W e d n e s d a y When a d o g . . . MICHIGAN Cloudy .. . . . b iles a m an that is not news, but when a m an bites a dog that is news. Charles Anderson Dana UN IVERSITY STATE TAT r IW S . . . today with chance of showers by evening. Mostly cloudy Thursday. 10c Vol. 60 Number 144 E a s t Lansing, Michigan M arch 27,1968 E A S T LA N S IN G Civil rights amendment has punitive measures Brown said he would vote in favor of By JIM G R A N E L L I the East Lansing Human Relations Com­ mission includes: a penalty clause if the present ordinance S tate News S taff W riter - A penalty of $500 and/or 90 days proved ineffective. in ja il for persons found guilty of dis­ Two years ago, the Human Relations An ordinance amending East Lan­ criminatory practices; Commission was sharply criticized by sing’s civil rights policy to include puni­ -T h e addition of real estate and fi­ city residents for its failure to recom­ tive measures for those guilty of dis­ nancial institutions to the list of possible mend a separate ordinance prohibiting criminatory practices should be ready for discirmination in housing. final action at the City Council’s Mon­ day night meeting, according to City Manager John Patriarche. public areas of discrimination already mentioned in the original policy; and -A change from a public policy of The reason the commission gave for not recommending a separate open Ê l*iJ* jt In a 4-1 vote, the Council recently civil rights to a public law. housing ordinance in 1966 was sim ilar approved the addition of punitive mea­ In opposing the penalty clause, Coun­ to Brown’s opposition of the penalty sures in the amendment and instructed cilman James B. Brown claimed that clause. The commission then felt that City Attorney Daniel C. Learned to put the city has had “ complete success" the citizens had. been “ putting their the amendment in legal, ordinance form. with the ordinance in its present form. own houses in order” and that the The amendment recommended to the Penalties might harm the work already community had “ come closer together, Council at their March 11 meeting by being done, he said. and is more willing to work together on this problem. " By changing the public policy of civil Revisedgrading system rights to public law, open housing, equal employment opportunity and equal op­ portunity in public accomodations would be changed from public policy to public law. awaits Council OK By LINDA G O R TM A K ER garded higher than a 4.0 and “ testify After the Human Relations Commission had drafted the present amendment in February, Richard E. Chapin, com­ mission chairman, suggested that the commission w ait until their next meet­ ing to pass the amendment to the Coun­ W h e re w e r e y o u ? W h ile M ic h ig a n w ent r ig h t o n b e in g M ic h ig a n , w e a t h e r - w is e , h o r d e s o f s h i v e r i n g c o lle g e s tu d e n t s f r o m the G r e a t N o r t h s t a m p e d e d to F o r t L a u d p r d a le to “ s u f f e r ” th ro u g h F l o r i d a ’s b r a n d o f M a r c h w e a t h e r. Sta te N e w s P h o t o s b y L a r r y H a g e d o r n and J im M e a d State News S taff W riter to superior work.” cil so that interested citizens could W illiam Kelly, director of> the Honors state their ODinions to the commission. A revised grading system eliminating College, said that he had gotten an “ informal feeling” from talking to many letter grades w ill probably be adopted by the Academic Council at their April Honors College students that they "were C o s b y ffickots not in favor of the 4.5 grades. " 9 meeting, itie s according to Dorothy A. C o fo m 'ti& i" d r& tt& f "They said they were afraid that ‘ ^ L, ' ■ N •r • < ä v m IT yr m <*r v w * y rm - w "w er * m , * Uhp ti> iw » V A w i »14 w V'^Vj'Vv, ii)b re *♦«•»/ iw a Strew*«« trt,,* <*«— ■ the proposal released in February. dards-in some classes a 4.0 might be in Jenison Fieldhouse. Originally “ I feel the council is in a mood to given work, while a student could do the only one show at 7 p.m. was scheduled. adopt a numerical system with more same quality work in another profes­ hits drug curb proposal than five grades," she said. sor’s class and receive a 4.5,” he said. Tickets are, selling fast, according to Miss A rata’s remarks came after the One Council member had suggested Don Banghart, Popular Entertainment Council’s finals week session that re­ that the 4.5 grade would tend to raise chairman. sulted in only one definite move: de­ grade averages, but Miss Arata explained Tickets for the second show are on leting the 4.5 grade or “ super A" that the 4.5 was an effort to avoid the people who use it ,” she said. “ The sale at the Union ticket office, Camp­ from the numerical system. lowering of grade averages that would is clearly infringing on the trustees’ By E R IC PIANIN taxpayers are getting restless. People bell’s Suburban shop and Paramount The new system would provide for result from subdividing the present authority.” S tate News E xecu tiv e E d itor don’t like to be spending about $1,300 News Center in Lansing. Reserved ten grades ranging from 0.0, 0.5, and grading scale. The resolution, which was introduced per student each year in our public seats are $4.50 and general admission 1.0 all the way up to 3.5, 4.0, and 4.5. The Council also inform ally gave ap­ Feb. 29 by Sen. Lorraine Beebe, R- A joint state legislative proposal, universities and find out the students is $3.50.' The 4.5 would only be used for “ ex­ proval by a show of hands of two that would require all public educa­ Dearborn, would provide that “ all edu­ are picking up dangerous habits.” ceptionally high perform ance,” the re­ failing grades, 0.0 and 0.5. cational institutions supported in any Students holding tickets for the first tional institutions to take a more ac­ Sen. Beebe does not consider the resolu- port reads. “ I think opposition seems to have part by public funds summarily expel show may not use them for the second. tive role in curbing the illegal use of (please turn to page 5) “The Council was disturbed that the dissolved on argument over the 0.0 drugs, was termed unconstitutional and any student reasonably. presumed to 4.5 grade might be m isinterpreted,” and 0.5 grades," Miss Arata said, ingest in any manner drugs of mind or out of bounds by the newly-elected Miss Arata said. “ This is a valid “ although the 4.5 grade is still very psyche of an aberrant effect without chairman of the MSU Board of Trus­ much an issue.” licensed medical supervision, or one position, but EPC doesn’t consider it insolvable.” One fear many Council members had was that many graduate schools would Miss Arata said she would “ guess that the Council w ill finally adopt a grading scale April 9 more expanded tees. “I don’t think they’ve got the right to do this,” said Don Stevens, D- who possesses or traffics in such drugs.” The proposal, which received enthu­ Student records policy than the EPC plan.” siastic support from the senate, and consider the 4.5 grade to be a B plus on a 5.0 scale. An inform al show of hands did in­ dicate that the Council would favor a “There’s a lot of sympathy for the plus and minus system of the University College, although I personally feel the Okemos. stitutional, “ This resolution is uncon­ for it autonomy of state universities which is guaranteed in our constitution. jeopardizes the concurring support from the house, is presently in Committee on Senate Bus­ iness. completed and passed 4.0H grade instead, which would be re- EPC plan for a 10-point scale is more " If they start this thing, perhaps they’ll Both a senate and a house committee process of formulating a records policy reasonable,” she said. are studying the use of drugs, with Copies of M SU’s first written policy start telling us what sort of curriculum since July, with recommendations made an eye to possible future legislation. on student records were completed (please turn to page 13) we should have," Stevens said. “ This by an ASMSU subcommittee and, the The proposal was conceived as an Monday with the necessary final en­ faculty committee. “ interim action to provide one extensive dorsements from ASMSU, the Faculty Czechs ca ll counterattack until possibly better mea­ sures may be considered and adopted." Committee on Student Affairs, and M il­ ton B. Dickerson, vice-president for W illiam D. Lindquist, mem ber of the faculty committee who worked with the ASMSU subcommittee, said his group The resolution states that although the student affairs. had been able to solve any small penalty of expulsion is apparently harsh, The faculty committee gave its ap­ fo r new laws it is “ advisedly operative: if such stu­ dents are willing to rish presumptively proval at its March 8 meeting, fol­ lowed by Dickerson’s needed approval. differences with ASMSU in working out an acceptable proposal. “These were mostly gram m atical or grave damage to contemporary society “Much of this w ritten policy is what wording changes, anyway," he said. and to their descendents, they demon­ we have always done," Eldon R. Non- on elections strate irresponsibility which is intol­ erable to duty to fellow beings and to namaker, associate dean of students, has said. “ But this is the first w rit­ Nonnamaker said that since a large amount of both student, faculty and administrative opinion was sampled, he future civilizations." ten document we ever developed with would think that the policy, “ as far P R A G U E (AP)--The reform leader­ Sen. Beebe, who is chairman of the respect to this office. ” as I can tell, w ill represent a docu­ ship of Czechoslovakia’s Communist party senate Committee on Drugs, charged “We attempted to develop a fair ment that w ill have wide agreement." called Tuesday for a new “ democratic” Tuesday that little is being done by policy,” Nonnamaker said, "one that could be useful to students and the He added that he thought that some election law. but left understood that it university officials and law-enforcement parts of the policy would be included was not willing to accept the challenge agencies to crack down on drug abuse. people who need access to information in the rew ritten student handbook. of Western-type opposition parties. “ I feel keenly that we have here about students.” The firs t part of the policy lists The proposal from the party pre­ another act of disrespect for the law, The Office of the Vice President University guidelines for keeping per­ sidium was passed on for study to and it presents a great danger to the for Student Affairs has been in the sonnel records as outlined in Article the revitalized National Assembly which was also expected to deal shortly with a move to lim it the powers of the O 3 of the Academic Freedom Report. Specific practices governing student records includes a list of information Interior Ministry. cludes the secret police. Its jurisdiction in­ Neutral trustee breaks tie kept in the Dean of Students Office and student's residence hall. This Official reports said the m inistry’s information includes: governing board had discussed giving up control over reformatories and prisons, to elect Board chairman -nam e, student number, date/place of birth, sex, identification picture. -home address and phone, parents the press and amateur radio licenses Republican and Democrats ended the while dividing the security police into By JIM SC H A E F E R or guardians name/address and phone. struggle with a 4-4 tie. civilian and state forces. State News S ta ff W riter - i f graduate, degree/date of gradu­ Smith's most recent move was seen by The presidium's recommendation on ation In a second pivotal reversal iii his career qualified observers as an attempt to stabil­ elections involved postponement until - i f m arried, spouse's name/address/ as MSU trustee. Conner D. Smith, Demo­ ize the Board by pro­ June of local contests scheduled for May phone cratic trustee from Pinconning, emerged viding an influence 19 so that voting procedures might -college major and GPA from his form er position of neutrality to on a Board recently reflect “ the current widespread process -te s t scores, previous academic ex­ successfully nominate and elect fellow rift by partisan dis­ of democratization." perience, academic actions. Democrat, Don Stevens of Okemos. as agreements over the (please turn to page 13) chairman of the MSU Board of Trustees sliding scale fees, Zdenek Mlynar, coauthor of the new at the regular monthly trustee meeting, and by the charges leadership’s "action program” of re­ scheduled during the term break. generated in the con­ forms, rejected the idea and said the Smith’s neutrality had earlier caused a flict of interest con­ Communist-led National Front, in which Ir o n y 4-4 stalemate between Democrats and troversy. non-Marxist parties are represented, Republicans on the Board since January Being of the ma­ offered citizens the opportunity to pick F r a m e d b y b a r b e d w ir e , a s ta t u e o f th e V i r g i n M a r y s t a n d s of last year, the normal election tim e for jo rity party -- the the party of their choice. There was room for argument on p e a c e f u lly in f r o n t o f S a i g o n 's C e n t r a l C a t h e d r a l, p r o v id i n g o n e o f the chairmanship. < ■\ 4 Democrats control general lines of policy, M ylnar said, th e c o n t r a s t s t y p ic a l o f the w a r - t o r n c o u n t r y . T h e b a r b e d w ir e A sometime Democrat. Smith’s deci-v‘> five .seats on the STEVENS I s u s e d to c lo s e o f f -the s t r e e t at n ig h t a n d In th e d a y t im e I s g a th ­ sion last year to bow to the sliding scale Board-Stevens as but on the “ basis of an agreement that (please turn to page 13) 355-4560 1-5 p.m. the Socialist concept is retained.” e r e d In f r o n t o f th e s ta t u e . U P I T e le p h o to tuition broke that deadlock also, when the 2 Michigan State Nears, East Lansing, Michigan Wednesday, March 27, 1968 M c C a r t h y b a c k e r s v o w l o y a l t y B y L E O ZAINEA Kennedy would further “damage’ nedy or McCarthy could de­ not campaigning against John­ best man, period,” said (Philip) posure McCarthy’s image will S ta te Newa S ta ff W riter the chances of President Johnr feat Nixon, the only major Re­ son or Kennedy but rather on Johnson. “Perhaps Kennedy is come across better to the Ameri- son being re-nominated. publican contender. such issues as the war and more well known, but with ex- can people.” Student and faculty backers Harold Spaeth, professor of Glenn Nelson, East Lansing racial unrest in the urban cen- of Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy political science and the former graduate student and chairman ters. served notice Tuesday they treasurer for the Michigan for of Students for McCarthy, “We feel McCarthy is the would work for him “as long McCarthy Committee, is co- said that as long as McCarthy chairman of the Platform and runs “we’U be running with as lie runs” for President, despite the candidacy of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy. Rules Committee for the De­ mocratic State Convention, him.” He said the student group Students to travel, Leaders of ' student and June 1-2 in Detroit. He said now numbers about 200 and is faculty support groups, said they felt “totaUy committed” to Tuesday that the party ap­ peared to by sympathetic to all obtaining more members with a booth outside the rear Men’s I.M. Bldg. at registration. A w o rk fo r M c C a rth y McCarthy, D-Minn., and would three candidates and that two not consider switching to Ken­ planks in the platform may pro-McCarthy contingent of as nedy unless McCarthy released endorse the Johnson Adminis­ many as 200 will drive-to Wis­ sending an estimated 150-200 said, and the only thing the them to support whoever they tration policy in Vietnam and consin this weekend to cam­ students ''to Milwaukee, Wis., students have to pay for are choose. at the same time urge a mili­ paign door-to-door before the this weekend to campaign for gas and food. James Hooker, professor of tary de-escalation. A re­ primary there April 2. Senator Eugene McCarthy for “ The total cost of the trip history and chairman of Faculty solution calling for immedi-' Nelson said he had seen no the state's April 2 presiden­ should be between $5 and $10," for McCarthy, said he had no­ ate withdrawal is doubtful, he evidence of “defections” to tial prim ary, a member of Penner said. ticed no “defections” to the said. Kennedy or evidence that his Students for McCarthy said He said he had worked in Kennedy camp though he antici­ Though he left the McCarthy candidacy will hurt Johnson Tuesday. Milwaukee last weekend and felt pates some as the campaign organization because of his more than McCarthy. “The wqfk w ill be almost that the student helpers were gains momentum. party appointment', Spaeth ex­ Philip Johnson, East Lansing entirely canvassing, going door- being very well received by the He said that some of the pressed the feeling that Ken­ graduate student and chairman to-door talking to people about local citizens. membership, which numbers nedy’s entry would enhance Mc­ of the MSU Young Democrats, McCarthy, and providing them "The Milwaukee residents have about 250, reacted "fero­ Carthy’s campaign and would reiterated the group’s sup­ with literature about him and been very impressed by stu­ Next President? ciously" after the New York help defeat President John­ port Tuesday for McCarthy what he stands fo r," Louis dents coming from out of the son. and said he foresees a switch Penner, Lansing graduate stu­ state to campaign for McCarthy." Se n . R o b e r t F , K e n n e d y g r e a t s an e n t h u s ia s t ic senator entered the race for the Democratic presidential nomina­ “The important thing is to keep to Kennedy only if McCarthy dent said. Penner said. N e g r o g r o u p in the W a t t s a r e a d u r in g h i s s e c o n d tion four days after McCarthy these anti-Johnson forces pulls out of the race. By a Penner said the group would See related story page 11. d a y o f c a m p a ig n in g In L o s A n g e le s . won 42 per cent of the vote together,” he said, “if John­ 44-2 vote last February, leave Friday afternoon, work U P I T e le p h o to RFKappeals tostudents in New Hampshire, the na­ son wins the nomination in the Young Democrats endorsed Saturday and return sometime tion's first primary, on March August he could very well be McCarthy for the nomination, Sunday. Transportation w ill be 12. ~ defeated by Richard M. Nixon mainly because of his position by automobile with the riders Nevertheless, Hooker con­ in November.” on the Vietnam war. EUG ENE MCCARTHY sharing the cost of gasoline. He said the organization was for helpinnomination tended that the prescence of Spaeth said he felt that Ken­ Housing w ill be provided free SEA TTLE (A P ) - Sen. Rob­ audience- vAnm q a e s u o n e * "Is it fair, in your judgment, ert F. Kennedy stepped up his the draft, refused. to those others that they should ' appeal Tuesday for the support They cheered lustily when he be drafted and have to go to of college students in his drive said he would “ like to develop Vietnam? Why should it be for the Democratic presidential in the United States a profes­ those who are very poor who nomination. sional arm y so that we would have to bear the burden? " If you’ll help,” he told 8,000 not have to rely on the d raft." But then he added, "However, "Should you be deferred be­ cheering University of Washing­ while the w ar in South Vietnam cause you have the advantage ton students, “we can win in is taking place I am in favor of of this kind of life, while Chicago, we can win in Novem­ a lottery system. And student Negroes, Mexican-Americans, ber, and we can have a new day deferments should be abol­ Indians and others are the ones for the United States of Am eri­ ished." who are fighting and dying for ca.” Receiving a mixed response us now?" But the New York Democrat, given an opportunity to score to that statement, which he has Kennedy drew his biggest extra points with his student made before, Kennedy asked: ovation when he told the stu­ dents the prim ary significance of Sen. Eugene McCarthy’s >v\ Nipw ¡tress Hampshire’ p rim ary is not trie number of votes but the fact Shirts that- it showed “ the desire of the people for a change from Lyndon Johnson.” f Nehru Jackets As at the other half dozen college campuses where he has appeared, there were no pro- Spreads Johnson signs or demonstra­ tions. BARNESFLORAL LANSING T h e H o u s e O f In d ia Fo r Flow e-s Fresh ond 101 E . G R A N D R I V E R F ashionoble B e t w e e n C u n n i n g h a m 's a n d N o r m K e s e l ’s 215 ANN ED 2-0871 T h e N o r e lc o R e c h a r g e a b le T r ip le h e a d e r . S o g r o o v y , ' i t d a r e s a n y b la d e to s h a v e a s e lo s e . P lu g g e d in o r I D id W a s a n y w h e r e s v ille . O p e n A 4 % D a ily In te r e s t S a v in g s A c c o u n t!” . . . the “little w o m a n ” is sure m oney-w ise. 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Works with or without a cord. th e d o s e , fa s t, c o m fo rta b le e le c t r ic sh a v e . A4 9S, <01968 North A m tr io n Philips Company, Inc., 100 E ast 42nd Street, New York, N. Y. 1 0 0 1 7 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Wednesday, March 27, 1968 3 NEWS Command candidate in D.C. SNadvertising summary WASHINGTON (A P ) -- The Pentagon said Tuesday that Gen. Creighton Abrams has re­ turned here from Vietnam to re­ expect the 53-year-old Abrams to succeed Westmoreland, but President Johnson has left open the possibility he could pick somebody else. w ill report to authorities here on the recently announced in­ creases in the planned strength of the ARVN and on plans for the additional modernization of grams of Westmoreland's suc­ cessor. Johnson’s vagueness was in­ terpreted as leaving open the possibility of the change in gets newhead port on plans to strengthen and The State News Adver­ A capsule summ ary of the day’s avants from modernize the South V iet­ Pentagon sources said Abrams, A RVN equipment.” strategy and a possibility that The South Vietnamese govern­ tising Dept, is now under our wira serv ices. namese armed forces. who arrived secretly Monday Johnson might choose a new face the management of Stan night, w ill see the Preside t ment has announced it w ill in­ to head the effort. As deputy. crease its forces by about Eichelbaum, Detroit grad­ The statement said nothing while he is here. Abrams has been closely as­ 135.000 men. The total now uate student. about the possibility that The Defense Dept, statement sociated with Westmoreland's stands at about 600,000. Eichelbaum, who re­ Abrams, top deputy to Gen. said that Abrams' visit w ill be strategy. In te r n a tio n a l N e w s ceived his undergraduate W illiam C. Westmoreland for for only one or two days. Johnson announced unexpect­ M ilitary sources said they ex­ edly last Friday his intention degree in advertising from the past 10 months w ill succeed "One of his m ajor duties in pect Abrams to become the new w The heaviest fighting in South Vietnam's central to nominate Westmoreland as MSU, replaces Susan Westmoreland in charge of the Vietnam has been his associa­ commander in Vietnam -but highlands since November was reported when 1.000 Army chief of staff, and left Comerford. Miss Comer- war. Westmoreland is returning tion with the Army of the Re­ they stressed they did not know North Vietnamese hurled themselves in waves at a open the m atter of a successor ford is presently student home to become Army chief of public of Vietnam (A R V N )," what was in Johnson's mind. U.S. artillery base and were repulsed with heavy losses. in Vietnam. teaching. staff in July. the statement said. Abrams met with Gen. Earle See page 9 Eichelbaum’s assistants Most senior m ilitary officers "On his Washington visit he The President said then: " I G. Wheeler, chairman of the ^ Arm y Gen. Creighton W. Abrams, 53-year-old w ill be Bob Jones, West do not know at this time who the Joint Chiefs of Staff, sources top deputy to Gen. W illiam C. Westmoreland, arrived Lafayette, Indiana, grad­ commanding general of our said. unannounced in Washington - officially to report on uate student, as assistant troops there will be." Abrams arrived last night and manager; Dale Prescott, strengthening the South Vietnamese forces, but more probably to talk about possibly becoming U.S. com­ mander in Vietnam. See page 3 Court upholds use Johnson made this rem ark when asked whether Westmore­ land's relief, after four years in the sources said it was uncer­ tain how long he would stay. Abrams was vice chief of staff Detroit graduate student, as assistant manager in charge of special promo­ Saigon and amid mounting c riti­ of the Army when he was STAN EICHELBAUM 0 Czechoslovakia moved toward liberalization when the reform leadership of the country's Communist party of pre-trial publicity cism. implies any change in strategy. tapped last April 6 to go to Vietnam as Westmoreland's tions, and Bob Roughley, Dearborn senior, as assist­ ant manager in charge of was assistant manager of the department. He trans­ called for a new "dem ocratic" election law, although The President said strategy chief deputy. By U P I reports implied his guilt. Jen­ classified advertisement ferred from Wayne State they emphasized that it was not willing to accept the and tactical operations had This happened after Johnson The Michigan Court of Ap­ kins argued. display. University as a sophomore challenge of Western-type opposition parties. See page 1 nothing to do with the appoint­ pledged publicly to send West­ peals Thursday ruled that ex­ The Appellate Court upheld Previously Eichelbaum in 1964. ments as such and that he could moreland some of the top quali­ tensive news coverage of a the refusal of Judge Donn D. ^ A Polish state-controlled newspaper published not speak for the plans or pro­ ty m ilitary talent. crime in itself does not prove Parker of the Genesee Cir­ a 15-point declaration demanded by thousands of anti­ that community opinion has cuit Court to grant Jenkins government student demonstrators charging human been prejudiced against a de­ a change of venue. Jenkins rights violations by the Communist regime. See page 12 fendant. said pre-trial publicity made This decision was made in it impossible for him to re­ the court appeal of Sidney ceive a fair tria l in Flint. N a tio n a l N e w s Jenkins, who was tried and "The inclusion of jurors who convicted in 1965 of murder have heard of or have read Q Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy moved into traditionally and armed robbery by the of the case, without more, Genesee County Circuit Court. does not disqualify them as Republican central Wisconsin in a frank bid for Republi­ Jenkins claimed that the jury jurors, or deny defendants a can votes to swell his total in next Tuesday's prim ary was influenced by prior knowl­ fair tria l." said a three-judge contest with President Johnson. See page 11 edge of the case through news­ Appellate Panel in a unami- paper. radio and television cov­ mous decision written by Judge £ Congress overruled a Treasury order against the erage of the murder. The news Lewis D McGregor. increasing use of tax-exempt municipal bonds to finance new plants for private firm s and the House Ways and Means Committee failed to approve the President's proposal for a tax on American tourists' spending abroad. The Slate News, the student newspaper at Michigan State Univer­ See page 10 sity, is published every class day throughout the year with special Welcome Week and Orientation issues in June and September. Sub­ ^ Sen. Robert F. Kennedy told college students in scription rates are $14 per year. Washington state that with their help he w ill win the Democratic primaries in Oregon and California, and the Member Associated Press. United Press International, Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press, Michigan party 's presidential nomination in Chicago. See page 2 Press Association. Michigan Collegiate Press Association, United State Student Press Association. £ Joseph W. Barr, the Treasury's No. 2 man. and George Christian. White House press secretary, responded cooly but did not deny the view that the United States Second class postage paid at East Lansing, Mich. Editorial and business offices at 347 Student Services Building. cannot fully meet its war and domestic needs without Michigan State University, East !,ansing, Mich. reducing its standard of living. See page 9 Phones: Editorial ................... 333-8232 A Peter B. Clark, publisher of the Detroit News. 333-8233 Classified Advertising f'~* ^ i .wt> t & t * " o t w e p f f T iif I M r ; , N V ri. V . public utilities to be "regulated 6y c/ic s ta te ' w o u ld do Business » ■ '■**RV *sr v&le.'cvtea o CALL CALL z O û < 3 5 1 -8 8 7 0 3 5 1 -7 1 0 0 N N for free, fast delivery for free, fast delivery CL «/> 0 z 1 D O M IN O ’S D O M IN O 'S • j - 1 o o • 1P I Z Z A f- P IZ Z A rv IM £ • f - • \ 966 T rowbrldge Read ” W h e r e s e r v in g s t u d e n t s is o u r p le a s u r e I/) • o # 3 203 M.A.C. 351-8870 % • I 351-7100 z Evergreen and W. Grand River One Block West of the Union «i ¡L o DOMINO’S PIZZA DOMINO’S PIZZA DOMINO’S PIZZA DOMINO’S PIZZA DOMINO’ S PIZZA 6 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Wednesday, March 27, 1968 SPORTS G - m e n i r k e d b y p l a y o f f d e c i s i o n ir W n N C A A reneges Szypula calls off boycott r /1 Drafting rules and then not on gym rules been no hesitation in selecting By GAYEL WESCH The uproar started four days the Big Ten Championship meet MSU. abiding by them is not exactly State News Sports Writer after the Big 10 gymnastics here was. Unfortunately the two most the best policy for any ath­ # championships held at MSU ‘The coaches voted to fol­ powerful athletic directors in * MSU’s gymnastics team was March 1-2. when the NCAA letic conference to follow, es­ low the form at for an NCAA pecially if it is as respected as the Big Ten. Forest Evasheski happy to end up in a three way ruled that only one Big Ten qualifying meet for the Big the governing body of athletics, of Iowa and F rtiz Crisler of tie for the Big Ten conference team could represent the con­ Tens." Szypula said. "Since Michigan, used their influence title, but the Spartans are less ference in the NCAA. the NCAA. we scored the most points in to get a vote among the three than happy now that they’ll That is what the NCAA did MSU won the Big Ten Cham­ that meet, we should be the involved schools. have to participate in a three- pionship meet after finishing when it determined the Big •conference representative." MSU's Biggie Munn at first way playoff to break that tie. Ten representative to the na­ third in dual meet competition. Szypula informed MSU Athle­ voted for a playoff, thinking The Spartans finished in a Iowa won the dual meet com­ tional gymnastics champion­ tic Director Clarence mor. Ixpiro. int., March 30, INI. mo 1a ^_r~ T ’^_ Umit ono por cw.lon.or. Inpim ^ . fell., Mmch 30, 1M3. 5■ rascHKrs Sliced Bologna M e ije r & T h r if t y A c re s C o u p o n wmmmnmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmM ¡" « Y ---------------- .-----------— . M g 110*; | J f save io¿ with thii coupon towmd % 10*3 SI8T I I J t save whb Ibto coupon towar IB/ 1^18*3 t h r if t y a c r e s Hm 0 ¡+ Iho purchoM of % IB | ! ■ * lh* M»*hom of AND ■ 12 to 16-ox. wt. Piece«, Your Chelee, Food Club I I HomT. Omom-Off 8 S W I S S C H E E S E •£■ [ II ACLEANER - SUPER fRRRKETS Anv or ail co.. upon, rnd.iaiabl. with »30 pu wboc.—o.—rl. mom. m _. ■ ^2 ny or all coupoo. mdoowohh with $5JO | HmoIuJLu RVM. ■ m ■IBVNMMip Lm eo o UWi aoIba olmeMMe welm «m> Lowe Brothers Paint Miss Landers said that al­ finals in the 22-year history of the event. ning Aug. 5 in M iam i Beach. Alaska w ill finish out the though the proposed changes Maryland's Democratic dele­ week with a Saturday-Sundav ant) Black W e il^ o c il Daisit 329 S. WASHINGTON, LANSING 487-0961 Debaters Richard Brautigam, gation, with 29 votes, w ill be contention in which delegates provide more opportunity for coeds ..to assume Te$*ww),ts' VAs( Albion senior, and Charles 9 5 5 T " x ' .. ~ «mention (j&iU h<> aic.Vted to 2? ’ l o r t l i e i r own actions, W IC hopes , UCklltyiii c^J), F tttfâ y . > iie p ^ i i ) ‘ D e m d r tk iic ^ t©tes. Party omore. qualified for the tourna­ ART SUPPLIES women w ill sign out for a favors President Johnson leaders predict Johnson w ill get specific place so they can be ment in District V competi­ On Saturday Kansas fills out the whole delegation. reached in cassation emergency. tion held earlier at Ohio State its roster with 38 Democratic As the count stands now. The proposal suggests the con­ University. votes. Norbert Dreiling, Johnson has 23 of the 1.312 JEWEL'IT Ml ARTCiNTER D istrict V includes univer­ state chairman, predicts a votes he would need in August- tinuation of the present policy 319 E. GRAND RIVER YOUR VOLUM E IS YOUR SAVING that women be encouraged to sities from Michigan, Ohio, In­ solid Johnson front. Johnson- assuming he runs for re-election sign out if they are leaving diana and Illinois. MSU was leaning delegates have already --17 from Nevada and 6. from $ 1 0 - $ 2 0 .................................... SA VE 5% the greater Lansing area. the only Michigan university been picked in district con­ New Hampshire. to earn entry. $ 2 1 - $ 4 0 .....................................SAVE 10% If the Faculty Committee on The topic to be debated is. ventions. McCarthy has 20 from New STUDYING ABROAD? Student Affairs passes the pro­ Also on Saturday South Caro­ Hampshire and half a vote from $ 4 1 - $ 8 0 .....................................SAVE 15% posal it w ill then go to Milton resolved. “ That the federal lina names 22 Republicans, Nevada for a total of 20 1 2. Studentswho’vebeenthere, $8 1-$120 .............................SAVE 20% B. Dickerson, vice president for government should guarantee a student affairs, for final ap­ minimum cash income to all proval. citizens." without a real contest. There are 18 officially uncomit- The second of the year's ted Democratic votes from dis­ major primaries w ill be held in tricts in Kansas, and 4 1 2 tellstudentswhoare STORE HOURS: WEDNESDAY NOON UNTIL 9 P.M. MONDAY-SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 5:30 P.M. uncomitted from Nevada On the Republican side the count for Richard M. Nixon stands at 28 of the 667 he needs. He got 8 in Hew Hamp­ shire and 20 in North Carolina. There are 22 Oklahoma votes officially pledged to Gov. Dewey Bartlett as a favortie son but leaning heavily toward Nixon as things stand now. But there are holdouts for Gov. Ronald Reagan of Cali­ fornia if his name comes before the convention, and more mem­ bers of the delegation are reported ready to jump to Rea­ gan if he becomes a serious candidate. On a rock-bottom budget (well under $7 a day!) in Europe, the Ba­ hamas, Bermuda, Jamaica, Puerto Ferency talks to Rico, the Virgin islands, and Hawaii Kennedy alliance • In this totally new guidebook, students who An "Alliance for Kennedy " have lived and traveled in the countries they group formed by students, fac­ write about give you personal, detailed,, ulty and civil leaders Thurs­ l-was-there reports on the In day at East Lansing High places for the high spirit, esrv., _ School, has expressed the hope low budget jet set. They tell that both area students and you where the fun is — adults w ill join the Alliance where to go, where to eat, to support and promote the, where to stay, where to candidacy of New York Sena­ shop, where to play, where tor Robert F. Kennedy for to meet people. Where to President. swing: bistros, coffee­ The Kennedy Alliance, the houses, ski resorts, surfing short and sweet. . our pettislips first such organization to form beaches, non-sightseeing in Michigan, w ill host a pub­ sights. Plus straight facts for fuller skirts fluff out lic meeting at 8 tonight in the about local life and local Community Room of the Edge- color and how to live with in soft flounces. Sizes P-S-M. wood United Church. 469 N. it- Price $2.95 . Hagadorn Ave.. featuring Zol- Thl» guidebook Is not for pooplo ovsr 30 A. Ribbon-trimmed nylon tricot. ton Ferency as speaker. The public is invited. COMPLETE INFORMATION ON White, blue or maize. 7 . 0 0 STUDY ABROAD Pan Am’s * NEW HORIZONS IN EDUCATION (2 2 2 pagm, $ 3 .9 9 ) gives you everything you B. White cotton dotted swiss Soloists hoftored n**d to know about 2 9 8 schools ana uni­ Three MSU music students versities In Europe, Middle Eeet, Far East, with floral stripe. 9 . 0 0 received outstanding soloist Latin America: Summer courses, Year-round awards recently for their per­ courses, Language and culture programs; C. Polyester/nylon taffeta in admissions requirements, coste, aooommo- formances at the 1968 Collegiate dations, language o f Instruction and much Jazz Festival at Notre Dame. more. white or champagne. 6 . 0 0 Soloist awards went to An­ drew L. Goodrich, alto saxo­ phone, Nashville. Tenn.. gradu­ Jacobsons Where The Fun ft, Fan Am’s Young Traveler's QuMe written ate student; M ark C. Gridley. by Studente and Fan Am’* New Horizons In Education ara flute. Royal Oak sophomore, available a t all boobetorae or a t your local Fan Am office. and Daniel W. Jacobs, trumpet. Published by Simon and Schuster Traverse City junior. d All are members of the MSU Jazz Ensemble. Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Wednesday, March 27, 1968 || Officer interviews for Capital jobs A recruiting officer w ill be and administration of student GREAT VARIETY! < H . GREAT EATING! GREAT FOOD) on campus Monday, April 8 to financial aid plans. Require­ interview students interested in ments: Accounting or Busi­ full-time career positions in ness majors with B.A. or Washington, D.C. M.B.A. degree. AT GOODRICH’S SPARTAN SHOPRITE Students who expect to re­ ceive a bachelor's, master's -EdObation *of Program P e p p e r o n i, a n y o n e ? or doctor’s degree by July Specialist to do highly special­ 1968 are invited to sign up for ized work in State school law. T h e c o m p e t it o r s In th e “ S u p e r B o w l ” p i z z a e a t in g c o n t e s t h e ld at A c e - A - an interview appointment at curriculum studies, adult educa­ the Placement Bureau. tion and other fields determined D la m o n d s d e m o n s t r a t e t h » f o r m th at m a d e t h e m g r e a t . W i n n e r G r a n t D a v id s o n (le ft), M i s s o u l a , M o n t. s o p h o m o r e r e p r e s e n t i n g S i g m a N u f r a t e r n it y , ate 3 1/2 The following positions are by individual skills and interests. 14 In c h p i z z a s . A l s o s h o w n a r e S te v e S w lo n t k o w s k l, (c e n te r), C h i c a g o s e n io r , open in the U.S. Office of Student must have demonstrated Education: innovative ability. Require­ r e p r e s e n t i n g A l p h a G a m m a R h o , and L a r r y G r e e n ( r ig h t ), M e r r i l l ju n io r, f r o m ment: Ph.D. in liberal arts A b b o t H a ll. -Educational Assistant (Trainee) to work in edu­ subject field, or Ed.D. in edu­ cational research programs, cational administration or edu­ computer programming, public cational research. McCarthy in Wisconsin; administration, education of the handicapped or disadvantaged, Applicants for GS-5 or GS-7 student financial aid and many jobs must pass the Federal other fields determined by stu­ Service Entrance Examination; shrugs off dissension rumors dent preference. Requirements: a passing score for positions Writing and editing ability; lib­ in the U.S. Office of Education eral arts arts majors with B.A.. is approximately 85.0. U.S. M.Ed. or M.A. degrees, citizenship is required. All STEVENS P O IN T, Wis. (A P ) One source indicated that going reorganization by shoe -G rants Management Trainee positions are located in Wash­ -Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy moved a dispute apparently involving manufacturer Arnold Hvat. to assist in the establishment ington, D.C. 4Ê Ê r* into traditionally Republican some of the younger members central Wisconsin Tuesday in a involved complaints of a lack S IR P I Z Z A S IR P I Z Z A S IR P I Z Z A S IR P I Z Z A S IR P I Z Z A S IR P IZ Z A . frank bid for Republican votes of specific programs on the Hygrade Center Cut to swell his total in next Tues­ domestic scence. a lack of day's prim ary contest with Pres­ domestic scence. a lack of Our Pick-of-the-Week. . . ident Johnson. internal organization or divi­ The state's voters may cast sion of authority and what was PEPPERONI & MUSHROOMS SMOKED PORK CHOPS tû t» . either ballot in the open pri­ termed a lack of aggressive Our pick-of-the-week is a special blend consisting of pre­ 3 lb. mary. and with Richard M. campaigning in Negro areas. mium, cut pepperoni and luscious imported mushrooms. All Beef Nixon coasting on a long lead McCarthy has not appeared or in the Republican race, a heavy crossover to the Democratic in Milwaukee's Inner Core area, torn by racial rioting last Incidentally our distribution enables one experience the same pleasure bite after bite after bite I HAMBURGER lb . 530 more 490 lb. ballot has been predicted, a l­ summer. though GOP leaders are trying There also was discontent T ry our Pepperoni & Mushroom Pizza . . . . . . . . . . . . COUPON*- - - - - - - - - m m m m % to head it.off.. » expressed over the candidate At a question and answer making little if arjy use of It’s o u r pick-of-t}ret-w eek period*’ in Wisconsin Rapids. .aemos. speeches and research -C O U P O N - McCarthy was reminded by a turned in to him, and over ad­ member of the audience that phrey had said President John­ in delivery. vance texts of speeches which Vice President Hubert Hum­ he sometimes does not follow This coupon entitles the bearer to a discount on our SIR PIZZA of-the-week. JELL-0 GELATIN son was the only real peace Another source said Tuesday candidate and was willing to P E P P E R O N I & MUSHROOM negotiate at "any tim e, any place." that orders had come down that transcripts of speeches and press conferences were to be P I Z Z A - O F —T H E -W E E K EACH McCarthy replied. " I ’m w ill­ ASSORTED FLAVORS ing to negotiate at a specific time, and a specific place, and turned over to a McCarthy aide for editing before being given to newsmen. This is the system 7 5 2 L J £ » • * ;■ ? S C Pepperoni J A f Pepperoni Mushroom l l | | & Mushroom on a specific proposition. followed in Congress where "They haven't said where or members get a chance to edit or when, or on what conditions." Pizza Pizza Coupon Expires; A pril 2,1968 [ L IM IT 3 — W I T H $ 5 .0 0 O R M O R E FO O D P U R C H A SE rewrite their remarks on the the Minnesota Democrat said of bèi aie tbèv apyeac vn the 2417 K A L A M A Z O O S T . 1 4 8 7 -3 7 3 3 f h i ‘ «AfriM/i.straiJeF,-ayoh,u*AKi>. ■ Congress’K/ivai 1«.¿euw > r ’ Îa À ''■N.W He ibid, that he- fe e ls the* ' d k 'A M if A N O h k * P £ And there were reports that 2 2 0 IS ^ E D A M T o k j-« u ^ n |y ^ ^ ^ ^ 8 4 -4 5 5 5 United States would have to be "prepared to accept a coalition government in Vietnam which the financial structure of the McCarthy carnpaign, was under- S IR P I Z Z A S I R P I Z Z A S T ? p T ? Z r ,ls T ^ î z Z A , ^ Î ^ I Z Z l! ^ I R p Î z z 7 Hi-C DRINKS Q T . 14 O Z . EACH 250 would include the National Liberation Front forces. 13c O F F L A B E L Mohday night at Madison, where more than 15,000 per­ sons crowded the coliseum with the largest audience of his Back-To-School Special IVORY LIQUID DETERGENT 1 PT. 6 OZ. EACH 380 campaign, his own supporters P L A IN O R IO D IZ E D were joined by thoses of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy--who has A C o m p le t e A m e r ic a n - M a d e urged such support in Wisconsin -and by Wisconsin's Repub­ MORTON’S SALT L B . 10 O Z . EACH 80 lican first lady. Mrs. Warren P. Knowles, wife of the governor, had a front FISHER STEREO SYSTEM 3 lb. - 6 o z . B O X row seat at the McCarthy rally, and told newsmen afterward. SPIC & SPAN T W EACH 790 " If I were a Democrat. I'd vote for him." T h e F i s h e r 150— 35 w att S t e r e o But Tuesday with McCarthy, R e c e i v e r w ith tw o F i s h e r A c o u s t i c a l l y who has described himself on M a tch e d S p e a k e rs occasion as leader of a *‘Chil­ dren's Crusade." there were re­ ports of dissension in the ranks -and some possible changes. Asked by newsmen about ru­ mors of staff frustration and discontent. McCarthy said that PLUS such signs were standard in a political campaign and added. " I have not accepted any resig­ 60 MK II nations." However, two press aides on the McCarthy campaign staff. Record Changer Seymour Hersh. 20. and M ary Lou Oates. 23. said they had and offered their resignations, but declined further comment. The two have been at the cen­ Shure Magnetic Cartridge ter of press relations, schedul­ ing and arrangements for F i s h e r 150 S t e r e o R e c e i v e r $ 2 9 9 .0 0 *2 4 9 speeches.____________________ G a r r a r d 60 M K II C h a n g e r 6 9 .5 0 S h u r e M a g n e t ic C a r t r i d g e 2 4 .5 0 Debating contest R e g u la r $ 3 9 3 .0 0 The Entire System Now set this w eekend Fifty-six colleges w ill come SEE ALSO OUR C O N CO RD A M -F M ST ER EO T ELE FUNKEN K E N W O O D TKS/40 to MSU Thursday through Sat­ E L E C T R O / V O IC E R E C E IV E R — G A R R A R D — STEREO SYSTEM s t e r e o R E C E IV E R — urday as part of the second G A R R A R D -JE N SE N S p e a k e r s , c o m p le t e c o m p le t e B 52/M ACDO NALD annual Debate Tournament of s y s t e m , c o m p le t e C H A N G E R --S H U R E Champions. C A R T R ID G E MSU won second place in last year’s tournament and w ill be represented this year by $159» M5950 $2395° Richard Brautigan, Albion sen­ ior, Charles Humphreys, M a r­ p lu s ta x p lu s tax p lu s tax S309M p t u * ta x shall. Mo. sophomore: David Case, Hudson, Ohio, sopho­ more; and Roger Chard, Lan­ sing sophomore. REMEM BER, Loyola University of Los F O R T H E M O ST C O M P L E T E S E L E C T IO N IN R E C O R D S , P R E R E C O R D E D Angeles, defending champion, T A P E S , S T E R E O C A S E T T E S , A N D S T E R E O C O M P O N E N T E Q U IP M E N T w ill be represented along with teams from Harvard, Univer­ sity of California at Berkeley and at Los Angeles, Univer­ sity of Houston, Rutgers, Brown, Northwestern, Ohio State, U.S. M ilitary Academy, University TheDISCSHOP Y o u r O n e -S to p S te re o C e n te r 323 E a s t G ra n d R iv e r A ve n u e HOURSt M -F S 9 :0 0 -9 :0 0 9 :0 0 -6 :0 0 SPARTAN SPA R T A N SHOPPING C E N T E R 940 TROWBRIDGE RO. -EAST LANSING b e tw e e n S p a r t a n V i l l a g e a n d of Kansas and University of OPEN 9 A .M . TO 9 P .M . - MONDAY THRU FRIDAY a n d C h e r r y L a n e Apartments Detroit. E a st L a n s in g SATURDAY TO 6 P .M . ' Teams from 20 states are en­ P h o n e 3 5 1 -5 3 8 0 tered in the tournament. 12 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Wednesday, March 27, 1968 W I N T U C O M M IN C K M IN T Zionists and intellectuals blamed for Polish unrest Educator defines WARSAW, Poland (A P ) - the philosophy faculty, which The Communist party campaign has been purged of five of blaming Zionists and intellec­ the 21-man teaching staff. tuals for student demonstra­ The third name mentioned I government posts after their sons and daughters were ac- I cused of being student ring­ leaders of the demonstrations. University’s role tions in Poland linked three was that of Andrzej Neumark, In order to “ act intelligently” “ I t is interesting to speculate to expect too much from the Trybuna Mazowiecka, news­ more names to the unrest son of the director of the cabi­ in shielding today’s univer­ what would happen to the fac­ university as a special commu­ paper of the Warsaw regional Tuesday. net of the Polish Culture Min­ sities from abuse, we “ must ulty if, like political office­ nity, so is it a delusion, in party organization, took up Two were members of the istry. Neumark was accused in begin by identifying and uproot­ holders, they were hired and my opinion, to hold that its what Poland’s Communists are Warsaw University teaching the newspaper Kurier Polski ing erroneous ideas about what an fired by vote of their princi­ members may enjoy life in a calling a “ campaign of slan­ staff which Monday was purged of having organized a demon­ institution of higher education, pal constituents, the stu­ kind of secular sanctuary where der” authored by world Zion­ of six professors and assistants. stration at the Warsaw medi­ is supposed to be and do," dents,” he said. they have many, rights but few ist centers. The names of Prof. Julius cal school March 11. The article according to Logan Wilson, Another notion Wilson criti­ duties," Wilson said attacking The newspaper said the cam­ president of the American Coun­ cized was that of the . uni­ the university as a retreat. Katz-Suchy and Assistant Krzy­ said he has been arrested. Sipce the student demonstra­ paign of “ slander" and “ dirty cil on Education. versity as a welfare agency He criticized the idea of sztof Pomian appeared among lies” increased after the failure or a “ panacea for most of our private w ill as sufficient justi­ those already criticized for tions began March 8, 12 persons Speaking at the winter term of “ Zionist Inspirators" to commencement exercises March social and economic ills.” having planted what were called have been purged. Ten are be­ fication f o r almost any act achieve their anti-Polish goals “ Not only are colleges and and the yielding to me wiuuu revisionist, oppositionist ideas lieved to be Jews. The first 10, Wilson urged the 1,172 five were sacked from their in the demonstration. graduates to continue their universities expected to trans­ of individual members of the into students' minds. Katz-Suchy is a member of interest in MSU in particular form young persons in atten­ academic community” as if the law faculty. In past years and higher education in general dance, but also to play key they were “ university man­ he served as Poland’s delegate to the United Nations and as M SU terminates with “ informed understanding and active support.'' roles in uplifting the population at large,” he said. dates.” “The groves of academe, I ambassador to India. Wilson cited his views on “I think we must be w ary of submit, have not been care­ Pomian is on the staff of ^overseas project four current misconceptions of the university and what to do letting any institution be pulled a p a rt. in the futile endeavor fully cultivated all these years as hideaways where everybody H IL L E L P R E S E N T S MSU’s oldest overseas pro- In the past 17 years, 58 MSU Winter Graduation about them. The first notion he criticized was the university of trying to be a ll things to all m en,” Wilson added, “ at should be permitted to turn on’ in his own w a y !" he THE FABULOUS ject--the development of the faculty members have assis­ said. G u e s t s p e a k e r at C o m m e n c e m e n t e x e r c i s e s o n as a m icrocosm -“ that the the risk of distorting their University of the Ryukyus in ted the Okinawan university basic purposes and splintering Wilson said he was disturbed M a r c h 10 w a s D r . L o g a n W i ls o n , campus should replicate in ARONSONS O kinaw a-w ili be terminated with curriculum planning, their effectiveness. ’ ’ by the “ spreading permissive­ Sta te N e w s P h o to b y L a r r y H a g e d o r n miniature the larger com­ Polks ingers June 30, reports Glen L. teaching, research and general m unity." “Just as it is an illusion ness" on campuses. " I have of Philadelphia, Pa. Taggart, dean of international university development. Since the old-fashioned notion that In a concert of programs. its founding in 1950, the U ni­ dormitories are not supposed to International Songs MSU w ill continue its re­ versity has grown to four col­ cater to the kind of together­ State-run papers opposed lationship with the University leges with 28 departments, 219 ness’ provided by motels." he S U N D A Y M A R . 31, through mutually cooperative faculty members and 3,413 said adding his objections to 8 :0 0 P . M . educational programs. The ad­ students. pass-fail marking and elimina­ U N IO N P A R L O R S B & C ministrative function of the In 1962, MSU and the Ryukyus tion of credit hours and stan­ FREE. Everyone Welcome overseas program by MSU, signed a cooperative agreement dards of accreditation. D E T R O IT (U P I) -- Making before a special committee of would solve no problem,” said out is "just as right, legal however, w ill be concluded. that encouraged exchanges of Criticizing the university as D etroit’s two daily newspapers the Michigan Senate which has Clark. He did say, however, and necessary under the circum ­ faculty, students and library an arena, Wilson said that public utilities to be regulated been investigating the long it would be helpful “ if we stances as is the right of a resources. Two MSU faculty- although the university might by the state would do little to newspaper drought, said Monday could bargain w ith a single en­ union to strike.” student groups have attended retain some of its basic iden­ w ith solve the problems which have that the problems of dealing tity ” rather than having to deal the Ryukyus in summer pro­ Clark said he was surprised tity despite the misconcep­ MaxÔhuIman grams, and six Ryukyuan faculty resulted in a newspapers black­ with unions still would remain with separate unions. when the Teamsters called tions he had cited, he doubted out now in its 132nd day, ac­ even if the papers became pub­ The News and F ree Press members have come to MSU the strike because he had thought that it could survive " if it is (B y the a u th o r o f " R a lly Round the Flag, B o ys!’’ , cording to the publisher of the lic utilities. together must negotiate and under the agreement. “ all parties had learned some­ turned into a battleground " Dobie G iU is ," etc.) Detroit News. The idea was brought up during sign 23 separate contracts. There are presently 16 Oki­ thing from the 1964 strike” that or an arena. " P eter B. Clark, in testimony the com m ittee’s hearings as I t was a dispute over contract nawan students a t MSU. lasted 134 days. He said that While citing statistics that a means of preventing the loss settlement with the Teamsters M O N E Y s T H E S T O R Y O F AN E N G IN E E R of news to the public. Both the part of the blame for the long proved that only about one Union at the News that led to News and the D etroit F ree Press blackout could be laid to the fifth of one per cent of the We all know, of course, that in this age of technology a strike against that paper every engineering senior is receiving fabulous offers of employment, but do we realize just how fabulous these Mac s Pipe Shop have been closed down since last November. last Nov. 16. The F ree Press shut down operations the fol­ publication of interim news­ papers for part of the time. students enrolled throughout the country are involved in campus violence, he said that, offers are? Do we comprehend just how keenly industry The committee was convened lowing day charging a violation “The operations of these news­ is competing? Tb illustrate, let me cite the true and typi­ W IT H A C O M P L E T E L IN E O F to look into charges that some “ happenings in such places as of, joint union contracts with papers would tend to lessen cal case of E. Pluribus Ewbank, a true and typical senior. members of Teamsters Local Berkeley, San Francisco. Madi­ P IP E S A N D S M O K IN G S U P P L IE S the two papers. settlement of the dispute,” he One day last week while strolling across the M.I.T 372 may have plotted the strike Both Clark and Lee Hills, said. son, Iowa City. Cambridge, and “ If something could be campus, E. Pluribus was hailed by a portly and prosper­ IS N O W L O C A T E D A T to make a financial killing. One other locales are danger sig­ ous man who sat-in a yellow convertible studded with Dublisher of the D etroit Free done legislatively, it should be teamster* testified before an nals not to be ignored. ¿ e m -itanes. “ H e l l o " said the portly and pros­ Press, dented there ,^«as any -done. . perous man, “I am Portly Prosperous, president of e s a tu tf v < f*£\ .. liu l. ¿a t that he m ade six times as much equal and opposite reaction." American Xerographic Data Processing and Birth Con­ (NEXT DOOR TO PARAMOUNT NEWS) papers to close down operations ation of new newspapers’ only Wilson added, "and it is trol, Incorporated. Are you a senior.?i’v . ->».-«..... working for an iplerirn paper when one paper is struck. when our own union employes .raigan»•-"o*#■ft.-* '**, - a•• beginning to look as if this “Yes, sir,” said E. Pluribus. OPEN 9-11 DAILY as he did while working for Hills said the federal courts are involved in these newspapers, “Do you like this car?” said Portly. •the News. law applies to the abuses of and the National Labor Relations Clark said. “Yes, sir,” said E. Pluribus. C L O S E D S U N D A Y S A N D H O L ID A Y S “To convert the newspaper the university. Board have ruled repeatedly “It’s yours,” said Portly. industry into a public utility that such a shutdown or lock­ A bill prepared by State Sen. “ Even though it is unfor­ “Thanks, hey,” said E. Pluribus. Robert Huber, R-Birmingham, tunate that so much time should “Do you like Personna Super Stainless Steel Blades?” chairman of the committee, have to be diverted from the said Portly. would prevent any interim paper main business of academia and “What clean living, clean shaven American does not?” given to riot prevention, it is from starting publication with­ said E. Pluribus. gratifying to me to see that a “Here is a pack,” said Portly. “And a new pack will in 90 days of the beginning of a be delivered to you every twelve minutes as long as you strike against a paper in Michi­ stout defense of law and order live.” gan. is developing." he added. “Thanks, hey,” said E. Pluribus. “Would your wife like a mink coat?” said Portly. “I feel sure she would,” said E. Pluribus, “but I am not married.” “Do you want to be ?” said Portly. “What clean living, clean shaven American does not?” said E. Pluribus. Portly pressed a button on the dashboard of the con­ vertible and the trunk opened up and out came a nubile maiden with golden hair, rosy knees, a perfect disposi­ tion, and the appendix already removed. “This is Svet­ lana O’Toole,” said Portly. “Would you like to marry her?” “Is her appendix out?” said E. Pluribus. “Yes,” said Portly. a week or m ore... “Okay, hey,” said E. Pluribus. “Congratulations,” said Portly. “And for the happy bride, a set of 300 monogrammed prawn forks.” “ Thanks, hey,” said Svetlana. AS HUNDREDS OF COLLEGE GUYS AND GALS HAVE SUMMERTIMES w ith . . . Yes, you put in lots of hours b u t. . . “Now then,” said Portly to E. Pluribus, “let us get down to business. My company will start you at $75,000 Y o u a r e th e o n ly p e rs o n w h o c a n a n s w e r a year. You will retire at full salary upon reaching the age of 26. We will give you an eleven-story house made of lapis lazuli, each room to be stocked with edible furniture. th a t q u e s tio n . Your children will receive a pack of Personna Super Stainless Steel Blades every twelve minutes as long as they To do it, you should know as much as possible about You’re trained and work on routes where people have shall live. We will keep your teeth in good repair and also the 150 new plant unite Du Pont has built since bought Good Humor Ice Cream for years . . . no in­ the teeth of your wife and children unto the third genera­ the end of World War II. You’d then choose from one of vestment . . . everything supplied. tion. We will send your dentist a pack of Personna Super the many lively fields of interest at Du Pont: Stainless Steel Blades every twelve minutes as long as design, construction, production, marketing, research HOW YOU QUALIFY FOR INTERVIEW he shall live, and thereafter to his heirs and assigns... and process improvement (to name just a few). Now, son, I want you to think carefully about this offer. 1. Minimum age 18. Meanwhile here is 50 thousand dollars in small, un­ Involvement starts the day you join. There is no 2 . Need a valid driver’s Jcen se . . . and must be able E . I. du Pont de Nemours & Co. (Inc.) marked bills which places you under no obligation what­ training period. You go into responsible work right away. Nemours Building 2500-2 to drive a clutch transmission. soever.” Your professional development is stimulated by Wilmington, Delaware 19898 3 . Be in good physical condition. “Well, it certainly seems like a fair offer,” said E. real problems and by opportunities to continue your Pluribus. "But there is something you should know. I am academic studies under a tuition refund program. Please send me the Du Pont Magazine along with the other magazines I have checked below. Sign Up Now For Our Campus Visit not an engineer. In fact I don’t go to M.I.X at all. I just You work in small groups where individual walked over here to admire the trees. I am at Harvard, Ask your Summer Placement Director or Student Aid majoring in Joyce Kilmer.” contributions are qpickly noted and appreciated. □ Chemical Engineers at Du Pont Officer to schedule you for our campus visit or write to: “Oh,” said Portly. The work is significant, and of benefit to society. □ Mechanical Engineers at Du Pont . “I guess I don't get to keep the money and the con­ You’re part of the most exciting technical environment □. Engineers a t Du Pont GOOD HUMOR, Dept. A. vertible and the Personnaa and the broad, do I? ” said B. available today and tomorrow, and facilities and □ Du Pont and the College Graduate Pluribus. aaodates are the best. 800 Sylvan Avenue “Of course you do,” said Portly. “And if you’d like the How could you fit in? Why not sign up for a chat with Englewood Cliffs, N. J. 07632 job, my offer still stands.” CU m - -Major— .D e g n e i a Du Pont interviewer and find out? The coupon will * • • • iM .S u S W H i also bring you more information about us. College_____ f INTERVIEW I S p oo k in g o f melrib, i f yen w o m t m trm fy r ic h , t r u ly Finally, what is Project X? I DATE: April 9________________ J { h i s r l ww a k o o o , t r y Person— Blades, ro o m ie r o r iu io e - Ior, e t t B m n m o S h m v o . regular o r m o m tk o i . T herm *» a on—upagwo akm op o u a m oo r badge»/__________ / ______ We don't know yet. Could be we’re waiting for y o u to tell us. mm M y eddreae. C ity________ _S U U _ _Zip C od e. An Equal opportunity Employer (M/F) W ed n esd ay, M arch 2 7 , 1968 1 3 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan ■V .... — 1 " "" " """ 4 9 -year MSU employe honored periment Station, 21 years; vah I. Morlock, married hous- ceremonies for the event w ill The man who has worked for been at the same job ever since, William B. Clippinger, engineer­ ing, 19 years; Bernice Morri­ be G. Malcolm Trout, pro­ MSU longer than apy other em­ although he moved to the new ing research, 21 years; John son, Brody Halls, 23 years; fessor emeritus of food science. ploye w ill be honored along with Engineering Building when it F. Cooper, physical plant, 27 Hazel J. Niesel, health center, Service awards w ill go to 38 other retirees at the annual was completed in 1962. years; Laura Decker, continu­ 15 years; Charles Piper, physical persons with 15 and 20 years award dinner Thursday for pro­ The school's president when ing eiducation, 15 years; Lee* plant, 34 years; George Pope, of service, and watches w ill fessional, service and clerical Pearson arrived was Frank S. man B. Edwards, physical plant, physical plant, 21 years; Helen by presented to those completing personnel. Kedzie. Four more presidents- David Friday, Kenyon L. But­ 22 years; and Helen Everette, Reeves, Williams Hall, 22 years: 25 years at MSU. Raymond T. Pearson went physical plant, 21 years. Noble Sherman, pathology, 22 The 25-year awardees in­ to work for Michigan Agriculture terfield, Robert S. Shaw and Others are: Martin R. Fitz­ years; Ora Strong, Mason-Ab­ clude: Mildred L. Beach, College in 1919 when he was John A. Hannah-followed. Pres­ ident Hannah was a freshman in patrick, physical plant, 18 years; bot Halls, 25 years; Ruby M. laundry: Donald Brooks, stores; 16 years old. When Pearson Anthony P. Fortino, Shaw- Hall, Sudberry, Snyder-Phillips Halls, Alonzo Cornell, Mason-Abbot officially retires July 1, he Grand Rapids Junior College w ill have worked for MSU for when Pearson started working 15 years; George Haddad, Hub­ 20 years; Louis Swoboda, phys­ Halls; Garnet Cross, physical bard Halls, 21 years; Donald A. ical plant, 20 years; Helen Tom­ plant; Robert L. Dow, stores; 49 years and two months. for MSU. Hathaway, married housing, 17 linson, laundry, 15 years; Lowery Hazel B. Foster, Brody Halls,: Pearson is sure his service Besides Pearson, four other years; Blanche R. Hesselman, D. Trumble, chemistry, 17 Robert Gillespie, soil science: record to. the school w ill not retirees w ill be honored Thurs­ laundry, 38 years; Cyril M. years; Frances L. Wait, Brody Starr Keesler. secretary!s of­ be broken because “ they aren’t day for 40 or m ore years Howard, physics, 23 years; Ma­ Halls, 18 years; Laura Waters, fice: George S. Leppamaki, Up­ hiring people that young any­ at MSU. They include: Gladys health, physical education and per Peninsula Experiment Sta­ more.” Franks, alumni relations, 42 rie Iliff, botany and plant path­ ology, 20 years; Aurora Lon- recreation, 39 years; Irene tion; M argaret M arkw art: Rene World War I had just ended years; Ray C. Heydrick, physical Whipple, Kellogg Center, 16 Naert. grounds maintenance: when Pearson left his native plant, 42 years: Luther M. M a­ felds, Union Building, 17 years; Grand Rapids in May, 1919, John R. Markwart, physical years; and Norris Wold, Ice Robert M. Pease, physical plant: rine, physical plant, 40 years; and started work for the MSU plant, 38 years; Margaret Mark­ Arena, 20 years. Norma Ray, Computer Labora­ and M arie Mercier. secretary’s B u s st o p lo u n g e (then MAC) forestry depart­ wart, laundry, 25 years; Ro­ The retirees and 138 service tory; Virginia Stewart, Univer­ office, 42 years. ment. The following winter he land Marrison, married housing, award winners will receive cer­ sity Business Office: Ora Strong: Certificates w ill also go to A w a it in g an M S U b u s In s t y le a r e tw o c o e d s w h o a p p a r e n t ly w e r e t r a n s p o r t in g took a job in the engineering 15years; and Aubrey C. McCann, tificates and awards from Presi­ Theodore Van Atta. stores: other retirees: H arriet Ansley, h o m e w i c k e r c h a i r s th a t o n c e f u r n i s h e d t h e i r d o r m ro o m . messenger service, 22 years. dent Hannah and Jack Breslin. and Helen Widick. residence shops near Olds Hall. Kellogg Center, 16 years; Ber­ S ta te N e w s P h o to b y J i m R i c h a r d s o n The 65-year old retiree has tram Canning, South Haven Ex- Also to be honored are; Al MSU secretary. Master of halls. “ ■“ COUPON COUPON COUPON “ “ “ COUPON“ " - 1 $4.79 $12.95 Student records Cigarettes Long Play Records 45 RPM Records Sunlamp w/Stand New Assortment Limit Ten Limit One $8 » ( c o n t in u e d f r o m p a g e one) L im it One -Limit 6 6< office only with student per­ East Lansing Store Only East Lansing Store Only mission include: E A S T L A N S IN G East Lansing Store Only East Lansing Store Only . Items from this list than can Expires After 4 -6-6 8 Expires After 4-6-68 -disciplinary records. The Expires After 4-6-68 Expires After 4-6-68 be released publicly are "only ■C O U P O N ■ “ ■ ■ m COUPON that of a public or ‘directory' report states, however, "that if m m COUPON “ “ COUPON ■ ■ $1.95 Flashcubes Go-Go Watch Band Kodak Color Film nature," the report reads. These the student is under 21. his $17.95 include name, student number, campus address and phone, home address, sex, m arital sta­ parents may be notified of any action taken." -membership in activities Go-Go Watch 126-127-620 JJM tus, class, major, and date of graduation/degree. and organizations -le tte rs of commendation 2 -y r . guarantee L im it One Limit One 0 Limit One East Lansing Store Only 79' L im it One East Lansing Store Only One portion of the p o h c j èiï&i -rr'TNiwl» * r*n r\cvtoK{vl('OV9r>\ ~ East Lansing Store Only East Lansing Store Only Ala«« AmAvAA Expires After J -6 -6 8 indicates a newly established medical problems Expires A*fter 4—6—6S practice is that of releasing a -financial records 'C O U P O N ■“ ■ ■“ ■COUPON ■“ ■ “ ■COUPON1 'C O U P O N -w ithdraw al records $1.69 $1.25 student’s number of credits and GPA to advisers of registered -evaluations. Although RA $1.45 Nylons Panty Hose 5 x 7 Color student organizations such as sororities, fraternities, honoraries that need this in­ and evaluations io r all students were destroyed last year, the records policy includes a stipu­ Qt. Tanning Lotii 29* pr. Enlargements (B & W 5x7— 29#) formation for membership pur­ lation that students, if they Limit Six 99« L im it One 9 # Limit 6 pr. L im it One 3 !r poses. want, may request evaluations The records policy expli­ from a member of their resi­ B e T H e East Lansing Store Only East Lansing Store Only East Lansing Store Only East Lansing Store Only citly provides that this infor­ dence hall advisory staff, in­ Expires After 4 -6-68 Expires After 4*6*68 Expires After 4 -6-6 8 Expires After 4-6-68 mation w ill automatically be cluding the Resident Assistant. “ ■■"C O U P O N "“ “ “ "■ C O U P O N "“ “ “ .COUPON “ “ “ "C O U P O N given out to these advisers, un­ Nonnamaker said the Resi­ 19# 39# $1.00 Value 25# less the student exercises his dence Hall Programs Office p r jf Q jp ije D privilege, in writing, of re­ questing that this information would have to develop an evalu­ ation form for this purpose. b Ç V & / Stono Notebook Bic Pens Hi-Liters I & I Cotton Buds not be released. The policy also provides Ii^ T o w if L im it One# Records that are released opportunity for students to I ' ÎV t ■ < V V ' r> . * : T 5* f Èast Lansing Store Only East Lansing Store Only records. If thfy find inac­ East Lansing Store Only East Lansing Store Only Nothing is so soothing to ■Expires After 4-6-68 Expires After 4 -6-68 curacies they may file these Expires A fter 4-6-68 Expires After 4*6-68 the “ fashion frantlcs” a e ■CO U PO N ' •COUPON1 corrections which Will be re­ “ “ ■COUPON“ “ " Stevens viewed by the Dean of Stu­ the serenely floating ruffle . . . wherever you find it. And “ ■ C O U P O N "“ $1.98 Human H air $1.50 75# 95# ( c o n t in u e d f r o m p a g e one) dents Office. "The decision of the Dean of Students or a member of his ruffles are everywhere on our newest fashion finds I They Eyelashes MSU PMIews Masking Tape I Crest Toothpaste chairman may offer a channel for better communication and cooperation between the Univer­ staff shall be subject to review by the Student-Faculty Judici­ f r ill o r flounce, flare or flir t with fan-pleating. A touch as tiny as a collar L im it One 99^ L im it One *33' L im it One East Lansing Store Only 39' L im it One East Lansing Store Only 59( ary is the student wishes,” the edging . . . as grand as a ll- East Lansing Store Only East Lansing Store Only sity and the trustees. policy reads. Expires After 4-6-68 Expires After 4 -6-68 Expires After 4-6-68 over ruffling . . . you choosel Expires After 4-6-68 Other than acting in this The policy adds, “ if such cor­ ■CO U PO N ■“ ^COUPON ■ “ ■ ■CO UPO N1 “ “ COUPONlH Come soon and be firs t 1 capacity, the chairman of the rections-are validated, they shall 25# $1.15 13 oz. 30% OFF ON ALL Board has no real powers either under the University by-laws or regulations, ex­ supercede the corrected parts of the record which in turn, shall be destroyed. If they áre not Scope Mouthwash Aqua Net POLAROID OR IMPORTED Cocoa Butter cept the ability to call spe­ Hair Spray validated, they may. at the dis­ 12 oz. SUNGLASSES cial meetings, without the L im it 3 cretion of the Dean of Students Limit One 47^ 12' presence of University of­ office, be included in the record L im it One 67' L im it One East Lansing Store Only East Lansing Store Only East Lansing Store Only East Lansing Store Only ficers. but shall not supercede any Expires After 4-6-68 Expires After 4-6-68 Expires After 4-6-68 Expires After 4-6-68 Such special meetings are other part of that record." ■ “ ■CO UPO N ' ■CO UPO N1 COUPON “ ■“ ■“ ■ ^ “ “ called in the event of appoint­ $1.09 Tube 98# ing a new president--a possibil­ ity if President Hannah, who has weathered over a quarter Foamy 1 0% O F F T H E D IS C O U N T P R IC E O N A L L F IL M D E V E L O P IN G iHead & Shoulders IShampoo of a century here, should decide Shave Bomb S A V E U P T O 4 0 % W / T H IS C O U P O N to step down. When asked for comment, however. Hannah would not say L im it One East Lansing Store Only 59' E a s t L a n s i n g S t o r e O n ly E x p ire s 4 -6 -6 8 L im it One East Lansing Store Only Q Expires After 4-6-68 anything other than Steven’s Expires After 4-6-68 ■CO UPO N^“ “ “ COUPON1 ■“ “ ■CO UPO N1 election "was the best for a ll." ■COUPON 75# 200-Ply A ll $1.00 Mabelllne “I t is a good idea." said ** 100 Count 5 Grain Hannah, "and I'm thoroughly pleased." Easy On Facial Tissue I Eye Make-up Spray Starch Grading system L im it One 9' Limit One 44' Limit One East Lansing Store Only 19« L im it One East Lansing Store Only 59' East Lansing Store Only East Lansing Store Only Expires After 4-6-68 Expires After 4 -6 -68 Expires After 4 -6 -6 8 Expires After 4-6-68 ( c o n t in u e d f r o m p a g e one) “ ■ “ COUPON“ "“ “ “ COUPON1 N ew MedsTam pons make you ■CO UPO N1 ■CO UPO N1 $4.98 Colgate EPC has drawn up, after work­ ing with John F A. Taylor, chair­ | C lairol Lipstick Book Matches Electric man of the Council steering feelpnly dflttle more secure. Matching Nall Polish 79' Box of 50 Books A larm Clocks Toothbrush committee, motions to structure the Council’s April 9 meeting. L im it One Limit One 9' Limit One $2 w L im it One East Lansing Store Only 19« Miss Arata said that much East Lansing Store Only East Lansing Store Only East Lansing Store Only of the time at the March 12 Expires A fter 4-6-6 8 Expires A fter 4 -6 -6 8 meeting was occupied with Expires After 4-6-68 Expires After 4-6-68 “ “ ■C O U PO N "^™ “ “ ■COUPON“ “ ■“ “ COUPON1 Council members airing their ■ C O U P O N "" $1.50 own "pet grading systems, but this was a necessary part of HI $1.00 Right Goard Barnes & Hind Alcohol discussion." Besides reactions to specific Special Sale! Deodorant Wetting Solution P IN T recommendations in the report. EPC w ill ask the Council to make Limit One 46* East Lansing Store Only Limit One East Lansing Store Only 93^ L im it One East Lansing Store Only 11' formal motions and vote-taking Expires After 4-6-68 Expires After 4 -6-6 8 Expires After 4-6-68 on these issues: [Giant Size Only - i f they prefer an expanded ■COUPON"“ ™ " “ ■ “ COUPON- 1 “ ^ “ ■ "C O U P O N * $3*50 $1.00 $1.00 system of grading. - i f they want a numerical scale instead of letter grades, Arpege Opaque Nylons Oep Hairdressing - i f they want a numerical Spray Cologne FOR MEN scale, what type of scale would be most desirable. But that’s a lot. Limit One Limit One *2** Limit 6 Best Lansing Store Only 69C Limit One 3# East Lansing Store Only “We’ll have to reach some East Lansing Store Only East Lansing Stors Only Expires After 4-6-68 common ground on the number Expires After 4-6-68 Expires After ■ Expires After 4-6-68 of divisions in the grading scale," M i l l Arata said, “without vio­ M M i exclusive design gives you this extra se­ lating the basic principles of the curity: an outer layer of larger fibers to absorb EPC plan.” tMtur, blended with an Inner layer of tiny fibers Miss Arata also said that EPC has put the 4.5 grade back to «ton more, longer. Daily 9-6 S TA TE Across from Student Services Wed. 9-9 into the report for Council reconsideration, along with all available data proving that M e d s Discount I elimination of the 4.5 grade 619 E . Grand River would lower grades and keeping For «moie bo* of 10, sand loc to Maas, Bax ìo-s. ■tessue moocssset tsaocmams Mlliumi, »u- oeaso. Indicata Haçular oc Super. or rceeoNALreoeucTScomtawv it would “protect the A.” 14 Michigan State News, East Laneing, Michigan 'Wednesday, March 27, 1968 i tw a h m u v r l i M m S i LOWEST FOODPRICES M TON*! The Student Volunteers for An “Alliance lor Kennedy.” NO STAMPS, NO COUPONS, NO GIMMICKS, JUST LOWER FOOD PRICES-MON. THRO SUN. •• 7 DATS A WEEK! McCarthy w ill m eet a t 8 p.m. to promote the candidacy of Thursday in 35 Union. The New York Senator Robert F. SWIFT'S PREMIUM volunteers w ill make plans for Kennedy for the Democratic this weekend's campaigning in Milwaukee. • * • presidential nomination, w ill hold a public meeting a t 8 tonight in the Community Room ^ a ^ TENDER, MEATY SLICED BACON W H O LE The Cycling Club w ill meet a t of the Edgewood United Church, 7:30 tonight in 208 Men’s In­ 469 N. Hagadorn Ave. tram ural Bldg. This w ill be an Add important organizational meet­ MSU's International F ilm A FEW B L O C K S O F F C A M P U S A l| ing for the intercollegiate race. Series w ill present “ The World All members are urged to at­ LB. of Henry Orient.” featuring tend. Peter Sellers at 7:30 p.m. QUANTnY RIGHTS 3301 E. MICHIGAN AVE. see FRYERS Thursday and Friday in the Exploring Cinema and Stu­ dent Religions Liberals w ill co­ Auditorium. OPEN WEEKDAYS I a.m .-10 p.m.| sponsor the film “ The Best of Charlie Chaplin’’ at 7 and 8:30 p.m. Sunday in the Union ball­ room. see MSU’s Block & Bridle Club w ill present its 20th Annual Horse Show on Friday and Saturday in the MSU Livestock Sundays 10 a ji .- 7 p m . S W I F T ’S BACON SQUARES 390 890 The Men’s Glee Club w ill pre­ Pavilion. Tickets for F rid a y ’s F IN E S T B E E F S O L D A N Y W H E R E I RO SE sent a concert a t 8:15 p.m. performance at 8 p.m. are Sunday in the Music Auditorium. see The Rust College A Cappella $1.50, Saturday's performance at 1 p.m. are $1.00. Tickets CANADIAN BACON LB. STEAKS 590 for Saturday evening’s perfor­ Choir from Holly Springs, Miss, S W I F T ’S P R E M I U M mance at 7 have been sold out. w ill give a concert April 8 at University Methodist Church, Cali Exhibition Hall for ticket information. BRAUNSCHWEIGER LB. lb.98c 1118 Harrison Road. MUIR'S 1399 East Grand River in SIRLOIN STEAK W H O L E O R R IB H A L F PORK LOINS C U T AND W R A PPED LB. 540 FO R F R E E Z E R S - - F R E E II Pres ( ri fit ion D R U G STO RES Brookfield Plaza T-BONE STEAK LB H » S M A L L BACK A T T A C H E D RIB STEAKS FRYER1E6S F a n t a s t ic V a lu e DELMONICO STEAKS Î2 ÏT LB. 4-5-6 S M A L L B A C K A N D RI BS A T T A C H E D Evening in Paris YOUR LIPSTICK STANDING RIB ROAST R IB S LB. FRYER BREASTS CHOICE LB. THIS SALE ONLY SLICED BEEF LIVER TRU' TENDERED LB. MEATY TURKEY DRUMSTICKS 2 ,or 660 .* <4 .. a CACKLEBIRD ROASTING £i FROZEN m j| • HERRUD’S, A w ik i! ' d h i 't t L L d d T rtA rfrt» ! L a . w V f Y o u w o u ld e x p e c t to p a y up to $ 1 .0 0 e a c h f o r s u c h q u a lit y l i p s t i c k s . F a s h i o n 's la t e s t s h a d e s at s u c h CACKLEBIRD FRESH FROZEN ECKRICH A LL BEEF 590 490 690 CRACKERS a lo w p r i c e y o u c a n n o w o w n e v e r y s h a d e a v a i l ­ a b le . CORNISH HENS -• COHN SALMON LB. HIN HUNKS LB. ARMOUR STUFFED SHOULDER CUT C O A HERRUD’S SLICED HERRUD‘S SLICED CO A 1st Quality Nylon TURKEYS 540 LAMB CHOPS lb . M Ç LEONA BOLOGNA « 2 : 3 “ C H O SIERY R e g u la r ly 2 99c p rs. CLUB OR TOWN HOUSE 1-LB . PKGS. $n o L E A N , FRESH, B EEF GROUND CHUCK l b . P 9 ( A A , R O A S T E D O R P O L IS H GROUND LAMB PATTIES - lb . M O R R E L L R O LL PORK fflA 590 ECKRICH SMOK-Y-LINKS SH O U LD ER CUT 10 O Z. S i. 590 2 prs. 590 SAVE 290 F irs t quality, a ll nylon seamless PO LLY ANNA - 1 L B . 4 O Z . •- SAUSAGE SAUSAGE U M B ROAST mesh hose with run-guard in toe PO LLY ANNA FARM ER P E E T ’S and top. Make it a point to buy 2 FARM HOME LOAF 4 ™ >1 pairs of the same shade, then you get BROWN SUGAR PO LLY ANNA 12 PACK , p M i c 3 9 the wear of 3 pairs fo r the price of F o u n t a i n 2. Sizes 8 1/2 to 11. Popular shades. S p e c i a l COOKIES IR. HAMBURG BUNS P O LLY ANNA CRACKED WHEAT BREAir L i t 2 F0R 4 9 0 « '« 29$ J A x 59 LB. 49 2 -D O Z . 0 BONANZA BURGER PKG. 39 PO LLY ANNA DELICIOUS CHUC. CREAM P I E 1 l e / .0Z S W I F T ’S 1 L B . 8 O Z . 0 CHICKEN STEW 1/4 lb. “ S w i f t s " b e e f p o ttle , e C h o p p e d let­ tu c e & d r e s s i n g , e S lic e d to m a to . R e l is h . DUTCH TREAT W A FFLE C R E M E S , W A F E R S T IX S , C a tsu p . S e r v e d o n a g ia n t b u n w ith p o ta to c h ip s . E A . “ A m e a l In a w h e e l " SUGAR WAFERS REG. 57c PILLSBURYWHITEORRASPBERRY 3 REG. 35c S P A R T A N C R IN K L E CUT FRO ZEN C15AK1/2EM IX i\c:v7, riLLJD u n i n n iiL r\ O Z.. 4 9 * SA LE! Fam ous HAIR SPRAYS ANGEL REG. 27c FOOD W T. PK G FRESH PARSLEY BUNCH 30 SAVE UN HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS ! Your Choice: 19 SO GREEN COFFEE RICH 20# O F F LABEL DEODORANT CELLS BRUSHES ONIONS EACH MIX OR MATCH CABBAGE SALAD T O Z . W T. 110 BAN SPRAY " S T 870 57c PKG. 2 for (1 .0 0 REG. L I B B Y 'S G R A P E F R U I T O R GULDEN BANANAS LB. 1 30 LISTEHNE 14 £ l? 2 - 730 Choice of: Aqua-Net, Get Set,Suave, o r Sudden Beauty. A ll 13-oz. wt. cans. No lim it. ORANGE JUICE R E G . 13c U NSW EETEN ED 6 FL. OZ. CAN S 6 PACK 49 PASCAL CELERY TUMAT0ES 30 SIZE STALK P IN T BOX 170 iso RAPID SUAVE HEAD t SIUULDERS PALM O LIVE 15# O F F 11 O Z. W T. COA «M»V DUO Lovely, Floral-decorated STATIONERY Package of 26 envelopes In plastic caddy. Matching writing paper In nomrSsog r-Q9 DAD’S ROOT BEER C O U N T R Y F R E S H B U T T E R S C O T C H O R C H O C . R IP P L E tablet of 50 sheets. ( 5 x 7"), Assorted colors. R e g . S 9C v o lu te I V T *. '.y'i *, ,cr i’>'> IC EC R EA M REG. 89c H A LF G AL. CTN. 2 REG, 29C COUNTRY F R E S H 880 FOR YOUR CHOICE: M IX OR MATCH YOGURT 7 D E L IC IO U S F L A V O R S 8 OZ. W T. CTN. Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Wednesday, March 27, 1968 15 'mvime sues?' iNti nmoseRi DOWU¿^RRV FRE-f/agPBiUeBfOT? 7 ? ' '- " f '- ì t à > > us* • ■» **tìs s V Ö4N me k P£M A N £f /V . #» v \ /AN aUA ÖPS 04b T n r t o ¿/Aie b e n t &t ¿msztoon, r M a o w t io ADOfiea 75 rse m ks re a o w T jm w s stopsntS!' mr mm t 'picnomes?' Special Store Hours'. H ave you s e e n y o u r s e l f in on e o f t h e s e s itu a tio n s ? - - S u re e a r ly te r m b o o k buying is g o in g to p r e s e n t s o m e p r o b l e m s , but a t MSU B o o k S t o r e w e t r y t o m a k e it a s This Week Next Week p le a s u r a b le an e x p e r ie n c e a s p o s s i b l e w ith su c h e x tr a s e r v i c e s a s m o r e c h e c k o u t Wed. & Thurs.til 9:00 P.M . Mon., Tues. and F r i. c o u n te r s , p l a s t i c b o o k c o v e r s , p la s t ic s to r m b a g s, an d a c o m p le t e lin e o f tex ts F r i. 8:30 A.M. T il 5:30 P.M . 8:30 A.M. T il 5:30 P.M. an d e x t r a r ea d in g , r e p r e s e n t in g th e w o rld *s top p u b lis h e r s . Sat. 11 A.M. T il 5 P.M. Wed. and Thurs. (So Sleep In A Little) 8:30 A.M. T il 9 P.M . M S U B O O K S T O R E In The Center Far Inter 16 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Wednesday, March 27, 1968 *U’ radio pioneer *- April entertainment lists dead at 77 James B. Hasselman, founder of MSU’s information serv­ ices program in 1917, died March 10 in Washington, D C.. He was 77. musical, snakes and dance The April entertainment slate Symphony Orchestra, under The Stern-Rose-Istomin trio, and at 2:30 and 4 p.m. Sun­ M r. Hasselman began free-lance writing for newspapers at MSU has something for every­ series B, April 3. under Series B. w ill close the days.. while teaching English at Michigan Agricultural College in one. ranging from African dance Samuel Beckett's "E n At­ 1967-68 Lecture-Concert Series "Serjeant M urgraves Dance," 1915. for students of choreography to tendant Godot," a French April 29. The trio: violinist a stirring drama with a power­ He started the information service program two years later. a snake exhibit for budding production of the two-act Isaac Stern, pianist Eugene ful social message, w ill be It was sponsored by the Cooperative Extension Service. zoologists. tragicomedy, "W aiting for Istomin and cellist Leonard presented by the Performing In 1923. he broadcasted the first MSU football game to be heard on radio from a telephone booth wired to a pole on top of Topping the April lecture- Godot." w ill be a lecture- Rose, w ill perform some of the Arts Company (PAC) April 23. concert bill is the famous mu­ concert special presentation on world's outstanding chamber through April 28. at 8 p.m. in the stands at Old College Field. M r. Hasselman did broadcasts of agricultural and home sical "Hello D olly," starring' April 8. works. Fairchild Theatre. economics programs over a radio station built by students in Dorothy Lamour. April 4 Noted violinist. Henryk K All lecture-concert events w ill The PAC w ill present two 1922, which later became M SU’s official radio station, and 5 in the Auditorium. Szeryng. w ill be featured in a be presented at 8:15 p.m. in the short plays, Thornton W ilder’s Other lecture-concert at­ solo appearance April 9. under Auditorium. "Infancy” and Lewis Carlino’s WKAR. He was a pioneer in the agricultural editing field and one of tractions include the Chicago Series B. He w ill perform works "Dinizulu," a troupe of A fri­ "Epiphany" beginning April 30. the founders of the American Association of Agricultural Symphony, conducted by from the standard repertoire as can dancers, singers and drum­ and continuing through May 5 College Editors. Jean Martinon. under series A. well as several by contemporary mers w ill perform a pageant of and 8 p.m. in the Arena Theater April 1. and the Cleveland composers. colorful choreographic works located in the Auditorium. at 8:15 p.m. April 16. in the Au­ A special Good Friday. April ditorium This is the final event 12. concert w ill be presented at in this season's Asian-Latin 8:15 p.m. in the Auditorium by American-African Series. the MSU chorus and Orchestra Cinema entertainment for under the direction of Gomer LI. spring in MSU's International Jones, professor of music. Film Series w ill include "The World of Henry Orient" featur­ The Faculty Chamber En­ semble w ill perform at 4 p.m. Excedrin Headache N um ber . . . ing Peter Sellers March 28 and April 21. in the Kresge Art O n e stu d e n t w a s n 't t a k in g a n y c h a n c e s at r e g i s t r a ­ 29. and “ The Gospel According Center Gallery. In the chamber tio n . S h e b r o u g h t a lo n g h e r d a u g h t e r w ho c a r r i e d an to St. Matthew" April 10. music group are violinists James “ E x c e d r i n " b o ttle in c a s e a h e a d a c h e d e v e lo p e d . Both film s w ill be presented Niblock. chairman of MSU's Sta te N e w s P h o to b y M ik e B e a s l e y at 7:30 p.m. in the Auditorium. music dept, and Theodore During April. MSU's World Johnson; violist Lyman Bod- Hairdressertakes Travel Series w ill present Al­ man: cellist Louis Potter, and fred Wolff with his film . bassist Virginia Bodman. All "German Panoram a." April are members of the MSU music 6. and Ralph Gerstle with a film gracetoVietnam faculty. report on "Russia." April 13. The often feared and frequent­ Kenneth Armstrong.- showing ly misunderstood snake is the his tim ely film . "South V iet­ star of a new exhibit at the nam." w ill close the season Museum. Entitled "F a c t and April 20. The Saturday evening Folklore." this exhibit deals travel series is held in the Au­ SAIGON (A P ) - M ilita ry More than 350 women sud-. with the 17 species of snakes ditorium at 8 p.m.’ Tickets are officials organizing tours for denly became glamorous as found in Michigan and seeks to available at the door. dispel some of the mistaken no­ entertamers were skeptical. Wadiaeff snipped, shaped and The Abrams Planetarium "4*.>ing to South styled. He worked iQ trailers, tions p/eof/ie «¿tve abm rt snakes. program for April is "Sun. Vietnam? barracks, lounges and out in Colored drawings, actual speci­ Stars and Seasons." which But Daniel Wadiaeff wanted the open under parachute cano­ mens and descriptions of their describes the changes . that to come from New York and do pies. habitat and life cycle are pre­ occur because of the earth's an­ creative hairstyling for the "Everybody received me beau­ sented. The Museum is open nual movement about the sun. American women in the armed tifully. I met such marvelous weekdays from 9 a.m . -5 p.m. Skvshows are at 8 p.m.. Fridays, forces stationed here. people here. Ironically. I'm only and from 1 p.m. - 5 p.m. on Sat­ at 2:30 and 8 p.m.. Saturdays Considered one of the top a private first class in the urdays and Sundays. 10 hairdressers in the United reserves, but in Vietnam I States, he lists Lynda Bird ranked as a colonel." he re­ C IV IL ENGIN EERIN G SEN IO RS YOUR Johnson. Mrs. Oscar Hammer- marked. stein I I and Eileen Ford among Wadiaeff. a bachelor, is fond F U T U R E CAN B E IN TR A N SPO RTA TIO N his clients. of sports and holds a brown belt Challenging opportunities available in our expanding pro­ If the m ilitary in Vietnam in karate. gram which includes a 1/2 billion dollar highway construc­ were dubious, his friends in The girls who met the sty­ tion program. New York found the idea even list wei;e delighted. No Exam -generous fringe benefits including tuition r e - more strange, he said. "The men here get singers, iu ItwV.«, ' W adiaefffi reception was en­ dancers and d l l > h J J IU f t , l / l •CUT' Our recruiter w ill be here-on Wednesday, A pril 3. Visit , thusiastic. He arrived March 18 tertainers. This is the first your Placement Office NOW for brochures and SIGN UP to and spent a week traveling to time someone came over spe­ hear the full story. New York State Dept, of Transportation, Bureau of Re­ bases around Saigon and Cam cifically for the women." said A cruitment and Training, State Campus B u ild in g , Albany, Ranh Bay, escorted by Maj. Sgt. Rita Pitcock of M iam i. . New York 12226.......... : , ^ John P. M ille r of Bonita. Cal­ Fla. "M any of the guys com­ if. mented quite favorably on our new appearance." Two seniors win D anforth Fellowships Two MSU students were awarded Danforth Graduate F el­ lowships this year. Amelia Ann Rutledge. B ir­ mingham, Ala. senior, and W il­ liam J. Skocpoi, East Lansing sen io r, were among more than * 2,000 college seniors in the United States who competed for the 123 fellowships awarded by the Danforth Foundation. Miss Rutledge is a humani­ ties major who plans to enter doctoral medieval studies. Skoc­ poi is a physics major. Both students were honored recently in the annual Woodrow Wilson Fellowship competi­ tion. Miss Rutledge was named a Woodrow Wilson designate and Skocpoi received honorable men­ tion. The Danforth Fellowships, designed to encourage outstand­ ing graduates to prepare for * THE WINGED SPARTANS college teaching careers, pro­ vide tuition and living expenses for four years of study toward a doctoral degree. ... in v it e y o u to f ly . The Winged Spartans once again offer ground school instruction fo r the private pilot’ s Feltner n a m e d license (Room 31) and instrument pilot license (Room 30) every Wednesday, Spring T e rm , 7-10 p.m ., Union Building. This opportunity is available to a l l . . . both club members and assistant dean non-members. The private pilot course covers all the instruction necess^y to pass the private pilot of agriculture written examination and provides a ll those with an interest in itia tio n with an opportunity Richard L. Feltner, associate to learn what it's all about at a nominal cost. Registration fee is $20 and can be paid at professor of agricultural eco­ the firs t meeting, A pril 3rd. nomics, has been named as­ The Instrument pilot course covers all the instruction necessary to pass the instrument sistant dean of resident instruc- * pilot written exam and provides an opportunity fo r a ll those who have a private pilot's license or higher to expand their aeronautical knowledge at a nominal cost. Registra­ tion and associate professor of the College of Agriculture tion fee is $20 and can be paid at the firs t class meeting, A pril 3rd. In addition to these very popular ground schools, The Winged Spartans offer flight and Natural Resources. instruction fo r a ll licenses in 5 modern well-equipped Cessnas at the lowest possible Feltner, who w ill take office cost. Well-qualified flight Instructors are available through the club, to provide the best April i , succeeds Richard M. possible Instruction. Membership is open to a ll men and women students, staff, and em­ Swenson, who resigned Feb. 1. ployees of MSU. F o r more information, w rite P.O. Box 287, Bast Lansing o r call Ron The appointment was confirmed Landis,’ P res., 355-1178. by the MSU Board of Trustees March 21. Feltner holds a Ph. D. in Enclose check* or money order and send to: agricultural economics and WINGED SP A R T A N S statistics from North Carolina State University, and an M.S. BOX 287 in marketing and statistics EAST LANSING, MICH. 48823 I and a B.S. in agricultural ed­ —Registration deadline is A p ril 3— I . ucation and biology from Pur­ I Name due University. Address. For the past year, he has I directed the Kellogg Young Telephone Number I ’ Make checks payable to Winged Spartans j Farm ers’ Study Program a ^ MSU. which is designed to Wednesday, March 27, 1968 17 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan \ I&PP V 1# ni i i : >v / a Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner Planet of the Apes Irm a La Douce The Graduate In Cold Blood 'Cold B lo o d ’ich illin g scene,rest not so hot An anticipative stirring, like through the use of techniques Gould comic strip. Yes. Merton, begins to wear and drag as in an effort to get him to jump 7 p.m. in 109 Anthony Hall and that of a herd of worms squirm­ which are exclusively those of there is a Dick Tracy. does Bogarde's portrayal and off a building is pretty stock. "Wrong" at 9 p.m. ing in the moist soil, spreads the cinema. On the screen, a "In Cold Blood" opens with Miss York's perking. Charac­ Elsewhere in Lansing. " D r spontaneously through the recreation of actuality does not an affected mass of compli­ terization is nil and plot develop­ Sebastian w ill play through Zhivago" is holding out in a theater. Every member of the necessarily constitute realism. cated montage, cutting rapidly ment is slow, despite an oc­ Thursday. On Friday, the third run engagement at the packed house, regardless of W riter-Director Richard between Perry. Dick, the Clut­ casional satiric barb thrown Spartan Twin w ill begin about Gladmer and "The Graduate" whether they came to witness Brooks selected his cast on ters and penetentiarv personnel. • at The English. The Americans a week's run of two W.C. Fields w ill probably spend several the celluloid edition of their the basis of resemblance to the employing such visual props as and the spy business in general. comedies. " M y L ittle Chicka­ more weeks at the Campus. favorite best-seller, to view a real-life characters whom they autos and telephones and sound There is a slight pickup toward dee" and "You Can't Cheat an "Guess Who's Coming to Din­ purported cinematic master­ play. This in itself is an pivots such as names. This the end. but this never really Honest M an." The former ner" w ill be pulled out of the piece or to engage in a form empty gesture tantamount to style, m ercifully, is not con­ develops. film , incidentally, costars Mae Spartan East on April 9. to be of voyueristic sadism--is aware assuming that the movie's ef­ tinued throughout, but its heavy West who w ill be featured in replaced with "Planet of the that the sequence for which fectiveness might have been handed implementation during The camerawork is respon­ Thursday and Friday's offerings Apes", the Charlettrn Heston they have been waiting with heightened had the real killers the initial segments sufficiently sible for the little that is fas­ of the MSU F ilm Society--"I'm opus about a planet on which baited breath is about to unwind and victims been available to sets up the typical American the work he did for " In the cinating about “ Sebastian", No Angel" and “ She Done Him apes have evolved from the lower Park swinging his umbrella in before their eager dilated pupils. reenact the crime for the filmgoer (who gulliblv equates picking up and emphasizing the Wrong." "Angel" w ill run at primate man. Heat of the NigJxt" » three-four time It s murdertime. cameras. Obviously, a dra­ ostentatious complexity ;v;tb art ■ "In Cold B lo o d " fm ls as E n te r Susannah York, young patterns wjeh perpetually sur­ MOORMI INrORMatioh> 4G94A ^B matized treatment, can be in- for the pseudopsvchological round the decipherer. These TODAY . . from 1:00 P.M. And the 80 or so minutes of waiting for In Cold Blood" 's finitely more powerful toan news- fiashbacks which are to come entertainment as an emotional or intellectual experience, as mathematical mastermind who is determined to see Sebastian range from a simple staircase At 1:00-4:30-8:15 QLADM ER style film strips of the actual Remarkably, with all the cm and tile floor to an interesting climactic sccQp have not been art and as instruction. In no in her wonderfully human arms event. phasis on Perry's mismanagedR and who boldly undertakes this shot of a radio telescope. It in vain. The massacre of the '«.is does it justify its pro­ The most publicized look childhood, we fail to derive the is dismaying that the structure Clutter fam ily is gripping. Un­ duction as a movie. Nonethe­ demanding project despite the alikes are Robert Blake and least semblance of feeling lor of the movie itself fails to ex­ fortunately. the remainder of less. across the country, it w ill fact that the human secret Scott Wilson as murderers or insight into the twisted per­ continue to prove that at the decoder ring is just as me­ hibit any symmetry or rhythm the film is merely grasping. Perry Smith and Dick Hickock. sonality of the killer The box office, crime often pays chanical in bed as he is at whatsoever. In fact, the aforementioned respectively. Wilson’s acting only moments which generate the office. The scene in which the heavies sadists w ill probably find sub­ very well. career pigviously consisted of any real emotional involvement About this time, the film slip Sebastian an LSD cocktail jecting themselves to a full run of "In Gold Blood" to be a short shot on an episode of the flop series. "The Lieutenant" are those during which the Clutter killings transpire. But "Sebastian” SPECIAL a highly masochistic experience. The most pertinent question and a bit part in " In the Heat of the Night." while Blake's this sequence constitutes the Sebastian" now playing at picture's only strength and sup­ the Spartan Twin Theater be­ LIMITED which comes to mind following a screening of the picture is only claim to prominence was port. and the only incentive gins on a very promising note- ENGAGEMENT! a role in "Town Without Pity for the theatergoer to sit through Your last chanco to onjoy "why was it made at all?' Tru­ for the first 15 minutes it is FROM PROGRAMINFORMATION ►482-3909 and as a member of Richard the preceding proceedings After entertaingly imcomprehensible TODAY . 1:00 P.M . all tha might and . t k man Capote's novel attempted Boone's defunct television ** > < i/'-. x- ■*%. - •- ' «•*•- V- m u c h u o a h ' ... -something frtie tnac op- AwsrrUw rnnm j without apparent m o tiv e . «, performance's haHProssed our sight, we redfize "aré ofTly fair as tained by kicking a slat out apoetaclat M reasonable and worthwhile proj­ they seem to be perpetually that the best bit in the flick was ect for a medium which is aware of the fact thát they are unhampered by practical lim ita­ actors in a film , never quite from under a bed-the whole mess collapses onto the floor under its own somniferous the titles. The premise IS good. Sebas­ NOMINATED BEST DIRECTOR -R ichard Brooks METRO-ioffiWYNMAYER ACARLOPONTI PRODUCTION tian. enigmatic head of the tions on length and is open slipping into their parts. to extensive and explicit ex­ Columbia Pictures boasts weight. Technically, the black and cryptography unit .for British FOR BEST SCREENPLAY D A V I D L E A N 'S F I L M OF BORIS PASrERNAttS planations and clarifications of that John Forsythe who plays the narrative. Analysis of the Kansas Bureau of Investiga­ white photography is much too tonal for the content matter. intelligence, is indicative ot this automated age s prevading -Based on material fromanother medium DOCTOR ZHIVAGO development of the crim inal tion Agent Alvin Dewey re­ •theme of man against machine. 4 -R ichard Brooks Use of crisper prints, as in ROBERTBOLTDAVIDLEAN Timocixo«”* mind, lucidly written, can result sembles the officer so closely The gimmick, though, is that "The Incident" would have in a valuable document as well that when seen together on the as an absorbing piece of read­ set. they were often taken for contributed significantly to the dismal.stark atmosphere that Sebastian, played Bogarde, is a man-machine-a by Dick ACADEMY CINEMATOGRAPHY BEST FÖXCÀSTtiNNTHEATRÉS ing. brothers by visitors. Forsythe, walking talking computer who SPARTAN TW IN EAST A motion picture must be the only name star in the flick judged, though, on how well it comes across like a Chester Brooks was trying to create. The soundtrack by Quincy Jones is indistinguishable from sorts through riddles in his head She and her widowed mother E x c lte n M n t a n d c o o l, h a rd a c tio n * moved to Chicago where Miss PLUS SMASHING CO -H IT Lamour became a vocalist with the Herbie Kay Orchestra and A KIERONMOORE INABALIN later with the Rudy Vallee Or­ U W .m KEENANWYNN chestra. TECNMCOLM0 TiCHMCQK* An NBC contract for a Los Angeles-produced radio program led Miss Lamour to Hollywood where a Paramount Pictures scout discovered her. She soon became an overnight success CORAL GABLES Shown 3rd 01 11.15 3rd Color Attraction Frankie Avalon Shlrlsy Eaton In The Million Eyes of Su-Muru TECHNCOLM” * APARAMOUNTPICTURE with a starring role In her first film . "The Jungle Princess." followed by the lead in Sgmuel Now Playing Nightly -• The Exceptions FREE ELECTRIC HEATERS F ir s t at 7:27 __ STARRING JANE FONDA TONIGHT AT 7:50 ONLY! Goldwins "The Hurricane." 18 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Wednesday, March 27, 1968 Trustees approve appointm ents, leaves MSU’s Board of Trustees gave Sept. 1; and Frank L. Ingram, Other appointments approved study in England; John A. assistant professor of German and social science, and professor College, March 1 to June 30: puter Institute for Social Charles C. Slater, professor of approval March 21 to 19 appoint­ included: John B. Holt, profes­ Yunck, professor of English. marketing and transportation and Russian, Sept. 1. f sociology, July 1 to Dec. 31, to Milton B. Powell, assistant pro- Science Research. ments; 20 leaves; 29 assign­ sor, James Madison College. Jan. 1, 1969, to Aug. 31. 1969, These retirements were ap administration, Aug. 31; Allan The Board approved these udy at home. fessor, to American Thought and ments, changes and miscella­ Sept. 1; Andrew S. Kende. visit­ to study at MSU, University of Additional sabbaticals ap- proved (first year of MSU em­ F. Hershfield, instructor in com­ Language, M o rrill College and neous actions; 2 retirements; appointments: John Sommer- ing professor in chemistry. April Michigan, New York and H ar­ roved are: James L. Dye, pro- ployment in parentheses): munication, March 31; Jerry feldt, visiting professor in his­ Honors College, March 1 to and 26 resignations and termi­ 1 to June 30; Michael P. vard; Robert E. Brown, pro­ essor of chemistry, Sept. 1 Paul E. Corbin, truck driver, M. Anderson, assistant professor tory, March 25 to June 8: Amar June 30; Conrad L. Donakowski, nations. Shinkle. assistant professor fessor of history, Sept. 1 to to Aug. 31,1969, to study at Ohio stores. July 1 (1953); and Vera of speech and theater, Aug. 31; N. Agarwala. visiting profes­ instructor, to humanities and (extension) of entomology. Dec. 31. to study at MSU and State; Andrew Tiittoiclfu orofes- Anthony R. Collins, instructor in Madison College, Sept. 1: Ken­ Meyer, food service helper, Appointments approved in­ sor in business and hotel, restau­ July 1: and Jerzy Borysowicz. other libraries; and Rhonda H. speech and theatre, Aug. 31; and sor of chemistry and director of neth J. Harrow, instructor, to Union Building, May 4 (1951). cluded: Douglas J. Chapman, rant and institutional manage­ assistant professor of physics. Kotzin, associate professor of Phyllis R. Stern, instructor chemistry laboratories, July 1 humanities and Madison Col­ Resignations and termina­ agricultural agent, Genesee ment, March 16 to June 15: Sept. 1. philosophy, Sept. 1 to Aug. to Dec. 31, to study at the Uni­ lege, Sept. 1; Henry Silverman, tions approved included: R i­ tion, April 30. County, M ay 1; Hildegard F. Warren J. Samuels, professor Hesse, consumer marketing of economics. Sept. I: Janet E. Also approved were these ap­ 31. 1969. to study in the United versity of Newcastle; Charles assistant professor, to American chard Ziegler, research associ­ Other resignations and term i­ information agent. Detroit. Alleman, assistant professor pointments. effective Sept. 1 States and Israel. C. Kiliingsworth, university Thought and Language. March ate in food science, April 15: nations approved included: unless otherwise noted: Philip The Board also approved these professor of labor and industrial 1: and Lynn S. Robertson, pro Chesley L. E. Wells, instructor Denise S. Van Aken, instructor March 25; Virginia K. Ortiz, of elementarv and special edu­ home economist, Lapeer and cation, Sept. 1; and Roy R. Filner, assistant professor of sabbatical leaves: Herbert E. relations, April 1 to Sept. 30, fessor, soil science, to Argen- in forest products, April 30; in elementary and special edu­ Genesee Counties. April 15: Goughnour. associate profes­ MSU-AEC Plant Research M iller, professor of accounting to w rite and do research in Eng­ tine Project. March 24 to April Richard S. Lindstrom. associ- cation, M ay 31; Jacob Stern, Laboratory and biochemistry, and financial administraion. land and Washington; Robert 28. ate professor of horticulture, associate professor of second­ Heinze J. D ill, assistant pro­ sor of civil engineering, Sept. fessor of German and Russian. 1. March 1; Lynwood G. Clemens, March 16. 1969 to June 15. 1969 M. Lumiansky, professor of Dual assignments to M o rrill April 15; Leonard M. Pike, ary education and curriculum, assistant professor of zoology: to study at MSU; Byron H. Van American Thought and Lan­ College were approved for (Sept. assistant professor (research of Aug. 31; M ary S. Parks, instruc­ Charles A. Gliozzo, assistant Roekel. professor of elementary guage. April 1 to June 30, to tra­ 1 to Aug. 31, 1969 unless noted): horticulture. Feb. 29: Justin Catz. tor in foods and nutrition. April BEST IN FOREIGN FILMS professor of humanities; Donna and special education. Sept. 1 to vel; and James D. Rust, om­ H arry M. Raulet Jr., associate instructor in English. April 30: 30: W alter N. Scott, assistant HURRY - ENDS TONIGHT B. Kasdan, instructor in social Aug. 31, 1969. to study at home: budsman and professor of Eng­ professor of anthropology, April and John M. Trojanowicz, as­ professor of medicine. Feb. 28: fTom Jones’ at 7:15 only science: and Clifford W. Welsch. K arl L. Schulze, associate pro­ lish, June 15 to Aug. 31, to study 1 to June 30; Alexander R. sistant professor of German and and Goro Tamura, research as­ assistant professor of anatomy. fessor of civil engineering and and travel in the United States. Butler, associate professor of Russian. Aug. 31. sociate in botany and plant 'Im ra LaDouceat 9:25 only engineering research. Sept. 1 Other leaves were approved humanities; Donald S. Goch- Additional resignations and pathology, April 14. Sabbatical leaves were ap­ to Aug. 31. 1969. to study in for: K urt W. Schild, instructor berg, assistant professor of terminations were approved for The following additional resig­ TOMORROWPURSDAY ONE DAY ONLY! proved for: J. Lee Taylor, as­ Vienna Austria; Frances M. sociate professor (extension) of horticulture. June 1 to Nov. 30. Magrabi. associate professor of home management and child in German and Russian, April 1 to July 31, to study in G er­ many; James P. Bebermeyer, humanities; and Bishop N. Pipes Jr., associate profes­ (all Aug. 31): Philip T. Carter, assistant professor of business law and office administration: nations and terminations were approved: Herman Rubin, pro­ fessor of statistics and probabil­ sor of humanities. * * * to study at MSU. Purdue. Illi­ development, Sept. 1 to Aug. 31, instructor in communication, The Board also approved dual Charles E. Ferguson, professor ity, June 30; Connie L. Williams, SPECIAL ONE DAY ENGAGEMENT nois and Pennsylvania State: 1969. to study in Washington and instructor in American Thought April 1 to June 30: Robert L. assignments to engineering re­ of economics: Thomas R. Sav­ H arry R. Hoppe, professor of at MSU ; and John C. Howell, as­ and Language. Aug. 31; Thomas YOU’VENEVERSEENANYONELIKE English. Sept. 1 to Dec. 31, to sociate dean of human medicine Ebel, professor of counseling, personnel services and educa­ tional psychology, and psychol­ search for: Richard C. Dubes, associate professor of elec­ trical engineering. Jan. 1 to ing. professor of economics; Paul E. Smith, associate profes­ sor of economics; and Paul W. J. Knight, instructor in humani­ ties. Aug. 31; George L. Brink­ M o rg a n ! 108 WELLS(W) UNION BALLROOM(B) 7 & 9 P Jd. 50tf DONATION ogy, Oct. 1 to Dec. 31, to serve as Ford Foundation consultant in Latin America; Maynard M. Nov. 30, and W illiam N. Sharpe Jr., assistant professor of metal- Thompson, instructor in eco- nomics. The Board also approved these man, specialist, Nigeria Con­ sortium Project, Jan. 15, and Edward C. Lawson, adviser. lurgy, mechanics and m ater­ M iller, professor of geology, resignations and terminations: Nigeria Program, Feb. 18. SHOWS F ra n co is T r u f f a t i t i N e w W o v e ’ M a s t e r p f o * MAR. April 1 to July 31, and Sept. 1 to May 31, 1969, to work for ials science, Jan. 1. These changes were approved: Richard L. Feltner, from as­ 28.29. $5 million given at World Center for Exploration sistant professor (research), 7:00 Foundation; and Claude Hub- agricultural economics, to as­ & ffartf, instructor *in American sociate professor, assistant 9:05 Thought and Language, March 1 dean and director of resident Feature in gifts, grants to June 30, to study at MSU. instruction, College of Agricul­ APR. at In g m a r SILENCE R a rg m a a li The Board approved these ture and Natural Resources. 7:20 & H E ’S A N O D D B A L L ! B transfers: Lyle B. Thompson, April 1; Julian R. Brandou. 9:25 A WAY OUT KOOK! A N UT! THE I t 12. agricultural agent, from Bav County to St. C lair County, April 1; Howard L. M iller, from acting director to director. Science and Mathematics Teaching Center, March 1; ap­ culture, and social science. VANESSA REDSMAVE Gifts and grants totaling c /> from associate professor of in­ pointment date of Arnold J. DAVID WARNER Jacob Vinocur. associate dean . . . H E ’S T h a B o c t t o l a R ich a rd L t s f t r ^ 18.19. formation services to associate professor and project leader of Pals, instructor. Center for Laboratory Animal Resources, $5.323.817.19 were March 21 by MSU's Board of accepted of the School for Advanced MORGAN! Graduate Studies, w ill admin­ 28. management information sys­ tems. extension service. April 1: Anne C. Garrison, associate veterinary clinics and veteri­ nary surgery and medicine, from March 1 to April 1: and Trustees. Included was a grant for ister the grant. The Agency for International Distributed by Cintino V $1.43 m illion to support con­ Development ( A ID i has granted professor of Bureau of Business overseas assignment of Nor­ $330,000 for an 18-month as­ Wi lu in ntii yaiTII talk and talk aad talk and Economic Research to man N. M iller, assistant pro­ tinued research and training akavt thli Cantravaraial Adult Matiaa Pictural at the graduate and postdoc­ sistance and advisory program ■ ... a a d h a w to g i t it business law and office admin­ fessor, political science and toral level in the MSU-AEC to the Ministry of Education The Producers of " I A WOMAN” Now bring you istration. Sept. 1: Milton B. African Studies Center, from in Turkey. The Institute tor In- FR.1.1 4 .A* .. a* “ I 4 L O V tp j* ■ » !•': . a " f < ; v Tv ✓ i u r i M £ . J . Povteiv, aSsisTSnl nr<\f.n the Ministry. Cole S. Brem- 16.17. editor, information services, V irid ia n a back. assistant dean of educa­ O r Iv e In T h e c t t r e April 1: Charles Seeley, from kinson from faculty and staff f e A 5207 5 CEDAR STREET The National Science Founda­ tion and director of the In­ assistant director to associate budget officer to assistant vice tion (N S F) granted $735,000 stitute for International Stud­ director, admissions and scholar­ president for business and fi­ to support additional research ies, w ill administer the grant. NOW OPEN EVERY NIGHT ships, April 1: and Gary North, nance, Feb. 27: delay of the re­ J a a a - P t o a t f l a l m a a d a l a J a a a - l o c G o d o r tk in M SU’s cyclotron laboratory. FREE HEATERS! EXCLUSIVE SHOWING from head residence adviser to tirement of John H. Jordan, The Board accepted $323.375.36 custodian, dormitories and food Aaron Galonsky. director of STARTS TONIGHT ALL COLOR 24.25. associate director, student af­ fairs. March 15. services: title of associate pro­ the laboratory, w ill administer from the MSU Development Fund. This brings the total ac­ W i l l h e a ts up slo w , but w h e n he g e t s th e re , B K O TH LH S Assignments approved includ­ ed: W illiam B. Hixson J r., in­ fessor for Bohn E. Musgrave. extension service. April 1: and reinstatement of Bernice W. the grant. NSF has supported the cyclotron construction, equipment and research since cepted by the board from the fund for 1967 to $1,373.828.85. h e 's h e ll w ith the h id e offl structor. to history and Honors Dillon, librarian. Library. 1961. Charles V. Mange, profes­ March 18. Mrs. Dillon had been sor of elementary education on leave since Feb. 1. Support for 76 graduate and special education, w ill Promotions from instructor traineeships and 17 summer administer a $263.800 grant to assistant professor, effective traineeships was provided in a from the U.S. Office of Educa­ Feb. 1. were approved for: $424.716 NSF grant. There w ill tion. The funds w ill provide John N. Collins, political be stipends, cost of education for 69 grants in special edu­ science: and M eyer L. Wolf. allowances, and dependency al­ cation this summer. Linguistics and Oriental and lowances under the grant to stu­ African Languages, and Com- dents in natural science, agri- A grant of $186.328 from A ID w ill provide support for * * the 10th consecutive year for a BROADWAY THEATRE series of communication semi­ nars for foreign students who w ill participate in technical SPECIAL * * training. The seminars w ill be con­ ducted under the direction of A M E R IC A S G R EA TEST M U S IC A L Lawrence E. Sarbaugh. assis­ tant professor of communica­ DOROTHY tion at the MSU campus and Atwood Lodge, south of Akron. Ohio, this summer. John Vinsonhaler. director of the MSU Basic Information Retrieval System. has re­ LAMOUR ceived a $109.122 grant from the U.S. Office of Education for use of information retrieval in work with teachers and administra­ tors of programs for handi­ I N capped youth. The new program is intended to encourage the establishment of local informa­ HELLO; tion retrieval systems in social science and education. The grant extends to February. 1970. The U.S. Public Health Serv­ ice granted $96,719 to the Col­ lege of Veterinary Medicine for research support. W illis W. BO UT/ Thur«., F r l. — April 4 & 5 Armistead, dean of the College of Veterinary Medicine, w ill administer the grant. An unrestricted research grant for $56.082 was made by the National Institutes of Health Reserved seats $6.00, $5.00, $4.00 to the College of Human Medi­ cine. Andrew D. Hunt. Jr.. ($1.00 reduction to MSU students dean of the college w ill admin­ I * 0 a c A r J y Pofiafdw Jem m a K — IN H N » « IM H M . a » M H H n n « » .( a n iJ N ^M cCO m tM X with validated I.D.) ister the grant. E X C L U S IV ^ ^ R E ^ ^ H O W W G S A ^ ^ 4 ^ A N ^ L A T E The Learning Service in the Validated I.D . necessary at the door College of Education received PLU S SHOWN AT 9:38 ONLY PLUS~ ~ 0STOUTOF M l h . -a , * i i C S U N I V E R S I T Y $56,610 from toe ESSO Founda­ tion to establish a teacher training program for graduate T M U R W A T teaching assistants. Lawrence A U D I T O R I U M T. Alexander, assistant direc­ tor of the Learning Service, — 8 :1 5 p .m . will administer the grant. Tickets On Sale At Union Ticket Office Scholarships totaling $427,- 971.98 were also accepted by ai ( a IA 1B BXC rriN G T A L E O F A Union Building the board. A L S O M R C H A T c o u o b r h u n t a t 7 :2 0 1 l a t e I h h h h r h h h h h Wednesday, March 27, 1968 |Ç ti W elcom e back! The S ta te New s C lassified paces are bigger STATE NEWS Classified B A R G A IN S G A L O R E & b e tte r than ever b efo re. B e sure to read th e W ant Ads 355-8255 Display m 353-6400 f ^ 3 / for your needs. Automotive Employment For Rent For Rent For Rent SUMMER - FOUR-man luxury apart­ ONE OR two girls wanted for Beech- SUMMER RATES (10 weeks) from RENAULT R-10 1967. Still under BABY-SITTER three days per week. wood Apartments. $50. 332-6287. 5-4 2 $12 per week each. Large one bed­ warranty. Take over payments or ment located on the scenic Red 8-4 p.m. Near campus. 351-0217. 3-3 29 room apatment for two. three, or best offer. Call 351-6636. 3-3 29 Cedar. Air-conditioned, dishwasher, garbage disposal, unlimited parking, NEED ONE roommate for two man four residents. Furnished, loads of MALE STUDENTS in need of money. luxury apartment. One block from closets, three year old building STUDEBAKER CONVERTIBLE. 1963. Call 393-5680 if you are 18-27 balcony overlooking river. Call 351- 0394 5-4 2 campus. 351-0345. 5-4 2 Close to Gables. Call building man­ white. W-8 Newly upholstered red 1:15 p.m. to 3:15 p.m. Monday. ager. Cal Arnold. 351-7179 or 337- • AUTOMOTIVE interior, excellent condition. 3550. Tuesday and Thursday. C WANTED: WORKING girl or grad­ 0146. Fall and annual rates, too. 5-4 2 ONE MAN for luxury apartment. 339-2693 3-3 29 uate student to share one bed­ • EMPLOYMENT NURSES -- R.N. and L.P.N. open­ One month free rent. 351-0724. 3-3 29 room apartment east side of Lan­ APARTMENT for three, four, or • FOR RENT SUNBEAM TIGER. 35,000 miles Pi- . ings P.M. shift in geriatrics. Ex­ sing. near East Lansing. Own trans­ five students for summer term. GIRL WANTED to share furnished • FOR SALE relis. Clean. 31.500 332-1849 3-3 2 » cellent base rate plus 5 per cent portation required. Phone 489-0184 Also, apartment for 68-69 school differential. Liberal benefits, con­ apartment in downtown Lansing. • LOST A FOUND $100. for spring term. Call 482- after 6 p.m. 3-4 2 year. Also, two single furnished SUNBEAM APLINE 1964 Excellent genial co-workers. Phone ED 2- rooms. All utilities included and the • PERSONAL 0801. 3-3 29 4051 after 5 p.m. 3-3 29 condition. 3800. 351-5480. 5-4 2 CEDAR STREET -- near 1-96. Up­ parking space. Call 669-3131 after • PEANUTS PERSONAL LUXURY APARTMENT: Men No per furnished Seven minutes to 5p.m. 1-3 27 TRIUMPH 1966 TR 4A. red convert­ DRIVER DELIVERY men. tele­ campus. Couple. $135. 663-8418. 5-4 2 • REAL ESTATE ible Only 11.000 miles. Phone 355- phone order-takers. girls. Night • SERVICE 6030 3’3/29 hours. Full or part time Apply deposit, no lease. Parking Pool. STUDIO FURNISHED. Burcham UNIVERSITY VILLA Across from the Gables. $45 per • TR AN SPO R TA TIO N evenings after 4:30 p.m 203 MAC • WANTED Avenue 351-8871. 5-4 2 month. Call 351-5298. 3-3 29 Woods $125 per month. Immediate BEAL HOUSE VOLKSWAGEN CONVERTIBLE 1966 occupancy. East Lansing Manage­ Sprlng-Summer-Fall Rentals Ten months old. 31,200. Call be­ FOUR MAN luxury, supervised, ment Company. 351-7880 C FEMALE HELP wanted full time 2 & 3 MAN UNFTS tween 7-9 p.m. 337-7691. 3-3/29 Prefer married student wife. THE (under 21 or oven apartment DEADLINE CARD SHOP 309 East Grand River Across from Williams Dormitory TWO BEDROOM luxury apartment Rental Offlce-635 Abbott VOLKSWAGEN BUS 1966 Camper Call 351-0737. 3-3 29 Short term lease available. 351- 351-7910 equipped. A-l condition. 31.695. Apply in person to Mr. Mukatla, 2-3 28 1 P .M . one class day be­ 4275 C Phone 882-1436 S'3 29 ONE ROOMMATE to share upstairs fore publication. GIRL TO live in. Do afternoon, eve­ NEEDED: ONE girl tiWlhre luxury of a house, with male grad student Cancellations - 12 noon one VOLKSWAGEN 1962 One owner. Good ning nursery care and light house­ apartment near campus spring and Completely furnished, includes all class day before publica­ condition. 3625. 355-3241. 3-3 29 ‘ work. Experience preferred. 337- NORTHWIND or summer. Call after 5 p.m.. 351- utilities. $50 per month. Call 355- 9318. 3‘3 29 7544 between 8 a m - 1 p.m. Ask tion. FARMS 4276. 3‘3 29 for Kevin. 1-3 27 A uto S e rv ic e & P a rts STUDENT TO live in. supervise Faculty Apartments SUPERVISED APARTMENT. One man PHONE school child four hours per day. , Spring term. Two blocks - Union. MELS AUTO SERVICE. Large or five days per week Male pre­ 351-7880 351-0534 3'3 29 CHALET ONE or two men for 355-8255 small, we do them all. 1108 East ferred. 332-0319 after 5 p.m. 3-3 29 TWO ROOMS, furnished, utilities spring Reduced rates 351-0859. 3-3 29 Grand River. 332-3255. C except lights. $15 weekly HC IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY for two. RATES SERVICE STATION Attendants. Full Jewett. 549 West Ash Street. Ma­ Furnished Trowbridge Apartments EYDEAL VILLA Apartments . . MASON BODY SHOP. 812 East Kala­ time or part time 19 years or old­ son. Phone OR 7-3461. nights. OR $160. 351-0465.332-0480 3-3 29 Now accepting leases for year 1 D A Y ................... $ 1 . 5 0 mazoo Street-Since 1940. Com­ er. Phone 487-3063 between 8 a.m - beginning September. 1968 Two- 5-4 2 7-4693 C plete auto painting and collision 5pm CEDAR GREEN apartment No. 24B bedroom apartments for $240 month. 3 D A Y S ................. $ 3 . 0 0 take over lease now!! Furnished Swimming pool. G E appliances, gar­ service. American and foreign cars. MEN: CLEAN, quiet, cooking, park­ 5 D A Y S ................. $ 5 . 0 0 IV 5-0256. C CLAIM REPRESENTATIVE complete $160 1135 East Michigan bage disposal, furnished for four- ing. Supervised Two blocks to Ber- For large multiple-line Insurance key. 487-5753 or 485-8838. C Avenue 5-4 2 man or five-man. Call 351-4275 (based on 10 words per ad) Company College education or equiv­ Over 1 0 ,15f per word per day IMPORTED CAR alent preferred Immediate employ­ EAST LANSING - Marigold Apart­ after 5 p.m. C FURNISHED APARTMENT. Graduate ments - 911 Marigold. Furnished SERVICE ment arranged locally for positions students Three rooms. Private en­ onc-bedroom. air conditioned and trainng in any one of the many trance and bath ED 7-7603 3-3 29 There w ill be a 50£ service S P E C IA L IS T S areas in the United States Salary, Across street fromcampus Phone and bookkeeping charge If expenses, and automobile provided IV 9-9651 for appointment 10-4 9 W h a t ’s n e w IN NEEDED: TWO girls lor four man this ad Is not paid within Excellent employment benefits Beechwood Apartments Spring and or one week. • T R IU M P H Phone 372-6410. Ask for J David summer terms $57 month 337- SEVERAL THREE and four-man in h o s p ita l Loftus for an interview appoint­ apartments now available for spring •RENAULT 1495. . 3-3 29 term Call State Management. 332- ment AETNA LIFE AND CASUAL­ in s u r a n c e ? The State News w ill be • VO LKSW AG EN TY An Equal Opportunity Employ­ 8687 C-4 9 ONE MAN for two-man Marigold responsible only for the er and Plans . For Progress Com- Apartment Close, quiet 351-9050 3-3 29 STATE FARM with a policy 23-4 26 firs t day’ s Incorrect Inser­ Al Edward's panv T h e Stu d e n t U n io n B o a r d that pays you cash. Use it tion. Sports C ar Center o f the for rent, food, anything. THE NICEST you will see New. Costs pennies. EMPLOYERS OVERLOAD COM­ quiet, close to campus. Adults, U n i v e r s i t y o f T o le d o 1200 E . Oakland t IV 9-7591 PANY Experienced secretaries, graduates $145 unfurnished Call p re se n ts: Phone ACCIDENT PROBLEM Call KALA­ typists to work temporary assign­ evenings. 332-2210. 3-3 29 for facts. The State News does not cM aE ments. Never a fee Phone 487- perm it racial or religious MAZOO STREET BODY SHOP 6071 C-3 29 For Rent F o r Rent THE JIMI HENDRIX :D ¡- Small dents to large wrecks. Amer­ discrimination in its ad­ THREE ROOM furnished apartment EXPERIENCE $ H ican and foreign cars Guaranteed CHOOSE YOUR own hours. A few vertising c o lu m n s . The TV RENTAL G K Portable Free ARBOR FOREST APARTMENTS Married couple, or 2- or three work. 482-1286. 2628 East Kala- hours a day can mean excellent TATE FARM « kv ’Yj», accent. t C y.* »- ■* ■'•>*'•'4- service and delivery $8 50 per Trowbrjdge Road, East Lansing girls. $135.: Also, five room un­ furnished apartmeny., $130. plus And ^ MUTUAL AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE COMPANY FaCUHv1 "TnwvKars, Opltnfa nut* anH H Fr.W JtklkO cjW '\iNQ\oc\, DVir.^tS advertising vflhca a ia c rm r- AvihW repre^entairtV. r o t'' appoint-' : “r m p . tu -fM 'i • ' T K ' * . •CAR'WASH: 25c Wash, wax' Vacu­ too V »paHt'tctgi' Jiurtibk I . *4 pth t- v lnates a g a in s t religion, ment. in your own home, write Private patio and swimming pool sarv Suitable for married couple um. U-DO-IT 430 South Clippert. Mrs Alona Huckins 5664 School race, color or national o r­ Apartment» Chalet House for private parties or 3-4 girls Car necessary Phone back of KO-KO BAR C-3 28 Street. Haslett. Michigan, or call Within walking distance of campus. 489-1276 3-3 29 igin. IV 2-6893 c-3 29 March 30, 196$ LUXURY APARTMENT to sublet No children or pets Phone 337- Aviation GREAT LAKES EMPLOYMENT for for summer term One. two. or 0634 for appointment. C-3 29 STUDIO APARTMENT for two men permanent positions for men and three girls Reduced rates 351- Parking $12 50 per week 251 Spar­ 8:30 P .M .- FRANCIS AVIATION. So easy to ONE GIRL: To sublease a two-girl tan Avenue. Phone 332-6078 3-3 29 women in office, sales, technical. 5480. 5-4 2 learn in the PIPER CHEROKEE!! luxury apartment for spring term. Special35.00offer! 484-1324. C IV 2-1543.. C-3 29 One block from campus. Phone: TU Fleldhouse A u to m o tiv e SUMMER TERM Sub-let Burcham STUDENTS FOR gardening and land­ Woods One bedroom, swimming 337-9560. 5-4 2 FOREIGN FOOD CHEVROLET 1964 Impala Convert­ THE WINGED SPARTANS now open a Cessna Cardinal-another good scape work. Full or half days. Ap­ pool, air conditioned Call Barry TWO MAN luxury apartment near $2.50 ible. 37.000 miles. V-8 Auto­ ply in person TWISS LANDSCAPE 351-8089 or 355-8252 ____________ 5-4 2 JIM RYAN GEO. TOBIN matic. Power steering and brakes reason to join and learn to fly or CENTER. 1112 Lake Lansing Road. campus. Immediate. Call 337-7274. DELICIOUS FOOD General Admission Black with black leather interior. rent through your own University club. Save with lowest rates, best East Lansing. 10-4 9 NEW LY MARRIED? 3-3 29 AND FIXINGS FROM RYAN & TOBIN Call 694-0586. 5-4 2 TANGLEWOOD INSURANCE equipment, quality instruction. Call NEED ONE man for two man apart­ ALMOST EVERY F o r r e s e r v a t io n s c a ll: 355-1178. 353-0230. 353-0213. 351- FRY COOK-must be 18 or over ment Reduced rate 351-6789. 5-4 2 339 MORGAN LANE CHEVROLET 1939 $300. or best 9301. c Full and part time work Apply APARTMENTS FOREIGN LAND ( a r e a 419) 531-5711,e xt, 310 FRANDOR offer Phone after 5 pm.. 489- CHARCOAL HOUSE. Frandor Cen­ 2 Bdrm., unfur., from 139.50 NEED ONE or two girls immediate­ 9237 5-4 2 ter. after6pm , 4-4 1 S c o o te rs & C y cles 351-7880 ly. Block from campus. Roberta. 351-0946 or 355-8252 S-4 2 SHAHEEN’S N o t ic k e t s at the d o o r. 351-0050 CHEVROLET 1956 Four-door Low WAITRESS--MUST be 18 or Over original mileage Good engine $150. HONDA SCRAMBLER 305. 1966 Ex­ Full and part time work Apply T H R IF T W A Y NEEDED; ONE girl for summer TWO-MAN- luxury apartment Sublet cellent condition Two helmets. CHARCOAL HOUSE. Frandor Cen­ 355-2767 3-3 29 337-2188 after 5 p.m 7-4 4 ter, after 6 p.m. 4-4 1 and or fall. Call 351-0319 3-329 spring and summer Phone 351- 2310 S. CEDAR LARRY CUSHION'S SPORTS SHOP 0760 3-3 29 485-1538 FORD GALAX1E 1963 1 2 two-door AUTHENTIC DEALER for Yamaha. WOULD LIKE to have college stu­ TWO BEDROOM furnished upper LANSING’S GOLF HEADQUARTERS hardtop. Power steering, automatic apartment Built-in appliances. Pri­ Triumph, and BMW. Complete line dent give golf lessons for summer. 351-7534. 3-3 29 vate entrance Married couple $100 • PLASTIC PRACTICE BALL of parts. accessories. leather Work in Pro Shop optional. Send a month plus utilities (averaging goods, and helmets. 1 2 mile south resume to Blossom Trails G.C.. less than $10 a month' Phone 337- 6 FOR 1.00 OLDSMOB1LE F-85. 1964 Power steering. Good condition. 351-0145 Deluxe. power brakes. 3-3 29 of 1-96 on South Cedar. SHEP'S MOTORS, Phone 694-6621. C 1565 Britian. Benton Harbor. Mich­ igan 49022. 3-3 29 7815 or 351-8231 3-3 29 Only we can • SHAG BALLS 1.00 A DOZEN OLDSMOBILE 98 Convertible. 1963 Em ploym ent For Rent WANTED: ONE male graduate stu­ dent lor four man luxury apart­ ment $40 per month Dave. 351- take your car in trade • 1968 GOLF RULE BOOK FREE WrTH PURCHASE Loaded full power, air. new top. OF 1.00 OR MORE and snow tires. Call 351-5687 eve- nings 3-3 29 BARMAID, nights. Willteach per hour. Call nights. 489-8769. $2 00 5-4 2 TV RENTALS for students Low economical rates by the term or 5260 ONE GIRL for luxurious apart­ 3-3 29 and have a new VW e TENNIS RACKETS FROM 4.95 OLDSMOBILE 1964 F-85 V-6. four- BABYSITTER NEEDED weekdays 8-5 pm. Spring term One year month UNIVERSITY TV RENT­ ALS 484-9263 C ment Reduced rate. Northwind Apartments. 337-1867. Beverly. 3-3 29 waiting for you in Europe. e BADMINTON BIRDIES speed Runs good $850. best offer old boy Call 355-0931. 1.3 27 Phone IV 9-1895. 3'3 29 TV RENTALS for students $9.00 FOR TWO or three, One bedroom, L arry Cushion AN UNUSUAL opportunity to make month Free service and delivery. sunporch. Utilities. deposit paid, PLYMOUTH 1955. Runs well $100 big money in your spare time! Call NEJAC. 337-1300. We guaran­ $150 spring. $125 summer. 351- Sporting Goods 355-9879 3-3 29 No experience necessary! 16-20 tee same-dav service. C 5905. 3-3 29 3020 Vine IV 5-7465 hours per week. Male. Make $50* mechanical $100 per week Need car For Open F rL ’til 8; Dally ’til 6. PORSCHE 1957 Good interview, call Mr. Johnston. 393- condition Grey coupe Body fair. 3-3 29 1399. 5-4 2 339-8400 RAMBLER 1961 Convertible. Auto­ n n n r lr liffttifi m m ir 3 0 IH 0EK S 9 B Iniwi ■ matic. Looks and runs good. Best MAID lor sorority house Five hour CROSSWORD PUZZLE can a n o n u b b d offer takes. Phone 627-2542 3-3 29 per day. five day week. 332-2785 3-3 29 0 0 a 0 H S SH H G 3 0 0 0 0 19 0 0 ! ACROSS LORD BRIARGATE SHAVE LATHER 25. Turn over a 0 (9 0 1. Black tea new leaf 0 0 1 9 0 0 0 $ 1 .0 0 R E G . 2 / 1 .0 1 6. Copycat 29. Before noon 0 (9 E 3 0 0 1 10. Esteem 30. Draft animals 11. Annoyed 31. Newt „ (9 E O H 0 Ï3 CHAMBLEY M ILK BATH Let's talk it over a month before you're ready to leave. 13. United 33. Cleft □ ia a 0 0 0 iiiH H @ „ ^ R E d . $ 1 .6 9 2/ 1 .7 0 Bring your car by our place a month before you leave and we'll do a little trading. (Non-bugs are fine with us.) 14. Emerged 15. Wharf 36. Consumed 37. Rubber tree E I0 1 S 0 H H m Q H 019 0 0 0 G 30Q 0 0 D 16. Lamprey 38. Emanation HILLROSE CLEANSING LOTION Then we'll arrange to have a new V W waiting for you In any 18. Butter cask 39. Gannet S K 0 0 0 0 0 0 one pf more than 40 cities in 15 European countries. (A bug of $ 2 .00 R E G . 2/ 2 .0 1 your own beats any bus or train while touring Europe.) W e 'll attend to all the details of purchase, delivery, and 19. Spread hay 20. Saute 41. Country 43. Bent 44. Ascribe 1. Misrepresent DOWN Prior to 21. Sword handle WALGREEN CONCENTRATE SHAMPOO licensing. 22.Thus 45. Threesome 2. Flirted Common viper r"r"r" r~/y/, r” a r"Va W h e n it needs servicing after you bring It back we'll attend 23. Constructs 46. Soothed 3. Cat fur Grandparental Through 2 / 1 .3 0 to that too. W e ’ll even give you the lowdown on how to have IT” 4 Enticing a $ 1 .29 R E G . your bug shipped home. And when it arrives, your old car will be long gone. % Outcome ® 1 Ifr~ Engrossed HAND CREAM R E G . 99C 2/ 1.00 : Phil Gordon's VW & w~ _ Obligations B“ « EH j ' 2845 E . Saginaw Hurricane jm m e v i- w « ** y m m & S S & G d fi ! Please tend me your fra* Illustrated brochure and price list. center r* MANY MORE ITEMS FRIDAY, MARCH 29, 1968 1x30 P.M. Dsalsr J On behalf of Dress edge- a ir * AT { Offspring MSU SALVAGE YARD 1 CENT SALE! FARM LANE MICHIGAN STATE CAMPUS ! City Stai*------------------ ---- Zip Cods— I * fr 1r PpP Deserter Cookout Wrest ONLY FOUR DAYS LEFT Various Makos And Conditions w~ i r r~ I _ Antenna Honey G u l l i v e r 's S t a t e D r u g s Also« 1 - 1959 Plymouth s s r iil #M 2561051 P h il G o rd o n ’s r jr r" _ — — Evade Menege Araceous rar 1 - 1958 Bulck serial #4E1054095 Gasp W alg rttn Agency — i 1 - 1959 Dodge serial #34914375 Discoanect Prescriptions 1105 E . Grand Rlvar A ll Items may be seen at salvage yard March 28, 8:30-4:30 March 29 8:30 - 1:00 ■ VOLKSWAGEN INC. 2845 E . Saginaw St. Ir Rwr _ _ — i Sweetsop Black cuckoo Macaw (opposite Mac Donald's) TERMS: CASH________________________ V 20 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Wednesday, March 27, 1968 You a re looking a t a page o f W ant A ds a t w o rk . T ry one to d ay! For Root For Sale Peanuts Personal Service Far*«« EXPERIENCED SEAMSTRESS and Apartment* UNSUPERVISED ROOMS 143 Bogue Mobil# Homos TO WHOM it may concern: Thanks! dress maker for ladies Reason­ Street. Near campus. $15. per week. Delta Zetas. 1-3/27 able. Call 355-5855 3-3/29 GIRL TO stare four-girl apart­ Call 3324558. *-*/29 LIBERTY 1962 10 x52' Excellent ment. three blocks from campus. condition. Many extras. Ideal for Call 351-8754: Girl to stare two- NEAR UNION. Men. Large double, young marrieds. 372-3941. 3-3/29 Real'Estate IF AN EXTRA typewriter is tak­ girl apartment, same location. Call or triple, 1/2 of double Lounge •¡AST LANSING: Newly decorated ing up space in your home, you 351-8756 M/» and TV areas Kitchen , No park-' Personal can depend upon a State News Want three bedroom ranch. Featuring ing. 3514311. M/2# Ad to sell it for you. NORTHWIND APARTMENTS. Re­ TWO fireplaces, finished recrea­ BIMBO'S PIZZA says "WELCOME tion room. 332-6023. owner. 5-4'2 duced rates. Need one man. 351- STOP! CHECK the newly decorated BACK." We have moved closer to 0723. 3-3/29 wall-to-wall carpeted, private lav­ campus and invite you to visit us TENNIS RACKETS, stringing, equip­ atory rooms at Spartan Hall. Sing­ ment. etc. Lowest prices around FURNISHED APARTMENT for rent. les. kitchens, doubles. $8 to $13. at our new location (2021. East Service Call Harrold Shelton. 355-6013. 54 2 Michigan), or we will deliver a de­ Four men or four girls. $280. per week. Call 372-1031 or 337- DIAPER SERVICE-Diaparene An­ licious pizza to your dorm for only per month. Two blocks from Union. 2225 for an appointment 3-3/29 tiseptic Process approved by Doc­ 25c extra for any size order Call 414 Abbott Road. Call 332-3895. 3-3/29 tors. Same Diapers returned all VACUUM CLEANER Repair We 489-2431. • C-3/29 MALE SINGLE 536 Abbott Kitchen times. Yours or Ours. Baby Clothes specialize in repairing all makes FURNISHED TWO rooms and bath. Private. $65. Call 627-5979. 3-3 29 washed free. No deposit. AMERI­ and models. Dennis Distributing First floor Private, utilities paid. POETRY WANTED for anthologv IDELW1LD PUBLISHERS. 543 Fred­ CAN DIAPER SERVICE. 914 East Company. 316 North Cedar. Lan­ Parking. Male or couple. 1214 East APPROVED ROOM for men. single or Gier Street-Phone 482-0864. C sing. C-3 29 Kalamazoo. 3-3/29 erick. San Francisco. California. double 837 West Grand River 3-3/29 C-3 29 FURNISHED APARTMENT downtown QUIET ROOM for male student. 614 Lansing 525 South Pine. G.E. ap­ YARN AND FABRIC CENTER Ma­ Sunset Lane, East Lansing. ED 2- son. Phone 676-2973. Fine fabrics, pliances. carpeted, security entrance, 1268. 2-327 air-conditioned, laundry. Full time sewing accessories. New--orIon manager. Only $145. per month. 5-4/2 sport yarn! C-3 29 SINGLES. MEN. Within walking dis­ tance. Parking, quiet, clean, no SAVE MONEY-WASH-20c LOAD. GIRL SPRING term. Near campus cooking. 3514176. 54/3 Complete dry cleaning, shirt serv­ $48. Utilities included. 351-8090. 3-3/29 ice. WENDROWS ECON-O-WASH’ ATTRACTIVE. EXCEPTIONALLY 3006 Vine. One block west of Sears. ><< ttoutas large double or single for upper C-3/29 /jyi. ; , n classman. “Men.” Near campus. MALE STUDENT to stare house ED 2-1746. 54/2 WALLSTREET JOURNAL calls SEN­ in Lansing $60. plus deposit. Call TRY’S Young Driver Questionnaire IV 4-1626 before 6 p.m. 3-3 29 SINGLE ROOM. Walking distance. a temper test! It could save $50 Male 882-5187 Call after 5 p.m. 3-3/29 on auto insurance If interested, and SUMMER OR faft. Three-four stu­ between 21 and 25. call 882-7284 dents. Near Campus. Parking 332- SPRING TERM vacancies at Els- or 485-3647. C-3/29 8903 3-3 29 worth Co-op House. $180 for room and board for entire term. Call FR EE !! A Thrilling hour of beauty. C E D A R GREENS ONE OR two men to share house. 332-3574. ask for Lynn Pless or For appointment call 484-4519. Single. $50.: double $40. Garage, Gordon Morgan. 3-3'29 MERLE NORMAN COSMETICS ample parking. Call 337-0988. 3-3 29 STUDIO. 1600 East Michigan. C-3 29 SINBLE OR double student room. Male only. Near campus. Avail­ FOR FOUR students Furnished with utilities paid. All new and close to able at once. IV 5-6581. ED 2- FORTY TOP Soul and rock bands. Gary Lazar. 351-8907 or MID- APARTMENTS 8531 3-3/29 MICHIGAN TALENT AGENCY, 351- campus Phone 332-8488 5-4 2 APPROVED QUIET and convenient 5665. C-3/29 1135 MICHIGAN AVENUE ONE. TWO. or three men. 265 3-3 29 room for man. Excellent study con­ Stoddard. 332-1728. ditions. $10. 428 Grove Street. 351- PARKING. I-S East Lansing, across ouvLiO. I n o oiocKs irorii campus. from Berkey. behind Polacheks. $25 B e fw e a n B r o d y a n d F r a n d o r o v e r lo o k i n g fhe Leasing now for next year. Share per term, in advance. $9 per month R e d C e d a r G o lf C o u r s e . ROOMS FOR men students. Down­ Call Mark White. 332-3947. 410 completely furnished house with town. East Lansing Newly carpeted Albert Street 3-3 29 other- girls. All utilities furnished. and draped. Now at summer rates. 489-4363 54/2 * ONE BEDROOM- * AM PLE CLOSET SPACE $8.50 single. $15 double. 312 Grove. 10-4/9 PAT PAULSON for President. But­ tons available for 50c at P O Box 2 MAN UNITS GOOD SIC room furnished house STUDIO ROOM - Available for two - 374. East Lansing. 5-4 2 two miles from campus for three or four male students. Reasonable. Must have transportation - Refrig­ erator. parking area - Call ED 2- •A TT R A C TIV E L Y FURNISHED * BALCONIES 337-0512 5-4/2 PARTY TIME? Gary has an idea! 3393 after 5:30 p.m. 7-4< 351-8907. MMTA. INC. C-3 27 FURNISHED TWO bedroom house for • AIR CONDITIONING two graduate students. Available For Sale For Sale For Sale For Sale NEED A band this weekend'’ Call • LARGE SWIMMING POOL for six months» $120 (plus utili­ LARGE SELECTION of frames. Gary. 351-8907 MMTA. INC. C-3 27 ties. ED 2-4770 3-3 29 MENS ENGLISH Bicycle, three- DRUM SET - Bass snare, tom- BIRTHDAY CAKES. 7'-$3.60,8''- Glasses for everyone. OPTICAL • SUN PATIO • CHOICE LOCATION speed with coaster brake. Good toms-, complete cymbal set. stool $4.12, 9"-$4.90. Delivered. Also MUSIC'S GROOVY! Fraternity rush FOUR BEDROOM house unfurnished condition. $15 489-3486. 1-3 27 and accessories. 484-4957. after sheet caRes KWAST BAKERIES. DISCOUNT. 416 Tussing Building. near campus. Garage. Family. $150 351-0988 3-3/29 5 pm. 3-3'29 IV 4-1317. C-3/29 Phone IV 2-4667. C-3/29 is almost here. Bands of all sorts and in all sizes Call Gary. 351- 8907 MMTA. INC C-3 27 NOW LEASING ZENITH PORTABLE TV Good con- HOOVER UPRIGHT Vacuum cleaner DIAMOND BARGAIN: Wedding and ’Animal* TWO MEN wanted to share four bed­ dition. First $60 takes it. 489- Deluxe model In A-l condition. ensaeement ring sets Save 50 per WE SECOND the motion of all bands For further information call 351-8631 room bouse with two students: $35 ■tm. , 32» W>or besi offer 482-2677 C-3/29 cem -or ,< ist/tê tfksrm' * 4U, ... c-art books. Give Gary a call. ?5>- m i . * £ , Y e tT & i lo t - R - IQ Pronin Jai-tot*. ‘ - ‘ - - - - - • . A « - - - - - ' plain and fancy diamonds. $258150 after 6 p.m. rol-8999 3-3 29 8907 MMTA. 1WC. OFFICIAL ENGRAVED invitation to ......................................................... WILCOX SECOND-HAND STORE. C-3 27 NEAR FRANDOR Three bedroom Kennedy-Johnlon inauguration in BICYCLE SALES, rentals and serv- 509 East Michigan. Phone 4854391. CHAMPION SIRED. SKC Malamute furnished house. Spring term. 332- 8925 »**— * 5-4/2 1961. Perfect for student or pro- fessor of history. May be seen by appointment Call Mr Crow- ices. Also used. EAST LANSING CYCLE, 1215 East Grand River. Call 332-8303 C ACHTUNG! TELEFUNKEN has ar- c .................................................................... puppies. $100.: and Siamese kit­ tens. $15 669-3066 or 484-3538. 3-3 29 CAN T GET through to Gary? We ALGO MANAGEMENT CO. ley. 482-2653 after 7 p.m. week- . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . rived—imported direct from Ger- take messages! Call our main * of*" 3900 C A P IT O L C IT Y B L V D . THERE IS NO mystery about Want -Room* days 3-3 29 SEWING MACHINE clearance sale. many por great buys on high qual- fice. MMTA. INC. 351-5665 Ads . . . call today and watch your L A N S IN G Brand new portables. $49.50. $5.00 ¡ty stereo systems, tape recorders, C-3/27 don't needs disappear quickly! NEAR UNION. Man to share nice DOUBLE BED: like new. excellent per month. Large selection of re- amj short-wave radios see NEJAC large quiet room for $35/month. condition. Call 669-3066 or 484- conditioned used machines. Singers. QF p/vST LANSING, 543 East Grand Parking. ED2-4770. 3-3/29 3538. 3-3 29 Whitts. Necchis, New Home and River C B urcham W oods ■■ Eydeal V illa ................................................................... "many others." $19.95 to $39.95. SLEEPING ROOM Gentleman Park­ WILL TRADE Polaroid swinger cam- Terms. EDWARDS DISTRIBUTING ................... j ....................................... * " ing available. 418 North Clemens. era with case for new binoculars. COMPANY. 1115 North Washington. THREE 8MM cameras. Argus Cine- IV 2-7598. 3-3/29 641-6038 1-3 27 489-6448. C-3/29 max 8EE. Revere Eye-Matic CA-1. ................................................................... Dejur Electra. Freezer, eight cubic ROOMS AVAILABLE one block from VIBRAHARP - Three octabe. C to .................................................................... feet. Runs well. $40.00. 332-1849. 3-3/29 Olin. $10 and $12 a week. Com­ C. Good shape. $125. 694-9465. 3-3 29 KODACOLOR FILM. Size 620, 126. .................................................................... munity kitchen. 337-0132. 3-3/29 ................................................................... or 127, only 98c with this ad. MAR- EXCHANGE NEARLY new maple DOUBLE BED: Hollywood style, box EK REX ALL DRUGS. Prescription bunk beds for chest of drawers, springs, good mattress. $25. 337- center at Frandor. New lower every- good condition, or desk. 641-8038. FEMALE STUDENT share clean 0514 1-3/27 day discount prices. C-3/29 3-3/29 double room Private entrance. Two blocks from campus. $10 weekly. 351-5705. 3-3 29 EAST LANSING - Male, single room. Cooking privileges. Parking. $60. Wei¿, P/SHHIGHER, UNIRAI. AIR 332-0480. 3-3 29 MEN. HALF double, single, close W m ftRtí/Ná Ktáfó ñíR AND Hltᣠin. Clean, quiet. 351-4062 3-3 29 CUM Tí K -W T M IDFA Ú F ' m w m t T [ MEN: CLEAN, quiet, cooking, park­ ing. Supervised. Two blocks to Berkey 487-5733 or 485-8836. TWO MEN share house. $44.. util­ C r ities paid. Kellogg near. 351-7754. 5-4 2 NICE: MENS double: living room, parking: clean and quiet. 332-47093-3/29 ROOMS FOR Girls. Cooking. In­ A lease combination to fit your needs quire at 332-0063. 3-3 29 Sept. 15-Sept. 15, June 15-June 15, and summer leases BEING SIGNED NOW • C o m p le t e ly f u r n is h e d • A i r C o n d it io n e d % 1 t o 4 m a n a p a r t m e n t s • G u a r a n t e e d p a r k i n g • O u r h e a t e d p o o l s a r e C A M P U S H IL L o p e n s p r i n g 9 s u m m e r 9 a n d f a l l . •apartm ents* " WATER'S EDGE Now Leasing For Fall t R e n t s s t a r t a t $ 1 2 5 And Summer* RIVER'S Dfi*lI tries. Multilith offset printing. 337- Whites and Negroes good na- In the July 23-30 riot, 1527. C turedly but enthusiastically bid much loot was abandoned at the ANY KIND OF typing in my home. against each other for items curbs “ when people had second 489-2514. C ranging from fry pans and a bow thoughts,” and some was turned and arrow outfit, complete with in after a police promise of w h o s a w it! H a d TYPING IN my home. Experienced, fast, accurate. MRS.- DAVIS, TU2- quiver, to television sets and ' *no questions asked. ” 7338. 3-3/29 room-size rugs. Even a television cameraman Occasionally, as they emptied there to record the show of ELECTRIC - REPORTS, theses, row on row of grocery carts some 350 frantic bidders popped etc. Accurate, low prices, prompt in a $50 offer when a used 16- service. 332-4516. 3-3/29 m illim eter movie projector, L1PPINCOTTS PROFESSIONAL IBM Wanted equipped with sound and a theses typing (including math), TRADE TWO "Hello Dolly” tickets, speaker, was put up. He fell out multilith 489-6479.489-0358. 5-4/2 n u m e ro u s c a lls fro m main floor, want Friday and have at $100 and the projector went Thursday. W.A. Goldberg. 355- for $113. compared with a cost Wanted 2227,351-8389 3-3 29 new of some $350. CHEMISTRY PROFESSOR desires m INTERNATIONAL 3-4 bedroom home, prefer par­ tially f'trMsbud, near MSU, about August ). Write Dr. Raymond Som­ mers, 2224 Jefferson. Stevens Point FILM SERIES Wisconsin. 3-3/29 presents^ FULL TIME child care, in my Uni­ th e a d .— versity Village apartment. 355- 6148. WANTED: BACK issues of RAM­ 5-4/2 "THE WORLD OF HENRY ORIENT” another happy PARTS. CHEETAH PLAYBOY, ES­ QUIRE. and similar illustrated mag­ Hilarious comedy about two school g irls in New York azines. Five cents per copy. Call who get a crush on Don Juan pianist, and their comic 351-0539 between 9-12 p.m. 1-3/27 shenanigans as they hound him. Cast Includes Peter Sell­ e rs , Tippy W alker, and others. BLOOD DONORS needed. *7.50 for all positive. A negaUve, B nega­ tive. and AB negative. *10 00 O Thurs., F r i. - M ar. 28 & 29 State News Classified Ad User. negative. *12 00 MICHIGAN COM­ MUNITY BLOOD CENTER, 507 1/2 East Grand River, East Lan­ sing, above the new Campus Book Store Hours 9-3 30 Monday, Tues­ UNIVERSITY AUDITORIUM • r=3o P.m. day. and Friday: Wednesday and ' . ' •* Wp7-J^83 C , A ^ ls s lo rj 50P • _ WANTED TWOUckets for Block and Bridle Show. Saturday night Tickets #- f* on sale at Union Ticket Office ‘ Call 355-0757 after 5:30 p.m. 1-3/28 Union Building , PLACE TO rent for rock band to I practice. Call 351-9359. 64/3 DON’T SIG N THAT LEASE 1986 HAMPTON. Luxurious two bed­ room 12' x 60'. Carpeted, washer juid dryer. On beautiful lot. 485- 3-3/22 unless you bave Y E S NO □ □ c o m p le te s o u n d p ro o fin g --b e tw e e n room s and a p a r tm e n ts □ □ am ple p a rk in g — C e d a r V illage h as parking fo r o v e r 50 0 c a r s c h o ic e of 9 o r 12 month l e a s e s co n v en ien t l o c a t i o n - - w e adjoin the ca m p u s a f u l l - ti m e m ain te n a n ce sta ff a i r conditioning p r iv a te study desk fo r e a c h student fo r r e s u lt s d is h w a s h e r s and l a r g e r e f r i g e r a t o r - f r e e z e r s b u ilt-in b o o k sh elv e s H o o v er vacuum clean ers fo r every 2 ap art­ m en ts S T A T E N E W S C L A S S IF IE D l a r g e w a lk -in s t o r a g e c l o s e t i n c i n e r a t o r chu te on e v e r y flo o r l a r g e lau n d ry r o o m s with w a s h e r s and d r y e r s h i-p o w e r e d T .V . antenna re c e p tio n 355-8 255 i n t e r i o r d e c o r a t e d a p a r tm e n ts with w a l l -t o - w a l l ca r p e tin g sn ack b a r with sto o ls e l e c t r o n i c i n t e r c o m — s a f e ty lock s y s t e m □ □ n a tu r a l b r i c k d e c o r a t o r wall in living ro o m All th e s e f e a t u r e s a r e included at C edar V illa g e Model now open for your inepectlon phone 3 3 2 -5 0 5 1 / 1Ì» the world's largest privately-owned student apartments 2 2 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Wednesday» March 27« 1968 Comic Pat Paulsen John F. Thaden, sociologist, dies plugs for President John F. Thaden, who gained national prominence as an edu­ cational sociologist and spec­ ialist in population studies, He is survived by his wife, Bernice, of 228 Orchard St. East Lansing; three sons, Rob­ ert of Golden, Colo., D r. Don­ HOLLYW OOD (A P ) - Is television has contributed a tell. “ I figure I can swing at died March 13 at the age of 73 ald Thaden, East Lansing, and it a mammoth put-on, or does grass roots campaign for Pat least 100,000 to 200,000 votes,” at his home in East Lansing Edward of Bvwling Green, Ky,; Pat Paulsen really have a Paulsen, who first achieved said Paulsen. “ I feel respon­ after a long illness. a stepson, Robert Besler of chance in the presidential race? note as the totally inept edi­ sible now; I wouldn’t want to M r. Thaden, professor emer­ Dewitt; a brother and three There is Paulsen, looking for torialist on the Sunday night take any votes away from itus of sociology, had remained sisters. all the world like a candidate, “ Smothers Brothers Show.” somebody I dig.” as a full-tim e consultant in shaking hands with consti­ After several weeks of pro­ The man Paulsen digs most, demography with M SU’s Insti­ tuents and making statements claiming his noncandidacy on off-camera, is Sen. Eugene J. tute for Community Develop­ that are innocuous enough to the air-m eanwhile shaking McCarthy, D-Minn., and pos­ ment and Services after his sound like political dialogue. hands with the studio audience sibly New York Gov. Nelson retirem ent from the faculty Mock campaigns for the presi­ after every speech-Paulsen A. Rockefeller. The criterion in 1956. dency have been prevalent on finally acceded to what he here is that McCarthy is a dove In 1925, M r. Thaden joined the American scene since the termed popular demand and de­ on Vietnam policy and “ Rocke­ the MSU faculty as one of the years when Eddie Cantor of­ clared himslef an active can­ feller might be a dove,” Paul­ three original members of the fered his candidacy on radio. didate. sen said. Like his mentors, sociology department. He joined Now the immense reach of Is he serious? It's hard to the Smothers Brothers. Paul­ the Institute for Community sen is dove-ish. T h e la s t g a s p o f w in t e r Development and Services in Despite his loyalties, Paul­ 1957. sen claims to be conducting A n u n e x p e c te d s n o w f a ll left It s m a r k at M ic h t g a n Sta te o v e r the t e r m b r e a k , He was a co-chairman of his campaign without fear or It w a s a r u d e e n d in g to a r e l a t i v e l y m ild w in t e r. LBJ cites Hannah favor. “ People think I am a flaming liberal," he said with S ta te N e w s P h o to b y L a r r y H a g e d o r n the Governor’s Study Com­ mission of M igratory Labor at its founding i n , 1952. Summer teaching institutes a degree of seriousness, “ But Born Oct. 22, 1894, near for civil rights work I am conservative in many ways." For one thing, his residence. Monticello, Iowa, M r. Thaden received his B.S. degree from the University of Nebraska, improve instructional skills President Hannah received a gressive prospering society,” Pat Paulsen, his wife Betty his M.S. from Iowa State Uni­ commendation March 19 from Johnson’s message said. Jane and three children live versity and his Ph.D. from President Johnson for his work Dulles’ history asserts the in Orange, Calif., the heart­ JO H N T H A D E N MSU. as chairman of the U.S. Com­ commission has been an im ­ land of the most conserva­ mission on Civil Rights. portant influence in civil rights tive county of the state. The message was read to progress. P at Paulsen was born in MSU w ill hold 10 institutes Civics: Cleo H. Cherryholmes, E arth Science: Jane E. Smith, Hannah at a special dinner George M. Johnson, professor South Bend, Wash., and grew this summer for elementary and assistant professor of political associate professor of geology, marking the publication of the of higher education, also at­ up in the San Francisco area. secondary teachers and college tended the dinner. He served science, June 17 to Aug. 9. June 17 to July 26. commission’s firs t history, After service in the Marines, personnel. on the original commission from he tried his comic monologues Mathematics: John Wagner, “ The Civil Rights Commission: Five of the institutes w ill be Guidance and Counseling: W. professor of mathematics, June 1957-1965,” by Foster Rhea 1958-1960, first as director of in Bay area night clubs with authorized under the National Harold Grant, associate profes­ 17 to July 26. Dulles. research and planning and later modest success. Defense Education Act (N D E A ). sor of counseling and personnel Mathematics: Lauren G. as a member. Shifting to Southern Cali­ “ As chairman of that com­ These w ill offer instruction in services, Aug. 5-30. Woodby, professor of mathe- At the dinner, Hannah re­ fornia, he was viewed at Pasa­ V' 'pVfyyv cr A "'£■ *-9 ■ r T O N IT E mission since its infancy in —— *-•- • -—- —e / - -*■ ' c/Ztitt ft C«i^»V . .. r% - T> * Asian History: Edgar A Schu- good,, good! 7good, PA RA PH ERN A LIA , f tion: Indiana and various Birmingham, Mich. Public s< h-mls v in iir. Mn.ui i anerxtl, pciysicatliy natiui- lapped. speech and visiting teacher, industrial arts and biology (B.M i. Portland, Mich., Public Schools: Early Bumper stickers for his can­ didacy are beginning to appear June 24'to Aug 2. Advanced Composition: H er­ goodT1 good, g , J A Ktf d, good, od, good, ^ FASH IO N SHOW ' All elementary, secondary and special on the Los Angeles freeways. man R. Struck, associate pro­ education iB.M). and later elementary education and re­ fessor of English, June 24 to goo d , g o ! p o o d , good,’ * T O P M O D E L S D IS P L A Y IN G T H E F A S H IO N S O F Booth. Newspapers, Inc.: Journalism, medial reading, home economics, indus­ The official Paulsen slogan is; "We Can’t Stand P at." Aug. 2. g o o d , good^ I, go od , good, L A N S I N G ’S N E W E S T , M O S T D I F F E R E N T * political science. English, history, ad­ trial arts and special education (B.M). vertising and all majors of the colleges Rudyard Township Schools: Early and goo d , goo d , gooa, „ ' g o o d , g o o d , good, W O M E N ’S S H O P of arts and letters, business, communi­ later elementary education, mentally go o d , goo d , go o d , goo d , goo d , go od , go o d , g o o d , good, cation arts and social science (B). Loca­ handicapped, speech correction, visiting TO D A Y’S SPECIAL goo d , goo d , goo d , good, goo d , good, go o d , g o o d , good, NO COVER tion: Michigan. teacher, remedial reading (B.M). psy­ Clark. Dodge and Co., Inc.: Financial chology (M). English, industrial arts good, go od , goo d , go od , d e lic io u s , go o d , goo d , good, administration, marketing and econom­ (auto power mechanics, electronics, ics lMi. Location: Michigan. metals and machine shop), French and g o o d , good, goo d , go od , good, goo d , go od , go o d , good, Cleveland. Ohio, Public Schools: Early general science. .(B.M). Location: Mich­ go o d , goo d , go o d , goo d , goo d , goo d , go o d , g o o d , good, and later elementary education, physical igan. education, art, music, special education, St. Lawrence Hospital: Nursing (B). mentally and physically handicapped, social work (M), and hotel, restaurant speech correction, guidance and reme­ and institutional management IB). Lo­ cation: Michigan. dial reading, art, counseling, English, home economics, industrial arts (draft­ St. Olaf College: Hotel, restaurant and ing. metals, machine shop, woodwork­ institutional management (B). Loca­ ing and printing), French, mathematics, tion: Minnesota. M e D o n a k fe physical education (women's), science, physical science, social science, history, San Jose Unified School District: Early and later elementary education, government, driver education, industrial industrial arts, physical education 234 W. Grand R Iver 1024 E. Grand River ìli arts i auto power mechanics, electricity (girls') (B.M). Location: California. and electronics), journalism, biology, Simmons Co.: All majors of the chemistry, and physics (B.M). / colleges of business, arts and letters, Factory Mutual Engineering Division: communication arts and social science Chemical, civil, electrical, mechanical (B). Location: Midwest. and metallurgical engineering (B). Lo­ Dept, of Health, Education and Wel­ cation: Michigan. Ohio. Indiana and various. Flushing, Mich. Community Schools: fare: United States Public Health Serv­ ice. Venereal Disease Program: All majors of the colleges of arts and let­ K Two Big New York Bands KNPAKP Early and later elementary education, art, ters, human medicine and social sci­ music, mentally handicapped, home ence (B). Location: various. economics, English, industrial arts, Warren Consolidated Schools: Early mathematics, business education, coun­ and later elementary education, art, seling, journalism, physical education music, special education, mentally, lack-Ta la ck (women's), chemistry and physical acoustically handicapped, speech cor­ science iB.M). rection, visiting teacher, guidance, re­ Grand Blanc, Mich., Community medial reading, diagnostician, English, Schools: Early and later elementary edu­ home economics, industrial arts (draft­ cation. core or block-language arts for ing, electricity, electronics, metals, K *, . THE W ILD -U1' v.’; O•; *K»i S•• * 6th grade, art, physical education, music, machine shop and woodworking), Spa­ special education, speech correction, nish. French, mathematics, physical mentally handicapped, science, mathe­ education (women's), science, physical matics. business education, English, science, business education and chem­ home economics, industrial arts (auto istry (B,M). Location : Michigan. U NIO N c °f e t e n a R A W THE HEW RECORDING STARS «um.COUÍICN * THE B IB B IE B IN * p«.wer mechanics, electricity, electron­ April 3 and 4. Wednesday and Thursday: ics, metals, machine shop), German, Corning Glass Works: Metallurgical, Latin. Spanish, French, biology, chem­ mechanical, electrical and chemical en­ istry, physics, physical science, sociolo­ gineering. all majors of the college of basem ent of the Union gy. special education and speech (B.M). business, all MBA's (prefer technical un­ Keebler Co.: All majors of the colleges dergraduate degree), mathematics, sta­ of business, arts and letters, communica­ tistics, physics and chemistry (B,M). Lo­ MACHINE tion arts, social science and engineering cation: various. w w m m suo com United Air Lines: All women, all (Bl. Location: various. City of Livonia, Mich.: Civil engineer­ majors (no degree required). Location: < r m i U>Nk iw ing (B.M). various. »m . Los Angeles City School Districts: m m i§ Early and later elementary education, special education, mentally, acoustical­ ly and physically handicapped, speech aÀyiï.-.ÏV--. correction, agriculture, art, business education. English, health education, home economics, industrial arts.(draft­ ing, electricity, metals, machine shop, WATCH FDR woodworking, printing ). journalism, language, Spanish, mathematics, music, physical education, remedial reading, P a r a p h e r n a lia science, general science, biology, phys­ ical science, social science, geography, GRANDMDTNER’S history, government, maladjusted, driver education, German, Latin, French, chemistry and physics (B.M 1. Madison Township Public Schools: BIG SPRING CALENDAR Early and later elementary education, physical education, art, music, special Paraphernalia, E ast Lansing’ s controversial new education, mgntally handicapped, speech boutique team s up with Grandmother's tonight to INCLUDING . . . correction, guidance, remedial reading, present a bold fashion happening. Top models In TWO OF BILL COSBY'S SIDE KICKS Spanish, French, mathematics, physical A PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE education, science, biology, chemistry, Paraphernalia.*« "now” clothes backed by music by I lie Rt'ltmi ( il the K 11 physics, physical science, special edu­ the Wild Ones from N .Y .’s Arthur. It's a groovy THE RETURN OF SIX RISKE OLD MEN cation, business education, counaeling, combination. Tonight, I0<30 P.M . at Granny's. A TOP MOTOWN GROUP English, home economics, industrial l\u « r » (U arts (auto power mechanics, drafting, eiactricity, metals, machine shop, woodworking, printing), language, ,1 s k .11 t h e I ». ><»k s 1( >( ( German, Latin and Russian (B.M). Lo­ cation: Old Bridge, N.J. Michigan DepartmMt of Mental Health: Labor and iinustrial relations C O M IN G S O O N and political science (B), hotel, restau- Paraphernalia - 541 F. GRAND RIVER PIZZA . SANDWICHES . DRINK - rant and institutional management and all majors of the college of business ad­