le a d Only 17 states and the D istrict o f WASHINGTON (AP) - H ubert H. Oklahoma, Florida, Colorado, Kansas, Columbia instruct their electors to do so. Humphrey Inched ahead o f Richard M. Idaho, Tennessee, Wyoming, Virginia, Because m ost electors are party Delaware, New Hampshire, and South Nixon Tuesday in popular votes but functionaries they generally stick with trailed in the crucial electoral count in Carolina. This gave Nixon 110. Humphrey won the electoral votes of the man in whose name they were the race for th e presidency. elected. But they can decide between Although Republican Nixon clung to a the District o f Columbia, Connecticut, election day and the day the college votes lead In electoral votes in states already Minnesota, Rhode Island, West Virginia, to cast their ballots for som eone else — w on, Humphrey showed a lead in states Maine, and Massachusetts - a total o f 50. still to be decided. Thus their race appeared headed for a M ore election co verag e, page 2 photo finish, with third running George C. Wallace complicating the picture. even, if they wish, for som eone w ho is As o f 1 :1 5 a .m . C o lu m b ia Wallace won in Alabama, Mississippi, Georgia, and Louisiana for a total o f 39. n o t running. Broadcasting System figures, with 58 per Therefore if no candidate has an cent o f the popular vote in, show CBS gave Humphrey 143 electoral votes, Nixon 164, and Wallace 39. electoral m ajority — switching o f loyalties Humphrey and Nixon in a virtual tie with by some electors in the n ex t six weeks 42 per cent o f the -vote each with It will take a 270 vote m ajority o f the electoral college to select the winner. could create a majority for one man — Humphrey holding a slight edge o f and n o t necessarily for the man with the 18,699,338 to 18,471,790 for Nixon. Wallace’s nationwide popular vote total was running about 16 per cent, largest popular vote. Third party candidate Wallace w ith Wallace has indicated publicly he 6,587,742 votes has 16 per cent o f the more than had been forecasted by the pollsters. would be willing to make som e sort of vote. deal with either Nixon or Hum phrey for Meanwhile Democrats, despite tough If none o f the candidates reaches th at Republican challenges appeared assured magic mark the contest could be throw n his electoral votes, an offer both the o f continued control in the 91st Congress into the House o f Representatives. other candidates have rejected. — b u t w ith narrowed margins. Although the electors normally cast According to the Associated Press, their ballots for their state’s winner, m ost H ow ever, Harvard professor Paul Nixon captured th e electoral votes in don’t have to. F r e u n d , a le a d in g a u th o rity on H. Humphrey Kentucky, V erm ont, Indiana, Nebraska, Constitutional law, said this w eek th at a ninety year old law could prevent Wallace P re s id e n tia l c o n te n d e r s H u b e r t H . electors from switching. H u m p h re y a n d R ic h a rd M. N ix o n The 1878 law, Freund said, places w e re ru n n in g p r e tty m u c h n eck a n d with Congress “ the final say w hether to neck e a rly th is m o rn in g , W e d n e s d a y honor an electoral vote cast for a r e m in is c e n t o f th e T ru m a n -D e w e y ra c e in 1 9 4 8 . (Please turn to page 131 M IC H IG A N U N IV E R S IT Y STA TE STAT Humphrey wins in Michigan DETROIT (UPI) — Democrat Hubert H. Hum phrey rode the party loyalty of dates back to 1956. Nixon lost the state to John F. Kennedy by 66,841 votes in white Democrats and solid black support 1960. The outcom e, which was predicted by to victory in Michigan’s presidential pollsters on the basis of late developing balloting Tuesday. blue collar defections from the Wallace lead The midnight vote on statew ide race camp, cast a political pall on th e ballot in the Michigan election is: popularity of Gov. Romney. President 2071 o f 5576 precincts: Rom ney, himself a candidate for th e Humphrey 665,340; Nixon 553,641; D e m o c r a t s H u f f , M a r t i n GOP nom ination last February, had put Wallace 128,999. his ’’coattail pow er” on th e line by The state’s 21 electoral votes were stum ping hard for the Republican ticket considered by Humphrey strategists to be in this non-gubernatorial year. vital for his drive for the White House. Political observers had said throughout H um phrey, who likened himself to the the campaign th a t Rom ney’s popularity B o a r d o f T r u s t e e s r a c e D etroit Tigers’ World Series comeback, had diminished because of his abortive to o k an early lead which held steady as campaign for president and then for vice the returns m ounted. president a t th e national convention. Diehl, who have 83,000 and 82,QOO votes T reasurer, had threatened that integrity E rnst is a 1948 graduate of MSU who Hum phrey, a self described underdog By JIM SCHAEFER respectively. seriously. has served as a m em ber of the Executive With m ore than 30 per cent o f the at the start of the presidential race in State News Staff Writer The election o f the tw o Democrats A form er tru stee and chairm an of the Board of the MSU Alumni Assn. vote in, the Vice President had 49 per Michigan, gained his trium ph with would retain the five to three majority Board, Huff had been also defeated in the In the past, he has been a m em ber of cent, com pared w ith 42 per cent for vote-getting power in the state’s big D em ocratic candidates for the MSU the Democrats currently hold on the 1966 election. the MSU Alumni Council, the MSU Ath­ Republican Richard M. Nixon and 9 per industrial cities. This was th e same way board o f Trustees, Dr. Blanche Martin board. Currently the executive director of the letic Council, the MSU Advisory Com­ cent for American Independent Party th at Kennedy squeezed past Nixon eight and Warren Huff, appeared to be headed During their campaign, both Huff and National Association of the P a rtn e rs fo'- m ittee to the basic college and the Public candidate George C. Wallace. years ago. for victory w ith approxim ately 11 per M artin had claim ed that the “ integrity Alliance, Huff has worked in both na­ Relations Com m ittee for Oakland Uni­ H um phrey’s victory continued a string cent o f th e vote in. of Democratic successes in Michigan that (Please turn to page 13) of the U niversity" had to re-established by tional and state adm inistrative posts. versity. M artin, w ith 92,000 votes, and Huff, He has owned and operated two farm s their election. They charged that the con­ w ith 91,500 votes were taking a in Washtenaw County, a ranch in Iosco flict of interest controversy, including c o m m a n d in g lead over Republican and Ogemaw, and has been vice chair­ in a guilty judgm ent against the MSU candidates Richard Ernst and David m an of the Washtenaw County section of tge Michigan Livestock Exchange. M artin, 31, is the second black man Despite losses Break out your mugs, to run for the trustee post. He earned his Doctor of Dental Surgery just last year. D e m o c r a t s w in c o n t r o An outstanding football player for MSU in 1956-59, he was named to the East Lansing is wet! All-American football team in 1957 and in o f U .S . S e n a t e , H o u s e 1958 was named captain of that group. After his graduation in 1959, he spent no for Proposal E-9. All eleven precincts another four years working on his MA By G. J. WOJCHIHOSKY were counted. State News Staff W riter Proposition E-6 perm its "th e sale of a t MSU. E rnst, a p artner in a class ring firm , another possible challenge to his seating For the first tim e since the city charter alcoholic beverages in certain places,” Democratic seats w ith a total of 218 and Diehl, a 2,000 acre cash crop farm er W A S H IN G T O N (A P ) - The in th e new Congress. was w ritten in 1907, liquor can legally he hotels and m otels of m ore than fifty needed for a m ajority. Republicans captured governorships in from Dansville, had campaigned the last Democrats kept control o f the Senate In th e house which may have to pick sold in E ast Lansing rooms, clubs, restau ran ts for m ore than four months against the partisan attacks despite losses in several states Tuesday th e President if neither Humphrey or Indiana and Verm ont and were leading in Proposals to amend the Prohibition fifty diners and in package stores. evident betwp.en trustees in recent years -and headed for continued control o f the Nixon win a m ajority of the electoral efforts to o u st Democrats in Iowa and ................. G V Proposition E-9 asks w hether or not the and against the sliding scale tuition sys­ House. vote, it appeared there would be little New Hampshire. 2 to 1 margin. As or 12 20 this m orning sale of spirits "in addition to beer and tem approved 5-3 by the tru stees in 1967 Returns on the 435 House elections the totals were 6,666 yes and 3,682 no wine shall be perm itted for consumption change in the lineup which now favors Diehl, who is currently chairm an of the sh o w ed Democrats elected in 149 the Democrats. for Proposal E-6 and 6,576 yes and 3,707 on the prem ises within the city ” under districts and leading in 78 districts, 12 of provisions of the first proposal. board a t Lansing Community College and on the Ingham County Interm ediate which were formerly Republiean. The When th e House elects a President, however, th e states vote as units, each Scodeller leads GOP leads In 1958 the first a ttem p t to change the charter was a m a tte r of legal procedure, School Board, has indicated he may re­ sign those posts to prevent any possible Democrats had occupied 245 seats w ith 2 vacancies. getting one vote, and the big question is how the states carried by third party when the M arble School D istrict was annexed by the city. According to state conflicts. Diehl, 49, was a co-captain of the 1938 Republicans were elected in 94 districts and leading in 74 including 8 candidate Wallace would vote. Democrats retained control of the while Helma, in State, law, when an area th at perm its the sale of liquor is annexed by a " d ry " city, a football team . He was graduated in 1939 f o r m e r ly Democratic districts. The R e p u b lic a n s w o n th r e e formerly Senate in Tuesday’s voting, winning eleven contests to go with their 40 City-wide election m ust be held to deter­ m ine whether the whole area will be with a BA in agricultural economics. holdover seats. Republicans made gains Preadmore win U.S. House “ w et” or “ dry." In 1962 a group of citizens supported by and had m ore in prospects. The Republicans took seats away from Democrats in M aryland, Florida and By LARRY LEE the Chamber of Com m erce suceeded in Arizona and led in Pennsylvania, Ohio S tate News Staff Writer By RON INGRAM placing the question on the ballot again. State News Staff Writer and Oklahoma. An extensive "d ry " cam paign won its But the Democrats, with a big M ajo r c o u n ty offices a t latest Local Republican candidates for seats point. The issue was again defeated majority holding over from the 90th ta b u la tio n showed Ingham C ounty in th e state and U.S. House were leading nearly two to one by a vote of 4924-no Congress, were able to win control again. fo llo w in g th e general Republican in th e balloting as o f midnight. and 2999-yes. sentiment. The issue, brought to a third vote be­ The Republican Senate victors were For Prosecuting A ttorney, R aym ond In th e national race, Charles E. cause of the proposed $8 million hotel- Charles Mathias in Maryland and Edward L. Scodeller took an early lead over his Chamberlain, Republican incum bent, was apartm ent complex, was the m ajor ques­ Gurney in Florida. Mathias defeated Sen. Democratic opponent, James J. Weed. leading James A. Harrison, Democrat, tion outside of the presidential elections Daniel B. Brewster and Gum ey beat With a few returns from Lansing and 8 o f with 62,000 votes to Harrison’s 38,000 in on the E ast Lansing ballot this year. form er Gov. Leroy Collins for the Senate 11 East Lansing precincts reporting, th e Sixth Congressional District. The city council and the Cham ber of seat vacated by Sen. George A. Smathers. Scodeller lead 10,991 to Weed’s 7,439. Cham berlain is a m em ber of the House Republican Senatorial candidates led Commerce both supported the vote this Armed Services C om m ittee ;ind the in Pennsylvania. Indiana a id < 'l'ah >ma. he.n *h.'\ learned ut the proposed I r 35 a .:- appointed io the posi­ House Adm inistration Conjimtt»** *dt^4toand. , ^ facilities tto n m ppt m eet " ’ i 'sta rt- W »V V * -, . Proposed as a constitutional state of any of its political sub- would not have granted direct sew ers in 210' com m unities pre- Pooled w lth-federal and loot! provide a graduated income tax on the ballot last night. am endm ent, the m easure divisions.” authority to local governm ents sently either without facilties, funds and som e excess park fee would have perm itted the leg­ Placed on the ballot by a to levy such a tax. and to improve sewage tre a t­ revenues, the m easure will pro­ * The defeat of the proposal, which would have replaced the islature to enact a graduated two-thirds vote of both houses Passage of the am endm ent m ent facilities in 126 other vide some $168.6 million al­ present flat-rate system , m eans ra te income tax, now specifi­ of the legislature in 1967, the would also not have m eant communities whose disposal located to the State parks (40.8 th at hopes of those eyeing al­ cally forbidden by the 1963 m easure had strong support th at Michigan would have plants are listed as inadequate m illion), fisheries ($17.7 m il­ location of state funds—includ­ Michigan Constitution. from the D em ocratic party and autom atically had the grad­ or sub-standard. lion), wildlife conservation I t read: “ An income tax a t some Republicans. uated tax, but m erely gave the The 12-year program would ($7.5 m illion), forest recreation ing MSU-would not m aterial- legislature the authority to do end the fouling of some 900 ($4 m illion), and in grants to so itself or delegate the power miles of Michigan w aterw ays local governm ents ($30 m il­ to local units of government. by bringing the w ater of every lion). The two approved m easures community in Michigan up to D e m s l e a d in c o n t e s t w ere the bond proposals on state w ater quality standards. w ater pollution and recrea ­ tion facilities. the Total cost of repaym ent of bonds is estim ated a t ap­ Repayable from the general funds, the bonds would prob­ ably be repaid in 30 years a t an average debt cost of $5.6 m il­ Proposal No. 3, the largest proximately $564 million, $18.8 fo r e d u c a tio n p o s ts of the two bond proposals on million a year. the Nove. 5 ballot, will autho­ rize the state to sell $335 m il­ Proposal No. 4, the “ Quality lion, totaling $168 for the entire period. The two m easures defeated Mock scuffle lion in general obligation Recreation” m easure, will concerned a review of a move D irector of Federal and State sistan t Prosecuting Attorney of bonds to clean up Michigan’s authorize the state to sell $100 A p o l i c e m a n and a d r a f t c a r d b u r n e r , p o r t r a y e d by By RON INGRAM to stay on Daylight Savings Relations, Grand Rapids Pub­ Ingham County, and served in rivers, lakes and stream s by million in general obligation two SDS m e m b e r s , s c u f f l e a m i d w hip and m a c e a s S tate News Staff Writer Tim e, and a constitutional lic Schools. He has been a the Michigan Legislature, 1951- 1980. bonds to finance a seven year am endm ent perm itting legis- p a r t o f T u e s d a y 's m o c k e l e c t i o n a c t i v i t i e s . sta te senator and the chair­ 52. The money will be used to program for the expansion and In t h e ra c e f o r the S t a te N e w s p h oto by M ike M a r h a n k a m an of the Senate Education Chester, New Politics, has pay the sta te 's share of a $568 im provem ent of the sta te ’s (Please turn to page 13) e d u c a t i o n a l b o a r d th e Democrats were leading at Comm ittee. had little experience in the m idnight in th e contest for the N ederlander, a Democrat, is field of politics. He believes University o f Michigan and a lawyer and a U-M graduate. tha't students should have the Wayne State. F o r' th e U o f M board o f lander T heatrical Corp., own­ He is vice president of Neder­ right to control their personal lives as well as having power SDS RALLY regents R obert Nederlander e rs of the Fisher Theatre in in policy making areas. and Gerald Dunn, Democrats, D etroit. Copi, New Politics, is a stu­ were leading with 83,000 and M atthaei is a U-M graduate 81,000 votes respectively over and an incum bent Republican Republicans Fred M atthaei Jr. regent. He is a trustee of the and Lawrence Lindemer, who Cranbrook Institute of Science, dent in the School of Education a t U-M. Copi proposes a graduated in­ com e basis for tuition because P u e r t o R ic a n b l a s t s e l e c t i o n s have 72,000 votes each. a D irector of the Bank of the By CHRIS MEAD the U.S. Army and 25 Puerto m ean the sam e thing, Mercez erated from the bonds ot form al­ enem y doesn’t have--compassion he feels that U-M is “ a school In th e race for th e WSU Commonwealth, and president for the sons and daughters of State News Staff W riter Rican students charged with a r­ said, “ With Humphrey or Nix- ity and the speaker’s m ike was and patience. Our patience is board o f governors, Democrats of M anagement and Capital the rich .” All is not well in Americaville. son and intent to incite a riot on--it make no difference.” thrown open to the students. running out," he said, “ but we George Edwards and Augustus Co. Wayne Board of Governors While millions of voters across will come up for trial Nov. 12 "W e can’t go to Vietnam to The produce of MSU is “ death m ust not run out of com passion.” Calloway were leading by Lindem er, a Republican, is the nation entered that little and need help. kill exploited people like us,” and destruction, a CIA product" Summing the whole thing up, Calloway, a D em ocrat, is 8 4 ,6 0 0 and 83,200 votes currently a partner in a Lan­ the director of community af­ booth ostensibly to participate The Puerto Rican national, he said. someone charged. “ We m ust in­ an SDS m em ber said, “ Sure, respectively. sing law firm . He is a graduate in democracy, a couple hun­ speaking in broken English, Mercez said that concerned th ere’re some good things about fairs for Michigan Bell Tele­ stitute guerilla w arfare in the of U-M. He has been the Re­ dred people gathered a t the SDS- said that the U.S. governm ent A m ericans m ay help the Puertc this school-but th e re ’s some Dunn, a D em ocrat and a phone Co. and is a board m em ­ classroom .” publican State Chairman, As- sponsored anti-election rally in coerces Puerto Rican men to R icans by joining in a fight of goddam shitty things, too. L et's U-M graduate, is currently the ber of the D etroit NAACP. "P eople belong in the streets, Edward, a D em ocrat and a front of the Auditorium Tuesday. fight in .Vietnam and therefore solidarity against im perialism , not on cam pus,” someone else go home and eat, I ’m hungry.” WSU graduate, is an attorney Student dissatisfaction and to exploit another poor coun­ “ the common enemy of hum ani­ suggested. “ We should be at The hour-and-a-half rally was with the Defenders Office of frustration m anifested itself try. ty” the state capitol or a t Washing­ peaceful, alm ost uneventful. Detroit. He has served in the in many ways: "The elections are “ We Puerto Ricans can under­ “ Its the sam e struggle of Che ton and Michigan (stre e ts).” An occasional U niversity police The State News, the student newspaper at Michigan State University, is P eace Corps in Bonjongo, W. a hoax,” SDS cried. “ We (cops) stand what an exploited country G uevarra, its the sam e struggle “ Cops are the enem y,” anoth­ c ar cruised by and a series of published every class day throughout the year with special Welcome Week a ren ’t all sons of bitches,” a is,” Mercez said. of all the revolutionaries of the cam pus buses plowed through and Orientation issues in June and September. Subscription rates are $14 Cameroon, W. Africa. er generalized. per year Keydel is a Republican and student in police adm inistration He explained th at Puerto Ri­ w orld,” he said. A portly leftist em phatically the crowd but there w ere no the publisher of the Detroit proclaimed. cans are not against the Ameri­ From then on, the rally was lib said, “ We have one thing the confrontations. Member Associated Press, United Press International, Inland Daily Press Abend Post and is managing Florencio Mercez, a m em ber can people, but are againstr Association, Associated Collegiate Press, Michigan Press Association, Mich­ of the United Federation for American capitalism and im per­ igan Collegiate Press Association, United States Student Press Association. p artner of the Household Paper Products Co. He is also a m em ­ Puerto Rican Independence, ialism. Voters protest system’ Second class postage paid a t East Lansing, Michigan. headed the rally by charging “ We don’t w ant to be defend­ ber of the WSU Advisory Editorial and business offices a t 347 Student Services Building, Michigan that Puerto Rican elections as ed by the United S tates A rm y,” Board. State University, East Lansing, Michigan. well as American elections Mercez said, “ we w ant to be de­ Raviolo, a Republican, is a “ mean nothing." fended FROM the United States Phones: WSU graduate. He is a m an­ Editorial..................................................................................................... S M B * Mercez is currently on a speak­ Army.” agem ent consultant, engineer Classified Advertising ...................................................................... 356-OS6 Display Advertising...................................................................................S53-M00 B usiness-C irculation.............................................................................. 355-3447 P h o t o g r a p h ic ...................................................................................................................................3 S M S U and business executive. He is also a m em ber of the Society of Automotive E ngineers and ing tour in behalf of Puerto Ri­ can students who have partici­ pated in anti-A m erican demon­ Mercez said th at w hat the Puerto Rican people need m ost is their freedom, their in SDS mock election strations. He explained th at the independence and their nation­ By STAN MORGAN One was the regular election dent for a D em ocratic Society is referenced in “ Who’s Who trial of 85 Puerto Rican men al liberation. State News Staff W riter held in numerous booths and (SDS) sponsored election held in A m erican” and “ American who refused to be drafted into Charging th a t elections and There w ere two elections in numerous precincts around the in the field between the Aud­ Men of Science.” dem ocracy do not necessarily E a st Lansing Tuesday. city and the other was a Stu- itorium and the Red Cedar River. Called the Official Am erican F arce, the event was designed as a protest against the Amer­ “ I d o n ’t w a n t t o do yo u r ican dem ocratic society and the dem ocratic process. To “ vote” in the SDS election the participant went through a series of stations where he was inducted into the university, w a it fo r s o m e o n e c o n t a c t le n s e s le a d given the opportunity to become a m em ber of the ruling elite, kicked out of the university and given the o p p o rtu n ity to p ar­ ticipate in the fun things of American life, such as killing to d ie o r r e t ir e a d e a n life ? V ietnam ese peasants and beat­ ing "hippie an arch ists” and d raft card burners. To symbolize these actions SDS m em bers, dressed as po­ licemen, an American G.I. and in o rd e r to a V ietnam ese peasant, reg u lar­ ly acted out charades w here the peasant was shot and killed by the soldier, and the polipe beat b e c a u s e L e n s i n e is a n and harassed “ hippie an­ " is o to n ic ” so lu tio n , archist^." Communists, draft g e t p ro m o te d ? w h i c h m e a n s t h a t it ble n d s w ith the natural fluids of the eye. card b't.t i. ' and others who could not tollow the system . Those who participated w ere C le a n in g y o u r c o n t a c t s given cards which entitled them w ith Lensine retards th e to enter the various stages of W e're with you. b u ild u p of foreign d e ­ the game. Because at 1H we believe a prom otion is posits on th e lenses. And At the end of the gam e w ere som ething you earn. N ot som e kind o f hand-m e-dow n soaking your c o n ta c ts in the ballot boxes for the three Lensine b e tw e e n w e a r ­ m ajor candidates, w aste bas­ just to fill an em pty slot. ing periods assu res you kets with toilet covers. The T h a t's why you'll have to be a thinker. A doer. of proper lens hygiene. participants w ere told to vote An innovator. T h e kind of guy w ho prefers to be prom oted You get a free so aking with the cards they had left on his m erits alone. c a s e o n t h e b o t t o m of and prom ptly had those cards C o n tact len ses can be every bottle of Lensine. Y ou'll need talent. Lots o f im agination. heaven . . . or hell. They taken away and ripped up. m ay b e a w o n d e r of It has been de m o n s tra te d The high light of the election A nd plenty o f guts. T he guts to m ake decisions m odern scien ce but just tha t im proper storage be- was the arriv al of the Spiro and fight for y our ideas. tw e e n w e a rin g s m ay T. Agnew Apple Pie In the Sky th e s l i g h t e s t b it of dirt W e, in turn, will give you plenty of freedom u nd e r the lens c an m ake result in th e g ro w th of E lectoral Process Snow Job - a n d excitem ent, too. t h e m u n b e a r a b l e . In b a c t e r i a o n t h e le n s e s . M arching Band and three figures order to keep your c o n ­ This is a sure c a u s e of clad respectively in red, white So you'll learn a lot. (Vlayb.e even teach us a thing o r two.) eye irritation and in s o m e and blue robes topped by large tact lenses as c o m f o r ta ­ W hat s m ore, if you join us. b le a n d c o n v e n i e n t a s c a s e s c a n e n d a n g e r your cube shaped heads who represen­ y o u ’ll be part of a diversified com pany. O ne where they w ere d e sig n e d to be, vision. B a c te ria c a n n o t ted the three m ajor presidential you have to take ca re of g ro w in Lensine w h ic h is candidates Richard Nixon, Hu­ th ere’s plenty of action in farm equipm ent, them. s te r ile , s e l f - s a n i t i z i n g , bert Humphrey and George Wal­ m o to r trucks, construction and stcelm aking. an d antiseptic. lace or Tweedledee, Tweedledum U ntil n o w y o u n e e d e d A nd you'll also find we’re b anking heavily on research. Let your c o n ta c ts b e the and Tweedledum-dum. tw o or m o re s e p a r a te (W e've got som e pretty far-out ideas on com puters in trucks, c o n v e n i e n c e th e y w e r e At the end of the gam e was solutions to properly p r e ­ laser beam construction equipm ent, pare and maintain your m e a n t to be. G et s o m e a large facsim ile of a brick applications of solar energy and nuclear pow er.) c o n t a c t s . Y ou w o u l d Lensine, from the M urine wall. “ Wall Street-This is the think tha t caring for c o n ­ C om pany, Inc. wall you’re up against,” was As a result, w e're looking for test, design, m an u factu rin g w ritten on it in large letters. and research engineers. W e need acco u ntants and tac ts sho u ld b e as c o n ­ venient as w earing them . p roduction m anagem ent people. A nd we need sales people Then there was the gentlem an It c a n be with Lensine. for o u r w holesale and retail operations. who walked around trying to Lensine is th e one* lens sell a real collectors jtem , So talk to your cam pus placem ent officer about us. s o lu tio n for c o m p le te “ A copy of only 5 cents. H e'll fill you in on the jobs we w ant to fill. c o n ta c t lens care. J u s t a d ro p or tw o , before you The event was designed as W ith m inds, not bodies. a put-on and put-down of the insert your lens,coats an d lubricates it allow ing th e American society and on SDS INTERNATIONA L HARVESTER m em ber said afterw ards a t a An equal opportunity " t *'* lens to float more freely ¡n th e eye s fluids T ha t's sm all rally. "W e a re sick of u n s this country and ju st wanted to havp a little fun i i W ednesday, N ovem b er 6, 1968 3 Michigan State N ew s, E ast L an sing, M ichigan I •*** •m m NEW S Pickets battle counter protesterssaid they did not intend to dis- Vietnam war They w ere iden- tors becam e involved in. a some heads. About 175 college students r~~ Election Day pickets battled y» w .s ir f f iiT w y .. , «£ About through vV * 200 persons m arched downtown Newark the •* -aJM L Ieitisx T V —i Students for a D em ocratic Society, and the .. wi.|Ji in d e n ts , from a ^ com m unity ctfrftge,' taunted the paraders. Police w tiw ♦««.ville. M iune N^u.s^ In.. Wat« Rie ana" (ire (lì mìir, d'arre, vbfhcr thè straight D em ocratic ticket, waved signs j & c u ;- _ , / t .v re a d in g "C hoice???” Muskie said the streets, carrying signs object- m ilitant Black Panthers, quickly quelled the scuffling, on which he is the vice-presi­ dem onstration did not disturb A c a p s u le - s u m m a r y o f th e d a y ’s « v e n ts f r o m I the polls in Maine while ing to the election and the About 50 of the demonstra- swinging clubs and blodying dential candidate. him. dem onstrators chanted “ free o u r w ir e s e r v i c e s . 1 About 50 m em bers of the elections now." The incidents w ere among Black Student Union a t Clare­ mont Men’s College in Clare­ scattered m anifestations anti-w ar sentim ent, plus the claim by some that the choicé of LACK AGREEMENT mont. Calif., staged a sitdown strike in a street next to the of presidential candidates school, protesting the election I -v as “ a farce." Traffic was de- m ade the 1968 elections “ a JU ü lo “ J d id e v e r y th in g I c o u ld f o r N ix o n . ” fraud.” M ilitant anti-w ar groups and student radicals, in advance of S , V ie ts d e l a y p e a c e talks tourcd. Students for a D em ocratic Society held a rally at New / G o v. N e ls o n A . R o c k e fe lle r election day, had called for York City’s Union Square “ for dem onstrations “ in c ity tacks on North Vietnam of delegations which opened the Vietnam 's political future has people who don’t find a m ean­ PARIS (AP) - The United peace talks May 13-on m atters been settled. ingful choice in the electoral stre ets all over the country.” States was forced Tuesday to m utual de-escalation. However, their leaders had put off the opening session of This meant the presence of of procedure and agenda. Jorden process." About 500 youthful the NLF. and thus Thieu’s boy­ said the Am ericans already had dem onstrators were held be­ enlarged Vietnam peace talks begun talking about this in se­ "If the United States raises hind police barricades. cott. because of South V ietnam ’s re ­ cre t with Hanoi’s envoys. the question of cease-fire this An SDS rally in Washington “ We came here as an inde­ International N ew s Policy fusal to attend and a lack of agreem ent on procedures. The rebel Viet Cong chal­ pendent and equal participant in a four-party conference” Mrs. Mrs. Binh, who arriv ed here would signify forcing the people from Moscow Monday, seemed of South Vietnam to stop their across the street from the White House was broken up by Binh said to be staking out an independent struggle while half a million police, who arrested about 100 • Cambodia once m ore has refused to release a U.S. river boat and its crew of 12 it has held since it w as seized in Cambo­ a p p ro ve d lenged the Americans to pro­ ceed without the South Viet­ nam ese representatives, but The next stop is agreem ent between the United States and NLF view, however, when she American troops and some 100 told newsmen the front will not bases rem ain in South Viet­ d e m o n s tra to rs as they paraded, m ade speeches and dian w aters July 17. North Vietnamese-- the two discuss a cease-fire until South nam ," she said. shouted through loud-speakers. This becam e known Tuesday when the United N ations circu­ U.S. delegation sources m ade it lated copies of a letter from the Cambodian governm ent to the United States dated Oct. 19. The letter, in reply to two U.S. by faculty clear Washington would agree. The U.S. delegation can rep­ not m essages seeking the release of the LCU 1577 and its crew, The Men's Hall Association resent both the U.S. government was circulated a t the request of Cambodia. (MHA) mixed student group and the Saigon adm inistration,” % policy received approval from the National Liberation F ront • South Korean counterespionage comm and headquarters the Faculty Com m ittee on Stu­ (NLF) negotiator, Mrs. said Tuesday troops and police have killed th ree m em bers dent Affairs Tuesday. Nguyen Thi Binh, told a news of a North Korean commando group of thirty th at landed far No am endm ents to the policy conference. down the east coast Saturday and killed th ree villagers. One w ere made. “ T herefore,” she added, “ we South Korean soldier was slain. As the policy stands, all Uni­ are ready to m eet with only Lt. Gen. Yu Kun-Chang, d irector of the com m and, said the versity regulations concerning three delegations present”--the North Koreans assem bled the villagers near Ulchin, 130 chaperones and hour lim its for United States, North Vietnam m iles southeast of Seoul. Ulchin is about 135 m iles south of the mixed group events would be and the NLF. dem ilitarized zone between North and South Korea. suspended. Also, the individual The first enlarged four-sided m ajor governing groups will be m eeting was to have been held • A ustralia has advised the South Vietnam ese governm ent responsible for registration of Wednesday, a date advanced by that its best interests would be served by being represented the events according to proce­ President Johnson when he a t the enlarged P a ris peace talks, P rim e M inister John Gorton dures they establish. called a bomb halt last Thurs­ told P arliam en t Tuesday. Passage of the policy will put day. He added th at Saigon would represent the true and legiti­ m ore responsibility on the hall The refusal of South Viet­ m ate governm ent of South Vietnam. level, according to Brian Haw­ nam ese P resident Nguyen Van kins, MHA president. Thieu to delegate an envoy to • The president of the Soviet Academy of Sciences, M stislav “ The new regulation proce­ the conference prompted the V. Keldysh said Tuesday the Soyuz 3 spacecraft tested by cos­ dures are the type needed to U.S. delegation to announce the monaut Georgy T. Beregrovoy last week is intended only for overcom e the bureaucratic pro­ postponement. e a rth orbit missions, not a trip to the moon. cesses of the U niversity," Haw­ The Americans said they had kins said. no intention of attending three- • A captured enem y docum ent contained orders from Hanoi “ I t’s another step on the road cornered talks with Hanoi and to step up the fighting, terro rism and sabotage in South Viet­ to hall autonomy. " nam despite the U.S. halt of all attacks on North Vietnam , the the NLF. The policy now goes on to The enlargem ent of the talks goverm ent reported Tuesday. Milton B. Dickerson, vice pres­ to include the four main fighting A U.S. m ilitary spokesman said Am erican intelligence ident for student affairs, for parties in Vietnam was p a rt of still had the docum ent under study to determ ine its meaning, final approval. origin and authenticity. the Am erican peace package th at included the halt of U.S. a t­ Last 3 Days ANNIVERSARY SALE _______________ SPORT DUO_______________ • ANY SPORT COAT . . . . . TO 45.00 .A N Y S L A X ............................... TO 19.98 NOWboth s4995 B LA ZE R SPECIAL • ANY BLAZER * TO 39.95 and . ANY S L A X . . , . . . TO 19.98. NOWboths45°° OTHER SPORT COATS .NO W 34.98, 49.98, 69.98 • Q U A L IT Y S U IT S NOW 5 9 .9 5 ,7 9 .9 5 to 99.95 • Q U A L IT Y DRESS SLAX .N O W 14.99, 17.99, 24.99 • ALL W EATHER C O A T ........................ NOW 34.99 R E G U L A R * L O N G * S H O R T * X - L O N 5 » S IZ E S 36 TO 46 • SPORT S H IR T S ................................................. 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Sizes 5 to 13. 15.98 Sizes 5 to 13. 11.98 FREE A L T E R A T IO N S C a n te rb u ry MAC at GRAND RIVER ' 4 C a m p u s C e n te r % I Edward A. Brill James 5. Granelli, managing editor M I C H I G A N edi tor-i n-chief Trinka Cline, campus editor Jerry Pankhurst* editorial editor STATI N EW S Tom Brown* sports editor Carol Bud row, advertising manager, Patricia Anstett* associate campus editor Inv < ;iV i V Y Six-time recipient of the Pacem aker aw ard for outstanding journalism . EDITORIAL Abolish freshman women ?s hours gent enough to study at the » A Holmes Hall, many may re­ University must not be allowed member, recently offended the to take a walk, got out for a late sensitivities of the Student- snack, or do anything else out­ Faculty Judiciary by invoking side the residence hall after its powers under the Academ­ a certain hour because of cer­ ic Freedom Report to elimi­ tain vague and unspecified nate all women’s hours at things that might happen? Holmes. The judiciary re­ Currently the All-University sponded by issuing an injunc­ Student Judiciary the Student- tion against the Holmes action, Faculty Judiciary, and other along with some muttering student organizations are con­ about “proper channels.’’ sidering questions concerning While the powers that be de­ freshman hours. We hope that bate about the legality of this the judiciaries will make sub­ and that resolution and argue stantial decisions soon. MSU about prededents and fine need not continue this unfair And now the awards for best campaign advertising, technicalities, the main issue and discriminatory restriction of whether freshman women makeup, and special effects of women’s rights. must continue to be confined to -The Editors the residence halls at night is paramount. Although the institution of freshman hours policy, accord­ get about “protecting’’ freshman women's hours at MSU no long­ ing to which hours protect the women too? DAVE GILBERT er has the medieval proportions girls from evil influences, help The Academic Freedom Re­ it once did, when coeds at them to adjust to freedom from port stipulates that there shall Michigan Agricultural College were locked up at 7 p.m., our freshman women are still not home restrictions, encourage them to study, and so on. There were probably equally good ar­ be no unnecessary restrictions of student activities. What Vic­ torian administrator will say Ego: that old key com plex considered by the University to guments for locking all the that a student must necessarily be capable of managing their women up at seven, but it is not be locked up nights because of own affairs and are told what done any more, and the non­ her sex and the number of cred­ safe deposit box. The fantasies I concocted For years now, ever since my fresh­ in figuring out where the box was located, times they may and may not freshmen, alas, must fend for its she has earned? Who is to man reverence for the R.A. with his key and how to test each box without being leave their residence halls. themselves. The solid reasons say that a person old enough to ring, I have carried around no fewer than detected, ah! these w ere food for my twelve keys which dangle im pressively The University has a great for protecting them are forgot­ leave home, get married, or on my belt. Acquaintances would ask me, study-wearied brain. Now 1 am down to two very functional variety of explanations for the ten. How long before we can for­ hold an adult job, and intelli- “ Are you an R.A .?" to which I would keys. They have no m ystery, no allure, proudly a n sw e r/ “ No, ju st have a few they a re rem arkably pedestrian and bus­ things to look a fte r." inesslike. In a word, they bore me. WitA th at vague reply, I tried to con­ Wouldn't it be grtfot if, when you reach- | vey tfie image of the Man In Charge, the ed positions of ’ responsibility, von got f One With The Keys, and was, I think, HOWARD OAR* pretty successful. (All right, all right, rings that would open draw ers and doors with a satisfying and m ysterious BZZZZ! some of you know m e too w e ll!) P ictu re the crowds of freshm an stagger­ ing in stunned silence, eyes agape with Im agine my surprise this morning awe! After all, about the tim e you're a The frustrations of Bob Smith when I cam e to the office and discovered a reporter waiting to get in. “ Have you got a key?” he. begged piteously. As I opened the door for the poor w retch, I senior, you realize ju st how little you know, how little all the organizations you have joined will am ount to once you leave college, and frankly, your ego is a little cam e to the startling realization that, Gone the four bicycle lock keys, gone shot. for the first tim e in four years, I ac­ the screw driver that looked like a key, Why doesn't the senior class have a A recent report on the student in tually had a real, genuine, usable key. gone the key to som ebody's Yale lock, com m ittee to devise G adgets for G radua­ higher education wonders “ how m uch of to which I was entitled. As a m atte r of gone the eight or so totally useless keys ting Seniors, or Kits to Capitalize on the current student unrest could be a t­ fact, I have two office keys to which I I used to display so ostentatiously. And your Shortcomings? Instead of leaving us tributed to authoritarian policy, rude am entitled, and three other keys which gone the days of irresponsibility. to w ither under the th reats of SDS. the clerks, hostile and unfriendly secre­ I use daily. And no more. Yes. with the dawn of responsibility, I d raft. G raduate Record Exam s, "in tel­ taries and testy te lle rs." have had to chuck out all those endearing lectual autobiographies" and the like. > * Even though I m ay not agree whole­ I staggered into the office and slumped figm ents of my imagination to m ake room Why don’t they engage in active research heartedly about the unrest caused by into a desk chair. My God, I thought, Gil­ for the few things of im portance that need to give us a little of the glory back that testy tellers. I am inclined to believe bert, you’ve lost your touch. Lovingly I to be carried about. Verily, the process we had once, like that chain of im pressive that student frustration is increased by fingered the barren key chain. Nostalgia of growing up is difficult. keys th at never needed to unlock anything? opposing forces outside the classroom . creeped into my eyes. Gone. I thought I rem em ber with particular vividness America, where is your creativity? In the student's endless search for ad­ sadly, all gone. ____ one key th at I imagined was to som eone’s ditional knowledge, especially around exam ination tim e, he is confronted with new enemies. Take for exam ple, an attem p t m ade J0O 4 OUR READERS’ MINDS by average student, Bob Smith, to see • nrS' p r o ic S s t /1 r « Y . - S i i i f i i r - ¥R5S S y p i i X '.- '’ m ately one foot into the p rofessor's of­ 'As a m a tte r of fact, he’s my uncle. " assistance for the m id-term exam ina­ fice and still gasping for breath because the elevator in South Kedzie was out of order, when the secretary snapped in Smith replied without kidding. ''N o kidding? Clyde and I used to be go­ ing steady in our early days at P.S. 84. Your uncle was a real kibbitzer. I can tion, Bob Smith headed toward the infor­ m ation desk. He wanted to find out where they had cleverly hidden his desired books. The MSU Library has over a mil­ S o c ia lis m a s p a r a s i t e the omnipotent sarcastic tone which To the Editor: sure to rid itself of the deadly pest. A good prepared (often through no fault of their could only belong to a person of her posi­ rem em ber the day when he swallowed a lion publications. However, 959,427 pub­ A recent letter to the editor by Mr. Wal­ exam ple of how socialism is m aintaining its own) for better positions. It should be ob- ♦ tion: stick of dynam ite and lit it, just to get lications are newspapers and periodicals te r claim ed that “ Capitalism , Socialism can death grip on our country is Mr. W alter’s vious that such socialist m easures as job "Y es." out of taking a m id-term examination. from all over the world. Some 40,551 ad­ co-exist.” As evidence he cited the fact reference to the concept of rights. training return m ore in term s of equality Smith hesitated. Since he was not com ­ And, the class will never forget the tim e ditional publications a re either in the th at our country is a mixed economy. It is The question is raised "Is the ‘inalien­ than they cost in term s of freedom ." Job pletely in the room as yet, he was not ‘old stinkie-poo' walked into the room bindery or on reserve, which leaves only true that, in the short run these two sys­ able right to engage in w hatever pursuit training costs money. At whose expense? quite sure whether the receptionist was two hours late for a m id-term , dressed about 22 books for undergraduate study. tem s m ay exist simultaneously. However, he chooses' m ore basic than the ‘rig h t’ to Society's? There is no such entity as so­ talking to him or someone else. “ I ’d like a Mohawk Indian and told the teach­ When Smith reached the information ciety . The cost is shouldered by individuals the nature of the relationship was over­ adequate sustenance in a land of plenty?” like to see Dr. Strangelike.” er. . . ” desk, he noticed a sign: “ P lease take a looked. Socialism and capitalism can co­ The answer is that no such “ rig h t” exists. within society and a person who is forced ' About what! “ she was quick to reply. Next, average student Bob Smith was num ber." Even though he was the only exist ju st as a parasite and its host can co­ A “ right" is a concept that applies to to labor for the support of another is a “ The m id-term ,” Smith blurted a s he observed running towards the library. one within the near vacinity. Bob took exist. m oral actions. More specifically, to indi­ slave. There is no difference in principle attem pted to be blunt. One would refer to this as probably just the next card, which w as num ber 57. The It can’t last. E ither the parasite destroys vidual actions, since a m an has the right to between stealing $100 or $1000. There is no “ Are you in his c la ss!” she intelli­ a little disheartenm ent on the student's girl behind the desk, who was reading a difference in principle between aborgating the source of its life, and thereby destroys life, it is essential that he have the right to gently stated. parti and still quite a ways off from to­ newspaper and chewing a piece of gum, a m an’s right to the product of his labor itself, or the host takes the necessary mea- those actions rationally necessary to m ain­ "No. I am representing the Double- tal unrest. The student now seeks another stood up and walked toward our hero, or abrogating his right to life. tain his life. The freedom to ac t to support Day Publishing Company, and we wish to m eans to prepare himself for the exam i­ saying, “ Num ber 14, anyone with number When Mr. W alter suggests that the “ social one’s life is m eaningless without the right publish a paperback version of the ans­ nation. The library offers such a means. 14?” benefits outweigh the cost in term s of to the product of that action. In a social w ers in tim e for the exam ination." Before entering the library, Smith had Smith looked around in bewilderment. The 'IT as ark context rights pertain to the freedom to freedom , let him realize that freedom is not "Who shall I say is calling!” she ques­ to play th at famous, yet very frustrating divisible. You a re free to live your life-- ^ When he m ade sure that no one else was To the Editor: m orally support one’s own life. The right to tioned. gam e: Which one of the front doors is not I was so thrilled by the words of M artin which m eans you have the right to those by the desk, he said: “ I’ve got number life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness "Bob Sm ith." he stated being very hon­ “ for em ergency use only?" After many Meyerson, president of the State Univer­ m oral actions necessary to m aintain your 57.” frees m an to pursue goals, it does not guar­ est. failing attem p ts to open up a bolted door, sity of New York, Buffalo, that I wish to life--which m eans you have a right to the “P lease w ait your turn, sir." She then antee that those goals will be achieved. “ What was that last nam e!” Smith finally gained adm ittance but only quote a short excerpt from his address fruit of your labor, or you have no rights. went on to say: “ Number 15, anyone with Let this be em phasized-rights guaranteed “ Sm ith." to be confronted with a malicious turn­ in the hope that others will find some How can socialism , a doctrine that de­ num ber 15?” the freedom of m oral action, and the re­ "D o you spell th at with one or two s’s! ” stile which belted him in his ribs, picked m easure of hope therein: stroys individual rights, co-exist with capi­ And, as we leave Bob Smith, average sponsibility for the consequences of those “ One." him up off his feet, and spun him around “ Those who choose the extrem es perhaps talism . the only economic system based student, standing in bewilderment, ask­ actions. No right can guarantee success. “ Is that S-M-I-T-H, Sm ith?” clockwise before propelling him and his imagine (foolishly) the university as a on individual rights? Only if the host per­ books inside the library. This m echani­ ing him self: "why m e? why always m e,” Consider the implications of switching the “ Y es." great whale. They think there a re only concept of rights from actions to m aterial mit* the parasite existence. cal device m ay be what the report calls we can faintly hear the information desk "Say, you wouldn’t be related to a two altern ativ es-to be swallowed by it like goods. Bill Chase a "testy telle r." attendent saying: “ N um ber 26. anyone Clyde Smith in Moosejaw Alaska?" she Jonah of the Old Testam ent, or to attack If a man has the “right" to adequate, sus­ Southfield, freshm an Starting to feel uneasy about getting with num ber 26?” coldly quipped. it, as if one were Moby Dick. In so im agin­ tenance it must, obviously, be produced ing, some reveal their wish to sit inside by someone. A house, food, cIothing--at Letter policy PEANUTS a well-padded darkness; others reveal whose expense? If one man has the I THINK I'Ll 6 0 OVER AND The State News welcomes all letters. SW Tt) MBA/HAffY NATIONAL their wish to destroy a thing they have not “ rig h t" to the product of another m an ’s ef­ troubled to understand. But both imaginings They should be typed and signed with the CAT L I be," AND THEN PUNCH fort, the latter is a slave. A quote by E ric home town, student, faculty or staff stand­ HIM KI6HT IN THE NOSE! a re wrong, for the university is not a whale Freem an sums up this point eloquently but an ark; a j r e a t ship, not something ing, and local phone num ber included. No "The right to violate a right does not exist. " unsigned letter " ill be accepted for nubli- other than ourselves, but ♦byproduct of i !, a ' right" that socialism al­ our own of 1carts. ll is not om enemy, cation. and no iettci will be printed with­ legedly grants, to some men. ourselves, and part of our salvation." out a signature except in extrem e circum ­ Yet Mr. Walter persists, “ Freedom to Irving W. Knob loch stances. Ail letters m ust be less than 300 choose from a number of poorly paying jobs words long for publication without editing, j Professor. Dent, of Botanv is scant consolation to those who are un­ W ednesday, N ovem b er 6 , 1968 MichiganState News, East Lansing, Michigan Law By ELOISE BOWER He urged that we stop using ght, not violence * . . . «_________“•They —“ If you’re black, stay back, TL/».rofo a reafrairf afraidthpir theirmater- m a te r­ ial possessions will depreciate T.ptt« L ettstaiH saidthat th at1 law and order m ust be achieved by sending violence in Vietnam and Latin or nigger, stay in your place.” peer groups out to talk to the Law and order through vio- America while trying to pre- - “ If you’re a student, stay if m inority groups move in,” he explained discontented. leftce Is not t a t i 'í i 'w f e h s d&t Cx, . « / t L ‘a i t ù ¿ » V v * Jrf 'are a piitrausuc ¿ocm y, KjTttflvS t&x . f ' âSen a three m an panel concluded “ We m ust stop t/ekig ft world * - “ If you’re on the Supreme he said, and there is some value for the form ation of com m unity Monday night a t Dialogue ‘68. cop,” he said. “ We m ust not Court, quit coddling crim i­ control groups, he said, but in m inority groups. _ Two MSU professors and a use such violent m ethods nals.” “ We m ust teach"the value of m ost of these g rants have been Lansing civil servant contended abroad and then tell the people Taking the sociological point minority groups in the schools, used to suppress protests and that law and order could be a t home not to use violence." of view, Levak said th at many he said. “ We m ust recognize dem onstrations. achieved by improving our po­ He also cited three common people support violent law and that they a re not out to take over He stressed that suppressing lice forces, by bringing about incorrect definitions th at peo­ order because they fear com­ our society.” an acceptance of m inority ple have about law and order: petition by m inority groups. protests is not the answer. groups and by working with the “ We m ust launch educational poor and depraved in their program s,” he said. “ The best home environments. way to fight crim e is to attack Serving on the panel w ere STR U Q Q LE F O R ID E A L S poverty and de sp àir. Charles P. Larrowe, profes­ "The terrible backlash is sor of economics, Albert E. that violence terrifies and Levak, professor of social sci­ ence, and Richard Letts, dir­ ector of Lansing Human Rela­ 'Royal G a m bit’ opens brings fears into our commun­ ity .” Law and order tions Committee. Larrow e said non-violent Everyone knows th at Henry VIII had numerous wives, but enough odds, the fates conspir­ Tuesday through Nov. 17 and at ed to add yet another woman to Wonders Kiva Nov. 18-19, He said a serious fault of our present system is that it en­ C h a rle s P. L a rro w e , p r o f e s s o r o f e c o n o m i c s , A l b e r t E . L e v a k , p r o f e s s o r of s o c i a l law and order could best be ef­ E van’s th eatrical life. “ Gam ­ Brody Hall Nov. 20-21 and Mc- forces laws and order by injus­ even knowing that “ Royal G am ­ fected by hiring m ore police b it” is being directed by Mrs. Donel Kiva Nov. 22-23. Season tice. s c i e n c e and R i c h a r d L e t t s , d i r e c t o r of th e L a n s i n g H um an R e l a t i o n s C o m m i t t e e , b it” is about Henry and his and paying them higher sala- M ariam Duckwall, the only fe­ book holders m ay exchange "This is not the answ er,” d isc u sse d a sp e c ts of th e " l a w and o r d e r " I s s u e M onday nig h t In H o lm e s H a ll. T he wives, one would not expect ac­ rie , m ale m em ber of the full-time their coupons a t the Fairchild he said, “ since force begets panel d isc u ssio n w as p a r t of D ia log ue '6 8 , c o n tin u in g th r o u g h T h u r s d a y . tor Evan Jones (Henry) to be th eatre staff of MSU. Dave Ste­ box office beginning Friday, force.” as totally outnumbered as he is vens, assistant director, helps (Nov. 8) and others m ay see In reply to L arrow e’s state­ during rehearsals for the PAC to even up the odds a little, but the show for 75 cents, space m ent about m ore police pay, he production of the show. th at still leaves it seven to two perm itting. said that all the money in the Henry only had one or two of with a woman a t the helm! Curtain tim e is 8 p.m. in the world would not help as long as his women to face a t any one D ia lo g u e 6 8 p a n e l re je c ts "R oyal G am bit” will play in Arena and 7:15 p.m. in the dor­ the attitudes of policemen are tim e, but Jones finds himself the U niversity Arena Theatre m itories. not changed. dealing with all six women at once, without a single m ale ally in the cast. In “ Royal G am bit,” running next Tuesday through Nov. 17, s c ie n tis ts ’ m o r a lis t p o s itio n in the Auditorium Arena and then touring the dorm s, play­ wright Hermann G ressieker d is c o u n t r e c o r d s i e O / has created a moving dram a in years it has forced us to cope Scientists should not be Wilson said that the scien­ candidates" for m oralists be­ with issues like the atom which Henry, the “ modern 225 ANN ST. placed in the position of m or­ tist has offered concrete ex­ cause of the dem ands of their bomb, biological w arfare, ex­ m an,” faces his wifes in his TH E O NLY C O M P L E T E RECORD STORE IN EAST LANSING planations for so m any of the work. struggle for his ideals. Jones, alists, four MSU professors tended life, and transplants. said Monday night in a Dia­ logue ’68 paneM scussion. Harold T. Walsh, professor questions m an had m arvelled a t for centuries that men have looked to him as a leader in “ To answ er this responsi­ bility the scientist m ust take tim e away from his work to We have struggled and had some success.” Kinsinger said that he felt a graduate student in econo­ m ics, m ust contend with Gail Burke as K atrina of Aragon, ‘ "NEVER G IV E A W .C . F I E L D S of philosophy, Edwin Kashy, m oral issues. give to the re st of society,” Linda Lashbrook as Ann Bo- W ftlM LM “ A MAN WHO m an would not destroy him ­ professor of physics, Jack B. “ One of the persistant char­ Kashy said. “ I t’s not enough self but that he needed a leyn, Roberta Dahlberg as Jane SUCKER AN EVEN HATES DOGS AND acteristics of humanity is try­ to know, he has to tell others. Seymour, Bonnie Raphael as Kinsinger, professor of chem ­ ing to find out what is good or Few men carry their convic­ leader to guide him to a new Anna of Cleves, Bonnie Mursch B R E A K .” KIDS C A N ’T BE istry and John E. Wilson, as­ m orality which was relevant bad,” he said. “ People look tions this fa r.” as Kathryn Howard and Jill THE O RIG INAL VOICE A LL B A D .” sistant professor of bio-chem­ to the i«-w questions raised. for m oral certitude.” Kashy said it would be a Goldwasser as Kate Parr! istry said that the scientists' He said that he could not see TRACKS FROM HIS Wilson felt that people “ bad om en” for future society As if six to one w ere not high special talents do not make the scientist in this role. him b etter equipped to make looked to the scientist to be if the rolq of m oralist was GREATEST M OVIES. FREE POSTER m oral judgem ents. their leader in m oral issues placed on the scientist. He INCLUDED W ITH and give them certainty of felt th at the scientists’ knowl­ right and wrong. “ Certitude is not in sci­ edge was not the understand­ ing needed for ethical judge­ ONLY 3 .9 9 RECORD Fighting ence,” he works on faith.” said. “ Science m ents for society as a whole. Kinsinger felt th at science et Wilson said th at making has raised m any new 'eth ical ethical judgem ents was a per­ questions which the “ medi­ continues sonal m a tte r and often the glam our of a Chris­ th at too eval m orality" of today does not answer. inc. tian B arnard or a Jonas Salk “ Scieepey-in the next fifty in Jordon will give their personal be­ liefs g reat influence. Both Wilson and Kashy felt years wnl force society to face confrontations th a t every phase of life,” he said. touch PH. 351-8460 225 ANNSTc H OURS: 9 :3 0 - 8 :3 0 DAILY 9:3 0 * 6 :0 0 SA T . AMMAN, Jordan lAP) -- A that scientists w ere not “ good “ In the last twenty-five brief fire broke out near a re ­ fugee cam p outside Amman Tuesday, indicating that re ­ bellious Palestinian com m an­ O N E D A Y O N LY! dos w ere still giving trouble to King Hussein’s arm y. The governm ent had lifted a 2 0 - 75% DISCOUNT curfew from 10 a.m . to 4 p.m. but reim posed it. Machine-gun fire broke out in scattered sec­ P e r f e c t s y m b o l on ALL merchandise tions of Amman Tuesday night. The bursts sounded like o f th e lo v e y o u s h a r e warning shots for those out des­ pite the curfew. Being with each other, doing things together . . . knowing thtrt W idespread fighting broke your affection is growing into precious and enduring love. Happily, out Monday between some all these cherished m oments will be forever symbolized by your P alestine commandos using diam ond engagement ring. Jordan as a base for forays If the name, Keepsake, is in the ring and on the tag, you are against Israel and the Jo rd an ­ assured of fine quality and lasting satisfaction. T he engagement ian arm y. diam ond is flawless, of superb color, and precise m odem cut. Your Unofficial reports said 17 per­ Keepsake Jeweler will assist you in making your selection . . . H e s sons w ere killed and 40 wound­ in the yellow pages, under “ Jewelers.” ed but diplom atic reports REPRISE RENAISSANCE MAN’S $39.75 LADY’ MAN’S $44.75 LADY'S 44.75 placed the num ber a t m ore R R EE GO II SS T T EE RI vEt DU _ than 25 killed and about 70 .wounded an both sides . TC e e p s a k e ( In D amascus, Syria, rep re­ D IA M O N D R I N G S sentatives of guerrilla groups operating in Jordan said that a bloody showdown between Hussein's arm y and the com­ mandos was inevitable. One representative asserted th at the situation in Amman w as explosive and the country w as “ teetering on the brink of civil w a r.” The Jordanian arm y rem ain­ ed on the alert. ALTADENA TRISTAN MAN’S $35 LADY’S 35 Amman authorities said MAN'S $35 LADY'S 5Ò 00 LEE CROWN ROYALTY they had arrested the ring­ Rings (rom $100 to $10,000. Illustrations enlarged to *o w beauty of leaders of the Victory Pha­ detail. • Trade-mark reg. A. H. Pond Company, Inc.. Lit. 1892. langes, a splinter guerrilla group accused of setting off r HOW TO PLAN YOUR ENGAGEMENT AND WEDDI NG “ I Monday's fighting, a rm y continued to round up and the t Írtsi I Please send new 20-page booklet, "How To Plan Your Engage­ ment and W edding" and new 12-page full color »older, both for only 25c. Also, send special offer of beautiful 44-page Bride s Book. suspected elements. I 7 F‘ 60 I The governm ent accused the j Name--------------------- — — ------------------------------------ — --------- group of being paid agents of a foreign power, which it did not j Address. identify, whose aim was to stir up civil strife in Jordan rath er than to fight the common ene ta)atel\aus I City------ State_____ — Z ip . my, Israel. A form er arm y ma K E E P S A K E DIAMOND RINGS, BO X 90, S Y R A C U S E , N. Y. 13201 jor from neighboring Syria T aher Tablan, heads the Vic tory Phalanges. $uutrcrlan6 < :< > m i *< ) • t A i i< 1 N I__ 207 M.A.C. Ave A1 F atah, the leading guer l\ I ’ 1111^ v v v r E ast Lansing rilla organization, was reported m ediating between King Hus sein and the Phalanges. xîÿw r mrt a j -r---rrïhït J 3220 Mall Court Frandor 201 S, Washington Downtown U'utchaus Armoured cars and Bedouin 1132 S. Washington £ u 'i l : e r U n 0 legionnaires of the 32-year-old m onarch guarded the U.S. E m ­ 207 M.A.C. Ave. — East Lansing S. Lansing 109 Putman Thursday at Paraphernalia 3220 Mall Court ~ Frandor Williamston bassy, where rioters sm ashed 201 S. Washington — Downtown windows and tore down the (new store) Open 11 -9 p.m . 541 E . Grand R iver 1132 S. Washington — S. Lansing American flag in a dem onstra 109 Putman — Williamston (new store) tion Saturday. W ednesday, N o v em b er 6, 1968 ¿ Michigan State N ew s, E ast Lansing, M ichigan 'CODINE’ DEBUTS *** : .» «M S id e S to r y ’ r e tu r n s do with the drug of the sam e rons, for it resem bles nothing well, any film that uses the teen­ If W ednesday's child is full nam e. And on the more tradi­ so m uch as an A m erican wes­ age slang of seven years ago is of woe, a t least there a re a cou­ bound to seem em barrassingly ple of movies around that will tional side, “ West Side Story" tern. has returned to the Campus Despite its subtitles, “ Co­ silly a t tim es. And m any of us m ake his problem s seem sm all T heater to rem ind us of ju st dine” is a very com m ercial, who wept a t the Rom eo-Juliet by comparison. how good a Hollywood m usical very gripping action flick which operatics of the last scenes will Tonight the MSU Film Society dem onstrates once and for all probably move into the cam p of offers a genuine oddity called can be. “ Codine” m ay come as a the trem endous im pact thai those who giggled when we were “ Codine,” a French-Rum anian shock to m ost foreign film pat- Am ericans like Howard Hawki in high school. production which has nothing to But no one will be unmoved by and John Ford have had on the the vitality of the "A m erica” or Ii F rench film industry. The brqoding anti-hero, Qndine (as the incredible prologue. By IB « ¥.0*,tS! «NO. Wed. played by Alexandia Platon), m ight as well be John Wayne or State News Reviewer A# social com m ent, “ West Side Story” will indeed age into Slavik sing Presents G ary Cooper, and Rum ania in deadly epidemic. Y et seen tic tragedy, it will retain its sentim entality. But a s ritualis­ T h e Y a le R u s s ia n C h o r u s s a n g E a s t e r n E u r o p e a n h y m n s a n d f e s t iv e s o n g s In a I 1900 m ight as well be Texas in c o n c e r t M onday n ig h t. T h e g ro u p w a s c o n d u c te d by D e n is M lc k le w lc z , f o r m e r through the eyes of foreigners, strength, in 1968 and for m any L 1880. MSU fa c u lty m e m b e r . these cliches take on a fresh­ reissues to come. O D!*1* Based on the autobiography M of Adrian Zogaffi, “ Codine” ex­ ness, a universality th at is pro­ presses the fascination of an found as well as entertaining. Winner of the Grand P rix for S 0 t G ra n d P r i z e , C a n n e s F ilm F e s tiv a l 11-year-old boy for a tough social outcast “ S hane!") who lures young (shades of best screenplay a t the 1963 Can­ nes Film Festival, “ Codine” m akes its Michigan debut to­ YA LE CONCERT c 7 .3O B e s t C o lo r P h o to g ra p h y , C a n n e s Adrian away from his ‘book learnin’” into the school of night a t 7:90 in 104 Wells, fol­ F ilm F e s t i v a l . lowed by coffee and discussion. I E T 104 B w -r | , B e s t S c r e e n p la y , C a n n e s F ilm F e s tiv a l S e le c te d f o r S h o w in g at M o n tre a l hard knocks. All the elem ents of the ordi­ nary w estern a re th e re : the whore with a heart of gold, the Bernstein Musical F or those of us who suffered through “ The Sound of M usic,” In s p ira tio n u n i f i e s C h o r u s of the power of the m usic and pleasant, if som ew hat weak per- Y Wells F ilm F e s tiv a l F r e e C o ffee runaw ay horse chase, the old the return of 1961’s “ W est Side Story” is especially welcome, If- you succum . ------ . . . b to Blah Mon-. the unity of purpose, the mus- form ance by MSU s Russian saloon, the comic dandy and the for it shows how fine a m usical day, you should have attended leal result was occasionally Singers. • • • • • • • e e e e s s e s e e s s s director R obert Wise can be Monday evening s concert by chaotic and often uneven. The three m en a n d . fj“ ?r when his subject m atter equals the Yale Russian Chorus. Un- The singers did not alw ays women sang a gypsy wine-drink- TONIGHT AND THURSDAY! F rom 5:00 P.M. T TATE h e T>H O Nm a t r e M Z - Z 9 '4 his talents The score by Leonard Bern- stein and Stephen Sondheim con- tinues to hold its place a s one fill Fairchild Theatre, of the m ost sophisticated works fortunately, the audience was to em erge from the Broadway expected * professiona pres- largely an in-group collection ° A few who attem ledim ay have even employ correct breathing tech- niques. Often, a tenor or bari- tone could be heard gasping for breath a t the end of a phrase, or whispering the last m easures of a too-m uch prolonged note, >ng son "S orodino count of the b attle of B°rodm ° with1tex t by the P ^ Lcrmontov, and the popular Snow Flurries, The second alto s pleasant but ra th e r colorless vo ce did not lan ac- stage. A id the Jerom e Robbins entation by seasoned rrmsic a n r There was a good deal of flat- blend adequately with the re st W illiam L IM IT E D E N G A G E M E N T ! choreography, which burst with They noisily expressed their By VALERIE RESTIVO ting in nearly all sections of of the group, the chorus The concert ended with the BRILLIANTLY P E R F O R M E D anim al sexuality and ballet-like d aPP°intm *Ht State News Reviewer S h a k e s p e a r e ’s by A c a d e m y A w a rd W in n e r grace on stage, is even m ore stylistic and technical V, ■ .-*• The hymn, "X v alit’e l m ’aG os- podn’e ” by Arkhangelsky. was well-know “ Kalinka fresh and spirited rendition and in a sensual and dynam ic when plac- sistencies. Most of sung in Old Church Slavonic. Im m o rta l MAXIMILIAN SCHELL ed in the streets of M anhattan fa^ [ro*P disappointed. The chorus filled the sm all aud­ very well done, with unusual hannony, and an organ-like “ Zhila Dv en atsat Razboinkov. The few excellent, and many anrf blown up to the 70 m m . T h a i E P S itorium , sounding m ore like 100 screen consisted of liturgical m usic of resonance enriched the ending good voices far exceed the qual- C la s s ic / As for the aging process,, tbe Russian Orthodox Church, than 25 voices. The chorus’ founder and guest conductor, of “ Blazhen Muzh,” a hymn ity of the chorus as a whole, dating from around the 15th yet the skillful direction of m u lc t Denis Mickiewicz has tre- Bruce Lieberm an and Denis E S S S i S 5 | 3 C olor H itt NORTHSIDËyEgl ONLY monrjnijc gnOfffV which inspires and unifies the chorus whose m em bership changes from per­ centruy. The second p art of the pro­ gram consisted of songs of E a st­ ern Europe. A Bulgarian fer­ •M1CK16W1CZ C —tU mm*1 IL a IVMnlin c in . U WlC 51 17up o in spiration hold the disparate p arts together. The evening had the Ip ttlV T -IN E le c tric form ance to perform ance. The chorus’ problem s a re those tility song and a Macedonian quality of inform al "sing” ra th e r than a concert (Al­ 2 MHm NflitwlE II III H e a te rs confronted by any a capella dance song were ably led by the regular conductor, Bruce though the m en w ere dressed choir. The difference between form ally, some unbuttoned their them and a professional choir Lleberm an. The Macedonian jackets, and there was no a t­ THE FILMTHAT(MUES is the degree of difficulty in song, "N e Odi D jem o,” was especially effective, with its tem pt to unify stance or TOEXPLAINWHAT m aintaining pitch and blend, gestures). without instrum ental backing. beautiful and melodious fortes There was a wonderful feel­ MOST PARENTSCANT... S££ Lift Btçin... S££ T h sA tM l Birth Of A B tby! 'iiLWssiJB/r - Instead of slipping slightly, and fortissim os. Songs of the Russina Peasant and Soldier followed the inter mission. There w ere several ing, ilnt the 1aw that transcended technical im perfection, a com­ munication m ore im portant than and In unison, the various sec­ conventional linguistic or a rtis­ fine solos by various m em bers IN COLÓRI tions slipped a t different tim es Dividing the program was a very tic understanding. * 1 ^ NEW ! ■ I l Issues’petitions s —3RD C O L O R H IT - -SHOWN 2ND AT 9>27- —3RD C O L O R H IT - TO*Cmtv'yfo* o'**#«** NUUNMM 0mSUPS DAY 75ç to 6 p .m . NOW SHOWING U r ììik è o th e r c la s s ic s Exclusive All Color Program “W e s t S i d e S t o r y " see r r as r r r e a l l y w as THE OTHER SIDE OF g r o w s y o u n g e r ! THIj R s . : BONNIE & C L Y D E •Also* M arlon Brando-Jane Fonda in “ THE CHASE" hon » 482-3909 H fl ICH IG A N HAIPP Y —. « p . m w TODAY 1:05, 3:15, 5:25, 7:40,9:55 HC)U R mtheEAUINEW rachel, M ANproductionol r a d ia l 'SMMtllt 198HilHI MMKtSj TECMMCtKM FMM WSRNERBMS.-SEVEM MTS41 8 WED. LADIES DAY - 75kl>LO PRlNCf HU'* Bf ARTHUR LAURENTS PtAVCOM ict mi- !MCINM&r>C- just- tihé*îfig -“ Sympathy Ser the ... Light-Hearted • Bra& “tike iHtf The m usical comedy is one P ajam a G am e” and “ Damn “ H air” certainly shows us songs a re published, making couldn’t makeuphismind. vil,” in which John Kennedy is a r t form th at can be classified Yankees” w ere typical of the th at w riters a re not running out WMSN possibly the only station Alvin Wodxbmki, 43, De­ mentioned. as truly American. Its earli­ early 50’s; but after that, Ler- of ideas. But they a re refining Sing along in Michigan able to play the tape. troit, was arrested today after est dom estic roots lie in the ner and Lowe scored a super them, and making their produc­ spendiiw 3* minutes inside his m instrel show, which was fad­ hit with “ My F a ir Lady.” tions m ore significant and orig­ A fte r a b r i e f b u s ln e e e m e e tin g , a m e m b e r o f th e In this album , the Beatles re ­ voting booth in the 10th pre­ ing in popularity nearly 100 MSU F o lk lo r e S o c ie ty g o t dow n to th e r e a l b u s in e s s : cinct. Police said there is a years ago. Gradually the public began to dem and individual tal­ More progress has occurred in the 60’s. Although the m usi­ cal stage is still dom inated by inal. This is the continued g rea t­ ness; the constant im provem ent of a typically Am erican a rt s in g in g and p la y in g . S ta te N e w t p h o to by J im R ic h a rd s o n v ert back to their “ old Sound” ra th e r than the psychedelic sound as they have been. One rarely enforced 2 minute stat­ utory limitation on the time NEWJMHflEM ents, and vaudeville gained its brassv nonsense which could form. _______________ • song by Ringo S tarr is much voters can spend balloting. Another Experience. Still th e popularity. like their song "Y esterd ay .” Since Wodxinaki had carried leaders, but now two step s ahead. Combining the folksy humor an alarm clock inside the So m uch to say, it’s taking two and m usic with the styles of booth with him, they decided European m usic halls, vaude­ ville flowered and faded over a "MAN OF LA MANCHA' It will probably be a double album called “ The B eatles” tohaul himout. He was charged with tres­ album s (packaged as one). Many new gam es to play, all without or “ Sexy Sadie" a fter one of period of 50 years. This short the song titles. E ric Clapton of passing and released by po­ benefit of rules. Electrified zapp. period, >however, gave rise to the Cream plays the guitar lice. Plug yourself in. m ost of A m erica’s current comic and entertainm ent tra ­ ditions. c le v e rly s ta g e d throughout the album . Because of the quality of the tapes, not all the songs can be played. Wodxinaki gave no explana­ tion for taking the clock Inside with him except to say he was E arly in the 20th century, the The tapes of the Rolling timinghimaelf. Viennese-type operetta enjoyed Thursday and Friday night, gym nastics. P atricia M arand, MSU is a m ajor theatrical a brief span of popularity. “ Man of La M ancha” will be talented star of several New event. There is a hazard in­ V ictor H erbers, Rudolf F rim l perform ed in the Auditorium. York stage and TV shows, will volved, however, in perform ­ NOW SHOWING! and Sigmund Rom berg im port­ The play is sponsored by the PANORAMA: play Aldonza Thursday opposite ing anything in the Audi­ ed the traditions of Lehar and Lecture-Concert Series, and Mr. Atkinson’s Quixote. torium. 3 C o lo r H itt created tuneful and hopelessly unfortunately all tickets have rom antic pieces which satisfied been sold. Aside from the perfor­ TO E At your ADULTS ONLY! the dream y tnnocense of pre- This play w as voted Best m ances, much of the show’s 20’s Americans. M usical of 1966 by the New brilliance lies in its staging. newsstand • PHONE ED Z After World War I, the revue York D ram a Critics. It w ent on The stage is bare and it pro­ NOW dom inated the New York stage. to win several Tony aw ards and trudes toward the orchestra in F O R T H E F IR S T T IM E O N F rom these cam e the early m u­ and much national and inter­ a clover-shaped platform . En- ELECTRIC LADY LAND The Jlml Hendrix Allunili■ sic of Cole P o rter, Vincent You- national recognition. In a BySTEVEROBIN trances are m ade from all T H E A M E R IC A N S C R E E N Experience RS 6307 m ans and Jero m e Kern a s well cleverly-staged fashion, the SNReviewer J sides and, as there is no a i r ­ t h e a c tu a l m o m en t o f c o n c e p t ú o as George Gershwin. Produc­ play deals with the life of tions becam e m ore lavish too, Miguel de Cervantes and his placed by Hal Holbrook and tain, lightin - plays a m ajor role. .. . t h e c o m p lo te birth o f a baby m particularly those of George creation of the im m ortal char­ White, E arl Carroll and Florenz a cter, Don Quixote de la BobWright. Joan Diener, a tiny woman Except for the shabby cos­ 1Tiä Pr ) Rincoi nuuu Productions-Ctmmtrtr bu vn * —v n iiiiiin iw i Film »pr resen • ">■•• " —nt with a knockout soprano, first H e lg a ' Zeigfeld. They incorporated the Mancha. tum es, a few props, and som e talents cultivated in vauldville Set prim arily in a dungeon created the role of Aldonza in m akeshift flamenco-dancing and gave the stage such sta rs of the Spanish Inquisition, the as M arilyn M iller, Will Rogers, play allows Cervantes to be­ Fanny Brice, A1 Jolson and com e Quixote. The one drab 1966. She was followed by Maura Wedge, Marlon Mar­ lowe, and currently, Bernice horses, the production stark. Clever lighting again Is used to create the illusion of Is very a ’Err A N ANAMERICANINTERN/fflONALlliUASt Eddie Cantor. set becom es the scene of the Massl. The part Is extremely windmill or a church or a cas­ The depression changed a lot “ glorious quest” of this knight of values, and the theatre was e rra n t. And the simple effects difficult, as it requires a lot of physical as well as vocal tle. “ Man of La M ancha” a t L Hit'S 1 i ñaña MRENT8: because of certain revealing SCENES WE SUGGEST YOU SEE”HELGAf FIRSTIII not exem pt. Audiences w ere a re quite spectacular. anxious for diverting m usical Dale W asserm an w rote the © SPA R TA N 1100 L STARTS TODAY! More on the War Agalnat the m SAOINAW Yeung: Martin Duberman says entertainm ent, but they w ere no book, adapting it from the ‘H E L G A ” Show n once at 9:17 longer am used by the gaudiness Quixote story and Cervantes’ T W IN W IS T 111-0010 7jj<5fr ,9?; those in power In our univerei- Usager* blind to student tif “ The Follies.” Zligfeld died, own life. Joe Darlon and «MC- principle». —2nd C o lo r Hit— -3 rd t e l o i N l f c but in his place cam e the sophi­ Mitch Leigh, lyricist and Jemee Dickey on Allan Sear r sticated farces of Coif P o rter composer respectively, crea­ and Theodore Roethke. and Rodgers and H art. These ted a powerful and moving had flim sy plots, but they w ere score including the fam iliar fast-paced, tuneful and often “ D u ld n ea” and “ The Impos­ No More Vletname? Is It even realistic to Insist on this? . . . Where doee the Vietnam ex­ perience leave us In our rela­ HOWTO SAVE A MARRIAGE AND our risque. E thel M erm an, Bob sible D ream .” The creators Hope, G ertrude Law rence and w ere form erly known for their M ary M artin w ere the perform ­ achievem ents in popular m us­ e rs who helped to popularize ic and advertisem ents, but tions with the U.S.S.R. and Chine? (The flrat of two ex­ cerpts from a conference at the Adlai Stevenson institute In Chicago.) ______ RUIN YOUR LIFE AjmiVIMAL RELEASE » TECHNICOLOR' 3 rd ot 10:48— hot dogs this type of entertainm ent. "Show B oat,” in 1926, was the their “ Man of La M ancha” was first Broadway-scale are first g reat breakthrough for m usical venture. m usical comedy as an a rt form. Originally, the role of Cer­ Part of the Campus Scene It had a book by Edna F erber, vantes was brilliantly created m usic by Jero m e Kern and lyr­ by R ichard Kiley. He w as fol­ ics by O scar H am m erstein. It lowed in New York by Jose this long. also had the g reat Helen Mor­ F e rre r and then David Atkin­ gan and “ Old Man R iv er,” but son, who will perform tonight it was not a trend-setter. Cri­ a t tics considered it a new form y o u n g e r of operetta. MSU. Mr. Atkinson, a actor achieved g reat power in the who has Howlong But nearly 20 years later, role, left Broadway several the m usical comedy cam e of m onths ago to tour w ith the age. In 1943, Rodgers and H am ­ show. He has since been re- m erstein brought “ O klahom a!” is to the stage. This combined © SPA R TA N their g reat m usic with Agnes deM ille’s ballet-type choreo­ 1 T W IN EAST graphy and a cohesive story, (based on “ G reen Grow the Fourth And Stftrrief • L ilacs,” a successful play of an earlier year). From then on, the m usical stage had a form to work with. Final Week JaneRmnU JAMES COBURN JAMES MASON • JAMES FOX • SUSANNAHYORK TODAY IS LADIES’ DAY 75ÿ 1 to 6 P.M. • LAST 2 DAYS* HUNGRY? PffOORAMINFORMATION» 488-0409 Today at 1:00-3:05 Rodgers and H am m erstein s h o r t e n it. T ry a t a n - G lA P M fE R 5:10-9:15-9:25 P.M. P e t e r U stin o v In gy p i z z a o r on e of o u r "H O T M IL L IO N S ” g r e a t s a n d w i c h e s . All TOMORROW . . . T h u rs. at 3:20-7:10-Late d e l i v e r e d I n s t a n t l y at Lansing Y* SUPER BARGAIN DAY! ALL-DAY no e x t r a c o s t . 2 FEATURES youth clubs T w lc e SHOWN THURS. a s m uch need leaders AT 1:30-5:25 The YMCA of Lansing is looking for eight to ten vol­ 9:10 p.m. T h e y h e ld WILD AND WOOLY BOOTS unteers for leaders of the Gray- With the Authentic “ A p r e s - S k i ” Look Y clubs in Lansing Com­ th e fa te m orel munity Schools. of th e F o r C a m p u s , S ta d iu m , o r W in ter R e s o r t Gray-Y is for boys in grades A big 16" one item four through six, and m eets w o r ld pizza for $2.50. a fte r school one day a week. MEN’S WOMEN’S DORM D E L . O N LY Volunteers a re needed for in t h e i r M O N .-T H U R S . Monday, Wednesday and h ands- LABRADOR P O M -P O M Thursday afternoons from 3:30 to 5 p.m . Transportation will and W ater-R epellant Fiberlux M ock-Seal Pull On C A L L 3 3 2 -6 5 1 7 be provided by the Volunteer .SEE d r o p p e d it! With a W arm P ile Lining W ith W arm P ile Lining services of MSU. Males interested in helping the club m em bers develop c it­ izenship and sportsm anship, RARDARQU ** DOeTMNGI1 * $28.00 $50.00 VARSITY ft» -I through recreation and club projects, should call L arry Lise vour chargi dc, 1>M. Limit ano por customor. Ixplros $ot> Nov. f, 1M$. N— Limit out par cuctomcr. Inpiroc Sot., Nov. 9, W o. FOR YOUR S H O P P IN G CO N V EN IEI SUNDAY HOURS 9 A .M . TO 7 P . M eijer & Thrifty A cres Coupon M eijer Thrifty Acres Coupon M eijer & Thrifty A cre s Coupon 5125 W g st S a g in a w & 6200 South Ponns> Wednesday, November 6, 1968 9 Michigan sta te N ew s, E ast L an sing, M ichigan URBAN ACTION PLANS Londoner opens shop T c o m m itte e shifts p r io r itie s f w itA ir UM Urt.' eXn • 'iò r lefties By MARK £i State New» Staff W riter drop-in center, counseling and program activity development in * ‘‘Some JO. VS junior hifL ‘ other young people attend one night to students he knows and enlarg­ unteers in an academ ic, re c re a ­ tional and cultural enrich­ LONDON (AP »-Never mind Lansing's YMCA Urban Action and 12 to 20 senior high and older ing the circle of young people he junior and senior high schools, knows and enlarging the circle m ent aspects in dealing with that business of the custom er Com m ittee has had to change youth attend on another night," some of the youth worked with and group and individual youth of young people in his working alw ays being right. Opening in some of the priorities of its fall he sa:d. these past m onths." activities with those youths who London is a shop where the cus­ program because of increased O utreach w orkers a re assigned group.” dem ands on w orkers due to have been contacted previously. tom er is alw ays left. as p a rt of the counseling pro­ In addition to the four priori­ To aid in further program de­ Kennedy explained th at 40 west William Gruby, a p rinter and school work. gram to a junior and senior high ties th a t have been established, velopment, Kennedy noted, "M ost of our w orkers are eith­ side junior-high-age boys are in­ book salesm an, says he’ll be in school in their areas, Kennedy Kennedy said "A tutorial pro­ a request is being developed for volved in YMCA club groups. The business a week from now sell­ er working a t a reduced load or explained. "They spend three gram is being developed w ith the eight to ten Vista volunteers to have left our staff due to diffi­ program providing leadership ing things for left-handers to six hours per week in the help of volunteer students from enlarge the Urban Action staff. to the boys is sponsored by The shop being prepared cult school schedules,’’ C. H er­ school during lunch hours and b ert Kennedy, director of the the YMCA and the downtown Shaftesbury Avenue ju st off ■OpUrrast'Club « *■ Piccadilly Ctrcus, «*• street ■'Urban Action Committee, said 9 prone to flashy m en’s cloths, The four new priorities in­ The drop-in center is operat­ W h e n y o u c o m e o n in a clude giving leadership to a ed at the W estm inster Presby­ ladies of the evening, theaters terian Church two nights each V a n H e u s e n s h ir t ... and pot smokers. YMCA building-centered club week, Kennedy said. The sales people hired for the shop a re all left-handed. th e r e st c o m e o f f lik e They will be offering left- handed scissors, can-openers, a b u n c h o f s t if f s . kitchen sinks, potato peelers, egg beaters, artists palettes, electric irons, record players, VAN HEUSEN surgeons’ knives and saucepans. 4 1 7 ” VANOPRESS SHIRTS One out of every 12 persons in Britain is lefthanded. H e e l i n g a n d f e e l i n g it! So, Gruby thinks he has a m ark et even though he him self A s a l t y MSU c r e w s t r u g g l e s a g a i n s t th e e n d of s a i l ­ is right-handed. As for the left­ ing s e a s o n on L a k e L a n s in g . R a c in g r e g a t t a s will handers, he com m ents: “ 1 felt they w ere let down by the m ass r e s u m e n ext s p r i n g . m anufacturers. I got in touch S ta t e N ew s p h o to by R ic h W ad dell with m any of the m anufacturers and m ost of them agreed to try out left-handed designs. Now I have been able to get out a c a ta ­ logue of left-handed instru­ m en ts.” Detroiter faces Fountain pens are a big item Now With an Unmistakable in G ruby’s dream . He claim s right-handers pull the pen across paper, left-handers abortion charge British Accent! The British a re c o m in g ... and cam pus patriots push it and so the nibs have to A 23-year-old D etroit m an de­ Road, D etroit, on charges of con­ couldn't be happier! Colorful British clu ster strip es be tilted differently. manded exam ination and post­ spiracy to com m it the crim e of and c h e c k s from Van H eusen are buttoned-dow n The left-handed saucepan ed $5,000 bond Monday in Meri­ abortion and attem pted abortion. problem is solved by having a dian Township Justice Court on in new Stay C lean fabric — perm anently p re sse d for He was a rreste d between 6:30 pouring lip on the opposite side. two abortion charges involving a w rinkle-free a p p e a ra n c e . Further fashion featu res and 7:30 a.m . Sunday a t the In kitchen sinks, the draining an MSU coed. include au th en tic York button-dow n collar and V- Spartan Motel on E a st Grand board is switched to the side Exam ination date was set for T aper fit for the slim m er, m ore m odern look. For a River Avenue in Okemos by the m ore suitable to the southpaw Nov. 13 for Clayton H. Whit­ combined efforts of the Michigar little bit of Britain in a lot of shirt, check out a new disw asher. field, a carpenter of 15744 Burt State Police, U niversity Police and the prosecutor’s office. Van H eusen " 4 1 7 " today! VAN H E U S E N ’ They w ere operating on a tif Communication lag relayed to the U niversity Police from D etroit, and had had Whit 417 field under surveillance since the preceding evening. A se a rd Now froen Van H a u s e n . . . the seam of advantura. . . spurs student unrest w arra n t was obtained from Jus tice Jam es E dgar a t about 5:3< Passport 360 . . . tbs first to last and last and last! | F ria n d s t S enior» ! 8 h a ap a k ifi e h a a a ra l L a n d an e a r to a a.m . Sunday. tions being felt throughout the tr a d itio n a l e x c e lle n c e rewarding career In menswear marketing, merchandising, engl- By DIANE PETRYK A spojeegipan a t the Inghan Inanrinn Iç QI || IVi at Van vWl *Heusenl iwwmrwt • • ■ For full' .. .. w. ....--- *ten Information, - - d your w name and entire culture. * State News Staff W rifer m -“♦‘Everyone, everyw here, is County prosecutor’s office sai 2Q& E» G r a n d R iver address to: Colleg e QcaiAQepartmentkiThe Van Heusen Company, “ Student U nrest on the CoF1 417 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York 1001«. demanding rig h ts.” Collier add­ th at as far as he knew. Whii lege - U niversity C a m p u s ,” field had no previous abortio ed, “ But along with rights we them e of the Michigan Asso­ record. m ust accept responsibilities.” ciation for Higher Education’s “ We m ust find a middle (MAHE) fall conference, w as discussed in a rep o rt of th at conference Tuesday by ground,” one of the faculty sug­ gested, “ Between fossilized ideas S h e a f f e r ’s b i g d e a l g e t s y o u t h r o u g h m em bers of the Education dept, and Jill H art, H arper Woods and the avant-garde. Generally, a “ shared authority’ 2 9 te rm p a p e r s , 3 b o o k r e p o r ts ,1 7 e x a m s , sophomore. The faculty m em bers ex­ w as though to be the answer for problems. student - adm inistration 5 2 q u iz z e s a n d 6 m o n th s o f h o m e w o rk . pressed concern over the lack Miss H art, who spoke a t the of comm unication channels be­ tween ad m inistrators and stu­ conference on “ N arcotics and S O rry dbO U t th d t. Sheaffer’s big deal means you can Drugs U tilization,” said, “ I t’s write twice as long. Because you dents and thought this m ight be a contributing factor to student too late to talk about drugs on get the long-writing Sheaffer dollar unrest. “ Students m ust be the college level when they’r a ballpoint plus an extra long-writing able to find a channel to the de­ already being used a t the high 49C refill free. All for just a dollar. school level." It was acknow­ How much do you think you can cision m ak ers.” Cal C. Collier, ledged that too large a tim e professor of elem entary and secondary education, said. The general consensus was lag exists between ideas for discussion and actual communi­ The world’s longest writing dollar ballpoint pen. SHEAFFER cation. that when students a re ready A com m ittee to consider ways for a change and the policy­ to im plem ent the groups sug­ m akers a re reticen t then out­ gestions will be formed by the bursts occur outside of the MAHE, according to Je rry “ proper channels." At the sam e Simmons, executive secretary tim e it was felt that student un- o fjh e MAHE. re st was p art of the sam e Solar forecasting prevents blackouts BOULDER, Colo. (AP) - Sci­ Automatic equipment detects entific sun-w atchers a re making these changes, and normally it safer to fly to the moon, would shut down the flow of cur­ while making it easier to keep ren t while the trouble is found. the lights burning a t home. In modern pool systergs, Decker If there w ere no warnings, said, the failure could ripple storm s, on the sun could spew from system to system , causing radiation on unprotected astro­ m assive blackouts. nauts exploring the moon and could cause m assive power fail­ Last w eek's solar activity ures on earth, explained Robert probably could have caused B. Decker, chief of forecast services at the Space D isturb­ such a failure, he said. But, as in some earlier cases, the warn­ ■ p P J o in a le a d e r ance F orecast Center here. Using satellites and sophisti­ ings enabled power companies to override the autom atic shut- W in th e fa s t g r o w in g ^ cated optical and radio equip­ m ent, the center studies and offs and there was not so much fie ld o f r o c k e t as a flicker. forecasts “ solar w eath er” much a n d m is s ile p r o p u ls io n as the W eather Bureau does its EXPLORE the potential for professional achieve­ Located 25 miles south of W ashington. D. C job on earth. Indian Head is close to the cultural, social, and ment at the Naval Ordnance Station. Indian Head. Decker said it is possible these forecasts m ight warn First state M atyland. scientific advantages of tb> Na'ir •>'s Capital of ferine opportunities, foi pleasant ou: ban or •. .nanny Itfi Fu-/y technical fields of for you as many o p p o r­ lunar astronauts of dangerous near m ountain and shore esorts. radiation headed their way, even returns: 12 tunities for an exciting and rew arding career as the rapidly gro w in g field of chem ical propulsion. Indian before sensors on their m other Head is a recognized leader in research, develop­ Positions available for Ph.D. candidates only in: spaceships could detect it. ment. production, and evaluation o f propellants and The earth is shielded from so­ GOP votes rocket propulsion systems and has advanced the state-o f-the -art of chem ical propulsion through Physics • Physical Chemistry lar radiation by its own atm os­ Liberal career Civil Service f POINTE AUX BARQUES phere. graduate study at nearby urnve'fii The th reat to electrical power (U PI) -- This tiny community expenses reimbursed. system s is posed by m agnetic in the northern tip of Mich­ N a va l O rd n a n c e S ta tio n storm s generated by the igan’s thumb area held to tra ­ In d ia n H ead. M a ry la n d 20640 flares. These storm s, which also dition today and was the first can knock out short-wave radio to report its returns. com munications, so m eh o w The Huron County C lerk's Of­ fice said the com m unity's 12 R e p re s e n t? ! m tp u s T u e s d a y , N o v e m b e r 12 cause changes in voltage on long-distance transm ission registered voters all voted Re' © 1968 W SHEAr I tK rtl'i Lumrxn <, run i lines. publican. Wednesday, November 6, 1968 10 Michigan State N ew s, E ast L ansing, M ichigan SPORTS Spartan booters eye tourney berth Evanston, 111., has nine goals two goals% and three assists this Kegney said H arris had been the 0 layoff s. ^ ^ hustlei; (or three y ears," Kenney - -’ dttft cl ayfttKor w\r\h/MT\Q^ RyPAJjLBOYCE antr Cwo ■***•• -m** . d ieting *s A» c/ev.'fy ftH i' /9Hy Is a tine fcaaer saur." ttc n c a ttf piayar wrtenHne State News nrtccr has done a fine job on the chips are down, and I am sorry we Deflsnseman Buzz Demling, a who Kenney says has done a The Spartan soccer team re­ and passing to the other play­ St. Louis sophomore, was re­ good job. ceives a re st this week in hopes ers, which accounts for his forward line,” Kenney said. had to lose him for the last “ Houska is a very versatile Tommy K reft, who missed the three gam es." ferred to as an “ outstanding of giving the injured players a large number of assists. sophomore” by Kenney. Dem­ player and got a real nice goal Senior Tony Keyes, the past three gam es due to an in­ K reft is expected to be ready chance to recuperate for the jured cheekbone, is the team 's for play in the NCAA tourna­ ling has done an outstanding job against Ohio last weekend,” Ken­ Spartans' captain, is behind NCAA Tournament. third highest scorer with seven m ent, however. in his first year on a defense ney said. Coach Gene Kenney expects H arris with 21 goals and six that has allowed only four goals Kenney considers Les Lucas, to find out Monday whether assists. Keyes, All-America goals and nine assists. The St. Chicago junior Alex Skotarek back-up to goalie Joe Baum this Louis senior scored five goals has accum ulated five goals in the past ten gam es, Kenney MSU will qualify as an entrant in his sophomore year, pulled a season, the outstanding goalie and nine assists last season and nine assists this season added. in the tournam ent. MSU, Akron thigh m uscle last year and missed John Houska, who has scored prospect in the Spartans' future. and St. Louis a re considered the the last half of the season and ‘Tommy has been a * real Dave Trace, a junior from th ree top contenders from the M\dwest. , 4 - . • If the team qualifies. ife v tir H arris will lead the Spartans into the tourney. The Jam aica junior, TRADITION TRIPS THOR leading scorer last year as a G-man misses chance at medal sophomore, has a total of 15 goals and 14 assists. Kenney calls H arris a "real team m an." K e y S p a r ta n “ F rom all aspects Trevor is w ere tied for fourth in the side w atch his event from the side­ By MARTY GILMORE lines. one of the best center forwards European tradition cost horse event, only one and a I have ever had on a tea m ," Ken­ half points from first place. Thor m ight have p artici­ M S U 's S o c c e r C a p t a i n , To ny K e y e s , b a t t l e s an Ohio Dave Thor, an MSU graduate pated if one of the finalists ney said. “ He is a real danger­ and form er Spartan gym nast, European tradition dictates U n i v e r s i t y p l a y e r f o r th e b a ll d u r in g l a s t S a t u r d a y 's had been injured, Szypula said, ous player and has been a a chance a t an Olympic m e­ th at places a re based on the gam e. S ta t e N ew s photo by M ike B e a s le y i m arked m an." higher all around score in case but none were. dal, Spartan Gym nastics Despite this, Thor’s fourth Coach George Szypula said. of a tie. Since the scores of the other three contestants w ere place tie and 24th place in the As an undergraduate, Thor final all-around standings was becam e a near legend in Big higher than Thor’s, he was the best perform ance by an McLain unanimous MVP, Ten gym nastics by becoming the first person in conference history to win the all-around dropped event. t o seventh in the A m erican gym nast Olympics since 1932. In th at Only the top six qualifiers year, there w ere only seven in the crown three years in a row. in each event go on to the fi­ team s entered in the gym ­ teammate Freehan second lp\jf But it was Thor’s all-around nals. nastics event. perform ance in the Olympics, “ This (Thor’s perform ance) coupled with European gym­ Although Thor had been less indicates progress in gym nast­ NEW YORK (UPI) - Denny m ittee composed of two w riters’ Only five other players were nastics tradition, that cost the than two points out of first ics, but we (the U.S.) have a McLain, the 31-game winner for in each AL city. unanimous choices--Hank Green- Spartan sta r a crack a t an and had a very good chance for long way to go as a te a m ,” the World Champion D etroit Freehan was second in the vot­ burg of D etroit in 1935, A1 Rosen Olympic m edal, Szypula said. a gold m edal, he could onl\ Szypula said. Tigers, was named by the Base­ ing, Boston’s Ken Harrelson of Cleveland in 1953, Mickey Man­ ball W riters Association of third. Tiger Willie Horton fourth tle of New York in 1956, Frank Robinson of Baktim ore in 1966, Modern gym nastics consists America (BBWAA) Tuesday as and B altim ore’s Dave McNally its unanimous selection as and Cleveland’s Luis Tiant tied all in the American League; and Orlanda Cepeda of St. Louis in of ics, six events; free calisthen­ long house, side horse, hor­ IN THIS CORNER. . . the Am erican League’s Most for fifth. I- 1967 in the National League. izontal bar, parallel bars, and Valuable P layer for 1968. “ I t’s a g reat feeling, I don’t The only others ever to win the the flying rings. feel I have to say m ore than “ I got goose pimples all over,” that, especially since it was CY Young and MVP in the sam e Individuals receive points in W h o ’s N o . 1? M a n y vie McLain said when informed of unaimous, McLain said of his year were both in the National ’ioN RH R RH H each event which they enter the aw ard by D etroit G eneral MVP selection. League--Don Newcombe of based on the difficulty of the M anager Jim Campbell. "A lot of guys on our club Brooklyn in 1956 and Sandy Kou- L i t t o n fax of Los Angeles in 1963. in m i ..... ‘ ' m aneuver, the execution, and but only one is chosen The 24-year-old McLain is deserve it. I feel very for­ the form displayed. The high­ In all, 27 players w ere men­ the youngest player to receive tunate that I was picked." est total wins the event. McLain also was a unani­ tioned by the com m ittee with By GARY WALKOWICZ the award since 1944, when Hal Newhouser was named. It was mous choice for the TY Young McLain getting the m axim um 280 T h e m ig h ty T h o r Points a re added from the in­ State News Sports W riter Award last week. points com pared to 161 for F ree­ dividual events to determ ine Is Southern California the best collegiate football team in the also the first tim e since New­ F o r m e r MSU g y m n a s t i c s t a r Dave T h o r p e r f o r m s McLain revealed that some­ han. The Tigers had three play­ the all around winner. houser that a Tiger won the In th e s i d e h o r s e , an e v e n t th e f o r m e r S p a r t a n nation? . . . .> e rs in the Top Five and four in honor, and the first tim e since tim e during the season he set m i s s e d q u a lif y in g f o r In the O ly m p ic f i n a l s on a At the end of the prelim in­ Well, the coaches and w riters who voted in this week s w ire the Top 10 with Dick McAuliffe American League player had won a goal to win the CY Young aries, Thor and three others service polls say it is and I’m sure the followers of O.J. and Com­ seventh. Mickey Lolich, the both the MVP and the CY Award, “ but this is really t e c h n i c a l Ity, pany will a tte st to the polls’ accuracy. something. I did not expect it. T iger's three-gam e winner in Young Award, which goes to But for every poll w atcher who agrees with this week s listing I really feel good about it." their World Series victory over the top pitcher. there will be ten others, in Columbus, Ohio, in Law rence, K ansas, IM News McLain is the first pitcher in T eam m ate Bill F rehan was either league to be a unanimous the only other player nam ed on selection since the aw ards began every ballot, for the first 10 in 1931, according to Jack Lang, St. Louis, got no mention. The MVP ballots w ere cast before the Series began. During the 1968 season, Mc­ hot off the and in a half-dozen other football hotbeds, who will say the polls are m eaningless (translation: our team w asn 't nam ed No. 1) or sw ear there is a conspiracy against their heroes. MSU’s annual Turkey Trot, Football fans are like politicians--the only polls they believe are choices, cast by the 20 m em ­ S ecretary-T reasurer bers of the BWAA Voting Com BBWAA. of the Lain had successive win streaks of five, four, nine, seven and six games. He w as 17-2 on the road a cross country-type event, is scheduled for 5 p.m. today a t Old College Field. Runners can WIRE the ones th at show them ahead. Until ju st several years ago, the public knew little and cared less about these ratings of the various team s. They w ere intended and 14-4 in Detroit. He allowed sign up for the event before mainly for the am usem ent of the people who m ade them up. 241 hits and 63 bases on balls starting time. The last two decades, however, has seen a trem endous boom in 336 innings, struck out the popularity of collegiate football and increased inter sectional 280 batters and recorded 6 shut­ Brian Truhn, a flanker on the Ithaca College football team who Deadline fo r individual competition. outs. He went the route in 28 collapsed during a gam e Saturday, died Monday of a cerebral w restling is noon Friday. Many colleges and universities around the country developed of his 41 starts. hem orrhage. A college spokesman said it had not been determ ined powerhouse team s and proponents of E astern football could no w hether Truhn suffered the injury during the gam e or previously. longer smugly assum e that the best team in the E ast, w here foot­ Entry cards for fraternity, * * * Frosh baseball dorm itory and independent The Sugar Bowl has narrowed its choice of New Y ear's team s to ball began, w as undoubtedly the best in the nation. team badminton are due at Fans debated the qualities of the various team s, but since the All freshm en interested in noon Friday. Tennessee, Gerogia, Penn State and Kansas. top schools m ight often not m eet each other, their argum ents * * * signing up for baseball who would go unresolved. have not done so are asked to The Washington Senators, the last-place team in the American Participants can sign up at Polls stepped in to fill this void and soon becam e an integral check before Friday with the League, will be «n’.d for about $10.5 million before the first of the intram ural office. p art of college football. , baseball office in 226 Jenison. the year, a spokesman for the Winning the conference championship on the football iieia Be­ club announced Tuesday. cam e secondary to being voted the best team in the country by a group of sportsw riters. _ Meet The Newest FromKLH! Tony Conigliaro, trying to m ake a comeback as a pitcher Today, every gam e betw een two highly-ranked team s is dubbed a Poll Bowl' and some schools, such as N otre D am e, will freely adm it th at their m ain goal for the season is to win the m ythical after his career as an outfielder national crown. was ended when struck by a Polls a re praised, damned, scorned, and sworn by, but never, pitched ball, went three innings never ignored. > in an Instructional League gam e Travel to Bear Bryant country and Alabama fans will insist Monday and was tagged with a to this day that neither MSU nor N otre D am e was the 1966 na­ 3-0 loss by the Philadelphia Phil­ tional champiorr, but rath er that 10-0-6 Crimson Tuie team was the lies. rightful champ. , , ... ... But after the argum ents die down, the record books still list one team as the best in the country for one season Terry Dischinger, veteran De­ People will forget who finished a close second in the polls or troit Pistons forw ard is expected who else was undefeated for the season. In other words, you are to be back in action Wednesday No. 1 or you are nothing. How accurate a re these ratings which can m ake or break a after missing the last five gam es with a fractured wrist. te am ’s season? , The pollsters often seem to be too im pressed by a team s re c ­ ord and discount the schedule it plays. KLHModel Twenty-Seven MARION’S N otre Dam e, for instance, has been rated near or a t the top of every weekly poll since 1964. During th at period, how­ The all-in-one unit that will satisfy trol facility likely to add to your FALL SALE ever, the Irish have m et 13 team s rated in the Top Twenty- musical enjoyment without a confus­ five and its record against them the most discrim inating stereo fan. ing array of control features. All of is an unim pressive four wins, It's compact and yet will offer the utm ost in convenience and flexibil­ this at no sacrifices in power—it SWEATERS seven losses, and two ties. ity. The KLH Model Twenty-hvve*. delivery 100 Watts at 4 ohms. The w riters and coaches usu­ REG. $10.00 NOW $6.90 is designed to give you every con­ ally a re too provincial, voting for team s in their own area. They SLACKS Playtex*invents the first-day tampon REG. $12.00 N0W $8.90 a re also voting for m any team s they have never seen before. NO M A T T E R W H A T .B R A N D NAME OR P IE C E O F S T E R E O Despite its shortcom ings, the (W e t o o k t h e in s id e o u t DRESSES polls a re a big asset to college E Q U IP M E N T YOU ARE LOOKING FOR, Y O U 'L L FIND IT AT t o s h o w y o u h o w d if f e r e n t i t i s .) football. They stim ulate interest M ID -M IC H IG A N 'S LA R G E ST C O M P O N E N T D E A L E R . UP TO $25.00 NOW $19.00 in football and have people talk­ Outside: it’s softer and silky (not cardboardy). ing about the collegiate game. Inside; it’s so extra absorbent.. .it even protects on DRESSES F or those who think th a t foot­ your first day. Your worst day! UP TO $22.00 NOW $15.00 ball is THE sport, the polls pro­ In every lab test against the old card b o ard y k in d .. vide a topic for discussion dur­ ing the eight months between HI-FI BUYS the Playtex tam p o n was always m ore absorbent. OPEN WED. & FRI. TILL 9 P M . seasons. A ctually 4 5 % m ore absorbent on the average OTHER NHTES TILL 5:30 P.M. Duffy D augherty’s proposal than the leading regular tam pon. for a playoff to determ ine the Because it’s different. Actually adjusts to you. No. 1 team has m et with little It flowers out. Fluffs out. Designed to protect every TA PE RECORDING INDUSTRIES enthusiasm and likely will not inside inch o f you. So the chance of a mishap M A R I O N ’S be adopted by the NCAA. The is alm ost zero! if "ft . ¡ '! 1331 E . GRAND RIVER polls will thus rem ain as college 323 Eos* Grand R iv e r A /e . football’s only answ er to pro Try it fast. ( j n la \t C \ PH . 3 5 1 - 7 2 2 4 W hy Iiv< pas 3st L a n s ir q 3 3 7 -2 3 1 0 football’s championship play­ ta m p o n * Brookfield P l a z a In th e E a s t L a n s i n g S ta te B ank Bldg. offs. # Michigan State N ew s, E ast L ansin g, M ichigan Wednesday. November 6 , 1968 11 8 ...».»..... | | Q J RANDOM X- 8 Liquor low, focts don t jive 3 * * W í ■ ’■* •• - -- • Buschman. owner of a foam -rubber hip •« ' ■>.) ' À. . He added, however, t t o î lr;^en land ¡ Questionnaires aid 5 * ■- • *. « * • - • .* V , - « ■ «* i... By GEORGE BULLARD roommate selection flask cleverly disguised as a toasted m ay get a liquor license if the leasing State News Staff W riter cheese sandwich, said th a t he hoped state agency certifies that the sale of Drinking alcohol on cam pus is absolutely forbidden, drinking would become legal during alcohol is not inconsistent with the pur­ Richard O. Bernitt, director of public safety, said. Campus police do not seem to care about drinking during games. pose of the land. ■My sandwich doesn’t hold m uch,” he The State F a ir Grounds is one of the football gam es, Dick Buschman, Colorado Springs, Colo., said. few are as specifically forbidden liquor senior, said. By RICH BERNARD For exam ple, if two male “ They’re too busy watching the gam e," he added. “ Actually,” Buschman continued, licenses. States shows that there is no The spokesm an said that a liquor li­ State News Staff W riter students w ere interested in sim ­ “ th ere’s no problem drinking, during Students with incompatible ilar sports, did not object to absolute known criteria for room- Z 'L .1 T /lK ^ A cense could be granted on leased MSU games. I t’s easy to hide in the m asses room m ates chosen by the Un­ smoking and desired the same m ate com patibilitv,” P o tter property if the board of trustees certi­ and drink your heart out.” iversity may find consolation in kind of tra its in room m ates, said In fact, random assign- SOI MU WN€ 0 , t R 1 0 After games, observed Buschman, fied that a liquor license would not be inconsistent with the purpose of the knowing that the selection was they would probably be com ­ men; is alm ost as accurate cam pus parking lots a re open-air tav­ leased land. not done totally a t random. patible, P o tter explained from the com patibility stand- erns. Decisions to lease lands or issue c e r­ “ All new students a re given But if one had grown up in point as anv a other method, he “ For the alumni especially,” he said, the opportunity to select their a large city and desired a added. "car trunks convert to bars and tifications are judgments exch > for the trustees and would be based on own room m ates, ju st as re­ funloving room m ate, while the VNe sii to m ake ad- bum pers serve as foot railings. It s amaz- turning students w ere given at other w as from a rural com­ justm ent o living at MSU as University regulations, he said. ing.” „ Laws prohibiting alcohol within 500 the end of the previous te rm ,” munity and asked that his room­ easy and pleasant as we pos­ Bernitt said that violators of liquor said Norman P otter, asst, m an­ m ate be neat and quiet, they siblv can bv trv ing to find rules caught by cam pus police are re ­ feet of school buildings apply only to buildings used for instruction pur­ ager of resident halls for would probably not be assigned roomma tes based on mutual ferred to the Ingham County prosecutor. interests who will be as com- poses. housing. together. This year from July 1 through September, “ About half of these new "M ost research done in patible le." Potter he said, there have been 10 violations in­ Under this definition halls used ex­ clusively for residence and recreation students do their own choosing,” schools all over the United conclude volving alcohol. P o tter indicated. “ This leaves B ernitt said th at transporting sealed would not legally be school buildings, the spokesman said. approxim ately 25 per cent of liquor through cam pus in cars is perm it­ all students requesting housing ted, providing persons involved a re over All Michigan and University alcohol laws a re strictly enforced by the cam pus for whom we have to select 21. Gables police, B ernitt said. room m ates.” Hour Banc A spokesman for the Michigan Liquor “ All I know,” Buschman concluded, "When a new student requests j Available Control Commission said that state law “ is th at a lot of booze flows before, dur­ on-campus housing, he is mailed Saturday Nights prohibits sale of alcohol on state land. ing and after those home games. ' a housing application. Questions Phone 353-8161 on sports and hobbies, whether it m atters if the room m ate smokes, jobs held and traits desired in the room m ate are p r e s e n ts SPARTAN SPIRIT asked in order to provide us with a m ental im age of the applicant," P o tter explained. "F rom the responses, we Qold FashionO riqinals ieri A c tivitie s m easure e n rt nh u s i a s m can determ ine, a t least in part, the type of person the appli­ cant is and what kind of room­ t h e R in g lea d ers o f a W ^ Ê m ate would be com patible.” He J e w e lr y R e v o lu tio n I -'Jj, By KAREN BRIER ideas. One idea would be to have stadium for the MSU-Purdue those of the residence halls, Greeks could conduct their State News Staff W riter a spirit dinner with the cafeter­ game, and groups from the resi­ G reeks and Co-ops can also own rallies, sponsor charity said. We try to select room m ates Football fans yell loud enough ia decorated and with food nam­ dence halls can sit together and show that they have spirit. football games, and cheer on N EW , . ,R o m a n tic W ed d ii Ring S e ts w th e on the basis of m utual interests, a t a football gam e when the team ed after different football play­ hold up signs to cheer the Spar­ campus. These events m ust al­ c h . r l s h e d a n tiq u e look f o r : f r a n k ly s e n tlm e n Some of these activities could since we really ask very little scores a touchdown, but it is un­ ers and games. tans on. so be organized and registered. be exchange dinners, displays, about the student.” _ t a l , . .lik e lo v e, , .n e v e r o if s ty le . known how much spirit they Residence halls can partici­ Klinsky said that students have when they leave the sta­ pate in events such as guarding a send off list to the Spartans HOW AND W H ERE Activities for off cam pus liv­ with the nam es of the residents should show enough spirit now dium. sparty. m aking window dis­ to convince their team that they TO G ET IT ing units are basically the same. of E ast Lansing on it, a fra te r­ Spartan Spirit, a division of plays, and having individual pep a re behind them all the way. T h e Unofficial Guide to MSU’ Although these com petitions nity and sorority blocks a t the Union Board, has organized a rallies. Trophies will be awarded to Available at Book Stores, will be on a sm aller level than game. com petition to m easure the Blocks can be reserved in the the residence halls and off cam ­ Drug Stores,and The C ard Shop am ount of football spirit MSU pus living units displaying the students have. " BARS andBOOZE ” m ost Spartan Spirit. The spirit com petitions will be held from Monday until the Saturday of the MSU-Northwes- tern football gam e with resi­ October record month Clean it A c r o s s F ro m H me :. B ldg. dent halls and off cam pus living G reater Lansing's before you units participating. The com petitions will be r a t­ ed, on a ten point scale ..with for nation’s auto m akers store it. largest selection of wide and •'vmuhual I J, ‘ ■■ Jew elry an: “A rt'C enter Phone ! 3 2 -4 6 7 3 higher points given to m ore en­ DETROIT (U PI) -- October record 304.2^4 cars and trucks month of uninterrupted sales Wedding thusiastic students with the during October, the first tim e increase dating back to August Rings 319 E. GrandF was a record month for the na­ greatest am ount of p articipa­ the firm had topped the 300, 1967. E ast Lansing, :h. tion’s auto m akers as both tion. G eneral Motors Corp. and Ford 000-mark in one month. GM A m erican Motors Corp. sold G ary Klinsky, Southfield sop­ Motor Co. turned in the best sold 557,804 cars and trucks 27,031 ca rs during the month, homore and Spartan Spirit di­ sales record for any m onth in during the month. i an increase of 2 per cent over rector. said th at previously the October 1967, the sm allest of 623 E . G ra n d R iv e r their history and Chrysler Corp. spirit shown on cam pus has had the g reatest October in the With sales of 142,251 units the m ajor auto m akers an­ E a s t L a n slh g been the work of various com ­ history of the company. during the month, Chrysler nounced. m ittees and not the m ain body C LE ANE RS ‘A cross from Student Services’ For Shimmering Ford announced it sold a m arked the 14th consecutive The October sales m arks of students. w ere seen by auto executives lights or soft velvet Residence halls a re encour­ as an indication of strong con­ nights SPA R T A N SH O P P IN G C E N T E R aged to organize their own spir­ it activities, registering them Michigan voting lines long sum er approval for the new m odels which bowed in during TRO W BRID G E AND HARRISON with Union Board at least two E . LANSING Satin panel glides the la tte r p art of September. days prior to the event. DETROIT (U PIi - Even the mid-morning slack-off failed Lee A. Iacocca, Ford vice smoothly from “ It isn’t how g reat a project plucky Michigan voter who to develop. president, said the October Phone 332-6229 the back of this red or you devise," Klinsky said. “ No big let up so far,” one sales “ support our predictions Store Hours: emerald evening jum ped out of bed early this “ Time and effort show sp irit." county official said as -Michi­ of record industry sales for both Mon.-Sat. d ress. Empire morning to cast his ballot usually Points will be given to all gan’s four million eligible vot­ the current calendar and model 9 a.m . to 9:30 p.m . Satin and found he had to stand in a long living units for the num ber of Sunday rhinestone line. ers storm ed the polls. y e a rs.” m em bers th at participated in 10 a.m . to' 6:30 p.m . trim . Block S this year. Morning voting reports found Another com petition will be long lines and w aits of an hour sizes 5 to 15 the compiling of a send off list in some areas as Ingham. Eaton, for the football players to take to the N orthw estern game. One point will be given for each 100 Clinton and Jackson counties notched record Heavy voting was continuing turnouts. M a c ’s P ip e W ITH A C O M P L E T E LINE O F S h o p SUPER DISCOUNTS in Muskegon. Kent, Berrien, on H E A L T H & BEA U TY Al&S nam es on the list. P IP E S AND SM OKfNG S U P P L IE S Residence halls a re also en­ Kalamazoo. G enessee.and Cal- IS NOW L O C A T E D AT couraged to plan creative spirit hous counties as an expected oothpaste i fmf ■§ m e Wv wHnAn T i ' sa S ^ 2 0 3 N . W a s h i n g t o n CREST Mint or Regular b 3/4 oz. Reg.—$1*05 (NEXT DOOR TO PARAMOUNT NEWS) in s Phone 487-0670 Daytim e O P E N 9 -1 1 DAILY PAMPERS 30’s Reg.—$1.89 C L O SE D SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS 48’s Regular o r Super All crops and soils majors are invited Dr. Gerald Simmons will discuss the MODESS Reg.—$.1.89 to attend the meeting of the Spartaa Craps u d Soils Chib at 7:30 tonight in 309 Agriculture Rail. # • • structure of M.E.A., S.M.E.A. and N. E.A. at 7.30 tonight in the fifth floor Erickson Hall Faculty Lounge. Every­ one is welcome to attend. s a le Liquid—12 oz. or Dr. Kahn, will present an illustrated • • • T ablets--100’s lecture a t a meeting of thePre-medical S K IW E A R Reg.—$1.59 The MSU Promenaders will hold an Society at 8 tonight in 31Union. Plans open dance from 7 to 8:15 tonight in 34 for field trips will be fiscussed and committee positions will be assigned. Women’s l.M. Lessons will be offered. By REGENT -• • * Child development majors and all interested persons are invited to attend the organizational meeting of the Child Paul Deussen of the MSU Art Depart­ ment will speak on “ Morgantina and Sicilian Archeology at 8 tonight in Kresge Center Art Gallery. ERNST ENGEL PERMANENT ANTI FREEZE Developmeat Club at 7 tonight in 1 • • • Home Economics Bldg. • • • Prof. Larry Johnson will speak on The Varsity Club will meet at 7:30 tonight in the Varsity Club Room at 1967 Jackets MULTI-VITAMINS EDWARD’S “Brasil” at the Dairy Club meeting at 7:30 tonight in 126 Anthony • • • Spartan Stadium. • • • The Union Board will show the movie 1 /4 Off W/ MINERALS Reg.—$2.95 of the Ohio Statr-MSl' football game at Students for White Community Action will meet a t 7:30 tonight in HHB Wells 8 tonight in Itie Union Parlor Admission is free. R t f . $10 P a n ts Hand Lotion Hall. A movie will be shown. • • • Ami Seal, fellow in modern Indian • • • The nm pu> magazine nrfils Mail members and «•! people interested in Now $25 & $37.50 ITALIAN BALM w / D ispenser 8 0 /. u t ; , - .89 History at Trinity College, Cambridge, writing, advertising, photography, bus­ will speak on Muslims la India at 3 iness and public relations to attend the today in 106 Center for International meeting at 6 45 p.m. Thursday in Union Short-Aver*ge-Long LADIES’ Programs. The lecture is sponsored by the Asian Studies Center. • • • “The Rogues" will entertain at a Parlor C. The College Life Organization, spon­ SUPP HOSE • or MEN’S sored by the Campus Crusade for Christ, R eg.~J4.95 mixer from 6 to 8 tonight on the third will meet at 9 p.m. Thursday in the floor of Case Hall. Admission is 25 Gold Room of the Union. cents. • • • I’hc l«»wti •.««n) *• hold in »■'»■>u- Lot Us F ill Your P re a c rlp tio h f The MSU Cycling Club will meet at tive meeting ui t> Ju toiugnt and a gen­ 7:30 tonight in 206 M ens I.M. Coach Karl Wettburg will speak and slides on eral meeting at 7 tonight in 21 Union. , Save On All Sick Room M i f i l i Uniforms must be worn, as pictures bike racing will be shown Everyone will be taken after the general meeting is welcome. W ednesday, N o v em ber 6, 1968 12 MichiganState News, East Lansing, Michigan — — — — — STA S TATE TE NEWS NEW5 LASSIFIE S5S.r5w Classified Wins by Landslide! W h y don’t you get on the b an d w ag o n and try w a n t ads? «3 g 5 5 -J 8 2 5J5 0 3 5 5 -8 2 5 5 _________________ ______ _ : r o r 'S f l l o ► lo v m e n t Automotive ONE BEDROOM luxury near campus. BICYCLE SALES and aervice Alio HORSE BOARDING-six miles from MALE AND FEMALE Applications wed. EAST LANSING CYCLE, 1215 campus. Access to 3,0» acres of state MERCEDES 9 0 Sb 1963 sedan AM Balcony, laundry, furnished. 337- land Box stalls and individual pad­ now being taken for training clam. 22». 5-11/7 E. Grand River. Can 332-003 C FM radio, •,000 mile* Many ex Full or part-time employment a t docks. Recreation fadUUes avail­ In s . 11400 351-4702 *-» * the new FRED ASTAIRE DANCE EYDEAL VILLA APARTMENTS 4’ BOA Constrictor, tame, excellent able to groups in spring. 041-62». health. $20. CaU 351-83« 3-11/6 S-U/7 STUDIO a t 541 E ast Grand River, TWO bedroom apartments for $2» MUSTANG 1(06 Burgundy, 209. 4- E a it Lansing. No experience neces­ month. Swimming pool. GE appli­ • AUTOMOTIVE speed. console, rally pac, radio, sary: Salary phis. Apply In person ances, garbage disposals, furnished LARGE SELECTION of frames. Glass­ COUNTRY STORE BAZAAR at ALL e EMPLOYMENT excellent condition 355-1060 between or call 372-6994 10-11/$ es for everyone. OPTICAL DIS­ SAINTS EPISCOPAL CHURCH-8» for four man or five man. CaU 10:30 a.m .-12:» p.m. or after 5:30 »1-4275 after 5 p.m. C COUNT 418 Tussing Building. Phone Abbott Road, East Lansing-Friday, e FO R RENT pan. M V» BABYSITTER WANTED: Twin boys IV 2-4687. C-ll/8 Nov. 8th-9 a.m. to 5 p.m. HoUday • FO R SALE my home 2W day* per week. 355 ONE BEDROOM furnished for mature Decorations - Collectors—Art Trea­ MUSTANG 1967 GTA. All accessories male or female. Near campus. 332- GE TV 21" _ console 19». sures — Misc. Gifts — Aprons — e LO ST A FOUND Best offer takes it. 351-8982, 9-5 04*3 : 351-37». 5-U/* 5157 10-11/18 Remote cor,S O L D picture tube. Country Kitchen - Candy - Jam* • PERSONAL p.m. 5-11/11 332-55». 3-11/6 & Jellies - Childrens Corner. Lun­ REGISTERED NURSE: Shift 11-7. • PEA N U TS PERSONAL Opening available in a medical care cheon will be served from 11:15 e REA L ESTA TE OLDSMOB1LE, n mic *® con_ facility. Opportunity for rapid ad­ H ouses BLANK 8 track cartridge tape 3W’ till l:00-F ree nursery available vertible. W h ite ,S O 1" “ Good con­ m m • SERVICE vancement within a dynamic organi­ * at $2.79. MAIN ELECTRONICS 55» aU day. S-ll/8 dition. IV 2-7233. 5 ii/t EAST LANSING: Two bedroom house. South Pennsylvania. C zation. Attractive starting salaries e TRANSPORTATION and above average (ringe benefit*. Furnished. 351-60». 3-11/8 HOW AND WHERE • WANTED OLDSMOBILE 1963 Excellent con­ Apply Provincial House, 1*43 Haga- REFRIGERATOR-MAGIC Chef, 33” TO GET IT dition New tires. Deluxe interior dorn Rd , East Lansing. 332-5061. d THREE BEDROOM house. Unfur­ by 32" by 23” . Fantastic condition. •T h e Unofficial Guide to MSU” IV4-2625. 5-11/6 10-U/lt nished, South East corner of Lan­ »1-0118. 3-11/6 DEA D LIN E sing. Six minutes from campus. $125 Available at Book Stores, Drug OPEL - 1967 K *dan ^ COUNTER AND broiler help wanted month. WiU accept students. 882- BOGEN-100-WATT amplifier; Two Stores, and The C ard Shop 1 P.M . one c la ss day be­ mileage Good S O L D Excellent 2451. 5-M/8 VM turntables; Two 5-FT VM col­ Male or female. P art or full time. second car 393-3062 or see at 2229 umn speakers and microphone with ‘Specials-W here They’re At* fore publication. Apply in person. Burger Chef 6031 Victor. M 1/* South Cedar. 10-11/19 THREE BEDROOM carpeted home near cord. CaU after 6 p.m . 655-1575. 3-11/7 C ancellations - 12 noon one Hagadorn and Burcham. $ 1 » .» . 351- THE ROGUES make Case Hall rock c la ss day before publica­ PEUGEOT 403. 4-door, sun roof. 832$after6:Mp.m. S-U/8 BILLIARD TABLE-Brunswick Chal­ tonight 6-6 p.m. 351-6089 1-11/6 DENTAL ASSISTANT certified or ex­ tion. 1903, low mileage. 332-2469 3-11/6 perienced. FuU or part-time. East lenger with slate top. $2». CaU 665 Lansing office. Call 332-8665 3-11/t EAST LANSING: 1231 Ferndale. 3 bed­ 86». 3-11/7 EXPERIENCED LEAD singer want­ PONTIAC LEM ANS 1966-three speed room duplex. Unfurnished, carpeted, ed for progressive rock group. 353- PHONE convertible. Excellent condition. Take DENTAL HYGIENIST: Salary and hours full basement. Nice yard. $175 month. SKIS HART PRO, step in bindings, 2102,353-2103. 3-11/6 over payments of $56.30 per month. GOVAN MANAGEMENT 351-7910. poles. One year old. 332-6294. 3-11/7 open. E ast Lansing office. Call 332- Phone credit manager. 460-2379 C-ll/8 355-8255 0246 evenings All calls confidential. After 5p.m. 332-0W1. O . TV RENTALS for students’ W ® 10 GOOD used sewing machines. $15- l k , month Free service and delivery. 3-11/t PONTIAC LEMANS 1968 FuU pow­ NEED FOURTH man for house on $50. Straight stitchers and automa­ CaU NEJAC 337-1300. We guaran­ RATES er. Rally green. Vinyl lop. 355-3252. THREE MEN needed to demonstrate Lansing’s East Side now through tics. DENNIS DISTRIBUTING COM­ tee same-day service. C 1 d a y . . . . . . . $ 1.50 3-11/8 June. $46 month. CaU after 6 p.m. PANY, 316 North Cedar, opposite movie equipment. WiU train quaUfied 484-1084 3-11/8 City Market. 485-2677. C-U/8 FREE . . . A Thrilling hour of beauty. 15< p e r word p er day PONTIAC 1966 Firebird "400 with applicants. Must lave transportation. For appointment call 4844519. MERLE 3 d a y s ....................$4.00 ram air. Loaded with options 695 Full or part-time work. Good wage SEWING MACHINE clearance sale. NORMAN COSMETICS STUDIO, 16» 13 l / 2 f p e r word p er day TWO GIRLS to sublease winter term. Brand new portables. $49.50. $5.» 2846. 3-11/6 (or $3 per hour). Call 487-5985 East Michigan. C-ll/7 504 Abbott, $65,351-0677 5-11/2 per month. Large selection of recon­ 5 d a y s .................... $6.50 between 9 a.m -9 p.m 5-11/12 SUNBEAM SPORTS car Newly paint­ ditioned used machines. Singers, 13{ p e r word p e r day FURNISHED HOUSE-five students. P e a n u ts P e rs o n a li _ ed. Low mileage. Good tires. Two EARN THOSE Christmas extras by Whites, Necchis, New Home and $2» month. Paid utilities. On bus (based on 10 words per ad) tops. 4598 Manitou. Okemos 3-117 showing VIVIANNE WOODARD COS­ line. 132 Shepherd. 120-224-4135. “many others," $19.95 to $39.95. METICS No house to house. For an 3-11/8 Terms. EDWARDS DISTRIBUTING DEAR SKINNER, our skins are not re­ T here will be a 50< service THUNDERBIRD 1955 3 speed V-8 appointment call Gwen Lorenz 351- COMPANY, 1115 North Washington. placeable but you are! You would look and bookkeeping charge if with overdrive. Black with white 1094. between 1-5 p.m. 3-11/8 489-64». C-ll/7 lovely over a fireplace. Pi Kappa Phi. this ad is not paid within hardtop and wire wheela. California 1-11/6 car in concourse condition Must women to DIAMOND BARGAIN: Wedding and PART-TIME one week. sell-wili consider trade. Phone Mr. join a grc f i l led less. Must UNUSUALLY NICE single for quiet, engagement ring sets. Save fifty FH PLEDGES. CongratulaUons on the 10-11/13 responsible man. Near campus. 332- per cent or more. Large selection great escape. Isn’t inflation wonder­ Hicks 489-2379 C-ll/S have car « l - j ä » The State N e w s will be 17«. 5-11/8 of plain and fancy diamonds. $25 ful? Actives. 1-11/6 $1». WILCOX SECOND HAND responsible only for the TRIUMPH 1968 GT6 fastback 4 speed. INTERESTED IN an unusual job to STORE 5 » E. Michigan. 4854391. fir s t day’s incorrect in se r­ Will take best offer Call after 5 earn Christmas money? Call Vi- ‘RUN!’ F o r Sale C THE INCREDIBLE HULK is in Love. p.m. 882-0807 3-11/7 vianne Woodard Cosnetics. IV 5-8351. Have you heard anything, Becky? 1-11/6 tion. C-ll/6 PROCESSING. REGULAR or Super 8 BIRTHDAY CAKES-7", $3.64; 8” TRIUMPH SPITFIRE 4, Mark II, 1965 Kodak color movie film or Koda- $4.16; 9". $5.20. Delivered. Also CONGRATULATIONS - TRIANGLE Red. excellent black top and interior. WAITRESSES MONDAY through Fri­ chrome 135-20 with this ad. $1.29. sheet cakes Kwast Bakeries. 484- pledges on your successful raid. 1-11/6 Reasonable 353-2500 5-11/8 day nights 9 p.m. until 1 a.m. Ex­ MAREKREXALL DRUGS. C-ll/7 1317. O T t* State New» doe» not perienced in food and oockteil. Must Fo r Rent F o r Rent A WOMAN of Renown. Zari Sarkis­ VOLKSWAGEN 1968 white with black be 21. Apply in peraon at MONTY'S ’HOLE IN ONE! Maybe not. but ched ian, Union Board Worker of the Week. permit racial or rellglou* BAR. East Grand River. Phone ED 2- GIRLS CLOTHING sizes 4 and 5 Call 1-11/6 interior ISc Q L D * and P*rfect ONE MAN for University ViUa. $55 GIRL NFJ today's Classified Ads for good buy; discrim ination In it» ad- 393-3062. 3-11/8 condition, tmJ, immovable AM-FM- 4781 S-U/6 per month. Winter and spring. 351- immedia R E N T iB U T Ä in golf clubs! vertlslng c o l u m n » . The SW. Asking $1695 656-1022. 6-11/8 6771. 5-11/7 GUESS WHO-The gift from the SOCIAL BALLROOM dance teacher. 0298. 5-11/6 PIERCED EARRINGS - Now 20 per State News w ill not accept cent off. Three big gift ta b le s-» Animals Great Pumpkin made me the happi­ advertising which dlscrlm - VOLKSWAGEN 1962 White, sunroof, Excellent position lor experienced HOLT: Ten minutes from campus. e s t Princess in the world. 1-11/6 woman instructor of private and CAPITOL w > ® apartment per cent, 40 per cent, 50 per cent 1nates a g a i n s t religion, good condition Asking book value. single g R E N l t U v i l e g e s On Luxury one bedroom tri-level apart­ off. Pearls 1/3 off, Linde stars 25 GERMAN SHEPHERD-black and ton. $540. 355-0753after 5p m 5-1111 class social dancing. Must be over ment. Refrigerator, stove, water and I’LL TRADE two sopwith camels for race, color or national or­ 21, free to work evenings Monday college bus line. 372-4583. 5-11/8 per cent off. William H. Thompson, perfect markings. Male. 7 months heat included 604-0651. and 484- Jeweler. Now located for your con­ old. AKC registered, all shots. Good one Piper Colt in the AFROTC flight igin. VOLKSWAGEN 1968, like new $350 through Friday 6-10 p.m. CaU IV 2- 4481 C-ll/18 instruction program! 1-11/6 2259 after 2 p.m for interview ap- GIRL NEEDED over 21 for 2-girl venience in Marek Drug Center, with children. »1-66». 3-11/6 off new price. 655-1022. 3-11 8 apartment. $72.50. 372-4006. 3-11/8 CUppert and Vine St. opposite Fran- p ntment S-U/6 FACULTY-STAFF, ARBOR FOREST dor. 1-11/6 NOAH'S ARK PETS VOLKSWAGEN STATION Wagon 1963 ONE OR two girls winter term. New APARTMENTS. Trowbridge Road. Service WANTED NEAT, attractive, person­ Deluxe apartments available. Unfur­ 38,000 miles. Two new tires $450 able young men—16-27, with car. Cedar Village. Reduced rent. 351-'. ARE YOU a jogger-nut? 1 L ong Hal r e d G u in e a P ig s INStlRANCfE : AUTOMOBILE - Motor- Also 1966 Oldsmoblle F-85. $1225 nished. Party House, , pool. 337- in-place jogging machine. jK* port­ Automotive Both in A-l shape. 372-4213. 4-11/8 393-5660 1 30-5 p.m.,\lon.-Fri. O 3017. 3-11/6 0634. C-ll/7 able. Only $».50. 351-5582. 332-6680 $6.95 195 332-3585after 4 p.m. 3-11/7 2761. 5-11/* excellent wages, steady work and 2-11/6 WINDSOR 10’ x 54'. Two bedrooms. Phone 351-6438. 3-11/8 SUPEREX PROFESSIONAL head­ TERM PAPERS, theses, general many other benefits. Call 480-99» Excellent. Furnished. On lot at phones, two woofers, two tweeters. Winslow’s. 351-5182. 511/11 typing Prompt service. Experienced. CHEVELLE MAI.IBU 1967. 327. V-8. Auto Service & Ports for an interview An Equal Opportu­ GIRL WANTED for Rivers Edge be­ ONE MAN for two man apartment im­ 25' extension. $55 new, only $40; also, 337-2603. 2512/4 3-speee stick shift Only 16.000 miles nity Employer. 6-11/8 ginning winter term. Walking dis­ mediately. »1-5149. 5-11/8 MASON BODY SHOP 812 East Craig portable tope recorder, $30. Brand lev wide ovals Chrome wheels tance from campus. Call 332-0934. 355-8026 M l/6 Lost & Found TYPING DONE in my home 2‘/a blocks Kalamazoo St Since 1940. Must sell 553 7049. 5-11 11 PART-TIME HELP-Telephone soli­ 3-11/8 ONE B E D B ^ Y . — c r V 1’ utiUties, from campus. 332-1619. O Complete auto painting and col­ citor needed, approximately 20 hours fireplace R E N ‘ t U le winter lision service IV5-0256. C NEED HIGIl-FI COMPONENTS? We LOST: WEST ramp after Baylor game: CHEVY 11 1965 Automatic. Good con- per week. Use your apartment phone. TWO MAN apartment $125 month. term. 4M -wx 511/8 WILL TYPE and correct minor gram ­ have access to all lines and because seventeen year old silver Ronson rtittrr- $990 4472 North Street. Holt. Should better $50 a week. Call 351- Close campus. Starting now or winter of new buying and selling techniques matical errors. Free delivery. 351- AUTOMATIC CAR WASH. Only 50c TWO-FOUR man apartment. New lighter with inscription HB-D-V. 2-11/7 7642 for appointment. 3-11/7 term. 332-6645. 3-11/8 we will beat any price by at least 5536. 4-11/8 It's the best in town. You may sit Immediate occupancy. Block from Please call 351-53». 511/8 5 per cent or not sell at all. CaU CHEVROLET WAGON, 1965-V-8 in your car for 2V» minutes while EXPERIENCED WO“ ' to care for TWO BEDROOM furnished. Close to campus. Phone 337-1294. 3-11/6 3352812 for free estim ate on the BETTY LOFTON: term papers, the­ your car is washed and waxed. Also LOST THREE or four months ago: automatic power brakes, white­ my two y * > » \ /e of paper DATSUN 1966-Ruadster Guud cot ■ 6(81. ED 2-8531. 5-11/$ Z ip Cods 24. Purchase 6 low dition. Tonneau $1,000 351-4145 EMPLOYERS OVERLOAD Company. 7 Hymn after 5:30 p.m. 5-116 S tu d e n t No. r~ i i 6 9 10 8 Bowfm genus Experienced secretaries, typist* to Phone work on temporary a ssignmenta. Never 9. Offenses DODGE 1964 Station Wagon V-8, auue a 1 is a foe Phone »7-6071 C-ll/7 C o n s e c u t i v e D a te s to Run II m atic. power steering, food condi­ tion $500 393-1424 * Ml 6 GREAT LAKES EMPLOYMENT for SEVEN w 15 10 lofty 16 Clan quarrel H eading — * 18. Sphere FA1RLANE 196« Two door hardtop 289. stick, with low mileage and permanent positions for men and women in office, sales, technical. IV 2-1543 C-ll/7 THIRTY P r i n t Ad H e r e : % 7 % 18 n 20 Woolly pyrol 21. High .saves % good rubber. 627-5626 3-11/8 rfENT-A-STUDENT office need« help ONE 20 r % %21 4 % 22 Observe 75 Rubber tree for field employment. CaU 482- Ì4 25 2/ 18 » 77, Letter FALCON 1961. Very dependable $125, ¿Î i r best offer CaU 351-88» 3-11 '6 0624 or write Box 374. East Lansing. d % "fi Sw3rd 4-11/8 SO 31 32 H 34 Wild animal m Û , Understand FIREBIRD 1967 Automatic, all power, F o r th o se P e a n u t s P e r s o n a l s m u s t be p l a c e d In p e r s o n . $7 38 BABYSITTER FOR 3 children, 2 in 35 Vo Weapon like new. Take over payments of school. 6 hours Tuesday and Wednes­ who c a n % % W . d Heath genus $98 40 month. Phone credit mana­ day $10 per day. 351-6864 511/11 42 a f f o r d th e 3 days - $4.00 5 days - $6.50 39 RO 41 ger 4852379 C-ll/8 10 Words or Less: 1 day - $1.50 è % V /. id. Pondered Second profession - evenings b e s t In 15^ p e r word 10£ per word 65£ p er word 45 •46 H I 19 Culmination Over 10 Words Add: 4} Head cook FORD GALAXIE 190 2-door, auto­ m atic, good condition. $3». 332- 4000. 5U /S & weekends. Men and wom­ en. $350 p art time monthly guarantee If you m eet our ap artm en t liv in g . a □ 46 m SO 11 Marquee Gumbo M all to : M ic h ig a n S ta te N ew s SI « Pigeon requirem ents. Students and 3 4 6 S tu d e n t S e r v i c e s Bldg. 1 r '4 . Objective FORD: GREAT running condition. 1961. teachers; $800 full tim e, te le­ \ ß . G u u l & i G o -. Mirthful Good tires. $86 3551131 evenings 351-8862 MSU E a s t L a n s in g , M ich . 511/6 phone; 484-4475 ______ 220 A l b e r t W ednesday, N ovem b er 6, 1968 1 3 Michigan State N ew s, E ast L ansing, M ichigan InghamCounty races N e w custom Preadm ore, an ex-m arine with re-evaluation study of the role (continued from page ■ one) He is a g tK v íW f w üthe ¥ ie Uni­ 24 t w r s oi policy » e rie n c e , versity of D etroit Law School won hIrf fto rth term » sherifl. f and the m aster of law program s thus continuing his association with the Sheriff’s Dept, that be­ of police. ^ ^ - He h as been a itm nai £ a t the Ionia reform itory and was as­ sistant director of the Urban By TOM HAMP They have a bearskin rug over how much tim e it takes to a t Wayne State University. Two E ast Lansing residents the edge of the barnwood counter m ake a vest or ja c k e t,” P e t­ Scodeller’s campaign rested gan in 1947. S teinfatt's only ex­ Action Com m ittee of the YMCA. Frendt, 22, is an E a st Lan­ have combined their efforts to and display case; two mink ersen said. Other than the help m ostly on his short experience as perience was as a m ilitary po­ offer a new service in this stoles a re on display. Several of a few friends they do the the prosecuting attorney with a licem an with the National sing junior high school teacher. are a : custom leather work. dyed skins in pink, blue and work them selves and m ost of slogan of “ Keep the m an who Guard. The eighth district, which in­ Belts, vests, skirts, watch leopard are also on display. it is done by hand. knows the job b est.” One of his His battle against Preadm ore cludes the cam pus, Spartan bands, sandals, beads, purses Vests a re another custom In the shop the beads, watch- m ain points w as that he was sel­ for the four-year position did Village, Cherry Lane Apart­ and just about anything m ade m ade fashion. The skin is cut bands, necklaces, belts, purses ected unanimously over his op- however produce a spirited ex­ m ents, and a two-block section from leather can be found at from a pattern and then dye is and other item s are m ade by 'jo/ient by the Ingham Circuit change of views on some of the along Grand River Ave. in E ast "B ro th er G am bit Slick Trading spread on the skin. The dyed W areham and Petersen, but they judges when the post was filled, duties confronting the Sheriff. Lansing, was one of 21 districts surface of the skin is then do have some paintings, pants Steinfatt pledged th at he Co.” thereby indicating th at those in established, in Ingham County Terry W areham and Gary laid on the top of the barn­ and other goods. the field had the m ost confidence would never use paid inform ers under the guidance of the U.S. P etersen opened up the custom wood counter and a can is Brother Slick’ (W areham ), in him. in narcotics investigations nor Supreme Court ruling of “ one shop in early Septem ber a t 211 rolle over the skin, giving the said that they want to give Weed concentrated on three would he use wiretapping. His m an, one vote.” Abbott Road, next to the State leather a grain. custom ers a “ pleasant atm os­ aspects: education, work experi­ opponent said that although he Theater. W areham had a shop Stitching and em broidering phere and the best m aterial'and Previously, the board of super­ ence and legal experience, hoped he would not hay.e to use in the back of his ap artm en t (if desired) is the next step. craftm anship” available. visors was composed of the town­ which he thought m ade him “ the such methods, he would seek on Cedar S treet in Lansing P etersen said they would fashion W areham is a graduate of court authority to do so if he ship supervisors and appoint­ m an who knows the job b e tte r.” la st sum m er. a vest to w hatever style or MSU. He received his B.A. ees of city councils. This did He cited, among other things, thought it to be necessary. He began by making sandals design the custom er wishes. in a rt and philosophy. P etersen P read m o re pointed with pride not allow city residents to vote his experience as a construc­ L e a th e r r w o k for friends two years ago for served three years in the Army to the fact that he began a civil­ for the township board m em ­ tion worker, factory worker, bers. the cost of m aterials. “ I bought “ People ju st don’t realize and attended Lansing Community sales clerk and insurance ad­ ian review board for the police “ B r o t h e r G a m b i t , ” p i o n e e r In th e p r o d u c t i o n of a pair and decided I could make how much leath er costs, and College. juster. He also pointed to his one consisting of nine m em bers, As o f 12:30 this morning them , so I m ade m yself a p a ir,” c u s t o m m a d e l e a t h e r g o o d s , Is at h o m e an d at w o r k y$ar as a law clerk, four years as three of which are civilians. results o f supervisor races in W areham said. F rom then on In h i » new sh o p w h ic h r e c e n t l y r e p l a c e d th e Q u e s t ­ corporate counsel, one year as Steinfatt said the question was the seventh, ninth and tenth he m ade sandals for friends. head of the juvenile and support not whether there should be ing B e a s t ' s l a i r . division while on the prosecutor such a board, but w hat its powers staff, and said he was an attorney should be. The present board districts were inconclusive. In Munich, G erm any, a year ago last sum m er, W areham made sandals on the steps of the Placement Bureau STATE OFFICES The foUowiag employer* will be la- ical Engineering, Metallurgy, Me­ th at had, “ researched, carefully had jurisdiction over all dis­ A rts Academy. After he re­ tervtewtag from November 4 tbroagb chanics, Materials Science, Chemistry, prepared and presented hun­ ciplinary cases. turned to the United States he November 8, 1868. December, Marcb and Physics m ajors (B) Location: Var­ dreds of crim inal and civil cases Steinfatt was critical of the am ount of bond assessed in the decided to open his own shop. a » Jane graduates of aU degree levels ious. United States Steel Corp Financial successfully and with sincerity P etersen joined W areham as are eligible to interview nnlesa other Management Program All m ajors of county crim inal cases, calling GOP awaits results of purpose. wise indicated. a partner in late sum m er and Friday: the College of Business (December and Scodeller, in addition to his them ridiculous. Preadm ore the two then decided to open March graduates only) (B ) Location. Abraham and Straus: AU m ajors of four years of experience a s chief said th at he did not think the shop in E a st Lansing and make the CoUege of Business, Mechanical Various. assistan t prosecutor, during bonds w ere excessive. leather goods other than sandals. * Engineering, Accounting, Retailing. Department - Industries! Credit Analy­ United States Steel Corp. Treasury which tim e he tried “ m ore than Another of S teinfatt’s pro­ Home Economics, Marketing, and all gram s, which helped him win "During the ’50s when pegged majors of the CoUeges of Arts and sis: All majors of the College of Bus­ 250 crim inal court cases,” said he By MITCH MILLER the endorsem ent of the State disappointm ent election night. rest o f the nation, watching pants w ere the style, my m other Letters, Communication Arts, and So­ iness (December and March graduates w as best because of his 11 years State News Staff Writer only) (B.M) L o c a t i o n : Chicago, Most o f the staffers and television and waiting for the wouldn’t peg my pants, so I cial Science (December and March grad­ Illinois. Detroit, Michigan; and Pitts­ of experience as tria l attorney, News, was a prom ise to experi­ party officials simply sat in the results. asked her to show m e how to uates only) (B,M). Location: New York. The m ood a t Republican and because he is “ recognized m ent with disarm ing the police. burgh, Pennsylvania. New York. State Central was n o t one of second floor o f the suite above G ra d u a te students from use the m achine," P etersen for fair but firm direction of law He also said that the sheriff’s Allstate: General Business Adminis­ DOCTORAL DAYS has been scheduled te n s io n , ju b ila tio n or a local credit bureau, like the MSU’s Dept, o f Communica­ said. “ Thats how I learned to tration, Hotel, Restaurant, and Institu­ enforcem ent and is experienced job should not be elective be­ tion scurried around working sew .” tional Management, Industrial Admin­ during the period Monday through Novem­ in advising Ingham County gov­ cause of the danger of political on projections for the news They rented the shop on Abbott istration, and Personnel Administration ber 15 During this week, emphasis is on ernm ent on legal m a tte rs .” hacks getting the job, but he majors (December and March graduates the recruiting of doctoral degree candi media. Road, and with the combined only) (B) Location: Detroit, Michigan dates. It should be noted that the follow­ The cam paign was probably could not determ ine who should No one was very upset th at efforts of friends they rem odled All-Steel Equipment, Inc.: Account­ ing employers are interested in inter­ m ost notable for its lack of pre­ appoint the Sheriff. Humphrey was declared winner the sm all shop with a barnwood ing and Financial Administration. Eco­ viewing described m ajors who are work­ senting the philosophies of the County Board of Supervisors ing on their doctoral degree with excep­ o f the state early Tuesday front, a wagon wheel suspended nomics, Management, and Labor and tion of the Peace Corps candidates concerning the judi­ Tom Helma, Democratic Industrial Relations, Marketing, and all n ig h t. According to Dick from the ceiling by wire, barn- majors, all colleges (December and If you are interested in an organiza­ cial system and their personal can d id ate for the County Heldrecht, one o f Lt. Gov. wood paneling for the walls and March graduates only) (B >. Location. tion. please report to the Placement Bu­ plans and goals. Board o f Supervisors, won his M illiken’s staff, Republican fresh paint. The decor resem bles Aurora, IlUnois. reau AT LEAST TWO SCHOOL DAYS in County Sheriff bid for th e county seat. American Can Company: Chemical advance to sign up for an interview and to projections foresaw Humphrey the style in the 1880s. obtain additional information. Doctoral Ingham County voters extend­ Helma, w ho won 74 per and Mechanical Engineering. Packaging taking the state but, he said, by Painted on the front window in Technology, Accounting, Marketing (De­ candidates in all fields may sign up for ed a 72-year-old tradition for at cent o f th e total vote, said th at m ore than the actual vote gold letters is “ custom leather cember and March graduates only), In­ interview by phone Interviewing appoint­ least four m ore years yesterday the victory was “ obviously a turned out. goods.” dustrial Administration (December and ments can be made from 8 15 a m. until when they picked Republican in­ landslide.” In the front window display is March graduates only), General Bus­ 4 30 p m cum bent Kenneth L. Preadm ore, He said th a t he pulled 50 to There was more excitem ent iness Administration (December and MILITARY OBLIGATIONS: Students when the Eaton County Clerk’s an em broidered sheepskin vest, March graduates only), and Computer should interview with employers even 47, over the D em ocratic challen­ 75 votes higher than Vice office w ent to a Republican. several styles of belts, purses Science m ajors (B,M). Location: Mid­ though they have not completed their mili­ ger Thom as M. Steinfatt, an President H ubert H. Humphrey and other leather goods. west. tary service Most employers will be in­ MSU com m unications instruc­ in each precinct and was the Although one party official terested in the student before and after his A righthand sheepskin m itten Bank of the Commonwealth . Account- tor, for the Ingham County top Democratic vote getter in said, somewhat disgustedly, “ If ing and Financial Administration and duty with the Armed Forces Nixon wins this thing, it’ll be sits on the barnwood counter. Economics m ajors (B.M) Location November 11, Wednesday: Sheriff’s position. The vote was Ingham County. “ Someone asked me if I could Detroit, Michigan. Borg Warner Corp mechanical engi­ Helma, who received an M.A. g o o d e v e r y w h e r e ex cep t 11,437 to 6,894. Michigan.” m ake m ittens, so I m ade one,” Campbell Soup Company: General neering. chemistry (physical), and phys­ Not since 1896 has a D em ocrat in rehabilitation counseling, P etersen said. Business Administration and Industrial ics majors (D ) Location Des Plaines, held that office in Ingham Coun­ stressed w elfare program s S e c u l a r b u m p e r s ti c k e r s In races for the state House, People do not realize Administration (December and March Illinois how graduates only), all majors of the Col­ Cleanese Corp chemical engineering, ty and S teinfatt's intense and and law enforcem ent in his cam ­ the Republicans have lost three m uch tim e is envolved in m ak­ lege of Engineering, Biology (Chem chemistry, and physics majors (D) Lo­ bold cam paign could not over­ paign, calling for aid to students, S tu d e n ts r a l l y to th e a g e - o l d c a m p a i g n a g a i n s t v l r - seats to give the Democrats a ing leather goods, W areham ical), Personnel Administration and La cation N J . N C , and Texas come his inexperience nor break especially m arried ones and a S ta t e N e w s p h oto b y Hal C a s s e l l clear victory in th a t body. Center for Naval Analyses economics, g ln lty . said. Most of the stitching is bor and Industrial Relations (December chemical, electrical, and mechanical en­ the string. Jerry Roe, state organization done by hand, with different and March graduates only), and General gineering. chemistry, mathematics, phys­ director, attributes the losses Business Administration majors iDe styles of stitches. “ Making a cetnber and March graduates onlyi. and ics. astronomy, and statistics majors Lo­ o mechanical and chem­ papers, theses, dissertations, call He was also the first chairm an ineffective and need revision. of the community. But the ical engineering, metallurgy, mechanics, where they will be opened and bring “ good" restau ran ts to m ainstream of their argum ent tary Education and Mentally and Acous Sharon Vliet 484-4218. 4-11/8 of the M cCarthy for President tically Handicapped majors IDecember and m aterials science, and chemistry m a­ counted before a joint session E ast Lansing. Michigan Com m ittee of Michigan. stem s from their calculations and March graduates only I; Junior and jors (D ! Location East Chicago, Ind. TERM PAPERS, theses. Corona elec- o f Congress Jan. 6. There is no Those against the am end­ and assum ptions that the city Senior High School Business Education, Libby. McNeill and Libby food science, In the cam paign, Harrison ! trie elite. Call 332-8505. 0-11/7 took a strong stand on Viet­ provision for a second electoral ment have argued from the will not benefit to a g reat ex­ Industrial Arts (Auto Power Mechanics, chemistry (food), and microbiology, and college vote._____________ ____ stalw art prohibitionist view Drafting, Metals, Machine Shop, Wood horticulture m ajors (D ! Location Chi­ nam , calling for United States tent from the added revenue of working, Printing), Mathematics, Sci­ cago. Ill and Janesville, Wisconsin. Wanted (C ontinued from P a g e One) the complex and liquor ^.li­ ence, and Mentally Handicapped ma Aerospace Corp Missiles and Space w ithdraw al a t the earliest op­ censes. The opponents have jors (December and March graduates ¿Division Michigan civil electrical, me­ BLOOD DONORS needed. $7.50 for all positive, A negative, B negative and AB negative $10.00. O negative, $12.00. Michigan Community Blood portunity. The candidacy o f Wallace He also said th at m ore funds this year was expected to hurt should be alloted for educa­ Humphrey as it appeared prior tional program s in the cities. to th e election th at many State proposals calculated, since by sta te law only); Senior High School Industrial majors ( D) Location Warren. Mich Arts (Electricity and Electronics! Bio­ 85 per cent of the license cost logy, Chemistry, Physics, and Physical m ust go to the city for enforce­ Science majors (December and March ministration electrical and mechanical chanical. and metallurgical engineering National Aeronautics and Space Ad­ Cent«', 507W E ast Grand River, East (C ontinued from P a g e One) has ruled legislators a re prohi­ engineering, applied mechanics, mathe­ n o r m a lly - D e m o c r a tic and Lansing, above the new Campus He supports the guaranteed bited from running from both m ent of liquor laws, the 15 per graduates only) (B.M) Location Gar matics physics, astronomy, metallurgy, -Book Store. Hours: 0 a.m. - 3:31 m inim um annual wage and rank-and-file union members lators to run for another public state and local offices, they may cent balance which goes to a den City, Michigan p.m. Monday, Tuesday and Friday Harnischfeger Corporation Mechanics mechanics, materials science, and statis­ Wednesday and Thursday, 12 p.m. feels th at there is a great need would support the former office during a term in the campaign for another office sta te general fund for all cities, Electrical and- Civil Engineering. Ac­ tics majors *D » Location Huntsville, Ala. 6:30 p.m. 337-7183. for training in salable job skills Alabama governor. legislature. “ w et” and "dry,” contributes counting, and Management majors i De The Proctor and Gamble Co.-Miami if the term sta rts a fter the legis­ Valley laboratories chemistry (physical, in toe ghettos. But the quiet o f the voting The “ no” vote affirm s the alm ost nothing to E ast Lan­ cember and March graduates only i i BI lative term ends. Location Milwaukee Wisconsin and inorganic analytical, organic, biochem­ WANTED PERSON flying to Minnea­ H arrison supported the Dem­ b o o t h found th e s e state law passed by the leg­ sing. istry and all other fields of chemistry), Even if the am endm ent had Various polis Thanksgiving vacation to ac­ o cratic ticket only a fte r Hubert working-class voters sticking to islature which excem pts the been company boy 4.351-7606. 3-11/7 approved, legislators Those against also argue LTV Aerospace Corporation Milliles and food science majors (D) Location: Humphrey m ade his pledge to past tradition and casting their state from the federal Uniform would have been prohibited that the hotel complex will and Space Division Michigan Me Cincinnati. Ohio DEDICATED UNPSYCHEDELIC drum­ stop the bombing of North ballots for the Democratic Tim e Act. It puts the state on from receiving an appointment cause a traffic and safety ha­ chanicat. Electrical, and Civil Engineer mgShell chemistry and chemical engineer- majors . philosophy, and his­ ministration. Accounting. Industrial Ad­ 4834 3-11/7 by 400 votes, 3,328 to 2,929 early returns. The Republicans, Uniform Tim e Act passed in elected to the legislature from be used to control the traffic ministration Electrical and Mechanical tory majors nf | Niruihirp H ff h m c f and iology botany plant pathology, chemis­ 5:30 p jn ., Tuesday and Wednesday. igan P ress Association and an prohibition of state legislators starts a fte r the legislative m its sales and consumption of Materni* ScMMtf m ajori B ■ Loca try mathematics, physics, astronomy, Hubbard. $10 per day. 351-6864. 5-11/2 MSU graduate. elected to the legislature from term ends. liquor, it does not change U m M ifw nou Michigan *ad Various physiology, statistics, zoology, anthropol­ Brown does not favor more Provided with their second receiving “ any other civil ap­ another clause in the city Untied Slate« Steal Carp American ogy geography, psychology, and social Even if the am endm ent had MAN NEEDED. Three man apartment, taxes. He feels that the pre­ o pportunity in tw o years to pointm ent" while in office from been charter which m akes it illegal Bridge Di m u m Cimi Engineering ma­ work and sociology majors (D). Loca­ winter or winter/spring. 351-6226 approved, legislators jara f B M Locai** Chicago Illinois tion Plattsburgh, N Y sent funds m ust he realloted 511/1 voice their opinions on the the governor or any state au- would have been prohibited to serve liquor to a guest This «ad Pittsburgh P m m y lv m i* Uniroval Research ( ’enter chemistry in new “ spending priorities " w a r, voters responded by t ii u r u v during the term for from receiving ONE GIRL for three man apartment an appoint­ m eans that you may buy liquor United Steles Steal Carp PtoiIbc al > chemical enft- ma)ors (D). Loca- He sees no reason for more approving the question on the wluch he is elected. winter term. River House. 351-B79 m ent as such to another of­ and bring it home but you can’t (mi Mini gai uni Program