1 i i 1 1.600 à 2.001 poo* tfosTód/ 200 400 600 800 .000 1.200 1.400 1.800 W H ». iJe — V »*v » i 'if * ¡,/f «4 *■ s r « i * « / r fp e ïitfy * M IC H IG A N U N IV E R SIT Y STA TE ST A T E EW S E ast Lansing, Michigan November 19, 1968 10c Vol. #1 Number 87 T e a c h e r s ’ u n i o n v o t e s t o e n d N e w Y o r k C i t y S c h o o l s t r i k e NEW YORK (AP) -- A teachers' union to classrooms. On two previous occasions, UFT Vice President John J. O'Neill, nied what it referred to as UFT "charges voted an end Monday to the worst educa­ the walkout was renewed. stripped of his union duties for opposing and innuendoes that the foundation is tional tie up in the nation's history, a city- This time, however, a state watchdog the strike, called the settlem ent a m ajor somehow influencing the course of the wide strike that kept the vast m ajority of com m ittee was designated to oversee the defeat for Shanker and his ra cist leader­ strike." New York’s 1.1 million public school return of 79 white teachers, whose ouster ship. which has torn this city a p a rt." Ocean Hill-Brownsville. one of the children out of classes for seven weeks. from the black and Puerto Rican Ocean Still facing Shanker is a charge of con­ city’s w orst slums has a population of "T eachers are beginning to return to their Hill-Brownsville decentralized school dis­ tem pt under the state s Taylor Law, which (please turn to page 9i schools this afternoon," School Supt. Ber­ trict led to the strike. In addition. State bans strikes by public employes. He could nard Donovan said. "We urge the return Education Commissioner Ja m es E. Allen receive up to 30 days in jail, with the to school of all our pupils also." placed a trustee in charge of the eight- union fined $10.000 per strike day. The,, One 8-year-old boy attending his G reen­ district schools in Brooklyn. court hearing has yet to be completed. wich Village elem entary school on a rain- and-mist-dimmed afternoon, located his "The panel established under this agree­ ment represents a strong hope that the The vote in favor of a retu rn to class­ rooms was 17,658 to 2.738. Less than 40 Profs focus First pint teacher, threw his arm s around her and kissed her. schools and their teachers will be safe from harassm ent and intim idation," UFT President Albert Shanker said. Two pre­ per cent of the UFT m em bership took part in the balloting. Ocean Hill was one of three experi­ on equality It m arked the third time since the strike Phil Frank, State News cartoonist, somehow seems to have lost his began Sept. 9 that the AFL-CIO United vious peace pacts fell apart because. mental school districts set up to test the Shanker charged. Ocean Hill m ilitants concept of limited community control of Equal opportunity at MSI' will be the s e n s e of humor as he donates the first pint of blood at the Red Cross Federation of Teachers, a predominantly sought by threats and harassm ent to keep education. It was financed in part by the focus of attention at the semi-annual m eet­ Blood Center. 5N Photo by William Porteous white union of 55,000 m em bers, returned the unwanted teachers from their class­ Ford Foundation, which at one point de- ing of the Academic Senate Wednesday rooms. afternoon. The bitter strike, which closed most The senate will hear reports an MSU's academic, role in Equal Opportunity Pro­ EDITORIAL FREEDOM of the city's 900 public schools for 35 school days, provoked racial and religious E xam s ig n up gram s, the needs and goals of MSU's pro­ gram s and MSU's search for m ore black anim osity between the black slums and the teachers' union, most of whose m em ­ Friday is the deadline for obtaining per­ students. bers are Jewish. mission to repeat final exam inations for The closed m eeting will be held at 4 C enso rship : old problem Mayor John V. Lindsay, in hailing the end University College courses. p.m. Wednesday in the Music Auditorium. of the strike, declared: "I hope we can Perm ission may be obtained from the The senate is an educational policy-mak­ begin now to heal the divisions this strike University College office. 170 Bessey ing body composed of professors, associate has opened and to turn our attention to the Hall, or a t the Student Affairs Office. 109 professors and assistant professors of the Brody. S33 Wonders or G36 Hubbard Hall. regular i full-time tenured >faculty. It m eets real possibilities for educational great­ nncc in fall term and once in spring term . ness this citv can achieve." for Stote News editors By CHRIS MEAD was prom ptly suspended from publishing the defendant was supposed to have com­ State News Staff W riter for the duration of the sum m er term . m itted perjury by answ ering "n o " to the Censorship. A new problem in the now The editorial was apparently a shocker question. "A re you now or have you ever famous "dirty-w ord debate," yet an old in the heyday of student apathy. Under been a Com m unist?" problem for the State News. the heading " I t s Not the Wav" (which The State News reporter who covered The first significant clash the State was a regular State News feature a t the the mock trial noted that the boys hooted News had with censorship in recent tim es tim e), the editorial criticized the Amer­ and booed every tim e the word com­ cam e in the sum m er of 1950 when it ican Legion's handling of the annual munism was mentioned. published what would now be considered Michigan Boys' State event. The State News editorial lam basted a rath er routine editorial. Bovs' State, which was held at MSU the American Legion, the sponsor of the For its editorial effort, the State News that year, held a mock trial in which event, for instilling in the sta te 's im ­ pressionable youth a fanatical attitude toward communism. "The American Legion has been pass­ P e a c e talks d e a d l o c k ing out this line for a long tim e now and it has gotten just a little sickening. But not. apparently, to the impressionable youth of Michigan," the editorial said. o n allie d r e p r e s e n t a t i o n The editorial concluded. "To the Amer­ ican Legion we say this: If communism is your special target, then face it. but not with catcalls, hisses and closed eyes. WASHINGTON (AP) - The expanded out would give both the United States and Give it open thinking *and show some guts Vietnam peace talks face postponement South Vietnam a voice at the conference by not hiding behind m ass reaction of the for the third straight week Wednesday al­ table under a system ot joint chairm an­ crowd. And keep Boys' State, in itself a though the United States and South Viet­ ships. Thus, under this formula. South good idea -- it ju st needs fumigation. " nam a re reported nearing a face-saving Vietnam would play a m ajor role on issues That was July 22. The next issue of the accord that will end the deadlock on al­ relating to political settlem ents, while the State News was July 27 - the last issue of lied representation. U.S. team headed by Ambassador W. Av- the sum m er term on the recom m enda­ Official sources making this known Mon­ erell H arrim an would concentrate on m ilitary m atters including tim etables for . tion of the Board of Student Publications. day were optim istic that Saigon would soon The State News, which was biweekly announce its decision to send a delega­ withdrawal of troops. A proposal by Thieu that South Vietnam during the sum m er then, printed on its tion to the P aris talks within a short time. Vice President Nguyen Cao Ky. the head the allied negotiators in P aris was un­ acceptable to the United States, accord­ editorial page the suspension order by A.A. Applegate, chairm an of the Board Dry run form er prim e m inister, was considered ing to official sources, because the re ­ of Student Publications. The group charged that the State News, Aoollo 8 astronauts, from left, William A. Anders, James A. Lovell Jr. and Frank Borman, go through a here to be the m ost likely chief of the South sponsibility for American servicem en and "by its inaccuracy, intem perate tone and dry run for their Christmas-time orbit of the moon. Apollo 8 is scheduled to be launched from „ape Ken­ Vietnam ese delegation. interests could not be delegated to The com prom ise agreem ent being worked (Please turn to back page) nedy Dec. 21. UPI Telephoto another country. A A U P s t r iv e s f o r e d u c a t i o n a l q u a l i t y By NANCY KLESS all institutions up to a high level biter of claim s and disinterested in planning for the support of the tices of recent years are continued, "The problem ol inequity is a his­ State News Staff W riter of excellence as rapidly as possi­ representative of the total need" educational program s financed they will buy Michigan a third-rate torical problem ." he said, citing ble" so that "w hatever each insti­ of higher education and urges under the state budget and in work­ system . If the needs are determined the past im portance placed on The A m erican Assn. of Univer­ tution does . . be done w ell.” that it be given the resources nec­ ing with the recom m endations of faced and m et through the joint et- m aintaining different levels ol sity Professors (AAUPi report. It asks for the adoption of the essary to act as such. each group. ■forts of all concerned, the quality prestige at different schools within "The State of Higher Education in system of minimum equity, with It further suggests that the board It urges that the "sta te board, the of our higher education enterprise the state. Michigan. 1967-68." concludes that appropriations of $700 per fresh­ "be asked to work toward the es­ governor and the legislature agree will m atch the other strengths ol Noscow noted moral im plica­ "th e sta te 's higher education sys­ man or sophomore. $1,300 per jun- tablishm ent of minimum support on guaranteeing a minimum stand­ our state. tions in the question ot equity. tem must be linancod according to ard of equity for all institutions "N o investm ent that the people Are MSU or U niversity ot Mich­ some reasonable set ot uniform E d u c a tio n an d E q u ity sufficient to allow adjustm ent of of Michigan can m ake is as im por­ igan students entitled to a better minimum standards in order to faculty com pensation" to the tant as that required by equity, ade­ education than students at other a ttra c t and hold our share of the AAUP minimum standards which quacy and reason for a state edu­ schools in M ichigan?" he asked. qualified faculty m em bers need­ reflect the existing pattern of com­ cational system truly second to Noscow said that the state must ed increasingly in the years ahead, pensation in states com parable to none." the com m ittee concludes. recognize changes which have in com petition with the system s Michigan. The com m ittee's report was in­ occurred in the educational system of com parable states." Finally, the com m ittee report tended to give the legislature in­ and grant equal minimal resources On the basis of this conclusion, requests "all the responsible offi­ form ation and notions of facts and to raise salaries at so-called less the drafting com m ittee sets forth cials to develop and agree upon a attitudes im portant tor appropri­ prestigeous schools, enabling them recom m endations to the various long-range State Plan for Higher ate decisions for the well-being to attract better faculties. agencies connected with lunding Second in a series Education much more concrete, of higher education. Sigmund Nos­ He felt that the schools would the educational program s of Mich­ ior and senior. $2.00u per m a ste r's standa Js for all institutions, based m ore constructive and m ore cour­ cow. professor of social science "benefit greatly " lrom this move igan colleges and universities degree candidate and $4.000 per "upon the am ount of instruction to ageous than any of the prelim inary and MSU's representative on the and would be able to provide bet­ At the base of its proposal, the doctoral <>r graduate-prolcssional be offered a t the four levels." d rafts we have so far been fur­ AAUP com m ittee, said. ter educational program s. com m ittee proposes that "th e student each year. The report urges the cooperative nished. We hope that we can make the Solving the problems presented state abandon its acceptance of The com m ittee confirm s the con­ efforts of the board, the D epart­ " It is our conviction that the next public and sta te officials aw are in this report would be a starting institutions of varying quality and stitutional responsibilities of the ment of Education, the governor few years will be crucial for higher that the needs of higher education point toward bettering state edu­ affirm its determ ination to bring State Board of Education as "ar- and his staff and the legislature education in Michigan. If the prac- are not being m et. Noscow said cational institutions, he said. M I C H I G A N Edward I. Hr»// J a n ie s S. ( t r a n e lli , in n u n g i n g e d it a r w/ííht-ím-íAm*/ l'r in k n ( lin e , i n n ifiiis e d i t o r S T A T I N E W S J e r r y l*n n k h u r s l, e d i t o r i a l e d i t a r I n n i lir ó n il, s f io r is e d i t a r IN IV K R S IT Y ( a r o ! H u d rou\ a d v e r t is in g m a n a g e r E n tr ic in i n s t e t t , a s s o c ia t e c a m p u s e d i t a r B LO O D j .y- ** %ê ‘‘ i l' ' ■* r LDI \l V ’ Six-tim e recipient of the Pacem aker award for outstanding journalism. E D IT O R IA L A reassessment of election merits Now th a t elec tio n s a r e over, “ E d u c a tio n is too im p o r ta n t and those in office a r e safe, a t for us to continue this w ay. We le a s t for a tim e , th e r e has been m u st c h ang e to a s y s te m w h e re a g r e a t deal of discussion la te ­ our e d u ca tio n a l officials a r e ly a b ou t M ich ig an 's m e th o d of chosen on th e ir individual m e r ­ elec tin g m e m b e r s of the four its .” m a jo r ed u catio n al posts. Not enough study has been S ev eral m o d ifica tio n s are done to in d ic a te w hich m e th o d possible and d e se rv in g of would be m o s t b en eficial to the study. ed u catio n al needs of M ichigan. Suggestions ra n g e fro m e le c ­ W hat is c le a r, how ever, is th a t tion on a non -partisan b a sis to study is needed. a p p o in tm e n t by the g o v e rn o r or We c an n o t a fford to h ave our the S en ate w ith the o th e r a p ­ Another m ethod, th a t of e le c ­ the m a n n e r th a t controlling e d u ca tio n a l sy ste m ru n by peo­ proving. tion on the sprin g ballot, has b o a rd s of u n iv e rsitie s m u s t be ple who a r e in office on a b asis A n u m b e r of a lte r n a tiv e s lie been favored by L eroy Augen- elected. o th e r th an th e ir own q u a lific a ­ in betw een. E d u c a tio n a l offi­ stein. c h a ir m a n of the Dept, of A con stitutio nal a m e n d m e n t tions. All a lte r n a tiv e s m u s t be c ials could be no m in ated on a B iophysics and a m e m b e r of the would be re q u ire d only if the studied so th a t schools a n d col­ b asis s im ila r to th a t of s ta te S ta te Board of E d u c a tio n , who e lections w e re abolished e n tir e ­ leges in M ichigan can free ju d icial officers. This would brought the issue to the lim e ­ ly. and the officials app ointed th e m s e lv e s fro m p e tty p a r t i ­ involve nom ination by political light. instead of elected. san sq uabb les and c o n ce rn p a rtie s, but election on a non­ It is a p p a r e n t th a t s ta te e d u ­ th e m se lv e s w ith the business The pro cess of changing the “ Y ou’ re just my ty p e - -R H negative!1 p a rtis a n basis. c ation al officials a r e often not of education. The point can be ra ised th a t if m ethod of selection is not as being e lec te d on their own m e r ­ --The E d ito rs the n a m e s a r e listed on a non­ c o m p licated as it m ig h t a p p e a r. its. bu t a r e r a t h e r “ co at-tailin g ' p a rtis a n basis the v oter will The M ichigan C onstitution in on th e ir p a rty ticket. The p a r ­ not be ab le to distinguish one s ta te s that B oard of E d u c a tio n ty th a t wins has c o n siste n tly FRED SH E R W O O D c an d id a te from a n o th er. The m e m b e rs m u s t be n o m inated been able to e le c t th e se offi­ e n t.re c au se of this c o n tro v e rsy by p a rty conventions and e le c t­ cials w hen it h as won o th e r of­ is. how ever, th a t the v oter should not lock him self in a vot- ed a t large. It would not re q u ire a constitutional a m e n d m e n t to have the board m e m b e r s n om i­ fices. F o r in sta n ce , in 1964 all 14 D e m o c r a ts w e re elected S tu d e n ts a x e d ’ b y riot la w ng booth and begin pulling b e ca u se of .Johnson's victory. e v e r s sim ply b e c a u s e they a p ­ nated by political p a rtie s , but In 1966 all eight R epu blicans p e ar un der a c e r ta in ticket. a p p e a r on the n o n -p a rtisa n b a l­ w e re hoisted into office on R om - Im agine that a police officer was 25 of those w ere beaten. Did the lots. This would a t le a s t e lim i­ Houston police deny charges of bru­ The e le c to ra te m u s t b ecom e n e v 's ticket, and this y e a r killed by a single bullet in a riot tality? The only reported response was n ate coat-tail riding by nom i­ all eig ht D e m o c r a ts won be­ during the spring of 1967 at Texas p o tte r in form ed on the issues Southern U niversity, a predom inately from an officer who adm itted hitting nees. election m e re ly b e ca u se c au se H u m p h re y happ en ed to a student in the head with a fire so th a t th e ir choice is m a d e be­ black school in Houston. All right, their n a m e a p p e a rs u n d e r the ta k e M ichigan. things like that happen. Imagine that ax.. addir>gi jLhat ,his .sergeant approved fore they e n te r the voting booth, of the activity and asked to borrow ¿Ltme colum n as n atio nal p a rty It is ironic w hen officials who the exact cdliber of the bullet could' elim in a tin g the need for p a r t i ­ not be determined because it appeared , the ax. i „h m e m b e rs . All th a t would be r e ­ w e re sw e p t in by this type of san ballots. The ig sp o n sib ility to have ricochetted before striking The district attorney in charge of qu ired to fa c ilita te this c h an ge tide point out the w e ak n e sse s the officer's body. the case has said that the five stu­ of the e le c to ra te to be e d u c a t­ would be legislative action. of the s y ste m , and su g gest m o d ­ Now im agine that five, not just one dents w ere indicted for murder be­ ed and inform ed is one of the or two. but five students, John Parker, cause, according to Texas law. any­ b asic n ecessities of a d e m o c r a ­ A c h an g e in the election m e th ­ e ra tio n s th a t could e n d an g e r Charles Freem an. Floyd Nichols, Wayne one engaged in a riot can be held cy. To ignore this respo nsib ility od of tru s te e s , re g e n ts or gov­ th e ir own position. B ut th ese Waller, and Trazawell Franklin, have responsible for any offense com m itted, e rn o rs could be acc o m p lish e d m e n h ave su g g este d so m e vital been indicted for the officer's murder. even if com m itted by another person. is to im p lan t le g itim a te doubts Apparently the state of Texas adm its a s easily , since nothing in the considerations. If you think that takes a little stretch­ concerning the validity of tre e ing of the im agination, you haven't the students could not have fired the elections. con stitu tio n specifically s ta te s As A ugenstein pointed out. heard anything vet: , shot that killed officer Kuba. yet they According to an NAACP advertisem ent are prosecuting them for murder. asking contributions to help bear the ne.v w isely noted that "rumors" about P resently the students are under­ estim ated $100.000 expense for their destruction w ere spread to incite riots. going a retrial following their first initial trial alone. Parker w as in his The New York Tim es, a noted rumor- trial's resulting in a hung jury. A H O W A R D G ABE spokesman for the prosecuting attorney dormitory room when the murder oc­ spreading yellow journalism sheet, had curred. It is at least conceivable that the audacity to report that police said a grand jury investigated the police he w as a sniper. But N ichols w as 24 chopped open doors to students' rooms tactics during the disturbances and m iles away. That's a pretty long snipe. or. in rare m om ents of Hollywood style found that "no excessive force" had D a tin g o r th a t old p u t- d o w n F reem an was a few feet from the Houston police chief, and W aller was bravado, shot the locks off doors. The Tim es added that the w alls and ceilings of room s w ere ripped apart, been em ployed other than that n eces­ sary for making arrests." Aside from conflicting reports on the already in jail. It w as not considered, of course, that televisions w ere sm ashed-perhaps to use of force by police, the case raises m som e questions concerning the phil­ the deceased officer (Louis Raymond search for weapons concealed inside Kuba) might have been shot by one the picture tubes, a clever anarchist osophy behind the Texas law. What Speaking of dating Finally, the optim istic "Sorry. I'm Englishm en ever to be stood up. spent of his associates but an Associated ruse - radios and m usical instruments constitutes being "engaged" in a riot? Ever since that dreadful day. when busv" brings a little hope to the an entire spring day under an apple P ress reporter on the scene estim ated w ere broken, and clothes ripped. Is the student who m akes a speech Adam and E ve consumed the forbidden caller. When this particular answer tree waiting for his love to arrive. that Houston police fired 2,000 rounds Mattie Habert, a house mother at before a riot breaks out and are the is used it m eans that she's not sorry Another Englishm an. William Shake­ Lamier Hall, the dormitory that got students who set fire to barrels of fruit, the Almighty has bestowed upon of ammunition into one dormitory alone. speare, had m any a m id-su m m ers 200 rounds and bore the brunt of the tar, as som e did at Houston, equally the m ale population a fate worse than that she's busy because of you, she's Kuba could w ell have been hit by a night dream as he tried to tam e Lucille police raid, said that m ost students culpable for anything that occurs in death. A "good-time" date used to be sorry that sh e's busy because of where ricochet from anywhere. An intensive u g' -ied to ' ike her This cat* Shrewenstein (which for theatrical were just hiding from bullets shot the ensuing violence? a nude trolic in the garden: but si nee search by police turned up only one purposes was later shortened to Shrew». into the dormitory. Miss Habert said Apparently such is the case if you those days things have really changed tg o r. a Is! ■ include-. the 'Sorry. I’m rifle, one shotgun and one pistol in Many other exam ples can be cited, she was ordered to lie on the floor live in Texas. If the five students Adam had it relatively easy. He never busy because you re a freshman. the possession of students. The police but save the rest for the famous MSU during the raid and was walked on by are convicted of murder, why not had to worry about calling up Eve. Other frequently used expressions w ere far m ore armed. interdepartm ental final exam ination police who smashed her television. charge them with everything else that for he knew that she would never be in c lu d e : No." which m eans don't The "intensive" search also resulted questions. The thing is that man will Police arrested 488 students. The occurred and tie up all the loose busy. bother to call again; "M aybe," which in several com plaints of wanton de­ m eans "No" because she's expecting soon tire of being refused over the struction by police. The district attor- dean of students claim ed that 20 or ends? It m akes a nice, neat package. Today, man. in his endless search for the perfect m ate, has to tremble something else to turn up by Friday; telephone. The diamond ring informs a s he dials the number of his favorite and. yes" which means "Maybe" be­ the m ale on WHO not to call, so why fem m e fatale. And. it's not just one number, it's lots of numbers. And it's cause her boyfriend might com e up for the football gam e. Some girls couldn't som eone develop a code so the m ale w ill know WHEN • not to call? OUR READERS’ MINDS not just on one day. but dialing has just hang up as soon as they hear the sound of your voice. If this ever My racial heritage to take place all week if negative To save em barrassm ent, ever before responses persist. happens to you. consider yourself minus the caller has a chance to identify Over the years a dreaded phrase one lab partner. him self, the young lady could answer has developed. This gram m atical con­ Looking back into history, the first the telephone: "Hello, I already have struction strikes fear in men s minds American ever to be "shot down" was previous com m itm ents for this wekend. To the Editor: My heart feels blank and em pty, a jar ties that are talked about in all the books. and brings tears to m en's eyes. It Christopher Columbus in the fall of P lease call back in the early part of A Black swirl that I can't know because of m olasses with a Black fly kicking up A sadness because people don t and ne­ ends possibilities of passionate hours. 1L>2 He u n ited a fair young Indian next week and I m ay be able to I'm not Black. I read your books, your currents and eddies, a wonder of what my ver did care enough to love, touch, and It puts out the candlelight and recaps maiden to watch the first corn harvest, squeeze you in." Or she could say, authors and my whiteness still shines race has done to another. Can I ignore my sm ile at another person. Know one takes the champagne bottle. The fearful term but she had promised another to go "Hello, i have a date this Friday, through. What shall I say, that I am better racial heritage? Can I be White and proud? the tim e to say hello: It’s just nose down is: Sorry. I'm busy." canoeing and then rain dancing. but Saturday is still available." These read than m ost White people? D oes that Oh. great m assive U niversity that you and don’t look at that girl’s breasts too A "Sorry. I'm busy" can com e in Since that dreary day. m any other types of salutations w ill elim inate m ake m e know you any better? Should I are. can you allow m e to call you John? long or sh e’ll know it. A beleagured cry a variety of different ways. The plain great Am ericans have taced failure further ego deflation. say that I have Black friends? Should I Can you help m e and m y White brothers for my fellow Americans? How about hu­ "Sorry. I'm busy" hurts the m ale ego over the telephone. The story of Ben­ be the envy of the boys on m y block by and sisters to help ourselves? Can you This is the first in a series of many man beings? No, I guess it wouldn’t the most. It m eans that even though jam in Franklin's misfortune with the dating and trying to screw a Black girl? allow m e to touch, feel, bite, and wallow provocative reports on college dating work anyway. she s sorry that she's busy, she s not women w ill live forever in the annals in a sea of all encom passing Blackness? techniques, problem s and criticism s. Samuel George Field as sorry as she would be if she had of history. While wooing the fair P ris­ I want to know you m y Black brothers The next column w ill be devoted to a K n o w y o u r fa c ts E ast Lansing, senior gone out with you. An em phatic "Sorry. cilla Hopkiss. poor Benjamin m ade one and sisters but I’m scared. I’m scared call too m any and Miss Hopkiss, tired phenomenon which is slow ly becoming because m y race has forced a structure I'm busy" m eans that not only is she To the E d itor: of hearing his voice, told Franklin extinct:the blind date. This series should of Black m onolithic solidarity and unity sorry that she's busy this week, but be clipped and saved for background Why don't your reporters learn to org­ only sh e's also sorry that she's busy tor to go fly a kite." anize their. . .m aterial? It seem s that you that excludes m e and m y sensibilities. m aterial for the Human Sexuality course. the rest of the quarter M f A N lT S Sir Isaac Newton, one of the first CHARLIE BROUN TELLS ME YOU HAVE A PROBLEM .YOUSEEM I FEEL LIKE l'MINTERVIEUJING A TEPPY BEAR have been consistently charged with m is­ quoting and fabricating statem ents of stu­ dents. Now you've done it to me. In re­ ference to the Veteran's Day R esistance White man go home. We don't need you anymore. When are White folk gonna stop telling Black folk how to think talk, love, and shit? I feel m ighty low right now. 37 days left TO HAVE PEVELOPEPTHISFEAR Vigil, I w as quoted as saying, "I'm in A sadness toward m yself and toward my OF THE PARK OR SOMETHING... sym pathy but not as far as turning in m y heritage as a part of the power structure. 15 THIS TRUE 7 ’» I draft card.” I never m entioned anything A sadness toward the lack of effort by m y about a draft card. Thanks a lot for sec­ White brothers and sisters to really know Christinas 7 ond-guessing my thoughts, you jerks. You or understand. A sadness because my =^ = rG !: a f have slandered m y good natT e. race is denying m e the chance to know Student Book Store g OOCTQ« 'f\ I ip i see m y Whiteness. A sadness i x i. J ic i ,ai 421 at Grand River 1. o \ . jUn.ui io. ini lack of human values and digni­ - A: T u e s d a y , N o v e m b e r 19, 1968 3 Michigan State N ew s, E ast L a n sin g , M ich igan NEWS N . V i e t s b e g i n w i n t e r o f f e n s i v e .heavily populatedi coastal low­ _____ were hit i_¡. by L ..__ new shelling attacks un u ’ O-e t A rt/iiyi (%is n / t o r a t t a n k f below the eastern flank' of the President Johnson halted bomb­ ers'wutvn '•revnoirnLat.' DdVK IU nuuis— P-*V “ ern provinces making up the 1st No American casualties were a m .-in Da Nang. South Viet­ Spokesmen said 163 of the ene­ A c a p s u le s u m m a r y o f th e d a y ’s e v e n t s f r o m Corps area, the South V iet­ dem ilitarized zone had spotted ing of North Vietnam Nov. 1 to North V ietnam ese troops m ov­ promote expansion of the Paris reported arid losses among the nam's second largest city. Offi­ m y were killed by artillery and in o u r w ir e s e r v i c e s , __________ _ namese general in charge of other allies appeared light. cials appaently felt the situa­ three other ground encounters that area said Monday. ing supplies south last week peace talks. across the Ben Hai River at the Spokesmen said South Viet­ Spokesmen said 12 South Viet­ tion had eased since a round of involving South V ietnam ese Lt. Gen Hoang Xuan Lam nam ese soldiers were killed and shellings and terrorist incidents and Korean forces In te r n a t io n a l N e w s told newsm en he expects the en­ m idsection of the six-m ile-w ide nam ese and South Korean troops 72 wounded in crushing an a s­ over the weekend. Police seized The U.S. Command reported e The Soviet moonshot Zond 6 has returned to earth with a em y infantry to concentrate on buffer strip. He reported the and supporting American air enem y w as in units ranging from squadrons and artillery killed saulting North V ietnam ese bat­ 109 persons, including some the 18th Novem ber incident in­ tricky double-dip entry into the atm osphere that has brought m ilitary outposts and sm aller talion at Dien Ban. 15 m iles women, as Viet Cong suspects. side the dem ilitarized zone oc­ Soviet science another step closer to a manned moon flight. towns while rocket, mortar and platoon to company strength-30 416 of the enem y in a string of to 100 men. weekend encounters in the south of Da Nang. The South The sharpest in the series of curred Sunday. The official announcement said Zond 6 tw ice entered the terrorist units attack the larger Korean reported seven of their ground actions w as at Dien Ban. earth's atm osphere to brake its 2,500 M.P.H. descent. American fighter-bombers de­ Vaccine producers strive m en killed and two wounded in Government troops supported by The return is the latest developm ent in a busy Soviet another engagem ent. U.S. helicopter gunships said stroyed a North V ietnam ese space program which in the past two months has seen the Government headquarters said they counted 253 dead and cap­ bunker complex spotted a half launching and recovery of Zond 5, a manned Soyuz 3 sp ace­ Quang Ngai and four district tured six of a North V ietnam ese m ile inside the southern bound­ flight and the sending into orbit Saturday of the 17-ton towns in the coastal lowlands battalion of about 500 men. Thev ary of the DMZ Proton-4 space station. Some observers in the West have said the Soviets' manned moon flight could com e as early as next month. • A Czechoslovak border guard w as shot and killed Mon­ day, presumably as he attem pted to flee across the border to avert possible epidemic It added: "Since normal de­ of eggs rejected in the vaccine WASHINGTON (AP) - A into West Germany, the Bavarian Interior Ministry re­ mand by vaccine producers for process has increased to al­ temporary shortage of love- ported. The guard's body w as recovered around noon on m ost 50 per cent as against Bavarian territory, about 150 yards from the border. making roosters and of mature hens is one of the problems fertile eggs ends in July, m ost f a r m e r s - m arketed roosters in late summer. their 15 per cent in a normal oper­ ation. . . . " C O N V O C A T IO N S com plicating efforts to pro­ • A British oil tanker cam e under enem y attack from a "Farm ers and egg producers PMA said hundreds of duce a vaccine against the river bank Monday while it w as m oving up the Long 'Diu River, 13 m iles southeast of Saigon. The 12,183 ton Hu,; ■ suffered only minor dam age from one dud rocket round, a new-found Hong Kong strain of influenza. in a dozen or m ore states from Arkansas to Maine are now in­ volved in supplying m ore than skilled workers have been transferred from other depart­ ments by the vaccine manu­ S O R O R IT Y This w as reported Monday U.S. Navy spokesman reported. There w ere no casualties. 2 million eggs being processed facturers to work on the new by the Pharm aceutical Manu­ • Two Molotov cocktails were hurled over the w alls facturers Assn. ( PMAi which said m illions of fertile eggs of w eekly by the vaccine manu­ facturers. vaccine and "other hundreds have been recruited and RUSH girdling the Greek Em bassy grounds in R om e Monday but "Due to the number of im ­ trained in a short period of high quality are required t.o pro­ failed to explode, police said. They guessed the explosive m ature laying hens at this time." duce the chick em bryos on T O N IG H T devices were thrown by leftists who m eant to protest the which the virus strain must tim e of year, the percentage death verdict pronounced in Athens Sunday against Alex­ feed and multiply in the vac- ander Panagoulis, charged with an assasination attem pt cine-production process. against the Greek premier. N evertheless, the PMA said 1 0 8 B W E L L S six American pharm aceutical • A hijacker who said he had a bomb rigged to explode m anufacturers are working at a m om ent's notice in his suitcase forced a M exican air­ around the clock to produce liner with 18 passengers and a crew of five to fly to Havana A -K 6 :0 0 p .m . vaccine in tim e for a possible Monday. Mexican Ambassador Miguel Covian said he ex ­ U.S. epidem ic with expecta: pected the four piston-engine DC6 to return to Mexico later tions that substantial quanti­ Monday. None of the passengers or crew w ere harmed. L -Z 7 :0 0 p .m . ties will be available for the civilian population som etim e • Scheduled talks in Warsaw, Poland betw een U.S. and Red Chinese am bassadors have been postponed because the com m unist side has failed to adhere to its own sug­ after Jan. 1. Sm aller quantitites will be • w 1* gestion for a November m eeting, the U.S. E m bassy re­ ported Monday. This w as the second tim e this year that ready earlier, but much of this production is com m itted to the contact your rush the talks, which are the only contact between Washington armed forces." a PMA an­ and Peking, have been put off. nouncement said. It said a total target popula­ 1 N E W counselor if unable to attend • A Japanese newspaper advised P resident-elect Richard tion of 17.5 m illion doses for M. Nixon to seek closer ties with Red China. A West German the civilian population is the paper counseled him against protectionism in trade. A British newspaper warned him not to "repeat stock responses in the manner of Mr. Dulles." goal for 1968. and that •’nobody knows when or if the new flu will reach epidem ic propor­ F O L K F i r s t Stage of Rush F rid a y , Nov. 22 November 21 7 p.m . tions" in the United States. • Secretary of State Dean Rusk arrived Monday in Lisbon. 8:30 p.m . Concerning vaccine produc­ Men’s Intramural Building 23 12:30 p.m Portugal, for a m eeting with Prim e M inister F ran co No- tion prnhlfims sW tenino from "gueira. Rusk flew in on "a" special jet from Madrid WKere“ GEN’L ADM. WITH 1JD. 24 1:30 p .m . the barnyard.' thfe_PMA noted 52.00 >1.50 he conferred with Gen. Francisco Franco. Spain's chief that the new vir#P%train was Tickets' on sa le at Cam pbell's, of state, on last w eek's m eeting of the North Atlantic not discovered in Asia until The Union and Campus Book Trestv Organization in Brussels. Belgium. mid-summ er, and that "it was S tores. ___________ _ _ _ _ not until mid-September that • A polar bear attacked and killed an Eskim o student scien tists of the U.S. Public Sunday as his school m ates looked on helplessly. Paulosie Health Service were able to Meeko. 19. of Great Whale River. Que.. died less than two provide m anufacturers with iscountrecordsi*cO hours after the attack in the heart of Fort Churchill, a sub- the seed strain and formula Arctic community of 2.500. The youth s throat was slashed. • Scotland Yard won more tim e from a court Monday to prepare its case against Bruce Reynolds, last of the wanted for the new vaccine. " Beggars t men in Britain's $7 million Great Train Robbery of August. 225 ANN ST. 1963. Reynolds, reputed to be the m asterm ind behind the Banquet? TH E O N L Y C O M P L E T E R E C O R D STORE IN EAST LANSING robbery, w as captured Nov. 8 in Torquay, a resort in Southern England. M a rs h a ll Music 245 ANN • The Indonesian army said Monday it sm ashed a com ­ munist plot to assassinate President Suharto when he visited South Sumatra last August. • Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip ended their visit The State News, the student newspaper at Michigan State University, is EATLES to Chile Monday and took off to spend the night in R ecife. published every class day throughout the year with special Welcome Week Brazil, before winding up the first visit of a British monarch and Orientation issues in June and September. SubscripUon rates are $14 per year. W E A R E N O W T A K IN G A D V A N C E O R D E R S to South America. The couple returns to London today. Member Associated Press. United Press International. Inland Daily Press N a t io n a l N e w s Association, Associated Collegiate Press. Michigan Press Association. Mich­ igan Collegiate Press Association, United States Student Press Association. F O R TH E N E W B EA TLES’ A L B U M , • With the Vietnam build-up nearly com plete, the army has approved plans to cut its basic com bat training out­ Second class postage paid at East Lansing. Michigan put by the equivalent of one brigade every eight weeks. Editorial and business offices at 347 Student Services Building. Michigan State University. East Lansing. Michigan A P P R O P R IA T E L Y T IT L E D "TH E B EA TLES” Pentagon officials said Monday that 30 basic combat training com panies will be elim inated at Ft. B liss. Texas, Phones: one of the arm y's 16 training centers, by January. Editorial 353-8252 Classified Advertising 355-8255 The cuts are possible m ainly because the arm y, now with Display Advertising 353-8400 A 2 -R E C O R D S E T — L IS T P R IC E 1 1 .5 8 more than 1.5 million men in uniform, is reaching the end Business-ClrculaUon 355-3447 of its build-up for the Vietnam war. The arm y has added Photographic 355-8311 more than 500.000 soldiers to its ranks since mid-1965. The A D V A N C E O R D E R SA LE P R IC E D efense Department needs only about 15,000 m ore men to reach the authorized ceiling of 549,500 in Vietnam. 7.38 A L S O A T S P E C IA L P R IC E S Shine on B rightly Souled-Jose Feliciano Procol H arum A retha In P a ris W ich ita Linesm an Glen Cam pbell Super H its, V o l. 3 The Y a rd Went on F o re v e r Soft Machine R ich ard H a r r is W ild Flo w ers High on M t . Rushmore Judy C ollins 2 .5 9 e a c h 2 .5 9 e a c h T R A F F IC iscountrecords HOURS : 9 : 3 0 -8 : 3 0 DAI LY P H . 351-8460 225 ANN ST, 9 :3 0 -6 :0 0 SA T . T u e s d a y , N o v e m b e r 19, 1968 4 Michigan State N e w s, E ast L a n sin g, M ich iga n 'C a m e l o t ’ m is s e s m e a n i n g . saw«» f o r t h -jiytíi t p '* jSF« T V , . on balconies 05 lolUng on I liMe J.*v»d wandefeain­ crrm od b s à/t V rtmocits rtfc# biecrnffi'iA nr,i*rtay-v TVer^annears to have fearnW sense of t im e a f r o p ia ce arto ' 1 d a y .' *4 '*• * *•>*•>. . • •*. to the middle of several m ovies his lines phonetically. Decause all at once. I think one of them m ore importantly, of dramatic they com e out in such passion­ build-up, are lost in a patchwork Arthur fizzles ate blurts that there is sim ply w as "The Wizard of Oz," another quilt of conflicting styles. Richard Harris' impersonation no other explanation possible. wa!ya rem ake of "Darling" with Take the se ts for exam ple. of Arthur, however, is sheer thea Sincerity m issing Vanessa Redgrave, and still P art of the tim e, the castle is ter. His beemish-boy expres­ And when Mr. Logan takes another w as a Hollywood m usical a pasteboard fantasy, bathed in sions look pretty silly blown these three chunks of acting version of "A Man For All Sea­ pink light, surrounded by a m ag­ up on the big screen And like sons." and lumps them together, things ical. m ythical forest, bathed in Richard Burton (who played the really stop happening. Both Har­ gold light. Nothing wrong with part on stage), he is m ore often Some of them w ere very good By JIM YOUSLING ris and Nero deliver their ora­ that. But just as often. Came- enthralled by the sound of his indeed, but surely none of them State News Reviewer tions oblivious to everything but lot's w alls and trees are realis- own very m agnificent voice than w ere based on T.H. White’s Ar­ their cam era angles (Logan pro­ tic-looking sets, and som etim es . by the meaning of his lines. thurian legend. "The Once and vides a lyric flashback to con­ even genuine outdoors locations As for Franco Nero . . . Well, Future King." The book has unity, Logan knows this and when in vince us that Lancelot and Guen­ that we have seen on travel post­ doubt (frequently), turns his just what was Logan thinking of? evere love each other, because profundity and a wealth of hu­ man experience. "Cam elot," on ers. cam era on her. Unfortunately, Physically, he m akes a very even their em braces seem poorly Lacks tim e-sense he just as often relegates her to pretty Lancelot ("pretty" being m otivated). the other hand, has exchanged A sim ilar combination m ars haute-couture decorativeness. the only word for it», strutting And poor Miss Redgrave just these qualities for som e beauti­ the film 's tim e-sense. King Ar­ lies there and pants, hoping that ful pictures and a handful of thur's castle combines about 20 Nero will stop telling us how lovely songs. different styles of architecture much he loves her and offer a and decoration (most of which Methods clash The problem lies in director Joshua Logan. Logan may be e f­ didn't exist in Arthur's tim e), and the whole place reeks of vacuum cleaners and central S o v ie ts lacking little proof to the woman in his arms. "Camelot" is not, of course, a Wonderful'! total loss. Very few film s that fective in the legitim ate theater, heating. cost so much are. The costum ­ but his control of the film m e­ dium never extends beyond the individual shot. "Camelot" At its m ore realistic moments. "Camelot" seem s to have taken in s e x e d u c a t i o n ing and muted-color photography have grave and old-fashioned Stevie Wonder came to Snyder Hall Thursday night to visit his friend Jerome (JJ) Jackson, Lansing, freshman, his f o r m e r classmate at Lansing School for the Bllind. The visit resulted in the jam session shown here. place yesterday afternoon. And MOSCOW (A P)-A leading dogogical Sciences, complained elegance. And the m ore intim ate when the fantasy com es on like Soviet educator called Monday that the question of sex educa­ songs, like "How To Handle a SN Photo by Morgan Moore Oz, w e doubt that it ever hap­ for sex education and child tion had been widely discussed Woman." are very moving, as C a r n iv a l b o a r d pened at all. Perhaps Logan was care courses in high schools in the press but nothing has are the battle sequences and the aim ing at universality, but he to offset a growing number of been done about it. final confrontation of Arthur and needs to be reminded that uni­ unhappy young Soviet families. "How do w e explain that de­ Guenevere. p e t it io n in g o p e n Petitioning for postions on versality need not be equated with confusion. Finally, if I may pass by the Writing in the Communist spite the significant im prove­ party newspaper Pravda. E. ment in m aterial condition and But Kostvashkin, chief of the section w elfare of fam ilies, despite the might verses right, the blindness the Loses meaning profound them es of A S n y d e r Hall h a p p e n i n g : the W ater Carnival Executive Board has been extended editing, saying only that rarely on Communist education at the higher cultural level of parents of love and pride, and the de­ through Friday. Hal Evans, general chairm an, said that the positions of pro­ has the silver screen displayed such a hodge-podge of m is­ matched footage, I would like Soviet Union's Academy of Pe- and the significant satisfying of structiveness of human passions, demands for preschool es­ which were a highly com plex un­ tablishments. many of m y for­ dertaking in White's novel, are S te v ie W o n d e r p a y s visit to turn to the acting, which of­ mer students did not find happi­ here reduced to som ething sim ­ sing freshm an Jerom e Jack ­ finale. Following his com ­ gram chairm an, a rt and design E x -o ffic io sea ts Snyder Hall cam e alive fers yet another sampler of film ness in fam ily life?" he asked. ple enough to be cross-stitched son's good friend and guest as mand perform ance, the courier chairm an and decorations chair­ Thursday night, and not be­ techniques. "We teachers taught them to onto a tea towel. cause of another m arijuana the blind singing personality. of the Motown sound was es­ man a re especially in need of Redgrave radiates o p e n to p e t it io n corted to Jackson s room, like labor, books, public work, Yes. once there w as a fleeting bust. One of D etroit's leading Stevie Wonder. After being re­ petitioners. Vanessa Redgrave is brilli­ where dancing, music, and Interested students m ay pick but we didn't teach them how to wisp of glory that w as known as recording a rtists paid a visit ceived by friends and acquain­ ant. She brings to the role of Petitioning for ex-offico behave in daily life, in a fam ily Camelot. But the tale is told in tances. he entertained with his conversation accented the up petitions in th ASMSU G uenevere a naturalism and a to a form er schoolmate who seats on three E ast Lansing with children." "The Once and Future King." tapes and joviality. Stevie party scene. offices, third floor. Student Ser­ sort of film ic sexuality which, now resides on campus. com m ittees will extend through He said m any young fam ilies not on your neighborhood screen. Few people recognized Lan- then rapped out on the piano Jacksoh, who is also blind, vices Bldg. in the proper setting, could ra­ Friday. first m et Stevie several years felt their first child had been amongst a curious but enthu­ diate that Julie Christie brand of Student ex-officio seats are ago while attending Lansing born too early. siastic gathering of students in "where does the actress leave available on the East Lansing School for the Blind. In snite Kostvashkin com plained that the Philips Hall lower lounge. off and the character begin?" Planning Commission, the East Lansing City Council and the books are not available to give Red Cross to offer The evening was capped of their handicaps, they c ild perhaps “ see" some' ng mCash w $3.84 D O Z. E ast mission. Lansing Traffic Com­ young people information how to cope with married life. on with the sam e gay. casual at­ many people could neve) )b- m osphere that had preceded its serve. Tonight From 7:00 P.M. e s p io n Anthony Interested students may pick up petitions in the ASMSU On rare occasions som e books of this type appear, he said, free holiday tapings offices, third floor. Student Ser­ but they are alm ost im m ediately HIGH WILD AND FREE 809 E. Mlchlaaii sold out. Taped Christmas m essages The "Voices From Home" 7:20 and 9:30_____ ackxco vices Bldg. to servicem en w ill be offered program will give fam ilies a STARTS FRIDAY fO*EASTC*NTMCATRtS**1JiS‘:>•»»>Y0‘ nationalGrN!RAi COP»* PROGRAM INFORMATION ► 4 8 3 - 6 4 8 3 again this year as a service of chance to record and send a BSA sisterhood sponsors the Mid-Michigan Chapter of free C hrtstm :J| m essage to a S P A R T A N T W IN THEATRE Q L A D M B R —the American Red Cross. R E X H A R R IS O N m em ber of their family who is R O S E M A R Y H A R R IS FRAUDO*tM O T P m O C tN T fft • 3IOO EAST SAGINAW • Phon« 351 0030 ★ K T O TTÏT U T r e M .« serving in »he Armed Forces. program to aid block coeds LAST DAY! TO D A Y . . S I R E The seven and a half minute L O U IS J O U R D A N ENDS TODAY! T A R L I T E recordings can be m ade until beration of their people through­ N ow for the The Sisterhood of the Black At 7:15 & 9:00 P.M. Shown At 1:30 —3 — Orive InTheatre Dec. 1 at the Red" Cross office. Students' Alliance, a new or­ out history. RACHEL» R O B E R T S • in/U N0 HOAO 1800 E. Grand River Ave. In the past, contributions of R e la x ! first time >Mill lOVTKWt»»O'UNRMOMM-M ganization for black coeds, formed last month, is fostering black women have been exem p­ ENDS TONIGHT I ALL COLOR! Hours of recording are 9 a.m. lified by such fem ales as H ar­ I t ’s o n l y at p opular prices. program s aim ed at relating I I r FREDKOHLMAR PRODUCTION 1 I I a m o v ie ! Direct from P e ter Sellers In T Love You, Alice B. T oklas' to 5 p.m. on Mondays. Tues­ days, Thursdays and Fridays and 9 a.m . to 9 p.m. on Wed­ personally to the movement as black women students on a p re­ dominantly white campus. riet Tubman and her under ground railroad: and Aretha Franklin. Diahann Carroll. its reserv ed -seat suggested for mature audiences nesdays. Appointments may Abbe Lincoln and F artha Kitt. I A FLEA 1 Also ’'WAIT UNTIL DARK'* be m ade by calling 484-7461. The sisterhood feels that with their expression ot black engagem ent. Starting Wednesday It is advisable that the m es­ black women have made im ­ feminine soul S l in h e r A 'R arbarella' ‘Water Hole #3’ sage be prepared in advance for portant contributions to the li- Phvlis Lovette. Romulus smooth recording. sophomore. Gail Williams. An­ PROGRAMINFORMATION ^ 482*3905 ita Baylis and Sandra \d am s moc«»m iNri.r,M*TioN » 332-6044 C f f M E L O T 2nd Big Week! all D etroit Sophomores, pn ( Ç A M R U S 1:00-3:45-6:35-9:25 CÁ*4ltt€ sented the idea of a black >&> h C M 1:05, 3:15, 5:25, terhood to Richard Thomas, cm M IRISCHPICTURESp TO D A Y 7:40, 9:55 chairm an of BSA. last month The idea and plans w ere ap­ proved and the sisters began c=U planning their organization. "B lack women can do a lot BEST m ore relative to the libera­ Winner of 3 Academy Awards! PICTURE!’ Winner of rachel, rach el tion m ovem ent." Miss Lovette said. "We want to get rid of apathy and get them to come tO Academy PANAVISION’ IMMITIOIMM iTIMtUMKII out m ore and help." ‘TECHNICOLOR’ TECHNICOlO RFROMW ARDERBROS-SEVERARTSUV The m eetings have taken the Awards!-,». Re-released thru TECHNICOLOR PARAVISIOII0 UnitedArtists form of open forum discussions WEDNESDAY IS LADIES’ WED. LADIES DAY - NEXT! Sean Connery in "Shalako” 75i TO 6 P.M. on the past and recent history DAY—75£ from 1 to 6 p.m. of the black woman and her rule in society. FOX EASTERN THEATRES • SUBSIDIARY OF NATIONAL GENERAL CORP "F u tu re projects will be up to the sisters, but so far our SPARTAN TWIN THEATRE FRANDOR SHOPPING CENTER • 3100 EAST SAGINAW • Phone 351-0030 structure and m eetings a re in­ form al." she said. Meetings a re from 7-8 p.m. every Thursday in 112C Wells S P A R T A N W E S T S P A R T A N E A S T Hall, preceding the BSA m eet­ ing. All interested black women STARTS TO M O R R O W ! STARTS TO MORROW ! a re encouraged to attend. 20thCeRTURV-Fo»PRESENTS FRANKSINATRA LAOTIN CEMENT T o m o rro w night, Baby Huey and the Baby S itte r s w ill be g r e a t at G ran d m oth er’s . T om orrow night is g i r l s ’ n ig h tto o , 2Û1HCeNTURY-FoXPRESENTS IN E W with red u ced r a te s for the young la d le s . A fifty cen t c o v e r , fo r what p r o m is e s to be quite a night at . . . FRANK SINATRA i LADY IN CEMENT’’ F O L K C L in T E a S T W O O D 13316772 RICHARD CONTE-MARTIN GABEL — F r id a y , Nov. 22 8:30 p.m . .„“c o o G a r r s B L U ff” LAINIE KAZAN - PAT HENRY Men’s Intramural Building GEN’L ADM. WTTH I.D. SUSAN ClARKDONSTROUOTISHASiïRUNfi BtllY FIELD' ÙAN BLOCKER AARONR0SENBÍRG-G0RD0NDOUGLAS-MARVINHALBERT JACKGUSSX -7.v-;.. PANAVISION' COLOR $2.00 $1.50 T ickets on sale at Campbell's HERM ANM ILLERDEANW ICSNERandHOW ARDRO OM ANHER8ARM ILLERDO RSIEG ELRICH ARD{ IVORS MUSICCOMPOSEDANDCONOUCTtO»VKUDOM ONTESEORO [ ^ mïtip, ■>•««'uNi DvDfllllP The Union and Campus Book INCOLOR•AUNIVERSAL PICTURE ORIGINALMOTIONA'CTUA« GOWNOTGACKALBUMONJOTMOtNTUNV- fO* WCOWPG S tores. T u e s d a y , N o v e m b e r 19, 1968 5 Michigan State N ew s, E a st L a n sin g , M ich ig an Snow lody challenges S t a t e q u a c k e r y n o n - e x i s t e n t research and developm ent. rArnrd for 'Vtper patient of the m edication," Dr than a hoax." he said. He noted der the regulations o fg h e Food m By SHARMAN STEWART < " ~"WliJjTi r Vr , No 1. according to V *1 Jam es S. Feurig, director of ’ S i- r saia: that m edical researchers are ||^ »«■ f»?: f\S.. . and Drug Administration. q v ir t r . T . . n~ ribed a com m on me- ' ffi tiKtrtg 'fa 's -* Not Aiwttys Barf * c«*ss where •« One of the major prob: 21. 1968. issue of "The AM A "Quackery is not alw ays Students Susceptible said the m anufacturers of these ■We were too fast for the several unnecessary trips to Coeds from East Fee lem s incurred w as how to N ew s." Yet, doctors- and ad­ bad." Dr Hunt said, “ when Students are m ost suscept­ pills are selling at higher pri­ boys," she went on to say. the doctor, paying exorbitant Hall spent early Sunday m inistrators at MSU said. used psychologically or in the ible to these form s of decep­ ces what can be obtained in a “ When we were finished, gather enough mushy snow prices. The doctor may not bo morning building a 5-foot- to build something worth­ "Quackery is virtually non­ form of folk medicine." tion in the form s of wart cures, cup of coffee. their's just looked like using unethical practices, but 6 snow woman. Their crea­ existent on the university cam ­ The origin of quackery has pills to put off sleep, weight Dr Hunt stated that many snow balls. They then got while. he is still taking advantage of tion proved that the State With a little college in­ pus and in Michigan. " been traced to the days of witch control pills and dietic and vitamiu ads are on the verge of mad and wanted to wreck "'Irregular practices without doctors whose practices. Dr. the patient. Dr. Jason said News Organization Boos- genuity, the snow short­ health foods. quackery. He said there is no ours." To avoid being duped, a per­ tering Buxomy Students foundation and the selling of The labels of these products m iracle ingredient that will The snow builders took age problem w as solved. Hunt said, were not entirely son can em ploy several m e­ (SNOBBSl lives on in the m edicines with false claim s state the ingredients and ef­ combat sluggishness and vita­ turns standing guard in The creation will live as the without results. thods in obtaining the name of hearts of m any MSU resi­ constitute quackery," Dr. An­ fects. but are often barely un- mins are ‘u seless m edica­ an attem pt to preserve the Francine Gottfried of the “ Witch doctors are more a reputable physician. dents. drew D. Hunt Jr.. dean of the tion unless given under the Senator eyes snow woman's charm s, winter world. At least until An obvious way is through The SNOBBS held their College of FMfcian Medicine, supervision of a physician. until the State News repre­ the next snow fall. contacts, either social or at first and last event on Hal­ said. No M iracles sentative arrived. Dr. Hunt said that these un­ work. If com pletely new to an loween in front of Beau- "People who flock to health ethical practices are usually area, it is possible to get in mong Tower. The first resorts for m iracle working Republican post touch with a Physician Call collegiate “ Beat Francine concentrated on an elite group mineral baths would gain the Gottfried Contest" attract­ of people suffering from incur­ Service, operated by the Med­ sam e results by turning on ed over one thousand curi­ able diseases. V ictim s of can­ ical Society. their faucets and bathing in None in Olin ous m ales, waiting to see cer and arthritis tend to seek ordinary tap w ater." Dr. Feu­ Quackery is a term students MSU's endowed fem ales the rainbow and are prone to rig claimed. WASHINGTON (AP (-Sup­ backed Richard M. Nixon for use frequently in referring to being measured. quackery. “ Quackery is thriving due A quack, playing on the frai- porters of Sen. Roman L. Hrus- president, are Sens. John G. Olin Memorial Health Center. With this in mind, a hand­ to a society of robots, created Tower of Texas, Howard H. Feurig asserted. “ These ful of E ast F ee Hall coeds lity and em otions of individuals ka of Nebraska said Monday he by over-the-counter drugs." presents them with expensive has more than enough com m it­ Baker Jr.. of Tennessee, and claim s are unfounded, but are- started Snow Lovers Or­ according to Feurig. and outrageous cures, such as m ents for election as the a ssis­ George Murphy of California. common in any community ganization Boostering Bux­ He said the sale of m illions electric static charges and tant Republican leader, or party where socialized m edicine is omy Snow women In addition. Hruska s N ebras­ of these drugs m akes regula­ bloodless surgery. Cures re­ whip, in the new Senate. ka colleague. Sen. Car. T. Cur­ instituted." (SLOBBS). Their repre- tion virtually im possible. With­ But the only other declared Doctors serving Olin Health senative remained outside sulting from these inventions tis. and Senate Republican lead­ out a prescription it is pos­ are psychological and the pa­ candidate for the post. Sen. C enter are MD's licensed to the dormitory w alls, nak­ er E verett M, IJirksen of Illi­ sible to buy a cure for almost tients were not suffering from Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania, is nois. reportedly were iending a practice in the State. ed. any ailment. reported to be “ cautiously op­ "Pushing of LSD and sim i­ Before the snow melted. true illnesses. hand. Usually Not Licensed tim istic“ of winning when GOP lar drugs is in m y definition Howard Gabe. president Psychological Cure The Hruska forces said that • Generally, quacks are not The psychological curing of senators caucus in January. of quaekerv." Dr. Hunt stated. of SNOBBS. arrived at East they have hard com m itm ents licensed practitioners. but a patient does not alw ays result Scott sent letters to all Repub­ from 23 of the 42 Republican The drugs are expensive and F ee Hall in tim e to take there are exceptions, unfor­ lican senators last week notify­ the resulting effects are death the SLOBBS queen's 71- in quackery. senators in the new Congress tunately." Dr. Hilliard Jason, 4812-77 m easurem ents. Doctors, including those at ing them he is a candidate for convening in January. or insanity. director of m edical education. A representative from the : Olin Memorial Health Center, the leadership vacancy left by anonymous snow sculptors Beat Francine w ill give sugar pills or other the primary defeat of Sen. Tho­ said that the figure was the R e s id e n ts o f the s o u th e a s t c o m p le x e n te re d t h e ir ic y m edication of non-significant m as H. Kuchel of California. result of a snow woman ingredients, when a patient s Hruska. who is in Europe, b u xo m m a id e n in the re c e n t “ B eat F ra n c in e con­ P u t o n e n d building contest between illness is not m edically found­ has let his availability for the te s t. B ut one p ro b le m r e m a in s - - th e snow m a id e n ’ s job be known but has not written E ast F ee and the Hubbard ed. hut psychological. m e a s u re m e n ts keep c h a n g in g ! “ It's the duty of the physic­ to his colleagues appealing for Hall men. SN P hoto by E . C h a rlto n h o lid a y b ill ian. however, to inform the support. Reportedly lining up support for Hruska. a conservative who w o r r ie s ... ROMNEY URGES SUPPORT a Beggars Banquet? Fair housing inaugu rated X“ M a rs h all Music 245 ANN By WES THORP will be urged to show no dis- m em bers have been informed The Michigan Civil Rights State News Staff Writer crim ination in the sale or ren- of their rights and responsibil- Commission according to the The citizens of Michigan new law has the responsibility tal of housing. He said that his lties under the law. w ere urged by officials of the of acting on com plaints of dis­ State government to support crimination because of race, the new State fair housing law ' color or national origin. H is to ry C lu b M e e t in g Get INSTANT CASH which went into effect Friday. , ■Michigan Atty. Gen. Frank At a luncheon Monday to Kelley said, “ we have reached celebrat'e the passage of the the turning point where law is 1 '"Dean V a rg fo r G ifts " a ifd ^ T ra v e l fair housing law. Gov. Romney used as the vanguard to fight w ill speak on the origins of said, "the people of the state for equal rights." of Michigan who belong to m i­ Kelley promised that the Atty. our China policy. E n jo y a h a p p ie r , m o r e c a r e fr e e h o lid a y se a so n t h is y ea r w ith an In sta n t C ash nority groups can now recog­ General's office will work for Wednesday Nov 20th lo a n fr o m y o u r M SU E m p lo y e e s C red it U n i o n . S p a r e y o u r s e lf h ig h -c o s t c r e d it nize the elim ination of a form the enforcem ent of the new Student Service Lounge s e r v ic e s b y c o n s o lid a t in g all y o u r h o lid a y bi l l s in to o n e , lo w -c o s t of discrim ination which robbed housing law. them of their birthright as The Director of Licensing 8:00 P .M . c r e d it u n io n lo a n th a t y o u r e p a y b y c o n v e n ie n t m o n t h ly p a y r o ll Americans." and Regulation in Michigan. d e d u c t io n s . A n d w h ile y o u 'r e a t t h e c r e d it u n i o n , ask a b o u t Romney promised that the Lenten Sculthorp, said that with fair housing law will be fully the new law there are now clear IN E W o p e n in g a C h ristm a s C l u b a c c o u n t ...it 's t h e e a s y w a y to implemented and enforced in rules for real estate brokers, the best interests of the peo­ salesm en and builders to follow ple of the State. According to the new housing erty. in the sale and rental of prop­ Seniors F O L K pre-pay h o lid a y e x p e n s e s . law. “ every Michigan person We a re returning has the right to buy or rent Tvrus R Carter, vice-presi­ F rid a y , Nov. 22 dent of the Michigan Real E s­ to campus Dec. 2 - 6 8:30 p.m . housing without discrimination M S U E M P L O Y E E S I C R E D I T U N I O N tate Assn. said that the 8,500 Men's Intramural Building because of religion, race, co­ lor, or national origin." m em bers of his association to photograph all the GEN’L ADM. WITH l.D . $2.00 $1.50 rem aining Senior P o rtra its Tickets on sale at C am pbell's, | 1019 Trowbridge Rd. • Open 9:30 -5:30 Monday thru Friday • Phone 353-2280 The Union and Campus Book T e x a s B a s k e t S p e c ia l for the 1969 W o lv erin e. Stores. ___________________ Monday and Tuesday C a ll 353-5151 for appointment Texas Burger F rench F ries Cole SIlaw Only 991 P.S. Seniors al ready photographed: please return D O G o your proofs immediately to room 42 Union 10 am -5 pm Mon. - Fri. 2755 E. Grand River Avenue T u e s d a y , N o v e m b e r 19, 1968 £ Michigan State N e w s, E a st L ansing, M ich ig a n P i t f a l l s fa c e t h e u n w a r y w i g u s e r .^ c a s c a d e or curls is Tb* zzsz-^ JÈ EÊÊm s >■ : hajrnieces ;s vprv is v 7import« ^ pon^ ■* ' s ^ S i tL *’ %m— -ipnptone • «• » a v g R f c ius u s .<> - .* „ I V w M m . »v » : . •>. * . *1/ /■ A nvac'niTiemTitiv ^Ffg vhii **vw . ^ l K ' a vt.Vav J • There are three types: round It Isn't safe nowadays to longer than a handmade one Suit a professional structure hair, oval structure ■ One of the difficulties in dy­ pull a coed's hair because of After constant wear and abuse hair, and flat sturcture hair. what m ight com e off A m icroscope reveals the in handmade wigs, hair has a ing to a darker color is This is due to the increasing thorough cleaning of the hair­ cross-section differences in the tendency to invert into the wrong use ot hairpieces as im aginat­ piece beforehand If there three types of hair. The round side of the wig. This only com es ion in hair styling breaks loose is any spray left on the hair­ sturcture found in Oriental hair about through the abuse of the H airpieces have revolutionized piece, the hair color will streak is thick, coarse, straight and person handling it. the entire concept of hair styl­ and the item will tie ruined. strong. The oval sturcture found A m achinem ade wig lasts from ing Dynel has drawbacks in European hair is wavy and six months to a year longer The tremendous increase in than a handmade one because holds a set well. The flat struc­ Many hairdressers feel that the hair goods market has boost­ of its tightness and the effect­ synthetic hair, a popular alter­ ture hair does not respond w ell ed the business into one of the ive m achine labor. to any set. native to 100 per cent human • fastest growing m arkets in the United States. Well-made? Most hairpieces are made Hair fashions Dying hazardous Achieving what is called satile. hair, is really not that ver­ The boom began four years The hairpiece at left Is a cascade of curls and the "exotic" co lo rs-v ery light from the oval structure hair. Dynel w ill tangle. Olma said, ago and in 1967 the over­ blonde shades by bleaching of so actually the best item to Many manufacturers have re­ hair on the right illustrates afail sltuatedon a head- all business figure amounted to hair pieees causes a 70 per cently begun to chem ically treat block In the correct wearing position, buy Dynel is the switch. $1 billion. cent hair loss. Olma said. The Dynel falls don't alw ays Oriental hair to remove the Wigs are not new. They have m icroscopic hair barbs and make into a weft. A w eft is a long thinner hair on the bottom to For exam ple, if one started with pass for natural hair, but the existed since Egyptian history and their populatitv has continued that type of hair more manag- able. Manufacturers call this line of strands of hair which make the hair is sewn onto the wig cap in a seem thicker, 10 pounds of hair, the weight sw itches are good since they The handmade w igs and other at the final color would be three can be made into buns. That’s dedication! on the European continent pounds. Lighter colors demand Through rain, snow, sleet, or dark of night: over process '"peeling." circular pattern. handmade hairpieces are light- For effective Dynel setting, from century to century. mountains, through trackless deserts oreven across The wig. fall or any of the The hair in the w efts is er. cooler and cost m ore be- m ore processing, Olma a said. spray starch may be used as Many pitfalls For an am ateur to dye or a setting lotion although the variations should be well-made. sewn on one side and then on cause of the labor involved campus: I’d walk a mile to read the State News. Many pitfalls face the hair- c i kI a .aic nhrtin hv M i c h a e l ! Serna A prospective buyer should the other. Some of th strands The piece looks d elicate, but bleach her own wig. fall, wiglet. set may not hold v etv long. take the piece at the ends of of hair in m achine made w igs the hair and rub it together are loosely stitched, so m an­ so it will tangle. If it gets ufacturers m ake the w igs with spongy and feels like brillo, chances are the piece isn't m ore hair to allow for the event­ ual loss. However, after the ARTS, LETTERS SERIES a good buy and the tangle won t first few brushings the hair brush out. If one strokes it that is loose will com e out. with a hairbrush, and the hair falls right into place, the item is well-made. Olma explained that the barbs No more hair loss w ill result with everday wear. Amount important Olma advises looking for the Violinist, pianist present recita The concert is free to the of a single hair all point in Violinist Walter Verdehr and be his first recital on campus. formed the Verdehr Quartet. amount of hair in the rows of public. one direction-from the hair root pianist David Renner w ill pre­ Verdehr played in several Program Roster a m achinem ade wig. They should to the end of the hair. When string quartets which have Included in the program are The MSU Concert Band, un­ not be sparse or widely spaced. sent a recital at 8:15 tonight in all these tiny barbs in a hair­ toured New York State under "LaFolia" bv Cornelli-Kries- der the direction of Harry Be- It is also important to haye the Music Auditorium. piece point in th sam e direction, Verdehr. asst, professor of the auspices of Lincoln Center. ler. "Sonata No. 2" by Bela gian, will perform at 4 p.m. an abundance of hair at The as in a normal head of hair, m usic, joined the MSU m usic Whiie studying at the U nivers­ Bartók. "‘Fantaisie, Opus 159" Sunday in the ‘U' Auditorium. Washing wigs the »piece will have the sam e crown. Some manufacturers put longer hair on the top and the faculty in September. This will ity of Graz in Austria, he by Franz Schubert and "Tzi­ The concert w ill include, a m anagability as before it w as gane" by Maurice Ravel. perform ance of "La Fiesta The finger brush should cut. The recital, which is a part M exicans," a Mexican folk­ be used gently on the edges of the wig when washing it, Manufacturing methods In handmade pieces the hair is attached to the net a few Poet Langston Hughes/ of MSU's Arts and Letters Ser­ ies. is open to the public with­ out charge. * * * song symphony by H. Owen Reed. prof. of m usic. Bach and Strauss Other selections will include black artist of introspect piece owner. Don Olma of Wig hai?s at a tim e and doubled Three students in MSU's "Toccata and Fugue in 1) Min­ Warehouse in Lansing said knotted with the hair itself. doctoral degree program in or" by Bach. "Der Rosenkava- "We learned the hard way. This double knotting is difficult m usic composition w ill present lier Waltzes" by Strauss. It's a shame to have the public for the untrained eye to see selections of their work at 8:15 "Celebration Overture " by suffer the sam e way we did. and for this reason the buyer p.m. Monday in the Union Creston. "Boston Pops March " Labels don't necssarily make should make sure the item has Lounge. by Ernest Gold. "Incantation By JEA N N E SADDLER and work down to him self. He com m ented. “ Langston w as the quality.'' Olma said. it. voice of black protest in this Charles J. Hall's "Ulalum e." WALTER VERDEHR and Dance" by Chance and the State N ew s Staff Writer used him self as a point of d e ­ Most manufacturers presently The hair is all hand tied to inspired by his admiration of first m ovem ent from Borodin's "Langston Hughes didn’t con­ parture and worked out in re­ tim e and believed that there prof. of m usic, and Leon Gre­ use Korean and Indonesian hair com pletely cover the base net. the poetry of Edgar Allan Poe. "Symphony No. 2." sider him self a black species lating to his American con­ could be no playing with an op­ gorian. doctoral candidate in for their goods. Olma said. Machinemade w igs differ in will open the program. — The concert is open to the on trial in an Anglo-Saxon m or­ tacts." Adams noted that this pressor." m usic, will aid in the perform ­ Years ago Spanish and Italian that the hair is hand fed to C harles, C. Stephens w ill of­ public without charge. ality play.” Samuel W. Adams, attitude w as basic and germain Adams also discussed Hughes ing of com positions. hair were the m ost prevalent. a sewing machine to be sewn fer "States of Mind." repre­ in H ughes'assertion of id^ntjty in relation to the African Rena­ poet, w riter and creative w rit­ From this originaj^ seif-as-. senting'' irWpfressions of three t /( VJl(, . . •I /ti ing instructor at Tuskegee In- issance. He noted that the re­ stitute said at a m eeting of yie sertion. Hughes devuopiled the birth of African literature oc­ paintings by U m berto Boccioni. I ■ ’ WJ/. UblH IATTENTION CAR OWNERS) Black * Student’s Alliance last week sam e kind of identity ffof The black race. This point is curred first among French "A fo m t Hymn,’" by Burt E. Szabo is a solo cantata for Staudt assumes GM post speaking Africans. In his "An­ tenor and orchestra based on an The poet spoke on“ Langston brought out in one of Hughes thology of Negro and M adagas­ * C o m p le te front end r e p a ir and Hughes and theAfrican Renais- poem s, "Around Harlem the can Poetry." published in 1937, adapted text b y William Cullen Bryant. as C h evy marketing director alignment sance - Sun Do Move." “ He extracted Leon Dem osque tried to recap­ Following the developm ent of the essen ce of the Negro life Set to Perform General Motors announced Staudt's students have honor­ ture the mood of Africa before Gean Greenwell, assoc, prof. Monday the appointment of Tho­ ed him many tim es with stand­ the black poet’s works. Adams style, and made of it a litera- the slave traders cam e. “ He * B rakes * Suspension said that Hughes w as the first ture,” Adams noted, goes to find in Africa a pas­ of m usic; mezzo-suprano Cora m as Staudt, chairman of MSU's ing ovations after his final lec­ Enman, a graduate student in Dept, of Marketing and Trans­ tures. In 1966 Staudt won the black writer to look within him- Hughes w as not an intellec- toral beauty and a lost pres- m usic: J. Loren Jones, asst, portation to a newly created Distinguished Faculty Award * Wheel balancing * Steering self and say “ I am; I e x ist.” tual, but rather had a tremen- tine integrity,” Adams said. prof. of m us’c; and the MSU As a black man, he knew he had dous sensitive talent. His poe- position with Chevrolet. tor. in President Hannah's Although Hughes visited Af­ Symphony Orchestra under the his back against the w all, and try is not a rationale or des- words. "Bringing to the Uni­ rica and w as very interested Ltaudt w ill assum e the posi­ LISKEY’S Auto Safety Center chose an through his poetry. ethnic response cription of black life. Adams explained, but expresses it in a in its culture, he is m ore strongly related to the Harlem direction of Dennis Burkh. asst. tion of director of marketing for the Chevrolet Motor Div. of versity. to his colleagues, and to him self a large m easure of 124 SOUTH LARCH IV 4-7346 “ Langston Hughes didn't sensitive, feeling way. distinction" as a marketing R enaissance. GM on Jan. 1. start from American society "The acid of American rac­ S N c o r r e c t io n specialist and educator. ism did not corrode Langston s “ Langston knew he w as not Staudt left MIT to join the Staudt has succeeded in consciousness. It cam e through an American citizen in the A story about MSU's annual MSU faculty in 1955. teaching building MSU's Marketing Dept, in all of his poetry that he liked term ’s full meaning. But he fall blood drive in Friday’s one of the largest undergrad­ to a pre-eminent position in knew he w as not an African eit­ A sh aver th a t g iv e s people." Adams said. He then dem onstrated the poet's com ­ passion. sense of humor and her. A creature of his own cir­ cum stance, he described the paper identified Ron Cook. Al­ pha Phi Omega scouting ad­ viser. as having given two gal­ uate courses in the College of Business. His textbook. "A M anagerial Introduction to the nation. Provost Howard R. N eville said that Staudt is res- pons.bile for the present posi­ dram atic talent with excerpts life around him. He concentrat­ a lm o s t t w ic e th e s h a v e s from Hughes' works. “ We’re in a tim e of increas­ ed on the plight of the black American in a racist so ciety ,” lons of blood since 1964. The name should have been Fred Szarka. Laingsburg senior. Marketing." has becom e one of the top selling books in the field. tion 'he Marketing Dept, oc- cupie ' Dr. Staudt has built a good ing turbulance in writing." he Adams said. p e r c h a rg e staff, an:' w ill conti';, N eville sai Marketing Dept, ' be important." But this is the U niversity's loss and I'm ;orry is w o r t h s o m e s tu d y . to see him go. They also have some extras that make Our Rechargeable 45CT (below) gives you 3 weeks of close shaves on a single charge. (Which is nearly twice as much as any other shaving a lot easier. A separate pop-up trim­ D o e s th e mer, snap-open clean­ rechargeable,) And it gives you the choice of using the cord, or not. . ing, a handy o n/ of f switch, and a 110/220 P h a r m a c e u t ic a l F ie ld It also has a lot of things in common voltage selecto r for with our new Tripleheader Speedshaver” 35T. Both shavers have 18 rotary blades set in three new ‘floating" Microgroove™ heads, travel use. Whichever you choose, you can't get o f f e r e x c e p tio n a lly that follow the contours of your face. a closer shave. And they both shave you as close or closer than a blade in 2 out of 3 shaves. (As tested in an independent lab by some very in­ R e w a r d in g dependent men.) you can't g et any closer s a le s p o s itio n s ? Yes, a n d Roche will train you for them. p.uny car an d e x p e n c o tuition i efu pi o g i a m and An oppor t uni t y e s p e t rally for p e o p le w h o like eli.il an uns u i p as s t al r o m p i ' ‘L en se, e na a , e p m i h am l ong mg a s s i g n m e n t s . i l your i n t e r e s t s an d a p t i t u d e s run to s a l e s , if you h a v e s o m e e x p e r i e n c e or Y oij i i ‘.ir m n g s c a n uh i me of e a r n i n g s , a' ' ■<>< l a ho n , and c a v i l e to the phy s n mil and hi s patient". Alt.a Locations olier considerable choicc. t ho l o u g h training y e n p o s i t i o n as. a R o c h e Me d u al W e will h e mi ei vi e w mg al Mi c h i g a n S t a t e l Ini ve e ,dy S a le :. R e p r e s e n t a t i v e will b e o n a hi ghl y p r o f e s s i o n a l un N o v e m b e r 20, at t hè S t u di mi S e r v a b ui l di ng l evel a | . c. i hot i with a pi j rp o s e If you c a n ’t mn k e il, c m d l e s i i m e oi l> tt> a lo Mr. Gerry Ma ni s hi n, D e p a r t me n t MS N 2 1 2 7 5 Virgi nia R o c h e is an i mp r e s s i v e n a m e in t he el ha a I p h a r ma Dri ve, Sout hf i e l d, Mi c h i g a n c e u t i c a l i ndust ry Our g r o wt h pat t ern is e n v i a b l e R o c h e is part i cul arl y n o t e d for its c o m m i t m e n t to g U 'id a , r e s e a r c h and its r e s e a r c h f aci l i t i es B U H R()t LABORATORIES D IVISION R e g i n n m g sal ary is di s t i nct l y at t ract i ve, e s p e c i a l l y fe U H S H O F F M A N N LA R O C H E INC. w h e n you c o n s i d e i t he e x t r a s - s a l e s b o n u s e s , corn 1 9 6 8 N o r t h A m e r i c a n P h i l i p s C o m p a n y , I n c .. m o E a s t 4 « r ,ti a c e ', , N e w t o . . ; , N e w n 10C 17 T u e s d a y , N o v e m b e r 19, 1968 j Michigan State N e w s, E a st L a n sin g , M ich ig an S P O R T S S ’ b o o t e r s b o m b T a r H e e l s , 5 - 0 By PAM BOYCE NCAA Tourney. MSU. ceded ahead midway through the first The third period w as all 24 goals. Keves-’ season output MSU took- 29 shots in the %V*r MidyL’oct wv-«-- Ve out one in on an as he tallied tw ic e - ties the MSI’ record se t in ¿65 ■game, while North Carolina CHAPEL H ^ L , , N.C --The defeated Nopth Carolina bv scor­ assist from Tommy Kreft. tne frrsi u n a s s is t e d riff ifie set* oy ituy huscn ana rrtovvs rtf'O 's' • shdl if times, jd e 6aum:*g. All teachers eral Spirits Division-Union Oil Co of Cali­ 1 qt. 14 oz. 25C 1 /2 Gal, 29< 4 oz. Pkg. EAST LANSING Duplex four years The Independent Majority will meet at must Imre a valid teaching certificate fornia chemistry and chemical, civil, 8' • • • • old Income $385 month. Separate 7 p.m. Wednesday in 38 Union, Location: Caracas. Venezuela. All Mas­ and mechanical engineering majors (j3 * • • • • utilities. Also-MSU mean Four ters with teaching certificates may inter­ Location: various V- The Students' Advisory Committee for view. United States Bureau of Mines, chem­ ?/ X.) bedroom colonial, one acre lot. base- Commonwealth Associates. Inc : civil, ical engineering, metallurgy, mechan­ Lft i C ment. two car garage. $27.500 Romance Languages will meet at 7 p.m. BOM' $2.500 down. Call Ray Zeni or Gladys Wednesday in 33 Union Allinterested mechanical, ahd electrical engineering ics. materials science, chemistry, phys­ * Hamlin. 882-5737. ROLLAND & students are invited to attend majors . Location: Cherry Lane Apartments TERM PAPERS, theses, general ........................................................ Genesee Merchants Bank and Trust various. typing Prompt serviceExperienced^ WILL BABYSIT in my Spartan Village Co.: English, history, accounting, finan­ Walled Lake Consolidated School Dis­ • • • • Open 9 a.m. - 9 p.m. - • • • • 337-2603. home. Hour. day. week. 65c hour. cial administration, business law. in­ trict: Elementary School: early and lat­ Ç f a p V â è ...................VI ’ References 355-1007 3-11/21 surance. and office administration, eco­ er elementary education (December and Mon. thru Frl, TYPING DONE in my home 2*2 blocks nomics. management, and marketing ma­ March graduates only); Junior High 9 a.m. - 6 p.m. - Sat, from campus 332-1619 ................... 0 WINTER TERM--one girl' for' three jors (December and March graduates School: home economics and mentally " W e Give Gold Bond Stamps” only» (B.M). Location: Flint. Mich handicapped majors (December and TYPING TERM PAPERS AND THESES Blrl apartment. *62 River House 351- Grand Blanc Community Schools: Ele­ March graduates only); and Senior High Electric typewriter, fast service ®79 4-11 22 mentary School , early and later elemen­ School: art. industrial arts (drafting, met­ NOW! SPA R TA N SUNOCO (Michigan at Harrison) ¡s in the Gold Bond stamp fam ily 332-4597 12-12 6 ......................... ........................................................... WORK AS night receptionist women s tary education, physical education, art. als. and machine shop», and mathematics music, special education, mentally han­ majors . Location Jackson Sharon Vliet. 484-4218 10-12 3 Michigan 48239 3-1119 mathematics (general*, and physical and Cheboygan. Mich. k T u e s d a y , N o v e m b e r 19, 1968 IQ Michigan State N ew s, E ast L ansing, M ich ig a n Who Puts Pressure on the University? C e n s o r s h i p t h r e a t s o l d p r o b l e m r.AC’T IN PART mi ANY aivi\7 PICKETING D ir i? r T ,H r sumDtion" sumption in in pointing out avoid influencing the com m it- pointing story on page one told of the . of the Michigan Publi the Michigan Public Acts of (continued from page one) tee's decision. editors’ walkout and their re­ 1925 which prohibits “ this kind extravagant phraseology in- OR OTHER FORM OF MASS com m unists on cam pus of capricious deductions from . ReporVersued Editors walkout placem ents with som e atten- Wfc.MQNSTRA.TlON, » y*”\e • f T V -. ~ a r j r r g ? *•— •." ■»'!%■' *'• w à p Mr Bertha n proceeds the Michigan (toys' S ta le.” phasis in origlila'/' V •• *y editcr. .managing e&tfor am1 torial p age one colum nist ex­ Aiivv Basing (nr S?.* in libel The suspension notice con­ The whole issue w as circvniv- sports editor, who, with the with his contem plated illegal dam ages. He did riot pursue plained that ,J h e State News' cluded with an apology to the vented in the pages of a rather editor-in-chief, com prised the endeavor," Repas said, "it Riders T ry M ic h ig a n S ta te N e w s the suit, however, and the case carried no story Friday be­ American Legion and to Boys' placid State News. The sus­ policy-making board for the cause of a tim e shortage and would seem that students and Train Entrv never got to court. State for the State N ew s edi­ pension notice and the sm all State N ew s, dissented from because "people were pushed faculty will have no choice but reply were the only com m ents "It was obviously a haras­ Kennedy Departs For torial. sment kind of suit." Robert Wells' and Berm an’s decision. into positions they had never to band together and raise the Foreign Conferences The State N ew s summ er in the paper whose editorial After a series of m eetings, the before occupied.” necessary legal funds to pre- Repas. professor of labor and staff printed a brief statem ent page contained two editorials four editors left their jobs at Wells explains vent so crass a violation of the industrial relations, sqid. Re­ beneath the suspension notice (one on the friendliness of the State News. Also on that page w as an law." pas had aided Miss Basing in which is interesting only in MSC. the other on the value In a detailed report on why editorial by Wells attem pting The student tax for the State her research for the series. that it is a direct contrast to of foreign students visiting lo­ they resigned. the editors to explain why he and Berman N ew s has also been connected But m ore important than what might happen under a cal hom es), a picture of Sparty pointed out that the U niversity censored the Schiff docu­ with the problem of censor­ the libel suit w as the fact that Tliomas Candidate sim ilar situation today. It statue and three Tom and would not provide any com ­ ments. ship. Jerry cartoons. the State N ew s suddenly got For Con-Con l*ost read: m ents on the Schiff case and "Once this y ea r,” Wells The history of the student "The above-signed editorial The State N ew s resumed another "editorial consultant" that Berman had handed down wrote, "he tax goes back to 1928 when the (or "general m anager" as the (Berm an) exer­ does not represent entirely the publication with the opening a flat order during the sum m er cised his power by pulling a Board of Agriculture, then the Old news? feeling of the sum m er staff of of the fall term on Sept. 2. position has been known since 1963). that no letter about Schiff, pro story he considered ethically chief policy-making body for In 1961, the State News faced the threat of censor­ the State News. Students 1950. No mention w as made or con, could be printed. unsotind until the Faculty the college, authorized a $1 per Louis Berman, who is now ship when it printed a series of articles accusing the wishing to aid our cause most of the events of the previous The State N ew s, they noted, Com m ittee on Student Affairs year tax for the State News. involved in the controversy University of bowing to the pressure right-wingers. can do so by NOT TAKING summer. had given scant space to the had finished its deliberations In 1937. this tax w as changed In that issue, however, an surrounding the State N ew s important issue, and they . . .The real question to 50 cents per term. over article explaining to the in­ printing of so-called obscen­ therefore saw a need for the Retain fee ities. replaced George Hough, printing the docum ents was coming freshman how the P o w e c a s e g o e s to c o u rt; publication of documents. not over whether' but In March of 1940. the student State News runs had this cur­ a ssociate professor of journal­ They consulted various pro­ ‘when'." body of MSC voted to retain ious paragraph: ism . as top man at the State fessional authorities w ho He concluded with a classic the fee. The fee w as raised in Strong editorial page News. agreed that the State News appeal to respect for authority: 1944 to 75 cents a term with "The State N ew s is also one Why Hough w as suddenly re­ would be within proper legal "Don't w e all have to trust deficits to be paid by the Uni­ g o v t. collision m a y a r is e of the few college dailies that placed by Berman is not cer­ boundaries in publishing the m aintains a strong and inde­ pendent editorial page." tain. but R epas feels that it w as because Hough failed to documents in question. censor Miss Basing's series of Dissident editors in the honesty and integrity of those who are in a position of authority?" versity. Then in 1947, the student tax w as dropped and the State This does not mean, necessar­ He w as in a dentist's chair in The State News again had a WASHINGTON (A P i-T h e Wells and Berman per­ Now the State N ew s is faced N ew s w as added to the Uni­ Supreme Court took on Adam ily. that the justices will decide New York City when he received brush with censorship. This articles with their far-reaching sisted. however, and the docu­ with possible censorship again versity's General Fund. In if the House has the right to word of the court's action. Hen­ tim e in the more enlightened im plications on the adm inis­ Clayton Pow ell's case against m ents w ere never published. - in what Professor Repas other words, the University ry R. W illims one of P ow ell's year of 1961. tration. the House Monday, risking a bar the seating of elected The dissident editors said they calls "censorship after the paid the State N ew s $35,000 a m em bers. For instance, the attorneys, said "I guess that Following a series of four ar­ year, thus centralizing admin­ collision between two branches Paul Schiff case opposed Wells' policy of mak­ fact." court could conclude Pow ell is w as som e compensation for ticles by a staff writer, Mary of government. In Novem ber of 1965 a much ing all decisions him self and The charge of censorship istration control of the paper. entitled to a hearing and yet going to the dentist. He was Basing, the writer w as threat­ The surprise action m eans m ore com plicated joust with said they would return to the isn't as clear cut as in 1950. The rem oval from the fee decide it does not have the happy at the news." ened with a libel suit and the basis in 1947 w as apparently attorneys for the New York State N ew s only if Wells 1961 or 1965. The Academ ic constitutional authority to force Pow ell, a black, lost his seat State News suddenly found it­ censorship arose in the State D em ocrat will have a chance to agreed to decide editorial Freedom Report has spelled m ade without formal vote by Congress to seat him. after a select com m ittee of the self with a new "editorial con­ N ew s office -- a battle that argue in the court that Pow ell's policy dem ocratically and if out that the editor-in-chief is the board of trustees. A. A. House had found him guilty of sultant." ended with the walkout of four exclusion from his House seat Momentarily, at least. Powell Berman would use his "final solely responsible for the con­ Applegate, who w as then head "gross misconduct" as a con­ Miss Basing's articles m em bers of the editorial March 1. 1967. w as arbitrary has scored an interim victory say" authority m ore judi­ tent of the State News. As of the school of journalism, gressm an and recommended that charged the U niversity with board and the resignation of and unconstitutional. in his battle with the House. ciously. late as 1965, this responsibility said m em bers of the board of he be censured, fined and keeping files, using inform ers six key staff m em bers in all. The walkout w as on a Thurs­ was in the hands of Berman. publications felt that by plac­ stripped of all seniority. He and "generally holding itself The issue centered around Speculators await day afternoon. Friday morn­ Repas said Berm an's threat ing the State N ew s directly in had represented predominantly responsible for non-academic the fight of a graduate student, Paul Schiff. to be readm itted ing's State N ew s m ade ab­ to fine three editors who were the financial hands of the Uni­ black Harlem for 22 years and actions of its students and fac­ to the U niversity after he had solutely no mention of the sit­ responsible for the "obscene" versity would give the admin­ w as one of the m ost powerful ulty." been denied readm ission be­ uation. article is a direct violation of istration stronger control over political figures in Congress as The reason for this. Miss The C om m ittee for Stu­ the Academ ic Freedom R e­ the editorial policies of t ?>* word on stability chairman of the House Educa­ Basing said, w as because the cause of his political beliefs. A few days before the F ac­ dents' Rights (CSR). an early port and of the ideal of free­ State News. tion and Labor Committee. U niversity w as under extrem e radical group, filled what they dom of the press. The present policy ot nfiarg Pow ell was re-elected in a pressure from fanatical right- ulty C om m ittee on Student Af­ called the "new s vacuum" by Threat of fines ing students $1 per term was special race in April 1967 but wing groups to purge itself of fairs was going to deliberate distributing 3.000 copies of the " He also noted that the threat reinstituted in August 1961. did not ask the House to seat ".pinko elem ents." Schiff's case, the State News Michigan Daily--which gave of fines is equally objection­ PARIS A P' - Money speculators m arked tim e throughout him. Instead, a battery of prom­ The last in the series proved acquired the list of the U niver­ the com plete story on the able since such action could Kurope Monday. awaiting the reply of central banks and govern­ inent law yers pressed for a fed­ to be the coup de grace for sity's charges against Schiff m ents to the onslaught on world m onetary stability. and Schiff's reply to the walkout. be a violation of Act. No. 62 eral court ruling and Powell those involved in Miss Bas­ The speculators had dumped an estim ated $1 billion worth >f In Monday's paper, a short spent long stretches relaxing in ing's expose. In it. she criti­ charges. French francs. British pounds. American dollars and other cur- Bimini. Harlem voters elected cized William Hicks. Jr.. Charles C. Wells, then State BARNES * NOBLE rencie into world m arkets last week in the hope of a large, quick him again this month. chairman of the un-American N ew s editor-in-chief. after profit on possible upward revaluation of the West G erm an The district and circuit courts A ctivities C om m ittee and an conferring with Berman, de­ m ark )espite repeated official denials in Frankfurt and Bonn that such a m easure was in the offing, the run on G erm an m arks reached crisis proportions at the end ot last week. The French franc, weakened by the afterm ath of last spring s in Washington ruled against East in May 1967. rejected an in­ itial plea for a hearing. Pow ­ ell's attorneys petitioned the Lansing realtor, o f cided not to print either ot Pow ell while the Supreme Court, "veiled innuendo and false as- the statem ents, ostensibly to KEYNOTES tim e saving general strike, suffered the most damage. Supreme Court again last May. (S 9 H 5 S B In Basel. Switzerland. Central Bank governors discussed inter­ The appeal w as put aside by the sim p lified national action to m eet the crisis. Close secrecy w as kept on their two-dav meeting. court several tim es. P o w e l l s attorney said the C h e m is tr y S IM P L IF IE D fle x ib le our ContrarVto expectation, the buying spree eased off when money study aids House, in judging the qualifica­ m arkets reopened Monday morning after a tense weekend. In F rankfurt, the G erm an central bank announced that it would maintain the dollar at the intervention level of 3.9700 m arks and tions of an elected m em ber, is restricted to those set forth ir, H ap id R ovtaw s*!tf Taato * Ft»«) ElUttto hot dogs the Constitution and cannot go A M M M ** W ith Rap)a nation» thus helped to dampen the speculative lever. further. Since Powell is at leasi OtotiMaryof ï«tb» The influential P aris newspaper LeMonde said the remedies expected to be announced Tuesday would not weigh exclusively on G erm any, but would be an act of international solidarity to 25 vears old. a U S citizen, anc a resident of New York, the 1. Wow! What is it? are state from which he w as elect­ dem onstrate that the resources of the present world monetary ed. they said he must be seated system could resist speculative gambling on a vast scale. Various m easures forecast bv LeMonde included a possible They charged his exclusior "was at least in substantial pari Pvthon LTD. l'ullv C< nipped. Everything about the KEYNOTES series makes for ease in studying. All the information about this long. Germ an tax on foreign deposits and a direct G erm an stand-by each topic is carefully distilled and ingeniously based on reasons of race. arranged in a 4 page unit to help the student credit to France. help himself at every step along the way to mastery of the subject. How long UNUSUAL FEATURES OF KEYNOTES Is G r a s s G r e e n e r ? Quick, self-test on each topic appears on the first, narrow page of the 4-page unit is Exposed column on page 3 for student to jot his answers (A Drug Symposium) Answers with brief explanations to the ques tions revealed on page 3 directly behind the test YOUR What happcni'c 1 to your Viper hat’s what, voli said ; hoot Basic facts of the topic given in a column on Mark IV? e Sidewinder Eight. the facing page E rickson Kiva 8:00 - 10:00 P .M . I just couldn’t idmtiív with that car. Additional information on the topic given in another column HUNGRY? Wednesday Night Plus these a d d itio n a l features Dictionary-index of terms provided for review shorten it. Try a tai- or future reference gy pizza or one of our Sample final exam great sandwiches. All A panel discussion with audience delivered instantly at Keys prepared for the specific text on which participation. the student’s course is based no extra cost. KEYNOTES are programmed to the course and are cleverly organized to permit the student to review his course rapidly, then use his time to study only the material he does not know. KEYNOTES Now Ready More KEYNOTES Available in 1968 ACCOUNTING $2.25 AMERICAN HISTORY TO 1877 $2.00 BIOLOGY $2.00 AMERICAN HISTORY SINCE 1865 $2.00 m ore Wednesday - Legal Aspects of Drugs CHEMISTRY—Vol. 1 $2.25 ANTHROPOLOGY $2.25 CHEMISTRY—Vol. 2 $2.25 CALCULUS AND ANALYTIC A big 16” one item Don’t you think voll ought to 5. That’s wliat I did yesterday- COLLEGE MATH $2.50 GEOMETRY $2.50 pizza for $2.50. hold onto a ear more than a signed up for Living Insurance ECONOMICS $2.25 GERMAN GRAMMAR $2.25 B W illia m B a r r - Residence Hall P rogram s month, Chet? fro in Equitable. At my age the ENGLISH GRAMMAR $2.00 MICROBIOLOGY $2.25 DORM DEL. ONLY cost is low, and 1 get solid GEOLOGY $2.25 PHYSICAL SCIENCE $2.25 MON.-THURS. When von sen a great protection now that will continue MODERN MATH $2.50 PSYCHOLOGY $2.25 hi is coining sour wav, to cover my family later when PHILOSOPHY $2.25 WESTERN CIVILIZATION-Vol. 1 $2.25 # Roy Swortfigger - Michigan State Police von lias e to grab it. I get married. Plus a nice CALL 332-6517 KEYNOTES are handy paperbacks, 8 x 10%" in size, Plus Benjamin Gibson fro m AC LU - (A m erican C ivil nest egg when I retire. and just right for student budgets, only $2.25 average. L ib e rtie s Union) w ill present the dissident view With the right set of wheels, you’ll go a long way; ON S A L E A T VARSITY ?or information about Living Insurance, see The Man from Equitable Presented by •or career opportunities at Equitable, see your Placement Officer, or write: Lionel M. Stevens, Manager, College Employment. OOKYORÇ a c r o s s fro m th e Union A c r o s s 'f r o m B erk ey H all C ity p a rk in g a t r e a r F r e e p a r k in g - s id e of s to r e Associated Women Students T H E I e q U IT A B L E The ICiinitnhle I.Me Assurance Society of the United States T ic k e ts on sale at both stores 128-5 Avenue of the Americas, New York, New York 10019 fo r the New Folk C oncert, Nov. 22. _______ An I.r,„„t I11> iaittilhit,f l-.myUXKr, ■'*- '' U'luMa1-1'' )»««