Monday We ourselves. . . M ICH IST G A N Partly cloudy. . . A T E #'TAT*‘ NEWS . . . chance of snow flurries. . . . m ust change to m aater High between 37 and 45. Tonight UNIVERSI change. We must rethink all oar and tomorrow, partly cloudy and cold. old ideas and beliefs before caw*«« and "ST. 1 -R o b e rt F . Kennedy >3 E ast Lansing, Michigan November 11.1968 10c Vol. 61 Number 81 S . V ie t n a m d e a d lo c k s t a lk s ; r e f u s e s w it h N L F about this. We warned the United States m unist propaganda is already saying the PARIS (AP) - South V ietnam ’s ob­ will not accept Thieu’s form ula for the United States has agreed to pass the Communist side, regardless of how the that, however grateful we m ay be for server a t the suspended Vietnam peace the help we a re receiving in our struggle power in South Vietnam to the N LF. talks said Sunday Saigon will refuse to allies arrange their own setup. "If the United States w ants South Viet­ Hanoi delegation spokesm an Xuan against Communist aggression, we are take p art in any negotiations on an equal not prepared to sacrifice what we regard nam to stay free, it cannot be done by level with the Viet Cong's National Li­ Thuy said Friday the United States had humiliating the Saigon government. We agreed to a four-sided conference in which as our vital interests. beration Front (NLF I. "Some of our friends have urged us a re not seeking to exterm inate the other Ambassador Pham Dang Lam spoke on all parties would have independent sta ­ side, but Washington m ust realize that it tus. He said North Vietnam would not not to be bothered with a procedural ques­ his return from Saigon with President cannot achieve the kind of settlem ent it agree to anything less than separte tion. But we say this is not procedure- Nguyen Van Thieu’s controversial new desires by hum iliating its ally.” and sovereign status for the NLF. it is a vital m a tte r of substance. Com- plan for a broadened conference on ending the war. The Saigon envoy is expected to confer shortly with U.S." delegates, headed by W. Averell H arrim an. His rem arks, in an interview, underlined the wide gap be­ tween the w arring Vietnamese over how The b attle for conflicting statem ents in the status in the proposed con­ ference left it unclear for the tim e being whether a com prom ise m ight be worked out-*but it seemed certain th at much backstage negotiating would have to be ON-CAM PUSVOTERS Back in Paris to get the talks going. Thieu, whose boycott forced postpone­ m ent of the four-party talks originally done. Lam, in his interview, said South Viet­ nam will not accept independent status W 1C hours proposal slated to begin last Wednesday, wants for the NLF or enter the talks in any South V ie tn a m e s e A m b a s s a d o r P h a m D ang L a m , c h ie f of S aig o n s the meeting to consist of a single dele­ way which would give the front-w hich o b s e r v e r m is s io n at th e P a r i s t a l k s , r e tu r n e d th e r e f r o m h is n a ­ t i o n ’s c a p ita l. In t h is I n te r v ie w S u n d ay , h e to ld n e w sm e n th a t he h a d r e c e iv e d “ new I n s t r u c t i o n s ” f r o m h is c a p ita l, b u t th e s e did gation for each side-with Saigon to head the allied delegation and Hanoi the Com­ m unist delegation. Thieu regards as a Hanoi-backed in­ surgency-equal status with the Saigon faces coeds today government. not In c lu d e o r d e r s to n e g o tia te . UPI T e le p h o to North Vietnam has served notice it The South Vietnamese governm ent re ­ By ROSANNE BAIME on the idea that coeds should be held as g rets the delay of the conference open State News Staff W riter responsible for their social lives as for ing but "cannot give way where its vital All on-campus coeds will vote today their academ ic lives. on the Women s Inter-residence Council "Colleges and universities supposedly BRO O KLYN RAID interests are concerned,” he added. Lam flew to Saigon Oct. 31, the day President Johnson announced cessation of (WIC) proposal to give freshm an coeds com plete selective hour privile'ges. encourage students to assum e their own behavior, and hours conflict with this bombing of North Vietnam and agree­ Also included in the policy are: philosophy,” the rationale states. m ent to an expanded peace conference -E lim in atin g all "special perm ission" "Women a re fully as capable as men provisions in women s regulations, in handling their personal lives, yet they n a b b ed a s p o lic e in which South Vietnam "would be free A ra b s to participate." Lam said the United S tates-against Saigon's advice-accepted an ambiguous -R educing sign-out policies from m an­ datory to recommended, -M aintaining present rules forbidding a re given little opportunity to exercise self-responsibility and p ractice self-disci­ pline." form ula for the expanded talks which, in non-residents' presence in women’s resi­ Kathy Tripp, chairm an of the WIC effect, allowed Hanoi to invite the NLF dence hulls afte r University closing hours. policy com m ittee which authored the pro­ Voting will be held in the individual posal, feels confident that the policy will b u st N ix o n m u rd e r p lo t as an independent delegation with a status equal to that of South Vietnam. w om en's residence halls. Each hall will be approved today. “ This is completely unacceptable to set up its own hours for voting. Today's referendum com es in ob­ u s," Lam said. "We are very serious All coeds m ust have some form of servance of Sec. 5.2 of the Academic Court on charges of conspiracy to assa- fie, 24 rounds of am m unuiot ind three identification to vote. Freedom Report, which describes the Pre-reglstraflon NEW YORK (AP) - An im m igrant from the Arab nation of Yemen and his two sons sainate Nixon, crim inal solicitation, and long knives were seized. After the referendum , WIC will pass procedures th at m ust be followed to w ere held in $100,000 bail Sunday tw con­ possesf’ci?' >' dangerous instrum ent* The officers had a search w arran t they the proposal on to both ASMSU and the change University policies. and appliances. said was obtained a fter an unnamed infor­ Faculty C om m ittee on Student Affairs, All changes suggested by m ajor gov­ nection with an alleged plot to assassinate They were arrested Saturday night by m ant told police the three men had tried where both groups will simultaneously erning groups m ust be referred back to its P resident-elect Richard M. Nixon. Ahmad Rageh N aiher, 43 and his sons, the Secret Service and police, who burst to recruit him for the assassination plot review the selective hours for freshman constituents before being forwarded to the Students with last nam es beginning with Hussein, 20 and Abdo, 18, stood silent at into their tenem ent apartm ent in Brook­ because he was an expert m arksm an. proposal. ASMSU Student Board and the Faculty S through Z m ay pre-register for winter their arraignm ent in Brooklyn Crim inal lyn. Authorities said a carbine and a ri- The inform ant, said to be a 36-year- Their recom m endations a re then passed C om m ittèe for Student Affairs. term from 8 a.m . to 4:30 p.m. today in the old man with an Arab name, is in pro­ on to Milton B. Dickerson, vice-presi­ These two bodies m ust approve the Men’s I.M. Bldg. policy and send it on to Milton B. Dicker­ tective custody, police said. He reported dent of student affairs. that just after the election the N am ers WIC’s rationale for the policy centers son. vice president for student affairs. Stevens, Augenstein offered him a large sum of money to help kill Nixon, although an exact amount w asn't mentioned. All policies m ust have D ickerson's ap­ proval before being implemented. WIC passed the proposal a t its Wed­ Nixon lives in New York and was due Faculty group to hear nesday night m eeting in Holmes Hall. WIC's policy comes a month after it clash on board election back from a Florida vacation on late Monday. requested the Student-Faculty Judiciary No motive for the assassination plot to look into the legality of the entire hours By CHRIS MEAD State News Staff W riter Trustee Don Stevens. D-Okemos, dis­ our educational officials are chosen on their m e rit.'' Augenstein told a meeting of of the Junior League and the American has been revealed, but N ixon-like Demo­ c ra t Hubert H. H um phrey-has said th at the United Slates is com m itted to pre­ report on open houses policy. The request was based on the theory that such policy is in violation of anti-discrim ination laws. No action has yet been taken by the serve Israel and should m aintain that Oct. 10 by Don Adams, Residence Halls agreed Friday with a statem ent by LeRoy Assn. of University Women in Battle By MARILYN PATTERSON Judiciary. nation’s arm s superiority over its Arab P rogram director, to evaluate study open G. Augenstein that m em bers of the Creek. State News Staff W riter Since the im plem entation of selective Stevens charged th at Augenstein wants foes. houses from the staff viewpoint. The sta te 's various boards of education should A Jordanian im m igrant, Sirhan B. fem ale upperclassm an hours last fall, a not be elected by the voters. the right to elect state officials taken The Faculty Com m ittee on Student com m ittee was composed of head resi­ num ber of attem p ts at liberalizing fresh­ Sirhan, goes on trial Dec. 9 in the assassi­ dents, graduate advisers and resident as­ Augenstein, chairm an of the Biophysics away from the people because he "ap­ Affairs will hear a report Tuesday sup­ m an hours have been made. nation of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy last sistant:- of residence halls. Dept, and m em ber of the state board of parently feels that the Republicans can­ porting the continuation of study open June. Kennedy also advocated arm s aid Action education, said Friday that m em bers of not win an election." houses and the establishm ent of open The report m akes five recommenda­ " I should like to rem ind him that it to Israel. tions: the Michigan Board of Education and the Police said their inform ant told them house policies by individual residence educational governing bodies of the sta te 's was a Republican controlled body that -T h a t study open houses be continued universities should not be elected, and adopted this dem ocratic process in the the N am ers took him to their apartm ent and showed him three rifles, all equipped halls. The report, issued F riday by a com­ and that the conditions under which open sought that a bombing halt should not be a con­ Constitutional Convention." Stevens m ittee of the Residence Hall Program houses are held be determ ined bv the hall with sniper scopes. He said he stalled government, the advisery staff and the trolling force in such a choice. noted. Office, gives substantial backing to a He said he feels that popular election them and decided to expose the conspi­ m anagem ent staff of each hall. He said that the bombing halt which Men’s Halls Association (MHA) pro­ gave Humphrey the victory in Michigan "is the best way to select m em bers to racy by an anonymous phone call to po­ lice. posal th at individual halls be allowed to - th a t the decision of having open- or on a p a rtm en t also swept in the eight D em ocrats in the the education boards, even though the determ ine all open house procedures. That closed-door open houses be left to the Republicans swept all the seats in 1966 Police traced the call to a Brooklyn individual hall. available educational posts in the state. bar, where they took the inform ant into ’Toposal is now before the Faculty Com­ when Mr. Augenstein and Mr. O'Neil - th a t the individual student be per­ The 1963 Michigan Constitution provides that the selection of m em bers for the w ere elected." custody. They said he seamed relieved. m ittee. The Residence Halls P rogram state­ m itted to close his door during the open m an agem en t governing boards of the s ta te ’s three lar­ Fourteen D em ocrats won the 14 open m ent reports the findings of the m ajority house if he has no guests. Michigan educational posts in the John- of an 11-man com m ittee commissioned (Please turn to page II) By DEBORAH FITCH gest universities shall be on a popular (Please turn to page 11 ) (Please turn to page II) State News Staff W riter level. This includes the Board of T rustees Increasing student dissatisfaction with a t MSU. the Board of R egents a t the Uni­ apartm ent m anagem ent corporations is versity of Michigan and the Board of Gov­ causing ASMSU to form ulate action on ernors at Wayne State University. specific problem s in the area. "We m ust change to a system where ASMSU chairm an P ete Ellsw orth said that "ASMSU has received enough com­ plaints from students in the past year about their situation in apartm ents and all kinds 'Resistance’ sets of problem s from bad relations with the m anagem ent to finances to unexplained anti-war activities evictions.” Ellsw orth said that although no definite plan of action has been worked out by By PAT ANSTETT ASMSU to date on the ap artm en t situa­ Associate Campus Editor tion, he w anted to inform the students MSU Resistance, a local student anti­ that student governm ent reaction is w ar group, will sponsor a week of reflec­ forthcoming. tion on the w ar in conjunction with the “ I w ant to announce th at we (ASMSU) National Day of R esistance Thursday. intend to do something about the a p a rt­ The group will hold a num ber of daily m ent situation. We have to define the activities outside the Library, culm inat­ problem, find the sore spots and check ing with several d raft card turn-ins a t a into them. Beaumont Tower rally a t 4 p.m . Thursday. "Then w e’ll build a plan to rectify The R esistance, through these various the situation,” he asserted. activities, will attem p t to establish an E llsw orth predicted th at the first con­ ongoing dialogue and create an aw areness crete response to the problem would of the draft and the war. em erge a t the weekly ASMSU Board m eet­ Both students, faculty and Lansing-area ing Tuesday night. residents will be encouraged to participate. "W e’ll probably set up a study com ­ The w eek’s activities begin today, V eteran’s Day, with a day of vigil and Blue Saturday m ittee to look into the m a tte r,” he said, "an d have the com m ittee work with people mourning starting a t 4 p.m . outside the to I n te r c e p t a C h a r lie W e d e m e y e r p a s s on th e MSU 32 d u rin g In­ It w a s a n o th e r f r u s t r a t i n g S a tu rd a y f o r th e S p a r ta n s . An MSU c h e e r from Off-Campus Council (OCC). The OCC Library. d i a n a 's 2 4 -2 2 u p s e t w in o v e r th e S p a r ta n s . people a re already doing some work in this "The day is dedicated in support of the l e a d e r h o ld s h is h e a d and a b e m u s e d P r e s i d e n t John H annah looks S ta te N ew s p h o to s by Jo e T y n e r, Bob Iv in s a n d J im R i c h a r d s o n a rea by them selves.” m en who a re there (V ietnam ) and in on a s I n d ia n a 's J a y M a th ia s g o e s o v e r F ra n k F o r e m a n ’s s h o u ld e r (Please turn to page 11) (Please turn to page 11) i M onday, N o v e m b e r 1 1 , 1968 2 M ichigan State N e w s, E a st L a n sin g , M ich ig a n T r u s t e e b r e a k d e a d lo c k rxn S m i f h 'c . vrc\to sta te laws unless they divested corporations in the E ast Lansing He accsed Trustee W arren Huff JtC/nsuJves ■of thei® positions or of conflict cl ‘--‘7TO* vs his State News Stair Vhrtutf put th e board in a four lo ¿oof On Nov. 9 May stated th at he selling of catjtle to the University deadlock. holdings im m ediately. T rustee Connor D. Smith in­ Sought clarification “ would be happy to provde any in 1965. dicated Sunday that he m ay allow Smith said Sunday that he inform ation" to Kelley to de­ had not m ade up his mind P resident Hannah; Rep. Wil­ the deadlock on the board liam P. Hampton, R-Bloomfield term ine if his outside business w hether or not to attend the He also accused the Demo­ of trustees over Hhe dism issal Hills, and Rep. Ja c k Faxon, affiliations violated any state cratic m em bers of the board of U niversity T reasu rer Philip meeting. Don Stevens, chairm an of the D-Detroit, each had asked laws of conflict in accepting a deal J. May to be broken, by not board of trustees, announced Kelley to calrify the existing for the use of new c a rs from showing up for the November 1‘Personal vendetta’’ plans Nov. 4 to move for May’s conflict of interest laws. Story Oldsmobile in Lansing. board meeting. May was affected by this Then on Nov. 12, C. Allen dismissal a t the November board The titles for the c ars w ere to M ay’s problem s with con­ ruling due to his holding a pos- Harlan. D em ocratic tru stee from meeting. be in the U niversity’s name, flict of in terest in p art a re the itioh with the Michigan N at­ Southfield, charged May was ind- “ I haven’t changed my views but for a $500 per year fee the cause of the dism issal move. on May,” Stevens said Sunday. ional Bank, which had had deal­ directly responsible for the 16 trustees could use the cars. < i The conflict centered on the power failures which had occured “ There will be some discussion ings with MSU. building occupied by the IBM May announced a t th at time on cam pus since 1966. Harlan on it before the meeting. I hope Several D em ocratic trustees Corp. At 1111 Michigan Aye., th at he intended to resign charged that May had a “ per­ it will be resolved.” took advantage of this deal, which was owned by the Philip from his position with the bank. sonal vendetta" against the Kelley statem ent including Connor Smith. Smith Je sse Co., in which both May On Nov. 8,1967, Rep. Faxon engineer who was to be hired may be taking the attack as and his wife a t one tim e held M ay's troubles began when for the project. Thus, H arlan stock. Atty. Gen. Frank issued his opinion of Sept. 26, Kelley again asked Kelley to rule on whether the private business contented, a les> com petent man a personal offense and therefore may not show up for the Nov­ Sparty snowman 4-4 deadlock dealings of May violated the state em ber board m eeting. His fail­ Smith, Pinconning D em ocrat, 1967 which said in part that cer­ brought in to do the job ure to do so would give the tain officers of some state ed­ conflict of interest laws. S p o rty b r a c e d a g a in s t th e S a tu rd a y m o rn in g c o ld In t h e , t r a d , t , o n a ' sided with the Republicans With his request Faxon sub­ with the result being poor over­ D em ocrats a four to three edge t r u e S p a r ta n . T h e s ta tu e g r e e te d a m id - m o r n in g sn o w and t h o u s ° nd‘ o f f o ^ and voted to retain May a t the ucational institutions were in all plant construction. direct conflict of interest and m itted “ copies of documents in the voting, thus making May’s fan s th a t day. S ta te N e w s Ph o to b y H a rris o n Septem ber board m eeting. The relating to transactions between May declined to answ er these would be subject to possible dism issal a near certainty. D em ocrats have a five to three Mr. May and various private charges because he said he advantage over the Republicans i prosecution under the present did not wish to reply to what he called “ false statem ents, innuendo and inferences.” Kelley’s ruling on May did not HARASSED AT BORDER Stronger Senate voice come until June 18,1968. Kelley ruled that rental fees received by May’s wife through the Phil­ ip Jesse Co. from the IBM Corp. constitued a “ substantial E n e m y fe lls t w o co p te rs in foreign policy foreseen conflict of interest" because of SAIGON (AP) - Enemy Three m ore enemy shell­ three civilians and wounding stage had been reached where the possible indirect benifits May troops, harassed by U.S. B52 ings of South V ietnam ese cit­ 63. In the 10 days prior to the productive talks could begin, night have received from the strikes bombng halt, he said, there Mansfield said the D em ocrats will not “ ob­ and ground forays ies w ere reported Sunday, 10 were nine such shellings with but added a warning. WASHINGTON (AP) - D em ocratic leader situation. against their hideouts near the days after U.S. arm ed forces struct just to be obstructing and will do our nine civilians killed and 42 “ We have m ade clear to the Mike M ansfield predicted Sunday “ the voice Cambodian border, shot down halted all attack s against the best to give the new President all of the sup­ Demands resignation wounded. other side th at such talks can­ of the Senate will be heard m ore loudly” in two U.S. 1st Air Cavalry Div. North. M ilitary spokesmen an­ port possible.” Harlan, in a press conference In announcing on Oct. 31 the not continue ’if they take m ili­ foreign policy decisions when Republican helicopters Sunday. nounced 11 civilians were arrangem ents for the bombing But the D em ocratic leader signalled oppo­ called the sam e day, demanded tary advantage of th em ,” he Richard M. Nixon takes office a s President. A rocket downed one heli­ wounded. sition to Nixon’s plans, announced during the the resignation of May, May halt, President Johnson said the said. The Montana senator said he expects the copter in flam es and autom a­ T a rg e t^ w ere Can Tho, a Dem ocratic-controlled Senate to support ef­ campaign, to step up m ilitary expenditures. was on a sabatical leave at “ It is going to be very difficult to spend a tic weapons fire felled another provincial capital in the Me­ forts of Nixon to tighten u p -b u t not to disman- ths time. The leave w as from tle--"G reat Society” social w elfare program s. He disclosed in an interview that he has lot of money building up a nuclear Navy-- where we already have superiority-and M arch 1 to Sept. 1. The turstees extended this leave until Sept. in a group of eight assigned kong D elta 85 m iles south of to pull a South Vietnamese Saigon; Cai Muoc, a district NEA pays trib u te closing a ‘m issile gap--where we also have company and its American town 165 m iles southwest of urged a speedy review by the Foreign R ela­ 20 a t their July meeting. superiority-and still reduce taxes and cut the advisers from a jungled area Saigon; and Cam Lo, nine tions Com m ittee of the nuclear nonproliferation At the Sept. 20 m eeting og 50 m iles northwest of Saigon m iles south of the eastern treaty. He m ade the request in le tte rs to ch air­ budget,” Mansfield said. Mansfield said does not anticipate that the board, Stevens moved to have M ay's services as Un­ to re st after a skirm 'sh Sat­ flank of the dem ilitarized to U .S .e d u c a t i o n m an J. W. Fulbright, D-Ark., and Sen. George D. Aiken of Vermont, the ranking Republican. Nixon will attem p t to dism antle the social iversity trea su rer term inated. urday night. zone. visit their children’s schools at welfare program s operating under the John­ Associated P ress photogra­ Rain of shells By BARBARA PARNESS least once a year. Mansfield said the scheduling of Senate The four to four deadlock vote son adm inistration. pher Henri Huet reported one Three allied m ilitary posi­ State News Staff W riter In addition, Individual pro­ debate on the treaty wiH depend on whether the then resulted. “ I expect him to try to stream line some of American cavalrym an was tions also drew enemy shells. American Education Week, gram s sponsored within the com m ittee w ants to hold additional hearings. wounded in the helicopter that Spokesmen said m ore than 200 which will be observed this He said it m ay be brought up before Nixon's these program s, to give them b etter ad­ schools during the week are m inistration and greater efficiency,” he said. Following this action, Stevens re ­ burned. The second c raft was rained on a U.S. Marine week, originated during the aim ed a t increasing civic sup­ Jan. 20 inauguration. Nixon has said that while he is disturbed “ He will certainly have the Senate's support quested Atty. Gen. Kelley to issue recovered. bivouac and two South Viet­ U.S. involvement in World War port for m easures to im prove in th at direction. an opinion on w hether Trustee For the third straight day, nam ese base cam ps in the bor­ I. the schools and to help students about some provisions of the treaty, he be­ lieves it should be ratified. But he urged the Mansfield said he is delighted by indica­ Kenneth Thompson, E a st Lansing B52 bom bers staged heavy der area between Cam Lo and The first Am erican Educa­ them selves gain appreciation of outgoing 90th Congress to delay action on it tions that Nixon will arrange a m eeting early Republican, had been in "coll­ strikes in the air-ground effort Glo Linh, 11 m iles to the north­ tion Week in 1921 resulted from w hat their schools a re doing for in December with the Congressional lead­ usion" with May over the Sept. to block any drive on Saigon by east, from enemy positions the findings by d ra ft boards, them because of the Soviet invasion of Czechoslo­ ers of both parties. 20 vote. 15,000 to 20,000 Viet Cong and Just below the DMZ. th at about 25 per cent of all A m erican Education Week is vakia. . „ North V ietnam ese troops re M arine casu alties w ere re ­ the young, men~ cplled* •up-'for ■(tedlatfed annually by P residen­ - - There was some Republican opposition to “ It will be helpful to future cooperation on im portant legislation,” he .said. n U ,. j • _ T.H. i . : „ p o r t e d strung out In a 50-mile ported tifcht. Qbverrtment head­ military, duty w ere ftlitif-ate; 6t- t i a l fi lpr6i!laWratl6n during the ..the treaty in the Foreign Relations C o m m rtn .. Thompson, T T n id ilg a h “ Bell )nn0 long arc arc near aVowedlv neutra near avowedly neutral q u a rte rs said-' there w ere no which about 2d per cent of these Telephone executive, has offices Cambodia. week of V eteran’s Day and' is li— W I D South V ietnam ese losses. w ere physicali^ (irifi't. n01' l jri')?!0 co-sponsored by the NEA, the in the Philip Jesse Building, N ear frontier A South Vietnam ese mili These alarm ing conditions, Am erican Legion, the U.S. Of­ ■ which was the center of the Twenty-five of the eight-en­ tary spokesman accused the led the Americanism Commis- confict of interest contriversy. gine je ts loosed 750 tons of ex­ fice of Education and the Na­ Communist Command of sjon 0f the then recently founded tional Congress of P aren ts and However, May announced on plosives on known and sus­ stepping up its rocket, m ortar American Legion to confer with Teachers. Sept. 23 th at his wife had pected positions of the enemy, and recoilless refle attackes on officials of the National Educa- In 1967, an NEA spokesman divested herself of all stock some a bare four m iles from provincial capitals and district tion Assn. (NEA) and the U.S. said, 25 million people p arti­ in the Philip Jesse Co. as of the frontier. towns since P resident Johnson office of Education about ini- cipated in program s sponsored The 18,000-man 1st Air halted U.S. air, artillery and tiating an educational cam paign as p a rt of A m erican Education Aug. 1 and had resigned her Cavalry Div. moved into that naval operations against North to correct these deficiencies, a Week. P a re n ts’ visitations of post as an officer in the com­ area from the north last week Vietnam Nov. 1 in a move NEA spokesman said, schools reportedly doubled pany effective Sept. 11. to beef up the Allied ground tow ard expanding the P aris The stated purpose of Amer- over the previous year, and ra ­ forces. U.S. officials said one peace talks. ican Education Week is to in- dio and television m essages Opens Attack of its units-B Company, 1st The spokesman said enemy crease public understanding concerning the week w ere es­ Last week May opened his own Battalion, 8th Cavalry Regi­ troops had shelled provincial and appreciation of the schools tim ated to have reached m ore à attack on D em ocratic m em bers of the baord and on Demo­ cratic candidates for the board. m ent-found a deserted enemy capitals and o th e r towns 24 anc¡ t» cncsu rag e parents to th a n 199 million people . base camp. tim es in th a t period, killing ■A £ r V \ T he S ta te N ew s, the stu d e n t n e w sp a p e r a t M ich ig an S ta te U n lv eralty , !» published e v e ry c la s s d a y th ro u g h o u t th e y e a r w ith s p e c ia l W elcom e W eek and O rie n ta tio n issu e s in J u n e a n d S e p te m b e r S u b sc rip tio n r a te s a r e »14 .■•«gSSSftakl ■J p e r y e ar. M em b e r A ssociated P r e s s , U n ited P r e s s In te rn a tio n a l, In la n d D aily P r e s s A ssociation, A ssociated C o lleg iate P r e s s , M ichigan P r e s s A sso ciatio n , M ich­ G RA N D M O TH ER’SD RO PS igan C o lleg iate P r e s s A ssociation, U n ited S ta te s S tu d e n t P r e s s A sso ciatio n Second c la s s p o stag e paid a t E a s t L an sin g , M ichigan. H ERCO V ER E d ito ria l and b u sin ess o iflce s a t S47 S tu d e n t S e rv ic e s B uilding, M ich ig an State University, East U n s in g , M ichigan. Z¿ P h o n e s: ^ m E d ito ria l. . . . * ............................................................................................ ........ C lassified A dvertising D isp lay A d v e rtis in g ............................................................................. sen*«? “ A r e v o l u t i o n in e n t e r t a i n m e n t ” . T h e T o le d o S u n T im e s P h o t o g r a p h i c ................................ * ‘O h y o u k i d ” T h e C h ic a g o D a ily R a d ic a l ‘‘A m o m e n to u s A c h ie v e m e n t” T h e N ew Y o rk M o rn in g B a g *‘ D u m b f o u n d i n g ’ ’ grinlets W illia m F . B u c k le y T h e C lu b o f C lu b s h a s d o n e i t a g a in . S u r g e fo rw a rd w ith no cover M onday T h u r s d a y . O v e r r e a c t to th e d o l l a r F r i d a y th ro u g h Getting the job done is one thing ... Wethink doing it an d S a tu rd a y . H a p p y H o u r s : 8 -1 Q This week, and next . . . The CANDYMEN right is another! G u a r a n te e d L a b o r a to r y - S ta n d a r d S e r v ic e f o r 3411 Michigan Ave., Lanelng, Mich, th e F ln e e t A udio, R F a n d M ed ica l /S c ie n tif ic ■0.——mi i w r » i E q u ip m e n t, mu fv S e r v ic e C o n tr a c t R e p a ir A u th o rlx e d b y Sony, S c o tt, F l e h e r , E le c t r o - V o i c e , A m p ex , H a lII- c r a f t e r e , and O th e r L e a d in g M a n u f a c t u r e d . th in k o f C a r d s ' I \ T R O N IC 8 C O CA RD SH O P A cro * » f r o m H om e E c . B ldg. 5558 S. P e n n s y lv a n ia A v a., L a n s in g , M ic h ig a n PHONE 5 1 7 -8 8 2 -5 0 3 5 309 e . G ra n d R lv a r P h . 3 3 2 -6 7 8 3 mmAm M onday, N o v e m b e r 1 1 , 1968 M ichigan State N ew s, E a st L a n sin g , M ich ig a n $3.00 $1.29 Cigarettes tpape Right Guard N ix o n a w a it s LB J m e e tin g space on the 35th floor there. A n tl-P e rs p lra n t Naif Rise KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. (AP) be talking with Johnson about working vacation on this reso rt Nixon, winding up a four-day kbe base for his work in prepar- ation for the new adm inistra- Nixon, his wife P a r, and their two daughters attended services 3/77« D e o d o ra n t S u p e r D ry 69« 1.79 - Ricahrd M. Nixon took his • foreign a ffa iirp m rtic u to rly the island, planned to fly northw ard tion. The P ie rre Hotel not far a t Key Biscay,w. Pre.sbvt*ciaj» fam ily u / \ ' £ k : r y , then *" V ietasxs. J Hr ‘ ^ L im it i . i Monday morning, first to Wash-' The Church Stifiuay. uttry M ittxfix**. * blended relaxation with prep ara­ expect* to see S ecretary of ington and then on to New * f v e « •“ » to lS John A. Huffman, Jr. preach E xpires a fte r U -16-68 Expires a f te r I I - 16 State Dean Rusk, too, during Nixon organization has token Expires a fte r 11-16-68 E ast Lansing Store Only tion for his m eeting Monday a serm on entitled. “ Here Comes E ast Lansing Store Only E ast Lansing Store Only with President Johnson a t the the Washington visit. the Judge.” White House. The president-elect also an­ nounced his first appointm ent He named Rose M ary Woods ti be his executive secretary. It was no surprise. Miss Woods C z e c h lib e r a ls c la s h “ Too many of us a re tem pted and give in to the tem ptation to be judgm ental in our way of life,” he said. “ We have no right to be judges of anyone Burlington 99« $1.75 Virginia Maid C S to $6.95 r artridgeTapese s has been Nixon’s secretary else.” There was no mention of Nix­ Cantrece Nylons Panty Hose since 1951. 8 T rack on’s presence during the serv­ Ronald L. Ziegler, Nixon’s ice. But when it was over Rev. 69« 1 .1 7 4.99 spokesman, said Sunday the president-elect was resting and conversing with his advisers on w it h o ld - g u a r d umo R e d s chn» nn was shot on Won/'OclsC Wenceslas fsHIlAH Huffman asked the congregation to rem ain seated until the pres­ Square ident-elect left the church, and L im it 3 L im it 1 Expires after 11-16-68 L im it 3 Expires after 11-16-68 eral busloads of Russian sol­ E xpires a fte r 11-16-68 the Monday m eeting with John­ PRAGUE (AP) -- Old- by a Russian.” said he was happy Nixon had E ast Lansing Store Only East Lansing Store Only East Lansing Store Only son. guard Communists lustily diers who participated in the A m an shouted: “ You m urd­ attended. Nixon and his wife a re to shouted “ long live the Soviet rally once again heard derisive Nixon stopped on the steps erers, long live Dubcek." Sever­ lunch with President and Mrs. Union” a t a ra lly in downtown whistles and shouts of “ Rus­ $9.89 $1.75 al old-guard m em bers dem and­ outside to pose for photographs Johnson. Then the P resident P rague Sunday and then had to sians go hopie” from the m ore and the man elected to succeed fight their way through an anti- than 1,000 Czechoslovaks who ed th at the m an who called with his family and the clergy­ them m urderers be arrested for m an. He signed a few auto­ 2 Album Stereo LP] Psssst Dry Coltati m assed a t the exits of the hall. him are to confer on the tran si­ Soviet crowd shouting “ tra ito rs,’ More than 2,000 pro-Soviet slander. graphs, and one sm all boy gave Jlm l Hendrix tion from D em ocratic to Repub­ lican adm inistration. “ swine” and “ collaborators at them as they left the hall. Communists attended the early One pro-Soviet woman c riti­ Turn a pocket Bible. A crowd garhered outside the Experience-- Shampoo Toothbrush Nixon indicated he also will morning rally, organized by the cized some boys for jeering a t F irs t fights broke out and sev- Czechoslovak-Soviet Friendship the Russina soldiers. The boys church and applauded a s Nixon E le ctric Lady Landj Association. This group is being pursued her down the street stepped into his automobile to 1.09 19« used to organize opposition to shouting “ sham e, tra ito r," until retu rn to his rented house on Biscayne Bay. Ziegler said he 4.99 Lim it 1 Lim it 1 the reform leadership of Com­ police took her into a car. L im it 1 NEWS m unist party F irst Secretory Al­ exander Dubcek. A Russian officer leaving the w as spending the balance of the there and and a t the home of hall with two women was chased c G Beet>e Rebozo, a clsoe A showdown between Dubcek into W enceslas Square by a Expires a fte r 11-16-68 East Lansing Store Only E xpires after 11-16-68 East Lansing Store Only Expires after 11-16-68 E ast Lansing Store Only and the old guard is anticipated crowd which shoved him and friend. summary Thursday when the Communist tugged a t his uniform until he party central com m ittee m eets fled down a passageway between In a sidelight, Ziegler report­ ed that Nixon and his fam ily watched “ The Jackie Gleason $16.95 OFF THE 10% to chart the course of Czechoslo­ buildings. vakia under Soviet occupation. Show” on television Saturday Kodak Camera Tampax 10’s A c a p s u le s u m m a r y o f th e d a y 's e v e n ts f r o m The violence th at broke out at night. Gleason endorsed Nixon DISCOUNT A woman standing outside the prior to the election, and his o u r w ir e s e r v i c e s . the end of the rally showed hall whacked form er Prague PRICE ON toped words of support for the some of the strains the Czecho­ Art School director Em anuel slovak population has been un­ F arm ira across the shpulders Republican were used in the fi­ 11.2 5 26« ALL FILM dergoing since the Aug. 20-21 in­ with her um brella. F am ira was nal campaign television shows. DEVELOPING L im it 1 L im it 1 vasion by W arsaw P ac t forces one of those on the stage at the STUDENTS L im it 1 Expires a fte r 11-16-68 “ W e can o n ly have one to halt the reform movement. rally, where the main speaker Expires a fter 11-16-68 Expires a fte r 11-16-68 Fly Jet to Europe East Lansing Store Only E ast Lansing Store Only p re sid e n t a t a tim e . . . I w ill When the old-guard Commu­ was Vaclav David, Czechoslo­ E ast Lansing Store Only do nothing to derogate eith er nists em erged from the m eet­ vak foreign m inister during the $230.00 the P resid en t or his rep resen ­ tatives abroad. ” ing, the Whistling, jeering pre-Dubcek era. Czechs outside began exchang­ About 100 Soviet soldiers, in­ ing insults with them-some un­ cluding an entertainm ent troupe, If Interested Call 355-3362 No Obligation 95« Oxydol 49« Boxed Envelopes lK a d $1.00 neSocksi es IN E W F O L K P resid en t-elect R ich a rd \t. printable. At least a score of participated in the rally. They fist fights broke out. Many suf­ departed from a side exit away N ixo n fered m inor injuries and police from the m ain crowd. But about Laundry Soap International News # A proposal was in the works Sunday for a G eneral took several persons into custo­ 100 Czechs clustered around dy their buses shouting "go hom e” One m an was chased by um ­ and shaking their fists at the brella w ielders who shouted, Russians, who waved and tried “ Shame, Sham e,” a t him. He to smile. IN iSH NE EEW WWF F O O L L K K 69« Lim it 1 100 Count 29« Lim it 1 69« L im it 3 F O L K ran up to a group of street The old guard called its m eet­ Expires after 11-16-68 Expires after 11-16-68 Expiree after 11-16-68 Assembly com m ittee th at could sound out both sides on w orkers who shoved and pum- ing for 8:30 a.m . a t Lucerna East Lansing Store Only E ast Lansing Store Only E ast Lansing Store Only the idea of having both Communist China and N ationalist meled him until police led him Hall in downtown Prague, which China in the United Nations. An Italian delegation spokesman said Italy, Belgium, Luxembourg, Ireland an£ Chile would subm it, a resolution ..Nlonday.-to h av e.th e assem bly, e l e ^ a.fiqppmUtee toPi® S u d y and recom m end “ an equitable and prachble solu­ tion to the question of the representation of China in the ... away, bleeding from one cheek. is normally shut during the day An oldrguard m em ber slapped and qsed a t night for variety .. a.y o u th .w h q shows apd pop music concerts. INEWFOLK $1.19 Coricidin I 1 87 1 Sudden Beauty $1.75 Brack United N ations.” Your Host From Coast To Coast Cold Tablets 11 Hair Spray Creme Rimse • Rhodesia steps w arily into its fourth year of independ­ ence Monday with the future a som etim es frightening and The Nation’s Innkeeper 69« 47« 87« alw ays cliff-hanging question m ark which has become alm ost a way of life. ,_____ . Two Locations In Laming Area I Lim it 1 11 Lim it 1 Lim it 1 Expires after 11-16-68 The three years since Rhodesia seized independence from 1 E xpires a fte r 11-16-68 11 Expires after 11-16-68 E ast Lansing Store Only B ritain -th e first country to do it since the United States | E ast Lansing Store Only |1 E ast Lansing Store Only nearly two centuries before--have been a tough struggle. 3121 E . GRAND R IV E R A V E . Hopes for a settlem ent with Britain have risen and fallen P h . 4 8 9 -2481 49« like a barom eter in changeable w eather. 6051 S. PE N N SY L V A N IA A V E. $2.25 P h . 3 9 3 -1 6 5 0 Breck Basic Hail PoKsh • “ Be it Nixon or Johnson, we will ca rry on our fight until not an aggressor rem ains in Vietnam, ’ said the Facial Tissues nmnr SPECIAL SPECIAL Remover Viet Cong's official news agency Sunday. In a com m entary distributed by Hanoi’s news agency I TIW N A T t O w f j INNKI— SUNDAY MONDAY Hair Conditioner 200 4Q C and monitored in Tokyo, the Giai Phong P re ss Agency, organ of the South Vietnam National F ro nt for Liberation, said “ The heavy burden left over by eight years of ad­ CHICKEN $125 SPAGHETTI $150 1.58 2 -ply 17 27« 1 m inistration by two D em ocratic presidents is gomg to be DINNER____ r . . DINNER.......... I . Lirqit 1 Lim it 3 Limit 1 placed on the shoulders of the president-elect, Richard Expires after 11-16-68 Expires after 11-16-68 C h ild r e n $1.25 A ll you c a n e a t Expires a fte r 11-16-68 E ast Lansing Store Only Nixon." East Lansing Store Only East Lansing Store Only • Queen Elizabeth II and P rince Philip placed a red rose w reath before the tomb of B razil’s unknown soldier Sunday 79« $1.00 and later attended a R em em berance Day service a t R io s C hristchurch. Westmore Coty Spray National News • President-elect Richard M. Nixon assigned his vice Compacts Cologne Eye Make-up president to a White House office Saturday and promised him broad responsibilities, arranged a m eeting with P resi­ dent Johnson Monday and said he m ay later send em is­ 39« 1.69 59« saries abroad. , „ L im it 1 L im it 1 • Lim it 1 “ We can only have one president a t a time. JNixo Expires after 11-16-68 Expires after 11-16-68 said. “ I will do nothing to derogate either the President Expires after 11-16-68 E ast Lansing Store Only East Lansing Store Only Ea st Lansing Store Only or his representatives abroad." $1.98 Listerene Mouthwash Zippo Lighter D esertFlow $2.00 Hand 8 Body er Q u art L im it 1.19 1 1% 0 F F L im it 1 66« Lotion Lim it 1 E xpires after 11-16-68 E xpires after 11-16-68 Expires after 11-16-68 East Lansing Store Only E ast Lansing Score Only E ast Lansing Store Only WE CASH MSU PAYROLL CHECKS STATE DISCOUNT I.D . R e q u ir e d 307 East Grand River |> h A n d th en th ere a r e football S a tu rd a ys $ * “Drinking^alcohol on igan an d U niversity al­ cam p u s is a b so lu te ly f o r ­ coh ol laws are str ic tly b i d d e n ,” R ich a rd O. e n fo rc e d by the cam pu s B ern itt, d ir e c to r o f p u b ­ p o lic e, he a d ded. lic safety, said. A ll Mich­ ¡ K I Í ra rS sm Stute \ e w s photos b y Hob Ivins a n d Lance I,agoni. rnmWV E dw ard A. B rill M IC H IG A N o d ito r-in -v h ie j »TATE NEWS U N IV E R S IT Y (.a ro l B u d ro u \ a d vertisin g m anaff er Ja m es S. C ra n elli , m a n a g i ng talilor l'rin ka ( line , ca m p u s e d ilo r J e rr y B a n k h u rst , e d ito ritd ed ilo r Tom B rou n, s/torls e d ilo r B atricia I n ste tv associate ca m p u s e d ito r Six-time recipient ot the P acem aker aw ard tor outstanding journalism . . | — E D IT O R IA L S S a i g o n m u s t s e n d d e le g a t e s to P a r i s tives of Saigon and the N ational Thieu has not sent representa­ den and has lost m any thou­ The P a ris peace talks have Liberatio n F ro n t ( N L F ). The tives to P a ris , but the N L F sands of m en in the process. eached a very delicate stage. has. The N L F was ready to sit But the talks revolve around Vhile six months of negotiations President said that this propo­ in on the talks called for the the futu re of South V ie tn a m . vith Hanoi have proved fru it- sal included an understand­ last Wednesday. H ow ever., the By th eir boycott of P a ris , the ess, there is hope for some ing th at Hanoi would not abuse U nited States had to call off the South Vietnam ese can do noth­ igreem ent in the near future, the n e u tra lity of the d e m ilita r­ m eeting because Saigon was ing but hurt them selves. B u t by rhis hope hinges on the four ized zone and it would not shell not represented. sending representatives im m e ­ sarties involved. South V ietn am 's cities. N o rth V ie tn a m has g reatly d iately , the Saigon governm ent In his announcement of a Hanoi agreed, but Saigons' benefited by Saigon's absence. w ill be doing its country a great aombing halt. President John­ early acceptance was followed I t has turned it into psycholo­ service. son called for the start of ex­ by a sudden refusal. gical propaganda against the The aim is peace--a just peace panded talks w ith representa-' South V ietn am 's President U nited States. The N o rth has benefitUng a ll the parties. Sai­ shown that it is united w ith the gon m ust not let the hope for N L F , whereas the U nited States settlem ent slip aw ay because of and Saigon cannot resolve their it's obstinacy. T h e U n iv e r s ity lo se s differences. - T h e E d ito rs w h e n p o litic ia n s p l a y Stevens a t the fore, are calling W hat is badly needed is a p ar­ ley w ith a ll four parties in a t­ tendance as planned. It Sai­ gon does not attend, then the OURREADERS’M INDS Among a ll the political flak n the news m edia during re ­ for M a y 's im m ed iate dism issal. W hat it all seems to come U nited States w ill be forced to talk fo r the South V ietn am - W e re d r o w n in g in t r iv ia Erroroffact lent weeks there have been sev- GS6. To the Editor: in this respect it has failed m iserably. The ;ral new bursts of accusations down to is another gam e of poli­ The U nited States has c ar­ Help! We’re drowning in trivia! We are ultim ate “ m ethod” used to get us to class md counter-accusations of con- tica l “ ring around the ro sie,’ ’ ried a m a jo r share of the bur- only a few of numerous dissatisfied stu­ is by m eans of IBM attendance cards; and lic t of interest from M SU ad­ and whose pockets are fu ll of dents partaking in the elem entary m ethods even this has failed because students col­ courses this term . There appears to be no laborated, sending one representative for To the E d ito r: m inistrators and trustees. w hat is secondary. W hat m a t­ hope for us. Our complaints have been their group. We feel the treatm en t we re­ With regard to your editorial and the P h ilip J. M ay, M S U 's finan­ ters is that the gam e is played aired through proper channels; and the ceive is the m ain reason students don’t a t­ news story concerning the m eeting of the cial vice-president who is re ­ at the U n ive rs ity's expense. V o te y e s ’ only response we get is that something m ight be changed next term . What good tend classes. Lectures a re prepared for third graders, not third grade teachers. U niversity Library Com m ittee contained in the State News issue of Nov. 8, I am signing in June because ot a W hile the various a d m in is tra ­ does this do us now?! The lectures are We cannot even learn anything from the writing to bring to your attention-and recent conflict of interest con­ tive fat cats and trustees get Today on campus coeds worthless, the pertinent information could texts because the content is elaborated to that of your re a d e rs-an im portant error troversy centered about him ­ their partisan jollies and pub­ be given in ten m inutes; but we suffer the extent of ridiculousness. of fact. V• vote on the w om en’s hours You indicate that I, as chairm an of the self, cried ‘ Y o u 're another" to lic ly m alig n one another for the through two hour periods of absolute bab­ referendum . Although the M argaret Sawicki, Cass City, senior com m ittee, could not be reached for com­ ble. This term is supposed to prepare us trustee candidate W arren H u ff, sake of th eir political rep u ta­ Shari Strachan, Grosse Pointe, senior m ent. Apparently, then, the right hand vote is not the final word, for our professional role as a teacher, and a passenger on the D e m o c ra t­ tions, M S U is being dragged within your organization does not know a “ yes’ ’ vote w ill be a very ic bandwagon that had e m b ar­ through the mud and treated in flu en tial factor in the Block 'S’ ignored w hat the left hand is doing; for I did, in ¿act, speak to one of your rep o rters after rassed M a y and provoked his by everyone concerned as a po­ was not covered in the paper. It seem s fin a l decision. To the.Editor: the meeting and gave her a statem en t of to me the State News had been notified resignation. H u ff, who was litic a l step-child. There is a lot of red-tape Saturday, Oct. 26, was a big day for ev­ as to our plans, but there was no picture, the com m ittee’s actions. These actions elected to the Board of Trus­ W ith a ll the talk going on eryone, especially the football team since w ere, in effect, to approve in principle to be waded through a fte r nor was one word mentioned. But an over­ they won their Notre Dame game. But, it a recom m endation th at Dr. Chapin im ­ tees in spite of M ay's accusa­ about finding ways to deal abundance of space was devoted to 11 men coeds vote, but prospects was also a big day for Block “ S.” needed a t one tim e while 661 people need­ plem ent the program of controlled access tions, replied in substance w ith student irresponsibility What is Block “ S,” you say? It is the to the research area of the L ibrary. I also seem good for the propo­ ed a t exactly the sam e tim e had no space. that he had not sold anything and conduct which disrupts spirit of the student body at the game. told the rep o rter that the com m ittee is sal. So raise high your At this tim e I would like to commend two It is the section which never loses faith preparing a form al statem en t of reasons to the U n ive rs ity and didn't or harm s the U n iversity, why pencils. G et out there and in the team . It is the section which backs particular people whose hard work and effort (alm ost solely) w ere not acknowl­ for its recom m endation, which statem ent m ake any p ro fit on the deal isn't someone w orried about the team by cheers when the chips are strike a blow against P u ri­ edged by the students on the cam pus and will be available shortly. anyw ay. the m ore im m ed iate and less down and not just when things are in its I tru st th at the com m ittee’s statem en t of tan ethics and bureau­ favor. Block “ S” also m akes everyone should be. This can be the few words the Then trustee Don Stevens.. ju s tifia b le dam age being State News forgot to include. its reasoning in regard to this issue will c ra tic , d iscrim in ato ry sup- realize MSU students have pride. receive equitable treatm en t in your pages. D-O kem os, added his two done through political chi­ If I had not heard any com plim ents, I On behalf of Block “ S” --Thank you Ted ; pression. Venti and Ryan Bagby. C harles C. Hughes cents w ith further charges canery by that unruly mob of - T h e Editors would not be writing this letter, but I Candi Hammond professor, Dept, of Anthropology against M a y , who responded in old m en in charge? heard nothing but good words about the chairm an, U niversity L ibrary Com m ittee Greenville, sophomore block, and so I would like to know why it kind. Now the D em o crats, w ith - T h e E d ito rs M onday, N o v e m b e r 1 1 , 1968 Michigan State N ew s, E a st L a n sin g , M ich ig a n Sororities H a rv a rd p ro f ta lk s o f d o u b t begin rush sign-up to differentiate he tween w hat Although m ost e rro rs of kuow- those thaL I knyy in a par The H arvard professor felt * . DAVE SHORT a* .; stare New* Staff W riter &W — — .tL-kv1,'. * JtyVS W IM i icage wvotrld be of m in o r im­ <..< uuji cWai, ' Ar JCTfed. .* The he actually does know. He portance, Albritton suggested classes would have to overlap." m any phases of knowledge Man does not doubt every­ “ Ju st think of the freedom pointed out that there w ere th at som e of the discoveries Albritton pointed out th at it is thing th at he thinks he knows that one would have in not because it would be an adm it­ things that a man thought he would have a devastating ef­ possible to doubt your knowledge S ig n -u p fo r s o r o r it y r u s h b e ­ knew but he that didn’t really of things w ithout doubting the knowing anything.” Albritton tance of personal defect, H ar­ fect. g in s to d a y a n d w i l l c o n tin u e know in reality. things them selves. He said that wondered outloud. Elsworth vard professor R ogers Albritton “ Finding out that there was “ And ju st think of how much th ro u g h F r i d a y a t v a r io u s c a m ­ no Peloponnesian W ar would be a man could doubt that he knew said Friday. m ore we m ust know than what p u s lo c a tio n s . much m ore staggering th a t find­ that he had a head without doub­ Th ey a re : ting th at he had a head. we think we know,” he said. “ To adm it th at everything ing out th at this m a te rial that ,, - -- 6-10 p .m . M o n d a y in 133 A k e r s H a l l. * 6-10 p .m . T u e s d a y in 2 th at one knows is in e rr would be self-defeating,” Albritton seekshelp, m y speech is on is not pap er,’ Albritton voiced. assistant stated. “ The possibility of e r­ W ils o n H a ll. “ Some of these discoveries ro r in everything th at we think would stagger us for weeks of M .E .’s CHEM. E’s — 6-10 p .m . W e d n e s d a y in we know doesn’t bother u s.” U n io n P a r l o r C . for life.” - 1-5 p .m . T h u r s d a y a n d F r i ­ d a y in 310 S tu d e n t S e r v ic e s B ld g . “ We ju st shut our eyes to these possibilities; we don't ASMSU Board chairm an P e­ Refuting some of the theories of other philosophies, Albritton Columbia Gas Isenberg lecture T h e r e w i l l b e a $2 c h a r g e to c o v e r ru sh b o o k le t, s u p p lie s a n d p r o c e s s in g c o s t s . I s e n b e r g l e c t u r e r R o g e rs A lb ritto n , o f H a r v a r d doubt.” Albritton’s rem arks cam e te r Ellsw orth is looking for an assistant. The d u tie s o f th e assistant claim ed th at there w asn’t any way to put judgm ents of know­ ledge into classes or sub­ Energy Engineering A ll g i r ls p la n n in g to go U n iv e r s ity , e x p la in s h is v ie w s on th e p h ilo s o p h y during his lecture on the phil­ to the chairm an would include h a s o p p o r t u n i t i e s f o r y o u in classes. He felt th at there might th ro u g h f o r m a l r u s h w h o sig n e d of “ K now ledge and D oubt*’ a t C o n r a d A u d ito riu m osophy of “ Knowledge and Doubt’ handling of A S M S U public re ­ be a way to segregate som e of • R e s e a rc h S tu d ie s u p f o r P a n h e lle n ic C o u n c il's F r id a y n ig h t. in Conrad Auditorium. The lations, news releases and cor­ the judgm ents but he knew of lecture w as sponsored by the respondence plus issuance of • D evice D e v e lo p m e n t in t e r e s t p r o g r a m e a r l i e r in th e Bullets missAyub, none. • S y s te m s O p tim iz a tio n t e r m m u s t s ig n up f o r r u s h th is MSU philosophy, departm ent as general A S M S U statem ents to p a rt of its Isenberg m em orial the press. “ There could be a large class • C o n s u ltin g on In d u s tria l Processes, w eek. Lecture series devoted to the of things th at I think I know; S tru c tu re s , M a te ria ls , and R u sh a c t iv it ie s w i l l b e g in Ellsw orth said that there is but there m ight be things in H eavy E q u ip m e n t police holdsuspect N o v . 19 w it h a r u s h c o n v o c a ­ philosophy of Ludwig Wit­ “ no experience necessary” for th a t class th at I actually don’t • E n g in e e rin g E c o n o m ic A n a ly s e s tio n in W e lls H a l l. A t p r e s e n t , tgenstein. the position. Any interested student should know,” Albritton argued. P a n h e l is c o n s id e r in g h o ld in g If a m an, such as a “ m an from call ASMSU at 355-8266 for an “ It would be sheer luck if T h e re ’s excite m en t w a itin g fo r you in energy tw o c o n v o c a tio n s t h a t e v e n in g engineering, on a range o f projects w hich press M ars,” did not know th at m is­ appointment. there w ere no things except in a n t ic ip a t io n o f a la r g e t u r n ­ th e lim its o f yo u r chosen specialty. For ex­ o u t. R A W A L P I N D I . P a k is t a n ( A P ) Peshaw ar police had to use takes in knowledge w ere possible a m p le , p ro to ty p e d e v e lo p m e n t o f th e rm a l F r o m th e c o n v o c a tio n th e w o ­ - T w o s h o ts w e r e f ir e d S u n d a y te ar gas to disperse demon­ and he was then told th at it system s and devices, fu lly au tom ated co m ­ a t a p la t f o r m in P e sh aw ar strating students on Ayub’s a r­ was possible to e rr, Albritton pressor statio ns, fu e l cells, corro sion studies, m e n w i l l be d iv id e d in to s m a l l felt that there would be grounds and analyses o f co m m u n ity and regional energy r u s h g ro u p s a n d p ro c e e d th ro u g h w h e r e P a k is t a n i P r e s id e n t M o ­ rival Saturday. use patterns. th e v a r io u s s t a g e s o f e li m i n a ­ h a m m e d Avub Kahn was w a it in g for such a m an to doubt w hether C o lu m b ia 's engineering in breadth o ffe rs you to m a k e a n a p p e a l f o r u n it y in In Rawalpindi, where a t least or not he actually knew any­ im m e d ia te challenge in im p ro vin g radiation tio n . h is v io le n c e - t ro u b le d n a t io n . three persons died in clashes thing, however. ch a ra cte ristics o f ceram ics, m in ia tu riz e d resi­ T h e e lim in a t io n p r o c e s s c o n ­ that began Thursday between d e n tia l furnaces, m assive ultra -hig h-tem p era - t in u e s to .Ja n 14, w h e n a l l w o m e n "No one was hit tu re in d u s tria l units, w elding processes, and A n o f f i c ia l s t a t e m e n t s a id a mobs and police, the govern­ Otherwise, Albritton asserted g o in g th ro u g h r u s h s u b m it t h e ir o p tim ize d to ta l energy system s fo r large fa ­ y o u n g m a n w it h a p is t o l w a s m ent withdrew troops sent in th at there was little chance for c ilitie s . . . and fu rth e r challenge in co n su ltin g p re fe re n c e lis t s to P a n h e l. g ra b b e d by a n a r m y p e n s io n e r to restore order. No m ajor such “ grounds” to develop. to ap plian ce m an ufacture rs, high te m p e ra tu re T h e s e l is t s w i l l b e m a tc h e d up incidents w ere reported in the Albritton, who has been a processing in du stries, and to th e fa r-flu n g , w it h b id l i s t s s u b m it te d b y th e in th e a u d ie n c e , o v e r p o w e re d b y ' capital and a dusk-to-dawn m odern te ch n ica l op era tions o f th e C olum bia s o r o r it ie s to p u t th e w o m e n in b y s t a n d e r s a n d tu rn e d o v e r to professor of philosophy a t H ar­ System itself. p o lic e . A y u b d e liv e r e d h is c u r f e w w a s c u t b y f o u r h o u r s vard since 1956, was careful You get th e idea. It’s hard to p u t fences 7in-hSoin urgabpaottle th e s o r o r it ie s o f t h e ir c h o ic e . sp e e c h a s s c h e d u le . aro un d th e engineering excite m en t w a itin g fo r you a t o u r C olum bia la bo ratorie s. N a tu ral gas “ T h e c r o w d w a s f u r io u s a t re p ro v id e s a b o u t o n e -fo u rth o f th e U.S. fu e l th e y o u n g m a n a n d he c o u ld energy. It's one o f th e n a tio n 's fa ste st gro w in g h a v e b e e n ly n c h e d , b u t th e p re s -' in d u s trie s and C olum bia is a leader. For in ­ e n c e o f th e p r e s id e n t a n d th e W e st P a k is t a n G o v e rn o r, M o­ MONDAY fo rm a tio n on o u r gro w th o p p o rtu n itie s fo r you: S IN G A P O R E (A P ) - Tw o h a m m e d M u s a , h e lp e d s a v e h is w a n te d m e n w e r e k ille d an d fo u r p o lic e o f f i e r s w e r e w o u n d ­ l i f e , " th e s t a t e m e n t s a id . P IZZA SPECIAL Meet on Campus with Our Representative T h e sh o ts c a m e a s M u k k a r - ed in a s e v e n - h o u r gu n b a t t le ra m K h a n , p r e s id e n t o f th e (T w o F o r T he P r i c e N ovem ber 25 h e r e S u n d a y m o rn in g . W e s t P a k is t a n M o s le m L e a g u e or write to T h e d e a d m e n w e r e id e n t i­ - t h e c o u n t r y 's d o m in a n t p o li­ O f O n e— A fte r 6 :3 0 P .M .) Mr. Stanley A. Rogers f ie d a s L o h N g u t F o n g , so u g h t t i c a l p a r t y - - w a s a d d r e s s in g a Director of Placement in th e k id n a p in g o f a n A s ia n p u b lic m e e tin g in a p a r k a t P e s ­ f ilm m a g n a te ’ s so n , and an h a w a r , a b o u t 100 m ile s n o r th ­ CQM UfMÏiâ a c c o m p lic e . T w o o th e r w a n te d w e s t o f R a w a lp in d i. W ED. SPAGHETTI SPECIAL tmti m e n w e r e t a k e n in to c u s t o d y . A y u b , 61, w h o c e le b r a t e d h is H u n d re d s of ro u n d s of am - 10th a n n iv e r s a r y in p o w e r tw t) A ll You C a n t at W i t h T r im m in g s $ 1 .3 5 m u n itio n w e r e e x c h a n g e d . a s w eeks ag o . ' re fe rre d in h is'** ( A f te r T P V M .) SERVICE CORPORATION V p o lic e b e s ie g e d th e h o u se s p e e c h to t h r e e d a y s o f a n t i­ 1600 Dublin Road, Colum bus, Ohio, 43212 w h e r e th e fo u r w e r e h id in g o ut g o v e r n m e n t d is o r d e r s t h a t h it an equal opportunity employer a n d p o lic e u s e d s c o r e s o f t e a r W e s t P a k i s t a n ' s m a jo r c it ie s TO W N g a s a n d h an d g r e n a d e s . la s t w e e k . .CRANIUM S em in a r on bursting with ideas. seek to A s e m in a r on C h in a , f r o m a n c ie n t t im e s to th e M a o T s e - tu n g e r a . w i l l be p r e s e n te d th is u n d ersta n d o f th e A r t s , S c ie n c e s a n d H e a lt h C a r e e r s B ld g , on M o n d a y e v e n ­ in g s a t L C C . PUM P 3 0 7 S. G R A N D IV 9 -6 6 1 4 .MOUTH fluent, defends ideas. m o n th b y M S U a n d L a n s in g T h e c o s t is $15 f o r one p e r ­ DOW NTOW N L A N S IN G ° P en 10 a-nr>--’2 a* C o m m u n it y C o lle g e . so n o r $20 f o r a m a r r ie d c o u p le T h e c o u r s e is d e s ig n e d to w ho w ill sh a re r e a d in g m a ­ im p r o v e th e a v e r a g e p e r s o n 's t e r i a l. •MUSCLE u n d e r s t a n d in g o f c o n t e m p o r a r y , well toned to hard work. C h in a a n d to p r o v id e a b a s e fo r u n d e r s t a n d in g and e v a lu a t in g A m e r ic a n fo r e ig n p o lic y . T h e s e m in a r w i l l f e a t u r e a r e p r e s e n t a t iv e o f th e U .S . S t a t e •BACKBONE D e p t, an d a n A s ia n stu d e n t w h o strong and well ta u g h t in C h in a d u rin g th e c u r ­ developed. r e n t c u lt u r a l r e v o lu t io n . T h e s e m in a r i s o p en to a l l a r e a p e o p le w h o a r e in t e r e s t e d in U .S . fo r e ig n p o lic y a n d it s e f f e c t on C h in a . - - DEEP SEATED A m o n g th e a r e a s to b e d is ­ loyalty. c u s s e d a r e a n c ie n t C h in a , t r a ­ d it io n a l s o c ie t y , e c o n o m ic p ro ­ g r e s s , in t e r n a t io n a l r e la t io n s , _ .REQUIRED equipment th e R e d G u a r d m o v e m e n t an d Ch.E, E.E. or M.E. Degree. th e w o r ld o f M a o T s e - tu n g . S e m in a r d a te s a n d to p ic s a r e a s f o llo w s : N o v . 1 1 - B a c k g r o u n d on C h i­ n e s e In t e r n a t io n a l R e la t io n s . N ov. 1 8 - C o n f u c ia n is m C o m m u n is m - T h e an d C u lt u r a l R e v o lu t io n , N e il H u n t e r , A u s ­ Anatomy t r a l i a n s c h o la r a n d c o -a u th o r o f “ C h in a O b s e r v e d ” N o v 2 5 - T o w a r d a N e w C h in a P o lic y - C a n C o llis io n be of an >LEGS ready for climbing. A v o id e d ? H a r r y T h a y e r , fo r e ig n s e r v i c e o f f i c e r , U .S . D e p t, o f S ta te . T h e s e m in a r w i l l m e e t fro m Engineer ' 7 :3 0 - 9 :3 0 p .m . in ro o m 401 (Our kind, that is.) ■FEET solidly planted on ground. In te r v ie w s : T h u r s d a y , N ov, 14, 1968 b u ilt lik e th is ? le ts ta lk . C o n ta c t P la c e m e n t O ffic e F o r A p p o in tm e n t F a s te r a b s o rb e n c y . L o n g e r p ro te c tio n . T h a t ’s th e e x tr a s e c urity you g e t w i t h n e w M e d s , t h e M5Ë Meds o nly t a m p o n w i th this d o u b le -p ro t e c t io n des ig n: a n o u t e r layer of la rg e r f i b e r s t h a t a b s o rb in ­ s ta n tly , w ith a n i n n e r layer o f t i n y f i b e r s t h a t andotte sto re m o r e , longer. C H E M IC A L S C O R P O R A T IO N ÎcæmSSETl M ID I ANO MOOCI9 ANC TRAOtMAftKt WYANDOTTE, MICHIGAN 48192 An Equal Opportunity Employer Bie-9 Comes in the first gentle, flexible plastic applicator. O f ACfltONAC MODUCTt QOflWNf VMSW )< M onday, N o v e m b e r 1 1 , 1968 M ichigan State N e w s, E a st L a n sin g , M ich ig a n GAINS IN MGORTANCE Unique arrivals alive an d w e l l v fu re p ro m is e s p ro te s ts T By GEORGE BULLARD K. ... ^ fc every vegetable including sun­ State News SUff W riter flower seeds,” he said. in selection of practical cour­ “ But we took them off the for them selves. With no one the counter elites in action. Two of the cam pus’ eight By TIM BANNISTER F ru strated with the operation ses. sunflower seeds,” he added. listening to them , frustration Rogers then traced the re ­ tylomys, the only ones in cap­ arises am ong the lower masses. of their college in the city of “ They w ere getting too fat and Student pro test and the con­ cent student unrest in Amer­ tivity, had twins last week a t Ju st b ek m the elites are the Cordova, students went on we w e re afraid obesity would troversy it produces will be ica. the University Museum. p a rt of the cam pus life through counter M il« , who are those strike in 1941. Rogers said the He said that although Latin The tylomys, large naked- affect their breeding.” out of pow er and college stu­ resu lt of their dem ands gave tail rats, w ere trapped last Swltz«rt>erg said th at little the next generation, E v e re tt M. American students w ere pro­ could be hypothesized from the dents. The «M nter elites seek Latin A merican students oppor­ sum m er during a Mexican field Rogers, professor of com m uni­ testing their rights twenty cations, said Thursday. to activate Change in the gov­ tunities th at American college years ago, the actual birth of trip led by Rollln H. Baker, new litter. ernm ent, and they m ay do so students still do not enjoy. Stu­ “ T hat they had twins doesn’t Speaking before the Delta U.S. student protest began at Museum director. Phi Epsilon business fra te r­ through cM pe, strikes or dem­ dents w ere elected to positions Berkeley in 1964. P ro te st on “ The Brookfield Zoo (near m ean m uch,” hd said. “ We can­ nity, Rogers said th a t the onstrations. on the board of trustees, and MSU’s cam pus arrived soon af- Chicago), had a pair of ty­ not predict litte r sizes based children of the students on cam ­ Rogers theft ased college stu­ they also won the right to help tern Berkeley, and it has come lomys, but they died,” Baker on a single litter born and ob­ pus today will be demanding dents in Lnttn America to show to play a growing p a rt over the said. "Now we have the only served in captivity.” Switzenberg suspects anoth­ Field even m ore rights in the future; last four years. tylom ys in captivity as well as the only tylomys born in cap­ e r fem ale is pregnant. More particularly in a g re a te r in­ “ There is a frustration ratio will be learned as the num ber of volvement w ith the way our among college students today, tivity.” country is run. w ork a d d e d said Rogers. “ Students w ant to “ Little is known of tylom ys,” births increase, he said. Donald F. Switzenberg, Mus­ “ It is surprising,” he added, Rogers discussed student have a say in U niversity opera­ protest as a facet of his infor­ tions, and they have an increas­ eum curatorial technician, “ th at this is the first tim e m al talk on the rising fru stra ­ ing aw areness, that never ex­ Student revolts said. “ We’re not even sure of tylom ys have been bred and stu­ tions among the peasants, the to M C cu rricu lu m isted in my college years, in their exact species.” died in captivity. They’re so urban poor and students. national politics,’’ he said. E v e re tt R o g e r s , p r o f e s s o r of c o m m u n ic a tio n s , “ Tylomys range from Mex­ ra re th a t defining their exact Using two theories advanced The field experience program -students' wants are raising, s p e a k s on th e r e c e n t s tu d e n t u p r is in g s th ro u g h o u t ico through Central Am erica. species will be a p a rt of our By SHARON TEMPLETON by comm unications specialists should provide a student with but the gets haven’t changed th e w o rld , l a s t T h u r s d a y n ig h t, n o tin g th a t th e s e r e ­ P anam a is the end of their range re se a rc h .” SU te N«ws SUff W riter as far as we know,” he said. “ In pairing our eight tylom ys Rogers showed how revolutions, both a functional knowledge of m uch." he said. “ I see m ore v o lts w ill p r o b a b ly c o n tin u e and b r in g s o m e k in d o f we m atched them according to civil w ars and student demon­ the policy process and a sub- controversy coming on cam- “ The pair th at had twins w ere Students In Jam es Madison b e n e fit to s tu d e n ts . a rea of capture, assum ed they strations in Mexico uCity u y and ana £ 0jjege (MC) will spend six stantive knowledge of policy puses, but I ’m convinced that S ta te N ew s p h o to by T im B a n n is te r trapped in a tropical area along Berkley a re all related through m ony ,s„ of th eir junior year out­ problems. in the long run much good will the Pacific coast of M exico,” would then a t least be in the tfrustration and n n/4 tlin sam e sub-species and have the the IoaW AT com lack of Afim— In his work, a participant in Co m e o fit.” he said. Worker reminiscesafter 19years side the university working with m unication in a society’s power persons or organizations cur the program will become ac Switzenberg added th at Ba­ sam e genetic m ake-up,” he structure. quainted with the policies of k e r’s trip to this area was fi­ said. rently involved in making, in­ “ I personally think th at they He first discussed the con­ fluencing the organization where he is nanced by an MSU grant and and implementing resem ble opossums, though I cept of alienation, through what public policies. working and may do research w as coipprised prim arily of MSU zoology students. am not implying th at they a re in he term ed the “ wants-gels ra ­ into specific policy issues. At Jordan said that people have Jordan said that after he re ­ any way related to opossum s,” tio.” Rogers used an example the sam e tim e, he will have an By JIM KETCHUM tires next spring, he and his “ We don’t know much of the The purpose of the program not really changed basically, he said. of peasants in an isolatet Andes is not m erely to expose students opportunity to observe the State News Staff W riter wife plan to drive to the West tylom ys’ habitat other than Can you imagine Shaw Hall but he said today’s students their preference for jungles, The tiny arriv als a re living Mountain village who had few to the challeftge of getting along organization at work. seem to be m ore studious than coast via the northern route. He w ith their m other in a tin can wants and w ere content with in the non-student community Participant-observation with with only 60 students living said the trip should take from and th at they a re frequently the students of 1950. observed near rocks, cliffs and a t the Museum. their way of life. or to provide cultural shock. It policy-making organizations there during a regular term ? Or “ Back then,” he said, “ you six weeks to two months. Because of their delicate He then explained the “ dis­ is designed to give students an m ay raise certain m oral pro­ dairy barns and cow pastures “ I t’s something w e’ve plann­ tre e s,” he said. equilibrium ” which can occur opportunity to see both public blem s for students, Baer said. where the Shaw parking ram p had a lot of ex-G .I.’s going to ed for a long tim e ,” he said “ We a re still learning of condition, photographs could school. They w ere older men th eir food habits. They a re veg­ not be taken. in a sm all country. A Peace and prlvete organizations deal Students will necessarily be in­ and the planetarium now stand? and they seem ed to goof off “ and so w e’re just going to “ We cannot disturb them Corps w orker from the outside with policy problems. volved as partisans during their John Jordan, 6267 Groven- etarian s and will eat nearly more than the students do now." take our tim e m uch,” Switzenberg explained, world cam e to the village. Al­ field experience. berg Rd.. can. H e’s been the “ because we a re unsure w hat though his purpose was to help “ The MC field experience Unlike internship program s night custodian a t Shaw Hall would be detrim ental to their the village, he upset the equili­ program diflera from indepen­ which take place after a student since March. 1950. and plans survival.” brium through introducing new dent study ift that MC believes completes all of his course to retire early next spring. In those 19 years. Jordan Plan to v a ry e x p e rie n c e T iYtuogocsola nfviriam s’s ideas, such as the transistor the student can learn as m uch radio. outside as in the classroom and work, the MC program takes has watched MSU grow from Suddenly, through the radio’s lib rary ,” C arl Baer. asst, pro­ place while the students are a sm all agricultural college, ads, the villagers becam e fessor in MC and director of juniors, giving them an oppor­ into a sprawling, diversified tunity to return to the classroom university. aw are of what they didn’t have. They becam e increasingly un­ said. the field experience program , where they can share and eval­ • When I went to work here at for ’U ' student teachers happy as their w ants w ere raised, but their “ g ets” w eren’t increased proportionately. The field experience program is designed to be closely re ­ “ As this disequilibrium con­ lated to eM M nts’ course work tinues, Roger said, “ indivi­ and on-campus research pro­ duals m av reso rt to revolution jects. uate the knowledge acquired in Shaw," Jorday said, “ this was the field. Before going into the field, students will take courses pro­ viding skills relevant to their tion crew s,” he said. "We had specific field experience and to carry our lunches then be­ as far south as cam pus went. "Our main job back then was cleaning up after the construc­ By BARBARA PARNESS State News Staff W riter P rior to beginning their actual student teaching, the students participate in a series The SERL P ro ject is an innovation in the of non-credit orientation sessions in which student teaching program offered at MSU. they become acquainted with their prospective schools and analyze the specific problem s of goodrelations OSIJEK, Yugoslavia (AP) The purpose of the project, secondary ed­ -- P resident Tito declared Sun­ or civil w ar. The Biafran w ar Students Will be placed in a courses providing ideas and cause the kitchen w asn’t fin­ ucation Residency Lansing, initiated in the teaching junior high school pupils. day this country has good re ­ in N igeria,” he continued, “ is v ariety of participant-observa­ questions which focus on the ished, none of the windows in During these orientation sessions, students lations with w estern countries j spring of 1966, is to discover and further de­ an exam ple of disequilibrium tion situations corresponding legislative process and public the dining room w ere in and discuss the problem s of ‘slow learn ers’, con­ and th at attem p ts of the there was no tile on the flqaf,” velop methods of preparing teachers w ho,can becoming conflict.” with the five fields of concen­ adm inistration. organize and m anage instruction emphasizing sider the sociological aspects of teaching and Soviet Union and its allies to In the second theory, called tration in MC. study ways in which new methods of instruc­ isolate Yugoslavia will not suc­ the unique learning requirem ents of a wide the “ notion of the e lite s,” tion and learning can be recorded, exam ined ceed. He stressed good re la ­ TIm M u s s s s s of study are variety of students in a typical junior high Rogers discussed a power 1 1 *11 W H A T ' S and evaluated. tions with W est G erm any. international relations, ethnic school classroom . structure that exists with those The SERL P roject, a joint venture sponsored “ The project was not seen as a research He spoke a t a rally in this and religious intergroup rela­ in power, the elites, on top and experim ent but ra th e r as a m eans of trying industrial-agricultural center M B tions, urban and socio-econo­ by the Instructional Division of the Lansing the lower m asses on the bottom. out some ideas for improving the laboratory close to the H ungraian border. m ic regulatory and welfare School D istrict and the U niversity's School As the elites move up the po­ experience in teacher preparation,” the bro­ The crowd, estim ated of­ problem s, constitutional demo­ for Teacher Education, differs from the regular wer structure they grow out of student teaching program in that students chure said. ficially a t 200,000. frequently cracy and justice, m orality and communication with the lower Based on the subjective evaluations of the interrupted T ito’s speech with the public interest. participate “ a t a much higher level than usual m asses aqd operate the society individuals involved in the project as well as applause and signing. Once in working with social agencies and organiza­ MS* • documented findings, a num ber of effects Tito told the crowd to calm tions in the com m unity,” the project brochure mm »«NM« shomm c o n n •s m InitiaU on for new m e m b e rs of S igm a D e lta Chi, p ro fessio n al jo u rn a lism honorary, w ill b e held a t 8 :30 p.m . T uesday in 35 U nion. said. “ Students a re much m ore likely to spend of the project have been noted. tim e in student homes and community activi­ These include the following: P articipants in the project have had a wider down and stop swaying back and forth because “ I m ay be­ com e seasick.” rrrrn rc n o n * G I tie s.” MSU ^u d en ts participating in the project experience during their student teaching than “ Our sovereignty and our in- , ENDS TUESDAY I ENDS TOMORROW S p a rta n W ives w ill m e e t a t 8 tonight in 105 S. K edzie H all. M rs. Ann T u ck er w ill d e m o n stra te th e m a k in g of w re a th s and o th e r C h ris tm a s d e c o ra tio n s fo r the hom e. in p la c e ^ o fth e regular student teaching 'pro- is possible for students in the regular student dependence was paid in blood, At 7:: 15 * * * gram are assigned on a less rigid basis than in teaching program . once for ever, and we will pre­ T he U nion B oard is polling stu d e n t in te re s t in s u m m e r E u ro p e a n flig h ts fo r 1969. A g rea ter proportion of SERL students the typical program . F o r exam ple, SERL serve it with blood, if neces­ Relax! Any stu d e n t in te re s te d in a n eight-w eek j e t flight round trip fro m D e tro it to London participants exam ine and work with a variety teachers have accepted perm anent positions in sa ry ,” Tito said, a s the crowd fro m Ju n e 27 to Aug. 26 or a 12-week flig h t fro m J u n e 24 to Sept. 16 fo r app ro x i­ It’s only m a te ly 1230 should c a ll the U nion B oard be tw ee n 8 a .m . and 5 p.m . th is w eek a t of methods for organizing instruction in large the Lansing school system . Students in this program have gained val­ cheered. “ A ttem pts of isola­ a movie! 355-3354,355-3355 o r 355-3362 and sm all groups as well as gaining experience in individualized tutoring and team teaching. uable experience in teaching rem edial classes tion of Yugoslavia will not. COLUMBIAPICTURESPresemi L e tte rs of p e titio n fo r a p p o in tm e n t of re p re s e n ta tiv e s a t la rg e fo r th e C ollege of succeed because we have &MARTINMANUKSProduction N a ta ra l Science S tudent Council a r e re q u e ste d fro m in te re s te d stu d en ts. At le a st The initial site selected for the project was and observing instruction in special education m any friends in the world. tw o openings e x ist. Send le tte rs to th e C ollege of N a tu ra l S cience S tu d en t C ouncil, Dwight Rich Junior High School, and in classes. “ Yugoslavia has achieved c /o J R H offm an. 103 N a tu ra l Science Bldg The d e ad lin e is Nov. 21. Student teaching has becom e an “ indivi­ in the world a trem endous • * * w inter, 1967, it was expanded to West Junior gJAMH dualized experience" for project participants, prestige and has very good eco­ T he MSU P ac k ag in g Society will m e e t a t 7 p.m . T u e sd ay in the Con Con R oom of High School, both in Lansing. These schools, COBURN the In te rn a tio n a l C en ter. O fficers w ill b e e le cte d . according to the brochure, w ere selected be­ with individual teaching assignm ents being nomic and political relations JAMIt JAMH • * * cause of their “ unique ch aracteristics in shiftdd easily to com pensate for their speci­ with many countries, and with MASOAN NO HR The S tudent L ib eratio n A lliance w ill m e e t T uesday night in 31 Union teacher personnel, geographic location and fic strengths, weaknesses or interests. a m ajority of countries in Eu­ ■UIANNAH physical facilities." All of these ch aracteris­ Teaching in the project is m ore likely to rope our relations a re very YV6MMC0UMT “ T he E u ro p e a n S c re e n ," a film show ing w h a t E u ro p e a n te le v isio n is like, provide experience for the student in his m inor YORK w ill bd shown a t 7:30 p .m . T uesday in P a rlo r C of th e U nion, follow ing a 7 p.m . m e e t­ tics appeared to lead them selves to the de­ field as well as his m ajor field than is likely good.” ing of the A dvertising Club. Chuck A dam s, p re s id e n t of M acM anus, Jo h n and m ands of the project. He named as friends of A dam s. In c .. w ill speak. • • • Students interested in participating in the in the regular student teaching program . Yugoslavia in Europe “ Italy, i “ N oise-Induced H e arin g Loss and R ock and R oll M usic” w ill be the s u b je c t project volunteer rur Droieci for uit during uuimg the me term r o m in *Plans for expanding the SERL ---------------- ° P ro ject >„to A ustria, G reat B ritain, Bel­ of a le c tu re given by W illiam R in te lm a n n a t th e S igm a A lpha E ta m e e tin g a t 7:30 which they are taking their secondary m ethods other schools are now being fo rm ulated In gium, Holland and Scandina­ p.m . T uesday in 106 In te rn a tio n a l C enter. bourse which is prerequisite to all student addition, plans a re being m ade to capitalize vian countries.” He added that THE R ep. D ale W arn er, R -E a to n R apids, w ill sp ea k on “ T h e In ju stic e of C ontem ­ teaching They m ust also have fulfilled all on the success of the SERL P ro ject by pro- the pre^student teaching professional educa- viding pre-student teaching laboratory ex- his country has especially good relations with nonaligned p o ra ry D rug L a w s,” a t a m eetin g of th e G eneva F o ru m a t 7:30 p.m . T uesday in tion courses including educational philosophy periences for u n d e r g f£ countries of Asia and Africa. FASTEST the S tu d en t C en te r, 217 Bogue St., Apt. 3. and snerial methods teacher aides. Included in the plans will be T ito c singled out the im ­ T h e ASCE w ill hold a b a n q u et m e e tin g w ill th e L ansing and Ja c k s o n d is tric ts The project a ttra c ts volunteers who have recruitm ent of teachers through F uture Teach- provem ent of relations with dem onstrated an interest and willingness to e rs’ Clubs and increased in-service education WORD a t 6:30 p .m . T uesd ay in th e G old R oom of the U nion. W est G erm any, the country participate in an unusual kind of student and curriculum developm ent activities for which is a prim e ta rg e t of Tapeplayer teaching experience. the regular teaching staff. Soviet attack in Europe. He IN Member: said that since diplom atic re ­ Read as Fast as You Think lations with W est G erm any JOE F. FARHAT’S reportedgone w ere re-established there exist At Least 3 Times Faster all conditions for speeding up OP AMERICA Velvet Rail Billiards! Thousands of college and high school students have of economic th a t country. relations with “ We m ust endeavor to even “ Leading the nation in sanctioned tournam ents" . . . You can, too . . . A tape player, belonging to m ore expand our trad e with It’s guaranteed or you don’t W h e r e you sa w Jo e B a l s is , Irv in g cam pus radio station WMSN W est G erm any. They have payl C r a n e , L u th e r L a s s i t e r , J im m y C a r a s , and valued a t $1,045, w as taken w hat we need and we have » Achieve better grades from the station’s storage area w hat to offer,” he added. D o ro th y W ish p r a c t i c e f o r » Cut down your hours of in the engineering shop some­ This p art of Tito’s speech th e U .S. O pen study » Increase your income with tim e between Oct. 2 and Nov. 8, w as seen as especially signifi­ 15 Brunswick Gold Crown g reater knowledge according to U niversity police. cant, reflecting the present » Our average graduate mood of Yugoslavia, th re a t­ Pocket Tables With reads in 12 minutes what ened by economic pressures Automatic Ball Returns used to require an hour • More than 400,000 grad­ «N EW F O L K from E a st m unist countries. E uropean Com­ The speech here w as seen as « N EW F O L K iVJpO** Good Mon. thru T h u rs. Only Oq uates including the staff : co1 Call today fo r further information of the late P resident Ken­ p a rt of Tito’s cam paign to ex­ FREE 377-1222 nedy plain to his people the pre­ Free Second Hour—Play One Hour, Get Second Hour Absolutely Free 8 -U a.m . 8-11 p.m . « N EW F O L K sen t conflict with the Soviet Union and its allies. After touring border a re a s n ear Bul­ Coupon Expires: Nov, 14, 1968 Open 7 Days T ill 2 a.m. N.S. G ill Campus Representative □ Evelyn Wood «N EW F O L K garia, he now is visiting the a re a bordering Hungary, DOMINO «N EW F O L K another W arsaw P a c t country 2004 N . L arch U.S. 27 North P . a Box 342 which participated in the oc­ E. L ansing, 48823 Reading Dynamics cupation of Czechoslovakia. M onday, N o v e m b e r 1 1 , 1968 7 M ichigan s ta te N ew s, E a st L a n sin g , M ich ig a n L a M a n c h a ’-, s u p e r b s h o w “ Man of La M ancha” was perform ed Thursday and F ri­ day . . * . „ut. in the Auditorium. Several thou­ • I P / s N O h w v 'M - F e rre r’s. So MSU was fortunate to, tvwve seen the finest “ Man of ^ » t i l l formed. being per strain of the Aldonza role m ust Penzer added another welcome enjoy w hat she is dam?.. The touch of burlesque as the inn- t . /A‘ css.tt t.he se c o n d q u a r t e r , c o m - o fte n a n d w e c o u ld n ’ t s u s t a in a n a t t a c k ; v. t e t i W riter The b o tto m d ro p ^ F out of th e 1968 fititW « « th e w in n in g whc." ’>'*'■ . .* *' p*« d r iv e an d s c p r e d th e to u c h d o w n h im s e lf th e g a m e o u t o f r e a c h . f o o tb a ll s e a so n fo r M S U on S a t u r d a y . on a r o llo u t. “ T h e d e fe n s e p la y e d h a r d a n d w a s e f ­ C o ach D u ffy D a u g h e rty ’s S p a rta n s v ir ­ M S U , w it h j u s t 52 sfeconds le f t a n d no f e c t iv e m o s t o f th e t im e , th o u g h w e d id t u a lly lo s t a n y c h a n c e to f in is h in th e tim e o u t s r e m a in in g , m o v e d th e b a ll to h a v e s o m e m is s e d t a c k l e s .” ' f i r s t d iv is io n o f th e B ig T e n a n d in th e th e H o o s ie r 4 0 - y a rd lin e , b u t I U lin e b a c k e r H ig h s m it h , r e p la c in g T o m m y L o v e in to p t w e n t y in th e n a t io n a l r a n k in g s a s J i m S n ia d e c k i p ic k e d o ff a B i l l T r i p l e t t th e s t a r t in g lin e u p , m a d e th e m o s t o f h is In d ia n a w o rk e d it s la s t m in u t e m a g ic p a s s to s e a l th e S p a r t a n ’ s f a t e . c h a n c e s a s h e le d th e S p a r t a n s in r u s h in g a8ain j r M S U fu m b le d th e b a ll a w a y on th re e w it h 83 y a r d s . T h e “ C a r d ia c K i d s e m e rg e d fro m a c o n s e c u t iv e p la y s in th e o p e n in g p e rio d , M S U s u ff e r e d no s e r io u s i n j u r i e s in S a t ­ c o m e d y o f e r r o r s to m a r c h 82 y a r d s f o r a in a b lin g In d ia n a to ju m p o u t to a q u ic k u r d a y ’ s g a m e . T r i p l e t t h a d p r o b le m s w it h l a s t m in u te to u c h d o w n a n d a 24-22 v i c ­ 10-0 le a d . th e s h o u ld e r h e b r u is e d a g a in s t O h io S t a t e t o r y o v e r M S U . T h e lo s s l e f t th e S p a r ­ T h e S p a r t a n s d o m in a t e d p la y f r o m th a t b u t h e sh o u ld be r e a d y to go S a t u r d a y t a n s w it h a 4-4 o v e r a ll r e c o r d a n d a 1-4 p o in t u n t il la t e in th e t h ir d q u a r t e r . T h e a g a in s t P u r d u e . m a r k in th e c o n fe r e n c e . MSU M S U d e fe n s e b ro u g h t th e I U o f f e n s iv e Ind. T h e g a m e s , p la y e d on a s lig h t ly w e t F ir s t dow ns 18 21 m a c h in e to a h a lt w h ile th e o ffe n s e f ie ld , r e s e m b le d a n o ld - fa s h io n e d s la p ­ R ushing y a rd a g e 144 178 p u sh e d a c r o s s t h r e e to u c h d o w n s . O n ly s e v ­ 90 s t ic k c o m e d y a t t im e s , a s th e tw o t e a m s P a ssin g y a rd a g e 195 e r a l m o r e S p a r t a n t u r n o v e r s p r e v e n te d P assess 28-13-2 12-7-3 lo s t th e b a ll a t o t a l o f 13 t im e s on p a s s D a u g h e r t y ’ s b o y s f r o m tu r n in g th e g a m e P u n ts 5-31 6-35 in t e r c e p t io n s a n d f u m b le s a n d c a m e w it h ­ R e tu rn y a rd a g e 58 77 in to a ro u t. in a n e y e la s h o f lo s in g th e b a ll a t le a s t F u m b les 7 6 D o n H ig h s m it h ’ s o n e - y a r d p lu n g e a n d a 4 f iv e m o r e t im e s . F u m b le s lost 4 tw o -p o in t c o n v e r s io n r u n b y C h a r l i e W ed e - Y a rd s penalized 39.5 15 M S U , w h ic h lo s t th e b a ll s e v e n t im e s m e y e r g a v e th e S p a r t a n s t h e ir f i r s t e ig h t S a t u r d a y , h a s n o w s u r r e n d e r e d th e b a ll on m is c u e s 32 t im e s t h is s e a so n . p o in ts. F o o tb a ll- a t a g i à n c e L a t e in th e se c o n d p e r io d , M S U to o k a “ W e 'v e fig u r e d a lm o s t e v e r y w a y o f 15-10 le a d o n a o n e - y a r d s n e a k b y T r i p l e t t C «al. All Season’s lo s in g a fo o tb a ll g a m e a n d o f b e a tin g W L W L an d G a r y B o y c e ’ s e x t r a p o in t. o u r s e lv e s ," M S U ’ s D a u g h e r t y s a id a f t e r ­ O hio S tate 5 0 7 0 B i l l F e r a c o , r e p la c in g T r i p l e t t w h o w a s 5 0 7 1 w a rd . M ichigan In d ia n a 's la s t m in u te h e r o ic s a r e b y now a f a m ilia r sag a to H o o s ie r f a n s . sh a k e n - u p , s c o r e d th e f i n a l S p a r t a n to u c h ­ d o w n , a s h e c a p p e d a 5 4 -y a rd t h ir d q u a r t e r Indiana P u rd u e 4 1 3 2 6 2 7 2 story M innesota 3 2 5 3 d r iv e w it h a n o t h e r o n e - y a rd s n e a k . I t w a s C o a c h Jo h n P o n t’s c h a rg e s now h a v e w o n Iow a 3 2 4 4 A sign of what was to c o m e , F e r a c o ’ s s e v e n t h to u c h d o w n o f th e y e a r . 1 4 4 4 s i x g a m e s t h is y e a r a n d 11 g a m e s o v e r MSU M S U ’ s Don H ig h s m it h ch a s e s a In d ia n a th e n c a m e to l i f e a n d B r o w n N o rth w e stern 1 4 1 7 th e p a s t tw o s e a s o n s in w h ic h th e y w e r e bad p ltc h o u t on the f o u r t h p la y sc o r e d on a t h r e e - y a r d r u n to c u t th e Illinois 0 5 0 7 b e in d o r t r a ilin g in th e fo u r th q u a r t e r . W isconsin 0 5 0 8 of S a t u r d a y 's I n d i a n a - M S U g a m e . Spartan doom “ I g u e s s f in is h e s lik e t h a t a r e o ld h a t ,” P o n t s a id . “ B u t I th in k w e a r e m o r e th a n S p a r t a n le a d to 22-17 a n d s e t th e s t a g e f o r th e w in n in g d r iv e . Indiana 24, MSU 22 S a tu rd a y '» result» T h e S p a r ta n s lo s t the b a ll seven “ O u r o ffe n s e m o v e d r e a l w e l l in th e O hio S ta te 43, W isconsin 8 t i m e s and the g a m e 2 4 - 2 2 . end E r i c S to lb e r g goes o v e r M SU’s Ken H e ft to catc h a lu c k y . I th in k i t s h o w s w e p la y p r e t t y good In d ia n a f i r s t h a l f , ” D a u g h e r t y s a id , “ b u t th e a l ­ M ichigan 36, Illin o is 0 S tate N e w s photo pass at the S p a r ta n o n e - y a r d lin e . S to lb e r g ’ s catc h set f o o t b a ll.” c ru c ia l m o s t u n b e lie v a b le a m o u n t o f t u r n o v e r s Iow a 68, N o rth w e ste rn 34 by M i k e M a r h a n k a a n a ’ s win nin g touchdown, which th ey s c o r e d w ith 52 seconds S u b s t itu t e q u a r t e r b a c k G r e g B r o w n w a s M innesota 27, P u rd u e 13 up Indi h u r t u s b a d ly .” c a s t in th e r o le o f h e ro in S a t u r d a y s s c r i p t . the g a m e . S ta te N ew s photo by L a n c e L a go n I le ft in STOLBERG IU STAR Harriers beat Irish S u p e r-ca tch b e a ts M S U to cap 7-0 season By DON KOPRIVA a n d n o te d , “ I w a s e s p e c ia lly i t h e a d in g to W a t e r s a n d j u s t h a p p y w it h th e w a y M o c k r a n . " T h a t c a t c h w a s s o m e th in g State News Sports W riter berg in the MSU end zone. Stol­ w a n te d to p r e v e n t a n in t e r c e p ­ I t w a s a s h a r p c o n t r a s t to la s t M S U ’ s c r o s s c o u n t r y te a m By GARY W A L K O W IC Z berg appeared to be well co­ e l s e ,” In d ia n a C o a c h J o h n P o n t tio n . I b a r e ly g o t a h a n d o n i t c o n c lu d e d i t s f i r s t u n d e fe a te d w e e k .” State News Sports W r it e r vered by MSU's Ken Heft but to ld n e w s m e n a f t e r w a r d . “ Y o u to t ip it a w a y .” d u a l m e e t s e a s o n s in c e 1957 A w eek e a r lie r a g a in s t “ I t w a s th e g r e a t e s t c a t c h the IU end made a sensational w ill n e v e r se e an o th e r c a tc h I n th e In d ia n a d r e s s in g ro o m F r i d a y w it h a 17-41 r o m p o v e r M i a m i , M o c k h a d f in is h e d 12th. la t I ’ v e m a d e in m y c o lle g e leaping grab over the Spartan lik e i t . ” a f t e r th e g a m e , S t o lb e r g a n d N o tre D a m e a t F o r e s t A k e rs G ib b a r d a ls o w as p le a s e d defender to give Indiana the E a r l i e r in th e w in n in g d r iv e , B r o w n w e r e th e p r in c ip a l t a r ­ a r e e r ." G o lf C o u r s e . S t o lb e r g h ad m a d e a n o t h e r b ig w it h th e S p a r t a n s ’ 51 .8 se co n d In d ia n a s p lit en d E r ic S to l- ball on the one yard line. A play g e ts o f w e ll- w is h e r s . B ro w n T h e w in , w h ic h g a v e th e J i m p la y f o r In d ia n a b y n o t c a t c h in g h a d b e c o m e I U ’ s h e ro f o r th e s p l i t - t h e t im e d if f e r e n c e b e t­ e r g w a s r e a l l y b e in g m o d e s t later Brown scored the winning G ib b a rd - c o a c h e d S p a rta n s a a p ass. d a y a s h e r e p la c e d th e in ju r e d w e e n th e f i r s t a n d f i f t h m e n . rhen h e th u s d e s c r ib e d h is touchdown. 7-0 d u a l r e c o r d , m a r k e d th e a m e - w in n in g a n d th e o n ly p a s s " I went right over the top of Q u a r t e r b a c k B r o w n , b a c k in H a r r y G o n s o a n d s c o r e d tw o f i r s t t im e s in c e 1966 t h a t th e “ T h a t ’ s th e b e s t w e ’ v e h ad e c e p tio n he m a d e in S a t u r d a y 's him (Heft) to get the ball. " th e p o c k e t to p a s s , w a s h it 'b y to u c h d o w n s in c lu d in g th e w in ­ S p a r t a n s h a d b e a te n th e I r i s h . so f a r . A n d I t h in k w e c o u ld a s ­ 4-22 w in o v e r M S U . Stolberg said. “ I think I sur­ s e v e r a l M S U lin e m e n d e e p in n e r w it h 52 s e c o n d s le f t . H e a ls o L a s t y e a r A le x W ils o n ’ s sq u a d s u m e t h a t i t m ig h t g e t b e t t e r T h e p la y o c c u r r e d w it h one p rise d him. He thought 1 was h is o w n t e r r i t o r y . B r o w n f u m ­ c o m p le t e d 10 o f 21 p a s s w rfo r^ tr iu m p h e d 16-46. y e t i f o u r fo u r t h a n d f i f t h m a n n in u t e l e f t in th e g a m e a n d w it h deeper th a n ^ was. He got his b le d th e b a ll b u t i t b o u n ce d 121 y a r d s . u U i. Roger M e rc h a n t, S p a rta n c a n r u n u p e v e n lo n g e r ,” he n d ia n a a t th e M S U 3 4 -y a rd hands on the ball on the way r ig h t b a c k in to h is h a n d s . H e “ I w a s k in d o f n e r v o u s w h e n I c a p t a in a n d th e o n ly s e n io r on s a id . in e . Q u a r t e r b a c k G r e g B r o w n ir c h e d a lo n g p a s s t o w a r d S t o l­ down but I kept possession of it.” s c r a m b le d a w a y a n d t h r e w a lo n g p a s s o v e r S t o lb e r g ’ s h e a d c a m e in to th e g a m e ,” so p h o ­ m o r e B r o w n a d m it t e d . " I h ad Triumphant trio th e te a m , fin is h e d fir s t in T h e B ig T e n m e e t w ill be 2 5 :2 3 .2 , a t im e s lo w e r th a n and r ig h t t o w a r d M S U ’ s F r a n k o n ly b e e n in f o r th re e p la y s b e ­ S p a r ta n C a p t a in R o g e r M e r c h a n t Is ru n n in g second h e ld a t 1 2 :3 0 p .m . S a t u r d a y on te a m m a te Ken L e o n o w ic z ’ s W a te rs . f o r e to d a y . I th o u g h t H a r r y w ith t e a m m a t e K im H a r t m a n In F r i d a y ' s 17-4 1 win O h io S t a t e ’ s f l a t f i v e m il e C o l­ 2 4 :3 5 .5 o f a w e e k e a r l i e r . B u t “ I h ad sto p p e d on th e p la y an d ( G o n s o ) w o u ld b e a b le to c o m e u m b u s co u rse . o v e r N o t r e D a m e . M e r c h a n t was f i r s t , H a r t m a n th e w e a t h e r w a s c o ld a n d r a i n y , w a s c o m in g b a c k to h e lp o u t lik e b a ck in .” second and Ken L e o n o w l c z (le a d in g h e r e ) was t h i r d a n d e v e n th o u g h th e S p a r t a n s T o p c o n te n d e r s f o r th e le a ­ I w a s su p p o se d t o ,” S t o lb e r g “ T h e p la y I s c o r e d th e w in n ­ s a id . “ I w a s r e a l l y s u r p r is e d as M S U fi n i s h e d a 7 - 0 dual seaso n. s u rg e d th ro u g h th e f l a t f i r s t g u e t i t l e a p p e a r to b e M in n e s ­ in g to u c h d o w n on w a s a ru n - w h e n he t h r e w th e p a s s . I s a w S tate N e w s photo by L a r r y H a g e d o rn m il e in 4 :3 7 , M e r c h a n t w a s o t a , W is c o n s in a n d th e S p a r t a n s . p ass o p t io n , ” B r o w n s a id . p le a s e d w it h h is t im e . In d ia n a c o u ld t h r e a t e n w h ile K i m H a r t m a n a n d L e o n o w ic z O SU h a s th e h o m e c o u r s e a d ­ c r o s s e d th e lin e j u s t b e h in d v a n ta g e . M e r c h a n t to g iv e th e S p a r t a n s G -m e n s h in e in te a m m e e t t h e ir f i r s t 1-2-3 f in is h o f th e ye a r. S o p h o m o re J o h n M o c k out- M ic h ig a n e d g ed th e S p a r t a n s in th e O a k la n d I n v it a t io n a l a n d c o u ld b e r a t e d a s th e d a r k s p r in t e d N o tr e D a m e ’ s to p r u n ­ h o r s e o f th e m e e t , G ib b a r d th e n a t io n ’ s b e s t in th e flo o r ond w it h 9 .4 5 , fo llo w e d b y C h a r ­ T h e te a m i s b e s e t w it h s e v ­ By P A M BOYCE n e r , K e v i n O ’ B r i e n , to t a k e s a id , w h ile I l l i n o i s h a s a p p a r ­ e x e r c i s e , s c o r e d 9.5 o u t o f a le s M o r s e , f r e s h m a n , s c o r in g e r a l i n j u r i e s t h a t m a y s lo w th e m State News Sports W riter fo u r t h in 2 5 :5 4 . O ’ B r i e n f in ­ e n t ly im p r o v e d f r o m l a s t y e a r s p o s s ib le 10.0 in th a t e v e n t. N o rm 8.7 a n d U r a m w it h 8 .5 . up f o r a w h ile . J o e F e d o r c h ik , G ymnastics Coach George is h e d s e v e n s e c o n d s b a c k in 10th p la c e f in is h in th e le a g u e . H a y n ie a n d M ic k U r a n s c o re d M o rs e w o n th e r in g s e v e n t ju n i o r , w i l l b e o u t f o r th re e Szypula viewed the available 26:01. 8.75 w it h P e g e S o rg r e c e iv in g w it h a 8 .5 , fo llo w e d b y K i n s e y 's w e e k s w it h a p u lle d b ic e p lig a ­ P u r d u e is in th e m id s t o f a talent for the 1968-69 season N D ’ s to p so p h , R i c k W o h l- 8 .5 5 ., 8 .3 5 . M o rs e a ls o tie d w it h M ic k m e n t. J o h n K i r c h o f f r e c e iv e d a re b u ild in g p ro c e ss and m ay Saturday in an intersquad m eet h u n t e r , o u t la s t e d S p a r t a n D a n T o w s o n a ls o w o n th e v a u lt U r a m f o r f i r s t on th e p a r a l l e l b r o k e n n o s e , a n d C l i f f D ie h l is se n d o u t o n e o f i t s b e s t t e a m s between the varsity and fresh­ S im e c k to g r a b s i x t h w it h 2 6 :1 3 , c o m p e tit io n w it h a s c o r e o f 9 .0 , b a r s , s c o r in g 9 .1 5 . S m it h w a s o u t f o r a n in d e f in it e p e rio d w it h in y e a r s , w h ile Io w a h a s b e e n men. Szypula said. w h ile S im e c k w a s c lo c k e d tw o fo llo w e d b y U r a m an d S o rg and se c o n d w it h 9 .1 , fo llo w e d b y a b a d s h o u ld e r . u n im p r e s s iv e in its m e e ts , High spots of the m eet, Szy­ se c o n d s b a c k . fre s h m a n L o r in R o se n b e rg . R i c h M u r a h a t a ’ s 9 .0 . C o a c h S z y p u la s a id h e w a s m a in ly b e c a u s e i t h a s no le a d e r pula said, were the double win D i c k A s lin to o k e ig h t f o r M S U D e n n is S m it h w o n th e s id e I n th e t r a m p o lin e c o m p e t i­ p le a s e d w it h th e t e a m ’ s p e r ­ s in c e tw o - tim e A ll- A m e r ic a n of Co-Captain Toby Towson and in 2 6 :2 2 , b e a tin g o ut N o tre h o r s e w it h a s c o r e o f 9 .5 , u n ­ tio n , N o r m J o l s i n w o n w it h a f o r m a n c e S a t u r d a y , g iv in g sp e ­ L a r r y W ie c z o r e k h a s g r a d u a t e d , the outstanding show given by D a m e ’ s M ik e C o llin s a n d M ik e u s u a lly h ig h f o r th a t e v e n t. 8 .6 5 , fo llo w e d b y R i c h M u r a h a t a c i a l c r e d i t to T o w s o n ’ s d o u b le Dennis Smith on the side horse. D o n n e lly , b o th f in is h in g in G ib b a r d s a id . C r a ig K i n s e y w a s a c lo s e se c- a n d R a n d y C a m p b e ll’ s 8.45. w in a n d S m it h 's p e r f o r m a n c e on Towson, regarded as one of 2 6 :2 8 . N o r m H a n le y w o n th e h o r i­ th e s id e h o r s e . N o rth w e s te rn h a s gone d o w n ­ G ib b a r d w as e n t h u s ia s t ic z o n t a l b a r s e v e n t w it h a s c o r e “ M ic k U r a m d id a good jo b h i l l s in c e i t s B i g T e n c h a m p io n ­ about h is t e a m ’s p e rfo rm a n c e o f 9.25 . a ll- a r o u n d ,” S z y p u la s a id . s h ip a n d N C A A - r u n n e r u p y e a r o f 1965 a n d m a y g a in th e d u b io u s d is t in c t io n o f b e in g th e w o r s t in th e le a g u e . D IA M O N D R IN G S IN E tí S fy á d M l- fil Mm / IN E 1 i IN E IN E £ IN E M E N ’S Denim The fra te rn ity -s p o n s o re d tr ic y c le r a c e Is a y e a r l y BELLS SororityRushSign-up A v a ila b le at the follow ing Bluebird Dealers: h ig h lig h t o f G r e e k W e e k . L . R. M ix D e tro it S a ll a n Inc. Lansing Heath's Adrian Sco tt Tuthill Detroit S h eldo n ’ s Jewelry M arlette Mel Cole Albion Alm a W. F . Lue th & Son Elsie Dale C . Le ve y Jeweler M ilfo rd McMartin's Jewelry At Adrian Frogg ett Jewelry Fern da le Fern da le Jew e lry M u s k e g o n H t s . Malvin's Jewelry Co. Alpena M o n d a y 133 A k e r s 6-1 0 p .m . W ethered -Rice Co. Paw Paw Charles Jewelry Bay City Benton Harbor Heglund & Beyer W illiam s & Co. Flin t Grand Haven Grand H aven Jewelers Saginaw George B. Hagerls FREDERICK INC. T u e s d a y 2 W il s o n 6 -1 0 p .m . Louis Morgensen G rand Rapids Frylings Jewelry South Haven Alfing's Bridgman W atson Jew elry Store G ra nd Rapids L . E . Phillips Jew e ler S parta Paul-Lawrence Jewelry 541 E . G R A N D Buchanan W e d n e s d a y P a r l o r C, U nion 6 - 1 0 p .m . Sandy's Jewelry H il l s d a le Roger A . Lose y Jeweler S t. Joseph Green's Jewelry Cadillac D yers Jewelry . Holland W illiam s Jew elers T h re e Rivers Frederick F. Foster R IV E R Caro T h u r s d a y 3 1 9 Student S e r v ic e s 1 -5 p . m . Nilson Jewelry H ou ghto n H a u g ’ s Jew elry Store Traverse C ity Caldwell Jewelers Colom a C h e ster Jewelers Ironwood John Albert Vicksburg Marvin E. Mains Dearborn Samelson's Jewelry ask at F r i d a y 3 1 9 Student S e r v i c e s 1 -5 p .m . Dearborn Dearborn Jewelers Jackson M e a g h e r's Jew e lry W yandotte A . C. Percy Kalam azoo H am ilton Jew elry Ypsilanti Green Jewelers P a ra p h e rn a lia D e tro it A n ker's Jewelers - Kalam azoo L . J. B arrett Jew elry Zeeland Dekker’s Jewelry Store B e a p a r t o f a ll th a t Is G r e e k De tro it M onday, N o v e m b e r 1 1, 1968 Ç Michigan State N ew s, E a st L a n sin g , M ich ig a n SPO RTS i hotoffthe L io n s fa ll to c a s to ff M o rra ll, 2 7 -1 0 W IQ C . Pki . .«!■,> % DETROIT (U PI) ~ Preston Pearson returned a kickoff 102 Yards, for a . touchfiown - >oha- tfsl ^Michigan^ STATE NEWS CLASSIFIED There’saquickeasywaytofin d a te oremptyapartment... It’stheW n a n t fo r y o u r s p a re r o o m ANTADway. STATE NEWS CLASSIFIED 355-8255 355-8255 ■ * * c *vr Rerjt s ««si* , 5erwlr* t £ m p /o yrrre r\t G IR L N E E D E D w in te r a n d sp rin g B IC Y CL E SA LES and se rv ic e Also IN SU R A N C E: AUTOM O BILE M otor- Ttw State News does noi W A N TED S E C R E T A R Y -R ecepU onist C lose c a m p u s $55 351-9404 M l/1 5 used EA ST LANSIN 6 C Y C L E. 1215 cycle. C all SPARTAN 487-5008 for H igh F id e lity S tore. A ge 21 or E . G ra n d R iv e r. C all 332-003 C M onthly p a y m e n ts. GO G R E E N . u perm it ra c ia l o r religious o v e r; filing; 50 w pm typing; s h o rt­ discrim ination in its ad­ hand o r good b u sin ess w ritin g ; s ta te ­ EA ST LANSESG a ttra c tiv e , tw o bed- E L E C T R IC TR A IN on ta b le N eed s B A BY SITTIN G : FU L L o r p a rt-tim e vertising c o l u m n s . The room , u n furnished W alking re p a ir 145 E D 2-2984 a f te r 3 p .m . in m y ho m e U n iv e rsity V illage m e n ts . D ire c t c o n ta c t w ith public. d is ta n c e to M SU, 1all echools. N ot M l/ll 355-6061 5-11/15 State News will not accept W ages a cc o rd in g to q ualificatio n s. C all s tu d e n t re n ta l. $180 A vailable J a n - ................................................................................................................................ advertising which discrim ­ for a p p o in tm en t. 337-2310. 7-U /15 • AUTOMOTIVE u a ry . C all ED2-2873. 5-11/14 BLAjnE tra c k c a r trid g e ta p e 300' I W ILL b a b y sit fu ll U m e fo r your pre- inates a g a i n s t religion, ..............................' ' ' a t 12 79 MAIN EL EC TR O N IC S 5558 sch o o lers in m y licen sed hom e c a l l • EMPLOYMENT E A R N E X T R A CASH for C h ristm a s. race, color o r national o r­ C ar n e c e ssa ry . C all 351-7319. O EAST LANSING : 123! F m j d a le 3 bed- ^ P e n n sy lv an ia C 355-3092. M I /1 1 • FOR RENT room duplex. U nfurnished, c a rp e te d , ............................................. 4 ................................................. .... igin. • FOR SALE EX C IT IN G F U T U R E now open to m en full b w e m e n t N ic* y a rd . »175 m o n th . 0 N E C H A N N E L M a s te r tra n s c rip tio n TV R EN TA LS, for s tu d e n t s ^ • LOST A FOUND th a t like e x p erie n ce a s w ell a s m oney. GOV AN M A N A G EM EN T 351-7910. tu rn ta b le . M otor needs w ork. $12.50. m o n th . F r e e s e rv ic e and d eliv ery . A fter5p.m .3S 2-0091. O 355-2815a f t e r 5 p .m . M l/ll C all N E JA C 337-1300. W e g u a ra n - • PERSONAL C ell 393-14301-6 p.m . O ................................................................................ ................................................................................ te e sam e -d a y s erv ice . c • PEANUTS PERSONAL O K E M O S-IN D IA N H ills: C h arm in g B IR TH D A Y C A K E S -7” , $3.64; 8” ................................................................................ DOWNTOWN LANSING taw office • REAL ESTATE C ape Cod a m ong tr e e s on la rg e a t- ^ 1#. D elivered. Also N E E D H E L P ? R ent-A -Student fo r all Automotive in need of p a r t U m e help. H ours tra c tiv e lot. T h re e b ed ro o m s, lVi sh e e t j j jq c ak e s. K w ast B ak eries. 484- y our te m p o ra ry needs. C all 482- • SERVICE c an be a rra n g e d . S horthand and typ­ b a th s, s e p a ra te dining room , sc re e n e d m7 0 (»24 5-11/15 • TRANSPORTATION VOLVO, 1958. N o ru s t. New tire* . ing re q u ire d . C all fo r in te rv ie w , 372- po rch , b a se m e n t. T w o c a r g a ra g e . ' .................................................................... G ood ru n n in g condition. 1390. C all 5700. M l/1 5 • WANTED N e a r school. $250.332-0186 , ", “ N E E D H E L P ? R ent-A -S tudent fo r a ll a f te r 5 p.m . 351-3160. 5-11/14 3-11/13 M o b ile H om es y our te m p o ra ry needs. C all 482-0624. N IG H T A U DITOR for w eekend, HOW­ 4-11/11 DEADLINE A voition ARD JOHNSON S M OTOR LO D G E C all 694-0454 for interview . 3-11/13 Rooms W INDSOR 10’ x 54’. Tw o bedro o m s. E x c e lle n t. F u rn ish e d . O n lo t a t Typing Service 1 P.M. one c la ss day be­ FR A N C IS AVIATION: So easy to G E N T L E M A N G R A D U A T E : Single W inslow 's. 351-5182. 5-11/11 H E L P W ANTED a t Boyne H ighlands fore publication. le a rn in the P I P E R C H E R O K E E room , k itc h e n e tte . Q uiet. F in e lo- Ski R e s o rt W a itre ss-2 0 y e a rs, IBM s e le c tric ty p e w rite r: T e rm p a­ S pecial »5 offer. 484-1324 C TWO B ED R O O M 10x50’. A ir-con­ C ancellations - 12 noon one tw o y e a rs e x p erie n ce ; b u s boys, caU on. P a rk in g . IV 2-8304. 3-11/11 p e rs, th e se s, d is se rta tio n s , c a ll Sha­ ditioned. G ood condiUon. C all 641- ron V liet 484-4218. 5-11/15 c la ss day before publica­ FR A N CIS AVIATION sta rtin g p riv a te desk c le r k s - m a le ; c a f e te r ia m a n ­ 6586. 3-11/13 a g e r, tw o y e a r food e x p e rie n c e ; din­ W OM EN STU D E N TS: R o o m s for tion. pilo t ground school. N ovem ber 12. ing ro o m m a n a g e r -a g e 25, four 40c P A G E . E X P E R IE N C E D . F a s t s e rv ­ C o m p lete in five w eeks. $50. C all lig h t housekeeping. Also tw o k it­ C R E E T R A IL E R s elf co n tain ed , 25’ y e a rs ex p erie n ce . P le a s e c o n ta c t c h e n e tte a p a r tm e n ts $50 up. IV 9- ice, te rm p a p e rs, th e se s, e tc . 355- 484-1324. 3-11/10 N ice for couple. 1950 F o rd P ic k u p , PHONE M ichigan S ta te P la c e m e n t B ureau. 5-11/15 1276. 5-11/13 $900. P a r k L ake 6100 M aple L ane. 8039. 1 - lt /U 641-6073. 3-11/13 W ILL T Y P E an d c o rre c t m in o r g ra m ­ Auto Service & Ports 355-8255 M ICHIGAN C E R T IF IE D D e n tal H ygien N IC E L Y F U R N IS H E D sin g le ro o m for m a le stu d en t. Cooking. C all 332- m a tic a l e rro r s . F r e e d eliv ery . 351- RATES MASON BODY SH O P 812 ¿ a s t ist. F iv e d a y w eek, M onday through F rid a y . C all 337-9224 fo r a p p o in t­ 6736. 3-11/13 Lost & Found 5536. 1-11/11 K alam azo o St. ■ ■ Since 1940. C o m p lete a u to p a inting and col­ m e n t. 1-11/11 ANN BROW N: T y p ist and M ulU llth, 1 d a y .................... $ 1.50 FU R N IS H E D ROOM fo r e m ployed LOST: M A N ’s w a tc h n e a r I.M . field. o ffse t prinU ng. D issertaU o n s, th e­ lision serv ice . IV5-0256. C m id d le a g ed w om an. C lose c am p u s. R ew a rd . 351-3347 a f te r 9 p .m . 3-11/13 l 5 i p er word p er day ses, m a n u sc rip ts, g e n e ra l typing 3 d a y s .................... $ 4 .0 0 A CCIDEN T PR O B L E M ? C all K a la m a ­ D R IV E R S O V ER 21: F u ll and p a rt- tim e . A pply V a rsity C ab C om pany «All In the line of Science, Eh, Professor?’ E D 2-4487 3-11/13 IBM. 18 y e a r s e x p erie n ce 332- 13 1/2 1 p e r word per day zoo S tre e t Body Shop. Sm all d e n ts 122 W oodm ere E a s t Lansing. 3-11/11 P e rso n a l 8384 C C H E A P TO e ld e rly la d y : L a rg e bed­ to U rg e w re c k s. A m erican and fo r­ 5 d a y s .................... $ 6 .5 0 BUS G IR L S needed. M eals plus $3.60 ro o m . living ro o m , k itch en . E D 2-5977. "T H E W O O L IE S ’--A vailable for M ARILYN C A R R : L eg al s e c re ta ry . eign c a rs. G u a ra n tee d work. 482- 13< p er word p er day 1286.2828 E a s t K alam azoo. C p e r w eek. J e r r y W isner 332-2563. 6-11/15 bookings 351-7114. Ask fo r Bill. 5-11/15 E le c tric ty p e w rite r. A fter 5:30 p .m . (b a s e d on 10 w o r d s p e r ad) M l/ll For Rent For Rent and w e ek e n d s 393-2654. P ick -u p Scooters & Cycles W A NTED S U P E R IN T E N D E N T -a g e 25- H O M E C O OK ED food and lunches p ack ed . H om e priv ileg es. P a rk in g . A LPHA K A P P A P hi w ould give a sigh of re lie f if its c r e s t w e re re tu rn e d and d e liv e ry . ^ T h e r e w i l l be a 50tf s e r v ic e G IR L W A NTED w in te r te r m U nivei O N E M A L E needed to s h a re house. F u r ­ 50. fo r sm a ll shop. M ust have light sity T e rra c e . C all 351-0272. 3-11/11 nished. $60. C all 372-1525 . 3-11/13 482-6714. 3-11/11 to its rig h tfu l p la c e. 5-11/15 T Y P IN G D O N E in m y hom e. E n v elo p es, a n d b o o k k e e p in g c h a rg e i f HONDA 1967 305 S uper Hawk. Im - th e m e s e tc . Could pick up a n d d e­ w elding ex p erie n ce . Inside w ork, good t h i s ad i s not p a id w ith in m a c u U te . M u st sell. H elm et. 351- 0358 3-11/11 pay, a ll f r ii* e ben efits, y e a r round O N E O R TWO g irls w in te r a n d spring O N E BED R O OM luxury n e a r c am p u s For Sale STUDENTS liver. C all 484-3555. 3-11/11 one w e e k. em p lo y m en t. S tan d ard B lock and Sup­ E den R oc. 351-6518 3-11/11 B alcony, la u n d ry , fu rn ish ed . 337-2253. ply. P h o n e 882-2451. 5-11/13 5-11/15 G IBSON E L E C T R IC G u ita r plus Am- Fly Je t To Europe V ESPA 1964 150cc Good condition. DONNA BOHANNON: P ro fe ssio n a l T h e S ta te N e w s w i l l be W A NTED G IR L fo r w in te r te rm . $55 pex A m plifier. $300 and $35. 351-3132. M u st s e ll-D ra fte d . $110. 332-2673. R E G IS T E R E D N U R S E ; S hift 11-7 3-11/11 $230.00 ty p ist. T e rm p a p e rs, th e se s, IBM r e s p o n s ib le o n ly f o r the M l/1 2 a m onth. 351-3556. C ED A R V IL L A G E -n e e d one g irl 2-11/11 S e le c tric . 353-7922 C f i r s t d a y ’ s in c o r r e c t i n s e r - O pening a v aila b le in a m e d ic al c a re w in te r te rm . C all 351-4294 . 5-11/15 No Obligation if Interested fa c ility . O pportunity fo r ra p id ad ­ TWO M EN ' n eed ed for four m a n a p a r t­ FR E N C H S P O R T p a ra c h u tin g ju m p BMW 1967 R60. 11,500 m iles. G ood Call 355-3354 - 355-3355 TERM PA PERS, th e se s, g e n e ra l v a n ce m e n t w ithin a d y n a m ic o rg a n i­ m e n t w in te r a n d /o r sp rin g te rm . $45. EA ST LANSING: One b e d ro o m u n fu r­ boots. N ew , 9Vx, $25. 372-5987 . 3-11/13 condition. 8900. 332-4470. a sk fo r zation. A ttra c tiv e s ta rtin g s a la rie s 3-11/11 tvping. P ro m p t s erv ice . E x p e rien c e d . 485-9964. nished. a ll e le c tric . W alking d is­ W ilkins. 2-11/11 and above a v e ra g e frin g e benefits. F O R SA L E : 1/4 k a r a t d iam o n d and 337-2603. 20-12/4 ta n c e MSU. P a rk in g . N ew re fr ig e r­ R EM IN G TO N PO R T A B L E ty p e w rite r Apply P ro v in c ia l H ouse, 1843 H aga- W A N TED : O N E m a n for tw o m a n a to r, ra n g e , c a rp e tin g . L ease. No C o m pletely re c o nditioned. G u a ra n ­ w edding rin g set--$115. 353-3347. BSA 441 V icto r 1967 $595; H onda 3-11/13 T Y P IN G D O N E in m y hom e 2‘z blocks Automotive 1965 300cc $325; 1964 150cc $175; do rn R d., E a s t Lansing. 332-5061. 10-11/19 a p a rtm e n t. W in ter. 351-5359. M l/ll p e ts. C ouples only. $110 m onth. 337-9633. 3-11/13 teed. $45. C all 339-2395 3-11/13 fro m c am p u s. 332-1619. O Suzuki 1967 120CC $210 485-7972. ROAD R A LLY by R EA LM . N o v em b er AUSTIN M IN I-C O O PER 1962 N ev er 5-11/15 GIBSON E L E C T R IC g u ita r and am pli- 17. E x p e rt and novice c la sses. In fo r­ ra c ed . F a s t. Good condition. $575. C O U N T ER AND b ro ile r help w an ted . M ale or fem ale. P a r t o r full Ume. TANGLEWOOD A PA R T M E N T ACROSS fro m cam pus.’ fer c o st $345. B e s t o ffer. 339-2395. 3-11/13 m a tio n . 699-2588. 3-11/12 PA U LA ANN H A U G H E Y : A un iq u e 482-6913 3-11/13 T h re e ro o m s, p riv a te b a th , p a rtia lly q u a lity th e sis s erv ice . IBM typing, HONDA 1967 305 S uper H aw k P e r ­ Apply in person. B u rg e r C hef. 6031 South C edar. « « 1 /1 9 AFARTMENTS * fu rn ish ed . 113 Louis St. E a s t L ansing. m u ltilith p rin tin g an d h a rd binding. C H E V E L L E M ALIBU 1967 . 327. V-8. fe c t condition. B est offer. Bill 355- 1 B drm ., unfur.,'from 124.50 In q u ire a f te r 4 p .m . M l/1 3 KODAK R E T IN A 35m m c a m e r a . 485- P e a n u t* P e rs o n a l 337-1527. C 0531. 3-11/13 9323. 5-11/15 3-speed, s tic k sh ift. Only 16.000 m iles. A PPLIC A TIO N S F O R te a c h e rs , s u p e r­ 2 B drm ., unfur., from 139.50 G IR L W A N TED w in te r, spring. New E C T O -H A P P IN E S S is being 21 to­ B rand new w ide ovals. C hrom e w heels. M ust sell 353-7049 . 5-11/11 Employment visors, in te rv ie w e rs, re c e p tio n ist 351-7880 ____ C ed a r V illage. R educed ra te s . 337- B U SC H E R ST U D E N T m o d el tru m p e t. m o rro w . G ood luck tonight. Goofy. BA RB I M E L . T yping, m u ltilith in g . No jo b to o la rg e o r to o sm all. now being taken. G u a ra n te e d sa la ry . 2783. 1-11/11 485-9323. 5-11/15 1-11/11 F u ll o r part-U m e. N o e x p erie n ce G R A D U A T E O R F a c u lty : D eluxe new Block off c a m p u s. 332-3255. C C H EV R O L ET 1959 6 cy lin d er, s ta n d ­ TY P1STS-5 ev en ings p e r w eek, 4-10 . : . ■-> a rd sh ift. $75. C all 372-1412. 3-11/13 70 w pm w ith a c c u ra c y . C all 337- n e ce ssa ry . F R E D A ST A IRE D A N CE efficiency. F u rn ish e d . Q uiet. Sub­ W H E R E T H E G IR L S A R E ! T h e y ’r e ' P IE R C E D E A R R IN G S -N o w 20 p e r Real Estate 1651,3-5 p .m . W STUDIO. 372-9385. 5-11/15 le t s ta rtin g D e ce m b e r 20th. $120 m onth . 351-7873. 3-11/13 re a d in g the " P e rs o n a l" c olum n in c e n t off. T h re e b ig g ift ta b le s-3 0 LEBANESE FOOD ___ to d a y 's C lassified Ads. T ry it now! p e r' d e h t , '« « I«* c en t; 50 p e r c e n t BREN TW O O D , EA ST Lansing. T all And O th e r F ood F ro m M ost For C O R V E TTE 1954 C lassic, ‘‘265", th re e speed, new U res, e x tra s . 332- ■ilv For Rent O N E MAN needed for w in te r te rm . off. P e a rls . JY3 off. U n d e S ta rs 25 p e r c e n t off. W illiam H . T hom pson, tim b e r and m a n ic u re d y a rd s u r­ e ig n C o u n tr ie s - in c lu d in g U.S. 0875, K en! M l/1 2 HELP WANTED TV R EN TA L S fo r stu d en ts. Low eco­ C ed a r V illage. 351-7699. 5-11/15 O N E F O U R m a n u n it a v a ila b le in Je w e le rs , now lo c a ted fo r your con­ round th is e x tra la rg e , th re e bed ro o m ra n c h . F e a tu re s all b u ilt-in k itch en , S H A H E E N ’S FA M ILY E v e rg re e n A rm s an d th re e four- ve n ie n ce in M arek D ru g C en te r, Clip- FO O D F A IR nom ical ra te s by the te rm o r m onth. O N E MAN needed for four m a n a p a r t­ c a rp e tin g , full b a se m e n t, re c re a tio n 485-4089 C O R V E TTE 1965 coupe. 4 speed. local Aluminum and B rass m a n u n its a v a ila b le a t U n iv e rsity p e rt and V ine S tre e t, opposite F ra n - 1001 W. Saginaw U N IV ER SITY TV R EN TA L S, 484- room , p a tio an d g a ra g e . $26.900. 300 hp, A M -FM . S h a rp $2396. 372- m e n t. O ne block B erkey. Im m e d ia te ly T e rra c e . C all S ta te M an a g e m e n t, M ichigan B an k ard W elcom e 6938 3-11/11 foundry adding an evening 9263. C or w in te r. 351-7834 . 3-11/13 332-8887. c dor. I 'l l / « C all 482-9600. W ayne P ik e . P IK E shift. 6 p.m . to 12 p.m . Foun­ R E A L T Y . E venings, 627-7413. 3-11/13 S K IIS -G E R M A N m ade E rb a c h e r- F IR E B IR D . 1968 T h re e sp eed , six. dry experience would help, P r i v a t e P a r k in g Space O N E G IR L fo r tw o m a n a p a rtm e n t. W in­ G IR L N E E D E D for a p a r tm e n t n e a r MS4, m e ta l co m b in a tio n , 200 cm . Two Bedroom O verhead cam . R adio. G reen . 351- but not required. 1 block south te r and sp rin g te rm s . $50 m onth. cam pus. $50. U tilitie s included. 351- Good condition. B est o ffe r C all 9427 a fte r 6 p .m . 5-11/15 For lease by the month. Lot V ery c lose c am p u s. 332-2219. 3-11/13 8968 a fte r 5:30 p.m . 2-11/11 of Paul R evere’s B ar. Call Sandy 351-5657 . 2-11/12 ED 2-8873. located on Grand River at O N E G IR L fo r th re e m a n a p a r tm e n t N E E D O N E for th re e m a n a p a rtm e n t. KARM IN GH IA 1964 co n v ertib le. Good F L U T E -C O N N very good condition. condition. A ccesso ries. B est offer C harles. For information . . . U n iv e rsity T e rra c e . W inter and F u rn ish e d H alf block c am p u s. $70 Three Man P le a s e c a ll 332-0601. 3-11/13 ov er $850. 351-3217 . 3-11/13 B A B Y SITT ER F O R 3 ch ild re n . 2 in Call 332-6503 Spring. 351-9450. 3-11/13 m o n th . 351-0338. 5-11/14 school. 6 h o u rs T u e sd ay and W ednes­ G IBSON TH IN H ollow body. Single M E R C E D E S 190 SL Roadster--1957. day. $10 p e r d ay. 351-6864. 5-11 11 NORBER M ANOR A PA R TM EN TS N E E D O N E m a n for w in te r and sp rin g TV R EN TA L S G .E . 19” P o rta b le , c u ta w a y g u ita r. F a lc o re v e rb a m p li­ S acrifice. F a ir condition. 351-4702. 5821 R icbw ood. B rand new , c e n tra l 731 A p a rtm e n ts. 351-0780 . 3-11/11 fie r. 332-3870. 5-11/15 Apartment $8.50 p e r m o n th including stand. 1-11/11 IN T E R E S T E D IN a n unu su al jo b to C all J . R . C ulver Co. 351-8862 a ir-conditioning, pool, fully c a r p e t­ e a rn C h ris tm a s m oney? C all V IVIANE ed. Tw o bedroom for $165. 393- O N E O R tw o m e n needed. S ublease E T U D E 2Vj o c ta v e v ibraphone. Six 220 A lb e rt S tre e t, E a s t L ansing. C J a n u a ry to S e p te m b e r . 351-5555. 5-11/14 M GB 1966. E x c e lle n t condition. W ire W OODARD COSM ETICS. IV 5-8351 4276. .0 m o n th s old. O rig in a l price-$250. w heels. 40,000 m ile s, g reen . 332- C -ll/1 5 W ill a c c e p t $75. 485-9323 . 2-11/12 PA R K IN G S P A C E -P riv a te , paved N E E D E D ; TWO m a n a p a r tm e n t, w ithin 8696. M ike. 5-11/15 T H R E E M E N needed to d e m o n stra te lot. H aslett-A lb ert. $10 m onth. 337- w alking d is ta n c e fro m c am p u s. C all H A RT S U P E R -P R O S , 6’5 " Also MUSTANG 1967 GTA. All a cc e sso rie s. m o v ie e q u ip m e n t. W ill tra in qualified 2336. 3-11/12 NORTHWIND a f te r 7 p .m . co lle ct, 313-885-2212. 2-11/11 H einke boots, size 10. B oth $100. For Rent beginning December 15th. B est o ffer ta k e s it. 351-8932, 9-5 ap p lic an ts. M u st h av e tra n s p o rta tio n p jn . 5-11 11 F u ll o r p a rt-U m e w ork. G ood w age Apartments FARMS C all 332-3850 . 3-11/13 Freshly painted and carpeted. (or $3 p e r h o u r). C all 487-5935 be­ Faculty Apartments A P A R T M E N T -T W O o r th re e peo­ O LDSM OBILE 1968 w ith fa c to ry a ir tw een 9 a .m . an d 9 p .m . 5-11/12 D ELTA A PA R TM EN TS: O ne girl ple. O ne block fro m U nion. 351- DIAM OND BA RG A IN : W edding and e n g a g e m e n t rin g se ts. Save fifty $70 per month per person. e tc D ays 351-8932: n ig h ts 351-5805 needed w in te r te rm . $55 m o n th . 332- 351-7880 3750. 5-11/14 p e r c e n t o r m o re . L a rg e selection 6 month leases available. M l/ll PA R T -T IM E : M » ¿ r j * w om en to 5324 5-11/12 of plain and fan cy d iam onds. $25- Q U IE T , D E L U X E , tw o bedroom . L ots jo in a g r o p j L L f c w less. M ust have c a r 48 10-11/13 EA ST L A N SIN G -D uplex. O ne b edroom , of e x tra s. Tw o c a r parking. N e ar O N E BED R O OM furnished fo r m a tu re m a le or fe m a le . N e a r c am p u s. 332- $150. WILCOX SECO N D HAND CALL PONTIA C LEM ANS 1968. full pow er. shopping. P h o n e 646-6609 or 393- STO RE. 509 E . M ichigan. 485-4391. R ally g reen , vinyl top. 355-3252. 5-11 15 unfurnished e x ce p t stove, r e fr ig e r a ­ 5157. 10-11/18 C ADVERTERE M A G A ZIN E w ants 4547. M l/1 1 tor $135. Phone 332-2048 5-11/12 R EN A U LT 1967, one ow ner. F o u r sale sm e n . W ork ow n hours. E x c e l­ le n t co m m issio n basis. C all, fo r a p ­ LU X U R Y F O 'I W l to sob- -O N E G IR L for w in te r te rm . C edar- Houses SQ U IN TIN G CAUSES w rin k le s. Sun­ East Lansing Management speed, rad io , d isc b ra k e s, ra d ia l U res. E x c e lle n t condiUon B est offer po in tm en t, 351-5058. 3-11/12 le a se begin RENTED R iv e rs brooke A rm s. R educed re n t! 351- g la sse s p re sc rip tio n ground O P T I­ CAL DISCOUNT, 416 TUssing B uild­ 8566 3-11/11 E A ST S ID E . M odern fu rn ish e d one 372-8148 10-11/12 M ALE AND F E M A L E : A pplications E dge A p a rtm e n ts. 351-7206. 10-11 11 b ed ro o m fro m N o v e m b er 25th until ing. P h o n e IV 2-4667. C -ll/1 5 351-7880 now being ta k e n * ^ ‘ra in in g c la ss N E E D O N E m a n for th re e m a n fu r­ J u n e 15th. No p ets. $95 p lu s u tilities. TWO G IR L S to le a se w in te r, spring, Second profession - evenings VOLKSW AGEN 1966 Tan, black in­ F u ll o r p a rt-tir- ^ Y . o y m e n t a t the nished a p a rtm e n t. $57.34 m onth. 351- Box A 1 M ichigan S ta te N ew s. 3-11/13 E v e n i n g s t i l 8; 3 3 2 - 2 6 2 7 te rio r S erv iced fo r w in ter. $1195. su m m e r. Close c am p u s. 351-5781. new F R E D v V ^ E D A N CE STU­ 5-11/11 0975. M l/1 1 & weekends. Men and wom­ 482-3616 3-11/12 DIO a t G ra n d R iv e r, E a s t TWO G IR L S to s u b lea se w in te r te rm . en. $350 part time monthly L ansing. 1.0 e x p e rie n c e n e ce ssa ry EYDEAL VILLA A PA R TM EN TS G IR L N E E D E D w in te r te rm . $60, 504 A bbott, $65, 351-6677 . 5-11/12 VOLKSW AGEN 1962 W hite, sunroof, guarantee if you meet our s E p s s A M I V y S a la ry plus. A pply in p e rso n o r call TWO bedroom a p a rtm e n ts for $240 including u tilities. B lock fro m c a m ­ good condiUon. Asking book value. requirem ents. Students and L 1 E 372-9385 10-11/19 m onth. S w im m ing pool. G E appli­ pus. 351-9368 3-11/11 O N E G IR L needed fo r la rg e house. p A R A 1 P E 1 $540 355-0753 a fte r 5 p .m 5-11/11 teachers: $800 full time, tele- a n ce s, g a rb a g e disposals, furnished W in te r te r m only. 351-8229. 242 O ak- L E T E V 1 L L 6 A F L IN E U P y our fa ll jo b now. C ar nec­ for four m a n or fiv e m an. C all NEW O N E bedroom furnished. Ideal hill. 3-H /13 phone: 484-4475 G e t ALL YOU PA Y FO R ! C heck best 351-4275 a f te r 5 p .m . C g ra d u a te stu d e n ts o r couple. Q uiet. 2 4 . Yellow ocher P E e M E S hi E w m e ssa ry . C all 351-7319. O re n ta l buys in to d ay ’s C lassified Ads A ir-conditioned. $160. 927 W est ACROSS 25 . Sca tter seed s 1 & N S T A 1 R Shiaw assee. TU 2-5761; E D 7-9248. 2 7 . Tr o p i c a l f r u i t O a T o. Ü R E R S E P la c e Your 10-11/14 1 , Noblem en 3 1 . Harsh F i L L S A P ■ 1 M P 6. Grit 35. Every PEOPLE RUCKER WANT RD N E E D G IR L fo r W inter T e rm . P le a s e 1 o hi 10. Surroundings 36. Paddle F o y E a s ■ ■ c all 351-3359. R iv e rs E d g e 3-11/11 1 1 . W ild ox 3 7 . J a p . n ee d le F o A M A T O M 1 2 . Lo v e affair case M A T E O N E O R tw o m e n needed for C edar A c hr 0 S E 1 3 . Tie 39. Fury T o d a y . . . J u s t c lip , c o m p le te , m a il. V illage r e s t of y e a r. $65 m onth. A 1 R ■ ¡K E hi E T O N 1 4 . E n g . b u l l fi n c h 40 . Mature 351-6438 3-11/13 P E E P STATE N E W S w ill b ill y o u la te r. 1 5 . I dol s 4 2 . Etagere P u y 1 s A T ONE’, G IR L needed w in te r and spring. 1 7 . Adjective 4 4 . Plateau H a sle tt A p a rtm e n ts. 351-0879. ¿11/15 su ffix 45. Dispossesses 18 . Extrem ity 4 6 W a r go d DOWN TW O -T H R E E people for spacious, 2 0 . Easygoing 4 7 . t o v e s too 2 . Pa l m leaf lux ury one bedroom . W inter-Sum - Transparent 3. W edding band 22 En thusiasm fo n d l y m e r . 351-0661 3-11/13 4. Decorative S E V E N n r 5 r B~9~ scheme 5 . Cl o ve le a th e r s O 1 TH IOR T Y 6 E g y p t , col Inn 7 . House wing (Z //VJ H 8 . Slipknot N E m 16 22 P K> 15 % » 20 pVo Tm 4 I 27 À 1 1/ 777 m 9 . Pa ss e ' C B o ck toe t o 1 ? Po ly t i . c h e s t n u t 16 . Lapse 1 9 . Privation 21 W ings tt i? 28 23 . R oast: Fr. Va Va Va % 2 6 . R e c o i le d F o r those Jl n B 3M .2 8 . Enam els who can » Î7 38 L 39 % ^29. E s t a t e ‘ 30. Sharpen a ffo rd the % best In HO HI fe % Hi 3 1 . Doctrine 3 2 . M o r e u nu s ua l a p a r tm e n t ¡ 3 3 . C a m e up HH HS liv in g . 34. Opah % 1 17 3 8. De ath notice Hfc % 4 1 . H ad being j j . R . G u lu e /i G o . 4 3 . Frost U 220 A lb e rt 3 5 1 -8 8 6 2 M onday, N o v e m b e r 11, 1968 J1 Michigan State N ew s, E a st L a n sin g , M ich ig a n Societyoffers facts TO ^ P R O V E TEACHING about free study SHARON rts rfif'L fc lt/iV '’ faciiriV’ ■tafhifflstrative* M a a a z m e ^ -, " "v- V. h it s o l d JSt », . a--f*» -* • - , , ; * , ... s t y le s \ , . *•>, £%■ » Je «fe» » suppose th at a set am ount of are unorganized and have little C arter cited the current MSU State News Staff W riter sem inars and discussions. By GEORGE BULLARD Inform ation about indepen­ State News Staff W riter knowledge is necessary. When com m unication of their ideas. sexuality symposium a s an ex­ Long range goals of the soc­ this am ount is learned the “ The distinguishing features am ple of the type of educa­ dent study courses is available of the innovators,” he said, tion that NDT will promote. iety are listed as: encourage­ student is declared educated. from the Jean P iaget Society, a professional education stu­ m ent of men to enter elem en­ A certain sacredness seem s Education has totally ignored “ are that they a re very active “ In starting NDT,” he said, tary education teaching, es­ to exist in 50 minute periods differences in learning styles and com pletely sold on the idea “ our biggest difficulty has been dent organization a t MSU. and 11 week term s, Reginalk of students and has placed of change.” tablishm ent of a scholarship in getting quality m aterial. New The society, organized by K. C arter, research assistant “ NDT will serve as the education m ethods are develop­ fund for these students, de­ em phasis on teaching styles, he MSU students on Nov. 15 1967. in labor relations, said. medium through which ideas ing all around MSU. NDT velopment of a b etter student, said. seeks to encourage undergrad­ uates to do meaningful educa­ faculty and adm inistrative re­ “ Instructors assume that stu­ Lectures, television and of cange can be shared, ” he is designed to spread these ideas lationships and involvement in dents learn in 50 minute blocks," group discussions a re dominant said. around the country.” tional research and to take he added. Carter said th at NDT is a the local com m unities' educa­ styles of both teaching and lear­ C arter expressed little hope m ore independent study C arter is editor of a new ning Although both professors “ non-journal.” We de- in converting older professors tional thought. courses. magazine, “ New D irections in a n d students usually p refer only emphasize scientific jargon and to new teaching methods. "They' The society eventually plans The society is presently Teaching" (NDT), com m itted one style, no attem p t is made extensive footnotes. NDT is in­ re hard to change." because to publish a book sum m arizing working on a paper for the to improving undergraduate to m atch the two." terdisciplinary in th at read ers they are set in their lecture the activities of students in in­ sexuality colloquy entitled, teaching. outside of a particular field style of teaching." dependent study, to be circul­ “ Abdominal Decompression “ Instruction should sta rt from ated among superintendents of During and Before Labor and Misunders tood? “ NDT," C arter continued, “ is the student’s approach to learn­ will understand the articles. basically interested in new ap­ ing," he added. We want w riters in every field “ is to convert younger pro­ "Out basic hope." he added, state school districts. Its Effect On The Child’s In­ Students can find out through J e r r y J. W e s t, p r o f e s s o r o f A m e r i c a n T hought and proaches teaching. We want “ Periods of 50 m inutes may to share sim ilarities in their fessors and teaching assistants telligence.” to get away from the style of be the best organization method educational experiences.” to the new teaching m ethods." the society what independent L a n g u a g e , s p ea k s on “ D ia lo g u e at M S U ” —the 10,000 Anyone wishing to join the W o r d M i s u n d e r s t a n d i n g " at the fi n a l se s s io n of teaching that assum es students of teaching," he explained, “ but NDT is com m itted to changing NDT was founded by Trevor study courses are available, an are unable to direct their own th ey're not necessarily the best the structured, traditional J . Phillips, professor of ed­ explanation of the content of society should contact David D ia lo g u e ’ 68 at H o l m e s H a ll la s t S a tu rd a y . the course, the course num ber E. N eum eister, IV 4-3335. S ta te N e w s photo by Hal C a s w e ll learning." learning method. It's a real methods of education o m ore ucation a t Bowling Green Un­ C arter said th at present shortcoming th a t we ignore stu­ pliable, student-orientated m et­ iversity, Ohio. and the advisor best qualified teaching methods largely ignore dent interests in setting up hods. Phillips objected to an article in the area of course study. the interests of the student. Instruction should reflect an in The Saturday Review entitled M embership in the society is learning situations." Education, he said, n e e d s a C arter said th at a few pro­ (interest in c u rren t issues as “ Who Wants to Teach Under­ Courses focus on Orient, open to all students, faculty and student-orientated approach. adm inistrative personne. The fessors are interested in educat­ well as traditional subjects, graduates?" In a letter to the P resent education m ethods pre- ional innovation, but th a t they he said. W editor, Phillips urged other in­ society is run by students, with the advice of Carson C. H am il­ structors, who enjoyed teaching undergraduates to contact him. ton, associate professor of English. “ The P iaget Society differs set goal of understanding’ can move on to specialized ASMSU D octoral D ays brin g And NOT was harm . C arter said tht the initial funding of NDT was through a grant by the P aren ts Club of from other educational org­ By MARK MCPHERSON Asked what he though would (continued from page one) anizations in th at speakers, State News Staff W riter a re a s.” The most recent m anifesta­ Bowling G reen. Ohio. This grant m ake a course on Islam ic Each of the 4 credit courses gives us editorial independence coffee and grade point a re not the m ajor objectives," David “ Wisdom is the principal thing; therefore get wisdom; and with to be taught next term will be art, philosophy, history and rel­ igion im portant to a student tion of the long-standing ap art­ m ent owner-student tension has em p lo yers to recru it but we hope to be eventually E. N eum eister, Lansing senior all thy getting get understanding.’ conducted along the lines of been the owners requiring stu­ completely financed through sub­ today, he replied, “ There is a A listing of all of the em ­ and president of the society, --Proverbs (4:7) the standard H um anities 241, dents to fill out a personal in­ By JEAN NE SADDLER scriptions." great civilization here. We will ployers and their openings is said. It is said that understanding, 242. and 243 series. Each will form ation for allegedly to " fa ­ State News Staff W riter Though NDT is prim arily de­ trace the developmental growth available a t the P lacem ent Bur­ , "W e want students to take the and wisdom as well, have both be instructed by experts in cilitate return of security de­ signed to share teaching ex­ of a people. Seeing how social Doctoral Days, a concen­ eau. Interested students should periences, C arter will consoler initiative: w e're not interested become phantoms in the Un­ their respective areas. change is promoted and how posits.” Section studies on China will trated recruiting period di­ report to the bureau a t least articles, poems and prose from in speakers, but rath er action iversity today. factors such as religion, so Included on the form is a re ­ two school days in advance to rected toward the doctoral can­ both students and teachers and change," he said. To the extent of rote condit­ be divided to include a latte r predom inant in Islam, can build quest for the student's grade sign up for an Interview and to didate. will be sponsored by the "We encourage undergrad­ Activities of the society in­ ioning. a student presum es to half of the 10 week period a society, will be stressed. point average, a questionable Placem ent Bureau from Mon­ obtain additional information. clude visits to local school learn, but seldom does he take devoted to Jappan. Section qualification for the return of a uates to contribute,” he said. Among other things, it will day through Friday. Doctoral candidates in all board m eetings and student, away from a subject the es­ 1 here, will be conducted by security deposit, according to Requests for inform ation or deal with the “ Arabian Knights" Seventy-eight companies in­ fields may sign up for in te r­ submission of m anuscripts niav sence of that which supposedly Joseph Lee. who rem arked upon im age of the E ast. I will do ASMSU Intcrfraternity Council cluding Standard Oil, General views by phone. Interviewing be sent to C arter a t 1526 E, he has m ustered. Much to blame the purpose of this class, my best to correct this notion." representative Pierce Myers. Mills and DuPont, as well as appointm ents can be m ade from Spartan Village E a st Lansing. for this situation, is the type and Oriental Traditions program Ken Smith, ASMSU's legal aid RHPO report The third of the trio of courses universities and colleges, will 8:15 a.m. until 4:30 p.m. of course m aterial offered to in general. is that of India. Surjit Dulai, service attorney, said that the only justification for requiring interview students. today's m ultiversitvite. Too often asked w hether his classes John D. Shingleton, director Awareness to understanding such inform ation would he that the subject m a tter is "th e re " would deal with xuch Indiana "T hese will create an under­ the apartm ent owners see some of the bureau noted th at the for attention, but does not re­ "trad itio n s" as Ravi Shankar, or (continued from page one) ••that study open houses be flect enough upon the student, standing for the student, w hat­ ever his m ajo r," said Lee. "In Yoga m edititations, found the correlation between a high grade em phasis on doctoral degrees in industry has s lip p y in re ­ P la c e m e n ' Bureau his world, or the context in suggestion amusing. point and a tendency to keep a under continual study and be studying China, as with the other cent years because the space and T b s foUa w lag em p lo y ers w ill b s la te r- m a tic s (D e c e m b e r an d M arch g ra d u ­ which he learns. Confront reality clean apartm ent. revised when necessary. lands, the experience will electrical industries are com­ vtow tag fr s m N sv . l t - B , M e to P tace- a te s only) m a jo rs (B ,M ). L o catio n : Meeting the problem of crea t­ "No, these things a re not Ellsw orth said that, accord­ nssB t B r a s B alletfa to r sd d itto o a l de­ - th a t a program be es­ perhaps become aw areness, a- pleting their contracts with the ta ils. ML C lem ens. ing “ understanding" in course planned, not y et," Dulai ing to Smith, no student should Los A ngeles C ity School D is tric t: tablished in each hall to ed­ w areness will grow into feel compelled to fill out the government. B y e a a r a totor estod la a a t r g a a l u t i a a , work, the Hum anities Dept, has replied. "Of course history “ There’s still a heavy de­ p le a se r e p a r t to tb a P la c e a a e e t B o re a s E le m e n ta ry School: e a rly an d la te r e le ­ ucate students as to the intent continued interest, and possibly, inform ation form s and that m e n ta ry e d u ca tio n (D e c em b e r an d at|d individual responsibilities recently added to its program understanding- will be, the end provides the fram ew ork for the legally, an apartm ent owner m and.” Shingleton saidL. "but AT LEAST TWO 9CBOOL DAY» la ad- -M a rc h g ra d u a te * only) m a jo rs ; Ju n io r of ancient, medieval, and m odem course, but every ierm I am relatively less than a few years vaaoa ta alg a a p fa r a a ta ta rv te w s a d to~ an d S enior H igh School: A g ricu ltu re, i! of [study open houses. product.” A sim ilar view was has no right to withhold a se­ iilu sla a d d ltls to l la to rm s tle a 1 i , Three m em bers of the com ­ world studies. a held by Frederick Kaplan, who taking history out of the class. curity deposit from a student ago. With the Nixon adm inistra­ M L IT A ltY OBLIGATIONS: S tu d en ts a r t, b u sin ess e d u catio n , E n g lish , h ealth Three courses, all a portion Students here will confront real­ tion and his com m itm ent to should Interview w ith e m p lo y e rs even ed u catio n , hom e eco n o m ics, in d u stria l m ittee subm itted a m inority will instruct Section 2, the because he has refused to fill a rts , m a th e m a tic s , m u sic, p h y sical edu­ of the Hum anities “ Traditions of ity through Indian religion and tho u g h th e y have not co m p leted th e ir repo rt stating th at study open culture of Japan. c atio n (m e n ’s an d w o m e n 's), re m e d ia l the O rient" form at, will be history. The search for the out the form. m ilita r y service? M oet e m p lo y e rs w ill be houses do not enhance the study “ There is m uch to be learned The security deposit situation space, we should have an up­ In te re s te d In the stu d en t b efo re a n d a fte r read in g , scien ce, g e n e ra l scien ce, b io ­ offered W inter Term . These, ultim ate experience of Life, as surge in the demand for doc­ h it d u ty w ith the A rm ed Force«. logy, p h y sica l scie n c e , eocial scien ce, atm osphere in the hall and. from Japan, for instance. A is one p art of the much larger providing a balance to the De­ has been trated in Indian's her­ to rates.” h isto ry , g o v ern m en t, sp ec ia l ed u catio n , therefore, are a failure. study of its art, its philosophy, problem with apartm ent own­ N ov. IS, M eaday: an d m e n ta lly a n d p h y sically h an dicapped partm ents regular W estern Civil­ itage, will m ake for a large Some of the com panies will A rm o ur-D ial, Inc.: g e n eral bu sin ess The study open houses have and the heritage it has produced, ers and students, Ellsworth (D e c em b e r an d M arch g ra d u a te s only) ization studies, will afford an- p a rt.” ath n in lstra U o n and m a rk e tin g (D ecem ­ also present lectures to other b e r a n d M arch graduate* only) m a jo rs failed to m eet their established leave one uneducated' in a sense, m a jo rs ; S enior H igh School: D riv e r said. goals to im prove the academ ic interested students the chance to if he rem ains unaw are of it,” Each of the three Hum anities Ellsw orth noted that after students on campus. (B ). L o c a tio n : various. ed u catio n, lan g u ag e, Spanish, F re n c h , study the history and cultures 2§Q Traditions of the Orient The P eace Corps will be of­ m a th e m a tic s , an d c h e m istry (D e c em b e r atm osphere and m aintain a he said.* talking with some University A tla s C h em ica l Industries, In c .: c h em i­ and M arch g ra d u a te s o nly) m a jo rs of China. Japan, India, and the courses for next term , will en­ fering positions for all m ajors c a l, e le c tr ic a l, and m ec h an ic a l e n g in e er­ proper study atm osphere in the adm inistrators and city govern­ (B ,M ). L o catio n : Los A ngeles, C alif. Middle E ast. The m ost recent addition to compass broad areas. As in­ in g a n d c h e m istry m a jo rs (B ,M ). L oca­ and all colleges on every degree tio n : varioua. halls, the rep o rt stated. m ent personnel, he feels that M asonite C o rp .: g e n e ra l b u sin ess “ Our courses are interdiscip­ the Hum anities Oriental Trad­ troductions to the philosophy, level for positions as teachers, ad m in is tra tio n an d m a rk e tin g (D e c em ­ The m inority rep o rt says that “ no one is com pletely happy B e e c h e r A rea Schools: E le m e n ta ry itions series, is that of Islam, there should not be coed study linary; not faddest, not flashy" religions, and cultural-his­ b er an d M arch g ra d u a te s o n ly ), fo re s try with the ap artm en t owners. ” teacher assts. and positions in S chool: e a r ly and la te r e le m e n ta ry ed u ­ wood technology, fo re s t p ro fu cts, an d m e ­ in students’ room s because said K arl Thompson de- t to be offered for the first tim e torical achievem ents of these community development. c a tio n , m uaic (vocal), and m e n ta lly c h an ical, civ il, and e le c tr ic a l e n g in eerin g facilities are not adequate for partm ent chairm an. We hope next term . Fauzi N ajjar, in for­ countries, it is expected that h a n d ic ap p e d m a jo rs , Ju n io r H igh School: m a jo rs (B .M ). L o catio n : v arious. in d u s tria l a r t s (D ecem ber and M arch private coed study in residence to provide a student study in m ulating this course, finds it b etter contm eporary understan­ g ra d u a te « only) m a jo rs (B ,M ). L oca­ M cD o n ald 's Corp. an d S u b sid iaries: "invaluable for broadening one's ding will be reached through a hotel, re s ta u r a n t, and in stitu tio n a l m a n ­ hall rooms m any a re a s' al1 in one tion: F lin t. a g e m e n t (D e c em b e r a n d M arch g ra d u ­ Adams will present the com- Placue of h a v in g h im p u rs u e perspectives: com paring our own study of the past. T h e B unker-R am o C o rp .-D efen se Sys­ a te s only) m a jo rs (B i. L ocation: v ario u s. W e s t e r n institutions with those m ittee reports to the Faculty th e m th ro u g h m a n y . T h e n , sh o u ld F u rther information concern­ te m s D ivision: e le ctrica l and m e c h an i­ M ichigan B lue Shield, a ll m a jo rs of he b e c o m e in t e r e s t e d en o u g h he o f o f th e E a s t . " c a l e n g in e erin g m a jo rs (B ,M ,D ). L oca­ Com m ittee Tuesday. ing the new courses is avail­ tio n : S ilv er Spring, Md. and Canoga th e co lleg e of b u sin ess (D e c em b e r an d able at the Hum anities D epart­ M arch g ra d u a te s only) (B ). L o catio n : P a r k , C alif. D etro it. m ent Main Office, 123 Bessey B u n k er-R am o C o rp .-W e ste rn T ech n i­ 'Resistance’ activities M ilw aukee P u b lic Schools: E le m e n ta ry Hall. c a l C e n te r: e le c tric a l engineering m a jo rs School: e a rly an d la te r e le m e n ta ry ed u ­ (B ,M ). L ocation: Canoga P a rk , C alif., and ficers took p a rt in the seizure of vario u s. c atio n , p h y sical ed u catio n , s p ec ia l e d u c a ­ tion, a co u stic a lly , m e n ta lly , an d p h y si­ the N am ers. To gain entry, one T h e C oca-Cola Co.: m a rk e tin g (D e c em ­ people who have suffered." cally h an d icap p ed , m a la d ju ste d , and (continued from page one) of them posed as the building b e r a n d M arch g ra d u a te s only) an d a c ­ re m e d ia l re a d in g (D ecem b er and M arch R esistance m em bers will be group and individual discussion co u n tin g m a jo rs (B ,M ). L ocation: v a ri­ mourning for those who have on w ar activities. superintendent seeking a gas g ra d u a te s only) m a jo rs : Ju n io r and Sen­ posted outside the Library WHEN ONE OF THOSE SOMEIHIN 6 S ous. io r H igh School: p h y sical e d u ca tio n (w om ­ died th e re ,” Dennis Southward, each day to talk with people A day of reflection will begin leak. F a c to r y M utual E ngineering C o rp .: a ll e n ’s) M ath e m a tic s, and in d u stria l a r t s (D e­ Flint junior, said. The elder Nam er and Abdo THAT 6 0 0 HEAR IN THE NI 6 H T m a jo rs of th e college of e n gineerin g (D e­ about the w ar or answ er any at dawn Tuesday. COMES TO 6 ET V00,60UVE HADIT* c e m b e r an d M arch g ra d u a te s o nly) m a ­ Southward said th at this day w ere seized in the apartm ent, c e m b e r a n d M arch g ra d u a te s only) (B ). jo rs ; Senior H igh School: E n g lish m a ­ He said th at the day was also questions they may have. They L o catio n : M ichigan, Ohio, In dian a, an d “ in support of the V ietnamese will attem p t to stim ulate both would be centered “ around the police said. Hussein fled down a v a rio u s. jo rs (D e c em b e r and M arch g ra d u a te s whole idea of conscience . . . fire escape, but was captured only) (B .M ). L o catio n : M ilw aukee, Wis. F e d e ra l-M o g u l C orp.: acco u n tin g and M otorola S e m ico n d u cto r P ro d u c ts, I n c .: what am I doing.” five hours later on the . „street , fin a n c ia l ad m in istra tio n , m a n a g e m e n t e le c tric a l, c h em ica l, an d m e c h a n ic a l en ­ Dawn will again be the hour near Udy bu.ldjng m Brook- (D e c e m b e r and M arch g ra d u a te s only), gin eerin g an d c h e m istry m a jo rs (B .M ). *■’ lam C E To 1\Tmm VAMb Hierel/it Stevens disagrees m e c h a n ic a l and c h em ica l engin eerin g , signaling a new day’s intentions 8 ast New York district, c h e m is try , physics, all m a jo rs of th e col­ L ocation: P h o n e is, Ariz. as the early morning hours Wed­ police reported. le g e s of a r t s and le tte rs , com m u n icatio n S e a lrig h t Co., In c.: pack ag in g tech n o ­ logy m a jo rs (B ,M ) L o catio n : K a n sa sC ity , nesday will begin a day dedi­ Acting Dist. Atty. Elliott Gold­ a r ts , an d social science (D e c em b e r an d M iss. (continued from page one) en said the elder N am er, who M a rc h g ra d u a te s only) (B ). L ocatio n : v a r­ gives the D em ocrats a 5-3 edge cated to peace. V an L aan , W einlander, F itzh u g h and son sweep in 1964 and eight ious. Republicans w ere put into of­ on the highly partisan board. Southward said th at Wednes­ cam e to the United States 13 G e ig y A g ricu ltu re C hem icals: a il m a ­ C o.: a cc o u n tin g m a jo rs (B ,M ). L o catio n : day’s discussion would be dedi­ years ago and is a naturalized B ay City. “ Tuesday's election showed P I Z Z A FEAS T jo r s of th e colleges of a g ric u ltu re an d W est B loom field Schools: e le m e n ta ry fice in Gov. Romeny’s land­ citizen, has a wife and three n a tu ra l re s o u rc e s (D ecem b er an d M arch th at we m ust drastically cated to “ a hope th at there can school: e a rly an d la te r e le m e n ta ry edu­ slide in 1966. daughters in Yemen. g ra d u a te s only) and g e n e ra l busin ess ad ­ This year, eight D em ocrats change the way we elect be peace.” “ Aside from the gravity of the TONIGHT 6 p.m. - 2 a.m. m in is tra tio n (D ecem b er and M arch c atio n (D e c e m b e r a n d M arch g ra d u a te s only) m a jo rs (B ,M ). L o catio n : O rc h a rd m em bers of the State Board He said th at the Resistance g ra d u a te s only) m a jo rs (B ,M ). L ocation: took their place on the avail­ charges so far, there are strong Lake. of Education and the govern­ hoped thé day would be a “ pro­ N .Y . able seats in Michigan’s gov­ ties outside the country, certain­ G e rb e r P ro d u c ts C o.: accountin g , fi­ ing boards of our m ajor univer­ gressive thing" where peace Nov. I I aad 1*. M oeday aad Taeaday: erning boards including the ly fam ily tie s," Golden told n a n c ia l a d m in istra tio n , m a n a g em e n t, a ll two new m em bers of MSU's sities." Augenstein said. discussions would stim ulate m a jo rs of the college of busin ess (D e­ C ity of D e tro it: c h e m ic a l, civ il, e le c ­ board, Blanche M artin of E ast He said the election proves people to think about how it re ­ Judge T. Vincent Quinn. c e m b e r a n d M arch g ra d u a te s o n ly ), c h em ­ tric a l, an d m e c h a n ic a l e n -in e e rin g . n u rs­ that M ichigan's educational Quinn, who served in Con­ ing. acco u n tin g , g e n e ra l b u sin ess a d m in ­ lated to their individual lives. is try , b io c h e m istry , m e c h an ic a l an d a g ri­ is tra tio n . c h e m istry , a ll m a jo rs of th e Lansing and W arren Huff of Plym outh. The 1968 election candidates "sink or swim ac­ Thursday's day of freedom gress with Nixon from 1949 to c u ltu ra l e ngineering m a jo rs and food sci­ C ollege o f Social Science (D e c e m b e r an d will feature the culm inating 1951, rejected Golden’s request e n c e m a jo rs (B ,M ). L o cation: F re m o n t, cording to what happens at M ich, an d F o r t Sm ith. Ark. M arch g ra d u a te s o nly), an d R e c re a tio n the top of their p a rty 's ticket." point of this week of events. that the three men be held with­ m a jo rs (B .M ). L ocation: D etro it. Service Augenstein said that many Several MSU students will turn out bail. H e rm a n and M acL ean a ccountin g and fin a n c ia l a d m in istra tio n m a jo rs (B ). Lo­ N o rth A m e ric a n R o ck w e ll-A u to n etic s He set a hearing for Tuesday, D ivision: e le c tric a l an d m e c h a n ic a l en­ H O LE IN O N E! M aybe not. b u t check v o te rs w e re not a d e q u a te ly in their draft cards at a rally 0 c a tio n : D e tro it. g in e e rin g . p h y sics (E le c tro n ic s o rie n te d ), to d ay ’! C lassified Ads for good buys fam iliar with the various can­ 4 p.m. a t Beaumont Tower. but Golden said he planned to H u rle y H ospital: nursing and nursing m a th e m a tic s (ap p lied ), and c o m p u te r sci­ present the case to a grand a d m in is tra tio n m a jo rs (B,W!)s L ocation: In g o lf clubs! didates for educational posi­ Southward said th at the day en ce m a jo r* (B .M .D ). L o catio n : A naheim , F lin t. tions to m ake an intelligent will a ttem p t to answ er the in­ jury on that day. He also told re­ L a k tv is w P u b lic Schools: R te m a n ta ry Gqlif. N o rth A m e ric a n R ockw ell C o rp .-C o lu m - L IP P IN C O T T 'S PR O FE SSIO N A L IBM decision He said he would pre­ dividual questions of people porters he planned to confer Coney Basket Special School: a a rly an d la te r a la m a n ta ry ed u ­ bu s D ivision: e le c tr ic a l an d m e c h an ic a l who wonder w hat they can do with the U.S. attorney about the thM M typing (including m a th eq u a­ c atio n , a r t, m uaic (v o c a l), s p e c ia l e d u ca ­ tio n s). 4»03 M ,4 S > 4 4 7 9 . 3-11,11 fer some sort of appointive tion, a o c o u itic a lly handicapped, m a la d ­ en g in eerin g , m a th e m a tic s , an d p h y sic i procedure. about the war. possibility of charging the de­ m a jo rs (B .M ). L o catio n : C olum bus, ju s te d , visiting te a c h ar, an d « p h a sic (D e­ A “ support petition" will also fendants under the federal law Ohio. Wanted Dale E. Hathaway, profes­ Coney Dog c e m b e r a n d M arch g ra d u a te * on ly ) m a ­ N o rth A m e ric a n R ockw ell C o r p - sor of agricultural economics be circulated at Thursday's th at provides a m axim um of life jo r s ; Ju n io r H igh School: M usic (v o c a l), R o ck etd y n e an d Space D ivisions: e le c ­ and chairm an of the Academ­ rally. in prison for conspiracy to assas­ g a n a ra l science, and m a la d ju ste d (D e­ BLOOD DONORS te n d e d . »7 50 fo r all French Fries c e m b e r a n d M arch g ra d u a te s o n ly ) m a ­ tric a l and m e c h an ic a l en g in e erin g , m e ­ Any person who supports the sinate a president or president- ta llu rg y . mechanics m l m ite ria ls a d - poattlva, A nogaUvn, B n e g ativ e and AB n e g ativ e 110.00. O n eg etiv e. 912.00. M ichigan C om m unity Blood ic Council steering com m it­ tee s a id the e le c te d F a c u lt y “ act of conscience" idea of the A Logs-*! A »»•» r ' v i A t to r n e y , «IQc jo r s ; Ju n io r a n d S enior H igh School: m a th e m a tic s (D e c em b e r a n d M arch g m d n a to a only) m a jo rs ; S enior H igh en ce rr.-t-c-* ti '* f) e rn Calnj * w a tio n South­ C en ter, BOTVh B a i t G ran d R iv e r, E a s t C o u n c il d is c u s s e d it it s Tues­ students turning in their dr..it Nov. I I , 1 ! » i-l 2i>, M onuay, Tuesday aad i'jiu o t i i u.s^, w n o u p ro s e * mt?d th6 School: In d u s tria l a r t s (a u to shop) (D e­ Wednesday: Lansing, a b o v e th e new C am p u s day m e e tin g the p o s s ib ilit y of cards can sign the petition. forming a com m ittee to re­ deiendants. noted in asking for c e m b e r and M arch g ra d u a te s only) m a ­ M onsanto: b io c iie m lstry , c h em istry , Book S to re. H o u n : 0 a .m . • 3 30 "People who are against the j o r s (B ,M ). L ocation: St. C la ir Shores. w ar but feel that this activity bail th at none of the arrested men m a te ria ls scie n c e , c h em ica l, e le c tric a l, p .m . M onday, T ueaday an d F rid a y view m ethods of electing trus­ L 'A n aa C reuaa P u b lic Schools: Eto- an d m e c h an ic a l en g in eerin g , e n to m o l­ w ad n aa d a y an d T h u rsd a y , U p.m . tod:S0p.m .SI7-71SS. C tees. (turning in their draft c a rd s) has a crim inal record, that two m e n ta ry School: a a rly a n d la te r a tem an - ogy, c iv il an d m e ta llu rg ic a l angln a a rla g , He indicated, however, that isn 't right for them because are U.S. citizens and that ta ry ed u catio n (D a c a m b a r an d M arch g ra d u a te s only) m a jo rs ; S enior H igh accounting and tra n s p o rta tio n a d m ln iitra - MAN N E E D E D : 3 m a n a p a rtm e n t, the com m ittee has not been of such things as family respon­ a li th ro e liv e a n d w o r k to g e th e r School: m e n ta lly h a ndicapped s p o ml a s s h ip p in g c l e r k s Ho d id not W in ter o r w in te r- pring 351-A2?f> sci up la!t i: m erely in the sibilities c.m sign Die petition, r -a-. "••'IT NAM E _______ C O L L E G E OR UN IVERSITY------------- SOUTH' TAKE OUT ONLY ONLY 484-4555 2 2 0 1 S. C E D A R 2 Doors South Of State Tneater Sun.-T hurs. 4 p«m. To 12:00 P .M .,F rl. & Sat« To 1 A.M. 209 Abbott Road Phone ED 2-8889