Friday TAT NEWS > Sunn y .. ATL f o u r c r e d i t s ? , P . 6 MICHIGAN . . . and w a r m with t h e h i g h in t h e low 4 0 ' s . F a i r and m i l d r Weekend entertainment, P. 7 C a g e r s play for title, P. 9 STATE with t h e Iqw in the low 3 0 ' s t o - Z e i t g e i s t c u l t u r e f e s t , P . 13 UNIVERSITY o n i g h t . P a r t l y c l o u d y with m i l d t e m p e r a t u r e s Saturday. V o l . 59 N u m b e r 144 East Lansing, Michigan M a r c h 10, 1967 10c SAE initiation incident brings year probation By B O B B Y SODEN Oak junior, refused to comment on the —A copy of their pledge program will actives and pledges must be above a 2.5. letter from Fuzak. be kept on file with IFC. Other conditions Included the participa- S t a t e N e w s Staff W r i t e r tion in community service projects and the The action came over a relay r a c e in - - T h e combined grade average of the publishing of an alumni newsletter each Sigma Alpha Epsilon (SAE) fraternity which Joseph A. Bonus, Detroit Junior, term. was placed on strict disciplinary proba- received third degree burns when a f r a - tion for one year Thursday for the inci- ternity member placed a towel on his neck The report hinted that any violation of dent in which a pledge was severely burned to prevent him from seeing from side to the probation would result in possible during initiation games. side. Bonus dropped out of school following suspension of the local chapter from the Among the stipulations for probation are the incident. campus. the loss of rushing and pledging privileges Bonus's attorney said in early February Fuzak r e f e r r e d the IFC report to the and the end of all social functions for one that the Bonus family will take legal action Faculty Comtiittee on Student Affairs for. year. The fraternity may appeal for rush after two t e r m s . for the incident, after learning the results of the University's investigation. an advisory opinion on March 3 . T h e c o m - mittee recom.nended adoption of the r e - Corpsman gets highest award John A. Fuzak, vice president for student The report also provides that: port. affairs, in a letter to the fraternity p r e s - —All undergraduate women a r e r e - Spec. 6 Lawrence J o e l of W i n s t o n - S a l e m , N . C . , r e c e i v e d t h e C o n - ident approved completely recommenda- stricted from the fraternity p r e m i s e s for In Its month-long investigation, IFC g r e s s i o n a l Medal of H o n o r T h u r s d a y . He is t h e f i r s t m e d i c a l c o r p s - tions for disciplinary action made in Feb- the duration of the probation. determined that SAE had violated Article m a n to r e c e i v e t h e d e c o r a t i o n in t h e V i e t n a m w a r , and w a s c i t e d r u a r y by the InterfraternityCouncil(lFC). —A chapter adviser must be present VI of the IFC constitution, which p r o - f o r v a l o r in h e l p i n g t h e w o u n d e d d e s p i t e h i s own w o u n d s , SAE President Craig D. Cowell, Royal during all SAE "Help Week" activities. FUZAK OWEN hibits the physical harassment of pledges. UPI T e l e p h o t o "Although It was the opinion of the Council that the burns received by Bonus PLANS PACIFIC MEET were caused by accident," wrote Fuzak, Board action ruled legal "the situation in which the accident o c - curred was clearly a violation of existing regulations."-• - F o r m e r IFC President L a r r y Owen, De- LBJ avoids specifics in Graham appropriation troit senior, said the IFC recommendation was a result of a study of the entire SAE pledge program, not just the specific in- cident. in Viet press talks WASHINGTON f — President Johnson, peatedly that " w e a r e willing to go more By E L L E N Z U R K E Y The student board argued that there is of AUSJ a r e appointed by the ASMSU "This incident was more or less a than half way" to get into peace talks S t a t e N e w s Staff W r i t e r declining to clash head-on with his Vietnam an elastic clause within the constitution student board. catalyst which opened a Pandora's box," policy critics, said Thursday "different whether conditional or unconditional - All-University Student Judiciary (AUSJ) that allows ASMSU to make such donations, A partial statement of the majority's Owen said. whether the fighting continues or is halted. individuals have different approaches" to ruled Thursday by a vote of 3-2 that stu- and that student board can allocate money rationale, said, "In the opinion of the m a - "It was not our intention to kill this "But I have said 1 did not think we can the search for a Vietnamese peace. dent board was within Its constitutional within its jurisdiction as it chooses. jority (Ron Bailey, Claxton, Ga., sopho- f r a t e r n i t y , " Owen explained. ' T h i s will stop half the w a r , " Johnson said. rights In donating $50 to Jim Graham, Johnson told a news conference; "All Graham admitted Tuesday, however, more; Dale Oliver, Alexandra, Va., soph- hurt them, but It can be overcome." of us are vpry anxious to,seek a peace- He declared he could not say to .the ASMSU chairman, to go to Washington, that the board had violated the ASMSUGode omore; and Lynnette Tate, Hart sopho- Owen called the IFC decision "in line commander In the field, "down your ful settlement in Vietnam - as far as I D.C., in January. of Operations when it gave him the $50. more), the Code of Operations is solely with the dynamics of this fraternity and planes, tie your hands behind and watch am concerned, the sooner the better." The constitutionality of fhe board's a c - a procedural document and therefore is the entire fraternity s y s t e m . " Johnson said he expects to meet some- ( p l e a s e t u r n to t h e b a c k p a g e ) tion was challenged by Richard Durell, The Code of Operations states that r e - unable to justify or r e s t r i c t any action where in the Pacific later this month Monroe senior and pre-law major, on the quests for money must be made of ASMSU sanctioned In the Constitution. with his top leaders in Vietnam. Bigger war grounds that ASMSU can appropriate mon- at least five class days before the board C of C hits meets. Graham was not Informed about "EVen though the Code is established Ambassador Henry .Cabot Lodge and ey only to benevolent causes which are Gen. William C. Westmoreland, U.S. mili- the Washington meeting until the day be- In Article II, section 6, subsection a and In the general welfare of the student body. tary chief in Vietnam, will be present. fore ASMSU gave him the money. b, we feel that any allocation under Title Durell said that because the money was He said they meet about every six months. XII of the Code must maintain constitu- appears likely price study given to an individual, acting on his own tionality established In Section 7. Johnson also said he is not yet ready The five-man AUSJ came to a decision behalf, the appropriation was unconstitu- " T h e r e f o r e , our decision Is based p r i - to decide about running for another term after two days of deliberation. Members tional. marily on our Interpretation of Section 7. In the White House, but may be ready- AP NEWS ANALYSIS Section 7 states that the student board to speak out on the future in several procedure months. American soldiers killed in Vietnam now- shall have the power to execute 'duties Vote may be held to restrict average 175 a week, and signs a r e in the and responsibilities as the student board He warmly praised Vice President Hu- air that the war will get bigger andblood- and Michigan State University deem nec- bert H. Humphrey without flatly f o r e - ier. Neither side places much hope in e s s a r y to promote the general welfare casting the makeup of the 1968 Democratic peace negotiations now. of the student body and the University.' By T R I N K A C L I N E board's political spending ticket. While this view may not be shared by Thus, any allocation of the student board S t a t e N e w s Staff W r i t e r must be considered to promote the general Asked whether he will run again, Johnson hopeful diplomats and others in Washing- welfare of the student body and the Uni- The East Lansing Chamber of Com- told a news conference: " I didn't know ton, London and elsewhere, it reflects the versity. merce claims the good faith it thought there was that much speculation. I'm thinking of officials in Saigon. existed between local merchants and the not ready to make a decision. Several There are now 417,400 U.S. troops in A petition asking ASMSU to hold a not directly affect students. NSA f r e - months from now would be an appropriate "It is the feeling of the concurring ASMSU study committee has been violated. Vietnam and Gen. William C. Westmore- referendum on restricting the spending of quently takes a stand on such questions. time to speak on future plans." land plans to use them fully. Sleep's petition does not restrict the majority that the student board's a l - Roger E . Jonas, executive director of student tax money by the student board is In responding to a question about peace He says that with this force the United spending of money for speakers. It also location of money to support the travel the chamber of commerce, said they would expected to receive the required number of move proposals by Sen. Robert F . Kennedy, States is strong enough to maintain a " s u s - provides that ASMSU can spend popular costs of J a m e s Graham to the conference now rather deal with the complete price 3,000 signatures today. D-N.Y., Johnson declared, "1 have no tained offensive" against the enemy's miin entertainment profits for political p u r - in Washington, D.C. was in fact consti- study instead of individual c a s e s , Jonas Over 2,800 had signed the petition late noted this shift in philosophy was in part particular fault to find with others." force units. Thursday afternoon. poses. tutional. The President was reminded of an due to unexpected publicity of the indi- The tipoff on likely strategy came when " I would vote 'no' on the referendum assertion Wednesday by Arthur Schles- about 25,000 men were used in the drive The petition, originated by N o r m a n "Our decision was based on the opinion vidual c a s e s . simply because such a provision already lnger J r . , who was an aide to President on the Iron Triangle, a Red bastion for 20 Sleep, Parchment senior,asks that ASMSU exists in the Code of Operations," Jim that having any student of Michigan State Jonas said too much publicity in the University attending by invitation a con- State News concerning ASMSU and in- John F . Kennedy, that he has concluded years. And Operation Junction City put be prohibited from spending student tax Graham, chairman of ASMSU, said. ference of national prestige and e x p r e s s - dividual businesses had significantly con- the Johnson administration does not wish 45,000 men into a massive sweep of War money for political purposes outside Ing- He agreed, however, that putting this to negotiate now. cerned local merchants. Zone C—the Communist Jungle lair near ham county. The referendum would be The meeting between the committee and Johnson replied that he had said r e - Cambodia which reputedly shelters the held on April 12 along with ASMSU general ( p l e a s e t u r n to t h e b a c k p a g e ) ( p l e a s e t u r n to t h e b a c k p a g e ) dry cleaners announced in Monday's paper Viet Cong political and military com-nand elections. will probably not take place, Jonas said. centers. A second question on the ballot will T h e r e a r e about 100 such a r e a s in Viet- ask students if they wish the MSU dele- This is primarily because a meeting was not scheduled, nor even promised, but State N e w s takes nam—large and small—and in time West- gates to the National Student Association was only under consideration, he added. moreland evidently has plans for all of (NSA) to vote on questions of national and international policy. The merchant who proposed such a meeting spring v a c a t i o n them. Sooner or later the Communists must start fighting seriously to defend found there was no convenient time to get When ASMSU decided to reaffiliate with the people together, according to Jonas. As t h e t e r m of the g r e a t s n o w them. NSA two weeks ago it stipulated that He said he finds the extensive publicity and t h e a b s u r d k i s s - i n d r a w s to Comnunist strength in South Vietnam is delegates could not vote on issues of na- given Individual c a s e s , such as the shoe estimated at 282,000 men--50,000 North a close, the State News s t o p s pub- tional or International concern which did repair shop, completely ridiculous. He Vietnamese regulars and the rest Viet l i c a t i o n . T h e S t a t e N e w s will not Cong. said merchants can't help but wonder who's publish during finals week. next. The Iron Triangle and War Zone C began We will r e s u m e publication to get U.S. attention months ago. When his The entire ASMSU price study report t h e f i r s t d a y of s p r i n g t e r m , troop level neared 400,000 Westmoreland Avoid rush, has never been submitted to the Chamber M a r c h 29. felt he could spare the men necessary to ( p l e a s e t u r n to t h e b a c k p a g e ) ( p l e a s e t u r n to t h e b a c k p a g e ) register now All students who have pre-enrolled will STRESSES LATIN AMERICA be eligible to participate In early r e g i s t r a - tion, to be held f r o m 8-11:30 a j n . and 1 - 4:30 p j n . in the Men's Intramural Build- ing Monday through Friday of final exam- ination week. Students completing registration at this Romney warns U.S. must improve time will not have to return to campus until March 29. Early registration reservation cards may be picked up by students from 8 a j n . foreign relations to keep security - 4:30 p j n . Monday through Friday at our enemies in an effort to destroy u s , " presidential hopeful, has delivered six Demonstration Hall. By E RIC PIANIN Romney said. such speeches in the last two y e a r s . Whether students a r e registering early State News Managing E d i t o r Romney spoke at the f i r s t annual meeting Romney said the key to improving o r during the regular period, they a r e of the Michigan P a r t n e r s of the Alliance, foreign relations is increasing private required to obtain a section reservation- at the Jack T a r Hotel. The Alliance is a economic aid and investment. Willingness enrollment card and permit to register Gov. George Romney warned Thursday non-profit organization exploring invest- to share this nation's know-how, private f r o m their college before traveling to the that unless the United States takes signif- ment opportunities in British Honduras. investment in economic development, and LM. Building. icant steps toward Improving its foreign recognition of the need to do it in a gen- A special drop-add period on the eve- ning of March 27 will be held for students The ghost of finals past? relations, especially with Latin American countries, the nation will jeopardize its It was organized by a group of Michigan businessmen headed by former congress- uine partnership a r e all crucial to improv- man Alvin M. Bentley ofOwosso,who is ing relations, he said. who find It necessary to drop a course and security. now a member of the Board of Regents " T o be more effective in building good The s p e c t r e that s t a l k s the c a m p u s this weekend, s t r i k i n g f e a r repeat another after receiving their winter at the University of Michigan. world relations," he said, " m o s t of the t e r m grades. i n t o t h e h e a r t s of all a n d p a n i c into t h e t h o u g h t s of s o m e , a p p e a r s " U n l e s s we In the United States change in f r o n t of H u b b a r d Halhs. If w e ' r e l u c k y , it will t u r n out to be just the world's false notions of what we a r e , Romney's last foreign policy speech was money should flow from private citizens, Students not completing early r e g i s t r a - delivered Feb. 20 In Salt Lake City,during tion will be required to follow the regular a g i a n t s w a t h e d in toi let p a p e r , v i s i t i n g f r o m t h e land of s u p e r h e r o e s . and share our principles and our progress with those who want, they will join with his western tour. Romney, a 1968, GOP ( p l e a s e t u r n to t h e b a c k p a g e ) registration March 27-28. S t a t e N e w s p h o t o by J e r r y M c A l l i s t e r STATI NEWS Kyle C. Kerbtwy Eric (Manin , managing editor James Spaniolo, Edward A. Brill, editorial editor Lawrence Werner, sports editor . Andrew Mollison, executive reporter Joel Stark William C. Papciak, a s s t . ad manager advertising manager Friday Morning, March 10, 1967 EDITORIALS A first time for a decision time a r e the U n i v e r s i t y ' s s p e a k e r Comes spring, and t h e p o l i c y and t h e q u e s t i o n of f a n c y of s e v e r a l y o u n g m e n who g e t s how m u c h s t u d e n t and w o m e n l i g h t l y t u r n s to parking. Even the l e s s po- t h o u g h t s of p o l i t i c i a n ' in t h e litically astute might be able ASMSU s p r i n g e l e c t i o n s . to find a p o s i t i o n on l i b e r a l - Since petitions f o r c a n d i - izing hours for coeds. d a t e s w e r e due T h u r s d a y , it C e r t a i n l y t h e c a n d i d a t e s in i s now known j u s t what a s - t h e syjring w i l l h a v e no l a c k sortment of m a n l y h a n d - of v a l i d i s s u e s to r a i s e , and shakes. m i n s t r e l - show t h e y m i g h t d e c i d e to do t h e smiles, vacuous p r o f e s s i o n s student body a f a v o r by doing of d e m o c r a t i c d e v o t i o n and candidates might oppose has been the most c o n t r o v e r - so. f o l i o s of i n a n e l i t e r a t u r e t h e their stands. s i a l p r o b l e m ASMSU h a s h a d to d e a l w i t h . C a m p a i g n s will b e m a p p e d s t u d e n t body will h a v e to put I s s u e s could m o s t p r o f i t - out o v e r s p r i n g v a c a t i o n . It up with. ably be r a i s e d in t h e f i e l d s A candidate might, for in- is to b e h o p e d t h a t w h i l e a There is a chance that the of ASMSU's i n v o l v e m e n t in s t a n c e , f a v o r a f f i l i a t i o n with t r o p i c a l sun d a r k e n s s o u t h - t r o u b l e could be w o r t h w h i l e . NSA and t h e e x t e n t it s h o u l d NSA and p a r t i c i p a t i o n in a l l bound s t u d e n t s , w o u l d - b e p o l - C a n d i d a t e s m i g h t r u n on i s - p a r t i c i p a t e in e x t r a - and i n - its worthwhile activities. i t i c i a n s will b e m a k i n g p l a n s s u e s t h i s y e a r , and o t h e r tra-campus activities. This A n o t h e r m i g h t o p p o s e NSA, to e n l i g h t e n t h e m . a i l i t s w o r k s and c e r t a i n l y all i t s s c h e m e s . — The E d i t o r s Hannah seeks ruling quire T h i s would c e r t a i n l y r e - t a k i n g p o s i t i o n s on Vietnam, civil r i g h t s and 'You can't read the handwriting in public interest such national i s s u e s . c a n d i d a t e a l r e a d y s e e m s to One By E D S C H W A R T Z a m s for the examined. " T h e examined" The Bob Dylan exam: Good answers, but b e p l a n n i n g to r u n a g a i n s t a r e those whose foibles a r e on the col- This C o l l e g i a t e P r e s s S e r v i c e you can't read the handwriting. P r e s i d e n t Hannah i s at s p e a k i n g out on t h e c i v i l t h e U n i v e r s i t y ' s h a b i t of r e - lective lips of the nation. The exams a r e The William Manchester exam: You l e a s t c o n s i s t e n t , which i s not r i g h t s p r o b l e m in E a s t L a n - leasing academic informa- designed to represent those foibles. The have to c r o s s out half the essay. WASHINGTON—Wind-up dolls have had following a r e several to get the ball roll- T h e Warren Commission exam: Con- an i n c o n s i d e r a b l e v i r t u e , and s i n g b e c a u s e he did not w a n t tion to a student's draft their day; magazine hybrids never got ing: vincing at f i r s t glance, but tends to fall h i s c o n s i s t e n c y h a s led h i m to a p p e a r to b e l e n d i n g t h e board. started; "would you believe" has been apart on second reading. run into the ground—it's time for some- The Hubert Humphrey exam; You start The Stokely Carmichael exam: Most of to s e e k a r u l i n g on M i c h i - n a m e of t h e U n i v e r s i t y to any Among the o n - c a m p u s i s - thing new. With finals approaching, a new off with an original thesis, but end by r e - the class flunks. g a n ' s n e w and r a t h e r w i s p y particular position. rhetorical past-time suggests itself—ex- peating the lectures verbatim. s u e s that should be r a i s e d T h e George Hamilton III exam: You c o n f l i c t of i n t e r e s t l a w . Now, o n e n o t e s t h a t H a n n a h flunk the exam, but get an " A " in the course. OUR READERS' MINDS One will r e m e m b e r t h a t has asked State Attorney The Adam Clayton Powell exam: You get Hannah h a s r e f r a i n e d f r o m G e n e r a l F r a n k K e l l e v to d e - caught cheating. t e r m i n e if, u n d e r the new The TIME Magazine exam: Your style Action could l a w , he w o u l d b e l e n d i n g t h e n a m e of t h e U n i v e r s i t y to t h e Interpretation vital to students is entertaining, but your content is d i s - torted. The Cassius Clay exam: You get side- off-campus business con- That seems straightforward enough, but following questions concerning the main- tracked by answers which have nothing to To the Editor: c e r n s with w h i c h he i s a s - only if there is agreement a s to its tenance of political files; Where was this do with the course. open council sociated. It is regrettable that the State News was not able to have a r e p o r t e r at the special meeting of the Academic Senate meaning. P r o f e s s o r Repas, therefore, asked: "Does the Faculty Committee on FBI report kept on campus? What did the •University watching the situation closely T h e Ronald Reagan exam: The same exam given in two different courses. In an a m b i g u o u s b u r s t of on Feb. 28, and had to rely for its coverage Student Affairs interpret the t e r m " u n i - consist of? Were reciprocal r e p o r t s made v e r s i t y " to include not only the record The Dean Rusk exam: You repeat the p r o s e , the statute prohibits on the cryptic summary given to it by the by the University to the FBI?If, a s it would T h e C o m m i t t e e on C o m - keeping activities of the Dean of Students seem, they were, who made them? No one same answers over and over again. Secretary of the Faculty. For the meeting m i t t e e s h a s an o p p o r t u n i t y to state officials from a direct dealt with a matter of vital importance Office but any records kept by the D e - answered these queries. Instead, P r o - The Beatles exam: You scream as soon o r indirect interest, finan- to all MSU students and faculty: the long- partment of Public Safety and/or other a d - f e s s o r Reinoehl, Chairman of the Faculty a s you see it. t a k e the l e a d in m o v i n g t o - ministrative officials?" awaited Academic Freedom Report. Committee on Student Affairs, and P r o - T h e Robert Kennedy exam: Pretty good, w a r d an i d e a l s t u d e n t - f a c u l t y c i a l o r o t h e r w i s e , in a c o n - Judging f r o m the report of the meeting He explained to the Senate that faculty f e s s o r Taylor, Chairman of the Steering but not nearly as good as the last one. r e l a t i o n s h i p at MSU . if it a c t s t r a c t wfffi t h e s t a t e o r any in the State News, the Secretary told you: and students have been told that such Committee, generalized about the need ' T h e r e were a few comments by Senate r e c o r d s a r e not kept by the University, for vigorous implementation of the Re- The Johnny Carson exam: The professor on P r o v o s t Neville's pro- of i t s p o l i t i c a l s u b d i v i s i o n s . members on interpretation of various s e c - yet a s recently as March, 1965, the P r e s - port. It would seem, in view of the lack interrupts you every ten minutes for posal for student participa- H a n n a h h a s i n d i c a t e d he i s tions of the Report, but no serious ob- ident of the University was quoted in the of candor—or lack of understanding—in f u r t h e r instructions. jections were raised . . . , " leaving the State News and State Journal as saying the responses, that students do not yet T h e George Romiey exam: You decline tion in t h e A c a d e m i c C o u n c i l . w i l l i n g to g i v e up h i s o u t - impression with your readers, one s u s - that the FBI had informed the University have assurance'that r e c o r d s of their po- to answer the most difficult questions. O p e n i n g m e e t i n g s of t h e s i d e p o s i t i o n s on the b o a r d of pects, that a few academic quibbles were that " t h r e e Communist-oriented agi- litical activity a r e not being kept. It does The Students for a Democratic Society brought up, but nothing of significance. t a t o r s " were planning to enroll at Michigan seem, to be sure, that the Dean of Stu- C o u n c i l would s e r v e to s u b - d i r e c t o r s of two b a n k s and State University, that these " t h r e e C o m - exam: You attack the p r o f e s s o r ' s sex life. While it is t r u e that only three questions dents Office no longer has this r e s p o n - M i c h i g a n B e l l , if K e l l e y d e - munist-oriented a g i t a t o r s " did in fact e n - The Bill Moyers exam: You shoot your s t a n t i a l l y i n c r e a s e t h e kind of interpretation were raised, they were sibility. C h a r l e s P . Larrowe by no means of minor importance. roll, and that "the University is watching bolt on the f i r s t two questions and leave of d i r e c t c o m m u n i c a t i o n b e - cides these posts conflict professor of economics The f i r s t had to do with Article 1, the situation closely." Robert Repas early. t w e e n c o u n c i l m e m b e r s and with h i s U n i v e r s i t y p r e s - section 4: T h e s e r e m a r k s , Repas said, were origi- associate professor, School of The Marshall McLuhan exam: Returned s t u d e n t s and c o u n c i l m e m - i d e n c y and a c a d e m i c r e s p o n - ' T h e Student is not only a member of nally made off campus, but repeated in at Labor and Industrial Relations with a large question mark. the academic community; he is also a least two college meetings, and r a i s e the The LSD exam: You take twelve hours b e r s and o t h e r f a c u l t y t h a t sibilities. citizen of the larger society. As a to finish It and two days to recuperate. i s the e s s e n c e of the d e m o - T r u s t e e C . Allen H a r l a n citizen, he retains those rights, protec- tions and guarantees of fair treatment Smarter than the average editor T h e New York City exam: You can't pull any of your answers together. cratic process. and U-M P r e s i d e n t Harlan which a r e held by all citizens and the To the Editor: clipping giving an account of my lecture. The Charles de Gaulle exam: You a n - Committee members are Hatcher are also connected University may not deny them to h i m . " 1 must congratulate you on the quality nounce to the class that you don't want to The question was: "Does the Faculty On Friday night, March 3, P r o f e s s o r u n s u r e of t h e i r o f f i c i a l p r e - with f i r m s t h a t do b u s i n e s s of your newspaper reporting, if this is a take it. Committee on Student Affairs interpret G . E X . Owen of Harvard University f a i r sample. I have never seen a more rogatives regarding the with t h e i r u n i v e r s i t i e s . Many this to mean that die University, the delivered the third and final Isenberg T h e George Wallace exam: Your g i r l - accurate account of a lecture with which I Department of Public Safety or any off- M c m o r u l Lecture on Plato. P r o f e s s o r friend takes it for you. council, but, as Neville other state officials could be have been concerned. Please give my campus law enforcement agency is p r o - Owen ff wittely regarded as one of the The Berkeley exam: You rip up the respects to whoever is responsible. Sin- p o i n t e d o u t , all the m e m b e r s affected. hibited f r o m engaging in the search and leading philosophers of the Oxford'group paper three times and try to start again. c e r e l y , Glenn R. Morrow" seizure of the living q u a r t e r s of any and an Internationally respected authority The draft exam: You try to cut the class. of t h e c o m m i t t e e a r e a l s o In t h e p a s t t h e s e m e n h a v e on the interpretation of Plato and A r i s - I understand perfectly well that some T h e Richard Nixon exam: You give ten student residing on campus unless com- sort of compromise must be effected be- m e m b e r s of the A c a d e m i c m a d e i t a m a t t e r of p u b l i c pliance with the usual constitutional s a f e - totle; his appearance on campus was, by different answers to each question. any standard, a noteworthy event. tween the ideal of accurate reporting of guards is m e t ? " The Martin Luther King exam: You use C o u n c i l . As s u c h , they c a n k n o w l e d g e t h a t t h e y hold s u c h No review of his lecture appeared in the technical subject-matter on the one hand and general reader appeal on the other. the same technique as on the last test but present any r e c o m m e n d a - outside p o s t s . This was done The Senate was assured that students State News because, the campus editor in- a r e entitled to the Constitutional s a f e - However, it still s e e m s obvious to me it doesn't work. formed me Monday, space wa sr limited and t i o n s they w i s h , a c c o r d i n g to s p e c i f i c a l l y to avoid c h a r g e s guards against invasion of privacy, which, the review prepared by John Ladd was that a university newspaper should have The General Ky exam: You keep asking we take it, means that unlawful entry room somewhere on its back pages for an Steering Committee Chair- of d e c e p t i o n o r d u a l i n t e r e s t . too technical for the " a v e r a g e " r e a d e r . occasional review which transcends the f o r more time. and search of dorm rooms, for example, I had read the review before it was T h e J i m m y Hoffa exam: You didn't know m a n John F . A. T a y l o r . H a n n a h ' s m o v e s e r v e s to will no longer be permitted under the submitted and I thought it excellent . competence and comprehension of the the material on the others either, but this k e e p t h e m a t t e r s in t h e o p e n new rules. " a v e r a g e " r e a d e r , o r even the average The C o m m i t t e e on C o m - P r o f e s s o r Glenn R. Morrow, who d e - editor. Cw\. Staudenbaur i s the one you flunk. Another questioner asked whether, The pop a r t exam: You hand in a blank mittees should take the and s u b j e c t to p u b l i c s c r u - under Article 6 ("Student Publications") livered an Isenberg lecture on Plato on associate professor piece of paper. THE PAPER and ZEiTGEIST a r e con- Feb. 3, wrote me the following letter i n i t i a t i v e in t h i s m a t t e r now*, t i n y , w h e r e t h e y s h o u l d b e . concerning the review by John Ladd which philosophy T h e Jean Dixon exam: You answer all sidered student publications within the the questions to the next exam. and p r e v e n t it f r o m b e i n g He s h o u l d b e h a p p y to h a v e meaning of the section, and entitled to appeared in the State News on February EDITOR'S NOTE: More letters T h e Lyndon Johnson exam: You can't p a s s e d f r o m one body to t h i s q u e s f i o n o u t in t h e o p e n . the same on-campus distribution rights as 6: " D e a r P r o f e s s o r Staudenbaur: Many t o t h e e d i t o r a r e on p a g e 3. believe the questions. other publications of recognized student thanks for sending me the newspaper a n o t h e r until it i s t a l k e d to An o p e n d e c i s i o n f r o m K e l l e y groups. The answer was " y e s . " death. w i l l e n d d e b a t e o n c e and So far, so good. But the response to a third question was disappointing. Article Volkswagen Service The Academic s h o u l d be o p e n . Council f o r a l l , r e g a r d l e s s of w h i c h way t h e d e c i s i o n g o e s . 3, section 3 states: "The University shall not make or retain records of a student's Now We Have --The Editors — The E d i t o r s religious o r political beliefs without his and Repair I»» A \ l I S knowledge and consent," CHARLIE ÔRÛUJN OUR TEAM Famous Faces Sinclair Regular ,32' c flal- o u e TEAM ISN'T I?EADV TO OJHERE DID THE TIME 6C 7 $1°° .36,c gal START A NEW SEASON... U)HV DOES THE SEASON (dOU-DNT BE REAiV iF THE SEASON Sinclair Super (JJE'RE JUST MOT READV... HAVE TO START 5 0 SOON 7 5TART6D IN NOVEMBER ! Posters UNIVERSITY FOREIGN CAR SPARTAN BOOKSTORE 3 0 2 9 E . K a l a m a z o o at C l i p p e r t 482-5832 489-8211 C O R N E R O F ANN & MAC O p e n 7:30 t i l l 9 : 3 0 w e e k d a y s \ Friday, March 10, 1967 3 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan V / f U bcFFThrepörts services Should A S M S l U o b b y ? To the Editor: If ASMSU officers were chosen for this offered by ASMSU By what sudden revelation can ASMSU be compared to the government of our country? It seems they only parallel in extra-legal purpose, surely someone more qualified than elected. Jim Graham would be Ineptitude, and this is hardly a criterion Secondly, the State News argument that To the Editor: do not indicate that it is a sort of game. for granting $50 for a J a m e s Graham ASMSU should In fact be allowed to voice First of all, let me cite our involve- political junket. opinions on a national scale is a sterile ment in the 18-year-old vote campaign point Indeed. I would like to take this opportunity The State News editorial of Feb. 21 which clearly indicated that student gov- Since it Is inconceivable that Jim to respond to Melvin Robison's recent organizations, student health insurance, justified the Graham trip to Washington, ernment should become involved in po- Graham & Co. could supplant our con- letter to the State News, in regards to external public relations with the city partially at the expense of the student litical a f f a i r s . After that, let me cite gressmen as the " v o i c e , " It would then the direction of the Associated Students of and legislature. Popular Entertainment body, as a manifestation of representative that ASMSU wrote no less than one third appear that ASMSU Is attempting nothing Michigan State University. I am very and so on and so on. government. Since government leaders of the academic freedom report that was more than to establish a lobby in the familiar with San Francisco State College Let me agree with one point made that don't have to hold a referendum on every recently approved by the faculty senate. chambers of Congress. Now, there's ab- and with the opportunities the student gov- I see a bright future for the Associated Issue before taking action, you argued the It should also be noted that ASMSU has solutely nothing Intrinsically evil about a ernment there has to offer. However,there Students of Michigan State University and similar structure of ASMSU gives them spent a large amount of time in attempting lobby group, but . . . a r e some statements that should be made I am sure that if you would consider the the same right. to get greater involvement for students in It is commonly held that a lobby rep- on behalf of our own student government the academic decision-making process, facts in this instance, you would heartily The editorial then implied that if the ASMSU constitution was violated by the resents a consensus. By accepted that can perhaps clarify part of the s i t - resulting in our membership in the grading agree with m e . definition, the financial support to a lobby uation. policy committee of the Educational Policy The students of this university have a action, the Infraction was a righteous breach of a bad constitution. Government group is freely given. Do the students Committee of the faculty and the establish- student government Of which they can be here freely give to ASMSU? Hardly. First of all, it is necessary to note that ment of advisory committees within the assuredly proud, for the people involved, by whim, huh? the Associated Students of San Francisco In the f i r s t place, ASMSU representa- When a pressure group takes an un- colleges and departments of this univer- for the most p a r t , a r e individuals who have popular stand, its financial basis 1a State College work on an annual budget of sity. devoted themselves selflessly to the task tives a r e NOT elected by the student body $300,000. This is easily seven times more on the basis of opinion in national a f f a i r s . removed. Can University students deny of attempting to bring about a liberal ASMSU its financial basis? Hardly, money than we have to work with. However, change in this campus. They a r e expressly elected to their e s - the budgets of western schools' students We also have been very concerned with teemed positions as ambassadors to the And a shrewd lobby group a s s u r e s itself the relationships with East Lansing and Jim Graham of membership support before taking a governments must be carefully con- University administration—not to the fed- have joined the Chamber of pommerce Chairman pronounced stand on any Issue. So does sidered, as in many c a s e s , not only do they eral government. of East Lansing, as well a s proposing that Associated Students ASMSU qualifly as a " s h r e w d " lobby support all clubs and organizations on the campus, but also the school newspaper. a coordinating body be set up between the group? Hardly. You will find that at San Francisco State campus and the city. We a r e concerned Jim Graham the " m a n " had a right to College this is the case. It should be noted that ASMSU, like AS- about the voting rights of citizens of the State of Michigan who attend Michigan State University who a r e denied the right to vote in East Lansing. We have passed resolu- Can't prove they lied trek to Washington . . . on his own bank account. Jim Graham the " r e p r e s e n t a - tive" is an entirely different m a t t e r . And we know of no Jim Graham the SFSC, sponsors not one but three tutorial if they could produce M r . Graham's formal that they could forget that M r . Graham was tions dealing with discrimination by Mr. To the Editor: not even Invited to his Washington confer- "lobbyist." Particularly since ASMSU p r o g r a m s , working with a small Negro request, which 1 assumed was in letter college in Mississippi, poverty a r e a s of William J . Pulte, who is a landlord in I will not accept M r . Graham's challenge ence until the day before the board received wasn't founded as a lobby. Cedar Village apartments. We have fully f o r m . Mr. Carbine stated that he accepts Lansing, and school districts in Ingham to provide facts for the statement that verbal requests as being formal. There and granted his request. Richard Phillips County. It is true we do not have a Tenants' rewritten no less than three university representatives of the board 'lied to win My anger, however, is not Justification Jackson senior policies and liberalized them to a con- was, therefore, no evidence of the date League and we do not help delinquents the case.' They alone know whether their the request was made except the word for saying that they lied. 1 will accept M r . in a reformatory, as such. Yet it was siderable degree. We have brought in the Graham's word that it was an honest over- Robert Vor Broker statements were made with a conscious of the defendant board. mainly through the efforts of ASMSU that past year to this campus Timothy Leary, sight that the board's representatives were Bloomfield Hills junior attempt to deceive me and the Judiciary. 7) Mr. Graham, In his summary the the campus radio station was established. Stokely Carmichael and Allen Ginsberg. mistaken as to the date he asked for the I apologize for having judged their intent. board's case, s a i d that he made his request The one thing that is always mentioned We have a legal aid service with a lawyer donation, as I accepted Monday night that hired and financed by student government I made that statement to the State News more than five class days before the board when one isdiscussingSan Francisco State when I was angered. I will explain why 1 he followed Rule 1. as well as providing interest f r e e small donated $50 to him. College is their experimental college p r o - was in that f r a m e of mind. I would like to defend part of the State P u b l i s h e d by t h . s t u d e n t , of Michigan loans service for members of the student 3) The Chief Justice asked M r . Graham State 1 ' n l . e r s l t y « » e r y e l » , » d t y t h r o u f h o u t gram, which is admittedly successful. This Title Twelve of the board's Code of News article which appeared March 8 and the y e a r and a a p e c l a l W e l c o m e Week Edition body. We participated actively when three to clarify whether he said " m o r e t h a n f i v e has since been a source of consternation In S e p t e m b e r . S u b a c r l p t l o n r a t e $10 p e r y e a r . has been tried a number of times at Mich- Operations, which provides rules for members of the American Thought and class days" or "no more than five class for both Mr. Graham and myself. Authorised by the B o a r d o! Student P u b l i c a - igan State and has been found to be un- charitable donations and which the Board tions. Language department were fired. There days." Mr. Graham's response was that The board in its brief to the AUSJ M e m b e r A s s o c i a t e d P r e s a . United P r e s s successful. presented as justification for the $50 allo- I n t e r n a t i o n a l . Inland Dally P r e s s A s s o c i a t i o n . has been a thorough price study of the he asked M r . Carbine more than five class contends that the Constitution of Asso- Associated C o l l e f f s t e p r e s s . Mlchlgsn P r e s s I am somewhat surprised and a little economic situation in East Lansing done cation to Mr. Graham, says in its f i r s t days before the board granted his request Association. Michlfan Collegiate Preaa As- disappointed that wlien Melvin considered rule that anyone requesting a charitable ciated Students of Michigan State Univer- sociation. by ASMSU this y e a r , for a charitable donation In order to comply sity is the " s y s t e m or body of laws under Second c l a e e postage paid at E s s i L s n s l n g . ASMSU, he could only point to a "junket" donation must make a formal request with Rule 1. Mich. (which actually concerned the Vietnam I could go on and mention a number of to the Vice Chairman of ASMSU at least which a state e x i s t s . " By its own defini- E d i t o r i s i snd b u a l n e a a o f f i c e s at 341 Student situation and during which I had the other projects which a r e traditional to five class days before such request comes I was angered because the board r e p r e - tion of constitution, the Code of Operations s a r e l c a s Building. MtchlgsnStste University, Essi Lansing..Mich. opportunity to speak to a number of national' .ASMSU, which also have been carried on before the Board for review. T h r e e times sentatives brought up a defense for which Is part of the Constitution of ASMSU. The Phone,: leaders) and a Supremes Concert. I could this y e a r , such as Water Carnival,Home- during the hearing with the AUSJ the board there was inadequate evidence that certain State News could have easily Interpreted Editorial SS5-Ì2S2 Classified Advertising 3SS-B25» spend the next half hour easily on this coming, mimeographing and silk screen- was questioned about the date M r . Graham procedures were followed. I could have a breach of the Code as a constitutional Display A d v e r t i s i n g 353-6400 l e t t e r , detailing the number of projects ing, college bowl, travel, discount serv- asked M r . Carbine for his charitable dona- accepted their inaccurate testimony as an violation. Business - Clrculstlon 355-iJM Photographic 355-4311 that ASMSU has been involved in, which ices through the VISA c a r d s , tutoring, tion: oversight if they had been mistaken by only- Richard Durell 1) I asked the board's representatives one or twodays.butfoundithardto believe Monroe senior US exploited Akers lounge To the Editor: We, as presidents of residence halls, and members of Women's Inter-residence Council, and concerned students of the University, would like to express our dissatisfaction with lastweek's " k i s s - i n , " sponsored by United Students. We feel that: IN THE LANSING - EAST LANSING AREA 1. This demonstration was, in effect, an exploitation of Akers Hall and the rights of the residents of that hall. 2. Permission should have been obtained from Akers Hall for the use of their lounge. Quick Carry-Out THESE FINE LANSING-EAST 3. Because of their extensive publicity, United Students should have anticipated and provided for the possibility of an unruly crowd. 4. United Students should have been willing to accept the respon- for Lunch or Dinner LANSING ESTABLISHMENTS sibility for the outcome of the " k i s s - i n . " It is our feeling that In sponsoring such a demonstration. United WISH YOU GOOD LUCK ON YOUR Students should have considered their responsibility to the individual 270 W. Grand River residents of Akers Hall. Is the public lounge of a dormitory intended for the University at large, or for the residents of that hall? We East Lansing FINALS AND INVITE YOU TO maintain that the lounge is provided for the students living in that hall. Any outside organization taking advantage of a r e s i d e n c e hall's Sun. - T h u r s . facilities, without the expressed consent of its residents, is infring- VISIT THEM ON YOUR STUDY 1 1 a . m . to m i d n i g h t ing upon the rights of the students in the hall. F r i . & Sat. We further believe that as a registered organization, United Stu- BREAKS. dents should have obtained the permission of Akers Hall for the use 1 1 a . m . to 2 a . m . of their lounge. Then, perhaps, provisions could have been made by the hall so that damage to the hall would not have occurred. United Students obviously overlooked the possibility of damage, even though the " k i s s - i n " had been well publicized. Finally, we feel that if United Restaurant Serving Daily GRANDMA'S Students is to declare itself an organization responsible enough to sponsor such demonstrations, then it must also be prepared to for gracious and take the responsibility for their outcome. Our main concern, however, is not the incident at Akers Hall, per se, but the fact that it couldwell have been any other residence hall on campus. How are the residence halls or the individuals living delightful dining y frfa/Qtoten in residence halls to defend themselves against this infringement Daily 7 a.m. to 2 p.m. Spaghetti of their rights? T ^ A L B E R T Steak "It's worth crowing about" Lasagna rNOTIi LUC BK ' We would like to suggest to United Students, and any other organi- and 5 to 9 p.m. Chicken zation, that upon considering the sponsorship of a meeting or demon- Shrimp Submarine Sondwiches Chicken * Shrimp • Fish pizza Sundays 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. stration within a residence hall they obtain the permission of that OTILI hall through the proper channels. It is only then that the rights of P r i v a t e Party Rooms the residents will properly be maintained and the facilities p r e - (OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK) served. Anne Osborne, President 1427 West Saginaw "The Cook's In" at irbaily, 4 Sun. 1900 E. Kalamazoo Phone;484-447l Women's Inter-residence Council Pfc 337-1741 2il M.A.C. ED 7-1668 The Original Campus Summary 5 87 FINALS GETTING presents the Need a finals All Basics ONLY 1 YOU study break? DOWN? g» - Nat Sci; ATL; Soc; Hums. Ci -" ' 9 - C ' m o n out t o S h a k e y ' s f o r s o m e H o n k y - T o n k Last Weekend until f u n . G e t up a g r o u p and f i n d out why S h a k e y ' s Happy P e o p l e s i n g l o u d e r , e a t b e t t e r p i z z a a n d have m o r e fun for less money. (Leave your finals , so don't be GIVE YOURSELF A BREAK b o o k s at s c h o o l and l i v e f o r a f e w h o u r s ! ) caught short without SHEETS ENJOY A PIZZA FROM SC FIZZA FULOS & A Campus Summary fir* from T H E P I Z Z A 203 MAC P I T aucus % oom The warmth and atmosphere of a Yorkshire inn, Ì M A A f i l I l ) ye P U B I I C house South Cedar at Pennsylvania (just north of 1-96 Expressway) S T MARSHALL MUSIC CO. your favorite beverages, and the famous Jack T a r FOR HOT DELIVERY hospitality make the Caucus Room a must for your weekend enjoyment. Open 11a.m. 'til 2 a.m ^ f t l ^ L 3 0 7 E . G R A N D RIVER & 245 ANN S T . PHONE ED 2-0863 across from the state capital 4 Michigan State News, East Lansing. Michigan Friday, March 10, 1967 A M E N D M I N T D E F E A T E D Consular pact survives attack WASHINGTON OP — The con- had been voting on ratification. and 10 Republicans joined in tiate this convention if any amend- Javits said without the provl- , sular treaty with the Soviet Union The amendment. Majority supporting the amendment, ment Is adopted, so in effect sion for immunity from all pro- survived a first-round attack by Leader Mike Mansfield of Mon- which was killed by a combina- this would kill the treaty." secution, the United States would opponents Thursday. tana said, would have killed the tion of 33 Democrats and 20 Re- Sen, Spessard L. Holland, !>• not have agreed to the treaty. An attempt to amend it was publicans. F l i . , said Talmadge*had pointed He added, "We wouldn't send our treaty itself. defeated 53 to 26 - just over the No vote on the treaty is ex- Sen. Karl E. Mundt, R-SJD., out "the A ^ i l l e s heel in this people to the Soviet Union unless two-,thirds majority that would pected until next week. In has introduced two reservations treaty." w they had immunity." have been required if the Senate Thursday's test, 16 Democrats which probably would make It But Sens. Charles H. Percy, The reservations introduced unacceptable to the Soviet Union, R - m . , Jacob K. Javits, R-N.Y., by Mundt pose a formidable ob- Gaullist ministers Thursday's amendment by Sen, and Thruston B. Morton, R-Ky., stacle for the pact. They would Herman E. Talmadge, D-Ga., joined In calling for ratification require the Russians to pull back would have eliminated the pro- as the treaty now reads. on aid to Vietnam. may lose final vote vision granting full diplomatic immunity to arrest for consular officials and employes. That's might be beaten. They areCabinet the same immunity now granted PARIS if- — PresidentCharles at the ambassadorial level. de Gaulle seems assured of a veterans, but neither has ever before tried for an elective of- This is not in other consular comfortable majority to support fice, and both campaigned in m a r - treaties, and Talmadge said he his policies in the new National ginal districts. thought it wrong to give the So- Assembly to be elected Sunday. viet Union a special privilege But he may lose two of his top The opinion polls predict not granted others. ministers in that final round of Gaullists will win 264 to 290 of Florida-bound voting. the 487 seats in the new a s s e m - The immunity clause, Mundt said, was insisted upon by the Foreign Minister Maurice bly. Gaullist-backed candidates Soviet Union and would merely Kathy H w a s s , Short Hills, N . J . , s o p h o m o r e , s e c o n d r u n n e r - u p to M i s s MSU, Couve de Murville and Defense won 66 of the 81 seats decided widen the door for more Com- p r e s e n t s the winning ATO r a f f l e t i c k e t f o r a t r i p to F l o r i d a to Doug Nelson, Minister P i e r r e Messmer are last Sunday in the first round of munist espionage. F l i n t f r e s h m a n . The r a f f l e w a s a p l e d g e c l a s s f u n d - r a i s i n g p r o j e c t . Bob T y l e r , (left) campaigning vigorously. They voting, when a majority was could win but no one is dis- required. On the runoff, the high Mansfield said: " T h e Soviets p r e s i d e n t of the ATO p l e d g e c l a s s , and Phil J o h n s t o n , p l e d g e c l a s s t r e a s u r e r , man will win. would be unwilling to renego- State News photo by M e a d e P e r l m a n counting the possibility that both look on. World News at a Glance Mao launches campaign Leftist Laborite hits Wilson Viet stand LONDON (AP) — Left wing r e b e l Michael Foot w a r n e d P r i m e M i n i s t e r H a r o l d Wilson T h u r s d a y night to wrest control of Peking one such island of resistance, We've got a better idea T'tey got t i r e d of c a r t i n g w a s t e p a p e r to the i n c i n e r - he will n e v e r get the " b l i n d , d u m b , unthinking supporters control the propa- heir apparent who has been r e - a t o r and c r e a t e d " T h e H u m p " f o r a t t r a c t i v e d i s p o s a l TOKYO (JP! — Mao Tse-tung Chinese Moslems, angered by ported ill. Perhaps this was to o b e d i e n c e he s e e m s to want f r o m his L a b o r p a r t y has launched a drive to seize ganda outlets of the Red Chinese the a r r e s t of several Moslems - - a t t h e b e g i n n i n g of w i n t e r t e r m . O t h e r m e m b e r s capital, islands of resistance are take some attention from P r e - f o l l o w e r s in P a r l i a m e n t . complete control of Peking, as enemies of Mao and his purge. of t h i s N o r t h W o n d e r s " f a m i l y " a r e T o m C o f f i e l d said to remain mannedby backers mier Chou En-lai, who has Foot a l s o swiped at Wi I son f o r backing the A m e r i - where fighting has been reported These reports said that in one emerged as the nation's top a d - (top), D u r a n d s o p h o m o r e ; J i m F o r k n e r ( l o w e r left), c a n s on V i e t n a m ; in the past two months, Jap- of Mao's enemy, President Liu fight in January, Peking Mos- S o u t h f i e l d f r e s h m a n ; and J a m e s M a n t e y , S o u t h f i e l d Shao-chi. ministrator and a powerful p a r - " T h e e x c u s e s f o r A m e r i c a n conduct b e c o m e m o r e anese press dispatches said lems attacked a police station ty leader. freshman. S t a t e News photo by J e r r y M c A l l i s t e r Thursday. Reports by travelers reaching and forced the release of the p a t h e t i c and d i s h o n o r a b l e e v e r y week. Hong Kong from Peking told of E v e n t u a l l y , if s h a m e f u I ly, o u r g o v e r n m e n t will have While the party chairman's Moslem prisoners. By this a c - ARM SHED count, about 800 Moslems to catch up with what I b e l i e v e is the o v e r w h e l m i n g stormed a public security office judgment of the L a b o r m o v e m e n t . " in the Moslem district in Febru- House will have ary, wrecked it, and then put to Students, congressmen flight Red Guards who had seized USSR president says U.S. leaders deceiving a mosque. The Peking correspondent ot MOSCOW ,f — President efforts of the Vietnamese Nikolai V. Podgorny said today people and of the Communist own eth ics check the newspaper Nihon Keizai said Mao's Com"nunist party American leaders are deceiv- countries friendly to them," ing the U.S. people on Vietnam. Podgorny said, without spell- Podgorny declared it will be ing out details. Such public WASHINGTON ,/P) — Thanks to Adam Clayton Powell, the House government' funds by congress- men was fairly common, 60 per Central Comnittee has put Vice Premier Hsieh Fu-chih, public security minister, in charge of demand Sukarno ouster impossible to overcome the pledges of greater Soviet bloc Is going to have an ethics com- cent replied yes, 21 per cent said the campaign to seize control. JAKARTA (£) — Congressmen with h a r s h l y , major violence only would not go to a vote. Communist cause in Vietnam. aid to meet American actions mittee to police the conduct of no and 19 per cent had no opinion. The correspondent said 27 demanding the ouster of P r e s i - would sweep several parts of Nonmilitary informants said that American leaders are "cheat- have been made here many its members. It was against this background Maoist organizations in Peking dent Sukarno lined up Thursday the country. They predicted they if it came to a showdown, the ing the electors" by holding times. That much seemed certain of public suspicion of the morals formed a preparatory commit- against their military colleagues, could not control their own men military was considering p r e s s - out hope for victory there, The Soviet president ac- on Capitol Hill that more than Thursday, although it still was t e r to organize "the Metro- who fear dismissal will mean should this happen. Large ele- ing for a two-thirds vote for he said. cused Mao Tse-tung and his 75 ethics bills were Introduced uncertain whether a special c o m - politan Revolutionary Commit- bloodshed in Indonesia. ments in the navy are said to be dismissal. Americans should know that group of not supporting North mittee or an existing committee in the House. The bills were sent tee to seize power" under the pro-Sukarno. Thus the military, with help In the forefront pressing for their escalation of the Viet- Vietnam in its efforts to get would get the job and when the to the Rules Committee which, guidance of Hsieh. Speaker after speaker demand- from congressional members dismissal were student leaders, namese war "will cause new peace talks started. assignment would be made. according to Chairman William ed the ouster of Sukarno, ignor- of Sukarno's Nationalist party, A dispatch by the New China backed to by powerful Moslem Thus the flamboyant Harlem M. Colmer, D-MIss., hopes to party. In the day's debate, the ing such appeals. might save the president. How- News Agency said the official Viet assembly assumes limited powers Democrat is succeeding where make a recommendation next military left most of the talking Some military sources p r e - ever, the Nationalist party has Peking People's Daily scolded scores of earnest reformers have week. to the navy. dicted the decision on whether to split recently on the Sukarno some followers of Mao for l e t - SAIGON (AP) - - The w r i t e r s of V i e t n a m ' s new c o n - failed. Over the years, hundreds ting victory go to their heads. A sore point was the speech oust Sukarno or keep him in name issue. Most Republicans and many s t i t u t i o n voted 9 2 - 7 today to a s s u m e l e g i s l a t i v e of plans for policing congres- Democrats favor a special bi- People's Daily told young Red Indonesia's s t r o n g man, Gen. sional conduct have been pro- Guards and older Maoists to Suharto, made at the opening Casualties high p o w e r s until a national a s s e m b l y is e l e c t e d . Ap- partisan committee with author- p a r e n t l y the rul"ing g e n e r a l s and the g o v e r n m e n t a p - posed, but they were never ac- ity to recommend a code of ethics stop "self-seeking." Mao has session of Congress Tuesday. In cepted. called for a merger of Maoist effect, he said he had taken over proved. and with power to enforce the Then, amid the controversy standards on both members and organizations in alliance with all executive powers, thatSukar- C o n s t i t u e n t a s s e m b l y m e n n e a r e d the e n d of t h e i r generated by Powell's activities, the army and party-government in week's fighting employes. no now is a figurehead and should line by line r e v i e w of the d r a f t c o n s t i t u t i o n . They public confidence In Congress officials. be retained in the interest of t e n t a t i v e l y p l a n n e d to c o m p l e t e the r e v i e w F r i d a y o r plunged. When a recent Gallup Others want the job assigned The article repeatedly r e - Indonesian unity. S a t u r d a y , r e c e s s f o r a week and m e e t again M a r c h Poll asked those Interviewed to the House Administration ferred to the instructions of De- Student leader Cosmas Batu- 20 to p o l i s h the d o c u m e n t f o r the M a r c h 27 d e a d l i n e . whether they thought misuse of Committee. fense Minister Lin Piao, Mao's bara declared Suharto was trying SAIGON (fl—Record American that in Da Nang the war looks to force his will on Congress and combat losses and record defec- good from the allied side. But added: "We will not be Intimi- tions from bloodied Viet Cong he said the possibility of a major People On The G0...G0 dated by armed threats." ranks emphasized rising p r e s - Communist attack cannot be ruled Several delegates recalled that sures In the Vietnam war last out. it was the army that pushed week, the U.S. Command dis- " I think they need something ßt/M£fi through a resolution in P a r l i a - ment last year calling for the d i s - closed Thursday. GIs sought fresh contact in 15 to boost their morale," he said. The American death toll of 232 Cffff missal of Sukarno, and for his trial on charges of complicity in drives, one In the Mekong River last week was not the war's high- delta. est. A total of 240 were killed the Communist attempt to seize The week was marked by many Nov. 14 to 20, 1965, the week of power Oct. 1, 1965. Parliament small skirmishes and a sharp in- the la Drang Valley battle. is subordinate to Congress in c r e a s e in the enemy infiltrator's The record losses stemmed both legislative and policy mat- use of mortars, particularly in from an unusually high number ters. the sector U.S. Marines guard of wounded—1,617—nearly seven lis "Why are they trying to stop below the demilitarized zone be- men living through their injuries this now?" one delegate demand- tween North and South Vietnam. for every man killed. The normal ed. Lt. Gen. Victor H. Krulak, ratio is about five to one. Naval officers tried to explain. commander of all U.S. Marines Losses among the other allies They said if Sukarno were dealt In the western Pacific area, said last week were lighter. South Vietnam's armed forces report- OHIO'S SECOND CRASH ed 199 men killed and 18 m i s s - ing; the others, six dead and 25 Saturday, March 18,1967 wounded. The South Vietnamese do not list their wounded. Jet, private pione Against the allied toll, spokes- Home of the Worldfe Greatest 19 Hamburger men said 1,736 Communists were killed and 1,168 switched sides under the Saigon government's open arms program. collide; 26 deod The Red defectors, numbering liner when lt disappeared from 60 more than in any previous OPEN FLAME BROILING URBANA, Ohio If) — A jet airliner only nine minutes from radar. week, brought defections this MAKES THE DELICIOUS D I F F E R E N C E landing collided with a private Witnesses told of an explosion. year to 6,357, compared to 3,845 Prime steaK f a v o r is s i z z l e d right into e v e r y plane Thursday, killing 25 aboard Bodies and debris were scat- in the same period of 1966. The 100% pure b e e f B u r g e r C h e f h a m b u r g e r . the airliner and the pilot of the tered over four square miles Communist dead were the equiv- private plane. It was Ohio's sec- northwest of this west-central alent of more than a regiment OUR REGULAR 150 OPEN FLAME BROILED ond airliner crash In five days. Ohio city. and uncounted thousands of others HAMBURGERS The Trans World Airlines DC9 Federal Aviation Agency air were obviously wounded. But far M f ONE with 21 passengers and a crew of four plunged to earth Just traffic controllers refused to say more were killed In the previous whether they might have observed week, a record 2,449. DAY 45 miles from the rural area two planes on a collision course. Accidents a n d other causes, where a Lake Central Airlines The airliner, a medium-range such as GIs might encounter at Saturday ONLY! Convair crashed Sunday, killing all 38 persons aboard. jet, was in radar contact with home, have claimed the lives of air traffic controllers at Dayton 1,721 others. There were 25 of and f a v o r s f o r the kiddles too! V when lt vanished from sight at these deaths In non-hostile c i r - The light plane fell two miles 11:54 a.m. It was due to land at cumstances last week. away. The pilot was Identified 12:03 pan., after a flight from A U.S. spokesman announced as Cyrus Burgsthler, 54, Detroit, Pittsburgh, P a . the troops have killed two Viet N O W AMERICA'S a salesman bound for Spring- The weather was clear and Cong in the offensive, launched field, 10 miles south of Urbana. Tuesday under the name Palm bright. LMJ NO. 1 Neither plane sounded any The plane had carried a full Beach, while losing nine dead HAMBURGERS We also have the convenience alarm before the crash. load of 70 passengers when lt and four wounded. The Viet Cong were apparently 15< HAMBURGER of inside seating! The airliner was approaching for a landing at Dayton 30 miles landed In Pittsburgh after a flight from New York' sLaGuardla Air- seeking to retaliate when they southwest. port with a stop at Harrisburg, shelled the base camp early Wed- WE'RE CELEBRATING THE OPENING OF OUR NEW STORE AT 2320 N. EAST ST. 622 North Homer(Near Frandor) Federal Aviation Agency t r a f - fic controllers in Dayton said P a . The plane was to stop In nesday. TWo soldiers were killed Dayton, then end Its flight In and 23 wounded In that bombard- ment. they were in contact with the a i r - Chicago. 5 Michigan State News, East Lansing. Michigan Friday, March 10, 1967 New star-like body sighted W A N T TO M O V E ? e ms PASADENA , J P l — D i s c o v e r y of much smaller 'than galaxies and is from the earth and the faster three men who announced the a r e Dr: T.D. Kinman, who used a star-like object which one c o s - up to 100 times brighter. it is traveling. discovery of 0237-23, believes the 120-inch telescope at Lick mic yardstick Indicates may be The quasar 0237-23 — so- The new quasar's red shift the extreme red shift may mean Observatory in northern Cali- life off-campus the brightest, fastest and f a r t h - est yet f o u n d was disclosed Thursday by the California In- called because of its listing in Indicates it is receding from an astronomy catalog — has a earth at more than 150,000 miles " r e d shift" greater than that of a second, or 82.4 per cent of the something other than speed and distance but so far has declined to explain his theory. fornia, and John G. Bolton, who discovered and Identified 0237- 23 with a 210-foot radio tele- The Off-CampusCouncil (OCC) everyone is looking for a party stitute of Technology. any other object yet sighted. velocity of light, compared with scope at Parkes Observatory In and ASMSU announced Wednesday and anyone with an apartment is 81.4 per cent of the fastest p r e - Australia. The Interpretations of The object, called 0237-23, is the publication of a new edition fair game." The term red shift means the viously discovered quasar. Arp studied the new quasar Kinman and Bolton were not given one of the mysterious new class of the pamphlet, "So You Want The ASMSU and OCC pamphlet light from an object has shifted Not all astronomers agree with with the 200-inch telescope at in the announcement by Cal-tech, of bright, distant things known to Move OffCampus?"Itexplains also contains a list of apartments toward the red end of the spec- this interpretation of the red shift Palomar Observatory in south- which with the Carnegie Insti- as quas is teller, or starlike. Lit- the problems facing the prospec- in the East Lansing area and trum. The greater the shift to of quasars. ern California. Those who Joined tute of Washington operates Pal- tle is known about the 200 so f a r tive off-campus dweller and how- the prices they charge. discovered, but they appear to be red, the farther away the object Dr. Halton C. Arp, one of him In making the announcement omar. best to cope with them. "So You Want To Move Off Concerning leases and con- Campus," can be picked up free tracts the pamphlet says, "Make from the Union, the International sure you know what you are sign- Center, the resident assistants S BS GIVES ing. Once your "John Henry* is on in the residence halls, the Off- die dotted line, you're hooked... Campus Council and the office for better or worse!" of Off-Campus Housing. On the subject of picking r o o m - Debate tourney set mates the pamphlet says, "That fun-loving, big-hearted guy you enjoy drinking with at the Gables may be the sloppiest, laziest neth Newton, Trenton, N.J., se- person on campus when he's College debaters from four states will be here for the Dis- nior, will be vying for one of the home." five positions. trict V Qualifying Debate Tourn- Other sections include damage ament March 19-21. J e r r y M. Anderson, MSU di- deposits, utilities, financial r e - This tournament will select rector of forensic s, has been sponsibility, insurance, mail de- five from the top college and elected by the debate directors of livery, pets and parking. university debate teams in In- the four states to direct the 21- In the section "Group Gather- diana, Illinois, Michigan and Ohio year-old tournament. ings" the pamphlet warns, "Don't to represent this district in the •Last year MSU's team quali- be surprised when you find you National Debate Tournament in fied and went on to the final have many more friends than you Chicago in April. elimination rounds of the Na- did the day you moved out of the MSU's team of Richard Brau- tional Championship Tourna- dorm. Come Friday night, almost tigam, Albion junior, and Ken- ment, BAHAMAS ASMSU selects four to aid students on trip Miller will be more beneficial Two student government m e m - Since it is the first time ASMSU bers and two adults will accom- has attempted a trip to the Ba- than the Hibbards as evaluaters pany the now-filled ASMSU flight hamas, Hassold said he feels because they are peers to most to the Bahamas that leaves March the evaluation is in the best of the group. 19. interest of students. All previ- All 91 seats on the flight have Cabinet President T e r r y Has- ous ASMSU sponsored trips have been reserved, accordingtoHas- sold said the four will make the been to New York at Thanksgiv- sold. Of these, 72 have schedul- trip on student government funds ing and Christmas. ed the entire ASMSU offering, not as chaperones, but as ad- including hotel reservations. The visers and evaluaters. Hassold said he feels it is i m - other 19 paid for the air t r a n s - Since people a r e known to take portant to send someone to r e p - portation only and will be "on advantage of others -at times, resent both thecabinetandboard. their own" otherwise during the Hassold said he felt George B. He added that he thinks Tung and trip. Hibbard, ASMSU Board adviser, and his wife could serve as an "authority image" or liaison be- tween merchants or proprietors TAKE A BREAK and travelers. Hibbard said he and his wife before finals would "act on behalf of the stu- dents In the event of room dam- age, poor food or physical In- -Special Buys - juries." Art Tung, ASMSU member-at - large, and Brad Miller, cabinet -Saturday Only- director of travel, will also serve as liaisons should any problems 2 left 2 left arise. V o i c e of M u s i c S t e r e o Zenith P o r t a b l e S t e r e o Hassold said that Tung and w a s $1 19.95 was $89.95 Miller were going primarily to evaluate the trip. They will r e - NOW $99.95 NOW $82.88 port to the board whether they think the trip should be main- 2 left 1 left tained in its present form, in- VM RCA P o r t a b l e S t e r e o creased to two flights or dis- Component System was $129.95 continued. was $259.30 NOW $199.95 NOW $117.89 Library group 1 left You'll always get a good deal for your used books at Student Book. You'll also get fast, Z e n i t h 1967 P o r t a b l e T.V. friendly service from our large, efficient sales staff. Giving you the service which you desire sets meeting was $159.95 is our main concern. In fact, students are so important to us we named our store for you. An open meeting of the student NOW $151.88 • I m iirn library committee will be held on March 29, the first day of classes spring term, at 4 p.m. in the Deans Conference Room on the f i r s t floor of the Student Services Building. of East Lansing The meeting has been called to discuss possible faculty fines 543 E . G r a n d Rivet ac and an extension of the library hours. 337 1300 Student library committee members urge all interested stu- dents, faculty and staff members to attend. FREE Freshly sliced o. HYGRADE'S WEST VIRGINIA fctfOssw n m FREE tuoss from Ham Sandwich Olm PEPSI „ ON S C H A E F F E R ' S H I L L B I L L Y B R E A D WITH P U R C H A S E O F ONE WITH PURO PURCHASE OF PEPSI for 15C ONE FRESHLY FRESI SLICED HYGRADE'S WEST VIRGINIA HAM SANDWICH ON SCHAEFFER'S HILLBILLY BREAD for only SPARTAN shop r,te FRIDAY & SATURDAY ONLY ! ! tudent tore Goodrich's 940 TROWBRIDGE RD. SPARTAN SHOPPING CENTER - MONDAY thru FRIDAY 9 to 9 SAT. 9-6 Free Parking at the rear of the store 6 Michigan State News, East Lansing. Michigan Friday, March 10, 1967 O N HILMBTS, P A S S I N O M I * V 4*crediLATL N e w motorcycle laws being discussed By STEVE GATES the maximum number of students become effective today State News Staff W r i t e r Although there is almot com- the first time they took it. In the College of Engineering, required courses already account used to carry more than one Also, under a law passed plete agreement on campus that for all but 10 to 18 credits of a Police officers all over the American Thought and Language state will begin today to Issue person at any time." earlier, motor driven cycles, student's time, according to Carl A "motor driven cycle" was those under five brake horse- courses should be four credits L Mensendick, asst. dean for stu- tickets to motorcyclists who are rather than three, opinion varies described as a motorcycle with power, are not allowed to be dent affairs in the College of not wearing helmets or who are on how such a change might be less than five brake horsepower, driven on public streets after engineering. Mensendick said carrying too many persons on made. that he would not oppose adding their cycle. such as a Honda SO. dark without permission from The law also states that both local police. Even with permis- Faculty and students seem to more credits to ATL, but Public Act 207, scheduled to agree on at least one aspect of cautioned that he was not neces- go Into effect today, states that motorcycle drivers and their sion, these vehicles cannot ex- passengers must wear crash hel- ceed 35 m.p.h. the problem—that students are sarily speaking for his college. "No bicycle or motorcycle shall probably being asked to do at be used to carry more persons mets approved by the Michigan Sherwood K. Haynes, chairman least four credits worth of work of the Physics Dept., said that Waiver exams at one time than the number for State Police. Violations of this act will be In ATL—despite the fact that while he might be opposed to a which it is designed and ATL is, by University regula- equipped." considered misdemeanors; the fine will be left to the discre- given March 27 tions, only three credits. four-credit ATL course, because It would limit the student's f r e e - The act further state« that tion of the courts. Students Interested in taking According to Thomas S. Greer, dom of choice of electlves, he "no motor-driven cycle shall be spring term waiver examinations chairman of the Humanities would support adding an ad- discover may obtain permits at 170 Bes- Dept., students are receiving only ditional three-credit course in sey Hall, S33 Wonders Halls, Scenes of Red China three credits because of what he termed an "historical accident." ATL on an elective basis. America as an 109 Brody Hall, or G36 Hubbard Probably the only definite a t - Halls before March 17. The P h o t o s f r o m Mark R i b o u d ' s " T h r e e F a c e s of C h i n a " a r e on d i s p l a y t h r o u g h t h i s Greer explained that all of the tempt to inaugurate such a change spring waiver examinations will present University College In the near future will be in the American Airlines week in the Union Lounge. B r u c e Hubbell, G r o s s e P o i n t e junior, v i e w s Hie e x h i b i t . courses except ATL were the be given Monday, March 27. S t a t e News photo by Bob B a r i t new James Madison College, results of mergers of related which will offer a four-credit courses In the old Basic College, ATL course combining regular the predecessor to the Univer- ATL with a series of related Visit exciting places, meet interesting people as you travel coast to coast, Foreign students sity college. But, ATL was never changed from the thiee-credit course it seminars and lectures by out- side speakers. Junior Year to Canada and Mexico. Go surfing While suggesting that he had in the Pacific, skiing in New England, had been in the Basic College only studied the problem in terms sunning in Acapulco, sightseeing in Toronto. A w o n d e r f u l world invited to homes because no " m e r g e r " had been made. of the needs of his own college, Herbert Garflnkel, dean of the in of discovery is in store for you when T. Ben Strandness, chairman James Madison College, added you begin a stewardess career of the ATL Dept. said, "ATL learn something about the com- that the question was basically with America's Leading Airline All foreign students at MSU should be a four-credit course," If you qualify, arrange now munity in which they will be vis- whether underclass courses have been invited to spend a week- but added that dissension in the for a private interview in y i j r area iting. Foreign students who have could cover material in adequate New York end with families in the Thumb University had prevented past depth in three-credits-worth of Qualifications: never visited an American f a m - area of Michigan from March proposals for such a change. time under the quarter system. • Single • Age over 2 0 17 to 20, according to the Chris- ily before will be helped to under- Sam. S. Baskett, acting chair- • High School G r a d u a t e • Normal v.j.on without g l a l i e » - tian Rural Hospitality Council. s t a n d American customs and man of the English Dept. agreed contact lenses c o n s i d e r e d Approximately 1,000 families manners, the council says. with Strandness. "ATL is as • 5-2"to5'9" • W e n h l 105 140 Three undergraduate colleges offer students The meeting will also provide O C C date on farms and in villages are p a r - valuable as the other basics, and INTERVIEWS from all parts of the country an opportunity ticipating in the project spon- information about the personal there are certainly inequities in Thu., Mar. 23 & Frl., Mar sored by the council. Items students will need for the having it worth three credits." to broaden their educational experience 5 p.m. - 9 p.m. weekend. Sat., Mar. 2 5 - 9 a.m 1 p.m by spending their The group will leave Friday, March 17, from the International Students In the English Langu- However, Baskett quickly added that he was "a little bit extended Jack Tar Hotel Junior Year in New York Center lounge and will return to age Center are asked to register Petitioning for positions on the loath to see additional credit American Airlines Suite New York University is an integral part of campus Monday, March 20. Bus in the center's office. All other given for a beginning course be- Off-Campus Council has been ex- NO APPOINTMENT NEEDED transportation is being arranged students may register with Mrs. fore a number of questions of tended to 5 p.m. Friday, March No Phone Calls, Please the exciting metropolitan community of and die departure time will be Joan Meredith, 207 International University policy were an- 17, due to the lack of students who New York City—the business, cultural, Center or call 355-2356. announced during an orientation swered." have taken out petitions according artistic, and financial center of the nation. meeting next Wednesday in 3 A $5 registration fee for each He said that the University to Greg Hopkins, OCC president. The city's extraordinary resources greatly International Center. foreign student or student f a m - would have to consider the per Qualifications for the council enrich both the academic program and the This o r i e n t a t i o n has been ily to cover visit expenses is cent of credit allotted to the candidates are: planned to help foreign students asked. general education program at the (1) full-time undergraduate experience of living at New York University freshman level, the number of student living off campus and not with the most cosmopolitan student body in credits required for a degree, represented by any other campus the world. and whether the students would governing group. American Airlines Flifkt Routas This program is open to students recommended by the deans of the colleges to which they will return for their degrees. Courses may be taken in the EASTER be asked to do more work if additional credit was given. One supporter of the plan In the ATL Dept. suggested that he would support the plan, if it were proposed for a vote. But he said (2) 24 credit hours (3) at least a 2.0 G. P. A. (4) in good standing with the University In social, disciplinary and ttnMcWl .matters. (5) a petition with 50 signa- School of Commerce /,•/< «. / / »//V< I / 'A, f School of Education ** the basic question was one of the ture's of students living off-cam- Ai l o u a i Opportunity Employer Washington Square College of Arts Try our Student Special University running the basic courses to get the most students pus must be submitted. Petitions can be picked up from and Science through for the least cost and the Off-Campus Council in 313 First Write for brochure to Director, Junior Year modifying course design to pass Student Services. in New York Laundry Choice NEW Y O R K U N I V E R S I T Y Fluff dry 150 per lb. Of The * New York, N.Y. 10003 Shirts finished 22C with Abrams Planetarium Engageables each bundle Regular price on shirts . . . now open wee kends The public exhibit areas of normally Just open 9-12 noon Folded or on hangers 330 each Abrams Planetarium a r e now and 1-4:30 p.m. weekdays. open 2-4 p.m. Saturdays and Among the exhibits is one on ONE DAY SERVICE Sundays. loan from NASA (National Aero- nautics and Space Administra- ON Thomas H. Osgood, planetarl- tion) tracing U.S. space explora- im, director, said that the week- tion with the Gemini flights. DRY C L E A N I N G & LAUNDRY end openings began last Saturday Highlights of the exhibit, ex- In response to public request. CREST CLEANERS & LAUNDRY pected to be on display for two The planetarium will also be open or three months. Include models during spring break. of the Gemini and Mercury space 620 E. Michigan, East Lansing capsules. Astronauts are shown The displays, exhibit hall and 337-0012 OPEN 8-6 WEEKDAYS, 8-5 SAT. seated Inside the capsules,which the black light gallery were a r e one-third of the actual size. Near the Gemini capsule Is a full STORE HOURS: MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 5:30 P . M . size model of an astronaut wear- ing a Gemini pressure suit. WEDNESDAY NOON UNTIL 9 P . M. R E G I S T E R E D TCe e p s stlco Summer D I A M O N D R I N G S Johnston They like the smart styling and Murphy Study is IN season. t h e g u a r a n t e e d perfectcenter diamond . . . a b r i l l i a n t gem s e e s you in w i n g t i p s of f i n e c o l o r a n d m o d e r n cut. The name, Keepsake, t h i s s p r i n g , black l l a m a - g r a i n in your ring assures lifetime Time was when summer satisfaction. Select yours at c a l f s k i n d r e s s s h o e s in the study captured the atten- your Keepsake J e w e l e r ' s store. tions of those students who H e s in thè y e l l o w pages under wandered aimlessly Jewelers. " through the regular school year. enjoy your leisure In • However • Time now is when summer permanent press casual slacks study attracts rather than captures. The in students are finding summer study In season. Always f r e s h p r e s s e d , e v e n a f t e r m a c h i n e w a s h i n g and d r y i n g . . . n o - i r o n s l a c k s Study this summer at the of w r i n k l e - r e s i s t i n g Dacron® p o l y e s t e r school of your choice. We'd TO SSOOO. ° *(>'. [ »SED TO SHOW S E Ab T Y OF and cotton b l e n d . B l u e , n a t u r a l , be pleased to see you at < REG A. M. PONO CO MV. INC , ISTASUSHEO ISSI. navy, o l i v e o r b e i g e . S i z e s 28 to 40. Marquette. HOW TO PLAN YOUR ENGAGEMENT AND WEDDING A. H a m p t o n b l u c h e r . Write today for your Sum- Please send new 20-page booklet, "How To Plan Your Engage- mer Sessions Bulletin. ment anri Wedding" and new 12-page full color (older, both for B. B r o o k h a v e n b o x e r top s l i p o n . only 25c. Also, send special offer of beautiful 44-page Bride's Book. 8.00 O f f i c e of A d m i s s i o n s Marquette Name . Address. Jacobsons City University State KEEPSAKE DIAMOND RINGS, BOX 90, SYRACUSE, N. Y. 13202 -Zip- Jacobsons [ > « p t . C U 5 n 3 1 W . W i s c o n s i n Ave Milwaukee, Wis. 53233 7 Michigan State N e w s , East Lansing. Michigan F r i d a y , M a r c h 10, 1967 WEEKEND ACTIVITIES M MSU Boole S t o r e MSU B o o k S t o r e i'I— -- - MSU B o o k S t o r e MSU B o o k S t o r e 11 »• • 11'„ MSU B o o k S t o r e MSU B o o k S t o r e M Finals apply mtrnm | j S' u B When does • • • If you don't feel like booking this weekend, there are still a o few "forget-finals" activities o available. But only a few. Entertainment k For a study break, drop in at a mixer tonight. The Second String will entertain at die Akers This Weekend By VALERIE ALBERTS S Hall mixer from 9-12. The Shaw mixer will be a r e c - t ord hop tonight from 9 to mid- o night. The all-star cast includes: over for a second week at the "Lilies of the Field,"thewitty George Chakiris, Kirk Douglas, Michigan Theater. r story of a wandering handyman Leslie Caron, Charles Boyer, e Sidney Poitier and a group of Simone Signoret, Glenn Ford, Michelangelo A n t o n i o n i ' s Immigrant nuns will be shown John Pierre Cassel, Anthony "Blow-Up," acclaimed the "Best tonight in Fairchild at 7 and 9. Film of 1966" by the National M Perkins, and Orson Welles. A faculty woodwind quintet will The Walt Disney movie, "Mon- Society of Film Critics, starts S play tonight in the Music Audi- keys, Go Home," has been held today at the State Theatre. torium at 8:15. U The student-sponsored show PIDRSTRIAN TRAUMA "Gamut," on WMSB, channel 10, B will feature a discussion of f r a - ternities and sororities on the o campus. The show, seen at 11:30 o a.m. Saturday, will also feature a jazz trio this week, "Norse Adventure," the travel film this week, will be shown No express bus k S Saturday at 8 p.m. in the Audi- torium. The big basketball game with Northwestern will start at 4p.m. for exam week t o Saturday. As the term changes, so do Spring term bus schedules will r "Georgy Girl" has been held be available March 20 from bus over for a fourth week at the the bus schedules. e drivers and in the residence Campus Theater. Beginning March 13 and con- halls. Bus passes will go on sale M "The Venetian Affair," s t a r - tinuing through exam week, the March 13 at Brody, North Won- ring Robert Vaughn, can be seen express bus will not run. During ders, West McDonel, West Shaw, S tonight at the Gladmer in Lansing. Spring break, beginning March Akers, Hubbard, Holmes, West U "Is Paris Burning?", a story of 20, the buses will operate on the Fee, Mason, Abbot, Landon, u At the MSU Bookstore's Annual Sweatshirt Sale the liberation of Paris during Sunday schedule, running every Case, Wilson and Owen halls World War n , starts Saturday. 20 minutes. and during registration at the B FREE Union ticket office, MSU Book- o B store and the Men's Intramural Building. o High Court asked Passes will still cost $12. Stu- dents may also purchase 10 k Buy two sweatshirts and get one tickets for $1.50 which may be S to grant Hoff a bail used after 5:30 p.m. and are good from term to term. Student wives t These a r e f i r s t quality Champion, V e l v a Sheen, C o l l e g i a t e , and J e m may purchase tickets which may o Sweatshirts and we a r e adding m o r e stock each day. WASHINGTON, 10 — James while they continue efforts in be used during the day. R. Hoffa's attorneys made two federal courts in Washington to r moves in Supreme Court today have Hoffa freed on a writ of Students will again be allowed e in an effort to have the teamsters habeas corpus. to ride the buses free during Mix or Match the many colors & styles while they last union president freed on bail registration, March27-28. P a s s - Action on the two moves be- es will be required beginning M from federal prison. fore next week is unlikely. A March 29. They said "basic fairness" to spokesman for the Supreme S Hoffa and three codefendants al- Court said the government will Henry Jolman, general fore- ready in prison "would seem to man of the campus bus system, U be given a chance to file pap'ers require that they be at liberty and afforded their day in court on substantial constitutional opposing the moves. said that 13 buses would be used spring term, running at five- The U.S. District Court in and ten-minute intervals. B Buy two sweatshirts at the regular price of $2.95 each & get the 3rd one FREE U issues which may well invali- Chattanooga and the U.S. Cir- o B date their convictions." cuit Court in Cincinnati have The average number of stu- o See fhè special display at the front o r our store Hoffa was taken to the federal both refused to allow Hoffa to dents riding- -buses datiy last prison at Lewlsburg, Pa., on remain free on ball. Stewart has spring term was 16,000. The k Tuesday to begin serving an supervision over this federal average this term has been about eight-year sentence for jury court region. 55,000, Jolman said. tampering. S One application for ball today t went to Chief Justice Earl Warren, the other to Associate o All sales are final-no exchanges or refunds on this very special sale Justice Potter Stewart. r Hoffa's lawyers asked Warren to f r e e Hoffa on bail until the e federal court in Chattanooga rules on a motion he filed there M asking for a new trial. This motion was based on a claim of widespread government wire- S MSU JACKETS Save 25% U tapping and eavesdropping before and during the 1964 Chattanooga trial where Hoffa was convicted. The attorneys asked Stewart B a great selection to free the union leader on bail o o k of styles & colors News entries Are you looking for due Monday an annual income of S t all marked The deadline for entries in the Detroit P r e s s Club Foundation awards competition is Monday. o r down All full-time students attending Michigan colleges and universi- ties are eligible to compete as are all professional newsmen in $95,000 e M 25% the state. Cash prizes totaling $7,200 will w or more S in your future career? be awarded the-26 individual win- U ners at the foundation's annual banquet. Stop In Today, Or Take A Break Between Exams • We're Open B This Is a rtllttlc goal for men entering Grants Management Training Program o Norgwegian film Starting salaries up to $6,760 per year de- o set for Aud pending on your qualifications Grants has the highest incomes in the dis- tribution industry... some store managers k Mon., Toes., Fri. from 8:30-5:30 Wed., Thurs. from 8:30 a.m.-9:00 p.m. "Norse Adventure," a color earn over $50,000 a year! S Sat. 10-3 (Exam Week Only) travel film about the land of the Granta rapid growth has resulted in extra- MSU Vikings and the midnight sun, ordinary progress for our managers. t will be shown 8 p.m. Saturday About 190 men were appointed to store in the Auditorium as part of the o management last year, and about 390 men World Travel Series. were promoted who were already in store r HJordis Kittel Parker, n a r - management e rator of the film, is prominent fm among American film lecturers and a specialist in producing M films on the Scandinavian coun- STORE tries. YEAH_$10,900 S MANAGER'S BOOK STORE Believing that there was a need AVERAGE U for better understanding between Ü 3rd YEAR $11.900 INCOME the U.S. and Norway, Mrs. Parker GROWTH began producing Scandinavian 4th TEAR $13,000 AT GRANTS* B films in 1948. ' 9- A native of Norway and now a citizen of the United States, Mrs. Ott YEAR $14,700 1 'Bated on 1865 Income dele Parker studied language and journalism at the universities of Giants seeks men determined to succeed. Men Washington and California. who enjoy freedom of expression that a decen- tralized organization offers. Is this you? BARNES FLORAL l'^O CalL Mr. Dorr 484.4586 Phon« No._ For Flowers Fresh and w. In the Center for International Programs Fashionable 117 N. WASHINGTON e 215 A N N ED 2-0871 MSU B o o k S t o r e MSU B o o k S t o r e MSU B o o k S t o r e MSU B o o k S t o r e MSU B o o k S t o r e MSU B o o k S t o r e 8 Michigan State News, East Lansing. Michigan Friday, March 10, 1967 riôpês hinge on Purdue win Skaters 4-2 By DE NNIS CHASE State News Sports W r i t e r in the league a r e doing," MSU Coach John Benlngton said. Jim Burns. They've been playing It is possible that Benington And r e m e m b e r . Northwestern Burns at both guard and f o r - will put L e e Lafayette at a guard leads the Big Ten in scoring." ward throughout the s e a s o n . " spot, If Burns s t a r t s at guard. urday, Iowa would tie MSU and Indiana for the title, and go to the NCAA tournament, since the "Look how well the teams that And the Spartans, of course, Hoosiers went after Iowa. over Michigan Twenty-five per cent. have no chance for the title play, 0 Shake it up, throw it around, like Minnesota." Burns is the Wildcats' leading Benington said that N o r t h - a r e last in scoring. But Michigan Benington said that Art Baylor, scream the Spartan fight song scorer and tied for fifth in the western i s unlike any other team State has the best defensive a v e r - suspended last week, would be and pack Jenison Fieldhouse at Northwestern poses some Big Ten. The 6-4 senior averaged the Spartans have played. age, holding the opposition to available for duty against North- 4 p.m. Saturday, and nothing peculiar problems for the S p a r - over 21 points per game and, for " T h e y ' r e a running ball club," 69 points per game. The Spar- western. By JOE M I T C H changes. tans. the past two seasons, has been he said,"But they a r e also big. tans have a 15-7 overall r e c o r d . Then, he said this about the "Our main concern," Bening- the top rebounding guard in the They run a little like Purdue Spartans: State News Sports W r i t e r The Spartan basketball team ton said, " i s whom to put on Big Ten. does, but they're not as fast. Northwestern, of course, is "Whether we tie or win the has a 25 per cent chance of the team that started so fast that title outright, either way, it would Wayne Duffett and Tom Mikkola had two goals each winning the Big Ten title out- some o b s e r v e r s were predicting be a wonderful thing for these to lead MSU's hockey team in a 4-2 victory over Michi- right, but the odds could change a perfect season, 14-0. The Wild- boys. They've given a lot more gan Thursday night in the opening round of the Western before Matthew Aitch goes up for cats won their first four games, this year than was expected. Collegiate Hockey Assn. (WCHA) playoffs. the first Jump ball. and five of their first six. But They're the worst shooting team The game was played at the MSU Ice Arena, before Indiana, tied for f i r s t place with then they slumped, and a r e now in the league, and yet they've MSU with a 9-4 record, hosts 7-6 in the conference. played great, both winning and a crowd of 2,149. Purdue. That game starts at 2 Why the slump? "I think it losing." The victory pushed the Spartan skaters into the finals p.m. East Lansing time, and it is due to the improvement of the The chances a r e 25 per cent. of the WCHA playoffs. They will meet the winner of the is likely that the Spartans will r e s t of the league," Benington Minnesota-Duiuth-Michigan Tech playoff Saturday night. know whether they will play in said, " a s well as the p r e s s u r e Bi« Rush Duffett's first goal put the Spartans into the lead in the the NCAA regionals March 17-18, of being the leader, and the fact first period at the 6:41 mark. He flicked one past Wolver- at Evanston, before the North- that the regionals will be played ine goalie Jim Keough on a close shot after picking up a western game begins. at Evanston." rebound shot by Doug French from the point. Jerry Burns, Northwestern MSU A t h l e t i c Ticket Since the Spartans were the coach, had a different story: "We Duffett's second goal gave MSU a 3-2 lead in the second last team of the contenders to Manager B i l l Beardsley lost two games, to Indiana and period at 17:51. He took a pass from McAndrew and was all represent the Big Ten in the Minnesota, by two points each. s a i d Thu r s d a y t h a t he h o p e d alone on Keough, faking twice before sliding it under NCAA tournament, in 1959, they T h a t ' s why we slumped." t h e r e w o u l d not be a m a d Keough's pads for the score. must win the title outright. For The Wildcats starting five is r u s h f o r t h e e a r l y s e a t s at the present, their chances a r e likely to be: t h e MSU - N o r t h w e s t e r n Mikkola's two goals came In the second and third periods. 25 per cent. game Saturday. The Spartan co-captain gave the Spartans a 2-1 lead at J i m B u r n j — 6-4, 190 pounds, Four things could happen Sat- " T h e d o o r s will o p e n at the 15:23 mark of the second period on a power play goal senior, guard. urday: and was credited with an open net goal in the final period T e r r y H u r l e y — 6-4, 180 2 p . m . , " Beardsley said, 1. Indiana wins; MSU wins. when Michigan pulled its goalie. pounds, sophomore, guard. " a n d t h e r e a r e p l e n t y of Indiana and MSU share the title, Both of Michigan's goals came in the second period, and IU goes to Evanston. D a n Davis—6-4, 215 pounds, student seats available. one by Dean Lucier and the other by Jerry Hartman. 2. Indiana wins; MSU loses. sophomore, forward. T h e r e i s no n e e d f o r t h e Gaye Cooley was in the nets for the Spartans, stopping Indiana wins the title, outright. M i k e W e a v e r — 6-5, 200 e a r l y a r r i v e r s to p u s h a n d 43 Michigan shots on goal. He had 17 saves in the first 3. Indiana loses; MSU loses. pounds, Junior, forward. s h o v e t h r o u g h t h e d o o r like period, 16 in the second and 10 in the third. Indiana and MSU share the title, Ron K o z l i c k i 6 - 6 , 205 pounds, last y e a r . " and IU goes to Evanston. senior, center. Michigan's Keough made 42 saves, with 16 In the first, Beardsley was r e f e r r i n g 4. Indiana loses; MSU wins. Iowa also has an outside chance 11 in the second and 15 in the third. t o t h e 1966 M i c h i g a n g a m e MSU takes title and the t r i p to for the title. The Hawkeyes beat The victory evened the Spartans' overall record at Wisconsin last Monday, to up w h e n " a b o u t 200 o r 300 Evanston. 14-14-1. Michigan finished the season with a 19-7-2 mark. "Once you start to play, it their record to 8-5. If both .MSU p e o p l e h a d to g e t to o n e doesn't matter what other teams and Indiana lose, and the particular seat." Hawkeyes beat Michigan Sat- Fox's Quality Jewelers Since 1917 OVER SPRING BREAK The clean lines of modem styling. So e l e g a n t in t h e i r q u i e t s i m o l i c i t y - s o right f o r t h e b r i d e s a n d g r o o m s o f t o d a y . T h e y ' l l inspire all their h a p p y t o m o r r o w s . A n d t h e y cost no m o r e t h a n mass produced rings, starting at $ 8 . NCAA swimming at I.M. By J O H N LADD MSU A s s t . Coach Richard F e t - however, won the 500-yard f r e e - Indiana lias finished second three t e r s said, "You have to count style in 4:42.3, again bettering y e a r s in a row. State News Sports W r i t e r 200-yard freestyle as his r a c e . the NCAA record. Stanford and UCLA have two Some of the world's best swim- But I wouldn't place any bets on Spartan Gary Dilley is one of of the s t r o n g e s t West Coast m e r s will converge at the MSU him in any of the other r a c e s . " the m e e t ' s best bets to be a two- teams, and could give either Men's Intramural P o o l o v e r Schpllander holds the American event winner. Dilley has won both Southern Cal or Indiana trouble. t À O I A M f SET MONROE SET DUNBAR SET spring break. The NCAA, Swim- r e c o r d in the 2QQ^yard f r e e at the 100- and 200-yard back- On the East Coast, Yale is the Greom'l B « i _ 00 G r o o m s Ring . S3? SO G r o o m i Ring S32.SO ming and Diving Championships 1:41.7 and has already gone an stroke events, the last two y e d r s . strongest team, especially In the I r i d o t R i n f . $ 3 9 SO t r l d o ' l Ring .$27 SO B n d » , Ring SI9.S0 \ will be held there on Mardl 23, unofficial 1:41.5 on a relay e a r - His strongest competition should f r e e s t y l e events. 24 and 25. lier this y e a r . come f r o m other Big Ten swim- Big Ten teams Michigan and FOX'S Probably best known of the swimmers competing in the meet is Yale's Don S c h o l l a n d e r . But on the shorter distance f r e e s t y l e , the 100-yardfreestyle, he runs into some stiff compe- m e r s he has already beaten sev- eral times. Southern California has won MSU finished behind Indiana in the Big Ten Championship, but had more individual champions, carved/ Direct Diamond Importers Though he is a junior, these a r e tition in the person of MSU. Co- the NCAA team championship who will be more important in this meet. his f i r s t NCAA Championships— C a p t a i n Ken Walsh. T h o u g h f o r the last four y e a r s , but may W E D D I N G -RINGS Frandor Shopping Center Schollander won the metric drop in the standings this y e a r . The meet will be swum on Ivy League schools refused to a t - the s a m e schedule as was the Big and 203 S. Washington tend the meet last year because equivalent of this race in the Of the perennial Big Ten Cham- Olympics, Walsh's time of Ten Championship. P r e l i m i n a r - of a dispute over scholastic eli- pion Indiana, Fetters said, ies will be swum on each day at gibility requirements. 0:46.02 in the Big Ten Champion- " T h e y ' v e never been able to come ships last weekend is better than 1 p . m . while the corresponding Schollander won four events in through in the NCAA's before. finals will be the same night at Schollander o r any other swim- I can't see why anyone should the 1964 Tokyo Olympics. He 8 p.m. Admission will be $1 for m e r ha-sbeen capableof this y e a r . expect-them to do it this y e a r . " DON S C H O L L A N D E R was so beseiged by fan mail in p r e l i m i n a r i e s and $2 for finals. Japan that his fellow Olympian, In the longer distances, the Spartan Gary Dilley, can recall 1,650-yard a n d the 500-yard boxes of it in the halls with f r e e s t y l e events, the West Coast groups of swimmers getting to- gether to open it all. Yet there is so much good com- schools will provide the strong- est e n t r i e s . UCLA's Mike Bur- ton bettered the NCAA record in Top gym squads meet the " m i l e " two weeks ago by petition at this coming meet that Schollander may be able to win only a single event. b e a t i n g Steve Buckingham of Stanford in 16:33. Buckingham, to quali fy for nationals IteKOtte By R O B E R T A Y A F I E competitors who will compete and vault. The Wolves had the State News Sports W r i t e r for the national titles at South- best event average in the Big LEARN TO The five best teams in the ern Illinois, March 31 - April 1. Three teams from each region Ten Meet on tramp (27.70) and floor exercise (27.85); t r a m p o - FLY country step' up to the f i r s t p l a - will vie for the NCAA crown, line was their turning point, push- teau of the NCAA Gymnastics with the top eight qualifiers in IRISH ing them into the lead a f t e r four Championships when they c o m - each event in the Regionals e l i - events. pete in the Mid-East Regional gible for a crack at the individual Iowa is the nation's best in Meet March 18 at Wheaton Col- titles. . lege, Wheaton, 111. side h o r s e . Michigan State, Southern Il- Trampoline and high bar a r e Regionals are held in all four linois, Michigan, Iowa and Illinois Illinois' best events. of the NCAA regions to narrow will field t e a m s , three of which the field of team and individual A l o n g with eight individual Through the MSU FLYING CLUB can go to the nationals. The Sa- lukis a r e the defending NCAA qualifiers on each event, the ALL MEN'S region will send four all-around champs, with Iowa the Big Ten men. Spartan Dave T h o r ' s com- champ. petition comes from Paul Mayer You c o u l d f l y to N a s s a u , C a l i f o r n i a , T o r o n t o , C h i c a g o , a n y w h e r e - o u r Southern is definitely favored, of SIU, Bob Dickson of Iowa, m e m b e r s do all t h e t i m e ! Join now and l e a r n how in one of o u r t h r e e , m^H hose are but Coach George Szypula feels now f o u r , m o d e r n w e l l - e q u i p p e d a i r c r a f t . We o f f e r e x p e r t i n s t r u c t i o n H i p ® that any of the other four teams Gary Vander Voort of Michigan and Bill Silhan of Illinois. GUARANTEED f o r all — B e g i n n e r to a d v a n c e d . M e m b e r s h i p i s now open to all m e n and can beat SIU with a good day. w o m e n s t u d e n t s , s t a f f , a n d e m p l o y e e s of MSU. F l y i n g f i l m s and g u e s t s p e a k e r s at e a c h m e e t i n g . L e t ' s s e e you at o u r next m e e t i n g , A p r i l 10. l+mm All five boast the toughest c o m - petition in the nation, both o v e r - Big Ten champ Toby Towson, of MSU, is favored to win floor exercise but will get strong chal- Sign up now f o r t h e P i l o t G r o u n d S c h o o l , a n e c e s s i t y f o r all s t u d e n t Free to all and individually. Of all the competitors that the Spartans lenges from Mayer, Michigan's Fuller twins and Dave Jacobs of p i l o t s and t h o s e w a n t i n g to b e c o m e p i l o t s . C l a s s e s b e g i n t h e f i r s t W e d . n i g h t of S p r i n g T e r m . See c o j p o n b e l o w . , . For MSU have faced this y e a r . Southern is the best, in both quality and depth, and their presence in the U-M. Rings is complicated by SIU*s Fred Dennis. All four of the Spar- I One Full Year Students meet is s u r e to f i r e things up. The Salukis' only weak spot is tan ringmen will be competing— each team may enter five men on E n c l o s e $20 c h e c k * a n d s e n d to 25® to others side horse. Their fortunes rest an event—along with co-Big Ten WINGED S P A R T A N S , BOX 287, EAST AGAINST HOLES A new booklet, published by a non-profit educational founda- primarily with floor exercise, high and parallel b a r s , rings champ Don Hatch of Iowa. Thor should qualify on floor LANSING. and trampoline. e x e r c i s e , vault, side h o r s e , high - R e g i s t r a t i o n d e a d l i n e is M a r c h 23 - -PLUS- tion, tells which career field lets you make the best use of all Michigan's strongest e v e n t s a r e trampoline, floor exercise and parallel b a r s , along with a l l - around. your college training, including CAMP COUNSELOR OPENINGS M M i N ame Address T elephone. Quality Shoes liberal-arts courses —whnch career field offers 100,000 new UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTS jobs every year —which career ( M m . a g e 19 & c o m p l e t i o n of at least 1 year of college ) make c h e c k s payable to Winged S p a r t a n s at A FAIR PRICE! field produces more corporation presidents than any other—what G R A D U A T E STUDENTS a n d FACULTY MEMBERS THE ASSOCIATION OF PRIVATE CAMPS m starting salary you can expect. comprising 350 outstanding Boyc. Girls. Brother-Sitter M Just send this ad with your name T h e W i n g e d S p a r t a n s h a v e just p u r c h a s e d a n e w , f u l l y i n s t r u m e n t e q u i p p e d C e s s n a Skyhawk. For information call 355-3192 o r 353-0200. REGAL SHOES FROM COAST TO COAST and a d d r e s s . T h i s 2 4 - p a g e , career-guide booklet, "Oppor- and Co-Ed Camps, located throughout the New England, Mid- m die Atlantic States and Canada. . . . INVITES YOUR INQUIRIES c o n c e r n i n g s u m m e r e m p l o y m e n t a s H e a d tunities in Selling,'' will be Counselors. Group Leaders. Specialties. G e n e r a l Counselors. From the store with mailed to you. N o cost or obli- Writ«, Phone, or Call in Person THE WINGED SPARTANS Red Carpet Service ! East gation. Address: Council on Op- portunities, 550 Fifth Ave., New Association of Private Camps — Dept. C Corner Of Ann & M.A.C. Lansing York 36, N . Y., Maxwell M A l e x a n d e r . Executive Director M 55 West 42nd Street, OX 5-2656, New York 36, N. Y. v 9 Michigan State News, East Lansing. Michigan Friday, March 10, 1967 Boards mtry^pfinfer \ y • " »a Wrestlers in nationals N C A A track hopes By GAYEL WESCH State News S p o r t s W r i t e r should be MSU's top rivals at the tournament. MSU's top prospects for the have strong possibilities of win- ning or placing high for the Spar- tans in die meet. in the conference at 123, will probably wresde at that weight in the nationals and Don Cox, By NORM SAARI Among these are seniors Gene Washington March 23-25 are Just three meet will be Don Behm at 130, Mike Bradley at 177 and Dale who has been hampered by in- S t a t e News S p o r t s W r i t e r and Das Campbell, co-captains for the Spartans days during vacation for most Dale Anderson at 137 and George Carr at 145, both two time con- juries is the likely Spartan at this year. Both placed in the NCAA meet two MSU students. Three days to Radman at 167. ference champions, and heavy- 160. Eleven select runners from the MSU track team will be getting their last taste, and per- years ago. spend in Florida, or working Behm Is 21-1 for the season, weight Jeff Richardson, fifth in Two extra weights added for Washington, running the 60-yardhighhurdles, or whatever else one plans to do his only loss coming to Dan the NCAA last season, could have the NCAAs, 115 and 190 will haps their most fulfilling one, of the indoor won the event, while Campbell placed fifth in the during the break. Such Is not Gable, a freshman from Iowa shots at titles, as could 152- probably be manned by George season when they compete this weekend in the Hody and Jack Zindel r e - NCAA championships at Cobo Hall in Detroit. •quarter mile. die case for the MSU wrestling State, in the Midlands Tourna- pounder Dave Campbell. Indoors this season, Washington has been team. ment last December. Gary Blssell, who was third spectively. The two day meet, sponsored by the Detroit running the regulation 70-yard high and low The Spartan matmen, who are A senior, Behm was third in News, will be drawing top athletes from across hurdles, while Campbell competed in the 300- currently enjoying a well de- the NCAAs in his sophomore the country. yard dash along with the quarter-mile. MSU runners who qualified for the meet by served rest after running away season and should be the favorite Don Crawford will run with Campbell in with die Big Ten championship, at 130 this year. Dropped to 123 top performances this season will be faced with quarter this weekend. another challenge in addition to the top runners— will be spending those t h r e e days for the meet last year, Behm MSU will also enter two men in the 600-yard of "vacation" at the NCAA tour- lost out in the semifinals. a board track. run. Pat Wilson, who won the Big Ten and hat nament at Kent, Ohio. Anderson has gone undefeated "Running on the boards should be a com- a best time of 1:09.9 for the season, will be MSU has never won a national in 21 matches this season. He pletely unique experience," said sophomore John joined by Rick Dunn, who has a best 600 time won the Big Ten championship title in wrestling, but the Spar- Spain. He has competed regularly this season of 1:11.7. tans should be in the thick of at 130 last season and finished in the half-mile, but will be switched to the The other Spartan competing in the running the fight this season and have a fifth in the NCAAs at that weight. 1,000-yard run for this meet. He has never run events, and the one who will probably be facing good chance of winning. He won the Big Ten 137-pound on boards. the toughest field, will be Dick Sharkey In the Coach Grady Penlnger's team title this season. "There is a lot more tactical running on two-mile. tied defending national Champion Radman is also undefeated and boards," Spain said. "You have to get out in the Sharkey won the two-mile in the conference Oklahoma State and defeated has beaten the best at his weight lead to begin with and then keep it. Runners meet and has a best season time of 8:51. But Oklahoma University, the run- already. The senior from Nor- don't have any good opportunities to pass on the he will need a super-performance this weekend, ner-up last year, in dual meets folk, Va„ has stopped defending boards so the early lead is important." since Gerry Lindgren of Washington State will this season to give reason for 167-pound champion Dave Rein- There is one big reason that runners do not be in the field. optimism. bolt twice this season, and has have this opportunity to stay back in the pack The Oklahoma victories pushed defeated last year's runner-up and challenge late in the race. The dirt tracks Lindgren won the NCAA indoor two-mile last MSU to the No. 1 ranking na- Vic Marcucci and third-place that m:'dwe stern and many western teams run on year with an 8:41.3 and has run the event in tionally by the Amateur Wres- finisher Roger Micklsh. indoors are 220 years long or eight laps to the 8:31.6. He injured his left foot recently in a tling News. The Question: Radman's 19th straight win was mile. But the indoor boards, which most Eastern dormitory room accident at WSU and was limp- Oklahoma and Oklahoma State, a convincing 11-3 victory over schools have, are only 160 yards, or 11 laps to ing Thursday. along with Iowa State, Lehigh, Reinbolt in the Big Ten finals. the m'le. Crawford, Bob Steele, Das Campbell and and the University of Michigan Four other Spartan wrestlers Wilson will also enter as a mile relay team. Also, the board tracks are narrower and the John Spain SIDELINES» Two MSU entries will be competing in the curves are banked. "There is a saying that 'a big man never field events: Mike Bowers, winner of the r ' j Ten high jump and MSU's other Big Ten winner, Spring break with has fun on the boards,' and it is true," Spain pole vaulter Roland Carter. said. "I may have to chop my stride somewhat on curves because they are so tight." Spain finished second in the half-mile in the Big Ten championships with a 1:51.1 time, but And don't think Carter will have an easy afternoon. Bob Seagren of the University of Southern California will be competing. He clear- Super Saturday:' or without extra money? another tie? had clocked 2:09.6 in the 1000 as a freshman. ed 17-5 1/2 to tie the world's record outdoors Joining him in the 1,000 will be Roger Mer- last season. Carter has a top vault of 15-6. chant, MSU sophomore who placed second in Among the other top athletes scheduled to the Big Ten with a 2:11.5. compete are Jim Ryun from the University of Track Coach Fran Dittrich feels most of the Kansas, in both the mile and half mile, and r MSU runners should not have too much trouble Charlie Green, 60-yard dash man from theUni- By LARRY WERNER The Spartans should know by losses by the team that will even- «en the boards, since they have competed in the versity of Nebraska. State News S p o r t s E d i t o r the time they take the floor for tually win the title, otheraspects nationals in previous years. their 4 p.m. game whether they of the '66-'67 campaign stand During the waning weeks of fall will be playing for all the m a r - out. kMSU term, before the MSU football bles or "playing for the tie." team was to meet Notre Dame, That is, they will know If No Big Ten team finished sports fans all over the country Indiana defeated Purdue in the among the top 20 in the press were talking about the tremen- game being played earlier in the polls. Michigan State had worked dous finale to the football season. afternoon, to assure Itself of its way up to as high as third, The Spartans were playing for b e f o r e the team's disastrous pen Finals at least a tie for the title. The the national championship on the other possibility, of course, Is holiday trip. last day of the season. Purdue winning, dropping Indiana Here we go again—almost. Another oddity. No Big Ten behind MSU in the standings. players were selected to the first Cash For Books VjM 'II John Benington's charges have not really attracted the attention Ironic enough. On the la st day three teams of UPI's All-Amerl- of sports fans all oyer the coun- of the 1966 football season,Notre ca squad. try. Nor is the team playlhg Dame played for a tie against the Spartans. The tie gave the Many critics have suggested for the national championship.' that the conference has no But Saturday's game between Irish a'championship. respectable representative for «Ut MSU Book the Spartans and Northwestern the NCAAs. This won't be de- On the final day of the 1967 Store provides,.at least, an Interesting cided until the regionals begin at finish to the Big Ten cage season. basketball season, the Spartans will be playing Northwestern, to Evanston. Barring a loss — or a tie — Michigan State will pick up at tie Indiana for the Big Ten cham- pionship, If the Hoosiers beat For whatever the Big Ten title least a share of the conference Is worth, it will be up for grabs basketball title. Benington has Purdue. Saturday. been joking for the past few weeks " 1 don't think they've ever had "Whether Indiana wins or about the situation. the football team and basketball loses, we'll still be playing for It would be Ironic if the basket- team playing games like this on a championship," Benington said, ball team ties Indiana for the their last days," Benington said in reference to the possibility of championship on the final day at the press luncheon Thursday. a tie for the title. of the season. It would only be It's been an unusual—if not Sure, Coach. That's all we appropriate after the crucial dead prosperous — Big Ten season. need around here — another tie. Apisa meets his match lock by the football team and the soccer tie with Long Island in the Besides the large number of Go Boilermakers! NCAA tournament. S p a r t a n f u l l b a c k Bob Apisa and P a t r i c i a Ann Novak, a junior f r o m Flint, a r e The thing that makes Satur- p l a n n i n g a June wedding. M i s s Novak is the d a u g h t e r of Dr. Edwin Novak, P r e s i d e n t day's Big Ten play especially In- MSU Book of the S t a t e B o a r d of E d u c a t i o n . She is m a j o r i n g in e d u c a t i o n . Apisa, a junior f r o m teresting Is the activity In Bloom- Store Honolulu, Hawaii, h a s been a s t a r t e r on the MSU football t e a m f o r the p a s t two ington that afternoon. If the Boil- seasons. State News photo by Rick B r o w n e ermakers beat Indiana, MSU will Ovv be the winner of its first Big B R A D S H A W T O LIONS Ten basketball championship since the 1958-59 season. the Midst it ihn 0pen w :rls li Call it "Super Saturday." It will. Indeed, be a big day Inking silts NFL Saints get McLenna for the Big Ten basketball. The Spartan game, like the famous ii fabrci s NEW ORLEANS (UPI) — The New Orleans Saints said they traded offensive tackle Charley was the no. 1 collegiate scorer in the State of Michigan during 1965 with 85 points. In college, and depth at offensive running .. back posts. Bradshaw, past president of football finale, is the television of t h e week.» The reserved seats at Jenison yovll flip over BS Good Luck on Finals /TjM It Bradshaw to the Detroit Lions he ran the 120-yard high hurdles the NFL Player Association, Is have been sold out for several in return for offensive halfback- in 14.8 seconds. the only player In the league weeks. And the students—in spite fullback Bruce McLenna. who holds a law degree. He now of finals—will fill the seats that McLenna was used sparingly lives in Houston, Tex. are left. McLenna, 6-3, 228pounds,was last year by the Lions, but he a star at Hillsdale College In was in more regular use by the 1965. That year he rushed for MSU WIVES ninth game, when he hurt his 1,008 yards and caught 13 pass- knee against the Chicago Bears. es for 216 yards. His total NFL offense was 64 The 6-6, 260-pound Bradshaw yards. is a nine-year veteran of National Football League play. He is a The Saints front office said B a y l o r graduate who played three McLenna has apparently made a years with the Los Angeles Rams fine recovery from the operation. until 1960. Since then he was with the Pittsburgh Steelers. McLenna Is 25 years of age, The Saints said McLenna was expendable for Detroit because the Lions had Tom Watkins and Need To Earn Whie Bradshaw will be 31 next Monday. Nick Eddy this year, but the Hours during Finals trade gave them added strength McLenna, of Fenton, Mich., Hubby Learns? The traditional good looks of suits | Mon., Tues., Fri. From 8:30-5:30 Wed., Thurs. 8:30 a.m.-9:00 p.m. london, brussels, amsterdam (free excursion on canals In am- sterdam), cologne (free excur- y Why not earn as a secretary. The demand for secretaries like these say you've got fashion know-how. Exciting Easter Saturday(Exam Week Only) 10 a.m.-3 p.m. sion on river rhlne), heidelberg is high. The pay is good. The working conditions are (excursion to oberammergau, neuschwansteln), munich, Salz- burg (free excursion to salt Most Unique pleasant. Prepare yourself for one of these positions though the short term training courses at Lansing Business University. Learn to take shorthand at 120 w.p.m. in stand-outs that suit all your dress-up needs. Lively color $65.00 Cash For Books mines), Vienna, klrchdorf, Inns- European Tour just 12 weeks. Improve your typing skill. Brush-up on to $79,50 bruck, lucernc (excursion to lnterlaken, Zurich, grundel- wald), Venice, florence, rome Yet! your business English. And you can qualify for a sec- retarial po'sition. Day school registration begins March 13. combos with fabrics of the finest blends. NOW Evening school registration begins March 16. For informa- (excursion to tlvoll gardens), tion phone or visit sorrento (free excursion to cap- ri), lerici, antibes, (excursion to nice, monaco, montecarlo, MSU Book Wrf^ositcheh^Bros. Cannes, grasse), arles, barce- lona (free excursion to the bull- To find out why LANSING BUSINESS UNIVERSITY fights), andorra, lourdes, parls (free excursion to the folles bergere, excursion to Ver- sailles), london. Call 882-2160 ASK FOR RITA 200 N. Capitol 489-5767 DOWNTOWN-LANSING Store 1 0 Michigan State News, East Lansing. Michigan Friday, March 10, 1967 STEVE. P O U * M U >: „• I TOMORROW » S A T . * SUN. (3) H I T S ~ | Former Spartan batsman FREE ELECTRIC CAR HEATERS HIT NO. (1) IN COLOR AT 9 P . M . ineligible due to '65 ruling FIRST LANSING SHOWING weights the leg was 100 per The crack of the bats will cent healed for spring practice soon be heard around Old Col- In 1966. Polisar had a fine season lege Field. One of the specta- for the Spartans, leading the team IN T H E HELL. O F W A R T H E R E 18 tors this year will be last year's In batting with .331 and turning in shortstop, Steve Pollsar. URSULA ANURESS, ONLY O N E P L E A S U R E LEFT F O R MEN.. an impressive season in the field. He has only played one reg- That was Pollsar's last season ular season for MSU, and an as a Spartan athlete, and soon NCAA ruling in 1965 Is preventing afterward he signed a contract his playing another one. mse Pollsar was Injured In a pre- season game in Florida before the 1965 season, and conse- with the Cincinnati Reds. He played for their Tampa farm team during the remainder of the sum- m/v quently lost his eligibility for that year. Pollsar, who graduates this mer. This year, however, Pollsar is looking for a law school (pref- erably near a big league camp). \ w term, transferred to Michigan He still plans to play professional State from a Junior college in Florida in 1964. He was one of baseball, though. the fine ballplayers that have "Maybe I'll try out at Vero been recruited from that state Beach (training camp for the through the efforts of Head Base- L.A. Dodgers) this spring," SEVEN ARTS presents URSULA ANDRESS and JOHN DEREK ball Coach Danny Lltwhiler. Steve said. Asked about this year's Spartan Spring bouquet m "ONCE BEFORE I DIE" « ««O.^moiaurìn RICHARD JAÎCKEI Lltwhiler, a native of the Sun- i,„h »A*l'< SCARÜÜßl ' f'DioifamlOuKTK!»» JOHN DfRfK . » « a »'S « n u i shine State, took over the head prospects, Polisar voiced opti- Student w i v e s such a s C a r o l S t r i c k l a n d , left, and coaching Job in 1964. mism. When it was suggested e v e n c h i l d r e n ( E r i c and J e n a Kay S a a r i , c h i l d r e n of that there were some gaps to M r . and M r s . E u g e n e S a a r i ) m o d e l e d at S p a r t a n THIS FIRST RUN HIT ONCE AT 7 P.M. Pollsar was showing great STEVE POLISAR fill, particularly at third, vacated W i v e s ' annual s p r i n g f a s h i o n show W e d n e s d a y night promise In early practice, and In by All-America John Biedenbach, the first couple of scheduled a' the U r i o n B a ' l c o o m . board. That board did not grant and at short, vacated by himself, games in Florida that spring, State News photo by Meade P e r l m a n Pollsar his eligibility because the he indicated that some young when fate stepped in and raised HENRY SILVA • JACK KLUGMAN home plate enough to break a leg. game was the seventh of the lnflelders such as Tom Ellis and MICHELINE FRESIE The leg was Pollsar's. season. Gayle Franzen are fine pros- ELSA MARTINELLI The NCAA ruling on "red Pollsar started a rehabilitation program as soon as the cast pects. Polisar continued that the move REBELS SNUB U A W ORDER shirting" (putting an athlete on an was removed. The ankle, not the of former catcher Bill Steckley HAIL! injury list, thus retaining his eligibility for that season) states that all grants of extra eligi- bility to players Injured after the leg, was slow In healing. The ankle had been twisted badly In the Injury and as a result took to third coupled with the return of Steve Rymal and Tom Bln- kowskl to second and first should G M may close Ohio plant THIS IS THE WAY IT I S - first scheduled game of the longer to heal. stabilize the infield. The addition WHEN YOU'RE MARKED season must be reviewed by a Through diligent exercise with of Richie Jordan to center field FOR MAFIA RUR-OUT! HIT NO. (3) IN COLOR AT 10:40 P.M. against NOtUM q l a d m e r INPOIIMaTI0N^4S844l9* •LAST DAY- AT 1:25-3:25-5:30-7:30-9:35 will give the team added defen- sive strength. " The team is looking strong in if union rift isn't settled ROBERT VAUGHN in spite of its youth," said Pollsar, DETROIT .f—General Motors in 85 GM auto plants across the The f a c t o r y manufactures STARTS 'VENETIAN AFFAIR' "and If the pitching comes said Thursday that labor disputes country. THE SUSPENSE IS KILLING! TOMORROW parts for 90 per cent of GM's through they should win a lot of A new unauthorized walkout JAMES GARNER MELINA MERCOURI ^ COLOR at a Fisher Body plant in Mans- passenger cars and is threat- games." field, Ohio, could Jeopardize the ened anew with shutdown by began there Tuesday night. It AT 1:30-4:05-6:35-9:15 PAI. But there is at least one .300 factory's future as a key link continued Wednesday night, but IfliKSANDRA DEE TONY ERANCIOSAi IT GRABS YOU, IT HOLDS YOU, IT INFLAMES YOU! rebels within United Auto hitter that they will miss this In t h e automaking production Thursday 75 per cent of the nor- Workers Local 549. year. chain. mal day-shift work force of 1,200 »OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOC An eight-day wildcat strike reported. FRI. SAT. SUN. that erupted there Feb. 15 fi- IfëtESTJ The 26-member International nally snowballed Into layoff of Executive Board of the UAW on 3 COLOR HITS approximately 200,000 workers Wednesday night ordered an ad- b » 1 1 TTT33T7W. Z Z 7 3 F R E E CAR H E A T E R S 1 mruiitiw * Vri ministrator to take over the rebel local, but some 1,200 of its2,700 way out members voted at a subsequent S O meeting to continue their work stoppage. t On Thursday, GM i s s u e d a 0 m 2 statement saying: "The Irresponsible and law- less conduct of certain UAW local union leaders at the Fisher Body plant in Mansfield, Ohio, implemented by wildcat strikes, violence and intimidation, inevi- tably poses the question as to whether or not the continuation of this plant as a key plant under these circumstances is practical THE or possible. "The production of over 90 UNSINKABLE per cent of our passenger cars and the job security of more CHARLIE than 200,000 of our employes In other GM plants affected by the BROWN disorderly disruptions of pro- duction at the Mansfield plant cannot be left to the whim of a JONATHAN DALY- KAREN JENSEN ROBERT PINE - CAROLE SHELYNE A PATTON W E I N R I B PRODUCTION THE NEW handful of irresponsible local A UNIVERSAL P I C T U R E W i t h • stunning international cast, ttarrMf m JEAN-PAUL BEIMONDO CHARLES BOVIN U S U I CANON , PEANUTS® leaders and their followers." JEAN-PIIHNE CASSEL GE0N6E CNAKIMS ALAN« DELON " O u t of S i g h t " Shown F i r s t at 7:22 CARTOON BOOK! 'CHATA" ® KINK DOUGLAS • GLENN FONO GENT FNOB! W I S MONTAU» - 2nd Top C o l o r F e a t u r e - by Charles Ml. Schulz ANTHONY PIRMINS »MONI SIGNONIT • NOCINT STACK MEXICAN CHILDREN'S FILM MANIS VINSINI SNIP WARB ONSON MIXES _ _ _ _ _ ONLY at your collega E. L A N S I N G L I B R A R Y , 7 P.M. Feature 1:20-3:25- SHE'S THE WORLD'S MOST BEAUTIFUL BANK-ROBBER! metro goldwyn mayer r « « *1 bookstore Holt, Rinehart and Winston, Inc. F R I , M A R C H 24 . D O N A T I O N HUäbtt 5:30-7:40 9:50 nataliewxx! as : MORE INFO. P H O N E 485-8920 Georgy's Back for a Fourth Week! M W 8 I A M INFORMATION ^ 488*3008 'penelopi KA ICH.GAN TODAY Shows at 1:00- 3:00-5:00-7:05-9:10 INATED FOR 4 ACADEMY AWARDS! ian bannen dickshawn 2nd WEEK OF WAY-OUT FUN! BEST ACTRESS peter falk lila tedrova lou jawbi J o n a t h a n Winters in Panavision s LAUGHTER, L'AMOUR. LE MONKEY BUSINESS» or THE YEAR! Metrncolor " P e n e l o p e " shown at 9:22 3rd Color Attraction - LYNN REDGRAVE M G M presents A CARIO PONTI PRODUCTION SOPHIA PAUL PLUS H'W Ay** \ flfM | i LOKEM newman £\ DAVID BEST SUPPORTING »CTO« BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY! /y V i./ffi \\ /I' W / I ' i Ui'T NttW \ irt * L / I D Y The hilarious «e romance of a Yank A in France! WALT VVMLI W Uiaivtl V, t V «ss» y present» . . 1 MBIA PIC I M S ' CECIL PARKLR and CLAUDE MNAVraMMlTand EAOTMANCOLOR" DAUPHIN WHWS, Go Hoffe! ~ i Maurice CHEVALIER Dean JONES SUCClltlt Ton MATURE áuOllUfU: M I Yvette MIMIEUX IV " L a d y L " shown 3 r d at 11:00 p . m . OKlCItOI« J SCKfWW er CO PKOOllCf» MAURICE TOMBRAGEL • RON MILLER • ANDREW V. McLAGLEN TECHNICOLOR a,..,.!(, KlfMV. f t ." Ci. ' " : C S66 0 i-M toMM* rjaMes MaSQN 3L3n Bares oMimensae-i LOCATED JUST 4 MILES E. OF MSU NEW S E L F - S E R V E RESTAURANT - - DRIVE O U T ! look lo me name mtOISNC* tor the fines* in Next Attraction " T H E 25TH HOUR" Anthony Qu inn - Vlrna Lisi Next J u l i e Christie in " F A H R E N H E I T 4 5 1 " tamity entertainment. ' Friday, March 10, 1967 11 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Cliff's Notes can keep ASMSU POSITIONS you from falling behind and failing to under- stand classic litera- ture. P&OskiatMi&zt k and all of Shake- speare's plays, Cliff's Stumping starts March 30 Notes give you a com- plete explanation and summary of every scene - in language you can understand. Official campaigning f o r the terpreted as campaign expendi- even parades as approved by the t o p distribution In academic Don't worry about your ASMSU Student Board and N a - tures, limitations on the candi- Dept. of Public Safety. buildings. literature grades - let tional Student Association Sum- date or disqualification at the Students should know that p e r - Cliff's Notes help you m e r Congress delegate positions discretion of the elections review All campaign handouts must sonally addressed campaign l i t - improve them. OVER does not begin undl 8 a j n . March board. be signed by the candidate and e r a t u r e may be sent through 125 TITLES covering 30, the second day of spring t e r m Elections regulations state that filed with the elections commis- campus mail. Telephone solici- frequently assigned sioner before distribution. The tation* is permitted except b e - plays and novels. classes. all undergraduate students c a r r y - regulations also prohibit desk tween 11 p j n . and 8 a j n . 1 Csndldstes f o r member-at - ing 12 or more credits spring st your bookseller large positions on the board or t e r m will be eligible to vote or write for f r e e title list as delegates to the NSA Con- April 12. Vetavisit-67 planned g r e s s may not conduct campaigns Voting booths will be set up In before March 30, according to the the Union, International Center, 'IN 1967 elections regulations. Berkey and Bessey between 8 .„.JULIUS CAESAR Jim Graham, chairman of both the present board and die elec- a.m. and 5:30 p u n . Residence hall and off-campus unit polls Live surgery will be one of the Vetavlslt is a nationally r e c - oasnrasB will be open f r o m 15 minutes main attractions of Vetavlait- ognized program, he said. Over tions review board, said the f i r s t before meal hours to 15 minutes 67, according to Theodore C. 4,300 people attended the open reported violation of this rule a f t e r meal lines close. P r i c e , East Lansing Veterinary house last y e a r . has been dismissed. Ross Mast, seeking a senior m e m b e r - a t - The board is also considering Medicine Student and Chairman of A Petoskey veterinarian a n - CUFF'S MOTH, INC. large sest, reportedly was d i s - setting up a booth In the Audi- Vetavisit-67. nually brings a group of high M M u n y Station Lincoln. N l b r . M S O S school students over 2Q0 miles Honors seniors tributing campaign literature during the petitioning period. torium d u r i n g Mark L a n e ' s speech. Vetavislt-67, the fourth annual open house of the College of Vet- to Vetavlslt. Two Honors College s t u d e n t s have been s e l e c t e d erinary Medicine, will be held Vetavlslt has two purposes, Graham said he had talked with Persons seeking board or NSA P r i c e said: to inform people of s e n i o r s of t h e w e e k . L e n o r e Wile, Princeton, N.J., English m a j o r and Mast, who said only a fact sheet identifying h i m s e l f had been delegate positions were required to submit petitions bearing a f r o m 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. April 8 at the Veterinary Clinic. It will feature exhibits and demonstra- what a veterinarian's work en- tails and to interest high school STUDY AIDS A V A I L A B L E AT MC D O N A L D ' S A L L THIS W E E K ! passed o u t with this petitions. minimum of 200 names by 5 p.m. Robin Berglund, Berkley b i o c h e m i s t r y m a j o r a r e tions on all phases of veterinary and college students In veterin- GOOD LUCK ON E X A M S AND HAVE Graham said If this was all Mast yesterday. If more than seven b e i n g h o n o r e d f o r t h e i r c o n t r i b u t i o n s to MSU. medicine. Price said. ary medicine as a c a r e e r . had done, no $50 fine or d i s - candidates f i l e petitions for A GREAT SPRING BREAK! M i s s W i l e i s a m e m b e r of T a u S i g m a , A l p h a L a m b - qualification will be enacted. m e m b e r - a t - l a r g e seats a p r i - da Delta, and Beta Beta Beta S o n o r a r i e s . She is now m e m b e r s h i p c h a i r m a n of C i r c l e H o n o r a r y a n d a m e m b e r of Senic r C o u n c i l . S h e h a s s e r v e d a s s p e - " B e s i d e s , It isn't feasible to fine candidates right f r o m the s t a r t . I don't expect to In this mary election would have to be held April 6 to reduce the num- ber to four. NOW PLAYING... AT CMMk c i a l p r o j e c t s c h a i r m a n of F r o s h - S o p h C o u n c i l a n d c a s e , " Graham continued. " R e - Campaign procedures include a s n e w s p a p e r a d v e r t i s i n g c h a i r m a n of W a t e r C a r n i - peated violations will, of course, posters no larger than 12 by 16 be Investigated." Inches placed according to n o r - val. m a l University restrictions, All infractions of the elections She s p e n t l a s t s u m m e r s t u d y i n g at t h e U n i v e r s i t y regulations a r e subject to fines campaign literature, s p e e c h e s of E d i n b u r g h in S c o t l a n d . A f t e r g r a d u a t i o n s h e p l a n s up to $50 which cannot be In- p r e - a r r a n g e d In living units and t o go on to g r a d u a t e s c h o o l a n d t h e n i n t o c o l l e g e Got all your teaching. BUTT Berglund, a national s c i e n c e foundation grant win- n e r , i s a m e m b e r of O m i c r o n D e l t a K a p p a a n d D e l t a P h i E p s i I o n h o n o r a r i e s . He i s an o f f i c e r in B l u e K e y h o n o r a r y and i s on S e n i o r C o u n c i l . He h a s s e r v e d a s • THE SENSATIONAL * c h a i r m a n of t h e H o n o r s C o l l e g e b o a r d . He is m a r r i e d and h a s a t w o - y e a r - o l d d a u g h t e r . SUNLINERS rum H i s w i f e , C h r i s t i n e , i s an a n t h r o p o l o g y m a j o r . A f t e r g r a d u a t i o n , B e r g l u n d p l a n s to do g r a d u a t e Limited Engagement - Nightly Except Tues s t u d y in i n t e r n a t i o n a l b u s i n e s s a n d a p p l y it t o b i o - et on the button c h e m i s t r y on a w o r l d l e v e l . ith these timely SKT1B PLUS JUMBO T.G. FRIDAY 4 : 30 buttons that are TOW I f f Campus demand high McDonaldi right on the button! I. Peanut IS. Irish Power 8 . Seve Water 31 Make Love Watch For Opening Of Butter is 17. Italian Power Shower With A Not War The New Coral Gables Of Berkley Better thin 11 Draft Beer Friend 31 Brini Back for overseas study Pot Not Studente IB. If It's Liquid... I I Am A Humeri IB. Come to Middle I'll Drink It Paianism 33. Ronsld Respn LANSING EAST LANSING Beln|t Do Not Earth 27. Gandalf For EMPTY! Fold,Spindle for Fuehrer 10. Moiart Forever President 34. Mary Poppine •r Mutilate 21. Batman Loves Robin 21. Roommate is a Junkie Only seven spaces a r e left for dent will be able to choose two 3. Support Your 22. Sen Before Finals Wanted 35. Frodo Lives Local Hobbit 23. HIGH 2S. Reality is A enrollment in the overseas politi- credit courses in political s c i - 4. Appla Pie Can 24. Support Mental Crutch 36. Socrates Eats Make You Sterile Health or I'll 30. Keep the Faith, Hemlock cal science classes offered this ence. 5. The Governor of Kill You Baby summer by MSU. However, there The languages will be taught Alabama is a Mother Buttons ee. SB*. Orders under $1.00 please enclose l i t for handllni a r e several openings remaining in P a r i s and Lausanne, Cologne, S. Thumb» up or t postef e. B for $2.00 IS «or ÍS.B8 B0 for $B.BB IBS for » I B M down (reversible) r- in the language study program Florence, and MadridandBarce- nicture according to Keith Odle, director lona. The political science 7. Belly I Horatio Buttern, Ine. S. Button 27 West N t h St, New York. New York 10024 of the program. courses will be offered at L o n - S. Unbutton I PIease send the numbers end quantity of each Indicated 10. Ban Buttons Nearly 200 college students don. I I . I Like Older Women NAME —, — f r o m ^ O states have enrolled in The summer study program, I I Marcel Proust the overseas study program so which runs f r o m July 3 to Aug. Isa Venta ADOftESS f a r . The courses will be taught 10, is sponsored by MSU's 13. God is Alivei -ID but Just -17. -IB In Europe by both European i n - American Language and Educa- does not want -11. -12. -13. -14. to get involved -ID. structors and by p r o f e s s o r s - i n - tional Center (AMLEC), and Is a f - 14. If It Feels -31 32- -33. -34. residence from the Michigan filiated with the European L a n - Good I'll • Send cataloi listing hundreds of other buttons A wild stuff. Do It State-faculty. guage and Educational Centers 15. Jewish Power In addition to the normal credit (ELEC) in Europe. L. and non-credit language p r o - B E S T IN F O R E I G N FILMS grams in French, German, I t a l - ian and Spanish, this y e a r ' s stu- STARTS TODAY Drop-adds A Corlo Ponli. Production T O D A Y F R O M . . . 7:00 P . M to be studi ed T O D A Y AT 7:20 & 9:55 S A T . & SUN. 1 : 2 0 - 3 : 2 0 - 5 : 2 0 - 7 : 2 5 - 9 : 3 5 Michelangelo Antonioni's first English l a n g u a g e film. Students dropping and adding courses next term will beaskedto fill out a questionnaire concern- ing their reasons for droppingor adding the course and how in- convenient the procedure is. The questionnaires will be used by the Provost's office in a study of the drop and add procedure for possible revision. MSU INTERNATIONAL F I L M SERIES presents THE JOYOUS STORY OF THE RUNAWAY CATHOLIC NUNS AND THE BAPTIST r . -J COUNTRY-BOY I THESE EMPTY SHELVES NEED YOUR USED TEXTS They Must Be Filled For Spring AND, BECAUSE WE SUBSCRIBE TO THE WORLD'S LARGEST BUYING SERVICE, WE CAN AND DO OFFER TOP CASH. Antonioni's camera never flinches. At love without meaning At murder without guilt. At the dazzle and the madness ol London today. Sell Now For Top Cash SEST « c r o e - <«. siONtr ramie Vanessa Redgrave BLOW-UP C a m p u s B o o k Stores 196] Ot'lM Film Festiv.1 fitiHiad Pvu OMITO «TISIS TONIGHT c o »starring David Hammings 507 E. Grand River FAIRCHILD •Time M a o « " 1 « . N « v n » « « k . Saturday Sarah Miles 131 E. Grand River THEATRE COLOR Across from Berkey Hall « « v i e w , l i l e M o g o i i n . , I.T.V, Th. N e w Torkar. C o m m o n w « a l , Tha Recommended for Across from the Union 7 & 9 p.m. N . w « . p u b l i c . Tha V i l l a s « V o i e » , mature audience* Th. New L.ode' A Premier Productions Co., Inc. Releote Admission; 50C Friday, March 10, 1967 1 2 Michigan State News, East Lansing. Michigan n x i y u MAN NOT PUGNACIOUS Morality based on relationships make moral living a pleasant, Evaluating all our behavior a c - that he has contributed to the w e l - the morality or immorality which pected tests, assign unavailable f a r e and well-being of those who characterizes a particular situa- readings, show you distrust the Joyous experience," because It Is cording to how It affects our r e l a - have accepted h i m , " Kirkendall tion, Kirkendall says. students and make the class ap- in harmony with the nature of tionships with others is the key explains. Cheating in school is an exam- pear purposeless as possible. man, Kirkendall says. to an advanced morality which can This holds true for all men, ple, because It rarely occurs "Out of this breakdown In r e - Although such a morality does lead to an end to war, according he says. " T h o s e who try to Justi- where relationships a r e good, lationships and failure In com- not Include a God a s such, It to an Oregon State University communication is possible, and munication would come cheating does include something bigger professor of family life. fy b a r r i e r s between racial or motivation is high. in c l a s s , " Kirkendall says. than oneself: The fact that war still exists ethnic groups get no comfort " I believe I could take almost ««If I taught this way, I would "Surely the idea of working In today's world shows that men from science." any group of students and r e g a r d - begin believing that all students for the improvement of i n t e r - still live by a very primitive personal r e l a t i o n s h i p s and concept of human relations, L e s - Universal man less of how strongly they may a r e undependable and dishonest," feel about honesty In their school he adds. "Yet I myself would toward a brotherhood of all hu- ter A. Kirkendall says in a r e - mans is a concept bigger than the cent Humanist magazine article. "Racial and sex differences, work, teach them in such a way have created the kind of relation- places of residence or citizenship that by the end of the course they ship that caused the dishonesty." Individual," Kirkendall says. The continuing presence of war do not alter the basic nature would be cheating," he says. Thus, the essence of morality " I t has a power and motivating does not prove man is naturally of the human being," he s a y s . i s In the kind of Interpersonal f o r c e , " he s a y s . "In fact, It is the warlike, he says. • " T o me, the evidence is con- * 'The desire and the need for Cheating fostered relationships which can be e s - concept that religions have a l - acceptance remain, and we have The way to do this is to put tablished among people. ways advocated, though in dif- clusive enough that man by nature ferent words and through other seeks sociality and cooperative no reason for believing this will as much p r e s s u r e on the students And the Interpersonal relation- change." as possible — schedule unex- ship approach to morality "helps approaches." relations," Kirkendall says. Acceptance, not s e l f - p r e s e r - Hence moral judgments and vation, may thus be man's p r i - practices should be based on what mary need. is common to fell men, not on Mommy they do have feet "A man's sense of self-respect and worth comes from the feeling social customs or authoritative statements concerning specific acts a r e right or wrong, what Students boycott school Kirkendall believes. CHRISTIANS DISCUSS They must be made on the basis ORANGEBURG, S.C. (#) — " I bet all he said to the gov- plans for a two-day protest march of how an act affects a relation- South Carolina State College stu- ernor yesterday was 'uh huh.' f r o m Orangeburg, 42 miles south ship, not what the act itself was dents, threatened with dismissal "Our president doesn't know of the capital, were abandoned for peace he says. If they don't return to c l a s s e s , how to be a Negro. He doesn't because " s o m e crackpot might agreed today to "stand fast, and know what our parents have s a c - try to start an incident along the Viet workshop Immoral behavior dehuman- strengthen our position." rificed - and for what? - a s e c - route." izes, creates distrust and decreases an individual's s e l f - At issue in the class boycotts, ond-rate education." The ultimatum for a return to respect, he says. which is 90 per cent effective, is Students began collecting a dol- c l a s s e s Friday resulted from a the readmittance of three s t u - lar for each person riding on a meeting between McNair and the By DAYLE S C H W A R L E R of what it's doing to the people action to educate people about the UCM will participate in the dents who were dismissed f r o m chartered bus Saturday to school's board of t r u s t e e s . M c - In Vietnam," he explained. war and to actively oppose the Week of Mobilization Against 'Sarcasm immoral' the predominantly Negro school Columbia for a march to the Nair called the order "lenient State News Staff W r i t e r Peach, a Hougton graduate stu- Johnson policies In the war. The Mass Murder in Vietnam which two weeks ago as a result of a capital. Williams said original and f a i r . " " S a r c a s m , for example, Is an A student-initiated, student- dent in sociology, belongs to the Lansing-area group was a c - will be sponsored April 8-15 demonstration against student Vietnam Strategy Committee of immorality because it usually operated workshop on the war tivated late last fall. by Students for a Democratic rules. the Methodist Student Movement. c r e a t e s feelings of distrust and in Vietnam has been set for In line with the program to Society (SDS) and other groups. Student leader Isaac Williams suspicion and builds a ' b a r r i e r April 2-7. The Workshop is being spon- sored by the Peace Coordinating The Methodist involvement reaches back to Christmas of educate people on Vietnam, Peach participated in a 75-mile peace Peach said that the difference between the UCM and SDS ap- proaches is that "we would be between those who use it and those against whom it is u s e d , " called the dismissal threat i s - sued Wednesday by Gov. Robert Is Christian unity 1965, vhen the National C o m - march in Illinois in December. he says. E. McNair, the trustees and col- Committee of the University much more interested in a broad- lege President B. C. T u r n e r , Christian Movement (UCM). The UCM position on Vietnam mitte of the Methodist Student Movement declared that the most Important issue facingChristians The m a r c h e r s talked with peo- ple and church groups along the based community movement. "We feel, for example, that if The grading system a s it c o m - monly operates produces i m - moral consequences, because "another ultimatum trying to scare us." possible today? is "fairly radical" but their ap- way, he said. a student were to be elected on then was the Vietnam war. the kind of competition it f o s t e r s "Unity of the christian church is a member of both the World proach is a moderate one, a c - "We wanted people to know the peace issue, or part of it, he Williams, the senior class impairs relationships. cannot be achieved through and the National Councils of cording to Gil Peach, regional Then, the national comm ttee could contribute to student gov- president f r o m Charleston, a d - there were people concerned, who All of our behavior must be Church administration unity, but Churches. coordinator for the committee. voted last June to express sup- ernment. We don't feel that stu- vised the students that many of were protesting the w a r , " he examined to determine its m o r a l - only through the unity of the Disagreeing with Jackson, "Basically, we believe the port for the Buddhist faction in dent government is a completely their parents " a n d many of u s " said. But they found some church ity, and all become parties to w o r s h i p e r s , " Rev. AlfredLong- H a r r y H. Kimber, chairman of bombing should be stopped and Vietnam which opposed P r e m i e r controlled government," he said. a r e being Intimidated through doors locked. ley of Notre Dame University the Dept. of Religion, said that the U.S. should negotiate with Ky's stand at the time. "I think what's happening in threats of the loss of financial " T h e r e is an awful lot of Just said Tuesday night at an Akers unity is improbable, for different the National Liberation Front support and in other ways. (NLF)," he said. "But there is To demonstrate their stand, the comm'ttee created a n a - plain sloppy thinking in the Church and even on the part of Vietnam isn't just a mistake," said Peach. "I think i t ' s a p r o b - Vietnam talks " T h i s whole thing Is the result Hall symposium. F r o m the beginnings of the denominations will alwayslookat each other a s different relgions. no need to grow beards and lem of a rich, affluent culture of the educational deprivation of some of the clergy," he ex- rebel." "We see it basically in t e r m s tional strategy committee to co- ordinate the development of local plained. interacting with a poor o n e . " at Wesley the Negroes of this s t a t e , " Wil- Roman Catholic Church a wall has formed between clergy and The P e a c e Coordinating Com- liams exclaimed. worshipers, he said. A feeling Loan checks UNIVERSITY EAST LANSING mittee of the University C h r i s - of Insecurity evolved as a result Services 10 & 11 a . m . 6 & 7 p . m , " T h e trustees said they were peoples Church CHURCH OF tian Movement (UCM) will spon- golnt to close the college if the of this wall and people have at registration CENTRAL BAPTIST CHURCH THE NAZARENE s o r a Vietnam Workshop April regular routine wasn't r e - relied too much on the word of East Lansing ' American Baptist) 2 - 7 at the Wesley Foundation, clergy. National Defense Education 149 Highland Ave.,East Lansing s u m e d , " Williams reminded a Interdenominational FREE METHODIST Sunday Sghool ltfcBO a.m. 1118 S, Harrison Ave. crowd of some 500 today. "Well, Father Longley believes that Acts checks for students r e c e i v - ing long-term education loans CHURCH Gerard G. Phillips. Pastor Morning Worship 11:00 a.m. Sessions will be held each it wasn't resumed, so now they've , " T h e Church is within the in- will be available at both early ED 2-1888 „ ^ evening at 7:30 p j n . T h e r e is no dividual, rather than the Individ- 828 N. Wash, at Oakland College Fellowship Hour" Just issued another ultimatum." and regular registration. Worship 105°° a - m ' registration f e e . F o r i n f o r m a - ual within the Church." 200 W. Grand River 6:00 p.m. Referring to the president as Follow Highway 43 to Lansing Church School 11:10 a.m. Evening Service - 7 : 00 p.m. tion and transportation call 351- " T o m " T u r n e r , Williams said. Herbert Jackson, associate T h e checks must be picked up at Michigan by the borrower when he r e g i s - Minister: Rev. Howard C. Artz Nursery Provided— ' 'One Hour of Sermon and 7030. p r o f e s s o r of religion, believes 10:00-12:00 a.m. Song" that churches a r e heading toward ters. SUNDAY SERVICES A Special Invitation To All MSU Students at American Legion Center For Transportation P h o n e First Christian Kimberly Downs unity through the various ecu- F o r those students who are not 9:30 and 11:00 menical movements, like the returning, repayment informa- F r e e Taxi Service: On Valley Ct. off 332-1446, Rev. G l e n n A. Reformed Church Church of Christ tion may be received in 101 W. Grand River, East Lansing Chaffee, Pastor World Council of Churches. He "This One 482-1444 or 484-4488 1007 Kimberly Drive, Lansing Administration Building or by 240 Marshall St., Lansing nursery THE CHURCH OF calling Warren McAlvey of the Thing" UNITY OF 332-2559 Welcome Students Rev. Hofman (2 blocks W, of Frandor Business Office at 355-5140. preaching Shopping Center on JESUS CHRIST OF Or. Wallace Robertson GREATER LANSING Christ Methodist E. Grand River) Morning Service 9:00 and 11:15 LATTER-DAY SAINTS St. Johns Student East Lansing Unity Center Church IV 9-7130 CHURCH SCHOOL 425 W. Grand River "Christ In Isolation" "Mormons" Parish 517 W. Jolly Rd., Lansing University C l a s s 10:15 SUNDAY SERVICES 431 E. Saginaw 327 M.A.C. Phone ED 7-9778 t 9:30 - 11:00 332-1932 university Wilson M. Tennant, Minister lutheran church Morning Worship 11:00 a.m. West of Abbott Rd. Sunday Masses Sunday Service - - 11:00 a.m. Meinte Schuurmans, " T h e Authority of the Bible" Crib through 12th Grade In alc-cla Bible Study 10:00 a . m . SUNDAY SERVICES 7:15 - 8:30 - 9:45 - 11:00 Wednesday Class - 7:30 p.m. Associate Minister Evening Service 7 p.m. church bldg. "Love's Necessity" Evening Worship 6:00 p.m. Priesthood Meeting 9:00 a.m. 12:15 - 4:45, & 6:00 p.m. Daily Meditation ~ 12 noon Worship Services Sunday School 10:30 a.m. When necessary Sunday I Refreshment period in Church Rev. Hofman Consultation by Appointment 9:30-11 a . m . Sacrament Meeting 5:00 p.m. Masses will be doubled up p a r l o r following worship s e r - Campus Student Center Wednesday evening Bible vices Minister: Richard D. Billings College Age Fellowship 217 Bogue St. Apt. 1 Study 7:30 P- m * with m a s s e s in the chapel and :15, 9:15, 10:30, 11:30 Tuesday Evening downstairs lounge. (Church of the Daily Word) Sunday, 6:30 p.m. Phone 351-6360 Youth Meeting 7:30 p.m. Those In Need of For Transportation Call Weekday Masses Transportation call for transportation, 7:00 - 8:00 - 12:30 - 4:30 First Church of FE 9-8190 First Presbyterian 8821425 485-3650 ED 2-1960 or ED 2-2434 .. call 332-8465 or 355-8180 Masses at Alumni Chapel UNIVERSITY REFORMED CHURCH Ottawa and Chestnut Christ, Scientist Monday - Friday 4:15 Saturday Masses Sir. 1 nm Stark, pastor 351-7164 709 E. Grand River Edgewood United University A Warm Welcome Extended 8:00 - 9:15 - 11:45 East Lansing Church to All Visitors WORSHIP SERVICE Seventh-Day and Sunday Service 11 a.m. 469 North Hagadorn Road Adventist Church Central Methodist Does God Grade on a Curve?" CHURCH SCHOOL ( j blocks north of Grand River) University Methodist Sermon Temporarily Meeting at Across From the Capitol Worship Services 9:30 a . m . and 11:00 a.m. University Lutheran Church Church WORSHIPS SERVICES 9:30 a . m . "Substance" Division and Ann Sts. 11:00 a m ALUMNI MEMORIAL CHAPEL "Don't try to sell me your 1120 S. Harrison Rd. "Who Is Worthy?" (9:45 and 11:15) 7 : 0 0 P M UNION • ROOM 35 religion" SATURDAY SERVICES SUNDAY SCHOOL Worship by Dr. J . Bruce Burke by Dr. T r u m a n A. Morrison 9:30 a . m . Sabbath School (WJIM Broadcast 10:15 a j n . ) 11:00 a.m. - regular 8:30 - 9:30 - 11:00 Church School 11:00 a . m . Worship Service "How Greatly Did He Love!" (9:30&11-Unlverslty Students) Hour of Choral Music 11:00 a . m . 9:30 a.m. and 11:00 a.m. Crib ——Saturday, March 1 1 t h — WEDNESDAY "Your Authority for Howard A. Lyman-preaching ' "Living Creatively through room through Junior high presented by the Choir SOUTH BAPTIST CHURCH 8:00 p.m.-Evening Meeting Believing" Inner Resources" j High School Group at 11 a.m. i Dr. Harold Weiss, Asst. Prof, C r i b Nursery Edgewood Bus Stops at Andrews University Ministers by Seth C . Morrow F r e e Public Reeding Room 10:40 a . m . - Conrad Hall So Bring The Baby 1518 S. Washintgon Lansing 134 West Grand River Rev. Alden B. Burns 10:45 a . m . - Parking Area For Transportation or OPEN Rev. Keith L Pohl F r e e Bus Transportation Between McDonel and Holmes Information Call 882-5007 LUTHERAN Weekdays—9-5 p.m. "The Seven Last Words of Christ" Around Campus Mon., Tues., Thürs.,Frl. 10:50 a . m . - Hubbard presented by the choir T o and From Church Evenings 7 p.m.-9 p.m. Other Stops Added by Request Each Sun. listen to "The Voice Nursery During Services WORSHIP of P r o p h e c y , " 9:30 a . m . , J a m e s Richard Mitchell, Martin Luther Chapel All a r e welcome to attrnd University Student Group WJIM 1240 and "Faith For ' CHURCH SCHOOL organist A warm and friendly welcome 5:30 p.m. supper and program T o d a y , " Channel 6 Sun. a f t e r - Lutheran Student Center Church Services and vlsi; and awaits you at F i r s t Presbyterian use the reading room. Transportation, phone 332-2906, noon, Channel 2 at 10:30 a.m. , 9:30 to 10:30 « . m . - P r o g r a m 444 Abbott Rd. Dr. Ted Ward, choirmaster for all ages Two Blocks North of Union SUNDAY 7:00 P . M . 9:30 - Holy Eucharist EPISCOPAL SERVICES AT MSU 11:00 a . m . - Children 2-11 y r s 1J:00 - Morning Worship TRINITY CHURCH 120 Spartan Ave. ' Interdenominational 9:30—Children's Sunday 8:30 P.M. 9:45 A.M. ALUMNI CHAPEL F r e e bus transportation 15 to School Hour SUNDAY WORSHIP SERVICES 30 minutes before each s e r Wed. Evening Lenten Worship COLLEGE BIBLE CLASS YOUTH FELLOWSHIP (Auditorium Drive, East of Kresge Art Center) 7:30 University Classes vice around the campus. Dr. Ted Ward, Teacher T h r e e Courses of Study 9:45 MSU Learning Systems 9:30 a.m. Holy Communion and Sermon Refreshments 8:30 and Institute 5:15 p.m. Holy Communion and Sermon Morning Worship casTfliin$TCR p a c s s v r c R i a n C H U R C H 11:00 "Sitting Down and Watching" 73 J 5 Abbott Rd. All Saints Parish COST ¿anstriG. micnican ' E n c o u n t e r With G o d " 7:00 Evening Worship 11:00 A.M. 800 Abbott Rd. M r . Rodney Sargent SUNDAY SCHEDULE D r . Howard F . Sugden, P a s t o r guest speaker Worship Services— —9:00 and 11.-00 a.m. 8:00 a . m . Holy Communion Church School, Cribbery-Third Grade --9:00 and 11:00 a . m . Executive Vice President of Navigators 9:30 a.m. Holy Communion and Sermon 8:15 p.m. Church School, Fourth Grade-Adults, Students—10:00 a j i * Trinity Collegiate Fellowship F R E E BUS S E R V I C E M o r n i n g a n d E v e n i n g 11:15 a ^ n . Morning Prayer and Sermon Canterbury For transportation phone 332-6271 or 332-8901 fASTORS: E. Eugene Williams, Divld L . Erb, Norman R. Piersma By 6:00 p.m. Saturday CALL 482-0754 FOR INFORMATION Sundays 6:30 p.m. FREE BUS SERVICE- See schedule in your dorm. Rev. R. L. Moreland - MINISTERS - Rev. H. G. Beach Friday, March 10, 1967 13 Michigan State News, East Lansing. Michigan f of poetry at had not yet reviewed any of Z e i t - very distinct groups of custo- The manager said that if anyone University proteges. Bob Boyd By ANDREW MOLLISON mers. from Zeitgeist put any quarters geist's six publications, and had and Randy Buschman, read some Executive R e p o r t e r In the brightly lit front a r e a , in die pool table, he'd call the covered Allen Ginsberg's ap- of their poems. construction workers and pump cops. pearance on campus without men- Groat said he was afraid that Wednesday night the Big Ten Jockeys argued about sports and Then Charlie Smith, president tioning that it was co-sponsored five or six of die poets present Club, which combines architec- played pool. of the MSU Folklore Society, by Zeitgeist. wouldn't get a chance to read, so turally all the finest features of a Behind a waist-high b a r r i e r sang folk songs and played the Jim Slmark, a Detroit poet, would everyone hurry along. 16-lane bowling alley and a U.S. Just behind the pool tables about guitar. read some Coltrane-influenced Chuck Taylor, Stormy Rice Air Force hangar, catered to two 200 members of MSU's sweater- Groat complained that a p a s - "rhythm ballads" from his forth- and Ed Harvey played 15 minutes and-knee-boots s e t h u d d l e d sage from Steve Walton's well- coming book of poetry. of applause - punctuated free - around a stage. Groat made public a letter ranging pop Jazz. Behind the stage was a huge from Jack Breslin, University Groat announced that Ken Law- sign: " C a s h McCall a n d His secretary, to an administrator, less and Robert Vander Molen, Greenbacks." But Mr. McCall adding a $50 surcharge to the whose books will be published wasn't on stage. $500 fee for renting the Audi- this spring by Zeitgeist, would Usually, Gary Groat was. torium for Ginsberg's appear- be unable to speak, since it was Groat cheered up the early a r - ance. Reason given: it cost more now after 2 p.m. rivals by telling them that they to clean up the cigarette butts. The crowd, by now down to 100, were to see more than a mere Groat, whose magazine contract- filed out past the art display. miscellany of Jazz musicians, ed with ASMSU to pay all ex- Larry Fritzlan, Maxine Chilton poets, folk, singers and a r t i s t s . penses of Ginsberg's visit, called and Joan Simpson made sales. The entire evening, he informed them, was to be a demonstration the letter unprecedented. Bud Spangler on drums, Ron Groat said to a friend, "This is the last one of these things I Culture at the Big Ten Club of how a small literary magazine English on lead guitar and Paul ever get involved in." An a u d i e n c e of about 200 l i s t e n s a s p o e t J o h n S i n c l a i r , MSU n o v e l i s t S t e p h e n W a l - can survive despite all the forces Cullins on Fender bass kept the The friend nodded agreement. ton a n d o t h e r s r e a d , s i n g and o t h e r w i s e p e r f o r m at Z e i t g e i s t ' s C u l t u r e - F e s t V<. arrayed against it. crowd enthralled for over an G r o a t smiled. "Unless, of S t a t e N«ws p h o t o s by Dave L a u r a hour of surging, complex Jazz. course . . . " Then Marshall Forstat sang Even the pool players stopped folk songs, accompanying h i m - occasionally to listen. self on the guitar. Groat reminded the audience Groat told which stores in East Lansing had decided not to sell the current issue of Zeitgeist. Then Kay Porterfield, looking that a paper wholesaler had cut off Zeitgeist's credit. John Sinclair, fresh out of jail from his latest accusation of Summer jobs open in Switzerland sweet, read poems about pot and possessing marijuana, read Mo- Summer Job opportunities in tour. For an additional fee, the remain in Zurich, Switzerland, The round-trip ticket, in- stuff. town pot poems typical of those Switzerland a r e being offered by student can tour Holland, Hun- for the summer and return in cluding placement expenses, is Gary Groat, instructor G r o a t revealed how many Gabor Yazsonyi, asst. instructor gary, France, Germany, Italy September with the students.This $478. An initial deposit of $150 published in the magazine in A T L , o m n i p r e s e n t hap- printers had refused to print in German and Russian at MSU. and Austria before beginning his way, says Vazsonyi, he can help is required. Interested students "Work," which he edits for De- pening m a s t e r . Zeitgeist, or to trim Its pages. troit's Artists Workshop. Vazsonyi, acting as a one- work in Switzerland. the students with any problems should contact Vazsonyi at 353- Then Gordon R. Moore read Groat wanted to know why the man placement bureau, arranges Varsonyi and his family will that may a r i s e In employment. 3600. some of his poems. John S i n c l a ' r , v i s i t i n g State News didn't point out that a job for the student at a resort .'IT grad lyreman from Detroit, Walton and Ken Lawless, the two hotel in Switzerland, his round Groat asked the manager of the reads his work. campus writers to have creative trip flight direct to Amsterdam club to ask the pool players to books printed this year, were from Detroit, and takes care of CHICAGO PUBLIC SCHOOLS ANNOUNCE EXAMINATIONS stop making noise playing pool. his labor permit and visa which receives received new novel, "No P a s - both published for the first time The manager said he'd close the sage," had first been printed in Zeitgeist. a r e necessary to work in the for High School Teachers' Certificates tables If Zeitgeist would pay in Zeitgeist, and then used in The next poet read some anti- country. $200 rent Instead of the agreed- E x a m i n a t i o n : S a t . , A p r i l 29, 1967 the novel without permission or Zeitgeist and anti-war poems. Leaving for Amsterdam June upon $50. top a w a r d acknowledgement of copyright. Groat told the audience that 15 and returning Sept. 14, the F i l i n g Deadlines W e d . , A p r i l 5, 1967, NOON, C . S . T Then Win Rowe, faculty m e m - student is obligated to work eight ber who is rumored to be a Then Walton read the passage, freedom to sell Zeitgeist is a s which in his novel is a short important a part of freedom of weeks for his employer. Wages behind-the-scenes power in the a r e $85-100 month phis free room James W. Miller, Ph.D„ a l o c a l Democratic party, read story submitted to a literary the p r e s s as is freedom to put TITLES OF EXAMINATIONS magazine by a multiversity stu- together the magazine. and board. 1956 graduate of MSU, recently some Spanish poems In English. received the Arthur S. Fleming dent. Two of Ken Lawless's Free Vazsonyi also offers a 22-day Groat offered to pay for non- Award as one of the 10 " o u t - played games on the pool table. Groat charged that The Paper A r t (7-12), A c c o u n t i n g , 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 standing young men" in govern- 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 S c i e n c e , G e o g r a p h y , ment. The program was established SUMMER SESSIONS IN Largest Discounts in Town at Kramer's H i s t o r y , L i b r a r y S c i e n c e (7-12), Auto Shop, D r a f t i n g , E l e c t r l c Shop, M a c h i n e Shop, Wood Shop, I n d u s t r i a l A r t s (7-12) 'to honor outstanding men under We're Exclusive MEXICO TOOLS! 40-years-old in the federal gov- ernment and to recognize excep- Distributers FOR I N F O R M A T I O N : B o a r d of E x a m l n e r s tionally meritorious work. For "BEAR" and 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 As head of the Engineering Psychology Branch, Office of N a - INGERSOLL-RAND! 228 N. L a S a l l e S t r e e t val Research, Miller developed C h i c a g o , I l l i n o i s 60601 a pioneering research program ASL0WAS 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 k for testing the behavior of men while living on the ocean bottom. Chain $3750 Vises $8» or: Placement Office Chicago Public Schools • 1 The Sealab Program will deter- mine whether and to what extent men could do useful work in an Enjoy a # « » o r a W i study-vacation in Hie cool, mountain Hoists As L o w As 8 SO alien environment, an area of climate of t r i e d ! * Stffllfo i t M e Largest Display of Automotive Tools research without precedent as a guide. Miller expressed thanks to S. Instituto ft Estadits Iberoamericanos incentrai Michigan Howard Bartley, professor of psychology and director of the f k variety ot intensive f f t i t i i e a n d undergraduate courses A U T O GLASS AIR-CONDITIONING Laboratory for Vision and R e - in Spanish l a n g u a g e a n d l i t e r a t u r e , a n d Latin A m e r i c a n OLHIIULSERVICE SERVICE. S A L E S & lated Sensory Processes at MSU. JUTATUIMC CUON Ç F R V I P . F WE A L L MAKES Miller did all of his college eivitiution. ELECTRICAL work at MSU, receiving a B.A. in 1949 and his MJ5. in 1950. ^ A» interesting program of social and cultural activities. COMPLETE LINE NEW AND REBUILT AUTO PARTS He was the first psychologist to CUttct arc smell, e«cb student tus hit own private tutor I or daily receive the Fleming Award in its practice in cc«vcnational Spaniitt, and ««commodaticnj arc arranged 'SERVING GREATER LANSING FOR 5 0 YEARS ' 19-year history. - W h o l e s a l e & Retai I - with Sp«nish-sp*«l 5-3/10 spring t e r m . Call 351-4295. 2-3/10 nished. Private bedroom. $55 per month. Plus utilities. Call overhauled engine. New t i r e s . Scooter* & Cycle* ment available for spring t e r m . Has heater. Needs new clutch. of plants and garden supplies. TWO MAN apartment spring TWO GIRLS SPRING TERM. Lux- Henry Alderman, 35J-2950. • AUTOMOTIVE HONDA '66 50cc. Excellent con- Commission and guaranteed T h r e e to four students. Com- Best offer. Call between 7-9 term. Northlawn Street. $150 ury apartment. $55.00.332-2644 4-3/10 • EMPLOYMENT dition. Red, step through. 393- base. Experience not necessary. pletely furnished. We pay all p.m. 355-7317. 2-3/10 total. 351-6365. 3-3/10 after 5 p j n . 2-3/10 EXCELLENT TWO - bedroom • FOR RENT 0195. 3-3/10 Orientation prior to April 1st utilities. Call NEJAC OF EAST FOR SALE FORD 1965 Fairlane, low m l l e - LANSING. 337-1300. C THREE MAN apartment. Close to house, one c a r attached garage, • SPRING'S COMING. Buy now. s t a r t . TWISS LANDSCAPE • LOST & FOUNO age, two-door hardtop. Good Save money. Honda Sport 50. CENTER. IV 4-7753. 4-3/10 Spartan Hall EAST LANSING - 316 Gunson. campus. Sub-lease until June. furnished complete. For four tires, automatic. Phone IV 7 - Furnished, efficiency units. Full 332-6966. 2-3/10 students, girls or boys. Avail- • PERSONAL Top notch condition. $170 or FEMALE: PART time evenings 5246. 3-3/10 Rooms for men. Approved, kitchen and ceramic bath, hot able March 20. Call ED 2-0811, • PEANUTS PERSONAL best offer. 351-4117, Mike. for counter work at new dry supervised s i n g l e s $10. MALE STUDENTS, supervised. ED 2-1438, IV 5-3033. 4-3/10 FORD 1960. Good condition. V-b. 3-3/10 cleaners. Apply EAST LAN- water heat, air-conditioned, • REAL ESTATE $250 or best offer. 355-5787. Large, q u i e t , fully f u r - Close to campus. Spring t e r m . ONE MALE for two-man house. • SERVICE SING ONE HOUR MARTINIZ- carpeted. Available March 15. 351-4062. 4-3/10 3-3/10 nished rooms. Hot and cold Private bedroom, living room • TRANSPORTATION Avoitien ING. Brookfield Plaza. 4-3/10 water in each. One block 332-6863. 6-3/10 NEEDED IMMEDIATELY. One MG-B 1965, deluxe top, radio, with fireplace, dining room, kit- • WANTED FRANCIS AVIATION will finance C A R E E R OPPORTUNITIES from campus. 215 Louis St. MAN WANTED University T e r - girl to sub-let luxury a p a r t - chen, completely furnished, snow t i r e s . Excellent condition. your flight training. Trial l e s - available through VivianeWood- Call ED 2-2574after 4p.m. r a c e . Special ratel Three man ment. 351-5909. 4-3/10 much storage space, less than DEADLINE Telephone ED 2-5616. 5-3/10 son, $5.00. Single and multi- ard Cosmetics. Write M r s . unit. 332-2902. 2-3/10 WANTED: TWO male students for one mile f r o m campus, ideal for MG-B 1964 white with black top. engines. 484-1324. C Dawe, 3308 South Cedar, suite EAST SIDE Lansing. Wanted, f e - $1150.00. Call 355-0777 after male graduate student or p r o - GIRL TO take over lease, luxury new luxury apartment. Close. studying. $60.00 plus utilities. 1 P.M. one class day b e - MSU FLYING CLUB now offers 8, Lansing. Or call 882-2760. 372-6655. 2-3/10 fore publication. 5 p.m. 5-3/10 fessional woman to share two apartment. Reduced r a t e s . 332- 351-5082. 4-3/10 pilot ground school to all who 6-3/10 MG-B 1964 blue all accessories. would like to become pilots. CHOOSE YOUR own hours. A few bedroom luxury apartment with 0234. 4-3/10 NEED ONE roommate for spring, DESPERATE! 6NE male spring Cancellations - 12 noon one After 3 p.m. $1295 . 332-1705. one other. Call 372-1743 a f t e r WANTED THREE girls spring possibly s u m m e r . $50.00 plus. t e r m for duplex. Cheapl 351- Classes each Wednesday night hours a day can mean excellent t e r m . Two blocks from campus. 351-7640. 4-3/10 class day before publica- 10-3/10 spring t e r m . Send in coupon earnings for you as a trained 4:30 p.m. 4-3/10 4100. 3-3/10 tion. MUSTANG, 1965; automatic; GRADUATE - OR professional 351-9087. 4-3/10 TWO GIRLS needed for four girl ONE MAN needed. Spring t e r m . appearing in State News, Friday, AVON representative. For a p - 14,000 miles; radio; power March 10th. The ground school pointment In your own home, woman to share luxury a p a r t - NEEDED ONE liberal minded apartment. Spring t e r m . Block Private room. Close, inexpen- steering. $1,695 . 372-9429 after Is open to all MSU affiliated, write M r s . Alona Huckins, 5664 ment Spring t e r m . Frandora student for apartment, spring f r o m campus*. Sun deck. R e a - sive. 351-4842. 3-3/10 PHONE 4 p.m. 1-3/10 Hills. 332-4606. 3-3/10 t e r m . 351-7445. 1-3/10 sonable. Call 351-7493. men and women, Interested in School Street, Haslett, Mich- GIRLS: FOR furnished house. 355-8255 MUSTANG T95!\ 289 engine, learning to fly. For further In- igan, or call IV 2-6893. C - 3 / l O APPROVED STUDENTS a p a r t - FOUR-MAN luxury apartment. 2-3/10 Close to campus. Fireplace, RATES bronze. Excellent condition. formation, call 355-3192 or 353- ments for boys. Inquire 505 Conveniently located. Close to CLEAN, CONVENIENT, TTIREE parking. $40 month. 351-7798. $1,400.00. Phone 655-2846. 0200. 3-3/10 NEEDED: BUSBOYS Sigma Kap- Albert Avenue. East Lansing. campus and shopping facilities. rooms, and bath. Unfurnished. 3-3/10 1 DAf si.50 3-3/10 pa sorority. Excellent meals, 5-3/10 Only six-month lease. Is ready IIRFRANCE JET $285 6/20 - new kitchen. ED 2-5355. Near bus line. $80.00 plus e l e c - TWO MEN. Share house spring 3 DAYS S3.00 for spring term occupancy. Call MUSTAKC 1965 fastback 8/23 S.S.S.T. Box 215, Madison, 4-3/10 tricity. 372-3665, 485-0941. term, furnished, parking. 5 DAYS 55.00 4-speed. Burgundy. Call 372- Wisconsin. 3-3/10 East Side Chalet Apartments. 332-6197. 2-3/10 $37.50. 482-7670. 3-3/10 5953 after 5:30 p.m. 4-3/10 MOTHER WITH Infant will c a r e 1-3/10 RESPONSIBLE MAN needed. SPRING TERM - one or two MSU FLYING C t U B now offers for your baby or preschooler in One bedroom, heat, furnished MUST SELL 1962 Lemans con- WANTED: TWO men or will rent Luxurious Northwind a p a r t - men needed for three bedroom ( b a s e d on 10 w o r d s p e r ad] pilot ground school to all who my south Lansing home five $125. Efficiency $95 plus $15 vertible, power steering, radio. entire Avondale apartment ment. Spring. Will deal. 351- duplex. Completely furnished, Over 10, 15f per word, per day. Was G.M. c a r . Best offer takes. would like to become pilots. days. Vicinity Mount Hope and utilities. Also apartment for spring t e r m . 351-7748. 1-3/10 7903. 2-3/10 dishwasher, utilities included. Classes each Wednesday night Logan. 484-9334. 1-3/10 four at $50 each, utilities After 6, 482-6810. 3-3/10 spring t e r m . Send in coupon paid. All units furnished and NEED ONE girl for Cedar Vil- FOURTH GIRL, two bathrooms, 351-6386. 3-3/10 There will be a 5Daras-. Sfearp Hmael East Lansing a red. Available WlC names metal canoe. 351-6605. you're f r e e . Herble, Ernie, Immediately. ED 2-8531, IV 5 - loiterers' 6581. MEN OVER 21, single rooms, no 2-3/10 3-3/10 Petty. SKIS: LAMINATED, 6', used one CONGRATULATIONS TO the new 1-3/10 Yóp member' cooking, across from Abbot Hall. Call before noon or after season. $40. 332-0005. 6-3/10 SEWING MACHINE: new White establishment. George, and J i m . Ron, The Phi Bob, Slgs. arrested Pat Stone, Hilton, N.Y., junior was a stimulating situation every time I went there, WIC, Anne Osborne, outgoing president of WIC, said, "Even 1-3/10 and president of Mason Hall,was 5:30 p.m. ED 2-3870. , 4-3/10 Zig-Zag. Never used. Won prize Three students were the nearly unanimous choice a s " I also derived so much p e r - aside from that, she is one of MEN: SINGLE. Also man In three in contest. Make cash or trade Real Estate the outstanding member for the sonal benefit working on the poli- the most dynamic student leaders a r r e s t e d as they climbed cy review committee-," she said. I have ever worked with." room apartment. Private en- o f f e r . Call Len at 353-3988. o u t of t h e s t e a m t u n n e l s y e a r in the Women's Inter- F RAN DOR AREA. Older home. Miss Stone began working in The outstanding member award trance, parking. Close to c a m - 2-3/10 residence Council (WIC). Lower: living-dining room with near the University Mu- student government her freshman was started last year by the Men's pus. No smoking. ED 7-2663. COUCH AND CHAIR, bedroom fireplace, kitchen with dining During her y e a r in WIC, Miss seum Monday morning year as a member of Frosh- Hall Association. Pat Stone is the . • • 1-3/10 set, 19" TV. 882-7837 after area, study, family room or Stone served a s a representative a c c o r d i n g to U n i v e r s i t y Soph Council. She was also co- first recipient in WIC, She was MEN: CLOSE, quiet, private en- 5:30 p j m . 2-3/10 bedroom. Upper: T\vo bedroom, to the first ASMSU compensation chairman of Freshman Forum Police. announced as the winner at the trance. Double, with cooking STUDY DESKS, small chests, and bath. Partially finished committee and to the policy r e - and co-director of personnel installation of new officers this privileges. 332-0939. 5-3/10 Lawrence Molnar, San- roll-a-ways & bunkbeds. New basement, garage. $17,500.484- view committee, development in ASMSU. She has week, LARGE BEAUTIFUL room. Up- 4932. 3-3/10 ford freshman; James and used mattresses—all sizes. " T h e most valuable part of applied for an RA position in per Classman, graduate student. K a r a s , Big R a p i d s s o p h o - WIC is composed of the p r e s i - Study lamps, typewriters, tape WIC was the associations I had Mason Hall for next y e a r , m o r e and Michael T u r - dents of all women's residence Walking distance campus. r e c o r d e r s , metal wardrobes, Recreation t h e r e , " she said. " T h e women " P a t is one of the mostdynam- halls. ED 2-1363. 3-3/10 portable TV sets, large selec- HORSE SHOW March 3 l , April kelson, Elk Rapids s o p h - in WIC a r e a fantastic gr»up. it ically Interested members of QUIET: R06MS for senior or tion new & used electric fans. 1. Tickets on sale 204 Anthony o m o r e w e r e s p o t t e d by a graduates. Single or double. Everything for the home. WIL- Hall. Or call 355-8400. 5-3/10 University Police officer Parking, some cooking. 332- COX SECOND HAND STORE, on p a t r o l a s t h e y r a i s e d 509 E. Michigan, Lansing, Phone BAHAMA SPECIAL: Round trip 2037. DOUBLE: PRIVATE entrance, 3 r 3/10 private bath, r e f r i g e r a t o r . Five IV 5-4391, 8-5:30 p . m . GUITARS: NEW electric guitar C air - seven nltes at Holiday Inn on the beach for only $195.00. Nine seats left. Call on campus. t h e m a n h o l e c o v e r on t h e t u n n e l in o r d e r to c l i m b out. Powell begins legal action blocks to campus. P r e f e r two and amplifier, $54.95. Electric Call Miss Mary Ellen Olman or The t h r e e w e r e c h a r g e d hearing. H a r t ' s office said, until and racially d i s c r i m i n a t e d c i r l s . 351-5313. APPROVED ROOMS for girls. 2-3/10 bass,- $49.95. Acoustic guitar, $15.95. Banjos, $39.95. AIRWAY Bill Rastetter and Bob Dunn at 332-4911. 3-3/10 with l o i t e r i n g .in a p r o - hibited a r e a and stood jVo. 1 WASHINGTON If)—U.S. Dis- trict Court Judge George Hart House Speaker John W. McCor- mack of Massachusetts and the against them. The court petition was signed Single and double. Some cook- TV, 811 East Grand River. IV 9 - was assigned today to hold a mute when arraigned P a t S t o n e , p r e s i d e n t of other defendants named In the by Powell and 13 other non- ing. Inquire 332-0063. 2-3/10 5214. 5-3/10 Service Thursday in Lansing Mason Hall, was c h o s e n preliminary h e a r i n g in Adam law suit a r e served with sum- w h i t e s , including civil rights DlAPER SERVICE, Diapa rene Clayton Powell's legal bid to r e - EAST LANSING. Lilac Avenue. Animals Franchised Service Approved by Township Justice Court. outstanding member for gain his seat in Congress. mons. The U.S. m a r s h a l ' s office leader A. Philip Randolph, Man- Unsupervised room for rent. t h e y e a r in W I C . said service will begin as soon hattan Borough President Percy $182 per term. New house, kit- ThREE AQUAftlUMS: S, 10, 18 Doctors and DSIA. The most No date can be set for the as possible. E. Sutton and f o r m e r borough chen, bath and parking. 332- gallon; fully equipped. Flynn, modern and Only personalized President Hulan lack. 332-6522. 1-3/10 service in Lansing, providing Judge Hart will be asked to 2361. 3-10-67 ¡BEHIND THE GABLES: single. FOR SALE: English Setter and you with diaper palls, polybags, 31ST ANNUAL SRSSION issue a preliminary injunction Share four-bedroom house with three puppies. ED 2-5762. 3-3/29 deodorizers, and diapers, or use your own. Baby clothes ordering Powell's i m m e d i a t e seating and to call a three-judge It9s what9s three others. $50.00. 351-5305 washed f r e e . No deposit. Plant court w h i c h would determine a f t e r 4:30 p.m. 3-3/10 MINIATURE SCHNAUZERS: two Inspection invited. AMERICAN whether the House exceeded its happening Attendance record set MEN: SUPERVISED. Large room adorable males. Ears cropped. DIAPER SERVICE, 914 E . G i e r . constitutional authority March 1 near campus. No cooking. P a r k - 372-5337 or ED 2-6751. 2-3/10 Call 482-0864. c when It refused the New York ing. 332-3170. 3-3/10 LABRADOR RETRIEVER pups. DIAPER SERVICE, Lansing's f i - Negro Democrat the oath of of- SINGLE ROOM: MALE. Parking. Yellow, males. AKC. Canadian nest. Your choice of three types. The Ingham County Democrat- fice. Containers furnished, no de- ic Women will c e l e b r a t e St. at credit union meeting .Cooking. $12.00. Quiet. Walking field and American s h a r e back- Hart may decide only whether distance. ED 2-5776. 3-3/10 ground. ED 7-7213. 2-3/10 posit. Baby clothes washed f r e e . Patrick's Day at 7 p.m., March a three-judge court should be 16, at the downtown YWCA.Mem- DOBERMAN PUPPIES: sKow Try our Velvasoft p r o c e s s . 25 MEN! APPROVED, doubles, convened and If so, leave to that bers a r e urged to bring guests. $10.00. Cooking, parking, laun- quality, AKC, guaranteed. years in Lansing. BY-LO-DIA- panel the decision to issue the PER SERVICE, 1010 E. Mich- science, were elected to the M r s . Jack Gunther, chairman, dry. 327 Hillcrest. 332-6118. Champion blood lines. IV 7 - MSU's Employes Credit Union said Louis J . Wolter, Advertising preliminary injunction. credit union's board of d i r e c t o r s . may be contacted for additional 5246. 3-3/10 igan. IV 2-0421. C drew the largest attendance In its Dept. instructor and publicity Clark E. DeHaven, assistant The suit, filed by Powell's a t - 2-3/10 information. history at the 31st annual meeting chairman of the union. MALE GRADS: large room, sin- Mobil* Homes Typing Service The session featured an audio- to the dean In the Graduate School torneys Wednesday, also asked • » <*. this week in the Auditorium. that a permanent Injunction be gle or double, private entrance. FAST, EFFICIENT typing. Call visual educational presentation of Business, was elected to the Faculty Folks and the New- MARLETT 30 x 8, on lot in trailer Some 3,500 members and and entertainment by an a l l - credit committee. Issued to prevent McCormack Parking or bus. After 5:30p.m., Shirley Mense, FE 9-2351. comers Club will have a joint park near University. Call after guests, including 2,000 voting University musical variety show The grand prize, a 1967 Mus- from refusing to give Powell the all weekend, 1013 Climax, Lan- 5 p.m., 332-1459. 4-3/10 meeting at 1:30 p.m. today in the 3-3/10 members, attended the meeting. with the Spartan B r a s s . tang, was won by James Petrow- oath of office. sing. 4-3/10 EXPERIENCED MAK'CSCRIPT Union Ballroom. There will be 8 x 40 Roycraft. Excellent con- Richard O. Beraitt, director of ski of 3342 Holiday Dr., Lan- The suit charged the House a fashion show by Jacobson's FEMALE STUDENT.. Double AND DISSERTATION TYPING. " T h e significance of the record dition, carpeting. Near. MSU. sing. He is an engineer , in MSU's action violated Powell's and his entitled "Spring on the M a r c h . " room, neat, $10 week. Near References. Near. Near Kellogg breaking attendance is that the public safety; J.D. Davis, o p e r - closed circuit TV network. $1500. 351-7041. 4-3/10 constituents' constitutional rights Refreshments will be served. campus. 351-5705. 4-3/10 Center. 332-5545. 4-3/10 m e m b e r s a r e enthusiastic enough ational manager of the closed- OPENINGS FOR spring term a p - 1956 48 x 8 Travello on lot. TERM PAPERS quickly, a c - to participate in the management circuit TV network and Marvin proved, supervised. Cooking, Immaculate. After 5 p . m . 332- curately done. Two blocks f r o m and future of the credit union," D. Solomon, professor of natural parking. One block Berkey.IV5- 3668. 4-3/10 Union. 337-2737. 1-3/10 8836. SPRING TERM: Two girls over 20. Nice double, close in. $8.50 3-3/10 Lost & Found LOST: SILVER pinky ring. In- TYPING in my home by f o r m e r s e c r e t a r y . Phone 677-5811. 1-3/10 ROTC cadets to graduate Students grade classmates itials MSC, sentimental value. If one of the 623 students in brook reported. No one grades and examination evaluation, and each. 337-1598 or* 663-8418. BARBI MEL, Professional typ- Commissioning ceremonies nine cadets in seven branches: Call 353-8039. 3-3/10 Public Speaking 101 doesn't like himself, he added. centralized course arrangement. 3-3/10 ist. No job too large or too for nine Army and five Air F o r c e one to the Artillery Corps; one LOST GREEN parka, Saturday his grade this t e r m , he can put The idea for this program Student grading was started ^ l V A ' I H ROOM and bath. P r i - s m a l l . Block off campus. 332- ROTC cadets will be conducted to the Ordnance Corps; one to night Pizza Pit. Please return part of the blame on his c l a s s - arose when students complained last y e a r , Lashbrook said, but vate entrance, clean, quiet, 3255. c in the Union Ballroom at 1 p.m. -the Signal Corps; one to Medical this is the first term that the glasses in pocket. No questions mates. that they did well before their graduate student p r e f e r r e d . Call TYPING. FAST service. Guar- Sunday. Services Cflrps; two the the In- student evaluations have been asked. B105 Bailey. 3-3/9 anteed accuracy. Electric type- For the f i r s t time, student classmates but became nervous ED 2-1993 after 4:30 p.m. The commissioning cere- telligence Corps; and three to actually computed with the evaluations will be figured Into in front of an instructor. 3-3/10 LO£T: ONE 8 " x 12" leather w r i t e r . All style sheets. 351- monies a r e the culmination of the Corps of Engineers. grades. each student's final grade for Lashbrook pointed out that stu- MEN: SUPERVISED doubles, bound picture album. Great sen- 6135. 8-3/10 four y e a r s of ROTC study for Of the nine cadets, two will the course. dent grading enables an in- cooking, parking, two blocks timental value. Call Suzanne, PAULA ANN HAUGHEY, typist. cadets. be honored as distinguished m i l - Each student's evaluation of the structor to work with twice as from Berkey. $9 & $10. 332- 337-9748. 1-3/9 IBM Selectric and Executive. Of the five Air Force cadets 4978. 4-3/10 LOST: MATH 120 Looseleaf bln- Multilith offset printing. P r o - to be commissioned, one will itary graduates. _ ' ' speeches delivered during the many students. Under the plan, Drill team fessional thesis typing. Re- attend undergraduate pilot t r a i n - Brig. Gen. Carson R. Niefert, term will count about 11 percent an instructor alternates between MAN - LARGE single or small d e r . East Lansing a r e a . 372- q u a r t e r m a s t e r general for the of the total grade, said William two groups of 25 students. In his double, three blocks from Union. 2212. 2-3/10 sumes page. 337-1527. printed — $3.00/100 ing while the remaining four will assume administrative positions. Michigan National Guard, will Lashbrook, a s s t . professor of absence, panels of students eval- gets second 337-7002 after 4:30 p.m. LOST: RING, sentimental value. TYPING DONE in my home, 2-1/5 The Army will commission address the cadets. speech and educational develop- uate the speeches of other stu- Reward. No questions. 351- dents with predetermined c r i - The Spartan Guard Drill Team 3-3/10 blocks from campus. 372-9527. ment. 7624. 1-3/10 teria. placed second in a field of 11 in EXCELLENT, ¿PAClOUS, ap- When preliminary grades were the Gannon Invitational Drili Meet C For example, 10 instructors, proved for boys. Private en- Personal ATTENTION STUDENTS: will do issued in February, the grades that students received from their a course chairman, and several at Gannon College, E r i e , P a . , trance, bath, two bedrooms, study room. 337-9794. 3-3/10 LEAD SINGER, organist, sax 'MALE STUDENTS rooms - sin- wanted for established group. J5161. Tom, IV 5-0761. 1-3/10 your ryping in my home. 882- ANk BROWN, typist and multl- . 3-3/10 Who's Whose classmates were almost identical graduate assistants taught 1,067 to those turned in by the in- students in 1960-61, This y e a r , structors. the same number of teachers recently. - •* The team will compete for the Michigan championship at the gle, double. Near Union. Cook- will work with 2,435 students. Titan Invitational April 1 in De- lith offset printing, d i s s e r t a - P INNINGS Barbara Rakoczy, Dearborn, ing. 314 Evergreen. 332-3839. PERFECT FOR term parties. The students proved to be f a i r Lashbrook said the increased troit. The versatile BUDSPANGLER tions, theses, manuscripts, gen- Michigan Junior Gamma Phi Beta 3-3/10 eral typing. IBM, 16 years ex- Marsha Bazuln, Sparta, Michigan to Kirk Louis, Unionville, Mich- and accurate graders,Lashbrook load is possible because of the The guard will also enter the ONE MALE student 21 years or BAND. 337-0956. 2-3/10 perience. 332-8384. C Freshman to Don Larson, St. igan Junior Beta Theta P i . said. Students generally graded student evaluation plan and other National Drill Championship April older. $10.00 per week. 614 THE LOOSE ENDS: The sound TYPING - tHESES, term papers, Louis, Missouri Senior Pi Kappa higher than p r o f e s s o r s , but it was new techniques. Some of these 7 in Washington, D.C., and will Sunset Lane, East Lansing. that makes you want to do it. PhL uniformly higher without any a p - changes include videotape l e c - take part in the National Cherry manuscripts, reports, by ex- Dotti Aardema, Central Lake, 3-3/10 Wild I Tom, 485-0761. C parent discrimination, Lash- t u r e s . data processing of grades Blossom Festival parade. perienced secretary. June Huff- Michigan Freshman to Dennis Cheryl Osborn, Ashley, Michigan MODEL TWENTY man. Phone 339-2337. 3-3/10 Murphy, Wyoming, Michigan Jun- For Sale LCC Sophomore to Bob Chapko, HELP! WANTED: TYPING to do In my Ashley, Michigan Senior Alpha ior Sigma Phi Epsilon. BICYCLE SALES, rentals and home. Excellent typist. Close Gamma Rho. THE services. Also used. EAST Lynda M. Johnson, Detroit,Mich- LANSING CYCLE, 1215 E. M u s t pay r e n t . in. Evelyn Elg, 1532 River T e r - r a c e Drive, East Lansing. ED 2 - Sandy Dereere, Grosse Pointe, igan Freshman to Barry L. Grand River. Call 332-8303. C Peterson, Kenmore, New York 4740. 2-3/10 Michigan Freshman to Kyle Con- APARTMENT SIZE electric Golf c l u b s f o r s a l e . Junior Sigma Chi. A s t e r e o m u s i c s y s t e m of a n e w ] v e r s e , Union City, Michigan Sen- range and Frigidaire r e f r i g e r - Transportation ior Alpha Gamma Rho. and d i s t i n c t i v e kind. The m o d e l ator. Also Maytag automatic Mary Ann Clark, Flint, Michigan First offer RIDER TO western Montana. t w e n t y o f f e r s all t h e , washer, completewithall'hoses, Sophomore to Steven M. Dobson, takes them. Spring break. Alan, 351-9267. important advantages fittings, and attachments. Used 3-3/10 Transportation Quincy, Michigan Junior Sigma of high p e r f o r m a n c e only eleven months. $175 for the Chi. complete group, or will sell WANTED: ROUND trip to Fort GIRL WANTS RIDE to Aspen s o u n d e q u i p m e n t in a Mary Merchant, Union City, units separately. Phone 487- Call 351-7767 Knox, Kentucky. Phone 355- leaving after March 17. 355- functional instrument Michigan Sophomore to Lynn 3096. 3-3/10 WEDDING VEILS-imported silk. 3300, extension 24. After 5:30 7015. 3-3/10 f u l l y s u i t e d to f i t WANTED: TWO r i d e r s to FIorE- Robblns, Union City, Michigan COLONIAL STUDIO couch Wide selection of head pieces. p.m., 485-0712. 2-3/10 g r a c e f u l l y into any da. Leaving March 17. Inex- Junior Alpha Gamma Rho. $59.50, dinette sets, used bed Also invitations, napkins, in- WANTED: SOMEONE to drive setting, including a s p a c e springs and mattresses, roll- f o r m a l s . Phone any time for several boxes from Boston to pensive. 355-3579. 1-3/10 ENGAGEMENTS too l i m i t e d f o r e i t h e r a a-way beds, chests. Cheap gas appointment. BECK'S STUDIO, MSU for visiting professor over FLORIDA. RIDERS needed. conventional console or ranges, metal kitchen cabinets, spring break. Call 353-3291 or Leave March 22. Return, ap- Joan Gray, Bloomfleld Hills, 882-7667. 5-3/31 Michigan Senior Gamma Phi Beta sound s y s t e m . electric room heaters with fans. THE SOUNDS and the Sondettes 355-6590. 2-3/10 proximately April 4th. Paul, Portable electric sewing m a - to Bill Green, Birmingham, T h e m o d e l t w e n t y is a r e now accepting bookings for WANTED: RIDERS to P o r t s - 351-6885. 3-3/10 Michigan University of Detroit chines. Stereo and transistor mouth. New Hampshire. Leav- a p o w e r f u l and v e r s a t i l e spring t e r m . 351-9155. C Dental Delta Sigma Delta. portable record players-used. CftOOVY SOUNDS at MSU . . . . ing March 18th. 337-7237. Wanted i n s t r u m e n t that can s e r v e AM-FM radios. Typewriters, 2-3/10 BLOOD DONORS needed. $7.50 a s t h e b a s i s of a c o m p l e t e $29.50-$300. Electric adding THE LIGHT BRIGADE. Call Jessica Hartman, Mt. Pleasant, for all positive, Rh negative e n t e r t a i n m e n t c e n t e r . It c a n machines. WILCOX SECOND 355-6957. 5-3/10 WANT RIDERS to Florida and Michigan Senior Gamma Phi Beta r e t u r n . Spring break. Phone with positive factor - $7.50, to William R. Woodward, Phil- play r e c o r d s , conventional or ' HAND STORE. 509 East Mich- APPOINTMENT FOR passport or 351-7377. 2-3/10 A negative, B negative, and adelphia, Pennsylvania Senior. m u l t i p l e x FM b r o a d c a s t s , a i d igan. IV 5-4391. C application pictures now being AB negative - $10. O negative - taken at HICKS STUDIO. 24 FLORIDA: TWO riders needed ( t h r o u g h i n p u t s f o r e x t e r n a l equif UP TO 1/3 and more savings, $12. MICHIGAN COMMUNITY hour or same day service. ED2- t o / f r o m F t . Lauderdale. Leave Linda Dennis, Ludington, Mich- t a p e r e c o r d i n g s , AM B r o a d c a s t s , comparison welcomed. OP- BLOOD CENTER. 1427 East 6169. C approximately March 18. Call igan Sophomore to Robert Roden- s o u n d p o r t i o n of t e l e v i s i o n p r o g r a r TICAL DISCOUNT, 416 Tus'sing Michigan Avenue. Hours: 9-3:30 THE PERSON to call for banda Amy, 351-6184. 2-3/10 barger, Niles, Michigan Sopho- s e c o n d s e t of s p e a k e r s in a n o t h e r r o o m , a n d it h a s o u t p u t s f o r lisTening o v e r Building; phone IV 2-4667. Monday and Tuesday; 12-6:30 -TERRY MAYNARD, 482-4590, TWO RIDERS needed. Vail. Share Thursday. 489-7587. more Alpha Phi Omega. C-3/10 C h e a d p h o n e s a n d f o r m a k i n g t a p e r e c o r d i n g s of r e c o r d s o r b r o a d c a s t s . 482-4548. __C gas. Leaving 18th. Bill, 351- We i n v i t e you to c o m e in and i n s p e c t t h e CLEARANCE SALE: Entire stock Janie Zabel, Chicago, Illinois 4490. 3-3/10 TWO-DRAWER Hie cabinet. of Concord stereo and portable Peanuts Personal Phone 351-5543 or 355-8311. Junior, University of Wisconsin M o d e l T w e n t y a n d all t h e f i n e K L H . a u d i o p r o d u c t s . tape r e c o r d e r s . MAIN ELEC- I^LORIDA: MIAMI, Lauderdale, 1-3/10 to Jack B r e s s , Chicago, Illinois T . J . I Found my rooftop. 1 love TRONICS, 5558 South Pennsyl- Daytona, Bahamas. Leaving LEAD SINGER, organist, sax Senior. you, C.J. 1-3/10 vania Avenue, Lansing. 882- spring break. Inexpensive. 351- wanted for established group. HEAR T H E AT MARSHA & DON, Congratulations 6473 or 353-3021. 13-3/10 Connie Bromley, Sparta, Mich- 5035. C Tom, IV 5-0761. 1-3/10 ANTIQUE TRUNKS for sale. on your pinning. Christy, Linda, RlDERS WANTED to Fort igan Sophomore to Ken Hunt, Beautifully papered, painted, Marian, and P a m . 1-3/10 Lauderdale. . Leaving March GRADUATE STUDENT withfam- Baldwin, Michigan Senior, Uni- DEAR MANIE: Happy 1st, March 18th. 353-2213 or 351-7485. ily needs two or three bedroom versity of Michigan. THE DISC SHOP and decorated. By appointment 19th. Many better to come. Love, apartment or house for spring (DISCOUNT RECORDS) TU 2-9157. 2-3/10 1-3/10 J.C.- 1-3/10 RIDERS WANTED to Florida. t e r m . Call 355-4167. 2-3/10 Audree Brudick, Huntington WEDDING and practical 323 EAST GRAND RIVER, E.L. AL, WE'LL miss you. Come Leave March 12. 337-2484. BADLY NEEDED: chests, desks, Woods, Michigan Junior Alpha shower gifts, complete line of visit u s . Peter and the North- 3-3/10 beds, most any good used f u r - Epsilon Phi to Strart Mitnick, OPEN MON.-FRI. 9 A.M. TO 9 P.M., SAT. 9 A.M. TO 6 P.M. basket-ware. See ACE HARD- lings. 3-3/10 FLYING PRIVATE plane to Nas- niture or appliances of any kind. Highland P a r k , New J e r s e y Sen- WARE'S selections. 201 East ANN: HERE it isl Your very own sau, Florida. Round trip, BENNIE'S, 109 E. South Street. ior Phi Sigma Delta, University PHONE 351-5380 t Grand River, a c r o s s from - Happy Birthday. S.R. 1-3/10 $125.00. 351-4361. 1-3/10 IV 4-3837. We pay cash. 5-3/10 of Michigan. Union. Phone ED 2-3212. C F r i d a y , March 10, 1967 1 6 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan W E T PRESS TALKS ? rV féa/pi LBJ avoids specific answers • He said his view of Commu- Communist maneuvers is to put tlons, that we a r e prepared to part- ofi North »T . L Vietnam," II he added, saying he thinks the North Viet- STORE FOR MEN ( c o n t i n u e d f r o m p a g e one) nist calls for halting the bomb- pressure on the United States to talk about conditions or a final division after division" of settlement," Johnson replied. namese are seeking to win a p r o - ing and talking about peace pos- halt bomblmg of North Vietnam. paganda victory since they cannot Communist forces come down sibilities Is that "the other side On the Schleslnger statement, But he added he does not think " w e can stop half a w a r " win a military victory. into South Vietnam from the Is struggling desperately to try Johnson said; Asked about reports that Am- North. to get a propaganda victory - when the enemy continues to " I have tried to make it clear attack U.S. bases, kill U.S. p e r - bassador Henry Cabot Lodge Johnson added that in the fail- to permit them to win here what wants to be relieved In Viet- they cannot win out there." to all the people of the country sonnel and try to seize South ure to get negotiations started nam, Johnson said, " T h e r e is so far "the problem Is not with Administration officials have and of the world that we are Vietnam by force. no truth in the rumor that I am this government." said that one obvious aim of prepared to talk without condl- looking for a successor." He said the United States is ready to go to the conference On the issue of the Central room any day, but it is not fair Intelligence Agency and its sup- Vote may restrict political spending to ask the United States to sit port of private groups, Johnson with hands tied and let division said nobody is happy to see the after division come through from country upset about such a s i t - the North. uation. It would be better if e v - ( c o n t i n u e d f r o m page one) "If we are going to participate have a student mandate," Sink eryone was agreed on a wise stipulation into the constitution in NSA, we should do so fully," said. • "We a r e willing to talk uncon- course of action, he said, but he might give it more permanence Sink said. He said that the entire question ditionally or unconditionally - but regrets some of the Intemperate than it now has as part of the of MSU participation in areas we are not willing to ask Ameri- statements that have been made. He commented that while the with political and social impli- can boys to do something when He added he has asked "the Code of Operations. initial cost of joining NSA is cations is involved In the NSA the other side does nothing," best people in the government" Jim Sink, ASMSU member-at- $285 a year, convention costs question. Johnson said. to study the matter and he e x - large and the only student board might run the total up to more "My only concern is that the Johnson was asked if time is pects a report about March 20. member to vote against reaffil- than $1,000. reaffiliation q u e s t i o n wasn't now on our side in Vietnam. Questioning turned back to iation with NSA, introduced the "If ASMSU is going to spend taken to the students In the first " I think it is very difficult to Vietnam again and Johnson said motion which will poll student that much money at least it should placet" Sink said. speculate" on things like that, the United States wants "Just opinion on NSA involvement. he replied. almost any reciprocal action" " I no longer see any possibili- on the part of the Communists to get peace talks started. C of C hits price study ty of a military victory on the viduals worried over their in- (continued f r o m page one) The publicity given the study come. of Commerce. Jonas said he has has followed some "impliedgen- Jonas emphasized the wording not yet seen the United Students eralizations that East Lansing used concerning the shoe repair prices are high and we haven't price study in full either. store incident. He said it was yet been given the evidence of not a matter of "lowering or "The idea of dragging cases this," Jonas said. even adjusting" prices, but of out one at a time is only per- petuating a ridiculous situation," Jonas noted that despite the employing an additional line of Jonas commented. "Where will coverage given the shoe repair service. " I t ' s not like selling it stop?" store incident, the board of d i - $40 dresses for $20, but like Jonas said the best plan now would be for ASMSU to present a full report of facts and figures rectors had some "good discus- sions on the matter." He said he hoped this would be the case in adding a line of $20 dresses to your stock." Jonas said the Chamber of Campus Center the future with the whole report. Commerce doesn't intend to d i s - to the chamber's board of di- rector's. Merchants on the board have continue communication and expressed a general concern for progress. He concluded that he the business of East Lansing, would like to get things back on Romney Jonas said. He stressed that this concern has been iorthe business community and not just indi- a "good faith" basis which would be more beneficial to the student body and merchants. (continued f r o m page one) not the U.S. government." Romney said'British Honduras, which is soon to become the in- Vietnam dependent nation of Belize, is an ( c o n t i n u e d f r o m p a g e one) is trimming the flow of supplies excellent starting point for his and "convincing Hanoi that a penetrate these areas. "self-help" doctcine. price must be paid for infiltrat- George C. Price, premier of Other such zones Just as tough are in the delta. The U Mlnh ing South Vietnam." British Honduras, was at the conference, helping to line up forest has the highest population aid in economic and technical of king cobras in the world—and development for his country. a high number of VietCong. There This view also was behind the orders for the Navy to begin offshore bombardment of North any weather is just are others stretched from the Vietnam and for the Army's 175 "It is my conviction that we Plain of Reeds in the western mm c a n n o n to start shelling don't begin to realize the impor- tance of making programs like this one succeed," Romney said. delta through the mountain high- lands to the north. across the 17th Parallel. The U.£>. strategy will be to right for London Fog Americans believe the Com- "If the United States cannot munists are now attempting to exert maximum pressure on the make itself relevant to the hopes build up strength in these zones, Communist forces wherever they Sunny s k i e s . . . o v e r c a s t . . . o r p o u r i n g down r a i n . and revolutionary expectations of to tighten their over-all combat can be found, to concentrate pac- the people of Latin America, with structure and "flesh it out" and The London Fog r a i n c o a t is your i n s u r a n c e against ification e f f o r t s in "priority whom we share common tradi- meantime plan to continue hit- a r e a s " and to continue efforts t h e f l i c k l e n e s s of s p r i n g w e a t h e r . W e a r it in t h e tions, common interests and a and-run tactics. to build the nation's economic common religion," he said, "we m o r n i n g . . . and c o m e w h a t m a y , y o u ' r e r e a d y . The bombing, in Westmore- and political structure. surely cannot expect to succeed land's view, is essential and he The U.S. military seems hope- The popular Poole model has split shoulder, single- anywhere else." ful that this program will bear intends to keep it up, even though b r e a s t e d fly f r o n t , s l a s h - t h r u p o c k e t s , s t a n d up Romney said the U.S. has de- Washington may not permit it dramatic fruit in 1967, but with layed too long in recognizing this to be increased. gradual results—and w i t h c a s - c o l l a r , c e n t e r v e n t and s t o r m t a b . C o m p l e t e l y w a s h - fact. "Time is not with us in Latin ualties. able. Black or tan. 37.50 In Saigon's view the bombing America," he said. "The p r e s - sures of population and revolu- tion are increasing." Romney emphasized that for- STORE FOR MEN-STREET LEVEL EAST LANSING eign nations resent UJ5. domina- tion of foreign relations. Eco- nomic partnerships, undertaken by private citizens, is the an- swer, he said. "The specter of 'yankee im- Arnold Palmer perialism' and'dollar diplomacy* still hangs heavy over the rela- hopsack sport tions between the United States and Latin America," he said. coats AUS1 ruling S Ä Trimly styled, excellently (continued f r o m page one) lng concern over any Issue as SV* t a i l o r e d in Important to our University com- exclusive 2-ply munity as the war in Vietnam, did lend greatly to the benefit of the Fortrel* student body, the prestige of the University, and the welfare of poly e s t e r - c o t t o n the general public." The partial rationale ex- b l e n d with a pressed by the minority was, "In the dissenting opinion of w o r s t e d look. the minority (Steve Rossiter, Farmington junior, and Dennis Milinak, Valley Stream, N.Y., NO ADULTS ADMITTED UNLESS lazy daisy Light, comfortable Junior), the allocation of $50 ACCOMPANIED and w r i n k l e - by the student board to James BY R E S P O N S I B L E Graham was in fact unconstitu- tional. The minority is in agree- PARTY UNDER work denims with r e s i s t a n t with TWENTY-ONE ment with the technical aspects popular soft of the majority opinion; I.e., the portions of the constitution which a dainty new look shoulder. Host are pertinent In this case. "The minority of the court of new colors bases Its opinion also on Article Wear-now fun c o - o r d i n a t e s t h a t III, section 7 of the constitution. in sizes for m u l t i p l y and d i v i d e a s y o u r m o o d It is the feeling of the minority that in this specific case, and / c h a n g e s . All c o t t o n d e n i m in n a v y regulars, short indeed in general, the allocation .E X C L U S I V E „ with white d a i s y d o t t i n g , in W e s t - and l o n g s . of student tax money to send a non-representative individual to e r n look b e r m u d a s . 9.98 M a t c h i n g a conference Is not in the general work j a c k e t , 1 2 . 9 8 . Navy d o u b l e 49.95 welfare of the student body and Michigan State University." voile s h i r t of p o l y e s t e r - c o t t o n g o e s STORE FOR MEN-STREET Complete rationale of the white at c o l l a r and c u f f s and d a i s y court's opinion will be Issued b u t t o n e d . 9.98. J r . s i z e s . LEVEL EAST LANSING Monday. Neither Graham nor Durell 135 EAST GRAND RIVER was available for comment.