/9 2 bedrooms, unfurnished. Call 351-7758". 5-2/10 and prices.gloves,socks,hats, Jazz. The BUD SPANGLER COMET 1965, 4-door sedan. two d a y s , " she said. EMPLOYERS OVERLOAD COM- Close to campus, shopping NEED! ONE girl for Deltaapart- and ear bands, also carry GROUP. Call TERRY MAY- TYPING: ELECTRIC typewriter, Automatic, 18,000 miles. Leav- She said she would continue PANY, Temporary assignments center, downtown, and bus ment Spring term. 353-1196, equipment foT intramural NARD. 482-4590, 482-4548. changeable keys. Call Pat after ing country. 355-0807. her attempt to drive to the de- for experienced office girls. No line.Model open 9 a.m.-8 p . m . . 351-4166. 5-2/8 sports. ' •mm, .. C 6 p . m . 355-2860. 5-2/6 . ..„.. .Gj*. 1 militarized zone in thenorth.She ' l e e " , p a y . Phone 487-6071. Daily and Sunday. MAN NEEDED spring term. WOMAN GO for social chair- had completed about three- CORVETTE Stingray 1965 con- Large duplex. 925 Ann. C a l l PX Store F randor TYPING: THESIS, term papers, C-2/9 rents from 1 35.00per month men who hire " T H E TONIKS." quarters of her 600-mile trip vertible, 327, V-S, 4-speed, general. Electric typewriter. GREAT LAKES EMPLOYMENT 332-6321 332-2571 351-5141. S-3-2/8 HEAD COMPETITION 6 ' 9 " . Ex- 351-9359. S-5-2/10 when seized. AM-FM radio, power antenna, cellent condition. Used 6 times. Fast service. 351-6135. for permanent positions for men or 337-0511 AVONDALE COTTAGE: onebed- THE PERSON to call for bands She said she wants to rest in mint condition. Must sell. $140.00 . 355-5361. S-3-2/7 5-2/10 and women in office, sales, tech- OKEMOS. ONE bedroom, mod room furnished. Utilities and -TERRY MAYNARD, 482-4590, Saigon first. $300.00 and take over payments. nical. IV 2-1543. C-2/9 ern, furnished. $137.50 includ- parking included. $130.00 per TWO MATCHING inner-spring 482-4548. C Wanted 627-5949 after 6 p.m. S-3-2/8 mattresses. Twin size, good ing utilities. Kuhen Equipment. month. Call 337-2080 after 5 Wanted -FaIRLANE 1962. V-8, automatic, SECRETARY: EXCELLENT lo- condition. $25. 337-1077. GIRLS: F A L L S , wiglets, wigs. BLOOD DONORS needed, $7.50 cal position available at once for 1790 E. Grand River. Phone p.m. 5-2/10 Finest human hair. Discount STEREO, R E C O R D player, and radio, four door. No rust, good S-3-2/8 for RH positive, $10, $12 & $14 tires. Must sell. Any reason- competent secretary to an ed- 337-0931. One-third mile east HOLT TWO-bedroom spacious prices. 337-0820. S-5-2/10 • for RH T.V. combination. Call 484- SEWING -MACHINE-SALE. Large- negative. DETROIT able offer. Call 351-7343, ucational administrator. Posi- of Okernos-Haslett Road north apartment, fireplace, carpeting, THE CIGAR BAND — The guar- BLOOD SERVICE, INC., 1427 3354. S-l-2/7 draperies, air-conditioning, G E selection of reconditioned, used 10-2/14 tion Involves much public con- side. 5-2/8 anteed sound known throughout East Michigan Avenue. Hours: FURNISHED APARTMENT, one appliances, heat included. machines. Singers, Whites, Uni- : tact and interesting, varied, O N E MAN needed, take over the State. 337-7086. C-2/10 9-3:30 Monday and Tuesday; bedroom, close to campus FIRETRL'CK 1§33 Diamond versal, Necci. $19.95 to $39.95. year-round work with ample lease immediately. Cedar Vil- $165.00. OX 9-2987, 0X4-8641. 12-6:30 Thursday. 489-7587. C " T " . Like rew, 5,000 miles, Guaranteed. Easy terms. ED- ELIZABETH TODD, Piano Stu- area. June 23 - August 23. fringe benefits. Experience and lage. 351-5824. 5r-2/8 Fifteen minutes from MSU. owned by V.A. hospital, Peter WARDS DISTRIBUTING CO., dio. 825 West Grand River E.L. WILL EXCHANGE 7 p . m . gen- Mother and 17-year old daugh- own transportation advisable. 10-2/17 Della Penna, 427 EllicottStreet, ONE MAN needed for Avondale 1115 N. Washington. 489-6448. 332-4613. S-5-2/13 eral admissions for Supremes ter. (313) KE 2-3157. 3-2/8 Write immediately. Box A-l TWO GIRLS needed for a four- Bat a via, N.Y. 14020 . 3-2/7 apartments. $50 month. 351- C-2/9 for tickets for 9 p . m . perfor- GIRL NEEDED for luxury apart- Michigan State News, MSU. girl apartment, spring term. THE REASON we have so many F O R D 1962, 352, cruise-o-matic. 6392. 5-2/7 SKIS 8', poles, and <;'7e 9. mance. 332-1177, or 353-6960. ment. Reduced rate. 332-0234 10-2/16 Call 351-7493. 3-2/7 darn fool answers is that we Excellent condition. Must sell. Total, $15.00. ED 2-3260. S-l-2/7 after 5 p . m . S-3-2/9 CHOOSE YOUR own hours. A few NEEDED: GIRL to sub-lease NEW LUXURY apartment must have been asked the matching Phone 355-9385. 5-2/7 S-3-2/8 hours a day can mean excellent Rivers Edge Apartments. Spring sub-lease immediately. For de- questions. Want to match wits TWO TICKETS Supremes, 9 p . m . MATH TUTOR for graduate rec- MUSTANG 1965, 289, Cruise-a- term. 351-6704. 5-2/8 HART PRO i k i s 6 ' 5 " with bind- on insurance? Insure with one performance. Call 372-1734. ord exam. Phone 339-2137 eve- earnings for you as a trained tails call 351-4842 . 5-2/9 matic, V-8. IV 2-5837. S-3-2/8 ings, also snow tires, $7.50-14. of 20 companies like " H o m e " S-5-2/9 nings. 5-2/6 AVON representative. For ap- TWO GIRLS wanted. Spring and •••• ••• ••• TWO MAN furnished apartment. OLDSMOBILE 1565 automatic winter t e r m s . 201 Rivers Edge 351-4480. S-3-2/7 at BUBOLZ INSURANCE, 220 pointment in your own home, Nicely panelled. $110 monthi 442, sharp red finish matching HEAD STANDARDS t ' 3 " , $45. Albert. C-3-2/9 iiM 9PPm write Mrs. Alona Huckins, 5664 apartments. 351-9319. 5-2/8 351-4557. S-3-2/9 interior, power steering, power Henke boots 10-1/2. $25. Dale HELP Stamp out the STATE • • H B E1BDC3QQB aaoEiH School Street, Haslett, Mich- DORCHESTER C I R C L E 1140 Lo- brakes, added extras. Call be- WANTED IMMEDIATELY one or 351-6187. 2-2/7 igan, or call IV 2-6893. C-2/10 gan and Jolly. Large two-bed- NEWS! Don't make us contrib- • • • • • • fore noon ar.d after 5 p m. two girls, Rivers Edge Apart- FEN'DEk EL ECTRIC twelve WANTED NURSES aide, 9 a.m. room. Carpeting, stove, oven, ute to the upkeep of this In- ACROSS IV 2-5031. 2-2/8 ments. 351-5284. S-5-2/13 string guitar and case. $275. sipid rag. Hire us for your 29. Magnetic H B BQSE3 B E O to 3 p.m. Monday through Fri- refrigerator, garbage disposal, 1 Unattached strip NEEDED: ONE man for four-man • D Q B Q • • • • CHECK THIS: Great home buys day. ED 2-5176. 5-2/7 air conditioning unit, unfur- house on Ann Street. 351-7594. PhQne 355-5694. S-3-2/8 function. We'll do our own ad- 6 Flightless bird 30. Alternative no •••• •••• are listed In today's Classified Ads. Turn back now. WANTED: MALE or female-ex- perienced cafeteria manager to nished, parking. Excellent loca- tion for children and students. S-3-2/9 BIRTHDAY CAKES: 7 " - $3.34, 8 " - $3.86, 9 " - $4.38 de- vertising. THE LAST RITES. 351-7652 1-2/7 It) Chance 32 Railing 33. Sword hilt •••• anna • • FOURTH GIRL needed forapart- 13 Cry 34 Utmost • D Q B • • • • • Problem: run medium sized Jackson In- Plant operation. National com- Walter Neller Company, Prop- erty Management Department. ment $50 utilities included. Judy, 351-7789. S-5-2/13 livered. Also sheet cakes. Kwast bakeries, IV 4-1317. C-2/9 LAUNDRY, CLEANERS, Payless for the best. Wash - 20£, Dry - 14 Norse god 15 Forward hv per bole 35. Aloft osa anna a n 122 S. Grand. Phone IV 9- 10£. Suits cleaned, pressed - • • • • • BHBMBB QBSEaOBB B B B O pany, attractive pay and fringe MAN'S GENUINE BEAR skin IV Sea bird 36. Native People don't M A L E STUDENT, 21, to share •cxa HQB • • • • benefits. Send resume to Mich- 6561. 15-2/22 coat. Approximately size 42. $1.50. Slacks, sweaters, Sport 18 Wild ox countrv studio apartment. $12.50 per Excellent. 372-4309. S-3-2/9 coats - 75£. WEN'DROW'S 3006 1» Supplement believe our igan State News, Box B-2 for ONE-FOUR men needed for a 37. F.dge of .1 Haslett apartment. 351-5807. week, parking. 332-6078. FOR SALE: New VM tire, r i m Vine Street, one block west of 20 Sun got! molding confidential handling. 3-2/8 used VW's are used. 4-2/10 Sears. Hours 7 a.m. - 11 p . m . 2 1 Goddess o! v at. : SOLUTION OF YESTERDAY'S PUZZLE S-3-2/9 and fan belt. Call J i m . Phone ONE GIRL wanted for four girl • C-?/9 i lischiel 38. Invalid 351-9505. 3-2/9 4 Conciliu- 8 Prevail This must be because we apartment. Spring term. $55. BRAND NEW 6' reflector tele- >'> Thought 41. Attributed FREE!!! A Thrilling hour of torv gilt 'I. Neuter recondition our used Volks- 351-7638. 3-2/9 23 Non-pro- 42. Trod HERE'S A scope. Three separate lenses. beauty. For appointment call tcssioiial DOWN 5. Syllable ot pronoun wagens to the highest standard Clock drive mount. Must sell. 484-4519. M E R L E NORMAN 24 Genullected 1. Scowl hesitation 11. H i .icing we can achieve. Then we Houses guarantee them for*l00% for IV 2-7845. S-5-2/10 COSMETICS STUDIO, 1600 E. 2.') Kntrain 2. Music- <>. Prestige medicine HAPPY IDEA MATURE STUDENT to share Michigan. C-2/9 2 7 ( Ibserved drama 7. Dolphin- 12. ltusiic thirty days or a thousand TYPEWRITER, UNDERWOOD house, private room, parking THIS AD worth 50£ toward pur- 28 Related 3. Overt like cetacean 1(>. Precise miles. "Golden Touch." Excellent con- 18 Parched $40 per month. 485-0961. chase of Valentine candy $2.00 for TODAY! "Engine 6i transmission, rear dition. $75. Call ED 7-2057. 19. Paradise ( axle, front axle ONE-THREE men needed for fur- S-3-2/9 ' 5-2/7 and over. MAREK DRUGS PRESCRIPTION CEN- REXALL I 3 4 5 % 6 7 6 9 %1 21 Deserve M •Brake and electrical systems STUDY DESKS, small chests, 10 (1 12 <77 22. Arrow nished house. Grand River. 485- TER at Frandor. C-2/9 poison roll-a-ways & bunkbeds. New 1965 VW Camper with tent $1895. 3448. NEW THREE bedroom house near 3-2/7 and used mattresses—all sizes. THE CHARGE of T H E L I G H B R I - GADE . . . . Groovy. Phone 13 % 14 % 15 it 23. Den 24. Preserved 1962 Valiant. 2 Door Hard- MSU. Completely furnished and Study lamps, typewriters, tape recorders, metal wardrobes, ITALIAN 355-6957. VILLAGE: S-5-2/13 l l O l E. 17 % 16 % 19 25. Hindu gemían,i n top. Automatic Economy 6. carpeted. Dishwasher, washer portable TV sets, large selec- Michigan. Phone 482-2100. Pick 20 % 21 % 22 26. GiratTelike %% Bucket Seats. 36,000 Actual and dryer, fireplace, and animai tion new & used electric fans. up, delivery and table orders. 23 24 Miles. Like new red inter- garage. $225 plus utilities. Six 27. More se- %% Everything for the home. WIL- Tuesday, Wednesday, and month lease. Available Feb- en re ior. Ready $695. COX SECOND HAND STORE, Thursday. For the family size, IS 26 27 ruary 21st. Prefer married cou- 29. Subdued 509 E. Michigan, Lansing, Phone get small one free with same 1966 BMW 1800. 4 Door ple. 482-6961. 5-2/7 30. Fattv fruit Sedan. White with black TWO BEDROOM furnished house IV 5-4391, 8-5:30 p . m . Ç combination. STEREO SPEAKERS: H.H. Scott, MEETING P L A C E for buyer and 10-2/20 ZA % 29 % 30 31 31. Demolished lnterl' $22*5. r^r- <->nliy Don't really enjoy going out in the cold like you used to? Why not make some beginning for rent in Lansing. $80 a month, save $60.00 a pair. MAIN ELEC- seller . . . the Classified Ads. 31 % 33 % 34 33. Expectation 34. Norse ex- PHIL GORDON VW ice skater happy by selling your shoe skates plus utilities. ED7-9771 - 7 a . m . to 4 p . m . ED 7-7000. 3-2/9 TRONICS, 5558 South Pennsyl- vania, Lansing. 882-5035. C Something to sell? Dial (Phone) now. 35 % 3fc % 40 37 plorer 36. In what way USED CARS iE. G R A N D R I V E R A T H O W A R D with a STATE NEWS Want Ad? Dial 355-8255 to place you ad today. ACROSS FROM Kellogg Center. Two girls to share home. Fur- nished. $40.00. Phone 351-7798. B I C Y C L E SALES, rentals and THE ROGUES censored at Fee. services. Also used. EAST LANSING C Y C L E , 1215 E. The controversial sound of East campus. Telephone TU 2-9345. % %% 3» 3» 41 % AX 37. Mindanao native 39. Negative 40. News serv- 484-1341 5-2/7 Grand River. Call 332-8303. C C-2/9 ice: abbr. Tuesday, F e b r u a r y 7, 1967 7 Michigan State News, East Lansing y Michigan Profs toast 'that wo man' said. Conformity is not admired Members ofthelrregularslove ians was founded in the early By J O ANN B A E R and irregularity is the key. Sherlock Holmes, said Yates. It 30s by author Christopher $ 0 r - State N e w s S t a f f W r i t e r Evenings are filled with toasts has been said that Holmes never ley. to Irene Adler, the only woman lived and therefore cannot die. The Interpreters named them- Elementary, my dear Watson. selves after Holmes's story, in Holmes's life; the secondMrs. The Irregulars believe in his The tradition of Sherlock real existence, he said. "The Adventure of the Greek Holmes study and glorification A branch of the Baker Street I n t e r p r e t e r , " and are one of 20 is being carried on by TheGreek Irregulars of New York, the In- such societies in the United Interpreters of East Lansing terpreters was organized 20 States. Similar groups exist in which includes three MSU pro- years ago by Paige Heldenbrand. Indianapolis, Boston, San Fran- fessors. The original group of Sherlock- sisco and Detroit. George A. Hough III, asst. professor of journalism; J a m e s Union sponsors Stokley, associate professor of Journalism; and Donald A. Yates, associate professor of romance languages, hold irregular meet- Over many a quaint and curious volume European tours ings filled with general disagree- ment during the year. The meetings are "never held on the same date twice, Yates f o r h o u r s ! " ) , hi— l i t e r (who k n o w s what t h e p r o f through Thursday from 1-5 p.m. R o b e r t D a y t o n , Holt s e n i o r , m a r k s t h e m i d n i g h t m i g h t w a n t you to r e m e m b e r ? ) a n d c o f f e e ( l o n g way The sixth annur.1 Union Board- o i l in t y p i c a l s t u d e n t f a s h i o n — g e t t i n g r e a d y f o r m i d - in the Union Board office. 'til m o r n i n g ) are essential props. sponsored European tour pro- t e r m s . Watch ( " I t ' s only how e a r l y ? I've been here The first scheduled tour, a SN graduate gram beginning in June will In- S t a t e N e w s p h o t o s by B o b B a r i t seven-week trip to England, Bel- clude a new four-week tour of guim, Holland, Germany, Swit- eastern Europe. zerland, Liechtenstein, Austria, wins award Italy, Monaco, France and Spain, Curtains for West End? Two other European trips are will be open to students only for Watson; M r s . Hudson, Holmes's also being offered, Students, staff $790 and begin June 20. Experience with the State News landlady; and Mycroft Holmes, or faculty members may register for the respective tours Monday The eastern European tour, seems to pay off, according to Sherlock's brother. June 21-July 20, is open to all Dennis Pa jot, editor of the South MSU students, staff and faculty Lyon Herald. members- The countries to be LONDON 'JO -- The London thing I could take to America, sometimes more than one show, There are more than half a dozen revivals of old plays on about them, but I don't think so. They are very dated and not the For Pa jot's use of photos in FEB. 13 V :ISU«SU I* Slovakia, lllLiUUC PU-iM ^ iaaniri fu , Hungary, l-T^hn- Austria, theater, often described as the Herald, the paper was and I've won a lot of prizes In the London stage at present. very good. Revivals make for a awarded a first place certificate France, Holland, East and West world's most exciting, is in the doldrums today. American impresario David New York with the British prod- uct. They Include resurrections of " L a d y Windermere's F a n " by barren theater. in that category in a recent con- " B u t there is hope for the test sponsored by the Michigan Institute plann ed Germany, Poland and the Soviet Union. Cost of the tour is $575. " B u t the British theater is Oscar Wilde, " V o l p o n e " by Ben British theater while you have Press Assn. • " An introductory tour of Europe, by Women s Club Merrick, who introduced many of relatively young playwrights like June 21-July 20, is the third currently in a dreadful state. Jonson and " T h e R i v a l s " by the most exciting British plays, Richard Brinsley Sheridan. They John Osborne, Harold Pinter, Pajot said that his experience trip offered. It is open to stu- I've never -seen it in a worse players and playwrights to are doing well at the box office. Arnold Wesker, Shelagh Delaney as editor of the State News photo dents only for $475. The tour state. There isn't anything Broadway, confesses he is disap- But this is not what people have and half a dozen more like them. staff in 1961-62 greatly bene- includes stops in England, Hol- worthwhile in London. The Lon- Reservations for the 13th An- Session topics will include " B e pointed with the current London come to expect of the London They don't seem to be represent- fited him with his work on the land, Germany, Austria, Italy, don theaters seem to be crowd- nual Institute of the MSU Business The Ideal Secretary," "Harmony season. theater over the last decade. ed this season. But while you Herald. Monaco, France and Switzerland. ed with a tired kind of r e v i v a l . " Women's Club must be made by for You with Design and F a b r i c " "So far on this t r i p , " he said Only a few days ago, Milton Merrick commented: " I go have playwfighters like that, you Wednesday, according to Mrs. and "Insights for Your Personal All tours require a $100 de- in an interview, "1 haven't found The Herald, in addition to re- Shulman, respected theater crit- along and see these revivals and are certain to have some suc- Claude Butcher, institute publici- Safety." Each 45-minute session posit and full payment of the a single thing that I've liked. cesses in the future." ceiving the first place award for This is the first time for 10 ic of the London Evening Stand- I wonder if maybe I am wrong use of pictures, received first ty chairman. will be presented twice, once in flight reservation fee upon regis- years that I've found absolutely ard, was complaining in print: place honors in the advertising The theme for the Feb. 15 in- the morning and once in the after- tration. Flight fares are based " T h e revivalists go marching on. noon. on student rates. nothing at all that I've liked. idea of the year category and a stitute, which will be held in the Wilde, Shaw, Coward, Lonsdale, A luncheon in the Union Ball- Prof predicts " E v e r y year for at least the third in news reporting at the an- second floor concourse of the BEST IN FOREIGN FILMS Maugham, opportunities for star nual meeting of the MPA held re- Union, is "Ideals, Insights and In- room will be highlighted by M r s . last 10 years I've found some- casts. Opportunities for well- cently at Kellogg Center. spiration." Roland Waterman, consultant for made plays. And, no doubt in time, State Health Occupation, who will atrophy in the British theater." speak on " A r e You Really I n ? " climate change Book discussion British producer Richard Pil- Twenty-five companies will dis- brow, London currently bringing into in collaboration with fU' orientation course play the newest in office machines in the Union P a r l o r . tonight at Free U. Harold Prince the American mu- Reservations can be made by TODAY. FROM 7:00 P.M. to beain for women sical " F i d d l e r on the R o o f , " said: contacting Miss Sheila McMona- Paul Goodman's book "Grow- " T h e r e ' s a lot of good work Groundhogs, who have had a is presently in a down-swing gle or M r s . William Love at 355- AT GRAND ing Up A b s u r d " will be analyzed going on but I think the Lon- long-standing monopoly on and will remain that way for 1810. Charge for the lunch will 7:25 & PRIZE by Cnitra Smith, social science lecturer, as part of the Free don theater has got to recap- long-range winter weather the next 40 to 50 years. Starting this week, Evening ' " T h i s course offers the woman be $1.75, and 50 cents for the 9:35 P.M. WINNER ture a little more intensely a forecasts, may soon find " T h i s will bring lower tem- sessions. University series of discussions themselves out of business as peratures and heavier snow- College is offering "Orientation the opportunity to enrich herself 1966 sense of excitement. I think and to acquaint herself with the in Classroom 1, Wilson Hall a result of the research of an fall to the northern states, Course for W o m e n , " designed to MO«»»M INra»M»TI«M » 4 people are taking it for granted from 4:30-5:30 p.m. today. and the theater has been feed- MSU geologist. with northward shifts of con- "acquaint women with University younger generation," she said. The course will be held on A MAN "Yesterday and the Day after ing upon itself. There's a sense Maynard M. Miller, profes- tinental storm t r a c k s , " the services." B M ' C H J C T o m o r r o w " will also be held in of apathy now; perhaps the the- sor of geology, has developed geologist said. Kay Eyde, coordinator of pro- Wednesday afternoons, 1-3 p . m . For more information, Interested ANCIAWOMAN Wilson from 7-9 tonight. Donald a winter weather outlook for grams for women, said the six- TODAY: ater's gone past its first peak Southern Michigan's abnor- women should call Miss Eyde at Baker, asst. professor of history, which started with John Os- the next 50 years based on week course is aimed at women A Dazzling Display mally heavy snowfall this win- who either quit their university 353-2262. Registrations are at 1:00 - will discuss American and borne's 'Look Back in Anger' of the study of the behavior of Of Virtuosity! " ter may be partially explained education when they were mar- being accepted at the Registra- 3:05 - 5:15 French relationships afterWorld 10 years ago. Alaska's glaciers. by this shift, Miller said. tion Desk In Kellogg Center. 7*25 - •Saturday Review War U. ried or want to start university " T h e London West End thea- He will appear at 7:30 to- He said there would be fewer 9:40 P . M . Discussions will follow both work when they have the time. ters seem to.have lost a little of night on a CBS-TV special, storms, but that these would p*oaH>M tNronM.TiOfc vsssua Burt Lancaster-Lee Marvin classes which are open to all in- " A l a s k a , " to explain his find- " T h e r e are a lot of women that "Tender, Glowing. the sheer fun and excitement be quite severe. want to go to j p h o o l , " she said, Robt. Ryan-Jack Palance terested students and faculty ings. It Should Win A members. that they h a d . " Miller said that he has found "but they put it off for a number Miller has predicted that Ralph Bellamy-Claudia Cardinal« that Alaska's ice masses ad- of reasons." TODAY.. Grand Prize Wher- winters like the present should pass — In about 40 years. He vance and retreat in direct Miss Eyde said that some wo- F r o m 1:00 p . m . • 1W| ever It Shows!" relation to cyclic changes In men think they will never use PROFESSIONALS Placement Bureau bases his predictions on the • Pittsburgh Press sun-spot activity. their education, or that the money Feature at pattern of sun-spot activity PANAVISION' TECHNICOLOR* " I am sure that glaciers will required for education should be 1:15-3:15-5:20 recorded by the glaciers. . FRI.: " F U N E R A L in B E R L I N " COMING: "CUL-DE-SAC" eventually help man to plot cli- used for their children. -7:25-9:25 " W e find that glacier fluc- mate centuries ahead," he " T h i s one of the things that is B R O A D W A Y THEATRE Students must register in per- reading, chemistry/mathema- tuations over the past two cen- said. good about tnis course," she said. son at the Placement Bureau at tics, industrial arts (drafting and turies show a tantalizing cor- M i l l e r , who was chief geol- " A special $5 rate applies to least two days prior to the date electronics) (BJvlj and speech , relation with sun storms and ogist of the American Mt. wives of both U.S. and foreign at M S U of interview, correction, visiting teacher temperature trends," Miller Everest Expedition in 1963, students." (school social worker), deaf and said. Monday, Feb. 13: does most of his research in Other women can sign up for ten hard of hearing, homebound He said that the up-and- the Juneau Icefield. dollars. Bell Telephone System: ac- teacher and mentally retarded down pattern of solar activity counting and financial admini- type A (BJvly. Miss Eyde said that over 30 stration, economics, manage- Town of Westport, Con.; specialists and consultants are ment, marketing and labor and Board of Education: all elemen- Involved in the course which fea- wHIINBSHOT tures. employment prospects— industrial relations (B,M). The Bendix Corp., Navigation cation (B,M). and Control Division: electrical tary, secondary and special edu- Xerox Corp.,: Accounting, It's what's happening local and national, the use of education in family life, com- and mechanical engineering mechanical, A n n o u n c e m e n t s m u s t be r e c e i v e d b e f o r e 11 a . m . munity educational resources, • • 3d« CA M P U S electrical, and course work, admission require- (B|M> chemical engineering, market- the day before p u b l i c a t i o n . ments and other topics. Bureau of Reclamation: Civil, ing, metallurgy, mechanics and .;__.. tiud*. Alpha Phi Sigma, national po- The Baptist Student Fellowship Enrollees will be able to re- electrical and .mechanical engin- materials science (B,M). eering (B,M). Monday-Tuesday, Feb. 13-14: lice honorary, will meet at 8 will meet at 7:30 tonight at 336 view the basic services of the NOW! University which are designed Burgess and Niple, Limited, The Bendix Corp., Bendix Mi- tonight in 34 and 35 Union. Noel Oakhlll Ave. George Borgstrom 1:00-3:05- to help them proceed in both for- Consulting Engineers: civil and shawaka Division: mechanical C . Bufe, executive secretary of will speak on " T h e World Food 5:15-7:25- Issue and Christian Respon- mal and informal educational sanitary engineering (B,M). • and electrical engineering (B.M,- Michigan Law Enforcement Of- 9:30 programs. State of California: social work D) and statistics and mathema- ficers Training Council will s i b i l i t y . " • • » speak. (M;. tics (D). The Bendix Corp., Central Of- The Forestry Club will meet at ¿YOU ARE Colgate-Palmolive Co.: mar- keting and all majors of the C o l - fice: all majors of the college 7:30 tonight in 183 Natural Re- sources. The Lands Division of GOING TO lege of Business (B.M). of Business, mathematics and Beta Beta Beta, National Bio- the Michigan Conservation De- ENJOY statistics (M.D). Downingtown Paper Co.: pack- aging technology (B). The Bendix Corp., Research logy Honorary, will meet at 7:30 partment will be discussed by tonight in 35 Union. Alex Mac- T.R. Tucker. •ALFIE' Northern Arizona University: Laboratories Division: electri- Donald will speak on biological • • * IN A HURRY! VERY educational services and re- cal and mechanical engineering, applications of gas chromato- Food Science Seminar will search, audio-visual, anthropol- physics, mathematics, metallur- graphy. All Interested students meet in 110 Anthony Hall at 4:10 DELICIOUS FOOD IS ogy, chemistry, educational psy- gy, mechanics, and materials are invited. p.m. today. Linda Miller, Till- chology, political science, so- science (B,M,D). amook, Ore., graduate student, SERVED QUICKLY AND ciology, Spanish, geophysics, General Dynamics: electrical, will speak on "Molecular Dis- secondary education, English, mechanical and civil (structures) I E E E (Institute of Electrical tillation and Analysis of Fat Sol- PLEASANTLY AT psychology, home economics, ec- engineering (B.M.D) and mathe- and Electronic Engineers) will uble Cheddar Cheese Flavor Vol- onomics, management, humani- matics, physics, metallurgy, meet at 7:30 tonight in 146 En- a t i l e s " and Alex E m o d i , East ties, biology, forestry, art, vo- mechanics and materials science gineering Building. John Cooper Lansing, graduate student, will cational-technical, office admin- (M). will speak on "Professional Reg- speak on "Outgrowth of Type E istration-communication, his- Rike-Kumler Co.: home eco- istration." Clostridium Botulinum." GENERATION tory (intellectual), mathematics nomics, sociology, marketing, by W i l l i a m Goodhart and engineering and technology retailing and all majors of the (D). - colleges of Arts and Letters, GRANDMA'S A PARAMOUNT PICTURE • TECHNICOLOR® TONIGHT Peat, Marwich, Mitchell and Business, Cormuinication, Arts •Next Attraction* Special r e s e r v e d seat Co.: accounting (B,M). and Social Science (B). Radiation Inc.: electrical and Bendix C o r p . , Aerospace Sys- LYNN REDGRAVE a d m i s s i o n to f u l l - t i m e M S U s t u d e n t s : $3.50 mechanical engineering (B.M.D). tems Division: electrical and TRW Inc.: Michigan Division mechanical engineering (B,M,D) $2.50, $1.50 electrical and mechanical engi- and mathematics,statistics,phy- neering (B,D). sics and astronomy (MJD). UNIVERSITY AUDITORIUM TAKE - HOME College, Junior College District of St. Louis-St. .Louis County: SUMMER EMPLOYMENT IN- 8:15 P.M. All m a j o r s , all colleges (MJD). TERVIEWS Gw- N Y FILM Warren Consolidated Schools: Monday, Feb. 13: v i t> CRITICS' / / Ü 1 early and.later elementary edu- Camp Lynn wood: camp coun- Chicken . S h r i m p . Fish 2820 E. Grand River * ico- Lj'y^X V A L I D A T E D I.D. CARD cation, remedial reading and mu- selors, must be 19. Lansing, Mi.chigan " B N E C r S S A R Y AT DOOR. sic (vocal) (B,M), language (B), TRW Inc., Michigan Division: OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK a Columbia L pictures release fjjijt" 1900 E. Kalamazoo Phone:484-4471 Phone 487-3761 counseling and guidance (M), bi- juniors and seniors in the Col- ology - mathema:ics, remedial lege of Business. 8 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan T lesday, F e b r u a r y 7, 1967 Gains from Red turmoil small AP NEWS ANALYSIS Yet, so much of any judgment about China is based on its resources and military power potential. This might make WASHINGTON I' — The United State: stands to gain ignorance, and possibly obsolete history, that the experts mainland China more dangerous to U.S. interests in Asia and very little from the present turmoil in China in the short concede the unexpected may happen and an anti-Maoist el se where. range. Whether it gains or loses over the long haul depends leadership come to power. A third possibility is that a post-Mao leadership In China largely on who wins in Peking. probably would be interested in stimulating trade with the In such a case, the experts speculate the trend of The odds, as judged by U.S. government experts on China, major industrial nations of Europe and with Japan to help relations between Red China and the Soviet Union, now on now favor Communist party boss Mao Tse-tung to come out build a modern industry. This could mean increased trade the verge of a diplomatic break, would likely be reversed. on top. If he does not, the experts are not sure who will. The with many other nations but not necessarily with the United The experts reason that even though the Soviets have not personalities of the successors would be decisive in future States. been very openhanded about aid, and charging substantially U.S.-Chinese relations. for what help they give, they still c>n be of great economic There are special problems between the UnitedStatesand The question "What will happen to the United States and and military assistance to the Chinese. Indeed, many U.S. Communist China which the experts believe probably would Communist China if Mao loses out?" is beginning to be experts on China believe that Mao's break with Russia long delay improved relations even if Chinese policies shifted asked seriously by China watchers here and in Hong Kong over Communist party doctrine has been a cause of the greatly. One is Formosa,.home of the U^S.-supported Chinese and Tokyo, even as they discount the possibility that Mao opposition to him inside China. Nationalist government. Any Peking government is likely to will lose. They think he lias' greater command of popular continue to claim Formosa as its territory. political power than any other possible leader, and that Another possible consequence of Mao's replacement could he also has the necessary strength in the army. be that China would become much m o r e efficient in developing American power is the major obstacle to any expansionist ambitions -the Chinese Communists may have in Asia - apart from Soviet power north of the Chinese border. U.S. government experts on the Chinese Communists believe the struggle between Mao and his opponents is really FORWORD EXAMINED a fight between his doctrine of permanent revolution and the opponents' belief in pragmatic solutions toChina'sproblems. In support of this, the experts recall the failure of Mao's 9 commune program and his "great leap forward" program Chippin away for industrializing China in 1958-60. A w o r k m a n c h i p s off a g i a n t i c i c l e on the N a t u r a l S c i e n c e B u i l d i n g M o n d a y . L a r g e c h u n k s of s n o w and i c e such as t h i s one a r e b e i n g r e m o v e d all o v e r Report neors final vote c a m p u s to keep t h e m f r o m f a l l i n g on p e d e s t r i a n s . ATTENTION CAR OWNERS By B O B B Y S O D E N A faculty committee of four was appoint- he thought the foreword would meet coun- State News photo by C h u c k M i c h a e l s State News Staff W r i t e r ed to write the foreword. The committee cil approval. is composed of Howard Ri Neville, pro- War on crime The Academic Council will consider to- The council is composed of major Uni- vost; John H. Reinoehl, professor of hu- day a foreword to the Academic Freedom versity administrators, college deans and manities; John F. A. Taylor, professor Report as the document meets its last step representatives. before being sea: to the Academic Senate. of philosophy, and McQuitty. complete front end repair and alignment ( c o n t i n u e d f r o m p a g e one) m. f .the House Democratic lead- Since its approval by the council Jan. The report is expected to be considered before congress is consistent er said Johnson made clear that The committee completed the foreword by the academic senate in a special ses- with the cominission'i finding? tn. administration oppt any 10, the report on student rights at MSU late last week. sion later this month. The date has not * brakes • suspension and recommiMdations. effort to da it i i i local law en- has been in the hands of a committee for editorial revision. The editorial revision, yet been set. • wheel balancing » steering corrections forcement an u r . e j spsi Som.' Republican leaders found which was completed in late January, The foreword will be presented at the actm.nt of th. President pro- Composed of 1,500 tenured facultymem- fault with the Presidents pro- was approved in advance by the council. council meeting at 3:15 this afternoon • motor tune ups posais. bers and administrative officers holding posals. House G O ? Leader G .r- in the Con-Con Room of the International Johnson said the passage of At the J a n . 10 meeting, Louis L. Mc- academic rank, the senate may only ald R . Fare of Michigan said Center. It must be approved before the strict firearm? control laws at Quitty, dean of the College of Social Sci- LISKEY'S Auto Safety Center Johnson'? message "focuses on approve or reject the report, but may not every W e i oí governmi it is an ence, requested that a foreword or pre- freedom report can be voted upon by the a number of important problem revise it. act of simple: prudence and a amble be written to put the report in Academic Senate. areas but neglects' so mo key measure of a civilized society. context. The preamble was to serve as an The report will be referred to Presi- points." " F u r t h e r delay is unconscion- introduction of MSU's land grant philoso- "Frankly, I don't expect any difficul- dent Hannah and eventually be acted upon Noting that mci-iy.ahd desire 124 SOUTH LARCH IV 4-7346 able." he said. phy, rather than as a part of the report. t i e s , " said Taylor Monday, when asked if by the MSU Board of Trustees. are the m:.in ingredients needed for a nationwide atta;k ).i : rim^, Ford said, " T h e be;t way to provide funds for that attack Smuckler urges increase woulc be through federal tux- sharin f c ." The GOP leader questioned J o h n ; j n ' s call for a ban on all When we say in technical foreign aid wiretapping except' in national we want people security case?. For*" said elec- tronic listening devices are " a n essential tool in law enforce- m e n t " and while the privacy of One of the crucial deficiencies ment by Fowler Hamilton, former erally through the United Na- citizens must be projected " w e mvst not throw out the baby with the batn water." Rep. Carl B. Albert ofO'daho- in our present foreign aid pro- gram is the reduction in tech- nical assistance, Ralph H. director of the Agency for In- ternational Development (AID), that the United States spends less on foreign aid per year than it tions or bilaterally with specific nations. Another instrument would be for the outer limits, this isn't what Smuckler, associate dean of in- propaganda to set the national ternational programs, said. does on canned cat and dog food. image, he said. A third instru- "He feels technical assistance In a talk on foreign aid last ment would be foreign aid which Clergy ask fast ( c o n t i n u e d f r o m p a g e one) is at the root of all our foreign aid efforts—education, building of institutions, and innovation month, Smuckler gave an overall view of the foreign policy goals of the U.S. which are determined could be military, non-military, technical, economic, loans, and so on. foreign we have in mind. for the societies. by Congress and the executive The last instrument available " I t is time now. to take the Smuckler said a- tested branch of the government. would be tne threat of force or feelings expressed in Washing- theory is needed to effect ad- He said the goals were vague. actual use of it, he said. tor. back to the local level and vances in underdeveloped coun- They ranged from attaining sit- Recent trends have shown a express it by a three-day fast," tries. " W e only have theories uations of security, either politi- concern for planned development Rev. Day said. and ideas to motivate the people cal or military, to situations of with more highly pinpointed tar- The position paper submitted and their economies; we do not economic stability and ver- gets, he said. Nations receiving to Johnson calls for applied pres- have a tested answer," he said. satility, to the establishment of a our aid have been reduced in sure.. to all possible channels of Economic or military invest- world value system with inter- number and the nations whose negotiation, Day said, including ment alone are not the answers, action among states. developments are more im- the United Nations and the he said. We will keep on grop- Smuckler listed instruments portant to the U.S. are receiv- National Liberation Front (the ing for the answer, but when it used in obtaining these goals. ing more aid than others, he said. political arm of the Viet Cong). is found it will be very complex, The first instrument was dip- In the last several years the He said the paper asks that all he said. lomacy, which is a traditional bulk of our aid has been switched obstacles in the way of negotia- Smuckler also felt that our way of doing international bus- from military to non-military, tions be removed, including the present foreign aid . budget is iness, he said, either multilat- Smuckler stated. bombing of North Vietnam. A DELICIOUS DUO! inadequate. He supporteda state- W aid meir owo rded Fulbright fellow ship F Joseph J . Waldmeir, associate professor of English, has been awarded a Fulbright teaching fel- lowship for 1967-6&. Waldmeir AOJLTY will teach American literature to European students at the Uni- ACTS versity of Copenhagen. tne employer oi the most out- BIB BARNEY standing students who participate Robert S. Fogarty of the Dept. in the club's pre-employment of American Thought and Lan- program. This program, spon- guage will present a paper at sored by the Lansing Board the 22nd annual conference on of Education, aids needy high Two griiiee patties of beef, higher education in Chicago school and junior high school creamy melted cfteese, pickle March 6-9. students in findingpart-time jobs and a secret sauce on a toasted Ú H double deck bun. t Its title is ' T h e Good Place or so they will be able to finish No Place: Communication on the their education. Campus." and 22 The club awards the outstand- • •• Forget science fiction. We're talking about the talents and abilities allow. ing working student from each of Mrs. Helen Brasted,' food supervisor, in theUnion cafeteria, was the recipient of the Capital the participating schools a certi- ficate of merit and his employer a plaque. M r s . Brasted and her ONION RINGS "outer limits" of technology. A n d these days it can be even more exciting than science fiction. The result? Greater personal responsibility and recognition; the dual satisfaction of per- I City Civitan Club's DonS.Creyts employes received the awards for Delicious rings of juicy onions in J r . Memorial Award last month. the Pattengill Junior High School bands of crispy crust french sonal achievement and continuing personal R i g h t n o w I B M needs qualified men and C The award is given annually to delegation. fried to a golden glow, perfect plain or with catsup. rewards. A pretty satisfying result. women to help reach these outer limits. The I kind of people w h o have made I B M the leader J o b opportunities at I B M are in six major h THE PIZZA PIT RED in today's fastest-growing major industry: in- areas: Computer Applications, Programming, formation handling and control. A n d the kind Finance and Administration, Research and of people w h o can grow With us as far as their Development, Manufacturing and Marketing. BARN Whatever your immediate commitments, whatever your area of study, sign up now for an on-campus interview with IBM, February 2 3 . 2 4 . For Hot Delivery If, for sonic reason, vou aren't able to arrange an interview, drop us a line. Write to: Manager of College Recruiting, Call: JUST EAST OF THE CAMPUS IBM Corporation, It*) South Hacker Drive, Chicago, Illinois. IBM is an I'tjual Opportunity Kniployer. 203 MAC ED2-0863 y-vima