Draft system revamp would abolish 2-S WASHINGTON —Student draft defer- i * strictly masculine as In tm past be- list in the reserves or National Guard • On abolishing_ the • greatly-criticized ' „ deferments the commission advised: dent deferments had become the "oc- casion for serious inequity" In the cclass lass standings despised by educators standings despis. and students alike, the report stated. ments should be abolished in a complete cause the 20-member board of univer- after being classified 1-A. It would also undermine student "cyni- -Men in school or training programs present draft system, the commis- revamping of the Selective Service Sys- sity presidents and professors, busi- —Replacing the nation's 4,000 local cism" about military service and higher when the plan goes into effect will be sioners were split on abolishing them. tem, a special commission advised nessmen and military, legal, labor and draft boards with the names of all eli- education now generated by students permitted to complete their present A minority favored retaining them in President Johnson Saturday. public representatives didn't overlook gible men being placed in a computer who pursue their studies longer than courses of study, but they would then some form. women in its study. It advocated more for a lottery-like random, impartial planned in order to avoid the draft The whole draft board plan should be be placed in the random selection pool ' T h e issue is one of special treat- replaced with one for a national man- military roles for women to reduce the selection for military service. ment," the report stressed. "The op- The anti-deferment majority of the with that year's 18-year-olds. panel maintained that there is no evi- power pool and lottery system, theNa - number of men who must be drafted. portunity to go to college still reflects -Emphasis on drafting younger men, -Men randomly selected for military dence that abolishment of student defer- tlonal Advisory Commission on Selec- Among the commission's principle a degree of social and economic advan- beginning at the age of 19, instead of duty after entering college will be per- ments would deter young men from tive Service said after seven months of recommendations were: tage not yet shared by all. the present older-first pattern which going to college or from returning to study. mitted to finish their sophomore years "What starts out as a temporary has been criticized for disrupting ca- college after their military tours of before being inducted. deferment for college enrollment is The panel's 219-page report is ex- -Elimination of the state "quota" reers and family life. duty. system in favor of a national manpower -College students in officer training easily extended into a de facto exemp- pected to stir new waves of debate in -Creation of a centralized adminis- On conscientious objectors the panel levy. Presently some states must call programs should be deferred, but only tion—by graduate school, by occupa- the nation's colleges and high schools, tration to formulate and issue "clear recommended that exemptions be con- fathers and students to meet their after they agree to serve as enlisted tion, by fatherhood and ultimately, by aa well as in Congress which must and binding policies concerning classi- tinued for men who are opposed to war quotas while others have adequate num- men if they fail to complete their of- the passage of time and advance of age." renew or change the Selective Service fications, exemptions and deferments, In any form, but not for men who object bers of single men. ficer programs. Without deferments there would be no System by June 30. to be applied uniformly throughout the to a particular war. -No more Immunity for men who en- While agreeing unanimously that stu- need for national achievement tests or And the debate probably won't be as country."" Reactions to Monday lottery draft system vary By P H I L VAN HUESEN V o l . 59 N u m b e r 140 MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY STATE STAT E East Lansing, Michigan M a r c h 6, 1967 10c MSU students and officials voiced mixed opinions over the weekend on the proposals submitted Saturday by a Presidential ad- F O R REI M P L E X visory commission on revising the present draft system. The commission's report, first made public Saturday, calls for a national lottery system, with 19-year-olds being most vul- nerable to the draft, and elimination of Traffic panel proposes student deferments. Provost Howard R . Neville expressed approval of the recommendations,but said the University will withhold official com- ment until President Johnson makes speci- Commuter Lot parking to have a ramp in that area large enough fic proposals to Congress. A Presidential the bus service be offered to the students message on the draft is expected to be The All-University Traffic Committee free, and if not, how much should be to hold all the cars from the Red Cedar placed before Congress today. amended a tentative parking proposal Fri- charged. Complexes, but he said he didn't know how Neville said despite the results of a day to provide that all undergraduates A group of student representatives from such a facility could be financed. campus referendum on the draft last week, living in the Red Cedar Complex park the Red Cedar Complexes suggested at students generally favor the elimination of in a proposed addition toCommuter Lot Y, the meeting that a parking famp be con- The ramp would have to hold 1,000 student deferments. Just north of Mt. Hope Road. structed across from Owen Hall where cars to meet the present needs and such "They feel it is a more fair proposition The original proposal would have re- Lot O Is now. a new structure would cost approxi- that all people be treated alike," he said. quired that students park in a lot to be mately $2 million, Bernitt said. Bernitt said that it would be nice In the referendum, 83 per cent of those constructed south of the railroad tracks near Fee Hall. AUSI HEARS CASE voting favored retaining student defer- ments in some form. Neville noted that The committee is expected to make a less than 5,000 students voted, and said final decision at its April meeting and ASMSU authority student opinion he has received was con- Is expected to submit the proposal to the trary to the referendum results. Board of Trustees. Neville also expressed approval of the Though the commuter lot is farther from central campus than the Fee Hall lottery system, stressing its fairness in comparison with the present system. They call it Western-style urea and would have to be extensively enlarged, the committee felt it would be " I ' v e favored the lottery method for a long time," he said. " I t gives each person the same opportunity to give service." H o l m e s H a l l s residents d r e s s e d for a p i c n i c T h u r s d a y and were s e r v e d b a r b e q u e d chicken, potato s a l a d and baked b e a n s . Some said the o n l y thing m i s s i n g was a t r o o p of ants. State News photo by Dave L a u r a more practical for the following reasons: —Better bus service could be offered because it would be serving a larger contested tonight ASMSU Chairman Jim Graham said the number of people, students as well as By E L L E N Z U R K E Y tions are unquestionably in the best in- recommendations, if adopted, will distri- commuters and visitors. State News S t a f f W r i t e r terest of the general welfare and any RESIDENCE HAU.S bute the burden of national defense more —Better police protection could be discussion to the contrary would seriously equally, and the drafting of younger men offered because it would have a large The constitutional right of the ASMSU hinder ASMSU's historical and necessary would be less disruptive to the careers number of people parking in one area Student Board to appropriate student tax Involvement in such cases." of draft-eligible males than current prac- rather than spread over two lots. money as it sees fit will be challenged to- Durell said that he is not against dona- tices. Jim Carbine, ASMSU vice-chairman, 'Living-learning units' —Bogue Street would not have to be extended at this time to service the new proposed lot with the possibility that it night. Richard Durell, Monroe senior and pre- law major, has submitted a brief to the tions that affect the general welfare, but he is against appropriating money which benefits only one individual. said the proposals would yield an improve- would have to be ripped up later because All-University Student Judiciary (AUSJ) Graham said he went to the Washington ment over the present system, but do not deal with the central problems of the draft. ( P l e a s e t u r n to page 11) replace homey dorms of a proposed state highway that would run through that area. Richard O. Bernitt, director of the charging the student board with illegally appropriating $50 for Jim Graham, ASMSU chairman, to travel to Washington In Jan- conference as an individual, not a rep- resentative of MSU. ASMSU's Code of Operations states Department of Public Safety, also noted uary. that a request for money from the student E D I T O R ' S N O T E : The follow- percentage of learning takes place outside that the cost of expanding the Commuter AUSJ is comprised of 13 students who board shall be made five days prior to the the classroom." Lot would be exactly the same as the Price group ing is the f i r s t in a s e r i e s of are approved by the ASMSU student board. ASMSU student board meeting, that the Head adviser positions in MSU s res- cost of constructing the lot that was A minimum of five students is necessary donation shall be considered token support, f o u r s t o r i e s on MSU's r e s i d e n c e idence halls are highly sought. For the previously proposed. to hear a case with a decision rendered and that the donation be defined as a gift h a l l staff. Today's a r t i c l e shows 15 available positions each year, there The committee also defined what it con- by majority vote. for public and benevolent purposes. The the change in the role of the are more than 70 applicants, most of sidered "adequate bus service" and added to examine Steve Rossiter, chief justice of AUSJ, Code, however, exempts organizations af- a d v i s e r and the hall system. whom have been admitted to a doctoral a proposed schedule of bus service to the declined to say what penalty would be im- filiated with ASMSU. program. proposal. posed on the student board if it is found By B O B B Y SODEN Graduate advisers have a more flexible It proposed that buses run to and from guilty of committing an illegal act. dry cleaners Luci confirms it, and position in most halls, serving as an the lot from 6 a.m. to 1 a.m. Monday ASMSU has filed a counter brief saying ELLEN ZURKEY assistant to the head adviser and usually through Thursday, from 6 a.m. to 11 p.m. that such action Is based on ASMSU's State News Staff W r i t e r s handling the student committees. or Friday and from 4 p.m. to 1 a.m. traditional power to give monetary gifts By T R I N K A C L I N E MSU was originally planned to house Resident assistants are chosen by their interest in the position, emotional sta- on Sunday. It is the committee's feeling that it for benevolent purposes. ASMSU's counter-brief, which will be b a b y ' s on the w a y State News S t a f f W r i t e r men at one end of the campus and women bility and grade point. will not be necessary to offer bus serv- filed with the AUSJ sometime today states, STONEWALL, Tex. OF) — President at the other. ice on Saturday because anyone needing "the question here is over whether student ASMSU's price study committee will Johnson's 19-year-old daughter, Mrs. Sometime between the completion of the "We hire people who are interested in to use his car may bring it back to board has the prerogative to determine Patrick J. Nugent, acknowledged Saturday begin negotiations with local dry cleaners first women's dormitory and the imple- higher education, not rules," said Adams. central campus on Friday after 6:00 what is, indeed, the 'general welfare of the that she Is going to have a baby. this week, said Jim Sink, ASMSU.member- mentation of the living-learning concept, "These people must make significant p.m., when parking is allowed. student body and the University.' decisions daily. They feel the effects Sun- Luci Johnson Nugent said she was at-large. blueprints were altered and campus hous- The question remaining before the com- "Historically speaking the board has "very happy" over the prospect of mother- Last week an area shoe repair store ing became more than a "home away from day of a decision they made Saturday mittee is whether it should propose that repeatedly determined that gifts for 'public hood. adjusted its prices following meetings home." It became an educational program. night." benevolent purposes' are in the general The President's daughter explained why with the ASMSU committee. Under the " D o r m s " became "residence halls." welfare of both groups." the couple had never chosen to reveal direction of Tim Pickard, the committee Motherly housemothers were replaced Durell contends interpretation would her pregnancy despite rumors to that began a state-wide price study com- with graduate students called advisers. mean that student board could decide what parison. The owner of an East Lansing dry Cleaning store has offered to set up a And classrooms were added. Hubbard Hall, which houses some 1,315 men and women, is a far cry from the Thant's peace hopes Is good for the general welfare and In the interest of the student body. ASMSU's brief continues: "Such dona- effect. "We haven't announced any aspect of our lives. We're Just trying to be private meeting for the committee with all area citizens," she said. first men's hall, which was built near the cleaners, according to Sink. The purpose will be to discuss the seven to eight cent price discrepancies found in the cost College cow barns so agriculture students could care for their livestock. Morrill Hall was soon constructed to shaken after meeting of laundering shirts. Meanwhile, Sink said the committee will house the growing number of women taking home economics courses. Morrill'sbase- NEW YORK OP] — United Nations Sec- retary-General U Thant returned here Thant has long advocated the cessation of bombing of North Vietnam. Nixon bocks LBJ Viet policy, continue correspondence with East Lan- Sunday after talks with North Vietnamese Sunday, he said he was "more than ment accommodated the campus laundry, sing bookstores. The committee found that most Big Ten bookstores offer discounts. and the coeds lived upstairs. Edith Gllhooley, who retired last year as representatives in Rangoon, Burma, with the pessimistic report that the war In ever convinced" that such cessation could lead to useful talks and negotiations. soys bo b halt talk ha rm ful East Lansing area bookstores do not. Vietnam " i s going to be prolonged and Thant said he did not plan to visit electorate might "pass a protest vote" housemother of Mason Hall, wasM.A.C.'s NEW YORK OP) — Former Vice Pres- "We'd like to know why MSU is so bloody." President Johnson with a report on his and sweep the Johnson administration first housemother. ident Richard M . Nixon said Sunday he different than Wisconsin or Illinois that talks, although he would convey the sub- from office. "At that time the housemother was a "The North Vietnamese are convinced stance of them to all parties involved in felt a pause in the bombing of North we aren't offered discounts," Sink said. Nixon made his statements at Kennedy social position," Mrs. Gilhooley recalled. that their military support will never let the Southeast Asian Vietnam - or even talk about it - would Gasoline and clothing prices will be Airport as he departed for London, the "It was our Job to make the dorm a home them down, whatever the circumstances conflict. prolong the conflict. He threw his full discussed at the next Chamber of Com- first stop of a three-week trip that will and to be more of a mother than an may be," Thant said at a news con- " I do not consider support to President Johnson on the Is- merce meeting, he added. ASMSU re- take him behind the Iron Curtain on what adviser." ference at Kennedy Airport. I have any substan- sue. cently purchased a seat on the East Lan- he has billed a fact-finding mission. Head advisers are more "removed" tive message to be "Johnson is right and Kennedy is sing chamber to improve communication He made similar statements earlier In Regarding the Vietnam peace proposals from students today, she said. conveyed personally wrong," Nixon said in discussing the and relations between the city and the London and Rome saying he had received of Sen. Robert Kennedy, Nixon said: " h i s Don Adams, director of residence hall to the President of recent proposal by Sen. Robert F. Ken- university. no new guarantees from North Vietnam proposals are not new. In my opinion the programs, agreed that residence hall per- the United States," nedy, D-N.Y,, that the United States should Sink added statistics from the United about peace moves and held no prospect proposal to halt the bombing and talk sonnel have never had such a voice in he said. suspend the bombing as an inducement to Students price study may be employed in for peace. about the proposal simply have the effect administration and policy formation. "I believe that the Communists to enter negotiations negotiations. "We're both working for the The problem, according to Thant, is of prolonging the war by encouraging the "Residence hall personnel are hired after the cessation which might bring peace in Vietnam. same basic goal," said Sink. "We'd rather one of reciprocity. enemy. They are led to believe there is with the expectation that they will be at U Thant of the bombing, in a The Kennedy-Johnson rift over the cooperate than fight each other." "The Hanoi idea of reciprocity Is that a division in the United States and they least as excellent as classroom person- few weeks time, talks would take place," bombing gained new proportions over the there is a civil war in South Vietnam," can win." The philosophy of the ASMSU price nel," Adams said. "Students must be Thant said. weekend when Sen. Edward Kennedy, D- study committee Is to work with Indi- he said. "Hanoi is assisting one side He said previous bombing pauses had able to get informed advice from these Mass., publicly endorsed his brother's and the United States the other. If the Asked If he held this opinion because not brought peace any nearer and be- vidual merchants to assure students of people.' stand. United States withdraws support from one of his talks with the North Vietnamese cause of this, Nixon said, he believes fair prices from Lansing area stores. "The influence a residence hall staff The Massachusetts senator went on to side, Hanoi is prepared to withdraw its representatives, Thant replied: "Not di- that "Johnson is right and Kennedy is Sink said the committee also plans to has on the students is considerable," say Saturday, that in 1968 the American support from the other." rectly." wrong." publish a booklet rating local businesses. Adams pointed out, "because such a large STATE NEWS Rrk^l'lanln, managing editor Kyle C. Kertoewy James Spanlolo, campus editor SNU6&LE g p AgA|M¿T editor-in-chief Edward A. Brill, editorial editor Lawrence Werner, sports editor H* Andrew Mollison, executive reporter ü g Joel Stark William G. Papclak, asst. ad manager S *R píemeos advertising manager Monday Morning, March 6, 1967 rf&T PROTEST} OH ^HIZ, EDITORIALS comi/ Draft referendum proves embarrassing bEMONSTRATE/ CLERK , J / é U)HEM TO MOONUGHT'S SHYING bowNj The results were pre- that it might be signifi- cant to breakdown the vote F o l k S CAN 1 dictable. WEAR a PROWn/ Register today ASMSU has fallen all by draft status. over itself in an effort to Thus ASMSU succeeded NJSHT A\*/Ay— KlSSy-FACE THe J ^ sample student opinion on in wasting the time of those w for E. Lansing vote the draft. who voted, the energy of Instead of adding the bal- the election workers and According to the East Lan- last day to register for the lot to the regular ASMSU Spring elections, the cabi- net, on whom responsibility devolved once the student the tàx money of all by not waiting for the spring general elections and by failing to provide for the v * il B o - b E - 0 ; B O - b e - O j sing city charter, anyone who April 3 election is today. board had decided to have analysis of the data. is a Michigan resident and a Students should take advan- OHjBO-bE-bOo.' an off-seasonvotecounting, They are now in the em- qualified voter may change tage of the right. prepared the ballot. barrassing position of TweNTy-THftEE, his registration to East Lan- sing. Thus, any student who There has been much talk recently about the relations Because of the way they being able to present to TU)E N T y. T H R E £j prepared the ballot, all one the federal administration declares his permanent res- idence as East Lansing between the MSU student and the city of East Lansing. can tell of the opinion of the few who voted is that most the meaningless results of a referendum in which few oorm RuL£S s K | t >Do 0 / would be eligible to switch. Many students feel that they want some change in the voted. But in the past, students aren't getting their fair — The Editors status quo. have been refused registra- share of the services of the The first mistake came tion because they did not an- swer trick questions in the city. By registration and vot- ing in the election, students when off season vote date •F VIEW was picked, an action al- proper way. would give a powerful voice ASMSU is attempting to assert the legal rights of the to their opinions, most guaranteed to produce a small turnout. Only 4,864 Kiss-in' just good, clean students voted. By W . C . B L A N T O N his arm was around her waist. However, student to registration. The — The Editors The second mistake -was- C h a i r m a n , United Students the rules were changed before Wednes- day to define automatic referrals to stand- to make the data obtained There was a kiss-in scheduled by United ards board for (1) loosened clothing, ANDRIW MOLLISON from that small sample Students for the West Akers lounge and nearby areas last Wednesday. According (2) roaming hands, and (3) lying on the couches. Informal warnings for lesser nearly meaningless by to the news media this was to be in pro- offenses and defining roaming were still 17 years ago- failing to separate the men from the women. No one test of an Akers law passed from on high somewhere banning all public sex acts more exciting than hand-holding. That's a at the discretion of the R.A. The kiss-in was not a protest of Akers' rules regarding P.DiA. alcohol has been consumed to Justify un- will know if gender could tremendously worthy undertaking, and one inhibited behavior—like dancing, for in- roots o f a scandal have had anything to do with one's view of the draft. with which most MSU students would agree, I think. The minor flaw in the sentence lies in The kiss-in was planned and organized to use a semi-serious effort in an attempt to illustrate the ridiculousness of the at- titude prevalent in residence halls that stance. There is some sort of mass illness prevalent when a thousand people gather to gawk at people so perverted as to kiss and student organizations without having the fact that there is not a word of it In the headlines of 1950 lie the ex- some nut scream "Commie give-away" Sex was indicated on the substantiated by either Akers rules and minor displays of affection are somehow in public without shame or guilt. planations for the recently discovered link And therein was the failure of the between the CIA and the National Student in the Senate. computer sheet, but the recent changes in them or the plans of indecent when exhibited in public. Where, United Students. might I ask, is the couple without a car memorable attempt to hold a kiss-in. Too Association. Good. Then give it openly. cabinet decided not to bother There was a controversy in Akers to and confronted by sub-zero weather and many people showed up too quickly to allow From the microfilm flies In die base- ' And thankfully. separating responses, De- be sure. Until recently, R.A.'s in the hall four feet of snow and living in a residence the US leaders to channel the crowd into rr.ent of the MSU Library come the fol- had the power to refer residents to the hall which does not have visitation hours the hallways and lounge to prevent the lowing New York Times headlines from Openly, because the times, they are a- cause of the time it would hall standards board for affectionate be- supposed to find a private place? All of overcrowding. And desperate attempts to that year. changing. The American people are now willing to talk and trade with other take. havior deemed inappropriate and/or ob- them are off-limits. I agree that ex- calm the mass of flesh, pleas to get off jectionable (there is a difference) in public hibition! stic behavior should be controlled, the furniture and quit pushing were com- M'CARTHY ACCUSES ideological blocs. Once'a course of Inade- areas of the hall. Inappropriate and/or pletely Ignored until éxtensive damage had Thankfully, because, we have reason to but by the responsible action of those who POINT FOUR OFFICIAL (March 14, p. 1) hope that the long overdue investigation of quate analysis was decided objectionable was defined in each instance are offended—not by making the R.A. occurred to the West Akers lounge. This Miss Kenyon Cites by the R.A. Harassment by the R.A.'s, damage will be (>aid for by United Students, Patriotic Record the CIA' will not be accompanied by the upon, fatuosities multi- play morality cop in addition to every- although the staff at Akers agrees withUS same hysteria which tainted forever the either in referrals to the standards board thing else the administration and manage- To Refute Charges (March 15, p. 1) anti-Red Congressional investigations of plied. The vote was not or informal warnings, i.e. "Stop that or ment demands of the position. that the actual damage was not done by HOUSE, 368-2, VOTES US members. TIGHTER SPY LAWS (March 16. p. 1) the 1950s. Don't we? analyzed by class standing leave," was reported (and verified) for In addition, I have the feeling that what offenses such as walking into the car- our society needs a great deal is more It was the fault of US. US was foolish McCarthy's Tactics Or are you, like me, one- of these or by previous military peted lounge and taking the first kissofthe open affection among individuals, not less. enough to believe that people who con- 'A Shame, Disgrace,' cynics who sees a sort of reverse Mc- service or lack of it. evening, having shoes off while kissing E x t r e m e self-consciousness is hardly sider kissing a spectator sport would be Peurifoy Declares (March 17, p. 1) Carthyism in all the recent disclosures? ("loosened clothing"), sitting with the more demonstrable than at a party at mature enough to civilly find out what it's SENATOR ASSERTS ACHESON Will someone 17 years from now look with And it occured to no one girl's head on the guy's shoulder while which everyone sits and drinks until enough all about. HAS ORDERED 'WHITEWASH* amazement upon the headlines of 1967? ON LOYALTY OF SERVICE (March 18, p. 7) Review Body Balks McCarthy on Data (March 19, p. 1) OUR READERS' MINDS M'CARTHY V. STATE (March 19, p. IE) Acheson Is Appealing To Public for Support (March 19, p. 3E) POLITICS DEEPLY COLOR M'CARTHY ACCUSATIONS (March 19, p. 6E) REPORT FROM THE NATION: All en Ginsberg, symbol of freedom mention of the fact that MSU students and To the Editor: ASMSU showed considerable courage in THE LOYALTY HEARING faculty get hungry on schedule and that helping to get him on campus; a sur- (March 19, p. 6E) One of the first insipid Jokes I heard no facilities could be obtained for an prising number of people showed up, con- Interestingly, of the seven people ac- cused of being Communists, commsymps concerning the MSU student body on my arrival here four years ago was the one evening reading, perhaps with even a cigarette' or two. You omitted the fact sidering the numerous bureaucratic delays in arrangements and publicity; a lot of 'Harem' leader apologizes or anti-anti-Communists in those six days, that begins, 'You can lead a whore to that the 400 or so students that remained these people thought they received a all managed to clear themselves. None, culture . . .' to the end despite their hunger is a con- bargain. as it turned out, were Marxists, much My comments on whoredom are al- siderable number on a campus where To the Editor: less seditious espionage agents. ready a part of the public record in the poetry was dead two years ago. You If there was a sense of failure at the More interestingly, that didn't seem to most recent Zeitgeist, but lest the two omitted the fact that most of the students afternoon reading (for there was no such Within the past few days I have re- make any difference in Joe McCarthy's articles thus far published in the State and faculty here are not yet sufficiently sense that night), I think it was small in ceived phone calls from the Arab Club political tactics or prestige. News stand as the only post-mortems to oriented toward the reading of poetry to comparison to those for whom it was an and other groups in protest of my "kiss- Now what do you suppose public reaction Allen Ginsberg's East Lansing burial, I be able to grasp, on the first hearing, event worthy of the best campus in in harem." would have been if the State Dept. had believe some further comment should be poems with which they are not familiar. America. The event was worthy, but per- I will make this clear once and for alll openly donated money to the National made. You failed to mention that Ginsberg clearly haps the campus was not. And the failure My religion is Judaism, but my political Student Association, whose delegates were First, you can bet your sweet soul, overestimated his audience, that he might was with the campus and a protected allegiance is with the United States of willing to talk to Communists, Socialists, Miss Pratt, that my answer to the edi- have expected (and did expect) a more campus newspaper that has been lulled America and nothing else. Conservatives and nationalists at inter- torial question you posed for me on Tues- courteous and responsive group. And you into indifference in describing plain- Therefore my sheik attire was not in national student parleys? day is 'yes, it is still worth having been did not mention that almost no one in the clothesman enforcing a 'peddling or- mockery of Arabs or any other ethnic .fired to have experienced that reading in audience of MSU automatons who attended dinance' in order to prohibit the sale of Isn't it possible that in the 1950s, when group. I was demonstrating against a only way I could do this was to out- that place at that time.' There is in- seemed particularly disturbed by the ad- a book of poems. "Communist" was an epithet rather than kiss-in and nothing else. ludicrous them. Now, what is more ri- a neutral label, the State Dept. would have sinuated in your article the idea that the ministration's denial of the right to sell I was fired for claiming the right to Furthermore, the statement that I am diculous than a Jew in a Arab outfit? been accused of aiding a Communist front poet Allen Ginsberg was a hoax perpe- Ginsberg's books on a campus at which he free expression, and I was fired by a representing "the United Arab Republic, organization T trated by Zeitgeist, that the publicity was reading on the day before a so-called university that fears free expression. B'nai B'rith, and Hadassah" was not a If I have shown any disrespect to the So maybe the State Dept. thought, "To concerning Ginsberg was misleading, that 'academic freedom' report was adopted. Allen Ginsberg is a symbol of such free- barb, but one Of many quips used during Arab Club, B'nai B'rith or Hadassah, it hell with it, we'll help NSA secretly." we were happy to have two campus police- The beer-throwing incident so smugly dom, and he read here—once—and the that "demonstration." was unintentional and I apolgize. Maybe there was no thought of spying; men show up, and that Ginsberg's reading reported in Wednesday's State News is firing Is, .a small thing compared to that. The whole reason for my actions wasto was, after all, a failure. The first three only a footnote to a smug article that Elliot Feldman maybe it was just a question of keeping show participants and by-standers how East-West communication lines open. of these are untrue, and the last is more almost completely misrepresented Gins- Gary Groat Southfield Junior ludicrous the Akers kiss-in was, and the Today, of course, that decision made doubtful than your article implied. berg's appearance attheGables.Throwing instructor, ATL back in the early '50s is being questioned. You omitted any mention of the balloons, beer at poets, Miss Gardner, Is not yet "It will ruin NSA's credibility in foreign the flowers, and the Jelly beans—the quite the national pastime your article implies. COUPON SPECIALS lands," some way. Juvenile signs of disrespect which greeted • Prescription lenses Today, of course, it is possible to a poet whom the rest of the world, at MSU and the Lansing community had an CAFETERIA MARCH 6-12 ground give government money openly to labor least, regards as one of the most sig- nificant of our time. You omitted any opportunity on Monday to hear a poet whom they may not hear again In this town; fcOUPON\ COUPONi • Complete selection ROAST BAKED SWISS PKANUIS ALL NÖ0T J.HE FIRST THN I 6 0)£HAVE "C DO IS STAKT A PROSKAMOf f IF toe ^ HOlx) ABOUT ONE PUSH-UP ? of frames CHICKEN STEAK Vô lOO flUS CALISTHENICS. W0RKTD6E1HEI?, French Fries or French Fries or THIS CAN BE XI • Sunglasses Mashed Potatoes Mashed Potatoes 0Wf6l?EAJESTinSMO>s»i»«tioflCo.tac C >9M Wft 0*n«r »M Next I "THE 25TH HOUR' ' wckwuV 211 M.A.C. ED 7-1668 PLUS CARTOON! i MFTROCOIOR Monday, March 6, 1967 SPORTS5Michigan State News, East Lansing. Michigan H. L. CHAPMAN M S Ü vgefav&Fßat < - K for pesticidecenter Strolls post MSU history man that Col. Lawrence had been Chapman met David Fairchild By P A M HICKS sent to them by Allah. in Cairo. Fairchild Is one of A $740,000 grant from theU.S. search plant originated three Chapman was educated In For students walking the cam- the greatest plant explorers In Public Health Service to MSU for years ago when MSU received Southampton, his birthplace, at pus day after day, familiar people the U.S. His father was the first a $2 million Pesticide Research a grant from the National In- London, and at Kew Botanic and places face Into daily rou- English professor at MSU. Center has been announced by stitute of Health. Garden's School of Botany and tines. But while the places have In 1950, Chapman became a Sen. Robert P. Griffin, R-Mich. During this time, nine MSU Horticulture. changed tremendously in the last horticultural specialist in the Greenhouse and environmental departments have been working While serving in World War I, 41 years, H i . Chapman has Cooperative Extension Service, control facilities have been under on pesticide control, said Guyer, he saw active service in France, remained a familiar face in the a job which he held until retiring. construction since June and with nine scientists and graduate Salonika, Gaza and the Holy Land. assistants comprising a staff botanical gardens and green- should be finished this month, He served with Lt. Asqulth, son of approximately 40. houses. according to Gordon Guyer, of the prime minister of England "This new center will coor- Chapman, professor emeritus chairman of the Entomology Dept. and director of the research dinate and centralize our efforts of botany and plant pathology, at that time. After the war, he returned to his studies at Kew 'Little' goof program. in an attack on pests and side came to MSU—then Michigan Ag- Gardens and graduated with The second br.lf of the rwo- effects story research center, the main Guyer. of pesticides" added Research has previously ricultural College—In 1926, as botanist in charge of the Beal H. L. C H A P M A N honors In 1919. His association with plants led breaks power Botanic Gardens. Retiring in laboratories, is scheduled to be been conducted in 15 on-campus to friendships with such great One failure led to another, so 1957, he returned in 1965 to re- built in three months and should and two off-campus locations. life so interesting," said Chap- botanists as the late E.H. Wil- electrical power was off on east Guyer emphasized that no new sume his position until a replace- be completed within a year. man, " i s the important people son, "the world's greatest plant and north^ campus Friday after- personnel will be needed to staff ment could be found. Chapman The new center will be located I have met and known." These explorer" David Fairchild, Wil- noon. Is one of the few people who south of the new Atomic Energy the center when completed. include Sir Winston Churchill. liam J . Beal and Liberty Hyde A manufacturer's representa- Commission Plant Science Re- "We've got all the manpower Frosh rush in... knows well the history of MSU. " 1 like to take my classes Lawrence of Arabia and David Bailey. tive, checking controls in Power search Building on Wilson Road. we need now," he said. where s o m e s e n i o r s have never ventured. on tours of the campus, pointing Fairchild. Bailey, noted American bot- Plant 65, pushed the wrong con- "The center may well make Facilities in the research cen- Chapman met T.E. Lawrence anist, was an alumnus of MSU, trol. A boiler failure followed, ter will include: Susan Woods (left), Ann A r b o r f r e s h m a n , and Cindy out the history of trees, shurbs MSU the hub of pesticide re- in 1919, having accepted a new class of 1885, and a student of causing a 15-minute blackout —Plant and animal rearing W i I k e , G r e e n v i l l e f r e s h m a n , sign up f o r s p r i n g t e r m and flowers that were planted search in the Midwest," said post as horticulturist to the Egyp- Beal, for whom the botanical period in the science area. rooms to determine the effect of s o r o r i t y rush in 309 Student S e r v i c e s . so many years ago by my Guyer. tian government in Cairo. gardens are named. Chapman In restoring power, operational pesticides on animal and plant State News photo by Dave L a u r a friends," Chapman said. The idea for a pesticide re- "After reading my letter of said, " I f there had been no Beal, problems caused further failure, metabolism. He says that he enjoys meeting spreading darkness on the north Introduction," Chapman said, there would have been no MSU, —Variant temperature rooms students and welcomes them to Free U. classes "Lawrence asked me if I played since Beal came here when the and east part of campus. Full to check the effectiveness of come for a tour. "It's a shame power resumed about 30 minutes tennis. When I answered yes, he legislature was thinking of dis- Union Board various pesticides in different temperatures and humidities. that so many students do not know the history of their school and replied: 'Thank the Lordl Some- one has come to see me who can solving the college." later. Europe flight cut to three this week —Radio-isotope counting the people who help make it," play tennis.' " he said. rooms to observe movement of radio-isotopes in research, "The thing that has made my The Arab soldiers told Chap- Polly Postscript meeting today —Laboratories for analytical pesticide chemistry study. Only three Free University Lawless will also lead a dis- is calling Union Board will hold a meet- ing for all students and faculty --General laboratories. —Graduate assistant offices. classes will be held during the cussion of Thomas Pinchon's last week of winter term. " V " and John Barth's "The Sot- Ken Lawless, instructor in Weed Factor" from 8-8:50 p.m. CAP and —Seminar facilities. interested in its flights to Europe at 3 p.m. today in the Union American Thought and Language, in the same room. will discuss with students their The last class of the term will GOWN all coeds! Ballroom. poems in a poetry workshop in 4 be the mental illness classledby Ian Craven of Craven Tours Pianist Wilson from 7-7:50 tonight. James Linden,graduateassistant Inc. will be present to answer in psychology. The class will be questions. Information sheets and vaccination forms will be avail- to perform Petitioning open held from 7:30-8:30 p.m. Wed- nesday in the conference room able. downstairs from the Wilson Informal Rudolf Flrkusny, celebrated Seats on the Union Board-spon- Ccech-American pianist, will for OCC jobs Library. sored flights from Detroit to Lon- perform In concert here at 8 p.m. Petitioning for positions on don are open to students, faculty Tuesday in theMusic Auditorium. Off-Campus Council will be open nator of the Free University, Michael Lopez, student coordi- Spring and staff members and their The concert is the third of- today through Friday. said that classes will resume immediate families. fered through the 1966-67 College Planned trips Include a 12 - of Arts and Letters Concert candidates are: Qualifications for the council spring term. Rush week flight, two four-week Series. Tickets will be available (1) full-time undergraduate flights, an eight-week charter at the door. flight and an 11-week flight. Seats student living off campus and not Firkusny's recital will open represented by any other campus b DISTRIBUTION Hurry and sign-up are still available on all but the with Schubert's "Sonata In B governing group. 12-week flight. Flat Major" f o l l o w e d by (2) 24 credit hours ^t/now going o n The price of all regular flights Brahms's "Four Piano Pieces." (3) at least a 2.0 G.P.A. I At The UNION DESK this week- is 4353; the charter flight will Other works include Debussy's (4) in good standing with the Chopin's University in social,disciplinary ^ And Will Continue Until 1:30 P.M. cost $300. Additional European "Estrampes" tours will be available to the "Sonata in B Minor." and and financial matters. March 6-10 tourists upon their arrival in London. t Born In Napajedla, Czechoslo- (5) a petltionwith 50 signatures vakia, Flrkusny made his debut of students living off-campus SUNDAY, MARCH 12 MEETING A similar meeting has been as a piano soloist with the Phil- must be submitted. scheduled for April 18 for those harmonic Orchestra in Prague There are 11 positions open on Hurry!! Reserve tours NOW! who are unable to attend Monday's at the age of 10. Before he was the new council. Elections will be TOMORROW! Register N o w ! meeting. 18 he was well known In Europe. held April 12. 7:30 p.m. UK Faculty Deadline 3 0 9 Student Services 1-5 p.m. U-Haul Rentals UNION Parlors B & C F o r A c a d e m i c Apparel O f f i c e r E lections Is 5 P.M. Tomorrow! Surf movies to TUESDAY, MARCH 7th NO REGISTRA TION CHARGE bring in spring! S T O R E HOURS: M O N D A Y THRU S A T U R D A Y 9:30 A . M . TO 5:30 P . M . - W E D N E S D A Y NOON UNTIL 9 P . M . wing s p r i n g w a r d with Wild C a n a r y accessories A merry new shade that really smgs out as EASY ONE-WAY RENTALS c o m p a n i o n tor the sunniest ensembles in your 65 Lansing to Detroit 10 spring-bound w a r d r o b e . Lansing to Chicago . . . . . . 1615 A. Enomel 24 rope. 4 . 0 0 B. N y l o n stretch g l o v e . 3.00 95 Lansing to New York 26 C. Fluted enamel 2 circle CALL 372-1238 for more rate information pin with Lady Bug. 5 . 0 0 D. A l l silk c h i f f o n (if busy, call 489-8535) HAUL o b l o n g scarf. 3 . 5 0 LANSING E. Belle Sharmeer Cantrece • Pads nylon stockings. 1 . 7 5 • Hand Trucks • Car Top C a r r i e r s F: Barber-shop stripes on • Tow Bar Hitches • All Types Trailers enamel bracelet. 6 . 0 0 Stop in and see how easy it is to rent Jacobsons from U - H A U L . 2509 W. Saginaw Hwy. Monday, March 6, 1967 6 Michigan State News, East Lansing. Michigan SPORTS Wrestlers overpower oil fo win Rig Ten title By G A Y E L W E S C H Michigan, who held the old formances from Don Behn at Friday and administered the some calculating of his own, tournament, Campbell won three him. His 6-3 victory over Michi- Heavyweight Richardson went record of 89 points, was second 130, Dale Anderson at 137, Carr, coup-de-grace early in the finals rushed to the scorers table to bouts. Including an upset of gan's Pete Cornell avenged an four minutes and 33 seconds be- State News Sports W r i t e r on Saturday. affirm his calculations and relay North we stern's Bob Schneider to with 78 followed by Minnesota, George Radman at 167,and Mike upset loss to Cornell in a dual fore being pinned by Michigan's COLUMBUS — Putting to- 32; Ohio State, 27;Northwestern, Bradley at 177. Dave Campbell Bissell's 2-1 victory over In- the news of victory to the team. make it to the finals. meet last week. Dave Porter. Richardson's fate gether the best all-round per- 22; Wisconsin ^-¿l; Indiana, 18; was second at 152, and Jeff diana's Jim Blnkley in the con- W ith the championship sewn up, Radman secured his second Bradley scored first when he was shared by two other formance in Big Ten history, the Iowa, 8; Illinois?/,and Purdue,0. Richardson the runner-up at solation round for third place, MSU wrestlers were still in four victory of the season over Ohio escaped in the second period, wrestlers who faced Porter In MSU wrestling team won the Big The Spartans got off to a fast heavyweight, while Gary Bis sell Behm's 15-8 championship win championship bouts, and they State's Daye Reinbolt, the de- then after being taken down he the tourney. Ten Championship going away start on Friday, qualifying seven was third at 123. over Ohio State's Roger Young, split those. fending Big Ten andNCAA cham- escaped again and the score was pion. Porter was given the out- this weekend. men for the finals, and had the Rod Ott, the MSU representa- and Anderson's 3-0 title victory Campbell, the surprise of the 2-2 going into thermal period. standing wrestler of the tourna- championship, wrapped up when tive at 160, was eliminated when over Wisconsin's Mike Gluck tournament at 152, came within Four takedowns,an escape,and Cornell escaped after Bradley Spartan wrestlers grabbed five ment and most falls award for Dale Carr defeated Michigan's he lost two close matches« gave MSU eight more points while two points of Michigan's Fred two points for riding time gave gained two points riding time in first-, two seconds and a third pinning the three opponents he B u n Merlcal for the 145-pound MSU scored 75 points to Michi- Michigan got four when 123-pound Stehman with 25 seconds left in Radman an 11-3 victory. the third period only to be taken place finish in the nine weight faced, in a total elapsed time of title. gan's 64 in the preliminary, Bob Fehrs pinned Minnesota's the bout before losing 12-5. Bradley's successful title de- down again,and the Spartan junior 11:39. classes, scoring 92 points, a fense was doubly gratifying for MSU got championship per- quarter and semifinal rounds on Jim Anderson for that champion- Taking a 6-7-2 record into the was the winner. record for the meet. ship. Behm and Anderson had easy ERRATIC FINISH time^ in sweeping to their titles, while Bissell gained third place after losing in the semifinals. Behm's smallest margin of Cagers beat Purdue, 75-71; Fencers pia third victory in three bouts was seven points. Anderson had pinned two opponents and was in command MADISON An erratic MSU peting were Ohio State, 24 points, and Iowa, 17. competition Saturday with a 3-6 foil record while teammate Terry during both other matches though scores were low. Bissell's loss was to Minnesota's Anderson, 7-3. tied for first in conference The Spartans made 42 percent fencing team closed its regular Givens was 2-7. strategy as the game progressed. " I feel we'll beat Indiana down Foil, which had been the top With the stage set for him, By DENNIS CHASE of their shots, as did Purdue, season on SaturJay by placing MSU's top fencer for the day " W e had planned on jumping off there." point producing weapon during Carr iced the championship for Associate Sports Editor Lee Lafyette, who made only but the Spartans made one more third in the Big Ten champion- was Frank Schubert fn epee, as to an early lead, and then send- the season, finished only eighth MSU. 2 of 13 field goal tries, led the field goal, 28-27, and two more ships, here. the senior finished second in the ing in our big men," he said# and ninth in the competition, After a scoreless first period, The University of Wisconsin weapon with an 8-1 mark. His " B u t after they took a lead, we Spartans in rebounding with 11, free throws, 19-17. while epee took second and tenth Carr escaped from his down Michigan State's ba s k e t b a l l went back to our normal defen- and contributed 8 points. Hey- won the meet with 37 points, and sabre finished third and fifth. only loss was to winner Pat position and took Merical down. Laper of Wisconsin. team is making the Big Ten race sive alignment in the second wood Edwards had 9, and John Indiana plays Michigan Mon- followed by Illinois with 32 and Roger Loutzenhiser finished Carr scored on a predicament for MSU with 25. Other teams com- Included in Schubert's vic- look like a typical Spartan game: half, with Rymal and Bailey at Holms, 6. Herman Gilliam led day, and Purdue next Saturday. a 5-0 lead. Merical escaped to close, with MSU pulling it out the guards." Purdue with 19 pointsi Dennis T h e Spartans play Minnesota tories were four bouts that he be taken down again and then es- won by a 5-4 score. in the last seconds. Brady came off the bench to away, and Northwestern a.thome, Choose from Michigan9s caped once more in the period. score 14, and Roger Blalock had in their last game. "Schubert fenced very welll" The Spartans won another one Going into the final period, the " I believe the league will end 12. Gilliam and Blalock had IS And the band, of course, will Schmitter said. "He kept his Saturday, beating Purdue, 75-71, score was 7-2 for Carr. game all the time and made and succeeded in scrambling the up with a 9-5 tie," King said. and 14 rebounds. play "Born Free." largest selection of others fence the way he wanted Although warned for stalling, Big Ten race again. Carr scored a takedown and near MSU is 8-4 and tied with In- them to." fall late in the final period to pierced and fake pierced earrings Schubert's partner in epee, Bill win, 13-4. diana for the lead. The Hoosiers lost to Illinois Saturday, 80-70. Kerner, finished tenth in com- After the Carr-Merical match With two conference games re- petition with an 0-9 record. Spartan Coach Grady Peninger, maining, three teams, besides the Team balance was displayed in who evidently had been doing current leaders, still have a A sabre with Charlie Baer and Dean Daggett fencing for MSU'. Baer chance for the title: Northwest- ern, Wisconsin and Iowa, all with MSU Cagers had tied for first place in com- rt > petition with Dave White of Il- 7-5 records. The Spartans can thank Mat- M linois and Larry Dolph of Wis- consin, but lost both fence-offs at Minnesota thew Aitch for Saturday's vic- w A to finish with a 7-2 record and third. Daggett fenced 4-5 in the meet. The S p a r t a n basketball tory. The 6-7 center had the best game of his career, scoring 31 points. Aitch scored 13 in the t e a m plays at M i n n e s o t a t o - second half, and John Bailey Schmitter called Schubert and night and the game w i l l be Daggett "agreeable surprises" scored 11 of his 17 points in the V b r o a d c a s t on W I L S r a d i o , second half, as the Spartans wiped of the meet. n i b e g i n n i n g at 9 p . m . out a 43-38 halftime deficit. The Spartans were close to the top during the opening M i n n e s o t a ' s r e c o r d is The Boilermakers played a matches of the meet and at one 5-8. The G o p h e r s a r e un- smart game. They broke fast L a n s i n g a r e a ' s most unusual gift shop time were tied, 10-10, for the doubtedly anxious to meet down the court and tried both lead. After that, however, Wis- the S p a r t a n s . M i c h i g a n zone and man-to-man defenses. consin's team balance gave them They outrebounded the Spartans, State beat M i n n e s o t a , Feb. the top position. 47-36. 18, 67-66, on a last sec- Schubert and Baer both qual- After the game, MSU Ooach ond dunk shot by Lee Laf- John Benington said, "Purdue's ified for the NCAA fencing meet ayette. G o p h e r Coach John- last two games are against North- by their performance in the Big Ten. Schmitter said he will also Kundla p r o t e s t e d the g a m e , western and Indiana. They're go- try and get Loutzenhiser in the c l a i m i n g that Lafayette was ing to do some good. George 956 Ttowbridge Rd. King (Purdue coach) has done meet, which will be held the guilty of g o a l t e n d i n g . Spartan Shopping Center last of March. on" of the better jobs in the league." ATTENTION CREDIT UNION MEMBERS Benington told his team at halftime, that Indiana had lost, Come to and the Spartans played the sec- ond half like they knew it. They scored six straight points to pull within one, 46-45. After holding the lead briefly three Center of attention times, the Spartans didn't re- the gain it for good until Aitch hit Lee Lafayette c o n t r o l s the b a l l , even as two P u r d u e p l a y e r s s u r r o u n d h i m . on a fumbling, driving layup to Lafayette s c o r e d only eight p o i n t s , well below his 15.4 g a m e a v e r a g e , but he make the score, 67-65. g r a b b e d 11 rebounds to lead the S p a r t a n s in that d e p a r t m e n t . Benington had to adjust his Standings Top Results Meeting. Attention Contact Wearers MICHIGAN STATE 8 W L Pet. 4 .667 NEW YORK (UPI)—Here's how the top 10 major college basket- Save 35% On Wetting Solution Indiana 8 4 .667 ball teams far ed during the week- n Save 35% On Soaking Solution Northwestern 5 .583 end: Wisconsin 7 5 .583 1. UCLA beat Stanford 75-47 C O N T A C T I S O L OR A L L E R G A N onlyS100 2 oz. "J 5 .583 and beat California 103-66 W W oetttt ii n n ng «snoll uu Ht inonn • Iowa Purdue 6 6 .500 2. Louisville was idle VISTEX soaking solution o n l y 5|00 4 Illinois 6 6 .500 3. North Carolina beat Duke 0J i s e n d coupon with c h e c k Ohio State 5 8 .384 92-79 Tonight o r m o n e y o r d e r to j Name Minnesota 5 8 ..384 4. Kansis beat Nebraska 64-57 Contact Lens Michigan 2 10 .167 5. Princeton was idle Saturday's Results 6. Houston beat Air Force Solutions Michigan State 75, Purdue 71. 90-80 Address Illinois 80, Indiana 70. 7. Western Kentucky beat Mid- P.O. Box 2282 Wisconsin 80, Michigan 79, dle Tennessee 55-46 Lansing, Mich. Iowa 90, Ohio State 56. 8. Tennessee beat Louisiana Minnesota 86 N|crthv.'estern 84. State 87-60 What's your 1967 Annual Meeting all about? 9. Texas Western was idle Well, mostly it's about people. People 10. Boston College beat Holy Cross 76-71 exercising their privilege to participate in the management of their own organiza- «ft O tion. People sharing a common experience i '•""Jmart Look ahead to Easter the as to what a credit union is all about . . . / t o r k people. 'hop Annual Meetings are fun, too! / MATERNITY FASHIONS perfect There's a Musical Variety Stage show plus exciting door prizes Perfect Easter Fashions to grow with you into summer - one & two piece dresses and suits. Mix & Match acceptables in dacron-cotton knit. V j combination... Featuring Maternity Boutique- College plus Qibbs I he most interesting, challeng- • DRESSES 6M ing, and rewarding positions go to Q-essy & casual & UP the young woman who adds com- plete secretarial training to her • JACKETS 3 9i college education. For all occasions & UP Combine the Gibbs Special M 4 Course for College Women—8Vi •SKIRTS & SLACKS months —with your diploma, and All over stretch & UP he ready for a top position. Wear now & after 9! 3& UP Write College Dean for • SHORTS GIBBS G I R L S AT W O R K . March 6 All colors Registration 7 P.M. P¥>4* I • BATHING SUITS £91 Katharine GIBBS MSU Auditorium •%*>•«»»» 0jiA 1 & 2 piece & UP Business Meeting 8 P.M. SECRETARIAL / / / SIZÄS: BANKARD CHARGES ACCEPTED M.S.U. EMPLOYEES' ^^JON / I 3-13, 6-20,38-44 Layaway ¿1 Marlborough St BOSTON, MASS.0211» DO Parr. Ave NEW YORK, N. Y. 1001T 1918 E. Michigan Open Mon., Thürs. & Fri. til 9 33 Ptymoct St M0NTCLMR. N.J. 87042 77 S. Ange;! St. PROVIDENCE. R. 1,02901 Monday, March 6, 1967 7 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan SPORTS INDIANA WINS TITLE Swimmers third in Big Ten By J O H N L A D D were: Indiana, 444; Michigan, meter diving. As in the other NCAA record by almost three in winning the event for Indiana State News S p o r t s W r i t e r 396; MSU, 308; Minnesota, 174; events, a team is allowed four seconds. Spartan Pete Williams in 7:00.8. Indiana University won its sev- Wisconsin, 152; Ohio State, 134; entrants, but because of the rule pushed Webb to the record time, The two Hoosier events better- enth consecutive Big Ten team Illinois, 113; Purdue, 77; North- limiting each team to 18 partic- finishing second with a 4:17.18. ing the NCAA records were only championship at the Men's Intra- western, 74; Iowa, 39. ipants, most teams rarely bring part of the long list of records mural Pool here this weekend, The first three places were even three divers. Indiana plied up 64 more points broken at the meet. MSU Coach using the two diving events to repeats of last year's champion- The strategy paid off as Indi- by winning two of the three re- Charles McCaffree said, "This build up a lead which a strong - ships. Minnesota turned In some ana scored 89 points in the diving, lays. The 400-yard Hoosler med- was the toughest championship swimming University of Michigan surprising performances, led by to Michigan's 38 and the Spar- ley relay team of Charles Hick- meet ever held." team could not overcome. sophomore Marty Knight's upset tans' 16. Indiana's past Olympic cox, D a v e Perkowski, K e v i n In every swimming event a new MSU placed third, with as many victory in the 200-yard indi vidual gold medalist, Ken Sitzberger, Berry and David Padgett took a pool record was set, and In 10 out first places as Michigan and more medley to move up to fourth from won both the diving events. first place in 3.33.72. The 800- of the 16 events, new Big Ten Going down than Indiana, but without the depth last year's seventh place finish. Ken Webb was the Hoosiers' yara freestyle relay team of Bill records were established. Mich- that gave those teams the top two Indiana used the unusual stra- only other individual champion, winning the 400-yard individual Utley, Scott Cordin, Webb, and igan' s Carl Robie and Spartan Bob Windle exceeded their own Co-Captain Ken Walsh Joined the A p a r t i c i p a n t in the t h r e e - m e t e r diving c o m p e t i t i o n at the Big Ten champion- spots. tegy of entering four divers in s h i p s heads f o r the water after c o m p l e t i n g h i s m a n e u v e r s in m i d a i r . The cham- The final scores in the meet both the one-meter and three- medley in 4:13.72, bettering the NCAA and American record time Hoosiers to bring the NCAA rec- ords bettered to four. p i o n s h i p s w e r e held at the M e n ' s I . M . Pool, last Thursday through Saturday, Robie set the tone of the meet State News photo by Paul Schleif in the first event, the 500-yard freestyle. Robie took out his first 250 yards at a tremendous pace, leaving Spartan Walsh and Indiana's Webb and Windle well behind. Walsh closed well to take sec- inois president to reveal ond place with almost eight sec- onds under his season best, but Robie held on to his lead to fin- position on scandal today request another hearing to "show 'The declaring of these players ish in 4:43.08 to better the Big CHAMPAIGN, ILL, (UPI) cause," so while there was no Ten and NCAA record. Robie ineligible is awfully, awfully President David D. Henry of the official indication that Illinois went on to win the 200-yard but- tough." University of Illinois Monday will would elect this course, unof- terfly in 1:53.55 and the 1,650- Ruled permanently ineligible reveal his official position in the ficial opinion was that it would. yard freestyle in Big Ten record were basketball players Ron Dun- school's "slush fund" scandal Henry expected to confer with time of 16:42.76. lap and Rich Jones, and football which already has resulted in the board of trustees before mak- Spartan Asst. Coach Richard players Cyril Pender, Robert sweeping penalties by the Big ing this decision. The board was Fetters credited this second- Stephens, and Derek Faison, the Ten. scheduled to meet on March 14, place finish for setting the scene latter pair freshmen. Steve Ku- Henry will announce the gist three days before the deadline berski, a sophomore basketball in what head Coach McCaffree of a statement he made to the granted Illinois to either fire the called "the meet's most phe- player, was ruled ineligible until conference faculty representa- coaches or ask for another his senior year and freshman nomenal performance." tives before they upheld a de- hearing. football player Oscar Polite was cision that the school must fire The coaches whose jobs are penalized one year of eligibility. A f t e r winning the 200-yard three coaches or "show cause" in jeopardy are football Coach freestyle In Big Ten record time why its Big Ten membership Pete Elliott, basketball Coach Seven players, including fresh- of 1:43.45 and swimming a very should not be suspended or ter- Harry Combes and assistant bas- man basketball standout Randy fast 0:46.4 leg of the Spartans' minated. ketball Coach Howie Braun. Krews, were exonerated and not winning 400-yard freestyle re- His appearance last week also None was willing to comment penalized. The other six, all came before the faculty repre- Pool panorama lay on Friday, Walsh turned In a time in the 100-yard freestyle sentatives held seven athletes in- eligible, five of them permanent- on the Big Ten decision taking their jobs away, but Elliott said football players, were not identi- fied. preliminaries of 0:46.02. The e s s e n c e of the Big Ten S w i m m i n g C h a m p i o n - c o m p e t i t o r s and s p e c t a t o r s look on, Indi ana won the ly, and exonerated seven of Setting a Big Ten record and College Bike Shop s h i p s is shown in this p a n o r a m i c v i e w of the b u t t e i c h a m p i o n s h i p s , MSU was t h i r d . wrongdoing in the case. bettering the NCAA mark in this f l y c o m p e t i t i o n . Six s w i m m e r s r a c e f r a n t i c a l l y w h i l e State News Photo by Mike Schonhofen preliminary event, Walsh came One source close to Henry back to win the finals by a body indicated that the statement would attempt to end the confusion as to TRAMP PROVES DOWNFALL length with the slightly slower time of 0:46.17. whether his appearance consti- tuted an appeal of the order to 134 N. Harrison Gary Dilley was the only other fire the coaches, made two weeks (1 Block N. of Kellogg Center) first-place individual winner for ago by the athletic director, or an G-men drop to third MSU. Dilley won, for the third year in a row, both the 100- and 200-yard backstroke events. Dil- ley set a new Big Ten record in attempt to show cause. "The faculty held that it was solely an appeal," he said, "and the president thought he was ED 2-4117 Honda Dealer By R O B E R T A Y A F I E Spartan sophomore Toby Tow- son won the floor exercise cham- excellent' performance as Keith McCanless of Iowa won the title Thor had difficulty. Then came "tramp." the 100-yard, In 0:53.10. In the 200-yard, Dilley faded slightly showing cause. It's typical of the Big Ten; it never has made a Parts & Accessories Factory Trained Mechanics State News S p o r t s W r i t e r pionship with a superb perform- on a 9.50 performance. Thor Cliff Diehl and Gunny did well from a strong start to finish in decision." ance for a 9.50 score. Croft tied for third at 9.20. in high bar, but Norm Haynie 1:56.23. The faculty decision, however, IOWA CITY ~ The Michigan retained a share of his rings Jacobs stole the trampoline got in trouble (8.15). Thor fin- left the way open for Illinois to State gymnasts, leading after the The Spartan 400-yard freestyle crown, tying for the title with title from teammate and defend- ished strong at 8.80. first three events, couldn't over- relay team set another Big Ten Don Hatch of Iowa, both at 9.20. ing champ Wayne Miller with a Iowa cleaned up on parallels come a 45-point deficit and fin- record, winning t h e e v e n t in . In the finals, Hal Shaw of Il- 9.45 score. Miller was second at (27.35) and rings (27.45). Illinois ished third in the Big Teh Meet 3:08.68. The swimmers and their linois successfully defended his 9.20. slipped on their final events to here Friday with a score of unofficial 'split' t i m e s were: vaulting crown, averaging 9.325. Neil Schmitt of Iowa gave one fourth, and Michigan got in trou- 182.375. Iowa came on like gang- Walsh, 0:46.4; Gary L a n g l e y , Thor, who was second in the pre- of the afternoon's best perform- ble on parallels and rings. busters in its last two events 0:48.5; Don Rauch, 0:47.5, and lims at 9.175, dropped to fifth, ances to win high bar with a Parallels weren't any better to take the title, scoring 187.05. Gary Dilley, 0:46.2. 8.95. Gunny tied Iowa's Ike Heller score of 9.45. Gunny fell from the for the Spartans, who totaled Michigan was second, scoring Michigan's Paul Scheerer won for sixth, 8.90. bar, dropping him to seventh 25.70. Diehl was working on one 184.875. Illinois was fourth at the 100-yard b r e a s t s t r o k e in Dennis Smith, top side horse place at 7.45. of the best routines of his career 180.875, followed by Indiana, 1:00.5 and the 200-yard breast- qualifier at 9.30, dropped to sec- Iowa's Tom Goldsborough hit when he started walking on his Wisconsin, Minnesota and Ohio s t r o k e in a Big Ten record ond with a 9.25 score for an for 9.25 to earn the parallel handstand and fell off. scoring State. 2:11.45. Purdue's Dan Milne won bars crown. Thor tied for fifth 8.10. Haynie was unsteady and Trampoline was the turning the 50-yard freestyle in 0:21.25. at 8.95, with Smith seventh at scored 7.70. Smith followed him point for the Spartans as MSU and turned in an 8.65 perform- John Lindley of Wisconsin, with 8.65. the slowest qualifying time in the scored 22.35 and dropped to The Spartan ringmen took the ance, and Thor scored 8.80. But fourth. Michigan totaled 27.70 the meet was already decided by 100-yard butterfly, came back to top three places, with Gunny win the event in 0:52.53. on the event to move into the third behind Croft and Hatch, then. lead, followed by Iowa and Il- at 9.10, and Goldberg fourth at linois. " A s a team, we were good 9.0. Terry Siorek of Iowa, the Hawks' outstanding ringman It's Great For A Date! and bad," said MSU Coach George who'd led the field in the pre- Szypula. " I t was disappointing. L a n e s A v a i l a b l e F o r O p e n Bowling liminaries with 9.50, ripped the We have the team that can win. F r i d a y , Saturday and Sunday Nltes head of his bicep mid-way through Trampoline was the big factor. his routine to knock him out of We fell apart on our last four r * 4 0 Lanes «Lounge the running. events while Iowa pulled away." Szypula called the pressure • Billiards »Snack Bar The Spartans won only one on trampoline one of the biggest event, vault, but qualified six men factors in the Spartans' loss, Open Every Day at 9 A.M. for the finals. Dave Thor qual- ified on all events but rings and while praising Keith Sterner for his work. The Air Conditioned trampoline, Ed Gunny on vault, " O u r trampoline is weak," he rings and high bar, Dennis Smith on side horse and parallels and said, "and there was tremendous pressure for us to produce.Thor HOLIDAY LANES Dave Croft and Larry Goldberg got into trouble, and Ron (Aure) on rings. was shaky on his performances. J u s t N o r t h of F r o n d o r P h o n e 487 3 7 3 1 Thor, who worked all seven I feel Keith (Sterner) was under- events, successfully defended his scored; he hit his routine, but - A r c de T r i o m p h e all-around title, totaling 53.675, I think he got lost." Invest your summer withJIMLEC but lost his floor exercise and side horse crowns. Thor turned After the first two events, it his ankle in warm-ups before looked like the Spartans were on the finals. He further aggravated their way. Jerry Moore hit on it in vault and scratched from floor exercise and side horse. Toby Towson horse, 8.30, but Ed Witzke and European Study/ Travel Program 7 Weeks Study Abroad CHICAGO PUBLIC SCHOOLS ANNOUNCE EXAMINATIONS for High School Teachers' Certificates Credit and Non-Credit E x a m i n a t i o n ; Sat., A p r i l 29, 1967 July 3- August 18 F i l i n g Deadline: W e d . , A p r i l 5, 1967, N O O N , C.S.T You Want Fresh Dough Pizza Call Us. If You French - At Paris* And Lausanne, Switzerland TITLES OF EXAMINATIONS Want Old Pre-Cooked German - At Cologne* or Frozen Pizza Crust Italian- At Florence You Have Our Heartiest Spanish - At Madrid* And Barcelona A r t (7-12), Accounting, B u s i n e s s T r a i n i n g , E n g l i s h , M a t h e m a t i c s , P h y s i c a l E d u c a t i o n ( M E N , W O M E N , G r 4 - 8 ) , B i o l o g y , G e n e r a l Science, G e o g r a p h y , Invitation To Call Else- Political Science - At London* H i s t o r y , L i b r a r y Science ( 7 - 1 2 ) , A u t o Shop, D r a f t i n g , E l e c t r i c Shop, • Credit courses M a c h i n e Shop, Wood Shop, I n d u s t r i a l A r t s ( 7 - 1 2 ) where. Transportation overseas - New York to Paris via Pan American Jets VARSITY 2 Charters: j AMLEC FOR INFORMATION: B o a r d of E x a m i n e r s THE 1. June 24-August 19 I R o o m 58 A, Kellogg C e n t e r C h i c a g o P u b l i c S c h o o l s - R o o m 624 2. June 25-September 9 | M i c h i g a n State U n i v e r s i t y 228 N. L a S a l l e S t r e e t I East Lansing, Michigan C h i c a g o , I l l i n o i s 60601 Call AML EC today or: D i r e c t o r of T e a c h e r R e c r u i t m e n t * R o o m 1005 I Name I or: Placement Office C h i c a g o P u b l i c Schools FAST DELIVERY "Campus Renowned" ED 2-6517 353-0681 I Address SPORTS 8 Michigan State News, East Lansing. Michigan Monday, March 6, 1967 Xr raekmen upset in By N O R M SAAR I and a first and fifth In the two- catching Butler near the fifth But a strong showing In this event not finish the race and Zemper this height on his first attempt State N e w s S p o r t s W r i t e r mile. hurdle. Then the big Spartan could have given the meet to MSI'. faded to fifth. while Bergemann made it on his Gene Washington, a bit too hit the hurdle, was knocked It never happened. Dick Shar- Along with Sharkey, MSU In- third try. MADISON — When a track over-anxious to repeat as winner slightly off stride and finished key won the race In 9:03.8, and dividual champs were sophomore Crawford Jumped 23-2 1/2 and team does not get points in events In the 70-yard high and low the race In fourth place with Eric Zemper placed fifth, but Pat Wilson In the 600-yard run, tied for second with Glenn Dick that had been strong all year, hurdles, was edged by Wiscon- a 0:07.8 time. these points only gave MSU a Mike Bowers in the high jump of Wisconsin, but Dick's second they lose. sin's sophomore Mike Butler in " I felt real well going Into 40-38 lead, not enough to carry and Roland Carter In the pole longest Jump was better than Such was the case in the Big the highs. Butler set a new Big the finals," Washington said. " I through the low hurdles, pole vault. Crawford's, giving Dick the Ter. indoor championships here, Ten record for the event with was keyed up for the meet, too vault, 60-yard dash and mile In semi-finals Friday evening, place. as MSU finished second with 53 art 0:08.2, while Washington ran anxious, though." relay. Wilson finished second In the points, behind winner Wisconsin, Charles Pollard qualified for 600, but led the entire race In Five MSU entries took second his record time of last year, the finals in the highs and Bob For a while during the race, the finals and won with 1:11.3 places in the meet. Sharkey with 56-3/4. 0:08.3, to finish second. Steele qualified in the lows, but Spartan chances of repeating as time. finished second in the mllewltha Spartan runners needed high In the low hurdles, Butler got both finished sixth in the finals. Indoor champs were excellent, " I wanted to be one of the 4:06.0 time; John Spain ran the places in the hurdles and two- an exceptionally fast start and as Sharkey, Zemper and George sophomores to win one," Wilson half mile In 1:50.6, three-tenths mile to defeat Wisconsin, but won the event with another re- After ten events, and just be- Balthrop were running In the top said. " I was too slow down the of a second behind the Badger's could manage only a second in cord. time, 0:07.6. Washington fore the two-mile, Wisconsin held three places. But Balthrop did first stretch but sprinted the turn. Ray Arrlngton, and Das Campbell the high and fourth in the lows got off to a slow start, but was ! a 38-34 edge over the Spartans. I figured they would try to take clocked 0:31.1 for second In the me before the quarter but it 300. didn't happen." Campbell competed in the 300 Spartans were exceptionally for the first time in over a month, as a strained hamstring Skaters sweep Badgers,- strong in the field events, as both Bowers and Carter won their muscle had kept him out of com- events and Don Crawford placed petition* third in the long jump. Another MSU sophomore, Bowers tied with Gary Knick- Roger Merchant, ran the 1,000- Dick Sharkey yard run In 2:11.5, equalling the await playoffs wi th 'M' erbocker of Michigan at 6-9 In the high jump but won on the winning time by Doug Conquest basis of fewer misses at a lower of Purdue, but Merchant finished height. second. S p a r t a n d i s t a n c e r u n n e r Dick Sharkey won the two- Wisconsin closed the gap to 4-3 This was the sa'me ruling that The mile relay team of Craw- m i l e run and f i n i s h e d second in the m i l e at the B i g By JOE M I T C H MSU received creditable per- later to give MSU its final mar- with a goal by Fitzgerald, his gave Carter his victory, as his ford, Steele, Campbell and Spain State News Sports W r i t e r formances from its goalies also, gin of victory. Ten T r a c k C h a m p i o n s h i p s in M a d i s o n , W i s e . MSU second of the night, but failed top vault of 15 feet was matched finished second with a 3:13.6 time. A weekend series sweep over Jerry Fisher Friday night and Dick Bois got MSU's first goal was second to the host t e a m , W i s c o n s i n , i n t h e m e e t . to tie it by pulling Johnson from by Brian Bergemartn of Wiscon- The only other MSU place was Big Ten conference foe Wiscon- Gaye Cooley Saturday. at the 7:49 mark In the first State News Photo by Dave L a u r a the net. sin. Carter, however, cleared a fifth In the 440 by Steele. sin left MSU Hockey Coach Amo period on a power play after Fisher made 25 saves and Wisconsin's Jim Petruzates had Friday night, the Spartans Bessone anything but happy. Cooley 30 on a Wisconsin team STUDENT-FACULTY RELATION given the Badgers a 1-0 lead. again fell behind 1-0 but scored "Let's say this was not one that had been averaging nearly three goals—by Tom Mikkola, of our better series," said Bes- six goals per game. Wisconsin took the lead again on a goal by Mark Fitzgerald, Bois and Nino Cristofoli—to take sone Saturday night after his But it was the Spartans' great- a 3-1 lead after the first period. Spartans had completed a two- er depth that, finally decided the but the Spartans tied it in the second on Wayne Duffett's Bill Enrico added the Spartans' game sweep over the Badgers at outcome of the series. Employing Panel studies membership marker at 6:00. fourth goal in the second period, the Ice Arena with a 4-3 vic- four lines to the Badgers' three, Jacobson then came up with his while Jacobson*s two goals and tory. the Spartans overcame the Bad- goal on a blistering wrist shot Ken Anstey's in the third finished The night before the Spartar.s gers' youth with a well-rounded MSU's scoring for the evening. 40 feet in front of the net. had crunched Wisconsin 7-3 on scoring attack. By B E V TWITCHELL members of the Committee on was instructed by Provost Ho- in the faculty by-laws will be McAndrew made it 4-2 on an The Spartans will take a 13-14-1 three goals each in the first and Co-Captain Mike Jacobson led State N e w s S t a f f W r i t e r Committees concerning student ward R. Neville two weeks ago necessary. In that case, the Aca- unassisted goal, skating around a final season record Into the play- third periods and another score the Spartans In scoring during The chairmen of the eight fac- participation on faculty commit- to study the question for a pos- demic Council would have to Badger defenseman and then offs Thursday. Wisconsin in the second. the series with four points on shooting one past Johnson from finished its season with a 16-10 ulty standing committees are be- tees. sible recommendation to the Aca- recommend an amendment for "Thank good.'.ess we got by three goals and an assist. ing contacted this week by the The Committee on Committees demic Council. approval by the Academic Senate, 30 feet out. mark. them," Bessone said. were Dick Bois and Sandy McAndrew The Educational Policy Com- composed of all tenured faculty not playing position hockey. Too had three points each, while mittee, a faculty standing com- at the University. many were out .to score. Wayne Duffett, Nino Cristofoli "We're going to have to be and Co-Captain Tom Mikkola had better than this against Michi- two apiece. gan." 'Cul-de -sac' 'No Transfer' lttee, initiated the question when Engel said the Committee on it discussed having a student on Committees must inquire as to its subcommittee to study grad- its authority in making recom- Nine other Spartans had one should care about these two- ( c o n t i n u e d f r o m pftge 4) and though I haven't put this ing systems. Bessone was referring to the point each. ( c o n t i n u e d f r o m page A ) mendations at other levels of dimensional parodies? The sit- pared Walton to Shirley Jackson. through a computer. It seems to Bernard F. Engel, professor f a c u l t y government, such as Western Collegiate Hockey Assn. Jacobson, who holds the Spar- But while the audience is still uation is much too exaggerated But too much kindness can ren- me that roughly a third of the of American Thought and Lan- opening the Academic Council to playoffs which begin Thursday chuckling, Polanski opens fire. to be any more than amusing or der Mr. Walton a disservice. novel is devoted to students tell- guage and chairman-elect of the students and the press.Theques- against the Wolverines at the tan record for the most goals scored In one season—29, just- The film becomes disgustingly repulsive. The answer is sim- The idea of the novel and the ing each other what their names Committee on Committees, said tlon was raised at the Committee Ice Arena,. brutal (girls begin to turn away ple. Polanski keeps everything so last third salvage a story which are. the committees would be asked on Committees meeting two Wisconsin, playing independent missed getting a three-goal "hat- from the screen) and climaxes bizarre that the film constantly is, in the main, pretty badly exe- if they want students and what weeks ago. hockey this season, stayed with trick" Friday night. He did score But the novel's really serious with one of the most sickening rocks on the brink of falling cuted. The dialog, for example, fault Is that there are no people the students' standing would be. the more experienced Spartans two goals in less than one death scenes ever made. Polanski apart. Although the audience can- not only goes on forever but in it. M r . Walton's Idea of char- When this information is The Committee on Com- for the greater part of both minute In the third period and has played the type of trick that not identify with the situation, manages to accomplish exactly gathered, the Committee on Com- mittees, composed of Academic games, mainly on the glove work had another shot that hit the acter differentiation is to put a post. made Hitchcock a master: get they remain curious. nothing; there are interminible mittees will begin to formulate a Council members, is the only of goalie Dave Johnson. tie on one guy and a sport shirt Johnson chalked up 43 saves His third goal of the series them laughing and pull the rug "Cul-de-Sac" is not an conversations about what brands plan. Engel said a report might faculty committee elected by the on another, or to havs one smoke Friday night and had 35 more came In the third period of Satur- out. * • "average moviegoer's" picture, of clgarets are more in than be prepared during spring term. members of the council. Its func- unfiltered clgarets and another Saturday night. Several times he day's game. That put the Spar- Since the entire film is a joke certainly not a great one, but what other brands, or about what If the report is in favor of tion is to advise the president on filtered. All the men in the nover stopped sure Spartan goals on tans ahead 3-2 and .McAndrew on the viewer, I constantly found funny, grotesque and "like nothing wine is right for what meal; formal student participation on the structure and composition of are exactly like all the other men, the faculty committees, a change the faculty standing committees. breakaways. added another goal two minutes myself asking, why an audience else. and the only difference I can de- tect between the women is that It's what's recreation some hold out a night or two long- happening er than others. "No Transfer" does have, as a matter of fact, some promise; it is one hell of an Dogs need beg-in to ban table scraps idea (I hope some television writ- The Retailing Club will meet er gets hold of it) and, as I have at 7:30 tonight in the Eppley said, the last third of the novel Center Teak Room. salvages the first two-thirds. center * * * But M r . Walton has a lot to learn Table scraps are bad "Bones cause more grief The annual meeting of the MSU for dogs. and death to dogs than they about story-telling. I hope that Employes' Credit Union will be They are overcooked, are worth," he said. "Al- by his second novel he learns held at 7 tonight in the Au- high in fiber, low In fat though good for the teeth, some of it. —Virgil Scott ditorium. and sometimes, spoiled. they splinter easily, caus- Take a few seconds now Dogs on this type of ing internal obstructions diet are fortunate to sur- and damage." vive as well as they do, and see if it might be contended Dr. R. W. Kirk, of Cornell University, Kirk said dogs will en- joy'and thrive on a diet that worthwhile for you to speaking at a Small Animal Nutrition Workshop in Kel- is exactly the same, 365 days a year. They do not spend a few minutes logg. need a variety in food. And when "Fido" He said that table scraps with this man. chomps down on a luscious should not comprise more GUS POURSINE f bone, he may be in for real trouble, Kirk said. than 20 per canine's diet. cent of a 1st: He's a life insurance man not a policy peddler 2nd: There are important advantages for the young man who can start his program early 3rd: He'd like to spell out these advantages for you and N o vice debaters show you how a program would work for you down through the years. Make sense7 It has to others on campus.See the New Eng. talce land Life man. NEW ENGLAND MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE CO. 927 E. GRAND RIVER BLVD. 332-2326 top honors at Wayne MSU novice debaters captured Cynthia Goldstein, Lansing Jun- YOU KNOW WHAT'S GOOD FOR YOU first and second places at the ior, and Linda LaVasseur, Ann Wayne State University Novice Arbor sophomore, qualified for YOU'LL STAY AT Debate Tournament this week- the final round. end. Since an MSU team would be There were 58 teams from 38 first and second regardless of Class schools participating in the four- who won the final round, the two UNIVERSITY INN of'67-'68 year-old tournament which MSU teams have won for the last teams decided not to face each other, Laycock said. ù/ fit f 0/ IJteÂup— t fwar U'fo three years. Humphrey and Laycock were The team of Doug Laycock, undefeated in eight matches while 1100 Trowbridge Rood in Eost Lansing Woodrlver, 111., freshman, and the Goldstein-LaVasseur team Charles Humphreys, Marshall, lost once to Wayne State Univer- Mo., freshman, and the team o' sity in the preliminaries. i. ? 0 2 DeLuxe Rooms the Largest motel in Lansing area Sumptuously furnished in decorator rotors of Mandarin Gold Tiffany Gold Maiestic Blue Blue Elderberry Autumn Gold Absinthe Midi Blue and Grape Meet Oldsmobile's new four-wheeled fun ma- modest price. 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Drive 1 Olds thinks of >our safety, too. with GM-developed e n e r g y - a b s o r b i n g s t e e r i n g c o l u m n t h a t c a n c o m p r e s s o n s e v e r e i m p a c t up t o 8 V 4 i n c h e s ; w i t h Phil Whitney - Manager I Safely} four-Aay hazard naming Hasher; o u t s i d e r e a r v i e w m i r r o r ; d u a l m a s t e r c y l i n d e r b r a k e s y s t e m , p l u s m a n y o t h e r s a f e t y f e a t u r e s — a l l standard! • I Monday, March 6, 1967 SPORTS9Michigan State News, East Lansing. Michigan ìif J&'Tz-IS*^ - . 2 - X ¿ j . f Á! around in the sun drinking, doing ranges from $50 to $200. One nothing," said a co-ed skier who student plans to take $300. He An estimated 4,000 MSU stu- claims, "You can never tell what dents will be a part of the annual visited Florida last year. Expenses are running from $35 might come up . . . jail fines, exodus to California, Florida, bond, etc." Mexico and the Bahama Islands for a person paying only a car fee to Florida, to a seven-day Students are financing their starting March 18. trips through money saved from Air lines and caravans of cars package deal to Nassau for about $275. Many students are taking summer Jobs, university employ- carrying five and six persons ment or tax refunds. Birthday each will transport the sun- the seven-day package deal to Nassau, minus student airlines presents and loans from parents aeekers southward. also seem to be a large source discounts and food costs. This Drawn by the sun and excite- of funds. leaves the price at approximately ment, students not having re- $200. IBARNES FLORAL served a hotel room will resort less popular with the students. their friends," Miss Nancy far as Palm Springs,Calif., Aca- to sleeping in tents and cars. Others »re driving to Florida, "Students prefer the British Washburne of the Washburn« pulco, and Puerto Rico. then paying about $100 for Some going to Nassau will sleep tradition and atmosphere ofNas Travel Center, 110 E. Allegan The greatest attraction to the on cots set up in public build-' sau and they like to be able to the round trip fare to Nassau and St., said. vacation spots, of course, is the For Flo»«-» lngs for $1.50 a night. Also, talk about the same places as six nights In a hotel. This does F-esh and Other students are going as opposite sex. As Carl Weber, unacquainted relatives may sud- Ann Arbor sophomore and pre- not Include food. F oshionoblt denly become popular during vious visitor to Ft. Lauderdale, The amount of spending money 215 ANN ED 2.0871 spring break. put it, ' I ' v e never seen so many students plan to take generally " A l l the hotels have been re- WMSN extends service brown bodies In skinny bikinis." served in Nassau a month ago Wide-spread parties are Wanted and all flights to Miami are booked," said James Miller of to Holmes, McDonel halls greatly anticipated by the south- bound students. If they are not Museum tour the CoUege Travel Office, 130 W. Grand River Ave. Holmes and McDonel has met some difficulties planning one themselves. Invi- halls will begin receiving laying the wire.In the elec- tations will be obtained by loaf- Cathy Hawkins, m u s e u m guide, shows a g r o u p of Ft. Lauderdale andNassau lead ing on die beach until some- All-Campus Radio WMSN trical conduits near Weft all other vacation spots in pop- thing comes up. school c h i l d r e n through the MSU m u s e u m . The g r o u p ularity. Daytona Beach and Free- today, according to WMSN Circle, Snyder-Phillips is just one of the m a n y that v i s i t the m u s e u m each port on Grand Bahama Island engineer Dave Morris. and Fee. However, the ma- Action and excitement are not week. State News photo by L a r r y F r i t z l a n are next, but are considerably Morris said Akers was jor delay has been caused everybody's cup of tea, however. Placement Bureau connected last Monday and by stalls in shipment of Two South Case Hall men are parts for the transmitters, camping In the hills of Ken- Holmes and McDonel will be today's target. Not all of the transmit- Morris said. Brody, Shaw and Won- tucky to "get away from it a l l . " They will pass their time by hunt- Books ters have arrived. The ders were the first halls to ing, fishing and general sight- Students must register in per- mechanical engineering (B,M), Reynolds Metals Co.: packag- ing (B,M). WMSN engineers reported that Mason-Abbot may be connected before the term receive WMSN because they have their own radio stations which are now af- seeing. Aspen In Colorado, is the des- tination of a small group of ski Will Pay Cash son at the Placement Bureau at chemistry (B.M.D) and biology filiates of the WMSN net- United States Gypsum Co.: ends, but Snyder-Phillips enthusiasts. Aspen offers a least two days prior to the date and mathematics (B). work. Wilson, Case and building and construction (B,M), and West Circle dorms may drinking age of 18 and a 45- of an interview. Southfield Public Schools: Hubbard were connected accounting and agricultural engi- have to wait. minute chair lift ride—ample early and later elementary edu- about 10 days ago. neering (B), marketing (M), and The • engineering crew time to get to know someone. Thursday, March 9: cation, music (vocal), physical mechanical, electrical, civil and '1 was sick of just lying Armour Grocery Products Co.: education, art, English, mathe- matics,- French/Spanish, Latin, chemical engineering (B). marketing and all majors of the geography, history/civics, phys- Briton to speak colleges of Arts and Letters, Business, Communication Arts and Social Science (B,M). ical science, general science, industrial arts, home economics, Thursday-Friday, March 9-10: Scott Paper Company: all ma- BASIC OUTLINES business education, German, jors of the colleges of Arts and Qf) a n C Î B i l t iuinS Atlas Chemical Industries, Inc.: chemical engineering (B>M), mechanical and electrical engi- French, Spanish, Latin, history/ government, geography, econom- ics, biology, chemistry, physics, l etters, Business, Communica- tion Arts, Engineering andSocial Science (B,M). T.T.B. Ryder, visiting pro- fessor from England, will give ATL NAT SCI SOC HUM neering (B) and chemistry (B,M, Wayerhaeuser Co.: all majors, a lecture to the Central Michi- physical science, business edu- D). Avondale School District: ele- cation, speech/dramatics, ad- justed study program, mentally all colleges (B,M). gan Society of the Archaeological Institute of America in the main COURSE OUTLINES mentary and secondary educa- handicapped type A and B, visit- SUMMER EMPLOYMENT gallery of Kresge Art Center at tion (B,M). ing teachers, speech correction 8 tonight. Birmingham Board of Educa- and preceptual development (B, Thursday, March 9: Ryder, professor of Ancient tion: early and later elementary' M). Sundstrand Corp.: juniors in History from Hull University, education (self contained and Sundstrand Corp.: mechanical mechanical engineering, metal- will speak on "Greek and Roman team teaching), art, French engineering, metallurgy, me- lurgy, mechanics, materials sci- Remains in Sicily." The public (fies), music (vocal and instru- chanics and materials science (B, ence and electrical and agricul- Is invited to attend. mental), mentally retarded, per- tural engineering. ceptually handicapped, English/ geography (block), French, Eng- lish, horr.e economics, Industrial M), electrical engineering and agricultural engineering (B). The Toledo Edison Co.: elec- MATH: 108,109, 111, 112,113 arts, mathematics, science trical, mechanical and civil en- A r b y . . . the deli- (physical), art, business educa- tion, chemistry and pssc phys- ics, remedial reading, girls' gineering, accounting and eco- nomics (B,M). Turlock School District: early c i o u s 1 y different CHEM: 101,111,112 and later elementary education, roast b e e f sand- physical education, speech cor- rection, mentally retarded and homebound (B,M) and counsel- science, English, girls' physical education, French and remedial reading (B), music (Instrumental) wich. Try one! You STAT: 121,123 MATH 120 ing and guidance, diagnostician (M) and business education (B). will never be satis- and visiting teacher (social work) (M,D). Canteen Corp.: hotel, restaur- The Upjohn Co., Veterinary Di- vision: all majors of theColleges Sun.THurt. fied with anything PHYSICS: 237, 238, 287, 288 ant and institutional management, of Agriculture and Natural Sci- t t a.m. to M i d n i g h t F n . & t a t . 1 1 t o 2 a.n less! ence (B). accounting and all majors of the Washington State Highway College of Business (B). Commission: civil engineering 270 W. Grand River East Lansing Central Mutual Insurance Co.: (B,M,D). economics, police administra- tion, Insurance and all_ majors of the colleges of Arts a'ncT Let- ters, Business, Communication Arts and Social Science (B). Forest Hills Public Schools: early and later elementary edu- cation and art (B,M), adminis- tration (\1), English/social stud- ies, mathematics/ science, art, physics, English and mathemat- ics (B.M). Gerber Products Co.: econom- ics and all majors of the College Fast-talking your parents . of Business (B), food science, foods and nutrition, all majors of the College of Agriculture, agricultural and mechanical en- gineering, chemistry, biochem- is the hard way istry and microbiology (B,M). Humble Oil and Refining Co.: economics, financial administra- tion, marketing and all majors of the College of Business (B,M). to get to Britain. Kent City Community Schools: early and later elementary edu- cation (B,M), administration (M); English and Industrial arts (me- tal shop and auto mechanics) Fact-talk i (B,M) and counseling and gui- dance (M). Kokomo - Center Township with convivial British students. Consolidated School Corp.: early Tell them exactly what vour trip will cost. O u r free book- and later elementary education, lets help \ on calculate it. And the booklets mention the fantastically low cost of art, music, speech and hearing, concerts and plays in Britain. You can sit in "the gods".- One lists prices of organized student tours. They start social science/English (block), home economics, speech and around §650. If you want to travel on your own and take galleries u p near Heaven-for 75f. A lot of outdoor enter- hearing, mentally retarded, potluck on meeting people —which may he the most fun tainment, like concerts and folk-singing, is free. physically handicapped, French/ of all—add things up for yourself. Clip the coupon. A d d everything up. And tell your Spanish, music, German and mathematics, (B,M). Start with a charter flight if your school has one. Or see 1jarents von can spend this summer in Britain for about Lakewood Schools: early and what it costs to hang around the house. later elementary education, our booklet on group flights, student ships, and the bar- Spanish and mentally handi- gain airline. capped type A (B,M). Add low costs for getting around Britain. O u r booklets , Lamphere Public Schools: ele- mentary and secondary education (except German and Latin) (B). tell vou about 3^-per-mile buses and the rail-and-boat British Travel Box 923. New York, N.Y.10019 Cash For Books pass that takes you u p to 1,000 miles for $30. Consider Los Angeles City School Dis- tricts: all elementary education (self-contained) (B). The Mead Corp.: accounting hiking too. Wordsworth did. Multiply the number of your nights in Britain bv cost Name. (Please print clearly) NOW MSU Book Colleye and financial administration (B, of bed and breakfast or a room in a college residence hall. M). If vou're hiking or biking, count on about 70c for youth Addres NASA, Ames Research Cen- hostels. At this rate you may be able to stay all summer. ter: mechanical engineering (B, Cits .Slate. .Zip. Allow about §1 a meal in London, less in the country. Store M.D), electrical engineering and physics (M,D), chemical engi- The booklets sav which restaurants and pubs are popular I neering, metallurgy, mechanics and materials science, chemis- try and biochemistry (D). Parke, Davis andCo.: chemical engineering (B,M), all majors of the College of Business (B), Monday, March 6, 1967 SPORTS 10 Michigan State News, East Lansing. Michigan STATE NEWS CLASSIFIED 355-8255 Want Ads Get RESULTS.. .Ask Anybody Who Uses Them . . . STATE^NEWS i r t x r TheirCdtt 355-8255 Td "Pfdce YourAdi ' ôis^îdy - 953 Automotive For Rent For Sole OLDS MOBILE 98. Four -door, EXECUTIVE SECRETARY. Must ONE MAN: share luxury apart- THREE MEN FOR apartment. WANTED: TWO men or will rent I N f ER.NAYIÖNAL WELCOME. DRAKE -2-B receiver, matching * "l d be experienced and well-qual- ment starting spring term. 487- Cooking, parking, $10.00 each. entire Avondale apartment Double room, cooking, private speaker, AM Convenor, crystal hardtop, power-brakes, seats, steering, windows. Excellent ified, shorthand and typing ac- 3197 evenings. 5-3/10 Single room also, $12.00. Super- spring term. 351-7748. 3-3/7 entrance, one block to campus. calibrator, must sell, make of- IOW ' C , curacy Important. Should have After 5:30 p.m., 332-2195. fer 353-6865 after 6 p.m. mechanically. $200. 489-5581. vised. ED 2-5776. 3-3/8 WANTED: MALE roommate to WANT AD bookkeeping knowledge. Salary 5-3/8 3-3/8 3-3/7 Burcham Woods N E E D ONE or two r o o m - m a t e s share four-man supervised open, exceptional fringes. Apply apartment. Campus View Apart- SLEEPING ROOMS. Gentlemen. Animals RAMBLER 1959, four-door, ex- Eydeal Villa to occupy Waters Edge apart- Personnel, MELLING FORG- ment spring term. 351-9337. ments. 332-6820. 3-3/7 Clean, quiet, parking and near cellent condition, fold-down • AUTOMOTIVE seats, $230. FE 9-2319. 3-3/7 ING. Lansing. 8-3/10 • Completely furnisnea 5-3/10 buses. IV 2-3454. 3-3/7 GERMAN SHEPHERDS. AkC. • EMPLOYMENT VIVIAN E WOODARD-cosmetlcs • For 1, 2, 3, 4 students or Htuin White, male. Ruth's, 14645 Air- LARCE fiEDROOM, living, klt- MEN: CLOSE, quiet, private en- • FOR RENT VOLKSWAGEN 1959. Engine will be conducting make-up single working people port Road. 484-4026. 3-3/8 chen. Graduate or foreign girl EAST LANSING (student) large trance. Double, with cooking • FOR SALE overhauled. New snow tires. training classes for women In- • Swimming pool preferred. ED2-5977. 5-10-67 efficiency unit $110. Also, two privileges. 332-0939. 5-3/10 Mobil* Homes • LOST & FOUND Runs real well in deep snow. terested In teaching make-up • Rental Offlce- bedroom duplex $150 for two MEN NEEDED for spring term. 1964 10 x 50. Two bedrooms, Only $495. We take trade-ins at and making extra money. No 745 burcham, Apt. 2 N E E D O N E or two g i r l s for • PERSONAL Includes furnishings and all util- STRATTON SPORT CENTER, door to door. Write Mrs. Dawe, 351-7880 Luxury Apartment. Spring or Room and board, $165.00 per carpeting on lot. 332-6135 after • PEANUTS PERSONAL ities. Spring term. CallClauch- quarter. Quiet, close to cam- 1915 East Michigan. IV 4-4411. 3308 South Cedar Street, number NEED ONE man for East Lan- spring and summer. Pool. Call 5 p.m. 5-3/8 erty Realty 351-5300, evenings • • REAL ESTATE SERVICE £ eight, Lansing, or 882-2760. C sing two man, two bedroom 351-7525. 3-3/10 ED 2-5900. 3-3/6 pus. 332-5555. 3-3/8 Lo»t & Found • TRANSPORTATION Auto Service & Parts BABYSITTER: RED Cedar School apartment, fireplace. 351-5623. FOR MEN: two rooms, quiet, TWO MEN needed now or spring GIRL NEEDED now or spring LOST: LIGHTER In Union pool- • WANTED MASON BODY shop. 812 East district. Two girls. Call 351- 5-3/10 separate entrance, parking. term. Delta apartment. 332- term to share house near cam- room. Sentimental value. Re- Kalamazoo Street - since 1940. 4972 between 4-9 p.m. 5-3/8 ONE WORKING girl to share 337-9510 after 5:30 p.m. 8436. 5-3/8 pus. Call 351-9369. 3-3/6 5-3/10 ward! No questions. 355-3760. DEADLINE Complete auto painting and col- two bedroom luxury apartment WANTED lT!kEE girls spring 4-3/7 lison service. American and with teacher. Ideally located. TWO SINGLE ROOMS - male APPROVED ROOMS and apart- For Rent term. Three blocks from cam- students. Linens furnished, near ment. Carpeted, cooking, park- 1 P.M. one class day be- foreign ears. IV 5-0256. C TV RENTALS for students. Eco- $72.50 a month. 351-6036. pus. 351-9087. 3-3/6 Personal fore publication. 5-3/10 campus. 332-1682. 3-3/6 ing. Recreation room. Call 351- ACCIDENT PROBLEM? Call nomical rates by the term or ONE GIRL needed spring term FRANCIS X and the Bushmen - NEEDED: ONE girl. Haslett THREE BEDROOM HOUSE near 7204 after 2 p.m. 5-3/10 KALAMAZOO STREET BODY month. UNIVERSITY TV RENT- quality is always worth the dif- Cancellations - 12 noon one for Delta Apartment. 351-7762. SHOP. Small dents to large Apartments. Spring term. 351- campus for family. Garage. ference. Dave, 353-2708. 5-3/9 class day before publica- ALS. 484-9263. C 9328. 5-3/7 3-3/6 $125.00. 351-4654. ' 3-3/6 For Sale wrecks. American and foreign, BICYCLE SALES, rentals and LOCAL ARMY Recruiter will be tion. TV RENTALS for students, $9.00 WANTED: FOURTH man for FOU&-MAN house summer term". cars. Guaranteed work. 482- ATTENTION: MARRIED stu- available in Room 4, Demon- month. Free service and deliv- Northwind luxury apartment. services. Also used. EAST 1286. 2628 E. Kalamazoo. C dentsl We have some one-bed- Near the Dells and Lake Lan- stration Hall Tuesdays and PHONE ery. Call N'EJAC. 337-1300. We $56.25 month. 351-7917. 3-3/6 LANSING CYCLE, 1215 E. MEL'S ALTO SERVICE: Large room furnished apartments at sing. Phone 351-9565. 5-3/7 Thursdays 1:00-4:30 p.m. to guarantee same day service. Grand River. Call 532-8303. C 355-8255 or small, we do them all. 1108 C a price you can afford. All mod- 6 3 NEW L U X U R Y FURNISHED TWO bedroom UP TO 1/3 and more savings, discuss with college seniors the E. Grand River. 332-3255. C ern conveniences, Including tel- sound proof u n i t s house for two or three graduate Officer's Candidate School pro- RATES GENERATORS AND starters - Apartments evision and built-in AM-FM comparison welcomed. OP- gram. 1-3/6 UNIVERSITY VILLA students. $110.00 month plus TICAL DISCOUNT, 416 Tusslng 1 DAF SI.50 6 and 12 volt. Factory rebuilt, NEED ONE girl for three- girl radio. For more information, utilities. Call ED 2-4770. APARTMENTS Building; phone IV 2-4667. GROOVY SOUNDS at MSU . . . . 3 DAYS ¿3.0C as low as $9.70, exchange; used apartment spring term. Close to call STATE MANAGEMENT I - 635 ABBOTT ROAD 4-3/7 C-3/10 THE LIGHT BRIGADE. Call 5 DAYS -S5.00 $4.97. Guaranteed factory re- campus. Call 351-6263 after 6 CORPORATION, 332-8687. - WALK TO CAMPUS 355-6957. 5-3/10 built voltage regulators $2.76 C-3/9 REDUCED RATES for spring ROLEX WRIST watch. $100.00. p.m. 5-3/9 - COMPLETELY FURNISHED ONE MAN needed for two man term - need two men to share Guaranteed for one year. New. OWNER WOULD like to express (based on 10 words per ad) exchange; shock absorbers, STUDENTS 2-BEDROOM East Side apartment. Spring term. 351- fully furnished house near cam- 337-0497. 3-3/7 appreciation to individual who each $2.99. ABC ALTO PARTS, FLEXIBLE UNITS Over 10, 15< per word, per day. One bedroom furnished, in- 4842 . 3-3/8 pus. Call 355-9627, 7-12 p.m. returned wrist-watch, Erlckson 613 E. South Street. PhoneIV5- - LET US HELP YOU FIND WEDDING DRESS, veil, two for- cluding heat, $135. Also , fur- Karl. 3-3/6 Hall. Please call 353-3887. There will be a 50tf service 1921. . C A ROOMMATE mals and three cocktail dresses. nished efficiency $115, plus EAST LANSING location. One GIRLS IMMEDIATELY for house. 1-3/6 and bookkeeping charge if bedroom unfurnished. $115 and 3 Man Units Sizes 9-11. Call 355-2827. Avaition $10. utilities. $100 deposit, 65.00 e a c h P e r month Michigan avenue across from 1-3/6 SEEING ISN'T enough'. Hear THE this ad is not paid within $125 month Includes stove, re- FRANCIS AVIATION will finance no children or pets. No hold- 2-Man U n i t s a v a i l a b l e campus. Two phones, refrigera- VESSEL OF WRATH. Phone one week. frigerator, air conditioner, gar- tors, bathrooms. Parking. GUITARS: NEW electric guitar your flight training. Trial les- ing. Phone IV 9-1017, | Furnished Model Open Daysfc 355-6892. 3-3/8 son, $5.00. Single and multi- "L'RNlSHED APARTMENT. 129 bage disposal. Call 337-0511, evenings: See Manager or call $40.00 month. 351-7798 , 332- and amplifier, $54.95. Electric PERFECT FOR term parties. engines. 484-1324. C Burcham Drive. Available April 332-2571 for appointment. 5119. 1-3/6 bass, $49.95. Acoustic guitar, The versatile BUD SPANGLER 5-3/10 3 32-0091,332-5833 befw?*« p m $15.95. Banjos, $39.95. AIRWAY The State News does not 1st. $130.00/month. Call IV 7- COLLEGE ROAD, 10 minutes BAND. 337-0956. 5-3/8 Employment 3216. 7-3/10 ONE - THREE girls. Apartment j A P P L I C A T I O N FOR F A L L TV, 811 East Grand River. IV 9- permit racial or religious from campus. One bedroom du- THE SOUNDS and the Sondettes FRATERNITY BL'SBOYS; best near campus. $47.50 including I BEGINS A P R I L 1. 5214. 5-3/10 discrimination in its ad- ONE MAN, spring and summer plex. Stove, refrigerator, car- are now accepting bookings for vertising columns. The food on campus. Convenient lo- terms. 303 Rivers Edge. 337- utilities. 337-2056. 3-3/8 ONE MAN spring term for mod- peted, carport. Couple. No chil- STUDY DESKS, small chests, spring term. 351-9155. C State News will not accept cation. Call 332-8696. 5-3/8 1427. 5-3/10 HOLT: NEW, spacious, two-bed- ern duplex. Utilities included. dren. OR 6-5983, OR 6-4141'. roll-a-ways & bunkbeds. New MUSICIAN AVAILABLE. Elec- advertising which discrim- room apartment. Fireplace, $65.00 m o n t h . 351-6815. 5-3/10 and used mattresses—all sizes. CHOOSE YOUR own hours. A tew FOUR-MAN luxury apartment, trlc piano, bass, singer. Play inates against religion, Study lamps, typewriters, tape hours a day can mean excellent furnished. Onfe block, Berkey. air-conditioning, drapes, car- 3/10 HOUSE NEXT to campus. Two rock (all styles), pop, stand- race, color or nationalorl- recorders, metal wardrobes, earnings for you as a trained Ron,' 3^7-1496. 10-3/9 peting, G.E. appliances. Heat FOUR MAN apartment needs two. male roommates needed. Plenty ards, country. Experienced, gin. included. 15 minutes from MSU. portable TV sets, large selec- AVON representative. For ap- THREE STUDENTS from India One block from Berkey. 337- of room, cooking, parking. $50 completely equipped. Call 694- $165. OX 9-2987, OX 4-8641. tion new & used electric fans. pointment in your own home, need one roommate. Avondale 0581. 3-3/7 per month. Utilities paid. Spring 0085 after 5 p.m. 5-3/8 5-3/8 Everything for the home. WIL- write Mrs. Alona Hucklns, 5664 Apartments. 351-6482. 3-3/6 FOUR MAN apartment, spring and summer terms. Paul 351- COX SECOND HAND STORE, School Street, Haslett, Mich- ONE MAN for luxury apartment 6885. 3-3/8 WANTED: ORGAN or bass player Automotive FEMALE GRAD STUDENT or and summer. Burcham Woods. 509 E. Michigan, Lansing, Phone lgan, or call IV 2-6893. C-3/10 spring term. Reduced rent. 351- NEED ONE or two roommates. for established band. Call 339- BL'ICK 1957. Nice condition, good SORORITY GIRLS, house mom professional. Attractive, fur- Pool, reduced rates. 332-4628. IV 5-4391, 8-5:30 p.m. C 5842 . 3-3/6 Huge Lansing house. Completely 8423. 3-3/6 engine. $160 or best offer. 351- and excellent cook need bus 3-3/7 GIBSON B-25, 351-4705. Four nished apartment. $54.00. 337- APPOINTMENT FOR passport or 7114, Mike. 3-3/8 boys and a maid. 332-0955. 0284. 3-3/6 Graduate and Married Students WANTED: TWO men for three furnished, three bedrooms, bar, months old. Must sell. 3-3/8 garage. 482-8611. 5-3/10 application pictures now being BL'ICK 1957, good engine. Needs HOW ABOUT THAT? An apart- bedroom home. Call 487-6254. SKIS: LAMINATED, 6', used one brake job. $50.00. 351-5617. 3-3/6 BAY COLONY 6-3/10 ONE GIRL house for six. $10 taken at HICKS STUDIO. 24 ment available for spring term. APARTMENTS season. $40. 332-0005. 6-3/10 hour or same day service. ED2- 3-3/8 APARTMENT FOR one girl. week plus utilities. 337-7116. SECRETARY Three to four students. Com- 1127 N. HAGADORN 6169. C 3-3/7 FÖ-FI CABLES, jacks, and ac- BL'ICK 1958 rwo-door sedan, pletely furnished. We pay all Spring, spring and summer. Must read spanlsh proficiently Now leasing 63 units. 1 and fcessories at dealer prices. THE PERSON to call for bands power steering and brakes. Ron utilities. Call NEJAC OF EAST Waters Edge apartments. Pat, FOURTH MAN needed for house W.K. Kellogg Foundation 2 bedrooms, unfurnished. MAIN ELECTRONICS, 5558 -TERRY MAYNARD, 482-4590, Peterson, 482-6187. 3-3/8 LANSING. 337-1300. C 351-4571. 3-3/7 spring term. $45 was $60. Call Phone 616 965-1221 Close to campus, shopping South Pennsylvania Avenue, 482-4548. £ CADILLAC 1956 - 68,000 actual 400 North Avenue EAST LANSING - 316 Gunson. FURNISHED: ONE bedroom, all J i m 351-6451. 6-3/10 center, downtown, and bus Lansing. C miles, mechanically perfect, Rattle Creek, Mich. Furnished, efficiency units. Full line.Model open 9 a.m.-8p.m.. utilities. $25 week. June 12 - MALE: EAST side Lansing house FÜR WEDDING ~~and practical Peanuts Personal body average, excellent car with I EC EPTIONIST for PEDIATRI- kitchen and ceramic bath, hot September 1. Box 731 Kalkaska, for spring. Parking. $45. 485- ATTENTION SUPREME Potent- Daily and Sunday, shower gifts, complete line of many unused miles. 332-8316. CIAN In East Lansing office. water heat, air-conditioned, er Michigan 49646. Phone 258- 4173. 3-3/7 ate of the Bull-Moose Party: rents from] 35.00P month basket-ware. See ACE HARD- 3-3/8 Pleasant personality, neat in carpeted. Available March 15. Now celebrating the third anni- 332-6321 332-2571 9267. 3-3/7 DOCTOR ON Sabbatical. Girl to WARE'S selections. 201 East CADILLAC, 1956 - good engine, appearance. Must be able to 332-6863. 6-3/10 FOUR MAN apartment. Spring share nine roomtri-levelhome. Grand River, across from versary of the party 4-11-64. or 337-0511 good tires. Clean body, $250.00. schedule appointments, handle ONE OR two girls, near campus, term. Parking close to campus. 351-7248. 3-3/7 Gomer the Twink. 1-3/6 EAST LANSING AREA: four Union. Phone ED 2-3212. C 484-2397. 3-3/7 bookkeeping, greet patients,and inexpensive, utilities furnished. SALLY: HOW about another rooms and bath, attached ga- 351-4456. 3-3/7 ONE MAN for duplex spring and/ STEREO SYSTEM: highest qual- CHEVROLET 1961. Two-door assist Doctor. Experience de- 351-7359. 3-3/7 weight-lifting session at 505? rage, furnished, utilities paid. ONE MAN Northwind. Dish- or' summer. $60 month. 351- ity components. Save over $200. automatic, good condition. $425. sirable but not necessary. Apply FOUR-GIRL furnished apartment Tybink. 1-3/6 ED 2-8531, IV 5-6581. 5-3/10 washer, disposal, terrace". You 4100. 3-3/7 351-5842. 3-3/6 332-8064 . 5-3/6 in own personal handwriting to needs two. Available spring name deal. 351-7907. 5-3/9 COMET 1964, two door, six cyl- Box A-l, Michigan State News, term. One block campus. Rea- RESPONSIBLE man needed. Rooms OAKLAND, CALIFORNIA inder, stick shift. New condi- MSU. 3-3/6 sonable rent. 337-2345. 5-3/9 Super - luxurious Northwind TWO MEN for apartment next to SINGLE ROOM, male student. tion. 332-1405. 3-3/7 PART TIME: $50-60/\veek. Four APPROVED STUDENTS apart- apartment. Spring. $55.00. 351- c a m p u s . $37, Don, 332-4511 or Spring term. 523 Charles Street. POLICEMEN well-dressed men. Deliver ad- 7903.'' 3-3/8 355-1804. 3-3/7 START A T $711 . $736 or $758 COMET 1962 white, 6 cylinder, ments for boys. Inquire 505 3-3/8 standard transmission, radio, vertising gifts for new sub- Albert Avenue. East Lansing. REDUCED RENT: fourth man for Depending on Experience heater. Recently overhauled. sidiary of Alcoa. CallMr.Arrn- 5-3/10 four-man luxury apartment. Nation's Leading Police Department Call 353-8458. 5-3/8 ltage, 339-8610. 3-3/6 ONE GIRL spring term, luxury 351-7539. 4-3/9 Age 21-29 incl.; 20/30 uncorrected vision; 5'9", IMPALA 1959. New battery, LANSING C.C. needs busboys. apartment. Reduced rates. A LARGE L I F E INSURANCE 160 lbs. min. E X C E L L E N T C H A R A C T E R ONE GIRL spring term only. Wire or Call immediately, Personnel Department, good tires, 8-cylinder, $150.00. $1.50 per hour plus meals plus Close. 351-9382. 3-3/8 COMPANY NEEDS LOCAL SALES Reduced rates. Excellent loca- Room 100, Oakland City Hall, Phone 415-273-3311. Call after 5 p.m., 355-1083. gratuity. Contact Rick Mackey at 337-1278 or Larry Gensen WANTED: ONE girl Haslett tion. 351-9438. , 1-3/6 REPRESENTATIVE. POSITION 1-3/6 Spring term. Call 351-7455. E X A M I N A T I O N S AND I N T E R V I E W S at 353-6867. Hours to be ar-' NEEDED ONE or two men for LEADS TO MANAGEMENT, LOCAL MG-B 1965, deluxe top, radio, 3-3/8 spring term. University Ter- at Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan ranged. 3-3/7 snow tires. Excellent condition. FEMALE GRADUATE student to race. Call after 5 p.m. 351- TRAINING. on March 13 and 14, 1967. • Telephone ED 2-5616. 5-3/10 C A R E E R OPPORTUNITIES share one bedroom apartment. 4301. 3-3/8 MG-E 1964 white with black top. available through VivianeWood- A T 0 M S F A C A D E ard Cosmetics. Write Mrs. 351-9154. 5-3/10 WANTED: TWO men for three $1150.00. Call 355-0777 after T 0 R 1 1 A B 0 R A L 5 p.m. 5-3/10 Dawe, 3308 South Cedar, suite EAST LANSING.Marigold Apart- bedroom home. $40 per month. WRITE TOM WARD 8, Lansing. Or call 882-2760. ments. Corner of South Harrison Call 487-6254. 6-3/10 T W A N G S B 0 E R S MGB, 1964, red, wires pirellis, 6-3/10 and Marigold. One bedroom fur- T u M 1 C K H E. ,E radio. 353-1564. Call after 4 nished. Open for inspection dally MAN NEEDED, spring and sum- 102 HIGH STREET, GRAND BLANC, ACROSS 0 R t WAITERS: FRIDAY and Satur- mer. Northwind Apartments. 1. Had being 27. Last queen G R O is M A p.m. 3-3/7 day evenings, 6 p.m.-3 a.m. 6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m., Saturday 4. Choose of Spain 0 A R C A N 0 L L 1 MG-B 1964 blue all accessories. FRANDOR BIG BOY, 3425 East 1-5 p.m. Sunday by appointment. 351-7540-no deposit. 3-3/8 MICHIGAN 48439 . Smell 28. Furrow 1 C P E. H After 3 p.m. $1295 . 332-1705. A P • T O P Saginaw. ED 2-0815. 3-3/6 Phone IV 9^9651. 5-3/10 MALE STUDENTS: large apart- 11. Period of 29. Headliner 1 0 M M 0 T 1 F R 10-3/10 ment furnished. Private, park- time 30. Snow I •• E. M S E. A Reminder GOING HOME 12. Hank of goose genus L A R 5 ing. 1214 E. Kalamazoo. 5-3/10 twine 32. Pear cider 1 N « R « A S C à L MAN: UNIVERSITY Terrace be- ginning spring. Three-man unit. 13 Armadillo 14. Disparage 33. Regaled 35. River bank S C O R T H R 0 B S A • O u 5 E 1 9 L E 1 A 332-2902. 5-3/7 16. Give forth 36. Whistling To All 17. City in swan genus TW5 MAN Burcham Woods 37. Fiend Kansas apartment. Spring only. $155 40. Canary DOWN 7. Music 18. Ill-natured monthly. 351-5515. 3-3/6 19. Corridor 41. Cereal 1. Marry drama TWO GIRLS needed spring to 21. Chaffy " grain 2. Land 8. Proved 42. Nigerian measure 9. Kimono Students sublease apartment near cam- part of wheat 22. Coffee- tribe 3. Adequate sashes pus. 351-9456. 3-3/6 10. Exclama- house 43. Declares 4. Fanon ONE OR TWO girls spring term 5. Spotted tion of 23. Purchase 44. Hubbub Luxury apartment, $55 . 332- 45. Emblem of cavy disgust 24. Cutting 2644 after 5 p.m. 4-3/6 tool morning 6. Explosive 15. Part MALE OVER 21, private room. ALL advertisements must 18. Shout Share house near Pennsylvania 19. King be paid for IN ADVANCE and Michigan. Call 489-0280 topper from now until the end of 20. Form of or 882-3042 . 3-3/6 the term. John MALE-SHARE three bedroom 21. Moreover duplex. $47.50 month. Spring 23. Sweet roll and/or summer. Call 332-1942, 25. Swiss river 26. Crooked DRIVE HOME IN A after 4. 3-3/6 AVOID THE APARTMENT - MALE students. 28. Color Supervised. Close to campus. HOLD LINE! 29. Lizard 31. Droves Phi Gordon Volkswagen 351-4062. 3-3/6 If you have a bill from an ad 32. Piebald placed in the State News this HEAT WAVE SPECIALS TWO GIRLS needed starting 33. Watch term, it must be paid in full pockets spring term. Riverside Apart- USED CAR by March 7. If this is not paid 34. Lamb's SUNROOFS ments. Call 351-9226 after 5 you will be held up at registra- pseudonym GHIAS p.m. 3-3/6 tion. Take a few minutes to pay 35. Highway MUSTANGS your bill at 345 Student Ser- 37. Extinct F U L L LINE O F F O R E I G N AND AVONDALE - TWO bedroom, CONVERTIBLES vices, and save yourself time bird A M E R I C A N USED AUTOS furnished, for spring term. PORCHE'S and frustration at Spring Term 38. Gelderland $208.00 per month. Also leas- BANK RATE F I N A N C I N G W I T H LOW PAYMENTS BMW'S Registration. city ing for June and September. Call on special 39. File 337-2080 after 4 p.m. 8-3/10 CORNER OF HOWARD & SAGINAW SPORTS11Michigan State News, East Lansing. Michigan Monday, March 6, 1967 Peanut» Perioral FftlfcNDLY M-A-L: Had a (cham- PETITIONS DUE THURSDAY pagne) blast and a (Red Car- 4> nation) ball. e. 1-3/6 §UZY: HAP^V belated Ulst.iior- rv I'm not around. Always, Fred. Wfi REMEMBfeR BUT56N on his 1-3/6 Want to run for ASMSU? If you're Interested in becom- a meaningful way in student gov- students will be able to vote by tlon by Thursday containing at arate petition for each office. 21st. The men of Wildcat. ing a member of student govern- ernment." individual candidate In the all- least 100 signatures. Those run- Petitions and election regula- tq|ce*m 1-3/6 ment, ASMSU Chairman J i m Gra- Students seeking positions in University spring elections. ning for member-at-large offices tions for all offices are available home ham said that petitions are due by ASMSU for 1967-68 will be al- Members-at-large sit as vot- also may run for NSA delegates from 8-12 a.m. and 1-5 p.m. in Recreation lowed to join together to form Lunches, suppers, p a r t i e s , Thursday. ing members to the ASMSU stu- and do not have to submit a sep- 334 Student Services Building. HORSE SHOW March 31, April slates for the first time this m e e t i n g s , picnics, snacks Petitioning closes then for the dent board throughout the year. 1. Tickets on sale.204 Anthony six member-at-large positions year. Each slate will be allowed Hall. Or call 355-8400. 5-3/10 on the 1967-68 student board, They are responsible for making Here's How Easy It Is . . . to spend a maximum of $200 policy d e c i s i o n s In areas of WEAR THE trademark of the for the presidency and vice pres- Puerto Rlcan sun. Seven sun- idency of the class of 1968, and filled days and six fun-filled for four positions as ASNCU per candidate during the cam- paign. "The advantages of allowing ASMSU involvement and attending weekly student board meetings. Draft reaction Mike Price, a member of the 1. Order by phone from your UNIVER - STTY BIG BOYI Spe- s l a t e s are obvious," Graham The six seats will be filled as (continued f r o m page one) cial lines to handle nights In exciting San Juan. $205 representatives to the National militant anti-draft Students for a said. "Students who are running follows: your calls. Includes luxury hotel accom- Student Association (NSA) sum- "The problem of using avail- Democratic Society (SDS), said modations, direct Jet Detroit/ mer conference. for office will be able to pool —two seniors (a minimum of able manpower most effectively the proposals represent an at- San Juan/Detroit. Optional side- Graham urges all students who their money and it will be easier 120 credits) will remain," Carbine said." For tempt to head off a "wave of anti- - 2. Your order, trip to Virgin Islands, $18,NOW are Interested in student govern- for voting students to distinguish --two Juniors (students having example, better use could be draft sentiment" currently build- packed In spe- OPEN to everyone In the Lansing, ment to enter the elections. between the stands of the candi- between 74 and 120 credits) made of college-trained men than ing in this country. cial Insulated area. Make reservations now. ' There have been unfavorable dates." —one sophomore (a student putting them in the Infantry." containers, is "The commission's report 4-3/6 reactions to some of the things Names of all of the candidates with fewer than 50 credits) kept piping hot! 355-6364. Carbine said the results of last doesn't change anything in terms this session that ASMSU has on a slate must appear on each -one female student (no cred- week's referendum will be sent of our position," Price said." It's Service done," Graham said, "Now is the piece of campaign material, but It restriction) to Washington as planned, but he still a system of involuntary DlAPEft SkRVWE, Diaparene time for students to express their — — — — — - — — — Senior class offices are open said student opinion nationally servitude, and the draft will still Franchise^ Service Approved by views and to become involved In to any student who will have more will probably favor ending the allow the president to carry on a 3. Enjoy BIG BOY's Doctors and DSIA. The moat CAM!**» » « » A M Ì Ì A H 01811 1 2 0 credits by the end of deferments. war without having to present the food with that delici- o e n io r r e c e p t i o n spring»™. issues to the American people." ous difference at home I modern and Only personalized "Students hefe are terribly •ervice In Lansing, providing i Service conservative, even in comparison Commenting on the proposal No workjilo fuss. No +YPING - TERM papers, thesis, President John A. Hannah and Both member-at-large candi- you with diaper palls, polybags, with the conservative Big Ten," that younger men be drafted first, muss. electric typewriter. Fast serv- his wife will host a reception for dates and candidates for senior deodorizers, and diapers, m winter term graduates in Cowles class offices must submit a pe- he said. Price said the action was antici- OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK use your own. Baby clothes ice. Call 332-4597. 3-3/6 pated by SDS and that the organi- House at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday. tition containing signatures of By the same token. If the pro- zation is already working in high M o n . t h r u T h u r s . : 6:30 a m to 11 p m washed free. No deposit. Plant Graduating seniors and their at least 200 eligible voters to posals are adopted as a national inspection Invited. AMERICAN Transportation schools, presenting its views to F r l . and Sat.i 6:30 a m to 12 p m policy, the majority of MSU stu- husbands or wives are invited ASMSU by 5 p.m. Thursday, DIAPER SERVICE, 914 E.Gier. dents will go along with It, he add- students who are nearing the '1050 T R O W B R I D G E R O A D PH. 351-5132 & 351-51! FLORIDA: MIAMI, Lauderdale, to attend an Informal coffee hour Students wishing to be NSA Call 482-0864. C ed. draft-vulnerable age. Daytona, Bahamas. Leaving at the president's home. delegates must submit a peti- DIÂPER SERVICE, Lansing's fl- spring break. Inexpensive. 351- nest. Your choice of three types. 6473 or 353-3021. Commencement 13-3/10 Containers furnished, no de- RIDE WANTED Grand Rapids to posit. Baby clothes washediree. Lansing five days a week. 459- Try our Velvasoft process. 25 6717. 5-3/9 years In Lansing. BY-LO DIA- PER SERVICE, 1010 E. Michigar ROUND TRIP to Lauderdale - IV 2-0421. C Miami. Leaving March 18-19. Ride in style. New car. 337- Typing Service 9842. 3-3/7 THESES, TERM papers: Pica Tickets type, manual typewriter. Mrs. Wonted Balow, 882-0633. 1-3/6 BLOOD DONORS needed. $7.S0 for all positive, Rh negative BARBI MEL, Professional typ- with positive factor - $7.50, lst. No job too large or too A negative, B negative, and small. Block off campus. 332- AB negative - $10. O negative - 3255. C $12. MICHIGAN COMMUNITY BLOOD CENTER. 1427 East TYPING. FAST service. Guar- Michigan Avenue. Hours: 9-3:30 anteed accuracy. Electric type- Monday and Tuesday; 12-6:30 writer. All style sheets. 351- Pick Up Free Tickets Thursday. 489-7587. C 6135. 8-3/10 ANN BROWN, typist and" multl- POETRY WANTED: Enclose 11th offset printing, disserta- stamped envelope with poetry. tions, theses, manuscripts, gen- IDLE WILD PRESS, 543 Fred- eral typing. IBM, 16 years ex- erick, San Francisco, California For Commencement perience. 332-8384. C 94117. 6-3/6 PAULA ANN HAUGHEY, typist. ATTENTION BOXERS: heavy- IBM Selectrlc and Executive. welght sparring partner needed. Multllith offset printing. Pro- Call John, 355-6339. Experience fessional thesis typing. Re? preferred. 3-3/8 sûmes printed — $3.00/100 BADLY NEEDED: chests, desks, page. 337-1527. beds, most any good used fur- TYPING DONE in my home, 2-1/2 niture or appliances of any kind. blocks from campus. 332-1619. BENNIE'S, 109 E. South Street. BACHELOR & MASTER DEGREE C IV 4-3837. We pay cash. 5-3/10 CANDIDATES Union Concourse - 1st Floor Mon., Tues., Wed. - March 6, 7, 8 8 a.m.-5 p.m. DOCTORAL CANDIDATES Tickets to be distributed by Office of Dean for Advanced Graduate Studies J O a Mon., Tues., Wed. - March 6, 7, 8 8-12 a.m.; 1-5 p.m. on First Come First Serve Basis EUROPE IE! LOI DOCTOR OF VETERINARY MEDICINE CARAVAN uonr FRIES CANDIDATES » SELECT TOURS « SAVE OP 10 2 i days-: <59Q M S27B! Veterinary Office ALL EXPENSE ESCORTEO INCL JET A W CHOICI o r Mon., Tues., Wed. - March 6, 7, 8 8-12 a.m.; 1-5 p.m. LOW PRICE INCLUDES: SEVERAL ITINERARIES Roundtrip Jet Air, N . V . to N . Y . , with new G r o u p Fares. Hotels w i t h p r i v a t e bath SAMPLE: 10 Country throughout. Custombuilt Airconditioned Grand Tour Indudts the best of England. Motorcoaeh travel in E u r o p e . Almost all Holland, Belgium, Germany, meals. All Tips, Taxes, Transfers. Complete Switzerland, Liechtenstein, sightseeing. Special Features and Evening Austria, Italy, Monaco and E n t e r t a i n m e n t . O u t s t a n d i n g professional France. Otker tours include T o u r Directors. Starts Today Spain and Portugal. D E P A R T U R E S : -Several Weekly, April thru O c t (Also available by S E A ) for Free Illustrated Brochure Write or Rhone lOaaltbu/iHe TRAVEL CENTER INC 228 Abbott Rd. Across From The State Theatre T E L . Open Evenings By Appointment 351-6400 Bring Monday, March 6, 1967 12 M i ' j.'.-r.'i " S t a t t Nt ws Hast Lansing, Michigan MSU Book StoY«* Stoxs Book Store MSU Book Store Ml MSt Rook > to re MSI- B o o k Stört- MSU B^Ts'tore ' MSV ¿TSU B o o k Sttfre MSU Book Store M Away We Go! u I B a nd B o o S t o r I e Ml M S S U| u B B o o o o k k S S Look for the t t o o r r e e red tags M M S special location S' u u B B o in front of store o o o k k S 'S t t o o r r e e Ml Ml S S u u B o o k S You Asked For Lower P r i c e s . . . Here They Are t o r e Annual Spring SALE M Ml S S u u B B 0-. o o o k All 1st Quality - by Champion, Velva-Sheen, lem, Collegiate k S S t t o Save up to 1 / 3 Save 2 5 % o r r e e MSU SWEATSHIRTS MSU JACKETS M M S S U buy 2 at U B reg. price a great selection B o o of styles & colors o o k get k S i 3rd one Free all marked t down o o r a saving of r e e M| S 331/0 25 % MSU BOOK STORE u B o o k S t o In the Center for International Programs r 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 BoolTstore MSU Book Store e