Tenure dispute provokes Garskof Æ fr» By CHRIS MEAD . State News.Staff Writer asst, professor of psychology, said Garskof's name w as not on the list of tenure recom m endations approved by »the Board morning. The trustees" N o v e y b e j S t a t e ¡126- A’nnlovtrtf*’* nnwitiifi'tfcv N e w unfh s E x c lu s iv e f r e ajje a /Of afiP.VtoWi. **«■• —.If ,----- $ M ; 'j m t 'Ywal etkay We w ilt resign at the end of m eeting includes all tenure recom m en­ anomer institution ’ * the school year if he is qpt granted tenure by his department. dations for«the coming scho.ol year Garskof. who has been an asst, pro­ fessor for six years, said. "This ap­ regarding the criteria the department used for m e in this punitive appoint­ ment. O’Kelly said the psychology depart­ m ent is "really interested" in Garskof H Lawrence I. O’Kelly, chairman of "My im pression is that I’ve been pointment would make m e a very, very ment which is tantamount to a dis­ fired," Garskof said. "They’re asking m issal." and therefore wanted to study his pro­ the Psychology D ept., said the de­ old asst, professor." m e to le a v e -it’s a punitive appoint­ Garskof said he would remain at MSU g ress as a teacher further by reappoint­ partment has recom m ended that Gar­ He said his teaching, research and ment in term s of m y career. " if the department had taken a less harsh ing him. for two more vears skof be reappointed asst, professor public service records should make He said the departm ent's decision him highly sought after by the U niver­ stance by granting him reappointment He said the procedure for determ in­ outside the tenure system pending for­ will make it im possible for him to sity but that instead he has reached as an asst, professor within the ten­ ing promotions and tenure is largely m al approval from the Board of Garskof quitting? rem ain at MSU and that he already an “end-of-the-road appointment." ure system . (P lease turn to the back page) Trustees. Friday Sunny . . . It is. . . MICHIGAN . . . with little tem perture TATE N E W S . . . m ore trouble to make a m axim than it is to do right. -M ark Twain STATE ch a n g e. High today 45-50, low tonight 34-38. Cloudy and warmer UNIVERSITY Saturday. E ast Lansing, Michigan Novem ber 22,1968 10c Vol. 1 Number 90 5-3 MARGIN MSU remains uncommitted Board approves request; in g ra p e battle May kept as consultant By F R E D SHERWOOD State N ew s Staff Writer The decision to purchase or not pur­ chase a lowly bunch of table grapes By RON INGRAM his resignation effective June 30, 1969, to get all his benefits should not have m ay go far beyond the usual pinching State N ew s Staff Writer but he w ill now step down Nov. 30. been allowed." and tasting as the controversy concern­ The MSU Board of Trustees approved the In voting to accept May’s resignation "I don’t like the way this thing w as ing a boycott of California grapes con­ early retirem ent request of Philip J. May. the board also approved a recom m enda­ m anipulated," White said. Hannah wants tinues to grow. MSU treasurer and vice-president for bus­ tion by Hannah to employ May on a day to the board to be a rubber stamp for him. He The United Farm Workers Organizing iness and finance, at their Thursday morn­ day basis in D ecem ber as a financial con­ w asn’t sure he could get his way after Jan. 1 S i t t i n g in C om m ittee has asked the consuming ing m eeting. sultant. May w ill cooperate with the firm when Huff and Martin take their seats." public to boycott California grapes in May requested the retirem ent through of Ernst & Ernst, m anagem ent consul­ Both m en expressed displeasure with Newly elected trustees W arren Huff and Blanche M artin visited the m arkets in support of striking field President Hannah. Mav had submitted tants of Cleveland. Ohio, who are doing a board chairm an Don Stevens for voting workers in California. Mayors John the Board of Trustees meeting Thursday morning. M artin appeared study of the organization of the business with the m ajority. They claim ed that had Lindsay of New York City and Jerom e Stevens wanted to fire May Thursday, his to chuckle as he pondered the recent State News story which has and financial functions of the University. Cavanaugh of Detroit have requested influence would have provided enough been the center of obscenities controversy. that their cities refrain from purchas­ Roger E. Wilkinson, presently asst, vice- (P lea se turn to back page) State News photo by Lance Lagoni ing California grapes for use in city Wilkiinson nom ed president for business and finance, will becom e acting treasurer at a salary of operated institutions such as hospitals and schools. $21.000 a year. May presently receives MSU does not presently have any po­ to succeed M ay With the retirem ent of Philip J. May on Nov. SO, Roger E. Wilkinson, budget"' $37.000. May salvaged an estim ated $100,000 in retirem ent benefits by his early retire­ ment. This is the amount that he had White blasts partisan use licy concerning the purchase of grapes. Em ery Foster, m anager of dormitory food services, said that huyers “ pay attention to quality and price, not where they com e officer in the business office of MSU, accrued in retirem ent annunities during from." of M S U Alumni Association w ill becom e the acting vice-president for his years at MSU. Had he been fired, as it Foster readily adm its that "at least som e" business and finance. w as likely he could have been had he of the 438 cases of grapes purchased by While May w as on sabbatical leave waited until after Jan. 1 when the D em ­ the U niversity during the months of July from March 1 to Sept. 20, Wilkinson w as ocratic trustees-elect Warren Huff and through October "m ust have com e from the acting vice-president. Blanche Martin take their seats on the California." A single case consists of 28 Wilkinson w as graduated from MSU board, he would have lost all benefits. By CHRIS MEAD Assoc, and also heads the Com m ittee to the U niversity for a group of R e­ pounds of grapes, but 152 of the cases in 1957. He had m ore than two years of State N ew s Staff Writer for Better MSU Trustees which en­ publican alumni to m ake “sophomoric w ere concord grapes which would very experience in public accounting before The vote to both accept M ay’s resigna­ Trustee Clair White, D-Bay City, dorsed several Republicans for trustee intonations of 'only w e love dear old likely be local produce. joining the U niversity staff in 1960 as an tion and to have him continue as a con­ blasted the head of the Com m ittee seats. MSU’ as a technique to elect Republican "I'm not sure w e should be placing our­ assistant auditor. He qualified for and re­ sultant was five to three with D em ocratic for Better MSU Trustees Thursday Patenge w as not available for com ­ candidates." selves in a position of taking sides," F os­ ceived his C.P.A. certificate in 1960. trustees C. Allen Harlan, Clair White and for using the MSU Alumni Assoc, ment Thursday regarding the charges White also had a few harsh words ter said. "If the Administration told us no1 While at MSU he has been assigned to Frant Hartman dissenting. to get votes for Republican candidates. made by White. for Republicans within the University to buy grapes, we would not. It would be the internal audit division, and jointly to In an interview following Thursday's and on the Board of Trustees. very difficult for us to know if they wer< the P rovost’s O ffice. His responsibilities Both White and Harlan expressed strong Board of Trustees m eeting. White ac­ White charged that Republican "John Hannah has tried to control picked by union workers or not. I don't include the preparation of the*annual feelings after the m eeting. cused Walter F. Pa tenge of “ using candidates are selected from the alumni his board and give them what you take the position that to be fit to eat it has budget and requests to the legislature "He should be fired,'" Harlan said, “ this the Alumni assoc, service as a Rep­ assn. executive board and that their call the com pany line," he charged. to be a union product." for appropriations. He has also worked on is a whitewash. John Hannah has dug his ublican showcase." cam paign com m ittee is made up of He accused the U niversity adm inistra­ Chairman of the MSU Board of Trustees. the preparation of the new business ac­ grave with this recom m endation. To let Patenge is a m em ber of the ex­ executive board and MSU Developm ent tion of being a "tight little group made Don Stevens, D-Okemos, said that he would him (Mav> choose his own retirem ent and ecutive board of the MSU Alumni Board m em bers. up of the Farm Bureau and a few attend a discussion of the issue at St. John counting manual. "E very tim e w e have an election corporate people." Student Parish Sunday night, but declined these people go into orbit," White President Hannah. Secretary Jack to com m ent on whether the trustees would said. Breslin, Treasurer Philip May. and m ake any m ove towards participating in He said they “ don't have the nerve" Chancellor Durward Varner are playing the boycott. Bernie Offerman. a labor and Last chance to call them selves Republicans so they resort to hiding behind the auspices "the old Akers gam e," he said. He said the late Forrest Akers, as a industrial relations expert, plans to intro­ duce Venustiano Olguin, a migrant Cali­ of the official alumni association. m em ber of the Board of Agriculture, fornia m igrant farm worker organizer, at 'then the major governing body of the the discussion. to contribute During the campaign, the Comm ittee for Better MSU Trustees m ailed cir­ University, w as instrum ental in getting Hannah named to the presidency. Sam Stark, an aid to The United Farm Workers' Lupe Anguino, who has spear­ culars to MSU alumni endorsing Re­ Akers and conservative coalition of headed boycott m ovem ents in D etroit, said publican candidates David Diehl of corporate and farm interests "set that MSU joining the boycott could have a to blood drive Dansville and Richard Ernst of Bloom ­ field Hills a conservative platform. up the (U niversity! we still have." White said. administration significant effect of its chance of success, (please turn to back page) Today from 10 a.m . to 4 p.m . is the They w ere defeated Nov. 5 by D em o­ last chance for students and faculty to crats Warren Huff of Plymouth and contribute to the MSU annual fall blood Blanche Martin of E ast Lansing. drive at Dem onstration Hall. “ Over the past several years," White Though Norm Elwood. the drive-s gen­ eral chairman, said that it would be dif­ ficult to reach the goal of 2,001 pints with­ said, "m y mailbox has been stuffed at election tim e with propaganda which attem pts to show that a group of high- U ’ S e n a te focuses out a special effort from both students and minded alumni are rushing to the faculty, publicity chairman Bob Freehan noted that a heavy turnout is usually ex­ perienced on the last day of the drive. battlem ents to stand off the hats’ who are trving to take over OUR UNIVERSITY’ by som e nefarious black on e q u a l opportunity West McDonel Hall leads all other By MARILYN PATTERSON tion, now filled by Lee, for the coordina­ schem e." units in the drive’s com petition among State N ew s Staff Writer tion of the U niversity’s efforts in the area In a letter sent to P atenge Tuesday, living units. As of Thursday afternoon resi­ The A cadem ic Senate focused its sem i­ of equal opportunity. White urged P atenge to resign his dents there had contributed 52 pints of annual m eeting Wednesday on equal op­ Lee subm itted to the Senate his plana official position on the executive board blood. of the Alumni Assn. portunity at MSU. for equal opportunity program s at MSU Freehan noted that in the women's White contended that it w as harmful The Senate m em bers-including all as reported in the State N ew s Nov. 5. residence hall category “ it is neck and neck regular (full-tim e, tenured) associate pro­ Sabine outlined the U niversity's past between West Wilson and West Holmes fessors and professors-heard reports on the and future efforts at recruiting m ore black halls with Wilson ahead by 3 pints." history and future of MSU's equal op­ students through the Detroit P roject, an portunity program s from Provost Howard Farm House leads the fraternities with pints. “ Every year they do an outstanding Exam deadline R. N eville, Gordon A. Sabine, vice-presi­ Upward Bound program, the Boys Club of Lansing and the Human R elations Com­ job,’’ Freehan said. dent for Special P rojects and Asst. Pro­ m ission of Highland Park. Today is the deadline for perm ission to vost Ronald Lee. Deading in the cooperative living unit Sabine noted that major problems of the repeat final exam inations for University "The land grant institution of the future category is U lrey House with nine pints search for black students are finding well- C ollege courses. w ill prosper in proportion to its ability to of donated blood. prepared black high school graduates, fi­ Perm ission may be obtained from the serve all cla sses and kinds in keeping S p a r t y g iv e s "All the sororities combined have given nancing these students, getting the able U niversity College office, 170 B essey Hall, with its a im s,” N eville said. "To do so less than the faculty, which normally black students to attend MSU and knowing or at the Student Affairs Office, 109 Brody, m eans, as in the past, pioneering in new does not participate m uch," Freehan said. how to choose the apparently unsuccess­ S33 Wonders or G36 Hubbard Halls. directions.” Sparty has donated his blood to the annual blood drive sponsored Winners of the com petition w ill receive ful students who will succeed at MSU. by Alpha Phi Omega and Gamma Sigma Sigma. Despite time and plaques of appreciation. In response to this need, N eville said, The Senate took no formal action. weather, the stately statue managed to contribute his share to the Donors are eligible for individual prizes the trustees created an adm inistrative posi­ worthy cause. State News photo by Joe Isca donated by local m erchants. F r id a y , N o v em b er 22, 1968 9 Michigan State News, E ast Lansing, M ichigan Mine fire foils rescue effort V, aP> of a .r.rf'. . ' * ’ „eased But ft«* ‘ ■" •v- :rv TViandstnn«* n*' 5 "nil — A miner's youqg w ife sobbed O fficials and search directors “ AH attem pts to reduce the we feel there is a chance to smoke w as pouring' from Atcs that the “ only hope now is that could offer'Htt If T" \iMsciAi4w vVtt t educe1 a\v& x.vsv>vavn the fire, w e shafts, instead ’ ol one, when God will work a m iracle" and and dampened any outlook the president William Poundstone. of will not give up hope." daybreak cam e Thursday . ® bring to safety the 78 m en still men would be rescued soon--if Consolidation Coal Co., told a But the gas and air fed flam es "We cannot endanger the trapped Thursday in the inferno at a ll-sin c e the intense heat news conference. refused to yield and little hope lives of resuce team s until we w as held for the 78 who have are certain the fire is contained been pinned deep in the mine and there will be no additional since an explosion rocked the explosions," Poundstone said. W-. A. Tony Boyle, president C o n fe re n c e d e a d lo c k e d com plex of tunnels in Mountai­ neer Wednesdy morning. Coal Co. No. 9 mine of the United Mine Workers, cam e from Wahington to sur­ vey the situation and said "it There were 21 fortunate ones, looks very dark to me. o v e r w o rld m o n e y c ris is those who managed to escape or were pulled from deep ventila­ tion shafts by a giant crane "But I will be the last person in this room to give up hope." BONN, Germ any (API - raising duties and encouraging m ent has said repeatedly that it which removed eight m iners in he said at the news conference. im ports by lowering them. planned no revaluation. a scoop bucket a few at a time. Mannington is a town of Treasury and central bank offi­ Sources said the planned Ger­ Ministers and bankers of Eu­ The eight spent hours huddled about 3,000 near the Pennsylva­ cia ls of the world's 10 richest nations m et in em ergency se s­ man m ove would cut West Ger­ ropean Common Market coun- in a freezing air shaft near a nia state line. Many of the sions until after m idnight but ad­ journed in a deadlock over how m any's export surplus by about tries--Franch, West Germany, ventilation fan. $1.25 billion over 15 months. Italy, Belgium , the Netherlands Company officials also said trapped men have hom es in nearby Farm ington, whose less Tee Pee t im e to ease the crisis m enacing the Conference sources said no and Luxem bourg-m et in sep­ than 1,000 residents still are The trees near the Natural Science Bldg. were the victims when students apparent­ efforts were being made to seal other proposals had come up in arate gatherings but there was recovering from a m illion-dollar French franc and perhaps other air vents in an effort to control ly decided to brighten the neai—winter dreariness of campus with some home-style W estern currencies. sessions that lasted until after 1 no sign they w ere able to agree fire which took four lives at air flow into the mine. One of decoration. State News photo by L a r r y Hagedorn a.m . local time. among them selves. a furniture store 10 days ago. After hearing West German the entrances sealed Wednesday About a dozen German stu­ proposals to curb pressure on was blown open late that night dents forced their way into the the franc by adjusting export and import tariffs, the conferees entrance of the meeting hall Wed by a gas buildup. Asst. Secretary of the Interior Y A LE, U-M scheduled another day of m eet­ ings Thursday. nesday night with signs reading “ Hands off the mark." “ No mark revaluation" and “ Franc PAC sets J. Cordell Moore and Bureau of Mines director Jack O'Leary flew into the Mannington area A West German spokesman said the only substantive discus­ sion had been on Germ any's of­ fer to use the leverage of its crisis--fault of French nation­ alism ." They w ere demonstrating con­ cern that Bonn might revaluate auditions at mid-afternoon Thursday to inspect the scheduled a news conference dam age. They Law profs protest draft its currency upward to foil trad­ Special auditions for the part later in the afternoon. current econom ic superiority to Poised rescue team s, on the By SHARON TEMPLETON deferrm ent if they w ere pre­ ors protest. a d e fe rrm e n t since June. ing based on speculation that it of the executioner in the P er­ help France. Germany proposed alert since the fire broke out State N ew s Staff Writer viously classified 2-S. The protesting professors 1967. should also reque st lim iting its exports to France by would rise. The German govern- forming Arts Co. performance A group of professors at More than just the 1-S de­ urge all graduate students, a s a m a t t e r of statutory right of "The Balcony" will be held following the chain of explosions, Yale and U niversity of Michigan ferrm ent hinges on the pro­ including law students, who a 1-S d e f e rr m e n t until the end at 2 p.m. Saturday in the scene were helpless. The scorching shop of Fairchild Theatre. Al­ heat and billowing sm oke prev­ Law Schools are protesting fessors interpretation of the are called for induction in of the a c ad e m ic year. though the show will be pre­ ented their entering the shafts that the Selective Service Sys­ law. the middle of a term to F u rth e r inform ation m ay Seniors sented Feb. 4-15. rehearsals in an effort to get to the m issing w ill start im m ediately and con­ men. tinue until finals. An athletic "The fire has definitely tem is not correctly inter­ preting the draft law regarding graduate students. The section of the law that im m ediately provides that graduate stu­ Selective Service Board to Charles dents are not entitled to a defer them until the end of of request their be obtained law. by Donahue, Room contacting professor 950. Legal spread during the night. The controversy centers a- 1-S deferrm ent if they have the term. R e se a rc h building. U of M We are returning physique is desirable. round Regulation 1622.15b which been previously classified At the sam e tim e, these Law School. Ann Arbor. to campus Dec. 2-6 grants 2-S deferrm ents to 2-S. also provides that they students, if they have not had Michigan. undergraduate students. shall have no right to a 3-A to photograph all the Under this regulation, two deferrm ent for fatherhood. remaining Senior Portraits The State News, the student newspaper at Michigan State University, is published every class day throughout the year with special Welcome Week and Orientation issues in June and September. Subscription rates are $14 separate divisions provide for a status of 2-S for undergrad­ uate and graduate students. The professors maintain that if their interpretation of the regulation is correct, then G rou p aids interests per year. for the 1969 Wolverine. The regulation provides a a graduate student who was Call 353-5151 for appointment Member Associated Press, United Press International, Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press, Michigan Press Association, Mich­ 2-S deferrm ent for first year law students, but fails to pro­ classified 2-S last year is qualified for a 3-A deferrm ent of m arried students igan Collegiate Press Association, United States Student Press Association. An organization to promote in m a rr ie d housing areas. vide deferrm ent for second this year. the interests of m arried stu­ Henry Risley, E a s t Lansing Second class postage paid a t East Lansing, Michigan. and third year students. The professors are also g ra d u a te student and founder of Editorial and business offices a t 347 Student Services Building, Michigan Professors are protesting challenging the right of the dents w ill m eet Sunday to dis­ the club, said that he has r e ­ State University, East Lansing, Michigan. the classification 'of 1-A now S elective Service System to cuss past and future action. Married Students Associated ceived cooperation from ' di­ being given to second and third place the nam es of graduate Phones: intends to represent the stu­ versity officials in the,w ork Editorial.................................................................................................. 355-8252 year students and are argu­ students at the top of the dents in their protests of Uni­ has done to date. A p r e li m in a r y Classified Advertising ...................................................................... 355-8255 ing for a 1-S deferrm ent if draft l i s t , ,wi}pn they becom e P.S. Seniors already photographujgg please return Display Advertising....................... ...................i . . . 353-8400 versity married housing condi­ support survey showed called during the m iddle of twenty-$ix years of age. B usiness-C irculation........................................................................... 355-3447 m a rr ie d students interested ii your proofs immediately to room 4^ Union 10 am P hotographic..................................................................... • , • • • 355-8311 the academ ic year 1968-69. Inconsistency in the inter­ tions. Some of these com plaints - 5 pm Mon. - F r i. ail are heating of thd'^Mits. condi-1 the organization's goals The Selective Service System pretation of the regulation by m aintains that graduate stu­ the Selective Service Board tion of playground equipment The group will m e e t at 8:3(1 dents are not entitled to any is the basis for the profess­ and generai safety conditions p.m. Sunday in the Union Ballj room. Louis F Hekhuis, direct tor of student activities, will A M A N ’S W A Y T O C O O R D I N A T E C O L O R F U L L Y speak. S p o r ts w e a r b y P e n d le to n * Friday Night . W A W W A N T I O TO | N o t su re w h a t y o u w a n t to do? J o in t h e c lu b . P e N d ® t o n WBRS Radio - —70a.of ma 0* 6i G US 00rO ^ P endleton Woolen Mills // All Campus 1 P O R T L A N D , O R ! 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L IT T L E A sk t h e D u P o n t in te r v ie w e r a b o u t i t . A sk h im a n y th in g . H e w as in your sh oes very S IS T E R r e c e n tly . ^ Equaj Opportunity Employer (M /F ) use our park o r shor o n T O W E R ^ m a f^ plan fo r tree « **f. U.I. W Off- custr r-inrking C o lle g e R e la tio n s Hart-Schaffner & Marx 0 two eleven south Washington F r id a y , N ovem ber 22, 1968 3 Michigan State News, E ast L ansing, M ichigan ■■Kg* S B N E W S Shelling continues near Da Nang eral m ajor engagem ents this Marine ‘ p a tro ls spotted 90 dozens of sm all unit eontaes S A I G O N (A P i -- Enem y around that second largest d a m a g e and casualties w ere enemy soldiers^ nearby and each day ." . s u m m a r y light, a U.S. spokesm an ‘^ 4 . >«id the U S ♦Command rockew at .U.S. tet-' cifty jn S o u th y ( L il clashe.4 ... HrtHterf' support Trc 1 A cap su le sum m ary, of eve n ts fro m About at\ ifamr ;d lF r iYfl?se ~ sfScnsrH, ' b ■ second straig h t day of sshelVmg southwest of Da N ang but w as slightly wounded m y killed com pared with 1.601 j our w ire s e r v ic e s . last rocket exploded. Marines killed. These actions a r e p a rt of the week before. landed by helicopter at the In one action, troops of the The U.S. Com m and said 127 w hat the U.S. C o m m an d 's chict Czechs end sit-in/ rocket sites to the southwest U.S. I96th Light Infantry Bri­ of public inform ation said was A m ericans w ere killed in a c t­ ” I n ic n V f i u n s h lu s s un i v i I I I and found 20 firing r a m p s gade battled about 300 North ion last week and 1.031 wounded. an allied "all-out effort to mi a b i t u i l a n t< ’ o f IC iitu r, b ill fashioned from dirt. V ietnam ese entrenched 33 attack the en tire North Viet- This com pared with 166 killed m i l su m u c h lim i h t cnn ii j- In a sweep of the a r e a , the m iles southwest of Da Nang. nam ese-V iet Cong system in and 1.253 wounded the week leave university bodies of six North V ietnam ese The fight raged th ro ug hout.the before. IB l'iir tl i n c i i n i i n i i c s q u a m i r r i iif¡ South V ietn am ." a r m y soldiers w ere tound that day. The U.S. Com m and said We've got literally hun­ South V ietnam ese casualties il ih ro iifih w u sln n u i l / m l l i i - had been killed by U.S. coun­ at least 20 en e m y troops w ere dreds of patrols o ut." Brig. w ere listed as 128 killed. 644 lin tt nml m i su su. " Ib u s iilu n l te ra rtille ry fire ." said a co m ­ killed along with four A m eri­ Gen. Winant Sidle said, " w e re wounded and 21 missing or munique. cans. Ten other A m ericans keeping the p re ssu re on all captured, co m p ared with 200 i. M u l i n i I I . J n l i iis iin w ere wounded. P R A G U E (A P i -- A four-dav trying to split the working The area south of Da Nang the tim e. On top of the large killed. 79.8 wounded and 9 m i i m in im i liiiiii 1,1 In the other action. U.S. student sit-in strike that showed a class. has been the scene of sev- contacts, we have literally missing the week before. Students reported there International News split between Czechoslovak Com­ m unist lead ers and a younger w as g r e a t tension in their • Mob violence accom panying World Bank P re sid e n t R obert S. M c N a m a ra 's visit to Calcutta continued into its second day today as police and students again clashed in front of the generation concerned about free­ occupied classroom s and labs dom ended peacefully today. all night as they speculated WANNA TAKE A TRIP! T h e S o u l P a tr o l Thousands of red-eyed stu­ w hether the authorities would - - a hard soul sound-- U.S. Information Service Bldg. Fighting erupte d when police dents ca rry in g bedrolls, books move against them a f te r the We have everything you'l tried to disperse m ore than 200 students burning an effigy of and guitars poured w earily but sit-in was prolonged. need to get you th e r e - - M cN am ara. happily out of university build­ But no police reinforce­ Now playing Tues. thru Sat. And the Marathon ings throughout P ra g u e at noon, m e n ts appeared as the large • In Cairo, a governm ental spokesm an for E gypt said the Guarantee will make satisfied th a t they had done " s t r i k e " bann ers w e re r e ­ Arab nation is keen on normalizing relations with the United S tates Asked at a news conference if Egypt has any conditions for the normalization, the spokesm an replied. "W e ask no something to keep alive the m oved from college buildings spirit of freedom curtailed a nd the students e m e r g e d . su re you wi 11 be satisfied with It. "Bob B laze Inn" since the Soviet-led invasion m o r e than realistic and ju st understanding of our position. of Czechoslovakia in August. S B $3.84 DOZ. Less Than 25 Minutes on South 127, Jackson, Mich. • An appeal for re tria l of Alexander P anagoulis, convicted of trving to kill the G reek p rem ier, w as turn ed down by the " I t w as m o r e successful than we d rea m ed . " a bearded engineering student said as Cash C arry Ion Anthony RON’S MARATHON Springport & Clinton Road Exit 2855 Clinton Rd. Suprem e Court Thursday. Hours afte r the tim e for execution Corner of Abbott and Lake Lansing Rds. 337-9809 boys and girls filed out of ________ 809 E. M ich ig a n had passed there still was no word from the re g im e w hether the electro-technical complex he was dead or alive. of G r e a te r Czech Technical University. • The Soviet Union launched another unm anned e a r th s a t­ " I t w as so successful and ellite in its Cosmos series Thursday. A brief anno uncem en t we had so m uch support that said Cosmos 254 will c a rry out space studies but did not give the students the m se lves de­ its specific mission. cided to end the strike be­ fore the popular enthusiasm • In a hospital in Rio De Ja n e ir o a 25-vear-old w om an m a y got out of control." he added. become a significant part of m edical history. If Candida B a r ­ About 100.000 students had bosa lives, doctors say she will be the first person on rec o rd occupied college classroom s, to have survived rabies. Rabies in m a n is uniform ly fatal corrido rs and laboratories when sym ptom s have developed. Doctors p e rfo rm e d a unique since Sunday throughout Bo­ brain operation to save C andida's life and now say it looks hem ia and Moravia in support as if she is out of danger. of a 10-point resolution r e ­ minding national leaders ot • B ritain’s House of Lords voted T hursday night in favor of the r e f o rm s launched last giving up their hereditary perogative of delaying legislation. spring and gradually abandoned The vote was 251 to 56. with a hard core of trad itionalists under Soviet p ressure since voting no. the invasion. National News There w ere also sc attered strikes of secondary schools • P resident Johnson launched Thursday a com m ission to in P ra g u e and universities search for a long range solution to the nation s w a te r prob­ in Slovakia, mostly ending lems. "You will have to help us find w ays to p r e s e rv e this Wednesday night. A number most precious natural r e s o u r c e -n o t just for this century of factories held sym pathy work but for the next and the ones a f te r th a t." he told the seven- stoppages Wednesday m an National Water Commission. This produced a strong joint 1 appeal and w arning from fhè * • A violent demonstraAipn erupted in the affnMPiSlxitUQt!, ,v governm ent. C o m m tifiM ’jbair'ty. offices of Oshkosh State University today as black students presented a list of d em an ds to P re sid en t Roger E. Guiles* National Assembly P residium .M and tr a d e union h ea d q u arte rs Desks w ere overturned, files sc a tte re d and windows sh a t­ accusing student elem e n ts of te red in the university offices. WHO’S WHO 37 M S U s tu d e n ts n a m e d fo r a n n u a l n a tio n a l h o n o r Bailey. Claxton. Ga.. senior; Don B angart. Oke- Thirty-seven MSU students have been se lec t­ mos. senior: L arry Berger. Wayne. P a., senior: ed and approved for inclusion in the 1968-69 Allen Brenner. Niies. senior: E d Brill. Merrick. edition of "W ho's Who Among Students in A m e r­ N Y . senior: Leigh Burstein. Medirian. Miss., ican Universities and Colleges." senior: David Campbell. Chester. N .J.. senior: The 37 juniors and seniors w ere selected on Scott Christm an. Ilion. N.Y.. senior: H arvey Nov. 5 by a com m ittee consisting of five stu­ Dzodin. Oak P ark , senior. L a rry Ellsworth. dents selected by the m e m b e r s of Blue Key Ypsilanti. senior; P e te r Ellsw orth. E ast Lan­ and four faculty m e m b e rs who w ere chosen sing. senior: Bill F erac o . Irwin. P a., senior: by these five men. Dave Gilbert. Cincinnati. Ohio, senior and Rolf Blue Key P resident L arry Berger. Wayne. G roseth. Sarsota. Fla. senior. Pa., senior, who served as the non-voting c h a ir ­ Also nam ed w ere Michael Grost. Lansing sen­ m an of the selection co m m itte e said. " B a s i c ­ ior: Brian Hawkins. P erio ria. 111., junior; Don­ ally the c o m m itte e stressed an overall balance na Hill. Simpsonville. Md.. senior: G reg Hop­ between a c ad e m ic and e x tra c u r ric u la r a c tiv i­ kins. E a s t Lansing senior: T hom as H ummel. ties including athletics, student governm ent, Dallas. Tex., senior: Doug Laycock. Wood Riv­ special ac hievem ents and projects. " er. 111., junior: Sue Landers. Stockbridge sen­ Berger added that each individual on the c o m ­ ior: John Lindquist. Deerfield. 111., junior. Bob m ittee used his own c r ite ria for selecing s tu ­ McCormick. Detroit senior: Ann Michaels. dents because the voting w as done by s e c r e t b a l­ Detroit senior. P ierce Myers. Moline. 111., sen­ lot ior: Dale Oliver. Alexandria. Va.. senior: T hom ­ Who's Who." published by H. P e ttu s R a n ­ as Samet. Shaker Heights. Ohio, junior; Theta dall of Tuscaloosa. Ala., is issued annually to Skocpol. E ast Lansing senior; Norm Sperling. honor students who have distinguished th e m ­ E a s t Lansing junior. L a m a r r Thom as, M arkham selves in the a r e a s of g rades and e x t ra -c u rr i­ 111., junior; Toby Towson. Blue Bound. 111., cu lar activities within the college com munity. senior. Roseann U m ana. Bradenton. Fla., sen­ Any junior or senior w as eligible to petition ior. L arry Werner. Bay City senior: J i m White. his nam e or the nam e of any other junior or senior. The students named this y ea r are : St. Joseph junior, Roger Williams, E a s t L an­ sing senior and Jeff Zeig. Hicksville. N.Y.. sen­ s m a s h in g sm ocks , yoked Mike Anderson. Bozeman. Mon., senior: Ron ior. o r b ib b e d w ith e m b r o id e r y BEATLES F re e th ese in and e a sy b le sse d e a s y -c a re sizes. A. T he fash io n s w ith acry lic an m an d arin bonded a re abundance th e to c o lla re d fo recast of acetate sm o ck for for e m b ro id e ry . shape w ith th e seaso n , A -sh ap ed th at b rig h tly esp ecially sm o ck s stay s. M isses e m b ro id e re d NEW DOUBLE ALBUM yoke w ith and fitted e m b ro id e re d sleev es. b ib fro n t W hite and o r cuffs. navy. G ath ered B. The jew el n e c k sleev es, side sm o ck o p en in g p atch p o ck ets. B row n o n ly . C. The p u ritan co llared sm o ck w ith e m ­ b ro id e re d c o lla r and cuffs. G a th e re d slee v e s. Navy o r w h ite. 19 $7 22.98 MARSHALL MUSIC GET TO THE CORE Campus Center 245 Ann OF THINGS AT MARSHALL MUSIC E d w a rd 4. Hr i ll e d l to r - 1 n -c h ie f M A X L E R N E R M I C H I G A N C a ro l B u d row , a d v e rtis in g m an ager STATE N E W S ¿Jam es S. G ran e Hi* m ^nagi aß e d ito r rr»#A-r f ' • %oft(*us ¿i)itut , ^ \ B rid g e s an d w g lls in E u r o p e J e rr y P aaLh(?r*t%e d ito ria le d i{i*J »Si N Tom Brmrn,V/»ôrl» e d h o r P a tric ia A nstett , associate cam pus e d ito r a chance to build a cou n terw aif around G r e a t Britain a n d - w h e n C harles de The bridges a re coming down in E u r­ Y ugoslavia, Romania and perhaps neu­ Gaulle rele n ts or g o es -a b o u t moving to­ ope. and the walls a r e being reinforced. tralized Austria as w ell. The bridges are w ard som e political integration. T here Six-tim e recipient of the Pacem aker award for outstanding journalism . If you put together the Soviet action in down, the w alls are rising. is a paradox here w orth noting: Czechoslovakia and the W estern reaction, Obviously, this has its dangers, since A strong er E r r o p e will be one without as shown by the NATO com m unique, you it increases the number of trouble zones national-sovereignty walls. But for the get the beginnings of w hat m a y becom e in Europe where a wrong m ove by either present, when NATO talks of throwing a another cold w ar over the power s tr u c t­ E D I T O R I A L cam p would flare into a war. D efense Sec­ wall around the power balance in Europe, ure of Europe. retary Clark Clifford em phasized that the te st of Soviet aggression is the viola­ The m uch heralded bridge-building the NATO m eeting the array of strategic tion of national sovereignty. phase of U.S. policy to w ard E a s te r n E u r ­ and tactical m issies at the command of The United S tates faces the problem, ope is over. Looking back a t it. one won­ the Western power cluster. He w as re­ also, of w here to build a wall, w here to ders w hether it ever had a real chance to E q u it y a n d a p p r o p r ia tio n s succeed, because it depended so com ple­ tely on Soviet good will. The w ithdraw l of assuring the Germ ans and others and signaling a firm warning to the Russians. For Europeans, and for Am ericans, too build a bridge. On W estern E urope it has decided to build a te m p o ra ry NATO wall. But on the P a r i s peace talks, on the Mid­ that good will was signalized by the invas­ the best defense assurance for the future dle E a s t and especially on nuclear dis­ ion of Czechoslovakia and the escalation of Europe lies in further steps toward a r m a m e n t and control, she needs a dia­ of, Soviet naval strength in the M editer­ integrating Europe itself. Hence the re­ logue with the Soviet Union, and those ranean. Inequalities and inade­ But while these eve n ts w ere the signals newed talk about overcom ing the pre­ walls m u st co m e down. sent im passe in the Common Market over Copyright 1968. LoX Angeles T im es quacies -present in the Michi­ of the new Soviet policy, they w e re not its gan svstefm of funding higher source. The source is a crisis of the Sov­ iet le ad e rsh ip -in e p t, confused, divided, education have recently under­ locked in a sh a rp inner struggle in which gone scrutiny by the American the civilian Hawks and the g en e rals seem Assn. of University Professors to have seized the whip hand. We have been accusto m ed to stressing (AAUP). The points the as­ the d isa rra y in the W estern alliance. But sociation brings up are well the fact is that the d is a rr a y within NATO worth consideration for'elim- has been p re tty well m uted. The real dis­ inating those inadequacies. a r r a y is within E a s t e r n Europe, the Sov­ iet Union. Com m unist China and the world Communist parties. C om pared with this, But elimination means a vast the Western power cluster, whose le a d e r­ overhaul of presnt policy. To ship Lyndon Johnson will be handing over begin with, the current figure to R ichard Nixon, is in tolerably good used to compute appropria­ stitutions receive funds equal to With inadequate compensa­ shape. tion for Michigan faculty The re p o rts a r e that the Soviet leaders tions. FYE (dollars per fiscal or greater than their calculated w ere persuaded to risk the Czech adven­ year equated> student, should minimum. However, last members in general, quality ture by W alter U lbricht's a r g u m e n t that be replaced with a more equit­ year, MSU and some other education may be hindered. If the defense of E a st G e r m a n y requ ired it. minimum funds were allocated But to s tre s s U lb rich t's role m isses the able instrument. In its report, schools received less than the r ea l point, which is that the arg u m e n t the AAUP suggested a possible minimum under the present to all Michigan institutions be­ w as a m ilita ry one and that the linal a r ­ plan. This includes the idea standard. It is clear that if the low equity the increased sal­ biters w e re the generals. What probably that the cost of instruction in­ idea of varying quality con­ aries resulting would attract counted with the civilian leaders was the better faculties. The advan­ growing conviction that internal control creases from the freshman tinues, then MSU and other of dangerous thoughts within Com m unist level on up. In any new policy state institutions in Michigan tages of increased salaries are countries is m o r e im p o rta n t to Soviet po­ something similar to this no­ will probably fall futher be­ many and should be considered w er than world opinion. carefully. Obviously, however, The resu lt in any event was the doct- tion must be represented fully. hind those institutions already r in e - n o t new. but given a new sharpness receiving funds greater than increased salaries will be to no - t h a t the Com m unist countries form a In other recommendations, avail if not coupled with ade­ their minimums. Socialist C om m onw ealth, and that the Sov­ the AAUP proposed that the Faculty compensation is quate programs and facilities. iet Union has the right to intervene if state make a determined ef­ Underlying this whole pro­ any of them is th rea ten e d by a challenge another area of extreme im­ from within to Soviet power. fort to bring every institution gram of achieving equity in ed­ portance. Since compensation It is this doctrine of Soviet interven­ up to a position of excellence ucation is the practical aspect. tion. as well as the Czech invasion, that of faculty members is a large by first abandoning its accept­ Can the state supply the the NATO nations have now an sw ered part of appropriations for in­ with a counterdoctrine. They have warned ance of institutions of varying money needed? stitutions, then the quality of the Soviets that any a t te m p t to interfere quality. the faculty and of the school This is uncertain. But what with u ncom m itted Com m unist countries— is certain is the need for a Rom ania and Y ugoslavia-w ill have the But for this to come into itself is greatly dependent on in direct effect of alte rin g the power bal­ It ’s an away game this week? We were being there must be agreement the funds available. In fact, change in the present system. ance in E u ro pe and will be counted a Accepting the present ap­ starting to wonder where everybody was! on a guarantee for a minimum the AAUP has pointed out that th re a t to the integrity of Europe. This standard of equity for all faculty compensation in Mich­ propriations is admitting fail­ m e an s that NATO is now c o m m itted to a doctrine of in direct a s well as d irec t schools of higher learning. As igan institutions is consistently ure—a failure greatly affecting defense. has been pointed out, under the below that of a comparable higher education in the state. By building a wall around Czechoslo­ present fiscal system some in- five-state average. --The Editors vakia. the Russians have given the West LA R R Y LERNER D A V E SH O R T F iv e y e a rs a g o to d a y A le g a c y to , r e m e m b e r Gone a r e the people who w ere once groups in this country T here w as silence for a few seconds. A m e on w hat he m e a n t to m e while he Five v ea rs have passed since the a s ­ P overty and the problem s ul “ Id-age. " II illi n good rotiseie nee im r only sort‘ his pedple and his w ay of life. The little crying followed. My hands mois­ was alive. sassination of John F. Kennedy, the 35th in his eves, w ere im m ed ia te d anc ers in re w o rd . w ith h is to ry the f i n a l ju d g e oJ' o u r Kennedy Cabinet of top governm ental tened and I felt sick. The te a r s didn't I have only one wish today. Think of P re sid ent of the United States. Five A m erica that had to be corrected. In an deeds, le i it* no f o r th lo lend the loud we and ad m in istra tiv e officials and intel­ come, but m y mind pleaded for reason. P re sid en t Kennedy. Think of w hat his lite years. One half a decade. lectuals has long since dissolved. The a tte m p t to overcom e them , he pushed lo re , asking Ills blessing m id llis help, During that tim e, the im m e d ia te e f ­ We s a t down. m e an s to you. Above all. read his in­ young P re sid e n t's com panion and a d ­ for the p assag e of his anti-poverty and In il kn o w in g that here on e n rlli t.o il's My English class w ent by very quickly augural address. Only then can you learn fect that John F. Kennedy had on the m e d ic a re p r o g ra m s in Congress. w o rk m u si tru ly he llis o u n . " viser. his b rother Robert, has also died at and a t 3 p.m.. I left for home. A few from his teachings. A m erican people and their w ay of life Feeling that the growth and expan­ —John I . I\e n neily the hands of an assassin. John Kennedy's people w e re laughing outside the building For. if anyone's life w as a "profile in has also passed. young widow has now disassociated h e r­ sion of A merica was crucial in the fu­ d rill ¡ ‘resid en t o f the I n ile d Slnles and I felt angry at them. I hurried home co u ra g e ." then it w as the one belonging Gone from the A m erican scene is the ture. he wanted vast, liberal economic Jim . 2 0 . 1001 self with the burden of his n am e and his to John F. Kennedy. 35th P re sident of im age of youth, vigor, and c h a rism a that policies instituted for this advancem ent. and walked in the house. legend. the United States. J F K gave the P r e s id e n t 's office. Gone a r e the plans and policies that he A m erica, in J F K ' s views, had to play Our housekeeper smiled and said " H i" . It was a cool, sunny day. New York once forwarded. Although they have been a foremost role in the securanee and I blurted out that P re siden t Kennedy was children w ere happy because it was the dead. She didn't believe me. passed by Congress and indoctrinated into m ain te n an c e of world peace. end ot the school week. The d ate was the A m erican society. K ennedy's original An assa ss in 's bullets cut short these Friday. Nov. 22. 1963 We sat and watched television together plans for America but they did not dis­ policies will go down in history as the 1 walked to school with three or four for about one half hour. She kept repeating solve them. John Kennedy m ade the passed legislation of the m an who suc­ of my friends We followed our usual how unbelievable it was. Then, she went A m erican people a w a re ot what was back to work and I continued to w atch ceeded hi-m. route and arrived promptly at 9:00 a.m. Gone a r e the m e m o ria l tokens which possible in the future of America. As The kids w ere noisy as they ran to get television. typified in the unrest and turbulence of followed the death of the Man from to their section classes on time. When m y parents and sis ters c a m e M assachusetts. The books, pictures, and the people today. Am erica has not for­ home we a t e dinner. Then, we all w atched the recorded passages of J F K have gotten what he showed it. After section was over. I proceeded to That grown m en would break down and television for awhile. dropped out of the best selling lists and mv classes for the day. I had social cry in the days af te r his assassination science, m ath and F rench in the m o rn ­ 1 had to get ready for a Bas Mitzvah faded into the storage ro o m s of America. But. there is one thing that John F. and in the yea rs afte rw a rd s (the 1964 ing A quick lunch followed with Sci­ that I w as invited to so 1 quickly got D em oc ratic Convention > is a tribute to ence and English rem aining in the a f te r ­ Kennedy left behind that has not passed dressed. I went with a good triend ot what John Kennedy sought and stood m ine and we got to the te m p le a few from the A m erican life. noon. for in America. Although it was unfinished and un­ My science class was from 1:28.p.m. m inutes late. One cannot help but recall the eulogy polished. P re sid en t Kennedy left a legacy to 2:16 p.m. Mr Resnick, my teacher, of w hat Am erica should be and could be given in m e m o ry of J F K by his brother During the sermon, the rabbi kept R obert during the 1964 D em ocratic con­ looked a little upset when we walked for the A m erican people. pointing out how good it was th a t P r e s i­ vention because it represented the way in the room. He told us to sit down (I Through out his cam paign for the P r e s i­ dent Kennedy was no longer with us. I in which Americans, both Republican didn t like him very much i dency and his te rm of office. Kennedy kept looking a t m y friend. We sa t in and D e m o c r a t i c . . thought ot him. Quot­ disbelief. stressed that Am erica could not stand Then he said something 1 11 never for­ still: in a tim e of burden and saeritice. ing S h ak esp ea re 's " R o m e o and Juliet. get " P r e s id e n t Kennedy's been shot in When the services and the party for the A m erica m ust move forward. Robert Kennedy said: the chest in D allas." As he calm ly stated girl w ere over, m y friend and I sta rted His assassination brought an end to ". . .when he shall die these words, the class froze. A girl in the to walk home. We stopped a t a lunch- his drive forward. T ake him and cut him out in little sta rs, m iddle of the room stood up and said onette and I picked up a copy of the New Because he left no book of ideologies And he will m ake the face of heav'n "N o. 1 heard th a t he w as shot in the York World-Telegram and Sun. The head­ for the achievem en t of his goal, it is so fine head!” I don't think it m a tte r s any­ line read: " P r e s id e n t Shot D ead." impossible to pinpoint his plans lor That all of the world will be in love m o r e ." m y te ac her responded. A merica. But. through the things that he with the night When I got home. I w ent up to my did do and did say. J F K set the guide­ And pay no worship to the garish Sun. No one could get any m ore news so room and put the headline aw ay for safe­ It would be folly to try and determ in e lines for the way in which he wanted we ju s t sa t th e re and listened, to-his lec­ keeping. 1 w ent to sleep and Nov.. 22. 1963 the success of the Kennedy A dm inistra­ Am erica to move. tu re I don't think he said anything worth- vanished forever. tion a t this tim e. But. it is possible to John Kennedy sought first to unite A m erica in p reparation for its drive for­ speculate as to the effect that John Ken­ Today, five yea rs later. I don't r e ­ nedy had upon the A m erican people. ward. Wanting m o re than ju st "w r itte n i sure it w as exactly at 2 p.m. when m e m b e r very much of P re sid e n t John F. John F. Kennedy was no Lincoln. Wil­ rig h ts" , he sought through clea r and tar- ice c a m e over the loudspeaker. "Will Kennedy. 1 know th at he w as a good and son. or Roosevelt. John F Kennedy was vone please rise for a m inute of silent er. T he P re s id e n t is d e a d .” decent m a n who w as an inspiring leader to our country. But. m y m e m o r y fails 1917 J o h n F. K e n n e d y 1963 reaching legislation the equality of civil rights for blacks and other minority John F. Kennedy. . . F r id a y , N ov em b er 22, 1968 5 Michigan State News, E ast L ansing, M ichigan OUR RfÀDfeRS’ MINDS Use of damage deposit unjustified J4£ 'I hilu* itietr ini' r>< W?A Catw* vl>* * * V * j **.>’?•-. ^ tifrb t D c tr m g i he fj. -itciar to' five t h e r e m U v r -çw- e/io/w ble events., se- in cans piacee filr en 3 ot the parking • a W l snared thej cipcirtllïtyit. attKi Pro pi err?.jr.s o f c-e-m'p lenity k i'w : with th e AIT-Lam pus We w ere w a r t e d ifcif 5T '* *■ m * 1“ -ff-lH I « f T'.ttlé tint? > ' , ■L „ ! * A, Housing Office and Otf-Cam- one o th lr Aluitent and 1 Signed curred. th e re Therefore it wpuld be To the E d ito * MSI* is too large f.or effective F o u rth , the sta te m eh t 'one o f 111 Incinerators a r e provided g arbage w a s 'lo u n d in th e mall a three-m onth lease and put George Bullard m ade a com o r a l chairm an-instructor dis­ three ATI. professors dism issed pusCouncil: > itself each a p a r tm e n t on that expected that d am a g e s would down a dam age deposit for the at the end of each floor. Any mendable and conscientious e f­ cussions." in 1966 for not completing his T his past s u m m e r 1 lived a t floor would be charged $3 00 the beginning of our tenantship sum of $200. non-burnable g arbag e is de- fort to provide SN readers with Third, the following statem ents Ph. D. p r o g ra m " is misleading Cedar V illa ge A partm en ts. This, although p ractical, would we filed an extensive list of dam ages, which included dirty an accurate report of the Wed­ concern quite different subjects P resum ably, there m ay have seem to be a questionable pro­ walls in every room and sev­ nesday AAUP Symposium on the although the im plication in the been other reasons, but his one cedure This, in fact did take P O IN T O F V IE W place at one tim e during the eral notables in need of repair. Rights of Non-Tenured Faculty. SN report m ay be justified: 1. was unjustified, iOther reasons, I have just received a check lor It is easy for a reporter to m iss "Tenure does not provide the if such existed, w ere never giv­ sum m er. $141 a shade of meaning, and thereby kind of protection that many sup­ en to the instructor in question i <21 On that day I went to Law a n d o rd e r to d a y the m a n a g e r's office to dis­ cuss this charge. I m e t a girl I th erefore submit this c o m ­ plaint in the hope that some to create an im pression oppo­ site to the thought expressed. Al­ low m e to correct a few such pose because a tenured profes­ sor m ay be forced out during a period of inflation sim ply by re­ Finally. I would m ake a plea that SN r e p o rte rs when cove r­ ing complex subjects check who told m e the following and action can be taken against E D ITO R'S N OTE: The following the responsible citizen's drea m finally explained why people Cedar Village A p artm e n ts in errors. fusing to raise his salary" quotes with the sources. showed m e a bill to back up Point of View was w ritten by - l a w and order. w ere so belligerent tow ard us. order to p rotect the rights of F irst, there is a m ajor dif­ and 2. "Tenure presum ably gives her story. The glass on a fire L ester Ginsberg, resident a s ­ "H ip p ie s ! " we w ere called. "M y son told m e what group ap artm ent-dw ellers in East ference in m eaning between professors freedom of expression, J a m e s B. H arrington, Jr. a la r m box on her floor had been sistant at North Wonders Hall. Well. 1 can vouch for the fact you punks w ere in !" the sta tem en ts:l. "Most firings but withholding raises tends to associate professor. Dept, of broken. Their a p a r tm e n t had Lansing. T his past S atu rd ay six c o ­ that the av e rag e length of each I further invite any interested in the business world are a con­ suppress their w illingness to ex ­ Agricultural Engineering "Why is it deem ed wrong for been charged $10 and odd cents. h o r t s a n d 1 s e t out to m a k e a hair on our heads w as consider­ students to join m e in pursuing sequence of personality traits press their id ea s.- students to protest over the 1 do not know w hether any p o in t. A s r e s i d e n c e h a l l s t a f f ably less than that of a sheep this end. Anyone with sim ila r rather than of ability and this is form and content of their ed uc a­ others w ere charged. I cannot m e m b e r s h e r e at M S U w e a r e dog. In fact, at least two of us problem s please contact m e at likely true of the academ ic world tional system but deem ed right im agine that procedure to be e x p e c t e d to r e p o r t s t u d e n t v i o ­ had gotten haircuts two days be­ 489-0934 or 353-5152. as well" . . . and 2. "Firings of for aduits to go as far as phys­ within the bounds of the law lation s of U n iv e r s ity O rd in an ce fore. A count of bea rds and m us­ Larv M. G erste n h ab e r nontenured faculty are based ical action against people who My own problem involves 22.00 con cern in g alcohol on taches revealed a total of none. Lansing, grad u a te student on personal reasons rather than interfere with their wish to bo­ the retu rn of the d am ag e de- c am p u s. A s a d v is e rs w e also F ive out of seven of us had side, academ ic freedom .'' oze it up? one of our group co m ­ a r e r e q u i r e d to e x p l a i n to th e burns though. Second, the following state­ mented. It se em s as though any­ stud ents w h y S a tu r d a y 's football p a t r o n s a r e a l l o w e d to b l a t a n t ­ " C o m m u n is ts ! " they cried. R adical I a m not. If I was thing students do which inter­ Procedures followed m ents have an opposite m ea n in g : 1. "A departm ent chairman feres with the peace and happi­ ly v i o l a t e th is o r d i n a n c e in full forced to " c la ssify " myself. I'd channels before being im ple­ should discuss annually with ness of the av e ra g e citizen is To the Editor: v ie w of th ese stud en ts and a n y ­ probably say I was a liberal. mented at the dorm itory level. each faculty m em ber the depart­ branded as "C o m m u n is t" or As a governing body of MSU o n e e l s e w h o c a r e s to look. But I'm sure the citizens' a c t­ We hope that by reaffirm ing m ental expectations for that "Hippie. Rationality is cast we the Butterfield Hall Council W e d e c i d e d w e c o u ld n 't h a c k ions w ere defensible. After all. our position as a student gov­ m em ber and his performance aside by the desire of the in­ would like to r e a ffirm our posi­ it. we took such violent action as erning body, we a r e r e p r e s e n t­ during the past year. If this is dividual to do w hat he wants. tion a s a living unit abiding by So. out w e w e n t , s e v e n s t r o n g , to hand out copies of O rdinance ing the opinion of an often un­ im possible because of the size Being a taxpayer, we a r e led to 'U n iv e rsity legislative and judi­ ' a r m e d ' w i t h th e m i g h t y s e a l 22.00 and ex pin in to people that heard majority. of a department then there is a believe, gives people the right cial procedures. o f N o r t h W o n d e r s H a ll s t a f f they w ere violating it. We even Butterfield Hall Council serious flaw in the adm inistra­ to break the law and get away tive organization” . . . and 2. j a c k e t s and slip s of p a p e r b e a r ­ did the d astardly deed of taking We a r e concerned that the r e ­ with it. contradicting in action in g th e i n f l a m m a t o r y w o r d s " N o pictures on public property, cent actions taken by other hall the cries of "law and o r d e r " p e r s o n s h a ll p o s s e s s o r c o n ­ which, we found, is legal unless governing groups which in our which com e from these sa m e s u m e a l c o h o l i c b e v e r a g e s on a Michigan taxpayer is involved. opinion a re in direct conflict ta xpayers. a n y kind a n y w h e r e w i t h i n th e with the ideals of student r e s­ "Y e s sir. You see we a r e try ­ c o n f i n e s o f land g o v e r n e d by ing to point up an inequity in the This m ust be hypocrisy of the ponsibility ahd hall autonomy, DIAMOND RINGS s a id b o a r d . . highest order. m ight sway your forthcoming system. We a r e not out to get O ur goal? v o u -w e a r e n 't going tp file any It s too bad. We w ere just g ett­ decisions on proposed open jtt T o p oin t out th e g r o s s in­ ing psyched up about giving our house and freshm en hours poli­ co m plaints." e q u i t y in th e s y s t e m . W e w e r e all for motherhood, the flag and cies. We would therefore, like "Oh. 1 se e ." the law-abiding u n i ou t to " b u r n th e a l u m s or R ichard Nixon because we to draw to your attention that adult reasoned "Y ou kids can the p o l i c e . W e w a n t e d to s a y thought the adults w ere sincere there ure responsible and m a ­ te a r down a cam pus. . because " L o o k p e o p le , w e d o n 't li k e th e and just in their wish for law ture student leaders on cam pu s you haven't learned how to wipe o r d i n a n c e a n y m o r e th a n y ou . and order. who d esire policy changes to be vour fannv v e t." b u t if it s t h e law th e n it sh ould Clearlv. we w ere m istaken. processed through the proper b e e n f o r c e d on e v e r y o n e , not " H e y ! " one guy said. "T his 111st s t u d e n t s , ' c a u s e t h a t ' s la w NEWNEWNEWNEWNEWNEWNEWNEWNEWNEWNEWNEWNEWNEWNEWNEWNEW is MY University. I'm a ta x ­ Ó.ttt/Hil (kïà/ôtÿ. a nd o r d e r , rig h t 1 p ay e r." S o m e h o w , d u r i n g th e a f t e r ­ N At last w e understood. As stu­ noon s s t r o l l o v e r th e l . M . f i e ld dents this is not our University. E AíHjf Ÿ7000 a n d t e n n i s c o u r t s , th e Inequity W We a r e here for the ta xpayers w e w e r e t r y i n g to poin t up b e ­ N lkù/t/ùid. fâ/id. iscountrecordsinc. benefit. c a m e o b l i t e r a t e d b y th e s i g h t s T bet you smoke pot. too!" E a n d so u n d s o f th e l a w - a b i d i n g " I saw you at Chicago." W M ichigan ta x p a y e r, and w e c a m e The list goes on and on. N a w a y s o m e w h a t sh ell-shocked Needless to say we w ere con­ E b v th e r e a c t i o n to o u r a t t e m p t at fused. But a kindly gentlem an W 225 ANN ST, PH. 35Ì -8460 A v ai l a b l e a t t he following Bluebird DçjaHer N t J + Sallan Inc. Lansing Heath's Adrian L. R. Mix- Detroit —S T U D E N T S R E L A X — W E N O W IN ST O C K 2 R E C O R D SET Albion Alma Scott Tuthill W. F. Lueth & Son Detroit Elsie Sheldon's Jewelry Dale C. Levey Jeweler Ferndale Jewelry Marlette Milford Muskegon Hts. Mel Cole McMartin's Jewelry Malvin's Jewelry Co. Alpena Froggett Jewelry Ferndale N Wethered-Rice Co. Paw Paw Charles Jewelry It ’s Great For A Date E Bay City Heglund & Beyer Williams & Co. Flint Grand Haven Grand Haven Jewelers Saginaw George B. Hagerls Benton Harbor Bridgman Louis Morgensen Grand Rapids Frylings Jewelry South Haven Alfing's W Watson Jewelry Store Grand Rapids L. E. Phillips Jeweler Sparta Paul-Lawrence lewelry “THE BEATLES” Buchanan Bowling N E W Cadillac Caro Coloma Dearborn . Sandy’s Jewelry Dyers Jewelry Nilson Jewelry Chester Jewelers Hillsdale Holland Houghton Ironwood Roger A. Losey Jeweler Williams Jewelers Haug's Jewelry Store John Albert St. Joseph Three Rivers Traverse City Vicksburg Green's Jewelry Frederick F Foster Caldwell Jewelers Marvin E. Mains IS T W I C E T H E FUN N Wyandotte Samelson's Jewelry Dearborn Dearborn Jewelers Jackson Meagher's Jewelry W H EN T H E R E ’ S M O R E A. C. Percy Kalamazoo Hamilton Jewelry Ypsilanti Green Jewelers E Detroit THAN ONE. Detroit Anker's Jewelers Kalamazoo L. J. Barrett Jewelry Zeeland Dekker's Jewelry Store W N EXTRA ADDED ATTRACTION Billiards-Refreshm ents- Good Food E W ALSO W E’RE OPEN THIS SUNDAY - 10 LABEL SALE N 40 B r u n s w i c k L a n e s F o r Y o u r B o w l i n g P l e a s u r e NEW-MOTHERS OF INVENTION E W N "R U B E N A N D THE JETS” H o iid a u E W NEWNEWNEWNEWNEWNEWNEWNEWNEWNEWNEWNEWNEWNEW JUST N O R T H O F F R A N D O R PH. 487-3731 NE W N E W N E W ¡Ü Y o u r C o lle g e L ife T e a m in E ast L a n sin g '■ 'A - ? V Dick B e r r y Bill K e m p f Bob Slade Bill B lo d g e tt N eale M usolff Dick W e s t b r o o k W ayne Cobb G a ry Silvernail Joe W rig h t THE f C O L L E G E LIFE T h e Original and I Only Life Insurance Company Serving INSURANCE C O M P A N Y OF A M E R IC A College Men Only INDIAN Al ’<) 1 I', INDIANA T h is w eekend o rd e r a H O B lE ’S - - s a l a m i o r tu rk ey --w h ile w atch in g th e g am e on TV o r after th e d ate o r ju st b e c a u se Je rry M eagher y o u ’r e hungry. L ik e m aybe Sunday. H O B I E ’S, packed w ith -C .L .U . Manager FOOTBALL FORECAST m eat, F ren c h co rd ch ee se, b re a d , tim e o r is lettu ce, stop by for to m ato c a rry and a m e a l in i t s e l f . Jusrt c a ll out seaso n in g s se rv ic e for on d eliv ery and w atch a lo af of in r e ­ your C o lle g e Life G u e st P r e d i c ti o n By: \ H O B I E ’S m ad e to o rd e r. E ith er w ay, p e rfe ct for th e w eek ­ 1 This Week’ s Schedule: Insurance S am m ies AE P i ’s en d er. And w e ’r e open til 3 a.m . F rid ay and S atu rd ay ; 2 a .m . Company MSU MSU MSU Sunday. MSU vs Northwestern Michigan Michigan Ohio Michigan vs Ohio St, Iowa Iowa Iowa Illinois vs Iowa Minnesota Minn. Mlnn. >:•: Minnesota vs Wisconsin i-ij P urdue vs Indiana P urdue Purdue P urdue 1 2 - in c h l 4 9 K ansas Kansas M is s . C a n n e d $ K ansas vs M ississipp i Oklahoma Oklahoma Oklahoma Oklahoma vs Nebraska D r i n k s 1 5 ^ So, Gal vs UCLA So. Cal So. Cal So, Cal 2 4 - in c h 2 7 9 Texas Texas T exas T exas vs Texas A&M • PEPSI »DR. PEPPER O regon St. Oregon Oregon State SPARTAN SHOPPING C EN TER Si Oregon vs Oregon St. H a r r i s o n 8, T r o w b r l d g e R o a d s • DIET PEPSI • SQUIRT ACROSS FR OM CAM PUS LAST WEEK’S RESULTS: College Life 8 -2 ," Wilson Hall 9-1, C ase Hall 10-0. The Good • HIRES ROOT BEER SEN Guys w ere at the bottom of the heap la st week in the predictions, but they’r e still tops In • VERNORS GINGER ALE M e n ’s I n t r a m u r a l B u i l d i n g Insurance! 3 5 1 - 3 8 0 0 G e n e r a l A d m i s s i o n S t u d e n t s W i t h I . D. $ 2 .0 0 $1.50 C a m p u s O rg a n iz a tio n s W ishing To T ic k ets on sale at Cam pbell’s Suburban Shop, E n te r FO O TB A LL FORECAST Union T ic k et Office, Campus Book Stores, C a l l J e r r y at 3 3 2 - 4 2 3 6 and at the gate. SPONSORED BY CAMPUS F R E E , F A S T D E L I V E R Y CRUSADE FOR CHRIST WATCH FOR FOOTBALL FORECASTS EVERY FRIDAY IN THE STATE NEWS F r id a y , N o v em b er 22, 1968 A Michigan State News, E ast Lansing, Michigan frf? . ".T h i‘ M in l/.S{ liu n ille s X ■— ¿ ¿ s e w - , **■ * r r in iA ^ n v ro ii,//; ^ ../ IS p ™ . J?V \ «-T». ï & ï $ *-* *1 ' . A^-4» «**»•-*#.^. ..• ,*vA -V il* s pb j ■' li( i|)|w 'tn ( tv « f »> *r»*vtcv » # v. firs t te rn i fr e s h m e n o n ly. to rs s h o u l t l h u r e h o u r s . “ W i l t l v Êrenst. J e e t l i'l lf i h e r te e n -\-\ u n ity . " KA TH Y LADD u n fie so tt. “ ' jo e m u se ; LOIS YE AGLEY CHRIS VE REM A K IS 'New breed’ tag characterizes class of 72 Dean Gregg, Litchfield fresh­ m ainstay of the social life at status and a better paying job. "I can't understand how stu­ should have hours,” Kathy Ladd, By GREG SCHROEDER ested class with many of their men at MSU are here solely to dents can get busted for having Flint freshm an said. man, said, "These groups seem MSU, Jav Rosen, Farmington While others search for potential The freshm en in the class own ideas, who are ready to get an education. Some com e just liquor in their room s while alum- Lois Y eagley, Birmingham to find som ething wrong with ev­ freshm an, stated that the Greek husbands or an expanded social of 1972 are a “ new breed" to give their opinions on just about to get a degree which offers them mi can guzzle booze on cam pus freshm an, felt that “ hours shoulc erything and just don't have any organizations at MSU are racist life. institutions and should be abol­ enter MSU. They have been de- anything, Coming straight from high and get away with it ,” Scott be for the first term freshman constructive ideas." scribed bv many as an inter- But not all of the 9,670 fresh­ McKenzie. Butte, Mon., fresh­ women only." ished. school, many freshm en enjoy M E E T IN G R O O M S ta tn s the life that MSU offers. They discover that cam pus life is not man. said. Chris V erem akis, B elleville. While som e freshm en busy them selves with academ ic pur­ “ The biggest thing that is hap­ pening at MSU is black unity.' Joe Muse, B elleville fresh­ "The white frateri.ities either what they expected. 111., freshman, felt that; a stu­ suits there first year on cam ­ keep the blacks out or only dent taking an 18 credit load pus, others join clubs and or­ man, said. Muse said that black PUT THAT POINT ACROSS "In high school, college is ganizations. unity could best be obtained adm it 'token' Negroes. The built up to be som ething it isn't," is faced with a great deal of blaeks don't, let in any whites, At UNIVERSITY INN through the Black Student Alli­ . professor of counseling, personnel serv­ will serve a one-year consultant ship from laneous actions; 10 resignations and ter­ sociate professor of psychology and the ices and educational psychology. Jan. 1- July 1. 1969-June 30. 1970; Robert P. minations: and five retirements MSU Counseling Center to associate pro­ March 31. 1970: and Cole S. Brembeck. Kruger, asst building maintenance su­ The retirements included that of Philip fessor of psychology, Sept. 1. 1968. and associate dean of education and direc­ J. May. vice president for business and Cyrus S. Stewart, from instructor in so­ pervisor in Shaw Hall. July 1. 1969 tor of the Institute for International Stud­ finance, who requested that the effective ciology to asst, professor of social sci­ il954i; and John H. Jordan, custodian ies in Education. April 1-June 30. 1969. to date be Nov. 30 The Board also designat­ ence. Jan 1.1969 in dormitories and food services. July study and write at MSU. 1.1969 <1950i. ed Roger E. Wilkinson as acting vice pres­ Also given sabbatical leaves were Z. Given additional assignments in MSU's ident for business and finance, effective George Barnett, professor of secondary Justin M orrill College were: N Frances Dec. 1. Transfer of assignments included the education and curriculum. Sept 1. 1969- Fletcher, asst, professor of natural sci­ ence. Sept. 1. 1968; James L Goatley, as­ SAVE ON Aug. 31. 1970. to study at the University ( naming of Donald A. Taylor, professor sociate professor of natural science. Sept of marketing and transportation adminis­ of California at Santa Barbara: Charles W 1. 1968: and Marvin D. Solomon, professor TYPEWRITERS Barr, professor of urban planning and tration. as chairman of the department. landscape architecture. Oct. 1-Dec 31. of natural science. Sept. 1,1968 He succeeds Thomas A. Staudt. who was 1969. to study in Australia. Southeast Asia appointed to a newly created marketing and Europe. D. Newton Glick. profes­ Other changes approved by the board A Guide for position with Chevrolet Motor Division of were: Dale L. Clayton, from instructor sor of urban planning and landscape ar­ General Motors Corp chitecture, April 1- Sept. 30, 1969 to study in psychology to asst, professor of psy­ Students Visiting Britain Appointments approved were Robert chology and acting director of the Human in Africa and Europe; and Philipp Ger- C Milev, specialist in agricultural eco­ hardt. professor and chairman of micro­ Biology Laboratories. Oct. 1. 1968; Horace nomics. Dec 1. 1968. Joseph M. Vargas. biology and public health. Jan. 20-April R Brock, professor with assignment as F re e ! 4 0 - p a g e b o o k ja m m e d w ith b o u tiq u e s . Jr.. asst, professor of botany and plant 19.1969. to study at Stanford University. adviser to the MSU Turkey Project. Jan. W h e re to g et lu n c h o r d in n e r fo r pathology. Nov. 1. 1968; and Leland F. Ve- id eas o n h o w to liv e o n a little a n d Leaves were also approved for: Lowell 31. 1969; and Garland P. Wood, professor licer. asst, professor in microbiology and see a lo t. SI. F Rothert. program asst in 4-H Youth. of agricultural economics with assign­ public health. July 1.1969. Nov. 1, 1968-June 15. 1969. to study at ment as chief of party for the MSU Argen­ W h e r e to fin d ac c o m m o d a tio n s H o w to tra v e l 15 days by tr a in Other appointments included: Jenny w ith u n lim ite d m ile a g e fo r o n ly $35. MSU: Harold G. Marcus, associate pro­ tine Project, Dec, 1,1968 fo r as little as 52 a n ig h t, fu ll E n g lish A. Lind, librarian, Jah, 2. 1969; Gary D. Also granted changes in assignments fessor of history and the African Studies b re a k fa s t in c lu d e d . L o n d o n th e a t r e s , b a lc o n y sea ts MacNillan. librarian. Nov. 15, 1968. Ber­ Center. March 21-Aug 31.1989. to study in were: Richard E. M iller, from research A w e e k in L o n d o n in a s tu d e n t S I .20 —som e g a lle ry seats 90tf. nice Z. Wallace, librarian. Nov. 18. 1968; and LaVonne E. Kriesel. secretary-ac- Ethiopia. Harm J. de Blij. professor of associate in chemistry to laboratory man­ r» S eason tic k e t to 9 0 0 sta te ly hom es, geography and the African Studies Cen­ ager in chemistry. Nov. 1. 1968; and Keki h o te l fo r $ 3 0 w ith to u r s o f fam ous countant to the MSU Tanzania Project, ter. Jan. 1-Dec. 31, 1969, to teach at Uni­ Mistry. from senior glassblower to super­ CORONET L o n d o n sig h ts a n d v isits to O x fo rd castles a n d h is to ric sig h ts fo r $5. Nov. 1.1988 versity of Miami in Florida; and Norman visor of the chemistry glass shop, Oct. 1, A U T O M A T IC 10” a n d S tra tfo rd -u p o n -A v o n . T ra v e l-stu d y p ro g ra m s , su m m e r The board approved sabbatical leaves N M iller, asst professor of political sci­ 1968 ■ i for; Norman R Thompson, professor of A w e e k in a n in te r n a tio n a l stu ­ jobs, s u m m e r schools. ence and the African Studies Center. Jan e l e c t r ic crop science. Dec 15. 1968-June 15, 1989, 1. 1969-Dec 31. 1970, to work with the Resignations and terminations were ap­ d e n t c e n tr e fo r $ 2 5 . S p e c ia l s t u d e n t t o u r p a c k a g e s to study In western U.S.. Hawaii, the Phil­ proved by the board for: John C Post, s ta rtin g a t $ 6 7 5 , in c lu d in g a ir fare. ippines and Australia: Jonathan W Wright, American Universities Field Staff • Automatic C arriage D isc o th e q u e s, fo lk s in g in g a n d The board approved transfers and agricultural agent for Arenac County. Dec professor of forestry. April 1-30. 1989. 31. 1968; James B Harrington, associate Return jazz clu b s, coffeehouses, p u b s, in n s, C o n certs, festiv als, o p e ra s , sp o rts. changes in assignments for Eldon A to travel in the Far East: C David Mead, Behr, from professor of forest products professor of agricultural engineering. • Full 8 8 -c h a ra c te r professor of English. April 1-June 30. to professor of forestry. Oct. 1. 1968; Aug 31. 1969; Joanne M Landis, special­ ’I 1969. to study at home; and William Whal- Henry A. Huber, from associate profes­ ist in dairy science. Nov 20. 1968: Henry office size Keyboard lon. associate professor of English. Sept. sor of forest products to associate profes­ O. Barbour, professor and director of • 5 yr. Guarantee T o : B ritis h T ra v e l, B ox 9 2 3 , N e w Y o rk , N . Y. 10019. 1,1969-Aug 31.1970. to study in Greece. sor of forestry. Oct. 1. 1968; W illiam B. hotel, restaurant and institutional man­ Also given sabbatical leaves were: agement. Jan. 5,1969: and Walter M. Bur­ P lease sen d m e y o u r free 4 0 -p a g e b o o k : "A G u id e fo r S tu d e n ts James R Hooker, associate professor of Lloyd, from professor of forest List Price $ 189.50 products to professor of forestry. Oct. 1, nett. associate professor of hotel, restau­ V is itin g B r ita in " p lu s 5 2 -p ag e c o lo r b o o k : "V a c a tio n s in B rita in ." history and the African Studies Center. 1968; Alan Sliker. from associate pro­ rant and institutional management, and Jan. 1-March 31. 1969. to study in Trini­ medicine. Jan 8.1969 dad and Tobago; R Keith Stein, profes­ fessor of forest products to associate pro­ ON LY $1349« fessor of forest products to associate Other resignations and terminations ap­ sor of music. Sept. 1. 1969-Aug. 31. 1970. N am e. • professor of forestry. Oct. 1.1968 proved were - Thomas A. Staudt. profes­ writing in Mexico. Spain. England and Ireland. Craig A. Staudenbaur. asso­ Other changes approved were: Robert sor and chairman of marketing and trans­ I ciate professor of philosophy. April 1- L. Green, associate professor of counsel­ portation administration. Dec 31. 1968: I C o lle g e . June 30. 1969. to study at home, and ing. personnel services and educational 1 Glenda Lappan. asst, professor of mathe­ Drab B Unwalla. associate professor psychology, and James Madison College matics. Dec. 31. 1968; Clark A Akatiff, of management. Apirl 1-June 30. 1969. to with apditional assignment in the MSU asst professor of geography. Aug 31, A d d re s s . study in the U.S. and India Equal Opportunities Program. Nov. 1.1968 1969: Lucy Landon. associate professor of 5411 SO CEDAR LANSING. MICHIGAN Sabbatical leaves were granted for: and Harrv G. Hedges, associate professor social work, Dec. 31.1968; and Brian Sand­ of electrical engineering with additional ers. library bibliographer. Dec 20. 1968 H O U R S -- C ity ____ .S ta t e . .Z ip . Jack W Bain, dean of communication arts. June 16-Sept. 15. 1969. to study in assignment as asst, dean of the College The following retirements were ap­ 40 of Engineering. Jan 1. 1969 proved bv the board: I first year of MSU M on. th ru F ri. 9-9 Michigan and travel in the United States: John M. Parsev. associate professor of Also given changes were: James V Hig­ employment in parentheses1 Leonard H S at. 9-6 Sun. 2-6 advanced studies in education and ad- gins. associate professor of human devel­ Blakeslee associate orofessor of ani- F r id a y , N o v em b er 22, 1968 3 Michigan State News, E ast Lansing, M ichigan Paris boycott reflects allied feud ...the. ' qjAtck end . p e o p le w i l l a s k how mill ftvy W >JJER nod th e T h «” j » *' £ H 1 .1 * ^ t’rKvL» U * ■_y f c x e f u tf v e R ip o c it-i ■whiff, -N -é v ftr - A n a l y s t e - ~ m y / t ' its g a i n s . *#• ■»-'■ „ijeorde who me never T h S o u th w i l l not a c c e p t a , Mahy «JLr— f ' • •'."•‘“'"'r** hrtg VnmiWip'Tfv rffe have expressed surprise and to ttYi twrvt n \vitTi fine' Y u*i • t' on e ol Yiovv o t h e r Ativan, n a t i o n s w i lt s p o n s i b l e f o r a l l i e d { a i l u r e to coalition governm ent For is seen by the o n e t h i n g , t h e y h a v e s e e n tin dism ay at South V ietnam 's r e ­ • c o u l d not g o to P a r i s w i t h o u t r e a c t to a n y p o s s i b l e m o v e s , explo it m a n y p o litic a l and p s y ­ a m a jo r governm ental crisis a n d m u c h m o r e f a m i l i a r th a n ;inn a u t h o r i t y a s a V iet Cong assassin ate th ou fusal. up until now. to p a rtic i­ cho logical w a r f a r e a d v a n ta g e s on th e o n e h a n d, and th e i m ­ t h e i r a l l i e s to d e a l w i t h th e if th e U S. san d s of n on -C om m un ist n a t­ pate in the P a r is peace talks. p r e s s i o n a r o u n d th e w o r l d ot northern ers as V ietn am ese, They w t to s e e h o w f a r the io n a li s t l e a d e r s . A r e w e a s k i n g However. Wesley Fishel. MSI B u t w h a t f i n a l l y w i l l b e th e b e i n g t o t a l l y u n d e r th e t h u m b and a s C om m u n ists. U .S. can b lu sh ed If w e d o n 't t h e m to c o m m i t p o l i t i c a l a n d professor of political science, outcom e of the t a l k s ' 1 W ill "By rea ch ing th e con fer­ b o m b th en i r e ta lia tio n , w e will p ossibly p h ysica l su icide ? said Wednesday, that the r e ­ o f th e U .S . on th e o th e r. th e S o u th V i e t n a m e s e a c c e p t " T h e r e is a b a sic con tra­ ence table, th e N o r t h V i e t ­ be view ed ; weak. A n d if w e fusal w as m erely a m a n ife s­ a s o lu ti o n i m p o s e d b y t h e U . S . ? A n d if t h e r e a r e to b e n e w d ictio n in U .S. p olicy to­ n a m ese have won a victo ry r e s u m e b o m b ung ir th e y w ill c la im tation of differences between If t h e y d o not. w i l l w e e n ­ e l e c t i o n s in V i e t n a m , a f t e r w e w a r d s Saigon, F ish e l pointed in th e e y e s o f m o s t o f A s ia . we violated th e agreem ents Saigon and Washington that c o u r a g e . o r a l l o w , a s F i s h e l put s a id t h e o n e s la st y e a r w e r e ou t. " W e w a n t a strong, r e ­ " I n th is k i n d o f w a r . Fish el w h i c h led to tin ks have been developing for some it. th e g o v e r n m e n t to b e o v e r ­ f a i r , w h e r e d o e s th at l e a d th e p r e s e n ta tiv e . and independent said, " i f you d o n ’t c o m p le t e ly T h e p ro b le m will m b e o n e ol time. throw n? g o v e r n m e n t , a n d a t th e s a m e w in . y o u lo s e It t h e y don t con vin cing Hanoi th a t th e U .S ."? The bombing halt. Fishel It th e S o u th V ie tn a m e se said, w as a u nilateral m ove by t i m e w e w a n t on e th at w e c a n c o m p l e t e l y l o s e , t h e y win. a l l i e s w i l l not p e r m i t c o n t i n u e d g o v e r n m e n t d o e s c h a n g e , he d e ­ A s f a r a s t h e f u t u r e o f the t a l k s , a nd o f p e a c e in A s i a . Hoad rally trophies m a n i p u l a t e w h e n w e th in k it H o w e v e r , he n oted , t h e r e is shellings, w it h o u t g i v i n g th e the U.S. which left P resid ent clared. A ll through A sia F is h e l cou ld o n ly o f f e r q u e s t ­ These trophies will soon be In the hands of road n ecessary.” no q u e s t i o n but th at th e N o r t h N o r t h th e o p p o r t u n i t y to m a k e Thieu no a ltern ativ e but to T h e S o u th V i e t n a m e s e a r e V i e t n a m e s e a g r e e d to c o m e to p olitical ca p ita l of a re s u m p t­ ions. rally fans as Snyder Hall sponsors its “ S a fa ri" road boycott the talks to prove his not n a i v e , a n d a r e v e r y a w a r e P a r i s b e c a u s e of th e p u n i s h ­ ion o f f u l l - s c a l e m i l i t a r y a c t ­ rally TO »gin at a.m. Saturday In Lot Y. John independence. "W ill the talk s e x p a n d to o f th e e f f e c t th at U S. a n d m ent th e y h a ve been taking. iv i ty . Shoemaker, executive asst, of Snyder Hall, views The original proposals for in c l u d e 14. or 15 m a j o r c o u n t ­ the talks called for only two w o r l d p o l i t i c s h a v e on t h e i r sides to be present, a Com­ f u t u r e . T h e i r p r o p o s a l th at "The casu lties have e n o rm o u s, so th ey a r e p lan ­ been F ish el em m a feels reflects th a t a b a sic t h is d i l ­ dif­ Frats to honor r i e s . l i k e t h o s e at G e n e v a in 1954'.’ W i l l th e U N p r o v i d e a the set of trophies with a rather wistful look. Regis­ tration for the event is $3 with any and all welcome s i n c e S o u th a nd N o r t h V i e t ­ ning to t a l k a n d s l o w d o w n the f e r e n c e in th e v i e w s o f th e to - ¡ 9 i n i n the fun. State Newspho to by Jim Ri ch ardson m unist side and our side, with r e p rese n tativ es attending n a m a r e th e m a j o r c o m b a t ­ fighting so m e w h a t B ut t h e ir s t r a t e g y h a s a l w i v s b e e n one s t r u g g l e a s s e e n b y th e U .S . a n d th e C o m m u n i s t s . housemothers m u l t i n a t i o n a l f o r c e to p o l i c e the a g r e e m e n t ? W i l l th e V i e t from each party to the con­ a n t s t h e y s o o u l d be th e m a j o r Cong be slau ghtered a lte r p a r t n e r s in n e g o t i a t i o n s w a s of figh tin g w h ile th ey a r e ta lk ­ > T h e U . S . . h e f e e l s , is t r y ­ L a m b d a Chi Alpha fr a t e r n ity flict. But the talks a r e developing with the ap pe aran c e of four very a d r o i t . F i s h e l said T hev a re m uch m ore a w a re ing. a n d t a l k i n g w h i l e t h e y a r e li gh tin g in g to m i n i m i z e th e g a p s b e ­ t w e e n th e t w o s i d e s a n d b r in g is h o l d in g a d i n n e r h o n o r i n g a ll f r a t e r n i t y h o u s e m o t h e r s a t 5:.'50 th ey la y d o w n th eir W i l l t h e y l a y d o w n t h e i r a r m s '. ’ " W h a t w i l l t h e L a o t i a n s do arm s Snyder Hall group to n ig h t in t h e i r f r a t e r n i t y h o u s e . a b o u t th e 40.000 N o r t h V i e t ­ N o w fo r the first tim e T h e idea of such a d in n er w a s c o n c e iv e d b y L a m b d a Chi Alpha b r o t h e r s w h o felt t h a t th e h o u s e ­ n a m e s e t r o o p s on t h e i r t e r ­ ritory? O r th e C am bo dians sponsors road rally at p o p u la r prices. m oth ers w ere n ot getting a b o u t t h o s e in C a m b o d i a O ” S n yd er H all M e n 's Assn. w ill sponsor " S n v d e r S a f a r i . ” a ro ad enough re c o gn itio n for th eir s e r ­ r a l l y . b< g i n n i n g 9 a . i n . S a t u r d a y in Lo t \ And m ost im po rtan t, F ish e l vices. T h e r a l l y w i l l b e o p e n to e v e r y o n e a n d c o s t $15 p e r c a r w i t h no D ire c t fro m E a c h h o u s e m o th e r w ill be e s ­ d e c l a r e d , is t h e q u e s t i o n ot w h a t W a s h i n g t o n in t e n d s to do lim it c i lie n u m b e r o f p a s s e n g e r s . c o r t e d b y a m e m b e r of L a m b d a F.u h c a r w i l l b e g i v e n a s e t o f i n s t r u c t i o n s in th e f o r m of abou t those p ro b le m s . its re s e rv e d -s e a t C h i A lp h a . clues T h e o b j e c t is to r e a c h d e s i g n a t e d c h e c k p o i n t s a t a n e x a c t tim e Though m ost p a rticip an ts w ill e s t im a t e their tim e, so m e cars re e q u i p p e d w i t h s m a l l c o m p u t e r s . en gagem en t. Tin cou rse w i l l c o v e r a p p r o x i m a t e l y 100 m i l e s o f I n g h a m C o u n t y a n d i e x p e c t e d to t a k e t h r e e h o u r s to c o m p l e t e . A t r o p h y w i l l b e W in n e r ited to e a c h o f th e to p t h r e e f i n i s h e r s in l oth th e e x p e r t a n d v ice classes. o f 3 R o d S l u t s k y , p r e s i d e n t +*f S n v d e r H a l l, s a i d th e d i r e c t i o n s w i ll A c a d e m y in c lu d e 1 j o k e s a n d t h e r e w i l l b e lo ts ot tun. A w a r d s! I -28-29-30 I RICHARD VANESSA FRANCO DAVID LIO N EL LAURENCE NAISMITH. Punctay, i \ o v , ¿ . f EV EN IN GS A T . and D e c . | .......................8:00 pm Roostertail :amelot' INJAY LERNER “ FREDERICK lOEWE ‘ T MOSS HART^ m S . ' i I H A N K S G 1V ING M A T I N E E . . . 4:00pm FREDERICK LOEWE s& tW JWIBNER“ sJOSfftRÄ ^ SHOWS S A T U R D A Y M A T I N E E . . . . . . 2:30pm ILA D M E R BROS -SEVEN AFUS RECORDS TECHNICOLOR9PANAVISION9FROMWARNERBROS.-SEVEN ARTSW S U N D A Y , M A T I N E E O N L Y . . . 3:00pm A L L S E A T S R E S E R V E D : $4— $3.50— $3— $2.5 0 F a c u l t y &. S tu d en ts: P i c k up y o u r H o lid a y on Upperdeck tAiaint 2nd BIG WEEK! ‘Ä SSS ä » I c e D i s c o u n t C o u p o n s a t th e Ice A r e n a . . . h u r r y 1 LANSING CIVIC CENTER W o u ld l i k e to introduce you to Detroit's la r ­ TATE B O X O F F I C E P H O N E 48 5-2 419 gest 21 and over club by extending a FREE c o u p o n t o you, good any Friday night through 1 9 6 8 . B r i n g t h i s coupon and legal I.D, and be ad m itte d fr e e . f=>H O / V B 3 3 Z - 2 B 14 - C A N O N E M A N ... ‘A F L E A IN H ER E A R ” 7:35 and 9:45 C H A N C E H IS T O R Y ? Excluding Friday, Nov. 29 F.n 0 u t r a -t* t.| i!jt> planned will provide believed. At 7 and 9:30 tonight JIM BROWN DIAHANN.CARROLL GENE HACKMAN international and com p arativ e faculty m e m b e r opportunities tor a num ber of in 109 Anthony Hall. JULIE HARRIS JACK KLUGMAN education. ate student working men as fuculu m e m b e rs and g radu ate And finally we have "T h e WARREN OATES The Institute is p rim arily search project in 'I. students to have o verseas ex- Threepenny O p era." Since this ^ J A M E S WHITMORE concerned with increasing other is in Asia i m hers nerienei classic film is so old 11932 >and in t h e S p lif c knowledge of the role of e d ­ r a n g e m e n ts I ■>r ERNEST BORGNINE ne bi Shown at 7:07 \1 <1\l pr.svnh Aft I vtfctt Freeman P.mJuciion ucation in cross-cultural and project which is e: SPARTAN TWIN EAST ■ Lm s p a r t a n t w in w e s t »>.ooBshoppingct»*f iiooust and L ate A » D o r i s Da\ Robert Morse Terry-Thomas-Pat rick O'Neal international settings and r e ­ ta ke th r e e w ars # > 7 'mmmmiirTmriwz « % Yi lating this knowledge to c a m ­ volve a number ol i. •9:15 Shown at 7 & 9 p.m. L pus teaching, r e s e a r c h and bers and g ra d u a te si r I Suggestedf#r BaturaAudiences j the College ol Kducat udii“ Matinees Sat. & Sun. S grad u a te p rogram s. ELECTRIC IN CAR Two purposes ol the Insti­ All re se a rc h prnje O tute w ere cited by David K Hennan. associate d ire c to r ol lafed to professiona hut faculty m embei •all FRANK SINATRA CLinT E a s T w o o q HEATERS Shown Once Only at 9:05 the International Studies In­ en tire t n ive rsiu th( “ LADY IN CEMENT' ‘C O O G a n s BLUff stitute and professor in the College of Education. - t o help support faculty and in the international pi The r e s e a r c h pr designed to be In t • RAQUEL WELCH | X . I IN COLOR IA UN IV E R S A L PICTU R E aUtt»iUil Ft r B a la re ] MEN'S HAI.ASSOCIATION grad u a te student re se a r c h a c ti­ the developing DAN BLOCKER. J ñ . vities in international and com ­ parative educational rese arch, and which the study is m facultv or g radu ate With LEE J . COBB Continuous From 1:00 P.M . WOMEN'S INTELR-RESIDECECGUNCIL -to help educational sys­ te m s and governm ents develop their m anpo w er needs. STARTS TODAY J & tJU n tu F eatu re at 1:00 - 3:10 - 5:20 - 7:30 - 9:40 PJvl. JW "Utilizing reso urce s the en tire U niversity, the In­ stitute works with officials to from W H Y D ID 1 3 W O M E N W ILLING LY O P E N T H E IR Lit IR H & D O O R S TO THE B O ST O N ST R A N G L E R ? S fîto . T H IS IS A T R U E A N D R E M A R K A B L E M O T IO N u DOUCE P IC T U R E . < ja c K SH IR L E Y I L E M M O N M a eL a iN E rl a s t o r y of n passion, bloodshed, desire 4 and death No bag everything, , in f a c t , that makes for the I life worth l i ving barrel. »r v ry Q u i t e f r a n k l y - w e d o n ’t O.O..QQQO {£) h a v e a b a g t h a t b i g . No m atter. 21 pieces of “ finger lic k in ’ g o o d ’’ SUUDÀy N16HT BRODV HALL K entucky F r i e d C h i c k - i L - en will rem ain hot, ADM. 5 0 t FRI PAY NIQtf •StfOVVf- f r e s h a n d d e l i c i o u s all fr H AM the way home in i t s WILSOKWALL j own large bucket con­ tainer. I t ’s h a n d y . ADM. 5 0 ? ! •S H O W S - . ¿ ' • ' i f P.M . COLIUMII MOM AH p K e n tu fk ty Élm i* fried ¿Jftitfken I S u g g e s t e d fo r M a tu r e A u d i e n c e s . 1040 East Grand River East Lansing , , . 351-5550] T o n y C u rtis H e n r y F o n d a G e o r g e K e n n e d y 1620 East Michigan M i k e K< l i f t o n -Robert Fryer Richard Fleischer Edward Anhalt Gerold Frank Lansing , . . 484-7759 Panavision Color by DeLuxe F r id a y , N o v e m b er 22, 1968 10 Michigan State News, E ast Lansing, Michigan 'Coogan’; trite plot, Partisan politics V HL • • . • L b r o u g h t into focus n n j r n i r r tr > rm • ui ^ ♦ The Irrff»pervJent Majority m ay \>e ATttfirufpemaA m bring­ the Nov. 5 election, said his (‘nances o l serving eiitecuveVy - ing the issue of partisan politics on the, com m ittees of health, strong, honest' ahd, m ost im ­ in local governm ent to public education and w elfare m ay be ,4 f ie r y horse, u-ith the speed o f portantly. believable. attention, Thomas Helm a, hampered by partisan politics. lig h t, a c lo u d o f dust, a n d a hearty Included in the cast are Lee P a n e l o n d r u g D em ocratic representative to He said a m ove by the R e­ H i i.o S ilv e r !— T he Long R ang er J. Cobb, Susan Clark. Don Stroud the Ingham County Board of publican representatives to re­ by F ra n S trik e r Four who voiced f U t u and opinions at the Drug Symposium Wednesday night are and Tisha Sterling. Supervisors, told that group duce the number of com m ittees “ Coogan’s Bluff" is an old Lee J. Cobb plays a New York (left to right) Benjamin Gibson, lawyer fro m the American Civil Liberties Union; Tuesday night. will give them a m ore distinct HI manhunt tale put in new sur­ constable who is hassled by Coo­ Roy Swortflgger of the Michigan State Police; W illia m B a rr, residence hall pro Helma, who w as supported ruling advantage because they roundings. Deputy Coogan, an gan's police techniques. As one grams; and Lee M. Upcraft, director of student relations, JMC. - Ç♦nta Kla \a/( photo rrhotn by M artin Nichols by the Independent Majority in outnumber the D em ocrats 18 to Arizona lawm an, is sent to the of Hollywood's best method ac­ State News bad-land. New York City, to ex­ 3 on the board. tors, Cobb offers his usual fine tradite a murderer. The plot Helma said he had been con­ performance. m oves around the escape and capture of the villain by Coo­ gan, who is as straight as Dud­ By MARK LEZELL State News Reviewer Miss Clark as a probation of­ ficer, and Stroud as the hippie TOO ’HARSH’ tacting individual Republican supervisors with the proposal killer, present convincing per­ that the com m ittee positions ley Doright. form ances. They rea ct w ell to be filled according to the repre­ Attorney raps drug laws The story is just awful, but the problem of being m ere sen tative’s qualifications to its presentation is really very . serve in specific areas rather Coogan even w ears a white hat. pawns to the flick's drift good. The best performance was than according to party affilia­ The problem with the story is Clearly, this story rates a su­ per yawn! Tisha Sterling as the sw eet tions. its trite, good-over-bad might- pensated for giving this infor­ The law s on LSD and sim ilar “ I’ve been getting m ixed re­ In spite of the script, the act­ drug-freak who is as trust­ have now, Gibson said. They m akes-right ideas. All those By KATHY MORAN m ation contrary to many beliefs, hallucinogens, which w ere made ing and technical presentations worthy as Mati Hari, as vir­ w ere imposed as a reaction actions on this proposal," ideals typical of a Randolph State News Staff Writer within the last two years, are of ''Coogan’s Bluff" are good. gin as Barbarella, and as against the "social undesir­ he said. Helma said. Scott flick are apparent here. Atty. Benjamin Gibson, of the Gibson felt that there should m ilder than those dealing with m otherly as Ma Barker. Her ables" and to stam p out drugs, Coogan, despite setbacks and American Civil Liberties Union marijuana. “ I don’t think it’s going to Clint Eastwood stars as Coo­ perform ance is true and pro­ as a result, the courts are stuck be rigid law s governing the pro­ errors made in the line of duty, IACLU I, called the present drug Gibson said the drug law s are be im possible but its going to gan. He is all the part demands. fessional. with these drastic laws, he said. duction and sale of drugs, and alw ays gets his man laws "harsh" and the penalties that people engaging in illegal not absolute and the courts are be difficult." he said in ref­ Eastwood is as prepared as a T e c h n ic a lly . "Coogan s Gibson said Michigan is at the Don Siegel, who produced and • quite severe" in a sym posium beginning to rule on them. He erence to getting Republican Boy Scout, as smooth as P at­ top in the severity of drug pen­ sale of drugs should be dras­ directéti from Herman M iller's Bluff" includes som e excel­ on the legal aspects of drugs in cited the Supreme Court ruling agreem ent on the proposal. ton's armor divisions, and as alties except for som e of the tically dealt with. screenplay, takes every oppor­ lent cam era shots. Of par­ Erickson Kiva Wednesday night. perm itting the Indians to use a Helma said as a m em ber of cocksure of him self as the Bald Southern states including Geor­ "However, there should be no tunity to push this point. ticular note is the mad m o­ The program was sponsored by hallucinant. known to be harm­ the board he would be devoted Eagle. gia where second conviction for legal prohibition to use of drugs," Thè film opens with the Ari­ torcycle race through the Associated Women Students ful, in their religious cerem ony to representing a liberal philo­ selling drugs is a capital of­ he said. zona cop s capture of a dang­ Eastwood skyrocketed to top grounds of The Cloisters in (AWS). because it is an integral part of sophy and putting it into prac­ fense, subject to capital punish­ He felt there w as not a just erously prim itive sniper, who is billing with the success of three New York. The film very e f­ Gibson discussed drug usage the ceremony. tice in local programs. law in response to use or pos­ an Indian, naturally. The coun- Italian-made w estern s,a ll show­ fectively extended the speed along with Lt. Dave Stormer, ment. Students aim ed m ost of their Conviction for sale of drugs session of marijuana. He fav­ t r y-Coogan o u tsm arts New ing the real set in the absurd. and danger of the scene. of the cam pus police. William discussion at the arrests m ade He specifically noted expan­ carries a minimum of 20 years ored treating marijuana in the York’s urban integrated police In "Coogan's Bluff" Eastwood "Coogan's Bluff" is now Barr, residence hall program of­ sam e way the law treats alco- for possession of marijuana. Gib­ sion of the county juvenile force with a bluff which is a displays the absurd in the real. showing at the Spartan Twin ficer; and M. Lee Upcraft, di­ in prison; conviction for pos­ son said that police have the home and greater em phasis on session of drugs carries pen­ h o l-a person is not subject to bathos. Clean-cut Coogan out­ He is sort of going from a Wil­ West Theatre. If you can rector of student relations of power to enter a person’s house w elfare program s as part of his alties up to 10 years imprison, arrest for use of it but rather fights and finally lassos his man, liam S. Hart to a John Wayne ride out the script, the acting Justin Morrill College, before if they had reason to believe intended reform s. ment in Michigan. for abuse of the use, such as a dirty hippy--again, naturally. the people inside were engag­ In thanking the organization prototype. is worth viewing. However, an audience of about 100 stu­ drunken driving. The script even m akes subtle Stormer said that he felt m ost ing in illegal activities. for it's support Helma m en­ if bad melodrama is not your dents. The use of marijuana would jokes at the U.S. Supreme Court. Regardless of Coogan s char­ Most of Michigan's drug laws of the criticism in drug cases tioned several nam es and said thing, let Coogan ride on by. not be illegal then except when A case can be m ade against a To top this whole absurd line, acter, Eastwood s portrayal is w as directed against the inves­ "these people were probably re­ were made in the 1930s before it infringed on the rights of oth­ vehicle used in drug transporta­ sponsible for giving m e the lar­ tigatory m ethods the police used there w as the research that we ers, he said. tion as w ell as against the per­ gest margin of victory lor any TONIGHT rather than the penalties for conviction on drug charges. He said that in Ingham Coun­ ty many people are arguing that son him self, he said. This was verified by a student who had Dem ocrat in Ingham County.’ He said that m ost of the in­ D r iv e in T h e a tr e ALL COLOR formation leading to arrests is gained from relatives, friends the law pertaining to marijuana is unconstitutional because m ari­ his car confiscated for posses­ sion of drugs. The Independent describes itself as non-partisan Majority 1 30Z D SNO W ROAD ISUGGESTED FOR MATURE AUDIENCES juana cannot arbitrarily be plac­ and acquaintances of the user. In a hypothetical case, if a student organization dedicated These people are never com ­ ed in the narcotics class. person w as serving a jail term to keeping the public informed 2 MILES SOUTHWEST OF LANSING ON M -7 * , PARAMOUNTPICTURESj-esents for possession of drugs and dur­ on political issues. This in­ CO-FEATURE M St lAuREM-iSproduction I a n e F o n c Ia Tonight and Tomorrow ing this tim e the use of that drug cludes researching candidates w as legalized, the person would for public office and supporting flicks- still have to serve the tim e be­ them according to their politi­ cause when he com m itted the crim e it w as illegal, Gibson said. cal ideals rather than their poli­ tical party. LOTTE RUDOLPH J a n ie s PROGRAM INFORMATION ^ 332*6944 LAST 5 DAYS! »BURN L E N Y A -F Ö R S T E R ■ ^ ' 1 : 0 0 - 8:45r,"6:35 -9 :2 « - BlAKB EDW8RD6 I N T H E O R .I C 3 - H S T A .I _ Unlikeotherclassics P I I_ ,*Æ V E R S I O N O F 'WestSideStory" growsyounger! •a g jg B * i TfarecaMt ¡ J Tbcwwcow' : » ¡r a w im m u s ì 1P " K S y ' ¡¡NEW THREEPENNY T/ 7/ J SHOWN ONCE ONLY AT 9:15 “ BARBARELLA’' SHOWN SEE q a r Im r e u a DO HERTHING! FOLK TONIGHT 8:30 p.m . OPERA •rest PICTURE!" Winner of 10Reademy m TWICE 7:07 AND LATE O R I G I N A L ID rR J E C T E J ID Men's In tram ural Building Awards!-,u, „.“WEST SIDE STORY' to o ! GEN’L ADM. WITH I.D. T E IX T M U S I C B Y *ROBERTWISE E lectric in Car $2.00 $1.50 Heaters D ifilli W i l l i i -in :ttiuai c a m i jn n t swuìkuio :•> «uni « *6 « i worn ■ [SMA. I T ic k ets on sale at Campbell’s, BERTOLT KURT GW „„.«NATALIE WOOD RICHARD BEYMER RUSS TAMBLYN the Union, Campus Book Stores RITAMORENO ■GEORGE CHAKIRIS and the G a t e . _ B R EC H T W E IL L PABST ¡,,nifinii. ROBERTWISE«-. JEROMEROBBINS P anavis ion & Color plus Pink P anther Cartoon •Ye. Olde Notice MSU 108 Wells Hall 7 and 9 P.M . 75d INTERNATIONAL NEXT1 Sean Connery WERE ONLY HO. i ... FILM SERIES presents the ND ROI V RE - ITN H TSH EI AD T ER E ^ in “ Shalako” 113: i Milts North on US-27.. 482-7409 C M tk - m m F i l l i ACADEMY Now Thru Sunday--3 Days Left 1000 Watt High Powered Heaters AWARD PARAMOUNTPtCIURtSpiesents AOINODfIAURÍNTIISPRODUCTION ANF F o N d / \ TRADEMARK WINNER D A R b A R I |[ A / Prosonts the Soul Sound at MSU M O N D A Y -T U E S D A Y -S A T U R D A Y “ B E ST FO R EIG N F IL M ” RUSH W E D N E S D A Y -T H U R S D A Y -F R ID A Y TG y{( FRIDAY NIGHT WWW SPICE Avis Is No. 2. They can’t make pizza like we do. Don’t have a player piano or a ban|o player, either. O r good-time singing, Im p o r te d and domestic. ., C L O S E L Y ¡IDuud "U go . Monday Nite - P IZZA FEAST delicious soft drinks, and funny signs on the walls. Let 'e m keep trying IW A T C H E D H e m m in g s J o g n a h momio* o*e'i#»« tifitseodMuvcbyleeCfeweendCwwifqiNftermedby i 6 p .m .-2 a.m. harder. • .till It Hertz! T R A I N S INÌM S ■H ill I Directid byJlrt Hrarel • ACarloPootl preacauuoa DistributedbyZKStems HI APUmwtyt Compaay 't——„ m i*. » in* nwa I M HKI M l IS.M.AJ Wed. Thursday “ HAPPY HOURS” ■ IMWMIMHil «UNMIK lUM'IURT « RUAMOUNIKttlt S B U ER 8 p.m. - 10 p=m. TONIGHT SHOWN TWICE AT 7 : 0 7 — 11:10 7:30 p . m . 'NOW OPEN FROM 12 p.m . - 2 a.m . FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE 2nd FEATURE AND PARTY FAVORS - THE BEER DEPOT UNIVERSITY JAMES COBURN IN AUDITORIUM ALICE CARTER P IZ *7 >TYP7 Z kX TPM AMR ttL O HR P « !^ Y E P P IUT BRLOI C P tRt fO t lU T fSi C E »' WATERHOLE #3 Every F ri.-S a t. Nlte Admission $1.00 5327 S. Cedar E SS-5232 Tickets on Sale at Unior 2nd at 9:17 in the R ATHSKELLER L _— F r id a y , N o v em b er 22, 1968 11 Michigan State News, E ast L ansing, M ichigan PANEL DISCUSSION Mosl ems un Organ transplants termed vita M oslem s the world over be­ gin a month of fasting in obser­ R v O W « R * : s \ t A .i.lOR New* K ) ■its i which w as sponsored by the * 'E ranjtettcfct _ of tended him to live, he would bis heart more Brown said that t-j.v*.« the iv'-sfm in future ^ Ohio, where the laws are dif­ fe r e n t concerning the willing 1 vation of the Holy Month of Ram ­ adan with the advent of the new \ durable. lit * -* .i. . . . , ittooit àmigrtc Christians should, support LansMW « the one who killed 4 h e person. fb**J the existing “ TV* is silly, (or we don't I. “ t* a» meh) of heart and WgaiT.' irahlpfc.ftlv ‘ On f a * . v..*L r~ \ T h e question of priority is Histr »V.v&S w e fe drawn up- over ten v take this attitude about peni­ rtatnadari that the Rordti w as re­ as a healing m easure. Rev. Blair of Ingham County Gen­ a difficult problem for the law years ago and w ere m eant eral Hospital, who spoke from cillin ind colds, poor eyesight vealed to Mohammed while he Roger P alm s said last week. for cornea transplants and are and glasses, blood transfusions to handle. w as in m editation." Sami Ab- P alm s w as a m em ber of a the physician’s point of view; “ If the situation w ere to arise not out of date. and RH factor babies," P alm s delhamid. president of the Mus­ panel discussing transplants, Tom Brown, an attorney who "The laws for im m ediate said. that both a young engineering lim Student Association at MSU, viewed the legal aspects of transplants need to be more “ Our bodies are the tem ples student and a mother of five said. transplants, and P alm s, a of God and now God has children, both needed a heart consistent with m edical advan­ "From two hours before dawn Baptist m inister presenting given us new Ways to keep transplant, who would be able ces," he said. until after sunset every day i theological aspects. Blair said that he w as con­ the tem ple going,” he said. to decide which of them would during Ramadan, w e are re­ P alm s said that every fused over the apparent con­ Brown said that law yers had receive it,” Brown asked. quired to fast." explained Ab- Christian should be a donor and troversy on organ transplants. that this should be done prayer­ been studying the problem of organ transplants for nearly “ The possibility of artificial "The donor has nothing to Nativity mural delhamid. "With the exception of liquor fully. parts would solve these pro­ loose, while the recipient has Fernando Calderon, world-renowned Spanish-born P alm s, citing the theological a decade. and pork, which we alw ays are Legal Question b lem s,” Brown said, “ but everything to gain," he said. muralist, puts the finishing touches on a nativity forbidden to consume, w e are asp ects of organ transplants, Blair said that from a m edi­ “ The first problem w e run m edical science says that it scene mural commissioned by a m ember of St. free to eat everything w e de­ encouraged Christians to sup­ port this m edical advancem ent. into is determining the tim e is not advanced enough to cal standpoint this type of Andrew’ s Episcopal Church in New Providence, N.J. sire after sunset. of d eath -th at’s som ething we perfect these yet. operation is not different from "Fasting provides a m eans "Christians ought to encour­ Calderon was befriended in Rome when he was un­ can't define leg a lly ,” he said. Brown said that the problem any other, but it involves the of exercising self-control for age healing and better m edi­ known by Canon Charles Shreve, now of St. Andrew s. cal care. We ought to be push­ “ Does death com e when the of donating body parts posed previous consent of the donor. The Spanish painter has come to New Providence the believer, as well! as ans­ heart stops, or when the brain a problem. "The donor m ust have all wering the w ill of God." Ab- ing for all the healing w e can ,” that can be done for him ad­ to do two gift murals fo r the church. he said. cea ses to function?" There are existing law s in UPI W 1 rephoto delhamid said. "When one fasts, One’s duty He stressed that this quest­ the state of Michigan's law­ m inistered." Blair said. the feeling of hunger lets him “ It is a Christian's duty to ion poses a real problem to the books stating that a person know the feeling of a poor man. KENNETH K AN TZER his Lord to keep as fit as possible and to live as long as possible,” he said. “ Through m edical science, law, and cited an exam ple of m ay w ill his heart, or any what happens because of the organ, to science when he loose definition. “ One of the first heart dies, the attorney said. Religious leader asserts "If a person is unable to ob­ serve the prescribed lasting be­ cause of sickness or other good reasons, he can be excused." moral lawessential to man man has the right and the transplants in Texas w as from “ The m ain problem is that Abdelhamid said. Bible topic opportunity to live perhaps up a person who w as murdered this law is not uniform with Ramadan, the ninth month of to 15 m ore y ea rs-m a y b e be­ but whose heart w as kept alive. those of other states." he the year on the Islam ic calen­ cause God w ants him to have At the trial the defendent said. dar. runs for the entire lunar o f seminar it for som e service to Him," claim ed that it w as not him “ You might w ill your heart in his heart since the fall of month, which ends with another P alm s said. but the hospital that had to scien ce in the state of "Moral law is the best sys­ are practical, fit, and expedient new moon on D ec. 21._________ "The Authority of the Bible” “ Man is not only dust of killed the man when they Michigan, but what if you die tem for mankind," Jim Serego, to accom plish this end," Serego Adam but that he has free is the topic of an all-day stu­ the ground, but he has got outside of the state, say in director of Campus Action at said. choice. 332-2559 nursery took his heart from him." dent theological conference to som ething else, a breathed- the University of Michigan said "There w as one causation in He said that m an has built be held in Ericson Kiva at 9:30 in part--or a soul," P alm s at a meeting of Chi Alpha Tues­ aU of creation. God created feelings for what he has done U n iv e rs ity Lutheran a.m . Saturday. said. Kenneth Kantzer, dean of the soul from the body, but "You cannot separate Vatican recognizes m arriage day night. „ Serego said that many people us for happiness. The goal of creation is for m en to work but that he pushes the blam e on society and its institutions. "It is not just environm ent and Church Trinity E vangelical Divinity these operations do not affect are today calling the moral in harmony." L, Sjchool, D eerfield, 111, w ill be m y soul, but m e." the principal speaker. Kantzer, between former priest, nun law s laid down by God in the Bible and com m andm ents im ­ Serego said to achieve this harmony man m ust love other heredity that shape life." Serego said. "We know a man s a lc - lc a “ If I am sick em otionatlyd wrong. The guilt feelings com e who for years w as associated this also affects m e physically GRAND FORKS, N.D. , 10:30 & 11:30 a .m . Panelists for the conference he said. act without delay in sim ilar the Fargo, N.D.. D iocese an­ world of m ore than one per­ talk of love and throw flow ers heart. are William Brownson of West- Total healing nounced Monday that the son. Otherwise there is chaos." around but they steal each I ern Theological Seminary, Hol­ ca ses in the future. Fiens' m arriage had been for­ Serego said that moral laws other's pocket change and argue LUTH ERAN Kimberly Downs The m inister also said that "I would like to interpret the land; John Gerstner of Pitts- when Jesus healed, he healed speed and graciousness of the malized before a priest after m ust be practical, fit. and ex­ who's going to wash the dishes. " W O R S H IP Church of Christ I burgh Theological Sem inary; and all of the man. dispensation as an indication special perm ission was obtained pedient. He said that if a law Serego said that man has 1007 Kimberly Drive, Lansing Martin Luther Chapel see sign at 2729 E , Grand I Leslie Keylock of St. Norbert He offered the exam ple of that Rom e is willing to move from the Vatican. He said the did not benefit man he had the had the m oral law s written Lutheran Student Center River IV 9-7130 I College. Green Bay, Wise. a man who, being offered a with m ore haste in sim ilar m arriage now is recognized by right to break it. S E V E N T H -D A Y 444 Abbott Road SUNDAY SERVICES I Registration w ill be $3 at the transplant, refused it with the cases." George Frein said. He the church. "But God s laws are for the I door. e x c u s ^ t h a t ^ j f ^ G o d ^ J ia d ^ ^ happiness of mankind and they Morning Worship 11:00 a . m . A D V E N T IS T Sunday Worship Services U N IV E R S IT Y Bible Study 10:00 a.m. U N IV E R S IT Y Services Saturday 9:30 - 11:00 a.m. Evening Worship 6:00 p.m. 310 ST . ANDREW Rev. David A. Kruse B A P T IS T wardcl£ com er of Ann & Division Wednesday evening Bible C H R IS T IA N North Hagadom CHURCH School Eastern Orthodox Church Missouri Synod Study 7:30 p.m. CHURCH Sabbath School 9:30 a.m. jr . University Student Center F ree Bus Service and For Transportation Call FE 9- oo* ■f * # s — (American Baptist) _ Morning Worship 11 a.m. * ‘rT*1#£reencrest Nursery Both ServffilF 8190, ED 2*-l960orED 2-243* I NURSERY -A V Gerard G. Phillips. Pastor East Lansing Minister L . G. Foil Worship 10:00 a.m. & 7:3U p.m. DIVINE LITURGY CO M PLETE Bible Study 9:45 Hear the "Voice of Pro­ Church School 11:10 a,m. phecy” on radio. See E D G E W O O D U N IT E D C H U R C H Worship 10:45 Wednesday prayer SUNDAY 9:30 A.M. D R Y C L E A N IN G VESPER & CONFESSION “ Faith for Today” on 469 North Hagadorn Road hour 6:45 p.m. SAT. 6:30 P.M. Television. Worship Service - 9:30 and 11 a.m . S E R V IC E DON STIFFLER, MINISTER Free Bus Service 332-5193 332-5212 and Nursery 332-1888 For Transportation Call Sermon by Dr. Truman A. Morrison 623 E. Grand Rlvar 332-5539. St. Johns East Lansing Student parish Church School— 9:30 and 11 a.m.—Crib Room-Senior High SBC EAST LANSING University Group— 6 p.m. C LE ANE RS 'Across from Student Services’ FRIENDS M E E T IN G Central Methodist 327 M.A.C. Phone ED 7-9778 Edgewood Church Bus route, Conrad, Holmes and Hubbard, F irs t Baptist Church beginning at 10:40 a.m. Across From the Capitol of East Lansing meeting for worship 3 p.m. Sunday Masses— Call 332-8693 or 332-0606 for information WORSHIP SERVICES Ministers: Truman A. Morrison, Paige Birdwell______ All Saints Parish 7:00-8:15-9:45-11:15 940 S, Harrison Rd, 10:00 A.M. 800 Abbott Road 12:30-4:45-6:00 p.m. ITM Sunday School 10:00 a.m. Thanksgiving Sunday Upper level, corner room Masses Mon.-Fri. Morning Service 11:00 a.m. "B e Not Silent Benefactors’ Training Union 6:00 p.m. Child care provided 7:00-8:00-12:30-4:30 Dr. Howard A. Lyman caSTmmsTCR p r c s p y tc r iù r c : LU N CH E O N S P E C IA L S Evening Service 7:00 p.m. All are welcome preaching 4:15 Alumni Chapel T3TS Abi Wednesday Evening For Transportation or cost ¿ansino. ft* CHIC KEN FISH HAMBURG Church School 10:00 a.m. Information call, 337-0241 Saturday masses Crib Nursery Large portion Delicious fillet of Full 1/4 lb. Beef So Bring the Baby____ 8:00 a.m.-9:15 a.m .-ll:45 a.m. SUNDAY SCHEDULE fried chicken, cole fish, cole slew, Hamburg with slaw, french fries french fries and french fries and Worship Services— 9:00 and 11:00 a.m . and roll roll. cole slaw. F IR S T C H R IS T IA N R E F O R M E D C H U R C H F irs t Church of Peoples Church Assembly for children through third g rad e 9:00 a .m , j FOREST VIEW SCHOOL Church School for children, youth, and adults 10:00 a.m . , Y O U R C H O IC E . . . 790 Christ Scientist East Lansing 3119 Stoneleigh, Lansing NURSERY PROVIDED ALL TIMES • 515 W. GRAND RIVER, E. Lansing *536 E. GRAND RIVER 709 E. Grand River MORNING SERVICE EVENIN^ | E^ VICE Rev. Robert David Leas 332-6854 _ J j* 3205 S. CEDAR *3921 W. SAGINAW, Lansing East Lansing 10:00 A.M. 7:00 P*M* Interdenominational Sunday Service 11 a.m. REV. ALVIN HOKSBERGEN 200 W. Grand River preaching SERMON ^Tb7 at Michigan CAMPUS STUDENT CENTER, 217 Bogue St., Apt. 3 MORNING: Dr. Kenneth Kantzer, Dean of the G L Y C IN E "Soul and Body" Alvin Hoksbergen, Director Phone 351-6360 Trinity Evangelical Divinity School FREE BUS SERVICE—See Schedule on SUNDAY SERVICE SUNDAY SCHOOL will speak. Residence Hall Bulletin Board. 9:30 a.m. - 11:00 a.m. 11:00 a.m. - regular EVENING: "Who’ s Thankful?” 9 :30- 11:00 a.m, - college class Sunday at 8:30 and 11:00 a.m. "Our Church 40 Years WEDNESDAY From Now” 11:00 a01 • Morning li'omhi/i * UNIVERSITY "Who Could Believe It?" .limimi A/ f illmiiiI ('.lift¡if I, one 8:00 p.m. - Evening Meeting EAST LANSING TRINITY CHURCH ***************** Free Public Reading Room By Rev. Carl Staser blink casi of the Auditorium. 10:0(1- It): 15 am • Disi ugnimi (iioiihs Ioi in/nils • colfce *01(1 REFORMED 120 Spartan Avenue interdenominational CHURCH SCHOOL E. Eugene Williams-PASTORS - Terry A. Smith 134 West Grand River tluughiinU. Sunday school classes CHURCH OPEN 9:30 a.m .-ll:00 a.m. for children. Nursery at 10:00 N University Class 9:45 a.m. 11:00 am Weekdays — 9-5 p.m. Mon., Tues., Thurs., Fri. Crib through 6th Grade 7:00 uni • Ii veiling Wois/ii/i • "What A Difference This Day Will Makel” 7:00 P.M. (,inumi ¡InnI tif limimi Mfillorini Evenings 7 p.m. - 9 p.m. ( Impel, Dress is informal and a All are welcome to attend Refreshment period in Social Trinity Collegiate Fellowship Hall following worship serv­ discussion follows the sei moo. Wednesday: Mid-week discussion and prayer hour at 7:00 p.m. Church Services and visit and use the reading room* ____ ices. Free BUS SERVICE — See schedule in your dorm. MAKE U N IV E R S IT Y U N IT E D A BIG SPLASH SOUTH BAPTIST M U C H 1518 S. Washington L ansing EPISCOPAL SERVICES M E T H O D IS T C H U R C H SU N D AY 7 :0 0 P .M . 1120 South Harrison Phone: 351-7030 His and her A lu m n i C h a p e l Glycine "Skindivers"! “ L e t ’ s H e a r F r o m G o d !’ ’ (Auditorium Drive) Each 17-jew el with r e ­ In a world of many voices has the living God spoken with ’ THROUGH THE GATE OF 9:30 A.M. and 5:15 P.M. THANKSGIVING" volving bezel to sh ow elapsed clarity? A message of certainty in a confused day. Holy Communion & Sermon time of dive. Man’s vacuum model, D r . H o w ard F . S u gd en , P a s to r By Rev. Burns self-w inding with date, $85. Lady's "Skindiver',' $ 4 9 .9 5. 9:45 A.M. COLLEGIAN College Bible Class FELLOWSHIP Morning Worship 8:30, 9:30, 11:00 8:30 p.m. A L L S A IN T S E P IS C O P A L C H U R C H in the fireside room Church School 9:30 (for all ages) Dr. Ted Ward, Teacher Fireside Room 800 Abbott Rd. 11:00 thru grade six Q m /g m b 1 1 :0 0 A .M . “ G o d D o e s W h a t W e C a n ’ t ’ ’ 8:00 A.M. Holy Communion Nursery under supervision of a registered nurse. • ill JEW ELERS SINCE 1876 9:30 A ,M. Holy Communion & Sermon ' Free bus transportation 15 to J F R E E B U S S E R V I C E M o r n in g an d E v e n in g 11:15 A.M. Morning Prayer & Sermon 121 S. Washlngton-Lanstng, Michigan C a l l 4 8 2 - 0 7 5 4 f o r i n f o r m a t i o n . ______ F r id a y , N o v em b er 22, 1968 12 Michigan State News, E ast Lansing, M ichigan FACE SPARTANS SATURDAY Wildcats hungry for final win ‘C ly tiA K r * f m . ^ a rrtrrr .w , ~ Û l.. ri -, .• -, ^ r ) ,nc ».s S/vjr/ujs is N oortjiuestern.s rthwestern s something offf V.3Í»? somethin* out iofff aa poor pobr V’ritM UieJr Sfii?S/OTfiPitfc • vv cr . e e h; # 1 « m g v/ux i xmi t s' x ot \i \>Vi Vv\yv>e\ . , .ji VJl season, while the Spartans *MSU and Northwestern close Halfback Chico Kun&WskU , pass ^ * might suffer a letdown after Fullback Bob Olson has been their opponent s 16 fum bles and oiit their 1968 seasons Saturday who has m issed much of the fumbling away what could have about the Wildcat s only other intercepting just nine passes. as they m eet in a 'Frustration season with an injury w ill be been a highly successful year. offensive weapon rushing tor a The top players on the Wild­ Bowl' battle for seventh place back for Saturday's clash. cat anti-touchdown platoon in­ A loss or tie against the Wild­ in the Big Ten. "We keep hearing that each team -leading 330 yards The Northwestern defense has clude defensive end John Cor­ cats would hand Daugherty a The two team s, each sport­ new foe will be in their best second ‘su ccessive losing sea­ been punctured for an average nell. linebacker. Ray Forsthof- ing a 1-5 conference mark, will shape of the season when they son for the first tim e in his of slightly over 400 yards per fer and halfback. Dennis White. m eet in the Wildcat's Dyche m eet us and it alw ays proves coaching career. gam e. The Wildcats have had On paper. MSU would seem Stadium at 1:30 p.m ., CST. to be true.'' MSU Coach Duffy MSU has won the last nine the m ost trouble against op­ to have an easy gam e on tap. Unlike MSU. the W ildcat's Daugherty said. "We anti­ ponents running gam e, giving but this has been far from a gam es in the series including w oes this year have not been cipate nothing other than a a 41-27 season-ending victory up 2,429 rushing yards in nine predictable year in "college foot­ of their own making. The very difficult season opener.” ball. Northwestern m ay be last year at Spartan Stadium. A L E X AGASE gam es. schedule-m akers several years Kurzawski. one of the lea­ ago put together a 1968 slate gue's best runners, has ground that gave Northwestern suc­ out 260 yards in 85 carries, and c essiv e gam es with Miami is three of four on the halfback Probable lineups Ole! Chico ( F la i. USC. Purdue. Notre pass. Dam e. Ohio State, and then Without Kurzawski. the Wild­ NO RTH W ESTERN M ICHIGAN STATE N o r t h w e s t e r n h a l f b a c k C h ic o K u r z a w s k l s e t up a threw in Michigan. Iowa and cats have been forced to take Offense W i l d c a t t o u c h d o w n w i t h t h i s r u n v e r s u s MSU l a s t Offense D efense D efense MSU for good m easure. to the air m ost of the year. 86 Allen Brenner SE LE year. K urzawski returns a s N o r t h w e s t e r n ’s t o p 80 Bruce Hubbard SE 89 John Cornell LE 97 Wilt Martin The Wildcats have staggered Quarterback Dave Shelbourne Don Denny LT 74 Bill Galler LT 74 Dave Van Elst LT 96 Bill Dawson LT offensive th re a t, __________ 57 through that schedule with just has thrown 233 passes and com ­ Angelo Loukas LG 72 John Rodman RT 59 Don Baird LG 61 Charles Bailey MG 59 one win (13-10 over W isconsin' pleted 98 for 1.245 yards and Jack Rudnay C 47 Roland Collins RE 75 Eddy McLoud c 94 Ron Curl RT 58 but they gave som e of those six touchdowns. He has been RG 66 Joel Hall OLB 70 Ron Saul RG 82 Gary Nowak RE 54 Mark Siktch Seniors powerhouse opponents a tough afternoon. Coach Alex Agase's Wild- intercepted 16 tim es, however. Split end Bruce Hubbard has been Shelbourne's favorite tar­ 77 86 15 Tom Ziolkowski Pat Harrington Dave Shelbourne RT TE QB 43 52 49 Jeff Rockenbach Ray Forsthoffer Mike Hudson ILB ILB OLB 77 84 17 Craig Wycinsky Frank Forem an Bill Triplett RT TE QB 66 95 42 Mike Hogan Don Law Jay Breslin I.B I.B RB 16 Dennis White LH 26 Tommy Love TB 43 Frank Waters l.H We are returning cats should be in their best get. latching on to 32 aerials 22 Chico Kurzawski LH 22 Dick Berlinski FB 86 Allen Brenner 38 Ken Luxton RH 12 Rich Dean RH s 11 Charlie W edemever FL 42 Jav Breslin to campus Dec. 2-6 40 Dick Em m erich FB 30 Gary Holland to photograph all the remaining Senior Portraits for the 1969 Wolverine. SHAW HALL Presents Women s swim meet here Call 353-5151 for appointment Friday in the Lower Lounge MSU hosts the 1968 National ber of the 1964 Olympic team : Arizona State is the defending "Mary Lou Waldie Intercollegiate Swimm ing and Indiana's Judy Hambarger was champion while W estchester place first in both the 100-yard Mis THE SAND Diving Champions for Women the U.S. backstroke champion w as runner-up last year. b a c k s tr o k e .” Hhis Saturday at the Men s IM in 1965. and Barb Kilgour. who MSU will be represented in Carr said. "E lle n I £ ( u j o I x M Pool. About 250 women from 34 set last year's IM record, from the m eet. Senior captain Ann should do well in i lie colleges and universities will Weathersbv. juniors Marsha 100-yard freestyle and i The Last All University W'estchester. should do vorv well i com pete in 17 events. Joan Carr. HPR swim m ing Brenner and Judv Dillion and Several nationally recogniz­ instructor and coach of the MSU sophomore Ellen Garrison are rela y s.” P.S. S e n i o r s a l r e a d y pho to g rap h ed : p le a s e re t u r n M ixer of the Term ed sw im m ers w ill be competing W omen's Swimming team , pre­ returning sw im m ers from last She said that with y o u r p r o o f s i m m e d i a t e l y t o r o o m 4 2 U n i o n 10 a m Coward and ,Ji.nl1,v In!!, MSI in the m eet. Penny E stes of dicted that MSU should place at year's team , and w ill figure - 5 p m Mon. - F r I . Arizona State w as the U.S. prominently in the team 's show­ should win the divine 9 p.m. - 12 p.m. least fourth in team scoring. Champion in 1965: Lynn Allsup "E ither Arizona State or ing Saturday. tition. of Central Michigan was a mem- W estchester (P a .i will prob­ Freshm en sw im m ers Martha The championship pcelirniu ably win the title with U niver­ Coward. Sue Culver and Mary arics begin at 8:3d a.m BEST IN FOREIGN FILMS sity of Michigan finishing Lou Waldie also hold much the finals are scheduled lot Tonight From 7:00 P.M. third.” Miss Carr said. hope. 2:30p.m . Admission is free for MSI students with II) cards there ever a wife HOUSE W as who didn't w ond er if her h u sb a n d w as 'Ptumeni-lBtA J n Shown at % She's hoping for a . . . cents for the general public J G I i/ U A Í eeiM Looking for a New unfaithful? 7:35—9; 45 Place to Dine? a u th e n tic of And a best friend who didn't offer to find out. MEXICAN IN D IA The very funny movie with the POT 101 E. GRAND RIVER DOWNSTAIRS BETW EEN KESELS AND CUNNINGHAM’S very sexy title . . . Or is it . . . 332-8403 The very sexy movie with the very funny title. 20- CENTURYFOXPRESENTS \ SA LE - BEA TLES - SALE R E X H A R R IS O N R Ö SE M im H A R R IS \ New Beatle Album Restaurant & 2 Stereo L . P . ’s 7.30 lo u is RACHEL ROBERTS m im m / IN A FRED KOHLM AR PRODUCTION A F L E A IN H E R E A R Tiffany Lounge 116 E . M i c h i g a n A ve. Panavision' ' Col or by DeLuxe D o w n to w n L a n s i n g F ri. No/. 22 and Sat. Nov. 23 our F r e e E v en in g P a rk in g 4 8 9 - 1 196 E n tire *L .P . stock on SALE! S t o r e H o u r s ; W e d n e s d a y noon until 9 :00 p .m . M o n d a y - S a t u r d a y 9:30 a .m . to 5:30 p .m . 2 .5 0 L i s t 4.79 L ist 5.79 L i s t 6.79 L ist S ale P r i c e Sale P r ic e Sale P r i c e Sale P r i c e 1-5 Records 1 .7 5 3 .3 6 4 .1 9 5 .2 9 P e r L .P . P e r L.P. P e r L.P. P e r L .P. h ig h - f ly in g g ift i d e a : th e S ale P r i c e Sale P ric e Sale P r i c e Sale P r i c e 6 6 -fo o t b la z e r s t r ip e d m u ffle r Records and 1 .6 0 2 .9 9 3 .8 4 4 .8 1 of orlon acrylic knit with Over P e r L.P. P e r L.P. P e r L.P. P e r L .P . big, bold, color-bright A ny c o m b i n a t i o n of L i s t P r i c e s m a y b e u s e d to g e t b e s t p r i c e . 4-inch w ide stripes and fringed EXTRA SPECIAL ends. . .newest status symbol All Deutsche Grammophon L .P .’ s 3.49 Per L .P . of the with-it crowd. 5 .0 0 Plus - Nine Beethoven Symphonies 8 Records Boxed 19.95 Stereo Jacobsons "Christmas Records do not Apply TONIGHT Your One-Stop 8:30 p.m . THE Stereo Center 323 E. Grand River Phone 351-5380 q U A O S H Men’s Intramural Building GEN’L ADM'. $2.00 WIl'H I.D. $1.50 DISC SHOP OPEN Mon. thru F ri. 9 to 9 Sat. 9 to 6 2 1 0 A bbott Rd. T ickets on sale at Campbell’st the Union, Campus Bubic St and the Gate._________________• / F r id a y , N ovem ber 22, 1968 I Michigan State News, E ast L ansing, M ichigan 'B r e n n e r h o n o r e d a s s c h o la r - a t h le t e Booters seek revenge «By PAM BOYCE com m on w as Ohio, which the 'Our gam e with North Carol- NEW YORK (UPI -M SU end back Steve Hindman of Missis- State News Sports Writer Zips defeated by 5-3. The Spar­ •ina last weekend w as a very AU>^ Ti -*rr\c\rv«> MS’- >PT 's ox wtvi'ewa.vhpd CUuo vu<*y^^ox£$Qrt.'' Kenney said. fdacöafi Starli 11/ ' i i _; . cum "v-‘ * 4 -y" rcfcó¡laríalbH‘tS ^ J |i ' / y ing th e i:\;.'^; dcJvakw. ■.r . - ** mL-s -V • * the National Football Fo'unda- “",n1 “ >™- rawyers. while MSU has dented the op­ Kenney said defensive s t a f ' season. •tion and Hall of Fam e. All of them qualify for $500 position's nets 65 tim es, while Buzz D em ling w as unable to Akron, seeded first in the Mid­ gra d u a te fellowships set up by w est, broke the Spartans 33- allowing only four g o a ls-a ll play the second half against The ten others named were funds from fo rm e r Arm y coach to Akron. North Carolina because he was gam e undefeated streak four guard John Hendricks of Iowa, E a r l i Red i Blaik's syndicated w eeks ago by downing them 4-1 Akron's leading scorer is Jim knocked out in the first half. tackle George Kunz of Notre football series. M alcolm, a senior from Dundee. Ernie Tuchscherer will be in regular season play. Dam e, tackle David Foley of Scotland, who has 19 goals and playing against Akron. Tuch- MSU m eets Akron in their Ohio State, end Mike Moody of c $ ’ - A k r o n second gam e of the NCAA tour­ 3 a ssists to his credit. Another sherer. an All-American last 'AHzona. end William Payne of nam ent Saturday after shutting threat to the Spartans is John year, played for the first tim e o n r a d i o Georgia, end Michael Perrin of out North Carolina 5-0. MSU Kissner. who has nine goals and in a month last weekend and as­ Texas, tackle David Rea of Am­ The MSL) Network, WMSN, five a ssists this season. sisted in one of the goals. Alex is seeded third in the Midwest, herst College, guard Richard w ill broadcast the soccer gam e w hile St. Louis is seeded sec­ Steve Christiansen tends the Skotarek. who has been recover­ Sandler of Princeton, end Rob­ with Akron at 1:30 p.m. Satur­ goal for the Zips. ing from an injured ankle, is ond. HARRIS ert Stein of Minnesota and tail- day. MSU enters this weekend with One question mark for the only playing up to 75 per cent a 9-1-1 record, tying St. Louis Zips is Fritz Schier, Akron's capability. Kenney said. one week after their loss to Ak­ defensive leader this season. ron. They have succeeded in Schier injured his ankle two Soccer to me! shutting out 10 of their 11 op­ w eeks ago and m ay not be ready to play. The Zips w ill depend M S U ’s Alex S k o t a r e k g o e s o v e r a C h i c a g o C i r c l e ponents this season. p l a y e r in an a t t e m p t to g e t t h e b a l l d u r i n g t h e i r Akron enters the gam e with upon John Lewand and Wallv an 11-0 record. The only 1968 Dawyd to com e through for them r e c e n t m e e t i n g . S k o t a r e k will p l a y a g a i n s t A k ro n opponent Akron and MSU had in on defense. S a t u r d a y b u t w ill not b e in to p p h y s i c a l s h a p e . HOST SPARTANS TONIGHT By MIKE MANLEY State News Sports Writer After last w eek's disasterous 2-3 record, fearless Tom Brown has decided to retire quietly from the prediction rack­ Sioux skaters on warpath et. Michigan and Ohio State w ill be the feature attraction on By PAM BOYCE The S p artans lost to the right wing Doug Johnston and night. B am burak scored three this final weekend, and after thinking for a while. 1 can see why State News Sports Writer Sioux twice last year. 6-2 and left wing Roger Bam burak. Hud­ of seven goals in the 7-5 win. he wanted out. F re sh from a shocking pair 5-2 and tied them once at the son and Johnston a r e both jun ­ Coach Bessone re f e r re d to IOWA (4-5) at ILLINOIS <1-8)—The Hawks have shown all of victories over defending beginning of the season. 2-2. iors. Bam burak a senior. the Sioux a s virtually veteran season that they can score and the lllini have shown a rather NCAA champion Denver. North North Dakota is the only In North D akota's first gam e and said that the defense com ­ porous defense. Should be fitting end for the boys from Cham­ D akota's Skating Sioux prom ise WCHA te am this year to have with Denver last Friday. K a rt­ posed of A bram and John Marks paign. Pick: Iowa by 17. to give the MSU hockey te a m all two All-America players r e ­ io scored all four goals in the is perhaps the toughest in the ■MINNESOTA (5-4) at WISCONSIN (0-9)~Look for the Badgers it can handle in the S partans' turning on the squad, ce n te r Bob Sioux victory. On the following league. to com plete a perfect season. Things are so bad in Madison season opener in G rand Forks. Munro and defenscm an T erry that if they even score, it s a moral victory. Pick: Gophers The S partans and the Nodaks Abram. by 24. INDIANA (6-3) at PU RD U E (7-2)—This one is for the cham ­ tangle tonight and Saturday evening in w hat S partan Coach Tending goal for the Sioux will be junior G ary Severenson. HILLEL FOUNDATION pionship of Indiana. Leroy K eyes should run wild here in his Amo Bessone calls one of the a 1967 letterm en . Other candi­ 319 H illc r e s t At W. Grand River last college gam e which m eans trouble for the Hoosiers. In­ toughest openers in his MSU d a te s for the goaltending duties diana was beaten soundly last week, and they ve been lucky all c a reer. include Brian Blanchard, a red- Sabbath Services & Kiddush Saturday 10 am season. Boilerm akers will be up for this one. Pick: Purdue North Dakota. 1967 NCAA fi­ shirt last year, and sophomore by 2 TD's. nalist. finished third in the West­ J im Nelson. MICHIGAN (8-1) at OHIO STATE (8-fti-The Big Ten ern Collegiate Hockey Associa­ On defense will be junior John BOWLING AND PIZZA Championship and the R ose Bowl are on the line in Columbus. tion (WCHAi last year with a M arks and Abram, a senior this TONIGHT The Wolves will have the best player on the field in Ron John­ 13-8-1 slate in the league. The year. Another defensive pair is Sunday, Nov. 24 8:30 p.m . son and if the Bucks want that trip to Pasadena, they are going Sioux w ere 20-13-3 overall last com posed of Mike B a u m g a rtn e r Men's Intramural Building to have to find a way to stop him. It can be done though. OSC vear. and Tim O Keefe, both sopho­ 4 p.m . Bowling Tournament Meet at Union GEN'L ADM. WITH l.D . has too much speed and depth for Bump's charges. 1 picked MSU, 11-16-2 in the 1967-68 m ores. Building Lanes $2.00 $1.50 'em by 6 yesterday so there's no backing out now. Pick: Woody season, finished sixth in the The Sioux' strongest forw ard 6 pm Pizza Party at Hillei T ickets on sale at Campbell’s, to spend Christmas in California. WCHA with a 6-13-1 record in line is composed of senior Mun­ the Union, Campus Book Stores Everyone Welcome and the Gate. MSU (4-5) at NORTHWESTERN (1-8)—If the Spartans can . the league. ro. right wing David K artio and hang on to the pigskin (no sm all feat), they should have no North Dakota lost to Denver left wing Rod Christensen. Sop­ trouble beating the Wildcats. NU is not the m ost exciting team in the 1967-68 NCAA finals, hom ore Bob Duncan, and seniors > on the Spartan schedule this v4ar? but they could be totfgli if but the Sioux got their revenge L a r r y Dobson and Bob Tuff given too many breaks. Duffy should see his boys put it all to­ last weekend a s they defeated m a k e up the second line for the gether Saturday. Pick: MSU by 20. BROWN’S RECORD: 2-3 LAST WEEK, 37-13 FOR THE YEAR. D enver twice last weekend. 4-3 and 7-5. Sioux. The third line is m a d e up of junior ce n te r Dave Hudson. To-ski-or-not-to-ski-weekends. Y o u d o n ’t h a v e to k n o w a s c h u s s f r o m a s la lo m to J o v e a s k i w e e k e n d , I h e re a re and N O W ... sit a n y w h e r e enjoy WAREHOUSE SALE p le n ty o f o th e r f u n th in g s to d o lik e t r a m p in g a r o u n d th e m o u n t a in s ... r a c in g t o b o g g a n s ...r id in g th e lif t s ..« a n d g a n g in g u p fo r s n o w b a ll fig h ts . A n d w h e th e r o r n o t, th e r e ’s a lw a y s y o u ’ v e b e e n k n o c k i n g ’e m d e a d o n t h e s l o p e s a l l d a y th e a p r e s s k i s t u f f . . . h o t b u t t e r e d t h in g s , lo g fire s , full, r ic h PURCHASE DIRECT FROM IMPORTER p a r tie s ...a n d p e o p le w h o lik e th e th in g s y o u d o . I f y o u ’re a 5 0 / 5 0 C l u b m e m b e r , y o u f l y h a lf - f a r e in th e natural ste r e o U . S . W e a ls o a r r a n g e o t h e r v e r y r e d u c e d r a te s . 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Stereo Precision record changer with Micro-Touch 2G tone arm. combi­ M o n tl) 9 - 0 0 W IG S 44 nation loudness/stereo balance con - trols; separate treble and bass con­ trols Tape/Tuner input jack lets you play tape recorder/player or solid- state tuner. Modern-design cabinet in Grained Walnut color with match­ ing speakers. E x p er t S ty lin g N o E xtra C harge A ll M e rc h a n d ise "Tknirtf The quality goes m A v a ila b le L ight or F ro sted ■^^rtyt^efore the name goes on 100% Hu m an Hair C o lo rs on P rem ises BEST YEAR YET TO G ET TH E B ES T B u y D ir e c t - N o M id d le m a n IM P O R T E R S 5411 SO CEDAR LANSING. MICHIGAN H O U R S -- W IG W AREHOUSE A s p e n —A sp e n H ig h la n d s —L ift s — Is e lin S k i S c h o o l—L e s s o n s —B ro w n Ic e P a la c e - S k a t in g an d H o c k e y - T h e R e d O n io n —M e a ls —T h e M o u n ta in S h o p —S k i R e n ta l i OWNEDEXCLUSIVELY M o n . th ru F r i. 9 -9 V a il —V a il A s s o c ia te s —L ifts a n d L e s s o n s —G o rs u c h L t d .—S k i R e n t a l—R e d L io n —M e als S a t. 9 -6 Sun. 2 -6 1820 E. MICHIGAN N e x t to P a g o d a R e s t a u r a n t PHONE 3 7 2 - 2 3 3 2 C o u p o n b o o k le ts a v a ila b le at th e TW A c o u n te r, D e n v e r a irp o rt, upo n p re s e n ta tio n of TW A 5 0 50 C lu b C a rd F rid a y , N o v e m b er 22^_196£ 14 Michigan State News, E ast Lansing, M ichigan STATE NEWS STATE NEWS CLASIFIED W in te r sp o rts e q u ip m e n t is in d e m a n d . S e ll y o u rs q u ic k ly w ith a w a n t a d . 355-8255 CLASSIFIED 355-8255 Automotive Employment For Rent ' ... , ; , / , W * --- ; J SNOW T lH f-S . GOOD^JSAfLSI ,81 R rwrU'*PT Tiue wmMjay M o a r fn je n Y s In# v> w *>*« TO RO G A l,A tf!F â WbrfYrg rtfl'as J $ > It AN IT F tire4 *£ JpfcrAfv... > w u r j& . v J T W ex­ n . . , - -a ... - //' - permit racial or religious Good condition Must sell, immedi­ 15355-8016 3-1122 perience not necessary Must be 21. EYDEAL V ILLA ' APARTMENTS Call Mrs Lange, MONTY 6 BAR E D 2- TWO bedroom apartments for $240 discrim ination In its ad­ ately. 351-4965 3-11 22, 4781 6-11/22 month. Swimming pool. G E appli­ vertising c o l u m n s . The Aviation ances, garbage disposals, furnished State News will not accept FO RD 1965 6. stick $600 353- l ik e t o s k i ? for four man or five man. Call 0 8 5 3 days, 882-4149 evenings 5-1125 W a itr e s s e s needed winter advertising which discrim ­ FRANCIS AVIA TIO N : So easy to 351-4275 after 5 p.m. c • AUTOMOTIVE inates a g a i n s t religion, learn in the P IP E R C H EROKEE t e r m . FREE skiing, room and • EMPLOYMENT race, color or national o r­ M ERCEDES BENZ roadster 1958 190sl. Excellent condition. $850 Special $5 offer. 484-1324. C board plus reasonab le sa la r y . G IR L N E E D E D winter term, luxury apartment. Reduced rent. Call 351- • FOR RENT igin. W ,,I consider partial trade. 351- Sugarloaf Village, C e d ar 0607. 3-11/22 • FOR SALE 5875 5-11/25 E m p lo y m e n t Michigan. F or applications • LOST & FOUND TYPISTS-5 evenings per week, 4-10 ca ll Don Kuelbs, 351-3135 N E E D E D ONE male »¿ r‘er and spring MUSTANG 1967 Six cylinder. Cruiso- • PERSONAL matic $1,550 Call 627-6207 after 70 wpm with accuracy. Call 337- BE T H E girls-girl watch! Learn • PEANUTS PERSONAL 6 p.m. 3-11/22 1651, 3-5 p.m. W and teach professional make-up • REAL ESTATE Automotive techniques and earn extra money for Christmas too. For an appoint­ T H R E E GIRLS for four girl apart­ ment. Winter, spring. 351-4001. • SERVICE MUSTANG - 1968 V-8, three speed and snow tires. 484-2425 or MOBIL BUSBOYS AND Waitresses needed for ment call Gwen Lorenz. 351-8094 5-11/26 winter term. Meals plus salary. Lamb­ • TRANSPORTATION CHEVROLET 1965 Impala sport coupe. SERVICE C ENTER - 12 noon-7:30 da Chi Alpha 351-4965 after 6 p.m. 8 30 a.m. to 1 p.m. or 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Low mileage, mint condition, stereo, • WANTED new tires, many extras. 351-8647 p.m. 3-11/22 3-11 22 3-11/22 TWO M E N to sublet apartment winter and spring terms. University Villa. 5-11/26 BABYSITTER: L IV E in. own room, WAITRESSES W ANTED: Full and part- 351-7644. 5-12 2 OLDSMOBILE 1963 F-85 Cutlass. DEADLINE -ellent trans- V-8. automatic, power steering and salary, very close campus 337-9212. time. Will train. Apply 1050 Trow­ CHEVROLET 5-11 26 bridge 5-11/26 MAN W ANTED for winter term. Re­ lires included. brakes. Excellent condition. 45,000 1 P.M. one c la s s day b e ­ porta tion duced rates. Waters Edge. 351-5445. $75. 332-6165 2-11 22 miles. $650 351-6352after 3 p.m. 3-11 26 f o re publication. 2-11 22 F E M A L E CONCESSION-Usherettes: EARN E X TR A CASH for Christmas C ancellations - 12 noon one Part-time-evenings. week ends and’ Car necessary. Call 351-7319. O CH EVY I I 1967 Nova. Two door sport CEDAR V ILLA G E. Four man apart­ OLDSMOBILE ¿ J T . Tri-power. holidays. Apply in person Spartan c l a s s day before publica­ coupe, 327 cubic inch, four speed, 4 speed. peiwOL L^lition. Must Twin Theater Frandor Center. 5-1126 ment sublet winter, spring and or tion. four new wide ovals, well cared for. SOMEONE TO clean small apartment summer. 351-0869 . 6-12 3 sell. 353-1520 ; 353-6158. 5-11 27 684-0809 3-11/H Second profession - evenings once a week. 353-1700 Mrs. Marcus. & weekends. Men and wom­ 2-11 25 SACRIFICE. CLOSE campus. One OLDSMOBILE F-85 1964. 6 cylinder, PHONE COMET 1963 S-22. Four-speed, buck­ 4 door. Deluxe Good condition. $600 en. $350 p a r t tim e monthly girl. $56 month. Start winter. 351- et seats, radio. Good condition. 351- D R IVER S FOR Dominos Pizza Eve­ 5781. 3-11 26 337-7000. 3-11 22 5343 . 3-11'25 guarantee if you m eet our 355-8255 r e q u ire m e n ts. Students and nings. Applv 203 MAC after 5 p.m. 2-11 25 BURCHAM WOODS-one man. im­ PEUG EO T 403 1963. Good condition. COMET 1962: Blue, bucket seats, teac h ers: $800 full tim e, te le ­ mediate occupancy. Cheap Phone 351- RATES radio, automatic. After 5 p.m.. One owner. Reasonable. 332-2489. 2-11 25 BABYSITTING IN my home Monday- 6419. Desperate. 5-12 2 355-9975 2-11 22 phone: 484-4475_____________ Friday. Also available during Christ­ | d a y ...................$ I • 50 PONTIAC TEM PEST 1968 Overhead BE TH E make-up expert in your mas vacation 355-9896 1-11/22 151 per word per day CORVETTE 1963 convertible. 327. group. Earn money as a V IV IA N E A P AR TM EN T for two students. Fur­ cam -6 Radio, heater Whitewall 3 days . . . . . . . $ 4 .0 0 four speed. Excellent condition. $1500. tires. Must sacrifice 393-4978 WOODARD Consultant. IV 5-8351 CHURCH SECRETARY with complete nished. 129 Burcham Drive. East 13 l/2 £ per word per day 339-9061. 3-11 26 7-11/27 C -ll 22 Lansing. $125 per month. 882-2316 after 6 p.m. typing skills. Dictaphone experience. or IV 7-3216. 9-12 6 5 days . . . . . . $ 6 .5 0 ’So this is graduate school!” 30-40 hours per week. References 13£ per word per day DATSUN 1966 Clean, roof rack, PONTIAC 1965 Starchief 4 door hard­ BABYSITTER TO live in Call 641- required. Write P. O. Box 644. East chains. Must sell $900 355-6317 3-11 25 top. Automatic, power brakes and 6509 or 641-6970. 5-11 22 Lansing. Michigan 3-11/22 ONE G IR L winter term University (based on 10 w ords p e r ad) steering. AM-FM radio. Must sell. Terrace 351-8912 1-11 22 FA1RLANE 1965 4-door Good con­ Phone 332-6926 3-11 26 E X C IT IN G CAREER open to men T h e r e will be a 50tf service dition. 46.000 miles. $695 882-0914 that want experience and money. For Rent LARGE TWO bedroom duplex avail­ and bookkeeping charge if 3-11 25 PONTIAC LEMANS convertible, 1967 393-1430,1-5 p.m. O able immediately. Includes stove th is ad is not paid within Power steering, automatic. V-8. Automotive Automotive TV RENTALS for students. Low eco­ nomical rates by the term or month. refrigerator, dishwasher, washer, FALCON WAGON 1960. $50 or best Dave, 355-9362 3-11/22 dryer carpeting, fireplace and patio E X P E R IE N C E D ONLY: Ex-Cookware one week. offer. 337-0525 after 6 p.m. 1-1122 TR IU M P H S P IT F IR E 1965. Good con­ VOLKSWAGEN. 1961 $250 351- U N IV E R S ITY TV RENTALS. 484- Phone FABIAN REALTY ED 2-0811. or Encyclopedia salesman. W ill pay dition. $800 Phone 482-9017. 5-11/22 0219. Call after 11:30 A M 1-1122 9263. c PONTIAC 1966 Catalina 2+2. Bucket managers rate of 30 per cent. To ED 2-6459 or IV 5-3033 . 5-12 2 T he State News will be FALCON 1960 Good transportation. seats. 421 cubic,four speed OX 4- show Hope Chest lines. Part or responsible only for the $85 351-0678 3-11/22 0111. 3-11'22 TR IU M P H HERA LD 1965. Good condi­ VOLKSWAGEN ' q ^ Q after 6 p.m. full time Contact Mr. Day 484- TV RENTALS G.E. 19” Portable, tion $750. Call after 5 p.m 355- 351-7228. Needs A. $100 f i r s t day’s in c o rrec t in s e r ­ FORD 1962 Fairlane Six. automat­ 1106 3-11 22 3-11 22 7026. 7-11/27 $8.50 per month including stand. MIXER PORSCHE ROADSTER 1961 series 356B Call J. R. Culver Co 351-8862 tion. ________ ic. Excellent condition $425 339- Very fine condition. Irish green BARTENDER. FU L L or part time, 220 Albert Street. East Lansing. C Saturday, Nov, 23rd 9061 evenings. 3-1126 lacquer l new i. Abarth exhaust. VALIA N T 1°£ ible. 225. three Auto Service & Parts evening shift. Wall Koss Restau­ $1.975 Evenings 517-337-9692 or speed. A-l at. $350. Bill. rant. Call M r Koss for appoint­ FORD 1967-Galaxie 500. four door 5-11 22 COLORED TV Rental $8 per week. 8 a.m . to 12 midnight davtime 517-351-5510. 1-11 22 393-4973. MASON BODY SHOP. 812 East ment. 655-2175. 5-11 27 Automotive V-8. excellent condition, private own­ Kalamazoo St. . . Since 1940. $24 per month. Call J. R. CULVER COMPANY 351-8862 C CAMARO 1968 $200 plus payments er. 16.000 miles 882-3602.882-6858 3-11 26 R AMBLER 1961 convertible New VOLKSWAGEN SEDAN 1966 Radio, Complete auto painting and col­ SALESMAN R E T A IL Part-time, per­ CASE HALL battery, radio, clean and quiet. ww tires, good all round. $950 lision service. IV5-0256. C manent. Contact Ramsey s. East Call Karen after 5 p.m. 332-6148 15-12 6 482-5167 1-U 22 Also 1961 with rebuilt engine $500 Lansing 332-3617 3-11 25 Cam era Imports featuring FORD 1967 four-door LTD One Both with six months guarantee. Lan­ owner 24.000 miles Excellent con­ SAAB SPECIAL 1966. Pirellis. Disc. sing Foreign Cars. 485-7510. 3-11 22 ACCIDENT P R O B LE M ’ Call Kalama­ BABYSITTER. W EDNESDAY and F ri­ Greatly Reduced the PARAMOUNTS CH EV E LLE 1966 Malibu convertible dition. 332-3135 3-11 25 zoo Street Body Shop Small dents 327. 4 speed. Radio console $1450. Oil injection. Excellent. Reasonable. day. 12:00-3:00 p.m.. winter term. Also L e n se s and A c c e sso rie s VOLKSWAGEN FASTBACK 1968 to large wrecks. American and for­ Cherry Lane 355-7798. 3-11 25 Phone 351-3541. 5-11 22 FORD 1960. six cylinder, standard IV 2-2287 3-11 22 Must sell, extremely low mileage eign cars. Guaranteed work. 482- The House of Bricker transmission. Best offer Call 353- SACRIFICE: MUSTANG 1967 Cruis- Call 627-5497. 2-11 22 1286. 2628 East Kalamazoo. C G E N ER A L CLEANING by the day C all 351-4869 5 -7 M o n . - F r i . " Admission 500 Get ALL YOU PAY FOR! Check best rental buys in today's Classified Ads 4169 3-11 22 amatic. custom radio, console, pow­ Own transportation. Would like to All day weekends______ er steering, vinyl top. clean. 355- get steadv work and full days. 8191 3-11 25 Phone 489-5933 3-11 25 CHEVROLETS SUNBEAM A LP IN E Roadster 19671- three new tires. 21.000 miles. New clutch. $1400882-2810. 5-12 2 B l’SBOYS W ANTED to work at the City Club of Lansing located in the Jack T a r' Hotel. Work hours about 9:30 a m .-10:30 p.m. Also some nights. AT PHIL GORDON'S T-B IR D 1962 Fine condition. P ri­ vate owner $500 or best offer. 339- 2812. 3-11 26 Free meals, uniforms, high pay. In­ terview in person from 6-8 p.m. For appointments call 372-4673. 10-11 26 WAITRESSES W ANTED to work at the 1967 IM P A L A 2-door hardtop TR-4 1963 Removable FASTBACK City Club of Lansing Located in the HARDTOP, soft top. tonneau, con­ Jack Tar Hotel Work hours about 10:30 ......................................................$2,195 sole. radio, overdrive, abarth. Looks a.m.-10:30 p.m. Also some nights like DB-5. Call 355-4402. Best offer. Free meals, uniforms High pay 1965 IM P A L A 2-door hardtop 3-11 22 Personal interviews 6-8 p.m. For - personal interview call 372-4673. ......................................................$1,295 10-11 26 1966 NOVA station wagon, 4-door I WISH to line up 3 or 4 energetic ................ • • • • , , .$ 1,395 students to help me build a garage at the first break in the weather. $3 50 hour, part-time. Mail your 1967 CAMARO 2-door hardtop telephone number to Mailbox 2279 ..................................................... $1,795 1965 MONZA 2-door hardtop Forest Road. Lansing. Michigan48910. APPLICATIONS FOR teachers, su­ l-ll 22 AND QUIET ........................................................ $8 95 pervisors. interviewers, reception­ TWO BED ROOM— T H R E E - M A N Furnished ist now being taken. Guaranteed salary. Full or part-time. No ex­ Apartments for Rent ^beginning December " A L L LOW MILEAGE AND C L E A N ” perience necessary. F R E D ASTAIRE 15th. Freshly painted and carpeted. $70 per DANCE STUDIO 372-9385. 5-11/25 month per person. 6 month leases available. Heat paid!!! P h i l G o r d o n ’s SEVEN CALL VOLKSWAGEN, INC. (S3J THIRTY 2845 E. Saginaw 484-1341 ■■■ “ ONE East Lansing Management Co. 351-7880 L u th e r a n s . . . OPEN HOUSE 6:30-9 M on.-T hurs. 5 Sunday 23. Crude tartar 731 Burcham Drive ACROSS 26. Legal u ifto t’s AAJL’s Open House Phone profession 332-8109 1. Green plum 27. Reddish-brown "student special”got 5. Disintegrate horse to dowith you? 10. Apparel 28. Allspice VI. Surroundings 32. Billfish Plenty! If you are a young Lutheran 13. Watered silk 33.Succor who wants to guarantee his future 14. Up-to-date 34. Tidings financial benefits today, find out ;15. Across 35., Rococo about the Student Special. For 16. Regulate 37. High nest 17. Twitching 38. Seesaw details, call 39. Runs between 18. Trustworthy 20. Handle ports DOWN 2. Asian gazelle 21. Tricky 40. Attire 3. Military post 22. Skeleton force 41. Too bad 1. Copse 4. Observe 5. Ant $ B 9 6. Street Gerald Schade V/ disturbance 10 t i 7. Obsolete P.O. Box 353 8. Lost weight Okemos, Michigan % 14 9. More weird % 10. Cupid 48864 li 16 17 12. Relative % Va Phone: 351 -6448 ié 19 20 16. Timber curve % 19. Evetyone Al XX 20. Leave-taking % % V a 22. Eccentric Vo rotating piece iS M W y //< & 23.Jargon ïf V/ô 18 29 SO il 24. Shouted % 25. Accumulate h B $4 26. Offer a price % 'à 28. Breakwaters 5* % Î7 29. Water wheel % » 30. Attempts S» 31. Lyrics ifll 40 % ■il 33. Sweetsop Aid Association for Lutherans ill Appleton,Wisconsin Fraternallfe Insurance % w, % 36. Consumed 37. Wallaba____ F r id a y , N o v em b er 22, 1968 15 Michigan State News, E ast L ansing, M ichigan For Sale Peanuts Personal Service For Rent For Rent F or Rent Ï N E E D E D ONE girl starting winter FOR R E N T 10x55 two bedroom trail­ HAPPY B IR TH D A Y to the eighteen BARBI MEL. Typing, multilithing. ONE G IR L winter term. Eden Roc. R EDU C ED RATES: Girls needed R iv­ er. Furnished. Phone Owo^jo 723- No job too large or too small. term. Riverside East Apartments. ers Edge Apartments winter term. year old with an inner-city friend. Reduced 355-3535 or 351-5019. 3205 collect or 1621 Griffin Avenue. Block off campus. 332-3256. C 332-6148 3-11/25 351-6806 3-11/25 Signed: The Inner-City Kid 1-11 22 3-11/22 Owosso. . 5-12/2 BILL AND Rex: Take a nice long ONE G IR L to sublease winter term. Eden Roc Apartments. 351-3725. 3-11/25 CEDAR VILLAGE--wanted--one girl for winter term. Call 351-8362 . 5-11/26 Lost & Found walk Jill. Linda. 1-11/22 T ransportation TAKE T H R E E riders to Washington N O R T H W IN D LU X U R Y APARTM ENT: 4 man win- ONE G IR L needed winter, spring LOST: LADIES octagonal brown rimmed BETTY - CONGRATULATIONS on DC* area. Leave Tuesday evening Wyt and. spring. Sublet. Campus Hill Twftwven 351:333»,, „ 5-11/25 V. a V/ «vT : glasses between N a t Sci. and Linden ROTC CorpsDonsor. W ere proud j^ovember 2b Return Suro^v L^^em-_ , »■. . **■ -*S • V ■ , • . * r¥ ' •**T ' • t ■ "* ' v y m L .rtf/Ulcy a r*tnmenvf " J ‘i J Y F IN. the Cedar Street pU ntgjpft ' N# a• f * ‘ -fit h „ K. ONE MAN for four man apartment. fdUr girli needed; 980 month Fall LOST As packet of books Reward DEBBIF. HA PPY 19th Birthday Carn y i One block from Berkey Available 351-8820 or 351-3358. 5-11/25 Call Das 355-4196 after 7 p m 1-11 22 1-11 22 Wanted w* ONE G IR L needed New Cedar Village immediately or winter 351-7834. January-August Reduced rate 351- 3-11/22 TH R E E M E N for Capitol Villa $48 75 LOST KKG Diamond key Near Sta L ITTL E SIS K D Congratulations BLOOD DONORS needed $7 50 for all 3405 3-11/26 per month 332-6242 4-11/22 dium. Reward Call Kay 337-1305 Looking Forward To A Good Time positive. A negative. B negative and 5-11/26 Big Brother R V. 1-11 22 AB negative $10.00 O negative, G IR L N E EFDEE E D *; v iT CO 1 spring, REDU C ED R E N T Capitol Villa one partments. BRENTWOOD - NEAR Frandor. Two $12 00 Michigan Community Blood Deluxe R R E N * T.pa LOST: K E Y chain with large plastic bedroom-sublet 351-0661. through August. 3-11/26 332-3752 10-11/27 bedroom unfurnished available im­ shoe. Between A&P Store and Mason. Real Estate Center. 50745 East Grand River, East Lansing, above the new Campus mediately. $155. Phone Fabian Real­ 351-6038 3-11/22 Book Store. Hours: 9 a.m. - 3:30 M E N : CLEAN, quiet, cooking, parking. ty. ED2-0811. ED2-6459, IV5-3033 TWO BEDROOM house, fireplace ’ * 0 N E G IR L winter or take over lease. Supervised. Close to campus. 487- 2-11/22 Close campus. 152 Gunson Phone p.m. Monday, Tuesday and Friday Three man. No damage deposit. 351- $50 REW ARD. Black Samsonite At­ Wednesday and Thursday, 12 p.m. 5753 or 485-8836 O o ED2-5715 2-11 22 4781. 3-11/26 tache with contents intact. No ques­ to 6 :30 p.m. 337-7183 C ................................. -*v w FRANDOR HILLS Townhouse. 3242 tions asked. 351-7019 M Greeni- NORBER MANOR APARTMENTS Holiday Drive. Own furnished. Im ­ EAST LANSING. Near-Also MSU and R E D U C ED RENT: One-two girls win­ sen. 5-11/26 ASSISTANT TO manager. Call Neil 5821 Richwood Brand new, central mediate possession. Two large bed­ Frandor Four bedrooms, family room ter only. Riverside East. 351- den. 2 * 2 baths, carpeting throughout at LANSING FOREIGN CARS. 485- aur-conditioning, pool, fully carpet­ rooms. i 1/2 baths, dishwasher, 4916. 3-11/26 D E LTA UPSILON requests informa­ 7510 3-11/22 ed Two bedroom for $166. 393- fireplace, full basement, patio, car­ Complete with beautiful shade trees, tion concerning missing "Pappy" 4271. O port. Newly decorated. $200 plus built-in wild life and wall-to-wall TWO BEDROOM, in home. Private O’Buell portrait. Reward. 3-11/22 TRANSPORTATION FLORIDA: Ride utilities. Children and pets accepted. pleasant living. By owner See any­ entrance, parking. Walk to campus needed for 3 or 4 to Miami. Can ONE BEDROOM apartment available 372*1466 Evenings. 372-4071 or time. 372-9259 1-11 22 Four students. 351-9561. Dec. 20. FOUND: YELLOW tiger kitten in front leave PM December 13. Will pay. December 14. Unfurnished. Call 372-3180. 3-11/22 3-11/26 of Union . 337-7116 3-11/22 Doug 353-1827 3-11 22 351-0600 after 5 p.m. 3-11/22 S e r v ic e COUPLES. O N F "J-JRO OM fur­ INEWLY MARRIED? G IR L N E E D E D winter and/or spring. nished Q p MT E D ilities inclu­ LOST: P A IR of black prescription sun glasses in case early last month Typing Service PAIR OF photogenic twins needed for television commercial Call 355-4052 TANGLEWOOD New Cedar Village. 353-1229. 3-11/22 ded. $12“ -u V * ÙJZ-2803 3-11/22 on campus. Reward. 351-8623. S-U/25 tonight 3-1122 PAULA ANN H A U G H EY: A unique APARTMENTS ONE MAM _ . _ man apart­ N EAR LCC: Apartment to share with quality thesis service. IB M typing, ORGANIST W ITH equipment for ex­ 1 B d rm ., u n fu r.,-fro m 1124*50 3 other girls. Carpeted, well fur­ P erso n a l multilith printing and hard binding. ment. C R E N T t U apartment perienced Soul-Rock group. Numer­ 2 B d rm ., u n fu r ., fro m 139.50 nished. Utilities paid. Deposit and 2. One montn rent free. 332-0937. 337-1527. C, ous job opportuniies Call 351-4099 lease. Parking. $50 each per month. H E R E ’S A hint for you to heed, an 5-11/26 education you may need. But don t 3-11 26 3 5 1 -7 8 8 0 372-6188. 10-12/3 let life just pass you by, come see IBM SELECTRIC typewriter: Term T H IR D G IR L University Terrace. Win- our shop, D IV E R S IF Y . Hours: 4 p.m. papers, theses, dissertations, call N E E D E D : ONE child to babysit for ONE MAN for two man apartment TWO AND four man apartments. Two ter-spring. No damage deposit. 351- to 9 p.m. 317 East Grand River. Sharon Vliet, 484-4218 10-12 3 in my home. 353-0984. 1-11 22 Jt> University Villa. Clean, quiet. 351- blocks to Berkey. $55-$75. 351- 6573 or 351-6240 3-11/22 3721.351-7910. -11/22 5119 after 6 p.m. 5-11/22 Lansing. TOM AND JE R R Y'S JUNK V a E M P O R IU M 1-14/22 ANN BROWN: Typist and Multilith. W INTER T E R M —one girl for three N E E D MAN winter and spring. $50 ONE G IR L needed for winter and offset printing. Dissertations, the­ girl apartment. $62 River House. 351- ONE MAN needed for winter, spring. month. Utilities paid. 484-0579. 5-11/26 spring. Haslett Apartments. 351- "T H E WOOLIES” -available for book­ ses, manuscripts, general typing. 9279 4-11/22 Waters Edge. 332-0109. 5-11/22 0879. 5-11/22 ings. 351-7114. Ask for Bill. 5-11/22 IBM. 18 years experience. 332- ONE FOUR man unit available in Evergreen Arms and three four- N E E D TWO girls Haslett Apart­ NORWOOD: apartment R ): UN«- furnished E N T E Dif t e r 6 p.m. LEAD SINGER needed for recording band. Must be dedicated. 332-0247 8384 M A R ILYN CARR: Legal secretary C W h o ’s man units available at University ments. Take over lease. 351-3274. 5-11/22 Terrace 332-8687 Call State Management, C 5-11/26 NOW LEASING new deluxe, one bed­ “ Marvin, come to your senses and 3-11 25 Electric typewriter. After 5:30 p.m. and weekends 393-2654 Pick-up W hose N E E D ONE girl for winter and spring. room apartments. Corner Burcham wait until NASA does it firs t!” W HEN we were very young, culture and delivery. *- I’I W I N G S Evergreen. 351-3860. 5-11/26 and Alton. January 1st occupancy. was a must. In later years we have DONNA BOHANNON: Professional C illtv P a u l o s . T r ; i v e r s t ' C i t y Furnished or unfurnished. 332- found crumbs make the upper crust. 3135. 5-11/27 typist. Term papers, theses, IBM f r e s h m a n . to M a c k B e e r s . T r a ­ ONE G IR L needed winter term or take Hours 4 p.m. to 9 p.m. 317 East Selectric. 353-7922. C v e r s e C i t y j u n i o r . U n i v e r s i t y of over lease. 332-0601. 3-11/22 Grand River, Lansing TOM & J E R R Y ’S TWO GIRLS needed for winter term. For Rent For Sale JUNK EM PO R IU M . 0-11 '21 LIPPINCOTT S PROFESSIONAL IBM M i c h i g a n . I’ si 1 p sil on . Riverside East Apartments. 351- ONE MAN for three man 731 apart­ theses typing, including mathemat­ Lind a M e y e r s . R o c h e s t e r , to 0541. 3-11/25 TR U E OR False? New Beatle LP can PREPARE FOR ment. Winter and spring. 351-5261. Houses CHRISTMAS TREES: Table top $1.10; ical equations. 489-0358 : 489-6479 D o u g l a s K i lb o ti r n e . S a g i n a w |un- 5-11/26 other sizes to $3.25.332-5545 . 9-12 '6 be vours tonight! Call after 8 p.m. 3-11 25 U N FU R N IS H ED ONE bedroom. Walk­ 351-6793. 1-11/21 i.or. B e t a T h e t a PI, EAST LANSING: 1231 Ferndale. 3 bed­ WINTER GLARE LEBANESE FOOD ing distance to stores, bus and uni­ room duplex. Unfurnished, carpeted, T H R E E GUITARS. Brand New. Inex­ TE R M PAPERS, theses, general K a th y K o lyu k . B righ ton ju n ­ versity. No undergrads. Prefer fac­ full basement. Nice yard. $175 month. TV RENTALS for students. $9 00 typing. Prompt service. Experienced. pensive. Never played. 351-3373. ior. Z e l a Tail A lp h a , to R i c h a r d •SUNGLASSES* And Other Food From Most eign Countries-including U.S. For­ ulty or staff. $140 per month. 351- GOVAN M AN A G EM EN T 351-7910. Evenings 337-2366 3-11/26 month. Free service and delivery 337-2603. 20-12 4 6529 afternoons and evenings. 3-11/25 Call NEJAC 337-1300. We guaran­ M a r t e l , A lle n P a r k s e n i o r . Phi After 5 p.m. 332-0091 O From S H AH EEN ’S F A M IL Y tee same-day service. C TY P IN G DONE in my home 2 ’ z blocks K a p p a Tati ONE G IR L to take over lease in Jan­ BLONDE HUMAN hair fall. Bargain. FOOD F A IR „ Artm ar Opticians 1001 W. Saginaw 485-4089 uary. Haslett. 351-3227 . 5-11/27 M O B ILE H O M E -N orth side-three Worn only two times 351-6885. 3-11/26 B IL L Y BANANA Blues Band for rent. from campus. 332-1619. O K \G AG K M E N TS Welcome bedrooms, children welcome. $150 C a llB B 351-0990, Socko 4-11/22 V ic k i L a .m p lu e r . D e t r o i t s e n ­ Michigan Bankard T Y P IN G T E R M PAPERS AND THESES 2 0 5 A n n S t. 3 3 2 -5 5 2 0 N E E D ONE or two girls winter and a month plus deposit. 489-6976 . 3-11/26 LARGE SELECTION of frames ior. to ( a r l J a n s s e n s . D e t r o i t Electric typewriter, fast service, spring term. Lowebrook Apartment. Glasses for everyone. OPTICAL senior. U n iv e r s ity of M ich iga n . Sheri 351-4743 : 351-3350. 5-11/27 LO VELY FU R N IS H E D carpeted three DISCOUNT, 416 Tussing Building. Peanuts Personal 332-4597. 12-12 6 Janet A. K ington. Tucson. TELEFUNKEN MUST SUBLET winter and spring terms. Beautiful apartment. Free bedroom house. Available immediate­ ly. 351-56%; 332-6715. 3-11/26 Phone IV 2-4667. F E N D E R ELEC TR IC C -ll/22 BASS guitar L IT T L E SISTERS of the Seven Stars: Congratulations, we are looking for­ SHARON CARR-Experienced Greek mathematical. general. Electric. Pick up and delivery. 625-3603. 17-12 6 A r i z o n a s o p h o m o r e , to G a r y FI M a n n . G r o s s o P o m i e ju n io r . water and heat. One or two girls. N E E D TWO girls to sublease winter and ampeg fretless bass guitar. ward to a prosperous and fun future with you. Brothers of Delta Upsilon. D e l l a U p s i lo n . Call 351-5926. 3-11/25 term. $46. M A C. 337-2649 5-11/27 337-1086. 3-11/25 « 9 2-11/21 FAST. ACCURATE service on term L in d a C o s m a n . R o c l t e s l i r. N . V GIRLS: IM M E D IA T E L Y . Comfort­ POODLE P U PPIES - ARC. white papers. 1156 Burcham Call 337- s e n io r , to P a u l B f a z d a . G r a n d N E E D E D ONE MAN TO SUBLET Albert Apartment OR one girl to able, furnished, fireplace, garage. toy. male, female. $60 up. 663- 2737 1-11 22 HA PPY BIR TH D A Y to the eighteen H a v e n se n i o r . sublet Chalet Apartments. 351-4416. $50. Close. 351-8995 evenings 3-11/25 3364. 3-11/25 year old with an inner-city friend. CAROL EAMES: Experienced typist. Sharon A ve o ck . R o s e v ille soph­ 2-11/22 Signed: The Inner-City Kid. 1-11/22 F IV E ROOM Duplex. Walkout base­ BLANK 8 track cartridge tape 300' Theses and term papers. Reasonable o m o r e . lo M i c h a e l K i l l s . Has- .ONE MAN wanted winter, spring ment. 2151 Dean Avenue, Holt. De­ at $2.7?. M A IN ELECTRONICS 5558 337-2266. , >11/22 le t! s o p h o m o r e posit required. 5-11/26 South Pennsylvania. C HAPPINESS IS a playmate for the . J . . . f ....................... # .1. terms. Campus Hill. 332-4172 3-11/25 " R a r b a r T J* ( a m p b e l l . A m ? \r * racing Turtle. Sexiness is a loving W ILL T Y P E and correct minlfr gram ­ FOUR BEDROOM furnished house. ho r senior... to G e o r g e ( ’. R a t R IVERS EDG E: Two girls for luxury MOCCASINS, PONCHOS, Leather Jack­ AEPhi. Happy 20th from the one who matical errors. Free delivery 351- East Kalamazoo. Available winter loves you more. 1-11/20 5536. 3-11,22 III. K a l a m a z o o g r a d u a t e o f MSI apartment. Close to campus. 351- ets, Dingo and Western Boots, "ev­ 7707. 10-12/6 term. 332-0425after 6 p.m. 5-11/26 erything” to be dressed “right." Now until Nov. 22nd. $1.00 off on N E E D ONE girl winter and or spring EAST LANSING: Two bedroom duplex, men’s shirts and all Lee jeans. ONLY ALL CLASSIFIED terms New Cedar Village. Reduc­ garage, basement, appliances. $165 WILL1AMSTON W ESTERN WEAR ed rates. 351-3097. 3-11/25 month. Call evenings 351-7692 . 3-11/22 $249.95 AND TACK in downtown William- ston, 118 West Grand River. Phone 655- N E E D ONE girl for winter and spring GIRLS N E E D E D for house. $60 In­ 3211. 3-11/22 term . $30 per month. 393-0247 . 4*11 '26 cludes utilities. 501 Lexington. 351- 8371. 5-11/26 TELEF UNKEN WANTED G IR L winter and spring HOCKEY SKATES, Bauer size 9 and shin pads. 351-8633 . 3-11/22 Allegro Stereo Tuner-Amplifier terms. Fireplace. All bills paid. T H IR D MAN for two bedroom house ADVERTISING $70 a month. 528 Albert. 351- Basement accommodations. $45 plus SKI O U T F IT 8V» boot, 6’7” skiis, poles, 8286. 5-11/27 utilities. 351-6616after 5 p.m. 3-11/21 gloves. $60 Carol before 5 p.m. A llegro 205 ^ 355-4673. 3-11/22 W H ER E TH E GIRLS ARE! They’re TWO GIRLS sublease winter. $65 4 w ave ranges: FM, MW, 2 x SW month. 504 Abbott, 351-8066. 5-11/25 reading the “ Personal" column in MAYTAG D R Y E R -N o vent model. 20 transistors, 14 diodes, 2 rectifiers. A today's Classified Ads. Try it now! Needs some repairs. $25 . 485-7754. Autom atic frequency control on FM (A FC ). ^ FURNISHF t« n house. Five 3-11/22 7 A M circuits, 11 FM circuits. Rented MUST BE minuti 189-6358. Music power: 12 W atts ( 2 x 6 W atts), continuous 12-12/6 output power: 8 W atts ( 2 x 4 W atts). Built-in EYE SEE THE FOUR SPEED, four track stereo tape recorder. Wollensak. $170. 355- FM stereo decoder, FM stereo indicator. T H R E E BEDROOMS, well furnished, 9478. 3-11/22 Sockets for: pick-up/tape recorder, 2 loudspeaker carpeted. Suitable students. Deposit LIGHT SHOW CO. and lease. Pay own utilities. Near DIAMOND BARGAIN: Wedding ahd PAID IN ADVANCE units (matching impedance 4 Ohms), FM antenna, AM antenna, ground connection. Frandor. 372-6188. 10-12/3 engagement ring sets. Save fifty Mains voltage: 110, 127, 220, 240 V, 50 c/s. per cent or more. Large selection M A R R IE D COUPLE Close to cam­ of plain and fancy diamonds. $25- Environmental Light Show pus. Appliances Available winter $150. W ILCOX SECOND HAND FM fine tuning (AFC) with tuning indicator STORE 509 E. Michigan 485-4391 Media to accent yo u r group term. 484-6595 3-11/25 C Where Quality and Service Are Sold F i rst . . . o r dance. FA CULTY OR STAFF: Lovely three bedroom. \ ' k baths, 2 car garage. ELECTRIC G U ITA R and amplifier, 19" portable TV with remote con­ BEGINNING MON. NOV. 25th. N e J a c ’s 543 E. Grand River Phone 372-2267 o r Qose campus. E D 2-1925 5-11/25 trol. 482-7134. 5-11/21 "TAT EN E . . . 337-1300 882-1736. N E E D ONE G IR L . Winter term Two BICYCLE SALES and service. Also blocks from Berkey. 351-4658 1-11/22 used EAST LANSING CYCLE, 1215 E. Grand River. Call 332-8303. C NOTICE TO MARRIED STUDENTS SOME PO RPLE G E T T H E IR KICKS SINGLE ROOM available for girl in reading Classified ads. They get bar­ large house Walking distance from gains too. Check today. Join your friends at Creek Farm Townehouses . . . rapidly becoming the campus. 351-6446. 2-11 22 B EA U TIFU L IM P O R TED gifts. Call most popular m a rrie d students’ community In the Lansing area. At Creek SINGLE. ALSO have some doubles 351-3373. 5-11/22 F arm , your money buys more living per dollar than anywhere else in for men. Refrigerator, private en­ town . , , and you'll find many other student fam ilies with the same in­ trance. parking, no cooking 437 OLYM PIA PORTABLE typewriter "COCA-COLA"AND"COKE"AREREGISTEREDTRADEMARKSW HICHIDENTIFYONLYTHf PRODUCTOFTHECOCACOOCOM P, terests that you have. Come and see the beautifully-furnished models today. Charles Street. 5-11 27 Sparingly used. Four years old. Excellent condition. 355-7885 3-11 22 D O U B L E -P R IV A T E entrance, bath, YOU’ LL GET THESE OUTSTANDING FEATURES parking, clean, reasonable. 237 GARRARD T t c f N l D ' with stereo Kedzie. 351-9584 5-11/26 cartridge. C a l l ^ V 0 3-11 22 Who’s * * Individual I & 2 story Townehouses Loads of closet space LARGE APPROVED single room. Men, G UITAR GIBSON, blonde, six string, model B25. Portable sewing machine got the junior-senior. Winter, spring term. * Large living room Parking privileges E D 2-6622 3-11/22 Good deal. Call now. 355-5561 or 355-5564. 6-11/27 ball? * Separate form al dining area SPARTAN HALL: Leasing for winter * 1, 2 or 3 bedrooms term. Rooms for men and women. Animals * 1 or 1 1 / 2 baths 372-1031. 6-11/27 * Modern kitchen with deluxe oven and range, two door re frig e ra to r“ GERMAN SH EPH ERD Pups-Four. SINGLE. M ALE Clean. No cooking three months old. $25. Phone 626- f re e z e r, custom cabinets Available now. Call 351-0631. 3-11/22 6669 3-14/22 * Full private basement M EN : CLEAN, quiet, cooking, park­ * Private front and re a r entrances ing. Supervised. Close to campus. 487- NOAH’S ARK PETS * Private backyard 5753 or 485-8836 O WILD ANGEL FISH * Only $345 moves you in EAST SIDE: Deluxe sleeping room. Much more beautiful * Income tax deductions Private entrance and parking. Linen than domestic breed. * No personal mortgage liability furnished. Gentlemen only. Call 223 Ann St. E. Lansing after 5 p.m and weekends. 372- * Choice of colonial or fanch-type homes 0979 3-11/26 351-0437 * Landscaping and maintenance included Mobile H om es * Plumbing and appliances replaced or repaired at no additional cost For Sale * As low as $102 per month Including heat and all utilities except electric PARKWOOD. 12x52: Two bedrooms, B IR TH D A Y C A K ES-7", $364; 8" raised kitchen On lot. fifteen min­ $416; 9", $5.20. Delivered. Also utes from campus. 625-7158 . 3 -jl 26 sheet cakes. Kwast Bakeries. 484- CREEK FARM TOWNEHOUSES 1317. O ONE MONTH rent free at BROOK- Go 1/2 Mile South of Jolly Road on Logan G E N U IN E AFRICAN cotton print: VTEW M O B ILE HOME PARK, 10 embroidered leather bags. 355- Turn left on Haag Road and Follow Model Signs minutes from MSU just off M-78. 3027after5:30p.m. 2-11/22 W h o c a r e s ! W h o ’s g o t t h e C o k e ? C o c a - C o l a h a s t h e 4600 Britton Road. Perry! Buy a 2 bedroom furnished, carpeted Mobile Model townehouses open da'ly and Sunday—Noon to 8 p.m. E LECTROLUX TANK vacuum clean­ r e f r e s h in g t a s t e y o u n e v e r g e t t ir e d o f . T h a t ’s w h y t h in g s g o Home for as little as $16 week with Saturday, Noon to 5 p.m. Closed Thursday. Phone; 882-1725 er with all attachments •( late model I. no payments until February. Open b e t t e r w it h C o k e , a f t e r C o k e , a f t e r C o k e . Cost $140 new-sell for $25.00. Phone 9-9. seven days week. Call 625-3UI 694-9616. C -ll/22 or 625-3311. 1-11/22 M m i l Mm ■vltorlly of IX . Cm-Cola Compon, bp, ( ta g -G S 'ß tttlw g (cmpú/U/ ( / ‘ffltcÁ íg íW F rid a y . N o vem ber 22, 1968 16 Michigan State News, E ast Lansing, M ichigan Garskof: tenure or resign l i f e W H A T 'S H RRIIG (continued fb n m tfh inuc from page* one) me •“ > 1 •• • pmH hi* i'* tv * . .■ —■ .tw - ’ , nampH Torrence A llen -./iroti» * s-’evi department y V /v ..u n IO'Kelly i named Terrence Allen. ,pro(es‘_ • T o t e v c . _ ‘. t >--» — S olmsvchology o e “ . i. . . . . . ; P '-r >fv> >s •zo,. is m ade which is then vot ' -. •4• *»allot «v•»v» - ,1 ¡rigs. these m em bers is named by the reviewing his record and inter­ Garskof decision without Gar- Entertainm ent, black light and free coffee w ill be featured the decision be made by the He explained the tenure deci­ O'Kell v said the decision to at the Case Love-Inn from 8-12 tonight and Saturday. sion procedure as follows: the candidate him self (Garskof viewing students and faculty re­ sof's perm ission. reappoint Garskof associate pro­ department chairman garding his general com petency. "The department is not try­ * * * fessor without tenure could be The com m ittee then presents ing to cover up anything." he The Scene: Act II will sponsor a "Celebration Memorial of its information a m eeting of said. considered a "probationary the Vision of JFK ." via poetry, folk m usic and other media at m easure, but that this w as not May retirement all tenured faculty. The tenured Garskof charged that the ten­ 8 tonight at 1118 South Harrison Road (rear entrance). Admis­ faculty discusses the inform a­ ured faculty voted not to talk to the official term inology of the sion is 75 cents. tion until a motion for a deci- him about what had been decid- department. * * * Singers from the Folklore Society will be featured at a coffee becam e treasurer and vice- (continued from page one) ing Smith said that he would house sponsored by the Cultural Scholastics Comm ittee of not have voted for May's im­ president of business and fi­ H u n te r s — West Wilson Hall from 9-11:30 tonight in the West Terrace votes to do so. However Stevens thought differently. m ediate dism issal and that it nance. Lounge. Admission is free. Coffee w ill be served. * * ♦ "I voted for the proposal be­ would have been unfair to de­ The board took no action on cause I thought it w as fair. prive May of his retirement the State N ew s obscenity con­ Maynard Bernis. national execu tive secretary of Phi Delta Stevens said. "It advanced his benefits. troversy as som e m em bers Kappa, w ill speak on “ Education in the Central City" at a banquet held by Phi Delta Kappa at 6:30 tonight in the Big retirem ent by seven months. May has been U niversity thought it should. Chairman Ten Room of Kellogg Center. New m em bers w ill be initiated If I'd voted with them (Har­ treasurer for the last 21 years. Don Stevens said that the lan. White. and Hartman) In 1947 he becam e com ptroller board felt it would be better at this time. ♦ * # we d be stuck with him until and treasurer and rem ained in to take no action on the The Humanities Dept, w ill hold a rec o rd concert at 7 tonight January at least. Because of this position until 1957. He then m atter. in 114 B essev Hall. May's action in the campaign S a v e O n • * » leading up to the Nov. 5 elec­ PEANUTS TOOAV, LET 5 UlERE V0U HAPPV AT HOME ? Shaw Hall will hold an all-University m ixer from 9-12 tonight tion. w e felt his retirem ent pSVftf lAîh?i TALK A LITTLE PIP V0U LIKE V0UR MOTHER w as due. I knew w e could get HELP 5