Thursday MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY STATE STATE MEW East October 12, 1967 Vol. 60 Number 62 Lansing, Michigan ASMSU COMMITTEE V' By TRINKA CLINE pregnancy Greg Hopkins, ASMSU chairman, said cies committee to work with ASMSU on e.v.: 1 . : n was passed recommending Library hours to 11:30 each policy he hoped the committee would make sig¬ the issue. State News Staff Writer ni . . the Faculty Library nificant recommendations to clear up any James R. Thomas, East Lansing special d the ASMSU Library Com¬ University policy regarding coed preg¬ misunderstanding on the policies and to student, wrote two letters to the State mittee to adopt this change. nancies and health service policies on News criticizing the ROTC program and alter any inequities. birth control information and devices will was soon asked to drop a basic ROT\ -The card passed a resolution re- • be studied by a new ASMSU committee. Under the recently defined pregnancy course. tlut University services and The board also established a committee policies, c.oeds may not remain in school Members of the committee on preg - ■ available .for all-University after four-and-a-lulf months of preg¬ Tuesday night to investigate charges that . nancies and birth control, which will , u!ie:i not'being otherwise used, Michigan State ROTC classroom practices nancy. Parents*; unmarried pregnant begin meeting next week, are Cindy iivers ly officials make available, violate sections of the Academic Freedom coeds under 21 will be notified by the Mattson, Lang, Join Aitken, W!C presi¬ : one term in advance, a schedule Report. University. dent, and Shari Marski, Panhellenic epen dates and that student Cindy Mattson, female member-at- Lang proposed the ROTC study com¬ representative. tv: • not be charged for such large, initially moved to establish a com¬ mittee in response to the recent con¬ In othqr action of the board: • mittee on the pregnancy policy. Brad troversy regarding military science train¬ —A motion by Brad*Lang to hold an also requested that Lang, sophomore member-at-large, ing. Lang and Hal Lashlee, Inter-Co¬ all-University referendum reading amended the motion to Include birth con¬ operative Council president, will repre¬ "Should MSU dissolve all ties with the \e public a definite policy Association?" was de¬ cedure for acquiring use of trol policies. Lang said, "It's not just a question of sent ASMSU on the committee. motion included a request Lang's for two mem¬ National feated. Student Lang said that a petition de¬ k-ilities. He doesn't bite what to do for pregnant coeds, but how lution will be submitted to bers from the faculty educational poli- manding the referendum will probably be President Johnson's most active aid, Yuki, a small white mongrel to prevent it." , University secretary, and circulated. dog, crashes through diplomatic barriers during a reception Tues¬ , Bill Lukens, MHA president, said he i to public safety department, iepartment, theUnion, Kellogg day. The neu ambassador from Ghana, Ebenezer Moses Debrah, had been mandated to vote against the esidence halls and food serv- presents his credentials to the Chief Executive as Yuki cavorts issue by MHA because it was felt that DPI Telephoto VISA card sales illegal around thei r feet. sufficient information concerning NSA and its programs was not available to students. Lukens added, "perhaps through a peti¬ stu threaten tion campaign the issue would be dis¬ other discounts cited cussed and ble to students." more information made availa¬ --The board voted to sponsor tours to the Bahama' Islands and Bermuda. Last NMU Varsity International Sales Association (VISA) discount cards may not be sold on campus unless properly authorized by the ASMSU Student Board. Individual students allegedly selling the of ASMSU a is Investigating possibilities locally organized student discount program. The Chamber of Commerce and Jaycees have agreed to work with student government on any "feasible" spring the ASMSU student travel bureau sponsored a Bahamas trip. Reports from ASMSU representatives accompanying the trip were favorable and suggested ex¬ panding the program. protest By LEO ZAINE A minated in June, 1 "68. prof The university offered no specific reasons for the firing. get some sort s or of rebate. reh hot water and felt they should cards are subject to prosecution for vio¬ plan and have suggested a January 1 —The Students for a Democratic So¬ When the school reopened this fall, the McClellan advised the students that they State News Staff W ter lating both a University regulation and an starting date. ciety (SDS) were granted minimal office nine-member Faculty-Senate committee, had a legitimate complaint and offered to ASMSU solicitation policy, according to Ellsworth said discount programs- space in 27 Student Services ITdg. until help. \R ■' !"1 IE—Student leaders at Nor- representing about 300 instructors, de¬ Pete Ellsworth, ASMSU vice-chairman. through NSA are being considered. the group finds a new location. \ Later that year, when NMU began to ticv Michigan University Wednesday plored the action as "improper pro¬ Last year ASMSU sponsored the dis¬ He noted that any program set up by Ill llll III I III III I Mil III cedure," since, they said, the decision purchase land in North Marquette last count service in the Lansing area and ASMSU would be in competition with threatened mass demonstrations unless year, McClellan worked with citizen passed out free VISA cards on an ex¬ VISA. Sunny . ad: . sirators revoked the sudden firing had been made by then-President Edgar L. Harden without ".proper consultation" groups opposed to the expansion and told perimental basis. More than 30 mer¬ and warmer with a high in of history instructor who had criticized them of their rights. The district is com¬ and without allowing McClellan to defend chants joined. Most of the merchants who joined the ersity policies. posed of mostly lower income families the mid-fifties. Low tonight; be¬ ur.i, himself against the charges. When ASMSU attempted to contact VISA effort list vear responded to a Sta'e tween 30 and 35, Chan re of f. o TV, dispute arose last July 28 when the who have resided there most of their News survey that though not displeased university advised the instructor, Robert 'luesday, the 1 'acuity'-Senate resigned to during the summer to orgcrtiize-The fall lives and work in nearby industrial plants. with membership, very- few students were cipitation: less than 5 per cent. McClellan, 33, an assistant professor of protest the inaction of interim. President advertising campaign, discrepancies were found in directions and explanations giver using the program. history, that his contract would be ter- Ogden Johnson in the issue, but after a (please turn to the back page) vote of the faculty, seven decided to re¬ by VISA to ASMSU and the merchants,. main and try to negotiatewithadministra- Ellsworth said. tors. Since that time, Greg Hopkins, ASMSU Civil rights case obscure Throughout the dispute, the Board of Doubt, chairman, said, "We have totally broken relations with the Shield International Control, the governing body of NMU, has Corporation (VISA). We are not and do not plan to sponsor the program. Anyone selling the cards on campus or on af¬ secrecy refused to meet with the Faculty-Senate committee. The committee is awaiting the results of the petition sent to all of triple slaying filiated may property such be pro secuted.'' as Greek units Ellsworth and Terry Hassold, ASMSU Cabinet president, said they personally had, toll} Ed Shield, president of VISA, Guevara's Bolivian LA PAZ, Bolivia iJP'i—'The Bolivian army in La Paz. He declined to elaborate. one ■him burial of the few alive.- I people here who have seen saw him in Cuba ataji faculty members to son. the the firing. Johnson is out be directed to John¬ Hopefully, thepetitionwouldimpress administration enough to reconsider of town now and un¬ begins third day dan, MERIDIAN, Miss. T — James E. Jor¬ a man of mystery since his grand jury testimony about the deaths of three Other military soOrceS said Guevara - civil rights workers, waited in the wings that selling cards on campus after ASMSU announced Wednesday the body of Ernesto available for comment. was buried either lateTuesday orTue;-Jay embassy reception in 1963 and there is no Wednesday as a key witness in the con¬ broke off relations would be In violation Che Guevara had been buried secretly Meanwhile, student leaders said Wed¬ night and not in Vallegrande's cemetery. doubt in my mind that it is the body of spiracy trial of 18 white men. of MSU policy. Shield denied this knowl¬ at Vallegrande, near where he supposedly One source* added: "It was important C he." nesday they would wait until next Tues¬ edge, but said he was sure the cards died of wounds inflicted in a battle Sunday. day for a decision from theadministration. Jordan, a 40-year-old construction not to create something like a shrini n d worker, was indicted along with the 18 were not being illegally sold at MSU. While doubt remained in some quarters I .S. officials, who doubted the first re¬ If they refuse, students intend to demon¬ that is why the burial place should t ot men on Federal charges of violating the Shield said, "ASMSU is political and that the former top aide of Cuba's Fidel port-, are inclined to rate the Bolivian strate outside Johnson's campus home. be revealed." civil rights of Michael Schwerner, we're a business organization. Business C&stro had been slain, Granma, the of¬ army's report of Guevara's death astrue, Arnold Morse, assistant student body The'quick burial is not unusual in I Uin Robert J. McCloskey, the State Depart¬ Andrew Goodman andJamesChaney, found and politics sometimes just don't mix. ficial Cuban newspaper, treated the story The army said Guevara 11 gd president, said that student leaders would America. ment'-- spokesman, said in Washington. continue to work closely with theadminis¬ shot and buried during Mississippi's We had misunderstandings last year with in a way which indicated the govern¬ Monday of wounds suffered in the jungle Roberto Guevara, a younger brother who racially hot summer of 1964. merchants who thought we were Involved ment in Havana took the report seriously. battle Sunday about 300 miles south'. --st tration and try to mediate the matter. i*a lawyer, flew from Buenos Aires to However, Jordan's case was transferred in the ASMSU price study. Thus we cannot "The newspaper Granma, not having in¬ of La Pax. It is customary in 1 itiu If nothing is resolved, they would lead the La Paz declining all comment. The to another jurisdiction after he testi¬ work directly under the political student formation to accept or refute this news, demonstrations Tuesday. America for burial to take place a : \ fied before a federal grand jury that in¬ government. They're putting political is publishing for the knowledge of the pub¬ family has declined to admit Che Guevara The administration took the actionafter after death. dicted the men. Since then, the FBI has was slain. McClellan had taken issue a year and a pressure on the merchants. Thus they lic contents of the principal cable dis¬ While officials In Argentina, when. half ago with the university's "four course refused to give his whereabouts. cannot actively endorse us." patches," the Communist party newspaper Guevara was born 38.years ago, and the The army was convinced that the guer¬ The only official statement from the VISA can conduct its program In the area said. rilla operation in the jungles and moun¬ plan", a series of common learning press in parts of France and Italy -aere FBI concerning Jordan has been, "He is without sponsorship from student govern¬ tain-- would collapse, and estimated no courses for freshmen. The Bolivian army said it based its skeptical that death had come to Gue ara, Then last year, McClellan became in¬ in federal protection." ment and sell cards, but not on Univer¬ British correspondent who viewed ' e more than a do/en rebels remained in identification of Guevara on fingerprints a volved in a di spute between students and the Five armed guards, with their pistols sity property. body in a Vallegrande hospital said lu the area. and a scar on his arm from a wound administration after students had been drawn, whisked Jordan into the Post Of¬ Meanwhile, some participating mer¬ convinced. "With the head of the corps separated, suffered when he was helping Castro fight was housed In unfinished residence halls fall fice building where the trial went through chants are honoring only the new cards "The body was undoubtedly that ' it will remain inert," Col. Marcos Vas- Cuban government forces in eastern Cuba. its third day. They entered hurriedly reportedly still term. Some had threatened to sue the being sold and a few are Che Guevara," Richard Gott wrote in n que/ Sempertegui, army chief of staff, honoring experimental cards issued last "The burial has already taken place," said of the guerrilla n university because the dormitories had no (please turn to the back page) Gen, Alfredo OvandoCandia told reporters article in the Guardian. "I am probably winter which expired August 31. COULD BE PROSECUTED Sparty: grid A new Spa'rty Will probably be displayed at the MSU-U-M game while the old Sparty may appear Wives fail to license order that a care physician can verify these facilities Day or Night! 5:00 p.m. on through in maize and blue, it was reported EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the that the home is free of communicable basic safeguards. night 1" fourth of a five-part series on diseases, that the child will receive ade¬ "I would like for two children Tuesday. A social worker from the children's to care the quate health care, and that the applicant problems of the children of is physically and emotionally. capable of unit further interviews the applicant and in my home while their mother works. The five-feet high Spartan head, married students.. I am the mother of three." believed stolen from Sigma Phi accepting the additional responsibility of Inspects the home to insure that there "We will not beat your is adequate space, cleanliness, and tliat child. Baby¬ Epsilon fraternity Oct. 2, has been child care. By WESLEY E. HILLS The children's unit requires that every the family has an adequate income and sitting." the object of a search by the fra¬ Some mothers care for many more applicant recive a medical examination in diet. ternity and students on campus. children than is legal, entirely financing Many of the wives in married housing The maximum number of children a their husband's education, but leaving "We have several tips to go at MSU could receive up to 90 days ir, in O day-care mother can accept is four un¬ time for related children. A maximum of two only the most essential chores on," William Jones, vice-presi¬ jail and a $100 fine. of changing diapers and feeding. children Is set if the children under dent of the fraternity, said. "People on campus have called us and given Their effort t& crime license is failing to make '.he their homes a; 'he Correction a year old. are The day-care mother's own This reporter was told of one foreign wife who made $500 a month babysitting. some information." Ingham County Children's Unit before children are Included in this total. She advertised that she was a registered accepting the care of children. A figure in Wednesday's State At present, married housing laundro¬ "We think it's at the University News mistakenly noted the num¬ mats are filled with notices by women nurse. Many of the children she cared According to Michigan Act 47, any for in her two-bedroom apartment were of Michigan. We've gone down and private home in which one or more children ber of children who are annually and children desiring to baby-sit for looked around, but we could get no small infants. children, flagrantly violating Public are given care andsupervlsionforperio-s being beaten to death in Michigan. According to William Lovett, childwel- proof that they have it," he said. of four or more hours a day for four or The figure of 125,000 children Act 47. fare supervisor of the children's unit, more days a week for two or more con¬ "We're trying to make one now referred to a national total, not a Sample notices copied from a there Is little change that these mothers secutive. weeks must be licensed. for the game Saturday," Jones said. state total. The error was made laundromat in married housing are as will ever be prosecuted. There Is only one licensed day-care "We almost expect to see an iden¬ home in Spartan Village and one in i di¬ in editing, not by the writer of the follows: "We are swamped with cases at pres¬ tical Spartan head painted in maize "Need a babysitter? You have one if ent," Lovett said. versity Village. you call (telephone number omitted). Age and blue." The fundamental reasons for requiring 12 1/2. Experienced. 35 cents an hour. (please turn to the back page) a home to be licensed are to insure Thursday, October 12, 1967 2 Michigan State News, East Lansing. Michigan MSU RESELLS 'EM Used computer cards stores who determine what to do used paper other than sell It? dents use at rectangular on cards market registration — the with the are accumulated, they're sold to the highest bidder. It couldn't be passed out to stu¬ with the computer's second-hand corners cut off and holes punched "Then they're mixed in proper dents In the classroom. They'd When it comes down to making objects. proportions with new pulp and re¬ The future in second-hand construct paper airplanes with it. through them. or saving money, the University stores is great. Through Nor could it be given to those The cards should be familiar processed through the mills," doesn't waste a chance ora piece Kletke said. MSU stores,usedcommoditieisno entering the stadium to throw in to everyone; there are enough of of computer paper. The finished product is paper- the air. They have their own them. In attempting to combat Inef¬ longer needed by the University paper to heave. In fact, there are so many IBM slightly used, but paper never¬ can be sure to find a new home. ficiency, Its energies have been cards that Fred Kletke, super¬ theless. The University sells unclaimed So left with no better idea on directed toward computers, visor of yard of the MSU stores, **Th2 cards used at registra¬ what to do with the used paper, which In some cases, after all, bikes (at an auction), used furni¬ has to send someone a round twice tion are a high grade paper," used appliances, used the University has to sell it. need a second party to do their ture, a week Just to pick them up. according to Francis B. Martin, machinery and even used paper. Actually, most of the paper thinking for them. After a few truckloada of cards director of Data Processing. What else could be done with sold Is the same paper that stu¬ This second party is the MSlj* "The cards have to be high grade because they go through the computer so fast, about 30 to 33 cards a second," he explained. "Thfiy also liave to pass through the hands of the students. UNDERSTATED LOOK SO COMPLETELY AIR AND "Once the information on the cards is on the magnetic tape," Registration subscript MSU Salvage Yard group leader, Fred Kletke, stacks boxes of IBM cards. The RIGHT—C O U N T R Y CAM¬ he said, "we don't need the , sity uses enough cards each year to pave Farm Lane from East Circle cards anymore. PUS, OR TOWN. PERHAPS to Mount Hope several times over. T| 1 °F NowM "We do, however, save the State News Photo by Jerry McAllister WHAT YOU WILL LIKE MOST cards until they are no longer ABOUT THESE CLASSICS IS applicable," he added. "Various retention cycles go back 5 JOHN MEYER FASHION HOW WELL THEY REFLECT years." MEANS PUREST SIMPLICITY IN ITS FORM . . . RICH, YOUR OWN GOOD MENT THE IN COMPLETE CLOTHES. COLLEC¬ JUDG¬ SEE About 75 tons of paper, or 25 million cards, are sold each year. The auction price is us¬ Open housing IMAGINATIVE FABRICS, ually between $28 and $38 a ton, face trial afte . . . SCRUPULOUS TAILORING. AND MUCH MO RE--AN . . TION AT LANSING STORE. GREENS EAST according to Kletke. "Right after the war, paper was scarce," Martin said. "This to is when we started selling the By JIM SCHAE FE R a study of discrimination in un¬ May 25, another 59 demonstra¬ State News Staff Writer supervised, off-campus housing. tors blocked traffic on Abbott Rd. paper. The price was consider¬ On May 17, some 200 or more We endorse The 36 male protesters were ably higher than it is now." John F. Robertson, arrested students and East Lansing resi¬ As for next term, look closely put in the city Jail; the 23 women in an open housing demonstration dents marched on cit/ hall and carried away on stretchers at the registration cards before two years ago, will face trial began to Jam the chambers prior and taken t0 the CounCy they're collected. this fashion concept in East Lansing municipal court to the council meeting. The fire jail in Mason> Qn Wednesday, the on Oct. 24,25,26. "We don't use any department limited the audience group was arraigned on charges of the re- Robertson is the last of 59 because of fire regulations at of "loitering and obstructing processed paper,' Martin said. demonstrators arrested 7:15, 45 minutes before the traffiC", Robertson was in that for its timeless, classic "All the registration made from new' It may pulp. cards are be the only really fresh M 25> 1965 t0 face ch loitering and obstructing tl meeting s scheduled time. group. durjng the demonStratlon> The 75 protesters who did get Three girls—AnnRobbins, Ann paper around campus. good taste. His case is also the last of inside, were not arrested, but Arbor, Barbara Levicki, East a long series of incidents sparked did leave after the meeting. Lansing, and Mary Jo Olsen, in that May, when feeling ran high In the following week, MSU Muskegon pleaded guilty im¬ Tutors needed for action by East Lansing on an Invited East Lansing officials mediately and received$10 fines. open housing ordinance. over for "mutual talks" on civil The remaining 56 pleaded not The ASMSU tutoring service It began on May 7, 1965, with rights problems and even state guilty, and were required to post needs tutors in all subjects, a letter to the city council urging officials got involved in the con¬ bonds up to $100. The trial was Interested students should go to open houslnS by the campus troversy. tentatively set for June 3. Some 315 Student Services Bldg. or call NAACp. the now defunct Com- It was on Tuesday night, $2,000 contributed by faculty 355-8302 between 1 and 5 p.m. mittee for s~dent Rights, the May 18, that East Lansing and members, graduate students, and Monday through Friday. Tutors East LanslnS Action Committee, Lansing police spent over an passers-by in the Union con¬ are paid $1.50 per hour. andOnCanterbury Club. hour carrying some 70 demon¬ course helped pay for the bonds. May 14, ASMSU considered strators, mostly MSU students On June 3, no definite date was out of city hall. On Wednesday, May 19, Mayor set by Judge William Wise and EAST LANSING Gordon Thomas and city manager defense attorneys Stuart Dun- SPECIAL EDUCATION John Patriarche met with local mn§s next and Frederick Abood. The day, it was announced the trials were postponed until the convenience of the court, city TEACHERS attorney and defense counsels. Since that June in 1965, East Attlee services Lansing acquired both another city attorney, Daniel C. Learned, held in London and Judge, Judge William K.Har- Immediate and future vacancies for Special Education LONDON UP) — A simple mon* JudSe Harmon took office Teachers Interested In working with retarded children. memorial service for former in JulV' 1965, Full approval by the Michigan Department of Education Prime Minister Clement Attlee Confession required. All Michigan Civil Service fringe benefits. Of the 56 cases, one was found was held Wednesday at London's Starting salary from $7,976.00 to $10,335.00 depending guilty by Jury, 26 pleaded guilty, Temple church, near his home. and 28 made a mass plea of nolo on experience and education. Maximum salary to $12,841.00. For full details contact Mrs. Pruder, Plymouth State Home, Only members of Attlee's im¬ contendre. The latter group used mediate family and about 150 their plea to get their cases ap¬ N'orthvllle, Michigan, or call ?13-453-1500. close friends, including Prime pealed to Ingham county circuit Minister and Mrs, Harold Wil¬ court. son, attended. The East Lansing municipal Lord Attlee died Sunday in a court's office said Wednesday London hospital after a long ill¬ that the sentence received by ness. He was 84. those who pleaded or were found Lord Attlee's ashes will be guilty was a $50 fine, $20 in placed in Westminster Abbey court costs and a work project. at a service tentatively set for The work project was to be with Nov. 3. a worthwhile civil rights project BETHEL MANOR during a 30 day period following the sentence. It required ap¬ OPEN RUSH proval of the court and a report OCT. 12 7:30 P.M. to the court by the supervisor involved. If not done, then there CALL was a 30-day Jail s 332-1437 for ride posed. Graduate Opportunities Meeting Sponsored by the Honors College I. All MSI* SENIORS interested in graduate or professional schools are cordially invited. John Meyer of Norwich creates Why' John Meyer's blending 2. MSU College and Department clothes with an unaffected great and matchingot coats, dresses, skirts, REPRESENTATIVES will be pre- look tor young women who refuse slacks, sweaters, and accessories are to let anything get in the way ot done with wit and wisdom ... sub¬ their individuality. tlety and eclat. What makes these women John It you're an individualist, you 3. TOPICS will include application Meyer enthusiasts...the clothes should see the new John Meyer procedure, national and inter¬ niceties for Fall. They're now being national fellowships, andinforma- or the personality of the wearer.' tion about selective service. Confession: it's both, and they shown at discerning stores ... on react on each other. and off. MMn MeYer Tonight, Oct. 12,7:30 p.m. Ti 4 °f N°Hv/icH Union Ballroom Thursday, October 12, 1967 3 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan KENNEDY CHARGES NEWS Haulers forceus Refugee camps summary despite poet A capsule summary of the day's events frorr PITTSBURGH [f\ ing steel haulers served notice Wednesday that a proposed peace — Strik¬ burgh durlHg a two-day session. The agreement committed signers to pay owner-operators poor WASHINGTON in Vietnam UP; — United and lack basic facilities and that iur wire services. pact hadn't ended their tumul¬ $10 a hour after the first two civilian needs have been sub¬ States officials are "showing a tuous, two-month walkout. Strike hours they wait to get trucks ordinated to the military effort. cavalier and almost disdainful breaking rigs were fired at and loaded at steel mills. The strik¬ Oye V. Stovall, director of attitude" toward medical and stoned from Chicago to Pitts¬ ers had asked >15 an hour. the International division of the "More important other needs of South Vietnam burgh. General Accounting Office,testi¬ civilians, Sen. Edward M. Ken¬ still . . . is the danger¬ In Ohio, a group of drivers It also committed the carriers fied today that: to seek a 5 per cent rate In¬ nedy, D-Mass., charged today. ous choking off of do¬ about to vote on the proposals He said conditions In programs Washington officials of the crease from the Interstate Com¬ hammered out Tuesday by a to provide for civilian war casu¬ Agency for International De¬ mestic reform as a re¬ panel merce Commission, with the hike seven-state mediation alties and refugees amounted to velopment were unaware of the sult of the costs and jumped up and left when they going to the independents. The magnitude of a refugee problem a scandal. strikers had asked for a 6 per heard some trucks were moving building up In one area of South anxieties set by the out of a nearby steel plant. cent Increase In their share of I spy "It's shocking to me, this com¬ Vietnam until they read about It shipping costs to 79 per cent. plete lack of any kind of priority war." Sen. J. William Mik% Boano, a Youngstown As part of the requirement for Civil Engineering for the human problems, the In the press last July. A tentative agreement was strike leader, said half of the 251, Bruce Parsons, Ludington, junior, practices A system for providing daily- Fulbright, D-Ark. reached between the Teamsters human needs," Kennedy said. cash and food allowances to re¬ 1,000 men^ioured into the streets and strikers nearly two weeks techniques of surveying by surveying the Red Cedar "All Americans must be as around the Youngstown Sheet and the Bessey Bridge. fugees was not functioning fully, ago, but the independents turned near deeply distressed by these con¬ Stovall said.. Tube plant gates. Police said the it down 9-1, State News Photo by Jerry McAllister ditions as I am," A total of 4,347 housing units men blocked trucks and stoned International News an empty one. Kennedy commented hearing officials of the General after were added to refugee camps in Three trucks were stoned and 1966, while the population in¬ Accounting Office report on their one fired on along the Pennsyl¬ creased by 28,000 families. Investigation of the refugee and 0 A Filipino newsman who recently visited North Vietnam reported that anti-personnel bombs, a polite name for ex¬ plosives designed to scatter and burn humans, have caused much hate and fear among North Vietnamese civilians. vania by one was Turnpike. Two were hit bullets near Chicago. hurt. No Ford-UAW news blackout medical programs in South Viet- llis Judiciary subcommittee on Plans renovate were made 15 civilian in 1964 to hospital? at a cost of $3 million but thus far William Kusley of Gary, Ind., refugees has heard testimony that only nine have b(?en renovated at indicate hard bargain and other strike leaders have a cost of $9 million and there there are inadequate facilities % The failure of the socialist sponsored motion to censure French was President Charles de Gaulle in Parliament hailed by de Gaulle as demonstrating anew the Tuesday stability repeatedly deplored the violence. Kusley said he was happy with may in refugee camps, that civilian hospitals are badly overcrowded has been a rapid deterioration of the work done. the agreement, but the strikers DETROIT S Rumors grew ferring elsewhere, while the elected two new executive vice of his regime. said they aren't — kicking over company directors were meeting presidents - Lee A. Iacocca A IN PCRSON 0^ Wednesday after a meeting of MCOUPONM Q The Bolivian Army announced that it had buried the of Ernesto Che Guevara secretly near where Guevara was body an engine until the trucking com¬ panies agree to the settlement. Ford Motor Co. directors that the company is preparing to sweeten behind closely guarded closed doors high in Ford headquarters and J. Edward Lundv. Until the surprise blackout— footer, ahuI Teamsters Union officials in after reported to have died of wounds suffered in battle Sunday. See page 1 Pittsburgh approved the pact, but its contract offer to the Un'ted Auto Workers Union. in suburban Dearborn. which came quest that T a company re¬ uesday's negotiations and cil Cigarettes The blackout, the first acting national President fcrank at Ford be delayed from afternoon until Fiusimmons said in Miami he After rejecting Ford's only of¬ since 1961, apparently was ex¬ night—each side had utilized fer in the three months of nego¬ National News had nothing to say to One group the press, of truckers—repre¬ tiations as "totally inadequate," the union struck Sept. 7 in sup¬ tended say on the matter of negotia¬ tions to the directors, who would nothing about bargaining but news conferences almost daily in endeavors scientious to prove itself con¬ and the other irre¬ 4/990 port of its contract demands, Limit 1 senting 50 firms--set a meeting were prompt in announcing that sponsible. 0 James M. Jordan, the 19th man accused of murdering knocking Ford out of 1968 model immediately to vote on the pact. Ford was continuing its regular Negotiations opened July 11 and three civil rights workers was escorted by police into court auto production. The strike is 35 But the 68-member National Steel 60-cent quarterly dividend de¬ Ford made its initial offer Expires after 10-14-67 to testify against his alleged co-conspirators. Jordan pre¬ days old. Carriers Association said it spite the strike. Directors also Aug. 29. viously testified in front of the federal grand jury that in¬ wouldn't be able to vote before A news blackout, which often in dicted the 18. See page 1 the past has signaled the begin¬ The State News, the student newspaper at Michigan .State "COUPON" Saturday. ning of serious bargaining, was University, is published every class day throughout the year €1 Gen. Omar Bradley, former chairman of the Joint Chiefs Informed groups sources said the two split over whether the clamped on at 9 p.m. Tuesday. with 'special Welcome Week and Orientation issues in June i \ Warner Brothers Recort Scope opposing the war in . of Staff, said a newspaper advertisement A company spokesman announced and September. Subscription rates are ^14 per year. Vietnam deliberately quoted him out of context in stating trucking companies should try Wednesday it would not be lifted LANSING Mouthwash to accommodate the strikers. CIVIC CENTER Bradley was opposed to the war. in any degree or under any cir¬ Member "Associated Press, United Press International, The strike had claimed one bland Dally Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press, "580 cumstances until it had been in life, as well as a score of in¬ Michigan Press Association, Michigan Collegiate Press As¬ SUN. OCT. 15; ^ Speaker of the House McCormack criticized Vietnam War effect 24 hours--if then. There critics in the Senate and added that he is proud of the House's juries, when the mediators repre¬ indications that Ford and sociation, United State Student Press Association. senting governors from seven were 7:30 P.M. record on the war. UAW negotiators might be con¬ states drafted the pact in Pitts¬ Expires after 10-14-67 Second class postage paid at East Lansing, Mich. $4.50 $3.50 $2.50 $2.00 £ The Senate Judiciary Committee approved, 9-5, a bill Editorial and business offices at 347 Student Services extending the life of the United States Civil Rights Commission for five years. The commission was started in 1957. Mr. John's Building, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Mich. ON SALE AT ^■COUPON' DISC SHOP HAIR FASHIONS Q The dropping of the traditional news blackout over negotia¬ tions between Ford and the United Auto Workers signaled the Who Says Phones: 323 E. GRAND RIVER Tampax Editorial 355-8252 quick start of serious talks and raises the possibility of a settlement, observers of the strike speculated. See page 3 ' An ordinary haircut is good enough? Classified Display Advertising Advertising . . , , . . 355-8255 353-6400 CIVIC CENTER 40 s Business-Circulation 355-8299 Not us at Photographic 355-8311 Reg. 1.55 Michigan News Mr. John Carver Mr. John's 990 Hair Fashions Expires after 10-14-67 0 In a report on the first racial census taken in Michigan Answer To Your Hair Problems. schools it was revealed that de facto segregation is still a major problem, both among students and teachers. 501 Across from ■COUPON! 1/2 E. Grand River across from Berkey Hall 332-0904 Berkey Hall SPORT COAT Aqua Net Hair Spray Study calls FRESHMEN! 13 oi. for beer, social drink Fulfill your COMBO Reg. 2.00 Limit 1 370 MILITARY Expires after 10-14-67 NEW YORK .¥■ — Serving Any 39.95 Sport Coat beer In college cafeterias and OBLIGATION persuading hosts to refrain from Any 16.98 Slax HCOUPONH continually filling guests' glass¬ Serving 2 years es would improve Americans' BOTH Contac attitudes toward alcohol, a gov¬ as a commissioned ernment day. report said Wednes¬ The report, entitled "Alcohol Problems-a Report to the Na¬ Officer 45' Cold Capsules Reg. 1.49 tion," will be published Thurs¬ day. It recommended that Ameri¬ # Freshmen can now enroll in 4 year Herringbones • Plaids Limit 1 690 can drinking be made a more Expires after 10-14-67 gregarious social adventure. "The personal anonymity, dark¬ R.O.T.C. Program Winter Term » Reg. • Short *Long ness and generally furtive quali- • Sizes.36-46 ■COUPON" ty of many bars permits and ' even encourages behavior usual¬ ly not considered socially ac¬ # Sophomores can apply for the Bic Peos ceptable," the report said. 2 year R.O.T.C. Program in January Serving beer on college cam¬ BLAZER SPECIAL puses, the report said, "might (Limit 10) reduce the current practice of groups of students piling into a car, driving several miles to a bar, drinking substantial amounts INTERESTED? Reg. 35.00 Blazer Reg. 19c 110 of alcohol in settings that lack Expires after 10-14-67 the desired social control, and TO TALK TO STUDENTS WHO KNOW Anyl6.98 Slax then driving back to the campus." Liquor advertisers could help WHAT IT'S ALL ABOUT. lessen some of the tragic BOTH to Specials good at 95 39 effects of drinking, the report said. E. Lansing Store Only The Scabbard and Blade Free grid movies offered by Union National the program Military for Honorary Society will answer questions you or your organization at your convenience. about STATE Those unable to attend the Discount MSU-University of Michigan clash Saturday at Ann Arbor will be able to see the game at 8 p.m. Wednesday in the Union Contact one of our Members Anytime: Canterbury (.osmetics cV- Vitamins Ballroom. E rik Barkman Jim Williams games Board Football movies of all away will be shown by Union on the Wednesday fol¬ 429 E. Mich. Ave. E , Lan«. 351-8854 402 Kipling Blvd. Lans. 485-2907 Michigan Bankard Free Alterations | 619 E Grand River lowing each game. The Minnesota game can be Loren MAC at GRAND RIVER Bud Quitiquit Voung seen on Oct. 25, Notre Dame 271 E. Shaw 532 Glenmore on Nov. 1 and Purdue on Nov. 355-8918 E. Lans. 351-0216 Free Parking 22. The Alumni Relations Dept. is supplying the free movies. MICHIGAN Pianin, executive editor STATE NEWS Eric Lawrence Werner, managing editor Bobby Soden, campus editor Susan Comerford Edward A. Brill, editorial editor UNIVERSITY advertising manager Joe Mitch, sports editor Thursday Morning, October 12, 1967 :ipient of the Pacemaker award for outstanding journalism. EDITORIALS ROTCl The mounti ^fi^onfc students, fV»<=»n then TVinrr Thomas has Already the target of a been obviously, and grossly, denied his rights. growing number of campus critics, MSU's ROTC de¬ If, however, the Dept. of partment made a move last Military Science, as Thomas week that, no matter what has put it, "transcends the its intentions, can only serve University in academic mat¬ to stir up more questioning ters," then the questions of the purpose and place of become even more serious. military instruction at this Exactly how, and just why, University. we might ask, can this be MSi' ROTC: existing or co-existing in the academic Apparently irked by the on our campus? And, per¬ nonpassive attitude of James community?' haps more importantly, what Col. Piatt has refused to 2,1.4.3, "The student shall R. Thomas, MSU special stu¬ significance will be left for comment on the reasons for be free to take reasoned dent visiting Military the Academic Freedom Re¬ Science 100, an ROTC in¬ Thomas' disenrollment, exception to data and views port, if it is allowed to be offered in the classroom." structor told Thomas to "get stating only that he did not whittled away with ex¬ Nowhere is an instructor out of the class" during a "meet the prerequisites of ceptions to its high- recent class period, when he this department for such en¬ given the right to suppress sounding, but all-too- rollment." dissent. Indeed, the very failed to stand while asking general protections? It is not difficult to figure academic ideals of the Uni¬ a question. Thomas admittedly was out the reasons why the versity must make us sus¬ — The Editors ROTC department would picious of those who fear attending the ROTC class to want to silence Thomas and free discussion and dis¬ MAX LERNER question and formulate his own objective judgment of his criticism. But by so agreement. the course, but denies he is a "troublemaker or an activist." blatantly, and without ap- parant justification, dismis¬ sing him, Col. Piatt has not While granting the mili¬ tary's aim to produce men capable of obeying orders Miniskirts, Minimorality Thomas, a former army sergeant, later was given only drawn more Thomas, but to attention to the entire and following discipline, certainly this can be gained and the Marquis de Sade permission to continue in ROTC program. without the mutual exclusion grown too soft and needs a dose of military of the ROTC as the Roman Empire did. In another the class, but only if he sat The actions of their right to think and With all the other commissions, discipline, 1 recall that both Prussian and quite objective vein, Herman Kahn America is getting a pornography Germany and Nazi Germany had plenty silently in the rear of the department appear to have question in an academic at¬ now and Anthony Weiner, in their book, "The of emphasis on the masculine warlike commission, appointed by President John¬ Year 2000," adopt the Roman parallel room. Then, when a letter directly violated the guaran¬ mosphere. Indeed, it seems son under a new act of Congress, to virtues, yet the America of the New Deal but without any predictions of cultural and the New Frontier has survived, while tees of the Academic Free¬ that the Army would want redefine what is pornographic and obscene by Thomas critical of the downfall. Picking up a phrase from the Germany of the Nazis has not. in the spate of print descending on us now Sorokin and Spengler, they call the present ROTC program appeared in dom Report. Section 2.1.2 officers trained to think. The real danger of the pleasure society and recommend how to deal with it. era and the rest of the century the Late defines the instructor's role, has, of is a very different one—not of selfishness the State News several days Thomas course, Godspeed to the members, whoever they Sensate period and describe its features may be, for they face a formidable task: but of violence. If a society adopts the free dis¬ with a chilling detachment. later, he was requested by "to encourage appealed the specific ac¬ how to give scope to genuinely erotic "anything" goes motto in sexual behavior, My own feeling is that the fears of Col. Robert G. Piatt, chair¬ cussion, inquiry, and ex¬ tions of the ROTC depart¬ literature that explores ideas and por¬ decline and fall are overdone, but (hat, in erotic literature, in drug experiment, trays character, hovy, to,,distinguish it it may find that the same philosophy of man of the ROTC depart¬ pression among his students ment to the ombudsman and if the pressure principle is unrestrained from vicious hard-core pornography, how and becomes the dominant one, we are in "anything goes" may be carried over into ment, to either drop the in their quest for knowl¬ to the Student-Faculty judi¬ to stop the rubbish that has neither racial and class conflict and may lead trouble. Both the strength and the dangers artistic nor social reason for existence, to killing on the streets. It is worth course or be de-enrolled. edge." And in section ciary. But the real issue of the American pleasure society lie in noting that the Marquis De Sade lived in without getting bogged down in censor¬ in the case seems to be the the principle of freedom. What has given the time of the French Revolution and that ship. the hedonic breakthrough in America its status of the military as it I hope the commission will see the the principle of anarchy at the base of his almost unresting drive is the recoil from More than exists, or co-exists, on cam¬ problem within the larger frame of the kind of society America is becoming. It used to be a production society, then it the Puritan codes and taboos of the past. Millions of Americans, young and life and writings was not very different from the principle of terrorism in the T error. pus. middle-aged alike, women and men alike, became a wealth society, then a power If we are seeking straws in the wind have had the sense of taking part in a If the ROTC department for the American future, find Honors we may society, then a happiness society. The The for Honors College has tablishment of complete is covered by the guaran¬ tees of academic freedom trend now is toward the swinging pleasure society. it: Everything around us attests the wonderfully (sometimes cruelly) real liberation movement: liberation from sexual taboos, from censorship, from the double standards for women and men. Any liberation movement has an impressive them in the success of magazine, not only among the run of playboys, but among many American stu¬ "Playboy" as a just recently given to MSU's revealing miniskirts, the minimorality, dents and intellectuals as well. For .decided that its students honors programs within the advantage to start with because infighting the far-out frenetic fashions for women, for it people feel they are fighting for the "Playboy", as it has developed, offers more than erotic photos and cartoons and should be distinguished from departments. the books that get published and the new as against the old, for the future as language in them, the movies we stand jokes. It tries to provide a frame for Wilson has also proposed against the past, for the free personality others by virtue of superior SNiper's Nest in line to see,, the underground movies as against'the rat race and the trap. a hedonic life—a frame of reasoned prin¬ academic experiences, and establishing an all-univer¬ and the underground magazines for the ciple, both in articles about American To: Col Robert G. Piatt "in" crowd, the new pop art, the drug A society whose young people grow society and in the succession of editorials not just by a higher grade sity board to formulate cer¬ up to lead expressive lives, instead of on censorship, taboos and freedom, by its Chairman, MSU ROTC dept. culture, the hippies, the lushness of con¬ point. tain standards for all Honors sumers' goods in a consumers' civili¬ inhibited lives, may in the end last longer editor, Hugh Hefner. His dialog with his Dear Col. Piatt: than one that is emotionally tight and zation, the feverishly expressive dances, critics, including many clergymen who The College students. This would Congratulations! By stifling repressed. Rome may have fallen partly seem obsessed with the "Playboy" prob¬ heavy reliance on the casual sexual codes of the young— not interfere, however, with dissent you've won another im¬ from too much hedonic freedom, but Sparta lem, is the kind of moral dialog that is and, unless I am wrong, not only of the grades for admission to departmental programs and portant Victory over the forces young. fell from too little, from being a tight intensely American: even in a pleasure Honors College and for con¬ of Communism and campuspinko Is this a corrupting and disintegrating little closed society in which the stress society, Americans seem bent on rejecting the Honors College student's on the military qualities had made every¬ the idea that "anythinggoes"andontrying tinued enrollment in it, has leftists. trend? There are many who think so freedom to and who are convinced that America is thing rigid and had driven out creative- to find more relevant codes to replace the pick his own The SNiper created a situation in which When people say that America has old ones. curriculum. sliding down the slope of moral decline, ness. some honors students choose Individual freedom pro¬ expediency by enrolling only vided by Honors College in regular courses. membership should be a Is there security officer reading this? John Wilson, director of freedom to plan a unique and the Honors more flexible College proposes and broader challenging program undergraduate not just the free¬ a dom to waive traditional re¬ security procedures to falsely describe clearance simply by having an instructor this process; thus, I am mystified i programs for Honors Col¬ To the Editor:. material as being classified. hand them out as though they were PNC how they can be considered "cleared." lege students. Too often, quirements. I raise this question of falsity chiefly cards. One must apply for a clearance, This, then raises the question mentioned I was quite interested in Jim Thomas' because the film in question probably Is by filling out a 4-page-form (DD-48)and above, together with the possibility of a student with a high GPA The Honors College has letter of Oct. 10, especially his allega¬ actually classified, which brings up the having It sent to the Defense Clearance failure to release classified information has entered the Honors Col¬ long been one of the Uni¬ tion that he would not be allowed to view far more serious question of release of Agency In Ohio; processing nominally to a properly cleared person, whichalso Is a certain classified movie even though takes three months. I have been 'informed serious offense. classified information to persons lacking a lege and stayed in by simply versity^ most acclaimed he had previously owned a security clear¬ Is there a security officer anywhere who the proper clearance. MSU students are by the Dept. of Military Science that MS maintaining that GPA, while programs. But it like every ance. I have held a clearance in the past, civilians, and as such cannot obtain a 100 enrollees are not required to go through might be reading this? In connection with my work at the Boeing T.A. Heppenheimer not actually challenging him¬ other institution needs up¬ Company, and on the basis of my past East Lansing graduate student self. As a result, several of dating, modernization. expansion and experience with security procedures I think I may raise some questions re¬ garding this incident. SDS, cheerios and mums Artistry in sound?? the University's colleges and Wilson's proposals reflect To the Editor: I wonder whether the film in question To the Editor: departments are now es¬ this attitude along with the In response to SDS policy, which in the is indeed legitimately classified matter. past, was directed against the Idea of Michigan State University: Catalog • tablishing guidelines for growing concern that aca¬ On the basis of established procedures, Vol. 61 No. 8 Dec. 1966 page 32, classified films must begin and end with Spartantown U.S.A., and presently, de¬ Issue Honors College students, to demic achievement can be nounces Careers '67 Week at MSU: General Information: Lecture-Concert the level of clearance (Confidential, It Is very encouraging to me to observe Series—". The programs are pre¬ more sharply define what best judged, not in terms of Secret, etc. ) shown on the screen, in the . . sented to give students enrichment . . . that the structure of MSU's Student's for is expected of them, s/ecial a gradepoint, but according manner that a film tide is shown. If the (cheerios, washing material in question is not a Democratic Society organization Is various industries (through) a variety of artistic achieve¬ so marked, honors sequences have been to individual endeavor. breaking down and the group is losing face. machines, aluminum foil, etc.) and the ments; . . . providing such cultural and then those viewing the film will be inter¬ The present trend in SDS aggression Boy Scouts of America who are parti¬ educational programs for the community." --The Editors ested to know that it is an offense against proposed, leading to the es¬ consists of attacking less formidable op¬ cipating in Careers *67 Week here at The University Auditorium certainly ponents. MSU. complimented Mantovani's "Artistry in IT U)A5N'T THAT...MV FEET Sound"? by his performance of popular In the past, SDS stumble and folly in¬ A probable SDS objective is to wipe UERE BEGINNING "ID HURT ! out the Boy Scouts so Spartan Stadium will entertainment. On his future returns to cluded the production of propaganda de¬ nouncing the efforts of our servicemen in be empty during the homecoming game. the campus I suggest that the ASMSU Vietnam and helping draft dodgers escape , They may plan to demonstrate against Popular Entertainment Series sponsor to Canada. Recently, however, this "111- mums for mothers and girlfriends, so I his group, for there was no cultural en¬ lustrlous" outfit assaulted East Lansing would like to warn the Central Michigan lightenment nor enrichment through his j merchants and the city's concept of Horticultural Society—you are next on mediocre themes and orchestrations to Spartantown UJS.A. (Tlsh Howard was the SDS list I impel Lecture-Concert Series support. Jerome Eckenrode Charles Stander tough): and now, "they have mobilized a "disorganized demonstration" against Haslett graduate student Saginaw sophomore Thursday, October 12, 1967 5 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Race bias in schools shown LANSING (UP I) — The first of the Survey Research Center at cipals and 63,469 classroom with white-Negro ratios. It °»2 Per cent American Indian, racial census taken In Michigan the University of Michigan. They teachers serving 1.8 million showed that 84.8 per cent of the and 1*2 percent "other or not public schools shows segregation ■ culled theIr nalres receiveddatafrom from3,374 question- prin- Michigan school children. students are white, 13.7 per cent ascertained." The report dwelt primarily Negro, 0.1 per cent Oriental, The Gurlns found that In spite Is still an "urgent problem,1 of efforts to balance the racial not just among pupils but more composition of Michigan public glaringly among their teachers schools, the imbalance—as es¬ and principals. timated by school principals- In a preliminary report made to the State Board of Education today on the racial survey taken ROTC critic, for has actually Increased. They found further that only 4.4 per cent of the schools were trying last spring, it was disclosed to erase this by open enrollment Elimination races were that: —84.8 per cent of public school students are white, as are 90per to reach A student critic of MSU'sRCTTC Wednesday to Eldon R. Nonna- 'real been requested by a letter from policies or bussing non-neigh¬ borhood students. cent of the teachers and 97.3 held behind Shaw on Mon¬ per cent of the principals. program who had been requested maker, associate dean of stu- the department chairman to drop Canoe race features day afternoon in prepara¬ tion for the big race on --Almost 60 per cent of Michi¬ gan schools have no Negro stu¬ a basic ROTC course dents. Thomas said Nonnamaker in- the Military Science 100 course he has been visiting this term. BETHEL MANOR day and said no real agreement structed him to bring Thomas had requested the Sunday. Furiously pad¬ dents and 3.6 per cent have al¬ OPEN RUSH 'Miss Red Cedar' most all non-white students. reached with the Dept. of complaint for the Student-Facul meeting with the ombudsman be¬ dling the canoe in the ty judiciary "whenever he wanted cause he felt his rights as stated background are Gary —Nearly three-fifths of the Military Science. in Articles I and II of the Aca¬ OCT. 12 7:30 P.M. Negro children attend schools James R. Thomas, East Lan¬ The annual All-University on-campus women, off-campus Faust, McKeesport, Pa., that are nearly all Negro, sing special student, said om- Nonnamaker said he could n demic Freedom Report had been CALL and off-campus women. Canoe Race, sponsored by Shaw men, Another event is the freshman and John Greg¬ —Teachers tend to think their budsman James D. Rust stressed take any further action until he violated by the Dept. of Military 332-1437 "for ride ^lall, will be held at 1 p.m. celebrity ory, Glasgow, Montana, that he v primarily a media received a list of names from Science. Negro students have less ability Sunday. All proceeds will go race. Campus and local per¬ and judge or active ASMSU of students petitioning sonalities will be featured in a freshman. Participants in and motivation than white chil¬ tor not a to Sparrow Hospital for an oper¬ participator. for the four student seats on heat. There will also be a the foreground are Ron dren. ation on a needy child In the —Racial concentration has in¬ Through Rust, Thomas sched¬ the judiciary, Thomas said. mystery canoe. Cleveland, Farmington Lansing area. creased over the last six years. uled an appointment with Provost Thomas, who has written two A part of the event is The highlight of the day will sophomore and Floyd Ba¬ for letters to the State News criti- new be the presentation of Miss Red ker, Pontiac sophomore. The survey was conducted by Howard R. Neville next the Miss Red Cedar beauty con¬ Drs. Gerald and Patricia Gurin Wednesday and lso talked ci/ing the ROTC program, had Cedar. Sunday's heats also in¬ Photo by Jim Mead test. Each precinct in East Shaw will have a male candi¬ clude the annual East Shaw - date. West Shaw Grudge Race. haven't tried our delivery service, "We are hoping for 80 entries. A dinner candidates and parade for the will be held today. All living units are urged to par¬ If you The parade, starting at 5:30p.m., ticipate because of the charity will visit all living units on cam¬ pus. Grand Marshall for the aspect of the event. If you can't get canoes, honorary donations you don't know what you're missing! will be accepted," 'said John parade is Miss M.S.U., Patty Burnette. Engler, general chairman of the Money jars for each candidate will be placed throughout Shaw All entries should be returned SPECIAL OFFER to all residents of HOLDEN, Hall. The contestant with the to John Engler, 378 E. Shaw, most money will win the contest. by noon today. WONDERS The course for Sunday's race The canoe race will be kicked OUR 12" PIZZA WILSON will run from the Farm Lane bridge to the end of East Shaw off an with the Red Cedar Romp, all-University mixer, Satur¬ for men and to the center of day night form 9 to 12:30. Music WITH ANYONE ITEM Sl.OO and Shaw for the women. will be provided by Dino and 3Qc EACH ADDITIONAL ITEM The race will be run in heats, the Dynamics. Finals for Miss CASE with finals made up of the fastest Red Cedar will be at 9:30. Offer good Oct. 9 thru 12 times in each division. The Drawings of the heats for the race divisions are: on-campus men, will also take place at that time. 351-7100 STOP IN! DOMINO'S Friday on 3rd Floor of Student Services See why we're MORE than just STORE HOURS: WEDNESDAY NOON UNTIL 9 P.M. a beauty shop MONDAY - SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 5:30 P.M. 220 ALBERT BELOW KNAPPS CAMPUS CENTER IIEBERMANNS FINLAND Fifty-years A special exhibit of arts and crafts from the hands of a courageous and Inspired people celebrating50 years of their independence. THE LEOPARD RUNS WILD IN A COLLECTION OF SHAPE-TAMERS Vanity Fair captures the cat s spots in sleeked down lingerie of nylon tricot and foundations that control shape with studied precision The pettis are wild with saber-tooth hems. . all were born to be worn with black, brown and bright fashions. A. Soft-padded bra, 32-36 B, C. 6.00 HAND-CRAFTED JEWELRY B. Pantie girdle of nylon/Lycra® IN STERLING SILVER A happy blend of art and industry in Finland has spandex power net. S-M-L. 11.00 created an Impressive array of things that are beautiful to live with .. • practical to use. Don't miss this great exhibit of crystal, ceramics, jewelry C. Pettipant, sizes 4-5-6. 5.00 ... many other beautiful things. D. Bikini pant in 4-5-6 sizes 2.50 E. Pettislip: mini-short XS-S-M, short S-M, and average S-M-L 5.00 Jacobson's E AST LANSING- 209 E. Grand River DOWNTOWN - 107 S. Washington Thursday, October 12, 1967 6 Michigan State News. East I a:.- r ___ - ichigan New view of U.S. Centrex Centrex: - one of the most signed by Bell for MSL's In- which all Incoming calls had to per 'U' day than Traverse City and Ypsllantl combined, and does It the aid of an p anywhere In the world without operator, If the come. The switchboard operator modern and efficient telephone creasing phone needs In 1960. with no problem." number Is known by the caller. Corps then contacted the student on his "The old system was 30 years Shaw said the University's from Peace systems In the world -- is In buzzer when he had a call. The Centrex permits five digit use on campus today. old and it was horrible," said student then had to search for dialing within the system. Calls 11,800 dormitory and married The word Centrex itself has Emery G. Foster, manager of for "Centrex of MSU" are housing phones, plus its nearly a vacant precinct phone. threat, but if meaning. It merely stands Residence Halls and Food Serv- handled through an office located 4,500 main station business "I • iprtifv if manv wavs with 1» the **<* Page °f the constrUed a type of service which Mich- ice. In comparison, the "new sys¬ In East Lansing. phones, handle an average of reisers and share their views York Times, New 'leftist' or is placed Hannah magazines—places losecritical he mightwere Johnson, his Job.ofThe higher lgan Bell Telephone makes avail- Under the old system phones tem," according to Herb Shaw, Bell Telephone's campus repre¬ Centrex also allows incoming between 125-and 150,000 calls now," a the I'nited Peace states Corps member hich don't reach many people." you go, the less your freedom," able to a large customer. «ere connected to a sentative, "handles more calls and outgoing calls to or from per day. The system was specially de- locate, : "A students' remarks are not Englander said. . i:J. commenting on how his i/ation affected LOW PRICES e on a- rmer attitudes. Er.r.larder, who served ONLY KROGER GIVES YOU 6000 ester.. Nigeria, aired his . - o: various topics dur- round table discussion UP $ WIN *100. NO PURCHASE END PARTICIPATE. SLIPS OF CHECK-OUT LANE OR STORE OFFICE. LIMIT I PER ADULT CUSTOMER PER STORE VISIT. .\. "Things do look dif- ' after you he said. have beer, over- TO WIN *50 - *25 t ic r hopes to ferment between former Corps TO RICH -s; n cf eNperience, irrent such as problems in Lansing's and 'RACE e t. Corps is a most ret the isolated PLUS THE EXTRA SAYINGS OF TOP PESCHKES FRESH OR SMOKED VALUE STAMPS look at things from FAMILY PAC " Englander said, CUBE STEAK LIVER CHUBS u look at other LEAN .•r'.r.t credence to You get a sensi- PORK STEAK KROGER COUNTRY STYLE SLAB va lues." •o problem he com- SLICED BACON FRESH 'it :s a question of ce between twodif- Frandor Shopping Center LEG 0 LAMB . The Negro dotfs & Yankee Stadium it the same thing an. It is what - KWICK KRISP for, not the • :ies~ ice This is a new Corps has given SLICED BACON l .ier -aU, "While over¬ seas 1 t ::.eJ to a Negro, who rkea 'I respect Gov. George A a:: cc- at least he is honest, :.J -. e - his mind. Now Stok- a:-;:;.chael doesn't speak "I r.ever thought Nigerians .■ere opt:-, to cross-cultural ex¬ it-;- ence. We study them but we or.': much about them ;•::.. others," Englander are 300 different Ni- -ions, all living dif- ;rer:ly,' he said. "But the exploits them, so they re susp; :ous of him. sr.\ bother to learn the ' Fnglander said, "but is: importan: to me, in i deeper dimension of IV hen st went abroad, I re were channels to .o.ce opinion In foreign r.a:. : s. The expression of one's o id a- is taken for granted here the U.S.," another ex- Nigerinr. r orpsman, Jerry Kleis, "Die to our extreme form of nationalism, we have a contami¬ nate:' view about the rights of societies, such as those in Ni¬ geria, to speak out," Kleis said. Kleis stated that Americans .1 sue ier/ "primitive" be¬ cause they are not as techno- lo_::.a!i; advanced as we, and ire capable of building cars arJ :/es on our type of scale. vctua'.lv, in the fleldof social " con.:, u- cation, the Nigerians arc *ar more sophisticated," he " \mericans have to amuse t:.v- i-vlve.- with silly thlngs.llke amusement parks. We wouldn't have to If ve could broaden our base oi communication," Klei» sa:J. Kleis 'eels African culture has been generally underrated. "Ni¬ gerians are getting more out of life :han I," Kleis stated. "The concept that \frlca is primitive I-LB is e-poused by missionaries and 2'/j-OZ t: e colonial administration." PKC " \n Eastern Nigerian society MICHIGAN U.S. NO I has a high degree of community development and ability for com¬ uULL/cn Hire WILL BUY AT KROGER APPLES munication. They lead a grass ;-oo:s, human sort of life," he BANANAS DELICIOUS OR JONATHANS MCINTOSH OR CORTLAND ENDIVE *69 *59 sat-.'. "I fee', it is we, and not they, who are primitive." Englander said that in the U.S., "dissent" is compatible with 13 FLORIDA RED OR WHITE RED TOKAY GRAPES SEEDLESS GRAPES lb ESCAROLE U S. NO I RUSSET BAKING being' anti- \merican. "Over¬ sea s, dissent is 'he point of view GRAPEFRUIT CABBAGE ROMAINE ™„ POTATOES of a smaller group." ACORN SQUASH » "'A'hen I returned tothestates, I became more sensitive to dis¬ tortions of news, i.e. Vietnam," f69«99 PASCAL CELERY sr. CARROTS ,_t. BUTTERNUT SQUASH 20 89 VINE RIPENED he sa." 'Subversive news' CALIFORNIA KALE £%> BUTTERCUP SQUASH ORANGES BOILING ONIONS , RUTABAGAS „ TOMATOES Flu vaccine ready a AO' 30$1 SPINACH SLAW SALAD « PA TOP VALUE 59**79 TOP VALUE C#l TOP VALUE The influenza vaccine, STAMPS JU STAMPS DU STAMPS which was delayed in ar¬ riving at MSU, will be given to students, fac- WITH THIS A 3-LB COUPON ON OR LARGER M THIS COUPON 0 2PKCSOF WITH THIS C 2 PKCS HERRUDS WITH THIS COUPON ONE 2'i-LB ON PKC OF fSSSTX. 2 PKCS OF CHOPS C.. OR A 3-LB _ g rfEJM \an'SfVf igSSffi of:■ 100 TV STAMPS ON A 2-LB FRENCH BRAND OR 3-LB . ■ ! I t y PORK ROAST HAM SLICES SMOKY-LINKS KROGER MEAT LOAF FROZEN SEA FOOD SMOKED LOIN ROAST FRUITS • (E.c/»rf/r - | 4 p.m. Persons allergic ■ BREAD AND/OR ROLLS- MMVRRini __ injIRIII to take the shot. eggs are asked not to aawaaa EE aaaa^Hnaaaaa thYjs Thursday, October 12, 1967 7 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan The urday. Lit. society will gather Johnson Socieft' of the day in the Music Building Audi¬ Central Region will hoK Its 1967 torium. Selections from Bach, annual meeting Friday and Sat¬ Handel, and other composers of Formed 10 years ago for the the Baroque period will be played. Major causes of MSU During Fire Prevention Week, loss by fire is due to careless were reported with an estimated contributed to the 13 electrical Oct. 8-14, students have once smoking and matches that stu- loss of $236. again been reminded of the com- dents thought were out. Eight fires reported. Minimal value Stuffing the incinerator in the damage resulted, as fires listed Poor a housekeepingwasli sted cause of fires, in a general sense of anything ifeft in a pile in a corner. This could be any student alarm to get report should sound the fire the people out, the says. He also should dial 123 to inform the fire dept. purpose of studying eighteenth Saturday's program will con¬ mon causes of fire, of the means fires caused by smoking were residence halls too full with paper Clothes also accounted for a thing from a pile of rags or The goal of the fire department, century literature, the society sist primarily of the presenta¬ to put out a fire and of loss be- extinguished on campus last year, caused 19 fires with minimal small number of fires. The papers to the storage Of home¬ according to Gingrich's informa¬ is composed mainly of Ameri¬ tion of papers by members of cause of fire, in an information Estimated damage was $816. value damage. synthetic in certain fabrics may coming displays. tion sheet, is to ensure that can and Canadian college teach- the society. A short business bulletin distributed by Sam Gin- Arson in the residence halls, Electrical fires occurredwhen burn in the dryer if the clothes Finally, there were 11 false erveryone in the residence halls meeting w ill be held in the after¬ grich, MSU fire inspector. such as setting waste baskets grease in dormitory pop com are left too long. Irons left on alarms last year. knows where fire alarms andi The first open feature will be a noon and new officers for the Six causes of fires were noted, on fire, was second in total pans got over-heated. Overloaded clothes or ironing boards added However, when a fire occurs, a fire extinguishers are before a music program at 8:30 p.m. Fri¬ coming year will be elected. The cause of the largest single damage caused. Eight arsons and frayed extension cords also to the count. fire strikes. The type of extin¬ guishers should also be known. For ordinary class A fires such as paper , wood, and cloth fires, DISCOVER THE a pressurized water extinguisher should be used. For flammable liquids and electrical equipment fires, class WORLD OF B and C fires, either a carbon dioxide or dry chemical extin¬ guisher should be used. The total fire loss on campus last year was $15,300.55, which includes building losses of $1,975.25, building content losses of $1,527 and losses to the prop¬ erty of others of $11,798.30 From the $11,798.30 figure, construction companies lost $6,256 and fires in vehicles ac¬ counted for $3,215. In 1965-66, total loss to the University was $7,317. In all fires reported no one was seriously injured. All University-owned property and contents were insured. How¬ ever, the students' personal be¬ FRES-SHORE longings are not insured by MSU. HADDOCK FILLETS Fresh Frc o The Cinema Guild will pre¬ Ready for the Pan ~„r sent "The Treasure of the Sier¬ CHUCK WAGON FLASH-O-FREEZE ra Nevada" with Humphrey F o- DINNER STEAKS . gart and Walter Huston at 7 and 9 p.m. Friday in the Union Ball¬ room. Admission is 50£ per per - JIFFY-WITH TOMATO SAUCE BREADED VEAL be An All-University dance will held from 9-12:30 p.m. Sat¬ PET RITZ urday in Shaw Hall. PIE SHELLS ist All organizations must be res¬ e r e d with ASMSU before Oct 20 if they wish to use Univer¬ KROGER VEGETABLES sity facilities during the year. Registration forms may be picked IN BUTTER SAUCE up in 101 Student Services Bldg. GREEN BEANS, FRES-SHORE FROZEN The off-campus students will BABY LIMAS, sponsor a mixer from 8-12 p.m. BROCOLLI CUTS, FANTAIL SHRIMP PEAS. Friday at St. John's Student Center, 327 M.A.C. Ave. All students are welcome. The American Chemical So¬ ciety will sponsor a lecture by Manuel M. Baizer, of Monsanto Co. in St. Louis, Mo. at 8 to¬ night in R138 Chemistry Bldg. The topic will be on the organic FRES-SHORE syntheses by electrolytic reduc¬ tive coupling. FANTAIL SHRIMP A meetini»fthe Amateur Radio KROGER SHOESTRING Club will be held at 7:30 tonight in 252 Engineering Bldg. POTATOES The Packaging Society is spon¬ ORE IDA-14-OZ WT soring a picnic at 2 p.m. Sunday at Washington Park. All pack¬ COTTAGE aging majors are invited to at¬ tend. « « » FRIES The Honors College is spon¬ soring a Graduate Opportunities OR Meeting at 7:30 tonight. All stu- ORE IDA 2-LB PKl dents interested in graduate HASH school should meet in the Union Ballroom where representatives BANQUET FROZEN BROWNS from a nswer various departments will questions on graduate CREAM PIES problems and services. The Akers Hall Social Com¬ mittee will hold a mixer from 3ANANA, CHOCOLATE, LEMOh 9-12 p.m. Friday in the Akers :OCONUT, OR STRAWBERRV classrooms. The mixer will fea¬ ture The Otherside. 3a FOOTBALL IM News Time Field 1 6:00 Holden S4 - 5 6:45 Kappa Sigma - Phi K. Sig. WT 12-OZ PKCS *| J| 7:30 Qoody 6 - Carriers (ES) 8:15 Titans - Meat 9:00 Losers - The Inn RICHS 9;45 Schular Mets - Wonder Wart Hogs COFFEE RICH 2 Time Field 2 ORE IDA 6:00 Archdukes - Archaeopteryx TATER TOTS 4 -$l 6:45 DTD - Pi Kappa Phi 7:30 Sig. Nu - Ph. Kappa Tau 8:15 Dudes - Nads 9:00 U Sig. Phi-Phi K. Theta 9:45 AGR - SAE KROGER - OFF THE COB Time Field 3 GOLDEN 6:00 Delta Upsilon-Tau Delta Phi 6:45 B. T. Pi - Triangle 7:30 Phi Dslta Theta - SAM CORN 8:15 ZBT - ATO 9:00 Phi Gamma Delta-Delta Chi IN BUTTER SAUCE 9:45 Brannigan - 6-Pak Delicious Golden Ripe Time Field 4 Corn in Tasty Butter 6:00 Theta Chi-Phl Sig. Delta Sauce. Just Drop the 6:45 West Shaw 9-10 Bag in Boiling Water 7:30 Theta D. Chl-Phi K. Psi and in Minutes its Ready. 8:15 LCA - Phi Sig. Kappa 9:00 Psi Upsilon-A. Kappa Psi TOP VALUE 9:45 Farmhouse-Sig.Phi Epsilon REDEEM COUPONS IN THIS AD Field 7 STAMPS Time 6:00 McDuff - McLean WITH THIS COUPON 0 WITH THIS COUPON 0. WITH THIS COUPON ON 6:45 Setutes - Stalag 17 975 EXTRA NY 2PKCSFROZEN FOR ANY FROZEN ANY 2 PKGS ANY GREEN GIANT SEA TREASURE . UP TO 7:30 Akrojox - Akcelsior CHEF BOY AR DEE STOUFFER ITEM 8:15 Hubbard 9-8 j SARA LEE )AK* ITEMS LEE HERO a a PIZZA ■ ■ """ * ■ VEGETABLES TiUMADl" J J SEAFOOD I 9:00 Sultans - Satans TOP VALUE STAMPS 9:45 Elsworth - Montie Thursday, October 12, 1967 8 Michigan State News, East I.ansint;. Michigan In this cose, Take one of Shakespeare's important less ger comedies, cleaned, stars. sectioned and rescrambled, add uences featuring the 1 may be a groundling at heart be the Shrew Katherlna, the contumatious daughter of Baptisa Minola who, along with several suitors of his is on ln the Audle Murphy Too bad that Audle Murphy western. wrong isn't it> shows his colors clearly in the first scene. After shooting up a stagecoach foot PEPPARD: It is to me. The violence is excessive and dished out liberally. How long This is the kind of stuff that for no apparent r< ason Martin has it been since you've seen several million dollars worth of but I was upset by the cutting of younger daughter is anxious fifteen years ago prompted i then hangs a shopkeeper whowas shot ln the face, point sets and costumes along with the induction scenes. Although marry off the elder Katherlna. Saturday afternoon, someone ; I chard Burton and generous this sequence in which the ale- Kate is definitely not the most every •ash enough to kill one of Dlno's blank, by a shotgun or heard a spend half an hour ln the line ln men ln the act of holding up his fine cry of agony as a glass portions of Elizabeth Taylor and house patrons taunt the drunken desirable candidate for mar- front of the local third-run movie The giveaway, though, shatters ln a man's eyes, shake vigorously. The result is Christopher Sly by convincing rlage, but she is loaded and house, waiting for an opportunity store. is that Martin wears leather smashed by a bullet Columbia Picture's release of him that a page In woman's at- Petruchio's attitude is "If the to trade my quarter for three shrew fits " The remainder gloves, to his face. Nor should we fail "The Taming of the Shrew" which tire is his wife is totally ir¬ ... of the film follows Burton in hours of bliss with "Attack of the the most But t'.._ devastating thing to mention that good masochls- is currently filling the West au- relevant to the plot, it is, none- .. his efforts to tame Taylor, to Giant Nasal Hairs" and"Slaugh- about Alex Flood (Dino) is that tic empathy elicited by a won- ditorlum of the Spartan Twin, theless, the most hilanous low ter ln Prarie Dog Town." "Shrew" is shrewdly calcu- comedy in the entire play the virtual exclusion of all other y STUART ROSENTHAL Martin plays him straight. There derfully brutal slug out between nclude the plot elements. State News Reviewer It's all there,people—thunder- is nothing that warms the heart Pickens and Peppard. lated to appeal to the mass au- Other changeb The final scene, after Bianca's ing hoofs, good guys with white as much as hearing the heavy dience which Shakespearean omission of certain archaic puns Shakes- monlal to Burton's skill hats and white shirts, super- Incidentally, Carol Andreson is drama seems to lave lost as a and wordplay—the type of things wedding, Is given much more play but then neither \ performer, tell the good guy, "I'll give you a tremendous actress. It takes ornery villains, and the strong until 9:00 to get out of town. At result of its academic implica- *hich would be Incomprehensible than In the usual stage presen- peare's. As for Mr. and Mrs. Burton, Miss Taylor is formidable frontier woman with high cheek- true native ability to recite in¬ 9;01, I'll hang you." H0ns> to today's public without foot- tation, The sets and costuming t A° fn he said tliat they work from must any angle. As Katherlna, bones and —- -~ a neckline ••vwiiiiv to IW match. itiaiciif Enter iillU E/Ilici Jericho, The Into JCiiCllW, Hero, IMC iitiUi teresting cliches without giving trimmed notes, « 1 . 1 . least indication of any , The play has been that well together. she screams, shrieks, kicks and The f, hts bloody and the ; impressive, conveying a a- are we B1 eyed whlte haired George and rearranged so as to de- The important point i ,-iirsci! n an lncrediblv SDir red quality actor and curses in an incredibly spirited could ,j . ...... care less abou£ thg chnd_ ' . . ° emotion. Although the rest of Peppard Is clean, but non¬ err.phastze even* thing except . at home In portrayal. She is, in fact, so hood of the bad guy. committal. He may say that he the cast puts forth a valiant effort •he Burton-Taylor interaction, been adapted expressly for the in a motion picti One of those added hard hitting throughout the movie gets Involved, but deep to equal her performance, they This means that Cambio'swooing motion picture, taking full ad- abethan times. ost The c-owded, Shakespea, claustrophobic sets bits of business in the picture that in her ultimate reform she And what a bad guy he is! never down inside we all know that he miss the mark, even if almost im¬ of Bianca, which is an important vantage techniques This ofthethe medium. and heighten the effect as coes the involves Petruchio waking and is somewhat less that persuasive, Dean Martin as the sheriff who will bring salvation to the down¬ perceptibly, element in the comedy as written scope decided that he could make a has been reduced to a minor treatn is not only justified use of hazy, pastel colors. washing his face. This sort of That's funny, she doesn't look better living by taking over the trodden citizens. I do feel compelled, lest some¬ Director Ziffirelli's players improvisation adds Immensely to shrewish, Jean Simmons has not worn one misinterpret me, to com- detail, handled by a couple of but Is lmperativi town than he could by protecting short clips spaced, between Ion- tenar.ce s cinema as an art are not very convincing Italians, the general hilarity and is testi- "Rough Night ln Jericho" Is well since "Spartacus." She upon one incident in which ■— 1 :>-► 485-6485 form. appears wear* and strained, but Martin'deftly adds depth to Ms is still of good heart and stead- bangs Or\e of the methods used in characterization as he fast spirit. After all, she is the GLAD,V,E£ the screen version spreading of a single scene over is the unwilling object of Alex Flood's affections, and he is demanding Miss Simmons' head repeatedly- against the edge of a table in a TODAY .. .at 1:00-3:10 several locales. Petruchio's in¬ moving display of unrequited lust. 5:15-7:20-9:25 P.M. 51 per cent of her stagecoach itial meeting with Kate, for ex¬ line. Nope, they just don't make ample, entails a mad chase flicks like that anymore. roofs Despite all thit subtlety, we They're through, the house, across and into a huge cotton bin. Phis are suddenly tipped off to the young • •• augmentation of the action en¬ fact that "Jericho" Is a real by the appearance of Festivities hances the comedy and ,.;ves the western , film a bawdy quality which is Slim Pickens who is as much a they're so vital to a performance of part of the tradition of the Ameri¬ in love "Shrew." can west as rustlers and Indians. ...and they Even with the cutting, trans¬ positions of scenes, and ad¬ But even Pickens, as a less, plays his role for real, baddie no open twin dition of sight gags, the plot of turning in the best performance kill the rowdy farce remains un¬ changed. of the It is picture. really a thrill to hear theaters people. Burton as Petruchio is deter¬ once again, that sentimental dia¬ logue which I thought was gone It was a gala occasion for the mined to marry money and the city of Lansing as the Fox most available prospect seems to forever. For example: Theater* Corporation opened its PEPPARD: Did Flood give you 252nd and 253rd theaters, tiie Twin Screens—Sibling Flicks those bruises? double screened Spartan Twin ,,u 7lEtNER5 OFFE« SIMMONS: It's not important. Theaters in Frandor Shopping Center. "Stfk EVERY DAY r'c£ Thoroughly evil Dean Martin as Slim Pickens looks on (left) knocks in "Rough a defiant mountain man across the bar Night in Jericho"on the E ast Screen of the Spartan twin. To see how the better half lives, spend an evening at home Burtons as depicted in "The Taming of the Shrew" on the West Screen. with the CAI 3rd Week! Feature at PUS titAiAt to Upon entrance, thosL- invited the glittering greeted by sleek hostesses and several kilt clad bagpipers and event were 1:15-3:20-5:30-7:40-9:50 offered the chance to be listed 1VAKKEM among the charter purchasers I3EATXI? at the ultra modern concession bar. FAYB As the time for the scheduled EUMAWAY "st> SPARTAN ♦TWIN ♦THEATRE<^"r festivities alerted all those who drew near, a were bugle in¬ PROFESSIONAL / FRANDOR SHOPPING CENTER * PH. 35 1-0030 X I specting the West Auditorium to JSIDINIIMIIIE) DRY CLEANERS AND the East end of the building ide zippered boot in antiqued brown o black ([rained leather. Buckle trim. Com j William Shakespeare's ! lusty tragi-comedy ■ ■ ■ position soles. Size* B5-10. I Jane Asher • Diana Churchill [ Jim Dale • Esmond Knight I Moira Redmond I David Weston ) MICHIGAN PR ON I THE I SCREEN I FOR I THE I FIRST I TIME! I Thurs., Fri.-- Oct. 12 & 13 - 6:30 & 9:30 p.m. University Auditorium Admission $1.00 in advantt $1.50 at the door On Sale at Union Ticket Office -SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO. Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Thursday, October 12, 1967 9 SPORTS BOSTON Red Sox square series, 3-3 (UPI) — The Boston day, evening the world series at pitchers Bob Gibson of St. Louis Out went Lamabe and in came Tim McCarver's liner Red Sox fired record three- three games apiece. Mike Shannon doubled off a and Jim Lonborg of Boston. Each Joe Hoerner, the second of four center, homer salute in the fourth inning The stunning sixth-game vie- has won two games, pitchers who worked before the the left centerfleld wall. One and Joe Foy's ringing double tory by the "miracle" Red Sox For all that ^pUy of power inning ended. Hoerner pitched out later, Bell walked weak- touched off a four-run seventh set the stage for a dramatic to two batters and allowed two hitting Dal Maxvill but retired hwveveri it was still 4-4 in the inning bombardment to crush the seventh game finale Thursday- sevemh because St. LouIs super. singles—by Mike Andrews and pinch-hltter Dave Rlcketts on St. Louis Cardinals 8-4 Wednes- last battle between ace Vastrzemski—before leaving the a deep fly to Yastrzemski on the hero Lou Brock gammed a two- Cards down 6-4. left field warning track. run homer deep Into the center- field bleachers off winning re¬ Larry Jaster had more The victory made the Red Sox* liever John Wyatt. success, retiring pinch-hltter dream only one step from reality. By that time. Jack Lamabe, the Jerry Adair on a sacrifice fly Ifie ball club, a 100-1 shot to fourth Cards* hurler, was on the to center which scored the third win the American League mound—but not for long. After run of the inning. Singles by pen¬ nant, has the opportunity to go Elston Howard bounced out, George Scott and Smith drove from ninth place the previous pinch-hltter Dalton Jones de¬ across a fourth and chased Jas¬ season to the world champion¬ livered a line single to right and ter from the mound. Ray Wash¬ burn finally terminated the wild ship. Foy, who had been benched for the second half of the season inning by intentionally walking The Red Sox, who trailed three because of poor fielding, lashed Petrocelli, loading tlve bases, and getting Howard to end it the games to one before rallying a hooking line drive toward the for a 3-1 triumph behind Lon¬ left field corner. way he began it—bouncing to borg on Monday, can become the Brock, running at full speed, third. It wasn't over yet though. Gary third team In modern major sailed into the air at the last second in a desperate attempt Bell, the third Sox pitcher, league history to win the world series after trailing3-lingames. A dusty Cardinal to catch the hall but couldn't allowed a leadoff infield single Only the 1925 Pittsburgh Pirates Lou Brock, who has led the St. Louis Cardinals in the World Series with his power reach and It caromed off the by Orlando Cepeda in the eighth and after Vastrzemski made a and 1958 New York Yankees have and base stealing, stirs up the dust as he scores from second base on a hit by wall. Jones scored and Foy took third on the throw-in. sparkling one-landed catch of accomplished the feat. Curt Flood. The Red Sox catcher is Elston Howard. (JPI TELE PHOTO Midfieldplay Spartans/ U-M: Spartan Barry Tiemann intercepts a pass in the Calvin game earlier in the season. His midfield play has been a big factor in the transition be¬ tween defense and offense on the MSU soccer team. State News Photo When has looked fenses of Houston and Southern beyond this year's performances. graduation. The Spartans lost by Mike Schonhofen By GAYE L WESCH ordinated. one broke loose behind the running 13 starters including four Ail- strong, the other of halfback Ron Johnson. California. Last week, however. Similarities also pop up when State News Sports Writer But Americans, while Michigan lost In the opener the defense couldn't contain the the Spartans were Impressive considering the problems the two SOCCER THREATS The time Is nearlng for the Michigan looked strong, despite passing of Navy's John Cart- both ways against Wisconsin. teams faced entering the season. All-American Jack Clancy, and annual battle between Michigan But the likenesses continue Both teams lost heavily to 13 other starters. a close 10-" and Michigan State to decide quarter field) Transition men the supremacy of ball In the state. And a college foot¬ quick look points out The offens what the ne„. LIGHTNING FAS = that the teams have more In , common than just being the two California defensi that Notre and» like the ^Pa«ans, they ve key By NORM SAARI to midfield in that department with four. major football powers in the state. Both have 1-2 records. Michi¬ Dame had ripped for 41 points the week scored on a before. final moments to win, 10-9. California long pass In the bcen hurt icial " b>' Penalties times. " and fum- MSU's offense sputtered In the gan won its first game and lost two games. The defense State News Sports Writer The 5-9, 165-pounder scored Last week the Michigan offense its last two, while the SpartJk couldn't the strong of- BREAKFAST four goals and nine assists last lost their first two and won The MSU soccer team can be season and was selected to the the last time out. & broken down into three individual second team All-Midwest. The Wolverines so far have teams the defensive team, Much of his ability in working BEEF BUFFET HAPPY — been unable to get their of¬ offensive team and transition with the forward line may ex¬ fensive and defensive units co- team. tend back to his high school days 325 E. GRAND RIVER The defense has kept up its in St. Louis where he was anall- wm tradition of being stingy to the opposition's offense. Only two city selection at center forward. He was switched to right halfback HOUR 1/4 LV BEEF BURGER goals have been scored on the his freshman year here. Spartans in their first five games "It wasn't that big a switch," TONIGHT - 8:30-10:30 of the season, all of which were Tiemann said. "Now, it is more victories. of a matter of setting up plays Tonight-AII Color! FRENCH FRIES And it is easy to tell the of¬ than it was of following through Featuring fense has been geared. forward line has scored 26 goals The with them at center "Playing midfield Is mostly a forward. THE ST. MLENTMCS (UT thus far. But the transition team, fielders &rry Tiemann, Alex mid¬ matter of thinking and realizing where you are and getting the ball downfield the best way. HUSSACRT THE 65{ Skotarek and ErnieTuchscherer, could well be the success story. They out are responsible for helping the defense, bringing the ball Tuchscherer and Skotarek both sophomores, but have pressed Kenney with their ball control and hustle. are im¬ SUNLINERS downfieldand setting up plays for "They are both hard working the forward line. kids and played exceptional "If a team can control mid- games in Denver last Friday," field, " Coach Gene Kenney said, Kenney said. Mrhf HeUit "you can keep the opposition's Kenney had been playing Tony SHOWN AT 7:25 defense off guard and your own Keyes a; inside right for the Pius. .SHOWN At 9:35 ONLY defense will play a lot tougher. early part of the season. But . "We have been doing an ex¬ he moved Keye*;to rightwingand cellent this." job in accomplishing Kenney feels Tiemann, a weekend. Junior, is the most underrated moved Skotarek int.ovthe starting line-up for the western trip last Ikotarek has scored two goals ISfflBH ed-'Beach Red' 'Fortune Cookie' SUNLINERS will be playing every Wed., man on the Spartan soccer team. and assisted onanother thisyear, Thurs., Fri., Sat. and Sun. "He is a tower of strength in while Tuchscherer also has one the midfield area," Kenney said. assist, but three goals. "He has the soccer sense to be . \ 7\p ' ,iP at the right place at the right BETHEL MANOR time and is very durable. Barry is as good a midfield man as OPEN RUSH NOW SHOWING AT THE HIDEAWAY —- I have ever seen here." OCT. 12 7:30 P.M. Tiemann tied Guy Buschfor the Call leadership in assists last year 332-1437 for ride JULIE ANDREWS RETURNED and Is presently leading the team MAX VON SYDOW BY POPULAR TODAY from 1:00 P.M. 1:00-3:05-5:10-7:20-9:30 m ICHIGAN RICHARD HARRIS - Th( GfORGE RO* Hill WAllCR WRI30 DEMAND AMUCK Y "HAWAII" f iiKPiu in EDWYN "0-0 SOUL" AiJikitT "HAWAII" SHOWN ONCE ONLY TONIGHT IIWKV AT 8:2- ADDED DISNEY FEATURETTE STARR TWO^ItOAII "A COUNTRY COYOTE MOTOWN RECORDING GOES HOLLYWOOD" SHOWN AT 7;25 ONLY ARTIST "POINT BLANK- ro DANNY WOODS ". . . has the audience jumping" HAVE A LATE 3BIG* NITE SNACK SHOWS BY Spiro's 11:00 1:00 . . . Come at 7:00 P.M. or 9:15 P.M. See the HIDEAWAY OPEN EVERY NIGHT TO 9 FRANDOR CENTER Sneak and Our Regular Attraction— PHONE: IV 7-JQ51 ' 325 E. GRAND RIVER Open Sundays noon to 6 p.m. AUDREY HEPBURN in "TWO FOR THE ROAD" Thursday, October ,12, 1967 10 Michigan State News. East I ansing. Michigan STATE NEWS STATE NEWS Classified Classified 355-8255 355-8255 CLIP THE HANDY COUPON ON NEXT PAGE - TAKE ADVANTAGE OF "PEOPLE REACHER" WANT - ADS Scooters & Cycles Employment Employment For Rent Automotive Automotive Automotive WANTED-ONE man for tw o-man MORGAN 19(i3. Plus4.Rij VOLKSWAGEN BUS 1966. Ex¬ Sf ARS CAMPUS 50 Cycle, 1,000 PROFESSIONAL NURSES: All BUSBOY wanted. Dinners plus i ORVA1R CORSA 1965. Two-door cellent condition. 20,000 miles. mile?. Good condition. $130. shifts, full-time or pan-time. pay. Call 351-0665. 3-10/13 luxury apartment. 351-0764. drive. 40,000 actual mill coupe. Burgundy with black in¬ 3-10/12 7640 between 3 p.m. and $1695. 353-6871. 3-10/12 3 7-0407. 5-10/13 Excellent pay scale. We invite —* terior. Bucket sens, four i n the you to compare our liberal For Rent floor sync rome«h-gears. Must ONE MAN for spacious two floor VOLKSWAGEN 1966 Sunroof, HONDA 1965, 305 Superhawk. fringe benefits including a Day sell. Going overseas. Call ifter apartment. Urider 21 eligible. AM-FM radio. Must sell. Ask¬ Guaranteed mechanically per¬ Care Nursery for your pre- TV RENTALS for students. Low 5:30. 339-2749. MO/16 351-5630. 5-10/16 ing $1395. 699-2219. 3-10/16 fect. Helmets. $425. 351-0644. schoolers. A beautiful modern economical rates by the term • automotive 5-10/17 general hospital. For further or month. UNIVERSITY TV • employment J OR VAIR 1961, Stationwagon, VOLVO 1957, excellent transpor¬ information, stop by, or call RENTALS. 484-9263. C UNFURNISHED. THREE rooms MUSTANG 1966, hardtop, six bus and shopping. No chil¬ . for rent automatic, radio, heater, ex¬ tation. Runs very well. Call HONDA 1965, 305 Super Hawk. Lansing General Hospital, 2800 near cellent condition. Full price cylinder. Line new. $1,495,332- dren or undergrad students. . for sale TU2-1349. 3-10/12 Good condition. 351-0807. Devonshire, 372 -8220, Person- TV RENTALS for students. $9jOO 33"5. 3-10/16 $110. Phone FABIAN REALTY. • lost & found $499, Crains Motors. 1301 East 3-10/13 nel Department, Extension 202 month. Free service and dellv- Kala; Phot ED2-0811. Eleanor Fabian. IV5- • personal . MUSTANG 1965. Fastback sports Auto Service & Parts or 203. 8 a.m. to 4:15 pjn., ery. Call NEJAC, 337-1300. We • peanuts personal AUTHENTIC DEALER for Yama¬ Monday through Friday. guarantee same day service. C 3033, ED7-1166. 3-10/13 car, handling package. Frendo • real estate brakes, Michelin X tires. $1900. ha, Triumph, and BMW. Com¬ 30-11/1 CORVAIR I0,-o. Auto Apartments EAST SIDE, four students, $40 • service (616) 749-9175. 3-10/16 plete line of parts,accessories, dio, he iter; new tin each. Two bedroom home or • transportation leather goods, and helmets. 1/2 CHOOSE YOUR own hours. A few 355-789$ after ~ p.rr hours a day can mean excellent HASLETT: NEAR shopping cen- apartment. One bedroom apart¬ • wanted OL06MOBILE 1965 F-85, V-\ mile south of 1-96 on South earnings for you as a trained ter. Lovely deluxe, two-bed- ment, $115. IV9-1017. Deluxe four-door. Power steer¬ CAR WASH: 25' evenings 6 and week- 3-10/12 3-1U/12 pius deposit. Phone 489-3569 plus ..-J.. ends. Apply 1198 S. Harrison, after 4 pi 3-10/13 accessories, Pirelli tires at Campus Mobil. 3-10/16 CAPIT0L NEAR: Girls lovely THE CHECK POINT. Authorized FRANCIS AVIATION. SO easy to HONDA, 1965, SS-50, excellent HOLT: NICE two-bedroom du¬ Lotus Dealer, 2221 W. Grand condition. Call 393-5447or 372- studio, well furnished, carpeted, 1st'. C -ill 355-6149. --10/16 learn in the PIPER CHERO¬ WAITRESSES AND cooks, part plex apartment featuring gas • River, Okemos. Phone 332- 3747. 5-10/12 well lighted area. Parking 487- KEE! I Special $5.00 offerl 484- and full time. Apply East time 3503# 3-10/12 range, disposal, soft water. All HOKD I ONVLRTIBLE 19t 3. Has 4916'. C-10/12 1324. C Employment Lansing Big Boy, 401 EastGrand * carpeted, drapes, full base¬ powi r »r ik«», steering. Excel- RAMBLER 1961 Classic, three Scooters & Cycles River. 5-10/18«SMALL TWObedroom.Holtarea. ment. $135 plus utilities. 2120 «1AN WITH light truck or pick- Married couple. Lease pre- Meadow Lawn. 694-0613. 3-10/16 seat wagon, radio. Must sell. 351-7535. 3-10/13 HONDA 1967, 305 Super Hawk, up to help move railroad ties GO-GO GIRLS needed for new ferred. Home phone 699-2395, 3-10/13 " ' ' Saddle bags, 2500 miles. $575. y and/or Saturday. nightclub, to dance in cages. office 882-5035. C FC>RD 1 " 2 Galaxle, convertible, Chance to make $50 to $75. Must be good dancers. Short HASLETT: TWO bedroom, de¬ RAMBLER 1963, Stationwagon. 337-0435 after 9:00 p.m. l ower steering, brakes, cruise- Call 353-6400 or 487-3096. hours. Good working condi- LIVING ROOM, BEDROOM, fur- luxe. Will accept family with Good condition. Must sell. Make 3-10/16 -mat;c. $4-5. 484-3113. ' 2-10/13 tions. Pleasant surroundings. nished, private bath, ground two children. No pets. Lease. 5-10/16 offer. 355-2769. 5-10/16 HONDA 50, 1965. Excellent con¬ See Brooks at THE VARSITY floor. Parking area.Couple. El¬ Deposit. Immediate occupancy. SUNBEAM ALPINE 1964. Wire BETTER THAN average typist DRIVE-IN ' 10-10/18 mer HarVey, 2261E.GrandRiv- 337-7618. 10-10/24 FORD FAIR LANE 1966, V-8, dition. Actual mileage, 700. Low wheels, radio. Excellent condi¬ to type from dictating machine. er, Williamston. 655-2737. lutomatic, chromes and red- price. 353-1334. 1-10/12 Confidential work. Good income. NURSES: RN for extended care 5-10/13 SUBLEASE WINTER term. Has- lln< Extr II. Best offer. 355- tion. 487-3338. 3-10/12 LATE 1966 Triumph, 500 com¬ Will furnish typewriter and all facility, 7 a.m,-3 p.m.: 3 p.m.- • 91,. 3-10/12 BEDROOM other nece s sa ry equipment. 11 Liberal salary, bene¬ TWO apartments THE AUTOSPORT Shop. Area's petition. 2,000 miles, $850,351- p.m. Phone after 5:30 p.m. 351-7342. fits and differentials. Weekend available for faculty and/or 1 (IRD 1964 Gala, ie 500. 390 cu¬ only sporty and racing c^ir ac¬ 5363. 5-10/18 5-10/18 graduate students. Completely DUPLEX FURNISHED. South end bic inch. Four-speed transmis¬ cessory shop. If we don t have premium. Apply Provincial HONDA 50,1967. Never used. Won House or call 332-0817. 5-10/12 carpeted including kitchens, GE of town. Three boys or three sion. $850. 372-6129. 3-10/12 it, we'll get it. THE CHECK in contest. Phone 353-7928. EMPLOYERS OVERLOAD COM¬ appliances. Furnished or unfur¬ girls. Basement, yard, carport. POINT, 2221 W. Grand River, All bills paid. Call 393-4282. PANY, Experienced secre¬ MALE STUDENTS: Part-time nished, with balconies. Phone ( R \ND PRIX 1963, dark blue, new Okemos. Phone 332-4916. 3-10/16 taries, typists to work tempor¬ Jon Runquist, 332-3534 or 332- 5-10/13 t.rc , new lattery, l est offer. C-10/12 openings now available. Call 8412. 5-10/13 BEN'ELLI 1967. 250cc. Scram¬ ary assignments. Never a fee. 393-5660. 2-4 p.m. Monday- Completely ove, • 351-5193. 5-10/16 bler. In perfect condition. Must Phone 487-6071. C-10/12 Friday. 29-10/31 5, Call 132-8641, \ VALIANT 1964, Signet Conver¬ ATTENTION GIRLS: . Sleeping Morton. 4-10,' LOTUS UORLD champion cars. tible. V-8, automatic, radio, sell. 393-4611. 5-10/18 rooms with cooking privileges. Mid-Michigan's only authorized heater, whitewglls, like new GREAT LAKES EMPLOYMENT busb0Y WANTED - Meals. Call Call Fred Allen. 332-8647 or [ I RENTED IT 1 t -ale- and service. THE condition. Full price $899 or HONDA 1967, 305 Scrambler. 2,000 miles. 3 51-6639. 826 for permanent positions for men and women in office, sales, 351-0250 after 7 p.m. 7-10/12 489-1002. 15-10/13 I THROUGH THE CHEC K POINT, two minutes $46 per month. Crains Motor's, Michigan Avenue. 3-10/13 technical. IV2-1543. C-10/12 BABY SITTER. Part time af¬ I WANT ADS *MO east ( campus. 2221 W. Grand 1301 East Kalamazoo. Phone River, 491,. Okemos. Phone 332- C-10/12 372-5234. 2-10/12 YAMAHA 1966—BigBear Scram¬ DELIVERY BOYS. Make $2-$3 ternoons. 4-8:30 p.m. Monday, Wednesday, Friday: 3-9 p. UNIVERSITY TERRACE: need fourth man. Holding open rush ^ Vx per hour. Must have car. Also Tuesday. Call 355-0874. evenings from 5-7 p.m. Apart¬ VOLKSWAGEN CAMPER 1966. bler. 1,750 miles. Like new. MGB 1965, fiberglass and con¬ inside counter help needed. Part 3-10/13 ment 22 W. For rides or in¬ Very good condition. Fully self 484-4751. 3-10/12 and full time. THE VARSITY. formation call 351-0686. CALL - 355-8255 vertible tops. Overdrive. Cus- contained. 882-1436 5-10/17 10-10/18 4-10/13 •om features.484-1243. 5-10/17 BSA 1965, 650. Excellent con¬ WANT AD readers are always VOLKSWAGEN 1966; white, red dition. 3,500 miles. Phone SERVICE STATION attendant,, looking for a bargain. Sell your MG 1958, Red. 50 miles per gal. Excellent shape. 489-0744. interior, with radio. Just tuned. $1175 or best offer. 332-8641 627-2792. 4-10/13 full at or part time. Call or apply 1553 E. GrndRiver, Okemos. bargains now with a State News want ad. Just dial 355-8255 FURNITURE 3-10/16 Dennis. 3-10/12 HONDA 90, 1966, 2000 miles, two helmets. Must sell. Call 351-9664. 5-10/12 for help in placing your ad. R-E-N-T-A-L 337-0946 between 6 and 10 p.m. 5-10/16 WANT A CAREER MISSION FOX PX - FRANDOR NOT JUST A JOB! t your tosrp' and budget. IMPOSSIBLE Fins-Masks-Snorkels Cigarettes 26£ pk. $2.60 car¬ ton inc. tax In the operation stores, we managers, but we of need store our also BISHOP FURNITURE RENTAL Tennis Balls $1,99 can need people in Paddle balls '72 NORTHWIND DRIVE 39tf up merchandising, distribution, Hand balls $1 Paddle ball rackets $2.88 real estate, personnel, i'lSSST Pt '.1-S830 accounting, transportation, Frisbes 88£ and engineering. Boomerangs $1.19 □BG1Q GHIUnH m■USOHw Our recruiters will Clay pigeons $1.99 case All game licenses available be on campus OCT. □□□HQ □□□□□ All Types Ammo 17 & 18. Sign up in the Placement Bureau □□a □□□□ □□□ Supporters $1.19 aai)i * □□na Spartan Megaphones $1.00 for interviews. Brasso--79£ pt nvco □□□□□ aatiEiucj EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER 4. Cyprinoi. □Rcaaau □□□□□ 7. Hainan □□ob □□□□ 30. Ostrich □□□ eiubcj Lina 32. Mike □□□□□ □□UiiHQ 34. Musical \1964,con- □□□□□ nQHQH □□EiElQ GIHHa •r steering, ter 5 p.m. ur 33. Tarn i >Heil 3-10/13 MM/ 37. Means of .43. Domic DOWN 1 I960, four-door se- Rely on Kamins To 20. Option 22. Ir. lake 23. Hib. pro- cylinder automatic. >. 694-5261. 3-10/13 It takes TOYOTA a 1 2 3 4 ± 6 % 7 6 7- 10 9. Oak nut tteinl % 10. 13 13. Nettle CHEYROLF'i 1959. Stick.Trans- \l portation Special $110, New bat¬ to do the im 11 % 16 15. Girl gr.nlu- tery. 351-0762 . 3-10'13 14 % 19 CHEVROLET 1947. Body and mo¬ 17 % IS % 22. Store foddei CHANNEL 6 Sunday 10 p.m. 21 tor excellent, $250. 694-0141. 3-10/13 20 21 % 25 25. Doctrine 26. Charge witl » % 24 % 27 126 29 CHEVROLET I960, 4-door, auto¬ matic, power steering and WHEELS of Lansing W/. \ 16 31 % 33 brakes, radio and heater, good 30 31 m 36 tires and batterv. $245. 351— authorized TOYOTA dealer 34 33 % 41? 1 evenings. ' CHEVROLET 1MPALA. Maroon, 5-10/13. We Also Specialize in CORVAIR Service 2200 S. CEDAR Permanent Antl Freeze AAf/AS 37 40 36 % 41 39 4,1 35. 504 38. St annul $1.39 gal. 1966, two-door hardtop, 283. Many accessories. Must see to only minutes from campus, 526 North Larch. 484-4596 43 44 i 45 39. Conden appreciate. >2,000. Call Jeff, 351-0535. 5-10/16 go west on Mt. Hope then 2 blocks south on Cedar Thursday, October 12, 1967 11 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan For Rent For Rent For Sale Personal Service FFA EYES 'HIPPIES' NEED ONE man for double. Un¬ MOTOWN AND all the other great Typing >«rvic« Farmers share distaste SEWING MACHINE sale, large supervised. $41 month. Phone selectiofcof reconditioned, used sounds! Now bookingl "The BARBI MEL, Professional typist. GIRL NEEDED starting October 332-0318 after 6 p.m. 3-10/16 machines, Singers, Whites,Uni¬ Finest Our". 351-9359. 3-10/13 No Job too large or too smalL 30, Apartment 9, Cedarbrook versal, Necchi. $19.95to $39.95. Block off campus. 332-3255." Arms. Call 351-8604. 3-10/12 NEAR UNION. Manual TV and FREEH A thrilling hour of Guaranteed easy terms. ED¬ NEW ONE bedroom, air-con¬ ditioned, carpeted, appliances, lounge areas. No cooking or parking. 351-4311. 4-10/16 WARDS DISTRIBUTING COM¬ PANY, 1115 N. Washington. 489- 6448. C-10/12 beauty. For appointment call 484-4519. MERLE NORMAN COSMETICS STUDIO, 1600 East for social outlook, habits Ideal for faculty and graduate For Sale Michigan. C-10/12 6609 after 6 p. 5-10/13 KANSAS CITY, Mo. If ~ I don't see any love in fighting tion a little," mused David Gil¬ couples. $135 unfurnished, $160 BIRTHDAY CAKES, 1" - $3.60 The Future Farmers of Ameri¬ cops and throwing rocks and bert, 17, Cortland, N'.Y. "I mean furnished. 927 West Shiawas¬ HALLICRAFTERS AM-FM re¬ DINO AND THE DYNAMICS STUDENT DISCOUNT SHEILA far from the bottles." 8" - $4.12, 9" - $4.90 deliv¬ - ca stand about as by showing people shouldn't put see. TU2-5761, ED7-92 48. ceiver. $30. Call 332 -01—3 available Homecoming, Hal¬ CAMPBELL. Experienced typ¬ flower children of hippieland as 'They're just making fools of ered. Also sheet cakes. KWAST everybody down so much. But 10-10/19 after 6 p.m. 2-10/13 loween, two November weekends ist. Electric. Term papers, and still share the themselves," said Ken Billings, I just can't understand why they BAKERIES, IV4-1317. C-10/12 you can get theses. 337-2134. C 18, Eaton, Colo. only. Call now for SOUL. 489- same planet. dress like that." TWO GIRLS to share house with SIX PIECE Rattan living room Some of the sunburned farm BICYCLE SALES, rentals and 9126. C-10/13 This state of affairs, a survey James L. Brown, 21, from three others. Your own bed¬ Excellent condition. c140. WILL set. services. Also used. EAST DO typing in my home. showed Wednesday, suits the youths took a more tolerant view Waycress, Ga., took a barJ line. room. Pets allowed. Call 393- 355-6087 after 5 p.m. 3-10/16 Call anytime. Mrs. JanetCelen- of the hippies while sharing the LANSING CYCLE, 1215 East THIRTY TOP area bands and apple-cheeked, crewcut, ail- "Drug users ought to thrown in . 4282 5-10/13 MID- tino. 489-9396. general distaste for their social . Grand River. Call 332-8303. other entertainers. 1-10/12 American rural types just fine. jail," he declared. FREE 5x7 enlargement, f ;.U MICHIGAN TALENT AGENCY, "People would respect them outlook and habits. Asked whether he thought a ARBOR FOREST Apartments. or color plus discount with "I INC. State licensed and bond¬ PAULA ANN HAL'GHEY, typist, more if they acted like human respect them for having typical hippie could survive a Trowbridge Road. Members of each roll processed. MARtK BLOND HAIR fall. Worn twice. ed. Phone 351-5665. 2-10/13 IBM Selectric, Multilith offset beings," an inquiring reporter their own opinions," said David hard day's work on a farm, Brown faculty. Have a few choice one REXALL DRUG PRE¬ Asking $65. 355-0483, Carol. printing. Professional the si s at the 10,000-strong annual FFA Diet/e, 17, Canby, Ore. "But I laughed and shook his head. and two bedroom apartments SCRIPTION CENTER at Fran- 3-10/16 don't agree with them." THE SIDE-ARM FIRE HY¬ typing. 489-6479. C-10/16 convention was told by Dale "They're just not our kind," he available. Adults only. Within dor. C-10/12 DRANT: Back from "The Li¬ Bidegain, 17, Benson, Ari/. "Maybe they can help the situa¬ said. walking? distance of campus. SI NTs' BASE amplifier, Sonic I, brary" in Kalamazoo—avail¬ CAROL 'Instead they use dope and act Phone 337-0634 for WINELY, Smith Corona • appoint¬ TWO 775x15 snow tires. Mounted months old. 484-8181 after able. Stan 332-0439. C-10/12 ment. ' 5-10/13 and balanced. $25. 355-S~95, two Electric. Theses, term papers, like a bunch of nuts.' 6 p.m. 5-10/13 general typing, Spartan Village. "1 think the hippies would lead Control dev 3-10/16 12th Annual AAUW Hwui 355-2 804. " C-10/12 us away from the American way WHY RENT? Rebuilt 21" Gen¬ Used Book Sale of initiative and aggressiveness TAPE RECORDER: four-trick eral Electric televisions. 90 Oct. 11-14 at LAKE LANSING Road, lakefront. TYPING TERM papers and toward a society of nonambitious mono tapes with 60 albums. day warranty. $50. Call 337- Federals in Frondor theses. Electric typewriter, people," said Eddie McMillan, Five rooms. Three college men. 351-6167. 5-10.1' 9781. 10-10/16 21, Bushnell, 111. traf Fast Service. Call 332-4597. safe 3-10/13 for 484-3849. Over 5,000 books of all kinds hours 9:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. 16-10/31 "Hippies don't look neat and PIRANHA, MAN-eating. Tank p»ASE AMPLIFIER, 50 watts. some don't even look clean," EAST SIDE: 3-5 students or PIRANHA, MAN-eating. Tar.k- Twin twelves. Bought July. $240. EXPERIENCED SECRETARY. complained Aaron Digman, 18, working man. Furnished, re¬ pump filter. One year old. r e.-t offer over $190.Call Kevin, WANTED—CUSTOMERS. Save Dissertations, theses, multilith, Monroe, Wis. An important part of traffic gineers to design roads and high¬ decorated, and newly carpeted. 351-6167. 3-10/16 332-0068. 3-10/12 money on washing and dry clean¬ general typing. Electric Smith "Maybe they're crazy, I don't safety is the engineering and con¬ ways, Including the installation of $165. - $185 per month. Phone ing needs. Wash 20ATE BANK EAST LANSING, MICHIGAN SPRING... NOW? PEOPLE REACHER WANT AD Service Branches in Okemos, Haslett, & Merr.ber Federal Brookfield Plaza Deposit Insurance Corp. Today . . . Just clip, complete, mail. FRIEND! SPANISH translation YES! It's Time To Book giving you problems? Rest STATE :V£Hi will bill you later. awhile. Dial 484-7952. 5-10/13 DIRECT^FROM ENGLAND Spring Reservations NOW]! EXPERIENCED SEAMSTRESS. the Clothes maker for ladies and A ccommodations are Already men. Reasonable. 355-5855. 5-10/17 CREAM also Filling Fast! PRIVATE ITALIAN-La:in les¬ The Rationals, The MC-5, The Apostles sons by native Italian professor. IViday Saturday and Sunday Don't Miss Out! Call 337-1525. 6-10/18 October 13, 14, 15 8:00 P.M. - 1:00 AM. DIAPER SERVICE, Dlaparene CARIBBEAN CRUISE Franchlsed Service Approved by Doctors and DSIA. The most- modern and only personllzed For $90.00 (From Miami) service you in Lansing, providing with diaper palls, polybags, deodorizers, and diapers, or use GRANDE Aboard the Luxurious S/S Ariadne - 4-Day Peanuts Personals must be placed in person your own. Baby clothes free. No deposit. Plant washed inspec¬ BALL ROOM Cruise to Nassau & Freeport in the Bahamas. R.T. from Detroit beautiful including all GRAND RIVER at BEVERLY, ONE BLOCK S. of JOY meals - NOW only $255.00 10 Words or Less: 1 day $1.50 3 days - $3.00 5 days $5.00 tion Invited. AMERICAN DIA¬ - - DETROIT TEL 834-9348 word 40£ per word 60^ word PER SERVICE, 914 E.Gler.Call Over 10 Words Add: 15£ per per 482-0864. C Advance Tickets $3.50 at Mail to: Michigan State News BRING YOL R prescription to OP¬ TICAL DISCOUNT, 416 Tussing GRINNELL'S and J. L. HUDSON Coming Oct. 20 & 21 CO. Oct. 27, 28 & 29 College Travel Office 346 Student Services Bldg. Building. Phone IV 2-4667. 130 W. GRAND RIVER 351-6010 MOBYGRAPE PAUPER MSU Esat Lansing, Mich. C-10/13 Thursday, October 12, 1967 12 Michigan State News. East I;msi!u. Michigan SUIT THREATENED SUEDE.. . the smart look Wives fail to license facilities Mackie warns Ro (continued from page one) said, and in view of Gov. monthly net income of less than in collegefashion slu "The situation is so desper¬ Romney's cut back, there is little $225 a month are eligible for full in fund squab ate," Lovett said, married students "that if 20 called day-care homes, I would be in for un¬ hope for obtaining the necessary- subsidy by the government. The funds. "Some children are completely monthly net income schedule in¬ creases at $35 a child. pile lined jackets able to fulfill the needs in mar¬ reared by the day-care mother," The unit further inspects each John Mackie, former State that Mackie had ;.\.il: "politi- of the highway department under he said, "leaving only Saturday licensed day-care home quarterly suede with Highway Commissioner, has cal slush fund" ui.li¬ v.-.mls» the Mackie regime. ried housing." to Insure they are maintaining (he "The situation is so desperate, and Sunday that the child is with threatened Gov. Romney with a stener. Mack it. a, . T.way Mackie, in his letter to Rom- his parents." necessary standards. leather collar law suit, chargin, the governor commissioner fro:v. 1° : 1961. ne>'» that his personal fi- said, "that if 20 married studer These parents must spend their Though Lovett and his staff are with "a delll'i-rate attempt to The Mackie adn-.fclst awas nanclal transactions are on file, in for day-care homes, I would weekends shopping, doing the deeply concerned with the prob¬ in fashion right be unable to fulfill the needs ir. impugn my Integrity and pro¬ the subject of a -i-\ nth in- checked by and cleared with the laundry and with homework, lems facing children needing day¬ fessional reputation". vesication Mich \tty. Internal Revenue Service, the married housing." Lovett added. care, the children's unit is simi¬ colors for Romney recently questioned Gen. Frank IKr this Federal Bureau of Investigation At present, if one married lar Mother Hubbard For students who are unable to to trying to Mackie's ai-illty to have an es¬ year. led to and the attorney general. student called in, he would be The pro je had afford a licensed day-care home operate on a shoestring. Fall tate in Lansing and in Washing¬ He demanded a public retrac- unable to find a day-care home in court actions. for their children, the govern¬ ton, D.C. with the Income he 't rely tlon and an fpology from Romney married housing with a vacancy. Perhaps money will not be Romney said he ,-o. ment will pay part or all of the made available to he would be forced "to seek The children's unit further safeguard the .-.ad Thegovernorlmplled on Kelley's report w c . lndi- or cost Involved. needs two staff members now to lives of the children today. To¬ cated the dc-par.n-.ent paid legal remedies as a private Parents with one child with a its existing load, Lovett morrow, however, the children certain contractors much citizen." meet Need nurses will be Juveniles and will pro¬ voke society Into being concerned Civil rights case in third day at a much dearer price, Lovett as physician's believes. The children's unit spends ("continued from page one) could capture and shoot them. assistants through a side door, but did not part of a Ku Klux Klan-bornplot. Dr. William Featherstone of The men are being tried on most of its time In treating the Dr. rector William H. Kr.isely, di¬ of MSU'i Institute of'Flo>- NMU protest go to the third-floor courtroom immediately. Jackson, Miss., told the court during the morning session that civil rights violations because murder charges can't be filed problems of The young delinquents. choice Is simple, Lovett believes. An ounce of prevention logy and Medicine, pointed out a In opening statements, Monday he dug five.bullets from the bod¬ by the Justice Department un¬ need for more nurses with ies of three men—two whites less the crime occurs on federal through love and care today will the Justice Department told the avoid the tons of tragedy-we may greater responsibilities, in a all-white Jury of seven men and and a Ne^ro—during autopsies property. No state charges were face tomorrow. speech before -he Michigan five women that it would offer performed Aug. 5, 1964, at the ever filed in the case. Nursing \ssoc!a::or. Tuesday in testimony from informants paid request of state police. He iden¬ Lonviction could mean a max¬ NEXT: the Lans.ng Civic Center. by the FBI. It did not give any tified the victims only as N'os, 1, imum sentence of 10 years in "According o some es:i-. 2 and 3. prison and a $5,000 fine. Food for the children. Knlsely told the student A dozen lawyers for the de¬ The Negro, he said, suffered nurses, "there Is a shortage of three bullet wounds—one that so. fense failed earlier to uncover belted coat SO,000 physicians right now." It began the left eye and of the informants who TONITE the name near wo profe nglish, traveled through the brain to th T a rr.har :' a tipped the FBI to the location of in antelope f;cler.t to Increase nursing en¬ the three men's graves near the back of the skull, and two in rollments than It would be to Pierce, have alread; resigned the midsection. The whites, he effecive this Jure, arnhard Philadelphia, Miss, The bodies THE PRE-MEDICAL SOCIETY $70 establish a new profession of were unearthed beneath a farm added, died from bullets that called McClellan "r always physician assistants, he said. tic" but pond dam after an intensive 44- pierced the heart. PRESENTS Dr. Knlsely said that the idea very tactful or diplo: State Highway Patrolman Earl deeply concerned a'- people day search. of creating a new post of The defendants include Neshe- Robert Poe of Philadelphia testi¬ physician's assistants has been "he felt are wronged." ins be County Sheriff Lawrence fied that Deputy Price arrested The E.K.G. And Ulawla, remark referred -o McClellan's given consideration in medical Rainey, 43, his chief deputy, Ce¬ Schwerner, Chaney and Goodman circles recently, but that he be¬ work with the reslJtrts of the cil Price, 28, sheriff-elect E.G. June 21, 1964. He said he re¬ The Functioning Heart North Marquette district. lieves ". , . we already have Barnett, 4", all of the Philadel¬ ceived a radio call from Price McClellan said Wednesdaythat several hundred thousand po¬ that "he had a good one and DR. WILLIAM WEBER since his criticism he had come phia area, and Sam H. Bowers, tential physician's assistants: 42, of Laurel, imperial wizard of was chasing a good one." Cardiovascular to accept the "four course" plan Surgeon they are called nurses." the White Knights of the Ku Government attorneys, in out¬ "Some physicians," said and defended tl e university's ex¬ Klux Klan. lining their case to the jury, WILL DISCUSS AND DEMONSTRATE Knlsely, "are already using pansion. He said t .. N\R' is ir, "a difficult position," but in Prosecutors said the deaths of have said they would prove that THE ELECTROCARDIOGRAM nurses and other assistants to Schwerner, 24, Goodman, 20, two Price arrested the three, held give injections and do j-outlne the process has not been con¬ cerned with the needs of the white New Yorkers, andChaney, them for several hours', then re¬ 8:30 P.M. ROOM 38 UNION 203 EAST GRAND RIVER jobs. 1 think, however, that they 22, a Meridian Negro, came as leased them so that kidnapers could do more." people in that area. 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