Wednesday Sunny. . . Winning is ... MICHIGAN . . . not the most Im portant thing. It Is the O N L Y thing. - - V i n c e L o m bardi UNIVERSITY ST A T I TAT M EW S . . . but c o ld e r with ahigh near 12 degrees. Low tonight n e a r 8 degrees. V o l. 60 Number. 101 E ast Lansing, Michigan January 10, 1968 10C Kasperak’s condition better, still many complications STANFORD, Calif. If) — Mike K as- perak's condition has Improved but re­ was only slightly below normal and the heart appeared to be functionmg very well. Her husband, Charles W. White, daugh­ ter Judy, 18, son Rickey, 12, and her mother, were told that M rs. White was New Larger Cartons mains critica l, doctors said today of the heart transplant recipient. „ At 10 a.m ., the hospital said he was His condition was satisfactory from the end of the operation until the internal bleeding began. dying and that there was no hope. They agreed to the transplant. . A4 Irf/ J~A f r t C t S * awake and alert, with liver and kidney func­ Kasperak even watched 10 minutes of a “ She was the type who would want to do televised news conference about the oper­ this,” White said. He added that their tions slightly Improved. The 54-year-old ex-steelw orker re­ ation, nurses said. D rs. Shumway and Don­ grief was eased In knowing she was help­ ceived a new heart Saturday night to re­ ald C . Harrison,head of the medical school ing another. cardiology division, held the conference at M rs. White, In death, also gavea kidney place his falling one. His condition became critical Monday Stanford Sunday afternoon. to another patient who was dying at the when he began to bleed from the stomach The patient's wife. F em e, has visited hospital. The kidney patient’s name was U\J\. uxsuiûaetjj v tfi uS?Sp&iaïlvi, iraS'tV-*’titéd and Intestines. Blood trahslusfons and other measures appeared to have stopped him' three tim es. Kasperak’ s diseased heart forced him t successful by hospital spokesmen. footnotes the bleeding, which his doctors attributed to quit work 18 months ago. He and his Kasperak’ s heart transplantation was D isgruntled custom ers often Jeave t h e ir m a rk s on to a severe pre-existing liver disease. wife moved from Cleveland to East Palo the second performed in the United States. Alto, near Stanford. Two others were performed In South fa u lty machines. State Npws photos by Jim Richardson Physicians said he was suffering'some He received the heart of M rs. Virginia A frica. kidney failure also. Though conscious and able to signify responses, Kasperak needed help breath­ ing because of lung disease. A tube has been placed in his throat. “ These many complications are severe but soluble as long as the heart ftmcttoii Is good/* said D r. Norman E . Shumway, head of the Stanford Medical School team that made the transplant. Stii transplant NEW YORK (A P ) — The w o rld 's fifth human h ea rt t r a n s - p l a n t - - t h e t h ird In this country ROTC critic files complaint B y L IN D A G O R T M A K E R of his dlsenrollment through that office. “ Thomas wasn't, treated any differently dlsenrollment and says that Platt de­ Doctors said Kasperak’ s cardiac output State News Staff W r i t e r .Thomas said he attempted to enroll for from these students,” he said. liberately, “ with no valid reason” d is- and the secondby a B rooklyn sur­ the course again this term , but for reg­ Thomas asks In his complaint to the enroiled him from the cou rse. gic al team — was perfo> med A student critic of MSU's ROTC pro­ ular credit instead of visiting. He said Student-Faculty Judiciary that the role He also charges violation of A rticle Tuesday with a 5 7 - y e a r - o ld man gram filed a formal complaint with the that the sergeant handling enrollment of the Military Science program as It 2.1.4.3, claiming he was “ dlsenrolled for given the h ea rt of a 2 9 - y e a r - o ld Student-Faculty judiciary Tuesday morn­ told him he was on a list of students that now exists be re-examined. political ideology rather than claas con­ N e w Aussie b ra in -d a m a g e d woman. A spokesman f o r B ro o kly n ’ s ing accusing the Dept, of Military Science of violating sections of the Academic Free­ were Ineligible to enroll in the course. , “ He was Ineligible,*’ Platt said. “ The He challenges the factors behind his duct." Maim onldes Hospital, where a dom Report. MSU catalog states that 'T he basic course leader seeks h e a rt transplant with infants Eldon R , Nonnamaker, associate dean of is n o r m a l l y taken in the freshman and fa ile d e a r ly last month, said the latest operation began shortly students and secretary of the judiciary, said the judiciary's first organizational meeting is scheduled for next week. sophomore y ears.’ ” Platt said that perhaps the catalog could be more specific, but that Army regu­ Bookstores deny cartel’, ties with a f t e r noon with-o s urgical tea m of He said it would be difficult to judge lations and his policy as department chair­ CANBERRA, A ustralia^)—•Prim eM ln- ister-e le ct John Grey Gorton said today 25 headed by D r . A d ria n K a n tro - w ltz . It was s till In p ro g re s s at 5:45 exactly when the ROTC case would be considered because of the newness of the judiciary. man specify that only underclassmen plan­ ning on a four-year program are eligible to enroll In the course for credit. defend prices, services p .m . Jam es R . Thomas, East Lansing special Platt added that his department is fi­ he wants ro build the same kind of "unique” student,.-who has written two letters to the considering the service provided end the nanced by the U.S. Army and they just B y L E O Z A IN E A relationship wfrti President Johnson aa ciutl iSUtkr Afews criticizing MSU's ROTC pro­ work involved. “ can't afford to staff instructors to teach State News Staff W r i t e r enjoyed by his predecessor, the late Harold gram, had been requested by Dept. Chair­ The MSU Bookstore end those off- White, 4 3 , of nearby Santa C lara, two students who are taking the course out of * E, Holt. hours after she died. M rs. W hite, mother man Col. R o b e r t G. Platt to drop the curiosity.” csmpus cam e under attack Friday from Gorton, described T h r e e off-campus bookstores said o f two, suffered a stroke and a brain M ilitary Science 100 course he had be«, He said “ several” students ordinarily Adams* who eaUed them i "viciou s end Lj M L by his colleagues as Tuesday that they decided to purchase noxious c a rte l," conspiring is exploit the hemorrhage the n i g h t preceding the visiting fall term . Ineligible to enroll in the course had hard working, good lists of texts from the MSU Bookstore students. heart transplantation. She lapsed Into a Herman King, assistant to the provost, tried to register in it or visit this term, humored and sharp only after the academic departments failed Adams tattnds to ask Atty . Gen. Frank / coma and never recovered consciousness. also wrote Thomas a letter Informing him but all had been denied admission. In debate, was elec­ to supply them with copies. J . Kelley this wsek to examine whether ted l e a d e r of the The managers of Campus, Student and the sto res violate the state anti-trust Liberal p a r t y , a s ­ Gibson's Bookstores said that the-depart­ law s. He said he would refuse to patro­ suring n l s instal­ ment chairmen had trouble making enough nize any of the stores and would urge lation Wednesday as copies of the lists for them and had sug­ others In the Economics Dept, to do so. A u s t r a l i a ’s 19th gested that just one be made for the MSU prime minister. store. (p le a s e turn to b ack p age) G o r t o n told his In separate Interviews, they disclaimed GORTON first press confer­ assertions by Walter P . Adams,professor ence the close relationship between Holt wm of economics, that they conspired with and Johnson had forged strong ties between the MSU store to exploit the student Australia and the United States. Gorton m arkets, said he would visit Asia as soon as pos­ Hanry Kull, manager of Campus Book­ sible "to seek to build on this enduring structure of friendship" that Holt helped to create. Gorton said his first Aslan tour store, said that he would have no reason to conspire with the other stores and that he is more Interested In Increasing Faculty feels would Include a visit to the Australian his student business, not dividing It with troops fighting on the allied side in South Vietnam. the others, Charles Poquette, manager ofGlbson's, the city's smallest bookstore, said that cartel charge Johnson found in Holt a staunch ally for American Involvement In Vietnam. he would not seek to cooperate closely Holt disappeared while swimming In stormy seas Dec. 17 and Johnson flew r with other stores, and would not expect any help from them. needs study across the Pacific to attend memorial "T h is Is a cut-throat business," he More evidence is needed to support services for him. said. charges by Walter P . Adams, professor Since Holt vanished, the government has Howard Balleln, m anager of Student of economics, that the MSU Bookstore and been headed by his deputy, John McEwen. Book Store, said that the stores never the East L a n s i n g bookstores are con­ Gorton, 56-year-old m inister for educa­ discussed policy with the MSU store, and spiring to exploit the students, according tion and science, had been favored over for this reason many of them “ get stuck" to a survey of IS department chairmen. three other candidates to succeed McEwen. with books because they overestimated The general feeling among the chair­ The latter Is leader of the Country party, the number they could sell for a course. men was that book p rices were high, but the junior member of the Liberal-Country He said there was no agreement between this was not necessarily the fault of the parry coalition that has governed Australia since 1949. Close to the faculty? stores on how much each should stock. They generally agreed that the $40 bookstores. “ Marking up book prices Is just another Gorton's election is unlikely to result per month charge from the MSU Book­ Some MSU M e r i t scholars say that they did not expect “ la rge, impersonal le c t u re s " to be part of th e ir example of a standard accounting device in any change in Australia’sforeignpolicy, store for the lists was “ not too high," to make profit,” Dalton E. MacFarland. particularly in its m ilitary contribution to undergraduate education at MSU, State News photo by Bob Ivins chairman of the management dept. said. the Vietnam war and its support of U.S. The chairmen also felt that a boycott policy there. would not be justified unless further The new government leader told a tele­ vised news conference shortly after his NO 'PAMPERED DARLINGS' evidence was presented to back Adams' charges. Several favored more investi­ election by the Liberal party's 81 members gation on the matter before any action of the House of Representatives and the is taken. rs wonder if M S U cares Senate: "Tomorrow I have no doubt that “ In all fairness, the Issue must be we will continue in this country as^we checked into before further accusations -ahonlrt— argnmpnrs, perhaps quite bitter are m ade," Edward B . Blackman, a ssit- arguments, as to goals and as to differing ant dean of University College, said. priorities in differing fields of national en­ bribe,” writes one scholar, "but It Is ters had "emphasized the good points, thlng special” In Sabine's series of let­ Blackman and C .E. Prouty, chairman deavor.” Impressive to a high school senior.MSU Is E D I T O R ’S N O T E : This is third but 'ignored the bad points about MSU” te rs, but once they arrived on campus, of the geology dept., supported the MSU His countrymen “ can be sure that I will O.K. but It is not nearly as great as Its In a f iv e - p a r t s e rie s by staff and listed as areas of deception reputa­ they were forgotten. Bookstore’s charging the other bookstores try my best and I will look to them for advertising claim s.” w r i t e r s Linda G o r t m a k e r and tion and general academic atmosphere, One rem arks, ” I’m not dissatisfied, be­ $40 a month for booklists. Both felt the strength to successfully conclude what we Some scholars felt they had also been Steve Gates on M SU's National the "W e care” pitch and large classes cause I like this college, only a little figure was realistic if the materials used, sta rt,” he said. deceived by the "W e c a r e " approach given M e r i t p ro g ra m and how some related to closeness to the faculty. puzzled, for I can’t find that special some­ man hours and other variables were con­ Gorton capped his education with a mas­ In many new sletters. Sabine said that this Despite the criticism s and accusa­ thing MSU seemed to promise me. as a sidered. ter of arts degree in history from Oxford, scholars felt they had been “ m is­ Idea extended to the Interpretation that "w e tions of being misinformed or. misguided Merit scholar.” Although the consensus of the chairmen taken with honors. He was a fighter pilot led ” by n ew sletters and other ca re enough to help you grow into the Inde­ through the newsletters, a majority of Another added, ” ’Merit scholar' means was that no conspiracy was involved in In World War II and was shot down once, m a t e r ia l. pendence that we know you have to have." two-thirds of the scholars In the survey nothing when you start taking courses—you book prices, several said that the policies off Singapore in 1942. "W e try to communicate In a letter In answered "y e s ” to this question: have to work like anyone else, I found out.” on used books warranted investigation. By L IN D A G O R T M A K E R early September that says when you get "You have probably accumulated more One summarization called the "a ca ­ "Adams has a better case for the used and here, you will be one of many very bright knowledge about MSU and other univer­ demic atmosphere exaggerated, caliber of books being priced unfairly than for new freshmen— so don’t expect a great deal SN open house STEVE GATES State News Staff W r i t e r s sities since coming here. Knowing what you do now, and given your interests and faculty too highly praised, and restrictions on freedom Ignored.” of attention because of yesterday," Sa­ books being priced as they a re ,” Black­ man said. "Competition is needed in used bine said, but this communication has ap­ The State News will hold an open house capabilities, would you a g a i n choose Other comments Included: books. T his is the strongestpart of Adams’ parently failed for many scholars that at 8 tonight in 341 Student Services Bldg. After a t t e n d i n g freshman summer MSU?” „ — "T h e re was never any attempt to de­ c a s e ." answered the State News questionnaire. All students interested in working for the orientation, paying their fees and attending Few of the 115 scholars returning ques­ ceive, but the Image projected was not that R i c h a r d E. Sullivan, chairman of the One scholar felt she was misled be­ State News are invited. cla sses, over half of MSU M erit scholars tionnaires Indicated that they plan to con­ of the re a l MSU that I know." history dept., said used book prices were cause there was " little or no Interest In Positions are available in the editorial, questioned in a State News survey felt tinue , their education at MSU past a — "Sabine’s PR m aterial led me to ex­ high, especially after a book hadbeensold h er” once she arrived. Another scholar advertising, photography and circulation they had been given misleading or untrue bachelor degree, showing the probability pect an exciting, challenging and intellec­ several times. states that "th e hint Is that MSU cares departments. News reporters, secretaries information concerning MSU in news­ that M5U will have to look elsewhere for tual university. It’ s more like a factory.” S u l l i v a n said the University was in about the student. To be fair, It Is also and sports w riters are especially needed. letters and other m aterials mainly written means of recruiting excellent students — "T h e school was made out to be a much a position to run a bookstore on its own pointed out that the student makes his own Tours of all departments wlllbeoffered by Gordon A. Sabine, vice president for for Its graduate school. more academically superior place than it and felt that a cooperative could be e s ­ during the open hours. Refreshments will special projects. Many scholars from the survey said really is .” tablished If the students andtheUnlverslty be served. These scholars felt that Sabine's le t- that they had been treated as "som e- And, "T h e Merit S c h o l a r s h i p is a (please t ur n t o back page) were willing to work at it. \ 2 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Wednesday, January 10, 1968 McKissick explains grant refusal By M IK E BROGAN "T h e way In which the money to affect what happens In the Workers (UAW) t u r n s different The head of CORE and the head workers and some of the r e ­ Spacial to the State News was offered to the Federation is re st of the country next sum­ c o l o r s when considering the of thè D e t r o i t federation an­ porters and onlookers retired to a form of ra c is m ," said Mc­ m e r." ra cia l situation in this country. swered questions for nearly an the bar. DETROIT — L ast week the Kissick.' " I t assum es that the He tried to explain, as other His pun drew a nervous laugh. hour. They kept trying to explain One man, an advertising copy­ NeW Detroit Committee, formed Negro doesn’t know what to do Negro leaders have Jn the past, "W alter Reuther is a major why they didn’t want $100,000 writer, tipped his glass and then after last summer's riot in the with money. It says that he why he and Cleage and others figure in, thq Democratic party under the conditions offered. slammed it hard on the counter. motor city, offered over $100,000 (the Negro) has never had that like them consider any money and he has great Influence," The reporters took notes and to the Detroit Federation for much money and has got to be or aid (given by whites under M cKissick said. "B u t he has to the cam eras whirred. " I t still seems like a lot of Self-Determination to use In r e ­ told how to use it ." white control) and directives to realize that things have changed “ I hope I have made myself money to Just toss off. 1 can’t building destroyed areas. Beyond theclub’sb a r, w aitres­ be racist. In the past 20 y e a r s .• If he c le a r ," McKissick said, and the figure that." The offer was turned down. ses ran back and forth with pots " It Is going to take more than wants to be effective in solving conference ended. B illy Allen just smiled and. Rev. Albert Cleage J r . , head of coffee, trays of martinis and $100,000 to buy my integrity and racial problems within unions He left with a group of CORE shook his head. of the militant Negro federation, plates of roast beef. my p rid e," he said. “If the be has to keep communications explained that there were strings The diners were seemingly money wer^e accepted, there open from the top all the way to attached to the offer, strings that u n a w a r e of M cKisslck’sp re s­ would be a white overseer stand­ the bottom. He can't stop with £ ran back Into white hands. If ence. ing there saying ’If you use this the middle class w orker." the money was to be used. It But back in the corner sur­ money in the right way, maybe McKissick stopped and shifted was going to be used the way rounded by about 60 reporters, we’ll give you some m ore.’ ’’ bis weight. PPI was still wearing black people saw fit, Cleage ex­ cameramen and onlookers, Mc­ A man with bushy white hair his galoshes and the buckles of the plained. Kissick discussed the militant and a trace of an Eastern ac­ right one clinked. The Reverend’s refusal and Negro’ s political persuasion,po­ cent a s k e d McKissick if he "Right now it s e e m s that explanation upset a number of litical ends and the means he’si t h o u g h t Negroes, comprising Reuther is out in left field some­ people, most of them white, and using to achieve them. about 10 per cent of this coun­ where. But he’s got to come to so yesterday Floyd McKissick, The Rev. Cleage nodded again try’s organized labor force, could home plate to b a t." d i r e c t o r of the Congress on and again In agreement. affect labor's attitude toward the Billy Allen grinned. "Did you R acial Equality (CORE), came to "W e in CORE were concerned racial situation. say L E FT f i e l d , Mr. McKis­ Detroit to clarify the problem. about Detroit long before the riot T he questioner’s name was s ick ?" Facing a battery of m icro­ last sum m er," McKissick said. Billy Allen, a long time labor ” 1 should have said RIGHT, phones, cam eras, a rc lights and "T h is is the automotive center reporter for the Dally Worker field,” McKissick smiled. many white faces, he sat on a of the world with the largest and a man who still uses phrases He continued t a l k i n g about couch In the Detroit P ress Club labor unions in the world and l i k e "membership solidarity" l a b o r and Negro self deter- beside Rev. Cleage. what happens in Detroit is going when speaking of the unions and qxlriAtiArV' , withir? - Contact Ionm i allow you to load a normal activa Ufa, alway* strikes. b l a c k community and wh i t e lookinjt your bait. They are ironed and poliihod to your pro­ The State News, the student newspaper at Michigan State McKissick; said the United Auto racism . scription, determined through an eye examination by our University, Is published every class day throughout the year i doctors. Fitted over the comes, they offer natural vision with* with special Welcome Week and Orientation issues in June , College Rotations Director out glsstet. Can lor an appointment now . . . IV 5-7137 . , . and September. Subscription rates are $14 per year. ! c/o Sheraton-Park Hotel, Washington, D.C. 20008 I Drop-Add dilemma I and gat the complete contact Ians story at our newly expended Frandor branch offica. Member Associated P re s s, United P ress International, Inland Daily P ress Association, Associated Collegiate P ress, •P le a s e s e n d m e I A long, long wait has been the fate of students wishing to make changes In ATL sections. * Michigan P ress Association, Michigan Collegiate P ress As­ sociation, United State Student P ress Association. ■a S h e r a t o n S t u d e n t I I Use Your Michigan Banhard at Wallace’s r L E X s o Ic a n s a v e im I r CLOSED SATURDAYS AT 1 P.M. Second* class postage paid at East Lansing, Mich. Editorial and business offices at 347 Student Services Building, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Mich. jt o 2 0 % o n i i M arch d ra ff quota hits eye examinations by DR. W. C. JENSEN, registered optometrist Phones: ■S h e r a t o n r o o m s . i high point at 3 9 ,0 0 0 W1UACE OPTICIANS E d itorial .................................... C lassified Advertising...................... 355-8252 355-8255 I ! 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Heavy emphasis on reservoir engineering, using computers. Join Phi S ip a Delta EssoProdacfioa Research Company 505 M .A .C . F o r rid e s coll 332-0875 Equal opportunity employers. Michigan State News, E ast Lansing, Michigan Wednesday, January 10, 1968 3 ■re : ___ m m NEWS Surveyor bucks odds <#(*%■* summary in moon landing fry A capsule s u m m a ry of the day's events f r o m PASADENA, C alif. Ifl — Sur­ ing rockets about 50 m iles above finding a spot level enough for .our w ir e s e rv ic e s . veyor 7 streaked toward a small the moon to ease the craft to a safe landing. plateau near the rocky, battered speed of 3 im p ji. Suspended 13 The chance of success was rim of the lunar cra ter Tycho feet above the surface, It was then computed at 43 per cent, but a Tuesday with flight controllers to fall free and land with a gen­ spokesman said that might be hoping against odds for a safe tle Impact on Its shock-absorb­ optim istic. * landing. ing legs. Surveyor 7 w a s given th e “ I s r a e l g o e s b ey on d th e Touchdown In the roughest The target area was a 12- heaviest load yet In the $500 mil­ moon target area yet was due at mile-wide circ le c e n t e r e d 18 lion serie s— a television earners, limits o f n ecessary 8:05 p jn . EST. m iles north of Tycho, near the a scoop to dig trenches s s deep m o d e r a tio n . " F ren c h "M an, If we make this It will south-central edge of the lunar as 18 Inches and a device to have to be called 'Lucky 7 ,’ ” a disk. The crater, formed ages analyze the soil. P r e s id e n t C h a r le s d e Je t Propulsion Laboratory ago by the Impact of a huge me­ G au lle. spokesman said of the final un­ teor, has a 15,000-foot-hlgh rim Unlike previous Surveyors— manned U.S. m i s s i o n to the and a mile-high peak rising In four of which were successful moon. the center of its 50-mlle-wlde an d certified f o u r equatorial F o r the first time, the Survey­ floor. sites as safe for manned land­ o r spacecraft had only scientific The sloping shoulders of the ings—Surveyor 7 was to see If goals. E a rlier Surveyors have cra ter, photographed by earlier there is any m ajor geological difference betweenthe vast plains International News scouted the lunar surface for a s - Lunar O rblters, are so pocked around the moan’ s mlddlt and the 0 THE U.S. COMMAND in War Zone C in Vietnam has evidently removed all restrictions on operations near a Crystal rapids t r o n a u t landing site s . Plans called for the 2,200-pound ve­ and littered with boulders that the odds were against Surveyor rugged highlands around Tycho. hicle, approaching the moon at narrow no-fire zone which American commanders once ob­ Snow and ice make In teresting viewing at the rapids of the Red C ed a r. 6,000 m iles an hour, to fire brak­ served along the Cembodlen border it was reported Tuesday. The herder has vanished beneath the presaure of Communist m ilitary Infiltration in Cambodia. See pege 12 0 U.S. MARINE CORPS officers figure that North Vietnam B U T A D D S . C R IT IC IS M H capable of launching another major offensive against South Vietnam's northern frontier despite m assive American bombardments and ground operations. 0 FRENCH PRESIDENT Charles de Gaulle told Israel’s David Ben-Gurlon that he still believes that Israel went "beyond the bounds of moderation" in attacking the Arabs See page 12 DeGaulle pacifies Jews PARIS (F) — PresidentCharles to take as pejorative, when there in taking possession of Jerusalem Egypt had not declared daily that J a s t June and ignoring French counsel for peace. See page 3 de Gaulle has told Is ra e l's David could be nothing offensive in and much of Jordanian, Egyptian their goal was to annihilate Is ­ Ben-Gurion he meant no offense underlining the character thanks and Syrian territo ries by force rael, the thought of going beyond 0 PRIME MINISTER-ELECT John Grey Gorton of Australia by describing Jew s as “ an elite to which this strong people has of arms, in carrying out the r e ­ the frontiers set by the arm is­ " said Tuesday that he wants to build the same kind of "unique" p eop le, sure 'of itsrif^nd-domi­ been able to survive and rem ain pression ancf expulsions which’ tice would never have odcurricMo relationship with President Johnspn as that enjoyed by his neering.’ ’ itself after 19 centuries spent in are inevitably the consequences u s,” he said. predecessor, the late Harold E. Holt. See page 1 But at the same time DeGaulle unparalleled conditions." of an occupation tending toward repeated his criticism that Israel "B u t what? Here it is that Is ­ annexation, in affirming before w e n t "beyond the bounds of rael, i n s t e a d of parading its N ational News the world that the settlement of moderation" in attacking th e Arabs last June and ignoring touching exile around the uni­ the conflict can only be realized BARNES THIRTEEN PERSONS, including four adults and nine verse, has become a state among on the basis of conquest . . . S ldren, were killed In a fire which raged through an ancient four-story Brooklyn tenement Tuesday. Cause of the blaze French counsel for peace. T h is was made public Tu es­ others whose life and duration depend on its policy," De Gaulle Israel goes beyond the lim its of necessary moderation.” FLORAL 7-w eek s e r i e s for m o th e r s -to -b e s t a r t s to m o rro w , Ja n u a ry 11; runs was undetermined. See page 8 day when the Ely see Palace pub­ added. lished an exchange of letters He told Ben-Gurion that the O F EA S T LA NS IN G thru F e b ru a ry 22. Join anytim e, Ben-Gurion recounted the his­ # THE NATIONAL FOREST PRODUCTS Association and between the former Isra e li prime closing of the Gulf of Aqaba was torical background of Israel and s e r i e s , conducted by M rs. Hewitt, 'm inister and De Gaulle on De "injurious to your country" and C EN TERflECES the AFL-CIO Carpenters Union threatened Tuesday to go to said, " it was not by force . . . AND CORSAGES is continuous. L e a r n how to bathe, federal court If the government won’t agree to halt vast Gaulle's Nov. 27 news confer­ he conceded that Israel may have and it was certainly not by con­ shipments of raw timber from U.S.-owned lands to Japan. ence. felt threatened by "the flood of quest, but by our pioneefing c re ­ FOR RUSH d r e s s , feed and handle the new In a 7,500-word letter dated invective" directed against the ation that we transformed a poor a r r i v a l . Visit a local m atern ity See page 9 Dec. 6, Ben-Gurion told De Jewish state. and arid land into a fertile one, We telegraph flowers 0 SURVEYOR 7 STREAKED toward a small plateau near Gaulle: "You, my dear general, "B ut I remain convinced, that creating communities, towns and ward. C l a s s e s , ev e ry Thursday tup rocky, battered rim of the lunar cra ter Tycho Tuesday employed in y o u r discourse in disregarding the warnings worldwide with flight controllers hoping against odds for a safe landing. villages on abandoned desert sur­ at 2 p.m . in Knapp’ s 5th floor harsh, offensive and surprising given at the proper time to your face. See page 3 term s, based on Incorrect or government by that of the French 215 Ann St. ED 2-0871 auditorium , downtown. 0 MIKE KASPERAK, the world's fourth human heart trans­ im precise information." Republic, in starting hostilities, " I f the leaders of Syria and plant, was listed'ln critical condition again in a Stanford,/Calif, In addition to describing the hospital, but medical spokesmen also said that his condition Jew s as domineering De Gaulle has improved. See page 1 also said at his news conference that the Jew s "hod provoked, or • THE PENTAGON TUESDAY called for ?9,000 men to be more exactly Created, ill will in drafted In March, the highest military manpower request in c e r t a i n countries at certain 17 months. See page 2 tim es.” In. his letter to Ben-Gurlon, De Gaulle spoke of “ the emotionap- 0 MAJ. GEN, RONALD D. MCDONALD, recently reinstated parently raised . . . by the fact as adjutant general of the Michigan National Guard, said that I said of their people that Tuesday that he "d efin itely" does not want to face a court it was 'an elite people, sure of martial on the charges that led to his firing by Gov. Romney in itself and domineering,’ a Judg­ 1964. ment which certain people affect SAVE $$$ SAVE $$$ SAVE $$$ SAVE $$$ SAVE $$$ SAVE $$$ SAVE $$$ SAVE $$ 5 iV ie p o cd s . . . L a n sin g and E a s t L a n sin g Sto re s S E M I- A N N U A L C L E A R A N C E SHOE SALE O v e r 3,000 p a ir s of F a m o u s N am e shoes MEN’S All patterns, m a te ria ls , colors and seasonal styles at low, low p ric es . $6.97 - $8.97 - $12.97 E a s t Lansing Store only $16.97 m e n ’s B O S T O N IA N L o afers WOMEN’S Po p u lar y ea r 'round styles — Dress heels, flats , casuals $6.97 - $7.97 - $9.97 mg KNEE SOX 1 o t HANDBAG Priced £ . o y now only bl **- > CLEARANCE From vLVl run iiufcu v CHILDREN’S Lü llI < Ploy, dress, and rugged school shoes < S tU $ 6 .9 7 - $ 8 .9 7 - $ 9 .9 7 5 uj V dotty beach looks < Use your charge account in both stores — Ask us about F REE PARKING. < Campus in to B o rn b e a c h c o m b e rs . . . with a hankering to be included in 47» your plans for & holiday in a sunny c lim e . B rillia n t yellow, dotted all o v e r in orange o r g re e n , makes a p ert appearance v n p n n rc i s Center ^^ FEAST A S T LANSING I A W Q T N f! m a . m, y —DOWNTOWN ------------ ' > ■< in a modified and ruffled bikini. 6 - 1 6 . $ 16. E n co re s in a u1 317 E. Grand River Ave. \ ■ » _f _ v r -« ^ 326 S. Washington Aver 1/1 culotte c o v e r -u p with low slung belt, zip -fron t for quick on s. Sizes 6 - 1 4 . $18. UJ UJ ^ «/> ' E a s t Lansing Store open 't il 9 p.m . tonight. < in Shop tonight 9til 9. Thursday 9:30 to 5 :3 0 SAVE $$$ SAVE $$$ SAVE $$$ SAVE $$$ SAVE $$$ SAVE $ $$ S A V E $$$ SAVE $$ Jam es IX Spulalo E ric Piante, executive editor M IC H IG A N editor-in-chief.. Lawrence W erner, managing editor Bobby Soden, campus editor STATE NEWS Susan Comerford advartl sing manager Edward A. B rill, editorial editor Jo e Mitch, aports editor U N IV E R S IT Y F lv e - t l m e re c ip ie n t of the Pacomokor award f o r outstanding jo u rn alism . Wednesday Morning, January 10,1968 EDITORIALS A form al com plaint that Sanity, sincerity and Vietnam •r _ . * - « ...... - tUft the bbombing o m b ln o r w ot would be the b est and perhaps only se e m to a Soviet c a rg o ship in a V iet­ route to the negotiation table. n am ese h arb o r was damaged In the words of colum nist by U.S. bombs. Max L e r n e r , “ The war has Two re ce n t c h a r g e s from c re a te d too many refu g ee s, China that Red fre ig h te rs s co rc h e d too much e a rth , have been bombed by A m e ri­ burned too many v illages, can planes. evoked too many tensions U.S. a ir attacks on roads and hatred s inside the United and bridges only nine m iles S ta tes, deflected too much fro m the China b o rd e r. energy fro m urgent dom estic All at a tim e of wide- is to be deplored; and any negotiations a r e ^ s in c e r e . p r o g r a m s , hurt A m e ric a too 0 m y i — »1 ■■«A * p l C a ll e we t w e e s v i a n i v / i m g oqsrl 4 V r r i M liw . i i u m i v .. o p p o r t u n it y " f b r p e a c e ' td lîC â ' O r;% sccxys v p s n l o d - b y a * hard •in- its - global position, country for peace and a time should be grasped. bombing halt could be m e re ly disillusioned too many young when the National L iberation T here a r e d i s t u r b i n g a front for a V ietnam ese people e v e ry w h e re . If it F ro n t and the North V ie t- questions to be ra is e d r e ­ build up; afte r a fall-through is at all possible to end the n a m e s e governm ent have garding the p a ra lle l of diplo­ on ta lk s, the U.S. would then w ar, in the name of sanity, given hints suggesting p os­ m atic and m ilita ry maneu­ f a ce stro n g e r r e s i s ta n c e and let it end.’ ’ sible negotiations. v e r s throughout m ore r e ­ a longer w ar. The la tte r Amen. cen t history of our involve­ possibility s e e m s to be the -«»The E d ito rs 'C r o s s ? ? Q u ick m e n --b u ild so m o lh in g!’ P e rh a p s both the alleged ment in Vietnam. M ilitary m ost plausible ond to the a ir actions and the VC ini­ tiatives are coincidental and e scalatio n s have appeared to Johnson adm inistration. MAX LERNER fall s tra te g ic a lly in the midst The U.S. m ilita ry today only falsely indicate poten­ of conditions for political v i e w s its position as in­ tial shifts in policy. The se ttlem en t . . . and the war c re a s in g ly s tr o n g e r and it war in Vietnam is well into a stage in which neither can be ignored. Any sign of goes on. The burden of war is heavy r seek s to use its strength. Thus, the issue of “ hot p u r­ kSff 111 Tl e paradox of success on Hanoi; perhaps offers for suit’ ’ into Cam bodiaby allied further e scalatio n by the U.S. f o r c e s has a ris e n . At some point the dollar curbs were P r in c e Norodom Sihanouk bound to come. But who would have pre­ Too lengthy trial period of Cambodia has suggested halting bombing of the North and approaching the enemy dicted that President Johnson, ignoring his o vn clear political in terests, would call for imposing them in an election year? It took some guts to do, and if it helps the nation “ . . . T h e g o ld flo w h a s b e e n th e p r i c e th a t A m e r i­ c a h a s h ad to p a y f o r its s u c c e s s e s .** economically—which is the crucial ques­ for study open houses d ire c tly for peace effo rts . A s i n c e r e c o n c e rn for p e ace in Vietnam , peace at tion—it may even help the President po­ litically. Of the two proposed sets of curbs, on free. The real freedom of travel has to do talent. And the European, in turn, has dis­ investments abroad and on travel, those on with liberty of movement, not with free­ covered how badly he wants all three, es­ | To bqplig^ta „lengthy/ and ft ; P r ° c ®£# ?ls that by the end home and peace around the travel a re less itapdrtant1lith«irtmp*cton dom from economic measures when you do pecially the last two—the technology and of spring , when MHA and hall world can only be shown the gold drain, but the travel curbs are m ore. , , , the managerial skills—and how magically cumbersjpgpe p r o c e s s , m en’ s they release the flow of profits. more dramatic and psychologically impor­ re sid e n ce halls will soon governm ents m ust give a through Investigating, not ig­ tant because they affect more Americans What will make many travelers feel Thus the gold flow has been the price final evaluation of the p r o ­ noring, any opportunities for directly. worse is that in a hlgh-income and high- that America has had to pay for Its suc­ initiate exp erim en tal study consumption economy they have the money, c e sse s. There Is a sense In which the gram , I n c l u d i n g policy It is a sticky thing (as now proposed in open h o u s e s , as r e c o m ­ negotiations. Congress) to tell free-born Americans that and they feel sovereign about deciding bow strong a re made vulnerable by the very reco m m en d ation s, th eir of­ The justification and p r a c ­ to spend It. The old Bob Hope lin e, “ Have fact of their strength. For the export of mended by Men’ s Halls A s­ they can’t go to Europe without paying a tux, will tra v e l," must now be changed to penalty tax on their tickets or even a p e r- American capital through Investment, sociation (MHA) la s t te r m . f i c e r s will have changed. tica l benefits of bombing the “ Have bux, can't tra v el." while it has been an expression of Amer­ diem tax for every day they spend abroad. Milton B . D ick erson , vice Thus, it will be up to new North a r e highly question­ But the free-born Englishman, no less Doubtlessly It will be hard to get peo­ ican economic strength, has also kept gold ple to like the travel curbs, or to enforce flowing abroad. There is only so much of presiden t for student a ffa irs , people to make re co m m e n ­ able. P e a c e indications from jealous of his freedom than the American, them against various ticket bootlegging the gold left: it is not infinite, it is finite. has for years been told how many pounds has approved MHA’ s req u est dations on an exp erim en t in the North have w a v e r e d he is allowed to take with him on his trip. ru ses. But this Is one case where the best As it flows out, the confidence of foreigners enforcement will be self-enforcement and in the American dollar is in danger of col­ for the exp erim entation , but whioh they will have been around the p re re q u isite of a And even the Kennedy Administration, Eu­ the best self-enforcement will be se lf- rope-oriented and culture-oriented as it lapsing. Hence the need for the corporate- Instead of the original time little involved. bombing halt. An uncondi­ was, told the traveler he couldn't bring restrain t. If Americans feel it is crucial dollar curb. F u r t h e r m o r e , by length­ to stanch the gold-flow, especially in the I am far more concerned about the suc­ lim it of one te r m , he has tional and Indefinite end to back more than (100 worth of stuff duty- face of De Gaulle’s savage recent campaign cess of these investment curbs than about stipulated that it la s t through ening the exp erim en t through against the American dollar, then the en­ the travel restriction. That is where the the s p r i n g , the adm inis­ forcement problem will be nothing like it the end of spring te r m . tratio n will not make the OUR READERS’ MINDS was in the Prohibition days. bulk of the balance-of-payments deficit lie s , and that is where it will have to be Visitation policy at MSU In fact, if the travel curbs do take hold made up. In fact, one may suspect that the policy c h a n g e until su m ­ on the imagination of Americans, we will travel curbs a re important mainly for lag s behind so many other u n iv ersities that an enlarged m e r ’ s end. This also m eans a full s u m m e r for student Getting facts across To the Editor: owe it more to De Gaulle than to anyone e lse . If anyone can make American self- restraint in European (especially French) spreading the pain, so that the corpora­ tions people won't feel that they alone are having to bear the burden of narrowing open house p ro g ram should travel unpopular, it is De Gaulle. In fact, the payment gap. enthusiasm and in te r e s t to The M ass Media Committee was set up be accepted with little ob­ on the belief that Information communi­ by his unbridled verbal and financial cold There will doubtlessly be crie s of out­ languish. Many of the war against America he may already have rage from Europe, too, perhaps from the jection. T h e study open cated visually would be better retained done it. * • • very people who have been complaining le a d e rs in the p re s e n t effo rt than If it had been presented through the houses a r e just such a p r o ­ other form s of mass media. The com­ We speak of the American balance-of- bitterly of the "A m erican invasion" of will have left the U n iversity. corporate investment. De Gaulle may use it g ra m with a s e rio u s purpose. mittee feels that there is a lot of hear­ payments problem as being 17 years old, An e a r l i e r policy decision say Information about student government, since 1951, But the record shows that from again to illustrate how much havoc Amer­ Thus, a tr ia l period lasting the student in relation to the University, 1951 to 1957 the average loss was only ican economic power can wreak. But after w o u l d m ean a b e tte r co n ­ his attack on the dollar, It will only be a two t e r m s s e e m s unneces­ and every area pertaining to students, about |1 billion a y ear. The really heavy tinuing evolution, with o r that precipitated unnecessary or undue losses have come only since 1958, in the case of his Gallic fowl having come s a r ily long. last decade, and they have come not so home to roost. without the study open concern by the student body about their student leaders. Students become angry much from travel but from heavy Ameri­ If I were a European, I would try to keep Probably the g r e a t e s t h o uses. too often for no reason. We want to give can investments abroad. American technology and- managerial drawback to this extended - - T h e E d ito rs students factual information so that if stu­ It is in the past decade that :American skills In Europe without any huge further dents are going to be mad, “ Let them be corporations have discovered how rich a additions of American capital. For Europe mad at SOMETHING and not at nothing." market foreign countries—and especially desperately needs the technology and perlence, or are willing to learn, are King comes up with right card The Mass Media Committee is receptive to ideas, initiative, and Imagination. We want to work in film s, videotape, or visual the kind of people we want. ASMSU has made an attempt to better European—offer for the export of Amer­ ican capital, technology and managerial America wants the capital to stay home. Copyright 1968, Los Angeles Times establish effective communication with the You may have noticed that a co n stru ctiv e contribution. slides with audio tape. We had no tele­ student body. Some people feel it is a registration, was, - ge nerally B e twe e n — tbe— m achine and vision or radio people -who were ex­ perienced and still^were able to complete good attempt hi,it it wtjl. fall with that__ goodness Intact if we don't get people for TRINK A CUNE much f a s te r this te r m . You those endless U niversity a motion picture. Our firs t unit was a this committee. series of interviews with people directly also may have noticed that file s, the information s u r ­ For any students Interested in working you didn’ t have to go to Demonstration Hall to pick ren d ere d fall te r m was saved and will be reused this te r m . involved with ticket distribution in relation to Popular Entertainment. We would like to do visual units utilizing panel dis­ cussions or satire if these are the best with us there will be a meeting Thursday, January 11, at 3:00 in the Spartan Room in Student Services. Everyone is welcome. The quiet worry Charles E . Demery, Chairman up that pack of approxim ate­ On behalf of the entire means for communication. We want to Mass Media Committee communicate effectively, but we need The "quiet worry." ents not understanding you, why you dream ly 1,000 c a rd s to fill out. student body, we would like New Rochelle, N .Y., senior interested, dedicated people. We need A nice phrase used by Ed Schwartz, of stuffing those stacks of books down T here i s , believe it o r not, to thank R e g is tr a r H orace idea people, w riters, typists, research / S national NSA president. a p rofessor's throat. a d ire c t relation between King and his staff for s a v ­ people, p h o t o g r a p h e r s , cameramen, And what are the‘ l)uiet, Internal wor­ Complaints about State News coverage, people who think we have “ a good thing Not'support', sir! ries of John Doe, Jane Smith, Charley or lack of, should still be sent as letters the two. ing many hours of tim e, going" and want to be a part of it. We Jones o r student number 821924? I'd to the editor. Your bits of prose and The wonderful com puter, sw eat and gen eral paranoia offer students the opportunity to make To the Editor: like to know. poetry and art work should be directed to m o t i o n pictures within a commercial We signed the MSU VeteransAssoclation Why a re students going to school? Are Collage. which con tro ls so much of at r e g is tr a tio n . structure. Accomplished student film­ Christinas greeting to servicemen with the you all here to beet the draft, to find a I want your hang-ups, beliefs, disbeliefs, our liv e s , has finally made - - T h e E d ito rs m akers, who can demonstrate their ex- understanding that It was simply a greeting guy to m arry, because you know roughly thoughts, feelings and words of wisdom. and qothlng more. It now appears that where you’re going and this Is part of the This Isn’t limited to students either; pro­ General Westmoreland is taking the play, because you can't .think of anything IT'S JUST “ I " THIS AND YOU MAY NOT REALIZE IT, fesso rs, administrators, secretaries, and greeting as ah "outstandingdemonstration better to do, because It’s the most secure “ I " THAT ALL THE TIME ! SUT ALL YOU EVER SAY 1«, Janitors are also encouraged to write me il|K J » * J * *' J * »»J « l( o f support for our troops.’ ’ If we support place to be at the moment, because your in ca re of the State News. anyone, then our backing goes to the men parents want you to be here, or Just why? who spent Christm as in prison because» Ever thought about suicide? How se­ When you're In a sensitive mood, de­ they could not participate in an immoral riously? Ever tried and failed? pressed, elated, angry or whatever, sit war. This Isn’t much of a column. It's pri­ down, scratch It out and m all It to me . . . George Divoky m arily an Invitation o r request. Write to preferably signed. If you don’t want your Shaker Heights; Ohio, Junior me o r call with your experiences and views name used, say so, but please sign It any- Alan Crossley on any topic—abortions, m arijuana, why way. Hagerstown, Maryland, junior you hate your roommate, about your par­ Think, feel, admit and express. Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Wednesday, January 10, 1968 5 MICHIGAN STATE NEWS SAE restrictions to be lifted By P H Y L L IS Z IM B L E R fraternity is still on probation following an investigation of SAE on the back of the neck from a much in the first te rm ," he said. EDITORIAL OPEN HOUSE resulting from hazing a pledge pre-initiation practices. towel soaked in chem icals, “ I feel that all physical hazing State News Staff W r i t e r Sigma Alpha Epsilon (SAE) fra­ in January, 1967. The fraternity was placed on ternity will be allowed to rush a three-term probationary period The investigation w a s held a f t e r Inter-Fraternity Council received a complaint on Jan. 24, The probation was approved by John A. Fuzak, f o r m e r vice president for student affa irs. The has been done away with In the past year,’* Rose said. "T h e only reason I can’t say hazing WEDNESDAY at 8 o’clock p.m. and engage In other social activ­ beginning spring term , with the 1967, that a pledge, Jo e A. Bonus, " s t r ic t disciplinary'* probation Is completely gone Is because ities winter term although the right to appeal after two term s, Detroit junior, had been burned called for cessation of all social I don’t know about mental hazing functions and not having MSU or whether cleaning the fraternity A N Y O N E IN T E R E S T E D IN D IS C U S S IN G undergraduate w o m e n in the house w o u l d be c o n s i d e r e d house at any time. hazing." M IC H IG A N S T A T E N E W S O P E R A T IO N S The academic stipulation said S p r i n g term , 1967, a p re- that the chapter must have a initiation period amendment was O R IN T E R E S T E D 2.50 all-house g r a d e p o i n t added to the IFC ru les. This average (GPA). The house also called for all physical hazing to had to Improve its academic be abolished. IN N E W S W R IT IN G standing in relation to other fra­ “ The actual doing away with tern ities. physical hazing in the houses had E D IT O R IA L W R IT IN G Another stipulation was that a lot to do with the SAE proba­ rushing and pledging could not tion ," Rose said. "B ut several C O P Y R E A D IN G be held for three term s, also houses had stopped all physical with the right to appeal after two hazing before the SAE Incident." term s. OR PH O T O G R A PH Y Rose went through each house A1 Rose, IFC chief Justice, holding pre-inltlatlon periods at said that SAE was not placed on IS W E L C O M E the beginning of winter term . probation because it was found “ I saw no hazing at a ll. The guilty of intentionally hurting fraternities didn't know I was Bonus. Rather, IFC thought that coming so they couldn’t be sure SAE’s hazing was not fa ir in re ­ to susper * such activities ,when lation to activities specified un­ A LSO ANY I was ccm lng," he said. “ If der current regulations and In there had been any hazing, I relation to current norms and would have fotind evidence of it practices of other houses. in the -Q or aaHouses Lchecked.11 SAE petitioned early fall term* to have the probation lifted for G reenwell to give the third term , winter term 1968. T R A N SF E R STU D EN TS ARE Goodwill ambassador Rose said it took until the end Of fall term to decide on the ca se. recital Sunday Charles Greenwell, East Lan­ E S P E C I A L L Y IN V IT E D W H O A rsen Tarpo ff, acting as m a ltre d’ In Holmes H all, talks with one of his many IFC c o u l d only make recom­ sing graduate student, will pre­ a d m ir e r s In the Holmes Hall g r i l l , mendations that the probation be sent a voice recital at 4 p.m. Sun­ M A Y H A V E P R E V IO U S L Y waived. Milton R Dickerson, current vice-president for stu­ day in the Music Auditorium. His program will include the W O R K E D ON SCHO O L P A P E R S * dent affairs, had to make the Maitre d’, minstrel’ spices final approval. Rose' said fiii't fn îi'à f the'pro­ bation is still Intact, but the wo s k s ^ o f B r a h m a , Purcell, Char lee Ives- and- Fouleas*- GreenweU is assistant director of MSU’s Opera Workshop. In stipulations have been waived. If mealtime in 'IT U’ dormitories SAE violates anything besides the restored privileges, the re­ strictions will go back into effect. mid-February he will sing the role of Osmin in the MSU pro­ duction of Mozart’s opera, "The The food in Holmes Hall tastes exclusive restaurants in Europe. Tarpoff to serve as an Inter­ Abduction from the Seraglio.” “ We have had no trouble with just a little better this term and There he learned to speak eight preter. SAE since they went on proba­ only one ingredient has been added—Arsen Tarpoff, m altre d* and good-will ambassador to the students. languages fluently. His linguistic ability has be­ come very useful lately. When new foreign students a rriv e, an “ When the foreign students hear my accent, they think,*He’s a stranger, tool’ That makes them feel more at home,” T a r­ tion,’’ Rose said. “ As fa r as we can determine, everything Is on the up and up. “ SAE’s GPA improved quite a IFC re gre ts Tarpoff -is MSU’ s version of emergency call Is sent'out for poff said. bit, a d we were amazed how the wandering m instrel. He has the o m issio n s e r v e d as host and official The f rate rn itie s Ò f M ic h ig a n State Invite You T o g r e e t e r in eight dormitories of S ig m a Alpha since starting at Fee Hall in the E p silo n in fall of 1965. R em em ber — 8 p»m. “ My main responsibility is to M o n d ay 's IF C keep the students happy," said Tarpoff. ad. However, 3rd Floor Student Services * “ Most of my work is public relations, I talk to students,lis­ ten to thejr complaints, and, in they w ill be ru shin g tonight, MICHIGAN STATE NEWS some ca se s, explain why it Is impossible for the management^'f to do something the students 131 Bogue Street. 337-9091 E m iA E OFEN NOOSE want.’’ Tarpoff manages to sm ile con­ stantly, greet everyone arriving 7-10 p.m . for lunch or dinner, visit some of r 1 1 1%. I l l i y n . n » i n i , - . . . —■ » v y r— ■ — the t a b l e s and with a little prodding, refill coffee cups. Alpha E p silo n P i Kappa Alpha P s i P s i U p silo n P.G . Holtkamp, Holmes mana­ 343 Albert 810 W. Grand River ger, said that Tarp offspresen ce 337-0346 351-4687 breaks the monotony of' insti­ Alpha G a m m a Rho Kappa S ig m a S ig m a A lph a E p silo n 432 Evergreen 715 Grove 131 Bogue tutional meals. L A N S IN G 332-0834 332-5092 337-9091 “ He's a change in the routine S ig m a Alpha M u Alpha Kappa P s i L am b d a C h i Alpha and that makes meals more in­ P arlor C — Union 123 Louis 128 Haslett teresting. If he were here longer 353^1404 332-5040 332-0841 than a term ortwo, Tarpoff would S ig m a C h i lose his effectiveness. He would Alpha Phi Alpha P h i Delta Thêta become routine,” said Holtkamp. 626 Cowley 729 E . Grand River Bridal Consultants 332-3568 337-9020 But right now Tarpoff* s popu­ Alpha T au O m éga Phi G a m m a Delta S ig m a Nu for fifty years. larity is at a peak. Everyone 334 Michigan 731 Burcham 451 Evergreen thinks he is great. 332-5053 332-2501 332-0846 Bev Handren, Saginaw fresh­ Beta Thêta P I Phi Kappa P s i S ig m a Phi E p silo n man, said, “ I think he’ s a darling 522 Abbott 526 Sunset 1148 E . Grand River little man. I just love him.” 332-5039 351-4160 337-1498 C ongratu lations, “ Ithink he’ s just fin e," was the T au D e lta Phi opinion of Gloria Batle, Inkster D e lta C h i Phi Kappa S ig m a 236 N. Harrlson 220 Cedar Street freshman. 101 Woodmere 337-1611 351-0250 Charles Staton, food service 332-3808 manager, s a i d that T arp offs Delta S ig m a Phi Phi K appa Thêta C olon y T h e îa C h i You h av e a beautiful ring, Student Services Lounge 453 Abbott presence is also lifting kitchen 1218 E . Grand River 355-6246 332-3581 morale. “ We’re happy to have 332-5035 him, and we'll hate to see him D elta Sig m u P i P h i Kappa Tau Thêta D e lta C h i — w e h av e a 125 N. Harrlson 139 Balley go.” 217 River Street 332-3577 332-2563 Tarpoff was bom in Macedonia 332-2591 and has worked as host In many Delta T a u Delta P h i S ig m a Delta T hêta X I C olon y 330 N. Harrlson 505 M.A.C. 501 M.A.C. beautiful collection 337-1721 332-0875 351-0665 „ 4 S k i, D e lta U p silo n P h i S ig m u K appa T r ia n g le U u iiu K O M rf 1504 E . Grand River 207 Bogue 332-8696 242 N. Harrlson of Spring gow n s. T - 3 a r s * O p e n t i l 10 :30 P M D a i l y 332-8676 332-3563 F a r m House P i Kappa Phi Z e ta B eta Tau O nly 1 hour away 151 Bogue 121 Whitehills 855 Grove S pecial group ra te s 332-8635 337-9734 332-3565 L iv e Bands F r id a y & S aturdoy C a l I the house s f o r r î d e s - - s e e as ma ny hou s e s a s you c on! _________ Sketched: THERE’S ST LL TIME! E m p ire -w a isted linen Special Offer * gown with detachable T H E M IC H IG A N S T A T E Y E A R B O O K , chapel train . Daisy T H E W O L V E R IN E , IS NOW O N S A L E FOR trim in Venetian lace ONLY $ 8.00 regui-ar»io.oo on gown and s ilk - THIS S P E C IA L O F F E R E N D S ON JAN 15, SO H U RR Y YO U CAN B UY YOUR YE A RB O O K AT: illusion m antilla. * IN T E R N A T I O N A L C E N T E R C A F E T E R I A * UNION * 344 S T U D E N T S E R V IC E S B L D G . Gown & Veil $130 $40 MICHIGAN STATE WOLVERINE Matching attendant gown in ten c o l o r s , 6 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan We d n e s d a y , J a n u a r y 10, 1 9 6 8 Neumann presents unexciting musical fare B y J I M ROOS juvenating j a d e d warhorses de­ Berg in the rising and falling straightforward. T e m p o s and ductlon." These Neumann under­ mands more than executant vir­ sevenths of the first movement, phraslngs were given plenty of stood. tuosity and good musicianship. snatches of harmonies a la Cop- breadth. They were, for the most However, he failed entirely in Conductor Vaclav Neumann has l a n d , Shostakovltch, Hindemith part, close to those of the com­ erating the Indispensable ex- been known to most American music listeners through record­ It also requires projection. Neumann, who will be 48 this and many others. Nevertheless, year, sports a somewhat greyish the work still bears the imprint poser in his recorded perform­ ance with the New Phllharmonla. a iment and frenzy of the In­ fernal Dance and Finale. As a ings with the Czech Philharmonic sem i-crew -cut. D i s p l a y i n g a of its creator clearly enough to Transitions were smooth and un­ c o n s e q u e n c e , the "F ire b ird " Orchestra and the Leipzig Opera, m i l d l y choreographic podium make you wish it were per­ affected by excessive rhythmic never got off the ground. the latter of which he Is General manner and baton technique, he formed more often. The elegiac distortions or idiosyncratic r l- The most disappointing, how­ Music D irector. opened the concert with Benjamin third movement is particularly tardandos. ever, was the Brahm’s Fourth On tour as principal guest con­ Britten's "Sinfonia da Requiem.” reminiscent of those bleak ut­ With the e x c e p t i o n of occa­ Symphony. Neumann Insisted on ductor of the Royal Philharmonic Written in 1940 when the com­ terances of Ek-itten's own "Sea s i o n a l flurries of ragged en­ v e r y slow tempo throughout, N e u m a n n ' s appearance here poser was residing in the U.S., I n t e r l u d e s ” from " P e t e r semble (particularly in the brass which is marvelous if your name Monday evening revealed that 1) the Sinfonia is a prime example G rim es." section), the Royal Philharmonic is Furtwängler and you can keep he is an intelligent, but unexciting of Britten’s s u c c e s s f u l ec­ Neumann's a p p r o a c h to the responded with its characteristic the whole moving enough to avoid, musical personality and 2) r e ­ lecticism . There are echoes of " S i n f o n i a " was b a s i c a l l y virtuosity and supplied what was its falling into parts. Maestro to be the best music-making of Nsumann could not. There will never be the evening. The "F ireb ird Suite" of Stra­ Again, there were some lovely vinsky and the Brahm's Fourth moments and fine playing (par­ Symphony which followed also ticularly the clarinet and flute a better time received solid performances in solos in the second and fourth term s of orchestral playing. The movements). But the interpre­ malleable Englishmen will give tation as a t o t a l conception any conductor at least that and lacked unity and, most of all, to meet the SAE’s. more if he wishes. Unfortunately momentum. It was simply stodgy. Neumann didn’t ask for much m ore. The A l l e g r o giocoso was robbed of its hearty laughter by The "F ir e b ird " was given a heavy-handed g'rand pauses, and standard, If not entirely routine the Chaconne-llke finale was lost reading. There were some beau­ in the tangled strands 01 fh-annrs tiful moments: the slight under­ ingeniously Interwoven rhythmic Melodious tones Va clav Neu mann of the Czech Philharm onic and the L eip zig O p e ra conducts the statement of the poetic Berceuse, variations. Royal Philh armonic O rc h e s tr a at F a irc h ild T h ea te r Monday night. the sparkling variations of the "F ire b ird 's D a n c e " and the GOIN' GUYS miasm ic mystery of the "lu tro - ATL group to avoid GO PHI TAU dull talks The danger of a faculty-stu- dent discussion group becoming 1 faculty " le t ’s be impressive” sessions with students sitting around trying to be impressed will be avoided at this term’s American Thought and Lan­ guage (ATL) F a c u 1 ty-Student. book discussions. 1 "With this danger in mind the* South Complex discussions will try to channel faculty contribu­ Open Rush Monday And Wednesday tions into definite roles hope­ fully intended to catalyze rather than to drown out student partic­ 131 Bogue Street Phi Kappa Psi ipation," said Stephen Elliston, associate professor of ATL. Tonight 7-10 p.m . "T oo many supposedly intel­ For Ride Call 337-9091 Or 351-0973 522 Abbott Rd, F o r rid e call 3 32 -5 03 9 lectual discussions end up being just knock-down-drag-out argu­ ments between a couple of true b elie v ers," stated Elliston. The discussions will provide an opportunity for interested stu­ dents to learn some of the sophis­ tication of controversy as well as to learn about books and ideas, said Elliston. The first meeting of the term What about Greek life? will be held at 7 p jn . Thursday in the African Room of Wonders Hall. Gordon Smith of the ATL de­ partment will lead a discussion of Aldous Huxley’s "Ek-ave New World” for the first meeting. The schedule for the remain­ der of the year Is: Jan. 25: Ayn Rand’s philosophy with Steve Elliston, Claude Hub­ bard and Je rry McCarthy Feb. 8: Graham Greene’s "T h e Power and the Glory'” with Fred Kolb and other staff members Feb. 22: Ken Kesey’s "OnS Flew Over the Cuckoo’ s N est" with Jim Lockwood, Gary Roelof? and Pat Julius March 7: E ric I ¡offer’s "T h e T ru e B e l i e v e r " with Maurie Hunglvllle and other staff n am­ b ers. April 11: Albert Camus' “Th# Stranger" with Tom Kishler, Jim Lockwood and Jerry McCarthy April 25: J.D . Salinger’s "C at­ cher In the Rye" with Frank Kipp and other staff members May 9; John Knowles' "A Sep­ arate P ea c e " with Pat Julius and Steve Elliston A choice, not a chance Ferency to speak on M cCarthy Zolton Feren cy, fo rm er star D em ocratic chairm an, will leai a discussion at an open meetirl] O P E N R U S H - W E D N E S D A Y 7-10 P .M . I was at Phi K appa Tau of the MSL Faculty fo r McCarthy Com m ittee at 8 p.m. Monday Feren cy , who has been c lo s e ! a s s o c i a t e d with the nations M onday. Were you? M cCarthy Com m ittee, has statei that the discussion will center o M cCarthy’s ro le in creating d well informed electo rate as wel as offering him self as a peaq candidate. T h e development of ways ti J b lte 'Qfcm ¿ S e ite ^ r a t e r n t t ç ( iH t c lf t g a n J & te te jÄ n it e r s t t t g OPEN RUSH CALL FOR A RIDE: help in the campaign to nominap McCarthy will also be discussed Feren cy said. T h e meeting will be held i; IONITE 332 0332 the auditorium of the E a st L aii 7-10P.M. sing Edgewood United Church 330 ¿ H arriso n S t r e e t ^ast ^Cattsmg, iHicljuvm 332-3577 C A L L 337-1721 f o r rides 125 N. HAGADORN 332-3578 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Wednesday, January 10, 1968 f Education college proposed B y A IM E E PATTERSO N Courses on Michigan School point system, the proposed six the next term and student teach­ would be sim ilar to JMC. The ^State Nows Staff W r i t e r Board laws plus research and point program would consist of ing the final teryn," would be the study could consist of student A proposed residential college interviews with state board of grade from a high of A+to a low usual academic chain as seen by teaching at an armed fo rcerb ase. for elementary education, Joan education members would also of B - . A 4J0 would be the highest the pamphlet. in a foreign language situation, Piaget College, (JPC) would be be beneficial to the student, Neu­ a student could achieve, and a JPC will probably be quite o r anywhere else that the student based on a "form ula for relaxa­ m elster said. 2.75 the lowest. sim ilar to JUstln M orrill College felt would be of benefit to him. tion** combined with student in­ The proposed policy on Univer­ 'T h e only reason we would (JMC), according to Neumelster. Neumelster admits that the dependence. sity prerequisites would waive all have a grading system at a ll," He said he hoped the college college is a rather ideal situa­ Originated by David E. Nau­ University College requirements Neumelster said, "would be to would be housed in an older r e s i­ tion and that some courses will ru e l s t e r , Lansing Junior, and fo r JPC students. Each student satisfy the requirements of grad­ dence hall, as JMC is now located have to be adjusted. "W e will P h y l l i s E. B o e r , Ann Arbor would be responsible, however, uate schools and th e draft in Snyder-PhlUlps Hall. probably have to do a lot more sophomore, the idea for the stu­ fo r any lacking knowledge should board . " 4 A student could drop a Field study in a foreign country conforming thanwe had planned,” dent-run Jean P i a g e t College he skip the recommended prere­ course at any time during the is another aspect of JPC that he said. stems from the dissatisfaction quisite. term regardless of his grade of some elementary education # the student wished to take point average. m ajors with the courses offered by MSU’s College of Education. any University courses, he could do so and choose the number of c r e d lt-h o u r s he wished to be The policy on waiver exams would require each student to take a waiver in each at his Ho Chi M inh photo By drtwing up a new lis t of given credit for in the course. courses at the beginning of the courses and decreasing the em­ phasis on grades through a new If, for example, he wished to take term . Should he pass the eight- answers death rumor Food fo r thought g r a d i n g system, t h e Milage could, according to Its creato rs, a four-credit ATL course for 15 credits, he would have to show hour open book exam, he could either take a Bt-ln the course TOKYO OP) — Hanoi broad­ The radiophoto, released by through extra research o r papers of attempt to achieve a higher cast a picture Tuesday of P resi­ Hanoi's official Vietnam News D r.' B o rg stro m (m id d le) and two rep res en tativ es fr o m India discussed food and achieve the more relaxed atmos­ that he had worked the required grade by taking the course. One dent Ho Chi Minh with a visitor Agency, was monitored in War­ population at a sym posium sponsored by James Madison C ollege, Justin M o r r i l l phere of learning that some be­ hours and had earned the credits advantage in taking the course from Cambodia, Foreign Minis­ saw. The agency did not say when College and the In ternational Relations Club. - lieve is lacking in the current over and above the normal four after passing the waiver, would te r Norodom Phurlssarl, in ap­ Ho and the Cambodian m et, but program. credits. be the stipulation that the student parent answer to a Saigon re­ the Cambodian Embassy in Tokyo 'T h e present college of educa­ ISUMPTION tion program offers, at most, two term s of special education, The grading system would con- s l i t of A and B grades, and an could under no circumstances re ­ ceive a grade in the course lower port that Ho was dead. The Saigon newspaper Cong reported Phurlssarl had flown to Hanoi on Dec. 30 for a visit "N ” w h i c h would indicate a than a B f . Ctìung quoted “ special sou rces" on the invitation of Foreign Min­ 10 term s of general education dropped grade; A plus or minus “ By consistently passing wai­ Sunday as saying North Vietnam's ister Nguyen Duy Trlnh. and one term of actual teach­ wo^l'd ''indicate a positive or v er exams, it might be possible 77-year-old chief of state died I I C f /v /v r L I f v t e a e r i i ings’ ' Neumelster said. _ iic ricuiai negative attitude respectively to­ to g r a d u a t e in one calendar uec.nzo $ a combination otnéart v r iw v avsM V e s / e i v / U u i v j a w j u i s / v / u The proposed college would the president and the foreign min­ ward the education -process as y e a r ," according to the JPC disease and tuberculosis. This place the emphasis on individ­ ister had cordial talks separately transportation is third only to the to the well-fed world,a challenge ual research , special education it relates to a specific cou rse," pamphlet. "One t e r m for wai­ dispatch was received with wide­ By DICK S T O I M E N O F F spread skepticism.______________ with Phurlssarl. problems of food underproduction that must be met in the next courses and actual teaching ex­ according to the JPC descrip­ v ers, one term to r pre-student State News Staff W r i t e r and overpopulation. In India, he ten years or there will be inter­ perience rather than the general tive pamphlet. teaching, ‘methods' (a course More than 30 per cent of all noted, food losses exceed the national implications,” he said. education and University courses Based on the conventional four now offered by the'University) food produced in die United States amount of food imported. Borgstrom called theuseofthe now required. M U I R’S is loçt before consumption, said "T h ere is a 'hunger gap’ be­ phrase "underdeveloped coun­ According to Neumelater, the B ro o kfie ld Georg A. Borgstrom, professor tween the one billion people in the tr ie s " a semantic blunder. student could choose his own pro­ of geography and food science, at well-fed world and the two b il­ ‘ T h ese are really overdeveloped gram of study. No consultations P la z a a meeting of the International R e­ lion people in the hungry world," Countries," he said. "They haye with academic advisers, as the 1399 E a s t Borgstrom said. “ And this gap too many people for the land and University now requires, would / tí n p ) t U sti lations Club Monday night. Borgstrom and A. N. Agar­ is constantly widening," G ran d R iv e r wala, professor of business, dis­ the soil has been worked nearly be required unless the student He said there had never been to exhaustion." DRUG STORES him self felt it necessary to ask cussed food and population at the a period in history with so many advice. meeting jointly sponsored by advances made in agriculture as He noted that 38 million tons of Although the majors offered by Justin M orrill and Jam es Madi­ there 'have been today, but this food each year are moving from JPC would be the same as those son Colleges. does not seem to be closing the the well-fed world to the hungry offered by the present College Borgstrom said that the prob­ "hunger gap," world, but that so far this has of Education, the course lis t We9re Open Nights, Sundays, Holidays lem of food lost in storage and “1 believe this is a challenge Just been part of relief measures. would be completely different. He said well-fed countries should "W e threw out the University adjust to the reality of the prob­ catalog and came up with our lem and make food trade with the own courses,” said Neumelster. Immigrant to face hungry world part of its regular These Include four courses on trade rather than Justanaidpoli­ children’s literature which re ­ Y E A R -E N D , PRICE-SLASHING Cosmetic SALE cy. quire the student to read several Borgstrom suggested that to hundred children's books during final appeal hope help combat the waste problem the course. that the World Bank spend less money building dams in these GRAND RAPIDS, MICH. (UPI) States in 1964 on a 30-day visitor countries and more money on — Laszlo Berdo, 32, of Grand permit and after arriving, asked good food transportation and P iz z a . . the soul Sale! TUSSY Rapids, who faces deportation for asylum. along with his wife and two chil­ B e r d o claim s he joined the storage facilities. Agarwala followed Borgstrom of our Wind & Weather dren because he once belonged to Communist Party only after con- with a discussion of the food the Communist Party, will make nant pressure was exerted on problem in India. one more appeal to stay in the him in order to get his family out The present food shortage in b u sin e ss BEAUTY AIDS of a converted stable in which they India, he said, was the result of What a wonderful' way to United States. were living—a dwelling without the failure of the monsoons in combat r o u g h n e s s and chapped skin. Wintertime, >H* G. Vernon Leopold, a Detroit plumbing or heat, and to get him­ four out of the last five years. attorney, will appear before the self admitted to a trade school. The monsoons are counted on to Summertime, V a c a t i o n Tim e, any time is Wind & Board of Appeals Jan . 24 in Wash­ L e o p o l d argues' that Berdo bring rain to the planting areas. Weather Tim e. ington to argue once more that the faces severe crim inal penalties Berdos should not be deported. if he is returned to Hungary. "Nevertheless the food prob­ $1.00 L O T IO N 6 fl o z ............................590 P r e v i o u s appeals have been, B e r d o works in a local fur­ lem is 'mproving,” Agarwala unsuccessful. said. "In the last 15 years the $2.00 L O T IO N 13 fl o z ........................ $1.00 niture factory. Atty. Leopold said the case Leopold said he has filed a population of India rose by 38 hinges on .whether Berdo Joined 47-page brief with the Board of per cent while the food produc­ the Communist Party in 1960 out Immigration A p p e a l s , arguing tion was up 50 per cen t." ] 'To Your Rescue’ j $2.00 C R E A M 8 oz wt........................$1.00 of choice of necessity. Berdo, that Berdo joined the Communist He said the biggest problem is I P izza, Spaghetti, i New fro m Coty! M I X N M A T C H E R S B Y BEEP. who says he w a s a "freedom Party to obtain the necessities of that of malnutrition. "Food pro­ ! Sandw iches, S a la d s * fighter" in the H unga r i a n up­ life and therefore his case is sub­ duction is not adequate to give the I rising of 1956 and “ shota Russian je c t to the exceptions written in people minimum nutritional r e ­ I Hours:Mon.-Sat. 11 a.m .-l a.m. ! I BEEP BEEP AND B E E P -B E E P -B E E P We’re using the TV-type beeps because several Califor­ MOISTURIZING $2.00 so ld ier," c a m e to the United the law. quirem ents," he said. I Sun. 3p.m.* 12midnight j Hand Body Lotion nia and New York designers would suffer massive coro­ | 3 convenient locations: . naries if we used their real names with off-prices! The g 2417 K A L A M A Z O O ST. ! real labels are still on, though, so come get your super­ $3.50 V alue TONIGHT 8:15 g 2201 S. C E D A R ! values today I 12 1/2 fl. oz. I W . W I L L O W at LOGAN J With Coty’s new moisturizing cream , dryness l| F o r F ast Luncheon service of the skin is a t h i n g of the p a s t . It I • 1407-3733 e m oisturizes, softens, whitens skin. MSU Lecture-Concert Series Franchises are •till available rdUMv • East Lansing Half-Price Sale! * SPECIAL * The United man Shultons D e se rt Flow er is looking for qualified DEODORANTS new stewardesses! 500 R e g. $ 1.00 See him, talk to him, Size listen to him, complete Choice of Roll-on 2 fluid ounces an application form. or Cream Deodorant 2 oz. weight. Now 1/2 price I ON C A M PU S IN T E R V IE W S Once-A-Year REVLON SPECIALS J A N U A R Y 12 Call your Placement Office for an appointment U N IT E D A IR LIN ES A N E Q U A L O P P O R T U N IT Y E M P LO Y ER Rethrn Intimate Rerlnn Intimate Moisture Lotion SPRAY MIST $2.95 Size l4 fl.o z . S I75 I Indulge yourself. Use this lux­ Special 2 fl. Oz. Remember, the woman who $2» wears Revlon Intimate has an ury lotion lavishly. New un­ breakable bottle. unfair advantage. N. * . MY' y Wednesday, January 10, 1968 3 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Boost inhome spending Student speaks out to increase federal budget WASHINGTON If) — Izcrsaaod doihestlc spending already w rit- fo r die firs t time a unified budg­ et format which lumps suspend­ ing together, Including that of die ' Thm is substantially above the $196 billion to $137 billion In ad­ ministrativo budget spending ex­ on U.S. in Germany B y F R E D S HE RWOOD against the principle of s e lf- In order to get a democratic tan Into low, and higher military determination of nations." co sts, raportadly will boost total huge government-operated trust pected In the current fiscal year S ta te Nows S ta ff W r i t e r university." fonds such as Social -Security. A form er G e r m a n student Wolff added that 30 per cent Wolff said the West Berlin fodetal outlay* In tha next fiscal ending Juna 30 but one source But one official said spending of the Invested capital In Europe SDS set up the "C ritic a l Uni­ yoar to $190 billion or beyond. ■aid the Increase stems from spoke out Monday night against In the administrative budget—if Is American, further Indicating v ersity ," s i m i l a r to MSU's higher defense costs and the In­ the "m yths” and "contrad ic­ An Informad aourc* reporting that, were still in use—would tions" In American post-war the economic motives of Ameri­ Free University, "try in g to creased cost of existing federal this Tuesday noted that the fig­ rangis between $145. billion and programs such as welfare, medi­ policy« claiming that"making.the can policy. bridge the gap between different ure isn 't e x a c t l y comparable $150 billion In the estim ates now caid and pay ralssa for govern­ world safe for democracy was Wolf also spoke about the Mew classes of society and provide an with pest budgets since the ad­ scheduled to be sent to Congress ment workers. really making the world safe for Left in Germany, citing three alternative for the present uni­ ministration will, use Oils year ,^an. 29. ____________ Exact budget figures have not American enterp rise." factors causing the emergence of v ersity ." .yet been revealed but adminis­ Rienhart Wolff, a member of student protest. " B y and large, the student gen­ tration officials now know lots “ The West German educational eration In Germany Is liberal PRESENTS what range they will fall, al­ LUTZ VON WERDER the West Berlin Students for a Democratic Society, said In an In­ system Is a class sy stem ," he or Left Wing," he said. REINHART W O L F F though some decisions mutt still said. "O nly about 6.8 per cent formal talk sponsored fay the elegantly crafted he mads by President Johnson. Friends of the University Chris­ per year go on to higher educa­ in the While spending In the nowbudg­ Deserters tian Movement that the E a st- tion.' "Student protest happened in C a r v e d 0 et will be higher than in tha cur­ rent year, the source aald U will definitely remain below $100 granted West standoff In Europe was Ini­ tiated by the Western A llies. " ft has bean found that the divi­ Germany because the political situation got w orse," he said. "Children realized that the free State lawmakers ■fl^l U lllon under the new unified bud­ sion of Germany and Europe was tradition A meaningful heritage of 116 get format. Under the administrative budg* at which has bean In use for asylum the result of consistent foreign policy patterns formulated In Washington," Wolff said. world's post-war policies had failed ." Wolff said that a third factor In student protest was Amsrlcon reconvene today 23m i years of craftsmanship stands years, spending rose above $100 Wolff said that the Western (U nited P r o a s International When the gavels fall In the . behind the name ArtCarved, Involvement In Vietnam. billion for the first time in ths Allies pre-empted chances for The M i c h i g a n Leglalaturs, House and Senate at noon, It . stam ped by a rtis a n s who STOCKHOLM W — S w e d e n “ SDS became an Important fac­ fisca l year that ended June 30, the political reunification of Ger­ w ill m a r k s fresh start on create your ring with the same formally granted asylum Tues­ to r, protesting against the h le r- harnessed to a presidential can­ careful pride they earned more 1966. It went to $126.7 billion many by lnatlgaUnjLcyrrency re­ didate and saddled with weighty perannlal £ ro b le m i: open hous­ than a century ago. the following year and is now day to rodr American Ml ty 'iiT«r forms In the W esiefnsectorsbe­ ing, court reorganization, aid te ALLEGRO SET who deserted from the UJS. a ir­ political situation," he sald^ problems, begins the^968 ses­ ForMlm $ 2 7 .5 0 For H .r 924.90 estimated at $136.2 billion In the fore such reform s were carried sion today. Predictions are that schools, traffic isafety and build­ craft ca r rie r Intrepid in Japan "P eo p le realize they have to Current fiscal year. If the new concept had been In use In the past, total federal O ct. 23 to protest the Vietnam war. put In the Eastern sector, "T h e most Important Issue was whether there should be economic fight for a democratic aoclety it will be a long, tough haul. iing a bllllon-dollar budget te inance state services. Most of this will be done this spending would have exceeded The sailors were Invited to ap­ unity to psy Soviet reparations," yoar In the glare of Gov. Rom- $100 billion for the first time ir ply for alien passports which would enable them to travel freely Wolff said. "T h e West would not IN SU B-ZIR O WEATHER ney's campaign for the Repub­ the fiscal year which ended June agree to this unity because recon­ l i c a n presidential nomination, 30, 1962. anywhere within the country. struction of Germany would have Romney himself was expected to Fire guts house, The UJS. State Department de­ been more difficult." use the Legislature's opening te 'Ifes) Headquarter s fa r Orange Blossom As for a deficit, that’s still un­ determined since the Treasury. Department reportedly has not clined to comment on the deci­ sions P ress officer Carl Bartch told Wolff said that the Americans developed a sphere o f Interest bolster his sagging lmaga In a sweeping "sta te o f the sta te " - yet come up with a firm esti­ In Europe for foreign Investments 0 address Thursday. Diamonds a Washington news conference and markets rather than any fear An aide to the governor aald sssiMwis* in mate of revenue expectations. Of­ MUtifcIO Hsu >37. W ficials a r t figuring on adoption of Johnson's proposed 10 per cont that the U.S. government Is ready to a ssist the four to return to the United States, "should they ask of a reunited German military complex o r Soviet domination of takes 13 lives there would bo soma " r e a l sleep - , e r a " In Romney's annual Jan­ The Traditional Class Ring tax surcharge in preparing the new budget. T h is year’s deficit in tha ad­ for such assistan ce." and to a ssist the parents If they want to Western Europe. "T h e Americans said they worked fo r reunification while came too fast and It was too NEW YORK OP) — A fire long dark to see them a ll. Some of uary address outlining his legis­ lative program., for the yoar. Ho did not say If Remney would range A p art of your col logo ministrative budget Is now ex­ visit their sons In Swadon. actually keeping Germany di­ undetected built to holocaust fury them were Injured when they Into national and f o r e lp affairs The Allens Commission, In de­ vided," Wolff said. In the dead of night Tuesday, to hit the ground." as did Gov. Nelson Rockefeller In experience to have with pected to bo under $20 billion ciding unanimously to approve roar unchecked for hours through without higher taxes, and the Wolff cited contradictions In The building housed 25 fami­ a sim ilar message to the New you forever. source said the probable deficit sanctuary for the fboT. said It did the American policy of maintain­ an ancient four-story Brooklyn lie s , Including 54 children, ft Is York Legislature last week. not consider them political refu­ ing a sphere of Influence In Eu­ tenement. It snuffed out the In the Williamsburg section of About a dozen Remney staff lb the now budget will bo a good gees, but that they would be al­ rope to protect Western nations scream s and the lives of 13 Brooklyn, a drab sem l-lndustrlal members, who have been working bit under that. lowed to remain In Sweden for from the Soviets, persons—*four adults and nine area between the East River and on the message for weeks while L "humanitarian reason s." "T h s Soviets demobilized Im­ children In two related fam lliea. Newtown C reek. Romney toured the world soaking Richard S . Bailey of Jackson­ mediately after 1945 and moved Below zero tem peratures, a All of the victims were mem­ jp foreign affairs background, v ille. Fla*, one of the four, acting .troops to their Chinese bord er," record for the date hampered bers of two Puerto R i c a n fam­ w o r e busy with h im Tuesday a a spokesman for the d eserter a , „Wolff said. " I t Is basically not firemen and compounded the mis­ ilie s. The only survivor among polishing ths speech. said they were grateful to the true that the Soviets Intended to ery of nearly 100 survivors,their thorn w aatheheadofsom efam ily, commission fo r not considering overrun Europe," panic echoing starkly In an­ Francisco Diaz, 29, In tha House, where Repub­ kjfP. ' them political refugees. "W e said In Japan that we are not Interested In politics and wa have not changed our minds since than." said Bailay, whoso father "Another myth Is that the Americans Immediately demo­ bilized," Wolff aald ."T h e Amer­ ican administration did not shrink from using force to promote their guished crie s for help ¿1 Spanish and English, Dead were Diaz' wtfe, Concep­ licans hold a 56-54 edge, Dem­ cion, 25, and her m e children ocrats released Tuesday thalr Cause of the blaze was not de­ aged three months to nine years; own "s ta te of the state" message termined. It began In a paper box hsnfcrotttaxvPtaancsaco Mojica«: with their legislative proposals. factory on the first floor and his wife Juanita, and thalr four , , la a commander In the UJS, Naval raged out of control for nearly children, four to nine; and M r*. Included wore plans fo r a policy of * containment even Reserve. five hours. More than 25 persons M ojica's mother, Victoria Mo­ pooled risk fire insurance set-up With degree MSU Seal 3 engraved initials, Choice of Stones Yellow or white gold, , were Injured, Including 14 fire­ reno, 85, men, in potential riot a rta a , a fair The firs t fire alarm was sound­ housing law, a tenants' riots cods, ed at 12:29 aan . But as the van­ state matching funds fo r police- No snow |ob ft was the worst residential guard of 195 firefighters arrived, salaries and state aid for re­ Greek Letters embossed on f r o m Louis. Only [Have you considered flying In blaze In New York City In more the flames already had reached cruiting Negroes for urban police stone e x p o rt c are and 'the United States A ir Force? than 20 y ea rs, and the death toll Inferno strength, barring their fo rces. was the heaviest since 1960 when entry to the building and forcing Ccwl êkop. attention to all Don P . Clements, a senior In 46 workmen perished In a fire them to fight the blaze from the Also suggested by Democrats you r cleaning electrical engineering, did and aboard the aircraft c a rrie r Con­ stree t. wore laws to crack down on tho pro b lem s. selected Air Force ROTC. If stellation. possession of " M o l o t o v cock­ iyou will have two graduate or "T h e re was a tremendous de­ undergraduate years at MSU Mayor John V. Lindsay ordered lay in discovery o fth e flre ," said ta ils " and on Interfering with latter next summer, the Air five city agencies to Investigate Chief of Department John T , firemen In the course of their the fir e . duties. They also proposed t $420 Force jjgmggj^ROTC program O'Hagan. "T h e discovery was Acro s s fr o m the Home Ec Building Patrolman Ralph Sorrentlno. made by three male passers-by. million bonding program to fight can get you your wings. one of the firs t on the scene, At the tim e of discovery, flames water pollution. and told newsmen: "P eo p le were were already coming through the R o m n e y ' s message Thurs­ screaming for help and throw­ windows." day Is expected to cover the same THE LIST MARINER cle an e rs ing their children out of windows F ire Commissioner Robert are a s, but he may propose differ­ to save them from the flam es. Lowery told newsmen: "T h e dif­ ent approaches. 956 Trowbridge 623 E. Grand River Applications for the two year "T h e panic was te rrific . I ficulty in fighting this fire was Spartan Shopping |program a re now being accept­ caught at least 20 kids, but they due to several factors—the age The 19 Senate Republicans and East Lansing ed. For details contact the Center of the building, the rapidity with 18 Senate Democrats caucused across from Studant Services' which the fire spread,the delayed separately Tuesday to get signals Aerospace Studies Department JOn/m fw U i alarm , the late hour—-that is most straight for the coming session. of the residents were asleep— Sen. Sander M. Levin, D-Berkley, ' Florist / and, of course, the tem perature," the new state Democratic chair­ Delta Chi is at 355-2178,2179,2182, o r 2185. Application period ends Jan, 18th l 03g off for students & faculty 809 E . MICH. AV E., LANS. The blaze began In the f ir s t - man, said the would ask his col­ floor Fancy Bag Corp., which leagues to r e l i e v e him of his makes paper cake boxes. duties as minority floor leader If they c o u l d f i n d a successor "without disrupting" the caucus. House caucuses were to be Step up to Wednesday. Tho Republican leadership Is Phi Kappa Theta planning a "sh o rt, action-packed session” so house members can. Tonight get home to campaign for r e d e c - tlon. The senate, elected for fou r- year term s in 1966, Is not up this Student Service» Lounge year. Plans are fo r the session to adjourn by June 25 after han­ dling only the most pressing 7-10 P.M. Issu es. HEY AMIGOS 1ET OFF TO MEXICO F O R N IN E C R A Z Y those great nights you’ll never forget IF Y O U A R E O N C A M P U S ACAPULCO IN C L U D E S D A Y S IN S U N & S U R F M A R C H 16-25 $299.99 W IT H A N A R M L O A D O F A IR F A R E - H O T E L - P O O L - F U L L B R E A K F A S T - C R U IS E P A P ER W O R K , E A T AT B U L L F IG H T - P A R T IE S - T R A N S F E R S C I T Y T O U R - G IF T S & M O R E c a l l s a l l y s h e p h e r d 351-8908 332-0866 U N IO N C A F E T E R IA P 1 $100 D B posit D u b Jan. 15 — - SUSIE W E IL - W O NDERS 353-2368 D E P O S IT HOLDS YOUR R E S E R V A T IO N Basem ent of the Union T R A V E L M A T E S TOURS BOX 194 M T . C L E M E N S ( 3 l3 ) -4 6 8 -3 5 5 l W ednesday, January 1 0, 1 9 6 8 O THE DAILY NEWS, GREENVILLE, MICHIGAN Montoya first in Jan. series Guitarist C arlos Montoya will are available at the Union or at the door. mm ■ W IT H H FOOD perform tonight as part of the Travel film s are also Included MSI) Lecture-Concert Series. In the January schedule. A native of Madrid, Montoya JUST A FEW BLOCKS FROM CAMPUS AT L ectu rers Include Dick Reddy will play his own arrangements with films of ‘‘Adventurous Swit­ and original compositions In the CllflDDFDC rilD Auditorium at 8:15 p.m. zerland" on Ja n . 13: John A rm - . strong, "Ja m a ica ,” J a n .2 0 ;C lif­ onurrcno min nextdoortofrandor 3301 e a s t MICHIGAN a v e . BUYS The National B allet of Canaaa ford Kamen, “Egypt —The Gold­ will entertain at 8:15 p.m. Jan. 18-19 In the Auditorium. The en Land,” Jan. 26 and “Around IP E N 8 A .M .-1 0 P .M . M O N thru S A T . O P E N S U N D A Y S 10 A .M .-7 P .M . the Bay of N aples," narrated by Canadian c o mp a ny , under the Arthur Wilson, Jan . 2?. direction of Celia Franca, will FRESH G RA D E A All lectures are at 8 p.m. in perform two ballets by T sch al- the Auditorium. T i c k e t s are kovsky. WHOLE available at the door. On Jan. 18, the group will The Museum’s new exhibit de­ present "Swan Lake:*’ the per­ picts Michigan’ s lumbering his­ formance on Jan . 19 will feature tory. Museum hours are 9 a.m . to "The Nutcracker Suite.” 5 p.m., Monday through Friday, Theatre actor Walter Slezak and 1 to 5 p.m., Saturday and will portray England’s monarch, Sunday. Henry II, In the Broadway com­ An exhibit of Contemporary edy, 'T h e Lion In W inter,” at Intaglio Prints will open Satur­ 8:15 p.m. Jan . 22 in the Audi­ C H O IC E O F O R A N G E O R G R A P E day at Kresge Art Center. The torium. Authored byJam esG old- display will show concepts of the man. the comedy was named one IntagRc- p r sc t s s- ’whteb. 4*- sim­ of the Ten B est Plays of the 1965- ila r to linoleum block and relief 66 season. printing. S M A L L BACKS A T T A C H E D 3 V A R IE T I E S - HERRUD On Jan. 25, the Norman Luboff Gallery hours a re 9 a.m. to 8 OZ. W T. Choir will present a concert of melodies from Bach to blues. Tickets for a ll Lecture-Con­ 12 p.m. and 1 to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday, 7 to 9 p.m. Tues­ FRYER LEGS SLI. COLD MEATS PKG. day evening, and 2 to 5 p.m. IS M A L L BACK & LEGS A T T A C H E D H E R R UD cert Series events are available 10 O Z . W T . Saturday and Sunday. at the Union Ticket Office or at the door. Two faculty recita ls by MSU FRYER BREASTS SMOKY LINKS PKG. Department of Music members F i l m entertainment for Jan ­ .will also be given In January. E C K R IC H uary includes "Doctor Faustus” 1 Q T - s t a r r i n g Richard Burton and T h e faculty String T rio will per­ form Jan . 26. Flutist Alexander SM0R6AS PACK LB. h o z . Elizabeth Taylor. The film will Murray will perform Jan . 30. E C K R IC H CAN be presented at 7:30 p.m. Jan. Both programs will be held at 3 OZ. WT. 11-12 in the Auditorium. On Jan. 16-17 a double feature 8:15 p jn . In the Music Audi­ CHIPPED MEATS PKG. torium and are open to the public BLACKPORT with aUkranianfilm, “ Shadows,'' at no charge. 2 LB. and the Russian film, "W el­ come, Kostya," will be shown Abram 's Planetarium will pre­ sent the sky show, "F ro m Chaos HAM LOAF PKG. at 7:30 p.m. in the Auditorium. ¡Q U A R T E R E D PESCHKE S L IC E D into Order —TheSolarSystem .” 'T h e Agony and the Ecstasy” yUi W presented Jan . 23-24 In the Auditorium. Presentations are scheduled at 8 p.m. Fridays, at 2:30 and 8 p.m. Saturdays and at 2:30 and 4 p.m. FRYERS LB. L1NCH MEATS LB. Tickets for the filrfi series Sundays. P O L L Y AN N A L E A N ,C E N T E R CUT Storms grip East, cause 5 0 deaths PORK BREAD 1 -L B . LOAVES CHOPS P O L L Y ANNA • I LB. rP O u Li LnY AN NA ASST. a B y T h e A s s o c ia te d P r e s s to three Inches along the upper Ohio River Valley from West POTATO BREAD 4 V SWEELMUS FOR 390 Winter's wrath continued in Virginia as fa r north as Michi­ P O L L Y ANNA SESAME P O L L Y AN NA F R . C R E M E lb: the Northeast Tuesday after In­ gan. Freezing rains and sleet tense cold plunged the mercury made highways treacherous from VIENNA BREAD ¿¿Jj 290 FRIED PUFFS fob 390 far below zero. Snow, sleet and Louisiana to Appalachia and FRESH, M E A T Y FIR S T C U T P O L L Y AN NA JUNIOR R EG . 65c P O L L Y ANNA rain rambled through Appalachia northern Alabama and Georgia. and Into the Deep South. More than 50 deaths have been of Schools were closed in parts Georgia and Kentucky. There SPUE HIS PORK CHIPS LB. HAMBURG RUNS 12 PACK 290 LEMON PIE 1 LB. 5 OZ. 590 attributed to the gripping cold was freezing rain In Atlanta STUFFED wave which stung the Midwest where the high temperature was REG, 53c C O U N T R Y FRESH 4c O F F - Q U A R T E R E D Saturday and moved through New only 30. PORK CHOPS LB. York and New England early The Ice Jam In Chesapeake Bay and Its tributaries was expected BREADED ■ COTTAGE I KEYKO 1 1 Tuesday. Schools closed in many parts to break with a moderation of LB. PORXCOTLETS of New England. Manchester, the cold spell which also extend­ N.H., was threatened by a heating ed to the Atlantic Seaboard. The shortage as the demand for temperature In Washington Tues­ W H O L E OR SHANK H A L F LB . CHEESE MARGARINE f t LB. 14 O Z . C T N , 1 LB. C A R T O N natural gas surged drastically. A day was 20 with snow. There was heavy rain In the FRESH HAM ROAST lb . 0 utllltv company spokesman said users had been asked to cut down Pacific Northwest. UJS, 26 In and “ the only letup will come Oregon was closed Tuesday aft­ when the cold snap b reaks." er mud and trees spilled on the Tuesday's low afternoon read­ road. Power was out for two ing was 13 below zero at Water­ hours In Gleneden Beach, O re. town, N.Y. The mercury plunged M E A T Y HOME S T Y L E SPARE RIBS lb W H O L E OR RIB H A L F DADM I nillC CUT * WRAPPED rUKIt S W IF T 'S P R E M IU M T R U - T E N D E R E D Luma f o r f r e e z e r s f r e e 0 to -51 In New York’s Adlron- WMSN appoints BEEF LIVER dacks early Tuesday. New York City commuters were plagued by interruption of 3 new directors subway service as the cold snap Resignation of three WMSN Jammed doors and switches. The staff m e m b e r s brought new LB . L IM IT I, PLE ASE - BIG E New Haven Railroad commuter appointments effective at the be­ line service was disrupted by the ginning of the term and Ja n . 15. ICE CREAM cracking of a power line in the se­ M O N E Y SAVOR B E E F A A . MONEY M O N E Y SAVOR B E E F The all-campus r a d i o station GAL LON vere cold. has appointed John Shoemaker. A fresh snowstorm dropped one Lathrup Village sophomore, as radio board chairman. His ap­ CUBE STEAKS LB. 890 STEW MEAT LB. CTN. pointment Is effective Ja n . 15. R E G . 150 S P A R T A N F R O Z E N 4 V A R IE TIES FRESH & GOOD Lumbermen seek Resignation of P eter Sorum , R o c h e s t e r , Minn., s e n i o r C H IC K E N , B E E F wood export halt WASHINGTON (JP) - The lum­ ber industry and union leaders threatened Tuesday to go to fed­ b r o u g h t an opening for the position. A p p o i n t e d as new network manager is John DeGroot, Farm­ ington senior. He Is replacing POT PIES TURKEY 8 O Z. W T. EACH COOKIES SI 29 VALUE - maxw ell 12 TO 14 O Z . W T . PKGS. HOUSE FOR eral court if the government won’t Ken Glmbel, Southfield senior. INST. COFFEE T h i s appointment b e c a m e ef­ agree to.halt vast shipments of ra w timber from U.S.-owned fective at the beginning of winter BOB W H IT E JA JL FOOD KIN G 10 O Z . W T . lands to Japan. term . JAR Japanese buyers have bid tim­ ber prices up double and already Thom Carman, Chicago Junior, Is the new central station mana­ SHORTENING 3 LB. CAN 4 0 Ç SALAD DRESSING Ä« put 27 U.S. sawmills out of busi­ ger. His new management posi­ tion replaces David Shinn,Leeks- SPARTAN ness and wiped out more than vllle, N .C., junior. G O L D E N R IP E SPA R TAN 4,000 American Jobs, said the National Forest Products Asso­ According to Paul Arthur, Oak 5 K I D N E Y BE ANS, GREEN & WHITE LIMAS, BANANAS ciation and the AFL-CIO C ar­ Park sophomore, other changes GREEN PEAS EXTRA )RK AND BE A N S, penters Union. are also pending. It Is hoped that MIXED V EG ET A B LE S WMSN will become affiliated with FANCY S P AG ME T T ! “ 1 think we’r e going to come 0 up with some ghost towns out the ABC radio network and trans­ mit news at :55 and :25, Arthur LB. 2 Lb*. 29C t h e r e , " said the carpenters’ treasurer, P eter Terzlck, of the said. sawmill closings in Washington However, bottlenecks In cost plans and communications have C A U F . S W E E T - 138 SIZE and Oregon. U n i o n and Industry leaders have talked with White House, c a u s e d a delay In th'e final decision. Arthur said that WMSN NAVEL ORANGES ««. BAKING POTATOES officials would know by Wednes­ YOUR CHOICr Or V ¡. . ¡State Department, Treasury De- partment and U.S. forestry offi­ day whether or not they will be F L O R ID A - 125 SIZE IDAHO S, H E S S L E R S MiG c ia ls , butTerzlck said they have an ABC affiliate. ¡received little more than lip [service so far. IR U SH l TEMPLE ORANGES DOZ. .BLE, OR CHICKEN RICE OR CHICKEN [ " I f It has to be legal action. It »will be legal action. It it has to jbe legislation. It will be legisla­ Alpha O m ega Colony OF U .S . NO . 1 JO N A T H A N OR 3 KAN SOUP 10 1/2 O Z. WT. 90 NOODLE SOUP m £ 90 tio n ," Terzick said of proposals ,to halt the exports at least tem - T H E T A XI 351-0665 MclNTOSH APPLES ¡porarUy. 10 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Wednesday, January 10, 1968 a« t m i « / *f' C tN T tt SA YS W E L C O M E BACK! T R U S T Y O U H A D A F IN E V A C A T IO N Clark’s group plays clean rock, too By STUART ROSENTHAL ing a Sigma Nu function that he mate dance, rock and soul band. Nonetheless, If y o u «1 joy hav­ State News R e v ie w e r conceived of the **Hot N uts." T h eir format is flexible. ART STUDENTS Contrcry to currently circu­ lating rumors, “ Doug Clark and "T h e fraternity had this three " I f It takes rock to get over,” piece group," he recalled. "And says Clark, "g et over with rock. ing your proclivities expointed, "Grandmother’«’ ’ and the "H at Nuts" make a good pair for thoae the H o t Nuts" have n e v e r ap­ everybody was going crazy over If it takes the album stuff to get over 21 with credentials to prove C h o o s e Y ou r (hem, but I just didn't like the over, get over with the albums. peared in concert attired in any It. garb In addition, or instead of, group. To me they sounded bad, Just so you get over to the au­ ART SUPPLIES their usual red uniforms. ya know, real bad." dience. They’re the ones you gotta satisfy. They're the ones that's Doug Clark, one of the two b r o t h e r s who began the "Hot "S o I asked the social c h a ir­ paying. If you don't get over to Rocky behind F r o m East Lansing*« Most Complsts Sslsctlon man, ' Wh a t c h a paying these them, you Just get you another Nuts" ca reer back in 1956 at • PR IN TS Chapel Hill, N.C., was dividing guys?’ and he said *$ 6 5 ."’ " ‘ $65’ I said. . . ‘just for the gig somewhere." Doug's brother, John, who does party c h o ic e , his attention between relating the three of them’ ? " history of the "Hot Nuts" and the moat of tht vocals on the albums, • TR A V EL PO STER S pepperonl pizza which he was It seems that the band was serves as business manager for seeks unity • FR A M ES attempting to consume between playing "Hot N uts," which, Doug the "H ot Nuts" and acts as un­ shows at ' ^ G r a n d m o t h e r s , " assured me, was a very old song. official historian of the combo. ALBANY, N.Y. UP)— Gov. Nel­ AST CVNTt* Across F r o m Ths Horn. E c. Bldg. 3 l9 Rlver where the group is now appear­ With respect to difficulty with son A. Rockefeller reaffirmed The idea stuck and that sumfher Clark got a set of drums, and soon the law, John can recount myriad his support for Gov. Romney for ing nightly. When Clark was in the seventh he and his brother were singing experiences r a n g i n g from a the Republican presidential nom­ L A D IE S ' c A M PU S I ¿ L jé u DAY grade, he werked after school and an weekends at various fraternity "H ot Nuts" all over campus. ban an advertising to a confron­ Although the "H ot Nuts" are tation with a d ry 's police force. ination Tuesday but said he would heck Richard M . Nixon if Nixon should bo named the OOP stand­ I IwroWMSTlQW » M S -— 44 heuses at the University of North notorious for the blatant unsub­ Always, ha said, they conform to 60C to Carolina, at whatever odd Jobs he tleties of their albums, they are the wishes of the guardians of the ard -bearer against President H E L D O V E R ! 2nd Week Johnson. 6 P .M . could m uster. It was while work­ also quite competent as a legitl- law and of tha m orality of the Facture 1:10-3:15-5:20-7:25-9:30 cities In which they appear. At the seme tim e. Rockefeller In one town In northern Vir­ told a radlo-TV panel he "had ELIZABETH TAYLOR MSU INTERNATIONAL FILM SERIES ginia the Juvenile Board of the village turned out fo r e "Hot no d esire" to become personally Involved In the race to r the Re­ publican nomination and said he Nuts" hop with the local con­ MARLON BRANDO f r o m th e m a n w h o y v ro te stabulary, who placed themselves ^ th e e p y w h o c a m e in f r o m t h e c o l d ”! prominently on-STíge Cu rentini •*/ believed that party unity was e s - i n- -• a * , «V • ¿0 ' O v . N tH É ja m H u s n w ^ s m fw m o o u c n o N ______ the musicians that . "Hot Nuts" He commented in the wake of songs would not be tolerated^ pdlis. that' show him as the Re­ REFLECTIONS In fact, Sunday night's per­ formance waa run In expurgated publican with the best chance of beating Johnson next November.. Under questioning. Rockefeller I IN A GOLDEN edition to comply with Lansing's 'blue laws’ which prohibit dancing and other lewd activities on the said that "only as a last re s o r t" would he agree to be the fa v o r ite Sabbath. son ‘candidate for New York's M u c h of the **Hot Nuts" ma­ 92-member delegation to the terial is t r a d i t i o n a l , and that wW cir-tr nor is written by John Hot rock Republican national convention. Asked whether h*_ intended to C lark. . . . is the musical f a r e at G ra n d m o th e r'» where have a "so lid delegation," Rock­ "Everywhere we go, though," ‘ ‘ Doug C la rk and the Hot N u ts " are appearing through efeller replied with a sm ile, he says, "people have a song or Saturday. " Y e s , s i r ." v e r s e or something for you. When asked whether he would That's where we get most of our erlck to the Hot Nuts, you might But don’t count on It being support form er Vice President m aterial. People even send it address a missive to: acknowledged. J o h n says that Nixon, he said, “ If the party through the m a il." John Clark they have stacks at m aterial that should decide to choose Dick So if you want to send some P.O. Box 725 they will never be able to clean Nixon, then I would support the James mason • maximilian schell choice j i n g l e or nefarious lim - Chapel Hill, N.C. up enough to use on their albums. candidate of the party." harriet andersson • harry andrews and Simone signoret ps "elsa" Students to meet music by Quincy Jones • associate producer denis o ' deli screenplay by paul dehn • produced and directed by Sidney lumet technicolor* Make plans now for next summer. In the loo sest sen s e h e Is h e r h u s b a n d *.. 'bestseller'author end In the lo o sest w a y she Is his w ife I T h u rs., F r l.-J a n . 11 & 12 - 7:30 p.m. at Symposium University Auditorium MSU students and faculty will ' have the opportunity to exchange DtfKCHD0« NOMCI0If OCMOONTh€xOvtk0« opinions with Harvey Cox, author CO•tácameI BRIAN KEITH JULIE HARRIS JOHNHUSTON«RtfSTARI*CARSONMc4C3&1O CULLERS A d m iss io n 50C of the best seller, The Secular KNtNMiIf CHAPMANMORTMERwdGUOVSMLL I hht Bv C ity , and H a r v a r d theologian, TECHNICOLOR* PANA' SCVKNART8 Because of t delaxJn processing the American premlttm . 3 p jn . Monday In connectlonwlth k — "fjlfc.** Ib lV o c tlo rl^ ^ ^ of " S r . F a u a tu a "^ re have bean forced to postponeOL y -the ■U n t v o r a l t y College Sym­ ’ E l l WarTaeR-Anne ^Jïicksoll " T h * T ig e r Makes ö l t ” showSg of l|he film . We expect to skpw it in spring teiSR» i posium for 1968, In preparation for the discus­ sion with Cox there will be an Informal meeting with Roy T , Matthews, assistant professor of humanities, and V in e a n t Lom­ bardi, i n s t r u c t o r of social s c i e n c e , concerning the phi­ losophy of Cox. This discussion will be 8 p jn . Thursday In the Shaw Hall lower lounge. The Cox dlscusslonwlllbeheld in the East Shaw Hall lower lounge. . . . . earn credits in Europe! T O D A Y F ro m 7:00 P . M . MSU AMLEC offers courses in: F ea tu re at 7:25 & 9:35 THRILLING I BEAUTIFUL I Course Course Number Term Hours —CUE Magazine WARREN M ILLER'S Political Science 455 and 490 10 Humanities Graduate Education 241 and 242 804-E; 882 ; 883 8 9 A Language credit courses available in French, German and Spanish. aiimEafc. FRIDAY Contact AAALEC 353-8921 sim onE SICnORET Why should you Bocauso tha guy wa’ra talking So make it a point to meet Alcoa’s A M L E C office s are located at 107 C en te r for International G a m e s about ia a collaga racruitar from recruiter. Ha’s a confidence man P r o g r a m s F o r O v e rse a s Study Inform ation S e rv ic e Phone 353-892C confide In a guy Alcoa. And tha only way to play it you dan really trust. you’ve never met la honaatly. ENGINEERS He’ll be on campus in a couple of Interview date: before? days. And hare’s what we recom­ mend you do at the interview. Tuesday, January 23 First, lay your carda on tha table. R F C O M M U N IC A T IO N S , Is one of the leading designers and m a n ufactu rers of high f r e ­ Tall him what kind of work would quency SSB communications equipment. The Company also designs, produces, and sells really turn you on. An Equal Opportunity Employer o th e r specialized equipment, including high power t r a n s m it te r s , automatic antenna coup­ Than, sit back and listen while he A Plane for Progress Company le rs , tran sp ortab le communications systems and underw ater sound detection equipment. explains how your plans figure into Alcoa’s plans. (You'll be 9- R F C O M M U N IC A T IO N S is located In Rochester, New Y o rk , a com m unity of 700,000. This surprised how versatile c om m u nity enjoys one o f the highest standards of living. It Is located 50 minutes by a ir Aluminum Company of America -from New Y o rk , an hour by T hruw ay f r o m Syracuse and Buffalo, and within a com fo rtab le can be.) days d riv e fro m D e tro it, Boston, M o n tre a l, Washington, and Pittsburgh. Campus interview s w ill be conducted on Monday, January 15, 1968. Challenging positions are available fo r E l e c t r i c a l, M echanical, and Industrial E n g in e ers . We would welcome additional In q u iries f r o m engineering students. W R IT E : D ire c to r of Person n el R F C O M M U N IC A T IO N S , IN C . 1680 U n iv e rsity Avenue R och este r, New Y o r k 14610 Change for the better with Alcoa □ALCOA * AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER Wednesday, January 10, 1968 H s Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan STARTING T A R L I Ï E ’H A m N B M 1OP Y BAR T O N IG H T ALL COLOR 'Avengers’ returns IT H E N O . I H IT F I L M O F 1967! M U jM iH r W in B w M l - ____________ Tonight m arks the national re­ buck Is Ms d sy ." Nsw tbs Steed «■«U M , e re rsm lsg frem the S ID N E Y P O IT IE R t u r n of "T he Avenge rs " to P a ris hsuss af P ie rre Cerdln and American television (locally, c s s bs bsugbt by the public, but they will be aeen Thursday at five d istin ctly Stood smMsms of 10 p«m.), an event which must bowler bet sad furled umbrella qualify as the video "happening a re being p rasar ved. of the y e e r." JAMES CLAVELL'S MacNee is m arried (to the PRODUCTION OF The aeries draws much of Its w o m e n who played the first carpos to appear on "T h e Avan- u t a m a m m a m a i f J U B " International popularity from Its sura of "klnidness," an lnda- ,« ; ■ ) .* is H o w U AT * 0 7 - REPEATED LATE - a .UMUwj C finable quality which m ixes sex appeal, violence, high satire and and wine and anJoys all of the tra­ COUMMFCnSS m ystery with imaginative pro­ By STUART ROSENTHAL ditional English pastlm as. duction, placing apecial emphasis Stood r opr e t onto fits p ast, die ALSO Stala News Ravlawar on cam era angle end editing. pomp and tbs reflnmnant of tra­ No sm ell portion of this "klnkl- swashbuckler s a s RatUn H e e d . lng L aertes in the production of ditional m»g»— «i- Plana R lm sm - bodlas (and quite well) dm con­ 1 K ■H B MNb NT L ■ At 9:20OnlyI n e ss" Is derived from the enig­ H is fathsr was "S h rim p " M so- "H am let" which won B ritain 's Nee, s w all known rscab orse first Geld Modal fa r television tem porary swinging lmafp M the EXTRAI COLOR CARTOON 6 SHORT $1 m atic nature of the principal tra in ar, s profession which Pat­ dram s. Since that tim e, he has Is le s . M ars an hm ch aracters, end of the perform­ e rs who portray them. And al­ rick sa cs wished to follow— appeared la aver 40 television though Diana Rlgg, la her role but sHmlaaiod s s s possibility p l o y s , s CsnsdUn tsleo srles, ivenger s s M rs. Pool, the ysuag widow, when he rsschsd Ms adult sta­ film s such as ‘*The Elusive Pim­ has attracted m ore attention than tu re of 6* 2" . pernel" (with Ms cousin, David any actress on American talov^ Hip f i r s t stags experience N iv en ), “ Battle af the River sion In recen ty ears. Patrick M c- cam e la the annusi school play P la te " and "L a s G irls." Ha has P atrick MacNee, a« Avenger John Stood, appears to at Eaton, in which ha played also worked the Shakespeare cir­ Nee, as John Stood, is the maliw bo m omentarily In a rut. This scene, however, from Quean V ictoria. L a ter he played cuit with The Old Vic p layers. stay of the ca st. the series which returns this Thursday night, Suc­ Le u rla in "L ittle Women. As Steed, MacNee personally ceeds adm irably Incc^pturingabitof "The Avengers" In fact, MacNee, in the seven In the Navy, he cemmanded a designed and chose all of the tongue-In-cheek s p irit. ^ y ears that "T h e Avengers" has' torpedo be st, but was 111 with arcane agent's clothes crestinge been a hit in England! ñw fiüf SWS3 I 5 » ‘~ (8 » -riigig th e BoaT «vegsncy ihiVwi’' hiiapli Ml i»y i t s three different partners am bit was blown up causing heavy c a s - gay w aistcoats, skirted jackets, due to Initiate a fourth sometime ualtlea. c r a v a t s and narrow trousers Not impressed at first sight, In M arch, After the w ar, he resumed Ms worn by Ms father the racehorse As has been the p ractice of the stags car e y with s p ert In Ok* train er, whs, ss the British press lvler’ s "H am let," later play- release puts It, "w as a notable x:1 program , the role of Steed was Sandburg’s widow admits created around MacNee’a own personality an d ta ste s. Steed NEW YORK OF) — C trl w as a very easy person to live seem s to be a projection of the Sandburg's Tuesday with; he was s u c h a warm­ man MacNee. He soya he wishes fAS7>SPARTAM*TWIN*THEATRE sfef w atn’t very Impressed whoa hearted m an." . M rs. Sandburg and her broth­ he could be "An unashamed . she first bwc the poet and, when- rom antic who would have en­ they got m prrled. “ wb bad as e r, Edward Stslchen, the photog­ rapher, were on h an d to help joyed the life of a Regency buck agreement either of us could W E S T open a collection of Sandburg In the time of King George in." quit.'* MacNee’s family tra ce s Itself pTODAY AT 2 -4 -7 -9 :3 0 1 TONIGHT AT 8 P X T Neither of them did because, memorabilia at the Hallmark G alleries. to the Hastings family who claim ALL STAR CAST a s M rs. Sandburg, 84, said, "h e among their ancestors such It’s Ju li« “VALLYO F Andrew s a s IRUSHI Alpha Omega Colony THE DO LLS” "THOROUGHLY W E D N E S D A Y , J A N . 10 IN TECHNICOLOR MODERN OF FROM THE GREAT j M IL L IE " The Independent Classic That T H ET A XI Took The MOVIE WORLD B y Storm 3 51 -0 66 5 BEST-SELLER IN TECHNICOLOR 131 BOGUE 337-9091 F R E E PARKING! FR E E PARKING DaviJ“' L /Sq 7hi nP'ACuV^ < S b V7V1T' V¿'¡Oh C/9 V / / , 4 V PAUL v _ 08 W ells Hall 7 & 9 p.m.-50ç Voluntary Donatior MAW TODAY I . . from 1:00 P X . At 1:10-3:14-5:18-7:20-9:25 LAM BS D A Ÿ V . ■HU momm i in/ oimiation^4M "64M 1:C P X . A ? A f f o l l i £> ¡til ; V V 7 7 oí 1 7 t W V N’ -'N LSblP I Hi oiPUT'0* ^ T h e y ’r e y o u n g . . . t h e y ’r e in l o v e . . . a n d t h e y k ill p e o p l e . W ARREN BEATTY TUES.-WED.-THURS. JANUARY 16-17-18 FAYE TAT E * P . O . , am m pom iATioN ► 3 3 2 * 5 0 1 7 1 P 1 J N A W 7 A Y I de*e*t B •wuiMoeBMentemi C N N I E Neeii|MRK«niMHiiMMM(w l^ C B Y C E Teenmcocow Fwoe wemisw onoe-aovan arts M s Coming— "C o p -O u t" James Mason HURRY . , . L ast 2 Days! Shows 1:00, 3:45.6:25 , F R ID A Y : 1 HESHARPEST SECRETABENT OFTHEMM Beautiful girls get stuck on him... Bad guys get struck by him You'll dig Dagger! IM ’M M InM BTRO CO LO R r. 1 Î Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Wednesday, January 10, 1968 Marines prepare against spring DMZ assault ¿AlOON OR— Despite m assive American bombardments end With 25,000North Vietnamese and Viet Cong troops reported In the gades of the U.S. Amerlcal Division end e brigade of Korean ma­ U £ . and South Vietnamese troops fanned out around Saigon In a ground operations, U.S. M arine officers figure North Vietnam is two northernmost provinces, Quang T r l and Thus Thien, It appears rines. hunt for Communist battalions that bloodied allied units for two capable today of launching another m ajor offensive against South likely the Marines will move soon to reinforce those provinces Last April there were only 18 maneuver battalions, all M arine, nights running. , Vietnam's northern fron tier. with additional maneuver battalions. These are highly mobile units. In the five provinces. Now there a re 19 M arine, 15 U.S. Army and In one sweep 19 m iles south of Saigon, U.S. 9th tafantry Division A new Rqd drive is considered likely In the 1st Corps area this Additional maneuver battalions would not necessarily mean fresh four South Korean, soldiers sloshed through the mud of the Saigon River Delta hunting spring after dissipation of the northeast monsoon storm clouds now troops from the United States. They likely would come from two Ten of the Marine battalions a re In Quang T r l Province, which four battalions of guerrillas that faded away late Monday after a 10- blanketing the frontier. sources: fronts on the DMZ. hour fight. Contacts were sporadic. L ast May wee the bloodiest month of the war with 1,100 Ameri­ "T h e enemy has placed emphasis on the north and has seen fit — From static defensive outposts such as Con Thien, which South to concentrate large numbers of combat troops in the DMZ a r e a ," In a second sweep, South Vietnamese troops reported killing nine cans killed and 6,000 wounded, mostly In fighting just below the dem ilitarized zone. Vietnamese fqrces ere taking over from the M arines. a senior Marine officer said, "T h e enemy has the capabilities to guerrillas Monday as they pulled beck after raiding the provincial Sizable units of the enemy operating toi the five northern provinces —From Marine units now based south of Da Nang In the three make m ajor efforts against the DMZ a re a , kdepends on what price capital of Khlem Cuong, 21 m iles northwest of Saigon. and ethers acro ss the DMZ a re considered in De Nang, the Marine lower provinces of the corps a rea. The Marine areas of respon­ he's willing to pay," In the southern part of the 1st Corps are a , units of the Amerlcal NU F R O N T I headquarters, to pose the new th reat. sibility below Da Nang have been gradually taken up by Army b ri- Marine Intelligence sources estimate Communist troop strength in all the 1st Corps area at 50,000 men— 33,000 main force and Division reported killing 81 of the enemy In intermittent clashes. 17,000 guerrillas. To the south In coastal Binh Dinh Province, South Korea's Tiger American and other allied elements total more than 100,000. Division listed 304 enemy dead In an operation tha began Dec. 17 Elsewhere In the war: and still is going on. J oin l e No -fire zone NU IDEAS ENTER HERE restrictions FßÄTERNnyAGVITY MEN. . . a . . THAT YOU abandoned WAR ZONE C , Vietnam UR— A narrow no-fire zone which —• BECBNE American commanders once ob­ /$ß- served along the Cambodian bol­ der has vanished beneath the r s r —z— r-: tlVAOpiip^.q^CiyiiBaun^rit .WfrUi>a»«y d o BETTERKENT Infiltration. ' The UJ5. Command has evi­ NU' dently removed all restrictions on operations however close to GNU- WSOMETHING the line. American soldiers now operate dally right up to the fron­ tie r . MKT NU. PEpPlfc The U.S. Command Informally S S » Imposed the buffer zone upon Its units In 1965. k sometimes dif­ fered In application fo rtlrp o w er and for ground units and was often loosely observed. In the virtually unpopulated area of War Zone C , which has long been a Red jungle sanc­ tuary northwest of Saigon, there ANEW NH hûUSC. e r e probably more Communist troops today than there were m ore than a year ago. Commanders on the spot show little hope that the current mis­ sion to Cambodia by President 'stem mu FAATIRNITY THETA DELTA CHI Johnson's special envoy,Ambas- sador Chester Bowles, will help much. eau. 331-2SO i F O R R ID E S C A L L Apart from the possible right of hot pursuit— which many unit ¿ T i roo. &Mu Ripes: 332-2563 commanders don't feel they will get—th e men in the field simply 351-9648 look forward to more and more jungle battles so long as the Com­ 332-5456 139 MILEY ST. « 332-2564 munists a re willing to brave the fantastic American firepower Z ’A M I A M I A M I A M there. A M I A M E A M E M E A N THIS IS RUSH AT ZBT E A M E A E A M E A M E AM A M E A M E A M E M E A M E A M E A E A M E A M E AM A M E A M E A M E M E A M E A M E A E A M E A M E AM A M E A PARLO R U N IO N M E A M FOR RIDES E A M E C a ll 353-1404 353-1405 A M E A h IE M E A M Z A ri Z A E AMEA A M E A M E AM M E A M E Zeta Beta Tau C a ll F o r rid e s M E A M Z A M E A 855 G R O V E S T . 332-3565 332-3566 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Wednesday, January 10, 1968 13 ri* i n i , " \ Why Pay More! Why Pay More iM D f ö The Cycling Club will meet at Placement Bureau 7:30 tonight In 208 Men's LM. Bldg. Elections will be discussed. Students must register In per­ the colleges of arts and letters, Chemical engineering (B,M,D), m W in t e r • • a son t t least two days prior to the communication arts, social sci­ civ il, mechanical, agricultural Spartan Women's League will date of an Interview. ence, and accounting (B,M) and an d metallurgical engineering speech (B). (B,M ), chemistry (D) and elec­ ìt ìe ij e r J hold rush at 7:30 tonight In the Wednesday, Jan . 17: Battle Creek Public Schools: Household Finance Corpora­ trical engineering (B,M). Main Lounge, Student Services McDonnell Douglas Corpora­ t h r i f t y a c re s Bldg. Early and later elementary edu­ tion: All m ajors, all colleges (B). * * * cation, physical education, art, Johnson Service Company: tion: E lectrical, mechanical, civ­ il and chemical engineering The Chess Club will hold a music, special education, men­ Civil engineering (B) and electri­ tally handicapped, physically cal and mechanical engineering (B.M.D). business meeting and elections United Air Lines: Mechanical at 8:30 tonight in 310 Bessey handicapped, speech corrpction (B,M ). Metropolitan Life Insurance and electrical engineering (B,M), Hall. The room will open at 7 and remedial reading, business accounting (B) and hotel, restaur­ p.m. education, E n g l i s h , Industrial Company: All majors of the col­ leges of business, arts and let­ ant and Institutional management * * * a rts, mathematics and general science (B,M). te rs , communication arts and so­ (B,M). Ranger One, an ROTC group, will hold a smoker at 7 tonight C arrie r Air Conditioning Com­ cial science (B,M). In 11 Demonstration Hall. pany: Mechanical engineering Philip M orris Incorporated: Summer Employment Interviews * * * (B,M) and electrical and chemi­ Accounting and financial admin­ A Free University c o u r s e , cal engineering (B). istration, economics, manage­ Monday, Jan. 15: "New Theology," will be held at Continental CanCompany.lnc.: m e n t , marketing, transporta­ All m ajors of the colleges of arts tion administration and labor and Leo A, Daly Company: Junior 7:30 tonight at the Wesley Foun­ and senior civil engineering ma­ and letters, social science and industrial relations (B,M). M e n 's Ja c k e ts dation. • • • business (B,M) and all majors Naval Ship Research and De­ jo r s . v e l o p m e n t Center: Chemical, Four-Way Lodge, Inc.: Various The Home Economics Teach­ of the colleges of engineering and ing Club will meet at 7 tonight packaging technology, and natural civil, electrical, mechanical and camp counseling positions. metallurgical engineering, phys­ W.R. Grace and Company, C ry- In 101 Home Economics Bldg. science (B,M,D). ovac Division: Accounting and "Opportunities in Business with a General Dynamics, E lectric ic s, mathematics and chemistry financial administration, s e n ­ Teaching D egree" will be dis­ Boat division: C ivil, electrical (B.M.D). io rs and above. And cussed. Refreshments will be and mechanical engineering Roche Laboratories: All ma­ jo rs, all colleges (B,M). Tuesday and Wednesday, Jan . 16 served. (B,M,D), metallurgical and ma­ * .* • terial science engineering (B,M) Sangamo E lectric Company: and 17: Gannett.. Nevapapec«. J w n - The Promenaders will hold ana management ;B;'. ' ■ mechanical engineering (B,M,D). nallsm m ajors. lessons and open dancing at 7 General E lectric Company:. tonight in 34 Women's LM. Bldg. Marketing (M). U.S. Geological Survey: Civil,' Thursday, Jan. 18; -sanitary and agricultural engi­ Win Schuler's, Incorporated: John Hancock Mutual Life In­ Anyone interested Is Invited. ALL- C o a ts Hotel, restaurant and institution­ * • • surance Company: All m ajors of neering (B,M,D). The Fisheries and Wildlife Wednesday and Thursday, Jan . al management Juniors. 17 and 18: Friday, Jan . 19: Club will meet at 7:30 tonight In the Activities Room, Natural Humble Oil and Refining Co., Morton International, Inc.: Ju ­ WEATHER Resources, • * # Travel tax Esso Production Research Co., niors and above in chemistry, Esso Research and Engineering botany, physiology, zoology and Co. and Enjay Chemical Co.: chemical engineering. * O u r entire W inter stock reduced The Judo Club will meet at 7 tonight iii the Judo Room, Men's may cause * Ski style s, knee lengths, su rco d ts LM. Building. T here will be a * Not every style in every p ric e o r size demonstration of judo and se lf- defense. cancellations * A ll siz e s sm a ll to large, 36 to 46 • • • Union Board announced Tues­ The Varsity Club will meet at day that should President John­ * O u r Reg. p rice $9.97 to $23.97 7:30 tonight In the Varsity Club son's proposed restrictions on Room, Spartan Stadium. Col. Ar­ overseas travel make the cost thur Holmes, head of the Michigan of going to Europe prohibitive, Selective Service, will speak on it will give those who book pas­ the draft. All members should sage on their seven low-cost attend. * * • group flights to London the option to cancel without penalty even $ 1 Q 0 0 $ 1 0 0 0 $ 1 4 00 Blue Key, national men’s hon­ after the set cancellation date orary, will hold an Initiation of April 19. meeting at 6 tonight at the Coral M rs. Maureen Berger, activ­ Gables. ities director of Union Board, * * • said that If the government im­ “ S u p e r-S iz e ” Toothpaste B y New A n ti-P e r sp ira n t Sp ray Deodorant The Foods and Nutrition Club poses a tax on travel, Union will meet at 7:30 tonight in 9 Board will rule if it is pro­ Home Economics Bldg. hibitive and if so, refund full Jack Hartzell, food Inspector passage money to those who wish for the Federal Dept, of Agricul­ to cancel. ture, will speak. This decision was made by Colgate Arrid * « * * * Craven Tours, which handles the The Business Women’s Clul}» booking arrangements for the 4 fl. oz. size 8 3 /4 oz. wt. siz e will hold a luncheon meeting at flights. "M ost students go on a very 11:30 a.m . Je rry C esarz, from 200 off label 5 9 E -X -T -R -A D -R -Y 6 7 the League Budget Service of minimal budget anyway," said Southfield, will speak on "Bud­ Ian Craven, the agency director. geting and Management of "And if the government adds another (1 0 0 or more to the cost Celebrity Bras Sale Money." Sometimes w e ’ re square . . . * * * of g o i n g to‘ Europe, well, it Information on the European wouldn’t be fair to tell all these W e 'r e square when It comes to scholarship, study program offered by the kids, 'you’ve got to go.’ " building enduring friendships, p articip atin g C ir c le Stitched Perm anent P r e s s "A fte r April 19, the money American Language and Educa­ in campus and community activities , personal tional Center will be available at will a ll go to the a irlin e s," Cotton B r a “ K e e p -In -S h a p e ” said M rs. Craven, also with the finances, c a r e e r development, an AMLEC meeting at 3:15 p.m. but not in our social a ctivities . . . A "famous brand" b ra. C ir­ Amazing durable press fabric on the Union Sun Porch. agency. cle stitched cups; petal shaped holds Its shape and look fresh * * * Sign-ups for the flight begin flannel Inserts in undercup. through repeated machine Jan . 15 in the Union Board of­ O u r Luxurious House The Agricultural Economics Lastex Insert. Fiber allcotton- washing and drying. Lined: un­ fice. The full fare of (356 musfc (W e ll, Almost) WHITE ONLY Club will meet at 7:30 tonight In Elastic, Rayon, cotton, rubber. dercups for support. Dobby be paid at that time. STYLE 5201 Size: A—32 to 36 16 Agriculture Hall. Lawrence weavy decorated undercup. Witt, professor of agricultural Save lOf with coupon B—32 to 38 WHITE ONLY E lastic front Insert. Padded an- C—34 to 40 77« economics, will speak on "T h e Size: A --32 to 36 chorband. Fiber 65% polyester, T r ia n g le F r a te rn ity O P E N RUSH SI.13 World and the UJS.—The Back­ B— 32 to 38 35% cotton exclusive of decora­ ground of Development." Wednesday C— 34 to 40 tion. Save 20ÿ * * * 242 N. H arriso n January 10 with coupon The Acrobats Club will hold a C a ll 332-3563 F o r a Ride T I M E ; 7-10 meeting and workout from 7-9 E m b ro id e re d Cotton With Perm anent P r e s s tonight in the Jenison Gymna­ S - T - R - E - T - C - H Strap s “ K e e p -in -Sh a p e ” sium. Comfortable stretch straps With F ib e rfill Padding 1 \ won’t cut or bind. 2 -sectlon cups with lined undersections. Durable press fabric stays Networks deny fresh even after dozens of ma­ Delta Chi is Batiste elastic front in sert. F i­ chine washings. Soft fib er-fill ber; all cotton exclusive of dec­ padding. Elastic front Insert; TV 'equal tim e’ oration. Elastic: Rayon, cotton, rubber. padded anchorband. Fiber: 65% polyester, 35% cotton exclusive WHrTE ONLY Save 10£ with coupon to M cC arthy of decoration. WHrTE ONLY 77« Size: A— 32 to 36 WASHINGTON If — The three Save 2 0f Size: A --32 to 36 B— 32 to 38 major television networks, In let­ with coupon B —32 to 38 C --32 to 40 ters to the Federal Communica­ tions Commission, have refused ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ¡■ ■ ■ I to offer time to Sen. Eugene J . McCarthy, D-Minn., to answer telecast statements by P re si­ ¡20^7 I 0 SAVE“2o” with this coupon toward SAVE10‘ with this coupon toward : io< s dent Johnson. the purchase of _____ ¡0 * the purchase of McCarthy is seeking to give a 8 Perma P ress Keep In Shape’s 4 .4 8 Our Reg. 87ÿ rebuttal to points the President made in an interview broadcast by the three networks on televi­ sion and radio Dec. 19. Among I 8 BRA 1 3 3 Value > 1 .1 3 Any or all coupons redeemable with $5.00 purchase™ I 770 Any or a ll coupons redeemable with $5.00 purchase^ B or more excluding beer, wine, cigarette Ite m s " or more excluding beer, wine, cigarette items other things, Johnson suggested 01-==— “ or coupon items. or coupon items. t h a t McCarthy and Sen. Robert Lim it one per customer. Expires Sat.. Ja n . 13 F. Kennedy, D-N.Y., were work­ ing together politically, a con­ M etier & T h rifty A cres C ou pon M etier lhnit\ Actes Coupon tention both have denied. Mc­ Carthy also wants to have the networks broadcast his views on the Vietnam war which are op­ L a d ie s ’ Foundations posed to those of the President. All three networks said Mc­ Carthy has no real basis for seeking equal time u n d e r an FCC regulation requiring broad­ casters to provide equal oppor­ SAVING HOURS W eekdays 9 a.m . to 10 p.m. tunities to all candidates for the samet political office. The net­ works said the President is not officially a candidate. a new world of friendship Sundays 9 a.m . to 7 p.m. 5125 6200 & " I t is common knowledge that President Johnson has not yet W est South announced his candidacy for the presidential nomination of 1968," Saginaw P e n n sylvan ia fflE IJ E R the ABC letter said. The others took the same tack. All three networks previously had rejected requests for air time sent on behalf of McCarthy 351-8908 332-0866 th r if ty acres by his campaign manager, B la ir - Why Pay More Clark. 14 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Wednesday, January 10, 1968 SPORTS 'M’ cage record misleading?K By G A Y E L WESCH Michigan has lost six games, powerful than Illinois, and they’ve from Hamtramck, is the leading " I don’t know if we’ve got a State News Sports W r i t e r but the Wolverines have lost got as good personnel as any scorer on the team with a 19.6 guard who can handle him, but MSU’s basketball team, which to some elite teams. tram in the league,’’ Benington average. Stewart is second at probably Steve Rymal has the seems to make a habit of walking F o u r of Michigan's defeats raid. 15.9 and Sullivan is fourth at best chance.” into a hornets nest, may be hard were by trams ranked in the top "W e're catching them at a bad 10.2 points per game. Benington said he might start pressed to keep from getting ten in the nation (Houston, Ken­ tim e, too. After that loss to Wis­ Tied with Stewart at 15.9points 6-8 s e n i o r Je r r y G eistler to stung for the second time in tucky, Davidson and Duke) and consin they'll be tough to beat.’ ’ points per game is 6-4 guard Jim guard Tomjanovich. the conference Saturday when the last loss was a 77-75 deci­ The Wolverines, Benington Pitts, a player whom Benington G eistler’s other major assign­ they take on Michigan at Ann sion in the final minutes against Said, are probably the only team respects as much as Tomjano­ ment was against Michigan as a 'Arbor. Wisconsin on the Badgers* home in the league with three high vich. sophomore when heguardedCaz- The Wolverines are a much court. s c h o o l all-Am ericans in the "H e's a tough guard to defend zie Russell for a time in MSU’s stronger team than their 4-6 Few people gave the Wolver­ starting lineup. Forwards Rudy against because he’s so ta ll,’’ 86-77 overtime victory. overall record would indicate, ines much c h a n c e against Wis­ Tomjanovich and Bob Sullivan Benington said. " I f you put a Saturday will be the first game according to MSU Coach John consin at Madison, but Michi­ and center Dennis Stew art all guard on him they move him t< for MSU in Michigan’ s new $7 Benington. The facts support his gan was surprising in its play. earned the honor. the low post, where he played In million University Events Build­ J E R R Y GE IS T L E R case. "Michigan’s bigger and more Tomjanovich, a 6-7 sophomore high school. ing which seats close to 13,000. Gentle Ben FREE! FREEI UCLA (yawn) still No. 1 Ben Davidson, 6 -7 , 265 pound defensive end f o r the CAR WASH A F L champion Oakland R aid e rs , puts the crush on NEW YORK (UPI) --Undefeated While UCLA (10-0) was build­ New Y o rk Jet q u arterb ack (left) as smoothly as he UCLA a g a i n received a unan­ ing its ratings streak to 22 and its winning streak to 44 and Hous­ UPI top 10 puts a t w ir l to his red moustache at a re cent press imous vote of confidence from the conference (rig h t). nation’s coaches Tuesday as the ton (15-0) was comfortably hold­ NEW YORK (UPI) — The (E x te rio r - - With P u rch ase of 18 G a l. G as) sixth weekly United P ress In­ top team in college basketball and ing down the second spot for the ternational major college basket­ OCA with purchase of E llA with purchase of in the process the Bruins became fifth straight week, there w as ball ratings for the 1967-68 the possessors of the s e c o n d wholesale juggling among the rest College hocky ... AVV 15 Gal. Gas » » V 10 G a l. G a r season. l o n g e s t dynasty in ratingshis- of the top 10. tory. In the season's sixth weekly., Team Points I- - EC4AL. EX TE R IO R jC-AR- W AS U l -" I - Coach Johnny Wooden’s match­ ratings, Dasea’on games played' 1. UCLA (35) (10-0) ' “ 350 le ss forces received a ll 35 first through. Jan 6, North Carolina, 2.- Houston (15-rQ). 311 SPECIAL PRICES 6 pm to 10 pm Daily at. place votes cast by United P ress International’s board of coaches, Kentucky, and Tennessee each moved up a notch to third, fourth, 3. North Carolina (9-1) 255 4. Kentucky (8-1) 241 faces bright future and the Bruins thereby became and fifth, respectively. Vander­ 5. Tennessee (7-1) 115 KWIK CAR WASH the only team besides the Ohio State powerhouse of the 1960-62 campaigns to maintain top rank­ bilt fell three places to sixth, followed by Utah, top 10 new­ comers New Mexico and St. Bona- 6. Vanderbilt (10-2) 7. Utah- (11-1) 8. New Mexico (13-0) 112 97 76 By T O M BROWN State News Sports W r i t e r successful performance of the new Los Angeles Kings. Professional hockey will prob­ 920 E. Michigan Ave. at Pennsylvania ing through 22 consecutive b al- lots. venture, and Davidson, which r e ­ mained 10th. 9. St. Bonaventure (11-0) 63 10. Davidson (9-3) 58 College hockey sees the Na­ tional Hockey League’s expansion ably remain 95 per cent Cana­ dian, much as Canadian football will remain dependent onAm eri- as a big shot in the arm . Professional hockey is the next can talent. COUPON - COUPON - COUPON - COUPON - COUPON - C OUPON - m m »¿i We may not be no. 1 . . . big sport, and CBS is willing to In addition to the professional p l a y e r s , 400 Canadians are SAVE 50« invest millions in a three-year pact with the NHL in hopes that playing hockey under scholar­ the Canadian sport will become ships in the United States, and as popular with Americans as what their status might be in the S P E C IA L E X T E R IO R C A R W A SH O F F E R face of all the television loot is — i-n peanut butter. This coupon when presented to cashier is WORTH 50£ with purchase at questionable. Roone Arlidge of ABC, the Spartan Hockey Coach Amo 920 E. M ic h ig a n Ave. — L a n sin g I prophet of televised sports, felt Bessone feels that Increased ex­ COUPON E X P IR E S JA N U A R Y 20, 1968 ■m that hockey was the last great posure and interest in hockey can 0 . COUPON - COUPON - COUPON - COUPON - COUPON - COUPON untapped sport, and with the NHL only benefit the college game.. expansion, the boys on Madison Bessdne thinks that there a re ' I ! / . \* \ ■ - " í j J lllfty ’A Avenue are attempting to turn enough players for everybody, ¡ pro hockey into another Com­ and while a player like Boston's* stock Lode. Bbbby Orr can step directly from * The six-team NHL went as Junior "A ” into a bed of green­ far as the M ississippi River, backs, “ these guys are here to The Men of [fa J i * which always limited the m er­ get an education as well as play >-?* tp chandising power of the league. hockey.” i»J< L .J Two of those six teams were In The television exposure, B es­ '0 . 0 ^ Canada and the Canadian tele­ .'ítfj sone said, wlfx DeneiXt College LAMDDA ... vision industry had the sport in a strangle hold. Hockey is too larger a sport for just Canada. The country overflows with good players who teams operating away from pro­ fessional centers. <_ “ I think the college game is ’better than pro hockey, from the spectator’s standpoint. I think CHI are hard-pressed to find a place that the pros would a g r e e ," B e s ­ Æ .X to hand their hats, and American sone said. capital .is more than eager to "T h e red line adds nothing accommodate them. There are 29 to their game. How many whistles pro franchises in the United do they get in a game, 30, 407 States, and only five in Canada. T hat’s what the red line gives ALPHA . . . but w e’re clean / If this fact galls the Canadians (and it does—members of the parliament rose to protest when Vancouver's NHL bid was r e ­ jected), they can only remember them. We play more head?-up hockey because we’re not w orried1 about I t ," Bessone said. "People come to see goals" s c o r e d , not to hear whistles, J YOU can^Bring^ETt that before expansion, there were blown; they’ll have to change • 550 Canadians making their living their rules and they know it .” ; in hockey, and only 100 of them did Probably thinking of last Satur-* it in Canada. day’s turn-away crowd of over Expansion put another 120 on 4,000, Bessone concluded, 'T h e clean up to no. 1 the ice with the m ajors, and the playing ability of these young unknowns can be judged by the only thing that is wrong with our program and its future is our ice aren a." Cordially invite you F r o m 4 to 44 In 4 — we m ust be doing som ething right to attend open rush 343 A lb e r t _______________________ 337-0346 tonight 7-10 p.m . Delta Chi i s . . . . Founded 1S22 Active Members 80 GIVE HER A CONVERTIBLE Here’s a double good gift idea I#she has House Capacity - 54 a favorite diemond, let us transplant it to one of these handsome rings. Or, we ll supply the complete ring. Stop by and take one of these lor a “test drive.” But camful, they're very-powerful. OPEN FOR RUSH A. Round diamonds inmarquise settings, $375. Sponsors of the Nationally-Known J r. 500 field B. Surrounded by Sow of brittle^ $525. each spring at Michigan Sjate U n iversity O U rg e b w ^ A tm A > , . D Snowflake of brilliants, $750. & Brilliants Fnsix-point design,$800. ^ ••lUipi ’ * W E D N E S D A Y , JA N . 10 7-10 P .M . £•• nvtv*fptpfwiwiwpwwee «Mpt* >*. ED 2-0841 /■< .v C a ll for ride 332-0866 1 I jfi§ 121 H S lH T S r. 101 W O O D M E R E 351-9808 111 ¡111 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Wednesday, January 10, 1968 15 SPORTS A CROWD P L IA fIR TOO DELTA UPSILON FRATERNITY Hvt. Jeff Smith top mat By S T E V E L O K K E R MSU from C erritos, California, develop his ability to he could appetite like his wrestling out­ State News Sports W r i t e r Junior College. make It in wrestling at a larger look. He’s out there to «win." While a t t e n d i n g college in university. Looking at the conference, both ‘‘He is the hardest working California he was the state heavy­ O k l a h o m a State, Oklahoma coach and player agree on one heavyweight I have ever had the weight champion. He was also a University, and Iowa State were thing—Dave Porter of Michigan pleasure to be associated with," three t i m e high school state a few ofthe schools the 245-pound is the man to beat in the heavy­ were the words of Wrestling champ at 191 pounds. bruiser was Interested inbesides weight division. Smith and Porter Coach Grady Penlnger describing Smith credits much of college MSU. Luckily for Penlnger and met earlier with P orter taking a Je f f Smith. success to his form er coach at MSU, he decided to come here. 2-1 decision. Smith is a newcomer to the C erritos, Hal Simonek. He says Penlnger said he firs t heard of Looking to the NCAA, Peninger Spartan squad. He transferred to it was S i m o n e k who helped S m i t h through other coaches. lists Porter, John Ward of Okla­ Smith's high school coach was a homa State, and Grandville L lg - 103-pound w restler for Penlnger glns of Oklahoma University as at Ponca City, Okla., High Schoel. the top contenders along with Peninger saw Smith wrestle for Smith. “But there are so many the first time in the AAU meet unknown in the NCAA," Pen­ laat April and two weeks later lnger said. the California w restler got his Smith, the top scorer on the first look at MSU. Spartan squad this year, will have "Everybody seems to know you his w o r k cut out for him this here even if the school Is so b ig ." weekend. Saturday he’llfa c e A ri- ■aid Smith, " I t has a lot more to zona State's Cruly Culp, who has o f f e r than most of the other already beaten Smith once this OPEN RUSH schools I have seen ." yqar. Culp took a 12-11 win In "H e’s out there to pin you. This overtime in the AAU meet laat makes him a crow dpleaser.H e’s April. a good team leader and is very Peninger feels Smith hasn’t WEDNESDAY ag gressive," Peninger said. reached his potential yet. "H e’s just what your heavy- "H e may not reach it for years. J E F F S M IT H j o » «M 41- IV I r VM D R W « i#r '» ¿ t g l i i t / u g h l a L IU w i i a t y s / u ' t T He is sreafifiy frfipi'o’Ving, ~ fie like him to be. He also has an said. 1504 E. G R A N D R IV E R 332-8676 IM News BASKETBALL * U-M narrow s search GYM 1 . Court 1 6:00 Cache - Casopolls for Crisler successor 7:00 McTavlsh - Mclnnes 8:00 Felony - Fecundity ANN ARBOR, Mich. (UPI) — port.” It said all eight have indi­ 9:00 Wlquassett - Wlnshlre The committee trying to find a cated they would accept the posi­ GYM I successor to retiring Univer­ tion If It was offered. Court 2 sity of Michigan Athletic D irec­ Fleming said he would re strict 6:00 West Shaw 1-4 tor Fritz C risler has narrowed his choice to the names presented 7:00 Fensallr - Fern the field to eight candidates, the to him by the committee. He said 8:00 C arriers - Bloody 6 school's student newspaper said he would delay selection until 9:00 Embers - Emmortals today. certain reorganizations are made GYM II The Michigan Daily said the in the duties of the athletic direc­ Court 3 committee will present its to r. 6:00 Ballantlne - Bayard choices to President Robben W, 7:00 Argonaughts - Arhouse Fleming in the "n ext few days.’’ 8:00 5 Spot - Brougham It said the eight candidates are Coed basketball 9:00 Eminence - Empowerment D r. Robert Bronzan, Athletic D irector, San Jo se State; Don Coeds are still needed to play GYM II basketball for teams In an Inde­ Court 4 Canham, Michigan track coach; pendent league. 6:00 6-Pak - Brewery Bump E lliott, Michigan football Anyone interested should call 7:00 M cD uff- McNab coach; Forest Evasheskl, Iowa 5-4710 at the Women's LM .Bldg. 8:00 Abelard - Abaddon athletic director; Burt Katzem- by Friday of this week. 9:00 Wilding - Wivem m eyer, Michigan assistant ath­ letic director and golf coach; Don GYM 111 Lund, director of player per­ Court 5 W e F e e l T h a t Phi D e lta T h e ta R e p re s e n ts A n Id e a l sonnel for the Detroit T igers; ■ IM meeting 6:00 Cambridge - Cartha|e David Nelson, athletic director 7:00 Fenrlr - Fee-m ales at Delaware and David Strack, A meeting will be held tonight 8:00 Aborigines - Abel for the managers of all indepen­ Sky reaching Michigan basketball coach* All but Bronzan and Katzem- dent and fraternity basketbt&4 .9:00. EMU - Emerald meyer are Michigan graduates. teams and fraternity volleyball GYM HI I n t r a m u r a l basketball got under way this week and the team s. Court 6 P H I D E L T A T H E T A C O R D IA L L Y IN V IT E S Y O U T O A T T E N D The Daily said speculation had 6:00 Wooster - Woodward action was heavy as these p la ye rs show during a Nelson and Elliott as the two top The meeting will be at 7 p.m. 7:00 Empyrean - Emperors game at the M e n ’ s IM . candidates, although Bronzan was in room 208 of the Men’s LM. 8:00 Baal - Bawdiers O P E N RU SH State News photo by Jim Richardson attracting "widespread sup­ Bldg. 9:00 FegeAuer - Feral JEN ISON G-men to face IU ATTENTION - M.S.U. STUDENTS Court 1 6:00 Brandy - Brinkley 7:00 Arsenal - Aristocrats Tonight 7-10 p.m. 8:00 Wimbledon - Windsor MAC*S is now lo c a t e d a t 9:00 Cameron - Carleton 626 C O W L E Y in warm-up meet Court 2 213 North Wash. Ave. 6:00 Brutus - Deuces THETA CHI 7:00 McGregor - McLean W ith C e n tra l M ichigan's L a r g e s t Selections 8:00 Ares - Archdukes 332-3568 C A L L . F O R A R ID E By DON D A H L S T R O M is A1 Gatti in floor exercise and PIPES-CIGARS 9:00 Hole - Hovel State News Sports W r i t e r vault. T heir best event has been still An Indiana team which has been rings with parallel bar close be­ And all smoking accesso ries—special for you. Thi s ad slightly disappointing so far this hind. is worth $1.00 to you on any sale from $5.95 and over— s e a s o n will be the next com­ Two leading trampoline can­ except cigarettes and liquor. petition forMSU’s g y m n a s t i c s didates dropped out of school to make that e v e n t their weakest MAC’S—open every night until 11 o’clock—closed Sunday team at Bloomington Saturday. The meet will be the second one. straight away conference contest for the Spartans. It will serve as a warm-up for their meet a g a i n s t the defending national c h a m p s , S o u t h e r n Illinois, Ja n . 19. The Hoosiers were fifth in the ENTER HERE Big Ten last season with a 3-4 conference record. T h eir coach, Otto Ryser, had hoped to finish at least that high again this year. MEN . . . They were defeatedbyWiscon- sin, 172.50-159.05, this season and chances for anything above sixth place now seem remote. Indiana’s record for the season thus far is 3-2. The Hoosiers have defeated B allState, Illinois- Chlcago C ircle, and St. Cloud State (Minn.) L osses have been suffered at the hands of Iowa and Wisconsin in the Big Ten. T heir best score of 160.45 was achieved against both Ball State and Illinois-CC. They scored only 152.70 against Iowa. The Hoosiers have eight le tte r- winners r e t u r n i n g from last y ear’s team which posted an 8-5 . . . THAT YOU record. The l e a d i n g returnees are Juniors Dwayne W iser in still BECOME rings and Pat Kivland in a ll- around. W iser averaged 9.06 last season and finished sixth in the conference. He already has a 9.4 BETTER MEN! this year. Kivland, who excells in floor exercise and parallel bars, was ninth in theBigTenhis sophomore year. T hree seniors who return are THETA DELTA CHI Dave Keiler (parallel bars and side horse), B ill Long (floor FO R R ID E S C A L L : exercise and horizontal bar), and 332-2563 Clyde McDonald (trampoline). Paul G raf (still rings), Bud 351-9648 332-5456 Hunt (side horse), and Bob Wit- m er (parallel bars) are all r e ­ turning juniors. 139 BAILEY ST. 332-2564 For Rides: ED 2-3581 453 Abbott The top sophomore on the squad 16 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Wednesday, January 10, 1968 State N ew s State N ew s C la s s ifie d 355-8255 Winter Sports Equipment Special for January 16-See Details Below! C la s s ifie d 355-8255 Automoti va Autom otive Autom otive E m plo ym e n t Em ploym e n t F o r Rent F o r Rent BU1CK I960. Excellent transpor­ JAGUAR ROADSTER X -K E 1965. RAMBLER 1961. Standard six, NEEDED ONE house boy for sor­ STUDENT TO as»*- handicapped ONE MAN wanted for two man. ONE MAN for duplex. Utilities^ tation. Power —■ new muffler, Good condition. $3250 or best radio. $150 or best offer. 351- ority. M eals, additional pay. attorney ’ ^ » '£ ,V mornings, Eydeal Villa apartment. 351- paid. Swimming pool. $65. 351—- tire s, brakes, seat covers. Ap­ offer. 351-9139. 5-1/12 6564, after 6 p.m. 3-1/12 332-5318. 3-1/10 retiring a \ V - . g s . Compensa­ 5623. 4-1/12 7940. 5-1/12 pearance good. Phone 332-6226. tio n Is room and board. 484- 3-1/12 JAGUAR 1962, E-type coupe. S U N B E A M TIGER. Many op­ ORDERLIES FOR two nursing 1938. 5-1/10 REDUCED — NEED one girl to URGENTI ONE man for Univer­ Sharp, 32,000 m iles. Offers or tions. Excellent condition. 355- homes. 7 -3 p.m ., 3-11 p .m .L ib - occupy immediately. Univer­ sity Villa apartment. 351-0756 CADILLAC 1951. Sedan. New paint trades. IV 4-1524. 5-1/12 0519 week days. 5-1/16 eral salary and benefits. Call BABYSITTER f i r s t -grade sity T e rra ce . 351-8299. 3-1/11 after 6 p jn . * 3-1/10 • AUTOMOTIVE • EMPLOYMENT and mufflers. Excellent $150. M rs. W illiams, 332-0817. girl five d*' It, 11:30 a .m .- 353-7411. 3-1/11 MGA ROADSTER - model 1600. SUNBEAM ROADSTER 1961. Re­ 10-1/18 12:45 -tnlty of Burger NEEDED: ONE or two g irls for • POE RENT • • FOR SALE LOST A FOUND CHEVELLE 1964 Malibu. 283, V -8. $200 below book value. 353- 1959. Competition shocks, wire cently rebuilt engine. $495. 489- wheels. Has extras. 393-3709 4366 after 5 pan. after 5 p«m. 3-1/12 3-1/12 CLERK-TYPIST part tim e. Ap­ proximately 25 hours per week. King. X .o plus lunches per week. Call 351-7091 after 4 p.m. Urgent I 5-1/11 CEDAR VILLAGE four-man apartment, 351-8317. 3-1/10 • PERSONAL 0973. 3-1/11 Four-man furnished apart- WINTER TERM. ONE GIRL. Near • PEANUTS PERSONAL TEM PEST 1964, 326, four speed, Call 332-0883, 8:30-5 p.m. MUSTANG 1966, V -8 automatic EMPLOYERS OVERLOAD COM­ .ment. Across from cam­ campus. F irep lace. $60. 3324 40,000 m iles. B est offer. Harry, 5-1/12 • REAL ESTATE CHEVELLE 1965 V-8, standard transmission. $1,600. Good con­ PANY. Experienced secretar­ pus. Leased now until June 4729. 3-1/10 • SERVICE dition. Phone 372-8996. 3-1/11 351-8311. 3-1/11 shift. Excellent gas mileage. MALE, MORNINGS for delivery ies, typists to work temporary or September. C a l l . . . . • TRANSPORTATION $950. 355-5966. 3-1/11 work and stock work. Phone assignments. Never a fee. Phone SAGINAW, WEST, 512. Four • WANTED TOYOTA 1967. White Corona se­ 332-5051 MUSTANG 1965. Standard shift, dan. Bottom p rice. 351-5348 482-1170. 3-1/10 487-6071. C-l/11 room s, bath. Unfurnished. No CHEVROLET 1962 V-8 two-door economy 6. Low teage. Dark after 6 pan. children or pets. $165. 484- 5-1/10 green, b la cV Q V .V r. Must sell. GREAT LAKES EMPLOYMENT ONE GIRL needed winter term , 6366. 3-1/10 D E A D L IN E hardtop. Very good condition. SECRETARY FOR Hillel Foun­ for permanent positions for men Chalet apts. $57.50. 351-6827. One owner. $700. 669-7682. Call Jim Au-vn, 882-2408. TRIUMPH T R -4 1963 Excellent d a t i o n . Good typist. Monday 1 P.M. one class day be­ 3-1/12 5-1/10 through Friday, 9 ajn^-5 p jn . and women in office, sales, 5-1/12 NEEDED: ONE girl for Avondale condition. Call 655-2783. fore publication. Phone Rabbi Zemach, 332-1916. technical. IV2-1543. C-l/11 winter and spring. 351-4690} 10-1/18 Cancellations - 12 noon one OLDSMOBILE 1964 Dynamic 88 3-1/12 NEEDED IMMEDIATELY — One 3-1/1$ CHEVROLET 1961 3/4 ton pick­ class day before publica­ up truck. Excellent condition. Power steering, brakes, radio, V A L I A N T 1964—S i x cylinder, w o m e n Ad v is o r s for junior man. Chalet apartments. Re­ tion. $550. 332-1154. 5-1/16 snow tires. Go o d c o n d i t i o n . five speed floor. $625.526 Spar­ MARKET RESEARCH—Students and senior high club after duced ra tes. Ken 337-2018. SMALL FURNISHED house, 120$ ED 2-8379. 3-1/11, tan. 3-1/11 and w«"- . i p Q p a n -tim e. s c h o o l . Call YWCA TEEN­ 5-1/10 East Grand River Avenue. Bed­ PH O N E CH EVROLET 1959 6-c y U n d e r . Fifty r » V - immediately. $2 AGE DEPARTMENT, 485-7201, room, bath, ¡fl«r € , 0 and living OLDSMOBILE, 1965 F -85 Two- VOLKSWAGEN — 1966 s e d a n , hour or m ore. 372-1780. 5-1/12 extension 59. T erm s to be d is- UNIVERSITY VILLA 2 1/2 blocks room d- 7 wo upstairs Needs work. $50. 332-0939. 3-1/iz door. ExceirC Q '.re deluxe tachometer. New snow tire s. celebrity sedan, power, many sedan. L arger than bug with two 393-5660 2 -4 p.m ., Monday- ——— — * ------------ and bookkeeping charge if Villa. 351-0481. 5-1/12 this ad is not paid within Call M rs. Weaver. 351-7532. accessories, $1,795. 484-4077.- trunks, gas heater, under coat­ Friday. 10-1/18 * For Rent Eydeal * . „.nent—Grad 5-1/10 4-1/12 ing, new engine, and tool kit. —Call L« ve, 333-2257. 3-1/16 one week. GARAGE FOR RENT/One block Top condition. Phone 353-3500 BUSBOYS - -F IV E days per week from campus. $10. per month. ONE GIRL needed urgently. Eden The State News will be COMET 1961. Economical, 38,000 OLDSMOBILE J E T S T AR 1966. — Great meals plus $5.00 per Roc apartments. Winter and/or F O R E IG N F O O D any time between 10 a.m . and 332-8303. C-l/12 INDIAN - ARABIC -.SPANISH responsible only for the m iles. New tire s. Automatic, Low m i l e a g e . $1,775. Power week. Call Steve, 332 -0875. 12 p.m ., Monday through F ri­ spring term . Call 351-6321. Food from most foreign first day's incorrect la se r- two-door. $195. 332-6022. brakes, steering. 351-7754, 7-1/15 day or after 6 p.m. 5-1/10 5-1/12 tion. 4-1/12 3-1/11 T .V . R E N T A L S countries - including U.S. VOLKSWAGEN 1964 red conver­ BUSBOYS WANTED evening WANTED: ONE man to sublease S H A H E E N ’S T H R I F T W A Y CORSA 1965. 1 8 0 hp four-speed. P L Y M O U T H 1964—Belvedere meals. Contact M iss Krueger, LOW R A T E tible. $900 or best offer. Phone luxury Northwind Apartment. 2310 S. CEDAR 485-1538 A M - F M , w ires. Adjustable wood station wagon. Automatic. Six The State News does not steering wheel. 482-2644. passenger, excellent condition. 35K5004. 4-1/12 Olin Health Center. Phone 351- 464-9263 337-1872. 3-1/10 permit racial or religious 3381. 3-1/11 3-1/10 882-1525. 5-1/15 discrimination in its ad­ VOLKSWAGEN 1962 Good condi­ U N IV E R S IT Y T .V . ONE OR two men. F t- ts t luxury T H IN K IN G A H E A D vertising c o l u m n s . The C O R V A I R 500 1965. Standard tion. Radio, good tire s. $625. DRIVERS, 21 or over. Mornings, apartment ent. $50. PONTIAC CATALINA Converti- TV RENTALS for students. $9.00 State News will not accept t r a n s m i s s i o n . Radio, white , ble, 1964. Red with white top. Phone 351-7740. 3-1/12 evenings and weekends. Apply, King's l « ' i ‘ ca st, Apartment TO N EXT SU M M ER ? advertising which discrim ­ side door, 122 Woodmere, East month. F re e serv ice and sidewalls, $750. Call 355-9751 Power steering andbrakes.Call delivery. Call NEJAC, 337- H -l, North AbbottRoad. 5-1/12 inates a g a i n s t religion, Lansing. 1-1/10 after 6 p.m. 3-1/11 week-days, 9-5 p.m., 355-8297, Auto Service & Ports 1300. We guarantee same-day race, color or national o r­ C The AMLEC program this EXPERIENCED PART time den­ serv ice. C igin. CORVETTE 1963 CONVERT­ MASON BODY SHOP, 812 East P X Store - - F ra n d o r summer offers credit and non- IBLE. Clean, new tire s . Runs PONTIAC GRAND PRIX 1963. Kalamazoo Street—Since 1940. tal assistant for E ast Lansing credit courses in languages. TV RENTALS for students. Low Snow Shoes, $24.88 up very well. IV 4-1524. 5-1/12 All power, automatic, aluminum Complete auto painting and col­ dental office, Monday and F r i­ Political science, humanities, economical rates by the term or Pea Coats, $21.95 wheels. 353-7946. 5-1/10 lision service. American and day 8:30-5:30 p.m. Call ED 2 - and graduate education are be­ Automntive month. UNIVERSITY TV RENT­ Field Ja ck ets, $4.88 1 CORVETTE 1963 Stingray. Red, foreign ca rs . IV 5-0256. C 8517 between 9-11 a.m . 3-1/12 ing offered for credit in Euro-' ALS. 484-9263. C Fleece lined boots, $7.88 up two tops, 300 hp. 4-speed posi­ PONTIAC 1937. R e u p h o lstered, Insulated b o o t i e s for ski­ pean settings. Call or visit AUSTIN HEALEY Sprite. $700. —r 'its a w eek. invested. Will take best offer traction. 651-5094. 2-1/11 newly enameled body. Red vel­ VOLKSWAGEN ENGINE. Used 40 MALE, T H R E f> K Apartments e r s , $2.98 the AMLEC office in room hp with recent valve job. $125. Nias -tí- \\A- ■ -.nsportation )5ki Caps, 9804-0984, 3-1/11 N E A R CAMPUS/?tudlo apart­ Ski R acks, $15.88 national Program s. Phone . . . BARRACUDA 1965 4-speed, new 50,000 miles v/arrlnty. Call 914 Vine Street, Lansing. 5-1/11 m e n t available immediately. Paddle Ball Paddles, $2.88 351-7555 or 353-8648. 3-1/10 MALE: PART-time delivery and Throwing Kniveb, 99£ tire s. Still under warranty. Furnished. 355-3023. 3-1/11 IM P O R T E D C A R stock work. M o r n in g s . T U 2- M achettes, $2.98 Sharp. Might trade. IV 9-0979. PONTIAC 1960. Blue. Good tire s. 0209. 3-1/11 353-8921 3-1/12 FALCON 1963. Four drive, 260, S E R V IC E UNIVERSITY VILLA: One girl or Military Blankets, $3.88 up 60.000 m iles. Four-door. Call V -8. Automatic power steering. will sublease to three. 351—t C igarettes, 26ÿ tax Included after 5 p.m. 353-0912. 1-1/10 S P E C IA L IS T S G I R L FOR nursing care. Mor­ 339-2374. 4-1/12 0994. 3-1/11 BARRACUDA 1965 Standard shift nings, Monday - Friday. 337- IN 93i8. 3-1/11 A-l condition. Single o wn e r . FORD 1960 full power. Good run­ PORSHE 356a, 1600 normal en­ ONE MAN wanted for two-man captured Snow tires. $1,150. Phone 332- 8066, after 6 p.m. 5-1/16 ning condition. $200. 351-6444. 5-1/11 gine, transaxle, chromewheels, coupe. 372-1586. 5-1/10 • T R IU M P H e RENAULT •¿ V O L K S W A G E N BABY SrTTER in my home from 11a.m. - 3:30 p.m. daily or oc­ casionally. Wardcllff School apartment. 351-0369. EAST SIDE—315 Bingham Street. Large one bedroom apartment 3-1/11 Giant Cars by YW Al Edward's area. Call 351-4255 after 6 p.m. • 1964’ RAMBLER AMBASSADOR 990; 4-door sedan, V -8, auto­ for two or three. $125. furnished. matic with power steering, radio, heater, whitewalls, two- Sp o rts C a r Ç enter 3-1/11 Share utilities. After 4 p.m. Want to 1200 E. Oakland ACCIDENT PROBLEM7 Call KALAMAZOO STR EET BODY IV 9-/591 WAITRESS. MUST be 21. One- two nights a week. IV9-6614 for . ED 7-7151. R E D U C E D RATES. O ne girl 5-1/10 tone green. •1965 MUSTANG GT 289; 4-speed, stereo tape player, radio, heater, mag wheels. only $995 only $1495 interview. TOWN PUMP Cock- needed winter term . Avondale. sell your SHOP. Small dents to large tall Lounge. 5-1/10 351-8482. 3-1/11 •1964 CORVAIR MONZA, 2-door, stereo tape player, radio, w recks. American and foreign w/w tire s, like new, red finish with black Interior only $795 ca rs. Guaranteed work. 482- REGISTERED NURSES for two ONE MAN f o r m a n apart— 1286. 2628 East Kalamazoo. C extended ca re facilities. 3-11, •1966 DATSUN ROAD6TER, white with black convertible top, m en o F H * • two blocks 11-7. Liberal salary and bene­ from wiuon. 351-0534. 4-1/12 radio, whitewall tire s, low m ileage. only $1495 winter sports CAR WASH: 25^. Wash, wax, vacuum. U-DO-IT. 430 S o u t h Clippert, back of KO-KO BAR. fits . Call Director of Nursing, 332-0817. 10-1/17 ONE GIRL needed for three-man winter and spring. Cedar Vil­ Phil Gordon’s C-l/11 T A X CONSULTANTS wanted. lage. $66 month. 351-6358. V O L K S W A G E N IN C . equipment?? M EL’S AUTO SERVICE. Large or sm all, we do them a ll. 1108 E v e n i n g s and/or weekends. P rio r experience necessary or one term of tax accounting com­ pleted. F o r the period of Jan - ONE MAN needed winter/spring term . Luxury apartment, pool. 5-1/10 2845 E . SAGINAW PHONE 484-1341 East Grand River. 332-3255. u a r y 8th through April 15th. Use classifie ds C No lease. $50. month. Call 351- [h raa ia MA a a U T H & R BLOCK. 489-1652. 4542 after 5 p.m. 3-1/11 1M T A T I in the special w in te r La n [L Y 5-1/10 sports edition published A viation m3 A P L II V E N E i ONE GRADUATE student or si ra p 1 a È LA on January 16. DELIVERY BOYS, counter help, working girl to share two beet-, A C R O SS S 1Ô171 m rj a a a FRANCIS AVIATION. So easy to t e l e p h o n e . P art-tim e student room apartment. Must be rea­ 24. Corral . learn in the PIPER CHERO­ help. Call ED 2-6517 after 5 sonably quiet. 351-9356, 351- i. Im personate 25. Sustained rah H Q H Í3I1S a s m KEE! 1 Special $5.00 offer I 484- pan . 5-1/10 6925. 5-1/10 4. Cvprinoid 26. Whole 13 ra H a m s s i r a r a a 1324. C fish 27. Heavy mist El ra Era n a s ® PERSONNEL ASSISTANT. E x ­ GIRL NEEDED Immediately. 7. Silvery fish 28. Thus » V/El [•JIME A M cellent opportunity fo r recent U tilities paid. Close to campus. I I . Gr. letter 30. Reek M i N 1 M 4¿ra MA Z E GROUND SCHOOL for the private college graduate. Will train in 351-6334. 5-1/15 12. Sins 32. First-rate U N A L 11K i=i A V O N 34. Simple sugar (Room 31, $20) and Instrument recruiting, screening, staffing, 14. Parsonage 16. Eloquent 35. Bib. pronoun G Ah a E m Ü E FI Ü (Room 30, $30) pilot writtens and related personnel activities. NEED ONE male to share apart­ speaker 36. Soft will be offered each Wednesday T u i t i o n reimbursement pro­ ment. 421 Charles. 2-1/10 17. Dismounted 37. Ice cream SPORTS EDITION SPECIAL 7-10 p.m. Union Building by the course is for all those who are gram available. Submit resume Winged Spartans. The private to Box A -l, State News. C O LLE G E PARTY 18. Irritate .19. ja p . states­ treat 39. Intertwine DOWN 4. Adjective suffix 7-1/12 man 40. Soak Gloves interested in aviation and would S E R V IC E 20. Ten-sided 42. I.egal action 5. Accomplish like to find out more at low cost. figure 43. Other 1. Flotilla 6. Derision The instrument course is for the WANTED: ’Y P®rt- • Party Favors 22. Pan's pipe 44. Kettle 2. Swiss cottane 7. Palm leaf Park as T oboggans private pilot or higher who tlm e. C f \ L * ' _ vaj6, between 23. Near 45. W ile 3. Bracer S. Had com ­ $1.00— 10 w ord m inim um Sleds wishes to increase his aeronau­ 5 -7 pan. 3-1/10 • Photography passion 9. Nitrogen % 10d— each w ord over S k i-M o b ile s tical knowledge to meet today’s Service 6 7 8 9 to Caps 1 2 3 4 5 10. Bib. king T r o lle r s needs. Register now by sending SENIOR STUDENT or graduate I ten student to teach drafting and • Sportswear 12 13 13. Acacia your check or money order to: It C u rlin g Items w ood chest Automobiles The Winged Spartans, Inc., P.O. wood-shop. Monday, Wednes­ 15 16 15. Gommoditx Hockey Sticks day, Friday, or full-tim e. Open­ • Paddles 14 Box 287, East Lansing. C IS. Electrified Bobsleds ing immediate. Contact Super­ intendent Howard Kuehn at 645- • Mugs *7 % % •9 particle % Snow T ir e s E t c ., etc. 21. Coagulate Sc o o te rs & C y c le s 9371. P o t t e r v i l l e Public 20 21 22 22. Government %% Schools. 3-1/10 Dandy % % 25. Skates Deadline fo r all ads P A R T Y FAVOR 23 25 26. Catkins SUPER HAWK 1964. Set up for %% %% ê w ill be F rid ay, s c r a m b l i n g . $400. Call 337- MOTHERS HELPER: some baby 28 29 Fairs January 12, at 1:00 p .m . SH O W 26 27 28. Tra> Ice Chains 2082, after 4 p.m. 332-6684. sitting plus two hours work per 30 31 32 33 29. First-born 5-1/15 day for free room and board. * IN N A M E R IC A .’10. Trench 351-4483. 3-1/11 Ja n . 11 through 14 34 3S % 36 31. Ordinary % 32. Tawdrx Call today! AUTHENTIC DEAL ER for Yama­ EARNINGS ARE unlimited as an ha, Triumph, and BMW, Com­ AVON Representative. Turn Fraternity and Sorority houses will 37 38 39 JU,.. P ope’s triple •crown 1 40 41 42 plete line of parts, accessories, your fre e time into $$$. F o r an be contacted by 35. O riental lute State News Classified leather goods» and helmets. 1/2 m ile south of 1-96 on South Ce­ appointment in your home, write MRS. ALONA HUCKINS, 5663 dar. SHEP'S MOTORS, phone School Street, Haslett, Michi­ F R E D B E A U B IE N 43 % 44 % 45 3S. Ow ing 39. Dank 41. Toward ¿94-6621. C gan or cail IV 2-6893. C-l/12 3 5 1 -0 8 2 5 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Wednesday, January 10, 1968 17 F o r Rent F o r Rent F o r Rent F o r S a le F o r S o le P e rso n a l Apartments NEEDED: ONE serious male GIRL — GRADUATE preferred. HOOVER CANISTER v a c u u m DIAMOND SOLrTARE .5 Karat. STUDENTS OVER 2111 Park Lake Winter andsprlng.Sophlsticated cleaner with all the cleaning $100. Write Box B -2 , Michigan Tavern: Pizza, B eer, great graduate s t u d e n t for luxury NEED ONE girl Immediately for apartment. 351-6067. country living. 339-8012. attachments (good suction). One State News. 5-1/15 Country-Western music with a 5-1/15 luxury two-man apartment. 5-1/10 year old. $18. OX 4-6031. swinging beatl Week-ends. Close to campus. 351-9359,351- GRADUATE TO »hare two bed­ C SEWING MACHINE c l e a r a n c e 15861 Park Lake Road. 5-1/16 8387. 3-1/10 room f u r n i s h e d apartment. sale. Brand new portables. GARAGE, T W ^ c O ,m * C ,r ’ $72.50. 332-3422, 353-8655. peted. tor one or IDEAL STUDENT or office desk. $49.50, $5.00 per month. Large PARKING ACROSS from Berkey, CEDAR VILLAGE. $140 covers 4-1/12 three. atoddard or 332- Original price — $75. Since selection of reconditioned used right behind pi j n ?k’ s . Con­ entire winter term . Need one 1728. 5-1/10 I am no longer a student, I will machines. S i n g e r s , Whites, venient' c -i Plowed, man to sublet. 351-8850. sell for $50. Deep drawer for Necchis, New Home, and*'many only $3C ^ci term or $11 month­ 5-1/12 R IV E R H O U S E APARTMENT F '^ V n p t : Two others.” $19.95 to $39.95. ly, in advance. Call Mark White. filing folders. Small drawers APARTM ENTS girls n e e C Y a * ...unth’s rent for office or student supplies. Term s. EDWARDS DISTRIB­ 332-3947, 410 Albert. 2-1/10 GIRL FOR University V illa. One Furnished th re e -b e d ro o m paid. Cal ^ 5 1 -5 7 5 2 . 5-1/10 Excellent condition. 523 North UTING COMPANY, 1115 North month fre e . 351-8406. 3-1/10 luxury penthouse. Close to Fairview, Lansing. Phone IV 4 - Washington. 489-6448. C-l/11 Peanuts P e rso n a l campus. Renting Im m e d ia te FOURTH MAN needed winter 2092 after 9 a.m . 3-1/11 MARCH—one girl to sublet lux­ ly. Call 337-2406, 332-0255. and spring. Excellent location. BIRTHDAY CAKES, 7 " - $3.60, SGT. PEPPER isn’t really a Pi ury apartment, $57. Call 351- 8 " - $4.12, 9” - $4.90 de­ Kapp, but then, we're not a 351-8880. 5-1/10 PORTABLE TYPEWRITER 8868. 5-1/12 1441 - 1443 1/2 East Michigan. table, can be folded and put in livered. Also sheet c a k e s . Lonely Hearts Clubl 1-1/10 M at paid. F o r q i t people, KWAST BAKERIES, IV 4-1317. NEED ONE girl to share two bed­ a car or be used as a small $150. 314 _^^y\X