Tuition hike of $87 conditionally office a d m i n i s t r a t i o n , and c h a i r m a n of the nine public Big T e n schools (Northwestern Family Income Tuition proposed i n c r e a s e d by l o w e r - i n c o m e students of while U n i v e r s i t y of Michigan and W«. :<-: By B E V E R L E Y T W I T C H E L L c o m m i t t e e , said. i s private). Under $5,000 Free lower ability. At the s a m e t i m e , h i g h e r - State U n i v e r s i t y students pay only 22.4 State News E x e c u t i v e R e p o r t e r " W e r e it not f o r the threatened f i - T h e c o m m i t t e e a l s o felt that r e l a t i n g >5,001-10,000 $324 income students of higher ability might per cent and 25.4 p e r cent, r e s p e c t i v e l y . A tuition hike of $81 a y e a r p e r s t u - nancial c r i s i s , we could s e e absolutely no tuition to f a m i l y income would be u n - 10,001-15,000 354 choose to attend other s t a t e schools with While it i s t r u e that the U n i v e r s i t y of dent h a s been proposed if MSU's state justification for any i n c r e a s e in tuition d e s i r a b l e and possibly d i s a s t r o u s . If only 15,001-20,000 870 lower tuition. Michigan h a s high cost p r o g r a m s not appropriation is limited to the $42.9 c h a r g e s a t Michigan State U n i v e r s i t y , " one u n i v e r s i t y in Michigan, with its s e v e r a l Over 20,000 1,020 T h e c o m m i t t e e was a l s o concerned found at MSU, such a s medicine, law and million that Governor Romney h a s r e c - the c o m m i t t e e said in its r e p o r t . s t a t e - s u p p o r t e d schools, adopted such a T h e committee explained that many of about the d i f f e r e n c e in the p e r c e n t a g e dentistry, which would account f o r the ommended. T h e c o m m i t t e e considered but r u l e d policy, enrollment e f f e c t s might g r e a t l y the above-average students f r o m l o w e r - contribution a student m a k e s to the cost cost difference, the committee said the T h e proposal was p r e s e n t e d to the out p r o p o s a l s to c h a r g e tuition on the r e d u c e total revenue f r o m tuition. income families a r e subsidized by the of his education. MSU students now pay percentage d i f f e r e n c e should not have board of t r u s t e e s T h u r s d a y by an ad hoc b a s i s of c l a s s standing, r e s i d e n c e , o r T h e p r o p o s e d s c a l e f o r basing tuition on Michigan Higher Education A s s i s t a n c e tuition c h a r g e s that a r e 34.8 p e r cent grown in the l a s t six y e a r s , a s it h a s . c o m m i t t e e on tuition policy. T h e r e c - family I n c o m e . family income was a s follows: Authority, so that enrollment might be of t h e i r p e r capita educational c o s t s , ( p l e a s e t u r n to the back p a g e ) ommendation is for a flat hike f o r all Higher f e e s f o r graduate students was students, with no differentiation on r e s i - opposed to avoid limiting o r reducing the dence or c l a s s standing. proportion of graduate students through T h e t r u s t e e s will take no action on the differential t u i t i o n c h a r g e s . T h e c o m - proposal until the state l e g i s l a t u r e a c t s mittee d i s c u s s e d the value of g r a d u a t e a s s i s t a n t s and the p o s s i b l e l o s s o f revenue on R o m n e y ' s budget r e c o m m e n d a t i o n s . If h i s recommendation is approved, MSU will be $3 to $3.5 million short of what if their s a l a r i e s had to be i n c r e a s e d in proportion to the i n c r e a s e in t h e i r tuition, Friday MICHIGAN i s needed f o r o p e r a t i o n s next y e a r . T h i s since e n r o l l m e n t might be expected to drop includes payment f o r heating, lighting also. and cleaning newly-completed buildings STATE T h e c o m m i t t e e felt that o u t - o f - s t a t e and paying s a l a r i e s f o r staff m e m b e r s students should not be asked to pay m o r e who have a l r e a d y been hired. tuition than the p e r - c a p i t a instructional T h e only p o s s i b l e s o u r c e of t h i s money is i n c r e a s e d t u i t i o n c h a r g e s , Milton B. and l i b r a r y c o s t s of the U n i v e r s i t y . MSU's tuition f o r both r e s i d e n t s and non- UNIVERSITY Dickerson, p r o f e s s o r of business law and r e s i d e n t s i s now the t h i r d highest of the May 19, 1967 O V o l . 59 N u m b e r 182 « East Lansing, Michigan 10c BILL T O H O U S E State Senate approves new tax reform package T h u r s d a y morning Senate l e a d e r s said t h e r e would not be sufficient D e m o c r a t i c By M I K E B R O G A N a vote on the tax package, the key i s s u e votes to p a s s the bill. State News S t a f f W r i t e r of the 1967 l e g i s l a t u r e , might be delayed The amendment p r o p o s a l , brought up until F r i d a y b e c a u s e of strong feelings by Sen. Robert Vander Laan, R - G r a n d T h e Michigan Senate T h u r s d a y p a s s e d in the Senate f o r and against a p r o p o s e d Rapids, was defeated. a tax r e f o r m package Including a two constitutional amendment to limit to f i v e p e r cent any tax imposed by the s t a t e . Sixteen Republicans and six D e m o c r a t s and one-half p e r cent p e r s o n a l income voted for the tax package. Twelve Demo- tax and a five and one-half p e r cent c o r p o r a t e income tax. T h e tax package now goes to the House Sen. C h a r l e s Youngblood, D - D e t r o l t , said p r i o r to p a s s a g e of the bill that if c r a t s and four Republicans voted against it. Besides the c o r p o r a t e and p e r s o n a l in- The lineup the amendment p r o p o s a l was adopted c o m e tax the package includes: for consideration. A United Arab R e p u b l i c ( U A R ) c o l u m n o f t a n k s h a l t s f o r r e f u e l i n g i n S i n a i on i t s w a y to t a k e up p o s i - * A doubling of the intangibles tax; tions along the frontier with Israel. UPI Telephoto * A 20 p e r cent r e b a t e with a ' 2 6 5 limit f o r r e n t e r s ; * A $15 p e r p e r s o n credit on s a l e s tax; Hannah says hell approve * A $600 deduction f o r each dependent in a family; Egypt readies troops, war material * A 50 p e r cent credit for ; xes paid to c i t i e s with income t a x e s . » us. if a AW S hours proposal for fall p e r s o n paid $40 in city Inco .e .ax, ne could deduct $20 f r o m the i l g u t e owed the state. in response to claimed Israeli threat By L A U R E L P R A T T asked the board to leave the final d e - A resolution to put a graduated income c r e a s i n g d a n g e r s to i t s southern b o r d e r A s the c r i s i s deepened, there w e r e t h e s e cision on t h e p r o p o s a l t o h l m , s i n c e " i t e m s tax r e f e r e n d u m on a s t a t e - w i d e ballot was BEIRUT, Lebanon iJP1 — Enlistment o f - facing Sinai. developments: State News S t a f f W r i t e r of this kind (such a s discipline and hours) a l s o adopted by the Senate. The 1963 f i c e s opened throughout Egypt T h u r s d a y At the United Nations in New York L'.N. S e c r e t a r y - G e n e r a l U T h a n t was r e - P r e s i d e n t John A.Hannah said T h u r s d a y a r e traditionally left to the faculty and s t a t e constitution p r e s e n t l y f o r b i d s a g r a d - and P r e s i d e n t Gamal Abdel N a s s e r ' s diplomats worked intensely to keep a ported to have a g r e e d to an Egyptian d e - that he will approve the AWS h o u r s p r o - administration." uated Income tax. t r o o p s and a r m o r s w a r m e d Into the Sinai seeming war of n e r v e s f r o m exploding mand for withdrawal " a s soon as p o s s i b l e " posal a s soon a s he knows how much it D e s e r t in challenge to a claimed I s r a e l i When he will approve the p r o p o s a l is The Senate p a s s e d the tax package, a into a m i l i t a r y collision between I s r a e l of the 3,400-man U.N. E m e r g e n c y F o r c e will c o s t to implement the p l a n . With his t h r e a t against S y r i a . uncertain b e c a u s e of c o s t f i g u r e s a r e 60-page bill including 51 a m e n d m e n t s , and its Arab e n e m i e s . f r o m Egyptian soil. Some diplomats b e - approval it will go into effect fall t e r m . not yet a v a i l a b l e . I s r a e l in turn took steps to m e e t i n - lieved the working of the demand, which within two and one-half hours a f t e r r e - He said that in d i s c u s s i o n s with the Vice P r e s i d e n t f o r Student A f f a i r s John convening at 2 p . m . set no deadline, left room for m a n e u v e r - board of t r u s t e e s Thursday morning he A. F u z a k , who Is working with other ing. a d m i n i s t r a t o r s on figuring c o s t s , is In Rep. C h a r l e s Z o l l a r , R-Benton Harbor, In London, B r i t i s h Foreign S e c r e t a r y Iowa City this week for Big Ten m e e t i n g s . T h e decision of the t r u s t e e s , Hannah s a i d , was based on the understanding that objected to the s a l e s tax exemption. " T h e exemption will not help the little House committee approves George Brown said that Egypt's r e q u e s t f o r withdrawal of the U.N, f o r c e m a d e a m o c k e r y of the peace-keeping work of guy who won't have to pay any state 'U' may need he will a p p r o v e the p r o p o s a l a s it now stands once he gets cost f i g u r e s , and income t a x , " he said. " T h e lower income groups who need r e f o r m s a r e not getting bill to draft 19-year-olds first the United Nations. In Cairo, a spokesman for the A r a b So- that the c o s t will be added to d o r m f e e s . it." c i a l i s t p a r t y said 500,000 volunteers a r e The p r o p o s a l ' s cost has been e s t i m a t e d Negro survey at $60,000 to h i r e watchmen in the h a l l s . Under the new policy: Z o l l a r t e r m e d the tax package "Just another I n c r e a s e in t a x a t i o n " r a t h e r than WASHINGTON <.f — T h e House A r m e d S e r v i c e s C o m m i t t e e T h u r s d a y completed field of d e f e r m e n t s and make a r e c o m m e n - dation of the s t a t u s of graduate students. T h e bill, approved in c o m m i t t e e by a expected to enlist when university e x a m s a r e over next week. A state of e m e r g e n - cy was d e c l a r e d in hospitals, with d o c t o r s — S o p h o m o r e , Junior and s e n i o r women a fiscal reform measure. action on a d r a f t bill aimed at inducting and n u r s e s on round-the-clock s h i f t s . 35-1 vote, would make minor changes in for federal aid and those 21 o r o l d e r will have no Uni- v e r s i t y closing h o u r s . —Signout will be optional except f o r Sen. Robert Huber, R - B i r m i n g h a m , said the p r o p e r t y tax exemption c l a u s e " i s 1 9 - y e a r - o l d s f i r s t and headed it for House p a s s a g e next week. T h e bill, which extends the d r a f t f o r four the law. One change would r e s t o r e the World War In T e l Aviv, an I s r a e l i source c l a i m e d that Egypt h a s moved a "huge f o r c e " into the Sinai Peninsula. He said I s r a e l m e a n i n g l e s s to b u s i n e s s , " b e c a u s e it is I policy of inducting conscientious o b j e c - overnight a b s e n c e s and when leaving the m o r e y e a r s , would r e q u i r e continued d e - was in a l m o s t hourly contact with the By S T E V E G A T E S too low. It would not give big business t o r s f i r s t and letting them make t h e i r fight G r e a t e r Lansing a r e a . f e r m e n t of college u n d e r g r a d u a t e s . In " g r e a t p o w e r s " over the situation. T h e State News S t a f f W r i t e r any significant p r o p e r t y exemptions, he addition, the c o m m i t t e e r e c o m m e n d e d that to avoid combat o r m i l i t a r y s e r v i c e a f t e r - —Each coed may choose t h r e e weekend s o u r c e said E g y p t ' s demand for withdrawal said. g r a d u a t e student d e f e r m e n t s also be con- ward. ( F r i d a y o r Saturday) nights a t e r m a s of the U.N. f o r c e , c r e a t e d a f t e r the Suez MSU has a l m o s t no way of knowing " T h i s is tyranny m o r e than fiscal tinued for the p r e s e n t . T h e House bill e r e c t s some roadblocks how many N e g r o e s a r e enrolled on c a m - 2 a . m . permission nights. conflict in 1956, should be r e f e r r e d to the —University closing h o u r s will be m i d - r e f o r m , " Huber s a i d . " T h i s is a n t i - T h e bill would establish a national to d r a f t s y s t e m r e f o r m s proposed by pus, but may soon ask students to v o l - U.N. G e n e r a l A s s e m b l y . night Sunday through Thursday and 1 a . m . b u s l n e s s . It could clobber i n d u s t r y . " advisory board that would study the e n t i r e P r e s i d e n t Johnson. u n t e e r that information. In D a m a s c u s , Syrian Foreign M i n i s t e r According to a r e p o r t given by Gordon Friday and S a t u r d a y . Ibrahim Makhos, a f t e r C a i r o talks with A. S a b i n e , vice p r e s i d e n t f o r s p e c i a l —Only f r e s h m a n coeds will be r e q u i r e d Egyptian l e a d e r s , said Egypt and Syria p r o j e c t s , at the MSU Board of T r u s t e e s to have p a r e n t a l p e r m i s s i o n c a r d s on file have been turned into an a r s e n a l . I f l s r a e l meeting T h u r s d a y , the U n i v e r s i t y " d o e s authorizing overnight a b s e n c e s . attacks, he said, "we shall turn A r a b land not have any r e c o r d that identifies any — G u e s t s of women with s e l e c t i v e h o u r s into a g r a v e y a r d of I s r a e l i s , " student by r a c e o r r e l i g i o n . " will not be r e q u i r e d to r e t u r n within However, new federal r e q u e s t s that University closing h o u r s o r with t h e i r hostesses. ( p l e a s e t u r n to the b a c k page) Activities planned IN SOME COURSSS for entertainment of visiting parents Pass-fail favored Hosting an expected 20,000 p a r e n t s llllltllllllllllllllllMMIIMHIIUiHM this weekend, MSU will reflect its m u l t i - By A N D R E W M O L L I S O N v e r s i t y d i v e r s i t y with activities ranging T h i s s e r i e s of d a l l y a r t i - f r o m the 45th annual Water Carnival to State N e w s E x e c u t i v e R e p o r t e r c l e s a i m e d at I m p r o v i n g M S U exhibits in a r t , music, outdoor living i s d i r e c t e d t o w a r d s those who and a s t r o n o m y . E a r l y this t e r m , one c a l l e r told m e , ASMSU h a s extended MSU hospitality would r a t h e r t h i n k t h a n be all 261 students in the v e t e r i n a r y m e d i c i n e by p r o c l a i m i n g p a r e n t s ' weekend " G e n t l e p r e a c h e d to. Your response p r o g r a m were asked, "Which grading s y s - P a r e n t a l Weekend" and asking the " s t u - tem do you feel is best for a p r o f e s s i o n a l w i l l d e t e r m i ne t h e length of the dents of MSU to g r e e t the older g e n e r a - veterinary c r i t i c i s m ? " series. tion - whose burdens a r e heavy - with T h e 225 r e s p o n s e s were analyzed by gentleness and l o v e . " Scott Seely f o r T h e Dedicated to P r e s i d e n t John A. Han- MSU Veterinarian. student opinion, I '11 tell you, not how many nah in his 25th y e a r of MSU s e r v i c e , The results: said what, but what they said. the Water Carnival, entitled " A B C D a r i a n 66 p e r cent f a v o r - Senior: " T h e way c l a s s e s a r e set up Building Blocks of Knowledge" will kick ed p a s s - f a l l . now, the p r e s e n t grading system is b e s t . off the weekend at 8 F r i d a y night on the 19 p e r cent f a v o r - But if the e m p h a s i s was on synthesizing Red Cedar R i v e r . ed l e t t e r g r a d e s . information and e x p e r i e n c e , r a t h e r than on While the MSU Jazz Band e n t e r t a i n s , 15 p e r cent f a v o r - m e m o r i z i n g and doing busy work, then a floats f r o m r e s i d e n c e halls, f r a t e r n i t i e s p a s s - f a i l o r a p a s s - f a i l - h o n o r s grading ed p e r c e n t a g e g r a d e s . and s o r o r i t i e s , and co-ops will each s y s t e m would be b e t t e r . " A similar analysis u s e one l e t t e r of the alphabet o r one Grad student in counseling and guidance: number to depict life at MSU. of the r e s p o n s e s I got to two days of " T o d a y two d i f f e r e n t students could take questions about grading s y s t e m s would r e - Also on the carnival agenda, Blue Key, the s a m e e x a m , get the same r a w s c o r e veal an even higher percentage f a v o r i n g the p a s s - f a i l s y s t e m , with s o m e r e s e r - and get two d i f f e r e n t g r a d e s f r o m two d i f - f e r e n t i n s t r u c t o r s . T h e problem i s not in Kind of a drag junior and s e n i o r honorary, and Excalibur, honoring 13 Junior men, will tap new m e m - vations. F r e e d o m o f c h o i c e in f a s h i o n m a y put m e n in m i n i s k i r t s , a c c o r d i n g to E l i z a b e t h H a w e s , N e w Y o r k d e - bers. the grading s y s t e m , but in the u s e m a d e of But since I ' m looking for ideas r a t h e r s i g n e r who c r e a t e d t h e s e k i l t e n s e m b l e s f o r the boys and pants s u i t s f o r the g i r l s . U P I Telephoto ( p l e a s e t u r n to the back page) than f o r a statistically valid sampling of ¿ase t u r n to t h e b a c k p a g e ) Kyle C. Kerbawy Eric Pianin, managing editor STATI N I W S editor-in-chief J a m e s 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. Papclak, a s s t . ad manager Friday Morning, May 19, 1967 EDITORIALS The Kennedy Round: HMO RCSrOMT a significant step After m o r e than four y e a r s cluded in the agreement Ams of trying, the Kennedy Round which would help u n d e r - of international t r a d e nego- developed n a t i o n s , but many » L " tiations ended Monday in a of these were defeated. MSU ombudsman: significant a g r e e m e n t . Some, h o w e v e r , did s u c c e e d , among them the i n t e r n a t i o n a l The o r i g i n a l o b j e c t i v e s of food-aid plan of 4.5 million nipping in the bud the negotiations were out- lined by P r e s i d e n t Kennedy tons p e r y e a r . T h e r e a r e a l - so e f f o r t s now being made When the Academic F r e e - dents. With t h e s e i n h e r e n t in 1962 when he p e r s u a d e d a to extend the tariff r e d u c - dom Report goes into e f f e c t functions of the o f f i c e , it r e l u c t a n t C o n g r e s s to p a r t i - tions to p o o r e r nations e a r - July 15, MSU will have an s e e m s only logical that s t u - cipate in the t a l k s . It was l i e r than to the m o r e i n d u s - ombudsman to r e c e i v e s t u - dents be allowed s o m e voice hoped that t h e r e could be a trialized. dent complaints and f a c i l i - in his s e l e c t i o n . 50 per cent a c r o s s - t h e - The Kennedy Round is a tate communication between The f r e e d o m r e p o r t p r o - b o a r d tariff cut. When the vivid d e m o n s t r a t i o n of the students and the University. vides that the p r e s i d e n t shall final decision was in, the cuts potential of i n t e r n a t i o n a l name the o m b u d s m a n . It ap- amounted to approximately negotiation. Despite many Ok$ The nature of the work r e - p e a r s , however, that P r e s i - 33 to 35 p e r c e n t . Although s e t b a c k s , the end r e s u l t was 7 < M ^ ^ q u i r e s that the ombudsman dent Hannah will choose him this was s h o r t of the goal, a g e n e r a l s u c c e s s . It can now be f a m i l i a r with the U n i v e r - f r o m a list of s e n i o r faculty it was f a r m o r e than had stand as an e x a m p l e for f u r - sity in o r d e r to give the s t u - m e m b e r s submitted by the e v e r b e f o r e been a c c o m - ther talks in the v a r i o u s dents the best advice in d e a l - Provost's office. plished in such t a l k s . It can fields of i n t e r n a t i o n a l e n - Harvey, It's about your parents. ing with the a d m i n i s t r a t i o n C u r r e n t l y ASMSU is n e - truly be h e r a l d e d as a s t e p deavor. They're making out in the lounge! and faculty. gotiating to have students on forward in international --The Editors the c o m m i t t e e which s e l e c t s trade. T h e r e f o r e the f r e e d o m r e - the list finally submitted to WERNER The a g r e e m e n t will a f f e c t port justly r e q u i r e s that the ombudsman be a " s e n i o r the p r e s i d e n t . m o r e than 80 nations, with MOLLISON T h e r e a r e other m e a n s of tariff r e d u c t i o n s on about faculty m e m b e r . " student participation in the 6,300 i n d u s t r i a l and f a r m The ombudsman should a l - so be a man who is sensitive to student p r o b l e m s and able c h o i c e , but the p r i n c i p l e i s the s a m e - - the students should have a voice in the i t e m s . The r e d u c t i o n s will affect what is now worth $40 A vote for life billion in world t r a d e . to c o m m u n i c a t e with s t u - s e l e c t i o n of an official who is The b e n e f i t s now f o r t h - so i m p o r t a n t to s t u d e n t s and coming, h o w e v e r , had f o r against abortion should be C e r t a i n l y the m o t h e r has Pizza parties who will deal with them so directly. some time seemed impos- s i b l e . F o r s e v e r a l y e a r s , the EDITpR'S N O T E : O n M a y 4, a c o l u m n by K y l e K e r b a w y and eliminated. our sympathy; so does the E d w a r d B r i l l cal ling f o r the c o m - We d i s a g r e e . child. Should the life of an t a l k s had c r e p t along at a , p l e t e l e g a l i z a t i o n of a b o r t i o n a p - or a project? Above all, students should be in a position to block the t o r t o i s e p a c e , and t h e r e was p e a r e d In the State N e w s . L a w - r e n c e W e r n e r and A n d r e w M o l - We d i s a g r e e not b e c a u s e we think t h e y ' r e wrong when unborn child be taken away m e r e l y b e c a u s e the c h i l d ' s growing f e a r of f a i l u r e . At l i s o n , as m e m b e r s of the e d i t o r i a l they say that it is t e r r i b l e p e r s o n a l i t y and contribution With the May 24 financial nomination of any faculty l a s t , under U.S. u r g i n g , the b o a r d , g i v e t h e f o l l o w i n g in r e p l y . to have c h i l d r e n c o m e u n - to society a r e not yet known? deadline quickly a p p r o a c h - m e m b e r who s e e m s unduly deadline f o r a g r e e m e n t was wanted into this world, or If s o c i e t y , through humane ing, the s u m m e r hopes of distant and u n r e s p o n s i v e to B e c a u s e anti-abortion s e t f o r midnight Sunday. Sud- that many illegal a b o r t i o n s anti-abortion laws, doesn't STEP w e r e especially students. laws a r e ignored in s o m e denly t h e r e was a f l u r r y of e n d a n g e r the l i v e s of the p r o t e c t the life of this child, h e a r t e n e d l a s t week with The f i r s t o m b u d s m a n will activity, c o m p r o m i s e s were c a s e s , many people have women involved, or that r a p e who will? West McDonel's decision to s e t many p r e c e d e n t s of i m - found (U.S. c o n c e s s i o n s in- urged that they be l i b e r a l - victims face t o r t u o u s A m o t h e r with e m o t i o n a l contribute $300 to MSU's p o r t a n c e to the school and the cluded), and by Sunday night ized. By extending to t h e i r emotional and s o c i a l s i t u a - p r o b l e m s or a b o a r d of d o c - civil r i g h t s p r o g r a m . student body. What b e t t e r the a g r e e m e n t was finalized logical e x t r e m e V i r g u m e n t s tions; we d i s a g r e e b e c a u s e t o r s , as u n s u r e s c i e n t i f i c a l - p r e c e d e n t could t h e r e be than in m o s t a r e a s . used by these people, two ly and n o m o r e qualified It was by f a r the l a r g e s t we have a r e s p e c t and a to have student involvement During the negotiations, of our c o l l e a g u e s on the m o r a l l y , should not have to contribution made by a d o r - sympathy and a love f o r in his s e l e c t i o n ? the United States had t r i e d State News c a m e to the c o n - make s o c i e t y ' s d e c i s i o n . m i t o r y to the t h r e e - y e a r - human life and f o r human --The Editors to get s o m e p r o v i s i o n s in- clusion that virtually all laws old p r o j e c t , which aids i n - beings. And if the s c i e n t i f i c c o m - coming f r e s h m e n at Rust We s u s p e c t - - we do not munity reaches a consensus, College in Holly Springs, Miss. S T E P still finds itself OUR RiADSRS* MINDS know, mind you, since t h e r e and it i s that the fetus is alive, then the i s s u e s e e m s is at this t i m e no s c i e n t i f i c about $6,000 s h o r t , however, c o n s e n s u s — t h a t the f e t u s is to us to be c l e a r : which and u n l e s s the money is should p r e d o m i n a t e , the somehow obtained cutbacks will be n e c e s s a r y . Chase wasn't off base' a human being. Many g e n e t i c i s t s and e m - b r y o l o g i s t s hold that life b e - e m o t i o n a l needs of t h e m o t h e r or the c h i l d ' s right to life? We'd c a s t a vote gins when the m a l e and f e - T h e r e is still time for in- To the Editor: stood that one's values a r e revealed in all a person's conscious grasp of an i n t e r - f or life. Howard Kohn, U-M sports writer, In his of life, he would realize that Dennis nally consistent philosophy; I do not c a r e male g a m e t e s unite to f o r m dividuals and groups to con- whether or not Mr. Kohn sticks to sports. attack on Dennis Chase's column, " T h e Chase's sports columns also express his the zygote. O t h e r s s u g g e s t , And we'd u r g e that society t r i b u t e to one of MSU's 'liberal' double-standard," made no a t - value system clearly. Such coherence in a Pat Pafford tempt to refute Mr. Chase's central wide range of applications is dependent on Omaha, Neb. senior conveniently enough, that hu- then use its r e s o u r c e s to aid worthiest student u n d e r t a k - points: (1) Communism and fascism man life begins just at the both the m o t h e r and the child ings. As d o r m s a c r o s s c a m - should be opposed as two forms o f c o l l e c - tivist tyranny which are, both in principle point at which an abortion meet the emotional a n d pus face the annual a l l o c a - s o c i a l p r o b l e m s that each Respect for the next guy' and in practice, equally abhorrent. (2) is m e d i c a l l y unwise. Still tion of a y e a r - e n d s u r p l u s , Political " l i b e r a l s " apparently disagree with that statement, as illustrated by the o t h e r s maintain that up to will, like all mankind, be it might be wise to think twice contrasting receptions given Apthekerand the moment of b i r t h the un- h e i r to. about the lingering value of a Rockwell on this campus. My final complaint concerns the policy To the Editor: with respect to the faculty. What gives born child i s not r e a l l y a That, to u s , s e e m s m o r e weekend pizza p a r t y , as Mr. Kohn lists nine "double standards" in American political attitudes, some of As an undergraduate, I am impressed faculty members the right to indefinite child at all. m o r a l and humane than s h o p - c o m p a r e d to that of a f i v e - which a r e valid descriptions of common use of books? How could anyone use a and discouraged by numerous aspects of The fact of the m a t t e r i s , ping a r o u n d among con- week h u m a n i t a r i a n p r o g r a m irrationalities in politically ' conserva- MSU. One of these aspects is the library. book for six months, or even longer? tive" thinking. However, they a r e not r e l e - While I am impressed by the quality, T h e r e is no reason for depriving students no one r e a l l y knows the m o s t flicting s c i e n t i f i c opinions in Holly Springs, M i s s . vant to the column supposedly under d i s - of library services which our fines and quantity and organization of materials tuitions help pay f o r . i m p o r t a n t f a c t of this m a t - in a s e a r c h for one which cussion, although they a r e sprinkled with found in the library, I am discouraged by --The Editors distorted paraphrasing from it. The tenth the attitudes of the library u s e r s . I can only urge members of the faculty t e r : When does life begin? will allow society to cop item states: " A m e r i c a ' s value systems Firstly, why did someone rip out page and student body to have a little respect Until we know, we'd r a t h e r out on its r e s p o n s i b i l i t i e s can differentiate (sic) between the 'normal' 720 of the National Review? 1 thought that and sympathy for the next guy. and the abnormal, between 'evil'and good. that went out with junior high school. not take the chance that we' r e ' to the mother and to the Tom Magill Letter policy Witness Dennis C h a s e . " Imagine the pain- staking analysis of a man's values that T h e r e a r e copying machines located throughout the library, and at a very low Grosse Pointe freshman killing a human being. child. should support such a sweeping indict- price. The State News welcomes all l e t t e r s . Please be brief and type all letters ment, and then compare Mr. Kohn's letter to that standard. I can not judge such an Secondly, why do students refuse to r e - Okemos & Haslett Rd. 6 M i l e s E a s t of Lansing GRANDMAS triple spaced, If possible. P l e a s e , also. injustice to be mere irresponsibility. turn materials to the proper place? I can Include name, address and university think of nothing more discouraging than Finally, Kohn directs Chase to "stick looking for a book not in the shelves, and standing. No unsigned letters will be printed. to s p o r t s . " If Howard Kohn, a sports writer, respected his own field and under- at the same time not checked out. 1 -iföioes IM 6ÖIN6 TO DEFV 3AD LUCK ! I'M 60W6 TO RlP THIS LETT« TO nsing .. / Frfiso SHREPS, AND NEVER ANSWER IT! o \ Amusement Park Pool your moneyl Bucket O' Chicken A D C K I P r i . & Sat. 7 ' t i l closing 15 pieces of Chicken, gravy À W NOTEs i C I N Organizations may make Sun. 1 p.m. 'til closing reservations f o r p i c n i c s , at r e d u c e d r a t e s , by c a l t - and biscuits. Serves 5 to 7 OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK I /R'U-LTJ'T'H» lng FE 9 - 8 2 2 1 . 1900 E. Kalamazoo Phone:484-44TI III Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan NEWS Johnson says Viet summary A capsule s u m m a r y of the d a y ' s e v e n t s f r o m t h e policy unchanged Associated Press. National News Tiny! Mini! Itty-bitty! Brief! All the 0 A draft bill to induct 19-year-old men f i r s t w a s completed clothes to be seen in have been pared T h u r s d a y In the House A r m e d S e r v i c e s Committee and Is headed down. Makes sense then for the " u n s e e n s " f o r House action next week. See page 1 to also get the minimizing t r e a t m e n t . And ^ P r e s i d e n t Johnson told a h u r r i e d l y called news c o n f e r e n c e they do! They do! Just look at this bevy of Thursday, he saw no change in U.S. objectives in Vietnam. T h e P r e s i d e n t said, " O u r determination is as strong a s it has ^V. marvy bikinis. ever been." See page 3 A Robert S. M c N a m a r a T h u r s d a y told a Pentagon news con- f e r e n c e the United States has m a d e little p r o g r e s s in e f f o r t s to gain a nuclear a r m s limitation with the Soviet Union. The S e c r e t a r y of Defense said that weapons talks, p a r t i c u l a r l y involving the deployment o f a n t i m l s s i l e s , hadnot yet taken p l a c e . A Senate l e a d e r s of both p a r t i e s said T h u r s d a y they would oppose Sen. Russell B. L o n g ' s move to delay action on the resolution to c e n s u r e Sen. T h o m a s J . Dodd, D-Conn. See page 12 A The f i r s t r e p o r t e d abortion under C o l o r a d o ' s recently enacted law was p e r f o r m e d recently at the P r e s b y t e r i a n M e d i - cal Center in Denver. T h e operation Involved a m a r r i e d woman In her 30s, the victim of a r a p i s t . See page 11 A The Johnson administration is r e p o r t e d considering a new appeal to the United Nations to help end the w a r in Vietnam. Senate c r i t i c s of the P r e s i d e n t ' s policy have been advocating the move. A F o r m e r P r e s i d e n t Dwight D. Elsenhower, 76, who has been hospitalized since May 6 for a gastrointestinal c o m - plaint, Is expected to check out of Walter Reed Army Hospital Friday. ^ T h e nation's r a i l r o a d s asked the government T h u r s d a y to approve an e m e r g e n c y i n c r e a s e in freight r a t e s e s t i - mated to total about $300 million a y e a r . us Center A. H i p r i d e r B i - kini, in Hollywood A The biggest block of s h a r e s ever traded on the New York Stock Exchange - a million s h a r e s of Pacific P e t r o l e u m s , Vassarette' s L t d . - c r o s s e d the ticker tape T h u r s d a y at $13.25 a s h a r e , matchmaker co- off 25 cents f r o m Wednesday's c l o s e . Summer violence l o r s and white, International News A newsman said t h e r e had with lace front been r e p e a t e d f o r e c a s t s of v i o - panel. 4 - 7 . $2. platoon of the U.S. 4th Infantry Division called a r t i l - lence and o t h e r u p s e t s , largely l e r y f i r e on its own position in a fight with Communist f o r c e s r a c i a l , In the c i t i e s during the T h u r s d a y . A m e r i c a n o f f i c e r s r e p o r t e d this development in the summer. c e n t r a l highlands of South Vietnam. See page 3 Johnson replied that he had B. D a i n t y Val kept in c l o s e touch with the s i t - lace edged bi- 0 C a i r o demands that the U.N. f o r c e in the Middle East uation through v a r i o u s officials be withdrawn, as tension between A r a b nations and I s r a e l kini brief by Vani- continues to grow. See page 1 ty F a i r . Sheer The 17 nation d i s a r m a m e n t conference r e s u m e d Thursday a f t e r an eight-week r e c e s s . T h e United States and the Soviet Platoon nylon t r i c o t . Pink, ice or white. $2. Union w e r e unable to p r e s e n t a d r a f t of a t r e a t y to halt the s p r e a d of nuclear weapons. colls fire 9 Red China told the British Thursday it would not t o l e r a t e " F a s c i s t s u p p r e s s i o n of Chinese c o m p a t r i o t s in Hong Kong." It accused the B r i t i s h of engaging in an anti-Chinese plot in collusion with the United States. See page 12 on itself SAIGON it) — Cut off in c l o s e - 9 Light winds succeed w h e r e huge waves failed and delay q u a r t e r b a t t l e , a platoon of the thr run for home by B r i t a i n ' s solo yachtsman, Sir F r a n c i s U.S. 4th Infantry Division called Chichester. In a r t i l l e r y f i r e on its own p o s i - tion T h u r s d a y . Whether any of 9 Vladas Karpavlchus, a Lithuanian accused of collaborating the 40 o r so men survived this with Nkzi invaders during World War II, has been sentenced action in the c e n t r a l highlands by the S u p r e m e Court of Soviet Lithuania to be shot f o r w a r was not known a s the p l a t o o n ' s c r i m e s resulting in the deaths of 14 r e s i s t a n c e f i g h t e r s , T a s s , radio was silent. the Soviet news agency, said T h u r s d a y . A m e r i c a n o f f i c e r s said they had no word of the r e s u l t s of the A About 100 students tried twice today to break into the a s s e m - shelling, r e m i n i s c e n t of the a i r bly hall of Barcelona University, Spain's second l a r g e s t , to and a r t i l l e r y s t r i k e s that C a p t . hold a meeting to p r o t e s t U.S. policies in Vietnam, officials William S. C a r p e n t e r called In reported. on his p a r a t r o o p e r company when it was being o v e r r u n by C o m m i - « The five-millionth visitor to Expo '67 in Montreal p a s s e d ough the t u r n s t i l e s unheralded T h u r s d a y . B e f o r e the f a i r ' s c o m p u t e r s caught up with him, the machines had shown that by 10 a . m . 5,000,648 had^gntered the f a i r . nist t r o o p s in the same region last J u n e . Farther n o r t h , U.S. a r m e d f o r c e s blasted at enemy p o s i - tions in and n e a r the d e m i l i - t a r i z e d zone to blunt any d r a - matic show of f o r c e the C o m - E. J a n t e e Pantee A All but one of the 117 t e a c h e r s in the downriver Detroit munists might plan f o r Ho Chi suburb of G i b r a l t a r have struck six schools in what their Mlnh's b i r t h d a y . T h e North V i e t - bikini by J a n t z e n . l e a d e r s call the most effective s t r i k e in the h i s t o r y of n a m e s e p r e s i d e n t t u r n s 77 F r i - Whisper sheer Michigan education. No meetings between the t e a c h e r s and day. the school board have been s e t . See page 4 The n o r t h e r n s e c t o r is c r u c i a l nylon in white and to the ComTiunists, and battles colors. S-M-L. A Voters in the 75th State House District around Mount t h e r e a r e c e r t a i n to push the A m e r i c a n combat deaths In five 1.25 C l e m e n s go to the polls today to select candidates for a vacant house s e a t . The house of r e p r e s e n t a t i v e s i s evenly divided y e a r s of w a r p a s t the 10,000 between 54 Republicans and 54 D e m o c r a t s with two v a c a n c i e s . m a r k b e f o r e the weekend. great mixers stir C o n g r e s s woman Martha W. G r i f f i t h s , D-Mich., will speak on the statutory r i g h t s of women RESTAURANT & new excitment a s p a r t of a symposium on " 2 0 t h Century W o m a n , " at 10:30 a . m . COCKTAIL LOUNGE Saturday in the Con Con Room LINGERIE • of the International C e n t e r . GARDEN LEVEL FEATURING The day-long c o n f e r e n c e will a l s o f e a t u r e four other w e l l - Broiled U.S. Choice Join those with m i n i m a n i a , add EAST LANSING known p a n e l i s t s , Including M r s . DOWNTOWN Steaks this little sun s p a r k to your P a u l e M a r s h a l l , who will speak DINING and a t 2:30 p . m . on " T h e American Greek S p e c i a l t i e s w a r d r o b e . P a r e d down belted A T ITS BEST Black Woman: Fact o r F i c t i o n ? " m i n i - s k i r t with attached and T h e symposium will begin at 9:30 a . m . matched b l o o m e r s . Solids or lively p r i n t s in s i z e s 5 to 13. :GHT C CENTURY ROOMS 7.98 Featuring Appetizer Buffet Nightly Cool and c a r e f r e e tank top of soft cotton knit. Now h e r e in a DINNER TIL >0 t.M GIFTS WITH CLOSED SUNDAYS soft wave of p a s t e l s , a bright THE ADDED I ILL I blaze of hot c o l o r s . S - M - L . TOUCH —UJRI 1 116-118 E. MICHIGAN IN DOWNTOWN LANSING MOM-SAT. mHTJiI J 10-5:30 3 B £ L y n ) 1 BLOCK E OF STATE CAPITOL CAMPUS CENTER SUN., 1 - 5 EAST LANSING FREE EVENING PARKING ADJACENT OR ANY CITY LOT 7678 GRAND RIVER. OKEMOS SPORTS F r i d a y , May 19, 196 Michigan State News, E a s t Lansing, Michigan NATION 'TUNING IN' FIRST SHOW AT 8 TONIGHT Pot legalization Carny' to top weekend S u i t i n g a t the State T h e a t r e trend developing T h e r e a r e plenty of p l a c e s to take your folks t h i s " E v e r - l o v i n ' Gentle P a r e n t s Weekend," In- this weekend Is " D u t c h m a n , " f r o m the award-winning play by L e Rol J o n e s . By E L L E N Z U R K E Y be e a s i e r to change existing laws on the d r u g ' s use than it would cluding Water C a r n i v a l , which s t a r t s at 8 tonight and Saturday Entertainment Today Is the l a s t day to s e e and f e a t u r e s 33 f l o a t s . " T h e Happening" at the M i c h - State News S t a f f W r i t e r be to t e s t m a r i j u a n a ' s legality Tha annual flower and bridal igan in d o u b l e - f e a t u r e with the The a s s i s t a n t attorney general of Michigan said Thursday that under p r e s e n t laws. McNamee r e f e r r e d to p r e s e n t show sponsored by the H o r t i - culture Dept. and F l o r i c u l t u r e This Weekend comedy " D o c t o r , You've Got to Be Kidding," s t a r r i n g Sandra t h e r e Is a very good chance laws which place marijuana in Dee and George Hamilton. that marijuana will be legalized a n a r c o t i c s category and c a l l Forum will s t a r t at 7:30 tonight soon. It a habit-forming drug. in the Alumni Chapel. BlllHlxon, By VALERIE ALBERTS The Campus T h e a t r e Is s h o w - William R . McNamee told the d i r e c t o r of the Hlxon School of i n g the r o m a n t i c comedy " A The c o m m i t t e e challenged this Floral Design in Lakewood.Ohio, Countess f r o m Hong Kong," s t a r - ASMSU fact-finding committee interpretation on the basis that will host the show, which will ring Sophia L o r en and Marlon on marijuana t h a t a national m a n y recognized m e d i c a l a u - " T h e D e t e c t i v e , " will be shown 9 p . m . Saturday in the d i r t a r e n a f e a t u r e a multiple mock wedding Brando. trend toward legalization s e e m s t h o r i t i e s have said that marijuana tonight at 7 in Anthony Audi- of the Men's I.M. and parking with $10,000 worth of f l o w e r s , At the G l a d m e r this weekend to be developing. is not an addictive drug. torium. lot I. an a l l - f l o w e r b r i d a l gown, a the old R o g e r s and H a m m e r s t e i n McNamee said that it would McNamee said, " I t is up to " T h r e e P e n n y - O p e r a " Is being At 1 1 : 3 0 a . m . S a t u r d a y " G a - metallic bridal gown and p a p e r m u s i c a l hit, " O k l a h o m a , " will be the Attorney General's office to presented By t h e Community in i t , " the student-produced t e l e - clothing. shown.' uphold and interpret the law, C i r c l e P l a y e r s at 8:30 tonight vision show on channel 10, will A m i x e r will be held today In Soil judges not to judge whether or not I t ' s right." the Mason-Abbottcourtyardfrom and Saturday in the Barn T h e a t r e located at 4208 Okemos Rd. f e a t u r e v a r i o u s sounds of m u s i c . T h e sixth annual ROTC Field place fourth McNamee was told that D r . J a m e s S. F e u r i g , d i r e c t o r of 3 - 6 p . m . If it r a i n s , the dance will be held In Abbott Hall's The second annual MSU O u t - door Living and N a t u r a l R e - Day p r o g r a m s t a r t s at 1:30 S a t - urday a f t e r n o o n o n D e m o n s t r a - Rabbi-prof T h e MSU soil judging team, Olln Health C e n t e r , said that Seniors of the week lower lounge. Fee H a l l ' s loading dock will s o u r c e s Show will be open f r o m tion Hall F i e l d . coacted by Ivan F. Schneider, associate p r o f e s s o r of soil alcohol is m o r e dangerous than m a r i j u a n a . McNamee said Feurig was " p r o b a b l y r i g h t . " P h y l l i s H e l p e r and Dan Bzovl, who both hold e x e - cutive positions on this y e a r ' s W a t e r C a r n i v a l , have be the site of a m i x e r today f r o m 4 - 6 p . m . , and tonight f r o m 9 to 2 - 9 p . m . Friday and 10 a . m . to A w a t e r show in the M e n ' s I.M. pool will be held f r o m 2:30 to 3:30 Saturday a f t e r n o o n . to discuss science, placed fourth in the midnight, with music by The National Soil Judging contest held recently at Cornell University, The Attorney General's Office does not employ any n a r c o t i c a g e n t s , he s a i d , but there might been named Seniors of the Week. M i s s H e l p e r , U n i v e r s i t y Heights, Ohio j o u r n a l i s m Nickel Bag. " M u s i c on the M a l l " can be T h e Epidemic will provide music at the Brody Street dance sponsored by Emmons Hall S a t - Judaism Ithaca, N.Y. m a j o r , has been executive s e c r e t a r y of W a t e r C a r - heard at Brody tonight at 7:30 Noted theologian Eugene B. be some working under the s t a t e urday night f r o m 8:30 to 12. Ten top t e a m s r e p r e s e n t i n g six police. nival for the past two y e a r s . She has been p r e s i d e n t with m u s i c by the Bud Spangler Borowitz will d i s c u s s the death Bailey Hall Is sponsoring a folk regions of the United States c o m - of h e r s o r o r i t y , Sigma D e l t a Tau, and the publicity Band, and singing by a vocal c o n c e r t on the Brody lawn f r o m of God i s s u e at 4 p . m . Monday peted in the seventh annual na- He said that he did not know c h a i r m a n f o r Senior Council. ensemble of the Men's Glee Club in Conrad Auditorium. 8:30 to 11:30 Saturday night. If tional contest. why a law prohibiting the u s e and the Folklore Society. M i s s H e l p e r plans to attend graduate school at It r a i n s , the c o n c e r t will be held Rabbi Borowitz, visiting p r o - Of the 44 participating c o n - of marijuana without a p r e s c r i p - The C o l l e c t o r s will play at a In the B r o d y m u l t i - p u r p o s e f e s s o r of religion at P r i n c e t o n N o r t h w e s t e r n U n i v e r s i t y . She hopes to combine h e r testants, four MSU team m e m - tion was e v e r p a s s e d . Wilson Hall m i x e r tonight f r o m rooms* University, will a l s o l e c t u r e at b e r s placed within the top eleven. The ASMSU marijuana c o m - g r a d u a t e work in j o u r n a l i s m with her i n t e r e s t in 8 to midnight. Adm'.ssion f e e s Four GO-GO g i r l s and F r a n c i s 8 p . m . Sunday In Wilson Audi- They a r e Paul C o r d e r , Lansing mittee will Interview Sen. Roger A f r i c a n h i s t o r y for a c a r e e r as a p o l i t i c a l r e p o r t e r will go to S T E P . X and the Bushmen will s t a r at t o r i u m , giving existential a n a l - j u n i o r , sixth; R o g e r Vinande, E . C r a i g , D-Dearborn, today. of A f r i c a n a f f a i r s . Wilson Hall will also s p o n s o r y s i s of w r i t e r s such a s Roth, the Hubbard H a l l loading dock Brown City senior, ninth; L a r r y As general c h a i r m a n of the 1967 W a t e r C a r n i v a l , the f i l m , " From H e r e to E t e r - m i x e r on Saturday f r o m 9 p . m . Salinger, M i l l e r , Bellow, M a l - Craig plans to Introduce a Hammond, Eaton Rapids senior, Dan Bzovl c u l m i n a t e s four y e a r s of s e r v i c e with this n i t y , " s t a r r i n g J e f f r e y Hunter amud, and I. B. Singer. to midnight. tenth; and Lynn Harvey, Chelsea bill In the Michigan legislature annual s p r i n g t i m e event. Bzovi, p r e - l a w m a j o r f r o m and David J a n s s e n , at 7:30 t o - Monday's talk Is entitled " T h e calling for the reclassification T h e MSU Singing Statesmen Junior, eleventh. T r e n t o n , is president of E x c a l i b u r , s e n i o r m e n ' s night. C o n t e m p o r a r y Mood of Jewish of marijuana f r o m a n a r c o t i c will hold a c o n c e r t at 3 and 8 T e x a s T e c h took the honors Shaw Hall will hold a r e c o r d T h e o l o g y . " Borowitz will speak to a dangerous drug. h o n o r a r y . He has s e r v e d as the E xecutive V i c e P r e s - p . m . Sunday i n t h e E r i c k s o n Kiva. at the contest. hop tonight f r o m 9 to midnight. Sunday on " T h e Image of Man The dangerous drug category ident of I n t e r f r a t e r n l t y Council, was a d v i s e r to Leonard Falcone will d i r e c t The P e r f o r m i n g A r t s Movie, his l a s t c o n c e r t with the MSU in Modern Jewish F i c t i o n . " is m o r e l i b e r a l and would r e d u c e A S M S U f o r publicity and public r e l a t i o n s , and w o r k e d Concert Band on Sunday at 4 Borowitz has contributed f r e - Honors College the heavy penalties imposed on those who illegally use m a r i - on the H o m e c o m i n g E x e c u t i v e B o a r d . In a d d i t i o n , he w a s t r e a s u r e r o f h i s f r a t e r n i t y , Z e t a p . m . on the K r e s g e T e r r a c e . quently to such p e r i o d i c a l s a s Commentary, Judaism, Christ- annual banquet juana. B e t a T a u , and is a m e m b e r o f B l u e K e y . Incomes The L i t t l e S i s t e r s of Minerva will hold t h e i r annual ice c r e a m social Sunday afternoon f r o m 4 ian Century and R e c o n s t r u c t i o n - i s t . He i s a l s o p r o f e s s o r of e d - TWO MONTHS OF UNREST to 6:30 on Landon F i e l d . ucation a n d Jewish r e l i g i o u s The annual banquet for Honors College education students was held last night in the Kellogg sluggish Susan M o s s h a m m e r , m e z z o - s o p r a n o , will give h e r s e n i o r thought at the New York School of the Hebrew Union C o l l e g e - r e c i t a l at 4 p.m., Sunday In the Jewish Institute of Religion. C e n t e r Red Cedar Room. The banquet honored Honors College education students and TSU riot blamed on minor in April Music Auditorium. The MSU-Unlversity of M i c h - The l e c t u r e s a r e sponsored by the B'nai B ' r i t h Hillel F o u n - entertained East Lansing t e a c h - Paint it white igan baseball game s t a r t s at 1:30 dation and the d e p a r t m e n t of religion at MSU. WASHINGTON ¡JPi — Economic Saturday a f t e r n o o n . e r s who have aided College of incident with police car sluggishness caught up during A campus grounds Education students. A p r i l with p e r s o n a l Income, m a i n t e n a n c e m a n uses a It w a s coordinated b y M r s . Yvonne \Va»kin, i n s t r u c t o r of e l - e m e n t a r y special studies. By M A C B, SKELTON o r incident has been pinpointed a s the c a u s e of the riot that r e - A p a t r o l m a n was shot in the thigh. which r e g i s t e r e d its s m a l l e s t advance in 18 m o n t h s , the C o m - m e r c e D e p a r t m e n t r e p o r t e d to m o b i l e p a i n t s p r a y e r to p a i n t c r o s s w a l k s on c a m - pus s t r e e t s . it's what's happening Entertainment at the banquet HOUSTON [f) — T h e r e Is s p e c - The r e s u l t : rookie p a t r o l m a n day. sulted in a p o l i c e m a n ' s d e a t h . S t a t e N e w s photo b y w a s provided by the East Lansing ulation by police, students and Lewis Kuba, 25, suffered a fatal An April gain of $1.4 billion The watermelon smashed Jerry McAllister Announcements must be r e c e i v e d b e f o r e 11 a . m . S i n g e r s , under the direction of o t h e r s that the riot Tuesday night wound between the e y e s , two o t h e r was the s m a l l e s t since October against a police c a r as four o f f i - the day b e f o r e p u b l i c a t i o n . Robert Stelner, f r o m East at T e x a s Southern University p a t r o l m e n and a student w e r e i n - of 1965 when p e r s o n a l income c e r s made a routine check along L a n s i n g H i g h School.Robert probably would not have been j u r e d , 488 students w e r e a r - actually dropped by $5.3 billion Wheeler Avenue, a c a m p u s - b i - G r e e n , a s s o c i a t e p r o f e s s o r of counseling, personnel s e r v i c e s Ignited if a watermelon had not been thrown at a squad c a r e a r - secting t h o r o u g h f a r e . rested. because of r e t r o a c t i v e Social Security payments made a month Teachers The College of Engineering will sponsor the 1967 Michigan The melon was thrown f r o m Sixteen students remained in and e d u c a t i o n a l psychology, l i e r In the evening. earlier. Junior Engineering Technical Society engineering exposition today, someone within a crowd of about jail Thursday. Five were delivered a lecture on " T h e Cul- t u r a l l y D i s a d v a n t a g e d in Two months of campus unrest left many students with strained 125 p e r s o n s who w e r e listening charged with felony rioting. During A p r i l , the department picket Detroit f r o m 1 p . m . - 9 p . m . and Saturday, f r o m 9 a . m . - 9 p . m . on the second and t h i r d f l o o r s of the Engineering Bldg. Secondary school students to a r e c r u i t i n g speech in behalf s a i d , p e r s o n a l Income r o s e to a Education." n e r v e s , but no specific problem will p a r t i c i p a t e with p r o j e c t s and r e s e a r c h p a p e r s . of a p r o t e s t that night at a city Senior recital r e c o r d $614.1 billion at an a n - nual r a t e , seasonally adjusted '.suburb schools dump that r e s i d e n t s of a Negro SALE subdivision have labeled a s a Judith Ann M a r l n g , Jenison despite the second drop in the s e n i o r , will give a piano r e c i - GIBRALTAR (fl — All but one health h a z a r d . p a s t t h r e e months in m a n u f a c - T h e MSU Welghtlifting Club will meet Saturday, f r o m 1-7 p . m . tal at 8:15 tonight in the Music of this downriver Detroit s u b - The o f f i c e r s stopped to I n v e s - turing p a y r o l l s . in the I.M. A r e n a . Guest l i f t e r s will be Sergio Olivas and Bill Seno. Auditorium. u r b ' s 117 e l e m e n t a r y and high t i g a t e . They a r r e s t e d one s t u - .The April slowing In Income T h e meeting will cover power-lifting and the National C o l l e g i a t e s . She will play selections by school t e a c h e r s struck today dent and seized a r e v o l v e r f r o m r e f l e c t e d r e d u c t i o n s , not only "in forcing the closing of the c i t y ' s h i m . The group d i s p e r s e d . B r a h m s , Beethoven, Bach, and m a n u f a c t u r i n g , but in the The Little S i s t e r s of Minerva, national w o m e n ' s h o n o r a r y , will P e r s c h e t t i , a twentieth century six schools. An hour l a t e r , the police c a r tributlon industries and in hold an ice c r e a m social f r o m 4 p . m . - 6 p . m . Sunday at Landon $35.00 to $70.00 was struck by b o t t l e s . The o f f i - composer. t r a n s f e r of payments which c o n - T h e B o a r d of Education s t a r t - F i e l d , a c r o s s f r o m the Women's I.M. Tickets a r e available at 50 Miss Marlng is a student of ed busing the high school s t u - help underprivileged children. c e r s again stopped to I n v e s - s i s t mainly of Social Security c e n t s , with p r o c e e d s going to Genla Nemenoff Luboshutz, a s - dents back to t h e i r homes and tigate a n d , police said, t h e r e and v e t e r a n s b e n e f i t s . SPORT COATS was gunfire f r o m a d o r m i t o r y . sistant p r o f e s s o r of m u s i c . Gains in government and the said pupils in lower g r a d e s would be sent home l a t e r . The University Cycling Club will hold a 2 0 - m i l e bicycle r i d e beginning at 2 p . m . Sunday. Open to all students, the r i d e will service Industries, however, Unsettled i s s u e s , according to ARE NOW Hallowed tradition produced an o v e r - a l l advance of $800 million in wages and s a l a - the federation, w e r e the t w o - y e a r lack of a collective b a r - s t a r t In f r o n t of the M e n ' s I.M. • • • of "pinning" a g i r l i s r i e s to an annual r a t e during April of $414.3 billion. gaining c o n t r a c t , grievance p r o - T h e MSU F r e e Methodist Fellowship will meet golfing at 10:30 a . m . at the F a i r w a y golf range, f o r miniature 1410 E. Grand $20.00 to $50.00 up-dated by Manufacturing wages and s a l - a r i e s declined by $300 million c e d u r e s and wages. No m e e t i n g s w e r e scheduled River Ave. A picnic will follow at the Cedar Bend one m i l e east of Meridian Road on E . Grand R i v e r . r o a d s i d e park Call 332-0675 Sprite bottle caps. during A p r i l . between the t e a c h e r s and the school b o a r d . for transportation. * « * According to an independent survey (we took it Alpha Kappa P s l , p r o f e s s i o n a l business f r a t e r n i t y , will hold a FOX'S A FEW SPORT COAT o u r s e l v e s ) , a startling new practice is becoming widespread on some college c a m p u s e s . c a r wash f r o m 9 a . m . - 5 p . m . Saturday at L a r r y ' s Gulf, on the S u d d e n l y , fraternity men are no longer "pinning" c o r n e r of Louis and Michigan. SPECIALS the lovely young things that catcl? their e y e . Instead, they reach for a bottle of t a r t , T h e Arab Club p r e s e n t s the movie "A1 M o r a h l q u a t " at a tea tingling Sprite--and proceed to "cap" p a r t y at 7:30 tonight In 31 Union. T h o s e who r e p r e s e n t e d the 7.Z. t ^ ^ F ^ ^ tha nhiact of — their a f f e c t i o n s . A r a b Club In the International F e s t i v a l should be p r e s e n t . $10.00 & $15.00 Why has this come a b o u t 7 T h e final meeting of the general a s s e m b l y of the club will be held at 2 Saturday to d i s c u s s the new constitution, etoct new Perhaps because of what happens o f f i c e r s and p r e s e n t the annual activities r e p o r t . * • * when you go St. J o h n ' s Student P a r i s h will hold a picnic f r o m 2 - 7 Sunday at ALL through the ceremony of opening a bottle of Sprite . It fizzes! Roars! Buzzes! Tingles! Bubbles! the East Lansing City P a r k . T h o s e wishing to attend should sign All of which makes for a much more moving moment up at the St. J o h n ' s Student * P •a r i s h• office. The cost Is 75*. than to simply "pin" a g i r l . The B u s i n e s s Women's Club will hold a baked goods s a l e at BERMUDAS T h e n , t o o , the intimacy of two people engaged in the act of opening a bottle of Sprite in itself leads to strong emotional involvement. P o l a c h e k ' s F a b r i c s , 417 E . Grand River Ave., at 9:30 a . m . Saturday. P r e p a r e d goods may be taken today to M r s . L a w r e n c e Capped o f f , of c o u r s e , by the sharing of a Dawson, 615 W. Grand River Ave. o r to M i s s Virginia Stewart, few moments of delicious a b a n d o n . (Tasting the 223 Elizabeth St. P r o c e e d s f r o m the bake s a l e will go to s c h o l a r - $1.00 OFF tingling tartness of S p r i t e , that is.) The beauty of the idea is that if the course of true love does not run s m o o t h , you don't have to go to the trouble of getting back your pin. ships and c h a r i t y . » » * T h e Humanities Dept. p r e s e n t s a r e c o r d c o n c e r t at 7 tonight in 114 B e s s e y , featuring the m u s i c of Glinka, Bach, Chopin and You just buy another bottle of Sprite Berg. REGULAR PRICE EUROPE i• Tau Alpha Rho, r a d i o and t e l e - vision h o n o r a r y , will hold a s t u - SPORT SHIRTS & SWIMSUITS | Greece $ 1 9 0 . 4 0 j dent-faculty picnic at 3 p . m . Sun- J o r 26 days a l r / r a l l * day at P o t t e r P a r k In L a n s i n g . 295.00 250.00 »Turkey $ 2 3 8 . 0 0 | Tickets a r e available f r o m any $3.00 THE CLASSIC SOLITAIRE IN T A I L O R E D STYLING 4 Russia $ 1 5 6 . 8 0 J m e m b e r of the h o n o r a r y at 75*. Food will be provided. o r 17 days alr/rall» SPRITE. CONVENIENT TERMS AVAILABLE ) Scandinavia . . .$198.80» ftamsey's SO T A R T AND TINGLING WE J U S T FOX'S I England, | 5 days coach I $25.20j BARNES FLORAL tíJSí,«, For F l o w e - s COULDN'T I AST Fresh ond u n i v e r s i t y S h o p KEEP Fashionable IT Q U I E T . Frandor Shopping Center |79 Buckingham P a l a c e R d ^ and j London SW1 E n g l a n d j D i a m203 o n d S.C o u Washington 215 A N N E D 2=0871 223 E . G r a n d River Phone 332-3617 n c i l of A m e r i c a 5 Michigan State News, E a s t L a n s i n g , Michigan Mrs. Romney quits Detroit 'City Club' United Press International mon faith, which b a r s Negroes among Negroes regarding Gov. f from the priesthood and said Romney's statements that he is T h e wife of Gov. George Rom- membership in the City Club committed to equality of o p - ney has resigned from the Wom- would generate m o r e suspicion portunity and f a i r n e s s . e n ' s City Club of Detroit to " p r o t e s t " the club's policy of Campus Center barring Negroes from m e m b e r - ship. M r s . Lenore Romney said she would rejoin the club if the policy of b a r r i n g Negroes from the dining room and second floor lounge is changed W e d n e s d a y , Mrs. Romney c a m e under c r i t i c i s m f r o m Robert L. Green, associate p r o - f e s s o r of education and f o r m e r e d u c a t i o n adviser to Martin Luther King. In a letter to M r s . Romney, Green asked her to resign f r o m the club. have you "How can you possibly justify started your membership in a club whose m a j o r policy regarding m e m b e r - ship is based on r a c i s m ? " Green asked. M r s . Romney said Thursday that G r e e n ' s letter had little to do with her resignation and that she is only protesting the right to bring guests of her choice to the club. your Green sent the letter to M r s . Romney, her husbandand several prominent civil rights leaders In- cluding King. In the l e t t e r he asked if the Negro must constantly be r e - minded "that the Romney family Lenore Romney L e n o r e R o m n e y , w i f e of Gov. G e o r g e R o m n e y , a d d r e s s e d a m e e t i n g o f t h e M i c h i g a n C o u n c i l on collection has memberships in institutions F a m i l y R e l a t i o n s T h u r s d a y in t h e U n i o n , She s p o k e whose admission policies a r e o n h o w w e , as c i t i z e n s of M i c h i g a n , c a n s t r e n g t h e n based on r a c e . " of sandals? f a m i l y life. S t a t e N e w s p h o t o s by M i k e S c h o n h o f e n He r e f e r r e d to Romney's M o r - Michigan's First Lady H i g h spirited c o m p a n i o n s f o r urges stronger family ties a l l sun fashions. O p e n l y 111 the " A child needs to be loved s p o r t y silhouettes i n soft By P H Y L L I S Z I M B L E R °PenlnS s Peech at the and needs devotion of a mother State News Staff W r i t e r c o n f e r e n c e of t h e M i c h i g a n C o u n - cil on Fam.'ly Relations. and a dad. s u p p l e l e a t h e r s , g r e a t colors. Unless individual family life "This commitment is the " W e must f i r s t understand the is strengthened, we all will be greatest we have," M r s . R o m - basic c h a r a c t e r of children if debased a n d lowered, warned ney, wife of Governor George w e ' r e going to help t h e m , " she said, "And w e ' r e going to have M r s . Lenore Romney Thursday Romney. said. to c a r e about all the children down the s t r e e t , not just our own," Expert defines Education of the child is not enough, according to M r s . R o m - ney. A s t r o n g relationship sun-fun Bernardos between parent and child is need- A. sling back thong, h a r n e s s brown family role ed. The child needs someone to B. g l a d i a t o r s a n d a l , h a r n e s s brown Imitate, she continued. The way C. d i a m o n d s , o r a n g e , pink, t u r q u o i s e . . . . a little g i r l t r e a t s her doll Is Families must r e a l i z e that they know how to cope with leisure an indication of her mother. D. white buttons on black p a t e n t a r e entering a new society and t i m e , " she explained. that as a family they must have Applying this to family life, " T h e f i r s t cause of emotion- E. t i e - b a c k thong, h a r n e s s b r o w n al disturbance in children is roots, Dr. Alice Mary Hilton Dr. Hilton said that the family the fact that the parents don't F. t o e - a n c h o r e d thong, h a r n e s s brown . . . told the Michigan Council on is controlled by the necessities of survival. get along together," she said. Family Relations Thursday. " F a m i l i e s a r e on the outside Children must know that their Dr. H i l t o n spoke on " T h e family relationship is sound. a unit and must compete with Family tn the Evolving Society." She has been working in the field of cybercultural r e s e a r c h since other u n i t s , " she explained. " I n - side the family, each member According to M r s . Romney, the sex relationship must be tied to love, s p i r i t , the mind, snappy Bandolinos must compete to retain their 1952. and the body. People who act identity." To p r e p a r e their offspring to differently a r e not happy. Dr. Hilton hypothesized that compete, parents feel they must " W e have to understand our G. S i r i a sling, beige o r d a r k brown $12 a family is a group of people who choose to live together out prepare them for a good job, she children under the fulfillment H. T e a n o , v e r y open in d a r k brown $12 said. They feel they must teach that comes in offspring. It must of love, habit or necessity, and that is is affected by the e v e r y - them to be efficient. be a fulfillment of love, not I. C a r n a i a , buckle v a m p , d a r k brown . . . $12 day abundance in our nation. "In o r d e r to make things e f - s e x , " she explained. J. P a d o v a , in white, b e i g e , brown $12 ficient they must be made uni- "If we believe they represent T h e r e is an increase in f r e e - the finest things we have, then K. A m b r a , in yellow, o r a n g e , g r e e n , brown . . $12 dom to choose our own life, f o r m , " Miss Hilton said. "What according to D r . Hilton. is missing in our society is in- we want to c a r e f o r t h e m . " We L. T r a p a n i , s q u a r e d off toe, b r o w n $12 efficiency. "What is called a have to want to respond to their "Everyone has at their d i s - family today is just a husband, needs, she added. posal , the energy of 10,000 wife and children, and no m o r e . M r s . Rdmney said, "Young s l a v e s , " she said. ' T h i s has "As we enter this new society people in high schools and c o l - affected the quality of our lives, without a sense of continuation leges a r e crying f o r direction. giving us the possibility of h a v - we will just drift, and when you We expect everything to be p e r - SHOES • CAMPUS CENTER EAST LANSING ing leisure t i m e . " drift alone you go down," she m i s s i v e , but young people want "But a f t e r all the y e a r s man guidelines. had to fight to survive, he doesn't said. " W e ' v e got to get away from the feeling that if we hand peo- ple enough, they'll be happy," Investigator lists she said. " W e have to teach them v a l u e s . " " Y o u n g s t e r s need us d e s p e r - ately, but one o r two or three crime rem ed ies of us can't dp I t , " she c o n - cluded, " W e must all accept our commitment to do all that we can to strengthen family l i f e . " as "syndicated or c o m m e r c i a l - By R H E T T JOHNSTON ized c r i m e which provides p r o d - ucts and s e r v i c e s for m a n ' s basic F a i t h , integrity a n d moral desires." Teen scientists courage a r e the weapons needed f o r citizens to combat organized " T h e s e c r i m i n a l s , who have c r i m e , Michigan's chief c r i m e entrenched themselves in society to present papers investigator said Wednesday. behind a facade of respectability, Vincent P l e r s a n t e of the state work together in tlght-knlt and About 80 Michigan junior high a t t o r n e y general's organized well-organized groups for large and high school students will p r e - c r i m e division and f o r m e r chief financial g a i n s , " P l e r s a n t e said. sent papens at the Michigan of Detroit detectives, said: A m a j o r problem today is that Junior Academy of Science, Arts " T h e r e is a debasement of people do not believe the s i g - and L e t t e r s at Kellogg Center public life in every community nificance of organized c r i m e , today and Saturday. that tolerates organized c r i m e , or else they tolerate its e x i s t - A variety of subjects, some and this has become a great ence, P l e r s a n t e said. highly technical, will be p r e - danger to our political f a b r i c . " "Organized c r i m e has f o r c e d sented. Some of the titles a r e : P l e r s a n t e said citizens must law enforcement agencies and " T h e E f f e c t s of Intracerebral . have a community awareness of the entire society to take a new Neomycin Sulphate on the M e m - organized c r i m e ' s existence, and look at our p r o c e d u r e s and plan* ory of M i c e , " "An Attempt to that each individual citizen must f o r controlling i t , " P l e r s a n t e Determine the Best Catalyst f o r take a personal concern in his said. the Polymerization of Polyester community. "We must have an exchange ol R e s i n " and " I s T h e r e Nutri- Information at all government tional Value in C o f f e e ? " " W e must know and understand our enemy by gaining m o r e In- l e v e l s , " he said. "Cooperation T h e purpose of the meeting formation on what they a r e do- is responsible f o r our past s u c - is to provide an opportunity for ing and who we a r e f a c i n g , " c e s s and must be broadened In high-ability students to receive P l e r s a n t e said. the future if our democratic s o c i - recognition f o r creative work in He defined organized c r i m e ety is to e x i s t , " he said. science and mathematics. ' F r i d a y , May 19, 1967 Mie In Michigan SPORTS In Reality Batsmen's lost Big 70 goal: favored in ending U-M's title chances league in hitting with a .448 Preakness BALTIMORE (UPI) - Kentucky -lday id then count f o r a l l of Michigan c o n - D e r b y winner P r o u d Clarion By G A V E L WESCH low.! ei-pec- f e r e n c e wins. T h e r e ' s little doubt average. b r e e z e d through a final workout State News Sports Writ« >aders. they'll be the one's to start against I t ' s going to s e e m like old at Plmllco T h u r s d a y In p r e p a r a - twice, MSU. Zahn i s 8 - 1 and Lyijynen home week f o r Rymal. Another If Mi tion f o r S a t u r d a y ' s running of A victory by the Spartan ba fiord a 8-6 overall. Adrian t e a m m a t e , Doug Nelson, the P r e a k n e s s Stakes, but w a s ball team could end Michig will be doing the catching f o r MSU will pitch senior Dick r a t e d only a c o - s e c o n d choice hopes f o r a Big T e n thii the Wolverines. Kenney, who'll be making h i s behind In Reality. weekend when the two have Litwhiler i s hoping MSU will last Big T e n s t a r t , and sopho- beat the Wolverines but said The s u r p r i s i n g l y l a r g e field meet in a home and home sei take of 10 swelled the total value of m o r e Mickey Knight. Kenney's " i t doesn't m a t t e r much to me MSU t r a v e l s to MicHigai the second of the triple crown final s e a s o n w i t h MSU who wins the t i t l e . " day f o r a single game at c l a s s i c s , a m i l e and o n e - s i x - from a i s destined to be h i s f i r s t losing T h i s i s the f i r s t time since on F e r r y Field, and will r< teenths t e s t , to $194,000. T h e Mich- one, h e ' s 1-4 in the c o n f e r e n c e Litwhiler b e c a m e coach at MSU home to face the Wolverines winner gets $141,500 with $30,000 ition ranked and 4 - 6 o v e r a l l . three y e a r s ago that the S p a r - urday 'at 1 p . m . on Old Co to second, $15,000 to third and se te uesday, MSU's leading Big 10 h i t t e r s , tans haven't been in the Big Field. do ub l e - Bill Steckley and John W a l t e r s $7,500 to f o u r t h . Ten fight until the last day of Michigan c u r r e n t l y occi c.in, the will play their l a s t home game Proud Clarion, whoworkedfive the season. t h i r d place in the Bip :c team Saturday. f u r l o n g s In 1:03 without ever standings, one game behind ! e Tie day. being urged by the e x e r c i s e boy, EASTERN MICHIGAN HERE leading Ohio State, 1 Steckley and W a l t e r s a r e tied f a c e s f o u r thoroughbreds he beat ¡ve been game behind seconc piace ; s w eek - for seventh in conference b a t - t w o w e e k s a g o at Churchill nesota. ting with .364 m a r k s . Steckley D o w n s , a l o n g with five new- MSU is in sixth place a leads the S p a r t a n s outside t h e comers. -Ce iff Zahn Twin bill today for frosh conference a l s o with a . 3 3 1 a v e r - out of the running f o r tl.< lien a r e Barbs Delight, Damascus, age, while W a l t e r s i s hitting T e n title. Tei to ac - Reason to Hall and Ask the F a r e , .308 f o r third place. W a l t e r s Minnesota and 01 io State who finished in that o r d e r behind leads the team in r u n s batted In • • 332-6944 P r o u d C l a r i o n In the Kentucky Feature- T o d a y & Sat. with 29. r e p l a c e m e n t f o r graduating Bill Derby, a r e back f o r another shot. c A F U S Utdtu 1:30-i 30-5.35-7:40-9:45 1 Steckley, W a l t e r s , Kenney, Eighteen m e m b e r s of MSU's f r e s h m a n baseball team will be encounter on the MSU diamond May 6 by 7 - 3 and 3 - 1 s c o r e s . T o m Randall, all r i g h t h a n d e r s . Miller provided the biggest Steckley a s the v a r s i t y t h i r d Celtic A i r , G r e a t P o w e r , F a - p i t c h e r s Bob P e t e r s o n and Dick T o d a y ' s game i s a fill-in f o r excitement f b r MSU f a n s in the b a s e m a n next season. v o r a b l e T u r n and Misty Cloud looking f o r t h e i r f i r s t victory in H i l a r i o u s R o m a n t i c Cc Litwhiler, infielder Gayle F r a n - C e n t r a l g a m e with a home r u n Garvey i s a defensive h a l f - round out the f i e l d . NiaRion SoPHia— Spartan uniform when they meet an e a r l i e r game with Flint zen a n d p l a y e r - m a n a g e r B i l l E a s t e r n Michigan's f r o s h at 2 Junior College which was c a n - which c l e a r e d the s c o r e b o a r d back and place k i c k e r f o r the In the draw f o r post positions, Wooley a r e the six s e n i o r s on p.m. today in a doubleheader on celed because of r a i n . T h e Flint in c e n t e r field. Spartan football t a m . P r o u d Clarion drew the rail p o s i - MSU's 35-mar, r o s t e r . team is now participating in the Miller also plays b a s k e t b a l l . Ron Witkowski i s the m o s t tion with D a m a s c u s in the second B p a i i d o Old College F i e l d . i p R e N Michigan's A n d y F i s h e r , a T h e f r e s h m e n lost twice to National J u n i o r College t o u r n a - He i s being groomed f o r t h e left likely pinch h i t t e r . T h e r e s t of stall and Celtic A i r next. Then t e a m m a t e of Spartan Steve Rymal m e n t . T h e MSU f r o s h will not field spot which will be vacated the team i s composed of pitcher s c a m e In Reality, placing the four Central Michigan in their f i r s t "fi countess at Adrian High School, leads the Now Showing play any Big 10 t e a m s . " T h e team h a s looked pretty by senior John W a l t e r s on the v a r s i t y . Garvey i s a potential with the exception of one r e s e r v e catcher. leading contenders c l o s e s t to the rail. frt>m hong Kpn©* good so f a r , " Spartan f r e s h m a n Coach T o m Smith said. " C e n - A ß A ' s Minneapolis Thru Tues. t r a l had a l r e a d y played t h r e e On M-43 n ^ - C o l o r H i t s g a m e s when they played u s , and we had f i r s t g a m e j i t t e r s . "1 expect o u r hitting to i m - club Shi prove t h i s g a m e , " he added. EXCLUSIVE FIRST LANSING SHOWING! rocK T h e Spartan line-up will c o n - ine ri 'THE BUSY BODY* SHOWN TWICE AT 8:30 AND L A T E sist of C a r r o l l Allen at f i r s t base, Mike Olson at second, Bill Campbell at shortstop,Steve 'steals' Hawks' Hudson Michael J . Aubuchon, Hawks AH this picture has is SEX, GANGSTERS, STRIPPERS, had used Hudson a s a r e g u l a r , Garvey a t third, Bill Blakeslee ST. LOUIS (UPI) - Rookie Lou legal c o u n s e l , s a i d " W e will a l m o s t f r o m t h e s t a r t of the Hear the hit song in left field, Richard Miller in Hudson of the S t . Louis Hawks i m m e d i a t e l y institute the n e c e s - A MILLION STOLEN BUCKSt3 STIFFS M ONE COFFIN season. -THIS IS MY SONG'' c e n t e r , and Dick Vary in right. of the National Basketball A s - s a r y legal p r o c e d u r e s to p r o t e c t Hudson's t e l e g r a m to K e r n e r Mike Haley will do the catching sociation said Wednesday that the Hawks against this action by said, " A s you know I did play N e x t ! " T H E P O P P Y IS A L S O A F L O W E R " ... and some of the other little Happenings in life. and the pitching will be done by he planned to sign a c o n t r a c t M r . Hudson." basketball h e r e In Minnesota f o r Phil Fulton, Chuck Viane, o r with the Minneapolis club of the Hudson played one full s e a s o n f o u r y e a r s and during that period A m e r i c a n B a s k e t b a l l As- with t h e Hawks. He had been I developed a n u m b e r of f r i e n d - sociation. signed out of the University of Lacrosse, rugby H u d s o n , who h a s been Minnesota a t a news c o n f e r e n c e ships in the a r e a . " d e s c r i b e d by Hawks owner Ben Hudson said, " I t i s my inten- Several m e m b e r s of the MSU called by Kerrier p r i o r to the Kerner a s a "coming super-star tion to stay in Minneapolis and football t e a m have chosen to play 1966-67 s e a s o n . K e r n e r had laud- p l a y e r , " sent a t e l e g r a m to K e r - ed Hudson a s a " s u p e r - s t a r in make my future career here." rugby f o r t h e r e m a i n d e r of t h e He said, " B e c a u s e of my f o r m e r c l u b ' s spring schedule, s t a r t i n g n e r which said, " I r e g r e t to i n - the m a k i n g . " f o r m you that I will not b e p l a y - a s s o c i a t i o n s with t h e city (Min- with t h e g a m e t h i s Saturday P l a y e r - C o a c h Richie Guerln ing basketball with the St. Louis neapolis) I think it would be against the Sarnia Saints. e a s i e r f o r m e to develop b u s i n e s s T h e two clubs f a c e each o t h e r Hawks." contacts." on Old College Field immediately following the MSU baseball g a m e . Hudson, w h o a v e r a g e d 18.4 points p e r g a m e in 80 g a m e s I.M. deadlines Hudson said " 1 again wish to thank you and e x p r e s s my a p - Rugby Coach Neville Doherty last s e a s o n , and hit a 22.6 f i g u r e p r e c i a t i o n f o r your c o u r t e s i e s and Club P r e s i d e n t Mike Auer In nine playoff g a m e s , said, in Entry deadlines f o r t h e i n - and kindness to m e during the have a s s e m b l e d a list®of rugby his t e l e g r a m , " I a m signing a dividual t r a c k m e e t to be held past y e a r . " r u l e s , which will be distributed c o n t r a c t with t h e Minneapolis next week is 12 noon today. T h o s e who have already e n t e r e d may Hudson said " T h i s s a m e a p - at the m a t c h . team of the A m e r i c a n B a s k e t - c a l l t h e I n t r a m u r a l office p r e c i a t i o n should be extended to ball A s s o c i a t i o n . " T h e MSU Rugby Club will m e e t Monday f o r the schedule of events Coach Guerin and the fans of Hudson said, " I do not wish the Sarnia Saints Saturday a t and the exact» date St. Louis who w e r e m o r e than you to take this a s a r e f l e c t i o n Old College Field following t h e against you, the St. Louis Hawks * * of the m e e t . kind to m e . " MSU-Michigan baseball g a m e . E n t r i e s for the intram jral Hudson's playing ability caught o r the f a n s of St. L o u i s . " Hud- f e n c i n g tournament and the on f a s t In St. Louis w h e r e he MSU's L a c r o s s e Club lost to son said In h i s t e l e g r a m , " I b e c a m e one of the most popular N o t r e Dame 10-8 in o v e r t i m e have been o f f e r e d a c o n t r a c t squash singles t o u r n a m e n t must be turned into t h e M e n ' s I.M. p l a y e r s since t h e f o r m e r Hawks * nwMwuni ru, i m u ««ws Tuesday a f t e r playing the I r i s h which i s e x t r e m e l y l u c r a t i v e and p l a y e r Bob P e t t i t . to a 8 - 8 t i e in four q u a r t e r s . one that I could not turn down." by 12 noon today. ^ WILLIAM USTUÍ DRIVE EXCLUSIVE ñüwti -ÂÏIÉÎÊ - I N anM-78 ALL PROGRAM COLOR SOUPED-UP CARS AJoyou* eomaáf CO-FEATURE TECHNICOLOR' offerii THEY PAVED FOR D-DAY! THE WAY siDcaesaß-ßMrpw-AijNe daw Mußßayß C -iHaRD p i w « 6 0 m Sm raw KDRXO B A R N Y A R D BABES! DOM De LUiSe - BiLL DâM - GODFßey CAMBRÌD66 • MâKTY IW6€LS and 660(266 dßSSeL ' «mm TECHNISCOPE A PARAMOUNT PICTURE 'THE HIRED K I L L E R " 2 N D A T 10:50 PARAMOUNT PICTURES presents HAD T H E Y TURNED \ MONÍY THE TIDE AT ^ TO BURN... ANZIOM! WOMEN TO KISS... JAMES DRURY Star of "THE VIRGINIAN TV SERIES e ARRIVEDERCI, THE YOUNG WARRIORS TECHNICOLOR* P A N A V I S I O N * co stimng LIONEL JEFFRIES ZSA ZSA GABOR STEVE CARLSON - ROBERT PINE JONATHAN DALY JOSE LOUIS DE V J m M S : r.v. KIN U S ssv KIN W S « RONALD HWWOOO VILALLONGA "WHITE LIGNTNIN' in UBI» *». « m DUM TECHNICOLOR' PANAVISION* mm // m ' I S A PARAMOUNT MURE i CEC UNDER R O A D " S H O W N AT 8:20 A N D L A T E SUN. MON. TUES. 2-COLORS HITS JEANNE VALERIE "YOUNG WARRIORS" A' RAMOUNT ÊÊk BOY DID I GET A WRONG NUMBER M*FRANK SHANNON GAYC . INEGM S p A. M SET. -MAM AT 10:10 O N L Y TECHNICOLOR" TECHNISCOPE* PLUS 2 COLOR CARTOONS WHAT DID YOU DO IN THE WAR DADDY? STARTS WED. • HOTEL PLUS ANY WEDNESDAY F r i d a y , May 19, 1967 7 Michigan State News, E a s t L a n s i n g , Michigan SPORTS I ® » » •tfnr m&^L Dittrich has formula for Big 10 win By N O R M S A A R I fourth and fifth placepoints along ta's Huble Bryant has clocked a outdoors last y e a r and could pos- nen, who has run a 13:58.8. Wilson will be chosen from for the mile. with our v i c t o r i e s . " 0:21.2 for the fastest time In the sibly be running that event. Roger Hurdle champs In the 120- State News Sports W r i t e r yard highs and 440-yard Inter- MSU entries should be tough MSU Is rated with Minnesota, conference. Bryant has also run a Merchant, winner of the 1,000 Thirds, fourths, fifths. 0:09.5 In the 100-yard dash, Indoors, will also be running the mediates return for the Spartans. In the field events they a r e e n - If the MSU track team gets Iowa and Wisconsin as p r e - m e e t favorites, but Dittrich refuses another top mark. No Spartans half mile for MSU. Washington has won the highs tered in, although no one will be enough of these today and Satur- a r e entered In the 100. for the past two seasons outdoors, competing in either the shotput o r to predict the order of finish. Eric Zemper and Dean Rosen- day at the 67th Annual Big Ten Quarter-mller Mike Mondane berg will be entering the one but could be seriously challenged discus. Mike Bowers, with his Outdoor Track and Field Cham- " I t ' s just too c l o s e , " he said. of Iowa has a 0:46.8 clocking. mile run with sixth and seventh by Bob White of Indiana and Mike seven-foot high jump this spring, pionships In Iowa City, Coach "Any paperwork on the outcome Campbell, Rick Dunn and Don fastest performances in the con- Butler of Wisconsin. has to be rated top contender In Fran Dittrich thinks his Spartans of the meet would be pure g u e s s - Crawford will be competing for ference. Iowa's Larry Wleczorek Charlie Pollard and Steve D e r - the event, will win the championship for the ing." Based on performances out- MSU. Is rated as a favorite, already by also give MSU valuable places. Roland C a r t e r , who won the third straight y e a r . The Spartans should be strong clocking 4:05. MSU's Dale Stan- Steele, who holds the Ameri- pole vault indoors this y e a r , and doors this season, MSU entries " I t is total score that counts in could be placing in most events. In the middle distances, since ley is also entered. can record of 0:50.1 In the inter- Jim Stewart have both cleared 15 this m e e t , " Dittrich said. " I n d i - John Spain's 1:17.7 and Pat Wil- The 3,000-meter steeplechase mediates, has run a 0:52.1, feet even for MSU, but Jim Clark Gene Washington and Das vidual championships help, but son's 1:19.9 a r e fastest and third could be one of the strongest his best this spring. Jon Relmer of Ohio State has gone 15-4. Campbell have been timed In they don't win titles by them- fastest 660 times outdoors. events for the Spartans, as Dick of Iowa has been timed In 0:51.7, John Wilcox also Is entered for 0:21.4 and 0:21.9,respectively,In selves. We need to get those third, Spain also won the 880 title Sharkey and George Balthrop r a t e though. MSU. the 220-yard dash. But Minneso- 1-2 with past times. Sharkey has No definite relay teams have Crawford's injured leg h a s been timed in 8:59.9 and Bal- been selected for MSU yet, but healed enough to make him a throp 9:11.9. Steele, Rick Dunn, Crawford, threat for both the triple jump 9 'S' swimmers make Sharkey has also recorded a Campbell and Washington are the and long jump. He had distances 14:00.5 in the three mile, second 440-yard potentials and Craw- of 45-feet and 22-10, respective- only to Minnesota's Tom Heino- f o r d , Campbell, IXnn, Spain and ly. In the «two events last week. ICHOQAN SUPER BARGAIN DAY All-American team [ I "onH• 482 B 390S a | ftff4 B flf A L L DAY PREVUE OF 2 FEATURES TODAY shown at 2:4o"6:oo-9:25 p-M* ' METRO G O L M MAYER ,. A MANN LAURENCE-WASSERMAN PRODUCTION . Desperation leap r Nine m e m b e r s of MSU's v a r - and Click also made It in relay 11th, One-Meter Diving, 408.05 sity swimming team have been combinations along with Don 12th, T h r e e - M e t e r Diving, Big The Spartan Ten Outdoor track Track team Is favored Championships, to w i n being held the named to the 1967 NCAA All- America Swimming Team. Rauch, Gary Langley and Rolf Groseth. Walsh and Williams were tops with three individual 408.25 Gary Langley, Ft. Lauderdale, SANDRA DEE * GEORGE HAMILTON at Iowa City this weekend. Above, a member of Gary Spartans Ken Walsh, Ed Gllck, Dllley, Pete Williams, and one relay selection each- Fla., sophomore; Don Rauch, Philadelphia sophomore; and Dil- There comes MSU's freshman team strains for the e x t r a dis- Duane Green and Fred White- Selections to the Ail-Ameri- ley and Walsh: ^ a time when t a n c e I n t h e long j u m p . ford were listed for individual can group are made primarily on the basis of performances in 4th, 400-Yard Freestyle Relay, every girl needs a S t a t e N e w s photo b y R i c k Browne spots. Walsh, Dllley, Williams 3:08.73 the NCAA championship meet, husband1 Rolf Groseth, Hinsdale, 111., additionally in conference and junior, Williams, Rauch and regional meets and lastly in dual Glick: Golfers battle 'Big Three' meets. The selections with rankings and times a r e a s foloows: Ken Walsh, Ponte Vedra, Fla., 9th, 800-Yard Freestyle Relay, 7:09.00 senior. at Big 10 Championships 1st, 100-Yard Freestyle, :45.6, NCAA champion 4th, 200-Yard Freestyle, 1:43.39 By H A R O L D D E A N 7th, 500-Yard Freestyle, State News Sports W r i t e r 4:46.10 The p r e s s u r e builds, the ten- Ed Click, Huntington, Ind., s e n - sion mounts. All the stakes are ior. on the table. The weeks of p r a c - 9th, 1650-Yard Freestyle, tice, even the regular season 17:02.69 meets, are dwarfed by the Big Ten Golf Meet at Ann Arbor Gary Dilley, Huntington, Ind., this weekend. senior. 2nd, 100-Yard Backstroke, Coach Bruce Fossum's crew :53.00 faces its biggest challenge to 3rd, 200-Yard Backstroke, date when it comes up against 1:56.20 t h e "Big T h r e e " —Michigan, Pete Williams, Pittsburgh, Purdue and Ohio State, the de- Pa., junior. fending champ. 10th, 200-Yard Backstroke, IFAUST 1:58.60 The Buckeyes won the title 8th, 200-Yard Individual Med- last year with a stroke total of ley, 1:58.78 1480. Michigan was second,1502, 3rd, 400-Yard Individual Med- Wisconsin third, 1509. T h e S p a r r ley, 4:13.69 tans tied Minnesota for fourth at 1519. Indiana was sixth at Duane Green, Battle Creek M A Y 25 1521 and Purdue seventh at 1526. sophomore. I n season competition, t h e 10th, One-Meter Diving, 420.4 ATM ID 27 ENDS TODAY . . . 'THE HAPPENING' & LATER SHOWN AT 1:00-4:20-7:40- (BOX OFFICE CLOSES 10 P.M.) Spartans beat the Wolves, while Fred Whiteford, Costa Mesa, 7 .10 MSU Auditorium losing to OSU and Purdue. MSU Calif., senior CI I A K L K S G O U N O D ' S SHOWN TODAY AT . . . finished behind the group in the W O R L D R E N O W N E D OPERA BEST IN FOREIGN FILMS Columbus and Northern tourna- 7:20 & 9:20 P.M. ments. Two weeks ago, however, in Karate meet The MSU Karate Club will hold Sponsored by the D e p a r t m e n t s of M U S I C and S P E E C H STARTS TODAY SAT. & SUN. AT . . . 1:20-3:20-5:15-7:15-^ 9:20 P.M. t h e Northern Intercollegiates, its Open Invitational Tournament MAIN FLOOR TICKETS $2 00 FROM 7:00 P.M. Purdue demonstrated i t s r e - in the white, brown and black BALCONY TICKETS $1 M) juvenated power and c o u n t e d belt divisions at 12 noon, Sun- 1,539 to defeat Florida by six stroke the title. Ohio State He stoops to conquer day, May 21, in the I.M. arena. The events will be open to the Auditorium Do* Ollice May 15 -24 (12 ill — S (HI p rn ) with 1,553, and Michigan with S p a r t a n g o l f e r John B a i l e y is e x p e c t e d to f i n i s h general public when the finals May 27 (12 50—H JO p m ) 1,570, also proved that they must a m o n g the l e a d e r s in the B i g T e n G o l f C h a m p i o n - begin at 4 p.m. For further May 28(12 10-5:00 p m ) be reckoned with this weekend. information, call Bruce Hender- May 29 (6 00-K JO p in ) s h i p s t o d a y and S a t u r d a y at A n n A r b o r . The steady Boilermakers were State N e w s Photo By M i k e Schonhofen son at 332-5035. paced by Steve Mayhew with a 304. John Schroeder of Michigan defeated Michigan's star golfer fired an identical score. John Schroeder by two strokes. A n o t h e r Michigan g o l f e r , Benson has the team's lowest Frank Groves, turned in a 306, scoring average and could be the while the Spartans' Sandy M c - biggest Spartan threat In the Andrew and Steve Benson finished Big Ten Meet. with 308 and 309, respectively. John Bailey finished 14th last F o s s u m picked the Boiler- year in the championships. He makers a s t h e conference f a - started the year setting a hot orite but also insisted that Mich- pace, but fell off during the mid- igan could win it because of the dle of the season. home team advantage. In the tournament with W i s - consin at Madison May 1, Bailey MSU beat Michigan in the last was co-medalist with McAndrew. time out for both teams by four He finished seventh In the S p a r - strokes, 613-617. tan Invitational to take medalist The Spartans' Steve Benson honors. NOW . . . PROGRAM INFORMATION^ 485-6489 AT 1:00-4:00-6:40-9:20 P.M. $1.00 to 5 : 3 0 * $1.25 AFTER J tÀuUu FIRST TIME AT POPULAR PRICES! iTlIÜi : RS S HAMMR t STEfI OKLAHOMA ! FRtEIAMl, JR- ClNi S C O P É •••••••••••••• GORDON MacRAE - GLORIA GRAHAME • SHIRLEY JONES • GENE NELSON CHARLOTTE GREENWOOD • EDOIE ALBERT • iAMES WHITMORE • ROD STEIGER 2 SHORT SUBJECTS UTMiMMiuw.« :mmam ' THE BLACK C A T ' • ' T H E KISS' fcm. n* * SOMA LEVIEN-WILLIAM LUDWIG AGNES K MULE .COMING SOON. & CARTOON - 'THE LION & ALBERT' 'HURRY SUNDOWN" F r i d a y , May 19, 1967 8 Mìi an State News, E a s t Lansing, Michigan ABORTION QUERY Religion Dept. small but strong Start of life By D A Y L E S C H W A R Z L E R problematic " W e ' r e m o r e interested in g e t - s u r e whether o r not the existence ing Is condoned In our society— With six r e g u l a r faculty m e m - State News Staff W r i t e r B y r n summed up the; a n t i - a b o r - ting a small high-quality group of of u n e x p r e s s e d potential in the tion view: " T h e abortion a d - b e r s an.; It) student m a j o r s , the s e l f - d e f e n s e , f o r example. m a j o r s than In getting a l a r g e very young fetus gives it the vocates m a k e t h e i r s t r o n g e s t Mai; Department of Religion does Even if biologists could d e - S i m i l a r l y , editor - a t - l a r g e number of p e o p l e , " Harry H. absolute right of survival. T h i s c a s e in the instance of a r a p e - not claim to bt the l a r g e s t d e - Michael Novak said recently the K l m b e r , c h a i r m a n of the d e p a r t - t e r m i n e the point at which a i s a question which should r e - pariment on c a m p u s . But It does right to life is not an uncondi- induced p r e g n a n c y . Must a woman m e n t , said. fetus becomes a human being, the ceive i m m e d i a t e and s e r i o u s a t - claim that half of its m a j o r s tional right—but the fact that s u f f e r the anguish of c a r r y i n g a "We n e v e r expect to have problem of abortion would not tention, he said. r a p i s t ' s c h i l d ? I t sounds appalling -v.v. a 3.0 GP \ 3r b e t t e r . the fetus i s totally d e f e n s e l e s s many m a j o r s , " he said r e c e n t l y . be solved, Commonweal w r i t e r In a C h r i s t i a n Century a r t i c l e until we r e m e m b e r that the child m u s t always be considered. " O u r enrollment and our s e r v - Thomas L . H a y e s recently on t h e r e l a t e d question of is m o r e h e l p l e s s at the hands of "I would support a revolution ice is mainly in t e r m s of s e r v - warned. euthanasia, M a r y M. Shideler the abortionist than his m o t h e r Translation ice to the e n t i r e U n i v e r s i t y . " Although the curriculum Is And since they will probably never be able to find such a a s s e r t e d that society b e h a v e s i r - reponsibly when it r e f u s e s to c o n - against the p r e s e n t system b e f o r e I would approve of abortion for the middle and upper c l a s s e s , " N o - was at the hands of the r a p i s t . " Byrn said the humane solution presently being reorganized and point, theologians may have to s i d e r such questions. vak d e c l a r e d , citing the fact that i s to make the way a s smooth plagues s o m e c o u r s e s a r e being r e s t r u c - t u r e d , no m a j o r changes a r e c o n - templated, he said. decide upon a m o r e - o r - l e s s a r - b i t r a r y dividing line, much a s society now defines adulthood, Simply banning abortion under any c i r c u m s t a n c e s s e e m s i n s u f - ficient, she s a i d . T h e r e a r e many f o r t h e s e people, abortion i s often s i m p l y . a m a t t e r of c o n - venience. a s possible f o r both the m o t h e r and the child, including special h o m e s f o r "such children if t h e i r Two new c o u r s e s may be o f - Hayes s a i d . c i r c u m s t a n c e s under which kill- Commonweal w r i t e r R o b e r t M . m o t h e r s m u s t give them up. Catholics fered in the fall, one In the ecumenical movement and one In Biologically, the quality of life is c a r r i e d by both the s p e r m and VATICAN CITY f --In a poly- c o m p a r a t i v e religion, Klmber the egg, Hayes said. But the new glot institution like the Roman added. The comparative religion individual i s not genetically c o m - Catholic'Church', o n e « the great c o u r s e would then be a p r e - unsolved p r o b l e m s has been how requisite for c o u r s e s In Hinduism to speak svith one voice to div- and Buddhism. Name that bloom plete until h i s f i r s t cell i s f o r m e d by t h e i r union. But the e m b r y o ' is not a tiny Mormon crime average e r s e peoples. He noted that the total c o u r s e h u m a n body, he e m p h a s i z e d . Almost any Vatican document enrollment last year was o v e r of importance, including Pope 3,000 students, many of whon Paul VI's latest encyclical, " P o - enroll In the 100-level " I n t r o - No p r i z e m o n e y i n v o l v e d h e r e ; just a g o o d g r a d e i n H o r t i c u l t u r e 3 2 5 . Ron W a r d , L o w e l l s e n i o r , h a s t o i d e n t i f y and m e m o r i z e the n a m e s of 2 0 0 d i f f e r e n t "Development does not take place by growth alone but in an i n t r i - cate p r o c e s s of interaction b e - far below national rate L a s t y e a r Salt Lake City r e - truth of the Bible and the divinity T h e b<*>k d e s c r i b e s a Jewish pulorum P r o g r e s s i 0 , " h a s duction to Religion" c o u r s e s In tween genetic m a t e r i a l and its f l o w e r s around campus. ported no Juvenile a r r e s t s f o r of C h r i s t , but they a l s o r e g a r d migration to the A m e r i c a s about brought complaints of different which church-affiliated l e c t u r e s environment that produces new S t a t e N e w s photo by J e r r y M c A l l i s t e r f o r m and function in the e m - m u r d e r , r a p e , o r narcotic o f - t h r e e other books a s divinely 600 B.C. One group of these m i - meanings ir. v a r i o u s t r a n s l a - focus on religion from v a r i o u s bryo a s development p r o c e e d s . " f e n s e s . Utah itself has a c r i m e inspired. One of these is the g r a n t s was visited by the r e s u r - tions. points of view. T h u s , while late in its develop- r a t e well belowthe national a v e r - Book of Mormon, published in r e c t e d C h r i s t and b e c a m e C h r i s - The Wall Street Journal i r The departmental philosophy age. Could the Mormon Church 1830 by J o s e p h Smith, the found- tians. New York said recently the Eng- lish version of the encyclical s t a t e s that "Catechetical p u r - Quaker sects slowly ment the f e t u s is obviously a living human individual, in i t s be the d e t e r m i n g f a c t o r ? e r of the Mormon faith. T h e Indian t r i b e s a r o s e f r o m the other group, who, becoming . shows " a hostility to capital- pose may very well be the p r i n - e a r l i e s t stage it contains only T h e Mormon religion, that of T h e y hold that Mormonism i s apostate, eventually wiped out ism in general, which does, not cipal justification for the t e a c h - the potential for such develop- Michigan's Gov. George Romney, the t r u e C h r i s t i a n religion, Smith appear in the Latin." ing of religion in a church c o l - Church s o u r c e s in the United lege; obviously such a m o t i v a - adopting ministers ment, Hayes said. is actually a society a s well a s having been chosen by God to a religion. I t s m e m b e r s a r e r e - be the P r o p h e t of a renewed the C h r i s t i a n s in a g r e a t battle about 440 A.D. in the e a s t e r n "Although the beginning and p a r t of North A m e r i c a . A p r o p h - States noted, however, that the tion is out of place in a state Quaker meetings, traditionally dependent for their content on silent quired to devote not only 10 p e r church. ending s t a t e s a r e quite r e c o g - cent of t h e i r incomes but also a et named Mormon and his son, encyclical was f i r s t composed in u n i v e r s i t y . " meditation and the spontaneous c o m m e n t s of anyone feeling moved to Smith said the Book of M o r - nizably d i f f e r e n t , the t r a n s i t i o n good deal of t i m e to the church mon was a translation of h i e r o - Moroni, allegedly p r e s e r v e d the F r e n c h and later translated Into A p r o f e s s o r of religion atMSU speak, a r e turning increasingly today to trained p a s t o r s f o r l e a d e r - o c c u r s in an individual c o n t i n - In such p r o j e c t s a s visiting the glyphics on ancient plates which ancient r e c o r d s . the Church's official Latin. is bound to teach "objectively ship. uously, so that no one point In sick and converting o t h e r s . had been given to him t e m p o - T h e infamous persecution of The Jesuit weekly America- and descriptively." "Objec- And the unpredictable silences, out of which might e m e r g e much time can be designated a s the pointed out that because the Latin t i v e l y " means " a n absence o f . Mormons believe in the l i t e r a l r a r i l y by an angel named Moroni. the M o r m o n s began with the m u r - d i s c o u r s e o r hardly any, of v a r i a b l e worth, a r e giving way in many l i n e that s e p a r a t e s t h e two text lacks contemporary t e r m s , p o l e m i c s or of appeals to e m o - der of Smith and his b r o t h e r c a s e s to planned p e r i o d s of Bible r e a d i n g s , p r a y e r s , hymns and s t a t e s , " he said. it does not cle-arly convey the tion r a t h e r than to reason. Facts H y r a m in 1844 by a m o b i n C a r t h - sometimes sermons. meanings °fflli) t ' French o r i g i - must not be distorted o r s u p - age, 111. Two years later, " S o m e Q u a k e r s a r e moving in a direction of f o r m s and m i n i s t r y nal. p r e s s e d o r logic chopped to s e r v e that a r e not much distinguished f r o m some Baptist and Methodist "Implantation in the wall of the u t e r u s , development of the Animal laboratory provides Brigham Young led many of his followers on a long, hard journey The J o u r n a l ' s analysis noted the needs of the a r g u m e n t . " c h u r c h e s , " said D r . Wilmer A. Cooper, d e a n o f t h e G r a d u a t e School placenta, m o v e m e n t o r q u i c k - west. of Religion of E a r l h a m College, Richmond, Ind. that tb.e F r e n c h version was s i m - ilar to the English. That is why the department does not engage in or support But i t ' s a c o n t r o v e r s i a l trend in s o m e q u a r t e r s . "A good many ening and birth a r e a l l important points, but n o n e r e p r e s e n t s a research, teaching facilities Within a short t i m e Salt Lake City was flourishing. In 1890 Latin is the Church's univer- religious a c t i v i t i e s on c a m p u s , Q u a k e r s r e b e l at it, objecting that w e ' r e becoming just like the r e s t point in development where t h e The board of t r u s t e e s e s t a b - uate students who will be using polygamy was outlawed—though sal language. Although documents nor does It r e g a r d itself r e s p o n - of the c h u r c h e s , " he added. " T h e y still feel that so f a r a s the local biological f o r m and function of lished T h u r s d a y a Center f o r a n i m a l s In t h e i r r e s e a r c h . it i s said that some h e r e t i c a l usually a r e written or thought sible f o r student moral conduct. congregation i s concerned, they want a ' d o - i t - y o u r s e l f ' kind of the human individual a r e s u d - L a b o r a t o r y Animal R e s o u r c e s The College of V e t e r i n a r y s e c t s still p r a c t i c e it. out f i r s t in a vernacular tongue, program." |L denly a d d e d , " he said. designed to give the University Its one a f f i r m a t i o n is that r e l i - Medicine will a d m i n i s t e r the the. official, versions of record N e v e r t h e l e s s , in a C h r i s t i a n movement which in i t s o r i g i n s a model p r o g r a m f o r animal r e - C e n t e r . P o l i c i e s will be d e t e r - T h e m a j o r c o n t r o v e r s y within a r e always done in that language. gion is important - "not only In- went all the way In rejecting c l e r g y - d o m l b t e d religion by complete- s e a r c h and teaching. "In fact, it a p p e a r s that such mined by a board consisting of the church today c o n c e r n s the Relatively few in the Vatican disputably a field of knowledge," ly abolishing the role, there i s a growing recognition of the need The board a l s o accepted a N a - a point does not e x i s t , " he said. Hoag, the d i r e c t o r of the In- status of N e g r o e s , which i s b a s e d know it p e r f e c t l y , and shades but also " a n Integral part of cul- for specially trained m i n i s t e r s . tional Institutes of Health g r a n t Hence, though biology may help, stitute of Biology and Medicine on an i n t e r p r e t a t i o n of the Book of meaning a r e often changed. t u r e . " And E a r l h a m ' s graduate school, founded six y e a r s ago, is turning which will exceed $1 million f o r theologians may have to pick a and d e a n s of the Colleges of of Mormon which b a r s them f r o m out men with divinity d e g r e e s to fill that need-^the f i r s t Quaker a f i v e - y e a r period to aid the First Church of University Methodist institution in the 300-year h i s t o r y of the m o v e m e n t to do so. point a t which the e m b r y o is e n - Agriculture and Natural R e - becoming p r i e s t s , although they program. s o u r c e s , Human Medicine, N a t - may be church m e m b e r s . (White dowed with the right of existence, Christ, Scientist ' Church E A T T LANSING Haves said. W a r r e n G. Hoag, f o r m s r a s s t . u r a l Science and Veterinary m a l e s a r e eligible f o r the p r i e s t - CHURCH OF He e m p h a s i z e d that he is not d i r e c t o r f o r r e s e a r c h and p r o - Medicine. hood at age 12.) 709 E. Grand River 1120 S. H a r r i s o n Rd. peoples Church THE NAZARENE duction at the Jackson L a b o r a - F a s t Lansing Worship tory at Bar H a r b o u r , M a i n e , has East Lansing Recently a group of women Sunday Service 11 a . m . 149 Highland Ave.,East Lansing LUTHERAN been appointed p r o g r a m h e a d . He p r o t e s t e d t h i s d i s c r i m i n a t i o n by 8:30 - 9:30 - 11:00 Interdenominational Sunday School 10:00 a . m . is noted p r o f e s s i o n a l l y f o r his Student parish picketing in f r o n t of Mormon Sermon Hearing Voices? Morning Worship 11:00 a . m . WORSHIP r e s e a r c h in microbiology and Church h e a d q u a r t e r s i n S a l t L a k e College Fellowship Hour "Soul and Body" Rev. Pohl preaching 6:00 p . m . M a r t i n Luther Chapel epidemiology and o t h e r a r e a s related to the c a r e and production to hear Kavanagh City. T h e question i s still c r u - 200 W. Grand River cial, especially f o r those who, Evening Service ; 7:00 p . m . L u t h e r a n Student C e n t e r of laboratory a n i m a l s . State S u p r e m e Court J u s t i c e at Michigan like Gov. Romney, must r e c o n - SUNDAY SCHOOL Ministers " O n e Hour of Sermon and T h o m a s Kavanagh will be the 444 Abbott Rd. The c e n t e r ' s r e s e a r c h will f o - cile their p e r s o n a l l i b e r a l i s m Song" m a j o r s p e a k e r at St. J o h n ' s S t u - 11:00 a . m . - r e g u l a r Rev. Alden B. B u r n s SUNDAY SERVICES Two Blocks North of Union cus on gaining basic information with the official views of t h e i r For I ransportation Phone dent P a r i s h ' s last group activity (9:30&11-Unlversity Students) 9:30 and 11:00 about the s p e c i e s traditionally church. Rev. Keith U Pohl 332-1446, Rev. G l e n n A. 9:30 - Holy E u c h a r i s t for this t e r m . WEDNESDAY used for l a b o r a t o r y r e s e a r c h , and Chaffee, P a s t o r 11:00 - Morning Worship also on p r o m i s i n g new s p e c i e s . The p r o g r a m , which will c e n t e r Today t h e r e a r e m o r e than S:00 p.m.-Evening Meeting " C o n s i d e r the L i l i e s " N u r s e r y During Services T h e c e n t e r will also e s t a b l i s h on the r o l e of the Christian l a y - 2,500,000 M o r m o n s throughout 9:30—Children's Sunday Rev. C a r l S t a s e r Kimberly Downs p r o g r a m s f o r training animal man In the C h u r c h , will be held the world, though in the U.S. CHURCH SCHOOL School Hour F r e e Public Reading Room preaching Church of Christ c a r e t a k e r s and f o r teaching g r a d - at 7 p . m . Tuesday at the S t u - they a r e still concentrated mainly 1007 Kimberly Drive, Lansing dent C e n t e r , 327 M.A.C Ave. in Utah, Arizona, Idaho and South- 134 West Grand River 9:30 to 10:30 a . m . - P r o g r a m nursery e r n C a l i f o r n i a . T h e 90,000 o r see sign at 2729 E . Grand 332-2559 Two s t u d e n t s , Susan C o m e r f o r d , OPEN for all ages River UNIVERSITY Lansing j u n i o r , and Andrew K. m o r e who a r e converted annually Weekdays—9-5 p . m . CHURCH SCHOOL IV 9-7130 m o r e than make up f o r those who Mon., Tues., T h u r s . , F r i . 11:00 a . m . - Children 2 -11 y r s SUNDAY SERVICES BAPTIST CHURCH Melnyk, Dixon, 111.,graduate s t u - dent, will respond to Kavanagh's find the going too rough and drop Evenings 7 p . m . - 9 p.m. 9:30 - 11:00 Morning Worship 11:00 a . m . ' Ameri can Baptist) out. remarks. j All a r e welcome to »tt:nd F r e e bus transportation 15 to Bible Study i0:00 a.m. Crib through 12th G r a d e Evening Worship 6:00 p . m . G e r a r d G. Phillips, P a s t o r F r . J e r r y Cavanaugh, a J e s u i t , Church Services ard visit and 30 minutes b e f o r e each s e r - university T h e M o r m o n s a r e governed by Wednesday evening Bible ED 2-1888 will d e l i v e r a speech entitled use the reading r o o m . vice around the c a m p u s . Worship 10:00 a . m . lutheran church their 93-year-old president, R e f r e s h m e n t p e r i o d in Church Study 7:30 p . m . " O n the Spiritual Development alc-cla David O. McKay, who will s e r v e p a r l o r following w o r s h i p s e r - F o r T r a n s p o r t a t i o n Call Church School HilO a.m. and Growth of the Layman In the F E 9-8190 until his death. He is a s s i s t e d vices N u r s e r y Provided— Church." ED 2-1960 or ED 2-2434 by four c o u n s e l o r s and 12 a p o s - CÛSTMMSTCR PRCSBYTCRIÜH CHUNCH 10:00-12:00 a . m . t l e s . Each of the a l m o s t 6,000 1315 Abboft Rd. UNITY OF COST at A m e r i c a n Legion C e n t e r congregations h a s i t s own bishop ¿ansino. micnican University Edgewood United On Valley C t . off 8:15, 9:15, 10:30, 11:30 GREATER LANSING and two c o u n s e l o r s . Church W. Grand River, E a s t Lansing E a s t Lansing Unity C e n t e r ^>1 NDAY SCHEDULE Seventh-Day 469.North Hagadorn Roati 425 W. Grand River Worship Services— —9:00 and 11:00 a . m . Welcome Students Church School, C r l b o e r y - T h l r d G r a d e --9:00 and 11:00 a . m . Adventist Church (5 b l o c k s n o r t h of G r a r i c River) THE CHURCH OF First Christian . c. 332-1932 Q . s 9:30 a . m . & T e m p o r a r i l y Meeting at W o r s h i p Services c Sunday Service - n a.m. Christ Methodist Church School, Fourth Grade-Adults, S t u d e n t s ~ 10:00 a.m: JESUS CHRIST O F Reformed Church " T r a n s f o r m a t i o n to J o y " University Lutheran Church 9:30 a . m . and 11:00 a . m . L A T T E R - D A Y SAINTS Mon. evening s e r v i c e - 7 : 3 0 p . m . Church Division and Ann Sts. May 21 Sermon by 240 M a r s h a l l St., Lansing For transportation phone 332 - 6271 or 332-8901 Wednesday C l a s s - 7:30 p . m . 517 W. Jolly Rd., Lansing SATURDAY SERVICES "Mormons" R e v . Hofman By 6:00 p.m. Saturday D r . T r u m a n A. Morrison Daily Meditation — 12 noon Wilson M. Tennant, Minister Rev. R. L. Moreland - MLN'ISTERS - Rev. H. G. Beach 431 E. Saginaw preaching 9:30 a . m . Sabbath School Church School Consultation by Appointment Meinte S c h u u r m a n s , West of Abbott Rd. Morning Service 9:00 and 11:15 11:00 a . m . Worship S e r v i c e 9:30 a . m . and 11:00 a . m . C r i b M i n i s t e r : Richard D. Billings Associate Minister SUNDAY SERVICES "Living S a c r i f i c i a l l y " (Church of the Daily Word) Worship S e r v i c e s 9:30-11 a . m . r o o m through junior high P r i e s t h o o d Meeting 9:00 a . m . Saturday, May 20 University C l a s s 10:15 " C a l l e d of G o d " High School Group at 11 a . m . SOUTH BAPTIST CHURCH 1518 S. Washintgon Lansing Dr. H.K. LaRondelle Guest Speaker Edgewood Bus Stops 10:40 a . m . - Conrad Hall Sunday School F a s t Meeting T u e s d a y Evening 10:30 a . m . Noon T h e Authority of the Bible Evening Service ? p . m . St. Johns Student Parish College Age Fellowship Sunday, 6:30 p . m . 10:45 a . m . - Parking Area " T h e D e s i r e to be A c c e p t e d " 327 M.A.C. Phone ED 7-9778 Youth Meeting 7:30 p . m . "A Man Faces Need" For Transportation or Between McDonel and Holmes C a m p u s Student C e n t e r Sunday M a s s e s Central Methodist Information Call 882-5007 10:50 a . m . - Hubbard for transportation, 217 Bogue St. Apt. 1 7:15 - 8:30 - 9:45 - 11:00 A c r o s s F r o m the Capitol "What Needs Has God Promised to Each Sun. listen to " T h e Voice Other Stops Added by Request c^ll 332-8465 o r 355-8180 12:15 - 4:45, & 6:00 p . m . WORSHIPS SERVICES Phone 351-6360 Meet in Life?" o f P r o p h e c y , " 9:30 a . m . , T h o s e In Need of When necessary Sunday University Student Group (9:45 and 11:15) WJIM 1240 and " F a i t h F o r A W a r m Welcome Extended T r a n s p o r t a t i o n call — M a s s e s will be doubled up 5:30 p . m . supper and p r o g r a m Does God Have A Poverty Program?' T o d a y , " Channel 6 S u n . a f t e r - T r a n s p o r t a t i o n , phone 332-2906 to All V i s i t o r s 8821425 485-3650 with m a s s e s in the chapel and (WJIM B r o a d c a s t 10:15 a . m . ) noon, Channel 2 at 10:30 a . m . downstairs lounge. "When F e a r Begins to Desmond Bell, Baritone Weekday M a s s e s Control" SUNDAY 7:00 P.M. TRINITY CHURCH EPISCOPAL SERVICES AT MSU 7:00 - 8:00 - 12:30 - 4:30 Howard A . Lyman preaching M a s s e s at Alumni Chapel 120 Spartan Ave. Interdenominational 9:45 A.M. 8:30 P.M. ALUMNI CHAPEL Monday - F r i d a y 4:15 C rib Nursery COLLEGE BIBLE CLASS YOUTH FELLOWSHIP SUNDAY WORSHIP SERVICES Saturday M a s s e s (Auditorium Drive, E a s t of K r e s g e Art Center) 8:00 - 9:15 - 11:45 So B r i n g T h e Baby D r . T e d Ward, T e a c h e r T h r e e C o u r s e s of Study University C l a s s e s MSU Learning Systems 9:45 Refreshments 9:30 a . m . Holy Communion and Sermon Institute 8:30 and Morning Worship 5:15 p . m . Holy Communion and Sermon 11:00 "A Compelling Motive" UNIVERSITY REFORMED CHURCH All Saints Parish Mr. Tom Stark,pastor 351-7164 11:00 A.M. " T u r n On T h e Light" 7.-00 Evening Worsftip 800 Abbott Rd. T r i n i t y ' s Annual May Musical "Why Go to Church" 8:00 a . m . Holy Communion Festival 8:15 p . m . 9:30 a . m . Morning P r a y e r and Sermon Trinity Collegiate Fellowship 11:15 a . m . Holy Communion and Sermon I FREE BUS SERVICE Morning and Evening 6:30 p . m . Canterbury 11:00 a M ALUMNI MEMORIAL CHAPEL PAS 1 ORS: E. Eugene Williams David L . Erb, Norman R. P i e r s m a 7:00 P M UNION • R O O M 35 CALL 482-0754 FOR INFORMATION FREE BUS SERVICE- See schedule in your d o r m . Michigan State News, E a s t L a n s i n g , Michigan SPORTS Friday, May 19, 19 Board approves faculty appointments, leaves Michigan S t a t e ' s Board of T r u s t e e s professor; J a m e s P. Levine, assistant University of Michigan; Carlos G. del guages; Walter H. Hodgson, p r o f e s s o r , tions. June 1, 1967 (1925); Blanche R. ment, June 30; Marcla Kay Hern** >•., music; Gomer LI. Jones, p r o f e s s o r , Hesselman, group leader, laundry, J a n . 1, Instructor, home management and child gave approval Thursday to 49 appoint- p r o f e s s o r ; P a u l Marantz, assistant p r o - Prado, associate p r o f e s s o r , romance lan- 1968 (1929); Sadie M. Carthell, house- development; Charles Hlrschfeld, p r o - music; George A. Hough III, assistant ments; 22 leaves of absence; 28 t r a n s - f e s s o r ; and Ellen Mickiewicz, assistant guages, Sept. 1, 1967 to Aug. 31, 1968, k e e p e r , Landon Hall, July 1, 1967 (1951); f e s s o r , humanities and Justin Morrill p r o f e s s o r , journalism; Harold S.Johnson, f e r s , assignments and other chahges; 4 professor. to study In Spain; John F.Muth, p r o f e s s o r , L a u r a Decker, clerk, continuing educa- College; V.G. Krishna, assistant p r o - assistant p r o f e s s o r , political science and r e t i r e m e n t s and 39 resignations and t e r - Other appointments (effective Sept. 1, management, Sept. 1 to Dec. 31, to study Milton B. Powell, assistant p r o f e s s o r ; tion, July 1, 1967 (1952). f e s s o r , biophysics, chemistry; Stephen minations. unless otherwise noted) were: Andrew at Indiana University; James R. Brandon, Henry Silverman, assistant p r o f e s s o r ; and A. Monti, assistant p r o f e s s o r , chemistry; Board action included the appointment M. Barclay, assistant professor, psychol- associate p r o f e s s o r , speech, Sept. 1, 1967 Robert G.Wright, instructor, all in A m e r i - Peter Grosse, assistant p r o f e s s o r , m a t h - ogy; Hiram E. Fitzgerald, assistant p r o - to April 30, 1968, to complete work in Of George S. Mclntyre as the director of MSU's Cooperative Extension Service f e s s o r , psychology; Thomas Ei Borton, Japan; Joseph Spielberg, assistant p r o - can Thought and Language. Resignations ematlcs; Norman W. Johnson, assistant Also given dual assignment was Donald p r o f e s s o r , mathematics; J e w e l M.Mon- and assistant dean of agriculture and assistant p r o f e s s o r , urban planning and f e s s o r , anthropology, Sept. 1 to Dec. 31, Resignations and terminations for the r o e , instructor, nursing» Sept. 14; P e t e r J . Freeman, Instructor, to teacher edu- Natural Resources, effective May 18. M c - landscape architecture; Macel D. Ezell, to teach In Costa Rica; Marc J . Swartz, following w e r e approved (effective Aug. C . C. Wang,assistant p r o f e s s o r , statistics cation and evaluation s e r v i c e s , effective lntyre has been acting director since instructor, American Thought and L a n - associate p r o f e s s o r , anthropology, A f r i - 31, 1967, unless otherwise noted): John July 1. and probability; John E . Hunter, assistant July. guage; P. Paul Holsinger, assistant p r o - can Studies Center, Sept. 1,1967 to Aug. 31, H. Stanley, 4-H- youth agent, Monroe Changes approved Included: r e i n s t a t e - p r o f e s s o r , psychology; D o n a l d A. In other appointive action, the Board f e s s o r , American Thought and Language; 1968, to study and teach at Cornell Uni- County, June 15; Richard L Townsend, ment of George H. Axinn a s assistant Krueckeberg, assistant p r o f e s s o r , urban named Warren G. Hoag director of the Philip A. Korth, instructor, American versity; Janet L . Merrill, assistant p r o - agricultural a g e n t , St. C l a i r County, dean, International P r o g r a m s , effective planning and landscape architecture; Sally Center for Laboratory Animal Resources, Thought and Language; Nicholas F. R a y - f e s s o r , sociology, Sept. 1 to Dec. 31, April 30; Avrom Fleishman, assistant Aug. 16. Axinn has been assigned to the M. Miller, assistant professor, American ind Jack M. Bain, professor and Dean der, assistant professor, evaluation s e r v - to complete doctorate at Yale. p r o f e s s o r , English; Stuard W. Bruchey, Nigeria P r o g r a m since June 22, 1965; Thought and Language; Eleanor S. B r u - of Communication A r t s , effective July 1. ices; Brian Heard, visiting p r o f e s s o r , The board also approved a two-year p r o f e s s o r , history; Madeleine B. T h e r - reassignment of Robert J . Deans, a s - chey, instructor, humanities; David E. Bain is now p r o f e s s o r of Speech, assistant pathology, June 11-25; Lawrence T . Alex- leave for Ralph H. Smuckler, associate rien, assistant p r o f e s s o r , romance lan- sociate p r o f e s s o r , animal husbandry, to K i d d , associate p r o f e s s o r , natural dean of Communication Arts and Director ander, p r o f e s s o r and assistant director, dean, International P r o g r a m s , and p r o - guages; Michael E. Kaelke, Instructor, the Nigeria P r o g r a m , through Aug. 31, sciences; Deanna Pearson, assistant p r o - of the International Communication In- Learning Services, July 1; Nancy J . Burich, f e s s o r , political science, f r o m Aug. 1, counseling, personnel services, and ed- 1967. Deans has been In Nigeria since f e s s o r , natural science; Fritz L . H e r r m a n , stitute. librarian, Library, Sept. 15; Heather S. 1967 to July 31, 1969, to work for the ucational psychology; Douglas M. Gil- July 1, 1964; designation of Louis A. librarian, L i b r a r y , June 30; Jean N. H a r - Other appointments included: Keith L. Miller, librarian, Library, Sept. 15; and Ford Foundation in Pakistan. m o r e , assistant p r o f e s s o r , elementary Doyle, p r o f e s s o r and associate d i r e c t o r , vey, librarian, L i b r a r y , July 31; Carol A. Lamkin, 4-H - youth agent in Emmet, Brian Sanders, bibliographer, L i b r a r y , and special education; Horton C. South- continuing education, as chief-of-party S t e c h o w , librarian, Library, July 26; Charlevoix and Cheboygan Counties, June July 1. worth, associate p r o f e s s o r , elementary and senior adviser to the Nigeria P r o g r a m , 24; Patricia J . Johnson, 4-H - youth Transfers f r o m July 1, 1967 to Aug. 14, 1968. Doyle and special education; Frank N. M a r z o c - Marvin R. Cain, curator. Museum, and associate p r o f e s s o r , history; Leslie C. agent, Lenawee County, July 1; C h a r l e s Sabbatical leaves T r a n s f e r s Included: Frank J . Molinare, has been In Nigeria since Aug. 16. 1966. co, p r o f e s s o r and director psychology Drew, curator of exhibits, Museum, and V. Peterson, 4-H - youth agent, Mason, natural r e s o u r c e s agent, Dickinson and human learning r e s e a r c h institute, Sabbatical leaves for the followlngwere Retirements w e r e approved for (first a s s i s t a n t professor, entomology a n d Lake and Manistee Counties, J u l y 1; County, to assistant field operations d i r e c - July 31; Robert J . Marsh, instructor, also approved by the board f o r : W. Smith year of MSU employment In parentheses): natural science. Roberta M. Rodgers, home economist, tor, cooperative extension service, J u n e l ; Mott Institute of Community Improve- Grelg, associate p r o f e s s o r , agricultural Gladys F r a n k s , head clerk, Alumni R e l a - Mackinac, Luce and Chippewa Counties, economics, May 7, 1967 to June 7, 1968, William D. Walter, 4-H - youth agent, June 16; Werner G. Bergen, assistant f o r r e s e a r c h and consulting in Argentina Lenawee County, to Lenawee, Monroe and professor, animal husbandry, Sept. 15; and at Stanford; Darian Markarian, a s - Washtenaw Counties, July 1; Gall L . Imlg, William M. Breene, assistant p r o f e s s o r , sociate p r o f e s s o r , horticulture, Aug. 1, home economist, from Chippewa, Luce and food science, May 15. Also appointed were (effective Sept. 1 unless otherwise noted): Paul W. Deussen, 1967 to April 30, 1968, for study in Taiwan; Kwan-wal So, associate p r o f e s s o r , his- tory, Sept. 1, 1967 to Aug. 31, 1968, for Mackinac Counties to Manistee, Lake and Mason Counties, June 12. The Board assigned: LaurenG.Woodby, V' accepts $2 million in giftsgrants instructor, a r t ; William P. Root, a s s i s t - study at the University of Chicago and p r o f e s s o r , to mathematics, Sept. 1; John Gifts and grants totaling Jl,940,871.72 A Center for Laboratory Anlamal R e - tinued r e s e a r c h of canine leukemia studies ant p r o f e s s o r , English; Joseph H. Sum- at home; Lazlo Borbas, p r o f e s s o r , Ro- N. Collins, instructor, to political s c i - were accepted Thursday by Michigan State sources will be established at MSU under to determine the relationship between m e r s , professor, E n g l i s h ; DenisMic- mance languages, April 1, 1968 to June30, ence, Sept. 1; J a m e s L . Page, associate University's Board of T r u s t e e s . a $175,977 grant from the U.S. Public the disease in dogs and m e n . Dr. Gabel kiewicz, assistant professor, German and 1968, for study and travel in France; p r o f e s s o r , teacher education, Instruction- Included was a previously announced Health Service. Other grants over the H. Conner, director of leukemia r e s e a r c h Russian; H e r b e r t Heaton, visiting p r o - William M. Seaman, p r o f e s s o r , romance al Media Center, to the project with the gift of a plant conservatory building and next five y e a r s a r e expected to bring the in the College of Veterinary Medicine, f e s s o r , history, J a n . 1, 1968, to March languages, Sept. I, 1967 to Aug. 31, 1968, Association of American Schools in the auxiliary buildings to house collections of full amount for the Center up to $1 m i l - will administer the grant. 31, 1968; Arnold P e r r i s , assistant p r o - study in Egypt; George W. F e r n s , a s - Republic of Mexico, f r o m April 28 to living tropical and desert plants at Hidden lion. D r . William H. Knisely, d i r e c t o r of The UJS. Public Health Service granted fessor, music; Angelo A. B o r r a s , i n s t r u c - sociate p r o f e s s o r , secondary education May 21, 1967; Victor E. Smith, p r o f e s s o r , Lake Gardens, about 25 miles southeast the Institute of Biology and Medicine, $73,809 f o r support of general r e s e a r c h tor, romance languages; Eugene F. Gray, and curriculum, Sept. 1 to Dec. 31, study economics, to economics and the Con- of Jackson. will administer the grant. in biomedical sciences. Dr. Knisely will instructor, romance languages; R. Julia at home; Ronald G. Rex, associate p r o - sortium for the Study of Nigerian Rural T h e buildings, which will cost an e s t l - The Center will be developed for the also administer this grant. Uceda, p r o f e s s o r , romance languages; f e s s o r , teacher education and secondary Development, f r o m Sept. 16,1967 to Aug. 31; mited $350,000, a r e a gift f r o m Ray H e r - study and c a r e of animals used for r e - Fred B. Bauries, assistant p r o f e s s o r , education, Jan. 1, 1968 to June 30, 1968, 1968; F o r r e s t L . Erlandson, p r o f e s s o r , search and teaching. Geography study rlc, President of Tecumseh Products Co. advertising; Donald T r e a t , associate p r o - study and travel in USA; Angus J . Howltt, Counseling Center, to theRyukyus P r o j e c t and M r s . Her rick. Henry C. Dykema, director of financial fessor, speech; John D. Lewis, associate p r o f e s s o r , entomology, Sept. 1, 1967 to a s chief-of-party, f r o m June 10, 1967 aid, will administer a $127,622 grant D r . Paul C . Morrison, p r o f e s s o r of The gift was announced last May shortly geography, will conduct a National De- professor, television and radio. Aug. 31, 1968, study and travel in New to July 15, 1969; Lincoln C. Pettit, a s - for a student work-study program that Is a f t e r a $250,000 reception center that fense Education Act Institute for the Other appointees included (Sept. 1 u n - Zealand and the F a r East; M. Ray Denny, sociate p r o f e s s o r , natural science, to the being funded by the U.S. Dept. of Health, Mr. and M r s . Herrick contributed was study of geography for 35 elementary and l e s s otherwise noted): Daniel J . S o r r e l l s , p r o f e s s o r , psychology, Jan. 1, 1968 to Nigeria p r o g r a m , f r o m July 15, 1967 to Education and Welfare. This is an on- dedicated at Hidden Lake G a r d e n s . junior high school teachers u n d e r a visiting p r o f e s s o r , counseling, personnel June 30, 1968, travel and writing In Aug. 31, 1969; and Clayton Wells, a s s i s t - going program that provides payment The U.S. Dept. of Health, Education $56,566 grant from the United States services and educational psychology, Sept. Scandinavia and Greece; J a m e s L . Goat- ant p r o f e s s o r , continuing education, to the for work which students p e r f o r m to help and Welfare granted $185,000 to con- Office of Education. The Institute will 1 to May 31, 1968; Verna Hildebrand, ley, associate p r o f e s s o r , natural science, Nigeria p r o g r a m f r o m June 15, 1967 to finance their education. The student jobs duct an educational program in i n s t r u c - be conducted f r o m June 19 through Aug. assistant p r o f e s s o r , home management Jan. 1, 1968 to June 30, 1968, study in J a n . 15, 1969. a r e mainly on the MSU campus. USA; F . Craig Johnson, associate p r o - tional media during the 1967-68 academic 11. and child development; Dale L. Clayton, Dual assignments to J a m e s Madison year. f e s s o r , speech, and assistant director, New teaching method A Social Science Teaching Institute Instructor, physiology, July 1; Thomas College, effective Sept. 1, were approved Institutional Research and Education De- will be conducted June 19 through Aug. R. S t o e c k l e y , assistant p r o f e s s o r, Animal resources center The School of Nursing at MSU will be- velopment P r o g r a m , June 1 to Aug. 31, by the board f o r : Lewis K. Zerby, p r o - 12 with the aid of a second grant f o r astronomy; Alex C. Bacopoulos, assistant gin development of a new approach to study In USA. f e s s o r , philosophy, to Aug. 31, 1970; John Twenty MSU faculty m e m b e r s and 20 $55,622 f r o m the United States Office professor, mathematics; Richard 0 . Hill, teaching nursing. The program is being J . Appel, associate p r o f e s s o r , American doctoral students from various p a r t s of of Education. The Institute, which will J r . , assistant p r o f e s s o r , mathematics; supported by a $94,847 grant from the Other leaves were approved by the board Thought and Language, to Aug. 31, 1968; center on American political Institutions, C h a r l e s L. Seebeck III, assistant p r o - the nation a r e scheduled to attend the UJS. Public Health'Service. Program texts, f o r ; Emma J . Relnbold, home economist, Robert E. M o r s b e r g e r , associate p r o f e s - is f o r 35 junior and senior high school fessor, mathematics; Richard J . McLeod, p r o g r a m . The emphasis will be on the f i l m s , slides, sound tapes, and other Emmet, Cheboygan and Charlevoix Coun- s o r , American Thought and Language, to t e a c h e r s . It will be conducted by D r . assistant p r o f e s s o r , science and math- application of i n s t r u c t i o n a l media in audiovisual aide that can be used in the ties, May 19 to June 30; Noel P . R a l - Aug. 31, 1968; and Mary E. Tomkins, Cleo Cherryholmes, a s s i s t a n t pro- ematics Teaching Center. u n d e r g r a d u a t e education. Dr. Horace classroom and in independent study will ston, p r o f e s s o r , agriculture and natural assistant p r o f e s s o r , American Thought f e s s o r of political science. H a r t s e l l , associate director of the In- be developed. Appointed to political science, effective r e s o u r c e s , July 1, 1967 to June 30, 1968, and Language, to Aug. 31, 1968. The Board also accepted scholarship structional Media Center, will administer A grant of $95,295 from the National Sept. 1, were: Murray L. Adelman, a s - to work with the Federal Extension Serv- grants totaling $35,566.59. Dual assignments to Justin Morrill Col- the g r a n t . Cancer Institute will be used for con- sistant p r o f e s s o r ; Paul R. Abramson, ice; Howard F. McColly, p r o f e s s o r , a g r i - lege, effective Sept. 1,1967 to Aug. 31,1968, assistant p r o f e s s o r ; Paul Conn, a s s i s t - cultural engineering, Aug. 1 to Nov. 30, w e r e approved by the board f o r : Thomas ant p r o f e s s o r ; Bryan Downes, assistant to work with Asian study group; Gerald p r o f e s s o r ; Ada Finifiter, assistant p r o - J. Massey, associate p r o f e s s o r , philos- H. Falk, Instructor, German and Russian; Trustees OK Bain K B S S T W S E f e s s o r ; Timothy M. Hennessey, assistant Juan A. Calvo, Instructor, romance lan- ophy, Sept. 1 to Dec. 31, to teach at the as Co mm Arts dean The Board of T r u s t e e s T h u r s - Summer recreation programs day approved the appointment of Jack M. Bain, a specialist in international communication, as dean of the College of Communi- E veryday Low Prices EVERYDAY E veryday Low Prices p i anned for Lansing teenagers cation A r t s . Bain succeeds Fred S . S l e b e r t , Extra Large Size who r e t i r e s as dean July 1. F a m i l y Size 18 oz. s i z e Bain is presently the assistant JPL 'Gleem' OUR PRICE By T R I N K A CLINE State N e w s Staff W r i t e r which would begin a r e " a t least indirect r e s u l t s " of last s u m m e r ' s violence on west side Lansing. one for junior high students and one for s e n i o r ' h i g h youth. He said the dances would be rotated among the five Junior dean of the college and d i r e c t o r of t h e International Communi- cation Institute in the Office of ORAL Antiseptic Reg. P r i c e 791 630 'Scope' Lansing's P a r k s and Recreation Dept. high schools. t h e Dean of I n t e r n a t i o n a l has proposed a 25-week talk, dance and Haskell said that the need for c o m - The p r o g r a m s to include volleyball, Programs. MICRINI MOUTHWASH recreation p r o g r a m to Involve facilities L a r g e Size munication more than Just recreation and other games and discussions on two of five Lansing Junior high schools. was brought up repeatedly in discussions week nights would be in addition to the Bain joined the MSU faculty Regular Regular P r i c e Included in the city budget passed Mon- day night by the City Council w e r e funds to expand p r e s e n t parks and recreations last s u m m e r . This will be Incorporated in the p r o g r a m s to be held two nights each week at area Junior high schools. a f t e r school recreation clubs sponsored by parks and r e c r e a t i o n s . Haskell said In 1954. Previously he taught at Purdue University, the U n i - © Price $1.39 'Liquid Prell' $1.09 the proposed coed p r o g r a m s will be for versity of Missouri, and theUni- p r o g r a m s in Lansing. Regular P r i c e junior high, senior hleh and out-of-school verslty of South Dakota. OUR PRICE Theodore Haskell, assistant director The proposed expansion also calls for • t e e n a g e r s . Because of the defeat of the He served a s a s s t . dean of OUR $1.00 of the recreation department, said the bond issue, possibilities for recreation PRICE OUR PRICE Saturday night dances to be held at two the college f r o m 1956-61 and $1.11 890 planned Saturday night dances and two- c e n t e r s In Lansing had to be abandoned. of the Junior high schools each week, again starting in 1966. 800 night weekly recreation and talk projects the FISHER 220-T Smuckler gets Pakistan post STEREO RECEIVER FANTASTIC 2.7 oz. Tube Size Wow! Ralph H. Smuckler, associate Reinstatement to the position counseling, a s of the chief of party R y u k y u s p r o j e c t in O k i - OFFER! 'Head & 13 oz. size dean of International P r o g r a m s and p r o f e s s o r of political s c i - ence, was granted a two-year of a s s t . dean of International Programs was approved for George H. Axinn who will con- nawa. Erlandson will be in Oki- nawa f o r two y e a r s , and he s u c - 'Suave' Shoulders' Crystal Clear ceeds Jack J . S t o c k t o n , p r o f e s s o r leave of absence by the Board of T r u s t e e s Thursday to b e - clude a two-year assignment in Nigeria July 1. in the Dept. of Biology and Public Health, who is returning to MSU. SHAMPOO SHAMPOO Regular P r i c e $1.00 'Suave' come the Ford Foundation r e p - HAIR SPRAY resentative in Pakistan, Axinn was chief of party f o r OUR PRICE leave in August to head all the foundation's assistance g r a m s in Pakistan-. The founda- pro- MSU in Nigeria. This position will be filled by Louis A. Doyle, c u r - rently the d i r e c t o r of continuing SPRING SPECIAL WEEKEND ALL-TRANSISTOR Wide selection Regular P r i c e $1.00 800 For all hair Regular P r i c e 98< tion has contractual a r r a n g e - education at the University of N i - FRI. & SAT. ONLY OUR PRICE BONUS PACK OUR PRICE geria. 55 W A T T S O F M U S I C POWER 690 690 ments t h e r e with MSU, Univer- sity of Chicago, Stanford, Yale, and other leading universities. The board also designated F o r - r e s t L. Erlandson, professor of THE BLUES BREAKERS AM-FM STEREO TUNER 'Modess' OUR PRICE AT CATOLOG PRICE MONO STEREO EVERYTHING YOU NEED ON ONE 28 Regular Napkins for the price of 24 Our P r i c e 720 Home building and BEAUTIFULLY-INTEGRATED SIMPLY ADD TWO SPEAKERS O F YOUR CHASSIS CHOICE HEAR THE FISHER 220-T WHERE YOU Forest Products Lecture ALWAYS GET QUALITY SOUND THROUGH QUALITY EQUIPMENT 11 A.M. Saturday HI Fl BUYS THE DISC SHOP TAPE RECORDING INDUSTRIES 1101 E. GRAND RIVER, E.L. May 20 323 E. GRAND RIVER OPEN MON-FRI 9 A.M.-5.-30 P.M. Room 208 OPEN-MON-FRI 9 AM-9 PM SAT 9 AM-6 PM WED - 9 A.M.-9 P.M. SAT 9 A.M.-5 P.M. OPEN U N T I L 9«00 P . M . WEDNESDAY MEN'S LM. PHONE 351-5380 337-2310 332-0897 ACROSS FROM THE UNION ~ 337-9879 F r i d a y , May 19, 196' Starting Monday • May 22, All Ads Must Be Paid For In Advance Automotive Automotive Scooters & Cycles Employment For Rent For Rent For Rent SUZUKI 80cc. Hillbilly. Excellent LEGAL SECRETARY: P r e v i o u s SUMMER SUBLEASE: F o u r - m a n POOL, AIR-conditioning, two- NEEDED: TWO g i r l s f o r winter VOLKSWAGEN T1962, w r black. with a CORVAIR MONZA 1965, radio, automati , 18,000 m i l e s . One good condition • mechanically. Tn condition. Must s e l l . 332-3289. experience in law office p r e - Colonial House a p a r t m e n t . $55 bedroom. S u m m e r . Reduced t e r m . University T e r r a c e . 355- e a c h . 351-9159. 5-5/23 r a t e . B u r c h a m Woods. 351- 2021, 353-2320. 3-5/22 owner. Beautiful condition. Body could use s o m e w o r k . Morris, Pat. 4 - 5 / 1 9 f e r r e d . 489-5753. 10-5/25 low cos' 4-5/24 $450. 882-0274. Ask for Bill. 955 e l e c t r i c CHILD CARE in my East Side SUMMER SHARE 10x50, two- 5838. 6-5/26 I Cedar V i l l a g e Apartments $1025. 393-0492. YAMAHA 1257 WANT AD CORVAIR 1961, two-Joor cöüpe, VOLVO 1961, (like '48 Ford) 4-5/24 s t a r t i n g . Had spring tuneup. $300 . 351-7424. home. IV 7-3045. 3 - 5 / 1 9 PART TIME clerk typist to work 3-5/23 bedroom t r a i l e r with owner. N e a r c a m p u s . $65 month. 353- SUMMER: FOUR-man luxury a p a r t m e n t . Close to c a m p u s . SUMMER LEASE 5O.OO/MONTH PER MAN automatic, $395. STRATTON Runs p e r f e c t l y . $540. Eton, 332- HONDA 160, 1966, black, e x c e l - mornings and Saturdays. $2.00 8277. 5-5/23 $200. 351-5725. 4-5/19 332-5051 AUTOMOTIVE SPORT CENTER. 1915 East Michigan. IV 4-4411. C 5092. 3-5/23 lent condition. E l e c t r i c s t a r t . p e r hour. STATE MANAGE- HASLETT - TWO bedroom de- NEEDED: ONE man for a p a r t - o r see manager EMPLOYMENT VOLVO s p o r t s t e r , P1800, 1963. 353-2150. 5 - 5 / 1 9 MENT, 444 Michigan Avenue, luxe. Stove and r e f r i g e r a t o r ment s u m m e r . One block f r o m between 3:00-5:00 P . M . for rent CORVETTE 1965 convertible, European equipped. $1850. M a - YAMAHA 1966, 250cc, $475.Call East L a n s i n g . Call 332-8687 for only. R e f e r e n c e s , deposit. M a r - c a m p u s . 351-9267. 5 5'25 In t r a i l e r next to 242 C e d a r f o r SALE r e d , 365 h o r s e power, four appointment. 3-5/19 LUXURIOUS] F o u r - m a n a p a r t - speed, A M - F M . C r a g e r wheels, son 676-2850. 5-5/19 351-4618. 3-5/22 ried couples o r graduate s t u - ¡Also available 12 4-MAN UNITS LOST & FOUND dents only. Call 337-7618. ment for s u m m e r . 351-9399. mlchelin t i r e s . 351-7921. HONDA SUPERHAWK 305^ E x - BEAUTICIAN - S A T U R D A Y S I FOR FALL PERSONAL Auto S ' r v i c * & Ports only. 9 to 5. LORENE BEAUTY 5-5/23 5-5/25 PEANUTS PERSONAL 5-4/19 cellent condition. D r a f t e d . Best GENERATORS AND STARTERS- o f f e r . 353-8377. 3-5/19 SALON, 3406 North E a s t . Phone SUBLET LUXURY a p a r t m e n t . HASLETT - REDUCED r a t e s , REAL ESTATE CORVETTE 1958, f o u r - s p e e d , Burcham Woods f o u r - m a n , s u m m e r sublet, top 6 & 12 volt. F a c t o r y rebuilt, a s 482-3119. 3-5/19 Two o r f o u r . Block c a m p u s . SERVICE 327, hardtop. Good tire's. Clean. SUZUKI 1966, 250cc., X - H u s t l e r , low a s $9.70 exchange, used DELIVERY AND stock room $60. 337-1496. 3 - 5 / 2 3 floor. 351-7668. 5-5/23 TRANSPORTATION 1,900 m i l e s , custom s e a t , hel- 351-9543. 3-5/19 $4.97. Guaranteed factory r e - m e t . Excellent condition. IV 2 - w o r k . 15 to 20 h o u r s p e r week, Eydeal Villa THREE APARTMENTS available TWO GIRLS for s u m m e r t e r m , WANTED DODGE 1959 Coronet. Good d e - built voltage r e g u l a t o r s $2.76 1917. ~ 3-5/19 mornings p r e f e r r e d . BROTH- f o r s u b l e a s e . Two-man a p a r t - W a t e r s Edge a p a r t m e n t . 355- pendable transportation. Good exchange; shock absorbers, » Our pools a r e now being DEADLINE r u b b e r . NI 6-5586. 3-5/19 each $2.99. ABC AUTO PARTS, C.H. 1965, time proven, rebuilt ERS RESTAURANT SUPPLY, readied for Spring. m e n t s , one bedroom. Close to 7133. 4-5/19 FALCON 1961. Transportation 613 E. South S t r e e t . Phone IV 5 - f a c t o r y , bench engine, polished 2326 South C e d a r , Lansing. » Sub l e a s e and short t e r m c a m p u s . Reduced rent. June 15 PX Store Frandor 1 P.M. one c l a s s day b e - 3-5/19 to September 15. 337-7274. Everything in Intramural to work. $100. 337-9556. c a s e s , e t c . Am getting out. IV l e a s e s a r e now available fore publication. 1921. C STUDENT PHOTOGRAPHERS . 5 - 5 / 2 5 Sports: shagballs, fins, arch- 3-5/19 9-0427 . 4-5/22 for Spring & S u m m e r . MASON BODY SHOP. 812 E a s t technicians, with c a m e r a , for PRINCETON ARMS, one bed- ery, diving m a s k s , shuttle- HONDA S-65, 1965, plus Bell • F o r 1, 2, 3, 4 students or Ca: celiati ms 12 noon one FORD 1964 country sedan w a - Kalamazoo Street - Since 1940. s u m m e r , fall, and w i n t e r t e r m s . single working people. room apartment, refrigerator, cocks, s n o r k e l s , tennis balls c i a s s day before publica- gon. Automatic, V-8, excellent Complete auto painting and Helmet. $150. 351-7588. State News Photographic, 301 stove, d i s p o s a l , $115.351-7540. & r a c k e t s , paddleballs & p a d - • Rentals s t a r t at $125. tion« conditio!.. One owner. 694-1601. collision s e r v i c e . American and 3-5/19 Student S e r v i c e s Bldg. See M r . 3-5/19 dles, and many m o r e . PHONE 3-5/22 foreign c a r s . IV 5-0256. C HONDA 1966, 160 S c r a m b l e r . Ex- Johnson. 10-5/26 East Lansing UNIVERSITY VILLA a p a r t m e n t s SUMMER: FURNISHED a p a r t - 355-8255 MODEL A F o r d , 1929. F o u r - M E L ' S ALTO SERVICE: LARGE cellent. Low m i l e a g e . call NURSES: RN and LPN. 7 - 3 , 3-11, available for sub-leasing s u m - ments, one bedroom, $135 p e r door, two engines, V-8 and o r i g - or small, we do them all. 1108 Management Co. m e r t e r m . Make your own deal. month. Two bedroom, $180 p e r J e r r y , 353-6893. 5-5/24 full or p a r t time, f o r two ex- RATES inal engine. Seats redone - s i l - E. Grand R i v e r . 332-3255. C HONDA 160. Excellent condition. tended c a r e f a c i l i t i e s : White 745 B u r c h a m , Apt. 2 Apartment 103, no phone. A p a r t - month. Utilities paid. 351-4168. 1 DAf... SI. 50 v e r l e a t h e r . Good body. New AtclDEN't PROBLEM? SaTl L e s s than 2000 m i l e s . C a l l 3 5 1 - Hills Monticello and Provincial 351-7880 ment 104, 337-7563; 108, 337- 3-5/19 miscellaneous p a r t s . 355-8974. House. L i b e r a ! s a l a r y , benefits MARIGOLD APARTMENTS, 911 1563; 112, 351-9564; 116, 351- ONE GIRL for f o u r - m a n R i v e r s 3 DAYS.. .$3.00 3-5/19 KALAMAZOO STREET BODY 6798. Boris Dimitroff. 3-5/19 and d i f f e r e n t i a l . Opportunity for Marigold Avenue. Four one- 7959; 204, no phone; 308, 351- Edge. S u m m e r , $55. 355-7015 • DAYS. ¿5.00 SHOP. Small dents to l a r g e HONDA 305. 6000 m i l e s . New MUSTANG 1965 fast:.ack, black. advancement. Apply Director of bedroom f u r n i s h e d a p a r t m e n t s . 6783. 2-5/19 or 355-7377. 4-5/22 w r e c k s . American and foreign helmet and bubble, $495. 355- ( b a s e d on 10 w o r d s p e r adj 35,000 m i l e s . Good condition. Nursing, PROVINCIAL HOUSE Available for s u m m e r t e r m . SUMMER SUBLET one bedroom SUBLET LUXURY a i r - c o n d i - c a r s . Guaranteed work. 482- 6002. 3-5/19 Over 10, 15f per word, per day. Can be seen at 117 West Ran- or call 332-0817. 5-5/25 June 15 to September 15. Phone • a p a r t m e n t . Air - conditioned. tioned a p a r t m e n t . Summer. R e - 1286. 2628 E. Kalamazoo. C T h e r e will be a50