W ed n esd a y G ra c /e s . . . MICHIGAN 'V a r m . . v * .y j • UcititlM ■jB*. the . cMnoetitive . M ... HATE * Partly canny, cv-r"* * A* of showers tonight. - . **• . V' s p ir it o f ttie m id d le c la s s . -anonymous * * UNIVERSITY Vol. 61 Number 63 East Lansing, Michigan October 16,1968 16c .¿EET TONIGHT Trustees to decide fate of closed board sessions He said that he had not heard of the By JIM SCHAEFER dicated that making these items public State News Staff Writer might avert the “potential damage” contents of White’s letter as yet, or At the suggestion of President Hannah, of recent months, where trustees even that the Bay City Democrat in­ the MSU Board of Trustees will dis­ have quoted other trustees either par­ tended to bring it up at the dinner. cuss only financial matters at dinner tially or out of context. tonight, and will not hold the tra­ The dinner tonight has only three ditional closed Finance Committee meeting Thursday morning. items to discuss-a report on the annual a u d its a discussion on long- Council seeks It was at last month’s Finance Com­ range investmwfts by a Boston broker­ mittee meeting that the trustees had not only discussed but taken action age firm’s Cincinnati representatives, and a letter by trustee Clair White, trustee recall on not only financial matters, but D-Bay City. others-such as a motion on MSU’s Treasurer, Philip J. May. At the dinner tonight, the trustees There is no formal agenda, as such, and no action scheduled on any of the topics. of resolution By MARILYN PATTERSON are expected to decide what procedure White claimed that the switch in the State News Staff Writer they will use to consider the mat­ meeting, from Thursday morning to When the Board of Trustees gathers ters formerly covered in the “Finance Wednesday night dinner, was to provide Thursday for its monthly meeting, it Committee meetings.” the trustees with an opportunity of will be presented with a recommenda­ Clear the runway!f Hannah has noted that other boards of control have a subcommittee that “scratching” his request from appear­ ing on the agenda of the public meeting. tion from the Academic Council that it rescind its suspension resolution and that handles the investment portfolio and “I'm convinced of that,” he said. a committee be assigned to recommend A s q u a d ro n o f A - l S k y r a l d e r s a w a its fi n a l a r m i n g p r i o r to ta k in g o f f on a b o m b in g m i s s io n f r o m B len other financial matters, while other “If this is the case, I will release Hoa A I r p o r t - - l 6 m i l e s o uts id e Saigon, B ien Hoa a v e r a g e s 6 7 ,0 0 0 la ndin gs and d e p a r t u r e s a month, a substitute for that resolution. items are considered in the public the letter and a statement Thursday The recommendation, which was not counting h e li c o p t e r s , C h i c a g o ’ s O ' H a r e A i r p o r t , which Is lis te d as the w o r l d ’ s b u s ie s t a i r p o r t , meeting. morning.” He added that he thought his passed at the Academic Council meeting r e c o r d s 5 7 ,0 0 0 la n d in g s and d e p a r t u r e s a m o n th , U P I T e le p h o to Various University officials have in- letter would be taken off the informal Oct. 8, calls for the Faculty Committee agenda of the dinner in “less than 30 on Student Affairs and “other appropriate seconds.” agencies” in cooperation with ASMSU White would not indicate the nature and the administration to form a com­ or contents of his letter, but merely mittee to recommend “all-University pol­ commented that he didn’t want the S y m p o s iu m to p ic .- s e x u a lity “Board of Trustees to continue to be tied up in political manuevers." “We need some move prior to the icies and procedures designed to avoid and cope with emergency situations in­ volving student disturbances on the cam­ pus.” election to take it out of politics.” The recommendation came after Presi­ By PAT ANSTETT an “open ciimate" of discussion by in­ marital behavior, marriage and family, but human relationships," Ward empha­ Chairman of the Board Don Stevens, Associate Campus Editor viting speakers on the seven subjects, and decision-making problems of sex­ sized. dent Hannah called Oct. 2 for complete D-Okemos, said Tuesday that he con­ student and faculty discussion of the A seven week symposium, “Sexuality: with attitudes ranging from moralistic to uality. The speakers visiting campus next sidered the restriction of the items at A Search for Perspective,” will unite permissive. term include Dr. Roy W. Menninger, trustees' suspension rule. the dinner to the purely financial as The rule, which was passed at the students, faculty and 21 nationally-known “It would be illegitimate to not have The colloquy will aim at investigating president of the Menninger Foundation: “appropriate.” physicians, scientists, theologians and differentiating value systems repre­ “viable life sytyles" or human interac­ Albert Ellis, author of “The American trustees’ finance committee meeting “I’m not criticizing President Hannah Sept. 20, gives the president “or his writers on campus this winter term. sented,” Ward said. tions, and promoting an “ongoing dial­ Sexual Tragedy" and “Sex Without or anyone else,” he said,” but the Thé colloquy, which will attempt to The topics will include the physiology, ogue” on human sexuality. Guilt; Lester Kirkendall, professor of public has a right to know.” designee" the power to suspend students ‘Weal completely with the question of cultural perspectives, roles, law, pre­ “We are not examining sexual acts family life at Oregon State University; Stevens said that any trustee could who cause an immediate threat to Uni­ human sexuality,” is a “pioneering ef­ and Calvin C. Hernton, black American suggest an item for the agenda, but versity operations. The suspension would fort” in this field, Don Ward, colloquy co-chairman said. “I don’t feel that any University has taken a responsible role in providing in­ NEWRULING sociologist and author of “Sex and Racism in America." Knisely also felt that the colloquy would attempt to “stimulate thoughtful that the majority of the board would have to approve placing the item on it. be effective until judicial proceedings were completed. (Please turn to page 11) formation on sexuality,” William and informed discussion" about the en­ Knisely, colloquy co-chairman and di­ rector of the Institute of Biology and Medicine said. Fraternity rush banned tire subject of sex. The $20,000 project initiated last De­ cember represents the planning of 14 aca­ U.S. rebukes Panama, Knisely felt that much of the previous demic areas, including 11 colleges, eight information on sexuality was mini­ mal or erroneous.” He related this’ to the general attitudes and inhibitions a t ’East Holmes Hall student governing groups and the Office of the Vice President for Student Affairs. Since the colloquy will represent pos­ severs diplomatic ties toward sex. In a ruling passed Oct. 10, the Holmes fore the All-University Student Judi­ sibly the first comprehensive gathering ciary. Such consultations are provided for The colloquy will attempt to establish Hall governing council banned all forms of speakers on so many facets of sex­ WASHINGTON (AP) - The United under the Rio de Janeiro Declaration of of fraternity rush from public and When asked about the Holmes Hall uality, the symposium could do more States suspended diplomatic ties Tuesday ruling, Pierce Myers, Moline, 111., 1965 which is implemented whenever a private areas of East Holmes Hall, than “provide a climate for learning.” With Panama because of the military military takeover occurs in any hemi­ senior, IFC president, said he had re­ Rawls tickets Tickets for Lou Rawl’s performance in effective immediately. Specifically, the ruling forbids: -placing advertising in public and private areas of the dormitory, ceived no notice of the ruling. “I would question the legality of such an action,” Myers said. The symposium could also determine future campus symposiums. Knisely cited a similar program on drugs as one possible extenstion of this long-ranged ouster last Friday of President Arnulfo Arias. At the same time, the United States reiterated its disapproval of Arias' call spheric nation. > State Department spokesman Robert McCloskey made it clear that suspension of relations goes into effect automatically Jenison Field House at 8 p.m. Friday are -rushing in all public areas, symposium idea. to arms while in the U.S.-administered in cases such as the one in Panama. available in advance at the Union, Camp­ -placing postage-free rush in­ “That is why evaluations will be so Canal Zone and expressed hope for a He described the current relationship vitations in mailboxes. critical,” Ward said. He. said, “We have return to constitutional government in bell’s and Marshall’ and also at the door. The council took this action after Library committee to legitimize the time and expense of Panama. between the United States and Panama as being in an “intermediate" stage, fraternity rush “repeatedly disturbed the program,” before discussing future The State Department said it would pending clarification of the situation in the privacy of East Holmes Hall res­ begin consultations Wednesday with other idents- through boisterous and obtrusive to hear comments symposiums. Knisely said that the colloquy also hemispheric countries on possible recogni­ the Central American country. McCloskey said the United States could Tickets available conduct and unsolicited advertising in represents “an implementation of the tion of the young military regime headed not “condone or permit the use of a safe both private and public areas of the hall.” No action was taken by the council on closed stacks (Please turn to page ID by Col. Jose P. Pinilla. haven in the Canal Zone as a political, for Homecoming on sorority rush. The Faculty Library Committee will military or governmental base of oper­ ations.” “The sororities haven’t been as big hold an open meeting concerning the clos­ Tickets for the annual Homecoming ing of the stacks in the graduate wing of The reference was to Arias' statement a problem about distrubances as the from the U.S.-administered territory Sun­ Dance at 8.30 p.m. Saturday in the Audi­ fraternities,” Janice Fox, Mt. Olive, the library at 4 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 23 torium are now on sale at the Union and in Rm. 204 International Center. day night that “it is necessary to take up N.C., senior, female vicg present of arms against the little group of military Campbell's Surburban Shop. the co-ed council, said. The meeting is being held to hear any The theme of the dance, and of Home­ comment for or against the plan to close traitors to the fatherland.” Glen Elliott, Kansas City, Mo., sopho­ (Please turn to page 11) coming, is “Unprecedented Presidents” the stacks before final action is taken. and will feature the MSU Dance Band and The American Breed. Attire will be semi- formal. more, male vice president of the council, said Tuesday that he has heard of no disagreement from Holmes Hall res­ idents about the decision. “If anyone has anything to say one way or another, they can say it at the meet­ ing," Richard Chapin, director of the Sorensen speaks Theodore C. Sorensen, special counsel Coronation of Queen Nancy Landis and Elliott does expect disagreement from library, said. “I will be at the meeting the presentation of her court will also take to the late President John F. Kennedy, the Interfraternity Council (IFC). and will be glad to answer any questions will open the Great Issues series at 10 place. He said all violations will be taken be­ that I can.” Tickets are $5.00 per couple. a.m. Friday in the Auditorium. His topic (Please turn to page 11) will be “Politics 1968.” U .S . a f f l u e n c e f r u s t r a t e s p o v e r t y - s t r i c k e n By GLORIA SNEED The conference, sponsored by the farm workers and families headed by paternalistic way, we increase the Addressing himself primarly to the ness” to define their worth for them then State News Staff Writer Association for International Develop­ a female have a higher probability possiblity of the poor becoming de­ problems of the black poor, Rev. Nathan they deserve to be in poverty. GRAND RAPIDS - To be poor in ment, a private organization, and the of being among the poor. pendent on us,” he said. Wright, author of “Black Power and the Speaking on the psychological effects America is not like being poor any­ Center for the Study of Development Government programs, especially the Urban Unrest” and director of Urban of being poor, Donald Warwick, professor and Social Change, heard six experts See related story, page 3 Office of Economic Opportunity (OEO), of social psychology at Harvard Univer­ where else in the world. In America, Works in Newark, N.J., charged that OEO to be poor is an anathema - yet one from across the country speak on came under sharp attack for failing to keeps the poor in the bottom of the bar­ sity said that the poor have difficulty in fourth of the country goes to bed poverty and the poor. Attacking the public welfare pro­ make a dent in the “vicious cycle of rel economically. defining themselves to the society around hungry. In the nation, 20 to 25 per cent grams for doing little to change the poverty” and for alloting more money “Black poverty and white poverty are them-a society that equates poverty with “To be poor in a poor country is of U.S. citizens could be considered situation of poverty, Shutes blamed for administration of programs than not the same,” Wright said. being a failure. nothing to be ashamed of but to be poor, earning under $4,000 a year. the welfare system for creating the for meaningful programs to help the “White poverty can be dealt with by “Peoplp will not change unless forced hungry in a nation that is full is the Of this 25 per cent, one fourth are possiblity that the children of those poor. Charging the federal government the current OEO because it is largely a to change,” he added. most frustrating thing,” James Shutes, black Americans even though they make already on welfare rolls may end up for not meeting the commitments it case of ignorance and not being given a up only 10 per cent of the population. in the same conditions as their parents. made in 1964 to the poor when OEO and Calling for community action pro- executive associate of the Michigan chance. Black poverty is low self- grms to take on the aspects of Black Economic Opportunity Office told the Not only is the probability of being “It rewards those who are lazy and similar anti-poverty programs were worth and powerlessness,” he said. poor three times as great for non­ it ties the hands of those who want begun, Shutes said that the government Power, Warwick said that to eradicate 200 persons that attended the two- Calling for black people to unite and poverty in America requires change day conference on poverty and the whites but also those over 65 are more to work but can't take the chance,” did not give the poor a voice in the likely to live in poverty conditions. form a power base; Wright said that as the attitudes of the remaining three- devélopment of peoples at Aquinas Col­ Shutes added. kinds of programs that were to be set long as black people allow “white nice­ Rural farm workers-especially black “As long as we continue in our up for their benefit. quarter who go to bed with full stomachs. lege here'. W ed n esd a y , O c to b e r 16, 1968 M ichigan State N ew s, E a st L a n sin g , M ich ig a n H IÜ y.. r o a d s h o w ’ in g o o d s p ir its NEWS : ,it CtiSf£R, (AP) - The Apollo 7 as­ .bbc Affair« Manned spacecraftCenter. fair« otftqifc. P aoecraftCenter. ft-Jftf, ' U** ton. was ton tml was ant trol atat the « * in the time . ' r— - ■•■'I’' V ” ::ï> in MipakW Ume and time ana Haney, Ml spacecraft The. earner? stowed t naney, thé crewmen working before .. k. At anoflwrjpoint,c schirraa ,te- trievéff a taingfa (ens from om an re- to; b^ttlev an after they were’ equipment bay and pushed it space last Friday for the 11-day "W ■ were- launched- *• ■< • battlev cgifi$ ihat developed launched into -uimrnary Officials said the question watching at his control cen­ the consoles and displays which tronauts took America on a ter console, made no com­ monitor the health of the space­ toward the camera. The lens A c a p s u le s u m m a r y of the d a y ’ s ev e n ts f r o m televised tour of the world’s involves the password for an informal club in the aerospace craft. At one point Eisele placed floated slowly out of the picture. mission. Cunningham said he o ur w ir e s e rv ic e s . highest sick room Tuesday ment. community. The proper answer Schirra, like a pleased and a pen in midair. The pen stayed At the end of the 11-minute had no cold, but felt “on the and ignored their colds long proud host, then gave a tele­ there until he reached up to show, Eisele asked if Slayton verge of getting one." enough to perform some zero- is considered somewhat racy “My only complaint is a head ■ m w for a national audience. Slay- vised tour of the complex use It again. was in the control room. gravity acrobatics. cold.” said Eisele. “I find my Navy Capt. Walter M. Schirra “Deke isn’t here right now, ears plugged up now and then. “ You c a n 't tr u s t a m a n ; Jr., Walter Cunningham and Air Force Maj. Donn F. Eisele, all needing a shave, cavorted MEETINGMAJORGOALS Donn, but Harriet Eisele’s Other than that I'm in good wife is jn the control room shape. No problems.” and watched it all,” Mission Control replied.* The fliers obviously were con­ w h his o has a va cu m w h e r e •; p r in c ip le s o u g h t to b e r” V ice P r e s id e n t ' and clowned in the weight­ cerned about their colds con­ lessness of outer space while gesting the tubes leading to the H u b e r t H. H u m p h r e y , the Apollo television camera carried their antics live to a nationwide audience. Apollo success boosts Laughter drifted down from ears. If these tubes are blocked, space before Eisele replied: the crew could have intense “Roger. Understand. Tell her pain on re-entry when the ta lk in g a b o u t R ic h a r d M. N ix o n “Coming to you live from ‘hello’ forme.” spacecraft pressure changes in ■KaSn ■Willi ru* outer space, the one and only original Apollo orbiting road show starring the great ac- robots from buter space, Wally likelihood o f lunar trek “We just did,” said the com­ municator. “She’s nodding her five pounds per square inch head.” less than half an hour used in space to the normal from the International News e The Communist Chinese Government has begun with­ SPACE CENTER, HOUSTON still must demonstrate are long to life in their roomy space sea level pressure of 14.7 drawing some of the more than 50,000 labor troops sent into' Schirra and Walt Cunningham,” Shown later a photograph of pounds per square inch. Schirra announced as the space- (AP) - With all the hoop­ duration flight and critical re­ chariot. North Vietnam during the U.S. bombing campaign, qualified entry and recovery techniques. John Healey, a leading space­ the television transmission, sources reported Tuesday. • ,; to-ground t e l e v i s i o n signal la over the daily television Mrs. Eisele said, “That’s my Blocked tubes would pre­ started. shows from space, the public The initial moon landing craft engineer, said of the per­ The initial withdrawals were reported relatively small., guy. He sure needs a shave.” vent pressure on the eardrums but the decision itself was seen as an indication of Red ^ Eisele began the show with may have lost focus on the main flight will last eightdays, with formance to date: from equalizing naturally. The a sign used Monday in their goal of Apollo 7, which is to seven days for the roundtrip, "I can put it in one word: Mrs. Schirra and Mrs. Cun­ crewmen said they planned to Chinese thinking about the Vietnamese war. - -, qualify the shot for the moon. interrupted by a one-day stay terrific.” • Czechoslovakian Premier Oldrich Cernick reached agree­ first telecast from space: Healey is a vice president ningham watched the space per­ save some de-congestant pills “Hello from the Apollo room, The fact is that such mun­ by two of the three Apollo astro­ formance at their homes. ment Tuesday with Kremlin leaders on a treaty dealing of North American Rockwell from the medical kit until just with the stationing of Soviet troops in his country, Czechoslo- - high above everything." Eisele dane-sounding things as radia­ nauts on the lunar surface. Schirra and Eisele continued before re-entry. tors, radars and control rock­ The engine that will steer the Corp. which built the craft. vak sources reported. .’* gave the sign a slight push Tuesday and it floated slowly ets are working so well that it’s astronauts to the moon, kick it The sources said that Cernik, who arrived Monday has*, away and out of the picture. looking more and more like into lunar orbit and then out ended his talks here and will leave for Prague either tonight' Apollo can transport men to the again has performed flawlessly or Wednesday. First Cunningham and then Schirra floated into view from the spacecraft’s lower equip­ moon and back. As Navy Capt. Walter M. Schirra Jr.,1 Air Force Maj. in three test firings on the Apollo 7 mission. Fire more ignitions are scheduled, includ­ Chinese Commun ist party o U.N. Secretary-General U Thant disclosed Tuesday he,-, has sent to the four big powers a proposal that their foreign’, ment bay. They resembled Donn F. Eisele and civilian ing the burst that will take the ministers meet to consider ways for strengthening the United • swimmers under water, Nations and the rules of international conduct. j gliding smoothly and with­ out effort past the camera. astronaut Walter Cunningham n e a r Wednesday’s half-way point of the planned 11 day jour­ ship out of orbit and back to earth. Throughout the first four days strips leader of fu notions Identical letters to the United States, Britain, Franfce and the Soviet Union, dated Oct. 7, suggested that the Big;' Four leaders could produce concrete results “if an agenda ' They held up signs asking ney, ground controllers report of the Apollo 7 night, the radia- TOKYO (AP) - Without history and he no longer has Apollo 7 has achieved 75 per tors, life support, electrical mentioning' him by name, power and authority in the par- could be agreed upon which would be realistic and not ^ “Are you a turtle?” One was overambiiious.” addressed to Donald K. Slay­ cent of the major objectives and , other . . systems. _ , have. per- ... Peking - radio declared Tuesday- ty and government,” said a ton, chief of astronaut flight needed to qualify it for a lunar formed almost flawlessly with that Liu Shao-chi, president ¿ eki broadcast monitored in crew operations, and the other journey. only a few minor problems re- 0f Red China, has been strip- Tokyo% ndtranslated hereinto National News to Paul Haney, chief of the The primary goals Apollo 7 ported. ped of all his official functions j apanese • Disruption ranging from a teachers strike to campus Temperature in the cabin has 3 ^ ¿ ! j e T n L n r mUniStPar' “ Chi"a ’S Khrushchev" has bombings unsettled the educational process in various parts been a constant, comfortable 70 ..We have completely dis- been the epithet for Liu Shao- of the United States Tuesday. chi for almost two years during The third teacher walkout of the new academic term The State N ewt, the student newspaper at M ichigan State U n iversity, is degrees, and the three astro- p0set| 0f the antirevolutionary the struggle which has gone W pnbMshed every cla st day throughout the year with special Welcome Week nauts, except for their colds, eiements led by China’s Khrush by the name of “great pro­ paralyzed the New York school system with its 1.1 million and Orientation issues in June and September. Subscription rates are $14 have had no trouble adjusting Cbev ¡nt0 the wastebasket of letarian cultural revolution.” pupils. per year “The declaration of proleta­ Member Associated P ress, United P ress International, Inland D aily P ress T h e M en o f T h eta D e lta C h i rian victory,” said the broad­ Association, Associated Collegiate P ress, Michigan P ress Association, M ich­ cast, “is therefore not just a • Ohio backers of Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy for the presi­ igan Collegiate P ress Association, United States Student P ress Association. a r e p le a s e d to announce t h e i r f a l l t e r m p le d g e s : claim buta fact." dency have named Coretta Scott King, widow of Dr. Martin- Second class postage paid at E a st Lansing, M ichigan. That referred to a declaration Luther King Jr., as their nominee for vice president. Ed ito ria l and business offices at 347 Student Services Building, M ichigan Tom Ranney Dennis Lupinskl some time ago that victory in McCarthy backers filed a slate of 26 electors with the- State U niversity, E a st Lansing, M ichigan. Glenn McGregor Mark Gade the struggle against the foes Ohio secretary of state Tuesday, qualifying the Minnesota, Phones: Bill Horwath Steve Zrimec of Mao Tse-tung had been com­ senator as a write-in candidate in the Nov. 5 election. EdUorial..................................................................................... , SSM2S2 J erry Whiting Garry Boyce pleted with the imposition of Claarifled Advertising .................................................... • - • s iM K 6 Bill Herrman :John Johnson ‘'r e v o l u t io n a r y Commit­ i ‘ . 1. . ’ M fl I /I 4 ■ *»»* ' * •'>■> » H i» .’ ’- ¿ J . l D isplay A d vertisin g .................................................................................. , JM-6400 J im Winston • Third party candidateGeorge Wallace is fading aqd B u sin e ss-C ircu la tio n ......................................................... *►. ., A . . 386-3447 tees” over all China’s provinces. Democrat HubertHumphrey has panicked into using 1 P h o to g rap hic........................................................ - t if f i v-m ’386-011 Mike Morrow Rick Wilhelm son The party. Tuesday’s state­ Mike Shrider J im Berry L iu S h a o -C h i “tactics of fear and smear,” Republican Richard Nixon ment said, now must “concen­ said Tuesday. J ohn La sky Dave Marvin trate on reorganizing itself by China, and has also been vice Before hitting out at Wallace and Humphrey, Nixon out- taking in fresh blood of workers chairman of the party of which lined plans for a campaign windup he called ‘Operation! and peasants and consolidate Mao is chairman. Extra Effort” which he said would produce the fastest;! itself by purifying the class There have been claims from finish in the history of presidential elections. ranks.” Peking from time to time of Liu is chairman of govern- Liu’s downfall, but none thus ment-in effect, president of Red far which claimed that he ac­ • A federal judge threw out of court today an Alabama tually has been stripped of legislator’s suit challenging the use of state funds in George Wallace’s presidential campaign. HOLDENHALL any office. The broadcast said "revolu­ tionary masses” throughout the “It is not clear,” said Dist. Court Judge Frank M. . Johnson, Jr., “that the allegations, even if proved, make out a violation of the Constitution of the United States.” P r e se n ts country had disposed of “Chi­ , H o w .t o POSTGAM E na's Khrushchev and his hand­ ful of followers.” • Hubert H. Humphrey, in an elaboration on his Viet-, nam stand, said Tuesday he would stop the bombing of r M IXER S a tu rd a y , O c t . 19 North Vietnam “period” and he called Richard M. Nixon “chicken hearted” for declining to debate him on Vietnam and other issues. Humphrey faced, black and white students in Kansas F r o m 5 p . m . to 9 p .m . City, Mo., and jabbed at George C. Wallace and Curtis LeMay as the “bombsey twins.” He declared “Richafd. i n t e r v i e w the Lion Hearted is really the chickenhearted" as his audience laughed. v DEAFERUPTION* * * * Humphrey later in his speech made another reference to Richard Nixon and said, “you can’t trust a man who has a vacuum where his principles ought to be. “It’s the same old Nixon, and the people can’t trust, 1 7 0 c o m p a n ie s ALLY M I .D . R e q u i r e d IXER him anymore in 1968 than they could in 1952,1956 and 1960. " • Most pupils were reported back in their classrooms Tuesday after a black-led boycott took nearly 25,000 youths from high school classrooms Monday. 4 HOLDENHALL A limited walkout was reported at Harrison High School and two false fire alarms were sounded at two other schools* in h a lf a n h o u r. A d m is s io n 5 0 £ The incidents were free of violence. INDIANAAGRICULTURE A T' " ‘ FARM 3U REA I s s f t THURSDAYSPECIAL fo r S tu d e n ts an d F a c u lty R e g u la r Now! 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O ur interview er will be on cam pus soon. If ....................... Pleats Extra AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER So a job a t G eneral E lectric offers th e kind of you’re wondering w hether it’s possible to find chal­ Fur Trimmed Garments im m ediate responsibility you m ight expect to find lenging work in big business, please arrange to see And Formals Excluded only in a sm all business. R ight from the sta rt you get a chance to demon­ stra te your initiative an d capabilities. A nd the him . H e speaks for 170 “companies.” OREHOUR 2 2 7 ANN S T . A c r o s s fro m PERSONNEL DEPARTMENT IN D IA N A F A R M B U R E A U C O O P E R A T IV E A S S N ., IN C . m ore you show us, the faster you’ll move ahead, GENERAL M ELECTRIC An equal opportunity employer CLERnERS K napps 3 3 2 -3 7 9 2 47 SOUTH PENNSYLVANIA STREET INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA 46204 TELEPHONE 317-631-8361 iL W ed n esd a y , O c to b e r 16, 1968 3 M ichigan State N ew s, E a st L a n sin g , M ich ig a n HUNGER New Jersey’ hits antiaircraft sites ; ..... >^ ;■ -,m <•*. rise in 1H 4»' t Vietnamese troops west of By GLORIA SNEED meet on one-fourtn of1tfi&^orTd’s isfied world is seven times per capita income was 15 times ; SAIGON (AP) - The bat- income, he said. as great as the hungry world that of India, today it is 35 Me-ship New Jersey unleashed Quang Ngai Monday, shortly State News Staff Writer after the enemy sent 17 rounds Calling foreign aid and other “The hunger gap and the pov­ times as great.” a 30-minute barrage on a North “Mankind is on a collision such programs immense blun­ of big rockets slamming into erty gap is widening at an Borgstrom attributes this to Vietnamese coastal island from course with proverty,” George ders, Dr. Borhstrom pointed the city and a nearby govern­ Borgstrom, professor of food accelerated rate,” he added. the reduction in the mortality which U.S. planes have been out that the income of the sat­ “In 1930 the United States rate of the country without a Subjected to frequent antiair­ ment infantry regiment. Four science and geography told his civilians and four soldiers were corresponding reduction in the craft fire, the U.S. Command audience Sunday at a conference killed. on poverty and the development fertility rate. said Tuesday. The 16-inch guns of the .world’s only active battleship The air campaign against the movement of war supplies Vi of peoples. In a world where two-thirds C abinet president “Foreign aid was never foreign and never aid, the money from North Vietnam into South of the 3.5 million people are pounded three-mile square Hon Vietnam continued with Amer­ has gone back to American short of almost everything- Mat island Monday with shells capable of penetrating 30 feet ican fightcr-bombers flying 118 missions over the North food, water, housing, and cloth­ ing, Borgstrom said that the petitioning opens business interest,” he said Citing the 1964 Geneva Con­ * of reinforced concrete. Monday. ference on International Trade, hungry world of Latin America, Due to the resignation of Greg he said that the countries pledged Pilots reported at Owen, the position of ASMSU The secretary’s job is to act Aerial spotters’ said later Africa, and Asia, has reached as the chairman’s assistant. He to use one per cent of their that at least one antiaircraft least 21 supply boats, 12 trucks a point where one-third of the cabinet president is open. and seven railroad cars de­ is an ex-officio member of the gross national product to raise battery was destroyed and a human race earns less than $2 Petitioning for the position stroyed or damaged. ASMSU board and is in charge the standards of the poor in the large chunk of the island it­ per week. starts today. world. U.S. headquarters announced The post involves coordination of public relations, including let­ self fell into the gulf of Ton­ M SU record h o ld e r Even though the poor countries ters and press releases, keep­ kin. the loss of a Navy A6 In­ of all cabinet programs, services “The United States used only truder Sunday 24 miles south­ have increased their net invest­ and special projects and serv­ ing the main files and ASMSU T o m L l s l c k i , A lle n P a r k , S o p h o m o re , p a n ic s a f t e r ment by five per cent faster records, legislative relations three tenths of one per cent Hon Mat is 22 miles north­ east of Vinh and said the two ing as an ex-officio member on foreign aid when five per east of Vinh and 14 miles south crewmen are missing. It was win nin g W M 3 N r a d i o 's “ B ig G r e e n B o x " c o n te s t. rate than the western world-the and resource person for the AS­ and relations with the East He c a m e th e c lo s e s t to g u e s s in g what was In the population growth has been Lansing committees and boards cent was really necessary, of the 19th Parallel, the the 907th American warplane MSU Board. Borgstrom added. •northern boundary for U.S. officially listed as lost in com­ box— 3 ,4 9 5 r e c o r d s . almost three and one-half per­ Owen resigned for personal with which ASMSU is connected. cent. Borgstrom said that the Petitioning for Water Carnival Part of the problem has been planes and warships operating bat over North Vietnam. S tate N ew s Photo by J im R ic h a rd s o n reasons. the kind of assistance America against North Vietnam. totality of the human race has The position of ASMSU secre­ general chairman is still open, reached a ceiling and resources but all petitions for the post has been giving. Borgstrom said tary is also open. This position that many of the countries have It was the northernmost sor­ are not adequate to keep up is not filled by petitioning, but should be in by Friday, ASMSU tie to date for the 56,000- with population growth. Board Chairman Peter Ellsworth been trying to follow the Amer­ ton New Jersey, which arrived in the war zone two weeks ago. The ship has been cruising the Lucky sophomore wins “The hunger gap has a counter­ part in the poverty gap where by appointment by the ASMSU chairman and approval of the board. Interested persons should said. ican lead emphasing technology. four-fifths of the population call the ASMSU office at 355- coast, firing at selected targets, have to stretch to make ends 8266 for information. mostly supply routes and areas of concentrated military ac­ tivity. WMSN’s Big Green Box’ While the battleship was hit­ ting Hon Mat, about 100 Air Force B52s attacked enemy Record lovers, eat your hearts out. Tom Lisicki, Allen Park, sophomore is now the some of the ones he does take to liven up his bare walls at 202 Case Hall. want to stirlistenerinterest intheir station. They claim 15,000 listeners. now CIVIL ENGINEERS base camps and troop concen­ owner of 3,495 singles be­ trations near four key provin­ The WMSN Big Green Box cause he correctly guessed the Contest, which ended October W A S H IN G T O N S T A T E cial capitals in South Vietnam contents of the WMSN Big Green which are considered prime Box. 9th, is one in a series of contests planned for fall term Thief takes targets for new enemy attacks. How did he do it? Well, he D E P A R T M E N T O F H IG H W A Y S by WMSN radio. Program Dir­ The cities were Quang Ngai, knew that the box held $2,000 ector Dennis Blyth and other amps from a* ,7* 1*31 in the coastal lowlands, Pleiku, worth of goodies, and con­ leaders at WMSN promise to / capital in the central high­ lands, Tay Ninh City near the sidering that a radio station was sponsoring the contest, fan the election fires with locked car H ighw ay e n g i n e e r in g Is a r e w a r d i n g c a r e e r •¡m “Voice Your Choice” later in Two amplifiers worth $410 Cambodian border northwest he thought around 3,000 seventy- October and to foster school and the State o f W a s h in g to n Is an e x c it in g cent singles was a good bet. were taken from a Jackson p la c e to w o r k and li v e . E v e r y phase of of Saigon, and Can Tho, the spirit for the Purdue game graduate student’s car Tues­ capital of the Mekong Delta (His exact guess was 2,831.) with “Civil War,” an inter- h ig h w a y c i v i l e n g i n e e r in g Is e m p lo y e d in the day evening while it was region in the south. Although he can boast a genuine record library, Lisicki dorm competition involving old songs. parked in parking lot E (next W ash in g to n H ig h w a y D e p a r t m e n t . R e p r e s e n t a t iv e s f r o m the W a s h in g to n D e p a r t ­ w. Fighting has flared on and could not help but be practical to Erickson Hall). The current challenge is Gerald A. McIntosh told m e n t o f H ig hw a y s w i ll be on the M ic h ig a n off around all four cities since when he saw the 6Vz3x2-foot “The Morning Machine,” in mid-August, when a new enemy MSU police the amplifiers were S tate U n i v e r s i t y c a m p u s F r i d a y , O c t o b e r 25, cabinet filled completely with which listeners try to guess attack against Tay Ninh shat­ colorfully jacketed discs. His on the rear seat of the car and 1968 I n t e r v ie w in g c i v i l e n g i n e e r s . I n t e r e s t e d the number of records that that he had locked the vehiicle. students p le a s e sign up f o r an i n t e r v i e w at tered a two-month lull. first impression was, “How are played. Singles and albums am I going to get these out The theft, which occurred be­ y o u r c a m p u s p la c e m e n t o f f i c e . South Vietnamese military are being offered as incentives. tween 8 and 11 p.m., was ac­ of here?” He admitted he prob­ headquarters announced that ably wouldn’t take them all, The people at WMSN say complished by lifting the locks , B52 strikes killed 36 North but he hinted that he will use they’re doing this because they of McIntosh’s car. B, m 2 d a y w ig s a le C save n o w on lu x u ry h u m an h a ir designs ||p&0J h a n d m a d e w ig 5 9 .9 5 se m i h a n d m a d e w ig 3 3 .3 0 lo n g f a ll 4 9 .9 5 m in i f a ll 3 2 .9 5 Campus P a n d o r a p e tite 1 9 .9 5 M r. H e n ri w ig le t 1 0 .6 0 Center s y n th e tic f a ll 1 3 .3 0 The day m a y b e d u ll and d r e a r y , but t h e r e ’ s no n e e d fo r you to m a tch i t , w hen our n ew c o lle c t io n o f s h o w e r s h e d d e r s lo o k s y n th e tic s tr e tc h w ig 1 6 .6 6 so d a sh in g . new sh a p e s A. W elt s e a m in g m a k e s a sh o w in g on a P r e - h o lid a y s a v in g s on g la m ­ o r o u s fa s h io n a c c e s s o r i e s that d ou b le b r e a s t e d ta ilo r e d c o a t w ith in v e r t ­ le t you c h a n g e y o u r a p p e a r ­ th a t shine ed b a c k p le a t s , d e m i- b e lt . B ro w n o r g r e y r a y o n /a c e t a t e . 2 9 .9 8 an ce to m e e t a ll o c c a s io n s at a m o m e n t’s n o t ic e . Hum an h a ir and r e a l- lo o k s y n th e tic s B . A s l i m - f i t c l a s s i c ta k e s a tr im m in g in at s p e c ia l lo w , lo w p r ic e s . in sun or le a t h e r - lo o k v in y l at th e m a n d a rin c o l l a r , down th e fr o n t. B e ig e o r g r e y . 7 - 1 1 . $25 M is s T ru dy w ill a s s i s t you with s e le c t io n fr o m a fu ll C. T he d ir n d l c o a t w ith p r e te n d b e ltin g at ra n g e o f n a tu r a l c o lo r s . Cut show ers the w a istb a n d and p e r t round c o lla r . R a y o n -c o tto n b len d in r ed o r b ro w n . and s t y lin g , 1 2 .5 0 . R e s ty lin g yo u r p r e s e n t w ig , $8. S iz e s 7 - 1 1 . 2 2 .9 8 . WIG SALON - SECOND LEVEL EAST LANSING 1 MICHIGAN Edward A. Brill Jamet S. Granelli, managing editor Trinità Cline, campai editor edi tor- in-chief Jerry Pankhurit, editorial editor 5 tA T |N |W S Carol Budrow, manager Tom Brown, iporti editor Patricia Amtell, asioeiale campai editor IJ N fV E R S lT Y 4 if»• m n* Six-time recipient oi me Pacemaker award for outstanding Jonrnaliam. EDITORIALS Suspension resolution— hitter a pill to swallow V ieT / V / 4 A V - W The s o -c a lle d su sp e n sio n w o u ld m a k e th e ir h y s te r ia s e lf- r e so lu tio n , p a s s e d b y th e B o a rd v a lid a tin g . of T r u s te e s S ep t. 20, w h ic h î f M S U i s n o t to b e c o m e w ou ld a u th o r iz e P r e s id e n t a n o th e r C o lu m b ia , th e t r u s t e e s H an n ah “ or h is d e s ig n e e ” to an d th e a d m in is tr a tio n m u s t su sp e n d a stu d e n t w h o s e a c ­ le a r n to r e c o g n iz e th e r ig h t o f tiv ity is c o n s id e r e d “ a n im ­ s tu d e n ts a n d f a c u lt y to p a r t ic i­ Anachronistic secrecy m e d ia t e th r e a t to th e n o r m a l and o r d e r ly o p e r a tio n o f th e U n iv e r s it y ,” is d u e fo r r e c o n ­ p a te w ith a u th o r ity in d e ­ c is io n s a f f e c t in g th e m . D is ­ s e n t a n d w id e s p r e a d d is c o n ­ sid e r a tio n to n ig h t a n d p o s s ib ly te n t m u s t b e r e c o g n iz e d an d of the Board of Trustees to m o r r o w a t th e m e e t in g s of th e tr u s te e s . e v a lu a te d on th e ir o w n m e r it s , and n o t ju st a u to m a t ic a lly c a te g o r iz e d a s “ p r o b le m b e ­ T h e r e so lu tio n w a s c h a r a c ­ h a v io r ” o r “ d is r u p tio n ” an d ‘G r o u n d c o n t r o l t o a n t i - a i r c r a f t d e f e n s e s T h e M SU B o a rd o f T r u s te e s E ven som e o f th e U n i­ te r iz e d b y th e A A U P a n d th e . . . u n id e n tifie d c r a f t a p p r o a c h in g . . . “ d e a lt w it h ” in a r e p r e s s iv e w ill n ot hold i t s tr a d itio n a l v e r s it y ’s to p a d m in is tr a to r s A C LU a s v io la tin g b a s ic p rin ­ or m a n ip u la tiv e m a n n e r . range 400 yard s . . “ F in a n c e C o m m it te e ” c lo s e d n ow fa v o r o p e n in g up th e F i ­ c ip le s of due p r o c e s s and T h e E d ito r s m e e t in g th is e v e n in g , a p p a r ­ n a n c e C o m m it te e or d in n e r - g r e e te d w ith o u tsp o k e n stu d e n t e n tly b e c a u s e o f p r e s s u r e fro m w h ic h e v e r . A m o n g o th e r f a c ­ and fa c u lty o p p o s itio n a t a a t le a s t o n e o f th e t r u s t e e s . In its p la c e , h o w e v e r , t h e r e w ill to r s , a p o lic y fo r m e d in a c lo s e d m e e t in g c o u ld c a u s e un­ la r g e r a lly S e p t. 30. T h e A c a ­ OUR READERS’ MINDS d e m ic C ou n cil p a s s e d a m o ­ b e a “ c o r d ia l d in n e r ” a t w h ic h p le a s a n t r e a c tio n s . tio n c a llin g fo r th e t r u s t e e s to s e v e r a l it e m s o f b u s in e s s w ill b e tr a n sa c te d b e fo r e th e r e g u ­ la r ly sc h e d u le d p u b lic m e e t in g T h u rsd ay. F o r in s ta n c e , c o n s id e r w h a t m ig h t h a v e h a p p en ed if th e s u s p e n s io n r e so lu tio n , w h ic h w ith d r a w th e ir r e s o lu tio n . A s it b e c a m e in c r e a s in g ly e v id e n t th a t th e su s p e n s io n r e so lu tio n Library shirks priority w a s p a ssed in th e F in a n c e w a s to o b itte r a p ill fo r th e T h is m o v e to a d in n er m e e t ­ To the Editor: this failure is allowed to paralyze the edu­ C o m m itte e , had n o t b e e n r e ­ U n iv e r s ity c o m m u n ity to To Richard E. Chapin, yeH, w. . . .ç e w w ing r e f le c t s g r o w in g c o n c e r n cational efforts of hundreds of students. v e a le d u n til it w a s a c tu a lly s w a llo w , H a n n a h p r o m is e d to Director of libraries: I especially do not understand. ON 0 0 0 ^ ’yflv CANI o v er a p r o b le m m u c h m o r e d e e m e d n e c e s s a r y for u s e . r e fr a in fr o m e x e r c is in g h is This letter is to bring to your attention the unfortunate situation existing in the un­ eer m üsM ilY s e r io u s th an th a t o f w h e r e th e p o w er u n d er th e r e s o lu tio n u n til This is plainly a managerial and admin­ itfe «AROesr KIM)1 A nd th e c a s e o f th e s u s p e n ­ dergraduate reserve facility. I am shocked t r u s te e s w ill e a t. T h e c lo s e d and exercised at what I consider an ap­ istrative problem. I am convinced thal m sio n r e s o lu tio n s h o w s h ow th e it c o u ld b e r e c o n s id e r e d a t th e m e e t in g , F in a n c e C o m m itte e , parent lack of concern for a major prob­ the well-intentioned personnel at the re­ B o a rd o f T r u s te e s m a y u s e th e O ct. 18 T r u s t e e s m e e t in g , an d served desk are understaffed, and thal or w h a te v e r yo u c a ll it, is in ­ lem. In spite of the fact that your person­ c lo s e d m e e t in g a s a v e h ic le to s e v e r a l t r u s t e e s an d a d m in is ­ nel in that section are courteous and well- the demands on them have been exces­ d e e d a lo n g -tim e s o u r c e o f ir- tr a to r s b e g a n to b e lit t le th e meaning, considerable inefficiency exists sive. Indeed, these observations are nol b y p a s s th e stu d e n t b o d y and intended as blanket criticisms of the li- r ita tio n to m a n y on th is c a m - im p o r t o f th e r e s o lu tio n and in getting books organized and into the th e f a c u lt y in fo r m u la tin g a hands of the students. This has also been the bM?y.'ity*kxjferjtence3; fgr-example, with ! p us a s a to ta lly a n a c h r o n is tic sp ok e of “ r e w o r d in g ” or m a jo r U n iv e r s ity p o lic y . experience of a number of my colleagues. the international librarian iiPparticdlai ; in stitu tio n . “ a m e n d in g ” it. Let me detail my particular complaint, but have beeh nlost helpful and highly pro­ T h e s c h e d u le o f b oard m e e t ­ C e r ta in s itu a tio n s, o f c o u r s e , It sh o u ld b e a b s o lu te ly c le a r more importantly try to bring this process fessional. The reserve situation, converse­ in g s p r o v id e s th a t th e t r u s t e e s n e c e s s it a t e a c lo s e d m e e tin g . into some kind of perspective. ly, reflects a gross lack of support for to th e B o a r d o f T r u s te e s an d faculty and students. May I suggest that m e e t o n e e v e n in g in c lo s e d F o r in s ta n c e , d is c u s s in g th e to th e a d m in is tr a tio n th a t a your priorities be re-thought and that youi s e s s io n and th e fo llo w in g d a y p r iv a te lif e o f an e m p lo y e A 300 level course I teach in comparative resources be reallocated. r e v is e d e d itio n o f th e s u s p e n ­ politics (80 students) relies heavily in the in th e “ r e g u la r ” o p e n m e e tin g . b e in g c o n sid e r e d fo r d is m is s a l Norman N. Millei sio n r u le w ill b e u n a c c e p ta b le early weeks on reserve readings. These are professor of political science voue tfufnv It m a y b e s a f e ly a s s u m e d o r p la n s fo r s o m e U n iv e r s ity in­ to a v e r y c o n s id e r a b le p o r tio n fundamentali that must be learned sequen­ th a t th e r e a l n itty -g r itty of v e s t m e n t s a r e b e s t c o n d u c te d o f th e U n iv e r s ity c o m m u n ity . tially. The readings are from large and cost­ ly volumes that I cannot ask the students U n iv e r s ity a f fa ir s is d e c id e d in th e c lo s e d c o m m it t e e u n d er in c lo s e d s e ss io n . In th e c a s e o f th e fo r m e r , W e e m p h a s iz e th a t th e s u s ­ p e n sio n r e so lu tio n m u s t b e r e ­ to buy. In spite of the fact that we will soon be starting the fourth week of classes, Reconsider stack closing th e p r o te c tio n o f s e c r e c y . T h e th e e m p lo y e ’s r ig h t to p e r so n a l and in spite of the fact that the reserve To the Editor: Shakespeare to find the exact one whidh v o k e d e n tir e ly , and n o t m e r e ly contains the pertinent information he de­ op en m e e tin g is m e r e ly an p r iv a c y m u s t be p r o te c te d . list was mailed September 19, not one of To Richard E. Chapin: r e w o r d e d or a m e n d e d . my 80 students has been able to obtain a With reference to the State News arti­ sires? u p p e r -le v e l p u p p et sh o w d e ­ A nd c lo s e d d is c u ss io n of p r o j­ single book. The reserve desk personnel tell cle of Oct. 10, I would like to express my 3. I have seen firsthand the disorder sig n e d to g iv e th e p u b lic th e e c te d U n iv e r s ity in v e s tm e n t T h e g r o u n d s fo r th is a b so ­ me the request should have reached your dissent concerning your proposed plan of which arises out of a misplaced book. This i ll u s io n th a t th e y k n ow w h a t w ill sq u e lc h a n y a tte m p t b y lu te o p p o sitio n h a v e b e e n e lo ­ office in one or two days. To counter the closing the East wing stacks to undergrad­ misplacement often results from hurry on situation, I had my graduate assistant go uates. a librarian’s part and also faded or dis­ is r e a lly g o in g on. p e r s o n s to ta k e a d v a n ta g e of q u e n tly s ta te d n u m e r o u s t im e s figured call numbers, especially among the to the library, organize the bodes and pre­ I am proud to say that I am not an affil­ B u t d o e s a c lo s e d m e e t in g th e s itu a tio n b y u sin g a d v a n c e by sev era l g r o u p s: a n y im ­ sent them to the reserve desk. He was told, iate of the SLA and I am a non-protesting older volumes. I am only to afraid that h ave a p la c e on a U n iv e r s ity in fo r m a tio n . B u t su c h c a s e s m e d ia t e su sp e n sio n a c tio n , however, that the reserve system could graduate itudent. However your plan will a hurried librarian, “paging” a book, will su c h a s th e r e s o lu tio n a u th o r ­ not accept the books in such a manner and , benefit me, I strongly feel that it will con­ not find a particular volume in its exact c a m p u s? U n le s s th e r e is s o m e ­ a re rare. numerical location and immediately con­ that the books would have to be searched siderably burden undergraduates who wish thin g th a t n e e d s h id in g , th e iz e d , w o u ld c o n s titu te a d ir e c t by the library staff in turn. / uxm later to procure volumes from the aforemen­ sider it “out.” B oard o f T r u s te e s sh ou ld h a v e The c lo s e d “ p r e -m e e tin g ” v io la tio n o f th e s tu d e n t’s r ig h ts told that the books could have been ac­ tioned stacks. This belief stems from the 4. Lastly, your proposed plan may no o b je c tio n to o p e n in g t h e s e and a ll o th e r p o lic y fo r m u la t­ to d u e p r o c e s s u n d er th e A c a ­ cepted exactly ai he had preiented them. following: cause undergraduates to ask graduate The entire course has effectively been im­ 1. When a man is selected to be a stu­ 'friends to locate certain volumes for them. m e e t in g s to th e p u b lic or d o in g in g m e e t in g s sh ou ld b e op en ed d e m ic F r e e d o m R e p o r t an d th e This is liable to cause unpleasantness. paired. The crucial materials which should dent at MSU it is assumed that he has a a w a y w ith th e m a lto g e th e r . to th e p u b lic e x c e p t in e x tr e m e U .S . C o n stitu tio n . G iv in g th e have been read early have not been obtain­ certain degree of responsibility, be he an On these grounds I ask you to reconsid­ And if th e y do h a v e s o m e th in g c a s e s . O th e r w is e , th e r e is , or a b s o lu te p o w e r o f su sp e n sio n able. More broadly than just this course ¡undergraduate or a graduate student. If er the plan which has been proposed. I is the continuing effect on students. It is this responsibility is neglected, and these am certain that it would be fairer for the to h id e, s o m e th in g is u s u a lly sh o u ld b e , n o th in g to h ide. to a n y in d iv id u a l o r in d iv id u a ls undergraduates and would not hinder the difficult enough to get some students to “thefts” are attributed more to the under­ w ron g. . T h e E d ito r s w ou ld ten d to s t if le d e b a te and creatively use the library for any purpose. graduates, I suggest you hire a competent graduates to any large degree. d is s e n s io n an d w o u ld in te n s ify To be constantly frustrated destroys any staff of “watchers” and not employees William H. Girvin, Jr. th e d iv is io n b e tw e e n th e s tu ­ incentive that may exist.. to run around looking for books. Graduate Fellow in German and Russian ONAFRO d e n t b o d y an d th e a d m in is tr a ­ I think this process of providing re­ 2. Being able to browse through the stacks affords one more availability to se­ tion . It h a s b e e n p o in ted o u t th a t, served books must be put in perspec­ tive. It is a crucial service which car­ ries the negative potential of breaking lect the volume which contains the speci­ fic information he desires. A student often comes closer to the in­ 'Safe’students Article tool of 'the man’ in a d d itio n to b e in g ille g a l, “ em ergency s u s p e n s io n ” w o u ld b e i n e f f e c t iv e in h a m ­ down the entire learning process. It should be the easiest process to man­ age if the priorities of the library are formation he is seeking by consulting the table of eontents in numerous volumes on one subject. Or specifically, should an To the Editor: Late Thursday night this campus was treated to another one of those traditional EDITOR’S NOTE: The following was that the article was rearranged by “the correctly established. All the other undergraduate "page” 47 volumes on panty raids, courtesy of hundreds of written by Estella Chambers, State News man” is evident; to say that he drew the p e r in g th e a c t iv it ie s of a n y sectors of the educational process are screaming students. The fact that it was staff writer, in reference to an article caricature Is evident; and to say that he g e n u in e ly d is r u p tiv e stu d en t. infinitely more difficult. For example, 11:30 in the evening seemed not to damp­ written by her and published Tuesday. titled it with his word “try” is quite no one is asking the reserved person­ en their “high-spirited fun;” on the con­ When copy-read, the article was slightly evident. T h e su s p e n s io n r e so lu tio n , it nel to write the books, to publhh the books, Letter policy trary, these students howled “we want changed. The State News regrets that a p p e a r s ,, is th e t r u s t e e s ’ p a r­ or to be teited on the books. Merely to pants” and charged merrily through Akers To say that I am highly “pissed” with The State News welcomes ati letters. any of these changes were taken as the outcome is also putting it mjldly, but tic u la r e x p r e s s io n o f th e g e n ­ provide the books. dormitory. No mass disciplinary action 1 derogatory to any person or persons. The They should be typed and signed with the the outedme is also patting it mildly, e r a l “ la w a n d o r d e r ” h y s te r ia home town, student, faculty or staff stand­ was taken. It is of interest to note here art that accompanied the article was bat la retrospect I hope this win serve that if SDS, SLA, YSA and assorted intended simply to illustrate the subject, w h ic h s e e m s to b e g r o w in g Why this process is not given top prior­ ing, and local phone number included. No as aa indication of what Black students ity I cannot understand. Why, if neces­ unsigned letter will be accepted for publi­ spaced-out denizens of the Union had per­ and again no malice was intended. on this campus undergo in even attempt­ in th e n a tio n . formed in a somewhat similar manner- To show the bias that the State News sary, you do not close the library for a cation, and no letter will be printed1with­ ing te depict the true essence of the Black day in order to get the books in place, running amok down Shaw Lane, toting possesses I would like anyone an campus out a signature except in extreme circum­ or anywhere else to look at the caricature sitaatien anywhere. „ By attempting to deal with I cannot understand. Why your staff li stances. AU letters must be less than 300 black flags and flaming Academic Free­ dom Reports, and shouting “Revolution! and article on the “Afro” Oat was in The article was not meant to be a tool student unrest with such a not working in the evenings or why faculty words . long for publication without edit­ Revolution! "-the campus, county and Tuesday’s State News. of “the man” to be used la another of baldly repressive measure, are not asked to help, I cannot fathom. Why ing. state police (complete with helmets, pis­ To say that It was oat of proportion with his attempts to show the supposed in­ they are furnishing legitimate tols and four-foot riot clubs) would have the entire purpose of my having written feriority of the Black man, but of course no doubt treated these "dlrty-hippie-eom- the article is putting it mildly. To say we aU saw the outcome! grounds for real revolt, which mie-bastards” with the same unthinking t»r a m Is HEADQUARTERS MUSTBE PLANNING V o te r registration problem s brutal efficiency of last spring term. Is it to be assumed that panty raids do not con­ A BIS DRIVE., I DON'TREC0SNIZE A ( EXCUSEME. ÜÖT OF THESE NEU) MEN... To the Editor: iff of Ingham County and as executive stitute a “disruption” and are in fact an (LIEUTENANT I would appreciate it If all persons who secretary of the Ingham County register Integral parf of the “normal function” and vote committee, I am attempting to of the megaverslty? Apparently the ad­ VU either had difficulty registering to vote in East Lansing or were denied registration collect all information available on denial ministration welcomes those “spfe” stu­ would call me at 332-2962 between 5 p.m. of student registrations as a basis for pos­ dents who scream for girls’ underwear and 11 p.m. Wednesday, Thursday or Fri­ sible action against the city of East Lan­ more than those who protest for legitimate day of this week or during the day this Sat­ sing. and vital reforms. Tom Steinfatt Allen G.Vallei urday. Lansing graduate student / As a graduate student running for sher­ Philadelphia, Pa., sophomore1 W ed n esd a y , O c to b e r 16, 1968 Mïchigan State N ew s, E ast L a n sin g , M ich ig a n MAX LERNER JAMESDUKARM A Ip t < W ’i . .f r a ir s i, Now, Rick, if you like, I can lately. Better get to the bottom 6:40 a.m. - As 9M738 6:30 a.m. - The wall screen, been troubled by personal prob­ authorize you to visit the Coun­ of this before it becomes ser­ smeared hair-removing cream which had been dark and silent lems. on his face, a chime sounded seling Center to discuss your ious. for exactly eight hours, flashed “As you know, at this in­ “Verywell, Rick, please, and a r^othes pak dropped into • The irony of the presidential problem.” campaign may well be that the éÊ - to life with a 3-D image of the president smiling ben­ stitution you are always re­ spected as an individual and • 989738, now standing con­ tritely before the screen, insert you ID in the slot here under the screen and I will the chute receptacle, followed by a rolled copy of the morn­ Question in its final weeks is not not just an anonymous student, phich candidate’s policies or evolently in the direction of nodded dumbly, wondering magnomark on it your excuse ing’s State News, stamped in a dark corner of the living- which is why we have taken vaguely why he had been so from ATL. Thank you. Good large red letters: Qualities are best, nor even who the trouble and expense of fan best be trusted with its mas­ learning cubicle. “Good mor­ thoughtless and irresponsible luck, son.” “REQUIRED READING”. ning,” crooned the president, developing our campus-wide sive power, but who can hold the Individual Communications Net­ “It is Monday, October 13, 1980. country together at all? Maybe the answer is that nobody can, that the revolutionary changes ponvulsing it are too shattering A " Class broadcasts begin at 8 a.m.-it’s time to get up now.” There was no response work, one of the most advanced in the world, which allows me to discuss your activities with P a rt o f th e C a m p u s S c e n e • front the dorknoss you in this intimate, person­ for any of the three less-than- “ W h e re N ix o n in p ic k in g S p ir o A g n e w as his 6;31 a m A jet of cold alized way. Another way in supermen to grapple with. But which the University seeks to my own feeling is that the task ru n n in g m a te p i c k e d o n e w h o w o u ld b e h e lp le s s i f air blasted from a nozzle over the bunk, which turned upside- deal with your individuality is is human, not superhuman, and h e e v e r h a d to ru n th e c o u n tr y , H u m p h r e y in p i c k ­ down and disappeared into the through the Counseling Center. that in confronting it there is a in g E d m u n d M u sk ie has p i c k e d o n e w h o m ig h t wall. An officer of the Depart­ clear human choice. ment of Public Protection I ; I fear I cannot agree with Wal­ s ta n d th e b e s t c h a n c e o f g o v e r n in g i t . ” ter Lippmann’s curious reason­ glared indignantly from the wall TARL1TE ing that the problem ahead is a need to know how to get a mea­ secret. What is even bleaker is screen at the now wide-awake Wallace mood of repression, and sure of trust from both sides in that he has neither a black nor a student sprawled on the floor 'that the Republicans are closer these confrontations. student base of support and rap- and blinking in the glare of NOW SHOWING 'to this mood than the Democrats I wish I could believe that port, just as he has no antiwar the room lights, which had Exclusive Program :and must therefore govern. Lipp- Nixon has the capacity to gov­ base. automatically come on a sec- ELVIS PRESLEY IN mann took the same position in ern. There is little evidence for If Humphrey has made mis- ond earlier, “LIVE A LITTLE, LOVE .1952 in choosing Dwight Eisen­ it on the record. He has been takes in the past about the war, “989738, as a student at A LITTLE’' At 7:20 hower as against Adlai Steven­ at picking a campaign staff and and allowed his vice presidential tWs great University, you en- ALSO “EMILY At 9:20 son on the ground that McCar- at refurbishing his old image years to dull and blur the out- j°y many privileges of which Next Attraction thyism required a Republican to into a new one. But staff skills lines of his personality, he has I am sur® y°u need not be 'With Six You Get Eggroll’ meet it. Ike met it somewhat less and public relations skills don’t recently been moving in the right reminded at this time. How- than gloriously. Nor was his add up to knowing how to run direction. Where Nixon in pick- ever, these privileges imply capacity to govern in foreign , a tragically split American in a ing Spiro Agnew as his running certain responsibilities, one of policy displayed with any splen- stormy time, mate picked one who would be which is to take full advantage dor in the U-2 incident, the sum­ Nixon as president will lack helpless if he ever had to run th® educational opportunities A N S IN G the country, Humphrey in pick- offered you here, IbjOrTvi In T h e a t r e mit fiasco at Paris or the cancel­ the trust of the antiwar groups, - S 2 0 7 5 . CED A R ST ation of his Tokyo visit. If you of the blacks, of the student ac­ ing Edmund Muskie has picked “You cannot fulfill your ac- NOW S H O W IN G ! want a final instance of how the tivists. Not that Hubert Hum­ one who might stand the best ademic responsibilities by Exclusive All Color Program seemingly strongman’s quality phrey would possess this trust chance of governing it. sleeping late in the morning and of con nd can flag and flop, in any abundance, as Robert What counts in governing is expecting others to bear the UNBELIEVABLE TERROR I Kennedy would have possessed judgment, trust and quiet com- burden of your unpreparedness “BRIDES OF BLOOD” look at 1.J. At 7:20 and late The asoning which makes it if he had lived to be chosen. mand. Humphrey has grown in f°r the class broadcast. You “BLOOD FIEND” At 9:15 Only Richard Nixon out to be a strong­ But Humphrey has been involved judgment, he has the trust of ar® iiried $5 for your irrespon- Next Attraction man who can ride the whirlwind in all the encounters and has blacks and has a chance to win sibility and disrespect for the “PARENT TRIP” ignores the question of where the been mixed up with all the efforts the trust of the young—and, rights of other students.” and 2nd Disney Hit whirlwind comes from. To say to reach out to the disaffected. therefore, to command. In Nix- The officer’s angry face was that the problem of running the At least he speaks their lan­ on’s case, where there are flaws supplanted by the smiling coun- country comes out of the Wallace guage, which is a needed step of judgment and little base of tenance of another in the same M S U SDS and the P a p e r mood is to put effect ahead of in getting their trust. trust, the chance to heal the uniform, who in subdued, cause. For the Wallace mood has If Nixon knows the approach splits would be discouragingly fatherly tones explained, “I p re s e n ts spread basically out of the de­ to ending the war, he has kept it small. see from your record here that spairing conviction that the remarkably secret, not only from Copyright 1968, Los Angeles you have been catching it’ for G u e rilla T h e a tre L iv e n U p Y o u r C la s s ro o m country is being split wide open. the enemy, but from the people Times. " this particular offense rather The splits are primarily be­ and perhaps even from himself. often lately. Perhaps you have tween the antiwar and the pro­ If he knows the approach to w it h t h i s b o ld o r n a m e n t war groups, between the races peace in the ghetto or on the uni­ TON I GaHT AT 7 1 3 0 ONLV in the inner city, between the versity campus-as with the re­ m S U F IL M S O C I E T y P R E S E N T S militant students and the univer­ cent encounters at Columbia, W ear it p la in o r w ith y o u r in it ia ls sity administration. To run the Berkeley, New York University- country, a new president will he has again kept it remarkably Nacíate by L ad y B o s to n ia n $ 1 6 .0 0 M a c ’s P i p e Shop GEORGES FRANJU’S STARRING- Use y o u r c h a rg e account in both s to r e s Ask us about F R E E P A R K I N G TAUE OF ESCAPE. CHAMES W IT H A C O M P L E T E L IN E O F PROM AN ASHUM AZNAVOUR. ANt> P IP E S A ND S M O K IN G S U P P L IE S A THRILLING- ANOUK IS N O W L O C A T E D A T FRENCH CLASSIC A IM EE 203 N . W a s h in g to n THEM WILL BE COFFEE ANb DISCUSSION AFTER THE F lL *\. (NEXT DOOR TO PARAMOUNT NEWS) IO H W ELLS * 7 :3 0 * 5 0 i< d o n a tio n O P E N 9-1 1 D A IL Y T h u r s d a y O c t o b e r 17 326 S. W a s h in g to n 3 17 E . G r a n d R i v e r C L O S E D S U N D A Y S AND H O L ID A Y S U nion B a l l r o o m 8 :3 0 DOW NTOW N E . L a n s in g .4 "I $1.25 r _ ... K ’69 C a m a ro SS S p o rt C o u p e, p lu s R S e q u ip m e n t INDIAN TrMLS COUNTHY \ n / H MARKOftKCFUMCt WE HAVE ARRIVED AT M.S.U. TOO! S P E C IA L C A M P U S S T O P LV: U N IO N B L D G . - BUS ZONE F R ID A Y S 2 :1 5 P .M . F O R : B A T T L E CREEK - KALAM AZOO B E N T O N H A R B O R - C H IC A G O BAY C IT Y F R ID A Y S 5 : 2 5 P .M . FO R: F L IN T SU ND AYS wBer&tist C A M PU S STO P F L IN T Askthe kidwhoownsone. FR O M F L IN T - L A N S IN G D E T R O IT B A T T LE CREEK Elegance revlsbed—the watery shimmer, the ladylike rustle, the utter femininity of taffeta moire Is great B E N T O N HARBOR again this season. Make It glow for you in a party KALAMAZOO dress, a hostessy tunlc-and-pants look. Molre—-the S o m e p eo p le h a v e a h a r d tim e in clu d in g H u g g e r O ran g e, w h ich y o u r h e a d lig h ts w h e n y o u h o ld th e merrier your holidayl c o m m u n ic a tin g w ith y o u th . is w ild. w in d sh ield w a sh e r b u tto n in. ^ SOUTH BEND N o t us. I t is : F u l l o f n e w f e a t u r e s I t is: S till w id er a n d w e ig h tie r W e j u s t b rin g o n th e 1 9 6 9 in c lu d in g b ig g er o u tle ts fo r th e t h a n th e riv a l s p o rts te r w e’re to o C H IC A G O C a m a ro , th e n tell i t like i t is. A s tro V e n tila tio n , a 2 1 0 -h p s t a n d ­ p o lite to n am e. P H O N E E A S T L A N S IN G I t is: R e s ty le d in sid e a n d o u t a rd V 8, a n d a lo c k fo r th e s te e rin g Y o u sh o u ld d riv e a 1969 C a m a ro 3 3 2 - 2 5 6 9 F O R D A IL Y w ith a new' grille, new b u m p e rs, co lu m n , ig n itio n a n d tra n s m is s io n a t y o u r C h e v r o l e t d e a l e r ’s th e C O N V E N I E N T E A S T L A N S IN G n ew p a rk in g lig h ts, new in s tr u ­ lev er. firs t ch a n c e y o u g et. j w M w y m e n t p a n e l, new ste e rin g w heel, I t is: A v a ila b le w ith a l i t t l e E v e n if y o u ’re 42. M m q g g p m r D E P A R T U R E S - A R R IV A L S n e w s t r i p i n g , a n d n e w c o lo r s d ev ice t h a t a u to m a tic a lly w ash es Putting you first, keeps uefirst. E . L a n s in g W ed n esd ay, O c to b e r 16, 1968 ¿ M ichigan State N ew s, E ast L a n sin g , M ich ig a n r 1""■ ■.... . ............. * K 7 '> ^ ra re fa re T '.'f y ry , j- . . . h its F un C i t y E a s t V - A ; • ” i - > *w , ■ - - » , l * rw'r ■ /C crrifttfcjwti AlUCffCU. *rmtjéf Pre- c o rn p u o tu D . J f k iv a g s . ■>< * p;-Ue«. . MSU Communications; Stace MsC is not exactly 800 pages fit words into two hours AznavouP and actress CJaT Mi i Shorts:: (7:30. ’Aannel 10k majors, take heart. of cinematic images. These Man and a Woman” ) Anouk s*01 ** aiwearly score by Mau- One additional note: There Fun City, it is with special pride will be a coffee hour after the Produced by Lee Mendelson. who While it is mathematically that we announce three examples images will be projected on the Aimee, who were then quite r*ce Jarre. wko had not yet did the highly successful “Pea­ impossible to attend all three- State Theatre screen tonight and film, during which I will be of mid-week entertainment of available for cross-examination, nuts” specials, the program of these mid-week events, and special interest to filmgoers: tomorrow only. Don’t miss them. traces the history of the ani­ homeworkally improbable to For an even more limited castigation, flattery and general mm First, the return of “Ulysses' ’ discussion. mated cartoon, from Mickey make even two, I hope you’ll' to the State Theatre for a two- time (at 7:30 tonight only) Mouse’s debut in “Steamboat spend your study break on day stand; secondly, the MSU serious filmgoers can catch Finally, MSU’s most famous Willie” to the abstract, exper­ at least one. All three are Film Society’s showing of the Georges Franju’s 1958 first- filmmaker, Ernest Pintoff, will imental cartoon. Mr. Pintoffs entertaining, intellignet and rarely seen French thriller, feature, "Head Against the be represented on tomorrow creation, which fits into this worthwhile. And for East “Head Against the Walls;” and Walls." While Franju’s works night’s NBC special. “Fabulous category, is a minor master- have received great critical Lansing, that can be rare. finally, an NBC special called By JIM YOUSLING “Fabulous Shorts,” which will State News Reviewer acclaim in France, very few have been shown commercially present “The Critic,” an Oscar- winning film by MSU alumnus Ernest Pintoff. Certainly, the poetry and puns in this country. This particular film deals with are largely missing. And cer­ a young man who escapes from POPENTERTAINMENT tainly, the film often over-sim­ an asylum to try to convince James Joyce’s “Ulysses” is one of the undeniably great plifies the Joycean relish for the girl he loves of his sanity. language. But what is retained Franju’s earlier work with grim from the book is a spirit, a documentaries is clearly in evi­ Rawls reserve seats books of the century. While no kaleidoscope of people, places dence in his use of natural film adaptation could ever hope to equal what is primarily a literary achievement, the mere and thoughts, which will intro­ settings, including an actual duce thousands of filmgoers to mental institution. a beautiful world which they Yet, at the same time, we can just about souled’ out fact that Joseph Stride’s version would otherwise never know. sense Franju’s increasing in­ Yet don’t dismay, for general Look for his “Lover is a succeeds as cinema is a cause The film is not a Reader's terest in the film medium’s By MARK McPHERSON hurtin’ thing,” "Stormy Mon­ State News Reviewer admission seats to see the man for celebration. Certainly, Strick Digest Condensation which potential for plastic artificial­ critics have called “the day,” and “Tobacco Road” only skims the surface of Joyce’s butchers the novel into pocket- ity, which later, in films like Just a reminder to you Lou among others of his hits. These, Rawls fans out there, the time greatest soul-jazz singer of multi-leveled plot. size. It is a crystallization of “Judex,” completely replaced the '60’s ”, are still aplenty. mostly in pre-psychedelia, will is nigh. That is, tickets are probably make for an enter­ his documentary approach. still available, but going fast. The Spartan answer to the BEST IN FOREIGN FILMS The film is also notable for taining evening. No doubt the The two local distributors, ancient Delphic Theatre, Jeni- T O N IG H T a n d the presense of singer Charles L o u R a w ls son Fieldhouse, (claimed by reasons for his popularity here Campbell’s Surburban Shop and can be attributed chiefly to the TH U R SD A Y the Union, both report heavy Bob Hope to be the world’s T O D A Y IS L A D IE S D A Y 7 5 0 F R O M I T O 6 P .M . largest quonset hut) will at­ Rawls style of presentation. FEATURE TIMES sales. At this time, reserved For whether it’s the wind off tempt the role of concert, hall 7:05 and 9:25 fìL A D M E R At 1:15 - 3:15 - 5:20 - 7:30 9:35 p.m. seats are becoming rarer by the day. The Suburban Shop claims a for Rawls and entourage at 8 p.m. Friday night. Backed 'a Chicago slum-street, hustler’s lament, or* just the a “ONE OF THE TOMORROW... KIRK C / Í L ouelv DOUGLAS m m T O ¡¡IE * 1er Matin U IIIM II COLOR few remaining reserves in, and the Union Ticket office reports ill reserved seats to be gone by the type of funky-beat, big band sound which has made him famous, the “Soul Man” will no lonely Blues, he makes us feel it. He sings of these things like he knows what they’re all about. GREATFILMS FEATURE AT 1:30 - 3:40 - 5:45 - 7:45 - 9:45 p.m. as of Monday morning. . rooiiam information a 482-3SOS doubt offer some of his best. T o d a y . , . L a d i e s D ay Listening, we come to believe, because we want to. This en­ OFALLTIME!” PARENTS: becauseofcertain IC H IG A N 75ANAMICUS PRODUCTION TECHNICOLOR' 0 and humor. Heading the list of entertainers on this special, “Soul," will be Lou Rawls, as well as Martha and the T o m 2nd at 9 :2 0 Vandellas, Joe Tex, the Cham­ 3rd F e a tu re bers Brothers and others. Jones If you're not enthused after all of this, you'll be better off EASTMANC010R AUNITEDARTISTSLOPERTRELEASE saving your money and ushering 2nd at 9*45 in the Homecoming weekend NOW ! F R E E E L E C T R IC C A R ’BERSERK! T E C H N IC O L O R I« some other wav. C o rre c tio n H EA T E R S AT The film of the University L a s t at II p . m . of Michigan-MSU game will B O T H D R I V E -I N S be shown at 8 p.m. Thurs., D O N ’T M ISS IT ! O N L Y 4 M IL E S E . October 17 in the Union Par­ J O IN T H E G A N G O F C A M P U S M -4 3 lors instead of Wednesday, as was stated in Collage. ALL HAIL“the Q u een ” T0NIGHT-- " F u n n y—a n d in s p ir e d —e x tr a o r d in a r y -in their A tlantic City o f G anat—in their F o r e st H ills o f d r a g —t h e s e g e n t le m e n in b r a s , d ia p h a n o u s g o w n s , lip stick , hairfalls and —at Grandmother’s h u ffs —d i s c u s s i n g th a ir h u s b a n d s in t h e m ilitary in Japan, or d e sc r ib in g thair o w n p r o b le m s w ith th a draft—o n e g r o w s fon d TheBiggest Soul SoundAround o f all o f thorn."-*.*«, mm,, n r Times IIS ÉP*»- "’T h e Q u e e n ’ i s a b ea u tifu l film; its s e n s a ­ BABYHUEY&THEBABY¿ITTERS t io n a l a n d s h o c k in g s u b j o c t m a tta r i s t r e a t e d w ith s u c h s e n s ib ilit y , t a s t e a n d COIYipASSIOn* — JudithCrmNewYorkMaga/me QARDAREyA ■SEE $1.50cover buysadmittanceandonemixeddrink '"The Q u e a n ’ is a s to n e gas!" DaLatimer. EastVillageOther .t h e DO HER THING! ueen d ud IN COLOR STARTS TODAY _____ 7 FOX E ASU RN THEATRES fcW .SPARTAN TWIN WEST FRANDORSHOPPINGCENTER- 3100 EASTSAGINAW• Phon« 3510030 SH O W N A T “ P u t y o u r s e l f i n t o i t 99 7 P .M . & 9 P .M . jY S fY lif W ed n esd a y , O c to b e r 16, 1968 M ichigan State N ew s, E a st L a n sin g , M ich ig a n SPORTS LITTLE, MARTM IMPROVE 'S’ ends.key to future.jsu-çç&s * tion, while sophomore Gary No­ » . taken aa Ilot t a Iro n n# of time to work By-GREGG LOR1A stantly improving on their play,” good thing about Little is that with me. I hope their patience State News Sports Writer he can play defensive end as wak was given the left end spot. pays off,” Martin says. Coach Duffy Daugherty says. well as inside at the tackle But Martin, showing his versa- Little also has been taken Spartan football opponents “Little had done a fine job spot,” Daugherty adds. tality, beat Nowak out for the aside by Bullough and shown the find themselves a little wilted until he was hurt in the Wis­ consin game, and his knee has Little played tackle last year, left end position. ropes by the former Green Bay this season when they run into “Wilt, like Little, is a great MSU’s pair of hard-hitting de­ really hampered his play. The and on special situations this Packer bruiser. season has moved backed into competitor, always giving you a “Hank has really shown me a fensive ends, Ken Little and Wilt great effort, but quite often he Martin. the interior slot. Little’s speed lot with my techniques and foot­ is evidenced by his presence commits those mistakes that work.” Little says, but th< Little, a 6-2, 210 pounds a sophomore makes. He’s really junior, has been hampered by on the MSU track team, where big thing is the fact that I don’l he competes in the 60-yard dash. going to be good, though, as think I gained my maximurr a strained knee for the last game he has all the assets that you and a half, but still has man­ The big lineman took a 3rd speed, strength or size yet. place in a conference meet this need, quickness, strength and “Another reason I think I’n aged to make 14 tackles. agility,” defensive Line Coach Martin, a 6-1, 217 pounds year. improving is the man next t< “I played very poorly in the Hank Bullough says. me. Chuck Bailey teaches me i sophomore who never played on “I really realize that I have the MSU freshman team is fifth last game, but I don’t really lot. I just about have his move: think about the Michigan game a long way to come to be down now, and we help eacl on the team in tackles with 20. a real good end, but the coaches, In the Spartans’ four games because that's the past. We’ve other out during the game. He’ got to look ahead to Minnesota, particularly Hank Bullough have a great player,” Little adds. to date, Little and Martin, crash­ W IL T M A R T IN ing in from their end positions, Notre Dame and the rest. A ll g o ld We’re still going to have a have often come up with the good season, maybe 9-1 or Basketball practice begins; T h e U .S . O l y m p i c T e a m ’ s R andy M a ts o n puts the big play to stop an opponent’s drive. 8-2, but the big thing is the shot 6 7 - 4 3 / 4 to w in the U n ite d S t a t e s ’ f i r s t 1968 fact that our team is constant­ gold m e d a l. T h e P a m p a , T e x a s s tr o n g m a n owns “Both those fellows have real fine potential, and they’re con- ly improving,” Little says. 8 lettermen return to squad the w o r l d r e c o r d o f 71-5 1/2 . U P I T e le p h o to “We’re a young team and we make a lot of mistakes, but we got the great spirit that is go­ EYE1-2-3 SWEEP ing to win games for us. We’ll bounce back for Minnesota, just wait and see,” he adds. By MIKE MANLEY State News Staff Writer Sophomores Rudy Benjamin, Paul Dean, and Tim Bograkos will add depth. MSU’s varsity basketball The Spartans are strong up­ In the beginning of the season, team opened practice Tuesday U.S. places 3 in 2 0 0 final KEN L I T T L E Little was slated to 'battle Martin for the right end posi­ as Head Coach John Benington greeted 15 candidates, including eight lettermen from last year’s front with three returning start­ ers headed by 6-6 senior center Lee Lafayette. Lafayette led the York City, and Smith, who comes team in scoring (16.8 points 12-12 saved. MEXICO CITY (UPI)-John 'Carlos, Tommie Smith and Larry ing, volleyball, basketball, cycl­ ing and modern pentathlon. from the tiny San Joaquin Val­ In tr a m u r a l News “We’ll have the same caliber per game) and rebounding ley town of Lemoore, Calif., (10.5 per game) and was Questad, who finished in that The United States was favored of ballclub so our main con­ picked for the UPI All-Big Ten order at the U.S. trials, won to pick up at least two gold med­ loped to easy victories in their I.M . BU ILD IN G F IE L D S F IE L D 4 cern is improving on last year’s heats of the 200-meter dash. F IE L D 1 6:00 Empyrean - Emperors record,” Benington said. “We second team. Tom Lick, a 6-10 their opening round heats in the als during the day-in the men’s senior letterman, will be on hand discus and women’s 100-meter Carlos led all the way to win 6:00 Carleton - Caribbean 6:45 Confederates - Impalas lack the big, consistent scorer 200-meter dash at the 1968 6:45 Road Runners - Titans 7:30 Worthington - Worst to spell Lafayette. Olympic Games Tuesday. dash. There were four track in 20.5 seconds, five tenths of 8:15 Cougars - Vets Club and general scoring punch that 7:30 Arsenal - Argonaughts “We need an exceptional The day’s calendar was and field finals in all, the a second over Smith’s listed 8:15 Ag. Econ - Outcasts 9:00 Windsor - Wivern other Big Ten clubs have and 9:45 Migoty Hawks - Vet Med senior year out of Lee if we are crowded with Yanks also in others being in men’s 400- world record and eight tenths 9:00 Woodbridge - Woodward this is probaly our main weak­ to be a contender,” Benington over his pending 19.7 turned 9:45 Eden Rocks - Turtles ness.” competition in seven other track meter hurdles and 800-meter run. F IE L D 2 I.M . EA ST CAM PUS F IE L D S said. and field events, rowing, fenc­ Carlos, who is from New in during the U.S. trials. 6:00 Brougham - Brewerv F IE L D S Benington’s big problem will Last year’s starters at for­ Smith also was first out of 6:45 Guh's Grundies - Tri ‘C’ Tig. 6:00 Hubbard 1-6 be replacing guards John Bailey the blocks and never was in 6:45 West Shaw 9-10 ward, Bernie Copeland and Jim 7:30 Wimbledon - Wisdom 7:30 ‘ Akrojox - Akcelsior and Steve Rymal, who directed Gibbons, return. trouble as he won in 20.3. 8:15 Ag. Econ - Outcasts 8:15 Felony - Fee Males the Spartan attack for the past Seattle, KC go for Questad, who is from Livingston, Mont., and will enter the Army 8:15 9:00 9:45 Asher - Everybody's Favorite Teeny Boppers - Eaters (SC) Scheidts Bomb. - T.H.E. Wild. 9:00 9:45 Hornet - Horrendous State Police - El Birdos three years. Lettermen Harrison Stepter, a Copeland, 6-6 senior, is an ag­ gressive defensive player who was usually found last year at the conclusion of these games, F IE L D 3 F IE L D S 6-2 senior who was a part- had to work hard for his vic­ 6:00 guarding the opposition’s top youth in AL draft tory. But he made it a Yank 6:45 7:30 Balder - Bardot Wolverton - Wolfram Byes - Good. Bad. Ugly 6:00 6:45 7:30 Housebroken - Hob Nob Bloody6 -Shikari Hubbard 10-11 time starter last year, and 5-9 junior Lloyd Ward have experi­ scorer. Backing these two up will record for Toledo and led the sweep for the first three heats 8:15 Eminence - Empowerment 8:15 Fecundity - Fern ence and Benington hopes one be 6-5 senior John Holms, who BOSTON (UPI) - Regulars International League with 206 in the seven-heat event by 9:00 Ellsworth - Montie of them will become the take- 9:00 Hubbard4-5 started as a sophomore but was were few and far between Tues­ strikeouts last season. winning in a slow 20.7. 9:45 Holden N4-N5 9:45 W iquassett - Winshire JOH N B E N 1 N G T O N day as the new Kansas City charge player that Bailey was. ^JjumgedbyCopeland^as^season and Seattle franchises were stocked in the $10.5 million American League expansion draft. F r id a y an d S a tu r d a y Lou Rawls Pitcher Roger Nelson, who had a 4-3 record and a 2.41 ASMSU Presents J e n is o n F ie ld H o u se O c t . 1 8 th a t 8 : 0 0 p . m . earned run average with Balti­ Note - S u b s titu te f o r “ Sundays and C y b e l l e ” more last season, as Kansas City’s first choice to launch what was supposed to be a day-long draft. The Seattle Pilots, who earlier had given up their first choice 1968 Y ul B r y n n e r , Steve M c Q u e e n , R o b e r t V aughn, J a m e s C o b u r n In the g r e a t e s t w e s t e r n e v e r m ade T ic k e ts : $ 2 .5 0 G e n e r a l A d m is s io n $ 3 .5 0 R e s e r v e d A v a ila b l e A t: to the Royals in exchange for HOMECOMING DANCE THE MAGNIFICENT SEVEN the second and third picks, M a r s h a l l M u s ic grabbed slugging first baseman C a m p b e l l 's Suburban Shop Don Mincher from the California 108 W e l l s H a ll - - 7 & 9 p . m . - - 7 5 0 Union & D o o r Angels and followed up by tak­ ing three weak hitters-Cleve- land outfielder Tommy Harper (.217), Detroit shortstop Ray Oyler (.135), and Chicago "Unprecedented Presidents” S ta r ts A Í M PU 332-6944 J t k ta b u T o d a y is L A D IE S ’ DAY catcher Gerry minor league rosters of the McNertney (.219), before dipping into the This Coming Saturday , October 19th 7 5 0 t o 6 P .M . A W IL D A N D H IL A R IO U S C O M E D Y ! 10 existing AL clubs. The Royals, standing firm by 8:30 p.m. Auditorium P et er Show n at their plan for a young club, made pitchers seven of their first 15 choices and had players averaging just over 23 years of Attire NOTFormal - $5.00 Per Couple S ellers 1 :2 0 -3 :2 5 -5 :3 0 -7 :3 5 -9 :4 0 in A PAUL MAZURSKY & LARRY TUCKER Production age before the halfway mark of 99 the 60-player draft. The Royals took Boston third baseman Joe “Foy, 25', in the I In v e Y ou. A u c e B .T d k u is biggest surprise of the opening round as the Red Sox froze controversial first baseman T h e s e a r e t h e f r i e n d s w h o m o v e in w ith th e c h i c k George Scott while leaving Foy w ho lo v e s th e K o o k w ho e a t s th e “ tu r n e d - o n ” b ro w n ie unprotected. The Red Sox promptly an­ t h a t s t a r t s th e fu n nounced they plan to shift Scott from first to third base next spring. The Royals went to the minors ps early as their third choice when they grabbed southpaw bitcher Jim Rooker, 26, from New york after he posted a 14-8 A d ja c e n t grid tickets available Students wishing to obtain Featuring adjacent seats in the student section for friends or parents can exchange their coupons, • TheAmericanBreed beginning Thursday, in the main ticket office in Jenison Fieldhouse and purchase ad­ »TheM SBDanceBand jacent tickets at the regular price ($6). »TheCoronationoftlwHomecomingQueen Frosh baseball »TheQueen’s Court meeting set ► TheMenmfExcafiberasEscorts CO-STARRING AND INTRODUCING 'All freshmen interested in freshman baseball report at TICKETS ON SALE NOW AT THE UNION AND CAMPBELL’S SUBURBAN SHOP 0VANFLEET•LEIGHTAYLOR-YOUNG PRO D U CED BY DIRECTED BY ElrnerBernston PAUL WRITTEN BY MAZURSKY & LARRY I UCKER < 7:30 p.m. Thursday in 208 CHARLES MAGUIRE ■HY AVERBACK ™ TECHNICOLOR 8 From WARNER BR 0 S.-SEVEN ARTS i f f Men’s IM Bldg. Added Laug h C a r t o o n & N o v e lty - N e x t ) B u r t L a n c a s t e r In " T h e S w i m m e r ” _______ ' 1 8 M ichigai. State N ew s, E a st L a n siu g , M ich ig a n W ed n esd a y , O c to b e r 16, 1968 3 seek b o a rd p o sitio n s | ’ , • A m V . «V . fry « *« —r-~ ■ —« c u a i< |/« u , V < I V 1 »' r IV I If iw c lM li *■(cifi* ofif* cAe "'¿hjif, ' ne saia. or cfttr c/iuver* * i*UEwfccative Reporter Lane, Spartan Village .♦»>« nnlM dfiuttipd, MRU for Kennedy,. xtty being ia ' the «qUc* by*- Grand Fiver blocks in East Lan­ The new composition of the Helma received his M.A. in re­ iness, on the one hand, or the This year, for the first time, sing, r.nd the ninth, the city’s board makes more likely con­ habilitation counseling, and effect of bringing in outsiders residents of Ingham County northeast section. cern with urban problems than has been a counselor at the on the other.” will directly elect their Board with those of the rural areas of Ionia reformatory. He is cur­ All three of the candidates of Supervisors, a change which Running for the seats in the the county, which dominated rently assistant director of the emphasize their interest in will bring the urbanized parts Nov. 5 election from the Uni­ its attention over the past. Urban Action Committee of thé streamlining and professionaliz­ of the county into control of its versity community are Charles Lansing alone has a clear YMCA. ing the county procedures and purse strings. Previously, the Press chairman of the political majority of the board mem­ He would like to see if wel­ operations. Hardin and Press board was made up of town­ science department, Einar Har­ bers, and with East Lansing fare funds could be made avail­ stress the sheriff’s department ship supervisors, and persons din, professor of Industrial Re­ and Williamston, the rural rep­ able to students, especially as an area where training and appointed by the cities within lations, and Thomas Helma, a resentatives will be only one- those in married housing, and in retraining of personnel is es­ the county to represent them graduate student and resident quarter of the board. expanding the juvenile home to pecially needed. on the board. of Spartan Village. All are The major emphasis of the Democrats. new board will be on continua­ provide for separation of the resi­ Hardin also indicated con­ Under a new Michigan law, tion of the upgrading and pro­ dents. on the basis of whether cern for increased cooperation each county was apportioned in­ Part of the reason for the fessionalization of the county they were place there because of of the governments of Ingham, to districts, and a supervisor change was a desire by some services, according to Press, a parental neglect, or because of Eaton, and Clinton counties,! in will be popularly elected from of the legislature to make the member of the old board, and a delinquency. the areas of metropolitan prob­ each one. boards more directly responsi­ candidate for the new board Helma also is interested, as lems, and between the city and Buggy building ble to the voters, rather than East Lansing has been di­ being in the position of repre­ from northwest East Lansing. Helma’s major concerns are is Press, in the University Po­ lice. He has not formulated any the county in water control, pol­ lution, and waste disposal. He vided into three districts for the senting their township or city also advocated a Human Re­ C o n s t r u c t io n w o r k e r s at new a d d itio n on c a m p u s to th e P e s tic i d e R e s e a r c h election, the seventh, in the governments. welfare programs, law enforce­ specific ideas as to what the ment, and county projects such proper relationship between the sources program to integrate B ld g . p r o c e e d u n d e r hot O c t o b e r sun. S ta te N e w s Photo by Bob Ivin s northwest section, the eighth, programs at the various levels as the juvenile home and the University and its police force. Ingham County was divided parks and library system. “It boils down to the ques- within the county. into 21 districts, the maximum HrfH NOT ENDORSED allowed for a county its size. The Board of Supervisors is Four faculty members Dems to vote indivi dually responsible for allocating the county budget, and for appoint­ ing the personnel for the various By ADRIENNE MOORE By a margin of 33*70, the dinator for Ingham County and dential former co-chairman of the changed candidate his mind. had not I Rowe la­ ization rule” of the Humphrey county controlled boards and de­ partments, such as the county welfare board, and setting their named honorary alumni New Democratic Coalition of Alliance for Kennedy, appealed beled him “Wallace with White people at the Chicago convention, salaries. Four MSU faculty members president and director of Uni­ years as head football coach "The party of the people has Michigan for the Sixth Congres­ to the former McCarthy Gloves,” saying that if elected will become honorary alumni versity relations; Milton E. here. During his tenure, MSU McGovern and Kennedy workers president, he will allow the been taken awayfrom the people The supervisors also main- during Homecoming activities Muelder, vice president for re­ sional District voted Monday to and can only return if the people tain jurisdiction over the func- won 54 games, lost 9 and tied second a state resolution that to support Vice President police to run loose. this weekend. search development and dean of 2, and was national champion party members vote according Humphrey. The resolution, introduced by can vote according to individual tioning of the departments, in­ The four to be honored at the School for Advanced Graduate in 1952. to personal conscience in the temporary chairman Phil Ball- conscience,”he said. eluding the sheriff’s depart- the annual alumni banquet Fri­ Studies; Biggie Munn, director His 1953 squad was MSU’S November presidential elec­ “Humphrey may represent bach, was presented last week day in Kellog Center are James of athletics and Thomas H. first Rose Bowl team. He has tion. the policies of the New Deal at the state convention of NDC H. Denison, assistant to the Osgood, consultant in physics, been named football’s “Coach but, my God, they are better in Detroit. At that time, three former dean and director than the policies of William alternatives were debated among of the Year” and was named The organization, formerly of Abrams Planetarium. to the Football Hall of Fame McKinley that Richard Nixon the 700 delegates. The organiza­ the Michigan Conference for Concerned Democrats, chose not to formally endorse Demo­ proposes and those of Hitler," tion would: he said. endorse Hubert Humphrey with reluctance and Evidence lacking Members of MSU’s Orange Bowl team of 1938 and their coach, Charles W. Bachman will and to the Sports Hall of Fame in both Michigan and Minnesota. Osgood, former dean of the cratic presidential candidate Rowe called Nixon an “un­ hope that he changes his posi­ be featured at the banquet. adulterated monster." He said tions; not endorse Humphrey; School for Advanced Studies and Hubert H. Humphrey in his bid Denison, a former newspaper for the presidency. Opposing the party stand, that although there were black or recognize personal individual people in his television adver­ conscience. tisements, the Republican presi- on toy gun effects reporter and editor, joined MSU in 1947 after working for two past chairman of MSU’s physics department, joined MSU in 1941. An internationally known sci­ Win Rose, campaign co-or­ Supporting the resolution, years as administrative assist­ entist, he served from 1959 to newly-elected advisor Jim occurred.” Burkowitz con­ ant to Gov. Harry Kelly. He 1961 as science officer for the McClure recalled the “organ- By SUSAN MYLES has been president of the Amer­ Nobody says that just be­ cluded. ican College Public Relations U.S. Embassy in London. He cause a little boy plays with But what happens outside the won the MSU Distinguished Fac­ Associations, was a member and guns he will turn into a Clyde laboratory situation'? former chairman of the East ulty Award in 1966. Barrow or a Jesse James. In "In play therapy and neighbor­ Osgood served as director of Lansing Planning Commission, Farm Credit fact, no one is absolutely sure hood situations I have never just what, if any, psychological seen any evidence that this and has served both the Mich­ Abrams Planetarium from 1964 until this year, when he was igan United Fund and the Greater appointed to a one-year consult- Conference effect toy guns have on children. (play) affects them.” Shirley “There hasn’t been much J. Hurley, asst, professor in Lansing United Community antship until his retirement from Chest. MSU next July. meets today research done on the question the MSU School of Social Work, by psychologists, and because said. Denison was on the editorial staff of the Toledo Times and John R. Brake, MSU agri­ there are so few facts, every­ She said that in her opinion toy the Detroit Free Press. He cultural economist, will speak body can have an opinion, but guns have very little effect was director of the Michigan War on changes in agricultural nobody can back a theory up as compared with the violence Council from 1941 to 1943 and finance at the Michigan Farm with evidence,” Gary Stollak, children see on television. served as a U.S. Army officer Credit Conference today asst, professor of psychology, for 17 months during World at Kellog Center. said. “Whatever feelings violence War II. Brake is the fourth in a line However, in an article on on the screen arouses, child­ Muelder, who is also acting of speakers starting at 9:30 a.m. “Impulse, Aggression, and the ren want to play with toy guns dean of International Programs, About 130 bank managers and Gun” in the September issue mostly because of what they joined MSU in 1935 as an in­ others from the farm loan field of “Psychology Today”, Leo­ see on television.” Miss Mari- structor in history and political are expected at the conference nard Berkowitz, chairman of ella Aikman, director of the science. He became chairman to study the changes occurr­ the psychology department at Spartan Nursery School said. of the political science depart­ ing in agriculture today. the University of Wisconsin, ment in 1949, then was named With the current shifts in the describes an experiment in­ “Playing with toy guns gives director of the Office of Re­ marketing of oil, fertilizer, in­ volving toy guns and child­ children a harmless way to search Development in 1951. secticides and other farm-re­ ren and draws conclusions let off steam and shouldn’t Muelder served as dean of the lated products, bankers are con­ based on the results. necessarily be cut off, but School of Science and Arts from cerned because of their role in Researchers at the Univer­ young children should grad­ 1952 until assuming his pre­ financing these products for sity of Indiana told one group ually be taught the difference sent duties in 1959. the farmer. of children to play with a between the play world of guns . Munn, MSU athletic director Among the topics of study are younger group in a friendly and the real world of guns, she since 1954, served for seven OSGOOD shifts in the agricultural input way. Then toy guns were given said. MUNN industries and the development to some of the children while of large-scale farm units. others talked with those con­ PARAPHERNALIA--- ducting the experiment. Some time later, each child was told that the older child AWAYFROMWEAPONS he had played with had built haif price »IW " * r aoirre tilin g ’**Ocrc V ? ‘ u io tk s table in another room. “If you push this button on oh cT Ihree toy outlets otter my desk, you’ll shake the table ¿s and his blocks will fall down,” the experimenter told the child­ ren. fewer 'toys o f violence’ More of the children who had Three major toy outlets in been given guns pushed the Hobby Hub has been steering of violence since the assassi­ the Lansing area plan to offer away from military toys and nations of Senator Robert F. button. fewer "toys of violence” for “Neither group of children weapons for the past two years. Kennedy and the Rev. Martin sale this Christmas, but two Toy Village and Yankee Depart­ Luther King Jr. in the spring was angry, but the guns had others plan to stock their us­ an effect. Guns did more than ment Store officials plan to of this year. ual amount. offer the same amount of such Both Meijer’s manager and lower the children’s restraints Meijer Thrifty Acres and against aggression: they seemed toys for sale as they did last Dirck Terwilliger, purchasing Sears have already cut back year. agent of the Hobby Hub, said to pull out aggressive reactions their orders to manufacturers The cutbacks by Sears and that the manufacturers them­ MUELDER that would not otherwise have for toys of violence, and the Meijer Thrifty Acres are con­ selves are limiting the amounts nected with company decisions to of war toys and guns available reduce the amount of advertis­ to retail stores. The emphasis ing for such toys. now is on educational and space W M S B - T V g i v e s . The store manager of the toys. Thrifty Acres Pennsylvania In Terwilliger’s opinion, v o t e r s a c h o i c e Street store also plans to offer children have lost interest in a smaller selection of military military toys because the way “Voter’s Choice,” a series of toys and guns this Christmas. in which the Vietnam conflict programs examining local issues He said he has noticed a has been presented has made and candidates, will be presented drop in the sales of toys war less glorious to them. by WMSB (Channel 10), MSU television, during the weeks of ARTSTUDENTS Oct. 20 and 27 and Nov. 3. Each candidate appearing on the programs will be questioned by a panel composed of a high Choose a ll y o u r a r t s u p p lie s f r o m E a s t L a n s i n g 's la r g e s t school student, an educator and s e le c t io n . a member of the League of Wom­ en Voters, all residents of the candidate’s district. Candidates for University boards will |be questioned by campus newspaper Buy One Item — editors from MSU, .University Across Posters of Michigan and Wayne Stale fro m P rin ts University. .1 , ‘ Hom e E c ’ JEWELRYmi F ram in g The candidates for MSU Bpajrd Choose a Second at Half Price B ld g, ARTCENTER 319 E . G r a n d R i v e r A v e . of Trustees will be questioned on the program scheduled for T h u rsd ay 11- 9 541 E . G r a n d R iv e r E a e t L a n s in g , M i c h . Friday, 8 p.m. Oct. 25. < . M ichigan State N ew s, E a st L a n sin g , M ich ig a n W ed n esd a y , O c to b e r 16, 1968 9 S tu d e n t a p a th y : m a jo r h a n d ic a p to te a c h in g ' ' StD gassw apaiay w iis cited as * "vajec handicap .to. teachin«. by John C. Hocking, professor problem d U a C^tudentseV V e ' apitneuc r«»r /-¿rifu* sSz. requirements was a major reason for la « some students may only be student ««^ed, .if S.D.S ideal ß said that tjjey were a^thetic., ^ .. ^ • *i t — ; -------------- , k arrangement impossible. 3 ^ ’* - - One grad student from Eng­ Hocking also talked about the future’me.” fyr - ■-Tfr.'jQk1 iW uéy Unci, Mi bp. «aid ‘‘ tgem^qdqps interest in tnem for* they are ■ of mathematics, speaking be­ about everything except their of interest. “nobodies.” “They hate many of our social life,” one grad Aid. “I have an eight o’clock cal­ values,” he said. “I hate some land commented on the English faculty^adnite student re- fore approximately 160 grad­ “There aren’t any real ‘no­ system of having a faculty lations. He said that grad stu­ uate students Monday night at “They have no enthusiasm or culus class that engineering bodies’,” Hocking replied, “only of them too.” Hocking said that grad stu­ majors have to take,” Hocking failures of communication.” “Sometimes teachers ask me counselor for every two or dents were “embryonic fac­ a seminar on faculty-student interest in courses.” dents are in the middle, neither Hocking agreed but said that said. “I’m enthusiastic about how I can teach the long-haired three students. He said that ulty” and should be treated relations. Many grads felt that much the system gave students an as such. students nor teachers, and are The seminar, sponsored by the burden of interest should math even at eight. They prob­ of the student apathy towards boys. ‘I’d want to cut their hair,’ often subject to the same pres­ not be placed on the student. ably think I’m an idiot.” they say. I don’t mind long opportunity to know a professor the Council of Graduate Stu­ school was due to parental in an informal manna*. sures as students. dents, was orginally planned “The quality and caliber of Hocking said that a teacher and other outside pressures. hair on boys, or short-haired “I waa bugged as a grad,” as a speech. Hocking said he relationships between students must be enthusiastic to reach “Often theses same students girls, barefoot, in jeans, with “This is one case where the Hocking said. “I always felt and faculty is the quality and his class. He said that many are actively involved in pol­ no bra, because they feel deeply. whole is much greater than the bugged but I didn’t know why.” One grad looked at it this did not want to “speechify” the caliber of the teacher,” students feel like "nobodies” itical affairs and social prob­ They are not apathetic.” sum> of its parts,” Hocking Hocking said he treats his way, "When I’m a student, and asked for questions and I’m a student. But when I’m comments form the audience. Hocking said. in class and that a teacher lems,” one woman said. Hocking agreed with one grad answered. grads as “future friends. ” Graduate students regarded Another student said that must reach them and make Hocking agreed stating that who said that is was usually He felt that the Interactions “Not as friends tomorrow, a teacher, I’m God.” W h y P a y M o v e ! W h y P a y M o r e ! W h y P a y M o r e ! W h y P a \ M o r e ! W h y P a y M o r e ! W h y P a y M o r e ! W h y P a y M o r e ! «< W H Y P A Y M O R E !" Ladies’ PLACE MATS COASTER SETS P l a s t i c P la c e m a ts with PURE SILK C o a s t e r sets to m a tc h p la c e m a t s . Set o f 4 R eg. 22C a s e t. fo a m b a c k s . . . a t t r a c t i v e p a t t e r n s and c o l o r s — w a s h a b le s u r f a c e . 70 Reg. 22ç EA. SMOKE RINGS SET HOT PADS S pe c ia l P u r c h a s e p u r e s i l k p r i n t s m o k e rin g s In new fa s h io n c o lo r s . 70 Hot pad se ts to m a tc h p la c e m a t s and c o a s t e r W h y pay $ 1 .8 7 . N ow $ 1 .0 0 e a . s e ts . C o r k bac k . Set of 4 R eg. 22Ç 70 M IL L IN E R Y D E P T . D O M E S T IC S D E P T . SET of 4 Satisfying Hit O f The Steak Set! T -B o n e P o rte r­ S te a k h o u se "M.I|or fin««»" fin««»" USDA Chole. USDA Chel«« Armeur Armour "Tondor- "Tondor- To«tod" Tottod" "Iconomy" loonor lb . 99 •oof. Nut "Tondor- To«tod" 3-lb. can 1-lb. Food Club can IS « A P P L E S - A PPLES. MdNTOSH JONATHAN lbs. 4 7 U.S. Ne. 1 4 U.S. Ne. 1 4 lbs. SAVI 20c 12» SAVI 14< ImT " ”— “ -(SI la i 2 9 mh^u i* r tewera the _pstthnn el I I Jf with (bit ceupen towerd the puwhptt et feed Club Smell er large Curd g 1 feed Club feed Club Cranberry Juke A A | FLOUR 25**1® COCKTAIL Any er eH «euyen« *ZU with 19.00 eurchete er Mil E Cottage CHEESE - l i T - - I Any et ell ceupem redeeipeble with | U M purthete et erara Aey et e l •emeus tsdssewhlt whb S I M a n bei« et wets I excluding beer, wise, clgerette Item» ei raupee Item« THRIFTY ACRES IS OPEN FROM 9 A.M. TO rteg bsct. wbM, « M i t iNau a a y t l l m •«eluding beer «Iseralle item* er teupen Dem« eue pot rattemir. b p iia le t. O«». IP, I H k ; Ixpirw Set.. Oct. IP, 1PM- limit ene per tuMemer. Ixplrra Set., Oct. IP, IPM . 10 P.M. DAILY, EXCEPT SUNDAY, FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE. SUNDAY HOURS 1. Apply In 4171. O person a t M ONTY’S B A R , E a st G R A D U A TE STU D EN T Gentlem an. e TRANSPORTATION C O RVA IR MONZA «00, 1IM. Two 9-10/18 H IGH TO R K Ducati Scram bler, 3 » , Nine weeks work for 5 stu­ Grand R ive r E D 64711. 610/22 Single room w ith kitchenette. Quiet. e WANTED door. Four on the floor. One owner, 1087. Excellent condition. 0 » m iles. dents* (Above average .TW O MAN efflciency. 318 Gunacn. Eaet. IV 69901. 610/18 32,000 actual mile i. Phone 668- PO N TIA C C A TA LIN A 19M 2H T; 11» »14615. M 0/18 « 1 « . 337-98». 610/19 3330 after 0 p.m . 5-10/17 GTO 3 » engine; Hydm m atic; pow­ jobs*} Must be 18 or over. D E L IV E R Y BO YS 9 6 » an hour. Also Guaranteed salary, $120 g irls to answer telephones. Inside NEWLY MARRIED? D E A D L IN E er (leerin g and brakes. 91,0». C all TR IU M PH B O N N EV ILLE 680cc. Six counter and g rill help. P a rt and 1IN G LE ROOM S: with cooking. Near campus. 337-01». 610/18 CO RV AIR MONZA 1006. S ilver, 6 3894186. M 0/M months old, like new. C all 356 for 5 1/2 day week. Hours: fun tim e. V A R S IT Y D R IV E -IN . 61 0/B TA N G LEW O O D 1. P.M. one class day be­ speed, 140 hp. Tachometer. Good 7028 1-10/10 12:30 - 9:30. First come, fore publication. tires. 9060. »1-4 7». 3-10/17 PO N TIAC 10» convertible. Very first served. H O U S E K E E P E R -B A B Y S IT T E R for A PA R TM EN TS F o r S a le dean. 95 ». C all »14576. After BSA 1067 Lightning. Perfect condi­ 1 Bdrm., unfur./from 124.50 Cancellations - 12 noon one CO RV AIR MONZA 19» convertible. I p.m . M0/10 tion. E x tra s. Must se ll. « 7 » . 351- one school age child. Monday through class day before publica­ 4 speed transm M on. New battery «4». 610/17 Call Mr. KOBACKER Saturday. Afternoon* free. Occa­ 2 Bdrm., unfur., from 139.50 C ID E R M IL L open. Sweet cider for and Urea. C all after 6 p.m. 351- sional evening fittin g . Fre e to tra­ a le . Corda W est. »17 North Oke- tion. 53». 3-10/10 PO N TIAC C A TA LIN A 19». A ll pow­ 484-1450 before 2 p.m. vel. Good sa to y . References neces­ 351-7880 mos Rd. 337-7974. 17-10/» er. Air-conditioned. 90 ». 35344» C h ris. Evening* 355-59». M 0/17 E m p lo y m e n t sary. C a ll 376602. 4-10/21 PEN N SYLV A N IA A V EN U E Squth off COUGAR 1067. Four speed. AM -FM , SA LESM A N : Part-tim e. Must like M ichigan Avenue. Furnished one bed­ FLO O R LEN G TH form al and coat PHO NE handsome black interio r, deluxe M A LE STU D EN TS 1 6 » . P a rt tim e, selling. No experience needed, W A IT R ES SES AND W A ITER S room, ground floor. P rivate en­ ensemble. Never worn. Size 8. Bro­ wheel covers, new tires including PO N TIAC 10M C atalina. Below book cade. 37658». 610/18 jobs now open tar F a ll and W inter w ill train . C ar furnished. Phone NOON S H IF T U - 2. Im m ediate trance. U tilitie s paid. Parking. 91» value « 9 » . 9 4 p.m . 372-9110. 5-10/10 3 5 5 -8 2 5 5 snow tire s, drive train w arranty. term s. Some fu ll tim e openings also. M r. Taylo r, 4862379. C openings. Tuesday through F r i­ month plus deposit. «27-5454. 610/16 Must se ll. »10». 37346». 4-10/16 C all 39650». 14 p m . M on-Fri. O FO X D O U BLE B A R R E L T W E LV E PO N TIAC F IR E B IR D 1007. Convert­ day. F u ll 'tim e also available. R ATES ib le, w ire wheels, wide oyals, ex­ E M P LO Y E R S O V ERLO A D Company. 484-4587 or apply in person TOW NHOUSE A P A R TM EN T. New fu ll G A U G E ihotgun, two sets of bar­ rel«. »1-3 8». 610/18 COUGAR 1007V0. Deluxe. Complete L IN E U P your fe ll job now. C ar nets Experienced secretaries, typists to CO U N TRY C LU B O F LAN SIN G , basement. Two bedrooms. Modem 1 d a y ..................... $1.50 with stereo tape recorder. E xc e l­ cellent condition. Take over payments sssary. C all »1-7310. o work on tem porary assignm ents. 22» Moores R ive r D rive. 1610/18 conveniences. Near Campus. 351- of 9M month. Phone C R E D IT MAN­ G RU N D IG AM-FM radio and H i-F i. 15< per word per day lent condition. 4M-5438 between 8-5 A G E R 4193379 C Never a fee. Phone 487-8071. C-10/17 88 ». 610/16 D E P E N D A B LE YOUNG woman wanted Blonde mahogany console. E le c tric 3 d a y s ..............................$ 4 .0 0 p.m . 5-10/17 M EN • G IR L S : Salesm en. Own to care for Infant Monday, Wednes­ T H R E E OR FO U R man room on large clothes dryer-10 settings. Excellen t ' 13 1/24 P*r word per day TH U N D ER B IR D 19M hardtop. One G R E A T L A K E S Em ploym ent for per­ hours. «10 an hour. »1-8491, day and Frid a y morning« in faculty estate w ith private bath, den, lib rary condition. Best offer near 9 » each. DO DGE 1954. C all 356-0504 Make of­ owner, low m ileage, good tire s, very manent positions for men and wom­ 35621». 1610/18 5 days ............... $6.50 fer . 5-10/10 member’s home. Two blocks w est of en In office sales, technical. IV 6 and cooking fa c ilitie s. »1-0 6». 610/18 ED 62431 after 5 p.m . 610/17 clean. A -l shape. 112». TU 2- 13< per word per day 71 ». 3-10/18 campus. Occasionalevenings also. 1543. C-10/17 Good sa lary. »1-7387. 610/10 G LAM O U R, M O N EY, and excitem ent W ESTIN G H O U SE VACUUM Cleaner. DO DGE D A R T, 1062 convertible. 440, YOUNG W A V E R LY Teacher (m ate) (based on 10 words per ad) V 4 , autom atic, power steering, good W A ITER S AND W A IT R ES SES for the can be yours w ith V IV IA N E WOOD­ wants to share rent on inexpensive (One year old). W ith a ll the at­ TR IU M PH 10», extra engine, rear A RD CO SM ETICS. Free make-up tachm ents. «13 .». Phone 486 condition. 94 ». IV 4 4 6 » . 3-10/17 D E L L S . Paying top wages. E xp e ri­ furnished apartm ent. IV 6 4 0 5 . 610/16 There will be a 504 service end and other parts. 92 ». 356 Instructions. IV 5-8»l c 06 ». C ence not necessary. Phone 336 and bookkeeping charge if FALCO N 1 9 »: Four door. Take 07 ». 1-10/16 O F F IC E B O Y 86» or 336M14. 10/28 N E E D O NE man Im m ediately for this ad is not paid within over payments of 821.40. Phone TR IU M PH T R -t 19» convertible. For Rent Campus H ill luxury apartm ent. C all O N E H U N D RED Used Vacuum Clean­ ers. Tanks, canisters, and uprights. one week. Credit Manager 489-2370. C-10/33 W ire wheels. O /D rive, radio, new R ESEA R C H ASSO CIA TE for health »1-5776. 610/16 TV R E N T A LS for students. Low eco­ «7.88 and up. D EN N IS D IS T R IB U T ­ engine. Good shape. 913». 3534062. planning organization. Requires broad FO RD 10» X L convertible. V 4 , To assist manager In out­ general interests and computer pro­ nomical rate* by the term or month. EYD EA L V IL L A A PA R TM EN TS. IN G COM PANY. 316 North Cedar, The State News will be 4-10/18 autom atic. Excellent condition. Ask- side order department. Op- gramming a b ility, Fle xib le hours, at­ U N IV E R S IT Y T V R E N T A LS , 484- TWO bedroom apartm ent* for «2« opposite C ity M arket. Phone 482- responsible only for the ii« »375. Phone 4890000. C-10/23 TR IU M PH 1962 TR 4. New paint, portunlty for advancement tractive pay. Minimum 10 hours per 92». C month. Swim m ing pool. G E appli­ »77 . C first day's incorrect inser­ valves, and w iring. W ire wheels. to management positions. week. Health planning Council of ances, garbage disposals, furnished FO R D 10M G alaxie convertible. V 4 M ichigan. 4865529. 4-10/18 TV R E N T A LS G .E . I F ’ Portable, for four man or five man. C all tion. autom atic, power steering. Clean. 356-58». After 5 p m . 3-10/18 Salary, $110. per week. »1-4275 afte r 5 p.m . C 9 8 .» per month including stand. 9000. Phone 6944611. 3-10/16 TR IU M PH 10» convertible. Good con­ Call MR. GREEN G R O C ER Y D E L IV E R Y boy. ings. C all in person Prince Morn­ Broth­ C all J . R . Culver Co. »1-8 8». 2 » Albert Street, E a st Lansing. C Houses SEVEN dition. 910». C all after 5 p.m . 356 484-1459 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. The State News does not FO RD G A L A X IE 500. 1965 V 4 , Cruis-O-M atic 352. 4-barrel, radio. 1106. 3-10/10 ers M arket, 555 E a st Grand E a st Lansing. R ive r, 610/17 Apartments E A S T LA N SIN G : 7 » Berkshire. Fin ­ THIRTY permit racial or religious Load levelers. 27,000 m iles. 91300. discrimination in Its ad­ 353-2174. 3-10/17 V A LIA N T 10«. Six cylinder. Good tire s. Good condition. Econom ical. STU D EN T W IV E S : Local consulting G R O C ER Y STO CK B O Y . C all in per­ son Prince Brothers M arket, 5 » STU D EN T U N ITS: Three and four man units s till available for Sep­ est duplex we’ve ever managed. Two large bedrooms, living room , dining ONE vertising co lu m n s. The LIN CO LN CO N TIN EN TAL 1007. Dark 6992M1. MO/18 firm now taking applications for E a st Grand R iv e r, E a st Lansing610/17 area a n t kitchen on firs t floor. Built- tember teasing. Lowebrooke, Uni­ in* in kitchen. Carpeted. Basement Stats News will not accept blue, 29,000 m iles. One owner. F u ll Computer program m ers versed In versity Te rrace, and Evergreen. VO LKSW AGEN BUG 10«. One owner COBOL language. Other language* has storage and finished recreation advertising' which dtscrlm- power plus auto-air. 8 a.m . to 5 p.m . (m iddle aged parent). « 6 « . Can H IG H COMMISSION! Representatives C all S T A T E M AN AGEM EN T 337- room for each side. Furnished side d aily. 066-2750, after 6 p.m -339- helpful. If you are experienced and lnates a g a in s t religion, be seen best on Saturday Sp rii«- interested in diversified applica­ for Hand-Knitted Norwegian Sweat­ 13». C available now. Unfurnished side 20 ». 5-10/10 ers. E rik Christensen, 339 West F o r th ose race, color or national or­ port, 857-4422. 10-10/33 tions w ork, apply for fa ll placement 22nd. Eugene, Oregon. 97405. 610/17 available December 1st. C all Dick igin. M ER C U R Y M O N TER EY 1062 E xc e l­ now. Salary open depending on quali­ SAGINAW AND Fra n cis. Unfurnished, Porter IV 67228 P O R T E R R E A L T Y who can lent condition throughout Loaded. VO LKSW AGEN 1961. Starp , has 10» fications. Equal opportunity employ­ two bedroom, carpeted, modern k it­ COM PANY. R ealto rs. 2-10/17 a ff o r d the CHURCH S E C R E T A R Y . Adm inistra­ W ill sa crifice. 3534819. 355-23». engine Sell for »450 4854703 3-10/17 er. C a ll »1-4741. 610/18 chen, a ir conditioner. «170. 486 tive and complete typing sk ills. Pro­ best In 3-10/18 fessional level. P a rt or fu ll tim e. 27 ». 610/18 ' M E X IC A N F O O D ap a rtm e n t VO LKSW AGEN KARM ANN G H IA 1907: F U L L T IM E : Position as cle ric a l Phone 332-0991 Monday through And Other Food From Most Fo r­ MG T F C lassic 1165. Excellen t con­ «14». Excellen t condition, Must se ll. assistant and key-punch operator. ATTEN TIO N G RAD S or Working Per­ eign Countries-including U .S. li v in g . Thursday only. 610/16 sonnel: Three roam s furnished near A u to m o tiv e dition. C all 353-00». 3-10/18 1064823. 610/M Experience helpful but not neces­ Brody. Available im m ediately. «1» SH A H EEN 'S F A M IL Y sary Moat have typing sk ills. J AUSTIN H E A L E Y 3 0 » : 10». New , exhaust and rear window. »1- M USTANG 1986-360 G .T . Runs w ell. Needs body work. 95 ». Mags. VO LKSW AGEN 19». V ery good con­ dition. Radio, many new parts. 356 Salary open depending on q u alifi­ cations. Equal opportun ity employ­ G IR L W AN TED . Light housekeeping. Regular hours to be arranged. 337- 1597. 610/18 FA B IA N R E A L T Y . 332-0811, 482- 5 3 », 485-30». 610/18 Michigan FOOD F A IR 1001 W. S a g in a lP Bankard 4864089 Welcome 1. ß. Culue/i, Co. 220 A l b e r t 35 1 -8 8 6 2 90 6. 4-10/18 4994157. 1-10/1« 70». 1-10/1« er. C a ll »14741. 610/M FO U R M EN or g irls. Near campus. A TTEN TIO N H R I and Accounting Furnished. 337-01». 610/18 VO LVO : B LA C K . Excellen t condi­ IN TR O D U C E A new and exciting ¿A U S T IN H E /2 S i I 1##1 T575 M USTANG 1067 hardtop. V 4 . Stand­ seniors and graduates. Night audi­ v* O ver-drive, 5 y | " i i l e r , M ichelin tion. New tire s, exhaust. No rust. cosm etic to your M ends and rela­ ard sh ift. New tire s. P erfect condi­ tor (M ale) for motel 11 p.m .- C X T ire s. 356-5942 after 5 p.m 3-10 16 «W . » 1 4 1 » . 4-10/18 tives. E a rn extra money and have R ED U C ED R A T E S . G irls for R iv e r's tion. B y owner. 38934». 5-10/18 7 a.m . five or six days per week. your own cosm etics at coat. VANDA Edge Apartm ents. W inter term . 337- C all M r. N icbells, U niversity Inn, r *B R G AUSTIN H E A L E Y 1957. E xcei- lentcondition. C all for Dave. 332- r 3581 4-10/18 M USTANG 1067. autom atic. Good Clarence 353-41». Power steering, condition. 810». 5-10/22' Avoition ¡FRAN CIS A V IA TIO N : So easy to CO SM ETICS of R e xall Drugs. Phone 8263413, or w rite Looking G lass Sales, 47« M-78, R . R . 1, P e rry , M ichigan 48872. 610/18 »1-5 5». W AN TED : JA N ITO R part-tim e 3 p.m . 4-10/21 2 7 «. G IR L TO SH A R E two bedroom near downtown Lansing. 372-4644 after 610/18 MSU EMPLOYEES learn In the P IP E R C H E R O K E E . to 8 p.m . « 2 .» per hour. Fo r infor­ fiCA M A RO 1987. Take over payments 4 p.m . 610/18 O LD SM O BILE 19» luxury sedan. , Special « offer. 484-1324. C mation c a ll 372-1910 extension 2 » ; » 5 64 482-9409 610/16 F u ll power, a ir, 13,0» m iles. Sale A P P LIA N C E SER V IC EM A N -Exp eri- M-F 8-4:30 p.m . 610/18 enced Good pay, many benefits. O NE MAN for two man apartment < •.................................................................................... price »,995. 81» down and 996 Auto Service & Ports C all between 8 a.m . and 5 p.m ., 486 starting December. C all »1-3212. * CARS! 18» Oldsmobile. a ll power, month. Crain Motors 1301 E a st K ala­ . A TTEN TIO N M A LE STU D EN TS: Im ­ »12. 610/17 6 1 0 /» ! many extras, 813». 19» Volks- mazoo. C-10/23 MASON BO D Y SHOP. 812 E a st m ediate part and fu ll tim e openings I f you a r e s in g le , o r In a g roup and need a * wagen. Excellen t condition. «1,0». Kalamazoo St. Since 1940. w ith H O B IE 'S soon to be serving W A ITER S OR w aitresses: F u ll or ABBO TT N E A R : Deluxe one bedroom. p la c e to liv e , you sh ou ld be on o u r lis t o f p r o s ­ t. 1961 Tem pest, 81» and 19» Chev- O LD SM O BILE 442 19». Excellent Complete auto painting and col­ MSU comm unity. Responsible indi­ *• rolet, 9 » . Both in good condition. condition throughout. Loaded. W ill part tim e. Apply POLO B A R , 8 » viduals needed for evening food de­ Responsible couple. 337-95» or 332- p e c t iv e r o o m m a t e s . lision service. IV60256. C W est Grand R ive r. 337-0057. 610/16 2414. 7-10/18 J C all L E S after 5 p.m . 351-4060 2-10/16 sa crifice. 339-2826 610/21 liv e ry . Starting wage 91.70. Lib ­ eral increases and m ileage bene­ FA C U LT Y -S T A F F. A RBO R FO R ES T T h e d i v e r s i f i c a t i o n o f o u r b u s in e s s p r o v id e s fits . Requirem ents: Knowledge of dorms or m arried housing; c a r; A PA R TM EN TS. Trowbridge Road. you w ith o n e - s t o p s e r v i c e to s a t i s f y Y O U R l i v ­ good driving record. 372-66» after Deluxe apartm ents available. Unfur­ ing r e q u i r e m e n t s . 6 p.m . 610/18 nished. P arty House, pool. 337 0834. C-10/17 V O IC E LESSO N S. Develop your vocal Need a r o o m m a t e o r a r o o m ? L e t us h e lp . sk ills. Previous experience unnec­ E A S T S ID E : Furnished one bedroom essary. 3561077. 1-10/18 apartm ent. « 1 » per month. Nine month lease. Adults only. Phone 486 P A R T T IM E job. Choose own hours. Decent pay. C all 33682». 610/18 21 ». 6 1 0 /8 EAST LANSING MANAGEMENT CO. STU D EN T A P A R TM EN T: Four man. M ECH A N IC S-BEST wage setup in town. Uniform s and other benefits provided. C a ll 4867510. 610/16 Furnished apartm ent available at once. « 1 » month. E D 2-82131, IV 6 «581 610/1« 351-7880 Second profession - evenings M A R R IED CO UP! *L .£ *= £ bedroom O u r N e w L o c a tio n : 3 1 7 M .A .C . & weekends. Men and wom­ furnished R £ N T E D ies paid. W e ’ll h a n d y o u t h e s a m e l i n e in E u r o p e . 81» per m oiiui iv 4-6791 5-10/17 en. $350 part time monthly ' Any Volkswagen you see in our showroom can be waiting for you in Europe. models, there ore a dozen Volkswagens to choose from. guarantee If you m«et our requirements. Students aqd E A S T S ID E : Furnished one bedroom S PI ¥l W e 'll take care of purchase. Insurance. Registration. Licensing: Delivery. All the red (And over 5,000 places in Europe to have them serviced.) teachers: $800 full time, tele- phone: 484-5671___________ apartm ent. 81 » per month. Nine month lease. Adulte only. Phone 486 2 1 », 337-7151; or »1-5 3». 6 1 0 /8 ■O HamÑmnan Q B S H D l 00H B Q naa tape. And since you'll probably want to bring it After you pick out the one you want to pick up, pick out the place you want to pick it up ACROSS 1. Social order 27. Marbles 28. Moist M m □ ass aara Students. . choice apartments Ba back with you (VWs save you money on gas in. Any one of over 40 cities in 15 countries. 29. Diver’s gear 6. Absconded and oil wherever you drive them) w e ’ll give you the details on that, too. Then throw aw ay your timetables. You'll see Europe the way it should be seen. At 10. Asecond time 11. Tidal wave 30. Jap. outcast 31. Office note Rson O Tonaia ata Counting sunroof, convertible, and camper your own speed. RATES-STJWTINfi AT $175 13. Prosecuting 14. Hoof 16. Lamprey 32. Corral 35. Arcaded gallery UA s T□as Phil Gordon’s Inc., 2924 E, Grand River, Lansing 484-2552 I want to see Europe at my own speed. Please send me your illustratei brochure and price list. 3,6,9 monthleases available 17. Ill-mannered 19. Elastic fluid 20. Church service 37. Well done 39. Respond 40. Nocturnal lemur DOWN 4. Stannum * s i4 im Î. N am e _____________ __ __ _______________________________________ _________________________ Address_________________ !________________________________________________________________ City----------------------------------------- t ______________ State_______________Zip § ______________ NOLASTM ONTHRENTREQUIRED N o r t h w ln d h a * m o r e p a r k in g spaces p e r a p a r t m e n t 21. Sponsorship 22. Reason 25. Peace goddess 26.Fanon 41. Gypsy gentlemen 42. Matutinal 1. Lawyer's concern 2. Malaria 5. Etch 6. Family quarrels 7. Country road 3. Cruise 8. Cake rr si than any o t h e r a p a r t m e n t c o m p le x . A D D IT IO N A L N O R T H W IN D F E A T U R E S i 2 3 4 5 10 1 lo 7 II 0 9 12 1 ingredient 9. Coarse jute rug 12. Tennyson •Air Conditioning «Wall to Wall Carpeting 13 14 If character Dishwashers m2 Bedrooms b Etch Apt. i7 » $ A 15. Dolts Garbage Disposals s Beautiful Front Lawn on River Ife % % 18. Application Scenic Front Lswn Privacy w. % % 20 21 20. Protein food 21. Series of years Phil Gordon’s . 11 23 29 26 % 27 2F 22. Mannequin 23. Eloquent speaker 24. Songbird ¿9 2924 E. GRANDRIVER 28 io 31 %%% 32 33 3 H 25. Dishonorable 27. Goal if Vo % I? 38 29. Accomplish­ ments % LANSING 484-2552 % & É HO 31. Vermin 32. Young salmon % 41 1 HI 33. Calamitous 34. Inquisitive 36.Joyous 38. Kiwi W ed n esd a y , O c to b e r 1 6 , 1968 I l f M ichigan State N e w s, E a st L a n sin g , M ich ig a n F o r S a le SUNG E R L AND DRUM TR A P -b ass » a rt, tom-tom, floor tom-tom, F o r S a le ST. B ER N A R D - two years. Fem ale. $175 or reasonable offer. Registered. ¡¡Who makes better drivers? id© u w m hi-hat, two cym bals and accessor­ 627-7110. 610/17 ies for *2 » C all »14114 4-10,16 f 5 , V V' KINGSTON E L E C T R IC ’_* " . i 4¿■>'4 am- «MphiU r < v m n i i t A r e ■v* r v 9 r * a t f M w> ReaaM M la « 4 V V I I i M v I V I Y T < 1 1 1 APACRfc » * » ' Tw o btti- 4 7 7 8 % ™ /' 616/17 rooms, carpeted, stove, refrig erato r, disposal Excellent condition. On lot DIAMOND BA R G A IN : WeddiM and in King A rthur's Court. M ust se ll, By RON INGRAM in fatal accidents, he added, men and 26.8 per cent for the earlier age. Men begin having i engagement ring aeti Save fifty im m ediately. $2,200. Phone 372- State News Staff Writer but five men were fatalities. women. trouble at 18; the little lady per cent or more. Large ((lectio n 81 ». 4-10/18 There will be Green Splash Tryout* at 6:30 tonight in the The computer has resolved The East Lansing figures State-wide, the records of not until age 20. of plain and fancy diamonds « 6 After age 23, records seem | $150. W ILOOX SECOND HAND Womens’ I.M. Bldg. for those interested in syncronized one aspect in the battle of the were 73.2 per cent men begin deterioratine at an B A RG A IN ! “ M UST S E L L !” 2-bed­ to get better for both sexes, STO R E. 500 E . M ichigan. 4*64391 room m obile home In top condition! swimming. sexes at last: Who are the C A ll set for im m ediate possession on The Student Coalition for Humphrey-Muskie will hold a better drivers, men or women? but the men never become as the lot. F irs t $3,500 takes it! Bank meeting at 7:15 tonight in the Golden Room at the Union. Women, says the computer good as the women. * F E N D E R STR A TO C A STER , Vox Buck­ ingham, excellent condition. C all term s. C all B A R R Y K IN S K E , 393- Robert Harris, national Vice President of the Student Coalition at the Michigan Department of 2714 or 37611», SIMON R E A L A study similar to that done | after 5 p.m . 355-6217. 610/19 ESTA TE. 610/18 for Humphrey-Muskie will be the speaker. State. In a recent study of in Michigan was carried out in £ * * * F E N D E R S U P E R reverb, 2 .channels': 27,662 drivers, a sampling New York in 1964. The re- $; There wilt be a meeting of the Independent Majority at 7 from a cross-section of “A” 4 speakers. Harmony guitar-hollow Lost & F8und tonight in 39 Union. All interested people are invited to attend. suits were the same with the body, double pick-up. Vibrato. E le c ­ * * ♦ file drivers, 7 of 10 women women coming out far ahead tro Voice m ike and stand. 337- LO ST B LA C K prescription sungla s. drivers were found to have 7393. . 610/19 es and case. Reward offered. 356 The Food and Nutrition Club is sponsoring a show featuring of the men. * 4M1. 610/16 perfect driving records while Dr. Pedrey, gourmet and chef, at 7:30 tonight at 102 Home less than 5 of 10 men could The study did put forth two? BLO N D E W IG. 100 per cent human hair. Long blonde fa ll, 100 per cent Economics bldg. boast such an achievement. reasons for the difference.? LO ST: Y ELLO W T IG E R cat. Answers * * * human h air. 499-»lS. 610/16 to Tom . In G lencairn area. Reward The computer probe involved First, the men constitute nearly *. 3569583. 3-10/16 There will be an open meeting of Alpha Phi Sigma at 7 both accident and violation re­ 60 per cent of the licensed? O V ER 25 years experience. O P TI­ tonight in 34 Union. Sheriff Kenneth L. Pradmore will speak cords ranging back through the drivers. Secondly, it was found*f* C AL DISCO UN T, 416 Tussing Build­ on “Education and Police.” M AN'S BROWN W A LLE T contains past six-year period, James that men drive more at peak? ing. Phone IV 2-4687. C-10/18 d rivers license, student ID draft • * * UOt . traffic periods when accidents ? card. C all M ike Gladwin 35653» M. Hare, Secretary of State T A P E R E C O R D E R , A rvin 4 track 610/18 Joe Hayden of the MEA Human Relations Commission said. are more likely to occur 66 stereo. Accessories. $100. »1- will speak to S.E.A. and all those interested in perception “Twenty-three seems the S. 8554. 610/18 LO ST: B LA C K and white fem ale cat at 7:30 tonight in the 5th floor faculty lounge in Erickson Hall. ■ * * * worst age for drivers of both to near Union. Reward. 351-3614. 3-10/18 6 W ATT 180 stereo tuner-am plifier, sexes,” Hare said. “At age Sansui 5000. Brand new. »1-5450. 610/18 P e rs o n a l The Freshman Home Economics Club will hold a meeting 23, only 19 in 100 male drivers at 7 tonight in 9 Home Ec Bldg. Mrs. Thelma Hansen from have accident and violation- the college of Home Economics will tell about her trip to the free records. On the other Sex symposium ■ to to to E SIN G ER SEW IN G m achine. (Late F R E E . . . A T h rillin g hour of beau­ International Federation of Home Economics in Bristol, to m odel). Mends, darns, zig zags, ty. Fo r appointment c a ll 484-4519. hand, 60 of each 100 female to etc. One year guarantee. $».08 or M E R L E NORMAN CO SM ETICS STU­ England. “set the top limit that can be mittee. to DIO . 18» E a st M ichigan. C-10/17 * * • drivers can boast perfect re­ (continued from page one) Various groups are conducting $4.09 per month. D EN N IS D IS T R I­ learned on any campus.” “We research on the visiting speaker: BU TIN G COM PANY. 316 North Cedar, cords at 23.” law passed this summer." The American Chemical Society, Student Affiliates will hold opposite C ity M arket. Phone 482-2677. U R G EN T! N E E D two non-student a meeting and election at 7:30 tonight in 136 Chemistry Bldg. Over-all this means 42.5 per This public act, Bill No. 925, must educate the professors, and writing position papers oi C tickets for Notre Dame-MSU game. cent of those involved in ac­ approved by Gov. Romney, al­ too,” he added. specific questions which th 3567953. 3-10/18 D. G. Farnum, Associate Professor of Chemistry, MSU, will cidents were women and 57.5 lows schools to “engage compe­ Ward felt that many of the group will send to the speakers. £ D R Y FIREW O O D by the cord. W ill speak on Research and Career Opportunities in Organic Chem­ per cent were men. deliver. M aple, oak, cherry, beech- “T H E RU SH ” is on . . . Some dates tent instructors and provide fa­ speakers w e r e enthusiastic The speaker will thus be arc istry. The state-wide percentage cilities and equipment for in­ about the colloquy because they swering specific questions Grand R iv e r, Lansing. Tom & Je rry ’s EA S T LA N SIN G : Attention F ra te r­ | Junk Em porium . 1-10/16 nities, Sororities. Excellen t, close- 8861. c tive than if a student went after in property for future building. Two s h o r te n It . T r y a t a n - f | L E A R J E T stereo tape players for properties: large home. One is a 7 “Before we can proceed we the book himself. B A R B I M E L. T y p ii« , m ultilithing. must have communication Chapin has received letters gy p i z z a o r one o f o u r j your car and home. From 7 9 .« unit apartment could be used as No job too large or too sm all. up. On d iip lay at M AIN ELEC T R O N ­ is for the present. Close to other from the board,” he said. “We from both the Graduate English g r e a t s a n d w ic h e s . A ll 5 Block off campus. 333-33». C IC S, 55» South Pennsylvania. C new Greek houses. CaU Ted Stand­ hope that it will give us parti­ Club and the Graduate History d e l i v e r e d in s t a n t l y at ; HAPPY fast 372-3420 or M argaret Nerad, SEW IN G M ACH IN E clearance sale. Realtor, 351-7722. - 3-10/18 TER M P A P E R S , theses. Corona elec­ cular directions for our study.” Club requesting that the stacks no e x t r a co st. tric elite. C all 332-85». C-10/17 . Brand new portables, « 9 .» , $ 5 .» Should the trustees approve a be closed immediately. per month. Large selection of re­ E A S T LA N SIN G : 404 Northlawn. Large joint faculty-ASMSU-adminis- Chapin has said that the conditioned used m achines. Singers, four bedroom, two story. Spacious DONNA BOHANNON: Professions 1 typist. Term papers, theses, IBM tration committee to propose paging system of undergrad­ W hites, N ecchls, New Home and Uving and dining rooms. Den or fam ­ "m any o th ers." $18.» to $39.96. ily room, Kitchen 18’ x 18’ 6” . seiectrlc. 36676». 1610/16 a measure to substitute for the uates getting books is being Term s. EDW ARDS D IS TR IB U TIN G Finished recreation room with bar. suspension rule, the Faculty used now as well as having the HOUR COM PANY, 1115 North Washington. Many features which make this home FA ST S E R V IC E : very careful, term Committee will probably form stacks open and is working 4868448. C-10/17 comfortable for gracious Uving. papers, etc. 40c page. 355-80». CaU D ick Porter IV 6 7 2 » or 1-10/16 a committee-of-the-whole to or­ fairly well. C O N A FLEX S U P ER cam era with case Home IV 6 5 8 » Porter R ealty Co. ganize and implement the Next Wednesday’s meeting 8 » . Exposure m eter $5. Tiltam ite 610/16 ANN BROW N: Typ ist and M ultilith, study, he said. will decide the issue. flash 85. SB filte r 83. Close-up lent offset printing. D issertations, the­ mord 83. CaU 482-78« between 6-8 p.m . E A S T LAN SIN G G LEN C A IflN A R E A : ses, m anuscripts, general typing. 4-10/18 A tru ly distinguished home in an IB M . 18 years experience. 336 A big 16" one Item ( exceptional residential area. Th is 8364. C Faculty wives welcome pizza for $2.50. KO DAK COLOR F ilm . Sizes, 1 » , 127, 620-99c Tw elve print ro ll processed --$2 90 w ith ad. M A R EK R E X A L L DRUG P R E SC R IP T IO N C E N T E R at 9V$ room, 4 bedroom, home has every extra expected in an execu­ tive quaUty home. A ll rooms large. Two fireplaces. Separate breakfast M A R ILYN C A R R : Legal secretary. E le c tric typew riter. A fter 5 :» p.m . and weekends 3662854. 1 Pick-up newcomers at reception 8 DORM DELrONLY V A R S IT Y 3 3 2 - 751 Frandor. New Low er Everyday D is­ room. Two ear attached garage. C ali­ and delivery. C count P ric e s. C-10/17 fornia porch overlooking large patio Now that the University is ecutive Board of the Faculty w ith brick barbeque. A buy at $47,5». in session, wives of the Folk Club will also be greeting C A L L 3 3 2 -6 5 1 7 ADDIN G M A C H IN E: 18(7 Sm ith Coro­ CaU D ick P o rter, Porter R ealty Co., W a n te d ne, 10 hey e le ctric. CaU 484-3 t-3875. B IC Y C L E S A LES and service. Also 610/17 IV 6 7 2 » or home IV 6 5 9 » . B A IL E Y SCHO O L. 5 » Du m ind Sev­ en roam -four twin size bedroom*. 610/1« BLOOD DONORS neaded. $ 7 .» for aU positive, A negative, B negative and A B negative $10.00. O negative, faculty will welcome wives in Newcomers Club with a fall reception and tea from 1:30 guests. Co-chairmen for the recep-, tion with its theme of "Halls 10 p .m . VARSITY used E A S T LAN SIN G C Y C L E , 1115 $12.». M ichigan Community Blood to 3 p.m. Friday in the Union of Ivy” are Mrs. William T. E . Grand R ive r CaU 331-83». Ç Large Uving and form al dining rooms. Bath and one h alf. Two car attached Center, 5071* E a st Grand R iv e r, E a st Ballroom. Magee and Mrs. Edward C. fe a tu r in g Animals garage. Many extras. $ » ,0 U . CaU La M ing, above the new Campus All faculty wives who attend Miller. D ick Po rter, Porter R ealty Com­ Bock Store. Hours: 0 a.m . • 3 :» will have the opportunity of Members and newcomers may pany IV 6 7 2 » or home IV 6 5 6 » . p.m . Monday, Tuesday and F rid a y ; B E A G L E P U P S - s ix weeks old. Wednesday and Thursdsy, 12 p.m .- signing up for various interest use the nursery provided in th e R eal cute. $10 each. 331-44». 610/16 610/M • ;» p .m . 337-71». C groups sponsored by the Fac­ the Fireside Room of People’s ulty Folk Club. Church between 1:15 and 3:15 N O A H 'S A R K P E T S S e rv ic e Heading the receiving line p.m. There is a fee of 75 cents H O LE IN O N E) Maybe not, but chedt SUMMERS STUFFED ANIMALS IN SU R A N C E: AU TO M O BILE - Motor- today's C lassified Ads for good buys will be Mrs. John Hannah and for this service and reser­ 7 cle CaU SPA R TA N , 487-50». Ingolf clubs! representing the Board of vations must be made by to­ by Fable Monthly paym ents. GO G R E E N . O Trustees will be Mrs. Don night to Mrs. Norton Strommen C A R P E T W AN TED . Sm all, cheap. 356 223 Ann St., E. Lansing 63 ». Abundant Autumn is upon uk! Stevens and Mrs. Kenneth at 351-5492 or Mrs. Ralph Get A L L YO U P A Y FO R ! Check best Next to Discount Records rental buys in today’s C lassified Ads. 610/17 Thompson. Members of the Ex- Hepp at 351-4408. W ed n esd a y , O c to b e r 16, 1968 j2 M ichigan State N ew s, E a st L a n sin g , M ich ig a n C o u r t g r a n t s W a lla c e p la c e ■ o n Al__ I O h io .A_ L1.L AU. I__ U b a llo t in effect, «iíH m ao um written new nrooi. presi­ hp he miffht might H flVC bM have VI :inclined to been WASHINGTON (AP)- tially uoesual on both nupunnu P O L L Y ANNA 1 LB. C R A C K E D «* L lH lO ilU lin CHEESE W HEATDREAD 5 0KI t countryfresh P O L L Y ANNA J E L L Y F IL L E D g je w IIAI C 9 II11 T P IN T BISMAIKS 6 - 43‘ “ Lf * H,LF GEIA CTN. P O L L Y ANNA PUM PKINPIE Joz8: 59‘ ESKIMO PIES PACK OATM EALCOOKIES 49* Z FLl nF. Q W DOWNY f l a k e 0Z$ P O L L Y ANNA V A R IE T Y PACK # lltU fc « I f n i r L L w W PKGS. ^ DONUTS j a 0 C0R 4 9 « J E N O 'S F R O Z E N _ -V PIZZA R O L L S - rwtt efU s 3 Al l fla v o r s - p i l l s b u r y 'j M IX OR M A T C H - F R O Z E N KEEBLER DELUXE SPARTAN CUT CORN 1LB GRAHAMS CUT GREEN BEANS - 1 LB. 6 OZ. GREEN PEAS - 1 LB. 8 OZ. FUDGESTRIPE 't°2 MIXED VEGETABLES ~ 1 LB. 4 OZ. PENGUINS 15” Y o u r C h o ic e fc