naay 1 C o o l. . . MICHIGAN MEWS N o m a n . . . . . . and cloudy with high today . . . ruleth safely but he that STATE of 54 and law tonight la the 3 f s. Chance of frost tonight. Sunny itwUUpilyalid- a* .,. • U ^ fV E R S iT Y tomorrow . 10c East Lansing, Michigan October 4,1668 Vol. 61 Number 55 n u TO TWIST ARMS’ V ' acquires M artin 4 0 4 LeMaÿ urges greater for air fleet MSU’s m ini-fleet of airplanes, consist­ pressure in Vietnam in joining him in getting this country ing of one DC-3 that seats 24, w as increas­ ed by another m achine through the Board of T rustees’ acceptance of a $75,000 Martin 404 in their Finance C om m ittee m eeting shocked at the way LeMay talked about Sept. 20. PITTSBURGH (AP) -- Form er Air Force back on the right track." The acceptance of the aircraft w as one the use of nuclear weapons. Chief of Staff Curtis E. LeMay joined W allace has stressed in his speeches of several item s of business considered by George C. W allace as his vice presiden­ that, should peace negotiations fail, he the trustees in the closed session that See related story, page 3 tial candidate Thursday and urged more would seek to end the Vietnam war “ m il­ had allowed Philip J. May, V ice P resi­ m ilitary pressure on North Vietnam. itarily and with convention w eapons.” dent for Business and Finance, to return “ It would be disasterous if anyone who Attacking what he said w as an Amer­ Flying from Pittsburgh to Indianapolis after his sabbatical leave. spoke as Gen. LeMay did this morning ican policy of “ no w ill to w in,” the with LeMay accom panying him, W allace Like the DC-3, the Martin 404 is as­ should com e into a position of high re­ fam ous flying general of World War II said he w as convinceM*he and his ran- signed to the state of M ichigan’s Dept, of sponsibility,” Humphrey said. said he, too, would rather talk than fight. ing m ate saw ey e to eye on the issue of Aeronautics, which m aintains and sched­ W allace, introducing the stocky, hard- But, he said, “ When you get in it, get nuclear weapons. ules the use of it. U niversity officials w ill driving father of the Strategic Air Com­ in it with both feet, and get it over “ Gen. LeMay has told m e privately,” contract for and finance use of the planes mand, said he had alw ays admired Le- with as soon as you can. ” W allace said in an interview, “ that he is for university activities, such as athletic “ I think there are m any cases when it May’s blunt language. “ In Gen. LeMay w e have a man who, against all war. He said to m e, ‘We L e M a y g e ts n o d team trips. would be m ost efficien t to use nuclear can ’t have a third world war; a third The plane, a gift from the Whirlpool through close personal contact, has a work­ T h i r d P a r t y C a n d id a t e G e o r g e W a l l a c e a n n o u n c e s th e c h o i c e o f r e ­ w eapons,” said LeMay, described by a world war would destroy civilization.” And Corp. of Benton Harbor, has a capacity ing knowledge of the aim s, the goals t i r e d A i r F o r c e G e n . C u r t i s L e M a y as h i s v i c e p r e s i d e n t i a l r u n ­ m ilitary biographer as the “ architect of he said the best way to prevent it is to of 40 seats, according to Merrill R. P ier­ and the capabilities of our nation's ene­ system atic destruction” for his bomb­ be strong m ilitarily. n in g m a t e . U P I T e le p h o t o son, assistant Treasurer. m ies as w ell as her friends,” W allace ing raids on Germany. Pierson said the plane, still in Benton said. “ I don’t think it would be necessary Harbor, w ill be moved to the Capitol “ I m ight add here that he, unlike som e in Vietnam. I’ve alw ays said that,” he City airport in Lansing “ soon.” of our so-called high level diplomats, w ent on. “ But I don’t think they are Other item s considered by the truste#s going to negotiate at Paris until w e tw ist their arm a little m ore.” Campaigning in Welch. W. Va., Vice recognizes the difference between the tw o.’ LeMay, without the cigar he usually has clamped in his teeth, said, “Some of m y friends are surprised at m y being Faculty committee okays included: -A pproval of a recom m endation by P ro­ vost Dr. Howard N eville for suggesting a President Hubert Humphrey said he was new system of awards for excellen ce in here today. I am som ewhat surprised niy- teaching by graduate assistants. They recom m endation on ruling se lf.” Reading slow ly from a prepared text, w ill be called the MSU Teacher-Scholar Tigers win the 61-year-old LeMay said he declined the first tim e W allace asked him to be the awards. -C onsidered several item s related to the U niversity’s investm ent portfolio, purchase No. 2 man on the American Independent By MARILYN PATTERSON “ The resolution is “a breach of faith of property, The Detroit Tigers, paced by the pitch­ Party ticket. for avoiding and coping with em ergency State N ew s Staff Writer with the rest of the U niversity com ­ -A ccep ted a report by Jack Breslin, ing and hitting of Mickey Lolich, bombed But after thinking about it, he sa*d, situations of student disturbances on his refusal seem ed the sam e as the Viet­ m unity,” T. Clinton Cobb, professor of U niversity Secretary, on the ratification the St. Louis Cardinals 8-1 Thursday to The Faculty C om m ittee on Student Af­ campus. nam position of som e people-presum ably The exercise of the suspension powers adm inistration and higher education and of the Union contract for nonacadem ic even the World Series at one game each. fairs unanimously approved Wednesday em ployees with changes reported that the doves who don’t want to fight. contained in the Trustees resolution is a faculty com m ittee m em ber, said. Lolich scattered six Cardinal hits night a recom m endation that the Board w ere m ade after a tenative agreem ent going the distance and drive in two Tiger Although a lifelong Republican, he said of Trustees repeal its controversial sus­ an “ unnecessary abrogation” of due pro­ he rejected both the GOP and the Dem o­ ce ss guaranteed in the Academ ic F ree­ “ You don’t rem ove the danger of a approved by the Board in July. runs with a single and his first major pension rule. The major change w as the decision to crats because tney offer nothing more dom Report, the faculty com m ittee said disruption by rem oving som eone’s status league home run. The com m itte w ill also recom m end to grant an “ agency shop” to the Union. than a continuation of deteriorating moral in its statem ent. as a student,” Tom Sam et, Shaker Willie Horton and Norm Cash also had the Academ ic Council that it assign the This requires non-union m em bers to pay values, bad money policy and crim e in It is the opinion of the F aculty Com­ Heights, Ohio, junior and student rep­ solo home runs for Detroit, while Dick Faculty C om m ittee on Student Affairs in a “ service charge” equal to union dues in the streets. m ittee on Student Affairs, the statem ent resentative to the faculty com m ittee, McAuliffe contributed a two-run single. cooperation with A ssociated Students of units with a clear m ajority of union m em - ‘I see in Go' W alla».#new , positive reads, ' L * t h i s resolution would be in­ said, “ That (rem oving the danger) has See page 6 & 7 for further details. MSU (ASMSU) and the adm inistra­ action . . .” he said. “ After adding up all effective in resolving the kinds of prob­ to be done by civil authorities.” bers tion to develop. U niversity procedures (please turn to back page) the factors, I decided to dedicate m yself lem s they believe the Board of Trustees to have had in mind. It would seem to the com m ittee that the resolution contained no exam ple of situations which could hot be better resolved through the structure and processes already contained in the A cadem ic Freedom R eport.” Diehl raps Stevens, The recom m endations w ill be pre­ sented to the Academ ic Council at its first fall term m eeting Tuesday after­ calls for due process noon. Stevens, D-Okemos, for appearing at a The faculty com m ittee acted on a By JIM SCHAEFER rally on cam pus Monday held to discuss request by the Steering C om m ittee of State News Staff Writer the suspension resolution passed Sept. 20 the Academ ic Council that the faculty A Republican candidate for the Board by the board. com m ittee review the suspension rule of Trustees, David Diehl of Dansville, “ If I w ere a Board m em ber,” Diehl and present its recom m endations to the Thursday criticized Board Chairman Don said, “ I certainly would not go before the council. students and tell them that it w as wrong The suspension rule, which w as pass­ I can’t understand asking for a bigger ed by the trustees in their Sept. 20 dem onstration.” finance com m ittee m eeting, would give D iehl’s rem arks w ere part of the reac­ the president “ or his design ee” the power to suspend a student who "con­ Protest leader tion of three of the four m ajor candidates running for the two open seats to the stitutes an im m ediate threat to the nor­ m easure adopted by the trustees and “ sus­ m al and orderly operation of the Univer­ sity ” pending the outcome of judicial leaves court pended” in effect by President Hannah Tuesday night. “A s far as I’m concerned, ” Diehl said, procedures establiehd^in the Academ ic Freedom Report. “ this thing probably needed clarification.” The controversy over the rule con­ cerns such suspension being a viola­ at H U A C trial “ But,” he added, “ there m ust be som e em ergency m easure if things are very bad tion of a student's rights to due pro­ WASHINGTON (AP) - An antiwar pro­ all of a sudden,” Diehl, currently the cess and the trustees' having by-passed test leader walked out and another w itness chairm an of the trustees for Lansing Com­ channels provided for in the Academ ic refused to answer questions on whether he munity College, noted Hannah’s desire for Freedom Report to adopt the resolution. w as a Communist Thursday at hearings further discussion on the resolution, and According to the report, the resolu­ by a House subcom m ittee on un-Ameri­ indicated he wanted to w ait for the re­ tion should have been approved by the can activities. su lts of that study before he would com ­ Faculty C om m ittee on Student Affairs, An undercover police agent charged the m ent further. ASMSU and the Academic Council as groups that planned the riotous Chicago “ But I feel strongly against the dis­ w ell as the trustees. dem onstrations during the D em ocratic ruption of c la sse s,” he said. Pending full discussion of the m atter National Convention favor violent over­ The Republican candidate said he saw by faculty and students, President John throw of the U.S. governm ent. He quo­ “ no reason w hy” the Student F aculty Ju­ S e a r c h f o r s n ip e r s A. Hannah has suspended use of the rule ted one Yippie leader as saying all the presidential candidates should be killed diciary couldn’t consider students involved in disruptions as part of the academ ic due and has placed it on the agenda of the T r o o p s in a r m o r e d c a r s p a t r o l th e s t r e e t s o f M e x i c o C i t y a f t e r a c l a s h b e tw e e n s t u d e n t r e b e l s ® trustees Oct. 17 m eeting for recon­ and the governm ent toppled. process, though he felt there w as som e ,.,.r r U PI T e le p h o to sideration. Rep. Richard Ichord, D-Mo., chairman urgency to its action. m ilita ry . “ It should happen alm ost im m ed iately,’'’ of the subcom m ittee, said earlier testi­ mony had cited 21 Comm unists as parti­ Diehl said. “ Something like this should cipants in the Chicago disorders last Aug­ happen fa st.” D iehl said that students involved in Snipers disrupt Mexico City ust. He did not identify any of them by name. crim inal acts ought to be punished ac- Yippie leader Abbie Hoffm an w as ar­ (please turn to back page) rested a s he tried to enter the congres­ sional building wearing a shirt with a stars There w as no im m ediate breakdown of than 30 seconds after the last flare “ Everything w as quiet. I didn’t expect and stripes design. Two other protesters Voter registration MEXICO CITY ( AP) - Troops hunted any trouble. Suddnely a helicopter loomed also w ere seized by police. •oom to room through a huge apartment casualties, but m ost of the 25 bodies fell, a single shot-apparently aim ed at Robert Freenblat, a Hungarian-born im ­ :omplex Thursday for snipers silenced jy arm y fire in the m ost vicious battle seen by Associated P ress staff m em ­ bers w ere those of civilians. Troops a soldier-set off a roar of fire and counterfire. over the building and dropped a flare. In a m atter of seconds police charged m igrant, walked out of the hearing after reaches final day Machine guns squads raked windows into the building, broke into the apart­ refusing to answer questions on his role jf M exico City’s student rebellion, which said a home m ade bomb killed three Deadline for voter registration for the and rooftops from which rebels fired at ment and arrested all of us. as coordinator of the N ational Mobiliza­ has claim ed at least 40 lives since mid- soldiers. Novem ber 5 election is today. them with rifles and pistols. The fight “ I w as brought forcefully down to the tion C om m ittee to End the War in V iet­ July. Tanks roved downtown streets. The battleground, as in a bloody fight To be eligib le to register, a student last week, w as the Tlatelolco district raged for m ost of the night. Snipers fell plaza. For the first tim e I saw the nam. The Executive C om m ittee of the Inter­ soldiers. There w as wild shouting all Dr. Quentin B. Young, a physician who m ust be a U.S. citizen m ust be 21 years of around the plaza, an area of high-rise, silent a few hours before dawn. national Olympic C om m ittee, headed by over the p lace.” helped organize m edical care for the pro­ age by Novem ber 5, m ust be a resident of low-rent apartm ents, som e occupied by Oriana F allici, an Italian newspaper­ Avery Brundage, m e t-to ponder possible testers injured in the street b attles with the state for six m onths and a resident of students. woman wounded in the fight, said: “ I effects of the disorders on the 1968 Chicago police, refused to answer a ques­ his local address for 30 days prior to the About 6,000 persons had gathered in have covered the Vietnam war, but I Olympic G am es, scheduled to open Oct. 12 at the U niversity of Mexico. the plaza for an antigovernm ent rally. have never seen anything sim ilar to what I«D« pickup tion on whether he is a Communist. Young said the question w as “ an un­ election. A student m ust also be able to furnish The m uted whump of a m ortar w as the happend last n ig h t... F ierce fighting Wednesday night constitutional invasion of m y rights” of proof as to identity and local address. first signal that there m ight be real Miss F allici, 40, w as shot in the right Today is the last day that student IDs between student rebels and the forces privacy. He cited the F irst Amendment, An MSU I.D. w ill not be a c c p g e d and stu­ trouble. The mortar fired phosphorus thigh, left knee and in the back. She is may be picked up on the second floor of of President Gustav Diaz Ordaz’ govern­ which guarantees freedom of speech and dents who live on cam pus (except for m ar­ flares that illum inated the crowd. Many undePtreatm ent at the French hospital. the Union from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. m en t in the area of the Plaza of Three the right of peaceful assem bly. ried housing) w ill not be allow ed to regis­ ran in panic. “ I w as standing on a balcony overlook­ Monday, IDs will be available only in Cultures left at least 25 dead, hundreds Ichord told the Chicago doctor that the ter. Helicopters also w ere aloft. ing the plaza with som e «tudent leaders Vault 3 Administration Bldg. injured and thousands in jail. R egistration is at the E ast Lansing City Soldiers with fixed bayonets moved who w ere speaking to the crow d,” she (please turn to back page) One M exico City newspaper reported Hall, 410 Abbot Road from 8 a.m . to 8 p.m . on the plaza from a ll sides. No m ore said. 40 dead overnight. F r id a y , O ctober 4, 1968’ Michigan State N ew s, E ast Lansing, M ichigan Peruvian coup results in violence I p¡ed p¡Per fete t that Peru cam e oqt on as a new type Of brfWtow* •¡£5 WASHINGTON (AP) ner’s). olutionary governm ent. w as filled with people, m ostly P eru ’s second city said the Terry. change in Latin America U.S. policym akers privately The party is co-sponsored by the Order of the Owl, a non­ The coup cam e 12 hours after young m en from the unversi- provincial governor had been P ress officer Robert J. through dem ocratic means- voiced unhappiness Thursday profit organization for the propagation of love and joy. Belaunde had installed a new ties. They began taunting the arrested. McCloskey indicated the a goal of U.S. policy and of over the coup in Peru, but Gilbert, Founder and D irector of the Order of the Owl, 11 m em ber Cabinet, the seventh soldiers with shouts of “ trait­ Soldiers took control of P eru’s United States would consult the U.S.-supported Alliance for they expect the new m ilitary said that his organization in t e n # to com e out in full force. in his five-year-old regim e: It or.” telephone com panies. with its hem isphere a llies on Progress hem isphere develop­ leadership to be pro-West and Highlighting the birth festivities w ill be a F arew ell to w as reported later that the Cab­ As the crowd grew , police The coup w as rem iniscent of what posture to adopt toward m ent program. anti-Communist. And eventual Skip Rudolph and a Prayer for President Johnson, both of inet had m et in the Foreign launched a tear gas barrage the takeover of July 1962 when the new regim e-but would like Covery T. Oliver, asst, recognition of the new regim e whose birthdays coincide with G ilbert’s. M inistry Building to condemn and then sent a w ater cannon the m ilitary ousted President Latin A m ericans to m ake the secretary of state for inter- seem s likely. All children age five and above are w elcom e to the party, the coup. vehicle rolling toward the gath­ Manuel Prado and installed jun­ first m ove. American affairs, had been On the record, the State which w ill take place at 1 p.m . Saturday at 229 Division The coup w as quiet, sw ift and ering. The stream of w ater sent ta. Belaunde w as elected to a Off the record, U.S. authori­ citing the absence of a coup Departm ent held to a strict Street. Admission to the party is one balloon. without violence. Led by a col­ the youths sprawling. six-year term in July 1963 with ties acknowledged the m ilitary in Latin Am erica since the no com m ent on judging the umn of tanks, troops burst into After the water truck passed, the restoration of civil constitu­ takeover cam e a s a setback to June 1966 Argentine m ilitary predawn Army overthrow of the presidential palace at about one group of students attem pted tional rule. takeover as a sign of growing dem ocratic stability in the A l l r ig h t • • • area. N e w Intercity Bus Service Just what Washington w ill do next depends on developm ents. Initial reports indicated the Senate allocates Direct From—To Campus L e t ’s lo o k s h a r p f o r th e arm y headed by Gen. Juan Ve­ W is c o n s in g a m e . lasco had moved in after a political crisis enveloped the Belaunde governm ent, fearing billions to defense Bus Zone—Union B uilding a breakdown of order and a WASHINGTON (AP) the total w ill go for Vietnam w ar costs but the Pentagon is possible com ing to power of a The Senate gave overw helm ­ expected to request supple­ B r in g group headed by Raul Haya DeLa Torre, regarded by the ing approval Thursday to a record $71.9-billion defense m ental funds later. FRIDAYS RIDE WEST TO . . FRIDAYS, EAST TO , . Before Thursday’s votes re­ m ilitary as a leftist. appropriations bill after beat­ LV: Union 2:15 p.m. LV: Union 5:25 p.m. jected efforts to cut $6 billion LV: Battle Creek 3:55 p.m. your V elasco is rated here as friendly to the United States ing back efforts to trim funds for a m issile defense system from the bill, it alseady had nonstop been reduced $5.2 billion from AR: Kalamazoo 4:35 p.m. and is staunchly anti-Com­ and to im pose other cuts. AR: Flint 6:20 p.m. munist. However, U.S. of­ A 55-2 roll call sent the President Johnson’s original LV: Kalamazoo 5:00 p.m. c lo th e s ficials viewed Belaunde a s a m easure to conference with the request-but it rem ained the biggest single m oney bill nonstop to m oderate who w as cooperating House which voted 1352 m il­ every voted by the Senate AR: CHICAGO 6:35 p.m. to in the A lliance for P rogress and with whom Washington lion m ore for the D efense Department. The previous record w as last year’s $69.9-billion defense could conduct business in a The over-all m easure allo­ appropriation. coherent way. cates, in rounded sum s, $24.3 The nearest the would-be SUNDAYS FROM SUNDAYS FROM After the latest coup in Peru, in 1962, the previous billion to the Air Force; $23.2 billion to the Army; $20.4 bil­ cutters cam e to su ccess in the closing skirm ishes w as Wed­ LV: Flint nonstop to MSU 7:00 p.m. LV: Detroit 9:15 p.m. AR: Union 10:55 p.m. J& u L Kennedy administration tried to show U.S. disapproval by breaking off U.S. relations and lion to Navy; and $4 billion to various other defense agencies. By functions it gives nesday when a 45-24 roll call turned back an effort slow down installation of antibajlistic AR: Union Bldg. 8:00 p.m. (Eastern Greyhound Lines) CLEANERS aid. The experim ent failed to $22.6 billion for personnel; m issile defense system . dislodge the junta, and Wash­ $21.8 billion for operation and This w as on a m ove to cut P h o n e E a s t L a n s i n g T e r m i n a l 3 3 2 - 2 5 6 9 f o r i n f o r m a t i o n on o t h e r c o n v e ­ 623 E . G r a n d . R l v e r ington wound up a month later m aintenance; $19,9 billion for $387 m illion from the $700 E a s t L a n s in g by joining a number of other new planes, ships and other n i e n t s c h e d u le s t o - f r o m a l l M i c h i g a n , I n d i a n a , I l l i n o i s p o i n t s , m illion provided for the Latin American countries in equipment; and $7.6 billion for 'A cross from Student Services' Sentinel system by lim iting recognizing the new Lima research and developm ent. I N D I A N T R A I L S BUS L I N E S . D IS C O V E R I N D I A N T R A I L S C O U N T R Y ! spending to research and leadership. An estim ated $25.8 billion of developm ent and elim inating deploym ent funds. We’ll give you a chance Ball succeeded as ambassador to go out on a limb. by J. R. Wiggins WASHINGTON (AP) - The Senate Foreign R elations Com­ m ittee approved Thursday the W ith our High R isk/H igh R ew ard p ro gram fo r c o l­ If you d o w e ll, y o u ’re on yo ur w a y . Fast. That's nomination of J. R. Wiggins, lege graduates. If you q ualify, y o u ’ll be put into a the rew ard . form er editor of the Washing­ challenging m anagem ent position im m ediately. You'll If stakes that a re a little higher an d risks that a re a ton Post, as am bassador to the little rougher a re your cup o f te a , see our recruiter United Nations. m ake your ow n decisions. Take your o w n risks. He succeeds George Wv Ball, If you can 't handle the challenges, w e 'll find out o r w rite C o lle g e Relations, 2 2 2 B ro a d w a y , N e w who resigned to join the Dem o­ fast enough to keep from wasting a lot o f your time. York, N . Y. 1 0 0 3 8 . cratic presidential cam paign of You’re in charge of building the float, decorating the house That's the risk. A lot o f hard w o rk never hurt an yon e. V ice President Hubert H. Hump­ and dressing up the party. So you need Pomps, the flame- hrey. Western Electric M ANUFACTURING & SUPPLY UNIT O f THE B ELL SYSTEM resistant decorative tissue. You can decorate anything beau­ tifully with Pomps, inside and out. and do it faster, easier, The com m ittee acted by voice vote in a closed m eeting. better. Pomps don’t cost much. They're cut 6" x 6“ square, AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EM PLO YER ' Wiggins w as also confirmed ready to use. come in 17 vivid colors that are virtually run- as U.S. representative to the proof when wet. Buy Pomps at your bookstore, school supply 23rd annual m eeting of the U.N. dealer or paper merchant. And ask your librarian for our General assem bly, which began booklet "How to Decorate With Pomps." If she doesn't have this week in N ew York. it. just tell her to write for a copy. Or. order your own copy. Send 51.25 and your address today to The Crystal Tissue FLY AMERICAN Company. Middletown. Ohio 45042. & pomps' A IR L IN E S CALL College Travel 351-6010 by YOU CAN AFFORD STEAK EVERY NIGHT DIAMOND TRIOS n f a t/w AT BEST STEAK HOUSE #16 For Her For Him AND BAKED POTA1’0 S IR L O IN ____ $1.33 PERCH . . . $1.10 For Her 1/2 ROASTED SHRIMP . . $1.35 C H IC K E N ____ $1.10 A ll 5 Include Texas T oast, salad, and For Him PORK CHOP . . $1.18 baked potato SPECIAL - STEAKBURGER . . . .720 | FO X JE W E LE R S Direct Diamond Importers CONVENIENT CREDIT TERMS . . BESTS ¡TEAK HOUSE #16 K A L A M A Z O O A T C L IP P E R T , . . ACROSS FRANDOR DOW NTOW N F R O M C A D E S . . . N E X T T O K W IK STO P ■S-riday, OetobAS, A, R IS K O F W A R NEWS G r o m y k o c a u t i o n s W e s t sum m ary n erica, inelading a _ the |people of Gromyko was #2 __ firm iqc thei .Soviet..contention that in .uphold- ..L jj nn on manv many nrrasinvM occasions w who are tempted to try and. coll warned those NATIONS, tAc I i the United States, who will al _____ ^ ,*> r jiv „ ¡£ - . . w n r *ways rertiemuo, aiination in r s — i-— \ A ... sf one A ca p su le lu m m a r y of the d ay’ s even ts fro m A. Gromyko declared Thursday the tradition of joint struggle concerned the “ Socialist com- to »«&» that interference by the West in in the ranks of the anti-Hitler monweath” alone. link on it, that we will neither o u r w ir e s e r v ic e s . Gromyko said attempts were tolerate nor allow this to hap­ Czechoslovakia or any other coalition, and who also should­ being made to reproach the So­ pen.” Communist Bloc country would er a tremendous responsibility run the risk of a new world war. viet Union for Events in Czecho- On Germany, Gromyko made for the preservation of world no specific reference to claims But in a policy speech to the peace!” slavakia. He added that no one 125-nation General Assembly he should be surprised by the So­ that the Soviet Union could le­ “ W h e n y o u g e t in i t (th è But in obvious reply to U.S. gally intervene militarily. tempered firm words on West avowal that the Western allies viet reaction to what he called a V ie tn a m w a r), g e t in i t Berlin, Germany and Czecho­ would defend West Germany threat to the Socialist world. w it h b o th fe e t, a n d g e t i t slovakia with an offer to enter and West Berlin against arm- “ You know only too well that FLY into negotiations immediately . ed intervention, Gromyko as­ there was nothing abrupt in the PAN AMERICAN o v e r w ith a» so o n as y o u _ 99 with the United States on limit­ serted : measures of self-defense taken AIRLINES COIIe ing ballistic missiles, and on by the Socialist countries against CALL “ West Berlin has never be­ F o r m e r A i r F o rc e C h ie f A p e a c e f u l s ig h t other disarmament measures. imperialist intrigues,” he as­ College Travel longed, nor does it belong, nor o f S t a f f C u rtis E. L e M a y Gromyko appeared to be hold­ will it ever belong, to the Fed­ serted. “ The Soviet Union and other Socialist countries have ______ 351-6010 An International group o f ch ild ren , Including b la ck , ing out a kind of olive branch eral Republic of West Ger­ w hite, and O rie n ta l, p lay In harm ony at the n u rse ry to the United States with these many. If sometimes an aggrava­ a c r o s s fro m the Student S e r v ic e s Bldg. words: “ We are for friendship tion of tensions may occur here, State News photo by L an ce Lagonl with the peoples of North Am- the responsibility for this lies The State New*, the student newspaper at Michigan State University, is squarely with the West German published every claw day throughout the year with special Welcome Week and Orientation issues in Jane and September. Subscription rates are $14 I n t e r n a t io n a l N e w s government.” per year. • Biafra has asked the United Nations and member Rusk listened intently to the Gromyko speech, and told a re­ Member Associated Press. United Press International, Inland Daily Press governments to act under the U.N. Charter to stop what it says is genocide in Biafra. LeM ay’s V ie tn a m v ie w porter afterward it was serious in nature and contained no sur­ prises. He described it as a gen­ Association, Associated Collegiate Press, Michigan Press Association, Mich­ iganCollegiate Press Association, United States Student Press Association. Second class postage paid at East Lansing, Michigan. • In a letter sent Wednesday night, Col. C. Odumegwu eral review of Soviet policy, and Editorial and business offices at 347 Student Services Building, Michigan Ojukwu, the Biafran leader, charged Britain, the Soviet Union and Egypt with supporting the Nigerian federal gov ernment and its armed forces in acts of genocide. opposes U .S . g r a d u a lis m added: “ It didn’t answer the questions asked in my speech.” Rusk told the assembly Wed­ State University, East Lansing, Michigan. Phones: Editorial.............................................................................. »M M N a t io n a l N e w s WASHINGTON (AP) Press last year that he had 1 recommended, the shock ef­ nesday that the Soviety-led arm­ Classified Advertising .........................................................JSMS6 Display Advertising................................................................35M400 “ Curt LeMay turned out to been pressing for bombing fect might have stopped them ed intervention in Czechoslova­ Business-Circulation............................................................ 3SM447 • The Senate met for 24 hours in secret Wednesday and be right so much of the time. North Vietnam since about then, but it’s too late for this kia endangered world peace and Photographic....................................................................... 3SMS11 then gave another strong endorsement to the Sentinel Anti- But he disqualified himself early 1962-three years earlier. now. he challenged the Soviet Union to Ballistic Missile (ABM) defense system. as an adviser because of the say when their troops would By a margin of 45 to 25, it rejected an amendment by “ We have been using air ultimates he proposed.” Since then the air war has leave. Sen. John Sherman Cooper, R-Ky., and others to cut $387.4 and naval power in a piddling So spoke a top Pentagon of­ been throttled way down-which million for the Sentinel from the $71.9 billion defense ap­ manner,” LeMay said in 1967. propriation bill. ficial of the McNamara era, looking back on the days when “ If we had done what we are is the opposite direction from the one LeMay advocated in FALL FASHION Vietnam war policy was being doing now five years ago, as the past. • Richard M. Nixon, campaigning on a colonial college debated in secret government With a Twist u n iio r campus and then in a Navy city, accused the Democratic administration Wednesday of compromising future Ameri­ can naval strength and permitting the Soviet Union to mount “ a major challenge against Western seapower.” Winding up his day of campaigning near the headquar­ councils. This onetime civilian of­ ficial, now out of public life and preferring anonymity, said Gen. Curtis E. LeMay “ was HOUSE Greys and browns are fine, but fall is a season of color. ters of the Atlantic fleet in Norfolk, Va., the Republican always six to nine months presidential candidate said present defense leaders have The reds, oranges, and warm browns of ahead of where we finally got.” failed to develop this nation’s nuclear carrier and submarine But, he said, the onetime of autumn leaves. strength. Air Force chief of staff and • Gov. Spiro T. Agnew said Wednesday in Annapolis, now vice presidential candi­ date on George C. Wallace’s III Colorful dresses, pant suits, bed­ Md., that when he said on two previous occasions that he third party ticket “ wanted to was against wiretapping in any form he did not mean spreads (Beautiful new prints) and do a helluva lot more than we to imply that it included wiretapping done under court could have accepted . . . like beads--simple or antique: INDIA order. bombing China.” o A news release distributed Wednesday under the let­ LeMay was an opponent of AT “ gradualism” in the Vietnam terhead of the Democratic National Committee said Vice war almost from the outset in President Hubert H. Humphrey would meet Thursday with George C. Wallace. 1962. HOUSE o f IN D IA A bluff spoken soldier, Le­ In response to newsmen’s queries, the committee brand­ May.' raffled m^ny civilian of­ 101 E . G rand R iv e r ed the documents a . “ counterfeit” and asked the: Faitl-Gam-— ficials and senior officers of paign Practices Committee for aft ihvdstlgaltion. 332-8403 other services. But never, during his four • Herman B. Ferguson, Negro candidate of the Freedom year as Air Force chief, and Peace party for the U.S. Senate, was sentenced Thurs­ did he carry his policy day to three and a half to seven years in prison for con­ differences to the public plat­ THE LITTLE NECKLACE AND BRACEL€T spiring to murder moderate civil rights leaders. form or to the press, except THAT STARTED A BIG TR€ND. o Two coeds who danced in the nude in a student version of the musical “ Peter Pan” were being sought, by authori­ ties today. They want to arrest them. The incident took place at the University of Wisconsin. when he was being questioned by congressional committees- and this was within the rules. Everybody knew LeMay had deep splits with Secretary of "M ini-collar" necklace w ith heart charm. In yellow gold filled, $6.50. "M ini-bracelet" w ith heart charm, $5.75. Also available in 14 karat gold. 0W l l vP O F A M E R IC A U.S. OPEN Defense Robert S. McNamara, o A history professor told the President’s violence com­ and they always thought an mission Thursday that he feared “ a new wave of vigilan- explosion would come. But it BILLIARD TOURNAMENT tism is a real prospect today.” did not. “ There are disquieting signs that it has already begun,” Not until after LeMay re­ Richard Maxwell Brown, professor of history at the College tired on Jan. 31, 1965 did he of William and Mary, said in a prepared testimony. JEWELERS I '/ SINCE 1876 begin to speak out. 121 S. Washington-Lansing, M ichigan The air war against North o Thrill-seeking teen-agers are sniffing intoxicating va­ Vietnam did not begin until a 'Coco-Colo ond "Coko ’ ora registered Irode-morks which identify only the produtt of The Coco-Colo Compony pors from pressurized cans of hair spray, insect repellent week after LeMay’s retire­ 1 and cleaning solvent-and are dying, officials said. ment. The chief of the San Diego County Probation Depart­ But it was apparent from Oct. 6-11 ment, Kenneth F. Fare, blames toxic substances in such what he told The Associated sprays for eight deaths in six months. w / / (ß h ip ’q ß h o re' W m / Opens Sunday Noon - F in a ls F rid a y NighL^Jy Limited We admire your spirit, edition but you just don’t fit f » 1 0 0 o f the w o rld ’s best players' J o e B a lsis, Loti B u tera, Jim ffty C a ra s * , Irving C ran e, Kazuo shirt, Fujim a, L u th er L a s s ite r , L a r r y L eak e, C ise ro Murphy, D allas W est, Sheila Bohm, San Lynn M e rric k , D orothy W ise*, J a m e s ultra collared C attran o * , Bud H a r ris , L a rry Johnson, Danny M cGoorty. and cuffed. 7.00 Lansing Civic Center 3 Divisions ~ $25,000 in Cash M ichigan Bankard Tickets A v a ila b le A t The Civic Open 10 AM Wed & F r l. till 9 p.m . O th er nights till 5:30 P .M . Center Ticket O ffice iS r " W ’ / t Luxury shirt, tailored larger-than -life in a linen-look blend. MSU STUDENT WITH I D . . . $1.00 So-easy-care, in gentle white and natural. Sizes 30 to 38. Coca-Cola is on everyone’s team. That’s because TICKET TO ALL SESSIONS . . $10.00 Marion’sApparel Coca-Cola has the taste you never get tired o f . . . \ a lw a y s refreshing. That’s w h y things go better with 2 Sessions D a ily — N oon a n d 7p.m . B ro o k fie ld P la z e 1331 E . G rand R iv e r Phone 351-7224 Coke . . . after Coke . . . after Coke. Bottled under the authority of the Coco-Colo Company by: ’ D efending cham pion In the E a s t Lan sin g State Bank B ldg. Coca-Cola Bottling Co. of Mich., Lansing, Mich. M ICHIG AN Edward A. B r ill Jump* S. Granelli, managing editor editor-in-chief STATE NEW S Carol Bmdrow, advertiiing manager Trinka Cline, campu * editor Jerry Pankhurnt, editorial editor Tom Brown, *portI editor Patricia Anstett, attociale rompu* editor U N IV E R S IT Y • v ' :> . t *•* . Six-time recipicm'ol me Pacem aker award far N l i t M t a | fturnalism. e d it o r ia l s The gaudy and unreal reality in t h e p r e s i d e n t i a l r a c e t o t h r e e F iv e y e a r s ago , G o v. G e o rg e la s h w h i t e c o l l a r w o r k e r s . B u t m a in fa c to r s . F ir s t , th e p a r ty W a l l a c e s to o d in th e d o o r w a y t h e r e is l i t t l e r e a s o n t o b e l i e v e b o ss s y ste m o f A m e r i c a , in • o f t h e U n i v e r s i t y o f A l a b a m a in t h a t h e w i l l c a r r y m o r e th a n n o m in a t in g R i c h a r d N ix o n a n d a d e f i a n t a t t e m p t to b lo c k a n in e s t a t e s in t h e e l e c t o r a l v o t e . H u b ert H u m p h rey , le ft m a n y H e s h o u ld n o t b e th e n e x t P r e s i ­ fe d e r a l c o u r t o rd e r fo r sch o o l v o t e r s s t i l l lo o k in g f o r a n a d e ­ i n t e g r a t i o n in h is s t a t e . d e n t. q u a t e c a n d i d a t e . A t h ir d p a r t y W h a t e v e r t h e o u t c o m e o f t h is T o d a y , c it iz e n G e o r g e W a l­ o f f e r e d a n e w f a c e , w it h s i m ­ e le c tio n , h o w e v e r , W a lla c e m a y l a c e s t a n d s in f r o n t o f h is b u l ­ p l i s t i c a n s w e r s to a l l th e p r o b ­ w e l l b e b a c k o n th e p r e s i d e n ­ le t-p r o o f s p e a k in g p o d iu m le m s . t i a l s c e n e in 1972. T h e s u c c e s s th r o u g h o u t th e c o u n t r y in a n a t ­ T h e t u r b u le n c e t h a t h a s b e e n t h a t h e h a s h a d in 1968 w i l l o n ­ t e m p t to b e c o m e i t s n e x t P r e s ­ a n e v e r -p r e s e n t p a r t o f in te r n a l l y e n c o u r a g e h im to t r y a g a i n . id e n t . A m e r i c a in 1968 h a s a l s o h e lp ­ B u t, b y th a t tim e , th e th r e a t W a lla c e h a s n ’ t c h a n g e d m u c h e d W a l la c e . C l a i m i n g t h a t “ w e o f G e o r g e W a l l a c e s h o u ld b e in t h e y e a r s t h a t h a v e e l a p s e d a r e t i r e d o f th e w a y t h is c o u n ­ p a s t . A m e r i c a , h o p e f u lly , w i l l s i n c e h is g o v e r n o r s h ip d a y s . H e t r y is b e i n g r u n ,” h e h a s o f f e r ­ h a v e h ad its ta s te o f s ic k n e s s . is s t ill a n a r c h - s e g r e g a tio n is t, e d h i m s e l f a s t h e k e y to c h a n g e E s p e c ia lly G eo rg e W a lla c e a r a c i s t a n d a n o p p o n e n t o f th e in A m e r i c a . S u p r e m e C o u r t . In f a c t , W a l ­ s ic k n e s s . T h e “ fe a r ch o rd ” o f ea ch -- T h e E d i t o r s l a c e w o u ld h a v e b e e n a n u n li k e ­ A m e r ic a n c it iz e n h a s b e e n a ro u s- ly m a jo r p r e s id e n tia l c a n d id a te ^ e d b y W a l la c e . T h a t i s h is in a n y p r e v i o u s m o d e r n c a m ­ m ost p o w e rfu l w e a p o n . H is p a ig n y e a r . W a l l a c e ’ s c a n d i d a c y is a t r a ­ p r o m is e o f “ la w a n d o r d e r ” h a s o ffe r e d a r e s tfu l r e s p ite MAX LERNER g i c p h e n o m e n o n . O f th e t h r e e to m a n y v o t e r s t h r o u g h o u t th e c a n d i d a t e s in ’68, W a l l a c e is U .S . W a l l a c e a p p e a r s t o b r in g t h e l e a s t q u a li f ie d . I n d e e d , h e is u n q u a lif ie d f o r th e P r e s i d e n ­ c y . H e h a s no b a c k g r o u n d in T o d a y , c i t i z e n G eorge W a lla ce s t a n d s i n f r o n t o f h is b u lle t - p r o o f s p e a k in g p o d i u m th r o u g h o u t th e o u t th e i n t e r f e a r s a n d f e e l ­ in g s o f h is f o l l o w e r s . H e k n o w s N ixon’s credibility problem th a t th e r e is a lit t le b it of f o r e i g n a f f a i r s , n a t io n a l d o m e s ­ c o u n t r y in a n a tte m p t to becom e “ G eo rg e W a l l a c e ” in every has been especially true of the war and out-clevered himself, and the question t i c p r o b l e m s o r in r u n n in g a n it s n e x t P r e s id e n t . The most important single thing about about Nixon in my mind is whether he, A m e r i c a n a n d h a s s o u g h t to foreign policy. e f fe c t iv e g o v e rn m e n t. Richard Nixon is Richard Nixon, and too, will out-clever himself, and whether The war is not the crucial issue of the g a i n f r o m it. the most important single thing about campaign, as compared with domestic the qualities needed for an election will D u r i n g t h e y e a r s t h a t W a l­ s t a t e s t h a t h a d h ig h w e l f a r e , W a l l a c e ’s v o te -g e t t i n g Hubert Humphrey is Hubert Humphrey. be adequate to the problems of the na­ la c e w a s g o v e r n o r o f A la b a m a , violence, but it raises the central prob­ That may sound like tautology, but it is tion and the world. u n e m p lo y m e n t and c rim in a l s t r e n g t h c o m e s f r o m th e S o u t h ­ lem of Nixon’s credibility. Both Nixon t h a t s t a t e r a n k e d a s o n e o f th e also the nub of the presidential cam­ and Humphrey historically have Men One must raise the same question about r a t e s a t th a t tim e . e r n s ta te s , th e b lu e - c o lla r la ­ paign. domestic issues. How does Nixon propose p o o r e s t in t h e c o u n t r y . A l a b a m a Hawks on Vietnam, Humphrey in his W a l l a c e o w e s h is p r o m i n e n c e b o r u n io n s a n d f r o m th e b a c k - The choice lies not so much between vice presidential capacity in a war Ad­ to deal with the bitterness of the Negro w a s a m o n g th e l e a d e r s in th e the positions the candidates take as be­ in the ghetto, and with the white-black ministration, Nixon even longer, ever since tween their personalities and credibility he proposed American military interven­ split? His earlier answer--“ black capita 1- as leaders. In terms not on where they tion to swing the balance to the French ism” -has evoked very little response from Gun control: at least a start stand but what they are. This applies to an extent to George Wallace, too, but less so, because his positions are in them­ selves so extreme. In this piece I shall side when Vietnam was still Indochina. Both have tried to move away from this position. But Humphrey, still caught with the black Americans, and there is noth­ ing in it which is not contained in the "total coalition” approach already being tried, which Humphrey accepts as part p e r s o n s l e g a l l y a b le to p u r c h a s e e lim in a te s m a il o r d e r s a le s an d Johnson on his back, has done it by deal­ S e n a te an d H o u se c o n fe r e e s be dealing mainly with Nixon, in later of his plan for the ghettos. o u t-o f-s ta te p u rch ases, and ing with specific phases of the war and a r e c u r r e n t l y m e e t in g to w o r k fir e a r m s . ones with the others. Actually, as Wallace has grown to be peace, however incompletely, while Nix­ N o r h a v e a ll S e n a t o r s b e e n s t r i k e s i t s s t r o n g e s t b lo w s a t All the doubts about Nixon converge Nixon’s real headache, rather than Hum­ o u t a c o m p r o m i s e b e t w e e n th e on has done it by silence, except for his th e u s e o f f i r e a r m s w h i l e c o m ­ on the central doubt, not about his skills phrey, Nixon has shifted from his inter­ tw o gu n c o n tro l m e a s u r e s p a s s ­ fr e e to v o te a s th e ir c o n s c ie n c e wishful and vague promise to seek an or will but about his credibility, just est in ghetto economics to a law-and- d i c t a t e s o n th e b i l l s , d u e t o m itt in g c r im e s o f v io le n c e . It “ honorable” peace. e d w it h in e a c h b o d y . as the doubts about Humphrey converge order approach meant to snare the voter p r o v i d e s f o r u p to l i f e i m p r i s ­ What is an “ honorable” peace? How T h e b i ll s a r e h a m p e r e d b y p r e s s u r e s f r o m h u n t e r s w it h in on his quality of command. Nixon has who is seceding to Wallace. This is Nix­ does Nixon propose to achieve it? Alas, o n m e n t fo r p e rso n s c o m m it­ performed wonders with his own public on’s real bind. If it proves true that Wal­ th e p r e s s u r e s e x e r t e d o n th e th e ir h o m e s ta te s . the answer has been silence. image, transofming it almost beyond lace is taking two votes from Nixon for B u t th e b i ll in n o w a y i n t e r ­ t i n g c r i m e s o f v i o l e n c e u p to I don’t recall any comparable silence l e g i s l a t o r s b y r a d i c a l s o f b o th recognition in the space of six years every vote he takes from Humphrey, then a n d in c lu d in g a s s a s s i n a t i o n a n d on the part of a major candidate in a th e e x t r e m e l e f t a n d r i g h t ( a l ­ f e r e s w it h th e r i g h t s o f h u n t- (his low point was the California elec­ Nixon must move in Wallace’s direction, tion in 1962). But the changeover job major democracy since Harold Wilson e r s - - a t l e a s t th e 77 s e n a t o r s w h o d o w n to r a p e a n d t h e f t , a p r o ­ as he has been doing in his attacks on th o u g h th e r ig h t is t s h a v e n o ta b ­ has been too successful. Its very com­ refused to talk about foreign or military v i s i o n w h i c h m a y d o m u c h to policy at the Labor Party conference in the college students and on the Supreme l y g r e a t e r i n f lu e n c e ) , h u n te r s v o t e d f o r th e b i ll , in c lu d in g pleteness raises questions about the sleight- Court decisions guarding the constitution­ s t e m th e t i d e o f g u n s lin g in g 1963, before the election that brought him a n d e s p e c i a l l y th e p o w e r f u l N a ­ b o th M i c h i g a n S e n . H a r t a n d of-hand techniques by which it was ac­ al rights of accused men. But the more to power. Wilson got away with it, and G r i f f i n , d id n ’ t f e e l t h a t w a y . b a n d it s a n d lo n g - d is t a n c e k i l l ­ complished. Nixon does it, to head off Wallace, the t io n a l R i f l e A s s o c i a t io n ( N R A ) . everyone thought it terribly clever of him, ers w ho h a v e t e r r o r i z e d th e These doubts have been fed by his more he loses his chosen image of the T h e d e lu g e o f m a il C o n g r e s s It d o e s n o t p r o h ib it a n y o n e as they do now of Nixon. But Wilson vagueness on the substantive issues where cool moderate, and the closer he comes o f l e g a l a g e w h o is c o m p e t e n t c o u n try . brought England to disaster because he r e c e i v e d u r g in g s t r o n g g u n c o n ­ a sharp stand might hurt his image. This to the image of the “ old” Nixon. f r o m o w n in g a g u n , o r d o in g N e i t h e r t h e S e n a t e n o r th e tr o l m e a s u r e s , f o llo w i n g th e a s ­ w it h it t h a t w h ic h h e l i k e s , H o u se v e r s io n o f th e gu n c o n ­ s a s s i n a t i o n s o f D r . M a r t in L u t h ­ b e it h u n tin g , c o l l e c t i n g , t a r ­ t r o l b i ll g o e s n e a r l y a s f a r a s e r K in g J r . an d Sen . R o b e r t F . K e n n e d y h a s o n ly p a r t i a l l y g e t s h o o t in g , o r a n y o t h e r l e g a l i t s h o u ld . N o f o r m o f l e g i s l a ­ O U R R E A D E R S ’ M IN D S p u r s u it ’.1" tio n o r l i c e n s i n g i s in c lu d e d , s u c c e e d e d in a l l e v i a t i n g th e o r ­ W h a t it d o e s is r e q u i r e h im a n d a b u y e r is n o t r e q u i r e d to g a n iz e d p r e s s u r e th e N R A h a s to p r o v e t h a t h e i s c o m p e t e n t , s h o w h i m s e l f k n o w le d g e a b le in u s e d f o r y e a r s to k e e p g u n c o n ­ F r e e d o m R e p o r t r e l e v a n t r g u n - h a n d lin g . t r o l b i ll s f r o m c o m in g in to la w . H o p e f u ll y , h o w e v e r , th e b i ll T h e H o u s e v e r s io n , f o r e x a m ­ Red Cedar report w ill e m e r g e fro m th e j o i n t the trustees see as necessary to guarantee If the trustees resolution were reaffirm­ p le , i n c lu d e s a n a m e n d m e n t To the Editor: the rights of the students. If we are to ed, the Freedom Report would be irrele­ Have you seen the new exit gates at the| c o n f e r e n c e c o m m i t t e e a t l e a s t President Hannah in his statement of function relevantly in the educational pro­ vant, but until that time, if it ever arises, th a t w o u ld e x e m p t th e N R A Library? They electronically monitor every w it h o u t b e i n g s u b s t a n t i a l l y w e a k Oct. 1, 1968 has indicated his regret that cess, this type of discussion involving all the channels are open and must be utili­ fro m th e b a n on m a i l- o r d e r one leaving and sound an alarm if a stu­ he had not consulted students and faculty e n e d . I f i t d o e s n o t, th e g u n parties is mandatory. zed until such time as they are no longer s h ip m e n t s o f g u n s a n d a m m u n i ­ dent leaves with a book not properly in the draft of the resolution in question. This does not mean that the discussion responsible. tio n , m a i n t a i n i n g it s v e r y p r o ­ checked out. Remind you of the Demo­ lo b b y w i l l h a v e to a n s w e r to He has indicated his feeling that he will of this particular question is over by any llie question of due process in the ju­ cratic National Convention? t h e n a tio n f o r i t s h y p o c r i s y in not inact this suspension power, pending means, but the rights of the students and dicial area is still to be decided, but it is f i t a b l e p o s it io n a s th e r e c e p ­ * * * a final decision, and he will ask for sus­ b e in g , in i t s o w n w o r d s , “ th e faculty are being observed in this pro­ important that in this decision, legisla­ t a c l e o f th e A r m y 's s u r p lu s a m ­ It's not true that the campus bus dri­ pension of this phrase, which many con­ cess. We do feel that further clarifica­ tive due process must be observed and m u n itio n . vers are 10 minutes late on purpose! g r e a t e s t s u p p o r t e r s o f l a w a n d cerned see to be objectionable. He also the statement by President Hannah in­ tion is needed, and Academic Freedom They’re 15 minutes late on purpose. o r d e r in t h e U . S . ” o n th e o n e requests that the due process of the pres­ I t a l s o w o u ld e x e m p t r i f l e , * * • • Report amendments are presently being dicates that this will be the case. h a n d , a n d i t s o p p o s itio n to a ent machinery in the University is in­ submitted by ASMSU to the Faculty Com­ Brian L. Hawkins s h o tg u n , a n d .22 c a l i b e r r im - Ex-presidential candidate Eugene Mc­ volved in nesolving this problem. mittee on Student Affairs to do just that. President, Men’s Halls Association f i r e a m m u n it io n f r o m th e b a n Carthy was called a communist by some b i l l w h i c h m a k e s m o r e p r o ­ It appears to us that this is a most Once again this question is not resolved, Susan R. Landers right-wing detractors. No communist vaca­ g r e s s t o w a r d a t t a in i n g t h a t e n d responsible approach to reconcile a prob­ but President Hannah’s approach reaffirm * President, Women’s Inter-Residence on i n t e r s t a t e s h ip m e n t. tions on the French Riveria. th a n a n y o t h e r c u r r e n t l y p e n d ­ lem which students, faculty and some of our belief in the relevancy of the Academic Council T h i s is n o t to s a y th a t th e * * • in g o r b e i n g c o n s i d e r e d b y e i t h e r Freedom Report. u p p e r h o u se h a s b e e n t o ta lly i m m u n e to th e p r e s s u r e o f th e Do you think that Curtis LeMay will become a household word like Spiro Ag- h o u s e . new? - T h e r e c a n b e lit t le r a tio n a l Agoodresolution Voice dissent! g u n lo b b y . T h e S e n a t e b ill d o e s * * • o b je c t i o n t o a b i l l w h ic h p r o ­ To the Editor: violated the legislative processes of this n ot b a n th e s a le o f w e a p o n s Q: What do they mean by “ the quick I wish to express my approval of the To the Editor: v id e s h o m o r e c o n tro l o f g u n s University. o f m a s s d e s tr u c tio n , s u c h a s and the dead?" resolution passed at the September meet­ It is imperative that all students, fac­ A : The two categories of people who at­ th a n i s r e q u i r e d o f f a r l e s s l e ­ ing of the Board of Trustees, which auth­ On Tuesday, Oct. 1 the President of m a c h in e g u n s, ca n n o n , a n d m o r ­ ulty and administrators at MSU, who tempt to cross Grand River Avenue. th a l a lc o h o l o r p h a r m a c e u ti­ orizes the President of MSU or his desig­ this University made a statement con­ * * * feel that the Board of Trustees has act­ t a r s . N o r d id i t p r o v id e a n e f ­ nee, when “ confronted by an instance cerning the general disturbance over the ed in poor faith and without regard to f e c t i v e m e a n s f o r m a k in g s u r e Hubert Humphrey just changed his cam­ c a l s . where the activity of a student constitutes Board of Trustees resolution of Sept. 20. legal procedures, must keep this issue paign from “ Happy Talk” to "Mission: ’ ’T h e E d ito r s an immediate threat to the normal and t h a t g u n d e a l e r s s e ll o n ly to In his statement, Hannah claims that the alive until it is resolved. The petitions Im possible.” orderly operation of the University,” to University community has misunderstood which went out this week are an excel­ „PI A N U TS “ suspend such student pending outcome the resolution and that it should be clar­ lent means of showing our discontent, HOUlftlPWU f d o n 't a s k me ...IT ^ lüË COULDN’T WÜ EVEN f*SS ATRUE I FALSEP OWEN I of the established procedures set forth in ified through amending and/or reword­ so are letters to the editor of the State 00 ON M3UR y (^ o ) a s a d i s a s t e r . , j OR FALSE TEST’DHATHAPPENED? SHOULD HAVE TRUED ! the Academic Freedom Report.” TEST? ing. As a student, an ASMSU Board mem­ News, members of the Board of Trustees I sincerely hope that if such a situa­ ber and a citizen of the United States, I and Hannah. Let us prove that when ÜÜ tion should arise, the President will in­ find this gesture not at all satisfactory. rights are violated, this University com­ voke this resolution without delay, armed The question involved is not that the reso­ munity is not apathetic, and VOICE OUR with the knowledge that he is acting in lution is poorly worded or misunderstood, the interests of the students who wish to •DISSENT. Chuck Mostov but that it is a violation of students’ learn and the faculty who wish to teach. sophomore member-at-large, rights as laid down in the Academic sft Peter W. Avery Freedom Report, and that the proce­ ASMSU Student Board Toledo, Ohio, sophomore >»-■¥ 1 -4 Auburn, N.Y., freshman dures followed in passing the resolutioh Friday, October 4, 1968 Michigan State News, East Lansing, M ichigan VPhoto confuses British, D e ce m b e r’s draft fri gitesi' inmonths blam e fake negatives "This picture should never WASHINGTON The Pentagon today ordered (AP) about the same as last sum­ mer’s induction levels. Draft LONDON (AP) - A red-faced a Soviet bomber over the Nor- the drafting of 17,500 men for caflls this "year have ranged as At* w s ii|u < n have been issued,” the spokes- high as 48,000, which was the Army and Marine Corps S ä > Mm# t i l i m v -ic- •: •»tigat- April's'figure1. “ * man admitted hère tnac a . in December. ing the' matter. As it stands we The December draft actually graph issued by the Atlantic h itte r flying The Army will get 15,000 regard the photograph as a re­ is greater than it appears Alliance last week showing a bomber during a rece and the Marine Corps 2,500. grettable accident.” It marked the second time since all 17,500 men will be British Jet fighter intercepting exercise. The London Daily Sketch re­ taken into service during the this year the Marines, tradi­ ported Lt. Cecil Willson, photo­ first two weeks of the month. tionally an all-volunteer out­ graphic officer aboard the Brit­ The Defense Department fit, resorted to the draft. The ish aircraft carrier Eagle, said generally avoids drafting men the fake negative was produced corps took 1,900 inductees last May. the last half of December be­ for recognition study before the HUPKHffl The December draft is the cause of the Christmas holiday NATO exercise. “ Somehow a copy of the rec­ A tim e f o r p la y highest in four months and season. ognition photograph was mis­ taken for the real thing,” the Sketch quoted an official as MSU men take a b reak fro m th e ir stu d ies fo r an evening gam e of in tram u ral football at the E a st Cam pus ath letic fie ld . State News photo by L an ce Lagonl WELCOME BACK! Be sure to take advantage of our student saying. discount prices on drycleanlng and laun­ dering The Student Duplicate Bridge Club will meet at 2 p.m. 9 1)0 / every Saturday in the Fee Hall classrooms and at 2 p.m. every ¿\}/0 discount on d ryclea n ln g Sunday in room 141 Akers Hall. All student bridge players are invited. Master points will be awarded in accordance with P la n e d o w n e d in V i e t n a m , 15% discount on laundry ACBL regulations. • * * The Hillel Foundation will have a supper-forum at 6 p.m. Sunday at the Hillel House. Allan Mandelstam, MSU profes­ Lansing Launderers and Dry Cleaners sor of economics, will speak about “ October 1968.” Rides N a v y lis ts p i l o t a s m is s in g 118 E. Washtenaw 603 N. Clippert will be available by calling 332-1916. Sabbath services will be Earlier, South Vietnamese in­ casualties were reported. held at 10 a.m. Saturday at the Hillel House. SAIGON (AP) - The United combat over the North since the • * * fantrymen reported killing 22 of Elsewhere, the U.S. Com­ States announced Thursday the air campaign began in February MSU Cycling Club will hold a touring ride and racing school the enemy a mile away from mand reported little ground ac­ loss of another plane over North 1965. the U.S. base. No government at 9 a.m. Saturday and at 2 p.m. Sunday in front of the Men’s In the South, enemy forces tivity. Vietnam, as American ground I.M. All are invited to attend. forces hurled back an enemy at­ lobbed more than 100 rounds of * * * mortar shells into a U.S. base Flicks will present “ Casino Royale” at 7 and 9 p.m. Friday and Saturday in 108 Wells. Admission is 75 cents. tack on a U.S. base near Saigon. The plane, a U.S. Navy A4 14 miles northwest of Saigon, then sent in a platoon of sol­ GO GREEK Skyhawk from the carrier Han­ * * * cock, was downed Wednesday diers in apparent attempt to The Baptist Student Union invites all MSU students to a dis­ by ground fire two miles below test American defenses. cussion on the topic of “ Love In and Out of Marriage at the 19th parallel, spokesmen The enemy pulled back after 6 p.m. Sunpay at the First Baptist Church of East Lansing, said, and the pilot was seen an hour of fighting, leaving 13 940 S. Harrison Road, followed by worship at the church and ejecting. His parachute opened, dead behind. Four Americans a social hour with food, song and fellowship. For transporta­ but he was not found and is list­ were reported wounded. The ed as missing. base was a nameless artillery tion call 355-0960. * * » It raised to 903 the number of position of the U.S. 25th Infan­ Blue Key will meet at 8 p.m. Sunday in the Green Room American planes downed in try Division. GREEK SPECIALTIES on the second floor of the Union. * * * EVERY SATURDAY The Chinese Student Christian Fellowship will hold a welcome NIGHT 5-10 P.M . party fir all new Chinese students at 7 p.m. tonight 38 Union. Topic of discussion will be “ Witnessing God on Campus. A S M S U O penings A G O U R M E T’ S DELIGHT * * * BRO ILED CHOICE ST E A K S The men of Kappa Alpha Psi will hold a dance from AND SEAFO O D NIGH TLY All my men Go to the ASMSU P etition s F o r Student T r a ffle A ppeals 8:30 p.m.-12:30 a.m. Saturday in the Union parlors. Admis­ Varsity Barber Shop C ourt w ill be a v a ila b le In the lobby of the third sion will be 75 cents. flo o r, Student S e r v ic e s B uilding, O ct. 2 -15 . * * * DINNER SPECIALS NIGHTLY The Joint, a coffeehouse in the basement of Student Services P etitio n s must be turned In between 9 a .m ,- Bldg., will again present a program of folk and blues music at noon o r 1 p .m .- 5 p .m ., 334 Student S e r v ic e s INCLUDING DESSERT • H air Styling • R a zo r Cutting 8:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday. Admission is 75 cents. Cofeee B uilding. • M ustaches • H air Straightening is free. * * * The Film Society will present “ The Group” at 7 and 9 p.m. $1.99 • Flattop E x p e rts • Hair tinting Appointm ent a v a ila b le In A.M . tonight and Saturday in 109 Anthony. * * * R e e ses B a rb e r Shop has joined V a rs ity RESTAURANT & TIFFA N Y LOUNGE Shaw Hall will hold an all-University mixer from 9-12 p.m. tonight in the Shaw lower lounge. Music will be by “ Wilson SORORITY RUSH 116 E . MICHIGAN A V E . DOWNTOWN LANSING Varsity Barber Shop Mower Purpuit,” a Detroit band. C o rn e r of MAC and G r. R iv e r (below S tyle Shop) • • * 489 -119 6 The Humanities Dept, will present a Friday Evening Record Concert at 7 p.m. tonight in 114 Bessey. Music will be by Handel, Beethoven, Brahms and Prokofiev. Interest Slgn-up All * * * The East Lansing Child Study Club will sponsor a garage This Week Sept. 30-Oct. 4 and bake sale from 8:30 a.m.-3:30 p.m. Saturday at 336 Cowldy Ave., East Lansing. ♦ * * offers a complete line of name brand: NO FEE MSU’s International Film Series will present “ Around the World in 80 Days,” a film based on the novel by Jules Verne at 7:30 tonight in the Auditorium. Tickets will be available at the door and at the MSU Union Ticket Office. * * * O cto b er 4 309 Student S e r v ic e s , 1-5 p.m . MSU’s World Travel Series will present “ Russia vs. China,” a color documentary film on the controversy between Russi. and China produced and narrated by Raphael Green at 8 p.m. Saturday in the Auditorium. Individual and season yickets will be available at the door. * * * The Sailing Club will hold regatta rides on the west side of the Union at 9, 10, 11 a.m. and noon Saturday and 12, 1, 2, and 3 p.m. Sunday. • picture frames • wood carving tools • radiograph • model clays Anyone interested in playing or learning to play field hockey should meet at 3:45 p.m. Sunday at the field behind Kellogg • x-acto knives • drawing pencils Cerflfer For further information call 5-7772 or 3-7170. • pastel pencils • paratype * % * * * The MSU Sport Parachute Club will have sky diving every • t-squares • zipatone weekend near Eaton Rapids. Interested persons should contact • pressure type • drafting sets Bob Olson, 355-8019. • brushes Students interested in canvassing the City of Jackson for Jim Harrison and other democratic candidates should meet at 9 a.m. Saturday at the Union. Freshmen: MSU E m p lo ye e s.. . V The ATL Syllabus * CERTIFIED PURE PIGMENTS is now in! Before you see the ’6 9 CARS T h is T o w n B r o a d c lo th nm ® * CONTROLLED DRYING * PERMANENTLY FLEXIBLE * UNLIMITED TECHNIQUES * CLEAR PLASTIC TUBES S h ir t N e v e r W r in k le s See your MSU Employees Credit Union New Masters Paper Supplies for Fine Artists M aterials From morning till late straight collar that can • a $5 p e r hundred new c a r loan (tru e annual into the night, this Gant he worn with or w ith­ • P o s te r B o a rd ’ e W ater C o lo r P ap er In te re s t ra te Is just 9,8%) Town broadcloth shirt out a pin. Gant preci­ e a c o m m itm en t loan b efo re you m ake your sion tailoring. In 50-50 » L in e n • W hite W ove P ap er holds its smooth unruf­ selectio n fo r re a l " In s ta n t fin a n c in g " fled composure. And it fine cotton and polyester • Silk S cre en V ellu m • T ra c in g P ap er e d e a le r costs and tr a d e -in In fo rm a tio n which never has to be pressed. — exuberant colors and could save you as much as $300 • Su gar Pine • C o n stru ctio n paper Other virtues: Its long stripings. $ 1 0 .0 0 In addition . . . C an vas (p rim ed o r unprlmed) • all new c a r loans a re covered by c re d it life and p erm an e nt d is a b ility Insurance f o r n o a d d l ^ ' ST. * ' LC&fe foplJ-M lckey fectldr bve^hght ancrwA t o « ? o f " ¡ J ' k * 144 hitter this season even He also walked-of all tunga- Lollch, shrugging off a groin the doctor that It might prevent y Card* Bob Gibson infection that was supposed to him from going all the way, was After a day off Friday, the though he’s a southpaw pitcher, with the bases loaded in the tied-up Series now goes to De­ collected two hits-including the ninth to force in a run, giving weaken him, left the St. Louis powerful at the finish as he first homer in six seasons with him two runs-batted-in. Cardinals daaed with a strong allowed only two hits in the final troit for the third, fourth and 1as three innings. fifth games, Saturday, Sunday six-hitter and his first Major Striking out nine batters in and Monday. mime League homer Thursday as the addition to clouting his 930-foot Lolich, who became a left- Detroit Tigers bombed the St Louis Cardinals 3-1 to even the homer in the third inning, Lo- handed pitcher as the result of a World Series at a game apiece. Uch picked the Tigers off the childhood accident on a bicycle, admitted that his triumph left Lolich, who developed the in- floor where they had been left him "so exhausted I’m ready to fall asleep on the trainer’s table.” But the Cards were left even L o lic h h a s f o r m u la more stunned as the explosive Tigers flashed the kind of hit­ T ig e r p o w e r ting prowess that terrorized t o h a n d le C a r d in a ls the American League. All told, the Tigers had 13 hits, including W illie Horton gets the Detroit Tigers off to a fast start In the second game of the ST. LOUIS (UPI)-The De­ tra base hits in his career, said three homers off starter and World Series with a second Inning home run off St. Louis pitcher Nelson Brlles. he “ tomahawked” the ball. loser Nelson Briles. By TOM BROWN troit Tigers’ Mickey Lolich had " I knew I hit it good, but I Towering homers by Willie State News Sports Editor Horton’s home'r was one of three hit by the Tigers as they bombed the Cardinals a simple game plan to beat the didn’t know how high I hit it,” Horton, who had 36 during the With the last full weekend of non-conference scheduling 8-1 and evened the Series at one game each. UPI Telephoto St. Louis Cardinals in the World he said. “ Then I watched the regular season, and by Norm past, the Big Ten remains on the cloudy side of the win-loss Series. leftfielder going back and fin- Cash, who had 25, in the sixth ledger with 8 wins balanced against 11 misfires. Illinois, Min­ “ It was just keep the ball down, throw strikes, duck and nesota, Northwestern and the Spartans' Saturday opponent, illy he couldn’t go any farther inning dismayed the capacity H arriers open season pray,” he said. Lolich said he never entered a game with the intent to rely and the roar of the crowd told crowd of 54,692 at Busch Mem- me it was out. I even missed orial Stadium, first base.” But they were really stunned Wiscor in, have yet to post a win, while Purdue, Ohio State and r iy's boys are the only surviving unbeatens. The conference race begins Saturday for six teams, but four non-conference games are on tap this weekend. With six ad­ By DON KOPRIVA team would be as good or better Top runners for the Hoosiers on one pitch or another. “ I ditional outside encounters scattered throughout the remainder State News Sports Writer than the 1967 edition, but time are sophomore Bob Legge. 1967 sort of find out what’s working can change cross country teams Big Ten runner-up Mark Gib- of the season, the Big Ten season has all the appearances of Spartan glory in cross coun­ for me that day,” he said. “ To­ an eventual 14-15 outside mark. try appears to be back on the uptrend at MSU under new head and it has changed Indiana. Last year’s sophomore stand­ out Dave Atkinson, fifth in the bens, a senior and sophomore, Jim Press. day it was the slider, and I had a generally good fast ball. "But the slider was working Big 10report rules Saturday’s gaines: coach Jim Gibbard. Big Ten and 13th in the NCAA, Indiana beat the Spartans last ILLINOIS (0-2) at INDIANA (l-l)--While the season hasn't real effectively and I got a Saturday at Bloomington, Gib- bard’s sophomore-laden team gets a chance to show just how has returned to his native Can­ ada, and Lavery admits “ it really hurts when you lose a top year, 23-32, but as for predict­ ing Saturday’s meet, Gibbard says, “ At this time, I can’t lot of guys out with it.” But the decision for him to 'M' athletes innocent been as spectacular as the Hoosiers’ newly acquired faith­ ful had hoped, the Cardiac Kids should have an easy time with lack-luster Illini. The Hoosiers, by 10. work wasn’t made until minutes Conference said that with the good it is as MSU will meet In­ flight runner like Atkinson.” even begin to guess how close CHICAGO (UPI)-The Big before game time and even then exception of a loan transaction NOTRE DAME (1-1) at IOWA (l-l)-Even though the records dian’s Hoosiers, the 1967 Big The Hoosiers have three wins it will be. If we run like we Ten Thursday absolved Univer­ he was slated to pitch only five involving a coach no longer on are the same, the brands of football are entirely different. Ten standard-bearers and NCAA under their belts so far, in­ did in the time trial (a close sity of Michigan athletes from or six innings. the staff, “ There is not sufficient Judging from past performances following humiliating Irish fifth-placers. cluding a tie for first with South­ group), it should be close. But charges that they received dis­ "Then somebody was going to grounds for believing a violation Indiana coach Jim La very ern Illinois in the Owensboro with five sophomores running, counts, free meals, theatre tic­ losses, Notre Dame should be good by 30 points. come in and take over for me,” of Conference rules occurred." said last season that his 1968 (Ky.) Invitational. anything can happen. ’’ kets and other favors fromlo- Lolich said. The exception in the 15 charg­ NAVY (0-2) at MICHIGAN (l-I)--The Wolverines have Navy Lolich, a .114 hitter who had cal campus merchants. es made this spring by the I In a 21-page report to the Big * in their sights for this must game. The- Wolves have it by never hit a Major League homer Michigan Daily, a student publi­ I Ten’s Athletic Directors, the seven. before and who had only four ex­ cation. concerned a loan from I former Asst. Coach V. C. Mc- I PURDUE (2-0) at NORTHWESTERN <0-2)~In the third of I I the DISC SHOP Nease to Cecil Pryor for bond on an assault and charge. battery the Wildcats’ fatal five, Smilin’ Jack's boys are in for an easy time. Purdue to coast with 21 points. Your One Stop Stereo Center . . . lE a r^ . Fl y .» I Although the loan was even­ OREGON (6-2) at OHIO STATE (l-O)-The Bucks. tunin- for I tually repaid, the matter may be Purdue, will put this one away with 21 stylish points. I I P O P ... brought up for further action at the next meeting of Athletic WAKE FOREST (0-1-1) at MINNESOTA (0-2)-Twice-burned, I I I PROCOL HARUM 2.99 STEREO Directors, Big Ten Commis­ sioner Bill Reed said. the Gophers are keyed to some burning with fire of their own making. The Deacons could be tough, but Minnesota can LEARN WHAT FLYING IS ALL ABOUT.............. SHINE ON BRIGHTLY haul it away by 14. I Bryor, a second string line­ I backer, has been returned to MSU (2-0) at WISCONSIN (0-2)-The injury-plagued Badgers, I. I- ARTHUR BROWN 2.99 eligibility and McNease has since left Michigan to accept a job as committed to a little-used quarterback, should be the third victim for Duffy's toddlers. Take the Spartans, by 17. THE WINGED SPARTANS, the MSU Flying Club, Is ones again offering CRAZY WORLD STEREO r an aviation Ground School for jgjJ thosa who aro Intorostod. head coach at the University of' if Idaho. . LAST WEEK: 8-2. i I A Ground School, with tho aid of toxt mataríais, maps, and visual aids, Introducás you to tho fundamentals of flying and air navigation. Whon you IRON BUTTERFLY 2.99 H LUNCHEON SPECIAL IM HOW S I finish tho course, you’re ready for the Private Pilot Written Exam. IN A GADDA DE VIDA STEREO I c w W jy .jc fr YOUR CHOICE Noon Friday will ba tha i i I With this course you're well on your way to joining the select few who know first hand the excitement and pleasure of being one's own private BIG BROTHER 3.99 STEREO Dlne-ln or Fast Take-Out deadline for entering team i in the following I.M. sports; fra­ ternity and independant foot­ pilot, ~~ CHEAP THRILLS SUPER HAMBURGER ball, independent volleyball, I 1/4 lb* pure beef, with lettuce I O F F E R 0 0 0 D T H R U O C T . 12, 1968 and dressing, cole slaw, fraternity bowling, and open For 3 hours every Monday evening this term» a $20 enrollment fee; $4.50 french fries. soccer. I text cost; some desire; and study, you ean take a big step towards putting I i flying In your future. The Introductory class and slgn-up session Is this Monday evening, 7 p.m., room 31, Union Building. See you the re I The DISC SHOP 1 large portion of chicken, FLY UNITED I Open Evenings Mon.-Fri. a ir l in e s and honey butter, CALL I 9 s.m. - 9 p.m. EAST LANSING STORE ONLY i 323 B. Grand River Collage Travel i Wlnged Spartani, Inc. P.O. Box 287 E. Lanilng 351-6010 i 351-5380 i Michigan State University Flylng Club I Y our C ollege Life Team in East Lansing D ick B e r r y B ill Kam pf B ill Blodgett N eale M u s o lff W ayne Cobb G a ry S llv e rn a ll UOWOO n You ( O i l EOE LIFE NMIRAN ( I < O M I ’ A N Y OF AMP RI CA IM I : i a J e r r y M ea g h e r -C .L .U . M an a g e r FOOTBALL FORECAST OLD M A N WINTER CAN BE HARD O N YOUR CAR. TO This Week's Schedule: C o lle g e L ife Insurance G u est P re d ictio n By* GUARANTEE YOUR CAR Com pany ATO S igm a Chi WILL G O A N D KEEP GOING! MSU vs Wisconsin MSU MSU MSU Michigan vs Navy Michigan Michigan Michigan Ohio State vs Oregon Ohio State Ohio State Ohio State MŒSOHEFU™ Notre Dame vs Iowa Indiana vs Illinois Minnesota vs Wake Forest Purdue vs Northwestern Southern Csl vs Miami Alabama vs Mississippi Note Dame Indiana Minnesota Purdut Southern Cal Mississippi Notre Dame Indiana Minnesota Purdue So. Cal Alábeme Notre Dame Indiana Minnesota Purdue So. Cal Alabama STOP Florida State ve Texas AltM Florida State Texas A&M Florida State C am pus O rg a n is a tio n * W ishing To at Morris Auto Parts For E n te r F O O T B A L L FO R E C A S T Batterle* V *S ta rte rs C a ll J e r r y at 3 3 2 -4 2 3 6 ¡Zi Í M R L flR ^ Y E PÜBtlC K ö m V* Thermoetats v* Anti Freexe 'T G e n e ra to rs ^ H e a t e r Hoses 8BS7ßCledar G98~S2S0 WATCH FOR FOOTBALL FORECASTS EVERY FRIDAY IN THE STATE NEWS MORRIS AUTO PARTS 814 E . K alam azo o IV 4 - 5 4 4 I 8 -5 i3 0 M o n -S a t. Friday, October 4, 1968 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan SPO RTS 'S’ A F T E R N € J SATURDAY S p a r t a n s s t a l k B a d g e r s By GREGG LORIA ner would s r f the starting as­ 'There’s really not much dif­ wilf^be filled fj^affofher A».** signment >Mead of regular sig­ ference between the two quar­ more Jay Breslin. State Newt Sport* Writer terbacks,” Defensive Line Coach The Unbeaten, and untied nal-caller John Ryun. Henry Bullough said. Frank Traylor and Bill Daw­ MSU football team travels to son have both recovered from Wisconsin today in search of the injuries which have kept The Badgers main strength their third consecutive victory. them out of any action so far lies in a corp of linebackers The Badgers, meanwhile, are this season. Both may see action led by All-Big Ten Ken Criter. looking for their first grid vic­ this Saturday. Halfback Earl tory since 1966. “ They use a formation that is Anderson, recovering from a The Spartans, on the strength referred to as the split-6,” cracked rib, will also be avail­ of wiQÿ. over Syracuse and Bay­ Daugherty said. able for service. lor, are installed as 14-point Bill Feraco will once again favorites in the contest which “ It’s just like Notre Dames be the Spartan’s field general, starts at 2:30 p.m. EDT, Satur­ defense, in that they play four and will try to add to his im­ day. up on the front line, backed up pressive list of statistics. Fer­ Wisconsin, although trounced by four linebackers, and three aco has completed 60 per cent 55-7 by Arizona State in their backs. With this formation they of his passes so far, good for opener, showed vast improve­ do a lot of stunting with the 313 yards. ment in their second game loss linebackers, and they could af­ Everything that you read about Wisconsin in “ Playboy” is true. fect our running game some­ of 21-17 to Washington. Tommy Love, sophomore tail­ Everything, and maybe a little more. “ They really did improve what,” Daugherty added. As anyone who has spent at least an hour watching television back, has rushed for 168 yards between those two games, and knows, they make a lotta beer in Wisconsin. Beer, and plenty of we expect them to improve even The only Spartan who will in two games for a 4 yard-per- it, is the key factor in Wisconsin’s Playboy rating, with beer on tap more this week,” Head Coach miss the Wisconsin affair will carry average, and will once in the Union, beer on tap in the fraternity houses and just gen­ be Gary Parmentier. Parmen- again be the major threat in the G o in g o v e r Duffy Daugherty said. erally beer.on tap. tier, a sophomore roverback in­ MSU backfield. MSU ta ilb a ck Tom m y Love tr ie s to hurdle o v e r s e v ­ Badger Coach John Coatta did This situation is natural where the legal beer age is 18. Most jured during practice Wednes­ “ Against that split-6 defense make a surprise move on Wed­ eral B a y lo r ta c k le r s during last S a tu rd a y 's gam e at MSU students traveling to Madison this weekend will be relegat­ B IL L FER ACO day, will miss the Madison of Wisconsin’s, we should be nesday when he announced that Spartan Stadium , Love w ill be leading the Spartan ed to the milk bar, however, unless they are 21. trip. His roverback position running more power sweeps be­ reserve quarterback Bob Schaff- ground attack again st W isconsin In th e ir en co u n ter Unless you live in Wisconsin, you must be 21 to get into the cause that's what can really Madison bars. In Madison Saturday, State News photo by Bob Ivins hurt them,” Love said. Now, how to get there. The Triple A bring ’em back alive guys suggest that you take 1-94 to the Northern Indiana Tollway (1-80 and 90). Exit onto 1-294 and on to the Northwest Tollway (1-90). You follow 1-90 right into BOOTERS MEET DENVER NOW SHOWING Madison. IN CAR HEATERS Where do you go when you get there? * D rive In Theatre If you are in a fraternity with a Wisconsin chapter, you have a 302 0 SM DW R O A D good start. The Wisconsin chapter of Sigma Chi is the campus dis­ 'S ' to u r n e y b e g in s to d a y 2 MILES SOUTHWEST OF LANSING ON M-7S ALL COLOR PROGRAM tributor of Budweiser, so you can get the general idea. THE NEW ROM ANTIC Friday evenings, several fraternities throw beer suppers with By GARY WALKOWICZ goalie. “ He was our No. 1 C O M E D Y!! sororities. The beer supper is similar to an East Lansing TG as State News Sports Writer in their opening win so our con­ goalie last year and he’ll be far as the girls go, but strictly legal. The Sigs. the SAE’s, and the test could develop into an offen­ our No. 1 goalie this year un­ Fijis are reported to have suppers scheduled Friday so the MSU chapters might consider the boons of brotherhood. The MSU soccer team risks its string of 29 consecutive sive show. Whoever we play on til he's knocked out of that Saturday should give us a good spot. S id n e y F o lt le r If you are not Greek, but long on nerve, the Wisconsin Greeks games without a loss when they battle." Sophomore Les Lucas saw suggest you try a fraternity party anyway. oppose Denver today in the MSU has met the other three considerable action at goalie in If you are not Greek and short on nerve, the famous Union first round of the MSU Invita­ tournament teams only a total the Spartan’s first three games, Rathskeller is a good place to spy on the natives. The Pub is a tional Soccer Tournament. of three times. Their win over all shutouts. for fl| good “ beer bar" for the college trade, while the Manor is a good MSU, which has not lost a Denver last year was the first The hooters had both good "21 bar." TheH.T. (AmberGrid) is another outstanding spa. game since the finals of the 1965 meeting with the Pioneers. They and bad news in the injury de­ lare For #od, Ella’s and Gino's have the recommendation of the NCAA Tourney, (they’ve won tied Chicago Circle (then partment this week. “ D ailyCardinal," but good food is served up and down State 25 and tied 4) meets Denver at known as Navy Pier) in 1956 ACTION C O -F E A T U R E All-American toward Ernie 3 p.m. Kent State and Illinois- and 1957 but the Spartans have Tuchscherer will return to Street. After the game Saturday, you could try the big bash at the Union. . Chicago Circle open the tourney with a game at 1 p.m. never met Kent State. practice Monday after missing Kenney will go with his reg­ the opening part of the season "a The big fraternity parties dominate the evening action. If you like the hard stuff, buy it before you get to Madison. Friday’s two losers meet in ular starting lineup against the following knee surgery. m in u te Prices run high in Madison. Your fraternity will spot you a rack while the houseless might the consolation game at noon Saturday. The two winners meet Pioneers. The Boles brothers. The Spartans, however, lost Kevin and Dennis, will be at sophomore forward Ray Kor- to p ra y, try the Lorraine up on the square. It’s a bus ride from the campus, at 2 p.m. for the championship. the fullback slots with Buzz kiala for an indefinite period. a GATES OPEN 7 TO 11 P.M. CARTOON AT DUSK but at last report, the rooms went for $4.25 a night. The football team will stay at the Lorraine so don’t expect miracles. MSU Coach Gene Kenney said he expects a very tough game Demling and Ken Hamann at Korkiala has loose bone chips halfback. Alex and Ed Skotarek in his knee and many require second “ IVY" AT 7:40 & Late "MIN.-SEC." AT 9:50 Only At the other end from the Salvation Army are the motels around the campus. If you aré a high roller, indulge. It costs $12-15 a from Denver. “ We had a real good game will play th? midfield spots, surgery. while the forward line will field to die!” IN COLOR with them last season (MSU Trevor Harris. Tony Keyes. night. Like the East Lansing stores, the Madison emporia are not won 3-1) and I expect an equally Tom Kreft, and Dave Trace. known for their low prices. Just the same, if you spill beer into your suitcase, Redwood and Ross is a familiar name. Sartorially, it would be hard to match my fur coat from Camp­ bell’s Suburban Shop, or my Hitler war binoculars, but Ramsey s can provide you a green and white, six-foot scarf, Redwood and close game today, Kenney said. “ They showed a good offense Kenney indicated that senior Joe Baum will be the starting BEST IN FOREIGN FILMS TONIGHT — Campbell can handle the Spartan broilie and Ray Leffler has the 2nd BIG WEEK! T om orro w a n d S u n d a y straw boater—in season. A little imagination, and you can match BUTTERFIELD FEATURE TIMES the Madison hedonists. If you get a chance to go to Madison, go see for yourself and 7:10 and 9:30 TONIGHT From 7 p.m. go early. Mingle with the natives, have a blast and get back in one piece. A SIZZLER FLICKS f 'CHARLES K. FELDMANS JAMES Tonight and Tomorrow BOND 007 FROM FRANCE. M a k e s ‘T H E F O X ’ lo o k % C A S IN O R O Y A IE lik e a m ilk -fe d p u p p y . 17 Intimation*! Stan Including! PETER URSULA DAVID WOODY ‘T h e re s e a n d Is a b e lle ’ f f t L SELLERS ’ ANDRESS * NIVEN * ALLEN w i l l be th e m o s t ta lk e d - Té* a b o u t m o v ie a r o u n d .* ’ |I0 8 Wells Hall - 7 and 9 p.m. - 75C^ -W IN S RADIO FOXEASTERNTHEATRES•SUBSIDIARYOFNATIONALGENERALCORR SPARTAN TWIN THEATRE FRANDOR SHOPPING CENTER • 3 10 0 EAST SAOINAW • Rhone 3 5 1 0 0 3 0 If f~ H J-4 rk i A M * « TONIGHT AT DAILY AT 6:30 & 9 P.M. 1:30-3:30-5:30-7:30-9:30 SAT. & SUN. AT »T*f “ f j , l:30-4:00-6i30 & 9 P .M . | ||0 K C lllF ! ! of the Happy Ending Ê- % * H I C o v e r : F rid a y $3.50; Saturday $3.50; Sunday $3.50 * T h e re w ill be two show s Sunday. One at 4:00 and one at 8:00. P eople under tw enty one a re invited to attend. Doris Day Brian Keith ■tarring ESSY PERSSON ("I, A Woman") hhThcroHO and Anna Gael as Isabelle with Barbara Laage / Anne Vernon / Maurice Teynac Mtafbrrow In«WWot Cm* Production Rosemaryb “With SixYou Next Attraction Baby Get Eggroll” John Cassavetes Ruin Gordon Sidney Biackmer Color by Deluxe. Filmed in Penaviiion*. "Ulysses” Released by National General Pictures. •4t-'.*> *fc- ■,c♦ ' Fridayi October 4, 1968 8 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Cam pus committee H u m p h r e y d ile m m a : to a**. W» *4^« i t m for Nixon inaction - iM**- d>. wd* rJh% n ü iff Ä/ e ü“ I I I © i í |ul » cr‘i h By DALE RAYMAN “ There are nearly 450 terested students we know State News Staff Writer about,” Greulich said, “ and phenonena, any future failure education and othe social jus­ The Nixon for President By TR1NK A CLINE there may be more we don’t of HHH to endorse ’further tice changes, Ross said. campus committee has moved Campus Editor know about.” liberal stands will be under­ Harvey Dzodin, co-chair­ into action as the national The differences are seen “ It’s difficult to contact 450 standable, Ross noted. Why man for the state-wide campaign moves toward the above and beyond tlie simi- people,” he added, “ but an go more liberal if you aren’t Michigan Young Citizens for November elections. larities. office would certaiftly help our going to pick up more liberal Humphrey-Muskie, explained Bill Greulich, Buchanan Humphrey versus McCarthy communication committee.” voters along the route, he that through weekly meetings, ’junior and chairman of the philosophy and policy stands. Greulich said the Nixon for asked. speakers, discussions and de­ campus committee, said the Differences even imagined President committee welcomes Ross interpreted Hum- bates the HHH forces must campus organization is mobil­ sometimes. all students who are interested Humphrey phrey’s Monday night Vietnam sensitize students to the Hum- izing after an inactive sum­ This is the in campaigning for the national dilemma facing his cam- speech as a “ feeler” for those phrey-Muskie stands. mer. ticket. liberal backers. The question “ A lot of people are not “ Nothing much was hap­ paigners, especially in such “ We hope to have an is now whether this liberal planning on voting. It was all pening over the summer,” McCarthy fortresses as MSU. announcement in the State or nothing (with McCarthy) Greulich said. “ The primaries Harvey Ross, co-chairman of the MSU Coalition for Hum- manpower will react suf­ ficiently to justify additional for them, and they aren’t N ix o n th r o n g s were over and everyone was News early next week con­ cerning the next meeting for phrey-Muskie, came to grad­ liberal response from HHH swinging to the best alterna­ waiting for the national con­ N ix o n i s s w a m p e d b y a d m i r e r s as he w a g e s h i s c a m p a i g n fo r the interested students,” he said. himself. tive,” Dzodin said. “ We must R ic h a rd M. vention.” uate school at MSU from Ken­ work to motivate them to vote, P re s id e n c y . The group plans to pass out nedy campaign experience in Lafayette, Ind. And he found Ross listed Humphrey’s stand on key issues and termed even if it isn’t for Humphrey.” campaign literature at the Prosecutor Dzodin said that meetings Homecoming game and to disillusioned McCarthy people him innovator in social change eager to work for Jim Har­ rison for Congress, Blanche legislation. He noted Hum­ phrey’s efforts to establish the leaflet distribution and can­ vassing will be leading up to maintain Nixon for President booths at vital points on cam­ receives the Oct. 29 Day of Political pus. Martin and Warren Huff for the MSU Board of Trustees, Peace Corps, Job Corps, Medi­ care and Housing and Urban De­ Awareness being planned by the L o c k w o o d p r a is e s N ix o n “ We’ll probably have booths appointment other liberal candidates and National Student Assn. (NSA). in front of Bessey Hall and velopment office. LANSING (UPI)-Raymond engage in canvassing and The MSU Coalition is also in front of the Union,” Greu­ There is a need to motivate working with a faculty group lich said, “ and we may have L. Schodeller, 35, of Lansing, polling efforts. was appointed Ingham County students and minority peoples supporting Humphrey just now more.” But direct Humphrey support has sometimes come to register today and vote Nov. being organized. b e fo r e y o u n g R e p u b lic a n s The group has been having Prosecutor Thursday to suc­ ceed Donald L. Reisig, recent­ 5, Ross added. “ Students have On election day the Coalition c o m m unication difficulties reluctantly ly named to the County Circuit “ We should expect to draw much in common with min- twill offer babysitting and in uniting the nation according constructive social change. Lock­ due to lack of a campus office. By STEVE WATERBURY Court. support from liberal Demo- orities past and present-bo^h transportation services for to the St. Louis Republican. wood claimed that the success Paul Asquith, president of The selection was made by the crats, Independents and- — lib­ lack sufficient representation voters in need. State Senate Majority Leader The Senate Majority Leader, of Nixon shows that it is pos- the MSU Campus Republicans, circuit court and is effective eral Republicans-people who among those who govern While Ross spoke often of an early Nixon supporter who sible to improve society by work- he has been trying for them,” he said. And both need Ingham County work, Dzodin Emil Lockwood (R-St. Louis) through the remainder of this recognize the need for social recently relinquished his posi­ ing through proper channels. several months to get an of- political and economic power. felt winning students over was spoke before a meeting of the year. change and social justice,” College Republicans Wednes- tion as head of the Nixon cam­ The College Republican meet- f*ce lor the local group, the absolute priority. Terming Schodeller has served as Ross said. “ But we aren’t Labor had a long fight for paign in Michigan to Gov. Rom- ing was also addressed by Jerry I ve rnade 12 trips to the the Ingham Count, Demoor,tin » » o r . .1I M d W J I Frendt, a recent graduate of Student Activities Office chief asst, prosecutor since getting all of it.” power. Blacks are only be­ on and of the necessity for the ney, stated he was confident of set up as “ archaic and so MSU who is currently running trying to get office space for 1964. He is the Republican can­ “ The biggest problem is ginning to get the “ tools they usage of proper channels to ac­ a Nixon victory. Lockwood por­ pro-Nixon and Wallace that it didate for prosecutor in the that the people who should be need for self determination,” hieve social change. trayed Nixon as a “ smart poli­ for a seat on the Ingham Coun- us> he said, but we haven t isn’t worth it,” Dzodin said Nov. Selection. our leaders because of the he said. Students having efforts must be concentrated Lockwood termed Nixon the tician” who had learned through ty Board of Supervisors. Frendt been given a place yet.’ James J. Weed of Lansing, things Humphrey has fought for trouble financially getting on the campusv community candidate who could best “ re­ defeat in the same manner that stressed the importance of ef- The Nixon for President the Democratic candidate, and have felt that they have lost through their education should establish the establishment” another famous election loser, fective government at the lo- committee is a standing corn­ “ where minds are still open.” Lansing Attorney James L. the leader of these causes turn to the Humphrey cam- and who could return a sense of Abraham Lincoln, had learned eal level, and sought student mittee of the Campus Republi- Portions of the Democratic tt . . . c . . N. support for his campaign. His cans, and as soon as the larger Theophelis had also sought the (McCarthy).“ he added, paign, Ross noted. All these through his election losses. Party platform relating to un|ty to. the UnitedStates. Nix district includes Spartan Vil- group gets an office, the com- interim appointment. Judge Jack “ Through some reverse halo groups have met frustration on has been successful in unit­ It is not necessary, said Lock­ youth include special efforts W. Warren of the circuit court effect, they have put the image from being left out of the de- to recruit young people as ing the Republican Party, and wood, to “ run up and down with lage, Cherry Lane Apartments mittee will be able to co- said Schodeller’s selection was of opposition to these issues sign of decision making and and part of East Lansing. ordinate their communications candidates for public office, would be similarly successful signs or grow beards” to achieve unanimous.___________ _ on Humphrey.” have a common interest in a and their activities. Should this be a national candidate seeking more aid to support of a Constitutional r amendment lowering the voting age to 18, revision of the Sel­ ective Service System to es­ HUM PHREY OUT tablish an eligibility period of one year and review draft board memberships to make them more representative of the communities served. Hum­ phrey has also pledged to re­ place Gen. Lewis B. Hershey as director of the Selective Candidates vie ByMITCSI MILLER Michigan Executive-Reporter nessman, and it is being met cerned about Nixon’s drawing Service system. Marvin L. Brown, vice Michigan, with its 21 electoral N ew s b a c k g ro u n d with success. According to Lee, power, at least on their voters. president of the Michigan Con- votes, is one o f’ the key indus- Wallace has the vote in the “ Labor will not go for the Re­ ference of Concerned Demo- trial states that all three candi- homicide rate in the nation and the best one winning. Not even working class districts that John­ publicans,” they say, and let crats, said “ Humphrey’s dates are concentrating on in thus is weak on law and order the prospect of Gov. Romney son had in 1964-between 70 and Humphrey attack Nixon’s la­ Agenda for Social Justice calls order to win the Presidency, and that a vote for Wallace is in a Nixon Cabinet seems able 90 per cent. bor record. for the right to a liveable And there is no question about wasted and will help to elect to excite the Republicans, but it In terms of appeals, the Wal­ And they accuse Nixon of environment, the right to a the fact that each candidate, in- Nixon who. they hope to prove, may be that their concept of a lace campaign is attempting “ selling out” these who sup­ good education and the right to eluding George Wallace, is driv- is an enemy of labor. well-organized drive is what will to maintain and increase its port him by suggesting liberals a good job.” ing directly for the White House, State campaign head John carry the election into the Nixon hold on the lower middle class like Romney, Scranton and Rock­ “ Compare that to Richard and not planning to stop at the Bruff goes so far as to predict column. by pointing to Humphrey’s call efeller for his cabinet posts. Nixon’s program for building Capitol. a 53-55 per cent victory for Hum­ If, however, enthusiasm is for increased federal spending Whether or not Wallace wins more jails and George Wal- Each of the candidates sees phrey. what wins elections, the Wal­ and the increase in taxes it or even does well will depend lace’s proposal for a police Michigan as a possible victory, On the Republican side the lace forces may surprise every­ would bring. on just how alienated the low­ state and you know why I am and each has legitimate grounds state campaign, according to one Nov. 6. “ The working man just can’t er middle class really is from X- ¥51 for Hubert Humphrey,” he for doing so. The whole cam- party vice-chairman William According to Wallace head­ afford any more taxes,” Lee the political system. said. paign can be reduced to the McLaughlin, is dedicated to get­ quarters, the other candidates said. Regardless of the final tal­ And added, “ Y et none of question of “ Where are the Wal­ ting the Republican vote iden­ have already reached their peaks, ly, the chances of Hubert Hum­ Wallace is counterattacking Humphrey’s social priorities lace votes coming from?” tified and to the polls. while Wallace is still climb­ phrey carrying the state as his the Democratic and Union atj can realistically take place If they are coming, as most “ We feel the issues are the re­ ing. predecessor did are nil. tack on his labor record with a until we end the war in Viet­ polls have forecast, from the sponsibilities of Mr. Nixon. “ Picking someone like Gen. pamphlet stating he improved There is no question that nam. I hope that the vice blue collar wards that have been Once he converts the voters, LeMay as his running mate Alabama’s labor position. There George Wallace is right when president will become more the source of Democratic stren­ w e’ll find them." can’t hurt the campaign, bring- he says it’s a case of “ the chick­ is no telling whether it will O n th e c a m p a ig n t r a il definitive on this issue and will gth in the state, then Richard The Republicans, too, find along labor people can’t hurt, ens coming home to roost” for work, however. speak out more strongly Nixon is a shoe-in. the race a tight one, but aren't and Nixon picking Romney, who For the moment at least, the Administration. on what he proposes to end But if the Democrats succeed particularly worried abt Wal­ just increased taxes, for his The only real question is H u b e r t H u m p h r e y has a s m i l e and a w o r d o r t w o - - the Wallace people feel they that war.” in their campaign of getting lace inroads, which they see in cabinet can’t hurt. We feel we have the union member voting whether they will land in the w h i c h he h o p e s w i l l p u t h i m In th e W hite H o u s e — Wallace or the Nixon column the ranks of labor back into Democratic districts like South can carry the state,” says Larry f o r h is a u d ien ce . for Wallace. their camp, Humphrey may still Warren and Hamtramck, ■ ‘both Lee, Wallace state vice-chair­ They are not particularly con- on electio« day. * have a chance here. 80-90 per cent Democratic in the man. And should they be right past. about their statement that Wal- The Republicans are capital Wallace is drawing capacity A c tio n C o rp s: lo c a l b r a n c h lace is getting his support from ¡¡¡¡ng 0n discontent with the crowds in his visits to Michigan. Republican suburban and rural Johnson Administration to give Lansing police reported a crowd areas, but wrong about their abil- them the state by one or two two or three times the size of ity to get the union vote back, points, with several appearan- Richard Nixon’s greeted the the little scrapper from Ala- ces by Nixon and Agnew turn- Alabaman on the capital steps. to b e g in m e m b e r s h ip d r iv e bama may be able to come up mg the tide, The emphasis of the Wallace with a plurality. They see it as a battle be- campaign strategy is toward By DIANE PETRYK act strictly in a advisory sense. lege, draft laws, U.S. welfare, The GOP has governed Mich- tween party organizations, with the worker and the small busi- State News Staff Writer “ We’d rather have the ideas tax laws, civil rights, migrant igan’s presidential electors six A membership drive for a new come from young people than workers, student demonstra­ times out of the past eleven branch of the state-wide Michi­ dictate our own feelings,” he tions, nuclear power control, gun elections since 1924. The Demo­ gan Action Corp is being organ­ said. ized in Lansing and partly on “ I imagine the membership control and Vietnam. She indi­ crats, however, carried the last cated, however, that the group’s two, with Lyndon Johnson rack­ LeMay’s position campus. will expect the advisory board stand will depend entirely on ing up a 66 per cent majority The Michigan Action Corps to be active in campaigning for is a non-partisan youth group funds,” Rowe said. whose purpose is to arouse, in­ Despite its admitted evolve- what the membership decides. Rowe has called the Action Crops an “ Independant Domes­ over Barry Goldwater. John Kennedy, however, was only able to beat Richard Nixon 'scares away' votes form and involve young citizens ment from the “ Alliance for Ken- tic Peace Corps” and suggests by two percentage points in 1960, Michigan Democratic leaders Thursday said the addition of and voters concerning public is- nedy” people, the organization that it might take up existing at a time when there was con­ retired Air Force Gen. Curtis E. LeMay to George C. Wallace’s sues. In the Lansing area it will hopes to attract interested youth volunteer programs that the gov­ siderably less discontent with third-party ticket will result in many blue-collar workers drop­ be run entirely by high school regardless of political affiliation. ernment lu s under-funded. the incumbent than Ixists to­ ping their support of the former Alabama Governor. »and college students and other According to Judy Class, Lan­ day. “ He’ll scare away votes with his position on nuclear wea­ young adults. sing Business University grad­ Both the membership and ad- Democratic leaders are skep- pons and the bomb,” said Atty. Gen. Frank J. Kelley. “ He John Arden, Flint graduate uate and vice chairman of the visory board are optimistic about tical of reports which show mas- won't add a thing for Wallace in this state.” student, will organize MSU stu- Action Corps, the organization the future of the organization sive defections to Wallace that Sen. Edward Kennedy ID- among union members. They State Chairman Sander Levin said LeMay’s selection will dents. “ We hope to have a booth does not want to require a party Mass. ) regards as a living mem­ point to private polls, and the prove to rank-and-file union members that Wallace is pur­ distributing literature in the preference for a young person orial to his brother. The group Detroit News poll, which as ot suing an extremely conservative program not in their best Union soon,” he said. to work for non-partisan social Although a youth organization, feels that part of the reason for last Sunday suggested a slight interest. an adult advisory board has reforms. The advisory board is an expected large membership edge for Humphrey in the race. Public opinion polls have shown Wallace gaining momen­ been established by the Action in agreement. “ Issues don’t lies in the Action Corps broad Nevertheless, the main thrust tum among blue-collar Democrats in Michigan’s big indus­ Corps. really divide along party lines base and non-political stand. of the Democratic campaign trial cities. This has worried supporters of Hubert H. Hum­ Members of the board are: Bill anymore,” Ferguson said. within the state is directed at phrey. Ryan, state House Minority Deeply interested in the or­ the blue-collar workers who see “ In a small way we’re an ans­ Bernard Apol, head of the Secretary of State’s elections Leader; Joel Ferguson, Lan­ wer to SDS,” Miss Class said. ganizations prospect for pro­ “ law and order” as the over­ moting "social betterment,” riding issue of 1968. division, said LeMay’s announcement that he is Wallace’s sing city councilman; Peter “ SDS protests, complains, pick­ vice presidential candidate came too late to change the Amer­ Manning stated, “ My hope is that » w w \ W Y % \v in Manning, professor of sociol­ ets and causes trouble. We are A “ fact squad” is touring ogy; Sander Levin, Dempcratic going to try to help to change the Action Corps will allow a the state with Wallace, seek­ ican Independent Party ballot lineup Michigan for the Nov. 5 number of people who are young election. State chairman; David Hollis­ things by working the right way.” ing to point out to the enthu- ‘ V* f o r V ic t o r y and idealistic to continue to feel Griffin was listed as “ stand-in” on the Wallace ticket to ter, Eastern High School teach- Miss Class listed the various .. . . .___. __ siastic crowds that have greet- er; and Winthrop Rowe, Lan- issues the Action Corps may deal thattheyhavesom pa ^ former governor that Wal- qualify the third-party candidate for ballot designation in Mich­ sing attorney. with, including voter registra- ciety- lace is a racist whose election igan and several other states. G e o r g e W a l l a c e , t h i r d - p a r t y c a n d i d a t e , w a v e s th e An organizational meeting for would exerbate racial tensions Levin said it makes little difference who is listed on the Ferguson expressed the feel- tion, the 18-year-old vote, a s i g n o f v i c t o r y d u r i n g h i s L a n s i n g a p p e a r a n c e at th e ail interested students in tenta- ratherthan relieve them, that ballot because “ no one or no thing can moderate the per­ ing of all the board members in Michigan presidential primary C a p ito l T u e s d a y . S ta te N e w s p h o to b y L a n c e L a g o n i emnhnsmne that the hoard w ill anH — -™"» 9» p pafripa'igtv the jjfc v State News Staff Writer paigns in more than a a u ca f ]a'^ vn\ ■day evening. Speculation is sticker placed in the w write-in X . that of \ # Jesse Unruh in Cal­ ties using students from r*- Wallace might g e tr fr o G<*ArrS ylBii \\ » in tape recorder technology. Example: completely automatic must dig in and do their home­ them our support.” cratic centralization, accord­ reverse changes tape direction without the need for flip- ing to Ginny Osteen, Arlington, are growing. ” flopping reels at the end of a tape, giving you hours of un­ work, Feinberg said. The groundwork for tomorrow’s The local Students for Mc­ Va. sophomore, YSA organ­ Already Mhe East Lansing SB 1 interrupted enjoyment! Other unique features include three changes must be laid today, Carthy will keep their own izer. he said. name for the Harrison cam­ YSA is in the midst of a busy Miss Osteen defined demo­ schedule of events. ■I i ft.$1 ■II 9« « « V 1 motors and Sony "SNR” Noise Reduction System, which automatically reduces the gain of the playback amplifier dur­ paign, though they are a part cratic ing quiet passages of the recorded material, when background centralization as a “ We played a supportive The group hopes to remain of the Majority and are working method of making decisions role in the rally opposing the UBO] noise is most predominant. The exciting 666-D has all the professional features you need for really serious recording: a force on the political scene for the same goals. wherein all minorities are trustees' resolution,” Miss solenoid-pushbutton operation, 2 VU meters, pause control after this election. The really given a voice. Osteen said. “ We will support and digital tape counter, scrape flutter filter, automatic tape Bob Swanson, treasurer for “ It was used in the Bol­ anything like this that comes big battle for control of the lifter, and so much more! Come in and see the features the the local Students for Mc­ shevik revolution very suc­ pro's use now! Under $575.00 two major parties will come up in the future.” Carthy, said the group de­ in 1972 they feel. cessfully,” she noted. cided to keep its own name. Like all local units, the In addition the East Lansing “ We will help the back­ He said a new name at this national YSA is made up of an YSA is gearing for the week of room politicians most if we time since they might are be confusing, working on the meets executive committee which anti-war actions Oct. 21-27. Before You B uy . . . COMPARE A t C entral desert the scene now,” Fein­ between regular Miss Osteen voiced hope that, berg said. “ Up until this time McCarthy write-in campaign meetings to compose major as a result of the week, a the student was never really as well as the Harrison cam­ policy decisions. campus unit of the Student M ic h ig a n ’s Largest H i-Fi Stereo D ealer. considered a strong force in paign. These decisions are sent to Mobilization Committee to politics by the old-style poli­ each local unit where dissent End the War in Vietnam, can Feelings of the M ajority We have a complete selection o f ............ ticians,” he said. “ We have be formed. over the McCarthy write-in is welcomed. All dissenting to change that attitude.” are mixed. Lou Penner, vice- reports are sent to the na­ She said an MSU contingent • M c In to s h « T h o r e n s « D u a l • M a r a n tz • Jensen » K L H e B o z a k • J B L » G a r r a r d tional office for national dis­ If the organization is to chairman of Students for Mc­ tribution. may be sent to Detroit Oct. 26 Kenwood « H a rm o n K a rd o n « F i s h e r « T e le fu n k e n » R o b e r ts » A m p e x » B e n ja m in survive past November, new Carthy, and Feinberg are un­ Miss Osteen said the local to participate in a parade sup­ M I r a c o r d • J. B . L a n s i n g » A l t e c # U h e r « N o r e l c o « C o n c e rto n e » M e - D o n a ld leaders must be recruited. decided whether or not to executive board has not been porting the International Day • V ik in g #AR » P re c is io n E le c tro n lc s « S ta n d a rd « J e r r o ld » P lu s M a n y O t h e r Most of those now leading the support the campaign. Miss chosen yet. of Protest. C o m p o n e n t s and A c c e s s o r i e s . group are seniors or graduate Drulard feels that it will prob­ “ Internally there can be as Speakers coming to MSU students. ably do more for George Wal­ lace than anyone else. much debate as we want,” through YSA include Paul Bou- she said. “ But once a decision telle, Socialist Workers Party Feinberg thought he had come is made we think it is most “ We will leave it up to the effective if we work as a candidate for the vice-presi­ HI-FI BUYS up with an original idea in dency, 8:30 p.m. Wednesday forming the group. However, individual whethe or not he team.” in 105 S. Kedzte; Giesela three weeks ago he was in­ will campaign for McCarthy,” A recruiting pamphlet YSA Mandel, founder of the Ger­ vited to a meeting of student Feinberg said. “ They can do distributes in their booth at man SDS and participant in groups in Washington, D.C. it at the same time the Har­ the union each Tuesday and the French students strife, There the National Coalition' rison campaign is being car­ Wednesday states, “ We be­ Oct. 20; and Carol Lipman, TAPE RECORDING INDUSTRIES for Student Action was forming ried oiit.” 332-0897 lieve that the root cause and the Independent Majority The group will begin can­ of war, racism, and poverty editor of "Young Socialist,” was asked to join. vassing in Jackson Saturday is the capitalist system, a YSA’s monthly magazine, Nov. 1101 E. Grand River Ave. East Lansing Phone: 337-2310 13 and 14. “ The National Coalition is morning for the Harrison system which means con­ Friday, October 4, 1968 10 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan P R O M O T IO N S Teens die fro m c a n 0y a q Q f S . Kenneth A l l . e n . "dal fith Affen Affen waswas appointed appointed d a lc ceremoniès o . r pheld m ceremonies IrfttrS- Pjunior n y eàv f JPT M? #3» has a sÇ ask«?' a<% * « r to ts cwnntaHuni|i w cwtnrtai Reserve__ Air: Officer Training Hati day inin nomnnctratinn Demonstration Ha 11 Hall loin SOâbbârd join Scabbard 3fidand BlâdC. Blade, âa fÎCGF. SAN DIEGO, Calif LAP) - Copps Cadet Brigade Com­ Allen is a senior and in­ national military honorary for Thrill-seeking teen-agers are dustrial education major from junior and senior cadets, and The Cadet Brigade Com­ sniffing intoxicating vapors mander and promoted to the rank of Cadet Colonel in spe- Goodrich Michigan. During his is currently serving as that mander is chosen on the basis from pressurized cans of hair of ROTC as well as university spray, insect repellent and scholastic standing, perfor­ cleaning solvent - and are mance during a six week sum­ dying, officials say. mer camp held between The chief of the San Diego cadets' junior and senior year, County Probation Department, B r o a d c a s tin g la b to a ir and the evaluation’s of ROTC Kenneth F. Fare, blames toxic instructors. substances in such sprays for eight deaths in six months. Also appointed and pro­ s tu d e n t r a d io p r o d u c tio n s moted in Thursday’s cere­ Dr. J. B. Askew, county health director says: "It’s recorders, turntables and con­ monies were the members of a fad. The motive is to seek Have you ever had a desire try it on the new Student Cadet Col. Allen’s staff: Cadet thrills, to get light-headed. to produce your own radio pro­ Broadcast Laboratory trol boards. Program produc­ Lieutenant Colonel Michael This is a nationwide problem. gram! (SBL). ers must have successfuly Anderson. Deputy Brigade Kids get together as a group Maybe you would like to do The purposes of the SBL are completed TV-Radio 272 and Commander; Cadet Major and do it.” one that would analyze the style to give the interested student a 273. changes in Beatle music, a re­ place where he can get realis­ WKAR has. offered a' time William Ewald, 1st Battalion Commander; Cadet Major M any a handshake Fare says sniffing was first noticed last April, and since enactment of an old Lone Ran­ tic on-the-air experience, a segment on AM and FM for Roger- Murphy, 2nd Battalion then more than 100 cases have ger script, a panel discussion chance to mature his produc­ SBL broadcasts. W1LS has Commander; and Cadet staff K e n n e th A l l e n ( r i g h t ) a c c e p t s a p p o i n t m e n t as R O T C C a d e t B r i g a d e C o m m a n d e r been referred to his depart­ on SDS or a documentary on tion techniques and a place also offered to air the student officers Captain's Alan Bell, f r o m C o l. R o b e r t G. P l a t t , p r o f e s s o r o f m i l i t a r y s c i e n c e . T h e a p p o i n t m e n t w a s ment. Biggie Munn. where the occasional mistake broadcasts. Paul Gard, Michael Luce, and m a d e at a c e r e m o n y at D e m o n s t r a t i o n H a ll T h u r s d a y . “ It’s not as expensive as Any student with a program is corrected then forgotten. The only requirement to par­ Robert Beller. experimentation with dan­ idea described as arty, con­ All SBL members will be ticipate in SBL is an interest in Officiating at the cere­ gerous drug pills and mari­ servative, weird, stoic or given courses of instruction in radio. The first meeting of juana but these toxic vapors common will have a chance to the operation of station tape SBL will be 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the WKAR studios in the Auditorium. monies was Professor of Mili­ tary Science Col. Robert G. Platt. C zechs confront Soviets appear to be gerous,” he said. "There’s less involvement but more more dan­ " '2 0 0 1 : A Space O d y s s e y / provides serious results.” th e screen w ith some o f th e most at p arley in M oscow Askew said; do it for a lark. But when “ These kids d a zzlin g visual happenings and technical achievem ents in th e history of the m otion p ictu re!" — Time Magazine SHAWHALL presents MOSCOW — - A Czecho­ slovak delegation headed by Communist party chief Alex­ There has been continued and head of the Slovak Com­ criticism of Czechoslovakia in munist party. the Soviet press, indicating the Dubcek was expected to argue Dubcek group may face an up­ that communist control had been the material is inhaled and takes action, nothing can be done to cure the damage.” Askew said his office is conducting a study and results andra Dubcek arrived in Mos­ hill task in seeking withdrawal considerably tightened in will be available next month. cow Thursday and began* talks of troops w/rich moved in Aug. Czechoslovakia and it was time Study is difficult because un­ from Detroit with Soviet leaders about with­ 10-21. to start a phase withdrawal of less the coroner finds traces drawal of some Soviet occupa­ The Kremlin said at the time the more than 500,000 Soviet, of freon gas, commonly used tion troops. in spray cans, during an "The Wilson Mower Pursuit” Czechoslovak sources said the first round of talks started it acted to save Czechoslovakia Polish, Hungarian, Bulgarian from an overthrow of commun­ and East German troops now autopsy, the official cause of ism. It demanded a reversal of stationed there. death cannot be attributed to In the Lower Lounge soon after the arrival and last­ the sprays. Freon is extremely Czechoslovakia’s liberal com­ According to reports in Prag­ ed three hours. Further talks difficult to detect in an exam­ munism, introduced by Dubcek, ue, the Russians have agreed are expected Friday. and the Soviet Community party in principle to pull out a large ination. “ I shall stay as long as Askew said spray sub­ necessary,” Dubcek told newspaper Pravda was still number of troops by Oct. 28, TONIGHT 9 -1 2 p.m. Czechoslovak correspondents calling Thursday for “ practical the 50th anniversary of the actions" toward more orthodox Czechoslovak republic. stances include solvents which can cause dealth by dissolv­ who asked him about the length ing fat in tissue, the brain, communism in Prague. But there has been no sign in of the visit. live, kidney and lungs. Vapors Dubcek was accompanied by Moscow that the Kremlin is 2001: a space odyssey TONIGHT! Premier Oldrich Cernik and sufficiently satisfied to start Gustay Husak, deputy premier the withdrawal. fill lungs, preventing oxygen from reaching the brain. SUPER PANAVISION ■ METROCOLOR A N S 1 N G EXCLUSIVE AREA SHOWING TODAY F E A T U R E A T 1:30 4 :1 0 -6 :4 5 -9 :2 5 D riv e -In T h e a t r e ALL COLOR PROGRAM 3rd Week! Regular Prices! IN CAR HEATERS 4 SHO W S D A I L Y 1 :0 5 -3 :4 5 -6 :3 5 -9 :1 5 a G A T E S O P E N A T 7 :0 0 - C A R T O O N A T DUSK THE IAUGH AFFAIR EXPLODES C A JM M P U S w h e n t h e t e e n t w i n s t a n g le D a d ' s W E D D I N G | 332-6944 . J tüem bu They’ll DOANYTHING! P A R T Y L IN E ! N e x t : P e t e r S e l l e r s '1 L O V E Y O U , A L I C E B . T O K L A S ’ ..■nrDAREANYTHING! and they’ve made your ’ - j | NOW SHOWING FR I., SAT. & SUN. streets a jungle! c. Luior Miis AH 3 / 3 MILES EAST0FMS.U •PHONE E D 2 -I0 4 2 * FREE ELECTRIC CAR HEATERS PALOMARPICTURESINTERNATIONALo-eseou S id n e y F o ît îc r la u g h in g Suggested fo r Mature Audiences a n d lo v in g JO M PATTY DAVID JO AN N A Technicolor CHARLIE UNA IE0G. IOANNA Sm TfN Y O U N G A N IM A L S T W IC E S1MRMG RUGGIES MERKEL CARROLL BARNES wsbitt in ... 7:40 A N D 1 1:— NARDINI•McCORMACK- MACKLIN FRANK NEXT. . .KIRK DOUGLAS - ‘ A LOVELY WAY TO DIE’ M IN I-S K IR T MOB 9 :4 0 O N L Y — ANDINTRODUCING"T H E AM ERICAN R EV O LU TIO N " FR I., SAT., SUN. 2 Adult Hits N O R T H S ID E FOLKS WITHBIG DRIVE-IN THEATRE^ SOON! NEW HIGH POWERED REALLY 60 FOR THE 7 Milts North on US-27. . 482-7409 FREE ELECTRIC CAR HEATERS MOUTH-WATERING KITTLES AT BOHAKA t GOME BY AHO SAMPLE s & o o r s T- SOME FOR YOURSELF. ABBEYLINCOLN,, -BEAUBRIDGES-NAN IN ACAPULCO! LAURI PETERS«»CARROLLO’CCM A.T-BIB3 --------------------------- S H O W N T W IC E A T 7:45 and L a t e —2nd F e a t u r e — MO SMALL presents lira » OF THE HON OKIES WITH A BONANZA LUNCH SOMMER CRaNE ■^ewickebl > D R E a iv s o f m ACADEMY AWARD GOLDEN FRIED C H IC K E N .... ...............8 9 « BONANZA BURGER CHUCK-FUL-O-BEEF SANDWICH 8 9 c 9 9 o p a u M B r il N O M IN A TIO N S! Take lunch at the including BESTDIRECTOR•BESTSCREENPLAY BESTCINEMATOGRAPHY-BESTORIGINALMUSICSCORE T r u m a n C a p o t e ’s M M MMMM osMATTHELM» BONANZA*’ S IR L O IN P IT #205 600 North Homer ■gnMAi IN CO LD gg| tgm T N I NM BUSM IRS m w p b lo o d S H O W N 2 n d a t 10:30 COME AS YOU ARE • OPEN 1 1 1.M . TO 9 P.M. S H O W N 2nd at 10 P . M . S H O W N T W I C E A T 7:45 A N D L o la F r i d a y , Ö o to t> « r 4 , 1 9 6 8 TT Michigan State New«, East Lansing, Michigan the msu itlw s o c l r t y pr«»«n+* S ID N E Y L U M E T ’S F IL M O F Snipers dissolve Mexican legend By PAUL H. FINCH their chance and moved in with tles in other countries troubled , , m M í McCARÏiffe V «•Shi, countries torn by social prob- MEXICO CITYCITY (AP) - A teg* leg- lama, iackbook dictators, left- ilogana and scheme* and with widespread Castroism. TL.wULh*^tnnp^.Ume before w i.: / i i 5 Mexico Can again « sspoken^guy flT g t ■«* - / * tytlu ektW ' in the ftearis have oecwmd u«.«,.-— * ' 'AJ » W ; w" ° --- • *r the raw Tsfem5 to have great suppose, in the fact that today the inner workings of our give up the detective_bag,_and Shadow knows.” machines of justice. At any turn to medicine as Dr. Rtci- flexibility for those who wear For those of you old enough, our crime-fighters are not all her colors. men of steel. A few of them rate, we are seeing much more ard Kimble? or nostalgic enough to remen- And for those times when our may be caped crusaders, of those men in blue, although Yes, those were the good her who The Shadow was, you attention is brought to the yet for the most they’re a some of us would still prefer old/lays; well, theywere old, can probably recall the days courts, there have forever bunch of quite human, failing, the good old days with Toody b a r 5how good? In terms of when crime-fighters ranked been a number of legal-eagles sometimes even bungling and Muldoon as we rode the private investigators today, second only to the gods. The to give television cases their types. back seat of Car 54. we might set the standard by golden era of radio ushered due process. We can go down Crime being what it is, a the toughness of a Darren them in, and the heyday of Of course, there are the the line, all the way from very untouchable business, McGavin as the “ Outsider,” Lamont Cranston, Captain By MARK McPHERSON Mr. Slicks, but they are kept Algonquin J. Calhoun, key de­ many television efforts have an ex-con who turns to sleuth- Braddock, or the Green Hornet State News Reviewer ^ to the minority. Consider if fender of the Mystic Knights been developed to show just ing. Or then there was Honey becomes now but a misty you will, the great number e* of the Sea Lodge Hall, to the that. The now-classic “ Naked West, sort of an early Diana memory. that reason, despite the pleas programs this season which father and son teams of “ The City” with its eight million Rigg, but without quite the Of course, during that for control over the presence have to do with the upholding Defenders," or the earlier stories, most of them seen same “ appeel.” period of the ’30’s and late of delinquency or crime on our of law and order. A great twice already in rerun form, Moving from the character “ Harrigan and Son.” Let us '40’s, the incidence of crime screens, the “ mob," or what­ many of them, perhaps answer­ was such a program. The of the hard-boiled flatfoot, we not forget Perry Mason who demanded such crusaders to ever you'd prefer to call them, ing the call for a curb of vio­ gutsy side of the detective find a more sophisticated does his talking from a wheel­ confront the lawbreakers who remain. lence, are police series. trade was here too, as there blend of crime-fighters also chair nowadays as "Iron­ threatened the American way. There have always been the have always been the gum- doing their thing. They are the side,” or the Melvin Belli- No less today do our com­ baddies about, whether they be This fali we saw the arrival F. Lee Baileyish “ Judd For of “ Adam-12” (NBC), shoes, though not quite all in debonair teams, such as Tony munications media, chiefly the Bogarts, the Cagneys, or the tradition of Sherlock Franciosa, Gene Barry and the Defense.” television, continue the role rather a companion to the likes Well, as The Shadow would whomever else the respective Holmes. Robert Stack of “ The Name which radio pioneered in com­ generations can turn out. Hap­ of the already popular “ Felony say, “ the weed of crime bears Squad,” and “ N.Y.P.D." In the past we knew them of the Game,” also the ultra- batting violence. Certainly, at pily though, this is a double as Nick and Nora Charles, mod “ Avengers,” not to men- bitter fruit.” With an army the present time in our history standard, as the embodiment (ABC), both of which take of defenders such as those us into the routine and Sam Spade, or even that most tion the high living cat-bur- crime is more rampant than of the good guys seems ever­ lovable of brutes, Mike glars in the best Saintly tradi- I have listed, how can one ever before. The number of realistic day’s work of the cop conclude otherwise? The evi­ present in the wings. This Hammer. Within the last few tions of “ T.H.E. Cat,” and tragic events which have oc­ on the beat. Also one could dence for my case has been fact occurred to me when I years some of these images Alexander Mundy of "It Takes curred have called for a halt not forget faithful Sgt. Friday presented; no matter the vio­ 6G e t S m a r t 9 began to recall a number of have been picked up and dusted A Thief.” in the violent material which and his side kick as they lence on the streets, in the old personages who have made it off. Remember that “ Man Oh, there are always these " W e r o b b a n k s ? ” D o n A d a m s and B a r b a r a F e ld o n manage to throw what must by boob tube where it counts, the the media offer. their life’s work to fight for On A Tightrope,” Mike undercover folk lurking about, now be an infinite "Dragnet" private eyes have it. o f " G e t S m a r t " p o s e f o r a m u g s h o t. However, so long as Holly­ “ truth, justice, and the Ameri­ Connors, before he became whether they are secret agent wood wished to remain what over Los Angeles. can way.” more successful as "Man- men, or just such unthinking it has become, it must give Of course, the prototype of Such series as these, along with the more official, almost nix?” Or how about that soft- bureaucrats as the boys and the public what it wants. For Marketing at IBM this last description was none 'C areer Compass’ display: “W orking with your guide to the future com pany p resid en ts By CHRIS MEAD State News Staff Writer are: Hours for the event this year particular line of business. “ We try to pick the Monday: 6:30-10 p.m. companies most representa­ is part of the job!’ Are you running with the Establishment? Then you must Tuesday: 10 - 11:30 a.m.. 1:15 - 4:30 p.m. and 7:30 - tive to the student body and the curricula offered at this Uni­ be looking for a job. Let 10:00 p.m. versity,” according to Jim “ Career Compass” be your Students who wish to talk Hulme, general chairman of guiding hand. with prospective employer Careers. “ Career Compass” is the representatives do not need to He said that after the list theme of Careers ’68, the make an appointment and are of companies was decided 20th annual event sponsored free to wander in at their upon, the companies were con­ by the Placement Bureau. leisure for informal discus­ tacted by letter. All those This year’s festivities will sions. reached accepted the invita­ be held today and Tuesday in Eighty-five companies will tion he added. the Auditorium. So stay out of be represented and will be Although Careers is spon­ the Union this year ‘cause that stationed at displays in the sored under the auspices of ain’t where it’s at. Auditorium illustrating their the Placement Bureau, the operation is run by students who petitioned for the various Zales offices last winter term. Careers ’68 will be kicked off by a banquet and a preview of “ Half-Million Dollar Decision,” Ring a movie made at MSU document­ ing how students can work with the Placement Bureau. If you couldn't care less about ofTJfe the jobs the man has to offer, go on over anyway. Maybe you’ll see an interesting display or two. Fire started The Qift in A b b ey She’ll TMever Forget LONDON Edgewood Church Bus circulates through East A jss From the Capitol Martin Luther Chapel Lutheran Student Center "* REV. J. HERBERT BRINK Campus starting at 10:40 a.m. . of E ast L ansing WORSHIP SERVICES Preaching Call 332-8693 or 332-0606 for information 444 Abbott Road 940 S. H arriso n Rd. 10:00 A.M. CAMPUS STUDENT CENTER, 217 Bogue St., Apt. 3 Ministers: Truman A. Morrison, Paige Birdwell Two Blocks North of Student Union “ How To Mend Alvin Hoksbergen, Director Phone 351-6360 Sunday School 10:00 a.m. A Broken Worldl" Sunday Worship Services—9:30 - 11:00 a.m. FREE BUS SERVICE—See Schedule on Morning Service 11:00 a.m. Dr. Lyman preaching Sunday School — 9:30 a.m. Residence Hall Bulletin Board. OKEMOS FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Training Union 6;00 p.m. Rev. David A. Kruse 4684 Okemos-Haslett Rd. Evening Service 7:00 p.m. Church School 10:00 a.m. Wednesday Evening “ 30 p.m. Missouri Synod (2 mi. E. of Hagadorn: 1/4 ml. S. of Grand River) Crib Nursery So Bring the Baby Free Bus Service and Nursery Both Services ♦Easily Accesslbl* from Mt. Hope Ave. HILLEL Foundation 10 a.m. Sunday School: **Collegiate Class (singles); Sunday at 8:30 and 11:00 a.m. 319 Hliierest at W. Grand River 5 Adult Classes "Committed For The Future" will be the sermon topic at 11 a.m. & 7:00 p.m. WORSHIP SERVICES CASTm inSTCR P R C S B Y T C R ia n CHURCH EAST LANSING TRINITY CHURCH liBnxcO 8 p.m. Collegiate Fellowship: *Growth Hour ‘ Refreshments 1315 Abbot* Rd. ♦•Nursery at all Services ••Transportation, Call; 351-5125 t o st ¿ansine, micnican 120 Spartan Avenue Interdenominational S u n d a y , O c t o b e r 6 , 6 p .m . E. Eugene Williams— PASTORS — T erry A. Smith S u p p e r -F o r u m -S o c ia l SUNDAY SCHEDULE University Class 9:45 a.m. at the Hillel House Worship Services— 9:00 and 11:00 a.m. "NOW WE LIVE” 7:00 P,M* Eugene D. Interim Church School, Cribbery and (Holy Communion) P r o f . A lla n M a n d e ls ta m m 9:00 and 11:00 a.m. Dawson Pastor Nursery provided— Church School— 9:00 and 10:00 a.m. Trinity Collegiate Fellowship 8:30 P,M* Wednesday: Mid-week discussion and prayer hour at 7:00 p.m. Economics Dept., will discuss "October, 1968” 332-6854 Buffet supper. Everyone welcome. For rides, call 332-1916 Free BUS SERVICE — See schedule In your dorm._____ GUEST MINISTER— REV. GRAHAM UNIVERSITY UNITED METHODIST CHURCh SOUTH BAPTIST CHURCH 1120 South Harrison Phone:351-7030 EPISCOPAL SERVICES 1518 S. Washington Lansing MORNING: "Untie Him, And Let Him Go' SU N D AY 7 :0 0 P . M . WORLDWIDE COMMUNION 1(1 Alumni Chapel “ W HEN G O D L A U G H S ” EVENING: “ Civil Disobedience In the New Testament“ (Auditorium Drive) “ T h e U rb an C r i s i s ” Are there movements In the world today that 9:30 A.M. and 5:15 P.M. provoke God's mirth? 11:00 am • M orning Worship • Special Music Featuring Kenneth Medema The Rev. Alden B. Bums, preaching Holy Communion & Sermon A lu m n i M em orial Chapel, one D r. H ow ard F . S u gd en , P a s to r block east of the Auditorium. 10:00-10:15 am • Discussion 9:45 A.M. YOUNG ADULT Croups for adults • coffee and College Bible Class doughnuts. Sunday school classes FELLOWSHIP lor children. Nursery at 10:00 & Morning Worship 8:30, 9:30, 11:00 ALL SAINTS EPISCOPAL CHURCH in the fireside room 8:30 p.m. Church School 9:30 (for all ages) Ur, L60 ward, 1 sscticr 11:00 thru grade six 800 Abbott Rd. ning- W orship • f Alumni Memorial Nursery under supervision of a 8:00 A.M. Holy Communion 11^ 0 0 A . M . “ G o o d N e w s F r o m G o d ” is informal and a registered nurse. ^ 9:30 A.M. Holy Baptism & Sermon F R E E B U S S E R V I C E M o r n in g an d E v e n in g llows the sermon. Free bus transportation 15 to 11:15 A.M. Morning Prayer & Sermon 30 minutes before each service. C a ll 4 8 2 -0 7 5 4 fo r in fo r m a tio n . Friday, October 4, 1968 14 MichiganStateNews, East Lansing, Michigan *1rr A fE NEWS STATE NEWS CLASSIFIED CLASSIFIED N eed A B o * To School? You’ll Find E xactly W h a t You W a n t Here. 355-8255 355-8255 14 E m p lo y m e n t For Rent For Rfent The State News * tdÿl does not * ? .V ' v . , 'T ÏF W / to i IM M E D IA T E O P E N IN G S lo r itiu r v* ▼A* ' !)' *** ' ’ ' ' !A.4T L A N S IN O * G i r l o v e r a — 4\ f Y - T W O B E D R O O M a p a r t m e n t on it f f r f i #— t F R A N C IS A V IA T IO N : So e a s y to TEACHER W ANTED H ig h school W iare a p a r t m e n t P h o n e 351-3542. F O R D 1961 s tic k 6 c y lin d e r 2 -d o o r n e a r c a m p u s f o r f a m i ly . H e a te d , permit racial or religious le a r n in th e P I P E R CHEROKEE. g irls gym a n d s p e e ch th e r a p is ts s t y lis t East L a n s in g b e a u ty s a lo n J-W /4 G o o d c o n d itio n R e p a in te d I V 4-96M 351-4552 3-10 » g a ra g e . 351-0416. 11-10/10 discrimination in its ad­ a f t e r 5 p .m . 6-10/4 S p e c ia l 65 o f fe r . 484-1324. C C a ll o r w r i t e W a lt e r N ic k e l. St MR YOU vertising c o lu m n s . The J o h n 's P u b lic S ch o o ls, S t J o h n s. S E R V IC E S T A T IO N A tte n d a n t P a r t- GRADUATE OR FACULTY m em ­ MAN NEEDED fo r tw o m a n a p a rt­ M ic h ig a n . 40879 P h o n e 224-2394 State News will not accept F O R D G T A 1907 390 V -6 . 335 hp IN S T R U M E N T G R O U N D SC H O O L 5-10/8 t im e e v e n in g s a n d w e e k -e n d s A p p ly ber E f f ic ie n c y , fu rn is h e d . Two m e n t. P h o n e 3 5 1 -3 7 » . H O /4 b lo c k s f r o m c a m p u s . 332-8434. 5-W /8 advertising which discrim­ 16,000 a c t u a l m ile s . 62,100.337-9734 1190 S o u th H a r r is o n C am pus M o b il • AUTOMOTIVE inates a g a i n s t religion, 6-10/10 W EATHER W IL L be d e t e r io r a t in g : D E T R O I T F R E E P R E S S m o to r r o u te S e rv ic e 2-10/4 LU XUR Y FO UR m an a p a rtm e n t G I R L F O R T W O b e d ro o m s n e a r d o w n ­ w i l l y o u b e r e a d y f o r it ? I n s tr u m e n t to w n L a n s in g C a ll M , 37I-4JJ0 • EMPLOYMENT race, color or national or­ J A G U A R 1964 X K E c o u p e 3.8. 1100 G ro u n d S chool r e g is t r a t io n u n t il d r iv e r s H o u rs B a . m . t o 2 :3 0 a .m B A B Y S IT T E R I N m y h o m e 11:15-5 a v a ila b le now . O ne b lo c k fro m e x te n s io n » 4 . A s k f o r L i z 3-10/4 ■ even d a y s p e r w e e k 333-1)54 5-10/4 • POE RENT igin. m ile s o n n e w « f i n e »2300 863- O c to b e r 11. C la s s a s s t a r t O c to b e r pm C a n a r ra n g e h o u rs . M o n d a y B e rk e y H a ll C a rp e te d , d is p o s a l, • FOR SALE 3 M 2 a fto r S :!0 2-10/6 11th, 9 a .m . t o 11 n oo n. WU1 c o n ­ R E G I S T E R E D N U R S E 'S a n d L P N 's F r id a y . C lo a e to C ase. 337-1367, a ir- c o n d itio n in g . C a ll Bob, 351- TW O M AN e f fic ie n c y . 310 G unson t in u e e v e r y S a tu r d a y m o r n in g f o r 7875. 5-W /8 • LOST A FOUND 12 w e e k s . 666. B o o k s in c lu d e d w i t h O p e n in g s a v a ila b le in a m e d ic a l a f t e r 5.332-8543. A * f o r B e rta . 3-10/7 $140.337-6363. H O /» JA G U A R 1167 Bkck S edan 11,500 • PERSONAL o r ig in a l m ile s Best o l je r . 356- c o u rs e . c a r e f a c il it y . O p p o r tu n ity f o r r a p id advancem ent w it h - in a d y n a m ic NEWLY MARRIED? P A R K L A N E : O N E b e d ro o m , f w - • PEANUTS PERSONAL Automotive 5474 ~ 2-10/4 o r g a n is a tio n . A t t r a c t iv e s t a r t in g GREAT LAKES E m p lo y m e n t fo r TANGLEWOOD n is h e d , c a r p e te d , d is p o s a l, w a s h e r - SN O O P Y SHO P • REAL ESTATE s a la rie s a n d a b o v e a v e r a g e f r in g e p e r m a n e n t p o s itio n s f o r m e n a n d d r y e r . L e a s e t o J u n e la t . R e s p o n ­ • SERVICE CH EVR O LET IM P A L A c o n v e r t ib le L E M A N S S P R IN T 1904 R e d C le a n . A L L T Y P E S o f p i lo t s u p p lie s a n d a i r ­ b e n e fits . A p p ly at P R O V IN C I A L w o m e n in o f f ic e s a le s , t e c h n ic a l. IV AFARTMENTS s ib le m a r r i e d c o u p le . E D 7-9608. 7-10/11 IM S . B u c k e t s e a ts . P o w e r s te e r in g , • TRANSPORTATION 1)400 C a l l 332-5674a f t e r 5 3 0 p m c r a f t a c c e s s o rie s . D r o p in a n d v is i t H O U S E , 261. N o r t h w in d D r iv e , E a s t 2-1543. C -10/4 1 Bdrm., unfyr., from 124.50 p o w e r b r a k e s , p o w e r w in d o w s , p o w e r 6-10/4 • WANTED to p . M u s t s e ll b y O c to b e r 9 th . 356- Snoopy an d d ro p y o u r n a m e and i .a im in g 332-0017, M r s . P a r k e r E M P L O Y E R S O V E R L O A D com pany. 2 Bdrm., unfur., from 139.50 O N E G I R L n e e d e d f o r C e d a r V illa g e » -1 0 /9 s t a r t in g W in t e r T e r m . C a ll 3 3 2 -4 4 » . C h r is tm a s w is h in S n o o p y ’s W is h 1M 6 o r » 1 -7 3 7 5 . 2-1 0 '» MERCURY 1962 C o m m u te r N in e p a s ­ E x p e r ie n c e d s e c r e ta rie s , t y p is t s to 351-7880 ___ _ H 0 /7 Box. w o rk on te m p o ra ry a s s ig n m e n ts . senger w agon Power c le a n . $200. DEADLINE CH EVR O LET 1965 A u t ix n a t ic 99,000 337-9264 3-10/4 IN Q U IR E A T F U L L O R P A R T - T I M E fe m a le d r u g c le r k . M u s t h a v e p le a s a n t p e rs o n ­ N e v e r a*fee. P h o n e 487-6071. 2-10/4 O N E M A N a p a r t m e n t f o r le a s e . V e r y H O L T : T e n m in u t e s f r o m cam pus m ile s . C o n ta c t D e e, 602 G ro v e , 351- c lo s e c a m p u s . A m p le p a r k in g . C a ll D e lu x e , t r i - l e v e l, o n e b e d ro o m a p a r t ­ a lit y . S o m e e v e n in g a n d w e e k -e n d 1 P.M. one class day be­ »11. 1-10/7 M G B 1964 e x c e lle n t c o n d itio n . W ire s . C A P I T A L C I T Y A V IA T IO N COOKS FU LL or p a rt t im e . P o lo 8 a . m . s h a r p o r 12 n o o n s h a r p . 351- m e n t . S to v e , r e f r ig e r a t o r , d is p o s a l, h o u rs . C a ll 332-2631 a f t e r 6 p .m . 7355. 4-10/9 fore publication. P ir e llis . A b e rth e x h a u s t. 24,000 C A P I T A L C I T Y A IR P O R T 3-W /4 B a r C a ll 337-0057 5-10/9 a ir - c o n d itio n in g . C a ll 694-0851 or CH EVRO LET IM P A L A 1900 V -0 Cancellations - 12 noon one m ile s 11400 351-0074. 2-10/S NEED ONE g ir l fo r D e lt a A rm s 7-10/11 a u t o m a tic Power s te e r in g , w h it e D R IV E R W ANTED fo r N u rs e ry class day before publica­ c a r , b lu e in t e r io r , d e a n E x c e lle n t P H O N E 469-1862 D R IV E R S O V E R 21. M o r n in g s a n d A p a r tm e n t. W in t e r te rm . 155 c a ll tion. tr a n s p o r ta tio n . 3560632. 3-10/4 MGB 1907 c o n v e r tib le . N a v y b lu e , 6-10/11 w eekends. A p p ly 122 W o o d m e re , S c h o o l o v e r 21. 11:30 - 12:30 d a ily . 351-6894. 5-10/10 O N E -T W O m an a p a rtm e n t now O w n c a r . 332-4796 a f t e r 4 p .m . a v a ila b le . 103 N o r t h la w n , com er b la c k to p . F o u r speed, r a d io , h e a t­ E a s t L a n s in g . S id e d o o r . 3-10/4 3-10/4 o f A b b o tt R o a d . I n q u ir e N u m b e r 8. CH EVR O LET » 7 V -6 C n iia o x n a tic e r, b u c k e t s e a ts . 31,806. 355-6475 Scooters & Cycles O N E - T H R E E m e n to s h a re f u r ­ 5 -10/9 PHONE B e s t o f f e r 406-7610 4-10/4 o r 676-12M a f t e r 8 p .m . 2-10/7 C O M P U T E R P R O G R A M M E R , e x p e r­ B A B Y S IT T E R fo r p r e - s c h o o le r. Two n is h e d a p a rtm e n t or h o u se . 650- Y A M A H A OOcc - T r a i l b ik e , h e lm e t ie n c e d . in te r e s te d in d iv e r s if ie d a p ­ 655. C a ll 337-0988. 5-10/10 e v e n in g s a w e e k . P r e f e r c a r . 129 O N E H A L F d u p le x , u n fu r n is h e d la r g e M USTANG 1965. A ir c o n d itio n in g , 355-8255 C H E V R O L E T 1905 S u p e r S p o rt 327 s tic k 351-3095 5-10/8 a n d b u b b le . G o o d c o n d itio n . I V 4- 9694 a f t e r 5 p .m . 6-10/4 p lic a t io n s . w o r k f o r c o n s u ltin g f ir m . C O B O L r e q u ir e d , o th e r la n g u a g e s E a s t G ra n d R iv e r ,. A p a r t m e n t 15. 3-10/4 ONE M AN needed R iv e r s id e East tw o b e d ro o m 325 N . P e n n s y lv a n ia A u to m a t ic , b u c k e t, c o n s o le , v in y l A v e n u e . 6140 p e r m o n th , u t il it ie s h e lp fu l. S a la r y o p e n d e p e n d in g u p o n A p a r t m e n ts 3E. 365. N in e m o n th RATES to p , s h a rp . 2915 R is d a le 062-3040. 1-10/3 MUSTANG 1 9 6 6 -W h ite . V e ry gcwd K A W A S A K I : 1,397 m ile s . 1968. 350cc. q u a lif ic a tio n s . Equal O p p o r tu n it y C O N C E S S IO N D R IV E - IN STAND: THEATER S T A R L IT E n ee ds eve­ le a s e . 351-0524. S '10/ 7 in c lu d e d . 3514530. 5-10/4 c o n d itio n C o n v e r tib le C a ll 351- 1 d a y ...................$ 1.50 T w o h e lm e ts , ja c k e t , c a r r i e r . 6585. E m p lo y e r . C a ll 351-4741. 5-10/9 n in g c o u n te r and c o o k in g h e lp . NORBER MANOR APARTM ENTS 3622 a f t e r 5 p .m . 1' 10/4 120-743-4315. 2-10/7 T W O M A N a p a r t m e n t. C lo s e t o c a m ­ 15tf per word per day O O R V A IR 1900 tw o -d o o r, fo u r-s p e e d . M A L E S T U D E N T S 18-25. P a r t tim e , G ood p a r t - t im e jo b fo r s tu d e n ts . pus. S to d d a rd A p a r tm e n ts . 6170. 5821 R ic h w o o d . B r a n d new , c e n tra l S ilv e r . B la c k bucket s e a ts . 351- A p p ly in p e rs o n b e tw e e n 7 a n d 8 a ir - c o n d itio n in g , p o o l, f u lly c a rp e t­ 3 d a y s ...................$4.00 4705 3-10/4 MUSTANG 1967 h a r d to p V -8. S ta n ­ T R IU M P H C U B 1987. «00 m ile s C o n­ jo b s n o w o p e n f o r F a l l a n d W in t e r p .m . 3-10/4 C a ll 332-2920 3 - * ° /4 ed. Two b e d ro o m fo r 61% 393- 13 l/2f per word per day d a r d s h ift . N e w t ir e s P e r f e c t c o n ­ d it io n t ik e n e w . P h o n e 337-7801 a f t e r t e rm s . S o m e f u l l t im e o p e n in g s a ls o . O 4278. 5 d a y s ...................$6.50 CORVETTE 1963 B lu e F a l lb a c k d itio n . B y o w n e r. 398-2409. 5-10/8 5 p .m . 3-10/9 C a ll 393-5800.1-5 p .m . M o n - F r i. O G L A M O U R , M O N E Y , a n d e x c ite m e n t ONE OR TW O g ir ls fo r s p a c io u s a p a rtm e n t w ith p o o l. C a ll 351- 13f per word per day C h ro m e w h e e ls New t ir e s . 356- T R I U M P H B O N N E V I L L E . S ix m o n th s can be y o u rs w ith V IV IA N E W O O D ­ T R O W B R ID G E APARTM ENTS - tw o 9157 3-10/4 O L D S M O B IL E 442 f o u r speed E x c e l­ LE A R N TO S K Y D IV E w ith th e ARD C O S M E T IC S . F re e m a k e -u p 8885 a f t e r 6 p . m . S '1® /4 m an. 6160. Lease. »1-8977, 332- (based on 10 w ords p e r ad) le n t c o n d itio n . T a k e o v e r p a y m e n ts o ld . 2.600 m ile s . L ik e new . 353- M SU SPORT P A R A C H U TE CLUB. in s tr u c t io n s . I V 5-8351. C 0480. 5-W /7 CO RVETTE I960 c o n v e r t ib le S il­ o f $41 m o n th . P h o n e C R E D IT M A N ­ 7926. 3-10/7 C o n ta c t B o b O ls o n , 355-8019. O N E G I R L n e e d e d : L a r g e n e w tw o T h e re w ill be a 50tf se rv ic e and bookkeeping charge if v e r , p o w e r s te e r in g , 351-0636 a f t e r 5 p .m . pow er b ra k e s . 5-10/9 A G E R 489-2379 C DUCATTI 1905, 250cc R a c in g c a m a n d c a r b u r e t o r 6400 o r S c r a m b le r- 6-10/4 For Rent m a n a p a r t m e n t. L o w r e n t . J u lie 351- 3141 a f t e r 12 p .m . 3-10/8 THREE MAN fu r n is h e d s tu d io a p a r t ­ m e n t a v a ila b le . H a f l b lo c k to c a m ­ th is ad is not paid within CORVETTE 1908, 427-435 h o rs e O L D S M O B IL E 1962 S T A R F IR E B uck­ b e s t o f fe r . 351-3850. 2-10/4 P A R T -T IM E d r iv e r fo r new spaper S E W IN G M A C H IN E r e n t a ls a v a ila b le . pus. C a ll E d S te ffe n o r E a s t L a n ­ e ts , b la c k , re d in t e r io r . S h a rp . 372- tr u c k M o n d a y th r o u g h F r id a y . M u s t S T U D E N T A P A R T M E N T : F o u r m an. one week. I n t e r n a t io n a l b lu e , tw o to p s . 337 66.50 a m o n th . D e n n is D is t r ib u t in g s in g R e a lt y $32-3534 o r 337-1274 6548 3-10/4 be d e p e n d a b le . A v a ila b le a ro u n d 1 F u r n is h e d a p a r t m e n t a v a ila b le at 5-10/4 7389, 10 a . m . t i l 0 p .m . 3-10/7 C om pany. 316 N o rth C e d a r. 482- 66 B S A 6 5 0 — R e a l f i n e p .m . 699-2219. 2-10/7 2677. C -W /4 on ce . $150 m o n th . ED 2-8531. IV T h e S tate News w ill be CO RVETTE 1666 C u s to m iz e d F u e lly P O N T IA C 1964 B e lo w b o o k v a lu e . shape, low m ileag e, ex tra 54581. H O /» G e t A L L Y O U P A Y F O R ! C h e c k b e st resp o n sib le only fo r the C o u p e . E x c e lle n t. W il l tra d e f o r 1966 6800 C a s h o n ly 6-8 p .m . 372-9116. ch ro m e, m u st se ll. Make an A T T E N T IO N : H R I s tu d e n ts ! A s s is ­ P A R K IN G : IN E X P E N S IV E . C lo se . r e n t a l b u y s in to d a y ’ s C la s s ifie d A d s f ir s t day’s in c o rre c t in s e r ­ C U tla s s . D ic k 337-7891 5-16/4 3-10/7 offer . . ta n t M a n a g e r, m a le , f o r 202 r o o m Phone 355-4802 b e tw e e n 6 and 9 APARTM ENT BLOCK cam pus. Se­ m o te l. E x p e r ie n c e w i t h f r o n t d e sk TW O BEDROOM F u r n is h e d a p a rt tion. DATSUN 1967 T u r q u o is e F o u r- P O N T IA C C A T A L IN A C o n v e r tib le p .m . 3-10/4 r io u s f a c u lt y or g r a d u a te m an. o p e ra tio n d e s ire d . 3 p .m . t o I I p .m . m e n t. A ir - c o n d itio n e d , g a rb a g e d is ­ 680. E D 2 4 4 9 8 . S-W /4 d o o r. E x c e lle n t c o n d itio n . Peppy 1964. 6395. 355-8297 w e e k -d a y s . s ix days. C a ll fo r a p p o in tm e n t. p o s a l. »180 • 6300 m o n th 514 W IL L RENT my w om an’s E n g lis h yet v e ry e c o n o m ic a l. 61296 SSI- Automotive 3657. 3-10/4 8-5 p . m . O M r. 5500. N ic k e ls , U n iv e r s it y In n . 351- 4-10/4 b ic y c le . 68 te rm . B a s k e t. ED 2- C A M P U S , N E A R : Y o u n g la d y t o s h a re S o u th C h e s tn u t 4894423 7 1 0 /4 8498 3-W /4 v e r y d e lu x e fu r n is h e d one b e d ro o m . P O N T IA C 1955. G o o d c o n d itio n . 690. A U S T IN HEALEY 1959. E x c e lle n t F A IR L A N E 500, 1963 Two door 351-5573 e v e n in g s . S-W /4 BE A GROOVY G ir l cam pus re p re ­ C a rp e te d , a ir - c o n d itio n e d , la u n d r y . Houses c o n d itio n . 332-5827. R e b u ilt e n g in e . Phone 3 -M /4 ta rd to p . V -8 a u t o m a tic , r a d io , CALL 355-9914 AFTER 5:15 s e n ta tiv e . P a r t o r f u l l t im e . See FIVE OFFICES 682.50. 489-5922 o r 393-4365 5-W /8 s io w t ir e s . E x c e lle n t c o n d itio n . P O N T IA C F I R E B I R D 1967. C o n v e r t­ M E N N E E D E D : O n e o r t w o f o r hou se, th e G r o o v y G ir ls to d a y a t S p o rt 332-0110. H O /7 ib le , w ir e w h e e ls , w id e o v a ls , e x ­ BSA 1967 lig h t n in g , e x c e lle n t con­ “ T H E N I C E S T w e h a v e s e e n .” B r a n d f if t e e n m in u t e s c a m p u s » 1 4 9 1 4 B U IC K S P E C IA L d e lu x e 1964. Four H a u s o f L a n s in g . 2320 E a s t M ic h i­ Fully c a rp e te d , wood 3-10/6 c e lle n t c o n d itio n . T a k e o v e r p a y m e n ts d itio n . 6850. W e ll c a re d fo r . 351- ga n A v e n u e o r c a l l 351-7060. 4-10/4 n e w lu x u r y , c le a n , q u ie t, g i r l s , g r a d ­ d o o r seda n. 310 c u b ic in c h e s . V -6 F A IR L A N E 1963 S ta tio n w a g o n Pow­ o f 667 m o n th . P h o n e C R E D I T M A N ­ pan ellin g , u tilitie s a u t o m a tic t r a n s m is s io n . M a n y ex­ 6438. 3-W /4 u a te s , m a r r ie d s . C lo s e . 332-2210. e r s te e r in g k b ra k e s , r a d io A ir - A G E R 409-2379. C p aid . FREE P ark in g . 3-10/a LA R G E HOUSE fo u r b e d ro o m s , tr a s . P h o n e 351-5023 a f t e r 5 p .m . c o n d itio n in g E x c e lle n t c o n d itio n . P R O F E S S IO N A L N U R S E S : L A N S IN G tw o b a th s , gas b e s t. S to v e and 3-10/8 HONDA 90 - S te p th ro u g h w it h h e l­ G E N E R A L H O S P IT A L n o w h ir in g J u s t off cam p u s. S a c r ific e C a ll 3554236 10 4 r e f r ig e r a t o r F a m il y o n ly SUNBEAM A L P IN E 1964. H a r d to p m e t. O n e y e a r o ld and r e c e n t ly R N ’s - L P N ’ s, f u ll t im e - p a rt Rent 1 office o r 5. 325 N O R T H P E N N S Y L V A N I A : P a r t ly 6195 p lu s u t il it ie s C a ll a fte r­ c o n v e r tib le . N o r u s t. P o w e r . D is c tu n e d . 6190. 351-4293 3-W /4 fu r n is h e d g r o u n d f lo o r f iv e ro o m C H E V Y I I c o n v e r tib le , 1963. S ta n d ­ FALC O N 1961 G ood c o n d itio n and tim e noo ns, M r s S e e ly , 332-8057 B ra k e s 351-3135. 5-10/10 D ays, 7 : 3 0 - 4 p .m .; A fte rn o o n s , a p a r t m e n t. U t i l i t i e s fu rn is h e d . 6150 a r d t ra n s m is s io n . R u n s w e ll, lo o k s v e ry r e a s o n a b le Phone 372-4196. W -W /W BM W - R60. Low m ile a g e . M in t 3:30 - 12 p . m ., N ig h t s , 11:30 - A vailable Im m ediately m o n th . 351-4530. 10-10/11 goo d. 353-0262. 3-10/7 1-10/4 T H U N D E R B IR D I960 G o o d c o n d i­ c o n d itio n . E v e r y p o s s ib le a c c e s s o ry . 8 a .m . 372-6655 tio n . F u l l p o w e r . 63% C a ll 337- O N E G IR L needed fo r tw o g ir l a p a rt G IR L S : REALLY s h a rp h ou se »50 CH EVRO LET 1 9 6 4 -V -» , a u t o m a tic , C a ll 351-6632 H O /7 C o m p a re our li b e r a l f r in g e bene­ F IA T 1966 30,000 m ile s R eason­ 1474. 1-10/4 TV R E N T A L S G .E . 19” P o r ta b le , m e n t . 759 B u r c h a m W o o d s, A p t. 20. 526 S to d d a rd 337-1681 a f t e r 3 p m . tw o - d o o r , r a d io . E x c e lle n t. 6695 f it « , d a y c a r e n u r s e r y , p a id t u i ­ a b ly p r ic e d . C a ll H a l. 351-0074. S-W/4 68.50 p e r m o n t h in c lu d in g s ta n d . 2-10/7 3-W /4 351-7286. 1-10/4 T R IU M P H 1967 'T-IO O R P e rfe c t tio n f o r c o n tin u in g e d u c a tio n , f r e e T D R O N A D O 1906. D e lu x e - f a c t o r y c o n d itio n . 6850. Phone 469-2615 li f e in s u ra n c e p e n s io n p ro g ra m , C a ll J. R. C u lv e r Co. 351-8862 FO RD F A IR L A N E 1963 F o u r door 220 A l b e r t S tr e e t, E a s t L a n s in g . C NEED FOURTH m an fo r U n iv e r s it y G IR L NEEDED Im m e d ia te ly S h a re C H E V R O L E T 1963 S u p e r S p o rts E x­ a ir , p r e m iu m t ir e s , 23,000 m ile s , a fte r 6 p .m . 3-10/8 p lu s m a n y o th e rs . C a ll P e rs o n n e l, sedan A u to m a t ic . P h o n e 665-1810. T e rra c e A p a r t m e n t. G ra d u a te S tu ­ b ou se w i t h f o u r g i r l s 521 A lb e r t c e lle n t c o n d itio n . 6600. C a ll 332- e x c e lle n t c o n d itio n . P r iv a t e o w n e r. 372-8220 e x te n s io n 203, M onday 3-10/7 D IS H W A S H E R R E N T A L . G .E . P o r t ­ d e n ts . 351-30% . 3-10/4 6 5 0 /m o n th p lu s u t il it ie s . »1-9425 6622 T o s h i. 3-W /4 372-1796. 3-10/4 H O N D A 305 S c r a m b le r - E x c e lle n t th ro u g h F r id a y , 8 a .m . t o 4 :3 0 p .m . a b le . 68.00 p e r m o n th . C a ll J . R . 5-10/8 c o n d itio n w ith h e lm e t. C a li 351- 10-10/9 T R IU M P H G T -6 1967 fa s tb a c k . S ix C u lv e r C o. 351-8862 C -10/4 N E X T T O C a m p u s : 121 B e a l. L o v e ly 0766. S-W /4 c y lin d e r , w ir e w h e e ls . E x c e lle n t fu rn is h e d , t w o b e d ro o m a p a r t m e n t. TW O M E N w a n te d f o r h ou se 6*0 N U R S E S ' A I D ’S: O p e n in g s a v a ila b le c o n d itio n . 351-6U3, a f t e r 6 p . m . 4-10/4 T V R E N T A L S f o r s tu d e n ts . L o w e c o ­ 6160 u t il it ie s in c lu d e d . N in e m o n th m o n th U t i l i t i e s in c lu d e d » 1 7621 AL MIKULICH T R IU M P H S P I T F I R E 1966. H a r d and B .S .A . 650cc L ig h t n in g m a c h in e . 6595. 337-7883 1965. A goo d 3-W /4 i n a m e d ic a l c a r e f a c il it y . O p p o r ­ t u n it y f o r r a p id a d v a n c e m e n t w i t h ­ in a d y n a m ic o r g a n iz a tio n . A t t r a c ­ n o m ic a l r a te s b y th e t e r m o r m o n th . U N IV E R S IT Y TV R E N T A L S , 484- le a s e f o r 2-4 s tu d e n ts . 351-0684 o r 3514009. 4-10/4 S-W /4 s o ft to p s p lu s e x tr a s . 6900. 337- 9263. C ONE OR TW O g ir ls fo r e le g a n t BSA 1964 350cc. M u s t . s e ll. G ood tiv e s t a r t in g s a la r ie s a n d a b o v e a v e r ­ 9434. 5-10/4 W A N T E D T H R E E m e n to ta k e o v e r h o u se O w n ro o m 432 B u t t e r f ie ld c o n d itio n . B e s t o f fe r . 699-2566. ag e f r in g e b e n e fits . A p p ly a t P R O ­ Double Sure Used Cars V A U X H A L L 1968 43,000 m ile s . 6125. 3-W /4 V IN C IA L H O U S E , 2815 N o r t h w in d D r iv e , E a s t L a n s in g , 332-0817, M r s . Apartments le a s e o f f in e a p a r t m e n t. u te s f r o m c a m p u s . 351-7288. T e n m in ­ 3-10/7 D r iv e . NEEDED t w o g i r l s f o r d u p le x h ou se 1 1 0 /4 N e a t an d e c o n o m ic a l. 355-1268. 3-10/4 HONDA NEW S90 E x c e lle n t c o n d i­ P a rk e r. 10-W/9 S T U D E N T U N IT S : T h r e e a n d fo u r S P E C IA L : U N I V E R S I T Y V i l l a a p a r t ­ O ne b lo c k fro m cam pus C a ll 332- tio n . 000 m ile s . E x tra s . 62% . 372- VO LKSW AG EN 1964 - S u n ro o f w h it e ­ m a n u n its s t i l l a v a ila b le f o r Sep­ m e n t s h a s o n e r e m a in in g f o r f a ll 0426 3-10/7 9376. S '10/ 4 B U S B O Y S w a n te d : M e a ls p lu s p a y. w a ll t ir e s . M u s t s e ll. 6749. o r best te m b e r le a s in g . L o w e b ro o k e , U n i­ t e r m o r f o r e n t ir e y e a r , t h re e m a n C a ll 351-0250. 7-10/4 o f f e r 332-4068. S-W /4 KAW ASAKI 1967 , 250cc S c r a m b le r , v e r s it y T e rra c e , and E v e rg r e e n . C a ll 351-7910 b e fo r e 5 p .m . O P o n t i a c , 1966, 2 - d o o r h a r d t o p , w h i t e , r a d i o , e x c e lle n t c o n d itio n . C a ll 669-9546 C a ll STATE MANAGEMENT 337- a u t o m a t i c t r a n s m i s s i o n , p o w e r s t e e r i n g and b r a k e s , w h it e w a l l s , v i n y l to p , e x t r a c l e a n . V O L K S W A G E N 1963, su n r o o f. A M - F M r a d io . C a ll a f t e r 5 p .m . 355- b e fo r e 3 p .m . ® 3-10/8 W A IT E R S or 662 OR P a r t - t im e . W est G ra n d W A IT R E S S E S A p p ly R iv e r . P o lo F u ll B a r. 337-0057. 1300 C INSURANCE Noah’s Arc 1067. 3-10/7 H ARLEY D A V ID S O N 1965 XLCH U nderw riting opening a v a il­ 5-10/9 EYDEAL V IL L A APARTM ENTS. s p o r ts te r . C u s to m p a in t a n d h a n ­ a b le . R ating ex p erien ce in V O L K S W A G E N K A R M A N G H I A 1967 d le b a rs . 61200 o r b e s t o f fe r . 663- P A R T T IM E SA LES F O R M A L E . O ver T W O b e d ro o m a p a r tm e n ts f o r 6240 m o n th . S w im m in g p o o l. G E a p p li­ F IR E, SM P, o r HOMEOWN­ Tiger Barbs 61566. E x c e lle n t c o n d itio n . M u s t s e ll. 3332 a f t e r 5 :3 0 p .m . 3-10/8 P o n t i a c , 1966, 2 - d o o r h a r d t o p , s i l v e r , r a d i o , 21. S a la r y . P h o n e 332-5025 5-10/9 a n c e s , g a rb a g e d is p o s a ls , fu rn is h e d ERS re q u ire d but m ight con­ a u to m a tic tr a n s m is s io n , p o w e r s t e e r i n g and 356-0623. 5-10/4 YAMAHA 1966-250CC I m m a c u la te . f o r f o u r m a n o r f iv e m a n . C a ll sid e r auto' o r c a su a lty . Sal­ 3/$1.00 W A IT E R S : nee d e d im m e d ia te ly . F u ll 351-4275 a f t e r 5 p .m . C b r a k e s , w h it e w a l l s , b l a c k v i n y l to p , e x t r a c l e a n . VO LKSW AG EN 1 9 6 3 -M ic ro b u s . New S tu d e n t m u s t s e ll. W in t e r p r ic e d 351- a ry co m m en su rate with ex­ 3810. 1-10/4 and p a r t - t im e . E v e n in g s . A p p ly t ir e s , shocks. W il l b a r g a in . C a ll p e rie n c e p lu s excellent frin g e Q u a lity C o u r t M o t e l- C a p it o l P a r k 351-0617. 3-10/8 Second p ro fessio n - evenings benefit p ro g ra m s . C ontact Red Wag Moons HONDA 1964 305 Hawk 6300 cash a f t e r 4 p .m . 5-10/4 W IL L Y S J E E P S T E R c o n v e r tib le . 1948. t i l S a tu r d a y 353-8418. 355-6115. 2-10/4 & w eekends. Men and wom­ P erso n n el D epartm ent. P o n t i a c T e m p e s t , 1967, 2 - d o o r , r e d , r a d i o , a u to ­ M in t c o n d itio n . C a ll 372-0939 a fte r POP P IA N O needed. to p g r o u p . T O P P A Y . 355-1077 . W eekends w it h 5-10/4 en. $350 p a rt tim e monthly AUTO-OWNERS 3/$1.00 m a t i c t r a n s m i s s i o n , p o w e r b r a k e s , ,w h i t e w a l l s , 5 p .m . 5-10/7 S U Z U K I 1968, 120 tr a il b ik e . 1800 g u aran tee if you m eet our a ir c o n d itio n e d , s h a rp . m ile s . B e st o ffe r over 62U0. 355- D E L I V E R Y B O Y S : M a le 62 - 63 p e r re q u ire m e n ts. Students and INSURANCE 2991 3-10/7 h o u r. A ls o g i r l s to a n s w e r te le ­ te a c h e rs: $800 full tim e, te le - Auto Service & Parts ph o n e s a n d p a r t - t im e in s id e h e lp . phone: 484-5671 COMPANY offer ex p ire s S U Z U K I 1966 X 6 , 2S0cc, tw o h e l­ L an sin g , M ichigan T W O W I R E w h e e ls a n d t ir e s , goo d V a r s it y D r iv e - I n . 5-10/7 m e ts 6350 o r o f f e r 353-7927 3-10/7 O ct. 12, 1968 C h e v y , 1967, c o n v e r t i b l e , b l u e , r a d i o , h e a t e r , c o n d itio n . O ne fo ld - d o w n w in d o w , (517) 482-1671_________ e x c e lle n t. O n e t r u n k lid . A l l f r o m B U L T A C O 1967 M a ta d o r 250cc. T r a i l s tic k , V - 8 , w h it e w a l ls , low m ile a g e , e x t r a c le a n . 1955 A u s tin -H e a le y . 337-9430. 1-10/4 b ik e . N e v e r ra c e d . 63% 351-3012 5-10/9 This Week’s Special! Haas a n s ago S O M E P O R P L E G E T T H E I R K IC K S W ith th is p u rch a se o f a □HEB DDE DEB re a d in g C la s s ifie d a d s . T h e y g e t b a r ­ Employment ACROSS □bob a a s o B H ia P o n t i a c , 1968, C a t a l i n a , b u r g u n d y , r a d i o , a u t o ­ m a t i c , V - 8 , p o w e r s t e e r i n g and s e a t s , w h i t e g a in s to o . C h e c k to d a y T Y P IS T S - e v e n in g w o r k - 5 n ig h ts Z e n ith 5 6 0 -S te re o we o f­ f e r y o u r c h o ic e o f any TJEMJTH 1. Tree exudation 28. Finale aaaQEiaSacJD W H E R E T H E G IR L S A R E ! T h e y ’ re 4. Compute 29. Of the ear □ b io s a Q B i a w a lls , a i r c o n d itio n e d , s h a rp . re a d in g th e “ P e r s o n a l" c o lu m n in to d a y 's C la s s ifie d A d s . T r y i t n o w ! 5-W - 337-2321,3-5 p m 60 a c c u r a te W PM . C a ll 3-W /4 t e n L P ' s to b e p u r c h a s e d n o w o r in th e f u t u r e at p u r The M o d e r n a ir e 7. Excess 11. In the 30. Gums 31. Dry, as wine □aa raan bebé L I N E U P y o u r f a l l jo b n o w . C a r n e c ­ d e a le r ’ s c o s t! manner of 32. Sole bbbb a a ia s a ri P o n t i a c , 1966, C a t a l i n a , g o l d , r a d i o , a u t o m a t i c M A S O N B O D Y S H O P , 812 E a s t K a l­ a m a z o o S tr e e t . S in c e 1940. e s s a ry . C a ll 351-7319. O 12. Braz. seaport 33. Tomboy p ii@ s B ps 13. Plane's fixed 37. Parson bird o n o B n w a n n a t r a n s m i s s io n , V - 8 , p o w e r s te e r in g and b ra k e s , C o m p le te lis io n a u to p a in t in g , a n d c o l­ s e r v ic e . A m e r ic a n a n d f o r ­ W A IT E R S , W A IT R E S S E S , b a r te n d e r s , route 38. Tract hbboHbh t a m a a w h ite w a lls , a i r c o n d itio n in g , a u to m a tic t e m ­ e ig n c a r s I V 5 0 2 5 6 C d o o rm e n , a f t e r 12 p .m . and flo o r m e n . 339-86% W-W/14 14. Sinuous 39. Spend too much « ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ I p e ra tu re c o n tro l. 16. Staff officer 17. Unexploded 43 Rave a c ia l shell 44 Three M e r c u r y , 1963, B r e e z w a y , b e ig e , r a d i o , a u to ­ X560 18. Housekeeper 45 last queen of m a t i c , V - 8 , p o w e r b r a k e s , c l e a n , 2 - d o o r , $ 59 5 , A p a rtm e n t • 32 W a t t P e a k M u s i c P o w e r 20. Shoot 22. Wolframite 23. Cultivator Spain 46 Otherwise 47 Split pulse 48 Sign of the 1. Canon 2 Fourth cel iph DOWN 4. Parched • S o l i d S ta t e A m p l i f i e r 24. Head 5. Clangor T -B ird , 1964, b l a c k , r a d i o , a u t o m a t i c , V - 8 , • S te re o P r e c is io n R e c o rd C h a n g e r 25. Mandible zodiac 6 Magisterial p o w e r s t e e r i n g and s e a t s , w h i t e w a l l s , e x t r a 2 5 4 5 è 7 0 9 10 7. Piece of Store • 2G T o n e A r m s h a r p , $ 1395. u • 6 S p e a ke rs 2 - 8 " W o ffe rs 2 - 4 ” M id R angers % li 12 ÎÏ 2 -3 1 /2 ” T w e e te rs % • G r a in e d W a ln u t C o lo r C a b in e t 14 15 »4 F o r d , 1963, 4 - d o o r , g o ld , r a d i o , a u t o m a t i c , V - 8 , • S e p e r a t e B a s s , T r e b l e , L o u d n e s s and S t e r e o p19 15 Excavated T he d iv e rsificatio n of our b u sin ess provides you with o n e- 17 w , 19 Herring sauce w h i t e w a l l s , s h a r p , $49 5. B a la n c e C o n tr o ls . stop s e rv ic e to satisfy YOUR living re q u ire m e n ts. % % 20 Article 20 21 Si D o d g e , 1963, 4 -d o o r, b lu e , ra d io , a u to m a tic , If you a r e Investigating ap a rtm en t liv in g , a v isit o r c a ll a Pa & 21 22 24 Prevailed Chain-shaped Affectation c l e a n , $4 9 5 . V to o u r office definitely can elim in ate the ’T eg w o rk " of ap a rtm en t-h u n tin g . OF EAST LANSING 20 ' Û 29 90 25 Savin 26 Everyone i 3i 32 27 Route EAST LANSING MANAGEMENT CO. W here Q uality % 33 Jm % J % ^7 32 Pronoun 33 Rodent AL MIKULICH Service are 38 | K> 34 Unwritten 35 Hankerings L 36 Engagement 1415 M i c h i g a n A v e . 351-7880 Q I N C . C Sold First 43 //y 44 % £ . 37 lime tree 40 By way of MU iff % 41 Memorabilia E a s t L a n s in g Our New Location: 317 M.A.C 543 E. Grand River - - 337-1300 't -- Michigan ,SÌ3f p N ew s, £s-«¡t I a n s in g , M ich igan Friday, October 4, 1968 15 For Rent For Sale For Sale Personal G M p la n s E A S T L A N S IN G : F o u r m a n , tw o bod r o o m , fu ru M b e d h o o a r T w o M o d i fro m (a m p u l IN I m o n th *51 B R IN G Y O U R p r e s c r ip t io n to O P T I C A L D IS C O U N T , 414 T u s e in g B u ild i i g P h o n e I V 2-4467 C IO 5 L E A K J E T s te re o U p e p U y e r s f o r your c u r and h o m e . F r o m u p O b d i^ > la y a t M A I N E L E C T R O N ­ 7I . K 1 G A R A G E A N D B A K E a le 5 th , 8 :3 0 - 3:3 0 p . m . S3* C o w le y , E ast L a n s in g . S p o n so re d O c to b e r by th e Who's Whose mini c a rs IC S *6 6 * S o o th P e n n s y lv a n ia C E a s t L a n s in g C h ild S tu d y C M ) 3-10/4 SUB a f t e r 5 p m • 5 -W 7 W K B t'O P . P O R T A B L E S te r c e S e p a r­ SO FA A N T IQ U E la m p s D in in g s e t. E Y E S E E T H E L IG H T - T o t a l T*sy r ♦ Durtife Lazin, Orchard Lake F U R N IS H E D H O U S E t o r r o o t A b e t* a te s p e a k e rs P h o n e 372-4502, a f te r . ENGAGEMENTS Andra Wolin, Flint junior, Ai- senior. ''X « 3L m ;> w 4 'S b i’utfi a icviw A c c o m m o d a te (o a r s tu d e n ts v e ry ........................................................... í - - - i1n7 a» . » M /I c le a n . O e p o o lt r e q u ire d C a ll M SO NY M O D E L TC -200 s te re o Upe Gamma Phi Beta to Thomas B. Flint senior, Alpha Epsilon Pi. Cynthia Gridley, Three Oaks O L Y M P I A T Y P E W R IT E R L i t t l e used 14S0 a f t e r I p m 3-10/7 re c o r d e r w ith m ic r o p h o n e s and W ANTED: ONE H o n k y -to n k s t y le Barnum, Lansing. L.C.C. Barbara Salzenstein, South­ junior, Zeta Tau Alpha to Robert NEW YORK (AP) - General (50 C a ll 356-1905 or 35 1 -8 6 » . s p e a k e rs . 8110 332-4505 2-10/4 2-10/7 p ia n o p la y e r , fo r w e e k -e n d eve­ Susan E. Nathan, Chicago, 111. e d senior, Alpha Epsilon Phi Dodge, Battle Creek senior, Cen­ Motors will introduce an Ameri: L A K E L A N S IN G F iv e b e d ro o m fa r n in g s . G o o d p a y C a ll W i l l y , 2*1- Sophomore to Paul A. Orlov, to Roger EttUnger, Southfield tral Michigan Uniyersity. can-built small car in the sum­ nte h e d . f a m i ly ro o m M 6 p e r p e r »on GENERAL E L E C T R IC p o r ta b le A L S O t w o b e d ro o m fu rn is h e d MO s te re o New in June. 1948 *190 N E IG H B O R H O O D SALE. Baby fu r­ 3748. M l/ 4 Skokie, 111. Senior. senior, Detroit Institute of Tech­ mer of 1970, Chairman James n is h in g s , T .V ., t w in g o ld c h a in , m o n th m i * M 1-10/7 c a s h A m g a n g in s e r v ic e C e ll B a r ­ c o u c h , s p re a d s , d r a p e s , r u g s , la m p a , Susan Willert, Saginaw Jun­ nology. PBMNINGS M. Roche announced Thursday. TV RENTALS fo r s tu d e n ts 88.60 ry a t 3 3 7 (0 0 a fte r 5 p m 4-10/1 d ia h e s , b ra s a s h e ll s u p p o rts , p o r t ­ m o n th . F r e e s e r v ic e a n d d e liv e r y . ior to Thomas Greer, East Lan­ Ann .Riegler, Warren junior to Jodie Strother, Ciarkston “ This new car will be more E A S T L A N S IN G 1717 H a s le tt R o ad T h ro e b e d ro o m d o p le i, c a rp e te d , a b le w a s h e r. C lo th in g : b e M e s ; b o y s ; C a ll N E J A C » 7 - 1 3 « . W a g u a ra n ­ sing Junior. James Sillers, North Branch sen­ junior, Alpha Xi Delta to Chuck than a foot shorter than any car T O M A N D J e r r y e r e h a v in g a s a le tw o b a th » iik F a m ily le a s e va M o s t u n u s u a l a s s o r tm e n t in to w n g ir ls , 5, 10-14; m is s e s , tw e lv e s , e tc . te e s a m e -d a y s e r v ic e . C Shirley Suzanne Parafin, Dear­ ior, Farmhouse. Myers, Livonia Senior, Pi Kap­ GM makes in the United States S a tu rd a y , O c to b e r 4, 9-5 p . m . ; Sun­ OMO 5-10/7 S ta in le s s s te e l h o t w a te r b o ttle , 78 born Senior, to Donald Addison Cheryl Resler, Detroit junior pa Phi. today,” Roche said. d a y 1-5 p .m . 2626 G r e e n c lif f D r iv e , r p m ju k e b c u e s , 18th c e n tu r y s w o rd s , E a s t L a n s in g 1-10/4 W MSN Y O U R “ M o r e M u s ic ” S ta tio n Stuchell, Detroit graduate stu­ to Gregory McPherson, Milling­ Debbie Zelley, New Kensing­ “ It will weight about 1,900 N E A R F R A N D O R . » -m a n b o u a r W e ll g e n u in e H a w a iia n h u la s k ir t , w a ll tapes- p la y s th e m u s ic y o n w a n t t o h e a r a t fa rn la h e d , c a rp e te d P ay ow n u t il- 640 K H Z . M 0 /4 dent. ton junior, Pi Kappa Phi. ton, Penn. Junior to David Fran- pounds and will be about a foot tr ie s , o ld r u s ty tru n k s , E n g lis h r id ­ iH es 15». pku $M d e p o s it le a s e in g b o o ts , m a n t le c lo c k s , o ld fu r s , T W O P lfe C E c o u c h , h id e -a -w a y b e d , zetta, Penn. Junior, Delta Up- longer than the best selling for­ 37M M 0 5-10/4 c h u m s , c r o c k s , ju g s , E n g lis h p r a m , *50.00. 361-37», o r 366-2380. 6-10/4 T H E R O G U E S , F o u r t h Y e a r , T h e S o und Service Denise Panza, Birmingham silon. eign car.” o f C a m p u s . 351 -4 0 « . M O /4 O NE MAN needed O w n r o o m , coo» w o o d e n w h e e ls , b u m p e r p o o l ta b le s ', senior, Alpha Delta Pi to John Dale Rittenberg, Winnetka, 111. The best-selling foreign car, is lo g hoo ka, w o v e n w ic k e r c a s k e ts , FO R S A LE f iv e s t r in g lo n g neck DONNA BOHANNON: P ro fe s s io n e ! lo g , b a th 160 m o n th *51-008 a lt e r b a n jo . G ood c o n d itio n . *80. 351- Dobelek, Detroit graduate, Tri­ Junior, Alpha Epsilon Phi to the German-built Volkswagen. w ic k e r c h a ir s , w ic k e r b u g g y , f i r s t BLUES! M S U ’s fir s t b lu e s b a n d . ty p ta t. T e r m p a p e rs , th e se s, I B M 5 p .m . 5-10/4 d a y c o v e r s , W o r ld W a r I g a s m a s k , 4731. 5-10/7 N e e d s B E S T s in g e r a n d b a s s p la y e r » e le c tr ic . 353-7922 19-10/14 angle. Mark Nissenbaum, Chicago, 111. Called at present the XPTO7, c a n d y s c a le s , s m a ll u k e , tro m b o n e s , C a ll B .B . 3 5 1 -0 0 « M O /4 Judith Dauer, Hinsdale, 111. the GM car will be engineered, HOUSE THREE b e d ro o m s fu r­ S T E R E O C O M P O N E N T s y s te m . G a r ­ t r u m p e ts , g u ita r s , p la n k b o tto m go s ­ Senior, Kappa Delta to Ron produced and distributed by n is h e d F o u r s tu d e n ts *100 m o n th s ip b e n c h , s o lid b ra s s la m p s f r o m th e ra rd F is h e r G E . *226. o r o f fe r . D R A F T I N F O R M A T I O N C e n te r. O il Wanted Sandra Joyce Cohn, Detroit Wickline, Grosse Pointe Jun­ Chevrolet Motor Division, H e a tin g IV7-0000 A f t e r 5 p .m . I W 353-8248. 3-10/4 OM » 1 0 /1 4 o ld G ra n d H o te l, G e rm a n b a y o n e t, E a s t G ra n d R iv e r , o p p o te te B a g u e S t. F O U R T R A C K S , f o u r speed ta p e r e ­ junior to Allan M. Huss, Chica­ ior, Alpha Tau Omega. Roche said. It will be assembled fla g p o le , C o r in th ia n p illa r s , s to v e s , O p e n M o n d a y th ro u g h F r id a y , 1 8 p .m . r e f r ig e r a t o r s , ta b le s , c h a ir s , w a r d ­ PO RTABLE T Y P E W R IT E R , R oyal 3 5 1 -5 2 » . M 0 /4 c o r d e r . C a ll 353-7082. 1-10/3 go, 111. junior, Alpha Phi Omega. Sally Ann Narhi, Baraga Jun­ at Lordstown, Ohio. S a fa r i C a ll 332-0801 3-10/4 (ooms ro b e s . d e s k s , te le v is io n s , la m p s , and ior to Gary Dawson, Oscoda Sen­ The expected price of the new m o s t e v e r y th in g in a n tiq u e s , t re a s ­ IN S U R A N C E P R O B L E M S ? W e s p e c ia l­ NEED FO URTH m an fo r lu x u r y Carolyn Stapleton, San Anto­ ior, Farmhouse. car was not announced. u r e r s a n d tra s h . O p e n 4-9 p .m . d a ily . E L E C T R IC BASS w ith case, *85. a p a r t m e n t. 363 m o n th . C a ll D e n n is Y M C A - R E S ID E N T ro o m s fo r m en E le c t r ic bass, *60. S n a re d ru m , is e in c a n c e lle d , re fu s e d , a n d f in a n ­ nio, Texas senior, Alpha Delta Pamela Chaff, Mount Clemens Roche said the new passenger a nd w o m e n , b y d a y o r w e e k M e m 317 E a s t G ra n d R iv e r , L a n s in g . 3-10/7 c ia l r e s p o n s ib ilit y . C a r and b ik e 330-2844. 1-10/3 *25 484-1624 5-10/8 in s u ra n c e . I N S U R A N C E A S S O C IA T E S , Pi to Dudley Bazar, San Juan, to Robert Williams, Mount Clem­ car “ will not be a pocket size b e rs h lp p r iv ile g e s C a ll 4608601 3-10/4 S E L L IN G MY c lo th e s , s iz e 9-10 37 2 -5 3 « . S N o r t h C a p ito l. 5-10/10 B L O O D D O N O R S nee d e d *7.50 f o r a l l Texas graduate student, Perkins ens Junior, Alpha Tau Omega. version of any other car,” but C o lle g e T o w n , G a rla n d , e tc . N ic e S A C R IF IC E : W O O D S k i o u t f i t . M e n ’s p o s itiv e , A n e g a tiv e , B n e g a tiv e a n d School of Theology, Southern Lynn Roberge, Bloomfield instead “ will have a look and c o n d itio n . O c to b e r 5, 9-5, 2641 10 d o u b le b o o ts - * 7 5 ; W a ln u t F M S IN G L E . L A R G E , f o r g ir l. 215 L o u is Peanuts Personal AB n e g a tiv e * 1 0 .« . O n e g a tiv e , Methodist University. Hills Sophomore, Kappa Delta character all its own.” L a S a lle B o u le v a rd , L a n s in g . 2-10/4 r a d io - *4 0 ; 1963 V E S P A S c o o te r, * 1 2 . « . M ic h ig a n C o m m u n ity B lo o d N o 10 *50 Sue. E D 7-0044 3-10/8 leOcc. a n tiq u e but ru n s good - C e n te r, 507VX E a s t G ra n d R iv e r , E a s t to Bobby Tyler, Flint Junior, He said the new car will be R O O M F O R lig h t h o u s e k e e p in g F e ­ H E R E C O M ES T H E TO A S T! *150. New p o r ta b le t y p e w r it e r - G .L . H . y D u s ty t a m p ie n : te a m o L a n a in g , a b o v e th e new Cam pus Cheryl Nielsen, Columbus, Alpha Tau Omega. “ roomier, with more trunk to d a v ia y te a m a r e . T u a m ig o a m a le C a r nee ded C a ll S a tu r d a y / *5.00 w i l l b u y a b e a u tifu l n e w a u to ­ *75 , 3 5 m m Y a s h ic a J 5 5 L R - b u i lt 55». . M O /7 B o o k S to re . H o u r * : S a .m . - 3:30 Ohio senior, Alpha Delta Pi to Lynne Taylor, Detroit Junior, space” than the best selling for­ m a t i c t w o s lic e e le c t r ic to a s te r a t in li g h t m e te r , le n s e s 55 t o 2 0 0 m m . p .m . M o n d a y , T u e s d a y a n d F r id a y ; S u nday. 0 0 5 -2 7 » 1-10/4 Y O U N G B R O T H E R S -D A L E Y BAR­ J im 351-6449 e v e n in g s . 3-10/4 Forrest Everhart, Columbus, Zeta Tau Alpha to Douglas Hamel eign car and “ superior in per­ W e d n e s d a y a n d T h u rs d a y , 12 p .m .- Ohio graduate, Ohio Wesleyan Centerline Senior, Alpha Tau formance with excellent fuel M A L E S T U D E N T S U r g e d o u b le ro o m . G A IN B A R N . 7 » E a s t M ic h ig a n 5-10/9 Real Estate 6: » p m . 337-71*3. C University. B lo c k u n io n C o o k in g , p a r k in g 332- N I K O N F p h o to m ic w i t h F 1.4 le n s Omega. economy.” UW 3-10/5 B U IL D A N E A T ID E A p h is c ase. *175. 353-8897 . 3-10/4 OKEMOS - S H A W N E E T R A IL . V a ­ B L O O D D O N O R S nee ded. * 7 . » f o r a l l Lynn Carol Ross, Brighton B U I L D Y O U R o w n id e a s in to b o o k s h e lv e s w i t h g la s s b lo c k s , c o lo re d c a n t t h re e b e d ro o m b r ic k r a n c h . p o s itiv e , A n e g a tiv e , B n e g a tiv e a n d senior to David H. Carpenter, TO P Q U A L IT Y S te re o c o m p o n e n ts F u l l b a s e m e n t, f ir e p la c e , f o u r p ie c e ONE MAN to s h a re ro o m in hou se b r ic k s . A ls o p r e - fin is h e d s te e l a t d is c o u n t p r ic e s . C a ll IV9-1807. A B n e g a tiv e * 1 0 . « . O n e g a tiv e , 12.W . Birmingham senior. C a ll 351-8342. 1-10/4 c e r a m ic b a th . L o t UO x 1 « w i t h M ic h ig a n C o m m u n ity B lo o d C e n te r, s h e lv in g . Y O U N G B R O T H E R S - D A L E Y M o n d a y - S a tu rd a y u n t il 9 p .m . 5-10/8 tre e s . 1/2 b lo c k to s c h o o l. C a ll 507IX E a s t G ra n d R iv e r , E a s t L a n ­ B A R G A IN B A R N , 720 E a s t M ic h ig a n G RADUATE S T U D E N T G e n tle m a n . F r a n k lin D e K le tn e H, IV5-7226. s in g , a b o v e th e n e w C a m p u s B o o k 5-10/9 Animals C o ry ro o m . F in e lo c a tio n . Q u ie t. R e s id e n c e : 337-2178. P o rte r R e a lt y S to re . H o u rs : I a .m . - 3 : » p .m . P a rk in g . IV J 8 3 0 4 3-10/4 C om pany. 4-10/7 M o n d a y , T u e s d a y a n d F r id a y ; W e d ­ VOX C O N T IN E N T A L O rg a n E x c e l­ G E R M A N S H E P H E R D : P u r e w h ite . n e s d a y a n d T h u rs d a y , 12 p . m . • le n t c o n d itio n . S e ven m o n th s o ld . F iv e m o n th s o ld . M a le . P h o n e 882- 6:3 0 p .m . 337-71*3. C M A L E : I N n e w h o m e n e a r c o lle g e . O K E M O S T H R E E B e d ro o m A l l b r ic k *175 c a s h p lu s t a k e o v e r p a y m e n ts o f 3789. M O /7 B e d ro o m w ith b a th . R e c re a tio n r o o m r a n c h b e a u ty . P a c k a d f o i l o f v a lu e . *21.93 p e r m o n th f o r 25 m o n th s F o r a n d k itc h e n I f d e s ire d . S e n io r o r g r a d ­ H A S L E T T f o u r b e d ro o m o ld e r h o m e f u r t h e r In fo r m a tio n c a l l 882-5892. M A L E S T U D E N T needs h o u s in g F a l l G E R M A N S H O R T H A IR n ip p le s . G o o d o v e r lo o k in g L a k e L a na ing . I d e a l R e n ­ u a te s tu d e n ts o n ly . C a ll T h u rs d a y , 3-10/7 t e r m o n ly . P h o n e 3618232. 2-10/7 c h ild r e n ’ s p e t a n d h u n tin g d o g . S ix F r id a y , o r M o n d a y . 372-4103. M O /9 t a l. 8 8 , 0 « d o w n , f l H p e r m o n th . m o n th s o ld . T h r e e fe m a le s a n d one F o r m o r e in f o r m a t io n c a l l T o tn le G A R A G E S A L E O c to b e r 5 th and 6 th . m a le . *25 P h o n e 641-8625 . 3-107* T W O g i r l a w i n t e r te r m (o r c le a n R a in e s 8 1 7 -O a i or J IM W ALTER For Sale 9-5 p .m . W o m e n 's s iz e 9 th ro u g h 16 an d in fa n ts c lo th in g , f u r n it u r e , d is h e s , R E A L T O R 8788770. 7-10/4 d u p le x . N e a r c a m p u s . 351-7261. C A LL s . » D O B E R M A N F E M A L E : A K C cham ­ 3-10/4 B I C Y C L E S A L E S a n d s e r v ic e . A ls o m is c e lla n e o u s . 2641 L a S a lle B o u le ­ p io n b lo o d lin e s M u s t s e ll b e c a u s e tw ed. E A S T L A N S I N G C Y C L E , 1216 v a r d , L a n a in g . 2-10/4 o f n o ro o m . G o o d p e t a n d lo v e s c h il­ Recreation E . G r i n d R iv e r . CeD 332-8303 C d re n . *75.487-0202 M O /8 R C A T V S te re o r a d io c o m b in a tio n . W O M E N ’S V A R S IT Y te n n is t o m w i l l Z E IS S S L R c a m e r a , a c c e s s o rie s . 7 s B la c k a n d W h ite . E x c e lle n t c o n d itio n . s ta rt r e g u la r p r a c t ic e ( a ll te rm . (wwflh S IA M E S E K IT T E N S n in e w e e k s o ld . 90 b in o c u la rs . W o llln s a k re c o rd e r W a ln u t c a b in e t. *190. C a ll T U 2- A n y In te r e s te d p e rs o n p le a s e c a l l S e a lp o in t. M a le s a n d fe m a le s . R a is ­ VM c h a n g e r. S te re o p r e a m p s . 50 7721. 3-10/7 3 6 3 -0 7 « o r »1-7804. 3-10/4 ed w i t h dog s. B o th p a r e n ts m a y w a t t h l- f l a m p . B r ie fc a s e B o o k c a s e . be seen. *20 406 G rq v e S tr e e t, D I A M O N D B A R G A I N : W e d d in g and » " fa n s T y p e w r it e r S a c r ific e 351- 47« 1-10/4 e n g a g e m e n t r in g s e ts . S ave f i f t y E a s t L a n s in g a f t e r 6 p .m . 3-10/4 Service p e r c e n t o r m o re . L a r g e s e le c tio n Q U IE T FEM ALE c a t, s ix m o n th s , o f p la in a n d f a n c y d ia m o n d s . *25- IN S U R A N C E : A U T O M O B I L E - M o to r ­ O N E H U N D R E D uaed v a c u u m c le a n ­ s h o ts . F re e to good hom e. 332- *190. W IL C O X SECOND HAND c y c le . C a ll SPARTAN, 48780«. e rs T anks, c a m is t e r s , u p r ig h ts . 6056. 5-10/4 S T O R E . 509 E . M ic h ig a n . 485-4391 M o n t h ly p a y m e n ts . G O G R E E N . O 17.I I a n d u p . D e n n is D is t r ib u t in g C C om pany. 3M N o rth C e d a r. 482- F R E E : T w o k it t e n s d e s p e ra te ly need 2177 C-10/4 D I A L - A - M A T I C S E W IN G M A C H IN E S . h o m e . L in d a , 489-3778,6-5 p .m . 2-10/4 H I P P IE S , S O R O R IT Y g ir ls , d o r m le s . P R E S E N T S N IT E L Y IN TH E SHOW BAR L e t m e s e w y o u r c lo th e s ! 3328744. E v e r y t h in g b u i lt in t o m a c h in e . Z ig 3-10/4 TH E PR O G RESSIVE MSU SOUNDS O F CUBAN FOOD z ags, m e n d s , d a r n s , a n d b in d h e m s . (53.08 o r *5.10 a m o n th . D e n n is 'Mobile Homes A n d O th e r F o o d F r o m M ost F o r­ D I A P E R S E R V IC E : D ia p a r e n e A n t i­ e ig n C o u n t r ie s - in c lu d in g U .S . D is t r ib u t in g C e d a r. 482-2677. C om pany, 316 N o r th 4-10/4 D E T R O IT E R n is h e d . 1 9 5 8 -8 ’ E x c e lle n t x 45’ . c o n d itio n . F u r­ 694- s e p tic P r o c e e s a p p ro v e d b y d o c to r s . "TH E OTHERSIDE" S a m e d ia p e r s r e t ur n e d a l l tim e s . 9174 5-10/10 S H A H E E N 'S F A M I L Y F O O D F A IR V A C U U M C L E A N E R S one y e a r o ld Y o u r s o r o u rs . B a b y c lo th e s w a s h e d Mon. Tues. F r l. Sat. Nltes fr e e . N o d e p o s it. A M E R IC A N D I A ­ lOd W S a g in a w 485-4089 w ith a ll a tta c h m e n ts . *18. 484- A M E R IC A N HO M EDALE 12 x 44. P E R S E R V IC E , 914 E a s t G ie r S tre e t. M ic h ig a n B a n k a rd W e lc o m e 0625, D e n n is D is t r ib u t in g C o m p a n y , T w o b e d ro o m . N e w c e n t r a l a lr- c o n - P h o n e 4828804. C S H N . C e d a r. C W /4 d itio n in g U t il it ie s . U n u s e d . S a c rific e . « C a ll 484-4503. M O /8 “ SPICE" W ed.-Thurs. F r l. T.G. A L T E R A T I O N S A N D D R E S S M A K IN G S to ti B U Y O R R E N T use d M o b ile H o m e 10 x 47. T w o b e d ro o m s , fu rn is h e d , f o r la d le s . E x p e rie n c e d . R e a s o n a b le c h a rg e . 3 5 6 -5 8 « . 3-10/7 J c a rp e te d , w a s h e r. L o c a te d on lo t Monday Nite - P IZZA FEAST (ju H Ü h tä lA D r u g one m il e f r o m M S U . E a s y t e r m s . C a ll 351-8606 o r 3556245. M O /7 Typing Service 6 p.m .-2 a.m. 1 105 E . G R A N D R I V E R at G u n s o n ED 2-201 T E R M P A P E R S , th e s e s , C o ro n a e le c ­ C H A R L A M O R 1961. 10’ x 50’ . T w o t r i c e lit e . C e ll S » 8 5 0 5 . 2-10/4 • IT A L IA N GLASS W A R E b e d ro o m s . E x c e lle n t c o n d itio n . N e a r reg. 2.19 M S U . 332-2621. 3-10/4 A N N B R O W N : T y p is t a n d M u lU U th , Wed. Thursday “ HAPPY HOURS" »• CT3 • • • 1 DECANTER o f fs e t p r in t in g . D is s e r ta tio n s , tb e - reg. 6.98 This year, celebrate the rite s o f A utu m n . • B IS S E L F L O O R W A X E R O P E N IN G S O O N ! B R O O K V I E W M O ­ . sea, m a n u s c r ip ts , g e n e ra l ty p in g . 8 p.m. - 10 p.m. • W O M E N ’ S H O S IE R Y B I L E H O M E P A R K . 4600 B r it t o n , IB M . 18 y e a rs e x p e rie n c e . 332- B u ild a g ia n t bonfire, roast Hotdogs and P e r r y . 1969 C o n c o rd M o b ile H o m e s 8384. C 3 p a ck ( lim it e d s u p p ly ) reg. 1.49 on d is p la y . O pen Sundays. 625- m arshm allows, go p un tin g , root f o r y o u r • H E A T IN G PAD reg. 5.98 3111. T w e lv e m in u te s f r o m M S U . 5-10/8 M A R I L Y N C A R R : L e g a l s e c r e ta ry . 'NOW OPEN FROM 12 p.m. - 2 a.m. FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE’ team and w ear lots o f the b risk, energetic • C O N T IN E N T A L E l e c t r i c t y p e w r it e r . A f t e r S : » p .m . AND PARTY FAVORS - THE BEER DEPOT and w eekends 303-2864. P ic k -u p VlLLAGER®things lik e th is fo r F all. M A R L E T T E 1965-12’ x 50’ . O n lo t KEROSENE LA M P n e a r E a s t L a n s in g . C a rp e tin g . E x c e l­ a n d d e liv e r y . C • IR O N I N G B O A R D le n t c o n d itio n . *3695. 484-4746. 3-10/8 ALICE CARTER PAD & CO VER reg. 1.39 .99 S H A R O N C A R R - E x p e r le n c e d G re e k , M O B IL E H O M E S M O V E F A S T w h e n m a th e m a tic a l, g e n e ra l. P ic k n p , d e liv e r y . 8 B 8 8 0 3 . E le c t r ic . 0-10/4 Every F rl.-S a t. Nlte yo u a d v e rtis e in C la s s ifie d . F o r an a c tio n - g e ttin g a d , d ia l 355-8255 n o w ! in the RATHSKELLER FALL DRIVING NEEDS M O B I L E H O M E 10 x 50. E x c e lle n t c o n d itio n . M ust s e ll. B e s t o f fe r . P A U L A A N N H A U G H E Y : A u n iq u e q u a lit y th e e e s s e r v ic e . I B M ty p in g , m u lt H lt h p r in t in g e n d h e r d b in d in g . Grand Trunk Western 372-9067. M O /4 337-1527.- C P A R K W O O D , 1964, 12 x 60. T w o P A U L A A N N H A U G H E Y : A u n iq u e b e d ro o m s . *3,000. Phone 482-9409. th e s e s s e r v ic e . I B M t y p in g , m u lt l- 2-10/4 U th p r in t in g a n d h a r d b in d in g . 337- 1527. C Lost & Found B A T T E R IE S A N T IF R E E Z E FO UND: F E M A LE c a t ne a r H u b b a rd b e r 22nd 3538351. t ig e r a n d w h it e H a ll o n S e p te m ­ 3-10/4 BARBI M EL T y p in g , N o Job to o la r g e o r t o o B lo c k o f f c a m p u s . 332 -32 «. m u l t i l i th in g . s m a ll. C goes to Michigan State Students.. choice apartments Starting October 11th, GTW RATES-ST ARTING AT $175 3,6,9 month leases available makes a special stop at Farm Lane Crossing NO LAST MONTH RENT REQUIRED for students and faculty members N orthw lnd has m ore p arkin g space* p e r a p a rtm en t JUM PER CABLES than any o th e r a p a rtm en t com plex. R e m e m b e r what a drag It was having you. E ast-b ou nd , G ran d T ru n k W est­ - COM PLETE - ADDITIONAL NORTHWIND FEATURES to m ake the Lansing Station scene e rn 's Mohawk and M aple L e a f tra in s « A ir Conditioning «Wall to Wall Carpeting e v e ry tim e you wanted to take the run c le a r Into D e tro it, Westbound, E L E C T R IC A L * A U T O G L A S S * M A C H I N E SHOF «Dishwashers « 2 Bedrooms In Each Apt* tra in ? F o rg et Itl T h e re 's to be a new mGarbage Disposals « Beautiful Front Lawn on River a ll the way Into C hicago. W ith handy T O O L S * A C C E S S O R IE S » E N G I N E A D D IT IV E S o ff'cam p us stop at F a r m Lane C ro ss ­ «(Scenic Front Lawn « Privacy In te rm e d ia te stops, e ith e r way you ing, w h ere you can bo ard the GTW go. tra in F rid a y s , d e tra in Sundays. Not rr too h a rd to take? And n e ith e r a re o u r fa r e s . P res en tin g a Youth C a rd means Youth F a re s d is­ counts e s p e c ia lly f o r the m ln l-b u d - F o r m o re In fo rm a tio n on you r F a rm Lana C ro ssin g stop, tic k e ts , club c a r re s e rv a tio n s , contact G rand T rur'r W e s te rn 's Lansing station , o r M cK ii ney's T ic k e t Agency, 537 E a s t G rand gets. And w e've got a ll the best con­ R iv e r, E aet Lansing. They know m o re . For more Information contact; nections to m ake It even e a s ie r fo r NORTHWIND MANAGEMENT 2771 NORTHWIND DRIVE EAST LANSING 800 E . K A L A M A Z O O 48 4-1303 337-0636 Days 337-0273 Nights Grand Trunk Western » F r id a y , O c to b e r 4 , 1968 16 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Trastee candidates react HUAC (Continued from page one) Finance (Continued from page one) First Amendment was not suf­ Pierson named the others as the Youth International Party T 4f. . ■•* ficient to shield him against Yippies, the Students for a T proceedings .. ?. .„** « ’* . “I.X.-.'U *>• ■ ■ Board majority doe% not trust being charged with contempt Democratic Society and the ® "The action of the Board ma- cordimi to ♦ ' ~^roocedqrçs UwjwwU« ¿Ardent« » vimb o| Congress. * . > Black Panther Party v. , N+ state anit ttxm . .*JMr #J ■ 'i i f c i " ; • ■ 1 ne *SUOCvft, rln Utt 4bl»ri«(f pension resolution was at once we reject* - * •- “ We have a fine faculty and -Agreed that MSU students said he did not know whether tests as a personal bodyguard W The two Democrats, Warren absurd and provocative.” to bearded Yippie leader Jerry 9 student body at MSU and we receiving financial aid more than contempt charges would be Huff of Plymouth and Dr. Blan­ The two candidates, stating Rubin, whom he quoted as say- * have faith in their ability to $95 from outside agencies such brought against Greenblat for che Martin of East Lansing, their support of the dissent reg­ ing, "We should take the gov­ act on this issue through proper as the Michigan Higher Educa­ his walkout. issued a joint statement earlier istered by Stevens and Clair ernment over just as Russia and democratic procedures as tion Agency are not eligible for Greenblat’s mobilization com­ in the week which called for a White of Bay City--both Dem- did.” approved by the Board of Trus­ reduced tuition rates (the ac­ mittee was one of four protest complete revocation of the re­ ocrats-claimed that the "rash Rubin has been subpoenaed to tees in the Report." cepted standard rate for MSU organizations which undercover solution. action” ignored the procedures “ The ‘suspension resolution’ in the Academic Freedom Re­ Huff and Martin said the mat­ ter, after revocation, “ should is $184 per term). -Split 4-4 on the re-assign­ police agent Robert L. Pierson testified share the goal “ to vi­ testify, but Ichord left open the question whether he would ac­ 355-4560 1-5 P.M. ought to be entirely revoked and port and was done in "secrecy.” tually be called when the hear­ be referred to the Faculty Com­ ment of May to another posi­ olently overthrow of the govern­ not just reworded,” the state­ Such an attempt at secrecy, ings resume Friday. mittee on Student Affairs. tion within the university. ment of the United States." ment said. they said, “ implies that the jtfaepi 72nd Anniversary Sale Shop Friday, Saturday and Monday 9l 30 to 5.* 30 fo r Anniversary Savings * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Anniversary Savings Men’s Perma-press Better Dress Shirts 4.89 L arge ors. s e le c tio n , P erm an en t in w h ite p ress and w it h c o l­ S o il Men’s Famous Misses’ Acrylic R e le a s e fin is h . D acron p o ly e s - te r-c o tto n b le n d s , w it h r e g u la r Brand Sweaters Lined Suburbans sp read c o lla r s , F ren ch or regu ­ la r c u ffs . S iz e s 14 1/ 2 to 17 8 .9 9 2 6 .9 9 S to c k up n o w . 3 f o r 1 4 .5 0 . S p e c ia l g r o u p . A l l w o o l s w e a t e r s in O u ts ta n d in g g ro u p . C o tto n sued es a h ost of new fa ll c o lo r s . C a r d i­ and co rd u ro ys, w ool m e lto n s and gans and p u llo v e r s . Som e m a c h in e p la id s . A c r y lic p ile . A sso rte d c o l­ STO R E FO R M E N -S T R E E T L E V E L w a s h a b le . S - M - L - X L . o r s . S iz e s 5 - 1 3 , 8 -18 S T O R E FO R M E N -S T R E E T L E V E L COA T S -S T R E E T L E V E L P ie r c e d E a r r in g V a lu e s ju n io r s ’ p a n t s k ir t s M e n ’s B e tte r T ie s 3 - P ie c e F o n d u e S e t 2 fo r $3 6.99 3 fo r $4 9.98 Sh ort and k ic k v r u *on h i t s in E x c itin g h o s te s s a c c e s s o r y . A v o ­ P ie r c e d and p ie r c e d - lo o k de­ B ran d nam e n e c k w e a r in s o l i d s , w ool and a c r y lic ..e n d s bonded c a d o , m u s t a r d o r C h in e s e y e llo w , s ig n s . L o op s, b u tto n s, g o ld or s tr ip e s , p a tte rn s. A s s o r te d fa b ­ to a ce ta te . A c h o i c e o f s t y l e s in w it h w r o u g h t i r o n b u r n e r , m a t c h ­ s ilv e r to n e s , som e w it h sto n e s, r i c s and c o lo r s . E x c e p tio n a l b u y s o r e n a m e l . 1 .5 9 p r . c h e c k s o r p la id s . a t t h i s p r i c e . 1 .3 9 e a . in g t r a y . CAM PVS CENTER H O M E A CC ESSORIES-SECO ND L E V E L C O S T I M E JE W ELR Y-STRF.ET L E I EL S T O R E FO R M E N -S T R E E T L E V E L ¥ ¥ M e n ’s H a n d k e r c h ie f N o -Iro n L a c e T a b le c lo t h s S a m p le C o s tu m e J e w e lr y « 1.99 « « M e n ’s B a n -L o n K n it 10 fo r 1.79 1.99 * T u r t le n e c k S h ir t s 52 x 5 2 ” a n d 52 x 7 0 ” s iz e .A c e - H ig h fa s h io n and ta ilo r e d p in s , ¥ V ery s p e c ia l gro u p . A ll c o tto n « h a n d k e r c h ie fs , e x tra la r g e s iz e , t a t e - c o t t o n l a c e . W h ite , g o ld , a v ­ e a r r in g s , c h a in s , rop es, pen­ 5.99 * ocado and b e ig e . O th e r s iz e s at d a n ts. G r e a t v a r ie ty o f d e ­ « e x tra s o ft. S to c k up fo r you r- * . s e lf , fo r g ifts . „ b ig s a v in g s , to o . s i g n s , in g o l d o r s i l v e r . ■** * S T O R E FO R M E N -S T R E E T L E V E L LIN E N S -S E C O N D L E VEL C O S T l M E J E f t E L R Y -S T R E E T L E V E L B ig g e s t s e llin g s h i r t in A m e r i­ * J u m p e rs f o r J u n io r s W in t e r W e ig h t S c a rv e s can . S h o rt s le e v e k n it o f B a n - ¥ 2 S p e c ia l G r o u p s : ¥ Lon® te x tu r a liz e d n y lo n . M a c h in e 88c ■1.88 ¥ w a s h a b le a n d d r y a b l e . In a g r e a t 10.99 S o ft a c r y lic s in sq u ares and ¥ M e n ’s B e tte r S h o e s ¥ a sso rtm e n t of c o lo r s . S -M -L . o b lo n g s . A s s o r t e d s o li d s , p la id s , « A s s o r t e d h ig h n e c k an d l o w - b e l t ­ and ch eck s. A ll th e to p fa s h io n « ed s ty le s . G o o d ra n g e o f c o lo r s . « c o lo r s , s a le p r ic e d . F A S H IO N A C C E S S O R IE S -S TR E E T LEV E L * * S T O R E FO R M E N -S T R E E T L E V E L 11.99 19.99 J r s ’ 5 to 1 3 . C A M P V S C EN TER - 4L ¥ M in k * T r im S u e d e C o a ts « M is s e s ’ F le e c e R o b e s D is c o n tin u e d s ty le s . M any fa m ­ Special 41 o u s m a k e : N u s h -B u s h , N e ttle to n . $68 W o m e n ’s D re s s y * « * 9.99 A ll b e t t e r q u a lity s h o e s . B la c k o r b row n , b ro ken s iz e s . A ll g reat Su zy W ong 7/8 le n g th co a ts of ¥ P o p u la r hand or m a c h in e w a s h ­ g e n u in e s u e d e w ith n a t u r a l m in k * « a b le r o b e s o f A r n e l® t r i a c e t a t e - v a lu e s . o r C a s u a l S h o e s tr im . A n te lo p e or c h o c o la te « « p o ly e s te r fle e c e . Jew el to n e s, b row n . 8 -18 . 8.90 10.90 12.90 « « * s iz e s 10 to 1 6 . R O B E S -G A R D E N L E V E L * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * S T O R E FO R M E N -S T R E E T L E V E L * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * COA T S -S T R E E T L E V E L * a ll im p o r t e d f u r s la b e le d a s t o c o u n tr y o f o r ig in * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * g * * G reat a sso rtm e n t of s ty le s on « N e w N y lo n B r a - S lip m e d iu m or lo w h e e ls . B la c k , ¥ F a m o u s K ik i B r ie f s S a v e ! M is s e s F a m o u s navy, c o lo r s . b ro w n , A b e ig e , and b r ig h t p a ir ju s t r ig h t fo r e v ­ * * « S p e c ia lly P r ic e d U n d e r - fa s h io n 4.99 a ll- in - o n e . N y lo n N a m e B lo u s e s ery s u it and d ress. S to c k up. « tr ic o t s k ir t, f ib e r fill c o n to u r b r a 4.99 « S H O E S -G iH I ) E \ L E V E L & C A M P V S C E \T F .R « 6/2.89 6/4.99 of la c e . 3 2 -3 6 A -B -C . W h ite or y e llo w . M is s e s ’ A c r y lic « L IN G E R IE -G A R D E N L E V E L « A c tio n -b a c k b r ie fs o f a c e ta te t r i ­ C u d d le H o o d s * cot in w h ite or p a s te ls . 5 -7 . B e tte r M a k e H a l f S lip s E x c itin g A n n iv e r s a r y v a lu e . 4i Hood 3.99-4.99 s t y le c a p s fo r c o ld - w e a t h ­ 4i « 41 6 / 2 ,8 9 . D e lu x e K ik i b r i e f s o f n y ­ l o n t r i c o t , e l a s t i c l e g s t y l e in s o l ­ 2.99 B lo u s e s , F in e s t s h ir ts fa b r ic s , and p an t to p s. g r e a t d e ta ilin g . id c o lo r s o r p a s t e l f l o r a l s , s i z e s N y lo n t r i c o t c r e p e s i t in m u t e d Long and r o ll s le e v e s . S o lid s , er w ear, in deep a c r y lic p ile . 4t « 5 - 7 . 6 / 4 .9 9 p l a i d l a c e t r i m m e d s t y l e s in w h it e p r i n t s o r p l a i d s . 8 to 18 . W h ite , b la c k , g rey, b ro w n and « tip p e d s h a d e s . V a lu e p r ic e d . ¥ L IN G E R IE -G A R D E N L E V E L and c o lo r s . B r o k e n s i z e s S - M - L . C A M P V S C E N TE R ¥ L L N G E R IE -G A R D E N L E V E L . * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * F A S H IO N A C C E S S O R IE S -S TR E E T L E V E L * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *