Friday The human knee ... M IC H IG A N C lo u d y . . . . . . is a |olnt and not an e n te r- STATI . . . with a high tem p e ratu re In the m id 20s. Chance of light taln m e n t. - - P e r c y Hammond U N IV E R S IT Y snow tonight with a low o f 15 degrees. V o l. 60 N u m ber 128 E a s t L a n s in g , M ic h ig a n F e b ru a ry 16, 1968 10c C o m m i t t e e s a y s l a c k o f f u n d s p r e v e n t s l o n g e r L i b r a r y h o u r s By P H Y L L IS Z IM B L E R been allocated, so there is no money in back on the shelves. Hughes said. The " I really feel extended hours serve State News Staff W riter the budget to pay for staff for extended committee felt that it would be better to the needs of a relatively small number hours." improve the regular functions of the li­ of students." he said. "There are not The Faculty Library Committee de­ Hughes added that the idea of extend­ brary at this time than to extend hours. really funds for this in lieu of other cided Wednesday that a lack of funds ing hours would be considered again "The committee felt that they would Library needs now." would prevent the Library from extending spring term when the budget is planned rather see additional people being hired The experimental period extending its hours during this academic year. for next year during the day to get the books back on Library closing hours to 1 p.m. was Charles Hughes, chairman of the com­ The Library is under-staffed now. the shelves." Hughes said, "rather than held from Nov. 27 to Dec. 6. All Li­ mittee and director of the African creating a delay in just getting books hire additional staff for extended hours." brary facilities were available during Studies Center, said. the additional hours. An average of 647 The committee made its decision after students left the Library after 11 p.m. hearing a report from Richard E. Chapin, each night. director of libraries, on the results of Chapin told the committee that after the experimental extended hours held at the end of fall term and on the present M a y ’s r e q u e s t fo r le a v e the renovations of the Library are com­ pleted spring term, there is a possibil­ financial situation of the Library. ity of arranging for some type of li­ "The problem is one of allocation of brary study facilities for students using scarce resources." Hughes said. "A ll a p p r o v e d b y T ru stees only their own materials after 11 p.m. the money for staff for this year has White labeled the leave "the beginning "We have to consider if it is the proper use of the Library to be a study hall." Athletic probe By JIM SCHAEFER of a phase out for M ay." Hughes said. "The committee suggested P ictu red (left to rig h t) a re John Fuzak, chairm an of the A thletic State News Staff W riter Harlan had objected to granting the to the chairman of the Student Library Council and Big Ten conference re p res en tativ e; B urt Sm ith, as­ A request for a five month sabbatigal leave, which carries a full salary for Committee that her committee try lo­ s istan t athletic d ire c to r, B iggie Munn, athletic d ire c to r. The Race survey leave by Philip .J May. vice president for business and finance, was approved May. but said he "bowed to the judgment of my colleagues who are rewarding cating other late studying opportunities on campus besides Berkey and Bessey th re e have been Investigating the MSU athletic departm ent as a re s u lt of charges made by the M ichigan D aily newspaper concern­ at the M SI' Board of Trustees Thurs­ him for making a mistake ." (please turn to back page) day. ing Illeg a l aid to ath letes. State News Photo by Jim Mead Harlan and White have led the attack will exclude The nature of the leave, as stated in the agenda of the on May for what they allege to be a conflict of his University and outside Board, was to study interests. business m a n- In April, they attempted to censure student names aggment at other Universities. May. but could .not gain enough votes. Instead, the Board of Trustees passed A th letic D ep t, c h a r g e s By J IM G R A N E L L l No other mention a mild resolution alerting University State News Staff W riter was made at the administrators to possible criticism meeting of the ac­ of their outside activities. , A survey of race, color or national tion. < On Nov. 8. Rep. Jack Faxon. D- origin that identifies students by name or student number w ill be discontinued next year, the Office of the Registrar an­ In comments later Thursday afternoon, tlie two trustees who Detroit. asked Atty. Gen. Kelley to rule on whether the private dealings of May and Hannah violated Frank D a ily w ith Irresp o n sib ility ’ nounced Thursday. had sought May's the state's conflict of interest law In a written statement. Horace C. King, resignation s i n c e MAY B y JOE M ITC H foot ball player last Thursday and F ri­ you in working and obtaining your most passed in July. 1966. registrar, said that the decision was based State News Sports Editor day and that it was during this time wanted goals." early April—C. Allen Harlan. D-Southfield Kelley's decision is still pending in on a revised compliance form from the Block reported incidents that appeared Fuzak said that he talked to M ittel­ and C lair White. D-Bay C ity-w ere pessi­ the case, and further ambiguity w ill be I'.S. Office of Education. MSU athletic officials have uncovered to show violation of Big Ten rules bv berg about Block's visit at MSU and mistic about May s chances of returning. The Lansing branch of the American Civil suhterfuge by |he Michigan Daily in an MSU said Block baited Mittelberg with ques­ In a telephone interview also on Liberties Union -A C L t— had sent a (please tu rn to back page) investigation of the alleged illegal aid Fuzak said that Vic Mittelberg. Skokie. tions to obtain any information on illegal Thursday afteroon. May said he had letter to all members of the M SI' Board charges made by the student newspaper I l l . freshman, acted as a guest for aid. wanted to take the sabbatical for a of Trustees Feb. 5. protesting the re­ at the University of Michigan. Block went through Mittelberg s per­ long time. Block in Case (fall and that all the quest for student identification on the John Fuzak. M Sl"s Big Ten repre­ racial survey. The ACLU said the survey I l l have the chance to look at what we've been doing, and at similar ENROLLM ENT M -R sentative and chairman of the Athletic incidents except one in the Daily story referred to Mittelberg. sonal belongings while Mittelberg was in class. Fuzak said, and that it was posed several civil liberties problems. Council said Thursday that Joel Block, Block reported that in a letter dated problems of other institutions." said at this time when Block found the let­ " It was considered appropriate to E arly enrollment continues today for whose copyrighted story appeared on May. March 6. 1967. MSU's offensive back- ter from Dorow. delay any statement from the Office of students with last names starting with the front page of the Daily last Sun­ May indicated he intended to return field coach A1 Dorow wrote i\ pros- Mittelberg told Fuzak that Block ate the Registrar until the Board of Trustees M through R in the northwest entrance of day. used "irresponsible and under- in September at the end of the leave. pective football player that T h e op- in the dormitory's cafeteria without had an opportunity to review the ACCC the Men's I.M . Bldg. between 8 a.m. and handed'means to make the alleged which is effective March I portunity for a summer job is yours charge and once he followed M ittel­ communication at their meeting todav- 4:31) p.m. charges against M S I’ . President Hannah Thursday after­ plus MSU will do anything in its power berg to a barber shop to see it he Thursdav." King said. Student identification c a r d s are re­ Fuzak said that the investigation, noon termed the assignment a "routine toassist you in working." would pay for the haircut or get it However, no action on the letter was quired for entrance. conducted by himself. Athletic Director sabbatical leave." parallel to that re­ Fuzak said the complete phrasing free. taken at the board meeting. Students unable to complete a regis­ Biggie Munn and Assistant Athletic ceived by faculty members. tration section request form may do so on of the letter was not printed and in­ "This is just an example to show The registrar received a revised Director Burt Smith, found that Block Hannah emphasized that May would stead it should have read MSU the lack of integrity and the under­ copy of the compliance form from the Monday. was a guest of a Spartan freshman be available for consultation on major will do anything in its power Mo assist handness this Daily reporter used to federal government Jan. 16. Original ____________ C__ _____ !____ fe______ items in the University’s business. make these charges." Fuzak said. instructions concerning racial identi­ "He's the only fellow who can rep­ "It was done irresponsibly to put the fication and financial aid stated that resent the University. said Hannah, University in a position to prove its "exact data for the 1968-69 school year lie indicated that a stand-in would be own innocence." w ill be expected." selected on a temporary basis lor May. Block alleged that athletes receive These instructions were rewritten. King said, to read "the manner of col­ lecting the information is left to the discretion of the institution provided and this person would perform only routine tasks. H e -M a y -is one of the most ef­ W o r k e r 's P a rty c a n d i d a t e grill passes for fate night snacks and Sunday night dinners and that one freshman football player-turned wrestler fective university business officers could not receive any more passes the system established results in rea­ in the nation." said Hannah. "In so that he would cut down on his weight a tta ck s Jo h n s o n p o licies sonably accurate data." University affairs, he's superb." Fuzak said that again Block was "The decision was immediately m ade- Hannah said May's leave would not referring to Mittelberg. but Mittelberg on Jan. 16 ;- that M S I’ will not conduct be "unbroken." as the vice president told him he denied ever getting passes a survey of race or color or national would have to come back for legis­ By DAN BRANDON tective agency for private American in­ that "there are millions on their side who and that he was trying to cut down on origin next year that identifies students lative hearings, and two to three weeks State News Staff W riter vestments around the world. want them out of there." his weight. by their name or student number." King of work on the budget. He is active in the anti-war movement Halstead attributed the urban crisis to Block's charges that Football Coach said. "And he'll always be at the other Fred Halstead, the Socialist Workers and said that the troops should be informed the existence of dishonest businessmen Duffv Daugherty held a banquet in (please turn to back page) end of a telephone." said Hannah Party presidential candidate, said Thurs­ in the black ghettos, poor police-commu­ nity relations, and the lack of low rent (please turn to back page) day that the troops in Vietnam are protect­ ing the interests of a small minority of housing "very rich men who are making money in He spoke of a chain super market in tne Southeast Asia. Puerto Rican ghetto of New York City where he used to live which charged higher V a n d e n b u r g quits staff, "When Johnson says send our boys to Vietnam, he means send them to die for somebody else s money." Halstead told a prices than in other parts of the city. They do it because they can get away group of about 150 students. with it. That's one reason they get a rock fipcaking as part of the Great Issues pro­ through their window once in a while." o ffers no ex p la n a tio n gram in conjunction with Choice 68. Hal­ stead said that American fear of Com­ munism is based on a myth. Halstead said He said that private enterprise doesn't build low rent housing because there is no By W ESLEY HILLS What does a Communist look like?" profit in it and that Johnson’s policy for on University business - it was made State News Staff W riter Halstead asked. " It's an abstraction A public housing is wholly inadequate. certain he never got a contract unless he complete and thorough myth. If you're "We need a massive move to public low Vincent I. Vandenburg. construction bid lowest - this was to protect him afraid of Communists, you have to worry rent housing on the scale of what we are superintendent for M S I' and President and me. " Hannah said. about people like m e." he said. spending on the w ar in Vietnam. Hal­ Hannah's brother-in-law resigned, on On Feb. 1. 1964. Vandenburg was first "You don't stop ideology with bullets." stead said. February 5. When asked the reason for appointed to the staff of MSU and on Halstead said. "This war is creating more "Johnson says he w ill end the problem h is . resignation. Vandenburg would not July 1. 1966. he became construction Communists in this country that I could by giving the police more clubs and hiring comment because. " I am no longer a f­ superintendent. in 30 years of agitation." more narcotics agents. When you get a filiated with the University." On January 26. 1968. the State News learned of the Vandenburg Halstead said that although he does not (please tu rn to back page) Theodore B. Simon, director of M S U ’s F R E D H A LS T E A D Investment Corp. agree, the draft is necessary because the physical plant, said. "his--Vandenburg's- .American m ilitary is being used as a pro­ was just a temporary assignment and (please turn to back page) construction has slowed down so we're cutting back on our staff." Vandenburg first became involved in SN has new, versatile look the conflict-of-interest controversy at | T h e State News has taken on a new is capable of reading any tape at the rate of MSU on Nov. 17. 1967. when it was learned physical appearance starting in today's 500 characters per second and reproducing that he did construction for MSU between paper with the use of a Photon 713 Text- 45 average newspaper lines per minute. 1950-1956 totaling $945.000 masier photo composition. Previous Justow ritfrs could reproduce Vandenburg was the president of the The Photon w ill set stories in eight dif­ the type at the rate of 16 lines per minute. Vandenburg Construction Co. and Julia ferent type sizes and eight different type The State News, now the largest morn­ H. Vandenburg. Hannah's sister, was the styles. ing daily newspaper in Michigan, is the vice-president and secretary. The varied type styles « ill «11«» m orie*. only collegiate publication in the country "As far as I know. he--Vandenburg~ I>nraiinii>hs or sentences to be -<‘i like this. that utilizes the Photon’s versatility. never did a jotufor this institution." Han­ t> nah said. Type sizes that can be set on the Photon Editorial pages and classified advertis­ “ I had no interest in the Vandenburg Co. when he --Vandenburg--was bidding N355-4560. u vary from seven to 36 point. The Photon 713 computerized control unit ing pages have been set with the Photon for the past two weeks. 713 Textmaster 2 Michigan State News, E ast Lansing, Michigan Friday, February 16, 1968 CRO W NKD F IB . 2 4 U . S . b o m b i n g e r r c j r Ten M SU coed s f l e a v e s o v e r 4 0 d e a d SAIGON AP -- More than The A ir Force said five of the richest farm land in V iet­ compete for crow n 4o persons were killed Tues­ the eight-engine jet bombers nam. was marked by huge cra­ Ten MSU coeds have been selected for the finals of the day when high-flying B52 conducted the afternoon raid ters that pitted paddy fields and annual Miss MSU contest, first step toward the Miss - Stratofortresses mistakenly and about half of their 750- a secondary road. Some of the Michigan and Miss America beauty pageants. dropped 50 tons of bombs out­ pound bombs fell outside the craters were within 50 yards The girls w ill be judged in evening gowns and bathing side a target zone only 10.5 target area but 'well within of a government m ilitary out­ suits, for talent and poise. miles north of Saigon, the l T.S. the one kilometer safety zone post. The winner w ill be crowned on Feb. 24, by last year's Air Force announced Thurs­ designated each time a target winner, Miss Patty Burnette. day. is approved." A kilometer is Prizes to the new Miss MSU consist of scholarship The spokesman said 42 to 44 persons died and from 57 to about three-fifths of a mile. In addition to the one kilo­ N. Viets get money, a trophy, and entry in the annual Miss Michigan pageant in June. 50 were injured in the raid meter safety zone. Air Force Tickets for the Miss MSU contest may be purchased that was the closest to Saigon in the war. It was the first sources said each B52 target must be surrounded by a three air support at the Union ticket office. The ten MSU coeds who w ill compete for tire title of such error attributed to the kilometer area cleared of all Miss M S I on Feb. 24 are (left to right! Elizabeth Howe, B.">2s that usually execute their K HK SANH. Vietnam AP - friendly forces Muskegon sophomore: Linda Crumb. Birmingham sopho­ high-altitude saturation raids American Marines garrisoning The target restrictions ap­ more: Nancy Raisanen. Detroit sophomore: Juliet Simon, in less populous areas. Klie Sanh have been advised parently were not observed in Ferndale junior: Molly Sapp. St. Johns junior: Kristen The Air Force did not in­ that North Vietnamese regu­ the strike. The district town of Powell, Okemos junior: (¿ail. Neimeyer, Bloomfield Hills dicate who the killed and in­ lars in the area, known to have Lai Thieu was within three freshman; M arcia Weber. Port Clinton. Ohio, sophomore; jured were. Other reports said some tanks, possibly could be kilometers of the southern and Kathy Hwass. Short Hills. N.J.. junior. Missing from supported by aircraft in the women and children were edge of the target area and the picture is Susan Jaeobstein, Detroit freshman. among them and it was pre­ sumed the casualties included • several government were within the one kilometer posts awaiting showdown battle The word came to Col. David Miss MSU aspirants civ ilians. Lownds' command post from a safety zone. The target was a suspected higher I ’ .S. headquarters at a The Air Force spokesman concentration of Communist troops alongside the Saigon said the entire target area had been declared free of friendly time when I S. jet squadrons were concentrating much of their efforts over North V iet­ 'W HYPOT?’ SYMPOSIUM River. Clearance lor the raid forces and ^civilians before hdd come from the Vietnamese nam to attacks on enemy air the bombing. bases. commander of the Saigon m ili­ tary district and the deputy senior American adviser for The target area was adjacent to what the Air Force de­ scribed as a "rapid access Most prominently mentioned is the old Russian twin-jet IL28. the Beagle. North Vietnam is M a r i j u a n a s e r v e s a s 'r e l e a s e ’ tin' 3rd Corps area. route to Tan Son Nhut a ir­ known lo have half a dozen ol By F R E D SHERWOOD Dr. Thomas Tierney of the ctiing bad trips under marijuana because it is a threat to a con­ field and Saigon, on which these craft, relatively long State News Staff W riter Detroit Psychiatric Institute just as with LSD." tinuing Establishment. Adults there had been heavy fighting JO„i yvHWtuj Florist “ in the past two days. " The seriously wounded were ranged. Marijuana usually does not The North Vietnamese troops have serious side effects and around Khe Sanh are regarded can serve as a social stimulant, said. "M arijuana is definitely not a narcotic. Il is not ad­ dictive. but habituating. Its Tierney said the results of the use of marijuana can vary according to the user's mental fear that adolescents will never stop rebelling "The Establishment is con­ 10 % off moved to hospitals in Lai Thieu by Marine intelligence officers a Detroit psychiatrist said Wed­ lethal dosage is not known, and "set" and the "setting" in cash value fo r students & faculty and Saigon. cerned with the continuity of as the best equipped enemy nesday in the symposium. "Why there is no physical reaction which he takes the drug. society." he said. "Thé use 809 E . M IC H . A V E ., LANS. The target area, in some of forces in the war. P o t ’" to withdrawal." He spoke at The set' is the individual- of marijuana is a problem be­ Fee Hall as part of the Social Science series sponsored jointly his personality, past experi­ ences. and what he is expecting. " ¥ cause it suggests that those in­ volved in the drug ga n w tn lf ( ^ Cravat Shop The State News, the student newspaper at Michigan State (/Diver­ sity. is published every class day throughout the year with special Welcome Week and Orientation issues in June and September. Sub­ by the College Sciences and Fee. of Tierney said that shortly Social Tierney said. "The prim ary effect of LSD is what the per­ son is led to believe he is go­ % never come out of it . " Apparently there is at least some use of marijuana outside ° " Knit Mock Turtlenecks scription rates are $14 per year. after inhalation of marijuana smoke the user may experience ing to experience. The same thing is true with 'pot'." "adolescent" circles which can­ Member Associated Press. In i ted Press International. Inland not be classified neatly into by CAMPUS Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Michigan Press Association. Michigan Collegiate Press Association. I nited "release of tension, passive­ He added that a recent Uni­ one of Manning's games. T ier­ ness and alteration in thinking, versity of Michigan study con­ ney said that outside of o bond the adolescent and drug games Police entered his room with FEBRUARY 16-24 overlap, such as long hair, a search warrant at 8 p.m. They beads and colorful clothes " allegedly found marijuana in a Manning said that marijuana plastic container in Sprecher s All-CampusTalent Show(Acts) poses such a great problem today coat pocket. 8p.m., Tonight, UnionBallroom M a r t in 5 0 < A d m is s io n SATURDAY, FEB. 17 TUESDAY, FEB. 20 M a r ie t t a Flicker Festival Thieves’ Market "When Comedy Was King" 7:30 to 10:30 8 p.m., Union Ballroom, 250 adm. Union Ballroom SUNDAY, FEB. 18 WEDNESDAY, FEB. 21 '/2 Price on Billiards & Bowling Flicker Festival 2 to 5 p.m. Laurel & Hardy • B illiards- L im it one table . per coupon 8 p.m., Union Ballroom, 250 adm. • Bowling - You bowl at regular prices, your date SATURDAY, FEB. 24 bowls F ree (L im it 3 lines) Flicker Festival Miss MSU Pageant 8 p.m., Union Ballroom B I G T IM E Charlie Chaplin Shorts 6:30 p.m., Union Ballroom, 250 adm. $1.00 Adults. 500 Children o perato rs! Interviews at campus engineering Tickets at Union Ticket Office, and at the Door Tonight’sthe night at office on FEB. 19 , 2 0 " T h e O rla n d o , F lo rid a , d iv isio n o f th e M a rtin M a r ie tta C o rp o ra tio n is c u rre n tly p ro d u c in g UNION BOARD WEEK COUPON I I P IZ Z A S P R IN T , P E R S H IN G , W A L L E Y E , S H IL L E L A G H , UNION BOARD WEEK COUPON S A M -D , a n d A G M -1 2 m is s ile system s. A n e x te n s iv e for Sunday, February 18, 1968 I I O R IO I for Sunday, February 18, 1968 b a c k lo g O f vita l d e fe n s e c o n tra c ts p ro v id e s I I S o u th C e d a r a t P e n n s y lv a n ia s ta b ility an d p ro fe s s io n a l g ro w th o p p o rtu n ity ." B0WLIN6 STUBY-BREAK (Just north of 1-96 expressway) If yo u a re u n a b le to s c h e d u le an from 2 to 5 p.m. ! HALF-PRICE ON ALL BILLIARDS in te rv ie w , p le a s e se n d re s u m e d ire c tly « i from 2 to 5 p.m. You bowl at die regular price, your W to: DIRECTOR OF COLLEGE RELATIONS date bowls FREEH! i i I MARTIN MARIETTA CORPORATION (L im it of 3 lines) with Coupon . P.O. BOX 5837, ORLANDO, FLORIDA 32805 • « (L im it 1 coupon per b illiard table) L im it on coupon one/couple on above dates and tim e i i I Phone: 393-3250 2 M 4 V r# A f J I M J f l f f m « M artin Marietta is an equal opportunity employer. Michigan State News, E ast Lansing, Michigan X Friday, February 16, 1968 3 N E W S J o rd a n c e a s e -fire re q u e s t s u m m a r y e n d s M id d le E ast fig h tin g A capsule*. lu m m a r y o f tho d a y 's avants fro m By T H E ASSOCIATED PRESS scrambled for cover and were not injured, sources said. C a m p u s C e n te r o u r w ir e s e rv ic e s . Jordan claimed its anti-aircraft batteries Israeli je t fighter-bombers roared along the Jordan River truce line, bombing and strafing shot down six Israeli jets, but the A ir Force Jordanian positions for seven hours Thursday command in Tel Aviv denied this. night, before a cease-fire ended the fiercest A series of clashes during the week preceded fighting in the Middle East since the six- Thursday's full-scale battles. Israel claims " I don’t think you can day war in June. the root of the flareups is the Arab E l Fatah avert a bad summer . Kol Israel, the Tel Aviv radio, said fighting terrorist organization and says Jordan aids its men with equipment, arms and assistance in We'll have a bad sum­ stopped after Jordan requested a cease-fire infiltrating into the occupied west bank of the at 11 p.m. It followed an Amman radio call m er. We’ll have several for blood donations and an emergency session Jordan River. bad s u m m e r s P r e s i ­ of the kingdom's supreme defense council. Jerusalem often has warned Jordan to halt At the fighting's height, an Israeli spokes­ the alleged aid. but an Israeli Defense Ministry dent Johnson. man said: "Both sides are using everything spokesman said Thursday. " It would seem they have." King Hussein is attempting to demonstrate Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Dayan later his alignment with the Arab world by keeping told the nation in a broadcast he hoped the the border hot . " fighting would "teach Jordan that a cease-fire Fighting sputtered early Thursday morning, International N ew s is a cease-fire and it applies to both Israel and the Israelis said, when Jordanian gunners fired Jordan." 150 artillery rounds in the Kibbutz K far Ruppin • T H E U.S. A IR F O R CE announced that high-flying Dayan Thursday cancelled a scheduled trip and Ma oz Havyim in the Beisan Valley. The B52 Stratofortresses mistakenly dropped 30 tons of bombs to the United States because of the outbreak. front then quieted down before erupting just outside a target zone only 10.5 miles north of Saigon Combat spread over a 60-mile area from the after noon. killing more than 40 persons. See page 2. Sea of Galilee south to Jericho. The ancient Israeli arm y spokesman said the fighting biblical city, spared during the June war. came opened when Jordanian troops lobbed mortar ^ B R ITISH SOURCES reported that Mai Van Bo. Ha­ under Jordanian fire at nightfall, a Tel Aviv shells at collective farms noi's top diplomat in Europe, told U .N . Secretary U Thant communique reported. in Paris that North Vietnam is standing firm in rejecting Dayan and Chief of Staff M aj. Gen. Haim A new outbreak then flared to the north and President Johnson's terms for peace talks. See page 13. Bar-Lev were caught on an inspection trip to the Israeli arm y said both artillery and tanks the Gesher kibbutz during the shelling, but were engaged in the exchanges. A U.S. M A R IN E S edged about 200 yards closer to Communist positions within Hue s walled Citadel behind a curtain of bombs and shells laid down by jet fighters. Navy guns and land-based artillery. 0 IS R A E L I AND JO R D A N IA N forces battled into the night along the Jordan R iver ceasefire line in the fiercest fighting since the Middle East war ended in June. •Nr See page 3. £ A M E R IC A N M A R IN E S garrisoning Khe Sanh have been advised that North Vietnamese regulars in the area, « known to have some tanks, possibly could be supported by aircraft in the awaiting showdown battle. See page 2. N a tion a l N e w s P AFL-CIO LEA D ER S meeting in M iam i Beach charged that millions of public workers ranging from gar­ bage men to school teachers are at the mercy of "bungling bureaucrats" and "antilabor" politicians because of puni­ tive state labor laws. See page 13. P FO R TY PERSONS W E R E arrested after Negro dem­ onstrators in Social Circle. Ga.. sprawled in front of buses to protest what they termed deplorable school conditions. See page 13. * P£. - Music K/ a D is c jo c k c y h A MASSIVE IN D U S T R Y effort to help avert future riots in Detroit appears to be backfiring as hundreds-pos- siblv thousands-of jobless from out of state come to the kALSO T H IS S K A fM S fiW W *W P T O N E W n « - » » M city seeking work. See page 13. If you are How about interested in team ing up with the YOU. . . here is king of the road? required International Harvester. W e take a back seat to nobody. W e’re the w orld’s largest producer of heavy-duty trucks. One out of every th ree on th e road today is an International. Roll w ith us. W e’re rolling in high g ear in fa rm and construction eq uip m en t, too. There will be another three billion m ouths to feed in this world in your tim e. And by the tim e you reach m iddle age, the new construction will d w arf today’s most am bitious projects. It’s a m ush­ room ing world, with International H arvester righ t on top of it. O ur biggest challenge for tom orrow is to provide an ever-increasing n u m b er of m achines to m eet the w orld’s increasing dem ands for basic m echanical power. If you’re graduating now, you couldn’t have picked a b e tte r tim e to join us. Ask your College P lacem ent O ffice m ore about us. HI I n t e r n a t i o n a l H a r v e s t e r p u t s p o w e r in y o u r h a n d s AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER One of these days YOU w ill be multiplied by a wife and fam ily. think It's tim e to a b o u t protection NOW , not la te r. s h a p e o f th e tim es NOW . . . you can benefit from sharply reduced pre­ miums to h e lp you get started during th e firs t . . • the p a n t d ress three years. P r e s e n tin g tw o w ays to w ear th e s e g re a t new fu n NOW . . . you benefit from f a s h io n s . As a s h ift d iv id e d , or c l e v e r l y c o n c e a le d low er Insurance c o s ts b e c a u s e you a re a pre­ under a flip of a s k ir t. They lo o k l i k e d r e s s e s , ferred risk. go lik e d re s s e s . . . and p la y lik e p a n ts . C o m e see NOW . . . you can get a ll o u r s u m m e r c o lo r e d c o lle c tio n . the facts from your Col­ lege L ife representative. A. A g le n -lik e p a tte rn e d c h e c k w h e e ls o n th e s c e n e NOW . . . you should know in a s le e v e le s s p a n ts h ift w ith p re te n d p o c k e t d e ta il, about th e BENEFACTOR . . . the policy planned d e m u re p e te r pan c o lla r and b e lt to w ear o r n o t. exclusively fo r c o l l e g e N o - ir o n c o t t o n - p o ly e s te r . 5 - 13. 15. 9 8 . men. A little tim e now can pay B . A ll c o tto n c u lo tte s h ift w ith ro u n d e d n e c k lin e off in a lifetim e of satis­ and d ro p p e d w a is tlin e . A s le e v e le s s s e n s a t io n fo r faction. young a c tiv e s in a flo w e r pow er p r in t. J u n io r DICK BERRY s iz e s 5 to 1 3 . 12. 9 8 . C O L L E G E L IF E INS. 220 A L B E R T S T . ( ll/CI S C K M 'h lH t: I NT/. I.VSf.Yf; E A S T LA N S IN G 3 3 2 -4 2 3 6 Representing the only Com­ pany that sells exclusively to Shop East tansinf Saturday 9:30 to 5:30 coUegemen. M IC H IG A N J a m e s It. S p a n io lo E ric P in n in , e x e c u t iv e e d i t o r e d ito r -in -c h ie f l.n ic r e n c e U e r n e r , m a n a g in g e d i t o r H obby S od en , cam p u s ed ito r S T A T E N E W S S u san C .o m er fo rd a d v ertisin g m n n n g er E d u a r d I. H ritl, e d i t o r i a l e d i t o r J o e M ilch, s p o r ts e d i t o r U N IV E R S IT Y Flvo~tlma recipient of the Pacemaker award for outstanding journalism Frldsy Morning, Fsbrutry 16, 1968 EDITORIALS B a la n ce o f fre e d o m in g ra d e s But the proposal does seem to Studying for a grade--it should incorporate the better points of equal studying to learn. “ both worlds;” it neither ad­ Grades are a means of distin­ heres to a rigid system nor leaps guishing among students in their blindly into the unknown. academic endeavors, of recog­ For a university the size of nizing outstanding achieve­ Michigan State, the proposal re­ ment, of transferring and ad­ flects a conservative approach mitting, of diagnosing apti­ to liberalism, a flexibility de­ tudes in specific areas and of spite size and, indeed, a com­ motivating-all points made in away from “ i n t e r e s t i n g ” prehensive reports on unconven­ mendable experiment. the proposed grading system re­ courses outside their field of tional grading systems led the “77ie University always must vision released Tuesday. But at times studying be­ study for fear of a low grade group to advise against elimina­ strive to strike that balance be­ comes a mechanical process endangering their grade point tion of all grades. tween maximum freedom and evolved only to meet the re­ average (GPA). Instead the EPC approved a necessary order which best pro­ quirements of a particular pro­ These points and many more proposal for major innovations motes its basic purposes by pro­ fessor with a particular style were considered by the subcom­ in the MSU grading system. Re­ viding the environment most con­ of grading. And sometimes stu­ mittee of the Educational Poli­ visions would include limited ducive to the manyfaceted activ­ dents find they are aiming for cies Committee (EPC) in pre­ implementation of credit-no ities of research, teaching and that B without concern for what paring the grade revision rec- credit (similar to pass-fail) learning. ” o m m e n d a t i o n s . Commit­ grading allowing for wider —The Academic Freedom Re­ they “ learn.” And sometimes students shy tee findings and lack of com- ranges of course taking without port, Article I. Saaay. You should see a doctor about this. threat from low grades. -The Editors The credit - no credit experi­ E n d in g d r a ft m ess: ment, open only to juniors and seniors, is devoid of averages P O IN T OP V IIW and requires that the quality of work in individual “ Cr-N” a n o t h e r c o n c e r n e d v o ic e courses counts toward satisfying J ^ o t r u s t in a c o u rt-in -h id in g Finally a government agency, neering, mathematics, and nat­ graduation requirements. Un­ Personally, a knowledge of my race's namely a subcommittee of the ural sciences. Even that judg­ acceptable work in the “ Cr-N” EDITO R'S NOTE: Ron Bailey, Claxton, gro cultural endowment and the Negro past history, incomplete as it is. has ignited without further investigation. These schol­ U.S. House Committee on Edu­ ment still lies with the National class would “ yield no grade Ga., junior, is president of M SU ’s chapter ars of history sum m arrilly concluded that in me a desire to contribute meaningfully and no credit. of Blue Key national honorary, member to the world, to America, and especiallv cation, has joined college ad­ Security Council and the Presi­ of the Honors College, and a student in Jus­ nothing of Africa could have possibly re­ to the general welfare of my race as my ministrators, professors, and dent. Also on an experimental and tin M o rrill College. He also is treasurer mained as an influencing factor in the life of Negroes in America. ancestors have done. I sometimes ponder students themselves, in decry­ Without solid guidelines for gradual basis, grading would of the newly-formed M S I' Black Student how many more black Americans could Consequently, this ing the uncertainty of the draft deferments, students contem­ shift from A, B, C, D and F to Alliance. Following is the last of three ar­ conclusion led his­ have contributed to this country had not we ticles Bailey has written on Negro His­ been shackled in chains of slavery and deferment system and particu­ plating graduate study face an 4.5 (exceptional only), 4.0, 3.5, tory Week, currently being observed from torians to a biased relegated to a bare existence on the fringes larly the questionable status of unnecessary uncertainty in such 3.0, down to 0.0. Individual pro­ Feb. 11-18. recording and inter­ of American society. But such nobel efforts pretation of occur­ graduate students. an important decision as gradu­ fessors could follow a 4.0, 3.0, The previous articles have dealt with rences in American in the face of great adversity makes the Negro History Week and several related The special subcommittee ate school attendance. Applica­ 2.0, 1.0 and 0.0 system, but the aspects in a retrospective fashion. Today, history. Black chil­ bountiful fruits of their labors much sweete ,and more cherished than e v e r.,, voted to send a bipartisan letter tions, are down because of the flexibility would exist for the let me diScusS topics of current consider- dren beginning ini­ equivalent of -f’s and -’s. The ation-the effects of the past treatment tial studies in Amer­ The results of restoring the neglected to President Johnson appealing ’ I fear drafted shortly ican history not only facts of history w ill be of benefit to Amer­ given Negro history and the correction of for some type of action on the* after beginning graduate study. gap from grade level to grade get the erroneous ica. Only those who know the exact facts present conditions. deferment of students. Report­ From the universities’ point level would not be so large. The systematic suppression of facts impression that they of history can understand fully the prob­ edly, the letter did not specify of view, planning for the educa­ The system w ill also sim pli­ about the past of Negroes has been quite had no past before lems of the past, and aid in understanding detrimental to America for it has resulted slavery, but are con­ the present. The social ills of America what action, but requested a tion of future graduate students fy some of the converting and vinced that their B A IL E Y today are rooted both in problems of the in the reliance on convenient stereotypes clarification of the regulations is substantially hampered. reconverting now employed in and generalizations in race relations. The history in this country is not worth the past and in complexities of the present. for graduate students. Without definitive guidelines preparing final grades. "mvth of the Negro past" is undoubtedly trouble it takes to learn of it. The results ■ To promote an appreciation of the Ne­ of this for the Negro have been tragic., gro's past, to encourage an understanding The present policy of drafting on who w ill be deferred, the na­ T h e r e w ill be a certain one of the main buttresses of racial preju­ Generations of black youth-potential dices in this country. It rationalizes dis­ of his present status, and to enrich the the oldest eligible first, with no tion’s universities and individ­ amount of problems and com­ crimination. affects the outcome of policy scholars, teachers, businessmen all-h ave promise of the future" should indeed be deferment for graduate students, uals considering graduate study plaints about any change in the where blacks are concerned, and was chief­ been irrevocably scarred by the psycholog­ the goals of every American. system, just as there are feel­ ical manifestations of a history-less past An important lesson in Negro history poses a notable danger for continue to suffer. Immediate ly responsible for the role that Negroes and swept into the abyss of nobodyness. study is that many of today's events and American education. The Na­ action by the National Security ings of injustice concerning the were assigned by earlier historians. These What. then, is to be done to correct these the black social thought which shapes historians were content to relv on assump­ tional Security Council has been Council and the President is im­ present process. This is to be tion rather than fact. Generations of Amer­ conditions? them are really revivals of earlier tradi­ charged to compile a list of oc­ perative. expected, acknowledged and icans have been just as content to repeat Leadership from education tions. I am reminded particularly of the parallel between the current means-ends cupations and graduate pro­ -The Editors analyzed. these unproven propositions concerning Ne- debate in the black struggle for human It falls upon American education, and grams which should be deferred rightfully so. to take a leadership role in rights and the ideological conflict which existed between Booker T. Washington in the national interest. But for JO SEPH Al SOP removing" the scars that have resulted and W. E. B. DuBois. The present stress more than seven months, since Negro history is not a thing apart, but an on black togetherness" is very sim ilar area of specialization dealing with inter­ the last draft law was passed actions between the Negro and the vari­ to the stress on racial solidarity and coop­ in June, no list has been pub­ eration over a hundred years ago. ous other peoples and institutions in Am er­ The many resolutions on self-help passed lished. ican life. Like all history. Negro history this summer at the National Conference is an enormous body of knowledge requir­ Among those testifying be­ ing both systematic and continuous study on Black Power in Newark are almost fore the subcommittee was Na­ L B J -D a le y : E le p h a n tin e a x is using all of the methodological resources identical to those passed by the Afro- American League in 1890. But one is cap­ than M. Pusey, president of Har­ of the discipline. able of learning from Negro history that vard University, who said that The approach adopted by educators and as far as black self-help, racial solidarity, scholars must of urgent necessity be m ulti­ when graduate deferments run faceted and executed at all levels. While and self-determination is concerned, it is W A SH IN G TO N -W ith most of the plaint on a rough battle front. Shriver ernor receives when, and if. the Presi­ possible to be a "race man" without being out at the end of June, a major­ was first offered the ambassadorship the learned research into the African exis­ a racist. A careful persual of Negro history world in turmoil, it is nice to know dent wins another term. ity of graduate students w ill be that politics goes on as usual. And the of Paris-vacated, after such long, At any rate. Kerner s promised re­ tence and the experience of Afro-Am eri­ will reveal that even the current theme of cans has inestimable benefit, its publica­ drafted if present policy is not big, unnoticed political development brilliantly distinguished service by tirement opens the way for a strik­ tion in journals of history cannot alone be Black Power" is not a novelty but rather Charles E. Bohlen. But Shriver's real ingly strong Democratic ticket in Il­ a continuing refrain in the history of Amer­ changed. He was especially con­ this winter is the formation of a new aim is to enter elective politics in his expected to alleviate the problem. Some Johnson-Daley axis. linois. One may guess that Shriver ican blacks. These facts of the past have cerned with the effect this would The astute Mayor Richard Daley of home state. w ill head the state ticket as the guber­ restructuring of the curriculums of all our remained and w ill always remain the • nation's schools is in order so that they have on the production of college Chicago has some of the survival value Furthermore, both M r. Johnson and natorial candidate, with Adlai Steven­ may be expanded to include what has same. It is how we relate them to our teachers. of a w ily old bull elephant, which he Mayor Daley have a lively common son I I I assigned to the more uphill present condition that w ill change, hope­ ¿interest in putting up the best pos­ been neglected. rather resembles. Hence he is now the fight for the Senate seat, against the The director of the Commis­ last of the once-numerous herd of big sible ticket in Illinois this year. It is hardy old perennial. E verett Dirksen. A m ajor thrust should occur in the col­ fully for the better. sion on Federal Relations of the leges of education. These institutions of Northern Democratic bosses. He used to one of the big Northern states that the By these transactions, the President Purpose teacher training must make their students American Council on Education, be distrusted by President Johnson, as President really has to carry in order and Daley have got a ll the Illinois ducks aware of the need for knowledge and appre­ "The purpose of Negro History Week, a Kennedy man from way-back. The to be re-elected: and Daley also wants quite beautifully in a row. For M r. John Morse, explained that after to go on having a friend in the gover­ ciation of African culture and its signifi­ in the words of its originator. Dr. C. G. President, moreover, has never felt at Johnson's sake, in truth, it is too bad Woodson, "is to promote the history of the blanket deferment9 run out, ap­ home among his party’s Northern lead­ nor's chair. that comparably neat and promising cance to the American Negro. Too few American Negroes, let alone Negro to the point when Negro History proximately 226,000 graduate ers. Shriver, who is close to Daley, has arrangements cannot easily be made their white compeers, are aware of the Week w ill no longer be necessary." Indeed. students w ill be eligible for the Despite these obstacles, the Johnson- all the makings of a glamor-candidate in the rest of the large Northern in­ depth and grandeur of African cultural I would welcome the day when a special Daley axis has come into being, one for the governorship, and running for dustrial states that also have great draft, while the Department of may guess, through the friendship- governor has always been Shriver's ul­ importance to him. achievements. effort to direct attention to the fact that the American textbook publishers should Negro has always been a part of American Defense estimates a need for broking of P o s t m a s t e r G e n e r a l timate aim. If Gov. Kerner had in­ Y et the new Johnson-Daley axis by history w ill be no longer needed. Dr. Wood­ also play a key role in bridging the gap 240,000 draftees in the next fiscal O'Brien. The outward sign and symbol sisted on running for re-election, how­ no means stops there. It is known, between the facts that are known and the son also felt that "w e should emphasize of this m ajor step forward by the Presi­ ever. it would obviously have been for instance, that Daley was consulted, year. These needs, Morse said, dent was the announcement by Illinois impossible to run Shriver. too. myths that are taught. Some textbooks not Negro history, but the Negro in his­ not by Sen. Robert F. Kennedy him­ still perpetuate the myth of white suprem­ tory." w ill be met almost entirely by Gov. Otto Kerner that he would not run K e rn e rs initial asking-price for self.. but by some of those silly people An "accent on the Negro, as rather acy. The fact remains. I guess, that white graduate-students. for re-election. gently bowing out is rumored to have who wished the senator to commit supremacy and Negro cultural deprecation erroneously advocated by the State News This a n n o u n c e m e n t must be in­ been very high, indeed-nothing less political suttee by becoming an anti- The estimate of 226,000 grad­ than the secretaryship of defense or in our textbooks w ill not be abolished un­ headline on the series' opening article, is tim ately linked to the forthcoming re­ Johnson candidate for the Democratic not needed. I am calling simply for a long uate students eligible for the tirement of the long-suffering direc­ the next place on the Supreme Court, presidential nomination. til authors, editors, publishers, and dealers decide that they are not willing to trade overdue "accent on facts." When facts are draft, however, presupposes de­ tor of the poverty program. Sargent in fact. I t w ill be interesting, there­ humane principles for the dollars of racial­ presented, the case of the black American fore. to see w h a t-if anything-the gov- The mayor replied, with the voice of ferment of students in engi­ Shriver. Having served without com- elephantine common sense, that he ist bigots. takes care of itself. Still, all segments of wanted no part in a Kennedy suicide at­ Negro benefit this society must ultim ately work together ANDI 60TAVALENTINEFROM And I GOTONEFROMJOV.ANP ANPKATHLEEN,ANDMA66IE,AND if we are to ever achieve our professed CLARA,ANDI 60TONEFROM CECILE,ANPJULIE,ANDHEDV, PlANELANPVIVIAN,ANDCHARLOTTE, tempt, since he thought the senator had aims. Negro History Week assumes in­ Virginia and one fromwbv.. AND JUNE,ANP MARIE,.. ANP TEKIA,ANDLILLIAN,AND... a great career before him: and that Il­ Negro Americans w ill certainly benefit creasing importance in the interim for. linois would, therefore, be solid for if their African cultural heritage and tfyeir car Lyndon Johnson in 1968. past as black Americans is fully known, as aptly summarized by Vice-President understood, and respected. This respect Hubert Humphrey, "the shared pride in Y e t it is also significant that these cannot help emerging into a strong feeling Negro history and achievement is a solid two are now working together. I t means of black prid e-a consciousness thqj w ill foundation upon which to build a new and that behind the scenes the President is counteract the deleterious negative self- healthy climate of mutual respect and doing a lot more to promote his own re- image rooted in the peculiar institution understanding among all elements of so- election than most people imagine. of slavery. Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, February 16, 1968 5 C l o s e d c i r c u s c o u r t To the Editor: P o l i t i c s a n d g a r b a g e procedure of the four students Anonymity is a fact of life at and seven faculty members on a university of 38.000 students. Obscure issues, removed many the judiciary-as we may be forced to guess at the meaning of In the end. the cities will times from the concern of the "due process." One can only con­ Ordinarily the question of but also the patience of the find these work-stoppages in­ individual, are debated by un­ jecture that the lack of trust in who does what to the garbage citizens. known personalities in far-off tolerable when thev break the students is not held by students. in American cities would be It is this second fact which conference rooms. The situation fabric of transport, com­ Indeed, how can any trust be a local issue. But two facts w ill remain the dominant one munication. education or is both unnecessary and unrea­ established in the wisdom of a about the nine-dav strike of considerably after the embers sonable. health and. thus. leave the city court which has no faith in. and the New York sanitation work­ of the Lindsav-Rockefeller Nevertheless, the Student- helpless. In the end. there will which hides its secret rites from, ers made it a national issue feud have died down and both Faculty judiciary has chosen, at have to be some system of la- the academic community it One is the fact that the men men have gone to their ap­ least tentatively, to withdraw bor-management courts, with serves. Like communication, chiefly involved-Mavor John pointed abodes in heaven or within the sacred and secret procedures for review, in the confidence is a two-way process, Lindsay and Gov. Nelson short of it. Of the two men. walls of its chambers, beyond place of the current system of in which a single closed channel Rockefeller-are m ajor Re­ Lindsay came closer than R o c k a fa lla r Lindsay the awareness of those it pro­ anarchy-bv-combat. this university. These issues lied to the R.O.T.C. problem. may destroy both. publican contenders for na­ Rockefeller to recognizing the he had sponsored--the Tay­ poses to serve. There is no ques­ But before that point is must be exposed and dealt with As a member of that committee There need be no circus at tional power. The other is the sense of outrage-^! most lor A ct-d ie of inaction. tion that the order and dignity of reached there is a vast fact openly, subject to the demands i1 cannot speak for the group as Michigan State, unless the peo­ fact that strikes by public em­ Americans at being made a But while Lindsay recog­ about cities and their people the courtroom are essential, but patsy by groups who felt they of student attitude. Currently the a whole • I am reluctant to be­ ple in the center ring act like ployes. including teachers, nized the new mood of the which the nation's leaders will the stated fear of a "circus at­ Student-Facultv Committee on come involved in any policy clowns. transit workers, police, fire­ had them in their power. people, he failed to grasp have to reckon with. It is the mosphere" is an assault upon the Academic Rights and Respon­ proposal forced to rely upon sec­ Tom Samet men. hospital workers, sani­ Rockefeller only repeated the its true meaning By asking fact of the revolt of the cities responsibility of every student on sibilities is engaged in a discus­ ond-hand information. member. Student-Faculty Com­ tation workers, have strained weary formula of a behind- in vain for the National Guard against passivity in the face this campus. Circuses are made sion of course enrollment pre­ One can only guess at the mittee on Academic Rights and not only the treasuries of the-scenes deal with the union to be called out. he invoked of impersonal forces. There is by the performers, not by the au­ requisites. which is closely al­ reasoning behind the suggested Responsibilities various big American cities and of letting a no-strike law against the sanitation workers nothing a city hates as. much dience. The crucial need for commu­ the one symbol of traditional as to be passive and inert, a nication cannot be met behind strong-arm strikebreaking dead object acted upon by which was - bound to bring a forces outside. Lindsay missed guarded doors. The only possible result of the judicial body's cur­ V IK W united labor movement to their his real chance for leadership, rent plans is a denial of the cred­ side, with the threat of a gen­ which was not to ask for the ibility of their decision, and the eral strike. National Guard, but to call for undermining of an already shal­ In fact, however. Lindsay- brigades of voluntary citizens low confidence in student gov­ ernment. C o m e , M r . M i l l e r , it is Y O U although seemingly out- to organize the people in every maneuvered and humiliated by block and neighborhood and get Rockefeller—may come out of the garbage out. There is a question more basic even than this. Not only are the E D IT O R ’S N O TE: The fol­ which support M r. Blanton's about "the true facts on the the ordeal better than the gov­ There was every sign that Ho Chi Minh s record is clear: 1955 as an example of a fret channels from student to power lowing point of View, which re­ position. validity of both governments of ernor. For while Rockefeller they were ready for such a from his teenage years he has election You . say that Diem structure diminished, but the sponds to comments recently You quote Mr. Blanton's main Vietnam ." We too feel that we can boast that he got the gar­ call. They could have recruited been involved in the Vietnam­ held three elections You do not communication between stu­ printed in the State News by question, "the I .S. government should bring out "the true ese anti-colonial movement, of­ mention that: "There is not the bage trucks, rolling again, a whole armada of vehicles to dent-governing agencies is de­ J.D. M ille r and W. C. Blan­ supported French colonialism facts." Here are some you do ten in the front line against the slightest doubt that this plebis­ there is a smell of accom­ free the city from its bondage stroyed. The issues at stake at ton, was submitted by Andy in its attempt to suppress a ' not mention. First, a very ele­ modation about the whole epi- to surplus refuse until the Japanese and the French. Sig­ cite was a shade more fraudu­ any judicial hearing, abstracted Pyle and George Fish. national revolution in V iet­ mentary argument. If you op­ nificantly. Nguyen Ai Quoc lent than most electoral tests side that will not endear strike could be settled. Instead from the particulars of the case nam. ' say it is nonsense. " press a people they will revolt Rockefeller to those who want of invoking the outworn symbol means Nguyen the patriot." under a dictatorship." (F all, p and the personalities involved, This is a reply to J.D. M il­ and yet do not present any evi­ at the first opportunity. The militant action on the prob­ of Calvin Coolidge and the Bos­ Ho has been considered by Ber­ 257 (. may have implications relevant ler's letter of the 12th. which dence to refute it! Studying Vietnamese in the southern zone lems ol the city. Lindsay, on ton police strike. Lindsay could nard Fall i leading French au­ And "There were thousands to the most basic concepts of was itself a reply to W.C. the evidence brings the follow­ are revolting against the Thieu- the other hand, emerges as the have invoked the volunteer th o rity and others to be an ar­ more Yes votes i for D ie m 1 Blanton s letter about Vietnam ing to light: "1 have never Ky government. The northern man who wanted to stand up to rescue operation at Dunkirk or dent and sincere Vietnamese than voters" 'F a ll' or that the We would hesitate to write such talked or corresponded with a Vietnamese have practically the unions. He will make Gandhi s salt march to tlu nationalist. northern zone of Vietnam of­ a long letter, but our point needs person knowledgeable . . . who all been armed. Any govern­ The record on the other side friends exactly where Rocke­ fered several times to hold na­ M e to o , c o a c h tube made. did not agree that had elec­ ment which can afford to arm is not so clear. Bao Dai. E m ­ tionwide elections to reunify feller may lose them: in the M r. M iller, you speak of Mr. tions been held . . possibly group that believes there is a The people were eager lot its people is obviously not wor­ peror of Vietnam under the Vietnam, but Diem's govern­ To the Editor: Blanton's "gross lack of knowl­ 80 per cent of the population rit'd about their loyalty 'David new urban condition which, be­ a spark of leadership. They French, openly collaborated • ment refused even to talk about To Dean Fuzak: edge" and of "facts deliberate­ would have voted for the Com­ cause it is new. requires us to wanted to form themselve> Schoenbrun. NEY TV. Jan with the Japanese. Ngo Dinli i t 1 'Kahin & Lewis, p. 86'. We the undersigned consider ly falsified." How about your munist Ho Chi Minh " - ' D D. 28th i. Which government has think freshly and act with into face-to-face units and got Diem spent many years in self- ourselves to be a student group own innuendos, distortions, and Eisenhower. "Mandate for more popular support'’ courage Thus, the winner in a sense ot their relation ti­ imposed exile, supporting nei­ As you stated in the State News falsifications'’ You constantly Change." p. 372 >. Vou would imply that Nguyen 'We w ill be happy to supply the Rocketoller-Lindsay man­ the whole city as an organ­ ther the French nor the anti- the practice of giving Duffy used ad hominem arguments, In 1954 the I'nited Statos'was you or any of the readers a euver mav ■aradoxicallv dis­ ism. They don't want the city Ai Quoc. better known as Ho French Viet Minh. thus iso­ Cards" to the athletes would cited irrelevancies. made wild spending $1 billion '80 per cent Chi Minh. was an imported short bibliography on Vietnam cover that lie has lost more to become a dead artifact lating himseli from the political only be illegal if no other accusations and assertions. of the cost of the w ar i. to support covering these and other points. than he won the loser that he they want it to he a living Soviet agent, an "outside agi­ situation until discovered by You accuse M r. Blanton of Fast Lansing. P.O. Box 382.' has won more iltan he lost. communitv. student groups were given simi­ the French in Vietnam. 'Kahin tator". Unfortunately. Ho Chi Wesley Fishel in 1950. Nguyen lar arrangements. In as much as reading only a few "contorted & Lewis. "The I S. in V iet­ Minh was born in Vietnam, Cao Ky. in the war against the we are sure that you would not anti-draft anti-war publications, nam." p. 32'. It appears not to lived most of his life in V iet­ French, fought valiantly . . commit an illegal act we are not any historical fact." You be nonsense at all--Ho had wide­ nam. presented an appeal for for the French therefore requesting some "D u f­ w ill find that such noted author­ spread popular support, and the Vietnamese independence at When it comes to fret* elec­ fy Cards" for ourselves. ities as Bernard F ail (Two Cnited States definitelv sup­ the Versailles peace conference tions you are also quite voluble 28 graduate assistants Vietnamsi and Marvin Gettle- ported the Frcnch colonialists. in 1919. and led the resistance Vou mention a "nationwide S tu d e n ts Department of Physics man (Vietnam ' present facts Next. M r. M iller, vou talk against Japanese occupation referendum in the South" ir Let Kramer Auto prepare your car for features S w iM BRAKE faA 'C o u n t r y C l u b C a n v a s ' D O W N TO W N L A N S IN G Complete Service on: • E lo c trlc a l • G e n era to rs e C a rb u re to rs STORE • Springs e S ta rte rs • A ir Conditioning HOURS T IL 9 AUTO KRAMER OPEN Largest MON. & SAT. n , nTC discounts PARTS ta FRI. TU Phone 484-1335 town 3 0 0 E. Kelemsaeo r 1 1 ____ ...when lÉ i? ■’ , blondes prefer gentlemen in our fc o ÎE G A R a c q u e t C lu b S tr ip e s £ by Hart Schaffner & Marx Omega—Official Watch of the 1968 Olympic Gamaa E v e ry O m e g a m u s t pass 1 4 9 7 It's about time the single men got hie due. So we're joining q u a lity c o n tro l c h e c k s . Hart Schaffnar & Marx In daclaring a naw national holiday: A n d , in a d d itio n to o u r o w n s to re g u a ra n te e , Bachelor's Day, February 29th. (Watch out, fellows! It's Leap Year, too.) e a c h O m e g a is g u a ra n te e d in 1 6 3 c o u n trie s . Celebrate in style by showing your stripes. Straight, wide, T h a t's a n ic e th in g to k n o w w h e n y o u ’re handsome stripes in H8 &M's natural shoulder Racquet Club p la n n in g y o u r n e x t ro u n d th e w o rld c ru is e . modal. An altogether young and slimming look, with three T h e O m e g a A u t o m a t ic - s e lf - w in d in g — C a le n d a r buttons, slanted flap pockets, side vents and shaped waist. f e a t u r e — lu m in o u s h o u r m a r k e r s — w a te rp ro o f* — Bachelors, be prepared I Coma In for an HS4M b right pinks and naturals match up in a w ell-bred blend of Kodel polyester and cotton g o ld -fille d t o p - s t a i n l e s s b a c k . $ 1 0 5 . stripes suit and be striped for action. $105 canvas. In your size. In s ta in le s s c a s e w ith m a tc h in g b ra c e le t, $ 1 0 0 . *As longbbcbsb, crystal and crown aro intact. QUALITY JEWELERS SINCE 1874 TOPPER SM.00 PANTS $10.00 4 blocks west of Capitol Hart Schaffnar & Marx Ottawa at Butler JEW ELRY V Two Eleven South Washington 4-5359 Friday, February 16, 1968 Michigan State News, E ast Lansing, Michigan SPORTS JM' HIM SATURDAY M a t m e n in B i g 1 0 s h o w d o w n ByS TE V E L O K K E R at 7:30 p.m. in Jenison Field- better season than the Spar­ Bob Bvrum w ill face Steve at that weight and Cornell took State NewsSports W riter house. tans. Rubben at 123. Bvrum is 8-3- second last year. Grady Pefiinger may be glad "The Big Ten should be be­ They have suffered one loss, 2 on the year. Rubben has been The highlight match of the to lose to the University of tween us two." said Head Coach to Oklahoma. 21-8. while win­ a pleasant surprise for the U-M meet w ill take place when Jeff Michigan if it w ill have the same Peninger. ning eight. The Spartans are coaches. It is his first year Smith and Dave Porter meet effect as it did last year. t ’-M coaches feel M SI' is the 6-4 on the year. MSU lost to in varsity competition. at heavyweight. Smith is 16-1 The Spartan grapplers were team to beat. Oklahoma. 16-15. Pat Karslake. 9-6-1. will on the season while Porter is undefeated going into the U-M "We feel they are the team Both schools participated in face Wyane Hanson at 160. Han­ undefeated. meet last year when the Wol­ to beat in the conference." said the Midlands Tournament where son is a Lansing product and a Michigan shows great re­ verines pulled a 16-14 upset I ’-M Assistant Coach Rick the Spartans finished a strong returning letterman for the Wol­ spect for Smith. As a result, the Spartans went Bay. " I t will be a real dog­ second and the Wolverines took verines. We think highly of him. He's into the conference meet fired fight." a fifth place. Rod Ott and Bill Waterman a better heavyweight than Jeff up and took the team title with Peninger summarized it when According to the coaches, will battle at 167. It should Richardson. It w ill undoubt­ I ’-M finishing second. he said. "The winner will be there w ill be five key matches, prove to be a good match as edly be Porter's toughest match The stage w ill be set tomor­ the one that wants it most including 123.160. 167. 177. and Ott carries a 10-2-1 record of the year." Bay said. row when the two rivals meet The Wolverines have had a heavyweight ______________ into the competition. The two have met once before Mike Bradley. 13-1. will with Porter taking a 2-1 win. face Pete Cornell at 177. Brad- Other Spartan wrestlers in lev is first in the conference the lineup include Keith Low- O ly m p ic rance. 5-4. at 130. Dale Ander­ son. 12-1. back from an injury Relay finish at 137. Dale Carr. 13-3-1. at Don C ra w fo rd s tre tc h es fo r the fin ish line In the m ile re la y at last S aturday’ s icers 145 and Ron Ouellet. 1-5-1. at 152. MSU R elays. C ra w fo rd anchors a strong team that should be n ear an MSU re c o rd In the dual m eet with OSU h ere Saturday. State News Photo by L a r r y Hagedorn Germany G R E N O B LE . France U P I - Larry Stordahl and Paul Hur­ ley. who had notched back to K e y to M S U - O h i o S t a t e back goals in the tirst period, scored two more in the final 61 seconds Thursday to snap a 4-4 tie and rocket the I'nited Suites Olympic ice hockey team to a 6-4 conquest of East Ger­ t r a c k m e e t in t e a m depth many. By DON K O P R IVA morrow should be sophomore Bill Relays high hurdle champ, will Laning in the 600 yard run. Soph Stordahl. a 24-year-old IBM State News Sports W riter Wehrwein and senior Don Craw­ run the 70 yard highs and lows .Jim Bastian w ill also be en­ systems engineer from Edina. Superior depth may decide the ford. Wehrwein. who has made against OSl' s Mike Thomas tered. Minn., slapped the tie-breaker winner of Saturday s track con­ a hobby of running 48-second and .Jim Barber. Also hurdling . In the distances. Dean Rosen­ past goalie Klaus Hirsche after J E F F S M IT H frontation between Big Ten ri­ quarter miles, w ill run the 300 for the Spartans w ill be Steve berg and Dale Stanley will run the Germans had staged a blis­ vals M S I' and Ohio State on the and 440 yard dashes as well as Derby. Rich Pauli and Rich E l­ the mile, while senior A rt,Link TOM'S has a tering rally in the third period. Jenison Fieldhouse track at 1 a leg on the Spartan mile relay, sässer. and sophs Ken Leonowicz and Twenty-seven seconds later, Bill Bradna are entered in the cure for your S k i report p.m. which placed second in 3:16.7 Sophs Rich Stevens and Bob Grim m w ill run the 1000 yard run. the I .S. earned a little breath­ This w ill be M S l ' s first dual at Saturday's M S I' Relays. two mile. party headaches ing room when Hurley, a Boston meet of the year. Ohio State lost Crawford, runner-up in the Re­ while Relays 880 champ Roger College student from St. Paul. Alpine Valley. Milford, has to defending Big Ten indoor lays long jump, w ill duel M ari­ Merchant w ill try for another win Rick Dunn w ill double in the Minn., emerged from a scramble a 12" base and 3-4" of new champion Wisconsin last week nello in that event. He w ill also in that event. 440 and 300. while sophs Don in front of the net to slam in snow. 74 1 2 to 60 1 2. although the triple jump and run the 300 and a Pat Wilson, second in the Re­ Highsmith and Jack Bamford another score. Irish Hills, off I S 12 near Buckeyes had some fine individ­ mile relay leg. lays and 1967 Big Ten champ, will sec action in the 300 and The C.S. s victory raised Clinton has 12-15" base and 2" ual performances. will battle OSl "s Sipp and Steve 440. respectively. PARTY TOM ’S Spartan Charlev Pollard. M SI' its record to 2-4-0. with only of new snow. Dave Prysecki won the two Finland left to play, and the Mt. Brighton. Challis & Bau- mile in 9:13.1 and was runner- STORE! Americans need a victory in ner Rds.. in Brighton has 2 ft. up in the mile in 4:13.8. Defend­ 2780 E. Grand River that Saturday finale to earn a place among the top five and thereby land in the 1972 Olym­ base and 5" of new snow. ing Big Ten long jump champ M t Christie, in Oxford, has Ralph Marinello won the triple 12' of snow. 'S' fe n c e rs in triple d u a l "new larger parking lot” pics without having to qualify. M t. Holly. Dixie Hwy.. North jump. jump and was second in the long The Spartan fencers, still straight meets, the longest by soph Glenn Williams, who of Pontiac has 14" of base and somewhat refreshed after last streak in tin 32-year history Schmitter has described as M S I' appears to have the per­ the find of the year " Ju­ 1" of new snow. weekend's win over defend­ of the sport a: South Bend. Last formers to take a number of nior Don Satchell has been im- Pine Knob, just off Clarkston firsts, but Spartan coach Fran ing. BigrJFfn champ Wiscon­ week the Irish whipped Detroit R d , in' Clarkston. has a 12-14 sin. \ v n f 1 ace an even tougher 17-10 and Chicago 80**4 pfoLing each meet as second Dlttrich said the meet w ill be man. Brothers Larry and G a r y base and 3" of fresh snow. test Saturday as they take on Spartan coach Charley decided by the seconds and All areas are brightly il­ thirds. Notre Dame and Ohio State in Schmitter has been pleased Norcott are third men. S H IN D IG '6 8 luminated for night time skiing. separate scoring contests at with his team of late. Baer, who has upped, hi- Leading M S I' in the meet to­ South Bend. " If we can get a little more record to 17-3 with nin win- IT R E A L L Y PAYS TO BE A C R E D IT UNION F A M IL Y . Notre Dame has now won 26 strength in epee we should be last week, leads the sabre tough." he said. "W illiam s Dean Daggett and Pete Kahli with music by the LOWCOSTAUTOLOANS MIXER is just great and Baer is im ­ proving steadily." Foil, which has been M S l' s are second and third men. Jim Davev. Bill Kerner. and Bob Tyler ' the Spartans are. Phillips Hall strong spot llius far. is topped top entries in epee. C A M P H IL L IP S Q U A R T E T FULLY INSURED FOR FRI. FEB. 16 8-12 p.m. Heard around and dances called by George Bubolz YOUR PROTECTION fo a tu rln g AT NO EXTRA COST, TH E Campus! T his In fo rm al dance has b*comO ffer Expires February 29, 1968 C A M P U S I N T E R V I E W S REG. $1.80 FEBRUARY 26 PLAIN Appointments should be made MAY BE BROUGHT IN In advance through your SINGLY OR IN GROUPS College Placement Center > • • • • .........................O ffer Expires February 29, 1968 1 P ra tt & jMay be used 6 times. Clerk will punch here.* FOX JEW ELERS DIVISIONOPUNITg EDA reo IRCRAFTCONN Ain [One garment per section. O (H ctacetct& P FR ANDOR -DOWNTOWN W h it n e y A A ir c r a ft 22f ANN ST. R R E G IS T E R E D G # LD MASTER An£qwlOMWtwiltyEmpier* JEWCLER • I ■»■CIALISTS INPOWER... ROWERFORFRORÜLSION—ROWERFORAUXILIARYSVCTENS. “ ACROSS F R O M K N A P P ’S” Phone 332-3792 ERS CURRENTUTILIZATION»^ (RACEVEHICLE., MARINEANOINDUSTRIALAPPLICATIONS. # Friday, February 16, 1968 7 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan SPO RTS w Won f o r Si C a g e r s n e e d u p s e t o v e r W i l d c a t s go after being slowed by minor 10.6 followed by Bailey with HOME in seventh place but are only junior Terry Gamber is close The Spartans have been hit By DON DAHLSTROM injuries last week. 10.2 and Stepter with 9.6. TRACK -- Ohio State, 2 p.m ., Saturday, at Jeaison Field- one and one-half games behind with 16. by the flu this week. Copeland State News Sports W riter out of third place. missed Wednesday's practice Lafayette continues to lead house. MSU reserve guard Lloyd in scoring with a 17.6 average. The game m ay be decided W R ES TLIN G -- Michigan, 7:30 p.m., Saturday, at Jenison Coach John Benington hopes Northwestern is 5-3. 10-7 Ward, who played a key while both Ward and Gerry the pattern*of the past week overall, and tied for third in part in the earlier 75-62 Spar­ Geistler missed a day earlier. Sixth-man Hevwood Edwards, on the boards where both teams Fieldhouse. in Big Ten basketball continues despite havidfc a scoring slump have out-rebounded their op­ AW AY the Big Ten. tan victory over the Wildcats by Reserves Vern Johnson and this weekend when the Spartans Benington w ill need improved shutting off Kelley offensively John Holms w ill be readv to recently, is still second with ponents this year.____________ BASKETBALL - Northwestern, Saturday. invade the lair of the North­ play from his ■guards. John may again see action in this F E N C IN G - Notre Dame, Ohio State, Saturday. western Wildcats. Bailey and Harrison Stepter. role. Saturday's regionally televised game starts at 2:15 p.m. EST. both offensively and defensively if the Spartans are to have a Benington w ill start his regular lineup in the game of Lee ATILLINOIS-C.C. GYM NASTICS - Illinois-Chicago Circle, Saturday. H O C KEY - Colorado, Friday and Saturday. S W IM M IN G -- Wisconsin, Friday. Minnesota, Brigham All three games during the chance at an upset. Lafayette at center. Jim Gib­ past week were upsets as MSU Young, Saturday. Bailey had his only bad n i g i ^ bons and Bernie Copeland at gained ground on three of the of the season against Ohio forwards, and Bailey and Step­ six teams ahead of them in the conference standings. State last Saturday. It is especially important that ter at guards. There are not too many G - m e n in ' brea th er ’ Our chances have been both return to form for tomor­ changes you can make at this Saturday might well be called will see his first meet action ference race where they are in helped this week without playing row's game. Benington said, be­ stage ot the season." Benington "Underclassmen Day" for the of the season in vault, parallel second place. a game." Benington said. "I cause the Wildcats have what said. " W e l l just try to do gymnastics team when they travel bars, and possibly high bar. Illinois-CC has an 8-4 record hope this continues over the siders the best guard combina­ better with what we have ” to face Illinois-Chicago Circle. The rest of the lineup in­ to date including 0-2 against weekend." tion in the league. He expects both forward Bob Only two seniors will be in cludes Toby Towson and Rich the Bie Ten. Their too scores The Spartans go into the Latest Big Ten figures show Gale and center Tom Lick to Coach George Szvpula's 12-man Murahata ' in floor exercise: have come against Indiana State. contest with a 3-4 conference sophomore Dale Kelley aver­ play more than they have re- lineup as he will get a good Ed Witzke and Craig Kinsey in 162.65. points and Wheaton. record. 9-8 overall They are aging 19 points per game while centlv. look at most of the underclass­ side horse's Dan Kinsey in still 162.49. men on the squad. rings: Norm Jolin. Randy Camp­ Staying behind in East Lan­ bell and Murahata in tram ­ MSU w ill face league-leader sing w ill be Captain Dave Thor. poline: and Towson in vault. Iowa in a battle for the confer­ Tankers f a c e clo s e m e e t Ed Gunny. Dave Croft, and Cliff Diehl, all seniors. Sophomore Joe Fedorchik will M S l':s record stands at 5-2 on the season and 5-1 in the con- ence dual-mmet championship at home Saturdav. Feb 24. work all-around for the Spar­ ' • • A l.ttjp f • • 9 in B a d g e r p o o l tonight tans where he is undefeated against three Big Ten oppo­ a By GA R Y WALKOW1CZ gest challenge of the season Spartans John Musulin and nents. The only seniors in the line­ The Town Pump M A R IO N 'S APPAREL up w ill be Gerry Moore in side State News Sports W riter for us." said Coach Charles George Booth. Monday Night They've gone without one all McCaffree. " It 'll definitely be John McCrary is the Badger's horse and L arry Goldberg in still rings. ■ Special season but the M S I' swim team our closest meet of the year." long distance treestyle man. Junior Norm Haynie will work § SURPRISE SA L E The Spartans will counter Each pizza order w ill should finally have a close meet four events-floor exercise, COCKTAIL 7°o when they face Wisconsin tonight The Badgers have strength in with Chuck Geggie. Dan Pang- entitle you to a second vault, parallel bars, and hori­ HOUR The Spartan tankers will almost every area. Sprinter born. and Rollie Groseth in pizza at no additional swim the Badgers in Madison Fred Hogan is probably their these events. zontal bar. charge. Offer good after 4:30 tonight and then complete their top swimmer He has a very Sophomore Mike VanWormer Ü : 6:30 Take out orders till • Sweaters »Skirts western trip and the dual meet fast time of 21.63 in the 50 not Included. You mast 6:30 Rug. $12, $13 season by facing Minnesota and freestyle this year. He also be 21. B IG G E S T 3“ Brigham Young on Saturday has a 48.22 in the 100. Bill afternoon in Minneapolis. McOwen gives Wisconsin a P 307 S. GRAND IV 9-6614 Open 10 A .M .-2 A .M . » Sweaters »Tops strong No. 2 sprinter. eating value LANSING A M S I’ has had nine dual meets so far this year but in com­ R»g. $5, $6 1/O piling their 7-2 record they The fastest times a Spartan haven't had a meet that could has turned in this year are 21.97 and 48.19 by Don Rauch indi­ in town be called close. The Spartans lost to Indiana cating some close contests in Akers Hall East Complex • Dresses by 37 points and to Michigan those events. Mike Kalmbach off • Jumpers CASINO TERM by 19. Their narrowest margin and Gary Langley w ill also be of victory was 28 points over swimming these events for MSI' Iowa State. • USE Y O U R B A N K A R D John Lindley is one of the An indication of how evenly THE BIG SHEF PARTY conference's top buttertlvers • W E IN V IT E LAYAWAYS matched the teams are came in the Big Ten Relays where they He won the 100 yard event at "You’ ll Love It’ • OPEN T IL L 9 P . M . W E D . & F R I. tied for third place with 74 last year's Big fe n meet and his 1:58.88 in the 200 this year • OTHER N IG H T S T I L L 5 :3 0 P . M . points. is several seconds faster than "Wisconsin w ill be the big­ 622 N. HOMER (Across from Spartan Twin) February 17 8 to 12 p.m. Marion9s Apparel H O C K iY S H O W D O W N T Semi-Formal BROOKPIELD PLAZA 351-7224 Admission In tho E.¿Lansing Stats Bank Bldg. Jazz Band-Coffoohouse Orchestra $2.50 per couple 'S ’fa c e s Flowers for the ladles $1.50 for single Featured At Uncle John's IN H O N O R O F fo r 6 th in W C H A W A S H I N G T O N ’S By TOM BROWN State News Sports W riter all year and is intensified by current injuries. The Tigers' top blue-liner. Jack Coles, has The ideal spot fo r that discount recordsinc. Q 225 ANN ST. l B IR T H D A Y MSU hockey fans, take heart- things haven't gone so well in been handicapped by a cast on special occasion . 3Brauer’tf the largest and most complete record shop on campus Colorado Springs this winter his right wrist. Captain Wayne 1861 Nelson has missed the last three 213 South Grand Avenue either. games and is not expected to Next to the New Parking Ramp) K u[H S K C U cT IN S T O C K N O W . . . The Tigers of Colorado Col­ lege. twice NCAA champions, see action against the Spartans. 4 have come upon hard times. Colorado snapped a five-game Three time champions of the losing streak with weekend vic­ tories over Ohio State and Ohio Experience the Thrill THE VANILLA FUDGE WCHA. the Tigers are only 8-13 for the season and 3-10 in V of Running the Board. league play. They are in sixth The Spartan attack continues to bewilder Bessone. "THE BEAT GOES ON” place, just ahead of the Spartans. The Spartans w ill be there "I'll keep experimenting with for Friday and Saturday games. the lines." Bessone said. "In Monday's workout, we had only G O LDEN $ "Colorado has a good goal- tender in Don G ale." Coach Amo Bessone said. " If he gets some help from his wings. Colo­ one combination that skated well together. " Bessone has moved Bob Fal- E IG H T B A L L 2 9 9 lat to center and has teamed FRIDAY ONLY! rado can be a handful. " Bessone was not overly en­ him with Bill Watt and NinoCris- Billiard Room couraged by the Tigers' poor tofoli. record. Alan Swanson, a winger be­ ASK ABOUT FREE PLAY CARDS "Colorado has been in every game they've played." Bessone said. "They beat Michigan Tech fore coming to East Lansing, returns to his old position against Colorado, along with Chuck Phillips and Bob Pattullo (acro ss 224 Abbott Rd. fro m East Lansing State T h e a te r) - L o w e r Level d iscount records inc. OPEN 9:30-8:30 Dally O l PANCAKE HOUSE 2820 E. GRAND RVR in Houghton and that is some­ 351-8460 9:30-6:00 Sat. 225 ANN ST. NEAR FRANDOR thing that isn't done every day. on the third line. V Colorado has improved tremen­ dously since Decdmber." The Tigers' have had trouble Short on time and want putting the puck in the net. a a delicious fish sandwich? fam iliar problem to Bessone also. Defense has been a problem Á i (LIu!a_ W a ter poloists HAIR FASHIONS M r . John Carver m e e t D etro it The I.M . Pool w ill be the site of a rematch between the state A n o th e r 1 s t F o r M r . J o h n ! champion Detroit Parks and Recreation water polo team and 1stplace in permanent waving the MSU water polo club. The event w ill take place Saturday at 10:30 a.m. won last Sunday in Detroit at The newly formed M S I' club the NORTH AMERICAN Why not w ill be looking for its first vic­ tory after losses to Indiana. 11- try one of 2. and 15-10 to the Detroit Club. BEAUTY AND FASHION SHOW HOUR'S Mark Manriqus. team cap­ tain and high scorer, feels the team has progressed a long way Let us apply our award winning knowledge since the last match. of hair care to your individual needs. Several teams have been lined up for further competi­ tion. This Spring, the water polo club w ill have home-awav 332-0904 1 MeDm ift ¡ È s J u t competition with Indiana. Notre 5011/2 E. GRAND RIVER 24 Hr, phone service Across from 1024 E. GRAND RIVER 234 W. GRAND RIVER Dame. Loyola. Western Ken­ EAST LANSING BERKEY HALL tucky. and Michigan. 8 M ichigan S ta te N ew s, E a s t L an sin g , M ich igan F r id a y , F e b r u a r y 1 6, 1968 TOMGHT! THE Strikers veto contract M 11*11 M U T I , i FREE ROCK D etroit U P I-A striking T eam ­ one day a fte r The News was ommended approval and out­ only course of action left for sters local rejected a proposed struck. lined their reasons to the the International w as for it contract with The D etroit News Phillip Weiss, a m em ber of membership. He said some to go back to the local by a razor m argin Thursday, the S tate Labor Mediation Board m em bers m ay c a s t negative leadership and "s e e where we re dimming hopes that the city ’s which supervised counting of the ballots out of "h y s te r ia ." He going." CARAVAN 93-day newspaper blackout might mail ballots, expressed hope, also said the outcom e m ay have Spokesmen for Local 372 said be nearing an e n l however, that the m em bership been influenced by statem ents they had no officiaL statem ent on The World Travel Series will Scene: Act I I .” 1118 South might rev erse its stand when from the leader of the council the outcom e of the voting. The present the film "P e ru Today" Harrison Road. M em bers of Local 372 who results of the election w ere it sees the closeness of the of newspaper unions who at 8 p.m. Saturday in the work a t the city 's afternoon announced by state labor m edia­ voting. Other m em bers of the indicated the other c ra ft unions Auditorium Geza deRosner The Hillel Foundation will AT newspaper voted down the pro­ same local who work at The tors. who supervised the count­ considered the proposal in­ will narrate. hold a supper-forum -social posal by a 56-ballot m argin, ing of the ballots. * ♦ * F re e P ress approved a sep ar­ adequate. at 6 p.m . Sunday in the Hillel against the recomm endation of The local has about 1.000 ate con tract with that publi­ The News and F re e P ress The Undergraduate Psych ol­ House. 318 H illcrest Ave. R ab ­ their leadership. W flêÊ Ê Ê m cation in the sam e balloting must still negotiate con tracts m em bers, and about 87 per ogy Club will m eet at 3 p.m bi Max Kapustin of Wayne State The rejection m eant that the Charles O’Brien, a m em ber with 13 unions in addition to cent of them ca st ballots. Sunday in 304 Olds Hall. University will speak on "Ju d a ­ strike which the Team sters of the T eam sters International the T eam sters. A legislative com m ittee was * * * ism in an Open Society-Human- began against The News Nov. Kxecutive Board, appeared down The re jected o ffer provided investigating allegations that There will be a m ixer in ism and S e cu larism ." 16 would continue and that The cast when the results were for a $30 per week pay some key m em bers of Local Wilson Hall from 8 to 12 * * * F O R IN F O D etroit F re e P ress, the city ’s announced. He adm itted he raise over the next three years. 372 planned the strike for p.m. Saturday. Music by Dino Handel’s "W a ter Music ON STAG E was "disappointed.’’ profit. A m em ber of the lo­ morning newspaper, would con­ The T eam sters, who handle and the D ynam ics and Dr .S u ite ." Beethoven’s "Sym phony 9 THRU i C A L L 351-5818 tinue the suspension it began I don’t think there was an circulation of the newspapers, cal told the com m ittee Monday E h rlich ’s M agic Bullet. No. 5 in C Sharp Minor. Op. evaluation made by som e of earn an average of $150 a week he arranged prior to the * * * 67." and Copland's "Sym phony BOX OFFICE OPEN TONIGHT the m e m b ers." O 'B rien said. under the old contract. strike to distribute a tempo-: Student Religious L iberals No. 3 " will be presented at AND TOMORROW FROM "T h e re ’s going to have to be O 'B rien said the m em bership rarv newspaper during any will m eet at 7 p.m. Sunday 7 tonight in 114 B essey Hall .A N S IN G D riv e In T h e a tre 6:30 P.M. - 11.00 P.M. LANSING'S MOST CONVENIENTLY LOCATED DRIVE IN THEATRE some serious thought now by the m em bership of Local 372." He said each m em ber of the local’s executive board had re c­ would hold a closed m eeting Thursday night to discuss pic­ ket assignm ents and other rou­ tine business. He said the strike, and m ade m ore money during the walkout than he was paid at The News. However, he said he planned for a strike in Union Old College Hall * * * Friends of the U niversity Christian Movement will pre­ as a part of the Humanities D epartm ent's Frid ay Evening Concert Series. * * * 1* 5 2 0 7 5 C E D A R S T R E E T T , kJt£KCNù...M$UF/lm Society Presents because facto rs beyond his con­ sent three a rt film s at 8 The V eteran ’s Association I his trol led him to believe one tonight at the coffeehouse. "T h e will hold an All-University TONtTE was likelv. EXC LU S IV E EN G AG EM EN T dance at 9 p.m. Saturday in the sm all auditorium of the SATU RDAY AND z fm m m sim m a si [Jeait TXe OriqiHoC] B o g a r t 's only Lansing Civic Center. kets a re $4.50 per couple and are on sale in the Un­ T ic­ SUNDAY UncutJ&a? Academy Award ion. * * * Thencn Version! performance. Today is the last day that entries for the 20th Annual E X C L U S IV E I Block and Bridle Club Horse Show will be taken in 27 An­ AREA I thony Hall. S H O W IN G ! unétr Où SfataOff Mar., The F o restry Club will hold "Shindig ’68 ." a dance fe a ­ turing the Cam Phillips Q uar­ FREE tet. at 8 p.m. Saturday in Dem on­ E L E C T R IC stration Hall. Tickets. IN C A R per couple for non-members and $2 for m em bers, a re on HEATERS iÄ H S P E J sale in the departm ent offices, the lobby of the Natural R e ­ - 1 9 6 3 IMTEHMATIOHAL BOBIE...KATIE, sources Bldg and from club m em bers. * * * COME the whole crazy Union Board Week activ ities t T&9 • 109 ANTHOlJy ▲ A - LL LL F I L. L N '~V S*» # ^ £ AS LATE mixed-up love story Is 7 | f this weekend include the Al! Campus Talent Show at 8 to­ night in the Union Ballroom AS back In action! a showing of "W hen Comedy W O GA£AT FfLM S l Was K ing" at 8 p.m. Satu r­ 10:30 SEE p Ihe belching econo... the leocheo.. day in the Union Ballroom , half price on bowling and bil­ BOTH the escape through theJungle... liards in .the Union from 2-5 p.m. Sunday and showings FEATURES HORIZON PICTURES presents of Charlie Chaplin film s at 6:30 p.m. Sunday in the Union j||- «A HUMPHREY BOQART.,KATHARINE HEPBURN Ballroom . * * * CARTOON AT 7.-00 There will be a m ixer from "DIABOLICAL 9 to midnight tonight in Shaw DR. Z " SHOWN W IT * JÙM « A W f i j t e Hall. The B e tte r Mouse JOHNLU O M L Trap will play AT 7:07 k 10:30 * * * "PLAYGIRL KILLER" AT 9:00 & LATE Mmrplus w muut rtmomss mhopoht NLISN-CRimi mo, nyi(AJ 70HLVJ) ija iu c e 86 e e y - There will be a m ixer from 9 to midnight tonight in the Fee A D D ED ••• Hall Classroom s. Harvey and ^ ¿ A R B O 'i ONL'Y AUTUMN IN the World War III plus a spec­ CPM CD V: ial guest group from Detroit EXTRA! •'Ninotchte! PENNSYLVANIA I» will perform Admission is 33 . . . the sp ecial season in color CARTOON / I Shutting COLOR cents. i * * * SH O RT WILLIAM KCaWIN — IEAN CHRISTOfHCA C V. T n n A V FROM 7:15 P .M . I K JU tA T F e atu re ftt 7 3 5 & 9:3( ANMESSCHAMPAGNE The International Club's an­ SU BJECT ÿ. ,'oducf, h, MMWILl SINKL,rMuiction» ili I Him me.lltHH cli,DI I All Films Are Here (/ttfONlV/) SATURDAY & SUNDAY CONTINUOUS FROM 1:15 P.M . nual dinner will be held at 6:30 p.m. Saturday in the Crossroads C afeteria of the 2 M ills SOUTHWEST OF IANSINO ON M-7» - International Center. T ic­ A LL C O LO R P R O G R A M kets are $3.50 for students TA R LITE * D riv e In T h e a tre MANKILLERS BY DAY 1 I WOMEN K ILLER S BY NIGHTI and S4.50 for non-students They are on sale in the Un­ ion U N. Lounge and 108 In­ ternational Center. * * 3 0 2 0 S N O W R O A D * * # A s u s p e n s e fu l story of 3 gener­ Delta Signa T h eta’s annual a ls • ..o n e a mur­ Sw eetheart B all will be held N O W S H O W IN G derous madman 1 Which one is the k ille r? from 9 p.m. - 1 a.m . Satu r­ day in the Lansing Room ot the Ja c k T ar Hotel. Tickets GATES OPEN AT 6:30 S t a r -F ille d F eatu re s are $2.50 per person. $4 per PHONE couple. 372-2434 The Moslem Student Associa tion will sponsor a sem inar at 7:30 tonight in 33 Union. Ben Tchikou from Ohio State Uni­ versity will speak on "C on­ tem porary Islam ic Thought." * * * The Cinema Guild will pre­ sent "T h e M ag ician " at 7 and 9 tonight in 108B W ells Hall. * * * The Swinging Hit Picture The Association for Com­ puting M achinery and the In­ win stitute of E lectro n ic E le ctrica l Engineers will hold a joint m eeting a t 7:30 p.m. Monday TH E SU PREM ES in 102 B W ells Hall. W eisman. of the System s De­ Clark velopment Corporation, will speak on "T im e Sharing Net­ The Swinging Hit Songl COLUMBIA PICTURES pi*MnU works and D ata Communica­ PETERO’TOOLE-OMARSHARIF tions." * * * “THEHAPPENING TOMCOURTENAY-W Mi PLEASENCE All women interested in play ing badminton are invited to an Thesteryof i nobstir, achickandthreeyoung JOANNAPEmr-PHRJPPENOIRET open m eeting of the Badm inton Club from 7-9 tonight in 127 giyt wIwruII offI wildThreeMillionDoilarCiperi TOE 8AMS P IE G E L / AMATOLS L 1 T V AK Women s I.M . Bldg. P r o d u c t» « o f A night without IgQL end . . . a night A MMt k itä of m tm -p k tu n excitement from the Director and Writer o f "‘Cat Billou ' 7 that hid the sec­ SNcorrection rets of men . . . Mark Gavn. a foreign new and revealed th e COUMM MCTUKS andMM SPIEGO. pnmt paper correspondent with e truth about their “Thehappdnng” H h nun mmnwimn* . mweouM* ■ women I tensive experience in the F j E ast will be the speaker fi M SU’s L ectu re Concert S amuàn Matto m im t marram# m m v B M im "N IG H T O P T H E G E N E R A L S " 9 :0 0 O N L Y ries F eb . 23. M In W ednesday's S ta te Xev " T H E H A P P E N IN G " A T 7 ,0 7 AND L A T E S ■ IH mR « U L nmmnnmnHVE C A R T O O N AT 7 ,0 0 - E X T R A ! SH O R T S U B JE C T it was reportedthat the spee< would be given this Fridav. M ichigan S ta te N ew s, E a s t L a n sin g , M ichigan F rid a y , F e b ru a ry 1 6 , 1968 9 'Incident’ projects chilling reality "T h e Incident" first ap­ the final sequence on the train: MHA-WIC Presents peared as an episode of the "D uPont Show of the W eek" many v earls ago when the pro­ they essentially serve to in tro duce the 15 men and women wh( are to share the hour of hor NOWYOUCANSEETHE * INTERNATIONALLYACCLAIMED gram wa£ »still holding down ror and. quite frankly, art its Sunday night tim slot. totally superfluous. Coming as it did a fte r » rash In trying to get a cro ss sec of subway slayings in New tion of New York style human York, the depiction of two punks terrorizing a c a r full of late night passengers on an ity. screenplay w riter Nichol a s B aeh r has given som e fint ch a ra cter a cto rs some prett\ HITJUSTASITWASSHOWN underground route scored a hackneyed roles to work with. critical success and induced some minor among those who were made repercussions The trav elers include Beai Bridges a s the clean cut P ic Teflinger from Oklahoma ing of one of G arb o's g reatest B y STU A R T RO SEN TH A L S ta ta N «w s R « v l« w * r "B onnie and C lyd e." one of INTHEMAJORCAPITALS OFtHEWORLDI uneasy by too much realism Ja c k G ilfo rd -la te of C racker film s. N inotchka." the sa tir­ the best of the year, is still on the unusually innocuous ja ck co m m e rcia ls -a s tht ic comedy depicting a Soviet holding out a t the G ladm er tube. father distraught over tht operative's corruption by the in Lansing while a new Dis­ Now additional m aterial has younger generation's treat cap italistic degeneracy of the ney product. "T h e Happiest been added to the original one ment of its elders. G ary Mer western world. Thè film M illionaire" has ju st opened hour script, bringing the run­ rill a s an ex-alcoholic trying marked the first and only tea m ­ down the street at the Michi­ ning tim e up to 99 minutes. to m ake good and Mike Kellir ing of G arbo with d irector E r ­ gan. The cast has been changed as a com placent history teach nest Lubitsch as well as being In the m eantim e. "T h e along with several of the ch ar­ er. the s ta r's first comedy. G rad u ate" will undoubtedly acters. and some of the in­ Thelm a R itte r is cast a:- It should also be noted that continue to draw the huge nuendos used in the broad­ K ellin's am bitious wife. Als< Billy Wilder who later di­ crowds which it deserves at cast have been made m ore ex ­ featured are Ed McMahon a> rected such cla ssics as "O ne the Campus Theatre. plicit. an alm ost normal husband ant Two T h re e " and "S o m e Like it The result of these a lte ra ­ Diana Van der Vlis a s hi> Hot" provided the screenplay Out in Frandor Shopping Center. "Thoroughly Modern “The Incident” tions a re cu uuntly on dis­ wife who wanted to take a cah for the picture. M ille" is playing on the screen Tony Musante (left) is a little burned ot Beau play at the Spartan Twin Thea­ in the first place. Maybe sht "N inotchka" will be run opposite "T h e Incident." which B rid ge s in this scene from the taut suspense drama, tre. and there can be very lit­ thought subways were beneatl Saturday night at 9 in 109 see above. “ The Incident” now showing at the Spartan Twin tle doubt that the present prod­ her. Anthony Hall. At 7 that night uct has m aintained all of the Aside from the terrifying the F ilm Society will present It might also be noted that T h e a tre . qualities which seven years ag< perform ances by Tony Musan- another G arbo flick. "G rand CBS is playing The World chilled the "D uPont Show" te and M artin Sheen us the H otel." the l esidence hall m ixers velopment on the F a s t Lansing of Henry O rien t." a beautiful audience. switchblade wielding m isfits, which s aek up a. follow s ; entertainm ent scen e-a ssu m ­ At 7 and 9 p.m. Friday, P eter Sellers picture on its The added 40 m inutes a rt the best of the short ch a r­ At 9 p.m. Fri day in the F e e ing that one e x is ts -is a new the M SI’ Cinema Guild will be "F rid a y Night M ovie." not nearly as interesting as acterizations com es from Hall (' lassroom s. wit l music group called "T h e Sessions' showing Ingm ar B ergm an 's One further television note Robert F ield s portraying a bv Harvy and the W’<>rld War who are endeavoring to bring film . "T h e M agician " in 108B on the MSU B road casters reluctant homosexual HI Ad mission 1s 35 cen ts late night entertainm ent to the Wells Hall. "G a m u t" installm ent, at 11:30 Forestry club At any ra te, those respon­ sible for the screen version Another old. but great film is being offered this week at Saturday morning on WMSB. channel 10. This w eek's show At 9 p.m. in Shaw Hall on Friday. The ' B etter Mouse- MSU area. Their scene is "T h e P it" exercised good judgment in the S tate T heatre which is trap " \\ill play. restaurant and their bag is will offer a closer look af to hold affair inserting this bit of business carrying a resurrection of Turkish m usic and folkdances At 8 p.m. h'riday in Phil- lips IFill. The Fine st O ur" anything from jazz and blues, to art displays, folksinging and at the front of the picture "T h e African Q ueen" which and featu res the MSU Turkish instead of prolonging and dil­ provide the ounds for 30 probably jugglers if they can on Saturday uting the actual "in c id e n t." pulled quite a sweep of the Academy Awards the year of Club under the. 4w»ctia«k ot Selcuk Ozgidiz. It will be pro­ cents a( Imission. find any. They hope to eventually ex ­ The harassm ent scenes, are. its release. including best duced and directed by Frank Meanwhile. Mickey s Hide- "Sh in d ig ." an annual a ffa ir pand to a Friday. Saturday and as taut and suspenseful as you actor for Bogie. Nichols. a wav s bringing ba ,'k "T h e sponsored by the F orestry Sunday all night schedule, but will ever see All of the action Even the movies in current If you feel in a dancing F re e lock C ira van' which flu b , will be held Saturday in until then they will be opera­ D em onstration Halit from and the tightly controlled de­ release at the local houses of­ mood, try the MSU V eteran 's has pa eked the house of pre- velopment of tension is height­ vious iccaslonsl; The "C ara- ting from 7-12 p.m. every Sun- 8 p.m. to midnight. fer an above average sele c­ Association dance at 9 p.m ened by the black crisp and van." rom De troit does psy- dav. offering dancing and a The hall will be decorated tion^____________________________ in the Lansing Civic Center. white photography. The cam era chedeli ■ stuff and is report- chance for would-be perform ­ with pine trees, a corral, and You can get your tick ets, at work is p e rfe c t-e ffe c tiv e but edly ex<-el lent ers to get exposure. an old-fashioned saloon which $4.50 per couple in the Union. will serve cider and snacks. unobtrusive "T h e Incident" does an e x ­ Repeat final exam At a little less form al level, F or its Sat urday Motovvn show. M ickey’s will be fea- It only costs SI. By the way. The ^Forestry Dance m usic will be pro­ dancing, drinking and burning Club will be holding its annua vided by the Cam Phillips Quartet and square dancing quisite job of bringing the problem of public apathy to­ deadline, Feb. 23 at G randm other's this week­ end will be to the m usic by the luring dancing and listeninji to the "Soul S' s te m " and the "Shind ig" in D em onstration ward "c r im e in the streets' The O ffice ot Evaluation Headlyters. No cover charge "Sound c tte s ." Admiss ion will Hall from 8 p.m. to midnight will be callqd " George Bu- Saturday. bolz. J r . down to a highly personal Services said Thursday that this tim e. he a mi re buck ; nd a ha If. level. students intending to repeat One more interesting de- T im b errrrl D ress will range from suit And absurdlv inform al are It will shake you up. exam inations for University and tie to pre-Civil V\ar cos­ tumes. Awards will be pre- Cnllegc cou rses must sign up NOW!ExclusiveShowing C R E S T •ihntedtor the best costume. Entertainm ent this by Feb 23. or forfeit tlip T ick ets can be purchased in the tour departm ental of- tices and the lobby of the Nat­ Weekend From movies to Motown to dancing, the entertainm ent sit­ chance. Students can obtain perm ission to take the exam s Tròm the University College. 170 B essey 2TopColorHits ural R eso u rces Bldg or from FREE E L E C .C A R H EATERS C O M M IE M A JO R orU .S .S E R G E A N T ? club m em bers. T ick ets a re S3 uation is Lansing this week is Hall or at the Student A ffairs per couple and S2 tor m em bers not nearly as strained as usual. residence hall offices a t 109 ol the Forestrv Club The MSI F ilm Society, for Brody. S33 Wonders and G36 exam ple, has slated a sereen- Hubbard. • • • • « so B ig / s o iife iy ! hangman 8 0 “ T H E H A P P I E S T M I L L I O N A I R E , a z in g in g , h e e l-th u m p in g m u s ic a l m a d e o f th e m a g ic a l s tu ff o f ‘M a r y P o p p i n s ’!” ♦ - G O O D HOUSEKEEPING “ E n jo y m e n t f o r e v e r y o n e , n o m a t t e r w h a t a g e ! , , -R E n eo o .c “ G r e a t e n te r ta in m e n t in t h e tr a d itio n o f ‘M a r y P o p p in s ’ a n d ‘S o u n d o f M u s i c ’!” - J I M MORSE. BOSTON H E R A L D - T R A V E L E R “ S p a r k le s w ith t a le n t ...o n e o f th e c in e ­ D A R R Y L F . Z A N U C K ’S m a tic b o n a n z a s o f th e y e a r ...a la v ish , TH E h a p p y m o tio n p ic tu r e !” -o f nver post SowghrDYSEELEfilESTin^lllUjyBiDailON Sfy>rSfELEGliSÏÏR tNracMb,BUZZMH1K PyalIucinb,FRANKTILfOBD AIRNVERSAL FICTBRE»CBUR A - O A Z Ö f iS r I f l . i .t f upon th t TV Productton - TM l C A M A 0 A IN 8 T U K Û I A N T AMYW | D A Y W IT H 42 INTERNATIONAL STARS / “ T h e h a p p ie s t o f m u s ic a l c o m e d ie s !” 2n d T o p C o lo r F e atu re T IM E S C H E D U L E Who says - PHI LADELPHI A DAILY N E W S Sergean t R y k e r F rl Feb 16 6:30 & 9:30 W ils o n Aud Sat Feb 17 6:30 & 9:30 C o n r a d Aud they don't make S H O W T I M E S : 1 :0 0 - 3 :5 0 - 6 :2 5 - 9 :1 5 T w i c e a t 7 : 0 9 - 11:03 Sun Feb 18 7:00 B ro d y Westerns like R o u g h N i g h t In WdTDwnwk A d m is s io n t h is E n g a g e m e n t 50P J e r ic h o o n c e a t 9 :0 9 they used to? ID ’ s R e q u ire d TfceJJflppiCSt FREE H EATERS Äonaire C O M IN G NEXT W EEK SELF SERVE PARAMOUNT T e c h n ic o lo r ’ V fe tu st d id . C O N C E S S IO N S PICTURES Raun CORNEL WILDE TOM M Y GRtC« *” GERALDINE J U S T 3 M IL E S E. MacMURRAYSTEELEGARSONPAGE GLADYS COOPERHEMMONE BADOELEYLESLEY ANN WARRENant JOHN DAVIDSON DEM GE0ME I O F M .-S .U , BU I M D f »SOR ftOMMN ’ù M » RICHARD M SHfRMAflood R0MR1 E «• lATR 4uKJJ! ■ • « . . mnimn PEPPflRD I J O IN Y O U R AT THE CREST F R IE N D S M ■ H K | H IG A N 1 tjf9»mnowM _ J UfaiAt M U M IHGHT HI JBHCM0 A UNIVERSAL PICTURE TECHNICOLOR* HAVE FUN 10 M ichigan S ta te N ew s, E a s t L an sin g , M ichigan F r id a y , F e b ru a ry 1 6 , 1968 W IN T U H A R D O H P L A N T S 'U' payroll exceeds $77.5 million for ’6 7 C u r a t o r fig h ts w e a t h e r M SU 's total payroll for 1967 exceeded $77.5 million, m ore la b o r p a y r o ll to ta lle d $67.641.214.10.' He said that 16.151 M SU 's 6.400 tre e s and other of course, is the plant's hardi­ Many of the plants a re ob­ the w in te rs frozen ground than $9 m illion m ore than the form s f o r student workers woody plants have a hard tim e n e ss." Its native clim ate tained through exchanges with prevents m oisture from seeping previous year, the MSU Board of amounted to $4.258.503.94. of it in the w in ter-w ith the m ust be sim ilar to E ast Lan­ other universities. In the past down to the roots of a plant. T ru stees learned Thursday. wind. snow, salt and even sun sing's. against them. B ecau se of this, most of the year, exchanges were made with the University of Copen­ P a rm elee said. Michigan rarely re ce iv e s a Philip J . May. vice president for business and finance, re ­ Torres performs But one of their b est friends plants com e from the northern hagen and the U niversity of snowfall heavy enough serious­ ported that the past y e a r's pay­ Gonzalo T o rres, classical is G eorge W. P arm e le e . cu ra­ part of the Northern Hemisphere. Finland. ly dam age m ost plants. P a r­ roll reached $77.580.475.72. in guitarist, will present a solo tor of the woody plants on Even som e of the plants in the However. P a rm elee said. "We m elee noted, however, that the 1966. he noted, the figure was recital at 8:15 tonight in E ric k ­ campus. P a rm e le e procures southern United States will not^ have a few plants from m aintenance crew has oc­ $68.279.316.06. son Kiva as part of the Asian- new plants and m ust be c e r ­ grow here. Southern Hemis­ m ilder clim ates that survive casionally knocked snow from He said that MSU issued Latin A m erican-A frican S er­ tain that they will grow in phere plants are rare here be­ well in sem iprotected areas pine trees with poles a fte r a 33.396 W-2 withholding form s in this clim ate. He also must cause Africa isn't cold enough such as the two courts of particularly large snowfall. Propaganda 1967. com pared with 31.624 in ies. P rogram numbers include know the techniques of pro­ in even its southern-most Bessev H all.” The shrubs and other plants 1966. "A d e lita ." " F iv e P relu d es" tecting them once they a re areas. South America gets cold The rhododendron is planted along the road also m ust be A member of the So c ia list Lab o r P a rty hands Party In 1967. May reported. 14.890 and "B on am pak. " which Torres planted. enough, but there are no roads in numerous places around the protected from road salt by literature to a student at F a rm Lane bridge T h u rs­ W-2 form s for regular salary and composed him self. In procuring a plant, he to the a rea s where the desir­ campus usually on the north burlap b arriers so salt-filled day morning. State News Photo by Bob Ivins said, 'the first consideration. able plants are. _______ and e a st sides of buildings slush and water is not splashed to aid its survival even though on them. WINNEROF5GOLDENGLOOEAWARDS the clim a te and soil here are not really suitable. soil and heavy mulching is Special Ice storm s cause the plants the m ost damage. A couple of years ago. an 1. B e s t P ic tu r e , C om ed y in c lu d in g used. Young plants with tight bark must be wrapped to protect ice storm split a tree trunk, but the ground m aintenance crew simply bolted the trunk F a in ily liv in g h e a d n a m e d 2. M ik e N ic h o ls , B e s t D i r e c t o r the bark from being burned by together and it recovered sources In addition, the 49 home M rs. Lois H. Humphrey will tension Service at Colorado State offers special educational oppor­ 3. A nne B a n c r o f t , B e s t A c t r e s s , C o m ed y the sun and the m oisture from "T h a t." P arm elee said, "w as becom e program leader for U niversity since 1965. She suc­ tunities to young hom em akers, econom ists under her direction being evaporated. The evapora­ one I never thought would re­ M SU's Cooperative Extension ceeds the late Mrs. Loa D Whit­ elderly citizens, working wom­ work with E xten sion 's studv 4. D u s tin H o ffm a n , M o s t P r o m i s i n g A c to r tion facto r is important because co v er." Service fam ily living education field. who had held the post at en. and fam ilies with lim ited re­ groups and lead ers. 5. K a t h a r in e R u s s , M o s t P r o m i s i n g A c t r e s s program on M arch 15. MSU since 1965. The appointment was ap­ At M SI'. Mrs. Humphrey will PROGRAM INFORMATION►332*9044 F R I D A Y , F E B R U A R Y 16 proved Thursday by M SU's oversee fam ily living program s M R U S N O W ! 2nd W E E K Board of Trustees. for the E xtension Service P la c e m e n t B u r e a u $1.50 to 5 :3 0 Eve & Sun $1.75 Ingm ar B e rg m a n 's Mrs. Humphrey has been state throughout the state. As part of Jeweled H o rro r Tale leader of home econom ics pro­ the U niversity's off-cam pus sys­ Students must reg ister in per­ least two days prior to the date Feature Today & S a t. at 1 :1 5 -3 :2 0 -5 :3 0 -7 :4 0 -9 :5 0 gram s with the Cooperative E x ­ tem . the fam ily living program son at the P lacem en t Bureau at of an interview. "ONEOFTHEYEAR’S10BEST!’’ 7thSMASHWEEK! G L A D M E R Feb. 23. F rid ay: Alton Box Eoard Co. : Account­ J O S E P H E L E V IN E “DON’TMISSIT!” - N E W Y O R K T IM E S MAGICIAN At 1:10-3:15-5:15-7:20-9:25 P .M . I j U e a fiu ing i B .M i . all m a jo rs of the college of business . m arketing iB . M i. m anagem ent, m echanical AND THE engineering, m ath and statis­ THEGRADUATE S O U L SYSTEM tics i B '. -Harris Trust and Savings ALBU M S AUTOGRAPHS Bank: Accounting and financial MINEBANCROFT DUSTINHOFFMAN KATHARINEROSS G U EST E N T E R T A IN E R S adm inistration, business law CALDER W ILLIN G H A M B U C K HENRY PAU L S IM O N and office adm inistration, eco­ P IC T U R E S D A N C IN G nomics. m anagem ent and m ar­ SIM ON... G ARFUN KEL LAW RENCE TU R M A N keting and transportation ad­ C A LL M IK E NICHOLS •i.iau TECHNICOLOR* PANAVISION* f 1“* C®«0011 & Novelty m inistration i B.M i. m 3 5 1 -5 8 1 8 „ Nextl Elke Som m er “ Wicked D ream s of Paula Schultz” $1 .5 0 FOR IN F O $1 . 5 0 O. M. Scott & Sons Co.: Chem ical engineering iB.M >. chem istry lorganic-i iB .M .D '. agronomy and biology iB .M .D - TODAY - SATURDAY & 3 SPARTA N 3100 E. I LO TS OF and m echanical engineering S U N D A Y A T 1:00 P . M . - 3 P . M . SAGINAWI FREE i B i. 5 :3 0 -7 :3 0 & 9 ;3 0 P . M . T W IN E A ST 351 0030 I P A R K IN G ! Sears. Roebuck and Co.: All m ajors of the colleges of a rts and NOW PLAYINGM letters, business, com m unica­ tion arts and social science i B i. W IT H T E R R O R ! Seattle School D istrict No. 1: CO-STARRING _____ E arly and later elem entary edu­ MICHAEL J. POLLARD GENE HACKMAN-ESTELLE PARSONS 0 cation. special education, m en­ M ac ty D ir ts Suant ftMuced HrWWStN EKAItv f r e c tt Or M I huR PtNH T C C H N I C O L O R M R O M W A R N B R B R O S . - M V B N A R T S tally handicapped, acoustically h a n d ic a p p e d . m alad ju st­ ed. physically handicapped and MSUASIAN-LATINAMERICAN-AFRICANSERIES speech correction, industrial arts, general science, physical science, geography, art. busi­ P re se n ts GONZALO TORRES ness education. English, coun­ seling. home econom ics. G e r­ man. Spanish. Russian. French, math, m usic (instrum ental and T h e b e s t in c l a s s i c a l M e x i c a n G u i t a r i s t vocali. physical education, re­ medial reading, social science, history, health education, auto power m echanics, drafting, e le c ­ tricity. electro n ics. Latin, bio- logv. chem istrv and phvsics iB . Mi. Slippery Rock State College: Art ich airm am . biology, eco­ nomics. m ath em atics. English, health and physical education, s p e c i a l education. Spanish. French, geography ich airm am . psychology (general experim en­ tal or clinical or counseling i. e le­ m entary education (elem entary math and or elem entary sci­ e n ce!. and student personnel The next white man i assistant dean of men or a ssist­ whoinsultsmegetsa ant dean of women i. one-way ticket tothe T R W . In c.: M etallurgical, graveyard!" m echanical and ch em ical en­ gineering and m a terial science ( B.M .D i. © SP A R T A N 1 1 0 0 E. SAGINAW “ ‘The Incident’ hits home with express train TWIN WEST M I4 M 0 impact Full blast drama...gives it to T O N IG H T AT 8 P .M . y O U S t r a i g h t ! ” Kathleen CanoH, NewYorkDailyNews S A T . AT 2 -6 -9 SU N . AT mmmL 20»œm*ïa» ________ T O N IG H T - 8 : 1 5 P .M . 2 -5 -8 Howissheintheclutch? biarrmfl (in alphabetical ordar) I H N P rSuboMTto row maww auotcwc— \ Sinceyou'renuzzlingher on the subwav, I figure E R IC K S O N K IV A In M5U 50i JULIE A N D R EW S AS VICTORARNOLD-ROBERTBANNARO-BEAUBRIDGES•RUBYDEE*ROBERTFIELDS-JACKGILFORD•MIKEKELLIN•EDMcMAHON GARYMERRILL-DONNAMILLS-TONYMUSANTE-BROCKPETERS -THELMARITTER-MARTINSHEEN-JANSTERLING anythingcanhappen!”/ A d m i s s i o n $ 2 .5 0 with valid ID at door. DIANAfei derVUS- ^MONROE SACHSOIUEDWARDMEADOW— SJLARRYPEERCE- NICHOLASE. BAEHR T i c k e t s a v a i l a b l e , a t U n io n T i c k e t O f f i c e Mmc c o n to r t by Tiny Kn(M . M ac toner t trto r tr t tyO r t » F» T M ichigan S ta te N ew s, E a s t L a n sin g , M ichigan F rid a y , F e b ru ary 16, 1968 11 Board of Trustees approves faculty changes M SU's Board of T ru stees Feb. 1: Arnold J . P a ls, instruc­ Schmatz. associate professor, Washington. D .C .: Ki Soon Rhee. m ents for: Sam uel J . Levine, Feb. 1: Axel L. Anderson, p ro -’ anatomy departm ent of Charles recreation. Ja n . 1. 1937: and. Thursday approved 11 appoint­ tor. Center for Laboratory elem entary and special edu­ research associate, food sci­ research associate to elem en­ fessor. E xtension, botany and W T itkem eyere. professor, e f­ Norris O. Wold, ice arena m ents: 19 leaves: 17 tran sfers, Animal R esources, veterinary cation. Sept. 1 to Nov. 30. ence. M arch 1 to April 15. tary and special education. plant pathology, from leave to fective M arch 1. He had been m anager. Sept. 1. 1949. Pro­ assignm ents and m iscellaneous surgery and m edicine: and to study in the Midwest: Carl m aternity leave: Stanley E. Learning System s Institute regular cam pus position. May assigned to‘ the Nigeria P ro­ fessor Jo lliffe will serve a actions: six retirem en ts: and veterinary clin ics. M arch 1: H. G ross, professor and ch air­ Smith. associate professor, 5: and leave dates of Albert gram since'Sept. 1.1966. one-year consultantship begin­ and Humanities Teaching In­ six resignations and term ina­ and Susan I. Knoke. librarian. man. secondary education and journalism . M arch 1 to Ju ne stitute. Ja n . 1 to Ju n e 30: A. Blum , professor of labor R etirem en ts approved in­ ning this Ju ly 1. tions. Library. M arch 1. curriculum. Ju n e 15 to Sept. 30. to continue studies in Com­ John W. Simmons, specialist, and industrial relations, and cluded. first year of MSU em ­ Resignations and term ina­ Appointments approved in­ The Board approved sabbatical 15. to do research in Ja p a n : munist E a st Europe: and Joanne to Learning System s Insti­ social science, to Ju ly 1-Aug. ployment indicated: Harold R. tions were approved for: Wal­ cluded: Lois H. Humphrey, leaves for: Philip J . May. Richard Schlegel. professor, B E ich e r. assistant professor, tute only. Feb. 1 to Aug. 31: 31. Jo lliffe, professor of jo u rn a­ ter B E m ery, professor, tele­ program director, fam ily living. professor, vice president for physics. Sept. 1 to Augj 31. textiles, clothing and related Two dual assignm ents were lism. Ju ly 1. 1969. 1949: Rose vision and radio. Sept. 30: Edgar C :1 Tacker. associate Cooperative Extension Service. business and finance. M arch 1. 1969. to study in Cambridge. arts. Ja n . 1 to April 30. to do approved: Paul M. P arker, Marie Iliff. senior clerk sten­ Gedalia Ailam. assistant pro­ professor, to engineering re­ March 15: Nancy B. Burton, to Aug 31. to study business England: and Josep h A. research at Stanford University. professor, to physics and Lyman ographer. botany and plant fessor. statistics and probabil­ search and com puter science. home econom ist. B araga. m anagem ent of other univer­ Schlesinger. professor, polit­ Also approved were leaves for: Fan. 1 to June 30-h e will be Briggs C 6 llege. Ja n . 1 to April pathology. Ju ly 1. 1948: Hazel ity. Aug. 31: Hans H. Toch. Houghton and Keweenaw coun­ sities: Roland I. Robinson, pro­ ical science. Sept. 1 to Aug. Roger E . Kasperson. assistant in the Computer Laboratory 30. and Marvin D. Solomon, Niesel. supervisor of nurses. professor, psychology. Aug. 31: ties. M arch 1: George W. Hothem fessor. accounting and financial 30. 1969. to do research at professor, geography and Ja m e s and computer science begin­ professor, to natural science Olin Health Center. Aug 1. D. Allen Lacy, assistant pro­ 4-H-youth agent. Cass. B errien adm inistration. Sept. 1 to Aug. home. Madison College. Sept. 1 to ning Ju ly 1: and Joseph J Lee. and Ju stin M orrill College. 1953: Noble Scherm an. anim al fessor. humanities. Aug. 31: and Van Buren counties. March 31. 1969. to study at home and The Board also approved Aug. 31. 1969. to study in Jan . 1 to Aug. 31. caretaker, pathology. Ju ly 1. Phyllis Olin. librarian. Library. associate professor, to human­ 18: and Dennis R Heldman. m New York City: Ja m e s W. these sab b aticals: B ru ce S te­ Puerto R ico : Theodore W. John­ In other item s, the Board 1946: Laura G. W aters, assis­ May 13: and F ra n cis X Scan- ities only. Sept. 1. assistant professor agricultural Costar, professor, counseling, wart. assistant professor, nat­ son. ' instructor. Am erican approved: promotion of Donald tant gym store m anager, neli. librarian. L ibrary. M arch Other assignm ents approved engineering and food science. personnel services and educa- ural science. April 1 to June Thought and Language. March F . Koch from instructor to health, physical education and 14. included: Bill A. Stout, associate May 1. tional psychology, Ja n .l. 1969. 30. to study at home, and in 1 to Ju n e 30. to study at home: assistant professor, philosophy. professor, agricultural engi­ to Ju n e 30. 1969. to conduct Chicago. Oklahoma and Wash­ Feb. 1 and the return to the Also appointed w ere: Ja y L. Pvlm an. associate professor, elem entary 'and special edu­ cation Sept.. L ester J . Evans, research and write a t home: Norman 1. Kagan, professor, counseling, personnel services ington: Charles L. San Cle­ mente. biology professor. and m icro­ public health. and B ern ice W. Dillon, li­ brarian. Library. Feb June 30. because of fam ily illness. 1 to neering. to an Africa pro­ gram . March 16 to April 30: and Norman N. M iller, assist­ Kaethe Kollwitz HILLELFOUNDATION 319 H lllcrest at W. Grand R iv er ant professor, political s c i­ visiting professor, human m edi­ and educational psychology. March 20 to Sept. 19. to study Reuben W. K aare. from natural ence and A frican Studios Sabbath Serv ices and Klddush Saturday 10 A.M. cine. M arch 1 to Feb. 28. Sept. 1 to Aug. 31. 1969. to in Tokyo: and Edmond W. Al­ resource agent. Alcona County, Center, to Midwest consortium exhibit at Brody 1969: and Carl B a a r. assistant study in Turkey and at home: ehin. coordinator, continuing to county agricultural agent. Brody Complex Council and P ro ject in Kenya. Ja n . I to professor. Ja m e s Madison Col­ and W illiam K. D urr, pro­ education. Ju ly 1 to D ec. 31. Ogemaw County. M arch 1: United M inistries in Higher Ed­ S u n d a y F e b . 18, 6 P . M . to study and w rite at home April 30. lege and political science. Sept. 1 fessor. elem entary and special Robert G. Wright, instructor, ucation at MSU will co-sponsor S u p p e r -F o r u m -S o c ia l Other appointments approved education. Ja n . 1. 1969. to Dec. Other leaves approved in­ from Am erican Thought and Changes were approved for: a centennial exhibit of the art included: Ja y R. Harman, 31. 1969. to study and w rite at cluded: Law rence E . Dawson, Language to Ju stin Morrill John F . Schwartz. Wayne County of Kaethe Kollwitz today through DR. M A X K A P U S T IN , of Wayne State Univ. will assistant professor, geography. home and in Boston. professor, food science. April College. Sept. I: and Kelley M agricultural agent, from tem ­ Feb. 25 in the Brody Conference speak on “ Judaism in anOpenSociety, Hum anism Sept. 1: G riffith 0 . Freed Other sabbatical leaves" ap- 16 to Aug. 31. to work on U.S. Harrison. assistant profes­ porary appointment to perm a­ Room. proved included: R obert R Dept, of Agriculture p ro ject in speak on “ Judaism in an OpenSociety, Hum anism associate professor, psychology. sor. from agricultural eco­ nent appointment. March 1: Roy . Sally E v erett, instructor in and S e c u la rism .” Buffet Supper, Everyone nomics. Brazil P ro je c t, to G. Smith, assistant professor art. will lecture about the life Latin Am erican Studies Cen­ Welcome. to assistant clinical profes­ and works of Kaethe Kollwitz ter. Feb 1 to D ec 31. sor. and transfer from m edi­ at 6 p.m. Wednesday in Brody Phone 332-1916 F o r Rides Over $1 million in grants, The Board approved assign­ cine to human development. Auditorium. gifts accepted by Trustees I f your major G ifts and grants totaling $1.323.721.44 were P e te r Hirsch. associate professor of m icro ­ accepted Thursday by M SU's Board of Trustees. Included was a $153.142 grant from the Na­ tional Merit Scholarship corporation from biology, received a $55.000 National Science Foundation grant for research on the growth, development, and reproduction of b acteria. His is listed here, Evanston. 111., for M SU 's M erit Scholar pro­ research involves the use of electron m icro­ gram. The grant will help defray fall term costs for m ore than 600 m erit scholars. Gordon Sa­ bine. vice president for special p rojects, ad­ scope and biochem ical techniques. A $53.900 grant from the National Science IB M would like m inisters the program. Milton Rokeach. professor of psychology, was granted $103.500 to continue his research Foundation will support studies for the use of frozen soil as a reliable and econom ic m a teria l for shaft sinking, building open foundation pits and protecting against ground w ater seepage to talk with you in human value system s. The em phasis of R okeach's research is on beliefs, values, a tti­ tudes and their relationships to human behav­ ior. This is the third renewal of the National during construction. The investigation is being directed by Orlando Andersland. associate pro­ fessor of civil engineering. QOS'" ,S ' '' . QOQ" „et'tPy February 21st Science Foundation grant, and it will fund the research until 1970. The U.S. O ffice of Civil D efense granted $88.000 to David K. B erio to continue research M. R ay Denny, professor of psychology, will continue research into ch a ra cteristics of avoid­ ance behavior In ra ts with a $40^6p0 g r a n t ji om or 22nd. into the e ffe ctiv e n ess of the c.ommuhication of ^.1^ n« is civil defense inform ation to the public. This 5 renewal o r a previous gran t from the .vSF. G° nrtV'C* •neefVr'<3a is the seventh renewal of the research pro­ Scholarship funds * accepted bv the*% 5ard totaled $181.443.39. gram which began in 1961. *33>* loin The Listener's Circle £ W IT H T H E N EW K I ...I I M O D EL TW EN TY’ The new way to enjoy stereo sound In your living room . . . T h e KLH Model Twentyl Model Twenty’ s three piece design fits easily and gracefully into a room already filled , with the furnishings of modern living. It uses very little valuable floor space. No m atter how you choose to arrange It, the Model Twenty will produce m ore effective stereo than the conventional console. The C enter Control section which contains all the sy stem 's operating featu res, can be placed wherever m ost convenient. T h e speakers go wherever they sound and look S ig n u p f o r a n in te r v ie w a t y o u r p la c e m e n t o f f ic e — e v e n if as government, business, law. education, medicine, science, b est. T h e center control section contains an automatic turntable (m ade fo r KLH by G a r­ the humanities. rard ), a sensitive, d rift-fre e FM Stereo Tu ner, and 50 Watt (100 watts perk) stereo am ­ y o u ’r e h e a d e d f o r g r a d u a t e s c h o o l o r m i l i t a r y s e r v i c e . p lifie r. Whatever your major, you can do a lot of good things at Maybe you think you need a technical background to work IBM. Change the world (maybe). Continue your education T h e speakers a re KLH ’ s rem arkable two-way acoustic-suspension system s, which can faithfully reproduce the frequency and dynamic range of a symphony orch estra. for us. (certainly, through plans such as our Tuition Refund Program . Not true. And have a wide choice of places to work (we have over 300 T h e Model Twenty u ses solid state electro n ics throughout. (A ll e le c tro n ic s, as well Sure we need engineers and scientists. But we also need locations throughout the United States). a s the loudspeakers, a re built en tirely In the KLH plant). liberal arts and business majors. We'd like to talk with you even W h a t to d o n ext T h e Model Twenty Is also available with new high quality AM radio. if you're in something as far afield as Music. Not that we'd We'll be on campus to interview for careers in Marketing hire you to analyze Bach fugues. But we might hire you to Computer Applications. Programming, Research. Design and analyze problems as a computer programmer. Development, Manufacturing, Field Engineering, and Finance and Administration. If you can’t make a campus interview, send T H E D IS C S H O P H o u r, W h at you can do a t IB M an outline of your interests and educational background to The point is, our business isn't just selling computers. Mr. I. C. Pfeiffer. IBM Corporation, 100 3 2 3 E . GRAN D R IV E R MON. - F R L 9 :0 0 -5 :3 0 It’s solving problems. So if you have a logical mind, we need South Wacker Drive, Chicago, Illinois 60606. 1 kY|| E A S T LANSIN G WED. 9 :0 0 -9 :0 0 SA T. 9 :0 0 -5 :3 0 you to help our customers solve problems in such diverse areas We re an equal opportunity employer. ¿ J i - ✓ u J V U 1" 351-S M F r id a y , F e b r u a ry 1 6 , 1968 1 2 M i c h i g a n S t a t e N e w s , E a s t L a n s i n g , M i c h i g a n Sta te N e w s Sta t* N e w s C la s s ifie d Results a re a u to m atic w h e n y o u u se a low cost W a n t A d to sell "D on’t N eed s.” C la s s ifie d 355-8255 355-8255 F o r Rent F o r S o la P e a n u ts P t r t o n a l S trv fc t A u t o m o tiv e . S T E R E O ■ w » « - y lif ie r F M P L E D G E S : C O N G R A T U L A T IO N S an A C C ID E N T P R O B L E M . C a li K A L A ­ A partm ent* A N Y K IN D O F t y p in g in m y hom e. T u n e r W a ln u C Q L " ip e r b buy. an a lm o st su c c e ssfu l r a id . T h e G a m ­ 4052514. C M A Z O O S T R E E T B O D Y S H O P . m a P h is 52/M C » U C u r t , 3 2 7 -2 1 - < « 3 -0 6 1 8 . S m a ll d e n ts to la rg e w re c ks. A m e r­ N E E D O N E m a n fo r tw o -m a n a p a rt­ 4 -2 / M S H A R O N V L IE T , E x p e rie n c e d typ ­ ic a n an d f o r e ig n c a rs. G u a ra n te e d m e n t . C a l l 3 5 1 -0 1 8 1 4 -2 / 1 6 S E C R E T F R IE N D : C a ll m e and id e n ­ is t . E le c t r ic t y p e w r it e r . C a ll 484- w ork. 4 8 2 -1 2 8 6 . 2628 E a st K a la ­ t ify y o u rs e lf. " J a m e s , " R o o m 2 0 6 .1 - 2 16 K O D A C O L O R F IL M , s iz e 0 0 . M 0, 42M . 153/S m azoo. C O K E M O S A R E A . T w o b e d ro o m o r 127, o n ly M e w it h t h is ad. a p a rtm e n t a v a ila b le im m e d ia t e ly . • AUTOMOTIVE M A R E K R E X A L L D R U G S , P re s­ A L P H A P H I 'S . W e lo v e you. T h e m en S T U D E N T D IS C O U N T - S H E IL A • EM PLOYM ENT IM P O R T E D C A R A ll new a p p lia n c e s . C a rp e te d c r ip t » ce n te r a t F ra n d o r. N e w a c ro s s the B e e ch . 1 -2 / 1 0 C A M P B E L L . E x p e rie n c e d t y p is t . th ro u g h o u t, in c lu d in g k it c h e n . $165 lo w e r e v e r y d a y d is c o u n t p r ic e s . • P O E R EN T S E R V IC E per m o n th . C a ll Joh n R u n q u is t . 332- C -2 / 1 S C O N G R A T U L A T IO N S P L E D G E S on a E le c t r ic . T e rm p a p e rs, th e se s. 3 3 7 -2 1 2 4 . M I 9 o r 3 3 2 -3 5 3 4 4 -2 / 1 6 • FO R S A L E S P E C IA L IS T S su c c e ssfu l r a id . S o rry yo u m is s e d " C a gre a t d e sse rt w it h the A lp h a P h is . • L O S T A POUND F E N D E R B A S S M A N a m p lif ie r w it h IN G R A N D L E D G E - Su b u rb a n P a r­ t w o 1 2 " la n s in g s . $ 3 0 0 .3 5 3 4 )2 5 « . 3.219 T h e b r o t h e r s o f D e lt a S ig m a P h i. 1 -2 16 A N N B R O W N : t y p is t an d m u lt ilit h , • PER SO N A L t ia lly f u r n is h e d . C o u p le o r b a c h e l­ • PEA N U T S PER SO N A L • T R IU M P H o r o n ly . 6 2 7 -6 7 1 5 2 - 2 16 D E A R D U L Y in it ia t e d m e m b e rs o ffle t p r in t in g . D is s e r t a t io n s , th e ­ se s, m a n u s c r ip t s , ge n e ra l t y p in g . • R EA L ESTA TE •RENAULT V O IG A T L A N D E R C A M E R A , and T h e re is n o t h in g • w e sa y n o th ­ IB M , 17 y e a rs e x p e r ie n c e . 332- O N E O R tw o g ir ls s p r in g . $ 4 7 .5 0 in g - b e tte r th a n a n A G D p le d g e . • S E R V IC E • VO LKSW AG EN M a n s fie ld S lid e p ro je c to r, b o th fo r 8384. in c lu d e s u tilitie s . C o n v e n ie n t . 337- $ 00 . C a ll I3 7 - 0 0 M 3 -2 / 1 6 H op e yo u e n jo ye d y o u r s u r p r is e . C • TRA NSPO RTATIO N 2056 3 - 2 19 L o y a lly . 1 - 2 16 • WANTED A1 Edward's W E D D IN G G O W N : C h a p e l t r a in and M A R G A R E T R IC E . E x p e rie n c e d typ ­ F O U R T H G IR L needed s p rin g te rm . v e il. S la e 7 .9 4 0 . 4 8 2 - 9 8 5 8 3 -2 / 1 5 W O R L D : P A T and B ill a re n ic e r S p o rts C a r C e n te r O ne b lo c k fro m B e rke v. $55. 351- th a n yo u kn o w . M .B . 1 -2 / 1 6 is t . P ro m p t se r v ic e . 509 G ro ve S t r e e t . 3 3 7 -7 0 3 8 . 1 -2 1 6 D E A D L IN E 1200 E . Oakland IV 9-7591 9435. 5 -2 21 S T E R E O S Y S T E M . E V a m p lif ie r . M A S O N B O D Y S H O P . 812 E a st K a la ­ N E E D O N E m a n fo r fo u r-m a n A vo n ­ E ic o sp e a ke rs, G a rra rd c h a n g e r. S e r v ic e T Y P IN G T E R M p a p e rs, an d le n g th . 1 P.M. one class day be­ d a le a p a rtm e n t. $57 m o n t h - g e t t in g P a n a s o n ic ta p e deck. $500 w o rth P ic k - u p . d e liv e r y a v a ila b le . 332- m a zo o S t re e t- S in c e 1940. C o m ­ A U T O IN S U R A N C E . IM M E D IA T E 0447. 1 0 -2 27 fore publication. m a r r ie d , w ill b a r g a in fo r le s s. o f e q u ip m e n t , o n ly $300. C a ll D on. Cancellations - 12 noon one p le t e s e rv ic e . a u to p a in t in g A m e r ic a n and and c o llis io o f o r e ig n 3 5 1 -8 7 2 6 . 6 -2 / 1 6 Hewenber in 3 3 2 -6 8 2 0 a f t e r 6 p .m . 5 -2 19 C O V E R A G E . Sp a rta n 4 8 7 -5 0 0 6 .1 6 0 4 E a s t M ic h ig a n . In s u r a n c e . N E E D Y O U R te rm p ap e r o r th e se s class day before publica­ ca rs. IV 5 -0 2 5 6 C E L E C T R O V O IC E P R O M O T IO N on 7 -2 / 1 0 typ ed ? L o w e st p r ic e on cam p us. + h e n o v i e s u > 6en X used "to run tion. E A S T L A N S IN G d u p le x e s . F u r­ ste re o syste m s. F M , m u lt ip le x , P ic k - u p an d d e liv e r y . C a ll c o l­ A U T O M A T IC C A R w a sh . O n ly 75c. le c t. P o n t i a c . 3 3 4 -6 5 7 6 . 5 2 22 Transportation G a rra rd c h a n ge r a n d sp e a ke rs D IA P E R S E R V IC E - D ia p a r e n e A n ­ n is h e d . u n f u r n is h e d $135 up. Im ­ PHONE I t 's the b est in to w n Y o u m a y s it c o m p le t e , $ 2 5 2 .9 0 up. M A IN E L E C ­ t is e p t ic P ro c e ss a p p ro ve d b y D o c ­ in yo u r c a r fo r 2 12 m in u te s m e d ia t e o c c u p a n c y 3 3 2 -0 4 8 0 . 5 -2 19 fs a n d h i l l a tt T R O N IC S , 0 8 2 -5 0 3 5 . 5558 So u th to rs. Sa m e D ia p e r s re tu rn e d a ll Tac vit(«oersf 355-8255 w h ile w axed. vo u r A lso c a r c le a n s is w a sh e d u n d e rn e a th and c a r. B E E C H W O O D A P A R T M E N T S O ne P e n n s y lv a n ia . C t im e s , w a sh e d Y o u rs fre e . o r N o O u rs. B a b y d e p o s it . C lo t h e s A M E R I­ \bvrn I0 2 9 : — .. w r> » j ■ |~ \i Field Jackets $14.8£ ea. 817 N O R T H C e d a r. F i j g ^ e d three fo u r-m a n o r f iv e m an. C a ll 351- 5 -2 / 1 9 3 5 3 -1 0 2 0 . 1 -2 16 B O O K IN G m e n t hoi p | L L “ V yo u r ow n C A T A L IN A C O N V E R T IB L E 1964 ro o m s. P a '^ 4275 a f te r 5 p .m . C Hand W armers, $1.29 up t im e . 3 5 1 -7 9 1 0 . 1 0 -2 / 2 3 A u t o m a t ic , p ow er s t e e r in g , and M a r r ie d co t n w -J8 4 8 . 4 -2 19 F O U R G IR L S needed. S p r in g te rm . Animal* 0 D Army Socks 95* ea. AGENCY b ra ke s. N e w sn o w t ir e s . 7 3 .0 0 0 $ 5 0 . I n c l u d i n g u t i l i t i e s . 3 5 1 -0 7 9 1 . 3 -2 19 m ile s . V e ry good c o n d itio n . W ill H A S L E T T A P A R T M E N T S . O n e g ir l C ed a r G reens Apts . 3 Gal. plastic gas can; $2.88. fo r the best M E D IC A L T E C H N IC IA N F u ll t im e Ski Caps, 98f le t g o fo r o n ly $900. C a ll 3 55 f e m a le . D o c t o r 's o f fic e in O ke m os. now and s p r in g . R ed uce d re n t^ 3 5 l- F R E N C H P O O D L E - s ilv e r gre y. rock, folk, fazz bands 8297. 9 -5 p .m .. M o n d a y th rou gh B e g in w o rk A p r il 1. P ho n e 332- 7645. 1 0 -2 27 O N E O R tw o g ir ls needed. F o u r- A K C re g is t e r e d , f e m a le . H a s a ll 1 pt. thermos with cup,$179 ea Luxury 1 Bdrnn. Units and o rch e stra s available F rid a y . C 3548. 5 -2 21 b e d ro o m h o u s e . $ 6 0 . 3 5 1 -5 6 4 0 . 3 -2 20 sh o ts. G o o d n a tu re d . S ix ’ m o n ths Paddle Ball Paddles, $2.88 IM M E D IA T E L Y . O N E g ir l w ante d o ld . $ 7 5 . 4 3 5 -5 0 5 7 . 3 -2 / 1 6 Peddle Balls 39* & 49* M A L E S T U D E N T S e a rn $40. - $80 fo r lu x u rv a p a rtm e n t. R ed uce d A M E R IC A N S D I D N 'T in v e n t th e P ro m a rk Productions C H E V R O L E T m a t ic . p ow er 1964 B is c a v n e . b ra k e s, A u to ­ s t e e r in g , p er w eek p a rt t im e , e v e n in g s , so m e r a t e . C a l l 3 5 1 -4 9 3 1 . N a n c y . 3 -2 16 351-8631 h a n d y W a n t A d e it h e r . . w e ’v e D A C H S H U N D A K C th re e -m o n th o ld Back Packs $1.88 up D a vt and Ntckla Raltz r a d i o . $ 7 5 0 . 3 3 7 -0 2 2 1 3 -2 16 a fte rn o o n s. C a ll 3 9 3 -5 6 6 0 2 -4 p .m .. fo u n d th e m on E g y p t ia n p a p y ru s Military Blankets, $3.88 up M o n d a v - F r id a y . 1 0 -2 28 N E E D O N E m a n at U n iv e r s it y T e r­ r o lls . B u t ro u n d the w o r ld e ve ry­ m in ia t u r e . R e d a n d ru st m a le . C lgarettea, 27* tax included 663-8585 N E E D O N E m an. B u rc h a m W o o d s H o u s e b r o k e n . 4 0 4 -3 6 5 2 . 3 -2 20 FACULTYANDGRADUATESTUDENTS C O R V A 1 R M O N Z A 1963 F o u r-sp e e d ra c e b y M a rc h o r S p r in g . 351- one a g re e s th a t W a n t A d s ge t re ­ t w o - m a n . S p r i n g t e r m . 3 5 1 -8 4 2 5 . 3 -2 16 R a d io . W h ite w a lls . E x c e lle n t co n ­ N E E D E D : S P A R T A N w if e w it h o r su lts - try a " r e s u l t f u l '' W an t 7447. 3 -2 20 P O O D L E . T O Y -b re d a p r ic o t fe m a le . d it io n . $ 450. 3 3 9 -0 0 7 2 . 3 -2 19 w it h o u t c ^ 'u ‘ t r Q in g fro m A d a n d se e ! A K C . Se ve n w ee ks. Sh o w n b y ap ­ su rg e ry . f T • * “ .. > e d s h e lp N E E D O N E m a n fo r tw o m a n lu x ­ S P R IN G C L E A R A N C E . C e d a r V il­ p o in t m e n t . P h o n e 6 4 6 -2 1 7 1 o r IV 9- in E a st L a n s in g hom e. H o u rs f le x ­ F A L C O N 1960 R a d io , new m u ffle r , u r y . R e d u c e d . C l o s e . 3 5 1 -8 7 7 9 . 3 -2 20 la g e fo u r-m a n . R e d u ce d ra te . D is h ­ Ro m i 2M 5. 3 -2 20 EAST LANSING AREA ib le . L i g h t h o u s e w o r k . E D 2 -4 2 5 8 . 3 -2 19 s h o e b r a k e s . $100 3 5 3 -3 5 6 1 . 3 -2 20 w a s h e r . 3 5 1 -9 2 4 8 . 3 -2 16 PRIVATE LAKE T W O G IR L S needed now and or G IR L - S H A R E tw o h o u s e k e e p in g F O R D 1963 X L. 500. T h re e sp e e d , S T U D E N T M A R K E T IN G P O S IT IO N S . s p rin g te rm . R iv e r s id e E a st A p a rt­ N E E D O N E g ir l s p r in g te rm . $58. ro o m s. R e f r i g e r a to r^ .. $10 H a n d y Mobil* Horn*t IM M E D IA T E O C C U P A N C Y s t ic k s h ift . B u cke t se a ts. P o w e r P a rt t im e e m p lo y m e n t fo r M S I' stu ­ m e n t s . $ 6 2 .5 0 . C a l l 3 5 1 -8 5 4 6 . 1 -2 16 lo c a t io n . 3 3 7 -1 5 9 8 .6 6 3 -8 4 1 8 . m o n t h . A c r o s s - U n i o n . 3 5 1 -8 0 9 0 . 3 -2 16 s t e e rin g . A M -F M ra d io . L ik e new . d e n ts 1 0 -1 5 h o u rs p e r w eek. A u to­ 1-2 16 R O Y C R A F T 1004 12' x 6 0 '. P o rch , NEW 2 BEDROOM LUXURY APARTMENTS featuring com­ $900. o r b est o ffe r. P hon e 65 5 m o b ile r e q u ir e d . E x c e lle n t in c o m e . NEWLY MARRIED? a w n in g . L o t 612. 2780 E a st G ra n d plete a ir conditioning, carpeting, refrigerator, oven, range 2435. 5 -2 22 M e a n in g fu l e x p e rie n c e . F o r fu rth e r TAN G LE WOOD W A T E R 'S E D G E a p a rtm e n t. F e m a le S IN G L E R O O M . M A L E stu d e n t. S23 . R iv e r , E a s t L a n a in g . 52/16 and dishwasher. in fo r m a tio n , w r it e T h e S o c ie t y C o r­ C h a r le s Stre e t. p o r a t io n . P .O . B o x 2051 L a n s in g . fo r s p rin g and o r su m m e r. 351- M O B IL E H O M E 56 x 10 F o u r ENJOY ALL winter and summer sports on a beautiful F O R D 1965 F a lc o n - fo u r-d o o r M i c h i g a n 48911. 2 -2 16 APARTM EN TS 8343. 5 -2 20 5 -2 22 b e d ro o m . 23' b y 10' liv in g ro o m private lake se d a n . O ne o w n e r. 6 6 3 -8 1 1 1 . 332- 0296 2 -2 16 2 Bdrm.,unfur.,from 139,50 N E E D T W O m e n fo r s p r in g o r su m ­ E A S T L A N S IN G -- n e a r U n io n . T w o e x te n s io n . 92500 o r b est o ffe r. FURNISHED model open d a ll y 2 to 7, Saturdays and Sun­ C a ll IV 441169. 1 - 2 16 C R E D IT S A N D C o lle c t io n s su p e r­ 351-7880 m e r . U n i v e r s i t y V i l l a . 3 5 1 -0 4 5 5 . 3 -2 / 1 6 m a tu re m e n sh a re tw o q u ie t ro o m s. days 1 to 7. v is o r fo r Sa tu rd a ys a n d Su n d a ys E a c h $35. p e r m o n th . E D 2 -4 7 7 0 . 3 -2 19 G A L A X IE 1963. $500 C a ll A rt. 351- DIRECTIONS: Take Saginaw Street east to Haslett Rd. Straight 7492. 3 -2 16 E x c e lle n t o p p o r t u n it y . C o nta ct ST T W O M E N fo r U n iv e r s it y T e rra c e N E E D O N E g ir l s p rin g and o r su m ­ R O O M A N D B ( * ^ f t v a ila b le in L o tt & Found ahead on Haslett Rd., 1/2 mile past Okemos Road to entrance. L A W R E N C E H O S P IT A L . 3 7 2 -3 6 1 0 . m e r . C h a le t A p a r t m e n t s 3 5 1 -4 3 3 2 . J E E P 1967 V -6 w it h p lo w and V in y l e x t . 413. 4 -2 19 A p a rtm e n t. Im m e d ia t e ly o r s p r in g . 3 -2 2 0 C h r is t t a r ^ f i j Y g U k ly A lso , L O S T - B L A C K m a le cat w it h b la c k CHALET PARK APARTMENTS at Lake O’ the Hills 3 5 1 -8 8 5 4 5 -2 19 r id e a v a f t v * * .„ « y throu gh F r i­ to p . $ 2 2 9 5 . 3 9 3 -0 8 9 4 3 -2 20 B U S IN E S S M A J O R w a nte d fo r A s­ L U X U R Y A P A R T M E N T to le a s e d a y in a re a of Sta te P o lic e P o st. b e lle d c o lla r . P le a s e c a ll 332- P H O N E 3 3 9 - 2 2 7 8 ; ______________ 4941. 4 -2 / 1 6 sis ta n t M a n a g e r p o s it io n . P e rm a ­ O N E G IR L to sh a re U n iv e r s it y T e r­ sp r in g te rm . T h re e m e n needed. 3 0 5 -4 7 5 5 , a f t e r « p . m . 5 -2 / 1 6 M G A 1961. N e e d s body and ca r- nent p a r t - t im e . A p p ro x im a te ly 20 ra c e A p a rtm e n t. 3 5 1 -8 8 5 4 o r 351- U n i v e r s i t y V i ll a . 3 5 1 -0 7 5 7 . 5 -2 22 P H I K A P P A P S I w is h e s the re tu rn b u ra to r w ork. M u st s e ll. $150. 351- h o u rs o r m o re . 3308 So u th C e d a r. 8946. 5 -2 / 1 9 O N E O R tw o m e n to sh a re fu r­ ol M S U -M ic h ig a n f o o t b a ll s k in , and 6230. 3 -2 19 S u it e II. L a n s in g 5 -2 20 E D E N R O C a p a rtm e n t M a le fo r n is h e d house. E q u ip p e d fo r stu d y­ sc ra p b o o k . C a ll 3 3 2 -5 0 3 9 fo r in ­ G IR L F O R tw o p e rso n a p a rtm e n t. s p r in g a n d o r s u m m e r . 3 5 1 -8 6 0 9 . in g . S in g le , $50: d o u b le , $40. C a ll f o rm a t io n . 3 -2 19 W A IT R E S S . M U S T be 18 o r o ve r. E a st L a n s in g . $60. 3 5 1 -0 9 0 7 . eve­ O L D S M O B IL E 1958 fo u r-d o o r se ­ 3 3 7 -0 9 8 8 . 1 0 -2 / M n in g s . 5 -2 / 1 9 3 -2 20 A p p ly C h a rco a l H o u se . F ra n d o r dan. R a d io , P o w e r h e a te r. b ra k e s and D e p e n d a b le s t e e r in g . tra n s­ C e n te r, a fte r 6 p .m 3 - 2 & I6 S H A R P S IN G L E ro o m fo r m a le . P r i­ $5 R E W A R D fo r re tu rn of w h it e ACROSS ciHHPi aynnmiDti p o r ta t io n . $200. C a ll 4 8 9 -6 6 9 1 a ft­ S T U D IO A P A R T M E N T to s u b le t at E A S T L A N S IN G A c to ss * om ca m ­ vate hom e. P r iv a t e b a th . E D 2- fu rry hat and n a vy m it t e n s . C a ll 20. Camelopard! □man Hmmnnnn rannn □□□ nnn p us. O n e b p < J ; '| , < C Q tsh e d ex­ 3 5 3 -2 4 7 7 . .j ¡¡q e r 5 :3 0 p .m . 5 -2 / 1 6 P A R T - T IM E b a b y s it te r fo r tw o N o r t h w in d F a rm s. R e d u ce d ra te . 1183. 3 -2 19 j 1. Derrick cept ra n f t w - -« e ra to r. R e a ­ 6. Prow 28. Congest O L D S M O B I L 1- I T " -^ 8 5 E x c e lle n t c h ild r e n . 6732. Y o u r h om e o r m in e . 2 -2 484- 19 3 5 1 -8 7 3 2 .3 5 5 -8 0 4 3 4 -2 / 1 6 so n a b le . . .n in e 3 3 2 -0 7 9 2 o r 351- L O S T : B U C H E R A R W a tch T u e sd a y 10. Dramatic 31. Surveyor's ranri as man c o n d itio n . I S O L , U $750 o r b est 9608. 5 -2 / 1 0 F o r S a le n e a r C h e m is t r y B u ild in g . R e w a rd 3.2 20 finale instrument □ ta n n a nnn o ffe r. C a ll C r a ig . « 2 -3 5 0 7 . 3 -2 16 N E E D T W O b u s b o ys fo r lu n c h and W A T E R ’S E D G E A p a rtm e n ts-O n e D IA M O N D B A R G A IN : W e d d in g and C a l l 3 3 7 -2 0 5 6 . 11. Rajah's 32. Coal prod­ □ □ □ □ a a a □□□□ d in n e r . M e a l s a n d p a y . 3 3 2 -2 7 8 5 . 1 -2 16 NORTHWIND g ir l needed fo r s p rin g te rm . 351- wife uct □ m a s □ n a n a n n ................... v e n ga ge m e n t r in g se ta . Sa v e 50 per P t r to n a l 33. Car O P E L R A L L Y E . B u ic k . 1967 . 30 FARMS 4912. 5 -2 / 1 6 cen t o r m o re . L a rg e s e le c t io n at 12. Doctrine ntaa □ □ an y m p g. $ 1 .7 0 0 . R a d io , t r a ile r h itc h . B A B Y S IT T E R M o n d a y. T u e sd a y. 13. Uftovers 34. Article 3 5 5 -1 0 0 8 3 -2 16 W e d n e sd a y. 1 1 :1 5 -5 :1 5 . N e a r M e d i­ p la in a n d fa n c y d ia m o n d s . $ 2 5 -3 1 5 0 S A L E S P E R S O N N E L needed fo r c a m ­ 36. Crack □ a n a n anm cal D e n ta l B u ild in g . O w n tra n sp o r­ 351-7880 N E E D V illa g e . O N E m a n S p e c ia l im m e d ia te ly . ra te s. C a ll C ed ar 351- W IL C O X S E C O N D - H A N D 509 E a s t M ic h ig a n . P h o n e 4 8 5 4 3 0 1 S T O R E , C p u s lit e r a r y m a g a z in e . 20 p e r cent 14. Fume IS. Bombys 38. Urge tuas rana an n a T E M P E S T F o u r-d o o r. 1964 A u t o m a t ic . E x c e lle n t R a d io . c o n d itio n . t a t io n . 3 7 2 -2 0 4 9 . 3 -2 20 N E E D E D : O N E g ir l fo r lu x u ry a p a rt­ 8017. 5 -2 / 1 6 c o m m is s io n s o ld . N e w p lu s iss u e . $ 1 .0 0 fo r P h o n e e ach 3557184 25 17. Fury grouper anaanam □□□□ $795. N o m on e y dow n. O w n e r. E D 2- B A B Y S IT T E R T O liv e in . E a st L a n ­ m e n t w i t h p o o l . C a l l 3 5 1 -9 1 8 8 . 5.2 21 G U IT A R . A M P L IF IE R , a n d a c ce s­ a fte rn o o n s. 2-2 16 18. Tibetan ox 30. Crude stone □Hnanasa T R O W B R ID G E A P A R T M E N T fo r 6 1 3 1 .2 8 8 6 C r e s t w o o d D r i v e . 3 -2 19 s in g a re a . 3 5 1 -6 6 5 4 b e fo re 2 p .m . tw o. Im m e d ia t e occupancy. 3190. s o r ie s . A ll in f in e c o n d itio n . P h o n e 10. Move tool o r 3 9 3 -1 3 3 9 . 3 -2 2 0 N E E D E D : C O L O R -B L IN D p e o p le fo r 21. Reserved 40. Formerly 3 5 1 -0 4 6 5 o r 3 3 2 -0 4 8 0 . 5 -2 / 1 6 3 3 9 -2 3 4 9 . 5 2 20 41. Commerce Z. H a y s t a c k >. Theater sign C L O S E S T T O C a m p u s. Jo b tra n sfe r v is io n re se a rch e x p e rim e n t. P a y 22, Coffee V A L IA N T 1961 - c o n d it io n f a ir , D R A F T S M A N . P A R T -t im e . T h ir d fo rce s m ove. N eed one m a n fo r house 3 . R ic e p a ste 7. Tax p r ic e v e ry r e a s o n a b le . 4 8 2 -6 6 1 1 o r Hooui G IB S O N L G -I G u ita r . Ste e l s t rin g e d . $2 p e r h o u r fo r 3 -4 h o u rs if vou a re 4. Household 8. Main din­ 3 5 5 -8 2 8 3 7 -2 / 2 1 o r fo u rth y e a r m e c h a n ic a l e n g i­ q u ie t lu x u ry C e d a r V illa g e A p a rt­ B e st o ffe r 3 5 1 4 )6 9 4 3 -2 16 se le c t e d . C a U 3553440 1 -3 p .m . fo r 23. Hawser DOW N n e e r in g stu d e n t ,to h a n d le d r a ft in g m e n t . 3 5 1 -0 9 4 3 . 3 -2 19 s c r e e n in g a p p o in t m e n t . 3 -2 20 25. Harbor linens ner course V O L K S W A G E N 1963 G ood, c le a n a ss ig n m e n t in o u r e n g in e e r in g O N E M A L E ro o m m a te , sh a re house S E W IN G M A C H IN E c le a r a n c e sa le . boat 1. Golf club 5 . S p e c ia l 9. Tightwad g ro u p . H o u rs f le x ib le . A p p ly J O H N f o r s p r i n g t e r m . $ 4 5 . 4 8 4 -5 5 6 5 . 5 - 2 '2 0 10 Sp. linen S8 t 2 I“ x - r" I I r - » 0 ■ 12. Lever N E E D O N E m a n fo r three m a n lu x ­ B ra n d n ew p o rta b le s , $ 4 9 .5 0 , $5. G IR L S C O U T C o o k ie o rd e rs F e b ­ c o n d it io n . O n ly 6 .0 0 0 m ile s s in c e B E A N D I/ IS IO N . 1305 So u th C e d a r. u ry a p a rtm e n t. S p r in g an d o r su m ­ ru a ry I6 t h -2 3 r d . W ill a r r iv e M a rc h p e r M o n th . L a rg e s e le c t io n o f re ­ e n g in e o v e rh a u l. $650. 3 3 7 -0 4 2 6 IV 4 -9 4 7 1 . E q u a l O p p o r t u n it y e m ­ 3.2 13 P L E A S A N T T H R E E -b e d ro o m coun­ 16. Anvil of the a fte r 5 p .m . o r a n y t im e S a tu rd a y . m e r . 3 4 0 O a k h ill . 96 5 . 3 3 2 -3 0 7 5 . c o n d it io n e d uaed m a c h in e s . S in g ­ N th. 50c p e r box. F iv e k in d s . C a ll » » 1-2 16 p lo y e r . 4 - 2 21 try h om e g a rd e n . w it h C a m p u s sto ve , 14 re fr ig e r a t o r , m ile s . $70. 646- e rs, W h ite s , N e c c h is , N e w H o m e 3551217 o r 3552961 2 -2 19 gj ear an d "m a n y o th e rs.” $ 1 0 .9 5 to I F A N E X T R A t y p e w r it e r is ta k­ a 5“ 19. Robbery V O L K S W A G E N 1966 1300 Sedan. E x ­ For Rant F O U R T H G IR L needed A v o n d a le . 4613. 3 -2 -1 « $ » .9 6 . T e rm s. E D W A R D S D IS ­ in g u p sp a c e In y o u r hom e, you 20. Droop c e lle n t c o n d itio n . 1 6 ,0 0 0 m ile s . R a ­ T V R E N T A L S fo r stu d e n ts. Lo w S p r in g 2014. te rm . 952. m o n th. C a ll 5 -2 337- 21 T W O O R three g ir ls needed im ­ T R IB U T IN G C O M P A N Y . W a s h in g t o n . 4 1 9 8 4 4 $ . 1115 N o rth C -2 / 1 6 c a n d ep en d u pon a Sta te N e w s W a n t W S” _ 7~ 21. Spring d io . O n e o w n e r. $1200. C a ll 351- A d to s e ll it ( o r y o u . 23. Roisterer 6819. 5 -2 22 e c o n o m ic a l ra te s b y th e te rm o r m e d ia t e ly . tSQ m o n th. C a ll Sue. T ■” T 24. Commands m o n th . U N IV E R S IT Y T V R E N T ­ O N E O R tw o g ir ls to s u b le a s e im ­ 3 5 1 -5 4 8 7 . 5 2 4 G u n s o n 2 -2 10 B IR T H D A Y 8 C A K E S , - $3 40; T H E R O G U E S . N o w b o o k in g (o r ■ 25. Fright V O L K S W A G E N S U N R O O F 1966. Su ­ A L S . 4 6 4 -9 2 6 3 C m e d ia t e ly . U n iv e r s it y T e rra c e 351- " - 1 4 .1 2 ; I ” - $ 4 .9 0 d e liv e r e d . s p r i n g t e r m . T e l e p h o n e 3 3 7 -9 2 6 6 . n n H “ 20. Soot 7074. • 5 -2 21 L A K E L A N S IN G - M a n needed im ­ A lso sh e e t c a ke s. K W A S T B A K ­ 22 sr % p e r io r c o n d it io n . P h o n e 3 5 3 -6 4 1 8 . 5 2 M T V R E N T A L S fo r stu d e n ts. 1 9 .0 0 m e d ia t e ly . L a rg e la k e fro n t h ouse, E R IE S . IV 4 - B I7 . C -2 / 1 5 27. Phase w e e kd a ys M e y e r. 1 -5 p .m .. a sk fo r B ob 3 - 2 '2 0 m o n th . F re e s e rv ic e a n d d e liv e r y . O N E G IR L to s u b le t B u rc h a m W ood s o w n r o o m . $ 4 0 . 3 3 9 -2 9 3 3 . 3 -2 / 1 6 A C A P U L C O - M E X IC O C IT Y . —! ¡Ü P 22 2S. Urge C a ll N E J A C , 3 3 7 -1 3 0 0 . W e gu a ra n ­ a p a rtm e n t. B e fo re 5 p .m .. 35 5 K L H - M O D E L 15 Ste re o w it h d ust S P R IN G B R E A K . 9 d a ys. Je t. lu x ­ w apartment V O L V O 1960 O ’1 c o n d itio n te e s a m e - d a y s e r v ic e . C 8715. 3 -2 19. c o ve r. U se d s ix w ee ks. $200. 351- u ry h o te l, b u llf ig h t s , p a r tie s , e tc . r i 29k Engrave D a rk b lu e . S O ” ” -1 o ffe r. 35 5 N E E D E D : O N E m a n lu x u ry a p a rt­ H A S L E T T R O A D . 1846. T h re e -ro o m 6 4 » . 3 -2 / 1 0 L im it e d sp a ce a v a ila b le . 3 5 1 -9 7 8 9 - v~ with acid T V R E N T A L G .E . P o rta b le . F re e 8 4 1 . 3 -2 16 c o tta g e , u n f u r n is h e d except (o r d e t a ils . r e s e r v n U o n s . N O W ! 30. Drive slant­ s e r v ic e an d d e liv e r y . 1 8 .5 0 per m e n t. 950. m o n th. W ill b a rg a in . sto ve a n d r e fr ig e r a t o r . C o u p le C A M E R A . K O D A K T w in L e n s R e ­ 1 5 2 / » ir Sr ingly m o n th . C a ll S T A T E M A N A G E ­ N o l e a s e . 3 5 1 -6 9 0 5 . 6 -2 / 2 2 o n ly . E D 2 -6 8 6 1 , E D 2 -4 5 6 0 . 34 / jg f le x . L e n se s, f ilt e r s , c a se . E x c e l­ 33. Greedy Auto Servie* & Ports M E N T C O R P . 3 3 3 -0 0 8 7 . 1 9 -3 / 8 M A L E G R A D U A T E stu d e n t to sh a re E A S T L A N S IN G . O n e o r tw o g ir ls le n t $40 3559093 3 -2 / 1 9 IF fo r Y O U N O w in n in g lo n g e r h a a rta , n ee d 1 st y o u r it g u ita r w o rk n 35. Pithy re­ lu x u ry a p a rtm e n t fo r sp r in g , su m ­ to sh a re th re e g ir l house. $50 mark M E L 'S ■ n a il, A U T O w e d o S E R V IC E . th e m a ll. L a rg e 1100 o r E a st T H E R E A d s . . IS . N O c a ll m y ste ry to d a y a n d a b o u t w a tc h W ant yo u r m e r . C a l l 3 5 1 -8 0 5 4 a f t e r 5 p . m . p e r m o n th . C a ll a fte r 0 p .m ., 351 - F E N D E R J B L 's . V o x B A N D M A S T E R S u p e r - B e a t le : w it h w it h c o v­ fo r it y o n to d a y a n o th e r in n Sta te w a y. N e w s A d v e r t is e W a n t t m i f 37. Utmost G r a n d R iv e r . 3 1 2 -3 2 5 6 . C d o n ’t n e e d s d i s a p p e a r q u i c k l y ! 3 - 2 '2 0 • « 7 . 42. / ie e rs 3 5 3 -1 1 7 8 5 -2 / 2 1 A d a n d i t w ill p a y o f f o n c e a g a in . hvnerhnle M ichigan S ta te N ew s, E a s t L a n sin g , M ichigan F rid a y , F e b ru a ry 16, 1968 1 3 Romney O u t o f s ta te jo b le s s h a r m challenges a*» ' et • . - • Viet, policy in d u s tria l a n ti-r io t M A N CH ESTER. N.H. A P - Gov. Romney said Thursday D E T R O IT A P -A m assive city 's own so-called hardcore ment right now ." said Inspec­ the United States is using na­ industry effo rt to help avert fu­ unemployed. tor Ja m e s Bannon. head of po­ palm on civilians in an in­ ture riots in D etroit appears to These a re people considered lice intelligence. d iscrim inate show of m ili­ be backfiring possibly thousands- as hundreds-- jo b ­ m ost likely to join a riot and they w ere the original targ ets of The d ram atic turn in the in-' dustry cam paign was revealed State views tary power in South Vietnam He accused form er Vice less from out of sta te com e to the job cam paign that has got­ by Josep h L. Hudson J r . . ch air­ President R ichard M. Nixon the city seeking work. The result: Som e out-of-sta­ ten nationwide publicity. P olice cite still another possi­ man of the Xew D etroit Com­ m ittee. riot proposal of saying "m e to o " to P re s i­ dent Johnson's policy in the ters have failed to get a job. ble problem. The com m ittee was set up by Asian war. swelling the unemployment that Mayor Je ro m e P. Cavanagh anc A proposal to clam p down on We a re cognizant of the fact "A s yet he has presented to many feel contributed to last Gov. Romney to help rebuild persons who attem pt to incite that there m ay be outside agita­ New Ham pshire s voters no Ju ly 's devastating riot. the city a fte r the rioting. riots Thursday becam e the first tors coming in and we a re keep­ m ore than a blurred carbon Others have snapped up jobs Hudson told a news confer­ anti-crim e or anti-riot bill to be ing abreast of the situation. But copy of the discredited Johnson that might have gone to the ence Wednesday that word has reported out of a legislative com ­ that's as fa r as I ca re to com- policies for ending the w a r." spread around the nation of the m ittee. Romney said of X'ixon. his city 's e ffo rts to c re a te new jobs The bill would m ake it a fel­ chief Republican rival in New and that an influx of jo b less has ony, with the possibility of a life H am pshire's presidential pri­ pushed unemployment to 31.000 prison term , for any person who mary. Talent show to open compared to the level of 30.000 last August. “ incites, induces or exhorts any other person to unlawfully burn The governor reliance on m ilitary said over­ forces any property, to murder, wound Tragedy presentation Although som e of this can be will not bring the progress traced to seasonal layoffs. Hud­ or assault any person, or to do Union Board Week son pointed out that 17 com pa­ nies asked to help provide jobs anything which m ay endanger or be likely to endanger the life that is really needed, "th e political and social strength­ or property of any p e rso n . . . ” ening of South V ietn am ." have hired 55.000 people since "Nixon has no peace pro­ Union Board Week will begin val at 6:30 p.m. Sunday. A Laurel Aug. 1. The MSU Broadway Theatre Special presented the Greek tragedy "P h a e d r a ” at gram . Romney told a clu ster with th e ' All-Campus Talent and Hardy film will be shown Hudson said 45 per cent of The bill was reported out of show at 8 tonight in the Union at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at the the University Auditorium Wednesday night. Shown above are actors John M a c - of voters in a Portsm outh these w ere X egroes. including the Senate ju d iciary com m it­ Ballroom . The residence hall F lick er F estiv al. Admission to tee and now goes before the Allan, Robert Blackburn and Shirley Cox, State News Photo by L a r r y Hagedorn bank. "He's glib and he talks 10.000 to 15.000 considered hard­ complex winners will com pete each show will be 25 cents. entire Senate for action. w ell." core unemployables. In a dime store down the for titles in the group and in­ The Thieves M arket will be Despite Hudson's com m ents, Other key m easures in the street. Romney pressed his dividual com petition. held at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday. A rt­ a spokesman for the New De­ Senate anti-crim e package in­ Vietnam attack on Nixon in The highlight of the week will work of MSU students and faculty troit Com m ittee said Thursday clude banning the use of Molotov these words: be the crowning of Miss MSU will be shown and sold. Any that there a re no plans to ask cocktails, rewriting the sta te ’s at 8 p.m. Feb. 24 a t the pageant. Ten of M SU 's m ost coeds will com pete for the title. talented student or faculty m em ber may display his work. the com panies to tighten hiring policies and at least two of the m ajor em ployers said they had riot a ct and making it unlawful to interfere with policem en and firem en during a riot. U n io n l e a d e r s a t t a c k tile We keep following this fu­ Johnson-Xixon and th at's what it is - a .John- p o licy - A F lick e r F estiv a l will be Union Board Week began son-Xixon policy of m ore and no such plans of their own. held a t 8 p.m. this Saturday. several years ago to provide more m ilitary escalatio n ." How can you keep these peo­ "W hen Comedy was K in g ." M SI! students with social But he said some people. about the rise of M ac Sennett will be shown along with excerpts from Charlie Chaplin. Laurel and activities during winter term and to b etter acquaint them with the Union and its facilities. ple out1’ " said the spokesman. I know personally of one young fellow from Cleveland said the number of outsiders seeking jobs through his office is up 9 to 12 per cent over 1966. la w s , 'b u r e a u c r a ts ’ Nixon among them , still a c ­ cept "th e Johnson th esis" that m ilitary force will assure vic­ who cam e to Detroit because of Hardy. Ben Turpin and the Key­ All the events during Union Wilson said nonresidency is no MIAMI BEACH. Fla. A P - alarm ing r a te ." AFL-CIO Hall described as "absolutely tory. the publicity about jo b s ." said a stone Kops. Admission is 25 Board Week will be held in the bar to employment referral. He "T h e fa ct is that the only Ford Motor ( Co. spokesman. Millions of public workers rang­ leaders m eeting here said. appalling" the New York g ar­ cents. Union Ballroom and tick ets for said a standardized form is giv­ They cited as exam ples Xew bage negotiations Involving real victory will be won in the But m ost of the people we ing from garbage men to school A Charlie Chaplin film will the events can be purchased at en to each applicant that in­ hearts and minds of the South have hired . have been from teachers are at the m ercy of York C ity's garbage m en's dis­ Gov. Nelson A. R ockefeller and be shown at the F lic k e r F e sti­ the Union Ticket O ffice. cludes a question on how long pute. another garbage col­ V ietnam ese people." Rom ney D etro it." "bungling b u reau crats" and Mayor John V. Lindsay. R ocke­ the person has been in Detroit. lectors' strike in Memphis. feller and Lindsay are Republi­ told a news conference. "an ti-lab o r" politicians because He said Ford has not taken In the answ er indicates the Tenn.. a recent nine-day strike Then he moved on to a movie of punitive state labor laws, un­ cans. any steps to separate native jo b ­ person just arrived, he is asked of teachers in the Washington. But "th e Republicans do not theatre, crowded with New ion leaders charged Thursday. W h o ’s W h o s e seekers from those from out of the state. why he cam e. "About 99.44 per cent say they "In cities and states across D C . suburb of Montgomery have a claim to all the stupidi Hampshire college and declared: students, "The m ilitary the nation tensions between County. Md.. and a threatened tv " Hall said. "T h is is equally "W e hire anybody who shows cam e seeking em ploym ent." public officials and public em ­ Florida teachers' strike. true of many citie s and many path is a false path because PINNINGS P a tricia Krariich. Ithaca up at the gate. " said a spokes­ Wilson said ployes are mounting at an AFL-CIO V ice President Paul s ta te s ." run by both D em ocratic w e're going to be m atched on to Richard Hill. Ionia senior. Alice A. Dyer. Royal Oak Triangle. man for Chrysler Corp. and GOP political adm inistra­ that p ath ." tions. he added. "In this indiscrim inate use junior. Alpha Chi Omega to Nelly Snel. Muskegon Heights He said Chrysler also takes Fred . X . F in ley . Royal Oak junior, Tau Delta Phi. sophomore to A1 Throop. F r e ­ mont senior. Triangle. people referred to it by civil REJECTS LB J’S TERMS of our m ilitary power we re "There is not a single slate in even currently bombing cities rights groups. G eneral Motors Suzo Ja n e E g g ers. Livonia Carole Clem ensen. TNenton the whole 50 when- public em ­ and using napalm on civilians, Corp. also works closely with and killing civilians and de­ sophomore. Tri-D elta to Char­ ¿senior -to David - K oW er.-T re«- , ployes have the right to strik e ." les L. sophomore. B eta Theta Pi. Kafen J o Schultz. Farnrting- , fljjrain g h am 11WitSyUP»!*. ■?rrarTglP', C lZ X S j j Marvelled’' B erffistar- Meta- j uora senior to Ken Murrfy. such groups in- its hiring->.cam- p'aign ■■ If they send th e re to , us we figure they're okay and we don t Hanoi stands firm on talks said R obert D. Bollard, legisla­ stroying tive d irector of the Atnerican Federation of State County and said. p roperty." He said the w ar in Vietnam is Romney Kalamazoo junior. LOXDOX AP -- Hanoi's top Vietnam ese diplomat in New The President has stipulated Municipal Em ployes the m ajo r issue of the Xew ton sophomore to David Clap­ care where they cam e trom. diplomat in Europe told U .X. Delhi. three provisions which. Wil­ Hampshire campaign. per. Farm in -ton junior. Delta Paula P eterm an. R oseville said the C h iy s le u spokesman. Secretary-G eneral U Thant in The substance of the reply, son argues. Hanoi can meet "Every tim e we strike, we Battling to overcom e what he Chi. junior to Butch Driver. East W illiam Wilson!* d irector of P aris that Xorth Vietnam is reported by the sources, was: easily it it wishes. P eace talks break the law ." said Bollard acknowledged as a X'ixon lead. Susan Margeson, Highland Detroit senior. E astern M ichi­ the unemployment department standing firm in re jectin g P resi­ P eace talks with the Am ericans must follow the standoff whose union represents some Romney said the form er vice P ark. 111. sophomore. Alpha gan University. of the D etroit Urban League. dent Jo hnson's term s for peace will begin " a t an appropriate promptly They must be pro­ 350.000 health, sanitation, high­ president "implies criticism Gam m a Delta to Philip Kline Cathy Ann Abbott. Birm ing­ talks. B ritish sou r^ ^ said tim e" a fte r the United States ductive or meaningful, in other way. school, clerical and other of the Johnson adm inistration St. Clair Shores sophomore. ham junior. Delta Zeta to Thursday night. unconditionally stops bombing words leading to peace. Hanoi public employes of states, cities but offers no really different Delta Upsilon. Specialist Fourth Class Rob­ Cynthia Coe. G rosse Pointe sophomore to T erry M itter. ert R. Zynda. Detroit grad­ uate. Faculty quintet Word of this development reached the B ritish government Xorth Vietnam. should undertake, inform ally This respopse hardly sur­ if necessary, not to beef up its and counties acro ss the nation. approach." Bollard urged a drive by or­ Romney said he decided to from P a ris where Thant met prised the B ritish. But it seqms power in South Vietnam. ganized labor to win laws in all assail X'ixon d irectly on V iet­ Dearborn senior. Sigma Phi Carolyn S. Thomas. E ast Epsilons Moline. 111. graduate student to give woodwind Wednesday with Mai Van Bo. head of Xorth V ietnam 's delega­ to have left P rim e M inister Harold Wilson as convinced as states to give public workers the nam because his rival has re­ right to organize, bargain and fused to engage in campaign to Bernard L. G renier. Bidde- en gagem en ts ford. Me. graduate student. concertSunday tion in Fran ce. Thant flew back to his Xew ever that "only a very narrow gap" sep arates Washington and Jail Negroes strike in order to "a ssu re equity debates. He accused X’ixon of for millions of public em ­ evasion on the war issue and Ja c k ie Kirkdorfer. Saint J o ­ The Richards Woodwind Quin­ York headquarters a fte r a Hanoi from m eeting around a ployes." said: " I t is truly ironic that seph senior to Fritz Schippert. M arilyn Park. ill. senior. Alpha E p­ P ick. Highland G rosse Pointe senior. Mary Zickgraf. Ypsilanti jun­ tet of M SI' will present a con­ cert at 4 p.m. Sunday in the swing through Xew Delhi. Mos­ cow. London and P aris where peace table. Wilson reaffirm ed this view after protest Mr. X'ixon has becom e a me- Latest U.S. Labor Dept, figures too candidate on V ietnam " Music Aud. he has been pursuing his quest Thursday night to Soviet Am­ list a total of more than nine Romney. although still both­ silon Phi to A. J . Traines. ior to Richard Johnston. Grand The quintet is made up of for a Vietnam peace conference bassador Mikhail Smirnovsky. million state and local govern­ ered by a sore throat, spoke Mount P leasant senior. Al­ Rapids senior SOCIAL C IR C L E . Ga. AP ~ faculty m em bers from the Dept, On arrival at Xew Y ork's According to aides. Wilson ment employes in the 50 states. for nearly an hour at the thea­ pha Epsilon Pi. Shirley Ann Englert. Grand Xegro dem onstrators, spraw l­ of Music. M em bers are Alex­ Kennedy Airport. Thant said. sees "o n ly a very narrow gap" ing in front of buses to pro­ "These laws impose m assive tre. Cynthia Ann Hillson. De­ Rapids to Alan J . Erickson. ander Murray, flute: E lsa Lude- "1 do not wish to m ake any between Washington and Hanoi restrictions on the rights of em ­ Then lie moved on to talk troit sophomore to Fred erick Morley junior. Delta Sigma test what they termed de­ wig. cla rin et: Daniel Stolper. sta tem en t." because: plorable school conditions, ployes and their unions and pro­ and tour in Portsm outh. Dur­ W alter Page. D etroit junior. Pi Suzanne Lloyd. Farm ington. oboe: Edgar Kirk, bassoon: -Johnson proclaimed his vide for severe penalties in the ham and Concord. Wavne S tate Universitv. were dragged from a street and Douglas Campbell. French Bo relayed to Thant the Hanoi readiness at San Antonio. Tex., by helm eted state troopers case of union violations." Bol­ Romney also had a com ment Stephens College to Jo e l R. horn. governm ent's m essage-w hich last Septem ber and several Thursday and taken to jail lard said in a resolution adopted on Xew York C ity's garbage Sehlereth. Farm ington jun­ W an te d Works on the Sunday program replied to a questionnaire sub­ tim es since to order an A m eri­ by the AFL-CIO M aritim e strike and on the role of his ior. Delta Sigma Phi are "A llegro and A rioso" by mitted last week by the seere- can bombing halt in Xorth V iet­ M ajor P o rter W eaver of the Trades Dept. m ajor presidential booster. B L O O D D O N O R S needed $7 50 fo r Karen M. Schelke. Detroit Ingolf Dahl: "Q uintet Xo. 2 in tarv-general through a Xorth nam. Georgia D epartm ent of Pub­ Gov. Nelson A R ockefeller. a ll p o s it iv e . R H n e g a tiv e w it h p o s i­ junior. Sigma Kappa to Robert In Xew York, officials of C M inor" by P eter M uller: lic Safety said about 40 per­ He said "th e r e are things you t iv e fa c to r~ $ 7 .5 0 . A n e g a tiv e . B C. Haughton. Flushing junior. striking garbage, teacher and could n e g a tiv e , and A B negaU ve. $ 1 0 .0 0 . "Q uintett by Hans W erner sons w ere booked at the Walton c ritic iz e ." about the Carolyn Engelbrecht. R o­ transit unions have drawn ja il R ix-kelcller perform ance and U.N. asst, secretary O n e g a tiv e - $ 1 2 .0 0 . M IC H IG A N meo to W alter Schmidt. Romeo Henze, and Q uintette" by Je a n County jail at Monroe. 10 m iles C O M M U N IT Y B L O O D C E N T E R . term s for strikes in recent that of Mayor John V. Lind- 507 E a st G ra n d R iv e r . E a st L a n ­ sophomore. Alpha Gam m a Rho F rancaix. north of this sm all communitv. vears. sav. s in g . H o u rs: 9 -3 :3 0 M o n d ay. T u e s­ Xancv Johnson. Jackson to The recital Sunday is open d ay and F r id a y : 1 2 -6 :3 0 W e d n e s­ Dean Reid. Owosso junior. to the public. There is no "Caia-Cala"tad"Caka" art registeredIrodt-morki ehkh IdaaNfyantyHiagradadaf Tha(tca-Cala Company d a y a n d T h u r s d a y . 3 3 7 -7 1 6 3 A i T ! • * - . C Alpha Gam m a Rho. admission charge. to speak at seminar Place Your C. V. X arasim han. assistant South Asia, is one of the other secretary-general of the speakers. O h -o h , PEOPLE IEICHER WANT ID United Nations, will be the Also speaking at the 1968 b e tte r keynote speaker at this y ear's sem inar will be P rofessor Winds of Change sem inar Wilfred Malenbaum. of the ch eck th e Wharton School of Finance at Today . , . Just clip, complete, mail. April 5-6. p u n ch C g The theme of the sem inar. the U niversity of Pennsyl­ STATE NEWS will bill you later . vania. He has been termed by b o w l. ■ ii "The R ich Lands and the Poor: The Challenge of Develop­ colleagues as an Indian econ­ m en t" centers around the omy expert. United Nations and its inter­ Another speaker, with the national developmental poten­ University of Chicago and a State Zip Code tials. specialist on Chinese Com­ Topics to be. discussed in­ munist econom ic develop­ Phone Student No. clude problem s of population ment. is R obert F . Dernber- growth, limited natural re­ ger. Consecutive Dates to Run. sources. the role of the UN. Lucien Pve of the Mas­ H ead in g________________ and responsibilities of the sachusetts Institute of Tech­ United States. nology and an authority on P rlnt Ad H e re :. X arasim han. who was ap­ China and India will also pointed a s Chef de Cabinet by speak. the late secretary-general Dag P a st speakers have held H am m arskjöld, has assumed cred entials of wide interna­ his present position since tional claim . R ober Hilsman. August of 1961. He is also assistant secretary of state for Peanuts P erson als must be placed in person. responsible for the General F a r E a ste rn A ffairs and Leo Assembly A ffairs. Cherne. chairm an of the Inter­ 10 W o r d s o r L e s s : 1 day - $1.50 3 days - $3.00 5 days - $5.00 Speakers include men of national R escu e Com m ittee O v e r 10 W o r d s A d d : 15* p e r word 4 0 * p er word 6 0 * p e r word were among them. Ice-co ld C o ca -C o la m ak es a n y ca m p u s " g e t-to g e th e r" a p arty . C oca-C o la h as th a □ M a ll to: M ichigan State News □ varied and wide experience in international a ffa irs. Selig S. Harrison, senior staff m em ­ ber of the Brookings Institute Also speaking last year were Howard K. Sm ith. ABC News com m entator and Lady Ram a te s ta y o u n e v e r g a t Nied o f . . . a l w a y s re fre sh in g .T h a t's w h y things g a better w ith C o k e . . . a fte r C a k e . . . a fte r C ake. 346 Student Se rv ice s Bldg. in charge of Asian Studies and Rau. president of the Interna­ Bottled undor tho authority of tho C o c a -C o la Company by: a long-tim e Washington Post tional Planned Parenthood M S U E a s t ! Lansing, M ich, ______- Coco-Colo Bottling Co. of Mich.. L o o sin g . correspondent in India and Federation. 14 M ichigan S ta te N ew s, E a s t L an sin g , M ich igan F rid a y . F e b ru a ry 1 6 , 1968 N O T D I P I N S I O F B E L IE F S R e lig io n t a u g h t a s e x p l a n a t i o n je ctiv e outlook on all relig io n s." significant questions, urgent versities offer religious in­ Robert T. Anderson, a s­ By PAT ANSTEtT Donahue said. and critica l to h isto ry ." Ander­ struction. MSU is among the 20 sociate professor in religion, State News * Staff Writer This intra-church unity m ove­ son said. per cent of state supported accounted som e of this interest to the existen tial question of ment has stim ulated interest This recent enthusiasm among R eligion, now instructed as schools that have a separate finding what is meaningful in in various faiths. World reli­ university students has created an explanation rath er than a de­ religion department. life. "R elig ion is one natural gions classes a re extrem ely an increased need fo r com ­ fense of various beliefs, is pop­ The departm ent, established place to look for this an sw er." popular with the students. Don­ petent instructors. One m inis­ ularizing itself as a m a jo r sub­ twenty years ago. has witnessed ahue said. ter estim ated a five-year gap je c t on university cam puses. a "ste a d y and persistent in­ he said. This interest parallels so­ Buddhism. Hinduism, and Is- before there will be enough de­ Two decades ago. only a few crea se in enrollm ent in religion ciety 's search for goals and lam ism are included in the grees in religion to " f ill up colleges offered any form of c la s s e s ." according to F ra n cis world religion study. The a demand that is so large there religious instruction, and the M. Donahue, assistant pro­ ideals. Donahue said. " I t is a reflection of the search for V ietnam ese situation has defi­ isalm o st a vacu um ." Bible was prim arily used as fessor of religion. This term permanent and durable values nitely furthered the interest in "Although MSU has not ex ­ religious literatu re. Today, a c ­ 800 students are enrolled in amid a world characterized these a r e a s ." Donahue said. perienced this la c k ." Donahue cording to a national survey. religion courses. by in secu rity ," he said. Contemporary theology classes said, "a n increased number of 75 per cent of the nation's four One possible explanation for also a ttra ct many students. religion m a jo rs and graduate year colleges have religion the recent interest in this age- Ecum enism , the movement Discussions of Christian and students could cre a te a demand courses and numerous religious old su b ject is the modern ap­ stim ulating unity among churches, also is related to social ethics, and evaluations for m ore in stru cto rs." books now supplement reading proach taken by instructors. this interest. Religion classes of m a jo r m oral issues pre­ This need will inevitably be D a v e C a m p b e ll Dave Thor D a le A n d e r s o n m aterial in courses from his­ As one campus m inister ex ­ no longer lim it them selves to dominate. filled, one m inister noted. "O ur tory to psychology. plained. " W e r e not trying to the Catholic. Protestant, and The Bible as literatu re and colleges are realizing that with­ Although a m ajority of uni- sell it-w e 'r e studying it." the history of Christian theol­ out a thorough knowledge of a Jew ish approach. " I t is com ­ pletely irrelevant to us whether a man is a practicing Christian ogy are offered by the religion department. "T h e realize that religion deals with students cu ltu re's religion, it is often nearly im possible to under­ stand that cu ltu re ." he said. Seniors o f the Week M e n n o n ite group or even a profound a th e ist." one lecturing University m inis­ Dave Thor. D ale Anderson and Dave Camp­ bell are truly fine exam ples of Sp artv's right- Anderson has been m arried since last April -April F o o l's Day to be exact. He and his wife ter explained. Indoctrination and persuasion hand m en: varsity ath letes with very good live in H aslett. where she teaches English. holds symposium ceases to ch aracterize religious instruction. "T h e courses are Halsteadspeakshere grades. Thor is the captain of the gym nastics team After graduation. Dale wants to go to gradu­ ate school or into the T each er Corps. conducted on a descriptive and is training in hopes of getting a berth on L ast spring. Dale won the NCAA W restling The MSU Mennonite Fellow ­ from the left wing of the Zwing- (C o n tin u e d f r o m page 1.) the U.S. Olym pic team . He is a m ath em atics Championship. Finishing spring term in fine level, aimed at helping students movement. "T h e only way ship. a sm all student-faculty lian reform ation of the 16th cen­ m ajor who plans to go to graduate school and fashion. D ale got a 4.0 in the classroom . understand and form an oh- government that thinks it can to save the G I's is to build group, is sponsoring a sympo­ tury. have always been con­ then teach. Dale is a m em ber of Blue Key. V arsity Club solve basic social problem s a strong anti-w ar movement sium Sunday on "R evolution and cerned with social issues. Milo When asked about his specialty within the and the Fellow ship of Christian Athletes. with a ’ sprinkling of hvpoc- and bring them home. There the Church in Africa and Am er­ Stahl, a doctoral student in edu­ field of gym nastics. Thor answered. " I t 's Dave Campbell has been a varsity w restler •risy and suppression, the coun­ is no other w a y ." he said. ic a ." The m eeting will include a cation media and spokesman for something different every wveek.” He is con­ for two years and is out of com petition this pot-luck supper beginning at 5 the Fellowship, said U .S.-C an ad a try is in deep tro u b le." Hal­ stead said. sidered an "all-arou n d " man on the team . year due to an injury. He was a resident a ssist­ p.m. at the F irst Church of the Brethren. 3020 S. Washington Ave.. Lansing. The Mennonite Church is one of the three historic peace churches, including the Quakers p r o g r a m set He said that A m erican "im p e ­ ria lism " is contrary to the national interest of the coun­ ACLU (Continued from page 1.) Thor has been the recipient of two Big Ten titles and qualified for the U.S. Pan Am erican team . He is a m em ber of Sigm a Chi fraternity. ant for two years and is president of the V ar­ sity Club. "A ll the different experien ces that I've had The two speakers will be Dr and the Church of the B rethren. M S l 's Third Annual Inter­ Anderson is a w restler with an excellent here have been the most im portant part of col­ try. T f it's a question of Ingida Asfaw and Miss Lydia Stahl said. The general Men­ collegiate Conference on Canad­ " I f we do conduct a survey, com petitive record. He has been on the varsity lege for m e ." Campbell said. national interest. I can see Cllick. nonite position. I believe, would ian Am erican Relations will we will not ask the student to team for three years. Cam pbell plans to go to graduate school for a threat from China in that Dr. Asfaw. a m em ber of the be that there is no ju stification be held tfeb . 23 through Feb identify h im self." King said. "B o th team s are on top: with good breaks an advanced degree in sociology a fte r gradua­ China does have an H-bomb. Mennonite Church in Ethiopia, for war 25 to further academ ic and si> "W e don't even know if we will we could finish the season f ir s t." Anderson tion. He is a m em ber of Blue Key and Theta How does it help her to deter was graduated from the E astern cial understanding between the conduct the survey at a ll." said, speaking of both the w restlers and gym­ Chi fraternity. that possibility to go into her Mennonite College in H arris­ two countries. "T h e ACLU apparently was nasts. Libraryhours part of the world and con­ burg. P a., in 1962. After a year Approximately 100 students not aw are of the change in the tinually prod her in the gu ts." in his home country he returned from 15 Canadian and Am eri­ federal re q u irem en ts." he said Call Daily'irresponsible' Halstead said. to A m erica to earn his M D. de­ can universities will take part King stressed that sin ce the This is not in my national gree from the University of In­ in the program. letter was sent to the Tru stees, diana. Bloomington. He is cu r­ (Continued from page 1.) interest, or yours, or the boys The agenda includes panel his office would not reply to the in other com m ittee action. ¿it Khc Sanh or the black (Continued from page I.) rently an intern at the Detroit discussions. workshops and ACLU letter until the T ru stees John Dewey, \ssistant Big pects' parents free trips to Hughes said faculty fines will be people in the g h etto s." General Hospital. speeches, centering around this had an opportunity to discuss the Chicago last vear for a fresh­ Ten Com m issioner who is in­ campus and saying that the reconsidered a fte r the undergrad­ He charged an abuse of our Miss G lick has served for sev­ y ea r's them e: "P o litic s and m atter. man prospect, again referring vestigating the charges, said Big Ten rules prohibit such uate and graduate Library sep ar­ servicem en who are used to eral years under the Mennonite M inorities: N orthand Sou th ." "I'm pleased that we don't have to M iltelberg and his parents, he know about the banquet." free trips was the crux of the ation is com plete. defend these "im p e ria list in­ Church in Som alia. She has been Speakers and panelists will to conduct a survey that identi­ was refuted by Fuzak and Daugherty stiid. "H e read it inaccuracies in the D aily's The com m ittee also discussed te re sts." involved in adult education, include professors from Duke fies the stu d ents." King said. Daugherty on the grounds that in the paper and said it was charges. ideas for increasing the faculty "E v en if they lose their leaching English classes. She is University. University of R oches­ At fall term registration, the Big Ten rules allow such perfectly leg a l." "T h ey 're right in saying we involvement in expanding Li­ investm ents over there, they currently working on her m as­ ter. York University and Uni­ students were asked to cneek entertainm ent and that the ban­ Daugherty said that B lo ck's do these things but they're brary resources. Hughes said that will not starve to death. te r's degree in linguistics here. versity of Toronto and rep re­ the appropriate box on the home quet was publicized. charges of MSU giving pros- wrong in saying they a re il­ faculty papers and monographs R ix'kefeller will eat tom orrow ." " M e n n o n i t e s . originating sentatives of U.S. Indian A ffairs. ad dress card s a fte r the ques­ legal. Daugherty said We should be sent to the Library he said. Canadian Dept, of North Am eri­ tion. what is your ra ce or na­ can pay for the transportation ♦ EAST LANSING F R IE N D S M E ET IN G .\Iaterial presented at con fer­ ences held on campus should be another source for increasing Li­ can Development and Michigan Civil Rights Commission John P o rte r, professor ot Halstead again stressed the im portance of the anti-w ar tional origin. Answers included white. Am erican-Indian. Negro. Spanish-Am erican. O riental and Maysabbatical of the parents as long as they accom pany the prospect and the transportation is not com ­ meeting fo r worship 3 p.m . brary resources. All Saints Parish T h is p ractice will better sociology at Carleton University. Ottawa, will speak at a dinner Petitioning open other. "W ith ready a c c e ss to dupli­ (Continued f r o m page 1.) tion on May until Kelley gave a ruling. m e rcia l." 800 Abbott Road serve the faculty and the Uni­ cating fa cilities, there is no None »of the other tru stees in the Union at 6:30 p.m. Feb for Homecoming Upper lev el, co rn er room Child ca re provided All a re welcome v ersity ." he said. " I t also huilds a great research library and a great university needs a great li­ 23 on "P o litic s . M inorities, and Social C hange." On Feb. 24 Sen. Edmund S Petitioning for chairm anship guarantee that such checks could not be duplicated for nefarious purposes, despite p recau tio ns." thrown on the m a tter with the proposed review of the con­ flict of interest law. could be reached for com ment on the action yesterday. White had also said that the Vandenburg For Information 337-0241 b ra ry ." positions on the Homecoming the ACLU letter said. The conflict of interest con­ leave was ;i "se cu rity m eas­ (Continued from page 1.) Muskie. D-Maine. will give the E xecutive Board will continue In an effo rt to persuade the troversy cen ters around u re." after-dinner address "M inority The Vandenburg Investment today and run through Feb. 23. Trustees to change the survey, M ay's F’ hilip Je s s e Co,, and "T h e U niversity can 't take F ir s t C h u rch of P e o p le s C h u r c h G roups-T h eir Im pact on the Corp. received a loan front Chairm anship petitions are the ACLU suggested an anon­ a building owned by the com ­ much m ore of th is ." added Am erican P o litica l S c e n e ." the E a st Lansing State Bank C h r is t , S c ie n t is t available in display. ymous system of conducting the pany ad jacent to the Brody White. " I don't think May will E a s t L a n s in g T ick ets fnt the dinners can on Septem ber 25. 1966. for P etitions will be ’ available survey. They noted, also, that residence halls. be working tor the University 709 E , Grand R iver be purchased at 317 M orrill $187.000. Vandenburg is on Interdenominational in 101 and 308 Student Services "th e Council of G raduate Schools In the week following the in Septem ber It is being done E a st Lansing Hall until Wednesday. the bank's board of d irectors. Bldg. has urged the U.S. O ffice of E d ­ request by Faxon. Harlan to protect Hannah and the Sunday Service 11 a.m . The Michigan Corp. and Se­ 200 W, Grand R iv er ucation to elim inate these re­ charged that May was re­ U n iversity." cu rities Commission con- r SERMON at Michigan ports because they involve uni­ sponsible for the power fa il­ Harlan had also said that U n iv e r s it y M e th o d is t firmed Vandenburg was the F ir s t C h r is t ia n versities in 'the offensive p rac­ ures on campus. Both White "P h il May made a m istake . . “ SO U L" president of the corporation tice of d irect questioning of and Harlan again sought it would be regrettab le if he SUNDAY SERVICE R e fo rm e d C h u rc h C h u rch and that its ch arter had be­ SUNDAY SCHOOL students regarding racial M ay's resignation, but the com es back to the U niver­ 9 :3 0 & 11:00 a .m . 1120 S. H arrison Rd. trustees decided to d efer ac- com e void on May 24. 1964. 1 1 :0 0 a.m . - regular 240 M arshall S t., Lansing 1 o rig in .' sity ." Sunday Worship because Vandenburg had failed 9 :3 0 -1 1 :0 0 a.m . - college Morning S erv ice 9:00 and 11:15 ••••••••••••••••••••• "H is usefulness to the Uni­ to submit an annual statem ent 8 :30 - 9:30 - 11:00 v e rsity ." claim ed Harlan, WEDNESDAY Serm on T oplc: “ We who a re many U n it a r ia n - : O K E M O S F IR S T 5 since 1961. guest speaker: "h as com e to ¿¡n en d ." 8:00 p.m . - Evening Meeting A ruling on Vandenburg's a r e one body” D r, David Evans U n i v e r s a l 1st 1 B A P T IS T C H U R C H J T don't think he'll be b a ck ." • • business a ctiv ities requested “ Whose B roth er Am I ? " U niversity C la ss 10:15 B oard of C hristian Social C h u r c h o f L a n s in g • 4684 O kem os-H aslett R d . • said Harlan, "but th at's just by Rep. Ja c k Faxon. D-Det.. F re e Public Reading Room Evening S erv ice 7 p.m. Concerns a t Grand Rapids • 10 a.m . College C la s s • my personal opinion. on Ja n 26 is expected soon, D r. Ju liu s Flschbach Red C edar School "H e did a distinguished 134 West Grand R iver “ Challenged to Begin Again” Rev. Alden B . B um s 2 11 a.m . “ Artificial Fruit” * according to a source in the preaching Sev er D rive - E . Lansing job. and I don't think he's R ev . A1 Hoksbergen, preaching R ev. Keith I. Pohl • 7 p .m . “ Love o r L u s t" • Atty. Gen. 's office. OPEN L e ctu re Topic: dishonest." CHURCH SCHOOL N ursery During Serv ices • 8:15 p.m . C o lleg iate- • Weekdays — 9 -5 p.m . Communion at all S e rv ices “ R em arks on Euthanasia” 9:3 0 & 11:00 a .m . CHURCH SCHOOL R ev , Sm ith, preaching 0 Fellowship * M on., T u e s ., T h u rs., F r i. Campus Student C enter • (N ursery at every service) • C e n t r a l M e th o d is t CASTfllHlSTCR Evenings 7 p.m . - 9 p.m . C rib through 12th Grade 217 Bogue S t. Apt. 3 9 :3 0 - Program fo r a ll ages D r, Benjam in H. Bantz PRCSBYTCRian CHURCH • D. R . Allbaugh, P a sto r • A cro ss From the Capitol Phone 351-6360 F r e e Bus Transportation R ev. Thom as L , Smith 2 T ra n s : 332-2133, 351-4003 2 WORSHIP SERVICES 1315 A bb ott Rd. All a re welcome to attend Refreshm ent period In Church T h o se In Need of 15 to 30 minutes before p a rlo r following worship serv­ 351-4582 9:45 & 11:15 cost ¿ansine, tmcmcan Church Services and visit and T ransportation c a ll— each serv ice around the use the reading room . ic e s . 882-1425 351-6360 cam pus. O ffice: 337-0183 U N IV E R S IT Y “ P ra c tic a l P ie ty " S E V E N T H -D A Y Worship Serv ices Sunday at 8:30 and 11:00 A.M. B A P T IS T C H U R C H R ev. Fran cis F . Anderson A D V E N T IS T 9:00 and 11:00 a .m . LUTHERAN W O R S H IP ( A m erican B a p t is t) preaching “ THE GUILTY UNTIL PROVEN INNOCENT ISSUE" G erard G. P h illip s, P astor will be the sermon topic at S e rv ice s Saturday Church School 9:45 to 11:45 F o r Ride Call Martin Luther Chapel Lutheran Student Center ED 2-1888 444 Abbott Road Two Blocks North of Student Un&n EASTLANSINGTRINITYCHURCH 120 Spartan Avenue Interdenominational co rn er of Ann & Division Sabbath School 9:30 a.m . Morning W orship 11 a.m . Worship 10:00 a.m . & 7:30 p.m. Church School 11:10 a.m . Midweek Meeting - C rib N ursery So B ring the Baby 332-6854 o r 351-7199 K im b e r ly D o w n s Wednesday 7:30 p.m . Sunday Worship Services—9:30 - 11:00 a.m . E . Eugene Williams w- PASTORS ■T erry A. Smith N ursery Provided 10 to 12 a.m . FIR ST B A P T IST CHURCH C h u rc h of C h r is t M inister L . G. F o il Rev. David A. Kruse Now at W ardcliff School 1007 Kimberly Drive, Lansing "Quality Fifth” 7j00 P.M. H ear “T h e V oice of P r o ­ Capitol at Ionia see sign at 2729 E . Grand Missouri Synod 3 blocks north of Grand Trinity Collegiate Fellowship 8:30 P.M. phecy” on radio See “ Faith River IV 9-7130 » R iv er, off P ark L ake Road Church School - 9:45 a.m . F ree Bus Service and Nursery Both Services F re e BUS SERVICE—See schedule in your dorm F o r Today” on television. Sunday Bus S e rv ice Provided Worship - 10:50 a.m . SUNDAY SERVICES Morning Worship 11:00 a.m , Serm on Bible Study 10:00 a.m . SOUTHBAPTISTCHURCH 1518 S. Washington Lansing AHSaintsEpiscopalParish U N IV E R S IT Y . R E F O R M E D Rev. Tom Stark, pastor 351—7164 CH U RCH "Beyond Doubt to Faith” Evening Worship Wednesday evening Bible Study 6:00 p.m. 7:30 p.m . F or Transportation Call Rev. Scott Irvine “ GOD L I F T S H IS F I N G E R ” 8 0 0 Abbott Rd. preaching ED 2-1960 FE 9-8190 or ED 2-2434 What unusual events in history bear evidence to God’ s ability to meet our needs today? Morning: "T h e Hated Healer** Rev. William A. Eddy, Rector 332-2559 nursery SU N D A Y 7 : 0 0 P .M . Rev. George Tuma, Acting Chaplain Evening: "T o Leave Your Father and Mother” CUjurcfy D r . H o w a rd F . S u g d e n , P a s t o r 8:00 a .m . H o ly C o m m u n io n 310 N. Hagadom Rd. U n iversity Lutheran 9:45 A.M. 8:30 P.M. M o r n in g P r a y e r and S e r m o n East Lansing College Bible C lass 9:30 a .m . Church 11:00 am • Morning Worship • Alumni Donald L . Stiffler, Minister in the fireside room ADULT YOUTH 11:15 a .m . H o ly C o m m u n io n and S e r m o n Memorial Chapel, one block east of Sunday School 9:45 a«m. Dr. Ted Ward, Teacher FELLOWSHIP H o ly C o m m u n io n and S e r m o n the auditorium. a lc -lc a 5:15 p .m . Morning Worship 10:45 a j n . 10:00-10:40 am •Discussion Group • 1 1 : 0 0 A .M . “ A G u e s t A t th e G a t e ” coffee and doughnuts. (Crib Nursery) at A LUM N I C H A P E L Nursery at 10:00 & 11:00 am Church School 9:15 & 10:00 College Hour 6:30 pan. F R E E B U S S E R V I C E M o rn in g and E v e n in g Transportation provided from West Door of Union to Church 7:00 pm • Evening Worship • Union For Transportation call Services 8:15, 9 :1 5 ,1 0 :3 0 * at 11 a.m . each Sunday & return to dorms. \. Building, Room 34, third floor & 11:30 C a l l 4 8 2 - 0 7 5 4 f o r in f o r m a t io n . 332-5193 337-1077