Wednesday M IC H IG A N Colder... Civilization. . . . Is little else than getting som ething fo r nothing. S T A T I a TAT r . . . with snow f lu r r ie s lik e ly . E xpected high today, 30 degrees; — James Robinson U N IV E R S IT Y low tonight, 12 degrees. V o l. 60 N um ber 121 E a s t Lansing, M ichigan F e b ru a ry 7, 1968 10C FIRST TANKS USED S. Korea protests talks Communist tank attack between U.S., N. Korea would be the best m easu res" since North SEOUL (vP) — The tempo of official Koreans "do not stick to diplomatic agree­ overruns Beret camp protest against secret U.S. negotiations with the North Koreans fo r the return of the USS Pueblo Increased Tuesday night. The National Assembly adopted a resolution expressing "national indig­ m ents." One legislator explained that South Ko­ rea feared the U.S. might sacrifice this country's Interests for UJS. global In­ nation" at the negotiations. te rests. SAIGON (fl — Communist trooops using launched across the country Jan. 30 cost advisers and four companies of Vietnam­ Indignant South Koreans say the U.S. tanks and armored cars early Wednesday Park Choan-kyoo, chairman at the For­ the enemy 22,748 dead up to midnight ese civilian Irregulars, Is about halfway did not react forcefully when the at­ overran and occupied a U.S. Special Forces between Khe Sanh village and the Laotian eign Affairs Committee, told the assembly Tuesday. It said 1,768 allied troops have tempt on Park’s life was made Jan . 21 camp near Khe Sanh, South Vietnamese boarder and about 1 1/2 m iles west of the that South Korea was being shut out of the been killed, including 614 Americans and but It alerted all South Korean and UJS, m ilitary headquarters reported. Marine combat base at Khe Sanh. U.S. talks at the arm istice town of Panmun- 1,130 South Vietnamese. forces when the Pueblo was captured There was no immediate word whether officers had believed the camp would be jom on subjects of vital concern to the As U.S. warplanes kept iq> their raids two days later. the fighting at the Lang Vel Green Beret country. over North Vietnam, the U.S. Command especially vulnerable to enemy assault. The South Korean forces remain under camp represented the start of a long- Park’s remarks and the assembly's said an Air F o rce F 4 Phantom fighter— the U.S. Command that fought the Korean expected major offensive by four or five action reflected growing government con­ bomber shot down a MIG21 Interceptor See re la te d sto ry, page 2. War, and this is another point of irrita ­ North Vietnamese divisions massed along cern over the U.S. handling of the current west of Hanoi Tuesday. It was the second tion. the northwest frontlerof South Vietnam. c r is is . They followed closely a protest enemy MIG downed in two days and the The U.S. Command said the Lang Vei C h a i r m a n Park declared the United If the South Vietnamese report is con­ note P rem ier Chung Ukwon handed U.S. 107th of the war. defenders came under mortar and a rtil­ States was employing a double standard. firmed, It marks the first time that the Ambassador William J . P orter on the U.S. a ir power also was called In near lery fire Just before midnight Tuesday. He said South Vietnam haa Its own com­ Communists have been known to use tanks secret talks. the Lang Vel battle early Wednesday. B52 An hour later, a spokesman said, the mand while South Korea’s forces remain in the Vietnam war. The assembly’ s resolution insisted that bombers hit enemy concentrations north­ camp was "under heavy ground attack." under the United Nations, that is U.S., In Saigon, the U.S. Command announced the recent attempt by North Korean com­ west of Khe Sanh. As the enemy pushed through the camp’s command. that the intensified attacks the Communists The Lang Vel camp, manned by U.S. perimeter, the defenders, aided by a rtil­ Careful climbing mandos to assassinate President Chung Hee Park was more important to South The protest note to the U.S. and the as­ lery and tactical air strikes, engaged in Korea that North Korea’s seizure of the sembly resolution both contained a hint that A h eavily arm ed M a rin e clim bs South Korea might remove Its 560,000- close-quarter fighting from their bunker s. Pueblo, a communications ship. South Vietnamese headquarters said o v e r a wall I n Hue durl ng a search man army from U.N. control to meet any The assembly’s resolution asked the seven enemy tanksandarmoredcars, sup­ and destroy m ission to root out North Korean threat. South Korea also has government to take "punitive measures, ported by artillery, moved from the direc­ rem aining C om m unist forces If necessary alone" against Communist 40,000 men fighting in Vietnam, and there tion of Laos for the attack on the camp. operating in the c ity . provocations such as the attempt to as­ have been some reports these might be Headquarters spokesmen said four tanks U P l Telephoto by sassinate Park. withdrawn to fight at home. were destroyed in the fighting. Contact Kyoichl Sawada It suggested that "m ilitary reprisals The day saw two anti-American demon­ with the camp was lost at 4:30 a.m. and strations, the first In morrTnan four years, reconnaissance planes flying over it at but while mild they were unusual for this daylight reported they saw North Viet­ strongly pro-U.S. Aslan nation. namese troops inside the position, the About 60 students, joined by 200 other spokesman said. E a rlier reports had said there were a Teamster heads advise persons, d e m o n s t r a t e d In front of the U.S. Embassy and handed out leaflets protesting American handling of the cur­ number of refugees from recent fighting r e n t c r is is . Then late In the afternoon, In Laos in the camp. The South Vietnamese spokesmen said a reconnaissance plane established radio end to new spaper strike about a dozen students reappeared at the embassy with more leaflets. The leaflets demanded U.S. retalia­ contact with civilian Irregular troops after the government forces had with­ DETROIT (UPl) — Members of Team­ recommendation by the local's offices. tion against the capture of the Pueblo and drawn from the camp. But there was no sters Local 372 were asked for the second But Team ster officials said they would the attempt on Park's life, an end to the report of where the Irregulars were. time Tuesday to vote fjta n e n d to a strike recommend approval of the new proposal, secret Panmunjom talks aimed at releas­ '•V*. v •>mr‘a fifth h ajgest çltÿ , whlph -^ui^dj^ovldt* for $30 a week In pay ing the Pueblo’s 83 crewmen, and modern­ Communist holdings In Hue constricic-u 'lrkl4ef& w f t t k^ ^t he first year, $10 the ization of .the Korean armed forces. slowly under coordinated drives by U.S. without a major neWspapeiv Negotiators for the Team sters and for second and $9 the third. The contract A Defen fie Ministry spokesman said a Marino* and South Vietnamese troops. would expire three y tats ftitm the date call-up 'of air fo?fet reserv ists A Aider The Marines recaptured the province the city’ s two major dallies— The Detroit News and The Detroit F re e P ress—agreed the News and F ree P ress resume pub­ study. This would be the first time since headquarters building In that old Imperial lication. the Korean War of 1950-53, He said plans capital. 400 m iles north of Saigon. late Monday night on a proposed contract. Team sters officials said they would The two newspapers still must reach are to have a number of reserve air­ As the countrywide Communist attacks recommend ratification by members of agreements on new contracts with their men, mainly technicians, serve active duty S e a rc h a n d d e s tro y went Into their ninth day, enemy forces Local 372. The local said it had not yet craft unions, whose contracts expired for le ss than a year. continued to hold out in Saigon and Hue, set a date for the voting. during the Team sters strike against the A group of M a rin e s , lying prone on a roadside rid g e, attem pt to the old Imperial capital 400 miles to the Nsws. In December, members of Local 372 p rovide cover fo r som e buddies who approach a s o lita ry house In north. The allies were girding for possible voted down a proposed contract thatwould However, spokesmen for the newspapers search of V ie t Cong in Hue, the only c ity in South V ietn am In which C o m m u n is ts a re s till f ir m 'y entrenched a fte r th e ir m a jo r o ffensive, second-wave attacks. (please tu rn to back page) have provided pay raises totaling $27 per week over a three-year period. That said they felt that the proposed contract with the Team sters set a pattern that could be carried to the other unions. Romney says U P l Telephoto by Kyolchi Sawada proposal went to a vote without any official "In view of our long established practice of negotiating with other unions any pattern that is set, we will now endeavor to reach military policy REASSEMENT IN VIETNAM agreement on the same basis with non­ striking unions if there is to be prompt resumption of publication," the publishers harms image Offensive challenges U.S. tactics said in a statement. A special State Senate committee was investigating allegations that members of MANCHESTER, N.H. IT — Gov. Romney Local 372 plotted the strike for personal said Tuesday the U.S. image around the materialized in full fighting trim all over profit. Two F re e P ress reporters alleged the country. world is that of "great big military ag­ that some Team sters made up to $1,000 By P E T E R A R N E T T News Analysis 3. The ability of the South Vietnamese per week distributing temporary news­ gressors and Im perialists.” He said that Is a product of American policy In Vietnam. A ssociated P res s W r ite r armed forces is again in question. papers that published during the first two " I f this shows anything, it shows that At the same time, Romney, intensify­ months of the strike. ing his campaign assault on President SAIGON If) —The allied military posture culminated in action against 35 population fringes of major towns.The lunar newyear you just can’t fight a revolutionary war Strikes by the local shut down the last by keeping office hours,’ ’ one observer Johnson, said it is self-delusion to pre­ in Vietnam has been challenged by the centers in the past week. truce was cancelled only in the northern­ two surviving temporary newspapers, and tend that the Communists in Vietnam have unexpected turbulence of the Communists’ Unless these gaps are plugged, it looks most 1st Corps area. commented, in reference to the reluc­ the publisher of one of them told the tance of most Vietnamese units to fight lost their "g reat capability, stamina and wlnter-spring offensive. as if the Communist battalions will be The director of the U.S. Command’s Senate committee he believed the local confidence." The most experienced observers see able to return any time they wish to har­ combat center, B rig. Gen. John Chals- a seven-day week. acted under orders from officials of the The Vietnamese military have had "T he facts are the enemy is stronger a major reassessment of tactics forced ass the cities and major towns. As some son, has credited the enemy with " hav­ International Team sters Union. now in South Vietnam than he’s been be­ upon the U.S. military high command, see it, this prospect might well break the ing engineered and planned a very suc­ main responsibility for city defense, and for security in the delta and in some fo re,” Romney said. “We’ve got to get particularly in view of the now proven will of a people subjected to war for 20 cessful offensive in its initial phases, somebody down in Washington who’ll tell vulnerability of major population centers years. other populated areas. The Communists surprisingly well coordinated." the truth. We've had the wool pulled over and administrative capitals. L ast November a senior American gen­ For weeks the allied command has launched no major attacks against U.S. infantry troops during the past week. our eyes. It's about time we saw through eral said: "We do not think the enemy ascribed ability and determination to the it ." These observers believe that great gaps Some U.S. airfields and other Installa­ can maintain the aggressiveness that has North Vietnamese forces streaming down Romney stressed that theme at clubs, have been exposed in the allied military tions were hit, but not the field troops. been demonstrated in the series ofbattles the Ho Chi Minh tra il. The tendency factories and homes as he hunted votes stance since the Communists began the of­ 4. The Viet Cong infrastructure in Sai­ and attacks across the country In recent was to write off the Viet Cong battalions In New Hampshire’s presidential primary. fensive with major actions near Laos and gon must be regarded as more powerful weeks.” which were largely responsible for the He aimed past his Republican opponent in Cambodia last October and November, and than ever before, despite claim s that it Late in December Gen. William C. W est­ delta onslaught. Most of the troops that New Hampshire, Richard M. Nixon, and followed these up with the attacks that moreland said: "The best measure of pro­ hit Saigon were Viet Cong. Other units (please turn to back page) concentrated on the Democratic adminis­ gress is the improved attitude of the tration in Washington. people. They have an attitude of optimism. He said Americans have been deceived Everywhere’ I go I note a feeling of en­ by their own government on the war in No. 4 man at GM couragement." Optimism and encouragement are not apparent among the population this week. E. Lansing to study angles Vietnam. "W e’ve got to have an alternative to what the President is doing down th e re," Thousands have fled from their homes. resigns; nam ed Romney said as he toured a greeting card The experienced observers, including some sem cr U.S. military officers, see o f city income tax proposal factory in Nashua. "H e’s going to lead us down the road to World War III the way president of Ford these weaknesses exposed in the allied military posture In recent months: A study to determine the feasibility the city may have to collect the tax them­ se lv e s." we’re going." 1. Enemy capability was underestima­ of a city Income tax In East Lansing He told 60 people at a Merrimack church DETROIT OP) — Semon E, Knudsen, will be made by city officials. The administrative costs for the city who resigned lest week as No. 4 man ted, particularly concerning the VletCong to collect a tax would be three to four hall that the U.S. isnotwinning in Vietnam, forces who draw recruits from South Viet­ Mayor Gordon L . Thomas authorized no matter what Johnson says. at General Motors after being passed the study at Monday night's City Council per cent of the total tax collected, he over fo r the presidency, Tuesday was nam’s population. The senior American in said. "T h e state could collect the tax "T h is Illusion of military victory is tak­ the Mekong Delta until his return to the meeting. ing us down the wrong road, ” he said. "The named president of Ford Motor Co., with a cost of two per cent of the col­ GM’s m ajor competitor. United States three weeks ago, B rig . Gen. "W e have been talking about it off and lectio n ," he explained. enemy has got support of people In the Making room for Knudsen, form er P res­ William R . Desobry, told newsmen early on for some tim e," Thomas said. "The “ If we do decide to adopt an income tax, citie s themselves and they can go into the ident Arjay M iller was shifted to the new­ in January: “The Vietnamese army has the passing of Lansing’s income tax program we probably won’t do it until after 1970," cities and terrorize and k i l l . . . ly created post of vice chairman of Ford's upper hand in the delta. The Viet Cong Thomas said. "T he people over there In Vietnam, the sparked my Interest in completing a study board of directors. are going down steadily. T h ere has been No deadline was set for the study. Viet Cong and the North Vietnamese, are in East Lansing.'* thwarting the greatest military power Knudsen, son of a form er GMpresident, significant su ccess." Thomas said that there was "n o great also was named a director and a member Several U.S. advisers in the delta dis­ MSU employes who live in East Lansing ru sh " to complete It, on earth, and that shows the power people of the Ford executive committee. agreed, saying privately the Viet Cong could pay up to one per cent of their "S ta ff members and probably some citi­ have g ot," Romney said. The surprise announcement was made were powerful enough to overrun govern­ disposable Income for a city Income tax. zens would be involved in studying the Romney said the U.S. should go on a by Henry Ford II, chairman and chief executive officer of the company founded ment forces. This past week the delta was terribly mauled. Employes living outside the city limits could pay up to one-half per cent. Id e s," Patrlarche said. " I don’t know what the proposed Income would be yet Balanced boarding political offensive to win popular support in Vietnam, insist that the Saigon govern­ by his grandfather. GM Is the largest 2. Allied Intelligence, often dependent The study should be completed by 1969, o r what effect It would have on the city's C h ris T h ai, Toledo, Ohio, soph­ on reports from the South Vietnamese, Is ment move in that direction, and press for automaker and manufacturing company Thomas said. He authorized the city largest payroll, MSU." o m o re , takes advantage of the peace on the basis of neutralization of die in the world. Ford ranks second in both. inadequate. While there were some warn­ manager, John Patrlarche, to conduct The effects of an Income tax could only ings forecasting last week’s onslaughts, s p r in g -lik e w e ath er to get in entire area. Knudsen, when he stepped out at GM, the research . be partially comprehended, Patrlarche some skateboarding n ea r Bessey “We can work harder for peace,’’ Rom­ was an executive vice president in charge these did q»t anticipate that the Com- "A fter 1970, the state will agree to col­ said. Current moves such as voter regis­ H a ll. ney told about 80Manchester business men mu n i s t s without widespread detection lect city Income ta x e s," Thomas said. tration of students and student involvement at an Exchange Club luncheon. (please tu rn to back page) .. could mass 60,000 troops inside andatthe K tf . . . . in East Lansing may be affected. State News photo by Jim Mead Wednesday, February 7, 1968 2 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan M a r in e s h o is t f la g o y e r H u e g a in s NEWS HUE, Vietnam (jf) — U.S. F la., and Pfc. Walter Kaczma- Marines moved on from the build­ 283 wounded. Gains of the day summary Marines, heirs to the Iwo Jlma rek J r . 19, of Port Reading, N .J. ing to house-to-house fighting totaled about two blocks. tradition, recaptured the Thus There were lusty cheers from along the palm-ringed plaza wall. Advance Marine lines at dusk T h l e n Province headquarter« other Marines, many isibornwhen They captured one Communist were about eight blocks from the A cspsule s u m m a ry o f the d a y 's avants fro m building from Communist troops the Stars and Stripes were raised soldier and dragged out five dead. U.S. advisory compound, their o u r w lr a s a rv le a s . here Tuesday and hoisted the ever Iwo Jlma 23 years ago In At least two Marines were headquarters in the south side of Stars and Stripes above Its bat­ a dramatic moment of World War killed and 23 wounded in the day's the city. In all they held 18 tered walls. IL fighting, raising their casualties blocks, roughly 40 per cent of Across the Perfume River, Under slight sniper fire , the fo r a week In Hue to 37 dead and their objective in this city of th eir' South Vietnamese allies 40,000. narrowed Red holdings within Mist and drizzling rain limited bomb-churned precincts of the a ir operations. “ T he la s t th in g I w ant walled Citadel, the once ornate home of Vietnam’s emperors, which forms most of the northern Cooles to speak Associated P ress correspond­ ent George McArthur, surveying the city from an artillery spotter is a R o c k e f e lle r - R e a g a n t ic k e t . " G ov . R o n a ld part of Hue. plane, said government troops were making steady progress and R e a g a n o f C a lifo r n ia . A Marine battalion commander had told his men the South Viet­ namese government’s flag should replace the Viet Cong banner here Thursday held more than half the Citadel, which Is two miles square. Communist forces w ere hold­ and show Its relation to help when they took over the yellow, By LINDA GORTMAKER breaking dewn obstacles encoun­ ing out for the eighth straight two-story headquarters building, State News S taff W r i t e r tered by poor people when ob­ day In the northwest and south­ a government landmark. But the American flag was run Stoney Cooks, national cam­ taining Jobs. west corners. The Viet Cong flag still flew from one of the International News pus coordinator for the South­ The Rev. Martin Luther King, up In the exuberance of victory battlements. 0 BATTLE ACTION, concentrated largely at Hue, -Dalat ern Christian Leadership Con­ h e a d of SCLC, has planed a after two squads of Leather­ march to Washington, D.C. Little movement could be ob­ and Saigon, opened the second week of a Communist offensive ference (SCLC), will speak at necks—about 24 men— stormed “ around the first week of April,’’ served w i t h i n the old palace that has scarred 35 of South Vietnam's major cities and 8 p.m. TTiursday In 38 and 39 over the walls and cleared out as culmination of the campaign, grounds, much of which appeared flooded them with refugees. See page 2 Union to encourage Campus the place In room-to-room com­ participation In SCLC’ s Spring Green said. King asked Green to to be a no man's land. Strewn bat. a ssist in the program. over the airstrip was the burned 0 THE ALLIED MILITARY posture In Vietnam has been Mobilization Campaign for Jobs. Gunnery Sgt. Frank Thomas, “ F irs t we plan to make a call wreckage of a half-dozen light challenged by the unexpected turbulence of the Communists’ 34, of Camden, N .J., ran up the MSU has been chosen as one of alrcraft-spotter planes and heli­ wlnter-sprlng offensive, according to Associated P ress W riter for poor people to Join the colors with help from P fc. Alan four national centers for SCLC's copters. P eter Arnett. See page 1 m arch ," Green said, “ then we McDonald, 19, of Jacksonville, spring campaign to help solve will make a call for the college the country's problems relating 0 SOUTH KOREA’S National Assembly adopted a resolution Students to support them.” to poverty and human rights, ac­ cording to Robert L. Green, as­ Other campaign centers be­ Court order expressing “ national Indignation’’ at the secret U.S. negotiations with the North Koreans for the return of the USS Pueblo, a sociate professor of counseling, side MSU Include the Univer­ Futile attempt significant rise in the tempo of official protest against the and personnel s e r v i c e s and form er educational director for sity of California at Berkdlery, a New York University, and a not reversed A c h ild runs o ff to get m ore w a te r In an e ffo rt to negotiations. See page 1 southern one, “ probably In At­ extinguish the f ir e in his fa th e r ’ s w recked machine SCLC who will work closely with Cooks. lanta, G a.,’’ Green said. “ College students have been for clergymen shop In the Cholon section of Saigon w here a llie d A U.S. MARINES, heirs of the Iwo Jim a tradition, re­ p a i r e d the Thua Thlen Province headquarters building from Green said Cooks' talk is open dlvebom bers left fo u r blocks In fla m e s , Communist troops andhoistedthe Stars and Stripes above the big backbone in the human WASHINGTON (fl — The U.S. to all MSU faculty members and D istrict Court of Appeals re­ U P I Radiotelephoto by Kate Webb its battered walls. See page 2 rights movement, especially In students. He hopes for a broad ’64 and ’65,” Green said. “We fused today to reverse a lower A SOVIET OFFICIALS are worried that Syria might make a campus contribution to the cam­ hope to get an office for Cook court order forbidding a group desperate try for revenge on Israel this spring, creating the paign. and coordinate a series of stu­ protesting the Vietnam war from danger of another Middle East war. gee page 3 Cooks’ talk will explain the campaign’s details, Its duration, dent groups to work with the campaign,’’ holding a religious service In the amphitheatre at Arlington Head advisers O K 0 PRESIDENT JOHNSON’S plan for a graduated travel Although Green will be making National Cemetery. tax In areas outside the Western Hemisphere worried Europe’ s The State News, the student newspaper at Michigan State trips to other campus centers A spokesman for the Clergy University, Is published every class day throughout the year with special Welcome Week and Orientation issues in June to organize the spring campaign, Green said he will be “ In and, and Layman Concerned about Vietnam said, however, the group signout proposal big but tourism Industry. P arts of Asia also expressed concern, exempt Latin America welcomed the plan. and September. Subscription rates are $14 per year. out” to help at MSU. of some 2,000 would go to the sophomores. At this level, Miss A draft of a Women’s Inter­ Green said he expects students cem etery, hold a short silent memorial prayer serv ice, then residence Council (WIC) proposal Altken said, it was very difficult National News Member Associated P ress, United P ress International, f r o m Wayne State University, that compulsory over-night sign­ to present their opinions, Inland Dally P ress Association, Associated Collegiate P ress, University of Michigan, Western return to a Washington church 0 PRESIDENT JOHNSON, In a special message to Congress, where sermons will be delivered. out for sophomores, Juniors and “The head advisers who didn’t Michigan P ress Association, Michigan Collegiate P ress As­ Michigan University, University come to the meeting do not have requested a national study of the auto Insurance system and He said the Defense Depart­ seniors be abolished met no r e ­ sociation, United State Student P ress Association. of Chicago, “ and many other mid- the right to voice their opinions new laws to protect Americans against diseased fish and ment had given $ e group per­ sistance at a meeting of head ad­ western schools” to Join MSU In v isers of women's residence la ter,” she said. “We are asking poultry. Second class postage paid at East Lansing, Mich. Support of the campaign. mission to hold a short silent halls previewing the draft Sun­ for their help In forming a better Editorial and business office« at 347 Student Services He calls Cooks “ one of the key meeting even though it would not A FORMER ALABAMA GOV. George Wallace will formally day night, according to Joan A it- policy.” Building, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Mich. organizers for SCLC.” Cooks, permit a memorial service. announce his presidential status Thursday in Washington. The only official spoken words ken, president of W3C. Besides eliminating the sign­ 23, has been working full-time He Is expected to say he Is j candidate according to a campaign a i the c e S e t m I he' said, woyld t ' out for all but freshman women, Phones: for the conl&svact. L - . 'j&n I-v v The proposal h$s not been years and has worked with proj­ be “ let us pray,’’ by the Rev. the present draft of the policy Editorial . » . # • • • • • * « • • • • • • • • » • • • • • * • • • ♦ 355-3MÛT passed by WIC yet. M iss Altken ects in Mississippi, the West Dr. Martin Luther King, a leader changes states that only fresh ­ Classified Advertising 355-8255 said that the proposal in some man women can not stay over­ 0 FORMER VICE PRESIDENT Richard M. Nixon told a Display A d vertisin g................ 363-6400 Side of Chicago, and Birming­ In the civil rights movement and university audience In Wisconsin that Latin America “ needs form will probably be passed by night In a hotel or motel in the Business-Circulation ........................................... 355-8299 ham, Ala. critic of the Vietnam war. radical change, needs a revolution.” Nixon is In his second WIC in a few weeks. G reater Lansing Area without Photographic ....................................... 355—8311 day of campaigning In Wisconsin. See page 3 their parents or notification of The purpose of the meeting their head resident adviser by * T h e y 're B a c k 2. was to give head advisers the op­ 0 GOV. ROMNEY, on the campaign trail In New Hampshire, their parents. portunity to express their opin­ said that one of the products of American policy In Vietnam I t ’s g o o d THE BISHOPS } ions on the proposed changes. The Academic Freedom At the meeting head advisers Report brought up a number of techni­ makes no provisions for proposed cal questions about the wording Is an image of the United States around the world as “ great big military aggressors and im p erialists." See page 1 n e ig h b o r MMPUT n J changes by WIC to be considered of the proposed changes, M iss by the management and staff. Altken said. The head advisers 0 A WALKOUT by the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen has Idled two of the nation’ s major railroads, the M issouri P R E S E N T E D BY wanted to make sure the wording Pacific Lines and the Seaboard Coast Lines. There were TH E HOUSE O F F E E -M A L E S M iss Altken said that when was clear, Indications that several other systems might become Involved. tim e a t the proposal for selective hours Friday, Feb. 9 - 8 to 12 reached the Faculty Committee “Not one adviser said she on Student Affairs, head advisers thought signing-out for after 0 THE UJS. DISTRICT COURT of Appeals re fu sed » re v erse Arnie’s □ Fee C la s s r o o m A re a Adm . 35C yL tried to express an opinion 6 a.m. should rem ain,” Miss against giving this privilege to Altken said. a lower court order forbidding a group protesting the Vietnam war from holding a religious service In the amphitheater at Arlington National Cemetery. See page 2 Michigan News 0 MEMBERS OF TEAMSTERS Local 372 were asked for the second time to vote for an end to a strike that left Efctrolt, the nation's fifth largest city, without a major newspaper. Both the Detroit F ree P ress and the Detroit News have been on strike since November. See page 1 0 SEMON E . KNUDSEN was named president of Ford Motor Co. after he resigned last week at General Motors where he was passed over for the presidency. Knudsen's father was president of GM for three y ears. See page 1 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Î ¡S P E C IA L * i if RiRht now1Take advantage $ 1 .5 0 If * * of this super-special offer on "threesomes" of skirts A n y M e d iu m S iz e Ï and sweaters Now thru * March 31, O n e It e m P iz z a * So grah any three today — F o r $ 1 .5 0 . if and head for your Arnold * Palmer Cleaning Center Better s till—grab six or G o o d in D o rm s O n ly nine, and get the Good Neighbor Special while it lasts' T H E C L E A N IN G C E N T E R C o u n t r y C lu b Q u a l i t y a t n e i g h b o r h o o d p r i c a a 405 Abbott Rd. VARSITY “C A M P U S R E N O W N E D “ F A S T D E L IV E R Y % 332-6517 J 2 doors fro m E . Lansing Post O ffice I k * * A 'k it 'k it 'k iK 'k 'k 'k 'k + 'k 'k l r Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Wednesday, February 7, 1968 3 S trik e le a d e r d e fie s c o u rt lo r law, which prohibits strik es tion thus far would fill 666 ra il­ from com m ercial buildings and eight million as a result of the NEW YORK lil — The leader of of municipal employes. road ca rs, each 70 feet long. restaurants, as well as some lux­ exposed refuse heaps. But a five-day sanitation men's strike Thomas Hagan, fire chief, said was sentenced to 15 days in ja il T he union head was allowed Midtown Manhattan was fairly ury apartment buildings. his freedom overnight and his clean, however. Private garbage Winter weather helped moder­ outdoor rubbish fires had dou­ Juesday for defying a court’s lawyer said DeLury will begin co llecto r! pick up 6,000 tons a day ate the health hazard to the city 's bled or tripled from die normal back-to-work order and allowing serving his contempt of court 80 a day. 40,000 tons of garbage to pile up Mayor John V. Lindsay had in New York City streets—enough sentence Wednesday. tried to deputize Hospital De­ to fill a freight train nearly nine m iles long. S tre it continued until Wednes­ day contempt charges against the union itself. A maximum fine Soviets fear Syrian partment drivers to man sanita­ tion trucks and remove infectious “ Employes cannot strike of up to $10,000 a day against a waste from 71 hospitals in the against the government," State Supreme Court Justice Saul S. Strelt told John DeLury, p re si­ union is provided under the s ta te ’s T ay lo r law, which works attack on Israel city. But their AFL-CIO State, County and Municipal Employes out to $1 per day for each sani­ MOSCOW (jP) — Soviet officials lead to suicidal attempts at Union ordered them not to act as dent of the striking Uniformed " strikebreakers. Sanltationmen’s Association, an tation man. are worried that Syria might revenge. It was the second crackdown make a desperate try for revenge Another facto r, according to Lindsay, a Republican, had said affiliate of the Team sters Union. he had no present plans to ask DeLury also was fined a maxi­ in four month# on union lead ers on Israel this spring, creating these sou rces, is a b itte r hatred who have ignored the law; which the danger of another Middle East by Syrian lead ers of Egyptian National Guard assistance in the mum $250 under the sta te'sT a y - took effect last Sept. 1. war. P resid ent Gamal Abdel N a sser. strike. The A FL-C IO United F e d e ra ­ April Is being mentioned in in­ T h ese lead ers are pictured as Lindsay did urge Gov. Nelson tion of T e a ch ers paid a $150,000 formed Soviet c irc le s as the calculating that even another A. Rockefeller late Tuesday to fine for la st fa ll’s two-week time Syria might be ready to do Arab failu re to defeat Is ra e l In assist the city In preparing to U.S. ship strik e of public school teach ers, and its president, A lbert Shanker, something rash. The h i g h - r a n k i n g Soviet a Syrian -sparked new Middle E ast w a r could be worthwhile deal with a possible "d isa ster” If the strike continues. served 15 days in ja il fo r con­ sources who gave this informa­ because it might cause N a s s e r’ s The city’s 10,000 sanitation tempt. The sentence was upheld tion Tuesday indicated the So­ ouster. men struck Friday in a demand aground on appeal. Meanwhile, piles o f garbage viet Union w a n t s to restrain Syria. But the informants ex­ If another w ar should break out, the Soviet Union has no for a $600 a year increase In an­ nual salaries that range from at many city curbsides mounted pressed doubt that Moscow has more intention of risking a nu­ $6,424 to $7,956 after three enough leverage in Damascus. c l e a r confrontation with the years. A mediation panel r e c ­ G a rb a g e g a lo r e off Rhodes s ix or m ore feet high. Normally, 10,000 tons a day a re collected during a six-day week by the city Syria has refused repeatedly to subscribe to the Soviet public United States than it did la st time, the sou rces said. The Mid­ ommended $400 a year. It was for defiance of Spie­ As the New Y o rk garbage c o lle c to rs ' s trik e continues, schoolchildren find the RHODES, G reece Iff) — Driven gel’s order that DeLury was con­ sanitation men. The accu m ula- position that political means— dle E ast is not regarded as vital going rough as they head fo r class along g arb a g e -s tre w n s tre e ts . The health by strong winds and rough s e a s , r a t h e r than military force— enough to b asic Soviet in terests victed of contempt during the h a za rd posed by the refuse has prom pted some to call fo r a state of em erg en cy. the UJS. 6th Fleet d estroyer should be used to eliminate the to be worth global destruction. hearing before Streit. U P I Telephoto Bache ran aground on the rocky beach of the Rhodes Yachting Symphony gives results of last June’s war. Syria alstf has rejected U.N. efforts Club on Tuesday. for peace. W IS C O N S IN C A M P A IG N T he ship,commanded by Cm dr. Ni block concerto Leftist Syria, which is armed, Edward A . Broadw ell, of B ir ­ mingham, M ich ., was reported in no Immediate danger. A Rhodes The MSU Symphony O rchestra will present the p rem iere per­ advised and aided by the Soviet Union, follows Soviet sugges­ t i o n s on economic policy. It Last N ixon calls for revolution’ h arbor spokesman said the 50 c r e w m e n were rem aining on board during effo rts to fre e the form ance of a double bass con­ certo by Jam es Nlblock, ch air­ man of the Dept, of M u sic, at its echoes Kremlin views on most aspects of world affairs. But, one Soviet source said: to rem edy Latin problems v e s s e l, despite the bad weather. The B ache had dropped anchor outside the harbor Monday for a winter concert a t 4 p.m . Sunday In the Auditorium. Niblock’ s work, "C o n ce rto fo r "When it comes to Israel, they don't listen to u s.” As interpreted by Informed 5 t h r e e - d a y g o o d -w ill v isit to Double B a ssa n d O rch e stra ," will Soviets, the Syrian hatred for Days . Rhodes, 12 m iles off the Turkish be performed by guest so lo ist, Israel is so irrational that it can STEVENS POINT, W is. W — about 1,500 in the university Field r e je c t its petition. " I f I thought co ast and the la rg est of t h e Gary K a rr, the young double bass Richard M. Nixon told a univer­ House, Nixon proposed that a doing one or a ll of these things sity audience Tuesday that Latin A m erica "n eed s rad ical change, highway be built down the center of South A m erica to open up the w o u l d lead to peace, lasting p e a c e ," he said, " I 'd be for G reek Dodecanese Islands in the Aegean Sea. The d estroy er apparently virtuoso who com missioned Nib­ lock’ s work. The orchestra will be under the SUMMER JOBS Thousand« of collage students needs a revolu tion." continent’ s heartland. them. But I have to respectfully dragged Its anchor as h u rri- baton of Dennis Burkh,conductor for resort employment. Fun-Fil- All Buckets and B arrels, today through Sunday have the “ I ’m not saying we should go " I t will do more to ra is e the d isagree with those who take ca n e -fo rce winds sweeping the of the MSU Symphony. ied jobs with hiql> puy in 37 50# OFF lids I out and blow up co u n trie s," the standard of living than all the that p o sition ." southern Aegean fo r the past Other works will Include "T h e states. The I96'"i edition of the fo rm er vice president said. so -called handouts,” he said. Another student asked Nixon two days pushed It toward the Im presario O v ertu re," by Mo­ Students Resort Employment Dir­ Redeem the lids on your next Bucket or Barrel anytime " I ’m not talking about m arch ­ T h e question of Latin A m eri­ whether he would authorize the rocky sh ore. Winds of hurricane zart; "Symphony No. 18 in G ectory is now available! Page up to Thursday, Feb. 15th, 1968. ing feet, I ’m talking about help­ ca provided a dram atic highlight use of nuclear weapons in V iet­ fo rc e a re above 75 m iles per M a jo r," by Haydn and " T i l l E u - after page of certified jobs at ing hand s." to what was otherwise a routine nam, w ere he P resid ent. hour. lensplegel's M erry P ra n k s ," by leading resorts. Maps, mileage Nixon's c o m m e n t cam e in answer to a student questioner sessio n . Students representing S tra u ss. ____ chart, applications, and help­ S A V E T H E L ID ! " I would n o t," Nixon said. “ I at Stevens Point U niversity who the "Stev en sP oin tC o m m itteefor ful hints that help you "get take a firm line on Vietnam but B L E E D F O R V E T E R A N ’S ASSN . COi. |ANectr MOM fried£fcfcken told him pointedly: P eace in Vietnam” presented that job". SEND $1. 00 for Dir­ no, I would not. And I would not "Y ou e i t i y want radical social Nixon with a petition calling on ectory to: anDar Publishers, Invade North Vietnam^ n " would chsrg^.xjr * u ’r e a l ia r ." The student, who did not iden­ him to oppose the Johnson ad­ ministration’s scaling down what they c a l l e d "th e level of vio­ I invade any atb-T country In the area t. BLOOS Box 15327, Tulsa, Okja. 74115 « NÜH---------------- tify him self, s a i d that unless something Is done about Latin A m erica’ s p r o b l e m s beyond p ro m ises, t h e next A m erican le n c e ," and d irect negotiations with the V iet Cong. Nixon told the group he must “T h e goal is to end the war in a way that doesn’t produce an­ other war o r a bigger w a r ," DRIVE — -Ä Ä i ------------- (City)............................ « . ¿ ¡ r U P 1040 E . Grand River, E . Lansing 1620 E. Michigan Ave., Lansing and elsewhere In Lansing 351-5550 484-7759 B asem ent of the P resid en t would again be “ spit A u d ito riu m upon" by Latin A m ericans. Service, Not Serve Us Nixon, while vice president, was je e re d and spat upon during a visit to South A m erica. Feb. 7 & 8 Surprise ALPHA PHI OMEGA Nixon seemed to take the ch a l­ RUSH 11:00 A .M . - 5:00 P .M . lenge in stride, COM ES IN TH R E E "L a tin A m erica needs rad ical change,’ ’ he said. " I t needs a revolu tion." National S e rv ic e F ra te rn ity Feb. 9:00 A .M . - 3:00 P .M . 9 S M A L L PACKAGES FR O M Nixon, in his second day of campaigning for W isconsin’ s 30 Republican convention delegates, Feb. 8 R o om 22 visited the campus as part of a 7-8:30 P .M . •. Union tour that started in Appleton “ S o n g s f o r a Tuesday morning and included 99 v isits to Stevens Point, Oshkosh C o ld W i n t e r E v e n in g and Fond du L a c . Meanwhile at Madison, he was named officially along with five other Republican contenders— Including New York Gov. Nelson I ® ® R o ck efeller and Illin o is Sen. C h arles P e rc y —to the ballot for the A pril 2 prim ary. T h e other GOP candidates will be C alifornia Gov. Ronald Reagan, Gov. R om - ney and fo rm er Minnesota Gov. Harold Stassen . C o rn s In and meet the K L H Model Twenty At h is appearance before a warmly responsive audience of If you want to fill your home with superb music without cluttering it with bulky, ex ­ pensive equipment, come in and see and hear the KLH Model twenty. A high p erfo r­ mance stereo m usic system designed to fit gracefully into your home. Research director Don’t be deceived by the unobtrusively oiled walnut cabinetry and the clean non- knobby look of the twenty. Ju s t turn it on and listen to the sound that isn ’t easy to come by at twice the size or p rice. speaks tomorrow T h e KLH Model Twenty is a com plete stereo m usic system . It has a sen sitive,.d rift fre e FM stereo tuner as well as acustom built G arrard record changer with Pickering Roland R, Renne, director of magnetic stylus, plus ja ck s fo r external equipment, headphones and making tape reco rd ­ the U.S. O f f i c e of Water Re­ ings. sources Research, will speak at 8 p jn , Thursday In Wells Aud.on If th a t’s what you’ ve been looking fo r, come see and h ea r “ Water Resource Problems of the K LH Model Tw enty fo r y o u rself. the United States.” Renne will also announce the Be sure to h e a r the KLH Model T w enty-on e F M -R a d io . winner of the Sigma XI Junior Research Award, presented an­ nually by the MSU chapter of the Science Research Society. Renne w a s the president of T he first time you hear the KLH Model Twenty Montana State University when he One FM radio, you won’t believe your ears. This assumed his present post in De­ small FM radio provides a totally unreasonable amount cem ber, 1964. of sound—enough to fill any room In your home. Blood drive lacks goal by 970 pints C o m e in and let the M odel Tw enty-one aston ish you T h e winter term blood drive ' continues today with 970 pints All here . . . a s pretty as you pleasel Andthat’s mighty ■ till needed to reach the 1,200- pretty pickings for th e-g irl-o f-’68I F o r a frill or a fabu­ lous formal, there’ s no flattery so outrageous as lace or Hi Fi Buys pint goal set by the V etera n s’ A ssociation and Alpha Gamma embroidery or velvet or taffeta. And who could doubt that Delta sorority, drive sponsors. of all the looks that’ll never be "o u t,” the " in -e s t" one The drive, held In the base­ of all is a pretty g irl like you? ment of the Auditorium, Is open T A P E R E C O R D IN G IN DUSTRIES from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. today F rid a y , Feb. 9 - - 7:30 and Thursday and from 9 a.m . \ E R IC K S O N K IV A - O n ly 75d 1101 E . GRAND R IV E R , EAST LANSING to 3 p.m. Friday. Phone 337-2310 Although anyone m a y give blood, there is a , special r e ­ quest today for O-positive blood. E ast Lansing MSU FOLKLORE SOCETY Jam es D, Spentolo E ric Pianin, executive editor M I C H I G A N ed itor-in-chief. Lawrence Werner, managing editor Bobby Soden, campus editor STATE NEWS Edward A. B rill, editorial editor Susan Comerford Jo e Mitch, sports editor advertising manager U N IV E R S IT Y F !v * -» lm * re cip ien t of the P a c e m a k e r aw ard fo r outstanding jo u rn alism . Wednesday Morning, February 7, 1968 E D IT O R IA L S Visitation and 6U99 now is the time open houses ... w ould be m ade The s p e e d w ith w h ich a c tio n on stu d y o p e n h o u s e s w id ely av ailable now, stu ­ Freedom of and visitatio n in general m o v in g h a s r e a c h e d th e point is dents b etter c o u ld opin ion form u late of v isitation a on t h e ir o w n . McCarthy shut down of rid icu lo u sn ess. L ittle is b e in g d o n e, and w h at h a s b e e n The in fo rm atio n on stu d y u ndertaken is being pursued ca m p a ig n fo r the D e m o c r a t ic op en h o u s e s is now a v a ila b le , Freedom of sp eech, g u a r­ w ith th e k in d o f f e r v o r sh o w n n om in ation . Such a s e p a r a ­ and m o r e w ill b e f o r t h c o m i n g a n te e d in th e F irs t Am end­ b y a K o d ia k b e a r in J a n u a r y . t i o n w o u ld i n d e e d b e n e f i t M c ­ sh ortly from the w om en’s m ent, h as trad ition ally been C a r t h y ’ s i m a g e in th e e y e s o f So f a r the only c o n c lu s io n h alls. There should be no t h e m a i n s t a y o f c i t i z e n s w ith th e g e n e r a l p u b lic . H is a id e s w h ich o n e c a n d ra w f r o m the m ore stallin g to slow down d issen tin g v i e w s on the have even encouraged M c­ study open houses is that co n sid eratio n of the v isita­ A m erican sy stem . C arthy to con cen trate on they are being held. W om­ tion p o licy change--a d eci­ Yet a group of le ftists, g r o u p s of v o tin g p u blic en’s resid en ce h a l l s now sion should be forth com in g w it h th eir am bigu ou s and rather th a n tou r u n iv ersi­ h a v e p e r m i s s i o n to c a r r y on by the end of this term . u n clear g o als, h a ra sse d Sen. T he fir s t item to be con sid ered is th is Eugene J. M cC arth y , can d i­ ties and m eet w ith student ex p erim en tal open houses. R e d C e d a r problem . . . --T h e E d ito rs d a te o p p o s i n g P resid en t groups. H o w e v e r , the in f o r m a t io n John son for the 1968 P r e s i ­ The road ahead of M c­ resu lting f r o m the open d en tial n o m in atio n , to the C a r th y is a ro u g h o n e . T im e houses in m en’s h alls, and JOSEPH ALSOP point of cu ttin g short h is and again h is o p p osition to the good student reaction m e e t i n g w ith s t u d e n t e d i t o r s Johnson is n o te d only in to them so far, is larg ely in W a s h in g to n S a t u r d a y . term s of V ietn am , an im ­ b ein g ig n o red . portant issu e, to be sure, F o r s o m e tim e the m a g ic a l cause P aying of lip serv ice freed om , the to the Left but not h is only a r e a o f d is ­ a g r e e m e n t w ith th e A d m i n is ­ tim e the p erio d resu lts for con sid erin g has been set at Rockefeller - D on’t call me . . . seem s lately to b e the f i r s t tration . tw o term s. T h e r e is no a p ­ to stifle in th o s e w ith w h o m It is iron ic th a t a group p aren t re a so n for this. there would also be doubts about the gov­ NEW YORK-- The immense nonsurprise sible that Romney would actually give up th e y d i s a g r e e t h e v e r y v a l u e s of d issen ters, w hose very his candidacy, perhaps asking Rockefeller ernor’s ability to beat President Johnson. of former Vice P r e s i d e n t Richard M. th e y d e m a n d . Nixon’s announcement of candidacy does to take over. It is not widely known, but Third, it will, t h e r e f o r e , be better for existen ce depends on the The action of concerned not change the basic Republican situation Romney started to withdraw some months Rockefeller to stay out of Oregon, and to r i g h t to S p e a k , w ould s o b l a ­ ad m in istrato rs has b e e n ago, when he first began to run into bad gamble exclusively on the two factors that T h e y would deny th e S e n a ­ one particle. Whereas, the situation is al­ ready being importantly changed by t h e trouble. On that occasion Rockefeller only now favor a near-draft. The first factor is to r the b a s i c f r e e d o m of p r e ­ ta n tly a b u se th a t f r e e d o m in ch aracterized , until now , by perceptible jelling of Gov. Nelson A. Rock­ barely persuaded him to go forward. the conspicuous Uck of e n t h u s i a s m for sen tin g his view ». They d e n y in g i t to o t h e r ^ . relu ctan ce. It is apparently But that is by the way. The main point Nixon among the great m ajority of the 26. efeller's intentions for 1968. th e ir a ttitu d p that v isitatio n •Tft hJfcin at the begiiming^there used, to is the vncr|gs*ng predictability of Rocke- Republican governors, who ca n on ly to n h u teu lfV d e n y t h e s t u d e n t p r e s s , At a t i m e w lf e n t h e be two quiteim aginable bufm gitv anlikety fe i ft r s i if R o m n e y ’scandidacy up behftd the New Yorker if they do not w hich has been m ore fav or­ n e e d s to b e o f f e r e d a ch oice, has no p lace at M S y _ „ b .u t f f future developments that would have made ends in disaster in the primaries. The argu­ want the former Vice President. Rockefeller decide to stay quietly in New ment about what-to-do-then no longer con­ The second, much more persuasive fac­ able to M cC arthy than the a d iffé r e n c e of o p in io n in is n o t t h e i r r i g h t to le t su c h York. One is out of the way now, for Sen. cerns candidacy v e r s u s noncandidacy. If tor is the steadily increasing evidence that c a n d i d a t e s , a n a l t e r n a t i v e to attitu d es slow down in itiatio n Romney fails, Rockefeller and his advisers the winner-loser contrast between Rocke­ sen ior press, acco rd in g to Robert F. Kennedy has now announced that he will not contest the Dem ocratic nomi­ will instead of be two minds about how he feller and Nixon is having m o r e impact his aid es, the right to e v e n c o n tin u e d w ar in V ietn am , of a v isita tio n p o licy . nation with President Johnson. caif best become a c a n d i d a t e , with the with each passing week. For example, the it is of p rim e im p o rtan ce Of p rim ary concern at the highest hopes of success a t Miami. conservative Rep. Melvin Laird, who was h e a r h im speak. Though no longer more than academic, Barry Goldwater’s strong b a c k e r , would Perhaps, as som e M c­ th a t M c C a r t h y b e a llo w e d to m om ent is the e x p e r im e n t a l The point a t issue will be whether to play this point is worth mentioning because it seem an immensely unlikely Rockefeller e x p r e s s h i m s e l f an d th a t th e p ro je c t in v o lv in g study open throws light on Rockefeller’s cool self-ap­ a waiting game, or whether to fight the Ore­ enthusiast. Yet, Laird has just been mak­ C arthy a id e s s p e c u la t e d , the gon primary against Nixon. All reports in­ houses. There m ust be a praisal. Briefly, he knows that his main ing strong pro-Rockefeller noises. in c id e n t at the stu d e n t p r e s s p u blic be allow ed to listen . dicate that R ockefeller should have no trou­ appeal derives from the Republicans’ han­ Again, there is the Gallup Poll of Repub­ The F irs t Am endm ent . .. p olicy ch an g e if open h o u ses kering for a winner. If Kennedy had instead ble beating Nixon in Oregon. And R o ck e-, lican organization people. In the last three c o n f e r e n c e w ill d is a s s o c ia t e feller's activist-advisers argue that he must decided to d e s t r o y both himself and his months this poll shows that Nixon has suf­ the m o r e e x t r e m i s t e l e m e n t s e sp ecially w hen i t ’ s need ed . are to be held at the d is­ go into Oregon, in order to give the Republi­ party, the Republicans c o u l d then have fered a dizzying decline, while Rockefeller — The E d itors cretion of the h a ll. If stud y been confident of winning with a zombie can governors and other potential support­ has made a handsome gain of no less than from the senator and h is at the head of the ticket. And in that event, ers a standard to rally behind. 10 points. In the very group where Nixon Rockefeller would have lost his main ap­ The argument of the antiactivists is more should be strongest only 55 per cent now peal. subtle and complex. It is ajso far more im­ favor Nixon, with 41 per cent for Rocke­ O U R R E A D E R S’ M IN D S As for the other p o s s i b l e development portant, since it appears tar more likely to feller and the rest undecided. Such are the points known to have im­ that may still keep Rockefeller out of the convince Rockefeller. It runs as follows: F irst, going into Oregon would automat­ pressed Rockefeller the most. Despite con­ race, it would be an unexpectedly g o o d Don’t dismiss Rosenthal showing in the primaries by Gov. Romney. ically rekindle the antique feud between the trary reports, it can be categorically stated Rockefeller has pledged his s u p p o r t to Republican P arty’s moderates and conserv­ that he has had nothing whatever to do with atives. the write-in drives that h a v e appeared in Romney, and he still means every word of Second, another spasm of feuding, with both New Hampshire and Oregon. And the film reviews. They are not at the present that pledge. But the fact remains that the To the Editor: pledge will be rendered m e a n i n g l e s s , all the conservative fire aimed at Rocke­ chances are high that he will simply wait time reviewing motion pictures for any Judith C rist, Joseph Morganstem, Har­ ris Alpert and Arthur Knight are con­ publications, stuffy or otherwise. ROTC 'rights’ if Romney does even half as badly in New Hampshire as the pollers have predicted. feller, would o b v i o u s l y impair the gov­ ernor's chances at Miami, no m atter what for his party to come to him-which is a fascinating but far-out gamble. scientious, succinct film c ritic s . Stuart Rosenthal is not a humorous To the Editor: the result in Oregon. With a split party, Copyright 1968. Los Angeles Times In that event in truth, it is not impos­ Paulene Kael seems a sincere reviewer, c r itic to be lightly dismissed. Many stu­ There has recently been much to-do but she gets lost in her own egoism. dents probably take Rosenthal’ s reviews about the "rig h ts ” of a student to take She is In love with the sounds of her own seriously, and that’s too bad because they any particular class which she or he de­ writing, and her reviews often contain w ill m iss many Interesting film s, and sire s to take. The ROTC department has JIM D O A N long sentences of image clauses strung even plays. been the target of much of this criticism . together with an overabundance of "ands.” Although "T h e Sound of Music’ ’ is In the first place I submit that It is She also has a habit of being obnoxious m erely saccharine tripe as a motion pic­ erroneous to feel that any student has a when involved in public or filmed dis­ cussion of the film art. Tim e magazine’s reviews can be lightly ture, and "V alley of the D olls" I found should appeal to only sub-water intel­ lects, I submit that M r. Rosenthal, like right to an education above the mandatory level established by law. From that point on any education Is a privilege which may It could happen to you dismissed as slick, often humorous, enter­ Kaufman and MacDonald, does a poor Job or may not be utilized. tainment. of explaining or Justifying his criticism s In the second place the University has Stanley Kaufmann and Dwight MacDon­ of film s o r theatre In an otherwise Inter­ the authority to screen applicants, thus "You, as a college senior, are now a ald are pseudo-Judicious, cynical, opin­ esting columm. admitting or rejecting prospective stu­ member of a select market. As a col­ ionated individuals who reflect their per­ Ed Oldani dents according to established rules. The lege graduate you are: going to live sonal biases and philosophies in their G rosse Pointe, senior m ere quantity of applicants is one impor­ longer; going to have more leisure; going tant factor the University must consider to want to be better informed; less sus­ if It is to match the quantity of students ceptible to venereal disease; have a bet­ to the available facilities. ter chance to be president of the United As the University must match facilities States (the way things are going, 1 doubt Hurray, the heart will save with students so also must the various departments develop guidelines to best en­ that); less likely to die from a) star­ vation, b) being run down by a tr a ile r- sure that the students most interested in truck on 1-96, c) an overdose of Coke and Even with the Playboy Foldoutyou must way through filling out the application To the Editor: taking a course or who are required to take aspirin, d) being knifed by a militant Jew of the fellows had to say and make a open It up with your right hand. in Central Park; going to make more when I got suspicious. When the question Recently a letter appeared in the State that course are able to do so. The ROTC decision. In baseball it Is hard to find a good left was put to him, "What the hell is this?” News about the controversy over the right department, In its policy of admitting only money (this being the most important of As any good cop can tell you, it is bet­ hand glove and virtually Impossible to find he said in a slight southern drawl, "W ell handed majority trying to ostracize the those people to whom the course is neces­ a ll).’’ ter to talk to a hostile party in sur­ left handed minority from our society. a left handed catcher’* m il. So goes the pitch. Day after day during Jim , what we are going to do is send You have never heard a person say sary or complimentary. Is limiting en­ roundings unfamiliar to him. So my first I would’ like to add further evidence of trance Into its department much more the last year of college the mail brings mistake was going to his office. My second your $10 in to see if you qualify for "H e ’ s my left hand m an." letters from the stalwarts of the free the preferred rates. If you don’t qual­ this. equitably than If they pursued a policy of mistake was staying once 1 arrived. Even the Armed Forces are against us, ify, then you get your $10 back.” Then, In this country driving, by law, Is done first come first served. Especially since enterprise system soliciting the future Everything starts off very friendly. Your for we must salute with our right hand. business of tomorrow’s leaders. Day aft­ suddenly it hit me where I had heard on the right side of the road, bi most it has become a fad to audit or visit an kind-hearted Mutual of Podunk man ex­ The moat spiteful of all Is the policy e r day the wastebasketbecomesfllledwith that figure before. That $10 wai the first cars you must also Insert the keys Into ROTC course by those who feel the need plains the "specialized’’ policy to you, the Ignition with your right hand. to put a wedding ring on a girl’ s left hand. the literature. Most frequent though, is the payment on the policy. In other words if But do not fear " le ftie s ,” for the heart to purge our university of what they Just for college men. He picks an a r ­ Which way do we write In this coun­ • insurance propaganda. bitrary figure, like $90,000, for an exam­ I did qualify, and what do you want to bet Is on the left, believe to be an outmoded department. try? To the right. Try to write with a You are told over and over that now is the ple policy. Then somewhere along the I would have, 1 had myself an insurance Mark Walchak Jeffrey Q. A. Smith fountain pen left handed, you can’t do time to begin worrying about that wife and line, It would really be hard to say when, policy. Detroit, sophomore Lansing, senior So I am a special market. So I am It without smearing the Ink. five kids. If you were to die, what will the transition is made to a policy which happen to them? The answer you are not he feels you can afford. Surprisingly higher than the average In Intelligence. IM \Nl 1 supposed to think of is nothing, because They why don’t they treat me like that. BUT I MUST ADMIT THERE THAT'S THE üüAV I AM... enough the cost of the policy is always they are only a twi’Ucle in some adver­ based on this more meager figure. These Maybe these guys sell insurance by get­ ARE ALSO TIMES WHEN I BV6ABLE AND HUSABLE tising man’s eye. tactics didn't bother me though. I felt ting people in spots they have trouble FEEL LIKE GIVING MJU A HUG... jn. Hockey: Of the UJS. team 's men the best claw, Wash., 18-year-old Kikl oslovakia’s young an d speedy schedule against Czechoslovakia, F t. Campbell, N.Y. event categories only pert 19- ting—1:30 ajm . Man's 30—kilo­ Norway v s. France—2:30 p A hopes lie with Billy Kidd, 24, Kutter, of Bend, O re., 21-year- hockey team to officially open Sweden, Russia and Canada. In The Czechs quickly broke the year-old Colorado Springs figure m e t e r cross-country akllng— Hocket: Russia v s. Bast Ger­ of Stowe, V t., who won a sil­ old Rosie Fortna, of W arren, the 1968 Winter Olympic games that order, fell behind with 5:30 deadlock in the second period skater Peggy Flemming was en­ 2:30 a jn . Hockey: Poland v s. many—3 p jn . gene in the first period when Jan and the U.S. was never in it ver medal In slalom at the last Vt. and Wendy Allen, 23, of San Tuesday. tering the games as the girl to Olympics In Innbruck In 1964. Pedro, C alif. The Czechs broke a 1-1 tie Suchy took a pass from J o ­ after that. Jan Havel took a pass beat. Though Kidd was out of compe­ with two goals in the second p e­ sef Golonka and slammed home a seven feet In front of the Amer­ T h e dark-haired young Col­ The U.S. bobsleigh teams don't doesn't have a chance against Coach Murray Williamson said tition with a broken leg all of riod and then scored two more goal past goalie Pat Rupp of ican goal and slapped it by the orado College sophomore Is fav­ th e Scandinavian and Russian his les hockey squad has as last season, he has shown great appear to stand m u c h chance times In the final period to put Minneapolis. post with only 2:01 gone. ored by virtue of being the reign­ promise In pre-Olympic compe­ against th e strong Romanian, squads which have traditionally good a chance as anyone to win the game out of reach for the Almost 15 minutes later, the Czechoslovakia made It 3-1 on ing two-time World Champion. tition consistently placing In the Italian and B ritish en tries. How­ monopolized the event. th e gold model, but experts o a goal by Jaroslav Jlrlk with 14 The men's skating team, seconds left In the second pe­ headed by National Champion Tim riod—■ shot that sent Rupp Wood, 19, of Detroit M ich., is top five. ever the number one two-man Teammate Jim Heuga, 25, of aled of) Paul L a m e y , 29, of Tahoe City, C alif., slalom bronze Manchester, N.H., and Robert Hopes aren't quite so dim In agreed the Soviet Union,reigning speed skating since the U £ . team World and Olympic Champions, includes 27-year-old Terry Mc­ should regain their title easily. Bessone predicts sprawling. not considered strong enough to Two more goals In the third get a gold medal, but Wood or period—by P eter Hejma at 1:47 fellow Detroit skater Gary Vis­ medal winner at Innsbruck, also Huscher, 30, of K eesevllle,N .Y., Dermott o f E ssexv llle, Mich. could pull through though to date have shown some he has not been In top form. training at Alpe Dhuez and in promise In The American squadwas phys­ McDermott won a gold medal In ically fit and mentally prepared, the 500 m eter speed skating event Williamson said, but he admitted and J lr l Hollk at 15:05— Iced conti, 22, could possibly get a one practice run even managed at Innsbruck much to the sur­ the first two matches—against The girl’ s squad,' however. Is the G ech victory. Two other sliver or a bronze. m edal for icers Czech goals were disallowed. At one point In the third pe­ In the glamour Alpine Skiing events the young and relatively the unknown factor. They have to beat all the other 21 teams prise of the experts. However, Czechoslovakia today andSwodan shown great depth this season. racing. While not winning.in major Inter- he has done very little since in 24 hours later—would be tough- The UJS. cross country team International competition. les. called the Soviets’ national team riod, the Czechs bottled up the By T O M BROWN close to a professional outfit but Americans behind their own blue Inexperienced UJS. ski squad is WSSii-Ä-S-SS State News Sports W r it e r Bessone is a little more frank. line for nearly four minutes, n o t among the favorites—the The Olympic hockey round- "T he closest thing to Russian leaving U.S. coach Murray Wil­ French, Austrlans and Swiss— re m e m b e r y o u r robin got underway Wednesday, hockey in this country is the liamson shaking his head In frus­ though skiing experts rank them tration. strong and with plenty of prom­ and Amo Bessone, MSU hockev NHL,” Bessone said. coach, sees medals for the brash “ Their entire p r o g r a m is U.S. team, d e s p i t e the United geared for the Olympics, and they V a le n t in e ... States’ loss to Czechoslovakia, play, not so much for the sport, 5-1, Tuesday. as for the propaganda.” " I pick the U.S. team for "Hockey is a way of life In F e b ru a ry 1 4 th th ird ," Bessone said, "behind the R u s s i a , " B essone continued, Russians and the Czechs. "they play about eight months "You have to pick the So­ and spend the rest of the year on v ie ts," Bessone explained, "bu t conditioning. It is a means of the U.S. team Is a sentimental gaining a better living. favorite for me. Everyone else “They have a million players says fourth or fifth, but I feel in their program, so it Is an that this year we have the size, honor to be on the Olympic team ." the speed and the athletes to do Bessone said that this is the wel?.V * rule in Europe, pointing out that Bessone felt that defense will the Swedes are paid for endor­ be an American strongpolnt. sing everything from butter milk "We have agooddefensemanln to hockey sticks. Louis Nanne. He is as capable The U.S. team won the gold a perform er as the Olympic sw ill medal in 1960 with a hard check­ s e e ," Bessone said. ing game, and Bessone feels But the chief reason for B e s - that the Soviets could be edged sone's selection has to be former again. Spartan Doug Volmar. Bessone "T h ere are two ways to beat feels that Volmar Is the best of the Russians. You can break up several fine forwards on th e their plays by checking them, or American squad. you can outshoot them. 'T think that Volmar lsthe key. "They will work the puck well, He should be the top performer but you can beat them by shoot­ of the Olym pics," Bessone said. ing. They can match^ the NHL B essone m t VMAfcvrv*-.« v»e th tbetv t>-d passing, but for the brilliant Cleveland, Ohio, they shoot neither well, hard nbr native who possessed what mqny often," Bessone said. called the hardest shot In college "B ut you have to favor them. hockey. They are the finest conditioned "He has the best shot In the athletes anywhere in the world," Olympics," Bessone said. "He he said. finally gave up the slap shot for that wrist shot of his. Ha had to or he wouldn’t have made UPI Top 10 the team. Now he Isn’t te le­ graphing his shots to the goalie." TEAM POINTS Bessone feels that the biggest 1. Houston (22) (20-0) 337 b arrier ahead for the U .S. team 2. UCLA (13) (16-1) 327 is the European rules that de- 3. North Carolina (14-1) 268 emphaslze checking In favor of 4. T ennessee(14-2) 200 passing and skating. 5 . New Mexico (17-1) 190 grand The U.S. team has already 6 . St. Bonaventure (16-0) 183 been branded "a bunch of hooli­ 7. Columbia (13-3) 105 gans" by the European press, and 8. Kentucky (13-4) 73 the crushing board work of the 9. Vanderbilt (14-4) 41 Americans w i l l not pass un­ 10. Duke (11-3) 37 noticed in Grenoble. Second 10: 11, Louisville 22; "P enalties can hurt us more 12, New Mexico State 20; 13,(tie) t h a n anything e ls e ," Bessone Boston College and Davidson 14; opening said. 15, Wyoming 12; 16,Ohio State 11; Bessone feels that Czecho­ 17, Drake 10; 18, Florida 9; 19, slovakia is game but outgunned. Utah 8; 20, Kansas 7 . "T he Czechs were once the of our best team in Europe, but in spite Practice change of their spirit, they lack the manpower of the Soviet Union.’’ The MSU R u g b y Club has A s everyone else, Bessone ■witched practice sessions from wig salon concedes the gold medal to the Wednesday n i g h t to 8-10 p.m. Soviet Union. Sports Illustrated Thursday. s p e c ia l s a v in g s have a heart . . . give her h u m a n h a ir w i g s a treasure from Knapp9s 8 9 . 9 5 c o lo r ific s ilk d a z z le r s M a r v e lo u s o p p o rtu n ity to save on h a n d -m a d e o r s e m i Im a g in a tiv e , c o n te m p o ra ry a r t d e s ig n s , ab laze h a n d -m a d e w ig s o f fin e s t w ith c o lo r on su p erb s q u a re s o f p u re s ilk . G ifts q u a lity hum an h a i r . L a r g e to go r ig h t w ith so m an y o f h e r o u tfits . $2 to $6. s e le c tio n o f shades in c lu d ­ ACCESSORIES'STREET LEVEL EAST LANSING ing g r e y m ix e s and fr o s ts . C u t and s ty lin g , 1 2 .5 0 . R e ­ s ty lin g y o u r p r e s e n t w ig , $8 fa s h io n fo r a g o o d sp o rt G o lf p ro . . . o r g o o f-o ff, sh e’ l l lo v e th is authen­ t ic s o u ffle k n it g o lf c a rd ig a n w ith p lu n g in g V - n e c k lin e . In y e llo w , lig h t b lu e , p in k , b e ig e , r e d , B e a u tifu l h um an h a ir w ig ­ o liv e , n av y o r w h ite . S - M - L . 1 1 .9 8 le ts f o r q u ic k c h a n g e -a b o u t SPORTSWEAR-CAMPUS CENTER EAST LANSING h a ir - d o s , now at G ra n d O p ening s a v in g s . Im p o r te d hum an h a i r , In w id e s e le c ­ r o m a n t ic M e m o ir e C h e r ie tio n o f f a v o r ite d a r k and A n enoh&nting f lo r a l bouquet w ith a n a m e th a t lig h t shades. m ean s “ d e a r m e m o r y ’ M o s s y , o r ie n t a l, eat I« s till m o d e rn b len d o f d e lic a te f l o r a l e s s e n c e s sh e ’ l l M e e t M is s V a l a d o re in m any g if t w a y s . C o lo g n e s p r a y , $ 6 . UNHN CAFETERIA w ie c o n s u lta n t M is t , 3 .5 0 D u s tin g p o w d e r, 3 ,5 0 . COSMETICS'STREET LEVEL EAST LANSING basem ent of-the Union Wednesday, February 7, 1968 8 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan 'Will of G o d ’ said cause '/1 —» « \1 ''.c'W* ■ VI g r /’M ■ Alumni Chapel’spast t. h itt « » • - K>fl of tw o California deaths SAN LUB OBISPO, Calif. IB— Patricia Carol Rush, 24, awoko there have been hundreds of let­ 9K fill! : * >i recounted by sexton When the contractor's bids plct various aspects of educa­ The Baptist family of two young last Ja n . 17, screamed, and fall te rs and phone calls since Patri­ By JUNE D E L A N O came to, they fa r exceeded alum­ tional experience as they relate woman who, flva years apart, dead. cia died, many offering prayers State News S ta ff W r it e r ni finances, so the plans were to modem life. screamed and died believes the Dr. John Blanchard,Santa Bar­ e r suggestions but "o th e rs were Are you one of the 99 per cent temporarily postponed. The drive Throughout the church, frag­ mysterious deaths were the will bara County coroner, said Mon­ downright vicious." » -'ifj o f MSU students who knows little to collect funds, through private ments of churches bombed to the day studies are still being con­ The family, active to the F irst 'k - of God* j o r nothing about the toterfaith donations, began again to hopes war are imbedded to the walls. The mother, Ruth Stephens,, ducted to the esse of M rs. Rush Southern Baptist Church here, Alumni Memorial Chapel? of raising enough money to build They have been collected by told an Interviewer, "God la not but " a t this point It just doesn't also includes two boys L arry , i ’J S V r. Perhaps It’ s “because there Is the chapel alone. friends of MSU who have gone vindictive. He doesn't take one look as If we'll ever find out 20, and Robert, 17. no extensive written history of The funds were eventually abroad or have been sent back by without a reason. I know my what caused the death of M rs. the building to be found on cam­ raised and the building was start­ foreigners who have visited the daughters died because of a medi­ R ush." pus. The only detailed record of ed on a plot of land In a secluded University. cal reason that so far has not been determined.'' Blanchard said, however, he hasn't given up, the post mortem Tri-U conference the Chapel is to the mind of Mal­ corner of campus that had been donated by the University. In the entrance to the Chapel, the names of 489 MSU alumni who colm Dickinson, class of 1915. A surviving s is te r , B arbara, studies are continuing and he is and sexton of the Chapel from Its The Chapel, located on Audi­ lost their lives to the armed 17, said, " I know it was God's consulting with the pathologist held here Friday dedication In 1952 until 1964. torium Road between the Kresge forces are engraved to the walls. will to r them to go. In some way who made tests after Miss Ste­ Dickinson attended chapel In Art Center and the Bogue Street Dickinson, who has helped with 1 believe we will all benefit from phans' death to 1963 and with "So cial Work in Jeopardy?" Old College Hall, where It was Bridge, Is no longer In an isolated over 1,000 weddings In the Chap­ it ." other pathologists. will be discussed at the Uth held until the building collapsed section of campus, but the sur­ el, remembers funny as well as And another siste r, Diana, 11, "Obviously there Is a medical Annual Tri-U niversity Social one night while contractors were rounding landscape still protects tragic incidents. said, " I think God wanted them reason for both deaths," Blan­ Work Conference in the Union reinforcing It. Th ereafter, the it from the commotion of traffic " I can remember a bride who to be with Him. He needed them, chard said ."B u tou r science isn't Friday. chapel was moved from building and students. was a half hour late for her that's why they went.” sophisticated enough to find some The conference is sponsored to building, providing students "M y first year in the Chapel wedding because she got hungry Medically, there is still no of the answers.” by the graduate schools of social with a temporary plade to wor­ we had around 55 weddings, but and stopped for a hamburger," answer as to why Beverly Joan work at Wayne State University, ship. the yearly average has gone up Dickinson said. "And there have Stephens, 17, swam the length of The husband and father, Ever­ ett Stephens, 4 4 , a correctional University of Michigan and MSU. Dr. Gordon E.Yudashkln. med­ Pulpit view P rio r to World War II, the to about 8 0 ," Dickinson said. " I t been numerous cases of lost a pool to Porterville on Aug. 2, alumni decided to raise the money is an Ideal setting for a wedding, dresses and cakes, as well as 1963, stepped out, screamed and officer at the California Men's ical superintendent of Northville Facing the pu lp it o f the Alumn! M e m o ria l Chapel, for a combined chapel and Inter­ with Its stained glass windows fainting bridegrooms." fell dead, and why her s iste r, Colony here, and his wife said State Hospital and Robert L. a w o rs h ip e r can d iscern the b u ild in g 's s p iritu a l national center. The original plan and old-world atmosphere. We Arrangements for use of the Green, associate professor in credo In s c rib e d on the three s ta in e d -g la s s window* called for a U-shaped complex on also saw religious functions of Chapel are made through the 3RD JOLTING!! IC H IG A N ► 4 tt< 3 N 6 counseling and personnel serv­ ices will be the lead speakers. State News photo by Jeff Blyth the site of the present L ibrary, many faiths " The windows have been donated Reservations Office at the Union. QLAPM ER WEEK FROORAMINFORMATION►485-6405 as memorials by Individuals and TODAY . . from 1:00 P.M . organizations. The theme of the At 1:10-3:14-5:18-7:20-9:25 LADIES DAY . . . 60< — 1:00 to 6:00 P.M . ™ Auto Workers pose Chapel, "R eligion , Brotherhood and P atriotism ," is represented by the windows at the head of the Report denies YEAR’S MOST TALKED ABOUT MOVIEI church. They're y o u n g . . . they’re in lo v e threat of G M strike The windows on the right side of the Chapel tell the history of fluid removal ...a n d they kill people. MSU, starting with its founding , . ■ .i DETROIT (UPI) — The United was set at 9; 15 a»m, EST next as the Michigan College of A gri- jf l O ld lU B T Q Auto Workers (UAW) threatened Tuesday. culture and Applied Sciences and Tuesday to strike four more Gen­ The new strike threats came on following through in chronologi­ eral Motors Corp. (GM) plants in top of sim ilar deadlines at GM CAPE TOWN, South Africa (B— cal sequence to the present. « that could put up to Installations in Pontiac, Mich., A Grootg S f huw Hospital spokes­ The windows on the left side 36,500 GM workers on strike by where 16,500 worker» »r^Ueady man denied today that fluid had and at the front of the church de- next week. to strike F r ^ y unless local con­ been rerfioved from near Philip The Union’s latest strike dead­ tract agreements are hammered Blaiberg’s transplanted heart. ]3 0N I1IE > ^ CElEDE lines were set up for GM instal­ out. 'IT debaters win # He was commenting on a state­ ■■■»■ill «MBAUST, HI lations in the Flint, M ich., ares If both Pontiac and Flint are ment by another hospital spokes­ ftn» ftOft#»*•»< «««!««!(» tilftcftft»»»*«!* Oniaftftl«TIW(WI where nearly 20,000 workers struck, GM would be faced with man Monday that it was necessary nCHNieOLOSMROMVIMRNmmOS.-HVINARTSVI another m ajor shutdown. The to tap fluid which, gathered in a m TECWHCOKM* FROM MMER M0S.-SEVEN » 1 1 1 0 N ext! C lin t Eastwood - "G ood, Bad and Ugly* could be Involved. The deadline firm Is still recovering from a first place in sac around the heart several NEXT; WALT DISNEY'S "HAPPIEST MILLIONAIRE trio of foundry strikes which tim es. idled up to 134 ,0 0 0 workers In the past few weeks. Virginia tourney Reports said the fluid gave no cause for alarm but indicated It The Flint deadlines Involved Two MSU juniors won fir s t was one reason for the setback the Chevrolet manufacturing place in a debate toui ur n i ment at that Is delaying Blalberg’ s dis­ plant, the Chevrolet V -8 engine W illiam and Mary t • . e In charge from the hospital. - yWllJiams&uig^y.i* iN k r t r n d . T he world’ s only » pmtu, ftiii a.. —V. * * * * , eating plant and a national parts Roger B. Chard, of rin s in g , heart transplant patient, B la j- distribution center. No Chevrolet and Glenn W. F o ster, of Saginaw, berg, 58, is not likely to leave assembly line was Involved. defeated George Washington Uni­ the hospital for at least two or The UAW said the Flint dead­ v ersity in the final round, 8 -3 . three weeks, sources said. line would be moved up "one day" In the prelim inary rounds, the M rs. Blaiberg said her hus­ IP *' If the company elects to operate MSU team was victorious over band's homecoming had been de­ B l; any of the plants Involved on over­ C e n t r a l Michiga n Univer slty. layed " fo r at least some weeks, time this Saturday. U niversity of Kentucky, Illin o is maybe a month." The hospital S t a t e U niversity, Dartmouth, had hoped he could go home in The Pontiac negotiations were m id-February. U niversity of New Hampshire and reported "v ery diligent*'by a GM "T hey have decided we were Georgetown U niversity. T h e de­ spokesman who said both sides going much too fast,” M rs. Blai­ b aters lost one round to the Uni­ hoped to keep working to avert a berg told reporters. "A fter his v ersity of Florida. Friday strike. T h e intercollegiate d e b a t e discharge, he will have to go The company and the union an­ topic was "R esolved: That the back to the hospital every morn­ nounced agreement on three new F e d e r a l government s h o u l d ing for some time, so he must local contracts, Including the guarantee a minimum annua lea sh have more time to build up his touchy Chevrolet plant at Muncie, income to all citiz e n s .” strength." MSU ASIAN-Latin American-African Series PRESENTS A n e v e n in g o f C la s s ic a l I n d i a n D a n c e s \ Chandra Sekhar I TONIGHT » K u m a rl Sudha D o ralsw a m y who FEBRUARY 7 sym bol Izes the peak ♦ o f p u rity and F a ir c h ild 4 p a rfa c tlo n In B h a ra ta Natyam I T h e a tr e has wen a reputation • among discern in g c n ltlc s as on# of A d m issio n $2.50 ths most outstanding MSU Studsnts with v a lid • c la s s ic a l danesrs In ID 50c ID at door. I ths country today I ¡I éÉ Í • I UNION TICKET OFFICE Michigan State News, East Lansing^ Michigan Wednesday, February 7, 1968 9 P e r fo r m in g A rts s u c c e e d s w ith A n im a l F a rm "Animal F a rm " is by fa r the lution against Farm er Jones and criterion of success. And Steele t h e s e effects are occasionally lication, y e t Orwell’s satire this kind of affort is its sffec- beat thing that the Performing assume control of the farm , the exudes odium to the extent that employed, is Impressive, giving em erges f r o m the staged p ro ­ tlveness—and "Aalmal P a m " Arts Company (PAC) has done acting personnel are called upon 1 find it difficult to stomach my direction an d guidance to th e gram virtually intact. as presented by PAC ts s snodisi» this year—rather Ironic con» to mimic bestial ch aracteristics own approval of his performance. moods and attitudes of the viewer. The hallmark of success for lngiy effective* ■lderlng the nature of the play and sounds while maintaining the These two are the outstanding This Is the outstanding feature and the cast who perform In it. allegorical treatment of com­ characterizations; th e o t h e r of PAC’ s rendition of "Animal T h e graduate students who munism in theory and application. players, however, are m o s t F a rm ." They have successfully comprise the PAC and dominate The task Is a difficult one, r e ­ satisfactory and exhibit remark­ Involved their audience In the the casts of Its productions are quiring somewhat sophisticated able thesplan dexterity as they action despite the fact that the currently on tour with "Romeo oral and physical interpretation. jump from one role to the next. characters are animals. and Ju lie t" and "T h e Skin of Our The seven students manage this to % Thus In Orwell’s novel, the T eeth,” thus relinquishing the the extent that the audience be­ By S T U A R T R O S E N TH A L The adaptation by Nelson Bond central satiric technique de­ Arena theater to the seven under» comes completely engaged by the Stato Nows R eview er was meant to be read by seven taches the reader from direct graduates who assume multiple action In the arena. readers, most likely sitting in Immersion In the depiction and roles In this adaptation of the David Stevens, for example, blance which Immeasurably en­ who Impersonates Napoleon, the c h a i r s facing a lecture hall brings him to look at the Ideas "re a d er’s adaptation" of George as Squealer, the liaison between hances his performance as the Imperious sovereign swine, Is the cn w d . PAC has chosen to stage In question from a novel and more Orwell’s novel. the ruling pigs and the proletar­ contemptuous seco n d -in -co m ­ slmulcrum of every real and fic­ the script, injecting a great deal objective perspective. In portraying the animals who iat animals looks like a villain mand. tional tyrant, not wily In physical of life into the allegory. The In the PAC version, the per­ stage their own glorious revo­ out of "F la sh Gordon," a resem - By the same token, E .J . Steele aspect but In his stance and style movement on the "in-the-round" suasion is d e r i v e d from th e of movement. stage is ingeniously planned with theatergoer’s empathic entrance When an audience takes a p e r­ p r e c i s e blocking and w ell- into the bestial society. The sonal dislike to an actor playing choreographed motion. methodology is the exact op­ I a heavy, he has fulfilled the basic Even the use of lighting, when posite of that observed in the pub­ >?ü r Reagan says he will refuse Animalism M o llie the Horse (Denise Judevlne) and B en jam in the M ule (Steve Shelton) ponder the fate o f the fa rm i vice-presidential can d id acy anim als follow ing the revolution and e stab lish m e n t of " A n im a l F a r m ." State News photo by L ance Lagonl tU AN EVENING OF SACRAMENTO (UPI) — Gov. b ack ers in other states in their following a policy of appease­ 4 Ronald Reagan of California said Tuesday he would refuse the Re publican vice presidential nomi­ attem pts to put his name on the prim ary ballot. He said he had expected T u e s ­ ment in world a ffa irs. "O u r record Is a little b etter than one of appeasem ent," he NIGHTMARES! Hirt“! nation If It’ s offered to him at the August GOP National Convention. day’ s placement of his name on the W isconsin prim ary ballot. He said. "W e have lost a great deal of ground in not taking CAN YOU TAKE IT? ¡¡y R ftsp " "1 have no interest in that job,” said W isconsin law is “ sim ilar positive steps in the fir s t 24 he told a news conference. " I to Oregon’ s and th e re ’ s nothing h o u rs ." T A R L 1 TE believe there’s a greater oppor­ we can do about it.” Reagan reiterated his e a rlie r Di ivi In Th(’«t rc . * .M a .M in n tunity for the cause 1 believe Reagan also said the Johnson position that the United States In right here in California.” adm inistration’ s handling of the consider seizing North Korean The Republican g q v e r n o r ’s USS Pueblo seizure ‘ by North ships in retaliation fo r the Pueblo T onight answer came in response to a Korea indicated the Presid ent is hijacking. A ll C o lo r P r o g r a m S o v e r e ig n s w in e newsman’s question. H e was E X C L U S IV E S quealer (D avid Stevens) and Napolean (E .J . Steele), discuss the prospects fo r a ru lin g class o f hams In The P e rfo rm in g A rt C om pany's production o f " A n im a l asked if he would accept the vice presidential nomination if the MSI) INTERNATIONAL FILM S H O W IN G Gates Open at 6:30 F a r m ." State News photo by Lance Lagonl nominee then asked him. Asked If he would turn down a SERIES PRESENTS "SHE FREAK request by the presidential nomi­ nee that he be the GOP candidate A N N A M O F F O 'i Shown at 7:07 and T O N IG H T O N N BC for the no. 2 spot, Reagan an­ swered " Y e s ." as V io le tta in V e r d i’s 10:30 Reagan has repeatedly denied "KNIVES OF he is a candidate for the GOP L A T R A V IA T A THE AVENGER1 Fred Astaire puts together presidential nomination and said he doesn’t want to be vice p resi­ dent but this marked the first (M id w es te rn P r e m ie re ) Thurs., Feb. 8 - - 7:30 p.m. at 9:00 only Second Blood Chlllerl time he has gone »so far as to say D on't com e If you he would turn down the vo. 2 spot University Auditoriufn s c a re easy! fourth television special If it was offered. Commenting on a suggestion he “ K N IV E S O F six g irls and they throw a rou­ He displayed a calendar of his might be persuaded to share a A dm ission $1.00 in -T H E A V E N G E R ” HOLLYWOOD If) — "Old tine together. And that’ s the way last month of work. 'It was as ticket headed by Gov. Nelson advance; $ 1.50 at dancers never die, they just sweat It looks—thrown together." detailed as a military operation, Rockefeller, the C a l i f o r n i a the door. away," groaned Fred Astaire as Extra! Color Cartoon & Short Sub. The Astaire approach to tele­ with each day of seven-day weeks governor said, "The last thing he swirled a mug of stout. vision is unique. « He declines designated for numbers in var­ I want is a Rockefeller-Reagan The drink was to help replen­ T ic ke ts on Sale ish the five pounds he had dropped in putting on "The Fred Astaire to guest on anyone e lse 's show, preferring to limit himself to hand-crafted specials. There ious stages of development. He was so wrapped up in his work that he didn’t get out to Santa tick e t." T his statement, he said later, meant " I don't want to be on the at Union T icket I IV P U S N» 3 3 2 -6 0 4 4 □ tik u & u Show,” which appears tonight on / have been only four in 10 years: Anita racetrack to watch his new ticket at a ll." O ffice NBC. He had finished the final / number—a rock version of his old "top hat” dance— the night be­ "An Evening With Fred Ast­ a ir e ,” which won nine Emmies filly Sharp Curve win a race. Reagan said he has done every­ thing possible to discourage his Starts Today! In 1958; "Another Evening With F eature At fore, and he was understandably TODAY & THURS. Featu re 7:35 & 9 :4 0 Fred A sta ire ," 1959; "A staire A Cine ItIO - 3:15 - 5 ; 2 0 - 7 ; 3 0 - 9 : 4 0 ________ exhausted. Yet his springy step T im e ,” 1960, and tonight’s show. Cum Laude and his Jaunty manner remained INGMAR BERGM AN’S All have had schedules far longer unchanged. "W ell, I like to dance," he ad­ than the usual television show. "1 wish I could be like Dean BIBI ANDERSSON / UV ULLMANN T h o a tari ea - ' N P ictu re “ONE OF THE YEA R’S mitted, "but it’s such damned hard work. At least it is the way Martin; he’s a genius at doing a show with speed, yet maintaining STARTS FRIDAY * * * * * * •M M J 10 B EST!” I do it. 1 can't do things the easy his particular charm,” said Ast­ -Bosley Crowther, New York Times • Joseph Morgenstern. Newsweek way. 1 figure If I'm going to do aire. "A s for myself, I started D e B r o c a s C r o w n in g T o u c h I -Judith Crist, NBC-TV Today Show • Hollis Alpert & Arthur Knight, laying out the dances for about Saturday Review • William Wolf, Cue Magazine something, it’s got to be the best four weeks. Then I worked with ALAN —National Board of Review I know how. Otherwise there's BATES- no point in doing it. the dancers for another eight weeks of rehearsals and taping. COLOR feyOtLUXE TECHNISCOPE O i l t 'l k u l t S toy “ Oh, I know how they generally L sssrl P itta rs i do dance numbers In television. H ere—look at th is." BEST IN FOREIGN FILMS C s rp s r H is a MIKE NICHOLS They say, 'L et’s have a soft- COMING shoe number here,’ then they get WINNER » «BEST DIRECTOR!" J 'T h e M U T A T IO N S *1 — N. Y. Film Critics Award Î is N O W ! Ï 353-1557 2 ANNE BANCROFT IS CLOSE G O N Z A L O T O R R E S TO MIRACULOUS!" — Hollis Alpert, Saturday Review © SPARTAN JIM I. SAGINAW TWIN WEST 351-00JO “ DUSTIN HOFFMAN IS NOTHING TONIGHT SHORT OF SUPERB!" AT 8:P.M. — Bosley Crowther, N. Y. Times JULIE ANDREWS “ KATHARINE ROSS IS AND MARY BEAUTIFUL, TALENTED, SURELY TYLER THIS YEAR’S JULIE CHRISTIE!" MOORE — Liz Smith, Cosmopolitan JOSEPH mi*.'' E LEVINE MIKE NICHOLS LAWRENCE TURMAN , © SPARTAN TWIN EAST / / \ MATINEES DAILY AT 2 p«m.-4 p.m«-7 p jn . & 9;30 1 - T H E GRADUATE ANN! BANCROFT.«DUSTINNGFFMAN KATIAMKRGSS E R IC K S O N K IV A ÖALÖERWILLINGHAM.- BUCKHENRY RAULSIMON A dm ission $2.50 M 3U Students 5 0 c w ith v a lid ID at door §pN~GARFUNKEL LICENCE TURMAN MÎRÈNICHOLS ......, TECHNICOLOR’ R WWMSON” 20th CENMRV-RK burnt! U N IO N T IC K E T O F F I C E P ric e s M atinees $1.50 Evenings $1.75 _ Wednesday, F e b r u a ry 7, 1 9 6 8 10 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan S T A T E NEW S ST A T E NEW S C L A S S I F IE D S e e O u r S e rv ic e D ir e c to r y T o m o rro w And Every Thursday C L A S S I F IE D 355-8255 3 5 5 -8 2 5 5 F o r Rent F o r S a le F o r Sa le Autom otive Em ploym ent EAST LANSING.— Duplex.Three SPINET ELECTRONIC organ. S T E I N W A Y PJANO “ P ü fl I OLD6MOBILE 1958 four-door sedan. Power brakes and steer­ ing. Radio, heater. Dependable EARNINGS ARE unlimited as an AVON representative. your free time into $$$. For an Turn bedroom colonial. 1 1/2 baths, carpeted, appliances furnished, basement. One or two children. $350. 1717 North Hayford. IV 9 - 1925 after 5:30 p.m. - — 3-2/9 vertical, ine lude sbench, exeel- lent condition. Phone ED 2 - 4443. 5-2/7 T ôÉU cFokvou transportation. $200. Call 489- appointment in your home, write LENS PRESCRIPTION ground In $180. 332-8795 or 353-7971. ELECTROLUX TANK vacuum 6691 after 5:30 p.m. 5- 2/ 9 M rs. Alona Huckins 5664 School our own lab. OPTICAL DIS­ 5-2/7 cleaner with aU the cleaning at­ Street, Haslett, Michigan or call COUNT, 416 Tussing Building. • AUTOMOTIVE PONTIAC 1957 four-door. Beau­ IV 2-6893. C-2/9 tachments. Runs like new, b NEEDED: g irl for Phone IV 2-4667. C-2/9 tiful engine. Uses no oil. Some A -l condition. $20. 677-5322. • EMPLOYMENT house. C .^ert and Has­ body rust. $100. 332-0741. 3-2/8 • FOR RENT EXPERIENCED DRUMMER lett. $60 Monthly. 351-8405 or VIOLIN - - VALUED at $350— • FOR »A LE 4-2/9 needed for top area social band. will sell for $250. Call 351- 337-2336. 5-2/7 • LOST A FOUND Minimum guaranteed, $5 per 6370. 5-2/9 SHORT RED-Brown wig. Hand RAMBLER 1959 four-door. $135 tied. Human hair. $40. 332- • PERSONAL hour. Call after 5 p.m ., 482- NEAR CAMPUS. Two studious cash. Private owned. IV 2-0580. SPEAKERS — J .B . LANSING, 5U6. 3-2/8 • PEANUTS PERSONAL 0215. 3-2/9 men needed for four-bedroom 3-2/8 Lancer 3 3 -s, $110 for both. • REAL ESTATE house. 337-0345. 5-2/9 BOOKS — USED. Hardcovers. MEDICAL TECHNICIAN. FUll- Call 351-6370. 5-2/9 • SERVICE Over 50,000. 10£ each. CaU RENAULT R - 8 . 1964. Tuned up. tlme female. Doctor's office • TRANSPORTATION NORTH HAG A DORN Road, Ethel's Second Hand S to re.669- Radio. Sporty; Economical. In Okemos. Begin work April REALTONE STEREO radio and • WANTED $495. 351-5090 after 5 p.m. ranch-style home. Two or three 93U. 4-2/9 firs t. Phone 332-3548. Butoba tape recorder. E xcel­ 3-2/8 bedrooms, 2 1/2 baths, two car lent condition. 355-4160 morn­ 5-2/13 garage. Carpeted and draped. 3-2/7 ACHTUNG! TELEFUNKEN has D E A D L IN E Appliances f u r n i s h e d . $250 ings or after 11 p.m. TEMPST CUSTOM 1966 Auto­ SECRETARY, LEGAT •, for law arrived — imported direct from 1 P«M. one class day be­ matic. 326. Excellent! Must sell! partner. P lea»' C V oundlngs. month plus utilities. Call 332- CUSTOM-MADE Bruce PA sys­ Germany. F o r great buys on fore publication« offer, 485-0278. 3-2/7 Modern < \ V Shorthand 6535, Ext. 2 . 3-2/9 tem for rock groups. 300 watts high quality stereo systems, Cancellations - 12 noon one required. Experience p re ­ of power. Reasonable. Call tápe recorders, and short-wave class day before publica­ T R -4 Roadster 1963. New motor. ferred. Phone 489-5753. 10-2/7 1/2 DOUBLE for woman. With Steve, 484-1021. 3-2/7 r a d i o s see NEJAC OF EAST $695. OX 4-0489 or OX 4-0258. limited cooking. Parking. Block LANSING, 543 E a s t G r a n d tion« 5-2/7 from Union. $9 week. 332-1895 DROP LEAF table, large, hutch. River. C RN AND LPN Positions avail­ PHONE able In G eriatrics at Ingham after 5 p.m. 3-2/9 Ten matching ch a irs, occasion­ TR-4A 1966. Wire wheels, over­ _ u_ M |||u. .. |r[ .. ■- ... T ... ... T. VOX VISCOUNT am plifier. Good al ch airs, CaU 393-5999. 355-8255 drive, AM-FM, toneau. Call County Facility, Dobie Road, 550 STODDARD, Sub-lease. Two 3-2/8 condition. $200. 353-2668. Okemos. 5% differential, one 3-2/9 RATES 487-3338 after 5:30 p.m. 3-2/7 meal, adequate parking. Many bedrooms. Good neighborhood. Leave message — 351-8085. EP IPHONE GUITAR, E lectric 1 D A Y ........................$ 1.50 fringe benefits Including a time K.L.H. MODEL 21 FM System. V A L I A N T 1963. Two-door. 3-2/9 six-string. Dual pick-up, VI- 3 D A Y S ..................... $3.00 and 1/2 factor. Personnel, ED2- S acrifice. Like new. Phone 355- V-200. Slant - 6 engine. E xtras. ! brato arm . Has like new case. 5 D A Y S ..................... $ 5.0 0 0801. 10-2/13 6125. 3-2/9 Call 337-0973 after 5 p.m. EAST LANSING: Two g irls for 353-6276. * 3-2/8 (based on 10 words per ad) 3-2/9 LARGE NATIONAL builder has three girl hous e. $50. per month. Over 10» 15< per word per day Call after 7 p.m ., 351-6427. CONTEMPORARY BLACK Dav­ position open for an aggressive VM FO U R -track stereo tape VOLKSWAGEN 1965. $1,000 or 3-2/9 enport. Good condition. $60; End There will be a 5Of se rv ic e • young man who is willing and re co rd e r.#4 recorder. $300. new-now under tables, lamps. IV 5-1552, eve­ and bookkeeping charge If best offer. Phone 355-5578 aft­ eager to learn the residential HOUSE WITH swimming pool. nings. 3-2/9 this ad is not paid within e r 3 p jn . 3-2/9 building business in the field of $200. 351-0577. 4-2/9 purchasing and contract man­ $65 includes utilities. One one week« Animals VOLKSWAGEN l9S6. Sun-roof. agement. Some background and/ man. 351-4503. 2-2/8 SEWING MACHINE clearance Anxious to sell. Call after 4 Y o u ’ve heard of the R oyal C an adian • •••.—“■—* ------- sale. Brand new portables, The State News will be or experience would be helpful. p.m. 482 - 4920 . 3-2/9 mounted police well . . . . Rooms $49.50, $5. per month. Large MIXED PUPPIES. FREE to good responsible only for the P lease call for appointment, Mr. selection of reconditioned used home. Leave message — 351— first day's Incorrect Inser­ Robert Brltz, at KAUFMAN AND VOLKSWAGEN 1967. W h i t e . WOMAN - OVER twenty. Share machines. Singers, Whites, 8085. 3-2/9 tion. BROAD HOMES, INC. Area code Black vinyl Interior. Radio. 355- 313-442-5760 Southfield, Michi­ two-room efficiency. $42. Necchis, New Home, and“ many ------------------ — 2798 after 1 p.m. 3-2/9 gan. 5-2/7 month. 663-8418. 3-2/9 others.” $19.95 to $39.95. Mobile Homes The State News does not F o r Rent F o r Rent Term s. EDWARDS DISTRIBU­ permit racial or religious SINGLE ROOM. Male student. T I N G COMPANY. 1115 North MUST SELL. 10’ x 50’. Two- VOLKSWAGEN 1964. Variant GREAT LAKES EMPLOYMENT GIRLS TO share apartment. Four discrimination In Its ad­ WANT GIRL ¿ V è D furnished 523 Charles Street. 3-2/9 Washington. 489-6448. C-2/8 bedroom. Excellent condition sedan. Radio, B elts, $850. 351— for permanent positions for men blocks from campus. Reason­ vertising c o l u m n s . The apartn bath, en­ with wood paneling throughout. 9066. 4-2/9 and women In office, sales and State News will not accept trance. nD 2-5977. 8-2/8 able. 332-0143. 3-2/8 ONE ROOM for men, with park­ BIRTHDAY CAKES, 7“ - $3.60; Needs new furnace. Owner wiU technical. IV 2-1543. C-2/8 advertising which discrim ­ VOLKSWAGEN 1966. Blue, Radio ing. Privatei enJ£2¿r\ entjvir»* excellent 8” - $4.12; 9 " - $4.90. de­ sell “ as is ” for $1,850 or with ONE GIRL now through June. completely new furnace in­ inates a g a i n s t religion, with rear speaker. Very reason­ EMPLOYERS OVERLOAD COM­ EYDEAL VILLA Apartments . . . room c *•' -tudent or livered. Also sheet cakes. race, color or national or­ able. 355-6428. 4-2/9 PANY. Experienced secretar­ Now accepting leases for year Duplex. $55 per month. Call gradua: Y^'Üuent. $12 per week. KWAST BAKERIES. IV 4-1317. stalled for $2,450. On lot near igin. ie s , typists to work temporary beginning September, 1968. 351-7708. 3-2/8 332-1248 or 332-4605. 5-2/7 C-2/8 campus. Phone 355-6450 after 6 assignments. Never a fee. Phone Two-bedroom apartments for p.m. Ask for Dan. 5-2/9 Auto Service & P orts $2 40/month. Swimming pool, EAST SIDE - Newly redecorated. 487-6071. C-2/8 One old couple. Utilities paid. F o r Sa le KODACOLOR FILM, size 620, M EL’S AUTO SERVICE. Large . . . . . . ---------------------- -- G .E . Appliances, garbage d is- Furnished. Deposit. IV 5-2671. 126, or 127, only 98£ with this magnetic FuU factory equipped in­ S E R V IC E 9-4:30 p.m. 5-2/8 cartridge, S O — -“O iout,$15.Call CAMARO 1967. Six, stick. Vinyl S P E C IA L IS T S APARTM ENTS Excellent condition. With case. 3-2/8 cluding radio. All taxes and WANTED: TWO g irls for luxury 351-9255. 1968 plates. top. 7,000 m iles. $2,000. 351- 2 Bdrm.,unfur.,from 139.50 $100. CaU 337-2758. 5-2/9 IN PART TIME evening work avail­ apartment. Spring and summer. 0391, anter 6 p.m. 3-2/8 351-7880 ELECTRO VOICE PROMOTION • T R IU M P H able for male students. Call One block from campus. $60. Complete price, $2,881.61. 393-5660 2 -4 p.m. Monday-Fri- D I A M O ND BARGAIN: Wedding on stereo systems, FM, multi­ month, plus one month rent •R E N A U L T and engagement ring sets. Save CHEVROLET 1963. Stick shift day. 10-2/15 SPRING. ENTIRE four-man lux­ free. 351-0729. 5-2/7 plex, Garrard changer and Ask for Je rry Govan, with 1966 six cylinder engine, • VO LK SW A G EN ury apartment V"*rCQ‘.R iv e r's 50% or more. Large selection speakers complete, $253.80 up. AV 5-1344 or DU 6- 2800 $475. Phone 645-0108. 3-2/7 Edge. C. --mpus. F u r­ of. plain and fancy diamonds. MAIN ELECTRONICS. 882- Al Edward's F o r Rent $ 2 5 '-$ 1 5 0 . WILCOX SECOND­ nished, air-conditioned. 332- 5035. 5558 South Pennsylvania. CHEVROLET 1960 from Florida. TV RENTALS for students. $9/» 0971 or 351-0607. 5-2/9 HAND STORE, 509 East Michi­ C Sp o rts C a r C en ter N O R T H W IN D gan. Phone 485-4391. C SO AP New engine, paint and interior. month. F re e service and FARM S 337-9330. 5-2/7 1200 E . Oakland IV 9-7591 delivery. Call NEJAC, 337- ATTRACTIVELY FURNISHED BICYCLE SALES, rentals and 1300. We guarantee same-day one-bedrodm apartment in new 351-7880 VOICE OF Music Stereo tape serv ices. Also used, EAST CAR WASH: 25*. Wash, wax, record er. Almost new. Best of­ THE FORCES CHEVROLET 1962. Red, two- service. C building. Call for appointment LANSING CYCLE, 1215 E ast vacuum. U-DO-rT. 430 South to see. 332-3135. 10-2/13 TWO BEDROOM. Unfurnished. fe r. 351-0542. 3-2/8 O F E V IL door, one owner. Phone 332- Graqd R iver. CaU 332-8303. C Cllppert, back of KO-KO BAR. TV RENTALS for students. Low 5376. * 3-2/7 $120. month. Ju st east of cam­ C-2/8 economical rates by the term or OKEMOS — THREE room apart­ pus. ED 7-7847. 5-2/8 F O R E IG N F O O D P X Sto re - - F ra n d o r CHEVROLET 1966 B elair. Four- MASON BODY SHOP, 812 East monthi UNIVERSITY TV RENT­ ment, ground floor. Furnished. INDIAN - ARABIC - SPANISH Ice C reepers, $1.00 up T H E F R IG H T E N E D door. Power s t e e r i n g and Kalamazoo Street—Since 1940. ALS. 484-9263. C Heat, lights, gas, water and Food from most foreign sewer paid. Air-conditioned. CAVANAUGH. NEAR Pennsylva­ Snow Shoes, $24.88 up TREES brakes. Radio. 28,000 miles, nia. G l e n wood Apartments. countries - including U.S. Pea Coats, $19.95 Complete auto painting and col­ "332-4950. 5-2/12 $1495. OX 4-0489 or OX 4- lision service. American and Apartments Large one b c i v O furnished, Hand W armers $1.29 up S H A H E E N ’S T H R IF T W A Y a fe w d a tes 2058. 5-2/7 foreign ca rs . IV 5-0256. C $140 plus Phone 482- F leece lined boots, $7.88 up FOUR ROOMS and bath. Private 135 KEDZIE DRIVE. Furnished 2310 S. CEDAR 485-1538 COMET 1966 two-door, six cyl­ entrance. 101 East Commerce. 4404 after 1 p.m. 5-2/9 3 Gal. plastic gas can, $2.88 s t i l l a v a ila b le apartment for two students. $165 Ski Caps, 98if ACCIDENT PROBLEM? CaU t h is t e r m , inder, stick shift. Good condi­ BODY 485_353Z*485-3532. 3-2/7 3-2/7 pe r month. IV 7-3216; evenings, EAST LANSING duplex. F u r­ STU D EN TO U RS Flight Jack ets $15.88 tion. Has good gas mileage. Must KALAMAZOO STREET nished, unfurnished. $135 up. Paddle Ball Paddles, $2.88 sell. $1,500. 676-2020. 5-2/8 SHOP. Small dents to large ~ ~ T~ “ " “¿ 7 ,1 ’ ~ p~*’." * *~ I w " 882_2316‘ 10-2/19 G O -G O B A H A M A S w recks. American and foreign DELTA ARM - u V " V " " ”.""T" T ” ” Immediate occupancy. 332- Paddle BaUs 39

35 No Mileage Charge 22. Study 1 2 3 4 knot S 6 7 2. Attach a 9 9. C lose-fit­ ting coat door, $225. CaU after 5 p.m., $63.75. Settle under $55. CaU $100. deposit. Phone 484-2180 10. O il cylin­ IV 5-2163. 4-2/9 evenings, 332-4729. 1-2/7 ATTENTION GIRLS. Now or next or ED 7-7151. 5-2/8 D A IL Y % 10 % il % 11 der BUS BOYS Needed. Excellent food term . Apartments or rooms with 12. Apparel and wages. 332-3218, Rose. W I L L O W WEST Apartments. aU the luxuries of home. CaU GIRL NEFDpn ry apart- NO •3 Û 14 17. Sweet roll HpomUc toI2 U S l « ‘l»uSl ........................... « £ 332-3466. 3 - 2 / 9 INTERVIEWING FOR fashion West of Lan8lng.^ewdeluxetwo Fred AUen, 351-7934 or 351- b e d r o o m unfurnished apart­ 0960. ments. Many extras. One smaU 5-2/12 ment. $ » R E N T SZ.'lo 351-5885. E t I campus. 5-2/8 >13 P e r Day MILEAGE Plus Gas CHARGE 15 % 16 17 % V //< 19 20. Favorite 21. Affected manner ---------------------- models and hostesses, bn 19 20 23. Sea cucum ­ IMPALA CONVERTIBLE 1964 America, Thursday, February child welcome. $150. IV 5-4869. BEMENT STREET — Bachelor H ouses 3- 2/ 9 apartment. Stove, refrigerator, OR CHOOSE OUR REGULAR %23 ber - « 3 - 2 / 9 22 24. Vaults 327. Complete automatic. Beau­ tiful condition. $1,200o r best of­ 8, 7—9;30 p.m. Ask for Miss Lee. MID-MICHIGAN TALENT utilities, zaraze furnished S7S ■ WANTED: ONE male for luxury utuules' «“ ^ » w ^ s h e d . $75. TWO OR three g irls needed Im­ LOW RATE OF % sr a i r % 27 25. Linim ent month. IV 4-2660, 3-2/8 / a 32 >6&* 6C v mediately. $50. month. CaU Sue, % 26. Torment apartment. Spring and summer P er fer. ED 7-9313 after 5 p.m. 5-2/13 AGENCY. 351-5665. C-2/8 term s. 332-3075. __ 3-2/9 351-5487, 524 Gunson. 5-2/12 M lle t Gas 55“ 29 K a 27. Prior to CAPrTOL AVENUE — 534, South. 29. Burn in- MAURICE’S SCOTCH HOUSEhaa 5 3b MUSTANG 1967, V -8, Lime gold. opening for full time cashier NEED ONE girl for two-man Pour room, partially furnished SUBLEASE IMMEDIATELY to apartment or must sub-lease apartment. 482-8287; evenings, one g irl. One block from cam­ 34 y 4 è» Stereo tape. Vinyl top.other ex­ tras . 482-4590. 3- 2/ 8 and office clerk. Apply In per­ son to the manager. 313 East Grand River. 3- 2/9 Immediately. 351-4211 or 655- 372-4473. 1465. 3 -2 /9 FRANDOR AREA —— large two 3-2/8 pus. February rent f#ee. CaU 351-8519. 5-2/12 You must be 21 and have a valid MSU LQ card. 36 40 n 37 dVA 39 41 OLDSMOBILE 1966 Cutless Su­ 42 43 preme. Many extras and low PHI SIGMA Delta needs busboy. ONE GIRL wanted for River's bedroom apartments. Furnished FURNISHED ONE bedroom.Two­ 214 SO. % % Ya mUeage. 373-5295 or 484-3088. 3 -2 /9 $5 per week plus m eals. CaU Edge apartment. February thru 332-0875. 3- 2/ 9 September. 351-8852. 3-2/9 o r unfurnished. 351-4864. • 5-2/12 man or married term . 484-7354. couple. Spring 5-2/9 CAPITOL 372-8660 39. é Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Wednesday, February 7, 1968 11 Mm F o r Sa le 1 1 * 8 W H A T 'B ELCONA, 10* x 51', 1965. Fur­ nished and carpeted. Excellent condition with many extra s. Call LBJ u r g e s in s u r a n c e s tu d y Perry, 625-7392. 5-2/9 WASHINGTON OP) — President Insurance premiums, arbitrary Secretary at Transportation y e a r's meat Inspection law. pounds as diseased or contami­ Johnson asked Congress Tuesday cancellation of some policies, Alan S. Boyd, who would super­ States would be encouraged to do nated. The President said the PARKWOOD 1967 12’ x 57*. Is­ situation appears worse where to authorize a national study at difficulties of Negroes in obtain­ vise the study, told a newsman th eir own inspecting, but the fed­ land Kitchen. Beat Spring rush I ing coverage and other problems, state inspection is concerned. $4444. 332-0965. 4-2/9 what he termed the "overbur­ the work could proceed without era l government could move In dened and unsatisfactory" auto Johnson celled for "the firs t congressional authorization but 12 they didn’t do the job within Not even the federal govern­ Insurance system. comprehensive study of the auto­ he said legislation would provide two y ears. ment Inspects much fish and, The Cycling Club will meet at 7:30 tonight in 208 Men's LM. Loet & Found He also called for new laws to mobile Insurance system ." subpoena povera that might be Federal Inspectors now look Johnson saldP there Is no sys­ Bldg. A movie will be shown. protect Americans against dis­ needed. He estimated that the only at poultry moving In Inter­ tematic program for looking at • * • LOST: TOM cat from Marigold eased fish and poultry. study would take from 18 to 24 state commerce. They annually the Imports that represent more The Promenaders will hold open dance and lessons at 7 tonight in Avenue area. T iger with white In a special message, Johnson months. re je ct more than 400 million than half of all fish consumption. 34 Women’s LM. Bldg. All are welcome. face and front. Call ED 2 - 1256 after 5 p.m. 3-2/8 outlined an 8-polnt program which he said would help make W. Europe In his m sssage, Johnson also called fo r enactment for his still— * * • The Fish eries and Wildlife Club will meet at 7:30 tonight in the su re the American customer gets " a fair and honest exchange for pending 1967 consumer propo­ s a ls , emphasizing his support for N E W A R K R IO T E R Activities Room, Natural Resources Bldg. Bob Strong, an assist­ ant regional game biologist for the Michigan Conservation Dept., LADIES BENRUS Watch lost In or around Auditorium last Sat­ urday. Sentimental value. Re­ his hard-earned d o llar." The President called for new shudders truth-ln-lendlng*’ law. And he pressed anew for a will speak.' • * • ward! 355-2949, P e rso n a l 3-2/8 lawa to: •—Protect against excessive radiation from color television travel tax 10 per cent Income tax surcharge, arguing that this would protect consumers against Inflation. N e g ro militant The Student Advisory Committee to the Sociology Dept.will meet at l p.m. Saturday in the Union Old College Hall. * * * sets, dental x-ray machines and PARIS (if! — President John­ Wholesome fish and poultry The Moslem Students Assn. will meet at 7:30 p.m. Friday In the DINO AND THE DYNAMICS.Soul available this week-end. 351- other electronic devices. — Perm it speedier federal crackdowns on home Improve­ son’s proposals for travel taxes outside the Western Hemisphere worried Europe’s big tourism legislation would extend to these products the provisions of last advises school NEWARK, N J . UPI — Negro Haynes said the purpose ot the Union Oak Room. * • • 4207. C-2/8 The German Club will meet at 8:30 p.m. Thursday In 31 Union. ment frauds and other sales industry Tuesday. playwright-poet LeRol Jones, committee has been to advise the Two films on German architecture will be shown. cheats. Concern also was expressed convicted of Illegally possessing school's administration on the * • * PLEDGE FORMALS and TERM PARTIES. Need quality bands. —F ix more stringent boating in parts of Asia, but exempt weapons during Newark’ s riots spending of $79,697 In federal The ATL Department will hold a student-faculty discussion at L .A .F . Enterprises. 353-4203. safety standards. L a t i n America welcomed the plan. G rand Rapids last summer, has been serving funds allotted for special educa­ tion programs for deprived chil­ 7 p.m. Thursday in Conference Room A, Wonders Hall, on "T h e 3-2/8 In addition, Johnson announced as the head of a committee ad­ Ideas of Graham G reene." he will appoint a "consum er The plan, among other things vising a school here on the use dren. * • * THE OTHERS IDE. The PSY- counsel" in the Ju stice Depart­ c a l l s for a graduated travel flood tide falls of federal funds for deprived Jones is an advocate of racial There will be a mixer from 8-12 p.m. Friday In the F ee Hall ment to advise and prod officials spending tax, a 5 per cent levy children. classroom s. "T h e Bishops Jam Part III" will perform. Admission CHASOULIC funky rock sound. United P res s In ternational separatism . on legal moves to protect the on overseas plane and ship tick­ The 34-year-old Jones, who Is Is 35 cents. DIG I 489-7916, 351-0907. A flat flood c r e s t moved One of his plays, presented buying public. ets, and a cut in the duty-free appealing a 2 1/2-3 year prison * * * 3-2/8 through Grand Rapids today and at a New York City school last He also said the government allowance on goods brought in sentence for the weapons offense, There will be a study break mixer in the East McDonel Lower riv er watchers predicted th e week, prompted one teacher to THE ROGUES, now booking for will undertake a broad study to from $100 to $10. It was pro­ was appointed to the Title 1 ad­ Lounge from 6-8 p jn . Thursday. Music by theWMCD disc Jockeys. posed as one means of cutting Grand River would begin a slow request a transfer. Three other spring term . Telephone 337- determine If legislation Is need­ visory committee at the Robert teachers left the performance * • • the U.S. balance of payments fall in Michigan’ s second larg­ 9295. 3-2/9 ed In such areas as appliance and T reat elementary school last stating that they became disgust­ Alpha Phi Sigma will meet at 7:30 p.m. Thursday In 34 Union. deficit. est city Tuesday. auto repairs and the policing of September by Charles Haynes, ed over certain racial passages. Wayne Diehl, of the Chrysler Corporation, will speak on "Industrial Erline Storrunsten, director of The river, swollen by l a s t GRETA GARBO stars In "Anna warranties and guarantees. the school’s Title 1 coordinator. Some questions and responses Security." the Norwegian National Travel week’ s heavy rains and run-off • * * Karenina" film at Hillel House, Pointing to rapidly rising auto The post Is unsalarled. In the play supposedly went: Office, said Western Europe from a sudden thaw, began fall­ Sunday, February 11, 6;30 p jn .; He was arrested last July 14 Today Is the last day petitioning for the chairmanship of the Stu­ stands to lose $300 million of the ing upstream at Comstock Park, "Who murdered the black also "An Interview with ben and sentenced with two co-defen­ dent Academic Council will be held. Petitions can be obtained in 334 G urion." 1-2/7 S e rv ic e ______ $920 million it has been earning and North Park during the night* dants Jan. 4. man?" The Grand River crested a foot ______ ___________________ Student Services Bldg. Typing Service annually in recent years. "W hitey, whltey." • * * LEAD SINGER wanted. Helps If Said a spokesman for the above flood stage at Comstock "Who should, we lynch?" The Chess Club will meet at 7:15 tonight in 304 Bessey Hall. you play an instrument', 355- French National Federation of P ark. Floodwaters had poured /■* » 1 I »11 I _ Ir "W hitey, whltey." • • * PAULA ANN HAUGHEY; T er. i m v ^ l i n d i and blocked roads X J t l l l K I I I 5 n G i S G I T 8912. 3-2/9 t'ravel regencies': "Personally, Two children of M rs. Sylvia The Varsity Club will meet at 7:30 tonight in the Varsity Club professional thesis typists. IBM both at Comstock Park and North if I were faced with an Increase Wilson Jones, the playwright's Room, Spartan Stadium. S electrlcs. Multlllth offset Park, and for a time threatened t o s o v g h e r d o g of 30 per cent in my expenses, I wife, attended the school In the * * * POETRY WANTED for Anthol­ printing. 337-1527. C would think twice about taking homes on both sides of a four- beginning of the y ear, but have ogy. IDLEWILD PUBLISHERS. The American Studies Association will meet at 8 tonight in the a trip ." m ile stretch of riv er. PHOENIX, Ariz. UP) — Rath­ since transferred to the National 543 Frederick San Francisco, Kresge Art Gallery. There will be a panel discussion of the book BARBI MEL, professional typ­ Air France recently reported An Ice jam formed and then er than kill her mongrel dog for School of Islam. California. C-2/8 "Death of an Uncle Tom " by William Pipes, associate professor of ist. No job too large or too a 64 per cent increase in the broke up In the St. C lair River her own misdeed, police said In Washington, a spokesman ATL. small. Block off campus. 332- sale of tickets on the Atlantic off Roberts Landing. Tuesday, Linda Marie Ault shot for the U.S. Office of Education * * * FORTY TOP Soul and Rock bands. 3255. C run between 1966 and 1967. Its At Detroit, Army engineers and killed herself. said "W e are not Involved In Call Gary L azar, 351-8907, or The publication "W inter Red Cedar Review" will be available charter flights tripled. Travel credited a new flood control proj­ The bizarre case came to light any way In these appointments. M I D - M I C H I G A N TALENT beginning today at bookstores and various campus locations. DONNA BOHANNON, Profes­ agents fear this business will be ect at Frankenmuth north of following the 21-year-old coed’s It's purely a local matter and we • • * AGENCY 351-5665. C-2/8 Flint with containing the swollen death at a hospital Monday. sional theses typing. IBM S e- seriously endangered if C o n ­ would not look into this appoint­ Graduate History Wives Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at lectric. 353-7922. 5-2/9 gress passes the proposed 5 per Cass River and preventing an Police quoted her parents, Mr. ment of Jones unless It were FREE II A thrilling hour of beauty. 404 Cowley Street, East Lansing. William McCagg, professor of cent tax on transatlantic air estimated $193,000 In damage. and M rs. Joseph Ault, as giving brought to our attention by local For appointment call 484-4519. history, will speak on "Hungary Today." TYPING IN my home. Royal fares. But flood control works in the this account: o fficia ls." MERLE NORMAN COSMETICS upper reaches of the Cass and * * * E lectric. Reasonable rates. In Greece, some of the largest Linda failed to return home The spokesman said the office STUDIO 1600 East Michigan. Flint Rivers were blamed for from a dance, and admitted she Students and faculty will read their own poetry at The Pit 393-0623. 3-2/7 travel agencies who have fired knows of no one who ever has C-2/8 Restaurant starting at 8:30 tonight. Everyone Is Invited to come scores of employes because of downriver fooding by Ray Janeke, had spent the night with a man. been removed from an advisory NINA CHILDS - typist. IBM S e l- the lack of bookings blamed the drainage commissioner at Sag­ As punishment, the Aults or­ position for a federal education and listen to what might be the beginning of a regularly held %AVE U £ to $50. or more on inaw, Janeke wrote to tArmy dered her to shoot the dog she coffee h°use. multlHth offset print­ U.S. tax plan. program. . ca r insurance. Young drivers engineers In Washington com­ had owned about two years. ing. 489-5472 . 20-2/27* In Spain, the Barcelona age 21-25, or m arried. 16-25. plaining -t ha t upriver dykes» On Sunday, the Aults and Linda, Take Sentry’ s preferred drivers' Chamber of Commerce estimated tourists’ losses would reach $25 speeded the flow of floodwaters took the dog into the desert.near ■iMI test. Phone" 485-3647 or 882- TYPING DONE In my home.21/2 m ‘a a a p i - e a t i i i i m f ’ . blocks from campus. 332—161*9. million-$50 million a year. Into the lower reaches of the riv­ their home. 'M rs . Ault grasped 7284. C-2/8 20-3/4 Hong Kong’s Tourist Associa­ e r where flooding was the worst the dog between her hands, gave tion c a l l e d the graduated tax In years. Linda a .22 caliber pistol and STUDENT SPECIAL save money. 10% discount for your dry clean­ CAROL WINELY. Smith Corona ing, shirt needs. Wash only 20£ E lectric, Theses, term papers plan vicious. The Japanese Transport Military estimated the restrictions would cost J a ­ Janeke said a $23 million flood told her to shoot the dog. control project for the rivers Instead, the girl put the pistol in Saginaw and Genesee Counties to her right temple and shot Pass-fail gains popularity load. WENDROWS COIN LAUN­ general typing. Spartan Village. pan $25 million in tourist trade. was proposed In 1946 but still herself. DRY CLEANERS. 3006 Vine. One was in the planning stages. block west of S ears, Frandor. 355-2804. 7 a .m .-ll p.m. C-2/8 TERM PAPERS. T h eses,d isser­ C-2/8 A spokesman for the govern­ ment tourist agency in Peru said "m ore people might come The Cass River was reported down to almost normal at Bridge­ : V gets $118,000 in Am erican universities South instead of going to Eu­ port where flooding had been ex1 By MARION NOWAK process sim ilar to p ass-fail. New Is currently present at Michi­ NOWII SPRING suit and dress tations, manuscripts. Corona tensive. But Sheridan Road In rop e." and C o l l e g e , in Sarasota, F l a . , gan State. Justin M orrill Col­ fabrics. $1.98 to $4.98. Sale on E le ctric . Elite print. 332-8505. all winter fabrics. YARN AND C-2/8 southern Saginaw County stiU was closed between the Cass and Flint for behavior study J E N N Y P OP E grades entirely on the pass-fail lege’s foreign study, field study S t at e News S t af f W r i t e r s b asis. and independent study programs FABRIC CENTER Mason, 676- 2973. Open Friday evenings. Business women R ivers. MSU has been granted $118,004 In the megaversity "p ressu re At California Institute of Tech­ all are on pass-fail basis. TYPING TERM papers and At V assar, the Cass had by the National Institute of nology, freshmen receive pass- Advantages of pass-fail are, ________________________ C-2/8 dropped six feet from Its crest Health (NIH) to launch the first cooker," the greatest cause of theses. E lectric typewriter. Fast service. Call 332-4597. present luncheon three feet above flood stage. y e a r of a five-year graduate stress is the fight for grades. fail grades in their five fresh- m a n courses: m a t h, physics, according to th e plan’s suj>- Peanuts P e rso n a l Across Lake St. C lair In Can­ training program In animal b e­ Social pressure, parental porters, reduction of academic 3-2/9 The MSU Business Women’ s chemistry, history and English. pressure and reorientation to the ada, the Thames River dropped havior. pressure and Vietnam pressure CHESHIRE CAT: I love you more Club will hold a luncheon meet­ The direct result of this pro­ learning process rather than the ing at 11:45 today In the Union six Inches at Chatham,Ont.,after The program wUl be directed all combine to create frustra­ than you love met Cheshire STUDENT DISCOUNT - SHEILA tion, information of false aca­ gram 's Implementation was to cut "grade-grubbing" process. kitten. 1-2/7 CAMPBELL. Experienced typ­ P arlo rs. Ice breakers cleared away a mas­ by Jam es J . Braddock,professor the freshman dropout rate from demic ideals and neuroses In Disadvantages, however, as ist. E lectric. Term papiers, M rs. Eugene Bretz of the Bretz sive Ice jam at the riv er’ s mouth. of zoology, and several members 20 per cent to 14 per cent. Ad­ stated by the sy stem 's opponents, Shop will speak about "Colorand River experts said a damaging of the MSU zoology department. many students. WHA T IS 5’ 4 " and has 33 theses. 337-2134. C To combat this, many Ameri­ ditionally, Caltech officials state a r e application problems f o r Your Personality." The Bretz crest predicted for Chatham may T h e program is designed to P earls? A tall, prolific oyster can universities are experiment­ that those that do leave are graduate school, poor work and named Bobbi. Love, your Ane­ ANN BROWN; typist and mul- Shop Is an interior decorating not m aterialize, but they kept provide study and research for among the " le s s promising” In ing with a system of pass-fail low effort from the student and mone, BUI. 1-2/7 tilith, offset printing. D isser­ shop on South Washington Street an eye on another Ice jam up­ about 30 doctoral and postdoc­ the cla ss. grading. "disorientation." This disorien­ tations, theses, manuscripts, in Lansing. river at Kent Bridge. If that jam toral traineesoverthefiveyears. broke up suddenly, they said, It Is the first major effort of Its Replacing the system of let­ The Ford Foundation en­ tation effects itself by confusing SET: What did you do with the general typing. IBM, 17 years AU members of the clerical floodwaters could suddenly swirl kind In the country. ter or number grading, the courages experimental programs the students who cannot adjust to missing part? Isis. 1-2/7 experience. 332 -8384. C staff at MSU are Invited to attend Into Chatham, a community of Part of the work at MSU wUl Princeton-originated p a s s -fall in p ass-fail. Currently the Foun­ the absence of academic reward the luncheon meeting and are system provides that the student dation is sponsoring such pro­ and status. GREEN, INCEST Is best? Is good, eligible for membership in the 30,000 about 20 mUes upriver center on the relationship of par­ States one university official, T ran sp ortatio n from Lake St. C lair, ent animals and their young. taking a given course simply r e ­ grams at six nationwide in stl- huh? Father Chico. 1-2/7 club. ceives as grade of P or F at the t u t l o n s : Colorado, Allegheny, "A number of kids who were ac­ end of a term of regular class Lake Forest, Colby, Pomona and customed to precedence. Nation­ DZ-AOP1: Mlssln’ sumpen? StlU FLY LANSING - Detroit City work. Florida Presbyterian. al Merit Scholars and all that, pays to advertise. The GDI’s. Airport. Four round trips,Mon­ pledges. Love, the Actives. 3-2/9 day thru Friday. Student Stand­ by. MICHIGAN TRADE WINDS. C O N G R A T U L A T I O N S AOP1 351-9192. 2-2/8 Placement Bureau Most commonly, pass-fail Is enacted as the student’s option, only, as at University of Michi­ gan to be applied to courses out­ Very limited use of pass-fail collapse without the grades." ' 1-2/7 NASSAU BOUND - Riders to share Students must register In per­ expenses to Miami— son at the Placement Bureau at tric Corp.: E lectrical, mechani­ cal and chemical engineering, and financial administration, economics, management, mar­ side his field of concentration. When pass-fail is offered as an outside-major option, not af­ Train strike cripples Spring break, 355-5313. 3-2/7 least two days prior to the date of mathematics, physics and metal­ keting and transportation admin­ SKULLS: THANKS for a marve­ lurgy, mechanics and m aterials fecting grade point, frequently an Interview, istra tio n (B,M). lous Saturday. The AOPl’ s . 1-2/7 NEED RIDERS. Round trip to Wednesday, Feb. 14: Florida, spring break.Call 482- Bedford Public Schools: Early science (B,M). B ell Systems, Sandia Corp.: 01 in Mathieson Chemical Corp.: Chemistry and chemical a set amount of graded courses is required, or a limited amount Missouri Pacific E lectrical, mechanical and of pass-fail courses Is defined. S T . LOUIS (Í) — A Brother­ board to help solve the dispute. R e al E state 6316; if no answer call ED 7 - and later elementary education, engineering (B,M,D), electrical At E&ll State University in chemical engineering, mathe­ and mechanical engineering, a c ­ hood of Railroad Trainmen Charles Luna, Brotherhood 9318. C physical education, art, music, Muncie, Ind., students a re, under TWO BEDROOM house, garage. guidance and remedial reading, m atics, physics and metallurgy, counting, marketing, and metal­ strike over crew sizes virtually president I s s u e d a statement mechanics and m aterials sc i­ the newly approved pass-fail bill, shut down the M issouri Pacific through his Cleveland o f f i c e $6,000.; $650. down; $60. month. NEED DRIVERS who are 21 to go physical education (men’s), lurgical engineering (B,M) and allowed to take no more than 32 393-0075. 5-2/12 driver education, industrial arts ence (B,M). financial administration (M;. and Its subsidiary Texas & Pa­ which said in part: round-trip to Florida Spring p ass-fail credits, with no more Leo A. Daly Company: Civil cific and Seaboard Coast Line "T h e ca rrie rs first refused to break. Call 482-6316. C-2/9 (drafting), general science and The P rocter and Gamble Co.: than half of the hours of any term 3 1/2 ACRES modern four bed­ social science, art, counseling, (structural) engineering (heat­ Mechanical, electrical and railroads Tuesday, negotiate, then went to court to room home. One ca r garage. English, health education, Span­ ing, ventilating and air condition­ chemical engineering (B,M). on this basis. Kansas State's A Missouri Pacific spokes­ avoid collective cargaining. The ACAPULCO, MEXICO. Spring ish, F r e n c h , mathematics and ing), civil engineering (sanitary program restricts the p ass-fail man said It was feared the walk­ Supreme Court has acted In our Call ZALEWSKI REALTY 351- break. Nine days. Last call. science (B,M). engineering option) and electrical Win Schuler’s Inc.: Hotel, courses by requiring that any out would spread to other lines. favor. Our members insist that 4864; evenings, 882-4305, Interested? 353-2368. 3-2/8 engineering (allied with architec­ restaurant and institutional man­ student on the honor roll must The strike, called by the union there be no further delay in the 5-2/12 B ell System, A.T. andT.: E le c­ ture) (B,M ). agement (B.M ). carry between 12 and 15 graded to support its demand for addi­ handling of their request for a NEED RIDE: Pottervllle to cam­ trical, mechanical and chemical General American Transpor­ The University of Michigan, cred its. Se rv ic e tional crewmen on some freight minimum, safe crew consist on pus. 8:00 a.m . and 5:00 p.m. engineering, mathematics, phys­ tation Corp., GATX: All m ajors Office of UniversityHousing: Ho­ At schools where pass-fail has serv ices, began Monday night. the road and yard trains of DIAPER SERVICE - - Dlaparene Monday - Friday. 645-8191 af­ ics and metallurgy, mechanics of the college of business (M). tel, restaurant and institutional not been enacted, often It is being It spread quickly across the Mis­ these c a r r ie r s ." Antiseptic P ro cess approved by te r 5 p.m. 2-2/7 and m aterials science (B,M). Grumman A ircraft Engineer­ management and foods and nutri­ seriously considered. souri P acific's 12-state system A Missouri Pacific spokesman Doctors. Same Diapers returned B ell System,—B ell Telephone ing Corp.: Chemical, civil, elec­ tion (B,M ). Washington State University, in th e Midwest, Southwest and at St. Louis headquarters said all times, Yours or Ours. Baby Wanted Lab.: Electrical,'m echanical and trical and mechanical engineer­ Wednesday and Thursday, Feb. Purdue and Wayne State Univer­ South and the Seaboard System trainmen want to return to Clothes washed free. No deposit. chemical engineering, m a t h e ­ ing and metallurgy, mechanics 14 and 15: sity h a v e , this year, debated In six southeastern and southern featherbedding practices dis­ AMERICAN DIAPER SERVICE. BLOOD DONORS needed. $7.50 matics, physics and metallurgy, and m aterials science (B,M,D). National Security Agency: adopting the system. Pennsyl­ states. posed of In 1963 after considera­ 914 East G ler Street—Phone for all positive. RH negative mechanics and m aterials sc i­ The M.W. Kellogg Co.: Chemi­ All m ajors of the colleges of vania State already has. It will be Pickets were posted at major tion by a presidential commis­ 482-0864. C with positive factor — $7.50. ence (B,M ). cal engineering (B,M), civil and arts and letters, communication instituted beginning fall term . sion, a presidential board, Con­ fa cilitie s. M issouri Pacific said A negative, B negative, and AB B ell Systems, Mich. B ell and sanitary engineering (B), me­ arts and social science (B,M) Penn State’s restrictions pro­ most of Its 23,500 employes re­ gress and an Impartial arbitra­ negative, $10.00. O negative — Other Operating Telephone Com­ chanical engineering (B,M), and mathematics and electrical vide that each student may sched­ fused to cross the lines. Sea­ tor. Typing Service $12.00. MICHIGAN COMMUNI­ panies; E lectrical, mechanical chemistry, (physical, inorganic engineering (B.M.D). ule between nine and eighteen board has about 23,000 employes. A. F . Smith, general chair­ TY BLOOD CENTER, 507 Last and chemical engineering, and analytical) (M.D). The P ro cter and Gamble Co.: credits In P/F purely optionally. J . P . Hiltz J r . , chairman of man of the Brotherhood Griev­ MARILYN CARR: Legal secre­ Grand River, East L a n s i n g , mathematics, physics and metal­ New Holland Division, Sperry All m ajors of the colleges of This Includes courses both In­ ance Committee in St. Louis, tary, typing at home. E lectric the National Railway Conference Hours: .9-3:30 Monday, Tuesday lurgy, mechanics and materials Rand Corp.: Agricultural and me­ business, a rts and letters, com­ side and outside the student's representing management,called said the union wanted to add typewriter. B efore 5 p.m., 485- and Friday: 12-6:30 Wednesday science (B,M). chanical engineering (with farm munications a rts and social sc i­ major field. In Washington for appointment one helper to yard and branch 4366, after 5:30, 393-2 6 5 4. and Thursday. 337-7183. . C B ell Systems, Western E lec­ background), dairy, accounting, ence (B,M ). Yale operates on an evaluative of a presidential emergency line crews for safety’s sake. Pick-up and delivery. C Wednesday, February 7, 1968 12 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan ANNIVERSARYSALE! O P E N SUNDAYS 10 A .M . - 7 P .M . O P E N W E E K D A Y S 8 A .M . - 10 P .M . Other Johnson in LBJ’s circle rS ENJOYTHE SPECIAL SAVINGS! THRIFT IS ALWAYS FUNAT BIG 'El JUST A FEW B LO C KS O F F C A M P U S AT WASHINGTON ¡M — Wyatt how the President has dealt with S W IF T 'S P R E M IU M P R O T E N Thomas Johnson J r ., an Impres­ sive young man of 26, had a ring­ them,” Tom Johnson told a r e ­ porter. 3301 E. MICHIGANAVE. at SHOPPERS FAIR ■SW,FTSPREM,UMPR0TEN SIRIOIH T-BONE side seat as usual Tuesday at "T h e President has given me WE RESERVE another super-secret session of Just about every opportunity to President Johnson and his key take on responsibility and be­ advisers on war and peace. come a good backup briefing of­ fic e r and press officer. I think FRESH , T E N D E R , G R A D E A Tom Johnson and Lyndon B. Johnson are far apart In years he feels that I would be of little WHOLE STEAK STEAK and background and importance. value If I were not completely But apparently they have made informed, so that is one reason quite an Impression on one an­ he permits me to sit in and doc­ other—to the extent thatTom sits ument some of the meetings for In and even records history In the the re co rd s." making around the presidential Tom is somewhat torn between FRYERS conference table. remaining on at the White House Tom Johnson is assistant White or going back to his home town House press secretary. He came of Macon, Ga., and the newspaper business. When he was in junior to the White House two and a half years ago, as a White House high s c h o o l , young Johnson started in as a school co rre s­ LB. Fellow, one of 15 young people out of 3,000 applicants for a pondent for the Macon Telegraph year’s internship with the feder­ al government. and News. He caught the eye of the pub­ FRYER BREASTS OBLEBS S M A L L BACK OR RIBS A T T A C H E D LB. 380 lisher of the two papers, Peytoh LB, Tom had something of a news­ paper background and had am­ Anderson. Eventually Anderson bitions to be a publisher. So he wound up in the White House press office for his year’stour, serving and the newspapers sponsored scholarships for him at the Uni­ versity of Georgia’s Journalism L IM IT O F 8 J A R S , P L E A S E - R E G . 80 V A L U E • I # BEECHNUT~ under the then press secretary, school and then for two years at B ill D. Moyers. the Harvard graduate school of Once thé year was up he was business administration. named assistant press secretary. There was an implicit under­ I Sw i f t ’s p r o t e n ftffc ■ SW S W IIF F T 'S ' S PR O TE ENf B O N ELESS He has been that ever since, now standing that Tom would come STE A K S serving under George Christian. He still is doing something of a back to Macon after he was through college. Instead that ROUNDSTEAK ooO MANHATTAN LB. MBVFOOD reporting job. He has a notebook White House fellowship came up and Johnson has been serving IS W IF T ’S T R U -T E N D E R E D SLI Q A a 4 0 LB> AV# WHC handy in such meetings as the one Tuesday to make an informal re c ­ ord of what went on and who made President Johnson. The President has made it ev­ 1 BEEF LIVER 09C BEEF LOINS C ut and W ropped fo r Freeza LB. what points. ident he wants Tom to stay where he is. And the latter may do The m e e t i n g included the that for some time to come. m SWIFT’S aw ir i o PREMIUM ri\cjvii SHOULDER President's top national security advisers, presumably discussing " I find the President to be an extremely exciting and challeng­ R EG . 890 VA LU E - COUNTRY FRESH - LOW FAT CI VEAL ROAST LB. the Communist outburst in Viet­ ing man to work with,” he says. " I feel that every day is a c la ss ­ SW IFTS PREMIUM SHOULDER GALLON MILK nam and the North Korean seizure of the American intelligence ship Pueblo. room in which I learn more about the government and the presi­ GAL. VEAL CHOPS dency and developments on the "T h is has been a great experi­ ence, to see all the problems and world scene.’’ CTN. BONELESS VEAL AND PORK CHOP SUEY MEAT 69ç V A L U E - B A B Y R U TH C H E R R Y C E N T E R OSCAR MAYER R E G .. 89ç C O U N T R Y FRESH Tank attack MICH. CHERRY ICE CREAM HALF GAL. ICE CREAMBARS 6 pack UNK SAUSAGE BOB EVANS SKINLESS L B. (continued fro m page one) and in northernmost Quang T rl 12 OZ. WT. Two Marines were killed and in cne oay Province, where U.S. Marines « r * \- ■ PASTRIES... CHOCOLATE .DUTCH CHOC.,VANILLA JU BILEE CHERRY,W. STRAW. VARIETY B E E F STROGANOFF.TURKEY PRIMAVERA CHICKEN LASCALES, CHICKEN BARONET HONEY DATE MUFFIN MIX nist movement operating so effi­ ciently in the capital city, hopes have been dashed that any real plane felled in such actions and the 797th officially listed as lost from all causes in combat over 'Bolted F i e J t .. tke datf ifou buif them! REG. 59* PAK PANCAKE AND WAFFLE MIX ¿¿Sr. progress has been made in the towns and hamlets in the coun­ the North. COCONUT JUMBO 4 PACK 0 5 1/2 to C I BUTTERMILK BISCUIT MIX tryside. DOZ. 6 1/4 oz. The pacification program ap­ pears set back Indefinitely in Knudson COOKIES 2 PKG. EACH. WT. PKG. view of its major objective: the (continued fr o m page one) security and economic develop­ ment of the population. ■ of overseas and Canadian opera­ HONEY WHEAT OREAD 2 ¿¿S' 49C YOUR tions and all domestic nonauto­ B U T T E R S C O T C H , C H O C ., L E M O N , V A N IL L A ,C H O C . FUDGE T his has been a key aim. From 1 L B . 4 OZ. Cl C H O IC E President Johnson down, leaders motive and defense divisions. At Ford he will be chief oper­ POTATO OREAD 4 LVS. ITHANK YOU PUODING8 EACH in the allied effort have made it ating officer, will report directly clear for years that the Vietnam war involved not only military to Ford and will run the company in Ford’s absence. ASST. SWEET ROLLS 6 390 PKG. moves but also "the other war,” the promotion of safety and sta­ Generally considered the No. 4 man at GM after an executive APPLE FRITTERS ( for 430 R E G . 39ç bility among the people. shuffle last fall, Knudsenwasone There were repeated state­ of the firm 's biggest stockhold­ BUTCH APPLE PIE * lb , 6 OZ 59c U -V PEHJTHROZEJ^PjnHELLS 10 O Z .W T . 2 PACK ments of progress. In June 1966 e r s . As of last May, he held William J . Porter, then deputy 42,507, worth more than $3.3 PELLSBURY READY TO SPREAD in Saigon, told million at current market values. ambassador President Johnson that the pro­ It was not immediately clea r what gram " i s really beginning to disposition would be made of the I0ç O F F L A B E L - G IA N T SIZE C A L IF O R N IA - 138 S IZ E it CHOC. FUDGE, L T. CHOC. .VANILLA FROSTING 1L^ r- ro ll.” That September President GM stock but Industry speculation Johnson said progress was im­ was that he probably would dis­ pressive, while Robert Komer, pose of his holdings—perhaps whom he assigned to direct the trading them for Ford stock. program, observed: "We think It seemed certain that Knud- FAB NAVEL ORANGES ENTER DIAMOND JUBILEE SWEEPSTAKES- ENTRY BLANKS IN OUR PRODUCE D EPT. DOZ. WHISTLES BUGLES, DAISIES BUTTONS,BOWS1 .3 ^ )\ ^ were are getting up steam.” sen would have to make some ar­ rangement so that he did not con­ FRESH FLORIDA WAX OR SW IFT'S CHILI WITH BEANS OR By last December the U.S. trol such a large bloc of voting D ETERG EN T 0 VALENTINES SAY •FEB. 14 GREEN BEANS Embassy, citing computer anal­ power with a m ajor rival. y ses, was saying that two-thirds Ironically, Knudsen's father, 3 LBS. I OZ. LARGE,BEAUTIFUL PLANTSI HESSLER'S BURBANK RUSSET BEEF STEW r 480 of South Vietnam’s 17 million L t. Gen. William S. Knudsen, people were living in secure who headedGMfrom 1937to 1940, BOX 5-BLOOM TULIPS BAKING POTATOES ’« LB. BAG LUNCHEON MEAT n Qz M M JL I areas controlled by the gov­ had been a high executive of Ford 3 -B L O O M H Y A C IN T H S , ernment. Americans closest to the paci­ before Joining GM. Knudson told a news confer­ ASST. M U M S - 5 1 /2 ” POTS MICHIGAN YELLOW COOKING ONIONS 3 SWIFT’S PREM S 44C fication program in die field ence, at which he appeared later YO UR C H O l d DEL MONTE W.K. OR CREAM . I REG . 21* LITTLE BO PEEP agreed in January that it w as with Ford, that the stock ques­ MICHIGAN HOT HOUSE EACH hopelessly out of date, having tion was " a personal m atter." been devised and developed for Ford said that his company use in a purely guerrilla envi- , had not been looking actively AMMONIA TANGY RNOIARO CORNORPEAS 5 SoO fl ronment. fo r a president. DEL MONTE-6 1/2 OZ. WT. of danger. "Knudsen's availability trig­ R E G . 99c V A LU E - SPRAY D EO D O R A N T What of the picture over all? gered the id ea," he said. 7 O Z. W T. LIGHT TUNA 4 FOR RIGHTGUARD Ford added that he himself While Westmoreland’ s head­ expected to be spending much CAN DEL MONTE PINE-GRAPEFRUIT quarters declines to discuss time in Washington working as what may be done, he has often head of a special businessmen’s referred to the American m ili­ committee charged by President tary posture here as "defensive Johnson with finding Jobs for JUICE DRINK 4 ^ : in strategy, offensive in tac­ 700,000 hardcore unemployed in tic s .’’ thfi next three veers«