GOP By M I K E B R O G A N servative faction In the 14th Congres- boosts Romney's '68 hopes to support Romney's fiscal program, it Only once in his address to the dele- revenues p r e s s u r e for more local taxes by New York Gov. Nelson Rockefeller and former Pennsylvania Gov. William Scran- appeared that the governor had control gates did Romney mention personal in- would be created. State N e w s Staff W r i t e r sional district, led by long time Romney ton. of the situation. come tax, considered the heart of his tax P e r c y praised Romney Saturday, but DETROIT— At a quiet Republican State foe Richard C . Durant, the governor's With Romney beside him on the speak- He attacked Durant's call for a r e f e r - reform program. said lt was too early to name a preference Convention Saturday, Gov. Romney gained program was accepted by convention dele- e r ' s platform, Percy called the governor endum by saying that the elected r e p r e - for the White House in 1968. party support for his fiscal reform p r o - gates at Cobo Hall by an overwhelming He said that without additional revenue an "exceedingly able man." sentatives of the people have the respon- The Illinois senator went to great lengths gram and took one more step toward voice vote. it would be necessary to cut state s e r v - sibility to face their job "squarely and to remove himself as a rival to Romney On his western tour last week Romney die 1968 presidential nomination. The convention verdict was a personal ices $147 mllli6n. honestly — not to try to duck and slide as a 1968 GOP presidential nominee. attacked the Johnson administration's Keynote speaker Charles Percy, II- victory for Romney, who told delegates and dodge their responsibility through a "If tax reform should fail, the result "I am not a candidate and I will not handling of the Vietnam situation, saying llnois's freshman GOP senator, further prior to the resolutions committee r e - referendum." would be at least a 15 per cent cut become a candidate," he declared. "I it was a^great mistake for the U.S. to boosted Romney's presidential stock by port that Michigan must have tax reform. Lt. Gov. William G. Mllliken urged across the board in all reducible items see no possibility that I will be d r a f t e d . " become involved in a ground war in Asia. emphasizing that he would not seek the Durant had called for a public r e f e r e n - party support, saying that without tax of state spending, including education Speaking at Romney's invitation, Percy When pressed by newsmen at that time nomination himself. dum on tax reform, particularly the gov- reform there will not be enough dollars and all local s e r v i c e s , " Romney pointed said he sees no need to unify GOP mod- for specific instances to bolster his argu- Percy all but openly supported Romney e r n o r ' s proposed personal Income tax to meet the state's essential commitments out. erates behind one moderate Republican ment Romney was visibly angered and as a presidential nominee. measure. in "vital a r e a s of public concern." He added that without the additional prospect. Such a course has been favored answered none of the questions. Faced only by opposition from a con- Prior to the convention's vote on whether TAT NEWS Monday MICHIGAN STATE o £ UNIVERSITY East Lansing, Michigan F e b r u a r y 27, 1967 10c V o l . 59 N u m b e r 135 War escalation charged as Navy shells N. Viet coast coast and is in range of naval gunfire. the Navy operations gave no information SAIGON (i! - - The UJS. guided-misslle and that no mines were being dropped in In the first bombardments,the Canberra on damage inflicted. c r u i s e r Canberra and four destroyers harbors such as Haiphong. The use of UJS. 7th Fleet ships in the bombarded supply lines and a munitions The shellings brought a prompt charge and the destroyers Benner and Straus depot along North Vietnam's coast Sun- from North Vietnam that the United States shelled a number of railroad facilities and effort to halt the flow of men and a r m s day in what spokesmen described asanew is stepping up the war and does not want a rail yard 20 miles south of Thanh Hoa. from North Vietnam to the south followed Navy operation to supplement air strikes peace talks. In Moscow, Pravda declared The destroyers - Picking and Duncan by only a few days the start of shelling and land-based shelling. the use of naval artillery against North attacked an ammunition storage area eight by land-based artillery a c r o s s t h e d e m i l i - Another new step to cut the flow of sup- Vietnam came at a time when Hanoi had miles north of Vinh. tarlzed zone, which divide.- the two Viet- plies and men into South Vietnam is the laid down " r e a l conditions" for peace The spokesman said the first reports of nams. mining of some North Vietnamese rivers negotiations. by American planes. A UJS. spokesman A Hanoi broadcast said the UJS. w a r - said that the sowing was limited to rivers ship- had caused losses of lives and prop- erty on the central coast. It saidanurgent Freedom Report goes message of protest was filed with the International Control Commission setup in 440 profs sign 1954 to serve as a watchdog for peace V in Vietnam. Waiting to be moved Viet protest Hanoi described the L'J5.Navy operation as " a new and extremely serious step of war escalation." to Senate tomorrow " T h i s 'escalation' step once again lays definite source for students to take prob- A V i e t C o n g P O W c a p t u r e d in a U . S . M a r i n e s w e e p n e a r D a N a n g bare the warlike and obstinate nature of E D I T O R ' S N O T E : The follow- a w e e k ago h u d d l e s in c a p t i v i t y w h i l e a w a i t i n g e v a c u a t i o n . U P I T e l e p h o t o by F r a n k J o h n s t o n letter to LBJ the U.S. imperialists and gives the lie to the deceitiul allegations by President i n g is t h e f i r s t of a t w o - p a r t series o u t l i n i n g the Academic lems to. A t r a n s f e r student who feels the eval- uation of his credits is unfair could prob-- A letter carrying 440 signatures of full- Johnson about 'peace' and'negotiations'," F r e e d o m R e p o r t in its f i n a l f o r m ably get quick results from the ombuds- time MSU faculty members is being mailed the broadcast said. and t r a c i n g changes which have today to President Johnson. The letter asks A military spokesman in Saigon said the been made s i n c e the o r i g i n a l ( p l e a s e t u r n to the b a c k p a g e ) an unconditional halt to the bombing of IFC hazing study in; naval barrages would supplement a i r faculty recommendation. North Vietnam. strikes on the North, and he listed'such It is being mailed today although not all the petitions put into circulation have been returned, saida spokesman for thé original targets as railroads,railyards,munitions depots and highways. He said the off- By B O B B Y S O D E N State N e w s S t a f f W r i t e r ir Students vote SAE may be censured shore shelling, would provide " b e t t e r 11 signers. coverage," particularly at night and in The Academic Freedom Report will The Interfraternity Council Friday com- however, appeal the decision a f t e r one "We felt it was Important to get the letter off with the signatures we had, rather than to wait," he said. bad weather. The warships, he added, a r e operating mainly along a 200-mile stretch of central travel to the 1600-member Academic Senate Tuesday to face its final test before being referred to President John Tuesday on pleted its recommendation for disciplinary term, the source said. Faculty members have been circulating A. Hannah and the MSU Board of Trustees. draft system and southern coastline from Thanh Hoa action in an incident involving a fraternity The decision is a result of a study of copies of theletter in most campus depart- south to the demilitarized zone. North The Senate, a recommending body com- pledge injured during "hell week g a m e s " the entire SAE pledge program, the source ments for over a week. Only full-time Vietnam's main highway runs along this posed of all tenured faculty with the rank at Sigma Alpha Epsilon. said, and involves more than the specific teaching and research faculty members of assistant professor and above, can IFC officials sent the report to John A. incident in January when a pledge was have been asked to sign. only p a s s , rejedt or " t a b l e " the 62-page Student opinion on seven aspects of the Fuzak, vice president for student affairs, burned with a towel soaked in acid during The letter asks President Johnson to document on student rights at MSU. present Selective Service System will be a f t e r more than a month of investigation. The officials declined to comment on or a pre-initiation game. F o r m e r SAE pledge Joseph A. Bonus, declare an unconditional halt to the bomb- ing of North Vietnam. Though the North Better get those The final version of the report written by the Faculty Committee on Student Af- sampled in an a 11-University referendum Tuesday. confirm the report. Detroit junior, received first, second and Vietnamese "would bomb us now, no f a i r s was approved by the Academic Coun- The results of the referendum will be A source close to IFC revealed that the report asked that the fraternity not be third degree burns to his neck and back Jan. 8 during a pledge relay race when a doubt, if they could," the letter s a y s , " o u r initiation and continuation of the bombing 67 license plates cil Jan. 10. sent to President Johnson in reply to a request he has made of all colleges. The council, a major governing group of allowed to rush or participate in social fraternity member apparently placed an seem to most of the observing world as far University administrators, college deans A presidential committee on selective T o d a y and T u e s d a y a r e the l a s t activities for three t e r m s . SAE could, acid-drenched towel on his neck to p r e - more likely to spread the war than limit and faculty representatives, asked that service is expected to recommend in the vent him from seeing from side to side. lt. d a y s v e h i c l e s m a y be o p e r a t e d the faculty committee make three near future that the present draft system The towel allegedly had been used earlier "We feel confident that the true f i r m - with 1966 Michigan license revisions on the report before approval. be changed to a lottery system. to remove varnish from the house foyer. ness and strength of the UJS. can best plates. The council first considered the report The lottery system is a choice offered WMSN service Bonus' attorney Irwin Burdick of De- troit said e a r l i e r that the family would not be demonstrated to all by wise r e s t r a i n t , " it continues, "World leaders . . . would C a m p u s and E a s t L a n s i n g p o - lice said they will begin t i c k e t - in early September, on the referendum as a possible alternative The document " a t t e m p t s to identify to the present draft system. file suit until the University completes its lend more active support to the search ing outdated plates March 1. rights and duties of students in regard to The f i r s t question asks whether students expands to 60 pet. investigation. Bonus dropped out of school for the remainder of the term. for a humane and realistic peace . . . if our nation, without precondition, stopped T h e n e a r e s t l i c e n s e o f f i c e to conduct, academic pursuits, the keeping of think the University should continue c o m - c a m p u s is i n the b a s e m e n t o f records and publications," the faculty piling class ranks for use by local draft The IFC report will be r e f e r r e d to the the bombing of the North to underline our committee wrote. boards. of campus dorms Faculty Committee on Student Affairs willingness to negotiate . . . " D o n ' s M u s i c Box in the F r a n d o r Shopping C e n t e i — t h e place with The report recommends the establish- The second question asks who shouldbe March 3, said Eldon R. Nonnamaker, a s - A similar letter was sent to the P r e s i - ment of an ombudsman as a middleman drafted and how they should be chosen. The loiig delay is partially over, and sociate dean of students. The faculty c o m - dent early this month, signed by more than t h e long l i n e . between students and administration. This The third question asks whether students All-Campus Radio WMSN is now servicing mittee will advise Fuzak in his final d e - 600 University of Michigan faculty mem- senior faculty member would provide a should be deferred and who should be given over 60 per cent of on-campus students. cision on the matter. bers. deferments. Wilson, Hubbard and Case halls were The fourth question asks for a yes or no added to the WMSN network Thursday opinion on whether women should be and Friday after two of the long-awaited drafted. transmitters arrived. The next question offer s alternatives for Chief engineer Jim Taylor said Wilson serving in the armed forces, such as was connected about 8:30 p.m. and Hub- serving in the Peace Corps, the job corps, bard at 11 p.m. Thursday. Case was or the National Teachers Corps. joined to the Wilson transmitter 4 p.m. Friday. The sixth and seventh questions also provide for yes or no alternatives. One The remaining four t r a n s m i t t e r s are asks if the present draft system has caused expected to a r r i v e today. students to alter their career plans, and the Akers and Fee halls are to be serviced last question asks students if they would by the Hubbard transmitter, Taylor said. actively support a movement to alter the Akers will be connected today. present selective service system. Fee, Snyder-Phillips and some West Standard IBM answer forms will be used Circle dorms have presented problems to record the answers. Students will fill with broken and blocked electrical conduits out the questionnaires in dorms during through which the radio w i r e s m u s t be laid, meal times or at the Union, Bessey Hall, Taylor continued. Berkey Hall or the International Center After hooking up Akers, Taylor said the from 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. engineering crew will move to either . Answers will be tabulated according to Holmes, VanHoosen, Fee or Mason-Abbot. sex. Results are not expected until Wed- Before Thursday, only Shaw, Brody and nesday, at the earliest. Wonders halls were receiving broadcasts from WMSN 640. Installation has been de- layed because of slow shipments of parts needed by the suppliers to build the t r a n s - Poet Allen Ginsberg 9 mitters. Although Case-Wilson-Wonders is the Mr. MSV crowned for 67 to read at Aud today f i r s t complex completely on the a i r , Taylor said more work is needed to clear back- Bruce Dove, Washington, D. C., junior (center) was crowned M r . I n f r o n t of t h e c o u r t i s P a t t y B u r n e t t e , D e t r o i t s o p h o m o r e , M i s s Allen Ginsberg will read his poetry in ground noise received in Wilson and Case. M S U at S p i n s t e r ' s S p i n S a t u r d a y n i g h t . D o v e r e p r e s e n t e d A l p h a M S U 1967. T h e t u r n - a b o u t d a n c e S p i n s t e r ' s S p i n I s s p o n s o r e d by the Auditorium at 4 p.m. today. Tickets WMSN Is programming 18 hours each C h i O m e g a . M e m b e r s of h i s c o u r t a r e T e d O ' N e i l ( l e f t ) , C h i c a g o , A s s o c i a t e d W o m e n Students. A m o n g h i s o t h e r a c t i v i t i e s , D o v e is a r e $1 and may be purchased at the Union, day, between 8 a.m. and 2 a.m. I I I . , j u n i o r ( D e l t a D e l t a D e l t a ) ; John S e b e s o n , E a s t L a n s i n g s o p h o - t h e n e w e x e c u t i v e v i c e p r e s i d e n t of t h e I n t e r F r a t e r n i t y C o u n c i l , Paramount News, the Disc Shop, the All on-campus students were taxed $1 Questing Beast, and at the door. more (Theta Chi); L a r r y Berger, Haverford, Pa., sophomore vice president of Z e t a B e t a T a u and a m e m b e r o f B l u e K e y . for winter term although several residence See related story on page 7. ( Z e t a Tau Alpha); and T i m T i c k a r d , F r a n k l i n junior ( W e s t Wilson). State News photo by P a u l Schleif halls have not been receiving WMSN. Eric (Manin, managing editor Ci v« Kyle C. Kerbawy editor-in-chief j a m e s Spainolo, campus editor Ldward A. Brill, editorial editor Lawrence Werner, sports editor v. «B i ^ \ndrew Molllson, executive reporter Joel Stark William G. I'apclak, a s s t . ad manager advertising manager Monday Morning, February 27, 1967 EDITORIALS Committed delays m v m midnight hours The MSU Library has m a t t e r . The Student L i b r a r y A Student Board course rightfully been concerned about i m p r o v i n g i t s s e r v - i c e s . In the p a s t y e a r , Sun- C o m m i t t e e i s in the p o s i t i o n to v o i c e this opinion, and lend its support to the i s s u e . in decision making day morning study h o u r s w e r e e s t a b l i s h e d and a fine The c o m m i t t e e c e n t l y been p r e o c c u p i e d with has r e - The ASMSU Student B o a r d For the p a s t y e a r and a half hike was p r o p o s e d . The next the fine hike, to the n e g l e c t might have s e t s o m e s o r t of there has been a s e v e r e s t e p should be an e x t e n s i o n of o t h e r i m p o r t a n t i s s u e s . student g o v e r n m e n t r e c o r d " d e c i d e - a b i l i t y g a p " in the of the L i b r a r y w e e k d a y h o u r s But it may now p e r f o r m a for m i n d - e h a n g i n g l a s t week ASMSU Student B o a r d . NSA f r o m 11 p . m . * t o midnight. g r e a t s e r v i c e to s t u d e n t s by as it swung f r o m f i r m s u p - affiliation was originally Five y e a r s ago. the L i - r e c o m m e n d i n g the e x t e n s i o n port of the National Student p a s s e d l a s t y e a r , and then b r a r y d e c i d e d to s e e if s t u - of weekday h o u r s at the L i - A s s o c i a t i o n (NSA) to a shaky reconsidered and r e j e c t e d d e n t s would r e s p o n d to an b r a r y until m i d n i g h t . r e c o n s i d e r a t i o n of its a f f i l i - within a week. e x t e n s i o n of w e e k d a y h o u r s . Its delay in c o n s i d e r i n g the ation in t h r e e d a y s . During f i n a l s w e e k , unpubli- m a t t e r and making the r e c - On Tuesday e v e n i n g , the Referendums again c i z e d . and u n o f f i c i a l l y , the o m m e n d a t i o n i s an i n s u l t to board s u r p r i s i n g l y voted 10- L i b r a r y was kept open until t h o s e who n e e d the e x t e n d e d 2 for i m m e d i a t e r e a f f i l i a t i o n After taking action on two midnight. The s t u d e n t s , a c - services. - - T h e Editors Are you overdoing it, M r . Gribnik? with NSA. D e s p i t e a r e c o m - major i s s u e s in the l a s t y e a r , c o r d i n g to L i b r a r y d i r e c t o r Take the jewel out of your navel. mendation by the p o w e r l e s s c o m p e n s a t i o n and financial Chapin, did not s h o w i n t e r e s t General A s s e m b l y for a r e f - aid to the 18 y e a r - o l d vote in the e x t r a h o u r s . erendum on the m a t t e r , Wed- c a m p a i g n , the board r e l - This d o e s not n e c e s s a r i l y TED MILS Y nesday the board w i s e l y d e - egated both p r o b l e m s to e x - mean that s t u d e n t s didn't cided not to c o n s i d e r the v o t e - - t h i s t i m e by an 11-1 margin in support of C h a i r - pensive dums. student referen- want the One week did not afford additional h o u r s . NSA, an excuse for junkets Instead of being a s t r o n g - enough t i m e for s t u d e n t s to man Jim G r a h a m . willed d e c i s i o n making body, adjust t h e i r study s c h e d u l e s , J i m G r a h a m ' s statement last week that But Graham apparently did the Student B o a r d has e x - especially during finals he moved to reaffiliate with NSA b e - s o m e p o s t - m o r t e m thinking cause It was n e c e s s a r y for the morale c e l l e d p r i m a r i l y in v a s c i l l a - w e e k . Undoubtedly, with the of NSA o f f i c e r s is typical of the a r g u - about the m a t t e r , and decided tion. The t e n d e n c y has been lack of p u b l i c i t y , f e w s t u - ments put forth in favor of r e a f f i l i a - Thursday afternoon to bring tion. to make d e c i s i o n s b e f o r e d e n t s knew about the c h a n g e the affiliation question back It leaves out all consideration of the anyway. ing about it, did he send up some t r i a l MSU students from It, but who " i n t e r - sounding out r e l e v a n t student MSU student. balloons to try to get an Idea of the to l i f e . But it wasn't a G r a h a m ' s other reasons were similarly acts?" opinion, and to r e v e r s e t h e s e But the s h o r t c o m i n g s of students' opinion? No, he waited and tried The only people who will be going changed, view on affiliation deficient. to .bring it up at one meeting and run p o s i t i o n s a f t e r h e a r i n g un- this t r i a l can be e a s i l y o v e r - Notable was the r e m a r k that he thought to the meetings and " i n t e r a c t i n g " will that prompted the m a t t e r to It was n e c e s s a r y to reaffiliate now b e - it through at the next. by ASMSU officers, and if recent e x - favorable reaction. c o m e by k e e p i n g the L i b r a r y Graham has good reason to feel that periences a r e any guide, they will want be c a l l e d up for r e c o n s i d e r a - cause he was a f r a i d that the next board the students will oppose re-affiliation H o p e f u l l y , t h o s e who run open until midnight for the might vote against reaffiliation. student money to do it. tion. In other words, Graham f e a r s the s t u - with NSA. L a s t year ASMSU was forced J i m G r a h a m ' s recent t r i p to Washing- for the board this s p r i n g will e n t i r e Spring t e r m . Students to pull out of NSA because a number of ton is illustrative of this. Graham went dents will elect people who will vote politics again would have enough t i m e to students were unhappy with NSA's i n - to Washington to " i n t e r a c t " with other pay m o r e heed to A r t i c l e II, against the way he wants them to, and volvement with international a f f a i r s . Graham is out to get his way r e g a r d l e s s student " l e a d e r s " (and The S e c r e t a r y It was the p o l i t i c a l i m p l i - s e c t i o n 1 of the ASMSU c o n - adjust t h e i r s c h e d u l e s , and of State no lessl ) but who benefited? of what the students want. c a t i o n s of the vote that moved stitution: "Student d e c i s i o n - o v e r the t e r m the new h o u r s T h i s dovetails nicely with his r e m a r k Compromise Only J i m Graham and his immediate cohorts. Graham lu ai ug ap ihù wssue making of an a l l - U n j v e r s i t y would b e c o m e w e l i that he had been planning the move for Thlk year ASMSU plans to get around some time. However, he said nothing T h e r e is also a question of r e p r e s e n - again, d e s p i t e his oweu nature s h a l l be v e s t e d j o . the The l i b r a r y a d m i n i s t r a - about it publicly unty he moved to r e a f - this objection by including a c o m p r o m i s e tation. Candidates for ASMSU do not tiW-ilt at the board meeting the week provision that delegates to NSA c o n - - r u n . on platforrrts pertaining to public the student b o a r d ' s , apparent . . . Student Borfrti."" ' tion i s tutw -waiting to weigh ventions f r o m ASMSU will not vote on before last. affairs, and they have no basis forjudging f e e l i n g s on the m a t t e r . - - T h e Editors student opinion on this During this time when he was think- international a f f a i r s . student opinion. T h i s is the height of absurdity. MSU A State News editorial Tuesday claimed will pay NSA dues, will go to NSA c o n - that it wasn't necessary for a student ventions, will be considered a member government officer to have a mandate OUR READERS' MINDS of NSA, but will, not vote on international policy decisions. in o r d e r to become involved in i n t e r - national a f f a i r s . MSU a s one of the NSA m e m b e r schools I a g r e e that there is no need for a will be r e p r e s e n t e d by the NSA decisions, mandate every time someone in ASMSU NSA referendum needed this year for unpopular expenditures. We but will have no say in making these decisions. MSU will be, in effect, a " s e c o n d c l a s s c i t i z e n " on NSA. decides to take a Junket to speak on national a f f a i r s , but they certainly ought to have some idea as to how t h e i r ' c o n - stituents feel, and unless someone on To the Editor: It is easy to understand the e a g e r n e s s the board is clairvoyant (which I doubt) thought this university stressed the living- of ASMSU o f f i c e r s to r e s u m e contact they have no way of doing this. At the last meeting, our Student Board LEARNING experience. We feel that G r a d students h a v e rights with the NSA, for NSA and other o r g a n i - T u e s d a y ' s editorial invoked the doc- made a kindly move to bolster the morale greater attempt's to get the students' opin- zations of that ilk a r e not organizations trine that a representative should be of NSA (an organization with which we ions on this issue should have been made To the Editor: a more formal structure may develop in of students but organizations of student allowed to use h i s ' judgment and not a r e all familiar), but as usual failed to before the vote was taken. time, if interest Is sufficient. government o f f i c e r s (not to be confused merely reflect the whim of his c o n - worry about the morale of the MSU stu- The students on this campus a r e tired On J a n u a r y 10 the Academic Council Too often, student participation is con- with student leaders). stituents. dent body. We have a grudging a d m i r a - of being led in directions they don't want approved the Report on Academic Freedom sidered a negative function. Students They a r e great for student government tion for a group that gets so much of The c l a s s i c statement of this position to go by people who a r e supposed to be for Students at Michigan State University. examine University policy for some i n - officers, but they do the average student its budget from outside "donations," but is Edmond B u r k e ' s "Speech to the E l e c - their representatives. The report suggests establishing a Stand- fringement of their rights. T h e loose no good. we also feel that MSU has had enough of t o r s of B r i s t o l . " But Burke claimed It is because of this fiasco that, despite ing Committee on Academic Rights, and a federation of graduate groups suggested the CIA to last it for a while. that the reason his judgment should hold costs, we believe a referendum should Student-Faculty judiciary. above could emphasize the positive aspect. Interaction Why should ASMSU spend $285 of the such a paramount position was that he be held to get the students' opinions. No explicit r e f e r e n c e is made to the Administrative bodies which have student students' money to join an organization that would have reached it a f t e r reasoning with Sandy Shaw •possibility of graduate student participa- welfare at heart would be enabled to has been so obviously weakened in the past Anyone who doubts this should read other representatives. Lexington, junior tion on these or other bodies. Such p a r - canvass opinion from those affected by couple of weeks? The Student Board has their decisions. G r a h a m ' s letter in F r i d a y ' s State News, If ASMSU wants to send people to Sam Febba ticipation appears limited to a living-unit had its fingers burned quite a few times "ASMSU needs NSA." reason with representatives f r o m other Johnstown, Pa., sophomore canvass opinion f r o m those affected by We would be glad to h e a r from other In this letter Graham went to great schools, it could find many people b e t - and the right of one hundred or more graduate students on the feasibility of such length to explain what NSA could do t e r versed in national a f f a i r s than those graduate students to petition for amend- a proposal. THE NATIONS' PRESS ments to the Report (Article 7). T o m Clevenger Neville J . G . Doherty f o r ASMSU, but devoted only a few lines to what NSA could allegedly do f o r the whose main concern is campus politics. F u r t h e r m o r e If the NSA compromise i s Graduate students make up 19 per cent any example of the ASMSU reasoning students of MSU. of the total enrollment. They have specific J i m Josling ability, I would p r e f e r to have a t h r e e CIA backlash Gary Seevers T h e r e has been much talk of " I n t e r - needs and i n t e r e s t s which can hardly be year old flipping a coin representing me; graduate students a c t i o n " with students f r o m other schools represented by any other body. Neglect at least then I would have a 50-50 chance. and the benefit which will a c c r u e to of the rights and responsibilities of g r a d - ¿ The revelations, about NSA, taken in clty can supply, is intellectual leadership. uate students In the Report presumably PFANUTS conjunction with other recent happenings, The university could fashion the mind of f PERHAPS lOC | WHAT ¿10UID VOL' DO IF V0Ü IP TRY t ) LOOK At MYSELF r e f l e c t s lack of their active participation a r e bound to create a backlash in the rest ' CAN 6lVE ME AN / FELT THAT NO OME LIKEP H&J ' OBJECTIVELY AND SEE WHAT I the a g e . Now it is the other way around, in its preparation. The Subcommittee on ijANSWER. LINUSy COlA-D DO TO IMPROVE . THAT'S of the world that will hurt this country. the demands of the, age a r e fashioning Grading Policy, set up recently to con- MY ANSIOER. CHARLIE ?R0WN The puritan found rolling dead drunk in the mind, if one may use the expression,of sider grading systems throughout the the ditch rarely gets much sympathy from the u n i v e r s i t y . " Disillusioned students University, similarly neglected to solicit those to whom he has been delivering will need some convincing that they a r e a representative f r o m the graduate stu- high-minded homilies. A lot of people getting an education in o r d e r to serve D r . dent body. T h e graduate library now under a r e going to conclude that bought students Hutchins* expressed goal. Instead of being construction will presumably r a i s e issues a r e part of a bigger picture that includes the stooges o r dupes of the government on which graduate student opinion would be corporations which bug one another's board rooms for industrial s e c r e t s , and and the Central Intelligence Agency. valuable. It is probably that the lack of an estab- a-tel I 1_ J 1 The only way to tackle this particular College Bike Shop congressmen who a r e up for sale. This credibility gap is for Congress to inter- lished, representative graduate student backlash we must live with as best we vene. Left to itself, and notwithstanding organization is the main reason for low can, but immediate and thoroughgoing scrutiny of CIA is mandatory if the country isn't to have a serious problem at home, the integrity of Undersecretary of State Katzenbach, the Executive branch will cov- e r up, not clean up the m e s s . Congress involvement of the graduate students in discussion of matters affecting their well- being. CAS'Ä* with an outraged student body. American should take a sharp look at the law which Attempts at creating such an organiza- college youths a r e already deep in p e r m i t s tax-exempt foundations to receive tion have failed in the past. However, 134 N. Harrison cynicism about their society. Now these funds without publicly disclosing their there a r e in existence several depart- (1 Block N. of Kellogg Center) students must reflect that the same kind source. More important it is up to Con- mental groups which could represent a of people who have been denouncing r a d i - g r e s s to cut the CIA back to its original significant proportion of the graduate ED 2-4117 cal activities on the Berkeley campus,and size and confine it strictly to its duties student body if they were in communica- Spaghetti Steak demanding loyalty oaths, were busy In the as they were first defined in the 1947 tion with each other. Chicken Lasagna back room calling signals for the biggest PIZZA Parts & Accessories National Security Act—to " c o r r e l a t e and T h e time involved would be small. Shrimp organization of college students, almost Submarine Sandwiches evaluate" security information.Thus r e a - Each group could appoint a liaison officer," from its inception. ligned, the CIA wouldn't have quite so many who could keep in contact with others by "What the country needs most of the university," the f o r m e r president of Chi- cago once said, "and that only theunlver- millions of dollars to bribe the students o r any other Americans. —New Republic, Feb. 25 telephone. Activity would be kept at a minimum, but opinion could be quickly polled on important issues. Of course, "The Cook's In" at II Daily, 4 Sun. 211 M.A.C. ED 7-1668 Factory Trained Mechanics Monday, February 27, 1967 3 Michigan State N e w s , East Lansing, Michigan CHOU EM-LAI SAYS sees ' World News at a Glance China's reputation hurt federal fund lack Nuclear policing system urged MIAMI BEACH, Fla. iJPJ - - AFL-CIO leaders said Sun- emphasized that key government TOKYO 1
een read the a r t i c l e s by Bernard Fall
WASHINGTON (fl — Michael the source of his information, received about the editors and it and Naom Chomsky on Vietnam
Wood, who revealed the Central or the target of the alleged f o r - had prompted some board m e m - In the last two issues of " T h e
Intelligence Agency's financial gery threat " f o r obvious persona: b e r s to change their decision. New York Review of Books" at
support of the National Student reasons." Two things that happened b e - the main library, Hooker said.
Association, charged Sunday that Wood made the accusation tween Monday and Thursday may Ken Lawless, instructor in
the CIA threatened to forge p s y - during a three-way-interview in have affected the b o a r d ' s d e - American Thought and Language,
chiatric r e c o r d s to discredit an which he was joined by Graves cision. and students will discuss their
NSA o f f i c e r . and the NSA vice president for One was a telegram f r o m 36 poems in 4 Wilson f r o m 7-9 t o -
He said the threat was one of International affairs, Richard Michigan legislators to U - M night.
various moves by the CIA to Stearns. president Harlan Hatcher, in the Lawless also will analyze
pressure NSA officers into Wood's charges ran counter to telegram the lawmakers said they works by Thomas Pynchon, with
silence about CIA Involvement. the view of Groves and Stearns were " a p p a l l e d " by the rejection emphasis on his novel, " V , " in
Eugene Graves, president of that the CIA - although its sup- of Roger Rapoport, the candidate the "Black H u m o r " class f r o m
the NSA,' said, however, he was port may have resulted in some for editor of the Daily. The t e l e - 8-8:50 tonight in the same room.
unaware òf the alleged Incident. subtle Influence on NSA o v e r - g r a m added that such a rejection Thomas Wallace, assistant
Wood, f o r m e r director of d e - seas activities - did not e x e r c i s e could " m a r a great tradition and p r o f e s s o r of art, will analyze
velopment in charge of fund r a i s - any direct influence on NSA a great u n i v e r s i t y . " art with the u s e of .slides in an
ing f o r the NSA, declined to reveal policy. T h é other was a story published
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. Mftiday, F e b r u a r y 27, 1967
4 Michigan State N e w s , East Lansing, Michigan
Mat, bàskèfbùlt teams lose crucia t carites fis
Wolverines deny wrestlers Badgers scuttle
undefeated dual meet mark Spartan hopes
By G A Y E L W E S C H
weight Dave PorterpinnedMSU's scored escapes in their down tories to complete undefeated By D E N N I S CHASE,
% Jeff Richardson to give the periods, but neither could score a dual meet seasons for both. An- Associate Sports Edifor
State N e w s Sports W r i t e r
Wolverines their margin of vic- takedown, and the match ended derson romped Gordon Weeks,
ANN ARBOR — Michigan tory. in a draw. Sinadinos had missed 13-4, and Radman trounced BUI MADISON — The Iowa Hawkeye basketball team spent all Sat-
State's wrestlers were denied the The score was tied 1-1.with a, out by three seconds from earning Waterman 14-3. Radman came urday afternoon baking a cake for the Spartans, but when the cake
final victory in more ways than minute-and-a-half left in the 177 one point for riding time which the closest of all Spartans to reached Wisconsin, the Spartans discovered it was stale.
one by Michigan Saturday as they bout when Bradley was taken down would have swung the bout in his pinning his man.
dropped a 16-14 decision to the by Cornell. The Ypsilanti junior favor. MSU takes heart in the fact Iowa edged first place Indiana in overtime, 75-74, and the
Wolverines. escaped to cut Cornell's lead to C a r r used an escape and a that a f t e r losing In a dual meet Spartans could have moved into a t i e for the first place in the
Leading 14-8 before the last 3-2 but Cornell dtfensed every beautifully-executed hip throw in to Michigan last year It bounced Big Ten by beating the Badgers Saturday night.
two matches, MSU needed a vic- move Bradley tried in the r e - the third period and one point back to edge the Wolverines In They didn't.
tory o r draw at either 177 o r maining time. riding time to down Michigan's the Big Ten tournament.
"Bradley just had a bad day," Wisconsin squeaked one out, 68-64, in front of a home crowd
the heavyweight classes to annex Fred Stehman, 7-4. "Things can be a lot different
MSU Coach Grady Peninger said. of 12,729. The Badger victory created a three-way tie for second
the win and their first undefeated Ott was decisioned by Mich- next Saturday at the Big Ten
" H i s stuff just wasn't working. place. Wisconsin, MSU, and Iowa all have 6-4 r e c o r d s .
season since 1948. But the igan's Jim Kämmen, 6 - 0 . tournament," Assistant Coach
He's still the best in the Big The Spartans never led in the first half and were behind by as
Wolverines were not to be victi- "Cox was injured at Illinois Doug Blubaugh said.
Ten, and we expect he'll be the much as 11. The Badgers held a 33-32 halftime margin.
mized. last week," Peninger said. " I
"Pete Cornell upset defending Big Ten champion again.' Went with Sinadinos and C a r r on In the second half, the Spartans came close, leading by one point
P o r t e r , the defending NCAA
Big Ten champion Mike Bradley
3-2, in the 177 pound match to
bring Michigan to within three
heavyweight champion,went from
the down position in the second
the basis of their performances
at the LaGrange (Midlands) tour-
nament, and because C a r r had
Andretti twice, but couldn't overcome a Wisconsin attack led by Chuck Nagel,
who finished with 18 points.
points of the Spartans, and heavy- period to a reversal, and then beaten Stehman last year In a At the beginning of the second half, the Spartans held the lead
pinned Richardson. The pin came
at the 3:30 mark of the bout.
tournament.
" I t was a gamble to take out
captures briefly, but Joe Franklin's field goal made the score 40-39.
The Spartans got as close as two after that, but that's all.
Q L A P M E R Peninger had made three un- Dave Campbell, but everything
^ ^ i TODAY _ J
AT 1:15-3:15-5:20-7:20-9:30
expected line-up changes for the
meet. Rod Ott replaced Don Cox
went about a s we expected, and
Sinadinos almost beat Merical." Doytono After Lafayette fouled out with nearly eight minutes remaining,
Wisconsin pulled away to a 61-56 lead until Matthew Aitch, John
« m m
at 160 pounds, and Dale Carr The bouts at 123, 130, 137, Holms and Art Baylor hit to make the score 63-62, Badgers.
was moved from 145 to 152. and 167 had gone a s predicted DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. But Vern Johnson fouled Dennis Sweeney, and Aitch was called
George Sinadinos replaced with MSU taking three of four. (UPI)—Young Mario Andretti of for charging Franklin. When Franklin hit both foul shots with 20
•fc-i
Sf DOLLARS
' • •J., . EXTRA:
TI TICHNICOUMV CARTOON
Campbell at 145 for the crucial
match
Merical.
with Michigan's Burt
Michigan's Bob Fehrs scored
a 6-1 decision over Gary Bissell
at 123 and Spartan Don Behm
Nazareth, P a . , outdueled veteran
Fred Lorenzen Sunday to win the
$200,000 Daytona 500 stock c a r
seconds to go, the score was 67-64, and that was that.
Aitch led the Spartans with 23 points, Lafayette had 13, and
Both Sinadinos and Merical topped Michigan's Geoff Henson race In a 1967 Ford. Holms, 10. Joe Franklin had 15, Jim Johnson and Sweeney had
8-2 at 130. 11, each, and Nagel, 18.
IT'S UNEQUALED ON THE SCREEN!
Turning the late laps at better
MSU's Dale Anderson and than 180 mph, 26-year-old An- The Spartans made 16 of 21 f r e e throw attempts, and both
George Radman scored easy vic- dretti crossed the finish line In teams had the same number of field goals, 24, but Wisconsin made
A [brand-new]actual performance ^«SSSIi^üTcnMATioN t 3Ä3 BM4 a blue-and-gold blur 22 seconds
ahead of Lorenzen of Charlotte,
20 foul shots.
of The D'Oyly Carte CAMPUS UuU/t^
N.C., also In a new Ford.
Third was Dewayne (Tiny) Lund
Come to me
N o t r e D a m e and M S U f r e s h m a n c a g e r s r e a c h s k y -
The Big Ten race Is the most even it has been In y e a r s . In-
diana leads the pack with a 7 - 3 r e c o r d . Indiana has two games
remaining at home and two away. The Spartans play three at home,
Opera Company. NOW! 2nd Week of C r o s s , S.C., In a 1966 P l y - w a r d f o r t h e descending basketball in T h u r s d a y ' s and one away. MSU cannot afford to lost another game, as it must
Feature mouth. He was followed by Jimmy f r e s h m a n c o n t e s t . N o one j u m p s , t h o u g h . T h e M S U win the title outright to win a berth in the NCAA tourney.
1:10-3:15-5:20-7:25-9:30 Hylton, Inman, S.C., in a 1965 f r e s h m e n d e f e a t e d . N o t r e D a m e , 8 1 - 6 3 , but t h e v a r s i t y
4 ACADEMY AWARD
NOMINATIONS
,Dodge, and J e r r y Grant of El-
condldo, Calif., in a 1967 P l y -
was s o m e w h a t less s u c c e s s f u l this w e e k e n d as it
was d e f e a t e d by Wisconsin,- 6 8 - 6 4 .
In other games, Purdue beat Illinois, 98-86, and Minnesota beat
Michigan, 89-86, a s the Gophers' Tom Kondla seized the Big
"Best Actress
including mouth. Ten scoring lead with a 36-point performance.
• »•. State N e w s Photo by M i k e Schonhofen
Andretti, a veteran of Indian-
apolis 500 racing, picked up
$35,000 for winning the richest
AWAIT BADGERS, PLAYOFFS
* stock c a r race in history. Lap
money and other awards will
\
bring his share of the purse to
more than $70,000. •
leers idle over weekend
" 1 didn't spare thè any-
zJT
w h e r e , " said A n d r e t t L . ' T m just
glad it turned out this way."
Premiere for But Andretti failed to set a
Performances u "\jr LYNN new record before the 94,255
shivering fans at the 2.5-mlle, B y JOE M I T C H North Dakota a weekend ago. playoffs—to the home rink of the kola has 11 goals and 16 a s s i s t s
6 times only GomJI K K I X i H A V K high-binked Daytona Inter- S t a t e N e w s S p o r t s . W r i t e r " I t ' s going to help cri. We've winner of the Michigan T e c h - while Wiste has 13 goals and 14
March 8 and 9 PICtUMS 1.1 " tK , national Speedway. He ran the been going pretty hard all season Minnesota-Duluth game. assists. '
»rent, I N
A SHE Production ot THE DOYLY CARTE OPERA COMPANY . THE MIKADO tyyW S race in 3 hours, 24 minutes and Sometimes when you're not without much r e s t . " After that i t ' s the National
GILBERT and ARTHUR SULLIVAN • Based on the Stage Production by ANTHONY 11 seconds, an average speed of winning, a couple days layoff The Spartan skaters do notCollegiate Athletic Assn. play- MSU's goalies finished with
BESCfl • Produced by ANTHONY HAVELOCK-ALLEN and JOHN BRABOURNE 146.926 mph. The caution flag was f r o m any game action changes resume action until a s e r i e s this offs in Syracuse, N.Y., March respectable averages in the
Directed by STUART BÜRGE • TECHNICOLOR WIDESCREEN ttwiflf WCHA. J e r r y Fisher had a
out nine times in the r a c e . The the luibk of a team.
J3M6S M3S0N 313N B3Tffi MIN fifi»only mishap consisted of c a r s weekend with Big Ten foe Wis- 16-18.
from WARNER BROS.
Matinee Performance [SUGGISTt'pjOH MATURf AUOifScfS] The Spartan hockey team was consin at the Ice Arena. But Bessone knows it's a long 3.0 mark in five games, while
1:30 P.M. Price $1.50
Special Student Show
spinning out on the curves, idle last weekend and Coach Amo This concludes the season road ahead to the NCAA cham- Gaye Cooley had a 4.4 a v e r -
4:30 P.M. Price 51.00 Plus Cartoon & Novelty Andretti didn't make his move Bessone i s hoping the rest will schedule for the Spartans,March pionships—one which he traveled age in 13 games.
Evening Performance 8:00 P.M. Price $2.25 until the second half of the r a c e , inspire a change for the better 9 the team plays at home with last year to finish on top with
Coming March 8 & 9
c
"- «••" ...rc.ii*.„on » 33'. f