Monday MICHIGAN The governm ent . . . . . . is like a baby’s alimentary canal, with a healthy appetite at one end and no sense of respon­ sibility at the other. -Ronald Reagan UNIVERSITY STATI TAT NEWS East Lansing, Michigan April 22,1968 Partly s u n n y . . . . . . . and warm today. High in the mid-(0s. Showers Tuesday. __!*f Election valid Vol. 60 Number 161 R E M U.S.., H anoi still battle despite bogus on prelim inary talk site ballot tally By MITCH MILLER State News Staff Writer TO KYO (A P ) -- N o rth V ietnam ac­ com m unications; that i t be open fo r The 100 ballots reported by the State cused the U nited States Sunday of “ esca­ news coverage, and that i t be a place News April 18 to have been cast il­ lating its conditions of the selection of a where neither side would have psycholog­ legally were found to have been counted site fo r p re lim in a ry talks aim ed a t b rin g ­ ical or propaganda advantage. in the ASMSU elections of April 11, in ing peace in V ie tn a m .” “ W hile ‘escalating’ its conditions fo r a series of rechecks of the ballots held H anoi's com m unist newspaper Nhan c o n ta c t," Nhan Dan said, “ the U.S. gov­ Saturday and Sunday. They did not af­ Dan leveled the charge and indicated the ernm ent is stepping up its w a r acts on fect the results of the election. N orth Vietnam ese governm ent is s till parts of V ie tn a m ." Saturday, a group under the direction holding out fo r ta lks in Phnom Penh Nhan Dan said S ecretary of State Dean of ASMSU Chairman Pete Ellsworth, Ray Cambodia, or W arsaw, Poland. Rusk proposed ten u ltim a te sites in an e f­ Doss, vice-chairman, and Dale Oliver, The U nited States has “ cold-shouldered” fo rt to “ m ake people believe in the U.S. chief justice of the student judiciary and these c itie s because it has no d i p 1o- governm ent's w o rd ." C ontrary to the idea a member of the Election Review Board, m a tic re la tio n s w ith Cambodia and be­ of n e u tra lis t country, m any of the coun­ sorted through the ballots and pulled out cause W arsaw, a com m unist capitol. trie s mentioned by Dean Rusk such as those stamped with the number “05." could not be considered neutral. Japan and M alaysia, fa r fro m being neu­ The bogus ballots were stamped with Nhan Dan once m ore accused P re s i­ tra lis t. are the ones where the ru lin g this number, as were those sent in of­ dent Johnson of in s in c e rity and of going circle s are serving as sa te llite s to the ficially by Hubbard Hall. The actual back on his assertion th a t U.S. envoys U.S., o r even jo in in g the U nited States in stamps used, however, were different. would go anywhere a t any tim e. the aggression in V ietnam , the paper Along with the specific voting pattern " In a w ord, the U.S. governm ent has. said. used by the student who submitted the w ith in a few weeks, com pletely changed "What is m ore, m any of these coun­ ballots, this enabled the checkers to de- naoer said. '.In ste a d of trie s. instead of heina, a, place where the _ ., * i f. , rm v av nAr> mifty * \. * 'then fo r' conditions fo r contact " fied by the U.S. governm ent its e lf, are La te r in the day. an unidentified per­ F our conditions listed by the President places where only the U nited States is son brought the other 79 ballots to E lls ­ Thursday asked fo r assurance that the represented," Nhan Dan said. M a k in g th e ir C h o ic e worth, a fte r having rem oved them fro m conference site be accessible to other "A n d last, but not least, c o n tra ry to the the rest of the ballots only hours before governm ents involved in the w a r. th a t it idea of not m aking propaganda,'' the lis t the check was held. have adequate and presum ably secure drawn up by Dean Rusk in its e lf is a move C o e d s li n e up to vo te In C h o i c e 68, the n a t io n a l c o l l e g i a t e p r e s i d e n t i a l p r i m a r y b e i n g h e ld o n c a m p u s Because of the discrepancies, the bal­ to court the s a te llite s of the U nited States t o d a y t h r o u g h 1 W e d n e s d a y . V o t i n g at the m o b i l e p o l l i n g p la c e w h i c h w i l l m o v e a r o u n d c a m p u s d u r in g lots were again checked Sunday to de te r­ and to deceive the public in ce rta in coun­ the t h r e e d a y s o f v o t i n g a r e : K a t h y C o n w a y , P e t o s k e y s o p h o m o r e ? L i n d a M c K i l l o p , C h i c a g o , III., s o p h o - mine if the to ta l num ber of ballots agreed N. trie s ." i t stated. “ This play-acting is too freshm an. S ta te N e w s P h o t o b y S t a n L u m w ith the totals as announced a fte r the m o r e ? and S u s ie P a r k e r , W ilm e tte , cheap, and no one w ill buy i t . " election. Vietcolonel Nhan Dan did not sp e c ific a lly say that Not including those hand-counted a fte r Hanoi continued to insist on Phnom the elections, the ballots numbered 6.864 Penh o r W arsaw as the conference site. begins when counted by com puter on the night I t indicated, however, the c la im that the of the election. defects, brings people of the w o rld are "d e m a n d in g " that the U nited States select one of the tw o cities. The Nham Dan a rtic le s were C h o i c e 6 8 t o d a y , When recounted Sunday, there were 6.885, only 22 o ff the o rig in a l count, w hich was w e ll w ith in the 100-vote lim it set by broadcast by the V ietnam News Agency. the E le ctio n Review Board as th a t of assault plans In V atican C ity. Pope P aul V I lam en­ ted the delay in the s ta rt of the talks. He told p ilg rim s in the St. P e te r's c o n t i n u e s t o W e d n e s d a y human e rr o # E lls w o rth said. In a statem ent issued Sunday, E lls ­ w orth said, “ The elections w ere honest. Square. "P eace has become the aspira­ There is absolutely no evidence to indi­ SAIGON ( AP i-T h e highest ranking defec­ tion. the passion of hu m a n ity and i t is Anyone w ith a validated MSU iden ti­ B a llo tin g begins today fo r Choice 68. 3. U nivac w ill also give a breakdown of cate the results w ere ille g itim a te ly a r­ to r yet to fa ll in to a llie d hands in South. V ie t­ s till late in coming. The expectation, the fication card can vote, including foreign, the N a tio n al C ollegiate P re sid e ntia l P r i­ the vote by school. rived at. The six m em bers-at-large now s it­ nam has surrendered w ith enem y plans fo r need and the an xie ty for peace are g ro w ­ graduate and p a rt-tim e students. m a ry and w ill continue through Wednes­ ting on the board are the students' choices." a second-wave assault on Saigon involving ing. and s till there are d iffic u ltie s that Voting Significant Choice 68 is sponsored by Tim e. Inc. day a t MSU. E lls w o rth stated th a t the board has a good m ore than 10.000 troops, o ffic ia l sources re ­ delay i t and hinder i t . . . , Roger W illia m s. Choice 68 coordinator, R obert H a rris, national executive d ire c­ Students w ill vote on com puter punch idea of those responsible fo r the hoax, and ported Sunday. " I t is a peace s till blocked by so m anym arked w ith the names of 13 can­ says MSU has the potential fo r the largest to r of Choice 68. and an MSU alum ni, cards that those involved on the election sta ff, The m an who defected was id e n tified as a questions of prestige and by an insuf­ student tu rn ^p t in the country. He hopes w ill v is it MSU Wednesday and w ill give didates and one w rite -in space. There are " w ill not be welcom e in any capacity in N orth Vietnam ese colonel and p o litic a l com ­ fic ie n t sense of broth e rh o o d ." a t least 20,000 students w ill vote here. a press conference. The tim e of his ap­ three referendum questions on the ballot, (please turn to page 11) m issar fro m the N in th V ie t Cong D ivision Soviet P re m ie r A lexei N. Kosygin The U n ive rsity of M ichigan, w hich concerning U.S. po licy in V ietnam and pearance is yet to be announced. posted northw est of Saigon. The unit was to stopped in New D elhi on his way home voted early, cast 11,000 ballots out of a pos- governm ent spending fo r urban program s. be used in the attack. on a v is it to P akistan to discuss V ie t­ Choice 68 s po llin g bus w ill m ake eight The Colonel said the enemy com m and had nam w ith P rim e M in is te r In d ira Gandhi See related stories on page 5 stops on campus today. o rig in a lly planned the second w ave assault on the ca p ita l fo r this Monday but some un­ known circum stances have prom pted a de­ of India. New D elhi has been m entioned as a possible conference site and in fo rm a n ts SCHEDULE -8:15-8:45 a.m . - C om m ute r P arking sible 30,000. Only 8.000 voted in U-M stu­ dent governm ent elections this year. A m erican foreign policy lay. there said th a t K osygin and M rs. Gandhi Lot. Choice 68 spokesmen say at least 2 The highest ranking V ie t Cong o ffic e r to brought up the question of a place fo r -8:45-9:15a .m .-C o m p u te rC e n te r, m illio n students m ust vote fo r the p ro j­ defect in the past was a lieutenant colonel. A ll other m ilita r y defectors have been of lower rank. talks. -10:00-10:30 a.m . - F a rm Lane bridge. -11:00-11:30 a.m . - G iltn e r H a ll. -12:15-12:45 p.m . - E rickso n H a ll. ect to have a "m e a n in g fu l" im pa ct on national policy. discussed this w eek course and the reaction it receives fro m fo r­ Tw o N o rth Vietnam ese soldiers defected -1:30-2:00 p.m . - E ngineering Bldg.. Some 1.500 universities, colleges and ju n ­ "A m e ric a n F ore ign P o lic y : The P rice of eign nations, according to an o ffic ia l re­ at K ontum Saturday. -2:30-3:00 p.m. - F a rm Lane bridge. io r colleges, w ith a potential vote of 6 m il­ P o w e r" is the topic o f a foreign a ffa irs con­ lease. A handful of p o litic a l o ffic ia ls also have -3:00-4:30 p.m . - C am pbell's Suburban lion. have agreed to p a rticip a te in Choice ference being held today, Tuesday and Wed­ D avid Schoenbrun, a veteran of V ietnam defected but so fa r as is known, none would Shop. 321E. Grand R iv e r Ave. 68. nesday by James M adison College and the reporting, w ill speak on “ The N ature of the be the equivalent of a fu ll colonel. Students have 104 other polling places C ultu ra l C om m ittee of Case H all. A m erican W orld C o m m itm e n t" at 3 p.m . to­ to choose fro m , including the Union. Ber- Computerized Vote The colonel was taken F rid a y fro m Binh The conference hopes to a rriv e a t some day in 108 B W ells H all. key and Bessey H alls, the Inte rn a tio n a l The vote w ill be tabulated by U nivac Guong province about 50 m ile s north oi Sai­ com puters, and the results of the poll understanding of c u rre n t A m erican foreign Schoenbrun's speech, sponsored in coop­ Center, and a ll residence halls, sororities policy, the pressures that influence its gon. He is in his e a rly 40s and is known in eration w ith ASMSU’ s F orum '68. w ill dis­ and fra te rn itie s . w ill be released in New Y o rk M ay 2 or the C om m unist p a rty as Tam Ha. 355-4560 cuss the generation gap w hich has de­ He reported that the attacks on Saigon veloped over U.S. foreign policy. were to follow the same pa tte rn as those “ Does the U nited States Have a F oreign which h it the c ity during the Lunar New Y ear offensive TELEPHONE WORKERS P o lic y ? " w ill be discussed by Kenneth Young, president of the Asian Society, at 7:30 tonight in the Wonders K iva The a ttackin g forces w ere to include two Young, fo rm e r ambassador to Thailand, regim ents fro m the N inth D ivision, tw o reg­ w ill exam ine the U .S.'s policy outside its im ents fro m the F ifth D ivisio n east of the I n j u n c t i o n b l o c k s s t r i k e p r o g r e s s borders, based on his experience in po licy­ city and at least a t tw o local force g u e rilla m aking positions in the Dept of State and regim ents—the 165th and the Dong Phap W ASHINGTO N ( AP >-The A FL-C IO Com­ M any B ell employees not on s trik e them ­ the F oreign Service. Regiment. m unications W orkers said Sunday that court selves are refusing to cross in s ta lle rs ’ p ick­ A panel, led by George C atlin of London A ll these forces have been used in the pre­ injunctions obtained by the B ell Telephone et lines. and composed of experts on foreign policy vious assaults on the c ity . The defecting of­ System blocked any im m ediate progress "A n anti-union s trik e in jun ction obtained in selected regions of the w orld, w ill discuss fic e r said they had since received new tow ard se ttlin g the union’ s four-day-old na­ by B ell in Alabam a is so sweeping th a t it the topic “ How Does the W orld V iew A m er­ weapons and the N o rth Vietnam ese in filtr a ­ tionw ide s trik e of nearly 200,000 telephone would m ake instant c rim in a ls of a ll 8.000 ican F oreign P o lic y ? " at 3 p.m. Tuesday tors to replace recent casualties. w orkers. of the good and decent people who are our on the th ird flo o r of Case H all. The N in th D ivisio n was to s trik e fro m the " I t sets us back ju s t a t a tim e when the mem bers ón s trik e in th a t sta te ,” Beirne “ Pressures on A m erican P o lic y " w ill be northwest edge of the c itv - h ittin g the a ir firs t sign of a breakthrough had appeared." said. discussed by L t. Col. R ichard Hobbs, d ire c­ base a t Tan Son N h u t-w h ile the F ifth D iv i­ said Joseph A. Beirne. P resident. AFL-CIO The union said the in ju n ctio n orders B ell to r of the In te rn a tio n a l R elations P rogram sion came in fro m the east and south. C om m unications W orkers of A m erica. employees to go back to w ork, and in structs a t West P o in t M ilita r y Academy, and the The targets included the same lis t as be- B eirne m e t Sunday w ith the union's exec­ the union against advising them to refuse follo w ing MSU professors: M ordecai K rei- fo re -a rm y barracks, power stations, com ­ utive board to consider an o ffe r by the to cross picke t lines of the Western E le c­ nin, professor of economics; Paul M arantz, m unications fa c ilitie s and other v ita l areas. A m erican Telephone & Telegraph Co. to tric installers. professor of p o litic a l science, and G ary The defecting o ffic e r is now reported to "L e g a l advice is th a t to fu lly and com ­ F ro st, assistant dean of James Madison resume bargaining in the nationwide wage be in the Saigon area s till undergoing in­ pletely com ply we w ould have to w ithdraw College, who w ill moderate. dispute. terrogation. The union said the B e ll system had ob­ picket lines and send southern B e ll m em ­ The panel w ill be held a t 7:30 p.m. Tues­ tained c o u rt inju nctions in Alabam a and bers back to w ork across picket lin e s ." a day in the Wonders K iva. He defected to a South Vietnam ese u n it and the South Vietnam ese Command made K entucky w hich order B e ll w orkers to re­ union o ffic ia l said. Christine Camp of the U.S. State Dept, turn to w o rk even if i t means crossing pick­ He said a statewide injunction issued in will discuss “ American Foreign Policy- a re p o rt of the o ffic e r's statem ent to the e t lines o f telephone installers. Kentucky is similar to the Alabama court The Men Who Made the Decisions" at 12:30 U.S. Command. The 23,000 telephone installers, com m uni­ order. p.m. Wednesday. cations w o rkers m em bers employed by the The text of Gilmer's statement: “Latin American and U.S. Foreign Poli­ B ell subsidiary. Western E le c tric Co.. are “Weekend telephone traffic is being han­ cy” will be spoken on by Hoyt Ware, UtS. picketing in some 40 states. dled without undue difficulty and we antic­ State Dept, specialist on Latin America« Open housing Beirne's remarks to newsmen were made ipate service will continue to improve with affairs, at 3 p.m Wednesday. a few hours after Ben S. Gilmer, president the resumption of the work week tomorrow. Julius Prince, State Dept, specialist IP of AT&T, had issued a statement in New “Management people who are filling in African affairs, will speak on "Africa * R I march today York saying management was "heartened at the switchboard are gaining experience, U.S. Foreign Policy" at 5 p.m. WednesNfc by union statements suggesting improved and customer cooperation has been most “Globalism: Remedy or Mistake" wfll be prospects for settlement." gratifying. discussed by George Will, profesaar of An ad hoc committee of interested stu­ Approximately 140,000 Bell System opera­ "We are heartened by union statements political science, at 7:30p.m. Wednesday. dents will hold a marcn to the Capitol build­ I r a t e e m p lo y e s tors. repairmen, clerks and other employ­ suggesting improved prospect for settle­ Students not residing in Case Hall aai ing te3ay in support of open housing legisla­ ees are striking in 15 other states and the ment. The Bell Companies have told the planning on attending the 12:30 or S p.m. tion. Wednesday speeches should bring a trans­ Interested students are to meet at the AT&T w o r k o r s b l o c k th o d o o r w a y o f t h o M i c h i g a n B o l l T o la p h o n o District of Columbia, and 2,000 Western Co. B ld g. In D e t r o i t a f t o r m o r t t h a n 2 0 0 , 0 0 0 w o r k e r s In 4 2 s t a t e s Electric manufacturing employees in Buf­ fer meal ticket or purchase a ticket at the Union at 3 p.m. and will proceed to Lansing North Case reception desk. from there. w e n t o n s t r i k e A p r i l 18 f o r h i g h e r w a g e s . U P I T e le p h o t o falo. N. Y.. also are on strike. (please turn to page 11) 2 Michigan State News, E ast Lansing, Michigan Monday. A 968 Lost d ip lo m a tic p o u c h e s s o u g h t NEW S W IN D H O E K . South-West Af­ r ic a (AP) - A u t h o r i t i e s Thomas Taylor, the Ameri­ can diplomatic courier who was The airline released names sengers. Dr. H. Fussmegger. The crash was among the of three other American pas­ most costly in lives in avia­ tion history. It came just the United States less than a month ago, shattered into four large pieces. Rescue teams pouches and a shipment of dia­ monds reported to have been en route from Johannesburg to su m m ary sear ched Sunday for U.S. and carrying the U.S. pouches, was Japanese diplomatic pouches one of six who survived the M.R.P. Roche and Ben Thom­ a year after a chartered Swiss had difficulty getting through London. and 1700.000 worth of diamonds crash' of South African Air­ as. It gave no home towns plane crashed at Nicosia. Cy­ rough, roadless terrain to the The U.S. State Dept, in Wash­ A C tp w ll lu m m o ry o f tho d a y ’s svonts fror in th e wreckage of a South ways’ newest Boeing 707. Tay­ and did not say whether any prus. killing 126 persons. The crash site, about six miles ington said Taylor, son of Mr. o u r w lr o s e r v ic e s . African jetliner that crashed lor, 36, of Tahlequah, Okla., of them was the survivor whose worst single-plane disaster from the airport. and Mrs. Robert Owen Taylor here Saturday night, killing was reported in good condi­ name had not yet been made was in February 1966, when a The airline said the plane of Tahlequah, ha« been a dip­ US persons. tion. public. ■Japanese jetliner plunged into had carried 116 passengers lomatic courier since July, 1958. Tokyo Bay and all 133 on board and a crew of 12. He is a graduate of Oklahoma were killed. State University and served . . We d o in d e e d f e e l CZICH LEADERS . The South African jet had just taken off from Windhoek's J.G. Strijdom Airport, . first By Sunday noon 90 bodies had been brought to a make­ with the U.S. Army in Germany from 1956 to 1958. that bein g our civil righ t s are a b ro ga ted by the shift morgue in an airport of four stops between Johan­ shed for identification. South U.S. spokesmen in South term t o f this p rep o stero u s nesburg and London, when it African Prime Minister Bal­ Africa said Taylor had picked injunction. ” Jo s e p h A. B eir- Tolerance urged ness and comradeship were applied,” the edi­ began to wobble and then plum­ meted out of sight. Horrified watchers at the airport heard a crash and saw flames spurt thazar J. Vorster issued a message of sympathy to the families of the dead. Police cordoned off a wide up the U.S. diplomatic pouches in South Africa but could give no further information. Authori­ ties said Japanese diplomatic ne, p resid en t o f the Com­ m unications A m erica. W orkers of PRAGUE (AP) - Czechoslovakia’s new Com­ into the sky. pouches also were reported torial added. area around the crash site as munist leaders served notice to the Kremlin The plane, delivered from aboard the plane. The appeal for equality among Communist they hunted for the diplomatic Sunday that they will follow an independent course at the international conference of Com­ parties was seen here as a sign that the new International N e w s munist parties in Budapest this week, demand­ leadership, headed by party chief Alexander ing tolerance of views opposed to the Moscow line. Dubcek, was determined to oppose Soviet at­ tempts to turn the Budapest meeting into an­ other campaign for the re-establishment of DISCUSS WARS • Authorities searched fo r U S and Japanese d ip lo m a tic pouches and $700.000w o rth of diamonds in the w reckage An editorial in the Czechoslovakian party of the South A frica n A irw a ys' newest Boeing 707. The newspaper Rude Pravo also urged the meeting control over the world movement. crash took the lives of 122 persons and was among the opening Wednesday to prepare a Communist Dubcek has based his party’s new action pro­ most costly in lives in aviation history See page 2 world summit conference to make amend to the gram on complete autonomy from the Kremlin Romanian party which withdrew its delegation and a more active role in international affairs. K o s y g i n , G a n d h i f o l k • Soviet P re m ie r A lexei N Kosygin m et in New Delhi from the pre p a rato ry conference in February Without referring directly to the Chinese-So­ w ith Indian P rim e M in is te r Indira Gandhi on Vietnam following attacks on its independent policies. viet feud, Rude Pravo said many complications A fte r lunch w ith M rs Gand­ and the M iddle E ast In fo rm a n ts said they discussed the NEW D E L H I. India (A P ) - destiny w ith o u t fo re ig n in te rfe r­ Echoing the Czechoslovakian party's opposi­ and disunity in the past resulted from the “ in­ hi. K osygin boarded his Lly- question of a site fo r p re lim in a ry peace ta lks between the Soviet P re m ie r A lexei N. Kosy­ ence.” the com m unique said. tion to centralized Kremlin leadership in East­ sensitive approach to differing views, the at­ ushin 18 and flew ba rk to the United States and N orth V ietnam See page 1 gin stopped here on his way “ The interests o f universal ern Europe, Rude Pravo said the conference tempts to replace realistic ideas by wishful Soviet Union. He had a rrive d home fro m P akistan Sunday peace demand th a t steps in Hungary should uphold ‘the principle of non­ thinking.” in P akistan Wednesday fo r b rie f talks w ith P rim e M in ­ should be taken fo r a p o litic a l interference and of respecting the independence It said the Budapest meeting should not make The R aw alpindi co m m uni­ o O ffic ia l sources reported that a N orth Vietnam ese col­ ister In d ira Gandhi on V ietnam settlem ent in V ie tn a m ." of the various parties.” just another declaration against imperialism as que said the Soviet U nion and onel. the highest ranking defector yet to fa ll into allied and the M iddle East. K osygin did not go in to any “It would greatly help if the practices of classi­ the last one did, but conduct a “ sober and thor­ Pakistan w ill continue coopera­ hands in South V ietnam , has surrendered w ith enemy plans "We came here to meet details w ith newsmen in New cal diplomacy and behind-the-scenes talks were ough analysis of the real situation in the world tion fo r the "strength enin g of fo r a second-wave assault on Saigon involving m ore than P rim e M in is te r Gandhi and we Delhi o f his ta lks w ith M rs .jelirainatfd . . . and if the principles of open- and come forward with appropriate proposals." frie n d ly relations and develop- 10.000 troops See page 1 discussed m ost com- Gandhi o r Ayub Khan. vi\ i, . * » , « ’*■ .* v situation in V ietna m and the nothing to add. b u t « Slates o f "e s & x lc & i,, c *..*. ate ¡utter- It was agreed, it stated, that Middle E a s t,” K osygin told a "I have no com m ents to tion of a site fo r p re lim in a ry talks aim ed at bringing peace make on the talks, sne said the Soviet Union w ill "re n d e r news conference. "We also dis­ technical and econom ic assist­ in V ietnam " See page 1 cussed relations between our " M r. K osygin said a ll he had to say. T ha t is a ll. " ance in the construction of a two co u n trie s." N a tio n a l N e w s graduate A t the news conference. In ­ steel m ill in Kalabagh. West W hile K osygin did not say so. Pakistan, a nuclear power sta­ he and M rs. Gandhi discussed dian newsmen asked K osygin about Pakistan, w hich is feud­ tion in East P akistan and in a the question o f a site fo r pre­ togreatness... ing w ith India over K a sh m ir number of other p ro je cts and • The A FL-C IO C om m unications W orkers said that court lim in a ry peace ta lk s between cooperation w ill be continued in and other issues. injunctions obtained by the B e ll Telephone System blocked the U nited States and N orth Kosygin said the Soviet the fie ld of geological explora any im m ed ia te progress tow ard settling the union's four-day- Vietnam . in fo rm a n ts said. tion fo r o il and gas in P ak­ become They gave no fru th e r details, Union is not contem plating old nationw ide s trik e of nearly 200.000 telephone w orkers. any new in itia tiv e to b rin g In ­ is ta n ." See page I however. A com m unique issued in Ra­ dia and P akistan together in "someonespecial” w alpin di a fte r K osygin's depar­ another conference like the one ture fro m P akistan said the So­ in Tashkent. U.S.S.R., in 1966. vie t leader and P resid ent M o­ That m eeting developed a fte r P r o t e s t a n t c h u r c h e s m e r g e thenewyorkcitynurse! M a k e th e m o s t p r o d u c tiv e u s e o f y o u r e d u c a tio n a n d y o u r a b ilitie s b y s ta rtin g hammed Ayub Khan had ex­ pressed deep concern over the continuance of the w a r in V ie t­ nam. India and P akistan fought a b rie f border w ar. “ We do w ant relation s be­ tween India and P akistan to i n t o i l n i t e d M e t h o d i s t g r o u p “ They stated th a t norm aliza- im p ro v e ." K osygin said. "T h e y o u r QuMeer as a N e w Y o r k C ity N u re O .S G S E jR p s e le c t y o u r a re a question of a m eeting is up to tion of" the* situation in V ietnam the p rim e m in is te r and P resi­ D ALLAX, Tex. (A P - a body of m ore than 11 m illio n B ut th a t e a rly language d if­ o f c lin ic a l in te r e s t fr o m a m o n g 19r g je fie ra l a n d s p e c ia liz e d h o s p ita ls , le a rn could be achieved on the basis dent Ayub Khan. I am sure if R epresentatives of tw o P ro t­ mem bers—the U nited M etho­ ference. w hich was a m ain of the observance of the Geneva n e w s k ills a n d te c h n iq u e s a s y o u p re p a re f o r p ro fe s s io n a l they feel the need they w ill estant denom inations, divided dist Church fa cto r producing the separate agreem ents of 1954 and uncondi­ get together. by language in e a rly A m erican They share com m on s p iri­ denom inations, has long since a d v a n c e m e n t, a n d m a k e an im p o rta n t c o n tr ib u tio n n o t o n ly t o y o u r p a r tic u la r tional recognition o f the V ie t­ "R e la tio n s between India history, gathered here Sunday tual and d o ctrin a l tra dition s, ceased to exist. Now w ith namese people to decide th e ir jo b b u t t o th e e n tir e C ity o f N e w Y o rk . and the Soviet U nion are ve rv to inaugurate the la rg est church going back to colonial tim es. a plan of union draw n up and good, and we intend to do a il m e rger in U.S. history, “ G erm an M e th o d ists" and ra tifie d by a m a jo rity o f re­ Y o u c a n b e a g o o d n u rs e ; "D u tc h M e th o d ists." the for- we can to im prove them II w ill unite the 10.3- gional conferences o f both a n y w h e re , b u t y o u c a n b e c o m e Professional Rscruitm snt D ivision, fu rth e r. ' he said. " A t the same m illio n -m e m b e r M ethodist bearers of the sm a lle r church churches, th e ir elected rep­ I B u s i n e s s t a l k were som etim es called because Room SOS, Dopi. C-10 tim e we are in fa v o r of the best Church and the 746.099-mem- resentatives w ill m eet to a g r e a t n u rs e in N e w Y o r k C ity . DEPARTMENT OP HOSPITALS possible re lations between In- her E vangelical U nited Breth- of th e ir kinship w ith the "E n g ­ launch th e ir unified com ­ IK WofSi Straut, Nm Ysffc, N. Y. IlS tl R o bert H. Lakam p, special dia and P akistan and we be­ ren Church (E .U .B .) to form lish M ethodists.” munion. W r it e to d a y f o r m o re Pinoso tond mo you: brochure sbout nursing In assistant to the president of J. C. Penny, w ill speak on lieve th a t is possible." T hat fo rm a l step w ill come Now Yo rk C ity. in fo rm a tio n o n h o w t o b e c o m e "H e lp W a n te d -B ra in s ." at Kosygin did not say w hat he in cerem onies Tuesday, fo l­ NAME and M rs. Gandhi discussed on lowing fin a l separate m e e tin g s , " S o m e o n e S p e c ia l” . . . T h e N e w Y o r k C it y N u rs e . C IT Y ____8 T A T E 2 IP 7:30 Monday, in the Teak Room of E ppiev Center. The le ctu re , sponsored by the M iddle East. The com m unique P akistan said issued in he and Ayub Search continues of the tw o churches M o n d a y ' to com plete preparations. A huge, jo in t celebration of Alpha Kappa Psi. professional for King assassin SC H O O L O RA D . D A TE business fra te rn ity , is open Khan condemned "c o n tin u in g the L o rd 's Supper Sunday night acts of aggression of Israel in the D allas M e m o ria l A udi­ An Eq u sl Opportunity Employer to a ll students, especially busi­ against A rab sta te s." toriu m . led by B reth ren Bishop ness a d m in istra tio n m a jo rs. Paul M ilhouse of Kansas C ity, MEMPHIS. Tenn. (AP > — FBI agents' have been given a was the prelude to the union. new identification for the man they seek in the assassina­ About 1.260 o ffic ia l dele­ tion of Dr Martin Luther King Jr.. but the new identifica­ gates. 840 M ethodists and 420 tion seems to have muddled even more the mystery of who B rethren• m fired the single shot that killed King here the night of % ake up the uniting • conference, along w ith hun­ April 4. IDE The FBI had issued a conspiracy warrant last Wednes­ day for Eric Starvo Galt. Two days later the agency said a comparison of fingerprints found in the King investiga­ tion revealed that Galt in reality was James Earl Ray, dreds of non-voting s ta ff execu­ tives. theologians and vis itin g clergy and la ity . They came fro m throughout the country. Listed among the a 40-year-okl escapee from a Missouri prison reg ula r M ethodists delegates is The second identity was only the latest in a series of puz­ THINKING MAffS fo rm e r Alabam a Gov. George zles which have surrounded the few known facts of the in­ C. W allace, who is cam paign­ vestigation. ing fo r the U. S. presidency. Witnesses who said they saw the alleged assassin in the To w hat exten t he w ill flophouse from which the fatal bullet was fired said he ap­ take p a rt in the two-week peared to be between 26 and 32 years of age The FBI’s Wed­ convention was uncertain. He nesday announcement said Galt had given his birth date CHOICE... has some cam paign appear­ as July 20. 1931 which would make him 36. Friday the FBI ances scheduled in this area said Ray was 40. 0 beginning Tuesday. The FBI also said Galt was said to be an avid dancer A Methodist magazine. and took dancing lessons in New Orleans in 1964 and 1965, World Outlook, calling him in Birmingham during September and October 1967 and in “ the foremost political sym­ Long Beach. Calif , from December 1967 to February 1968. bol of racism in this nation." You can’t just wish your way out of tha kind of problems we’ve T h in k a b o u t th e o n e m a n w h o is b e s t q u a lifie d f o r th a t o ffic e . W ith th e sure But dunng the time Galt allegedly took dancing lessons has claimed his presence as ha n d , th e ba la nced ju d g m e n t, th e c o m b in a tio n o f seasoned e xp e rie n ce and in New Orleans. Ray was serving part of a 99-year term for a delegate would cast doubts got today. You’ve got to think them through—and that takes a y o u th fu l v ig o r. T he o n e m an w ho has g a in ed a p e rs p e c tiv e on th e P reside ncy armed robbery in the Missouri State Penitentiary at Jef­ on the church’s efforts to get lifetime of getting ready. u n iq u e in o u r t im e — fro m 2 0 yea rs in p u b lic life , e ig h t o f th e m a t th e ve ry ferson City. c e n te r o f po w e r— fo llo w e d by a ra re o p p o rtu n ity to re fle c t an d re -stu d y, a n d rid of segregation. At the time Galt was attending a bartending school in Moves to eliminate a separ­ T h in k a b o u t V ie t N a m . A b ru ta l c o n flic t th a t te a rs th p n a tio n . A n e w k in d to m e a su re th e p re s s in g needs o f A m e rica a n d th e w o rld in t h is fin a l th ir d o f th e 2 0 th C e n tu ry . T h e o n e m an p re p a re d by h is to ry f o r th e w o rld 's to u g h e s t California, a duplicate Alabama driver’s license was mailed ate Negro Methodist jurisdic­ o f w a r a g a in s t a new k in d o f enem y, th a t re q u ire s new c o n c e p ts o f c o n c e rte d m ilita ry , p o litic a l, a n d d ip lo m a tic e ffo r t. T h is is a tim e w h e n w e m u s t e x p lo re jo b — th e one m an w h o can re a lly m ake a d iffe re n c e in th e se tro u b le d , to him at a rooming hous» in Birmingham. tion is part of the unification e ve ry avenue to w a rd s e ttle m e n t-* b u t kee p u p o u r g u a rd a g a in s t th e te m p ta ­ d a n g e ro u s tim e s . The woman who runs the flophouse here said the man to plan. tio n s o f a c a m o u fla g e d s u rre n d e r. whom she rented a room just three hours before King was Both merging churches are slain had a Southern drawl. The FBI said Galt liked country results of previous mergers, T h in k a b o u t y o u r d o lla r. W eakened a n d s h ru n k b y b u y -n o w -p a y -la te r p o litic s , NIXON’S THE ONE! and Western music and drank beer and vodka. one in 1946 forming the E. U. B. ea ten by ta xe s, th re a te n e d b y th e ba la n ce o f p a y m e n ts a n d th e g o ld d ra in , i t ’s g o in g to ta k e s k ill a n d u n d e rs ta n d in g to g e t a n $ 8 0 0 b illio n e co n o m y In Jefferson City, an inmate of the Missouri prison, who Church, and northern and b a ck o n th e t r a c k — a n d keep i t th e re . said be "ran a r o u n d " w ith R a y , said Ray-listed as a na­ southern Methodists uniting tiv e o f I llin o is - d id n o t have a Southern accent. “Jim into the Methodist Church in T h in k ab ou t y o u r c h ild re n . A b o u t th e ir sc h o o ls . T h e ir c o lle g e . W ill th e re be d id n 't drink, e x c e p t a li t t le p ris o n home brew.” s a id the • p la c e f o r th e m 7 A n d th e w o rld thw y in h e rit. W ill it be w o rth in h e ritin g ? W ill 1939. I went to help Richard Nixon become President of the United States. c o n v ic t, w h o asked not to be id ent i f i ed. “ He never talked Both denominations have th e y have a w o rld to in h e rit? ab ou t h im s e lf v e ry m u c h and n e v e r e xp resse d any liking their roots in rural America T h in k a b o u t th e c itie s . A b o u t th e c iv il w a r rip p in g o u r n a tio n a p a rt. A b o u t Enclosed is $1.00 to enpbie me to become an active member of YOUTH FOR NIXON. This wiN provide me with monthly newsletters, f o r m u s ic , d a n c in g a n d ha w a s to e tig h t t o g a m b le .” of the late 1700’s, their travel­ v io len ca a n d c rim e and d e s p a ir. A b o u t th e need f o r b o th th e ru le o f la w a n d G a lt s e e m in g ly w a s a fre e spe n de r . A sid e from the campaign materials, a membership card and othw information. ing preachers roving the fron­ th e lig h t o f hope. A b o u t th e new s ta te s m a n s h ip ne eded t o m a ke o u r n a tio n da ncing Masons, w h ic h co o t h im a b o u t $810 in California tier settlements. sin b y m a k in g o u r p ae p la o n e e g a in . aisne. he p a id R W ca sh f o r a w h ite M u s ta n g that is Membership of the E. U. B. Nam* ■ ! th a « s a rti. Its com ple x ity a n d Ms ch a lle n g e . R u ssia . C h in a . NATO , aaw im p o u n d e d la k tla a ta . a n d a tte nded th e bartending fS A tO , D a 0 A 8 , th e U N . E uropa. T h e M id d le E a s t A fric a . L a tin A m e ric a . w school Church is heaviest in the Penn­ sylvania and Ohio section of A ftfo. N u c le a r a rm s a n d d ip lo m a tic m a n e u ve rs. A w o rld e n te rin g th a m o s t "He was tight as a tick,” the Missouri convict said is p a rte d in its h is to ry , an d lo o k in g to th e U n ite d S ta te s f o r leader- the country, where their Ger-, : c a n ta k a i t s à fe iy th ro u g h . of Ray "Boy. it you ow ed him money, even a few cents, man speaking ancestors set- \ he'd bug yuu to d e a th ." tied, while the Methodist V T M n h a b a u t th a P re sid e n c y , Its aw esom e po w e rs a n d it s lo n e ly re s p o n s ib ilitie s . Send to: Y0ÜIH FOR NOON, 1726 Pennsylvanie Ave., N.W., Washington D C 20001 T he p e n ite n tia ry in m a te said he d id n e t th in k Ray was T h e ra n g e o f th in g s a P re s id e n t has to t h in k a b o u t, k n o w a b o u t. T h e g re a t Church, "started by English- the k in d o f m a n w h o w o u ld k i l l f a r p r o f i t A n d th e warden. speaking settlers, is spreatl •m rtocfofon« t h a t ha alon e ca n m ake , an d th a t m a y d e te rm in e th e fa te o f fre e ­ H a re M Swenson, w h o r e m e m b e r s R a y , added, “ It's odd. but d o m f o r g e n e ra tio n s to c o m e — a n d even th e s u rv iv a t o f c iv iliz a tio n . throughout the nation. 1 w o n 't b e lli vs he k ille d K in g u n t il i t is pro ve n . Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Monday. April 22, 1968 McCa r t h y s u p p o r t e r s RFK followers meet m S t u d e n t s t r a v e l t o I n d i a n a with little opposition Bv DAN BRANDON State News Staff Writer (Lafayette--i About 30 Stu- machines and give it back to Ind. senior, shaved his mus­ the people. "We re trying to give the tache Friday night. Carter said he works for Mc­ “What dam ages McCarthy most is people who go over to Kennedy because they think By TRINKA CLINE express Kennedy’s views and plained to those with the "op­ dents for McCarthy traveled to young people a voice in poli- Carthy because he is opposed he can win and McCarthy can't." State News Staff Writer distribute literature on Ken- portunist” idea that if Kennedy Fort Wayne, Ind. Saturday and tics." Penner said. " If Mc- to the war and is worried about she said. "The winner is LAFAYETTE-MSU supporters nedy’s campaign. Polling was had announced his running Sunday for the first of three Carthv can go to the conven- the way “ priorities have been where the people are." of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, D- merely to determine regis- earlier, it would have forced weekeqds of intensive canvas- tion with 500 delegates, the upset." Steve Haynes. Beaulah sen­ N.Y., working in Lafayette, Ind., tered Democrats and independ- him to enter the Massachu­ sing for Senator Eugene Me- party regulars will begin to We have to get the domestic ior. supports McCarthy for setts primary thus invalidat­ Carthy, D-Minn. before the all- look to the voung." priorities back on the right three reasons. "He's a peace this weekend met the anticipated^ents “stop-gap” effort against Keg^p Basic opposition to Kennedy ing primary returns by stiring important Indiana primarv Mav “If we were given a choice track, and there are only two candidate, he has a head on up a personality issue between 7. between Johnson and Nixon, candidates who have shown any his shoulders and as far as I nedy, but encountered less o^^'net by the workers was not a pro-McCarthy, pro-Indiana *n terms of previous commit- Kennedy and LBJ: the Demo­ In what was called a bad it would not have been the concern over this.” Carter can tell he is honest." Haynes cratic split already existed. weekend because of rain. MSU people's choice, it would be said. said. Gov. Roger D. Branigin move- ment-it was the Kennedy Speculations have Some people felt that Kennedy students canvassed selected the politician's choice," Pen­ “I like McCarthy better per­ ment than had been expected, image. according to Bob Penn, student been that Kennedy is pumping had merely waited until Mc­ areas in the largely Republican ner said. sonally because he has shown Students canvassing for Mc­ coordinator for the campaign unprecedented funds, between Carthy proved in Massachu­ city of over 200.000. Penner. Chicago graduate more willingness to come out Carthy are briefed on the ideas $500,000 and $1 million into setts there was a significant Lou Penner. trip coordinator student, said that were Ken­ and say what must be done, of a three pronged campaign. in the northwest part of Indiana for Students for McCarthy on nedy elected it would hurt the while Kennedy has sat back to The May 7 Indiana primary the Indiana primary alone. dissent toward Johnson. ROBERT KENNEDY campus, said thaf he expects They are told that McCarthy However Lafayette Kennedy MSU Students for Kennedy movement which McCarthy has see if it's safe first.” Carter is a "must" for Kennedv as it as many as 200 or 300 can­ believes the following: is the first time he will meet supporters commented, if so in Indiana were first told not started. "With McCarthy, you said. vassers next weekend. have the young people fighting This type of attitude was -National leadership is not McCarthy head-on. also seek­ we certainly haven’t seen any to bother mentioning where good and needs a change. The Indiana primary is con­ the political bosses. Kennedy prevalent among students as ing the Democratic president­ of it.” Some sources have they were from; the Lafayette insisted that Kennedy and Mc­ area, highly conservative, and sidered all-important because it has shown that he is close with they chatted before going out ial nomination. Kennedy was -National unity is a must will be the first confrontation those bosses. " Penner said in the streets. not in Indiana this weekend, Carthy will have invested more formerly “G o l d w a t e r terri­ between McCarthy and Sen. for solving the nation's prob­ Students who showed up for but he might be during the next than $2 million each in Indi- tory." was assumed to have lems. a distaste for "outsiders". Robert F. Kennedy. D-NY. canvassing with long hair or Cassie Beddow. Ridgewood. two weekends preceding the ana , , In the largely Republican Some Lafayette citizens chal- Later Saturday Penn said some beards were asked to shave N.J. junior, said "McCarthy -There must be a decrease primary. state, former Vice President before they went out. stepped forward when every­ in the use of military solutions Penn says strong support lenged canvassers on the money of the students received favor­ forBranigin. theassumed issue. One 77-year-old man. able response by the trip from Richard M. Nixon is expected Brian Carter. Kendallville. body else was stepping back." to solve foreign policy problems. stand-incandidate for Vice- a World War I and II veteran, MSU and he decided to change to win a resounding victory. The true test, however, will president Hubert Humphrey, charged that Kennedy is at­ his philosophy. MSU students be on the Democratic side where has been expected since Tippe­ tempting to buy the nomination. working for McCarthy in Wis­ It’ s the McCarthy must prove himself canoe County is Branigin's “He won’t buy my vote. I ’ll consin last month found the as a vote-getter. home. Prior to Johnson’s fight that man as long as I long trip a somewhat impres­ Second Annual Indiana Governor Roger Brani- announcement that he would live. He doesn't have my sive factor. interest or yours at heart- Activity in Lafayette will gan. a Democrat, is expected not run. Branigin was the to get some support as a favor­ stand-in in Indiana: now Brani­ just his own. And I've been continue over the next two ite son candidate. A vote gin considers himself a favor- a Democrat all my life." weeks, mostly with work from ite-son candidate and denies commitment to Humphrey. The students said - many people mentioned the late President John F Kennedy. Purdue students. , Organiza­ tions for Kennedy on the Purdue for Branigan will be inter­ preted by experts as a vote '‘for Vice President Hubert Hum­ Spring Stationery campus have ty?en slow f: . Initially Saturday the ap- Some spoke fondly of both ~:cr? d fc WBs the man ** $ r ~ ■ £ » •^< 4^ s . rrw rr 'it * > * ra.'< o tly jr^ *iff* The- MSU Alliance (■ Ken v* t# spencf ffte nexf (wo „ cted t< y phrey, an undeclared candidate. Students working for Mc- C.arttvv. 'vrt»rai“A e. ' and i si * tort is aTi aiTempt to wrest the to beat. The group included er's equal One lady, how- at Fort Wayne. ItwSvana How somewhere between 40 and 50 MSU students and Lansing I m going to vote for him. high school students. Thirty- snirt. Some felt that RFK is mere­ I m Catholic and ever. Penn said this is outside his district and because he was pleased with the MSU group's E u g e n e McC a r t h y -away from party Contemporary Note Show. five students left Lansing by ly exploiting his brother's work so far that he might at­ • P re scrip tio n lenses a chartered bus 6:30 a.m. fame. Some disapproved of tempt to kefep them in his area, fo r S pring 1968 Saturday. Three or four car­ Kennedy's timing on entering possibly in Michigan cities ground loads of other students joined the campaign and one person Eunice Kennedy Shriver par­ • C om plete selection them later that day. even believed that Kennedy ticipated in the official opening Canvassing and polling were had not officially announced of Kennedy headquarters in o f fram es T h e new s t y l e s , In c lu d i n g . D o tt e d S w i s s , done Saturday and Sunday.-Can- his candidacy until after John- Lafayette last Tuesday. Author • Sunglasses and b righ t c o lo r s f r o m M o n ta g & H a llm a r k vassing procedures were de- son s withdrawal. Arthur Schlesinger spoke a r e n o w a v a i l a b l e d u r i n g th e S e c o n d A n n u a l signed to assess voter opinion. Qne canvasser patiently ex- Thursday in Lafayette support­ • R e pa irs w h ile you S p r in g Show ing. Aid reapplications ing Kennedy and later met for w a it discussion with a group of pro­ Bator Opticians fessors. predominately Mc­ necessary”by* May Carthy supporters. Saturday night actor Paul Newman spoke , , supporting McCarthy in La- See them a ll in the fro n t of 223 Abbott (N e xt to Stato Theater) Ifavctte .. \ • * * Students hoping to receive almost any type of financial aid D O M I N O ’S P I Z Z A D O M I N O ’S P I Z Z A D O M I N O ’S P I Z Z A D O M I N O ’S P I Z Z A next year should reapply for grants, loans and scholarships by May 1. according to Henry C. Dykema. director of financial aids. 'The only students that will not have to reapply are those who have the MSU Trustee Scholarship or an Alumni Dis­ tinguished Scholarship." Dykema said. These aids are based Don't Forget the Contest! tudent on graces, not financial need. If You A re A R esident Of: If You A re A R esident Of: Dykema estimated that between 4.000 and 5.000 students now receive funds from National Defense student loans. Edu­ A k e r s H a ll H o l m e s H a ll A b b o t H a ll cational Opportunity grants, work-study programs and other A r m s t r o n g H a ll H u b b a r d H a ll C a m p b e l l H a ll plans. B a ile y H all M c D o n e l H all “With new applications coming in," he said, "we’ll probably G i l c h r i s t H a ll L o n d o n H a ll B r y a n H a ll Owen.. H a ll be processing from 6.000 to 7,000 applications this time. M a s o n H all B u t t e r f i e l d H all R a t h e r H all Dykema said the May 1st deadline is necessary “ in order M a y o H all C a s e H a ll S h a w H a ll to process this large volume of applications. " When students submit their applications, they also send a P h i l l i p s H a ll E m m o n s H all V a n H o o s e n H a ll Parents' Confidential Statement to the College Scholarship S n y d e r H a ll Foe Hall W i l s o n H all Service for evaluation. Dykema said this serves as a prelim­ W i l l i a m s H a ll H o l d e n H a ll W o n d e r s H all inary screening. Y a k e l e y H a ll Y O U M A Y BE E L IG IB L E FO R The Office of Financial Aids, meanwhile, surveys supple­ A F R E E P IZ Z A P A R T Y I mental forms submitted by the students which include addi­ or The House Floor which saves the tional information such as major, area of interest and previous most Domino's Pizza packages per debts. L i v e In E a s t L a n s i n g capita at the end of a 4 week When Parents' Financial Statements are returned from the period Is eligible for a Domino’s College Scholarship Service in Evanston, 111., both the supple­ Pizza Party. 30 Pizzas & 2 cases mental forms and these statements are considered before giv­ C ALL of Pepsi. Contest: April 1 to May ing financial aid. 1. 351-8870 Dykema said students will be notified of their aid for next year by July or August. Applications can be obtained at 257 Student Services Bldg. 203 M .A .C . C ALL 351-7100 966 T ro w b rid g e Road fo r fre e , fa s t d e liv e ry fo r fre e , fa s t d e liv e ry A P R IL S P E C IA L P O L Y N E S I A N headbands If you s t ill haven't trie d our pizzas B U I L D B A B Y ’S and s c a r v e s fre e w ith % yet, take advantage of this special P H O T O A L B U M W IT H o ffe r. (It’ ll help you in the contest also!) S pring F ro s tin g $15.50 or D O M I N O ’S C O U P O N D O M I N O ’S C O U P O N BODY PERM $12.50 up S T Y LE D HAIRCUTS $2.50 25* Beautiful 5x7" WORTH GOOD ON ANY R a /J u v u i U /iC j, P IZ Z A ORDER a n d J lc u s tiitfU U d L im it one p i z z a p e r c o u p o n 2 2 4 Abbott Phonet 332-4080 E x p i r e s — A p r i l 29, 1968 I D O M I N O 'S C O U P O N D O M I N O ’S C O U P O N f Th e S late N e w i, the student newspaper at M ichigan S u te U n ive r­ sity , Is published eve ry c U s s day throughout the ye ar w ith special Welcome Week and O rien U tio n Issues In Ju n e and Se p u m b e r. Sub­ scrip tio n rate s á re 114 per y e ar. M em ber Associated P re s s , United P re s s IaU rn atio n al, Inland D O M IN O 'S D a ily P re s s A sso cU tlou , AssocU ted Collegiate P re ss, Mlphlgan Dojour baby-braggingwith a boau- P re ss Association, M ichigan C o lle g la u P re s s AssocU tlou, United ttful photo . %."worth mon than a P IZ Z A thousand words.” Got a complotoly S u u Student P re s s A sso cU tlou. finished photograph for only If#. Second c U s s postage paid a t E a s t La n slag , M ick. E d lt a r U I and business o ffice s a t 147 Stadeat S ervices Building, You will not boorgodto buy bet if M ichigan S U te U n iv e rsity , E a s t Lansin g , M ich. youwl«htheremainingpoaoathoy*n yoora for 1.86 for tho first, 1 18 for E d ito ria l ........................................................................................................... 3 S 6 -B B tho 8nd and |1 f or any additional. C lassified Advertising ........................................................................ . l i t - B i i fy & U fy ie e J b e ü u & u j, PIXY PIN-UPS SXCLUSIVHY AT P M M Y T A e s UNUf 6 years. One o r tw o c h ild re n D lsp U y A d v e rtis in g ......................... ............................................................ 3S3-4400 B u sin ess-C ircu U t io n ........................................................................................I H -W t P iz ia Pecfeetlon PHOTOORAPHSR'S HOURS: p o r fa m ily w in bo photographed staffer P h o to g r a p h ic ................................................................................................... M M J1 I Mon. Thurs. Fri. 9:30 A J4. ’til 9 P M . f o r 194 each f o r th e fir s t p ic tu re , l a c h D O M IN O 'S P IZ Z A DOMINOES P IZ Z A D O M IN O ’S PlZZ/fr D O M IN O ’S P IZ Z A Tues. Wed. Sat. 9:30 AA4. ’til 5:30 A IM ander t n , M S . J aine» It. Spaniolo Shin Kiehelbnum MICHIGAN editor-in-chief od ter lining manager. STATE U N IV E R S IT Y NEWS f'ric Pinnin, executive editor Lmtrenc* U erner, managing editor Hobby Soden, rompu» editor Kdicnrd I. Hrill, editorial editor Joe Milch, »port» editor Monday Morning. April 22.1968 N e w questions o n ca m p u s Five-time recipient of the Pacemaker award for outstanding Journalism. EDITORIALS she would find someone to marry. Now the tration on it. and faces possible suspension. , Some right white action By MAX LERNER questions are more complex: how much Sixty other Barnard girls have signed a These are the weeks of the most impor­ political activism and commitment will statement saying that if Linda is guilty they tant invitations in American society-the in­ there be? What about the drug subculture? are. too. because they have been doing vitations to attend a college. Letters from For the girl, how free a sex life will she much the same thing. 4, the admission offices have been .arriving lead, and how openly? For the boy. what This is in itself an interesting event, an at homes all over the nation, in cities, will.be his attitude toward the draft when outgrowth of the draft resistance movement suburbs, small towns, ghettos. They carry the time comes? For both sexes and races, at various colleges. In effect, it is the tactic the bursting lights of a Yes or the gloom what will they feel about Negro fellow-stu- of shared guilt, as a form of participatory P r e ju d ic e can be a s u b tle A c tio n . The nam e? Shades of S tu d e n ts fo r W h ite Com ­ of a No or the suspended limbo hope of a dents. about black power, about the Afro- rebellion, if not participatory democracy. m ilita n c y in its s o u n d ? ~ W h ite . waiting-list Maybe. American societies that are coming to What they are saying is. ‘"Don't expel one. , th in g . m u n ity A c tio n have ta k e n a They are crucial invitations because col­ prominence on every important campus? expel us all." on the theory that if one is . ‘ I t ’ s in t e r n a l; a p r e d is p o s itio n W H I T E g ro u p s h a v e b e e n c r iti­ tin y , but n e c e s s a ry s te p to ­ lege and post graduate education has be­ And will they go on to postgraduate train­ guilty, everyone is. th a t m a y b e h a rd to d e fin e ; a c ize d fo r a tte m p tin g to “ a id ” w a rd s c h a n n e lin g th e e ffo rts come the new imperative for social mobil­ ing or find work and a career right after In moral terms, while it says that the B LA C K c o m m u n itie s -- it and e m o tio n s of w h ite A m e r­ ity and for an expressive life. They are cru­ college? sexual code is no longer there, it fails to n e g a tiv e e m o tio n th a t doesn’t cial. also, because the university is no long­ s tr ik e s som e w ith a n o te of ic a to w a rd s th e p ro p e r ends. These are hard questions. They all have to deal with the question of truthfulness. If n e c e s s a r ily m a n ife s t its e lf in er a decorative, cultural arabesque on the do with the problem of roots, ties and you allow yourself to lie about where you c o n d e s c e n s io n . O u r o n ly h o p e is t h a t th e s t a r t American landscape. It is taking its place live, then why not about term papers, exams v io le n c e a n d d is o r d e r . values, or the lack of them. As I see the But th is o rg a n iza tio n has a th e y have m ade now w ill not alongside the business corporation as one best of the new college generation, they are and the whole relation of a student to his D i s c r i m i n a t i o n is a m o r e o r ­ of the two central power institutions of new a n g le in m in d --w h ite peo­ p e te r o u t a fte r se ve ra l w e e ks tearing up roots, breaking ties and rebelling work? It is this question of integrity, rather g a n iz e d , le s s p e r s o n a l t h in g . American life, as witnessed by what has re­ than the question of the sexual code, which * p le w o r k in g w ith th e w h ite against established values. But they are It ’s a g ro u p fu n c tio n . One o f e n th u s ia s tic e f f o r t . cently been happening to Gene McCarthy is at the heart of it. And oi^his question the also looking to find new roots, to form new c o m m u n it y to s t ir a r e c o g n itio n Fo r a p ro je c t such as th is and (in a negative way) to Robert Kennedy, ties and develop values of their own. The value rebels, who are re-e1Wning the draft, m ig h t n o t s e ll a h o u se to a of s u b tle --o r not so s u b tle -in ­ Inevitably, the university is the focus of two groups whom Prof. Keniston at Yale marijuana, sexual behavior and almost ev­ N e g ro -n o t fo r p e rso n a l re a ­ to h a v e a n y w o r th w h ile im p a c t, the adolescent's dreams. To ‘'make" the has so well studied-the "uncommitted" and erything else, are likely to come down d iv id u a l b ia s . it w ill be n e c e s s a ry fo r th o s e university of one’s choice is to be part of the sons, b u t ra th e r b e c a u se o f re a c ­ the "young radicals"-don't comprise the squarely on the side of truthfulness, with T h e o rg a n iza tio n is e n c o u r­ who a re e x c ite d now w ith th e swirling currents of life: to be rejected is. others as with oneself. tio n to th e “ c o m m u n i t y .” whole of the important segment of the col­ a g in g w h ite s tu d e n ts on cam ­ firs t in c e p tio n of th e id e a to for a time, a kind of death. Like it or not. lege generation. There is a third, less-de­ ‘ B o th a re m ade and p e r­ that is what is happening in the inner world p u s to r e a c h b e y o n d to k e n s y m ­ c o n tin u e t h e ir d e d ic a tio n in th e fined. group which doesn't fit well either p e tu a te d b y m a n . B o th a r e r e ­ of the young--and. therefore, of their pa­ into the category of the estranged or the I like the emphasis on the right of privacy p a th y w ith th e b la c k com m u­ fu tu re . rents. too. s p o n s ib le fo r g h e tto e s and * * * category of the New Left. They are more which 1 find among many students today. r io ts . . . and th in g s le s s ob­ n ity b y a c tiv e s u p p o r t, o n th e H a r d w o r k w ith o u t v is ib le r e ­ moderate about both politics and ''hippi­ The trouble with the LeClair case on this Don’t underestimate the tensions that be­ ness." I call them the value rebels, and I am score is that the one unquestioned victim b e lie f th a t w h ite A m e r ic a n s w a r d s w ill b e th e o n ly w a y to v io u s , lik e a lie n a te d in d iv id ­ set the entering college student. In the old c a n b e s t u n d e r s ta n d a n d re la te convinced that they will inherit the earth. of it has been privacy. My own approach u a ls (y o u don’t have to cro ss k e e p th e o r g a n iz a tio n a liv e . days the question was how well the classes * * * on the question of codes is that, codes are to o th e r w h it« A m e ric a n s . It -T h e E d ito rs and grades would go. and for a girl, whether r a n y “ c o lo r” lin e to fin d th a t), Take the Linda LeClair case at Barnard needed tor a life with meaning, just as roots w ill ta k e d e d ic a te d w h ite College as a starting point Outwardly, it and values are needed, but that they don't a n g ry y o u th , th e n e g le c te d el-. A m e ric a n s ts h a k e , d o w n . M v ». looks, at least to many parents^as.it tfu* bo thv a_g,e. . «. " 1 %' V 'I B , „ „ . — vrtfg’ urrl.vonff boys grow into mr:: jm i su n ,U S qu A w a re n e ss is a b ig th in g - in unsanctioned sin. Linda had set up house p e o p l e d o n ’t lik e to a d m i t d is ­ M o re frig h te n in g .than any more or less openly with a Columbia junior. \alues ot their own. To help them do this. r i o t is a w h it e re s p o n s e o f in ­ v o v'rti tvavo authorif/s.' the college must meanwhile briry? the stu­ c r im in a tio n o r p r e ju d ic e . M a n y about her residence and her job. She is up dents into the rule-making process and d iffe re n c e , c o u n t e f -v io le n c e p e o p le r a tio n a liz e th e ir a t­ for a hearing before a mixed board, largely then ask them to live up to the rules they and r a tio n a liz a tio n . W ith o u t of students, with some faculty and adminis- have themselves shared in making. titu d e s away and s h ift th e c o n d o n in g r i o t e r s , i t is a t le a s t b la m e to som eone e ls e , any­ p o s s ib le to u n d e rs ta n d th e o n e e ls e . fo rc e s and fe e lin g s th a t m o ti­ P O I N T O F V I E W A w a r e n e s s --w ith th is and v a t e t h e m » -» T h e i r r a t i o n a l , m i s ­ m o re in m in d , n e a rly 100 s t u ­ d ire c te d re sp o n se of m uch of d e n ts have o rg a n ize d th e S tu ­ d e n ts fo r W h ite C o m m u n ity w h ite A m e r ic a d o w n th e s p in e to d a y . sends s h iv e rs The truth concerning A political barometer: * MAAND RRIA,GE U.S. chemical w a rfare EDITOR’S NOTE: Burke Zimmerman, ecological effects t f a m l y •measure of .PLANNINQ. asst, professor of biochemistry, wrote the following point of view to clarify some of the statements he was reported to have made during his Academic Days of Conscience '^ÊÊÊmgÊm resulting from the destruction of the land may be ir­ reparable. F o r th e n e x t th re e d a y s , M S U M S U ’ s e x c e p tio n a lly la r g e s tu ­ lecture last week. In the second s tu d e n ts have an unusual op­ d e n t p o p u la tio n . O ffic ia ls have KM OClfBffBBee«ERI By BURKE ZIMMERMAN The State News last Thursday carried on p a r a g r a p h , the State News article p o r tu n ity to e x p re s s th e ir v ie w s n o te d th a t M S U c o u ld h a v e th e page 6 an article covering my Academic im plied that 1 o n th e m a j o r is s u e s o f th e d a y . n a t io n ’ s la r g e s t s in g le t u r n o u t . Days of Conscience lecture on chemical stated that many V o tin g in C H O I C E 68, th e na­ The r e s u lts of C H O IC E 68 and biological warfare. Unfortunately, your lethal chemical w jjl be announced s o m e tim e reporter confused a number of statements Z IM M E R M A N weapons were cur­ tio n a l c o lle g ia te p r e s id e n tia l I made. and. as a result. I was seriously p r im a r y , s ta rts to d a y a n d w ill b e fo re th e In d ia n a p r im a r y misquoted in a number of instances. It is rently in use. In my lecture I referred to w h ic h is h e ld o n M a y 7 . S o , i t possible that she equated the word “de­ the lack of public outrage at the use of c o n tin u e th r o u g h W e d n e s d a y . chemical weapons in’ general but empha­ c o u ld have c o n s id e r a b le im ­ ployed" with “used" and thus attributed to -■ A s w e ll as v o tin g fo r th e ir sized the use of the three “riot control'\ me the statement that lethal nerve gas was p r e s id e n tia l p re fe re n c e am ong pact on th e ra c e b e tw e e n agents (including the occasionally lethal being used in Vietnam. In any case it is nec­ D e m o c ra ts R o b e rt K e n n e d y and essary that my statements be corrected at DM i and herbicides in Vietnam and par­ 13 a lte r n a tiv e s , s tu d e n ts w ill ticularly the use of lethal nerve gas by the a ls o v o te o n th re e re fe re n d a E u g e n e M c C a r t h y . A n d i t c o u ld once before I am accused of not knowing the subject or of deliberately making false, UAR against two villages in Yemen in Q u e s tio n s , tw o o f th e m o n V i e t ­ h a v e g r e a t im p a c t o n th e p o liti­ early 1967. the only known use of nerve melodramatic statements for the sole pur­ nam a n d th e o th e r o n th e “ u r ­ c a l c l im a t e in th is c o u n t r y , b u t pose of arousing public indignation. There­ gas thus far. b a n c r i s i s .” o n l y i f t h e r e is a l a r g e t u r n o u t fore. I shall repeat in this letter certain points which I made in my lecture which To clarify other points stated incorrectly M o s t o f th e 1 ,5 0 0 p a r t i c i p a t ­ n a tio n w id e . in the article: should be sufficient to clarify the matter. in g c o lle g e s a n d u n iv e r s itie s T h a t le a v e s it u p to th e in d i­ There are at present seven chemical 1 1 1 No biological weapons are authorized v id u a l s tu d e n t to d e c id e w h e th ­ agents standardized for use by the U.S. tor use without executive order. w ill v o te on W ednesday o n ly , military as described by the Army technical '2' The Germans did not use a lethal but th e M SU C H O IC E 68 o r­ er he b e lie v e s h is o p in io n is nerve gas in combat in World War II. They manual TM 3-215 “Military Chemistry and g a n iz a tio n chose to keep th e im p o r ta n t e n o u g h to g o o u t a n d Chemical Agents." They are Sarin 1G B 1 developed and manufactured the nerve gas p o lls o p e n f o r th r e e d a y s in o r ­ v o te to d a y , T u e s d a y o r W e d n e s ­ and VX. both lethal nerve gases: HD. a puri­ Tabun i GA i in a plant eventuallv captured fied version of the mustard gas used in by the Russians and moved to Russii. d e r to m a x im iz e th e v o te fr o m day. --T h e E d ito r s World War I: BZ. an incapacitant which Tabun is the predecessor to Sarin (GB' be­ temporarily slows or alters normal phys­ ing made by the U.S.. ical and mental activity and three so-called 13 > With regard to the morality of using “riot control" agents: DM. a vomiting such weapons. I pointed out that children O U R R E A D E R S 9 M I N D S and old people would generally be more sus­ agent with effects lasting up to three hours, which "is not approved for use in any oper­ ceptible to chemical agents than an army of healthy young men. This was a bit gar­ ram to help for disadvantaged ation where deaths are not acceptable": CS and CN. both of which are of the tear gas type and which have effects lasting only a few minutes. While all seven chemical wea­ bled by the State News. ' 4 1 The reporter confused research grants with postdoctoral fellowships awarded for continuing study to those who have com­ pons are being manufactured and deployed . To the Editor: The program is administered by the M. Goossen and James C. Totten. In­ in areas of the world where they might be pleted their doctorates. The postdoctoral I Recently. MSU performed a service Detroit Board of Education in coopera­ formation Services: Jack D. Seibold. C o n te x t m is s in g used at some future time, only the latter fellowship stipends offered by Ford Detrick .-that exemplifies one of the ways a uni­ tion with the Mayor's Committee for Student Services: Miss Greta Lundquist. three, those of the “ riot control" type, are arc approximately double those awarded by versity can contribute its resources to Human Resources Development. After Miss Grace M. Masuda. Lyle A. Thor- To the Editor: authorized for use in Vietnam and can be the National Institute of Health and the Na­ ‘•a program seeking to alleviate some of ten weeks of training, the aides are burne, and Mrs. Helen Widick, Food Needless to say. I was somewhat used in military operations at the discre­ tional Science Foundation. In addition, with ‘ the educational and economic problems assigned to selected schools where Services: Nelson Baines and Robert J. surprised to see a letter I submitted tion of the field commander. One of these. Vietnam war expenditures having greatly | ’of the disadvantaged members of our they are employed as teacher aides, Emerson, Kellogg Center: Miss Donna on Feb. 24 printed in Thursday's State DM. can cause death in massive doses or to reduced government funds available for society. The University hosted 165 neighborhood aides, and clerical and Browell. Lauren P. Brown, and David News. Although it may still be rele­ weakened individuals but is not usually basic research, many established scientists i people from thé Detroit Urban Area monitorial service aides. Although E. Marquette. Central Services: Burt vant, the letter was written as a re­ lethal. The nerve gases, mustard gas and are turning to Defense Dept, supported rer ^ Employment ^ Project (UAEP) and the program is barely five weeks old. D. Ferris and Charles F. Kell. Grounds sponse to your editorial of Feb. 23. the incapacitant BZ are not to my knowl­ search projects in chemical and biological conducted a' series of talks describ­ the aides have already demonstrated Maintenance: and Mrs. Patricia J. Lee entitled ‘‘What price. Negro history?", edge authorized for use anywhere. An exec­ warfare. ing the kinds of tasks performed by the that they can contribute competently and Miss Patricia C. McGuire. Learning in which you attacked the tactics of a utive order would be required for their If anyone is interested in reading further variou&service departments on campus. to increasing the educational effective­ Service. group of black students who “demanded" use. However, the most serious chemical on the subject of chemical and biological The Detroit. UAEP is one of five ness of the schools. For most of the aides this experi­ inclusion of Negro history in the ATL weapons used in Vietnam are not the so- warfare. I recommend the articles by Eli­ / experimental demonstration programs The Learning Service arranged for ence was their first opportunity to learn curriculum. The publication of the nor Langer in the Jan. 13. 1967. and Jan. the aides to visit the MSU campus on called “riot control" gases, but the herbi­ 20. 1967. issues of Science, available in the i currently being conducted in school ' about how they might participate in the letter would have been more appro­ Monday. April 15. to leafn about some cides which have been used to destroy 1 ' districts throughout the country and is world of work toward which they aspire. priate had its intended context been library, and the August-September. 1967. of the occupations in the service de­ million acres of crop land and defoliate issue of Srieuti»i oml ( itiaen. These refer­ ' supported by the U.S. Office of Eco- Lawrence T. Alexander mentioned. partments of a large university. Each Professor and Assistant Director. a considerably larger area of jungle. Aside ences provided the principal sources of in­ ■r nomic Opportunity. The program has ‘ Paul Lingenfelter from being used to perpetrate the short , three interrelated objectives: to pro- department arranged to present a short Learning Service East Lansing, graduate student formation for my Academic Days of Con­ term horror of starvation, the long term science lecture. • vide trained aides -to assist the 'pro* talk describing its operations and the Consultant to the UAEP i fessional staffs of inner ' city schools kinds of jobs performed by its per­ . currently faced with crowded class­ sonnel. The success of the tour was 1*1 \ \ i is SEVENTH , HtoU SHOULD ENTER, SNOOPY.. T H E DEFENDING rooms and insufficiént equipment and due to the willingness of the Univer­ L e t t e r P o lic y CHAMPION STAND# sity staff members to expend time and it ANNUAL U0RLP'*. „ IT'S S0IN6 TOBE HELDON ■> facilities: to provide meaningful jobs 5 IXRXJT THREE AND effort in careful planning and schedul­ The S ta te N e w s w e lc o m e s a ll le t­ ItRldT jJREGTUNG1 MAY 391 IN PETALUMA.. J for the disadvantaged unemployed of the yCHAMnONYHIPy IdElëHS 333 flOUNP#. inner city In which they may develop ing. and to the informative talks pre- ters. P le a se keep a l l le tte rs under r j marketable skills leading to economic sentad. 300 w o rd s : w e w i ll re s e rv e the r ig h t 1 self-sufficiency: to provide a channel I should like to convey to the following to e d it a n y le tte rs o v e r th a t le n g th . of communication between the school University staff members, who par­ A ll le tte r s should be ty p e d end t r ip le \ and m 'ifrrdoftidlng community jkjr which ticipated In the tour, the gratitude and spaced e n d in c lu d e na m e, u n iv e r s ity > mutual trust and cooperation might be thanks of the Detroit Board of Educa­ sta n d in g, p h o n e n u m b e r, and address. ftirtfcëf developed. tion and o f each aide: Mra. Phyllis N o u n sig n e d le tte rs w t llb e p rin te d . Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Monday, April 22, 1968 5 . C h o ic e 6 8 c a n d id a te s ’ v ie w s d e b a te d Æ sored an Industrial Incentive An international inspection Halstead of the Socialist Work­ The Socialist Workers Party Sen. Eugene McCarthy, D- ing the war calls for reversing -press the Sagon a u th o r­ By LINDA BEDNAR Bill and an Urban Housing In­ team including "all political ers Party, said that "as long sees riots as "a legitimate Minn., believes that the bombing U.S. military escalation and ne­ ities to bring d v i n n s into the State News Staff Writer rebellion by an exploited people of North Vietnam is not ad­ gotiating a settlement, Johnson government, inchxl^ig members Nine MSU representatives of centive Act to give tax incen­ elements" in Vietnam would be as the major parties continue against the government." Miss vancing our military or political ,said. In arranging negotiation.s of the National Liberation Front. five Choice 68 candidates de­ tives to businesses. Helma said. set up. Van Ravenswaay said, to follow the policies of forcibly He quoted Kennedy on govern­ "nie ultimate end must be to intervening in the affairs of Osteen said. The party advo­ objectives, and calls for per­ he said, the U.S. must: Jerry Frendt, Smith Creek bated Friday night that their ment slum programs: ‘"But I, have free elections in North other nations.” no one man can cates black control of black manent cessation, according to -stop the bombing and make senior, speaking for California man had the best solutions to their strongest advocate, must and South Vietnam." he said. hope to alter the system. communities, right of black Phil Johnson, a graduate stu­ a sincere effort to begin ne­ Gov. Ronald Reagan, said Rea­ the Vietnam and urban crises. people to bear arms under the dent living in University Vil­ gotiations: gan sees the United States com­ Bill Greulich, Buchanan fresh­ admit that they are not enough." "The present government in Miss Osteen called for the Bob Van Ravenswaay. Swarth- South Vietnam must cease to immediate withdrawal of U.S. Second Amendment to the Con­ lage. and chairman of MSU -halt U.S. search-and-de- mitted through the SEATO treaty man. speaking for former Vice stroy missions. to uphold our commitment in President Richard Nixon, called more. Pa., freshman, said Ken­ exist.” forces from Vietnam. "We stitution. and federal funds to be Young Democrats. -draw back American troops Vietnam, and would “go in and »the urban crisis the “greatest nedy would negotiate a settle­ believe in the democratic right placed in the hands of repre­ McCarthy’s program for end­ and force the South Vietnamese finish the war "with a military crisis in the United States ment over Vietnam. The first Ginny Osteen. Ft. McPherson. of self-determination for all sentatives of the black com­ ing and negotiating a settlement. to take the initiative, step would be to halt bombing Ga.. freshman, speaking for Fred people," she said. munity. victory.” today." He said that Nixon wants less of North Vietnam, he said. governmental action as a so­ lution. and more private enter­ prise action. Nixon would allow A r c h e r y , t e n n i s tax credits to private enterprise to “put more money into the slums to help people get s t a r t t h i s w e e k out of the slums," and would The individual archery use computers to find out who tournament will begin at 5 the poor are and what their p.m. qualifications are for jobs. Greulich said that despite their pairings. the Republican Party's repu­ today. Participants should call the I.M. office for HOW D O E S T H IS Fraternity team tennis will tation as a warmonger. "Nixon begin at 5:30 p.m. Wednesday. hopes for an honorable peace." Noon Friday is the deadline G RAB YOU? Tom Helma of Campus Al­ liance for Kennedy, a graduate for entering residence ' halls student living in Spartan Vil­ and independent tennis teams, lage. cited the New York sena­ and sign up for the individual tor's record of support for ur­ track meet. ban legislations. Reservations for the I.M. Robert Kennedy has proposed tennis courts will begin to­ an Emergency Employment Act day. The court lights will be whereby "slum areas can get on until 9 every evening, R e v c o p i o n e e r e d a n e n t i r e l y n e w c o n c e p t i n t h e quick jobs." and he has spon­ weather permitting. r e t a i l d r u g b u s i n e s s . W e c a l l i t " T o t a l D i s c o u n t i n g . ” I t A n s w e r t o OCC b r i n g s y o u ‘d r a m a t i c s a v i n g s o n a l l y o u r h e a l t h n e e d s a r i d b e a u t y ^ a i d s . . . w i m e v e r y c r a y d i s c o u n t p r i d e s o n p l a n i n 2 w e e k s e v e r y t h i n g . By LINDA GORTMAKER port will concentrate on these State News Staff Writer three aspects: ' -financial matters A decision on Off-Campus -educational aspects H o w d o w e d o i t ? F i r s t , t h e t r e m e n d o u s j D u y i n g Council's (OCC i proposal t.o -"the equities and inequities permit sophomores to live off in" giving permission for stu­ campus with parental consent dents .to live in off campus p o w e r o f o u r v a s t c h a i n m e a n s l o w e r o r i g i n a l c o s t s . should come within the next two housing." weeks from the Faculty Com­ The original OCC proposal mittee on Student Affairs. was approved by OCC and T h e n , w e h a v e e l i m i n a t e d w a s t e f u l , c o s t l y s e r v i c e s t h a t T. Clinton Vobb, committee ASMSU in November. ASMSU chairman, said the committee added an amendment that the spent nearly all of Friday's proposal pertain to students who o r d i n a r i l y h i k e r e t a i l p r i c e s . F i n a l l y , o u r u n i q u e s y s t e m meeting on the proposal and have been at MSU for three will discuss the financial as­ terms instead of to those of o f w a r e h o u s i n g , d i s t r i b u t i o n a n d s t o r e o p e r a t i o n p r o v i d e pects this Friday. sophomore standing. "We thought we were going Cobb said then that some of to avoid that." he said, "but the areas that needed con­ a d d i t i o n a l e c o n o m i e s w h i c h w e p a s s a l o n g t o y o u . we can't." The group will sideration included ability of talk with Roger E. Wilkinson, MSU to pay dormitory debts, acting vice president for busi­ apartment increases in East ness and finance. Lansing, and feelings of fra­ Allan B. Mandelstamm. chair­ ternities." sororities and par­ E v e r y t h i n g t h a t R e v c o d o e s i s d e s i g n e d t o l o w e r o u r man of the off-campus sub­ ents. committee working specifically If the proposal received ap­ with the OCC proposal, said proval by the faculty commit­ p r i c e s a n d k e e p t h e m l o w d a y i n a n d d a y o u t . W h e n that the subcommittee's re­ tee. it would need approval by port 1- riday was tentative and Milton B. Dickerson, vice presi­ w e s a y t h a t " E v e r y d a y i s s a v i n g s d a y o n e v e r y t h i n g a t was meant more for prelimi­ dent for student affairs, and nary discussion. the Board of Trustees. "We're not quite ready to Other committee action in­ R e v c o , " w e a r e q u o t i n g m o r e t h a n a n a d v e r t i s i n g say what we are going to do on cluded referral of a series of ’ the proposal." Mandelstamm five ASMSU proposals to sub­ said, "but I would anticipate committees who will be working s l o g a n . W e a r e h o n e s t l y s t a t i n g o n e o f t h e m o r e p l e a s ­ that this Friday's meeting will on them this week. be the last meeting to discuss These proposals, passed by the proposal." He said that ASMSU last week, would essen­ a n t f a c t s o f l i f e ! Y o u w i l l f i n d t h a t s h o p p i n g a t R e v c o i s there may be. however, a tially shift the responsibility final wrap-up meeting to give for governing student groups away from the administration a s e x c i t i n g a s a n u n e x p e c t e d c h e c k f r o m h o m e . final consideration to the pro­ posal. and into the hands of the stu­ The committee's final re- dents. LEC TU R E TODAY HERE ARE JUST A FEW TYPICAL EXAMPLES AMONG THE HUNDREDS YOU'LL FIND WHEN YOU DROP IN M ONDAY, AP R IL 22, 8:30 P .M . 106 B. W ELLS H A L L B y the o u t s t a n d i n g J e w i s h N o v e l i s t GILLETTE FOAMY REVCO BUFFERIN AQUA NET REVCO Spray GILLETTE Super Stainless Steel IsaacBashevisSinger SHAVE CREAM G IAN T-SIZE SPRAY CAN C om paro at 980 TOOTH PASTE 63/4-OZ. , C om pare a t 9 5 0 TUBE TABLETS BOTTLE OF 10 0 C om pare at $ 1 .4 9 HAIR SPRAY 13 -O Z . CAN C om pare at $ 1 .2 5 DEODORANT 7-O Z. CAN C om pare at $ 1 .4 9 BLADES DISPENSER O F 10 C om para a t $ 1 .4 5 A u t h o r o f ‘‘ T h e M a n o r , ” “ T h e F a m i l y M o s - k a t , ” ‘‘ T h e S l a v e , " ‘‘S a t a n in G o r a y , ” ‘‘T h e revco warn REVCO j m REVCO A REVCO f t REVCO f t f * REVCO f * S p i n o z a o f M a r k e t S t r e e t , ” ‘‘G i m p e l the F o o l , ” EVERYDAY I X EVERYDAY MM | I a EVERYDAY U A EVERYDAY | | | | a EVERYDAY MMA EVERYDAY A Etc. d is c o u n t ■ ■ M L DISCO UNT A A l V DISCO UNT V DISCOUNT y DISCO UNT ■ ■ Ü DISCO UNT V PRICE m PRICE ■ M PRICE p r ic e m m PRICE p r ic e m m EVERYONE W ELCOM E ALKA-SELTZER CREST REVCO REVCO RIGHT GUARD USTERINE THE LOST MARINER ASPIRIN DEODORANT a co m b in a tio n of TABLETS TOOTH PASTE ALCOHOL ANTISEPTIC BOTTLE OF 1 0 0 , 4-O Z . SPRAY CAN 14 -O Z . BOTTLE BOTTLE O F 2 5 6 % -O Z . TUBE ISOPROPYL, 7 0 % 5 -g r. U.S.P. O LD TOWN in C hicago C om pare a t $ 1 .1 5 C om pare a t 6 7 0 C om pare a t 9 5 0 P IN T BOTTLE C om pare a t 3 9 0 C om pare a t 9 8 0 P LU M STREET in D e tro it HAIGHT-ASHBURY In San F ra n c is c o REVCO M jm REVCO 0 ^ am revco jm mm REVCO ML REVCO ■ ■ REVCO ■■■ ■ ■ EVERYDAY MM MM A EVERYDAY MM A EVERYDAY . EVERYDAY m J A EVERYDAY 1 1 A EVERYDAY f f i DISCO UNT U f t p V DISCO UNT y DISCO UN T M* ■ V DISCO UNT 1 V DISCO UNT ■ ■ V DISCO UNT M f f C PRICE I ■ PRICE ■ PRICE I PRICE M PRICE m M PRICE m È now open E v e r y D a y i s S a v i n g s D a y o n nights REVCO ’t i l 8:30 211 EAST GRAND INVER DISCOUNT CENTERS FORMERLY MARGIN DRUG STORE 956 T r o w b r id g e Rd. a c r o s s f r o m C a s e , W i l s o n , W o n d e r s and H old en H a lls ______________ Michigan State News, E ast Lansing, Michigan Monday, April 22, 1968 N .T . FAVORITE SON S t a s s e n : e t e r n a l c a n d i d a t e Rockefeller: possible draft ò r f o r By DICK STQIMENOFF m i d a b l e c o m p e t and twice re-elected. i t He i o n ? B y L IN D A B B D N A R last year. But after Romney a favorite son. and he will cation and Welfare: and Special State News Staff Writer achieved national recognition S ta te N e w * S ta ff W r ite r dropped out of the race on Accept a call from a majority Assistant to the President for If persistence were the quali­ during these terms when he N elson A . R o c k e fe lle r's na m e March 1 this year. Rockefeller of the delegates, he said. Foreign Affairs. fying factor for a presidential In 1958. Rockefeller defeated supported a labor law which is s t ill on th e C h oice <8 b a llo t failed to get the support he Rockefeller was born in 1908. aspirant. Harold Stassen would alth ou gh he re c e n tly w ith d re w Averell Harriman for governor provided for a cooling off expected. He received only the son of John D. Rockefel­ be a shoo-in this November. fro m th e p re s id e n tia l ra c e f o r of New York by over 500.000 period before strikes. about 10 per cent of the vote ler Jr. and Abby Aldrich Rocke­ Stassen. a 60-year-old Re­ his th ir d tim e in less th a n 10 votes, and was re-elected in In 1945 he was a delegate in the New Hampshire primary. feller. At Dartmouth College, publican from Philadelphia is 1962 and 1966. to the San Francisco Confer­ years. April 2. after his withdrawal, he majored in economics, and now entered in his fourth presi­ O n M a rc h 21, th e d a te o f ence and was a major figure he received about 1.5 per cent was graduated as a member of dential race since 1948. h is w ith d ra w a l, he sa id : of the GOP vote in the Wis­ Phi Beta Kappa in 1930. During his nine years in in the drafting of the charter office. Rockefeller has greatly Las Vegas gamblers rate which founded the United Na­ “I have said that I stood consin primary. He will not In 1940. he was appointed by expanded New York's higher- him darker than most horses tions. ready to answer any true and run in the Oregon primary in Franklin D. Roosevelt as co­ education system; built a $500 at 1.000 to 1 odds. He is the From 1955 to 1958 he served meaningful call from the Re­ which he had his only great ordinator of Inter-American constant butt of political jokes, as Special Assistant for Dis­ publican Party to serve it and success in the 1964 race. Affairs to investigate Nazi ac­ million complex of state offices in Albany: poured $300 million witness a Johnny Carson mono­ armament to President Eisen­ the nation. I still so stand." Rockefeller now finds it "clear tivity in South America. NELSON ROCKEFELLER logue in which he told of the hower. After that he lost some But he added. " I expect that a majority of the party's After the war. Rockefeller a year into the state transpor­ time Jack Benny checked in political prestige in unsuccess­ no call. And I shall do nothing leaders want the candidacy of founded the International Basic tation system: and implemented as a nation and that our ac­ to a swanky hotel in New York. ful bids for the governor­ toencourage such a call." former Vice President Richard Economy Corp. and the Ameri­ a $1 billion bond issue to halt tions have not kept pace with The clerk asked him if he'd ship of Pennsylvania and later The 50-year-old New York Nixon." can International Au>n. for pollution throughout the state. the changing conditions." like the Presidential suite. for mayorship of Philadelphia. governor supported Gov. Rom- But he will attend the na­ Economic and Social develop­ In 1962 he divorced the former Benny declined, saying he'd Stassen is a tireless cam­ ney's candidacy for president tional Republican convention as ment to provide assistance in Mary Todhunter Clark, and in like something as far from the paigner but fails to attract the such areas as education, health 1963 he married the former H ARO LD STASSEN Presidential suite as possible. crowds of a Nixon or a Mc­ and roads. Margaretta Fitler Murphy. EDITOR’S NOTE: Following are "OK", the clerk said. "We’ll thing in common with Presi­ Carthy or a Kennedy. In Keno­ In 1950. he was appointed to biographical and issue sketches ç fio w C i? & k e a d q u a A Ìe A ^ lo t , put you in the Harold Stassen dential candidate Eugene Mc­ sha. Wis.. a few nights before Truman's International Develop­ Rockefeller has not stated of two more Choice 68 candi­ Carthy , besides his Vietnam WWW ° his views on Vietnam. At dates. The national collegiate room." the primary. Stassen addressed ment Advisory Board. He Even Stassen's own cam­ views, that is his lack of cam­ served in the Eisenhower ad­ his March 21 press conference presidential primary begins on a group erf 50 students and he said that he disagreed with campus today and will continue paign manager admits his paign money. He has a national professors at Carthage Col­ ministration as chairman of chances are extremely slim. budget of $60-70.000. Com­ \ r t \ i i r v e c i the Advisory Committee on President Johnson's Vietnam through Wednesday. See story on lege. In the meantime. Richard policy: page one. But Stassen refers to himself pare this to the more than Nixon was speaking to 3500 Government Organization: Un­ "I think that our concepts as "an old political warhorse $500.000 Richard Nixon spent persons and assorted newsmen dersecretary of Health. Edu- who can't stay away from the on Wisconsin alone. About $20.000 of his budget. Stas­ in Beloit. battle." SIR PIZZA SIR PI7ZA SIR PIZZA SIR PIZZA SIR PIZZA SIR PIZZA Stassen's motives, however, sen put up on his own. But Senator Eugene- Mc­ To add to this problem. Carthy's ..unexpected success Our Pick-of*tlie-Week... show he is more of a politi­ cally concerned American Stassen recently started sport­ rather than presidential candi­ ing a toupee at the request in the N'pw Hampshire pri­ mary has caused many Re­ THEROYAL FEAST ... our “ famous” fresh pork sausage, lusciohs Import I ?> (/» date. His stand on the big of television cameramen who issues bear this out.. He Ke- complained of the glare from Vf>/1ed States should . This. halt all bombing of North Viet­ him with a load of p’re-toupee publicans to take a second look at Stassen and his peace - v Vi v : : :: v •' iWrrwauftee recently totd news­ mushrooms, diced sweet green peppers, and sliced onions. X) nam. cease at) offensive action publicity material with pictures men. "He's no tJireat to us ♦Try this dellc&us tangy comblnatittw . . . Its another "O in the South, pul) troops back of the man looking ten years here, but we re not laughing H as a c o m p le te s e le c t io n at him either. H ii peace great Sir’Pizza blend. N to the population centers, and older. His already tight budget o f w ide and u n u su al w edding r in g s . N bring in the United Nations. prevents him from having ne\r campaign is attracting real > material printed. support, especially among the D ro p in and l e t u s s h o w / you s o m e T r y o u r Royal Feast P izza These ideas, he believes, will only be taken seriously Despite his financial short­ students." o f th e l a t e s t d e s ig n s . . . ^ i t ’ s p u r p ic k -o f-th e -w e e k if they come from a presi­ comings. Stassen has an im­ When Stassen isn't busy — ■i. n COUPON — dential candidate. "What hap­ pressive list of political quali­ campaigning, he can be found pens to me as an individual fications. In 1938. when he in Philadelphia working at his This coupon entitles the bearer is of no consequence." Stas­ was 31 years old Stassen was successful international law to a discount on our SIR PIZZA sen says. "The important elected governor of Minnesota practice. of-the-week. . thing is to get my ideas across, * THE RO YAL FEAST and I can do that best as a n c J ffwWCLRY C Cl ART CENTER W« P IZ Z A -O F -T H E -W E E K presidential candidate." life W HAT'S, off on off on "I couldn't move any other 319 E. GRAND RIVER PHONE 332-4673 Worth our 10" Worth our 14" Republicans on Vietnam." i Royal j Royal Stassen adds, “ so I decided to run myself." 25 c pss 4 0 f,s c Pizza Stassen has at least one 2417 KALAMAZOO ST. 1129 N. LOGAN Coupon Expires April 28,1968 487-3733 284-4406 JOS 10%off n / r iif t m F lo r is t / u The U. S. Army Field The Union Board is spon­ _ _ _ ^ ^ ^ ^ 2 2 0 ^ ^ E D A M T a k |- o u ^ n ly ^ ^ 4 8 £ 4 5 5 5 cash value for students & faculty Band will perform in con­ soring "Mad Hatters Mid Way" cert at 2:30 today in the Audi­ on May 3-4 in the Men's In­ sir p iz z a " ^ Î ^ T Î zz^ i^ Î zz^ i r p i z z a s Ir p i z z a T Ir p Îz z T 809 E. MICH. AVE., LANS. torium. Admission is free. tramural Bldg. * * * * * * The Campus Alliance for The MSU Outing Club Kennedy is recruiting per­ will present Mrs. Margaret Thorpe in a program entitled W o r l d ’s s h o r t e s t sons interested in campaign­ ing in Indiana the next two "On Foot Through Nepal" weekends. Anyoneinterested at 7 p.m. Tuesday in 204 can sign up in the Union. Natural Science Bldg. There * * * will also be a sneak preview The MSU Folklore Society of an upcoming program. Sign will meet at 7 tonight in the up sheets for future trips will t h e r ë j E X P E R T, | æ >n e C P A a p tit u d e Tower Room of the Union. * * The SDS Peace and Free­ dom Committee will meet * be available. The MSU Pre-Law Club will sponsor a lecture by * } * * at 8:30 tonight in 34 Union Harold Glassen. Lansing at­ I N E V E R Y F A M I L Y to discuss "Building a Move­ torney. at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday te s t. ment On and Off Campus." in 118 Epplev Center. Glas­ sen will discuss "The Trials of Jesus." Faculty and students Everybody has an Uncle George. He’s the one who knows which car is a p ie c e of are invited to attend. * * * junk. And whore you can get practically anything wholesale. A C L U s e n d s The MSU Packaging So­ Uncle George is a real expert with other ciety will meet at 7 p.m. If you want to earn a living in a field that con­ [ / ^ W W ( W y . W A W A V i W S V i W i W \ W i V M V . ’i V A % W W V . w w \ \ v . people’s money. Tuesday in the Student Lounge But when it comes to your diamond, we’re going stantly offers new and exciting perspectives — p r o t e s t l e t t e r in the Natural Resources Bldg. to suggest that you ignore him. George Aldrich from the 3-M Because unlest Unde George is a trained new problems to solve—consider the work of the A letter of protest over the Company will discuss "New* gemologiat, he probably knows little more than you CPA. closing of MSU classes and Developments in Machinery." do about diamonds. Every ArtCarved diamond is inspected by a A CPA has to grasp the essentials of many offices on Good Friday was All interested students are gemologist and backed by a written PVP&M sent to President Hannah and invited to attend. guarantee. He evaluates it for carat weight, color, cut different fields, and have the independence to * * * the Board of Trustees Tues­ and clarity. form objective opinions about them. day by the Lansing branch of Sign ups for the Studiilt And at any time during your lifetime, if you the American Civil Liberties Union Board European F lin ts ever want to trade your ring in for a more expensive He’s more in demand than ever before, by Union. are taking place from 9 a.m. ArtCarved ring, well take it back. At it’s full corporations, non-profit agencies, government Harold Hart. , chairman of to 5 p.m. now through May 1 value. in the Union Board office. Can Unde George give you that kind of bodies at all levels. the Lansing branch, said in guarantee? the letter that the Union re­ There are presently seven Why? Because the increasing complexity ^ r t Çarvedf ® of business requires new concepts of fact- garded the action as "a vio­ lation of one of the important principles upon which this coun­ flights scheduled. * * * The Student Union Board is gathering, problem-solving, and communication A k u n t t t a l 2 0 0 p a s * w a d d in g g u i d a a n d f r e e try was founded: the separation sponsoring a Student Photog­ a t r ia b r a d m r a a a r a a v a lla tila a t t h e A r tC a r v e d d a t i e r e l ia t e d . J u a t t r y o n a n A r t C a r v e d of economic information. of church and state." raphy Exhibit from 8 a.m. I d ia m o n d r i n g a n d a a k t o r d a t a i l a . The CPA, for example, is one of the leaders "We believe it particularly to 11 p.m. now through Friday - SeeArtCarved Diamond Riegeat — — inappropriate that a public, tax- in the Union Main Lounge. in planning.new ways to use computer systems. * * * supported University officially Allegan - Kalamazoo - □ P r o b le m s s tim u la te m e . He might also be called upon to weigh the recognize in this manner a An academic house is now Paul McFarland Jewelers Schumaker’s Jewelers - ceremony peculiar to one re­ being organized in East Fee relative merits of social programs in terms of Alpaca - Walter E. Ring Jewelers ligion." Hart continued. for the beginning of fall term. □ P r o b le m s u p s e t m e . available resources, helping to shape an urban Rene’s Jewelers Midland - Hart said that holidays of Interested coeds should con­ Bad Axe - R. J. Robinson Jewelers renewal program. other religions on campus were tact Meg Korda at 353-3159 Clarence J . Sageman Jewelers Muskegon * not similarly recognized. He for further information before Cadfllac- Parmelee’s Jewelry So if problems intrigue you, and if you have said students who did not wish signing up in the manager's Reed A Wheaton Jewelers Oxford - * aptitude for concentrated, meticulous, creative to observe religious services office beginning Tuesday. Caro - Acheson Jewelers thinking, you might make a good CPA—in ajjub- had been deprived of part of ♦ * * William Manasse Jewelers Owoaso - the education they had paid for. Petitioning for membership Cheboygan * Campbell’s Jewelry lic accounting firm, in industry, education or The action also used some in the Blue Key National Travis Jewelry Pontiac - government. At some point, you might even de­ public tax funds to pay faculty Honor fraternity is open Detroit - Lou-Mor Jewelers and staff while they attended through Friday. Petitions are Sallan Jewelers Royal Oaks - cide to form a firm of your own. available in 101 Student Serv­ church services, according to Beat t ■ Myers Jewelry Shop Talk with your faculty.advisor. He can tell - Hart. ices Bldg. Leon G. Jewelry k Art Center Saginaw - • * * * you about the courses that could lead toward a /- Alpha Kappa Psi, pro­ R ta t- Jules Greenberg Jewelers Leonerd A. Goetzke Jewelers - Nuechterlein Jewelry CPA certificate soon after graduation. Or you Demonstration fessional business fraternity, Hatfield Jewelers Inc. Sandusky - can do graduate work. is sponsoring a lecture, “ Help HMdnga • Sageman’s Jewelry You can also learn about the work of a CPA explores ESP Wanted-Brains." by Robert Patrick J. Gilmore Jewelers Sebewaing - H. Lacamp from the J.C. Penny Herb Beyer will give a demon­ IriflPMHT Arnold Lagher Jewelers in a booklet we’ll be glad to send you. Drop a Co. at 7:39 tonight in the Teak stration of extra-sensory per­ Room of Eppley Center. Busi­ Acheeon Jewelers Traverse City . note or card to: Dept. A 1 0 , AICPA, 666 Fifth ception at 7 tonight in Wonders ness administration majors, Ludtagton • : Bari Cobb Jewelers Kiva. Sctehl Jewelry Co. A v e n u e , N e w York, N e w York 1 0 0 1 9 graduate and undergraduate,!, Walled Lake ■ The demonstration is open as well as other interested Irland Jewelers Aiftarican Instltut» o> C ttlftod Public Accountant» to the public without charge. students are invited to attend. Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Monday, April 22, 1968 7 P r o f f a v o r s t r u t h 'Big b a n g ’ theory links stars i n c o Misunderstanding in conver- n v e r s a t i o its relation between the speak- n to m ystery of elements* sation was discussed by Don­ er. the time and the sentence By STEVE GATES The theory advanced by Fow­ dous quantity of heat. In fact, ald Davidson, professor of in a conversation. State News Staff Writer ler to explain the existence of if the recently-discovered ex­ philosophy in science and “There must be a truth def­ Why is there air. earth, fire the elements is a modification istence of a uniform “tempera­ language at Princeton Uni­ inition for the speaker and and water? of the "Big Bang" theory sug­ ture” of space radiation of versity, Thursday night at the for the language,’’ Davidson According to the theory of a gested by another noted phys­ 2.7degrees Kelvin (barely above term's first Isenberg Memori­ said. “ In sharing a language noted California Institute of icist. George Gamow. absolute zero) is the result al Lecture. we share the feeling of the Technology astrophysicist, the The theory states that the of this explosion, then the ex­ Davidson's speech. “The world. Any acceptable trans­ basic chemical elements were universe was formed over 10 plosion can be calculated to Theory of Meaning in Meta­ lation will make listeners' and formed successively in a “big billion years ago in a single have produced temperatures of physics.'' dealt with truth and speakers’ beliefs true." bang," in supermassive stars, explosion of a huge mass of about 10 billion degrees Kel­ Davidson defined misunder­ and then in normal stars like extraordinarily concentrated vin. standing as “error about what our own sun. electrons, protons and neu­ After a brief few million the other person (in the con­ The problem of< the origin trons. years of forming a number of versation) believes." David­ of the elements antedates sci­ This explosion, suggests Fow­ the elements, these heavy stars V a n d a l s c l i p son stressed the conclusion ler. produced primarily hydro­ then presumably exploded, scat­ ence itself, said William A. that “ increase in disagree­ S a le s p itc h gen and helium, the two light­ tering their elements throughou* ' Fowler, professor of physics ment means decrease in in­ U n i o n B o a r d m e m b e r s w e l c o m e d s t u d e n t s to o p e n r u s h . F r o m left a r e s F r a n O r r , at Caltech. However, the prob­ est elements, and a tremen- space. p h o n e c a b l e s telligibility.’' lem has become increasingly P ig e o n f r e s h m a n ; J a c k ie W a lk e r , M o n r o e f r e s h m a n ; D o n n a R itc h ie , O a k P a r k s o p h o m o r e ; P a u la S ik e s , W a r r e n s o p h o m o r e ; and S u s a n M a k e la , O n to n a go n so p h o ­ more complex, as the number of Misunderstanding occurs at known elements has grown from C h eck T h e s e V a lu e s m ore. . S ta t e N e w s hoto b y R u s s e l l S te ffe y in L a n s i n g either the point of translation the four postulated by the or when the message causes LOWEST EVERYDAY ancient Greeks--air. earth, fire PRICES IN TOWN ByUPI Telephone service for 1,600 a divergence from the re­ ceiver's own doctrines. Davidson also stressed the LARGEST GRANT TO AID and water-to the 104 elements and approximately 1.500 iso­ E X TR A SAVINGS W ITH residents of Michigan's capital topes of those elements known city was restored Sunday morn­ importance of a speaker's loca­ today. W EE KLY DISCOUNT 'U’ ing, after vandals had “ pretty tion in time and space in meta­ The big breakthrough in the physics. COUPONS skillfully’’ cut seven main cables search for an explanation of the ¡COUPON ¡COUPON | as a strike by Michigan Bell r e c e i v e s f u n d s elements, said Fowler, was the Telephone Co. workers went In order to p r o m o t e better discovery of the neutron in into its third day, the com­ understanding in conversa­ G ifts and grants totaling $3.525.496.75 of innovation in ru ra l societies is being designed to train about 30 doctoral a n d . C ig a re tte s C r e s t T o o th p a s te w ere accepted Th u rsd ay b y the U n iv e r­ supported w ith a $254.340 grant from 1932. tion Davidson recommends postdoctoral an im al behavior scien­ pany said. sity ’s Board of Tru stees. the Agency for International Develop­ tists. The grant is directed by D r. Ja m e s ' Using various combinations of The cables, providing serv­ concentration on "using verbs Included w as a grant for $549.000 from m ent. D r. E v e re tt M . R ogers, profes­ neutrons, with the already- ice to a North Lansing resi­ dential area, were cut some­ as predicates that relate to obj ects a nd events." the Agency for International Develop­ ment i A ID i to continue a study for the government of Thailand on how to sor of com m unication, is d irecto r of the program w hich has been underw ay since 1964 The research , w h ich has been con­ C . Braddock. professor of zoology. The N ational Science Foundation has granted $104.600 to two M SU physicists for continued theoretical studies of elec­ known protons and electrons, scientists could then theorize 3/77c 54‘ time between late Saturday the building of any element Limit One Limit One im prove graduate education in Thailand ducted in India. B ra z il, and N ig eria, tronic processes in solids. night and early Sunday morn­ The study, w hich began in 1967. is w ill produce inform ation on how to com ­ Scholarship funds totaling $330.839.95 or isotope. Expires After 4-27-68 Expires After 4-27-68 ing, the company said. The being conducted by the Institute for In ­ m unicate new ag ricu ltu ral methods to w ere also accepted by the Board East Lansing Store Only Bast Lansing Store Only ternational Studies in Educatio n D r peasants 1kX)UPON [COUPONl- } u n iversity in çub- hacking apart the caofes. said tion. is canfpuS’ cwtfmitafor* bt tfie pro-* ill trt" CAarinHeo i/r . ’ f*v * w\ v » George VoorhJs, -areb com­ gram •* r Jam es T HON* »NO MrttOCOtOR pitched and batted his way to a NBA PLA YO FFS 7 oo Woodbridge - W orst * JO IN TED CUE STICK TO BE P IE S H E T ÏÏ 4-2 Tiger victory to complete a held at Lake Lansing Saturday, sweep of Detroit’s doubleheader Boston 107 Lo s Angeles 101 Court 6 The MSU club had 10 points. AWARDED MONDAY A P R IL 22. with the Sox. 6:00 E m in e n ce - E m p e ro rs St. Clair Community College was NHL PLA YO FFS 6:30 AbdicaUon - Aborigines second with 24 points and Hfenrv Pete Ward hit a two-run homer St. Lo u is 5 M innesota 3 7:00 W inchester - W ilding in the ninth inning of the second Ford Community College was FREE T IC K E T WITH 7:30 W ordsworth - W olverton third with 32. Dave Chavkin of MSU was the HOUR OF P L A Y . high-point skipper in Class B TWO FREE COKES as he won all four of his races. Pat Walker of MSU was the high-point skipper in Class A'. w ith e ve ry one ite m m edium pizza * 'S ’ s tic k m e n LANSING’S FINEST NIGHT C LU B lo s e n o . 6 CD. PRESENTS The Chicago Lacrosse Club defeated the MSU Lacrosse Club 6-4 Saturday on Old Col­ lege Field and handed the Spartan stick men their sixth /V IC and the V E R S A T ILE S ' straight loss without a vic­ 0» . T H IS W E E K O N L Y tory. The MSU team stayed fairly N O R T H U .S. 2 7 A C R O S S F R O M T H E P I G E O N IN N close to Chicago throughout the game. However, Dick Nygren’s goal in the last few VARSITY minutes of the fourth quarter THE made the score 6-4 and put ÄQRW.V the contest out of MSU’s reach. Bob Murphy led MSU with two goals. Jerry Vendt had a goal and an assist. Pete Mc- i M m m « f a t Avoy also had a goal for MSU. kcnmumi n i tm K M O K I Super F a st D e liv e ry 332-6517 The Chicago team was led by fminer Maryland All-Ameri­ 224 ABBOTT RD. 2ND A T 9 t3 7 * o f f « r a p p l i e s to d o r m d a l l v a r t a s o n l y can George Corrigan, with two A t ROSS FROM STATE THEATER (LOWER LEVEL) goals and an assist. Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Monday, April 22, 1968 9 'G o o d . B a d a n d U g ly ’ a s a tis fy in g film the corpse, “when you have lars in salaries for non-exis­ By STUART ROSENTHAL criticism of the lack of per­ character is transparent and a couple of weeks to a mild of those lavish organizations right into line with every other tent agents. Entertainment Writer to shoot. shoot--don’t talk. ” sonal interaction between char­ which populate all of today's "eccentric Texas bigot" por­ There's no point in question- more often ludicrous than turnout. Perhaps it’s best, In trying to recapture the acter and viewer in the usual humorous. as far as Newman’s reputa­ espionage tales. The “Cru­ trayal of the last five years. wonderfully haphazard, sloppy The most violent thing about Tuco s absurd practice of prairie spectacle. sade for Freedom" is the bathing with a pistol in the Newman is a World War tion is concerned, that Harry appeal of the “ Ipcress File" "The Good. The Bad and the It should be noted that Leone II private who has spent more Frigg's War remains as secret brainchild of one self-styled water; it’s typical western hap- which waned considerably in Ugly" is the going over that goes even beyond the level of time in the stockade for in­ as possible. General Midwinter who per­ it gives the conventional west- P®nstance as is every While Begley plans the Lat­ the subsequent "Funeral in surface satire in his lambast- sulting' officers than he has “ B illio n D o lla r B r a in ” ceives of himself as the mes- ern. As such, itis one of the incident throughout the flick s vian uprising with the able Berlin." the "Spying is a> ing. Most of his symbhlism in the ranks. Consequently, It seems as though it is siah of the downtrodden Reds. most satisfying commercial q u ickly passing two and a half assistance of his billion dol­ rotten, dreary business” and, < is obvious but pointed, such as he has become the number impossible in a series of films “God." he insists, “told us films to plav in Lansing this ^our duration. Even the plot lar computer complex. Karl "Everybody is out for them- . playing the final triangular one escape artist in the armed to fight the Communists. And is irrelevant and subordinate to maintain a consistent level Malden is capitalizing upon selves” routines have been,. year. showdown in what appears to forces and is assigned to effect He has made me His tool." to the sham violence and con- of quality, especially in the Jiis knowledge of cybernetics emphasized. Even at that.. < Sergio Leone raked in sev- be an arena encircled by the breakout of five allied Opining that the air in his secret agent market. “ Brain" is much too slick , eral “fistfuls of dollars" with drived suspense. This is to slopes of graves extending on brigadier generals being held James Bond and Derek home state is the only really by feeding the machine phoney say that, in fine satiric form. data which induces it to place to fulfill the promise of the " F is tfu l of D o lla rs " and “ F o r all sides beyond the range by-the Italians. wholesome air in the world. "Good. Bad and Ugly" is Flint created considerable stirs into his hands a million dol­ initial Palmer film. a Few D o lla rs M o re ." the of the camera. The catch is that the offi­ Ed Begley’s performance' falls structured exactly after the with "Dr. No" and “Our Man infamous p a ir of quickie Ita lia n With this work, the Italian cers are being treated as stock American western. Flint" but by the time "Thun- westerns w hich substituted a director seems to have ade­ Student^urvwal *4“ The same concept finds its royalty in the chateau where derball’’ and "In Like Flint" conglom eration of violence and quately covered the western. they are imprisoned, a situ­ way into the camerawork with make the rounds, the excite­ sadism fo r p lo t and set c ritic s But if “The Good. The Bad ation which somewhat dimin­ its profusion of tight closeups ment had worn down to less and pro tective m others to and The Ugly” is any indi­ ishes their desire to be lib­ of faces and trigger fingers than a quiver's worth. The gnashing th e ir teeth. This cation of his potential as a erated. so they use their Cinematicaily. virtually every disintegration was even more tim e Leone has turned against satirist, it might be hoped that equality of rank as a point sequence will strike you as drastic in the case of the the very elem ents th a t he has Leone will turn his attention of dissension forestalling the heretofore successfully ex­ having been lifted from some to other American film cycles. Dean Martin-Matt Helm adven­ From Harvard to UCLA . . . Texas to Ohio State long forgotten oater. formulation of any plan of tures which began with the ploited. m e rcile ssly puncturing I can hardly wait for “ Fistful escape. veritable fun-fest. "The Si­ College students are ALL playing STUDENT SURVIVAL® The film will disappoint of Dollars on Wheels or a ll of screenland's cowboy The o ffic e r-h a tin g Frigg. lencers" and immediately de­ blood and guts gluttons and “The Good. The Bad. and the The NEW, EXCITING, FUN game for top students, Phi Beta Kappas, BMOCs, cliches. then, is given an instant pro­ cayed into the tripe mold of tongue in cheek lovers because Ugly Go Hawaiian. " potential drop-outs, Summa Cum Laude students, and would-be college M y fa v o rite b it involves the m otion to the rank of m a jo r “The Ambushers" which dis­ of its consciously absurd V graduates. STUDENT SURVIVAL® is sweeping across campuses and dormi­ talking shootouts th a t are so general, p e rm ittin g him . to mayed even Martin’s most v ita l to the " a d u lt" horse opera, nature. The violence is too “Secret War of Harry Frigg” tories throughout the country. excessive to be objectionable, 1) comm and the u n it of top fanatic fans. w ith the v illa in tra ckin g down “The Secret War of Harry brass and 2i give vent to Two to six players or one to three couples match wits, luck and money (another salient point of sa­ The most disappointing de­ enrolling in school courses, completing Majors, paying penalties, avoiding the good guy. or vice versa, Frigg" is Paul Newman's first his intense contem pt fo r o f­ tire i and although the corpses cline. however, is Michael the draft, escaping from dating dilemmas, getting engaged to be married, and and le ctu rin g the poor target straight comedy vehicle and ficers. He. however, fa lls accure rapidly, the viewer Caine's descent from the highly trying to survive the hilarious and sometimes devastating Student Notice fo r five or ten m inutes on his it might have been a lot better v ic tim to the charm s of the acclaimed "Ipcress File" to never becomes well enough Cards. m otivations, and hang-ups. This had Newman not been in it. widowed countess whose “The Billion Dollar Brain." acquainted with the victims to tim e when one of Tuco's (E li The method actor who es­ castle is being used as a the current Harry Palmer An adult boardgame packed with fast moving excitement for college be emotionally affected by their W allaehi nemeses, cornering tablished his style in such m akeshift prison-hotel. opus which just opened at students and fun-loving couples. passing. his prey in a tu b fu ll of suds, hits as “ Hud" and “Cool Hand the Lansing Drive-in Theater. There is no real violence Luke" apparently cannot turn IF YOUR CAMPUS STORE IS SOLD OUT, SEND CHECK OR MONEY launches into the ob lig a to ry In this one. the bungling without mental anguish, an ele­ his technique to comedy. De­ The developm ents are m ild ly ORDER IN THE AMOUNT OF $5.95 ($4.95 plus $1.00 postage and handling) harangue, he gets a soap- Palmer is pitted against one ment that is unequivocably coated slug fo r his e ffo rt. spite the adaptation of a new amusing, but not p a rtic u la rly (N tw Y ork S ta to r o tid o n tt o d d 2% S a in Tax) absent in this and most other set of mannerisms, the title side sp littin g w ith N ew m an's [. i R I C H i a u i "S e n o r." W allach addresses westerns. This constitutes PROGRAMINFORMATION P 48| «S9O 0 I Port Chester, New York 10573 slump-shouldered, back-home. T0 GAMEMAS1FRS. INC P0 Box 567 . - ir ò c S i frrapf/cxipnafc. m ar which is funny in the film is 1:25» 3:25» 5:30. d ra w n , d ire c tly front -iisr 7 : 3 5 ,9 :4 * script itse ll'. and m ust do its r r s mot who you con. help.wanted r r s how you oo n t PRUL nfUHM II work w ithout the enhancement which m ig h t have been derived had a p e rfo rm e r of some com ­ ic a b ility , s e n sitivity and Thi leerst Ularof I "M u1' knowledge of tim in g and de­ liv e ry been given the role.. TECHNICOLOR* I UNIVERSAL PICTURE "The Secret War of Harry NEXT: "SWEET N O V E M B E R * 1 JK . Frigg" will probably play for FPO G M A M IN P O N M A T IO N P llth W EEK! Ends Soon c 1:15-3:20-5:25-7:3(V9:40 ACADEM Y AWARD WINNER "B e s t D ire c to r" JOSEPHELEVINE \ *M lk e N ich o ls M IK E N IC H O L S . . \ LA W R E N C E T U R M A N / ,0 THE L , \ RMMMKN* TECHMGOUr .. IMMM*MCIUM1MUM) G o o d , B a d , b u t n o t E v il G R A ANNE BANCROFT-DUST1N HOFFMAN-KATHARINE ROSS D U AT E - C l i n t E a s t w o o d , T h e G o o d , t a k e s a b r e a k w ith L e e V a n C l e e f , T h e U g l y , In the h ila r io u s s a t ir ic w estern T h e G o o d , T h e B a d a n d T h e U g l y , " n o w p l a y i n g at FOXEASTERN THEATRES •SUMMNARV Of NATIONAL OERERAL 0QAP the G l a d m e r . S P A R T A N T W I N T H K A T R E M A L E — FE M A L E FRANDOR SH OPPIN G CENTER • 1 1 0 0 (A S T SAOINAW • P h o n . 1 9 1 0 0 3 0 E ve nln gs Army Band concert Encyclopedia Brltannlca and Great Books 'of the Western World now hiring students and SPARTAN EAST 20THCENTURY-FOX prmnti at Auditorium today moonlighters. We work by ap­ lem pointments only. No canvass­ (M m ing, delivering or collecting. WO TEACHER TRAININO OR EXPERIENCE NECESSARY oneof thetoughest assignmentsmAmerica- poverty teaching, it'syourchancetomaki a.»§differencein The in te rn a tio n a lly acclaim ed by the Lansing Council for Must have car. Sales experi­ If youeonhoopyoureooi working»0hoursoweek, «toyloooowithocrow thelivesof somepoor aids. Andyouget 875eweek of hyper-activeMPa, andotMbohanginginthorotor2or$graduatosem. Interested? U.S. A rm y F ie ld Band and Veterans' Affairs, will be held ence not necessary. Can lead nara- thoToaohorCorpomight boforyou. Contact your chief stateechoei officer seeyour col­ Soldiers' Chorus w ill present at 8 tonight in the National to full time in summer. Yougattwoyeereof tuWenfreegraduatestudyptueon-thejobtrainingfor legeplacement officer.or applytothe a concert at 2:30 today in the Guard Armory. 2500 S. Wash­ $250.00 T EA 2H ER 2C O R P8 I d u u d thru per month guarantee if you D illi ETUIS d L a n e t A uditorium . ington St.. Lansing. ATfinjjmenca The Army Band has per­ meet our requirements. For Corporation U .S . O F F IC E O F E D U C A T I O N / W A S H I N G T O N , O .C . B O B O S Three fo rm e r MSU students. formed before audiences in appointment, call M r, Faust, A P E S Ross Paulus. R obert P e tre lla and Duane Smeltekop are cu r­ Europe, the Far East. Canada. 484-5671. Shown at 7:30 & 9:20 A t 1 :3 0 -3 :3 0 -5 :3 0 -7 :4 0 -9 :4 5 re n tly playing w ith the A rm y Mexico and all of the 50 states. Band and w ill p e rfo rm at the concerts. The campus concert is spon­ sored by the MSU V eterans' Assn. and the P ershing R ifles. A second concert, sponsored ftL A D H E R PROGRAM INFORMATIONP 4 8 3 -6 4 8 9 I----- TODAY — 1timh* AT 1:00-3:45-6:30-9:20 T H E G O O I I T H E B A D S T H E U G L Y ImaItiechn>8COPC* tkchnic?»5?£! CO M ING. ! . . “ THE B IB L E “ TODAY FROM 7:00 P.M. FEATURE AT 7:20 & 9:25 W EEKEND IT A L IA N S T Y LE W h ere yo u t r y to beat the heat a l l day • • • And the co m ­ p e titio n a l l n ig h t I FOR A D U LT S M ltlM C O U l N E X T ! | U V E FOR L I F E " 1 0 Michigan State News, E ast Lansing, Michigan Monday, April 22, Í968 tó íá A /A N T T o In tr o d u c e y o u to th e w e n d e r fu l w o r ld o f W a n t A d s , t h i s w e s k o n ly , r u n y o u r a d 8 d a y s f o r t h e p r i c e o f 51 A utom otive A u tom o tive A utom otive S c o o ttr* & C y c le * E m ploym ent F o r Rent F o r Rent C H E V R O L E T 1960 ConverUble. Red M U STA N G 1967 deluxe 2 plus 2. 289. M ASON B O D Y S H O P 812 E a s t K a la ­ S-90 196«. B la c k . R oll-p leat seat. E X C E L L E N T P R O P O S IT IO N - If R E M M U S M R E T - Tw o guys need­ 316 GU N SO N Street. A vailab le for w ith black top, radio. $196 . 351- three-speed. E - T m ags. 7.600 m iles. mazoo S tre e t-S in ce 1940. Com ­ sum m er and fa ll term . Tw o man 351-8571. 5-4/23 Cushioned grips. *200. 353-5002. you a re interested in sates work ed. 340.95 month. Ced ar V illage. 4205. SP-4/26 plete auto painting and collision SP-4/28 on cam pus, c a ll M r. W olf. days. 351-8690 SP-4/28 furnished apartm ent. $140 per month se rvice . A m e rican and foreign ca rs. 464-5411 or 372-5779. evenings 337-9263. 10-4 25 C H E V R O L E T 1963 Im p ale. Auto­ O F F E N H A U S E R R A M m anifold w ith IV 5-0258. C 3-4/22 H O N D A S-S0. 1986. 3.000 m ile s H A S L E T T A P A R T M E N T S . Sum m er m atic, V-8, P o w e r, R ad io , A ir, holly c a rb t. cam lifte rs , M allory B la ck . E x c e lle n t condition. 0150. sublease for four or five . C a jl 351- C e d a r G re e n s A p ts. distrib uto rs. 355-2492. SP-4/26 • A U T O M O T IV E E xce lle n t. 351-5182. SP-4/M IM P O R TE D CAR 355-9217. SP-5-4/26 U N U S U A L T E A C H IN G , counseling 0498. SP-5/1 O L D S M O B IL E 1955 four-door. Motor opportunities C L IN E T E A C H E R S S p r in g , S u m m e r and e EM PLO YM EN T C H E V R O L E T IM P A L A 1959 - tw o door. okay. *40. C a ll 355-8203. SP-4/26 SERVICE E m ploym ent A G E N C Y . 129 E a s t G ran d R iv e r S U B L E T F O R sum m er lu xu ry two-man. F a ll Rentals V-8, autom atic, convertible top. Avenue. 3-4/23 e FOR R E N T 43.000 m ile s, good m otor, tire s. S P E C IA L IS T S two-bedroom apartm ent. 351-5828. e FOR S ALE O L D S M O B IL E C U T L A S S 1966 vinyl SP-5-4/26 L u x u r y I B d r m . U nits O rig inal ow ner, fourth ca r. 0219. D IS H W A S H E R N IG H T S . Good pay and TW O W O M EN to w ork on yacht on e LO ST A POUND 353-3132 SP-4/26 tap. power steering and b rakes, buck­ IN working conditions. Inq uire a fte r 2 et seats, loaded w ith accessories. p.m .. C O R A L G A B L E S E D 7-1311. the G re a t U k e a from the m iddle of H U G E 4-man apartm ent close to cam ­ 351-8631 s PERSONAL • T R IU M P H Ju n e to Septem ber. P a y : *300 per pus. Air-conditioning. Sum m er lease CHEVROLET 1960. Radio, heater, de­ M ust se ll, getting m arrie d . C a ll 332- 5-4/23 • PEANUTS PERSONAL 6M6. SP-4/26 •RENAULT m onth plus room and board. Send C a ll 351-0935. SP-4/26 S U M M E R S U B L E T . Fu rnished Air- pendable 0250. Phone 077-1583. SP-4/23 p icture w ith height, w eight, and age. conditioned. Close to cam pus. 351- • R EAL ESTATE • VOLKSW AGEN C L A IM A D JU S T E R S . Openings are Upon request p ictu re of yacht, loca­ 5838., 5-4 22 e S E R V IC E C O M E T 1901 S ix cylin d er. Leaving O P E L K A D E T T 1967. Red. F u lly availab le for career-m inded young equipped sports coupe. Lo w m ile ­ tion and duties w ill be sent. M ust M A R R IE D S T U D E N T S • T R A N S P O R T A T IO N country. 0150. Chang. 351-5910. 3-4/22 Al Edward'* m en w ith th eir se rvice obligations be ab le to w ork w ith ch ild ren. W rite IM P E R IA L M AN O R A partm ents. H O LT . TW O bedrooms. New spa­ age. 487-0376. SP-4/26 com pleted. E xp e rie n ce not neces­ • W ANTED M aurice M. T a v ln r 2111 B . Wood- One month free rent. Downtown lo­ cious apartm ent w ith fire p lace C O R V A IR 1963 Monza. Four-speed. P O N T IA C G R A N D P r ix 1963 Four- S ports C a r C e n te r sa ry , but educational background m a r D riv e , Houghton. M ichigan cation. One and 2 bedroom. C e ll 489- Furn ish ed. $180. heat included. No New clu tch , sta rte r, and brakes. m uat include co llege, or top high 49931 5-4/22 7182 or 487-5029. Ask fo r M r. R e y. children or pets. F ifte e n m inutes speed. T a k e over paym ents of 539.90. 1200 E. Oakland W 9-7591 DEADLINE 0325.409-0647. SP-4/26 C a ll C re d it M anager, 459-2379. O school rating s. We provide com plete 5-4/26 from M SU. O X 9-2987 or O X 9-2315 trainin g , com pany c a r* , and e xce l­ W A IT R E S S E S : P A R T tim e noons and 5-4 24 C O R V E T T E 1958. 327. four-speed, M E L 'S A U T u S E R V IC E . U r g e or lent benefits. W rite to: M r. Negus. fu ll tim e sh ift availab le . No Sundays, 1 P.M. one class day be­ P O R S C H E 1957 g ray norm al coupe sm a ll, w e do them a ll. 1108 E a s t W A N T E D : TW O g irls for sum m er herd-top. Phone 355-6065 SP-4/26 M IC H IG A N M IL L E R 'S M U T U A L IN ­ good w orking conditions and tips. term only. Reduced rate s. C a ll 351- TW O M E N to sublet ap artm ent for fore publication. Good m echanical condition. New G rand R iv e r. 332-3255. C S U R A N C E C O M P A N Y . P .O . Box 60. M ust be of good ch aracte r w ith 0319. SP-4/26 sum m er. Sw im m ing Pool. Air-con­ Cancellations - 12 noonone C O R V E T T E 1968 Convertible 1,000 clutch, body fa ir. 339-8400 . 4-4 22 U n s in g , (o r personal in te rv ie w . 5-4/26 some w aitre ss experience. C all ditioned. 351-7679. 3-4 22 class day before publica­ m ile s. Being drafted--must s a c ri­ A U T O M A T IC C A R w ash. O nly 50c a fte r 10 a.m . J IM 'S R E S T A U R A N T O N E O R two g irls needed sum m er. fice . 05.000 cash. *1.000 down. *126 R A M B L E R 1960 six cylin d e r Good It's the best in town. Yo u m ay sit P A R T T IM E em ploym ent u n ive rsity IV 9-1196. downtown Lansing . 5-4 22 S U M M E R . FO U R -m an sublet Chalet tion. transm ission. 5125. 489-1311 after in your c a r fo r 2*9 m inutes w hile Chalet Apartm ents. 351-4696. SP-5/1 a m onth, or re-finance. C a ll 353- men students (o r store and d e live ry Apartm ent. Reduced rates. 351-0354 7481. 1-1/22 5 p .m . SP-4/26 your c a r is washed and w axed. Also w o rk. M ust have good d rivin g re c­ 3-4 22 N E E D E D : P A R T and fu ll tim e men O N E T H R E E - g ir l fo r sum m er and cleans underneath ca r. An alm ost ord. Apply C A P IT O L A U T O M O T IV E PHONE D O D G E C O R O N E T 1966 E xce lle n t R E N A U L T R-8. 1964 35mpg. radio, perfect job. 430 South C lip p ert. back S U P P L Y C O R P O R A T IO N . 431 North as m anagers and d ealers in m a r­ one four-girl for sum m er, near cam ­ TW O M E N for four-man Beechwood good condition. 351-5090. SP-4/26 keting autom otive product. No ex­ pus F A B IA N R E A L T Y . E D 2-0811. of K O -K O B A R . C-4 22 U r c h S tre e t. U n s in g . SP-4/26 355-8255 condition. M ust sell 355-6645 8-5 perience necessary. C a ll 355-2787 IV 5-3033. SP-4/26 apartm ent. Sum m er term . Big and inexpensive. F iv e m inutes from p.m . SP-5/1 between 12 and 6 p.m for appoint­ S IM C A 1965. R ed, four-speed *500 A via tio n B A B Y S IT T E R wanted 7:30 to 5:30 m ent. 3-4/22 O N E T H R E E - g ir l for fa ll N ear cam pus. 351-8725 5-4 24 RATES F IA T 1963 Model 1100-D four-door. C a ll 351-0049 before 7 p.m . SP-4/23 p.m d a ily . . M o n .-Fri. M t. Hope- cam pus Phone F A B IA N R E A L T Y . E D V erv good condition w ith tow bar T H E W IN G E D S P A R T A N S now own a Penn are a. C a ll afte r 5 p .m . 372- S E R V IC E S T A T IO N Attendant 8 a m 2-0811. IV 5-3033. SP-4/26 O N E M A L E needed for two-man 1 D A Y ........................... $ 1 .5 0 9394 C all 484-1597 3-4 23 S U N B E A M A L P IN E G T 1964 Rem ov­ Cessna C ard in al-an o th er good rea­ 0197 SP-4/28 to 1 p .m .. Monday - Saturday $1.70 lu xu ry apartm ent Reduced rates able hardtop $850 firm C all 353- son to join and learn to flv or rent per hour Contacl Bob Calhoun. IV SU M M ER T E R M sublet three man sum m er . 351-0169 5-4 24 3 DAYS . . . . UjQO jtgrTHtCTW9 INTEU Wt,!'Ny.'«ow» a vi* ra , ■. ■. V • T . j ¿TWu paym ents. Caff3SB-4568. — ' ’■' v " V *•» with the lowest rates, best equip­ Mfi S j r -1 TR -5 C O N V E R T IB L E 1961 Red ment q uality instruction C a ll 355- W O O D A RD C O S M E T IC S . C a ll Lo is A T T E N T IO N M S V Student Nurses E a st Lansing Lib ra rt «- A vailab le (based on 10 words per ad) FGW> O T t lit Ost//m we khoììn.,. I R 3 blocks dition. $500. Phone 355-8978. 3-4/23 gan. C a ll Oak P a rk . M ichigan 1-313- m H a tm s m A W trM e u r o f t / k s w - a m 546-6494. co llect. 5-4 23 N E X T T O cam pus -- two lu xu ry fur­ I A DORM $301 ( T H E R E D B e a st) 1965 Yam ah a nished two bedroom apartm ents. $180. I per term and $220. Three month or one year N“ A bbott Rd. COST 125. 4.000 m ile s. 5225. 351-8311. L E G A L S E C R E T A R Y . E xp erien ced . I Blue C ro ss, so forth. Phone 372- lease beginning Ju n e 15. 351-5696 or D 5-4/22 8050., 10-4 30 351-6009. 10-4 29 I UNIVERSITY $270 A U T H E N T IC D E A L E R for Y am ah a. I R VILLA per term T riu m p h , and BM W . Com plete line R E G I S T E R E D N U R S E S : Im m ed iate TW O O R three m an apartm ent. Sum ­ openings on a ll sh ifts. Startin g m e r sublease. B u rch am Woods. 351- I I of p arts. accesso ries, leather goods, and helm ets. 1/2 m ile south s a la ry : days. 13.15 per hour: afte r­ 0463. 3-4'22 I V from $55.00 rent of 1-96 on South C ed ar. S H E P 'S noons. $3.30: nights. $3.45. P lu s I E 30,00 food m any benefits Including 10 per cent S U M M E R S U B L E T . Four-m an lu x­ M O TO R S. Phone 894-6621. C u ry apartm ent. R ive rsid e E a s t. R e ­ R _ ! L 0 0 utilities weet-end bonus, m e rit in creases, I sickn ess and accid ent Insurance, tim e duced. 332-0752. 3-4 22 I $90.00 monthly H O N D A 250 S cram b le r $325. includes and a h alf overtim e. T w o w e e k i paid GOVAN M G T. helm et. C a ll 351-0755. 5-4/22 R E D U C E D R A T E S . U n iv e rsity T e r­ I x3 months vacation, paid sick leave. N urses 635 Abbott Rd. Association dues. Sp ecial p rice s on race . Four-m an. Sum m er. C a ll 351- I $270.00 S U Z U K I 1966. 80cc Good condition.* 8384. 3-4 22 351-7910 6175. or best offer. 484-6596. 3-4/23 m e als. S ix paid holidays. P a id life I Insurance, suggestion bonuses and I after 5:00**—351— 4060 am ple opportunity fo r advancem ent W A N T E D O N E g irl sum m er. Re­ B R ID G E S T O N E 1967. 175 S cram ­ duced ra te s. E ve rg re e n A rm s. C all b ler. G re a t shape, m odified for to su perviso ry positions. W e invite your personal inspection of our 337-1213. 3-4'22 woods, fiv e tire s, etc. 353-2787. I U a lS H H H H H Ö Si SP-4/26 m odern fa cilitie s. P R O V IN C IA L H O U S E and W H IT E H IL L S M O N TE- C E L L O H O U S E . E a s t Lansin g . Phone C O LLE G E CROSSW ORD PUZZLE p a a o r a i a ü h d i ö h H O N D A 1966 S cram b le r 305 2.300 M r i. Lo ve . 333-0817. 10-5/2 unuaow um » — la a o o H G D a s m a s m ile s. 353-0119. SP-4/2« STUDENT ra r= ¡w H H h t a r a r a K A W A S A K I 85cc. S till under w arran ­ 1. Bridge Small barrel h h h [a a ra u S iì S t y . T r a il o r itre e t. Solid. 355- S ^ LC M N ^ T T M A LE O N LY player's aim 26. Dutch m a s ra a ra a s 6284. SP-4/2Ï D E T R O IT . M IC H IG A N A R E A 6. Brit, gun cupboard A M E R I C A ' S fa s te s t H ES B E IH s ra a 10.Faucet 28. Automaton g r o w in g e te a k h o u s e — 11. Ankle-length 32. Noah's boat » S a Ü M fi C TH H H PX S tore — F ra n d o r r e s t a u r a n t c h a in . S U M M E R JO B S 35. Unused robe r a a a a a s a ra n a Paddle Ball Paddlas, $5.88. NOW HIRING 8500 m onthly s a la ry . . . plus . . . 13. Game 37. Gourd fruit s n r a a a n a ra n m a Penn« Tennis Belle $1.99- Brollermsn It Trainee Cook— one student can w in up to 83000.00 resembling 38. Superintend­ In c a ih scholarships. *1000 in schol­ ents h b h m m s a n s a s $2.49. Tennis Racket Press. experience In broiling or on bagatelle arsh ip s aw arded w ee kly . . . plus 41. However H a c a ü H ñ a m a s $1*39, New Golf Balle $3.98/3 grill helpful. Will train. PART . w in i new Fo rd Station wagon 14. Plowed land Tennis Shoes $5.49. Baseball of full time. . plus . . . w in a vacatio n trave l 15. Sweet drink 42. Silly 43. Dawn C A M P U S H IL L Gloves $4.88-$9.88.Alr Force Cashier — will train, PART aw ard . . . plus . . . coin m erchan-' 16. Highly or full time. dlse aw ard s such a s co lor T V s , •motional 45. Underwater Sun Glasses, $2.98. Softballs worker DOWN Dishwashers — Male and Fe­ ate. 18. Romantyrant 3. Past $1.98. Swim Fins $10.88- A n axcitln g business experience 20. Total . Threefold male. Will train. PART or 1. Skillet 4. Mildew $11.88. Swim Snokela $2.98. can be your* th is sum m er regard- 21. Prior to . Stitches 2. Uniform Special Fishing Tackle. Rode, full time. lese of your future Job p lant. 5. Foments 22. Wood nymph . Chiefs 6. Stutter •a p a r tm e n ts • Reela, Lures, Lines. Save 25% -38%. Busboys It Bueglrla — Will train. PART or full tlma. Porter — an excellent PART A ssistan t m anagers Id en tification A n alysts Techniques, O ffice P ro ce d u rat, Sales Managa- In m sn t, Sales Prom otion, S alas, e tc., Brand 7. Book palm 8. Overjoy 9. Lowest point . time position. Early morning w ith distinguished Internationally 10. Night table TROPHIES 4 PLAQUES o r after 9 p.m. at night. Five km efo A rm , rated A A A -1 Dun wUáf (/*»Jt 1 B U L N . OP MICH.-W88T O f t jA Z S "LAN M N O '8 H O U I8 O P T S O M IIIS " April 22« 1968 10 u m . - 1 2 noon and 1-4 p.m. except Saturday aad Sunday. 9*3-4341 la .m . t b lp .m . D e tro it, M ichigan 39. Afresh 40. Poaitive 44. Narrow Inlet Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Monday, April 22, 1968 11 F o r Rent F o r Rent F o r Rent S U M M E R S U B L E T . One m an needed. F o r Sale 1961 C O L L IE R 'S Encycloped ia w ith F o r Sale P ersonal M H O U R quiet h o n e : Sleep o r study. Telephonestrike (contineed from page o k ) tiating picture a proposal tha A p a rtm e n ts JO H N R . 623. N ear Hagadorn Road. Animali union had come op with.’’ Beirne Sharp, two bedroom apartm ent. Com ­ R ive rsid e E a s t. 156 3SI-091I. 5-4/22 bookcase. 610.337-0646 M /2 2 Abbot H e ll. C a ll 3 5 5 4 6 » M M union they are ready to bargain S U M M ER S U B L E T : H aslett Apart­ p letely furnished. P a y own u tilitie s. said. A F G H A N P U P P IE S tw elve w eeks okL an entirely new three-year con­ ments. Luxurious. Four-m an. Cheap. A vailab le im m ediately. 6150 C a ll E A S T S ID E . S e ve ra l one bedroom. F E N D E R S U P E R -R e v e rh . E piphom . Cream and brindle colors. Crow n N E E D L A B help th is su m m er? T e ach e r. rent 18-month contract and re­ C all 332-8733. SP-4 26 S T A Y R E A L T Y . IV 5-2211. realto r 6120*- 61.40; One tw o bedroom, 6166: Solid Cherryw ood. V ib rato . Tupic- B .S . C h em istry. E xp e rie n ce d . A v a il­ tract and are ready to return to write a completely new three- SP-4 26 Lease now fo r (a ll. nine month* lease. C roat br eeding. A K C . Holt. 604- formal bargaining just as soon kups. Shure m ike. 356-6(14. 6-4/12 0003 M /8 able. »641000 a fte r 4 p .m . S P -4 /K E D 7-7161. 5-4/22 year agreement covering wage*, S U M M ER S U B L E T - One g irl to share as the union is disposed to do fringe benefits and working con­ two-girl apartm ent near cam pus. N E E D E D : T H R E E g irls fo r sum m er R C A C O LO R T V . Sofa. D re sse r. S A IN T B E R N A R D . H ave m ale , in­ W IG S - H IG H q u ality, low price. term . U n iv e rsity T e rra c e . C a ll 351- U N IV E R S IT Y T E R R A C E four-man D inette set. Beat offer. C a ll 372- A ll faeman h a ir. W ig *, fa lls , h air­ so.” ditions. The current agreement 351-0661. S P -4 /» terested in breeding H as been 8341. SP-4/26 sum m er sublet. Reduced rent. 351- 8766.322-6260 evenings. 2 -4 /8 pieces. 351-068. S P -5 26 “This turn for the worse fol­ is a wage-only reopener. shown 361-7302 afte r 6:36 p .m . SP-4/26 S A V E ISO Soundproof, new Cedar 0703. 5-4/24 lowed hopes aroused late Friday Telephone installers now aver­ S T O D D A R D A P A R T M E N T S , lu xu ry, vacuum sweeper. 650. can ssi- V illage, g irls, sum m er. 351-8882. after 6p .m . SP-4 26 sum m er sublet. One m an. W ill bar­ 126 M IL F O R D . Tw o m an furnished 8617. M /8 M IN IA T U R E S C H N A U Z E R . Fem ale Peanuts P ersonal when AT&T President Ben Gil­ age 13-27 per hour. Bell employ­ A K C papers. Good stock. 627-2421 mer brought back into the nego- gain. 351-0182. SP-5/1 apartm ent two blocks to cam pus. a fte r 6p .m . 4-4 23 ees average 12-79. The union pre­ Lease. 6160 per month. A ll u tili- • CANO N L E N S 135mm Telephoto auto­ T .D ., S .Q ., D .P . and c re w : Thanks R E D U C E D R A T E S Huge U n ive r­ fa r a g reat jo b .X LS . M /8 viously rejected company offers sity T e rra c e end apartm ent. Sum m er. R E D U C E D R A T E S . Supervised lu xu ry lie s except e le c tric ity . D ays. IV 6 m a tic F-2.5 Bavonet mount. N ew. (76. L A B R A D O R R E T R I E V E R S A K C R eg­ S e rvice apartm ent for sublet. N ear W illiam s C a ll 356-2387. M p .m . w eekdays. of a 7.5 per cent wage increase C all 351-7777 S P -4 ,26 1579. Even in g s. 372-5767. 489-1656. istered. F iv e months old. C a ll 484- C O N G R A T U L A T IO N S T O our new 351-0587 SP-4 ,'28 C M /6 4 5828 M 22 over 18 months. The company actives. We think you’re g reat. D .Z .'s E X P E R T D IS S E R T A T IO N and m anu­ H A S L E T T - A L B E R T F o u r g irls. scrip t typing. R eferen ces. N ear said the union is asking 10.5 per­ E V E R G R E E N A R M S Four-m an sum ­ TW O F U L L length form ats - to p rice. 1-4/8 A vailable sum m er, fa ll. 655. F u r ­ W A N T E D : O N E g irl sum m er term . Mobile Homo* Kellogg Center 38-5545 M /8 cent. nished. u tilitie s, parking. 337-2336 m er sublet. Reduced. Air-conditioned. H aslett Apartm ents. Phone 351- Size 7. C a ll 362-10». SP-4/26 332-1400 SP-4/26 T .F . H A P P Y 20th. Lo ve, Creep. Beirne said the Alabama in-! SP-4 26 5434 a fte r 6p.m . M /8 N EW MOON 12’ x 60*. Air-condi­ 1-4/8 T Y P IN G - A N Y kind. Experien ced M O N O LU X M IC R O S C O P E . T h re e ob­ junction was issued late Saturday tioning. carpeting, choice lot Phone secretary. E le c tric . C a ll E D 7-2661 E Y D E A L V IL L A o ffers not only a con­ G I R L TO share apartm ent. 645 Own S U M M ER S U B L E A S E three-man U n i­ je ctive s-th re e o cu lars. 25X to 900X. a lte r noon. O by state Circuit Judge James A.' venient location for M SU students but bedroom. P re fe r graduate. 484-7648 Separate light source Wood c a rry ­ 337-1074. afte r 5 p.m . M 13 R e a l'E sta te ve rsity V illa . Discount on rent. 337- Hare in Dallas County. a quiet suburban-like atm osphere SP-4 26 2029 M 8 ing case Phone 416-815 Ask for R U T H D O M E Y E R - an y typing done w hile offering the usual appoint­ Tom . 675, o r best offer. M /8 H ILT O N 1(04 56' x 10'. two bed­ T H R E E B E D R O O M ranch in Okemos. room. 100' x 50' lot. K in g A rth u r's Lots of q uality space inside and out­ in m y home. C a ll 405-3589. S P -4 /» “This action again puts the m ents of a lu xu ry apartm ent. These M IC H IG A N A V E N U E E a s t: 1443‘ a. apartm ents overlook a g rassy land­ Larg e apartm ent Fu rn ish ed , two C E D A R V IL L A G E Sublet. Sum m er. L E A R J E T cartrid g e tape p layer. Court, pool. Carpeting, underpin­ side. Under 68.000. Phone 355- spotlight by Southern Bell man­ scaped barbecue a re a , featuring a bedrooms. Heat and w ater furnished. Four-m an. Lo w er rate s. C a ll 351- E ig h t-track stereo. Com plete w ith ning. quality w orkm anship. 485- 1713 d ays. 38-0041 a fte r 5 p .m . M /8 T Y P IN G T E R M papers and theses. E le c tric typew riter F a s t se rvice. agement on a state which has heated sw im m ing pool. O ffered at the Septem ber 1. 6150. Now 6125 a 8755. M /8 over fifty d o llars w orth of tapea- 1 0*6 after5 :00 p .m . SP-4/26 month 351-5323. O E A S T LA N S IN G - W ard cliff area C all 38-4597 M 24 been notorious for its attitude to­ respectable rate of 6220. 6240 for free! 680 or beat offer. C a ll 356- a four-m an unit. F o r inform ation ca ll. House* 4010. SP-4/23 S T A R 1964 10' x 55' two bedroom. Th ree bedroom, by ow ner. New k it­ ward civil rights, for we do in­ 351-4275 afte r 5 p .m . O N E E D TW O m en sum m er term . Bur- Carpeted, excellent condition. C all chen w ith a ll built-ins. carpeted A N Y K IN D O F typing in m y home. deed feel that our civil rights are cham Woods. Reduced rate s. 353- 8 1 -4 7 8 . SP-4/26 throughout, paneled fa m ily room , two 489-2514 C H A S L E T T S U B L E A S E - furnished 40 P O IN T Diam ond ring. 405-0278 being abrogated by the terms of R E D U C E D R A T E S Supervised luxu ry 2895. SP-4/23 ranch style home. Tw o bedrooms, afte r 6. Satu rd ay afte r 12. SP-5/1 ca r attached garage, excellent loca­ apartm ent. E x c e lle n t location. C all R O Y C R A F T 51 by 12. T w o bedrooms, tion P L U S com pletely furnished this preposterous injunction,” 337-2263. 5-4 25 TW O G IR L S need tw o g irls for fa ll study. I 1, baths, carp o rt. F a m ilv S T E R E O C O M PO N EN TS Telefunken carpeted livin g room , fro nt kitchen, basement apartm ent now renting for T ra n s p o rta tio n Beirne said. preferred 8175 Ju n e 7-September apartm ent. 353-0561.353-0564. SP-4 23 I 339-2006 4-4 24 System . Changer. A M -FM Short low down paym ent. 670 per month. 8192 month *» .5 0 0 C a ll 38-4597 C A R L E T O N 'S M O B IL E H O M ES. 14500 M 24 N .S .A . R O U N D trip flight to London “Equally ominous and disturb­ P E N N S Y L V A N IA SO U TH Tw o bed­ w ave. A m p.. Speakers com plete June 10-August 10 8 4 6 Contact room unfurnished except for stove SU M M ER L U X U R Y A P A R T M E N T . system 8239.50 phis tax. T H E D IS C North U .S . 27 a t Solon Road O ing is the actual language of the F O U R B ED R O O M furnished house. 300 R E G E N T Street. Seven rooms, P au l Sch rad er. 1134 La ke D rive . and refrig e rato r. Air-conditioned, Tw o m an. Air-conditioned. Reduced Sum m er and next ye ar. 810/week. S H O P. 323 E a s t G ran d R iv e r. 351- G rand Rapids. 3-4 23 injunction, which from long fu lly carpeted, balcony and sw im ­ rates 351-0677 . 4- 22 53*0. 1-4/8 L o s t & Found four sleeping room s, large yard , gas F em ale s. N ear cam pus. 3 8 -0 5 8 . heat, n icely furnished, nice basem ent, familiarity we recognize as the ming pool. C hildren w elcom e Take M /8 over lease Im m ed iate occupancy E D E N R O C - G ir l wanted sum m er and F E N D E R BASSM A N a m p lifie r, bass LO S T : E L G IN w atch. A p ril 17. I.M . excellent condition. 617.000 cash Wanted language of the Southern Bell Phone 393-5620 or 489-0236 3-4 23 fa ll or fu ll ye ar. 351-7748 SP-4 26 S I M M E R S U B L E A S E three m an fu r­ g u itar. Lansing 15" speaker. Save Building locker. A-261 355-9351. A fter 5 p .m .. IV 5-9392 D avs. IV 4- Telephone Co. itself.” he said. nished. W alking distance. W ill bar­ 8 1 5 . 3534)245 SP-5 1 1905. 5-4 24 H IG H D O L L A R paid for S ilv e r C e rtif­ gain. 353-2170. 3-4/8 M/25 icates Also buy other old coins A P A R T M E N T . L U X U R Y . Carpeting, S U M M E R A P A R T M E N T cheap, four stove, refrig e rato r, u tilitie s. 6130 m an deluxe. Chalet Apartm ent. C all T V 12" F iv e months old. W ith stand LO S T : B L A C K rim m ed glasses w ith S e rvice 487-0380. 3.^ 22 The union said the injunction, Security deposit. 669-3433 . 3-4 23 351-0615. SP-4/26 128 SO U TH Fo ste r - E a s t Side, 655. 351-5481 afte r 5 : » p.m M /2 4 name: John Heath. 355-9M1 3-4 23 in addition to ordering Bell em­ near Fran d o r. House to share w ith D IA P E R S E R V IC E - D ia p a re n e An­ B A B Y S IT T E R 8-5 p m Mondav- ployees to withdraw pickets and A T T E N T IO N F A C U L T Y Horizon S U M M E R S U B L E A S E . T w o m an lu x­ iw o boys. Room fo r four more. A L T O S A X A P H O N E . Seven ye a rs old. LO S T : G O L D Stephens College Ring tiseptic Pro cess approved by. Doc-’ F rid a y F iv e month child 453- House Larg e one bedroom Quiet ury apartm ent. $145.351-0167 SP-4 26 $45 each per month. $45 deposit 6150. Good condition. 355-0051. tors. Sam e D iap e rs returned all 0614 or 353-7955 3-4 8 go back to work, ordered the un­ Sat. A p ril 13 on cam pus. C a ll 337- atm osphere P a rtia lly furnished. P a y own u tilitie s Phone 372-6188 • SP-4 26 0820 S P -4 » tim es. Y o u rs or O urs. B ab y Clothes ion also to use newspapers, ra­ Carport included $160 E D 2-1438. L U X U R Y TW O or three m an ap art­ 5-4 24 washed free. No deposit. A M E R I­ G O L F C L U B S - 1w om en's 1 irons-- dio. television, mail, telephones E D 2-0811 , 5-4 23 ment sum m er term . 351-9118 SP-4 26 G IB S O N M A N D O LIN F-2. a rtist CAN D IA P E R S E R V IC E . 914 E a s t 3. 5. 7. 9. putter, and woods. 1 and and the posting of notices where T H R E E S T U D E N T S in good furnished m odel. pre-1922 6275 351-7443 LO S T G O LD m o to rrvcle helmet Tuesdav night. Please return! R e ­ G ie r S treet-Pho ne 48-0604 C 3-long clubs desired C all 355- necessary to bring about an end H A S L E T T A P A R T M E N T S Four man A V A IL A B L E S U M M E R Two-m an house Tw o m ile s from cam pus Need between 5-7 p.m S P -4 /» 0777 S-4 25 Aliyw»ry apartm ent Reduced . rate s '-«icltv maty -655. no lease. 337-0512 w ard 351-5786 3-4 22 to the strike in Alabama T f — • S t-4 « i . v - * - J • '»;* y w .s X* 4 , » !* ' V /¿ ra d condition B est offer. 351-8119 P e rs o n a l t f s .» r r ,o (/ a c t/ g iri s ow e m TW ( je 5|JOM *90S) Q V 31S 1V H 0 3 a d T (a) W n S i S X O O B NOS13N * 2 (a) N3SSVAS C nO aV H *1 SaaM SNV