Frida-,T Cloudy. •. NEWS ' Inside today . . . MICHIGAN . . . w i n d y and c o l d e r t o d a y w i t h c h a n c e of light snow this a f t e r - Spartan w r e s t l e r s N o . I, p . 5 STATE noon, T e m p e r a t u r e in the low Williams o n L B J p o l i c y , p. 6 thirties. Saturday, s n o w y and J a m e s C a r b i n e f e a t u r e , p. 7 colder. UNIVERSITY F e b r u a r y .10, 1967 10c E a s t Wansing, M i c h i g a n V o l . 59 N u m b e r 124 AGAIN THIS YEAR Neville: tuition hike possible Provost Howard E. Neville hinted Hannah said at least $3 million of quested appropriations of any other in- Hannah said, "I suspect more severe. Hannah stressed the necessity of tax Thursday that tuition rates may be i n - the $13 million slash must be restored stitution in the state, and administra- just to maintain present University p r o - reform in his State of the University- creased again this year. tive officials were surprised at such grams. Present programs include built- message and again Thursday. He said Later, President John A. Hannah a d - a large cut. , in increased costs and commitments a l - the 11 state supported college and uni- mitted that a tuition hike is possible, Hannah feels that the slash in a p - ready made, including a r i s e in enroll- versity presidents who met last Friday but added that the Administration has propriations is worse this year than ment, additional faculty members who with Romney agreed that " a s hurt as we not gotten that far in discussing solu- in previous y e a r s . The gap, said Han- tions to its budget problems. have already been hired, and wage in- were, tax reform is of number one p r i o r - nah, is much wider and a partisan a l - creases, as well as higher costs for ity." He also said he did not know what legiance between a Republican legisla- supplies and utilities to operate recent- "Without tax reform now, adequate other possibilities there were for meet- ture and a Republican governor is pos- ly completed classroom and office build- support for education at all levels is ing the problem. sible this year. , ,, ings. just not in the c a r d s , " Hannah said. "Our problem is severe as anyone s, "We will raise tuition only if we have In his State of the University m e s - t o , " Hannah said. sage Wednesday night, Hannah expressed A S K S $3.1 BILLION He also said that room and board confidence that the additional funds would r a t e s should not be increased, since be found, but he said Thursday he did these depend on increased costs in r e s i - not know where they would come from. dence halls, and there has'been no in- Hannah and members of the admini- dication of this. Governor George Romney's proposed budget, which was announced last week, stration will make a formal presenta- tion to the legislature within the next two or three months, but will not change Foreign aid designed cut MSU's requested funds from $72,- the original budget request. "We are now faced with a situation where power- less conscience meets conscienceless power." 295,000 tq $59,404,293, a difference of nearly $13 million. The University will then take what- ever appropriation the legislature makes and will re-appropriate the funds among to prevent 'futu re Viets country - the wealthiest in human his- the various departments and programs. WASHINGTON (/T ~ President John- tory - can well afford to devote less than MSU's recently approved four-year son urged an economy minded Congress seven-tenths of 1 per cent of its national Càrmichael sees ghettos medical school is not affected by the Thursday to provide $3.1 billion for eco- income to reduce the chances of future slash, since it was not included in the nomic and military assistance to 70coun- Vietnams." budget request. tries " t o reduce the chances of future The presidential request for aid funds A supplementary budget for the medi- Vietnams." came within $18 million of the amount cal school is being prepared and will Calling this a minim im contribution he requested last year when Congress be presented to the legislature at a to the security and development of Asian, lopped off $450 million and gave the as black power bloc in 7 2 " T h e only time blacks gain is when later date. Hannah pointed out that the medical school will not be ready for about three years, and that funds needed now for its African and Latin-American countries, the President's foreign aid message said: have " T o do less would endanger all we accomplished in the past two dec- administration $2.9 billion. For the fiscal year starting July 1, the administration asked for $2.53 bil- lion in economic assistance and $596 sympathetic, let them work within their planning should not amount to very much. j ** million in military assistance excluding He loosened his tie, unbuttoned his white people a r e divided. Look what hap- ades. own race to civilize i t . " The real cost, he said, will come with Anticipating congressional opposition, Vietnam, Laos, Thailand and some North collar, clenched his fists, mimicked P r e s - pened during the Civil War," Carmichael hiring a faculty and obtaining laboratory dent Johnson, and denounced integration. Carmichael, founder of the all-Negro Johnson acknowledged that some persons Atlantic Treaty Organization expenses. said. supplies. White House aides said an additional political party Black Panther, said that a want to give up the foreign aid program united minority always rules the majority. He charged that the p r e s s is no longer He said that he suspected that funds because of U.S. domestic needs and costs $242 million is being asked for mili- Stokeley Carmichael, national chairman of the Student Non-violent Co-ordinating "And w e ' r e the largest minority in the able to objectively report racial news, requested for the medical school would of the Vietnam war. tary assistance to Laos and Thailand and Committee (SNCC), Thursday told a n e a r - country," he said. much less analyze it. be granted. "Nothing could be more shortsighted NATO, but this request is being n u d e capacity crowd in the Auditorium, " W e ' r e SNCC's target date for political organ- " T h e i r 'get-whitey' sensationalism MSU received the largest cut in r e - and self-defeating," he asserted'. " T h i s in the regular Defense Department bud- fighting against white supremacy. We're ization is 1'972 "when Bobby will be fight- leads to superficial and misleading defi- get, not in the foreign aid program. not marching to integrate with anyone." ing Hubert and Reason will be fighting nitions of such terms as black power," T h e . Congress was asked to approve When asked why he did not seek white Lindsay." By then SNCC expects that Negro ghettos, wielding the political l e v e r - the SNCC leader said. Carmichael said he just won a case In HINTS TRUCE EXTENSION eight programs over a two-year period instead of on an annual basis. This was sympathy and support, Carmichael r e - age gained in. . ai.J 1904 st&LC r e - Georgia which stated that rioting can r.o bound to spark opposition in both houses plied, "We appeal to our own'people, not longer be a cause for a r r e s t . A specific of Congress. to those in the oppressive camp. If they're apportionment battles, will serve as a black bloc in power politics. charge, such as throwing a brick at a policeman, must be made. This case was never reported by the press, Carmichael Rusk—no bomb halt There was also strong emphasis on i self-help as the major qualification for UJ5. economic assistance. claimed. " I will not ask any American citizen Coed uncovers for photo, He also focused on the difference be- tween institutional racism and individual acts of r a c i s m . Individual -acts, like the unless infiltration stops to contribute his tax dollars to support any country wrtjft? i&i^ -troi irwet this t e s t , " Johnson said. bombing of a Negro church, are not the WASHINGTON F — Secretary of State permament cessation of the bombing of The program also emphasized more concern of SNCC, Carmichael said. "Such Dean Rusk said Thursday theCommunists North Vietnam" without Communist de- cooperation from other countries, along acts a r e deplored by both sides. bares university problem in Vietnam "must not expect u s " to stop escalation. with such institutions as the World Bank, "In Atlanta 500 Negro babies a year die bombing the North while they "continue Rusk noted that President Johnson had International Monetary Fund, the Asian from starvation or lack of medical aid," their military action" invading the South. told Pope Paul VI that the United States Development Bank, the Inter-American GAINESVILLE. Fla. IJf - Prettv Pam Springfield, Va., gets a public hearing ' he said, "that is an act of institutional "We've been trying in every way known is prepared to talk at any time and place Development Bank and the African De- Brewer was a cause celebre on the Uni- . before the committee Friday In the tiny r a c i s m , and nothing meaningful has been to us to invite the other side to talks," but not to reduce^ military action unless velopment Bank. versity of Florida campus Thursday and Board of Regents room, which seats only done about i t . " Rusk tola a news conference. But he r e - the other side will do the same. Officials anticipate aid programs to not just because her 38-25-38 charms 50. Some people benefit politically and eco- ported no positive results so far. both Iran and Cyprus will end in the nomically from the ghettos, and they're Rusk insisted there must be " r e c i p r o c - were displayed nude in an off-campus Rusk's news conference attracted un- next fiscal period and that several other the ones who have the power to change ity." small programs in Africa will be phased humor magazine. " I ' m afraid there's going to be a mob usual attention because it was announced them, he said. "They must not expect us to stop out. She is the center, not only of a full- s c e n e , " said Moor. "Thousands of stu- Wednesday by the White-House. " I t ' s as if a malignant racist force our military action by bombing while they length gatefold picture on a white P e r - dents want to go, but the committee r e - It appeared designed to make an Ameri- had formally made each ghetto from continue their military action by inva- sian rug, but also of a rising controversy fused to move to a bigger room. Some of can response to what Rusk called "a the students told me, 'I'm going to get the same plan. It would be less sion,' he said. over student rights and university con- systematic campaign by the Communist trol. "It could be another Berkeley," said In r e g a r d l e s s . ' " ( p l e a s e t u r n to p a g e I I ) side to bring about an unconditional and In exchange for the possibility of f o r m - less talks, Rusk said, the United States is being asked to take a grave military 900 hopefuls Andy Moor, an editor on the campus risk. newspaper, Alligator. Stan Laughlin, an associate law p r o - f e s s o r , agreed. "The whole area of stu- SNOWBALLS AND GARBAGE Asked to give an idea of the rate of infiltration by the North, Rusk said, arrive today ' T h e r e is some time lag in our infor- dents' relationship to the university has become increasingly sharp in the past few y e a r s - the whole idea of individual Soviet workers jeer Chinese mation on exact n u m b e r s . " But men and trucks continue to move south, he said. And f r o m captured prison - for ADS tests rights and a rule of law. The students are Ten Alumni Distinguished Scholarships concerned." . e r s and other sources rather accurate it blocked the traffic lanes at one of Mos- figures are available. worth $7,000 apiece a r e up for grabs this In Berkeley's case, the movement MOSCOW f - Thousands of jeering The black Volga sedan in which the cow's busiest places. weekend and next. started in 1964 and a year, later crystal-, Russians swarmed around Chinese dip- highest-ranking diplomats sat was s u r - But there is nothing to indicate the rounded. Russian faces glared in from The Chinese car continued its stop- T h i s year, for the first time, every ized on a specific case as unlikely as a lomats yesterday in Moscow's biggest infiltration has stopped, he added. state in the union will be represented by nude picture: the right to use f o u r - and wildest show of anti-Peking hostil- all sides amid anti-Mao shouts. Police, and-go tactics while police kept urging To the Communists, he proposed: "Let pushing and shoving roughly, cleared a the driver to get away. the high school seniors who come to letter words. ity. good sense take charge for all of u s . " Michigan State hoping to beat the 180 Miss Brewer, who got her parents' Many three snowballs and garbage at path. But the Chinese driver hesitated Finally, after a U-shaped police line Rusk said P r i m e Minister Nguyen Cao again and again. held the surging crowd, the Chinese drove to 1 odds and win one of the ADS scholar- permission, posed for the picture knowing the Chinese at Yaroslav railway station Ky of South Vietnam had indicated a will- ships. that it probably would make her a-public and later shouted abuse of Mao and Chi- Finally the c a r , followed by the buses, off. The crowd, with some people shaking ingness to discuss an extension of the Inched down the alley and got onto the Floyd Kirk from Aiea, Hawaii, Susan figure in more w a i s than one. na as the diplomats sat impassively In- their fists, gave them one last hostile current four-da v c e a s e - f i r e . main street in front. People milling about Salo from Mount Edgecumbe, Alaska, Kev- The coed whose uncovered form was side their car, its windows closed. roar. in O'Brien from Frankfurt, Germany, Rob- displayed In the previous issue was put The Chinese diplomats w e r e at the ert Kushler from Warwickshire, England, on probation by the faculty disciplinary station to see off another group of stu- and more than 900 other candidates will committee. An editorial in the magazine dents being sent home from study abroad be tested this weekend. said it would challenge any charges made to take part in Mao Tse-tung's " g r e a t Another 900 students will compete next against h e r . cultural revolution." . weekend. Pam, an 18-year-old sophomore from The majority of the candidates a re final- The -riotous scene lasted 30 minutes ists in the annual National Merit Scholar- and blocked traffic in Komsomolskaya ship competition. Others were chosen on Square before the Chinese drove away. the basis of test scores and academic O f f i c e r s elected The new ugly mood toward the Chi- nese was evident at the railway station records. Nearly half some from Michigan. Each year it is hoped that a number of even before the trouble started. those who . don't quite make the ADS cut- b y IFC for '67- 6 8 Thousands of whistling and shouting Russians were jammed behind policemen off will decide to come to Michigan State anyway. Dormitory contacts with MSU Interfraternity Council elected new of- standing shoulder to shoulder to keep them students and Friday afternoon meetings f i c e r s for 1967-68 Wednesday. off the platform for the Moscow-Peking with faculty members are intended to pro- Elected president and IFC representa- express. Another crowd was gathered in vide the high school seniors with informa- tive to the ASMSU Student Board was E . front of the station around a statue of tion that will persuade them to enroll here. Richard Herrold, Harrisburg, Pa..junior. Lenin. At 2 p.m. Friday they will gather in the Herrold, o f j a u Delta Phi fraternity, will Auditorium for a short meeting at which assume office spring t e r m , Charle» W. Curry, associate director of The diplomats, who had smiled bland- Other officers include: Bruce Dove,vice admissions and scholarships, will explain ly on the railway platform when Rus- president; Allan Wechsler,administrative the weekend's activities. sians three snowballs and refuse at them, vice president; Arthur Lefco, secretary; The candidates will then split into groups seemed to aggravate the new incident. Michael Katz, t r e a s u r e r , and Alan Rose, according to academic interests, and spend member-at-large. As the Chinese diplomats started to- an hour -a nd -a -ha If with faculty members Herrold succeeds L a r r y Owen as p r e s - ident of IFC and delegate to the student ward their c a r s and buses, parked in a nearby alley, they stopped for over a Sacrificial meal protests war and honor students from the University's various colleges. board. He is the second new ASMSU r e p - minute In front of the massed Russians N e a r l y 100 s t u d e n t s and E a s t L a n s i n g r e s i d e n t s s t a r t a t h r e e - d a y f a s t in p r o t e s t of t h e V i e t n a m w a r A candlelight dinner in the Fee Hall resentative to be elected this t e r m . The and smiled at the din of derision. This apparently Infuriated the crowd, which w i t h a " s a c r i f i c i a l m e a l " of r i c e a n d t e a . T h e m e a l was s e r v e d at t h e W e s l e y F o u n d a t i o n W e d n e s d a y ( p l e a s e t u r n to page I 1 ) first new board member was Susan Comer- Ferrante then poured down around the vehicles night a n d w a s f o l l o w e d by p e r i o d of pn r oa vy ee rr . State News Photo by T o n y ford, Pan-Hellenic Council. STATI NEWS Ky(e C. -K'cCòtcnry editor-in-chlef E r i c Pianiti, managing «Mtor Jamfes Spanidlo, campus editor Thomas Segal, editorial editor Lawrence Werner, s p o r t s editor Andrew Mollison, executive r e p o r t e r Joel Stark William G. Papclak, a s s t . ad manager Friday Morning, February 10, 1967 advertising manager Dw/o EDITORIALS Editorial freedom in danger at U-M The soon - to - be - i m - both inside and outside the trol of the paper technically Changes in the paper's plemented investigation of university community. r e s t s with the university. On circulation or business The Michigan Daily demon- a professional daily paper, operations could well be ini- strates once again one of the the publisher is the strict tiated by The Daily's Campus coverage most s e r i o u s problems of boss. Board of Control. Outside ,on-campus student publica- Others predict a more n o n - p r o f e s s i o n a l s know very tions. basic review. Many feel they little about the operation of a Free press The U-M Board of Control cannot rely on The Daily for newspaper. They should let of Student Publications asked coverage of campus news. those who are r e s p o n s i b l e At a university with over But the idea and tradition Mo.id ay for a review by an and have the knowledge--the 30,000 students, The Daily behind The Daily demands "outside" group of The editors and the Board of Con- has a circulation of only operational freedom for the Daily's general structure trol--Tun the paper. 8,100. Newly arisen techni- student staff. The paper is to and relationship to the uni- exemplify and teach the value The potential l o s s of e d i - versity. The group will be cal problems have led s o m e , torial f r e e d o m and o p e r - including staff m e m b e r s , to of a f r e e p r e s s . It i s not selected from the university meant to be an arm of the ational integrity which would community. call for p r o f e s s i o n a l advice result from the proposed in- to help solve these problems. university. The purpose of the review vestigation i s much g r e a t e r Maintaining that n e c e s - is unclear. Some feel that in Inherent in the contro- than any p o s s i b l e gain. sary freedom demands that I'm on probation again. the end it will result in r e - versy is the traditional con- - - T h e Editors the university keep its hands strictions on The Daily's flict of a f r e e p r e s s vs. uni- off the controls. The initia- NEWS ANALYSIS editorial freedom. The Dai- versity control. tive for a study like,.the one ly has published s e v e r a l Because The Daily's pub- proposed should c o m e from signed editorials and s t o r i e s lisher is a university group, which have drawn fire from legal and professional con- within The Daily's staff. If outside studies are to be made, then they should r e - Hanoi will talk if bombing stops EDITOR'S NOTE — Wilfred States could enter into t a l k s " — is believed While 1 believe the overwhelming m a - sult in recommendations and B u r c h e t t , an A u s t r a l i a n Com- by the North Vietnamese to be up to Wash- jority of Vietnamese a r e ready to accept not in o r d e r s . ington. all s o r t s of s a c r i f i c e s and fight as long $50 for CC seat munist writer, has f r e q u e n t l y been a s p o k e s m a n for the C o m - In talks to the Vietnamese following the a s leaders consider necessary, there is m u n i s t s in v a r i o u s s i t u a t i o n s i n T r l n h Interview and seeking clarification, also a tremendous yearning for peace, E a s t B e r l i n , K o r e a and V i e t n a m . 1 was told: reuniting with evacuated families and a " P r e s i d e n t Johnson said he was ready r e t u r n to normal life which a terribly Faculty Intrusion He has t r a v e l e d f r e q u e n t l y in smart investment The intrusion of faculty N o r t h V i e t n a m a n d h a s just r e - t u r n e d f r o m t h e r e to C a m b o d i a . He w r o t e the f o l l o w i n g article to go anywhere any time and do anything to end the w a r . It's up to the United States to act now. The United States mustprovlde high proportion of Vietnamese have not known for almost a quarter of a century. But the almost universal reaction I found, its good will in the a f f a i r . a f t e r the f i r s t excited discussion of the In inviting ASMSU to join East Lansing p r i c e s will now power, whether intended to f o r The Associated P r e s s when news, was " I t ' s up to Washington now. "If bombings cease completely, good and the Chamber of C o m m e r c e , drop to what students might or not, could quite e a s i l y a s k e d if he c o u l d c l a r i f y w h e t h e r favorable conditions will be created f o r the What will Johnson s a y ? " the Chamber has d e m - consider reasonable l e v e l s . H a n o i is r e a d y f o r t a l k s a n d u n d e r talks. Halt the bombings, come and talk. President Johnson's " I s e e no sign" t r e s p a s s upon The Daily's L e t ' s see what can be done next. President what conditions. This article statement was received in Hanoi glumly onstrated its avowed d e s i r e P r i c e s might not drop at traditional f r e e d o m of o p e r - Johnson said he was only awaiting a sign. or with an exultant " I told you s o " r e - gives a Communist view and to s e e students and m e r - all, but communications on ation; o r d e r s would be an should be read in t h a t light. Well, he's had the s i e n . " action, according to whom one spokewith, When 1 asked why a move was not made so f a r as the general public reaction was chants get along. the subject should be i m - obvious infringement. T h e A s s o c i a t e d P r e s s has been e a r l i e r — and i t ' s open knowledge that a concerned. t r y i n g f o r y e a r s t o get i t s o w n number of Socialist bloc countries w e r e proved. There are no doubt On the qeustion of whether Hanoi is ASMSU, like the nearly c o r r e s p o n d e n t into N o r t h V i e t - urging such a move over a year ago — I p r e p a r e d to offer anything in exchange for innumerable specific situa- n a m but h a s b e e n u n a b l e t o o b - was told that if talks w e r e offered a year 200 other individuals and a cessation of. bombings,. I was told o f - Outlook tions in which a student r e p - tain a visa f r o m Hanoi. ago the United States would have taken this ficially: m e m b e r s represented in the as a sfgn of weakness and bombings would The Democratic Republic of Vietnam resentative, working c l o s e l y have been intensified. organization, would pay $50 By W I L F R E D BURCHETT is a sovereign state. Bombings, a r e a with other C o m m e r c e m e m - " E v e n now," one Vietnamese said, violation of this sovereignty. They must to a s s u m e full voting m e m - PHNOM PENH, Cambodia P) — Hanoi "Washington hawks probably think they c e a s e . This is not a matter for bargaining. b e r s , could be of benefit to is ready to sit down with the United bership on behalf of the have got us on the run and will urge We have nothing to offer in exchange." both students and merchants. States to hold preliminary talks to explore escalated bombings. But we a r e ready for Except, It was added jocularly, "If the iptudent body. An ex officio what steps can be taken to end the w a r that. In fact, our offers a r e made f r o m a Americans c e a s e sending their planes,w§ (non-voting) seat on the 17 The important point i s that In Vietnam. They a r e also p r e p a r e d to position of strength, not weakness: We cease firing at them, shooting them down, receive President Johnson in the North withstood two y e a r s of heavy bombings. cease killing or capturing their p i l o t s . " member board of d i r e c t o r s another line of communica- Vietnamese capital if this will facilitate Our lives w e r e reorganized on the basis It has been made clear to me on several is also open to ASMSU. tion between students and ending the w a r . of an expected continuance and the e s - previous occasions that Hanoi will never The basic conditions a r e that bombings calation of bombings. agree to talks while bombing is continued Though the invitation came the town has been proposed. of North Vietnam and " o t h e r acts of w a r " " I n the South, with 400,000 men, Wash- nor even during a temporary cessation mainly as a result of the With relations as they are Six d i s t i n g u i s h e d f a c u l t y m e m - against North Vietnam, such a s coastal ington is unable to improve the military because the implication would be if the b e r s a r e n a m e d , none o f w h o m shelling, be permanently halted. situation. The aim of bombings was to cut current concern over prices now, e v e r y such line should The next move — following Foreign Min- talks took place during a temporary c e s - a r e i n t h e C o l l e g e of A g r i c u l t u r e . our communications, make life unbearably sation that the United States would use in East Lansing, it would not be opened. T h e e n t r o p y c r o p was d a m a g e d i s t e r Nguyen Duy T r i n h ' s declaration to m e difficult and reduce our will to struggle. the threat of a resumption of bombings be r e a l i s t i c to expect that that if the bombings stopped " t h e Demo- In fact, none of these things have come as a bargaining point. - - T h e Editors by frost. c r a t i c Republic of Vietnam and the United about. We a r e much stronger today than This is unacceptable. " a year ago." According to diplomatic c i r c l e s in Han- In talks with President Ho Chi Minh, oi, there is another fundamental reason OUR R E A D E R S ' MINDS P r e m i e r phan Van Dong, Defense Minister Vo Nguyen Ciap'and many other l e a d e r s , why Hanoi demands an unconditional end to bombardments before talks can s t a r t . It is I found them m o r e confident than a year a s s e r t e d this Is also the reason for a ago that they could c a r r y on indefinitely. Give us some stout-heabed men p h r a s e in the foreign m i n i s t e r ' s reply to In general, they explained the confident my third question: " T h e United States has mood was because life had settled down shown an utmost obduracy and p e r f i d y " a f t e r two y e a r s of bombing. As Pham Van on the question of talks. To the Editor: means, but older even than the university Dong expressed it, "1966 has been a year According to these s o u r c e s , two p r e - is what you a r e saying. Mister Editor, lenge.of the f r a t e r n i t i e s . We need men who of trial, of big escalation bombing but also vious attempts to a r r a n g e f i r s t contacts Recently you printed an editorial call- system Itself. I ask yaurDaes this sound you have said nothing. If you really mean will live the life of love, man who will like the babblings of an immature o r i r - of increased agricultural and industrial f o r talks were foiled in the f i r s t place by ing for more mature and responsible you think the fraternity system Is i r - walk in the way of honor, and men who production. We know we can withstand responsible system? Perhaps some of the the start of systematic bombing of North f r a t e r n i t i e s . To say some students a r e responsible, you a r e mlstakenl We do not will s e r v e in the light of truth. anything now." men in the fraternity system a r e i m - Vietnam in February of 1965 and secondly immature or irresponsible is not a very need a m o r e responsible o r mature s y s - No, Mister E d i t o r , the need is not f o r mature o r irresponsible, but then so a r e I could find no foreign resident in Hanoi by the bombings of Hanoi last Dec. 13-14. staggering assertion. One need only look t e m , (I doubt if there could be one), f r a t e r n i t i e s to mature and to become m o r e some of the men in every organization of or any foreign visitor who found any signs Both events a r e said to have coincided at the " o v e r d u e " list at the library o r t h e but more responsible, m o r e m a t u r e , and responsible, but f o r men in general to do any size on the face of the earth. If this of weakening m o r a l e among the Viet- within days of concrete arrangements for Olin list of broken bones during the more generous men to answer the chal- so. The challenge of the fraternity system namese, and that certainly is my own i m - contacts. If this is so, it explains also snowstorm to see this manifested. How- is to lead the way. p r e s s i o n a f t e r hundreds of conversations, why f e e l e r s were thrown out for President ever, to say fraternities a r e immature T e r r y A. Hagan including those with residents in the most Johnson to visit Hanoi, and why I was o r irresponsible is, I think, a gross o v e r - E a s t Lansing, senior heavily bombed a r e a s . told: " L e t them come and t a l k , " generalization and indicative of a lack of understanding. UC students in fix The ideals, the standards, and the A & W CAR WASH unable to pay an additional $400 and not • Reminder • challenges of a social fraternity a r e To the Editor: quite superior enough to receive a scholar- perhaps the most mature concepts on the I would like to comment on a column ship. This student is well on his way to American campus today. For example, written by Dennis Chase. He failed to a c a r e e r — t h e r e is very little chance of his let me sight an excerpt from the creed of the Sigma Nu fraternity: point out that the main case against California Governor Ronald Reagan has to dropping out of school—and would someday take his place In society as an educated lasiAincj,'¿> ervlcei Idtng. Mchignn! l a t e I ' n l v e r a i t y . for the National Aeronautics and Action could come f i r s t , how- han said that If the situation E a s t La i. Mich. structure. until the manifesto containing it b e s i d e M a o ' s p o r t r a i t p a i n t e d out i n t h e p r i n t ; a n d Space Administration said, "and ever, from the AFL-CIO Execu- worsened Governor Romney . 35S-B252 probably have a read-out of the Its 1.4 million making up the is received there; that there N o . 3, s o m e c r u d e r e t o u c h i n g b r u s h m a r k s o v e r Editorial tive Council. It meets next week might be asked to provide Na- Claaalfled Advertising . . 365-S25S f i r s t partial f r a m e the same largest union within the 13.5mil- would be no comment on p r e s s p o s t e r s on t h e r o s t r u m d i s p l a y . Display A d v e r t i s i n g . . . 353-6400 in Miami Beach. tional Guard help. Ruslness - Circulation 355-0299 day." lion member federation, theUA\V r e p o r t s of It. Photo from an o f f i c i a l Communist source via UPI Thomas emphasized that the Photographic 355-W11 Telephoto NOTICE TO M l STUDENTS Academic Advising/Enrollment, and Registration For 1967 NO-PREFERENCE Spring Term UNIVERSITY COLLEGE COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURE COLLEGE OF COMMUNICATION ARTS GENERAL INSTRUCTIONS FROM Have you seen your adviser? Agricultural Business, Feb. 6-7-8, By Appointment. Department Of Advertising Students will see their advisers for pre-enrollment by ap- Students who do not confer with advisers must assume full THE REGISTRAR Agricultural Communications, Feb. 8-9 - 8:00-5:00. responsibility for their p r o g r a m s . Agricultural Economics, Feb. 14 - 8:00-5:00. pointment during the period from February 6 through 15. During the period February 1-3, obtain a 1967 Spring term Appointments for definite time during this period must be Each N o - P r e f e r e n c e student should have received an invitation Agricultural Education, Freshmen - Feb. 7- 9:00-3:00; Soph- T i m e Schedule For C o u r s e s and a Student Schedule Card made by visiting the departmental office in Room 204 J o u r - •to come to his advisement center for p r o g r a m planning for omore - Feb. 8. - 9:00-4:00, Feb. 9 - 9:00-3:00; Junior - . (available to dormitory residents in their residence nalism Building or by calling 355-2314. Feb. 6 - 8:00-3:00, Feb. 13 - 1:00-5:00; Senior - Feb. 3 - spring t e r m . hall on Wednesday, F e b r u a r y 1; and to other students in 4:00-5:00, Feb.,8 - 8:00-5:00. Department Of Communication the f i r s t - f l o o r concourse of the Union Building, and the Student residents of Case-Wilson-Wonders should go to S-33 Agricultural Efl||neering, Feb. 6 Through 10. Advising for Spring T e r m will be conducted during regular Center for International P r o g r a m s , on T h u r s d a y - F r i d a y , Wonders; residents of the Brody complex to 109 Brody; r e s - Animal Husbandry, Feb. 8 Through 16 - By Appointment F e b r u a r y 2-3, during the hours 8 a . m . - 5 p.m.). office hours f r o m February 6 through 10. Students should idents of East Campus to G-36 Hubbard; and all others including Biochemistry, Feb. 1 Through 16. A summary of what to do — where, when. . .concerning make individual appointments to see their advisers by calling off-campus students, residents of Abbot, Mason, Phillips, Crbp Science, Feb. 9 -10. the enrollment and registration procedure for Spring term 355-3470 or by visiting Room 545 South Kedzie Hall, the new Shaw, Snyder, and the West C i r c l e Halls to 170 Ernst Bessey. is outlined in the 1967 Spring t e r m Time Schedule For C o u r s e s . Dairy, Feb. 15 - 8:00-4:00, Feb. 16 - 8:00-5:00. location of the departmental offices. If your Student Academic P r o g r e s s Plan (or similar plan- Extension Personnel Development, Feb. 1 3 - 1 4 - 1 5 - 8:00-5:00. F i s h e r i e s And Wildlife, Feb. 7 Through 10, By Appointment School Of Journalism Students enrolling in evening classes only may confer with an ning f o r m that may be used in your college) needs updating, Students will see their advisers for pre-enrollment by ap- adviser by telephone (355-3515). ^ see your academic adviser according to the arrangement with Adviser. pointment during the period from February 6 through February in your college (and possibly department) as outlined below: Food Science (New Building-Room 234B), Feb. 7 - 8 - 9 - 8:00- 15. Appointments for a definite time during this period must NOTE special drop-add period Monday evening for students 5:00. be made by visiting the departmental office in Room 204 ' who must repeat a c o u r s e taken winter t e r m . COLLEGE OF ARTS AND LETTERS F o r e s t Products, F e b . 7 Through 10. Journalism Building or by calling 355-2314. All Students in the College -of Arts and L e t t e r s , except F o r e s t r y , Feb. 8 - 8:00-5:00 & 7:00-10:00 P.M., Feb. 9 - Art Majors, should see their academic a d v i s e r s during Department Of Speech COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING 8:00-5:00. Horticulture, Feb. 9-10. Appointments f o r academic advising may be made from Feb- their office hours on Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday, Each Engineering student should have received advisement Packaging. Freshmen & Sophomores - Feb. 10; Juniors - Feo. ruary 1 through 6 by telephoning 355-6690 or by stopping in February 13, 14 and 15. Advisers will be in their offices instructions f r o m his academic adviser. Those who have not . 8 & 9; Seniors - Feb. 6 & 7; Graduates - Feb. 13. person at the Speech department office, Room 149 Auditorium. at least one hour each afternoon and morning of these three received instruction's should contact their academic adviser Advising will take place from February 6 through 10 by ap- days. Check. with department offices for the hours of indi- Poultry Science, Feb. 1 Through 16. immediately. pointment only. vidual a d v i s e r s . Make an appointment to minimize waiting Resource Development, Feb. 13 - 8:00-12:00, Feb. 14 - in line or if you cannot come at the hours scheduled. You 1:00-5:00, Feb. 15 - 8:00-12:00. Department Of Television-Radio COLLEGE OF EDUCATION may also see your adviser before these dates during his Soil Science, Feb. 6 Through 9. Students will see their advisers for pre-enrollment on the . regular office hours or by appointment. evenings of February 14 and 15 from 7:00 to 10:00 p . m . Advisement Center Bring with you a trial program! COLLEGE OF VETERINARY MEDICINE on the following alphabetical schedule: A through M, Feb- Undergraduates assigned to the advisement Center should not Art m a j o r s and minors should see their a r t advisers on r u a r y 14; N through Z, February 15. Please note that the make an appointment with their advisor unless they a r e in need Monday, February 13. All a r t c l a s s e s will be dismissed Preveterinary department has a new address, Room 2122 of tthe MSU Union of special assistance. All new f r e s h m e n and t r a n s f e r -students on that day and advisers will be in their offices f r o m 8-12 Building, and report there for advising. should have made an appointment prior to pre-enrollment for All students enrolled in the regular and upper level special the purpose of planning their program for the entire year. All and 1-4. preveterinary programs should check with their academic COLLEGE OF HOME ECONOMICS students may, however, see their advisors if additional.help is COLLEGE OF BUSINESS adviser and, if necessary, schedule an appointment. Students In the College of Home Economics a r e requested desired. , . to make appointments with academic advisers if assistance Those students wishing to make an appointment with tneir All students, including graduate students, should see their a d v i s e r s during regular office hours. Academic aavising is a Veterinary is needed in planning spring term course schedules. If advisor should contact the receptionist in 134 Erickson Hall (1) Students enrolling in T e r m s 1 or 3 (new curriculum) plans have been approved by advisers and students a r e in continuing p r o c e s s in which a student and a faculty member either in person or by phoning 355-1900. The receptionist will should make an appointment with their academic ad- good standing, it will not be necessary to see advisers. All discuss possible options in a student's potential c a r e e r , total make all appointments for the following advisors: M r s . Blandlng, viser (Room 178 Giltner Hall). students on academic probation, however, should counsel education p r o g r a m , and chosen m a j o r . Enrollment is a sfudent M r s . Cobb, M r s . Follette, M r s . Hedeman, M r s . Linton, M r s . with advisers before pre-enrolling. Appointment schedules responsibility in selecting courses for a term schedule from a (2) Students enrolling in T e r m s 5, 7, or 9 (new curriculum) Nutter, and M r s . Wainright. Advisees of Dr. Harding should beginning February 1 - 15 have been posted outside the office student's academic plan previously developed but continually will be " m a s s - e n r o l l e d " by the Dean's Office. Students contact Miss Guthrie at 355-1902. door of each academic adviser for the convenience of students. reviewed with the adviser. Electives should be reviewed and not wishing to be included in " m a s s - e n r o l l m e n t " must approved periodically by the adviser. General electives tanen notify the Dean's Office by February 6. JUSTIN MORRILL COLLEGE Undergraduate Faculty Advisers (3) Seniors (old curriculum) will not be " m a s s - e n r o l l e d . " 1. During the week of February 6-10, students should contact during the Junior and Senior y e a r s should be primarily at the Faculty advisors for undergraduates in Industrial Arts, 300-400 level. The required upper level Economics electives Medical Technology ' their academic advisers to plan a program for Spring T e r m . Elementary Education, Special Education, and Health, Physical a r e often used as a supplement to the student's major r e q u i r e - 2. After the adviser has approved the program, the student Education and Recreation will observe normal office hours All student come to Room 179 Giltner Hall to schedule ments and should be selected in consultation with the adviser should present to the Office of Student Affairs, 135 Snyder f r o m February 1 to February 15. Students needing assistance or f r o m an approved departmental list in the m a j o r depart- appointment with adviser. Hall, two copies of his program according to the following in program planning may a r r a n g e advisement appointments ment. All students in the College of Business a r e responsible schedule: during this time. f o r studying and k n o w i n g University, College, and Departmental Graduate a. Monday Feb. 13 1:00-5:00 p.m. A-J requirements as stated in the MSU Catalog. Meet with m a j o r p r o f e s s o r . b. Tuesday Feb. 14 1:00-5:00p.m. K-R Graduate Advisement Juniors and Seniors should conform to catalog requirements c. Wednesday Feb. 15 1:00-5:00 p.m. S-Z and to the additional College policies c a r r i e d in a statement Graduate students in Education a r e encouraged to enroll early. COLLEGE OF SOCIAL SCIENCE COLLEGE OF NATURAL SCIENCE Instructions a r e contained in a letter distributed from the mailed to all upper level students just p r i o r to the opening of Labor & Industrial Relations - All m a j o r s should see their Graduate Student Affairs Office. Special enrollment a r r a n g e - Fall term (A copy of this statement is available in 313 Berkey Group L Hain Upper level students in the College of Business (1) a d v i s e r s Friday, Feb. 17, between 9:00 and 5:00. ments a r e provided for graduate students f r o m 6:30 to 8:30 Social Science - Office hours of the advisers a r e posted in Those sttfaents who have planned previously a Spring T e r m should not repeat " D " grades, (2) should not exceed the 12 p . m . Monday February 13, through Thursday, February 16, 245 Fee Hall. p r o g r a m wfth their academic adviser and do not intend to credit repeat limit, (3) should not schedule excess credits, in room 252 Erickson Hall. (4) should not take graduate c o u r s e s , (5) should not request Anthropology-No special instructions. change it a r e to use the following procedure. (Physics and permission to drop courses a f t e r the official midterm date Geography - Students will be notified. If you do not receive mathematics m a j o r s see Group 2) except for catastrophic r e a s o n s , and normally should not r e - a letter, please call the Department, 5-4650. 1. Enroll for Spring term in the Men's Intramural Building quest permission to drop courses a f t e r the f r e e drop period Political Science - Feb. 15 or 16 any major who wishes during the period February 16 - 2 2 . A student schedule c a r d to identify the sections wanted should be completed COUNSELING CENTER provided at the beginning of the t e r m . The Office of Assistant to see his adviser should call the Department Office, 355- Dean is responsible for enforcing such policies and may 6591, to make appointment. before going to the Men's Intramural Building. Changes Of Major For • enforce them by the use of Dean's Drops, withdrawal of Col- 2. Pay fees and complete the registration p r o c e s s in either Psychology-Office hours of the advisers will be posted on of two periods:- March 13 - 17 or the regular registration University College Students lege registrations, specific request r e f u s a l s , and other means t h - bulletin boards a c r o s s f r o m 109 Olds Hall. not popular with students who do not conform to clearly Sociology-Students will be notified by mail. If you wish to period at the start of the Spring term - MaUch 27 - 28. (Freshmen and Sophomores). stated College of Business policies. see your adviser for early enrollment, their hours a r e as Group II a . ... J Those students who must confer with their academic adviser Changes of major may be initiated at the Counseling Center. Seniors, starting their senior y e a r , should submit an adviser- approved student academic p r o g r e s s plan for the Assistant Dr!°Conner - Feb. 13, 14, & 15,. 10:00-12:00 and 3:00-5:00. before enrollment (ALL PHYSICS MAJORS and MATHEMATICS 207 Student Services Building, from 1:00 to 5:00 p.m. Monday Dean's file. This plan should clearly show how the student D r . Hoffer - Feb. 13, 14, & 15. 10:00-11:30 and 3:00-4:30. MAJORS a r e strongly advised to review their programs with through Friday. D r . Hundley - Feb. 13 & 14, 9:00-12:00and Feb. 15, 1:00-4:00. their advisers each term) a r e to use the following procedure. For the convenience of students the Counseling Center has plans to meet his graduation target with all course requirements m e t . Seniors may leave their senior year academic progress Dr. T r o u t - Feb. 13, 14. & 15, 1:30-4:30. 1. During the period February 6 thru February 15, a time to made arrangements to have staff available to write changes of plans with their advisers for transmission to the Assistant s e e your academic adviser is to be r e s e r v e d by signing m a j o r for those living in the Brody, South Campus and East Police Administration and Public Safety-Students who have Dean's Office or bring them to the Office personally. First the appointment form posted on the academic a d v i s e r ' s Complexes in their respective C o u n s e l i n g Offices as follows: not had their programs planned for the Spring t e r m should t e r m seniors a r e encouraged to make appointments during office door. This is to be done as early as possible, BRODY COUNSELING OFFICE - Room 109; 3:00 -d:00 p.m. report to Room 412 Olds Hall on Feb. 13, 14, or 15. Monday through Friday. the forthcoming term with M r . Mier or Mr. M o r r i s in 313 preferably in the period February 1 thru February 10. Social Work-Students will be notified. If you do not receive Berkey Hall (5-7605-Assistant Dean's Office) to discuss their a letter, please call the School, 5-7517. 2. The conference with the academic adviser is to occur in WONDERS COUNSELING OFFICE-Room S-33; 3:00-5:00p.m. Urban Planning - Students should see their advisers as Monday through Friday. senior year academic p r o g r e s s plans and their graduation the period February 6 thru February 15. r e q u i r e m e n t s . A senior is certified for graduation by his major 3. Enroll for Spring term in the Men's Intramural Building HUBBARD COUNSELING OFFICE -G.36C; 10:00-12:00 a.m. adviser and by the Office of Assistant Dean. While the student M r ^ B a r r - Feb. 16, 9:00-12:00 & 1:30-5:00; Feb. 17, 2:00- 5:00. during the period February 1 6 - 2 2 . A student schedule Monday through Friday is responsible for knowing and meeting all graduation r e q u i r e - Mr". F a r n e s s - Feb. 16 & 17, 1:00-5:00. c a r d to identify the sections wanted should be completed 3:00-5:00 p.m. January 30 ments Mr. Mier or Mr. M o r r i s a r e available to help, in M r . Honey-Feb. 16, 1:00-4:00; and Feb. 17 * 20, 9:00-12.00. before going to the Men's Intramural Building. through February 17. addition to the student's adviser, in interpreting requirements Mr. Krueckeberg-Feb. 20, 1:30-5:00; and Feb. 21. 9:00-1:00. 4. Pay f e e s and complete the registration process in either and handling senior year scheduling problems. If no plan is Changes of m a j o r to be effective for Spring T e r m must be Landscape Architecture-Majors will see their a d v i s e r s during of two periods: March 13 - 17 or the regular registration submitted it is assumed that the student will graduate at an made prior to Registration f o r Spring T e r m . regular office hours which a r e posted outside the adviser s period at the start of the Spring term - March 27 - 28. indefinite future date when all requirements a r e met. office door. SPORTS 4 Michigan State News, East Lansing. Michigan Friday. February 10. 1 96 7 Ai S U Relays: ' ' now topxjffrueíiori events for their upcoming c o n - "Kids a r e more serious about be going for the meet and field- come from Oscar Moore of South- "Running against Ryun Is like lower time£ already this year. 1,000-yard run and Richard Dunn By N O R M S A A R I house record of 9:01.4. ern Illinois, a 29-year-old soph- something you get to tell your In individual field events, Spar- in the 600 for other individual ference season," Dittrich said. track now. Practice is more in- State News Sports W r i t e r tensive, and there is just bound "I'd like to break 8:50 in this omore. grandchildren." Stanley said. tan entries include DonCrawford entries. § "In the last ten years, though, it has developed into a t e r r i f i c to be improvement." 'meet," Sharkey said. "A lot ''It will be an honor to run with in the long jump; Roland C a r t e r , MSU teams will also be entered The story of the 44th Annual will depend on how I feel and what MSU s entry Tn the r a c e of him. He should win the race, in the distance medley and two- meet. T i m e s have been going Both Dittrich and his a s s i s t - Jim Steward and John Wilcox in MSli Relays, to be held Saturday, time I get for the f i r s t mile. If the evening," the o n e - m i ^ r u n , but not by much." mile relays. down and will continue to, but this ant, Jim Gibbard, feel this " n a t - the pole vault; Joe Auffrey and is one^of " p r o g r e s s , " according I run the f i r s t one in anywhere will be sophomore Dale Stanley, Field events and preliminaries is the way It should be. It shows ural development" will continue, Dennis Lamb in the shot put, to MSU Track Coach and meet from 4:15 to 4:20, I could break who ran a c a r e e r best of 4:19.6 The sprint medley and mile will start at 1:30 p.m. and finals that we a r e making p r o g r e s s . " and say it will take a meet r e c - and Allan Miabach and Mike Bow- director Fran Dittrich. the r e c o r d . " last weekend. He will be r u n - relay teams could set new r e c - will begin at 6:30. Students will Dittrich, who has been a s s o c i - ord to win every event this Satur- e r s in the high jump. "There was one« a time when His big competition should ning against Jim Ryun. ords, a s they both have run Mike Mirtens is entered in the need their ID card for admission. the relays was an early season ated with the meet for the past day except maybe in the shotput. meet for coaches to experiment 31 years, notes t h i s a s a "natural The Spartan track team could and place men In their proper development." play a major role In re-WTiting the meet records, as they have two defending champs — Gene MIKKOLA LEADING SCORER Washington in the 70-yard high and low hurdles and Jim Sum- m e r s in the 60-yard dash — competing, three relay teams that could break records and a strong delegation of individual entries. Skaters face U-M roadblock By JOE M I T C H points last weekend in helping the line, with Wayne Duffett and Nino quire sitting out the remainder certain who will be the goal Washington has won both the high and low hurdles for the S t a t e N e w s S p o r t s W r i te r Spartans sweep a two-game Cristofoli manning the wings. of the game in which the penalty tender Saturday. past two years, holding the meet s e r i e s from Minnesota, 6-4 and The Spartans will be at a d i s - is assessed and the next. Cooley was credited with both r e c o r d s of 0:07.9 in the lows MSU's hockey team runs into 6-3. advantage for the first game of victories against Minnesota. He Coach Amo Bessone said he and 0:08.5 in the highs. Charles Western Collegiate HockeyAssn. Behind Mikkola, the Spartan the s e r i e s as junior Doug French, stopped 30 shots the first night will d r e s s an extra defenseman Pollard and Steve Derby are other (WCHA) leader Michigan this skaters have two others with 20 a s t a r t e r on defense all season, and 41 the next. for Friday night—John Shuster. MSU runners competing in the weekend, with a former doubtful points or more this season to pose will sit it out. He was given a For the season, Cooley has a hurdles. s t a r t e r now leading the way.J as top threats to Michigan. Vol- spearing disqualification penalty Gaye Cooley will start in 4.7 goals - against - average, This trio and Bob Steele will The Spartans face the Wolver- mar is second with 24 points on in last Saturday's game against the nets for the Spartans Friday giving up 65 goals in 13.7 games be entering the 240-yard shuttle ines in an away-home series,' 17 goals and seven assists, while Minnesota, and WCHA r u l e s r e - night. Bessone said he is not played. He has made 477 saves. hurdle relay, an event won last playing at Ann Arbor tonight and Sandy McAndrew is third with 10 goals and 13 a s s i s t s . MSU Relay Runners year by MSU with a record time of 0:28.8. Washington and Steele in the Spartans' Ice Arena Satur- day. Saturday's game will start McAndrew leads all Spartans Dale Stanley and Jim Summers are MSU's hopes were members of the winning a t 7:30. in WCHA scoring with 20 points team. on nine goals and 11 a s s i s t s . in the two top races in t h e M S U R e l a y s t h i s week- Tom Mikkola, senior co-cap- Summers, who came out for Mikkola's ability to take up the end. Stanley will compete in t h e mile against Jim tain, who Suffered a wrist injury the team late and may not be in scoring slack when Volmar was Ryun. S u m m e r s is not yet in t o p s h a p e , a f t e r coming prior to the start of the season, top shape, will be defending his unable to produce will be a vital out late, but will defend his 60-yard dash title was not expected to play this year 60-yard dash title, but expects factor to the Spartans' success against standout sophomore Bill Hurd of Notre at all. He now tops the Spartan to be seriously challenged by against the high-flying Wolver- s c o r e r s for the second straight Dame. Ryun's world record in t h e m i l e s p e a k s for Notre Dame's Bill Hurd. ines, who a r e 8-2 in the WCHA week. itself. " I ' m not in the kind of condi- and 16-2-1 overall. Following the Michigan Tech The Spartan skaters, fifth in tion I would like to be in for s e r i e s , Mikkola took over the the WCHA with a 4-9-1 record this m e e t , " Summers said. "The HILLEL FOUNDATION competition will add spice to the meet, and the pride of being r e - scoring lead from Doug Valmar, last y e a r ' s scoring king, who and a 7-12-1 mark overall, have to be strong offensively against ,319 Hillcrest at W. Grand River continues to ride a slight goal- Michigan, and Mikkola's recent turning champ will help. I'll be scoring slump. surge to the top could well p r o - looking forward to running Sabbath S e r v i c e s Saturday 10 i m. against H u r d . " Mikkola, center on the No. 1 vide the trick. Summers' record time is line, has 27 points on 11 goals Mikkola will team up with the SUNDAY Feb. 12, 6 P.M. 0:06.3, while Hurd has a c a r e e r and 16 a s s i s t s in 18 games. The other co-captain, senior Mike best of six seconds flat. wrist injury, which is still a Jacobson, and sophomore Lee Supper - Forum - Social slight hinderance, kept him out Hathaway on the No. 1 line. Another top individual entry Richard Levy, M.S.U. Political Science will be Dick Sharkey, the two- of the Spartans' first four games. Jacobson has 16 points on seven Dept., will discuss, ' T h e Jew In America" miler who set the MSU varsity The 5-11, 175-pounder from goals and nine a s s i s t s this s e a - E . e-yone We'come. For R des phone 332*1916 record of 8:51.2 last week and will Copper Cliff, Ont., scored three son, while Hathaway has four points on two goals and as many- assists. Top Spartan Scorer Volmar will man the right Tom Mikkola, senior center and co-captain on the h o c k e y t e a m f a l l s to t h e wing post on the No. 2 line with ice while getting off a shot against a C o l o r a d o C o l l e g e g o a l i e in a r e c e n t game sophomore Ken Anstey at the at the Ice Arena. Mikkola will be paving the way f o r the S p a r t a n s in a c r u c i a l other wing and senior Willie away-home series this weekend. H e h a s 2 7 p o i n t s i n 18 g a m e s . Faunt at the center spot. M c - State News Photo by Dave Laura Why become an engineer at Andrew- will center the No. 3 Garrett-AiResearch? You'll have to 1st OF 3 W MEETS work harder and use more of your knowledge than engineers G-men take aim at Illinois at most other companies. By R O B E R T A Y A F I E State News Sports W r i t e r Last year, the knocked Illinois out of conten- tion by winning their dual clash Spartans Randy Brown, Chuck Weber and Bill Silhan combine to form a powerful high bar group. They a t o s s - u p , " he noted."We should win side horse. We've got to beat them on r i n g s . " Saturday, the Spartan gymnasts and setting a Big Ten scoring scored a total of 28.15 against Toby Towson, after an excel- enter the first of three rings in r e c o r d , 192.45-184.00. the Wolves. lent performance against Wis- a week-long circus of activity that De spite the 111 in i' s l o s s e s , they Vault is led by Hal Shaw, who consin last week, teams up with will determine the Big Ten cham- still have a chance for the crown. edged Spartan Dave Thor for the captain Ron Aure and Bill Dig- pion. Although they're out to play spoil- Big Ten title last y e a r . The gins in floor exercise. Aure and The undefeated MSL' G-men ers-Saturday, a defeat at the hands vaulters had their best day at Diggins will also work vault. face twice-beaten Illinois at of the Spartans will not eliminate Michigan, where they combined Ed Gunny i s scheduled for Champaign. The Illini, one of the them from the running. for 27.15. vault, high bar and rings. Cliff top conference powers,lost close A point is handed out for"every Diehl will work both bar events, decisions to Big Ten leaders dual win. The winner of the Big Coach Charlie Pond's squad along with Norm Haynie. Dennis Michigan and Iowa, both of whom Ten Meet gets an additional eight lost only four lettermen. He has Smith is set for side horse and Af y o u ' r e o u r k i n d of e n g i n e e r , a c t u a l hardware. MSU will meet next week. points, with seven forthe second- outstanding perform ; r s in Cookie parallels. y o u have some very definite ideas That means you The Wolves edged Illinois, 190. place finisher and on down the Rollo in t r a m p , parallel bars and Also working the horse a r e Ed 825-190.70, while Iowa won by a line. Despite the placings in the vault; Bill Silhan in all-around; Witzke and J e r r y Moore. Keith a b o u t y o u r career. h a v e t h e oppor- slim margin, 185.00-182.30. conference standings, a third- Shaw in vault, floor exercise and S t e r n e r , Ray Walker and Aure For e x a m p l e : t u n i t y t o start w i t h will work trampoline. Rings is a place team could win the title if trampoline, and Waber in high You've worked hard to get a a c u s t o m e r ' s problem it finished first In the meet. and parallel b a r s . toss-up, with Szypula still un- g o o d education. N o w y o u w a n t t o andf F see it t h r o u g h to a The Qlini's strongest events The Spartans a r e back at full decided between Gunny, C r o f t , p u t it t o w o r k in t h e b e s t w a y s y s t e m t h a t will get t h e j o b done. shape up to be parallel b a r s , strength, with Dave Thor ready L a r r y Goldberg and Dan Kinsey. possible. T h e product lines at AiResearch, high bar and trampoline. The for all-aroundand trampoline and Los A n g e l e s Division, are environ- Our e n g i n e e r i n g staff is smaller trampoline unit combined for Dave Croft back in the rings You will never be satisfied w i t h 27.60 against Michigan. line-up. Lacrosse starts BULOVA r u n - o f - t h e - m i l l a s s i g n m e n t s . You m e n t a l s y s t e m s , flight i n f o r m a t i o n than comparable companies. This Coach GeorgeSzypula is count- d e m a n d exciting, a n d c o n t r o l s sys- spells o p p o r t u n i t y . I t gives a m a n ing on vault and floor exercise challenging projects. tems, h e a t transfer w h o w a n t s t o m a k e a mark p l e n t y to give the Spartans a command- The MSU lacrosse team will TIMERS systems, secondary of e l b o w r o o m t o e x p a n d . A n d ing lead. He feels that the t r a m - hold its first winter practice You not only a c c e p t polinists, with a good day, could Sunday at 2:30 p.m. in the I.M. individual responsibil- power g e n e r a t o r w h i l e he's d o i n g it he's working dirt a r e n a . Practice will be for hold their own. ity — y o u insist upon it. s y s t e m s for missiles w i t h , a n d learning from, s o m e of all old and new m e m b e r s . WE'LL TAKE YOU " P a r a l l e l s and high bar a r e D o e s t h a t s o u n d like a n d space, electri- t h e real pros in t h e field. Record the Action you? Then AiResearch cal s y s t e m s , a n d If t h e A i R e s e a r c h s t o r y s o u n d s at is your c u p of tea. specialized indus- trial s y s t e m s . like o p p o r t u n i t y s p e a k i n g t o you— d o n ' t fail t o c o n t a c t A i R e s e a r c h , WHERE THE ACTION IS MSU Relays But of Course; Our business is mainly in sophisticated aerospace systems and subsystems. In e a c h c a t e g o r y A i R e s e a r c h e m p l o y s three k i n d s of engineers. L o s A n g e l e s , or see our repre- sentative when he comes to your The night life at Chicago. A weekend in the North Country. The big game. Home. T h i s <&h we still have Here, research, design, a n d de- Preliminary design e n g i n e e r s do campus. i s the action generation, and The Original Campus v e l o p m e n t lead t o production of the analytical and theoretical We'll b e h a p p y t o t a l k t o y o u — wherever the action, INDIAN work, t h e n write proposals. a b o u t you a n d your future. . TRAILS will take you there D e s i g n engineers do the lay- A n d p u t t h i s in t h e back of y o u r in Stylel Easy ona collegian's o u t s ; t u r n an idea i n t o a product. D e v e l o p m e n t a l engineers are mind: I n a field w h e r e m e e t i n g chal- pocketbook, too. Summaries responsible for m a k i n g h a r d w a r e l e n g e s p a y s off in r e w a r d s . . . o u t of concepts. for All Basic Courses W h i c h e v e r field fits y o u b e s t , w e AiResearch can guarantee y o u this: y o u can g o a s far a n d fast as y o u r t a l e n t s is challenge A.T.L. Nat Sci, Hums, Soc c a n c a r r y y o u . You c a n m a k e a s An equal opportunity m u c h m o n e y as a n y e n g i n e e r in a c o m p a r a b l e spot — anywhere. And employer We are also including IF YOUR A C T I O N IS IN of c o u r s e , a t A i R e s e a r c h , y o u ' l l AiResearch Manufacturing Division C H I C A G O , SOUTH B E N D . ' them at our new location g e t all t h e plus benefits a t o p c o m - BENTON HARBOR, p a n y offers. Los Angeles KALAMAZOO, F L I N T , SAGINAW, OR BAY C I T Y . . WE'RE FOR YOU! MARSHALL MUSIC CO. Indian Trails 319 E. G R A N D RIVER 245 Ann Street Sign up now in the Placement Office for interviews. An AiResearch 307 E. Grand River When you know what representative will be interviewing on campus Friday, February 17. 408 W. GRAND RIVER makes a watch tick Phone 332-2813 you'll choose a BULOVA! Friday. February 10, 1967 5 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan SPORTS get No. 1 rating New cage worry: before final ho me meet Purd ue's Gilliam By G A V E L W E S C H State News Sports W r i t e r balanced t e a m . They w r e s t l e a g - g r e s s i v e l y , a r e equally a s good on t h e i r feet as on the m a t s and Ten championship at 130 and was t h i r d in the NCAA m e e t during his s o p h o m o r e y e a r . L a s t season be G a r y B i s s e l l , 9 - 5 - 0 at 123, Dave Campbell, 6 - 5 - 2 at 152, and probably Don Cox at 160. Indiana d i d , " Benington said. " T h e y ' v e a r e in fine physical condition he was second in the Big Ten at " I t ' s been a r a g s to riches By D E N N I S C H A S E H e r e ' s a line you've never climb to the top for us (MSU got good scoring g u a r d s . They play a l - f o r this period of the s e a s o n . 123, w r e s t l i n g out of his weight Associate Sports E d i t o r ternating d e f e n s e s , both zone and m a n - head b e f o r e : " W e ' r e Number 1 . " w a s eighth in the Big Ten in Don Behm, 130, and George R a d - class. t o - m a n , and they a r e n ' t big. But they No. 1 s t a t u s may not be new m a n , 167, a r e both undefeated 1964), and now t h a t w e ' r e u p t h e r e The crop of sophomores in the Big R i c h a r d s o n is on the opposite m a k e up f o r it with t h e i r q u i c k n e s s . " to MSU s p o r t s fans, but for the in dual competition, and the l e a d - w e ' r e going to have to fight to Ten this season is exceptionally end of the s c a l e , weighing 240, Benington, whose team beat the B o i l e r - f i r s t time in recent y e a r s it can ing hopes for individual honors in stay on t o p , " MSU Coach Grady talented. Chuck Nagle of Wisconsin, Den- but h a s been equally s u c c e s s f u l . m a k e r s twice last y e a r , 89-78 and 92- be applied to the Spartan the NCAA. Heavyweight Jeff He a l s o won the Big Ten c h a m - Peninger said. " T h i s is the best nis- Stewart of Michigan, and Spartan w r e s t l i n g squad. team I've had since I was a high Lee L a f a y e t t e a r e p l a y e r s who a r e likely •4, •said this y e a r ' s team is very d i f - Richardson and Dale Anderson, pionship a s a s o p h o m o r e a n d w a s f e r e n t . ' L a s t y e a r they worked around In the l a t e s poll compiled by 137, a r e capable of placing, and second last y e a r a f t e r m i s s i n g school coach, and I hope they to make the Big Ten interesting in the re.alize that the role of the No. the one bie man, Dave S c h e l l h a s e , " Ben- the Amateur Wrestling News, Dale C a r r , 145, and Mike B r a d - the f i r s t half of the season b e - n xt two y e a r s . 1 team is one of eternal vigil- ington said college w r e s t l i n g ' s most r e - ley, 177, have good potential. T o m o r r o w , at Lafayette-, Ind., the S p a r - tans face a Purdue sophomore who is spected r a t e , Editor J e s s Hoke " T h e Spartans w o n s t h e tough c a u s e of his play on the f o o t - ball t e a m in the R o s e Bowl. anci e . " Grady Peninger P u r d u e will rt Henry E b e r s h o f f , p l a c e s MSU above Oklahoma and Midlands tournament in D e c e m - He m i s s e d p a r t of this season • tenth in Big Ten scoring and who MSL second leading s c o r e r on the t e a m , and Oklahoma State at the top p o s i - b e r and the Northwestern Quad due to p o s t - s e a s o n football but : Coach John Benington said " h a s all the basketball m o v e s . " He is 6 - 2 f o r w a r d - guard H e r m a n Gilliam. Bill Keller at guards, Gilliam and Roger Blalock at forr w a r d s , and Ted Reasoner tion. in e a r l y J a n u a r y and a r e un- But for devoted f a n s , the last defeated in seven (now eight) has won f o u r m a t c h e s and tied one s i n c e his r e t u r n . : don't let bills get you down at c e n t e r . Radman w a s t h i r d in the Big Gilliam has been scoring at a r a t e home w r e s t l i n g meet of the s e a - dual meets to d a t e , " Hoke s a i d . Pay them all right now Benington said that he is still uncertain Lehigh, Iowa State and Mich- Ten l a s t y e a r but r e m a i n s un- of nearly 19 points p e r g a m e , and F r e s h - son will be at 3 p . m . Saturday with a Credit Union loan. whom he will s t a r t , but that Heywood defeated in 13 m a t c h e s this y e a r man Coach Bob Nordmann and a s s t . Coach in the I.M. Sports Arena when igan round Hoke's ratings of m a - One low interest r a t e . One E d w a r d s and Matthew Aitch would a l - and has beaten the top t h r e e men Gus Ganakas, both of whom have scouted they take on Big Ten rival Iowa j o r t e a m s . monthly payroll deduction. t e r n a t e at center and f o r w a r d . Other For Behm, Radman and in h i s weight c l a s s , including Gilliam, a r e very enthusiastic about him. in a dual m e e t . No checks to sign, stamps likely s t a r t e r s will be Lee Lafayette at NCAA champion Dave Reinbolt. " H e ' s a real s t a r , " Ganakas s a i d , "When Michigan State w r e s t l e d R i c h a r d s o n , the t h r e e s t a r t i n g to lick, o r c r e d i t o r s to f o r w a r d , and Steve Rymal and John Bailey Heading the list of juniors is " a very v e r s a t i l e a t h l e t e , " Oklahoma State University and s e n i o r s on the squad, this will be howl. Save as much a s 100^ at g u a r d s . Art Baylor, John H o l m s , and Dale Anderson who h a s won 15 P u r d u e Coach George King has i n - the University of Oklahoma on their last appearance before the on interest and c a r r y i n g Shannon Reading a r e also likely to see s t r a i g h t at 137. The 5 - 5 Ander- dicated that he »ill start Gilliam at f o r - s u c c e s s i v e nights on the Okie hofne crowd, and they'll be hoping charges. action, if Benington hold:- t r u e to f o r m . son placed f i r s t in the Big Ten ward. King warned opposing coaches at m a t s , tying one and winning the to bow out in style. the beginning of the season that G i l - o t h e r , they earned the right to Behm has disposed of 15 op- last y e a r at 130 and lost only CALL Benington said he expects Purdue to ! one m a t c h in dual meet c o m - liam would be a high s c o r e r , u s e a z o n e , but King said " W e ' l l stay- be named a s the nation's No. 1 ponents while losing once this college t e a m , " Hoke w r o t e . season, that i n t h e M l d l a n d s t o u r - petition. " A t a Big Ten meeting, when all the pretty much m a n - t o - m a n . " coaches were talking about possible s t a r s . P u r d u e is 10-5 in all g a m e s , and 2-3 "Although lacking in individual n a m e n t . The 5 - 3 . 130-pounder C a r r , who won at 137 In the 353-2280 King stood up and told us that Gilliam in the Big Ten. The B o i l e r m a k e r s lost talent, the Spartans have a well f r o m Winnetka, 111., won the Big Big Ten last season has an 8 - 4 - 1 - wo-ld be a dangerous p l a y e r , " Benington to Wisconsin« Ohio State and Michigan r e c o r d at 145 and Bradley, de- said. " H e was very high on G i l l i a m . " and beat Minnesota twice. They have an fending league champ at 177, has FOR The Spartans will be facing the s a m e kind of team that has given them trouble all s e a s o n . The B o i l e r m a k e r s a r e not p a r t i c u l a r l y big but they a r e fast and, in edge in the s e r i e s with the Spartans, 18-10. MSU is 3-2 in the Big T e n . In o t h e r action, Iowa will be at Ohio Changes in sabre a 9-2-1 r e c o r d to date at that weight. Bradley Is actively being challenged f o r his position by IMMEDIATE State in a televised g a m e , Michigan is s o p h o m o r e John Schneider. Kine's w o r d s , try to " r u n the big guys at N o r t h w e s t e r n , Illinois is at Minnesota Rounding out the squad will down." " T h e y pose the s a m ; p r o b l e m s that and Wisconsin is at Indiana. for fencing meets SERVICE T h e final home fencing meet Bill Wunsch and Dean Daggett. ND issue settled PERENNIALLY POWERFUL of the y e a r f o r the MSU s w o r d s - men will be their biggest c h a l - Starting in foil will be Roger L o u t z e n h i s e r , T e r r y Givens and v ^-MSU EMPLOYEES lenge before the Big Ten c h a m - Serge Montalvo, while Ken Som- MSU finally won a national pionships, to be held at Wiscon- m e r v i l l e , Gus Schubert and Bill championship f r o m Notre D a m e , sin in M a r c h . K e r n e r will c o m p e t e in e p e e . even if it was only in handball. Tankers leery of OSU M e e t s a r e scheduled for both F r i d a y and Saturday for the S p a r - t a n s , a s they will be meeting " A s soon a s we get 14 points, o r have 15 against us, I'll s t a r t substituting," Schmitter said. A Bob B a l l a r d , of the University Business O f f i c e , a n d K a r l A s m u s , i n s t r u c t o r in e c o n o m i c s , d e f e a t e d 1019 T r o w b r i d g e R o a d both Big Ten and NCAA t i t l e s Ohio State, however, h a s its Wayne State University and the team needs 14 wins in competition Notre Dame graduate students Phone 3 5 3 - 2 2 8 0 What h a s happened to the Ohio g r e a t e s t depth of talent in the Don K r e b s and Louis Guillou in State swimming team is a l m o s t as a sophomore in 2 0 0 - y a r d i n - University of Chicago, on F r i - to win the m e e t . dividual medley and took second sprint f r e e s t y l e events. Buckeye day evening at 7:30, and W i s - the finals of the 20th National s a d . T h e Buckeyes have won m o r e " I n e x p e r i e n c e has hurt us this record-holder Tom Lakin is YMCA Contenders Handball Credit Union M e m b e r s NCAA swimming team champion- in both m e e t s in the 400-yard cousin, Iowa and Air F o r c e Acad- y e a r , and 1 want to give other individual medley. L a s t y e a r , a s a backed up by four other top f r e e - e m y Saturday morning at 9:30. 1 ournament r e c e n t l y . That ought Have The Advantage ships (11) than any other t e a m , but f e n c e r s some needed meet c o m - junior, Hopper retained his Big s t y l e r s . T h e y could provide a Both m e e t s will be in Gym 3 to settle things once and for all. this y e a r finds them at a new low. p e t i t i o n , " he said. Ten crown but lost his NCAA title strong t h r e a t in the 400-yard of the Men's I.M. T h e Buckeyes have a l r e a d y lost f r e e s t y l e events a s well a s in the The PENNSYLVANIA DUTCH to Bill Utley of Indiana. Hopper MSU Fencing Coach C h a r l e s "All the t e a m s we meet this swimming m e e t s to such c o m p a r - 50- and 100-yard f r e e style weekend a r e about even. They often does not hit his competitive Schmitter will make s o m e atively lowly t e a m s as Wisconsin events. should all be tough m e e t s . " HEX peak until late in the s e a s o n , changes in s a b r e Friday to and P r i n c e t o n , and they don't Vet in the f r e e s t y l e MSU can In addition to the MSU m e e t s and Spartan P e t e Williams m a y s t r e n g t h e n the t e a m ' s weakest s e e m to have much of a chance match strength f o r s t r e n g t h . G a r y F r i d a y night, Air F o r c e will meet s u c c e s s f u l l y challenge him. weapon. Undefeated C h a r l i e B a e r against a good one, Michigan Dilley and G a r y Langley, in the N o t r e Dame and Wayne will a l s o State, Saturday at Columbus. OSU's other National champion still holds the number one p o s i - s p r i n t s , Don Rauch, R o l f G r o s e t h duel Wisconsin h e r e . But Coach C h a r l e s M c C a f f r e e has t h r e e National AAU diving t i t l e s . Chuck K n o r r was r a t e d and Steve Yamamoto in the m i d - tion. and he will be joined by GOOD Symbol w a r n e d against discounting the dle-distance, Dan Pangborn and traditionally s t r o n g t e a m . " N e v - highly by Spartan diving coach John N a r c y , but N a r c y ' s d i v e r s Chuck Geggie in thp long d i s - LUCK e r count Ohio State out. They tance, and co-captain Ken Walsh Duane Green, Doug Todd and F r e d always t r a i n f o r the nationals and at a l m o s t any distance m a k e the c o m e on s t r o n g . " Whiteford have shown t h e m - f r e e s t y l e r s the Spartans' s t r o n g - $1.00 selves ready to give anyone a good T h e Spartans have a long- e s t contingent. contest standing s e r i e s with Ohio State. Of the 26 t i m e s that the two FROM t e a m s have m e t , the Spartans have won only six. But they BARNES Floral Hang it from your dorm or apartment window have won the last t h r e e y e a r s of E, Lansing in a row and last y e a r handed the Buckeye s w i m m e r s t h e w o r s t 215 Ann St. Almost guaranteed to make all your defeat of the s e r i e s , 75-48. ORDER TODAY Despite the c o m p a r a t i v e fall of Ohio State f r o m excellent to just • roses in short supply • Valentine wishes come true good, they retain individual p e r - f o r m e r s who have to be r a t e d We Telcgraph among the b e s t in the nation. Two of the Buckeyes have won Flowers WORLD WIDE Call ED 2-0871 national t i t l e s . Bob Hopper won o N ç*iNG! WINTER CANTERBURY LECTURE ÒJihxtoMib Fr. John Kirvan Catholic Chaplin • Wayne State Univ. i n & 'Word-. T«. 'THE RESTLESS BELIEVER' When two become one so completely i t ' s a little silly to use two words ( i . e . " p a n t s u i t " o r " p a n t s s u i t " ) to d e s c r i b e it (them). Hence: PANTSUIT..rfhe one word that says all. You'll a g r e e when you see how we can add new w o r d - --an appraisal of problems power to y o u r wordrobel Oops I 9 5 6 T r o w b r i d g e R d - S p a r t a n Shopping C e n t e r of Faith for today's students open 9 : 3 0 - 8 : 0 0 Mon.-Fri. Sat. ' T i l 5:30 Your P A N T S U r r can have many different f a c e s , Sunday - Feb. 12, 7:30 P.M. just by changing your a c c e s s o r i e s . Instead of a turtleneck topper, try one of o u r g r e a t print o r plain s h i r t s . Scarfs do a l o t , too. 7/te Gcuid£>kop St. John's Catholic Student Center 135 East Grand River Downtown-East Lansing a c r o s s f r o m the H o m e E c . Bldg. 327 M A C . AVE. 6 Michigan State News, E a s t Lansing. Michigan SPORTS Friday. February 10. 1 96 7 S E L E C T » V * OFFICIALS: WILLIAMS: 'LBJ must ease Draft lottery system poncy-or else may pose problems By M I K E B R O G A N State News Staff W r i t e r B y JE F F STONE among the commission's recom- lottery will work out or not yet, Unless President Johnson " t u r n s a c o r n e r " concerning the Viet- mendations, are a reversal of It may be an entirely new sys- State N e w s Staff Writer nam situation, the Democrat party may have difficulties in 1968. priority placing the 18-and-a- tem." Speaking to the MSU Young Democrats Wednesday night, f o r m e r Michigan's two top Selective half to 19-year olds first, in- A lottery' selection method was Michigan Gov G. Mennen Williams said the "Democratic party- Service officers have reserved stead of those 25 and 26, and a used during World War 11, may find a different LBJ in 1968 as far as what he is, what his comment on proposed draft lottery method for selecting these " F r o m what I know," Col. image is and what he stands f o r , " changes. "All we know is what men from the 1-A classification Holmes said, " t h e r e Is ample Williams said the Republican party made significant gains in we read in the p a p e r s , " Col. pool. authority In present selective the 1966 election partly because of public frustration over Viet- Arthur A. Holmes, staff direc- Both Col. HolmesandCol.VV.J. service laws for the President nam and the nationwide summer rioting. tor said. Myers, deputy director, agreed to make these changes now." Michigan's six-term governor said, however, that he doubted The proposed draft method changes are in a National Com- that in the past the lottery method has posed additional problems Only basic changes in the laws must be passed by Congress; the Soapy at Phillips Hall if any other president would have been able to affect " b a s i c t r e n d s " going on during the election. mission on Selective Service r e - without proving very successful. President has considerable authority in determining proce- Former G o v . G , M e i n e n W i l l i a m s a d d r e s s e s a m e e t i n g of t h e M S U Y o u n g Looking to the 1968 election, Williams said he doesn't think port to the President, to be p r e - However, Holmes added, " I dures of the system within the Gov. George Romney, considered prime GOP presidential timber, sented next week. Foremost can't tell whether the proposed Democrats at Phillips Hall cafeteria Wednesday. At l e f t c e n t e r i s H a r v e y law. has yet demonstrated " h i s competence in foreign a f f a i r s . " C . D z o d i n , O a k P a r k s o p h o m o r e , c h a i r m a n of t h e Y o u n g D e m o c r a t s . Regarding U.S. foreign relations, Williams said relations with S t a t e N e w s P h o t o by Ray Westra the Soviet Union a r e " c l o s e r than they have been in many y e a r s . " A lottery method tends to sub- He pointed to the Sino-Soviet split as a major reason, adding BEAT « • stitute chance for good judgment Col. Myers said. What effect the that U.S. efforts to build " b r i d g e s " to satellite countries in t e r m s 4 . Mfc lottery has on' the morale of the men in the Armed Forces is NAACP OBJECTS of trade and cultural exchange have also helped. "I thing we are going to see an entirely different relationship another question, he said. with Russia In the f u t u r e , " he said. Turning to Michigan's fiscal situation, Williams said tax r e - COST To some extent the 18-and-a- half to 19 priority proposition is no actual change. "In 1965 Apartment plan approved form is essential and that r e f o r m cannot come without a state income tax. With at least 40 states now having a state income tax, Wil- and 1966, we were raking these OF MOTORING ages as fast as we could," MyerS said, "because we had no more East Lansing's Planning Com- mission Wednesday evening ap- mission is not legally respon- which created the commission sible for implementing the city's and defined its functions could liams pointed out that it is not a "novel or abnormal thing." Defeated by U.S. Senator Robert P. Griffin last Novenber, Williams is now "relaxing," though still in touch with his party available men 25 or 26. As the proved William J . Pulte's plan- open housing policy. be construed to make the com- PAYS nation's need for men continues, Pulte's project had been op- mission a safeguard of open hous- and politics. ned apartment development on TO BUY AT KRAMER'S younger men will Increasingly posed in letters to the commis- ing policy. Williams was appointed Undersecretary of State for African the basis of the city attorney's be called f i r s t . " sion by Robert Green, f o r m e r Even If a person is a proved Affairs during the Kennedy administration, serving in Africa LOW DISCOUNT PRICES opinion that the planning com- member of the East Lansing Hu- discriminator in other cities, the until running for senator last y e a r . man Relations Commission, opinion said, the planning com- He has written a book covering his years in Africa, though So You Want To Be A J a m e s A. Harrison, Ingham mission can consider plans only County Democratic Party chair- on points of conforming to city it has not been printed yet. Would he run for office again, if asked? A U T O GLASS man, and Stuart J. Dunnlngs, building laws. Williams smiled. " T h a t ' s too much speculation to think about." SPRING M A C H I N E SHOP SERVICE AIR-CONDITIONING SALES & SERVICE. WE Swinger J r . , president of the Lansing branch of the NAACP. In other actions the commis- sion approved a Delta Gamma SERVICE ALL MAKES ELECTRICAL They suggested that the coun- sorority request for rezonlng of Then cil resolution of May 17, 1965 a lot for an addition and p a r k - C O M P L E T E L I N E NEW A N D R E B U I L T A U T O PARTS (that it shall be the policy of ing and disapproved the plan to N START OFF AT THE Last Lansing that housing not be turn M.A.C. between Albert "5-ERVWC GREATER LANSING FOR 50 YEARS denied on racial grounds) should Street and Grand River Avenue BIGGEST BLAST IN preclude approving Pulte's de- into a parking mall. -Whòlesale & Reert a i i - velopment. Students must register in p e r - ing (B,M,D), physics (M.D) and TOWN. son at the Placement Bureau at accounting and financial admini- KRAMER 8 0 0 E. K a l a m a z o o Phone AUTO PARTS 484.1303 At The Jumbo Pulte is currently defending himself In Oakland County C i r - cuit Court on charges of d i s - C a r s must move University Police request that criminatory housing in Birming- all students and other persons ham where, he said, " I t ' s bad parking in lots X and F move least two days o r i o r to the date of interview. ™ Thursday, Feb. 16: Avon Products, Inc.: chemical stration and all majors of the College of Business . For this cial studies (block of time), in- dustrial a r t s , home economics, Owens-Illinois, Inc.: account- ing, financial administration and Spanish/French/English, phys- management (B,M), all m a j o r s occasion ics, biology, English and dis- tributive education (retail) (B). of the College of Arts and L e t - t e r s (B), marketing (B,M), m e - Herkner, Smits, Miskill and chanical, electrical and chemical Johnson: accounting (B). engineering (B), mathematics and The M.W. Kellogg Co.: chem- statistics (B,M) and labor and istry (B,M,D), chemical and industrial relations (M). mechanical engineering (B,M) SUMMER EMPLOYMENT and civil engineering (B). Thursday, Feb. 16: Lake Park High School: s e c - Camp Easton for Boys: male ondary school openings (B,M). counselors. The National Cash Register The P r o c t e r and Gamble Co.: For this Co.: chemistry (B,M,D), chem- men one year from final degree ical engineering (B,M), elec- in chemical, mechanical, e l e c - special trical and mechanical engineer- trical and civil engineering. occasion 'Prayer and the by For this Spiritual Healing very Movement' MADISONAIRE YOUR SIGN OF AUTHENTIC The F i s h e r . . . special occasion . . . a subject arousing more interest than at any time since early Christianity. NATURAL SHOULDER FASHIONS In spiritual healing a modern day possibility? Can it be explained in t e r m s of understandable spiritual law? How The most desirable features of a ready to play does prayer help? What does prayer bring to the person Now Madisonaire graduates a brand new sum- console and separate high fidelity components are looking for basic truth as well as physical healing? mer blazer—the double breasted model. Obvi- now available in one, compact home entertainment ously it's at the head of its class, a t r i m m i n g , center. Add to this the reliability of a Fisher-Engi- A careful, point-by-point exploration of such questions flattering coat that is smarter in every line. With neered high fidelity system and you have sound which emerges from the taping of this unscripted, informal pearl button accents and lean, modern styling will please the most discerning ear. HEAR THE dialogue. it's a blazer to keep an eye on. Wear it with bright check trousers or contrasting plain color slacks. FISHER 85 AT . . . -CUPID APPROVED - Robert Peel, author of two major books about Christian Science, is interviewed by a professional writer and grad- uate of Harvard Divinity School. FOX'S You a r e invited to hear this inspiring and informative dis- Hrl^sitcheli^ros. cussion of " P r a y e r and the Spiritual Healing Movement," THE DISC SHOP Direct Diamond Importers Sunday, February 12 OPEN EVENINGS Frandor Shopping Center ON DOWN TOWN-LANSING TILL 9 and 203 S. Washington "The B i b l e S p e a k s to Y o u " Program at 9 : 4 5 a . m . o v e r S t a t i o n WILS CONVENIENT TERMS VISA CARDS WELCOME {pooooooooonnoooooooooooooooooooooooriooooooo i Michigan State News, State driving age 'Jim Carbine analyzes fp may rise to 17 reason for politicking Michigan's minimum d r i v e r s ' licensing age should be raised c r e a s e in reimbursements to schools to an assured $40 max- imum per student, but not to from 16 to 17 y e a r s , according to By B E V TWITCHELl t h e r e , " he said. "The thing to do MSU's Highway T r a f f i c Safety exceed the actual cost of the State News Staff Writer is attack now. They a r e young Center. program. The present r e i m - people's p r o b l e m s . " bursement is $30. J i m Carbine, vice chairman of This proposal and others, in- For reasons such as these, For all new drivers over 18, ASMSL , admits that he is ideal- cluding ones for revision of the Carbine was particularly i n t e r - the c e n t e r ' s proposals recom- istic, but describes his ideal- ested in the 18-year-old vote i s - 10-year-old d r i v e r ' s education mend that they receive a d r i v e r ' s i s m a s " t e m p e r e d with r e a l i t y . " sue last fall. program, w e r e presented by education c o u r s e before receiv- " I have not set out to right Gerald J . Feddersen, a special- ing their f i r s t licenses. "What I do may be little .'or all the- wrongs of the world," ist at the c e n t e r , to a regional nothing," Carbine said, "but I Meetings similar to the one Carbine says. "1 see problems d r i v e r ' s education Instructors have a personal obligation to Thursday a r e being held through- in an idealistic sense, but I am try-" meeting h e r e Thursday. out the state to acquaint instruc- not so idealistic as to think t o r s with the survey's findings. that I or any one group will "I have had to modify what I The safety center's survey, solve the problems. But s o m e - believe in to get a groundwork which was prepared for Gov. one has to t r y . " for open-mindedness in thinking. George Romney, pointed out that at the age of 15-years most stu- Colombia rocked Carbine applies this in his role in student government. Why I don't want to aggravate; that isn't how to win over people. I t ' s Distinguished Faculty Award winners dents a r e not mature enough for the d r i v e r ' s education course does anyone become involved in a slow p r o c e s s . " . . » • i I • • I _ I J ^ _ • ! u and consequently at 16-years- by earthquakes student government? Carbine in- President John A. Hannah presented MSU's highest award to s i x professors cludes the personal satisfaction, C a r b i n e ' s goal, then, is to Wednesday. From left are Milton B. Dickerson, business law and o f f i c e ad- old a r e not prepared for a li- activity orientation, and this develop the soundest, best e x - cense. ministration! J. Sutherland Frame, mathematics; Charles P. Loomis, sociol- "idealism." ternal image of student govern- ogy; Hannah; Charles C. Hughes, anthropology; Hideya Kumata, commun.ca- Feddersen indicated that sev- BOGOTA, Colombia i — Two One of the problems Carbine ment possible. tion; and Lawrence E. Malvern, metallurgy, m e c h a n i c s and m a t e r i a l s s c i e n c e . e r a l recommendations besides violent earthquakes struck Co- sees in the University environ- His goal fits with his f i r s t State N e w s Photo by P a u l S c h l e i f that of the licensing age will be lombia Thursday, spreading ment is encouraging students to priority as vice chairman, that included in the p r o g r a m , rang- damage and panic over a wide " u s e books a s a tool and not of "making s u r e the bureaucracy ing f r o m state-wide legislation area and leaving at least 42 as a crutch." • is going." He is responsible for to proposals to local school s y s - dead, with s c o r e s injured. The "They don't realize that they all internal workings of the s t u - tems. shocks w e r e felt in neighboring a r e going to be the leaders of dent board, f r o m hiring of s e c - Ecuador and Venezuela- t o m o r r o w , " Carbine said,, " s o Included in a list- of over 40 M S U cast stars i n 'Gamut' retaries to handling i n t e r - they should begin active concerns JIM CARBINE revisions and recommendations Calling this the worst e a r t h - departmental memoranda and today, not t o m o r r o w . " to the p r o g r a m will be a proposal quake ever to hit Colombia, the planning an agenda for board Much of C a r b i n e ' s thinking was for legislation prohibiting stu- Interior Ministry said 28 p e r - affected by several months' "Books should be meetings. dents with " u n s a f e physical de- sons were killed in Hulla State, Robert Schlater, adviser for the viewing audience. travel in Europe last s u m m e r . used as a tool and not Carbine loves to speak, and MSU advanced television-radio the s e r i e s , said its objectives a r e f i c i e n c i e s " f r o m participation in The six shows video-taped to the p r o g r a m . believed to be the epicenter of does so before student groups the quake some 180 miles south as a cnitch." whenever possible. He plans to students have been working to- to provide practical experience date include humor, music, and The p r o p o s a l s call for an In- of Bogota. Psych clinic go on to law school and to a gether this y e a r as the "MSU f o r the students and entertain facets of campus life. c a r e e r in law or civil r e s p o n - Broadcasters" to produce a "1 talked to a student," C a r - sibilities; "anywhere I can get weekly TV variety show called bine said, "about girls, booze, avoi table people to listen to m e , " he said. "Gamut." students, but he was from North Vietnam. Another student was "1 like to be in the spotlight." " G a m u t , " a half-hour show from Russia. I learned that "It keeps me busy," he said. a i r e d over channel 10, \VMSB, Beginning Saturday morning, everyone has so much in c o m - staff m e m b e r s of the MSU P s y - Spring t e r m will be C a r b i n e ' s Saturdays at 11:30 a . m . r e c r u i t s mon, but no one understands last term before he graduates. all campus talent. chological Clinic will be avail- able p a r t - t i m e to residents of each o t h e r . " His plans: " t o take a vacation; A m e m b e r of the "Broad- IN THE LANSING - EAST LANSING AREA University Village, Spartan Vil- College students could become to take about nine credits of IM c a s t e r s " usually acts as the lage and Cherry Lane. pool, six six ccredits of gou; golf; 10 15 or or Those who have family prob- l e m s or questions about their m o r e involved with current s i t - uations because they a r e " f r e e a g e n t s , " Carbine said. " T h e y pool, r e m t s ot 16 credits of Gables, and enough enii.ee, of school to graduate." the cameras. o t h e r students man BRING IN YOUR VISA Quick Carry-Out CARD AND SAVE children a r e invited to stop by and discuss them. There is no can do what they think is right, without worrying about the AT fur Lunch ur Dinner f e e for this service. It will be given on a f i r s t - c o m e , f i r s t - r e a l m s , of business and f a m i l y . " a The 9ackdoor p r e s e n t s : served b a s i s . F o r the remainder of the win- "But they sit back and wait until they graduate, and then INFORMAL FOUR FILMS ABOUT WAR & YOU DISCUSSION-FREE REFRESHMENTS THE PIZZA PIT 270 W. Grand River t e r t e r m , the service will be open they a r e not prepared for these 8:00 P . M . TONIGHT! Added savings with special V I S A coupon. East Lansing 7:30-10 p.m. Monday and T u e s - p r o b l e m s , " he said. 1118 S o u t h H a r r i s o n Road S o r r y - s p e c i a l o f f e r d o e s not a p p l y to days, 8:30 a . m . - 3 p . m . Wednes- While in Europe Carbine read del i ve r i e s . Sun. - Thürs. days and 10 a . m . - l p . m . Satur- days at 1550J Spartan Village. about the racial riots and Nazi rallies, and' these situations at Wailey, ^cuunJxtiUm O p e n d a i l y 5 p . m . - M i d n i g h t , F r i . and Sat. 5p.m.-1 a.ti 1 1 a . m . to midnight At other times persons should Fri. & Sat. call the MSU Psychological brought his attention back to his |SUN DAY-SUP PER 6 P.M. 50£and FORUM-7 P.M.:| own country. 11 a . m . t o z a.m. Clinic, 355-9564 and 355-9566, "The Question Of Interracial-Marriage" 203 MAC Avenue Phone ED 2-0863 which is open 8 a j n . - 5 p . m . " T h e s e problems will chase Monday - F r i d a y . you into a c o r n e r and keep you Restaurant Serving Daily For Fine Steak Dinnevs for gracious and The Best Steak House - Second one in E. Lansing delightful dining AT THE SPREAD-EAGLE OF TECHNOLOGY KALAMAZOO & CLIP PERT D a i l y 7 a . m . to 2 p.m. T ^ a l b e r t AT GRUMMAN and 5 to 9 p . m . Filet Mignon $1.27 Ranges from inner to outer space FlOK' H O T E L * Sundays 8 a . m . to 8 p.m. Sirloin $1.23 P r i v a t e P a r t y Rooms Both dinners Include baked Idaho potato, tossed {o salad, and Texas toast. G r u m m a n has special interest f o r the g r a d u a t i n g e n g i n e e r a n d scientist seeking t h e widest s p r e a d o M « ^ » J ^ 1427 West S a g i n a w AROUND THE BEND FROM UNIVERSITY VILLAGE Ph. 337-1741 kn H n k t n i n i versi t v and Adelphi C o l l e g e a r e ..11 « i t h i n eas> d i s t a n c e . T h e s u r r o u n d i n g s a r e not h a r d to t a k e . H \ e GRANDMAS T h e i n f o r m a l a t m o s p h e r e is a G r u m m a n t r a d i t i o n , m a t c h e d h> an e q u a l l y h a r d - n o s e d o n e of t u n . . » , o u t s o m e of t h e f r e e w o r l d ' s highest p e r f o r m a n c e a i r c r a f t s>stems a n d s p a c e vehicles. Taking their place in a long line of Grumman aircraft that Currently, Grumman engineers, pulling the state of t h e •^nous^ czJr have contributed to the national defense, the aircraft art relentless forward, are engrossed in still more ad- vanced aircraft and aerospace vehicles. These include: shown below are performing yeoman serv.ee .n Vietnam. / pte&tfMlen Steak v Spaghetti Lasagna ( : t Hawkey« Chicken TAKE • HOME. Fish Hat c o n t r i b u , eulf«tre»m H World's'astest electronic svsten Sienilicanti' I corporale Iransport . . non-slop Shrimp Submarine Sandwiches ng and a i r b o r n e Fcoast-to-coast '»nge 585 nvp.h. Chicken . Shrimp PIZZA OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK C-2A . . • Carrier-on board delivery 1900 E. Kalamazoo Phone:484-4471 211 M.A.C. ED 7-1668 HU 16 Albatro«* ' a t i o u i as t i r . (COD a i r c r a f t c a r r i e s h i g h p r i o r i t y j m a m tool of t h e U S » r Fo- e «ir w e a p o n s s y s t e m s and p e r s o n n e l | Rescue S e r v c e s . and p e r f o r m s l o g i s t i c a l missions for a t t a c h a i r c r a f t e a r n e r s . We're only CA-SB All-weather tactical elec- t r o n i c c o u n t e r m e a s u r e s a i r c r a f t to S-2E r, Tracker . . Ant. sul s u p p o r t s t r i k e a i r c r a f t and g r o u n d *a are a tre r a f t w h i c h p both - hunter and hille • troops. v o n s for t h e U S Navy. J presents the C-1â Trader personnel b e t * e e * shore . l a n d an based a i r c r a f t f e m e s car r a» F - 1 1 1 1 . . . Navy v e r s i o n of t h e • USAF N Á W b i s e r v . e e f i g h t e r w i t h v a r i a b l e w m g s w e e p f r o m 16 to 7 2 . 5 d e g r e e s . ' F l i e s at s p e e d s up to t w o and one h a l f t i m e s t h e s p e e d of s o u n d . ) No. 1... A-6A I n t r u d e r . U S Navy c a r - ' . e r b a s e d a t t a c h a re r a f t c a p a b l e Avis is No. 2. Fhey c a n ' t m a k e p i / / a of o p e r a t i n g w i t h p i n p o i n t a c c u - 0AO 'Orbiting Astronomical Ob- like u c do. Don't have a player piano 1 servatory) . . . Scientific satellite racy m all weather conditions. tor t h e i n v e s t i g a t i o n of s c i e n t i f i c phenomena. or b a n j o player, either. O r uood-time 0».1 » U l i a w k . . U.S. Army S T 0 1 sinijint;. imported a n d domestic beer, e l e c t r o n i c s u r v e i l l a n c e a i r c r a f t op e r a t i n g in c l o s e s u p p o r t o l g r o u n d troops. delicious soft drinks, and f u n n y siirns o n t h e w a l l s . L e t eni k e e p t r y i n u M B t r a c e r . . U S . Navy e a r n e r . h a r d e r .... till it H e r t z ! SHEETS ye PUBIIC house based h i g h resolution radar air- I PIZZA PÍELOS & craft detects impending enemy L M (Lunar M o d u l e ' . . . a t t a c k s h u n d r e d s of m i l e s from to l a n d t h e a s t r o n a u t s on t h e lunar the f e e t . surface in the late sikt.es. Caucus 'South Cedar at Pennsylvania , . . . ,. ,„„; m „,, c TPs FFs MEs lEs. Physic majors and Chemical Engineering c ™represcntatives w i U bc oom ON CAMPUS ^ (Just north of 1-96 Expressway) T o o b t a i n G r u m m a n l i t e r a t u r e a n d a r r a n g e a n i n t e r v i e w , c o n t a c t y o u r p l a c e m e n t cilice. The warmth and atmosphere of a Yorkshire inn, j j i n l u r t If a n interview is n o t c o n v e n i e n t at tin t i m e , send a c o m p r e h e n s i v e r e s u m e t o GRUMMAN A1KC RAFT E N G I N E E R I N G C O R P O R A T I O N your favorite beverages, and the famous Jack T a r hospitality make the Caucus Room 3 must for your weekend enjoyment. M r . Peter C . V a n P u t t e n . D i r e c t o r ol bfii Bcihpapc • Long Island • New York Open 11a.m. 'til 2 a . m . ploymcnt, Dept. GR 251. An equal opportunity employer (M F) across from the state capital 8 Michigan State News, East Lansing. Michigan SPORTSFriday.February 10. 1 96 7 War against C hrisHan ideal By F A Y E U N G E R jreat difficulty reconciling h l m - trained. The war must be a last State News Staff W r i t e r peace must be just and not the -trlf to w a r , Zahn emphasized. r e s o r t . The means of waging war Zahn spoke at thé last of the The three-day fast f o r peace preconditions for another w a r . five seminars on "What Is the began Ash Wednesday, Necessary tension must be just. The good to be gained by the war must be g r e a t e r " E v e n under these conditions War Doing to Us?" The s e m i n a r s The Rev. Gordon Zahn, p r o - Zahn listed three a r e a s in than the evil; involved. Victory it would be difficult to see the drew more than 200 people for f e s s o r os sociology at Loyola which Christians should feel a must be certain. The ensuing present war in Vietnam as j u s t , " some s e s s s o n s . University in Chicago, charged tension on the question of p a r - Zahn said. Sunday that Christians no longer ticipating in war. felt the necessary tension be- 1—Love for one another, even tween C h r i s t ' s teachings and the for one who does evil, has always support of w a r s . Zahn spoke at the last convocation on war and peace at St. John's Catholic Stu- been the one essential mark of Christianity. Yet the secular world would teach a Christian Augenstein explains beliefs dent C e n t e r . to think of an " e n e m y " a s an P r o j e c t yourself into the future beings should behave towards of beliefs is necessary for making Several m e m b e r s of the East evil object, not as a person, where one can know everything each o t h e r , " he added. such decisions despite t h e m u c h - Lansing clergy who had been a t - r about a child before he is born. He emphasized that the funda- discussed hazards of the planned tending a national conference on Now suppose you a r e a j u r o r mental principles never change, society. 2—Love in the Judeo-Christian peace in Washington called for who will decide birth or abortion. their application v a r i e s with the "Otherwise we're going to tradition is universal. The s e c u - a three-day fast at the beginning You know this child will be a situation. start making decisions on a lar world, however, would r e - of Lent. second Van Gogh: his life will " I ' m not a complete situational c a t c h - a s - c a t c h - c a n b a s i s , " he place it with nationalism, be hell, but society will be e n - ethics man o r a complete a b - said, "and we can get into s e r - "•the characteristic heresy of our Rice and tea riched. s o l u t i s t , " he said. " F o r example, ious t r o u b l e . " day." How do you decide? t h e r e is a move underway with War is not inevitable today but T h e role of the university in The f a s t e r s a r e eating one meal is the result of a nationalistic Leroy G. Augenstein, c h a i r - the state to liberalize the a b o r - Tragedy narrowly averted a day, an evening meal of rice and tea. definition of reality and of a man of the Dept. of Biophysics, reliance on the military, Zahn posed this societal problem a s that fundamentally abortion is tion laws. I happen to believe such a p r o c e s s is to "teach about belief systems from the historical viewpoint," Augen- Zahn's speech set the mood for said. If we a r e to achieve peace he discussed why religion is as m u r d e r . stein said. The snow-covered roof of St. R o s e of L i m a Roman Catholic Church, Balti- the announcement of the f a s t . we must uplift moral sensitivity. important for the scientist as f o r ' "However, there a r e some s i t - more, collapsed Thursday on top of 120 p e r s o n s 100 of t h e m c h i l d r e n , who w e r e " W e a r e disturbed by the slay- anyone e l s e . uations where the child would be No student should have to hold ' ' Even our deterrence ration- Today science is developing seriously damaged. T h e r e a r e attending a morning Lenten service, Thirty-foe r p e r s o n s , ' n e a r l y all children, ing of eight n u r s e s in Chicago, al has the mark of h e r e s y , " he certain beliefs in o r d e r to pass UPI Telephoto by a sniper on a Texas campus said. "We have built our rationale methods by which men can be some things worse than m u r d e r . a course, he added. w e r e i n j u r e d . No one was k i l l e d . and horrified by the slaying of on the feeling that we ought to manipulated o r controlled, he People should have the option " T h e r e should be more r e l i - several beauty p a r l o r p a t r o n s , " have enough power left , over to said. Such knowledge can be used to choose, Augenstein explained. gion, as well as the other hu- Zahn said. utterly destroy the enemy who. f o r helping the psychotic o r for/ But such an option Jhould be set manities, jaught in a historical enslaving the society. The q u e s - up under philosophical guide- Actors to dramatize religion Yet it does not disturb us to attacks u s . " sense simply because this has learn that the South Vietnamese tion is, who is to decide? lines. been an important pari of the 3—The Christian religion and American soldiers keelhaul claims priority when it comes "Science can provide the tools, T h e s e would not necessarily history on which our whole s o - A theater troupe and a p r o f e s - available at the University Luth- the Viet Cong through rice pad- in conflict with any other value but their use is up to m a n , " be the ones I adhere to strongly, cial system has developed," he Richard Levy, p r o f e s s o r 6f sor of sociology speaking on '*The eran Church office, at the c o r n e r dies behind military vehicles, he s y s t e m . The secular o r d e r , o n the Augenstein explained. " T h e s c i - he said, however, some system said. political science, will d i s c u s s Jew in A m e r i c a " will deal with of Ann and Division Streets. T h e said. It does not disturb us to other hand, demands that we give entist operating a s a true s c i - " T h e Jew in A m e r i c a " at Hillel questions or. the man of religion cost is $1. To phone for tickets learn that t o r t u r e methods a r e priority to the "national i m p e r a - entist cannot and should not make foundation's Sunday night supper used in questioning Viet Cong that d e c i s i o n . " tive." in society next week. Norman and Sandra Dietz, a call 332-2559. The pair, now oh their third national tour, left c a r e e r s i n t e l e - forum. The forum will begin at 6 p.m. p r i s o n e r -., o r that p r i s o n e r s have died under interrogation. This is where the tension should come, Zahn said, in the " T h i s decision has to come Intrepretive donee New York -theater couple who For r i d e s call 332-1916-, f r o m a ' b e l i e f system,'" he con- subtitle their hour-and-a-half vision and advertising in 1960. " W e a r e in danger of losing turning over of our moral obli- program as "man and wife and other outrageous r o l e s , " will They formed their own company, called T h e a t e r of Concern, in Sabbath s e r v i c e s followed by Kiddush will be held Saturday at the Hillel House. any religious w a r , " Zahn warned. perspective on gations to the dommand of secu- lar authority. tinued. A scientist asks how an atom or a man or the universe works, but to use this knowl- port of church service The Christian should have perform at University Lutheran 1962. 'pacem in T e r r i s ' edge, one must ask "why is Sacred Dance co'jld become Last Christmas Eve the choir Church. there, an atom, a man, a uni- Pope John XXIII's encyclical-, as much a part of church s e r v - lit th« candles a: the evening Among their r o l e s are a hap- verse?" service and o.i C h r i s t m s s m o r n - " P a c e m in T e r r i s , " demands ices a s traditional hymns. less suburban Adam and Eve in Augenstein said that one of ing held an interpretive dance of af sketch called "The Apple B i t " and a frantic druggist and. c u s - tomer in search of self-confi- Christian youth unifying that we evaluate war with an entirely new attitude, Zahn said. The encyclical stated that " i t Is hardly possible to imagine.in h i s best sources of finding out the why of the universe is his religious convictions. The Rhythmic Choir of Edge- wood United Church, 469 N . H a g - adorn Rd., has been staging in- terpretive dances during church the Annunciation. Last s p r i n j , when Edgewood's dence in " L e D r u g s t o r e . " "Basically my God is a C r e - new jharch Aas finished, the T h e spirit embodied in t h e U n i - organization on the national level have been invited.The Methodists an atomic e r a that a war cefuld services f o r t h ; pas: ten / e a r s . g r o j p started th..' first service There are also little Tilly ator, and particularly a C r e a t o r versity Christian Move- formed to bring, university s t u - hope the meeting will be i n t e r - be used a s a just instrument." This p r a c t i s e is welfrknoWh in w ith an interpretation of the ritual Tutweiler who takes a "SillyTrip of o r d e r l i n e s s , " he said. "It ment (UCM) is beginning to catch dents together from a c r o s s d e - denominational, the s t a r t of the It called for d i s a r m a m e n t , the other p a r t s of the country, bur of the sa.ictifica:ioa of a p l a : e to the Moon" and the boy with turns out that any scientist must on here. nominational lines. Members in- UCM at the state level. end of the a r m s ract*,' and the is not as extensive in 1 he M.'.d- of wors.ilp. They a r e planning to "too much eyesight" in "I Lsed believe in .this o r d e r l i n e s s . " The UCM is a Christian youth clude Protestants, Roman C a t h - The new L'CM's s t r u c t u r e a l - banning of nuclear weapons with- r e p . a t the performance this y e a r to See My S i s t e r . " Believing such an o r d e r was olics, E a s t e r n Orthodox and lows local campus groups to a f - out any mention of the bilateral Ti 10 high school girls who for the anniversary. The performances will begin or was not created by God is an Young F r i e n d s . filiate directly with the national requirement. maki up-:h:.- choir practico every at 8 p.m. Feb. 17. Tickets a r e act of faith, he continued, neither UCM. T h i s p e r m i t s local groups The encyclical called for p e r - Sunday afternoon j n d e r the di- Reactions of the congregation St, Johns Student A statewide convention will be can ever be proved. to this radical m o / e m ? it have held at Ypsilanti In March by the of ecumenical character and m i s - sons to be-individually r e s p o n - rection of M r s . Martin Gal, 1206 UNIVERSITY Parish Methodists. Other denominations sion orientation to have the means sible for their actions. " T h e fact that I believe in Burcham D.-. been inspiring, M r s , Gal said. to contact each other nationally- this o r d e r l i n e s s and find it in sc M r s . Gal has had some p r o - Those who truly appreciate the I BAPTIST CHURCH 327 M.A.C. Phone ED 7-977& EAST LANSING Zahn also mentioned the con- many places means that thlere efforts of the girls outnumber the according to T e r r y Black, of the ditions'-iece^sary for a just war: fessional training and taught at American Baptist) Sunday Masses CHURCH OF United Campus Christian Fellow- The 'cause must be just. The also should be an order o r set MSL for o.ie y e a r , but th.- m e m - people with a " c l o s e d - e y e - u n t i l - Gerard C. Phillips, Pastor 7:15 - 8:30 - 9:45 - 11:00 12:15 - 4:45, & 6:00 p . m . THE NAIARENE ship. right intentions : hould be main- of rules for seeing how human bers of the choir have had no p r o - i t ' s - a l l - o v e r " attitude. r ED 2-1888 When necessary Sunday fessional training at all. 149 Highland Ave.,Last Lansing Services 10 & 11 a . m . 6 & 7 p . m . Worship 10:00 a . m . Masses will be doubled up ! Sunday School 10:00 a . m . OKEMOS UNITY OF Welcome Students LUTHERAN 11:10 a.m. Church School with m a s s e s in the chapel and | Morning Worship 11:00 a . m . CENTRAL GREATER LANSING Christ Methodist WORSHIP Nursery Provided— downstairs lounge. College Fellowship Hour *- BAPTIST CHURCH FREE METHODIST East Lansing Unity Center Martin Luther Chapel 10:00-12:00 a.m. Weekday Masses 6:00 p.m. 4684 Okemos-Haslett Rd. Church at American Legion Center Evening Service 7 : 00 p.m. CHURCH 425 W. Grand River Lutheran Student Center 7:00 - 8:00 - 12:30 - 4:30 10 a.m.-Collegiate Class On Vallev C t , ®ff "One Hour of Sermon and 332-1932 517 W. Jolly Rd., Lansing 444 Abbott Rd. M a s s e s at Alumni Chapel 828 N. Wash, at Oakland W, Grand River, East Lansing Song" 11 a . m . - 7 p.m. Worship Wilson M. Tennant, Minister Two Blocks North of Union Monday - Friday 4:15 Follow Highway 43 to Lansing Sunday Ser.vice — 11:00 a . m . For Transportation P h o n e Meinte Schuurmans, 9:30 - Holy Eucharist Saturday Masses 8:15 p.m.-Collegiate Wednesday C l a s s - 7:30 p.m. 332-1446, Rev. G l e n n A. Minister: Rev. Howard C. Artz University Methodist 8:00 - 9:15 - 11:45 Fellowship Associate Minister i 1 ;00 - Morning Worship Chaffee, Pastor Daily Meditation — 12 noon A Special Invitation T o Worship Services 9:30—Children's Sunday Church All MSU Students D.R. Allbaugh, pastor Consultation by Appointment School Hour 9:30-11 a . m . 1120 S. Harrison Rd. University Edgewood United F r e e Taxi Service: Listen Minister: Richard D. Billings College Age Fellowship Wed. Evening Lenten Worship Church 482-1444 or 484-4488 WVIC, 9 a . m . Sundays (Church of the Daily Word) 7:30 Worship Seventh-Day 469 North Ha.gadorn Koac Sunday, 6:30 p.m. 8:30 - 9:30 - 11:00 Adventist Church blocks north of Grar." RiverJ Kimberly Downs F i r s t Christian Central Methodist T H E CHURCH OF "Honor Your Father Temporarily Meeting at Worship Services Church of Christ peoples Church A c r o s s From the Capitol and Mother" University Lutheran Church JESUS CHRIST OF Reformed Church 9:30 a . m . and 11:00 a . m . 1007 Kimberly Drive, Lansing East Lansing WORSHIPS SERVICES Division and Ann Sts. Sermon by L A T T E R - D A Y SAINTS 240 Marshall St., Lansing Rev. Burns Interdenominational SATURDAY SERVICES D r . Truman A. Morrison (2 blocks W. of Frandor Rev. Hoksbergen (9:45 and 11:15) Ministers "Mormons" 200 W. Grand Rl"er Shopping Center on preaching 9:30 a . m . Sabbath School | Church School 431 E. Saginaw at Michigan (WJIM Broadcast 10:15 a . m . ) Rev, Alder. B. Burns E. Grand River) 11:00 a . m . Worship Service! 9:30 a . m . and 11:00 a . m . C r i b West of Abbott Rd. Morning Service 9:00 and 11:15 SUNDAY SERVICES "A Dream of Destinyl" Rev. Keith L Pohl room through Junior high IV 9-7130 "What God Does Saturday, February 11th SUNDAY SERVICES at the Supper" 9:30 and 11:00 High School Group at 11 a . m . SUNDAY SERVICES Priesthood Meeting 9:00 a.m. will be held Howard A. Lyman-preachlng Dr. Donald Jacobsen University C l a s s 10:15 Nursery During Services Edgewood Bus Stops Sunday School 10:30 a.m. at the Church Asst. Prof, of Religion Morning Worship 11:00 a.m. "Contemporary Liturgy" 10:35 a . m . - Conrad Hall Sacrament Meeting 5:00 p.m. Crib Nursery CHURCH SCHOOL at Andrews University Bible Study 10:00 a . m . Evening Service 7 p.m. | "Invitation to Adventure" 10:40 a . m . - Parking Area Evening Worship Tuesday Evening by Dr. Wallace Robertson So Bring The Baby 6:00 p.m. " C h e e r s for Jehovah" 9:30 to 10:30 a . m . •Program For Transportation or | Between McDonel and Holmes Youth Meeting 7:30 p.m. Rev. Hoksbergen Wednesday - F e b . 15 for all ages information Call 882-5007 I 10:45 - Owen Hall 332-2559 nursery Wednesday evening Bible f o r transportation, Campus Student Center Lenten Luncheon For Men 11:00 a . m . - Children 2 11 y r s 1 10:50 - Shaw Hall Study 7:30 p.m. 217 Bogue St. Apt. 1 of the East Lansing Each Sun. listen to " T h e Voice call 332-8465 or 355-8180 I Other Stops Added by Request Phone 351-6360 Community $1.25 of Prophecy," 9:30 a . m . , ¡University Student Group For Transportation Call Those In Need of D r . Truman Morrison F r e e bus transportation 15 to WJIM 1240 and " F a i t h For 15:30 p.m. supper and p r o g r a m FE 9-8190 A Warm Welcome Extended Transportation c a u speaking 30 minutes before each s e r - T o d a y , " Channel 6 S u n . a f t e r - Transportation, phone 332 -2906 ED 21*1960 or ED 2-2434 to All Visitors CHURCH SCHOOL vice around the campus. noon, Channel 2 at 10:30 a.m. 8821425 485-3650 university J L 9:30 - 11:00 lutheran church I alc-cla ! Crib through 12th Grade in SOUTH BAPTIST CHURCH CûSTflliriSTCR PRCSBYTCRIûn ChUBCh UNIVERSITY REFORMED CHURCH 1 3 1 5 Abbott Rd. I church bldg. COST ¿ansino m i c u c û ' ; \lr f-om Sltiri, (Mstar 15J-7164 R e f r e s h m e n t period in Church p a r l o r following worship s e r - Lansing ftl NDAY S C H E D I L E i vices :15, 9:15, 10:30, n:30 1518 S. Washintgon Is God Like? - Part 1 Worship Services— — 9:00 and 11 ¡00 a . m . Church School, Crlbbery-Thlrd Grade --9.00 and 11:00 a . m . Church School, Fourth Grade-Adults, Students--10:00 turn; First Church of First Presbyterian "Fed-up With Life!" A L U M N I M E M O R I A L CHAPEL Christ, Scientist Ottawa and Chestnut For transportation phone 3.32-62"*! or 332-8901 709 E. Grand River WORSHIP SERVICE UNION - R O O M 35 By 6:00 p.m. Saturday East Lansing 9:30 a . m . - SUNDAY 7:00 P.M. Rev. R. L. Moreland - MLNISTERS - Rev. H. G. B« ich 11:00 a.m. Sunday Service 11 a . m . Sermon "Beginning Again" TRINITY CHURCH EPISCOPAL SERVICES AT MSU 8:30 P.M. by Seth C. Morrow 9:45 A.M. 120 Spartan Ave. Interdenominational "Soul" ALUMNI CHAPEL COLLEGE BIBLE CLASS YOUTH FELLOWSHIP SUNDAY WORSHIP SERVICES 6 p.m. Collegian Fellowship (Auditorium Drive, East of Kresge Art Center) SUNDAY SCHOOL University Classes 11:00 a . m . - regular at Alumni Chapel Dr. Ted Ward, Teacher T h r e e Courses of Study 9:45 MSU Learning Systems (9:308tll-Universlty Students) Supper 50$ Refreshments 9:30 a.m. Holy Communion and Sermon Institute 8:30 and Morning Worship WEDNESDAY 5:15 p.m. Holy Communion and Sermon 11:00 Is the War in Vietnam Un- ' T h e Heart of Christian Maturity 3.-00 p.m.-Evening Meeting avoidable f o r the United All Saints Parish States. Discussion illus- 11:00 A.M. "This Makes Life D i f f e r e n t ! " 7:00 Evening Worship 800 Abbott Rd. F r e e Public Reading Room trated by slides. Assoc. 'A Lesson on P o w e r l e s s n e s s " 134 West Grand River P r o f e s s o r John Donoghue D r . Howard F . Sugden, P a s t o r OPEN Dept. of Anthropology MSU. by Assoc. P a s t o r Piersma 8:00 a . m . Holy Communion 8:15 p.m. 9:30 a . m . Holy Communion and Sermon Weekdays—9-5 p.m. Trinity Collegiate Fellowship F r e e Bus Transportation FREE BUS SERVICE Morning and Evening 11:15 a.m. Morning P r a y e r and Sermon Mon., Tues., T h ü r s . , F r l . Evenings 7 p . m . - 9 p.m. A round Campus Canterbury All a r e welcome to attend T o and From Church PAS IORS: E. Eugene Williams, David L. Erb. Norman R. Piersma A warn and friendly welcome CALL 482-0754 FOR INFORMATION Sundays 6:30 p.m. Church Services and visi; and FREE BUS SERVICE- See schedule in your dorm. use the reading r o o m . awaits you at F i r s t PresbyteriarJ Friday. February 10, 1967 9 Michigan State News. East Lansing. Michigan VOTINO StJLT „, Supremes tcp4ist ASA4SU becomes Well, the big night has finally arrived for all devoted Motown lovers. The Supremes will p e r - at the Wonders Hall Satu "day night mixer from 8:30 to mid- night. form here as part of the ASMSU Entertainment "Afghanistan," a travel film narrated by Col La Wyatt, will be C of C member Just Pop Entertainment Series at 7 and 9 to .light in the aud torium. Those unfortunates who got up This Weekend shown in the Auditorium Satu.* Jay at 8 p.m. MSU weekend sports opens to- By VALERIE ALBERTS Thursday the ASMSU Student man, named Tim P i c k a r d , c h a i r - fiddlin9 too late to purchase tickets for the Supremes' performance need not night with a fencing meet with Wayne State University at 7:30 Board voted unanimously to pur- man of the ASMSU price study p.m. despair because another activity chase a full one year m e m b e r - ship on the East Lansing Chamber committee, as the student r e p r e - sentative to the Chamber of Com- around is also on tap tonight. For the few *ho lLce to get out of bed early on a Saturday of Commerce. The Chamber has ring Danny Kay e will be shOA-n " G a m u t " on WMSB, Channel 10, merce. Bailey Hall is sponsoring a morning, there will be fencing invited ASMSU a seat on the Graham said Pickard's posi- A San F r a n - at 7 p.m. in Anthony Hall audi- at 11:30 a . m . Samrday will p r e - Battle of the Bands mixer at sent the Satin Sound - ja.'.z trio bouts with Iowa, Wisconsin and board of directors. tion will insure students a p e r - c i s c o m u s i c i an Brody tonight f r j i n 9-12. The torium. Air Force at 9:30 a.m. manent voice on business mat- "Guns of Navarone," an a c - anJ the Social P r o s , a local Jim Graham, ASMSU chair- carries the three competing bands a r e the The wrestling match with Iowa t e r s in the community. tion-packed suspense story s t a r - folk group. Singing by the Delta tool of his Grim Reapers, the Second String Sigma Theta sorority will also starts a; 3 p.m. Saturday. ring Gregory Peck, Anthony The student board debated l e s s trade, a bass and the Toniks. be featured. Satu "day evening sports in- Qu inn and David N iven .vili be Faculty art than five minutes in reaching its f i d d l e , to w o r k Shaw will have a record hop clude an invitational track meet shown "in Conrad Auditorium at decision to appropriate $50 to in somewhat f r o m 9-12 tonight. The newest thing hitting r e s i - at 7 p.m. and a hockey gami at 7 and 9 toir.ght sponsored by purchase the annually renewable The Performing Arts Company dence halls is the coffee house. 7:30 with the University of Michi- different fash- MM A and WIC. exhibit to open membership. Movie, "On the Double," s t a r - Fee Hall will convert its c l a s s - gan. ion. The student-sponsored show Both the University and the rooms into " T h e Thing" on Sat- At the theatres this weekend, UPI Telephoto " A l f i e " continues his love affair State News a r e members of the urday night from 8-12. Kenneth at Kresge Chamber of Commerce, but Lawless of the American Though: at the Campus tor the 4th w.:ek. The annual faculty art exhibit ship. neither has a voting m e m b e r - Movies to feature and Language Department will read poetry. Folksinging by the "Funeral in Berlin," a spy thriller starring "Alfie's" Michael Caine wil. pliy at the will open at Kresge Art Center The invitation to have an MSU Folklore Society will provide the Michigan Theatre this weekend. Sunday weeks. and continue for two student represent the student body on thé board of directors comedy and travel atmo sphere. The East Lounge of Wilson Hall will be convened into a Tonight is the last night to catch "Warning Shot" at the Erling B. Brauner, chairman came as a result of a meeting "On the Double," a comedy Series. It begins 8 p.m. in the Gladmer in Lansi-ig. " T h e Liq- coffee house every Saturday night of the Art dept.. visiting artist Monday between three ASMSU starring Danny Kaye, and " A f - University Auditorium. uidator," another secret agent at S;30 and l o c i jazz a.id folk Angelo Ippolito, and 20 A n dept. representatives and the eight- ghanistan," a travel film, will The film will be narrated by spoof, starts Saturday. groups will ent? "tain. faculty members will display man executive council of the be shown on campus this week- Colin Wyatt, author, painter and The State Theatre is showing their work. Chamber of Commerce. Akers Hall will hold a mixer end. linguist. He is a fellow of the the highly accUi.tted film, " A Paintings ranging from r e p r e - Graham, Jim Sink, ASMSU from 9-12 Saturday evening with The Danny Kaye film is being Royal Geographic Society and a Man and Wo ma , " grand prize sentational to abstract, sculp- m e m b e r - a t - l a r g e , and Pickard entertainment by Francis X. a.id presented as part of the P e r - graduate of Cambridge Univer- winner of the !96b Cannes Film t u r e , ceramics and prints will represented ASMSU at the meet- th-.' Bushmen. forming A r t s Company's Film sity. Festival. be on display. A feature of the show will be ing. Graham said he believed the Nuclear defense plan Classics Series and will be shown in the Anthony Hall Auditorium The Other Side will e n t i r n i n the " p e e k - a - b o o " painting which majority of businessmen near Friday at 7 p.m. Admission is appears three-dimensional when campus a r e extremely fair in viewed through a stereopticon their dealings with device» However, he said students should student ; formed for major cities by Performing Arts Company season coupon. Dana Wynter, Margaret Ruth- The show will be open to the seek a solution when injustices W ASHINGTON f — The Joint population a r e on the list of 50 erford and Diana Dors star along public and purchases may be do occur. Chiefs of Staff a r e supporting a to be protected, the Star said, with Kaye, who plays a dual made. The price study committee will role. but there a r e exceptions—among The gallery will be open 9 a . m . - continue its investigation on plan to provide special protec- tion against nuclear - tipped, them Omaha, Neb., site of the The travel film, "Afghani- noon and 1-5 p.m. Monday through bookstore prices, dry cleaning enemy missiles for 50 Ameri- Strategic Air Command's head- stan", will be Saturday's o f f e r - Friday, 7-9 p.m. Tuesdays, and c o s t s , and high parking-ticket can cities, the Washington Eve- q u a r t e r s . ing from the MSU World Travel 2-5 p.m. weekends. fines charged to students. ning Star reported Thursday. The Joint Chiefs' plan it said, Although the full list of p r o - is to provide a " t h i n " defense posed cities was not disclosed, of long-range Spartan missiles to Supremes' it's what's happening George the Star said most of the biggest cover the entire United States, cities~New York, Chicago, Los with 50 cities to be given the 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 1 1 a . m . Angeles, Detroit, Baltimore and added protection of short-range Washington, for instance—are on Sprint m i s s i l e s . door times the day b e f o r e p u b l i c a t i o n . the list. The Joint Chiefs, the Star says, The Auditorium :!oo.-s will no: But it said more than 100 cities propose to start with the long- open uitil 6:39 p.m. Friday for Bernard Richard Cloward, professor of in the Centennial Room at Kel- with a population over 100,000 do range protection plus close-in the 7 p.m. Supremes ¡perform- social work at Columbia Univer- logg Center, Admission is 75 not appear, among them such coverage for a first list of 25 ance, and at 9:i5 p.m. for tht sity, will address a colloquium on cents. state capitals as Richmond, Va., cities estimating the cost at second show. "Youth and Poverty" at 3 p.m. * • * Lansing, Mich., Phoenix, Ariz., $9.9 billion. Another 25 cities The 7,700 tickets for the tw today in 31 Union. The International Club will and Sacramento, Calif. Among would be given the short-range performs/ices * e r e sold out w . h - have an open dance Saturday at other cities it said would be left protection later at an additional in seven /.ours an J l5minu'es,thi- Shaw • •• 8 In the Union P a r l o r s . Admis- without special protection would cost of $9.5 billion. fastest rate ¿or any ASMSU pop- J . Blakeslee of Cornell Uni- sion is f r e e . be Salt Lake City, Utah, Birming- McNamara, on the other hand, ular eateruinmoat program, ac- versity, an agricultural Special- • •» ham, Ala., Syracuse and Ro- estimates the cost at $15 billion cording to Mitchel Piatt, po,> ist of Wycliff Language Group, The Bud. Spangler Group will chester, N.Y., and Charlotte, for the first step and another $15 entertainmuir chairman. will give a seminar on " A g r i - hold a Jazz Concert at 3 p.m. N.C. billion for the second. ' cultural Socio-Economics in the Sunday In the Wilson • » Hall Grill. Most of the 50 largest cities ir. be darned ! Amazon Jungle of Ecuador", at 4 p.m. today in 309 Agriculture^, The MSU Science Fiction Club Hall. will meet from 2-5 Saturday in » »» the Union Oak Room. T h e r e will Notre Dame prof The Humanities Dept. Record be a discussion of. robots as e x - Concert will be at 7 p.m. in 114 emplified in "1, Robot," and Beseey Hall. Music by Boc- "The Humanoids." For informa- to lecture here cherine, Handel, Schumann and tion call 355-5406. "Colloquium" will present Tchaikovsky •will be featured. • *• J o h n T . Canty, instructor in gen- »» The Wesley Foundation will eral studies programs at the Uni- Delta Sigma Theta sorority- hold its second Backdoor Film versity of Notre Dame, in a phil- will sponsor a dance at 8 t o - Session at 8 tonight in the Foun- osophy lecture at 8 p.m. Monday night in 21 Union. The dance dation Lounge. Four films on in 209 Horticulture Building. will be a benefit for the March war and the individual will be Canty's topic will be " L e s - of Dimes. Admission fee is one shown. niewski's Logical Language: Its Youth isn't wasted on the young. And the young don't * * * penny per inch of a person's Formation and Formulation." waste their time at Celanese. height. All-Nations Forum and F e l - The speech is open to the pub- • ** lowship of the East LansingTrin- 11 O u r top people are never old-fashioned about any n e w Student Religious Liberals will ity Church will meet at 7 Sat- idea, whether it c o n i e s tiom middle m a n a g e m e n t or meet at 11 a.m. Sunday in Old urday night in the Alumni Mem- I rom i)ur youngest college grad. We have a master plan College Hall of the Union. C y - orial ChapelSocial Room. Eugene and the vitality to make it work. Marketing is way-out bernetics and its effect on the Friesen, research associate of the Instructional Materials C e n - a n o' zeroed right in. Finance knows that we have better future will be «discussed. • » ter will show slides of his being things to do with our money than let it grow b a r n a c l e s . . . Alpha Kappa Psi, professional the f i r s t to contact an Indian shelled out ¡>405 million in capital expenditures business fraternity will meet this tribe in Surinam, South Ameri- over the last years. In the scientific department, we afternoon for a field trip at the ca. He will discuss the rationale c o m b i n e technical insight with an unusual grasp of Ex Cello Corporation »»» in Detroit. for bringing "civilization" to an marketing d y n a m i c s . isolated tribe. The Mass Media Committee • ** T h i n k i n g young e x p l a i n s how we chalked-up one of the will meet today at 4 p.m. in 323 A resolution on Vietnam will most impressive corporate rebuilding jobs in recent Student Services. All interested be discussed in the General A s - history. How we turned what w a s basically a one-product students a r e invited. sembly meeting of the Campus business into a solid and diverse international corporation • •* United Nations meeting at 7:30 dealing in c h e m i c a l s , miracle libers, plastics, paints, Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity will tonight in the Con Con Room of petroleum and forest products. How we multiplied sales have a dance at 9 p.m. Saturday the International Center. 5 fold in 10 years. How w e now h a v e 100 plants in the the chill out of U.S., Canada, Latin America, Europe, Africa and Asia. TAKE winter Possibly w e could afford to relax a little. But s u c c e s s m a k e s young blood run e v e n faster. Which m e a n s that the ambitious college grad couldn't find a more provocative opportunity anywhere else in American industry. Accountants, Chemists, ChEs, MEs, Physicists, MBAs stop in and Our representative will be on your c a m p u s soon. get weppned Contact your p l a c e m e n t director to make an interview up wirna appointment. Or write for a brochure outlining more steaming cup specific areas of job opportunity to Mr. J. B. Kuhn, Manager of University Recruitment, Celanese of hot chocolate Corporation, 5 2 2 Fifth Avenue, N e w York, N.Y. 10036. a fresh hot fishburger and fries. It's the quickest warm- up you'll find! ELAN E S E McDonald's CHEMICALS • FIBERS • PLASTICS COATINGS • PETROLEUM • FOREST PRODUCTS An Equal Opportunity Employer ( M & F ) LANSING EAST LANSING 1 0 Michigan State News, East Lansing. Michigan SPORTSFriday.February 10. 1 STATE NE. WS STATE NEWS CLASSIFIED TAKE ADVANTAGE OF OUR WINTER "WOE CHASER" .* - ' ' CLASSIFIED 355-8255 355-8255 CALL AND PLACE YOUR WANT AD TODAY AT SPECIAL RATES Automotive Employment For Rent For Sale Personal I with a f ' 9 8 ' 1964 luxury sedan. Fully equipped, including a i r - c o n - ditioning. IV 5-7485. S - 3 - 2 / 1 4 low cos OLDSMOB1LE 1964 " 9 8 " t w o - UNlQUÉ RESEARCH P f t b j E C I : GIRL NEEDED immediately for OLIVETTI TYPEWRITER ( P o r t - GIRLS: FALLS, wiglets, wigs. Need age 18 males with c a r and c o n s i d e r a b l e dating experience. luxury a p a r t m e n t . Close to c a m - pus. 351-7650. 5-2/14 able.) Like new - $44.95. Phone 353-7050. S-3-2/14 Finest human h a i r . Discount p r i c e s . 337-0820. S-5-2/10 Who's Whose Integrity, reliability. Ability to EAST KNOLLS near c a m p u s for STEREO TUNER Heath-Kit, a l - T H E CIGAR BAND - - The g u a r - anteed sound known throughout WANT AD door hardtop, white, deluxe, a l l power, plus a i r conditioning. follow explicit instructions e s - s e n t i a l . Box 3 - C , Michigan State faculty and staff. New spacious two bedroom. Dishwasher, c e n - most new with Knight a m p l i f i e r . $65.00. TU 2-8587. S - l - 2 / 1 0 the State. 337-7086. C-2/10 Pinnings Bonnie B e r g , Glencoe, Illinois J u n i o r Delta Delta Delta to J a m e s 30,000 m i l e s . OX 4-7741. News. MSU. 3-2/10 t r a l a i r conditioning, pool. $170. | Snow shoes, boots, many s i z e s Carney, Southfield, Michigan V-M WEEK is coming F e b r u a r y K a r e n Ridenour, Costa Mesa, • AUTOMOTIVE 3-2/10 DELIVERY BOYS wanted. Must Also, one bedroom with w a l k - j and p r i c e s , g l o v e s , s o c k s , h a t s , 20. Watch f o r special savings California Sophomore to G r e g Senior Delta Upsilon. • EMPLOYMENT OLDSMOB1LE 1964 Cutlass 442. have own transportation. I t a l - in c l o s e t . $150. Open 1 - 6 Sun- and. e a r bands, also c a r r y on p o r t a b l e and component s y s - Ettling, B i r m i n g h a m , Michigan • FOR RENT 2 - d o o r 4-speed. Good c o n d i - ian Village, 1101 East Michigan. day o r by appointment. ROSE equipment for intramural t e m s during VM week at NEJAC J u n i o r Alpha T a u Omega. « FOR SALE tion, good t i r e s . $1175. ED 7 - 5-2/10 HILL REALTY 393-1220. sports. of East Lansing, 543 E. Grand E ngagements • LOST & FOUND 0384. S-3-2/10 BABYSITTER WANTED. 4 - 5 10-2/21 River next to P a r a m o u n t News. Elizabeth A. Long, Detroit, M i c h - • PERSONAL OLDSMOB1LE, 1963, 4-door days a week. Our home. Call A YON DALE COTTAGE: o n e b e d - PX Store Frandor C igan F r e s h m a n to B a r r y Metheny, Sandra Kin, Farmington, Mich- • PEANUTS PERSONAL sedan. Full power, factory a i r . 351-7854 a f t e r 5:30. 5 - 2 / 1 4 room f u r n i s h e d . Utilities and STEREO, AM-FM multiplex HAD ANY lately? Good time m u - Waterford, Michigan Senior igan to J o s e p h Phillips, F a r m i n g - • REAL ESTATE BUS BOY needed at once. M e a l s . parking included. $130.00 p e r turntable, s p e a k e r s . Excellent Alpha Kappa P s i . ton, Michigan Senior. 332-4539. S-3-2/13 s i c . Call the GOOD GUYS. 351- • SERVICE PONT1AC CATALINA 1962. Ex- ZETA TAU ALPHA, 639M.A.C. month. Call 337-2080 a f t e r 5 condition. Must s e l l . 355-6828. 4335. S-3-2/10 • TRANSPORTATION 332-5318. S-3-2/10 p.m. 5-2/10 S - l - 2 / 1 0 FRAMED PRAYERS and uplifts, Sara Stryker, G r o s s e lie, M i c h - • WANTED cellent condition, all power, 2 - door hardtop, maroon, snow FRATERNITY COOK: Excellent PENNSYL VAN1A AVENUE South, $53 DUE bill to Kitty Kelly B r i - thoughtful desk o r wall i t e m s , Service igan J u n i o r Gamma Phi Beta to William Gill, Carleton, Michigan DEADLINE t i r e s ; owner leaving country. conditions. Week days only. 10- n e a r Michigan Avenue. F u r n i s h - 5. 337-0346. S - 3 - 2 / 1 0 ed studio with kitchenette. P r i - dal Shops In Detroit f o r $45. 351-7085. S-l-2/10 specify and mail 50 • J : fjl i i|: tf&§ • •^• ama aeran like new. $600.00. IV 9-2874. adults only. Williamston, M i c h - FOUND: PRESCRIPTION s u n - s e r v i c e Lansing/San J u a n / L a n - ft te : • • • • • • s a n o er 7 p.m. • 3-2/10 BB3DBBB D391S • • •HB S-3-2/13 igan. Inquire at Western Auto g l a s s e s , B & L Rayban n e a r sing. Optional s i d e t r i p to V i r - •• ••• 50 BED GENERAL HOSPITAL FORD 6 - c y l i n d e r , $50 has need for professional help. Store. 655-1788. After 6 p . m . , For Sale Holmes Hall. 353-7408. gin Islands. $18. Limited space ACROSS grain Phone IV 5-6128, 215 N. 8th R.N.'s and licensed practical 655-1035. 5-2/16 Fc5E WEDDING and p r a c t i c a l S-3-2/10 available. Make r e s e r v a t i o n s 1 Spigot 2 8 My sell Street. S - l - 2 10 n u r s e s . . Salary c o m m e n s u r a t e WANTED IMMEDIATELY one or shower gifts, complete line of LOST: OLIVE green s a m s o n i t e ni>w. 355-6364. 4-2/13 4 Household 30., H o u s e • • • • • • • Ham b a s k e t - w a r e . See ACE HARD- a t t a c h e implement wings HDD R E E S MERCURY CONVERTIBLE 1956. with experience, differential for two g i r l s , Rivers Edge A p a r t - c a s e . I.M. building. 7 Father a s a • • • • a n a 32 Melodious Good condition. Ideal F l o r i d a , WARE'S selections. 201 East Phone 351-9131 evenings. • • • B U H DOB evening and night duties. Liberal m e n t s . 351-5284. S-5-2/13 spring transportation. 332- personnel policies. Easily Grand River, across from S-5-2/15 . Join the 1 1 Gr. vowel 34. Deplore FOUR-MAN luxury a p a r t m e n t . 12 Closed 35. Intimation Union. Phone ED 2-3212. C 5365. S-3-2, 13 reached f r o m freeway 127.Well Pool, parking. Spring, s u m m e r , S>MIH6/#e WORLD 14 Accelerated 36. M a t g r a s s BOB ••••••• lighted, ample parking a r e a . „ C a l l 351-7758. 5 - 2 / 1 0 HEAD COMPETITION, 210cm, Personal 16 Com tort 37. Captivate EHISQ EBBI HOB Problem: Pleasant working conditions. Apply: Mason General Hospital FOURTH GIRL needed f o r a p a r t - $85.00 ment $50 utilities included. 205cm, $65.00 - with bindings. - Kaestle Slolams, THE CHARGE of THE LIGHT BRIGADE . . . groovy. Phone of Yamaha 17 Eternally 18 W e a r 39. Mvth 4 0 Knight ibbbb ama bbh 19 Siesta 42 Fairv tort People don't 800 East Columbia Street, M a - Judy, 351-7789. S - 5 - 2 / 1 3 353-1508. S-3-2/10 355-6957. S-5-2/13 2 0 Sturdv 4 3 Three-spot son, Michigan 48854. 10-2/21 THREE BEDROOM town house 44. Appointed 2. Ancestor dummy 22 C a s p believe our PART-TIME help for counter style. 1 - 1 / 2 baths, stove, d i s - 2 3 Bone time 3. News sheet 8. Pineapples work, pizza help, and telephone HRI SENIORS 24 Female 4.Y Adjective 4". Mire 9 Nut used VW's are used. a n s w e r s . Also, delivery boys posal, c a r p e t i n g . No p e t s . $175 animal sultix 5. Forward 1(1. Adroit month plus utilities, M a r r i e d This must be because we to deliver food to c a m p u s . A v e r - 2 5 Fu me fi. Sheriff's 13 P a r s o n couple only. ED 2-1737. tutu bird recondition our used Volks- age $2 - $3 p e r hour. Apply 2 6 Gender DOWN 3-2/10 1. Shipworm 7. Fencing 15. Sultan's wagens to the highest standard 5 - 6 p . m . V a r s i t y Drive Inn. 2 7 Cereal WOULD YOU believe? One a p a r t - decrees we can achieve. Then ws; guarantee them for*l00% for SECRETARY: EXCELLENT l o - 3-2/13 ment available f o r students, In cestigate The C a r e e r Opportun- at 1 2 3 4 S t 7 8 9 10 1 8. C audio 21. Spar completely furnished, all u t i l - ities With The Leading National thirty days* o r a thousand miles. cal position available at once for competent s e c r e t a r y to an e d - ities paid. Call Nejac of East Lansing. 337-1300. C Drive-In Restaurant And Cafeteria MSU's Yamaha H |4 % 1 IS it li 13 22. Eucharistie plate %% %if •Engine Si t r a n s m i s s i o n , r e a r ucational a d m i n i s t r a t o r . P o s i - 2 V Pikelike a x l e , front axle tion involves much public con- 63 NEW LUXURY Chain. Headquarters fish • B r a k e and electrical s y s t e m s sound proof u n i t s 17 il 26. Floss tact and interesting, v a r i e d , 27. Grand- % UNIVERSITY VILLA 1965 VW C a m p e r with tent y e a r - r o u n d work with ample APARTMENTS MANAGER And F I E L D SUPER- Bowker & Moi les 20 1 2> 22 child: Scot. f r i n g e b e n e f i t s . Experience and 25 28. C a m e iisli $1895. own t r a n s p o r t a t i o n a d v i s a b l e . - 635 ABBOTT ROAD - WALK TO CAMPUS VISOR Trainee Positions Available. Cycle Shop 25 % 24 %% 29. Oldest % i» 1962 Valiant. 2 D o o r H a r d - Write i m m e d i a t e l y . Box A - l For Interviews Today, Sign Up At 26 27 26 30. Upright top. Automatic Economy 6. Michigan State News, MSU. 10-2/16 - COMPLETELY FURNISHED STUDENTS 2-BEDROOM The Placement Office or Contact: i % i 32 33 31. Of the moon Bucket Seats. 36,000 Actual Miles. Like new r e d i n t e r - CHOOSE YOUR own h o u r s . A few FLEXIBLE UNITS - L E T US HELP YOU FIND » f u l l line of Yamahas 30 31 J4 %33 36 32. Dismal 33. Overseas i o r . Ready $695. h o u r s a day can mean excellent A ROOMMATE * f a s t and expert s e r v i c e è38 m message PHIL GORDON VW earnings for you a s a trained AVON r e p r e s e n t a t i v e . F o r ap- pointment in your own home, 3 Man Units 6 5 . 0 0 each p e r month 2-Mon U n i t s available PERSONNEL DIRECTÖR BURGER C H E F SYSTEMS, INC. 2152 W. G r a n d River 37 40 %41 3» 42 35. M o u n t a i n pass 38. Spring USED CARS 1348 W. I 6 t h S T R E E T month w r i t e M r s . Alona Huckins, 5664 Furnished Model Open Days& 44 i 4Ì E . G R A N D RIVER AT HOWARD 484-1341 Sphool S t r e e t , H a s ' e t t , Mich- igan, o r call IV 2-6893. C - 2 / 1 0 evenings: Sae Manager o r call 332-0091 o r 332-5833 INDIANAPOLIS, IND. Okemos, Michigan P h . 332-6977 43 % % 39. Saute 41. D i g r a p h 11 Michigan State News, East Lansing. Michigan SPORTSFriday.February 10. 1 96 7 U-M press 'policy,' ^ | TOMORROW • SAT. * SUN. (3) HITS*"] not rights, the issue FREE ELECTRIC CAR HEATERS By L A U R E L P R A T T and both to general c o m - 'investigation,"' said Daily e d - (2) First Run Hit« L A T E SHOW munication on campus, are those itor Mark R. Killingsworth, " i s State News Staff W r i t e r ambiguous. It does not indicate TWO TIMELESS TERRORS UNLEASHED!. to be studied under the t e r m s of ANN ARBOR—"Nothing solid" the board's request. if it could lead to such a l i m i t a - is expected until Monday o r T u e s - SACUA will meet Monday to tion. If this occurred, it would day on a request for a committee review the request and determine have disastrous consequences, its recommendation to the Senate not only for The Daily but also Behold a to study the relationship of The savage Michigan Daily to the University Assembly, a 65-man r e p r e s e n - for the entire University commu- world w h e r e of Michigan and the Board of tative body that is the legisla- nity." men are Control of Student Publications. tive a r m of the Faculty Senate. Killingsworth's statement on slaves 1 The request, made by theBoard The Assembly will meet Feb. Tuesday is the only policy s t a t e - 20 and is expected to make the ment made by The Daily since of Control itself, has been r e - ceived by the Senate Advisory final decision on the committee at that time. the board's action Monday. The Group Committee on University Affairs Faculty observers have said Cooperrider said the request that recent stories, specifically N e w P a n - H e l l e n i c C o u n c i l officers r e c e n t l y installed, a r e ( f r o m left) Hedy (SACUA). It has also been pub- lished in The Daily. leaves the nature of the study signed editorials proposing the Bowman, Alpha E p s i l o n Phi, second vice p r e s i d e n t ; Nancy Pfau, Alpha P M , Luke Cooperrider, chairman of group to the advisory committee. legalization of marijuana and a t r e a s u r e r ; Sally A y l e s w o r t h , Delta G a m m a , p r e s i d e n t ; Susan C o m e r f o r d , Kappa the Board of Control, said T u e s - Brown emphasized that story reporting Berkeley A l p h a T h e t a , c h a i r m a n of the e x e c u t i v e c o u n c i l ; S h a r i M a r s k i , A l p h a G a m m a day that the board did not intend " t h e r e ' s no need to set up a chancellor Roger Heyns's i n t e r - D e l t a , c o r r e s p o n d i n g s e c r e t a r y ; and S u s a n A l e x a n d e r , A l p h a X i D e l t a , r e c o r d - to call for an "investigation of censoring body." Statements est in the U-M presidency, i ng s e c r e t a r y . M i s s i n g is T e r r y H a z a r d , D e l t a D e l t a D e l t a , f i r s t v i c e p r e s i d e n t . The Daily's editorial practices from senior editors of The Daily prompted the board's request. S t a t e N e w s P h o t o by M e a d e P e r lI m a n and policies," a s The Daily had and observations from faculty reported the request. members have indicated a fear Thursday he said, "It is not a that the study might lead to l i m - MlSH Michigan State Film Society question of editorial freedom but of policies." The policies r e - itations on The Daily's editorial freedom. Orchestra to dedicate ALEC VcCOV'.EN lating the board to The Daily "The board's request for an presents a Benefit for concert to opera house THE PAPER toiot Atty. Gen. Kelley The MSU Symphony Orchestra will dedicate a concert Sunday instruments and properties, and no r e h e a r s a l s . Contributions to the Florence Marlon Brando LATE SHOW ALSO IN COLOR to the flood-ravaged Florence Opera House in Italy. The con- Opera House will be requested 4 o forms crime task force cert, to be held at 4 p.m. in the following the concert. Burkh r e - in ay j FratfiSsa 'THE WILD O N E ' Auditorium, will include two ported that collections will be sent in the name of the MSU m LANSING \Pi — Atty. Gen. difficult than that posed by organ- works new to Lansing audiences. The midwest premiere of Anton Symphony Orchestra and its pub- I- < lYMfiY r~ Frank Kelley today announcedthe ized c r i m e , " Kelley said. m Webern's " P a s s a c a g l i a , " w r i t - lic. Admission to the concert LU NdSr "The price we pay in t e r m s of O Tifón creation of a special division is f r e e . X within his department to fight human wreckage, economic loss, ten in 1908, will be presented. social rot and political c o r r u p - The concert will open with A m e r - In the music of Charles Ives organized c r i m e . tion weights heavily on our n a - ican composer Charles Ives's the listener will recognize many Sunday night 7 and 9 p.m. I-* The attorney general said his tional consciences Butthe magni- Second Symphony and conclude popular 19th century American Union Ballroom Donations: 50C u ïipieanm £ action follows the call by P r e s i - tunes, including "Columbia, the (ü dent Johnson for a massive fed- tude of our prohlem must not with Rossini's overture to the Gem of the Ocean," " A m e r i c a , " ml H opera "Italian in Algeria." e r a l war against crime. deter us from developing new and "Bringing in the Sheaves," »ooaiuM Information • 482-3903 Ili m » SUPER BARGAIN RAY! Kelley speculated that Michi- ways to meet i t . " Vincent Piersante, chief of de- The concert will be given in according to William D. Elliott, ICHIOAN § lÂccTieSw'fâiîi i/> gan's special task force is the recognition of the opera com- instructor in the Music Dept. f i r s t of its kind in the nation. tectives for the Detroit Police Department, will be the chief of pany's efforts in the face of Ives's father, a successful band ALL DAY PREVUE 2 FEATURES "No problem we face is more hardship during Italy's floods director in Danbury, Conn., investigation, Kelley said. The last November, according to con- trained his son in the traditional ADS tests division will be under the d i r e c - tion of Deputy Atty. Gen. Leon ductor Dennis Burkh. elements of music. By the time Cohan. Despite valuable losses, the he was ready to enter Yale, company managed to open the Charles Ives was a polished p r o - Carmichael 1966-67 season only two days fessional musician, with a v a r - THE WILDEST (continued f r o m page one) behind schedule with borrowed iety of compositions to his credit. dining room at 5:45 p.m. will t.»««TioN t 33'. KV44 feature music from an ensemble ( c o n t i n u e d f r o m p a g e o n e ) NOW! 4th Week of Spartan musicians. frightening if ghettos had been Feature 1:10-3:15-5:20-7:30-9:40 Gordon A. Sabine, vice p r e s i - planned. Instead, they merely dent for special projects, will be show that the white attitude is ^Michael Cairn gives NEWEST...KOOKIEST IDEA master of ceremonies. The the same from Boston to Watts," " A L F I E ' BUBBLES briiant performance.* speakers will be John D. Wilson, Carmichael declared. —Redbook Magazine Honors College director, and WITH IMPUDENT The SNCC spokesman criticiz- John F. A. Taylor, professor of HUMOR AND R I P E philosophy and director of the ed integration of white schools Humanities Research Center. in that only the A-students in MODERN W I T ! " Negro schools a r e sent to white -Botlty Crowtfier. N Y. Times At 8 p.m. those interested in the schools. humanities a r e invited to hear I t yhulf" "We have to send the best Arthur E. Adams, professor of (students) to sit next to animals history, speak on "The Many whose parents throw beer cans At I < Sides of Soviet R u s s i a " in the and cigarette butts at them when Conrad auditorium. they try to enter the schools. invanir'] 1 At the same time scientifically You should bring back your m i s - oriented candidates are invited to' sionaries from Africa to civilize MICHAEL CAINE, m Hubbard Hall dining room to hear this country," Carmichael told Leroy G. Augenstein, professor the quiet, predominantly white wKats and chairman of the Dept. of audience. biophysics, give his answer to the During the question-answer question, "Shall we play God?" period, Carmichael was asked what attempts w e r e being made (RECOMMENDED FOR MATURE AUDIENCES) funeral bi Berlin } C ompetitive examinations will to join lower class and middle be administered from 8:45 a.m. to class Negroes. He replied that MICHAEL CAINE « ALFIE RAUL HUBSCHMID OSCAR HOMOLKA noon Saturday. the people of the ghettos and MIUICENT MARTIN -JULIA FOSTER »JANEASHER • SHIRLEY ANNE HELD n M EVA K E I M I m u m MM«, CUIUS USHER. •«•«»t •«» NMMTW A PARAMOUNT PICTURE VIVIEN MERCHANT • ELEANOR BRON • WITH SHELLEY WINTERS AS RUBY i m JONES-m - - M «t M a m rural a r e a s a r e the ones with T t C H N I C O L O W ^ A N A V f l O N « TECHNICOLOR'TECHNISCOPE*k LEWIS GILBERT PRODUCTION ¿ g h r ^ . ENDS TONIGHT 'The the will to fight. "The black Shown At Intramural bourgeoisie have already been brainwashed. They're the j>nes | Next Att. Lynn Redgrovc ^J^GEgRGY^GIRL^^J Professionals9 3:05-7:00 & Later T ' G E R News who must come home.' Uly? TODAY and SATURDAY BEST IN FOREIGN FILMS L A D M EMeÁnu« N I N> 46B-64M I FORMATO R Shown Today At 1:15-3:15-5:20-7:20-9:25 DAVID JANSSEN in SECOND Basketball WEEK! SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 12 STARTS 'WARNING SHOT' TODAY . . . f-KOM 7:00 P.M. „COLOR Gym I Court 1 5:00 Montie - Motts TOMORROW! SHOWN SATURDAY AT 3:15-7:05-LATE ALL-DA Y SHOWING 6:00 Paperbacks - Underdogs SUPER BARGAIN DAY See it with someone you love! SHOWN SATURDAY AT 1:20-5:15-9:05 P.M. OF TWO FEATURES 7:00 Red Barons - Jay Birds 8:00 Augies Aces-Tonys Boys THE MOST BREATH-TAKIN6 AND Gym I Court 2 5:00 Sea Men - Locos t cP PASSIONATE LOVE STORY OF ALL TIME I 'What's Up T i g e r L i l y " shown 2nd at 9tl7 2nd Top Color Attraction 6:00 Schular Mets - Hallucina- tions 7:00 Impressions - Finns Folly THE LIQUIDATOR "A B E A U T I F U L FILM"-™« New Yorker MEET THE GIRLS 8:00 Elevator I-Soil Tech (SC) "A beautiful and sometimes breathtaking exposition W I T H T H E THERMO- Gym II Court 3 would 5:00 Theta Xi Theta-Villagers 6:00 Hedrick - Elsworth you of visual imagery. A free, vigorous cinematic style. V NUCLEAR 7:00 Muters - Stumblers believe. Incidents that have poignancy and charnv » NAVELS! 8:00 Zookeepers - Evans Schol- The Liquidator - B o s l e y Crowther, N . Y . T i m e * kills 27 spies ars without getting Gym II Court 4 out of bed ? 6RAH0 PRIZE WINNER 1966 CANNES FILM FESTIVAL : PRICE 5:00 Outsiders - Cookies would TODAY AT 7:20 & 9:30 P.M. : 'FABIAN' you 6:00 Thunderchickens-Majesties 7:00 8:00 Beebs Britches-Wee Five F.E.S.S.I-Nursery II (SC) believe. SATURDAY & SUNDAY AT . . , : FRANCO : "CICCIO DftGOlPFOOÏÏ Gym III Court 5 he hurts 1:20, 3:25, 5:30, 7:40 2 UMMM mG'iRLBOMBS 5:00 6:00 Bower - Howland AMF's - Pack. Society 6 spies and & 9:50 P.M. ( :ANTONELU [¡CHN.Ì I V 2 innocent 7:00 Flying Dutchmen - Team- bystanders? sters 8:00 Rejex - Knoll Soul would U»U0f G«0U> PMSIMS " D r . Goldfoot & The G i r l Bombs at 7s22 Gym III Court 6 you a Man 5:00 Spastics - Scorpions believe. ancIaWoman SEE IT! SUPPRESSED! SEX 6:00 Asher - Shockers he bruises 7:00 Falcons - Vets easily? Mrt* W . . . U W n * p H RN 8:00 F a r m Equip. II-Elev II (SC) «•rai to « M m went Well. A FILM BV ClAUOf LEiOUCH • » ÍASIIWIIC010» -ÄlEAStD 8Y « L I O « « I B I S DISPLAY you better WOMEN'S IM Sorority Bowling Feb. 11, Saturday Alleys IIFRID IU l\IU IiiHi1 I UL believe he's The unbelievable secret "DAZZIAMG"-Saturila, "BEAUTIFUL" Rive» "RARE"-*»" /Ve« Yorker " G R E A T " - * « » York Post York Tuns You TO LOVE -J! Block playoffs, if necessary and 1-2 Alpha Gamma Delta ODICI 1A nr agent! PLUS . . . " T H E INSPECTOR" NEXT . . . Won't ibKibLLA Ul Believe It! & vs. Sigma Kappa PANAVISION " T H E LOVE THING" "CUL-DE-SAC" Shown Once At 10:47 3-4 Chi Omega PETER YELDHAM* & 'JON PENINGTON *HARRYFS íEi *JAi METROCOIÛR v s . Sigma Delta Tau Friday, February 10, f967 12 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan MSU Book Store MSU Book Store MSU Book Store MSU Book Store MSU Book Store MSU Book Store MSU Book Store MSU Book Store MSU Book Store 1 MSU Book Store M S • Iu u DO NOT WALK OUN HEALTH B o o CENTER k IN STREETS CMJTION: 1 WALK ZA inc S t NO IN SLIPPERY WHEN WET o r / STREET PARKING e [no M Ml THRU ^ NO S WINDOW u ¡TRAFFIC 1 < M W > JUMPING B NO CLASSES o o RED CEDAR k C Thin I c e a FREE BUS SERVICE «s 45 Î £ BUSES FULL c ¡NO Chits ON C A m s l c6 Ml S ü u I B o o k S t o r e M M| S S u u B B o o o o k k • -r î S t o r 1 e Ml S U| B o SOiS o k \ IWTHE MIDDLE OF EVERYTHING ... M.S.U. BOOKSTORE „ S t o r e M You'll find just what you need right in the center of campus Ml S u B Text Books • New & Used • Paperbacks • Art Supplies • MSU Sweatshirts & Souvenirs B Reference Books Sympathy Standing Room Only Bus Pass Class Rings Picket and Protest Sign Making Materials Orange Paint (spray & reg.) Etc. MSU BOOK STORE M M U U B B In the Center for International Progräms e MSU Book Store MSU Book Store MSU Book Store MSU Book Store MSU Book Store MSU Book Store MSU Book Store MSU Book Store MSU Book Store MSU Book Store e