RFKconsidersentering Indiana primary contest « MICHIGAN ST A T I U N IV E R S IT Y East Lansing, Michigan NEW S March 28,1968 10c PROVO, Utah (A P I-- Sen. Robert F. Kennedy has all but decided to enter In­ diana's M ay 7 presidential prim ary, set­ ting up a potential three-way race with Sen. Eugene McCarthy and a stand-in Kennedy flew to Provo Wednesday to address an estimated 15,000 students at the traditionally conservative Brigham Young University. While the Mormon student body waited Vol. 60 Number 145 for President Johnson. for Kennedy’s motorcade to arrive from It was understood Wednesday that Ken­ the airport, they filled the university field- nedy, the New York senator who is chal­ house with hymns. lenging the President for the nomination, E arlier, at Weber State College, nestled may fly to Indianapolis Thursday. That at the foot of the Wasatch Range in Ogden, is the. deadline for filing petitions declar­ Kennedy continued to press his anti-war ing his candidacy. Center to counsel on d ra ft He would be running against Gov. Roger See related story page 3 Branigin, representing President Johnson, and probably also against Sen. McCarthy, campaign against the Johnson adminis­ D-Minn., whose supporters say they have tration. enough petition signatures to qualify His voice growing increasingly husky, him for the ballot. he again broadened his attack to include By M A R IL Y N PATTERSON group working to foster peace and freedom assistant professor of mathematics; through the Students for Peace and Free­ The Hoosier state has 63 delegates to Richard M. Nixon, the potential Republi­ State News Staff W riter within the community. A number of James Resh, assistant professor in the dom in the East Lansing high schools," the Democratic national convention. The can nominee. Information and counseling on legal al­ community organizations are cooperat­ systems science program; James An­ Mrs. Guinn said. "We are also trying to state's prospective slate is reported lean­ Kennedy again faulted Nixon for what ternatives to the draft are now available ing. derson. assistant director of Honors Col­ interest high school counselors in our serv­ ing toward Johnson. he called a lack of any new ideas in the at the newly-established D raft Inform a­ The center offers literature on the draft lege; John Brattin. Lansing attorney, and ices." past decade. tion Center, 935 E. Grand River Ave. from religious organizations, the Friends Guinn. The center is open from 1 to 5 p.m. and Kennedy, in announcing his candidacy Kennedy called for creation of a state The center has information on draft law, Peace Committee and the Central Com­ 7 to 9 p.m. Monday through Friday and March 16, said he would support McCarthy peace corps, to be financed by the fed­ conscientious objection, religious denomi­ mittee for Conscientious Objectors. It The center will help high school stu- from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturdays. For in those primaries where the Minnesotan eral government, but to remove federal national statements for conscientious ob­ also has a staff of 10 counselors experi­ dents, as well as college students, who further information, call 489-8035 in the has entered. McCarthy has yet to accept strings from aid programs to local com­ jectors and alternative service. enced in the area of draft advising. face the draft. morning or 351-5283 in the afternoon or the offer and is campaigning on his own munities, allowing the localities a wide The center, which is located off the park­ "We are talking to high school students evening. in Wisconsin. latitude in deciding how the funds w ill be “ The technicalities of trying to gain a ing lot of the Meridian Mutual Insurance deferred status are varied and complicat­ used. Co., opened Tuesday in response to 'th e ed." Mrs. Guinn said, "and the counselors, enormous demand for information. having had previous experience with the “ Many young men are struck with a procedures involved, w ill be able to help grave philosophical question in having to the individual do what he thinks he should fight for a cause that even the statesmen are opposed to." Mrs. Ted Guinn, staff do and do it as quickly and correctly as possible." V honora ries coordinator, said. “ We are here to help them. We do nothing to make up the “ It is much easier for a man to obtain man's mind for him but try to help him find the road that is best for him " deferred status if he makes the applica­ tion before he is Classified 1-A.’ Ted d ire c t p o lic y The center is sponsored by the Greater Guinn, assistant professor of mathematics Lansing Community Organization, a and counselor for the center, said. "The boards are less suspicious of his motives. We are trying to help young men realize fo r Choice ’6 8 this and' appry earry ir cneir intention is to try for a deferred status." By LEO ZA IN E A The other counselors include Rev. W ar­ State News Staff W riter ren Day of United Ministries in Higher Education. Rev. Keith Pohl of University Choice '68 organizers here announced Methodist Church, Rev. Tom Smith of Wednesday they have enlisted the support Unitarian-Universalist M inistry, Peter of 12 service honoraries to direct the na­ Stettenheim and Harrison Hunt. tionwide collegiate presidential prim ary on Also counseling are: John Masterson. April 24. 355-4560 1-5 p.m. Roger Williams, East Lansing junior and Demleaders reluctant campus coordinator, said the honoraries would be responsible for a ll policy-making, though ASMSU would still provide the to.support LBJagain funds. Williams said MSU would possibly be the Is th a t K e n n e d y ? only campus in the nation to use this kind o /1system. The. rt.r* !* pfimarres' wiW ¿a? S if t x iv d b y campus stu­ In Nebraska, where McCarthy w ill be a A b fifb o a rc f in A S h r a n a * # /ic o n « r n W n ' a r r t f e n e r r - o f & o . flfcberf K e n n e d y d e c f a r f n g a t t r a c t in g a lot o f a tte n tio n la t e ly . T h e s ig n w a s p r o d u c e d b y the N o r t h la n d dent governments. The board of directors W ASHINGTON i AP > -- Although 14 of challenger, the White House induceij E u g e n « M c C a r t h y h a s be«n ye • 4s not o n the b a llo t In the A p r i l 2 W i s c o n s i n p r i m a r y . U P I T e le p h o to w ill establish basic guidelines, design the 24 Democratic governors are listed a: John­ . ’ i.-ier G •».. -"’.*31*: V /r r is o r . as w el^as ' C o l i t i - a rt d ep artr-i natiohSUhenot and provide overall leader­ son supporters, administration lieutenants the state chairman and national commit­ ship and direction. are finding that many state party leaders teeman. to come out publicly for Johnson. are reluctant to stand up and be counted But the delegation's 30 votes w ill go to Williams said project spokesmen decided for President Johnson’s renomination. the winner of the prim ary. Kennedy has McCarthy warns business to relieve student government of the Choice A large share of these potential defec­ booked himself into Lincoln. Neb.. Thurs­ '68 “ burden” because of the upcoming tors to Sens. Robert F. Kennedy. D -N .Y .. day for a university speech and a meeting ASMSU election and the consequent and Eugene-' J. McCarthy. D-Minn.. are with Democratic officials. McCarthy will changeover of personnel and leadership. turning up in the 26 states that have Re­ be going in as soon as he completes his publican governors. Wisconsin campaign this week. He said the honoraries welcomed the of possible wage controls These states w ill have 1.382 votes at There are fresh reports of trouble for task with “ fantastic" enthusiasm and none the Democratic convention in Chicago the President in Ohio and Pennsylvania, of those approached refused to take part. next August. 70 more than needed for the previously supposed to be securely in the All of the honoraries have given definite nomination. Johnson camp. commitments, he said. An Associated Press survey disclosed The Ohio Democratic organization is running Sen. Stephen M. Young, a vigor­ CHICAGO (A P )-S en . Eugene J. M c­ President Johnson. He made a fund­ Kennedy brought laughter and applause A ballot of 14 candidates, including both that 14 Democratic governors are sup­ ous Vietnam w ar critic, as a favorite son Carthy. stopping in Chicago to raise money raising appearance and a speech in Chi­ from the audience. extremes of the political spectrum, w ill porting the President, six are noncommit- for complimentary support on the first for his campaign, told businessmen Wed­ cago and talked by telephone with Mayor McCarthy, a member of the Senate be offered to nearly five millon student- al, one is threatening to leave Johnson ballot at the Chicago convention. Young nesday that if the Vietnam war continues Richard J. Daley, a supporter of Johnson. Finance Committee, said if the cost of war voters. Republican candidates include Sen. over Vietnam, one backs Kennedy and two has confided to friends that the leaders to escalate, the nation w ill have to plan for At a news conference, McCarthy fielded rises to $50 billion a year the nation would Mark O. Hatfield of Oregon, Mayor John are for form er Gov. George C. Wallace of are getting nervous about trying to trans­ credit, price and wage controls. questions about a mini-revolt in his have to be prepared to move toward some V. Lindsay of New York, Sen. Charles H. Alabama. In Republican-governed states Johnson fer all of the state's 115 votes to Johnson The Minnesota Democrat took part of "children's crusade." kinds of wartim e controls-and not the sur­ Percy of Illinois, Gov. Nelson Rockefel­ the day off from campaigning in Wiscon­ Asked about the resignation of his cam­ tax now proposed by the Johnson adminis­ ler of New York, Gov. Ronald Reagan of w ill have to win contested primaries to get subsequently. the delegations of five states-Wisconsin, A Democrat intim ately associated with sin for his April 2 prim ary challenge of paign press secretary. Seymour Hersh. 30, tration. California, Harold Stassen and Gov. Rom- the situation in Pennsylvania said the and Hersh’s assistant, M ary Lou Oates, He said some action would have to be ney. President Johnson, Sen. Robert F. Nebraska, Oregon, California, and South Johnson camp’s dependence on Mayors 23, McCarthy said: “ I don’t look upon considered on credit controls and on wage Kennedy of New York and Sen. Eugene Dakota. In none of these is the President Joseph Barr of Pittsburgh and James Tate this as a serious loss to my campaign. and price controls. J. McCarthy of Minnesota are the Demo­ currently looked upon as the favorite. *M c C a r t h y ’ m e e tin g W e'll survive." At a news conference after the speech cratic contenders. of Philadelphia for the state's 130 votes McCarthy repeated that he is considering could be shaken before the convention Mc­ McCarthy said "we have the best or­ M o re Cosby Tickets Carthy's name is on the April 23 prim ary Approximately 150-200 MSU students, members of Students for McCarthy travel­ ganized campaign at the lower level." entering the Florida prim ary but indicated that no final decision has been made. He Choice '68 organizers also placed Gov. George C. Wallace of Alabama, Rev. M ar­ ballot, which is not binding on the dele­ Hersh is a free lance w riter and a form ­ More than 2,000 tickets to the second Bill ing to Milwaukee Friday, w ill meet at 8 said he understands he has until April 20 tin Luther King and Socialist Fred H al­ gation. er reporter for The Associated Press in Cosby show Saturday night have been sold, There are political storm signs in some of tonight in 35 Union. to enter the Florida campaign. stead on the ballot to provide alternatives Chicago and Washington Miss Oates was according to Don Banghart, ASMSU popu­ These students w ill campaign for Sen. McCarthy acknowledged to newsmen for those students “ alienated from the two- the 14 states whose governors are support­ a newswoman for United Press Inter­ lar entertainment chairman. ing Johnson. These states include Texas. Eugene McCarthy this weekend in M ilwau­ later that he had talked by telephone to party system.” national in New York. Their duties were Approximately 4,000 tickets are still Tennessee. West Virginia. Delaware. k e e , Wis. for the state's April 2 presiden­ Mayor Daley, a powerful influence in taken over Wednesday by Paul Gorman, The prim ary w ill be “ open,” in that stu­ available for the second show at 9:30 Hawaii, New Hampshire, Indiana. Illi­ tial primary. They w ill canvas the Milwau­ party politics who has maintained that 38, who had been a speech w riter for the dents w ill be asked to express their party p.m. and are on sale at the Union ticket kee area, going from door-to-door, talking he w ill support re-nomination of Johnson nois. Utah. Connecticut. New Jersey. campaign. office, Campbell’s Suburban Shop and the South Carolina, North Dakota and Loui­ to people about McCarthy and providing (please turn to page 13) (please turn to page 13) Paramount News Center in Lansing. siana. them with information about the senator McCarthy spoke before businessmen at charge Reserved seats are $4.50 and general ad­ and what he stands for. the Paper Board Packaging Council. He Kennedy may challenge Johnson's bid The group w ill leave Lansing Friday was introduced by Henry Van der Eb, East German’s mission is $3.50. for Indiana's 63 votes with Gov. Roger D. Tickets not sold prior to the two perform­ afternoon, work Saturday and return Sun­ Executive vice president of the Container ances w ill be available at the door. (please turn to page 13) day. Corporation of America. In introducing McCarthy, Van der Eb said “ all others have followed in his cour­ ageous footsteps in somewhat unseemly haste." The apparent jibe at Sen. Robert F. spurs Red controversy reported the reformers readying a program P R A G U E ( AP)--CzechosIovakia’s for­ to shed Iron Curtain restrictions on individ­ eign minister summoned East Germany’s ual liberty and perm it “ no-confidence” ambassador Wednesday night to protest A S M S U can d id ates' an attack that was likened here to calling votes against the government. CTK also reported that Czech Ambassa­ him an “ im perialist agent." The attack dor Vaclav Kolar called in East Berlin platform s, pictures due and the official complaint were believed unprecedented in Soviet bloc diplomacy. on Erich Honecker, a top member of the East German Politburo, and East Ger­ All candidates for the ASMSU Student The Czech news agency CTK reported man Foreign Minister Otto Winzer, “ ex­ Board, National Student Association dele­ that Foreign M inister Valclav David pressing objections and disagreement gates, senior class president and vice pres­ notified Ambassador P eter Florin of an with the statements” made by Hager. ident and Off Campus Council should sub­ “ official objection” to statements that The Hager comments stirred wide­ m it platform m aterial, biographical infor­ “ reflected on Czechoslovakia and a mem­ spread indignation here. One party source mation and pictures to the State News as ber of the Czechoslovak government." spoke of a “ sneak attack,” and the Asso­ soon as possible. He referred to a speech in East Germany ciation of Czechoslovak Anti-Fascist Students running for at-large positions by K urt Hager, secretary of the East Ger­ Fighters called Hager’s statement “ in­ on the ASMSU Board who have not been man party Central Committee. He singled terference in the democratic affairs of a contacted by the State News to schedule out Forestry M inister Josef Smrkovsky, a leading Czech liberal and candidate for fraternal country. interviews with the editorial board should call 355-8252 immediately. the vacant post of president, as one of At the same time, a delegation of Candidates and delegates who need pic­ those who are “ filling the West with hope students from Prague’s Charles U niver­ tures taken must report to 301 Student Serv­ that Czechoslovakia w ill be puh?d into the sity delivered a petition to the East G er­ ices Bldg. between 1:30 and 3:30 p.m. to­ maelstrom." man Embassy, denouncing H ager’s at­ day. The incident, reflecting r.ew tension tack as a “ hostile act against the Czech­ d in t j o b between the orthodox Communist nations Contact the State News immediately oslovak people.” if interviews or photographs are not possi­ of East Europe and the reform leadership MSU’s Reserve Officer Training Corps received greetings from the other half recently when they i n i c u i turn to page IS) ble at any time. in Czechoslovakia, came as party sources discovered their sign and doors painted with large peace symbols. State News Photo by Bob Ivins 2 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Thursday, March 28, 1968 WELCOME BACK! IN W IS C O N S IN WITH THESE SUPER BUYS Israelis likely to ignore Nixon to seek FROM LARRY'S U.S.D.A. GRADE A UN 'reprisal’ resolution By MITCH MILLER total GOPvote WAUSAU. Wis. (AP (-R ich ­ other m ajor speech at Milwau­ CHICKEN THIGHS State News Staff Writer Sunday’s U N Security Council N e w s a n a l y s i s ard M. Nixon, whose Wisconsin prim ary campaign has been kee Thursday night. Before the withdrawal of OR BREASTS resolution condemning Israel for its reprisal raids into Jor­ dan has pointed up the problem The Arab nations apparently into a “ Greater Israel” and realize that they cannot defeat make it more advantageous X coasting with his huge acknowl­ edged lead, returned to work Gov. Romney from the Repub­ lican contest. Nixon had planned on concentrating heavily on Wis­ W/RIBS the Israelis face In handling Israel by conventional m ilitary for the inhabitants to be under Wednesday as Republican lead­ consin after the New Hampshire ers battled to hold GOP voters attack. Their response to Is­ Israeli control. 49* the results of their victory in in their own column April 2. primary. the six-day war of last June. rael's occupation has been to The raid on Karameh, in However, with only token op­ He scheduled a m ajor farm LB. The Israelis want to hold on resume terrorist-cum-guerilla Jordan, was one of these. Skateboard sitter address before a Wisconsin position on the GOP ballot from to the territories they captured operations, sim ilar to those The Arab states and their California Gov. Ronald Reagan Farm Bureau convention at for a number of reasons. First, which have been taking place Soviet backers, who have com­ G a r y G r a y , T r e n t o n s o p h o m o r e , w a s t e d no t im e and form er Minnesota Gov. Wausau Wednesday night, a CHIQUITA BRAND the areas are of m ilitary value. since Israel was first estab­ plained periodically about Is­ g e t t in g h i s s k a t e b o a r d o ut o f m o t h b a lls a n d t e s t in g it Harold Stassen. he has made breakfast reception at Oshkosh They provide the Israelis with lished. ra e ls acts, felt that the n e a r B e s s e y H a ll In r e s p o n s e to the f i r s t d a y s o f Thursday, followed by a lunch­ only three sorties into the BANANAS protection against hostile ac­ tivities, and room to maneu­ ver. What they have been hoping scale and duration of this one to force Israel into is the type (several I s r a e l i of response made by most West­ destroyed what was one of the battalions s p r in g . Sta te N e w s P h o to b y M ik e B e a s l e y eon talk at Sheboygan and an- state since March 12. But with Sen. Eugene J. M c­ Carthy touring the Republican 2 » 25£ Second, they possess economic ern nations to this type of w ar­ main bases of guerilla heartlands in a frank bid for value, especially the east bank of the Jordan River, although in the long run the cost of ad­ ministering the territories may fare. that is. a counter-insur­ activities in a day-long bat­ gency effort confined to the tle) areas under attack. provided an opportunity to make a success­ The Israelis, however, are ful case in the United Nations excellent Relaxed Romney crossover votes in his confronta­ tion with President Johnson on the Democratic side. GOP lead­ ers are mounting a drive to Hl-C ORANGE OR outweigh the profit of posses­ unwilling to cooperate. They for a resolution against Israel. keep Republican totals up views racial issue sing them. have conducted both terrorist A compromise resolution Republican State Chairman Third, and probably most im ­ and anti-terrorist campaigns passed, with the support of the Ody J. Fish sent a letter to all GRAPE DRINK portant. they provide the Jerusa­ lem government w ith the nego- tiating powei—that Will liupclully and have come to the con­ United States. clusion that to take the de­ The support was forthcoming fensive in this type of con­ because the U.S. wishes to re­ By the Associated Press mistically to newly enacted would not actively seek the of his party's county chairmen Tuesday, directing them to wage a telephone campaign "to get I QT. 14 OZ. CAN 25* bring the Arabs to talks regard­ ing peace in the Middle East. But if the Israelis are pro­ tected from attacks on Israel flict is to be defeated. gain the goodwill of the Arab So rather than conduct "search states, in addition to furthering and destroy” or sim ilar opera­ the American-Soviet “ detente." tions. which they feel would But there is a more funda­ With the pressure of presiden­ tial campaigning off his shoul­ ders. Gov. Romnev is tackling Michigan's problems with a re­ open housing ordinances in several cities. 'Romnev is pushing the legis­ lature to pass a statewide law- nomination, "m y personal feel­ ing is he i Romnev i would have continued had he not felt that Mr. Rockefeller was going out the Republican vote and to have it vote Republican next Tuesday." Under Wisconsin's open pri­ proper, they now must worry alienate the population of the mental reason why the U.S. laxed and confident air. de­ banning racial discrimination in to be a candidate.” COUNTRY FRESH captured territories, the Israelis supported the resolution, and voting much of his time to mary law. there are no poll about attacks on the captured real estate transactions and has lists of party members, and vot­ Romnev declined comment on FR. ONION FLAVOR territories. have attempted to integrate their that is that our experience with what he considers his state's called for stiffer laws against his wife's statement ers may use either ballot. guerilla warfare has led this No. 1issue-race relations. rioters. In another Republican devel­ DIP ’N CHIP SAYS WELCOME BACK! country to the feeling that it was unfair for the modernized Is­ raelis to beat the underdevel­ During the month since he withdrew from the race for the Republican presidential nomina­ Romnev speaks with ease on some aspects of his unsuccess­ ful presidential bid. but has Of his own future political plans. Romnev says he plans to opment. Stassen told newsmen Thursday that a poll taken in 39« lead the Michigan delegation to six state cities the past two P IN T C A R T O N oped Arabs. tion. the 60-vear-old governor remained silent on others. the convention in M iam i Beach. days showed him running ahead has .conferred with legisitAc'-s. He says he has no excuses and 5 TRU r YOU H A D A FIN E VAC ATiON The U.S. wants Israel to play the game of modernized mayors, aides and civic leaders on the prospects of racial vio­ professes no bitterness at ,his failure to arouse the GOP rank Early in his campaign. Romnev wmwwcW with a flat "no.” of Nixon for the first time. 51 per cent to 40 per cent when ask^G if he were interest­ Stassen. who has been cam­ SHOP-RITE ART STU D EN TS against unmodernized states where the modernized state lence this summer. Spending his time _” in the and file. " I learned some lessons.” he ed in the vice presidency. Now he describes such questions as paigning hard as the GOP "peace candidate.” said this ICE CREAM C H O IC E O F 3 F L A V O R S C h o o s e Y our loses. The Israelis show no interest in following the rules; they feel they are in an al­ process of getting up to date " on Michigan's racial problems and "getting a feeling of where says, adding he has even made a "New Years' resolution" to be nice to the press, which he often "theoretical and speculative” and adds " I'm not going to be showed opposition to Johnson- Nixon policies on the American speculative.” war drive in Vietnam together different contest. The JQC we are'' in solving riot causes accused of misinterpreting his *17 1/2 GAL. memory of the murder of the ; has kept the governor close to A R T S U P P L IE S statements. CARTON Mediation expert six million “ civilized” Jews by home. He has made only two "The press is wonderful.” he the "savage” Nazis is too fresh trips outside Michigan since he said with a smile at a recent F r o m E a s t L a n s i n g 's M o s t C o m p le t e S e le c t i o r for them to feel any guilt about returned from the campaign news conference. "Some are O PEN SU NDAYS defeating the Arbas. who have trail March 1 1 1 :00 A . M . T O 6 :0 0 P . M . more wonderful than others." PRIN TS may settlestrike • re-declared the Nazi ambition Although working mostly at A hint of disillusionment LARRY’S o Ii M m IiW s IwM t Vi 1 Br • T R A V EL PO STER S toward them. And it remains to be seen whether the threat of probably his Lansing office, the governor has made two trips to Detroit showed through, however, when he said. "1 don't believe I was 'r>vfceck racial problems. <\yA'f> AV, 'rcmWiTig. inarticulate FRAM ES I the Israelis to play by our «- /«*. :7v ^iié <*£. ' ■ ■j 110 9 E . G R A N D R I V E R | A c r o s s F r o m T h e H o m e E c . B ld g , 3 19 e . Grand River Michigan faces "another diffi­ Romnev said New York Gov. D E T R O IT U P D -A labor rules. cult and tense„..sumoiei'i” but singer to come in because oi Nelson A. Rockefeller s state­ expert from the Upiversity of "the apparent inability of the says he doesn't anticipate an ment that he t^ould accept a Wisconsin has agreed to try parties even to get close to upheaval as great as the one draft by the GOP convention in­ to settle D etro it’s 133-day- resolving this thing.” which hit Detroit and five other fluenced his own decision to pull old newspaper blackout, Mayor “ If he can’t solve it. then cities last summer. out. but was only one of many Jerome P. Cavanagh announced no one can,” he said. "White and black racists who factors. Wednesday. The Detroit News and the want violence are very, very- His wife Lenore. said on the M i l e s a n d m i l e s o f ju s t a f e w w o r d s a n d h o ld in g h a n d s . few .” he says, and points opti- dav Rockefeller announced he Cavanagh told a news con­ Detroit Free Press h; ve not ference that Nathan P. Fein- published since Nov. 16. One singer would come to Detroit strike against the papers has Thursday "to advise me been settled, but four more PANHELLENIC COUNCIL on what further steps can be continue. W IS H E S T O A N N O U N C E T H A T T H E taken to end this disastrous Thursday, the lengtl- of the 'F O L L O W I N G H O U S E S W I L L B E O P E N S U M M E R ’6 8 labor dispute.” newspaper blackout will equal 2 f l f e Feinsinger, a law professor, the record shutdown of 1964. ALPHA DELTA PI has a 30 year background in Cavanagh said Feinsinger CHI OMEGA mediation and arbitration. He “might be able to devise some DELTA DELTA DELTA was an umpire in disputes formula upon which this dis­ KAPPA DELTA KAPPA ALPHA THETA Between General Motors Corp. pute could be settled.'' ZETA TAU ALPHA and the United Auto Workers He said Feinsinger would from 1954 to 1966. and was in­ have to leave D etroit Friday, R O O M ( 7 d a y s ) and B O A R D (5 d a y s m e a ls ) volved in the settlement of but indicated he would come Is $225 such labor disputes as the New back next week f needed. York transit strike of 1966 The mayor blamed the stale­ A P P L Y T O D E S IR E D C H A P T E R H O U SE and the Hawaiian pineapple ship­ mate on "attitudes by person­ 11 W E E K T E R M ping strike of 1947. alities” involved in the ne­ Cavanagh said he asked Fein- gotiations. He did not specify which personalities or what attitudes. About 600 members of Team­ Casual. . . Bouncy. . . Easy-going. . . sters Local 372 went on strike against the D etroit News Nov. 16 when their work contract expired. The Free Press suspended publication the next day. char­ ging violations of joint con­ tracts that the two newspapers had with News employes who refused to cross the Team ­ sters' picked line. Local 372, under pressure from its international union, signed new contracts with the Free Press Feb. 15 and with the News March 15. But the contracts of 13 other unions expired during the Teamsters strike, and four of the 13 went on strike. B ook store fails, S u m m e r is f o l l o w i n g g o o d v i b r a t i o n s . . . f e e l i n g h a p p > . . . t a l k i n g A v a il a b l e In B r e v l t t B r o w n declared a b o u t t i l i n g s t h a t m a t t e r a n d t i l i n g s t h a t d o n ' t . . . r u n n i n g ar< m i n i and G o ld e n H a r v e s t T a n w it h f r i e n d s . . . u s i n g T W A ' s S O 5 0 ( H u b e a r d t o d is e t > \ e r n e w p la c e s bankrupt a ll o \ e r th e I S f o r o n ly h a lf f a r e ... M e e t in g p e o p le ...th e s u rfe rs a t M a iib u ...s t o m p in g a n d y e llin g S16M The owner of the Spartan Book Store, 307 D. Grand River Ave., missed his first at th e M o n t e r e y P o p F e s t iv a l...a n d th e N e w p o r t I o ik I e s tiv a l... Use your charge account In both stores — Ask us about FREE PARKING. school opening in 20 years d a n c in g a ll n ig h t a t th e S a lv a t i o n . .. d r in k in g b e e r a t th e D o d g e r 's g a m e .. this term. He declared bank­ I ' o i k s in g in g S u n d a y s in W a s h in g t o n S q u a r e . . . t h e a r t is ts a n d w r it e r s ruptcy at a March 14 court hearing. a t B ig S t ir ...t h e b i g g u y s a n d th e lit t le g u y s ...t h e p e o p le w h o a g r e e w m i Charles S. Wylie, the owner, said he couldn't do anything to xhepard y o u a n d th e p e o p le w h o d o n 't ... ju s t b e in g t o g e t h e r ...a ll th e p e o p le EAST LANSING stop the decline of business a t T W A w h o w a n t y o u to h a v e a g o o d s u m m e r . . I im l t h e m ... I itu l y o u . 317 E. Grand River Ave. DOWNTOWN that he first felt when the MSU S u m m e r is a f i n d i n g - o u t t i m e . C i l i e c k y o m tr a \ el a g e n t, 326 S. Washington Ave. Bookstore in the International o r y o u r n e a re s t T W A o ffic e ! ■ d s K v a y J h

. is published every class day throughout the year with special prices indicated no let-up in the near future. See page H. served as chairman of the Welcome Week and Orientation issues in June and September. Sub- United Nations’ General Assem­ scrip.ion rates are lit per year. A Johnson administration lieutenants are anxious for state bly Committee on Social, Cul­ Member Associated Press, United Press International, Inland party leaders to stand up and be counted for the President in tural and Humanitarian Affairs, Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press, Michigan order to curb potential defectors to Sens. Robert F. Kennedy representative to the U N Eco­ Press Association, Michigan Collegiate Press Association, United D-N. Y .. and Eugene J. McCarthy. D-Minn. nomic and Social Council Stale Student Press Association. (UNESCO), permanent repre­ A A 10-day-old walkout by nearly 22JOOO longshoremen has sentative to UNESCO in Paris Second class postage paid at Kast Lansing. Mich. idled some 160 ships in New York ports and threatens to rot and ambassador to France. Editorial and business offices at 347 Student Services Building. rypcishable foodA. Tbe ccsA of Ito1 walkout is about (3 Michigan State I niversity, Kast Lansing, Mich. In 1941 he received his coun- ' ‘ . ; * • c ,. ( f * .S f t y . i / l w,.- ■ - for a volume of essays, editorial . . . . ..................JSS-KZfc NR Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy, who was in Chicago to raise "Literature and Society,” and Classifird Advertising ............................................. .................... money for his presideritidl bid", said that if the Vietnam war has received m ilitary and civil­ Display Advertising................................................* ...............................................i f ' “ ™ ■• continues to escalate the nation w ill have to plan lor credit ian decorations from many na­ Photographic........................................................................................ ..... price and wage controls. * * * Pa8*‘ 1 tions Lopez’s appearance here was £ Sponsors of a bill that w ill combine a federal spending «SSiftWSiSS cut with the administration's 10 per cent surtax are pushing for Senate passage of the measure, but concede that House acceptance is doubtful. Michigan N ew s A Gov. Romney, now a month out of the pressures ol the presidential race, is tackling the state's problems with a re­ laxed and confident air. and is devoting much of his time to Michigan's race problems. Pa* e You’ll Find ALL Your Art Materials 0 Doctors in Pontiac think that a five-year-old girl suffer­ ing from an often fatal blood disease may be cured with up to 50 blood transfusions a week. She has already had 800 transfu­ ’Across From Olin’ sions. Mayor Jerome P. Cavanagh of Detroit announced that Na­ . . . Complete supplies are ready for ACTIVE than P. Feinsinger. a labor expert from the I niversitv of Wis­ consin. has agreed to try to settle Detroit s 133-day-old news­ paper blackout. See page 2. every MSU art course. NEEDS T R A N S F U S IO N S PEOPLE 5 -y e a r- o ld attles LOVE US! ART 132 K IT S A vailab le NOW d e a d ly disease PONTIAC. Mich (A P i- Mrs. Harrington says, indicate ve-year-old Sally Harrington, ffering from an often-fatal Sally's marrow is beginning one« again to produce both red ONLY at the store ood disease, has been kept and white corpuscles, and ive for six months with 800 nts of blood. It the trans- sions. which range up to 50 equally important, that the m ar­ row's platelet-making mecha­ nism may start working again. ACROSS FROM OLIN nts a week, can be kept up. Platelets cause the blood to ?r doctors think she may be ired. The dark-haired, blue-eyed clot Without them, a minor cut could cause a hemorrhage and death The goal is to keep T h a t '* r ig h t .. . a c t iv e p e o p le a r e f u n - t im e p e o p le . T h e y k n o w h o w to e n jo y t h e m s e lv e s , no m a t t e r w hat the s it u a t io n . W h e n t h e ir c le a n in g lo a d s It’s the Art Student’s Book Store. illy lives in danger around the Sally alive until she once again b e g in p i li n g up, do th e y w o r r y ? H e c k no! T h e y b r i n g t h e ir c lo t h e s to one ock and has been confined to makes her own platelets. o f o u r 3 c o n v e n ie n t lo c a t io n s , s a v i n g t im e a n d m o n e y . K n o w w h a t th e y do padded bed since last Septem- Sally must stay in her padded th e n ? T h e y go out and e n jo y t h e m s e lv e s a g a in ! ?r at St. Joseph's Hospital bed to avoid being bruised or i Pontiac. cut and must avoid activity, Ask about our d rop-off s e r v ic e . Her mother. Mrs. Emmanuel which burns up platelets. arrington. says it takes 50 Although doctors say Sally ints of blood a week to keep isn't yet producing enough red ally "fu ll of pep and looking ke nothing was wrong with or white blood cells, her mother said the chance of bleeding is. to her. the big threat. S u n s h in e C e n te r er." « Sally went to the hospital Her need for blood has rompted several hundred peo- le in the Detroit and Pontiac daily for transfusions between last March and September, and Save T i m e . . . Save Money -ea to donate f or her she has been confined there She has aplastic anemia a since then 3 Great Locations For Your Convenience ‘ukemia like disease, in which Her parents are 400 pints in tie bone marrow tails to pro arrears at the blood bank but 1 - 2 1 3 A n n S tre e t uce necessary blood compo- hundn■eds have pitched in to 2 - C o r n e r of H a r r is o n & W ils o n R o a d 3 - N o r t h w ln d D r . F a c i n g Y a n k e e S t a d iu m P la z a ents. Her mother sa\s lew help More than 230 pints have ver have survived it long as been donated by Harrington's felle yrkers at a GM Truck Jut there is hope now If she can just stay i I then and Coal •h Division plant, stu dents at L wrence Institute of WASH N DRY CLEAN WASH N DRY CLEAN ig enough, they know I >r sun Techr logy in Detroit a Buick :y can cure her s, iJQ Ifit sales (fiee in nearby Drayton ither. wife of a Genei al Mo Plaira and by neighbors in the luburban subdivision near Pon Join Those W h o Expect More . ... .......... A n d Save s foreman, decent bone marrow iac where the Harringtons live M I C H I G A N ./«hi«'« I). Spuniolo Eric 1‘innin. executive eililur editor-in-ch ief t.m rrence II erner, niiintipinp etlitor STATE N EW S Stun Hicheihttn in Hohbx Sullen, cum pus editor E lim ini I. Hrill, editorial editor Joe Milch, sports editor U N I V E R S I T Y nil certi si iig nm itftfii‘ 1 T h u r s d a y M o r n in g . M a r c h 28.1968 Five-time recipient of the Pacemaker award for outstanding journalism Political petal-picking : choice 968 E D IT O R IA L S p o r t u n is t , p o w e r - h u n g r y im a g e . D a i s i e s a r e in. H e h a s g i v e n h i m s e l f a lo t to T h e y ’r e n ic e p e t a l- p ic k in g o ve rco m e . F o r th ose w h o s h y f lo w e r s f o r in d e c is iv e p r e s i d e n ­ a w a y fro m K e n n e d y , he se e m s t ia l c a n d id a t e p o t e n t ia ls a n d to p o s s e s s a d e g r e e o f a b r u p t ­ fo r fru stra te d vo te rs. n e ss, r u t h l e s s n e s s a n d i m p e r s o n ­ T h e f i r s t c a n d id a t e in the a l c o n c e r n f o r a n y o n e in h is r in g , G o v . R o m n e y , w a s a ls o w a y . O n th e o n e h a n d a n y th e f ir s t to flee. lik e n e s s in s p e e c h , t h o u g h t o r G o v . N e ls o n A . R o c k e f e l l e r m a n n e r i s m s to th e la t e J o h n F . w a s e x p e c t e d to s t e p f o r w a r d , K e n n e d y b r i n g s p r a is e , r e s p e c t , b u t le ft s u p p o r t e r s g a p i n g in a n d s u p p o r t ; o n th e o th e r, s u c h a sh o c k w h e n he re fu se d . l ik e n e s s i s v ie w e d a s “ p l a g i a r ­ A n t ic ip a t io n t h a t R o b e r t F . is m ” a n d he b e c o m e s a “ fre e K e n n e d y w o u ld e n t e r w a s n ’t r id e s e e k e r . ” w id e s p r e a d , b u t h e did. In th e K e n n e d y -M c C a rth y S e n . E u g e n e M c C a r t h y m o t i­ co m m a n d of th e R e p u b lic a n ta t io n in th e p r i m a r i e s , a c o n ­ m o v e m e n t, th e re is hop e fo r v a te d th e y o u th , m a d e a r e ­ n o m in a tio n . f r o n t a t io n a n d a ll- o u t b a t t le b e ­ c h a n g e , e v e n if it i s a s l i m one. m a r k a b le s h o w in g in th e N e w tw e e n m o d e r a t e s a n d c o n s e r v a ­ S t ill, it w o n ’t b e s u r p r i s i n g if H a m p s h ire p r im a ry and is tiv e s. P e rh a p s R o c k e fe lle r th e r e v o l v i n g d o o r s p e w s f o r t h g r a d u a l l y g a i n i n g r e c o g n it io n W h e th e r R o c k e f e l l e r ’s re ­ j u s t f a ile d to r e c o g n iz e th e d e p th o n ly J o h n s o n a n d N i x o n o n e le c ­ a s a s e r io u s a lt e r n a t iv e f o r the fu sa l w a s a f o r m of s u r r e n d e r of s u p p o r t he h a d a c q u ir e d . tio n d a y . . . o n ly s a d d e n in g . D e m o c r a t ic P a r t y . o r stra te g y, th e R e p u b lic a n E i t h e r w a y , it i s r e g r e t t a b le --T h e E d i t o r s A n d P re sid e n t J o h n so n co n ­ P a r t y d o e s n o t h a v e a n a c t iv e tin u e s a s P r e s i d e n t J o h n s o n . d ia lo g u e g o in g . S o m e c o n te n d th a t h e is n o t c h a lle n g in g N i x o n A n d f o r m e r V ic e P r e s i d e n t th a t he m e r e l y w is h e d to a v o id to w h a t c o u ld h a v e b e e n a n i m ­ p o rta n t a nd m u c h needed de­ JIM BU SCH M A N R i c h a r d N i x o n a p p e a r s to h a v e a p e r s o n a l a n d v io le n t c o n f r o n - b a te o f th e is s u e s . F o r a l l p r a c ­ t ic a l p u r p o s e s , th e R e p u b l ic a n M e a n w h ile a t M S U c o n v e n t io n w i l l b e o n e w it h o u t a c h o ic e . A g a in , th e lib e r a l w in g o f th e W e lc o m e , th e stu d e n t t e a c h e r m u m s th e w o r d R e p u b lic a n p a r t y h a s f a ile d to u n ite b e h in d a c a n d id a t e o r e v e n E D I T O R ’S N O T E : J i m B u sc h m a n re ­ T h e p a s t tw o w e e k s in p o lit ic s c o n j u n c t io n w it h C h o ic e 68 p u t u p a g o o d fig h t. N ix o n , h o w ­ c e n tly re tu rn e d f r o m D e t r o it ’s F e r n - h a v e s e e n b o th e x p lo s io n a n d w h ic h w i l l b e h e ld A p r i l 24. e v e r, a s G o ld w a t e r d id in 1964, d a le H ig h , w h e r e he sp e n t w in t e r t e r m e x c it e m e n t in th e p r e s id e n t ia l H e r e th e s t u d e n t s w i l l h a v e a h a s b e e n h a r d a t w o r k o v e r th e a s a stu d e n t t e a c h e r of E n g li s h . E a r ­ c a n d id a t e sc e n e . S e n . E u g e n e c h a n c e to e x p r e s s t h e ir p r e s i ­ p a st fe w y e a rs. lie r t h is w e e k , he s t a g g e r e d in to the o ffic e w it h the f o llo w in g a cc o u n t. M c C a r t h y ’s u n e x p e c t e d s u c c e s s d e n t ia l p r e f e r e n c e s , a n d e x- N i x o n p le d g e d in N e w H a m p - - 'i 't * vii^vcjftsU» c a m p u s in th e .New. H a m jv s t y r e o r i m a r y o.osure to th e Qa.«jdidat s id e n o t o n ly the p o w e r o f p a t r o n a g e a n d I Ra is e d aw kam d , NOBODY CAN LOOK R I6 H T 10HEN A TEACHER LOOKS RIG H T IdH V DO ES M IS S CTTHMAR the c e m e n t in g f o rc e o f o r g a n iz a t io n a l h ab it. h is o p p o n e n t s - D e m o c r a t o r R e p u b l i c a n - In t h is s e n s e the b e s t p r e d ic t io n o f the A nd m is s o thm ar THROUGH MW BETTER TH A N A THROUGH MOD, YOU KNOlO YOOYfc m a y b e ta k in g . T h i s is a p r im it iv e k in d of c o n v e n t io n a n d e le c t io n r e s u lt s w ill b e a LOOK RIG H T THROUGH M E T H e h a s th e u n p a ra lle le d s t r e n g t h o f the LOOKED RIGHT TEACHER GAN LOOK RIGHT THROUGHM)U BEEN LOOKED R I6H T THROUGH! a p p e a l, a n d the P r e s id e n t w ill m a k e it in lo n g - r a n g e p r e d ic t io n o f th e c o u r s e o f the p r e s id e n t ia l o f f ic e itse lf, w it h it s s t r a t e g ic THROUGH ME.., d r a m a t i c le v e ra g e , a n d it s c a p a c it y fo r a p r i m it i v e w a y . w it h o u t a n y s u b tle tie s, w a r a n d p ea ce . L y n d o n J o h n s o n k n o w s this. k n o w in g th a t it w i ll a r o u s e s t r o n g e m o ­ W h e n he s a y s h e i s c o n c e n t r a t in g o n the g e tt in g a tte n tio n f o r the i s s u e s th a t the t i o n s - j u s t a s the p e a c e a p p e a l b y h is w a r a n d the p e a c e ' he m e a n s it. b e c a u s e o ffic e c a n c re a te . F i n a l l y he h a s the " s p l i t ­ o p p o n e n ts i s a r o u s in g s t r o n g e m o t io n s on no t' o n ly the n a t io n 's fu t u r e h a n g s o n the t e r " a n d " s p o i l e r " a r g u m e n t a g a in s t K e n ­ the o t h e r D e m o c r a t ic sid e . H e w ill n o t be o u tc o m e , b u t h is o w n p o lit ic a l f u t u r e a s ^ ne d y. in a d d it io n to the s y m b o li c a lb a t r o s s a n e a s y m a n to beat. w e ll. th a t B o b b y a lr e a d y c a r r i e s in the f o r m of B u t h is r e a l c h a n c e f o r the n o m in a tio n . C o p y r ig h t 1968. L o s A n g e le s T i m e s the r e s e n t m e n t o f the K e n n e d v d v n a s t y Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Thursday, March 28, 1968 5 O U R R IA D B R S ’ M IN D THE T h e i s s u e : A m e r i c a , n o t V i e t n a m B s ta le m a t e b e tw e e n the U n ite d E D IT O R ’S N O TE: The moral and political insight: file s the v e r y e s s e n c e of A m e r i- the re m a y b e n o lim it to w h a t S t a t e s a n d the S o v ie t U n io n following letter by James P. the problem of Vietnam is c a - a n ill-a d v is e d a d v e n t u r e in a d e s p e r a t e le a d e r s h ip m a y d o h a s-so fa r-sa v e d the p eop le Warburg was sent to the State the problem of America! M r. w h ic h w e a p p e a r to be i m p r is ­ to e s c a p e f r o m a d m it t in g its O of V ie t n a m f r o m n u c le a r ho lo­ News by Marcus G. Raskin, Warburg crosses generational oned b y the ir r a t io n a l c o m p u l­ m is ta k e s . caust. co-director of the Institute for lines to reach out to us on sio n of o u r le a d e r s to r e in ­ W h e n the y o u th o f A m e r ic a , T h e is s u e A m e r ic a n s fa c e in Policy Studies, and co-author the public problem which h a s fo rc e e r r o r r a t h e r th a n r e c o g ­ c o n fro n te d w it h the d ile m m a s th is e le c t io n y e a r is b ro a d e r with Bernard F a ll of the book become central to our lives.” nize m is j u d g m e n t a n d m i s c a l­ p re se n te d to it b y a n o ld e r than f in d in g " a n h o n o r a b le w a y “ Vietnam Reader” . Warburg cu la tion . g e n e ra tio n , s e e s n e w s r e e ls of ou t of V i e t n a m . " A w a y m u s t O is a noted financier and author T o the E d i t o r : The "re s tle s sn e s s " w h ic h in n o c e n t c iv ilia n s b e in g k ille d be fo u n d o u t of the m o r a l and was a foreign and eco­ M o r e a n d m o r e A m e r ic a n s o u r P r e s id e n t s e n s e s a m o n g u s b y A m e r ic a n b o m b s a n d o t h e r s m o r a s s in to w h ic h o u r c i v i l i ­ nomic policy adviser to Presi­ a re b e g in n in g to re a liz e is not m e r e ly im p a t ie n c e o r m a im e d a n d re n d e re d h o m e le s s z a tio n h a s flo u n d e re d . We dent Franklin D. Roosevelt. th a t o u r in t e r v e n t io n in V ie t ­ re se n t m e n t o f fu tile s a c rif ic e . - w h e n it s e e s b r a v e A m e r i ­ need to fin d le a d e r s w h o w ill Raskin stated, “ I find this' n a m h a s b e c o m e a m a s s iv e , Not "re s tle s sn e s s " b ut fe a r c a n s g iv in g up t h e ir liv e s in re c o g n iz e th a t o u r n a tio n h a s letter tim ely because of its s e n s e le s s o b s c e n it y th a t d e ­ h a u n ts our n a t io n - f e a r that the n a m e of d e m o c r a c y in o r ­ K o f t h is w a r that m in g le s , in p r im it iv e b a r b a r is m that b e­ lost its b e a r in g s , has o v e r­ d e r to m a in t a in in p o w e r a a ll a g e -g ro u p s , w it h the s a d ­ g a n w h e n H it le r m a d e e x t e r ­ re a c h e d it s e lf and . in so d oin g, c o rru p t, in e ffic ie n t a n d u n p o p u ­ ne ss, s h a m a n d d is g u s t e v o k e d m in a t io n a m o d e of w a r f a r e has w a st e d its m o ral and la r r e g im e of f e u d in g g e n e r a ls A c t io n p la n fo r w a r d is s e n t and m a n d a r i n s - i t is s m a l l w o n ­ d e r that fe w a r e in s p ire d w it h p a trio tic fe rv o r; and s m a ll b y the s ig h t of w o m e n a n d c h il­ d re n in c in e ra te d , o f p itifu l p e a s ­ a n t h u t s se t a fir e a n d o f the and w h e n B r i t a i n a n d the U n ite d Sta te s, r e le c t a n t ly a t firs t, r e ­ ta lia te d w it h o b lit e r a t io n r a id s m a t e ria l s u b s ta n c e . te rn a tiv e to a c o n tin u a tio n of c u rr e n t p o lic y is not a r e ­ treat in to is o la t io n is m . T h e a l­ W hat w o n d e r .that m o t h e r s a n d fath- c r u m p le d h e a p s of A m e r ic a n in w h ic h h u n d r e d s of t h o u sa n d s dead. of c i v i li a n s in G e r m a n y and is ne ed e d is a r e a p p r a is a l of T o the E d it o r : w ill h a v e no s u c c e s s in th e f u ­ try. W e f u lly a g r e e w it h S e n a ­ e r s - e v e n fa th e rs w ho have T h e r e is a g r o w in g r e a liz a ­ J a p a n w e r e frie d a liv e in s e a s w h a t a r e A m e r i c a 's tru e v ita l to r M a n s f ie ld in h is w a r n in g s B ture. s e rv e d in o th e r w a r s - - a r e t o rn * The f o llo w in g le tte r is a tio n th a t th is w a r is b u t the of f la m e d e lib e r a t e ly kin d le d . in te re sts, its p ro p e r re sp o n ­ W e fe e l that th o se w h o re p ­ a g a in s t the n e c e s s it y o f tax b e tw e e n p a t r io t ic lo y a lt y a n d m e a n s of p ro te s t a g a in s t the la te st ste p in the r e g r e s s io n T h e d a w n of the n u c le a r a ge s ib ilitie s a n d the e f fe c tiv e lim it s re se n t u s a n d a s k f o r o u r v o te s in c re a s e s , e c o n o m ic c o n tro ls, a n x io u s doubt. For it is w a r in V ie t n a m . A n in d e p e n d e n t of W e ste rn c iv iliz a t io n into d id not in a u g u r a t e the d e sce n t of its p o w e r. O n ly in the c o n ­ h a v e a n o b lig a t io n to c o n s id e r etc.. w h ic h w ill re s u lt if th is doub t a s to the rig h t e o u s n e s s g r o u p of s tu d e n ts a t D o u g la s s into s a v a g e r y . W hen T ru m a n text of such a r e a p p r a is a l the a m o u n t of d is s e n t th a t h a s w a r is not stop p e d . T h e a m o u n t C o lle g e o f R u t g e r s U n i v e r s i t y and C h u r c h ill le a r n e d at P o t s ­ w ill w it h d r a w a l f r o m V ie t n a m been a n d is c o n t in u o u s ly v o ic e d o f s a c r if ic e w it h w h ic h the A in N e w J e r s e y w ro te , p rin te d d a m th a t " t h e b a b ie s had been g o d o w n in h is t o ry , not a s a a c r o s s A m e r ic a . It is o fte n felt A m e r ic a n p u b lic is faced , in a nd c ir c u la t e d it f o r s ig n a t u r e s o v e r a th re e d a y p e rio d . A t the and is ofte n eavd th a t b e c a u se t e r m s of liv e s a lon e , is t o ta lly P arad ox o f a tro c ity -s a lv a tio n b o r n " a t A la m a g o r d o . the d e ­ h u m a n iz a t io n of w a r had a l­ defeat, b ut a s the m o r a l r e ­ b irth of a g r e a t nation. that d is s e n t c o m e s m o s t lo u d ly out of p r o p o r t io n to the e n d s end of the f ir s t d a y . 700 p e r ­ ha rd . I 'm s u r e th a t b y the tim e re a d y re a c h e d a p o in t at w h ic h T h e is su e is no t V ie tn a m . f ro m the y o u n g e r m e m b e r s of fo r w h ic h t h is w a r is b e in g T o the E d it o r : s o n s h a d s ig n e d the le tte r in I g ra d u a te . I w ill u n d e r st a n d th e y felt no q u a lm a b o u t u s in g The is su e is A m e r ic a - w h a t the a d u lt p o p u la tio n , it need fought. T h e fa c t that m y g o v e r n m e n t sort of a n a tio n w e w a n t A m e r i ­ T a s e v e n h o u r p e rio d . T h e letter, not be c o n s id e re d s e r io u s ly . C o n s e q u e n tly . we b e lie v e s o u n d ly c o n d e m n s the R h o d e s ia n w h y a n e x e c u tio n in R h o d e s ia is the new w e a p o n s of m a s s m u r ­ a lo n g w it h c o p ie s o f e v e r y s ig n a ­ d e r a n d d e s t r u c t io n that s c i ­ ca to be a n d w h a t p a rt w e w is h F ir s t , w e d is a g r e e on the g r o u n d s that the t im e is lo n g p a st d u e g o v e r n m e n t 's e x e c u tio n of th re e b a rb a ro u s , w h ile a n e x e c u tio n in ture. h a s b een se n t to e v e r y U .S . e n ce a n d t e c h n o lo g y h a d p la ce d it to p la y in a w o r ld in w h ic h that it is p e r h a p s w e w h o h a v e fo r the S e n a te to d e m a n d the t e r r o r is t s m a k e s m e p ro u d to the U .S . is n 't. A n d w h y an S e n a to r. e x e c u tio n in R h o d e s ia is a n in th e ir 'h a n d s. N o r d id the a ll w a r h a s b e c o m e a thre at the g r e a t e s t s t a k e in the fu tu re re in s ta te m e n t of its r ig h t to be a n A m e r ic a n . I 'm p ro u d to If a la r g e n u m b e r of stu d e n ts a tro c ity , w h ile the b o m b in g of h o r r o r s of H i r o s h i m a a n d N a g a ­ to the s u r v iv a l of c iv iliz a ­ of t h is c o u n try . T h a t f u t u r e w ill a d v is e a n d g iv e c o n se n t to P r e s ­ k n o w that m y g o v e r n m e n t s ta n d s w e re to ta k e the s a m e k in d of s a k i p re v e n t la te r le a d e r s f r o m tion. be a d ir e c t r e s u lt of the d e c is io n s id e n tia l p o lic y . W e d o not u n d e r ­ fo r w h a t is rig h t. A n d I ta k e a V ie t C o n g o c c u p ie d v illa g e is T a ctio n , a n d a t the s a m e tim e a d o p tin g a p o lic y of " m a s s i v e J a m e s P. W a r b u r g m a d e f o r u s a n d fo rc e d u p o n us sta n d h o w w e c a n be e x p e c te d p rid e in the k n o w le d g e th a t m y a n a c t o f s a lv a tio n . H o w m a n y p u b lic iz e it o u ts id e of the c o lle g e in n o c e n t v illa g e r s w e re " e x ­ r e t a lia t io n . " O n lv the n u c le a r D e e r f ie ld B e a c h . F lo r id a now. Se c o n d , it is o fte n t ru e that to s u p p o r t a w a r w h ic h is p u r ­ g o v e r n m e n t w o u ld n e v e r c o m m it o c o m m u n it y , it s im p a c t is b o u n d the y o u n g e r m e m b e r s o f the p o rte d to be fo u g h t in the n a m e su c h a n u n c iv iliz e d act. e c u te d " by our b o m b s? to b e felt. p o p u la tio n a r e m o r e in te re ste d of the A m e r ic a n p e o p le a s re p ­ I 'm o n ly a n ig n o ra n t f r e s h ­ M ic h a e l M a k in e n o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o T h e a m o u n t o f d is s e n t a g a in s t and he nce, b e tte r in fo rm e d . re se n te d b y the S e n a te w h e n , in m a n now . b u t if 1 s t u d y v e r y L a k e L in d e n , f r e s h m a n the w a r w h ic h h a s b e e n v o ic e d T h ird , it i s ir o n ic and. a t th is in the S e n a te in the p a s t fe w w e e k s c o n v in c e d u s that t h is point, t ra g ic , that th o se w h o m u st im p le m e n t that p o lic y re a lity , it is not If w e a r e e x p e c t ­ ed to f u lfill o u r C o n s t it u t io n a lly - d e fin e d o b lig a t io n s , w h at rig h t L k in d o f a c tio n w ill not be w a s t ­ h a v e little to s a y in its f o r m u la ­ ed. I f S e n a t o r s o r C o n g r e s s m e n tion. h a s the P r e s id e n t to m is u s e h is C o n s t it u t io n a lly -lim it e d pow ­ Lowe Brothers Paint GREATEST MUSICAL HIT E a re re m in d e d e m p h a t ic a lly W e h a v e q u e s tio n e d a n d c o n ­ e r s ? 329 S. W A S H IN G T O N , L A N S IN G 487 -09 61 that t h is i s a n e le c tio n y e a r, tin ue to q u e s tio n the n a t u r e of th e y w ill be fo rc e d to a c k n o w l­ the in v o lv e m e n t in S o u th e a s t W e u r g e yo u . a s a S e n a t o r o o o o o o o o o o o o o e d g e the a m o u n t of d is s e n t ART SUPPLIES A sia . W e q u e s tio n w h e t h e r the and a s o u r re p re s e n t a t iv e , to T h u r s ,, F r I . - A p r. 4 & 5 that e x is t s, w h e t h e r it c o m e s c o n tin u a tio n a n d e x p a n s io n of support a.mu nd h ncip e lp mmol, in itia te mi im m e - U N IV E R S IT Y A U D IT O R IU M C A N BE FOUGHT f ro m s tu d e n ts o r not. the p re se n t p o lic y is in the in ­ d iate a c tio n w h ic h w o u ld r e ­ R e s e rv e d Seats $6, $5, $4 te re st of t h is c o u n t r y at all. sto re the S e n a te s rig h t to ad- IN L E ISU R E F u r t h e r m o r e , w e c a n n o t a cce p t — and v ise — 1 g iv e c o n se n t b y re v o k - .0 0 re d u c tio n to MSU students w ith v a lid a te D e a r M r . S e n a to r: In v ie w of the d e b a te that took e ith e r the m o r a l o r p o lit ic a l ing the p o w e r y o u d e le g a te d to YOUR V O L U M E IS YOUR SAVING U N IO N T IC K E T O F F IC E DU RING MSU p la c e in the S e n a te on M a r c h 7. o b lig a t io n s w h ic h have been the P r t ident inAt*1964 - -J B y t h is a c - / K . -I • -a»* * - «r ¡V'. > . « r , , . ■ ■■ ' ■ *} ■ e 2 j '# V . , . , «sH- - : A 9 a ' tion^ f o r that in v o lv e m e n t . W e States w if r e g a in the re p re se n - Y o r k T im e s , o v e r the q u e s tio n feel that th e se p u rp o rt e d o b lig a ­ tatio id u u un 111 in C o n g r e s s w h ic h h a s $21 - $ 4 0 .....................SAVE E X T R A HOURS of the f u r th e r e s c a la t io n of the been d e n ie d to th e m f o r th e past w a r in V ie t n a m a n d the p o lic y tio n s f a ll f a r s h o r t of b e in g s u f ­ $ 4 1 -$ 8 0 .....................SAVE A s S e e n I n S e v e n t e e n fic ie n t r e a s o n s fo r the d e s t r u c ­ fo u r y e a r s in the m a t t e r of th is i* of the P r e s id e n t in c a r r y i n g on tion o f the a lr e a d y p r e c a r io u s w ar. $ 8 1 -$ 1 2 0 ...................SA VE that w a r. we. the u n d e r sig n e d , in t e rn a l b a la n c e of t h is coun- 700 in te re ste d p e r s o n s su p p o rt a n d a g r e e w it h the s ta te ­ m e n t s of S e n a t o r s F u lb r ig h t . T O N IT E Kennedy. M a n s f ie ld . C h u rc h . Gay Gibson9s H a tfie ld . H a rtk e . C ase, and til M ille r . W e w h o lly a g r e e w it h the 6Beardsley 9:00 P.M. a b o v e S e n a t o r s th a t th e re h a s b een v ir t u a lly no su cc e ss C om e. Prints9 a c h ie v e d in th a t w a r a s it h a s b een c o n d u c te d o v e r the p a st s e v e n y e a rs . E v e n f r o m the S te p s o ftly in to tn e lim it e d am ount of tion a v a ila b le f r o m the n e w s in f o r m a ­ in e v ita b le w o r ld o f F R ID A Y m e d ia , it is o b v io u s th a t a c o n ­ tin u a tio n of the p re se n t p o lic y THE VELVET 8 $0 A.M. to UNDERGROUND 5:30 P.M. Where there is no now. Where yawning yesterdays fade out on timeless tomorrows. Where sounds reflect from plastic people. And reverberate in exploding whispers, electrifying echoes. SA TU RD A Y Come. To where vinyl virgins devour the macabre mind. 11:00 A.M. And flowers of evil bloom in the Elysian-pure atmosphere of to W H I T E L IG H T /W H IT E H E A T 5:00 P.M . R E T U R N T O FA S H IO N S T H A T F A S C IN A T E ! A D E S IG N E R G R O U P O F A R T DRESSES M AS D IS P L A Y E D IN MARCH "S E V E N T E E N S A L L S IZ E S $23.0 0 U F o r that big event CITATION **7 B A LSO ( IS O TO IBTf W f ODINO NINO U t BOOK in your life, select a Keepsake D iam o n d R ing . . ■first choice o f the engageables. STORE IN ____ m a iiT iK iD , __ TC «=> e p s c tlc e » THE D IA M O N D n in o u D JS T P ® CENTER Thompson’s Q 'a i FOR Jewelry IN T ER N A T IO N A L 2 0 7 M .A .C . 3 B L O C K S W EST OF ST A T E C A P IT O L PRO G RA M S ^ E a s t L a n s in g , M ic h . 900 O TTAW A WEST Ring» ralsr—d to show dvtsil Trsde-Msrfc Re». > 5 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Thursday, March 28, 1968 NATIONAL TRINO Phone rate reduction C o e d c u r f e w s li b e r a l iz e d postponed By M A R IO N NOWAK State N ew t Staff W riter extra people just to let the W ASHINGTON (A P i ~ The girls in late,” there exists Federal Communications Com­ Illustrating an administra­ no immediate prospect of im ­ mission (FC C) put off for tive trend toward recognition of plementing selective hours at another three months Wednes­ individual responsibility, the lib­ Wellesley. day a $20 million cut in long eralization of women's hours By c o n t r a s t , R a d d i f f e C o l­ distance telephone rates which has become a m ajor movement le ge f ir s t - t e r m f r e s h m e n a r e had been planned for April 1. on the nation's campuses. lim it e d o n ly in th a t th e y m u s t The commission, in a 5-1 vote, A t M S U . c u r f e w w a s o n ly s ig n o u t to le a v e th e re s id e n c e said it was deferring the cut be­ la st y e a r e lim in a t e d f o r w o m e n h a ll a ft e r 10 p .m . T o s ta y cause of the uncertainty in­ of so p h o m o re s t a n d in g and o u t p a s t 1 a .m . f i r s t t e rm volved in settlement of a labor above. T h e s u c c e s s o f t h is fr e s h m e n m u s t s i g n f o r la te dispute involving the Bell Sys­ a c tio n h a s p ro m p te d re c e n t a t ­ p e rs; the p e r -t e r m am ount tem and because of the pending te m p ts to e lim in a t e h o u r s f o r a ll o f s u c h la te -p e r s i s u n lim it e d . request for a surcharge in fed­ but f ir s t - t e r m fre sh m e n . f ir s t s e m e ste r, s o m e k in d of is e x te n d e d to 2 a .m . F r i d a y N o o ther stu d e n ts a t R a d - eral income tax. E li m i n a t i o n of h o u rs, h o w ­ and Sa tu rd a y . c liff e h a v e h o u rs. L a s t J u l y 5 th e F C C o r d e re d ever, h a s b e e n e n a c te d a t fe w lim ita tio n . S e n io r s , in the w o r d s o f one P e rh ap s th e s t r ic t e s t c u r ­ the B e ll S y s t e m to r e d u c e its co lle g e s. M o r e o fte n a la te r " H o w e v e r a ft e r the f ir s t t e rm o ffic ia l, c a n c o m e in " a n y tim e, fe w n a t io n a lly i s th a t in e ffe c t lo n g d is t a n c e c h a r g e s b y $120 c u rfe w is set, m o d if ie d a c ­ in the d o r m , fo r a ll p r a c t ic a l a n y n ig h t .” T h is p ro c e d u r e a t B o b J o n e s U n i v e r s i t y in m illio n , b u t t w o m o n t h s la t e r it c o r d in g to c l a s s sta n d in g . p u rp o s e s the stu d e n t is a n u p ­ in v o lv e s g o in g to the W e lle s le y S o u th C a r o lin a . B J U , d e r iv in g d e c id e d to d e f e r $20 m ill io n of S e n io r w o m e n a t the U n i ­ p e r c la s s m a n , " sh e co n tin u e d , c a m p u s c e n t r a l o ffic e o n re ­ o v e r 95 p e r c e n t o f it s s tu ­ t h is u n til A p r i l 1.1968. v e r s it y of M a ry la n d , fo r "a n d s h o u ld be trea te d a s su ch . turn . Fro m the o ffic e , the dent body fro m o u ts id e the In s p rin g It Is s a id th a t m a n y a y o u n g m a n 's fa n c y tu rn s to w hat g i r l s have been T h e s c h e d u le d r e d u c t io n s w e re e x a m p le , h a v e s e le c t iv e h o u rs. state, e n f o r c e s a c l o s in g h o u r s th in k in g about a ll w in te r . C h r is D a v is , E a s t L a n s in g s o p h o m o re , r e la x e s w ith h is the r e s u lt o f th e f ir s t p a r t o f a n T h is is fa c ilita te d b y a k e y W e lle s le y C o lle g e 's c u rfe w coe d i s r e tu rn e d to h e r r e s i ­ o f 10:30 e v e r y e v e n in g f o r a ll th o ughts in an unusual m a n n e r. S ta te N e w s Photo by M ik e B e a s le y F C C in v e s t ig a t io n in to the f in a n ­ s y st e m ; s e n io r s m u s t t u rn in h o u rs a r e c u r r e n t ly so m e w h a t, d e n c e h a ll b y s e c u r it y p o lic e . stu d e n ts, m a le and fe m a le . c ia l s t r u c t u r e o f th e A m e r ic a n th e ir k e y s d a ily b y 10:30 a .m . m q r e lib e r a l th a n M a r y l a n d ’s. ' ' H o w e v e r , s in c e " t h e s e c u r it y fo rc e c o u ld n 't cop e w it h a d d i­ L i g h t s m u s t b e o u t b y 11 p.m .. T e le p h o n e a n d T e le g r a p h C o. S o p h o m o r e s a n d j u n io r s at S u n S a jn th ro u g h T h u rsd a y fre sh ­ m en. s d p h p m o r e s a n d j u n io r s tio n a l stu d e n ts." and s in c e a lth o u g h s e n io r s t u d e n t s a r e T h e c o m m i s s i o n h a d o r d e re d M a r y la n d m u s t a d h e r e to a c u r ­ h a v e a c u rf e w of 1 a . m . : t h is W e llp s le y is " n o t a b o u t to h ire a llo w e d a n e x t e n s io n in s e n io r N EV A D A M IN E S the r a t e c u t a ft e r se ttin g , fo r few of m id n ig h t S u n d a y th ro u g h s t u d y r o o m s u n til 11:45. the f ir s t t im e f o r m a lly , a p r o f ­ T h u r s d a y a n d 2 a .m . F r i d a y and Im m e d ia t e lib e r a liz a t io n of it r a n g e o f 7 to 7.5 p e r cent. S a tu rd a y . F r e s h m a n h o u r s a re 11 p .m S u n d a y t h r o u g h T h u r s ­ d a y and 1:30 a .m . F r i d a y and S a tu rd a y . T h e a d m in is t r a t io i. T a x r e t u r n s a p r o b l e m h o u r s is g e n e r a lly b a r r e d b y e c o n o m ic a n d s o m e t im e s m o r a l c o n s id e ra tio n s . T h e c o s t of N e w c h e m ic a l tre a tm e n t The m illio n FCC s a id th a t th e $20 c u t o r ig in a lly s e t fo r A p r il 1 i s n o w d e f e r re d to J u l y in it ia t in g a s y s t e m o f s e c u r it y e x tra c ts g o ld fro m o r e s 2. B u t the c o m m i s s i o n s a id it is c u r r e n t ly w o r k in g on e lim in a t in g j u n io r c u rfe w . 'S e lf -lim it e d c u r f e w fo r a ll but m a t h h a s i m p r o v e d f o r d o r m it o r ie s is at t e m p o r a r ily p r o h ib it iv e f o r m a n y sc h o o ls. le a st cou ld , if it w is h e d , d ir e c t A T & T to file it s p la n f o r the r a t e c u t e a r lie r if n e c e s s a r y . stu d e n ts d e p e n d s a g r e a t d e a l lo v e a f f a ir : o n c e th a t is done, ta x r e t u r n s file d b y A m e r ic a n s M a rg a re t F is h e r , dean of W A S H IN G T O N (A P ) - D e­ m illio n ounces e c o n o m ic a lly T h e c o m m i s s i o n no ted th a t in on the sch o o l. " sta te d a n ad- T h e I R S s a id e r r o r s h a v e th is y e a r. w o m e n a t th e U n i v e r s i t y of v e lo p m e n t o f a n e w p r o c e s s the c y a n id e p r o c e s s c a n e x t r a c t m in e a b le b y p re s e n t m e th o d s. a d d it io n to th e la b o r p r o b le m s v is e r there. " F r e s h m e n w o u ld been sp o tte d o n a lm o s t s e v e n T h e I R S s a id the c h ie f b a r r ie r S o u t h e r n F lo r id a , p o in t s out f o r e x t r a c t in g g o ld f r o m p r e ­ the gold. T h e r e a r e g e o lo g ic a l in d ic a ­ a n d the p o s s ib ilit y of f e d e r a l tax m u c h r a t h e r h a ve , fc/r c£n$ c5 i ' ) -iJJwWflitó 1 in c o m e to a n a c c u r a t e ta x r e t u r n is no th a t w h ile U - S F i s g r a d u a lly v io u s ly u n w o r k a b le o re s, a b re a k - T h e n e w m e t h o d i s s a id to tions. the b u r e a u a d d e d , th a t surcha rge., a p p ly in g to th e s y s ­ 4fVU*r\ -•*-4r - «— r V , .-. w e tn tt e c o n o m ic a l r e c o v e r y of lo n g e r p e e r t r t Ste the a tea m ig h t e x ­ t e m 's in c o m e , the B e ll S y s t e m 90 to 95 p e r c e n t o f the g o ld in At East LansingSTATEBAHk u s e b y t a x p a y e r s o f th e w r o n g a n c u rfe w s, “ w e h a v e o th e r new g o ld d e p o s it s to m in in g , tend in t o c e n t r a l Id a h o a n d s till h a s no t w o r k e d o u t the d e ­ tax ta b le o r th e w r o n g lin e o r t h in g s to s p e n d the m o n e y o n - w a s a n n o u n c e d W e d n e s d a y b y the th e se o re s, c o m p a r e d w it h p r e ­ so u t h e rn N e v a d a . t a ils o f a r r a n g e m e n t s b e tw e e n it c o lu m n in th e co rre ct ta x lik e m o r e b e d s .” U .S . B u r e a u o f M in e s . v io u s r e c o v e r y o f o n ly 20 to 35 “ I n N e v a d a a lo n e ,” M o o r e a n d the m a n y in d e p e n d e n t te le ­ You’ll $avewith table. M ix e d - u p a r it ih e t ic n o w r a t e s a s th e se c o n d m o s t p r o m in e n t S o m o s t u n iv e r s it ie s m a in ­ ta in the c o n c e p t o f c u rf e w s , "lib e r a liz in g " h o u r s to la te r If s u c c e s s f u l, use of p r o c e s s c o u ld h e lp m e e t th e g o ld n e e d s o f U .S . in d u s tr y , b ut it the p e r cent. B u t so f a r it h a s b e e n p e r ­ fo rm e d o n ly in the la b o ra t o ry . sa id , “ s u c c e s s w it h the b u r e a u ’s p ro ce ss c o u ld in c r e a s e g o ld p r o d u c in g p o t e n t ia l s e v e r a lf o ld . p h o n e c o m p a n ie s th a t h a n d le lo n g d is t a n c e c o m m u n ic a t io n s a lo n g w it h A T & T. ThriftiChecks f a c t o r in e r r o r s . tim e s. w o u ld s c a r c e ly d e n t the T r e a - P i lo t s c a le t e s t s a r e b e in g c o n ­ A m e r ic a n s have g e n e r a lly T h e a tt e m p t a t a n d b e lie f u r y ’s g o ld -s t o c k s h o r ta g e s . d ucte d , the b u r e a u sa id . L o w -c o s t student chocking acco un ts. T he o nly in d is c a r d in g a ll c u r f e w s , h o w ­ A n 8 ,0 0 0 -sq u a re -m ile a r e a of “ I f the p ilo t s c a le t e s t s in ­ c o m p ile d a b e tte r r e c o r d s o c h a rg e Is 10c p * r c h e c k ; no o th e r p rin tin g o r s e rv ic e c h a rg e s . fa r f ilin g t h is y e a r th a n e r r o r le s s ta x la s t in re tu rn s, e v e r. i s s lo w ly s p re a d in g . S ta te d G e n e v ie v e A u s t in , d e a n N e v a d a , the b u r e a u s a id , is k n o w n to c o n t a in g o ld - r ic h o r e s d ic a te c o m m e r c i a l fe a s ib ilit y , t h is w ill b e a m a j o r t e c h n ic a l Hans M o rgen th a u to speak You’ ll Find T hriftiC h ecks Only At I R S f ig u r e s sh o w e d . O f the o f re s id e n c e a t R a d c lif f e . “ I w h ic h c o n t a in c a rb o n com ­ b r e a k t h r o u g h , " s a id J. C o r d e ll m o r e th a n 24 m illio n in d iv id u a l th in k th a t f r o m 90-95 p e r ce nt p o u n d s th a t h a n g o n to g o ld M o o r e , a s s i s t a n t s e c r e t a r y of £ a s t c /ia n s in o r e t u r n s file d th ro u gh M a r c h o f a ll s tu d e n ts c a n h a n d le t h e m ­ so t ig h t ly th a t the c o n v e n t io n a l the in t e r io r f o r m in e r a l r e ­ on *commitment’ in series 15, e r r o r s w e r e sp q tte d o n 1.65 s e lv e s r e s p o n s ib ly . F o r the c y a n id e p r o c e s s c a n 't e x t r a c t s o u rc e s. m illio n r e tu rn s , o r 6.8 per ones w ho c a n 't - - r u le s w o n 't it e c o n o m ic a lly . ^ , T h e b u r e a u s a id the c a rb o n a - C e n t e r in g o n the t h e m e of p o s s ib ilit y is gre a t th a t he / s < B A N K ‘H.VTiU JSi¥d rrV. Atras /n f. ritTSf t-1 ft K Mium/v "xlKr, A. ^ --V r 'X it s M e t a llu r g y R e s e a r c h C e n t e r fie v è à to corrtSHn dome U r n u F lU u Je r it U db' ilM d f YO- l O t a tn< dA . % B r a n c h e s in O k e m o s, H a sle tt, & B r o o k f ie ld P la z a lio n to 30 m ill io n o u n c e s of go ld , v o st L e c t u r e S e r ie s w ill p r e ­ i n ' R e n o h a v e in v e n te d “ an Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. C IV IL E N G IN E E R IN G SEN IO R S YOUR a q u e o u s c h e p iic a l t r e a t m e n t " co m p are d w it h the n a t io n s se n t f o u r , s p e a k e r s A p r i l 15- " T o w h a t s h a ll he m a k e h is fu lle s t c o m m i t m e n t ? " s h e a sk e d . FU T U R E C A N BE IN T R A N SP O R T A T IO N to b re a k up th e g o ld -c a r b o n k n o w n r e s e r v e s of s o m e 9.4 18. T h e P r o v o s t L e c t u r e S e r ie s T h e • s e r i e s . . a c c o r d in g to Challenging opportunities available in our expanding pro­ M a ry B e th S t u lb e rg . Oak w ill b e p re se n t e d a t 4 p .m NEW gram which Includes a 1 /2 billion dollar highway construc­ P a r k s e n io r c h a ir m a n of the M o n d a y t h r o u g h T h u r s d a y in tion program# P ro vo st L e c tu re C o m m it t e e , F a i r c h i ld T h e a te r. No Exam — generous fringe benefits Including tuition r e ­ is "c o n c e r n e d w it h c o m m i t ­ Fe atured sp e a ke rs in c lu d e funds# Our re cru ite r will be here on Wednesday, April 3# Visit m e n t a s a n a c t of in v o lv e ­ K e n n e t h E . C la r k , d e a n o f the your Placement Office NOW fo r brochures and SIGN UP to W iglet C row n P e r m a n e n t m e n t . . . In a s o c ie t y w h e re C o lle g e of A r t s a n d S c ie n c e s hear the full story. S oft m o d e m n a tu ra l the in d iv id u a l p la y s m a n y r o le s a t the U n i v e r s i t y o f R o c h e s t e r : New York State Dept# of Transportation, Bureau of Re­ open c u r ls . and re sp o n d s to m any de­ M ic h a e l S c r iv e n . p r o f e s s o r of cruitment and Training, State Campus Building 5 , Albany, m ands and o b lig a t io n s , the p h ilo s o p h y a t the U n i v e r s i t y New York 12226, ........................ of C a lif o r n ia at B e r k e le y : BARNESFLORALLANSING H a n s M o r g e n t h a u . of the C e n ­ mm FLORENCE HAIR SALON 201 A B B O T T A P T S . 2 N D F L O O R F or F Iow e- s F r . s h ond te r fo r the S t u d y o f A m e r ic a n F o r e ig n a nd M ilit a r y a t the U n i v e r s i t y o f C h ic a g o P o li c y F a s h i o n a b l* and A lf r e d H. K e lly , p ro ­ 1. Some outfit you 2. What’s that? (O V E R E A S T L A N S IN G B A N K ) fe sso r of h is t o r y at W ayne have* there, Ed. C A L L E D 2 -4 3 1 4 215 ANN ED 2-0871 mm S ta te U n iv e r s it y . It’s got everything. A thermostat—keeps the suit an even 72 ’ . D r iv e o n e o f th e s e MMI orIKIUIMCI d re s s e d -u p C h e v r o le ts in s te a d o f a s tr ip p e d -d o w n som e t h in g e ls e . 3. C ool. 4. C’mon. My oxygen tanks have reti And the Nippers run on and green running lights. batteries when vour legs get tired. A The Purist*... Choice of the Collegian 5. You sure play it safe. 6. Then why don’t you look into Living Insurance from Equitable S e r o c h a m p io n s t h e t r a d it io n a l l o o k o n c o lle g e I like to feel secure It can give you a lifetime of c a m p u s e s a c r o s s t h e n a t i o n w i t h It s f u l l - f l a r e d foreground: Chevrolet Impele Sport S e d s n ; r ig h t P o e h g r o u n d : Cheveile Uellbu Sport Coupo; lott b a c k g r o u n d : Chevy II Nove Coupe wherever I am. security. Protection for your P u r is t * b u t t o n - d o w n . S t y le d e x c lu s iv e ly f o r th e family when you’re young, and '« • C H IV Y I I N O V A c o l le g ia n . . . t r im ly t a p e r e d w it h a s e v e n - b u t t o n ' « • C H IV R O L E T '6 8 C H IV E L L I when you retire, an income that Insts as long as you do. fro n t f o r a n e a te r, s lim m e r a p p e a ra n c e . A h o st p r ic e s s t a r t I s w s r th a n a n y e th a r p rle e a s t a r t le w e r th a n a n y e th e r p rle e a s t a r t le w e r th a n a n y e th e r fu ll-e lx e m e d a l« . Lo o k at It. Chev­ m id -s iz e m e d e la . O bviou sly no th ing's e e o n o m y e a r s o g e n e r o u s ly sized. of new s p r in g c o l o u r in g s a n a p a tt e rn s in d is ­ Now if I only knew rolet'« 4 -door s«d«n Is room ier than newer In m id-size cere than C h ava lit. N o v a is b ig enough for a fam ily on v a ­ t i n c t i v e t a t t e r s a ls , c h e c k s , s t r i p i n g s a n d s o l i d s . how to swim. an y other Am arloan car except one T h ere's fresh styling, the long-hood, cation, yat H elipe Into p arkin g sp a o a a C l a s s i c s h l r t m a n s h l p a t I t s f in e s t . luxury sedan. Drlva It. You tall by Ita short-deck look. There era two nim ble­ o th ers p a s s by. With Ha new w ide A V A IIA B U AT sm o o th an d silent rlda that C h svro lat footed w h aalbasae now— both on a sta n o a an d com puter-tuned ohassle, quality runs daap. B u y HI Q at a C hev­ wldar, staadlar traad. Y o u ga t b lg -c a r N o v a rldaa a s silent an d ste a d y a s e ars fat information about Living Insurance, see The Man from Equitable. rolet Instead o f a m adlum -prleed nam a power, b lg -ca r rlda In a quiek-slze c o stin g a lot moro, a n d K com ae wNh For career opportunities at Equitable, see your Placement Officer, or J.W. K N A P P CO. a n d you eon have, say, pow er steering, paekaga. N o w ondar C h a v a lit outsail« the b ig g e st standard V S In Ita field. nrritet James L, Morice, Manager, College Employment. pow er b ra k e s and a radio bee Idee I everything In Its field. N o v a 's the not-too-emall oar. M SU C A M PU S H i * E Q U I T A B L I L if e A s s u r a n c e S o c i e t y o f t h e U n i t e d S t e t « B A S T L A N S M O , M IC H . N O W — IM P A L A V t S A L II S e v a o n s p e c ia lly e q u ip p e d I p e r t C o u p e , 4 - P e e r S e d a n o r S t a t io n W a g e n # I Home OtBe»I ItA S Ave. of the Americas, N.Y., N. Y. 1001# An Equal Opportunity Employer, M /P © KqOltaMe 196# Thursday, March 28, 1968 f Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan SPORTS 4i B e h n e y p i t c h e s b a t s m e n 5 - 1 w i n b e st h it t e r s to d a te , w e re a l s o o u t o f th e lin e ­ B yG A Y E L W E S C H he h a s p ic k e d u p s ix h it s in 11 a t b a ts, in c lu d ­ T h e S p a r t a n s p ic k e d u p tw o m o r e in the '0 & Ù se c o n d w h e n s h o r t s t o p T o m E l l i s , B e h n e y u p f o r the g a m e . State News Sports W riter in g th re e a g a in s t W e s t e r n M i c h i g a n W e d ­ M e l B e h n e y h e ld W e s t e r n M i c h i g a n U n i ­ n e sd ay. a n d H u m m e l s in g le d a n d s e c o n d b a s e m a n G a v e l is s t ill n u r s in g a n i n j u r y in c u r r e d v e r s it y to f iv e h it s a n d p ic k e d up h is th ird B e h n e y t s t r u c k o u t th re e W e s t e r n M i c h i ­ S t e v e H y m a l s in g le d h o m e tw o ru n s. w h e n he r a n in t o a fe n ce in an e a r l ie r g a m e . s t r a ig h t s p r in g t r a in in g w in a s M S U 's b a s e ­ g a n h it t e r s in the g a m e a n d g a v e u p th e o n ly R i c h J o r d a n s c o r e d M S U 's t h ird r u n in H a r lo w s u f f e re d a s p r a in e d le g m u s c le s lid ­ b a ll t e a m d e fe a te d the B r o n c o s 5-1 W e d n e s ­ ru n in the se c o n d in n in g w h e n B r o n c o left the th ird in n in g w h e n he w a lk e d , w e n t to in g in to s e c o n d b a se in o n e o f T u e s d a y s d a y in the M i a m i T o u r n a m e n t a t M ia m i. fie ld e r D a l M a c k i e s in g le d , w e n t to se c o n d th ird on a n in fie ld s in g le b y E l l i s a n d gam es. on a p a s s e d b a ll and. s c o r e d on a s in g le b y t h ro w in g e r ro r , a n d c a m e h o m e o n a p a ss e d F la . c a tc h e r D a n B e n o it. ball. W e s t e r n M i c h i g a n w a s 3-2 a ft e r the lo s s It w a s the S p a r t a n s ’ s ix t h w in a g a in s t fo u r T h e W e s t e r n M i c h i g a n r u n tie d the s c o r e S in g le s b y B e h n e y . R y m a l a n d th ird b a se ­ to M S U a n d fa c e d M i a m i la te W e d n e s d a y lo s s e s in the t o u r n a m e n t a n d g u a r a n te e d a t 1-1 u n til M S U s c o r e d tw o r u n s in the b o t­ m a n H a r r y K e n d r i c k in the e ig h t h in n in g a c ­ a fte rn o o n . M i a m i e n te re d th e g a m e w it h a th e m a tie f o r f i r s t p la c e a ft e r 10 g a m e s . tom o f the se c o n d a n d B e h n e y w a s in fu ll cou n te d fo r M S U ’s fin a l r u n of th e g a m e . 5-4 re c o rd , a n d the w in n e r o f the W M U - M S U w ill fa c e W e s le y a n to d a y. J u n io r c o n tr o l the r e s t o f the w a y . K e n d r ic k , w h o h a s b e e n M S U ’s s t a r t in g M i a m i g a m e w o u ld tie M S U f o r th e t o u r­ r ig h t h a n d e r M i c k e y K n i g h t w ill p itc h fo r M S U s c o r e d a r u n in the f i r s t in n in g w h e n c a tc h e r, w a s p r e s s e d in to s e r v ic e a t th ird n a m e n t lead. the S p a r t a n s . K n i g h t h a s a 1-2 w o n -lo st le a d o ff m a n T o m H u m m e l d o u b le d , w e n t to w h e n s o p h o m o re S t e v e G a r v e y w a s c a lle d r e c o r d g o in g in t o the W e s le y a n g a m e . h o m e b y h is g r a n d m o t h e r 's death. M S U w ill c lo s e out it s s p r i n g t r a in in g B e h n e y , a s le n d e r le fth a n d e r, h a s b ee n th ird o n a d o u b le p la y a n d s c o r e d w h e n J o e G a v e l, a s o p h o m o r e in fie ld e r , a n d w ith g a m e s a g a in s t W e s t e r n F r i d a y a n d o u ts ta n d in g f o r the S p a r t a n s in the s p r in g S p a r t a n c a tc h e r B i l l L in n e re a c h e d b a s e on s e n io r o u tfie ld e r R i c h H a r lo w , tw o o f M S U 's M ia m i S a t u rd a y . M IC K E Y K N IG H T g a m e s. I n a d d it io n to w in n in g t h re e g a m e s . a n e r ro r . 'S’ netters win 2nd, S w im m e r s e n t e r top Miss. College, 9-0 N C A A ’s t o d a y B y G A R Y W A L K O W IC Z the g ro u p , p la c e d in th re e in ­ C L I N T O N , M I S S . - M S U 's ten­ n is te a m p u lle d o ff its se c o n d s t r a ig h t v ic t o r y T u e s d a y w it h a sh u to u ts o v e r L o u is ia n a S t a t e a n d the B u lld o g s . J u n io r a n d N o . 1 s in g le s . C h u c k BOOK S t a t e N e w s S p o r t s W r it e r T h e M S U s w im te a m fa c e s a n u p h ill b a ttle a t t h is w e e k ­ e n d 's N C A A c h a m p io n s h ip s a s d iv id u a l e v e n t s la s t y e a r a n d a p p e a r s to be the S p a r t a n s ' top hope t h is y e a r. H e w ill c o m p e t e in th e 200 a n d 4 0 0 -y a rd in d iv id u a l m e d ­ 9-0 w in o v e r lege. M i s s i s s i p p i C o l­ A f t e r fo u r s t r a ig h t lo s s e s , the n e tte rs h a v e s c o r e d b a c k -to -b a c k B r a in a r d le d the w a y . d e fe a tin g C a r l T r a n g e . 8-6 a n d 6-0. N o. 2 s in g le s R i c h M o n a n w o n 6-1 and 6-1. M i c k e y S z ila g y i a n d J o h n STORE the S p a r t a n s a tt e m p t to m a t c h G o o d ro u n d e d o u t the s c o r in g la s t y e a r ’s e ig h t h p la c e fin is h . le y s a n d the 2 0 0 -y a rd b a c k ­ Satchell replaces w ith 6-4, 6-4. a n d 6-0. 6-1. w in s. S te v e S c h a f e r a n d O r h a n E n u s - T h e c h a m p io n s h ip m e e t w ill stroke . R i c h a r d s w i ll b e in the tw o ton w e re o t h e r w in n e r s in the b e h e ld a t D a r t m o u t h C o lle g e in d iv id u a l m e d le y s w it h W il­ Williams in N C A A s in g le s c o m p e titio n . in H a n o v e r , N .H ., b e g in n in g lia m s and in the 2 0 0 -y a rd In d o u b le s, the c o m b in a t io n of XTRA to d a y a n d c o n t in u in g th ro u g h M SU fe n c e r Don S a tc h e ll S a tu rd a y . b re a s t st ro k e . R ic h a r d s set an w ill re p la c e G le n n W ill ia m s B r a in a r d a n d M o n a n w e re v ic ­ M S U s c o r e d 115 p o in t s la s t M S lJ re co rd in the b r e a s t ­ in the N C A A c h a m p io n s h ip s t h is to rio u s 6-0 a n d 6-4. S z ila g y i and y e a r b u t g r a d u a t io n c la b s w A ' stroke, in the re c e n t B i g T e n w e e k e n d a t W a y n e State . G ood t e a m e d u p to w in 6-3 and f iv e m e n w h o p ro d u c e d 71.5 of th o se p oin ts. Coach C h a r le s M c C a ffre e m eet. and The S p a rta n s K a lm b a c h have e n te re d Rauch in S a tc h e ll, a ju n io r , c o m p ile d a s e a s o n m a r k o f 28-26 in f o il c o m p e titio n . W illia m s , 5-i: S c ii- . 'c . 6 -la n d 7-5 w in s. , . f > ydrir.M 'w m - pleted the S p a r t a n s , s c o r in g w ith HOURS sa id the s e v e n t a n k e r s r e p r e ­ the s p rin t s . R a u c h w ill be T urb o ca r a so p h o m o re , is h o sp it a liz e d s e n tin g M S U w i l l b e p re p a re d . in the 50, 100 a n d 2 0 0 -y a rd f r e e s t y le s a n d K a l m b a c h w ill T h e r a d ic a l S T P -L o tu s T u r b o c a r gets a push back to th e p its a fte r e n c o u n te rin g w it h a s t o m a c h a ilm e n t. Rugby practice T O N ITE " T h e b o y s a r e re st e d a n d in s w im the 100-yard fre e sty le . m e c h a n ic a l d iffic u ltie s on Its f i r s t run at th e In d ia n a p o lis M o to r S p e e d w a ^ W e d - S a tc h e ll, a lo n g w it h C h a r lie til go o d sha p e. T h e y 'v e lo o ke d B a e r in s a b r e a n d B o b b y T y ­ T h e R u g b y C lu b w ill hold g o o d in o u r p r a c t ic e s e s s io n s T h e f o u r s w i m m e r s w ill a ls o n e s d a y . D r iv e r J im C la r k te r m e d th e c a r ’ s p e rfo rm a n c e and hand lin g " u n ­ le r in epee w ill c o m p e t e in p ra c t ic e a t 4 p .m . t o d a y b e ­ 9:00 P.M. c o m p e te in tw o r e la y e v e n ts, b e lie v a b le ” but he c o m p le te d less than tw o laps b e fo re tro u b le s set in. the N C A A c h a m p io n s h ip s . s in c e the B i g T e n m e e t,” M c ­ hind J e n is o n F ie ld h o u s e . C a f f r e e said. the 8 0 0 -y a rd f r e e s t y le r e la y U P I T elep h o to " W e d o n 't h a v e the s t r e n g t h a n d 40 0 -ya rd m e d le y re la y . * to s c o r e a s m a n y p o in ts a s w e d id la s t y e a r. W it h the T h e ir b e s t ch a n c e , a c c o r d in g to M c C a f f r e e , w ill b e in the ME? A UNITED F R ID A Y N O A M O U N T C IT R D t e a m s b u n c h e d s o c lo se ly , t h e r e 's no w a y o f p r e d ic t in g w h e re f re e s ty le r e la y w h e re p la c e d t h ir d in the B i g T e n th e y STEWARDESS? 8:30 A.M. m eet. WHY NOT !! to w e 11 f in is h . ” T h e s e v e n S p a r t a n s g o in g to tbfc m e e t $tre s iy iir n j ie r s P e t e .gjm' . D iv e rs G re e n a nd Todd c o m ­ peted a t la s t y e a r 's •' NCAA t V i ■* • H a y e s s i g n s w it h R o c k e t s On C am p u s In te rv ie w s 5:30 P.M. «•* r ‘" ‘ T * 7 . C A '1 R ic h a r d s ' and M ik e K a lm b a c h . the o n e -m e te r e v é n l. C o n ta c t y o u r p la c e m e n t o ffic e f o r a S A N D I E G O . C a lif (U P Ii- - p la c e in the n a tio n a l p o lls 1.052 a n d is the a ll- t im e s c o r ­ and d iv e r s J im H e n d e rs o n . The d iv in g e v e n ts sh o u ld , E l v i n H a y e s , U n i v e r s i t y of H o u s ­ th is y e a r, s c o r e d 1.215 fie ld in g le a d e r w ith 2.975 p o in ts co n ven ien t a p p o in tm en t a s u su a l, b e d o m in a t e d b y B i g D u a n e G re e n a n d D o u g Todd. T e n c o m p e t it o r s a n d the S p a r ­ t o n 's C o lle g e P l a y e r of the Y e a r . g o a ls a n d fin is h e d a s the se c o n d H a v e s . ‘ M e e t . 9 I d i 'i n c h e s , SA TU RDA Y W ill ia m s , th e o n ly s e n io r in W e d n e s d a y sig n e d a p r o fe s s io n a l w ill re t u r n to H o u s to n to c o m ­ U N IT E D A IR L IN E S ta n s c o u ld s c o r e h ig h in them , b a sk e t b a ll c o n t r a c t w it h the S a n h ig h e st s c o r e r in N C A A m a j o r p lete w o r k in h is e d u c a tio n a n e q u a l o p p o rtu n ity e m p lo y e r 11:00 A.M. c o lle g e c ir c le s w ith 2.884 p o in ts. a c c o r d in g to M c C a f f r e e . S t a n fo rd , S o u t h e r n C a lif o r n ia D ie g o R o c k e t s of the N a t io n a l J m a j o r a n d then re p o rt to the to and In d ia n a , w h o f in is h e d 1-2- B a s k e t b a ll A s s n . O s c a r R o b e r t s o n o f C in c in n a t i R o c k e t s ' ro o k ie c a m p la te in 5:00 P.M. R o c k e t 's o w n e r B o b B r e it - held the fie ld g o a l re c o r d of June. 3 la s t y e a r, a r e e x p e c te d to b a rd d e c lin e d to r e v e a l the b a ttle f o r t h is y e a r 's c ro w n , t e rm s , s a y in g th e y s h o u ld be 0 0 0 - 0 0 0 0 0 o o o o o o o o Th ursd ay, A p ril 4 , w it h In d ia n a c o n s id e r e d a s lig h t fa v o rite . A B C ’s W id e W o r ld of S p o r t s kept p r iv a t e b e tw e e n he and H a y e s. H e s a id it w a s a m u lt i­ explore an XTRA y e a r p a c t b u t re fu s e d to s a y w ill t e le v is e taped h ig h lig h t s of the f ir s t tw o d a y s of c o m ­ p e titio n a t 5 p .m . S a tu rd a y . f o r h o w long. H a y e s sa id . ” 1 lik e S a n D ie g o . T h e y w ill h e lp m e a n d I w ill engineering career HOURS Judo meet help t h e m . " T h e H o u s t o n M a v e r i c k s o f the W * A M E R I C A ’S G R E A T E S T M U S I C A L H IT / on earth’s here Saturday A m e r ic a n B a s k e t b a ll A s s n . re ­ p o rte d ly o ffe re d $500.000 but 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 . 0 o o o la st fro n tie r. H a y e s s a id “ I re a d it b ut I T h u r s ,, F r l . - A p r. 4 & 5 The M SU J u d o C lu b w ill d o n 't k n o w a n y t h in g e lse a b out U N IV E R S IT Y A U D IT O R IU M fa c e C e n t r a l M ic h ig a n , E a s t e r n it . " R e s e rv e d Seats $6, $5, $4 M ic h ig a n , a n d W a y n e S t a t e in H e had b e e n quo te d a s s a y in g $1.00 re d u c tio n to M SU students a to u rn a m e n t S a tu rd a y at 2 h e w a n t e d $300,000 to s ig n a w ith v a lid a te d I.D . p.m . in the M e n ’s I. M . B ld g . th re e -y e a r c o n tra c t. U N IO N T IC K E T O F F IC E P E T E W IL L IA M S A d m i s s io n i s 50 ce nts. H a y e s , w h o le d H o u s t o n to f ir s t D O M IN O ’ S P IZ Z A D O M IN O ’S P IZ Z A D O M IN O ’ S P IZ Z A D O M IN O ’S P IZ Z A We take both sides QUALITY DAIRY CO. Talk w ith N ew port News O n-Cam pus C areer C on­ s u lta n t a b o u t e n g in e e r in g o p e n in g s a t w o rld 's largest sh ip b uild in g com pany— where your fu tu re 1201 E A S T G R A N D R IV E R A V E . E . L A N S IN G is as big as today's brand new ocean. M E E T OUR STO RE M A N A G ER S Our half-a-billion-dollar backlog of orders means high start­ BETT Y AND KENNETH BARNES ing salary, career security, with your way up wide open. It also means scope for all your abilities. We're involved with nuclear ship propulsion and refueling, nuclear aircraft TRYOURREDCARPETSERVICE 1/2 G A L . carrier and submarine building, marine automation. We’ve recently completed a vast oceanographic ore survey. We're LOW FA T a major builder of giant water power and heavy industrial G LASS. P A S T E U R IZ E D equipment. We’re starting to apply our nautical nuclear P E P up with 43l H O M O G E N IZ E D know-how to the fast expanding field of nuclear electric power generation. We're completing competitive system s tasty milk M IL K designs for the Navy’s $1 billion plus LHA fleet concept. Interested in an advanced degree or research? We re next door to Virginia Associated Research Center with one of S P E C IA L S the world’s largest synchrocyclotrons, offering advanced study in high energy physics. We're close to Old Dominion T H U R S . F R I. S A T . 2 8 , 29, 30 College and University of Virginia Extension Division, where you can get credits for a m aster’s degree, or take courses in Microwave Theory, Solid State Electronics, Nuclear En­ gineering and other advanced subjects. Ask about scholar­ H A L F -N -H A L F ...both sides of campus, that is! 1 G AL. Ice Cream F A M IL Y P A C K V A N IL L A 0 0 c P IN T Reg. 30* 26‘ ships, tuition grants, study and research leaves to imple­ ment these opportunities. Ask, too, about the pleasant living and lower living costs, BOOK STORE REG. U 5 7 7 here in the heart of Virginia’s historic seaside vacation land, 203 M A C 966 Trowbridge with superb beaches, golf, fishing, boating, hunting. P u r e - R e c o n stitu te d 351-6670 351-7100 Fortified Skimmed • F l o r d l a o r a n g e Juice M ilk IMMEDIATE EN GIN EERIN G CAREER OPENINGS 1/2 G A L . S e rv in g E a s t L a n s in g and th e s e s e le c te d d o rm s : A bbot, M a s o n , P h illip s , S n y d e r, S e rv in g M S U ’ s ca m p u s S u p e r F r e e D e liv e r y . w ith 1/2 G A L . R E G . 35* 31- R E G . 69* 59' Mechanical Engineers Electrical Engineers Naval Architects Nuclear Engineers Marine Engineers Civil Engineers C a m p b e ll, G ilc h r is t , Lon d o n, M a y o , and Industrial Engineers Metallurgical Engineers IN F R IE N D L Y S E R V IC E A N D C O N V E N IE N T P A R K IN G Systems Analysts Y a k e le y . F R E E F A S T D E L IV E R Y Y O U R O N E -S T O P C O M P L E T E G R O C E R Y THE See our representative Ed Conway CENTER D O M IN O 'S Thursday, April 4 He'll be at the Placem ent Office to answer questions, dis­ FOR cuss qualifications, take applications for fast action. IN T ER N A T IO N A L P IZ Z A COUPON PRO G RA M S P iz z a IS W O R T H n f e w p o r t W e f w s P e r fe c t io n on $3.00 worth of any NEWPORT NEWS SMIPBUIIDING AND DRY DOCK COMPANY. NEWPORT NEWS. VIRGINIA J l l items in our store. An Equal Opportunity Employer. O O M IN O ’ s P IZ Z A D O M IN O ’S P IZ Z A D O M IN O ’ S P IZ Z A D O M IN O ’ s P IZ Z A 3 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Thursday, March 28, 1968 U .S . f o r c e s in lo n g b a t t l e n e a r C a m b o d i a S A IG O N iA P )--U .S . tro o p s the A m e r ic a n s w e re re p o rt e d U .S . 25th In f a n t r y D i v i s i o n A m e r ic a n c a s u a lt ie s , th e p h o to ­ d a y. It b e gan T u e sd a y w hen Sunday. U . S . c a s u a lt ie s w e r e 4th D i v i s i o n s o ld ie r s hu n te d tions, re p o rt e d a p h o t o g r a p h e r c a lle d in a r t ille r y f ir e a n d to h a v e se ize d o n ly o n e -fo u rth t ro o p s m o v e d in o n the h a m le t w h o w a s s li g h t ly w o u n d e d in g r a p h e r sa id . F ig h t e r - b o m b e r s 25th D i v i s i o n t ro o p s in a h e li­ d e s c r ib e d a s lig h t. n e a r the C a m b o d ia n b o r d e r fo r a i r s t r ik e s o f n a p a lm o n ly 50 o f th e h a m le t. H e a v y f ig h t in g T u e s d a Iy a n d r a n in t o h e a v v y f ir e the c h e s t b y s h r a p n e l. a ls o c lo se d in 50 to 75 y a r d s c o p t e r la n d e d f o u r m ile s n o rth ­ T h e U .S . C o m m a n d s a id th a t the r e m a in d e r o f a N o r t h V ie t ­ ya rd s fro m t h e ir p o s it io n s co n tin u e d . fro m enem y e n tr e n c h m e n t s . L t. C o l. J o h n H . T ip t o n , a a h e a d of the A m e r ic a n lin e s, e a s t o f T r a n g B a n g a n d w e re s o f a r U .S . a n d S o u t h V ie t ­ n a m e s e f o rc e th a t w a s r e p u ls e d W e d n e s d a y in a r a g in g b a ttle T h e b itt e r o p p o sitio n in ­ T a n k s a n d a rm o re d p e rso n n e l b a tta lio n c o m m a n d e r , a s k e d h is d o u sin g n a p a lm o n the V ie t a tt a c k e d b y V ie t C o n g w a it in g n a m e se tro o p s in O p e r a t io n in a n a t t a c k T u e s d a y o n a n fo r a h a m le t n o rth w e st of d ic a te d that U .S . f o r c e s in c a r r ie r s c a m e u p in su p p o rt. C o n g p o sitio n s. in t r e n c h e s a n d b u n k e r s w it h Q u y e t T h a n g h a v e k ille d 1,842 a r t ille r y lia is o n o f f ic e r : “ Can a r t ille r y b a s e w e s t o f K o n t u m . S a ig o n n e a r C a m b o d ia 's b o r ­ O p e r a t io n Q u y e t T h a n g - R e s o lv e F ig h t in g c o n tin u e d th ro u gh A p L o n g M u c i s a k id n e y ­ m a c h in e g u n s a n d r o c k e t - p r o ­ V ie t C o n g a n d c a p t u r e d 293. N o c o n t a c t s w e r e re p o rt e d w e p u t m o r e a r t i l l e r y in c l o s e r ? " der. to W in --h a d c a u g h t up w ith s o m e the n ig h t w it h a r t i l le r y p o u n d ­ “ Y e s w e ca n , b u t t h e r e ’s sh a p e d h a m le t a b o u t 800 y a r d s p e lle d g r e n a d e s . U .S . lo s s e s w e r e 69 k ille d a n d T h e U .S . C o m m a n d s a id the T h e V ie t C o n g fo u g h t b a c k o f th e m a in V ie t C o n g b a t ­ in g the h a m le t a n d j e t s b o m b ­ a g o o d c h a n c e o f h it t in g o u r lo n g a n d 200 y a r d s w id e 30 m ile s U .S . h e a d q u a rte rs s a id at 604 w o u n d e d . S o u th V ie t n a m e s e b a ttle f o r th e a r t i l le r y b a se w it h a u t o m a t ic w e a p o n s a n d t a lio n s that fell b a c k t o w a r d in g a n d d r o p p in g f ie r y n a p a lm . o w n p e o p le , " re p lie d the of­ n o rt h w e st o f S a ig o n . le a s t 17 o f the e n e m y w e re c a s u a lt ie s w e r e g iv e n a s 92 left 135 N o r t h V ie t n a m e s e a n d ro c k e t-p ro p e lle d g r e n a d e s f r o m C a m b o d ia w h e n th is b ig g e s t B y m o r n in g , U .S . a r t il le r y ficer. L t. J o h n J. M e n n in g . F i g h t i n g o n a s m a l le r s c a le k ille d , b r i n g i n g to 396 the n u m ­ k ille d a n d 232 w ou n d e d . 19 U .S . s o ld ie r s dead. tre n c h e s a n d s p id e r h o le s in d r iv e o f the w a r opened M a r c h fire w as b u r s t in g 85 y a r d s B u t the c h a n c e w a s t a k e n a n d fa rth e r south a ro u n d T ran g b e r o f V ie t C o n g d e a d c o u n te d T h e a im o f the o p e r a t io n i s Ap Long M uc. B y n ig h t fa ll. 11. in fro n t o f A m e r ic a n p o s i­ the c lo s e s h e llin g c a u s e d no B a n g w a s a ls o in it s s e c o n d in the T r a n g B a n g a r e a s in c e to lift the V ie t C o n g t h re a t L t. C o l. M a u r i c e E d m o n d s , to S a ig o n a n d r e g a in the in it ia ­ J a c k s o n v ille , F la . , the d iv i­ tiv e the e n e m y se iz e d in the s io n ’s o p e r a t io n s o ffic e r , told No P u rc h a s e N e c e s s a r y ! lu n a r n e w y e a r o f f e n s iv e th a t A P p h o to g ra p h e r R ic k M e rr o n ; G e t F r e e “ S p o rt o f K in g s ” G a m e C a rd s op en ed a t the e n d o f J a n u a r y . “ It w a s s o m e o f th e to u g h e s t And G a m e P ie c e s A t P a r tic ip a tin g K ro g e r In the c e n t ra l h ig h la n d s . U .S . f ig h t in g t h is d i v is io n h a s h a d .” To $ i , o o o S to re s O r M a ll R e q u e s t T o P . O . B o x 62 W e s tp o rt, C o n n e c tic u t, G le n d ln n ln g 06 8 8 0 C o s t o f liv in g u p , K IN G S no d e c re a se seen W A S H IN G T O N ( A P ) - L iv in g ce nt h o u r ly r is e in p a y b o o ste d c o s t s c o n tin u e d u p w a r d in F e b ­ the a v e r a g e p u r c h a s in g p o w e r r u a r y w it h a r is e of th re e -te n th s of s o m e 45 m ill io n w o r k e r s b y of o n e p e r cent, a n d s h a r p ly 55 c e n t s a w e e k in F e b r u a r y . h ig h e r w h o le s a le p r ic e s in d ic a ­ T h e a v e r a g e w e e k ly p a y c h e c k ted no le t-u p in the n e a r fu tu re , w a s $104.33, h ig h e s t in h is t o r y the g o v e r n m e n t re p o rt e d W e d ­ and a g a in o f $1.20 p e r w e e k n e sd ay . fro m J a n u a ry . A fte r ta xe s and In c r e a s e s f o r food, h o u s in g , a llo w in g fo r p r ic e in c r e a s e s , the c lo th in g and m e d ic a l c a r e a v e r a g e w e e k ly w a g e w a s w o r th p u sh e d the L a b o r D e p a r t m e n t 's $78.03 in t e r m s o f the 1957-59 c o n s u m e r p r ic e in d e x up to 119.0. d o lla rs. T h is m e a n s it c o s t $11.90 la s t m o n th f o r w h a t a t y p ic a l f a m il y 4,%id $10 in the 1957-59 p e r io d on Senior receives w h ic h the in d e x is b a se d . T h e v a lu e o f the 1957-59 d o l­ M arshall grant la r d ro p p e d to 84 c e n t s in F e b ­ ru a ry . T h e in d e x h a s b e e n r i s i n g f o r for study a b road the p a st f iv e m o n t h s a t a n a n ­ C a r o ly n H . F is h e l, O k e m o s n u a l ra te o f f o u r p e r cent. T h is se n io r, w a s r e c e n t ly a w a r d e d a X t - L B PKG KROGER w o u ld b e the ste e p e s t c l im b in M a r s h a l l s c h o la r s h ip f o r tw o MEAT 10AF s m o r e th a n a d e c a d e if the tre n d y e a r s o f g r a d u a t e s t u d y in E n g ­ REDEEM A T KR O G ER —. 1 c o n tin u e s t h ro u g h o u t 1968. THRU S A T ., MAR. 10. 1940 12921 land. She is o n e of 24 c o l­ ■MA.. M L W h o le s a le p r ic e s r o s e se v e n - le g e s e n io r s in the U n it e d P e s c h k e ’s F u ll S h a n k H a lf F r e s h S e m i- B o n e l e s s te n th s o f o n e p e r cent, b ig g e s t VANDEN BRINK'S FROZEN PRIDE 0 MICHIGAN BONELESS F A TO P VALUE S t a t e s to w in a M a r s h a l l s c h o la r ­ H o n L o a f 2 pkg $ 1 .5 9 S M O K E D H A M lb. 450 LEG 0 PORK lb . 7 9 0 Mo m WHL. R o a s t OROTR.LB « ♦ i f J V STAM PS WITH THIS COUPON ON THE PU RCH ASE OP 1 - L B OR MORE USD A CHOICE TEN D ER AY ■ Z Z m o n t h ly j u m p in tw o y e a rs , in ­ c lu d in g a h e ftv 1.5 p e r c e n t in ­ cre a se fo r fa r m p ro d u c ts and s h ip t h is y e a r. M i s s F is h e l. a J u s t in M o r r i l l C o lle g e stu d e n t, h a s b e e n a d ­ P e s c h k e 's W h o le o r H a lf . K w lc k K r i s p u'W te FRES-SHORE FROZEN PESCHKE’S BUTT PORTION ¡ CUBE STEAKS i p ro c e s s e d food s. m it te d to th e U n i v e r s i t y of P erch F ille t. ES M I - B O N E L E S S H A M lb . 6 5 0 S L IC E D B A C O N 1 -lb . p k g . 6 9 0 S m o k .d H i e - «e, lb „ 5 ▼ 5 « 6 0 ■ ■ ■ B O G ro c e ry co sts e a c h p r ic e s a n d h o u s in g r o s e f o u r -t e n th s of M a n c h e s t e r a n d w ill s t u d y fo r a m a s t e r 's d e g r e e in a n th ro - PNOuz OP P J 3 HALF _ / ; •‘5fc . 7 *> ’ JH& SEA TRE&odd j*1 j »I * in g ancf m e d ic a l c a r e s e r v ic e s S h e h a s b e e n a ctiv e ’ in a STAM PS F tr c k S t t i k s 3 9 < C A N N E D H A M 3 - lb . s iz e $ 2 . f 3 S L A B B A C O N ' 1 -lb . p k g . J d Ç P a rk L o tu s lb 65( é 7 WITH: THIS C O U f ON OM TU B P U R C H A t e O P A H r 1 PKG S ■ T i w e fe up s ix ’-tfenths. T h e o n ly m a ­ j o r p r ic e c a te g o ry to d e c lin e v a r ie t y o f stu d e n t o r g a n iz a t io n s a n d s e r v ic e s . M i s s F i s h e l is O F SEA TREASU RE FR O ZEN J ’w a s t ra n s p o rt a t io n , d o w n one- c o - c h a ir m a n o f th e M S U P e o p le - SEAFOOD ■ ■ REDEEM A T KROGER ^ M f t U SA T., MAR. SO, IM S SÌ tenth. D e s p it e the r i s i n g p ric e s , a lo n g e r w o r k w e e k a n d a one- to -P e o p le A ssn ., an z a t io n c u r r e n t ly p r o v id in g d i­ re c t f in a n c ia l a id J o o r g a n i­ Long TO P VALUE 13 Y e n , V ie t n a m . S h e i s p u b lic it y STAM PS 3 S P A R T A N c h a ir m a n f o r the W in d s of Z WITH THIS COUPON ON Z Z TH E PU RCH ASE O F TWO Z ■ P /t-L B LO A V ES O F KR O G ER ■ TWIN EAST C h a n g e s e m in a r a nd a m e m b e r of P h i K a p p a P h i, n a t io n a l ! BUTTERCRUST BREAD ■ ■ REDEEM A T KROGER s c h o la s t ic h o n o r a r y . 10 ACADEM Y M i s s F i s h e l is the d a u g h t e r L THRU S A T ., MAR. 30, 1944 ■■■■■■■■■■■ AWARD o f W e s le y F is h e l. p r o f e s s o r of NOMINATIONS! p o lit ic a l sc ie n c e . Z W I T H THIS COUPON OH - TODAY AT ■ T H E PU RCH ASE O F 5 P K G S OP Z 1:30, 3:30, 5:30, 8iC Medium Point 19# i ■ 9 - 0 2 WT OR 1 0 - 0 2 WT KRO G ER * 7:30 A 9:30 ■ FROZEN VEGETABLES ! ■ REDEEM A T KRO G ER COLUMBIAACTUALS P'tttAH» ' L THRU S A T ., MAR. 30, 1944 Stanley Kramer mmmmmmmmmmmmm Spencer ■ Sidney i Katharine BiC Fine Point 25# TRACY 1P0ITIER1HEPBURN Z Z WITH THIS COUPON ON TH E PU RCH ASE O F ANY t w o Z g u e s s w h o 's ■PFCCS O P K R O G E R BRAND S L IC E D " c o m in g t o d in n e r i AMERICAN CHEESE i ^ ( ‘‘gprctor. ■ REDEEM A T KROGER ^ T N * U SA T ., MAR. sé (si S P A R T A N IG E 9 F A TO P VALUE ( KROGER BAKED \ f KROGER WHOLE KERNEL OR KROGER J U STAM PS TWIN WEST D e s p it e WITH THIS COUPON OH A n g e l Fo o d C a k e C re a m C o rn O ra n g e J u ic e TH E PU RCH ASE O P TWO ft- G A L CTHS KR O G ER HI-NU MILK 1 LAST DAY! f ie n d is h t o r t u r e d y n a m ic B iC D u o REDEEM A T KRO G ER w r i t e s f i r s t t im e , I 8 9 TH RU S A T ., MAR. 30, 1948 M M BeaeeB BaB eei e v e r y t im e ! l- L B 3 9 5 : 1 ' 2 a 7 V 3 F A V TO P VALUE STAM PS WITH THIS COUPON OH TH E PU RCH ASE O P ANY HEAD ê SHOULDERS b ic ’s r u g g e d p a i r o f s t ic k p e n s w in s a g a in in u n e n d in g w a r a g a in s t b a ll-p o in t KROGER SWEET KROGER Paramount Pictures Pintm ROYAL VIKING DANISH SHAMPOO s k ip , c lo g a n d s m e a r . I3H-OZ • 1-QT S É B A S T IA N _ REDEEM A T KROG ER D e s p ite h o r r ib le C ì m m ì b o m T w ist WT PKG 4 9 0 G n rd n n P a n s 6 /- O Z E A N S $ 1 T o a n t e Ja le a 3 14—OZ CANS 7 9 0 B THRU SA T., MAR. 30, 1940 p u n is h m e n t b y m a d s c ie n tis ts , b ic s till KROGER SANDWICH OR AVONDALE KROGER BLENDED OR F A TO P VALUE Technicolor' A Paramount Picture SM» PKGS l-LB w r ite s firs t tim e , e v e r y W ie n e r B a a s OF 8 # 1 T a a n t a n s CANS $1 G ro p e fro it Ja le a 2 u - ö z tcans 7 9 0 9 V STAM PS C O - H I T ! A T 7:50 tim e . A n d n o w o n d e r. Z WITH THIS COUPON OH Z b i c ’s “ D y a m ite " B a ll Z TH E PU RCH ASE O P 1 P K G ¡ KROGER KROGER KROGER ■ JU B IL E E PR EM IER OR ■ H A L W A L L I S ....... is t h e h a r d e s t m e t a l l-L B € f . I-L B ■ CAN T R E C E ■ m a d e , e n c a s e d in a PKG W n x B a n n s CANS 9 1 A p p lesn n ce 5 cans 7 9 0 R fl« f^ o r S a ltin a s 4 9 0 ! NYLONS s o lid b r a s s n o s e c o n e . S EED EEM A T KEO O EE W i l l n o t s k ip , c lo g KROGER WEINER OR KROGER KROGER L Í Z I V U I M X m IIII, PKGS 15-OZ PKGS € 1 i f YMf p a r k o r sm e a r n o m a tte r S a n d w ic k B a n s OF 12 $1 S p ln a ck WT CANS $1 In stn n t B re a k fa st OP 6 9 1 A F TO P VALUE w h a t d e v ilis h a b u s e A J STAM PS is d e v is e d fo r th e m KROGER REG. OR HONEY KROGER KROGER FREESTONE WITH THIS COUPON OH I t o r - - * b y s a d is tic s tu d e n ts. . l-L B St J- L B TH E PU RCH ASE O P EA CH P K G J .G r a k a a s 2 PKG 5 l- O Z CANS $ 1 / \ J P e n c k H a lv e s 2 13—OZ CANS O P H OLLAND SPRING 5 G e t th e d y n a m ic b ic D u o at your □ FLOWER BULBS ■ REDEEM A T KR O G ER ST A R T S c a m p u s s to re n o w . ■ THRU S A T ., MAR. 30, 1940 M S I ■ B e e B B B a M B M M M ia iS I TOMORROW ! WSTISMSN-IIC H N COW. 125 F L O R I D A A F TO P VALUE SP A R T A N Miiroas, conn . MICHIGAN A j STAM PS W EST Oranges w ith r a n c o u p o n o n : U.S. NO. 1 GRADE 4S« OH M O M FU ECM ASE O F VINE E IF E N E D Z ■ S 2 TOMATOES W.C. F IE L D S P o ta to e s EED EEM A T KB O G EE a _ J L THBU S A T .. MAE. S I. I f SS f i l l i m m m m m m m m m m m m m iu E i G R EA T S! 12 por 490 O C TO P VALUE STAM PS WITH THIS COUPON ON " M Y L IT T L E 2 0 THE FUECMASE OF » MEAOS OP JO N A T H A N & M C IN T O S H a LETTUCE or CA BIASE « C H IC K A D E E " L B B A G * MOCCM AT KEOOEE ^ T M t U SAT., MAE. SO. ItSS U T fi] Apples P L U S ¡ Z A J TO P VALUE STAM PS WITH THIS COUPON ON THE FUECMASE OF ; : "Y O U C A N 'T ■ A T JÀ 3 **• 590 ■ 1-LBS OB MOBE S BANANAS i r YAMS i *I EEOEEM AT KEOOEE — i ■ C H E A T AN HO NEST M A N " THBU SAT.. MAE. SB. It M i i l l ■■■■■■■■am aadSU Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Thursday, March 28, 1968 9 T H IS W K E K K N D w H o u s e c o m m itte e a p p r o v e s B lo c k a n d B rìd le t a x to c u t to u r is t s p e n d in g to e x h i b i t h o r s e s W A S H IN G T O N (A P ) H ouse W a y s and M e a n s C o m ­ - The A m e r ic a n s t r a v e l i n g a b r o a d to sp e n d c a u t io u s ly . the m a i n f e a t u r e s of th e lim it e d b ill a p p r o v e d t o d a y a r e : M e m b e rs o f M S U 's B lo c k M S U h o r s e m e n w ill b e the m itte e a p p r o v e d t o d a y a m i n i ­ T h e c o m m it t e e a g r e e d to d a y - T h e p r e s e n t d u t y -fr e e e x ­ a n d B r i d le C lu b w ill e x h ib it p e r f o r m e r s in a ll c l a s s e s e x ­ m u m ta x p r o g r a m d e s ig n e d to to in c lu d e in it s re p o rt e m p tio n o f $100 f o r g o o d s a r e ­ s o m e o f the top s h o w h o r s e s ce p t th e s h o w b re e d s. The re d u c e U .S . t o u r is t s p e n d in g s u c h a n a p p e a l to A m e r ic a n t u r n in g t r a v e le r b r in g s in w it h in M i c h i g a n a t the c l u b 's 20th m o r e th a n 75 h o r s e s w h ic h a b ro a d b u t p o stp o n e d a c t io n on t o u r is t s - n o t n e c e s s a r i ly to f o re ­ h im w o u ld b e c u t to $10 t e m p o ­ a n n u a l H o r s e S h o w to be he ld w ill be s h o w n a r e o w n e d b y P r e s id e n t J o h n s o n 's m a j o r r e c ­ g o f o r e ig n t rip s , b u t to k e e p r a r ily . T h e e x e m p t io n w o u ld F r i d a y a n d S a t u r d a y in the the B lo c k and B r id le C lu b o m m e n d a tio n in t h is field. th e ir s p e n d in g a b ro a d w it h in r is e to $50 O c t. 15,1969. » L iv e s to c k P a v ilio n . m e m b e r s o r b y f a r m s in M i c h i ­ bounds. - T h e p r e s e n t a llo w a n c e of T h e c o m m it t e e se n t to the The sh ow is re g a rd e d b y gan. H o u s e a b ill c a llin g f o r a fiv e In a d d it io n to the f iv e p e r c e n t $10 f o r a g if t m a ile d f r o m h o r s e m e n a s the f ir s t m a j o r D e t e r m in in g t ro p h y a n d r ib ­ p e r ce n t ta x o n a ir p la n e t ic k e ts tax o n a ll a i r t r a n s p o r t a t io n a b ro a d to s o m e o n e in t h is e v e n t of M i c h i g a n 's sh o w s e a ­ bon w in n e r s w ill be M r . a n d f ro m t h is c o u n try to a n o th e r, c o u n t ry w o u ld b e re d u c e d to $1 to d e s t in a t io n s o u ts id e the so n a n d g i v e s a p r e v ie w of M r s . C h u c k G r a n t . A m e r ic a n U n it e d S t a t e s a n d f o r a r e ­ m any of the h o r s e s w h ic h H o rse Show A s s o c ia t io n - a p ­ d u c tio n in the a m o u n t of g o o d s w ill be show n a ro u n d sta te d u r in g the se a so n , a c ­ the p ro v e d E n g lis h ju d g e s , B a i le y B r a d le y , A m e r ic a n Q u a r ­ t e r H o r s e A s s n . -a p p r o v e d q u a r ­ and r e t u rn in g t o u r is t s m a y b r in g in d u t y free. Fulbriglit requests c o r d in g to P a m M ille r . D u n ­ It sa id , h o w e v e r, th a t a c tio n t e r h o r s e ju d ge . Viet p eacem aker dee s e n io r, a n d s h o w p u b lic it y o n the e x p e n d it u r e ta x that c h a ir m a n . G r a n t w ill a ls o p e r f o r m a s p e c ia l e x h ib it io n w it h h is c h a m ­ H o rs e w a x w a s to p r o v id e m o s t o f the P e r f o r m a n c e s w i ll be a t 8 b a la n c e of p a y m e n t s s a v i n g s in p.m . F r i d a y a n d a t 1 a n d 7 p io n d r e s s a g e h o r s e s tra in e d Ken M um y, K a la m a z o o ju n io r and c o - c h a i r m a n o f th e B lo ck & B r id le H o rs e J o h n s o n 's p r o g r a m w ill b e p o s t ­ in p r e c is io n o f m o v e m e n t and Show , g r o o m s h is h o r s e In p r e p a r a tio n f o r th e e v e n t. W A S H IN G T O N (A P I -S e n . n a m p o lic y , s a id the r e s p o n s ib il­ p.m . S a tu rd a y . p oned u n til th e a d m in is t r a t io n o b edie nce. S ta te New s P h o to by M ike B e a s le y J.W . F u lb r ig h t , D - A r k . , o ffe re d it y fo r n e g o t ia t in g a n e n d to the C la s s if ic a t io n s of p e r f o r m a n ­ c o m e s up w it h r e c o m m e n d a t io n s c e s in c lu d e E n g l i s h a n d W e st- John G arn e r. V a ssa r ju n ­ W e d n e s d a y a S e n a te re s o lu t io n w a r c u ts a c r o s s the in t e r e s t s o n s p e c ia l i m p o r t d u t ie s o r o th e r e m -s t y le r id in g ; b u n d le r a c e ; ior. is c h a ir m a n of the 1968 c a llin g f o r a p p o in t m e n t of a n of m a n y g o v e r n m e n t d e p a r t ­ in t e r n a tio n a l tra d e m e asures c o s t u m e c la s s , in w h ic h b o th show . im d e p e n d e n t. C a b in e t -le v e l n e g o ­ m e n ts. in c lu d in g S t a t e a n d d e ­ a ls o d e s ig n e d to c o r r e c t the h o rs e a n d r id e r a r e d r e s s e d T ic k e t s a r e on s a le in the tia to r f o r p e a c e in V ie t n a m . fense. im b a la n c e in in t e r n a t io n a l p a y ­ in co stu m e s of the r i d e r ’s B lo c k a n d B r i d le r o o m of the " E a c h d e p a rt m e n t, a n d e s p e ­ m e nts. F u lb r ig h t . c h a ir m a n o f the d e s ig n a n d c u t t in g c la s s L iv e s t o c k P a v i l io n and w ill c ia lly the tw o d e p a r t m e n t s I Se n a te F o r e i g n R e la t io n s C o m ­ S h a k y t ie s w it h S w e d e n U n d e r s e c r e t a r y o f the T r e a s ­ in w h ic h h o rs e a n d r id e r t ry be a v a ila b le a t the d oor. The h a v e ju s t m e n tio n e d , n o t o n ly u r y J o s e p h B a r r to ld r e p o r t e r s m ittee. u r g e d in a s ta te m e n t to s e p a ra te on e a n im a l f r o m p ric e is $1.50 f o r F r i d a y e v e ­ h a s s p e c ia l in t e r e s t s b u t p a r t ic ­ a fte r the c o m m it t e e s e s s io n he the a p p o in t m e n t of a “ m a n of n in g a n d $1 f o r S a t u r d a y a ft e r ­ u la r o b je c t iv e s in m i n d . " he a h e rd of cattle . d o e s not k n o w w h e n the tra d e h igh in t e r n a t io n a l s t a tu re w h o A s h o w o f b re e d s w ill be noon. T ic k e t s f o r the S a t u r ­ said. re c o m m e n d a t io n m a y b e f o rt h ­ w ou ld not h a v e b e e n p r e v io u s ly p a r t o f e le c tio n te n s io n s fe a tu re d a t a ll t h re e p e r f o r m - d a y e v e n in g show a re so ld id en tifie d w it h a n y p a r t ic u la r F u lb r i g h t s a id he t h in k s th e re c o m in g , o r e v e n f o r s u r e w h e th ­ an ce s. N in e h o r s e a s s o c i a ­ out. sch o ol o f t h o u g h t . " is m u t u a l s u s p ic io n in H a n o i e r t h e re w ill b e any. tio n s w ill p re s e n t e x h ib it io n s T h e s h o w ’s p r o f it s w ill be and W a s h in g t o n a b o u t the m o ­ In t e n s iv e n e g o t ia t io n s a r e no w T h e A r k a n s a s se n a to r, a c r it ­ to d e m o n s t r a t e the q u a lit ie s u se d to f u r t h e r in t e r e s t at t iv e s a n d o b je c t iv e s o f the o th e r STO CKH O LM (A P ) - The th is w e r e n ’t a n e le c t io n y e a r w h ic h s t ill f in d s g e n e r a l a c c e p t ­ in p r o g r e s s , he s a id , w it h the ic of P r e s id e n t J o h n s o n 's V ie t ­ w h ic h m a k e e a c h b re e d d if ­ M SU in the liv e s t o c k in d u s ­ side. s t r a in in r e la t io n s b e tw e e n the in S w e d e n a s it is in the U n it e d ance. m a jo r U .S . t r a d in g p a r t n e r s in fe re n t f r o m the oth e rs. try. U n it e d S t a t e s a n d S w e d e n r u n s S t a t e s ,” s a id a p r o m in e n t S w e d ­ M a n y S w e d e s s t ill fe e l g u ilt y E u r o p e t r y in g to w o r k ou t fre e r c o u n te r to a n u n b ro k e n f r ie n d ­ is h o ffic ia l. a b o u t not h a v in g s p o k e n out a c c e s s f o r U .S . g o o d s. * F L O R ID A U N R EST s h ip b e tw e e n th e tw o c o u n t r ie s g o in g b a c k 185 y e a rs . S w e d is h o f f ic ia ls c a n n o t re c a ll “ T h e g o v e r n m e n t , o f c o u rse , 1 c r it ic a lly a g a in s t the N a z i s a s d e n ie s it, b ut le t ’s b e e k p liC U - th is e x t r e m e c r i t i c i s m of the th e y d o to d a y a g a in s t the U n it e d S ta te s. O n e stu d e n t of f o re ig n B a r r e s t im a t e d th a t the lim it ­ ed b ill a p p r o v e d to d a y w o u ld r e ­ su lt in a b a la n c e o f p a y m e n t s W j a n y t h in g lik e th e p re s e n t d e t e r i­ u n ite d a u rc e s Cvuiu not n a * H s: T h e re w a s im p r o v e m e n t o n th e e i- THE F I N E S T o r a t io n in r e la t io n s h a v in g h a p p e n e d if it w e r e n ’t th a t o u r w h a t a m o u n te d to a lm o s t a n $100 m illio n a y e a r. Arsonists causing h a p p e n e d b e fo re , a lt h o u g h th e re w a s a p e rio d o f r u f fle d f e e lin g s S o c ia l D e m o c r a t ic g o v e r n m e n t is w o r r ie d a b o u t T h e o u tc o m e of o f f ic ia l c o n s p ir a c y of sile n c e f o r fe a r of o ffe n d in g the N a z is . T h e o r ig in a l J o h n s o n p a c k a g e , in c lu d in g a ta x up to 30 p e r IN HAIR DESIGN AND HAIR P I E C E S d u r in g the c o ld w a r. Sw eden the p a r lia m e n t a r y e le c t io n in T h e r e w e re no d e m o n s tr a t io n s , ce nt on the s p e n d in g of U .S. racial disturbance re fu se d th e n to g o a lo n g w it h a n A m e r ic a n - le d e m b a r g o on the a u tu m n . “ S o c ia lis t s f e a r th a t t h e ir f a r n o r o c k o r e g g th ro w in g , no fla g b u r n in g . H a d a p a p e r then t r a v e le r s a b r o a d a b o v e a m in i­ m u m . h a d b ee n c a lc u la te d to 351-4552 t ra d e in s t r a t e g ic g o o d s w it h left a n d e s p e c ia lly m a n y o f the a tta c k e d H it le r a s m a n y a tta c k r e su lt in a $300 m illio n p a y ­ G A I N E S V I L L E . F la ( A P ) - a nd the A la c h u a C o u n t y G r a n d C o m m u n is t c o u n t rie s. y o u n g n e w v o t e r s w i ll d e fe c t to P r e s id e n t J o h n s o n a n d h is a d ­ m e n t s s a v in g . T h e a d m in is ­ M o o n lig h t t r ic k le s t h r o u g h the J u r y of b e in g r a c is t a n d “ K la n - S in c e the 1965 s te p u p in the the C o m m u n i s t s u n le s s t h e y a p ­ m in is t r a t io n today, it w o u ld h a v e tra tio n h a d h o p e d f o r a n o th e r t re e s a n d s ile n c e b la n k e t s th is in fe ste d .” V ie t n a m w a r, r e la t io n s g r a d u a l­ p e a se t h e m on the V i e t n a m w a r b ee n c o n f is c a t e d - a s s o m e ind eed $200 m illio n b y a c o m b in a t io n j y IL L A G E i s - 6 ^ ix 9 n o rth F l o r i d a tow n, b ut no t e v ­ S ix w e e k s la te r, t h e y w e re fre e d on b o n d o n a n o r d e r f r o m ly h a ve b e com e m o re and m o re issu e . T h e y a ls o fe e l t h e y w ill w e re fo r d e fy in g the g o v e r n ­ of e n c o u r a g in g f o r e ig n t o u r is m e r y o n e i s s le e p in g £ in c e J a n . 1 the 5th U .S . C i r c u it C o u r t of cloude d. S w e d e n , a n e u t ra l b e n e fit a m o n g the e le c t o ra te m e n t .” in th is c o u n try and u r g in g the d a r k n e s s h a s b e e n illu m in a t ­ A p p e a ls in N e w O r le a n s . The c o u n try , o f f ic ia lly to o k a n e v e r g e n e r a lly b y c h a m p io n in g the Stop In and s e e u s at ed m o r e th a n 20 t im e s b y the f in a l fe w d a y s of t h e ir c o n fin e ­ s h a r p e r c r it ic a l tone in o p p o s i­ a n t iw a r se n tim e n t. A n d r e m e m ­ fire b o m b s of n ig h t rid e rs . 2 2 0 Albert below Kn ap p ’ s C a m p u s C e n t e r m e n t w a s sp e n t in s p e c ia l, tio n to U .S . p o lic y in S o u t h e a s t b e r the S o c ia l D e m o c r a t s h a r e F ir e s c a rs a s m a ll g ro c e ry s to re a n d a f u r n it u r e sto r e ; it s e a r s a b a r, in the s e c tio n of i fb . 1 - dP ufv se g r e g a te d c e lls a ft e r 12 h o u r s of s p o ra d ic r io t in g in the ja il A sia . B r o a d s e c t io n s of the p r e s s a ls o re fle c t e d a h o stile M8SW*). (.<>■ V i® U C • * 'V sw.VinA of the v o te s h a s b e e n d e c lin in g sin c e 19 62." <»>--- '■ N - ’* “ ‘ "S . A ttention car ow ners I . iv , . , <*; ¿à* m t j ..... * re s id e n t s a re A e g ro e s. "T h e M arch (Y on a n a r s o n c h a r g e nam. *• 0* a n y m e m o r ie s o f a t im e w h e n s t o r e s a r e o w n e d b y w h ile s . H o u s e s of p r o m in e n t w h ite , , filed in the f ir e - b o m b in g of a grocery. T h e c l i m a x c a m e w h e n the S a c r a l D e m o c r a t ic g o v e r n m e n t E u r o p e 's f r e e d o m _ ^ a s t h re a t ­ ened, a r e p r o t e s t in g m o r e lo u d ­ * Complete front end repair and alignnriènt 1968 SP R IN G T E R M I' M r s . T h o m a s . 34. left h e r ja il o p e n ly s u p p o rte d H a n o i p o lic y ly, b e c o m in g p o lit ic a lly m o r e o f f ic ia ls a r e not sa fe f r o m the m id n ig h t f ir e b o m b s. P o lic e ce ll to re t u r n to h e r h o m e to b y p e r m it t in g a C a b in e t m in i s ­ a c tiv e a n d d e m a n d in g m o re ’ Brakes E V E N IN G C O L L E G E re p o rte d on e in j u r y a n d e s t i­ c a re f o r h e r th re e c h ild re n . H e r te r to w a lk a t the s id e of a in v o lv e m e n t in w o r ld a f f a i r s th a n * Suspension N o n - c r e d it c o u r s e s o f s p e c ia l a p p e a l and v a lu e to the hu sb a n d . T h o m a s . - a U n i v e r s i t y N o r t h V ie t n a m e s e d ip lo m a t a n d a n y p r e v io u s S w e d is h g e n e r a ­ m a te d p r o p e r t y d a m a g e in e x ­ u n iv e r s it y c o m m u n ity o f fa c u lty , sta ff, stu d e n ts and of F l o r i d a p h y s ic s r e s e a r c h p r o ­ d e n o u n c e the U n it e d S t a t e s in a tion. U n d o u b t e d ly p a r t o f the c e s s o f $25.000. t h e ir s p o u s e s , T h e G a in e s v ill e Su n . its e lf the fe sso r. s a id w it h a g r in . " 1 m a y p r o -V ie t C o n g , a n t i- A m e r ic a n r e a s o n i s th a t V ie t n a m i s b e in g * Wheel balancing * Steering n e v e r b e p ro m o te d a g a in . We d e m o n s tr a t io n : b ro u g h t in to t h e ir h o m e s t h ro u g h a p p a re n t t a rg e t of a n a rs o n is t , A p r o g r a m o f u n i v e r s i t y - le v e l and u n iv e r s it y - q u a llt y W h y i s the S w e d is h g o v e r n ­ te le visio n . LISKEY’S Auto Safety Center e d it o ria liz e d : “ S in c e m o s t of a ll g e t a little p a r a n o ic a ft e r a In s t ru c tio n . w h ile , y o u k n o w . " m e n t f o llo w in g s u c h a lin e a t the A w o r r y i n g q u e s t io n in S w e ­ the a t t a c k s a r e u p o n property- W h ile M r s . T h o m a s a n d D a w ­ r i s k o f s e r io u s ly d a m a g in g t r a ­ den, r a is e d r e c e n t ly b y the c o n ­ o w n e d b y w h ite s , w e c a n o n ly A n o p p o rtu n ity to s u p p le m e n t c r e d i t - c o u r s e p r o g r a m s k in s w e r e b e h in d b a r s , the fire - d it io n a lly a m ic a b le t ie s w it h s e r v a t iv e p a p e r S v e s k a D a g - a s s u m e the a r s o n i s t s a r e s e e k ­ and to extend In t e lle c tu a l s tim u la tio n a n d e n jo y m e n t. the U n it e d S ta te s, f ir s t se a le d b la d e t is w h e t h e r the y o u n g 12 4 S O U T H L A R C H I V 4 -7 3 4 6 in g to in f la m e r a c ia l ha tred . b o m b in g sta rte d . Y e t . b e fo r e t h e ir c a s e u n fo ld e d b y B e n j a m in F r a n k lin in a g e n e r a t io n i s p r e p a r e d to ste p S p e c ia l tu itio n r a t e s In m a n y c o u r s e s f o r s p o u s e s of T h e a r s o n is t s h a v e no t s u c c e e d ­ and the f ir s t b u s in e s s w a s tre a ty A p r i l 3 ,1 7 8 3 ? b e y o n d the b o u n d a r ie s s e t b y stu d e n ts - f o r m a n a n d w ife r e g is t r a t io n s - a n d f o r ed. th a n k G o d . '' hit. r a c ia l le a d e r s w a r n e d of “ I a m c e r t a in the p re s e n t S w e d e n ’s 1 5 0-ye a r-o ld p o lic y of r e t ir e e s . . A c i v i l r ig h t s le a d e r said . ' T h e b o m b e d s t o r e s a r e lo c a te d in the N e g r o a re a w h e re e x p lo i­ un re st. " I f t h e y h a d liste n e d to u s la s t p ic t u r e w o u ld b e d if fe re n t if n o n -a lig n m e n t in p e a c e tim e , HILLEL FOUNDATION C l a s s e s b egin the w e ek o f A p r i l 1. s u m m e r , n o n e of t h is w o u ld tatio n i s g o in g o n . " PRO U D LY P R E SE N T S "H ig h , u n ju s t if ia b le a re c h a r g e d a n d m o s t d o not p r ic e s h a v e h a p p e n e d . " s a id the R e v . W rig h t , p a s t o r of M t . C a r m e l A C LU letter urges F o r d e s c r ip t iv e b r o c h u r e , s e e y o u r re s id e n t h a ll a d v i s o r o r te le p h o n e 3 5 5 - 4 5 6 2 . R e g i s t e r a t the h ire N e g r o e s . " s a id the R e v . B a p t is t c h u r c h f o r s e v e n y e a rs . THE FABU LO U S R e g is t r a t io n D e s k , M a i n L o b b y K e llo g g C e n t e r , o r T h o m a s A . W r ig h t , p re sid e n t of " I d o not a d v o c a t e v io le n c e , open recruitment $ by m a ll. the G a in e s v ill e c h a p t e r of the N a tio n a l A s s o c ia t io n f o r th e A d ­ but if it t a k e s a fe w t h re a t s to g e t s o m e t h in g done, w e w ill d o it. O n -c a m p u s ca re e r r e c r u it ­ u n iv e r s it ie s d e c id e d to a d m it a ll ARONSONS (loe &Penny] •••• v a n c e m e n t of C o lo r e d P e o p le . " W h e n a p e r s o n i s liv in g in a m e n t s h o u ld be o p e n to a ll r e c r u it e r s o r n o n e of them , H i s c h a r g e d r e w a d e n ia l O F P H I L A D E L P H I A , P A . , IN A C O N C E R T O F c o n d itio n a n d lo o k in g a t a th in g c o r p o r a t io n s and go ve rn m e n t but the d e c is io n to a d m it s o m e f r o m E d d ie F is h e r , o w n e r of one of the b o m b e d s to re s , w h o said . "W e ’v e b e e n m o r e th a n e v e r y d a y a n d he c a n 't se e a n y p r o g r e s s , he g e t s d e s p e r a t e . " a g e n c ie s if it is to b e o p e n to a ny, the A m e r ic a n C i v i l L i b e r ­ and e x c lu d e o t h e r s w o u ld be d is c r im in a t o r y . T h e A C L U le tt e r c o m m e n t e d F O L K S O N G S - H U M O R , S A T I R E , NOST AL GI C SUNDAY, M A R C H 31, 8 PM m m Here’s one off the impor­ □ □ □ he added. tie s U n io n ( A C L U ) s a id r e ­ fa ir, e x t e n d in g c r e d it to th o se that need it a n d s o on d o w n ce ntly. o n the n e ed to p ro te c t p ro t e s t s UNION B UI L DI NG - P A R L O R S B & C tant new b oo ks of 1968! T h e sta te m e n t, m a d e in a le t­ a g a in s t r e c r u itm e n t . the line. G a in e s v ille i s the c o u n t y se a t te r to the p r e s id e n t s o f 200 It s a id : “ W e a ls o b e lie v e E v e r y o n e W e l c o m e - No A d m i s s i o n C h a r g e " W h a t ’s b e h in d th e m , the o f A la c h u a C o u n ty , w h o s e 1960 le a d in g c o lle g e s a n d u n iv e r s it ie s , that fre e s p e e c h a n d a c a d e m ic f ir e - b o m b in g s I d o n ’t k n o w , " p o p u la tio n of 74.074 in c lu d e d sa id W illia m F is h e r . P o lic e J o in e r h a s h is o w n C h ie f 19.490 N e g ro e s . C it y o f f ic ia ls , re lu c t a n t to be w a s b a se d o n the c u r r e n t a c tio n o n m a n y c o lle g e c a m p u s e s to f re e d o m r e q u ir e th a t p ro te s t o n c a m p u s r e la t in g to r e c r u it ­ m e n t b y a n y s e g m e n t o f the R e s e r v a t io n s a r e now b e in g taken at the H ille l H o u s e f o r the A p r , 12 P a s s o v e r S e d e r , a s w e ll a s the P a s s o v e r W H Y TH E DRAFT? ideas. " I t a ll s t e m s f r o m the tro u b le quo te d b y n a m e in a n e le c tio n y e a r, s a id th e re h a s b ee n p r o g ­ b a r m i li t a r y a n d D o w C h e m ic a l r e c r u it e r s b e c a u s e o f stu d e n t a c a d e m ic c o m m u n it y s h o u ld a ls o M e a l Coop, R e s e r v a t io n s sh o u ld be m a d e by A p r i l 1 The Case for a Volunteer Army a n d f a c u lt y p r o t e s t a g a in s t the be f u lly p ro te c te d .” that h a s o c c u r r e d h e re w h e re r e s s in p u b lic r i g h t s f o r b la c k V ie t n a m w a r. By James C. Miller III (Editor), David B. Johnson, the c iv il r ig h t s w o r k e r s h a v e people. T h e c la im is d is p u te d Cotton M. Lindsay, Mark V. Pauly, Joseph M. b y c iv il r i g h t s le a d e rs. “ A n y d e c is io n to e x c lu d e s o m e b ee n in v o lv e d . " J o in e r sa id . J o in e r s a id he r e f e rr e d to C a r ­ ol T h o m a s and Ir v in "J a c k " S c h o o ls h a v e b e e n in te g ra te d , but no f i r m f ig u r e s a r e r e a d ily r e c r u it e r s , a r is in g p r i m a r il y f r o m a p o lit ic a l c o n t r o v e r s y , p o s e s a q u e s t io n o f c iv il lib e r ­ Summer Student CharterTours to Europe Scolnick, Jr., Robert D. Tollison, Thomas D. Willett W it h a n In t r o d u c t io n b y a v a ila b le a n d c r it i c s c a ll it D a w k in s , c i v i l r ig h t s w o r k e r s ja ile d D e c . 27 o r ig in a lly w it h o u t token. tie s in te re st. a c c r e d ite d T h e b a r r i n g of o u ts id e a g e n c ie s Language Y o u n o l o n g e r h a v e to b e a m e m b e r o f a sp e c ia l g r o u p to t a k e a d v a n t a g e o f Se n a to r E d w a r d W . B ro o k e $125 bond on c o n te m p t o f c o u r t c o n ­ P u b lic f a c ilit ie s a n d r e s t a u r ­ A P E N G U IN P A P E R B A C K O R IG IN A L v ic tio n s. M r s . T h o m a s , w h o is w h ite , a n t s a n d G a i n e s v i l l e 's r e c r e a ­ tio n c e n t e r s a r e o p e n to N e g r o s t r ik e s a g a in s t the c o n c e p t of the o p e n u n iv e r s it y a n d the r ig h t s o f s tu d e n ts to h e a r a ll Institute d o lla r s a v in g c h a r t e r a ir fa re s. a n d D a w k in s , a N e g ro , w e re a n d w h ite . W H Y T H E D R A F T ? is a b o o k that e v e r y t h o u g h t fu l held in c o n te m p t on c h a r g e s of B u t th e p r o g r e s s h a s b e e n d is ­ p o in ts of v ie w , ” the s ta te m e n t FRENCH Tiki in excitinc STOP tour of Europe via WORLD A m e r ic a n w ill w a n t to read, c o n s id e r a n d d is c u s s in said. d is t r ib u t in g an u n d e r g ro u n d t r e s s in g ly s lo w a n d c a m e o n ly T h e A C L U a ls o s ta te d th a t GERMAN AIRWAYS, largest and finest Charter Airline in the t h is im p o r ta n t e le c tio n yea r. p u b lic a tio n th a t a c c u s e d the t h ro u g h c o n s t a n t p r e s s u r e , s a id th e re w o u ld b e n o is s u e if RUSSIAN World. Departur|s June 18, 23, 25, 28. S o v n n y o u n g p o lit ic a l e c o n o m is t s ta k e a c r itic a l b u t G a in e s v ille P o li c e D e p a r t m e n t W rig h t. o b je c tiv e lo o k at the d ra ft in all its a s p e c t s a n d at SPANISH Choosefrom12itineraries of 46to60days. From$1180 the a lle r n a t iv e s to it. T h e y c o n c lu d e that c o n s c r ip ­ June 2 4 -August 10, 1968 all-inclusive. tio n in a n y fo rm is in e q u it a b le a n d th e n e x a m in e in d e ta il the a d v a n t a g e s a n d p r o b le m s o f a v o lu n te e r Sweetheart Special S m Europe In tht company of fallow itudanta from all war tha U.S. and University of California Canada. Pretram, tallerad with a “yeuni leeh", dlacothaquaa, thaatra ava- a rm y . nlnn, tailing partita, aacortad throughout by atudenta frem Sm ith uni- Santa Crus vtraltiaa and lata of ialtura tlma far yaur peraonal puraulta and Infardata. “This i> an excellent piece o f work by a group of Alto wallablt: 13 tpectacular Eureptan Protram, via tha all Jet tarvlcat of men of aound professional training and o f the rele­ Living - learning language TWA and tranaatlnntlc luaury llnera-the $& Franca, Mlchelanielo, United programs for beginning and Sfatta*. Superior hotel accommodation! avtrywhtrt, flrat data rail trawl, vant age and concern. Policy on tha draft haa always intermediate students. Intensive lilhtaatlnt In air cendltlentd motor coachtt, athar top quality leaturea. been made by the old and tha aging, and never so 1 Dozen Sweetheart seven week summer sessions In residence at Cowell College, i r ta TS day, from ESdt.SS all-indutlve. •M e a t 1960. the international tafaty atandard* for new iflips davalopad In much aa now, and by tha specialists in cliché and tra­ dition. This fraah view is exceedingly welcome and I, U CSC. Audio-lingual method. For compiala Information and compllmantary brochure: for one, hope lt will be highly influential." Native speaker informants. 10 -Jih n Kenneth Galbreith units University credit. R oses J3 M Application deadline: April 22. Coat: $636 All-inclusive. call or come In to W H Y T H E D R A F T ? is now on s a le a t yo u r p a p e rb a ck d e a le r's . P ick up a co p y today. For further Information, CollegeTravel Office NO ST U D E N T pleaae write: DISCO U NT The Secretary, Summer Language Inetltute; PENGUIN BOOKS INC saeo C lipper M ill R oad Baltimore, Md. 21211 JO UCSC; Santa Cruz, California $6060 130 West Grand River 351-6010 809 E. M IC H IG A N IV 5-7271 10 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Thursday, March 28, 1968 AT■ W a l k o u t c l o g s N . Y . h a r b o r P l a c e m e n t B u r e a u N E W Y O R K ( A P ) -- S o m e 160 The 10-day-old w a lk o u t b y n e a r ­ C IO . s t r a n d e d 107 s h ip s at p ie r s u n lo a d p in e a p p le s W e d n e s d a y fo r n e w a u t o m a t e d p ie r s in N e w id le d s h ip s c lo g g e d th e n a t io n 's ly 22,000 lo n g s h o r e m e n w a s set b y W e d n e s d a y a n d a n o t h e r 50 a t f r o m the S S S a n J u a n d o c k e d at J e rs e y . Students must register in person at the Boy Scouts of America: Forestry and reading, business education, diagnosti­ b ig g e s t p o r t W e d n e s d a y a s a o ff bv a fe u d w ith a port a g e n c y m o o r in g s in th e h a rb o r. E d g e w a t e r . N .J . T h e s t r i k e r s s a y w o r k h a s b ee n cian. instructional media, geography, Placement Bureau at least two days prior all majors of the colleges of education, lo n g s h o r e m e n 's s t r ik e d w in d le d over" new h ir in g p ra c tic e s. T h e V o l k s w a g e n o u tle ts in th e m e ­ S o m e r e lie f s h ip m e n t s w e r e a f­ d iv e rte d f r o m the N e w Y o r k to to the date of an interview. business, arts and letters and social sci­ physical education, general science, t ro p o lita n a re a w e r e a lm o s t fe cte d b u t d e fe n s e c a r g o re ­ the N e w J e r s e y p ie r s, le a v in g April 4. Thursday: ence (B). Location: Michigan. Indiana. art, English, industrial arts. French, fru it a n d f o r e ig n c a r s u p p lie s c o s t o f the s t r ik e is m o u n t in g e m p ty W e d n e sd a y. ^ m a in e d i m m u n e to th e strik e , the N e w Y o r k lo n g s h o r e m e n u n ­ American Oil Co.. Standard Oil of In­ Illinois, Wisconsin and various. mathematics, music ivocal), social sci­ and th re a te n e d to ro t t o n s o f at a $ 3 -m illio n -a -d a y c lip diana: Agricultural economics, crop And Continental Can Co., Inc.: Packaging ence. chemistry, physical science, The e s t im a t e d 6 3 0 -m illio n lo st M o r e th a n 8.000 to n s of p in e ­ w it h f iv e v e s s e ls lo a d in g a t the d e r e m p lo y e d o r jo b le ss. economics, and government ( B M i p e r ish a b le fo o d s. soil science IB), all majors of the col­ technology (B.M), all majors of the a p p le s, b a n a n a s, ’ o r a n g e s a n d M i l i t a r y O c e a n T e r m i n a l in B a y ­ In a d d itio n , th e y c l a i m that leges of arts and letters, business, com­ college of arts and letters (M), all ma­ Wickes Corp : Business law and office L u x u ry lin e r p a sse n ge rs so far h a s a ffe c te d in d u s t r ie s m e lo n s w e re im p e r ile d b y the onne. N .J. u n d e r th e s e c t io n s e n io r it y s y s ­ munication arts and social science IB.M) jors of the college of business (B.M I. and administration, accounting, economics, s t r u g g le d w it h t h e ir o w n b a g ­ d e p e n d e n t of the w a te rfro n t, the tem in e ffe c t, n e w m e n a s s ig n e d all majors of the college of engineering all majors of the colleges of engineering management, and marketing (B.M). g a g e a n d fa c e d lim it e d m e n u s c it y e c o n o m y and c o m m u n it ie s s t r ik e e v e n t h o u g h r e f r ig e r a t io n and accounting i B i . Location: Michigan and natural science (B.M.D). Location: forest products, electrical, mechanical on ce th e v s a ile d b e c a u s e o f the a c r o s s the h a rb o r in N e w J e r ­ w a s b e in g m a in t a in e d a b o a r d T h e s t r ik e c o n c e r n s th e N e w to N e w J e r s e y h a v e s e n io r it y and metallurgical engineering and all and Midwest. Various. d if fic u lt y o f g e t t in g p r o v is io n s v e sse ls. Y o rk -N e w J e rse y W a te rf ro n t over v e te ra n s f r o m th e N e w Arthur Young and Co.: Accounting IB. Corunna, Mich., Public Schools: Early other students interested in manage­ sey. a b o a r d J ^ p s w ith o u t d o c k w o r k ­ W it h s p o ila g e im m in e n t , 46 C o m m i s s i o n 's p la n to o p e n the Y o r k d o c k s. M.D). Location: Ohio. Michigan. Illi­ and later elementary education, mentally ment i B ) Location : Various. T h e s t r ik e b y the In t e r n a t io n ­ w o r k r e g is t e r to 750 m o r e m e n S h ip p e r s a ls o o p p o se d o p e n in g nois and various. handicapped, remedial reading, indus­ April 4 and S. Thursday and Friday: ers. a l L o n g s h o r e m e n 's A ssn .. A F L - lo n g s h o r e m e n w e re p e r m itt e d to Ashland. Ohio. Schools: Early and later trial arts (electronics), mathematics, Guardsmark. Inc. : Police adminis­ the re g is t e r , f i g u r in g th e n e w tration and public safety (B). Loca­ elementary education, special education, music (instrumental), physical educa­ W hy P ay More! Why Pay More! Why Pay More W h y m e n m ig h t e v e n t u a lly c o m e u n ­ physical education imen's). English, in­ tion (women's), biology, chemistry and tion: Tennessee. SUMMER EMPLOYMENT d e r the p o r t 's g u a r a n t e e d a n ­ dustrial arts imetals, machine shop), physics (B.M). nu a l w a g e . O n the o th e r hand, art. counseling, driver education, mathe­ Davison, Mich., Community Schools: INTERVIEWS matics. Spanish and French i B.M ). Early and later elementary education and April 3. Wednesday : (sh ip p e rs o b je c t to p a y in g p r e ­ Booth Newspapers. Inc.: Sophomores Blaw-Knox Co.. Foundry and Mill physical education, social science. Eng­ m iu m p a y f o r t r a v e l a c r o s s the Machinery Group: Mechanical, electrical lish. mathematics, science, business and juniors in journalism, political BOYS’ NYLON H ud son R iv e r d em an d ed b y N e w and metallurgical engineering (B). Lo­ education. German. French, biology and science. English, history, advertising Y o r k lo n g s h o r e m e n . cation: Indiana. speech (B.M). and all majors of the colleges of arts Boise Cascade Corp. : Packaging tech­ Durand. Mich.. Area Schools: Early and letters, business, communication S o m e lo n g s h o r e m e n s a id the arts and social science. Location: Mich­ nology. accounting and financial admin­ and later elementary education and spe­ c o m m is s io n c a t e r s to N e w J e r ­ istration. management (B.Mi. all ma­ cial education ( B.M ). igan. se y p o lit ic ia n s w h o p le d g e d m o r e jors of the colleges of arts and letters, Flint, Mich., Civil Service Commis­ Camp Easton for Boys: Male coun­ communication arts, and social science sion: Hotel, restaurant and institutional selors in archery, crafts, riflery. nature, Waim-up Jackets jo b s fo r N e w a r k N e g r o e s a ft e r IB). Location Various management, accounting, urban plan­ sailing, canoeing, scuba, waterfront, last s u m m e r 's rio ts. waterskiing and general counseling ning (B). nursing (M) and civil engi­ neering (B). Location: Minnesota. Grand Haven. Mich.. Public Schools: New York State Dept, of Transporta­ Special education, mentally handicapped tion: Juniors and seniors in civil engi­ (type A and B) and speech correction neering. (B.M). April 4. Thursday: M a c h in e w ash ab le a ll nylon In the p o p u la r “ w a r m - u p " m o d e l. Grand Rapids. Mich.. Catholic Cen­ American Telephone and Telegraph. Snap fr o n t w ith s e lf c o lla r -u n ltn e d . C hoose fr o m navy, b ra s s tral: Art, English, industrial arts (draft­ Long Lines Dept.: Juniors and seniors ing). mathematics, music (instrument­ within one year of availability in the and g re e n . S izes 8 to 18. al). general science, physical science, colleges of business, electrical and social science and speech iB.M ). mechanical engineering. Location: Inter-Island Resorts: Hotel, restaurant Illinois and Midwest and institutional management (B). Loca­ Arthur Young and Co.: Juniors and tion: Hawaii. above interested in summer staff posi­ The Metropolitan Sanitary District of tions. Location: Ohio. Michigan. Illi­ Greater Chicago: Civil, mechanical and nois and various. electrical engineering (B). Inter-Island Resorts: Juniors and BOYS’ Mount Vernon. Ohio. City Schools: above in hotel, restaurant and institution­ SPORT Early and later elementary education, al management Location: Hawaii. mentally handicapped, guidance and Michigan Bell Telephone Co.: Juniors W EAR remedial reading, diagnostician, indus­ and seniors within one year of availably trial arts, sciencq. biology, social science ity in the college of business, electrical and sociology, counseftdk. mathematics, and mechanical engineering. Location: business education. English, home eco- Michigan. 'homics. French, physical science, history, The National Life and Accident In­ and speech correction i B.M ). surance Co. : Juniors in the colleges Newport News, Va.. Shipbuilding and of business, arts and letters, communi­ Dry Dock Co.: Electrical engineering, cation arts and social science (minimum CLEARANCE WINTER WOOLENS metallurgy, mechanics and material age21). Location: Various science (B). mechanical engineering Western Electric Co. : Juniors within (B.M.D). one year of availability in electrical Roseville. Mich.. Board of Education: and mechanical engineering. Location: Early and later elementary education, Illinois. art. music (vocal), special education April 5. Friday: C le a ra n c e of F a ll and W in te r W o olen s o f v a rio u s w eig hts and q u a litie s in c lu d in g c re p e s , (type A) and visiting teacher, IB.M I. Detroit Bank and Trust Co.: MBA's Ryder Truck Lines, Inc.: Industrial graduating in December 1968 or March fla n n e ls , s u itin g and o th e r ty p e s , also bonded k n its In v a rio u s w e a v e s . R e g u la r $1.27 administration, economics, transpor­ 1969 in accounting and financial admin­ to $ 2 .9 7 . tation administration and all majors of istration. Location: Michigan the college of business (B). Location: Ekco Products. Inc.: Sophomores or Florida and various. juniors in mechanical engineering, Utica. Mich.. Community Schools: packaging technology, hotel, restaurant 1 /3 O F F 1 /3 O F F Early and later elementary education, mentally handicapped, speech correction, visiting teacher, guidance and remedial and institutional management, and all majors of the college of business L ra­ tion: Illinois. meno » »S' Bobby, M cCarthy •C H O O S E FRO M ANY M E N 'S W ORK SHOES IN OUR SHOE D E P T . • P IC T U R E D ARE A FEW O F TH E M A N Y W E STO CK . . . gain King support AND NOW SAVE $ 2 .0 0 W IT H C O U P O N B ELO W N E W A R K , N .J . ( A P ) -- D r . b el P e a c e P r iz e , w a s in N e w M a r t i n L u t h e r K i n g J r . h in te d J e r s e y to e n lis t s u p p o r t f o r h is s t r o n g ly W e d n e s d a y h e w o u ld p la n n e d A p r i l 22 m a r c h on W a s h ­ s u p p o r t e it h e r Se n. E u g e n e J. in g to n to d r a m a t iz e the p lig h t s M c C a r t h y o r Se g . R o b e r t F . K e n ­ of the n a t io n 's p oor. n e d y f o r the D e m o c r a t ic p r e s i ­ “ I f N i x o n a n d J o h n s o n w e re WORK OXFORDS Playtex'invents thefirst-daytampon" d e n tia l n o m in a tio n . K i n g s a id he w a s “ d is e n ­ the c a n d id a t e s . " he sa id , "w e w o u ld h a v e a t r a g ic c h o ice . " c h a n t e d " w it h P r e s id e n t J o h n ­ K i n g s a id he s u p p o rte d and ( W e t o o k th e in s id e o u t s o n ’s f a il u r e to e n d th e V ie * •vote d f o r P r e s id e n t J o h n s o n in t o s h o w y o u h o w d iffe r e n t i t is . ) n a m w a r. 1964. w h e n h is R e p u b lic a n o p p o ­ C ho o se fr o m tan o r b ro w n F u ll cushion In so les H e s a id b o th K e n n e d y . D - N . Y . . ne nt w a s c o n s e r v a t iv e Se n. B a r ­ Outside: it’s softer and silky (n ot card b o ard y ). a n d M c C a r t h y , D - M ir in . , w in c e O il r e s is ta n t sole r y G o ld w a te r. B u t he c h a r g e d Inside: it’s so extra ab sorben t.. .it even protects on "the k in d o f re le v a n t id e n tit y S iz e s 6 1 /2 to 12 that the J o h n s o n a d m in is t r a ­ your first day. Y o u r worst day! of u r b a n p r o b le m s a n d s o c ia l t io n 's V ie t n a m p o lic y w a s “ le a d ­ A ll L e a th e r u p p e r In every lab test against the old cardboardy k in d .. . j u s t ic e . " in g u s to a d e a d -e n d stre e t that the Playtex tam pon was always m ore absorbent. H e s a id . "B o t h a r e v e r y c o m ­ c a n w e ll lead u s to the d e s t r u c ­ A ctu ally 45 % m ore absorbent on the average peten t m e n . " tion o f m a n k in d . “ R E G . P R IC E $ 8 .9 7 than the leading regular tam pon. " It m a y v e r y w e ll b e th a t I w o u ld e n d u p e n d o r s in g o n e of Because it’s different. A ctu ally adjusts to you. S A V E $ 2 .0 0 I t flowers out. Fluffs out. Designed to protect every inside inch o f you. So the chance o f a mishap them . " he told a c o n f e re n c e in a B a p t is t c h u r c h in the a r e a of Victim of assault W IT H C O U P O N P A IR t h is N e w J e r s e y c it y w h e r e r a ­ is almost zero! T r y it fast. c ia l r io t in g to o k 26 li v e s la s t treated at Olin J u ly . W h y live in the past? K in g , c h a i r m a n o f the S o u t h ­ A n M S U stu d e n t w a s tre a te d MEN’S 6” WORK tampons e rn C h r i s t i a n L e a d e r s h ip C o n ­ fe re n c e a n d w in n e r o f th e N o - a t O lin H e a lt h C e n t e r f o r in ­ j u r ie s re c e iv e d in a n e a r ly SHOES Tu e sd ay A rm stro n g m o r n in g H a ll. f ig h t near U n iv e r s it y • C hoose fr o m tan o r b ro w n p o lic e re p o rt. C h a r g e d f o r the a g g r a v a t e d • F u ll cushion In so les a s s a u lt o f R o b e r t D . R e is h , • O il r e s is ta n t s o le and h eel F l i n t s e n io r, i s B e n n ie E . P a g e • • A ll L e a th e r u p p e r S iz e s 6 1 /2 to 12 Paperbounds on your o f L it t le R o c k . A r k . reading list? R E G . P R IC E $ 9 .9 7 R e p o r t O f T h e N a tio n a l S A V E $ 2 .0 0 A d v is o r C o m m is io n W IT H C O U P O N P A IR O n C iv il D is o r d e r s by UJS. Riot Commission Thrifty Acres Only P a p e rb a c k ....................................... {1.25 This is the complete text; the facts - behind the shame of our citie s, the( c r is is of our nation I Here a r e ! ■ T ¡$ 2 .0 0 # SA V E $ 2 .0 0 1 $ 2 .0 0 1 the causes of and rem edies fo r the I smoldering violence In Am erica to« | w M i »hit M u g e * tow ard day. tot pw ichaM a* Y e s - I t ’ s s p rin g . M e n 's WORK SHOES o r OXFORDS T H E 10 B E S T - S E L L IN G P A P E R B A C K S T im e to g et r id o f 1. Valley of the Dolls 6 . Phyllis Diller’ s Housekeeping Hints] th o se e x t r a heavy A d v e r tis e d in th is A D. 2. The King 7. The Riot w in te r c lo th e s . C le a n in g A n y a r all ta ap aat radaam abla with 61-00 purchaia a r mara 3. The Sleeping Prophet 8. C ase of the W orried W aitress aacludlng baa«, wiaa, tigaratto itonw ar I M M KW V 4. Capable of Honor 9 . The 9th D irective and s to ra g e a t ... Limit a n * gar cvttomar. In g ira t *a t.“ a « . J U , I j O 5. The Paper Lion 10. The Adventurers I hi ¡ f t y A i r e s Coupon m e iJ G R 5125 West Saginaw Q JL ™ 6200 South Pennsylvania t h r ift y a c r e s 00K Y Ö R Ö J ^ L cleaners * Wo rooervo the right te lim it to reasonable quantities. ¿23 E . G ra n d R iv e r P rice« tat thle ed good through Saturday, March 30, 1968 | E a s t L a n s in g O v e r 100 P u b lie h e re H li v P u y M o re ! YVh v P a V M ore! VVh \ V o. \ M S to cked In o u r W a re h o u s e 'a c r o s s from Student S ervices' Thursday, March 28, 1968 11 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan M M «A H IH M AHATI— 4M TW O SNOWS Q P -A P M fft C osby s t a r s S a t u r d a y H is to ry p r o f e s s o r T O D A Y AT 1 :0 0 -4 :3 0 -8 :1 5 L IM IT E D EN G A G EM EN T! a s t o p c h o i c e i n s u r v e y a d d e d to s e m i n a r YOUR LAST CHANCE TO ENJOY ALL THE MIGHT O F THE A la s t m in u t e c h a n g e in the s o c ia l s c ie n c e , h a s p la n n e d to ACADEMY AWARD Athlete, comedian, actor, T ic k e t s a r e o n s a le a t the I B e c a m e S e r i o u s l y S e r io u s . ” a g e n d a o f M S U p r o f e s s o r s to sp e a k o n th e “ R e v o lu t io n a n d WINNING SPECTACLE I whatever you call it, that’s B ill U n io n , C a m p b e ll’s S u b u r b a n S h o p C o s b y s a id t h a t h i s s t a r t in le a d w o r k s h o p s in the f ift h E v o lu t io n in S o u t h e a s t A s i a . ” Cosby. a n d P a r a m o u n t N e w s C è n t e r in c o m e d y w a s a s n a t u r a l a s s t u b ­ a n n u a l W in d s o f C h a n g e S e m in a r And, afte r two years as being d o w n to w n L a n s in g . b in g h is toe. H o w e ve r, C o sb y T h e t w o -d a y s e m i n a r b e g in s w as announced t h is w e ek. * 'the number one choice on the C o s b y , o n c e o n e o f the m o s t s a id th a t h is d r a m a t i c w o r k w a s w it h r e g is t r a t io n f r o m 3 to W a lt e r G o u r la y , p ro fe sso r ASMSU Popular Entertainm ent p r o m is in g g r i d d e r s a t T e m p le the r e s u lt o f a c a r e f u l d e c isio n . 6 p.m ., A p r i l 5, fo llo w e d b y o f h is t o ry , h a s b e e n a d d e d to survey, Gosby w ill present U n iv e r s it y , began h is f ir s t W h e n C o s b y w a s a k id , he N a r a s im h a n ’s s p e e c h a t 8 p .m . the lis t o f M S U s p e a k e r s on in the E r i c k s o n K i v a . A c o ffe e two shows a t 7 and 9:30 p.m. Saturday in Jenison Fieldhouse. c o m e d y r o u t in e a t a g e 10 in p a id a tt e n t io n to t h in g s ¿ h a t a P h ila d e lp h ia s c h o o l. A n d t h is o th e rs d id n o t t h in k tw ic e about. Quite an earfu l the p re se n t sc h e d u le . W in d s of C h a n g e , A p r i l 5 h o u r w ill fo llo w . i s w h e n it a ll b e g an . I t g a v e h im a s e n s e o f s e c u r it y a n d 6, w ill h a v e the th e m e , C o m e d ia n B ill C osby w ill a p p e a r h e re S a tu rd a y A p r i l 6 a c t iv it ie s b e g in a t C o s b y h a s p la y e d a t le a d in g to te ll s t o r ie s a n d se e o th e r “ T h e R i c h L a n d s a n d the P o o r : c lu b s s u c h a s S a n F r a n c i s c o s people la u g h , h e sa id . M a n y of n ig h t. H is f i r s t show at 7 p .m . Is so ld out, but tic k ­ 9 a .m . w it h a s y m p o s i u m on Collection taken H u n g r y I, W a s h in g t o n 's S h o re - h is j o k e s d e a l w it h h is e a r l y e ts f o r h is second show a r e now on s a le . T h e C h a lle n g e of D e v e lo p m e n t . ” “ A m e r ic a ’s R o le in th e D e ­ C .V . N a r a s im h a n , se cre tary- h a m H o te l, N e w Y o r k ’s B a s in life in P h ila d e lp h ia . v e lo p m e n t P r o c e s s . ' ’ M ET R 0-G 0LD W Y N -M A Y E R for math team St re e t E a s t , the F l a m in g o in L a s C o s b y s t a r s in “ I S p y , ” the g e n e r a l o f th e U n it e d N a t io n s , w ill b e k e y n o te sp e a k e r. A n o on lu n c h e o n in the G r e e n PRESENTS A c o lle c tio n i s b e in g ta k e n Vegas and H a r r a h 's at L a k e N B C - T V s e r ie s in w h ic h he Interim d ire cto r to remain K e n B o d e , p r o f e s s o r of p o lit ­ R o o m of th e U n io n w i l l p re ­ ce d e w o r k s h o p s in E r i c k s o n A CARLO P0NTI PRODUCTION' a t the lib r a r y to p u r c h a s e a Tahoe. N e v. p la y s a s e c r e t a g e n t u n d e r the H u m o r i s the n u m b e r o n e g u is e o f a R h o d e s s c h o la r . ic a l sc ie n c e , w i ll le ad a d i s ­ b e g in n in g a t 1:45 p .m . D in n e r DAVIDLEAN'SFILM p la q u e to h o n o r the f ir s t - r a n k e d M S U m a t h te a m . C o n t a in e r s w ord fo r C osb y. H is s ix It w a s d if f ic u lt to k e e p the as Teaching C enter head c u s s io n o n th e “ P o l i t i c a l D e ­ v e lo p m e n t s in L a t in A m e r ic a . ” is p la n n e d a t 6:3 0 p .m . in K e llo g g C e n te r. T h e S a tu rd a y OF B O R IS PASTERNAKS , h a v e b e e n p la c e d a t e a c h of the c h e c k -o u t d e s k s a n d w ill c o m e d y a lb u m s , a ll o f w h ic h h a v e “ B i l l C o s b y c o m e d ia n ” p e r s o n ­ m a d e the top tw e n ty c h a r ts , a lit y o u t o f the sh o w , h e s a id . J u lia n R . B r a n d o u . a c t in g d i­ re c t o r o f the S c ie n c e a n d M a t h e ­ o r a t o r ie s fo r te a c h in g a n d d e ­ v e lo p m e n t a l w o r k in b io lo g ic a l J o h n C o llin s , p r o f e s s o r of p o lit ­ ic a l sc ie n c e , is s c h e d u le d fo r e v e n in g s y m p o s i u m w i ll c o n ­ c e rn “ C h in a a n d In d ia : Com ­ DO CTO R r e m a in u n til the n e c e s s a r y $60 h a s b e e n c o lle c te d , s a id R i c h a r d in c lu d e “ B i l l C o s b y I s A V e r y F u l l y F e llo w N o t u n t il h e s e p a r a t e d h is . . . R i g h t ? ” c o m e d y s e lf f r o m h i s d r a m a t ic m a t ic s T e a c h in g C e n t e r , w a s n a n e d d ir e c t o r M a r c h 21 b y the a n d p h y s ic a l s c ie n c e a n d c o n ­ d u c ts p r o g r a m s .for s c ie n c e a n d a d is c u s s io n o f th e “ P o lit ic a l A s p e c t s o f M o d e r n iz a t io n in p e tin g P a t h s o f M o d e r n iz a t io n . " P a r t ic ip a n t s in S a t u r d a y e v e ­ ZHHÄG O a n d “ I S t a r e d O u t a s a C h ild . ” s e lf d id t h in g s c o m e n a t u ra lly . IN PANAVISION* AND METR0C0L0R E . C h a p in , l i b r a r y d ire c t o r. M S U B o a r d of T r u s te e s . H e s u c ­ m a t h e m a t ic s te a c h e rs. A fr ic a .” n in g 's s y m p o s iu m w ill b e W ilf r e d A lo v e o f p e r s o n a l a p p e a r a n c e s A s a re su lt , h e p o r t r a y s S c o t ­ “ T h e R i c h N a t io n s a n d the T h e t e a m r a n k e d a h e a d of c e e d s F r e d e r i c B . D u tto n , no w S t a f f m e m b e r s f r o m the c e n ­ M a le n b a u m , S e lig S. H a r r i ­ N E X T 1 W a lt D i s n e y ’ s h a s no t w a v e r e d w h ile C o s b y t y a s a liv e p e r s o n w h o n e v e r P o o r. T h e C o m m u n is t V i e w ­ se c o n d -p la c e C a l T e c h , th ird - d e a n of L y m a n B r i g g s C o lle g e . son, R o b e r t F . D e r n b e r g e r a n d "B L A C K B E A R D S h a s c u t h is a lb u m s a n d f ilm e d d o e s the s a m e t h in g s tw ice. te r a ls o a d v is e g r a d u a t e a n d u n ­ p la c e H a r v a r d a n d fo u r th -p la c e p o in t” w ill b e th e w o r k s h o p G H O ST" B r a n d o u h a s b ee n s e r v in g a s d e rg ra d u a te te a c h in g m a jo rs L u c ia n P y e . T V sh o w s. H e h a s b e e n k n o w n O n e o f C o s b y ’s la te s t v e n ­ to p ic o f T h o m a s G re e n e , p r o ­ M I T in the 28th a n n u a l W il­ a s s o c ia t e p r o f e s s o r a n d a c tin g to p la y to p a c k e d a u d it o r iu m s on t u re s is a s e r ie s o f fiv e -m in u t e f r o m the C o lle g e of E d u c a t io n . lia m L o w e ll P u t n a m M a t h e m a t i­ f e s s o r of p o lit ic a l s c ie n c e . w e e k e n d s. c o m e d y r a d io s p o t s f o r C o c a - d ir e c t o r s in c e 1966. c a l C o m p e t itio n , h e ld F e b r u a r y B r a n d o u is a m e m b e r of the L o u is Z e rb y, p ro fe sso r of MSU INTERNATION AL . .T h e C e n t e r w a s c re a te d in 1957 H i s n e w a lb u m o n the w a y is C ola. h is t o ry , w ill t a lk o n th e “ D i ­ 8. T h i s i s th e t h ird c o n ­ to p ro m o t e b e tte r s c ie n c e te a c h ­ A m e r ic a n A ss n . fo r the A d v a n c e ­ c a lle d “ H o o r a y F o r the S a l v a ­ C o s b y i s m a r r i e d to th e f o r ­ v e rg e n t Id e o lo g ie s in the M o d e r n ­ se c u tiv e y e a r th a t M S U 's te a m in g in M i c h i g a n a n d w ill so o n o f­ m e n t o f S c ie n c e , the N a t io n a l tion A r m y B a n d . ” m e r C a m il le H a n k s a n d liv e s in iz a tio n P r o c e s s . ” h a s w o n f ir s t p la ce . T h e s e c r e t to C o s b y ’s s u c c e s s B e v e r ly H ills . i s e x p la in e d in h is a lb u m , “ H o w d a u g h te rs. T h e y h a v e tw o fe r a g r a d u a t e d e g re e in s c ie n c e e d u ca tio n . I t n o w m a in t a in s la b ­ S c ie n c e T e a c h e r s A s s n . a n d the D e t r o it S c ie n c e C lub . C h it r a S m it h , p ro fe sso r of FILM SERIES MSU musicians O O O O O O O O Q O O O O O O O T ic k e ts o n S a le N o w THU RSD AY & F R ID A Y F o r S p r in g T e r m F ilm S e r ie s tour eight states M A R C H 2 8 th a n d 2 9 th F R A N C O I S T R U F F A U T ’S ‘N E W W A V E ’ M A S T E R P I E C E D R. FAUSTUS - $ 1 .0 0 in a d v a n c e over spring break ($ 1 .5 0 a t th e d o o r) W 1 * A M E R I C A ’S / T h r e e s tu d e n t m u s ic g r o u p s A ll o th e r f ilm s : 5 0 £ sp e n t t h e ir s p r in g v a c a t io n r<3 G R E A T E S T M U S IC A L H IT e x p lo r in g c in e m a p re s e n t in g c o n c e r t s o n s e p a ra te M a r . 2 8 -2 9 w o r ld o f henry o r ie n t tours c o v e r in g e ig h t sta te s. o o o o o o o o o o o & s . r . l . 7 8. 8 :30 C o m e d y s ta r r in g P e te r S e lle r s . T h u r s ,, F r l . - A p r. 4 & 5 union b a llro o m T h e to u rs, i n v o lv in g 248 s t u ­ d en ts, w e re s p o n s o r e d b y the U N IV E R S IT Y A U D IT O R IU M donation - m a r . 31. A p r . 10 T H E G O S P E L A C C O R D It+ G TO 108 W E L L S H A L L 7 - 9 p .m . 50* DONATION C a p a n d G o w n S e r i e s o f M S U ’s R e s e rv e d S eats $6, $5, $4 ST. M A TTH E W C o n t in u in g E d u c a t io n S e rv ic e . $1.00 re d u c tio n to M SU students R e v e re n t m a s te rp ie c e . The M e n ’s G le e C lu b , w ith v a lid a te d I.D , R u s s G ib b P r e s e n t s in D e t ro it d ire c te d by A la n P o la n d , L E C T U R E -C O N C E R T S E R IE S U N IO N T IC K E T O F F IC E D R . F A U S T U S (M ic h ig a n P r e m ie r e ) a s s is t a n t in s t r u c t o r o f m u s ic , re tu rn e d M o n d a y f r o m a 17- c o n c e rt to u r o f O h io , P e n n ­ * SEASON T IC K E T S * The FUGS M ay 2 -3 S ta r r in g B u rto n and T a y lo r . r n e* - A p . -i*4 - v M A ^ D p L ,a ta U g tv \ , s y lv a n ia , N e w J e r s e y a n d M a r y : The,re Is s till a good s e le c tio n o f s e a ts i| fO K 5 f a r r I ng o-fev* <. ¿fc/ir'crrr anr o th is m o n t h a n d f a ilu r e o f P r i m e w e a lt h S e c r e t a r y G e o r g e T h o m ­ L O N D O N (A P )--T h e B r it is h C a ll h im w h a t y o u lik e u n cen sored » so n h a d told the H o u s e th a t R i c h a r d B u r t o n a n d E liz a b e t h P a r lia m e n t W e d n e s d a y n ig h t M i n i s t e r Ia n S m i t h 's w h it e m i ­ c o m e d ie s : a n y s u r r e n d e r to S m i t h ’s b r e a k ­ T a y lo r , M a y 2 a n d 3. “A K O O K ! " . . “A H U T ! " c o n d e m n e d R h o d e s i a 's e x e c u ­ n o rity r e g im e to p e r m it th e A f ­ . . . “A N O D D B A L L ! ” *I'M NO ANGEL*at *00 tion o f th re e A f r i c a n s in d e fi- r ic a n s ’ a p p e a l to B r i t a i n 's h ig h ­ aw ay gove rn m e n t w o u ld “ a s h o r t c u t o n ly to d is h o n o r be O t h e r a t t r a c t io n s in c lu d e tw o ‘ a n ce o f Q u e e n E liz a b e t h I I ’s re- e s t c o u r t o f a p p e a l, the P r i v y It a lia n f ilm s , "T h e G o sp e l C*SH£MMEJMA4 •p rie ve . T h e H o u s e of C o m m o n s , o n a n C o u n c il. T h e H o u s e f i r s t v o te d d o w n a and d i s a s t e r . ” A c c o r d in g to St. M a t t h e w . " d ire c te d b y P i e r P a o lo P a s o lin i. u n re c o r d e d v o ic e vote, ap- T o r y a m e n d m e n t to the re so lu - P r i m e M i n i s t e r H a r o ld W ils o n A p r il 10, a iy l " I I G r i d o " (T h e V v ' ,'ju. „ A /u » dtolie.t b c id i n.v j t v v v . - ■^ ■1 \ 4 tk A j» ‘ iq g #rila i1ti s i'& y d iu e sa fo r id m 'p r 'B a u c n o n . M a y 23 a n d 24 m e n t ’s m otion. m ore and t o u g h e r s a n c t io n s — — _ A FROM PROGRAM INFORMATION ► 4 8 2 -3 9 0 5 In v ie w of the r e s u lt o f the a g a in s t R h o d e s i a ’s w h ite r u le r s T h e s e r ie s w ill c lo s e w it h TODAY , . . i:oo Pjvl. f ir s t vote, the C o n s e r v a t iv e s w h o m h e a c c u s e d o f u s in g " t h e " A F u n n y T h in g H a p p e n e d on 4:0 5 - 6 :4 5 - 9:25 Utetu. d id n o t p r e s s f o r a v o te o n t’he m e th o d s o f H it le r a n d G o e b b e ls " the W a y to th e F o r u m " M a y • • second . in the b r e a k a w a y c o lo n y . 29 a n d 31. T h e c in e m a t re a t ­ T h e V o te s c a m e a ft e r C o m m o n - NOMINATED m e n t o f t h is B r o a d w a y h it f e a tu re s Z ero M o s t e l, P h il BEST DIRECTOR S i l v e r s a n d B u s t e r K e a to n . FOR - R i c h a r d B ro o k s A l l s h o w in g s w ill be in the BEST SCREENPLAY F 4 8 2 -3 9 0 8 M S U A u d it o r iu m a t 7:30 p.m . -Based onmaterial fromanother medium - R ic h a r d B rooks O V I'C H 'Q A ¿ í T ic k e t s w ill b e a v a ila b le at the d o o r o r in a d v a n c e at the M S U U n io n t ic k e t office. ACADEMY CINEMATOGRAPHY BEST AWARDS! ~ T ru m an C a p o te s BEST ORIGINAL MUSIC SCORE A M 3 / 3 M IL E 5 E ^ T o r M S .U ! IN C O L D M t a i f l i • P H O N E E O a -1 0 4 2 « ' i BLO O D Written for the Screen and Directed by ^ NOW - E X C L U S IV E R ich ard B ro o k s A D U LT F IL M FA R E Music by Q U 1 N C \ J O N E S ' A Columbia Pictures Release In Panavision* Positively no one under 16 admitted unless accompanied by a patent or guardian. Iswaj N O R T H S ID E TO M O RR O W TW O B IG P R IV l-IN THEATRE C O LO R H IT S 2 Miles North on US-27. . 482-7409 N o m a tt e r how b la c k the o u tlo o k I s to t h o s e b e a rd - e d COLUMBIAPICTURESPresents o n e s , g h o s t ly wee h o u r s a r e sp e n t a t t e r m 's end to S ID N E Y P O IT IE R le a r n that 't e a c h ' i s the w o rd k n o w n to a ll stu d e n ts I H e 's lo v e a b le , w ild a n d h il a r io u s to o l a s t h e t e a c h e r w h o le a r n s t h e A B C ’s f r o m L o n d o n 's t u r n e d - o n t e e n s ! Box Office Open Nightly 6:30 I TARLITE l D i i v < 11»T h e a t r lA / tJ R in istry of E d u c a t io n w ill be fo r the P r e s id e n t in the M a y 7 •A«r- m itte d to a p le n a r y s e s s io n of M S U , c o m p o s e d of p r e s id e n t s o r and m o r e im p o te n t a: fo rc e u n d e r ta k e n b y M S U ’s C o lle g e the 18-m onth p r o g r a m , w a s a c ­ p r im a r y . be in d e p e n d e n t a n d no lo n g e r the p a r t y 's C e n t r a l C o m m it t e e a p p o in te d re p r e s e n t a t iv e s of in w o r ld a f f a i r s . " of E d u c a t io n u n d e r a $330,000 ce pte d M a r c h 21 b y the B o a r d Social services T h e a c tio n of Illin o is A tty. in c lu d e no p r o v is io n fo r a a p a rt of the s ta te a p p a r a t u s . T r a d e u n io n s w ill c e a s e to be h o n o ra rie s. w i ll m e e t to n ig h t to o f T r u s te e s . G e n . W ill ia m G . C la r k , a c a n ­ g e n u in e o p p o s itio n p a r t y to the d is c u s s p la n s f o r the p r i m a r y d id a te f o r the Se n a te a g a in s t the e x te n d e d a r m o f the p a rty , T h e U n i v e r s i t y c u r r e n t ly h a s a program offered R e p u b lic a n L e a d e r E v e r e t t M . C o m m u n is t s , h o w e v e r. T h e p a r t y 's v ie w is th a t the r e s u m in g t h e ir o r ig in a l fu n c tio n here. T h e b o a r d w a s se le c te d o f p ro te c tin g w o r k e r s ' in t e r ­ late la s t te rm . E n z ia n . a m a le lI i l f De W H A T ' S w n n i sa ä f o u r -y e a r -o ld p r o g r a m in p r o g ­ M S U ’s C o lle g e of Hom e D ir k s e n . in e x p r e s s in g “ g r a v e p r e s s f re e d o m r e s t o re d sin c e le a d e rs h ip h o n o r a r y , is the c a m ­ ■ c o n c e r n " o v e r J o h n s o n s V ie t ­ e sts - e v e n if it m e a n s o p p o s in g r e s s to s t r e n g t h e n b u s in e s s e d u ­ E c o n o m i c s h a s e s t a b lis h e d a new lib e r a ls r e m o v e d the o ld -lin e the C o m m u n is t m a n a g e m e n t. p u s c o o rd in a to r. n a m w a r c o u rs e in tu rn h a s M c a tio n at fo ur u n iv e r s it y - u n d e r g ra d u a t e p r o g r a m in c o m ­ r e g im e of A n t o n in N o vo tn y le v e l a c a d e m ie s in T u rk e y . c a u s e d c o n c e rn at the W h ite m u n it y s e r v ic e s , e x p a n d in g the g u a r a n t e e s s u f f ic ie n t c o n tr o l of L IE B E R M A N N ’S T h is p r o g r a m is e x p e c te d to H o u se . • g o v e r n m e n t a n d p a rty . h o m e e c o n o m ic s e x t e n s io n m a ­ Keep organized with a be c o n c lu d e d in 1972. Io w a G o v . H a r o ld E . H u g h e s , E n u n c ia t e d in the b lu e p rin t j o r f o r m e r l y offe re d . a c a n d id a te f o r the Se n a te , e v i­ is the p o s itio n of r e f o r m e r s h e a d ­ T h e ne w m a j o r m a t c h e s in ­ d e n ce d th a t he is fe e lin g the ed b y p a r t y c h ie f A le x a n d e r C o le d iv id u a l c a r e e r in t e r e s t s w ith S. B r e m b c k . a s s is t a n t a n tiw ar, p r e s s u r e w h e n he^ sp o k e ?n . e m q h a s t s in g e n e r a l edu- D u b c e k th a t the p a r t y a n d gov- , ... m Veavvp? Hy.*» u>Jw*«sw. Student \ otitit ii/r-.isS * tq r ’ y.K*VY quiet, cook wig park­ o n e w eek. SC iVl.VTKK SUBLEASE. iWo rftatr. fax- WANTED: WORKING girl or grad­ aim and 1 p m M 1 girl. Good salary plus meals. Call ing. Supervised. Two blocks to Ber- Ray Balbach. Theta Chi. 332-3581 3-4 1 urv. Air-conditioning and pool. 355- kev 487-5753 or 485-8836 C uate student to share one bed­ T h e Sta te N e w s w ill be TRIUMPH 1966 TR 4A. red convert­ 1115. 3-4 1 room apartment east side of Lan­ r e s p o n s ib le o n ly f o r the ible Only 11.000 miles. Phone 355- WAITRESSES in Coral Gables Show sing. near East' Lansing Own trans­ FURNISHED APARTMENT Graduate 6030 3-3/29 Bar. Waiters in Coral Gables Rath­ ONE PERSON for three girl apart­ portation required. Phone 489-0184 f i r s t d a y 's In c o r r e c t In s e r ­ students. Three rooms. Private en­ skeller. Apply in person. Coral ment. 212 River Street. Utilities after 6 p.m 5-4 2 tio n . trance and bath ED 7*7603. 3-3 29 VOLKSWAGEN 1964. Good condi­ Gables. East Lansing. 7-4'5 paid. 351-9332. 2-3 29 tion. One owner $675. radio. 353- CEDAR STREET ** near 1-96. Up­ NEEDED: TWO girls lor four man STUDENT TO assist handicapped EAST LANSING. One girl to share per furnished. Seven minutes to 0901 M 1 Beechwood Apartments Spring and or attorney in arising mornings and re­ furnished apartment. Prefer grad­ campus Couple. $135. 663*8418 5-4 2 summer terms. $57. month. 337* The State News does not tiring nights. Compensation room uate student. Single room Phone VOLKSWAGEN 1963 Sun-roof. Radio. . 1495 * 3-3 29 351-6427. 3-4 1 STUDIO FURNISHED Burcham permit racia l or religious $550 353-3239 or 332-5615 3-4 1 and board. 484-1938. 5-4 3 Woods. $125 per month Immediate discrimination in its ad­ ONE MAN tor two-man Marigold TWO MAN Apartments. Furnished. occupancy. East Lansing Manage­ vertising c o l u m n s . The VOLKSWAGEN 1963 Sunroof. Radio, DIETICIAN - FULL time position Apartment. Close, quiet. 351-9050 3-3 29 F o r R ent 135 Kedzie. 124 Cedar, and 129 ment Company. 351-7880. C whitewalls 32mph. Call 351-8563. open: Complete charge of food plan­ E m p lo y m e n t Burcham. From $130. - $160 per State News will not accept ning. preparation, and service. Sal­ 3-4 1 month. Year and summer leases. STUDIO APARTlpj^fV'or two mon TWO BEDROOM luxury apartment advertising which d iscrim ­ ary: $7.830-with step increases to GIRL TO live in. Do afternoon, eve­ TV RENTALS for students. Low- ParkinfcQ C M | 6»Wek. 251 Spar­ Call IV 7-3216. evenings 882-2316 C Short term lease available 351- inates a g a i n s t religion, VOLKSWAGEN CONVERTIBLE 1966 $9.667. Civil Service position with ning nursery care and light house­ economical rates by the term or tan Av é m r T «ui«? «132-6078. 3-3 29 4275 C ra ce , color or national o r ­ Ten months old. $1.200. Call be­ attractive fringe benefits. Apply to work. Experience preferred. 337- month. UNIVERSITY TV RENT­ ONE GIRL, for two-firl apartment tween 7-9p.m. 337-7691. 3-3 29 John J. Delaney. Administrative Of­ 9318 3-3 29 ALS 484-9263 C 134 Stoddard. 337-7274 2-3 29 igin. ficer. Michigan School for the Blind v\\',KSWA.C,V.\ BUS 1966 Cariuver 7151 West Willow. Lansing 7-4*fr- STUDENT TO live in. supervise TV RENTALS lor students $9 00 ONE MAN Sublet luxury apartment ¿/ it ’o t i" h . .',.» .- 1, Cv • (8 * aV * ‘ - ' " ■ '■ s j A '— * Phone 882-1436 3-3 2» m* iciais per 111e x - 'c.Vri, t t i No 16 351-341« ** ».* • work five hours daily Monday- ferred 332-0319 after 5 p.m. 3-3 29 tee same-dav service C A u t o m o t iv e Friday. ED 2-5176 10-4 10 VOLKSWAGEN 1962 One. owner. Good ONE BLOCK from Olin Kitchen CHEVROLET 1964 lmpala Convert­ condition, $625. 355-3241 3-9 29 EMPLOYERS OVERLOAD COM­ PARKING. IN E X P ft^ Y ^ n?ar Union. targe living room, fireplace, two WANTED: GIRL to cook dinner and PANY. Experienced secretaries, Many spaces available. 351-5531. 3-4 1 ible. 37.000 miles. V-8 Auto­ bedrooms. Needed two men to share matic Powej. Steering and brakes occasionally stay all night with ladv. typists to work temporary assign­ aparthient. $12. a week 337-0132 2-3 29 Black with black leather interior. A u to S e rv ic e & P a r t s ED 2-5176 after lp.m. 10-4 10 ments. Never a fee. Phone 487- A p a rtm e n ts Call 694-0586. 5-4 2 6071. C-3 '29 NEEDED: ONE girl lor summer MELS AUTO SERVICE. Large or BABY-SITTER three days per week. LUXURY APARTMENT to sublet and or fall. Call 3514)319 3-3 29 CHEVROLET WAGON 1965. 8 . auto­ small, we do them all. 1108 East 8-4 p.m Near campus. 351-0217. 3-3 29 CHOOSE YOUR own hours. A few matic. whitewalls, power steering hours a day can mean excellent lor summer term. One. two. or Grand River 332-3255. C TWO BEDROOM furnished upper Superb condition. 355-1131. 3-4 1 MALE STUDENTS in need of money earnings for you as a trained three girls. Reduced rates. 351- 5480. M 2 apartment. Built-in appliances. Pri­ MASON BODY SHOP. 812 East Kala­ Call 393-5660 if you are 18-27. Avon representative. For appoint­ vate entrance. Married couple. $100 CHEVROLET 193»$300 or best mazoo Street-Since 1940. Com­ 1:15 p.m. to 3:15 p.m Monday. ment. in your own home, write SUMMER TERM Sub-let Burcham a month plus utilities (averaging offer Phone after 5 p.m.. 489- plete auto painting and collision Tuesday and Thursday. C Mrs. Alona Huckins. 5664 School Woods. One bedroom, swimming less than $10 a month' Phone 337- »1*37 5-4 2 service. American and foreign cars. Street. Haslett. Michigan, or call pool, air conditioned Call Barrv 7815 or 351-8231 3-3 29 IV 5-0256. C NURSES -- R.N. and L.P.N. open­ IV 2-6893. C-3/29 CHEVROLET 1956 Four-door. Low ings P.M. shift in geriatrics. Ex­ 351-8089 or 355-8252. 5-4 2 WANTED: ONE male graduate stu­ original mileage Good engine. $150 cellent base rate plus 5 per cent GREAT LAKES EMPLOYMENT for ACCIDENT PROBLEM. Call KALA­ differential. Liberal benefits, con­ dent for four man luxury apart­ 355-2767 3-3 29 permanent positions for men and KILBORN - WALKING distance ment. $40 per month Dave. 351- MAZOO STREET BODY SHOP genial co-workers. Phone ED 2- women in office, sales, technical. from downtown. New--one bed­ Small dents to large wrecks. Amer­ 0801 3-3 29 5260. 3-3 29 CORVAIR 1960 four-door with auto­ IV 2-1543 C-3 29 room. Furnished, parking. Lease matic transmission. Runs and looks ican and foreign cars. Guaranteed required. 332-3135. 10-4 10 work 482-1286. 2628 East Kala­ ONE GIRL for luxurious apart­ good. $95 882-2555. 3-4 1 DRIVER • DELIVERY men. tele­ STUDENTS FOR gardening and land­ mazoo C phone order-takers. girls. Night ment. Reduced rate. Northwind scape work. Full or half davs. Ap­ R lv e r h o u s e Apartments 337-1867. Beverly. 3-3 29 CORVAIR-1963. 700 series, good hours Full or part time. Apply ply in person. TW1SS LANDSCAPE tires, four-door. Best offer. FE CAR WASH: 25c. Wash. wax. vacu-. evenings after 4:30 p.m. 203 MAC CENTER. III2 Lake Lansing Road. A p a rtm e n ts um U-DO-IT. 430 South Clippert. FOR TWO or three. One bedroom, 9-8236 3-4 1 Avenue. 351-8871. 5-4 2 East Lansing. 10-4 '9 back of KO-KO BAR. C-3 28 Renting Immediately - sunporch. Utilities, deposit •paid. Furnished 3 bedroom luxury $150 spring. $125 summer. 351- CUTLASS SUPREME 1966 White with FEMALE HELP w— 1 'full time. FRY COOK-must be 18 or over. Prefer mar'" C Q wife. THE 5905. 3-3 29 F R ID A Y , M ARCH 2 9 , 1 9 6 8 1 :3 0 P . M . white side walls, black interior. Full and part time work. Apply Penthouse - Close to campus - Power brakes and steering, radio, A v ia tio n CARD S C\V»«—^< ¡> 1 Grand River. CHARCOAL HOUSE. Frandor Cen­ ARBOR FOREST APARTMENTS. AT tilt Wheel, etc. Call 482-5902 3-4 1 Apply in [ . »on to Mr. Mukalla. 2-3 28 ter, after 6 p.m. 4-4 1 Short term lease available. Trowbridge Road. East Lansing. MSU SA LVA G E YAR D FRANCIS AVIATION. So easy to Call 3 3 7 -2 4 0 6 , o r 332-0255 Faculty members. Deluxe one and FORD 1960 V-8 automatic 49.000 learn in the PIPER CHEROKEE!! SERVICE STATION Attendants. Full WAITRESS-MUST be 18 or over. SUMMER, FA LL RENTALS two bedroom apartments available FA R M LAN E actual miles Excellent condition Special $5.00offer! 484-1324. C lime or part time. 19 years or old­ Full and part time work. Apply Private patio and swimming pool. M IC H IG A N STATE C A M P U S er. Phone 487-3063 between 8 a.m - AVAILABLE, ALSO $225. ('all IV 5-4584 after 5 p.m. CHARCOAL HOUSE. Frandor Cen­ Chalet House for private parties. 3-4 1 THE WINGED SPARTANS now open 5p.m. M 2 ter, after 6 p.m. 4-41 Within walking distance of campus. V a r io u s M a k e s A n d C o n d it io n s a Cessna Cardinal-another good WANTED: FOUR men for luxury apartment summer. Swimming pool No children or pets. Phone 337- reason to join and learn to fly or CLAIM REPRESENTATIVE A ls o : FORD GALAX IE 1963 I 2 two-door WOULD LIKE to have college stu­ 351-8980. 5-4 3 0634 for appointment. C-3 29 rent through your own University For large multiple-line Insurance dent give golf lessons for summer. 1 - 1959 Plymouth serial #M2561051 luirdtop Power steering, automatic. club. Save with lowest rates, best Company. College education or equiv­ Work in Pro Shop optional. Send ONE GIRL: To sublease a two-girl 1 - 1958 Bulck serial #4E1054095 351-7534 3-329 equipment, quality instruction. Call EAST SIDE - Furnished one bed­ alent preferred. Immediate employ­ resume to Blossom Trails G.C.. room. Utilities included. Bus close luxury apartment for spring term 1 - 1959 Dodge serial #34914375 355-1178. 353-0230. 353-0213. 351- ment arranged locally for positions 1565 Britian. Benton Harbor. Mich­ One block from campus. Phone: KARMAN GHIA 1958 convertible 9301. C $90. ED 7-7151. 10-4 10 All items may be seen at salvage yard and trainng in any one of the many igan 49022. 3-3 29 337-9560. 5-4 2 Good condition. 351-8743 after 5 M arch 28, 8 :3 0 -4 :3 0 March 29 8:30 - 1:00 areas in the United States. Salary, EAST MICHIGAN Avenue. Clean fur­ p.m 3-4 1 THE WINGED SPARTANS now own expenses, and automobile provided. nished two rooms with complete OLDSMOBILE 1964 Dynamic 88 four- a Cessna Cardinal-another good Excellent employment benefits. kitchen. For one or two gentlemen TER M S: CASH ___________________________ Phone 372-6410. Ask for J. David F o r R ent door. Automatic. 355-5776 after 5 reason to join and learn to fly or students. $20 a week. Phone 372- 4 M A N p.rfi 3-4 1 rent through your own University I-oftus for an interview appoint­ ment AETNA LIFE AND CASUAL­ TV RENTAL G.E. Portable. Free 4963. 2-3 29 asnaa a sa s OLDSMOBILE F-85 1964 Deluxe club. Save with lowest rates, best equipment, quality instruction. Call TY An Equal Opportunity Employ­ service and delivery. $8.50 per ONE GIRL needed for spring term. [L U X U R Y APTS aasB naaaa Power steering. power brakes. 355-1178. 353-0230. 353-0203. 351- er and Plans For Progress Com­ month. Call STATE MANAGEMENT 351-0602. 3-41 • 2 bedrooms H ass a a a a a Good condition 351-0145 3-3 29 9301. C pany. 23-4 26 CORP. 332-8687 C ACROSS aa aso ¡ana • 2 bathrooms s aaa smon “ D e lic io u s Food PX S to re — Paddle Ball Paddles, $2.88- F ra n d o r • Fully furnished 1. Vocal solos 6. Concoction 26. Religious work of art sa aaaans 10. Freight s a a s s n i e s iz i F ro m F o r e ig n $5.88. Penn. T e n n i s Balls • Fully carpeted 11. Stately 27. Ballan asad asa a L a n d s /* $1.99-$2«49. Tennis R a c k e t Press $1.39. Shag Golf Ball • A ir conditioned 13. Bay window 14. Birds of prey 2 8 .Taverns 29. Spiral □na misa ansa $2.88/doz., $3.88/ doz. New 16. Flushed 30. By birth @ B B H D m a n n F o o d f r o m a lm o s t e v e r y c o u n t ry . Golf Balls $3.98/3. Tennis Balconies on 17. Partly open 31. Vocalize naans saasnn Shoes $5.49. Baseball Gloves $4.88-$9.88. Softballs $1.98. all apartments 19. Resinous substance 32. Flax fiber 35. Plant shoots nans a n s a S H A H E E N ’S T H R I F T W A Y One block from 2 0 .Engendered 37. Active Swim Fins $10.88-$11.88. Swim DOWN campus 21. Plateau 39. Impassive 3. Crocus, 2310 S o u th C e d a r Snorkles $2.98. Special Fish­ 1. Stomach gladiolus 22. Although 40. Cupolas ing T a c k l e . Rods, Reels, 41. Brave: an acidity 4. Maturity 25. Climbing 4 8 5 -1 5 3 8 Lures, Lines. Save 25%-35%. pepper plant 42. Exercise 2. Unique 5. Sun rooms im m * 6. Staff of life r— c1 T 7 9 7. Background L A R R Y C U S H IO N 'S S P O R T S S H O P i 3 4 ii~ 8 Wk !Z 8. Urge L A N S IN G 'S G O LF H EA DQ UA RTERS 10 1? ft & 15 9. Billfolds 12. Rental contracts > PLASTIC PRACTICE BALL f W A T E R 'S V L r ■__ 15. Gamut io ¡7 " e A 6 FOR 1.00 18. Fast plane > SHAG BALLS / EDGE 20. Wagers 20 21 1.00 A DOZEN j t Now Leasing For Fall 21. Repast 1968 GOLF RULE BOOK " And Summer 13 31 A w 22.'Mimicking FREE WrTH PURCHASE 23. Steamers R IV E R 'S 2k a 24. Under O F 1.00 OR MORE EDG E 25. Organized T E N N B RACKETS 39 s> PP group * fir FROM 4.95 27. Overcame B A D M IN T O N B IR D IE S » 29. Whitefish L a r r y C u th lo n Leasing hours: sr W~ _ 31. Waken 32. Occasion S p o r t in g G o o d s 8:00 P .M . - 10 p.m . dally March 27 - A p ril 15 82 w~ I w 33. Excessive 34. The Occident 3020 Vine IV 5-7465 Open F rL 't il 8; Daily 't i l 6. Apt. 103 - RIVER'S EDGE 1 ÏT « ! mmmmw 36. Enemy ^ m 38. Smoked OR PHONE 332-4432 salmon i Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Thursday, March 28, 1968 15 F o r R ent F o r R ent Peanuts Personal StudentService r> NICE: MENS double: living room, R P. HAPPY 21ft on tie 28th Reach I--SEVERAL Mature young men to parking: clean and quiet. 332-47093-3 29 high, dream deep The best is yet to share cozy, clean, well furnished be! Sxuleid 1-3 28 home in Lansing. Ample parking. DIRECTORY Excellent deal 482-5188 10-4/10 ROOMS FOR Girls Cooking In­ quire at 332-0063 3-3 29 I DREAM of Jeanne. Nightmares of MC 205. Thanks a heap! 1-3 28 NEEDED ONE girl House near campus. $50. Utilities included. STUDIO ROOM--AvaiIable for two- WANTED: BACKYARD to rent for 351-0229 3-4/1 Must have transportation-Refrig- dog until June. Helen. 337-0514 5-4 3 erator. parking area $80.00. Call GOOD SIX room furnished house ED 2-3393 after 5 30 p.m. 7-4/4 “ Worth crowin’ about" THE COST of a Want Ad isn't high M ID -M IC H IG A N two miles from campus for three but its broad coverage will bring S T U D E N T S E R V IC E or four male students. Reasonable PRIVATE ENTRANCE to bedroom, T a le n t A g e n c y In c . responses to you within hours! T f e ip * 337-0512 5-4/S study room, and bath for two men D IR E C T O R Y students. 712 Northlawn Avenue. F Fried Chicken Bands & other TWO MEN for four man house $50. Phone 332-4674 3-4 1 R e a l E s ta te A W e e k ly O p p o rtu n ity entertainers Utilities paid 482-7688 3-4 1 , 1900 E. Kalamazoo MEN: ROOMS with cooking privileges EAST LANSING Newlv decorated 484-4471 351-5665 GIRL. PRIVATE bedroom, newly at 523 prove Street. $15 per week. three bedroom ranch. Featuring decorated, spacious, close to cam­ Phone 332-1835 or 332-4674 3-4 1 TWO fireplaces, finished recrea­ pus $60 351-7516 5-4 3 tion room. 332-6023. owner 5-4 2 N o r to n 's C O LLE G E TR A V E L F ra n d o r S h ell S tation SINGLE OR double student room GRADUATE STUDENTS need one Male only. Near campus. Avail­ EAST LANSING~“L '’ shaped ranch, & O F F IC E M ajor rep airs Including man to share house in East Lan­ three-bedrooms-up; plus two in able at once IV 5-6581. ED 2- tune-ups and brake work sing. Own room. $60 plus deposit 8531 3-41 finished basement. Near Red Cedar 130 West Grand R iver Blvd. Mechanic on duty. Its name indicates it character Call 351-8817 or 355-0149. 3-4 1 School. * Fireplace. carpeting, 3024 E . Saginaw, E . Lansing WOMAN STUDENT. Kitchen, laun­ drapes included. Two-car garage. 351-6010 L in c o ln N a tio n a l L ife Call 332-4627. 5-4 5 489-8010 ONE GIRL for four girl duplex in dry. parking facilities available. ___________________ 332-5025 East Lansing $55. 351-0776. 3-4 1 Excellent location 332-1918 3-4 1 Join the Campaign Nowl ONE. TWO men share three-bed­ GRADUATE OR over 21 share two S e r v ic e F R A N C IS A V IA T IO N PAT PAULSEN fo r PRESIDENT room house Close. $60 351-0988. bedroom trailer All conveniences. HaHaHa. Don't take any wooden piastras, EXPERIENCED SEAMSTRESS and C A P IT A L C IT Y A IR P O R T G Wash 2 0 * load 3-4 1 Close $55. Call Tim 332-4312. 3-4 1 1 1 / 2 " buttons 25* e a . 5 -5 1 .0 0 dress maker for ladies. Reason­ 10% d isc.-d ry c l. able Call 355-5855 3-3 29 4 8 4 -1 3 2 4 White w/Red Printing Shirt Service w/coupon FOR FOUR students. Furnished with ATTENTION GIRLS: sleeping rooms Send: Paulsen for President utilities paid. All new and close to with cooking privileges. Call Fred F o r S a le F o r S a le Sales, Service, Flight WENDROW’S ECONOWASH DIAPER SERVICE-Diaparene An­ 2015 Pleasant Grove campus Phone 332-8488 5-4 2 Allen. 351-7934 or 351-0960 3-4 1 ACHTUNG! TELEFUNKEN has ar- Instruction, A ircraft Rental VINE ST. WEST OF SEARS VOX JAGUAR Organ. Standell Art­ tiseptic Process approved by Doc­ _ <- VRti Ai ' W t V f l v yv-ir.i. r v Call 351-8754: Girl to share Iwo- S( t I ( t Mr mart Single. $50 : double- -640 G«ragc. ■ Hft-O&tf ’ «■■ . A - ZNl Q of drawers, good condltK“ ,,i- desk. 641-6038 C-3/29 fessional thesis typists. IBM Selec- H H. SCOTT 40 watt FM stereo trics. Multilith offset printing 337- Burcham Woods -■ Eydeal Villa receiver model HHS-20. $219.95. 3-3 29 WALLSTREET JOURNAL calls SEN­ Complete with case. Cash or terms. 1527. C LARGE SELECTION of frames. TRY'S Young Driver Questionnaire MAIN ELECTRONICS 5558 South a temper test! It could save $50 Glasses for everyone. OPTICAL ANY KIND OF typing in my home Pennsylvania. 882-5035. C DISCOUNT. 416 Tussing Building on auto insurance. If interested, and 489-2514 C Phone IV 2-4667 C-3 29 between 21 and 25. call 882-7284 ELECTRONICS Rl'MAGE Sale this or 485-3647. C-3 '29 Saturday. Test equipment, parts, TYPING IN my home. Experienced, hi-fi stereo equipment, speakers. BIRTHDAY CAKES. 7"-$3 60.8 - last, accurate. MRS. DAVIS. TU2- $4 12. 9" $4.90. Delivered. Also FR EE !! A Thrilling hour of beauty. 7338. 3-3 29 351-6502. 2-3 29 For appointment call 484-4519. sheet cakes KWAST BAKERIES. MERLE NORMAN COSMETICS STEREO TAPE deck. Eight track IV 4-1317 C-3 29 STUDIO. 1600 F'ast Michigan C-3 29 Call Mike. 332-5184 after 6 p.m. W a n te d 1-3 28 DIAMOND' BARGAIN: Wedding and FORTY TOP Soul and rock bands. engagement ring sets. Save 50 per CHEMISTRY PROFESSOR desires Gary Lazar. 351-8907 or MID- 3-4 bedroom home, prefer par­ KODACOLOR FILM. Size 620. 126. cent or more. l,arge selection of plain and fancy diamonds. $25-$150 MICHIGAN TALENT AGENCY. 351- tially furnished, near MSI', about or 127. only 98c with this ad. MAR- 5665. C-3/29 August 1. Write Dr. Raymond Som­ EK REXALL DRUGS. Prescription WILCOX SECOND-HAND STORE. 509 East Michigan Phone 485-4391 mers. 2224 Jefferson. Stevens Point center at Frandor. New lower every­ BIMBOS PIZZA savs WELCOME C BACK " We have moved closer to Wisconsin. 3*3 29 day discount prices. C-3 29 campus and invite you to visit us at our new location •2021 East I WILL baby-sit full time in my F U R N IT U R E Michigani, or we will deliver a de­ licious pizza to your dorm tor only 25c extra lor any size order. Call University Village apartment. 355- 6148. 5-4 2 R -E -N -T -A -L 489-2431 PARKING IN East Lansing, across c-3 29 WANTED TWO tickets for Block and Bridle Show. Saturday night. Call 355-0757 after 5.30 pm 2-3. 28 from Berkev. behind Polaeheks $25 Now you can furnish your apartment per term, in advance. $9 per month PLACE TO rent for rock band to Cali Mark While. 332-3947. 410 practice. Call 351-9359 0*4 3 to suit your taste and budget. Albert Street 3-3 29 A le a s e c o m b in a t io n to f it y o u r n e e d s Se p t. 1 5 -S e p t. 15, J u n e 1 5 -J u n e 15, a n d s u m m e r le a s e s BISHOP FURNITURE RENTAL PAT PAULSON for President But­ tons available tor 50c at P.O Box 374. East Lansing. 5-4 2 BLOOD DONORS needed $7 50 for all positive. A negative. B nega­ tive. and AB negative. $10.00. O negative. $12 00 MICHIGAN COM­ RUMMAGE SALE in Social Hall of MUNITY BLOOD CENTER. 507 BEING SIGNED NOW 4972 N O R T H W IN D DRIVE EA ST OF Y A N K EE STADIUM Okemos Community Church Tues­ day. April 2. 9:30 a m. to 9 p.m. Wednesday. April 3. 9:30 a m to 12 1 2 East Grand River. East Lan-1 sing, above the new Campus Book Store. Hours: 9-3:30 Monday. Tues­ PLAZA - EA ST LANSING Ph. 351-5830 p.m. Sponsored by the Women's day. and Friday: Wednesday and Society. 3-4 1 Thursday. 12-6:30 337-7183 C • C o m p l e t e l y f u r n i s h e d NEED _A C A R ? P la c e Y ou r • Air Conditioned PEOPLE REACHED WANT AD BUDOE %1 to 4 man apartments T oday . . . J u s t c lip , c o m p le t e , m a il. STA TE NEWS w ill b ill you l a t e r . in rr-4 -C M w n it • Guaranteed parking Special R ates for MSU Students W EEK EN D Noon F r l . - Noon Mon. • Our heated pools are S tate Z i p Code J J Plus Gas No Mileage Charge open spring, summer, Phone C o n s e c u tiv e D ates to R un . Student H o . and fall. D A IL Y H e a d in g _______ ___________ NO P e r Day MILEAGE P r in t Ad H e re : M3 Plus Gas CHARGE • Rents start at$125 OR CHOOSE OUR REGULAR LOW RATE OF EASTUN S M t M A N A G E M E N T C O P e a n u ts P e rs o n a ls m u st be p la c e d in p e rs o n . Per M ile 4 G as 10 W o rd s o r L e s s : 1 thy - $1.50 3 thy» - $3.00 5 diys - $5.00 O v e r 10 W o rd s A dd: 15* p e r w o rd 40 * p er word 6 0 * p e r word You must be 21 and 745 Burcham Drive, Apt. 2 □ M a ll tos M ic h ig a n S tate H ew s a □ have a valid MSU LQ card* 351-7880 346 Student S e rv ic e s B ld g . M S U E a s t L a n s in g , M ic h . 214 SO. c a p it o l 372-8660 16 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan •___ Thursday, March 28, 19^68 P a r a p h e r n a l i a W e lo v e d t h e id e a o f P a r a p h e r n a lia s o m u c h w e d id n 't b u y ju s t t h e w o n d r o u s f u r c o a ts o r th e fa b u lo u s flu o r e s c e n t d r e s s e s o r th e p e r fe c t h ip p a n ts . W e b o u g h t th e w h o le s to r e -lo c k , s to c k a n d m a d n e s s . The newcontroversial boutique that rocked NewYorkisnowinour store all preparedto giveyou a rockor twoandthose fashions tofaint about. P a r a p h e r n a l i a 5 4 1 E. G r a n d R i v e r