. V r tu , •* f ì, .i'A.' » ) » tf W ednesday MICHIGAN STATC * *ü « v ï » î : t o T&1T ~yr -V i >W*". E ast Lansing, Michigan October 2 , 1968 lie Vol. 61 Number 53 Suspension rule lifted pending 'U' debate President Hannah announced Thursday afternoon that he has in effect, late A statem ent was also released Tuesday night by Hannah as an explanation of the by the ASMSU student board, Faculty Com­ m ittee on Student Affairs and A cadem ic all eventualities discussed, it is decided that the resolution is not important, then it’s not im portant.” suspended the controversial Resolution on intent behind the adoption of the resolu­ Cpuncil that the resolution w as not d esir­ Hannah m ade his rem arks just the day suspensions passed Sept. 20 by the MSU tion. able then he would m ost definitely abide after returning from a .week-long trip to In the statem ent, Hannah said he w as by that decision. Germany for his son’s wedding. He said Board of Trustees. Hannah said that he is putting the resolu­ “ surprised” and “ d istressed ” to find the “ Som etim es m istakes are m ad e,” Hannah U niversity in the m idst of an intense said. “ If after a com plete discussion, with (please turn to back page) tion on the agenda of the Oct. 18 trustees m eeting and is “ ready to urge the trustees discussion” upon his return from Germany to suspend it and put it on the shelf pend­ late Monday afternoon. ing action by all groups that want to parti­ “ The Trustees’ resolution,” Hannah cipate in discussion of it.” Hannah, noting that he had “ no intention of suspending anyone under this rule,” said, “ has two ob jectives-T he first one outlines the several categories of m iscon­ duct which would make an offending stu­ H annah’s statement dent subject to U niversity discipline. To the Faculty, Students, and Staff of that I may w ell have been--it w as in not claim ed that the m easure had not been in­ consulting m ore widely with faculty and “ The second provision m akes explicit Michigan State University: tended for frequent or indiscrim inate use. student groups in preparing the final draft the im plicit power of the P resident of the I w as surprised and distressed on m y re­ A n s w e r in g b a c k He also disclaim ed the urgency expressed by those claim ing a controversy. U niversity, or his designee, to suspend a turn from Germany late Monday afternoon, of the resolution. In extenuation, I point out that at the tim e it w as drawn, such student pending hearing on charges of Septem ber 30, to find the U niversity in the “ This is not an em ergency situation,” groups were not readily available for con­ conduct considered to represent an acute m idst of an intense discussion arising over T h ir d p a r ty c a n d id a te f o r P r e s id e n t , G e o r g e C . W a lla c e , s p e a k s Hannah rem arked, “ but it is obviously a sultation. danger to other persons on the cam pus or an action taken by the Board of Trustees on to a c r o w d o f 5 ,0 0 0 In fr o n t o f th e C a p ito l B u ild in g In L a n s in g , m atter of great concern to students and I would like to point out to the new est to U niversity property.” m y recom m endation. Tu èsd a y . S ta te N e w s p h oto by Bob Iv in s facu lty.” The T rustees’ resolution has two objec- m em bers of the U niversity com m unity Hannah said the action w as “ the out­ growth" of experiences in recent months tives--The first one outlines the several that I personally set in m otion the m achin­ at other universities, and claim ed there categories of m isconduct which would ery of the study which resulted in the Aca­ CHEERS, JEERS was a “ gross misunderstanding of its pur­ p o se.” m ake an offending student subject to Uni­ versity discipline. The second provision dem ic Freedom Report, have supported it at every stage of its progress, and have • He said it was not intended to amend m akes explicit the im plicit power of the been proud of it .as one of the m ost signi­ P resident of the U niversity, or his d esig­ ficant recent actions taken by the U niver­ the Freedom Report. nee, to suspend a student pending hearing sity. L a n s in g “ I am conscious of m y own m o tiv e,” W a lla c e Hannah said, “ in proposing the resolu­ on charges of conduct considered to rep­ But I am le ss interested in the history tion to the Trustees and assert that there resent an acute danger to other persons on of this recent unfortunate developm ent w as nothing ulterior in its character." the cam pus or to U niversity property. than in action to restore the U niversity people in Alabama who voted for his "Som e of you anarchists better have He added that his m istake w as in “ not con­ This action w as the outgrowth of experi­ to the concord it has enjoyed in recent By CHRIS MEAD your say now because after Nov. 5 you’re en ces in recent months at other universi­ months. State N ew s Staff Writer w ife Lurleen for governor in 1966. sulting m ore widely with faculty and stu­ A peaceful but persistent group of dem ­ through in this country,” W allace angrily ties where it has been determ ined that their I am w illing and ready to subject this Third party candidate G eorge C. Wal­ dent groups in preparing the final draft." onstrators shouted their disapproval told the dem onstrators. He did note that the language of the rules or ordinances were not adequate to m atter to such discussion as m ay be lace brought his presidential crusade to W allace played heavily on his appeal today’s needs. required to com e to a consensus a s to throughout W allace’s speech causing him resolution had appeared first in a sta te­ Lansing Tuesday and the cheers of his to the com m on m an and his prom ise how best to accom plish this. I intend to to loose his place in the preapred m ent on academ ic freedom of stu­ In the tim e I have had since m y return, local supporters and the constant heckling that “dom estic institutions ought to be recom m end to the Board of T rustees at its speech he alw ays uses. dents published in 1965 by a com m ittee I have read the recent issu es of the State of his opponents. controlled by the people of this sta te .” next m eeting on October 18 that the se c ­ "A good haircut w ill take care of you . of the American Association of U niver­ N ew s and conferred with colleagues and The rally, to which W allace arrived He said the federal governm ent has be­ tion of the resolution pertaining to student nearly an hour and a half late, w as rela­ fella s,” he said to one group of hecklers. sity P rofessors (AAUP). student leaders in an honest attem pt to Someone else in the crowd on the east trayed the people by making decisions suspension without a hearing be suspend­ tively peaceful. An unidentified black “ It is distressing to m e ,” Hannah said, fam iliarize m y self with the situation be­ lawn of the Capitol reflected light in that rightly belong to the people. ed. Neither I nor any designee w ill sus­ m an w as rem oved from the crowd by “ to have this internal difficulty develop fore m aking any public com m ent. W allace’s ey es wi^' a mirror. pend any student under this portion of the state policem en for alledgedly causing a (P lea se tarn to page 17) out of w;haf I know to be a regrettable It is evident to m e that m uch of the resolution pending final action of the Trus­ disturbance. The m an charged that the misunderstanding. opposition to the Trustee resolution a rises Hannah said that if it w as determined tees. policem en had kicked him in the groin from a gross m isunderstanding of its pur­ Certainly the language of the entire reso­ and a few other blacks shouted “ police pose. Wallace supporters lution has nothing sacred about it. For m y­ brutality,” but no serious incidents de­ self, I would be quite content to see substi­ A m ajor error is the assum ption that this veloped. Trumping his usual them e of states Wa r m ... w as som ehow intended to am end or revise tuted for the paragraph to which such strong objection is being m ade, language the Academ ic Freedom Report. It was not rights, law and order and anti-commu- . . . high today 80 degrees. Part­ so intended. to which sanction has been given by som e iiTsm, the American Independent party candidate said he w as pleased by the turnout he had received on his Michigan enthusiastic at Capitol ly cloudy and chance of show­ ers. Rain and cooler Thursday. I am conscious of m y own m otive in pro­ posing the resolution to the Trustees and a ssert that there w as nothing ulterior in its of the m ost prestigious organizations in higher education. That language appeared first in a “ State­ tour and cited what he claim ed w as the By F R E D SHERWOOD prom ised to jail anarchists and suppor­ m ent on the A cadem ic Freedom of Stu­ character. My m otive w as sim ply to bring overwhelm ing support of the labor vote State N ew s Staff Writer ters of Communists. dents” published in 1965 by C om m ittee (S) our own procedures into line with the m ost and the “ com m on m an.” A large number of W allace supporters, “ H e’s not afraid to stand up for what he W allace’s swing through Michigan in­ b elieves in,” said a Lansing woman. V o ter reg istra tio n advanced thinking in the field today and of the American Association of U niversity referring to him as everything from a Professors. the current requirem ents of the courts. cluded stops at Kalamazoo, Grand Ra­ “ good cathartic” to “ the only Ameri­ “ That’s giving the police back the power If I w as at fault-and I w illingly admit (please turn to back page) pids and Flint as w ell as Lansing. It w as can running,’’ appeared in force in the to enforce the law .” reported that he w as greeted by 12,000 A professional nurse, form erly of Mont­ d e a d lin e F riday crowd of about 5,000 that gathered on the persons in Grand Rapids, the largest turn­ Michigan Capitol lawn to hear the form er gom ery, Ala. bem usedly expressed herself Deadline for voter registration for the out in a northern city. Alabama governor speak. in term s perhaps a bit indigenous to her N ovem ber 5 election is this Friday. W allace claim ed that he isn’t a ra­ cist. “ I would like to have the support of people of all races for the presidency,” Wearing brightly bannered styrofoam hats pressed in the shape of the old straw boaters and waving professionally printed occupation. “ H e’s the one to adm inister a good cathartic to the nation,” she said, elicit­ To be eligible to register, a student m ust be a U.S. citizen m ust be 21 years of age by Novem ber 5, m ust be a resident Students, faculty seek he added. W allace placards, they cheered “ Tell it ing only slightly concealed laughter from of the state for six months and a resident He noted the large percentage of black like it is, G eorge.” as their candidates her friends and adding “ Let’s see you print that.” “ You bet I’m for W allace,” said a of his local address for 30 days prior to the election. A student m ust also be able to furnish alternative m easures three-tim e donor to the third party cam ­ proof as to identity and local address. an alternate m easure m ore consistent with paign. “ I think w e should g et prayer By MARILYN PATTERSON An MSU I.D. w ill not be accepted and the Academ ic Freedom Report. Fortassupporters back in the schools, g e t violence out of the streets, and do something about for­ * students who live on campus (except . for m arried housing) will not be allowed » and JIM SCHAEFER Both Hannah and those groups intend to bring the m atter to the trustees for re­ eign aid. It’s a kick in the teeth to the State N ew s Staff W riters to register. consideration at their next m eeting Oct. 17. As President Hannah announced he would to halt Senate filibuster A merican people." R egistration is at the E ast Lansing City Hannah, in effect voiding the effec tiv e­ Some seem ed confident that W allace not use the power delegated to him by the Hall, 410 Abbot Road from 8 a.m . to 5 p.m. ness of the resolution by not using it,h as would pull m assive voting power form er­ trustees in the suspension resolution, faculty W ednesday and Thursday and 8 a.m . to promised to seek m ore discussion on it by ly given to the two major parties. and student organizations sought to develop tas supporters needed 59 votes to end the 8 p.m . Friday. the trustees. WASHINGTON (A P) -- Abe Fortas back­ (P lea se turn to page 17) filibuster that has blocked action on the The faculty and student organization, ers failed to break a Senate filibuster Tues­ nom ination since last Wednesday. using the procedures outlined in the Aca­ day and gave up their fight, for the tim e D em ocratic Leader Mike M ansfield of e dem ic Freedom Report, seek to propose being at least, to confirm his appoint­ Montana, ramrodding the effort to break an am endm ent to the Report to e ffec t the m ent as chief justice. through the opposition, announced the ap­ MLLACÎx sam e purpose: that of preventing disrup­ The vote for closing debate on a motion pointment w as being laid aside tem porarily. tion of the normal functions and p rocesses to bring the appointment before the Sen­ ate w as 45 to 43. This w as 14 short of the HATE, LIEÇ, of the University. See related story, page 6. Those procedures require consideration required two-thirds m ajority to im pose UCUN£ s s by the Faculty C om m ittee on Student Af­ the debate-lim iting cloture rule. “ The Senate has refused to face square­ fairs, with consultation by the student gov- With 88 senators on the floor, the For- ly the issue of the nomination of Mr. For­ AN Da ernm ent-ASM SU. ASMSU has already proposed a version. ta s,” Mansfield said. • Mansfield told his colleagues just be­ fore the roll w as called that this w as the w u SALT The Faculty C om m ittee on Student Af­ fairs m eets at 7:30 p.m . tonight. It w ill de- first filibuster ever directed against a (P lea se turn to page U ) presidential appointee. Johnson named Fortas, who has been an associate justice since 1965, to succeed Earl Warren as chief justice. The President sent F ortas’s nomina­ Last add day Spartacuss, State News-ASMSU informa­ tion to the Senate on June 26. tion line, w ill initiate its fall term opera­ Today is the final day for adding Voting to end the filibuster w ere 35 tions from 1-5 p.m. Thursday at 355-4560. D em ocrats and 10 Republicans. Against ■m courses. Spartacuss, serving as an added infor­ The procedure for either drops or it were 24 Republicans and 19 D em ocrats. m mation source and clearinghouse for com ­ adds is as follows: Go to your col­ Sen. Robert P. Griffin, R-Mich., a lead­ plaints, has in the past informed students lege o ffice to pick up the drop or er in the fight against the nomination add cards and have them signed by of the number of scoring pencils used told reporters after the vote that “ the & an adviser. Take the cards to each annually on MSU exam s, told how to get a D em ocratic leadership now has good rea­ confidential W asserman test at Olin and son t o lay this nomination aside per­ W * departm ent affected by the drop or discovered that MSU professors have the add and have it signed. The card is m anently.” left at the departm ent office unless prerogative to throw unprepared students out of class. If Mansfield m akes another attem pt to a fee change is n ecessary. The Spartacuss line w ill be open from call up the nomination, Griffin said the F ee changes are handled in 187 Ad­ 1-5 p.m . Monday through Friday this filibuster w ill be resumed. “ We have 12 ministration. term. Those interested in working in a re­ or m ore speakers who are ready to go right ahead,” he said. P e a c e f u l d is s e n t Student ID s m ay be picked np from search or secretarial capacity for Spar­ He added: “ I think the better part of e n t h u s ia s t ic w e lc o m e t h e r e w e r e t h o s e d i s s e n t e r s in th e 8 a.m . to 5 p.m . today in the Union. A lth o u g h G e o r g e W a lla c e r e c e iv e d m o s t ly an tacuss m ay com e to the State N ew s Open wisdom would be to leave this up to the a c c o r d in g to M r. W a lla c e . next president if Mr. Warren is going to c r o w d a s p ic t u r e d h e r e . It w qs h o w e v e r , a “ p e a c e f u l e v e n t S ta te N e w s P h o to by B ob Iv in s House, 8 p.m . Thursday in 341 Student Services Bldg. lea v e.”* < « '■ , i- r -p Michigan State N ew s, East L ansing, M ichigan W ednesday, O ctober 2, 1968 P a rt O f T he CLAIM «NOTHING NEW’ NEWS C am pus S cene summary Vice Presro^ITt L,4ik*v . A,.,. . a iso x»ft, •^«nb approacn Hubert H Humphrey's qualified the North m ust be uncondition­ “absolutely nothing could be detected in Hum­ al. Humphrey’s offer. phrey’s speech broadcast from A c a p s u le s u m m a r y o f th e d a y 's e v e n t s fror bomb-hait pledge was brushed off by a North V ietnam ese In a cam paign broadcast Mon­ The implication appeared to Salt Lake City, Utah. o u r w ir e s e r v i c e s . spokesman in Paris Tuesday as day, Humphrey said that if be that it did not differ from It said Humphrey’s speech “ still the sam e demand for reci­ elected president he would stop President Johnson's position. w as “clearly calculated to win bombing the North but only if The Norths V ietnam ese have over to his side the numerous procity which w e reject. ” The North V ietnam ese have he saw “evidence of Communist offered verbal assurances that voters resolutely denouncing the “The chickens are com ing long spurned American demands w illingness to restore the dem il­ "positive efforts” would follow dirty war in Vietnam and de­ itarized zone betw een North and an unconditional American h o m e to roost all over the for prior assurances that the manding that it be ended.” Comm unists display m atching re­ South V ietnam .” bombing halt, but the Hum­ Som e foreign diplom ats feel, U nited S ta tes . ” straint after a halt in the bomb­ Le Due Tho, Hanoi politburo phrey pledge w as viewed as by however, that Hanoi m ight sur­ P resid en tia l h o p e fu l ing of the North. They have in­ m em ber and one of the North no m eans unconditional. prise its Moscow supporters as V ietnam ese d elegates at the The Soviet news agency Tass George W allace sisted instead- that a cutoff of it did when it accepted P resi­ dent Johnson’s offer of prelim i­ sp ea kin g in L ansing nary p eace talks in Paris. Nixon argues HHH speech They reason that Hanoi could calculate Humphrey w ill prove easier to deal with than any of • Red China m arked its 19th anniversary Tuesday with an announcement that Mao Tse-tung’s 26-month-old purge is his rivals. Follow ing this logic, the North V ietnam ese m ight de­ to be widened and deepened to “ purify” the 17-million could ruin Viet, peace talks cide to m ake a response to his speech, thus hoping to ea se his w ay into the White House. m em bers of the Chinese Communist party. • The U.S. Command announced Tuesday the top secret DETROIT (AP) - Rich­ tarized zone between North once said that the Communists “ The North V ietnam ese would m ilitary plan for conducting the Vietnam war in 1969 ard M. Nixon said Tuesday that and South Vietnam. ” should understand they won’t be taking a risk,” said one West­ has been signed by all the senior allied com m anders. Nixon said that the only win through an American ern diplomat, “just like Hum­ A press release said this w as the first tim e South Korean, unless Vice President Hubert political cam paign what they phrey said he’s ready to take a Thai, Australian and N ew Zealand com m anders participa­ H. Humphrey clarifies his trump card American negotia­ tors have is the possibility of can’t gain in Paris. risk .” ted in preparing the annual plan and signing it. Previously, conditional offer of a Viet­ nam bombing halt, it could a bombing halt. “ I agree with that proposi­ only the United States and South Vietnam knew its contents. destroy “ the only trump card” Asked if Humphrey’s state­ tion," he said. O fficials in the U.S. peace m ent took aw ay that bargaining Nixon said news reports of delegation here declined all • Secretary of State Dean Rusk conferred privately with American negotiators have in STEP O U T the P aris peace talks. The GOP presidential nomi­ power, Nixon replied that ques­ tion could only be answered by the Humphrey speech indicates the speech caused “ con­ com m ent on Humphrey’s speech, obeying orders to steer clear U.N. envoy Gunnar V. Jarring Tuesday in an effort to spur Middle E ast peace negotiations w hile Israeli and Arab for­ nee said that Hanoi's leaders the Ameican team at the fusion.” of the presidential election eign m inisters are in New York for the General Assem bly. cam paign. The two m et for breakfast as part of Rusk’s intensive diplo­ in contort and fashion m ay interpret Humphrey’s Paris talks. Asked what specifically he m atic consultations on world problem s. He talked for more statem ent as offering “ a con­ But he added: wanted clarified in the speech, in the Radcliff by V I N E R cession in January that they “ I think it is possible, very he said he w as concerned over At the United Nations in New than an hour Monday with Israeli Foreign M inister Abba could not get now.” possible, that the m en in Hanoi Humphrey’s w illingness to halt York, visiting foreign m inisters Eban and had an appointment to see Jordan’s foreign m inis­ could interpret this particular the bombing if the Communists from the Philippines and The ter, Abdul Monem Rifai, later. Available in beautiful antique He said that would destroy Netherlands dem onstrated the w hatever chance there is that statem ent as offering them a indicate their w illingness to olivewood and antique the current negotiations might concession in January that restore peace in the DMZ “ by d iverse overseas reactions • The Vatican appealed Tuesday to Roman Catholics to sparked by Humphrey’s pledge. join with other Christians and m em bers of all other faiths mahagony and only bring a settlem ent. they could not get now. ” word or d eed.” in an international program of contacts with atheists to Nixon told a news confer­ Nixon said of Humphrey $ 1 2 .0 0 “ this is his fourth and possibly help m ake the world “m ore hum an.” ence that despite Humphrey’s statem ent, he will continue to fifth different position on a U s e y o u r c h a r g e a c c o u n t in both s t o r e s A sk u s about FR EE P A R K IN G . rem ain silent on his own Viet­ nam peace plan while negotia­ tions in P aris have a chance bombing halt.” Referring to Humphrey’s statem ent that he would take Youthful hecklers N atio n al News • A m am m oth airport, designed to span the supersonic age for success. an acceptable risk, Nixon sa id : Humphrey, in a speech in Salt Lake City, said he would “ I would respectfully sub­ m it that the risk is not his. The risk that is taken is to strike o t W allace of com m ercial flight and the age of space travel, is being carved out of the cypress sw am ps of the Everglades. Em bracing 38 square m iles, the jetport site could sw al­ stop bombing of North Viet­ the thousands of Am ericans in low up the whole city of Miami and easily absorb all the KALAMAZOO, Mich. (AP) Rapids, W allace leveled a nam “as an acceptance risk the dem ilitarized zone whose runways of the Los Angeles, San Francisco and Washington - Hecklers in two Michigan finger at the youthful hecklers for p ea ce.” lives would be threatened in International Airports and N ew York's Kennedy Airport. cities Tuesday greeted the and sa id : But he said “ before taking the event that a bombing halt political m otorcade of third- “ You’d better have your say • A television personality running for tax collector lost that action. I would place key occurred and the North Viet­ party candidate George Wal­ now, because when I becom e his job Tuesday because the Federal Comm unications Com­ 3 2 6 S . W a sh in g to n 31 7 .E . G rand R iv e r im portance on evidence - nam ese forces w ere able to lace, who prepared to an­ president you w ill be all m ission ruled his opponent deserves 22 hours of equal tim e - DOW NTOW N E . L a n s in g direct of indirect - by deed attack them in greater numbers nounce his choice for a run­ through in this country.” even if he fills the screen with rock n roll music. or word - of Communist w ill­ than presently is the case. ” ning m ate. ingness to restore the dem ili­ Nixon noted that Humphrey Aides of the form er Ala­ In Grand Rapids, W allace bama governor said W allace told hecklers that their be­ planned to nam e ‘ the vice- havior had “gotten m e a half­ • The Interstate Com m erce Com m ission, in an econom ic presidential candidate of his m illion votes h ere.” reJJort that sent shock w aves through the railroad industry, American Independent Party A long-haired youth who concluded Tuesday that passenger trains m ake, and not within the next few days. shouted “ get a gun, get a gun,” lose, money. Frequently mentioned in w as handcuffed by plain- speculation over the choice clothesm en and led from the • Leonard H. Marks w ill resign soon as director of the w ere retired Air Force Gen. Kalamazoo crowd. It w as the U.S. Information Agency, the White House said Tuesday, Curtis LeMay and T. Coleman to head a U.S. delegation arranging for an international only incident. Andrews, form er federal In­ W allace also scheduled telecom m unications satellite conference in 1969. Marks' ternal Revenue Com m is­ stops at Lansing and Flint dur­ new assignm ent w ill give him the rank of personal am bas­ sioner. ing his day-long session of sador. A sm all portion of the crowd courting M ichigan’s 21 e lec­ of about 6,000 heckled W allace toral votes. M ich ig an News in Kalamazoo, chanting “ Sig, In Grand Rapids, W allace H eil,” and carrying signs read­ said the best way to guard • The death of State Rept. Charles J. D avis, R-Onon- ing “ racist pig” and “ If you against World War III is for daga, early Tuesday narrowed the GOP m ajority in the 110- liked Hitler, you’ll love Wal­ the United States to have m em ber House to one vote. la c e .” “ superiority, not parity” in Both at Kalamazoo and dur­ offensive and defensive weap­ • George C. W allace, w as greeted by big crowds in Western ing an earlier stop at Grand ons. Michigan Tuesday. The crowds were liberally sprinkled with hecklers on a m otorcade through Michigan, and W allace told the dem onstrators they w ere gaining him votes. • “ I appreciate your activities, because you've gotten m e . The State News, the student newspaper at Michigan State University, is published every class day throughout the ysar with special Welcome Weak a half-million votes today," W allace told hecklers at a rally and OrientaUon issues in June and September. Subscription rates are $14 in Grand Rapids. per year. “ The biggest racists in the crowd are those who call other folks ra c ists,” he told a subsequent rally in Kalamazoo. Member Associated Press, United Press International, Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press, Michigan Press AsaodaUon, Mich­ igan Collegiate Press AsaodaUon, United States Student Press AsaodaUon. • Republican presidential candidate Richard Nixon at­ tended a non-partisan conference on urban problem s in D e­ Second class postage paid a t East Lansing, Michigan. troit Tuesday. Gov. Romney, heading the panel, said leaders Editorial and business offices a t 347 Student Services Building, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan. of urban projects from throughout Michigan and around the nation discussed self-help, private enterprise and voluntary Phones: urban programs. Editorial......................................................................................................3(6-051 Classified Advertising .......................................................................... 3(6-056 Display Advertising................................................................................... 313-4400 • Michigan dem ocrats are planning to send a fact-finding Business-CirculaU on........................................................................... 3(6-3447 squad across Michigan on the heels of third party candidate P hotographic..................................................................... 316-011 George W allace. State D em ocratic Chairman Sander Levin, said, “ We are determ ined to expose the record of this m es­ senger of fea r.” T W A 's G roup T t iE R A p y F r e e ti m e a n d f a r off p l a c e s . G o in g a l o n e o r w ith f a v o r ite p e o p l e . B e in g o p e n a n d d o in g y o u r th in g . H a c k i n g a r o u n d C e n t r a l P a r k ...w o r s h i p p i n g s u n , s u r f "TATE MEWS a n d B ig S u r . . . t h e to ta l s o u n d s o f t h e F illm o re , E a s t a n d W e s t . . . f r i e n d s , o ld a n d n e w . . H a r e K r is h n a fro m c o a s t to c o a s t . . . l a u g h i n g , l e a r n in g , c a r i n g . B e in g a b l e t o t a k e w e e k e n d v a c a t i o n s b e c a u s e y o u ’r e u n d e r tw e rity -tw o . C le v e r e n o u g h tc s ta y a w a y f ro m t h e c r o w d s o f o ld p e o p l e o n th e ir h o lid a y s . T a k in g a d v a n t a g e of y o u r T W A 5 0 / 5 0 C lu b C a r d to ro a m t h e U S f o r h a lf t h e r e g u l a r f a r e . C a llin g u s o r y o u r tr a v e l a g e n t . . t h e n fo llo w in g g o o d NEEDS YOU THIS FALL v i b r a t i o n s o n TW A . COM E TO AN O PEN H O U SE TH URSDAY N IG H T , O C T O B E R 3 , 7 :3 0 P .M . IN T H E M A IN L O U N G E E A S T W IN G O F T H E S T U D E N T S E R V IC E S B U IL D IN G W ednesday, O ctober 2 , 1968 3 Michigan State N ew s, E ast L an sin g, M ichigan ____ 39 DC priests penalized Y ip p ie s , a tto r n e y s fo r birth control dissention d i s r u p t - h o a s e h e a r în ç } WASHINGTON ct ( *• (AP) i JNfcr >' J.v.iCu'v.* received public notice, with m issib le ancT^nd&cf necessary to preserve and foster the * Cardinal Patrick O’Boyle an­ som e parishioners openly sup­ Values and sacredness of mar­ nounced Tuesday penalties for porting their dissenting Gallagher said the demon­ riage.” Ichord said House rules 39 Washington area priests priests. WASHINGTON (AP) strators wanted to disrupt In a statem ent issued by the The cardinal said: ‘‘No­ lim ited attorneys to only ad­ who have dissented from his P o lice evicted 14 antiwar dem ­ vising their w itnesses. A m erica's total political pro­ w here in the encyclical does view on the birth control is­ Archdiocese of Washington, onstrators and attorneys Ichord also m ade it plain c e ss and that the groups taking sue. Cardinal O’Boyle said som e the Holy Father m ake any Tuesday as they tried to stage that the subcom m ittee would part represented “ just about provision w hatsoever for such Cardinal O’Boyle, who is of the dissenting priests a silent standing protest be­ not delve into charges of police the com plete spectrum of the an exception.” Roman Catholic ArchAishop of accept the en cyclical but in­ fore a House subcom m ittee on brutality during the August N ew Left and the Old L eft.” the D istrict of Columbia and sist on adding a qualifying The authority to exercise un-American A ctivities prob­ convention, saying the hear­ Rubin, one of the w itnesses certain priestly functions w as part of Maryland said his sentence. ing the bjloody street clashes ings w ere lim ited to con­ subpoenaed for the hearings, The sentence which he withdrawn from the 39 priests, action w as “ absolutely neces­ at the D em ocratic National frontations staged by the pro­ is not scheduled to appear until ranging from the right to hear sary if I am to fulfill the quoted said: “ Spouses m ay Convention. Thursday. confessions to the right to testers. solem n obligations im posed responsibly decide according The subcom m ittee chairman, As the first session opened, preach and to teach. ‘‘We’re not interested in upon m e as the shepherd and • to their own conscience that Rep. Richard Ichord, D-Mo., whether the police underacted however, the bearded protester teacher of all Catholics in this artificial contraception in C o n tin u e d on p a g e 14 warned the attorneys that they or overracted,” he said. led a straggly band of fellow archdiocese. I had no other som e circum stances is per­ could be cited for contem pt and Ichord said the probe’s pur­ dem onstrators to the com ­ ch o ice.” the dem onstrators could be pose is ‘‘to determ ine the m ittee door. The controversy involves charged with trying to dis­ extent to which and the m eans Barefoot and barechest^r, full acceptance of Pope P aul’s NO rupt Congress. But no im ­ by which these incidents in his body painted with m ulti­ en cyclical banning artificial m ediate arrests w ere made. Chicago w ere planned, insti­ colored peace sym bols, Rubin birth control. Som e priests Bushy bearded Jerry Rubin, gated, incited and supported by marched to the com m ittee dissented, and the controversy leader of the Yippies, w as Communist and other sub­ cham bers, carrying a .toy M16 ejected from the House Office versive organizations.” rifle and w earing a pistol belt. ‘Guerrilla o f the fu tu re9 Building for the second tim e of The first w itness, Jam es L. COVER B e a r d e d , b e a d e d and b a r e c h e s t e d J e r r y R ubin, y lp p le the day. P olice hustled Rubin Gallagher, a HUAC staff m em ­ He w as halted by Capitol out earlier when he tried to ber, told the subcom m ittee the police and escorted him out of enter th$ hearing room purposes and policies of the the building. le a d e r o f th e Y outh In te r n a tio n a l P a r ty , a r r iv e d In W a sh in g to n w ith a to y M -1 6 r if le to a p p e a r b e f o r e } HOMECOMING wearing a bandalier of bul­ Chicago protesters “ were Four others also were th e H o u se U n - A m e r ic a n A c t iv it ie s C o m m it te e fo r ^ Is c o m in g lets. clearly com patible with the hustled out, but there w as no s t r e e t d i s o r d e r s in C h ic a g o d u r in g th e D e m o c r a tic The confrontation cam e p olicies of Hanoi, Peking and attem pt by the dem onstrators UPI T e le p h o to N a tio n a l C o n v e n tio n . when attorneys for the pro­ M oscow .” ____________ _ to interfere with the police.______ testers reportedly sought an opportunity to cross-exam ine w itnesses testifying about al­ leged subversive involvem ent in the convention protests at Chicago five w eeks ago. B IER BETWEEN CLASSES? T ttG WED. Nov. election may stock Attorney M ichael Kennedy, OR representing protest leader Rennie D avis, charged, “ The Constitution is being raped in this armed cam p in Con­ g ress.” East Lansing with liquor THURS. As Rubin and others stood with Kennedy, Ichord asked the group to be seated or change concerning liquor three m ore than 50 djners P ackaged leave. When they refused the Drinking age students m ay tim es. . . . be sold in -*— subcom m ittee voted unani­ soon be able to leave their cla ss­ liquor could stores- But a s Citv Manager John “ where the sam e are not per­ m ously to evict the group. es, walk across Grand River Patriarche has pointed out, m itted consumed on the prem ­ As attorneys for protest lead­ Avenue for lunch and order a “This tim e the charter amend­ is e s .” ers bobbed up and down with bottle of beer with their m eal. m ent is m ore in line with the Alcoholic beverages would com plaints and objections, Rep. HAPPY Richard H. Ichord, D-Mo., It all depends, however, on attitudes of the E ast Lansing also be perm itted in any estab­ banged his gavel and warned the voters in E ast Lansing. In citizen s.” lishm ent that m ight be annexed them not to overstep bounds the Nov. 5 general election, to the. city if they were licensed prescribed in House rules. the citizens w ill be able to ap­ Patriarche noted that the li­ before annexation. The law yers w ere given the prove or reject a city charter quor am endm ents of 1942, 1958 The entire amendm ent is warning after they m ade re­ change allowing for the sale and 1962 w ere total changes; geared to the tastes of develop­ HOUR peated requests for a larger of liquor. that is, the am endm ents allowed for the repeal of the liquor sec­ ers of an $8 m illion hotel-motel- hearing room, complained E ast Lansing voters have pre­ tion of the charter. business com plex. The 17-story about the acoustics and m ade a Wear what you want« viously rejected a charter This tim e,’ the am endm ent hotel would be constructed on couple of technical objections. the corner of Abbott and Albert w ritten by City Attorney Daniel when you want and how C, Learned w ill not repeal the S tr ee ts-if the voters approve the liquor section but, in Learned’s liquor change. you want it. This is HHH criticizes Last February, R. J. Lede- 8 words, w ill “ liberalize” the section. buhr, a developer, said that the the year of the put- building would be constructed in „ .. . Lansing or Meridian Township if on. Like this groovy If the present resolution * licen se w ere not both opponents am ending the charter w ere passed by the voters, it would al- s t’ d L ittle Nehru and plaid KNOXVILLE, Tenn, (AP) m anagers and --Hubert H. Humphrey, serv­ electors are drawn from the presidential low alcoholic beverages to be sold in hotels and m otels where Ledebuhr said that a liquor li­ there are m ore than 50 sleeping cense w as essential to the suc­ sk irt. Come se e all the look s. Then, put- 10 p.m . ing notice there w ill un­ ranks of the Ku Klux Klan, the room s, a public dining room and ce ss of the project. doubtedly be future dif­ w hite Citizens Councils, the a general kitchen. The E ast Lansing Chamber of on what you p lease and featu ring ferences between him self and John Birch Society, the armed Com m erce estim ated that the the Johnson Administration, Minute Men, or groups Alcohol could also be served in com plex would bring at least ,do your own thingl charged George C. W allace dedicated to the promotion of private clubs and restaurants $216,000 in annual revenue for the Tuesday with being “ the crea­ an ti-sem itism .” that have accom m odations for the city. ture the m ost reactionary underground forces in Ameri­ can life .” And as he pushed his cam ­ paign southward, Humphrey as­ serted that his Republican E a s t L a n s in g SUNLINERS opponent, Richard M. Nixon, u ses W allace tactics-aim ed at division and enflam ing fears- O PE N W EDNESDAYS and has “deliberately courted the -m ost radical extrem ist 12:00 N oon u n til 9 :0 0 p .n elem en ts in his own party.” Humphrey, with reaction still coming in, Said that in his foreign policy statem ent Mon­ day night, he w as em phasing that “ I would halt the bombing in North V ietnam .” “ The administration has its own position,” Humphrey said, and he added that he felt it y o u ’ re a m a n o f w as important “ for the people Action to know where I stand." As for any confusion as to how to interpret his views, SALE Humphrey declared, “ I said I would stop the bombing of North V ietnam ,” and that, he added, “ is the em phasis of R ush O LDM AINE TROTTERS LOAFERS m y statem ent.” $8 He declined to say whether he, as president, would halt the bombing without som e pre­ R egularly $12 a n d $14 arranged guarantee from Hanoi. Humphrey also explained G e n u in e h a n d s e w n tr a d itio n a l c a m p u s during his half-hour television speech on foreign policy that he asked that the vice presi­ a n d casu al-tim e m o c c a sin lo a fe rs , n o w dential seal not be shown. “ The reason is that I w ill a l sp e c ia l savings. In cluded in this have som e variances, no doubt, from tim e to tim e with e x te n siv e c o lle c tio n a r e th e classic the adm inistration,” the vice president said. “ I want to b ro w n c a lf tassel lo a fe r, a n d y o u r speak as Hubert H. Humphrey, candidate for president on the D em ocratic ticket, and that’s all-tim e fa v o rite . . .the p e n n y lo a fe r in the w ay I’m going to do it .” Humphrey’s assau lts on Wal­ b ra s s w a x o r g r a in e d b ro w n calf. lace and Nixon have been among his toughest of the cam paign. W allace, the segre­ gationist third party candidate a t the ZTA sorority house and form er governor of Ala­ bam a, “ stands . . . apostle of hate and racism .” a s the J a c o b s o n s SHOE SALON U niversity of Tennessee that som e of the W allace political C all 332-2501 fo r a rid e — E D I T O R I A L --------------------------------------------------------- — A c o n t i n u i n g f a / e , o c o n t i n u i n g t a s k • *n# «r- should stu n be unified expressinri ^ No fk^puld $ admtniWri&ym , was., day's "K aum oftt TotVer rally,- day of o f dt^pleasnfe. d t£ p den. Frankness must be the key­ cheating. Thè Trie aacadem ic com- -« T V * and the heavy protest against Not only does the “ suspension note. munity from top to bottom the “ suspension resolution,” resolution” need to be discus­ Above all, the debate should was profoundly affected. It can­ President Hannah has stated sed, but the entire area of ad- be viewed as preliminary to ac­ not happen again. that he will not enforce it, and ministration-student-faculty re­ tion. w ill put it on the agenda of lations. The passage of the reso­ The protest we have seen in The ensuing discussion and the next trustees m eeting. lution is a vivid exam ple of the past few days was not blown thought should be coucned in Though he said the issue had what can happen when one ele­ out of proportion, but rather a rationality and long-range per­ been blown out of proportion, ment ignores the others in di­ forceful expression of wide­ spective. The job is bigger than Hannah apparently felt the pro­ recting important policy. spread dissent and disenchant­ this resolution alone, though it test significant enough to sus­ Communication with the ad­ ment with the administration might be first on the agenda. pend, in effect, the resolution. m inistration was obviously lack­ and the trustees on a very seri­ There certainly rem ains great ing, and ways must now be es­ ous problem. It is now up to the academ ­ hesitancy on the part of the ad­ tablished to ensure that direct ic community to express clear­ It is fortunate that the pro­ ministration to sim ply rescind channels are open AND USED. ly and concisely its fundamen­ test so far has been orderly the resolution, but that job must Neither the faculty, the stu­ tal disagreem ent with the term s and organized. That, however, be the first order of business. dents, nor the administration of the resolution. should not detract anyone from This m istake (to understate) should take a back seat in the Y esterday’s rally was a study realizing the depth of feelings should not be left to irritate the debate. All were involved in this in unity with diversity. In that on the matter. wounds it opened. latest fiasco, and must be in­ spirit, the following few weeks As we have said before, the --The Editors volved now. 'in** OH Cl! f i m a H iïlA I | V* & \ F ilu a rd A. B rill * FRED SHERWOOD vtli to r -in -c h ie f M I C H I G A N C arol B u d ro iv , a d ve rtisin g m anager N ixon’s slick ap p ro ach TATI N EW S Ja n ies S. C ra n elli , m a n a g in g e d ito r U N IV E R S IT Y T rin k a (.line, ram p u s e d ito r J e rr y Pa n k hurst, e d ito ria l tali tor Com B ro iv /i, sports e d ito r Still photographs of a worried American nam, he says, because he does not wish to he is attracting the longing glances that GI in Vietnam and the despairing face of jeopardize the P aris talks, but his “ m ora­ his newly acquired accouterm ents re­ P atricia A n ste tt , associate cam p u s e d ito r a V ietnam ese peasant woman appear on torium ” on Vietnam actually began when ceived in his favorite m agazine. Six-tim e recipient oi m e P acem aker award for outstanding journalism. the television screen, casting a m om en­ Eugene McCarthy took a stand counter to tary chill over our warm Sunday afternoon that of Nixon and other hard-liners and be­ This is all part of the gam e accepted by com placency. Taut drumbeats in the back­ gan winning prim aries on it. This w as w ell this society m ore than any other, but the ground heighten the drama, and we are before the P aris talks convened. political gam e is a bit m ore serious. Nix­ parepared to be deeply affected by the The art with which an advertisem ent is on's advertising is good enough to present MAX LERNER voice of Richard M. Nixon. put together can imbue a product with cer­ him favorably without com m iting him to Nixon's television advertising, like the tain values not inherent to its nature. issues, and there m ay be som e disen­ rest of his cam paign, is slick and profes­ Thus a man adorned in a cashm ere chanted Americans who, thinking they are sional, but that in itself can tell us som e­ sw eater and tooling around in a Jaguar voting for the 79 cent spread, will end up thing about it. Advertising can pay well XKE is so much the happier if he thinks with plain old margarine. Political images as w eapons enough to attract those wordsm iths and researchers who can rub a com m unication into its m ost highly polished form. Vrry few can deny that Nixon’s men have done ju st that. What can be denied, If political im ages are weapons, as in not often paralleled by “ GiVe 'em hell, m anaged to leave a sharp and strong however, is that the feeling culled from fact they are, what are the im ages engaged Hubert” shouts in 1968. There are som e on a partisan television announcement is the im age of him self in the voters’ mind. in battle with each other in the presiden­ the D em ocratic left who want him to Nixon, as front-runner trying to hold his best basis for determining one’s prefer­ tial campaign? give Lyndon Johnson hell rather than lead, can afford a m ore blurred image ence in an election. Richard Nixon has pretty effectively Nixon, and replace the loyal" soTv sym ­ than Humphrey, who m ust overtake him Y et due to the nature of the television scrapped the loser im age, and replaced it bol by that of the rebel son.. The Humphrey im age right now is that m edia and Humphrey’s fund-raising diffi­ with the comeback im age. Since no self- of the underdog, and it is true that Ameri­ The m ost current W allace im age is culties virtually the entire voting public respecting American loves a loser, and cans do som etim es identify with the un­ that of the outsider trying to m ake his w ill be exposed repeatedly to ads for Nix­ every American identifies with a man derdog-provided he has a good chance of own way in. It em braces the feelings of on that are better and m ore frequently who has made a comeback, this is a becom ing top-dog. Otherwise he becom es his opponents as w ell as his supporters. aired than any others. whopping gain. If you ask how Nixon only a victim im age, and nobody loves a The im age that W allace wants to leave Nixon and his ad m en play on em otions, did it. I suspect that George Romney's victim , especially people who feel they is at once that of rebel and that of sher­ in this case by showing scen es of war. and Nelson R ockefeller's blunders gave are victim s them selves and want their iff. To get such a contradiction across poverty, and civil disorder that have oc­ him a vacuum to move into, and Nixon leaders to be winners. would take som e doing, but it a m easure curred during President Johnson's ad­ m oves fast. That is why Humphrey has been quite of the widespread social angers in Amer­ ministration. The idea is to make Nixon a Nixon's own explanation is that of the right to combine the underdog im age with ica that W allace's vote in increasing desirable product because he can replace Toynbeean withdrawal-and-return: that he that of the scrapper, which is exactly steadily even with these crazily contra­ an undesirable one. retired for a tim e to reflect on his past, what Harry Truman did in 1948. But one dictory im ages. It seem s hypocritical, however, that and cam e back refreshed for the future. w eakness of the 1948 parallel is that Mr. That is why the law-and-order im age is Nixon should hope for support because On this base he is working hard to get rid Truman had something to scrap for and an inspired one for W allace to be using. of dissatisfaction with Johnson's policies, of the earlier hatchet-man im age and re­ som eone to scrap against. He ran on It conceals m ore than it reveals, but that specifically the Vietnam war. Nixon was place it by that of the unifier. The trouble his own Administration performance, and is the purpose of an effective political once an outspoken supporter of Johnson's with this is that while a hatchet-man could attack the ' Do-Nothing-' Republi­ im a g e. It enables W allace - to link him ­ war policy and felt-th e conflict could not im age can rouse at least a partisan en­ can Congress which had been returned in self with a stability code at the sam e be resolved by negotiation. thusiasm . a unifier im age is more evo­ 1946. Humphrey can’t defend an unpopu­ tim e that he is actually evoking the code Nixon wrote, when only 230 American cative (as Thomas Jefferson proved) af­ lar Administration whose policies he didn't which puts him in the viginalte role. More lives had been lost in Vietnam, that we ter a victory rather than before one. A uni­ shape, and--even w o rse-h e can’t rouse recently, as in his New York Tim es inter­ m ust "instill in ourselves and our allies fier im age m ust be all things to all men, much enthusiasm for his attacks on Nixon. view, he has tried to blur this by casting a determination to win this crucial w a r- and there is a danger that it will serve For he can’t revive the “ old Nixon" him self in the im age of the conserver and win it d ecisiv ely .” as a screen for the trim m er and the sales- without the new one’s collaboration, nor who is protecting the nation against mob Today the “ determination to w in” has in­ pitch packager. Nixon runs that danger can he panic the voter about the new anti-“anarchist” angers which only he creased that number by m ore than a hun­ today. Nixon when the real threat from the right can contain. But this w on’t wash. Be­ dredfold with precious little to show for Hubert Humphrey is having even more is so clearly not from Nixon but from fore the campaign is over, I suspect, it. im age trouble than Nixon right now, and George Wallace. That is why the shouts Wallace will be flushed out of his sheriff he won’t be out of the woods until he has of “Give 'em hell, Harry” in 1948 are im age and be stuck with the vigilante. Nixon says he served in an adm inis­ tration that settled the Korean war and U1HEU1!WHATARELIEF! ITHOUGHT TAKING A ‘TRUE01? FALSE' that he can call the right shots in Vietnam, TRUEORFALSE? IS ITWOUlP BEANE66MTESTOR TEST IS LIKE HAVINGTHE but advocating a decisive victory is ap­ SOMETHING! kJHEU)! I'MSAVEP! UJINP AT fOUR BACK! pearing m ore and m ore to be a scratch. IT TRUE OR FALSE?! What assurance do we have that the Nix­ on who says “ America is in trouble to­ day because her leaders have failed^' is any different than the Nixon who once called Lyndon Johnson "the ablest politician to be in the White House in this X / J r iÆ J - T h e n a tiv e s a r e r e s t l e s s ! ’ century? Very little. He w ill not discuss Viet­ W ednesday, O ctober 2 , 1968 5 Michigan State N ew s, East L ansing, M ichigan OUR RCADSRS’ MINDS | R ed C e d a r R ep o rt POINT OF VIEW If "N ixon’s the one,” who’s the two? Spring finals in focus D ir e c t io n in c o n f u s io n U you have a few hour^ of free tim e you migljt try- to fig- in a t o £ JTOf, M— inOfHiIn, Of,*.»• everyw here, from the confus­ with the three existing black sorority answers (-1. A W o m a n ' ) a a T h e r e o e NOWI IN-CAR HEATERS ing and constantly changing sororities on cam pus, she added. a n d A n n a G a el aa Isa belle ALL COLOR PROGRAM apartm ent (a la “ Repulsion” ) The secretary of the colony, which becom es a character it­ For the first tim e this year, SIDNEY POITIERTN P at Butler, hopes that black self. to the exterior photog­ Panhellenic Council is holding coeds w ill not com e to view —NEXT— 'F O R L O V E O F I V Y ’ raphy, shot so close that w e are a non-obligatory interest pro­ the sorority as a breaking gap " K u b rick p r o v id e s t h e v ie w e r THE OLDEST PROFESSION' never allowed to escape from gram . —ALSO— in the black unity on campus. the tension into a grandiose view The black girls should really w i t h t h e clo sest e q u iv a le n t t o TO DAY IS L A D IE S ’ DAY 75 ç 1 to 6 P .M . “ A MINUTE TO PRAY of the Great Outdoors. view the sorority a s a chance to Sign-up for the program, A SECOND TO DIEl’ ’ And finally, score one point when women can find answers p sy ch ed elic e x p e r ie n c e t h is s id e PR O G R A M I N F O R M A T I O N ^ Œ S - S Ï S V " •L A S T D A Y - broaden and build up their own for com m ercial value. Although interests. It. should also serve as to all their questions about At 1-3:05-5:10-7:15-9:25 P.M . o f h a l l u c i n o g e n s !"~Mogaxine"A f a n ­ the greatest artistic su ccesses a channel through which they sorority life, will be held from C L IN T EASTW OO D are often box-office bombs can serve the com m unity, the 1-5 p.m. Thursday and Fri­ t a s t ic m o v ie a b o u t m a n 's HANG ’EM HIGH” A N S I N G (“ Greed") and vice-versa day in 309 Student Services f u t u r e ! A n unprecedented psy­ TOMORROW COLOR * « ■ bîD rT ve I n T h e a tr ç S S m 5 2 0 7 S. C E O A R S T (“ V alley x>f the D olls” ), critics are occasionally pleased to find cam pus and them selves. Miss Butler said. Bldg. * FEATURE AT 1:30-4:10-6:45-9:20 V erlie Sampson, treasurer of All women who sign up will c h e d e lic roller c o a s t e r o f a n e x ­ NOWI IN-CAR HEATERS the group, said that the girls be eligible to attend an Interest E xclusive All Color Program should com e to view the soror­ p e r i e n c e !"- Magazm«'Kubrick'S ' 2 0 0 1 ' Convocation Tuesday, October T he Wildest of the Young Onesl ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ity as a basis for building last­ ing friendships. 8. A m ovie produced for Pan­ is t h e u l t i m a t e trip!" ^ Sci#nee 'T h e Y o u n g A n im a ls ’ Í HOMECOMING } “ It really does not m atter which one of the sororities a hel and the Interfraternity Council is scheduled to be —AND— is c o m in g girl chooses. The important shown at the convocation. A 'T H E MINI-SKIRT MOB” thing is that the girl can iden­ guest speaker w ill also discuss asp ects of Greek life. ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ MGM nuuNTs« STANLEY KUBRICK PRODUCTION ta 2001 WtKM li a space odyssey W HET Technicolor D ISIV I SUPER PANAVISION - METR0C0L0R 3rd W EEK ! R E G U L A R P R IÇ E S HAYLEY M IL L S-H A Y L E Y MILLS 4 S h o w s D a ily 1:05 - 3 :4 5 - 6 :3 5 - 9:15 T h e PARENT TR R P ! The answer to these and other socially critica l questions Is available on the Grand­ m other's Fall Term Schedule of entertainment nearest you. A J f l U P Otkatni . ► 332*6944 S Pick one up from . Paramount News,Cam pbell’s Suburban Shop, Student Book Store, Disc Shop, M arshall M usic, Discount Records or GRANDMOTHER’S. T od ay Is L A D IE S ’ D A Y 7 5 0 to 6 P .M . Next! Peter S ellers “ 1 LOVE YOU, ALICE B. TOKLAS” MAUREEN O’H A R A -B R IA N KEITH 3411 E . M ic h ig a n A ve. Soonl “ R achel, Rachel” - “ West Side Story” CHARuiRUGGLES uiuMERKELuut CARROLL iuannaB A R N E S whumks \ W ednesday, O ctober 2, 1968 Michigan State N ew s, East L ansing, M ichigan I 1m* wm m B Wam H n A n Ta ' mm B N e w Y o rk sc h o o l s t r ife s t ill h o t Junior High Schodl 271 w as IB R B D G NEW YORK (A P) renewed revolt in a P uerto Rir-ai, P tnpriyenfal - A public school system , with Negro- it’s 1.1 million pupils. ‘The Ywsybijrty «{ another AFL-CIO United Fedegption of T eachers in a walkout cover- ing H school ^days that ended school in Brooklyn’s Ocean Hitt-Brownsville * district. “directing m e to relieve im ­ m ed iately all teachers who closed Tuesday ihom ing after Three other , schools . in the have r e l u m e d . . nonuniorr teachers, som e df *' fc*jrpd *<*• ,v school o i s O T ^ ' m . im w T /y ir^ sirix e ue tgauim, o.2y * ♦*»* ' ~ M X i . v tr : j, * ,i JX test walk-out staff m em bers promptly retorted that any . ousted ones, walked out to Tuesday provoked the threat said Albert Shanker, who led P olice clashed briefly with of another tieup of New York’s the 55,000 m em bers of his dem onstrators outside one sym pathetic to the local board. principal defying its orders dem onstrate support of the The first m eeting of the year of the History deportm ent Stndent At issue again, a s during the would be replaced. Said School governing board of the dis­ Advisory C om m ittee w ill be held a t 7 p.m . tonight in room 340 Mor­ three-week strike by the Superintendent Bernard E. trict. rill Hall. teachers’ federation, w as re­ Donovan: The walkout w as led by Al­ ' • • • “ That’s not a threat, that’s bert Vann, an acting assistant instatem ent to Ocean H ill’s Tours of the MSU Library w ill be given by U niversity librarians throughout the year, at 2 p.m . Tuesdays and at 4 p.m . Fridays. Anyone interested m ay attend. Tours start at the information D raft office bom Bed, decentralized schools of a band just a statem ent of p olicy.” of ousted w hite teachers, now depleted through The central board also had Afro-American Teachers As­ voluntary the power to supercede the sociation. principal and president of the desk in the lobby. transfers to about 80. 19-member Ocean Hill district Some of the dem onstrating • * * Frank Read, Dean of the Duke U niversity L aw ^ chool, w ill ad­ dress a m eeting of the Pre-Law Club, at 7:30 pmmM onday, Oct. state records burned A Board of Education m an­ governing body, which claim s date for their return to their its actions have been in re­ parents, marched on another classroom s w as the key to an sponse to teachers, along with pupils and com m unity de­ Ocean Hill school, Intermedi­ 14 in 118 Eppley. Read w ill also be available for interview s from rope w as used as a fuse to agreem ent which ended the mands. Donovan told news­ ate School 55, to try to per­ 2:30 to 5:30 p.m . that day in 211 Eppley. MADISON, WIS., (A P) - Fourteen antiwar protestors, men: “ We would not like to see suade teachers there to join start the fire, police reported. cityw ide teachers’ strike. • * • The Wisconsin state selective m ost of them Roman Catholic their boycott of classes. F irem en brought the blaze However, Rhody McCoy, it go down the drain.” The Black Students A lliance w ill hold its first general m eeting service headquarters was priests, were arrested. Ocean Hill adm inistrator, or­ But at another point, the P olice intervened and a under control without dif­ of fall term at 7:30 p.m . Thursday in 106-B W ells Hall. firebombed Monday night and “ I can’t disassociate the in the superintendent of the nation’s m elee broke out at wooden * * * ficulty. A large picture window dered principals som e draft records destroyed, tw o,” Courtenay said. system de­ barricades outside the inter­ w as blown out during the blaze district's eight schools not to largest school Planners for Equal Opportunity w ill m ee t in room 7 of the officials said today. The director said Justice m ediate school. E ggs, rocks and furniture w as destroyed. assign cla sses to the returning clared : Urban Planning, Landscape, A rchitecture Bldg. at 8 p.m . Thurs­ Col. Bentley Courtenay, D epartm ent agents were “ It’s hard to predict from and bottles were thrown at teachers. He said he was day. Members of the public are invited. state selective service dir­ called in to investigate the police, two of whom were Courtenay said he could not acting on a resolution of the one minute to the next what • * * ector, said he believed the m atter. injured. state how m any records were d istrict’s governing board action we will take.” The U niversity D uplicate Bridge Club w ill m eet at 7:15 p.m . incident w as connected' to one The state headquarters in lost in the fire or how m any every Wednesday, 3rd floor Union. Any staff m em ber or student in Milwaukee last week in Madison w as doused with a re kept in the Madison of­ Ga S P A R T A N D A IL Y A T is w elcom e to play. M aster points w ill be awarded according to which records w ere taken from gasoline about midnight and a fice. ACBL regulations. a draft office and burned. T W I N EA ST 1 : 3 0 - 3 : 3 0 - 5 :4 0 - 7 :4 0 - 9 : 4 0 \ * * * M "NT, The MSU F ilm Society announces that “ D iary of a Country P riest” w ill NOT be shown tonight. It w ill be shown at a later date. * * * African strife: Adolescent Psychology 348, taught by Dr. A. Seagull, w ill not m eet today, but w ill resum e on Friday. * * * reps discuss B ia f r a n - N ig e r ia n Shaw Hall w ih present an A ll-University Mixer 9-12 p.m. F ri­ day in the Shaw lower lounge. The band featured w ill be The Wil­ sides tonight son Mower Pursuit from Detroit. * * * R epresentatives of the op­ posing points of view in the D e b a te Alpha Phi Sigma, national police honorary society, w ill hold a Nigerian-Biafran civil war will general business m eeting at 7 p.m . tonight in 35 Union. All PLA discuss the issues at 7:30 m ajors are invited. tonight in a program spon­ * * * T O N IG H T 7 : 3 0 P .M . sored by D elta Phi Epsilon, The Prom enaders w ill hold open dance with lessons from 7- international relations honor­ 8:15 tonight in 34 Women’s IM. Anyone interested is w elcom e. ary. U N IO N B A L L R O O M * * * Robert M. Lumianski, pro­ The Joint, a coffeehouse in the basem ent of Student Services, fessor of ATL, w ill m oderate w ill again present folk and blues Friday and Saturday nights, the discussion betw een the with shows starting at 8:30 p.m. Admission is 75c with free cof­ four student and faculty parti­ fee. * * * Campus organizations m ust be registered with the U niversity cipants in the Union Ballroom. E ach side w ill be given 20 DELTA PHI EPSILON m inutes to present its points by Oct. 25. Form s are available in 101-109 Student S ervices Bldg. and an additional 10 m inutes Open Rush Doris Day and Brian Keith * *# * for rebuttal. A free sailing film w ill highlight the first m eeting of the MSU The discussion w ill be fol­ Sailing Club at 7 tonight in the Union Ballroom. Interested lowed by a period for the group persons are w elcom e. to answer written questions * * * “ W ith SixYou Get Eggroll” from the audience. F or m en In te r e ste d in f o r e i g n a f f a i r s . A B iafran/N igerian D ebate, sponsored by D elta Phi Epsilon, “ The purpose of the discus­ w ill be held at 7:30 tonight in the Union Ballroom with Robert sion is to enable both sides M. Lumionski, professor of ATL, m oderating. D elta Phi Epsilon to present their positions on w ill hold the debate in conjunction with their fall open rush, the issu e,” Don Cross, D ear­ N O W S H O W IN G C o - s t a r r in g P a t C a r r o ll, B a r b a r a H e rs h e y , A lic e G h o stle y extended to m en especially interested in international affairs. born junior and president of * * * a n d G e o rg e C a r lin , w ith T h e G r a s s R oots. D irected by H ow ard M orris. The MSU Student Coalition for Humphrey-Muskie will m eet the honorary, said. B R IV E e l/ li 2 C o lo r H its . Screen play hy Gwen B agn i, P au l Dubov, H a rv e y B ullock, R . S. A llen. Produced by M artin M elcher. Color by Deluxe. Film ed in Panavision®. at 7:30 tonight in 31 Union. A H 3 / 3 M ILES EASTorM S.1 A Cinem a C enter F ilm s P resentation. Released by N ational. G eneral Pictures. FREE HEATERS • PH O N E E P 2 .-1 0 4 2 .V Rusk talks with A rabs; PAIOMAR PICTURES INTERNATIONAL. S i d n e y V to H S e r SPARTAN TWIN WEST FÒX ÉA S t E R N THE ATRES FRANPOR SHOPPING CENTER • 3100 EAST SAGINAW Phone 3510030 , STARTS TODAY! no progress reported la u g h in g a n d lo v in g in T O N IG H T A T 6 : 3 0 A N D 9 P .M . U N IT E D NATIONS, N.Y. Arab com m ent was m ostly noncomm ittal. Rifai said the On that basis the United ta re (A P) -- Secretary of State, Dean States has reacted to a reported o f Rusk rounded out his Middle talks centered on strengthening Soviet peace plan by saying E ast consultations Tuesday by peace efforts in accord with that proposals should be pre­ Security Council resolutions. i j y conferring separately with Arab sented to the assembcy, and not leaders and Gunnar V. Jarring, Eban talked with Lord Cara- undertaken on a bilateral level. FROM§KCINERAMARELEASINGCORPORATION the U.N. peace envoy. don, the chief British U.N. dele­ PROGRAM IN F O R M A T IO N ^ 4 8 2 -3 9 0 5 But there were no reports ot gate, who also, has been trying SHOWN TW ICE AT 7s45 and L a te progress in efforts to reduce the to act as a bridge between thd i ¥ l l ! ® H i ^ N threat of a new Arab-Israeli Arabs and Israel in encouraging — 2nd C o lo r F e a t u r e - - R o sé m a ry i war. peace talks. T O D A Y . . . from 1:00 PA I, The private talks were in ad­ vance of the major policy Rusk w as known to be stress­ 1:30, 3 :3 0 ,5 :3 0 ,7 :4 0 ,9 :4 5 EDW ARDSMALLEST ing the point that the tim e for speech Rusk Wednesday to the 125-nation w ill deliver getting successful negotiations ELKESOMMER BOBCROME General Assem bly The Middle E ast ranks high among the is­ under way is now—when all sides are represented at the cur­ rent session of the assem bly. He " T H e W IC k B D ab v I" S H IV E R IN G A N D A B S O R B I N G sues Rosk will present in h is« s- takes thè view that thé settle­ E N T E R T A IN M E N T .-S ly , s t y lis h sessm en t of the world situation. D R E i m S O F m ent m ust not be imposed from a n d s u s p e n s e f u l film is a s p le n d id ly He had breakfast with Jarring, the Swedish diplomat who has been trying since last D ecem ­ outside, but m ust be worked out by the Arabs and Israelis them ­ selves. TtuinilOlOR APARAMOUNTPICTURE P a u u t S C H U ftz e x e c u t e d e x a m p le o f its g e n r e . " — H o llis A lp e rt, S a tu rd a y R e v ie w ber to arrange peace talks be­ COLOR by DeLuxi «h » “ LADIES’ DAY ‘A S H O C K E R . T h e t e n s io n c r e a t e d tween Isreal and the Arabs. W ED. — SHOW N 2nd at 10 P .M .— ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ * 75ÿ to 6:00 P.M , is p r a c t ic a lly u n b e a r a b le . ” Later Rusk m et with Abdul Monem Rifai. foreign m inister — K a th le e n C a rro ll, N e w s *yL HOMECOMING yL$ N E X T A T T R A C T IO N : of Jordan, and set up a talk FREE E L E C T R IC IN -C A R HEATERS with Egyptian Foreign Minister “ PA PER L IO N ’ A M A S T E R P IE C E O F S U S P E N S E A N D Mahmoud Raid. On Monday, H O R R O R . P o la n s k i is a m a s t e r o f t h e Rusk was closeted with Abba H is c o m in g □ b iz a r r e , e r o t ic a n d p e r v e r s e . H e h a s N O W S H O W IN G Eban, the Israeli foreign m in­ ister. N O R T H S ID E D R I V E -I N T H E A T R E S 2 C o lo r H its o u t -H it c h c o c k e d H it c h c o c k !" — J o s e p h G e lm is , N e w s d a y MSU International Fjhn Series j W e» H e ft w U S - 2 7 .. 4 M -7 Ä W D o n ’ t M i s s It! A ST O R Y OF FA N T A SY A N D U Q R Q p R . M ia F a r r o w is q u it e m a r v e lo u p r e se n ts — R enata A d le r, N Y T im es SO O N ! NEW H IG H P O W E R E D IN -C A R H EATER S. 4R o s e m a r y 's B a b y ' t e lls It lik e it is : A C L A S S I C ! A s h o c k e r b e y o n d b e li e f , w ill b e d i s c u s s e d | d a m n e d , p r a is e d a n d a ttra ct m illio n s a n d m illio n s o f " B E S T P IC T U R E p e r s o n s to t h e a t r e s . " - u p i Mi . t ur i Tuhl s ‘AROUND THEWORLD " I t ’s G r e a t ! S h e e r P e r fe c t io n Paramount Pc lures Resents IN80DAYS” O F THE Y E A R ! M A T T H E L M ’S A n A -p lu s m o v ie . M ia F a r r o w M et fu r r o w In a WMiam Castle Production DavrdNrven Cantinflas i . Richard Brooks is the B IG G E ST is ju s t g r e a t ! — L iz S m ith , C o s m o p o lita n Rosemary's RpbertNewton \\ A N D BO LDEST! Baby " I 'v e a lr e a d y a w a r d e d *b e s t ShirlflyMachine man of the year!" COLUMBIAPICIUflESpresents AnIRVMGALIENProduction a c t r e s s ' h o n o r s to M ia F a r r o w atoostamng — W anda Hale, N.Y. Daily News J o h n C aCOsllimsga v e t e s fjNiTED\ JBjjtnSls) ¥Sr/>i mum fo r 4R o s e m a r y 's B a b y ! '” — D o ro th y M an n e rs, H e a rs t N e w s S e rv ic e Ruth G ordon S idney B lackm er •' tnuif » y Written for the Srreen and Directed by Richard Brooks MHKHM " S u p e r b su s p e n s e . E ven Maurice Evans an d Ralph Bellamy Produced by William Castle/Written lor the Screen T h u r s ., F r l ., O c t . 3 - 4 , 7 : 3 0 p .m . r.Cisif hi QUINCY JONES A f o!u'” bia Pictures Release osMATT HELM. r e a d e rs o f th e b o o k w h o and Directed by Roman Polanski / From the novel by Ira Lev^l UNIVERSITY AUDITORIUM ln Panavision*' TNI k n o w h o w ‘B a b y ’ c o m e s P io d u cio n O » g n .i-n cn M S ^M n / UKtncalo>* APvamountncW* Suggested lot Mature AuOences S in g le A d m is s io n $ 1 .0 0 Positively ottone under 16 admite*J unle.s SHOWN TWICE at 7?45 - -enl or guardian ism aia & L a te NMBUSHIRS - —2n d ot 1 0 i3 0 — o u t a r e in f o r a s u r p r i s e ! ” — T im e T i c k e t s o n S a le a t U n io n T ic k e t O f f ic e t W ednesday, O ctober 2, 1968 10 Michigan State N ew s, East Lansin'g, M iehigan A p a r t m e n t p a r t i e s t a k e t h e i r t o l l m em bers of the Ingham County figure of $400 after checking Favorite targets for van­ Management, which m anages By GERRY WOgCJIl HUSKY caused by guests, rather than dalism . R oss said, a r e Sheriff's Departm ent to patrol som e of last y e ir s reports. Cedar, Greens, estim ated that State N ew s Staff Writer residents. therm ostats, fife alarm s exit >The «n »naay v -sa id that the apartm ents on weekends. He said -that the use of in the -first-year of the cojnplex Student ■= x p U llc t' 'ItT 4 .... cause a lo^af oam age eWry ‘ u . A Wtg I.«* problem Dona* down to eoo " m ediajly, but the expense of com plexes such as U niversity The manager explained that “ The average w as about $50 week to apartm ents and apart­ eating the student” in the ways the patrol w as probably higher Terrace and Haslett Arms had the security locks “ don’t do per apartm ent and that is re- m ent buildings according to of apartment living and common than the dam ages would have definitely been useful in stem ­ any good because people lose im bursible sin ce its taken out m anagers of som e of the courtesy for others. their keys or break the locks. " b een,” Pulte said. “ The only ming dam ages. the dam age d ep osits.” larger com plexes. He said that one of the main Nicholas V entsias of Alco com plaint about the patrol was "But w e m ight have to go “ Students cause on the aver­ reasons that students m ove in .when they w ere discontinued. back to the police to protect ag e about $400 to $300 worth apartm ents is that “ they just P eople asked us, w here did the owners' investm ent and the of dam age a w eek .” T. J. intend to have a good tim e .” Pulte, m anager V illage Apartments, said. He of Cedar Pulte, who also worked a s a m anager in Ann Arbor, said they go? The new approach is to have other resid en ts.” Ross said. Ross agreed that m ost of 'Enterprising’ thief m aintainence workers living the dam ages w ere caused by said that $400 of jjjat figure that it w as interesting to note w as actual dam age caused by “ pure vandalism" and that that the cost of dam ages w as much higher in E ast Lansing in the buildings and to m ain­ tain a closed-door policy for guests but noted that residents are liable for dam ages to their apartm ents w hereas the dam ­ steals bus passes than at the U niversity of parties. This has proved ef­ Some enterprising indivi­ MSU bus system and picking another $100 went for cleaning fective in m ost cases. age in the public areas is dual, probably bent on forcing and labor. Michigan. up som e cash for him self, Harry Ross, of State Man­ incurred by the m anagem ent. price com petition with the Pulte estim ated that 60 per In order to stem these stole 109 bus passes from the dam ages, Cedar V illage hired agem ent, agreed with the cent of these dam ages are desk of the MSU Book Store 04* Monday. The theft w as re­ |Z NOtfN ' ported to the Campus P olice WHOKHW - I T/ as taking place between 12:15 iS fii and 12:30 p.m. G3. With a m arket price of $14 each, the passes could bring their possesser a total of $1526. However, it should be Instant grass 04UHD noted that anyone who is dis­ C e d a r V illa g e Is g e t t in g Its lo n g - a w a it e d la w n —-it -O covered with one of the stolen Is s p r o u tin g a s f a s t a s th e m en ca n put It d ow n . tickets, numbered from 2092 T h e m u c k — g ro w n r o l l s o f s o d a r e la y e d m u ch lik e to 2200, would com e under Fon. F u . « t h C « suspect as the thief. lin o le u m o r c a r p e t in g . k jm *o Cmil : S ta te N e w s P h o to by J im R ic h a r d s o n X*K *9*fl*S • // CAREERS ’68 M a c ’s P i p e S h o p PHI DELTA THETA C O R D IA L L Y IN V IT E S Y O U T O A T T E N D W ITH A C O M P L E T E LINE O F C orny a t au P IP E S AND SM OKING S U P P L I E S ------------------------------------------- Z O PEN R U SH IS NOW L O C A T E D AT 88 firms represented Tonight: 6-10:30 p,m. 203 N . W a s h in g to n R epresentatives from 88 com ­ Cook, Saginaw junior, and Tri- and departm ent chairm en and (N E X T DOOR T O P A R A M O U N T N E W S) panies w ill crowd into the Aud­ cia Areen, Birmingham senior, their w ives have been invited 626 COW LEY itorium Monday and Tuesday art chairman; Doug Cook, Spring to a special Careers "68 ban­ O P E N 9 - 1 1 DAILY as the P lacem en t Bureau spon­ Lake junior, staging chairman; quet Tuesday at Kellogg Center. 3 3 2 -3 5 6 8 CALL FOR A R ID E sors “ Career C om pass,” Careers and Lynda O’Donnell, Grand A film showing how a stu­ C L O S E D SU N D A Y S AND H O LID A YS '68. Rapids senior, secretary. dent gets a job through the MSU The com panies are not com ­ Many exhibits w ill be the P lacem en t Bureau w ill pre­ ing with the intention of re­ sam e as those, that appear in m iere at the banquet. -C W h y Pay M ore! Why Pay M ore! Why Pay M o r e ! W hy Pay M or e ! cruiting em ployes, according to various national shows through­ Also attending the banquet Tom Early, asst, director of the out the year. Exhibit size rang­ w ill be over 300 company repre­ P lacem en t Bureau. es from a card table to Whirl­ sentatives who hire students MAGIC HOSTESS BONDED ORLON “ They are here for the spe­ pool's 30 x 20 foot Kitchen of through the P lacem en t Bureau. cific purpose of answering ques­ the Future, appearing for the Careers '68 hours are 6:30 to tions the students m ight have first tim e this year. 10 p.m. Monday, and 10 to 11:30 CAN OPENER about their respective indus­ Deans of all colleges, m em ­ a.m ., 1:15 to 4:30 p.m ., and trie s,” he said. bers of the Board of Trustees 7 :3 0 to 10 p.m. Tuesday. DRESSES Visiting representatives from different industries give stu­ » dents a better idea of what op­ portunities are available in their m ajor fields. BSA emphasizes Careers '68 is the joing effort of the P lacem en t Bureau and a years y ea rs o f u se at student com m ittee, headed by Jim Hulme, G rosse Pointe sen­ black courses price a n y o n e can ior, general chairman. Members of The Black Stu­ course, and adds m ust be com ­ affo rd . Buy “M agic This year’s student com m it­ dents’ A lliance (BSA) have pleted today. H ostess“ the m agic tee chairm en are: Mike Trame, voiced concern that students According to a BSA spokes­ < 3 .0 0 Dearborn junior, publicity chair­ have not been adequately in; m an, “ one course w as not m en­ n a m e in can op en - man; Bob May, Sioux Falls, form ed about the addition of sev ­ tioned in the schedule book, S.D. junior, them e chairman; eral courses in black studies to another w as only listed as a Rosalind Puhek, Livonia sen­ the U niversity’s curriculum. sem inar in political behavior, ior, banquet chairman; Gary and a third listed under Ameri­ B o n d ed O r io n * A c r y lic can Studies. The three courses are Am eri­ D r e s s e s In m any s t y l e s , can Studies 301, “N egro Writ­ “ We feel that the content of ers in A m erica;” History 309, each course sufficiently justi­ “The Negro in America: Varie­ fies students being informed A -L in e S k im m e r s , N eh ru * HOMECOMING * ties of Slavery,” and Political about the additions.” the spokes­ s h if t, b e lte d s h if t, 2- I * is c o m in g t » Science 430, “ Sem inar in Politi­ cal Origins and B ehavior: Black P o litics.” man continued. “ We would hate for lack of information to be a m ajor cause of the courses not to n e s k im m e r s to c o a t V acancies still ex ist in each being fully utilized." ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ * U.S. OPEN s o lid c o l o r s ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ p a tt e r n s . BILLIARD I O u r r e g . lo w p r ic e $ 3 .8 7 . T h is w eek TOURNAMENT£ O F A M E R IC A o n ly $ 3 .0 0 L a d ie s H ou sed resses Oct. 6-11 I WITH $ 1 .0 0 COUPON 3 9 “ high with optic g la ss bo-,c in h on eycom b d esign : w a ln u t tapered center break; th ree-w a y Lansing Civic Center * sw itch; 6 ' U.L. ap p ro v ed cord; fabric over p arch ­ Fe aturing 100 of the World’s B e s t P l a y e r s - - J o e B a l s i s , yL m ent sh a d e w ith sh a d e cover. Colors of am ber, Lou B u t e r a , J i m m y C a r a s * , Irving C ra n e, Kazuo yL green Fujima, Luther L a s s i t e r , L a r r y L eak e, C i s e r o Mur- phy, D a l la s West, San Lynn M e r r i c k , Dorothy Wise*, ^ ■ ■ ■ a B B B o n a w K ia H a i ■ ■ M l J a m e s Cattrano*, Bud H a r r i s , L a r r y Johnson, Danny ^ *i 00A > « SA V E $ 1 .0 0 l $V 00 ■ McGoorty. ^ with this coupon toward the purchase of v J 3 D I V I S I O N S — $ 2 5 , 0 0 0 IN C A S H J Reg $5 97 TABLE LAMP A 9 7 -!. coupon £ 9 M E N 'S W O M E N 'S M E N 'S * S T R A IG H T S T R A IG H T * Any or all coupons redeemable with $5.00 purchase or more I 3 -C U S H IO N «eluding b?e> wme, agareue item*, or coupon items | | POOL POOL * Limit one per custome» Expires Sat , Oct. 5, 1968 | th r if ty a c re s T ic k e t s A v a ila b le at C iv ic C e n te r T ic k e t O f fic e * * M e t ie r & T h r ift y A c r e s C o u p o n MSU S T U D E N T S WITH I.D .......................... . $ 1 .0 0 T IC K E T S TO A L L S E S S I O N S ..........................10.00 5 1 2 5 W . S a g in a w & 6 2 0 0 S . P e n n s y lv a n ia M ore! W hy Pay M ore! ^ D e fe n d in g C h a m p io n 2 S e s s i o n s D a lly — N oon and 7 p .m . } W hy Pay M ore! W hy Pay M o r e ! W hy P a y ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ W ednesday, O ctober 2, 1968 IT Michigan State N ew s, East L ansing, M ichigan "KfS U p a n d a w a y : U ’ S o a r i n g C l u b NEED MONEY and general aviation principles By KAREN BRIER State N ew s Staff Writer A flight test is also given Joseph E. Varner, professor They fly through the air wjlh of biochem istry and of the plant greatest o f e a s e -th e mism- •ti ‘*«v m c i .’ ‘^ w i y Cb*b ■, , , research laboratory, and cluo The club, m ,,,n) ovrns 'are iiwATt/taj . - * mx •-!■*.-> *"•*; tor for the club and he also glider plane seen flying above holds his power plane license Spartan Stadium during the MSU-Baylor gam e, recruited it s The MSU Soaring Club is now an independent organization, but first m em bers during fall term it hopes to affiliate with the registration, 1967, and is now one of the fastest growing clubs Soaring Society of America in on campus. the near future. The purpose of the Soaring I s it a b ir d . . . ? Club is to give students an op­ portunity to both ride and even­ Pollution control tu a lly f^arn to pilot ^he glider ■ T h e MSU S o a r in g C lub h e ld a n '.‘'cfetJAii m w .-n iy '"*i *■&,&'* plane a t 'a s iittle cost as pos­ c ¿zttnittee g o a l to th e d e lig h t and d is m a y o f m an y u p p er d eck f a n s . T he f a n s ’ a tte n tio n w a s s p lit sible. By UPI b e tw e e n th e v ic t o r io u s S p a r ta n s and th e s w o o p in g g lid e r . The club operated from a land­ Gov. Romney has announced ing strip located behind Y park­ that over 60 leading Michigan ing lot on the corner of Mt. citizens hve accepted m em ber­ 'LEARN>IN’ WITH A FUTURE Hope and Farm Lane. They a l­ ship on a com m ittee to puslf for so have am ost exclusive use of voter approval of a state bor­ a 5000 ft. grass landing strip at rowing program for water pol­ Free U ’ a creative force Maple Air Manor in Eaton Ra­ lution control and park expan­ pids. sion. The Soaring Club flies a 1965 The $335 million clean water The boundaries for your student and instructor interest glider purchased from another and $100 m illion quality recrea­ By DEBORAH FITCH O r G iv e “ course” are yours to decide to be continued from term to club. The glider, 9 ft. high, 26 tion bonding proposals will face State N ew s Staff Writer -h o w m any people would com ­ term and from year to year. ft. long, and with a wing span voters as proposals 3 and 4 on U s A If you’re looking tor a heard of the Free U niversity and what pose the “ cla ss” , how many Some such courses are poetry of 46 ft., is an airplane with­ the N ovem ber general election radical groilp to join, you’ve tim es a week you would m eet workshops your discussions cussion groups. and book dis­ out an engine constructed so as to soar on rising air currents. ballot. STOP C a ll. M embers of the com m ittee and what it does, and you would entail. Your m iddleman The F ree U has e ffic ie n t- The glider is towed into the represent organized labor, busi­ IN D E P E N D E N C E o f th e fin a n c ia l “ p in c h ” think that m aybe, just m ayb e.. is the F ree "U ” office on the and inexpensive-publicity and air by a tow plane attacked to ness and industry, government, third floor of the Student Serv­ staff methods. 200 ft. of m anila rope. When it professional and civic organ­ can b e y o u rs . . . . to p a y fo r s o c ia l life Forget it. ic es Bldg. Three or four staff reaches an altitude of about 1200 The F ree U niversity was izations. m em bers are in the F ree U ft., it released itself from the "We are fortunate to have u n iq u e c l o t h e s . . . o r fo r created as an extra-curric­ The F ree "U ” staff links office to answer cla ss and tow plane and soars on the air Interested students to secured the assistance of this ular learning experience; an sign-up requests. When a currents. The glider usually flies group of outstanding individuals sch ool open forum, with som e neces­ Interested Instructors and student calls professing at an altitute of 2000 ft* who are willing to devote som e sary organization, for student helps them set up their Interest In a course, he is M embers of the Soaring Club exp en ses who want m ore knowledge and classes. They bring in­ put in charge of recruiting pay an Initiation fee of $35 and of their valuable tim e to this cam paign," Romney said. faculty m em bers who want to structors to students who need others for the sam e course. dues of $5 quarterly. This fee “ These two proposals are of give it. It’s not radical; it’s them to teach the courses they The Free U gives the student enables the student to fly with such Importance to the future not reactionary. It’s a request and find students in­ body a ccess to Its proposed a licensed instructor. When the growtikBnd vitality of Michigan "learn-ln’’ with a history and terested In a future. offered by taking Instructors. courses courses through regular student com pletes 10 to 15 hours articles in the State News. of flying tim e, depending on as to deserve nothing less than our best effo rts.” ONLY 10 HOURS PER WEEK If you’re a student-or an Upon reading these articles. his ability, he Is perm itted solo » t A 1 i i i 1 i lnstructor--and have experi­ The F ree U niversity begins Interested students can call flights. In a b r ig h t, f r ie n d ly a tm o s p h e r e f i l l s y o u r s p a r e t im e w ith a f in a n c ia lly enced a persistent Itching Its second year of operations or w rite the F ree U office som ew here In the back of your this fall, planning to sponsor to sign up for cla sses or enter mind to discuss a certain about 15 to 20 cla sses per term a request for one. After 11 hours of solo flying, the student Is then eligible to HOMECOMING and s o c i a l l y r e w a r d in g e x p e r ie n c e . . . C A L L NOW at any m a n a g e r 's o f f ic e UNION B U IL D IN G - K ELLO GG C E N T E R - L A U N D R Y - M ARRIED som ething and you think that on diversified subjects. The office also takes charge take an exam ination for his pri­ HOUSING - THE FOOD ST O R E S o r R ESID EN C E H A LLS. Some of the cla sses are of reserving a room for a vate pilot license in a glider. Is c o m in g other people m ight feel the courses class when one has been set This consists of a written exam sam e way, the F ree U is for "regulars.” These alw ays arouse sufficient up on weather rules, theory of flight you. H ., P a y M o r e ! W h y P a yM o r e ! W hy Pay M ore!W hy Pay M ore! W hy Pay M ore! W hy Pay M o r e ! W h y GALLON O L D -F A S H IO N E D F o o d C lu b , L o w -F a t CARTON 2% M IL K T o p F rost F ro zen S h o e s tr in g t h r i f t y a c re s t o C e le b r a t e 34 Y e a rs o f S a v in g s T H IH F R IE S w um m m ■ ¡5‘ ) Í 9C 1 I 2 6 '? SAVE 26c Ls I W with this coupon with thla coupon with this coupon toward tha purchaio of K ! ^ 0 # tow ard tho purchato of H 69 I-' ■ tow ard tho purchase ot Whlto or Colors of Charmin 0 Broait O ' Chicken ” ■ th rifty a c re s S htdd'i Smooth or Crunchy Peanut Butter pall T with coupon I Toilet Tissue I 4 s 29' with coupon S CHUNK TUNA 9U-OI. 35' c w„h coupon > i •T H R IF T Y *>C R E S !r' O P E N FROM 9 A .M . TO | Any ot all couponi redeemable with $5.00 purchaio ot mote 1 Any a t all oeuponi rodoomablo with $3.00 purchaio ot moro | Any or all coupon! redeemable with $S,00 purchato ot moro excluding btor. wlna, cigarette items or coupon itomi. | 10 P .M . D A ILY , E X C E P T S U N D A Y , FOR YOUR excluding boor wlno, cigarette itomi ot coupon Itomi excluding boor, wine, cigorette items ot coupon Items, limit one per customer Ixplroe Sat., Oct. S, 1968 I lim it one per cuitomor Ix p lret Sat., Oct. S, 196S | limit ano par cuetomer Ixplroe Sat., Oct. S, S H O P P IN G C O N V E N IE N C E . SU N D A Y HOURS © 9 A .M . TO 7 P .M . M etjer tCr 7 h n f t y A c r e s C o u p o ti M e ije r & Thrifty A cres Coupon A lc t ie r & Thrifty A cres Coupon 5125 W e s t S a g in a w & 6 2 0 0 South P e n n s y lv a n ia W h y Pay M ore! W hy Pay M o r e ! W hy Pay M ore! W hy Pay M ore! Why Pay M o r e ! Wfiy P ay tfareki W hy Pay M orf. 12 Michigan State N ew s, East Lansing, M ichigan W ednesday, O ctober 2 , 1968 C o e d s d i v e f o r G r e e n S p la s h versity, the MSU coed team bership in Green Splash on the lina ballet legs and one optional other swim team s from colleges By DELORES MAJOR and trio placed second while the basis of their aquatic skill and stunt. and universities throughout Stale N ew s Staff Writer Spartfn solo and duet placed ME» . .kVi rM>I* V* 'K'i f, , ^ a e * To q"?Kf” v c i ^ t f a t e s Active m em bers will be pres- ti^ sU te jn n stunt competition. - ^ s t r l t r n required stunts » riaitaU . practice « “»*isr b y G r a n d m o th e r ’ s d a ily fro m 4 :3 0 - 7 :3 0 fo r d in n e r a n d lo w p r ic e s b e P a r t o f a F ifte e n o n y o u r f a v o r it e d r in k s Y e a r O ld T r a d itio n 1504 E. GRAND RIVER 3 3 2 -8 6 7 6 3411 E . M i c h i g a n A v e . 3 3 2 -6 5 6 5 W ednesday, October. 2, 19Ö8 - 1 3 Michigan State N ew s, East L ansing, M ichigan M c A U L lF F E S e r ie s o f s u r p r is e s - - T ig e r s “ Their catcher Tim McCarver is far from being . One of Tigers major concerns is the pitohyig R" 'H *• ■■■ ' i K W s t u e te fis iv e V .c .-ln the k J g u e Johnny' E d -. “ *, ,jnhd»rv*l a ca , Bojh 'w m a j l w i a A . . r ig ffh a n ie r com piled a 112 n*.■’lo w 's t in toe- waMSrxneir V ., Visiting Lansing this past week were four m em bers C arver-defensively,” Tracew ski said. m ajors since 1914. of the 1968 American League cham pions, the Detroit “ But then again you never know what type of “ I definitely feel this is the key to the entire series Tigers. series you m ight have. There’s been quite a few because if w e can get to Gibson, the Cards are d ead,” Tiger stars Dick M cAuliffe, G ates Brown, Jim turnabouts in these World Series. Supposedly we re M cAuliffe said. P rice and Dick Tracewski held a sm all press con­ the power team and the Cards have the speed. St. “ Actually, it’s all up to our left-handed power. If ference at WJIM radio station and they expressed Louis could end up hitting 20 hom ers in the Series, our lefties like Norm Cash, Jim Northrop, G ates their opinions concerning the upcoming World Series. and w e could steal 20 bases. You can never te ll,” Brown, and m yself can’t hit Gibson, then you really As would be expected, all four w ere com pletely can ’t expect much from our right-handed power. M cAuliffe said. optim istic about their chances with the World Cham­ “ St. Louis has a much bigger ball park than w e do, "It’s our responsibility to hit Gibson,” McAuliffe pion St. Louis Cardinals in the annual autumn classic. but I really don’t think that it w ill effect us. Our added. The Series starts at 2 p.m. today. Another thorn in the side of the Bengals could be power guys can knock the ball out of any p ark - Both team s w ill have to be concerned with regain­ the-blinding speed of the Cardinals,, represented in even Y ellow stone,” P rice said. ing their m om entum , as the Cardinals lost five gam es the form of Lou Brock, Curt Flood, and Julian Javier. One of the Tigers m ost im portant players this year, in a row in the final week of the season, and the Ben- Tiger opponents this year did a lot of running against and the fan’s favorite, is G ates Brown. Brown had gals lost three straight. the pennant winners; and it can be a safe bet to 18 pinch hits this season, setting a Detroit record “ Regaining the m omentum we had should be no and winning innumerable ball gam es. Asked about assum e the Cards w ill do m ore of the sam e. problem ,” Dick McAuliffe said. “ Our pitching staff has an exceptional group of his pinch hitting su ccess he said: “ I just don’t swing Dick Tracewski, a utility infilder and veteran of two and m iss. I only struck out one tim e pinch hitting this hard throwers, such as Denny McLain, Earl Wilson previous World Series, agreed with McAuliffe. season. That’s why I think I’m the key to the whole and Mickey Lolich. They have big, hard windups. “ Once the players get out on that field, knowing S eries,” the Gator said with a grin. This allow s baserunners to get a couple of extra what’s at stake, they’ll start playing. Those red, white “ If I don’t play, that m eans w e ’re going to win, steps on the catcher,” Tiger catcher Jim P rice said. and blue banners draped around the field just do ’cause they’re not going to need m e if they’re win­ “ Talking about running, I think, w e’ll do som e of things to a player Tracewski said. our ow n,” Tracewski added. ning,” Brown added. For D a p p e r Denny, Gibson undaunted GREEN SPLASH the ring’s the thing by Series pressure TRYOUTS LAND M E E T I N G .................. “ What I did before m eans “ Sure, w e’ve got m ore World ST. LOUIS (U P I) - Denny Mc­ ST. LOUIS (U PI) - The St. nothing now,” he said in an ob^ Series exp erience,” he said, “ but O c t. 2 Lain, with plenty of both already Louis Cardinals’ Bob Gibson has vious reference to his 31-6 that doesn’t m ake any difference. 7 p .m . doesn’t care a nickle’s worth been through it before, and he 1 2 6 W .I .M . record this year which catapult­ In 1964, the Yankees had been for any of that gold or glory declared Tuesday there’s no ed the Tigers to their first Amer­ in all kinds of Series, and we all those tired phrase-makers m ore pressure in baseball’s ican League pennant in 23 hadn’t been in any, and we annually trot out at World Ser­ World Series than any other, FU N W O R K IN G IN E U R O P E years. w on.” ies time. gam e. Still, Gibson conceded that “ I think w e have the bet­ The only thing D etroit’s cele­ “ It’s just like I’m starting a ter ball club, and w e’re going brated 31-game winner cares brand new season." he went on. h e’d be trying a little harder Wednesday when he opens the to win. But I don’t know how anything about right now is “ The Cardinals aren't interested long it’s going to take us. The that World Series ring. The spe­ in what I've done up to now. I’ve series against the D etroit Ti­ gers because “ there's m ore spir­ la st gam e is the pivotal one. cial one. The one with all those got to go out there and do the I’l like to win it in four.” sparkling little diamond chips. whole thing all over again. it, a little m ore adrenalin” in the challenge, and “ if you can’t The one they give the winners. g et up for the series, you can’t S p o rt S h o r ts The 24-year-old Detroit right­ McLain, who startled a lot of people a few w eeks ago when he Hurlers meet get up for anything.” F irst MSU gym nast to make hander, who this year becam e Gibson, bell weather of the the U.S. Olympic team is Dave revealed he w as pitching with a W ith a c o m b in e d r e c o r d o f 53 w in s and 15 l o s s e s Cardinal pitching staff all sea­ the first man ever to win 30 Thor, of R eseda, Calif., who GUARANTEED JOBS ABROAD! Get paid, travel, m eet people. torn shoulder m uscle, claim s d u r in g th e 1968 r e g u la r s e a s o n , T ig e r a c e D enny son, w ill fill the sam e role in gam es since Dizzy Dean in wound up his Spartan career Summer and year ’round jobs for young people 17 to 40. For the injury continues bothering M cL a in and C a r d in a l h u r le r Bob G ib so n d i s c u s s this short series, and he’s con­ 1934, knows he has no im m e­ in 1968 by winning the Big Ten illustrated magazine with complete details and applications him. t h e ir r e s p e c t iv e s t y l e s , UPI T e le p h o to fident that the Cardinals w ill send $1.00 to The International Student Information Service (ISIS), diate m oney worries. all-around title for the third com e through. straight year. 133, rue Hotel des Monnaies, Brussels 6, Belgium.______________ “ W e’ve got a better defense, a better offense, m ore speed, S u p e r c o o l’ vs. S u p e r n a l c e ’ and I think our pitching m ight be b etter,” he said. But it could all go for naught against the G o in g G r e e k is Tigers, he interposed, because “ You have to be lucky, you ST. LOUIS (U PI) - Supercool Bob Gibson, downplaying his heralded opening gam e World so he can insert Al Kaline in right and give Kaline his first shot at a series in 16 years of have to be up for the gam e, your defense has to play good G o in g P h i K a p p a T a u baseball. ball, or you’re going to lo se.” Series pitching duel Wednesday with “Superflake” Denny Mc­ Lain, pointed towards the pitch­ ing mound at Busch M em orial 1 SORORITY RUSH Stadium during Tuesday’s work­ 1 out and said, “ My act goes on right out there.” The Gibson-McLain clash “ goes on" at exactly 1 p.m. CDT I n t e r e s t S ig n - u p A ll today when the St. Louis Cardi­ > nals and Detroit Tigers m eet in T h is W ee k S e p t. 3 0 -O c t. 4 the opening gam e of the series t,y‘ before an expected sellout 6 - 1 0 p .m . crowd of 54,575 at the fancy, spa­ Î? cious ball park on the banks of NO FEE the M ississippi River. k Gibson and the defending S e p te m b e r 30 133 A k e r s World Champion Cards are 8-5 C la s s r o o m 2, W ils o n O c to b e r 1 favorites to win the opener. O c to b e r 2 U n io n , P a r lo r C Cards' Manager Red Schoen- dienst is starting the identical O c to b e r 3 -4 3 0 9 S tu d en t S e r v i c e s , 1 -5 p. ir^ * *** lineup he used in the opening T% V»‘ ' /•*; gam e of last year's series against Boston as the Cards aim ■BO •ir" , O i* tor their third World Champion­ ship in the last five years. Tiger Manager Mayo Smith, who usually plays things by the “book," is taking the gam ble Delta Upsilon of the series. He's moving Mick­ ey Stanley from centerfield to shortstop and switching Jim W in n e r o f G r e e k W eek Northrop from right to center fo r th e L a s t T w o Y e a r s I P R O B A B L E L IN E U P W in n e r o f G r e e k W in te r W e e k e n d DETROIT ST. LOUIS C a r d in a l b a s e t h ie f L o u B r o c k McAattffc IB Brock LF StaaleySS Flood CF Rallar CF M arti RF SEE US RINGING THE V IC TO R Y B E L L Calk IB Cepeda IB Hortaa LF McCarver C AT A L L HOME F O O T B A L L G A M E S Mat, cage, ice meetings set N artknp RF FrcakaaC Skaaaaa IB Javier ZB Wert SB MaxvtUSS 1504 E , G R A N D RIVER 3 3 2 -8 6 7 6 M eetings have been sched­ Freshm an hockey candi­ C iblea P M cLalaP uled for today for all candi­ dates m eet at 7 p.m. in room d ates for the MSU wrestling 209 Jenison Fieldhouse. team , freshm an basketball team and freshm an hockey team . ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ All w restling candidates re­ port at 5 p.m. in room 208 Men’s I.M. Bldg. $ HOMECOMING $ Open Rush Tonight Freshm an basketball candi­ is c o m in g d ates m eet at 4:30 p.m . in room 209 Jenison Fieldhouse. ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ A S M S U O penings 6 -1 0 p.m. 125 N. Hagadom AS MSU P e t it io n s F o r S tu d e n t T r a ffic A p p e a ls C o u r t w ill b e a v a ila b le In th e lob by o f th e th ir d f lo o r , S tu d en t S e r v i c e s B u ild in g , O c t, 2 - 1 5 . 451 EVERGREEN P e t it io n s m u st be tu r n e d in b e tw e e n 9 a . m . - CALL 3 3 2 -0 8 4 6 o r 3 3 2 -0 8 4 7 FOR A R ID E noon p r 1 p .m .- 5 p .m ., 3 3 4 S tu d en t S e r v i c e s Call ED 2-3577for rìdes B u ild in g . The No. 1 National Fraternity W ednesday, O ctob er 2, 1968 14 Michigan State N ew s, E ast L ansing, M ichigan E n e m y f ir e d o w n s a ir c r a f t SAIGON (A P ) T h e toll of . Am erican helicopters have tjeen they encountered in World. War ter die are rem oved from battle­ sons in and out of Viet Cong Jfett in cohi ^ %*',K t The l^prean confticr , fields bvwfhe Nocth V ietnam ­ contested a rea s.” SWf . in the Vfeutam war mounted ’ hlgfiter-ourm*^ puui» Jravea In another ,fiiLr**ut' ti*? a ir e s e irno m t w ig w i u t J me Bo­ m oderate-to-heavy anti-aircraft war, U.S. B52 bombers flew 10 d ies can be counted! olent workers uprising” against Tuesday when the U.S. Com­ fire to fly 108 m issions over strikes late Monday and Tues­ the South V ietnam ese govern­ m and announced the loss of a fighter-bom ber and two heli­ North Vietnam Monday. day on targets from the coastal Loss of governm ent troops in m ent’s “cruel and inhuman m o­ copters. U.S. com m anders hope that areas east of Saigon to Quang the eight-year, period is said to bilization order which seeks to Spokesmen reported only light the battleship New Jersey, Nam Province in the northern­ be about 95,000, w hile the Uni­ force you to fight and die for the ground fighting. which entered the war Monday m ost 1st Corps area. ted States lost 28,211 m en up to A merican a g gressors.” by bombarding heavily fortified South V ietnam ese spokesmen Sept. 21. In another broadcast Radio A N avy AS Intruder from the Hanoi claim ed North V iet­ carrier Constellation downed by anti-aircraft fire Monday w as North V ietnam ese gun em place­ m ents, w ill help reduce aircraft announced that 401,589 enem y have been killed in the Vietnam nam ese gunners shot down a U.S. Headquarters also re­ U.S. Air Force F105 Thunder- J u s t c h e c k in g the 901st U.S. warplane lost losses. The New Jersey’s guns w ar in eight years of American ported that Am erican, South chief as w ell as the Navy In­ T h e G r o u n d s D e p a r tm e n t c o n d u c ts a r o u tin e c h e c k o f w a te r p r e s s u r e In fr o n t o f over North Vietnam. Its two can reach targets 23 m iles away involvem ent. V ietnam ese, South Korean, New truder confirmed lost by the th e o ld A d m in is t r a t io n B ld g . on C ir c le D r iv e . N ext th e y w ill c le a n ou t th e f i r e crew m en w ere listed as m iss­ and can penetrate fortifications The official report of the toll Zealand, Thai and Australian since Jan. 1, 1961, is questioned U.S. Command. h y d r a n t. S ta te N e w s p h oto by L a n c e L a g o n l ing.’* that m ight be invulnerable to com m anders ‘ have signed the Two helicopters w ere shot aerial bombing. by som e m ilitary m en who feel top secret m ilitary operations down in South Viernam, one in Since air attacks on the North the figure is exaggerated by plan for 1969. It outlines war the northern provinces and the w ere started 3 1/2 years ago, aerial estim ates when no actual priorities, strategy and com m it­ other in the Mekong D elta south anti-aircraft defenses have built count of enem y dead is possible. m ent of troops. of Saigon. Both, choppers w ere destroyed, tw o crewm en were up steadily. Veteran fliers say the flak is m ore intense than Allied com m anders counter this by arguing dead and wounded m en who lat- that m any In a political developm ent, S o v ie t flig h t s u c c e s s fu l wounded. By official count, 875 the Saigon governm ent started issuing new identity cards to ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ everyone in South Vietnam 15 or WASHINGTON (AP) - P resi­ Aeronautics and Space Council, this w as a test for a manned entry test w as about the sa m e,” $ HOMECOMING $ older, an operation that will take three years. Purpose of the dent Johnson's space adviser said Tuesday, heat generated by the steep re-entry angle of the said the Sept. 21 m ission w as successful since it did reenter the earth's atm osphere intact. fligh t,” he said. Expressing doubt whether the Welsh said. Welsh added he can not find any evidence of serious deficien­ 7 Is c o m in g 7 new cards is to “ restrict, con­ m oon-circling experim ent was trol and where necessary pre­ Soviet Zond 5 m ooncraft would “ There is not much doubt that cies in Soviet space capability intended to sim ulate a manned vent the free m ovem ent of per­ have m ade any occupant un­ in the ballistic re-entry the in the Zond m ission. On the con­ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ flight, he added: “ It would have trary, he said, they showed a com fortable. spacecraft would have been been much m ore likely to com e But Edward C. Welsh, execu­ rather uncom fortable for a liv­ high degree of capability in down closer to the Soviet Union tive secretary of the National ing body but we don’t know that sending the craft out and around and at a lesser angle if it had the moon and bringing it back p r e se n ts been planned to sim ulate a into the required corridor for manned fligh t.” re-entry and recovery. CAREER CHALLENGES . . . are available with But he said it is debateable M ICHIGAN C O N SO L ID A T E D GAS C O M P A N Y whether the Soviets planned for Q o ld F a s h io n O r ig in a ls rieri . . . an a f f ilia t e o f th e A M E R IC A N N A T U R A L GAS S Y S T E M . the spacecraft to splash down so far from Moscow in the Indian 0 ’ Boyle the Ringleaders of a A s Advertised Ocean. It took 10 hours to re­ C o n tin u e d f r o m p a g e 3 Jewelry Revolution In Seventeen Students co m p le tin g d e g r e e r e q u i r e ­ trieve it. . O’Boyle said the priests of m en ts in ENGINEERING, CHEMIS­ this diocese w ill continue to Welsh said the flight w as a receive their salaries. He said NL\V . . . Romantic Wedding Ring Sets with the cherished TRY, ACCOUNTING, BUSINESS AD­ good test of the spacecraft's abil­ each of the priests can be antique look for the frankly sentimental . . . like love . . . never out of style. MINISTRATION, MATHEMATICS ity to withstand re-entry heat restored to full m inistry but without serious dam age and he w ill have to agree to ad­ and HOME ECONOMICS are i n v i t ­ com pared it as “alm ost as im ­ here to “ the teaching of the ed to ex p lo r e e m p lo y m e n t and c a ­ p ressive” as the U.S. Apollo Church.” W elcom e Back Students! r e e r opport unities with our Company shot last Nov. 9. The cardinal said he had on: “ respected the rights of the That unmanned spacecraft priests while trying to safe­ Try O ur Texas Basket OCTOBER 10, 1968 shot to a distance of 12,000 m iles guard the right of the faith­ before it turned around and ful to be served by priests F o r m o r e I n fo r m a tio n , v i s i t y o u r P la c e m e n t O ffic e plunged back into the atm os­ in accord with the Church’s o r w r it e : phere at m ore than 25,000 m iles authentic teaching.” D o u b le B u r g e r G r e a t e r L a n s in g ’s ACRO SS an hour. C o lle g e R e c r u itin g *1.15 l a r g e s t s e le c t i o n FROM He said he has no right to F ren ch F r ie s ’H om e E c" The Apollo craft arrived back subm it the m atter to arbitra­ o f w id e and M ic h ig a n C o n s o lid a t e d G a s C o m p a n y C o l e S la w B ld g . on earth in good condition and tion, as the priests asked. u n u su a l W ed d in g JEWELRY » • O n e W o o d w a rd A v en u e right on target, he said. B u t he said “ if any one of ART CENTER D e t r o it, M ich ig a n 4 8 2 2 6 “ The Soviets m ay have been these priests thinks his rights 2 7 5 5 E . G r a n d R iv e r R in g s 319 E . G ra n d R iv e r A v e. Phone trying som ething sim ilar but have not been fully respected, 3 3 2 -4 6 7 3 An E q u a l O p p o r tu n ity E m p lo y e r m ore spectacular with the flight he m ay appeal to the Holy N e a r Y a n k e e S ta d iu m P la z a E a s t L a n s in g , M ich . around the moon, but the re­ F ath er.” GROOVY GIRL WILL NOT • MAKE A GIRL OVER AGAIN - - I T TEACHES HER HOW TO USE HER HIGHLIGHTS TO THE BEST ADVANTAGE • CHARGE ANYTHING ABOVE THE PROGRAM FEE NOR REQUIRE ANYTHING ELSE BE PURCHASED MAKE YOU PAY THE E N ­ TIRE $45 COST UNTIL CLASSES BEGIN J U S T $ 1 5 w ill h o ld y o u r r e g i s t r a t i o n u n til O c t . 17 E n r o ll n o w a t SPO RTH AUS ( 2 3 2 0 E„ M ic h ig a n A v e .) W EDNESDAY th r u F R ID A Y % S till A v a ila b le : SAVE TH URSDAY N IG H T S -- JUST C L IP THIS C O U PO N F IV E C O N S E C U T IV E AND BR IN G IT TH URSDAY N IG H T S WITH Y O ’J TO SPO RTH AUS B e g in n in g O c t. 17 M ic h ig a n B a n k a r d W e lc o m e 351-7060 W ednesday, O ctober 2, 1968 | 5 .f Michigan State N ew s, East L ansing, M ichigan NARROWS GOP M AJORITY JMC field study R e p . D a v is d ie s ; travelers.return Before leaving for their for­ By SHARON TEMPLETON Stale N ew s Staff Writer eign study, students took a two-credit course spring term Forty-seven Justin Morrill to study sim ilarities and dif­ R e p u b lic a n C ollege students have re­ ferences of cultures and to of unusual leadership capa­ The death of State Rep. 6 primary. The D em ocratic turned to cla sses at MSU after observe other kinds of social b ilities.” Charles J. D avis. R-Ononda- nominee for the 59th seat is com pleting their foreign study roles and value system s. Speaker of the House Robert program s this summ er. ga, early Tuesday narrowed the Rev. Terry Black of East “ This preparatory class E. Waldron, R-Grosse Pointe, Students, travelling through w as, designed to prepare the the GOP m ajority in the 110- Lansing said he w as “ deeply shocked” Europe, Central and South students for the cultural shock m em ber house to one vote. F lags at the Capitol were by D avis’s death. “ He was America and Asia, visited they had to face upon entering Under the election code the lowered to half-staff today as truly an exam ple of the great­ such countries as Switzerland, another culture,” Winter said. Republican C om m ittees of the legislature began an of­ ness that is in every m an.” F rance, Israel, Japan, Mexico Ingham and Jackson Counties ficial period of mourning for Upou. Returning to MSU from Davis, a m em ber of the and Russia. w'ill select ä candidate to re­ D avis house since 1962, w as chair­ their independent studies, stu­ Gov. Romney said the death The goals of JMC’s field dents have place D avis in the Novem ber man of the Budget and E x­ enrolled in a of Davis “ is a great personal and foreign study program are modern election. Stickers w ill be used penditures C om m ittee and a culture course to loss." Romney said he served personal growth and cross- synthesize what they to put the alternate candidate’s m em ber of the Appropriations have with Davis at the Constitu­ cultural perspectives. nam e on the ballot. Com m ittee. He was named learned. tional Convention and called “ Experim ent in Interna­ Davis defeated his Republi­ A ssistant House Majority “ The modern culture him “a man of exceptional tional Living,” a required course provides an anthropo­ can opponent, Victor H. Meier, Floor Leader last year. course of study at JMC, pro­ logical approach to French, by a 4-1 m ajority in the Aug. character and integrity, and vides JMC students the oppor­ Spanish and Russian-speaking tunity to travel independently countries,” he said. G reenhouse g r a ffiti to a foreign country and com e FAST ♦ FAST ♦ FAST ♦ FAST ♦ FAST ♦ FAST ♦ FAST ♦ FAST ♦ JMC is beginning its fourth in close contact with a dif­ year at MSU and w ill graduate T h e s e s e l f - m a d e a r t i s t s d id n ’t u s e t r e e s , o r w et c e m e n t o r .p a p er on w hich to ferent culture and value sys­ its first full senior class this d ra w t h e ir g r a f f it i. T h e y to o k a d v a n ta g e o f th e g r e e n h o u s e w in d o w s b eh in d th e tem . The independent research spring. H o r tic u ltu r e B ld g . S ta te N e w s p h o to by M ike B e a s le y Y O U R I N G program differs from other university foreign study pro­ gram s in that the students BEFORE BOMB HALT W E B R I N G did not attend formal classes, but lived as guests with chosen F R E E I fam ilies and worked in selected social service organ­ izations, im m ersed in the for­ H H H s e e k s o p e n D M Z eign culture. tween Hanoi and Washington If Humphrey wins the elec­ son’s--to try at least a tempo­ The program attem pts to do Hubert H. Humphrey donned LOO* right along: North Vietnam has tion. he would still have room rary bombing halt to see what away with the classroom dove feathers in his Vietnam been calling for a “ perm anent” within his form ula-or John- happens. G V ** abroad, said David K. Winter, speech without going beyond and “ unconditional” end to the director of JMC’s field study the peace formula already sta­ bombing; the United States has program. We want to give ked out by President Johnson. asked for som e sign from the students overseas opportun­ “ My first priority as presi­ ities they can’t get here at dent shall be to end the war home, he said. and obtain an honorable p ea ce,” “Our program placed the Humphrey told a nationwide Reds of reciprocal restraint. If Johnson w as ruffled by the oratory of the presidential can­ The CREAM didate Humphrey, there w as no students in a home situation television audience Monday where they were constantly night. And as his first step, he clue of it from the White House. To the contrary, press secretary interacting. They had to stay said, “ I would stop bombing in one place and participate of the North as an acceptable George Christian reaffirm ed in fam ily and com m unity ac­ risk” to spur peace negotia­ Johnson’s backing for the D em ­ ocratic nominee and noted som e tivities for two months. We tions. feel they learn m ore from this presidential statem ents about If these w ere his only words type of role than either that on the bombing. the m atter, Humphrey On March 31, for exam ple, of student or tourist,” he might--or might n o t-b e ven­ said. turing beyond the bounds of the when Johnson ordered a partial halt to the U.S. air attacks he f o r p i z z a s a k e , By investigating a foreign bombing policy as set forth by culture, students w ere able to his governm ental chief, see the im plications of their President. the offered to stop them altogether if serious peace talks began C A L L “T H E A C E ” promptly. own value system in com par­ ison with those present in another part of the world. to But the vice president went on say that “before taking ac­ In his latest address on the m atter, in N ew Orleans Sept. m ' -a . \ com ing 3 0 1 - 8 8 0 0 Although students did not tion” he would give key weight 10, Johnson reported that the S U P E R -F A S T T A B L E S E R V IC E I at^qfic}- -.forrnal cla sses, they to evidence “ of Communist will­ weire required to w rite a paper ingness to restore tfie dem ilitar­ only reply from the Reds so far “ is a demand that w e do Saturday, © it. 12 1 2 M IN U T E T A K E -0 U T « H fr 1 e D EL I V E R Y on their experiences and what ized zone between North and som ething else without their they had learned. Ten credits South V ietnam .” having responded to our first 8 PM O P E N 7 N IG H T S ♦ FRL & SAT. ’TIL 3 A .M . This has been a gut issue be­ bombing restrictions.” are earned in the study. at OLYMPIC STADIUM DETROIT R O U T THE Tickets: $6, $5, $4, À P IZ Z A On s a l e at O ly m p ia , G r in n e l l’s and & S U B S U N IN F O R M E D a ll m a jo r J. L . H udson C o. s t o r e s M ail O r d e r s : se n d c h e c k o r m o n e y o r d e r and s e l f - a d d r e s s e d e n v e lo p e to 2 1 1 M .A .C . A C R O S S F R O M K N A P P 'S O ly m p ia S ta d iu m , 5 9 2 0 G ra n d R iv e r , D e tr o it, 4 8 2 0 8 f AS T # PAST ♦ fast ♦ FAST ♦ FAST ♦ FAST ♦ FAST ♦ ^ iscountrecords; G 225 ANN ST. llf C .^ P \ / THE NEW YORK TIM E S ca n be d e liv e r e d to a ll s t u d e n ts , f a c u lty and s t a ff . THE MOST COMPLETE RECORD STORE IN M IC H IG A N F o r I n fo r m a tio n , c a ll 3 3 2 - 0 9 3 7 , c a m p u s r e p r e s e n t a t iv e . S un day $ 5 ,2 5 p e r t e r m . M onday th ru S a tu r d a y , $ 7 .5 0 p e r t e r m . W e e k ly $ 1 2 .7 5 p e r t e r m . M on­ d ay th ru F r id a y $ 6 .3 0 p e r t e r m . W h e n You W a n t Shoes, You G o To A Shoe Store W h e n You W a n t Books, You G o To A Book Store TH E N E W Y O R K T IM E S W h e n You W a n t Groceries, You G o To A G rocery Store NURSES W hen You W a n t Records, Y o u T o m e To DISCOUNT RECORDS These A re But Five G o o d Reasons W hy!! New in the area? IRON B U T T E R F L Y S T E P P E N W O L F 2nd 2.89 P R O C O L HARUM CHECK the program at St. Lawrence ft P R O F E S S IO N A L O r ie n ta tio n ft P R O F E S S IO N A L I n -S e r v ic e E d u c a tio n ft P R O F E S S IO N A L A p p ro a c h to to ta l P a tie n t C a r e id P R O F E S S I O N A L C o m p e n s a tio n p r o g r a m s ft P R O F E S S IO N A L B e n e fits P r o g r a m s 2.89 A R TH U R BROWN 2.89 DOORS - W A ITIN G FOR THE SUN 2.89 f t P R O F E S S IO N A L P r o g r a m s o f N a tio n a l S ig n if ic a n c e Extra Special - A ll Folk A n d Blues A lbu m s 1 /3 O ff List Price CHECK th e m o u t fo r y o u r s e lf . . . . . . IN C L U D IN G Such la b e ls a s C o lu m b ia , C a p ito l, V a n g u a r d , F le k t r a , R C A , E P IC and m any, ■......................... ■ i tit**«- m Cm S a le g o o d CONTACT US THRU OUR PERSO NNEL DEPARTM ENT AT m any m ore. th r u th is S a t. St. L a w r e n c e Hospital O c t. 5 1210 West Saginaw Lansing, Michigan is c o u n t r e c o r d s H R S 9 :3 0 - 8 :3 0 D A IL Y P H . 3 5 1 -8 4 6 0 225 ANN ST . 9 :3 0 - 6 :0 0 S A T 372-3610 E x t - 413 îfc: -V A * .. W ednesday, O ctober 2 , 1968 STATE NEW S STA TE NEW S C L A S S IF IE D C L A S S IF IE D THINK w a n t ads w h e n yo u w a n t to buy, sell, rent. They w ill w o rk fo r you! 3 5 5 -8 2 5 5 3 5 5 -8 2 5 5 S co o ter s & ^ Employment E m p lo y m e n t v F or R en t , 7 » . .*. .\ • f :,1: . . . *>$•. ’. s f t . . •» iji.T !* ’ •'*" * r *!\ TV I*.*’ *. r -’’ ti,' «4*>hkV: ■ ‘ f " ^ ’ul% rM ate fiiw a PROFESSIONAL NURSES: LANSING RENTALS for students. Low eco­ DATSUN 1997 'Turqueixe. Four- VOLKSWAGEN 1965 Top condition KAWASAKI BM. SSOcc 650 miles GLAMOUR. MONEY, and excitement nomical rate* by the term or month. perm it racial or religious door. Excellent condition Peppy Many accessories. See to appre­ can be yours with VIV1ANE WOOD­ GENERAL HOSPITAL now hlrii« Helmet *790.395997*. 5 8 /2 UNIVERSITY TV RENTALS, 495 discrim ination in its ad­ yet very economical. $1296 351- ciate! 372-9153. 5M/3 ARD COSMETICS. Free make-up RN’s - LPN's, full time - part time 08. C vertising c o l u m n s . The 3667 WO/4 HONDA 306 Scrambler - Excellent instructions. IV 5-981. C Days, 7 : 8 - 4 p.m.; Afternoons, State N ew s will not accept VOLKSWAGEN 8 K Deluxe Bus condition with helmet Call 355 IV RENTALS G.E. IT ’ Portable, FAIRLANE 893 Ranch Wagon. Ex­ WAITERS: naadad immediately. Full 3:20 • B p.m., Nighta, 11:39 - advertising which d iscrim ­ Clean, no rust. 8,099 miles *9». 9799. 5 8 /4 332-0331 or 494-0742 5 8 /2 and part-time. Evenings. Apply •a.m . U N per month including stand. • AUTOMOTIVE cellent condition and tireo. Radio, inates a g a i n s t religion, Quality Court Motel Capitol P a rt Compare our liberal fringe bene­ CUIl J R. Culver Co. 81-998 V-9, power. *9». 337-7533 3-8/2 B.S.A. 880cc Lightning A good • EMPLOYMENT race, color or national o r­ VOLKSWAGEN KARMAN GHIA 1997. after 4 p.m. 510/4 fits, day care naracry, paid tui­ 2K Albert Street, E ast Lansing C machina. *596 337-7983. 5 8 /4 tion for continuing education, free • FOR RENT . igin. FAIRLANE 893 Stationwagon. Pow­ 31596 Excellent condition. Must sen. 3554823. 510/4 life insurance pension program, DISHWASHER RENTAL. G.E. Port­ • FOR SALE er steering A brakes, radio. Air- EMW - ROD. Low mileage Mint POP PIANO naeded Weekends with plus many others. Call Personnel, able. *SN per month. Call J. R. • LOST A FOUND conditioning. Excellent condition. condition. Every possible acces­ top group. TOP PAY. 2851077. 510/4 CUlver Co. 81-9N2. C-10/4 Sacrificd. Call 355-9239 M/4 3758210 extension IK , Monday VOLKSWAGEN 1996 with radio. $1050. sory Call 351-9832 5 8 /4 through Friday, 8 a m . ti>4:30 p.m. • PERSONAL Call Ben Munger, 332-9651. 2-M/3 WAITRESS WANTED. Uniform* and 8-8 /9 Apartm ents • PEANUTS PERSONAL FIAT 899 Spider 990 convertible. SPORTSTER 900cc. Rebuilt engine, meal furnished. Apply In person,. A u to m o tiv e 9.000 miles. Must sell. 3559997 VOLVO 1986. Perfect condition. New S.S. Kresge Co., Frandor 5 8 /2 • REAL ESTATE very clean Some extra parts REGISTERED NURSE’S and LPN’s. STUDENT UNITS: Three and four 3-8/2 tires. Tuned-up. New Avarth ex­ (chain, hebnet). 375418. *78. • SERVICE CHEVELLE 1197, 227 V-9, 275 horse­ haust. Beautiful buy at *1396 351- SUBSTITUTE TEACHERS wanted. Openiiys available In a medical man units still available for Sep­ power, th ree speed. 19,000 miles. best offer. 5 8 /2 care facility. Opportunity for rapid • TRANSPORTATION 3557. 5M/4 Must have a minimum of sixty tember leasing. Lowebrooke, Uni­ Perfect condition. 8796 892-2100 FIAT 899 - 30,000 miles. Reason­ advancement with-ln a dynamic versity Terrace, and Evergreen. • WANTED 3-10/2 ably priced Call Hal, 351-0074 3-10/4 semester or ninety term hours. P iy , organization. Attractive starting Call STATE MANAGEMENT 337- WILLYS JEEPSTER convertible. 1949. E m p lo y m e n t *22.90 per day. Contact Mr. C har salaries and above average fringe 1300. C FORD FAIRLANE 1965, wagon, white Mint condition. Call 372-0939 after lea W. Pelham, Superintendent By­ D E A D L IN E CHEVROLET 1955 very good run­ benefits. Apply a t PROVINCIAL with red Interior. V-9 automatic, new 5 p.m. 5M/7 TYPISTS • evening work - 5 nights ron area scbooh, Byron, Michi­ HOUSE, 291. Northwind Drive, E ast ning condition. Good heater, new EYDEAL VILLA APARTMENTS. brakes, shocks and engine overhaul. 5 8 - 90 accurate WPM. Call gan. Telephone 2152*9-4929. 5 8 /2 Lansing. 332-4817, Mrs. Parker. tires. Must seU. 9125. Ml Leslie, TWO bedroom apartments for *240 1 P.M. one c la ss day be­ Lansing. After 7 pm . 3-9/2 Snow tires and rims. Yours for 9750 337-2321,5 5 p.m. 5 8 /4 8 -8 /9 as it stands. Lots of miles of use- A vaition DETROIT FREE PRESS motor route month. Swimming pool. GE appli­ fore publication. ances, garbage disposals, furnished CHEVROLET 1993 Super Sports. Ex­ abiUty. 372-0792. 9-10/3 BABYSITTING IN my home 8 a.m. drivers. Hours B a.m. to 2:30 a.m. C ancellations - 12 noon one FRANCIS AVIATION: So easy to seven days per week. 335U54. 5 8 /4 MALE STUDENT! Experienced. for four man or five man. Call cellent condition. 9900. Call 332- to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday c la s s day before publica­ learn in the PIPER CHEROKEE for pre-schooler. One to five years House painting. Call 332-3681. 1-8/2 81-4275 after 9 p.m. C 6522Toahi. 3-10/4 FORD 1H6. Four door sedan. New , Special *5 offer. 484-1324. C tion. tires, 90 per cent restored. Good old. Call 3553090. 2-8/2 WANTED • GIRL to cook and clean TEACHER WANTED: High school MALE GRADUATE student to share CHEVROLET IMP ALA 1990. V-9 running condition Good for frater­ in exchange for room and board. girls gym and speech therapists. apartment. Own bedroom. 6652064, automatic. Power steering, white nity use. Call IV 3-4179 between 2-3 Auto S erv ice & P arts Call after 5 p m . 3352272. 5 8 /3 355028. 1-8/2 PHONE FULL OR PART-TIME female drug Call or write Walter Nickel, St. car, blue interior, clean. Excellent p.m. 3-10/2 CAR WASH: 25c, Wash, wax, vacu­ clerk. Must have pleasant person­ WAITERS, WAITRESSES, bartenders, John’s Public Schools, St. John's, transportation. 3550932. 3-10/4 ality. Some evening and week-end Michigan. 49879. Phone 2252394. EAST LANSING: Girl over 21 to 3 5 5 -8 2 5 5 FORD GALAXIE 1963 1/2. Two door um. U-DO-rr 430 South Clippert doormen, and floormen. 335998 back of Ko-Ko Bar C5M/3 hours. Call 332-281 after 6 p.m. 5 8 /8 share apartment. Phone 81-3542. Fastback. Automatic. Full power. after B p.m. 8-8/14 CHEVROLET II 1993 conver­ 5 8 /4 5 8 /4 V-9. Best offer. 351-5094 3-10/3 RATES' tible. All power. Automatic. MASON BODY SHOP, 812 East Kal­ IMMEDIATE OPENINGS for Hair Radio. 351-9059 after 5 p.m. TWO MEN needed for light delivery amazoo Street . . . Since 1940. DRIVERS OVER 21. Mornings and Stylist. East Lansing beauty salon. GRADUATE OR FACULTY mem­ I d a y ..........................$ 1.50 FORD 1961 stick 6 cylinder. 2-door. work in East Lansing. Must have 5-10/3 Complete auto painting, and col­ weekends. Apply 122 Woodmere, 81-4592. 5 8 /2 ber. Efficiency, furnished. Two 151 P®r word per day Good condition. Repainted. IV 4-9594. car. 372-0067. 5 8 /3 blocks from cariipus. 332-9434. 5 8 /8 after 5 p.m. 510/4 lision service. American and for­ East Lansing. Side door. 5 8 /4 3 d a y s ..................... $ 4 .0 0 CHEVROLET 1997 Impala. Two door COMPUTER PROGRAM, experienc­ eign cars. IV50256 C ATTENTION: HRI students! Assis­ hardtop. Good, black vinyl top. 293 IRONING AND housework one and ed, interested In diversified ap­ LUXURY FOUR man apartment 13 1 /2 / per word per day engine Automatic transmission, good JAGUAR I960 XK1S0 roadster, 5 tant Manager, male, for 202 room two days weekly. 81-4355 after plications, .worh-jjyi^CTMhltinj&IUnt. avXUabkvr'nair: Oqp block from 5 d a y s ......................$ 6 .5 0 tires. 927-9992 5-10/2 speed. Ermine white, new top. motel. Experience with front desk Good condition, only 91,000. Call S c o o te r s & C y c le s 5 p.m. 5 8 /4 operation desired. 3 p.m. to 11 p.m. COBOL requiriS, other languages Berxey Hall. C&rpeted, disposal, 13£ Per word per day helpful. Salary open depending upon air-conditioning. Call Bob, 351- CHEVROLET 1K7 V-9 Cniisomatic. 495M54, ask for John. 5M/2 YAMAHA 80cc - Trail bike, helmet six days. Call for appointment. LEARN TO SKY DIVE with the qualifications. Equal Opportunity 7975. 5 8 /8 (based on 10 words per ad) Best offer. 496-7910 4-10/4 and bubble. Good condition. IV 5 MSU SPORT PARACHUTE CLUB. Mr. Nickels, University Inn. 81- JAGUAR IK7 Black Sedan 29,500 5900. 5 8 /4 Employer. Call 81-4741. 5 8 /8 T here will be a 50f service 9694 after 5 p.m. 510/4 Contact Bob Olson. 355-9019. NEED FOURTH man for Univer­ CORVAIR MONZA 1963 Four-door, original miles. Best offer. 355 5 8 /4 DRIVER WANTED for Nursery sity Towers Apartment. Graduate and bookkeeping charge if light blue, three speed, radio, heat­ 5474. 5 » /« BE A GROOVY Girl campus repre­ HONDA 1965 350 kit, metal flake School over 21. 11:8 - 12 30 daily. Students. 81-3096. 5 8 /4 th is ad is not paid within er. 9295 355-4049. 3-10/3 sentative. P art or full time. See LE MANS SPRINT 1999. Red. Clean. paint. 9400 or best offer. 332- RESTAURANT HELP - McDonald’s Own car. 332-4796 after 4 p.m. the Groovy Girls today a t Sport one week. 3M00 Call 332-5674after 5:30p.m. 8204 after 5:30p.m. 510/3 has openings for part-time employ­ 5 8 /4 APARTMENT BLOCK campus. Se­ CORVAIR 1M1. Good shape. 1965 Haus of Lansing, 2320 E ast Michi­ 5H/4 ment noon hours and evenings. Apply rious faculty or graduate man. engine. Four speed. New brakes. gan Avenue or call 81-7(80. 5 8 /4 66 BSA 6 5 0 — R ea l f in e in person, McDonald’s Drive-In, 234 BABYSITTER for pre-schooler. Two 990. ED2-9496. 5 8 /4 The State News will be 353-0903. 3-10/2 MERCURY 1962 Commuter. Nine pas­ shape, low mileage, extra W. Grand River and 1024 E. Grand LANDSCAPING: FULL or Part-time evenings a week. Prefer car. 129 responsible only for the River. 510/2 East Grand River ..Apartment 15. 5 8 /4 CAMPUS, NEAR: Young lady to share CORVAIR 1996 two-door, four-speed. senger wagon. Power, clean. 9200. chrome, must sell. Make an help. Male. Own transportation. ED2- f ir s t day’s incorrect in se r­ 811. 5 8 /3 very deluxe furnished one bedroom. Silver. Black bucket seats. 351- 337-9254. 5M/4 offer . . WAITERS AND waitresses wanted CONCESSION STAND: STARLITE Carpeted, air-conditioned, laundry. tion. 4765. 3-10/4 MGB 1994. Black with red in­ nights full or part-time. Experience DRIVE-IN THEATER needs eve­ 992.50. 4855922 or 3954395. 5 8 /8 PERSONAL SECRETARY to an exec­ terior, wire wheels. Good en­ not neceasary. Will train. Apply utive. Must have knowledge of short­ ning counter and cooking help. CORVETTE 1963 Blue Fastback in person between 8 p.m. - 8 p.m. Good part-time job for students. 1 - 4 MEN to share furnished A u to m o tiv e Chrome wheels. New tires. 355 gine. 1135 E. Michigan, apt. 24. hand, typing and general office pro­ 5M/2 at Lansing’s busiest night spot. Apply In person between 7 and 8 apartment or bouse. 950. Call 337- 9157. 3-10/4 cedures. Benefits include excellent 0989. 5 8 /2 METROBOWL, S. Logan and Jolly. s a la r y ^ a id Blue Cross, Blue Shield, p.m. 5 8 /4 AUSTIN HEALEY 1KB model 3000 5 8 /2 Four seater Good condition. 339- MUSTANG 1965. Air conditioning, ........................... paid Me insurance, paid vacation FEMALE GRADUATE to share CORVETTE 1969 convertible, sil­ »51 5-10/2 ver, power steering, power brakes. stick. 351-3995. 5M/9 CALL 355-9914 AFTER 5:15 NIGHT DISHWASHERS needed. Apply and holidays. Free parking and lib­ F o r R en t apartment. Own bedroom, close 351-9636 after 5 p.m. 5-10/2 in person a t BILL KNAPP’s Restau­ eral personnel policies. For a per­ campus. 81-0447. 510/4 MUSTANG 1967 hardtop V-8. Stan­ YAMAHA CATALINA 1966, 250cc, sonal interview call: Mrs. Kromer, SEWING MACHINE rentals available. AUSTIN HEALEY 1950. Excellent rant, Okemos. 510/2 dard shift. New tires. Perfect con­ low mileage, sharp, *400. 372- 497-9436. 5 8 /2 96.8 a month. Dennis Distributing condition. Rebuilt engine. Phone CORVETTE 1965 Customised Fuelly K14.115Valley Rd, 3-10/3 Company. 316 North Cedar. 482- TWO MAN apartment. Close to cam­ 332-5827 3-10/4 dition. By owner. 3952409 5M/8 SALES HELP wanted two to four hours pus. Stoddard Apartments. 9170. Coupe. Excellent. Will trade for 1966 BUS BOYS wanted: Meals phis pay. 877. C-8/4 nightly or name your own time. Make Call 332-2920. 5 8 /4 Cutlass. Dick 337-7991. 5-10/4 HARLEY SPRINT 250cc A real goer Call 81-0250. 7-10/4 OLDSMOBILE 1964 Dynamic 68. Pow­ *40.059190.00 weekly. No sales CAMARO 1*67, rally sport, 327 en­ er brakes and steering. Automatic. Knobbies, fifty tooth sprocket, fall experience needed. Must have car. PARKING: INEXPENSIVE. Close. priced. Call 6755666. 3-10/3 ONE OR TWO girls for spacious gine. Like new. Deluxe, many ex­ CORVETTE, 1999 Coupe, 427 close 372-0048. 510/3 Call Mr. Johnston, 3951309 for NURSES’ AID’S: Openings available Phone 355-4902 between 6 and 9 apartment with pool. Call 351- tras. 19,000 miles. 92,350 or best ratio, four-speed, posi traction, AM- information. 510/2 in a medical care facility. Oppor­ p.m. 5 8 /4 8885 after 9 p.m. 5 8 /4 offer. Student must sell. Phone al­ FM radio, many extras. Low mile­ HONDA 1966 Sport 50. Excellent OLDSMOBILE 1992 STARFIRE. Buck­ tunity for rapid advancement with­ ter 9 p.m. 339-9090. 5-10/2 age. 94,500.399-3191. 3-10/2 condition. Helmet and new tires. WILL RENT my woman's English ets, black, red interior. Sharp. 372- COOKS - FULL or part time. Polo in a dynamic organization. Attrac­ JEROME 815. Near Sparrow Hospi­ 9190.351-4886 510/3 bicycle. 98 term. Basket. ED2- 9549 510/4 Bar. Call 337-0067. 5 8 /2 tive starting salaries and above aver­ tal. 15 unit building, nicely furnished. CUTLASS 1999 convertible. Aut­ age fringe benefit*. Apply at PRO­ 8498 5 8 /4 Two bedrooms, all modern conve­ CARS: 1965 Olds 99, all power, best HONDA 160 1965 Scrambler. Com­ offer over 61300. Also 1961 Tem­ omatic. Full power. Bucket OLDSMOBILE LATE 1993 Holiday BABYSITTER PARTIAL mornings. VINCIAL HOUSE, » 8 Northwind niences. Get away from the campus pletely rebuilt. Best offer. 351- rush. Share the expense and live in pest, 9125. 1969 Chevrolet, *95 Both seats Custom sport wheels. four door. Automatic transmission, Two girls. Good location. 81- Drive, E ast Lansing, 332-0917, Mrs. PARKING SPACES for rent. Call 81- 0679. 510/3 luxury. 494-978. 510/2 in good condition. Call Let, 351- 11,000 actual miles. 499-4175. power steering and brakes. Good «8. 5 8 /2 Parker. 158/9 798. 510/2 4090 after 5 p.m. 2-10/2 5-10/3 tires and battery. 9275 or best of­ HONDA DREAM 305cc 1964. 12,000 DELIVERY BOYS: Male *2 - 93 per COUNTER HELP needed. BURGER fer. Call after 1 p.m. ED 51921. T .V . R E N T A L S GREEK FOOD miles. Excellent running condition. hour. Also girls to answer tele­ CHEF DRIVE-IN. 822 N. Homer, 510/2 Price includes two helmets. *250 phones and part-time inside help. across from Spartan Twin Theatre, And Other Food From Most For­ 372-6655 after 5 p.m. t 5 8 /3 Frandor Shopping Center. Apply in LOW R A TE eign Countries-including U.S. AL MIKULICH OLDSMOBILE 1990 convertible. Low mileage, automatic. 9150. Call 351- 5671 evenings. 2-M/2 BMW 1966 R69S enjoy the beauti­ ful Michigan Autumn on the Rolls- Varsity Drive-In. URGENT: BABYSITTER to live in. Room and board phis. 641-6509, 5 8 /7 person. LINE UP your fall job now. Car nec­ 5 8 /2 4 8 4 -9 2 6 3 SHAHEEN’S FAMILY FOOD FAIR Royce of cycles. $1395 or best of­ 1001 W. Saginaw 4854089 PLYMOUTH 1995 BARRACUDA for­ 641-6609,641-6970. 5 8 /2 essary. Call 81-7319. O U N IV E R S IT Y T .V . Michigan Bankard Welcome Double Sure Used Cars mula 5. Four speed, 273 cubic in­ ches. High performance 3/4 cams, solids, fuel instnanentation. Chrome fer 351-4642 MOBYLETTE (EUROPEAN Motor 510/2 wheels, radio, reverb. Must sell. 339-9614. 510/2 Bike). Excellent condiUon. $105 Best offer. 351-4825. 510/2 Need A Roommate?. . . UHH! . . . CHECK YO’ BAD SELF! PONTIAC 1955. Good condition. *90. BSA 1967 lightning, excellent con­ P o n t ia c , 1966, i - d o o r h a r d to p , w h ite , r a d io , 351-5573 evenings. 5M/4 diUon. $850. Well cared for. 351- a u to m a tic t r a n s m i s s io n , p o w e r s t e e r i n g and b r a k e s , w h ite w a lls , v in y l top , e x t r a c le a n . PONTIAC 1967 Wagon. 21,000 miles. Power brakes, steering, tailgate. 6438. HONDA 90 - Step through with hel­ 510/4 Or A Room W ith The met. One year old and recently P o n tia c , 1966, 2 - d o o r h a rd to p , s i l v e r , r a d io , 992-0912. PONTIAC CATALINA 5M/2 Convertible tuned. $190. 351-4293 HONDA SUPER 90, 1966. 510/4 Black, If you a r e s i n g l e , o r In a g ro u p and n e e d a PMMMOUNTS 1994. 9395 3559297 week-days, 55 p.m. O good condition. $18. 3551068. 1-10/2 p la c e to liv e , you s h o u ld b e on o u r lis t o f p r o s ­ a u to m a tic t r a n s r r v s s lo n , p o w e r s t e e r in g and p e c t iv e r o o m m a t e s . b r a k e s , w h ite w a lls , b la c k v in y l top, e x t r a c le a n . BSA 1964 350cc. Must sell. Good S o u l W ith B r a s s PONTIAC TEMPEST 1961 wagon. Very condition. Best offer 699-2586. clean, practically rebuilt. New tires, 5 8 /4 T h e d iv e r s if ic a t io n o f o u r b u s in e s s p r o v id e s paint good. 485-9023. 510/3 you w ith o n e - s t o p s e r v i c e to s a t i s f y YOUR l iv ­ HONDA NEW S90 Excellent condi- 3 5 5 -6 3 5 8 3 5 1 -5 2 4 9 P o n tia c , 1967, 2 - d o o r , re d , r a d io , a u to m a tic SUNBEAM ALPINE 1967 Must seU. in g r e q u ir e m e n t s . tion. 600 miles. Extras. $2%. 372- t r a n s m i s s io n , p o w e r b r a k e s , w h ite w a lls , a ir Call 351-9432 or 826 Michigan 5 8 /4 9376. Ave. 5W/2 c o n d itio n e d , sh d r p . N eed a r o o m m a te o r a r o o m ? L e t u s h e lp . TEMPEST LEMANS 1964 326, V-8, power steering, brakes. $995 355 5782. 1-10/2 HONDA 305 Dream. Must see Phone 81-0205 evenings. 510/2 GOOD GAWD! Second profession - evenings C h e v y , 1967, c o n v e r t ib le , b lu e , r a d io , h e a t e r , & weekends. Men and wom­ EAST LANSING MANAGEMENT CO. s t ic k , V - 8 , w h it e w a lls , low m ile a g e , e x t r a c le a n . TEMPEST 1963 Le Mans. Automatic, [□ s ia s t a n a h h s tic k e ts. New tires. 3557921 after en. $350 part time monthly □□S S0 H E HE® 5 p.m. TORONADO 1969. Deluxe - factory 5M/2 guarantee if you meet our requirem ents. Students and 351-7880 ACROSS sms □ ES EO S SOBS HassEHas P o n tia c , 1968, C a ta lin a , b u rgu n d y, r a d io , a u to ­ m a tic , V - 8 , p o w e r s t e e r in g and s e a t s , w h ite air, premium tires, 23,000 miles, excellent condition. Private owner. 372-1795 5M/4 teachers: $800 full time, tele­ phone: 484-5671 O ur N ew L o c a t io n : 3 1 7 M .A .C . 1. Billiard stick 27. Along with 4. Large bird 7. Pretension 29. Tax 31. Lizard genus caaana SSHBS ssa Hcaaaaa w a lls , a ir c o n d itio n e d , s h a r p . TRIUMPH GT-6 1967 fastback Six cylinder, wire wheels. Excellent 11. Hostile 14.Jargon 15. High card 32. Refuse wool 33. Irritate . 34. Eng. cathedral a a S E H O aaa u e e e e H E B E ® ' condition. 351-8113, after 6 p.m. 4-10/4 S o rry 16. Note of the city E s s a B Ea O EQ P o n tia c , 1966, C a ta lin a , g o ld , r a d io , a u to m a tic TRIUMPH SPITFIRE 1966. Hard and scale 35. Hindu garment 1EE1HODHE1 EH H t r a n s m i s s io n , V - 8 , p o w e r s t e e r in g and s e a t s , soft tops phis extras. 9900. 337- 17. Body joints 36. Function IBD EB SH I [u N w h ite w a lls , a u to m a tic t e m p e r a t u r e c o n t r o l. 9434. 510/4 18. Curve in timber 37. Creek 38. Western saa saas A S TRIUMPH SPITFIRE 1967 Dark blue convertible. 91500 or best offer. 355 Northwind Farms Apts, 19. Twilled cloth 20. Increase exhibition 39. Actors 3. Russ, stockade 8. Neuter M e r c u r y , 1963, B r e e z w a y , b e ig e , r a d io , a u to ­ 4315. 510/2 21. Slender finial 42. Make muddy 43. Remnant 4. Urge pronoun 22. Emanation m a t ic , V - 8 , p o w e r b r a k e s , c le a n , 2 - d o o r , $ 5 9 5 . VAUXHALL 1969. 43,000 miles 9125 Neat and economical. 3551298. 510/4 are designed for 23. You and I 24. With ice cream 44. Drive slantingly 5. Show Me DOWN 6. State: abbr. Accord 9. Codicil 10. Bee’s pollen brush VOLKSWAGEN 1994 - Sunroof white­ 26. Absolute 1. Nut T - B ir d , 1964, b la c k , r a d io , a u to m a tic , V - 8 , 2. Dissimilar 7. Enzyme 12. Belg. Evenrone. wall tires. Must sell. 1749. or best commune p o w e r s t e e r in g and s e a t s , w h ite w a lls , e x t r a offer. 332-4068. 510/4 1 2 4 5 6 7 0 9 IO 13. Slippery s h a r p , $ 1395. VOLKSWAGEN FASTBACK. 1966 % % 18. Spoon-shaped Radio. W.W., 24,000 miles $1300 II 12 13 19. Regret 6752940-3550909. 510/3 21. Guido's note w 15 16 22. Fruit drink F o r d , 1963, 4 - d o o r , g o ld , r a d io , a u to m a tic , V - 8 , VOLKSWAGEN CAMPER 1964. Bed, % w h ite w a lls , sh a r p , $ 4 9 5 . refrigerator, tent, new tires, clean. $1250.3557097. 510/3 Except: 17 20 % 21 18 % 22 è 24. Solely 25. Eggs 26. Wapiti % 27. Bullfighter on S in g le u n d e r g r a d e , 25 25 foot D o d g e , 1963, 4 -d o o r , b lu e , r a d io , a u to m a tic , POOL TABLES C h ild r e n u n d e r 12, % % % 28. Lazy c le a n , $ 4 9 5 . , -, 2b 27 2B 29. Wild animal U sed, 2 y ea rs. P erfect for and P e ts. % ?/, % 30. Maine college fraternity house recreation 29 To 31 32 town room s. Regulation tournament % % CALL 34 35- 32. Plebe 33 34. Goddess of s iz e . Heavy com m ercial sla te. à è AL MIKULICH These are not cheapies. Orig­ inally $1,500 each. As is,y o u r ch oice. A real steal at only East Lansing Management Co. 36 M % 40 V à 41 38 healing 35. Offspring 37. Unit of 3 1 7 M .A .C . reluctance 1415 M ich ig a n A ve. $550 each. F irst com e, first 42 43 44 38. Disencumber se rv e . Stop in at the Metro % % 40. Palm lily E a s t L a n sin g Bowl, 1541 S . Logan, 3 5 1 -7 8 8 0 41. One W ednesday, O ctober 2, 1968 $7 Michigan State N ew s, E ast L ansing, M ichigan F o r R ent F o r R ent PENNSYLVANIA AVE. South off Mich­ F o r R en t EAST LANSING: Four man, two bed­ F o r S a le BRING YOUR prescription to OPTI­ F o r S a le TAPE RECORDER Roberts 770X. W allace enthusiasts ONE GIRL wanted Winter Term CAL DISCOUNT, 416 Tussing Build­ 33«. or best offer. Call Join (continued from page one) of uniform m em ber of the Highland Park igan Ave. Furnished one bedroom, room, furnished house. Two blocks Chalet. »1-3223. 5. 10/2 ing. Phone IV 2-4667. C-10/5 4190981 910/2 ground floor, private entrance. Util­ from Campus. 9180 month. SSI- “ H e’s the only American running - the police dept, who presented money to Wal­ ities paid. Parking. 9125. per month 52« after 5 p.m. 5-10/7 only real candidate for law and order,-’ lace which he said represented a “dona­ GIRL NEEDED for two man apart­ plus deposit. Phone 627-5454 3-10/3 DIAL-A-MATIC SEWING MACHINES. TWO PIECE couch, hide-a-way bed, ment. Available October Mb. 351- said a Republican state delegate from a tion from every man on the force.” NEED ONE man. Three bedroom, Everything built into machine. Zig BO W »1-37», or 35923«. 910/4 0687 after 6 p.m. 3-10/3 Anti-Wallace dem onstrators gave his CAPITOL NEAR. p 1 * w o t studio. three man ranch house. Comer Hag- mgs, mends, dams, and bind hems. Warren precinct. TWO KfclTRDOM Fumtibed apart i%,ßot Single girl Modem kitchen. adora and Beech. 338.50/moath phis 353.08 « 35 M a month Dennis SOFA: 3 1/2 feet long. Good coo- Law and order w as on the lips of many supporters a good run for their m oney in innn i^i. — .—A—— , ki ui—^ >» CdLi; fcodtoe. .» fe tt . *• "« S-Kf/3 *« utilities. MOB Bbech » 9 3 f8o n m Distributing Companv. 3»--'N<*4b Cedar'482:2677 4-10/4 ditigw: 3 » «93»fS 910/3 people, anri* is f w q j r s of wqre* a shou^w«^