Monday W ha t passion C o ld e r M IC H IG A N . . . cannot music ra is e and . . . today and to m o rro w with quail? S T A T I chance of snow f lu r r ie s . High --J o h n Dryden today 13-18. Low tonight 2 -8 U N IV E R S IT Y above. V o l. 60 N um ber 124 E a s t L a nsi ng , M ic h i ga n F e b ru a ry 12, 1968 10ç ACLU protests Thant, Kosygin discuss racial survey Vietnam peace prospects MOSCOW OF) — U.N. Secretary-Gen­ a t registration B y JIM SC H A E F E R Kosygin with Foreign M inister Andrei gan In South Vietnam almost two weeks eral U Thant arrived from India Sunday A. Gromyko went to a program of one-act ago. State News Staff W r ite r and Informants said he began discussions ballets at the Bolshoi Theater. Informed The Lansing branch of the American with P rem ier Alexei N. Kosygin on pros­ Recent Soviet comments have, however, sources said they had Informal discussions Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) has sent left vague what the Kremlin thinks about pects for peace In Vietnam. on world affairs during Intermissions. the peace situation for South Vietnam, 355-4560 a letter to all the members of the MSU The main discussion on the war ap­ Thant will fly to London Monday for Board of T ru stees, protesting the re­ parently took place at a dinner given as distinct from Hanol-Washlngton peace talks with Prim e M inister Harold Wilson, quest for student identification on racial Sunday night by Kosygin. T ass said a talks. The Viet Cong representative In who returned Sunday from talks with survey data during registration. "friendly conversation took p lace" but gave no details. However, Informants said the war was the main topic. President Johnson In Washington. The Soviet reception for Thant was keynoted by Pravda's article calling Moscow, who received personal as­ surances of support from Soviet leaders last week, has talked of Indefinite war­ State N ew s, ASMSU In a letter to the State News, which enclo sed a copy of that sent to the Trustee s, Harold Hart, chairman of the ACLU,said, Pravda, the official Communist party fare until the United States abandons South Hanoi's peace term s " d e a r and just” "T h e racial survey of MSU students con­ newspaper greeted Thant with frontpage backing fo r Hanoi’s peace term s. . With visits to New Delhi, Moscow and and saying It was "up to the U.S.A.” to stop all military actions against North Vietnam. Vietnam. In an apparent effort to take some credit for recent Viet Cong victories, the to sponsor Spartacuss ducted at registration during fall and winter terms poses several civil liberties problems.” London, Thant la reported trying to ensure This Soviet attitude—and, Indeed, the Soviets claimed last week that they were The sometimes arduous process of faculty and administrators and provides "T he activities and position of the Lan­ that the increased fighting in South Viet­ North Vietnamese attitude—has shown no arming "Vietnam ese patriots,” Implying creating understanding between students, an excellent means to better clarify their sing ACLU in this matter culminated in nam does not spoil whatever small chances change since the intensified fighting be­ the Vlet Cong as well as Northern forces. administration and faculty andtheUniver- positions on many areas of concern.” the enclosed letter sent this week to all there are of peace talks. sity community-at-large will get an extra Faculty members and administrators the members of the MSU Board of Trus­ This version of Thant’s mission was boost beginning Tuesday by MSU's own contacted regarding Spartacuss have been tees. Our stand is consistent with policy given by a high level source In New Delhi. gladiator, Spartacuss. quite enthusiastic and voiced their ap­ positions taken within the last two months Thant flew in to Moscow from the Indian Operating under the auspices of the State proval and willingness to cooperate, he by both the National and the Michigan eapital after talking there with Prim e News and ASMSU, Spartacuss is aimed at noted. ACLU.” M inister Indira Gandhi, North Vietnamese providing information and answer s to many This group includes D>n Adams, direc­ The letter sent to the Trustees mainly Consul Nguyen Hoa and UJS. Ambassador of the questions and problems of M:3U tor of residence hall programs;HoraceC. protests the request for student identi­ Chester Bowles. students. King, registrar; Gordon A, Sabine, vice- fication in the racial survey. Thant la trying "to apply reverse g ear" Beginning Tuesday, students can call president for special projects; Biggie “ We do not question the honorable In­ to a worsening outlook for peace talks, 355-4560 between 1 and 5 p.m. with their Munn, athletic director; Milton B . Dicker­ tent of the reg istrar,” states the letter, the Informant said. He added that Thant problems, questions and gripes. ASMSU son, vice-president for student affairs; "b u t we are not at all satisfied that was not carrying any peace proposals. personnel will record the information and Jam es D. Rust, ombudsman andRichardO. the procedure outlined in Systems and Thant himself refused to talk to re­ pass it on to a team of researchers, who Bernltt, director of the Dept, of Public Procedures from the Office of R egistrar, porters when he left New Delhi or on will tap all available resources to obtain Safety. dated November U , 1967, adequately pro­ his arrival here. the most concise possible answers. tects student privacy.” Shortly after he arrived, Thant and The ACLU claim s that this procedure The results will be printed in Sparta­ requires a duplicate deck of cards be cuss, a weekly column to appear every Friday in the State News, beginning Feb. 23. Students whose inquiries are not H an n ah gives prepared, with an alphabetical listing of minority group students. In fall term registration, the student U.N. officials printed will be personally contacted and given the needed information. State o f U ’ checked a special box on the home ad­ dress cards, which answered the question: Coordinating- Spartacuss are E ric what Is your race or national origin. call for talks *j Pianin, State News executive editor; Cindy Mattson, ASMSU m em ber-at-large; Ro­ berta Yafie, State News feature editor, and rep ort tonight The categories Included white, Amerlcan- Indian, Negro, Spanish-American, O riental, and other. T erry Mulchahey, ASMSU director of At winter enrollment, separate cards with N. Korea T h a n t in M o s c o u U nited Nations S e c re ta ry G en eral U Thant (ce n te r) Is g reeted at the iroshmiirnw^ntaftoiK. * ' • "Spartacuss represents the first com­ President Hannah will deliver his an­ nual "State of the University” report tonight and present the six Distinguished were jse fi. “ With ready access to duplicating facil­ bined effort, on the part of the State News ities there Is no guarantee that such SEOUL OF) — U.N. officials called for a M oscow A irp o rt by Soviet Deputy F o reig n M in is te r V a s s ily Kuznet­ and ASMSU, to provide an extremely Faculty Awards before faculty members checks and lists could be duplicated for nae fling today with North Korea to a ir sov (rig h t) and F o reig n M in is try P rotocol C h ief F lo d o r M olochkov. worthwhile service to students," Planln and their spouses at 8 p jn . in the Audi­ nefarious purposes, despite precautions,” claim s of Communist truce violations "In said.” It brings students a step closer to torium. U PI Cablephoto the letter said. ' sad through the demilitarized zone.” U.S. Last year, Hannah discussed the neces­ The ACLU said It became aware of envoy' Cyrus Vance headed Into talks with sity of tax reform , expansion of the two- the racial survey from an Oct, 25, 1967, South Korean President Chung Hee Park. year medical school, student dissent, and State News article which reported some The United Nations Command announced the then newly established special Com­ 6,000 students had failed to check their Brain Drain’ challenges Sunday It has asked fo r a full meeting of mittee f o r Undergraduate Education . race or national origin on a card which the Joint M ilitary Arm istice Commission (CUE). also included their name, student number —MAC—Monday at Panmunjom — the Distinguished Faculty Awards, MSU's and home address. second such session since the U.S. intelli­ highest recognition, were presented last In a letter at that time to Horace gence ship Pueblo was seized Jan . 23. year by Hannah to Milton B . Dickerson, King, reg istrar, the ACLU said they urged As of Sunday afternoon the North Koreans had not agreed to the meeting. The shift of emphasis to the North Ko­ rean threat along the frontier was a wel­ international progress accorded to American doctors, engineers now vice president for student affairs; Charles C. Hughes, professor of mathe­ m atics; Hldeya Kumata, professor of communication; Charles P. Loomis, re­ that " I f such a survey was necessary, that it be conducted so that a particular student could not be identified with a particular race or origin on a card which come one for the South Koreans, who have By M !T C H M IL L E R search professor of sociology, and Law­ might be Improperly used. and scientists. claimed the United States was Ignoring their security in its five secret meetings State News S taff W r ite r News Analysis No one is sure how many of MSU’s rence E. Malvern, professor of metallur­ gy, mechanics and m aterials. In a subsequent Interview with King, approximately 1200 foreign students will the civil liberties group said information ? with North Korea over release of the According to the first International Each recipient was given a citation and and discrimination on the basis on race, stay and how many will return to their and Ideas were exchanged, then la te r, Pueblo and its 83 crewmen. conference to study the "B ra in Drain” , $1,000 from the MSU Development Fund. caste, tribe or other non-professional native lands to work. together with Jeanne Gullahorn, a s s t. • Although Vance would not say what he held this summer in Lausanne, Switzer­ They were nominated by faculty, stu­ criteria . According to August G. Benson, the professor of psychology, a sample anony­ Intended to tell Park, it was believed his land, 90 per cent of the Asian students dent and alumni groups, then selected by The new Immigrants come to the U.S. foreign student advisor at MSU, the much mous questionnaire was presented to King, prim ary mission was to quiet South Korean who arrive in this country for study Hannah, Milton E. Meulder, vice presi­ in order to escape such discrimination, higher ratio of graduate to undergraduate " F o r a number of reasons,” complains fears that the United States was tending never go home. dent for research development and dean or to participate in an academic atmos­ foreign students here than throughout the the letter, ‘ ‘the survey at winter term toward appeasement In the Pueblo affair Although many experts would question of graduate studies, and Howard R. Neville, phere which may not be available at nation (85-15 per cent vs. a near 50-5C and neglecting the North Korean attempt this figure, none would disagree that the provost. (please tu rn to back page) Jan . 21 to assassinate Park. migration of scientists, physicians, home, or to benefit from the high status (please tu rn to back page) T here was speculation the presidential engineers and scholars from the develop­ troubleshooter, who arrived Sunday, would ing nations to Western Europe and from meet with North Korean representatives before his scheduled departure Tuesday both regions to the United States has become a matter of great concern for world development. DEMOCRATS DEBATE afternoon. Reliable Korean sources said they be­ The number of such Immigrants has lieved three Injured Pueblo crewmen would been rising and In fiscal year 1966. be returned soon along with the body of on# man killed during North Korea's seizure of the ship off Wonsan. 9,534 scientists, engineers and physicians migrated to the United States. (This does not include scholars in other areas.) And, with new liberalizations of the Im­ Vietnam solution must be p o litica l By STAN M ORGAN But there was believed to be little hope migration laws, yearly numbers o f in­ State University, and L Milton Sacks, Cambodia, Laos and Thailand could result It is evident that the U.S. does not of quick release for the others unless the coming scientists, engineers and phy­ State News Staff W r ite r have the support of thé Vietnamese people, associate professor of political science in another world war. . United States admits the Pueblo was spying sicians are expected to reach 17,000. A debate Saturday on the Vietnam war, at Brandels University. Ethridge said, and cited the "De-Am eri­ This is not a war against Communism, In North Korean w aters, apologizes and These numbers may not seem large, Sponsored by the Michigan Conference of Ethridge spoke out against the U.S. canization” campaign waged by a civilian he said, and the fate of Southeast Asia prom ises to refrain in the future. but they represent a significant share of Concerned Democrats, ended as unre­ policies In Southeast Asia as having done candidate In the presidential elections as does not depend on stopping the Com­ There was no official report of any prog­ the graduates of the developing countries, solved as the war Itself. proof. munists at the 17th parallel. r e s s after the fifth secret U.S. - North and of the total number of new per­ Held In the Union Ballroom, the debate "D espite overwhelming evidence to the See re la te d s to ry page 7. ” Ho Chi Mlnh and his echelon may be Korean meeting Saturday. The only official sonnel added to the technical resources was attended by several hundred Michigan contrary, Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker, Communists, but they are also na­ comment on any of the talks was a Wash­ of this country. Deniocrats Interested In repairing the General William G Westmoreland and tio n alists," Ethridge said. "They are ington report that the Communists bad been The Dominican republic lost 67.7 per strife within their party and gaining a others still Insist that progress Is being nothing but turn South Vietnam Into the fighting a war for national liberation they "cy n ical” In the firs t one. UJS. spokesmen cent of its. graduating engineers and 33.8 meaningful Democratic victory In 1968. made in South Vietnam," he said. "B ut world's largest m ilitary base. thought had been won at Dlen Ben Phu." In Seoul will not admit talks have been held per cent of Its new physicians to the Participating In the morning debate as Sen. Edward Kennedy said, ’ It is "A m erica la not winning the war in He said that the average Viet Cong is y«rti Washington acknowledges each one. U.S. in fiscal 1966, for example. And w ere: Mark Ethridge, J r . , editor of Vietnam, but Is merely preventing the the kind of progress we make crawling basically apolitical. Interested only In the total number of Immigrating phy­ the Detroit F re e P re ss; Wesley Flshel, Vlet Cong from winning,” he said. up the side of a ship without realizing The U.N. dommand demanded Immediate ending the colonialism and other sicians that year was equal to 26.1 per­ professor of political science; Max Mark, the ship is sinking.’ return of the Pueblo and crew at an MAC Ha said that there was no military way occupation which had been going on for cent of the total graduating class of professor of political science at Wayne Ethridge received a standing ovation meeting the day after the seizure. The Out of Vietnam, and extending the war into nearly 100 y ears. U.S. medical schools. when he said it was time our govern­ Pueblo Incident was not raised during a The reasons for the wave of immigra­ ment realized that the only solution to one-hour MAC secretaries meeting last tion are not easily identified, but a c­ Vietnam was a political one, based on the Wednesday, but U.N. spokesmen did pro­ cording to Walter Adams, professor of idea that the National Liberation Front test the assassination attempt. economics and co-chairman of the Lau­ (NLF) was the strongest political organ­ The current crisis began two days before sanne Conference, trained personnel are ization In South Vietnam and could not the Pueblo Incident when 31 North Korean leaving the developing world because of be excluded from any settlement there. commandos slipped across the demilitar­ die lack of professional opportunities, Mark supported Ethridge, saying that ized zone and headed for Seoul, 30 miles die low standard of living, and the undue our policies In Vietnam have been a com­ to the south, to assassinate Park. emphasis by certain countries on over­ bination of confusion, lack of understanding They failed, but a South Korean police seas training in esoteric skills, such as and self-deception. chief died In a gun-battle with them only nuclear engineering. He said American policies ware baaed 800 yarde from the presidential mansion. The lack of opportunity appears not only on a "tyranny of small decisions.” That Twenty-seven of the infiltrators were because of the low level of technical la , the policies have taken each problem killed and one was captured. development, but because of salary struc­ step-by-step, but have never come to gripe i- tures (In the Philippines, tor example, with the basic situation. South Koreans In all walks of life were young doctors not only em igrate but be­ "T h e re has been an interdlslntegratlon tivWgnont whan they thought the Incident come Manila businessmen rather than of the Vietnamese so ciety ," Merit sold. was being overlooked because of the practice medicine), a lack of willing­ "How ’ can there be peace If laziness, Pueblo's capture. Park may not be a be­ ness on the part of ruling elites to use hypocrisy and corruption are prevalent la loved leader to his people, but they reepect V ie tn a m d e b a te the skills of its trained personnel ln- their government.” him and depend on hie leadership, politi­ novatlvely and to Share power with them, D eb a te rs In the D e m o c ra tic sponsored V ie tn a m Debate last Saturday a re p ic tu re d fro m lefts M a rk E th - cally and militarily. and discrimination on the basis of ra ce. rid g e , M ax M a rk , W e s le y Flshel and M ilto n Sacks. State News photo by Gordon M o e lle r (please tu rn to back page) Jam e* I). Spaniolo ■Su«on C om erfnrd J O S E P H A L S O P r i M I C H I G A N editor-in-chief adrerliaing m anager V Eric I1i fin in* executive editor V V V i STATI NEWS l.awrence Werner, managing editor Hobby Sodcn. cnmpu* editor Edward I. HrilU editorial editor ! . . U N IV E R S IT Y Joe Milch* apart* editor Vietnam , the visible end Flve~tlnne re c ip ie n t of the P ace m a ke r aw ard for outstanding jo u rn alism . Monday Morning, February 12, 1968 WASHINGTON - We a re , no doubt, due E D IT O R IA LS for another spate of warnings that a ll is hopeless in Vietnam because of the at­ tack on the U.S. E m b assy and the other V iet Cong effo rts in Saigon and other cities. In reality, however, this flurry of S p a r t a c u s s : a s te p c l o s e r guerrilla activity in urban cen ters alm ost certainly has ju s t the opposite meaning. According to Hanoi’s doctrine, the war always has been supposed to culm inate in a "g e n e ra l up rising," engulfing towns as Spartacuss, the State N e w s - well as countryside. In prudent preparation for this "g e n e ra l uprising,” the enem y’s ASMSU a tte m p t a t bringing stu­ high command long ago began to accum u­ dents one step closer to under­ late hidden assets, in the form of men and standing the com plexities of a weapons, within or on the fringes of the various urban cen ters where their w rit has m u ltiversity , was not conceived never run. to be a panacea. Everyone has known that such hidden I t is intended to provide an assets existed. .O ccasionally, this or that added in fo rm ation service t o bit of the V iet Cong network in Saigon or some other town has been discovered students and to act as one m ore and removed. Most of the network always clearing house fo r com plaints has rem ained in place, largely inactive a t the U n iversity. Students are and therefore difficult to locate, but ready for use on the word of command from w elcom e to c a ll in th eir ques­ Hanoi. tions and com plaints about the research these inquiries, obtain These people realize the great That word was evidently given some U n iv e rs ity to the special Spar­ the fu ll story, and then either potential of Spartacuss, not only weeks or months ago. The numerous a t­ tacuss num ber, 355-4560, w eek­ publish the results in a w eekly in that it benefits students but tacks in Saigon, in Hue. in Da Nang and at other points were o b v i o u s l y long- days fro m 1 to 5 p.m . Spartacuss column in the State also th at it enables the U n iv e r­ planned and m ost carefu lly co-ordinated, T h ere won’t be m iraculous re ­ News, or call back the results sity to adequately describe its The execution, in m ost cases, was quite sponse to inquiries, w ith im m e ­ to the inquirer. policies and procedures. adm irable, showing very carefu l co-ordina­ tion as well as great daring. T h e o b v io u s f a c t r e m a in s th a t w a s te fu lly e x p e n d e d , w ith ­ diate responses to questions or The response to the idea of But the obvious fa c t rem ains that m ost m o s t o f t h e V ie t C o n g 's a s s e t s in o u t p r o d u c in g a n y th in g d im ly r e ­ instant solutions to problem s. Spartacuss by top U n iversity ad­ I t was m ost encouraging to of the V iet Cong's a sse ts in sen t around the get the fu ll cooperation of a n d a ro u n d th e u r b a n cen ters s e m b lin g th e g e n e r a l u p r is in g H a ­ B ut instead, a dedicated com­ m in istrators and faculty, fo r the urban ce n te r* have n o b e e n a b ru p tly and James D . Rust, the U n iversity wastefully expended, without producing h av e now been a b r u p tly a n d n o i h a s a lw a y s d r e a m e d o f. m itte e of State New s and AS- m ost part, has been quite favor­ ombudsman, who views Spar­ anything dimly resem bling the general M S U m em bers w ill thoroughly able. uprising Hanoi has alw ays dreamed of. be clim actic. And it will obviously help This should surprise no one. Quite aside tacuss not only as an added serv­ It is as if a college boy, who had been the enem y a t Khe Sanh if there is acute from the heavy pressure of the bombing of ice to the U n iversity, but also saving up for a new sports ca r, suddenly worry about security throughout the rest the North, countless captured documents as an innovation that w ill com­ put all his savings into a useless rattletrap . of South V ietnam . reveal that “ fe a r of protracted w ar” is the Procrastination blocks plem ent his position as trouble­ shooter and generate m ore stu­ The question is, why? Quite certainly, the right answer is not that Hanoi thought the tim e had really But from all this, a single, cen tral point rath er em erges. What has happened in the cities, what is happening a t Khe Sanh, cen tral “ w eakness” - the word is regularly u sed - of the North V ietnam ese troops and V iet Cong cadres and troops in South V iet­ dent interest in his office. com e for the general uprising and therefore cannot possibly be made to fit into Hanoi’s nam. sorority key system Spartacuss, in essence, is an experim ent in in te r-U n ive rs ity moved prem aturely. The kind of V iet Cong planning and preparation revealed in 'the recent a tta ck s is alm ost never wasted on fam iliar and cla ssic blueprint for “ pro­ tracted w ar.” The sudden expenditure of the hidden ur­ There is considerable evidence, indeed, that a t som e tim e last sum m er the Hanoi leaders seriously contem plated re tre a t into false assumptions. ban assets, like the preparations a t Khe the patient strategy of classical “ pro­ F o r roughly $16.90, 40 girls in communications, and it has an Sanh, in truth m akes no sense at all unless tracted w ar,” only to rebound into the pa­ P an-H el, but m ay be next week. Quite certainly, therefore, the decision a sorority house could come and exciting potential. I n q u i r i e s was consciously taken to settle for the the Hanoi leaders are instead basing all tient strategy of a clim a ctic effort. And And it m ay even by handled as a their cu rrent <>nged-for sports the ch an ces are th at the reason for the re­ new motion. car. P retty certainly, there w ere two aim s final or sem ifinal effort. Their adoption bound w as 'the e ffe c t on the troops and whenever, they please. areas of exploration previously The houses have accepted the behind this decision. One was the obvious of the system of win-lose,-or-draw is the. ejui?e% '•'riVo't.9 —i'AVw! th e c a lls from .Hanoi A n d responsibility could be overlooked, arid it*m ay give AS­ propagandistic a im -to weaken Am erican only rational reading of the fa cts, prom is­ for “ p ro tracted w a r . . . up to 20 y e a r s. " • proposal and w ant it sent to AS- handed the individuals by levy­ M S U another means of m easur­ and South V ietnam ese resolution by con­ ing their troops in the field peace-by-coali- God knows, none can predict exactly M S U im m ed iately. There is no veying the im pression of hopelessness. tion “ in 1968.” what Hanoi will do, if the preparations at ing a fine fo r losing a key equal ing student opinion. reason for P an-H el to look a t it The other aim was m ilitary. Everything That m eans, on the one hand, that the Khe Sanh fail to produce the desired result. to the cost of replacing the lock Thus, the experim ent begins, indicates that the big show in Vietnam stakes a t Khe Sanh are alm ost unbearably But it is certain ly idiotic to go on talking a g a in -it is the same proposal, and keys. the lines are open, and a ll is this winter is to be the b attle at Khe Sanh. high. But that m eans, on the other hand, about a w ar “ with no end in sight,” as so plus one m ore page of rationale. The North V ietnam ese preparations that the Hanoi war-planners have been many do in this country, when the other P an-H ellenic Council approved ready. The next m ove is yours. If , however, t h e change is strongly suggest, by their m ere unprece­ driven to conclude that “ protracted w ar” side so obviously th in k s-o r fe a r s -th a t a that m easure last N ovem ber, but again channeled through Pan- --The E ditors dented scale, that this b attle is intended to is not a safe strategy to adopt. rath er early end is in sight. a “ study” was requested, thus H e l, it w ill be an extra week delaying im plem entation a t least one m ore term . before the key question reaches O U R R E A D E R S ’ M IN D S ASMSU. In view of the steps In D ecem ber a c o m m i t t e e fo r approval that lie between studied the key system a t the U n iversity of M ichigan E astern M ichigan U n iversity. and the proposal and im plem enta­ tion, even a w eek’s d elay-an d spring term sorority sisters w ill Down Blanton, up the war Another page of rationale was find themselves still taking turns To the E ditor: Your main argument was as follows: our pilots could not see. It is odd that is to bring out the true fa cts on the validity prepared and should have been a t the door. I would like to answer W. C. Blanton "T h e U.S. Governm ent supported F rench of both Governm ents of Vietnam . Which G reene did not include the picture that was presented to P an-H el Feb. 7. on his letter to the State News on Ja n . colonialism in its attem pt to suppress a represents the people to the greatest de­ in Tim e Magazine sev eral months ago of A t this point, fu rth e r procasti- 30. national revolution in V ietn am ." and “ the gree? I think that the best way to under­ the Montagnard m a ssa cre where the in­ Somehow, without any specific nation is absurd. Mr. Blanton: U.S. Governm ent condoned the breaking stand our stand in Vietnam is to bring out habitants of an entire village w ere brutally reason, it was not discussed at --The E d ito rs Only the m ost naive would for a mo­ of the Geneva agreem ents of 1954 by a the historical facts. roasted by the V iet Cong and the N. V iets m ent hope that the student body would corrupt pupj'i t governm ent in South V iet­ In 1941 the Soviet Union sent an ardent using new Soviet flam e-throw ers. Where fall for your one-sided, distorted fab rica­ nam and supported it with aid and ad­ com munist named Nguyen Ai Quoc into were the pictures of the 100,000 dead V iet­ How we won the war tions about the War in Vietnam. It is hard to determ ine whether your “ fa c ts ” were d eliberately falsified or whether it was ju st your gross lack of knowledge on the visers in suppressing a national revolu­ tion." Ju s t because m ost students don't follow this nonsense doesn't m ean that they don’t Vietnam. His task was to take advantage of the anti-French movement to build a Southeast Asian Communist power. He nam ese who w ere murdered in the bloody hands of the com m unists la st year alone? Only one m ore thing can be said, Mr. Blanton, for the sake of 20 million V iet­ im m ediately began this task by forming a “ They a re our f r i e n d s out the Advisory Team 93 said, “ We subject. I ’m sure it was both. Your knowl­ think, or that they are "stu p id ." It is quite pro-com munist group called the V iet Minh nam ese and for the sake of the m illions edge is limited exclusively to a few con­ the opposite. front. Since the vast m ajority of the peo­ in boardering countries who will be next th ere,” said one A m e r i c a n , w ill never know fo r sure” how torted anti-draft, anti-w ar publications- 1 think that the best way to co rrect any ple feared the com m unists. Nguyen Ai to suffer if South Vietnam falls, thank pointing to the smoking South m any civilians d ie d -a t least 500 not to any historical fact. doubts about this Country's role in the war God that L B J doesn’t listen to you and the Quoc, because of his background, changed Vietnam ese c ity of Ben T re . m ore like ly 1,000. his name to Ho, the Enlightened or Ho rest of the bearded, bead rattling phonies A llied f o r c e s had ju s t un- Chi Minh. a non-communist nationalist. who m arch on Washington (with ASMSU E n em y dead totaled 451. A l­ Under this facade, he obtained a minor money) to fight tyranny, to save the world leashed-w ithout advance w arn­ lies lost 70. government post. Two years la ter he con­ from A m erica's "w ra th “ --to save your owi^ ing to civilians - 500-pound - f r o m an A P news dispatch trolled all the power by way of murder, cheap necks. bombs, napalm , rockets, v a ri­ * * * * * * * threat and purge. His favorite was the J.D . M iller "arm ed propaganda" method (terrorism Lansing sophomore ous types of a n t i - p e r s o n n e l C a n it b e t h a t t h e U n ite d S t a t e s such as involving whole com m unities in bombs and 105 and 155 m m a r­ the p u b lic ." tr ia l" and execution of local tille ry on the riv e r c ity of 35,000 h a s b e c o m e s o i m m e r s e d in t h e overran, by the V ie t Cong. b r u t a l m e a n s o f t h is w a r t h a t it leaders). Assassination squads elim inated many N ationalist opponents-the rest fled Amazing h a s so m eh o w fo r g o t t e n th e su p­ to the South and joined with the French. W e had to bomb i t to “ save” The Soviet Union aided the Ho govern­ To the E d itor: it, according to a U.S. m ajo r. p o s e d e n d s . . . th e s e c u r in g f o r m ent with weapons and money to support Life is full of surprises (or so they say) About 85 per cent of the Ben t h e p e o p l e o f S o u t h V ie tn a m o f Ho s drive to defeat the French-V ietnam - but nothing to date has amazed me more T re environs was wiped out; a t s e lf-d e te r m in a tio n an d a b etter ese alliance and conquer Indochina. At than Stuart Rosenthal’s r e v i e w of the that point the United S tates chose to help Lovin’ Spoonful Concert. least as m any civilians as VC life ? out, because no longer was the b attle a Mr. Rosenthal sdems to have based his w ere killed. And a m em ber of — T h e E d ito r s national revolution. criticism on the lack of interest which the It is interesting to add that in 1955 a performers displayed concerning “psyche­ nation-wide referendum was held in the delic and drug influenced m usic.” When* South where Diem was elected President. questioned about the issue “ they seemed Who then is the true government and who hesitant to reply, embarking instead on a is the Puppet? Diem held three elections. semantics hassle as to what is psychedelic The Communist rule was. and is, based music.” on coercion, not legality or vote. No free May I point out that the group appeared elections were ever attempted in t h e on campus as part of the Popular Enter­ North. tainment Series, not Controversy ’68. They The Geneva agreements of 1954 were not gave an excellent performance and were signed because: they were vague, the total­ not expected to conduct a symposium on itarian government in the North had al­ the existing marijuana laws for Mr. Rosen­ ready eliminated all political enemies, thal’s benefit. I think their views on the and Ho Chi Minh already had infiltrated subject were made quite clear during the thousands of his Viet Minh (known in the “great deal of joking” which took place South as Viet Cong) into South Vietnam between numbers. One can only be led to disrupt and control the proposed “ fre e " to believe that our critic is a rather un- elections. perceptive individual. Mr. Blanton, I have seen Felix Greene’s I suggest that in the future he confine his collection of photographs of the children criticism more to an analysis of the per­ who were accidentally burned by our na­ formance and less to the entertainers’ palm. These were unavoidable, as civil­ social and political views. ♦ ians sometimes sought refuge from the Sandy Koliopoulos Cong and the N. Viets in the jungle where Flint, sophomore Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Monday, February 12, 1968 3 NEWS summary Dems view politics, policy By DAN BRANDON or I kind of like h im ," Ferency When questioned about the dle," Sheanton said. " L B J may State News S taff W r ite r said. "R ockefeller is soaring at election possibilities In 1968, be the first Incumbent In the 20th A cap su le s u m m a r y o f th a d a y '» a v a n ta fro m the polls and he hasn't said s Ferency sold that he does not century to be dumped." YPSILANTI—T b e r e g i o n a l word In t year and s h a lf." see Son. Robert Kennedy (D-N.Y.) e u r wi r e s e r v i c e « . conference ot the Natlqpal Student He said that tbs young people On the question of student as a possible candidate. Assn. (NSA) Saturday and Sun-' are being ^askod to put their power, towart! which the NSA He further sold that as much a*y heard two outspoken Mc­ conference was oriented, F e r­ as her Is discontented with the lives on the line and they should “ I th in k th e o t h e r s id e Carthyite Democrats express ency said, " I f you don’t have the present policies, especially In the begin to Inquire why. their views on how to achieve a Sheanton sold that McCarthy’s power now you're never going to Vietnam w ar, If Johnson runs is p r e p a r e d t o n e g o tia te bettor political situation in the get It. You're not going to get again he w ill support him. concern Is mors with domestic United States. problems than with the w ar, which s o m e kin d o f c o m p r o ­ any la r g e r." Sheanton was more fervently Zolton Ferency, form er State he is opposed to. With regard to the rumblings of against Johnson and In favor of m is e o r c o a litio n g o v ­ Democratic Chairman, and discontent which President John­ McCarthy. He charged that John­ Sheanton’ added that Mc­ e r n m e n t in South V iet­ Jam es Sheanton, a member of son recently referred to " a s the son is "m endacious" and called Carthy’s strong suit is his cour­ the faculty of Columbia Univer­ w aters being parted by the ship him "Johnson lia r ." age. "Gene McCarthy has the nam an d I don 't th in k w e sity, agreed that It Is time for of sta te ," Ferency said, " I think " If the Democratic party re­ courage to put everything on the a r e . " Sen. E u g e n e J . political change. Ferency, an avid the ship of state is wallowing nominates Johnson, it will split line; the least we can do Is supporter of Sen. Eugene M c­ match him ." M cC arth y o f M in n esota. around In the same old swamp." the party right down the mid­ NSA conference Carthy (D-Mlim.), said that the problem lies with the public’s James Sheanton of C o lu m b ia U n iv e rs ity speaks to the Inability to organize and unite International N ew s NSA Student P o w e r Conference Sunday at Y p s lla n tl. behind the cause. To his left Is James G rah am , fo r m e r ASMSU Student "W e a re living In an era of m ass propaganda and Indoctrina­ R A Nw D A L L S 0 U.N. SECRETARY-GENERAL U Thant arrived in Moscow Board c h a irm a n . tio n ," Ferency said. "W e are to explore prospects for peace in Vietnam with Soviet Prem ier State News photo by J e rry M c A llis te r becoming Immune to the truth. Alexei N. Kosygin. Thant Is reported trying to ensure that in­ We’re out-propagandizing our­ creased fighting in South Vietnam will not deter chances for selv es." peace talks. See page 1. He analogized the political sit­ UOOUOUÜ V C O U P O N D A Y « ) uuooi 0 THE U9EKED NATIONS Commission, for Social Develop­ ment has drafted a proposal that would have the U.N. General N a v y jets bomb uation to the great abundance of commercial advertising through­ M e n 's o f L a d le s 'P la in SWEATERS out the mass media. c leaned Assembly declare that birth control Information and m aterials "T h e key word these days Is are the right of every family. See page 10. p ressed s e ll," he said. "Abe Lincoln with ^ THE UNITED NATIONS Command announced that Is has called for a meeting with North Korea to a ir claim s of Com­ N .V ie t station his beard and his high squeaky voice would never make it today." 4 for only Reg. $3.60 munist truce violations "In and through the demilitarized SAIGON (If) — UJ5. Navy Jets battle of the cities has left a half He attributed this situation to zone." d o d g e d an ti-aircraft fire and million civilian refugees »South public apathy and lack of Infor­ To be valid this coupon must be presented when m issiles ten miles north of Hanoi Vietnam In two weeks, U.S. of­ mation. "W e have to stop think­ clothes are brought In for cleaning. Coupon void ^ HANOI RADIO reported that the Viet Cong has announced, to bomb for the first time an im­ ficials said* ing In terms of, he Is a nice guy after Feb. 17, plans to strengthen its "solidarity with an alliance of national, democratic and peace fo r c e s " In South Vietnam. portant radio communications station In North Vietnam a ir de­ fense networks, the U.S. Com­ The State News, the student newspaper at Michigan State University, is published every class day throughout the year lonfiogoOQOQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQOOQQOQOOOO! s 0 BRITISH PRIME MINISTER HaroldWllsan, returning home mand announced Sunday. The United States appeared to with special Welcome Week and Orientation issues in June and September. Subscription rates are $14 per year. m C O U P O N D A Y S T ( m THESE from the United States and Canada, was assailed by the Con­ servative Party for "lectu rin g " Instead of supporting President be stepping up the air war In M e n ’s o r L a d ie s' both North and South Vietnam, Member Associated P re s s , United P ress International, SLACKS Johnson's policies In Vietnam^ Cleaned particularly around Khe Sanh. Inland Dally P ress Association, Associated Collegiate P ress, P ressed 0 ISRAELI AND JORDANIAN tanksandartllleryfoughtacross Spokesman said the Importance Michigan P ress Association, Michigan Collegiate P ress As­ the Jordan River along an 80-m lle front. Israel claimed one of the station was indicated by sociation, United State Student P ress Association. 4 Reg. VALUES Jordanian tank was knocked out a few m iles north of the Dead the heavy an ti-aircraft defense for $3.60 Sea. provided for the operations cen­ Second class postage paid at East Lansing, Mich. te r and its seven support build­ Editorial and business offices at 347 Student Services To be valid this coupon m ist be presented when ings. Building, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Mich. clothes are brought In for cleaning. Coupon cx N atio na l N ew s The raid was one of 76 mis­ void after Feb. 17 0 SEN. EUGENE J . MCCARTHY, D-Mlnn., target of White sions over North Vietnam Satur­ Phones: uooouooooouooooooooooooooooooo i House fire In an atomic tangle, said he would be very surprised if the Pentagon hasn’t considered use of nuclear weapons In the w ar In Vietnam. See page 7. day carried out with low visibil­ it y and rain. Air Force F-4 Phantoms attacked the Phucyen E d itorial...................... Classified A dvertising. ............. Display Advertising ................... 355-8252 355-8255 353-6400 RANDALL’S Q m m a C O U P O N P A Y p nonne a ir field 18 miles northwest of Business-Circulation ............................. 355-8299 g M e n 's W hite 0 NEW YORK GOV. Nelson Rockefeller went over New York City Mayor John V. Lltjdsay's head and ended the city’s nine- day sanitation strike by announcing that the state will take over Hanoi for the second time In three days. Russian built H-28 j e t bom b­ Photographic........................................................ 355-8311 WILL I SHIRTS Laundered & Starched the City Sanitation Department and pay the woi'te rf with city funds. gee page 6. e r s were spotted on that field Thursday and the base often Is used as a MIG base. The UJS. P H : 351-4552 ALWAYS only each Command said bad weather pre­ V vented the bomb damage as­ sessment In the latest strike. m m I SAVE YOU When brought In with $1.00 of Dry Cleaning Coupon void after Feb. 17 W IT H S T IP U 1 A T IO N S The U.S. Command said eight secondary explosions were re­ corded after a raid five miles north-northwest of Khe Sanh In­ -V IL L A G E MONEY o jy iiiM iM 't c o p p Q N d a y s T M H A policy gets dicating the big bombers prob­ ably hit an ammunition dump. There were no reports of new S i i r* t ì h o rr C le a n O n ly Special ground fighting in Khe Sanh. L A S T C H A N C E T O W IN faculty group OK Street fighting continued In Sai­ gon and Hue for the thirteenth YOUR F A L L ! ONLY MINUTES 50« off Reg. p ric e on A pprox. 8 lb. load B y L IN D A G O R T M A K E R the residence colleges and "g et­ consecutive day. The UJS. Com­ Made with 100% French State News S taff W r ite r ting a better understanding of the Uvlng-leamlng idea In dormi­ The Faculty Committee on Stu­ to r ie s ," Cobb said. mand claimed that allied forces had killed more than half of the 60,000 Communist troops thrown hair, blended to your hair color) Nothing to buy, no obli­ FROM CAMPUS To be valid this coupon must be presented when clothes a re brought In for cleaning. Coupon void after Feb. 17. ex Into the countrywide offenses Jan. dent Affairs approved Friday "In He said the subcommittee Is objective" the Men’s Hall As­ "proceeding nicely." sociation (MHA) proposal per­ 30 against 35 m ajorcities In South Vietnam. gation - just deposit the coupon at V i l l a g e Hair & 320 WEST WILLOW "T h is area Is broader than we Shoppe at 220 Albert St., mitting women In designated pub­ anticipated," he said, "but some In response to the heavy Com­ b e l o w Knapp’s Campus lic areas of men’s residence halls good headway Is being m ade." munist attacks South Vietnam be­ Center. at any time. gan mobilizing 65,000 additional The committee Is also cur­ Drawing will be held Wednesday at 6 p.m. T . Clinton Cobb, chairman, rently studying the handling of t r o o p s . The cabinet approved said Saturday that the commit­ student records In a report writ­ President Nguyen Van Thleu’ s tee had no disagreement with ten by the Office of the Vice plan to beef up the armed forces the objective of the proposal President for Student Affairs. and the government radio an­ that asked for deletion of this This report has been in formula­ nounced that service veterans A sentence in the student hand­ tion since the Academic Freedom must report for duty starting Feb. book: Report officially went Into ef­ 15. Still A v a i l a b l e "M em bers of the opposite sdx fect this summer. The Communist attacks In the a re not permitted In residences after women’s closing hours In the evening and before re si­ dences officially open In the morning.” (p. 17) Student Book Store "Now It’s a matter of how the handbook language changed to reflect the objec­ tiv e ," Cobb said. A subcommit­ will be Has A Complete Selection tee composed of two faculty mem­ bers and two ASMSU appointees w ill work out t h e s e technical of Hallmark Valentine Day Cards aspects, It was decided at F r i­ day’s meeting. The committee passed a reso­ lution. Including three stipulations that would accompany approval of J t é t ¡ jo n A a lh e n if , J le l p Ijo u ¥ p lu s M S U n ig h t ie s f o r y o u r the MHA proposal. The subcom­ J * ' fa v o r it e V a le n t in e m ittee will rewrite the regula­ tions with these In mind: M a k e V a le n t in e '4 , j b a y A —An Individual residence hall 8 s ty le s a n d c o l o r s fro m w h i c h to c h o o s e government may set time limits V e /u f, S p e c ia l O c c a s io n . a n d o th er s e le c te d g ifts If it desires on the visitation. —The areasdeslgnatedaspub- 11c should be agreed upon by the hall government, management, and the head advisor. S p e c ia l M S V S tu d e n ti —The hall government should establish regulations with A n d f y a e n lh f respect to what it considers ac­ ceptable behavior In these areas, and should assume reasonable responsibility for the enforce­ ment of such regulations. 10% Cash Discount Other committee action In­ F r a * d e liv e ry on all cluded a progress report by Al­ purchases o f $6.00 o r m ore lan. B . Mandelstamm, professor of economics and chairman of the (a fte r discount) subcommittee studying the Off Campus Council proposal that sophomores be permitted to live J o n A n th o n y F lo w e r s in unsupervised •off-campus housing. • 809 E . M ic h . Ave. Mandelstsmm’s group has been IV 5 -7 2 7 I 421 E . G ra n d R iv e r - F re e p a rk in g in L o t at re a r of S.B.S. Interviewing representatives of 4 ' Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Monday, February 12, 1968 SPORTS Ryun, Kansas, MSU dominate 45th Relays But the finals were a different By DON KOPRIVA story ae Western Michigan held S ta te News,S p o r ts W r i t e r off a late rush by Pollard and Jim Ryun ran true to form won in 28.7 to tie the record winning handily In the mile and again. MSU was timed in 28,9. all the pre-meet predictions The old meet and fleldhouse mark about record-breaking came true wes held by a 1967 MSU quartet ae Kansas and MSU dominated and die American record is also competition In the 45th annual held by a 1967 Western Mich­ MSU Relays at Jenlson Field- igan team. house Saturday. B ill Hurd of Notre Dame tied Ryun set new meet and field- meet and fleldhouse records held house records with a 4:03.4 time by Spartan Bob Moreland in 1963 around the Jenlson oval. T he old and 1964 with a 6.1 clocking in mark of 4:03.7 was set last the 60-yard dash in the prelim­ year by Ryun when he was a inaries, semifinals, and finals. Kansas sophomore. Kansas pole vaulter BobSteln- Kansas Coach Bob Timmons hoff broke meet and fleldhouse wds pleased with Ryun's run. records as he won with a 16-0 **The time Is remarkable when vault. Spartan Roland C arter, you consider that he ran In New using a new pole after his regu­ York the night before and then lar one broke in practice, made flew back here with very little 15-7, good for runner-up honors. sleep ." Roger Merchant was another S h u ttle h u r d le r e la y a t M S U R e la y s But Ryun was not the only ex­ impressive performer for the citing perform er in the meet. Spartan Steve D erby (second fro m le ft) c le a rs the hurdles on f ir s t leg of 2 4 0 -y a rd A m e ric a n re c o rd which MSU had equalled In the afternoon p re lim in a rie s . Spartans as he won the 880 yard MSU’ s shuttle hurdle relay of shuttle hurdle re la y Saturday night. The winning W estern M ichigan team tie d the State News photo by Lance Lagonl run in 1:53.0. Since the 880 Steve Derby, Rich Pauli, Rich was a new event, this time will but missed it, running 3:25.3 to and Pat Wilson teamed up for the and had to run against the clock. one-tenth off the American, meet, Wilson was edged In the 600 Murphey, Jack Bamford, Dale B lsa sse r, and Charley Pollard be entered in the book as a meet outdistance all the competition. mile relay and took second behind Defending 70 yard high hurdles and Jenlson records he e s ­ by Central Michigan’s Nesbitt Stanley, Dean Rosenberg) broke tied the American dirt record record. and surpassed meet and field - B ill Wehrwein, Don Crawford, Drake’s 3:16.0 with a 3:16.7 time. champion and American record tablished last year as a with a 1:12.2 to 1:12.3 for the - the Spartan indoor record of MSU'8 sprint medley relay Rick Dunn, and Rich Stevens ran Drake ran in the second heat holder Pollard won the highs, sophomore. Spartan’s defending Big Ten 10:13.8 with a 10:00.3 clocking house records of 28.8 with a (440-220-220-880) was shooting 28.7 clocking in the afternoon for the Spartans. and won with tight competition edging Michigan’s Larry Midlam. Crawford placed second in the champ. but failed to place. for the American record of 3:24.0 Wehrwein, Crawford, Stevens while the Spartans led all the way Pollard’ s winning 8.3 time was long Jumo with a 23-0 leap while MSU’s distance medley (Mike prelim inaries. MSU Veterans Association IN SPEED SKATING 3 hours sleep, P re se n ts W in te r la n d 6 8 U.S. wins 5th medal GRENOBLE, France (UP!) — Killy blazed down the track In skated into the lead in compul­ but Ryun still wins Ski m aster Jean-Claude Killy of one minute, 42.74 seconds to sory figures and another Russian By PON K O P R IV A He talked about the American W h ir l pair was second with the brother- France hurtled closer to his Favre's 1:43.94. Guy Perillat S ta ti News Sports W r it e r Olympic team and expressed op­ dream of an Alpine gold medal of France, second to Killy In siste r team of Cynthia and Ron tim ism . Jim Ryun is no sleeper and he sweep by winning the first heat the downhill, was third with Kauffman of Seattle fifth. " I think we'll have a real fine M iss G eijssen, a 20-year-old proved It Saturday night. of the giant slalom at the Winter 1:44.78. team. We could really be good in Amsterdam secretary who said After running a 3:57.5 mile In Olympic Games Sunday and 16- Jimmy Huega of Squaw Valley, the 1500 m eters.” that unllfce the legendary Hans New York Friday night, the "Kan­ year-old Dianne H6lum of North­ C alif., turned In the best Amer­ Ryun is almost a sure bet to Brinker she had "nev er skated sas fla sh " got three hours sleep brook, 111., gave the United States ican time of 1:45.15 for seventh make the Olympic squad for this T w o Bon d s - Sem i F o rm a l on a canal In my life,’’ gave in preparation for the MSU Re­ its fifth medal by finishing third place and Billy Kidd of Stowe, summer’s meet in Mexico City. lays Saturday. in women's 1,000-m eter speed V t., was eighth in 1:45.91. Kidd Holland Its first Olympic speed After his run, Ryun signed Lansing Civic Center skating. won a silver medal and Huega skating victory in history by chopping around the Ice oval In He ran the mile Saturday In a meet and fleldhouse record set­ autographs. He shook hands. He Killy, already winner of the the bronze In the special slalom cheered his team on in the dis­ glamorous downhill, courted four years ago for Am erica's one minute, 32.6 seconds. ting time of 4:03.4. tance medley relay. He stepped disaster as he wheeled off- Early Sunday, Italy’s 40-year- away from reporters to encour­ SA TU RDA Y only men's ski medals in history. old Eugenio Monti finally won Just as he has proved himself balance through the last of 70 M iss Holum, who sped to a age his teammates. gates on the Chamrousse slalom triple ■second-place tie in the his first Olympic gold medal with ;a great performer on the track, A crowd of youthful admirers F E B . 17 run but he’ll carry a 1.2-second 500 m eters with two other Amer­ a narrow victory in the two- he proved himself a patient and swarmed in. He signed a few lead over Switzerland’s Willy ican g irls, wound up third in the man bobsleds at Alpe d’Heuz. thoroughly poised individual off programs—and t h e n struggled Fhvre into Monday's final heat. 1,000 m eters behind record -set­ Monti and his brakeman, the track. his way through the growing The 24-year-old se e from Val ting Carolina G eijssen of Holland Luciano de Paolls, tied Horst He admitted he was tired, and crowd. D isere has his heart get on jmd Russia’s 500-m eter cham­ Floth and Pepl Bader of West said the traveling made this race He ran out of the fleldhouse and matching Austrian Toni Sailer's pion, Ludmila Titova. Germany with a combined four- even rougher. toward Kellogg Center. T le k e ts a v a l la b ia 1956 sweep of the downhill, giant heat time of four minutes, 41.54 It was obvious that Ryun was It was Jim Ryun’s last race Canada, beaten only once in the seconds but won the gold medal tired after the race, but he showed * Student Union * At the door _ slalom and special slalom. And of the night. hockey round robin, came from on the basis of the fastest heat. himself to be an old pro at han­ * Club m e m b e rs *$ 4 .5 0 p e r couple f the hearts la all of Fran ce are behind to hand the U.S. its fourth Monti steered his careening dling autograph seekers, photog­ with him. m. straight defeat, 3 -2, on third- sled down the 1,500-m eter chute D O M IN O 'S P IZ Z A D O M IN O 'S P IZ Z A D O M IN O ’S P IZ Z A D O M IN O ’S P IZ Z A period goals by Marshal John­ In 1:10.05—fastest of the meet— raphers, reporters and well- w ishers. USSR victory ston and Ray Cadiuex. to win. JIM RYUN GRENOBLE, France (UPI) ~ To the dismay of the Scan­ The Soviet Union defeated West Jan. 23... a great day dinavians, J lr l Raska of Czecho­ slovakia won the gold medal in the 70-m eter "sm a ll hill” ski Towson upset, G-m en win Germany, 9-1, in hockey Sunday scoring four times in the first period and four more in the for the Avant-Garde Society Jump and Franz Keller of West Germany edged Alois Kaelln of Switzerland In the nordlc com­ MADISON, Wls, — Sophomore lgan Towson had defeated de­ said after the meet, "W ew eren’t second before easing up. It was the Russians’ fourth straight victory. Joe Fedorchik upset Toby Tow­ fending NCAA floor exercise and D O M iiu o ’á p i z z a bined. up to par in either the vault Only a goal after 11:14 minutes Russia’s defending champions son In floor exercise and the champion Dave Jaco b s, 9 .3 -9 ,2 , o r still bars where our dismounts of the first period by Lorenz In pairs figure skating, Ludmilla MSU gymnastic team got back to remain undefeated this season, were shaky.” Funk kept the Russians from Belousova and Oleg Protqpopov, on the trail wlnnlngwitha 182.95- Fedorchik ended that string Other individual winners for scoring their third shut-out vic­ 168.5 victory over Wisconsin here Saturday with an MSU ca reer high MSU were Dave Croft in still tory in four matches. For the i t M SU SK I C L U B Saturday afternoon. of 9.35 points. Towson was rings (9.15) , Dave Thor in West Germans it was a fourth The victory for the Spartans second with 9.15 points. parallel bars (9.2), and Fedor­ consecutive defeat. M E E T IN G who had lost to Michigan last The other bright perform er chik In the horizontal bar (9.25). Thursday, gave them a 5-1 rec­ for the Spartans was junior Norm "Fedorchik had a wonderful Feb. 13 7:30 ord in the Big Ten (5-2 over­ all) and put them In second place, Haynie. He finished third in floor exercise with a season high of day In the all-round with 51.7 points,” Szypula said. “ He Fencers Union B allro o m one-half game behind Iowa. 8.9 to give MSU the top three scored 9.15 in taking second In The two teams meet each other places In the event. F in al collection fo'r 3 rd tr ip due Feb. 24 at East Lansing in the key dual meet of the confer­ He was second In the horizontal bar with 9.0 and scored 8.3 in parallel bars.” Thor finished second In side take 2 o f 3 horse with 9.15 points while Those signed up for Aspen ence season. parallel bars although he didn't Larry Goldberg was second in Trip must attend or trip will be cancelled. Wisconsin Is 2-2 in the con­ ference and 8-2 overall. place. MSU took the top three places the still rings with 8.95 points. Ed Gunny picked up third In matches .Last Thursday against Mich- In three events, floor exercise IOWA CITY—Senior Captain the high bar (8.9), fourth In (27.4), parallel bars (27.05), and Charley Baer in sabre and soph­ vault (9.0), and fifth In the still horizontal bar (27.15). omore Glenn Williams in foil rings (8.7). Wisconsin won only one team led Charley Schmltier’ s fencers B A S IC O U T L IN E S event, the trampoline, in the Individual winners for the Bad­ to two wins In three meets F ri­ meet. gers were John Russo in the day and Saturday. *‘ We did some experimenting in side horse (9.55) and Pete Brad­ MSU beat defending Big Ten A T L. N A T S C I. S O C . H U M the m eet," Coach George Szypula ley In the vault (9.3). champion Wisconsin 14-13 Friday night. It was Wisconsin’s second C O U R SE loss of the season against nine victories. The fencers split Sat­ urday, whipping Kansas 17-10 but O U T L IN E S falling to Iowa 15-12. B aer won all his nine sabre bouts and Williams finished 6-1 in foil. Shown here Is Soaky Potato Fun Bath (R ick K alb), High P r ie s t H IS T : 1 2 1 ,1 2 2 ,1 0 1 ,1 0 2 Schmltter was happy with the o f the A van t-G ard e Society, k e e p e r o f the Uoople pinning N e r - outcome, although disappointed r ltln a Sklppo (Dianne D ublel), C lr c u m s c r lb e r o f the A stro C h arts . . . with his epee perform ers. w itnessed by the keeper of the G re en Beansl PSYCH : 151 CHEM: 1 3 0 ,1 4 1 " I was very glad to best Wis­ consin. They were a little com­ placent. B aer’s going fine an<| MATH: 1 0 8 , 1 0 9 , 111, 1 1 2 ,1 1 3 Williams is going to be money I DOMINO'S COUPON ! in the bank.’ ’ ' W W h e r e im p o rta n t p e o p le I2 2*1 12 WORTH i8 d II I ! STA T: 1 2 1 ,1 2 3 , M A T H 1 2 0 Don Satchell finished 6-3 In foil behind Williams. Backup men L arry and Gary Norcutt were m e e t, y e n 'll fin d 250 4 -4 and 1-2, respectively. 8 1(0 Ic -I CO E C O N :. 2 0 0 ,2 0 1 EBan Daggett finished 6-3 in It 0« | | Here's your best tire buy in its sabre behind Baer and Pete Kahle S I pries range. Pick your sice now waa 4 -5 . The sabre team was 8! P H Y S IC S : 2 3 7 ,2 3 8 , 239, 287, and Go Goodyear. Chooss from any 19-8 in the three meets, a mark D O M I N O ’ S f Good on any pizza size black wall tubeleaa listed below. Which Schmitter called "quite 19 pick-up o r delivery z 3400 EXTRA FOR W.W good." Mis Epee proved to be the Spar­ I p ord er. Present this o 2 8 8 ,2 8 9 tlas* Fas. Is. Tsi Ja coupon to your pep- * aaë all tira tans’ downfall, though. The epee jgperoni p r l e s t e s s l Blu* *1.55 to 52.05 team was 7-20 against the three 6.50x13 $1.55 Fid. El. fai (dipwidlni . P I Z Z A ¡«a L im it-o n e coupon per « on tin) ind old tin other teams. Jb pizza. Expires: March £ 7.75x14(7.50x14) $1.88 Bob Tyler finished 3 -6 , Jim j| 15.1968 8.25x14(8.00x14) $2.05 NO M ON EY Ehvey was 2 -6 , Bill Kerner was 2 -7 , while Herb Thompson fin­ 3 5 1 -7 1 0 0 [8 DOMINO'S COUPON a DOW N ished 0-1. P in s perfection 1110 E . M IC H IG A N o n o u r E asy The fencers will travel to Notre Dame this Saturday to meet the DOMINO'S PIZZA DOMINO'S PIZZA DOMINO'S P i 7 T i DOMINO'S PIZZA O IV 2-1426 P a y P la n i Irish and Ohio State’s Buckpves- Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan SPORTS Monday, February 12, 1968 5 „¿¿f t Ài C age rs crushed by Bucks, 'S’ title chances now slim B y G A Y E L W ESCH their league record to 6-1 and with 22 points, center D a v e State News Sports W r l t t r dropped MSU to 3 -4 In the con­ Sorenson and guard Dennis Mea­ ference and 9-8 overall. It all dors added 16 each and forward COLUMBUS — MSU’ s bas­ but ended MSU’ s title hopes. Bill Hoskett totalled 12 points ketball team came here with the Ohio State kept up Its excellent despite being In foul trouble most Idea o f stopping Ohio State’s shooting percentage In l e a g u e of the game. march for the Big Ten title, but games by scoring on 50.9 per the Buckeyes crushed what little L ee Lafayette an d Harrison cent at Its field goal attempts resistance the Spartans put up. Stepter were MSU's o n l y two against the Spartans and outre- Encouraged by a good week of sco re rs In double figures with bounded MSU 59-40. The Bucks practice, MSU Coach John Ben- 16 and 11 respectively. came Into the game shooting ington had high hopes for his OSU opened up the game In a 50.1 per cent a g a i n s t league team against the league leading zone defense, switched to man to team s. Buckeyes, but OSU rolled to an man for part of the first half easy 90-62 victory. The Buckeyes dominated most and then went back to the zone "W e had played well in our of the first half, except for two fo r the majority of the second last' three games and had a real brief spurts by the Spartans to half. The defensive deployment good week of practice last week. take a 43-34 halftlme lead, and kept the Spartans shooting mostly We couldn't wait to get down Iced the game by scoring 12 from long range and allowed OSU h ere,’* Benlngton said. "Then straight points to take a 20-polnt to dominate the rebounding. H I b P vPi we play like we did tonight.” lead with 13:35 remaining In the The Spartans were outshot, game. "W e felt Lafayette was the key outrebounded and often outhustled Steve Howell, a husky 6-5 for­ to your team and went to the zone STEVE HOW ELL by the Buckeyes, who extended ward led the Buckeye scorers to try and stop him from getting S p a r t a n p re s s u re the ball Inside," OSUCoachFred MSU hockey p la y e rs Ken Anstey (11) and Nino C rls to Taylor said. " I f he gets the The W o lve rin es o|Sme back fro m a 3 -1 d e fic it to beat fo il (14) put p re s s u re on M ichigan g oalie Jim Keough ball Inside there's no way you the Spartans 4 -3 In o v e rtim e . BEAT BUCKS, 85-37 can stop him without fouling.” "W e knew before the game that during F rid a y n ig h t’ s game at the MSU Ice A ren a. State News photo by Lance Lagoni Michigan State had been playing well and was strong enough phys­ Tankers get 7th win ically to own the boards, so wè went to the zone to keep MSU away from them,” Taylor said. Wolves drop slumping twice "T ills win will mean a lot to By TO M BROWN "W e played well Friday night,” Crlstofoll scored again, how­ the Spartans In the final stanza. us, but you’ve got to win at home State News Sports W r ite r B y G A R Y W A L K O W IC Z of 21.97 in the 50 and 48.19 in the Bessone said. " I t 's not often ever, on a picture play when M anilla scored at 8:47, assisted Burke won the ra ce with an easy If you're going to do anything In that you play so well on Friday State News Sports W r ite r 100 represented his season's the league,” Taylor said. "B efo re the game, i told our Alan Swanson picked up a loose by Dave Perrin and L ars Han­ 30-second triumph. night and end up so flat on Sat­ best, The Buckeyes never trailed In trainer, Clyde Stretch, that If we puck, passed to Bob Fallat who sen. Hansen scored the tlelng The MSU swim team recorded John Musulln beat out one of urday. Geggle took the honors In the dirta’t «,«*. a j quick goal In the fed across the front of the Michi­ goal at 18:35, assisted by Perrin what waa probably tta lr top per­ Ohio State' 8 Gable brothers to win the game, and started ru iv "W e skated well on Saturday 500 and 1,000-yard freesty les. first period', wvir* ¿re? Iit‘ rough gan goal to C rlstofoll, coming and Barney Pashak. formance of the year, according the butterfly. MSU’s George away with a streak of three con­ and our goaltending was pretty His times were also his best ef­ secutive baskets for a 14-7 lead shape,” Hockey Coach Amo B es- In on Keough's right. to Coach Charles McCaffree, in Booth was fourth. good. Michigan got a couple of forts of the year. Dan Pangborn sone said. MSU opened Its lead to 3-1 M anilla finished the Spartan Its dual meet win over Ohio State Mike Kalmbach was the other with 13:51 left In the firs t half. fluke goals In the third period, was third for MSU inbothevents. Leading 48-40 with 17:20 left The goal never came as Michi­ at 14:18 when Ken Anstey rammed effort at 7:11 of the overtime here Saturday. individual winner for the Spar­ but they broke our defense,” Richards was two-hundreths gan’ s goalie J lm Keough recorded In a rebound In a wUd melee period, Dave Perrin assisting. The Tankers ripped the Buck­ tans. He won the 200-^rard free­ to play, OSU started on a 12- Bessone said. of a second off his best time of his third shutout of the year, and in front of the Michigan goal. The two weekend losses ran the eyes 85-37 to up their season dual style event with a 1:48,29 that polnt streak which left them with a High-scoring Doug Galbraith the year in winning the breast­ the Wolverines downed the Spar­ Bols and Fallat were credited Spartans' losing string to eight, meet mark to 7-2 and drop Ohio was also his best time of theyear. 60-40 lead to coast home on. got a hat tric k , while Randy stroke. Greg Brown gave MSU a tans, 9-0, Saturday night at Ann with a ss is ts. leaving the team 2-11-1 In WCHA 'State to 5 -2 . MSU ran away with Rollle Grosethwas third fo r MSU. MSU’s freshman team fared no Blnnle scored twice to thrill the The Wolverines overpowered play and 6-12-2 for the year. the meet by winning 12 of the 13 one-two sweep in that event with better than the varsity and lost Arbor. tum-away Ann Arbor crowd, events. a second place finish, The Spartans had no trouble in to a powerful Notre Dame fresh­ The Spartans, disheartened by "T v e never s e e n Michigan " I was pretty pleased with our MSU also took the first two winning the two relay events. man team 136-88 at Notre Dame a 4-3 loss in overtime Friday skate as well as they did Satur­ performance today,” McCaffree places In the Individual medley. Burke, Brown, Musulln, and Mark last Thursday night. night, put Keough to the test In day night,” Bessone said. said after the meet. "Many of our Williams won the race with Rich­ Holdrldge swan on the 400-yard Austin C arr scored 52 points, the opening 12 minutes, but the Friday night’s game In East swimmers recorded their top ards finishing second. medley relay team. a Notre Dame fleldhouse record. burly Wolves wore the Spartans Lansing was a heart breaker for tim es of the year and our divers The Spartan’s Bob Burke and W illiam s, Kalmbach, Rauch, Paul Dean led MSU’s freshman down, scoring twice In the final soph Rich Duffett, but a four- did a good job against Ohio State's OSU’s Tim Brady were the only and Langley were victorious In team with 25 points and Rudy Ben- eight minutes of the stanza. on-two breakaway g a v e the powerful crew .” o n t r l e s In the backstroke and the freestyle relay team. jamln*scored 21, MSU held the high scoring Wolverines the victory. The performance of the divers Michigan team to a single tally The Spartans took, an early and double victories by Chuck In the second period, but the Wolverines caugto the lead at .5:37 on a goal by Nino Geggle and Don Rauch high­ C rlstofoll, assisted by lighted the meet for the Spar­ man short as the final period tans, MSU still, however, did not quality any more swimmers for G rap p lers gain split in Iow a began, "W e still had a chance at them until they got that fourth and Ken Anstey. Michigan knotted the score at 8:08 In the second period when the NCAA championships. Only IOWA CITY —An injury to de­ match, he had spoken to th e The Spartans had little trouble goal,” Bessonesaid. "From then Don Deeks scored, getting an two swimmers, Pete Williams fending NCAA champion Dale An­ referee to make sure he could with Northern Iowa. Byrum took on. It was all we could do to a ssist from Bruce Kovlak and derson and Dale C arr’s contro­ Interpret the rule. When C arr an 11-9 decision over Jim Kin- keep from being shutout,” Phil G ross. In the Individual medley and Bruce Richards In the breast­ versial defeat cost th e MSU pulled the maneuver, the referee yon. At 120, Lowrance defeated stroke, have qualified thus fa r. w restlers a split over the week­ failed to award him two points. Tim Dlllon/12-3. In diving MSU’s Jim Hender­ end against Iowa schdols. "H e was the first referee who Marv Rieland gave Northern m a le A , th e b e , ¿ ¿ u ffi& á li& n á , son beat Buckeye sta r Chuck Anderson w as Injured In failed to give him (Carr) the Iowa Its first win as he declsioned ¿sVcSNTf# , O Knorr In the one-meter 315.85- Thursday's practice and failed points In two y ears,” said Pen­ McGllllard 12-4. C arr won at 281.10. Spartan Duane Green took to make the trip with the team. lnger. " I t cost us the meet.” 145 with an 8-3 decision over ^ th a t £ p & c ia l V a le n t in e i t ’s l e a p y e a r ! third in this event, edging out The Spartans got along without Following the disputed match, Brad Stolz. OSU's Jim Klrklin. him against Northern Iowa, win­ Jo e Wells declsioned RonOuellet Je rry Bond ousted Ouellet 8-6 FOR HER . , , FOR H IM for the second Spartan defeat. AND THIS IS FEBRUARY 14™ / Knorr came back, however, to ning 21-6, but couldn’t Saturday 8-5 and Rich Mihial defeated Pat beat Henderson In the three- night, losing to Iowa, 15-12. Karslake 4 -0 to give Iowa a Karslake beat Tom Horton 8-6 m m eter. A bad finish on Hender­ It was Anderson's absence and commanding 15-3 edge. before Ott declsioned Jim Guyer •x" .7 son's fourth dive may have cost C arr’ s loss on a decision that The Spartans started a come­ 3 -2 . was key to the Spartans’ defeat back as Rod Ott decisfoned Phil Bradley and Smith closed out * ' 1 him the win. Mike Flnneran of Ohio State beat out Green by less against Iowa, according to MSU Henning 1-3 at 167 while Mike che scoring for the Spartans. than two points for third place. Coach Grady Penlnger. Bradley won 3-1 at 177. Je ff Bradley declsioned Skip Bellock • -V *; Rauch won the 50 and 100-yard freestyles for MSU. His times C arr lost to Don Yahn, 4 -3 , Smith took heavy weight with a 4-2 giving Iowa a 9-3 lead at the win. tim e. In th e three previous 8-2 and Smith took Kent Osboe 6 -2 . \ matches. Bob Byrum had de­ Seniors play in Shrine ga m e cision ed Bob Machacek 11-3 while Keith Lowrance had lost to Joe Carstensen 11-3 and MlkeMcGll- Drapery liard, Anderson’ s replacement, MichiganStatefootball seniors Dwight Lee, George Chatlos and was declsioned 9 -6 . Cleaning Hand engraved diagonal Floral Leaf. Tony Conti played for the North team in the 1967 North-South In the Carr-Yahn match, the referee failed to give C arr two points for a ‘ ‘grand by ro ll." w Choice of Yellow rm te h W h it» 5« Shrine Game In Miami. They brought to 43 the number of Spartans who’ve been in the game According to Coach Grady Pen- inger, the rule book has a special secion on the move. Before the 20% off Brooch $12.50 Earrings $14.00 ANO YOU KNOW OJHAT THAT M E A N S / J ) since 1950. - y r - V? R e g u la r price Lighters On any o rd e r o f two com plete d in n e rs , the 1 /2 P U C E College Cleaners B lock E a st of Brody 626 W , M ichigan E .L .- 14KT. GOLD OVE RL AY Delightfully perfect roses in jewelry of superb quality. Made with an overlay of 14Kt. pink and green gold. with this 319 E . GRAND R IV E R lo w e r p ric e d coupon d in n e r w ill be Good after 4:00 p.m ., Mon. thru Thurs. f i " VKN N A S U N ( taoeo t Expires 2/15/68 1rs TOASTED/ YAT WAN Reitaunani 136 W. Grand River - E . 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C e d a r (Take-out o n l y ) .......................... 484-4555 And Heldsn D o rm s. 6 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Monday, February 12, 1968 f W e e k honors S a tire reigns in 'H e a r ts ’, 'G r a d u a t e ’ | N e g r o history Lately it haa become cotnmo.) practice la motion pictures to satirize the various follies of- montage to sweep the theatre pa­ tron into a world gone beserk, of his would-be girl friend who then refuses him access to her in sympathy with its protagonist. One of die ways that m is is This week. Fab. 11-18, te a been declared “ Negro History goon subjectively through the daughter, la accosted by one of mads c la sr Is through die usa of man and society through die de­ ■ubjactiva camera and tha dif­ Weak*' la a proclamation Issued by L t. Gov. William G. vice of the ostensibly insane, eyes of a product of thia tick his father's business associatss Mllllkao. ferent ways that the camera plays proving themselves to be con­ aocioty. who lsavsa him with the cryptic Commenting an the purpoaes of the weak, Milllkan said, T here is a general feeling that m e s s a g e — "p la s tic s " —and is with distance and perspective. siderably lass demented than "Public knowledge and awareness of the contribution of “The Graduate" is a sensitive, coerced into performing for his Thera are many intense, over the those who have Judged them luna­ iji; the Negro In the fields of the sciences, the a rts, the pro- Insight filled dramatization of the. parent's friends in his new birth­ shoulder cloaeups at first, when tic s. "M organ" and " L o r d Lova, ¡$ Cessions and worUMwlde humanitarian efforts is essential triumph of romanticism over r a ­ day gift diving outfit. the idiocy of die world which a Duck" can be considered •• challenges is looming large be­ §§ to the achievement at a democratic society.“ Successful Implementation of the tionality when, in fact, it is a His plunge into the world of The MSU Library recently issued a bibliography of books cynical laahlng out at this very fore him. Then, on occasions such technique. love is equally as unreasonable and articles on the Negro role in state history. Lansing concept—as such, lt is beau­ as the one In which Anne Ban­ “ King of H earts," while often By S T U A R T R O S E N TH A L as the other instances, coming on schools are carrying out special projects examining the tiful. abruptly and without prior prova­ croft, as the mother, exposes lacking the subtlety of these two, State News R ev l« w «r iji: past and present roles of the Negro in American history. The title character, youngBen- her affair with Ben to her daugh­ is still a captivating hour and a cation—a "love at fir s t” sight Assistance in local programs is coining from the Research of the film is its use of indi­ an Impression of amusement and Jamtn, upon his release from which transforms him into a tun­ ter, the camera pull shack rapid­ half of Irony and comedy. ly to show her perched, dimin­ £ Association for Michigan Negro History, Inc. Alan Batas, who will be recog­ vidual and mass movements, delight. the academe is confronted not nel visioned automoton, groping with the prospect of shaping his utively, In the corner of the halL nised by most American movie­ touches which make “ King of wildly for his goal, his g irl. own future, but rather with a Often, the screen will be filled goers as Anthony Quinn's co - H earts" a fascinating visual ex­ The G raduate As mentioned in the above r e ­ with a crowd scene and then zero © SPA R TA N 1100 t SMMMW 'Phaedra' here star In "Zorba the Greek” ap­ pears as a reluctant B ritish en­ perience. In drawing its cen­ tral analogy between the Joys of In contrast to the simplicity of selection between several mani­ festations of human irrationality view of “ King of H earts," while film s like "M organ" and “ Lord In to isolate Ben in his own fanatical world. The contrasts TW IN W IST IS 1-0010 Wednesday listed man on assignment In a carefree civilian life and the ex­ citement of a circus, Director camerawork in "King of H earts," "T h e Graduate" makes use of and incongruence, idealism and romanticism Included therein. Love a Duck" have Justified this are convincing. northern France towards the end apparent insanity as singleness of After racing through some of of World War I. Philippe De Broca has expertly complicated shots and involved He is seduced by the mother purpose, this picture is not at all TONIGHT the m o s t excruciatingly funny MSU’s Lecture-Concert Series The Germans, lt seems, have choreographed the almost bal­ AT SsPJd. scenes to hit the screen In quite will present “ Phaedra,” Ra­ rigged a small French village letic motion which pervades his a w hile, Benjamin finally JULIE cine's dramatic classic, newly which is pending liberation to many street scenes. achieves his objectlveand is last translated by Robert Lowell at explode at midnight. The town The effect is enhanced by pre­ ANDREWS seen sitting with his bride-to-be 8il5 p jn . Wednesday in the Aud­ has been evacuated and Bates is cise editing which balances these AND on a bus bound for some unknown itorium. given the task of singlehandedly patterns of motion while Inci­ MARY destination. This is the fourth attraction locating and disarming the dentally abetting the smooth, but TYLER One has the impression that in a se rie s of five Broadway planted explosive. rapid, pacing. the graduate is no better off in MOORE plays presented by the L ectu re- In his flight from the occupy­ The beauty of it is that this is the last scene of the flick than he Concert Series. ing German unit, B ates inad­ accomplished without calling T , ‘ ' ) P ( HJ ( , H; Y Mñ O E P f was in the first. Tickets a re available at the vertently liberates the Inmates upon hokey camera angles and Union ticket office or at the door. of the local asylum who flock gimmicks. Instead, the content of I i Ti 11 u into the avenues and shops of the individual shots is stressed in Russ Gibb presents in Detroit deserted hamlet andassumepos­ order to maintain Interest in the action. In this manner the tran­ O C C survey (i j SPA R TA N F r i. & Sat., Feb. 16 & 17 session of its streets and build­ ings, taking the roles of the sition of one of the inmates from TW IN EAST "CannedHeat” townspeople as barbers, phy­ sicians, whores and clergy. patient to the madame of a brothel is effected by following totals 12,500; r — — ------------------ 1 8:30-1' a.m . Adm. S3.00 E MATINEES DAILY AT 2 p jiu -4 p.n y-7 p jn . & 9;30 j The confused' soldier is made “ King of H earts" by the child­ like lunatics, who dress him in her application of lipstick and other makeup in a simple clo se- up. extend date Sun., Feb. 18 royal finery and whisk him off As an anti-war picture, “ King The last mailing of Off Campus D irect from California . . . of Hearts” is fairly impotent. Council (OCC) questionnaires to to be crowned. NOW A MOVIE1 "TheByrds” As might be expected, when these vassals serving th e The depictions of madmen lock­ ing themselves in against society vs seas off - campus living has been completed. V a lle y 7-10 p.m . Adm. $3.50 “ Heart” give him a coronation, a “H eart" attack by the Germans ensues. have been so overused that their effectiveness has waned down to nothing. When members of the This brings the total number of questionnaires sent out to ap­ proximately 12,500, according to Besides Bates, the only mem­ cast open their mouths to pour H o rs e s e n s e Jim F rle l, president of OCC. o ffh e TheGrandeBallroom Grand River at Beverly bers of the cast who are likely to be fam iliar to Americans are Adolfo C elli (who played Emilio out the dubbed verbalizations of obvious concepts, the film does suffer a momentary lapse in con­ The lead ers of-the B ritis h and the G e rm a n u n lt come to a fin a l showdown In " K in g The deadline for returned questionnaires has been extended to Friday, o f H e a rts " showing through Thursday at the State T h e a te r, D o lls 20th CENTURY-FOXPreunts 1 Block South of Joy Road Located in Detroit For Information call 834-9348 Largo in “Thunderball" and sup­ porting roles In “ Grand P r i x , " "T h e Bobo," etc.) and Gene­ tinuity. Fortunately, these instances are not frequent and their detri­ The information from the questionnaires will form the basis for the off campus booklet vieve Bujold (who had the title mental qualities are far from to be published at the end of role in NBC-TV’s "S a in tjo a n "). The most impressive aspect lethal to what is primarily a film for the eye. It is doubtful whether “ King of N e w Y o rk cleanup begins winter term by OCC, The book­ let will provide information for people interested In living off H earts" can be labeled as h ilar- campus about available housing ipus as there are not more than one or two moments which will evoke outright laughter. But when considered in over­ as Rocky’ ends strike and prices and contains other suggestions, F rle l requested that students said that amounted to $250,000 summon into special session return the questionnaires be­ view, "King of H earts" has been NEW YORK (F) - - Th o us a n ds cause the information is needed of sanitation men pitched into a year, while calling out the Monday. The lawmakers are in carefully constructed tfr produce for the booklet. He also said removing 100,000 tons of garbage Guard for 60 days would cost the midst of their regular s e s ­ that people must be sure their from the city 's streets Sunday $16 million, with maybe another sion, but the governor's call will address is someplace on the re ­ after a nine-day strike was ended $20 million for injury of guards­ mean they will have to drop other men working at unfamiliar jobs business to tkae care of the gar­ turned questionnaire since all term s Gov. Nelson A. Rocke­ bage dispute. housing will be listed by feller forced on a protesting, with strange equipment. Lindsay saidhe was "shocked" It was expected that Rocke­ addresses. The information can angry Mayor John V. Lindsay, at Rockefeller’s “ capitulation" fe lle r’s forces would be able to not be used without addresses. Under R ockefeller's unprece­ to the 10,000-member Uniformed speed the bill through. Questionnaires should be re ­ dented formula, announced Sat­ turned to the Off Campus Housing urday night, the state will take Sanltationmen's Assn., a Team ­ Under the settlement, sanita- office on the first floor of Stu­ over the city Sanitation Depart­ sters Union affiliate. In a radio­ tlonmen get a $425-a-year raise, television appearance Lindsay retroactive to last July 1, when dent Services, the OCC office, ment and pay the workers with used profanity in an aside, ap­ their old contract expired. The 313 Student Services Bldg. or city funds at a rate that Lindsay to the entrance to ASMSU offices A l l f T A L F A R ? ! had said amounted to "black ­ parently unaware he was on the old wage rates ranged from a on the third floor Si Student Serv­ m a il." a ir. It was the most visible start of $6,424 a year to $7,956 ices. Rockefeller refused to call out display of disagreement between after three years. « n o n c e o iw iL L the National Guard, as Lindsay, the two men, both frequently men­ a fellow Republican, requested. tioned for the GOP national ticket, The governor said the guards­ despite their disavowals. BRODY AREANA FEB . 14-15 CURTAIN TIM E 7:15 P.M. men could not have done the job, and that their use could have Immediately after Rockefeller announced the settlement in a O p p o rtu n ities open BrodyNortheast Lobby Open Feb. 12 -13 5:00-7:00 p.m. led to “ fighting in the stre e ts." Saturday night television ap­ pearance, about 2,000 garbage- Organized labor had threatened a general strike if troops were used. men went to work and picked up 1,400 truckloads of refuse during despite O C S cut In addition, Rockefeller said the night. B y STAN M ORGAN is an 80-90 per cent chance of THE PERFORMING ARTS COMPANY the term s the union accepted were R ockefeller's formula will r e ­ getting the field requested." State News Staff W r ite r only 50 cents a week per man quire approval by the state leg­ P rio r to September, programs DEPARTMENT OF SPEECH AND THEATRE over the city 's final offer. He islature, which he said he would The Army’s cutback in its had also been offered at F t. Lee, MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY Officer Candidate Schools (OCS) Va„ F t. Ustes, Va., F t. Knox, last September has not affected Ky., and the Aberdeen Proving the number of college students Grounds, Md. I t ’s G r e a t wishing to enter the program, "About 90 per cent of those according to SFC Dwight F eu er- entering OCS come from col­ F o r A D a te ! born, of the Lansing recruiting leges,” he said, ' T h i s station station. processes about 70 applications He said the cutback was an a year and enlists approximately ^ B o w l A t efficiency move, Involving the 50-60 candidates, most of whom combination of several schools, are from MSU.” rather than the elimination of Feuerborn explained that H O L ID A Y LANES them. There has been no r e ­ duction in the number of people anyone wishing to apply for OCS should do so about two months 3101 E . GRAND R IV E R before they graduate so there entering these programs. JUST NORTH O F FR AN D O R ^ Training is now offered at would be time to take a physical IV 7-3731 F t. Gordon, Ga„ for the infantry, examination and process the tests REFRESHM ENTS armor and signal corps., at F t. an applicant must take. B O W L IN G "Once a man ia accepted to SNACK BAR Sill, Okla., for artillery and at B IL L IA R D S F t. Belvoir, Va„ for engineers, OCS there is about a 70 per Feuerborn said. cent chance of getting through,” IS M I A M I B Ç f t C M H tR g ïS -» . A M P U S C._ >► 3 3 2 - 6 9 4 4 T llíiÉ i NOW SHOW ING! 1 :1 0 -3 :1 5 -5 :2 0 -7 :3 0 -9 :4 0 “Those wishing to enter another part of the army would train at one of these schools he said. " I t takes six months to com­ plete OCS," Feuerborn said, "but JOSEPHE LEVINE and then transfer to the field prior to that a man must take MCHHT« " O N E O F T H E Y E A R ’S they wanted," he said. "T h ere two months of basic training and f M M i . R S I t . 2 S M ik e N ic h o l s - r e c t v h two months of advanced train­ m o u w -------- —— u n i m ’ WStMtì mmbmm ì LAWRENCE TURMAN ~ N [ " 1 0 R K r,MfS in g ." Of the college students who TIMBWfitKS ' D O N ’T M IS S IT !” « AT 1:10-3:12-gjlS-7:20-9:25 D U N A A H i graduate from OCS, he said, about 20 per cent become engineers, with most of the remaining going into the infantry. GRAttëUfRIRi FBOMAMINPOftMAVION^ 482-3009 - N B C TV T O D A Y S H OW IW IT C M i o a n Today1:00-2:50-5:00-7:15-9:30 AUDREY «M8W BSTAR T h is is B eq ja m in . H e’s a little W orried a b o u t h is future. HEPBURN ALAN A R K IN T H E G R A D U A 11 technicolor* rmiavision* R IC H A R D l i an e m b a s s y p i c t u r e s m u a k CRENNA_ Ì N N I BANCROFT^ DUSTM HOFFMAN KATHARINE ROSS TonmeooLoii ' mMB\ Nsxtl Elks Sommer “ Wicked Dreams of Paula Schultz” Mt-eeveNAjT^Rfl Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Monday, February 12, 1968 "J Dem.four-man panel Committees hold O ly m p ic a id drive discusses Viet, war A drive will begin today on campus to ra ise $2,500 for the United States Olympic team. and a member of die U.S. Olym­ pic Committee. Awards will be given to the By JIM G R A N È L L I tty in foreign affairs, and a lousy Job of covering the war, S la t* News, S taff W rit* r bud reform program better than partly due to false government highest men’s and women’s floors that of the South Vietnamese rep o rts," he said. " I t ’s not The drive will be sponsored and the highest men’s and wom­ Discussion and debate, often government. by the athletic committees of the en's halls. the great war of democracy like reaching emotional peaks, on “The NLF p r o m i s e s no men’s residence halls and the “T h is cause should appeal to we thought it w as." »United States involvement in * blood -bath* reunification o f sports committees of women’s MSU students particularly, be­ Flshel felt that we slipped into Vietnam marked the afternoon V ietnam ," he said: “ butnegotia­ halls. Each hall will run its cause our University has been the war step by step, but this session of the State Democratic tions between two equals without own drive. Off-campus students represented In -every one of the “doesn’t imply m alice." Central Committee at the Union can contribute in the Men’s and Olympic games since 1928," said outside interference." "T h e credibility gap is great Saturday. Women’s LM. Bldgs. President Hannah. If the NLF really means to due in part to optimistic state­ A panel of four men, who p re­ Hannah said the Olympic team f o l l o w this constitution, “ the ments by the government, "S a c k s sented their viewpoints on the war The money collected in the depends on contributions because United States should tell the Viet said. "T h is is a function of at the morning session, w a s drive will be presented to Big­ the U.S. government does not Cong that they are in accord government, but t h e r e is no drilled by persons with questions' gie Munn, MSU athletic director subsidize the team. with our own aspirations in South sophisticated response from the from the floor after answering V ietnam ," Ethridge said. public which should take these some prepared questions. “We should then have a cease­ statements with a grain of s a lt." O ly m p ic s u p p o rt Max Mark, professor of politi­ fire holding policy without stipu­ cal science at Wayne State U ni- verlsty, an d Mark Ethridge, lating negotiations," he s a i d . Sacks also denied a statement made by an inquirer that Lyndon Students to spend "T h e money saved from n o t Johnson wa a nominated and P res id en t Hannah p resen ts a statem ent o f U n iv e rs ity support fo r the B a ile y H all Detroit F re e P ress editor, held fast to their ideas of d e-escala­ tion. bombing could be put into medi­ cine, schools and training doc­ tors, elected on a peace platform in 1964. O lym p ic W eek p rom otion to B ill Nelson, Plym outh sophom ore and a th letics c h a ir ­ man of B ailey H all and c o -o rd ln a to r of O lym p ic W eek. F lankin g Nelson and P r e s i­ year in Germ any "Johnson opposed the Gold- dent Hannah a re frig h t) J. C h ris to p h er M anners, C leveland, O hio, ju n io r and (le ft) ' L Milton Sacks, associate pro­ said some students take a course “ Because the credibility gap water escalation of the war and R ltch E lc h , M a ry s v ille , C a lif., graduate student. State News photo by Jim M ead Selected MSU students may fessor of politics at Brandeis which includes econom ics, soci­ is so large, an arbitrary body therefore may have seemed like a spend their junior year studying University in Waltham, M ass., ology and forestry, such as the United Nations could peace candidate," Sacks said. at the University of Freiburg and Wesley R. Flshel, professor Hughes said the academic year act as bookkeeper," he said. “Actually he ran on a limited In Germany, of political science, favored con­ tinued U À involvement. “T h is war can’t be settled be­ tween Hanoi and Washington be­ warfare program ." F R O M PLA C EM EN T B U R E A U ‘T h e Junior Year in Freiburg for students In the next program will begin Sept. 1, when they leave A man then shouted from the program combines foreign study Elaborating on their opinions in a group for Germany. He cause lt is a civil war. We audience, “Do you call half a with the experience of traveling through many audience interrup­ said the University of Freiburg can’t end the war without negotia­ million boys limited w arfare?” and living abroad for American tions, the men ended their talks showing no clear, or even sem i­ resolved, unified idea. tions with the N L F ." Sacks felt that Ethridge went too far in his proposal. After dismissing this interrup­ tion an d many others Sacks 'Know yourself’-m o tto college students," said William N, Hughes, chairman of the Ger­ man and Russian Dept. will begin classes the middle a t October. Classes will end in the middle of July. T h e conference was planned warned that Johnson may again be “They (Viet Cong) a r e su­ "MSU became a co-sponsor Students wishing to apply can partly as a plea for unification the peace candidate in 1968. obtain an application and further within the Democratic Party. Ethridge proposed negotiations with th e National Liberation periorly armed. modern trained troops with Chi­ nese equipment," Sacks said. They are Answering a question on social disintegration, both F lshel and Sacks agreed that there was no for successful interviews of the Junior Year in Freiburg program this academic y ear," Hughes said, "which means we Information In 717 Wells Hall, or telephone 353-8477, Deadline "T h ere would be a Communist Knowing as much as you can programs which generally lend Is Feb. 15. Front (NLF), the political arm of imminent social disintegration In nervousness. Remember that it can send some of our own stu­ dictatorship set up the moment we the present situation. about your own strengths and themselves to lengthy and ir­ helps to keep loose and be smooth dents this coming school y e a r." the Viet Cong. He pointed out pull ou t." that the war was a civil war. "W e’re not on the eve of revo­ weaknesses Is the key to a suc­ relevant answers. rather than give the impression Hughes said 50 students will be iC O U P O N i On the question of credibility, lution," they concurred. cessful job interview accord­ " I t Is more advisable to In­ of being gun shy.” selected from the four sponsoring In their platform of Sept. 1, Ethridge noted that all the men Mark said that if we don’t ing to Ed Fitzpatrick, assistant quire about overall company ob­ In concluding his talk Fitz­ American universities. the NLF, Ethridge said, proposed of the administration “are men of C ig a r e t t e s get out of Vietnam as soon as director of MSU’ s Placement jectives and the applicant should patrick reminded those present ‘T h e Junior Year in Freiburg a constitution fo r South Vietnam good will doing what the\{ think. po'a-sth-'H ws -irtU face a deterior­ Bureau. seek to find how he will fit into *.h%t> ‘‘ satisfaction comes with program was first sponsored by that encouraged small busi­ nesses, c o n t i n u e d plantation Is right, though it doesn't neces­ operations, property rights, free sarily mean they are right.” agricultural education, neutral- “The media have been doing a ating society. Ethridge noted many of the revolutions we are going through now in farming, population, civil hi a talk given to the Adver­ tising Club last week, Fitzpat­ rick said the student should go into the interview with the at­ those o b je c c u e s , said. Fitzpatrick advised against making snap judgments concern­ doing what you really want to do Wayne State-University in I960. in life, not with how much money The University of Michigan and you m ake." th e University of Wisconsin Concerning th e draft, Fitz­ joined Wayne State as co-spon­ 3/77* titude that the recru iter is " t r y ­ ing job offers. He said that one L I M I T ONE' rights and other areas. patrick said that most companies sors In 1964," Hughes said. m I 1 a* Bn W n nH nA m T 'S "The major social problem Is ing to discover your strengths." shouldn't hesitate to ask for a will consider job applicants who "T h e program Is open to stu­ Expires 2/17/68 that these revolutions are coming “ The individual should make time extension to make a ra­ expect to be draft exempt for at dents who have completed their East Lansing Store Only | to a head in our c itie s ," he said. his capabilities known to the job tional decision when confronted least two months after gradua­ sophomore year and havehadtwo Limited time forced th e ses­ re cru ite r," Fitzpatrick said. with a job offer. tion, This way a company can at years of German, or the equiva­ B a ff B d f f i sion to a close. Senator sees "O ne is more aware of his own capabilities than anyone e ls e ." "O n ce a job interview has started, be you rself," Fitzpat­ "G et several interviews under your b elt," Fitzp atrick said ."ln - tervlew as frequently as you can to gain experience and overcome least get the individual estab­ len t," Hughes said. He said lished In a training program be­ that students may also be asked fore he requests a military leave to take a language achievement of absence. test. IC O U P O N I $1.00 rick said. "T h e re is no for­ The University of Freiburg is P a p e rM a te mula for how much you should located In the heart of Germany's Delta Sigma Theta will hold its should bring a ruler and protrac­ rumored use talk during an interview, but do B la ck Forest. The University" is Pens annual Sweetheart Ball from 9 p.m . to 1 a.m . Saturday In the Lansing Room of the Ja ck T ar to r. • • * There are still openings for of nuclear arms riy to establish quick rappojMrfcSi the interviewer and don't walk out without telling him what you Drinking ’disease’ five centuries old, and Is one of Germany’ s finest educational In­ stitutions, according to Hughes. 4* think he should consider about "M o st students," Hughes said, L IM IT ONE Hotel. Admission is $2.50 per students wishing to volunteer as WASHINGTON (fl — Sen. Eu­ Expires 2/17/68 cited by attorney person, $4 per couple. tutors for foreign students learn­ you." "ta k e a course of study which • • * gene J . McCarthy, D-Mlnm, tar­ Fitzpatrick said that the stu­ Includes philosophy, psychology, I East Lansing Store Only J ing English. For Information call get ' of White House fire In an The Home Economics T R A 152 353-0802 or go to 1 International dent should avoid asking stock political science, a rt, m usic,lit­ atomic tangle, said Sunday he questions like those concerning erature and languages." Hughes placement exam will be given Center. would be very surprised If the “ Simply putting alcoholics in fringe benefits and retirement By T E R R Y M O R FO R D IC O U P O N I from 9 to 12 a.m .( Feb. 24 in • * * Jail Is not a c u rs ," he said. Pentagon hasn’t considered use 99c 206 Home Economics Bldg. The Peace and Freedom Com­ of nuclear weapons in the war A Washington attorney, con­ "T h ey will go out on the street Honorary to hold Sign-up for TRA 204 will be mittee of the Students r a B u rlington in Vietnam. tending that the United States has and wind up getting arrested . . , . . held Feb. 15 through 22. • • * Democratic Society will meet at 8:30 tonight In the Union Oak McCarthy, citing Washington Homecoming two inconsistent sets of laws on again. Public intoxication laws invitations Friday must be replaced by laws that [C a n tre c e N y lo n s ] rum ors, said, "T h ere have been drunkenness, said last week that 59' Entries are being taken for the Room. can effectively solve the prob­ A formal banquet to Initiate suggestions around the edges that alcoholism Is one of the coun­ 20th Annual Block and Bridle Horse Show, being held March 29 The • • • Institute of Electronic nuclear weapons, tactical weap­ job openings try 's largest problems, ranking le m ," Hutt said. new members Into Tau Beta P i, a national engineering honor so­ ons, have been recommended, fourth among serious diseases L I M I T ONE through 30, In 27 Anthony Hall E lectrical Engineers will meet have been considered." Petitioning for chairmanship in the United States. Hutt recommended passing ciety, will be held at 6:30 p.m. until Friday. at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in 146 En­ positions on th e Homecoming laws which provide for putting Friday In Kellogg Center. Expires 2/17/68 • • * The senator said the adminis­ Peter B. Hutt, who has been East Lansing Store Only I gineering Bldg. A speech on Executive Board opens today and alcoholics in hospitals. When re ­ Members are selected from tration’s public response that lt involved in two federal court The Chess Club will meet at “ Systems Engineering in Gradu­ doesn’t plan to use such weap­ will continue through Feb. 2B. test cases in which it was de­ leased, they could be treated as junior engineering students who 7:15 p.m. Wednesday in 304 B e s- ate School" will be offered. Positions are available in dis­ out-patients, and be Integrated a re In the top eighth of their • * * ons “ tends to relieve me some­ cided alcoholism is a disease, OUPONI sey Hall. what.” play, homecoming dance, queen and not a crim e, said he was back Into society. It is the only class or senior engineering stu­ 2 x 8 0 0 In. • • • Students may discuss poems selection, art and design, pub­ way to cure alcoholism, Hutt dents who are in the top fifth McCarthy is challenging P res­ preparing another casewhichwlll The United C erebral Palsy As­ they have written at the Poetry licity, guests and patrons end said. of their cla ss. sociation will sponsor a G et-Ac- Workshop meeting at 7 tonight ident Johnson in six Democratic tickets. go before the U.S. Supreme Court CeHopbane prim aries to dramatize his op­ In March. qualnted Card Party at 7:30 p.m. in the poetry room on the second J a m e s D. White, St. Joseph position to U.S. policies In Viet­ Hutt said one of the sets of Wednesday in the Walnut Street floor of M orrill Hall. nam. Junior \ and general chairman of laws on drunkenness contends " l t Tape • * * 13c School Gymnasium. For more in­ homecoming, stressed that pre­ He said the Senate Foreign Is a crim e to be Intoxicated In formation, call 332-4461. There will be a chess class at vious experience is not a pre- public, and offenders should be • a s Relations Committee " i s trying 7 tonight In 304 Bessey. requisite for chairmanship on arrested. The other says alcohol­ to verify those rumors now." The International Club will hold some committees. L IM IT ONE McCarthy defended his state- ics are sick people and should not Expires 2/17/68 its annual dinner at 6 :30p.m .Sat­ There will be a discussion of ments and 9ald the q u ^ « , Petitions will be available In be punished for their d isease." urday in the Crossroads Cafe­ 101 and 3 0 8 StUdentServices Bldg. East Lansing Store Only B . F . Skinner s book Walden I f should be discussed publicly, He said that alcoholism ac­ teria of the International Center. at 9 p.m. Thursday in 103 Bessey, McCarthy appeared on the NBC Questions may be answered by counts for one-third of all crim ­ Tickets are $3.50 for students, Je rry West, professor of A m eri- televlsion-radlo program "M eet calling 337-1721. inal a rre sts. :o u p o p $4.50 for non-students. They are can Thought and Language, will the P r e s s ." on sale in the Union U.N. Lounge $ 1.50 lead the discussion. He renewed his contention that ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ and 108 International Center. • • • * * * the administration Is demanding "An Explosive Situation: The surrender as its terms forpeace IR e v lo n L ip s t ic k ] The Soaring Club will meet for U«S. in Latin America ’ is the talks in Vietnam and said lt Is S P E C IA L Pow dered Pales Its third ground school at 7:30 topic of an open discussion at 7 afraid to negotiate a compromise tonight In 33 Union. Members p.m. t o n i g h t in 211 Bessey. settlem ent. If you like the feel of money- M ON. - TU ES. - W ED. - THURS. L I M I T ONE $ 1 .5 0 O n ly M in u t e s F r o m M S U Expires 2/17/68 lots of it...why not I East Lansing Store Only work for a big, strong bank? Monday Evening Special IÇOUPOP r>1967. S e c u r i t y F i r s t N a t i o n a l S e n k Any Medium Size IttU ia n L u ste r C re m e One Item Pizza S p a g h e tti C r e m e R in s e . p.. 7 7 c For $1.50 A ll you L IM IT ONE' can eat Expires 2/17/68 Lots of money isn’t alt we place to be — as a banker Good in Dorms Only IEast Lansing Stare Paly have at Security Bank: A and as an individual. And $ c a r e e r w ith u s w ou ld m e s n w o r k i n g in a n atm o sp h ere w here youth is a cc e n te d , with peop le who are progressive a s well aa financially and want to work for a big bank that isn't Security Bank is the larg­ est bank based there. The opportunity is great. If you have an interest in money THE 1.50 Including a t a s s a d sa la d , r o lls and b u tte r, Monday V A R S IT Y astute. Southern California ¡a an exciting stuffy, we'd like to talk to you. I tisn n in l nights 5 p .m . till 10 ms. u s. . at. err Make your financial partner 619 E Grand River S E C U R IT Y F IR S T N A T IO N A L B A N K En|oy the n a tio n ' AN EQUAL O PP O R T U N IT Y EM PL O YE R M E M B E R r n t C R A l D E P O SIT IN SU RA N C E CO RPO RATIO N “C A M P U S R E N O W N E D “ fin a st at U n d erg rad u ate stu d en ts c o n ta c t -the P la c e m e n t O ffice f o r f u r th e r in fo r­ F A S T D E L IV E R Y 332-6517 E A S T G R A N D R I V E R (North of Fron cbr) m a tio n . W e'll h av e a re p r e s e n ta tiv e on ca m p u s F r id a y , F e b r u a r y 16. f t A * * * * * * A * 8 M ichigan State N ews, E a s t Lansing, M ichigan S T A TE NEWS STATE NEWS T h is is l e a p y e a r . . . O n e e x t r a d a y f o r W a n t A d s t o w o r k f o r S t a t e N e w s R e a d e r s C LAS SIFIED C LA S S IFIE D 3 5 5 -8 2 5 5 3 S6 - S 2 5 5 DIAMOND BARGAIN: Wsddii« and OVER 23 y e a n experience. OPTI­ DIAPER SERVICE - Diaparene An­ OLDSMOBILE 196* four-door se- WAITRESS ONE or two nights a CAL DISCOUNT. 418 Tussil« tiseptic Process approved by Doc­ engagement rjng set*. Save 80 par dan. Power brakes and steering. weak. Will train. Meat be 21. Call tors. Same Diapers returned all cent or m ar*. Large selection of Building Phone IV 2-4867. C-2/16 Radio, heater. Dependable trans­ IV M 914 for interview. TOWN times, Yours or Ours. Baby Clothes plain and fancy diamonds. 825-8150 PUM P COCKTAIL LOUNGE. 2-2/12 to eBBc B rtoii portation. POO. Call 4SM081 aft­ er 9:90p.m M /li RN AND LPN Positions available WILCOX SECOND-HAND STORE, 909 E a st Michigan. Phone 485-4391 Mobile Homes washed free. No deposit. AMERI­ CAN DIAPER SERVICE. 914 E ast C Gier Street-Phone 482-0864. In Geriatric* a t Ingham County ROYCRAFT 1964 12' x 60' Porch, PONTIAC 19*1 Catalina convert­ £ Facility, Dobie Road, Okemo*. 5+ awning. Lot 612, 2780 E ast Grand MOVING WEST. Living room set and • AirroMOTivc ible. 1636 Good condition. Call 498- M /ll differential, one meal, adequate bedroom set for sale. 894-9419 River, E ast Lansing. 5-2/16 Typing Service • EMPLOYMENT perking. Many fringe benefits in­ after 5:30 p.m. cluding a time and V4 factor. Per­ PAULA ANN HAUGHEY: Ten pro­ • FOR RENT PORSCHE 9-12. 1966. AM-FM SW sonnel. E D 2-0401 10-2/11 3-3/11 Animals fessional thesis typists. IBM Selec- • FOR SALE Radio. Excellent condition. Many trics Multilith offset printing. 337- extras. Must sell. 93.695. 351- BANNER TRAILER - 1« ft., self- • LOST A FOUND MEDICAL TECHNICIAN. Full-time BLUE POINT Siamese kittens. Seven 1527 contained with equaliser hitch and 434«. M /ll female. Doctor's office in Okemoe. weeks old. Box-trained. Not regis­ • PERSONAL electric brakes. Like new. used C Begin work April first. Phone 332- tered Phone DeWitt. 069-3254. 3-2/14 • PEANUTS PERSONAL RAM BLER 1962 63 motor *196/ one summer only. 882-4849. 354«. M /1 3 MARILYN CARR: Legal secretary, best offer. 372-5104 after 5 p.m. 3-3/13 • REAL ESTATE typing a t home. E lectric typewrit­ • SERVICE >2/12 PART TIME evening work avail­ L o s t & Found er. After 5:30 p.m. and weekends, VOX ROYAL Guardsman amplifier. able for male students. Call 393- 393-2654 Pick-up and delivery. • TRANSPORTATION RAMBLER 1959 four-door. Private 5660 2-4 p.m. Monday - Friday. $986 new. Used two months, $650. BLACK KID gloves. February 5. C • WANTED owned. 9120. Must sell. 351-6041 10-2/15 1:50 p.m. Erickson Kiva. Reward. after 5 p.m. 3-2/13 5-2/15 355-7115. NINA CHILDS -- typist IBM Sel- BABYSITTER - CARE for three 3-2/12 ELECTRO VOICE PROMOTION on ectric. multilith offset printing D EAD LIN E VOLKSWAGEN 1962 Radio, good children 3 1* days a week. 489-1919. stereo systems. FM. multiplex, 489-5472 tires. *575. Phone 351-7740 3-2/13 3-2/12 LOST: ON E „ silver woman's watch G arrard changer and speakers in auditorium. Reward! Call 355- 20-2/27 1 P.M. one class day be­ complete, 3253780 up. MAIN EL E C ­ fore publication« VOLKSWAGEN 1959 Good condi­ F o r Rent TRONICS, 882-5035. 5558 South 3638. 3-2/12 TYPING DONE in my home. 2 1» blocks tion. New battery and muffler. 9300. from campus. 332-1619. Cancellations - 12 noon one Pennsylvania. 351-5200. 3-2/12 TV RENTALS for students. Low 20-34 class day before publica­ economical rates by the term or C P erso n al tion. VOLKSWAGEN 1964 Sunroof Dark month. UNIVERSITY TV RENT­ BICYCLE SALES, rentals and serv­ BARBI M EL. professional typist. green. Good condition. 9650 ED 7- THE LOOSE ENDS, back in business ALS. 484-9283. C ices. Also used. EAST LANSING No job too large or too small. 2576. 3-2/12 after a temporary delay. 337-2263, PHONE TV RENTALS for students 89.00 CYCLE, 1215 E ast Grand River. 353-8384. 4-2/18 Block off campus. 332-3255. Call 332-8303. C 3 5 5 -8 2 5 5 Auto Service & Parts month. Free service and delivery. C Call NEJAC, 337-1300. We guaran­ WANTED: STUDENT artists to do LIPPINCOTT'S PROFESSIONAL RATES ACCIDENT PROBLEM Call KALA­ tee same-day service. C ACHTUNG! T ELEFU N K EN has ar­ illustrations for a book of poems. IBM theses typing. Fayann, 489- MAZOO STR EET BODY SHOP. Call, after 6 p.m .. ask for Jan. 353- 0358: Mary Martha. 489-6479. I D A Y ........................$1.50 rived - imported direct from Ger­ Small dents to large wrecks. Amer­ PARKING SPACE. Paved private lot. many. Fo r great buys on high 3413;\ , ;_______ 3-2/12 3-2/12 3 DAYS..................... $3.00 ican and foreign cars. Guaranteed Albert-Haslett. 810/month. 337- quality stereo systems, tape re­ 5 DAYS.....................$5.00 work. 482-1286. 2628 East Kala­ 2336. 3-2/13 corders, and short-wave radios Peanuts P e rso n al STUDENT DISCOUNT - SHEILA (based on 10 words per ad) Over 10.15< per word per day mazoo. IM PO R TED CAR C Apartments \V see NEJAC OF EAST LANSING. 543 E ast Grand River. CONGRATULATIONS being our winter princess TONNIE on Love. CAMPBELL. Electric. 337-2134. Term Experienced papers, typist. theses. C ATTRACTIVELY FURNISHED one- & LA * A D Pis 1-2/12 C There will be a 50f service' SERVICE bedroom apartment in new build* POLAROID 700 Land cam era and and bookkeeping charge If iiqj. Call for appointment to see. case. Call 351-9358 after 5 p.m. SIG EPS: Looking for one pledge ANN BROWN: typist and multilith. S P E C IA L IS T S paddle and one trophy? Phi Mu 332-3135. 10-2/13 offset printing. Dissertations, the­ this ad Is not paid within 3-2/12 1-2 12 one week. IN Look, S ylvia! Its one of can help. ses. manuscripts, general typing GIRL UNIVERSITY Terrace. COMPLETE SKI outfit for 6’ male, IBM. 17 years experience. 332- e T R IU M P H 8384 The State News will be *63.75, settle under 855. Call eve­ those Hippos! with size 10 feet. Used seven times, Real E state C •R E N A U L T nings. 332-4729. 1-2/12 870; FM Radio in walnut cabinet, responsible only for the • VO LK SW A G EN 845; Four-track L aFayette tape TWO BEDROOM house, garage. recorder, 850; Call Jim , 353-4328. MARGARET RICE Experienced first day's incorrect Inser­ EAST LANSING Across from cam ­ F o r Rent 3-2,;l2 *6,000; *650 down; *60 month. 393- typist. Prompt service. 509 Grove tion. A l Edward's pus. One bedroom unfurnished ex­ For. Rent 0075. 5-2 12 Street. 337-7038. 1-2 12 cep t. fange and refrigerator. Rea­ FRANDOR AREA -- large two bed­ SKI BOOTS, size 10, buckle. Antique S ports C a r C en te r sonable. Phone 332-079? or 351- EY D EA L VILLA Apartments . . . room apartments. Furnished or brass items. Oil paintings. 351- The State News does not 9608. 5-2/18 Now accepting leases for year be­ unfurnished. 351-4864. 7026. 3‘/i ACRES modern four bedroom home. One ca r garage. Call ZAL- T o MSU students 1200 E . Oakiand IV 9-7591 ginning September, 1968. Two-bed­ 5-2/12 permit racial or religious WATER’S EDGE Apartments-One room apartments for 8240/month. 3-2/12 EWSKI REALTY 351-4864 eve­ only discrimination in its ad­ AUTOMATIC CAR wash. Only 75c girl needed for spring term. 351- Swimming pool, G .E. Appliances, nings, 882-4305. It's the best in town. You may sit 4912. 5-2/16 garbage disposal, furnished for Hou ses IBM EXECU TIV E typewriter. F a c ­ 5-2 12 B ig 1968 Dodge vertising colum ns. The in your ca r for 2 1 2 minutes four-man or five man. Call 351- tory reconditioned. *180; Setchell- State News will not accept EAST LANSING - duplex. Three- while your car is washed and NEED ONE man immediately. Cedar 4275 after 5 p.m. bedroom colonial. l ' i baths, car­ Carlson MPX component stereo S e rvice CHARGER advertising which discrim­ waxed. Also cleans underneath car. Village. Special rates. Call 351- C peted. appliances furnished, base­ in matching cabinets new. 8150. F u ll factory equipped in­ inates a g a in st religion, An almost perfect job. 430 South 8917. 5-2/16 351-6502 Clippert, back of KO-KO Bar. NEWLY MARRIED? ment. Sublet till June. Renewal 3-2/12 AUTO INSURANCE. IMMEDIATE cluding radio. A ll taxes and race, color or national or­ C-2/12 TROWBRIDGE APARTMENT for available. 8130. 332-8795 or 353- COVERAGE. Spartan Insurance 1968 plates. igin. two. Immediate occupancy. *160. TANGLEW OOD 7971. C BOOKCASE WITH sliding glass door 487-5006.1604 E ast Michigan. and lamp, *20; sofa and rocker, *50: 7-2 16 1965 VOLKSWAGEN engine. In very good running condition. Must re­ 351-0465 or 332-0480. 5-2/16 APAR TM EN TS TWO OR three girls needed imme­ double bed complete, 830; study Complete price, $2,881.61. diately. 850 month. Call Sue, 351- move from car. 351-5484 . 3-2/12 ONE GIRL wanted for River's Edge 2 Bdrm.,unfur.,from 139.50 5487. 524 Gunson. table. *7; 355-7782, after 5 p.m. WILL REPA IR all types electric 3-2/12 Ask for Jerry Govan, Autom otive apartment February - September. 351-7880 5-2/14 equipment. R ate: V» regular serv­ M EL’S AUTO SERVICE. Large or 351-8852. 1 -2/12 ice shop. 351-5484. AV 5-1344 or DU 6-. 2800 CATALINA CONVERTIBLE 1964. small, we do them all. 1108 East SUBLEASE IMMEDIATELY to one TH R EE DESKS, portable T V ., and 3-2 12 NEED ED FOURTH girl for spring miscellaneous household furniture. Automatic, power steering, and Grand River. 332-3255. C SPRING: ONE or two men needed girl. One block from campus. Feb­ term. 860. Riverside E ast. 351- brakes. New snow tires. 73,000 for Cedar Village. 351-0364. 3-2/14 9158 Julie. ruary rent free. Call 351-8519. Call OX 4-9801 PX S tore — F ra n d o r miles. Very good condition. Will MASON BODY SHOP, 812 E ast Kala­ 2-2/12 5-2/12 3-2/12 STUDENTOURS Ice Creepers, $1.00 up let go for only *900. Call 356- mazoo Street--Slnce 1940. Com­ EAST LANSING duplex. Furnished, 8297, 9-5 p.m., Monday through plete auto painting and collision unfurnished. *135 up. Immediate LARNED STR EET - Two-bedroom SKIS WHITE stars 6'9" brand GO-GO BAHAMAS Foam Rubber Flakes 1 lb. bag Friday. " C service. American and foreign occupancy. 332-0480. 5-2/16 NEED ONE man for four-man Avon- . duplex. Basement, appliances, to F re e p o rt “ w here all 59^ dale apartment. 857 month-getting new. *200 new. Will sell best offer cars. IV 5-0256. C draperies, carpeting. 8140. 372- Pea Coats, $19.95 married, will bargain for less. over *130 351-6172, Greg. 3-2/14 the action Is “ . CHEVROLET 1956 *50. Transpor­ 351-8726. 6886. after 5:30 p.m. Hand W arm ers, $1.29 up tation Special. 339-2131 after 6 A viatio n 6-2/16 5-2/14 COMPLETE SKI outfit for 6’ male, 8 DAYS — 7 NIGHTS Upholstery Vinyl; $1.39 yd. p.m. 3-2/12 with size 10 feet. Used seven times, 3 G al. plastic gas can, $2.88 SA VE-LEARN to fly or rent from N O R T H W IN D N EED ONE girl spring term. Cedar- ONE OR TWO girls needed. Four- 870; FM Radio in walnut cabinet, $179 bedroom house. 860. 332-3667. Ski Caps, 98£ CORVAIR 1962 Good condition. the MSU flying club. Lowest rates. FARM S brook Arms. 351-5342. 845; Four-track LaFayette tape C a ll C h ery l K ille b re w *250. IV 9-7226. 3-2/14 3-2/12 5-2/15 recorder, *50; Call Jim . 353-4238. 1 pt. thermos with cup,$179 ea. Best equipment. Quality instruc­ 5-2/14 3 53 -0 5 0 4 , M ike Irv in e Paddle Ball Paddles, $2.88 tion. Call 355-1178. C 3 5 1 -7 8 8 0 T H R EE ROOM air-conditioned fur­ CORVAIR 1964 Red Monza. Radio, Rooms 3 5 1 -8 6 4 8 , Jinn Goodwin Bike locks, comb., $1.39 ea. air-conditioned, stick shift, good nished apartment. 351-5993 or 351- FRANCIS AVIATION. So easy to ATTENTION GIRLS. Now or next TWO GIRLS to share quiet, com­ GRAND PIANO - Small Kimball. 3 32 -0 33 3, o r Tom Bike locks, key, $1.88 ea. tires. 37,000 miles. 337-0024. 4813. learn in the P IP E R CH ERO K EE!! term. Apartments or rooms with fortable room near campus. 332- Excellent mechanical condition. M ilita ry Blankets, $3,88 up 5-2/13 3-212 P r ic e 3 3 2 - 3 11 0, Special *5.00 offer! 484-1324. C all the luxuries of home. Call 8450. Phone 489-3666. 3-2/14 1771. 3-2/14 Cigarettes, T J f tax included CORVAIR 1965 500. Gold bronze Fred Allen, 351-7934 or 351-0960. N EED ED IMMEDIATELY. One man Power glide. 25,000 miles, Radio, Scooters & C ycles 5-2/12 SHARP SINGLE room in private STOP for four-man luxury apartment. CLARINET B U F F E T B-flat. E xtra home. Private bath. ED 2-1183. heater. Clean. Phone er 3:30 p.m., 7016 646-6818 aft­ Crietz Road, AUTHENTIC D EALER for Yamaha, 135 KEDZIE DRIVE. Furnished *52.00. 351-8542. 3-2/14 trill key, case. *450 new; 8295, TROPHIES & RUQUES apartment for two students. *165 5-2/14 like new. 355-3066, evenings. 3-2/14 * Dimodtale. 5-2/12 Triumph, and BMW. Complete line OVER1000 TROPHIESON DISPLAY of parts, accessories, leather per month. IV 7-3216; evenings, NEED TWO girls now, spring, sum­ ROOM AND Baprd available in AT THE SIGN OF NOWAITING - IMMEDIATE DEL/VERT FORD § 1967 289 engine. Standard goods, and helmets. 1/2 mile south 882-2316. 10-2/19 m er. or sublet to four. *40 includes Christian home. 825 weekly. Also, : ----------- Spade/ Pric * i h r transmission. 81,700. OX 4-1403. of 1-96 on South Cedar. SH EP's utilities. 351-0884. ride available Monday through Fri­ SOAP SAVING ¡¡¡¡¡IK -* Qaantitr Purchamt MOTORS, Phone 694-6621. C day in area of State Police Post. 5-2/15 hURCHAM WOODS APARTMENT 3-2/12 393-4755, after 6 p.m. 5-2/18 PROFESSIONAL for four. Furnished, air-condi­ M AR S H ALL ENGRAVING OURSPECIALTY FORD 1964. Two-door, automatic. E m ploym ent tioned, swimming pool. Available BEECHWOOD APARTMENTS-Two THE FORCES V-8, very clean. 8775. 393-0075. spring term. 351-0793. girls needed spring term. Reduced SINGLE ROOM for woman, spring MUSIC CO« term. Near campus. Large. Quiet. 5-2/12 CHOOSE YOUR own hours. A few 3-2/13 rates. 351-0998. ED 2-8498. 3-2/12 OF E V IL OUR PRICE . . . Iring InYour Trophiesor Plaquas hours a day can mean excellent 5-2/14 earnings for you as a trained for Professional FORD 1968. Two-door hard-top. SUBLEASE TWO-man Burcham Engraving Brand new. *200 less than I paid; I can arrange for a trade in and Avon representative. Fo r appoint­ ment, in your own home, write Mrs. Woods. Immediately, spring, sum­ GIRL TO share immediately two- > man luxury apartment. 880. After MEN'S DOUBLE, quiet, living room, parking, now and spring. 332-4709. THE FRIGHTENED LOWEST 24 Hour Sorrlto m er terms. 351-0833. • Alona Huckins, 5664 School Street, 2 p.m ., ED 2-2341. 3-2/12 3-2/13 3020 VINE ST. Pfco#*• financing. Call 353-1348 after 7 5-2/15 TREES IN r 483-0645 p.m. 3-2/13 Haslett, Michigan, or call IV 2- 6893. C-2/16 ® FURNISHED APARTMENT. All util­ ~( C O U P O N D A Y S o fa r r y Cm tLtu* S p o r tin g ( jo o d t IMP ALA CONVERTIBLE 1964 327. CLEANING WOMAN. New apart­ ities. Couple only. No pets. 8125. § a fe w d a tes TOWN 1 ILK. N. OPMICH.-WEST OP SEAM Complete automatic. Beautiful con­ dition. 81,200 or best offer. ED 7- ment house. Arrange your own OX 4-9801. Coupon & $ 3 purchase G X o "LANSING'S HOUSEOPTROPHIES" time. 351-7910. 10-2/23 3-2/12 cx s t ill a v a ila b le 9313 after 5 p.m. 5-2/13 (Not Incl« alcohol o r tobacco) e n title s b e a re r to t h is t e r m . MUSTANG 1965, very low mileage. A L. o p t ] □ a E Like new. Phone 627-2917. OLDSMOBILE 1963 F-85. Excellent 3-2/12 IN T E R V IE W S for: THREE 1 /2 g a ls, m ilk fo r 9 9 C TWO 1 1 / 4 lb« loaf bread 2 9 P CH o 3 5 1 -5 6 0 7 CROSSWORI PUZZLE o B O R E A s a n W A G i N e l s E in d I L_J_ a a s s [d 3 1 condition. Four-door. 8750 or best offer. Call 332-3507, ask for Craig. >o SHAHEEN’S THRIFTWAY ACROSS 2 7 . Silkworm M O C H A ra ía [ d l l 3-2/12 S a le s an d 29 . Low A N E R L i p Q H B 13 > o 1. Sandwich 30. Advance 13 2510 S. CEDAR 0pen 7 Days 9-9 Phone: 485-1538 Y E n e W u MAN N E ED A CAR? filling 31. T rough IL I o IG I e B A S 3 CM3 4. R ecoil 33. Fo rw ard o f the Month S a le s M a n a g e m e n t 34. In a ccu ra cy B A L ■ P I E II IN H 19 f n‘wr-4-out om 8 . Exp ert 11. Anecdot- 36. C rying A. JL j ¿ It I a a u l â l d Ej L age ‘ 38. High rail­ c o D I 1 |C 1 4 Edlä G O T ra in in g P ro g ra m J t 12. Substan­ way 39 . T ow ard T e eM e ü £ l a u Y X jn r n t tive 13. Kind of 41 . N eu ter pro Ronald H. Cook College Representative This Program is designed to develop young college graduates for careers in life insurance sales and sales management. It provides an initial training period of 3 months (including 2 weeks at a Home Office School) before moving into full sales work. SA V E V A LU A B LE C O U P O N Special Rates for MSU Students WEEKEND Noon Frl. - Noon Mon« buoy 14. Unhappy 17. Intim idate 18. M usical perception 15. Atop noup 42 . Pre-school training 48 . P rio r to 49 . A ffected m anner 52. Digits 53. Braw l DOWN 1. Owned 2. B lack cuck oo 5. C harged p article 6. Sliced 7. L e g joint 8 . C avity 9. Hint M i» Plus Gas 21 . F ro m 5 0 . Past 3. Sign of 5 1 . E v e rg re e n good luck 10. F in ale Ronald Cook's record of Those trainees who are interested in and who are NO Mileage Charge 23 . Collide 26 . D ecom pose tree - 4. Understand 15. Against consistent performance found qualified for management responsibility are 16. C rasp and outstanding service as 1 I“ 4 5 “ 7 9 9 to 19. Im pel assured of ample opportunity to move on to such an executive salesman has D A IL Y M3 20. Needy qualified him for the man of work in either our field offices or in the Home Office ” ¡5” die Month Award for Janu­ after an initial period in sales. Per Day MILEAGE NO ü" ite te 2 1 . Potential m etal 22. Fish's ary. Each month our com­ pany, founder of mutual life Aggressive expulsion plans provide unusual op­ portunities for those accepted. Plue Gee CHARGE w~ lé propeller 24. A nchor insurance In America, sa­ 19 90 21 J T 2) 24 25. Small horse lutes the agent whoaccom­ Arrange with the placement office for an inter­ OR CHOOSE OUR REGULAR 2 7 . M isjudge plishes the greatest in­ view with: LOW RATE OF 2T 27 26 29“ 2 8 . O rdinance crease of financial protec­ » Si 3 1 . N arrated tion In this ares. tZ Per # « Per 5T ■ P 3 2 . L e g a te e HERBER T C . R E M IE N , JR . 1 1 Day ♦ 0 MUet Gee m û 1% l r 3 5 . Replenish Marvin Mullsnberg W 19 Mobil 3 7 . Oil of roses General Agent F e b ru a ry 15 , 1968 w ilam rnP Æ w45 m VW. 3 9 . T h reeso m e Sgfod 40. M onster You muet be 21 and 44 46 47 42 4 2 . Solution SERVICE CENTER heve a valid MSU LQ card. 4 3 . Irascibility 50 3721660 ïT 44 T J e 927 E. Grand River Connecticut Mutual Life INSURANCE COMPANY•HARTFORD 2818 E. Kalam azoo .214 SO. SI 52 _ 55“ 4 4 . D ine 45. B urro 46. Self-love „Bast Lansing mtmm ammm Tfc# M i# Chip Company • Sine* 1846 48 9 -8 4 6 7 _________________ A cross ffom Dags c a p it o l 4 7 . At o n ce ________ 332-2326________ Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Monday, February 12, 1968 9 IN SOUTH CAROLINA ‘W h y P o t? ’ d is c u s s io n N e g r o e s c o l l f o r b o y c o t t a t F e e H a ll “ Why Pot? A Discussion of ORANGEBURG, S.C. (jPI— Eight for the police brutality" In the cluded in the statement adopted adding "an equitable number of Why People Use Marijuana*' Is hundred Orangeburg N eg ro es Thursday night Incident that re­ at the meeting were approved Negroes" to local and state po­ the topic of a symposium jointly called Sunday for the Immediate sulted In the three deaths. last week by the student bodies lice forces; and elimination of sponsored by the College of Social removal of National Guard troopa Following the Negro meeting of the city's two predominantly the Orangeburg County dual Sciences and the residents of from the city andmade plans for a a dusk-to-dewn curfew went Into Negro collegea—South Carolina school system together with full Fee Hall to be held at 8 p.m. boycott of white businesses. effect at 5 pjn. Sunday for the State College and church-sup- Integration and the bussing of Wednesday in 137 Fee H all. third straight night. Mere then ported Claflln College* The State pupils for racial balance.. D r. Thomas Tierney, psychia­ Reacting to last week's racial 600 National guardsmen resumed College campus was the scene of "We call upon the total Negro tris t at the Detroit Psychiatric violence that left three dead and petrols. Thursday night’s violence. community and other interested Institute, an d Peter Manning, some 50 persons Injured, the The Rev. LD*Quincey Newman, The lengthy, wide ranging citizens to participate In a no* associate professor of sociology Negroes mat Sunday and voted South Carolina field director for statement called for the etate to buying quarantine with shopping h e r e w ill be the featured speak­ overwhelming approval ofa broad the National Association for the make adequate restitution to fam­ to be confined to N egro busi­ ers. civil rights campaign. Repre­ Advancement of Colored People, ilies of the three dead and the nesses," the statement said. sented at the meetlngwas a cross said the boycott would begin at 50 Injured. Dr. C.H. Thomas Jr., local Tierney w ill deal with the psy­ section of the city's Negro com­ once. No deadline was set for the NAACP president, said Negroes chological reasons behind m a ri­ munity. "We will pursue the Implemen­ boycott, which is to continue comprise 62.9 per cent of the juana use with reference to fo r­ A statement adopted at the tation of th is program Im­ until action Is taken to comply population of Orangeburg County mer patients who have used it meeting also called fo r "Im­ mediate . suspension of the lew mediately with no nodsense," he said. with a list of objectives. The and their buying power in the ADS testing with both good and bad results. list includes: placing Negroes In city of 17,000 total population la "We don’t want people to come enforcement officers responsible S e v e ra l "declarations" In­ appointive county and city Jobs; between 60 and 70 per cent. to discuss th e legalization of Alum ni Distinguished Scholarship candidates fro m all o ver the country stru g g le One of the objectives of the marijuana,” said Tom Warden, campaign also w ill be desegre­ o v e r th e ir tests on Saturday. State News photo by M ich ael M arh an ka Pittsburgh, Pa., junior, an d gation of the city’s only bowling chairman of the discussion series alley. Efforts to Integrate the committee. facility led to the student dem­ onstrations and the violence last A T CANDLELIGHT DINNER B aljit Singh, assistant dean of week. the College of Social Sciences, F a c u l t y Q u i n t e t t o p r e s e n t The U.S. Justice Department added that the symposium w ill has filed s u it demanding de­ segregation of the A ll Star T r i­ angle Bowl and an eating estab­ Scholarship contestants not “ be promoting marijuana one way or the other,” but w ill be probing th e psychological mo­ lishment In It. A hearing on tives In Its use. r e c i t a l i n C a r n e g i e H a l l The Richards Quintet, a faculty quintet-in-residence at MSU, w ill named chairman of a four-week seminar to be conducted In Salz­ and at T rin ity College In Dublin, the suit Is expected this week in Columbia. Meanwhile, it was announced that classes at South Carolina given friendly welcome T his year’ s symposium isp art of theCollege’s discussion series started two and one half years Ireland. By M A R IL Y N P A TTE R S O N them to use their talents to the ‘Shall we play God?’ , we’ll have ago. present a recital In Carnegie burg, Austria March 17 through State College had been suspend­ In the past social move­ State News Staff W r ite r fullest, to do It ," he said. H all, New York, Feb. 28. A p ril 12, fo r potential European ed Indefinitely. T h e college ments, birth c o n t r o l , black " I urge you,” Kelly said, "to God, by giving man a brain, agricultural leaders. president, M . Nance J r ., said With the music of the Spartan power, the draft and LSD have make the most of your extended is asking him to find out the rules been discussed. Hathaway w ill lead the Salz­ W illiam L azer, professor of Sunday that only administrative Brass and the words of advice talents. It is important to push of life and death himself,he said. Six MSU representatives w ill burg Seminar in American marketing, conducted two sem l- personnel and staff would report of three faculty members, 750 “ Once we find out the rules yourself." serve on committees and councils studies on "Agriculture and Na­ a rs at Stanford University Tues­ Monday. contestants for MSU's Alumni The common thread which we must use them like adults. tural Resources." He w ill The nightly curfew has been Distinguished Scholarships (ADS) of the National Association of day, as a visiting professor. binds honors college students You are going to be the first, S t u d e n t a r r e s t e d State Universities and Land- present lectures and lead dis­ L azer firs t spoke to 44 mar­ In effect since Friday by order were welcomed to the University together Is not that they have the generation of adulthood for you Grant Colleges. cussions on "U.S. Agricultural keting teachers from a rw u tù th e U i G& t. Rotatf Mi ♦ Friday at a candlelight banquet* potential to be good students but w ill know how to create life and that they have used th eir talents the qualities of that life . P re? o n d r u g s c h a r g e They are President John A . P ric e and Trade Policy." world ar Stanford’a International A feeling of friendliness pre­ Hannah, M ilton E. Muelder, Center fo r the Advancement of vailed as Gordon A.Sabine,vice- and potential to demonstrate pare yourselves w ell." James H , Denison, John E . Ivey Management Education. He dis­ president of student affairs and Saturday morning the ADS con­ A student pleaded guilty to use achievement, he said. J r., Gordon Sheehe and Philip Joe L . Byers, associate pro­ cussed trends in marketing emcee of the banquet, greeted testants took the test which will of a narcotic at his Circu'ic Court . “ You w ill not receive a hand­ J. May. fessor in counseling personnel thought. His second seminar, A K P s i to v is it the competitors and assured them out or something for nothing," determine who is to receive the 10 tria l and was fined $200. • * * services, has had three papers fo r doctoral students, concerned that, ‘ ‘it (MSU) Is really for Sabine warned. "You w ill have scholarships. Robert R. Paul, J r., Livonia published recently. societal dimensions and re­ C h ii c a g o re a l." It consists of 132 objective and freshman, was apprehended by M el C . Buschman, assistant fir m : Other speakers were William to earn what you learn. There They are * T h e Roll of Hypothe­ sponsibilities In marketing. are no platters on which you will two essay questions, Sabine University police Dec. 5 with director of the Continuing Educa­ Kelly, director of the Honors sizing In the Facilitation of Con­ Alpha Kappa Psi professional Informed them Friday and no one . marijuana In his room In Snyder tion Service at MSU, Is serving receive everything." cept Attainment" In the "Journal business fraternity has planned College and associate professor as an educational consultant to of American Thought and Lan­ Augenstein’ s speech was "an has yet scored over 80 per cent. H all. of Verbal Learning and Verbal Donald N. Baker, assistant a field trip to Chicago fo r its But, he told them ," Don’t worry The charge of possession of the Coleglo Americano de Puebla guage, and Leroy Augensteln, example of what you w ill get" Behavior;" "V erbal and Concept professor a t history. Is co-ed­ members Thursday, Friday and school system In Puebla, Mexico, chairman of the Biophysics Dept. in classroom lectures complete if there are one or two questions narcotics was reduced to use of Learning" In "Review of Educa­ ito r of a two-volume work, Saturday to observe large busi­ this month. tional Research;” and with "Landmarks In Western Culture: ness operations in practice. The contestants were seniors with class participation (“ How you don’t know because none of narcotics at the tria l Feb. 2. Dennis M arzella, coordinator from high schools In 48 states many of you would do this In the professors who made up the Paul was also fined $160 in Robert D. Davidson, University Commentaries and Controver- test can answer all of the ques- court costs. and aevp.r.ai fcvypla®.«iuntr tes vds» this situation.?’ ’.) and -Question ■V ic to r H. Noll, retired member of Wisconsin,- "A- oti th t ewr*. a n d a n s w e r p ^ r - jin r . Calculation, of Strategies In Con­ nual affair receives financial traveled to Eas: Lansing to bo- of the College of Education If medical advancements conr r cept Attainment" In "Am erican backing from businesses which come acquainted with MSU and faculty, has won the 58th annual p. P.-jTlaon Tind Miles »t« e?ger to have students take t, the editors of the Science Edu­ cation magazine. Wi M artin , assistant professors a close look at them. Besides of communication, spoke to the taking tours of the businesses, University of Nebraska chapter of Ralph L . Guile, associate p ro ­ Sigma X I science honorary F r i­ there w ill be discussions with full-tultion scholarships awarded annually by the alumni. Top distance-traveled honors said, one w ill soon be able to choose hre time of death. "W e won’t even have the op­ 7AM N oll, professor emeritus of portunity to ask the question executives concerning the opera- went to Douglas Wlndsall who counseling and personnel ser­ fessor of chemistry, has arrived day on "Human Communication vices, was cltedas "one of Amer­ in Bangkok, Thailand, where he as a Scientific Discipline." tiqns of the companies, came 7500 miles from Yamato, MONDAY THROUGH FR IDAY Thursday the group w ill visit Japan, and Leo King who flew ica’ s most competent classroom w ill spend the y e a ra s S .E .A .T .0 . teachers, prolific science educa­ Harrison, In his presentation, professor at Thailand's Univer­ stressed nonverbal, subliminal the United Airlines executive of­ from Sao Paulo, B ra zil, 5800 Smile! With fices and discuss employe de­ miles away from East Lansing». tion w riters and distinguished re ­ sity of Medical Sciences. and unconscious aspects of human These Super search leaders." • • * Guile Is on a year's Dale E. Hathaway, professor of two Fulbright Fellowships, at the maker and processor of Infor­ leave of velopment with company repre­ communication. M artin focused sentatives. Following that is a absence from MSU. He has held on man as a rational decision visit to the A.C. Nielsen Com­ pany, the largest marketing r e ­ The group, however, rep­ resents only half of the high school seniors who w ill be vying for nextyear’ s ADS scholarships. Buys From Larry’s 38,000copies agricultural economics, has been University of Ghent In Belgium mation. search organization in the world. An equal number . w ill be on campus this weekend for the F la . Size 40 o f th e M ic h ig a n S ta t e N ew s are same competition. The program was aimed not W hite o r P ink d is trib u te d so much at selling MSU to the P l a c e m e n t B u r e a u prospective students as at urging GRAPEFRUIT 0 7:15AM Students must register in p e r- son at the Placement Bureau at least two days prior to the date of C a m pb e 11-Ewald Company: Marketing and a ll other majors 0f the college of business (B), ad - handicapped, speech m a la d ju s te d , correction, teacher, guidance and remedial visiting Monday and 20: and Tuesday, Feb. 19 6 for 49 an Interview. vertising and English and a rt (B). reading, mathematics, counsel­ Aerojet-General Corporation: Monday-Frlday, Feb. 19-23: Central Washington State C o l- ing, English, business educa­ E lectrical, mechanical, civil and sanitary engineering (B .M ,D ). W IN T E R R A T E S □ ACAPULCO EXPRES ZION, FRESH C ity of Detroit: C iv il, chem l- lege: Faculty positions for Doc- tion, Industrial arts (electric­ SO — 8 DAYS. Bv Jet 3 8 ,0 0 0 STUD EN T and 8 , 0 0 0 ACA­ cal, electrical and mechanical engineering (B.M ), nursing, a ll toral candidates, Columbia Gas System Serv- ity, electronics), Journalism, language and French (B ,M ). E .I, DuPont De Nemours and every day. 7 nights and 8 days FIG BARS D E M IC PERSO N N EL who spend 0 Company, Incorporated: Chem i­ at the luxurious Acapulco H il majors of the colleges of busi- ice Corporation: Chemical, m e- Northern Natural Gas Com­ cal, mechanical and electrical ♦on or Cafeta Hotels. Deep sea fishing, dancing, water-skiing 2 LB . $ 9 0 , 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 . 0 0 a y e a r in th e L a n s i n g 29 ness, arts and letters, com - chanical and civil engineering, pany: Electrical, mechanical and engineering and chemistry (B ,M ). . . . a delightful stay in “para­ a r e a p e r y e a r . B e g i n th e b ig r u s h f o r munlcation arts and social s c i- and accounting (B) and econom- chemical engineering, account­ M artin -M arietta Corporation: dise!” BOX ence, and recreation and physical iCS, financial administration and in g , a ll MBA’ s and computer th e S T A T E N E W S ’ S T A N D S . education (B). accounting (M ). science (B). E lectrical, mechanical engineer­ FROM Monday, Feb. 19: D etroit Bank and Trust: A ll Ohio Lim e Company: Chem i­ ing, (B,M ,D) and materials sci­ Pasquale’ s F in est American E lectric P o w e r majors of the colleges of busl- cal and metallurgical engineer­ ence and physics (M ,D). $121 D I 7 7 A C U ELU XE Servlce Corporation: Electrical, ness (B,M ) and arts and le t- ing (B). PLUS AIR FARE i Il l AO c o m b in a t ic i . mechanical and civil engineer- ters, communication arts and Prudential Insurance Company lng (B .M ). social science (B). of America: A ll majors of the FROM DETROIT ROUND S A U S A G E ,or P E P P E R O N I 96% o f t h e s e p e o p le re a d th e The Bendlx Corporation: A c - Dewey and Almy Chemical colleges of arts and letters, busi­ T R IP JET $184. STATE N E W S d a i l y . 80% o f th e counting and financial admin- D lv „ W .R. Grace and Company: ness, communication arts and I LB. 2 OZ. istration (B .M ). _________5 * I , » I 6 b _________ _ Chemistry, chemical and m e- chanical engineering (B .M ), f l - nanclal administration (M ), a ll agriculture (B,M ,D). Tee-P ak, Incorporated: Chem­ istry (B ,M ,D ), chemical and me­ FO R F O L D E R S AND R E S E R V A T IO N S . CHECK ANO MAIL AD, to LB . 6 O Z , SIZE 99! s t u d e n ts read no o t h e r n e w s p a p e r . Tvnina Service majors of the college of busi- chanical engineering, packaging ™ ...................... ness (M ), accounting (B) and m a r- technology and marketing (B ,M ). H ershey’ s Famous ketlng (M ). U.S. A rm y Corps of Engineers: l^ M m e ANY KIND OF typing in my home. 489-2514 i r* ~ ‘ C Garden C ity Public Schools; E a rly and later elementary edu- C ivil engineering (B,M ,D), m e­ chanical engineering (hydraulic CHOCOLATE F O R IN F O R M A T IO N ON H O W TO REACH T H IS $ 9 0 , 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 . 0 0 a y e a r Tran sp o rtatio n cation, physical education, art, or hydrologie) (M .D), economics, ......................................................... music, mentally and acoustically all majors of the college of social TRAVEL CENTER INC. SYRUP m a r k e t . . . C a ll ACAPULCO, MEXICO , Spn?? handicapped, m a la d ju s te d , science (B,M) and chemistry, 2 2 8 Abbott Rd. break. Nine days left. Last call. , . . . mathematics and geology (m a­ Across from State Theatre 16 oz. Interested? 353-2368 4-2/15 »P«ech correction, visiting P in t 17* te a c h e r and re m e d ia l re a d in g , rine) (B,M ,D). 3 5 1 -6 4 0 0 The University of Michigan: NEED r i d e r s . Round trip to Flon- s c i e n c e and g e n e ra l s cie n c e , Accounting (B), biology and CAN da. spring break. Call 482-6316: b u s i n e s s e d u c a tio n , c o u n s e lin g , if no answer call ED 7-9318. d ia g n o s tic ia n , E n g lish , h e a lth microbiology (B,M), bacter­ C iv il Engineering Seniors! education, home economics, ln - iology and chemistry (B,M), med­ C ou ntry F re sh * lt l ~~“ dustrial arts, Spanish, m ath/ s d - ical technology, nursing, home P lan your fu tu re in Wanted ence combined, social science, economics (foods), institutional P u b lic W orks E ngineering ICE MILK 3 5 3 -6 4 0 0 BLOOD DONORS' needed." 87.50 for ^ i v e r education J ^ U s m L a - management, mathematics and all positive. RH negative with posi- O n , French, biology, chemistry, a ll majors of the college of busi­ w ith the A ll F la v o rs Uve factor-*7 so. negative, and AB A negative, B physics and physical science and negative. 110.00. earth science (B,M). ness (B) and social work (M). Van Laan, Weinlander, F lt z - C ity o f Los Angeles C STATE NEWS ADVERTISING o negative - 812.00. MICHIGAN COMMUNITY BLOOD 587 E a st Grand River, E a st Lan- CEN TER, , Lockheed Missiles and Space Company: Mechanical and ele c - sing Hours: 9-3:80 Monday. T u e s- , trical engineering, mathematics, « I ™ hugh and Company: Accounting (B.M). Walker Manufacturing Com­ pany: Accounting, mechanical en­ B ureau of E ngineering The tremendous growth and development of Los Angeles presents challenging career opportunities to young 1 /2 G al. 49 day and Friday: 124:80 Wednet-' and computer science (B.M.D). engineers, helping to build the fastest growing major day and Thursday 887-7183. P. R. M a 1lo ry and Company, gineering and industrial admin­ OPEN SUNDAYS city In the nation. 11:00 A.M. Till 6:00 P.M. ............................................ .. WHEELS TO fit Triumph TR-4. Inc.: Metallurgy, mechanics and istration (B,M). m aterials science (B.M), elec- C hrysler Corporation: Ac­ Our starting salary is $776 a month. In addition to ex­ Michigan1s Largest URtrs Wire or disk, in good condition, tric a l and mechanical engineer- counting and financial adminis­ cellent salary, we offer job rotation and tuition reimburse­ in g , accounting, management and tration (B,M,D), marketing. In­ Phone 482-8410 after 8 p.m. chemical engineering (B). dustrial administration, chemi­ ment. Morning Daily" cal, metallurgical, electrical and 1967 CANADIAN -87.50 each - Proof-Like Also, others. sets 332- C ity of Muskegon Public Schools; Early and later e le - mechanical engineering, chemis­ Arrange with the Placement Office to talk with our engineer­ ing representative who will be on campus SHOPRITE 8581. mentary education, mentally, try, mathematics and physics HOP E . Grand River 3-2/u acoustically and physically (B,M). _____________ Feb. 2 0 . 1968 ■O' Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Monday, February 12, 1968 S o v i e t s a d d w a r a m e n d s # t o b i r t h c o n t r o l p r o p o s a l u n p tb d NATIONS, N .Y . id — A m m prop— 1 bare would have the U.N. General Aeeambly loads, tho United States, Uruguay and Venezuela. But of oil Its members, only Tho Soviet Union introduced a resolution In the General As­ sembly last June demanding that 1V r j -k-1 m . * $ the'Sevlot,Union tried to change Israel pay Egypt, Jordan and * M V dorloro tbqt birth control In fo » motion and motortnlo oro the tho birth control provision. The Syria for war damage. But It right of every fondly. working party's report shows that did not press the proposal. The EToft Declaration on Social tho Soviet delegation suggootad The draft declaration consists lib ' i Program and Development say«, recognizing a family's right only of three separate articles set­ "Each family hao tho right, within "to decide the number a t Its children"—without mentioning ting forth "principles," "objec­ the framework of notional dam» tives" and "means and meth­ \ \ graphic polldee, to Cheknowledge tho knowledge and means to do ods" a t social development. that. and mean* to dacldo the number and spacing of children." The Raman Catholic Church has discouraged birth control by The report also slows that the Soviet Union, supported by Egypt, wants the declaration to say that The provision on birth control Is appended to the principle that the family as the basic unit a t Ik social development requires that society should be strengthened artificial means. The working by all possible means. party which wrote the proposal a country bo compensated for tnrinrfu several countries with tho damages caused by aggres­ The first principle is that all % ' ' big Catholic populations, among sion and "Illegal occupation of persons, regardless of race, sex, them Chile, France, the Neth e» territory by tho aggressor," religion, politics, nationality and similar factors, shall have the right and freedom to enjoy the fruits of social progress and, on Vietnamdebate their part, should contribute to it. ‘ However, he feels that admini­ Other principles favor the im­ (continued fro m page one) mediate elimination of all forms stration decisions have not been of inequality, exploitation, co­ He said that American claims no longer had credibility with the South Vietnamese and a solu­ tion was not possible unless they based onnhe decisions of exports. "While It Is sometimes nec­ essary to basedeclslonsonpollt- lonialism and racismi" "peace­ ful coexistence and cooperation among states irrespective of dif­ Folksingers V * ical reasons, it Is, lamentable The F o lk lo re S o c ie ty presented " S o n g s fo r a W in te r had confidence In our policy that they have been made under ferences in their social system," E v e n in g " F r id a y night In the E r ic k s o n K ova. P e r ­ makers. total national Ignorance, and and "the expansion of national f o r m e r s Include M a r k T a lb a and Ted Strunk, p ic ­ The solution to this, Mark said, without reference to the advice Income and Its equitable distribu­ tured above. State New s photo by Jeff B lyth was to have officials who have of experts." tion." poorly advised the President resign so that a complete change In policy can be made. Æ MÊkIjA "The war must be stopped as soon as possible," he said. "As A C L U p r o t e s t s s u r v e y Martin Luther King said, 'We - , do not honor the dead by swelling information was gathered,and al­ checked the wrong box in the these reports," continues the the ranks.' ” (continued fr o m page one) i though accuracy is requested, the survey as a protest against the ACLU le tte r, "because they in­ Sacks disagreed with the views I I * registration was again conducted form certainty does not rule out survey, thus recording errors. volve universities In the ‘of­ of Ethridge and Mark. "Vietnam The Council of Graduate fensive practice of direct ques­ Is an issue which has to do with via c a r d s which bore student anonymous questionnarles." International peace and security. Tho fate of Southeast Asia identification." "W e are Hot depends on what happens there. present system is more accurate convinced that the The stantial ACLU claims numbers of that "sub­ students" Schools "has urged the U«3. Of­ tioning fice of Education to eliminate racial origin.' " of student regarding V "We wouldn’t accept wars to than an anonymous one would be," unite Germany or Korea because said the letter. they are supposed to be one coun­ The racial survey had devel­ try," he said, "so why should oped from a request by the UJS. 'BrainDrain’ } r f we accept Ho Chi Mlnh's war of Dept, of Health, Education and (continued fr o m page one) tultion and fees and other ex­ power planning. It is opposed 1 liberation?" W elfare for " ra c ia l data essen­ penses, and include legal o r to.our concept of academic fre e ­ split nationally) has helped to Sacks said that he was for tia l to equal opportunity pro­ reduce the problem. Graduate m oral commitments to return dom.’’ peace, but the U.S, must stand gram s." home after the program of study A fter the student finishes his request by the UJ>. Dept, of students are more mature, he by Its commitments. "Com­ Health, Education and Welfare for explained, and have more ties is completed. munism Is a threat to the free world and it mllst be dealt with." ■"racial data essential to equal which commit them to returning students does the Foreign Stu­ has three alternatives. He can to the homelands. studies here, theUniverslty loses Only in the case of sponsored track of him. At that point he NO ONE CAN FIND HMaW H— -«—flw M . opportunity programs," The university’ s policy is not dent Advisor's office try to ln- either go home, apply for im m i­ Aece/vsd i f last June, the, for the South Vietnamese to ac­ had a free cl— ^ sumU*, communication included a mes- to admit foreign undergrarfuSrehaf ^ " c e cept Communism as long as they nWT>. from F , P».*— « • eVfdSr wlth less than junior standing, h is rector of the Office o r C M l and A /s tends to help. student to return to grant status, or undergo an 18- native country. e ra liy ,” said Ben*— Gen- month practical trainlngprogram it- klr * •* TV>* Ad­ ANSWERS FOR ALL "It would be all right to negotiate Rights, which wrote of the need In addition, Michigan State’ s take a stand.” visor’ s office has approximately Even though they are deeply with the NLF, but we must not fo r an "accurate appraisal of the reputation as a school devoted to concerned w ith development, 50 students engaged in such pro­ let them shoot their way to current situation • • . " power." In its letter to the trustees, social service, and its experience in Flshel felt that the biggest the ACLU sajd President Hannah led to a substantial number of problems of development have gram s, but when they finish, its most universities don’t attempt records w ill not Include whether to channel students into particu­ they return home or stay In the OF THE PEOPLE ALL la r areas, Benson indicated, even U.S. problem with Vietnam was that received a memorandum from f o r e i g n students sponsorships OF THE TIME ... though there may be a great need Almost one-half of M S U ’ s no one was aware of the real Llbassi on Aug. 7 , 1967, which being made available for study f o r a skill in a student's home­ foreign students are in agricul­ situation, but everyone con­ enclosed a copy of the Com­ here by governments and philan­ ture, natural science an d busi­ sidered themselves an expert. pliance Report of Institutions of thropic agencies and foundation s. land. These sponsorships pay for a ll "We are reluctant to get in - ness and prospects for their r e ­ "Never have Issues of war and Higher Learning (under T itle V I turning home a r e improving, peace been argued before such of the C ivil Rights Act of 1964). o r part of a student's travel, vo^ve^* be continued, in man- Benson feels. national Ignorance." Llbassi requested the Uni­ After the debate, Flshel said versity complete and return the BUT SPARTACUSS, Johnson had done everything pos­ report by Nov. 15, with notifica­ W hy engineerin g students graduate to Lockheed. sible to keep out of the war and tion that such data would be re­ now that he was in It, he was quested annually in the future. doing everything possible to end it. " T h e Compliance Report,” states the A CLU, "asks how the Progress is a matter of degrees. But, that's only the beginning. At Lockheed Missiles and Space Company, we're working on wideworld. . . otherworld. . . upperworld. . . and subworld projects. □ We're pretty high on space. . .we've got Agena and other TheStateNews’ New EARN YOUR M A S T E R 'S D EG R EE extremely advanced programs to prove it. And, when it comes to ballistic missiles, Polaris and Poseidon show an arc of triumph. We think deeply, to o . . . consider our deep submergence vehicles, tor example. And, just to show you our feet are solidly 'Answer All-HelpAll’ on the ground, we re working on advanced land vehicles. Information? Business, OR PhD W H ILE YOU W O RK government and industry get it out of our systems. LMSC has been in the s e a . .. on land . .. in the a ir. . . in space. . . and now, we’re com­ ServiceIsCoiningIn ing to your campus. We'd like to talk to you about coming to LMSC. Contact your place­ ment office for an appointment. Our interview team will be on campus February 19. Move up to Lockheed.. .or move over for those who do. □ If an interview is incon­ TwoWeeksToGive venient at this time, write to-. Mr. R. C. Birdsall, Professional Placement Manager, PO Box 504, Sunnyvale, California 94088. LMSC is an equal opportunity employer. L O C K H E E D It AGoodTry. M IS S IL E S S s m s e s C O M P A N Y AI,SOUPOlYlSIONOSLOCANEKOAimCAAFTCORRORATION Q. How do I fin d someone who can answ er m y questions (not the ones fro m m ath 109 hom ew ork), Help me solve m y big p rob le m s (S o rry we can’ t get you a date w ith thelblonde M O T O R O L A in yo ur h um anities s e c tio n s , and show me the best way th ro u m re d IN © d J M IL P H O E N IX tape. ' Motorola offers the student et the BS or MS level en op* portunity to edvence his career end educetion concurrently. THE ANSWER: Work ana achieve a Master’s or PhD Degree In an environ­ ment of constant challenge and tremendous growth. C ALL THEENGINEERINGTRAININOPROGRAM Open to BS or MS graduates in Electrical Engineering, Chemical Engineering or Physics with a B average or better. While pursuing an MS or PhD degree at Arizona State Uni­ versity each trainee is placed in a rotational program cov­ ering four engineering activities at Motorola. THEMARKETINGTRAININGPROGRAM Open to BS graduates in Electrical Engineering or Physics with a B-averege or better. Marketing trainees may work toward an MBA or an MS or PhD degree. Rotational assign­ ments are in the marketing area. Direct Ptocement at all Oegree Lavala far. .. o Electrical Engineers a Organic & Physical Chemists a Physicists o Chemical Engineers ■ Metallurgists la ReaearehandOewlepmeiit QuaMyControl, MsriMfng, andProduction. If you are unavailable for an interview at this time write directly to: Director ef Calao» Relation». Motorola Ine.. Semiconductor Products Division. S008 East McDowell. Phoenta, Arisene SSOOS. 355-4560 M O TO R O LAI IN O . B o m l o o n d u e f o r W G d m f s W v f s to n A new State N e w t w eekly fe a tu re .