Monday STAT E Cloudy Inside today... MICHIGAN . . . - m i t s Issued, the parking space available tary General U Thant said Friday that an erance, understanding and fresh thinking ness, to a new position of involvement and w i l l not be adequate to accommodate the institution of higher education should be on national and international problems are leadership in the w o r l d . " students. free f r o m any form of overt or covert the key to nothing less than human sur- He said everyone, especially the young, A bus service operating f r o m 6 a . m . to political pressures. vival." should involve themselves with the insti- voters to decide today 1 a . m . Monday through Thursday, f r o m Higher education's "intellectual status Speaking to an audience of about 3,000 tutions, and political and social beliefs 6 a . m . to 11 p . m . on Friday and from 4 and academic prestige, as well as its at U-M's annual Honors Convocation, which deal, o r attempt to deal, with prob- p . m . to 1 a . m . on Sunday has been Included standard of teaching, may well depend Thant avoided any mention of United States l e m s of everyone's lives. in the proposal, but It is not known at upon Its freedom from such p r e s s u r e s , " involvement in Vietnam or the fact that he If people do not become involved, Thant this time whether or not the students Thant said. " I t s role as the servant is seeking a resolution to the conflict warned, the effort to develop a sane inter- w i l l have to pay for this service. and mentor of society should never be through the U.N. national order will lack the needed sup- By L I N D A G O R T M A K E R council told of their campaign progress. He had entered the auditorium by walking port. State News Staff W r i t e r Gordon L . T h o m a s , the incumbent mayor Underlying educational considerations and an MSU speech professor, said that through a group of thinly scattered stu- A s East Lansing voters, including reg- is the question of ethical standards,Thant although not directly involved with his dents protesting UJS. Involvement in Viet- istered students, go to the polls today to campaign, it " w a s progressing in the way nam. said. elect three new members to the East he expected it t o . " He feels the issues The students, members of Students for Although vocational and social training Lansing City Council, the six candidates that have emerged are a r t i f i c i a l ones a Democratic Society, carried signs a r e fundamental parts of education, he said wind up their campaigns. determined by the news media's ques- reading " H a n d s Off the Vietnam Revo- a third " e s s e n t i a l Ingredient" is needed: Polling places, the same ones used tions. He does believe that the m a j o r issue l u t i o n " and " B r i n g the Troops Home m o r a l teaching " i n the sense of inculcating during the last elections, will open at 7 lies in a fiscal solution to the city's N o w . " A 30-foot streamer worded " U . S . and keeping alive certain essential a . m . and close at 8 p . m . Residents of problems. Get Out—U.N.Stay O u t " was strung across values." Cherry Lane apartments (precinct 7) vote " T o solve this problem, a city income an exit r a m p where the secretary general's at East Lansing F i r e StationNumberTwo, He said those m o r a l values and ideals tax and reduction in property tax will be c a r was parked. University Village (precinct 9) at Red must correspond to the realities of life needed," he added. The Burmese-born diplomat said the Cedar School and Spartan Village (pre- and still have an inner strength of their G. Tod Kintner, an East Lansing real- university is no longer a " c l o i s t e r e d re- cinct 10) at Spartan Village school. own which withstands the destructive as- tor and incumbent councilman, confirmed treat of the chosen f e w , " but has become Besides voting for three councilmen, pects of those realities. r u m o r s that he was being endorsed by a Involved with world changes. voters will elect a constable by write- Thant drew applause from the audience "property owners association" through a Thant pointed out that the UnltedStates* in, since there is no candidate. role In the world has radically changed ( p l e a s e t u r n to the back page) Over the weekend, candidates for city (please turn to the back page) within a generation. Grading study suggests new experimentation tions for an exchange by faculty members A report recommending experimenta- of grade distribution within multiple sec- tion in grading systems among depart- Honored ments has been filed with the Educational tion courses to encourage uniformity and promote self-correction in grading prac- Policy Committee ( E B C ) . U-M President Harlan Hatcher, left, awards U Thant an honor- tices. A third recommendation asks for The report, presented by a subcommit- lowering of the minimum gradepoint re- ary L l . D . degree at Hill A u d i t o r i u m in Ann A r b o r . tee of the E P C , presents five recommen- quired for acceptance into upper college State News photo by R i c h a r d T r i l l i n g dations which will be discussed for pos- to be changed from a 2.0 to a 1.8. sible acceptance, modification or rejec- Also recommended Is a booklet for use tion. of faculty and students to explain general The main recommendation provides that Greek men hold rush tonight, grading procedures and the meaning of each department interested in experimen- grades. A booklet of this type is published tation with a grading system, is encouraged at Cornell University. to do so. The experiments would be subject The report was presented to the E P C pledging begins April 10 to approval of theprovost'soffice,Charles Thursday, but only the first point was dis- R . St. C l a i r , chairman of the subcommit- cussed. Jack B . Kinsinger, chairman of tee, said. the E P C , said that special sessions would Fraternity open rush begins tonight for president of Interfraternity Council (IFC). This point replaces any recommenda- probably be called to discuss the recom- half of MSU's 33 chapters. Closed rush will be held Thursday,with tion for a specific grading system to cover mendations, since the EPC is also Involved Men with at least a 2.2 winter term rush parties held Friday and Saturday the entire university, with other discussions relating to the spe- nights. A second m a j o r recommendation pro- cial Committee on Undergraduate Educa- average may attend open rush at half Pledging begins April 10. vides for the creation of a continuing tion. the houses tonight, the other half Tuesday Dove called winter term rush " v e r y research program to answer questions on A student committee on grading, set up night and all houses from 7 to 10 Wednes- s u c c e s s f u l , " and said fraternities ini- the psychological and philosophical effects to parallel the grading subcommittee, is day. To go active, a pledge must have a 2 2 tiated an average of 17 pledges per chap- ter. New president of grading systems and on methods of teaching and evaluation of students. planning on holding open hearings for students to react to the report. The chair- all-University average. There is no actual l i m i t on the size of University of Michigan students s u r r o u n d President-elect Robben These questions a r e outside the charge man of the student committee. Skip Ru- All students except first-term fresh- a pledge class, he said. Chapters pledge dolph, Detroit j u n i o r , is a member.of the m e n are eligible for rush. W , F l e m i n g at an open press conference. of the subcommittee, St.Clair said. Rushees may get rides .by calling any as many or as few men as they feel they State News photo by R i c h a r d Trilling Also in the report are recommenda«- faculty subcommittee. house, said Bruce Dove, executive vice- need and want. STATE NEWS Kyle C . Kerbawy editor-in-chief Eric Planin, managing editor J a m e s Spanlolo, campus editor B ever ley Twitchell, executive reporter ¿¡awn?.«. ¿xsb setiw Lawrence Werner, sports editor Joel Stark Andrew Mollison, executive reporter advertising manager Bobby Soden, associate campus editor Monday Morning, April 3, 1967 EDITORIALS 111 Students have stake BtrKA-cwus PflKTi CI PflTION in Academic Council Last winter MSU Provost students have too big a Howard II. Neville urged stake in the university to the C o m m i t t e e on Com- leave it to the educators. Durell v. ASMSU: mittees to look into the pos- sibility of placing students on the Academic Council. The C o m m i t t e e on Com- mittees needs to consider s e a t i n g students on the' A significant ruling Michigan State's sister in- stitution, Oakland Univer- Academic Council now in conjunction with the seat- On March 9 the All-Uni- tion in allocating the money sity, recently placed three ing of students on faculty versity Student Judiciary to G r a h a m , and was there- students on its new 47 committees. T h e i s s u e s (AUSJ) announced Us deci- fore censured by AUSJ. How- m e m b e r Academic Council. are two aspects of the same sion in the case of D u r r e i l ever , it is c l e a r that a vital Yet, the MSU C o m m i t t e e problem -- giving the ad- versus the Student B o a r d . and purposive student gov- on C o m m i t t e e s h a s b e e n m i n i s t r a t i o n and faculty the The t r a n s f e r r a l of $50 from ernment cannot ignore hap- reluctant to open the ques- benefit of the student point the Hospitality Fund to J i m penings in the world around tion here. Even though i t i s of view, as well as a mean- G r a h a m was deemed consti- it, especially when students considering the related ingful voice in University tutional. Graham had pre- are so intimately involved proposal of student partic- affairs for the benefit of viously used the money for a in them. ipation on faculty standing the students and the Uni- t r i p to a Viet Nam conference Recognizing this function, c o m m i t t e s , the c o m m i t t e e versity. __The Editors in Washington, D.C. i-n the future ASMSU candi- does not wish to discuss Statements of the majority dates hopefully will cam- this sensitive issue, as Ne- paign on non-campus as well MERRIE MOD ENGLAND and the minority rationple, ville has urged. which were issued in the de- as cam pus i s s u e s . Students Committee C h a i r m a n will then have an opportunity British coed's wardrobe eclectic cision, both censured the Richard L . Featherstone Student Board for violations to choose capable represen- has indicated that if the of the procedure set down in tatives of their opinion on c o m m i t t e e does discuss the'' the Code of Operations, but all extra-university ques- issue--and this is ques- both reports recognized the tions. t i o n a b l e — i t w o u l d come As an A s s e m b l y repre- E D I T O R ' S N O T E : Jeanne The- integrity of the board in mak- only after a discussion of odore is a Michigan State coed ing its decision. The reports senting students, ASMSU has the standing committee studying at the University of E xe- also sanctioned a certain the right and the responsi- question. t e r in E n g l a n d . This is the fourth bility to express views and report she has filed for the State amount of extra-university The Oakland move was News. activity by ASMSU. take stands on political is- predicated on the idea that By J E A N N E T H E O D O R E Two important precedents sues affecting students. It it is better to resolve pol- State News London Bureau have been set by this deci- can be a responsible voice icy differences with stu- Men of Michigan State, if you are look- .,rt sion. F i r s t , a procedure has for students in decision- dents at the i n i t i a l level of ing for the all-American girl, don't come Howard Major once remarked in refer- Actually, the wants of an English girl to England—the University of Exeter in been established for chal- making on the l o c a l , state and conception, r a t h e r than try particularl Unlike Hank Kniskern, one ence to the coeds of Western, "stumped are relatively simple — a shandy for an answer to ' h i ' . " It's just that they (1/2 lemonade, 1/2 beer) once or twice lenging ASMSU's actions on national level. to explain these differences can't generalize—English girls some in all are used to letting the man do the talking. a week or an evening at the pictures is --The Editors sizes and shapes. They wear their hair afterwards. The move was If you don't particularly enjoy having just fine. Quite different from an Ameri- constitutional grounds. The in a two-inch "urchin c u t " like Donna, can g i r l ? Yes, and the differences don't or a three-foot fall like Angie. They may the conversational ball snatched f r o m your ASMSU Constitution vests based on the sound p r e m i s e wear tartan mini-skirts like Susan, or grasp, punctured, and buried by a loqua- end there. Unlike an American, she won't o r i g i n a l jurisdiction over the that students are mature Jeans and jumpers like Glynis and Chris- cious coed, then Exeter is the place for consider it a compliment- and be delighted -t-k Brillio sie. In fact, the only thing you can be you, because Duryard girls consider the to wash your shirts. Oh, she may wash constitutionality of Student and r e s p o n s i b l e , and that ideal conversation 75 parts male and 25 them (providing they are drip-dry) as a sure they won't wear is loafers. They Board decisions in AUSJ; it they are, after all, deeply wouldn't be caught dead in them—they'd parts female. If, on the other hand, you special favor, but there is a certain risk sooner wear hush puppies (and in some are a bit unsure of your repartee, per- involved. You may never see the shirts is the f i r s t t i m e this clause involved with the function- haps you had better reconsider transfer- again, unless they are on her. cases they do). In short, there isn't has been implemented. ing of the university. any special "college l o o k " — a s seen in ing, for to the Englishwomen, there is Any shirt or sweater that falls into the the city centre, a girl from the Univer- no such thing as an uncomfortable silence. hands of an English girl is considered Secondly, the right of In much the same spirit She will simply sip her drink and wait fair game. (I know for a fact that Angela sity of Exeter could be mistaken for a ASMSU to extra-university at. University. that Clemenceau declared migrant worker . . . or a debutante. patiently for you to catch your breath. And May owes half her wardrobe to Kevin's it had better be a drink too, because if trusting nature and desire for clean activities has been upheld. that war was too important You can tell an American girl the minute you invite any English girl over the age she opens her mouth and you can tell an shirts.) Retrieving said shirt requires The student Ijoard did not act 53-6400 to be left to the generals, English girl because she doesn'tl It isn't pi 17 out for a Coke, she is liable to look the diplomacy and cunning of a Machiavelli, 55-8299 at you rather peculiarly. and even then you'll probably end up with complete c i r c u m s p e c - 55-8311 it might be pointed out that that English girls aren't clever or, as wasnlng it yourself, unless you can ignore a shirt that exudes Chanel No. 5. Other than a shirt, the way to an English OUR READERS' MINDS g i r l ' s heart is through a m i l k bottle, for in Moberly House, white coffee is the Epithets of a transferring student staff of life. When courting a g i r l at MSU, the boy stops off at the jeweler's or florist's — in Exeter, he stops off at the dairy. In fact, according to Gay Marsden, his acceptance is assured when he i s asked to put the m i l k on to boil. To the Editor: year and was able to take every class I listing a n y extenuating circumstances And speaking of coffee, m e n o f Michigan requested, even though, as a freshman, I which would affect scheduling, and have a I Just went through my second registra- State University, it is during the ancient had last choice. I was even able to take computer do the whole thing? What is the tion here, so you may consider this letter a well-paid testimonial. all the classes between 8 a . m . and 12:30 p.m., since 1 wanted the afternoons free logic of registering alphabetically? Why not register by class standings, seniors Selective Service masterpiece and tradition-bound ritual of coffee-serv- ing that the character of the English- woman Is revealed. An American (this i worked for a year and a half to save for gainful employment. So DON'T try to first, since it's much more Important To the Editor: anyway, is pragmatically quite clever. one in particular) would race madly about up enough money to come back to school. tell me it can't be done. It can. It's simply that seniors get the classes they want I repeat, the present system of muz- putting the saucepan on to boil, washing I have now paid better than $1,200 in two a matter of organization. and need because they have less time I have followed the current debate over zllng-by-deferring is sheer genius. It cups, measuring coffee, refusing any quarters. 1 have paid the money to live QUESTIONS: What is the logic of having left? What is the logic of offering small reforming the draft system with great in- allows students, etc. to feel noble be- assistance, and then letting the milk boil in a dorm where people complain when a class meet for a period and a half classes in a course that close by the terest, but I am amazed that no one has cause they oppose the w a r , but' at the over. An Englishwoman i s much more you talk in your room during quiet hours, twice a week (HPR, for example)—thus second or third day of enrollment? You'd made one very obvious point. No one has same time to support it indirectly. orderly. She merely hands the saucepan and where people run down the halls blocking out two class periods? Why not think that a competent administrator would mentioned that deferring college students to the boy and directs him to the gyp screaming during noisy hours. 1 have paid have it meet for one full period three realize that when heavy demand closes a and ministry students is sheer genius. David Wood room. When he returns, he discovers it to be told what to wear to meals, and times a week, so another class could be course that soon it might be a good idea Chelsea freshman there is no sugar, and if he wants some when to be back at night (my parents haven't fit into that half-blocked class period? to add some sections in the class to meet It's quite obvious that the majority of he must go down to the garage and get put hours on me since I was fifteen). 1 What is the logic of having a class meet the demand. those who oppose the war are members some and while he's down there might have paid it to attend mandatory house at one time on Tuesday, another time on of one or both of these groups. If we end he pick up some chocolate biscuits as meetings at 11:30 p.m. when I'd much Letter policy Wednesday and Friday, and another time Those are just a few questions to set these deferments, thousands of those who well . . . By the time he returns, the rather be sleeping or studying. 1 have pa id on Thursday (Nat Sci for example)—thus someone—ANYONE—thinking. But I ' m not cannot ignore the war, will be brought milk is boiling and a flurry of excite- it to share a bathroom with sixty other blocking three full class sessions? Why sticking around to see if the apathy lets face to face with the question, " I s war ment ensues as she flies about pouring girls, at least half of whom must have not have it meet two hours at a time up enough to get some answers. I've had Justified?" Some will bow to the "inevi- the m i l k and handing coffee all around. been raised to behave like pigs. three days a week, or maybe squeeze a it and I ' m getting out, out, out. What's t a b l e , " but many will not. So it seems to The State News welcomes all letters. But most importantly (and the subject little harder and have it meet one hour ironic is to think of how much the ad- me that buying off these potential objectors At this point the chap is often heard Please be brief and type all letters of today's lecture, students) 1 have paid a day five days a week? What is the logic ministration spends on ADS, and publicity, with deferments is easier and better for the to r e m a r k sympathetically: " L o o k , this triple spaced, if possible. Please, also, it for my education. I paid to take a lighter of helpfully having several different lec- etc., instead of using the money to im- war effort than adding a few more men is really such a bother for you, why don't include name, address and university credit load than I wanted. 1 paid it, in ture sessions in a class—and h a v i n g a l l d f prove .he course offerings. They've done to our armed forces. Even the idea of we go over to my room for coffee next standing. No unsigned letters will be two terms, to take eight courses—four of them meet at the same time? If you can't as much h a r m as good. You see, word- deferring religious objectors, who surely time and I ' l l make it. You women Just printed. which I had little or no desire to take. fit one into your schedule you can't fit of-mouth is pretty effective. And I've will not submit to what they think is wrong aren't efficientl" Don't get mt wrong -none of them were the others, either, you know. What is the BEEN here and I KNOW what it's like. University College courses. It was simply logic of a two-credit class meeting six And if you think I ' m ever going to say It's Great For A Date! GREEKS a matter of taking what 1 could get of what hours a week and a five-credit class anything about this place that will influ- was left open (very little) and what would meeting three hours a week? What is the ence someone to come here, you're dead N fit into my s hi-dule (even le' logic of having registration half by IBM wrong. Jk. Lanes Available For Open Bowling A And don't try to. tell me that the problem and half by foot? Why not have students F r i d a y , S a t u r d a y and Sunday N I t e s B O is the size of the university. I went to the list two or three alternate choices on the Janet G. Edwards r e 40 Lanes • Lounge I You're welcome to II section enrollment request f o r m , plus University of Washington (2f>,000) for a Indianapolis, Ipd., sophomore A meet at Spiro's • Billiards eSnack Bar TÌ Pf ANI T* E P t h A n k y o u . . . i u)As Open Every Day at 9 A.M. Z Lots of room X EXPECTIM6 THIS... H T & The Air Conditioned Lightning I AW \ M HOLIDAY LANES 1 K A Fast < 9 M J u » t N o r t h o f F r o n d o r P h o n e 487 3 7 3 1 | Service C A F E T E R I A 4 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan -*ARTS Monday, April 3, 1967 > NEWS YC said desperate D e i t e r S i g m a P h r 3 IMBISH summary in major victory bid Wishes To Extend An Invitation To Open Rush To The Men Of M.S.U. uted heavily to the success of the the 9th Division I s comparative- A c a p s u l e s u m m ary of the d a y ' s events f r o m the AP News Analysis U . S . defense. ly s m a l L Monday, April 3rd and Wednesday, April 5th Associated Press. SAIGON UP) — Desperate for U.S. officers ¿aid the 9 t h D i v i - After the smashing of t h e 7-10 p.m. victory, the Viet Cong 9th D i v i - sion can reoutfit itself and b r i n g 271st, 272nd, and 273rd r e g i - sion has sacrificed three of i t s its battalions back t< fighting ments i n t h e fighting i n a n d five r e g i m e n t s i n a futile effort shape within one to three m o n t h s . around W a r Zone C , the d i v i s i o n International News to destroy a m a j o r A m e r i c a n force. ment I f a South Vietnamese govern- division suffered such still has two regiments. One i s the 70th Guards, which protects Nearly 3,000 of the d i v i s i o n ' s casualties, i t sould be a year o r the still undetected C o m m u n i s t 0 Vice President Hubert Humphrey left Italy Sunday, for Eng- 8,000 m e n have been killed i n m o r e before m o r a l e and l e a d e r - central headquarters for V i e t - land and talks with P r i m e M i n i s t e r Harold W i l s o n . The talks four battles over the past three ship could p e r m i t a r e t u r n to the n a m . The other i s the North V i e t - w i l l concern the nuclear non-proliferation treaty, t r a d e agree- weeks i n W a r Zone C , a C o m - field. Some Vietnamese govern- namese 101st Regiment, loosely m e n t s and East-West development among other topics, H u m - munist-dominated area north- ment units have not recovered attached to the division. Both a r e phrey said upon a r r i v a l in London. west of Saigon. Americans fully f r o m d i s a s t e r s of late 1964 reported i n top fighting f o r m , counted 581 enemy bodies after and early 1 9 6 5 . although the guard regiment h a s £ T h a i l a n d ' s foreign m i n i s t e r , Thanat Khoman, said Thailand the latest battle Saturday. U.S. commanders are puzzled a p r i m a r i l y defensive r o l e . allows the U . S . A i r F o r c e to use T h a i bases because it helps safeguard T h a i l a n d ' s heritage of freedom and independence. Fifty-six Americans were and dismayed at the C o m m u n i s t s ' Khoman was speaking on A B C ' s television p r o g r a m " I s s u e s killed and 271 were wounded i n ability to bounce back f r o m d i s - and A n s w e r s . " There a r e only two m i l i t a r y u m b r e l l a s , R u s s i a n the four attacks. aster. and A m e r i c a n , in the present w o r l d , Khoman s a i d . He hopes the U.S. sources say the V i e t C o n g " W e just don't know how they U . S . ' s can b r i n g peace and prosperity to A s i a . appear to have abandoned hope of do i t , " one said. He suggested winning the war and instead a r e that part of the explanation was ^ I n d i a ' s weakened ruling party, the Congress P a r t y , received willing to shed vast amounts of the large infusion of North Viet- another blow lately in the f o r m of party defections. O c c u r r i n g blood for one big victory and what namese r e g u l a r s into the V i e t m o s t l y i n the state governments, the defections have left the C o n g r e s s party with a m i n o r i t y in 9 out of 16 state l e g i s l a t u r e s . they believe would be a psycholo- gical coup. T h e Viet Cong think Cong force. Although U.S. intelligence r e - SAILIN6 CLUB 1218 E. Grand River F e b r u a r y ' s general elections began the weakening process of such a v i c t o r y might shock the ports say the m o r a l e of these Tomorrow Nite the party, reducing the party f r o m 394 to 282 seats in the 523- A m e r i c a n public and push the men i s poor because of hunger, Join us at the seat lower house of P a r l i a m e n t . T h e party also lost control of United States into negotiations on disease, weariness a n d battle half of the state a s s e m b l i e s i n the F e b r u a r y elections. t e r m s favorable t o the C o m m u - nists, the sources say. casualties, their fighting s p i r i t obviously is top flight. The n u m - Union Ballroom 7:30 P.M. Rides:Call 3 3 2 - 5 0 3 5 ® T h e Bolivian A r m y has a s m a l l a r m y of g u e r r i l l a s apparently ber of combat men who desert Some A m e r i c a n sources ex- trapped in the hilly Jungle region of southeastern B o l i v i a . p r e s s the belief that the V i e t C o n g COUPON^ Government sources have been somewhat confused in their ref- or a t least the 9th Division, h a s erences to the rebels' holdout. But President Rene B a r r i e n t o s succumbed to its own propaganda, c l a i m s the rebels a r e no threat to h i s government. 0 A L'.N. m i s s i o n a r r i v e d in Aden Sunday following three days of a n t i - B r i t i s h street violence. A general strike was in effect which d e s c r i b e s U . S . units a s weak i n m o r a l e and fighting spirit. T h e progaganda says the Cigarettes Michigan State University A m e r i c a n s cannot have strong 4/990 too. B r i t a i n has p r o m i s e d the South A r a b i a n Federation state hearts because their cause i s independence next year. B r i t i s h authorities say p r o - C a i r o unjust. forces a r e battling nationalistic forces opposed to any C a i r o - Aden l i n k s . I f Aden did become a satellite of the U . A . R . , the South A r a b i a n Federation itself, m a d e up of six other e m i r a t e s and sultanates, could fall to C a i r o ' s influence. In the three biggest battles, the Viet C o n g were close to victory when A m e r i c a n a i r c r a f t and a r - Invites All Eligible Men To tillery s m a s h e d their a s s a u l t 9 A large voter turnout for South V i e t n a m ' s v i l l a g e elections lines. T w i c e , the t i m e l y a r r i v a l was reported Sunday despite Viet Cong attacks at t h r e e polling of troop r e i n f o r c e m e n t s contrlb- p l a c e s . Elections are for local council m e m b e r s in the villages where the Saigon government i s in control. COUPON Scope OPEN RUSH 0 R e d G u a r d demonstrations i n Peking and other cities at- tacking Chinese*T>resident L i u Shao-chi a s " t h e greatest leader VC sabotage of the bourgeoisie line within the p a r t y , " signaled the final stages of the anti-Liu d r i v e . The d r i v e i s p a r t of C h a i r m a n M a o Tse-tung's fight to eliminate r i v a l s in the c u r r e n t Peking S. Vietnam M o n d a y Night village voting 570 power struggle. Page 9 DELTA UPSILON SIGMA NU £ U . S . Navy guns bombarded North V i e t n a m ' s southern coast Saturday, the biggest sea b a r r a g e in a single day of the w a r . HUONG T H O PHU, V i e t n a m 1504 E. Grand River 731 Burcham Shores a r e a s were p r i m a r y targets because i n these a r e a s (f) ~ Viet Cong g u e r r i l l a s kid- DELTA TAU DELTA FARMHOUSE any traffic i s forced to take a narrow passage. F o u l weather naped nine candidates and at- had blanketed the North Saturday, l i m i t i n g 215 attacks. T h e r e tacked t h r e e polling places Sun- COUPON1 330 Harrison 151 Bogue was little answering f i r e f r o m shore during the Navy b a r r a g e . day in the f i r s t of a series of KAPPA SIGMA PHI KAPPA TAU village elections i n South Viet- 9 I n apparent all-out efforts to destroy large a l l i e d forces n a m . B u t e a r l y r e p o r t s indi- Cor ici din 715 Grove 125 N. Hagadorn operating i n Vietnamese W a r Z o n e C, one Viet Cong division cated a heavy voter turnout i n THETA CHI PHI DELTA THETA has lost 3,000 m e n in the past three weeks. The l a r g e attacks spite of a C o m m u n i s t campaign the Viet C o n g launched a r e a change in tactics for them, pos- to sabotage the balloting. 453 Abbott 626 Cowley sibly representing a change i n N o r t h V i e t n a m ' s goals in the w a r . The elections a r e f o r l o c a l PSI UPSILON LAMBDA CHI ALPHA council m e m b e r s . Involved a r e 810 W. Grand River 128 Haslett National News £ R i c h a r d F . Speck goes on t r i a l Monday, charged with the 1,262 of South V i e t n a m ' s 2,552 villages. Only villages that a r e secured by government forces i vii K ; 690 SIGMA ALPHA MU ALPHA EPSILON PI 343 Albert m u r d e r of eight student nurses last J u l y in a C h i c a g o suburb. a r e voting. Village chiefs w i l l FRIARS T h e 12 j u r o r s , seven men and five women, have said they have be elected on five consecutive Union TRIANGLE no Inhibitions against r e c o m m e n d i n g the death penalty. T h e Sundays beginning M a ^ 1 4 . OU P O N THETA DELTA CHI N. Harrison state of I l l i n o i s i s asking for a death sentence i f 25 year-old The Viet Cong started its t e r - 139 Bailey DELTA SIGMA PHI Speck i s found guilty. P r e s i d i n g will be Judge H e r b e r t C . Paschen, defending Speck i s G e r a l d Getty and prosecuting i s r o r c a m p a i g n e a r l y in the elec- tioneering and P r e m i e r Nguyen Head & Shoulder 1218 E. Grand River W i l l i a m M a r t i n . M a r t i n ' s case i s based on the testimony of C a o Ky reported last week that SIGMA CHI a n u r s e , C o r a z o n A m u r a o , 24, who hid under a bed w h i l e the four candidates have been k i l l e d . 729 E. Grand River BETA THETA PI m u r d e r s were committed. T h e t r i a l begins with the swearing PHI KAPPA SIGMA 1148 E. Grand River 590 of the 12 j u r o r s and two alternatives in the P e o r i a County DR. R I C H A R D H. S E A B O L D Courthouse. 236 N. Harrison R e c r u i t i n g Representative ^ W i t h President and M r s . Johnson and 29 L a t i n A m e r i c a n NAVAL C I V I L E N G I N E E R I N G a m b a s s a d o r s attending, a R o m a n C a t h o l i c A r c h b i s h o p used his L A B , P o r t Hueneme, C a l i f . pulpit Sunday to laud the p r e s i d e n t ' s peace b i d s . Most R e v . 93041 will interview graduat- R o b e r t E . L u c e y took a dig a t what he s a r c a s t i c a l l y called, ing students with C 0 U f10 N " s o m e great experts in international r e l a t i o n s , " though he didn't BS, MS, or P h D D E G R E E S mention n a m e s . Outside the San Antonio C a t h e d r a l , four groups picketed f o r better wages f o r Spanish-American workers. In Modess CIVIL, ELECTRICAL, or MECHANICAL E N G I N E E R I N G and Tuesday Night BS D E G R E E i n 'Faust' needs choristers INDUSTRIAL E N G I N E E R I N G on 230 W E D N E S D A Y 5 A p r i l 1967 DELTA CHI ,PI KAPPA PHI Male students and faculty f e r r e d , but not n e c e s s a r y . m e m b e r s can earn one credit " T w e n t y to twenty-five m a l e T o sign up for interview and 101 Woodmere 121 Whitehills further i n f o r m a t i o n , contact in m u s i c by participating i n a volceg a r e needed for the pro- your P l a c e m e n t Office. UNICORNS OF THETA XI ALPHA GAMMA RHO p r o d u c t i o n of Gounod's " F a u s t . " duction, which w i l l be sung i n Auditions f o r chorus positions E n g l i s h , " said Dennis B u r k h , an equal opportunity e m p l o y e r • C O U P O N * 243 Burcham 432 Evergreen w i l l b e held at 7:45 tonight in a s s t . p r o f e s s o r of m u s i c and Toothbrush PHI SIGMA DELTA ALPHA TAU OMEGA 125 M u s i c B u i l d i n g . m u s i c d i r e c t o r of the onpra P a r t i c i p a t i o n i s open to stu- dents, faculty and staff, as well The production, which Is spon- s o r e d by the Speech ana M u s i c What next? 505 MAC ZETA BETA TAU 451 Evergreen SIGMA PHI EPSILON a s p e r s o n s not connected with D e p t s . , w i l l be staged May 25-27 855 Grove 526 Sunset M SU. Singing experience i s pre- in the A u d i t o r i u m . ALPHA PHI ALPHA PHI GAMMA DELTA Vandals hit S A E house Union 334 Michigan K I !(i 1 PHI SIGMA KAPPA TAU DELTA PHI A $450 picture window at the m a t i o n leading to the a r r e s t o r 207 Bogue 501 MAC Sigma Alpha Epsilon house was apprehension of the person o r Once you have your college di- PHI KAPPA PSI shattered by a rock early Satur- persons responsible for t h i s , " ploma, what are you going to do? Specials good at said T o m Goodale, chapter ad- W h y not consider b e c o m i n g a n 522 Abbott day m o r n i n g . It was the third t i m e the fraternity had been van- viser. executive secretary? E.Lansing Store Only1 Such a position will require you STATE d a l i z e d since N o v e m b e r . to utilize your intelligence and edu- East Lansing police a r e inves- cation and to exercise your imagi- A reward of $50 will be paid tigating. nation. You will be working di- All Houses O p " t o anyone who can give us infor- rectly with executives. And if you're seeking an even greater challenge, you will always find an opportunity WAYNE COUNTY ROAD COMMISSION to advance to an administrative CIVIL ENGINEERING position. Gibbs offers a Special Course for College Women. In just 8'A months Discount you will receive complete secre- ( '.osmetics OPPORTUNITIES Wednesday, April 5 tarial training and will be ready for a fine position as an executive secretary. X' \ itamins Your next step? Write College Design a n d construction of streets, sewers, b r i d g e s , p u m p i n g stations, buildings, T r a f f i c & Safety, and Urban Dean f o r G I B B S G I R L S A T WORK. 619 E. Grand River Planning KATHARINE Campus Interviews GIBBS Du I I y 9 t) . 'TV 6 I» SECRETARIAL Wed V n. m - ) p April 5 21 Marlborough St.. BOSTON,MASS.02116 200 Park Ave., NEW YORK, N . Y . 10017 F r e e Parking Call any Fraternity for a ride 33 Plymouth St., M0NTCIAIR, N. J. 07042 See your Placement Office'for an appointment 77 S. Angell St., PROVIDENCE, R. 1.02000 Monday, April 3, 1967 4 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan -*ARTS i -V Will Woolre^ ies played "Who Do You L o v e ? " •II get ^^^^ willies ———— • • • • I from flH^H^^*" Jeff Toff their nnU/ nlflvfi Ilead now plays m H OtHtflr guitar, f Lou Adler m i l » rbtnhlll quit success? Dunhlll. n un. Dun- stylistic fORITI StvliSfir form thfltthat 1 live perform- By ANDREW MOLLISON rhythm, bass and piano. hill's marketing program went ers can ignore. But is it enough? Meeting only when they per- Into a tallspln. So By building a new $50,000 stu- Executive Reporter No, contended Bob B a l d o r l formed, since Jeff lived in Dear- From radio station to radio dio locally, The Woolies hope to (keyboard instruments, bass and Can four local lads with hearts born, The Woolies began to build station tramped The Woolies, be able to experiment until they harmonica) Sunday morning. of gold and pocketbooks of empty up a popular following. convincing program managers to find the electronic blend that And as he recountedThe Wool- achieve success In the rock- play their records. East Lansing creates an effect equivalent to ies' history, a rags-to-rags saga " W h e n guys know muslc a it's schlock Hollywood world of re- and Flint played them. Detroit that of live music. of trips, stalls, falls and tiny Just a question of getting to- cording studios and competitors picked up " W h o D o . " CKLW Is They want to stay in East Lan- advances, his skepticism seemed gether for two or three minutes with hearts and pocketbooks of also heard in Cleveland. Cleve- sing, of all places. Why? more than Justified. to learn the rube (Top-40) stuff," vice versa? land Is a trend-setter. Pretty " I n Hollywood, if you're at all Bill Armisted and Bob began Baldori said. " W e ' d spend the The Woolies — Bob Baldorl, soon more than 200,000 copies active, you spend four hours a The Woolies two years ago, dur- rest of the time on the songs and Stormy Rice, Bill Mitros and had been sold. day in a car. You inhale smog. ing the first week of spring t e r m . arrangements Stormy and 1 j e f f Baldori—think so. Lou Adler found out about lt. You lose touch with history, with Armisted, who had come to worked u p . " So does Mike Steinberg, the He phoned Bob and four hours politics, with the real world. be leader, fired the entire band That March The Woolies graduate assistant in English who later Bob and Stormy were on a " A l l you worry about Is what's at the end of that summer. Bob, recorded an audition tape at Spar- serves astheirchaperone, chauf- plane to Hollywood. happening. Here, that's certainly Stormy Rice (guitar, bass, lead ta, Mich. In June they won Michi- feur and general factotum. The next week, in mid-Feb- no problem. singer) and Bill Mitros (percus- gan's Battle of the Bands, in com- petition with half a thousand other ruary, The Woolies were in " H e r e you find all the cul- So does their manager, Grosse sion) are survivors of that first groups. Hollywood. They recorded the tural attractions you need, con- Pointe lawyer Tony Spada, who's band. The prize offered: $10,000, a rest of an album. Eight of the 12 sidering that after writing, prac- down in Florida right now taking After being fired they prac- ticing and playing there a r e only recording contract and a trip to songs are Baldorl-Rlce compo- time out from his duties as an ticed for a week and drove to X number of hours for them. Hollywood. sitions. Chicago at 40 miles an hour In an IBM Exec, and Navy Lt. C m d r . to line up an East Coast tour. old ambulance. The Woolies The p r i z e actually received: Will The Woolies soon be rich? Although not one to groove on " A n d then through the MSU Library, you can place yourself A recording executive heard a trip to Hollywood. So do their mommas and their Stormy Rice, Bill Mitros, Jeff B a l d o r l and Bob Baldorl Late August In Hollywood The gelt and status (he stopped school musically in context. You can see poppas. them one afternoon at Mother that some of our stuff and some Woolies tramped from door to one course short of a degree), Blues, and they recorded "Black of The Beatles' stuff will be " W e found out later that we'd him a hell of a strong rhythm them and I ' l l make you f a m o u s . " door with their audition tape. Bob Is preparing for the pos- The only opinion that matters, Crow B l u e s " and "Morning around for a hundred years and been offered a standard con- section." His knowledge of music gave The Woolies ended up with Dun- sibility. alas, Is that of the teeny-boppers. Dew." why." Saturday night in Sunfield (pop. tract," said Bob. NO luck. Then during Christ- Jeff enough of a head start to hill, a company built around Lou " T h e question is: Can we make You say you never heard those Bob grimaced. "That sounds 626), a farm community on the In November their lead guitar- mas break Bob noticed his 15- learn the guitar well enough In a A d l e r . Bob and Stormy also the switch from live to elec- r e c o r d s ? That's because the pompous, doesn't i t ? " He paused lonia-Eaton county line, their en- group, new to the recording busi- ist quit. year-old brother, who had been week to Join the band. " H e knew signed as songwriters with a Dun- tronic performances?" studying classical piano since the whole board theoretically. Records lack range in volume, while taking a record out of a thusiasm was obvious. A non- ness, got nervous when asked tc "What we needed really was ill 1 subsidiary. the age of five. After that it's Just geometry rich overtones and the compelling Jacket to illustrate a point, and drinking, -non-fighting conglom- sign a seven-year contract giving someone who could sing and play They recorded " W h o Do You " H e r e ' s a bass and a g u i t a r , " and practice," Bob said with a presence of live bands. The pop commented on his own question: eration of teens at The Scene them a small percentage of the both bass and lead guitar," Bob -ove?" and returned to East Joked. " I n return we could offer Bob told Jeff. " L e a r n to play straight face. Lansing. song is played within a tight "Tough. That's what I think." wiggled vigorously as The Wool- take. HOW TO SUCCEED1 Musical makes enjoya ble fil m By JIM Y O U S L I N G making a great show available to Swift wisely chose to retain as the boss' nephew, the vul- disgust, but like " A l f l e , " the hero the millions of people who could the best of the Broadway cast turous yes-men, and the schem- is hatefully admirable. I suspect State News R e v i e w e r never see it otherwise. and, except for a few cuts (three ing secretary as he viciously that "How to Succeed" won the Transplanting a musical from David Swift, who wrote, pro- very funny songs, two weak ones), cheats and back-stabs his way Pulitzer Prize because lt criti- Broadway to Hollywood is a deli- duced and directed the film ver- did little to change the original to the top. cizes business ethics so adeptly, cate business. Altering the show sion of "How to Succeed in Busi- version. He even had enough But the high spots of the film yet enjoyably. The thought, how- for the sake of good cinema sense to add very little material ness Without Really Trying," a r e two of the obstacles them- ever, that much of the audience ("Porgy and Bess," for example) chose the latter method, and the written especially for the film, may not be appalled by all these selves: R u d y Vallee parodies Infuriates theatre buffs. Simply result is a very palatable film a process which all too often ruthless monsters remains a se- himself as J.B. Biggley, the com- photographing the original stage that remains surprisingly faith- results in such disasters as " T h e pany p r e s i d e n t who secretly rious and disturbing one. performance (as In the Nureyev- ful to the original. V i s i t " or such song hits as " I s knits; and, as Hedy LaRue, Mau- Fonteyr b a l l e t films) usually The main strength of the f i l m , There Anyone Here For L o v e ? " reen Arthur is a dumb blonde to "How to Succeed in Business makes a dull, artificial film, in- now showing at the Campus The- On the other hand, the weak- end all dumb blondes. Try to vis- Without Really Trying" suppos- f u r i a t i n g movie critics but ater, Is simply that "How to nesses of the movie are not those ualize a secretary who talks like edly cost less to produce than Succeed" was a tremendous mu- of the play. The content of "How Carol Channlng, looks like Little any film musical In 30 years. If sical to begin with. Winner of a to Succeed" didn't need to be Annie Fanny, and says things so, the money was certainly well 1961 Pulitzer Prize, the book Is changed for films, but lt suffers like " I ' m your assignation!" and spent. Most business-conscious acidic, and the music, if not from unwise cinematography. you have some idea. Americans should be confronted especially popular outside the Dancing secretaries and heavy Perhaps what is most dis- by lt to laugh at themselves and, context of the show, works well mugging may be perfectly accep- turbing about the film is a matter hopefully, to see beyond the hu- within the plot. table on a stage, but shot In the of content rather than quality. Ev- m o r . That happy ending leaves extreme close-ups of a more a bitter aftertaste. PR^RAM INFORMATION ^ P®44 eryone in the story shouldarouse Experimental AMPUS TODAY F R Ì T T I ."7:00 P . M . intimate medium, the lampooning AT 7:10 & 9:15 P . M . C occasionally ceases,to be cred- ible. Perhaps the acting should Evening College caters This A m e r i c a n Motors experimental c a r is part of the industrial design show BEST have been toned down and the in the g a l l e r y of Kresge Art Center. State News photo by L a r r y F r i t z l a n TODAY at 1:00-2:55-5:05- choreography should have been +o diverse interests I i 7:IO-9:35 P.M FILM less staged. Mexico Ballet Folklorico Nevertheless, the film bubbles f The 'Pulitzer along admirably. The story of J . Home gardeners, free-lance m a l courses, mosu of which start Prize«Winnin Plerpont Finch's rise from win- /riters and amateur actors and today on campus. ¿Musical Comedy dow washing to chairman of the actresses will be interested In Some of the more Interesting THE MMISCH CORPORATION wisin's board in two weeks is prepos- to perform here Friday MSU's spring Evening College courses are acting In the theatre, National TH£ 0AVI0 SWIFT PRODUCTION terous; the characters are dis- program. brunch and brush-up, calli- Society gusting p a r o d i e s of business of film Critics So will mushroom hunters, bird graphy, creative program plan- MOW t o i ftp? types with names like Frump, J watchers, restaurant owners and ning, identification of edible Twlmble, and Womper; and the mushrooms and other fungi,lit- result Is a comic-strip brought book reviewers. erary radicals, magazine writ- men leave for the sea, which pro- guiro; and "Wedding In Tehuan- In fact, there is something for Mexico's celebrated Ballet M to life. ing, prehistoric art of the Ameri- tepec," a choreography based on A C o r l o Ponti Production vides their livelihood. Antonioni's BUSINESS As Finch, Robert Morse re- almost everyone In the 54 lnfor- cas, propaganda, psychology of Folklorico, with Its cast of 75 dancers, singers and musicians, Mexico's ancient rites of betro- BLOW-UP peats his Broadway role as one sexual abnormality, self-defense Other numbers are "The Sugar thal, marriage and procreation. -WITHOUTJ will perform at 8:15 p.m. Friday ¡REALLVJ of the rottenest heroes of all time, overcoming such obstacles Mail orders now skills and techniques,and birds of in the Auditorium. Harvest In Tamaullpas" depict- The Folklorico performance ing the sugarcane farming people will conclude with the dance [TRYING! south central Michigan. Vanessa Redgrave Combining the theatrical with ramni David Hemming» • Sorah Miles COLOR tvDtüiii «imiTCDumsfs taken for play Registrations can be made by m a i l , or in person at the Kellogg the historical, the Folklorico of Mexico's Haustecan region; " G u a d a l a j a r a . " Featuring the "Veracruz-Mocambo," which dances of the Christmas season, coiot provides an exciting glimpse Into ftCOWWINOtD >0» M*TU»t *uouwc"iT) Starring G U A Q M E g Mail orders for tickets for the Performing Arts Company pro- Center registration desk. The the heritage of the Mexican peo- incorporates folk music, a " G u a d a l a j a r a " ends with the ex- marimba band, and an ethnic plosion of the traditional Mexican A Premier Productions Co., Inc. Release : : Robert Morse-Michele Lee registration desk will have addi- ple. TODAY duction of " T h e Dybbuk" will be tional evening hours Monday rasping instrument called the Christmas symbol, the plnata. N E X T . . . FROM SWEDEN AT 1:30-3:30-5:30-7:30-9:30 accepted beginning today. N E X T ! " G l G l " and through Thursdays from 6:30 to The troupe, which last per- No one ever made The cost of the tickets is $2 7:30 for the next two weeks. "LOVING COUPLES" " N O R T H BY N O R T H W E S T * formed on campus In 1963, will the scene like V H p or one season coupon. Orders may be sent to Performing Arts Additional Information can be appear here as part of the Lec- Playwriting competition F R E E E L E C T R I C CAR H E A T E R S obtained by contacting the Cptttyf* TECHNICOLOR" PANAVISION" Company, Dept. of Speech, Cam- pus. Checks should be made pay- able to Michigan State University. Evening College office, 18 Kel- logg Center, or by calling 355- 4562. ture-Concert Series. Its current tour features three new numbers, created by the group's director-choreographer, deadline set for M a y 1 Amalla Hernandez. In addition, The deadline for entries in the Manuscripts may be turned in MSU Lecture-Concert Series the Folklorico will perform many of the numbers that gave the annual Theta Alpha Phi playwrit- ing competition is May 1. to the theatre department office, 149 Auditorium. TONIGHT! A L L COLOR PROGRAM troupe Its reputation for spectac- A l l MSU students are invited HIT NO. 1 AT 7:20-11:00 HIT NO. 2 AT 9:15 SPECIAL ular performance. to submit manuscripts of full- STACK SOMMER —STUART WHITMAN JANET LEIGH A particularly spectacular length plays that have not been N a n c y Lee W h i t e .«<. NANCY CHRISTIAN cm production, entitled "Guelaguet- z a " ("Offering"), will be per- previously produced elsewhere. Judges will be members ofTheta KWAN s MARQUAND formed by the male ensemble. Rooted In the culture of the Za- Alpha Phi, the national dramatic honorary. to give recital V Reami potec Indians, the folk dance First prize in the contest is üyi .•IT'* requires a costume including a $25, and honorable mention cer- Nancy Lee White, East Lansing crown of feathers over four feet tificates will be given to other senior, will give a cello recital high. outstanding entries. All winners at 8:15 p.m. Monday in the Music STARTS WEDNESDAY " T h e Tarascans" is a dance will receive tickets to the May 29 Auditorium. Accompanying her TWO E L V I S H I T S of mourning, showing the grief TAP Honors Banquet at the Jack at the piano will be William D. of the women of Tarasco as their T a r Hotel. Elliott, instructor In music. "GIRLS, GIRLS, GIRLS" Her repertoire will include " F U N IN A C A P U L C O " "Sonata in A M i n o r " by Antonio MSU INTERNATIONAL F I L M S E R I E S Vivaldi, "Sonata for Violiocello and P i a n o " by Claude Debussy presents with and Nadia Boulanger's " T r o i s 11 ONE OF THE BEST DETECTIVE Pieces." Mrs. White is completing the the Jimmy Jones Trio THRILLERS EVER FILMED! if» requirements for a degree from Indiana University under Louis -N.Y. Timm* Potter, professor of music at MSU. The complete works of George & Ira Gershwin, Cole Porter, Rodgers & Hart, Duke Ellington, Irving Berlin, Johnny Mercer . . . E l l a knows them all — from the old and new ; MioanAM information • 482-3003 standards of the day. One of the great jazz and popular singers of our time, this year she ventured into the singing of traditional hymns. If C H I G Ai W ti-t* From Reserved Seats: $3.00, $2.50, $2.00 Oincttd fay «IHM KVMSAWA «Ml TtSNMt MVMK TODAY . . . i:oo P.M. 1:00-3:10-5:15-7:30-9:45 UNIVERSITY A U D I T O R I U M A WAITER READE STERlJNG PRESENTATION ( Tues., Wed., April 4-5 ~ 7 & 9:30 P . M . Tickets on sale at Union Ticket Office $1.00 reduction to MSU students with validated I.D. (Validated ID c a r d plus reserved ticket stub necessary for admittance at the door). FAIRCHILD THEATRE Admission 500 FUNICnE iMASCOK Coo lr by Deluxe -*ARTS Monday, April 3, 1967 4 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan SPORTS SPARTAN INDIVIDUALS COMPETE SIU keeps N C A A gym title .... By R O B E R T A YAFIE . I This was Cohen's second con . _ ... of California, who averaged 9.6. " D a n was the biggest sur- j at. . season for a 9.30 average and * sixth place In the finals. He was j accustomedI to u somersault." i _ doing a ^Aiih him double State News Sports W r i t e r secutive NCAA all around title. In addition he was presentedwlth p r i s e , " Szypula noted. " H e came only two points out of first and Gunny drew more raves on CARBONDALE, 111.—The Mid- the Nissen Award given to the na- f r o m an alternate position to one .05 out of third. His performance rings for his sheer feat of east Region dominated the NCAA tion's outstanding senior colle- of the highest In the nation. This featured the most spectacular strength by pulling himself up gymnastics championships held giate gymnast. has been the story of the entire feat of the meet when he ended from a straight hang to a cross here, at Southern Illinois Univer- The Mideast placed 23 mem in ring team. his routine with a one and one- position to a fill support above sity March 31 and April 1, and the finals as compared with* 14 " T h e y a r e the finest in the half dismount, backward over the the rings. host SIU successfully defended each from the West and Midwest country and on any given day, bar. Its national team title coming Dave Jacobs of Michigan was and 12 from the East. any one can beat the o t h e r . " f r o m behind with excellent per- Missing from the floor exer- Co-Big Ten rings champ Dave "'He i s the only one who has a double winner, earning the formances in vault, parallel bars cise finals was MSU's Toby Tow- Croft dropped out of the eight done this dismount p r o p e r l y , " floor exercise title with a 9.45 and rings to score 189.55. son, who scored 9.10 in the pre- qualifiers and lost his opportu- Szypula said, extremely pleased score and the trampoline crown Michigan finished second, to- with the results. "Everyone Is at 9.50. liminaries and failed to quality. nity at the national title by touch- talling 187.40, with Iowa third at Iowson was moving too fast and ing his hands on his dismount. 186.90. Michigan State failed to qualify missed on his straddle press, dropping him down too much. He scored 9.00. Gunny gave one of the best R E G I S T E R NOW as a team for the national title "Despite his miss he should high bar performances of the FOR SPRING CLASS AT THE because of the Spartan perform- ance in the regional meet, but h a v e qualified," said Spartan JOAN JEWETT C A R E E R SCHOOL six gymnasts competed on an In- C o a c h George Szypula. " T h e same goes for Ron Aure. Ron's • TYPEWRITING • PROFESSIONAL MODELING dividual basis. Michigan had been leading 107. not so well known so he had to Golf meeting • Q U I K R I T E ABC • B A L L E T , MODERN J A Z Z do the 'big trick'—a double som- SHORTHAND F I G U R E COORDINATION 00-106.50 after the first four Head Golf Coach Bruce Fossum High school hurdler rounds but lost the lead to SIU on ersault—which he. started with will hold a meeting for all fresh- fÙ^ÎAl^lAûtkÔ and stuck without losing his bal- parallel b a r s . men Interested in trying out for Bill Tipton of Pontiac Central High School wins the hurdles event at the Spartan ance. 301 M . A. C . - East Lansing Steve Cohen of Penn State won the golf team in the lobby of the " A u r e is the only one in the high school relays Saturday at Jenison Fieldhouse. The relays are an annual affa.r a l l around, 55.75, edging AAU Jenison gymnasium at 7:00 p . m . P H O N E 351-6590 I CAREER / SCHOOL nation to use this move suc- and attract the finest teams in the state in both class A and B champ Makoto Sakamoto f r o m Tuesday. cessfully all year and one of few State N e w s photo by C h u c k Michaels Southern Cal who totaled 55.05. in many years to do it success- fully." BEAT CELTS, 107-102 Looking For Unusual Gift Ideas MSU's Ed Gunny and DanKin- sey worked excellently in prob- ably the toughtest event of com- 76ers go two gomes up petition to qualify for rings with score of 9.35 and 9.3 respective- ly. Gunny lost his national title in the finals; he and Klnsey scored 9.4 with Gunny finishing Wally Jones added 22 while T h e t e a m s traded baskets The 76ers scored five straight fourth with a 9.375 average and BOSTON (UPI)—The Philadel- Green had 17 and Chamberlain through the early minutes of the points to open the final period Klnsey fifth with a 9.35. phia 76ers took a commanding second quarter before Howell and led 89-75 before the Celtics two game lead Sunday in their and Luke Jackson got 15 each. Sam J o n e s , Boston's high sparked a pair of Boston surges r a l l i e d . The title went to Josh Roblson in Chicago it's Old Town drive to break Boston's nine year National Basketball Association scorer as the Celtics finished that gave the Celtics an 11 point in New York it's Greenwich Village lead. in Detroit it's Plum Street domination with a 107-102 win on the Celtics home court. second to Philadelphia in regular season play, was limited to 9 points by the 76ers. The 76ers ran off eight straight points to wind up the half t r a i l - BASIC OUTLINES ATL NAT SCI SOC HUM The 76ers blew most of a 14 point fourth quarter lead as the John Havlicek topped Boston ing by three, 58-55. in East Lansing it's thfi Lost Mariner Celtics cut their deficit to one with 26 and Bailey Howell collect- Philadelphia, trailing by three in the final two minutes. ed 22, most of them in the first at the start of the second half, But free throws by W i l t C h a m - half. took charge with a run of 10 berlaln and B i l l Cunningham and Hal G r e e r ' s last second layup gave the 76ers their victory m a r - The game was nationally tele- vised after ABC executives car- ried their own equipment through straight points starting at the four minute m a r k and survived another Celtic comeback for an COURSE 84-75 lead after three. gin. Actually, it was a three-point play by Cunningham who scored an AFTRA picket line. The scheduled color telecast had to be dropped in favor of a black and white program that was OUTLINES MATH: 108,109, 111, 112,113 on a layup and converted a free throw with 3:40 remaining that proved to be the winning points. produced with only one camera. Philadelphia jumped on top In win Chet Walker led the 76ers to a low scoring first quarter and 956 Trowbridge Rd. - Spartan Shopping Center CHEM: 101, 111, 112 led by seven before the Celtics ANN ARBOR — The their 2-0 lead in the best of seven Eastern Division finals as he came back to tie at the period on MSU Lacrosse Club Open Monday - Friday 9:30 a . m . - 8:00 p . m . scored 23 points. Don Nelson's last second j u m p e r . opened Its spring season Saturday til 5:30 Sunday with a 9-3 wl n over Fencing entries finish the University of Michi- gan. Scoring two goals each for MSU were Tom STAT: 121,123 MATH 120 PHYSICS: 237,238, 239 Sbarra, L a r r y Berger and There goes a guy 16th, 20th in N C A A Bill M u l r . Gary Paulln, Andy Balderson and Pete RACKLEY 287, 288, 289 going places in his McAvoy each made one Gus Schubert and Charlie B a e r combined to earn MSU 25 points goal. pedwin in the NCAA Fencing Championships held this past weekend in MSU outshot the Wol- Northridge, Calif. verines, 43-22. Spartan Schubert finished 20th in epee and Baer 16th in sabre. They were Don Fouracre made 18 the only representatives in the meet from MSU. saves. "Given reasonable breaks and a little more experience, Baer could have done much b e t t e r , " Fencing Coach C h a r l e s Schmitter said. " H e Is just a junior and learned plenty from this meet. He shoes NEED EXTRA POCKET MONEY? wasn't beaten badly by any of the fencers, and he faced some good ones. "Schubert performed much better for the whole year than I IF S O . . . thought he would," Schmitter said about his number one epeeist. " H e was up and down in the championships though. H i s finish was strong, but he was just too slow starting to be up in the competition." Led by two individual winners, New York University won the team title with 72 points. George Masin was the NYU victor in epee and Mike Gaylor won the foil crown. The other Individual winner in the two day national championship meet was Todd Makler from Penn State. He won the sabre weapon. Other top teams scoring were Penn State, 64; Columbia, 63; Navy, 62, Air Force, 58 and Notre Dame and C o r n e l l , 56 points. Where can your college degree take you in American business? N o w , discover everything you need to know about 260 ot the largest companies in America w h o they arc. where they're located, what they require- and what they have to ofTcr you. • hundreds of technical and non-technical job opportuni- ties with the most important U . 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R A C K L E Y ' S - DOWNTOWN and F R A N D O R 4 Michigan State News, East Lansing, M i c h i g a n Monday, A p r i l 3, 1967 -*ARTS Drobac öfter Southern trip By DENNIS CHASE lost twice to North Carolina, 7-2 and 8-1, Associate Sports E d i t o r and beat Geroge Washington, 8-1. The trip ex- Spartan tennis coach Stan Drobac had hoped tended from March 21 to 31, with only two to decide on a starting lineup on the basis of " o f f " days of rest, most of which were spent traveling. the team's southern road trip. After returning "It was a good trip weather-wise, but a late last night, Drobac made two decisions: tough one travel-wise," Drobac said. " I t s e e m s 1. He wanted some sleep like all we did was pack and unpack." 2. He still wasn't set on a starting lineup Drobac calls this year's team the best he's "1 expected the team to be stronger on the ever had, on paper. t r i p , " said Drobac, whose Spartans finished "Sophomore Chuck Brainard is an excellent with a 4-4 record, "But I'm not disappointed. tennis player. He played Notth Carolina's Bitsy "The southern schools are strong in tennis. Harrison, one of the south's top stars, two. They're tougher physically, and they play out- days in a row. He lost to him the first day in side all the time. There a re other, even stronger straight sets, but he was ahead the second day, teams, in the south that I wanted to play, like 5-4, and serving, after winning the first set, Georgia, and Tennessee, but they were on their 6-3. Harrison won though, 7-5." spring break too." Drobac said that, following his policy of last Drubac also singled out John Good, a sopho- more, and Stever Schafer, a Junior transfer Spring work&Uts year, he will not count these matches in the student from California. overall record of the team. The MSU rugby and lacrosse clubs worked out last week in preparation for "Good started low, at No. 6 singles, but ' T h i s was nothing more than a training t h e i r Spring seasons. The lacrosse team beat M i c h i g a n Saturday in its season open- t r i p , " he said. "Resides, some of those southern teams use f r e s h m e n / V * eventually moved up to'No. 4 , " Drobac said, "and he is an excellent doubles plaver." "¿mki«;: e r and wi 11 go back into action A p r i l 14. The ruggers open Saturday against Indiana here. State News photos by L a r r y F r i t z l a n After a match with DePaul was rained out, "We open up our season A p r i l 18 against the Spartans lost to Florida State, 6-3, beat Wayne State in Detroit," Drobac said, "and LOSE 3 OF LAST 4 Georgia Tech, 5-4, lost to Clemson, 5-4, beat then play two strong teams, Northwestern and South Carolina, 7-2, beat East Carolina, 9-0, Wisconsin, here at East Lansing." No, we're not fryers Batsmen return home, 7-7-1 , ,.,rr/-u By G A Y E L WESCH aitine» Wesley aBBM iv.-cinvan Frldav morn an Friday morn in in? handled the pitching handled Ditching for MSU, _ _ defense Our j - ...m have will >...,. to >n be k . im-i ^ . .• in the in »h» field «ole and at bat on the bot State News Sports W r i t e r MSU's baseball squad ended to set his record 'at 2-2 for the season. Wesleyan got its only hit, a Kenney taking the loss. E l l i s , the Spartan shortstop, hit a home run and single that day. proved though." Litwhiler singled out E l l i s , saying he Improved greatly both trip. EUis is a junior from Grand Rapids who takes over for the graduated Steve Pollsar. its spring training trip this week- single, in the second Inning.MSU MSU dropped a 12-4 decisiof! end the same way it had opened was led by Tom Ellis, Bill Linne, to Duke Friday. Transfer student it with a double header split. The Spartans came home for the reg - Tom Binkowski, Bill Steckley and Gary Smith started and lost for M h i M J > i Í !: 1 iffml ZJxt l o m Hurr.mel, who got two hits s 1. > J MSU. He was relieved by Dick lar season after finishing 7-7-1 i i ^ i l t t M l P |Q |TI each. Litwhiler in the fourth inning, in spring training in Florida. MSU/ lost its final game in Mickey Knight in the fifth and TPHkvs Thursday and Friday,MSUlo--t to Duke. Righthander Bob Peter- son hurled a one hit 6 - 0 shutout Florida, 4-1, Saturday afternoon. Dick- Kenney and Mel Behney ¿ana Easton in the sixth. Ken- drick, Rich Jordon and Binkow- ski led the Spartan hitters in 1 A C R O S S Feminine pronoun 4. C o u r t panel 31 33 35 Row an Naviga- tional l'alni tree device lily • •DD L A C O N I C • • BBEHüi C O N I H a a a a a a 3ft. l.ow tide the game. 8. Sward • • • 0 0 • • • rosa aaaaaa College Bike Shop 11. Hail 38 Insane The Blue Devils topped MSU, 12. Fencing 40. Arrest . 4-3, Thursday despite three hits sword 42. Desire to DB1G1DQBQ QDQD by H u m m e l , and two by Walters. 13. Misjudge scratch Oiaa E a • • • • We're a neu group, aiming for national chapter Behney started but was relieved 14. B e a r cat 43 \\ eapoli sano B Q Q Ö Q Q B Sandpiper status this term. The Friars want to be known 134 N . H a r r i s o n by Knight in the seventh. Knight 16 18. Linen Cattail 46 49 ( .elervlike took the loss, as a group that "does something." Find out (1 Block N. of Kellogg Center) 20. Drugget 1 Ui ut " I t was a good t r i p , " Spartan 21. Windflower 50 Bill ol lare I. Topsy s H Alliante tridui 9. Fodder what we do tonight or Wed., April 5, 7-10 E D 2-4117 Coach Danny Litwhiler said. 24. Chess 52 Mist - i. Fr. incoili t plant " T h i s is a young club, bound problem 53 Muffiti Honda Dealer in Room 21 Union Bldg. For rides call 355- to make mistakes. There were 27 Behold 54 Bittern s crv 4. ('.uvei! m s Id C.lumsv 5. Riseti boat 6246. some base running and throwing 28. Singed 55 11 15. Mute Parts & Accessories 30. Alfonso's D O W N ft. Blushing errors mostly, things we hope 9 . C haute 7. Time unit 17. Mire queen we'll iron out before the next 19. Kilter Factory Trained Mechanics game. 10 21. Wolfhound I 2 3 4 5 i 7 t 9 " T h e pitching looks OK, and the i 1 22. Proboscis hitting seems to begetting better. II % 12 1 13 23. Boredom '25. Antagonist %% %% 14 15 it 17 26 Non-pro- %% tessional • Prescription lenses 18 19 20 29. Violent % ground outburst 21 22 23 24 25 32. Two- % wheeled car- • C o m p l e t e selection of frames 27 2i 29 % 31 riage % % 34. Nation 3/ 32 33 35 37. Caress • Sunglasses % 39 39. Robbery M 31 33 4 1. F.xplosive %% • R e p a i r s w h i l e you wait 40 41 41 43. Kind ol f , dog Bator Opticians 43 49 44 SO %5> 4i St 41 4t 44. Cvprinoid hub" 4") "The l.ion" 33 m 34 i ss 47 Oath 48 The I 223 Abbott (Next to State T h e a t e r ) 51. Negative Phi Tau Brotherhood A Phi Tau Victory THETA CHI WELCOMES Y O U To O p e n Rush Typically Phi Tau D i v e r s i t y in membership- A unified brotherhood- The Men of A Phi Tau Party PHI KAPPA TAU A 4.0 P h i T a u OPEN RUSH 125 H a g a d o r n F o r rides call 332-3577 7 - 1 0 p.m. 332-3578 April 4 & 5 332-0333 For Rides: ED 2-3581 4 5 3 Abbott * 4 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan -*ARTS Monday, April 3, 19 EVALUATORS REPORT At last... ma trip a success William Manchester's By TRINKA CLINE State News Staff W r i t e r said the people who went were " v e r y responsible. We couldn't have asked for a better g r o u p . " would suggest additional trips planned for other spots in the Bahamas, Nassau or Trinidad. feel other places had " m o r e to o f f e r . " This he said depended on what the person was looking for Death Of * President The Bahamas were " s u p e r ; " Hlbbard, M i l l e r and Art Tung, Tung said he felt more advance and added that other places were the student group was great; ASMSU m e m b e r -at- l a r g e , preparation would have been within traveling distance. Now on sale at: ASMSU sponsored a " s m a s h i n g agreed their m a j o r recommenda- beneficial. He thought students Tung thought it might be ad- tion to the student boardwould be should have been given sugges- vantageous if the students had CAMPUS BOOK STORES s u c c e s s , " according to the Uni- versity administrator and two to expand the spring travel pro- tions for what type of clothes to m o r e of a chance to meet each ASMSU student evaluators who gram. take. other before the flight left. " 1 accompanied the trip. The three travelled as advisers Hlbbard stated that there were know It isn't necessarily a group MSU travellers experienced a on the trip to evaluate and report no accidents, no room damage function, but neither were we c r i t i c i s m s of the Journey. Al- and no real problems. He added sightseers to a foreign l a n d . " 131 E . Grand River 507 E. G r a n d R i v e r six hour delay in their flight to the Bahamas and a shorter delay though no major c r i t i c i s m s were that the hotel management re- Hlbbard commented that the A c r o s s f r o m the Union Across f r o m Berkey during the return trip. However, reported, letters a r e being sent to peatedly commented on the "ex- recreation facilities were excel- Brad Miller, ASMSU travel each of the participants for their ceptional behavior" of the MSU lent and the cost reasonable. I scream, you scream... director, said he didn't think the comments and suggestions. group. Hlbbard also compli- delay dampened the spirit of the Hlbbard said he thought the mented Tung and Miller for the A sure sign spring is here: the annual rush on trip at a l l . group size was ideal and would fine handling of minor matters ice c r e a m cones at the MSU Dairy Store. George B. Hlbbard, associate suggest each trip be limited to such as lost tickets. State News photo by Meade P e r l m a n director of student activities, around 100. The three said they Tung said some students would Free U has Polish, cinema Free University did not die whether enough students are in- with the end of winter t e r m , NAME. PHONE terested In it. rather it is moving on to newer Free University depends on horizons. Courses this term are LOCAL ADDRESS volunteer teaching. Without being organized around faculty teachers, it cannot continue. Fac- and student requests. Please fill in the times you would be free to attend c l a s s e s : ulty interested in talking with sju- One course offered i s a discus- dents about the above courses MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY or courses in any other area sion of contemporary cinema and the process involved in film pro- should call 355-8267. duction. Mike Lopez, NewHaven, Free University is planned to Conn, sophomore, is organizing benefit students. Those who want tHs and other Free University to take advantage of this opportu- programs. nity and would like courses other Marshall McLuhan's book Mall to address listed under individual course. than those listed here should call "Understanding M e d i a " will be 355-8267 from 8-12 and 1-5 Mon- discussed in a single class ses- P lease r e g a r d this as a C O M M I T M E N T t o attend the clas s If it is scheduled during day through Friday. The number sion. Those interested should to call on weekends is 353-0050. • the free t i m e s you list below. Vou need not sign up for a class to attend it. But if also contact Lopez. you are s u r e of your interest, f i l l i n g out this f o r m will be of great help in setting Each course will be indi- KAPPA SIGMA Issues pertaining to all areas up the c l a s s . vidually planned. A course may of mental health will be d i s c f t s e d meet for only one or a few class in another course, which will have and the profitable purchase of It is not necessary to sign up to find the best times to schedule sessions. T h i s will depend on the no reading assignments. J i m L i n - stocks is also on the agenda. for a course to attend it, so the it. If a student sends in an answer course's subject matter. Other den, a graduate student in clinical Gerald Vandevelde, Wyoming, psychology, is in charge. senior, should be contacted. sign-up sheets are only for.per- sons who are certain that they sheet, it is considered a commit- ment to the class if it meets dur- classes may meet weekly for the Find Out For Yourself term. A series in coversational Po- Interested students should fill will attend the class. According ing his free time. Class times will be announced lish is being planned.. Paula in the sign-up sheet on this page to Lopez, the purpose of this pro- Lopez said the courses are not on Mondays in the State News. Andre, Brussels, Belgium, Jun- or send a letter similar to it to cedure is only to find out the definite yet. Whether a class is They will also be announced on ior, will instruct. the person in charge of the m i n i m u m number of students who held depends on if a faculty m e m - the day they occur in I t ' s What's A course on market conditions class(es) desired. would definitely attend a class and ber volunteers to teach it and Happening. FOR R I D E S 715 G R O V E ST. Zen lecture W e d n e s d a y Quick Carry-Out 332-5092 332-5093 Open Rush Tonight 7-10 P.M. jhe friars starts Focus on Asia series for Lunch or Dinner A lecture on Zen Buddhism by Japan, first at General Mac- Lawrence H . Battistini, pro- A r t h u r ' s headquarters and then, fessor of social science, will in 1952-1956, at Sophia Univer- 270 W. Grand River initiate the " F o c u s on A s i a " sity in Tokyo, where he taught East Lansing series for spring term. The lec- F a r Eastern history. ture will be given at 7:30 p . m . Students wishing to be placed Wednesday in Wonders Kiva. on the " F o c u s on A s i a " mailing Sun. - T h u r s . Battistini has travelled widely list may apply at the Asian Stud- 1 I a . m . to midnight in Asia and has written numerous ies Center office, 101 Inter- F r I . & Sat. books on Asian history and national Center, or phone 353- 1680. 11 a . m . to 2 a . m . culture. He spent 10 years in The Men of LAMBDA CHI ALPHA Cordially invite you to attend open rush THE MEN OF tonight and Wednesday 7-10 p.m. QJiptfa M í a Ôlïyt CORDIALLY INVITE YOU TO Founded 1922 O P E N RUSH Active Members • 75 TONIGHT 7-10 P.M. House Capacity • 54 Sponsors of the Nationally-Known J r . 500 held each s p r i n g at Michigan State University CALL FOR RIDE 332-2563 128 Haslett St. Call ED 2-0841 For Ride 332-5456 Monday, A p r i l 3, 1967 g Michigan State News, East Lansing, M i c h i g a n Prof heads postal study A new study of the U.S. Post has asked Congress for an ex- E x p r e s s , P a r c e l Service, truck- e r s ship a c a r l o a d of p a r c e l s at a t i m e and then break them up p r o b l e m s . While a m a x i m u m of 20 pounds can be shipped only son at the Placement Bureau at Placement Bureau Students m u s t r e g i s t e r in p e r - ance ( M ) and mathematics ( B . M ) . Kentwood P u b l i c Schools: early (B), psychology and social work (M) and dietetics and nursing tension of package dimensions— e r s , r a i l r o a d s or any other c a r - least two days p r i o r to the date (B.M). O f f i c e ' s parcel post service i s f r o m one f i r s t c l a s s post office and l a t e r elementary education, s i z e and weight—to help keep up r i e r in o r d e r to find the an- at the destination. The c o m m i s - to be directed by an MSU pro- of an interview. science and industrial a r t s ( B ) , Salinas C i t y School D i s t r i c t : with the present market. s w e r s to the q u e s t i o n s . " sion must decide what constitutes to another, 40 pounds of m a x i - fessor. M o n d a y , A p r i l 10: Grand Rapids. early and later elementary edu- a s m a l l shipment. m u m w e i g h t p a r c e l s m a y be The c o m m i s s i o n will study dis- One of the c o m m i s s i o n ' s tough- Atlantic Richfield Co.: indus- cation and mentally retarded Edward W . Smykay, professor A non-uniformity of the re- shipped f r o m and to second, t h i r d tribution of all small p a r c e l s , est tasks i s to define what s m a l l trial administration and all S.S. K r e s g e Co.: a l l m a j o r s (B.M). of m a r k e t i n g and transportation s t r i c t i o n s In weight a l s o causes or fourth class,post officer- whether by the post office, R E A p a r c e l s a r e . Some manufactur- m a j o r s of the College of Busi- of the colleges of B u s i n e s s , A r t s School D i s t r i c t of the C i t y of a d m i n i s t r a t i o n , was asked last Although the c o m m i s s i o n has ness ( M ) . and L e t t e r s , C o m m u n i c a t i o n Arts Ferndale: a l l elementary and month by President Johnson to held p r e l i m i n a r y meetings, the Bay City P u b l i c Schools: early and Social Science ( B ) . secondary education ( B , M ) . head a five-man advisory com- work will begin f o r m a l l y May 1. m i s s i o n to study s m a l l parcels and l a t e r elementary education, M o n t c l a l r P u b l i c Schools: ele- School D i s t r i c t of the Public distribution. The c o m m i s s i o n plana to de- t e r m i n e the extent of the size Senior mh m competition An MSU recipient of a Na- p a p e r entitled " T h e Use of Tau Beta P I , P i Tai- Sigma and The report Is due Jan 1. The other m e m b e r s of the c o m m i s s i o n a r e Gayton E . G e r - m a n e of S t a n f o r d University; s c i e n c e , m a t h e m a t i c s and Eng- lish (B). Board of Education of J a c k - mentary and secondary education m a j o r s ( B , M ) and counseling and guidance and psychology ( M ) . Schools of North Muskegon: e a r l y and l a t e r elementary education (B). of the m a r k e t , how many par- son: early and later elementary State of Wisconsin, Bureau of tlonal Science Foundation Fel- B r a k i n g E l l i p s e s in Space Craft P h i Kappa P h i . L o u i s E. R u d l n , f o r m e r l y vice M o n r o e P u b l i c Schools: early cels a r e distributed, how much education, L a t i n , F r e n c h , g i r l s ' Personnel: economics, psy- president of Spiegel's m a i l o r d e r and l a t e r elementary education, they cost, and What kind of serv- l°wshlp placed fifth in the region - R e - E n t r y " at the Region V Con- Last fall he was a m e m b e r of physical education, speech cor- chology, management, and busi- house, Highland P a r k , 111.; J a m e s Spanish, art and m u s i c (vocal) als of the American Society of ference of the A S M E , The con- the MSU College Bowl v a r s i t y r e c t i o n , r e m e d i a l reading and a l l ness law, insurance and office Ice the people get. H. M o r r i s o n of Washington, D . C . , ( B , M ) , counseling and guidance Mechanical Engineers' ( A S M E ) ference was held at the Univer- squad which defeated C o l u m b i a others interested ( B , M ) and a d m i n i s t r a t i o n (B,M), labor and The Post Office handled one sity of Waterloo , W a t e r l o o , On- f o r m e r congressman; and C e c i l e ( M ) , m a t h e m a t i c s , E n g l i s h , in- annual paper presentation. in a non-televlsed rematch In visiting teacher (social work) industrial r e l a t i o n s (M) and ac- billion p a r c e l post pieces in 1959, tario, Mackey of the U.S. Dept. of d u s t r i a l a r t s (auto m e c h a n i c s ) but at the present t i m e it handles T . A . Heppenheimer, Coco Solo, New Y o r k . (M). counting and financial a d m i n i s - Heppenhelmer is a m e m b e r of Transportation, Washington, D , C . and science (B) and type a ( B , M ) . only 700 m i l l i o n . The Post Office Canal Z o n e senior, presented a The C h e r r y H i l l School Dis- tration ( B . M ) . t r i c t : early and later elementary Swartz Creek Community National Water Quality Lab- education, a r t , m u s i c (vocal and Schools: early and later elemen- Provost Lectures open o r a t o r y , UJS. Dept. of the In- instrumental), physical educa- tary education, m u s i c (vocal) and t e r i o r : physiology ( i n s e c t , p l a n t ) , t i o n , s c i e n c e / m a t h (block), lan- speech c o r r e c t i o n ( B , M ) . MONDAY, APRIL 3 entomology (aquatic) and bio- guage a r t s / s o c i a l studies (block), T r o y B o a r d of Education: a l l on identity theme chemistry, ( B , M , D ) , fisheries business education, industrial elementary and secondary educa - and w i l d l i f e , b i o c h e m i s t r y , bo- a r t s ( e l e c t r i c i t y , drafting and tion ( B , M ) . tany (algae), and physiology (fish woodworking), m a t h e m a t i c s , U.S.Dept. of L a b o r : all m a - and invertebrate) (M,D). The 1967 Provost L e c t u r e Se- debate on this m a j o r social Is- general science, biology, chem- j o r s of the College of Business r i e s w i l l open this afternoon at sue, M a y ' s lecture i s entitled istry, E n g l i s h , F r e n c h / j o u r n a l - O r a n g e Board of Education: ( B , M , D ) , accounting ( B . M ) , eco- F a i r c h l l d Theater under the joint " I d e n t i t y , Myth and V a l u e s . " i s m , r e m e d i a l reading, visiting early and later elementary edu- nomics ( B , M , D ) , mathematics, , sponsorship of ASMSU and the Subsequent l e c t u r e r s In the teacher (social w o r k ) , speech cation, S p a n i s h / F r e n c h , biology sociology and psychology (B,M). Honors C o l l e g e . following three days w i l l be C l a r k c o r r e c t i o n and mentally handi- (botany), m a t h e m a t i c s and social and labor and industrial r e l a i Illustrating the theme of the Moustakas, p r o f e s s o r of psychol- capped-type a ( B . M ) . studies ( B , M ) , Cleveland. tlons ( M ) . / I n d i v i d u a l ' s search for identity ogy at the M e r r i l l - P a l m e r In- Davison Community Schools: Panhandle Eastern P i p e L i n e Shippensburg State College: In today's m a s s society, each stitute, speaking on " I n d i v i d u a l - early and l a t e r elementary edu- Co.: economics (M,D), ac- a d m i n i s t r a t i o n , chemistry, ele- l e c t u r e w i l l be given at 4 p . m . ity and I d e n t i t y " ; Kenneth Ken- c a t i o n , r e m e d i a l reading, Eng- counting, financial a d m i n i s t r a - mentary education (mathemat- today through Thursday In F a i r - iston, asst. professor of psychol- l i s h , m a t h e m a t i c s and F r e n c h / tion and a l l m a j o r s of the col- ics), English, geography, mathe- c h i l d , followed by receptions for ogy at Yale University, lecturing G e r m a n (B) and teacher of the lege of business ( B , M ) . m a t i c s , m u s i c (band), philosophy, each speaker in the Kresge Art on " S o u r c e s of Student D i s s e n t " ; mentally handicapped ( B , M ) and political science and sociology and U r l e Bronfenbrenner, pro- diagnostician ( M ) . Purex C o r p . , Ltd.: marketing (M who have done significant Gallery. Tonight's s p e a k e r Is R o l l o f e s s o r of psychology at C o r n e l l Glidden Co.: accounting ( B , M ) . (B.M). work on t h e i r D). M a y , adjunct p r o f e s s o r of grad- University, who w i l l deliver a Godwin Heights Public Schools: R E A E x p r e s s : police a d m i n i - Monday-Tuesday, A p r i l 10-11: uate psychology at New Y o r k l e c t u r e entitled " T h e Split So- early and l a t e r elementary edu- stration ( B , M ) . L y b r a n d , R o s s B r o s , and Mont- BETA THETA U n i v e r s i t y . Opening the s e r i e s ciety: C h i l d r e n versus A d u l t s . " cation ( B ) , counseling and guid- gomery: accounting, financial ad- DELTA UPSILON St. L a w r e n c e Hospital: hotel, m i n i s t r a t i o n , management, elec- restaurant and institutional m a n - trical and mechanical engi- agement ( B , M ) , industrial m a n - neering ( B , M ) . f agement and m e d i c a l technology Sky C h e f s , Inc., Subsidiary of A m e r i c a n A i r l i n e s : hotel, res- taurant, and institutional m a n - Mason-Abbot agement ( B ) . / SUMMER EMPLOYMENT IN- get W M S N TERVIEWS M o n d a y , ' A p r i l 10: Approximately 900 m o r e stu- C a m p Kohanna: a l l m a j o r s for dents a r e now being serviced by counselors, housekeeper, kitchen WMSN 640, according to the a l l - help and dishwasher, Glen campus station's engineers. A Arbor. t r a n s m i t t e r was installed in Ma- The Glidden Co.: accounting son-Abbot at 5 p . m . Saturday. ( J r . ) , f i n a n c i a l a d m . , economics, WMSN can also be picked up in business law, insurance, office p a r t s of Student Services now, administration, chemical and said J i m T a y l o r , chief engineer.. mechanical engineering and Broadcasting to Snyder - P h i l - m a r k e t i n g (B). l i p s , West C i r c l e and Fee Is N o r t h e r n Oakland G i r l Scout CALL FOR RIDES 332-8676 still d e l a y e d by blocked and Council, C a m p Sherwood: a l l m a - broken e l e c t r i c a l conduits. j o r s for c a m p unit leader, unit counselor, waterfront assistant, s m a l l c r a f t instructor and busi- ATTENTIONI Students who ness m a n a g e r and education m a - w i l l attain BS o r MS Degrees jors, counselor in training, in trainer. ELECTRICAL T e e P a k , I n c . : soph and above E L E C T R O N I C or A S A N WELCOMES Y O U MECHANICAL In c h e m i s t r y , chemical, mechan- ical and e l e c t r i c a l engineering, ENGINEERING packaging technology and m a r - INDIVIDUAL D R . R I C H A R D H. S E A B O L D keting. NAVAL CIVIL ENGINEERING Monday-Tuesday, A p r i l 10-11: L A B & N A V A L SHIP E N G I - Sky Chefs, Inc., Subsidiary of NEERING, CENTER, Port A m e r i c a n A i r l i n e s : j u n i o r s and TO A TTEND OUR OPEN RUSH Hueneme Division, Hueneme, C a l i f . 93041, w i l l Port above in hotel, restaurant and institutional management. Interview students on campus on: W E D N E S D A Y , 5 A p r i l 1967 Seven to Ten 1148 E . Grand River T o sign up for interview and T he E venlngs of MON. APRIL 3 f u r t h e r information, see your P l a c e m e n t Office. the friars Phone 337-1498 jk> and WED. APRIL 5 an equal opportunity employer PSI UPSILON PHI KAPPA PSI OPENRUSH T U E S D A Y AND W E D N E S D A Y NIGHTS 522 A B B O T T RD. PHONE 332-5029 11 to 8 SPECIALS Chi I i-Burger 250 Sloppy-Joe 25C Steak-Burger 25C Due to last A p r i l ' s fire the brothers of S i g m a Submarine 65C Alpha Mu cannot rush at the house. The S a m m i e s Varsity-Dog 350 cordially invite you to open rush tonight in P a r l o r C of the Union, and Wednesday at the Pi Beta Phi Sorority house, 343 N. H a r r i s o n , THE MEN OF PSI U N o delivery on specials 7-10 p . m . Cordially Invite All Enjoy these tremendous Wl specials Monday thru, "VARSITY Eligible Men To Open Saturday and save! ftdl Rush Mon. & Wed. Evenings For Rides: 351-6025 810 W. Grand River Ave. 351-7841 , i Corner of Harrison Rd. # 351-4686-87-88 O P E N AT 11:00 a . m .R e n oEwD "Campus n e d2-6517 4 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan -*ARTS Monday, April 3, 1967 End of TOKYO if) -- Reports from of the bourgeois line within the on Liu seen The demonstrations apparent- Teng's whereabouts have not been made public. Tao was ear- plng and Politburo member Tao Chu.r • Peking on Sunday indicated Com- p a r t y . " ly were touched off by the first Sunday's demonstration In official attack Friday on Liu by lier reported to have returned to Asahl said no less than 200,000 munist Chinese Chairman Mao the Communist party's most his stronghold of Canton, in Red Guards and Maoist workers Tse-tung's drive to discredit Peking followed reports of mass authoritative publications, the southern China, but this has not and peasants participated in President Liu Shao-chi has en- rallies in the capital, Shanghai and Harbin on Saturday de- Red Flag, a theoretical journal been confirmed. Sunday's demonstration in Pek- tered the final stage. and party organ tne Peking The Japanese newspaper Asa- ing. The Chinese-language Ra- Radio Peking said, " H u n d r e d s nouncing Liu and his followers. dio Peking broadcast said the Radio Peking said students, People's Daily. hi in a dispatch from Peking of thousands" of revolutionary square was flooded with Red Recent reports from Peking s.aid recent developments in the workers and Red Guards staged workers and soldiers partici- banners and portraits of Mao. It did not indicate the whereabouts Chinese capital Indicate Mao's a demonstration in Peking's Tien pated in the demonstration at the said the demonstrators " l o u d l y " of L i u , Teng and Tao. Liu was drive to discredit his opponents An Men - Gate of Heavenly Peace captial Saturday. It added 200,000 chanted such slogans a s , " R e s o - reported humiliated by Red in the power struggle has been - Square for the second consec- persons held similar rallies In lutely repudiate the bourgeois Guards at a public rally in Pek- narrowed down to L i u , party utive day to launch an all-out Harbin and thousands m o r e in reactionary l i n e " . ing on J a n . 26. General Secretary Teng Hsiao- attack on " t h e greatest leader Shanghai. Registration Tuesday for Winds of Change Students interested in attending ing address at 8 p.m. Friday in the Winds ofChange seminar F r i - Erickson Kiva. day and Saturday may register At 9 a . m . Saturday a sympo- between 1 and 5 p . m . Tuesday sium on "People, Events and the through Thursday In the Union Mass M e d i a " will be held. Bikes on block concourse. MSU faculty members will con- duct workshops Saturday begin- Unclaimed bicycles found on campus were sold at an auction F r i d a y afternoon To attend the dinner in Kellogg ning at 2 p.m. at the c a m p u s salvage yard. Fred Kletke, group leader of the salvage yard, was Center at 6:30 p . m . Saturday, " W a r at the Dinner T a b l e " auctioneer. State News photo by Meade P e r l m a n students must register and pay will be the topic for a symposium a $3.30 fee in advance. If sym- at 8 p . m . Saturday. posia and workshop sections a r e not filled, students may register Coffee hours will be held at (JHiciftgaM: <3toia C h a p t e r it's what's happening Cycle, saddles at the door. approximately 10 p.m. both days. Participants on the panels in- clude prizewinning newsmen, a Howard K. Smith, ABC news Announcements must be received before 11 a . m . weekend thefts commentator, will give the open- m i l i t a r y c r i t i c and professors. of the day before publication. Three robberies were report- Douglas Lytde, president of the vited to a meeting and rehearsal ed to the University Police over Professional Photographers of at 4 p . m . today in 12 Demonstra- the weekend. Michigan and Michigan's profes- tion Hall. A lightweight motorcycle, sional photographer of the year, » # • valued at $250 was stolen from Kenneth Cragg, cannon of Can- Ronald W. Matheny, Birming- cordially invites you to will speak at 7:15 tonight in the State News Phc'.oiraphic Dept., terbury Cathedral and ward of ham sophomore, Friday. 301 Student Services. St. Augustine's College, will The motorcycle had been • » * speak on " M u s l i m and Christian parked on Brody Road West near Milton Rokeach, professor of Today" at 7 tonight,in 137Akers, Bryan Hall p r i o r to the robbery. OPEN RUSH Spaghetti psychology, will speak on " A n The appearance by the author of A saddle valued at $164, a Steak "Sandals at the M o s q u e " and bridle valued at $45 and two sad- Chicken Lasagna Ahistorical Approach to the Study of Radical-Conservatism" in a " C a l l of the M i n a r e t " is spon- dle blankets valued at $27 were Shrimp Submarine Scndwlches political science s e m i n a r at sored by the Dept. of Religion taken from Linda M . C l a r k , Bad and the Asian PIZZA 4 p . m . today, » * * * * Studies * Center. Axe freshman. A saddle valued C . E , Wildon, professor emer- Faculty members are Invited to at $290 was also taken f r o m Marv "The Cook's In" at II Daily, 1 Sun. on Monday, April 3,1967 the monthly open meeting of the Ellen Bemister, Metamora Jun- 211 M.A.C. E D 7-1668 itus of horticulture, will speak Steering Committee of the Aca- i o r . to the Evergreen Wives, a group demic Senate at 4 p . m . today in i o r the wives of forestry students, 507 Erickson. P I J at 8 tonight in the Faculty Lounge of the Natural Resources Bldg. The MSU Folklore Society will He will discuss * *floral arranging. meet at 7 tonight in the Museum * All musicians interested in the Auditorium. Plans for the Spring Reifet Œ a u -©sita gtsMàq (iîtltcÎjtgan Jlfcttc Jänitersttjj Scots Highlanders are being ln- Sing will be discussed. me QcuîÀ êhcpp, 330 fiorii} ¿Harmon Street J ì a j t lîanamg, 65 S 90. Great buy. 63 NEW L U X U R Y miles. $1,400.00. Going Into modern company cafeteria. Six PHONE Only $220.00. Phone TU2-0764. JAGUAR SEDAN 3.4, new car Radio, heater, turbine trans- service. TU 2-4421. 3-4/3 day week. Full benefits with a sound proof u n i t s plex. Faculty or staff. No pets. 332-4316. 3-4/5 3-4/4 condition, $1295 at STRATTON mission, power steering. Excel- UNIVERSITY VILLA 355-8255 SPORT CENTER, 1915 East lent condition. Private owner. OLDSMOBILE 196^Star firecon- national food company. Located A SURGE for every' urge! Kawast- APARTMENTS N E E D FOURTH Man for spring RATES kl 60cc.-650cc. Call your deal- Michigan. IV 4-4411. C $850. 482-2282. 4-4/5 vertlble, full power. Record in Jackson. Call M r s . Kaye, SERVOMATION OF LANSING, - 635 ABBOTT ROAD term. Parking. 351-9216. 5-4/6 player. May be seen at MSU Em- 1 DAf SI.50 er-CULLY'S CYCLE CENTER. YAMAHA 1966, 66cc bike, deluxe CADILLAC 1958 hardtop. ÂTl 372-1850 for appointment. - WALK TO CAMPUS ployee's Union. See John DeBow. TWO GIRLS needed next year, 3 DAYS S3.00 482-4019. 3-4/5 helmet, S245.00. 616 Gainsbor- power, excellent condition. 332- 3-4/5 - C O M P L E T E L Y FURNISHED 353-2287. 3-4/5 Eden Roc apartment, 205. 353- 5 DAYS .<5.00 MO+6RCYCLE HEADQUAR- ough. E D 2-4131. 3-4/4 6273 after 5 p . m . 3-4/4 STUDENTS 2-BEDROOM PLYMOUTH 1962; six cylinder; WANTED: COED to supervise two F L E X I B L E UNITS 1169. 3-4/4 TERS: Yamaha, Triumph, BMW DUCATI 250 Scrambler. 1966, C H E V E L L E 1964 convertible automatic; 50,000 miles; good children, 8 and 6. Monday thru - LET US HELP YOU FIND N E E D E D ONE male roommate. sales and services. All types 800 miles, superb condition. Mallbu. V-8 automatic. 489- body condition; new tires. Best Friday, 3-5 p.m. Okemos ad- A ROOMMATE Luxury apartment. $50 per ( b a s e d on 10 w o r d s p e r ad] of riding apparel. Complete Need money for school. Call 7474. 3-4/5 offer over $500.00. 355-5599. dress. Must have own transpor- 3 Man Units month. Close to campus. 351- selection of helmets. SHEP'S 351-4565. 10-4/13 CHEVROLET CONVERTIBLE 3-4/4 tation. Call 351-5006 after 5 Over 10, 15f per word, per day. 65.00 each per month 7348. 3-4/4 MOTORS, just south of 1-96 BMW 1965-R69S. Excellent con- 1959, $75.00. Excellent motor, p.m. 5-4/7 RENAULT 1963 Caravelle. Con- 2-Man Units available • TWO BEDROOM apartment needs There will be a50tf service Expressway on Business 127. dition. Extra large seat and tank. some body work necessary. Call vertible. $750 with extra hard- WANTED: EIGHT full or part Furnished Model Open Days 81 third girl. $50 monthly. Call and bookkeeping charge if OX 4-6621. 3-4/5 Windshield, luggage rack, turn 484-4954. 5-4/6 top. 26,000 miles, burgundy with evenings: See Manager or call 332-5937. 3-4/4 this ad is not paid within time men for division of Alcoa. SUZUKI l50, 1966. fted, 1,800 signals. 351-7023. 5-4/4 CHEVROLET 1961 Blscayne. Six 332-0091,332-5833 before 8 pm j one week. black interior. IV 5-3303 eve- Call 339-8610 for appointment, THIRD STUDENT needed. Brand miles. 10,20CVmiles of warran- BR1DGESTONE 1965, 175cc. Ex- cylinder, two door. 355-9710. nings. 3-4/3 M r . Foster. 3-4/5' new apartment. Car needed. Call ty left. Call IV 4-6461. 3-4/5 cellent condition. $425 . 332- Juergen. 5-4/4 STUDEBAKER 1962,perfect con- SALES P E O P L E wanted. Build SIGN U P NOW F O R F A L L 882-6716. 3-4/4 PARlLLA 1933 250cc, with 0609. 5-4/4 CHEVROLET 1955, $25.00 as lsl dltion, $280.00 . 332-6522 after on repeat sales. Nationally EDEN NEAR CAMPUS: quiet, furnished, sprockets for road or trail. HONDA 1966, 305 Scrambler, 2281 East Mt, Hope Road. 351- ROC; one, two men; The State News does not 6 p . m . Henry Han. 3-4/4 known products. Write P.O.Box two-man, living room, kitchen, 627-2727. 3-4/5 excellent condition. Best of- 4608. Call after 5 p.m. spring, summer. $55.00 per permit racial or religious 3-4/5 343, East Lansing. 3-4/5 bedroom and bath. ED 2-5374. THUNDERBIRD 1963 Landau, monti 351-5404. 3-4/4 discrimination in Its ad- HONDA 50, 1965. fted and white fer. Call 655-2524. 3-4/5 CHEVROLET 1956. Cheap, de- 3-4/5 new tires, very sharp condition. SUMMER HELP WANTED: Can vertising columns. The with chrome luggage carrier. VESPA M O T O R S C O O T E R S . pendable transportation. 18-20 MAN N 'EDED. Waters Edge TWO MEN needed in four man $1280.00. IV 5-7020. 10-4/13 use 15 men. Healthy outdoor State News will not accept Excellent condition. 1688 miles. Clean, economical transporta- m.p.g. Call 332-6112, 6-9 p . m . Apartme >ts, spring term. 351- apartment. Block from Berkey. advertising which discrim- $175 cash. Call IV 5-7565 after tion. GENE'S BICYCLE-HOBBY TRIUMPH TR3 1959, goodcondl- workrooms available nearby. 7463. 4-4/6 3-4/3 Reasonable. 337-0581. 3-4/4 inates against religion, tlqn, red. 489*7474. 3-4/5 Located approximately 25 miles 5 p.m. 3-4/5 SHOP. 702 West Barnes. IV 4- HASLETT: TWO-bedroom de- CHEVROLET 1954, four-door. southeast of Lansing-5 miles WANTED: ONE man for three race, color or national ori- YAMAHA 80, $200. Honda 50, 0362. 3-4/5 VOLKSWAGEN, REBUILT en- luxe, stove," refrigerator, car- gin. Good condition, runs well. Phone north of Gregory. All the hours bedroom home. $40 month. 487- $150. Both run well. 351-9376. HONDA 1966 305 Scrambler. 351- gijae, 6000 m i l e s . Call 353- peting, drapes. Married stu- 482-2846. 3-4/3 you want at $1.75 per hour. Call 6254. 3-4/4 , 3-4/5 5298. 3-4/3 dents or teachers. $150 per 1321 after 6 p.m. 3-4/5 area 517-223-9966, or come month. Phone 339-8859; after 6 N E E D ONE man for luxury apart- VOLKSWAGEN 1963. Call after out to EMERALD VALLEY Burcham Woods and Eydeal Villa p . m „ 339-8834. 3-4/3 ment immediately. University 5 p ' m . IV 5-3905. 5-4/5 TURF NURSERIES, INC., 7450 Terrace. 351-6705. 5-4/5 Weller Road, Gregory, Michi- WANTED: GIRL for two girl VOLVO 19Ó1 Sport. Very good ONE MAN for spring t e r m . gan. 5-4/7 apartment. Summer term. $60 condition. 332-5092, Don. 4-7 Eydeal Villa. Phone 351-7368. p.m. 3-4/4 FULL OR part time men needed. month. Near campus. 351-4359. 10-4/13 $50 to $60 per week, delivering 5-4/7 Auto Service & Parts TWO MEN for four-man apart- advertising gifts. M r . Centllla, FOUR NEEDED TO sub-let OPEN HOUSE ment. Burcham Woods. 351- MASON BODY Shop, 812 East 339-8610. 3-4/4 luxury apartment summer, pool. 9491 " n o w . " 5-4/6 Kalamazoo Street - since 1940. SEVEN WAITRESSES who defi- Call 351-7305. 3-4/5 Complete auto painting and col- FOURTH MAN needed for spring nitely need to earn school money TWO MEN for a four man luxury lision service. American and t e r m . $50. 351-6392. 5-4/6 this summer. Room and board apartment in Evergreen A r m s . foreign cars. IV 5-0256. C and wages plus tips. Send pic- $50 a month. Phone 351-7365. HOLT: NEW spacious two-bed- ACCIDENT PROBLEM? Call tures and resumes. STRAITS 3-4/5 room apartment. Fireplace, a i r KALAMAZOO STREET BODY INVEST, Box 337, Mackinac conditioning, GE appliances, ONE MAN. Burcham Woods,pool, SHOP. Small dents to large City. 5-4/5 draperies and carpeting. Heat reduced rate, cheap. Call Tues- wrecks. American and foreign furnished. $165. 15 minutes day and Thursday. 351-7756. cars. Guaranteed work. 482- For Rent 4-4/6 from MSU. Call OX 9-2987 or 1286. 2628 E. Kalamazoo. C GARAGE AVAILABLE at 218 OX 4-8641. 10-4/11 NEED FOURTH man luxury M E L ' S AUTO SERVICE: Large Mllford Street, close to campus- apartment. Pool, reasonable. LUXURY PENTHOUSE APART- or small, we do them all. 1108 two blocks from Grand River. MEN'T needs two girls for school 351-5298. 3-4/5 E. Grand River. 332- 3255. C 5-4/4 year beginning June or Septem- N E E D ONE GIRL Spring and/or GENERATORS AND starters - TV RENTALS for students. Eco- ber. Call 332-3570 or 332-3579.. 6 and 12 volt. Factory rebuilt, summer. Burcaam Woods,pool. 8-4/7 nomical rates by the term or 351-4267. 3-4/5 as low as $9.70, exchange; used AVONDALE APARTMENTS now month. UNIVERSITY TV RENT- $4.97. Guaranteed factory re- FURNISHED APARTMENT to leasing two bedroom furnished ALS. 484-9263. C built voltage regulators $2.76 sublet for summer. One bed- apartments for June and Sep- exchange; shock absorbers, GARAGE an3 PARKING, one room Near east end of campus. tember. Also one available for each $2.99. ABC AUTO PARTS, block from Bogue Street. 337- Graduate or married students. spring term. Call 351-7672 or 613 E. South Street. Phone IV5- 0216. 3-4/3 351-7478. 3-4/4 337-2080. 10-4/12 1921. C FOURTH GIRL for Haslett Apart- ONE GIRL needed for Eden Roc TV R E N t A L S for students, $9.00 ment. Spring term. Call 351- Apartment #205. Phone 351- Aviation 7667. 5-4/7 month. Free service and deliv- 7565. 3-3/31 FRANCIS AVIATION offers ery. CallNEJAC. 337-1300. We NEEDED: ONE man for spring Houses spring special. 10% discount guarantee same day service. C term. Riverside East. Call 351- on flying. Trial lesson, $5.00. 9429. 3-4/3 TWO BLOCKS from campus. 415 484-1324. C GARAGE FOR rent. 538 Grove. Ann Street. Fully furnished, • 332-5184. 3-4/5 SUBLEASE SUMMER term, four- paved parking. $65 per month Employment man luxury apartment. Excel- including utilities. Call 482- lent location. 351-7091. BUILDING MANAGER. Graduate CEDAR VILLAGE 3-4/3 2919. 4-4/6 student. Couple only. Apartment APARTMENTS ONE BEDROOM house $90, no Completely furnished building in East Lansing. Apart- ment furnished. Must have pub- Leasing for G I R L FOR apartment, one block from Berkey. $50/month. 332- lease. Two student apartments, two bedrooms each, parking. lic relations knowledge and me- 4475. 3-4/3 S u m m e r and Fall $140 and $160 for three or chanical ability. Coal stoker 12 " N O R W O O D APARTMENTS Air Conditioned boiler. Sorry no children. Call Tom Bauman at the Edward G. Model open April 3 9 MONTH LEASES needs third man spring term. four men, groups. Call 332- 2919 or 332-2823. KOFFMAN Phone 351-9269. 3-4/3 REALTY. Hacker Company. IV 5-2261, AVAILABLE 1-4 man apartments evenings 484-0515. 5-4/4 Modern Luxury Apts. on edge of campus FOUR-GIRL ment furnished apart- AWAY TWO years, furnished needs two. Available five-room house for couple. Ha - EXPERIENCED BABYSITTER: spring t e r m . One block campus. gadorn near Mt. Hope, available Two small girls, our home near Reasonable rent. 337-2345. 4/5 * Dishwasher in all apart- July. $175 month. Lease to July, Our H E A T E D pools campus. Thursday or Friday, EDEN ROC four man apartment GUARANTEED 9-4. 332-6472. 3-4/4 ments 1969. Phone 351-9023. for spring term. Contact man- NORTHEAST, WELL furnished, 5-4/5 are open spring, FLY WITH the Jet Set - be a * A i r Conditioner ager at 332-8488 . 8-4/7 six rooms. Four students at parking Pan Am Stewardess. Interviews * Large Balconies EAST LANSING. MARIGOLD $60 each. 337-0512.. 5-4/4 summer, and fall April 17, Placement Bureau. 5-4/6 * Snack Bars APARTMENTS. Corner of South N E E D ONE man for spring, pos- WANTED: busboys in sorority Harrison and Marigold. One slbly summer. $50.00plus. 351- Two Bedroom bedroom, furnished. Open for house. 332 -3020. 3-4/4 7640. 1-4/3 * Laundry Facilities inspection daily 6:30 p . m . to TWO GIRLS: comfortable, pool, Rents start at $125 EXPERIENCED BABYSITTER, 8:30 p . m . Saturday, 1-5 p . m . fireplace, parking. Burcham Monday, Wednesday, and Friday « Parking Sunday by appointment. Phone Drive. Spring term. 332 -6117. EAST LANSING MANAGEMENT CO mornings. 8:45-11:45. 351- IV 9-9651. 5-4/4 * Close to shopping 5-4/5 6037. 3-4/3 ONE GIRL wanted for Burcham ONE MAN needed spring term. WANTED: PLANE Geometry * Walk In storage closets Woods Apartment. 351-4604. Own bedroom. $50 monthly. 372- tutor for high school student. 5-4/4 6732. 5-4/6 Call 332-8734 after 6 p . m . Model Apartment 1-4/3 ONE MAN spring term. Cheap, ONE MAN to share house. $75 241 Cedar St. clean, quiet, luxury apartment. month. Near campus. 351-6789. EARNINGS ARE unlimited as an Apt H9 3-4/5 351-926?. 5-4/6 AVON Representative. Turn F o r further HOW ABOUT THAT? An apart- C O O L E D SUMMER brick ranch. 745 Burcham Apt. 2 your free time into $$. For an appointment in your home, write detai Is ment available for spring t e r m . Three to four students. Com- Furnished, three bedrooms, large recreation room, fire- M r s . ALONA HUCKINS, 5663 Phone manager at place, double garage, dish- 351-7880 School Street, Haslett, Michigan or call IV 2-6893. C-4/7 332-5051 • pletely ¡urnished. We pay all utilities. Call NEJAC OF EAST washer. $265, utilities. 1667 < LANSING. 337-1300. C Linden. 337-2304. 3-4/4 / 4 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan -*ARTS Monday, April 3, 1967 For Rent For Rent For Sale For Sale Personal Peanuts Personal Service Wonted SINGLE, APPROVED, for mar.. APARTMENT SIZE Electric COLONIAL STtJDlO couch THE SOUNDS and the Sondettes JOHK, CÒNGRATULATIONS on DIAPER SERVICE, Lansing's DOCTORAL STUDENT needs 3-4 HMISCS No cooking. Ideal for grad or stove and refrigerator. Also are now accepting bookings for finest. Your choice of three bedroom for 1-2 years. Will $59.50, dinette sets, used bed the SP-4 promotion and happy THREE BEDROOM duplex. Near serious undergrad wanting Maytag automatic washer. All spring term. 351-9155. C » 1-4)/ì type*. C c w a A - V r i ^ - s v ^ - v ^ i * . ' i r ^ X ^ m * &OS&, • Suburban or shopping c«nier, bus, »«¿woks. Vai», clean, iitsss^in rsfKT. \T. gOoSt eoft#tcAfo. Cifi 4S7- springs and mattresses, roll- ¿i-wip iwii., ~€*Mp*gas APPOINTMENT FOft passport o r ' deposit. Baby clothes washed Lansing. Needed June or Sep- Drapes, stove, full basement. $9.50 . 428 Grove Street. Phone 3096. 7 5-4 6 application pictures now being free. Try ourVelvasoftprocess. tember. Write D. L. Conrad, ranges, metal kitchen cabinets, 332-1612. 3-4/4 351-4266 or 351-9023. 3-4/3 ELECTRIC 1 GUITAR and ampli- electric room heaters with fans. taken at HICKS STUDIO. 24hour Real Estate 25 years in Lansing. BY-LO DIAPER SERVICE, 1010 E. Bethel College, Mishawaka, In- diana. Phone Oscola, 219-674- SUMMER AND fall, three or four PLEASANT SINGLE rooms for fier with case. Good condition. Portable electric sewing ma- or same day service. ED 2- MARBLE SCHOOL area: thret Michigan. IV 2-0421. C students, near campus. Parking. rent. Students or working girls. $85. Call 655-2244. 3-4/4 chines. Stereo and transistor 6169. c 8901- 3-4/5 bedroom, tri-level, fireplace, 332-8903 after 6 p j n . 3-4/4 332-3259. 1-4/3 MATCHED LOCAL ARMY Recruiter will be RIDE URGENTLY needed from 1965 MT-DX golf portable record players-used. carpet. $25,900 . 337-0959. Typing Service THREE BEDROOM, furnished, In SHARE ROOMY housse with four clubs. Sansui 500 amplifier and AM-FM radios. Typewriters, available In Room 4, Demon- Chestnut Pine area to campus. 5-4/5 ANN BROWN, typist and multl- Lansing near bus line, limited grad men — parking. $50.00. Gerard A-70 turntable. Call $29.50 - $300. Electric adding stration Hall Tuesdays and Will pay! 487-6277. 5-4/7 lith offset printing, disserta- parking, 4-5 single persons. One minute from campus. 489- 351-7377. 3-4/4 machines. WILCOX SECOND Thursdays 1:00-4:30 p . m . to tions, theses, manuscripts, gen- BLOOD DONORS needed. $?.50 484-1938. 5-4/4 3174. Gene. 5-4/4 P X Store Frandor HAND STORE. 509 East Mich- discuss with college seniors the Service eral typing. IBM, 16 years ex- for all positive, Rh negative C O O L E D . CAPE Cod, furnished, A P P R O V E D SUPERVISED-Men: igan. IV 5-4391. C Offi cer's Candidate School pro— DIAPER SERVICE, Diaparene Everything in Intramural perience. 332 -8384. C with positive factor - $7.50, two bedroom, double garage. two singles, $10.00 week.Jt\vo VACUUM CLEANER, like new, gram. 1-4/3 Franchised Service Approved by Sports: shagballs, fins, arch- TYPING DONE i n m y home, 2-1/2 A negative, B negative, and Fireplace, dishwasher. Summer doubles, $7.50. Large, quiet, $17.00. Also .scuba gear. Call FOR GOVERNMENT that Listens Doctors and DSIA. The most ery, diving masks, shuttle- blocks from campus. 372-9527. AB negative - $10. O negative on. $165, utilities. 337-2304. fully furnished rooms. Hot and 485-4896. 3-4/4 to Vou, vote BROWN for ASMSU. modern and Only personalized cocks, snorkels, tennis balls C - $12. MICHIGAN COMMUNITY 3-4/4 cold water in each. Large lobby BICYCLE SALES] rentals and THE LOOSE ENDS:' The sound service in Lansing, providing & rackets, paddleballs & pad- BARBI M E L , Professional typ- BLOOD CENTER. 1427 East EAST LANSING: two mer. needed with TV. One block from cam- that makes you want to do it. you with diaper pails, polybags, Michigan Avenue. Hours:9-3:30 dles, and many more. services. Also used. EAST ist. No job too large or too for four-man house. 351-5548. pus. 215 Louis. Spartan Hall. FENDER MUSTANG guitar, with LANSING C Y C L E , 1215 E. Wild! Tom, 485-0761. C deodorizers, and diapers, or Monday and Tuesday; 12-6:30 small. Block off campus. 332- 3-4/3 ED 2-2574. 5-4/5 Grand River. Call 332-8303. C NOW BOOKING for spring. Get a use your own. Baby clothes Thursday. 4C"~-"7587. C case. Excellent condition. Best 3255. c MEN: NEAR Union, singles and good band now! TERRY MAY- washed free. No deposit. Plant offer. 353-0108. 5-4/7 FOR WEDDING and practical Rooms doubles, lounge and TV areas. BOYS shower gifts, complete line of NARD, 482-4590, 482-4548. C inspection invited. AMERICAN TYPIST; CALL M r s . Yates.55T- COUPLE NEEDS. apartment or ENGLISH Schwinn bi- GREAT SOUND of THE EXILES. DIAPER SERVICE, 914 E . G i e r . 8404 after 5 p.m. weekly. All house for summer. Wi i:_ DOUG STUDENT" ft(!!>OMS, male only, Cooking. Call 351-4311. 8-4/7 basket-ware. See ACE HARD- cycle. Good condition. $20.00. Open dates. Call 353-2769, Bob. Call 482-0864. C day on week-ends. 5-4 7 COOK, Grant, Michigan. 3-4/5 neat and clean. Two blocks to MEN: NICE double room. Cook- WARE'S selections. 201 East 372-8325„ 3-4 5 5-4/5 campus. Immediate occupancy. ing. Cleaning done. Block cam- Grand River, across from IV 5-6581, ED 2-8531. 5-4/7 HQ 170A-VHF HAM Receiver: pus. After 5:30 p . m . , 332-2195. Union. Phone ED 2-3212. C R 6 0 M £ O R woman, block Union. 160 through 2 meters. Eight 3-4/5 ONE AMPEG B-15 amplifier. Quiet, phone. Graduate pre- months old, ,,asking $300. 351- LARGE DELUXE double room, Call 332-3270 anytime. 3-4/3 ferred. ED 2-8498. 3-4/5 9004. ' 4-4, 5 outside private entrance. Walk- ' M A L E GRADUATE student to THREE FISH tanks: 29 gallon, OUR LOW overhead saves you ing distance. Contemporary new money. OPTICAL DISCOUNT, share large room. Private bath, home. 337-0031 after 5 p . m . $22.00 per tank or $60.00 for porch. Parking, buffet break- _____ 5-4 all three. Call after 6 p . m . 416 Tusslng Building. Phone IV 355-8046. 3-4/3 2-4667. C 5-4/7 fast. One block from campus. R 6 O M FOR gentleman. Linen 351-5485. 3-4/5 HARMONY, SOLID body, double A n i m a l s furnished. Private entrance and pick-up. Vibrato tail piece. With SINGLE FOR male student. Pri- parking. Close to bus and cam- ADORABLE BLOND cocker case. 485-0761. 3-4/5 vate entrance. Private bath. pus. Call after 5 p.m. 372-2875. spaniel puppy. Very gentle. 351- Parking. 332-5214. ' 3-4/5 3-4/4 WINCHESTER RIFLE .30Ssemi- 9428. 3-4/4 MEN, CLOSE to campus, super- automatic. Excellent condition, TWO AND three man rooms two vised, cooking. Private en- $130. Also . . . Karmann Ghla Mobile Homes blocks from campus. Fully car- trance. $10. 351-4062. 3-4/5 luggage rack, 800 miles old, MARLETTE 1960 10x50, Two peted, newly furnished, paved M E N : ROOMS near Union. Cook- parking. 425 Ann Street. $45 $15. Tony 355-3132. 5-4/7 bedroom, carpeting, awning, ing, lounge area. 314 Ever- per month. Call 482-2919. ELECTRO-VOICE. Spring pro- $3000. Phone 588-4708. 5-4/6 green. ED 2-3839. 3-4/4 4-4/6 motion. Come listen to the new NEAR UNION, single room for model 11 speakers, teamed up Personal male student. Parking. Phone For Sale with EV's 1177 Stereo receiver. SEE THE world as a PanAmerl- BAMBOO SLIDE rule. 10" Really The whole package FM stereo, can Stewardess. Interviews 337-2400. 3-4/4 changer, speaker systems, April 17, Placement Bureau. like new. $12. 355-0824. 1-4/3 SINGLE, APPROVED, for man. $287.90 plus tax. Bring your 5-4/6 No cooking. Ideal for grad or GOLF GLUBS-Mac Gregor Tour- own test record. MAIN ELEC- THE TONIKS are back! The serious undergrad wanting ney 1, 3, 4, 5 woods. Spauldlng TRONICS, 5558 South Pennsyl- Toniks are back! Call 351-9359. quiet, clean, close-in room for Autograph 1, 3, 4 woods. 337- vania. C 6-4/7 $9.50 . 428 Grove Street. Phone 0581. 2-4/3 RCA 21" TV Consolette. Maho- 484-4601 or 351-9023. 3-4/3 AMPLIFIERS, DRUMS, guitars, goney. Good working condition. WE'RE TUNED for spring, are MEN: SINGLES, doubles, close, any make. 30% off list price. you? The GRIM REAPERS. Call $15. 337-2770. 3-4/5 cooking. 332-0939. 5-4/6 351-5803. 5-4/7 339-8423. 5-4 6 MASTER'S CANDIDATES: You had a Interested in European Study? pretty good reason for going on for your Master's. Now here are some good ones for MICHIGAN STATE putting it to work. European Study/Travel Program Credit UNIVERSITY and Non-Credit Language For putting it to work with IBM. Reasons went on for vour advanced degree, isn't it? and Political Science such as: To make the most of vour potential? I B M is THE leader in THF. major growth You can choose from six majorcareerareas with July 3 - August 18 (7 weeks) IBM: Computer Applications, Programming, industry: information handling and control. French - At Paris* And Lausanne, Switzerland Finance and Administration, Research and Doesn't it stand to reason you can grow far- G e r m a n - At Cologne* Development, Manufacturing or Marketing, thest with an exciting, continuallv growing 'Italian- At Florence ^es, we would like to talk with you. You may company? be the bright, look-ahead kind of person we're Spanish - At Madrid* And Barcelona You'll be advanced as far and as fast as your lookingfor. And we could be the exciting kind Political Science-At London* talents and ambitions allow. That's whv vou of companv vou're looking for. So... * Credit courses Whatever your immediate commitments, whatever your area of study, Transportation overseas - New York to P a r i a v l t sign up now for an on-campus interview with I B M , Apr i I 12-13 seats available to students, staff & faculty,. AMLEC 2 Charters Call A M L E C today 1. June 24-August 19 If, f o r some reason, y o u aren't able to arrange an interview, d r o p us a line. W r i t e to: Manager of College Recruiting, IBM Corporation, 100 South W a c k e r Drive, Chicago, Illinois. IBM is an Equal O p p o r t u n i t y Employer. 2. June 25-September 9 353-0681 A M L E C Offices located in r o o m 58 A Kellogg C « n t « r 4 Michigan State News, East Lansing, M i c h i g a n -*ARTS Monday, A p r i l 3, 1967 East Lansing election Fleming d u b i o u s o f d r a f t ' f .V «< .. . . <• . fxpspJfeB» of the downtown EEast Lanslnc area area Is .. . a. » Hlmlnlch student who who aemanaeu demanded 'ro cO Kknow a m na I d> Blue and Grape Heated Swimming Pool-Patio-Kiddie Playground Asa • E*e' utive Suites • Free Continental Breakfast • Bndai Suites • free Wake up CoWee • Kitchenete Apartments • Free TV and Radio • Conference & Meetn ig Roorn • free Ice • 24 hour Switchboard Servict • Free Parking college girl, The Motel With a College Education* you'll learn • Electronic Bedside TV Controls * Bedsd ie Radio Controls • Electronic Message Waiting Signals • Room Status Signals psychology, • Electronic Wake up Buzzer System • Mad • Touch Tone Tee i in Room Signals lphones m Every Room • Electric Bathroom Wal Meat sociology, philosophy, • Touch Tone direct phonmg for speed and privacy f • Individual thermostatic controls for healing and rooimg . Write for reservations or call Area Code 517 351 550G* economics and more. your guests will love it too . . Phil Whitney - Manager in mnfn^if^ Asa T h e B o a r d of D i r e c t o r s r e q u e s t t h a t no o n e t e l l t h e i r f r i e n d s about (ireal Buys On t o d a y ' s b i g s t e r e o s a l e (it h u r t s just to t h i n k o f t h e s a v i n g s ) United Stewardess, USED TIRES you'll put them I The Voice of Music all to use. (And fly to the places you've read about.) Learning "by the book" is the tirst step. Learning by doing is the next. As a United Air Lines stewardess, you'll have a chance to apply what you learned in school. You'll meet people trom all walks of life. Because they'll be looking to you for information, assistance and re- assurance, you'll gain poise and self-confidence. You'll become a master of tact and diplomacy. It's the kind of experience that will be useful to you the rest of your life. After a 5'/2-week course at our Stewardess Training Model 382 Center in Chicago, you'll be assigned to one of 10 United Buy one and get Component System stewardess domiciles —Seattle, San Francisco, a $19.95 stand Model 368 Los A n g e l e s , Denver, C h i c a g o , Detroit, New York, Save $59.35 Newark, Washington, D.C., or Miami. for a nickel Save $20 The record changer plays any During youi first year, you'll earn as much as $451 a record, any size, any speed, month. When you're away from home base, you'll be Model 382 with 45 peak watts Housing a powerful 20 watt stereo or monaural. And the of power and Input for tape Solid State amplifier, the cen- given a generous travel allowance. Other benefits in- speakers (hang them up, stand or tuner. "Shadoweight" tone tral unit sits on bookshelf or clude a two-week paid .vacation and four free trip passes them up, or build them in) a r m with diamond needle pro- tabletop. The detachable after one year. As a United stewardess, you'll be eligible are technically perfected and vides rich tones through four matching speaker enclosures for reduced fares—up to 7 5 % — o n international airlines. acoustically matched. A l l you carefully balanced speakers. can be placed up to 16 f M t If you're single, between 20 and 26, between 5'2" and apart for true stereo separa- have to do is connect speakers 5'9", weigh 140 pounds or less (in proportion to height), tion. and record changer to this A n y Size Blackwall in stock. W h i t e w a l l s and your vision is correctible to 20/30 in each eye, you Solid State, 12 watt Tuner and only $1.50 more may qualify. Amplifier. O P E N MON. & F R I . NIGHTS ON C A M P U S I N T E R V I E W S : Open W E D N E S D A Y , A P R I L 12 of East Lansing Mon. - F r l . 9-6 GOOD/YEAR CONTACT YOUR PLACEMENT OFFICE F O R AN APPOINTMENT 543 E . G » onci R i vet Sat. 'Til 5:00 ac Mon. and Wed. SERVICE STORE 3 37 H00 Opposite Sparrow Hospital UNITED AIR LINES Shop until 9:00 p.m. H a r r y Kost, Manager 1110 E . M i c h . IV 2-1426 AN E Q U A L O P P O R T U N I T Y EMPLOYER