Friday NEWS Faculty expected MICHIGAN STATE to OK no hours UNIVERSITY for all but frosh V o l . 59 N u m b e r 172 East Lansing, Michigan M a y 5, 1967 !0c demic Freedom Report, when ASMSU By E L L E N Z U R K E Y Tuesday rejected the original Associated S t a t e News S t a f f W r i t e r Women Students proposal to eliminate hours for juniors and seniors. The Faculty Committee on Student Af- f a i r s is expected today to approve the Student board rejected the proposal in an attempt to Include sophomores by fall. A grueling 11 days end of curfews for sophomores, junior According to the Academic Freedom and senior women, paving the way for Report, the Faculty Committee for Stu- approval by the Vice President for Stu- dent Affairs and student board must a p - dent Affairs and the board of t r u s t e e s . prove any proposed changes in Univer- John H.Reinoehl, chairman of the faculty sity regulations before they become Uni- committee, said that he felt confident versity policy. the committee would accept the proposal Jim Carbine, former vice chairman of approved by a four-man joint student- ASMSU and member of the joint com- faculty committee Thursday afternoon. mittee, said that the hour and a half Later in the afternoon the AMSMU meeting went " v e r y smoothly," Student • Board met in a special session and unanimously approved the joint com- " M o s t of the time the discussion was mittee's recommendations. The r e c o m - on minor points, but the faculty's main mendations were exactly what student concern was why AWS had not included board asked for Tuesday. sophomores In the proposal in the begin- ning," Carbine said. Reinoehl said that he did not wish to Carbine told the committee that AWS anticipate the vote of the faculty commiteee had drawn an arbitrary line and that It but that the proposals " w e r e not out of didn't want to ask for too much for fear line with what we had been thinking." of rejection. The joint committee was established by John A. Fuzak, vice president for ( p l e a s e t u r n to the b a c k page) student a f f a i r s , in accord with the Aca- Merit scholars choose MSU first for 5 years For the fifth straight year, more Merit reflected a decision by the University Scholarship winners have chosen to attend MSU than any other college or university in the country. to maintain the number of Merit Scholar- ship winners at the same level each year. ^ÊÊÊÈêè The National Merit Corp., which a d - Sabine added that the proportion of ministers the program, reports that Mich- out-of-state students who receive the igan State will have 200 Merit Scholars scholarships has remained about the same entering in the fall. This ranks MSU however. above any other educational institution in the U.S. In all, 673 Merit Scholars a r e attend- ing Michigan State on the undergraduate Battle scar Of the 200 who will attend MSU ,100 level. MSU sponsors 477. Excluding the A m e d i c bends to h i s t a s k to d r e s s the w o u n d of a M a r i n e h i t won scholarships sponsored directly by Michigan State sponsored scholars, MSU the University. Though Michigan State ranks fifth behind Harvard University, d u r i n g the savage f i g h t i n g f o r H i l l 881. M a r i n e s took the h i l l a f t e r sDonsored 142 Merit Scholars last y e a r , Massachusetts Institute of Technology t h r e e days of f i g h t i n g and t h e n b r a c e d f o r a c o u n t e r - a t t a c k by e l i t e the total number of scholars was also 200— (MIT), Stanford University, and Yale Uni- North Vietnamese troops. UPI Telephoto the same as this y e a r . versity. Gordon A. Sabine, vice president for Since 1963, Michigan State has spon- special p r o j e c t s , explained that the d e - sored more Merit Scholars than any c r e a s e In MSU Merit Scholars this year other college or university, ranking s e c - ond only to Sears Roebuck Co. in over- all sponsorship. Merit Scholars attend- Marines contest Hill 881 ing MSU, but not sponsored by the Uni- State House versity, a r e financed by large national corporations and foundations. in bloody Viet fighting Sabine said that the funds for MSU studies GOP Merit Scholarships come from a com- bination of donor and regular scholar- ship funds, plus payments from the spon- SAIGON liP) — Weary U.S. Marines dug in Thursday night on the explosive- 881 North Thursday afternoon against enemy sniper fire, but stalled short'of the tax proposal soring corporations. Although MSU supplies the funds the scarred slopes of Hill 881 North with the hope that, perhaps Friday, they could summit and entrenched for the night. While planes and artillery pounded Grim reality Merit Corp. selects the recipients in- drive tenacious North Vietnamese r e g u - enemy bunkers on the peaif, two American lars from its c r e s t . A U.S. M a r i n e b a z o o k a t e a m p r e p a r e s to a n s w e r e n e m y f i r e dependently from among Merit finalists shells strayed into Marine lines, killing who designated MSU as their first-choice Conquest of Hill 881 North should wind w i t h s o m e of t h e i r own on the a p p r o a c h e s to H i l l 881 n e a r the L a o - LANSING (#) — Republicans put their one and wounding nine. state income tax bill before the House college. t i a n b o r d e r . B e l o w , a w o u n d e d M a r i n e i s c a r r i e d by h i s c o m r a d e s See r e l a t e d a n a l y s i s on page 11. Only a few miles to the southeast, for a vote today despite an apparent t o w a r d a h o v e r i n g h e l i c o p t e r as c a s u a l t i e s a r e e v a c u a t e d f r o m H i l l 300 or so Communist troops attacked lack of needed Democratic support. up some of the bloodiest fighting of the and partly overran a U.S. Army Special 881. UPI Telephoto By late afternoon, the House had passed war. It has been an 11-day campaign in Forces Camp at Lang Vei. They killed three Senate amendments to the tax bill, Committee urges which the Marines have won two other 28 of the defenders—two American Green RA REPORTS REVISED and the debate was continuing. Compro- hills at a cost of 900 casualties. Beret advisers and 26 of the irregular mise had apparently been reached on the With 157 dead and 264 seriously wounded, garrison—in a fierce fight launched with amount of personal exemption from state 19-year- old draft; they count 605 of the enemy killed and estimate 610 others wiped out in the a m o r t a r barrage before dawn. Seven income taxes, $1,000, and on a corporate enemy dead were left behind when the tax level of six per cent. American drive to clear high ground Cominanists withdrew. Republicans seemed determined to keep the issue before the House. Some Repub- cooler on lottery in the strategic sector adjoining the de- militarized zone on the north andtheLao- The strength and location of the a t - tack provided ^another indication of a Residence halls approve WASHINGTON [JPi - The Senate Armed tian frontier on the west. buildup of enemy forces in South Viet- licans were estimating they had a total Services Committee recommended Thurs- of 49 positive votes on the bill. House Democratic floor leader William Ryan of Detroit said Republicans had day that younger men starting at age 19 be inducted ahead of older youths. A Marine spokesman announced a bat- talion of the Leathernecks edged up Hill ( p l e a s e t u r n to the back page) new student profile form This reversal of the callup order was told him the House " h a s got to get these proposed by President Johnson in a m e s - ing contributions to hall and house affairs, bills over to the Senate at almost any By L A U R E L P R A T T sage to Congress on revisions of the offices held, competency as a leader and p r i c e . " He added: " I ' m not going to ask any Democrats to put their heads on the block for that." Selective Service system. In backing the proposal, Chairman Rich- a r d B. Russell, D-Ga. said there may LBJ seeks 2-year ban State News S t a f f W r i t e r A three-page blue form marked "Con- participation in campus affairs, plus "any Information which will lead to f u r t h e r understanding of the student's ability to " W e a r e going to be wasting another be some difficulties in changing over to fidential" and titled "Student Residence accept a position of trust and responsibility day of everybody's time because the a new system. He said that for the first P r o f i l e " has been approved by the r e s - and assist the Dean of Students Office negotiating process has not been carried out," Ryan said. But the chief House Republican Robert year or two both 19-year-olds and those in the 25-and-younger bracket would be subject to induction. to avoid railroad strike possible, but providing for compulsory idence halls central staff. It l-eplaces the "Residence Report" previously required of RAs. in completing recommendations In the new report, a checklist section includes categories with item descriptions . . . " Waldron of Grosse Pointe, said he wanted The committee gave only lukewarm en- WASHINGTON 1.1» - - President Johnson The new form has been approved for and comment space, for example: proposed Thursday a law forbidding a na- settlement if necessary, to put the politically potent tax question dorsement to another Johnson proposal. use within residence halls at the dis- "SOCIAL SENSITIVITY — Sensitivity to tion-wide railroad strike until 196^ by " I t represents the slightest possible cretion of the head advisers, accord- to a vote and see how much support it ( p l e a s e t u r n to t h e b a c k page) and understanding of reactions andfeelings seeking a voluntary wage agreement if Intrusion upon the process of collective ing to Don Adams, director of r e s i - could a t t r a c t . of others. bargaining," Johnson said in a message dence halls p r o g r a m s . to Congress. —Understands others and their feelings UNIVERSITY COLLEGE BLASTED Because of staff dissatisfaction with —Attempts to force own attitudes on Secretary of Labor W. Willard Wlrtz t h e * ) l d residence reports, an ad hoc others insisted at a White House briefing that committee was appointed in March to —Respects the right of others to have the proposed legislation would not amount study and revise the forms. The staff their own attitudes and opinions Faculty defends, denigrates MSU to compulsory arbitration to force settle- accepted the committee's recommenda- —Insensitive to others, feelings and ment. tions this week. attitudes Both railroad and union spokesmen Adams is to meet with Eldon Nonna- —Does not accept challenges to own criticized the Johnson plan, but the in- maker, associate dean of students, and beliefs" dustry said it will not oppose the legis- John A. Fuzak, vice president fpr stu- By ANDREW M O L L I S O N Other categories a r e responsibility, lation. dent affairs, to discuss guidelines for State News E x e c u t i v e R e p o r t e r F a c u l t y r e s p o n s e to M o l l i s o n ' s q u e s t i o n s , " W o u l d leadership, integrity, relationship with Spokesmen for the six shopcraft unions use of the profile and to formulate a y o u s e n d y o u r son o r d a u g h t e r to M S U ? W h y ? , " - was p e e r s , adjustment to residence hall living in the dispute indicated they would put statement of demonstrable need for it. and academic effort and attitude. Rather than put the most sensation- so h e a v y that a b b r e v i a t e d v e r s i o n s of t h e i r answer?. Their decisions would have been made up stiff opposition in Congress. al comments from faculty phone calls appear |n t w o i n s t a l l m e n t s . T h i s Is t h e f i r s t . by Thursday, but Nonnamaker has been and l e t t e r s at the top of this article, Johnson's proposal would create a five- 111. The three may be able to meet to- I'll just list ultra-condensed versions man White House board to exert Intensive day, Adams said. of what some of them said. efforts to win a voluntary agreement, and Both report f o r m s include the stu- then imposing binding terms if this falls. dent's name, student number, sex, r e s i - They were • asked, you remember, if dence hall and class level, as well as and we are confident that she will take The board's proposals, If there was no they would send their children to MSU. Keep digging, but watch out for people the length and degree of acquaintance advantage of these opportunities." agreement within 90 days, would go Into Then they were asked why. who defend academic institutions rather he and the RA have had. From an assistant instructor in home effect for two years retroactive to last The views expressed below a r e not than goals. Only students, who have no This information was followed In the economics—I will send one to MSU and Jan. 1. necessarily mine, nor those of a statis- stake in the existing departments, dis- old report by a s e r i e s of categories such one to another school. The big enroll- The unions and the railroads could keep tically valid cross-section of the faculty. ciplinary structures, grading systems, as personal appearance, self management ment results from MSU's dedication ro bargaining for a different agreement, but F r o m a professor with 19 years at etc., can provide the impetus for changing "adjustment to demands of college life educating all who qualify. "And the sit- any strike o r lockout would be banned by MSU—Both my son and my daughter a r e a system in which people accept the view (individual stability)." uations these large numbers bring about proud to be alumni of MSU and feel that universal education implies that ed- law. are not for some children" RAs w e r e to rate students superior they've gotten a fine education. What is ucation should be universally the same. (top 10 per cent of students known by "If you knew how many times I've AFL-CIO President G e o r g e Meany your problem, M r . Mollison? " I sympathize with your concern as do rater), good (top 25 per cent ), average gotten up early, sent my kids off to branded Johnson's proposal as compulsory QCAl- 2:. 3 Oô fifT» F r o m another professor in the same some (but not many)of my colleagues." (typical, acceptable), below average (bot- From a professor of Animal Husband- school, fed my husband and driven here arbitration and said " w e shall therefore department. Education —Yes, but only tom 25 per cent) or unknown (not enough for an 8:30 appointment that the student vigorously oppose this as well as any .WHLOÔD ORIv e " H/L because MSU is a fairly "good" version ry — I wouldn't send my daughter to any opportunity to judge). of the only reasonably pleasant a l t e r - school. My wife and I a r e pleased that didn't keep, y o u ' d realize that the problems other legislative proposal which calls are not all the faculty's fauly." for compulsory arbitration of the issues There was a space for explanation of native for young people to the military, our daughter CHOSE to attend MSU, since "below a v e r a g e " responses, then for l i s t - See related story on page 7. prison, a meaningless job or m a r r i a g e . 'opportunities to learn a r e great ( p l e a s e t u r n to the b a c k page) in dispute." TATI NEWS Kyle C . Kerbawy editor-in-chief Eric Pianin, managing editor James Spaniolo, campus editor Edward A. Brill, editorial editor Lawrence Werner, sports editor Bobby Soden, associate campus editor Joel Stark Andrew Mollison, executive reporter advertising manager William G. Papciak, a s s t . ad manager Friday Morning, May, 5, 1967' EDITORIALS A c o l u m n of o b s e r v a t i o n and comment b y State N e w s s t a f f writers on along their beats. recent happenings Playing the library game This is Academic Freedom? By P H Y L L I S ZlMBLER The library beat? When I was assigned it, I thought to myself, "What can pos- The Faculty and Student Library Com- mittees have proposed*a recommendation endorsed by ASMSU that when the under- Vice President for Student posed Thursday indicate this sibly be news-worthy about a few thousand graduate library is open the faculty be Affairs John A. Fuzak an- to be true. volumes of dusty books." Little didlknow held responsible for the same overdue that the "Quiet, please" signs are a dis- fines that students now are. The graduate nounced this week that RA More importantly, to c o n - guise lor bustling activity inside the deep library will still remain f r e e from the tax evaluations written before tend that t h e s e evaluations, recesses of the building. act for faculty. the Academic Freedom Re- One of the main activities inside the Due to various faculty members who although not marked c o n f i - library is a game the students play called feel that they are the institution and there- port will not be open to stu- dential, were fully intended "Find all twenty volumes I need for a fore should be granted all kinds of special dent inspection. The evalua- project gone." If it is only a fellow student privileges, this proposal might not pass. to be such g o e s against both who has checked out So we students do not have to fear losing tions are made each year for the l e t t e r and s p i r i t of the the delinquent vol- our favorite library game. e v e r y student by his house's very Academic F r e e d o m R e - umes, there is the "" assurance that with- One fact that the faculty forgets is that resident a d v i s e r . port that brought them o r i g - in two weeks the students enable the professors to be the missing volumes will most imperative tools of the institution. The recently approved inally into question. The Without students, there is no one to teach be returned. Academic Freedom Report Academic ' F r e e d o m report But If the hapless and use their talents on. s p e c i f i e s that students have prepared them with this in going c a r e f u l scrutiny by the sought to e l i m i n a t e arbitrary student happens to be And with that in mind we students should looking for books that end our favorite game and cut down on the right to inspect their mind. Student A f f a i r s department administrative d e c i s i o n s on some of the library activity with the cry a professor is using) r e c o r d s . The report, how- Thus, Fuzak's d e c i s i o n , and the C o m m i t t e e on Under- policy. to write a paper, his children attending "Equal undergraduate library fines for even if made only when a graduate Education. A s e r i e s MSU might be able to find the volumes r e - a l l | " After all, t h e r e a r e still more library ever, excepted l e t t e r s of The question Fuzak should turned. Because as It now stands faculty games we can play like, "Help, no infor- recommendation and other large number of students of changes were announced be asking h i m s e l f i s whether members can keep books out indefinitely— mation was ever written on the hair styles wished to s e e their r e p o r t s , Thursday by the Student Af- and they frequently do Just that. of the African Pygmiesl" r e c o r d s prepared on a c o n f i - these evaluations are n e c e s - dential b a s i s . must be upheld. If any of the fairs office. s a r y . He should keep in mind reports were prepared with But in the m e a n t i m e , the Whether RA evaluations the understanding that they question i s what should be that his own department, by The liberal' double-standard already making changes, ory can recall back in February of 1966 were indeed intended to be were to be confidential, it done with the numerous RA By DENNIS CHASE indicates they are not. To do when an admitted Communist named H e r - confidential, as Fuzak would be a violation of trust evaluations prepared in the There can no longer be any doubt about bert Aptheker appeared on this campus. so he should c o n s i d e r that the the truth of columnist Henry Taylor's But then there were no demonstrations and s t a t e s , is not entirely c e r - to open them to students. past which Fuzak has now put s p i r i t of the Academic F r e e - charge that no self respecting individual no letters to the editor (not one). tain. They are not marked N e e d l e s s to s a y , it would o f f - l i m i t s . The r e a s o n a b l e can call himself a liberal today. At one Why did both the president of the Social- dom Report i n d i c a t e s they confidential and many RAs also be a violation of trust to answer i s to s i m p l y d i s c a r d time—yes. But not now. ist and the Conservative Clubs calmly are not. The liberals' illoglc was shown in full accept Aptheker, with the Socialist stooge did not c o n s i d e r them to be use the information for other and d e s t r o y them. force last month when George Lincoln adding: "He has something of value to By doing so he should s e e such. In fact, many prepared than counseling r e a s o n s . No one, not even the o f f i - Rockwell appeared at MSU. The issue, say." that the r e a s o n a b l e a n s w e r of course, was not free speech, as every- Why did the liberal groups on campus the reports with the help of This newspaper in the past c i a l s in the Student A f f a i r s one clamored. Refusing to allow Rockwell get so moral when Rockwell spoke, where- i s to e l i m i n a t e t h e s e unnec- the students in question. has voiced its s e r i o u s r e s e r - o f f i c e , has denied that the to speak here would not have violated his as Aptheker, a man whose ideas are far e s s a r y and outdated e v a l u a - rights any more than more dangerous, have caused far, far more Yet, there are doubtless vations on the p r e s e n t RA p r e s e n t RA evaluations are booting a beggar out suffering, was treated to the old " l e t ' s tions. s o m e RAs who felt the r e - evaluations. Indeed, the outdated and must be i m - of my house doors. listen to the man" rubbish? ports were confidential and What was interesting Why should Aptheker be treated any p r e s e n t s y s t e m i s under- proved. The changes p r o - - - T h e Editors was the reaction of differently than Rockwell? Both are politi- those apostles of cal tramps whose Ideas make less sense Right, Truth and J u s - than Peter Pan, and who have only years OUR READERS' MINDS tice, the liberals. Renee Earp, a of grief and famine to offer humanity? Why, I want to know, did 18 professors freshman who organ- condemn State Representative Raymond ized a "Star of Dzendzel in February of 1966 for suggest- 'Administration logic' illogica David" distribution, said: "Rockwell in- ing that the Michigan legislature has a sults everyone's intelligence," which is right to approve the way the state's money true. is being spent, whereas, last month, 16 Greg Hopkins chairman of ASMSU, political science professors at MSU wrote warned the students to "Be tolerant of into the State News comparing the Vietnam To the Editor: war to Nuremburg and Lyndon Johnson to his right to speak, but not his views," In reading Monday's issue of the State Vietnam not panacea which is true. A State News editorial, predictably, said Hitler. Tyranny should be opposed no matter News, I encountered one of the most that all those who love freedom must what form it takes. If there is a lesson blatantly illogical statements I have yet To the Editor: ideologies and aims there are few common uphold Rockwell's right to speak, which, to be learned from Rockwell and Apthe- heard made at this university, one which goals and little common ground between the no doubt, is true. ker, it Is that normal, apparently rational renews my doubts as to whether or not the Far be it from me to accuse the all- two countries. I see little likelihood of a human beings can be as evil as a scream- The clamor was so great that the State term "administration logic" is not a con- mighty, all-knowledgeable StateNewsedi- joint space program, or any other Joint ing, ranting madman. News was flooded with letters and had to tradiction in itself. Vice-president Fuzak tors of naivete, but don't you think that it's program or action between us, regardless devote an entire page to print them all. The liberals, it seems, see It differ- was credited with stating that because RA a little simple-minded to assume as you do of the Vietnam situation, and regardless Those of us, however, with a longer mem- ently. evaluations were written and filed before In your April 26 editorial that Vietnam is of how obvious the benefits of the Joint the advent of the Academic Freedom Re- the sole source of disagreement between action may be. PI A M I S ^ÑJ port, they are not under the report's administration become so worried about the United States and Russia? I think it is political and intellectual I THINK VOU ThCSC "MVÀAH5" oh, DON'T 66 Jurisdiction. This is extremely interest- breaches of confidence? What about the Your editorial states; "Once again, it is naivete to look at Vietnam as a panacea. täkiir /SHOULD 5T0P SWIN6, cam riiRT! J Ridiculous í ing. Might not this same type of logic be the war in Vietnam that Is driving a wedge Ending the war is not going to end East- W/y"** '"NVAAH NVAAH NVAAH" release of students' grade-point averages "TD CHARUe ßftOUN extended to all existing records, for the between us. And the cooperation in space West tension nor is it going to end all the to fraternity and sorority houses — In same " r e a s o n " ? If I had bought a car in that once seemed so possible, now appears world's problems. direct violation of the administration's 1956, before the creation of certain rules further away than the moon we aim a t . " A, Peter Cannon own self-set guidelines concerning this governing driving on campus, does this It seems to me that because of differing Charleston, S.C. Junior area? mean I don't need a sticker—since the car was made before the rule existed? Another If space permitted, I could easily list question—I wonder how this type of logic five out and out abrogations of truth in can be twisted to cover next year's evalua- "News for the Class of 1969" and other "recruitment literature" which I received Beware, the Sick Society tions, if they are made? before ever setting foot on the East Lan- guilt but on a vaster stage. Do not our Further on, Dr. Fuzak is quotedas say- sing campus. So if the administration has To the Editor: OJtll.THEVDO HURT! X W R E > ing it would be a "breach of confidence" Nation's actions In the world have all the THEY CAN IF THEV . now become interested in repairing and t h o s e "nvaah«"can j c r a z V ! on the part of the administration to allow Psychopaths like Richard Speck and earmarks of their crlme?Beware your in- SET D0U)N IN VOW? J A FEU) BECOME I N F E C T E D . 1 . ' preventing breaches of confidence, I'm terdiction, World; we can't beapprehended J students to viewtheir evaluations, as these all for it.'Why not start with one of the Charles Whitman, living in their own self- STOMACH ANP "NYAAHS" are considered in the same category as centered loveless worlds, can murder or disarmed. We're f r e e to terrorize R6ALLV HURT! CAN'T HURT greatest of such breaches--the existence letters of recommendation. Somehow, I strangers without cause and without r e - you, World, and to betray our heritage ANV6ÖCV! of RA evaluations? don't seem to recall anything saying RA morse, their crimes Justified in their of love and liberty, and to create from reports would be treated as letters of r e c - Dave Ring own sick minds by a thin film of rational- what might once have been the Great, the (I ommendation—it might be nice to let the RA's know this. And since when has the Baltimore, Md. Junior West Fee Resident Assistant ization. Society, fearful of the unreasoned terror of their ways, lives in daily dread Sick Society. James B. Harrington, J r . r until apprehended and disarmed they are Associate Professor f-r incarcerated. Agricultural Engineering And yet we should not be too quick in Mobilization for peace, not war Judgment on these men; we share their Featuring r AUMO»V6SAVC¿ Before beautification To the Editor: Today there is talk about mobilizing for peace. Who are the people behind these turn into a BIG WAR that will destroy mankind. What do they think ought to be done? To the Editor: * THE Friday & Saturday Today as Linden and ahh were drivin movements? While there are some crack- Most of them would suggest at least thru your fair state of Mlchigun, ahh IN YOUR CAR pots, most of these people are anything but three things: (1) that Johnson stop the crackpots. Among them are many of the bombings and call for an immediate cease- suddenly realized that we were in Lansin, and near MSU. So ahh said to Linden, "THE COMPLETELY $ 250 most loyal and thoughtful men and women in fire; (2) that Johnson call for a peace "Linden, stop this c a r l " . For you see America. This was brought to my attention recent- conference of all parties involved—includ- ing the Viet Cong; and (3), after making a r - ahh had heard of your beautifull Red Cedah Rivah, and wanted to canoe it Just 0 LOOSE INSTALLED & e ly when I attended a peace rally in Ann rangements that would prevent wholesale once. Arbor—the chief purpose of which was to massacres, we withdraw our troops as Makin our way to Bessey Hawl, we pave the way for greater national rallies. soon and as graciously as possible. boarded the 4 star canoe "Navy One" and Among the over a dozen leaders who spoke briefly, only two could be called crackpots Authur W. Muck Albion, Michigan began a most enjoyable trip' thru your ENDS" GUARANTEED campus. Ahh couldn't help notice the beau- or radicals. One of the best speaches was tifull trees, boushes, and shroubs planted made by a Catholic priest, another by a 1 campus side, but nearly fell overboard Unitarian minister, a third by a Negro, Gentle jr. high passln under the Bogue Street bridge into — Bank Financing Available — and a fourth by an outstanding and much respected Quaker lady. the luxury slum district of East Lansin. No Covor Charge And EVERYTHING Else For Your Car At To the Edlton Ahh turned to Linden and shrieked at There are at least five reasons why A good friend of ours has recently in- the top of ma southern lungs "turn off these good people are so greatly con- cerned about peace: (1) as good Christians, they believe that the bombings are im- troduced us to several clippings from the "State News" concerning "Gentle T h u r s - day." Our amazement led us to delve that motahl". Let me say rot now to forget plantln trees, boushes, or shroubs, for they's surely dieh amoungst all the L No Minimum KRAMER AUTO S moral; (2) they believe that this will in further Into the matter. Yes, it seemed litter, beer cans, and Junk. So ahh say to PARTS the long run hurt rather than help democ- that "Gentle Thursday" was a reality. all you people in them tacky slums; Clean The fun begins at 9:00 racy; (3) they are becoming increasingly Immediately we were reminded of the up your rivah beds, and THEN beautify, distrustful of President Johnson and his Where You Get "The Largest Discounts in Town" good, old days of Junior high school. beautify, beautify. fellow hawks; (4) they deplore the fact Steven Bishop Yours for a more beautiful Americah, Serving You Since 7975 that so many of our young men are called Lawrence Young "Birdie" The Dells on upon to die needlessly; and (5) they are University of Michigan E. Bruce Brock Lake Lansing phone greatly afraid that this ugly little war may Ann Arbor Mt. Morris, senior 800 E. Kalamazoo 484-1303 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan SPORTS F r i d a y . May 5, 1967 3 NEWS Reds plot India hate, ^ijJiulifillWililtlllMÉrtiililriritft^""'""^''"""""""'"'""'"''^ summary ambassador charges A c a p s u l e s u m m a r y of the d a y ' s e v e n t s f r o m the NEW DELHI, India iff —U.S. the United State and other ported a plot by the U.S. In- Associated P r e s s . Ambassador Chester Bowles Western powers could be e x - formation Service, the U.S. sees a Communist effort to pected to assist the development Agency for International D e - undermine American efforts in of a new united and independent velopment and the Peace Corps India by promoting the mutual nation formed from eastern In- In the form of a public opinion National News distrust and hatred between In- dia and East Pakistan. According poll to determine sentiment for dia and Pakistan. to West German sources, the an independent Bengal. 9 The Senate Armed Services Committee Thursday unani- Writing for the American Re- Berlin service denied sending mously recommended to the Senate a four-year extension of the porter, a weekly published by the release. The American Embassy d e - present military draft law and a lottery-type system of selec- the U.S. Information Service, In mid-January the Patroit, nied any poll of any type was Bowles charged "international taken. SHOPPER'S tion. See page 1 a leftist New Delhi daily, r e - character assassination." 0 The Senate heard Sen. Russell B. Long, D-La., apologize American, British and West for his remark that half of the Senate ethics committee m e m - b e r s couldn't stand an investigation like the one Sen. Thomas J . Dodd went through. See page 7 German sources say forgeries of documents and news r e l e a s e s have appeared in both India and Pakistan. Prospects better £ President Johnson Thursday proposed to Congress a law forbidding a nation-wide rails strike until 1969, by seeking a voluntary wage agreement. But the law provided for compul- British and Pakistani sources say forged documents intended as letters from their embassies to London and Rawalpindi have for Nike X system sory settlement if needed. See page 1 Union or, in later years, China. been circulated recently in an WASHINGTON i.f) — U.S. offi- attempt to discredit the United cials indicated Thursday that But the defense chief does not 0 Sen. John G. Tower, R-Tex„ said Thursday that the Senate States and in one instance India's Secretary of Defense Robert S. believe it is wise to embark on Republican Policy Committee made a mistake when it made ruling Congress party. McNamara considers a light- any deployment of missile shields public a critical staff study of President Johnson's Vietnam for specific American cities— One of the most obvious f o r g - type, $3-billion to $5-billion s y s - policy. See page 9 a course advocated unanimously COLUMN eries was a news release mailed tem as the only worthy anti- to Pakistan newspapers under missile defense if one is needed. by the Joint Chiefs of Staff. 0 America's fourth moon-mapping attempt, Lunar 4, rocketed Gen. Earle G. Wheeler, c h a i r - toward the moon Thursday to photograph 95 per cent of its the letterhead of the Interna- McNamara, according to these tional P r e s s Service, a c o m - officials, has not ruled out de- man of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, surface in the most ambitious lunar survey to date. See page 3 has told Congress the military merical news organization in ployment of a thin Nike X de- 0 President Johnson left Washington Thursday for a long week- West Berlin. fense system to protect the na- leaders favor immediate con- end at his Texas ranch. Mrs. Johnson accompanied him on the tion's offensive missile batteries struction of a $10-billion Nike X In a story datelined Dacca, presidential jet. The president is expected to return late Sunday against attacks by the Soviet system, East Pakistan, the release said or Monday. OF VALUE International News A Western observers report that in India evidence is mounting to indicate an anti-American campaign is underway, designed Race an issue in EEC bid LONDON Iii — Britain's swell- But P r i m e Minister Harold clal estimates Indicating food to take advantage of the mutual distrust between India and Wilson sidestepped the problem prices In Britain will r i s e by Pakistan. See page 3 ing colored population emerged Thursday as a major Issue in the while acknowledging that it 10 to 14 p e r cent if this country 0 A f o r m e r National Space Council official saidThursday that nation's bid to join the European " b r i s t l e s with difficulties." He adopts the agricultural policy f o r m e r Soviet P r e m i e r Nikita Krushchev had on several occa- Common Market. promised to deal with it fully and system of the Common Mar- sions, in private talks, offered to show U.S. officials pictures when Parliament Monday begins ket. This would mean a hike of The question was raised In the of U.S. bases taken from orbiting Soviet spacecraft, "in return a three-day debate on Britain's 2.5 to 3.25 per cent In living costs House of Commons. Lawmakers application for EEC membership. and an added burden on Britain's rj) Decorator I for certain f a v o r s . " See page 3 of all parties demanded a s s u r - In other developments on B r i t - balance of payments of $500 m i l - ances that all British c i t i z e n s - battalionofU.S. Marines edgedupHill 881 North, in north- ain's approach to Europe: lion to $700 million a y e a r . black, brown, yellow as well as western South Vietnam Thursday, and dug in for the night. The Marines will try to take the hill's crest from North Vietnamese white Commonwealth immigrants —Government hlghups reacted cooly to signals from Paris that —Party floor managers In the House of Commons spread the | PLASTICS I w —will receive equal treatment in r e g u l a r s today. See page 1 an enlarged European Economic President Charles de Gaulle in- word that any Laborite who votes against the government In next IH Ii Community (EEC). tends to take his time about r e - A a Peking wall poster has reported that Red Chinese P r e s i - sponding to Britian's application. week's debate will face expulsion. ith coupon dent Liu Shao-chi and his supporters stock-piled a r m s and M Veg. bins, utility tubs, 2 / 1 «00 The French leader, through military equipment for a coup to depose Mao Tse-tung from the Communist party leadership and substitute former Peking Board vetoes aides, has been at pains to r e - ject British suggestions that s u c - W rounddishpans,pail, laundry basket. R e g 69c and 78c e a . Mayor Peng Chen. See page 7 c e s s or failure of the approach extra fun ds S l S ; 5 l S l t I ^ 5 l | 2 = C o u p o n expires 5 - 7 - 6 7 S ^ v i U S l ì S ^ K S depends on him. British officials 0 Equal treatment for British minority groups in an enlarged said this was just what they e x - I Lady Seymour European Economic Community became a major issue in B r i t - pected. for STEP -¡XV ilson's men published offl- Ii a i n ' s bid for Common Market membership Thursday. See page 3 ISRAEL INDEPENDENCE DA Y Michigan News By T R I N K A C L I N E State News Staff W r i t e r Celebration 1 1 Ironing Board I The ASMSU Student Board has A Leaders of the Negro community in Lansing have called for defeated a motion to allocate a meeting Saturday night in an attempt to remedy the situation an additional $2,000 to the Student 288 I Sunday May 7, 8 P . M . with coupon that led to a rock throwing spree in Lansing Monday night. Education Project (STEP) be- A Heavy frost during the last few days has not damaged Hol- land, Mich, tulips, which a r e a l r e a d y i n the budding or blooming cause of insufficient funds. L a r r y Klein, STEP coordina- tor, said he thinks the budget Union B a l l r o o m i€ R e g . 4 . 9 9 - Save 2.10 ltlSMSltlSMSCoupon expires 5-7-67 o n l y 17 pes im stage, officials of the Tulip Time Festival Inc. saidThursday. goal of $18,000 will be obtained Program will incmde: anyway. ® STEP is a summer program - Talk by Prof. Daniel Kruger w m Spalding Tru-Flite 1 I conducted by MSU students to Lunar Orbiter 4 help Negro students prepare to - A Festival in song and dance I1 enter as freshmen at Rust Col- - Movies lege, Holly Springs, Miss. "We may have to scramble - Refreshments I Tennis Balls aloft on photo trip some more, but I think we'll make i t , " Klein said. " T h e In- terest of the STEP workers and . C o m e and e n j o y y o u r s e l f - A d m i s s i o n Free 1 ffl R e g . 3 / 1 . 7 9 a c a n 3/1.00 w,th cou Pon CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. If)—Lu- flight," a space agency spokes- the enthusiasm and support shown by faculty and students look II Special dura-tough melton covers for extra long wear. 1 I nar Orbiter 4 rocketed moonward man said as Lunar Orbiter 4 good." S l I S i ? : S : 5 S S l t I C o 9 P ° n expires 5-7-67 : Thursday to p h o t o g r a p h with winged toward its distant t a r - The board made an initial con- scientific detail more than 95 get. tribution of $1,000 winter term rasi w Polaroid p e r cent of the moon's front An official go-ahead to launch I with a promise to consider addi- TO face and hidden backside in the was d e l a y e d until 3:30 p.m. tional requests when financial W most ambitious lunar survey yet Thursday, after project officials matters were arranged. Rand McNally World M I agreed that tests on a valve in I attempted. Pete Ellsworth, ASMSU vice A fiery Atlas-Agena rocket, which nearly had been grounded the Agena's fuel system showed it to be acceptable. A failure of chairman, indicated there is News Maps and Swinger Camera still some possibility of further by a troublesome rocket valve, a similar valve sent a $9-mil- beat a race against the count- down clock and blasted off at liqn scientific satellite into the wrong orbit last month. support if the $8,000 in the old Water Carnival reserve fund is Apollo Space Chart II J 199 with coupon I 6:25 p.m. to start the flying photographic laboratory on a planned 89-hour, 245,519 -mile Unlike previous O r b i t e r s , which flashed as low as 25 miles over the moon's terrain to snap transferred from the University to ASMSU. The r e s e r v e fund accumulated Yours with V a M demonstration! No cost or o b l i g a t i o n . Just enjoy a R e g . 16.99 Save 5 . 0 0 I •23 under the old student government Coupon expires 5-7-67 • t l S M S M S l t l S * journey through space. closeup photographs of astro- d e m o n s t r a t i o n of the great stereo (AUSG) when the University was naut landing sites. Lunar Orbit- sound you get f r o m Voice of Music. subsidizing such programs. Ideal Gift For Mother's Day » The craft — a sister ship of e r 4 was to rocket into an oval- Now's the t i m e . . . w h i l e V-M values ASMSU, according to Ellsworth, Lunar Orbiters 1,2, and 3, which shaped path ranging from 1,650 are best ever, and the Rand M c N a l l y believes that since the new stu- w G. E. Bouffant photographed in striking detail to 3,800 miles above the s u r - maps are f r e e ! dent government system accept- millions of square miles of the face. ft I ed the debts of AUSG, it should Ask about Special Offer on moon's backside and portions of The prime goal of the mission also have its credits. Rand McNally Atlas and Globe! Offer I its front face—was to swing in- to a lofty egg-shaped orbit around was scientific. Lunar Orbiter 4 was to film at least 80 per cent Hal Lashlee, ICC president, said most of the present unallo- » Plwpainl m m >MCM » good only at participating dealers Hair Dryer I of the side of the moon which the moon Monday. cated funds of nearly $1,000 will Ç99 w i t h coupon Cameras aboard the spacecraft a r e set to begin snapping pictures May 11. faces earth in sufficient detail to show geological features as small as 200 feet across on the moon's have to be given to the NSA dele- gates for the summer conference. He said ftieir travel expenses H W R e g . 14.99 S a v e ! ! 5.00 Super size bouffant bonnet, 4-heat motor, nail dryer. TOT Carrying and storage case. I ||| "We appear to have a good tortured surface. would require approximately 2 5 t l S 3 6 S i $ i S : t i S C 0 u p 0 n expires 5-7-67 . X S ^ I S : » ; ^ ; ^ $800. Concerning the $8,000 ASMSU Khrushchev sought favors might receive from the business office, Lashlee said, "I'd then be V * M Portable Stereo C o m p o n e n t System True S c u d State S t e r e o c o m p o n e n t s s p e c i a l l y of U.S., space report says glad to seriously consider STEP again, but it all depends on what d e s i g n e d to s n a p t o g e t h e r s u i t c a s e s t y l e f o r easy c a ' r y m g ' other requests a r i s e . Many Cabi- Model 369. $129.95 ATLANTA, Ga. (f) — A leading American authority on Soviet net a r e a s have no funds at all The Voice of Music space programs said Thursday that former Soviet P r e m i e r Nikita to work with at p r e s e n t . " w Khrushchev had, on several occasions in private talks, offered to show the United States pictures o f U . S . military bases taken f r o m orbiting Soviet spacecraft - "in return for certain f a v o r s . " Dr. Charles S. Sheldon of Washington cited this contact in a survey of Soviet space research, prepared for delivery before the American Institute of Astronautics and Aeronautics. But Sheldon, for five years a consultant to the National Space Counsil, did not say what "certain f a v o r s " Khrushchev wanted, or what was the American response to his offer. Sheldon added that in addition to the recent death of cosmonaut Free New Testament Vladimir M. Komarov in the crash of a satellite returning from E n g l i s h - o r - Y i d d i s h or C o m p l e t e B i b l e Old and New T e s t a m e n t s orbit, the Soviet program also lost one man in a parachute test tor Jewish readers Mon. t h r u Sat. 10 a.m. to 10 p . m . Sun. 12-7 Other l i t e r a t u r e a v a i l a b l e and another in a plane c r a s h . But he said it has definitely not lost any men in orbit. Christian information 3301 E. MICHIGAN AVE. NEXT TO FRANDOR Sheldon said a fairly complete and accurate picture of major service open M o n - F r l . 9-6 p.m. Shop Mon, and Wed. Soviet space trends can be pieced together from information avail- P.O. B o * 1 0 4 8 , R o c h e s t e r . N Y. 14603 Sat. 'til 5:00 p.m. • 'til 9:00 able to die public. 4 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan F r i d a y , May 5, 1967 SPORTS Conference baseball hopes rest on weekend games four victories this weekend to ranks sixth (3.71 team earned By G A Y E L WESCH stay in the thick of the cham- run average), Purdue seventh State News Sports W r i t e r pionship fight. Otherwise they'll (4.19) and Illinois eighth (4.43). MSU's Big Ten baseball hopes be fighting to finish as high a s MSU will probably pitch Dick should make like a May flower possible. and either bloom or die this Minnesota w i l l have single Kenney and Mel Behney against weekend. games with its natural rival, the B o i l e r m a k e r s who will The Spartans, currently tied seventh place Iowa over the week- counter with righthanders Steve for fifth In the Big Ten stand- end. Krull and Jim Meek. Behney and ings, face Purdue today and Il- Michigan, tied for second with Krull are tied for 18th in the linois Saturday in doubleheaders Indiana, will face the same two conference w i t h identical 1-0 on the road. teams as MSU but on reverse marks and a 2.77 ERA after 13 Coach Danny Litwhiler's team days. Indiana takes on fourth- Innings pitched apiece. Jumped from ninth place in the place Wisconsin and last place Krull is 3-3 overall, Meek standings on the basis of three Northwestern, while Ohio State, 1-4, while Behney is 3-2 and Ken- wins last weekend in the Big tied with MSU in the standings, ney is 3-5. Kenney is 0-3 in the Ten, and now will have a chance has them on opposite days. conference. to decide who will succeed them Statistically, MSU's superior- ity over the two teams is In the Zana Easton and either Bob in the next-to-last spot in the hitting department, where the Peterson or Gary Smith will standings. Spartans take a back seat to oppose Illinois. All are right- Purdue and Illinois are cur- Minnesota only. handers. The Illinl will counter rently tied for eighth with 2-4 with their best pitcher, Rick marks and are 4 1/2 games behind league l e a d i n g Min- The Spartans as a team a r e hitting at a .298 average in con- Binder, (4-1 overall) a lefty, and righthander Bill Foss. Many hands . nesota. They're only one game ference play while Purdue ranks BILL STECKLEY behind MSU. eighth (.213), and Illinois last Easton is 1-0 in the confer- M e m b e r s of the MSU C r e w Club a r e s h o w n p u t t i n g w i l l b e at M a r i e t t a , O h i o , t h i s w e e k e n d f o r t h e M i d - The Spartans are 4-4 In Big (.153). ence with a 2.09 overall ERA. m u s c l e to the o a r s on G r a n d R i v e r . T h e r o w e r s A m e r i c a n Collegiate Rowing Assn. Regatta. Ten play (16-15-1 overall), 3 1/2 Left-flelder John Walters has Smith is 0-1 in the conference State N e w s photo by M i k e Schonhofen Third baseman Bill Steckley games out of f i r s t , entering the a conference mark matching while Peterson will be starting leads the team In conference for the first time in the Big Ten weekend action. hitting (.429) as he does over- Steckley's, and is tied for fourth MSU needs three, preferably place in Big Ten hitting. Walters if Lltwhiler chooses to go with all (.368). him. Crew club in 'Super Bowl' is third overall with a .320 aver- age. Centerfielder Tom Hummel is Boo ters Have A Greek second overall with a .347 aver- During the football season MSU, Alabama and Notre Dame State, Grand Valley College and St. Thomas College, to decide age but is hitting only .269 in the vied for No. 1 — and came up stalemated. who's No. 1 aquatlcally. conference, a mark topped by teammates Tom Binkowski(.26?0 and Harry Kendrick (.333). foce But now representatives from those schools can fight it out with seven other colleges and universities for top ranking The meet will feature 200 crewman rowing 25 eight-oared shells In four divisions—varsity, junior varsity, freshman and Feast At Shakey's Kendrlck Is tied for 16th In In a different sport—crew. lightweight. The course is 2,000 meters long, and the race Marietta College, Ohio, will be the scene of the Third will be run on the Ohio River, startingat Marietta College, the Big Ten hitting while Binkowskl is tied for 22nd and Hummel is 23rd. U.S. teom Annual Mid-American Collegiate Rowing Assn. Regatta Satur- day. It will pit the "super-powers" of the football world host school. Is it possible to tie in crew? against Marietta, Kansas State, Minnesota, Purdue, Wayne Purdue's Hank Suerth and Ray The touring U.S. Olympic Soc- One good p i z z a d e s e r v e s another. And an- cer team faces the MSU varsity o t h e r . . . and a n o t h e r . People |ust .can't Starnes are tied for 11th and tied for 14th respectively, with in an exhibition game Saturday get t h e i r f i l l of Shakey's pizza, 'cause It's at 2 p.m. on the soccer field. .368 and .364 marks. Illinois s o g o - o - o - o - d ! G e t up a g r o u p a n d f i n d o u t has no one in the top 23. Spartan c o a c h Gene Kenney said this game will be a good 2 net wins this weekend why Shakey's Happy People eat b e t t e r pizza From the pitching standpoint and have m o r e fun f o r less money. the teams are nearly equal. MSU workout for both teams. The Spartans have been practicing since early April. sum's TOGETHER 2 SI2ZLERS IN FIERY COLOR I The Spartans, who finished PIZZA PABLOB & could push MSU past U-M third in the nation last year, are TheOF RAPE ye PUBLIC house THE anxious to build up Interest in soccer. The professionals start- South Cedar at Pennsylvania gjD Sabine ed to play two weeks ago. (just north of 1-96 Expressway) Women "We just want the people to see By DE N N IS C H A S E match victory, the latest ratings urday at 1 p.m, Indiana placed Also, In a switch at No. 3 dou- GUARANTEE what soccer is all about," said find Michigan State in fourth third in the Big Ten Champion- bles, Steve Schafer and Bob Associate Sports E d i t o r place, one point behind Michigan. ships last year, but has three of Schneider beat Norm Werner and Kevin O'Connell, Spartan goalie. These features can Admission will be free. A while back, Tennis Coach their top lettermen returning. Tom Essenburg, 6-4, 6-0. The Stan Drobac said that he hopes P O I N T S The Hoosiers have already beaten regular No. 3 doubles team is not be seen on TV! the Big Ten race turns into a two TEAM W-L Minnesota, 8-1, Iowa, 8-1, Vic Dhooge and Jim Phillips. Northwestern 4-3 36 and Illinois, 7-2. But they lost Open 11a.m. 'til 2 a.m team affair. Even before the Brainard, Monan, and Mickey CREST DRIVE-IN Spartans play Ohio State here to- WIsconsln 5-2 35 5-4 to Wisconsin, a team MSU Szilagyi all have 5-1 records. Michigan 4-0 32 beat, 8-1, and 5-4 to Northwest- At No. 4 singles, John Good Is day at 3 p.m., the latest con- ference standings bear this p r e - MSU 4-0 31 ern, who lost to MSU, 7-2. 4-2. Dhooge is 6-0 at No. 5, and diction out. Based on a system I ndiana 3-2 31 The Hoosiers are 12-6 overall, Jim Phillips is 6-0 at No. 6. In that awards one point for each Illinois 2-3 2 ó Dave Brown is likely to start doubles, only Brainard and Monan O h i o State 18 for the Hoosiers at No, 1 singles. have lost. Their record is 4-2. 1-5 Iowa 12 He won the job from Mike Nolan. 2-3 Brown is a sophomore,and teams Minnesota 1-4 12 ANY TIME P u rdue 0-4 0 with Nolan at No. 1 doubles. Against Western Michigan last Michigan and Michigan State Wednesday, the Spartans won, Damascus are the only teams that haven't 7-2, but they lost at No. 1 singles IS lost a match, and with the next and doubles. just makes best teams, Wisconsin and Chuck Bra ina rd lost to Dick ARBY Indiana, already having lost two, Johnson, 6-3, 6-3, and Brainard it does Indeed look like a two team and Rich Monan lost to the brother race. team of Henry and Ken Germain, Derby TIME! . The Spartans play Indiana,Sat- 6 - 4 , 4-6, 6-4. LOUISVILLE, KY. (UPI) — Damascus, the pride of the East, 270 W. GRAND RIVER Restaurant Serving Daily and Ruken, the champion of the West, drew side by side post po- sitions Thursday for their initial EAST LANSING for gracious and clash Saturday in the 93rd running of the Kentucky Derby with a dozen other 3-year-olds also named for the turf classic. delightful dining The entry box at Churchill Downs had to be held open an D a i l y 7 a . m . to 2 p.m. additional 15 minutes before trainer Frank Whiteley entered and 5 to 9 p.m. Damascus by telephone for the Sundays 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. 1 1/4 mile race which open hous- P r i v a t e P a r t y Rooms ing d e m o n s t r a t o r s have threatened to disrupt. 1427 West Saginaw Clyde Turk entered Ruken in Ph. 337-1741 plenty of time but then quietly left the secretary's office, say- ing, "I don't care very much what NOW PLAYIN6... AT post Ruken gets. My staying here BUILDING BLOCKS OF KNOWLEDGE won't change it." Thus neither trainer was on (fat&tk hand when the inside post posi- tion went to Ruken with Damascus Tickets now on sale at Union, Campbell's In the No. 2 stall. Suburban Shop, Auditorium and by coupon below Willie Shoemaker, riding in his 16th Kentucky Derby, handles Damascus for Mrs. Edith Ban- croft who is ailing and will not - T i c k e t s at $ 2 . 0 0 E a c h f o r t h e F r i d a y S h o w at 8 P . M . be among the thousands of Churchill Downs when the field parades to the post at 5:30 p.m. Send M e : (EST). - T i c k e t s at $ 2 . 5 0 E a c h f o r t h e S a t u r d a y S h o w at 8 P . M . Plantation Striped Oxford • THE SENSATIONAL • iiaiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiaiiiiiii T o t a l A m o u n t E n c l o s e d Is $ Bubba Name Gant deftly etches pastel stripes on deep- color cotton batiste oxford. Result: an ex- SUNLINERS a Bullet? (Please Print) citing, bold expression in zephyr-weight Bubba Smith, versatile Address button-downs. Tailored with exacting care Limited Engagement - Nightly Except Tues. defensive end for the to details. Tapered Hugger body. In a great Spartan football t e a m last City State selection of colors. $8.00 Come out to the f a l l , must decide whether he w i l l play professional Mail To: T i c k e t s C h a i r m a n - 1967 W a t e r C a r n i v a l Jumbo T.G. •football, basketball, both. The g r i d A l l - A m e r - Ican was p i c k e d by the or 101 S t u d e n t S e r v i c e s B u i l d i n g F r i . 4:30 or . . . B a l t i m o r e B u l l e t s in the ttn^sitcheklros. M i c h i g a n State U n i v e r s i t y National Basketball Assn. East L a n s i n g , M i c h i g a n 48823 d r a f t , W e d n e s d a y . He w a s P l e a s e Make A l l Checks O r M o n e y O r d e r s Payable To W a t e r Carnival Try the new Coral Gables s e l e c t e d by the B a l t i m o r e Woodward and 10 1/2 mile C o l t s In the N F L f o o t b a l l draft. DOWNTOWN-LANSING in Detroit 5 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan F r i d a y . May 5, 1967 SPORTS SIDELINES FULLBACK'S DEBUT Mike Auer & Hell's Ruggers Apiso in first scrimmage sparingly in the final three games " I ' v e given thought to moving Thomas began spring practice By JOE M I T C H in a clean bill of health, strained By L A R R Y W E R N E R of the season. Cavender t o halfback,"Daugher- State News Sports W r i t e r a neck muscle two weeks ago and State News Sports E d i t o r After the season Apisa had sur-« ty said. "We used him last week gery on the knee, his second for a while." missed practice. Fullback Bob Apisa will make knee operation in a y e a r . Two other S p a r t a n f o o t b a l l A halfback, Thomas was con- What the heck is rugby? his spring debut in a scheduled In February of 1966 he had players will join Apisa in their sidered one of the outstanding Most probably consider it a vicious sport, designed for some Spartan football scrimmage Sat- freshman prospects on the Spar- surgery on his left knee to r e - first full scrimmage action of the type of sadistic, ignorant slob. After all, the sport is basically urday. tan varsity. pair a torn ligament suffered late spring—Ted Bohn and L a M a r r equivalent to a game of football, but without padding, time outs and Apisa, recuperating a f t e r s u r - in the 1965 season. He was e x - Thomas. tenders. g e r y on his right knee l a s t cused from all contact work that Bohn, like Apisa, had knee s u r - He was the most sought after And what kind of person would you expect to be the president December, w a s given t h e go- spring. gery last season and has been high school player In the nation of the MSU Rugby Club? Perhaps a sadistic, ignorant slob with a ahead this week from Team Phy- held back from all contact work in 1966 a f t e r gaining All-State The latest operation was c o n - sician James Feurig. until this week. honors at Thorton, 111. ball. sidered less serious than the f i r s t , which explains why Apisa Daugherty said Bohn could be In his senior year he scored Mike Auer, Flint graduate student, is MSU s top rugger, of- " f m r e a l anxious t o g e t is able to engage in this spring's used as either a center o r line- 24 touchdowns for 144 points, ficially. Those who equate a clean shave with apple pie may think started," Apisa said this week scrimmages. backer. and gained 1,100 y a r d s . he looks like a slob. You see, h e ' s bearded. before a practice session. " F m But Auer says that rugby Is really a polite sport, and Auer has l o o k i n g f o r w a r d to a good " B o b responded faster to this proven he is not ignorant by obtaining a bachelor's degree from operation than the l a s t , " said season." Harvard, in pre-revolutionary American history. Furthermore, he swears that he wasn't elected president of the club merely because he had a ball. "1 have a whistle and a c a r , " Spring practice began f o u r weeks ago, but Apisa has been excused from any contact work. Head Coach Daugherty. " I don't think r i l start him in contact work, though, until Saturday." Northern Tourney he quickly points out. The return of Apisa c r e a t e s And about the beard: "Why do all those people out there shave?" he asked. "The beard He took part only in calisthenics and running drills. a ticklish situation for Daugherty. Cavender filled in for Apisa last Last week he was dressed in season, and scored seven touch- awaits golfers The Spartans face all the Big tells people I'm unconventional. full gear and began to hit block- downs while gaining 200 y a r d s . By H A R O L D DEAN Ten teams on the same course For instance, 1 sleep hanging ing dummies. He was worked into He has been the starting fullback Stat« News Sports W r i t e r that will hold the Big Ten Cham- by my heels. the first unit along with his r e - this spring. MSU golfers will get a taste pionship Meet, May 19-20. placement at fullback, Reggie of the Big Ten Championship Bob Apisa "No home should be without Cavender is d e s c r i b e d by Notre Dame, Ohio University, a beard." Cavender. Daugherty as " a s fine a blocker Meet today when they tee-off University of Florida and Miami Auer is educated. He is working Apisa injured his right knee as we've h a d " , and one who will in the second annual Northern of Florida complete the rest of on a Ph. D. In Education. In late last season during theNorth- be difficult to keep out of t h e Intercollegiate Golf Tournament the competition. case you haven't noticed, Auer western g a m e a n d p l a y e d line-up. at Ann Arbor. " T h i s y e a r ' s field of teams is witty. will be strong," Golf Coach Bhice But the most impressive thing about the tall, muscular rugby Fossum said. " T h e couple of Southern teams a r e real good." Cycling Club holds player is his unconventionality. Fossum said that Michigan's He's different, like his sport, and the difference is refreshing. The guy is fascinating. If you golf course is one of the finest around and that " a l l we need is some good weather," Invitational here Last y e a r at Bloomington, Ind., The MSU Cycling Club will Chestnut Roads on campus. The let him, he'll crack you up. AUER the Spartans finished fourth be- hold its f i r s t Intercollegiate Mid- course will follow Chestnut to He's probably a little bit nuts. hind champion Ohio State, P u r - west Invitational Cycling Race Stadium Road to Wilson and back But, as he puts it, "In rugby, | due and Michigan. at 1 p.m. Saturday. to Chestnut. it h e l p s . " Starting line for the r a c e will T h i s area will be blocked off One of the interesting aspects of rugby is the tremendous con- to any traffic. Fossum said the golfers were be at the corner of Wilson and t r a s t between the brutality of the competition itself and the post- obviously entering to win but game politeness characteristic of the sport's homeland, Great that the competition is much Britain. After the battle, the teams "clap each other off the field" stronger this year than a year "** ÀUTO RACING and get together for a post-game party. ^ ago. "If the English know one thing, it's how to be humane, Auer " r i l be satisfied if we finish said. " I t ' s a violent sport, but after the match we can sit down, in the top four at this stage of let our guards down and have a good t i m e . This is what it's all AT THE TRACK THE the game."/Fossum said. about. Yes, very humane—that third half." Fossum predicted that the win- J STARS CALL HOME . SPEEDWAY Auer is not a free-wheeling eccentric. He feels many of the ning score' would be right around anti-beards expect him to " r u n out on the field dribbling a crystal 295-296, if the weather is good. J ball. We'll call ourselves the East Lansing Mystics," he said. ¿FRIDAY SATURDAY His club sells humorous, perhaps satirical, booster buttons. The men's variety reads "Hell's Ruggers." For the girls, "Ruggi* MSU's best p e r f o r m e r w a ss a~ ' • 51 Super Stock • Super Modified Sandy McAndrew who tied for Hugger." 12th place w i t h a 305 total igure 8 Racing • Open Class Stocks The buttons bring money to a club which has had some very Teammates Steve Benson and * unfortunate luck, a club which outdraws many varsity sports, John Bailey shot 309 and 313 which enjoys a good time and a good Joke. respectively. Time Trials 7:00 p.m Mike Auer's humor and dedication keep the ruggers going, Troy Campbell a n d George Races 8:00 p.m. when the going gets rugged. Buth will join the regular season s t a r t e r s Larry Murphy, Mc- ** ADULTS (12 and over) $1.75 Track team holds Andrew, Benson and Bailey to i i complete the Spartan squad. CHILDREN (6 to 11) 500 " Cedar Cinema 'run-in' Saturday A Gang of Greeks presents . By NORM SAARI has already cleared 15-4 outdoors P a r t of the Greek Week f e s t i v i t i e s include a t r a c k nheet between the f r a t e r n i t i e s . Father Goose To be held State News Sports W r i t e r while C a r t e r and Stewart have State News photo by Bob Ivins both made an ever. 15 feet. between Red Cedar There have been love-ins, s i t - Buckeye high jump Glenn and Auditorium ins, and be-ins on campus this Pettway has made6-8this season More chicken for If it rains it will be held in Rugby game y e a r . The track team will have and will compete against Mike its only home " r u n - i n " of the your money Union Ballroom on Friday Bowers, winner of the Big Ten night and not at all on Sat- outdoor season Saturday when it meets Ohio State in a dual indoors. urday. MSU Rugby Club faces the 8:30 Fri. & Sat. 25* meet on the Ralph Young Memo- The hurdles, relays and d i s - Windsor. Boarderers Sunday at rial outdoor track. tance r a c e s should be the strong 4 p.m. on Old College Field. The dual meet with the Buck- events for MSU. Washington and The Spartan ruggers competed THE RECEIVER eyes is the only home compe- Charlie Pollard a r e both slated in the Big Ten Tournament last tition for the defending Big Ten to run the 120-yard highs and champion Spartans in the out- Bob Steele will run the 440- door season. Field events start yard intermediates. at 1 p.m. and the f i r s t running weekend and finished with a 1-1 record. BUCKET OF FRIED CHICKEN Fisher event starts at 1:20. " T h e Big Ten has just sched- Now take the newest E V E R Y T H I N G YOU NEED ON ONE, BE A U T I F U L L Y - I N TE GR ATE D uled two years in advance so every conference school meets multi-sensory trips 16 pieces of f r i e d chicken, pint of mashed potatoes, g r a v y , $375 CHASSIS all others during the regular season," Asst. Coach Jim Gib- Walk to any soft-drink 4 b i s c u i t s and honey THE 220-T A L L TRANSISTOR bard said. machine and have some Sprite. 135 E. GRAND RIVER 332-2541 55 W A T T S O F MUSIC POWER " I n the past, the schools have A M - F M - F M STEREO.TUNER been competing in the big relay THE It happens as soon as you meets instead of the conference pay.your money and take your Fox's Quality Jewelers, duals and triangulars. This will bottle. Suddenly, Sprite Since 1917 -.L-' takes y o u , the hedonist, on be an opportunity for more ath- your way to a sensually letes to compete," he said. satisfying tactile-aural- Running on the home track also palatable -optical -oral has certain psychological a d - experience. T-HE 500-T A L L TRANSISTOR vantages, according to trackmen First,- you observe the 90 W A T T S OF MUSIC POWER Das Campbell and Pat Wilson. refreshing green bottle A tempting sight. Then you •Campbell, a senior and c o - reach forth and touch it Very cool. Finally, you eAjpe/ib F M - F M STEREO captain along with Gene Wash- uncap the cap. Now ington, feels "you can get keyed you're ready to up more for a home meet. It drink in that adds up to a real good effect. delicious tartness --but wait! Before " T h e track here is not as regressing fast as a new rubberized one, to the but I think you run faster on a delightful _ home track than away if the same infantile pleasure conditions exist," Campbell said. of taking your bottle, THE 700-T A L L TRANSISTOR Wilson agrees with the p s y - stop. And listen. Because Sprite is so utterly noisy. 120 W A T T S O F MUSIC POWER chological effect, adding,"There is a sense of pride to do well Cascading in crescendos of effervescent F M - F M STEREO in front of a home crowd. flavor. Billowing with billions of ebullient bubbles. And then sip. Gulp. " I n d o o r s , the crowd's noise Guzzle. Aaaaaaaaaaa! Sprite. So tart is a big effect in running, but and tingling o'er the taste buds. you can't usually hear anything And voila! You have your outdoors," he said. "You want multi-sensory experience. to do your best in front of people But what about the olfactory HEAR ALL THE FISHER RECEIVERS AT you know." factor, you ask? W e l l , what do you want for a dime--a distinctive designs HI FI BUYS WHERE YOU ALWAYS GET . . . In running against Ohio State, five-sense soft drink? the Spartans should have little trouble in many of the r a c e s , although the Buckeyes will be FOX'S Frandor Shopping Center QUALITY SOUND THROUGH QUALITY EQUIPMENT especially tough in the field and 203 S. Washington HI Fl BUYS events. • Their top man in the long jump and triple jump will be Ralph Marinello, winner of the ( T A P E RECORDING INDUSTRIES) OPEN Big Ten indoor long jump c h a m - pionship, Outdoors, he has made 7 Fiery 9 A.M.-5j30 P.M. 1101 E . GRAND R I V E R , E . L . 23-8 and 46-11 in the triple jump. SPRITE, SO TART AND amonds WED 9 A . M . - 9 P.M. Roland C a r t e r , Jim Stewart TINGLING, WE 3 3 7 - 2310 337-0897 SAT 9 A . M . - 5 P . M . and John ..Wilcox, the top pole JUST COULDN'T KEEP vaulterS- for MSU, will be c o m - IT QUIET. peting against Jim Clark. Clark SPORTS 6 igan Mich StateNews, East Lansing, Michigan F r i d a y , May 5, 1967 WMSB-TY Gamut' airs student talent Marijuana ftudy radio m a j o r s an opportunity to get t e n t with j u s t a television Student talent that desires tel- further than studio, since this The producer also picks the evision exposure need look no talent for the show, with the the WMSB-TV c o n s u l t a t i o n of Robert W. Is where more experience In producing, " G a m u t " They are working on a directing and crewing variety radio version which would use an shows. edited sound track from the t e l - headed by Sink Schlater, a s s t . professor of t e l - evision program, Williams said. A fact-finding committee on the b e r - a t - l a r g e and head of the new- " G a m u t " is produced. ly-formed committee. evision and radio. One source of physiological and legal aspects " G a m u t " is a 30-minute tel- talent is the Union Board All- Provides experience Any student that would like to of marijuana has been established "We hope to conduct a survey evision variety show featuring appear on " G a m u t " should con- Campus Talent Show, and often On " G a m u t " television-radio tact Roger Parsons at 3 5 1 - 7 3 0 6 . by the ASMSU Student Board. to determine the general attitude MSU student talent only. It Is on campus toward marijuana, the the producers conduct auditions. students a r e given a chance to The five-man study committee broadcast at 11:30 a.m. Saturday extent of use of campus and how Edging off Talent does not have to perform work in all phases of a television will also seek to define Univer- morning on WMSB-TV, Channel 10. live, because the show is video- taped several weeks before it p r o g r a m . As Tad Williams, a d - v i s e r to the MSU Broadcasters Activities sity and state regulations on the use of marijuana, according to many people would use it given the legal circumstances," Sink The show is a student p r o - Jim Sink, former ASMSU m e m - said. duction of the MSU B r o a d - is shown. c a s t e r s , an association of t e l - A typical " G a m u t " show may said, " w e try to rotate students through all production assign- Carny set T h e .State T h e a t r e m a r q u e e has b e e n h a v i n g i t s He said that besides utilizing include folk singers,a jazz group, ments so that they gain experi- Clubs and organizations must t r o u b l e s , what w i t h t r u c k s h i t t i n g the edge which American Medical Association evision-radio majors Including graduate students and juniors and or a dramatic reading. seniors. TV-radio students run " G a m u t " will have broadcast ence In all aspects of the busi- register by May 25 for next n e s s . A student could be a p r o - y e a r ' s Activities Carnival, a c - e x t e n d s o v e r the c u r b . M i l l s B r o s . E l e c t r i c a l C o n - t r a c t o r s p e r f o r m the s h o r t e n i n g . UFO sighted reports and psychology depart- ment r e s e a r c h , the committee will also conduct open hearings. the whole show, with the time and 19 shows by the end of this t e r m . f a c i l i t i e s made available by Videotapes of the 13 best shows ducer one week and a cameraman cording to Bruce Auten, Mel- the next." vindale sophomore and Activi- State News photo by Dave L a u r a o v e r Holmes "We plan to invite administra- a r e being syndicated to any Mich " T . V . - r a d i o students spend ties Carnival general chairman. tion and medical specialists to WMSB-TV. "A ball of flame flying through igan station that wants them. about 6 - 8 hours a week on the The carnival will be held during the hearings," he said. the sky" Is the description Dean Perfo rming Arts Co. WKNX-TV in Saginaw will begin show and this does not Include Welcome Week in hopes of better Sink said that his committee Nicolai, Mount Clemens junior, Students volunteer broadcasting the "Gamut" shows planning and discussion," said attendance, Auten said. gave to the unidentified flying ob- will make a report with recom- In May, and WZZM-TV In Grand J e r r y Immel, graduate assistant The purpose of Activities C a r - mendations to the student board About 50 students each term ject sighted Wednesday night. in about four weeks. take charge of the production, Rapids has already started show- direction and crewing of the show ing " G a m u t " on Saturdays at In television and radio and p r e s - nival is to familiarize freshmen ident of MSU Broadcasters. and t r a n s f e r students with c a m - announces schedule During an East Holmes Hall fire drill at about 11:45 residents "We hope the University will make Its position clear on student strictly a s an extracurricular 1:30 p.m. '.'The minimum requirement pus organizations. The Performing Arts Com- drama, " T h e Physicists," will spotted what appeared to be a Schlater said that the purpose for membership in MSU Broad- Participating organizations a r e use of marijuana before a p a r t i c - activity. pany has announced its summer play July 19-22. The summer "kite-like object with something c a s t e r s , " said Immel, " Is the asked to appoint a booth c h a i r - ular incident o c c u r s , " Sink said. Each show has a different p r o - of the " G a m u t " project is two- term and 1967-68 season pro- season will conclude with the attached to It." Most witnesses By making this an open Issue ducer, and this producer picks fold: to give exposure to people successful completion of the Ad- man. A registration fee of $6 gram. musical comedy "Once Upon a agreed that it was traveling vanced TV production course. Is charged to cover expenses of the committee hopes to avoid c i r - a director and crew from among on campus who have special t a l - The Summer Circle Theatre's M a t t r e s s , " July 26-29. northeast. cumstances which would be d e t r i - his fellow students. ents, and to give television and To serve as a d i r e c t o r , " he publicity, custodial services and program will offer a variety of Nicolai called the Ingham said, " t h e student must have supplies. Fairchild Theatre productions mental to the University, he said. comedy, drama and music. The County Sheriff's Dept. who t a k e n the television directing will Include: Thorton VVilder's Committee members include: " T h e main difficulty with grad Broadway comedy "Mary, M a r y " checked the Capital City Airport MSU INTERNATIONAL FILM SERIES course. There are no other employe permits Is that a grad will open the season June 28- Pulitzer P r i z e winning play " T h e and found that no planes reported Brad Lang, ASMSU m e m b e r - a t - academic requirements," he a d - employe is not clearly defined," Skin of Our T e e t h , " Oct. 24- large; John Sebeson, chemistry Presents July I. any trouble. ded. 29; Shakespeare's "Romeo and major; Will Albert, an editor of Lukens said. " E a c h school and This will be contrasted with "It seemed to be coming from J u l i e t , " Nov. 28-Dec. 3; Mo- the R e d Cedar Review; J o h n " G a m u t " Is strictly on its own department sets different c r i - John Steinbeck's drama "Of Mice the southwest end of campus and Thank financially."No university money teria for what constitutes a grad and Men" July 5-8. "Androcles l i e r e ' s satire, " T h e Would-Be going over Grand River Avenue," Wooley, biochemistry major; and Sink. heaven is involved in 'Gamut' except employe.' and the Lion," by George B e r - Gentleman," Feb. 27-March 3; Nicolai said. Others believe it Frederick Reeve, ATL p r o f e s - for incidentals like mailing and and John Arden's war drama for duplicating," said Williams. " T h e aim of this proposal Is nard Shaw, and Harold Pinter's "Serjeant Musgrave's Dance," originated from the wooded area sor, will be the faculty adviser. to equalize the definitions for one-act " A Slight Ache" will by Owen graduate hall. Some students in the TV - all colleges and departments In play July 12-15. April 23-28. The Sheriff's Dept. suggested Radio Department a r e not con- the University," he added. Friedrich Duerrenmatt's In addition, Rogers and Ham- that It might have been a meteor merstein's popular musical, but could give no further explana- State Singers " T h e King and I," will be p r e - tion. Acccrding to witnesses, it FREE PIZZA sented May 16-18, 1968, in the traveled in spurts, slowing down Auditorium. then speeding up. present concert Season coupon books for the " T h e color of the object was The State Singers will present 1967-'68 season and individual yellowish-oraiige, and as it went their annual spring concert at coupons for any of the summer by, it looked like chunks were 8:15 p . m . Sunday In Lansing's plays can be ordered by mail falling off the main body. As a Plymouth Congregational from the Performing Arts Com- large chunk fell, the whole thing Church. pany. disintegrated," Nicolai said. Works Included in the concert will be Bach's " T h e Lamb f o r u s A IMI P U S was slain;" " O gladsome light" For by Alexander Kastalsky; "Kyria ."SSIT¡9N.>! ' 944 tkeahti and Sanctus" by Antal Doratl; and "My Shepard is the L o r d " Lesue Caron Tonight at by Joseph Gallneau. Maurice Chevauer ^ Louis Jourdan S Ï Ê Ï V , FUN 7:30 P.M. Another work on the program is "Canticle from Daniel," a c o m - position by Gary White,a doctoral candidate in music, who will con- TONIGHT & SAT., MAY 5 & 6 - 7 & 9 p.m. at the duct his work. NEW The concert will also include FAIRCHILD THEATRE a cello solo by Lawrence Brown, Admission 500 FREE ELECTRIC IN-CAR HEATERS SATURDAY 11 a . m . - 5 : 0 0 MARVELANES SUNDAY 1-6 p.m. - SNEAK TIP - If sports is your East Lansing junior, and a guitar solo by LorisChobanian,doctoral candidate from Baghdad, Iraq. . . free pizza to all teams imi of three people or more bowling GOAL . . . Don't miss this +, one for thrills! Woodwind three games. South Cedar at Jolly food TU 2 ?4?9 Come at 5:25 or 7:30 recital set NOW SHOWING - FIRST RUN NEW MARVELANES and see both a t t r a c t i o n s ! " F A H R E N H E I T 4 5 1 " shown today at 1:10-3:15-5:25-9:45 Members of the MSU Richards ALL COLOR PROGRAM 2120 E. M78 5 MINUTES FROM CAMPUS Woodwind Quintet will present a recital of chamber music at 8:15 6/00£STCOUNTRY MUSIC I Julie Oskar tonight in the Music Auditorium. eve* FlLMBD/r^^^ i Christie «Werner Appearing in the recital, which is open to the public, will be NOW SHOWING! THRU TUES. i her first role ,4 winner of the flutist Alexander Murray, a s s t . ¡BftSI Ü j since her Academy '•ife* New York Critics' p r o f e s s o r ; clarinetist Elsa Lud- I COUNTRY - JUST 5 DAYS LEFT. SEE IT! '.Award for"Darling wig, a s s t . professor; bassoonist MUSIC V Edgar Kirk, associate p r o f e s s o r , STARS l A f t L A N . « '"> On M-43 UNCUT! UNCENSORED! INTACT! and oboist Daniel Stolper, a s s t . p r o f e s s o r . All a r e faculty m e m - t bers In the Dept. of Music. INCLUDING S EXCLUSIVE FIRST RUN ADULTS ONLY!! The works to be performed I TOGETHER 2 SIZZLERS 10HNNY CASH include "Eight Etudes and a Fan- * The STONEMANS > tasy for Woodwind Quartet" by lit LEFTY FRIZZELl , Elliot Carter; "Concerto in G 1 4 NORMA JEAN From the world-n Ray Bradbury. F R A N C O I S n j« Directed By Minor for Flute, Oboe and B a s - PORTER WAGONER TRUFFAUT IN FIERY COLOR! famed novel by soon" by Antonio Vivaldi, and OSBORNE BROS o 38 Hear The CARTER FAMILY N e x t A t t . R o s a l i n d R u s s e l l in " O H D A D , POOR DAD" " Q u a t u o r " by Jean Francoix. shHit VjSongs ™ R O B E R T PATRICK A L L BEST IN FOREIGN FILMS SAVAGERY! TODAY FROM 7:00 P.M. "Adam and Eve STARTS LEIF RISE Z Z Z W I L L ZENS » R O B E R T PATRICK PRODUCTIONS G FEATURE AT . . . 7:20 & 9:28 P.M. CREATED ar I PASSION ! * depicted - PLUS - ou natural!!! It i% WOMAN TODAYl SAT. & SUN. AT . . . 1:10-3:13 SOMETHING TO SEE" -5:16-7:24 & 9:37 P.M. FOR MAN - Hollywood dU„n N,w, ONCE 10:17 h • • AND SEX 'A unique a lot to recommend film...has it' "EXTRAORDINARY! HONEST HUMOR!" BEGAN — I-A. Tim — Time Magazine ^ o u w r V STRANGE "DELIGHTFUL AND UNUSUAL, A COMEDY OF THE GRANDEST SORT!" CUSTOM OF mTr S i 0L0V,HT„c • — Crowther, N Y Times LIKE F/GW,, W / W t t COURTSHIP A M "A P L E A S U R E TO W A T C H - A PLEASURE ki>, T O R E C O M M E N D ! " -Archer Winsten, New York Post and Techn ¡color MARRIAGE! "VERY MUCH WORTH SEEING!" Techn iscoPt — Crist, World Journal Tribune "RARE ENTERTAINMENT! A GEM!" — Newsweek "MARVELOUS!" -William Wolt, Cue Magazine "WHOLLY MASTERFUL! REMARKABLE! WIDE SCREEN in Eastman Color —Arthur Knight, Saturday Review Starring C H R I S T I A N E M A R T E L t I Th* Former MISS UNIVERSE from FRANCE SHOWN TWICE AT 8:07 WHICH BARBARIC MAN W W BE Added . . . Two A c a d e m e y Award Winners REX ALLEN CAROLE GILBERT A N D AT 12 P . M . HER MATE? - Best Documentary Featurette - SUE CASEY DAVE DaLIE LYLE WAGGONER KIYA LAWRENCE " A YEAR TOWARD TOMORROW" BAKER KNIGHT Produced and U. .ted by ROBERT PATRICK Extra # Color Cartoon and Short Subject - And B e s t Cartoon - Written by DAVE DaLIE • A PATRICK SANDY Production STARRING - " H e r b Alpert And The Tijuana •Rd. To Nashville' 8:05 & Late - 'Swamp Country' 10:20 Only Special Limited Showing # Take Your Date or Mate! HANA BREJCHOVA VLADIMAR PLC HOLT B r a s s Double F e a t u r e " Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan SPORTS F r i d a y . May 5, 1967 7 w r AMA WEEKEND FESTIVITIES Hip Tis a Pity Greeks feast; Fee frolics While MSU Greeks wind up Friday and Indiana at 3 p.m. PAC at its best As in the film version of " C a n - their week's festivities Saturday with Greek Feast, non-Greeks and Greeks alike can enjoy a Entertainment Saturday. Saturday's track meet with Ohio State will begin at 1 p.m. By JIM YOUSLING groaning board of activities this Held over for a second week at dide", the two time periods and weekend. the Campus Theatre is " F a h r e n - State News Reviewer the two senses of comedy and Fee Hall is holding a " F e l o n - It is a shame that the Arena T h e a t r e can only play to limited tragedy a r e bizarrely juxtaposed, leaving the audience suspended in ious Affair," highlighted by the extraordinary psychedelic sound This Weekend heit 451". "A Man For All Sea- sons" continues its run at the Gladmer. audiences, for the PAC p r o - a netherland that is neither the of the 25-guitar Roulalre County "Deadlier Than Male" starts duction ot " T i s ' a Pity She's Seventeenth C e n t u r y nor the Blues Band. The happening will By V A L E R I E ALBERTS this weekend at the Michigan a Whore" should not be missed Twentieth, but a dramatic world run from 8 p . m . ' t i l midnight,and and " L o v e s of a Blonde" opens by even MSU's most irregular of theatrical experience. the 25# donation at the door at the State. theatre goers. Not only is " T i s The acting ranges from good will go to the International Serv- a Pity" a worthwhile play itself to the most professional I have ice Fund.. High School Auditorium in Lan- behind the Sigma Chi fraternity but the current interpretation seen at MSU. There a r e some " F a t h e r Goose," s t a r r i n g sing. house. offers a unique blend of John sterling character parts: Cynthia Gary Grant and Leslie Caron, On Saturday, the Sammy t r i - The African students on c a m - F o r d ' s masterwork and high Baston plays Putana, Annabella's will be the offering of the Cedar cycle race will start at 12:30 pus a r e p r e s e n t i n g "African camp. tutoress, as a delightful Auntie Cinema. It will be shown on the p.m. in Parking Lot P near Night" f r i m 6:30 to midnight The play, we a r e told, ap- Mame-ish fool that is only barely bank of the Red Cedar near the Anthony. Saturday in the Crossroads Cafe- praises the conflict between nat- suggested by her lines. Edward Auditorium, at eight tonight and Serving for Greek Feast is teria at the International Center. ural philosophy (following our Steele's Poggio turns a super- Saturday. If rains should fall, from 4 to 5:30 p.m. with the The banquet will Include African emotions) and legalistic moral fluous part into a worthwhile ad- tonight's showing will be in the Penny Choir entertaining. This cuisine such as "Jollof Rice," views. The plot unweaves as a dition. Union Ballroom. year the Feast is at East L a n - " D o d o " and " A g i d i " followed by witty, but basically tragic, drama Dean Kyburz, a s a teeny- " T i s Pity She's a Whore" will a stage show of dances, songs, sing P a r k . The Klngsmen will of Giovanni, a y o u n g Italian, bopping idiot, shows an unexpect- wind up its week-long run in skits and informal dancing. entertain from 5:30 to 7 p.m. whose incestuous love for his ed flair for comedy (his roles the Arena Theater before travel- Francis X. and the Bushmen If it rains,'they will perform in sister Annabella eventually de- too often a r e brooding' heroes ing to campus complexes. P e r - will entertain at the Saturday Jenison. stroys their lives as well as or Doug Fairbanks types.) and formances run tonight through night Akers Hall mixer from 9 The Sigma Chi all-university the l i v e s of Bergetto, Anna- steals every scene given to him. Sunday. Curtain at 8. to midnight. dance will be held from 8-11 bella's idiot suitor, Soranzo, the Mary Hardwick, whose part The West Circle street dance T h e r e will be a piano recital Saturday night in the vacant lot discover that she is pregnant by of Hippolita is so calculated and will be held tonight from 8-12 in the Music Auditorium at 4p.m. her brother, and Hippolita, Sor- so studied as to almost sep- in the West Circle parking lot. Saturday. anzo's former m i s t r e s s . a r a t e her from the other p e r - The dance is co- sponsored by On Sunday, fraternity and s o - The theme of the play, writ- f o r m e r s ' styles, does wonderful justice to a difficult role ending t h e inter-cooperative m e n ' s Blood drive rority choral groups will p a r t i c - ten in 1633, is M l of ancient group and music will be provided ipate in Greek Sing from 2-4 with a death scene worthy of by the Last Rites. g r a n d passion, yet timeless. Realizing this, the d i r e c t o r , "Medea." "Bridge on the River Kwai," falls short p.m. in the Auditorium. 'Tis a Pity IF AHJ ST The State Singers will hold Frank C. R u t l e d g e , adapted The leads a r e nearly perfect. starring Alec Guiness and Wil- T w o h u n d r e d pints of their spring concert on Sunday F o r d ' s play into a world of rock- Bernard Tato does his best as liam Holden, will be shown in blood w e r e donated in at 8:15 p.m. in the Plymouth and-roll and mod clothes, thus Giovanni, one of those intense, W i l s o n Auditorium tonight at Congregational Church in L a n - t h e f i r s t t w o h o u r s of super-charging its innate hu- tragic young men who can only 7:30. Liu accused the drive Thursday, sing. be played as such, and his best mor and making the tragedy even more bitter. is very good indeed. John Bail- "Gigi," starringLeslieCaron, Louis Jourdan and Maurice Che- bringing the t o t a l to In tennis this weekend, MSU takes on Ohio State at 3 p.m. M A Y 25 Rutledge's p r o d u c t i o n uses ey' s Vasques is venomous and r e - valier, can be seen in Fairchild 925—40 per cent of contemporary dr e s s immesur- A T ^ D 27 ably more successfully than Bur- ton's "Hamlet," where the sets pulsively slick. Marshall Rosenblum and Vicki Jean Sanchez work so brilliantly of plotting coup tonight at 7 and 9. P.J. and the Nightshirts will star at the Shaw mixer tonight the set goal of 2,300 pints. Students m a y donate SPRING SPECIAL WEEKEND 7 HI M S U Auditorium ; and costumes often seemed cheap in spots that the rest of the play from 9 to midnight. blood at Demonstra- T HE N E W SMASH Cl IARI.KS GOUNOD'S rather than dramatically simple; seems amateurish in compari- HONG KONG \K\ — A long, suburbs in clashes between Mao's The Jullliard String Quartet t i o n Hall today, the last WORLD Rfc.NOW NKD OPEfiA and the anachronisms of "Tis son. As Soranzo, the cuckholded detailed wall newspaper in Peking foes and his supporters Wed- will perform in the Music Aud- ROCK L.P. a Pity " always seem inten- husband, Rosenblum n o t only has reported that Red China's nesday. itorium at 8-.15 tonight. d a y of t h e d r i v e , b e - S p o n s o r e d b y tin* D e p a r t m e n t s tionally funny or intentionally turns In the best performance President Liu Shao-chi and his The Tokyo newspaper Yomi- The Lansing Civic Players are tween 10 a . m . a n d 3 THE oí M U S I C and S P U L C I I original, wherein "Hamlet" such I have seen him give, but also followers stockpiled a r m s and uri reported from Red China's presenting "Any Wednesday" at p.m. GREATFUL MAIN I I .DDK IK M I - $: no touches as Gertrude's mink coat is the only cast member who is military equipment for a coup to capital that one factor mobilized 8:30 tonight at the West Junior BALCONY TICkl.TS $1 id were simply ludicrous. convincingly masculine on stage. topple Mao Tse-tung from power hundreds of persons armed with »OOHAM INroKMAnoN > 482-3W» SUPER BARGAIN DAY DEAD and place former Mayor Peng clubs and stones to prepare for Modern audiences would prob- Miss Sanchez outdoes everyone Chen of Peking in control of the an attack from Mao's "revolu- Dl .TACH AND ably still accept " T i s a Pity" else. Every move she makes is Chinese Communist party. tionary r e b e l s . " I I ICHIGAN ALL DAY PREVUE 2 FEATURES MONO 2.31 MAIL TODAY TO: without the depreciation of self- convincing, from the many long FOR HIRE The wall newspaper - a de- The poster brought to Hong STEREO 2.88 Performing Alts C»ni|»ny parody. Yet some of the lines love scenes to her climactic Michigan St I 'invernili . ARE unintentionally f u n n y , and death. vice of Mao's young Red Guards Kong demands that Liu Shao-chi & SAT. ONLY l aut L . l i u i n « . MichiguÄ to c a r r y attacks on his enemies- and his followers be condemned Ford himself inserted some p u r - The MSU Performing Arts was brought to Hong Kong by a to death. DEADLY WEAPONS: Thursday. Mu> 2 i M . . i n I l<«.t posely amusing ones. Why not Company has not only carried escape the stuffiness of such traveler from Peking. It is con- According to the poster, the H..U01» . Nuniltt'r Desired off a difficult tragedy, but also lines as "Alas, some villain sidered by experts the most r e - coup attempt developed as a po- S a t u r d a y , M . i > 27 M a i n I loo transformed it into a hilarious has h u r t my lovel" with bur- vealing account to date of a litical move against Mao and grew "Ian, U.iLom. Numi,.-, Desired evening of go-go girls and Hell's lesque? m o n u m e n t a l power struggle Into a military attempt. Peng Angels, which has been going on in Red Chen, dumped from his positions China since late 1965. as Politburo member and mayor From inside mainland China of Peking in mid-1966, had long Long apologizes for slams c a m e ' f r e s h ' r e p o r t s of bloodshed been close to President Liu, and in the current " g r e a t proletari- the poster contended that Liu, an cultural revolution" launched through Peng, wanted to rule at Senate in Dodd defense by Mao to save his authority. China. Accused along with the two Senate he had not meant to of- Japanese c o r r e s p o n d e n t s WASHINGTON W — Sen. Rus- was Lo Jui-ching, the fallen army fend the six-member bi-partisan quoted wall newspapers in Peking sell B. Long of Louisiana pub- chief of staff; Lu Tlng-yi, a committee that recommended as saying more than 200 were licly apologized Thursday for vice p r e m i e r who had been prop- last week that Dodd tie censured killed or wounded in Peking's saying half of the Senate ethics aganda chief until he was purged, for financial misconduct. committee members couldn't stand an investigation like the "If I made a mistake and if I No end to and Yang Shang-kun, who was purged as a Politburo secretary. RICHARD ELKE 8UUW «GR one Sen. Thomas J . Dodd went through. did wrong by saying whatl said," Long asserted, "I am here to TOGETHER 2 SI22LERS IN FIERY COLORI jOHnson sommER Koscinn GREEn After quoting from the Bible offer them a public apology." truck strike : MitagHtfOmmm Mimen P h o n * 482-740* The RAPE Long is the Senate Democratic TODAY that " h e that humbleth himself shall be exalted," Long told the whip, or assistant majority CHICAGO Í) - Top T e a m s t e r s OF THÉ AT Mn M i h ® leader. Union officials and government labor conciliators tried urgently gj) Sabine 1:30 r i ill FRIDAY - - SATURDAY 2 COLOR HITS It's what's Women Long reiterated that he did Thursday to settle an 11-day truck 5:20 9:10 TECHNICOLOR' not think Dodd should be cen- strike-lockout t h a t h a s idled Looking for TECHNISCOPE1 a You may hate yourself in the morning, but happening sured, saying the Connecticut nearly 200,000 C h i c a g o - a r e a Democrat has not violated any workers and threatens to spread Something Different I think you are going to enjoy'Alfie'very much. law or any rule of the Senate. to other regions. CO STAM NlG SUGi' l Si I t) • O H Alfie' uses people-mainly women-and throws He said his reaction to the committee's censure r e c o m - Federal c o n c i l i a t o r s have failed to bring labor and man- to do Tonight? Now Playing SUZAIMA LEIGH STEVE CARLSON MATURE. A U D I E N C E S them away like tissues." UFEMOBOI Williams Hall will hold a car mendation was that practically agement negotiators to the con- CREST DRIVE-IN ENDS TONIGHT ! " H O M B R E " SHOWN AT 3:10-7:00 & LATER wash 9:30 a . m . - 4 p.m.Saturday anybody who went through an investigation like the ethics pan- ference t a b 1 e , b u t s e p a r a t e closed-door meetings were held ••Bubbles with impudent " U N R E E L S MORE to raise funds for the Student LIKE A SCORE CARD NOW SHOWING Education Program (STEP). The el made of Dodd could be s e r i - in various Chicago hotels with humor and ripe, modern c a r wash will be held at the Bay ously e m b a r r a s s e d . the parties involved. wit. The first 'bird' he's THAN A SCENARIO? 9 Station, 315 E . Grand River Ave., N u m — TIME Magtilne and will cost 99# U LEWIS GILBERT fY ALlf IT HI NNCM SHOWN TWICE AT 8:07 AND 12 p.m. IImum Q • MUSCtIA S MUWMIT WTUK OW f MUB • W f UUX® PflW Bessey. Featured are the works of Haydn, Vivaldi, Dvorak and Brahms. FOR M M W WI 2ND COLOR HIT MARGRET«TONYFRANCIOSA swinging • * * ALL rants Roger Brown, professor of so- ÌEENAGÉ cial relations at Harvard Uni- versity, will conducta s e m i n a r a s part of the College of Education's Visiting Scholar in Educational SEASONS REBELLION Psychology Program at 10 a . m . today in 507 Erickson. Brown From llu- plus UtOBKirr BOLT • 0 will speak on current research in language psychology. • • » 4th Big Week! ENDS SOON! DEBORAH W A L L E Y « « 0 TOMMY K l R K j CO SIAItftING BOB PICKETT ANO suziE KAYE IANIMAIS GENTRYS - ^es Î SWARTZ IH ;.™r! CASTAWAYS ««TOYS IH The Veterans Association An- D O N ' T BE D I S A P P O I N T E D ; S E E I T NOW! "UNGER PRODUCTIONS »0 ONCE AT 10:40 nual Spring Dungaree Tea will TODAY AT 2•15-7*00-9*15 PUPWW* informati«*^488*6489' NORMAN HERMAN BURT TOPPER A TRANS AMERICAN RELEASE SHOWN AT 10:00 ONLY SUN. • "TOBRUT" - PLUS "THE WRONG BOX" be held at 9 tonight in the Ingham SAT. & SUN. AT'1:00-3:15-7:00-9:15 SHOWN AT 8:05 AND LATE County Conservation League ADMISSION $1.75 Clubhouse. Dress is casual. SPORTS 8 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan F r i d a y , May 5, 1967 CHURCH FUHCTION CHANGES Campus new church concern them from an education and a r e By D A Y L E S C H W A R Z L E R society in effecting social and " T h e many centers I've visit- rejecting denominational efforts to work through existing p e r - State News Staff W r i t e r cultural change than the ed a r e not manned byjjfntellec- by the numbers," Barnes added. sonnel, realizing they cannot be The Sunday night social club churches, and this is one strong tual incompetents, prating p r o - Ministers on campus a r e work- all things to all people. for misfits, have-nots, cast-offs reason for their intensified in- phets, p r e s s agents, pious ing increasingly toward m a s t e r ' s "If they a r e serious and d e t e r - and rejects is no longer the volvement, he continued. pretenders, or piddlingpurists," and doctoral degrees in higher mined to do their best, they central focus of campus ministry, The campus ministry has now Barnes said. education or related disciplines, a r e co-workers with university according to Ronald E, Barnes, become " r e s p e c t a b l e " and is no Barnes said. personnel," he said. "We learn dean of students at the University longer regarded as a stepping- "The ministers a r e highly- Church groups admit thatthe from them and they from us; the of North Dakota. stone to the " r e a l ministry," trained, well-educated, com- university Is more central to Barnes said. campus is the r i c h e r . " Today's critical issues of mitted human beings. They seek poverty, civil rights and Vietnam Increasing involvement of f a c - are being focused on by groups ulty and other lay people in c a m - which a r e increasingly ecumeni- pus ministry programs highlights this attitude. Creative, intellec- ' cal, involved and sophisticated, he said in a recent article in the National Assn. of Student P e r - Svettano discards atneism tual students, attracted to the worthwhile activities often bring faculty members, Barnes said. sonnel Administrators Journal. NEW YORK (£) — As Stalin's cognito in people, even where certain label to my religious Washing up Protecting the student from the university, providing a home daughter describes it, her change from atheism to belief in God He is unknown and unnamed. feeling." "The true light that enlightens The joining of the campus min- However, she said she felt istry with the university and the away from home and other ill— every m a n , " Svetlana quoted the religious faith was incompatible outside community helps all three Patt> Su r ne e. M i s s M S U , l e n d s a h a n d to C l i n t J o n e s , G e n e W a s h i n g t o n , a n d came about without any identi- concieved aims a r e no longer fiable cause or inducement. It Gospel of John. "The light shines with communism. "I don't think groups deal with issues like the ie i r b r o t h e r n O m e g a P s i P h i as t h e y get r e a d y f o r S a t u r d a y ' s c a r w a s h , spon- emphasized, he said. simply welled up, from some in the darkness, and the d a r k - that class struggle and revolu- search for meaning and identity, sored for e f r a t e r n i t y . T h e w a s h , at F r a n k ' s S u n o c o S t a t i o n , i s f o r t h e b e n e f i t "The students, of course, a r e hidden spring within. ness has not overcome I t . " tion can go hand in hand with or the problem of authority, he o'f t h e E d Lee S c h o l a r s h i p F u n d , w h i c h m a k e s a w a r d s t o w o r t h y N e g r o h i g h s c h o o l now too shrewd to be taken in It was as if a "person was That was the situation of Stal- the Idea of love." said. stude nts. State N e w s p h o t o by Dave L a u r a by the churches' efforts to save blind" a n d ' " o n e day his eyes in's daughter, reared and trained Only after M r s . Alliluyeva had become open and he can see in an atmosphere not only of turned toward religion without "If we deans a r e doing the the world," said Svetlana Allil- no religion but of vigorous antag- outside inducements did she begin work we should be doing, and If uyeva, the daughter of the So- onism to It. She described her studying It, she s a i d . " A f t e r that, campus ministers are Involved Christion Peace Conference viet Union's late dictator, J o - seph Stalin. ' I t is like this. It is the feeling that comes to you one day." faith as a broadly generalized I began to read m o r e . " conviction, without definite doc- trine. in the best purposes of the church Five years ago, In May 1962, vis-a-vis the university, then our she was baptized in Moscow into work is similar if not insepar- It is a "generalized belief in the Russian Orthodox Church, a able," Barnes said. As to where it came from God," she said. "I believe that communion which s t r e s s e s the "We have some valuable col- seeks unity, brotherhood or why, she said she didn't know. all religions are true and d i f f e r - mysteries of God's sovereignty Y'et her experience had biblical ent religions are only the d i f f e r - in contrast to Western C h r i s - leagues out there. It's high time antecedents. And theology main-' ent ways to the same God." It tianity's tendency to try to codi- more of us got together," he con- tains that God often works in- was a rudimentary affirmation, fy and define it. cluded. to coincide with the meeting. international tension, cold war, tians in Western countries and a simple elemental acknowledg- E d i t o r ' s Note: While both gatherings wanted to intensified nuclear armament and C h r i s t i a n s in C o m m u n i s t ment, without its developed r a m i - T h e Christian P e a c e further peace, it was there that of the threat of a world c a - countries, because of strict gov- Scientist fications. Conference (CPC) began i n 1958 w i t h a s m a l l g r o u p o f p e o p l e who d e c l a r e d , the resemblance ended. The aims of the CPC first met in 1958, through an Invitation of tastrophe. " I t s alms a r e to bring C h r i s - tendom to recognize Its share of guilt In both world wars and to ernment control of churches In the East, Through its International Com- mission, the CPC has made a to speak " F o r me God is the power of life and justice and when I am talking about God I am just Theologian talks "In C h r i s t t h e r e i s no the E c u m e n i c a l Council of talking about happiness to live dedicate Itself to the service of significant contribution in p r o - on 'situation ethiI C S East sr W e s t . " In t h e Churches In Czechoslovakia to A Christian Science lecture and to enjoy life on earth. I feel f r l e n d s h i p , reconciliation and vidlng opportunities for East- that humanity should be one, following article Rosalie Christians from the East and called "What Makes A Happy peaceful cooperation of nations; West dialogue, dialogue between that mankind should not be di- A. Clavez, Maine, N . Y . , West to join in writing an a l l - Marxists and Christians. Family?" will be given at 8 united action for peace; (coor- vided. The people should togeth- freshman, t e l l s of the Christian concilium In defense tonight at First Church of Christ, dinating) peace groups; and (fa- The CPC has several o t h e r er work for much good. Well, A noted scholar and theologian be infinitely more moral than C P C and its second annual of peace. Scientist, 709 E. Grand River cilitating) common effective p a r - commissions, including an Ecu- this is my belief In God. Maybe " m a r r i e d unlove"; lying could Ave, credited with popularizing a con- m e e t i n g she r e c e n t l y a t - The quote from the "Statute ticipation in the peaceful develop- menical Commission and a Youth I am not c l e a r . " be more Christian than telling Harry 5 , Smith, C.SJB., of troversial form of "new " m o r a l - tended. of the Christian Peace Confer- ment of human society today." Commission. Eastern Orthodoxy, the tradi- the truth; and stealing could be Atlanta, G a „ will be the speaker. ity called "situation ethics" will ence" helps to clarify the tone The fact that the CPC calls Study groups may be set up tion in which she was baptized, more acceptable than respecting There is no admission charge, speak on "The Immorality of » second annual meeting of of the movement: itself a movement is very im- through UCM to study East-West holds the classic concepts of private property. and all who a r e interested a r e Morality" Monday. 'nited States Committee for " T h e Christian Peace Confer- portant, since i t I s not an o r - dialogue a n d socialism, C h r i s - Christ's mission as the saving He has presented his views Invited. Rev. Joseph Fletcher, p r o - the C hristian Peace Conference ence Is an international move- ganization of churches, n o r a tianity, etc. act of God in human history. in two books, "Situation Ethics" Smith resigned from a major fessor of social ethics at the met April 15-16 in New .York ment of theologians, pastors and church, although It is supported There are hopes that in the M r s . Alliluyeva said she also and "Moral Responsibility." In sales management position with a Episcopal Theological School in City, The Spring Mobilization laymen, growing from their con- by churches. future the dialogue in the CPC appreciated other Christian ap- his books and numerous lectures national f i r m ten years ago to Cambridge, Mass., will deliver for 1 >eace in Vietnam happened viction of faith in a time of rising Much of the CPC's past work will be extended with the East proaches: including Roman throughout the country, he ap- enter the Christian Science heal- this y e a r ' s University Forum has centered on problems of the and West united in North and Catholicism and Christian plies his approaches to such South exchange with emerging ing ministry. He has since b e - Lecture at 4 p.m. in Fairchild EAST LANSING East and West. It has served Science, and saw values in Ori- fields as sex, medicine, labor, Services 10 4 11 a.m.6 & 7p.m. underdeveloped nations. come an authorized teacher of Theatre. CHURCH OF as the only liaison between Chris- ental religions such as Hin- international relations and other the religion and a member of Fletcher contends that in some CENTRAL THE NAZARENE the Board of Lectureship of The duism. " I don't feel much con- situations unmarried love could a r e a s of ethical concern. Kimberly Downs LUTHERAN First Church of Christ, Scientist, troversy between these things Fletcher has been a coal miner, FREE ME:THODIST 149 Highland Ave.,East Lansirg Church of Christ in Boston, Mass. and I do not want to attach a auditor's assistant, rope f a c - CHURCH Sunday School T0:00 a.m. WORSHIP tory worker, resident worker in 828 N. Wash, at Oakland Morning Worship 11:00 a.m. 1007 Kimberly Drive, Lansing see sign at 2729 E. Grand Martin Luther Chapel nursery Protestants a New York settlement house and College Fellowship Hour UNIVERSITY 332-2559 social research director for the River Follow Highway 43 to Lansing Minister: Rev. Howard C. Artz Evening Service 6:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m. IV 9-7130 SUNDAY SERVICES Lutheran Student Center BAPTIST CHURCH set up unity National Council of the Episcopal Church. 444 Abbott Rd. "One Hour of Sermon and Morning Worship 11:00 a.m. A Special invitation To All MSU Students Song" Bible Study io : oo a.m. Two Blocks North of Union ' American Baptist) lia /son group He has preached and lectured in more than 30 universities in For Transportation P h o n e Evening Worship 6.-00 p.m. 9:30 - Holy Eucharist Gerard G. Phillips, Pastor the U.S., Canada, Latin A m e r - Free Taxi Service: 332-1446, Rev. G l e n n A. Wednesday evening Bible ED 2-1888 university CAMBRIDGE, Mass.l/P-- Rep- ica, Australia, Japan, Britain and 11:00 - Morning Worship 4*2-1444 or 4*4-4488 Chaffee, Pastor Study 7:30 p.m. Worship 10:00 a.m. lutheran church resentatives of 10 major P r o t e s - Southeast Asia; and he is former 9:30—Children's Sunday alc-cla 11:10 a.m. r First Church of Christ, Scientist peoples Church East Lansing For Transportation Call ED 2-1960 F E 9-8190 or ED 2-2434 School Hour Church School Nursery Provided— 10:00-12:00 a.m. tant denominations planning to dean of St. Paul's Cathedral in unite set up an unusual interme- Cincinnati. diary agency Thursday to get them working together even be- University St. J o h n ' s P a r i s h i Edgewood United at American Legion Center 709 E. Grand River On Valley Ct. off 8:15, 9:15, 10:30, 11:30 fore their formal unification. Interdenominational Church East Lansing Seventh-Day W. Grand River, East Lansing A special commission was a p - Sunday Service 11 a.m. 469 North Hagadorn Koati Adventist Church proved for liaison among denomi- smorgasbord 200 W. Grand River blocks north of Grand River) Temporarily Meeting at UNITY OF Central Methodist national officials to "encourage Sermon Worship Services GREATER LANSING and c o r r e l a t e " joint work In St. John's Student Parish Ac- at Michigan University Lutheran Church Across From the Capitol 9:30 a.m. and 11:00 a.m. E?st Lansing Unity Center various fields at local, regional tion Poverty Program will spon- Division and Ann Sts. WORSHIPS SERVICES and national levels. sor its annual smorgasbord from "Adam and Fallen Man" SUNDAY SERVICES May 7 Sermon by 425 W. Grand River 9:30 and 11:00 SA TURDAY SERVICES c 332-1932 9 : 3 0 a t m e & (9:45 and 11:15) The action, aimed at stimulat- 5-7 p.m. Sunday in the parish Dr. Truman A. Morrison ing and increasing practical unity cafeteria. SUNDAY SCHOOL Sunday Service — n a , m . 9:30 a.m. Sabbath School (WJIM Broadcast 10:15 a.m.) as a prelude to actual unification, According to Glenn Rosendale, 11:00 a.m. - regular "Where do you Stand?" Church School 11:00 a.m. Worship Service Jesus Relates to Children Mon. evening service-7:30 p.m, came shortly after the church program president, the smorgas- (9:30&11-Unlverslty Studems) 9:30 a.m. and 11:00 a.m. Crib Strategic is the Family delegates gave a clear go-ahead bord is being held to r a i s e funds Dr. Wallace Robertson room through Junior high Saturday, May 6 Wednesday Class - 7:30 p.m. WEDNESDAY for designing the plan of union. for the mission projects in Mexi- preaching 'Bargain Seekers" Daily Meditation — 12 noon Howard A. Lyman preaching S:Q0 p.m.-Evening Meeting High School Group at 11 a.m. co and in the Lansing area. Guest Speaker Consultation by Appointment Edgewood Bus Stops Welcome Students Tickets may be purchased at Rüssel Spangler Minister: Richard D. Billings Crib Nursery the door, adults $1.00 and chil- 10:40 a.m. - Conrad Hall F r e e Public Reading Room CHURCH SCHOOL 10:45 a.m. - Parking Area (Church of the Dally Word) So Bring The Baby Christ Methodist dren, 50 cents. 134 West Grand River For Transportation or OPEN 9:30 - 11:00 Between McDonel and Holmes Information Call 882-5007 Church 10:50 a.m. - Hubbard F i r s t Christian T H E CHURCH OF University Methodist Weekdays—9-5 p.m, Crib through 12th Grade Each Sun. listen to "The Voice 517 W. Jolly Rd., Lansing Mon., l u e s . , Thurs.,Frl. Other Stops Added by Request of Prophecy," 9:30 a . m . , Reformed Church JESUS CHRIST OF Wilson M. Tennant, Minister Church Evenings 7 p.m.-9 p.m. Refreshment period in Church University Student Group WJIM 1240 and "Faith For L A T T E R - D A Y SAINTS 240 Marshall St., Lansing Meinte Schuurmans, 1120 S. Harrison Rd. Ai! are welcome to attend parlor following worship s e r - 5:30 p.m. supper and program T o d a y , " Channel 6 Sun.after- Associate Minister ¡Chjrch Services ard vlsi; and vices Rev. A1 Hoksbergen "Mormons" Worship Transportation, phone 332-2906 noon, Channel 2 at 10:30 a.m. Worship Services 9:30-11 a.m. | use the reading room. preaching 431 E. Saginaw " T h e Family at the L 8:30 - 9:30 - 11:00 r Morning Service 9:00 and 11:15 West of Abbott Rd. • Lord's Table" SUNDAY SERVICES College Age Fellowship Doors to the Glass Menagerie "Keeping the Faith" Sunday, 6:30 p.m. UNIVERSITY REFORMED Priesthood Meeting 9:00 a.m. SOUTH BAPTIST CHURCH University Class 10:15 Rev. Burns preaching Sunday School 10:30 a.m. Mi lorn Shirk, fi'ntiir ~i'il-7I'l l The Authority of the Bible Fast Meeting Noon St. Johns Student Ministers Evening Service 7 p.m. Tuesday Evening Parish Rev. Alden B. Burns 1518 S. Washintgon Lansing " W i l l He Come to the Feast? "Who Goes to the Supper" Youth Meeting 7:30 p.m. 327 M.A.C. Phone ED 7-9778 Rev. Keith L Pohl Communion Service Campus Student Center for transportation, Sunday Masses 217 Bogue St. Apt. 1 call 332-8465 or 355-8180 7:15 - 8:30 - 9:45 - 11:00 Phone 351-6360 Nursery During Services •A Man Finds The Answer' ALUMNI MEMORIAL CHAPEL 12:15 - 4:45, & 6:00 p.m. UNION • ROOM 35 Those In Need of When necessary Sunday CHURCH SCHOOL A Warm Welcome Extended Transportation call — to All Visitors Masses will be doubled up SUNDAY 7:00 P.M. 8821425 485-3650 with m a s s e s in the chapel and 9:30 to 10:30 a.m.-Program downstairs lounge. for all ages Weekday Masses 11:00 a.m. - Children 2-11 y r s EPISCOPAL SERVICES AT MSU TRINITY CHURCH 7:00 - 8:00 - 12:30 - 4:30 120 Spartan Ave. Interdenominational Masses at Alumni Chapel 9:45 A.M. 8:30 P.M. ALUMNI CHAPEL Monday - Friday 4:15 F r e e bus transportation 15 to COLLEGE BIBLE CLASS YOUTH FELLOWSHIP SUNDAY WORSHIP SERVICES Saturday Masses 30 minutes before each s e r - (Auditorium Drive, East of Kresge Art Center) 8:00 - 9:15 - 11:45 vice around the campus. Dr. Ted Ward, Teacher T h r e e Courses of Study University Classes 9:45 MSU Learning Systems Refreshments Institute 9:30 a.m. Holy Communion and Sermon 8:30 and Morning Worship 5:15 p.m. Holy Communion and Sermon CHURCH 11:00 c a S T m i n s T C R PRCSBYTCRian "Legitimate Claims on 7 3 7 5 Abbott Rd. All 3aints Parish Real Wealth" east fûfisinG. micmcan 11:00 A.M. The E s s e n c e of Life" 7.-00 Evening Worship 800 Abbott Rd. NiHAY SCHEDULE "What Death Cannot Do" Worship Services— — 9 : 0 0 and 1 1 . 0 0 a . m . 8:00 a . m . Holy Communion (Holy Communion Service) Church School, Cribbery-Thlrd Grade --9KX) and 11:00 a.m. 9:30 a . m . Morning Prayer and Sermon 8:15 p.m. Trinity Collegiate Fellowship Church School, Fourth Grade-Adults, Students—10:00 A^I* 11:15 a j n . Holy Communion and Sermon FREE BUS SERVICE Morning and E v e n i n g 6:30 p.m. Canterbury F o r t r a n s p o r t a t i o n p h o n e 3 3 2 - 6 2 7 1 o r 332-8901 PAS'IORS:E. Eugene Williams, David L. Erb, Norman R. Piersma CALL 4 8 2 - 0 7 5 4 FO R IN FORM ATION By 6:00 p.m. Saturday FREE BUS SERVICE- See schedule in your dorm. Rev. R. L. Moreland - MINISTERS - Rev. H. G. Beach Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan SPORTS F r i d a y . M a y 5, 1 9 6 7 9 Lively sound prevails Tower hits GOP "tin Viet criticism despite much static' WASHINGTON f — Sen. John G. Tower, R-Tex., said T h u r s - day the Senate Republican Policy Committee made "a classic political mistake" when it made public a staff study critical of President Johnson's policy in Vietnam. He said the overwhelming majority of Republicans stand for By T R I N K A C L I N E transmitters was also unable to gramming special interest fea- "unrelenting military pressure" in the Southeast Asian war. get necessary copper parts. tures every Thursday evening Amid the swirl of debate over the controversial staff study. State News Staff W r i t e r The station's wiring arrived called Uniscene. This series in- Tower issued a statement offering this forecast: T r y 640 on your radio dial. "It is my belief that the Republican platform and the Republican early in January and the sup- candidates and discussions on That should be the "light and women's hours, East Lansing nominee in 1968 will reflect the majority viewpoint of Republicans, plier received copper materials lively sound" of All-Campus Ra- a few eeeks later. more hours weekly. DJ's a r e everywhere, as I have enunciated it h e r e . " dio WMSN. While waiting for the transmit- selected through auditions and do Tower said there is not considerable division among Republicans Some will get nQthing at 640, t e r s to be built, the WMSN en- T y p e s of m u s i c p l a y e d on the conduct of the war. because several dorms aren't g i n e e r i n g c r e w began lay- are scheduled according to a stu- wired for WMSN's sound. ing wires in the conduits of the dent survey taken in 1965. The A Others will also get nothing, University's electrical system. survey indicated that studen t s but that's not because the dorm isn't connected. Some dorms still The next difficulties i n v o l v e d blocked and broken conduits and preferred " e a s y l i s t e n i n g " records during the morning, rock FOR PIZZA SAKE have reception problems. cable packages already in some music all afternoon, followed by For those dorms without tech- nical problems, there will be music, Jazz, rock, classical, folk conduits. folk songs, jazz and back to easy listening late at night. Turn on, tune in fr FOR PIZZA SAKE Weekend music selection is a or "easy listening" depending Trained rat little heavier on jazz and includes And l i s t e n to Don A l l . n , y o u r f r i e n d l y , " l i g h t and l i v e l y " W M S N d i s c jockey and on the hour of the day. All-Campus radio, now serving some classical m u s i c S u n d a y T h e e n g i n e e r s e m p l o y e d afternoons. c a m p u s b r o a d c a s t e r . T h i s is a r e c o r d i n g . State News photo by Chuck M i c h a e l s FOR PIZZA SAKE 75 per cent of the on-campus students, is the result of an idea vacuum cleaners, f i r e e x t i n - started in 1956 to have a student- guishers and compressed nitro- Pay limited FOR PIZZA SAKE operated radio station at MSU. gen to force sponges with string attached through the electrical ducts. Only WMSN department heads and engineers r e c e i v e a n y Chapín praises computer Delays overcome They even went so far as to monetary compensation for their begin training a rat to pull a work. Engineers are paid on an You don't have to love the com- Still another benefit is the This practice yields more a c - curate records of the hours they FOR PIZZA SAKE In the last year, WMSN has puter but you should learn to a c - availability of the equipment for faced delays in supply shipments, s t r i n g t h r o u g h c o n d u i t s hourly basis, b u t d e p a r t m e n t cept It if automation is to yield other uses, Chapln said, as one work, he said, and frees ap- heads receive between $50 and contracting delays and construc- that couldn't be sealed for a $110 per term. tion problems. Broadcasting was vacuum. The first WMSN rat the results it's capable of, Rich- piece of equipment is used as a time clock for 350 student em- proximately 15 per cent of the payroll c l e r k ' s t i m e t h a t o n ; e w i s FOR PIZZA SAKE met an unfortunate fate when he The 15 newsmen and approxi- ard E. Chapin.directoroflibrar- ployes. spent keeping student records. scheduled to begin fall term, but mately 20 disc Jockeys volunteer ies, told a conference of library Just for trying our was stalled until mid-January. was accidentally used in a psy- administrators in Urbana, 111. OFF anywhere from one to ten or pizza. Bring this As early as 1956, when Brody chology experiment. more are selected through au- recently. coupon in for table radio, WBRS, began operation, Transmitters were installedas ditions and do not have to be Since MSU automated its l i - or take out on there was some consideration of soon as they arrived, and, by television-radio majors. b r a r y circulation system, he Mon., Tues,, or in all-campus o p e r a t i o n , ac- complex, WMSN expanded s e r - South Campus complexiscom- said, students have saved more Thürs, night. Of- cording to Pete Sorum, radio vice across campus. than 4,000 man hours a year fer good 'til May board chairman. Plans to " f e e d " Early winter term, WMSN had pletely connected f o r WMSN. that would have been spent just Provisions have also been made 31, 1967. A'est Circle halls were never been programming several hours for feeding Holden Hall when filling out forms. A elaborated on, and the idea was during the week for Brody and At one time, prior to auto- Shaw stations. Wonders radio, It opens fall term. The engi- abandoned. Store your neers, students working under mation, books returned to the ABE A DIAMONDS Sorum said that in 1958 or 1959 WEAK, also decided to affiliate a supervisor from the physical library sometimes remained un- 3rody's WBRS and Shaw' sWKME with the WMSN network. shelved for as long astwoweeks, clothes free FtfiA liscussed, without action, the Presently WMSN is on the air plant, have to return to Wilson Chapln said. During this time â SOBMARINSa A a.m. to correct reception difficulties. possibilities of merging stations except between 2 and 6 no one could check them out. at for all-campus service. Brody and Shaw continue their Hubbard a n d A k e r s a r e r e - The automated system makes 337-1668 WMSN In 1961 the idea was studied programming, but u s e ceiving WMSN. Fee presented it possible to have books back by an AUSG (student government) services for special feature pro- extensive problems with plugged on the shelves in a fraction of 211 M.A.C. — E. Lansing committee. A report was given grams, expanded news reports conduits and is still incomplete. that time, he said. ¡FORMERLY CASA NOVA #2 - E.L.'s FIRST PIZZERIA in 1963, but AUSG discontinued and whenever disc Jockeys are McDonel and Holmes have been scarce. action. connected, but work on Van Hoo- We mothproof After AUSG became ASMSU, McDonel radio, WMCD, r e - sen is unfinished. a steering committee was ini- cently attained conditional affili- Of the W e s t C i r c l e d o r m s , Cadet wins all clothes at tiated to contact Big Ten uni- ation status. Eventually WMCD' Campbell and Mayo are receiving no extra charge Cleaners versity radio stations for infor- will be granted affiliation, and WMSN, but Williams and Gil- mation. will contribute to the entire net- christ, Yakeley and Landon are air a w a r d 623 E. Grand River E. Lansing During 1965 a charter was work. not. An MSU senior Is one of nine drawn up and the idea presented B e s i d e s recording s p e c i a l Ma son-Abbot were hooked up Air Force ROTC cadets in the Why Not to the student body as a referen- speeches, such as Mark Lane and recently, b u t S n y d e r - P h i l l i p s United States awarded the Air dum in February 1966. Of the George Rockwell, WMSN is pro- still need some electrical lines. Force Association's W. Ran- MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY PERFORMING ARTS COMPANY 15,991 students on campus, 7,986, dolph Lovelace Medal. or 49.9 per cent, voted on the John B. Kean, Grosse Polnte issue. The proposal passed by a senior, received the medallion 4174-3812 margin. March 1966 the Board o f T r u s - Junior '500' to become at the Arnold Air Society's 19th National Conclave. Swap tee»-Approved the recommenda- Criteria for selection of the tion and authorized a $66,000 loan for creation of a station subject to annual review by the a Sunday event nine national winners included: ranking In the upper five per 'TIS PITY SHE'S cent ofthecaaet'sROTCclassand Trustees. The 20th annual Lambda Chi the upper ten per cent of his col- The race begins with the t r a - lege's graduation class; a recom- A WHORE Alpha "Junior 500" will be held ditional lowering of the flag as mendation by the professor of Central station on Sunday, May 14 at 2 p.m. Ac- the contestants begin their race aerospace studies as the most cording to race chairman Paul along the mile long coursearound outstanding senior cadet of his The new station was to govern VanWeelden, the "500" is being Circle Drive. A pace car relays detachment. May 2-13 a network of residence hall sta- held on Sunday this year instead the position of the carts by walkie Arnold Air Society is the na- tions. The central station would of the traditional Saturday in talkie to the pylon, which an- tional professional service o r - John Foid'i powerful tragedy of inccttuous Starting Monda^, May 8th, the State Nrfws broadcast to any "radioless" order to'encourage more parents nounces the information to the ganization composed of over passion between a brother and sister. C l a s s i f i e d Section w i l l have a new c a t e g o r y . hall, and coordinate and serve and East Lansing residents to spectators. 6,000 Air Force ROTC cadets. I n s t e a d o f b u y i n g o r s e l l i n g an i t e m y o u c a n the affiliates. WMSN was to be attend. Omega P si Phi holds the record Squadrons are located at over VanWeelden said the change ADMISSION $.50 OR COUPON s w a p It f o r s o m e t h i n g e q u a l . I t ' s ® a s y , I t ' l l student built and operated and time of 2 minutes 58.7 seconds 165 of the nation's universities work. tailored t o student l i s t e n i n g should bring some 12,000 specta- and colleges. tastes, Sorum noted. tors to view the race and parade. run In 1964. Installation didn't begin im- The 60 living units entered mediately because of contracting will compete in two divisions, TICKETS STILL AVAILABLE FOR . . . delays in July when the physi- men's and women's, with three GRANDMA'S WONDERS KIVA MAY 8-9 CURTAIN T I M E ' 7 : 1 5 P.M. cal plant requested more detail trophies per division awarded. The race began 20 years ago (Use Wilson Hall Concourse) May 4-5 5:00 -7:00 P.M. in the plans. Remodeling of 8 Student Serv- this month when members from ices, where the central station MSU's Lambda Chi Alpha chap- is located, went slowly through ter built a cart and began push- BRODY ARENA MAY 10-11 CURTAIN TIME: 7:15 P.M. (Use North East Lobby —Brody) May 8-9 5:00 - 7:00 P.M. Here's How It Works September as various subcon- ing each other around campus. McDONEL KIVA MAY 12-13 CURTAIN TIME: 7:15 P.M. tractors failed to notify e a c h Other fraternities began building other when they had finished. carts and in a few days everyone (Use Conrad Hall) May 10-11 5:00 - 7:00 P.M. was being challenged to a " r a c e . " Regular Another delay involved copper supplies. In September WMSN Although no official race was BOX O' CHICKEN "It's officials learned copper wiring held that year, the competitive American United 3 pieces chicken, mashed potatoes, worth WILLING to exchange Wilson for the station would be delayed, spirit had spread and an all- gravy & biscuit, and coleslaw crowing tennis racket for bowling ball. possibly because of a government university race was scheduled. about" In Just three years the event grew OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK Call 355-8255 Life Insurance Company priority on copper for Vietnam. The supplier building WMSN's to the largest fraternity spon- 1900 E. Kalamazoo Phone;484-447l sored event in the world. Force me to give up my MAC - Break! T REALLY P A Y S T O BE A C R E D I T UNION FAMILY. is proud to announce N O T f € C A M I L L I O N D O L L A R S ! LOW COST AUTO LOANS the appointment of NEED used bicycle. Will swap record player. Call 355-8255. James " M i k e " Wicksall FULLY INSURED FOR A as a n a s s o c i a t e i n E a s t L a n s i n g area YOUR PROTECTION 10 words for $1.00 - 1 day • » >*> 10 words for $2.50 - 3 days AT NO EXTRA COST, 10 words for $4.00 - 5 days plus (These special p r i c e s w i l l last f o r t w o weeks) xT* ALL THE PRICE INFORMATION " S t a t e News C l a s s i f i e d Ads Work" YOU NEED TO GET THE BEST * • POSSIBLE DEAL. M r . W i c k s a l l w i l l be an a s s o c i a t e i n the STATE NEWS s H a r r y D e n s m o r e A g e n c y of Lansing 927 E. Grand River Suite 12 S t a s e r Bldg. Phone 3 5 1 - 7 6 3 0 CLASSIFIED MeDomlft MSU F M P I f l Y F F S I c r e d Í t Í I E. L a n s i n g union LIFE - HEALTH - GROUP ANNUITIES 355-8255 1019 T r o w b r i d g e Road Call 353-2280 LANSING EAST LANSING Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan SPORTS F r i d a y . May 5, 1967 10 Ci. ANNOUNCING OUR NEW 'SWAP' COLUMN - STARTING MONDAY, MAY 8. WHAT DO YOU HAVE TO SWAP? CALL NOW *n Automotive Automotive Automotive Scooters & Cycles Employment For Rent For Rent OLDSMOBILE 1961 white Holi- ACClDENY PROBLEM? Call HONDA SPORT 50, 1965. Black, MEN WANTED for full timeland- MARMAX LUXURY apartments, LUXURY APARTMENT, one with a CHEVROLET 1966 Impala con- vertible, six cylinder, red. 6000 day Super '88', red interior, KALAMAZOO STREET BODY best offer. Call 351-9059 eve- scaping work. Sandhill Acres summer, fall. Block from cam- bedroom, unfurnished, close to l o w COS* miles; Standard, $1950. 355- power steering and brakes, r a - SHOP. Small dents to large nings. 4-5/5 Nursery, ED 2-3310. 2-5/8 pus. Ron, 337-1496. 5-5/11« campus. $140.00. IV 2-9914. 2885. 10-5/15 dio, snow tires. $370. ED 2- wrecks. American and foreign ROYAL ENFIELD 500 ccScram- EARNINGS ARE unlimited as an 129 BU'RCHAM DRIVE, East Lan- 10-5/8 WANT AD CHEVROLET four-door 5722. OLDSMOBILE 1061, two-door, 5-5/10 cars. Guaranteed work. 482- bler. Call 482-7670. 1286. 2628 E. Kalamazoo. C 3-5/5 AVON Representative. Turn your free time Into $$. For an sing. Furnished apartments for SUMMER SUBLEASE, one man two students. Summer lease for three-man luxury apart- hardtop, V-8 stick, good condi- MATCHLESS I95T 650cc. Dynamic 88, automatic, power, appointment in your home, write only, $120 per month. Call IV 7- ment. University Villa. Call AUTOMOTIVE tion. 351-9225. 3-5/5 Aviation Cherry condition. Complete re- excellent condition. $700. 337- built engine plus extra goodies. Mrs. ALONA HUCKINS, 5663 3216; evenings, until 9 p.m., 355-5345. 5-5/5 EMPLOYMENT CHEVROLET 1961, six, auto- School Street, Haslett,Michigan 1278. ' 3-5/5 FRANCIS AVIATION. So easy to Must sacrifice. 355-9449. 882-2316. 10-5/18 SUMMER: FOUR-man Chalet FOR R E N T matic, two-door. Call 355-9226. learn in the PIPER CHERO- or call IV 2-6893. C-5/5 3-5/5 OLDSMOBILE 1967 F-85. Four 3-5/8 Apartment, balcony on river. FOR SALE door sedan, six cylinder, auto- KEEtl Special $5.00 offer! 484- SUMMER EMPLOYMENT-Men, AVONDALE ARTS. Reduced rate. Call 351-9250. LOST & FOUND CHEVROLET 1957 Relair, V-8, matic transmission, radio, 1324. C HONDA" 1967 Scrambler, 160cc. 20 or over. Detroit and various 3-5/5 PERSONAL automatic. 1020 West Grand 2000 miles. Barnett clutch. $550 2 Bedroom furnished PEANUTS PERSONAL River. 337-2303. , 3-5/9 heater, tinted windshield anti- Scooters & Cycles 353-2713. 5-5/10 other Michigan cities. $2.80per AVONDALE APARTMENT, sub- spin differential. 3,400 miles. hour. Overtime available. David lease for summer. Four-man. • REAL E S T A T E CHEVROLET IMPALA IS50 BULTACO METRALLA 200 cc. HONDA 1966 Super Hawk 3U5cc. June t o June $2250. Phone 372-1281. 3-5/5 Jaffa, 353-2803 between 10-12 $47 per person. 332-5842. • SERVICE four-door V-8, automatic, good OLDSMOBILE 1963 '98'. Must 3,000 miles. $450 or best offer. 1400 miles. Immaculate. Hel- noon. 10-5/11 3-5/5 • TRANSPORTATION condition. 351-6257. 3-5/9 see to appreciate; with extras 353-8171. 3-5/5 met. 351-5312. 3-5/5 PURCHASING BUYER. Excellent Leases now being WATERS EDGE Apartment. One • WANTED CORVAIR CONVERTTBLI , ^ 6 4 . including factory a i r - . $1375. HONDA S-90, 1400 miles. Heated HONDA I60cc, quick, different, opportunity for a recent male signed-Discount for girl wanted for summer term. Excellent condition. 351-4248. 332-6166. 1301 East Grand basement all winter. Call 372- beautiful, guaranteed. $500. college graduate. Will train in 351-9506. 3-5/5 DEADLINE $795 or best offer. 5-5/5 River, East Lansing. 3-5/5 9694. 5-5/5 355-2956. 1-5/5 basic purchasing procedures. summer months Model Apt. No. 146 LUXURY APARTMENT, dish- CORVETTE F9o5 STINGRAY OLDSMOBILE 1964 Jetstar, two- SUZUKI 150. Electric starter, SUZUKI SPORT 50, excellent Send resume to Box C-3. State 1 P.M. one class day be- Open Daily - 8 to 8 washer, excellent parking, fore publication. convertible. 250hp engine, four- door hardtop, power steering, brand new. Only $395atSTRAT- condition. Eight months old. ED News. 3-5/5 beautiful lawn. Reduced rates. speed, original owner and mile- and brakes. $1200. IV 2-9071. TON SPORT CENTER, 1915 E. 2-6835. 3-5/5 iMnnClAN. Excellent opportu- Summer. 332-5775. 5-5/5 Cancellations 12 noon one age. Phone 337-2546. 3-5/9 ' 1-5/5 Michigan. IV 4-4411. C HONDA I3D Scrambler. 3500 Beaumont Management ity for therapetic dietician. SUMMER ONLY, furnished class day before publica- CORVETI E i960. Two four bar- OLDSMOBILE 1966 F-85 deluxe. IMMACULATE! CANDY-apple miles. Must sell. $390. 489- Excellent working conditions. apartment. $110 includes util- tion. rels, four speed. 283 cubic inch. Four-door, six cylinder, auto- Yamaha 305cc, 1966, $635. 6863. 3-5/5 Contact Personnel Department. 351-7672 or 337-2080 ities. Private entrance. 372- IV 2-6359. 5-5/9 matic. Excellent condition. Trade for car. 353-7688. NORTON 750cc. 1966 Scrambler. St. Lawrence Hospital. 3-5/5 124 CEDAR STREE T, East Lan- 5025. 5-5/5 PHONE $1675. 351-4316. 3-5/8 5-5/5 New engine, drafted. Must sell. DRIVER, OVER 21. Full and part CORVETTE, 1965. Nassau blue sing. Furnished apartment for SUMMER SUB-LEASE luxury 355-8255 with white top. 17,000 miles. OLDSMOBILE 1954 Dynamic KAWASAKI 1966. Like new. 351-5412. 3-5/5 time. Apply VARSITY CAB two students. For summer only. two-man apartment. $165/ RATES Warranty til September. $2900. '88', two-door hard top, power, 60cc., just tuned, electric lights HONDA 1965 Scrambler. 250cc. COMPANY, 122 Woodmere. $150 per month. IV 7-3216. Call month. 351-5856. 3-5/5 IN' 5-6049. 3-5/8 gpod condition. $1200.487-0478. and blinkers, approved helmet. Custom seat, helmet, $525.353- _- 2-5/5 evenings until 9 p.m., 882-2316. 1 DAf si.50 3-5/8 Call Marilyn 487-0093 after 5 8194. CORVETTE 1958, three speed, 3-5/5 LEGAL SECRETARY: excellent 10-5/18 3 DAYS S3.00 rebuilt 283 engine. ?600 firm. OLDSMOBILE 1964 JetStar '88' p.m., or 373-2764 at work. DUCATI 250 Monza with helmet. working conditions, shorthand HASLETT APARTMENT. Four East Side 5 DAYS ¿5.00 5117 Bogart. 2-5/8 convertible. Yellow with black 5-5/10 and typing required. For inter- $450. Call after 7 p.m. 351- man, sublet summer term. Air- l-bedroom, heat, furnished (based on 10 words p e r ad) CORVETTE i960 two four-bar- top and interior. Power steer- BENELLI 1966 Sprite 125. $375 5617. 3-5/5 view, call 372-5700. 10-5/9 conditioned. 351-9327. 3-5/5 $125. Also, house 2-bedroom Over 10, 15< per word, per day, rels, four speed. Excellent ing and brakes. One owner. including deluxe helmet. Call DUCATI 50,1965. Good condition. FOOD SERVICE supervisor. Ex- ONE, TWO or three men wanted for 3 at $150 or 4 at $Ì80. There will be a 5(ty service Phone 882-8475 after 5 p.m. 699-2727 after 5:30 p.m. 2-5/5 cellent opportunity for experi- tires. Two tops. Call TL' 2- Best offer over $100. Call Rod, to sublease air-conditioned lux- All units furnished and $100 and bookkeeping charge if 7594 Monday, Tuesday, Thurs- 3-5/5 HONDA 19537 1965, 3Ô5cc. Barnett 489-2615. 3-5/8 ence. Afternoon shift. Hours deposit. No children or pets. ury apartment for summer. 341 this ad is not paid within day, Friday after 5p.m. 3-5/9 PLYMOUTH 1957 two-door, six clutch. Excellent condition. $500 HONDA S-90 1965. Good condi- flexible. Male preferred. Con- Available now - no fall term Evergreen 4-F. 351-7539. one week. DODGE DART convertible. 1964. stick. Fair body, runs great. 353-2712 after noon. 5-5/10 tion. Must sell. Best offer. 337- tact Personnel Department, St. Lawrence Hospital. 3-5/5 3-5/5 holding. Phone IV 9-1017. Automatic, snow tires. $895. $99. ED 7-9677. 3-5/5 MOTORCYCLE H E A D Q U A R - 1448. 5-5/5 SUBLET BIGGEST apartment in The State News will be responsible only for the 332 - 3717 after 6 p.m. 5-5/5 PONTIAC 1958 convertible, ex- TERS: Yamaha, Triumph, BMW HONDA 305 Dream, 1966. 3,000 FOOD PRODUCTION manager. University Terrace. Need three. THREE- or FOUR-man N'orth- first d a y ' s Incorrect Inser- FORD 1966 GALAXIE 500 con- cellent shape. Turquoise and sales and services. All types miles. Excellent condition. Excellent opportunity for recent 351-7464. 5-5/9 wind apartment for summer. $50 tion. vertible. 5500 actual miles. New white. $235. IV 4-9994. 2-5/5 or riding apparel, complete $500. 655-2881. 8-5/5 college graduate or individual FRANDOR, NEAR: one bedroom per month. Call 351-7907. with two years college, and ex- car warranty. Also i960 Pon- PONTIAC 1966 LeMans - V-8, selection of helmets. SHEP'S HONDA 160, 1966. Blue beauty furnished house. Sublet May 5- 5-5/9 tiac. 372-0272. 3-5/8 MOTORS: Just south of 1-96 perience. Send resume to Box September 1. $110plus utilities. ONE MAN needed for two-man The State News does not power steering, radio, positrac- in top shape. With electric start. C-3, State News. 3-5/5 permit racial or religious FORD GERMAN 1965. Excellent tion. $1,750. 337-1897 after 5:30 Expressway on Cedar Street. $485. 339-8865. 3-5/8 484-6595. 4-5/5 apartment in Burcham. Fall, condition. Front wheel drive. p.m. 3-5/5 OX 4-6621. C-5/5 REDUCED RENT: sublease for 1967. Call 351-6438. 3-5/5 discrimination in Its ad- After 5:30 p.m. 355-7929. MOBYLETTE 1966, 50cc. 90 Employment For Rent summer. Northwind apartment. vertising columns. The PONTIAC 1964 Bonneville con- ! Cedar Village Apartments 3-5/8 actual miles, excellent condi- TV RENTALS for students. Eco- Air - conditioner, dishwasher. State News will not accept vertible. Very clean, leather in- tion. $150. Phone 372-4320. SUMMER: WAITRESSES, Beaver SUMMER LEASE advertising whichdiscrim- FORD 1959 wagon. V-S stick. nomical rates by the term or 351-7900. ' 3-5/9 terior. Call 351-4687. 3-5/8 3-5/5 Lodge, Beaver Island. Board, 50.00/MONTH PER MAN inates against religion, Good second car. New tires. month. UNIVERSITY TV RENT- HASLETT APARTMENT, four- STUDEBAKER 1960 station wa- room, wages, tips. Interview- 332-5051 484-7104. 3-5/5 TRIUMPH CUSTOM, 1954frame. ALS. 484-9263. C man sublease for summer. Call race, color or national ori- gon. New tires. $50. 128 South ing Placement Bureau, May 11, 60 engine, 650cc twin. Quick. or see manager gin. FORD, 1966 Galaxie - 500 XL, Hayford Avenue. Lansing. 485- 4-5/10 TV RENTALS for students. $9.00 353-7383, 3-5/9 After 6 p.m. - 351-7249. 3-5/8 month. Free service and deliv- WATERS EDGE. One girl needed between 3:00-5:00 P.M. bucket seats, console, 22,000 '889. 3-5/8 GRADUATE STUDENT desires miles. Still under warranty. ery. Call NEJAC, 337-1300. We for fall term. Call Joanne, 355- In trailer next to 242 Cedar SUNBEAM, two-door sports se- BSA 1 9 6 5 , 6 5 0 C C . Thunderbolt, summer computer program- Take over payments $85 per dan. 1965. Call IV'4-568^ after condition excellent $825. Lot guarantee same day service. C 7070. 3-5/9 Also available 12 4-MAN UNITS ming position. Experienced. Mr. Automotive month. Phone IV 2-5058. 5-5/8 5 p.m. 3-5/5 159. 372-4030. 3-5/9 Williams, 355-4637. 3-5/5 Apartments 307 RIVERS EDGE, four-man FOR FALL AUSTIN HEALEY 3000. 1965. JAGUAR XKE Roadster, 1966. YAMAHA 1964 250cc Drafted. MALE OVER 21. Y.M.C.A. Sum- for summer. Balcony. 337-1427. LUXURY APARTMENT needs THUNDERBIRD 1964, two-dpgr Excellent condition. Many ex- White, AM-FM radio. Excellent hardtop, full power, must sell. Must sell. Call 351-5517 after mer program position. Call 332- NEW LUXURY furnished apart- 3-5/9 second man immediately. Re- tras. Phone TL' 2-0410. 3-5/9 condition. Never been in salt. 5 p.m. 3-5/9 8657. ' 4-5/9 ments. 513 Hillcrest. Two, OFF] Four-man luxury duced rent. Quiet. -351-6450. $1700. 627-7446. 4-5/5 three, four mature students. AUSTIN HEALEY roadster, 1959. Call 332-5619 after 4 p.m. TRIUMPH CUB 1965, 200 cc., BARN WORKERS wanted for apartment with dishwasher. 5-5/9 TRIUMPH SPITFIRE 1963. Un- One year lease for two. $165. Excellent condition. Red, radio, 2-5/5 best offer! 332-0586. 1-5/5 weekday mornings 7-12. Must 332-2210. Large lawn for 'IG's and sun- ONE GIRL for apartment start- believably good. Foreign gradu- 3-5/8 heater. Sale or trade.351-9187. MGB 1964 - Low mileage, radio, HONDA TRAIL 55. Red. Best of- have • extensive experience ning. 351-7896. 3-5/9 ing fall term. $55 monthly. 351- r 3-5/8 ate unable take it home. 332- COUPLE WANTED to sublet $150 CASH - We will pay you 6289. 3-5/5 heater. White side walls, wire 5775 after 5:30 p.m. 4-5/5 fer. Call after 4 p.m. 372-0097. working with cattle. Call MICH- Spartan Village apartment. AUSTIN HEALEY Sprite, 1^63, wheels. Call 484-2545. 5-5/9 3-5/9 IGAN ANIMAL BREEDERS CO- $150 to sublet four man luxury SUMMER SUBLEASE apartment. VOLKSWAGEN 1961 mechanical- Summer only. After 6 p.m. call very clean, 32,000 miles,.good apartment summer term. Air- Reduced rent. Three man, Uni- MGTD. JUST restored. New ac- ly excellent. Body in good con- HONDA S-65, i960. Excellent OP. 337-9796. 3-5/5 353-6825 * 3-5/8 conditioned. Pool, custom bar, upholstry. 651-5448. 1-5/5 versity Terrace. 351-7436. dltlon. 351-9374. 3-5/9 condition, best offer, over $200. COLLEGE GIRL'; must be 21 BUlCK Ï95T Special deluxe. cessories. Beautifull Swap or ' years, cocktail waitress, 2-3 WANTED: TWO men for sum- TV included. 351-4945. 3-5/5 3-5/5 355-9028. 3-5/9 Four-door, V-8, automatic, best offer. 355-8838. 3-5/8 VOLKSWAGEN Ï953 Bahama mer luxury apartment. Univer- power steering, radio. $425. MUSTANG 1966 - V-8 automatic, blue, sunroof, whitewalls, r a - MATCHLESS - MINT black 1965. nights week. Call IV 9-6614 for 372-5175 after 5 p.m. 3-5/5 wtiltewalls. Two door hard top. Bt'ICK 1957, two-door hardtop, 393-2371. 3-5/5 dio. $1225. 355-2931. 3-5/9 G 80, S 500 single. 5,000 miles. appointment. VOLKSWAGEN 1962, excellent 489-5467, 4-5/5 sity Terrace. 351-4510. 3-5/8 5-5/9 URGENT! TOY demonstrators. NEEDED TWO girls September The BEST 'PARTS' of power steering and brakes, body OLDSMOBILE 19371 Power- shape, radio, $600. 485-4142, BRIDGESTONE 1966, S-50. 773 TOY CHEST needs help in Lan- to September. University T e r - and engine good, needs muffler, brakes, windows, steering. Ex- has one new muffler. 393-3490. cellent running condition. $150 2829 North Logan. VOLKSWAGEN 1965 sedan. Ra- 5865. 3-5/5 miles. 5.2 ^ horsepower. 355- V sing, Charlotte, Willlamston and race. 351-4928. 3-5/8. other surrounding areas. Call TWO GIRLS for Haslett apart- 7-5/12 MORRIS Auto Parts are: Clara Algate, 482-8249, 5-5/5 3-5/5 . or best offer. 482-0580. 3-5/8 dio, seat belts, undercoat. $1000 HONDA 305, Scrambler 1966. Ex- GIRL WANTED for part time ment. Summer term. 351-7667 1. Quality - name brand equipment at rea- 882-7307. 3-5/5 tras. Excellent condition. Call sonable prices. work in Shirt laundry. Apply or 351-4295. 7-5/12 Ray, 332-5053. 3-5/8 Auto Servie» & Ports EAST LANSING ONE HO.UR HASLETT APARTMENTS four HONDA SCRAMBLER 353cïï. man. Sublease for summer. 351- 2. Time Saving - Only 5 minutes from CAR WXSHI"25$, Wash, wax, 1966. Excellent condition. 3000 MARTINIZING, Brookfield Pla- za. Phone 351-4858. 4-5/9 5302. 3-5/8 campus. vacuum. U-DO-IT. 430 S. Clip - miles. 489-0724. 3-5/8 pert. Back of KOKO Bar. NEEDED: FOUR people to sub- HONDA 305 Super Hawk, 1965. GREAT BOOKS. Not encyclo- 3. Selection - Wide stock of brushes, waxes, C-5/4 Extras. Must sell. Best offer. pedias.. Open for part and full let for summer. Evergreen touch up paints, tools, accessories, and all time employment. 351-4011. Arms. 332-4736. 4-5/10 GENERATORS AND STARTERS- ED 2-6084. 5-5/9 your part needs. 6 & 12 volt. Factory rebuilt, as HONDA 305 Scrambler. Excel- 5-5/5 F&ANDOR NEAR. May 16. Deluxe MORRIS Auto Parts low as $9.70 exchange, used lent condition. Must sell. Call ATTENDRE PUSSYCATS. Need furnished efficiency apartment. $4.97. Guaranteed factory r e - 655-2524. two attractive young ladies, 21 Garbage disposal, carpeted. 3-5/5 or over, with week-endwander- built voltage regulators $2.76 HONDA 50, 1964. Engine just $120. Phone 489-5922. 3-5/9 exchange; shock absorbers, overhauled. $135.355-9208 eve- lust, Interested in working for TWO GIRLS for summer term. IV4-544I each $2.99. ABC AUTO PARTS, the summer months, all ex- Luxury apartment near cam- nings. 3-5/5 penses paid PLUS salary. Neat pus. 337-0820. 3-5/9 814 E . K a l a m a z o o - Just west of P e n n s y l v a n i a 613 E. South Street. Phone IV5- 1921. C NORTON 1966 Scrambler, 750cc. appearance absolutely essen- TWO - BEDROOM, furnished Best offer. Extras. After 6:30 tial. Vivacious personality nec- M O N D A Y TO S A T U R D A Y 8 - 5 : 3 0 MASON BODY SHOP. 812 East apartment, $125 a month. Sum- W p.m. 353-7688. 3-5/5 essary. Here's a chance to spend mer. Girls or couple. 337-2345. Kalamazoo Street - Since 1940. every week-end at Michigan's 3 5 9 Complete auto painting and HONDA 1964. Excellent con- ~ / jP^f^iSipK finest resort. For futher details collision service. American and dltion. $235. Call for Bouf,332- and personal interview, call CAMPUS NEAR. 227 Bogue. Im- iN'llivl a • foreign c a r s . IV 5-0256. C 2501. 3-5/5 Jviibb June «cuvyfcir. v u .ni. - mediate occupancy, Large two- MEL'S AUTO SERVICE: LARGE HONDA SPORT 65, 1966, red, 5 p.m. Monday thru Friday at bedroom apartment. Carpeted, • a n i D H o g s B g drapes, parking. Unfurnished T i n n n BBBBa or small, we do them all. 1108 great condition. $275. Call 353- 487-5027. E. Grand River. 332-3255. C 2154. 3-5/5 6-5/12 $150 or furnished $170 and up. ACROSS 1. Apartment 29. Slender tinial S H A 1 • E. J 0 a S ¡ 8 E Lk D B Q Q Phdne 489-5922. 3-5/9 5. Cooking (0 ('.orninoli necessity to both sexes' M Am u M TU B q b q LYON'S AVENUE unfurnished, R 1 SE• E • B Ü Q NORTHWIND FARMS APT. 8. Vegetable 33. Protection clean, carpeted. Newly decor- 11 Opulent 36. ('.iri s name s W _Ä]G E a R She Got Her Man ated. Utilities paid. $110 and LUXURY APARTMENTS DESIGNED FOR deposit required. 482-0430. 12 Craggy lull 37. Gums 13. Ouster" 38. Rook 1 T H R E. N Ol V •BB E 0 A N R i A ADULT FAMILY LIVING 3-5/9 14. Arab, com 42. Cheese dish SUS 135 KEDZIE DRIVE. East Lan- mander 45. Tended a > P A R T E N D BBB slng. Furnished apartments for 15. Kar shell g a rden On A Yamaha! two students. Summer lease on- 17. Conclusion 46. Hasten 19. Beret 47. Bullfight- DOWN 7. Symmetry ly. $150 per month. IV 7-3216. 1 Independent 8. Recommend Call evenings until 9 p.m., 882- 20. Retainer er.s cry 21. Jackets or 48. Minced 2. Delineate 9. New born 2316. 10-5/18 oath 3. Sour lamb caps FEATURING HASLETr APARTMENTS - one 24. Beams 49. Obsolete 4 Economy 10. Generation (and she only rented it for an hour.) COMBINATION RURAL — URBAN GENERAL ELECTRIC 28. Chin, dy- 50. Pitch 5. Whatnot 16. Buddhist girl needed, summer. Excellent 6. Sailor pillar A T M CS"SPHERE APPLIANCES location. 351-9506, Cathy. nastv 51. Cautious 18. Born 5-5/11 22 Heb. letter It 1 13 23. Drip: Scot. 24 Turmeric Find fun on a spring day Burcham Woods 14 i 15 16 25 Copy 26. Calculated Eydeal Villa 27 Phantom with a Yamaha. You can rent II 19 31. Yellow EAST LANSING MANAGEMENT COMPANY INTRODUCES TO THE • Our pools are now being bugle one by the hour or by the day. G R E A T E R L A N S I N G A R E A , T H E L A T E S T C O N C E P T IN L U X U R Y A P A R T - M E N T S . N O R T H W I N D E X E C U T I V E HOUSE W I L L O F F E R T H E O P P O R - readied for Spring. • Sub lease and short term leases are now available m W- 14 ZS I t 17 m. ze 11 13 32. Nut 34. ••• de France 35. Wooden T U N I T Y F O R 200 L A N S I N G F A M I L I E S T O E N J O Y " E X E C U T I V E L E V E L " for Spring & Summer. shoe 2» 30 31 31 L I V I N G A T A M O D E R A T E C O S T . IN T H E E N S U I N G M O N T H S , AS T H I S • For 1, 2, 3, 4 students or 39. Roman P R O J E C T PROGRESSES, EAST LANSING M A N A G E M E N T W I L L P U B L I - single working people. 33 3 * 35 3h garment Bowker & Moiles Cycle Shop C I Z E P E R T I N E N T DE T A I L S S U P P O R T ING OUR C L A I M T H A T N O R T H W I N D W I L L P R O V I D E L A N S I N G W I T H GRACIOUS AND L E I S U R E L Y L I V I N G . W A T C H FOR THESE D E T A I L S , AND R E M E M B E R , • Rentals East start at $125. Lansing Management Co. m 41 43 3T I 38 1 45 39 40 4t 40. Shake- spearean king 41. Vortex 42. Gr. R 43. Afflict 2 1 5 2 W. Grand River 4fc 47 Phone " N D R T H W I N D I S R I S I N G " Rental 745 Burcham, Apt. 2 44. Labor Or- ganisation: 2 8 4 3 EAST GRAND R I V E R . E A S T LAN S IN G SO Okerr.os Ph. 332-6977 351-7880 T W O B L O C K S E A S T O F H, i • A D O R N R D . $120 - $330 351-7880 4« abbr. Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, May 5, 1967 | | Apartments For Rent SUMMER: BEAUTIFUL River- For Rent bedroom, furnished apartments. 351-4168. 2 - 5 / 5 For Rent For Rent SUMMER ONLY: one and two- GIRL TO SHARE two-girl apart- WOMEN-SUMMER housing with LOOKING FOR the perfect gift? ment next year. 353-1166. meals and sunken garden' for 3-5/5 sunbathing. $210. 627-6653. For Sale Gerbils - soft, loving, clean pets. $7.50 apiece. Call 351- Red troop build-up 5-5/11 7767. 3-5/9» near DMZ debated slde East apartment, 1-4, cheap. MAN NEEDED, room and board, MARIGOLD APARTMENTS, 911 Call Mike, 355-9423 or 355- quiet, near campus. Parking. Marigold Avenue. Four one- LOVELY FURNISHED single SIAMESE KITTENS, beautiiul 9455. 5 - 5 / 8 332-5555. 3-5/5 bedroom furnished apartments across from campus. Avail- purebreds. Ten weeks old. $8.00 THREE NEEDED for luxury available for summer term. able immediately. 351-5696. OR 7-1212. 3-5/8 ONE-four people to sublet Has- apartment summer term. $50. June 15 to September 15. Phone 3-5/9 lett apartment summer. Good Call 351-7763. IV 9-9651. 10-5/8 " '" " —Smrnàmmmàmm- HORSE BOARDED on very good WASHINGTON LP — A strange has focused fresh attention on one April 20 that he was concerned 3-5/5 pasture. Five minutes from and shadowy battle has been of the most dangerous situations about the situation along the de- Rays. 351-7668. 5-5/5 ONE OR two girls, sublease sum- w For Sale campus. ED 2-2737, evenings. fought this week between faceless in Vietnam without determining militarized zone. Graduate and Married Students HASLETT APARTMENT, four- mer term. Evergreen Arms, OLDIE RECORDS: free lists, 2 - 5 / 5 military men and faceless diplo- exactly how dangerous it is. The State Department's warn- man, summer sublease. Good $62.50 per month. Also two girls BAY COLONY catalogue 50