House wants budget cut Wednesday MICHIGAN will ignore LBJ tax or WASHINGTON if1*—The House refused Tuesday to order President Johnson to cut his budget but, In effect, threatened to reject his request for a tax boost If Republican on the Appropriations Com¬ mittee and author of the proposed spending curb, said the House vote showed "who wants to cut and who uses parliamentary procedures to deny the House the right UNIVERSITY STATE STATE NEWS he does not. East Lansing, Michigan October 4, 1967 12 pages to cut." The vote was on a parliamentary The dual action came on the House Vol. 60 Number 56 issue. floor and In Its tax-wrltlng Ways and Bow mentioned Republican amendments Means Committee. The House sent to the Senate by voice cutting spending which have already been vote a bill to provide temporary financing, until Oct. 10, for more than a score of accepted by the House and others totaling about $1*5 billion which he said were STIFF PENALTY SET federal agencies which technically went rejected. He said he thinks Johnson "should tell broke last Saturday midnight. Their money us where it (the budget) can be cut. 1 OKs for the fiscal year that started July 1 is Lansing think he should have tolc us months ago." tied up In pending appropriation bills. But first the House turned back, 213 to Bow quoted a 1958 speech by House 205, a Republican drive to add to the Speaker John W. McCormack, D-Mass„ financing measure a mandate to the Presi¬ demanding that then President Dwight D. Eisenhower spell out for Congress where He said the ordinance was "as fair as dent to cut at least $5 billion from the does it apply to duplex units in which part The ordinance passed unanimously, 6-0. he thought spending should be cut. The Lansing City C ouncil pushed through could be drafted at this time". current fiscal year budget. This was a of the ; use is occupied by the owner or Two councilmen were out of town and did the city's first open housing ordinance in East Lansing is among the ten other reversal of last Thursday's 202-182 vote Rep. Martha W, Griffiths, I>Mich., a a member of his family. a surprise move at the meeting Monday Michigan cities/to pass an open housing that recommitted another temporary fi¬ member of the Ways and Means Commit¬ evening. Joel Ferguson, Lansing's first Negro Lansing's Human Relations Commission ordinance recently. Asked how Lansing's nancing bill because It didn't Include a tee, said she will believe there is a councilman, initiated Monday night's Director, Richard Letts, and Lansing Lansing now Joins ten other Michigan ordinance ccwnpared to the one in East spendlng-cut angle. serious interest in cutting the budget when action when he asked that the ordinance Mayor Max Murninghan, both said they cities in prohibiting discrimination in the Lansing, Letts said it was stronger be¬ While the House was engaged In de¬ cuts are proposed in defense spending. sale rental of real estate. The or¬ be w thdrawn from the committee where were pleased with the ordinance but were or cause of punitive provisions. bate over whether the President or Con¬ "There's as much water in that as dinance becomes effective Nov. 1. it had been under study for seven weeks. sorry that one was necessary. Letts said he doubted that many ca ses should take the lead In cutting spend¬ Councilman Delmer R. Smith, chairman gress in anything else in this congress," she Anyone found in violation of the Lansing Letts said that many Lansing residents would ever go through a court. "First ing, the Ways and Means Committee, ordinance is subject to. a maximum $500 of the committee, indicated that he wanted don't want to discriminate in the sale or added, pointing to government purchasing: there would be hearings and efforts made by a 20-5 vote, laid aside consideration "You could buy it billions of dollars fine and/or a maximum 90 days confine¬ community groups to review the ordinance rental of property, but do so because they . at reconciliation." of the tax increase proposal "until such before it was brought to a vote, but cheaper." ment in jail. conceded when most of the council mem¬ feel they might be ostracized bymembers The commission director said that If time as the President and the Congress of their community if they don't. "If you really want to cut the budget," The ordinance does not apply to the anyone should be subject to court action reach an understanding" on budget cut¬ bers wanted it presented in its present she said, "thenlookwhereyou'respending rental of a room or rooms to three or form. "This should help alleviate that because of the ordinance, he or someone ting. the money." less persons in a single dwelling. Nor from his department would first meet Such an "understanding" may be situation," said Letts. Letts also said that there was really with the party and try to work out a reached before the end of this month, settlement. no significant opposition to the ordinance. for the Senate Is expected to extend the life of the House-passed temporary fi¬ nancing bill to Oct. 31 or longer. give the House Appropria¬ VC may gamble forces That would tions Committee more time to work on the promise of Its chairman, Rep. George H. Mahon, D-Tex., to review past and current appropriations with the hope of cutting back money available to the Presi¬ dent for spending. The Administration has claimed it can't to shatter U.S. morale cut spending until all the appropriation By WILLIAM L. RYAN bills become law and the President knows how much money will be available. Only The military situation in the northern News analysis four of 14 regular money measures have part of South Vietnam raises a possibil¬ their morale has become tense." Under become law. ity that theCommunists are pushing stacks such circumstances, Communist regular Just what effect Tuesday's action would of blue chips into a gamble to produce have on the tax bill is debatable. units would "have more and more op¬ a situation not entirely unlike that of "The tax bill is dead; we killed it 1954. portunities to deal the enemy strong blows and destroy his important military today," Rep. Melvin R. Laird of Wis¬ Communist strategists in North Viet¬ consin told Laird, chairman forces." a reporter. nam may be tempted to think in terms of the GOP conference, was a leader in Two weeks ago, Giap made another of 13 years back, when France was in the losing fight to tie the mandatory bud¬ speech. This time he seemed impatient political uproar over the Vietnam con¬ for results. The situation, he said, was get-cutting rider to the emergency money- flict. It took one spectacular strategic "never so favorable as it is now." The bill. defeat at Dien Bien Phu to shatter the "We made our point," he said. war in the South, he said, was now in morale of the French colonial power. "an offensive stage." But Rep. A1 Ullman, D-Ore„ of the In Con Thien this week, reporters Ways and Means Committee said the found a belief among U.S. Marine of¬ odds are that a tax bill will be passed. ficers that Communists in that area had And Chairman Wilbur D. Mills, D-Ark., succeeded in one of their objectives; to said, "The atmosphere Is such that a draw U.S. forces away from the main tax bill would not be approved by the Tickets to ride thrust of the war. That thrust was committee or passed by the House." .But Mills wouldn't what the situa¬ s when then buy winter terr toward destruction of the Viet Cong in¬ frastructure and establishment of road Senator say These fall term bus rider will get special consideration as steady ric tion may be later. in SI4 fall passes will pay another $14 for winter pass. Everyone els« and village securtiy. People who tun Rep. Frank T. Bow of Ohio, ranking passes. considered spec'al riders, ill pay $20. State Ne > Photo by Mike Schonhofen To enormous do it, the Communists wheeled up firepower to the Bien HaiRiver border. From that sanctuary they poured halt of murderous fire on U.S. positions In the THE COST OF RIDING 1st Corps area. Responding, the Americans had to move to test up reinforcements. fair to all' WASHINGTON !.f — The Senate got May calls bus price rise The strategic thinkingofGen.VoNguyen Giap is discernible. Giap, who master¬ conflicting advice on Vietnam Tuesday. minded the French debacle at Dien Bien Sen. Stuart Symington, D-Mo., proposed a Phu, learned his "people's war" atYenan U.S. cease-fire to test Hanoi's war or of rising costs In maintaining the bus For two hours in the morning, 16 Ijusl <■ intentions. Sen. Thomas ll.Kuchel, incurred by the slackening in passe from Mao Tse-tung in the 1930s. The peace By ROBERT A YAFIE service, from an Increase in the drivers' bring students from north to central R-Calif., opposed any unilateral stand- during the fall and spring terms. idea of the sudden, decisive, morale- State News Feature Editor While passengers greatly Increase from hourly wage to the higher cost of buses ;ampus. The fleet is reduced to six for down. and maintenance. shattering victory springs from China's Fairness without socialization, not dis¬ fall to winter terms, the winter figure is the rest of the day. Mao. Symington, an Armed Services commit¬ in half spring term, and drops con¬ The cost of buses has jumped $1,000 A commuter shuttle service, Univer¬ teeman, told the Senate the United States crimination, is the Intention behind the In¬ cut "To wound all the 10 fingers of a man siderably more during the summer. per vehicle. MSU now owns 22 buses. One sity-owned coachettes that carry 30 is not so effective as to chop one of crease In the price of a winter term bus "A socialized bus system, where stu¬ is presently on order and will be delivered passengers, operates from 7:i5a.m.-t>;15 pass, as well as Increases In all other in late November. them off," Mao advised. "To rout 10 dents would assume full financial re¬ the enemy's divisions is not so ef¬ passes, according to University Treasurer of Philip J. May. May said that the Increases sponsibility, would require them to pay Henry Jolman, director of the bus ser¬ "We were required to provide trans¬ fective as to annihilate one of them" vice, said that he plans to lease four more portation for these students because we were Initiated In an attempt to give a good $50 a term," he said. "Twenty dollars When the time comes for the annihi¬ buses for use winter term. found it a physical impossibility to get bus system to people who want to use the for a winter term pass doesn't come close lation blow, emphasis is placed on con¬ to handling expenses for a rider who wants Thirty drivers are employed by the students from their housing in north ventional war and guerrilla warfare is system all year. service, two less than the service's needs. to use the system for three months." campus to the classroom," said Harlan Winter term passes now cost $20. Fall, coordinated with it, wrote Mao. The jump in the winter term price was They work a 40-hour week, with three Mulder, assistant to the vice-president spring and summer full term passes are Mao's instructions were to "lure the designed to protect the steady rider and men off every day, Monday through Fri¬ and chief financial officer. "Regarding $14 each. Half-term passes for summer enemy to penetrate deep," always "choose day. These men work on the weekends, the commuter service, It i1- our aim to will be $7, and commuter passes were provide for him. The steady rider can still conditions favorable to ourselves and when the frequency of service is con¬ keep central campus as free from traffic Increased to $8. pay $14 for a winter term pass by turning unfavorable to the enemy," induce the In his fall pass at time of purchase. siderably reduced, while "the others are as possible and encourage peripheral Kuchel Since the inception of the service, aflat enemy to "commit mistakes when he is May feels that it's really not fair for off. parking." worn out physically and mentally" from rate was charged each term—$12 for the steady rider to find himself crowded Referring to Michigan's financial sup¬ should go beyond a mere halt in the regular passes and $6 for commuter The system is entirely self-sustaining, protracted war. Among the enemy mis¬ out winter term by the doubled demand which necessitates, according to both port of the system, May said that U-M takes, Mao counseled, would be piece¬ bombing of North Vietnam and suspend passes. for the service. receives $4000-$5000 more per student meal reinforcement and dispersion of main all military operations in both the North A flat rate of $15 perterm, for example, Jolman and May, the need for increased The new fees were decided upon because than we do, and so can afford to sub¬ and South on a fixed date. would not cover the losses to the system costs of passes. Jolman said that to his forces. Then, at the proper moment, after sidize. If the Communists did not respond with understanding the University never in¬ long stalemate, "people's war" forces tended to subsidize the system. Although attempts are being made- to should pass over to the offensive. similar action and with offers to talk, he "We don't have any way for the State keep costs to a minimum, Increases Like Mao, Giap has advised reliance said this country would be free to "pur¬ and maintenance must be covered, he sue this war in any manner of its own of Michigan to pick up the check," May- upon the enemy to make mistakes. Several Ro mney hints said. "We don't have the money; things have gotten worse, not better," noted. noted Compared to a that MSU city system, May drivers are underpaid, and that labor and operating costs con¬ months ago out he was saying: "Stretched thinly, the large enemy armed forces have become small, and despite their choosing." Kuchel, the assistant GOP Senate leader, said the United States cannot be expected The University of Michigan operates a push stitute the major financial burden. to "declare a unilateral standdown that mobile means, they have been tied down. may get »tous service quite different from the one at MSU. It is free to riders and is financed "We've invested over a half-million dollars in buses," he pointed out. Their strength has been worn down and would permit the North Vietnamese uni¬ laterally to improve their positions," par¬ DETROrr (DPI)--Gov. Romney has in¬ housing laws on an effective law enforce¬ through the University's budget. ticularly in the hotly contested demili¬ ment basis." Because of the distance between the north dicated he may reverse his position and tarized zone area. Romney said he would meet with leaders campus dorms and central campus at Ann Kuchel told his colleagues that Hanoi try to push an open occupancy law through of both houses and parties to see if he Arbor, a system was begun with the pur¬ ^0'- has been denied a military victory and the special session of the Michigan legis¬ lature. could line up enough support for an open pose of bringing students to class during 0* thus is counting on "our moral paraly- housing bill to pass the legislature. the peak periods of the day. ' sis in the face of mounting pressure for Speaking at a news conference at De¬ Such action is necessary, he said, be¬ peace" to win' a political victory. He troit's Wayne State University Monday, the Republican Governor also hinted that fore he can put the measure on theagenda. warned against abandoning American com¬ he would seek a way to provide more Romney had earlier opposed' onen mitments in Asia. funds for education in impoverished areas, housing legislation, saying the state con¬ Bus Pass Sales It is far too late in the day to throw thus back-tracking on his earlier state¬ ments that no more funds were available stitution- already guaranteed it. But he said then, and repeated Monday, that he felt the open housing issue could best 64-65 Regular Commut Flat tire saves bell away what free people have to said. achieve In Southeast fought valiantly Asia," Kuchel "America must not sully her com¬ for education. The news conference was held after be dealt with through local ordinances. Fall 3173 J The bell that rang out 17 Spartan points in mitment to the security of free Asia by 6164 J Romney, a top contender for the 1968 During his tour, Romney said that Winter 3232 Saturday's game was found Monday morning on the groping for a nameless settlement . . • Republican presidential nomination, de¬ professors at Brandeis University In Bos¬ Spring 1-96 expressway near the Weberville exit. " In our zealous quest for a speedy end ton had told him a survey conducted by 346 (5 weeks;586) hostilities there, we must not be livered to the New Detroit Committee a Summer The men of Delta Upsilon estimate their bell to all closed-doors report of his observations them showed that "open housing is a more was heisted at 4 a.m. Sunday and towed down the blind to the Indispensable necessity that after a three-week, 17-city probe of the explosive issue than jobs as a cause 65-66 the peace we seek to achieve must be of riots." 6619 expressway until a flat tire on the bell's plat¬ nation's urban problems. Fall . form forced the thieves to abandon their prank. just and enduring." "I want to be sure the course we pur¬ Winter 9935 Symington, former Air Force Joseph L. Hudson, chairman of the An unidentified person called the fraternity house a citizens committee established to cure sue will result in enforceable open oc¬ Spring 4834 secretary, was asked in an Interview if Detroit's ills in the wake of the July cupancy laws at the earliest date," he Summer 414 (5 weeks:542) Monday to report the lost bell. his proposal represented a change in his riots, said the committee had strongly said. "It's very simple to put open Al Voss, Farmington senior and chairman of the | basic position that there should be in¬ urged Romney to put both measures on housing on the agenda. The real prob¬ 66-67 bell, made the rescue. He said in the future the tensified bombing of vital military targets the agenda for the special legislative lem is to get the legislature to pass it." Fall 9140 bell will be chained to a tree betwen games, but in North Vietnam, a stance that has session, beginning Oct. 10. The New Detroit Committee has also Winter 11,771 will be ready to ring out a victory this Saturday. caused him to be labeled a hawk. "I'm for open housing," said Romney. urged Romney to put an extra $5.3 million Spring 6099 There are no clues as to the identity of the "If we get the help of legislators, we'll appropriation for Detroit schools on the Summer 506 (5 weeks:245) (please turn to page II) pranksters.. get more effective action to put open agenda for the fall legislative session. 2 Michigan State News, East Lansing. Michigan Wednesday, October 4, 1967 ACCENT ON MID-INCOMES New tuition more By CHRIS MEAD money: Institution. lncome And at the high- Dickerson dents earning over family level, he ex¬ will be considered self-sup¬ $4000 a year rate of Board $118. He added that the of Trustees felt that the State News Staff Writer plained, the student with higher porting . part-time student was less likely Milton B. Dickerson, vice ability would not enroll in MSU Another criticism of the tuition to be hurt than the full-time president for student affairs, said because he could get Into another plan is that it does not account student. Monday he believes that MSU will institution for less money. for families with more than one Dickerson cited one alternative get more money from the new Dickerson termed the sliding student enrolled in college. to sliding tuition and flat rate ■lldlng tuition scale than would tuition scale a compromise. Be¬ Dickerson said that this was not increases which has been pro¬ have been possible with any other cause a maximum and minimum a consideration at the time the posed in various forms by Kil¬ fystem. tuition have been established, he plan was formulated, but that it llngsworth and others. In a speech before Alpha Kappa said, "it took a chunk out of the would be considered when the Psi, men's business fraternity, middle." An alternative would plan is revised next fall. Sometimes called the Federal Dickerson said that as an ad¬ have been to range tuition from The plan has also been criti¬ Bank for Students, this system Fee scale discussed ministrator in the University, he free for extremely low-Income cized for the high tuition rates would allow a student to borrow was not in a position either to families to increasingly higher for part-time students. Dicker- as much money as necessary Milton B. Dickerson, vice-president for .student defend or attack the controversial with no ceiling for extremely son said that the tuition for less for his education on the condi¬ affairs, described MSU's sliding tuition plan as tuition plan. high-Income families. than 10 credits is based on the tion that for each $3,000 he "taking a chunk out of the middle," in an address Dickerson served on a commit¬ he will pay one per cent of his One factor that must be con¬ same percentage of $167 (the cur¬ to Alpha Kappa Psi Monday night. tee last spring which was ap¬ sidered before a student com¬ rent maximum full-time rate) as gross taxable income each year State News photo by Meade Perlman pointed to recommend a tuition plains of higher education costs, it was on the previous full-time for 30 years. plan if the Legislature didn't Dickerson commented, is that it appropriate the additional $3.5 now takes fewer hours of work million needed to maintain for a student to earn enough existing University operations. money to pay tuition, room and Also on the committee were Dale E. Hathaway, professor of agri¬ cultural economics and Charles board than ever before. "Politicians what are influenced they see, too," Dickerson by Writer says Mao can't end C, Killlngsworth, professor of said. They find it hard to sym¬ economics. After five weeks of intensive Investigation the committee recommended a flat rate tuition pathize with students when hun¬ dreds of student are jobs on campus unfilled each year. Dickerson compared the political instability in China By RON ROAT privileged group." So he has sought support boost for all students (amounting Associate sliding scale tuition plan to fed¬ Campus Editor for his revolution among the younger generation, to about $27 a term per student), eral income tax. It is basically Red China's current problem of maintaining while his political enemies come from the party Dickerson said. fair to most, he said, but the structure. Internal political stability will probably con¬ The committee did not propose guy on the Income borderline "Some Western leaders think this affair an tinue, with Mao Tse Tung's chances of regaining a sliding tuition scale because it sometimes suffers. old man's folly," Wilson said. But he said feared what Dickerson termed complete control very small, a British Journalist One of the basic problems with that China's domestic situation calls for extreme said Monday. "adverse selection" at both ends the tuition plan now, Dickerson measures. of the income scale. Dickerson Speaking at the opening talk in the Univer¬ said, is how to determine which said that a student from a low- sity's Lecture-Concert Series, Dick Wilson Mao's opponents are more realistic leaders, students are self-supporting. income compared China's political arena toan American Wilson said. They are not as romantic as Mao, family with lower ability The current guidelines are such football game. "You don't know who's winning might enter MSU because it would that single students earning over but are good administrators and influential STOP AND BROWSE most of the time," he said. be less expensive than another $2,500 a year and married stu¬ members of the party. Specializing In Chinese politics, Wilson is a leading British writer, radio commentator and In answer to a question about Mao's health, The State News, the student newspaper at Michigan State speaker on current Asian affairs. Wilson said that rumors support any point of University, Is published every class day throughout the year Wilson said that the communists were forced view, but that the present situation In China with special Welcome Week and Orientation Issues in June to turn to the middle class in 1949 in order leads him to believe that Mao is "still alive." and September, Subscription rates are $14 per year. to rebuild the country. It Is still the middle Wilson said China's foreign policy Is not as class which dominates the country, and the complicated and forward as most Western GAMES Member Inland Associated Press, United Press International, Dally Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press, Michigan Press Association, Michigan Collegiate Press As¬ sociation, United State Student Press Association. peasants have not yet been made equal. Calling them "ambitious peasants," Wilson said that there Is currently a debate in China concerning what to do about them. leaders believe. nationalistic goals: He said China has four restore proper borders, regain spheres of Influence In Southeast Asia, Churches PEOPLE PlAY Second class postage paid at East Lansing, Mich. Editorial and business offices at 347 Student Services Mao, being a "romantic and an optimist about human nature," called for a new revolution to bring about a resettling of the population, Wilson protect friends of the Chinese Communists and make China a world power. The fifth goal, Wilson said, is to spread com¬ munism in the world by war or peace. offer youth Building, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Mich. said. Phones: "As we have seen, he Is even willing to Jeopardize short-term economic progress and Interrupt formal education If a whole generation "There is no doubt in my mind that the nationalistic goals hold privilege over the fifth goal," he said. He did not consider Vietnam asylum' Editorial .355-8252 of China could be awakened In his Cultural NEW YORK yv-Somechurches one of China's attempts to spread communism. Classified Advertising .355-8255 Revolution," Wilson said. and synagogues throughout the Wilson also said that he sees chance for nation will offer "asylum" to Display Advertising 353-6400 He said that Mao sees the structure of the no Business-Circulation 355-8299 Chinese Communist party as "bureaucratic, the Nationalist Chinese to regain control of the youths who refuse to be drafted because of opposition to the Viet¬ Photographic 355-8311 an obstacle to progress and representing the mainland. nam war, a group of clergymen, educators and literary figures pledged Monday. Peter Benequista, a Manager of The clergymen In the group Substrate Process Engineering will offer sanctuary to opponents of the war "so that this country at IBM, says: can see the nation Is in viola¬ 81 MM. Ml tion of basic laws," said the Rev. William S. Coffin Jr.,chap¬ "Want lain at Yale University. IF YOU DON'T SEE IT; WE'LL ORDER IT a company He was chairman at a meeting Monday of representatives of the where bright guys group of 320 signers of a state¬ ment: "A Call to legitimate .Authority." Among Resist Il¬ the signers are 35 clergymen. can leapfrog The group plans to publish the statement in the next few days as an advertisement in nationally ahead? distributed magazines and news¬ papers. The Selective Service law makes It illegal for anyone to abet, aid or counsel men to re¬ fuse the draft. Then see IBM The Rev. Mr. Coffin said If the protest worked federal agents would have to enter the churches and synagogues to arrest draft on campus reslsters. " If a further mockery of Amer¬ ican justice is not to be made, October 12*h we the clergymen must be ar¬ rested, too," he said. The group's representatives said It plans acts of civil dis¬ or13*h" obedience in eight cities begin¬ ning Oct. 16. Mitchell Goodman, the writer, said draft cards and statements declaring refusal to "engage in any way with the Selective Service system" would be turned in to government officials. He said OVER 4,000 TITLES about 200 men are expected todo this in New York. TO CHOOSE FROM Peter Benequista graduated with a B. S. in Mechanical Engineering in 1964. He started in Draft-age men in the San Fran¬ Sign up for an interview at your place¬ IBM's Systems Development Division as a Junior Engineer. Less than two years later, he was cisco Bay area will try on Oct. 17 ment office—even if you're headed for promoted to Manager of Substrate Process Engineering at a major IBM plant. to disrupt indefinitely the Oakland graduate school or military service. Induction Center, the only one In Northern California, Goodman said. Join IBM and you'll launch a career personal contribution. We'll be on campus to interview for Other will interrupt MSU groups in the world's fastest growing, fastest You can stay technologically hot. careers in Marketing, Computer Appli¬ operations at war supply plants, changing major industry-information You'll have an opportunity to do state- cations, Programming, Research and napalm factories and local draft handling and control. This growth is of-the-art work in many different tech¬ Development, Manufacturing, Cus¬ boards, he said. one of many reasons young people can nologies or computer applications. tomer Engineering, Finance and Ad¬ Finally, on Oct* 20, a group will turn draft cards over to the move ahead at IBM. (We have over IBM makes it easy to continue your ministration. Come see us. attorney general in Washington 5,000 more managers today than we education. One program, for example, at 3 p.m. The group hopes to BOOKSTORE did less than four years ago.) You'll work individually or as part pays tuition and fees for qualified ap¬ plicants while you work on your Mas¬ Chicago. Illinois 60606. have 500 to 1,000 draft cards. Dr. Benjamin Spock, the noted pediatrician, said he joined the of a small team (two to six people) no ter's or Ph.D. in the/centerfor matter how large your project. That means you get quick recognition of achievement and also a strong sense of Where would you have 19 over 250 offices like to work? We plants, 21 laboratories, and throughout the U.S. .4h IBM Equal Opportunity Employer group and was ''prepared to go to jail for this principle." Some of the other representa¬ tives were Dwlght Mac Donald, International Program* author, and Prof. Noam Chomsky of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Wednesday, October 4, 1967 3 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Marines aid outposts HCl NEWS Ed A capsule summary Associated Press. summary of the day's events from the I as VC halt attacks SAIGON UP: — Taking ad¬ vantage of a letup in Communist ;shellings, U.S. Marines worked 'feverishly Tuesday to resupply delta city of CanTho, but at his An Quang pagoda gon had sources In Sai¬ said 110 other monks and nuns volunteered to immolate Vietnamese in the border area, but no one was predicting they had been knocked out. Across the country it ap- ^nap/ok "America must not their outpost at Con Thien and other battered pressure points Just below the Demilitarized Zone. Improved weather helped. themselves if the charter stands. The death of the Can Tho nun, Le Thi Cue, 20, was describedas in protest against the charter. peared that the Vietnam con- flict was periodic lulls. in another of its The U.S. Com- mand said ground action was Campus C sully her commitment Reports from the northern¬ Eleven Buddhists killed them¬ "generally light and scattered" :|: most First Corps area said only selves in the abortive antigovern- in the 40 allied operations now g to the security of free under way, three rounds of enemy fire hit ment, anti-American uprising in Asia by groping for a the shirt the spring of 1966. There were no reports of fresh Con Thlen, a sharp contrast to of shells that The government announced 35 fighting in the central highlands x nameless settlement." the scores southeast of Pleiku, where U.S. screamed In daily during Sep¬ students were under arrest for Sen. Thomas H. Kuchel tember. Two raids by B52 jets investigation from a band of 200 4th Division infantrymen clashed % contributed about 225 tons of ex¬ that attempted to march on the Sunday and Monday with freshly plosives to the American coun- national assembly Monday while equipped North Vietnamese the assembly was still deliber¬ troops. The enemy troops have International News terfire of the day. Helicopters ferried ammuni¬ ating on charges of irregulari¬ ties in the Sept. 3 election. Po¬ been identified as elements of Hanoi's 95B regiment. 3 | right but not trite little shift tion, rations and other supplies Q British Prime Minister Harold Wilson summoned Foreign from the Marine base at Dong lice armed with clubs dispersed Spokesmen here said it was ;!•: the students and injured three not known whether they were >•: Minister George Brown to a private meeting Tuesday to Ha, 10 miles south of the DMZ, discuss Brown's part In a shouting demonstration at mid¬ television newsmen of the Colum¬ newcomers or had just received j; night Monday. High authorities say there is little chance the secretary wil be fired, but that Brown Is In Just that to soon build up stockpiles against the time when northeast mon¬ storms begin drenching the bia Broadcasting System In the process. new weapons and other supplies. There were scattered skirm- :• •: 15.98 much more trouble. forward Leatherneck •lines later Vietnamese voters elected a ishes across the country as •: this month. 60-member Senate at the same enemy forces, hit out with mor- 0 Premier Alexei N. Kosygin told the Soviet people in a The dirt road from Dong Ha time they cast ballots in the 11- tar attacks on several allied |j Sensational shirting with skirting for junior size gals. Lit¬ speech Tuesday that Russia's growing industrial might would to Con Thien was no help.Heavy man presidential race. They are installations, but the command ■: tle dresses with superclassic collars, trimly tabbed front better standard of living unless a foreign crisis unseason rains in late September to round out the new civilian- said no significant, sustainedac- and barrel-cuffed long sleeves...here in lightweight fabrics. mean a had made the road a muddy bog based regime by choosing a 137- tion was reported. :• Jeopardized benefits. and it remains impassable for member house of representatives Although the weather was im- :• In red/navy or red/gold plaid on white and brown or black Oct. 22. proved south of the demilitar- £ Five Yemeni demonstrators were killed and 25 wounded trucks. The government's news agen¬ ized zone, clouds and rain hung :• stripes on white, all karate sashed in solid colors. Jr. sizes. Tuesday when a crowd attacked the Egyptian military head¬ The enemy's invasion threat, :• quarters in San'a, Yemen. The demonstrators resented the hostile natural elements and the cy, Vietnam Press, announced over much of North Vietnam decision of Egypt to evacuate Yemen In the midst of its waiting game added up to pros¬ 1,240 candidates are running for and limited U.S. air strikes Mon- civil war. pects for a grim fall and winter the House. That's an average day. Spokesmen said missions i, for the Marines, however well of nine to a seat. were flown and that most of them Southeast of Saigon, Viet Cong were in the southern panhandle i 0) Erich Rajakovic, former aide of Adolph Eichmann, es¬ supplied. They are trained as caped a police dragnet In Yugoslavia and is now in Austria, specialists in assault operations. riflemen fired on a Japanese In South Vietnam, a U.S. ob- ; his lawyer said Tuesday. He is wanted by Dutch authorities U.S. policy bars an infantry drive freighter, the 1,932-ton Okuni servatlon plane was brought down • for extraditing Qitch Jews for extermination in Eichmann's into North Vietnam. Maru, as she headed up the Long by ground fire Monday 84 miles : concentration camps. Political turmoil persisted in Tau River to Saigon and wounded northeast of Saigon and the two : a sailor, crew members were killed. : Saigon despite the National As¬ £ The newly elected and approved President of South sembly's validation of the elec¬ Japan's Foreign Ministry in¬ Vietnam Nguyen Van Thleu saw during his first official tion of Chief of State Nguyen Van structed its embassy here to ask day in office a young Buddhist nun burn herself to death with Thieu as president and Pre¬ South Vietnamese authorities to take every possible step to in¬ Pan-Orthodox j militant Buddhists threatening 110 more self-immolations. mier Nguyen Coa Ky as his run¬ are demanding Thieu rescind his resolution sure the vessel's safe return. The Buddhists recognizing a moderate sect as the official Buddhist Church ning mate. Ky appealed to militant Bud¬ The Okuni Maru's cargo was de¬ holds service of South Vietnam. dhists, "for the sake of the peo¬ scribed as nonmilitary, consist¬ The Pan-Orthodox Student As- : ple," to stop demonstrating and ing of textiles, sundries, sewing soclatlon will hold a service of : 01 According to AP newsanalystWllliamL.Ryan.in mounting return to their pagodas. The machines, television sets and prayer at 7:30 tonight at the : a tremendous offensive at Con Thlen, the North Vietnamese militants, a politically ambi¬ farm machinery. Alumni Memorial Chapel. A tious minority headed by Thich In the North, the two B52 may be trying a repeat of their 1954 performance at Dlen meeting to elect new officers and I Bien Phu, where they smashed French morale by gaining a Tri Quang, spurned the appeal. raids added to more than 7,500 to discuss the proposed amend- i major victory in a single large battle. See page 1 Trl Quang carried through the tons of bombs the Stratofor- ments to the constitution will : sixth day his vigil in front of In¬ tresses have dropped on known follow. and suspected Communist posi¬ will be held-at 0 Only three rounds of shells hit the Marine outpost at dependence Palace, the govern¬ tions in and near the DMZ since Vespers Con Thlen Tuesday, allowing Marines to resupply their base. ment headquarters, to emphasize 6:30 p.m. Saturday at St. An¬ North Vietnam reported it shot down seven U.S. planes over his demand that the government mid-August. One raid centered drew Orthodox Church and Stu¬ four miles north of Con Thien its territory Tuesday. See page 3 rescind a July decree which made dent Center, on Hagadorn Road a moderate faction the mother and the other four miles farther at M-78. Confession will follow. church of Buddhism in South north. There will be a liturgy at National News Vietnam. Military men here said there no doubt that the heavy air 9:30 a.m. Sunday at the church. The monk deplored the fiery was New elected officers will be in¬ suicide of a nun in the Mekong assaults have hurt the North stalled. £ Robert L. Oswald said in a Look Magazine article this week that although he had no evidence his brother, Lee Harvey Oswald was not the sole assassin*of President John F. Kennedy, there was a possibility he was "Influenced" by others. The Men 0 The House Ways and Means Committee voted 20-5 Tuesday to put aside consideration of President Johnson's tax pro¬ posal "until such time as the President and the Congress reach an understanding" on spending cuts. See page 1 EVANS SCHOLARS 0 Sen. Stuart Symington, D-Mo., told the Senate Tuesday the U.S. should go beyond a halt in the bombing, and If the North does not respond, then of Its own choosing. prosecute the war in a manner See page 1 are proud to announce their 0 Attorneys for H. Rapp Brown failed Tuesday in their attempt to gain a court injunction barring his extradition 1967 FALL PLEDGE CLASS to Maryland to face charges of inciting to riot. Their court petition listed as a reason the belief that Brown might be lynched If he returned to Maryland. Gary Caldwell Raymond Nemecek HAZEL PARK FLINT . 0 Shootings and beatings marked the struggle of striking truckers to keep their strikebreaking comrades off the road. James Chiodini Donald O'Connor The steel truckers rejected Tuesday a second proposal to DETROIT their union and are continuing their strike into the ninth ST. CLAIR SHORES day. Dennis Downer John O'Connor A A group of clergymen, educators and literary figures GRAND RAPIDS LOMBARD, ILL. ported Monday that in the future some churches would give political asylum to youths who resist the draft.^ ^ Willis Flood Daniel Scherrer 0 House Democratic leaders said Tuesday they are con¬ fident the House will accept a temporary appropriations bill PONTIAC EETROIT and will not force President Johnson to cut spending. See page 11 £ Hurricane Fern Tuesday was traveling on a course which Frank Francis Raymond Schinler would bring it to the oil-rich coast of Mexico. Born Monday BENTON HARBOR MUNDELEIN, ILL. in the same area that spawned Beulah, Fern has winds of 85 miles an hour, and is moving at ten miles an hour. William Gallagher Donald Shires FARMINGTON 0 Gov. Romney indicated Tuesday he may switch his position GRAND RAPIDS and push for an open housing law during the newly called special session of the legislature. See page 1 ' Patrick Kenrick Michael Stair DEARBORN MONROE YOUR MSU CRFDIT UNION OPPORTUNITY SERIES Wayne KriStall Thomas Zambetis PRESENTS: DETROIT DETROIT a series of nine programs designed to assist you to . . THINK FOR YOURSELF Robert Ziemer Thomas Long IN STOCK INVESTMENT FRANKFORT ST.JOSEPH : First Program'Content: : • How to Read the Financial Page of the Newspaper (Bring your newspaper with you) Paul Lucido • Suggested Reading List • Paper Trading ST. CLAIR SHORES • Why People Should Own Stock i FREE COPY - "HOW TO BUY STOCKS" October 4, 1967 Community Room EVANS SCHOLARS IMSU EMPLOYEES 243 LOUIS ST. | 1019 Trowbridge Road - Call 353-2280 EAST LANSING "It really PAYS to be a Credit Union family" MICHIGAN STATE NEWS James D. Spaniolo ft Eric Planln, executive editor editor-in-chief. Lawrence Werner, managing editor Bobby Soden, campus editor Susan Comerford Edward A. Brill, editorial editor UNIVERSITY advertising manager Joe Mitch, sports editor Five-time recipient of the Pacemaker award for outstanding jour'n'alr Wednesday Morning, October 4, 1967 EDITORIALS The Republic and evasive is the trust and support of the By margin of only 11 Graduate votes, a the provisional people For for the government. centuries , the Viet¬ National Assembly of Viet¬ COGS need demand universal concern in nam tion Monday upheld the elec¬ of Nguyen Van Thieu namese for have confidence had no reason in their As the percentage of as President of South Viet¬ government. It is silly to graduate students at MSU the graduate community. nam. Though the Assembly think the situation will sud¬ continues to grow, the need COGS could become, a denly change now. found many irregularities in for an organized and rep¬ sounding bo.ard for graduate the election It ruled Although the election is a that, resentative voice for this students who have sug¬ hopeful sign for some, the even with them, Thieu would segment of the University gestions or criticisms con¬ have won. Vietnamese still have an community becomes ever cerning the use of the li¬ The enormous, if not impossible, narrow margin by more obvious. brary. Graduate program which the election was upheld job ahead of them to es¬ A small group of students areas, such as computer tablish a democratic govern¬ emphasizes the somewhat science and foreign lan¬ ment in the forseeable has attempted to fill the tenuous nature of the with guages, could" be discussed future. 'Concerning your application for vacuum a group known situation. If the vote had as the Council of Graduate in the COGS format. These --The Editors graduate school' . . . not been upheld, the pos¬ areas can best be examined Students (COGS). COGS was sibility of negotiations be¬ conceived this summer, and by representatives from tween North Vietnam and a received its start with the several graduate depart¬ JIM BUSCHMAN legitimate government in the ments, rather than isolated support of about two dozen South would have been interested graduate stu¬ groups. seriously jeopardized. dents. to keep alive. Now it is struggling COGS has started with the existing graduate clubs as been The election, though, has upheld, and there is Cluste The newly formed Council a basis of organization. The at least, an apparent aura of needs active support in order revised COGS constitution legitimacy about the Thieu This term marked the passing of a tradi¬ to help define and achieve will be sent to all depart¬ tion at MSU. Hardly anybody noticed, and government elect. But to nobody mourned Its passing except me. its goals. COGS was orig¬ ments with graduate stu¬ mistake this election for any Alas. dents, however, and each de¬ Really, traditions are Important only to inally started to "promote sign of real democratic partment can then acknowl¬ the faculty and alumni. I think the biggest the academic, social, and government is to be kick for a student, tradltlon-wlse, Is economic goals of grad stu¬ edge ratification of the con¬ when an old grad comes back on Home¬ seriously mistaken. dents" as well as to es¬ stitution simply by electing coming Weekend and says something like: In order to achieve democ¬ "God this place has changed! Glad to a representative to the exec¬ tablish a basis for communi¬ see you're still ringing the DU bell." racy, there are a number utive council of COGS. But It wasn't the EU bell that left us cation within the graduate of antecedents which, as yet, this term. And It wasn't Sparty, or the Without increasing active community. COGS could fur¬ the South Vietnamese do not U-M rivalry or the Greek Sing. All of around the mld-1920's when love in the support by the students these traditions had belonged to the stu¬ It occurred simultaneously In at least thermore become a channel open air became fashionable for the first themselves, COGS could possess. Any semblance of dents and all were taken away from us—by twenty-one locations on campus and at a for MSU time (Up to that time, the tradition had grad students to a democracy must be built the faculty and alumni, who used them large number off-campus sites (though been kept alive by a few brave couples communicate with the rest easily fade away, just as selfishly as remembrances of their own these were usually of smaller propor¬ on the foundation of a reason¬ who were forced by society to go under¬ past, futile attempts to or¬ college days. tions). All across the campus of Mich¬ of the University. ground, very much like the early Chris¬ ably literate populace, which The tradition I mourn was the only igan State, people were happy. Safe In the ganize MSU graduate stu¬ tians). It somehow weathered the De¬ tradition left exclusively to the student shadows of the Ivy-covered hall, a boy and COGS conceivably could the Vietnamese are not. A pression and, In the years that folkwed, dents have flickered and body at MSU. It remained pure and un¬ a girl could enjoy being together In the good deal with issues that con¬ grew in stature along with the university. died. democracy must also stand touched over the years until It was rudely company of their friends. Here there were The Cluster almost died out In the no Humanities professors, no graduate cern nearly every MSU grad¬ More active on a firm tradition of demo¬ snatched from us. It was, and Is no period around World War IL This was participation more. It was the Eleven-Thirty Cluster. assistants. There was no green-hatted uate student. Recent tui¬ in cratic ideals, something-the primarily due to two very equal factors, COGS, though, could give By last year, the Cluster had become alumnus. Class of '46, saying to his wife, 1) the lack of available men and 2) the tion changes and selection of Vietnamese again lack. the most widely-practiced tradition at "Remember when we used to do this, efforts by MSC's Iron-handed Dean of graduate students a voice honey?" it And now It is representatives for the - Michigan State, especially on weekends was serene. Women, Elizabeth W. ^nrad, to pre¬ which equals their growing (when It was known variously as the Mid¬ gone. serve virtue on campus. (Dean Conrad, graduate positions on five Another precondition night Cluster, the One a.m. Cluster and, No one knows exactly when the Cluster impact upon the University. herself once a tradition at Michigan State, standing faculty committees generally deemed necessary on occasion, the Two 0' Clock Mob). began, but It appeared publicly somewhere was immortalized several years agowhen --The Editors the auditorium in East Campus was given her name. The structure Is not unlike the good Dean herself—solid brick with a steel frame.). OUR READERS' MINDS But as we all know, it's hard to keep a good thing down, and the Cluster sur¬ vived. The return to campus of two CUE recommendation ATL won't work thousand soldiers did much to aid its on survival. The Cluster's growth was steady and unimpeded from that time on, and it reached its height last year. But the To the Editor: here allows. I limit myself,.therefore, death knell was already tolling. Efforts I've read with much interest the re¬ to Committee Recommendation 34, which had been started—by the students them¬ port of the Ccgnmittee on Undergraduate asks that the English Department develop selves—to remove the curfew at Mich¬ • Education (CUE), an account of which has been an "acceptable alternative to the course in American Thought and Language. Such Grad fees unfair igan State. The death of the Cluster was running in this newspaper. quick and Accompanying the report which I received an alternative should carry nine credits painless. When the students arrived on was a letter from President Hannah in and should be clearly defined ...asa first campus this fall, the curfew was gone. So which he expressed his hope that "the year course in composition." was a tradition. committee's conclusions and recommen¬ 1 urge the readers of this letter, as Oh, there are still some remnants of dations will be widely discussed at all last spring I urged the Committee, to I am writing concerning a gross In¬ the Cluster around, but at best these are levels of the University and that In due recognize writing for what it is, namely equity In the sliding tuition scale which only a sad reminder of what used to be. time action will be taken wherever appro¬ a function of one's Intellectual develop¬ seems to have been overlooked by all. A mild flurry of activity when the fresh¬ priate." ment, at every level. For those who know Graduate students are not permitted to man girls arrive, an occasional motion Like many who've studied the report, the professional score, this Is cliche; but in the shadows—what are these compared apply for a fee reduction, but must pay I have more reactions to it than space American courses charged with writing to the glory of years past? The Cluster the full tuition charge. One must con¬ instruction have long suffered from the is dead. Say what you will about the new clude that the trustees have either con¬ one-course fallacy, the reasons for which cluded that such a large majority of freedom, it is ours at the expense of are partly historical andpartlyacademic- Nudes not needed graduate students earn an Income over the last tradition which belonged ex¬ Fraternity thanked polltical—they are not pedagogical. The nature of one's language develop¬ $16,000 or they are not sympathetic to clusively to the university students as a trash like this. Perhaps Mr. Buschman the problems of graduate students and whole. The Cluster is dead, and I mourn To the Editor: To the Editor; ment being what it is, what we predictably the death of a friend. felt that he'd like to stir up a little view them only as a source of Income. get froma compositioncourse(onecourse) I opened the State News to page four Friday morning and found the most in¬ controversy? is disappointment. Then, like CUE, we The Sigma Phi Epsllon pledges did a Katherine Hepburn said something with The problem Is that as a group the good deed last week that should not pass conjure some alternative (one course). sulting piece of garbage ever regurgi¬ tated by an author. Yes friends, Mr. which I wholeheartedly agree. "I feel graduate students can least afford this Sniper's Nest unnoticed. Maybe that will work the needed magic. It sorry for those girls who have to take off 42% Increase In tuition. They are most won't. James Buschman believes the Playmate Dear Duffy: I have been trying desperately to get of the month to be an inspiration for all their shlTts before a man will look at likely to be earning their own Income; yard help, but to no avail. Seeing the What we need is extension of ATL's them." She wasn't kidding. Perhaps the being married, returning to school after Losing Tody Smith, Jack Zln- lovely coeds who had been apprehensive del, Jesse Phillips, Dave boys working on the yard at the fraternity writing emphasis. What we're getting, male population would be turned-on if the an absence or being cut off from paren¬ about removing their clothes for the house, which Is in my neighborhood, I pretty much across the University, Is female population at M.S.U. disrobed. tal support. This being so, it seems that Schweinfurth, Calvin Fox, Don This is shown in what CUE public. explained my plight and asked If any of declension. Girls, isn't It a relief to know that you However, the wait for such a day will be the university ultimately views all its stu¬ Warnke, and Clifton Hardy for them would like few has to say about the all -University function dents only as a source of income! due to to earn a extra don't have to be ashamed to run around tremendous! It takes much more than the season injuries may dollars. They said they would let me of the Office of Evaluation Services, whose nude? After all, Tish Howard does it Tish Howard to inspire me in any manner hamper our team's chances, but know. specialty is machine-scored tests. whatsoever. how will we ever win without and she isa student ofU.C. I'm sure we're Richard S. Williams Within minutes, the entire pledge class The danger, long manifest at Michigan Susan M. Slavinsky State as at most other American uni¬ all dying to pose for pictures now aren't East Lansing graduate student Sparty? The SNIper was at my house. Not only did they do we? Taylor Sophomore the mowing, but they raked and weeded versities, is that we will pronounce the and watered and tidied up the entire yard. necessary pletie*, amend whatever writing In answer to that last question—Nol r KNfi*) He 60lN^ THE They refused my offer to pay them, In¬ course (Singular) we've got, and end up (This is the strongest my language is (JAV, BUT I WONT 4M MrTHlNS! sisting that they were happy to do It as where we started. This is not specu¬ allowed to be if I want this article to be a community project. lation but history, which offers examples printed.) For Pete's sake! What does Mr. This Is indeed refreshing. Sigma Phi by the score. If we don't know that history, Buschman take us for—a bunch of show¬ Epsllon should be very proud of the spring or choose to ignore it, we could well girl's champing at the bits? term 1967 pledge class. repeat it by doing what CUE so wrongly I, for one, do not see anything wrong East Lansing could not exist without recommends. with the human, female body. However, m such fine young men. Ben Strandness I don't think I'd like being paraded down Professor of American the street or in a magazine. I thought Mrs. E. T. Ha lima n Thought and Language the State News had better taste than to print Wednesday, October 4, 1967 5 Michigan State News, East Lansiiu,, Michigan MITCH MILLKR MAX LERNER 1 EDITOR'S NOTE: The following Is the third of a State four-part series by News columnist Is is a$250 deducted lowances. husband amount a from 'Block welfare al¬ Say a family receives month allowance. If the should earn $200, that would be deducted from Poanswer? as CHICAGO--In a talk here to the Council on Foreign Relations, ln talks elsewhere, I have been struck by how hard mosr Americans take the loss of be¬ 2 ments. highly young4Americas They, too, come from unstructured families, usually without a father, and are pan of the rebellion of our time. But they are the rebels without cheerfully. the American dream met enemies." the We cannot question challenge until we have of lta Mitch Miller analyzing a cause, while their college can- Thus It Is with the two young the allowance, leaving a welfare lief by the young ln their country Negro problems and the and in their culture. My own temporaries are rebels with a Americas. One day, after the payment of $50 per month. But the steps necessary to solve family would not receive its pre¬ feeling, too, Is that we had bet¬ cause. fighting, they will be unltedagaln, them. Copyright 1967, The By contrast with both these but on the road to that reunion vious Income, because earnings, ter take it pretty seriously. State News groups, the young men ln Viet¬ there are real lions in the path. unlike welfare, are subject toin- The Vietnamese war is at once "come ax. exhibit one and testing ground nam are largely from the lower- One Is the resentment that is The slogan "Black Power*1" middle class, whet her from farm, bound to remain as the residue The laws under which welfare of this erosion of belief for many seems Inextricably bound up with small town, suburb or city. The of the diverse attitudes of the is distributed promote broken young people. The war is a sym¬ this summer's racial upheaval. two groups. The young men who homes and illegitimacies. Aid to bol of what is wrong not only Negroes among them have had the It has served as the rallying find the Vietnam war futile and dependent children is cut sub¬ with American foreign policy but literacy and training to meet the cry of the black extremist move¬ Immoral feel that those whofighr ment and Is the source of fear stantially If a family is reunited; with the decision-making elite Army standards. Mo-eover, the if a mother marries the father of and indeed with the society it¬ defense services offer them the it on the battlefields are victims for many whites. her children; or if a breadwinner self. added vocational and professional or Innocents or squares. The But If the riots were expres¬ Yet there is a striking paradox training which they can later use young men on the battlefields feel sions of rage, frustration and is present in the home. ladder for moving higher that those who stay behind are By eliminating the welfare bur¬ about the whole business. One as a the agony of being a black man it best by taking what is on the rungs of the social struc¬ grumblers and malcontents and In white America, then only eaucracy and substltutinga nega¬ gets I suspect that after the tive income tax we can stimulate said by young Americans on uni¬ ture. The whites, whether from worse. through the achievements of the South, the Midwest, the West war a fierce anti-intellectualism black power will they ever end. employment and^income among versity campuses and comparing all those presently on welfare. it with what is said and done or the East, come from more will sweep over the heartlands It Is obvious that our atti¬ of America In resentment against This negative Income tax would by young Americans on the Viet¬ structured middle-class families tudes and ways of treating the the universities and their be scheduled so that families namese battlefields. Every ob¬ in which the sense of a duty to Negro problem require a radical be performed has not yet been teachings. It will be a long time server returning from Vietnam change. Those of the past 30 filing returns would receive more eroded. Hence, the continuing before we shall recover from its than Individuals. While a basic has been impressed by the morale years have been totally unsuc¬ belief and morale among the effects. cessful. income would be provided, It of the young men, black and white, from small town and big American forces. would never take the place of The other lion in the path is The welfare earnings and Increasing income. city, who face dangers together Which of these wo young Am¬ ericas is the authentic one? No the question of what will happen Those who are absolutely un¬ and acquit themselves with a stoic boondoggle willing or unable to find work courage and a genial cheerful¬ one can say. We only know that ln the minds of the returning The height of folly was reached should be required to work for ness. they balance each other. The Negro veterans when they come In New Haven, Conneticut, where the common good. The able- I have had the following ques¬ young America on the campus and back in large numbers after the in the ghetto Is the one that war. There are some observers a n t i-poverty expenditures re¬ bodied could work on public pro¬ tion put to me by military men who fear that, after having been portedly reached the neighbor¬ jects. Even the handicapped could and civilians alike who have seen challenges the whole American trained in legalized violence on hood of $10,000 for every Negro become clerical aids. With all the fighting in Vietnam. How do social myth. "When the leaders the battlefields, they will come man, woman and child; need¬ the work that is to be done in Thoss who achieve positions of power and status will not I reconcile our fighting morale, of a people," Harold Laski once back to the ghettos, trained in they ask, with the bitter genera¬ said, "ask their followers to less to say, very little of that our cities, surely no one could which would tolerate the disruption of their society by the Black Ex¬ tional struggle taking place on the die for a dream, those followers guns, Inured to violence, and actually reached the people for oppose a program whom It was intended and none perform vital functions at the tremists . . . for they will realize more than anyone else campuses and in the ghettos at have a right to know ln whose find the inequalities still there and ask what it was for which behalf that dream is being of it helped prevent the rioting same time it develops a sense of that occurred there. that it is the Negro people who suffer most from such out¬ home? I have no answer Iwould swear dreamt." On the campus and in they fought. participation and worth in people Anti-poverty programs which who have lacked it. bursts. by, but I have a guess. It runs the ghetto that question is now in of the differences ln constantly being asked: "In That may be. But there Is began simply have grown Into terms immense bureaucracies that Stimulating economic tttion shouldbe given to the small majority of Negroes up into the as vociferously as they call for class membership and ln ex¬ whose behalf is the American an equal and perhaps stronger drain away energies thatcouldbe growth Negro flx-lt companies that know middle class that we can give rv»o^nifiir-o 1 ha• the death of Whites, the United American-Zionist States, and American—Zionist perience between the two young dream being dreamt?" And from chance that they will come back hwiT to do the work1. ._j . .1- ...111 and will hire them the roots, the cultural base, o Americas. Those who stay home the Vietnam battlefield comes the with skills and with a pride in fighting poverty. Bureaucracies, imperialism. like all organisms, seek to per- Tax deductions should be al¬ other Negroes, rather than to the stake in society necessary for But Black Power is the anti¬ are the highly literate young men, response: "One must endure, their achievement, pretrate themselves. The anti- lowed for businesses that move big construction firms who find them to eradicate the ghetto and thesis of those goals, and It largely from upper-middle-class into the slums and train the themselves incapable in the mid- its disruption of all our lives, families in suburbs and cities. poverty bureaucracies have done become increasingly ob die of a project, and then pull Those who achieve positions of so by, consciously or uncon¬ inhabitants to work. The gov- sciously, perpetuating poverty. |ernment should provide guaran¬ Our present welfare programs tees for banks so that they will out, wasting millions of dollars, "There's a lot of money being power and status will not tolerate the disruption of their society by vious that the extremists do not want a higher station for Negroes ln \merica, but rather isolation The national policy is to keep them at their education because of the value of the skills they RECORDS for example, rather than encour¬ take "Number 2 paper" (the made In urban renewal," an em- bittered ghetto entrepreneur told the "Black Extremists." It is the community leaders who will of Negroes from whites, the are training for. LOWEST PRICES.. . aging the recipients to leave the banker's word for a Negro's They often come from unstruc¬ ne, "but it's all white money." become prime agents of social molding of Negroes into a revolu- welfare rolls for employment and application for a loan. It is al¬ The sum of these solutions is control in preventing riots, for tlonary proletariat and continued tured and permissive family situ¬ ations and are part of the genera¬ Best Selection. higher Income, do the opposite. most never granted.) dlvlson and violence in \meri- Contracts for housing rehablll- the stimulation and expansion of they will realize more than any- tional rebellion of time. EAST LANSING ST In most cities, outside Income can society. our the Negro middle class. The ln- one else, that it Is the Negro ORIGINAL DISCOUNT RECORD STORE Along with them, the less literate crease, not the diminution, of people who suffer most from such Thursday's article, the youngsters from the ghettos of responsibility for the Negro com- munlty by the Negro community. This will include economic, outbursts. Thus militants who preach Hack Power the loudest are the final one discusses in this series, the radical the inner for do not one city often stay at home; reason or another they the draft require¬ MARSHALL MUSIC measures the author feels meet social, and political power, ful- ones who view the Negro middle- will be necessary to save filling the goals of black power, class as their enemy. They call American cities. as outlined by Floyd McKissick, for its extermination at least national chairman of CORE. Growth of the Negro middle- class will also mean growth of a cultural traditiop that is not necessarily a culture of poverty, HILLEL FOUNDATION something to be shunned and Ig¬ Schedule of nored. Just as other ethnic groups developed an ethos out of their HIGH HOLIDAY SERVICES rise from oppression, so can American Negroes. With growing economic power, ROSH HASHONAH and a cultural base, the politi¬ cal and social power of the Negro Wed. Oct. 4, 8 P.M. Anthony Hall Auditorium will come of age. This will mean Thurs. Oct. 5, 9:30 A.M. Alumni Memorial Chapel control of Negro affairswillpass Fri. Oct, 6, 9:30 A.M. Alumni Memorial Chapel Into the hands of Negroes—ln Bill Atkinson short, Black Power will be ac¬ hieved. YOM KIPPUR designs a What Black Power Frl. Oct. 13, 7:30 P.M. Anthony Hall Auditorium ROARING RED means Sat. Oct. 14, 9:30 A.M. Alumni Memorial Chapel 4:30 P.M. Alumni Memorial Chapel collection for It is only be helping the vast Glen of Michigan and you. (jViepards . . . Sizes 5-13 Your Bostonian Headquarters 0,K., who put the Kryptonite The Tassel's The Thing in the football?! Your choice of sketched left: IN PERSON Burgundy smooth at $20°° (?eter. and Brass Buckled Fleece and Jl Camel Suede and Green Suede at S2I00 Coat $65. Fleece Skirt $17. Turtle Top $12. EXCLUSIVELY ON ? Warner Brothers Records I'm not superstitious LANSING but I wouldn't CIVIC CENTER trust my clothes to anyone but . . . SUN. OCT. 15; 7:30 P.M. J&u $4.50 $3.50 $2.50 $2.00 yes ... we have charge accounts ON SALE AT DISC SHOP 323 E. GRAND RIVER E ast Lansing Vhepard s Cleaners EAST LANSING DOWNTOWN 301 E. Grand Riv< *(523 E. Grand River 317 East Grand River Ave. 337-1316 East Lansing CIVIC CENTER 326 South Washington Ave. :cross from Student Services' BOX OFFICE 505 W. ALLEGAN H^ES 6 Michigan State News, East I .msi:. Wednesday, October 4, 1967 . Michigan Folk poet PAC The Performing ArtsCompany announces Several undergraduates are cast also members of the road (PAC) has announced the selec¬ silenced tion of the cast of its touring repertory company. pany. "The Skin of Our Teeth" will com¬ This year the PAC will tour be directed by Frank Rutledge NEW YORK f — Balladeer Woody Guthrie, .V . with Thorton Wilder's "The and "Romeo and Juliet" by Sid¬ : folk poet of .he downtrodden, their singing, guitar- Skin of our Teeth" and Shake¬ ney Berger. : apostk of self-e?teem, died Tuesday, foridoon speare's "Romeo and Juliet" to The University community will ) by an encroaching Illness that robbed him o cities in Michigan, outlying states be able to attend the He v. produc¬ and Canada. tions as part of the regular PAC "1 want to thank you for making this worlc The utilization of the same ca st season when they open at Fair- ," a-r. itfklenttfled admirer onci wroti hli members for two distinct plays child later this term. "The make p3bple think about the good that Is wit is a new development in the PAC Skin of Our Teeth" will be the By STUART ROSE NTHAL person? heard Guthrie's songs without ev program which has previously season opener on Oct. 24 with State News Reviewe arr.t. Among those who have recorded thel toured a single play each winter "Romeo and Juliet" ■y, Marry' Belafonte, Frank Sinatra and P following term. from Nov. 28 to Dec. 3. .1.>ry. : ie wrote more than 1,000 of the, the " Nine regular members of the Here are some more of the "The Desperate Hours" victs who invade a home and rhls Land it Your La:.d." PAC are included in the touring upcoming dramatic specials in hold the family hostage. 196b, Interior Secretary Stewart L. I Jail the American company. Among them are Marti BroadcastingCom- "The Desperate Hours" is i. with a federal government a war, ar.J c.i Maraden who had major roles in rican pany's series of monthly tele¬ another television play ba*ed up¬ v..-. landscape, last year's productions of "Slow vision theater: on a movie adapted from a play. "Of Mice and Men" rrk.: and divorced three times*Guthrie le ren* His eldest son, Arlo, 19, is himself • Opera auditions Dance on the Killing Ground" and "The Dybbuk" and her husband, "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde" George Segal and Robert Stack will recreate the roles played "Of Mice and Men" will boast Eyes closed In concentration, this coed was one Frank Maraden who will play by Humphrey Bogart and Fredric another starring appearance by of several auditioning Tuesday night in the Music "Dr. Jekyel and Mr. Hyde" March in the original motion Judge Moss in the Wilder play. George Segal in the adaptation Auditorium. The vocalists were seeking to join Newcomers to PAC who will will mark the return ol picture about three escaped con- of John Steinbeck's novel. Also NORTI MSU's Opera Workshop Program. travel with the shows are Joel scripter Rod Sterling to the oc¬ cult realm in which he worked featured are Franchot Tone and PKIVI-IWi State News photo by Meade Perlman Plotkin, who has the male lead Joey Heatherton. in "Romeoand Juliet" ; Jill Gold- wasser, who comes to PAC after for host five of years as creator and "The Twilight Zone." No new leads Named In the wings Desire," are "A Streetcar "Stalag 17," Now thru Tue. Now thru Sun. work with American Players, Inc. Sterling's special adaptation of and "The Big Knife." 7 BIG DAYS 3 Color Hits HEY SPORT! in New York; Harold Hite, member from Dartmouth College and Paul Meachum, who has done a new the classic Robert is now Louis in Toronto, utilizing the talents of Stevenson production in on lost Sparty No leads have been turned up S|nnUD CI t Union television and theater work in Jason Robards Jr. and Eliza¬ in the disappearance of Sparty, u 1 wmiV" tony etirtis T ennessee. beth Hartman. who was kidnaped from Sigma f i • i i flqwfdla wftiiulp Three former undergraduates Phi Epsilon fraternity Monday for bridge leSSOnS who have just joined the PAC "Present Laughter1 morning. after appearing in many produc¬ tions of past years, Marshall "Present Laughter," will He is described as being five Union Board is again spon¬ feet tall, wears a green helmet soring its annual fall term be¬ Rosenblum, Michael Oberfield bring the faces of two English with green and white plumes, has ginners' bridge lessons starting and Scott Weldin, have roles in performers to the American tele¬ the repertory organization. Be¬ vision screen for the first time. a big nose and weighs 45 pounds. Thursday. sides his on stage duties, Weldin Peter 0"Toole will star opposite Sparty has been the mascot at Albert R. Drui-y, veteran Honor Blackman, who left "The all home football games for the bridge player, will teach the is this year's tour director- Avengers" series to take the role past ten years and the Sig Eps six classes from 7-9p.m.Thurs¬ responsible for on-the-road of Pussy Galore in "Goldfinger." are anxious to get him back in day in 21 Union. mechanics. time for Saturday's game. The class is limited to 60 sharon tate 1 Anyone who has seen Sparty students who will be selected on panavision metrocolor or knows of his whereabouts a first come basis and a $3 fee will be charged. should contact either the East —Shown 2nd at 9;40 Advanced lessons will be given Take time Lansing police the fraternity out BEFORE or The Twins house. during winter term. and AFTER the game ROY ORBISON at are tiling F ISe ffJlEST GUITAR UNION jJ/i Spartan | Spartan cflliVE Ak Theatre Theatre L Shown 2nd at 10:30 --First at 7:40 ISLAND OF TERROR 3rd CAFETERIA \ / EAST WEST 1 4 miles E. of US 27 7 miles N. M.S.U. BASEMENT OF THE UNION GRAND For liberal arts majors OPENING They're young... they're in love . .and they kill people. 1CT0BED WAEEEH I3EATTY FAVE 11th rreomimtft«EaapB TECHNICOLOR* FROM WARNER BROS SEVEN ANTslAF 1 NEXT; James Garner - 'HOUR OF THE GUN' Today Is MSU INTERNATIONAL FILM SERIES PUS LADIES r 332-694* 1 ticatru DAY presents 60C to DAME MARG0T RUDOLF 2nd BIG WEEK! 6 P.M. FONTEYM NUREYEV Superb Wonderful Entertainment! Feature Hear "LULU 1:15 - 3:20 sing the- 5:30 - 7:40 9:50 No. 1 Song "TO SIR, The role you've been WITH waiting for since "Lilies 'Professional Qualification Test—A prerequisite to making of codes and ciphers), analytic research, LOVE of the qualify for a career position with the National Security language resea|ch, data systems design and pro¬ Field" and Agency. gramming, and administrative management. 'A Patch At NSA, your professional status and earning f Blue". WHEN: October 21, 1967 power grow rapidly from the day you begin, without WHERE: Contact your Placement Office for having to wait for years of "experience." Starting location of test nearest you, or write to NSA salary of at least $6,700 (for bachelor's degrees), (address below) right away! regular increases, excellent advancement possibili¬ If you expect to receive a liberal arts degree be¬ ties ... and all the benefits of Federal employment. fore September 1968, register for the Professional Another advantage is NSA's location, convenient to both Baltimore and Washington and a short Qualification Test. Taking and passing the POT doesn't commit or obligate you to anything, but we drive from ocean beaches and other recreational attractions. urge you—even if you are not now fully ceitain of Plan to take the POT. It could be your first step to your future interests—to investigate NSA career a great future I COLUMBIA PICTURES Presents opportunities. An Agency of national prominence, this unique organization is responsible for developing "secure" communications systems to transmit and receive IMPORTANT: THE DEADLINE FOR PQT APPLICATIONS IS OCTOBER 9 .Pick up a POT Bulletin atyour Place¬ SIDNEY POITIER m JAMES CLAVELL'S PRODUCTION OF vital information. How and why does that affect you? ment Office. It contains full details and the Because NSA has a critical and growing need for imaginative people—regardless of your academic necessary registration form. Applicants must be U. S. cit¬ , [color LM ' '' * HENRY G SAPERSTEIN Rueast ol a SEVEN ARTS PRODUCTIONS cresei "TO SIR, Thurs., Fri.-Oct. 5 & 6-7:30 & 9:30p.ni major. You will participate in programs of national impor¬ izens, subject to a complete physical examination and back¬ WITH LOVE" tance, working in such areas as: Cryptography (the ground investigation. University Auditorium JUDY GEESON • CHRISTIAN ROBERTS • SlIZ* KENDALL ■ THE "MINDBENDERS" Admission $1.00 in advance sale Mr' * JOHN! SLOAN * JAMES ClAVELL LULU national security agency $1.50 at the door Tickets on Sale at Union Ticket Office TECHNICOLOR" - r,p [p" hear lulu sing *to sir. with love" and "stealing (MYl> College Relations Branch, National Security Agency, Ft. George G. Meade, Maryland, Attn: M321 • An equal opportunity employer, M&F Novelty "Montreal On A Summer Day" Plus Fun Cartoon Wednesday, October 4, 1967 7 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan • I • § • The Forestry Club will hold Its first meeting of the term at Students must register In per¬ son at the Placement Bureau at Placement accounting (B,M) and all majors metallurgy, mechanics and ma¬ of the College of Business (B,M) terials science (B). City to clarity signup By JIM SCHAE FER Slate News Staff Writer desire to sit down with and discuss the matter. students opinion that "spot-zoning," as in the sorority case, ought not to the —Agreed to MSU's Wuuouu purchase by East Lansing least two days prior to the date (December and March graduates United States Gypsum Com¬ "It has never been the policy be continued. of additional capacity in a cam¬ 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the Student "I'm fearful of establishing a Activities Room of Natural Re¬ of an Interview. only). pany# Chemical, civil, electri¬ Mayor Gordon Thomas prom¬ of the city," said Thomas, "to pus interceptor sewer. East Oct. 11, Wednesday: Ohio Line Company: Chemjcal cal and mechanical engineering, ised Monday night to consider an discourage student voters. We precedent for the city," said Landing will buy 20 feet per sources Building. LeeM.James, marketing (B) ASMSU resolution asking for a have done what we could, but Strother. second at a cost of almost chairman of the forestry depart¬ Alexander Hamilton Life In¬ and metallurgical engineering accounting (B) (B). (December and March graduates clarification of the city's policy the laws are that voters must Councilman James B. Brown $200,000 over 10 years at 4.5 ment, will be the speaker. surance Company of America: All The Prophet Foods Co., Grey¬ oniy). on student voting registration. be bona fide residents of the city. said the precedent had been es¬ per cent interest. majors of the College of hound Food Management: Hotel, Board of Wayne County Road Thomas said at the East Lan¬ "We are not afraid of the tablished when the city permitted Spartan Women's League, an Business (B) (December and Civil engi¬ sing city council meeting that a student vote," added Thomas, sororities and fraternities in the City Manager Patriarche said all campus service organization, March graduates only). restaurant and institutional man¬ Commissioners: scheduled Human Relations Com¬ In a discussion after the downtown area. Meridian Township will buy the will hold open rush at 7 tonight Altschuler, Melvoin and Glas- agement (B) (December and neering (B,M). missi brochure specific regular meeting, Mary Slavik, The intentions of the sorority increased capacity from East in the lounge of the Student serv¬ Ser: Accounting (B) March graduates only) and foods West Virginia Pulp and Paper: o n on and nutritlon(B). Electrical, chemical and me¬ registration policies will be city clerk and the city official are clear, said Brown. They have Lansing over a 30-year period ices Building. Arthur Young and Company: available to students. who deals with registration prob¬ invested capital into the house, at the same rate of interest. Accounting (B.M.EJ). Second National Bank of Sagi¬ chanical englneeringandchemls- In the meeting the council also lems, said each case was judged and do not seem to be antici¬ Strother's motion to communi¬ A meeting to plan transpor¬ Cadillac Gage and Company: naw: All majors of the Colleges try (B,M) and civil engineering Mechanical Engineering (B,M) of Arts and Letters, Business, (M). revised an ordinance allowing ex¬ on its individual merits. pating sale or movement from cate the agreement to the Uni¬ tation for the open housing march, The criteria Miss Slavik said, the premises. Continental Illinois National Communication Arts, and Social Oct. 12 and 13, Thursday and pansion of a sorority and heard versity was passed. which will go from the Union a letter about a proposed apart¬ are whether a student is a legal Baptist Church to the Capitol, Bank and Trust Company of Chi¬ Science (B,M) (December and Friday: The council also: —Accepted deeds for the pub¬ Caterpillar Tractor Co.: All ment development by a fraternity. resident and is self-supporting. will be held at 8 p.m. Thurs¬ cago: Accounting, economics, March graduates only). —Awarded a contract subject lic right-of-way necessary to ex¬ Although student registration She noted that most married day inUnion Parlor A. The march financial administration, general U.S. Civil Service Commis¬ majors of the College of En¬ to review by city attorney Daniel tend Timber land St. from Ridge- will take place at 11 a.m. Satur¬ business administration, mar¬ sion: All majors, all colleges gineering, mathematics, statis¬ was not included on the formal students qualify, and that students wood Dr. to Burcham C. I earned to architects Begrow Rd., sub¬ keting and personnel adminis¬ (B,M,D) (December and March tics and accounting (B.M) and agenda, Mayor Gordon Thomas can register with her office to day. home. and Brown, Inc. The firm will ject to a bond of $25,000 for the economics, financial adminis¬ mentioned it in his remarks near vote at tration (M). graduates only). draw up plans for parking ramp necessary street facilities. The Continental Aviation and En¬ U.S. Gypsum Company, Re¬ tration, general business, man¬ the end of the meeting. The city has no choice, she The Tower Guard will hold its #3 on a fee schedule of to 5.4 deeds came from the East agement, marketing and forest The proposal, unanimously said. They must comply with first meeting at 7:30 tonight at gineering Corporation: Mechan¬ search Center; chemistry, chem¬ to 5.9 per cent of cost from $.5 Lansing Board of Education and passed by the ASMSU student law. Beaumont Tower. ical engineering (B). ical, civil and mechanical engi¬ products (B,M) (December and state million to one million dollars. Trinity Church. March graduates only). board Sept. 26hadbeenpresented The council, except for Continental Motors Corpora¬ neering (B) and chemistry International Business Ma¬ to Thomas on Friday by Greg Councilman Max Strother, also A study-break mixer will be tion: Accounting and financial (organic) (M). held from 6 to 8 tonight in Hub¬ administration and mechanical Vestal Laboratories Div., W.R. chines Corporation, Computer Hopkins, ASMSU chairman. passed a motion to permit ex¬ bard Hall classrooms. The mixer engineering (B,M) and economics Grace and Company: Chemis¬ Programming: All majors, all In response to students'desire pansion of the Alpha Xi Delta will feature the sound of The and management (B,M) (Decem¬ try, and bacteriology- (B,M). colleges (B,M) (December and to having the c-riteria for regis¬ sorority by amending ordinance Wisconsin Efepartment of Nat¬ March graduates only). tration clarified, the board asked #199. Otherside. No admission charge. ber and March graduates only). IBM, Field Engineering: Elec¬ in the resolution that the voting The revised law permits the Continental Grain Co.: Eco¬ ural Resources, Division of Con¬ nomics, agriculture economics servation: Forestry (B,M,D). trical and mechanical engi¬ policy be put in writing. sorority properties at 510, 520 Thomas noted that the pro¬ and 528 Linden to be zoned resi¬ Petitions for the Greek Week and general business (B,M) (De¬ Oct. 12, Thursday: neering (B.M). Chemicals IBM, Finance and Administra¬ posal, not seen by the council dential. Executive Council will be avail¬ cember and March graduates Amoco Corpor¬ able Oct. 2-9 in 101 Student Serv¬ only). ation: Chemistry and chemical, tion: all majors of the college yet, was received. He said the City manager John Patriarche civil, electrical and mechanical of business (B.M) (December and city did intend to work on this said the sorority would have to ices Building. Ethyl Corporation, Research March graduates only). "complicated" problem. post a bond in order to receive Laboratories: Chemistry and mechanical engineering (B,M,D) engineering (B). Baxter Laboratories, Inc.: IBM, Manufacturing: Mechan¬ Thomas also commented on a building permit. DORM DELIVERY ical, electrical and chemical en¬ the difficulty of determining voter Strother, the dissenter to the An all-board meeting of the and chemical engineering (M,D). Packaging technology (B), all Student Union Board will be held General Electric Company: majors, all colleges (B)(Decem¬ gineering and metallurgy, me¬ qualification, and expressed a proposal, did not change his Pizza • Foot-Longs ber and March graduates- only), chanics and materials science- at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, in 31 Accounting and financial ad¬ Union. All members are urged ministration, economic and gen¬ marketing (M), chemistry (B), (B.M). Submarines . Hamburgers to attend. If attendance is im¬ eral business (B,M), statistics possible contact the Union Board (B) (December and March grad¬ Office at 355-3355. uates only) and all majors (B,M) management (M) and chemistry, chemical gineering (B). and mechanical en¬ IBM, keting: Non-Technical Mar¬ All majors, all colleges (B,M) (December and March GIRLS WANTED Roast Beef • Steak (December and March graduates The B.F. Goodrich Company: graduates only). Sandwiches Sandwiches IBM, Research and Develop¬ OPEN AUDITION only). Chemistry, chemical engi¬ Students who have completed Kelsey-Hayes Company: Elec¬ neering, mathematics and phys¬ ment: Chemical, electrical and ' Corned Beef • Fish mechanical engineering, metal¬ For two years of college, have had trical and mechanical engi¬ ics (B,M,D). Sandwiches Sandwiches Northwestern University lurgy, mechanics and materials one year (3 terms) of business neering (B,M) and metallurgy, GO GO DANCERS or economics courses and would accounting andfinancialadminis¬ Graduate School of Business Ad¬ science, chemistry, physics and like to work overseas for a sum¬ tration (B,M,D). ministration: All majors, all mathematics (B,M). • Cheeseburgers • French Fries All colleges (B). IBM, Technical Marketing- mer are invited to attend the or¬ S.S, Kresge Company: ganizational meeting of the chap¬ majors of the Colleges of Arts Price Waterhouse and Com¬ Systems Engineering: All majors "Swing Lively" - T. V. Show The VARSITY of the colleges of engineering, ter of A,I,E.S.E,C, at 7:30 tonight and Letters, Business Com¬ pany, Certified Public Accoun¬ in 115 Eppley Center. munication Arts . and Social tants: Accounting and financial chemistry, mathematics,physics Thurs. Oct. 5, 1967 administration (B,M). and astronomy and statistics The organization's initials Science (B) (December and March 7:30 p.m. stand for a French phrase graduates only). R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Com¬ (B.M). IBM World Trade Corporation: meaning InternationalAs- Lear Siegler, Instrument Divi¬ pany: Chemical and mechan¬ sociation of Students in Business sion: Electrical engineering (B, ical engineering, chemistry and Foreign nationals: electrical and WJIM TV STUDIO 'Campus Renowned' and Economics. M,D) and metallurgy, mechanics, accounting (B,M) and financial mechanical engineering, busi¬ OPEN AT 11 A.M. ED 2-6517 mathematics, physics/ 'PARKING LOT ENTRANCE) administration, personnel and ness, H '' material science and electrical and mechanical engineering (B). marketing (M). chemistry, and economics Marvel-Schebler Div., Borg- (B,M,D). The Student Education As¬ Rike-Kumler Company, Fed¬ Warner Corporation: Electrical erated Department Stores: All sociation will hold a symposium and mechanical engineering and movie at 6:15 tonight in majors of the Colleges of Home (B,M). Economics, Arts and Letters, E r i c k so n Lounge, fifth floor. Mechanical Handling Systems, Communication Arts, and Social Topic of the symposium and Inc: Electrical and mechanical What would it Science (B) (December and March movie will be "Controversial engineering (B,M). graduates only) and general busi¬ Literature in the Classroom." Mutual Life Benefit: All ness, marketing and management majors, all colleges (B) pecem- (B,M) (December and March MSU Promenaders will hold an open dance at 7:00 tonight in 34 ber and March graduates only). Nuclear-Chicago Corporation: Physics, chemical, biochemical graduates only). Square D Company: Electri¬ take to get you interested Women's IM Building. There cal and mechanical engineering, and electrical engineering (B), will be free lessons and all in¬ terested are invited. TONIGHT - ALL COLOR PROGRAM in Lear Siegler?" BOX OFFICE OPEN NIGHTLY AT 7:00 The Marketing Club will meet THIS YEAR'S at 7:30 tonight in the Teak Room ■CO-FEATURE - of NATALIE WOOD STARS AS Eppley Center. Guest speaker will be Robert B. Neilson, vice- president and sales manager of the William A. Robinson sales promotion company. IjjllCHIOAN Co-Starring Ian Bannen Dick Shawn - Peter Falk Jonathan Winters miii mini unN mn cams hi mi TODAY. . from 1:10 P.M.I Shown At 10:30 Only i!/ kiii ii sum mm ADDED-Cartoon S; Short Shown Tonight At 7:40-Repeated In Part LADIES DAY . . . WED. Subject^ 60/ to 6:00 P.M. BOX OFFICE OPEN AT 7:00 TONIGHT 'IN TH: IfAT t-celusive Drive-In 0FTO - Showing - MIGHT" 2 MILES SOUTHWEST OF LANSING ON M-78 (Would aerospace challenge, professional recognition ggg-g; ••31" 5?25.7?3S: 9:40 Chiller of the year! Monster of the year! and a midwest location do for starters?) Fiends AIIMtKV We're big enough to have been active in every cation and display systems for frozen major aerospace project. Small enough to want to aircraft, missiles and spacecraft. In this respect dead at see you get all the professional recognition you we're currently engaged in some of the most exciting the height of can achieve, all the responsibility you can handle research and development programs you'll find in their diabolical — with appropriate advancement. The other side any company, large or small. And we're versatile ■»* powers and of that coin, naturally, is that there are simply no enough to sustain this air ofexcitement and dynamic brought back mazes to get lost in at LSI. growth within an overall framework of stability! ^ years later. What's more, LSl's recently-expanded facilities are Our Supervisor of University Relations, will be on based in Grand Rapids, Michigan —not some your campus soon. If engineering or science is your SHOWN AT 9:45 ONLY far-oil", crowded coast or sweltering southland. field and we've given you good reason to be inter¬ (We like Grand Rapids because among other things ested in Lear Siegler. be sure and see him. He's it's friendly, cultural activities thrive and real estate interested in B.S., M.S. and Ph.D. candidates who is about as sane as anywhere in the country.) are interested in what LSI has to offer. (If you can't We're a critical defense industry deeply involved in make it. write as soon as possible.) design, development and manufacturing. Our challenges include advanced flight reference, navi- On Campus—October 27-Kngineerinn Placement Office LEAR SIEGLER, INC. isstki mkst division DANA ANDREWS HERBERT J. LEOER ANNA PALK HERBERT J LEDER i equal opportunity employer * WARNER BROS.-SEVEN ARTS RELEASE A GOLD STAR PR00UCTI0N TWOTHKICOAI) ^ Ponovision' Color by Deluxe EXTRA! COLOR CARTOON AND SHORT SUBJECT 'JUST FOR SPORT' Wednesday, October 4, 1967 8 Michigan State News, East I/msiim. Michigan -SPORTS Cards' Gibson faces Boston today same two teams met in 1946. Eddie Kasko and his team prior Clear "Indian Summer" to Tuesday's practice. Opposes Santiago weather was forecast for the He then announced the same 1 p.m. EOT start, with a chance starting lineup that opened Sun¬ of showers late in the day. day's decisive gameagalnstMln- Santiago, in only his second full nesota, which the Red Sox won series opens season in the majors, earned the 5-3 behind ace pitcher Jim Lon- as starting nod from Manager Dick Williams by beating the Min¬ borg. Jerry Adair, who suffered a nesota Twins on the next-to-last seven-stltch wound in his left BOSTON (UPI)—Jose Santiago, fe*son before clinching the day of the season for his fourth leg Sunday but reported there was the clutch pitching star of the American League flag, were 3-2 victory in the Red Sox' late pen¬ no swelling and he felt good, will "miracle" Boston Red Sox, was favorites to win the Series and nant surge and his 12th In 16 ; lead off and play second base. primed to oppose experienced n-10 choices for the first game decisions. Like all but two He will be followed by third Bob Gibson of the favored Su in cramped, antiquated Fenway baseman Dalton Jones, left Louis Cardinals Wednesday In Park, fielder Carl Yastrzemski, right the first game of the 1967 Wor fielder Ken Harrelson, first Series. baseman George Scott, center The Cardinals, who won t fielder Reggie Smith, shortstop National League pennant r Rico Petrocelli.cather Russ Gib¬ weeks early while the Red S son and Santiago. fought to the last day of t Cards Manager Red Schoen- dienst, who played on the Card¬ inals' 1946 World Champions who Series hurlers defeated Boston In seven games, Bob Gibson of St. Louis and Jose Santiago of York Yankees. No other Cardinal ORLANDO CEPEDA CARL YASTRZEMSKI nominated the same starting line¬ Boston named as starting pitchers in were the pitcher has thrown a ball in the up that carried his team to the World Series. Santiago, deeply In from Puerto Rico,talk overthe earliest NJ_. pennant clinching opening World Series game today in Boston's Fen¬ one up In that screen on top moved by the distinction of being hitters with my wife and then go of the wall, the deal's off." since *1955. way Park. the first Puerto Rlcan ever to to sleep. Sox Manager Williams, who ap¬ pitch a World Series opener, One of Santiago's best friends peared in one world series for seemed than Gibson. more tense happens to be Orlando Cepeda, the Brooklyn Dodgers as a pinch "This is the greatest honor of the Cards' best hitter and leading my life," said Santiago on the candidate eve of his big moment, little nervous but you have to be Award. for the "fma League's Most Valuable Player National hitter for a microscopic series edge over all his players except veteran catcher Elston Howard and plnchhitter Norm Siebern, Litwhiler predicts nervous to pitch well. I plan conducted an hour and a half "I told him after the game I'm Cards over Boston to pick up my parents tonight long meeting with scouts Frank going out and buy him a dinner," at the airport where they're flying Malzone, Tommy Thomas and joked Santiago, "But if he puts ber of the Cardinals' pennant "I just figured they had the By GAYEL WESCH State News winning teams of 1943 and 44, club to do it," Litwhiler said. Sports Writer and played in 10 of 11 World "They were young and had all MSU Baseball Coach Danny Series games. kinds of desire and were getting Litwhiler predicts a World Litwhiler hit .229 for the 10 great hitting and pitching." Series' victory for the St. Louis series games, getting eight hits "The Red Sox remind me a Cardinals, one of the teams he in 35 at bats, including two lot of the Philadelphia Phillies played for in his major league doubles and a home run. The 'Whiz kids' of 1950, but they're Cardinals lost the 1943 series of 1950, but they're a better demonstrating in each of these 20th century tech¬ Ling-Temco-Vought, Inc., is among the our success "I think the Cardinals have four games to one to the Yan¬ team. top 50 industrial corporations in the United efforts. nological require¬ the pitching, fielding, power and kees, but won the following year "This whole series is like ments to explore everything else that's needed to 4-2 from the Browns. the 1950 series between the States, with projected 1967 consolidated LTV 1967 consists of a parent company win it,"Litwhiler said. "They've He was a teammate and is a •Whiz kid' and the Yankees. and seven subsidi¬ and improve his also got three games in suc¬ close friend of RedSchoendienst, sales in the range of $1.6 to $1.7 billion. One team was young and inex¬ cession on their home field, and the Cardinals' manager. aries—each com¬ environment and perienced and the other was a LTV's financial it's possible that they'll sweep But even with his ties to the veteran team." success — meas¬ peting in a distinct defend his home¬ them. Cardinals, Litwhiler has a lot The Yankees won that series land. "Fenway Park shouldn't bother of respect for the Red Sox. He in four straight. ured by its growth industry, yet con¬ the Cardinals much and they was one of the few who was "The Red Sox have the dis- from a $4 million tributing a unified We welcome the oppor¬ should split there." predicting a Red Sox pennant Litwhiler's choice of St. Louis in August when the four team race company just a value for the entire tunity to tell the LTV story isn't surprising. He was a mem¬ in the American League got hot. Lltwhller said. Those kids have LTV to college students been under great pressure and decade ago — is organization. haven't had a chance to get ready a direct result of a management principle Through its seven across the nation. For additional in¬ ATTENTION - M.S.U. STUDENTS for the series. "The Cardinals of building values for our shareholders, companies, LTV par¬ played to win, MAC'S is now located at but also to get in shape, and our employees, our customers and the ticipates in a wide vari¬ formation on the they've set up their pitching ro¬ communities in which our companies operate. ety of diversified, international markets: meat and food process¬ many challenging ca¬ reer positions avail¬ 213 North Wash. Ave. With Central tation." 'The same the Phillies in 1950. thing happened to Michigan's Largest Selections They won We try to ing, aerospace, elec¬ able throughout LTV the pennant by taking a playoff make LTV a good invest¬ ment, a good place tronics, sports and athletic goods, trans¬ and its subsidiaries, write to Professional please And all PIPES-CIGARS smoking accessories - special for you from Brooklyn." Litwhiler thinks the series should go six or seven games. "The Red Sox were supposed to work, a good mission cable, pharma¬ Placement at the This ad is worth $1.00 to you on any Sale to make mistakes because of from 5.95 and over - except cigarettes ceuticals and chemicals, addresses shown their youth, but they didn't, and place to buy a good And I don't think they'll kick the series Liquor and sound systems. in each c o m product, and a good - MAC'S — OPEN EVERY NITE — MAC'S away either. I know both The LTV pany's chart. An managers, and they're great in¬ neighbor. Our companies dividuals and leaders, so both growth, we feel, serve man's ancient basic needs for food, equal opportunity teams will be trying to win it speaks for itself in recreation and good health, and fulfill his employer. 40* Now — when you finish your drink, for them. "It should be a well played series." So says the seventh son of a seventh son, who's been right just whistle for more all but of his predictions LING-TEMCO-VOUGHT, INC. like in the on one days of yore with . .. in the past four years. new Odds rate MSU over Wisconsin NEW YORK (UPI)--The odds- makers Monday tabbed top- ranked Notre Dame a 34-polnt favorite in Saturday's game 1 against Iowa, despite its stun¬ ning setback to Purdue last week¬ end. In Big lOgames,Michigan State twenty one and one half over Wisconsin; Michigan six and one half over Navy; Illinois 12 over Southern Methodist. UCLA, ranked No. 2 in the first United Press International Board of Coaches ratings, is a ten and one- half point pick over Penn Authentic reproduction of glass State; third-ranked Southern Cal¬ ifornia is a 19-point choice over bottom mug in lead-free pewter Stanford; fourth-ranked Houston faithfully detailed even to the is rated 20 points better than . slot or "whistle" on the underside North Carolina State and Georgia, the traditional "S" shaped han¬ ranked no. 5, is picked by 18 dle used in points over South Carolina. days of yore to sum¬ Sixth-ranked Nebraska is a 16- mon the barmaid when the mug polnt pick over Kansas State; was empty! Capacity, 16 ounces. seventh-ranked Colorado is • whopping 24 points over Iowa $1250 State; eighth-rated Purdue is 19 points over Northwestern; Ala¬ bama, ranked no. 9, was 10 over Mississippi and tenth-rated Mis¬ souri's game with Arizona is off the board. In a Friday night game, Miami of Florida Is a four-point selec¬ tion over Tulane. OFFICIAL In other Saturday games in the East; Penn 11 over Brown; MSU - MUG WITH COLLEGE SEAL West Virginia 7 over Pittsburgh; Princeton 6 over Columbia; Syr¬ acuse 14 over Maryland; and Col¬ M2°» gate 4 over Cornell and Dart¬ mouth 1 over Holy Cross. Wednesday, October 4, 1967 9 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan SPORTS Saul twins make Goalie Baum has it big with MSU By NORM SAARI State News Sports Writer easy time in nets By NORM SAARI "Against Pittsburgh, for In- this is the first year he has Last year Ron Saul got to watch his brother Rich start on the stance," Kenney said,"Joemade started," Hens said. "He is freshman football team and then earn the starting berth in spring State News Sports Writer innumerable saves that were not dependable in the goal and works varsity practice. Statistics may be deceiving, recorded. A lot of these saves well when we are safeguarding This year, Ron still gets to watch Rich. But it Is from a totally were on shots that could easily him from behind, but It still stands on record that different viewpoint as Ron has been granted eligibility from the have been goals, If he had not "He calls out the plays real soccer goalie Joe Baum has not Big Ten and has started both games this season as an offensive been too busy this season. charged them.'' well and lets us know where the right tackle. three games, soccer op- Officially, Baum only recorded ball is and whether there is an Rich Is the starting defensive left end. The wait was particularly long for Ron. He was ruled ponents have scored one goal one save win over Pitt. in the Spartans' 1-0 offensive man behind us." When a forward makes it past academically Ineligible to play last year and was not allowed to "A lot of the credit has to the defense, Baum feels his best put on the football pads until he established at least a 1.7 grade Baum has had to make^ only go to the defense though," Baum move Is to go out and meet the point for the year. nine saves. Orhan Enustun, said. "They are all tough in man, hoping the shooter commits Ron earned a 2.7, and in three weeks of pre-season practice, letting the opposition get a > foolish mistake and is not able second team goalie, made another was moved Into the starting spot. three in the second half he played offensive attack going. On this to get a decent kick. "1 never expected to come around this fast," Ron said. "Last team, a goalie has to be con¬ "If he comes down the middle, against Purdue. year was depressing, not being able to play, but it seems that just The nine saves are deceiving, sistent, not particularly spec- I like to meet him early, about the word football kept me going. I was fortunate to get the starting tacular, since the defense will according to Coach Gene Kenney. 13 yards out," Baum said. "If berth.'' staff Hesays" Baum Is the type of always be back to assist you." he is coming in on an angle, it from The look-alike Saul brothers were recruited by the MSU Butler, Pa. and were on a high school team quarterbacked Goal saver goalie that will < forward to prevent him from Defensive fullback and team co-captain Peter Hens feels his is more ideal to meet him about geyen dg ow glnce he lg in intrasquad practice game i has had by Notre Dame star Terry Hanratty. Goalie Joe Baurr a save an taking a shot on goal or else line is adjusting well to Baum's ghootlng a much more dMicvlt A certain amount of pressure was on them to play at Penn State, to make only nin« hree games as the Spartan soccer tean idefeated, the shot before it gets to pky. meet shot." alnce an older brother, Bill, was an all-American there and is "Joe Is fantastic considering 3-0. State News Photo by Jim Mead the goal crease. now starting linebacker for the professional Pittsburgh Steelers. Baum, a Junior, earned the "I figured MSU was the best in the country," Rich said, "and starting goalie job when last I would satisfy myself if I could play here." year's regular, Kevin O'Connell, Rich has 13 tackles in the two games so far this season, ranking him fourth on the team. ROSENBERG TAKES HONORS became ineligible this year. O'Connell transferred here from "Rich is so sound technically, he doesn't make many mistakes St. Louis University after his playing defense,"Coach Duffy Daugherty said. "Ron has tremendous freshman year. dedication to the sport and his enthusiasm and hustle plays over a lot of mistakes that woul* be expected of a boy starting without any previous collegiate experience." Ron injured a ligament in his left doubtful starter against Southern Cal. elbow last Tuesday and was a He played the complete By STEVE LOKKER S' harriers hold 1st time little warm for cross country," seconds ahead of the fifth place a trial such as this. The first trials day morning. MSU will open It was the that of understanding then he would have three years soccer eligibility, but the faculty representatives meeting game, with his arm heavily padded, and should be somewhat said Dittrich. "It wasn't that runner. ten runners had a spread of its regular season against an refused to let him play this State News Sports Writ* bad of a time trial." This is one of the things the 57 seconds. improved Indiana team. season. Improved physically for the Wisconsin game. "1 feel I have to prove myself in games now," Ron said. "Coach Cross Country Coach Fran A good sign was the spread coaches look for when judging The true test will come Satur- The meet will begin at 10:30 He is now assisting Kenney of the times, Dittrich a.m. at Forest Akers Golf as freshman coach. (Gordie) Serr (offensive line coach) and Coach Daugherty have Dittrich had his first good look taken extra time with me and now it is a matter of showing them finished only 16 I Course. It is the first of three at what he can expect from his Rosenberg home meets. "Kevin has helped me con- Improvement." runners for the coming season. Ron, married and the father of a year-old son, weighs 230, about He had the team run its first Other home meets include siderably In my play," Baum ten pounds heavier than Rich. time trials in 80 degree weather Eastern Michigan, Oct. 21 and said. "He taught me a few things One of Rich's greatest assets on the field is his speed. He has Time 9:00 Minnesota, Nov. 11. about the goalie Job that I had on the Forest Akers Golf Course. been timed at 4.8 seconds for 40 yards, with full football gear on. Field MSU will be vying for its no idea about. He played under The Spartans ran four miles, one first Big Ten title in four years, a European coach and was able He uses his speed on pursuit plays, as shown Saturday when he I.M. BUILDING FIELDS 2 Woodbrldge - Wooster mile shorter than the NCAA dis- assisted with several tackles on sweeps around the opposite end. 3 Worst - Wolverines The last three seasons have seen to show me some excellent "The Michigan State defenses have earned a great tradition 4 Wimbledon - Windsor State as runner-up. moves." Newly elected team captain, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 4 7 West Shaw 3-5 and I would like to someday look back and say I was part of it," Dean Rosenberg justified the said Rich, who was named as one of the five top sophomores in choice by finishing first in the the country by a national sports magazine. Time: 6:00 Time: 9:45 "A big part of football is self-pride," Rich continued. "You don't want anyone to put you down. I don't think it will happen time trials. The junior from North Muskegon ran the dis¬ Field Field BARNES FLORAL tance in a time of 21:59. 2 Bower - Howland again this season." 2 Woodpecker - Wolfram '•There Is tremendous inspiration Ron can give me by playing Rosenberg was expected to be 3 Wildcats - The Roots j 3 Wiquassett - Winshre the No. 1 runner on the team 4 Mrs. Bras. Boys - Assassins on the same team," Rich said. "But actually, the whole team 4 Wlnecellar - Winchester before the season began. Rosen¬ 7 McNab - McLean are like brothers. We are dedicated to one Idea—playing football." 7 Hibbard 2-5 ORDER YOUR CENTERPIECES berg finished 26th in the Big Ten championship meet and 34th Time: 6:45 bowling CORSAGES AND ROSES' in the IC4A run. Field Junior Roger Merchant and 2 The Hurts - Thetz XI WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 4 sophomore Gary Blsbee finished 3 Carleton - Cache Time: 8:30 p.m. WE TELEGRAPH FLOWERS second and third with a time of 4 Emerald - Embassy 1-2 Phi Kappa Tau - Delta Chi 22:07. WORLD WIDE 7 Fegefeuer - Feral 3-4 Phi Sigma Kappa - Freshman Dick Aslin made a ■ Delta Upsilon ED2-0871 good showing with a fourth place Time: 7:30 time of 22:11 as did freshman 5-6 DTA - Pi Kappa Phi 215 ANN STREET EAST LANSING Field Ken Hartman and Norm Cepela. .1 2 Hoi den N3 - 5 Hartman took fifth with 22:15 3 BFAAA - Tonys Boys a and Cepela sixth with 22:19. Dale Stanley took seventh with 22:36 four miles, while Bill 4 Jutes - 7 Hubbard 3-6 Suds Special MUIRS Bradna came in eighth at 22:41, Time: 8:15 NOW THRU OCT. 8 Freshman Bill Hoebeke placed Field ninth at 22:49 and Jim Bastian 2 Caribbean - Cameron Brookfield Plaza followed him with 22:56. 3 EMU - Embers 1399 E. Grand River 4 Bacardi - Balder "The four mile times are de¬ 7 Akbarama - Aku-Aku DEAN ROSENBERG Open Nights, Sundays, Holidays ceiving," said Dittrich. "The DRUG STORES first time the team ran against each other rather than with each other rather than with each other. Two of a kind REGULAR 5c It was also the first time the MSU's football team has got a whole lot of "Saul" on the squad this year. Twin brothers Ron (left) Spartans ran hills. They had practiced mostly on the flat sec¬ CANDY Rich (right), have both earned starting assignments tions of Forest Akers. Times for the Spartans as sophomores.Ron, is an offensive will naturally be slower than BARS tackle, while Rich is a defensive end. those dufing a meet. ALL BRANDS State News photo by Bob Ivins "It was a good day but Swim meeting Army & Air Force Basic Cadets BOx O Qt A meeting will be held for OF24 Oir A those Interested in managing the swimming team today, 7-8 p.m., in room 129, Men's IM. JOIN Softex 2-Ply PERSHING RIFLES FACIAL 3QOOC TISSUES BOX OF 200 Mulr's Always Give You 5b88* FREE Color FILM Whenever you bring a roll of Kodak Kodacolor TRAINING IN: Film to Muir's for developing and printing, we give you a similar size roll of Kodacolor SMALL UNIT TACTICS Film Free! We do this immediately, without PHYSICAL TRAINING waiting.io see how many good prints there are MARKSMANSHIP LE ADE RSHIP on your exposed roll of film. BAYONET DRILL WANTED: Be On Folk Singers Among the wildly whirling lights of the fashion world TRAVEL ALARMS there's always something special. . .justyours. You Dancers recognize it because it feels right, way in-side you. Handy for college of trav¬ Comedians Magicians ATTEND That's why we always show you so many of the newest ideas and moods in everything that's fashion! eling. Attractive fold-up case. Reg. $4.98 3*8 Organists Hawaiian Performers V&X Oui' V 3'dnctulll ALARM CLOCKS "Pop" Vocalists Square Ctince Callers Instrumentalists OPEN Big ideas in little things that are hard-to-find . .. "different" colors .,. "large or smaller" accessories DOMINION Guaranteed accurate wound alarms; luminous or plain dial. Reg. $2.99. key- I99 These talented . . . "first of a kind" of coming attractions. You'll .. . types are SMOKER unexpected, herel revel in the needed to perform for spe¬ cial happenings on and off HAIR DRYER ELECTRIC ALARMS the campus. If this is your bag and extra bread is Oct. 5 - 7:00 p.m. ss 11M Quality electric alarms. ^^ruutAKA— Plain or luminous dial. your end, call the Cap and Dem. Hall Gown Series today, 355- Room II - 4-speed portable dryer; Reg. $3.98. Sale priced ... Mm 4570, or make the scene at large boufant hood; lovely Room 16, Kellogg Center, hat box case. for an audition. Wednesday, October 4, 1967 10 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan ] STATE NEWS STATE NEWS Classified 355-8255 Pick up your telephone now & place a result getting want ad. Classified 355-8255 Automotive Automotive Automotive Employment ' " For Rent HONDA 1967, 305Scrambler. Ex¬ WANTED FOR full time employ¬ CORVAIR 1964, red, 4-speed, SPRITE 1959. New transmission. ACCIDENT PROBLEM? Call PART TIME work available for SUBLEASE, winter term. Cedar- tras. Mint condition. 332-2715 ment, clerk typist, call INGHAM students with one or more days brook Arms. Apt. 15, for four. four new tires, radio and air Heavy duty clutch. No rust. KALAMAZOO STREET BODY after 6 p.m. 4-10/6 RADIOLOGICAL ASSOCIATES. 351-6354. 5-10/5 conditioning, good condition. 355-9394. 3-10/5 SHOP. Small dents to large free. Contact ROBERT'S LAND¬ 332-0883. 5-10/4 $595. 351-6085. 4-10/6 wrecks. American and foreign SCAPING, West Mt. Hope at WANT f D SUNBEAM ALPINE 1964 Radio, cars. Guaranteed work. 482- BENELLI 1967250cc, Scrambler. EARNINGS ARE unlimited as an 1-96 viaduct. 5-10/6 NEED ONE girl for two-man CORVAIR Convertible 1964. 4- wire wheels, very good con¬ 1286. 2628 E. Kalamazoo. C In perfect condition. Sacrifice. apartment. Utilities included. 393-4611. 4-10/6 AVON Representative. Turn 332-2612. 5-10/9 • AlrtOM0T)Vl speed, radio, low original mil¬ dition. 487-3338 5-10/5 HELP WANTED week-ends, your free time into $$. For an eage. IV5-2080. 3-10/6 MASON BODY SHOP, 812 East waiters, waitresses, 18 or older. TEMPEST 1964 4-speed, 326, Kalamazoo Street—Since 1940. HONDA 250 Scrambler. Excel¬ appointment in your home, write After 6 p.m., phone 489-7483. ONE GIRL needed immediately. . FOR REHT Mrs. AlonaHuckins, 5663 School Haslett Arms No. 38. Call 351— CORVETTE 1963 Fastback 327 tires, ski rack. Best lent condition. $370 includes Will furnish transportation, , FOR SALE snow Complete auto painting and col¬ 351-8311. 3-10/6 helmet. 6061 Abbott Road. Call Street, Haslett, Michigan or call 0173 after 4:30 p.m., ask for cubic Inch, 340 h.p. $1900. Call offer. lision service. American and room and board. Top wages. . LOST & FOUND 351-9755. 5-10/6 IV2-6893. 5-10/6 Rena. 3-10/5 • PERSONAL 482-8527. 5-l°/5 foreign cars. IV 5-0256. C 5-10/10 THUNDERBIRD 1955, Fiberglass • PEANUTS PERSONAL top. Excellent body. 66-390 Ford SUZUKI 50, 1966. Damaged.Only DRIVERS 21 or over. Part and WORKING GIRL (at least 21) • REAL ESTATE CORVETTE 1965 convertible 327. ,vlation full time. Apply 122 Woodmere, WANTED FULL OR part time Drlvetrain. Leaving country, 200 miles. Best offer. 485- help for general nursery work. to share my apartment. 300 SERVICE Excellent condition. Must sell. side door. • best offer. 485-8252. 3-10/4 ?RANCIS AVIATION. SO easy to 4230. 5-10/4 3-10/5 Call ED 2-3310. 3-10/6 1/2 S. Holmes, across from TRANSPORTATION Phone 351-4032 after 5:30 pjn. • learn in the PIPER CHERO- Sparrow Hospital. Call after WANTED 3-10/5 TRIUMPH 1961, hardtop, con¬ GENERAL SECRETARY: Reli¬ 5:00 pjn., 372-1114. • KEEI! Special $5.00 offerl 484- HONDA 1966 S-90, 1900 miles. NEEDED IMMEDIATELY. Sec¬ 3-10/5 vertible. Excellent condition. Good condition. Must sell. 351- able, professional personality, 1324. C ond and third grade teachers. DEADLINE. FALCON 1964. Good, cheap Best offer. 337-9373. 5-10/10 shorthand, bookkeeping. Speed 6757. 3-10/4 Must be able to obtain Michigan NEW TWO bedroom duplex apart¬ transportation, needs battery. LEARN TO and accuracy Important.Career ment, featuring gas range, dis¬ 1 P.M. one class day be¬ Best offer. 355-9911. 3-10/5 TRIUMPH, SPITFIRE, 1965. sky-dive with the permanent or provisional cer¬ fore publication. MSU Parachute Club. Contact SUSUKI 1966, 80. Like new. opportunity. 372-1845. 5-10/4 posal. Full basement, carpeting, tificate. Contact Lilliam Blue, 11,000 miles. Owned by Bob Olson 355-8019. Only 1300 miles. Call IV9- drapes and yard. Must see to FIAT 1960, Sedan. New tires, teacher. 372-9775. 3-10/6 5-10/4 EXPERIENCED DENTAL assist¬ Homeyer, Okemos Schools 337- Cancellations - 12 noon one 4109 after 5:30 pjn. 3-10/5 1775. 3-10/6 appreciate. Available Novem¬ runs good. $75. 351-5021 after ant full time with orthodontist, SPARTANS: Ground ber 1. $140, plus utilities. 2122 class day before publica¬ 5:15 P»itu 3-10/5 WINGED TRIUMPH 1961, TR-3, two tops. BENILLE 1966, 125cc. Used four 18-28. Call 482-9695 days, 484- Meadow Lawn. Holt. 694- tion, school will be offered again this MALE STUDENTS: Part-time Call 882-1182 before 3 pjn. months. $250. 699-2727 after 0702 evenings. 5-10/4 0613. 3-10/4 fall each Wednesday from 7-10 openings now available. Call PHONE FIAT 1965, 1100D, 4-door sedan. 3-10/5 5:30 p.m. 4-10/5 p.m„ Room 34, Union Building. 393-5660. 2-4 p.m. Monday- 355-8255 26,000 miles. 485-0038. BARTENDER AND waitress, ex¬ ONE GIRL immediately. Bur- 3-10/6 TRIUMPH HERALD 1963 conver¬ Cost $20. Both members and Friday. 29-10/31 non-members welcome. Send HONDA 1966, S-90. Excellent perience preferred. Driftwood cham Woods. $58.34. Nine month RATES Lounge, South Pennsylvania. lease if desired. 489-4522. tible. Low mileage. $500. name, address and phone num¬ shape. Call after 6 pjn. 655- BUSBOY WANTED - Meals. Call 1 DAf si.50 FORD 1964 Galaxie 500. 390 332-0971. 3-10/5 3342. 5-10/4 Call Tom Kurzlg at 882-5482 3-10/4 ber with $20 to Winged Spar¬ 351-0250 after 7 p.m. 7-10/12 .3 Days s3.oo cubic Inches. Four-speed for appointment. 5-10/4 tans, P.O. Box 287, East Lan¬ 5 days j5.00 transmission. $850. 372-6129. TRIUMPH 1965 Spitfire. 2300 NEW ONE bedroom, air-condi¬ 3-10/5 sing. 9-10/3 Employment tioned, carpeted, appliances. actual miles, excellent condi¬ PROFESSIONAL NURSES: All WANTED IMMEDIATELY: Ty¬ [based on 10 wordt per ad) Ideal for faculty and graduate Over 10, ISf per word, per day tion, radio, top, tonneau. 332- Scooters & Cycles ROOM AND board In return for shifts, full-time or part-time. pist secretary for two weeks couples. $135 unfurnished, $160 LOTUS WORLD champion cars. 1408. 3-10/5 Excellent pay scale. We invite work. Pay $1.40 per hour. assisting handicapped attorney furnished. 927WestShiawassee. There will be a 50tf service Mid-Michigan's only authorized LATE 1966 Triumph. 500 Com¬ in arising and retiring even¬ you to compare our liberal Call University Lutheran TR-3 1962. TU 2-5761, ED 7-9248. and bookkeeping charge if Lotus sales and service. THE Super condition, fringe benefits including a Day petition, 2,000 miles. $850,351- ings, 484-1938, between 7-9:30 Church, ED 22559. 1-10/4 this ad is not paid within CHECK POINT, minutes radio, complete overhaul trans¬ 10-10/4 two 5363. 5-10/10 p.m. 5-10/6 Care Nursery for your pre¬ one week. east of campus. 2221 W. Grand mission. Many extras. 332- schoolers. A beautiful modem CLINICAL LABORATORY 0971 TWO GIRLS needed for apart¬ The State News will be River, Okemos. Phone 332- 3-10/5 HONDA 305 Enduro, 4,000 miles, NURSES AIDES - experienced, general hospital. For further Supervisor, Ph.D., preferred, 4916. C-10/5 Extras. Beautiful Information, stop by, or call ment immediately. One block responsible only for the New Paint. for two nursing homes. 7-3, however, will consider an M.S. from campus. $58.30 including VOLKSWAGEN 1966, $1150. Also machine. $550. 351-72 59. Lansing General Hospital, 2800 first day's Incorrect Inser¬ 3-11, 11-7. Apply PROVINCIAL degree. Beginning salary utilities. 340 Evergreen. Rober¬ MERCURY CONVERTIBLE 1962. MG-TD 1953, $1250. Both ex¬ 3-10/6 Devonshire, 372-8220, Person¬ tion. HOUSE or call 332-0817. $11,000 to $15,000 plus fringe Excellent condition. Power. No cellent. 351-7754 after 6 p. ta, 355-8252. 5-10/6 10-10/11 nel Department, Extension 202 benefits. Five day work week. rust. $620. 355-0562 , 5-10/10 5-10 HONDA 1965 305 Superhawk. Ex¬ or 203. 8 ajn. to 4:15 pjn., Write Box 3-C, State News, TWO BEDROOM APARTMENTS The State News does not cellent condition. Helmets, Ex¬ CASHIERS, USHERETTES, mer¬ Monday through Friday. East Lansing. 3-10/6 available for faculty and/or MGB 1967 Green 3,700 miles. VOLKSWAGEN 1966, White, tras. $425. 351-0644. 3-10/6 chandise applications now being 30-11/1 permit racial or religious graduate students. Completely discrimination In its ad¬ Bought In Europe. Must sell. radio. Like new. Must sell. taken. SPARTAN TWIN THEA¬ BUSBOYS WANTED to work din¬ $2,500. 351-8311. 3-10/6 Best offer. 332-8641. Dennis carpeted including kitchens. GE vertising columns. The KAWIASAKI 1966175cc Srambler. TERS, Frandor Center. Apply NURSES: RN for extended care ners in exchange for meals B. appliances. Furnished or unfur¬ State News will not accept 3-10/5 Excellent condition. Helmet In¬ between 4-5 p.m. only. No phone facility, 7 a.m.-3 p.m.; 3 p.m.- and five dollars a week. Week MGB-GT, 1966, 10,000, SP tires, nished, with balconies. Phone advertising which discrim¬ cluded. $400.00. Leigh 351-0772. calls. 6-10/6 11 p.m. Liberal salary, bene¬ nights and Sunday noons. Call wire wheels, perfect condition. VOLKSWAGEN 1965, 1500, Sedan. Jon Runquist, 332-3534 or 332- inates against religion, 5-10/10 fits and differentials. Week¬ 332-1385. 2-10/5 8412. $2,500. 351-8909. 3-10/6 Good condition. $950. 372-97.^4 5-10/6 race, color or national or¬ DOORMEN: APPLICATIONS now end premium. Apply Provincial after 5 p.m. 3-10/6 igin. YAMAHA BIG Bear 250cc Scram¬ being taken. SPARTAN TWIN House or call 332-0817. For Rent MG TD TWO BEDROOMS: stove, refrig¬ 1952, Restored. 353- bler. $525.00. 332-4993 after THEATERS, Frandor Center. 10-10/4 1899. VOLKSWAGEN 1967, 1300. Light TV RENTALS for students. Low eration, garage. 1005 Baar. $105 10-10/9 4:30 p.m. 3-10/6 Apply between 4-5 pjn. only. blue. In new condition. 372- TU 2-5761, ED 7-9248. 10-10/4 HOUSEKEEPER, SITTER,wanted economical rates by the term 9737 after 4:30 p.m. 5-10/10 No phone calls. 6-10/6 MGB 1965 Immaculate, wire month. UNIVERSITY TV Automotive HONDA 1966 305 Scrambler. Ex¬ by Christian parents. Two chil¬ or wheels. Tonneau, many more dren in school and one toddler. RENTALS. 484-9263. C cellent condition. $450.00. They CAMPUS ROUTE man. Neat, de¬ extras. 351-5726. 10-10/11 VOLVO 1961 $250.00 firm. New FOX PX - FRANDOR AUSTIN HEALEY Sprite. Zero won't be this cheap next springl I pendable, individual with good Five days, eight to five, in battery. Snow tires' Included. 627-9150 after 6 p.m. East Lansing. Own transporta¬ TV RENTALS for students. $9.00 hours on total rebuild. Abso¬ Service records. Shoulder har¬ 4-10/9 driving record. Must be avail- MUSTANG, FASTBACK 289, 4- b1 3-7 p.m., Monday-F r 1- tion. Must be mature and re¬ month. Free service and deliv¬ Cigarettes 26 3-10/4 %%% 27 %% 1 30. Prophetical CHEVY II, 1962, Wagon, 6-cylin- Featuring Appliances %26 25 26 % 20 30 31 31 31. Turk, commander der. Good condition. Phone 32. Toweling IV5-0218. 3-10/4 General Public Welcome 39 35. 33 34 I'nexploded shell to the city address with a country air. 36 37 3# 39 CORVAIR 1962 Monza. Foui;- door. Excellent condition. New EAST LANSING MANAGEMENT CO. East Lansing Management Co. i 41 37. Spread to drv i 40 39. Palm leaf battery and tires. Call 355- 43 44 1825, 8-5, or 332-6691 after 41 5:30 p.m. 5-10/5 145 Burcham, Apt. 2 351-7880 a Wednesday, October 4, 1967 ]| Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan For Rent For Sale For Sale Service „ SAINT BERNARD puppies, reg- EXPERIENCED WELCOME BACK Students. proofreading of dissertations, drug lowers fat level Remember the big names in Hi- istered. Seven weeks old.Start- 372-2772. New theses. term papers. NEED MALE graduate to share fi, JLB, AR, EV, SCOTT, ing at $85. 4 females, 2 males. 3-10/5 one bedroom, furnished apart¬ MARANTZ, GARRARD, WOL- Call 355-0777 or 616-772-6220 ment. Call Bob at 353-8647 or LENSAK, etc. are in stock at after 5. 5-10/4 EXPERIENCED SEAMSTRESS 487-3063. 3-10/4 MAIN ELECTRONICS. 555 8 • would do ladies' and men's al¬ And since the body normally South Pennsylvania. C Mobil* Noma* terations. Call 372-1415.3-10/5 CHICAGO (JP; — A drug caused by a combination of such bodV ^" reabsorbed makes bile acids from cho¬ HASLETT: TWO bedroom, de¬ that may prevent—or else re¬ factors as a high cholesterol or Because of the Interference with lesterol, the cholesterol level In luxe. Will SEWING MACHINE sale, large 1963 MARLETTE 10' x 55'. Nice OUR LOW overhead saves you acceptfamlly with two verse—hardening of the arter¬ <»■ the blood Is lowered. children. No pets. Lease. De¬ ■election of reconditioned, used park near campus. Evenings money. OPTICAL DISCOUNT, ies even if the persons remain on He said the action is entirely posit. Immediate occupancy. machines, Singers, Whites, Uni¬ versal, Necchl. $19.95 to $39.95. 482-5964. 3-10/ 416 T us sing Building, Phone IV2-4667. 5-10/6 the high fat diets sometimes blamed for causing the condition srss.tsaJE' - — — - •«"- wfthin the gastro-intestlnal tract and that chances of producing 337-7618. 10-10/10 CUSTOM-MADE mobile home. Guaranteed easy terms. ED¬ Fuson said in an interview serious side effects slim. House GOP was reported by a Duke Univer¬ are DISTRIBUTING COM¬ Fully furnished including tele- C0MPUTER PROGRAMMING in and paper at the annual clinical 1648 HASLETT Road. New two WARDS sity researcher Tuesday. vision, brand new water heater compass and Algol. congress of the American Coli- bedroom furnished apartment PANY, 1115 N. Washington. 489- Fortran $2500. Phone 663-8345. 5-10/6 5-10/5 that the drug is , for three graduate students. Mu*t pay own utilities. Call 6448. C-10/5 694m0870. DIAPER SERVICE, Dlaparene Dr. Robert Fuson, a surgery resident at Duke who has been lege of Surgeons a powdered plastic known push for after 6 p.m. 351-5851. 5-10/5 GREAT LAKES, 1962, 10 x 50. chemically as cholestyramine. GIRLS WINTER wardrobe, size Franchlsed Service Approved trying the drug on others and on Good condition, extras, best of¬ ABBOTT ROAD - King's Point seven. Very reasonable. Excellent condition. 351-4573. * fer. 694-0772 evenings. 12-10/13 by Doctors and DSIA. The most modern and only personllzed himself for three years, said his studies indicate "you can have When said, it mixed with water, he becomes a yellowish spending cut East - will sublease our two- 2-10/5 WASHINGTON iff! — House service in Lansing, providing your cake and eat it too." compound that tastes like soda Democratic leaders said today bedroom deluxe apartment com¬ 1956 GREAT LAKES 8' x 35*. you with diaper palls, polybags, pop. pletely furnished, including lin¬ TV ZENITH. Late model walnut deodorizers, and diapers, or use Hardening of the arteries, they are confident the House Rumors at the State Capitol Fully furnished. Good condition. ens, dishes, etc to June 1, 1968. console on casters. Immacu¬ known medically as athero¬ Fuson said that when he start¬ will accept a temporary appro¬ that Gov. Romney would for¬ 351-7924. 3-10/5 your own. Baby clothes washed References and security deposit late. ED2-4905. 3-10/6 free. No deposit. Plant inspec¬ sclerosis, is a major killer and ed taking the drug, his blood priations bill and rebuff Repub¬ mally announce his candidacy required. Married couple pre¬ crippler. It results in heart cholesterol count was 250 milli¬ lican attempts to force Presi¬ for the 1968 GOP Presidential PRAIRIE SCHOONER 10 x 55, tion invited. AMERICAN DIA¬ ferred. $175, month, 351-9026. CARPETING, MATCHING 9' X attacks, strokes and loss of limbs dent Johnson to cut spending by nomination sometime this week, three bedroom, on lot near cam¬ PER SERVICE, 914 E. Gler.Call grams, a level placing him in 3-10/4 10', 7' X 10", Bigelow, all wool. 482-0864. C from gangrene. the danger bracket. For the last at least $5 billion. possibly at a press conference pus. 332-2437. 3-10/4 The condition is believed to be "I think we have unity now," Grey. With pad, $45.95 each. 1 1/2 years, he added, his count Wednesday morning, were THREE ROOM unfurnished, all IV5-0855. 1-10/4 below 75, almost the said Rep. Dan Rostenkowski, D- PIANO STUDIO: ELIZABETH has been quelled Tuesday by Jack Van¬ utilities paid. Couplfs only. Lost & Found TODD. Certified teacher of level of a newborn baby that 111., chairman of the Democratic denberg, an assistant press Near East Lansing. TU2-2451. REFRIGERATOR AND apartment M. M. T. A. Specializing In has not consumed any fatty foods. caucus, after it met this morning. secretary to the Governor. LOST: S.A.M. fraternity pin on Mr. R. Bahls. 6-10/6 Both for He said no votes were taken sized electric stove. $80. 351-8133. 3-10/6 Grand River. Reward 351-0523, 3-10/4 theory. 825 West Grand River, Eafet Lansing. 332-4613. Enroll WMSN cuts In trials on 65 other-humans, during the rare session attended Vandenberg said, "If you bet me It (Romney1 s announcement) WANTED ONE girl, four-man he said, their cholesterol levels by 215 of the 247 House Demo¬ will come this week, I'll bet you now. 10-10/4 apartment. 8754. $58, month. 351— 3-10/6 WEBCOR STEREO, $29.99; Metal bookcase $6.99. 489-5255 after FOUND MATH text, near Com- the chotter, have been reduced up to 60 per cent. He said 32 of 36 patients crats. Many Republicans—and some it won't come before Ebcember. Vandenberg also Indicated that putor Center, Call 353-8639. VISIT RABORN'S Barber Shop. 5:30 p.m. 1-10/4 suffering from symptoms ofhar- Democrats—have said if the the exact time and place for the 3-10/6 Razor cuts. 144 West Ottawa. TWO GIRLS needed for four-man apartment, starting November. 5-10/10 bocks o beat dening of the arteries enjoyed President doesn't agree to the "significant relief" but that their spending reduction, he won't get long awaltedannouncement, to his knowledge, has not positively FOR WEDDING and practical LOST—GREEN wallet on Grand — Cedar Village. 355-3500.2-10/5 River. Reward. Rhoada Weiss. Typing Service symptoms gradually returned approval for his 10 per cent In¬ been determined. shower gifts, complete line oi A new program format with when the medication was stopped come tax surcharge. basket-ware. See ACE HARD¬ 355-1428. 1-10/4 more popular music, PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE South mo*g con¬ temporarily. He discribed the Johnson met with congres¬ WARE'S selections. 201 East BARBI MEL, Professional typist. tests and giveaways and' less off Michigan Avenue, one room No Job too large or too small. drug's action: sional leaders of both parties Grand River, across from LOST: PEARL ring in Bessey chatter has been announced by Romney and Atty. Gen. Frank efficiency. Men only. Utilities Union. Phone ED 2-3212. C Hall Monday October 2, Reward. Block off campus. 332-3255. all-campus radio station,WMSN. Cholestyramine combines with Monday night, but the White House Kelley verbally battled at the paid. Share bath. $60 per declined to give details of the 355-1586. 1-10/4 "WMSN has quit talking and bile acids in the intestine and State Administrative board meet¬ month plus deposit. 489-3569 discussions. SPANISH GUITAR with Gibson causes them to be excreted from after 4 p.m. ANN BROWN, typist and multlllth started doing," John DeGroot, ing Tuesday morning. 3-10/6 FOUND SATURDAY football The hassle was over alleged amplifier, case. One year old. at offset printing*. Dissertations, station program director, said. 353-2692. 3-10/6 stadium: a purse. Call 355- "Starting 10 a.m. Thursday we Irregularities within the Mich¬ WANTED ONE man for newCedar theses, manuscripts, general Symington asks battle halt 5536, Bailey Hall, Room A 117. will be broadcasting a program of igan Highway Department and . Village apartment when open WHY RENT? Rebuilt 21" Gen¬ 1-10/4 typing. IBM, 17 years experi¬ October 15th. First month rent ence. 332-8384. C "authoritative rock" with more Kelley's Investigation into these. eral Electric televisions. 90 music and less conversation." Romney put down the attorney free. Accommodations avail¬ able until then. 372-9706. day warranty. $50. Call 337- Personal C A R OL "W FneTV; "Smith" Co r ona The new programming will (continued from page one) doesn't stop firing, won't that be general several times during the 9781. 10-10/16 Electric. Theses, term papers, feature the top 31 records of in North Vietnam, a stance that tough on the Marines who are meeting, saying Kelley's Investi¬ 3-10/6 MOTOWN AND all the other great under heavy attack on the de¬ general typing, Spartan Village. the "Fun Sound Survey", 10a.m. has caused him to be labeled a gation was Ineffective and got ELECTROLUX Vacuum cleaner sounds! Now booking! "The 355-2804. C-10/4 to 10 pjn., Monday through Fri¬ militarized zone? started too late. hawk. Hmui with all cleaning attachments. Finest Our", "The Toniks". day, DeGroot said. His answer: All of the testi¬ A. Unfortunately, we would Kelley said he would petition Runs like new. $22. 677-5322. 351-9359. 3-10/6 "We will be playing 18records for a new grand Jury Investiga¬ THREE BEDROOM house on STUDENT DISCOUNT - SHEILA mony from civilians and mili¬ lose those lives anyway. The 3-10/5 CAMPBELL. Experienced typ¬ each hour and giving away more tion If Romney can prove that Aurelius Road Just offMt.Hope. tary leaders that I have been only way we can really stop LISTED BY, THE 1967 DIREC¬ Male students. IV4-4164 after EVENING ist. Electric. Term papers, prizes," he said. "The prizes able to gather here and in my those losses would be a ground one Is needed. GOWNS, curtains, book TORY of PROFESSIONAL theses. 337-2134. C currently Include free billiard The two will meet again Thurs¬ 4:30 p.m. 4-10/6 cases, men's clothing, and mis¬ frequent visits to Vietnam Is Invasion to get at their mortars ELECTROLOGISTS. Remove games, hamburgers, hit 45 that the bombing pauses, partic¬ and artillery. I'm opposed to day. cellaneous. 332-2952. 3-10/5 unwanted halrl Telephone MRS. EAST SIDE near campus. Full PAULA ANN HAUGHEY, typist, records, 70 albums and theatre ularly in the Buddhist new year that because 1 believe any ground VIRGINIA HANCHETT, IV- house. Plenty of parking. $50 FISHER PHILHARMONIC Stereo IBM Selectrlc. Multlllth offset passes for all area theatres." holiday (TET) early this year, invasion of North Vietnam would 4-6132. C-10/5 per student. TU2-6333 or IV5- Console—Fisher Am-Fm Ster¬ printing. Professional thesis Telephone requests will be taken have resulted In many more bring Communist China Into the Kelley laid the groundwork for 5681. 5-10/6 eo tuner, amplifier, 3-way WANTED—CUSTOMERS. Save typing. 337-1527. C In the evening from 7-10, Mon¬ killings in South Vietnam. war. court reorganization Tuesday by day through Thursday. These The basis of this current ruling the legislature may abolish speaker system, Garrard AT6 money on washing and dry clean¬ of requests for stopping Q. What happens If the enemy the office of municipal Judge. NEEDED: THREE men for six Transportation requests plus record sales in steam changer and beautiful mahogany ing needs. Wash 2 Of, dry 10£. East Lansing will be used to the bombing is that action of doesn't stop firing? man house. 322 Leslie Street. French Provincial cabinetry. WENDROW'S COIN LAUNDRY, Kelley, relyingonan 1881 Mich¬ RESERVE YOUR seat for direct compile the "Fun Sound Survey" this kind will bring Ho Chi Mlnh A. Then the options would be igan Supreme Court ruling, said Well furnished, carpeted. $54 DRY CLEANERS, 3006 Vine. Only $275.Call355-3129. 5-10.9 bus service to stadium at Ann each week, DeGroot said. to the conference table. If we entirely with us. since the office of municipal . month each, plus deposit. Call One block west of Sears. 7 a.m.- 372-6188 after 4 pjn. Arbor for MSU-Michigan game. Saturdays will be all "rock" stop all fighting, won't he be Judge Is created by the legisla¬ 5-10/4 SALON HAIR DRIER with at¬ 11 p.m. 3-10/5 Call Bus Depot 332-2569. Q. How long would you sug¬ with "soul music" In the even¬ even more inclined to talk? The ture, it may be abolished by the tached chair. Like new. 351- 5-10/6 ings. Sunday wlll .be easy lis¬ thrust of my proposals is to test gest as a test period? EAST SIDE: 3-5 students or 6590. ANY LOYAL Spartan fan going A. Long enough so that the legislature. 4-10/6 tening music, he said. Ho's Intentions thoroughly. The court reorganization, re¬ working man. Furnished, re¬ to Notre Dame game, call Jane, government and the people, the decorated, and newly carpeted. RUMMAGE Wanted Live coverage of the Intra¬ Q. You think a cease-fire quired by the 1963 MichlganCon- SALE: 2-9 pjn., 355-1589. 3-10/5 mural football championship would be more effective than a administration and Congress, $165. - $185 per month. Phone October 5 &6,121 East Mt. Hope, stltutlon to be completed before could determine whether Hanoi 484-1086. 10-10/12 APPLICATIONS ARE once again playoffs and the hockey game of mere bombing pause? January 1, 1969, will betheprlme Lansing. 4-10/6 THIRTY TOP area bands and intends to talk or merely Is step¬ being taken to place your child the week are also being planned, A. If we do It this way, we topic at the fall legislative ses¬ other entertainers. MID- will lose fewer lives. ping up Its Infiltration. This is in In my nursery-type home. he said. sion starting next week. EAST LANSING - Duplexes, 1213 KING SLIDE trombone. Cleananc MICHIGAN TALENT AGENCY, no sense an ultimatum. Ferndale, three bedroom ranch, Equipped with full day's pro¬ Q. But suppose the enemy INC. State Licensed and bon¬ slightly used. Offers heard. 332- gram. Ages 2 1/2-5. Near carpet throughout, full base¬ 0497. 5-10/4 ded. Phone 351-5665. 4-10/6 ment, $175; 1656 Greencrest, Frandor. 482-3152. 3-10/6 two bedroom bi-level, large kit¬ chen, carpet throughout, $155. and DIAMOND BARGAIN: Wedding engagement ring sets. Save FREEH beauty. A thrilling hour of For appointment call TWO NON-STUDENTS tickets to STATE NEWS - These must be seen to be ap¬ 484-4519. MERLE NORMAN Wisconsin game. Good seats. 50% or more. Large selection of Call Don Sager, 332-3574. preciated. Seen by appointment plain and fancy diamonds. $25- COSMETICS STUDIO. 1600 East 3-10/6 only. Phone 351-7910,332-0091. 150. WILCOX SECOND HAND Michigan. C-10/4 THE KEY TO SALES 5-10/4 STORE. 509 E. Michigan. Phone THE SIDE-ARM FIRE HY- NON-STUDENT TICKETS to _485-4391. C EAST LANSING - Duplexes, two to three bedrooms. $150-$200. STUDENT DESK freshly enam¬ DRANTS: FeaturebandofSpar- i, USA. Now scheduling £°tre *me Game. Call 3"10/6 at 351"8429- Sandy 332-0480. 5-10/4 eled orange. ED2 -5909. for fall term. Call Stan, 332- • 3-10/4 WILL TRADE two Notre Dame 0439. C-10/4 VERY NICE three bedroom du¬ tickets for two Michigan. 351- 8438. 3-10/6 plex. Fireplace. Near Wardcllfl CLASSES IN E.S.P. and related School. No student groups. $185 month. 351-4311. Roe mi 10-10/11 VOLKSWAGEN LUGGAGE rack. Good condition. Call 355-8085. subjects In Lansing. 1845. DINO AND THE DYNAMICS Call 372- 16-10/6 GOOD USED mini-bike or small Honda. 4 p.m. Call 355-1860 after 1-10/4 ACTION 3-10/4 available Saturday night for ROOMS FOR two or three in SOUL. 489-9126. 3-10/5 GIRL NEEDED to help two male fine home, South Lansing, with LEICA 28mm. Wide-angle lens students in domestic chores in use of garage, kitchen, piano with viewfinder. Call Dan 351- Peanuts Personal exchange for dinners, 351-8065. now. Then all of this con¬ 5485. evenings. 3-10/4 3-10/4 venient ranch home five or six months to right parties. 882- MULTILrTH MODEL 85, office IT'S EASY, it's fun, it's inex¬ pensive, it's resultful . . . it's TWO GIRLS need apartment UNWIND your . 3563. 5-10/10 duplicator, 1 1/2 years old. Will State News want ads. Call our winter and spring. Near cam¬ WOMEN - ATTRACTIVE well- train operator. 337-1527. 5-10/5 ad advisor at 355-8255. MARGIE: Happy. 19th--Theworld pus. 353-2576. 3-10/4 selling problem furnlshed, clean room, two knows! Pharf. 1-10/4 BLOOD DONORS needed. $7.50 blocks from Union. 332-1760. BICYCLE SALES, rentals and now 3-10/5 services. Also used. EAST for all positive. RH negative with positive factor—$7.50. A to a STATE LANSING CYCLE, 1215 East CATHY IN LIVONIA: W.Y.M.M.? Make the right choice - Me - negative, B negative, and AB SINGLE ROOM for male stu¬ dent. Linens furnished. Near Grand River. Call 332-8303. NOW! - Michael 3-10/6 negative, $100)0. O negative— $12.00. MICHIGAN COMMU¬ NEWS Classified campus. 332-1682 . 3-10/4 NITY BLOOD CENTER, 507 Real Estate SINGLE. THREE blocks from EAST LANSING income erty; two apartments near cam¬ prop¬ East Grand River, East Lan¬ sing. Hours: 9-3:30 Monday and Consultant. Union. Parking. 447 Grove. EAST LANSING. Most attractive, pus, shopping, school, Nice Tuesday: 12-6:30 Thursday. 5-10/5 three bedroom ranch, 1-1/2 neighborhood by owner. 332- 337-7183. C 4913. 5-10/5 baths, newly decorated, lovely For Sale trees, close to University and school and SOLVE YOUR buying, renting BIRTHDAY CAKES, 7" - $3.60 two blocks from shopping center. Can finance selling or locating problems fast with a State News want ad. Costs so little - 8" - $4.12, 9" - $4.90 deliv¬ ONE SILVER poodle registered FHA at only $1200 down. Call Call our friendly State News ad ered. Also sheet cakes. KWAST BAKERIES, IV4-1317. C-10/5 female, four months old. 351-7342. Call 5-10/5 GEORGE C. BUBOLZ, Realtor, 332-1248. 5-10/4 advisor at 355-8255 for help in placing your ad. Sells so much , FACULTY AND GRADUATE STUDENTS Recreation BLUES ORGAN player and Organ furnished. Call im- vocal. Call THE TIMBERS RIDING STABLE. medlately, 351-6370. 3-10/4 EAST LANSING AREA Team drawn hayrides, also club PRIVATE LAKE room. Call 663-7178 for reser- 8-a~.m7~-"~5_p.m. IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY vations. C_10/4 Employee of Case Hall. East NEW 2 BEDROOM LUXURY APARTMENTS featuring com¬ Grand River area. 353-6750 5-10/9 plete air conditioning, carpeting, refrigerator, oven, range Service and dishwasher. ENJOY ALL winter and summer sports on a beautiful DIAPER SERVICE, Lansing's ONE MAN for three-man fur- private lake finest. Your choice of three nished house. $60. Call 482- FURNISHED model open daily 2 to 7. Saturdays and Sun¬ types; containers furnished, no 2331 or 484-1626. 3-10/5 days 1 to 7. deposit. Baby clothes washed DIRECTIONS: Take Saginaw Street east to Haslett Rd. Straight free. Try our Velvasoft proc- RELIABLE MARRIED couple ahead on Haslett Rd., 1/2 mile past OkemosRoad to ess. 25 years in Lansing. BY- wishes to sublease apartment CHALET' ^ARK APARTMENTS at Lake O' the Hills LO DIAPER SERVICE, 1010 E. winter term. Call 353-1403. PHONE 339-2278 Michigan. IV 2-0421. C 4-10/6 Wednesday, October 4, 1967 12 Michigan State News, East Lansing. Michigan EST *0< »D PRICES OPEN SUNDAYS 10 A.M. TO 7 P.M. WEEKDAYS.. .8 A.M. T010 P.M. fP H HERE ARE JUST f