Wednesday Acts o f violence—. . . . . . Whether on a large or a M IC H IG A N Co I d . . small s«*ate> Crt»WU«r parsivx: ». and me />f ^ r'jvth- m eaninglessness of • « 7 A T I S fA T E M E W ' ^*7 S----- .S.. - * • —* j O S . . ■ . and cloudy with a chance of light snow flurries. W*».- • ’¿ V killing. U N IV E R S IT Y night from 21 to 26. Thursday, -D a g Hammarskjöld cloudy with snow flurries. Decem ber 4, 1968 10c East Lansing, Michigan Vol. 61 Number 96 F a c u lty c o m m itte e O K o p e n h o u s e p o lic y By MARILYN PATTERSON by individual residence hall governm ent open houses are to be held, proper attire, vice-president for student affairs, for final State N ew s Staff Writer and their advisers. open door policy, and supervision of open approval. The faculty C om m ittee on Student Af­ The policy change, which w as proposed houses. “ The proposal could be im plem ented fa ir s approved Monday night a proposal by Men's Halls Association (MHA), de­ by the beginning of winter term , which letes U niversity rules on length and tim es These policies are now to be deter­ is half a term ahead of our schedule. that open house policies be determined m ined by the hall governm ent, the man­ Hawkins said. ager and the head adviser. The policy, if approved, w ill apply to The Faculty C om m ittee made one m en's and w om en's rf^ d en ce halls, he change in the MHA proposal. said. Visitation policies vary MHA offered that procedures for scheduling of open houses be determined by the hall governing council under the "This policy w as passed with the as­ sumption that it w ill not be m isused. Hawkins said. "The su ccess of this policy Marines in Dodge City advisem ent of, rather than with the agree­ and the possibility of passage of other for Big Ten living units m ent of, the m anager and head adviser. The Faculty Com m ittee amended the policies giving students m ore responsi­ bility depends on how the halls use their new power. This does prove that the pro­ M a r i n e s in v o lv e d in O p e r o t i o n M e a d R i v e r watch n a p a lm s t r i k e s on N o r th V ie t n a m e s e and V i e t Cong p o s itio n s . About 4 ,0 0 0 M a r i n e s versity. the policy has been subject to a r e In v o lv e d In the c o r d o n o p e r a tio n in an a r e a known as Dodge proposal to read: ‘‘Procedures and pol­ vided channels are an effectiv e way of By RICH BERNARD scrutiny bv different publics, which has ic ies for open houses shall be agreed upon C i t y , 13 m i le s south o f D a Nang. U P I T e le p h o to State N ew s Staff Writer included som e high-fidelity flack." Hen­ changing policy." by the governing council m anager and P olicies ranging from closed doors and nessey said. head adviser. living unit self-determ ination at the Uni- 'But the argum ent for students having .v ersity of Michigan to occasional lounge a greater voice in defining the w ay they “This tri-partite arrangem ent has open houses at Purdue U niversity color the live has supported the right of student worked in the past. A.L. Thurman, P E A C E P L A N spectrum of visitation among the Big Ten self-determ ination in this area." Hennes­ chairm an of the Faculty C om m ittee, schools. sey concluded. said, “ and w e could see no justification MSU has furthered the liberal trend in open house policies with the recent move to allow the individual residence halls to decide their own open house policies. The State U niversity of Iowa, while re­ quiring that doors be ajar, allow s resi­ dence hall floors to determ ine lengths and frequency of visitation in the rooms. for changing it .” Brian Hawkins, president of MHA. said that the change does affect the intent of the original proposal in that the policy­ VC spokesman denies U-M last January, adopted a policy al- , Hours of visitation are lim ited by the making is a three-part responsibility, not lowing each individual student housing unit plan to su p p o rt Saigon university to 4:30 to 8 p.m. Monday through the duty of the students alone. to make its own decisions concerning vis­ Thursday. 3 p.m. to 12:30 a.m . on Friday. However, MHA approved the com m it­ itation. This policy change cam e after an 10 a.m . to 12:30 a.m . on Saturday and tee am endm ent in a m eeting Tuesday. intensive year and a half-long study of the 10 a.m . to 11:30 p.m. on Sundays. The proposal w as considered by the problem. The university s Code of Student Life ASMSU Student Board Tuesday night. in Paris. Presum ably, the allies went over PARIS IA P i - A Viet Cong spokesman the South V ie tn a m e s e people . . . I fin d Alm ost all of the m en's units have elec­ requires that planned visitations be regis- If passed by the ASMSU board, it will rejected Tuesday as "ridiculous" a re­ these pro po sals s c a rc e ly r e a lis t ic ." proposals Vance passed on to the North ted to im plem ent 24-hour visitation with (please turn to page 13) be presented to Milton B. Dickerson, V ietnam ese at a secret session Monday. ported South V ietnam ese plan calling for T h e fro n t has said it w ill re fu s e to nego­ closed doors. P olicies vary in women s U.S. sources said further secret m eet­ the guerrillas to rally to the side of the t i at e w ith the South V ie tn a m e s e d e le g a ­ living units. ings with Hanoi's diplom ats were expected Saigon government. tio n w hen the exp a n d e d ta lk s g et u n d er The U niversity upholds policies against (please turn to page 13) In the m iddle of the verbal jockeying, w a y . South V ie tn a m has said it w ill ta lk cohabitation and pre-m arital intercourse. an advance party of the South Vietnam ­ o nly to N o rth V ie tn a m , not the fro n t. T h e Student responsibility in exercise of the ese delegation arrived and U.S. sources right to privacy is stressed. A policV of closed doors and self-deter­ mination aV«i sub-living unit level within said it w as hoped the enlarged peace talks could begin next week. Government sources in Saigon said the N o rth V ie tn a m e s e say th e y do not re c o g ­ n ize the Saigon g o v e rn m e n t. T h e V ie t Cong s ta te m e n t u nderscored the w id e gap b etw e e n the N o rth V ie tn a m ­ Council refers a 2 p.m. toJp]ra.m. tim e lim it m arks In­ plan to be submitted to the first iour- diana y n ify e rsf& a s second in liberaliza­ tion of visitation. > Living unit areas of approxim ately 50 party talks would provide for scale-down of the fighting, supervised withdrawal of North V ietnam ese troops from the South ese and the fro n t on one side and South V ie tn a m e s e on the o th e r as they app ro ach w h a t m a y be m o n th s of tough b arg a in in g w h ile the fig h tin g pages on in South V ie t ­ stack closing people, corresponding to precincts in MSU residence halls, m ay decide the frequency and length of in-room visiting within the tim e lim its .’et by the university's Inter- along with a cutback of I'.S. forces and a "rallying" of the Viet Cong to the gov­ ernment. "That's ridiculous, very ridiculous." said n am . V ic e P re s id e n t N g u y e n C ao K v . a h a rd ­ lin e r w ho w ill not be a d e le g a te but w ill to committee R esidence Hall Assn. have a s u p e rv is o ry ro le , is e x p e c ted o v e r By MARILYN PATTERSON a spokesman for the National Liberation State News Staff Writer Floor governors, sim ilar to MSU resi­ the w e e ke n d . South V ie tn a m e s e sources Front, the Viet Cong's political arm. The Academ ic Council Tuesday referred dent assistants, serve in a supervisory said. "The puppet administration ot Saigon to the Faculty Library C om m ittee a pro­ authority during the visitations. Signing in U.S. A m b a s s a d o r C y ru s R . V a n c e a d ­ represents no one. It is the creation of the posal that the Library stacks not be clos­ and out of guests is required. vanced p r e lim in a r y a rra n g e m e n ts by con­ United States. The National Liberation ed to undergraduates until sum m er term The policy w as tried on a sm all, exper­ fe r rin g w ith N g uyen V a n A n . L a m ’s d ep u ty Front is the legitim ate representative of im ental scale last spring before it was 1970. expanded to the entire university this fall. The proposal, presented by Jeff Zeig. • The policy has caused som e disloca­ ASMSU senior m em ber-at-large and stu­ dent representative to the Council, re­ tion in the student com m unity with regard San Francisco protest to decisions concerning who is to use the room by room m ates, but the problem is not insurmountable." Tom Hennessey, San F r a n c i s c o State C o lle g e students r a i s e c le n c h e d f i s ts in d e ­ H opes for med school quested that the stacks rem ain open for a year, that the stacks then be closed for a year and that the two system s be com ­ asst. asst, director of counseling and ac­ f i a n c e o f A c tin g P r e s i d e n t S. I, H a y a k a w a 's re o p e n in g o f c la s s e s on pared by an ad hoc com m ittee appointed tivities in Indiana U niversity’s residence by President A. Hannah. halls, said. • Because Indiana is a major state uni­ D e c . 2. At le a s t f o u r d e m o n s t r a t o r s , one a n o n -s tu d e n t, w e r e a r r e s t ­ ed e a r l i e r . y P | T e le p h o to climax 12-year struggle Zeig's m otion cam e after considerable discussion by the Council about the li­ brary's closing stacks to undergraduates By WES THOR! u p p o rt the new m e d ic a l school, the in January for reasons of efficiency and State N ew s Staff Writer K e llo g g F o u n d a tio n g ra n te d $1.25 m illio n to M S U . H a lf w ou ld be fo r in itia tin g the better service. Rising hopes at MSI’ that the state 2 9 A R R E S T E D legislature might approve a four-year de­ new m e d ic a l p ro g ra m and the o th e r h alt Charles C. Hughes professor of anthro­ fo r c o n s tru c tio n o v e r a fiv e -y e a r p eriod . pology and chairman of the Faculty Li­ gree-granting program for the College ot D r . A n d re w D . H u n t J r .. fo r m e r d i­ brary C om m ittee, stated six considerations Human Medicine by the end ot this r e c to r of A m b u la to ry S e rv ic e s and as­ the C om m ittee took into account in recom ­ Police halt Frisco strikers month clim ax a 12-year struggle for a s o c ia te p ro fe s s o r of p e d ia tric s a t the San­ mending that the stacks be dosed.They are: com plete m edical school. The first effort to bring a m edical ford U n iv e r s ity M e d ic a l C e n te r, w as a p ­ p ointed to be d ea n o f the new m e d ic a l -th at the library is com m itted to pro­ school for the U niversity w as in 1956 school. viding diverse services appropriate to all non-Negro, tried to break up cla sses knocked down and his face w as bloodied when Dean Albert ('. Fursten-Berg of the SAN FRANCISCO i A P i - Student strik­ T h e M S U C o lle g e o f H u m a n M e d ic in e segm ents of the academ ic community. in the Business and Social Sciences Build­ U niversity of Michigan Medical School ers. enraged at the reopening of San Fran­ in the m elee. re c e iv e d its p ro v is io n a l m e m b e rs h ip in -th a t the E ast Wing graduate library ing. The strikers are demanding an auton-, urged the establishm ent of another cisco State College, stoned police Tuesday the Assn. of A m e r ic a n M e d ic a l C o lleg es building statem ent proposed lim ited a ccess omous Black Studies Departm ent, ad­ m eeical school in the state. and in return were bloodied by swinging P olice arrested eight, including two in O c to b e r 1964 to the area: therefore, it was not designed m ission of all non-white students regard­ In 1957 M ichigan's need for nealth per­ clubs in a wild afternoon of interm ittent girls. The others fled into the nearby (Please turn to page 15™ eavy traffic. less of educational background, and re­ sonnel and the desirability of a m edical cafeteria and threw food and dishes at' (please turn to page 13) clashes. instatem ent of Black Panther George Mur­ center at MSU w as documented by F ive policem en and three other persons the officers. Charles R. Hotter. MSU professor of ray as a teacher and graduate student. w ere injured. At lunchtime the strikers started a sociology, and his fellow staff m em bers. Murray was reinstated Monday but was P olice arrested 20. forbidden rally by the cafeteria. After the Hoffer study in 1957 a Uni­ im m ediately resuspended when he made $125,000 gift aw arded Numerous other, students, both strikers versity study com m ittee in 1959 proposed Repeated calls for a show of hands a rabble-rousing speech on campus. and nonstrikers, suffered lesser injuries as to the MSU Board of Trustees that MSU for support drew about 50 responses strikers attacked students loyal to admin­ undertake a program in human m edicine from the crowd of about 150. istration. which would be closely integrated with Strike leaders then rushed the Busi­ Most students attended regular classes ness and Social Sciences Building, where existing program s in veterinary m edicine, for the second day since the strife-torn college w as reopened Monday. Dr. S. I. Hayakawa named acting p r e ^ ^ attendance ,in classes has been alm ost 100 per cent, making the students prime targets of the strikers. Reserve shortage nursing and other health-related subjects. To com plete the initial planning for a two-year m edical program and to co­ to MSU med school ident after President Robert Smith re­ in B ritish econom y ordinate and integrate biological and The Board of T rustees of the Amer­ to submit proposals involving the areas signed last week, vowed to keep the m edical curricula and research, the Com­ ican M edical Assn. Tuesday awarded the As up to 1.500 onlookers gathered, of research in m edical education, de­ college open with w hatever force was LONDON (AP) - The British govern­ m onwealth Fund in 1960 gave MSU a MSU m edical school a $125,000 inheri­ the leaders broke a g la ss door, the livery of health services, provision of m ent, still struggling to m ake last year's grant of $167,000 to establish an Institute tance for its proposal to m ore effectively needed. third in two days in that building. com prehensive health care or em ergency The student dem onstrators w ere from devaluation work, faced new danger signs of Biology and Medicine. involve com m unity physicians as teachers Three white youths and one Negro m edical care. Out of six proposals which the Students for a D em ocratic Society, Tuesday from the biggest monthly drain In 1962 the National Institutes of Health of m edical science. burst inside and were arrested. the AMA rated as "excellent." MSU's the non-Caucasian Third World Liberation P olice swinging clubs, w restled som e this year on the reserves backing the gave MSU $1.4 million to support con- «. The AMA. holding its annual clin­ w as selected for the grant. Front and the Black Students Union, which pound sterling. struction of a biochem istry building, a ical convention in Miami Beach, pre­ protesters to the ground and forced the The intent of the grant is to develop provoked the long siege of violence when During the European m oney crisis, portion of which would be used by future sented the sum to Andrew D. Hunt crowd back. ways of improving and speeding the it called a classroom strike Nov. 6. when speculators sold weak British m edical students. Jr.. dean of the College of Human m edical education process by making The Tuesday disorders began during the pounds and French francs to buy strong The College of Human Medicine was M edicine The gift fulfilled the bequest The crowd dwindled as afternoon classes m ore effective use of the com m unity morning when about 60 strikers, m ostly German m arks last month, Britain was established by the Board of Trustees in of the late Dr. .John I. Snavely of resum ed, the main force of police marched resources, said Hilliard Jason, direc­ forced to Ji" deep into the gold and con­ 1964 with an academ ic structure which Sterling. 111. off campus, and strikers led a new rush tor of the O ffice of Medical Education vertible currency reserves backing the utilizes the existing departments. Snavely. who died Jan. 15. 1967. willed on the Business building, showeririg it R esearch and Developm ent, which will Obscanity hearing with rocks and breaking several windows. P olice returned, and again the crowd pound, treasury figures showed. The treasury said these reserves, which D istinctive features of the new College of Human M edicine included the joint that'" one-sixth of his estate should be distributed to m edical colleges for m ed­ adm inister the grant. "We expect and. indeed, want to en­ protect the .value of the pound in the adm inistration of 12 units by two or more ical research as determined by the The Student-Faculty Judiciary w ill hold retreated, throwing cans, fruit and all courage m ost of our graduates to pra- pocket of the man in the street, fell colleges and the inclusion of anthro­ board. an open hearing on the State N ew s obscen­ handy objects at police. tice m edicine in a com m unity rather by 196.8 million. It was the largest pology, psychology, sociology and zoo­ Medical schools which have started ity case at 8 tonight in the third floor con­ One policem an w as knocked unconscious (P lease turn to page 15) (P lease turn to page 13) logy as basic scien ce departments. in the past five years were requested ference room of the Student Services Bldg. by a thrown brick, and a student was W e d n e sd a y , D e c e m b e r 4, 1968 2 Michigan State N e w s, E ast L a n sin g , M ich ig a n F re n c h m o n e ta ry p o lic y u lith a u l J*. < but E xecutive Reporter tion . W'if with money speculators and When Charles DeGaulle re­ the surplus currency nations Abolish gold system pressure are the loss of French and they m ake less w age Even m ore fundamentally, fused to devalue the franc he such as Germany, Italy, and was acting not only in the Netherlands. com petitive position vis-a-vis mands." Kreinin recom m ended a m ove­ F ran ce’s, but in the interna­ the rest of Europe. Revaluation beneficial m ent aw ay from an interna­ The outward m anifestation tional m onetary system 's b^st of the pressure on the franc is After the strikes of last If the Germ ans would re­ tional m onetary system based interest. speculation, and speculation March, and the w age settle­ value, the French, the British, on gold. “ Gold," he explains, And when the United States ought to be m et by intergov­ m ent that followed them. the Americans, and the entire “ is capricious. The amount of supported the move, it was ernm ent action, not by deval­ French products becam e less system would benefit. If the gold in circulation depends on acting in its own best interests. uation. The French are using com petitive as their prices in­ French were to devaluate, they the w him s of South Africa and So says professor of econo­ restrictive m easures to keep creased, and France went from would m ake only French pro­ R ussia, and there is no reason m ics Mordechai Kreinin, who capital inside the country and a surplus in its balance of pay­ ducts more com petitive, there­ why w e should rely on this ar­ specializes in international attract it from abroad, but m ents, where m ore goods £fnd by damaging the com petitive tificial method. U ltim ately trade and finance. these are m easures that deal services were exported than im ­ position of all other third coun­ currencies are redeem ed in Not only did DeGaulle do the only with this outward man­ ported, to a deficit position, tries." goods and services, not in gold. right thing by refusing to de­ ifestation.” where the opposite occurred. The Germ ans have not re­ "The real solution is to de- M oredecha! K re in in value, Kreinin declared, but Loss of com petition The solution to the problem valued the mark. Kreinin feels, m onitize gold altogether, and the blam e for the financial sit- The underlying causes of the could have com e in two ways, because of the feeling that re­ substitute a system based on Kreinin points out. Either the valuation would imply a poli­ free-floating exchange rates, or French could have devalued tical defeat for them. on an expanded version of the the franc, or the Germ ans (and "But revaluation." he pro­ Special Drawing Rights now Miners’ deaths continue the other surplus countries) tests, "is an econom ic tool could revalue their currency. Germans to blam e not a political punishment used by the International Mon­ etary Fund, or on som e na­ Any change in exchange rates tional currency. There is noth­ ing wrong with an interna­ The Germans, feels Kreinin, should not be an issue on whict are the main delinquents. "It political leaders rise and fall tional system based on the despite federal shutdown has been abundantly clear for The only reason it is so is the' dollar.” at least seven years that the amount of attached to national prestige currency, which 1 But form s until take place, som e major the system P e d e s tria n p a th s ally ordered shutdowns of m ines billion worth of coal from m ines mark is undervalued. This has will continue in the instable WASHINGTON . (AP) - E x­ been a major factor at the core think ought to be rem oved." An i n t e r e s t i n g c o n g l o m e r a t i o n o f students b u s tle to tracting coal from the nation's deem ed to be "in imminent dan­ in 29 states. Most Germ ans, according tc state it is in today. of every international financial and f r o m c la s s on c ro w d e d s id e w a lk n e a r Shaw H a ll ger of disaster." The Bureau of Mines, which "The seeds of the next m ines cost the lives of 220 m in­ crisis of this period. the econom ist, would benefit During those shutdowns, rang­ com piles such statistics, expects and B e s s e y B r id g e , a m a in c a m p u s th o r o u g h f a r e . ers last year. Hundreds more Why is the mark under­ from an upward revaluation ol crises," declared Kreinin, have ing from days to months, thou­ this year's coal production to been planted by this one." State N ews photo by L a r r y H a g e d o rn were injured. And 1967 w as one the mark. sands of m iners went without exceed last year's by $25 m il­ valued? P olitical strings 'of the safest mining years on “ Because," Kreinin says, lion. In human terms, mining record. pay- "It would raise the standarc operations have already cost “ the Germans have suffered The deaths and injuries oc­ curred despite nearly 500 feder- The 220 lives w ere lost in the rem oval of an estim ated 2.5 260 lives this year. much less inflation than the of living by making m ore for rest of Europe. This is for three eign goods available, and ii NOT CRITICAL Of last year's coal mine death reasons. One. they received a would help the governmeni toll, nearly one-fourth occurred great surplus of labor from the control their dom estic infla­ in a single state. West Virginia. And West Virginia's 60 mining flow of refugees from the E ast­ deaths w as the lowest in the tionary boom. ern zones. Two, they have an valuation is m erely one way ol Currency re­ fU ’ a d a p ts to cut backs The first line sta te’s history. abundance of foreign capital, reaping and distributing the . ‘‘As a m atter of fact, it is as­ dating from the days of the United S tates’ Marshall Plan fruits of increased productivity in the econom y. Of course sue! of defense is tounding." Rep. Jam es Kee, D- W. Va.. said last March in hail­ in the '50s. And ing im provem ents in the state's m an workers are m ore d isci­ third the Ger­ revaluation is contrary to the interest of som e politically in science expenditures to turn on plined than their counterparts. powerful groups within Ger­ m ine safety record. number of grants for teacher many. notably the exporters." By G E O R G E B U L L A R D sand dollars m ore than $5 m ill­ What Bonn did w as lower State News Staff Writer ion from NSF. The new figure training programs were deferred the enemy: Nixon appoints ABBIE HOFFMAN export subsidies and import Spending ceilings recently set taxes. This had the sam e ef­ by the National Science Foun­ fect as revaluation, but only dation (NSF) haven't affect­ will be "several hundred thou­ sand dollars less than $5 m ill­ ion." he said. It is difficult to because of spending cuts im ­ posed by NSF. "Fortunately." he added, "it is not necessary to cancel any in com m odities, not in ser­ ed MSU as badly as other univ­ assign a precise dollar value vices. It had the effect of in­ ersities. David T. Clark, asst, to NSF funds, he added. programs this year. " creasing the m ark's value by to the vice president of re­ "We never know exactly what Brandou expects that a 1970 Everybody thinks he knows who Abbie Hoffman is. Now read his book. It’s all here—the inside story of science adviser about 3 per cent, not the 11 or search and developm ent, said. 12 per cent that would have brought the currencies in line. "In general," he continued, "it has not been a critical awards will be granted through the year," he said. ciark estim ated that MSU spending ceiling on NSF funds would have considerably more effect upon U niversity programs What really went on in Chicago. What happened at th e NEW YORK (AP) -- P resident-elect Richard M. Nixon named than the current ceiling. And, said Kreinin, "these point here. We have adapted spends 25 per cent of its NSF Stock Exchange m oney-burning caper. The Grand Central educator Lee A. DuBridge his scien ce adviser Tuesday, and said m easures are too im perm an­ to the delay in expenditures funds for salaries, 25 per cent "This sum m er's programs he hopes to narrow a gap between governm ent and scien tists ent. The Germ ans could re­ imposed by NSF. Hardships for equipment and 50 per cent w ill be about the sam e." he said, Be-In police riot. Why Abbie thinks there will be two who now “ take a rather dim view of the political operator." "but 1970 is a com plete un­ verse them unilaterally." _jfcii(fc for specific 'areas for services and supplies. C hicagos, three C hicagos, many C hicagos. Why Cfiiifcgo DuBridge, 67, is retiring as presicrerit-of^he*f>tTforniy^TTTrr~“ ”"’^ ‘Wore”’’ lasting m easures“ to and individuals, but the effect Clark said that judgm ents known." thinks there will be no m ore Abbies. tute of Technology. * - . * prevent future crises Would in­ here has been generally light." where to m ake exact spending Nixon said the United States needs “ a m ajor scien tific research clude widening the spread cur­ Clark explained that the de­ cuts are left to the departments. effort," particularly in the field of peacetim e technology. He said rencies are allowed to vary ferred spending ordered by NSF “ Each departm ent is given Support your local bookseller. Pick up a copy now. D e G a u lle DuBridge will have major responsibility for bringing this about. w as not critical for MSU be­ a spending ceiling," he said. DuBridge him self said there m ust be a stress on basic scien ce REVOLUTIONFORTHEHELLOFIT in the United States the kind of pure research which leads to discoveries and new scien tific applications. M a j o r b u i l d e r cause m ost MSU com m itm ents of NSF funds Could be easily deferred. But, he added, if "We feel that the decision« on spending cuts should be made within the discipline." s ta rs in book By ABBIE HOFFMAN (alias FREE) The president-elect said DuBridge will also be counseling NSF im poses ceilings again in Albert P. Linnel, chairman of $ 4.9 5, h a r d c o r e . $ 1.9 5. so ftc o re . him on efforts to enlist private enterprise in research. He said THE DIAL PRESS the governm ent will continue to play the major role. "But to ta lk s t o n ig h t 1970, the effects would be more the Dept, of Astronomy, said that fo r c h ild r e n severe. lack of NSF funds would stall the som e extent that w e can enlist the private sector m ore, we will W. N. Kennicott, vice-presi­ "We will have to be more building of what will be the larg­ PARIS (AP) - Charles De do so .” dent of Kaufmann and Broad careful in making com m itm ents est radar telescope in the world. Gaulle jumps on beds, hurls He spoke, too, of an alienation between scien tists and poli­ B uilders, will speak to build­ of NSF funds in the future," Linnell is a m em ber of the 12- books around his room, w ears ticians. ing construction m ajors at 7 to­ he said. man panel who planned the pro­ a clown suit and short pants ject for the,C om m ittee on Insti­ For "I think w e would like to bridge that gap," he said. Nixon said DuBridge can help. “ I think he will be able to night in room 152. Natural R e­ sources Bldg, Clark noted that based on ex­ pected NSF funds, other univ­ tutional Cooperation. Linnell said that NSF financed and sew s his own stars on his general s cap in a new book reassure the scien tific com m unity that our interest in them is Kaufmann and Broad Build­ ersities had written agreem ents about his life for children. Fireside not sim ply what they can produce but also how they can counsel us and how they can advise u s.” ing Co. is the second largest home building operation in the to fund graduates and other re­ searchers. In som e ca ses where the $101.000 for planning the tele­ scope, but the plans, jointly spon­ Its president one the 78-vear-old is not likely to U.S. and was one of four build­ com m itm ents exceeded the new sored by 11 Midwestern univer­ buy for his grandsons and DuBridge, once less than enthusiastic about U.S. involvem ent Chats in the manned space race, said it is important that the nation reach its announced goals. ing com panies to produce over 2.000 homes last year. NSF spending ceiling, univer­ sities found them selves in dif­ sities, will require an additional $20 m illion for completion. daughters at Christmas. De Gaulle is portrayed as The company is planning en­ ficult positions, he added. Julian R. Brandou. associate pink cheeked and smiling: try into new m arkets in the San Clark said that before the professor at the scien ce and but vain and m ore than a In a Francisco Bay area and is study­ spending cuts, MSU anually re­ m athem atics teaching center, little tyrannical too. From the S e e ... T H E ing operations in Europe. ceived "several hundred thou­ said that in his departm ent a The book. called "Le Coffee Ho us c la s s b y General R aconte aux En- Collection: W A TC H B A N D th e m s e lv e s . Exclusive but not expensive fants" the or " A l l General for About” Child­ Femininity t h e ,o ren." tells how De Gaulle alive and well T H A T TELLS Speidel Idents are personal, grew up in the city of Lille handsome and a great way to i and living remember a great day in their ^ Ì m art in the north of France, T IM E . Holiday MATERNITY in luxury. becam e a soldier, a general, lives. For a gift that means more yrO R K then president. Proof positive give a Speidel Ident. In a wide At first, there are de­ 4iOP —pant dressing choice of designs for him and tails like his father sighing. her. From $4.95. with a frankly / "When Charles arrives, quiet feminine flair. disappears.” and a teacher de­ In b r o w n a n d n a tu r a l FASHIONS 1918 E. Mich. IV 4-9607 scribing him as “just average in everything except size." Big drawings in bright nur­ p la id o f SMART MOTHERS-TO-BE are gay and comfortable in our on e-piece d resses sery colors show him playing 6 4 % w o o l/ and pretty coordinates at p rices you can afford to pay. Stop in and browsel soldiers as a boy, in a soccer 2 7 % ra y o n / uniform and wearing a clown's 9 % T u s s a h s ilk . pointed dunce cap. S ize s 5 - 1 5 . Then things get gradually m ore sly. S le e v e le s s ja c k e t The general, the book says, 2 1 .0 0 • DRESSES 100 bought the stars for his own T r u m p e t fla r e d D ressy & CasuaJ cap at the Bazar du Bon Marche t r o u s e r s 19,00 *f* JACKETS ^00 & up" it just before the fall of France in Lace edged 1940 and sewed them on him self ^ Casual - F estiv e as he left for England. b lo u s e 16.00 In b e ig e Ai fpMil ,, • SKIRTS When De Gaulle cam e back to Washable wools France after the Germ ans w ere c re p e at \J cottons - Stretch routed, "he went all over look­ 6 0 % A r n e l/ ing for applause," the book ID E N TS • SLACKS goes on. 4 0 % F o r tr e l You've read Said, engraved and gift wrapped N lH fA M A Stretch,w ool, Next it shows a De Gaulle about it in all the cotton Cabinet m eeting-the general magazines. You've at , ^ pkil jiccbs B efore in a classroom filled with seen it on television. Now and After • LINGERIE child sized m inisters--and then come see it in action. The closed Slips, P .J .’s , Shop W e d n e s d a y & up De Gaulle sending out his riot Datefinder Calendar Watchband Front gowns by Speidel. It puts the whole year u n fll 9 P .M . police, goggled and helm ented, on your wrist — and then some. FOUNDATIONS 200 to battle student rioters. Handsome Twist-O-Hex* styles. B ras, gird les, They beat them or put them & up Stainless steel, $8.95. Yellow OK in prison." the book says. ; garter belts gold-filled, $11.95. For any man. Editions Jullard, the publish­ For any gift occasion. -« J V ing house that brought out the S ize s xJN ». book by Jean Schouman and Oj VI Sizes 6-18 3-13 XaVier Antomarchi. said they Jew elry and 6-20 ^ - w a y nylon stretch expect som e adults to buy it A rt Center 38-44 for them selves. A com pli­ by BANKARD CHARGES T h e largest selection in central Mich. 'c W Lay-A-Way m entary copy has been sent to 319 E. Grand River Ave. ACCEPTED 0 ; e .i Mon. thru FrI. T ill 9:00 PJvl. , Sat. 5:30 De Gaulle. So far, the publishers East Lansing E ast Lansing, Mich. said, there's been no reply. W e d n e s d a y , D e c e m b e r 4, 1968 3 Michigan State N e w s, E a st L a n s in g , M ich ig a n 8 _ * * * 1 4 K U C D NEWS sb I s r a e l i a t t a c k h i t s -------------- 9 summary l_ „ J * ;vr" 1— 1 ta (L . A c a p s u le !s u m m a r y o f the d a y ’ s e v e n ts f r o m I J U I O d l l l u í i t v i i s / \ pt T jT ^ O ilier J o u r w ire services. 1 TEL AVIV, ISRAEL (API - Valley, south of the Sea of Gali­ Aviv and Amman, the Israeli Israeli planes and artillery lee. The Jordanian barrages arm ed forces worked over the sm ashed at Jordanian and Iraqi caused som e dam age, tHey said, city of Irbid and three sm aller “/ think there's a tendency targets in northwest Jordan ear­ but no casualties. settlem ents north of the Gilead . . . / ‘o r p eop le in the scienti­ ly Tuesday in an attack, de­ The operations, marking the M ountains-Kafr Assad, Ghum scribed as retaliatory, that a second su ccessive -night of and Summa. fic comm unity and the p eo p le heavy fighting across the cea se­ Jordanian spokesman said all Jordanian spokes m e n said o f the intellectual comm unity killed at least 14 civilians and fire line, ended about 2:30 a.m. the civilian casualties w ere in­ generally . . . to take a rather The daylight report from the flicted by bombing and shelling wounded 18. front w a s: “ All quiet. at Kafr Assad. dim view o f the p o litica l oper­ Israeli authorities charged He reported seven children that Jordanian gunners set off The Israelis charged the Jor­ ator. the exchange by opening up danians instigated the fight in w ere among the dead. P resident-elect about midnight on eight Israeli response to a raid Sunday by With three form ations of jet Israeli com m andos. Countering fighters supplementing the fire Richard M. Mixon farm settlem ents in the Beisan Arab guerrilla strikes into Is­ of Israeli artillery, the spokes­ rael, the com m andos blew up a m an said 63 houses w ere O p en s ta c k s highway bridge and railw ay span wrecked and 83 others w ere International News about 40 m iles inside Jordan on damaged. • Enem y activity has been brisk in the dem ilitarized zone p e titio n d r iv e the route between Amman, the Israel confirmed that its jet since the Nov. 1 bombing halt and U.S. artillery and planes capital, and Aqaba, that na­ fighter-bom bers took part in the have fired on North V ietnam ese there on 122 occasions, the tion’s only port. strike, as they did during the U.S. Command reported Tuesday. The U.S. Command has list­ c lo s e s t o d a y Tel Aviv spokesmen said the sim ila r dral Sunday night. ed only 30 "significant incidents'" in that period. In all, there Petitions requesting that the Israeli targets both Sunday and Both Israel and Jordan filed have been 455 indications of North V ietnam ese a ctiv ities re­ Library reconsider its decision early Tuesday included batteries new com plaints with the U N. ported in the six-m ile-w ide zone dividing North and South to close the graduate research of an Iraqi arm y division that Security Council in N ew York stacks to undergraduates should has been stationed in northern about the latest outbreak of vio­ Vietnam. be com pleted and turned in by Jordan since the Arab-Is- lence, but neither asked for a • U.N. diplomats, housed on a bank of the dirty, oil-slick- 10 a.m . today in 309 Berkey raeli war of June 1967. They said council m eeting. ened E ast River, pondered Tuesday hew to keep m an from Hall. the Iraqis were equipped with Jordanian Ambassador Mu­ fatally polluting and plundering his natural resources. Any petitions not turned in by Soviet-m ade 122mm artillery, a hammad H. El-Farra, told the “ Nature's patience has a lim it. Swedish Ambassador Sver- that tim e should still be comp­ type used by som e Hanoi forces council it had the responsibility ker Astrom told the U N. General Assem bly. "E ven if we leted and turned in to be used if in the Vietnam war. to end the alleged Israeli avoid blowing up the planet, w e m ay—by changing its face— needed during the rem ainder of The Iraqi artillery positions aggression. unwittingly be parties to a process with the sam e fatal out-. this year. are several m iles inside Jordan, Israeli Ambassador Y oser Te- com e." Out of about 850 petitions dis­ but vulnerable to heavy guns on koan, citing Arab commando tributed Tuesday, over 200 sig­ the Israeli-occupied Golan raids he said were directed and • Shaken by the worst riots since he seized power 16 natures w ere turned in within Heights of Syria as w ell as to perpetrated from bases in Jor­ years ago. President Gam al Abdel N asser again has raised six hours. dan, declared Israel w as pur­ Israeli air force squadrons. the spector of Israeli subversion to com bat m ounting un­ Petitions are still available in By accounts from both Tel suing the right of self-defense. rest among his people. But the reports of a student-led 309 Berkey Hall. dem onstrations reaching Beirut. Lebanon Tuesday sugges­ ted an explosions of discontent which even the Israeli is­ sue m ay not muffle. The State News, the student newspaper at Michigan State University, is published every class day throughout the year with special Welcome Week N atio n al News and Orientation issues in June and September. Subscription rates are $14 per year. • Apollo 8 astronauts received injections and started a program of “ lim ited exposure" this week in a plan space Member Associated Press, United Press International, Inland Daily Press doctors hope will keep them free of colds or Hong Kong Association, Associated Collegiate Press, Michigan Press Association, Mich­ igan Collegiate Press Association, United States Student Press Association. flu during their C hristm as-tim e flight around the moon. Some 1,200 key space personnel at Cape Kennedy also re­ Second class postage paid at East Lansing, Michigan. ceived the shots. Editorial and business offices at M7 Student Services Building, Michigan Apollo 8 is scheduled for launch D ec. 21. State University, East Lansing, Michigan. Phones: • A Czechoslovakian mother who fled from her homeland Ed ito rial......................................................................................................S55-B5Î m inutes before the borders w ere sealed during the Russian Classified Advertising ..........................................................................J56-82S5 takeover w as reunited with her two daughters at a Wis­ Display Advertising...................................................................................S5Ï-6400 B usiness-Circulation .............................................................................. SS6-S447 consin airport Tuesday. The girls w ere visiting relatives Photographic.............................................................................................SSM Sll and had looked forward to returning home, but after their widowed mother just barely escaped they plan to m ake a new life in America. • A murder-robbery com plaint w as issued Monday against an Illinois 17-year-old, accused with his brother of slaying actor Ramon Navarro. The charge, filed in suburban Los Angeles, m eans that Thomas Scott Ferguson w ill be tried with his brother, Paul. 22, on a sim ilar charge. The young brother w ill stand trial as an adult. f Santa’s Special Selections I from AM PEX Ampex M icro 85 A Complete Stereo Cassette Tape System T his miniaturized so lid - state system plays and records in Stereo. Includes accurate lev el VU M eter, push-button controls * . with separate controls for recording, balance and playback. 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C a m e l , b e i g e o r h o n e y . 3 6 - 4 0 . t u ra l lo o k i n g t e x t u r e and body of r e a l B e f o r e you buy S te r e o . . . See M i d - M i c h i g a n ’ s L a r g e s t 11.98. T r i - c o l o r plai d k il t, pinned and b u c k l e d , with h i p - h a i r . W a s h e s and d r i e s e a s i l y . No s t i t c h e d p l e a t s . 100% w o o l , p r e d o m i n a t e l y c a m e l and na v y . f it tin g n e c e s s a r y , j u s t s l i p i t on, fi ts C o m p o n e n t D e a l e r . A lw a y s a C o m p l e t e S e le c tio n o f B r a n d N a m e s J u n i o r s i z e s 13.98 all h e a d s i z e s . In n a t u r a l , f a d e - p r o o f colors. C. C r e w n e c k p u l l o v e r with s a d d l e s t i t c h e d s l e e v e s . F u l l y f a s h i o n e d , b a c k z ip . 100% wo ol in h o n e y , bl ue o r c a m e l . M e e t our M i s s T ru dy . S h e ’ll HI-FI BUYS 3 6 - 4 0 . 11.98. P l a i d A - l i n e s k i r t with s i d e tab c l o s i n g in a b le n d of w o o l and nylon bon de d to a c e t a t e . P r e d o m i n a t e l y h e lp you with T a p e R e c o r d in g In d u s tr ie s bl u e and h o n e y . J u n i o r s i z e s 11.98 your selection . 1101 E . G r a n d R i v e r A v e . E a s t L o o s in g 3 37-2313 shop K n a p p ’s 5 d a y s 9 :3 0 to 9 :0 0 , if-It; S 4LO\ - SECO\U LEVEL EAST LASSISC S a tu rd a y s fro m 9 :3 0 to 6 :0 0 James S. Granelli, managing editor Edward .4. Brill Trinka Cline, campus editor editor-in-chief Jerr, Pankhurst, editorial editor Tom Brou n, sports editor M I C H I G A N Carol Hudrow, falricia Anslett, associate campus editor advertising manager S7«tf£ N I WS The Slate News is a free and editorially independent student newspaper. Editorials express the unanimous opinion ,of the editorial .\4JLk.'' . ^ I U N I V E R S I T Y Under the provisions of section 6.1 of the “ Report on Aca­ dem ic Freedom for Students at Michigan State U niversity,” final responsibility for all news and editorial content rests Six-tim e recipient of the Pacem aker award for outstanding journalism. with the editor-in-chief. EDITORIALS T h e E l e c t o r a l C o l l e g e a n d t h e p o p u l a r v o t e A long night of counting votes. vote" yet the Electoral College A fewTvery ciose states. A fluc­ cannot observe this in the elec­ tuating national total popular tion of the president, simply be­ vote. All of these aroused cause of its apportionment by thoughts election night about the state according to the number possibility of a Constitutional of Congressmen and Senators. R e p o r t s o n v i o l e n c e crisis arising from the Electoral The president is a leader for College system which elects our all people in a united nation. presidents. By putting his election on a m u s t h e p u t t o w o r k Should this doubt ever be the straight popular vote basis, we case? And what would have hap­ would be closer to that ideal. «|*d rather have them dislike the munists” would be difficult to ». Chicago and its police force pened if. in fact, the Electoral --The Editors C alifornia grapes than the Tapioca!” maintain in the face of the *>are once more in the spotlight College loser had garnered the ^following the release of the re­ report. Although the Walker report majority of the popular vote: p o r t of the Walker committee The Electoral College had an and others like it sponsored by STAN MORGAN ^on the violence and alleged historical function. It suppo­ police brutality which occur­ the president’s commission on violence may not completely sedly protected the smaller r e d in that city during the states from domination by the expose the roots of violence in •»'Democratic National Conven­ tio n . ? The report addresses itself the United States or produce unequivocal understanding of giants, it aided a nation still un­ derdeveloped. without the tech­ Those final days at MSU the problems giving rise to that nical know-how of the present to £ to factual questions such as About 50 tim es this term people have violence, they serve the impor­ be used in national elections, asked m e, “ What does it feel like to be * determining the objectives of and it provided a less literate tant function of removing the graduating?” ~ demonstrations planned for electorate with the supposed I really don’t know what to tell them. * that week, preparations of the problem of violence from the It is rather hard to explain the myriad realms of blind speculation safeguards of the politically mo­ thoughts and feelings that have possessed S city for the demonstrations, the tivated elite. m e this term , so I usually say, “ It is great. make-up of the crowds in- and demagogery. It is important that the of­ None of these, however, have I am never going to open another text­ » volved in violence, and so on. great relevance to modern book.” ; Numerous incidents of vio- ficial studies of riots, police However, that is an inadequate answer violence in Chicago, and so on America. We have the technol­ and is m erely an acknowledgem ent on my | lence between police and civil­ ogy. we have the literacy, and part that a great onus is about to be lifted ians are detailed including drawn up for the consideration from m y mind, and it in no way describes . »of the public and the presi­ we are noyv % jnnore ^omoggp-., both the provocations, if any, * what ts going on inside m e as the great day dent’s commission not be left ous nation than the days of re­ draws near. î of the demonstrators and by- gional rivalries. Often this term while walking across : standers. and the nature of po­ as ends in themselves, inter­ The Electoral College, which cam pus I find m yself grinning inanely for lice action taken. esting reading to occupy our no apparent reason or discover that in­ minds between social catastro­ will meet in two weeks, is an stead of walking I am jogging or skipping Substantiating and docu­ anachronistic sup erstructure through crowds of scurrying students who menting reports of unrestrain­ phes. The Walker report and others like it must be put to which harbors the potentialities probably consider m e som e kind of nut. ed and indiscriminate police for political disaster. Other tim es I seem possessed by som e violence against innocent by­ work in determining practical kind of heightened aw areness that leaves m y physical self and is staring down proportions and my grades have fallen measures for preventing future We are now all accustomed m e with the im pression that m y inner- tently at me. off accordingly. But in a strange, frighten­ standers as well as demonstra­ to the guideline “one man, one self is elevated about three feet above My class skipping has reached fantastic ing sort of way I don't care about school tors and confirming accusa­ mass violence. -The Editors anymore. All I want to do is graduate and tions that newsmen and photo­ go to work. I have senioritis. if that is the correct graphers were deliberately as­ term , and I have it in a big way. Graduation, saulted, the Walker report is a shocking indictment of the A M AX LERNER for many years an ephem eral concept as elusive as the Loch N ess m onster, has finally becom e a concrete reality which Chicago police force. is com pletely dominating m y existence. Mayor Daley’s reaction to If you still don't understand what gradu­ the report was to bluster out 'U’ flexibility and strength ation is. perhaps the following exam ples of both sides of his mouth at w ill be of som e aid. Graduation is having 50 or m ore people once that it was “an excellent ask you. “ What does it feel like to be grad­ study” but at the same time uating?" “misleading.” He did not X Graduation is reading books that are not required reading. comment on the report's ac­ Graduation is selling your old books cusations of his own respon­ cause the sharp demands w ill com e from and spending the money on a couple of Negro students, for Black Studies pro­ sibility. If San Francisco State College is any in­ gram s which are som etim es put in harsh, six packs instead of a couple of ratty books that won t be bought back the next term. In spite of the mayor's dis­ dex. a college presidency these days is a uncomprom ising form. An exam ple is the Graduation (if you are m arried) is going revolving chair with a self-propelled ejec­ missal of the report and citing tor m echanism : a few turns around and program being pushed by Nathan Hare at home at night and spending tim e with of token disciplinary action out you go. The third man within a year to San F rancisco State, about which John your fam ily instead of your books. Bunzell w rites in the issue of The Public Graduation (if you are draft exem pt) against a few officers involved sit in the chair is Acting President S. I. Interest, which I have m entioned. Hare's is working forty hours a week and getting in the police violence, it is Hayakawa. The brilliant author of a text­ program is so far out and his mood and paid a decent wage for it. book on sem a n tics- 'Language in Thought conceivable that the power of and A ction'—w ill now have a crack at the demands so rigid that it is hard to un­ Graduation is a color TV arid all the other the report’s accounts of the derstand how any president or faculty accruem ents ol the middle class. merry-go-round and a chance to learn with self-respect could allow them to Graduation is listening to people lam ent­ breakdown in police disci­ from bitter experience how language and paralyze an entire college. ing about pre-registration and laughing thought get distorted when they are caught pline and resultant public at­ in the m eat grinder of action. Bunzell notes the trend in som e univer­ silently to yourself. tention will bring about further sities to give in to demands for Negro Graduation is getting nostalgic about Already the far-out cam pus sp okesm en- student quotas roughly equal to their per­ leaving until you realize that your presence disciplinary measures against including Nathan Hare, the director of centage of the population. He quotes the re­ at MSU will be about as rem em bered r.s the Black Studies--have recited Havakawa's guilty individuals as well as obsequies before his academ ic death. Ha­ sponse of Daniel P. Movnihan that such a breaking of a solitary w ave on som e lonely possibly some more thorough yakawa will go out faster than Smith (the quota system would mean forcing seven beach som ew here in the world. out of eight Jewish students from the Graduation is being invited to have coffee shakeups. last p resid en t'." says Hare. "If he takes universities, and also Japanese- and Chi­ at Cowles House with President and Mrs. Publication of the Walker the hard line, we'll be ready for him. nese-Am ericans. Movnihan adds that .John Hannah. Which m eans, sem antically, that Hare has a report for the American public right to be m ilitant (that is. hard-line» on The other is an analysis-in-depth of Col­ “ America has known enough of anti- Graduation is 3 p.m. D ec. 7, a cap and states as w ell, the political clim ate and Sem itism and anti-Oriental feeling to be gown a happy w ife, a proud m other and a to read for itself will help to Black Studies and black power, but that umbia and other case histories in a re­ wary of opening that box again." m for the senior class gift. Havakawa' has no right to be hard-line popular tem per m ake anything but a hard foster deeper understanding of line unlikely. m arkable, special university issue of the 1 shall return to the university them •» is wishing my father could ithat is. m ilitant' on keeping the college quarterly The Public Interest. It is so good, the problems of dealing with open for students who want to study and For good reading on the American stu­ soon in another piece. My own convic­ have lived long enough to see it. with a sym pathy for the student hungers tion is that of the three pressures toward Graduation is 9:45 a.m . D ec. 13 when I mass violence and help com­ teachers who want to teach, both of which dent revolts I suggest two books from the and m alaise, a searching inquiry into their current flood. One is “ Up Against the Ivy all-out student rev o lt-th o se of the hip­ w ill hand in m y last final. bat black-or-white thinking happen to sum up the functions of a col­ Wall“ (A theneum i. a history of the April roots, an unfooled wisdom about society pies. the black m ilitants and the far-out Graduation is saying good-bye to a lot of which stereotypes either side lege. and an unshrill affirm ation of intellectual left—a healthy university has already It is a good bet to watch New York and and May days at Columbia, done by Jerry great friends and m em ories. values, that I hope the editors will bring absorbed the first and will m anage to cope of a conflict and obscures the California for two different m odes of Alvorn. Robert Friedman and other m em ­ it out soon as a paperback book for the Good-bye. bers of the Columbia Spectator staff. De­ with the second. underlying causes of violence. approaching cam pus revolts. In New student and layman. The ionger-range attack will com e from York, both at Columbia and at Stony spite their obvious sym pathies, the stu- An uncritical “The policeman The danger about the coming university hard-core dogm atists who really want to only Brook, the approach is flexible while also dent-writers try hard to be fair and give revolts is that if you crack down on them take over the society and-w hen they find is our friend” or “ It’s the Com­ firm. In California and in many other a good running account of the events. with police action you create exactly the PEANUTS I LIKE TW05 THE BEST...THEY'RE SORT OF GENTLE..THREES AND have You p o n e t h o s e d ivisio n PROBLEMS FOR TOMORROW? NÛTHIN6 SPOILS NUMBERS FASTER THAN A LOT OF ARITHMETIC repression on which rebellions feed and g et sym pathizers and becom e revolu­ tions; and if you eagerly accept every ex­ they ca n 't-u se the university as a substi­ tute. seeking either to control or destrov it. The tragedv of it is that there ¡s mu eh 21 FIVES ARE MEAN, BUT A FOUR IS trem e demand, whether in the name ol a lays left ALWAYS PIEASAHT.. I LIKE SEVEN5 for total revolution and scoff at dem ocrat­ "new so ciety ” or of Black Studies (as som e ic reform s, who insist on using college re­ ’til AND EIGHTS.TOO, BUTNINES ALWAYS professors do. with a “ hunger for hum ilia­ volts to transform the whole society, end SCARE ME..JENS ARE GREAT... tion" i, you destroy the universitv as a place up by warding the energies for Christinas T ( for the iife of the mind. The effort to find a way that com bines j society which make' intellectual values an iiident Book Store fle x it :|ity .with strength w ill be especially agojny to sustain. 121 a t G ra n d R iv e r hard in the im m ediate years ahead be­ Copyright lhtiH. Los Angeles Tim es W e d n e sd a y , D e c e m b e r 4, 1968 5 Michigan State N e w s , E ast L a n s in g , M ic h ig a n O U R R E A D E R S ’ M IN D S Y e s t e r d a y ’s i u s t i c e - t o d a y 7 • » To the Editor; compared to-the o u tc o m e o f h e r m other's murder. How does a girl reconcile to h e rs e lf the To wish us a M erry Christmas pose is only to say Merry think it to m ean any indication BE FORGOTTENI e q u a lity of A m e r ic a n ju s tic e To the Editor : Much controversy has been of the'm oral or political aspects Sp 4 Ronald W. Rowe made about “ju stic e.” I recog­ w h ile her m o th e r's k ille r s go I understand that again this Christmas to 526.000 ot us of our servicem en being here. 101st M. I. Det ( ABN > nize an understanding for it after fre e ? year, the MSU Veterans Assn. Afherican servicem en who will This year, as last year, it APOS. F. 96383 reading an article from the D e­ For once I fully understand is circulating sign-up sheets hot be spending Christmas at WILL indicate that we are not troit F ree P ress (Thursday, No­ the protests of today’s youth for a Christmas G reetings to home. Many of the ex-service­ forgotten by m em bers of our vem ber 21.1968). against yesterday's justice. American servicem en in Viet­ m en behind this project know own peer group at home. I feel helpless when I read an nam. Because I receive the what it is like to be 13,000 For us. C hristm as w ill have Mrs. Viola Gregg Liuzzo, civil article like this . . . the only m ove State News by subscription. 1 m iles from home during a holi­ rights worker and mother of five no snow. It w ill have no warm left is to w rite to Mary Luizzo . . . have becom e aware of the con­ day which is traditionally spent fam ily gatherings by the Christ­ w as fatally shot on the night of let her know that som eone does troversy regarding the indica­ with fam ily and loved-ones. March 25, 1965, as she w as driv­ But. with varying reactions m as tree or fireplace. There care. tions of this project. ing between Selm a and Mont­ they could not be home then and w ill be no ski-parties with the rest away. She said she de­ herself in to the U.S. m arshal in Lynn McDermut This action is to be praised gom ery, Alabama. The m en ac- E. Lansing this year it is our turn to spend friends. For the m ost part, it cided to bring it home instead to Detroit on Nov. 7 to be sent to without reservation. Their pur- cussed of Mrs. Luizzo’s murder Christmas in Vietnam. w ill be a numbered day as we give to her friends. W est V irginia." w ere acquitted even though an When I first cam e to Vietnam daily count-down toward that F B I. agen t said he witnessed The hasty decision brought her “ When she did appear at the I m et many men who. although day when w e w ill be heading a federal court conviction, a home again, for m any old-fas­ the killing. judge's order for two month’s m arshal’s office here, officials Send season ’s g r e e t in g s they are home now. spent last hioned Christmas' to com e. didn’t know what to do with her Christm as here. I have even Today Mrs. Luizzo’s daughter psychiatric observation at the Before you go home to fam ­ sits in the Wayne County Jail Federal Reform atory for Wom­ and had to w rite to Texas for in­ To the E ditor: there. Hopefully, this w ill be the talked with som e who rem em ­ ily and friends, join with the waiting to be sent to federal pris­ en at Alderson. W. Va., and cost formation on the case. So far To the people of the MSU com ­ year in which we see a su ccess­ bered seeing last year s G reet­ MSU V eterans Assn. in wishing on for sm uggling marijuana. munity; ful conclusion to the revolution­ ings with thousands of signat­ us a M erry Christmas. It will her her job. Mary has waited for alm ost two The MSU V eteran’s Assn. ary struggle of the V ietnam ese ures on it. They w ere pleased mean m ore to us in Vietnam, The following are quotes from w eeks in the Wayne County Jail Mary, who had never been in has recently begun circulating people and our men w ill be able and im pressed that so many busy than those of you at home can the Detroit F ree P ress article: trouble before and didn't even . . . tim e that is lost because it their annual appeal for Christ­ students had rem em bered them w on’t count as part of her sen­ to return home. ever realize—DON T LET US “ Mary w as arrested at the San have a traffic violation on her m as greetings to the m en and Veteran's Caucus MSU-SDS at Christmas. They did not Antonio (Tex.) airport on July record, pleaded guilty on Oct. 26 ten ce.” women of the American armed 24, by U.S. custom s officials who to a charge of importing m ari­ The girl obviously m ade a forces in Vietnam. Although said she carried on a flight from juana without paying import MISTAKE . . . But how m any of this drive has been repeatedly M exico two ounces of marijuana tax. us can claim a free conscience? m is-represented by the m ass concealed in her underwear. “ The judge ordered her to media as indicating wide stu­ The w ay the case was handled dent support for the war itself, "She had never smoked “ pot" prison for two months obser­ constitutes an injustice. Was the the Veteran's Caucus within the before, even though som e vation and said she would have severity of her punishment in local Students for a D em ocratic friends did. she said. When som e­ to return to San Antonio for final line with the degree of the seri­ Society (SDS) urge all students one in M exico gave her a sm all sentencing. Then he gave her three w eeks "vacation with her ousness of her thoughtless trans­ to once again join the V et’s in bag of m arijuana she tried a gression? Particularly when family before she had to turn their cam paign to secure as little bit and w as going to throw m any signatures as possible. Inaccuracy in reporting We feel it is important to sup­ port these men in Vietnam but not the svstem that sent them SUPERB RECORDINGS OUTSTANDING PERFORMANCES To the Editor: unity, because such support function..." In the original The story in the Nov. 26 hinders the production of other story, the students involved, State N ew s about an article in newspapers." not the paper, cited the "dif­ the Hubbard Hall newspaper was The original said, “ The drive ficulties" of the two publi­ so twisted and distorted that it was started because THE STU­ cations. No one, especially not cries for correction. Your head­ line read. “ Hubbard paper sup­ ports petition abolishing SN DENTS BELIEVED newspapers in an academ ic com m unity should not be tax supported.” E m ­ the Hubbard paper, said they w ere unable to function. Your newspaper ow es the stu­ L O W P R IC E S tax." This is sim ply not true. phasis added) The difference dents better reporting than this. The Hubbard Hall paper m erely between the two is obvious. You There is no excuse for distort­ reported on the activities of a group of Hubbard residents have attributed a statem ent to the paper which it only report­ ions such as these. It is enough to give the students involved in n o n e s u c h peoovds working against the tax. It did ed. this petition drive one m ore rea­ not take an editorial position on In the sam e paragraph you son for wanting to cut your the issue. Any reader of the im ply that the Hubbard paper funds. article who concluded otherw ise cited the Paper and Campus Roger Downey A V A N T G A R D E». S TO C K H A U S E N : would have to border on illiter­ Observer “ as exam ples of Dayton. Ohio sophomore two newspapers unable to MOMENTE (1965 v e r s i o n ) acy. Assistant Editor. In paragraph two you repeated Hubbard Hall News the error by writing, “ A story in the newspaper advocates the G iv in g th a n k s S T R A V IN S K Y : petition..." M O D E R N ! Paragraph six in your article To the Editor: d o rm THE R IT E O F S P R IN G / 4 E T U D E S FOR O R C H . Dear David and William and B ou !e z cond. said. “ The article stated that Tom and M ichael and David and the State N ew s should not be Tom and M ichael and Rick and tax supported in a free com m - Sonny and Gene and John and R O M A N T IC ! R A C H M A N IN O F F : Tom and Carter and Robin and S O N A T A F 0 3 P IA N O & C E L L O O u r in te g r ity Nancy and Em ily and all other strange-friends who were with To the Editor: m e and T and F e and ME on In reference to the article Thanksgiving. “3 state universities challenge I have a thank-you poem for K O D A L Y : legislature, in the Wednesday you all waiting in the State News SON A T A O P . 4 November 27th issue of the office for you to read. B A R O Q U E ! ( E a r l W i l d , p ia n o ; H a r v e y S h a p ir o , c e llo ) State News: E lise May I take this opportunity to disassociate the Lansing area B A C H : League of Women Voters from B R A N D E N 3 U R G C O N C E R T O S , B W V 1045 - 1051 the opinions which were expres­ sed by m e. The League of Wo­ R IS T E N P A R T C O N D. men Voters has not studied (2 - r e c o r d boxed set) this issue and has not taken any position in this m atter. I wish to clarify this inas­ JUST A SAMPLE OF THE FINE REPERTOIRE TO CHOOSE FROM much as the League of Women d e c o r a tio n s Voters is a non-partisan organ­ ization. and cannot function ef­ fectively unless it be regarded " W h e n you th in k of C a r d s ” n on ec-cn as such. Its integrity results $ from the public lyiderstanding that it does not take a position CARD SHOP it unless and until it has fully an­ alyzed and studied the question A c r o s s f r o m H om e E c , Bldg, EA C H involved, 309 E . G r a n d R i v e r Ph. 3 3 2 - 6 7 5 3 Mrs. Harold Currie IN P E R S O N A b e S a p e rste in 9s F a m o u s H a r le m G lo b e tr o tte r s «Magicians of Basketball” t m O O KVO R eS Plus the C ry a n S ham es RECORD DEPARTMENT ACROSS FROM BERKEY HALL - - FREE PARKING T o n ig h t Take advantage of this tremendous record s a lf in our record department. If you need 7 :3 0 a little cash to purchase these records, sell Jenison Fieldhouse your textbooks early. Remember. . . M e a d o w la rk L e m o n of the H a r le m G lo b e tro tte rs m ust g et his b a s k e tb a lls w h o le ­ T i c k e t s - Students $ 1,5 0 W E G IV E M O R E C A $ H FO R Y O U R B O O K S ! sale» G e n e r a l A d m is s io n $ 2 .5 0 R e s e r v e d $ 4 .0 0 ACROSS FROM THE UNION ACROSS FROM BERKEY HALL A v a i l a b l e at Jenison F ie ld h o u s e FREE PARKING — EAST SIDE OF STORE C IT Y PARKING AT REAR the Union, and P a r a m o u n t N e w s , W e d n e sd a y , D e c e m b e r 4, 1968 £ Michigan State N e w s, E a st L a n sin g , M ich iga n Recount /otes dow n lit Regents expected I - I,* - L a saving' Hint? ! ___ B S to designate tens* had already been im plem ented By STAN MORGAN son can request a recount but Michigan from daylight saving State N ew s Staff Writer or w ere being studied by a com ­ By ROGER C. PALMS the cost is $5 per precinct, or tim e. The Wisconsin State Univer­ m ittee appointed earlier to study State News Staff Writer m ore than $27,000 for the state. Im m ediately Sen. Raymond sity Board of R egents w ill prob­ such problems. A difference of 413 votes is Michigan could becom e a Dzendzel, D-Detroit. let a peti­ ably appoint a jurist Friday to "However, the students said keeping Michigan residents in “ tim e island” if daylight saving tion drive calling for a referen­ conduct hearings for 92 black they were im patient, that no pro­ suspense about daylight savings tim e is defeated, William Wick­ dum. stude its suspended from Wis­ gress w as being m ade and re­ time. ham, legislative counselor for The petition w as upheld in consin State U niversity at Osh­ futed som e of our claim s, such What seem ed on election the Michigan State Chamber of court tests and the state ex­ kosh after a sit-in at the admin­ as an effort to find black instruc­ night to be a definite win for the Com m erce, said. em ption w as set aside pending istration building on N ove uber tors," he said. advocates of "fast tim e," turn­ He said there would be con­ the outcom e of voting last Nov. 5. 21. Although no one w as injured ed to a sliirtj margin for their opponents when an apparent er­ ror showed a miscount of 20,000 fusion in airline, train and bus schedules if Michigan had a dif­ Since the courts had set aside the Michigan exem ption, Michi­ Exquisite exhibit? Stan Peterson, news director for the university said Tuesday during the disturbance, Peterson said the students caused an es­ ferent tim e system than sur­ gan went on daylight saving tim e the students are currently pro­ tim ated $15 - $18,000 dam age to “ No" votes in Jackson County. A r t e n th u s ia s ts c a r e f u l l y e x a m i n e the w o r k s on d is p la y at the ninth annual C h r i s t ­ rounding states. June 14, 1967 and again April hibited from using university the adm inistration building. Seventeen days after the Nov. m a s s a le at K r e s g e A r t C e n t e r , S ta te News photo by J im C o n k lin 5 balloting, county clearks’ re­ Businessm en who want to 28 this year. facilities or attending cla sses ports showed 1,402,022 votes operate on the sam e tim e as but have not been expelled. for daylight saving tim e and their eastern m arkets ^prefer The students are also facing 1.402.415 against. daylight saving time. Farm ers crim inal charges of disorderly P o lic e re p o rt On Nov. 25, State Elections and outdoor theatre owners op­ L E G A L A ID conduct and unlawful assem bly Director Bernarp Apol secured pose daylight saving tim e, say­ stem m ing from the sit-in from the State Board of Canvas­ ing that it is really "double w here about 100 persons were h o lid a y th e fts Course to train defenders sers a postponement of certi­ fast tim e” since Michigan is arrested, a reporter for the fication of the balloting until next to the Central Time Zone. student paper said. Dec. 9. This w as done to allow Argument for and against v a lu e $735 daylight saving tim e has been According to a College P ress m ore tim e for rechecking votes Additional thefts of property going on since March 1966 when Service release the disturbance from all grecincts in the state. over the Thanksgiving w eek­ Congress passed a Federal Uni­ tions, ordinances and the Aca­ tions and it presents any stu- “ The SDA,” Chancey said, started after U niversity P resi­ Charles R. McLean, a Lans­ By BARBARA WOODWARD end with a total value of $735 form Tim e Act. dem ic Freedom Report. tions and it represents any stu­ “ is not a policy making body. It dent Roger Guiles refused to ing attorney representing the Education 482 General--or w ere reported to the U niversity The purpose of the act was to The Student Defenders Assn. dent in trials concerning those only helps people prepare their accept a list of dem ands from Michigan R etailers Assn.. said How to Becom e a Student D e­ police recently. prevent m any different tim e (SDA) w as created as part of policies or regulations. cases. the black students, who number his organization will request a fender. zones, and called for daylight ASMSU’s Legal Aid Dept. Un­ 111 out of an enrollm ent of 11,000. Jam es K ellie, Benton Har­ recount of the vote if the re­ A new course will be offered Ed. 482, which wtudents can saving tim e nationally unless a anim ously approved by the AS- "We question issues, he said, Monday, the parents of som e bor sophom ore and Fred Lewis, check of county canvass reports winter term to help train pre­ state exem pted itself. MSU Board on Oct. 22, the SDA add during finals week regis­ “ but w e do not raise them." of the suspended students con­ Grand Rapids sophomore dis­ shows the proposal was defeat­ sent and potential student de­ In March 1967 the Michigan serves two purposes. It offers tration or at the beginning of fronted Guiles with questions covered Saturday that their ed. fenders. It w ill deal specifically information and counseling on next term , w ill aid the 16 pre­ about getting their children back room at 112 North Wonders had According to Secretary of Legislature passed, and Gov. So far, the SDA has handled with U niversity policy, regula­ U niversity policies and regula­ sent student defenders and any in school, but he only told them been broken into and several State Jam es M. Hare, any per­ Romney signed a bill exempting the w om en’s hours case before students interested in becom ing that the m atter had been turned articles taken. defenders. the U niversity judiciary. It is over to the Board of Regents, Three sw eaters worth $15 also preparing ca ses on State Legal Aid Dept, director Harry the reporter said. each and one worth $35 plus a N ew s censorship, Olin M emor­ Chancey, G rosse Pointe Park ial Health Center, the Library, $50 watch belonging to K ellie She said the parents also and a $90 suit. $24, $27, and $35 junior, explained that the SDA stacks and d ress regulations. accused Guiles and the admin­ sw eaters, a $60 black leather would like to have one person istration of shirking their re­ coat, a $7 su itcase and an $8 in each residence hall acting as The SDA also has m any long sponsibility by turning the m at­ book belonging to Lewis were an ex-officio m em ber of the range goals. It plans to im prove ter over to the regents. taken som etim e between 4 group. Students could go to the com petence of the lower All 92 of the students entered p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 26, and 7 their residence hall represen­ level judiciaries; have effective, innocent pleas to the crim inal p.m. Saturday. tatives as an interm ediary step non-redundant com m unication charges on Monday. to the SDA. The victim s said that except between ASMSU com m ittees, The reporter said the cam pus for the hour between 4 and 5 The SDA w as originally pro­ m ajor governing bodies and au­ w as relatively quiet, but that tonomous groups; and establish p.m. Tuesday, their room and posed as a fulfillm ent of pro­ several groups, including Stu­ contacts with various legal their su item ate’s room were vision 4.2.1.05 of the A cadem ic dents for a D em ocratic Society, Freedom Report, which states: agencies. w ere planning dem onstrations locked. against the business district of The MSU College of Engi­ “ The student shall be en­ titled to be accom panied by coun­ But the SDA is only one part Oshkosh where petitions calling neering reported a strobotac, sel of his c h o ic e .. . ” of a three-point program with­ for the expulsion of the students worth $350, w as taken from the in the Legal Aid Dept., which have been circulating. basem ent workshop in the En­ gineering Building som etim e is an ASMSU Cabinet service. There w as also a university- between 5 p.m . Wednesday and low Yourself There is also a revised legal aid program and a legal aid publication. wide teach-in on tkujimatter Mon­ day Which received the endorse­ 10 a.m . Tuesday. A strobotac is used to m easure the revolu­ Ip TÔ POSTER SIZE Under the legal aid program, m ent ôf Guiles, she 9fiid. Peterson said Guiles refused tions per m inute of a motor. Also taken from the work­ 2 Ft. x3 Ft. students w ill talk to the SDA to accept the petition on N ovem ­ shop, which has no lockable Send any Black and Whitt or Color before seeing the law yer avail­ ber 21, because of the manner entrances, w ere two pre-am ­ Photo. Alto tny newspaper or maga­ zine photo. W t will tend yiou a 2 ft. able to students at $3 for 15 in which it w as presented, be­ plifiers worth $4 each. The x 3 f t perfect pop art potter. m inutes. Some w ill find that cause he did not have the author­ workshop is accessable to any­ A $25.00 « < 2 5 0 they do not need the law yer's ity to m eet som e of the demands one who can get in the base­ Valu« for services. Others w ill be ad­ and because som e of the dem ands m ent hallway. Fram« tor 2x1 II. Foator only $1.10 vised to bring pertinent docu­ 3 x 4 Ft. IL 0 - U F * 7 “ m ents before m eeting with the lawyer, Ken Smith. Student injured, Poster rolled and mailed in sturdy tuba. Original returned undamaged. Add 50c for pottaga and handling for EACH item ordered. Add local The Legal Aid pamphlet. ex-‘ Salas Tax. No C.O.D. SEND CH ICK, CASH or M.O. to pected to com e out by the end of PHOTO POSTER winter term at a cost of 25 210 E. 23rd St., topt. 381C Mw Ytrt, 8. T. 10010 C e l l e f e Re gs m m t ê i - m i U I n details cents, w ill provide legal infor­ m ation especially pertinent to MSU procedures. ticketed in accident An MSU student suffered a In another accident over the broken arm when his car went Thanksgiving weekend, cars dri­ out of control and hit a tree ven by Edward O'Brien. East early Saturday. Lansing senior and Thomas Teichman, 33 of Durand collided itaurtoa Ronald P. Schmidt, Battle Creek junior, told E ast Lansing police that he w as traveling at the intersection of Sunset and Northlawn Streets Wednesday. Teichman w as treated and re­ north on Haslett Road at about m tr tj ifm tH p 2:20 a.m . Saturday, and w as go­ leased from Sparrow Hospital ing too fast to m ake the corner in Lansing. where H aslett. Snyder and Col- Neither driver w as cited for lingwood streets m erge. He w as a traffic violation as the inter­ issued a ticket for ex cessive section is not controlled by 313 E. Grand R iver, E. Lansing lights or signs. speed. 6s© »¿A ?3 FOLKS WITH BI6 APPETITES REAUV 60 FOR THE /seeing .Forsome it's t J ^ ^ f c r u is e M0UTHWATERIN6 folidays depend on who you are. For some, a holi- milES AT BONANZAI m day is to sleep^ till noon For some, a holiday ^and for some it’s to Christmasffflshop for m -w COME BY AND SAMPLE SOME FOR YOURSELF. is to stay out singing and Lad^ugs like/ new ladybu^j^irettiestill liliT il» and for some it means that Spring is right around HELP BONANZA FIBHT Hi HIGHDINNER PRICES! .sun comes up /cornen F R IE D y%C H I C K E N D I N N E R .............. R I B E Y E S T E A K D I N N E R ................... $*|39 For some it’s to run away from it all and lie in the ^whatever a holiday BO NANZA BURG ER 8 9 o FF H a v e S u n d a y D in n e r W it h U s Jo 3, for you, l ^ ^ orE ^ jjjj)or 1sand and goL^M * sailing "V - r < foot /and sight Ladybug has the nifty necessities to do it in. BONANZA* S I R L O I N P I T # 2 0 5 tish-k -^fWnaandbàre- -9¡ngand I I 600 N. Homer at E. Saginaw near Frandor Shopping Center k ; COME AS YOU ARE • OPEN 11 A.M. TO 9 P.M . W e d n e sd a y , D e c e m b e r 4, 1968 7 Michigan State N e w s, E a st L a n sin g , M ich ig a n a y M ore PAIR JUST M E N ’S W O R K O X F O R D S $ Q ii- .'L tk tj M E N ’S W O R K SH O ES SIZES 6-1/2 to 12 “ P O N D E R O S A ” Go lden G lo v e L e a t h e r U p p e r . P o p u la r m o c c a s in V a m p . F u ll cu shio n in s o le . P . V . C . In je c tio n m o ld s o le , oil r e s i s t a n t . I n v e r t e d y wedge h e e l. A v a ila b l e in sp ic e tan o r b o n a n z a b ro w n . SALE PRICED M E N ’S 6 ” W O R K S H O E BOYS’ SPORT SHIRTS,SPORT KNITS SAVE $1.51 It $1.97 on Special SAVE 500 WITH COUPON PAIR 97 9 NOT MEN'S SPORTS SHIRTS $|28 f 0 $408 WITH SHOWN PRICE GROUP ■ ■ ■ m i COUPON $2 0 0 - $ 3 0 0 . $ 4 0 0 8 8 c to $1 48 S50J SAVE 50c with this coupon *50° M E N ’S 8 ” W O R K S H O E toward tho purchase of * » 1 ¡ Boys’ KNIT SPORT SHIRTS $ir\97 G r e a t C h r i s t m a s g ift s e l e c t io n f o r e v e r y guy on y o u r l i s t . G r e a t s a v in g s on top q u a lit y , fa s h io n r i g h t s p o r t s h i r t lo o k s . Choose f r o m C ho o se f r o m : S o lid s , p la id s , c h e c k s o r s t r i p e s . I0 0 % c o t to n k n its and 50% p o l y e s t e i— 35% c o tto n . R e g u l a r a n d p e r m a n e n t ■ I Reg $ 1 .7 8 $ 4 .5 8 to $]28 $408 WITH COUPON wo ven c u t - s e w n o r k n it t e d s ty l e s , R e g u la r L im i t one coupon per ite m . press fa b ric s . A s s orte d B c o lla r, Iv y b uttondowns and N e h r u s . Expires S a t. Dec. 7, 1968 s ty l e s , s iz e s 6 to 16. T u r t l e S’ZES P e r m a n e n t p r e s s and r e g u l a r f a b r i c s . 100 neck, button downs and r e g u l a r M e ije r & T h rifty A c res C oupon c o tto n s , 100% R ayon s, 65% P o l y e s t e r - 35% 6-1/2 to 12 c o tto n s . S iz e s s m b l l , m e d i u m and l a r g e . c o lla rs . "ECONOMY" LEANER REEF, NOT "TENDER- TEST" 5-lb. 4-01. O E T E R O E N T box i m u i ■> ■■nr 21‘ ■ SAVE 21 I 21 I 17' I SAVE 17c 17' I SAVE 14c Vi* ¡ v; j E J V « I È I with this coupon with this coupon I with this cou| in I, toward the purchase of toward tho purchase of toward the purchase of I 8 B Food Cl_ ■ All-Purpose Flour 25-lb. $|67 I White and Colors PUFFS FACIAL 2 7 M ' with I ! MAYONNAISE 35 c .h ■ with GOLD MEDAL bag Any or all coupons redeemable with $5.00 purchase or more with coupon ■ I ■ TISSUES pkg>. V W Any or all coupons redeemable with $5.00 purchase or more coupon I I I Any or all coupons redeemable with $5.00 purchase or moro I coupon g excluding beer, wine, cigarette items or coupon items. I V excluding boor, wine, cigarette items or coupon items. I excluding beer, wine, cigarette items or coupon items. I Limit on# per customer. Expires Sat., Doc. 7, 1968. I Limit one par customer. Expiros Sat., Dec. 7, 1968. ■ Limit one per customer. Expiros Sat., Dec. 7, 1968. M e ije r & T hrifty A cres C oupon M e ije r & T h rifty A c res C oupon © M e ije r & Thrifty A cres C oupon m E ls J E R ■ ■ ■ r a u M is a n ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ¡■ ■ ¡N i ""W M ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ t h r if t y acres 14'} SAVE 14' with this coupon 114 filO'« SAVE10c with this coupon 110 SAVE 14c with this coupon 114* Instant Coffee By toward tho purchaco of *105 ¡ B 7 Van Raalte's French toward tho purchaio of l / Kraft'« Oarman Stylo toward tho purchase of C '-A| NOi/v open daily Mon. thur. NESCAFE t 10-ox. wt. Any or all coupon» redeemable with $5.00 purchaco or mora with coupon I DRESSING I PT- 53« Any or all coupons redeemable with $5.00 purchase or mora with coupon g Potato Salad I W IU IV V U IU U 3-lb. 2-ox. — 75' ■ w Any or all caupans redeemable with $5.00 purchase or mora coupon wi,h 2 J B Sat. 9 a.m . to II p.m. for your Christmas shopping excluding boar, wine, cigarette ¡tom« or Coupon itamc. Lindt one par customer. Expire« Sat., Doc. 7, IMS. g “ excluding boor, wine, cigarette ¡tome or coupon ¡tome. Limit one par customer. Expires Sat., Doc. 7, IMS. S excluding boor, wine, cigarette items or coupon items. Limit one par customer. Expiros Sat., Doc. 7, 1M6. ■ | convenience. Sunday hours 9 a.m . to 9 p.m. © © M e ije r & T hrifty A c res C oupon M e ije r & T hrifty A cres C oupon I M eijer & T h rifty A c res C oupon 18702173 5125 West Saginaw & 6200 South P / S S W ffifc y p Qy M ore! W hy Pay^M oY&l : W hy Pay M o r e ! W hy Pay W hy Pay M o r e ! '‘ W h y Pay M ore! W e d n e sd a y , D e c e m b e r 4, 1968 8 Michigan State N e w s, E ast L a n sin g, M ich ig a n SPORTS C a a e rs w in o p e n e r, 9 0 -8 4 By MIKE MANLEY m ade an im pressive debut for With the w a r e <96-82, Jim Gib- State News Sports Writer MSU as he scored 13 points and bons finally put the gam e out of Lee Lafayette scored a career guided the offense against the Bull-reach when he g. abbed a m issed high 32 points to .pace MSU to a dog's zone defense. shot and dropped in the rebound 90-84 victory over a hot-shooting With the Spartans leading 73-70. with 1:39 to go. At this point, ©Southwestern Louisiana club Lafayette hit a layup and w as foul- Coach John Benington pulled his Tuesday night in Jenison Field- ed by S outhw estern s Leon Davis, starting guards and the Spartans Lafayette m issed the foul shot but had their hard fought opening gam e house. Lafayette w as just too strong Copeland grabbed the rebound and won. , underneath for the Bulldogs and scored on a sweeping hook to boost MSU had too much strength for continually out-muscled their two the Spartan m argin to a com fort- Southwestern under the boards as taller centers,' hitting 13 of 21 able seven points. Benjam in then they dominated both the offensive shots from the floor. hit a 10-foot jum per to m ake the and defensive rebounding. The A close contest throughout the score, 79-70. Spartans had a wide 41-29 margin gam e, the Spartans held a slim in rebounding with Copeland g ett­ 46-37 halftim e lead. Southwestern After a bucket by Lafayette, ing nine and Lafayette eight. stayed close on the hot shooting Southwestern reeled off six "The offensive rebounds by MSU of forward Jerry F lake, who hit straight points to narrow the gap w ere what killed u s,” South­ on 14 of 19 shots and finished the to 81-78 with 4:24 rem aining. Laf­ western Coach Deryl Shipley said. ¡¡¡g gam e with 31 points. ayette then hit a short jum per and Viri/'' MSU's forwards. Bernie Cope­ a free throw to make it 84-78. but S T A T IS T IC S land and Jim Gibbons, aided Lafa the Bulldogs hung close as Marvin Foiled fo r two yette with 19 and 16 points resp­ ectively and w ere strong on the Winkler hit a jumper to close the m argin to four points with 3:40 MSU FG FT TP left. Player S p a r ta n f o r w a r d B e r n l e C o p e la n d (45) find s It tough shooting o v e r S o u th w e s te rn offensive boards. Rudy Benjam in 7/15 2/2 16 Gibbons g u a r d T . J . G a s p a r t (1 0 ) as L e e L a fa y e tt e and B u lld o g ’ s G a r l a n d W i l l i a m s lock on. Copeland 8/16 3/4 19 S tate N e w s Photo by Joe T y n e r Lafayette 13/21 6/9 32 Ward 0/1 0/0 0 GET-INY0LVED-IHTHE-CHALLEN6E-0F-ISRÄEL ~ i it- iLA i t’ AM i l i (SERVICE / c c D V / i r p CORPSr n p p s FOR FOR ISRAEL) I ■ drop ■ Stepter Benjamin Holms 3/17 6/14 0/1 2/2 1/1 0/0 8 13 0 SHERUT ISRAEL] Lick 12 0/2 2 Bograkos 0/0 0/0 0 If you a r e b etw een 18 and 30 you can c o n s id e r a n u m b e r of a v a i l a b l e op­ Dean 0/0 0/0 0 p o r t u n i t i e s to s e r v e I s r a e l and f u l f i l l y o u r s e lf: I. P R O F E S S I O N A L & S E M I - P R O F E S S I O N A L — ONE Y E A R 'S ’ 7 9 - 7 4 SW Louisiana Player FG FT TP A) S e r v e as a t e a c h e r , g roup w o r k e r , e n g i n e e r , e t c . MSU's freshm en cagers held off added 13, including several key buckets in the closing m inutes. Flake 14/19 3/5 31 L e a p in 9 L e e a late surge to defeat the MSU W illiams 3/4 2/2 8 B) C o n tin u e y o u r s e r v i c e f o r a second y e a r ; o r Aitch had 24 for the Old-Timers Townsend 5/10 4/4 14 M S U s e n i o r c e n t e r L e e L a f a y e t t e (35) tap s In a r e ­ Old-Timers, 79-74. Tuesday night and dominated both boards. Geist- Winkle 8/20 5/7 21 bound la te In the f i r s t h a l f o f T u e s d a y n ig h t’ s 9 0 - 8 4 in the Spartan-Bulldog prelim in­ C) R e g is te r f o r a second y e a r at an In s titu te o f h ig h e r le a r n in g ler had 15 with Jim O'Brien and Gaspard 1/3 4/4 6 S p a r ta n w in . L a f a y e t t e s c o r e d 32 points a g a in s t South­ ary. in I s r a e l I f you a r e a c o lle g e g ra d u a te o r u n d e r g r a d u a te e n t e r i n g Bill Curtis netting 11 apiece for D avis 1/1 0/0 0 w e s t e r n L o u i s i a n a f o r a p e r s o n a l high. With the frosh holding a slim y o u r t h i r d y e a r o f study. 73-72 lead with 40 seconds left on the losers. Snyder 0/1 2/2 2 S tate N ew s Photo by Joe T y n e r D epartu re: July 1969 the clock. Ron Gutkowski hit on Cost : $670 r o u n d - t r i p a i r f a r e and the three point play to give Bob o r ie n t a t io n costs Nordmann s squad a safe margin. P L E A S E D W IT H G O A L IE S After a 39-39 first half, the L i m i t e d n u m b e r o f p a r t i a l loans a v a il a b le f o r p r o f e s s io n a ls o nly freshm en, led by Ralph Simpson, jumped off to a 50-40 lead after Bessone shifts S’ lines II . K I B B U T Z P A R T I C I P A T I O N — O N E Y E A R (U n iq u e e x p e r ie n c e in c o m ­ four m inutes of the second half. m unal liv in g ) Matt Aitch led the Old-Timer s com eback, but it w as Jerry G eist- D epartu re: S e p t e m b e r 1969 ler's two quick buckets with a Cost : $670 r o u n d - t r i p a i r f a r e and minute rem aining that cut the lead o r i e n t a t i o n costs to one point, 73-72. they work out w ell during prac­ u s.” Bessone said. "Pat Russo one assist. Nelson D eBenedet By P A M B O Y C E Simpson paced the winners with tice this week. Seniors Charlie has also been playing w ell and and Randy Sokol have each State N ew s Sports Writer did som e scoring for us in the III. S IX -M O N T H K IB B U T Z P A R T IC IP A T IO N : 27 points, but he w as even more Phillips. Ken Anstey and jun­ scored two goals. w hile Co- Hockey Coach Amo Bessone im pressive with his rebounding ior Billy Watt are working on last trip. Captain Bob DeMarco is five is experim enting with the lines Co-Captain Ken Anstey D epartu re: J a n u a r y 1969 and a p p r o x i m a t e l y e v e r y 4 months t h e r e a f t e r . and floor leadership, often hitting this week in an attem pt to get one line with juniors A1 Swan­ a ssists to his credit. leads the Spartans now in scor­ Cost ; $ 570 r o u n d - t r i p a i r f a r e and o r ie n t a t io n co s ts . open m en for baskets. P at Miller a winning com bination to­ son. Pat Russo and Bob Pat- The Spartans will play home had a hot shooting night, netting tullo on another. Sophomores ing with three goals and two gether to defeat a strong Mich­ Saturday n tg h f following ,i trip assists. Pat Russo is second KNOW LEDGE OF HEBREW NOT E S S E N T IA L FO R ANY PROGR AM 1? points while Ron Gutkowski igan team facing the Spartans Randy Sokol. Jerry DeM arco to Ann.Arbor Friday. and Richard Houttemam com ­ in scoring with three goals and S T A T IS T IC S this weekend. FOR A D D IT IO N A L IN F O R M A T IO N C O N T A C T : C H IC A G O IS R A E L PRO­ Although the team goes into pose the last line. Bessone said Freshm en the two-gam e series with a 1-4 he plans to use Bill Enrico and G R A M S , 220 S. State St., C h ic a g o , II I. T e l : 9 3 9 - 6 4 2 7 □ PLE A S E SEND M E :M O R E IN F O R M A T IO N | - Y r . P ro f. & S e m i-P r o f. P ro g ra m □ A P P L IC A T IO N FORMS l - Y r . P ro f. & S e m i-P r o f. P ro g ra m Player Simpson Pryzbylo FG FT 10 1 7 4 TP record, Bessone says he has no Mike Olso as spare forwards. 27 6 com plaints about his team s playing ability. The icers' Senior has been Nelson moved D eBenedet from offense Buckeyes w in Gutkowski 5 3 13 main objective is to put a to defense, and he w ill join □ 2 -Y r , P ro gram □ K ib b u tz - - One Y e a r □ □ 2 - Y r . P ro gram K ib b u tz — One Y e a r Miller Cohrs Larsen 8 3 2 3 2 2 19 8 6 good gam e together instead other Spartan defensem en Bob of playing in spurts, Bessone DeM arco, Mike DeM arco. Ron said. Springer. Dan O'Connor and national title NEW YORK ( UPI i - Ohio only live points behind the Tro­ “ Our best period in every Dan Finegan. State, with a substantial assist jans. Bessone, com m enting on the Alumni gam e so far has been the last from Notre Dam e, captured its Georgia held on to fourth while Cl K ib b u tz — Six Months □ K ib b u tz — Six M o n th s the last three gam es the team Player FG FT TP period," Bessone said. "W ere second National Collegiate foot­ Texas moved past Kansas to take 9 played in N ew York, said he Bailey 4 1 going to do som e work on our ball championship Tuesday the No. 5 ranking Tennessee 11 w as pleased with the perfor­ O'Brien 5 1 passing and shooting, because when the United P ress Inter­ took seventh. Notre Dam e fin­ 11 m ances of the two junior Curtis 5 1 w e had plenty of opportunities national Board of Coaches vot­ ished eighth. Arkansas was 24 goalies Rick D uffet and Bob Aitch to score this past weekend, but V‘f 11 2 ed the Buckeyes the No. 1 team ninth and Oklahoma retained G eistler 17 Johnson. 8 1 w e m issed .” in the country. tenth. Maibach 2 "I also think Mike DeMarco 1 0 Ohio State captured the title Garvey 0 did a fine job on defense for » 0 0 without even donning uniforms TEAMS POINTS as Southern California, top- Part of the Campus Scene 1. x-Ohio State 1281 <10-01 334 ranked last week, and Notre 2. x-Southern Cal ( 4 1 i 9-0-1 > 277 D am e battled to a nationally 3. Penn State (2 1 19-01 272 televised 21-21 tie. The dead­ 4. x-Georgia (8-0-21 227 lock toppled Southern Cal from 5. x-Texas <8-1-1 > 174 SENIORS the No. 1 ranking'pnd paved the way for the Buckeyes to becom e the fifth Big Ten team to win the national crown in the 19-year 6. x-Kansas (9-1) 7. x-Tennessee (8-1-11 8. x-Notre D am e (7-2-11 148 106 104 9 x-Arkansas 19-1 > 90 history of the UPI ratings. 10. x-Oklahoma «7-3 > 61 The „Buckeyes w ere given 28 x-com pleted season. of a possible 34 first place votes, Friday Is The Last as one coach w as unable to vote Second 10—11. Purdue <20': 12. due to illness. They am assed Alabama 1171: 13. Oregon State 334 points to easily outdistance 1121. 14. Florida State i l l ' . 15, second place Southern Cal, Michigan 15 1, 16. Southern Meth­ which had four first place votes odist ( 4 1; 17. Missouri (31; 18 and 277 points. Penn State, which Tie, Ohio U niversity and Min­ captured the two rem aining first nesota <21: 20, Tie, Houston and Posshle Chance place votes, finished third. Stanford 11 i Don’t Wait Until The To Have Your Last Minute! Avoid the Rush G et Y o u r Caps And G o w n s T o d a y A t T he U n io n D e s k WOLVERINE Chains Are Bigger Than Ever T ic k e t s to C o m m e n c e m e n t w i l l also be is su ed at this ti m e . T h is Bostonian in Woodwork, St ai ne d and C o r f a m is available Portraits Taken. . . H o u rs F o r Is s u e A re M onday through T h u rs d a y 8:30 a .m . 5*30 ' $24°° F r id a y 8:30 a.m . - 8:30 Use y o u r c h a r g e account In both s to r e s - A sk us about F R E E P A R K I N G . Call 353-5151 A p p a re l can be p icked up at the I n on D e c . 7, a ls o , u n til 1:00 p .m . F o r fu r th e r in fo rm a tio n in q u ire a \h e p a r d s Do It Today! the U N IO N DESK 326 S. W a s h in g to n / H q ) E S 317 E . G r a n d R l v s r 355-3498 DOW NTOW N E . L a n s in g W ednesday, D ecem b e 4, 1968 9 Michigan State N e w s, E a st L a n sin g , M ich igan P A R T IS A N S D E B A T E Issues’ to focus on s e x ,m orality New factions evaluated By PAUL HANSON seeing that the m illions spent happy if an existing party be­ sistant professor of history Three faculty m em bers and plores a current issue in depth. com es m ore responsive to their said, “ and who feel th a t.th e The liberal wing of the D em o­ on Vietnam are converted to eight outside speakers w ill dis­ This term the course has been spending on dom estic prob­ goals." regular political organizations concerned with urban prob­ cratic Party cannot get to po­ cuss “ Human Sexuality and Hoffberg. who ran with Eld- don't give adequate expression wer because it is part of. a lem s. „Morality" during the Great Is- lem s. He said that both liberal ridge C leaver in Michigan, of the liberal point of view." suies course for winter term. The class has studied urban w ealthy m achine. New parties are too caught D em ocrats and new party m em ­ countered Kauffman s attacks Gourly. who is chairman of Lawrence R. Krupka, as­ problems from different points by saying the b em o cra tic Party the executive com m ittee, made up in being m ilitant instead of bers have the sam e goal and sociate professor of natural sci­ of view, including sociology, they should work within the is too far gone to be saved, and these introductory rem arks be­ education, scien ce and litera­ attacking the concentrations of ence, Gary E. Stollak, asst, D em ocratic party to transform that« the A m erican voter is fore the 40 m em bers of the professor of psychology, and ture. power in American politics. These two divergent view s it to achieve the goal. looking for new organizations local chapter attending the de­ Jerry J. West, professor of “ The winter term cla ss will that are m ore in tune with the w ere aired Monday night at the “ Working in the party is much bate. American Thought and Lan­ stress the legal and literary m ore likely to succeed in chang­ issues. guage, will teach the four- aspects of sexuality and m oral­ m eeting of the Greater Lansing Area Chapter of the Ameri­ ing society," he said, "than He said that w hile the Dem o­ credit class which will m eet ity,' Krupka, chairman of the cratic Coalition m ay have strong cans for D em ocratic Action seeking an alternative party. from 12:40 to 2 p m every course for winter term , said. leadership, "little is gained by (ADA). He attacked new parties by Tuesday and Thursday in 114 “ Physiological asp ects of sex spying that they lack the vote- putting good men at the head of w ill also be discussed, The program w as a debate B essey Hall. g ettin g power of the D em ocrats an obsolete m achine." between proponents of the New Typically, there will be an though." w hile the New D em ocratic Coal­ Hoffberg said that the major The guest speakers w ill be on D em ocratic Coalition and New outside speaker every Tuesday. ition is a functioning part of the difference betw een the two The guest speaker will not cam pus in connection with the P olitics Party. The speakers were Larr'y existing party organization. m ovem ents w as not one of tac­ necessarily lecture: he might sexuality colloquium. As an exam ple he pointed out tics but of ideology. Cultural perspectives, over­ Hoffberg. New P olitics vifce- lead a discussion. that a "great m ajority" of The local ADA chapter was The Great Issues series, population, sexual roles, sex­ presiddntial candidate, and Arn­ old Kauffman, m em ber of the blacks voted for Humphrey this organized this sum m er by for­ started in 1963. each term ex- uality and literature, sex and mer McCarthy. Kennedy, and national steering com m ittee year because they were un­ m usic, sex and the law and moved by m ilitant new parties. McGovern supporters, all in­ prem arital sexual standards for the New D em ocratic Coali­ U ’ g ra d u a te will also be discussed. tion. He also said that indepen­ dependent D em ocrats, who felt Kauffman opened the debate dents w ill flock to a new D em o­ the need for a liberal voice in g iv e n a w a r d Texts include: “ M arriage and Morals' by O Tannenbaum! by saying that liberal elem ents cratic Party. the area. A t i n s e l e d t r e e , c o m p le te with lig h te d s t a r , g r a c e s of the Dem ocratic/ i-,arty should “ Non-party voters feel that “ We are trying to serve as Bertrand R ussell; "The P lay­ a voice for people who backed the lobby of South C a s e H a ll as the C h r i s t m a s s p i r i t focus on local issues such as the traditional ideals of Ameri­ in b u s i n e s s boy Philosophy" in eight in­ can dem ocracy have been be- McCarthy, Kennedy, and Mc­ stallm ents; “ The Legal Case r e a c h e s the re s i d e n c e h a l l s . the California /£rape boycott, An MSU graduate has been traved." he said. “ They will be Govern.“ W alter Gourlv. as­ For Abortion'' by Alan Gutt- State N e w s photo by W i l l i a m P o r te o u s and future national issues like awarded the Outstanding Busi- f ness Achievem ent Award of the m acher, "Sex and R acism in MSU Business Alumni Assn. A m erica“ by Calvin Hernton; Eli Broad, chairman of the “One Hundred Dollar Misun­ board and president of Kauf- mann and Broad, Inc . Los An­ g eles, is a nationally known derstanding” by Robert Gover; “ Lady C hatterley’s Lover" by D. H. Lawrence; and “ Rabbit Sen. Hart calls for p r ò b e housing producer who started Run" by John Updike. his rise in the housing field by introducing a new concept in model homes in the Detroit The cla ss is offered for sen­ iors, honors students and grad­ uate students only. Enrollm ent into auto repair business They were speech prepared for delivery area. is lim ited to 200. DETROIT (A P ) Sen. An interdisciplinary course Philip A. Hart. D-Mich.. told —Legislation for state licens­ before the annual Detroit Auto The presentation was made on human sexuality (IDC400VI an audience of auto dealers ing of auto m echanics and re­ Show dinner sponsored by the by Richard A Allen, president .D etroit Auto D ealers Assn. will also be offered winter and executives Tuesday that pair shops. of the MSU Business Alumni the consumer is often “ not get­ -F e d e ra l Trade Com m is-, The Michigan Dem ocrat Assn at a banquet at the Pont- term This is a three credit ting his m oney's worth" in sion investigation to deter­ said that flat rate m anuals, chartrain Hotel, in Detroit course open to all students. auto repairs, and called for m ine whether manuals which which are published by auto Broad, a cum laude graduate A student m ay repeat the list labor tim e charges for re­ manufacturers and independ­ from MSU. received his busi­ governm ent action in three G reat Issues course for up to 12 areas to correct the situation. pairs are price-fixing devices. ent firm s and are used by ness administration degree in credits. Spring term 's subject -A n investigation by,! the many shops to figure custom er June, 1954 with a major in ac­ counting will be "War and P e a c e .” FTC or Justice Dept, to deter­ charges. “ Began as an aid to m ine if special repair r a te s - repair shop owners in making such as those to fleet ow ners- estim ates for repairs. constitute a violation of anti­ “ Yet we know now." he AUTO REPAIRS trust laws. Hart is chairman of the Sen­ added, “ that in many cases the m echanic is paid by the ate Antitrust and" Monopoly ----------------QÜJ—--- —------- -—:----- manual tim e, not the tim e Investigation committee sub-com m ittee, which earlier in the day opened hearings in Washington on the cost of auto actually used to repair the car. “ In jpqny ,cases the incen­ tive also is to use new parts »C R \B e TOTHe reparis. His rem arks were m ade in a rather than repair the old. " calls fo r industry change 1 M IC H IG A N 1 WASHINGTON ( A P ) - Open- it w as as bad as it had been signed to cut down repair costs mg w itnesses Jt ¿1 Senate inves- pictured. and to m ake it easier to find STATE ;l| ligation of auto repairs agreed Hruska said he w as confident out what repairs they need. Tuesday that the industry itself that som e of Leonard’s criti­ John P. Kushnerick of Phila­ I News * is in need of repairs. cism s would be “ shot down as delphia publisher of the Chilton The autom obile service busi­ we proceed with this inquiry. Company autom otive m anuals, ness has becom e a jungle for The subcom m ittee chairman. said m anufacturers already are the consumer.' William N Le­ Sen Philip A. Hart D-Mich.. working to design cars to make onard professor at Hofstra Un­ recom m ended state licensing of them easier to service and to iversity Hempstead. N Y told auto repair shops and m echan­ perm it use of electronic diagno­ the Senate antitrust subcom ­ ics. sis. m ittee “ State licensing would help guarantee qualified m echanics N eal E. Mann, executive sec­ No m atter where the con- sumtner turns for repairs to­ while setting up an authority retary of the Independent Auto­ Going Home for the Holidays? through which com sum ers could m otive D am age Appraisers day he said, he runs the risk Assn., recom m ended Federal of a fleering Leonard participated in a re­ process their com plaints," he said. licensing and rating of all auto Go via NORTH SERVESM SMB ICHIUANANDINDIA He com m ented in a speech m echanics. He also proposed a cent Federal Trade Commission prepared for delivery to auto federal rating system for repair P h o n e 4 8 2 - 0 6 7 3 for sc h e d u le s a n d ra te s . staff study of auto warranties and has been retained by the dealers in Detroit. garages. subcom m ittee as a consultant. Glenn F. Kriegel of Denver, Colo., operator of one of the He contended that car manu­ facturers are largely responsi­ first autom obile diagnostic cen­ ters to test and inspect motor ble tor what he termed “ the vehicles, told the subcom m ittee automobile service m ess. that inspection and repair work Leonard said auto m akers put should be separated. sales over service and. in their He testified that “ only a. very relations with dealers, “ service m inute percentage" of cars ex­ becom es—to use an industry amined by his diagnostic serv­ expression—a necessary evil. ice had been repaired in accord­ Sen Roman L Hruska. ance with m anufacturer's spe­ R Neb . com m ented after listen­ cifications. ing to Leonard s testim ony that Kriegel said the chief problem there doesn t seem to be any­ is an extrem e shortage of quali­ thing right with the industry" fied m echanics. But he also but added he did not believe recom m ended that cars be de- ilasterof paris itique Michigan State News 346 Studont Services Building East Lansing, Michigan 48823 a E nclosed is $ . P lease enthr a one year I know the way home subscription to the Michigan State News to the following address: w ith my eyes closed." Name A ddress. City____ ........... ... — Then you know the way too well. S ta te z ip . Because driving an old familiar route can make you NOW drowsy, even when you’re rested. □ O ne t e r m , $ 4 .0 0 □ F u ll y e a r , $ 1 4 .0 0 OPEN When that happens, pull over, take a break □ T w o t e r m s , $ 8 .0 0 □ A d d $ 3 .0 0 p e r t e r m t and take two NoDoz® Action Aids * They'll help you □ T h r e e te r m s , $ 1 2 .0 0 f o r fo re ig n d e liv e r y 619 E . G R A N D R I V E R drive home with your eyes open. NoDoz Action Aids. No car should be without them. 10 A . M . - 6 P . M . EA S T L A N S IN G ’ S N E W E S T B O U T IQ lfe j I nsp. THISKANDYCOUPON! ♦ T .M . © 1 9 6 8 B r i s to l- M y e r s C o W e d n e s d a y , D e c e m b e r 4, 1968 ran 10 Michip State N e w s, E ast L ansing, \ re d is c o v e r ro ck is Back" in the best óf D om ino so audible, in the m aterial tioned "ew .A j- *cs.pf+,tr­ •a.Td tbn B eatles cropping up now. delivered in »concert, a s it style. Currently one of the top By now our community* <\as ance of the Beatles in their As a contender! or as som e may have been in studio. records on thè charts is done * mm** w itnessed two special events, latest album since "Sgt. Pep­ would still maintain, "the Black leather look by Dion, a once-revered name both in the pop genre, certain PANORAMA: p er.” Of course, the Liver- champ." Presley has good com ­ With his appearance last among "cool cats" everywhere. to a :feet us all. Both of these puddlians have never really petition with the Beatles, if they night, E lvis P resley has once He too is making a return. in a m usical sense are. I been away, and the space be­ are serious in what they are do­ again "offered him self to the Shades of the Big Bopper and suppose, revolutionary. Who are tween their records serves only ing. the Purple People Eater, what Of course, the Hound Dog m asses. This could be a dan­ they? What*are they? Suffice to to r> inforce the Nold adage. does it all mean?. Even the gerous move. Though side­ say A) E lvis, and B) the "A bsence m akes the heart grow Man's "thing" has continued to burns are said to be the vogue, oracles of our age, Lennon, fonder." This has alw ays been be much the sam e throughout the McCartney and Co. are fall­ B eatles for "in the beginning"' many w ill still question the sucn w as the order of their the case, and with the Beatles, years. Conversely, the B eatles slicked pompador. even the ing into line. D oes this mark com ing. skillful promotion has resulted have never stood still for very the return of the "White archaic “ black leather look,” Last night, the man called in the conditioning of m illions, long. We have their early period. Sport Coat and a Pink Carn­ "The King of Rock." E lvis By MARK McPHERSON both young and old. Beatle ven­ i.e.. "I Want To Hold Your sym ptom atic of the "bad lad" ation," "Blue Suede Shoes," P resley, reappeared to tele­ State News Reviewer tures of past and present, timed Hand " a middle period marking im age of the late ’50’s, and pegged pants, not to vision after an absence of 8 to give the public "just enough.1" a turning point (‘‘Rubber Soul’’) And though he m ay shake to mention the old pointed-toe years. It strides, m e as inter­ “ rdck" m usic, is in a state of m ake the sudden appearance of and a shift of gears into what convince us of his feeling or shoes replete with cleats? e s t in to note his return, for flux. anything they do much like the becam e their own m usical od- J“st th®t jj® 1S J et ? . Only tim e w ill tell. B eatles reappear yssies ("Revolution "1 leading in- P elvis Mr. P resley Meanwhile, start brush­ il com es at a tim e when his w elcom ed visit of an old friend. The second of the above men- to the wonderland types of be careful of just how much of ing up on your "M onkey” personal medium, nam ely, In the case of Elvis, absence has not been a deterring factor. B eatleistic collages such a s "Sgt. him self he does expose. and "Twist" and try to re­ Instead, his cult has remained Pepper s Lonely Hearts Club call the lyrics to "The Ten FOx E »stcR N Th ea tres an active one. even above the Band." and presently "The Bea­ Y et the signals are go; Commandments of Love." white socks are being donned If it’s going to happen, we K i n g o f th e ro c k ? SPA R TA N T W IN W EST cries of "Is Rock Dead? From tles." Of course none of this ca te­ by m ore rebels every day, m ight as w ell be prepared FRANDOR SH OPPING CENTER 3 1 0 0 EAST SAGINAW Phon# 351 0030 tim e to tim e, som e of these sam e E l v i s P r e s l e y , the o r i g i n a l " H o u n d D o g " m an r e - ACRES OF FRI E PARKI NO voices m ay have asked. "Is gorizing is m eant to probe the Dick Clark is with us still for its return. I, for one, Beaties' craft very deeply. and as you "Blueberry H ill” am not about to "knock the t u r n e d to t e l e v i s i o n la s t nig ht in an N B C co o r s p e - P resley Dead?" Such fears of c la l e n t i t l e d , " S i n g e r P r e s e n t s E l v i s . " STARTS TODAY! course w ere calm ed by the reg­ Just note that they have evolved followers know by now, F ats rock." ■yOUR's, M I N E & O U R S " S H O W N AT ular outpouring of Presley film s and chosen to run a m usical and discs, verifying that E lvis cycle, whereas E lvis has re­ 6 & 9:4 0 " F I T Z W I L L Y ” at 8:00 him self w as alive, w ell and get­ mained in a static form on a ting even richer. pedestal. This is alm ost as if ’L A D Y IN C E M E N T ’ Elvis, standing still all this Echo rock while, is not being passed by A Honeym oon The B eatles, to many the in­ the B eatles as they com plete Is N o P la c e T o H a v e K id s ! fallible svm bols of this gener­ a circle in their m usical styl­ ation, seem to be seeking a reestablishm ent of the older izing. "rock” em pire by their latest From all appearances, they are today concentrating on a Saved by pseudo-realism album. The "shoobie-doobies. taught her the more subtle tossed in to the f ilm less fu r the neo-rock elem ent which it would If you think that television sake of a e s th e tic s than in an e f­ the falsettoes. the type of shades of facial expression, but seem , is a popular form as w ell killed the B m ovie, that forget­ fo rt to be fas h io n a b le . " L a d y " sounds which originally preceded she still delivers each line with as a practical vein in which to table quickie which w as once the their own “ veah. yeah, veah" are a flat voice that seem s to draw trie s v e ry h ard to be hip. th ro w ­ perform. We cannot ea sily im ­ bread-and-butter of Hollywood, convincing enough to tell us that its inspiration from nothing in g in n u d ity , s w e a rin g and sor­ this foursome is either serious agine som e of the m ore psy­ then take a look at "Lady In m ore internal than a cue card. d id " surro u n d in g s to e a rn its about the old rock, or m ore prob­ chedelic" cuts from the "Sgt. Cement." For despite its stel­ HI And if you can accept Raquel " a d u lts o n ly " re s tric tio n ; adds ably. is launching another of their Pepper" album, being performed lar cast, its w ide-screen tech­ Welch, then how about Dan one b la c k cop a n d 'a d e w fag g ots gigantic put-ons. or "send-ups. live. Much less difficult is a nicolor and its lush budget, this Blocker as a lovable, lethal to be lib e r a l; and inc lu d e s som e which have entranced fans in the number like the recent "Hey Sinatra vehicle steps right off heavy who w atches "Bonanza" to p ic a l w is e c ra c k s and unneces­ past. The rock and roll of the Jude." or "Revolution," w here­ the assem bly line into oblivion. on TV? s a ry v io le n c e fo r c o m ic r e lie f. B eatles is performed as an echo in the physical dimension of the Not that "Lady" is not en­ "Lady's" real faults lie not I t adds up to fa s h io n a b le not­ of the groups by which they them ­ m usic goes unhindered without tertaining. Most of its ninety By JIM YOUSLING with the actors but the director. hingness. T h e f ilm 's one stun­ selves w ere nurtured. The music technical hang-ups. m inutes pass quickly, action all State News R eview er Although there w as a "Gordon ning im a g e - the u n d e rw a te r here includes the early blues Of course meaning, a con­ the way. But this kind of action Douglas" listed in the credits. corpse o f the t i t l e —is soon lor- L U C IL L E B A L L H E N R Y T O N D A sounds. Chuck Berryism s and. troversial elem ent in all leaves no im pact after the I can't quite believe that there g o tte n . and th e s to ry g rin d s to Beatle com positions, is just have our credence tested by lights go on. h K w r s .M in e and ultim ately. E lvis him selt. was anyone behind those cam ­ a h a lt w ith a fin a le so p re d ic ­ as evident, though perhaps not F irst of all, w e have to accept Raquel Welch impersonating an It is curious to see both Elvis eras. The old pros like Sin­ ta b le th a t it m a y s u rp ris e you. Frank Sinatra as Tony Rome, a alcoholic heiress. atra and Richard Conte can M e a n w h ile , the p a rts w h ir r along NOW J A N JOHNSON.-TOM BOSLEY NORTHSIDE SHOWING hard-hittin’ kind of neo-Bogart. Assuming that w e all have seen This one does not com e off so well. Miss Welch's m easure­ in this mold before and m ents m ay be astounding and walk through a film as though preparing for its sequel, but n ic e ly , but th e m a c h in e u lt im a ­ te ly p ro ves to h ave no fu n c tio n . - ilti SHAVE¡.SON : MOR! LACHMAN MAOELYN D /ÿ lS BOBCARROtl.JR VEIVILIE SHlVtLSON D RIVE-IN T H E A T R E 3 - Color Hits Sinatra can therefore believe it. w e next her vears as a model m ay have people like Miss Welch. Bloc­ ker and Lainie Kazan (all of ROBiRl ! BLUMOK ms s COLOR by DeLuxe •<«.« Inited 2 Miles North on US-27. <482-7409 Elec. Heaters whom could be used effectively! «S- IT1STS; are left to flounder for their G o v e r n m e n t m M S U FO LK LO R E S O C IE T Y characterizations in a rather ltffi depressing fashion. In addition to working with the o ffers jo b s ^ M B E S C T T R S î: AND perform ers, a director should D ic k V a n D fö e Whafs so Bad About Fesling Good?;: give a film a sense of continuity and style. Our im aginary Mr. Douglas, however, not only of­ to stu d en ts T it e w illy " COLORbyDeLuxe •PANWISXM >, A UNIVERSAL PICTURE TECHNICOLOR fers a series of sh am eless m is­ takes (the obvious exam ple be­ ing a scene in which Miss Welch A lim ite d n u m b e r ot tra in in g o p p o rtu n itie s Wl a v a ila b le to sc ien c e ant eng ine- ederal be F i r s t at 7 :07 e rin g students d u rin g tin sum - 3 r d at 11:00 P. fiddles with her bodice and then, m e r o f 1969. the U .S . C iv il S e r­ through the m agic of editing, HALF-TIME BUTLER. suddenly has her hands on her v ic e C o m m is s io n has ann ou nc­ D IC K L O R D SUSAN S T R A S B E R G IN FULL-TIME FUN! jrz tc A Ç O N w aist t. but he also gives "Lady" ed. T h e v a c a tio n w o rk -s tu d y p ro ­ all the visual grace of a sub­ The Name of The Game standard travelogue. g ra m is designed to lead d ir ­ Is K ill 7S~4 In fact. Douglas belongs in the e c tly to p ro fe s s io n a l fe d e ra l c a re e rs in e n g in e e rin g , p h y s i­ 8 :0 0 / í : o o travelogue industry. Certainly c a l sciences, and m a th e m a t­ IN C O L O R the film 's strongest elem ent is ic a l sciences. • I* its Miami locale. The beaches, co-suuiHiy Shown once at 9 : 1 7 T ra in e e s wi l l p a r i r 'W Also hotels, slum s and causew ays o n -th e -jo b tra in in g d urjS g v a ­ BARBARAFELDON lend "Lady" a pseudo-realism c a tio n p erio d s and wi l l com mue DOC WATSON which often rescues the plot from the realm of nonsense. N evertheless, the location, to a tte n d ' c o lle g e d urin g tile s c h o la s tic y e a r. W h en the Wil Be Corrung in January like everv other ingredient, is q u ire m e n ts fo r a B. A. a re com < p le te d . a tra in e e m a y be pro m o te d to a f u ll-tim e pro fes- sion al p ositio n in the fo d e ra i g o v e rn m e n t. Students w ith one fu ll y e a r of a c a d e m ic study a rc e lig ib le fo r S e a n C o n n e ry G S-3 p ositions, p ay in g S8H a w e e k . Those w ith tw o and one- h a lf y e a rs ot study a rc eli; fo r CIS-4 p ositions, payin g -Shit a w eek. The s u m m e r positions ill h e S H A L A c o m p e titiv e and based on a w r i t ­ ten e x a m in a tio n . T ho se a p p ly in g by D e c . 31 w ill be tested on F e b . 1. 1969. T ho se a p p ly in g by F e b . 28. w ill he tested on M a r c h 29. B eatles tops LONDON (A P )-T h e Bea­ tles were named Tuesday the world's outstanding vocal group for the fifth tim e since 1963- in a poll by Britain's new Musi­ cal Express. k The poll voted the Beach Boys second. p rS k co o . f 53.84 Cash DOZ. and seT carry ^ j o n Anthony 809 E . M ic h ig a n “ALL rem ains Quiet on a n o th e r o i A dam P o w e ll’s m any fr o n ts . T h o u g h t h e m a tte r o f h is a lle g e d m is a p p r o p r ia tio n s o f g o v e r n m e n t N a M flC b lW M tn M tilN M w f tX O M tH R f tlllM lI M M I f c i . . ■ ■ U M tM l I F N f t fu n d s and h is k ic k b a c k arrange- SEAN I BRIGITTEISTEPHEN JACK PETER • HONOR M W ERIC m e n t s w it h h is w ife a n d o th e r c o n ­ CONNERYIBARDOT IBOYD I HAWKINS IVANEYCKI BLACKMANI STRODE1SYKES g r e s s i o n a l e m p l o y e e s w a s a i r e d in C o n g r e s s a n d th e p u b lic p r in t, n o 'AlEXANDERl VALERIE fSHÄLÄKÖl w o r d c o n c e r n in g th e s e d o in g s h a s KNOX IFRENCH Satttiüoiyb)ClarkeHeynolds■AssociileProiuarH»lMison■ttCHNICOLOfT'fRANSCOfi• c o m e fr o m th e D e p a r tm e n t o f J u s ­ Starts TODAY! I*00 - 3tl5 - 5:20-7:30-9:40 tic e lo n g o th e r lo n g th a n ago, th e s ta te m e n t, PROGRAM INFORMATION ►332*6944 IP O 3 CJUM'ie -Today Is LADIES’ DAY 75Ç to 6 PMÍ th a t th e y w e re ‘u n d e r in v e s ti­ g a t i o n ’ .” For a fr copy of W m . F. B u r l e y ' * NAT O N A r RE V IE W , w r it? : D e p t. I' IT s&l Ai lii Ar. S '. ■ g t, ,- jh u ü h u U U l i mo M A R V IN ri A L tfL K i «« J A L ft u u o o ihm- Added ! Fun C a rto o n - - N e x t! B u r t L a n c a s t e r " T H E S W I M M E R " K, 150 E. w»i S t r e e t , N. Y. 10015. I# L U on' »DUCTtD BY HUGU MONTENEGRO o r i g i n a l m o t io n p ic t u w e b o u n q t w a c k a l b u m q m aoT M c k n t u w v - f o x « « c o w o » W e d n e sd a y , D e c e m b e r 4, 1968 i]] Michigan State N e w s, E a st L a n s in g , M ich ig a n A r t stu d e n ts p ro te s t c o u rs e s She once got permission is nrt a junior because she has Ssr.i": "’V'* ► the aramA's office, and ASA students of the department, but Kj>*h^r the occasional visitor. from a professor U> came u«e . . - s v ftv a ttn x A iv y ' &v He said that shows' in t!he an alreedy-crowded class bu i even though the U niversity rec­ I’ve been getting the courses report to becom e part of the was denied toy the department. ognizes her third-year stand­ gallery run too long to be of I w ant.” study. “An ideal department should ing. She said that she will have Inadequate facilities any good to the students. This statem ent by one for­ Paul Love, gallery director, have classes for majors and to cram in the extra courses to tunate co-ed art m ajor is the Sharbach stated that the answered the charge by saying minors as well as art elec­ graduate in two years. exception rather than the rule lack of cla sses only points out that all travelling shows are tives,” she said. “We can’t Statistics released by David in getting cla sses in the Art the deficiencies in the depart­ on a national three-week sche­ even give classes to majors so Logan, participating in the Dept. In fact m any backers of ment. dule and that it would be im­ we’re pretty poor.” EDP study, show the problem the Art Student Assn. (ASA) “ The basic problem ,” he possible to have shows hang Pre-registration plans of lost classes. feel that the lack of cla sses is said, “ is the departm ent’s un­ in Kresge for less time than Miss Cherniak proposed , a His figures show that in 1967. w illingness to pay for first- that. pre-registration for the art de­ 73 art m ajors becam e juniors. the chief problem of the de­ rate facilities. Faculty silent partment which would give it Of these, 70 per cent w ere one partment. But for the most part the de­ time to obtain faculty to meet to five art cla sses short. This As an exam ple he pointed But the goal of ASA, accord­ partment administration has the demand for classes. percentage increased each ing to Terry Sharbach, Far­ out that the original plans of Judy LaTocha, Petoskey term . This term 80 per cent K resge Art Center called for remained mute on the question mington senior and co-chair­ of facilities. junior, said that as far as the of the new juniors w ere short man of ASA, is to help change a larger building, but the plans department is concerned she classes. *" w ere changed, and a sm aller However Erling B. Brauner, the entire department and re­ chairman of the department, ITONIGHT FROM 7:00 P A I. lieve the sym ptom of class building w as built. said that the shortage of Creative clutter shortage. The art departm ent is al­ The Art Center itself com es under as much fire as the short­ classes was not serious. He also said that he had never ANE Art students are Inhibited by the crowded conditions which p ersist n the painting ready under exam ination by age of classes. heard of an art student leaving an Educational D evelopm ent Some students contend that MSU in desperation. 8:35 Only rooms at Kresge Art Center. State News photo by Bob vins 7:00 & Later Program study conducted by it is “ too sm all” and “ too Students speak unhuman''. One art major, Adele Cher­ IN -D E P T H S T U D Y Other m ajors w ere m ore spe­ cific in their criticism s, al­ niak, Southfield sophomore, plans to transfer to Wayne STARTS FRIDAY! though no less caustic. State or Alfred University next An unsurpassed cast in one G a lle r y a tta c k e d fall or winter term because she The g a lle y > < a s attacked by has not had an art class in two of the great plays of the ages! ATL alternatives offered one student as not serving the terms. NOW SHOWING By SHARON TEMPLETON through a m ore thorough study terests or training in a partic­ fered. • Three sections of ATL 112W State N ew s Staff Writer of key works. ular area to be m ore effective and two sections of ATL 113W EXCLUSIVE The Dept, of American “ The in-depth study of se lec­ instructors. Thought and Language w ill of­ ted works and w riters w ill en­ To be eligible for the course, w ill be offered. P rofessors will FIRST RUN fer a new approach next term able the student to w rite and all students m ust have com ple­ include Albert Karson, Thomas to the study of American liter­ read with m ore comprehension, ted the ATL 111 requirem ent. Inge, Macel Ezell and Frances ature. confidence and skill, as w ell as Students can elect to take one Cohen, professors of American ELECTRIC CAR HEATERS “ P erspectives in American increasing his knowledge of the or both of the new courses of- Thought and Language. CHRISTOPHER PLUMMER .Thought" is designed as an al- American cultural and intel­ ELECTRIC IN CAR HEATERS Who was she? Som etim es A FANTASTIC TRIP THROUGH BIRD-VILLE ORSON WELLESa nd • LILLI PALMER ternative track for ATL 112, 113 lectual heritage," Albert Kar- she was a child skipping and as a two-term sequence to son, professor of American a rope. Som etim es she was RICHARD JOHNSON follow the regular ATL i l l . Thought and Language and a T A R L IT E a woman with a passionate m em ber of the new Track W The "Track W" proposal C om m ittee, said. D r iv e In T h e a tre * 3OJU SNOW ROAD hunger . . . and one day Q E P R P U S T H E K IN G (ATL 112W and 113W) differs the child and the woman TECHNICOLOR' a «Mai t o w mi or uiowi onau>a from the regular series in that students w ill read entire works The courses will also intro­ duce greater flexibility into the Tonight! cam e together . . . J¡ T á j KfWffB CYRIL CUSACK* ROGER LIVESEY DONALD SUTHERLAND of a lim ited number of authors instead of many anthologized axcerpts. general educational core b y of­ fering an alternative to the re g ­ ular ATL and H o no rs A T L p ro g ­ All Coiér! 2 Big Features! f\ ( f V 1 mCOLOR C H E V R O N S.M.A. Screenplay by MICHAEL LUKE and PHILIP SAVILLE • Diiected by PHILIP SAVILLE Associate Producer TIMOTHY BURAIll • Produced by MICHAEL LUKE A Crossroads f rim Production/Universal Pictures Production • A UNIVERSAL RELEASE ram s. ^ Show Twice a4 7 j0 7 - 10:57 Readings w ill continue to em phasize authors considered Although Honors ATL has COMEDY HIT IN COLOR basic to the regular syllabus, som ew hat the sam e form at as 20th Century-Fox presents such as Thoreau, M elville, the proposed new courses, ad­ Plus Theifftveetride Crane and Jam es, and selections m ission requirem ents prevent w ill m eet the approval of the D epartm ent's Curriculum Com­ all but a sm all number of stu­ dents from enrolling in Honors GWednesdap Repeated ATL. ’’Coldly beautiful . . . every bit as m ittee. The flexibility of the course eJanEFONDGdi r a c h e l. PANAVISION* COLORBYDELUXE The new courses w ill attem pt DEanJ0n^"ÂR0SEM8RÎMURgHY tense as any modern thriller.” w ill m ake it possible for fac­ 2nd at 9*07--------------------------- — . —Ladies’ Home Journal to sharpen the students' insight SHOWN ONCE AT 9:05 isuoaesTto pon matuw« auphncr»; ra c h e l K ulty m em bers with special in- PNOORAM INFORMATION^ 4 8 8 - 0 4 6 8 Q L A P M E R At 1:00-3:40 TODAY . . 6:25-9:15 p.m . Now for the first time at popular prices. Direct from its reserved-seat engagement. r Winner of 3 Academy Awards! GIRLS! to attention ^''TECHNICOLOR- PAMAVISIOir0 You g irls have different needs than guys. TODAY IS LADIES’ Som etim es you require a little extra atten­ DAY— 75^ from 1 to 6 p.m . tion. So Grandmother's has set Wednesday PROGRAM INFORMATION ^ 4 8 2 * 3 9 0 5 nights aside just for you. Tonight there will be a new, fem inine drink IM 1 IC H IO A N T O D A Y . . L A D I E S DAY once in a decade... made esp ecia lly with your ta stes In mind. And offered at a price that will pleasantly 75* From 1:00 to 6:00 p.m. su rp rise you. Feature at 1:00 - 3:10 - 5:20 - 7:30 - 9:40 p.m . an artist the stature of So spend your night maklngand m eetlngfrlends In Grandmother’s congenial exciting atmos­ T H IS IS THE phere. Before the evening's over, you'll TRUE STO RY OF THE S ELF-C O N FESSED BOSTON VAL STOECKLEIN enjoy that “ little extra attention" and It won't all b* from Grandmother's. STRANGLER. his life...will get to you. IP Val St6©cktein now available ■ I \ Grey Lit© w herever records 5J j ‘ are sold 3411 Michigan Ave., Lansing, Mich. B O ST O N STR A N G LER tUBny C urtis " M" H enry Fonda G eo rg e K ennedy Us) I Rl CORDS, A DIVISION Of RARA).- UN! DIO ! URI j U Rl ' ORAIIUN ikeKetlin Murray Hamilton iu (i, ii m k m i •> S ir Next! ^ ‘"“ o f i ^ ' S U L L i T T W e d n e sd a y , D e c e m b e r 4, 1968 )2 Michigan State N ew s, E ast L ansing, M ich ig a n 3 5 1 -8 4 6 0 2 2 5 A N N ST. We carry a W? a * J r . •. g w jA n i iA I Jñ yrw g f t n n i r Targe stocV of ISCuuih iw »c r d s , n w iji Inc. ^ 1 1* Paper Posters valuable “ oldie” 45’s 1 L o n g -p la y in g R e c o rd s a t a S a v in g s SARASATE, PABLO DE N a v a rra , Op. 3 3 ; 8 S panish D ances; C a p ric e B asque, In tro d u c tio n Or T a ra n te lla V O X S in g le s V§* T h e V O X C a ta lo g o f R otond, V iolin; W alev sk i, P ia n o SCHUBERT, FR A N Z Im p ro m p tu s, O p. 9 0 b O p. 1 4 2 A lfred Brendel, P ian o STPL 5 1 2 .7 6 0 STPL 5 1 2##“ { 1 I a C H , JO H A N N SEBASTIAN CT. , « 1 4 4 3 0 B iu n d an b u rg C o n e srti N o .. 1. 3 . 4 STM . 3 6 .4 3 0 DEUTSCHE M esse, D .8 7 2 ; M oss In B f la t. O p. P o sth ., B ra n d an b u tq C o n c erti N o*. 2 , 5, 6 J D 324 M ain z C h a m b e r O rch.; K ehr C o nductor ’ T h o m o n n , W in g , Jo h n : V ie n n a K om m erchor; V ie n ­ n a Pro M usico; G iilesberger, C o n d u c to r . C on certi for Violin In A M in o r Or E M otor; C oncerto ^ V a u t e n b a c h e r & V orholz, V iolins; O rch.; Kehr, C o n d u c to r M ainz C h a m b e r STPL 5 1 1 .3 4 V F in e C la s s ic a l R e c o r d in g s Sym phony in C " T h e G r e a t" , D .9 4 4 B am berg Sym phony; P erleo, Co° STDL 50U .8"w 5 ^q j q q t a M o ^ * G o * i n g ? dH o rp sich o rd STM. 5 1 4 .3 3 0 S c h u b e rt: His Story a n d His M usic (M ono only) MM at I 98 per disc W lM u n ! c ^ i m tr " m e n ta l Ensem ble ST^ 5 0 0 .4 9 0 S C H U M A N N , ROBERT W o rk , for H a rp sich o rd : Ita lia n C o n certo , 6 rre lu d e s, C o n certo for P lan o b O rc h e stra , O p. 5 4 . b /w M O ­ F a .ita .la , T o c c a ta b F ugue In C M inor, Z A R T : P ian o C o n c erto N o. 2 0 . C h ro m atic F o n to tlo b F u g u e S in 770 R ichter, P iano; U.S.S.R. S ta te Rod.o O rch.; G auk H elm a Eisner, H a rp sich o rd STPL 5 1 0 .7 7 0 C o n d u cto r . k p ie r? % , v W orks fo r O rg a n : T o c c a ta b F ugue in D M inor, S c h u m a n n : His Story o n d H u M usic, b /w GRIEG. His P relu d e b F ugue In E M inor, P a sto ra le , 6 ChoroW Story o n d His M usic (M ono only) MM 3 550 G LINK A, M IK H A IL . . - fVWVKK I , JEAN J O S t P H - P reludes, F ugue in C M inor S I! 440 Festes d e T h a lie (S u ite ), b /w C H A RPEN TIER; C o n ­ W a lte r K roft, O rg an STPL 5 1 1 .4 4 V C A M PRA , ANDRE „ u in o e k iT ic p . O v e rtu re s: R ussian o n d L udm illa, Life to r th e , SOUSA, JO H N PH ILIP F etes V onitionnes (S u ito ). b /w CH A RPEN TIER. V afse F a n to isie ; J o te A rogonosa (C a p ric e b r.llo n t) , c e rto ; C A M PR A : F etes S o u sa: His Story a n d His M usic, b /w FOSTER:: HH B ach. Hie Story a n d H i. Mu*ic TPL 5 9 8 4 0 ? d erling, C o n d u c to r STPL 5 1 6 .5 0 0 JO H A N N STRAUSS: W o ltx e s & Polkas C oncerto N o. 4 for Piono b O reh estro , O p. 2 2 ; K rokow iok R ondo, Op. 14. b /w L I5Z T : E duard S tra u ss & H is O rc h e stra STPL 5 1 2 .4 7 0 P e e r G ynt S uites, Op. 4 6 b Op. 5 5 . b /w BIZ ET : Don G iovanni (E xcerpts) Op. 5 8 ; " M o o n lig h t" S o n a ta H u n g a ria n F a n tasy fo r Piono b O rch estra S tich -R a n d a ll. D anco, M offo, Gedda,^ P aris C o n ­ . N ovaes, Piono; V ienna Pro M usica; .. L 'A rlesie n n e Suites STRAUSS, RICHARD ’» F ran k l, P iono; Inn sb ru ck Sym phony; B am berg Sym phony; C ouraud, , ,, ... serv ato ry O rch.; R osbaud, C o n d u c to r 5TPL 5 1 5 .1 1 0 * D’ r R o senkavnlier (W o ltx e s ). b /w TCH A IK O V SK Y . Sw arowsky, C o nductor STPL 5 8 5 JO • W a g n e r, C o n d u c to r STPL 5 1 2 .5 0 0 C o nductor STPL 5 1 2 .4 1 0 M a rria q e of Figaro (E xcerpts) N u tc ra c k e r S uite; WEBER: In v ita tio n to th e D onee C oncerto N o. 4 fo r Piono b O rc h estra , C o n c erto N o. 1 fo r P ia n o b O rehestro, O p. 11 S tick -R a n d a ll, Revfuss, S treich; Societe C ons O rch ; B am berg S ym phony; H ollreiser, C o n d i x t o r ^ ^ Op. 5 8 ; 10 V a riatio n s on a Salieri Air Sym phonic D ances, Op. 6 4 ; E leqiae M elodies, Op. 3 4 N ovoes, P lano; B am berg Sym phony; ___ V ie n n a Pro M usica; V an R em oortel, C o n d u cto r R osbaud, C o n d u cto r STPL 5 1 5 .1 2 0 - B rendel, P iano; V ienna Pro M u sica; ... P erleo, C p n d u c to r STPL 5 1 0 .7 1 0 STPL 5 1 0 .3 3 0 SUPPE, FRA N Z VON W allb erq , C o nductor STPL 5 1 1 .3 6 0 Requiem K .6 2 6 . E tudes, O p. 10 b O p. 2 5 Bucke'1,- Bence, M ielsch, W o llitz; S tu ttg a rt Phil.: O v e rtu re s: Poet & P e a sa n t; B e autiful G o la th e o ; L ight C oncerto N o. 5 for Piono b O rc h estra , Op. 7 3 G uiom ar N ovoes, P iano ST PL 5 1 0 .9 3 0 G rieg: His Story ond His M usic, b /w SC H U M A N N : His B ader, C o n d u cto r STPL 5 1 2 .7 4 0 C a v alrv ; B oce-cc n; M orninq, N onn b N ig h t In V ienna "E m p ero r" Story o n d His M usic (M ono only! MM 3550 Southw est G erm an R adio O rch.; Sx<^«^^Coi^mjcto^ N ovoes, P iono; Bamberg Symphony; M a z u rk a s : Op. 3 3 , N o i. 2 - 4 ; O p. 2 4 , N o .. 2 6 4 ) Op. Svm phonv N o. 41 " J u p ite r " , K .5 5 1 . b /w H A Y D N : 17, N o. 4 ; O p. 5 9 , N o. 2 ; O p. 5 6 , N o. 2 ; O p. 4 1 , No. HANDEL, GEORGE FREDERICK Perleo, C o n d u cto r STPL 5 1 1 .9 3 0 " S u rp ris e " Sym phony 1 ; Op. 6 3 , N o. 1; O p. P osth. in a W a te r M usic _ . . . . . . NDR Sym phony O rch.; Ludwig, C on d u cto r TCHAIK OVSKY, PETER ILICH ................. C oncerto fu r Violin b O reh estro , O p. 61 G uiom ar N ovoes, P ian o STPL 5 7 9 2 0 T e le m a n n Society; Schulze, C o nductor STPL 5 1 4 .0 4 0 STPL 5 1 2 .5 1 0 C apriccio Italian , C p. 4 5 . b /w M ENDELSSOHN: I ta l­ O istrokh. V iolin, U.S.S.R. S ta te O rch. H a n d e l: His Story o n d His M usic (M ono o n ly ' Gouk, C onductor STPL 5 1 6 .1 5 0 N o c tu rn e s: Op. 9 , N os. 1 - 3 ; O p. 15, N os. 1 -3 ; Op. 2 7 , MM 3 o j O M o x a rt: His Story a n d ! ! i ' M usic I M ono only) i a n " Svm phonv _ , .. _ .j N os. 1 -2 ; Op. 3 2 , Nos. 1 -2 ; O p. 3 7 , N o. 1 . MM 35 I v V ienno M usi g e se llsc h o ft O rch.; Von R e m o o rte l C oncerto for Violin b O rc h estra , Op. 6 1 ; G uiom ar N ovoes, Piono STPL 5 1 2 .9 5 0 > HA YDN , JOSEPH _ C o n d u c to r STPL 5 1 1 .2 1 0 3 R om ances for Violin b O rehestro MUSSORGSKY, MODEST . N o c tu rn e .: O p. 3 7 , N o. 2 ; O p. 4 8 , N os. 1 -2 ; O p. 5 5 , C o n certo for C ello in 0 , O p. 1 0 1 . b /w BOCCHERINI N ig h t on Bold M e u n to in . b /w TC H A IK O V SK Y : 1 P I 2 C o n certo N o. 1 for P iano b O rc h e stra , O p. 9.3 b /w L au te n b a c h e r, Violin; W e stp h a lia Sym .; Badische S to o tsk o p elle; R eichert & C rem er, No*. 1 -2 ; O p. 6 2 , No». 1 -2 ; Op. 7 2 , N o. 1; Op. VIV A LD I: C ello C oncert! O v e rtu re ; BOROD’N : P olovtsian D onees; RIM 5K Y - R A C H M A N IN O FF: P ian o C o n certo N o. 2 F o rth , in C s h a rp M inor C a ssad o , Cello; B am berg Sym phony; P erlea, R ichter, P iano; L em n q rad P h ilh arm o n ic^ C onductors STPL 5 1 1 .1 7 0 C o n d u cto r STPL 5 1 0 .7 9 0 KORSAKOv : R urH on F oster O v ertu re G uiom ar N ovoes, P ia n o »TPL 5 1 2 .9 6 0 V ie n n a Sym phony: H ollreiser, C o n d u cto r sky, C o n d u c to r (M ono only) p L 1 6 .2 2 0 Piono S o n a ta . " M o o n lig h t," " P o th e tiq u e ," M a ts N o. 11 in B fla t " C re a tio n " STPL 5 1 1 .6 9 0 P relu d es, O p. 2 8 ; S o n a ta N o. 2, O p. 3 5 C o n certo N o .l fo r P ian o b O reh estro Op. " A p p a s s io n a to " T h c m a n n Zottl-Holmstaedt. O rch. of V ie n n a V olk- 2 3 b /w R A C H M A N IN O FF: Piono C o n certo N o. 2 W a lte r Klien, P iano STPL 5 1 4 .S 3 0 G uiom or N ovaes, Piono STPL 5 1 0 .9 4 0 ' PA G A N IN I, NICCOLO scp er; G iilesberger, C o n d u c to r STDL 5 0 1 .0 2 0 B lu m e n tal, Piono; V ienno M u sik g e se llsch a ft O rch.: Sym phony N o. 3, 5 5 "E ro ie o " P re lu d es: Op. 2 8 , Op. 4 5 , P relude in A flo t M ajor P a q a n in i: H is Storv ond His M usic, b /w LISZT ^ r h s G ielen, C o n d u c to r STPL 5 1 1 .5 0 0 W a lte r Klien, P ia n o STPL 5 1 2 .6 5 0 Q u e r trt in D for G u ita r, V iolin, Violn b C ello, b /w MM 3630 Southw est G erm uii R adio O rch.; M O C C H ER IN I: G u itar Q u in te t Story a n d His M usic (M ono only) H oren stein , C o nductor . STPL 5 1 0 .7 0 0 A C hopin R eeito l: S ch erso N o. 3, Op. 3 9 ; B erceuse, B allet S uites from "S w a n L a k e " & "S le e p in g B eauty!' B ottner, G uitor; K ehr, V iolin; L em m en V iola; PROKOFIEV, SERGEI V ie n n a Sym phony; V an R em oortel, 5 ^ j jjq Svm ohonv N o. 6 , Op. 6 8 " P a s to ra le Op. 5 7 ; " M in u te " W a ltx ; Im p ro m p tu N o. 2 , Op. 3 6 ; P alm , C ello STDL 5 0 1 .0 1 0 P rokofiev: .H i* Storv o n d H is M usic, b /w R A C H ­ V ienna Sym phony; K lem perer, C o n d u cto r 56960 E tude N o. 3. Op. 1 0 ; N o c tu rn e N o. 5. O p. 15; F a n ­ M A N IN O F F :' H is Story a n d His M usic (M o n o on lv ^ Sym phony N o. 9 4 in G " S u rp ris e ." b /w M O Z A R T : N .te r a c k e r S u ite, b /w WEBER: In v ita tio n to th e | ta s ie , O p. 4 9 . G uiom ar N ovaes, P iano STPL 5 7 8 1 0 ? " J u p ite r Sym phony n STRAUS’S: “ Dar K o sen k ñ v a lie r" W o ltx e s Sym phony N o. 7 , Op. 9 2 ; Sym phony N o. 8, Op. 9 3 NDR Sym phony O rch.; Ludwig, C o n d u c to r ^ ^^ B om bera S vm phonv: P e rlea , C o n d u cto r London Sym phony O rch.; V an Rem oortel W o ltx e s (C o m p lete) R A C H M A N IN O FF. SERGI , C o nductor STPL 5 1 0 .9 7 0 G uiom ar N ovaes, P iono 5TPL 5B 170r C o n certo No. 2 fo r Piono b O rc h e stra , Op. IB . b /w STPL 5 1 1 .3 9 0 H a y d n : His Story a n d His M usic (M ono §nlv> TCH AIK OVSKY: Piono C oncerto N o. 1 Sym phony N o. 9, Op. 125 "C h o ra l W a ltz e s (C om plete) MM. 3 6 1 0 R ichter, P ian o : M oscow N a tio n a l Sym phony; K on- T 812 O v e rtu re , b /w BORODIN: p o lo v t.¡a n Deince«; Lipp, H oengen, P a tz a k , W ie n er; V ie n n a Pro Ingrid H oebler, P ian o STPL 5 1 1 .9 7 0 • dro sh in , C o n d u c to r (M ono only) PL 1 6 .2 2 0 RIM SKY-K ORSAKOV : R uss.on O v e rtu re , MUSSORG M usico; H orenstein, C o nductor STPL 5 1 0 .0 0 0 T LALO, EDOUARD C ho p in : His Story a n d His M usic (M ono only) C oncerto in D M inor for C ello & O rc h estra , b /w ST. SKY- N io h t on Bold M o u n ta in B e ethoven: His Story a n d His M usic MM 3 5 2 0 C o n certo No. 2 for P iano b O rc h e stra , O p. 18. b /w SHENS: C ello C on certo ; FAURE: Elegie V ie n n a Svm phonv: H ollreiser, Con u c ,^ _ r ^ 490 I M ono only) MM 3 6 0 0 TCHAIK OVSKY: P iano C oncerto N o. 1 CORELLI, ARCANGELO C assado, C ello; V ie n n a Pro M usica, M o r a l t _____ Blumenfcil; V ie n n a M u sik q e se llsch a ft O rch.; G ielen BERLIOZ, HECTOR C orelli: His Story a n d His M usic, b /w V IV A LD I: His C o n d u cto r STPL 5 1 0 .9 2 0 C o nductor STPL 5 1 1 .5 0 0 Sym phonie F a n to stiq u e Story a n d His M usic (M ono only) MM 3 6 7 0 S ym phonie Espognole for Violin & O rc h e stra , Op. 21 R a ch m a n in o ff: His Story a n d His M usic, b /w PROKO- SV Bom0beVrqN S ;m p h o n y : ‘Í S d i S ' . C o n d u c to r ^ ^ B am berg Sym phony; P erlea, DEBUSSY, CLAUDE b/vt_S T SHENS: Violin C oncerto N o. 3 STRL 51 1 .0 9 0 Prelude a l'apres-midi d'un. faune b/w RAVEL: Bolero; ; R osand, V iolin; S outhw est G erm an R adio O rch ;__ FIEV: His Story a n d His M usic (M ono only) M M 3 6 9 0 C onductor CHA BRIER: E tp o n o ; DUKAS: S o rcerer's A p p ren tice Szoke, C on d u cto r STPL 5 1 1 .5 9 0 RAM EAU, JEAN PH ILIPPE B erlioz: His Story a n d His M usic Indes q a la n te (B a lle t S u ite ), b /w LULLY: B ourgeois MM 3 6 4 0 V ienna Sym phony; V an R em oortel, LIADOV, ANATOL S y B a ! X VrgN S y m p h o n ^ MH X e i? e 0r, Conductor 51() 38Q (M ono only I C o n d u cto r STPL 5 1 1 .8 5 0 q en tilo m m e B aba Y a q a, Cp. 5 6 ; E n ch an ted L ake, Op, 6 2 ; Kiki M ain z C h o m b cr O rc h estra ; K ehr, C o nductor BIZET, GEORGES DUKAS. PAUL M ora, Op. 6 3 ; 8 R ussian Folk Songs, O p. 5 8 . b /w STDL 5 0 1 .0 7 0 L 'A rle.ie n n e Suites Nos. 1 if 2. b w GRIEG. S o rc e re r's A p p re n tic e, b /w DEBUSSY : P relu d e; RAVEL: BALAKIREV: lulam cv T ch a ik o v sk y : His Story ond His M usic (M ono o n M Peer G ynt Suites Bolero; CHA BRIER: E spann B om ber Sym phony; P erleo, C o n d u c ts 5 ]0 280 RAVEL. MAURICE B am berg Sym phony; C ouraud. ____ V ie n n a Sym phony; V an R em oortel, Bolero, b /w DEBUSSY: P re lu d e; DUKAS: jo rc e re r; C onductor STPL 5 1 2 .4 1 0 C o n d u c to r STPL 5 1 1 .8 5 0 CHABRIER: E spaña VERDI. GIUSEPPE LISZT, FRANZ V ien n a Sym phony; V an R em oortel, C o n d u cto r V erd i: H is Story o n d His M usic (M ono only) , C orm en (E x c e rp ts' DVORAK, A N T O N IN C onccrti N os. 1 & 2 for Piono & O rehestro STPL 5 1 1 .8 5 0 MM 3680 M odeiro Filocuridt, V ivoldo; C oncerts P asdeloup Slavonic D an ces: Op. 4 6 , N os. 1 b 8; Op. 7 2 , Nos. 2 1 JJrendel, Piano; V ie n n a Pro M usico; 5 1 0 .42C Orc'h.; D ervaux, C on d u cto r STPL 5 1 5 .1 7 0 ' b 7. b /w BRAHM S: H u n g a ria n D ances Viv a l d i, a n t o n io G ielen, C o n d u cto r RIM SKY-KORSAKOV, NIKOLAI ____ C o n certo fo r C ello & O rc h estra , Op. 17, N o. 5. b /w BOCCHERINI, LUIGI B om bera Sym phony; Perleo, C o nductor H u n g a rian ta n t a s i a to r P iano & O reh estro . b w C H O ­ R ussian E astern O v e rtu re , b 'w TCHAIK OVSKY:^ 1 81 2 STPL 5 1 1 .2 4 0 H A Y D N /B O C C H E R IN I: C ello C oncert! C oncerto for Cello C' O rcnesiro in 0 H at. b w P IN : K rokow iok R onds, A n d a n te S p ia n ato & G rande O verrure; B O RO D iN : P olovtsian D ances; M USSORG­ C assado, C ello; B am berg Sym phony; PeMea, ^C on- HAYDN VIV ALDI: Cello C cncerti Sym phony N o. 5 , Op. 9 5 "N ew W o rld " Polonaise Brillon.o SKY: N ig h t on Bald M ou n tain C assado. Cello; B am berg Sym phony; B am berg Sym phony, H ollreiser, C on d u cto r Frankl, Piano; In n sb ru ck Sym phony; W ag n e r, V ienna Svm phonv,’ H ollreiser, C o nductor STPL 5 1 0 .8 1 0 C o n d u cto r STPL 5 1 2 .5 0 0 STPL 51 1 .6 9 0 Four S -osons, Op. 8, N os. 1 -4 P erlea. C onductor STPL 5 1 0 .7 9 0 Biffoll. V iolin; A ccadem ici de M ilano S T rL 5 1 1 .4 8 0 FALLA, M ANUEL DE H u n q a ria n R hapsodies: N os. 2 . 3 . 5, 6 , 11, 13, 15, 17 B am berg Sym phony; P erlea, C o n d u cto r Q u in tet for G u itar & Strings, Op. SO, N o. 3. V ivaldi: His Story o n d His M usic, b w CORELLI: His N ig h ts in th e G a rd en s of Spain, b /w GRIEG: P ian r L iszt: H is Storv o n d His M usic, b /w P A G A N IN I: His S tory a n d His M urie (M ono only) MM 3670 b /w H A Y D N : G u itar Q u a rte t Scheherazade STpL 5 | 0 , a 2 0 , B ottner, G u itar, Kehr, K alafu sz, Lem m cn C oncerto Story a n d His M usic (M ono cnly) MM 3 63 0 N ovaes, P iono; V ien n a Pro M usico; "w B alint V azsonyi, P iano STPL 5 1 2 .3 4 0 W AGN ER, RICHARD & Palm , Strings S T 0L 5 0 1 .0 1 0 ROSSINI, G IO A C C H IN O „ . T a n n h o e u se r (O v e r tu re ); T rista n f t Isolde. M e ister- Swarowsky, C o n d u cto r STPL 5 8 5 2 0 ’!’ LULLY, JEAN BAPTISTE O v e rtu re s: W illiam T ell, B arber of Seville, T h e T h ie v - sin q e r (P re lu d e s ); L ohengrin (P re lu d es to A c t 1 v BOROOIN, ALEXANDER FAURE, GABRIEL B ourgeois q e n tilh am m e (B a lle t S u ite ), b w RAM EAU: Polovtsian D onees, b.'w TCHAIKOVSKY: 1 8 1 2 O ver - inq M aq p ie, C e n e rc n to la , S em iram ide III: B r'dol C horus) Elegie for C ello b O c h ertro , Op. 2 4 . b /w LALO/ ln d ? s G a lan tes B am berg Sym phony; P erleo, C o n d u c to r ^ ^ ^ B om bera C vm phonv: Sw arow sky & ru re; RIM SKY-K ORSAKOV: R ussian Eoster O v ertu re; ST. SAENS: C ello C oncerti M ainz C h am b er O rcher.tra; K ehr, C on d u cto r H ollreisers-C o n d u cto rs STPL S 1 1 .5 5 0 MUSSORGSKY: N H h t un Bald M o u n ta in C assado, C ello; V ie n n a Pro M usico; M oralt, STDL 5 0 1 .0 7 0 ■Vienna S\ mphonv H ollreiser. C o nductor STPL 5 1 0 .9 2 0 Rossini: His Story a n d His M usic (M ono only) W a g n e r: His Story a n d His M usic (M ono only) MENDELSSOHN, FELIX MM 3600 C onductor STPL 5 1 1 .6 9 0 MM 3650 FOSTER, STEPHEN Concert« Nos. I & 2 for P iono & O rc h estra F oster: His Story a n d His M usic, b /w SOUSA: His WEBER, CARL M A RIA VON „ u . BRAHMS, JO HAN NES K ryiakou, Piano: W e s tp h a lia Sym. & V ienna Pro SA IN T-SA ËN S, CAM ILLE In v ita tio n to th e D ance, O p. 6 5 . b /w TCH A IK O V SK Y . C oncerto No. 2 to r Piono b O rc h estra , Op. 8 3 Story a n d His M usi« (M ono only) MM 3620 M usica; Sw arow sky Cx R eichert, C onductors C oncerto for C ello b O rc h e stra , Op. 3 3 . b /w FAURE: N u tc ra c k e r S uite; STRAUSS: "D e r R osenkovolier Sandor, Piano; Southw est G erm an R adio O rch.; FRANCK, CESAR STPL 5 1 4 .1 2 0 kleqic; LALO: C ello C oncerto W a ltz e s ) R einhardt, C onductor STPL 5 1 0 .9 9 0 Sym phony in D M inor; Sym phonic V a ria tio n s for Sym phony No. 3 in A M inor, Op. 5 6 * Scotch ; M id ­ C assa d o C ello; V ien n a Pro M usico; M oralt, C o n ­ B am bcrq Sym phony; H ollreiser, C o n d u c to r ^ ^ P ian o b O rc h estra su m m er N iq h t's D ream (E xcerpts) d u c to r STPL 5 1 0 .9 2 0 H u n g a rian D onees: Nos. 1, 3, 5 - 7 , 10, 17, 19, 2 1 . F ruaoni, Piono; V ie n n a Pro M usico; G ielen, fo u th w e st G erm an R adio O rch.; V an R em oortel, COLLECTIONS b w DVORAK: Slavonic D ances C o nductor STPL 5 1 2 .2 9 0 C oncerto N o. 3 for Violin & O rc h e stra , Op. 6 1 . b /w B am berg Sym phony: P erlea, C on d u cto r C o nductor STPL 5 1 1 .3 1 0 LALO: Sym phonie E spqqnole THE COSSACKS! . _ . _ „ STPL 5 1 1 .2 4 0 GERSH W IN , GEORGE Sym phony No. 4 in A, Op. 9 0 " I ta lia n . b /w T C H A I­ R osond, V iolin; Southw est G erm an R adio O rch., Folk S onas: Song of th e V olqo B o atm en , E venm q Belts, G ershw in: H is Story a n d His M usic (M ono KOVSKY: C apriccio Szoke, C o nductor STPL 5 1 1 .5 9 0 A lona th e V olqo; T e D eum ; P a te r N o ste r (R im skv- Sym phony N o. 4 in F. M inor, Op. 9 8 O nly) MM 3 700 V ie n n a M u sik q e se llsch a ft O rch.; V an R em oortel, K o rsa k o v ); C redo (T ch a ik o v sk y ) b O th e rs NCR Sym phony O rch.; S d h m id t-lsserste d t, C onductor STPL 5 1 1 .2 1 0 Sym phony N o. 3 in C M inor, O p. 7 8 O rg an C o nductor STPL 5 1 2 .2 7 0 GILBERT b SULLIVAN C horus of th e Block Sea C ossacks; H o t ^ f ” ' • H a g u e P hilh arm o n ic; Fcike A sm a, O rq a n : R oberto C o nductor STPL 5 1 5 .0 4 0 M ikado (H ig h lig h ts) STPL 5 1 6 .1 3 0 M end elsso h n : His Slory a n d His M usic (M ono o n ly ) -B enzi, C - onductor STPL 5 1 2 .9 7 0 * B iohm s: His Story a n d His M usic M M Jrt wV MM 3580 P ira te s of P e n sa n e * (H ig h lig h ts) STPL 5 1 6 .1 4 0 (M ono only* p lu s m u c h m o r e A N D M A N Y , M A N Y M U L T IP L E -R E S O R D S E T S - b y — Brahm s — B u xteh u d e — C h a brier 2 -R E C O R D S E T S — $3 96 3 -R E C O R D S E T S — * 4 — Corelli D V O R A K — — Debussy B A R T O K — B E E T H O V E N — C o m p le te C h a m b e r M u s ic — Faure C h a m b e r M u s ic fo r F lu te C o m p le t e S o lo P ia n o M u s ic — M en d elsso hn K o h o n Q t. e t a l. (4 -3 -r e c o r d s e ts ) J e a n -P ie r r e R a m p a V eta l ( 1-3 -r e c o r d se t G y o r g y S a n c lo r ( 3 - 3 - r e c o r d s e t s ) — Haydn B E E T H O V E N — M O Z A R T — B A C H — — R avel C o m p le t e S tr in g Q u a r t e t s C o m p le t e S o lo P ia n o M u s ic — Schon berg C o m p le t e S o lo H a r p s ic h o r d M u s ic B a r c h e t Q t. (3 -3 -r e c o r d s e ts ) A lfr e d B r e n d e l ( 6 - 3 - r e c o r d s e t s ) M a r tin G a llin g (6 -3 -r e c o r d s e ts ) — Schubert C H O P IN — P R O K O F IE V — — V iv a ld i CH — C o m p le t e S o lo P ia n o M u s ic C o m p ie te O r g a n M u s ic N o c tu r n e s (c o m p le te ) — a n d others G y o rg y S a n d o r. (2 -3 -r e c o r d s e ts ) I n g r id H a e b le r , p . ( 1 - 2 - r e c o r d s e t ) W a i t e r K r a ft (6 -3 -r e c o r d s e ts ) HOURS— MONDAY thru FRIDAY 9:30 ■9; SATURDAY 9:30 • 6 ; SUNDAY 12:00 • 5 * W e d n e s d a y , D e c e m b e r 4, 1968 13 Michigan State N e w s, E a st L a n sin g , M ich ig a n S P R IN G E V E N T if, f- COMPUTER CENT ^jgfSUSS^'f 'i‘ Activities planned * , fÿ. f r Water Carny A tentative schedule of events By DEBORAH FITCH for increased on-campus living unit participation in the event fro the weekend is as follows. - State N ew s Staff Writer Thursday, May 22 -- Mad Since the com pletion of the this year. Once a them e for Water Carnival réévaluation, the Carnival has been decided Hatter's Midway work on the,'“ spring w eekend” upon, representatives from the Friday. May 23 -- Mad H atter’s Midway, Water Car­ idea proposed in the re-eval­ executive board w ill visit every nival, tapping of Blue Key and uation has shifted into high living unit on cam pus to dis­ cuss float ideas with residence Excalibur m em bers. gear. Bob Bicek, publicity chair­ hall float co m m ittees and be Saturday, May 24 - (morn­ man /o r the weekend, said that available to offer them any ing) Shaw Hall canoe race the •'concept is “ all new ” and assistance necessary with their (afternoon) Spartantown,*\fa,v. eral and state governm ents. the C om m ittee on the duration present one of • open houses a open only two term s, w e ques­ per year. of Graduate Study that the Uni­ few tim es per sem ester in the -th a t the resource facilities of tion whether there can be valid versity foreign language re­ residence hall lounges is under Bill Murray, asst, director of the undergraduate library re­ statistics showing that the open quirem ent for graduate students consideration at the U niversity adm issions, indicated that he did main unaffected by the propo­ system is inferior.” be discontinued. The recom ­ of Illinois. not anticipate any changes in the sal to close the stacks. Students are concerned, he mendation stated that languages The proposed policy is expect­ open house policy in the near -th a t undergraduates who said, that their browsing priv­ m ay still be required by the in­ ed to parallel the closed-door. future. show need for the m aterials in ileges will be lim ited, that the dividual departm ents, but they the stacks w ill have a ccess to paging system w ill involve too are not to be required univer­ S P A R T A N S H O P P IN G C E N T E R them through a paging system much red tape, tim e and work sally of all graduate students. T R O W B R I D G E A N D H A R R IS O N and special perm its to visit the for librarians, that no policy The Council also approved a V ^ E . L A N S IN G for im plem entation of special resolution of the Academ ic DOT r ' stacks. perm its exists, that no shelf Rights and R e sponsibilites -th a t m ost public and univer-. lists have been com piled, and Phone 3 3 2 -6 2 2 9 C om m ittee and the Educational S to re H o u rs : ?»' Sity libraries have very effec-'- that the library's action m ay P olicies C om m ittee thai there tive closed or lim ited stack sys- be a violation of section 1.5.0.2. M o n .-S a t. be no all-U niversity regulation DISCOUNT 9 a .m . to 9 :3 0 p .m . • terns. of the Academ ic Freedom R e­ requiring class attendance. Sunday port dealing with the necessity Proposed as a revision of the 10 a .m . to 6 :3 0 p .m . of showing dem onstrable need statem ent in the catalog, the for policy changes. resolution states that each in­ The Council moved to refer structor is to be responsibce for (continued from page one) V m onthly drop since Decem ber the motion to the Faculty Li­ brary C om m ittee because the Council m em bers w ere not pre­ determining the relevance of at­ tendance and for informing his cla sses of his regulation at the SUPER DISCOUNTS 1967, the month after devalua­ pared to act on it beginning of the course. On HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS tion. r - This left total reserves at , $2.490 billion, the low est since October 1967, the month before Britain cut the value of the 1 Christinas Wrap Foil $1.09 "> pound from $2.80 to $2.40. H O B I E ’ S I 6 r o l l s to a bundle » The pound is allowed to fluc- l tuate between $2.42 and $2.38 12ms. Light & Dark 1 Chocolates sc°s°n9r“""9S 5 1 . 6 6 on the exchange market. N ew s . of the treasury figures sent the pound down two points to /l $2.3841. Continental foreign ex­ change m arkets were closing, 5 preventing a further drop in Europe. 1 1 a . m . Evening in Paris 2PC S" V » I S i b o I S p r a y co lo g ne & Bath p o w d e r On the New York foreign ex­ change m arket, the pound i s w h e n w e o p e n . dropped to $2.3835 in what deal­ ers called heavy selling. The Bank of England w as under­ J u s t F o r L u n c h . 1 Christmas Cards 25 b°°x o o o o n 1 R e lig i o u s box a s s o r tm e n t stood to have dipped again into If you w o rk on cam pus o r In E a s t L a n s in g , c a ll H O B IE ’ S fo r reserves at this point to buy pounds and steady the market. Britain had hoped West Ger- lu n c h . W e 'll d e liv e r y o u r H O B IE ’S b e fo re y o u r lun ch b re a k to avoid w a itin g . H O B IE ’ S o ffe rs a c h o ic e o f R o as t B e e f, T u r ­ 1Hampshire House o o o o o m any would resolve the money crisis in Europe by increasing the value of its mark in rela- key o r S a la m i on loaves o f F re n c h b re a d w ith p ro vo lon e c h e e s e , le ttu c e , tom ato es and s easo nin gs. D iv id e a 1 2 -in c h e r w ith a frie n d o r a 2 4 -ln c h e r w ith the o ffic e . Fruit Cake 2 ibs. b° x tion to other currencies. This would have taken pressures off the pound and the franc. Ger- 1 Kingsmen Cologne s1.37 T o d a y A t 1 4 ,5 o z, r e g u l a r - - $ 1 . 5 0 ,< o ' • m any refused and offered trade G® concessions instead. To cope with the crisis Bri­ tain adopted a series of m ea­ sures last month to squeeze the 1Revolving Poker Chip Rack $3.55 1 w ith 200 C hips E r n s t E n g e l Is r e c o g n i z e d i consum er and discourage im- 1 2 - a n d 2 4 - in c h as the f o r e m o s t s k i w e a r j ports. I Lord Chesterfield d e s i g n e r In A m e r i c a . Men’s Biliiold $1.77 | The m ove w as aim ed at im- S P A R T A N S H O P P I N G CENTER E a s t L a n s in g S to re f proving B ri’ain’s trade balance I to strengthen the pound, som e- j thing devaluation w as supposed H o r r l a o n & T r o w b r l d g » Road» ACROSS F R O M CAMPUS Sun. 3_p.m.-l a.m. Mon.- T h u r » . 11 a.m.-2 a.m. | 4 to 7 P.M. | to do but hasn’t yet. The added Fri.-Sat. • blow in the form of a large 11 a.m.-3 a.m. Let Us Fill Your Prescription» t drain, on the nation's reserves 3 5 1 - 3 8 0 0 He m a y not t a l k about his g r e a t s k lf a s h lo n s but he lo ve s to t a l k about s k ii n g . So stop In, c h a i, and h a v e s o m e hot c i d e r w ith us. cam e before the new squeeze FREE. EAST DELIVERY Save On Ail Cick rioom Needs m easures w ere able to produce \ any effect. W e d n e sd a y , D e c e m b e r 4, 1968 14 Michigan State N e w s, E ast L a n sin g , M ich ig a n STATE NEWS STATE NEWS CLASIFIED O n ly T w o D a y s L e ft T o A v o id " H o ld L is t” . P a y N o w R oom 3 4 7 S t u d e n t S e r v ic e s . 355-8255 CLASSIFIED 355-8255 . .« « a * For Rent For Rent Auto Service & Parts *. t- ta ................... JL COUPLE-THREE /s u itt GNC I*** «*• - • i* » ’ 1 1 * State News does odk EAST LANSING apartment. Girl to Burcham Woods starting winter term. MASON BODY SHOP ,812 East share' luxury apartment. $58 33 basement apartment. Fireplace, 351-3273 3-12 4 perm it ra c ia l o r religious Kalamazoo St Since 1940. month. 372-4159. S-12/4 Near campus. IV 2-7334 1-12/4 discrim ination in its ad* Complete auto painting and col­ ONE GIRL for winter Penthouse in ONE TO three males to share fur­ w tls ln g c o l u m n s . Tbe lision service. IV5-0258. C M R YOU Scats Newa w ill not accept ONE FOUR man unit available In Evergreen Arms and three four- River House apartment. 351-6895. nished apartment. Winter, spring. Seniors and grads preferred. 1214 3-12/8 advertising which discrim - CAR WASH: 25c. Wash, wax; vacuum man units available at University East Kalamazoo. 5-12 6 AUTOMOTIVE U-DO-IT 430 South Clippert, back Terrace. Call State Management, ONE GIRL needed winter term only. Inatea a g a i n s t religion, of KoKoBar. C-12 5 ONE GIRL for Cedar Village win­ EMPLOYMENT 382-8687. C $65 month, close to campus. Call race, color o r national o r­ ter and spring. Call 332-4468. 5-12/6 351-3651. 3-12/6 FOR RENT ig in . ACCIDENT PROBLEM’ Call Kalama- FOR SALE loo Street Body Shop Small dents ONE GIRL winter, spring. $60. Across FURNISHED APARTMENT for cou­ to large wrecks. American and for­ ple. B edroor^ w \“T en t*'nin8 LOST & FOUND eign cars. Guaranteed work. 482- NORTHWIND from Mason. 332-6362. 3-12/4 and Uvir Q t v * . Lansing, near PERSONAL 12M. 2628 East Kalamazoo. C ¿A R M S ONE MAN for two man apartment Frandor. »so. 353-5030 or 372- PEANUTS PERSONAL winter term. Possibly spring. North- 4771 4-12/5 SNOW TIRES Slightly used 6 50x13 Faculty Apartments REAL ESTATE Automotive Fits, Corvairs. Comets, Valiants. wind apartments. 351-3832. 3-12/6 SERVICE * Darts. $25 pair. Call after 6 p.m. 351-7880 COUPLE--ONE bedroom. Furnished TWO MEN for four man apartment Utilities included. $135. 332-2803. TRANSPORTATION FORD FAIRLANE 1965, wagon, white 351-8707. 3-12 8 HAVE APARTMENT, will rent, all winter and spring terms. $50 month. 4-12/6 with red interior. V8 automatic. Snow WANTED tires and rims. Yours for $600 as it utilities paid. One block from cam­ 489-2282. 3-12/6 Aviation pus. Available now. Call NEJAC-- NEEDED--TWO men--winter, spring stands. 372-0482 S'124 337-1300. C-12/6 FOURTH MALE needed winter, spring. term. $55 month. Call 332-2427. 3-12 6 DEADLINE FRANCIS AVIATION. So easy to $61.25/month. Five minute walk to FORD 1967 four door LTD 8 cylinder ONE GIRL needed winter and spring. 390 engine. One owner. 24.000 miles. learn in the PIPER CHEROKEE. Berkey. Ample parking. 351-3414. CEDAR VILLAGE: Four man apart­ 1 P .M . one c la s s day b e ­ Special $5 offer. 484-1324. C Haslett Apartments. 351-0879. 4-12/6 1-12/4 ment. Sublet winter, spring and/or Excellent condition. 332-3135. 5-12 6 fo r e p u b lic a tio n . summer. 351-0869. 3-12/6 E m p lo y m e n t CAMPUS HILL Apartments. 2 bedroom FOUR MAN duplex, furnished, car­ C a n c e lla tio n s - 12 noon one FORD 1960. Six, stick, good trans­ for sublease starting winter term. 351- peted, two bedrooms. 551 Virginia c la s s day b e fo re p u b lic a ­ NEED ONE or three winter; winter - portation. New tires. Battery $125. 0614. 4-12/6 Street. Phone 355-9758. 3-12/6 TYP1STS-5 evenings per week. 4-10 spring. Reduced rates 731. 351- tio n . 355-1201 3' 125 6226. 3-12 6 70 wpm with accuracy. Call 337- TWO GIRLS needed winter and spring. REDUCED RATES: Girls, winter IMPALA SS 1965. 327. Excellent con­ 1651,3-5 p.m. W Milford Apartments. $60. 332-5452. term Rivers Edge Apartment. 351- GIRL WANTED winter term. Luxury PHONE dition. Dark green 351-3401 after 3-12/5 6806. 3-12/6 apartment. Reduced rent Call 351- 4 p.m. 5-12/5 BOYS SUPERVISOR Must be 21 0607. 3-12 6 355-8255 Good salary, fringe benefits. Must be available at 4 p.m.. four days a NEED ONE girl winter or winter and spring. Delta. 351-0097. 3-12/5 LUXURY APARTMENT, Available for JAGUAR 1966 XKE Roadster White nine months or part of--four man ONE TO four men for luxury, super­ week 882-5717. ask for Mr. Leo­ RATES AM-FM radio. Nice shape. 332-5619. 4-12 6 nard. 3-12/6 SPARROW AREA: Furnished, carpeted, Campus Hill. $235 per month. 351- 5776. 3-12/6 vised apartment across from Williams Dorm. 351-3786. 3-12 6 1 day . . . . . . . $ 1.50 2 bedrooms, fireplace. Utilities. MARLIN 1965 Rambler. White with STUDENT-STUDENT wife with trans­ Adults. 332-8704. 4-12/6 ONE MAN winter and spring. Waters 15tf p e r w o rd p e r day portation Housework Monday. Wed­ ONE MAN needed for two man Edge- white vinyl interior, 1959 Cadillac Edge Apartments. 351-3363. 3-12/6 3 days . . . . . . . $ 4 .0 0 hearse. $200. 485-3059 3-12/4 nesday. Friday mornings. $1.75 COMPLETE CHALET apartment on wood Apartments. Reduced rates. 13 l / 2f p e r w ord p e r day hour. Call 332-8459 3-12 6 "Come on in, Mom and Dad! I want you River available winter and spring. 351- CEDAR VILLAGE-need man to take Close campus. 351-6026. 5-12 6 5 d a y s .................... $ 6 ,5 0 MG-B 1964-5. Excellent mechanical 4280. 4-18/6 over lease. Call Pete. 351-9063. condition. New tires, recently paint­ STUDENT PART time, four hours, 3-12/6 NEW CEDAR Village. Reduced rent. 13tf p e r w o rd p e r day ed One owner-professor. Must five nights per week, to manage to meet my ro o m atef’ WANTED ONE man to sublet apart­ Need one girl starting winter. 351- (based on 10 w o rd s p e r ad) sell now. Call 351-4139 preferably sates crew of six boys. Should ment winter term. One block from ONE GIRL needed for winter and 4294 . 3-12 4 at dinner time. 3-12 6 better $50 weekly Must have car. campus. Evergreen Arms. 351-8103. spring for Cedar Village apart­ T h e r e w ill be a 50tf s e rv ic e Call 351-7842.12-4:30. M 2'4 3-12/5 ment. 351-4939. 3-12/6 TWO GIRLS needed. Chalet, starting and bookkeeping c h arge if MUSTANG 1965-three speed, six. winter. Reduced rent. 351-0953. 3-12 4 th is ad is not paid w ith in good condition, green, black in­ DENTAL ASSISTANT - Downtown Specialist. Experienced and ma­ Employment For Rent GRADUATE OR working girl to share ONE MAN needed winter, spring. Ri­ FOUR ROOMS, one bedroom. Partly terior. Must sell. $950 332-5962 one bedroom apartment. 351-6699 verside East. Phone 351-0435. Room­ one w eek. 3-12 6 ture. Resume in writing. 1107 Bank TV RENTALS for students. Low eco­ after 5 p.m. 4-12/6 m ates MacLaren, Hunter. Gould. 3-12/6 furnished. First floor. Utilities paid of Lansing, Lansing. Michigan 48933 BABYSITTER TO live in. Phone 641- nomical rates by the term or month. Garage. Close to campus. Adult or T h e State N ew s w ill be 3*12 6 6509 or 641-6970. 5-12/5 UNIVERSITY TV RENTALS, 484- older couple. Lease ED 2-3454 aft­ MUSTANG 1966 six cylinder stick. ONE MAN for two man apartment. ONE OR two girls winter and spring. 9263 C Cedar Greens. Call 351-3094. 4-12/6 ernoons. 3-12/4 re s p o n s ib le only fo r the Call 355-9112 after 4 p.m. 1-12/4 Eden Roc. 351-6518. 3-12/6 EMPLOYERS OVERLOAD Company. f i r s t day’ s in c o rr e c t in s e r ­ ANN ARBOR Experienced secretaries, typists to NICE ON Eq ' furnished. Close tio n . ______ __ MUSTANG 1965. 289 engine. Four stick. Complete overhaul. $999 641- work on temporary assignments. Never COLORED TV Rental $8 per week, $24 per month. Call J. R. CULVER AVAILABLE JANUARY 1st - attrac­ tive three room apartment, air con­ ONE MAN for winter and spring terms. Only $43.75 per month. tocam pusK ENTE D4”8753. 6408. 4-12 6 POLICE a fee. Phone 487-6071. C-12/5 COMPANY. 351-8862. C ditioned. unfurnished except refriger­ Call 351-0397. 3-12/6 3-12 4 ator and stove. One block from A&P ............... y GIRL NEEDED: Luxury, carpeted, OLDSMOB1LE 1965 ’88". Low mile­ DEPARTMENT FEMALE HELP WANTED. Temporary TV RENTALS G.E. 18" Portable, store. Adults. ED 2-4886 4-12/6 GIRL NEEDED for quiet two girl furnished apartment. Air-condi­ Automotive age. power steering, brakes. Good office work. Full or part time. Apply in person. 3308 South Cedar. Suite $8 50 per month including stand apartment. Close to campus, very tioned. sauna, pool. 351-3095 . 3-12 4 tires. 332-1485. 3-12 4 R e p re s e n ta tiv e s o f th e Ann Call J. R. Culver Co. 351-8862. APARTMENTS (STUDENTSI. Avail­ convenient. Winter, spring. 351- AUSTIN HEALEY 1964. navy blue, II. Lansing. Michigan. 4-12/6 able at once. Four room furnished, 9457. 3-12/6 ■ A r b o r P o lic e D e p a rtm e n t w ill 210 Albert Street, E ast Lansing C NOW LEASING new deluxe one bed­ good condition. Must sell. $1250. OPEL KADETT 1988. Two-door se­ _______ «, v $150. ED 2-8531, IV 5-6581. 4-12/6 351-3020 3-12 6 be in te rv ie w in g f o r th e p o s i­ GREAT LAKES EMPLOYMENT for STUDENT APARTMENTS. We have room apartments. Corner Burcham dan. 13,000 miles. 355-2393. 332- permanent positions for men and Apartments NEED TWO girls for winter term. Four apartments for ten boys for win­ and Alton. January 1st occupancy. 5702. 1-12 4 tion s o f P a tro lm e n D e c e m b e r BUICK 1956. Engine excellent, body women in office, sales, technical. IV blocks from campus. 332-0143. 3-12/5 ter term, two through four student Furnished or unfurnished. 332-3135. 4 th fro m 12 noon to 4 p .m . 5-12 6 fair $65 or best offer 351-0801. PLYMOUTH 1962-four door. V-8 2-1543. C-12/5 ONE MAN winter term. Waters Edge apartments, one and two student 4-12 6 and 6 p .tn , to 9 p .m . a t the FURNISHED STUDIO apartment for engine Black, good condition. Ex­ Apartments. Apartment 216. 351- apartments. From $60 per pfrson. U n iv e r s ity Inn M o t e l, 1100 MALE AND female help wanted. Mail­ one or two girls. Parking. 251 Furnished including all utilities. ONE MAN needed for 4 man apart­ cellent student car. $250. Call IV 2- 6784. 3-12/4 T r o w b r id g e , E a s t Lansing» ing room work during Christmas break. Spartan Avenue. Phone 332-6078. 4-12/6 Inquire 103 Northlawn. Corner of ment. Beginning winter $40 351- CAMARO 1968 $200 plus payments. 8919 after 5 p.m. 3-12/6 Apply in person at 3308 South Ce­ Abbott between 10 a.m .-6 p.m.. apart­ 6264. 3-12 4 Call Karen after 5 p.m 332-6148 Anyone In te re s te d in d is c u s s ­ INEWLY MARRIED? 15-12/6 dar. Suite 11, Lansing. 4-12/6 UNIVERSITY VILLA: Available Jan­ m ent 5. 3*12/6 PONTIAC GTO 1967 Power steering, ing job o p p o rtu n itie s should power brakes, automatic. Silver com e along o r telephone f o r an FINANCE your education by operat­ TANGLE WOOD uary lst-one. two. three, four man CAMARO 1968 3% 375 hp. Burgundy, convertible. Must sell. Reasonable. apartments. Just a few left so call TWO MAN apartment. $160. deposit black vinyl top. black interior Lots 351-5776. 3-12 6 ap p o in tm en t d u rin g th e tim e ing a small business. If you arid sev­ APARTMENTS us early. GOVAN MANAGEMENT paid. Call 485-4768. Evenings. 5-12/5 of extras Excellent condition. IV 2- lis te d . 3 5 1 -5 5 0 0 on D e c e m ­ eral of your fellow students can pool 1 Bdrm ., unfur.,‘from 1124.50 635 Abbott 351-7910. 0-12/6 4673 1-12 4 your resources and set up a work 2 Bdrm ., unfur., from 139.50 PONTIAC 1959 $25; 1961 Plymouth b e r 4 th . schedule Texaco can provide you with RIVERS EDGE: Two <0; '" for luxury CASH & CARRY $130. 646-6114. 3-12 6 TWO GIRLS wanted New Cedar Vil­ apartment, p C N T E D pus. 351- CHEVELLE 1966 EXS Sport coupe an opportunity to be in business and (351-7880 lage. Winter-Spring. 351-6194 . 3-12/6 7707 ” 10-12/6 go to school at the same time. For * V-8, automatic. 32.000 miles After APARTMENT for two students Fur­ PORSCHE 911 372-0495 after 7 p.m. CHRISTMAS MONEY: Delivery boys. full information call Bob Polen or 5p.m. 355-9793 . 3-12 5 $2 to $3 hour. Also phone girls and Paul Langenkamp in Lansing at IV 2- nished. 12« S.fci t E l ) ive- East ONE MAN needed winter, spring. Ce­ dar Village. 332-0119. 3-12/6 HOLE IN ONE! Maybe not, but check 3-12 6 inside help. Make your Christmas Unsing, f t t « * 1 -nonth. 882-2316 today's Classified Ads for good buys CHEVROLET 11-1966. Blue. six. 0112 or 351-9061 evenings. 4-12/6 money now. VARSITY DRIVE-IN3-12 6 or IV 7-3216. »-12/6 in golf clubs! automatic, heater, radio, good tires THUNDERBIRD 1963. $400 or best - . HASLETT APARTMENT eed one CHURCH NURSERY attendant for Excellent condition 4027 $1,150 485- 3-12 6 offer Leave name and telephone at 489-6721 until 3 p.m 3-12 6 MALE GRADUATE student to live as Resident Advisor at Albion College Co-op. Will provide room, board and church in Okemos area. Sunday 9:45 to 12:30 and 6:45 to 8:30. Own trans­ portation. Call 332-2133 9-12 p.m. NORBER MANOR APARTMENTS 5611 Richwood. Brand new, central aiir-conditioning, pool, fully carpet­ girl winter term. Reduced rent. 332- 2735. 2-12/5 Spartan Bicycle Storage ■ n s ty ^ CHEVROLET lent running Doug 337-9180 1960. stick, six.excel­ condition. $65 Call 4-12 6 VOLKSWAGEN 1968 like new. Asking $1595 655-1022 Prof's car. 3-12 6 $100 month. Call 629-3142 or write 402 East Porter. Albion. Michigan 49224. 3-12 6 Monday to Friday. EARN EXTRA money for Christmas and buv your gifts at discount. VI- 3-12/5 ed Two bedroom for 8165. 393- CVi. PERSONABLE GUY Delta Arms take 0 ONE MAN needed for 4 man apart­ ment. $65 month. Capitol Villa. 351- 8309. 3-12/6 F r e e P i c k - U p and D e l i v e r y I n s u r e d S to ra g e p rin ts CHEVROLET 1965 Impala Sport Coupe Low mileage, mint condition VOLKSWAGEN 1966 Bus. Good con­ NEED three young men for display VIANE WOODARD COSMETICS. IV over lease. Free naonths rent. 351- 5768. 6-12/6 WANTED: Male graduate to share large one bedroom apartment. 351- 3 55-8156 instant litho printing dition Best offer 484-8770 after 5:30 department C all393-14301-5p.m. O 5-8351. C-12/6 Stereo, new tires, many extras $1100 3709. 3-12/6 351-8647. ' 5-12 6 p.m. 3-12 6 AUTOMOTIVE SALESMAN: Make NEAR COLLEGE Furnished and un­ 5 0 & S & 3 $ 2 0 0 Second p ro fe s s io n - evenings & w eekends. M en a n d ,w o m ­ $1,000 plus a term. No experience furnished apartments $125 for two or APARTMENT TO share. Graduate, P IZ Z A 1000 copies . . loss than 11 each CHEVROLET 1966 Impala 2 door VOLKSWAGEN 1965 Karmann Ghia. 27 necessary if you think you like sell­ four persons. House for four people student. Own bedroom, parking, close BVzxll, 20 lb. whila or colon hardtop V-8. standard transmission, m p.g.. new tires and battery. $995 e n . $350 p a r t tim e m onthly ing Call Mr. Taylor 372-5234. C-12/6 campus. $60. 332-0436. 3-12/5 $150. Call 351-5323. 6-12/6 351-8375 after 4:30 p.m 4-12 6 g u a ra n te e i ' you m e e t o ur vinyl top. radio, and whitewalls. 351- 5652. 4-12 6 re q u ir e m e n ts . Students and WANTED: MORE students for RENT- TWO OR THREE take over lease. Personalize your ONE MAN needed for three man VOLKSWAGEN 1966 Excellent condi­ tion Original owner. Best offer over te a c h e rs : $800 f u ll tim e , t e le ­ A-STUDENT. Call 351-5130 for ap­ apartment. The Chalet. 351-3874. Burcham Woods, now. 351-4098. 4-12/6 Christmas letter. COMET 1961 Excellent running shape pointment. 7-12/6 v 3-12/6 Needs rear spring. $100 355- $1,000 Phone 339-2263 after 6 p.m. 3-12 4 phone: 4 8 4 -4 4 7 5 — - - - ..................................... - 7 * MEN: CLEAN, quiet, cooking, parking See our Engraved 8715. ■ 3-12 6 EARN EXTRA CASH for Christmas WHERE THE GIRLS ARE! They're FOUR MAN apartment to sublease. Supervised. Close to campus. 487- _«...................................................... reading the “ Personal" column in Begin Winter term. Rivers Edge. M ulticolor Car necessary. Call 351-7319. O 5753 or 485-8836 ° CORVAIR 1965 Excellent condition. Get ALL YOU PAY FOR! Check best today’s Classified Ads. Try it now! 351-7266. 7-12/6 Radio. 4 speed 337-1414 after 5 rental buys in today's Classified Ads SALESMAN. HOURLY pay plus com­ letterheads pm 3-12 5 mission furnished. Phone COURTESY VOLKSWAGEN CAMPER 1964. Fully DART GT: A beautiful red convertible. equipped New tires. Sacrifice. Best WATER CONDITIONING INCORPOR­ 50 letters only ATED. 332-0881. 3-12 5 Four speed, new tires, like new offer Phone 393-0825 3-12 4 $3.50 $800 Drive. 487*3365. 4913 DODGE 1960 two door, automatic, Applewood 3-12 4 VOLKSWAGEN 1963 Camper Bus. Ex­ cellent condition 351-0953 3-12 4 VICINITY BURGER King Babysitter winter term from 3 to 5 p.m. daily. 351-9556 after 5 p.m 3-12 4 W C i r c l e D o rm s : O th e r D o rm s 1 4 5 6 E. M ichig an A ve. Telephone: 4 8 9 -3 3 0 3 power steering. $80 Call after 4 3 5 1 -8 8 7 0 ___ 3 5 1 -7 1 0 0 p.m.. 355-3002. 3-12 6 FALCON 1960: New tires, new ex­ haust. good transportation 351-6912 $95 1-12 4 BEECHWOOD This Year ACROSS 26. N e u te r pronoun FALCON 1960-Excellent mechanical condition $100 337-1721 2-12 5 2 Bedroom Apartments Now Available for Get Yourself 1. Provoke 5 . Ahead 7 . V essel for 27 29. 39. Sun god Like Q u ib b le h e a tin g liq u id s 32. B itte r v e tc h NOAH’S ARK WINTER A Gift: 1 1 . G olconda 1 2 . M y s e lf 13 . Gush 34. H e ra ld ic roundel guies 3 8 . H uge w ave -1-1 p Ë iP lA i ■ i R PETS TERM From The 14 . H and le 15 . D efu n c t 3 9 . G reat Lake 4 0 . C lim b in g p la n t p A R A ■ 17 . D iocese 18 . C him ney pipe 19. B ib. high 4 1 . M e a n tim e 4 3 . Russ, inland sea u P O o N ■ NOW $50 p e r p e rs o n Apartment Store p rie s t 2 0 . Innocuous 2 2 . Fr. pronoun 4 4 . A n im a l’s hom e 4 5 . Live 4 6 . Gr. le tte r 4 9 . Lord Avon DOWN 2. C lo th e s m o th genus 2 3 . T ip s te r 4 7 . D o m e stic slave 3 . G o'e The diversification of our business provides you with 2 4 . Tow ard 4 8 . Exists 1. S h a tte r 4. T u rm e ric OPEN Two , T h re e o r F o u r-C o s ts no m o r e one-stop serv ic e to satisfy YOUR living requirem ents. If you a re investigating apartment livin g,a v isito r ca ll 2 * 1 12 *> % 7 11 8 §'... 10 5 . E g g o ts h . 6 . Link 7. Pagoda • L a rg e A pa rtm e n ts o rn a m en t to our o ffice definitely can elim inate the"legw orkMof 1 H» 1 -8 weekdays o 5 m in u te w a lk to campus apa rtment-hunting. 14 17 % 18 15 (9 S. In fle c tio n s 9. C ores • New fu rn itu re EAST LANSING MANAGEMENT GO % 22 10. P a in te r ! 6. H aving le ft a 10-6 Saturdays • A i r c o n d itio n in g C a r p e t in g 20 2i 21 2 if 2 7 . S pring back 2 8 . B oxing rings 3 0 . F elonies 38 i 39 40 The Christmas 42 % 41 3 : 14-4.eo 3 3 . Shiny m a te ria l •H 45 % 46 3 5 . P alebuck 3 6 . G rape co nserve Holidays 4s 17 % 48 i 49 3 7 . W ood gum 4 2 . P rior to ■4 Ann S t., E . L a n s in g 1 % 4 3 . The Rail S p litte r" 2 2 0 A lb e r t-A b o v e K n a p p 's C a m p u s C e n t e r -3 5 1 -8 8 6 2 3 5 1 -0 4 3 7 W e d n e sd a y , D e c e m b e r 4, 1968 15 Michigan State N e w s, E a st L a n s in g , M ich ig a n For Rent For Rent For Sale GERMAN STEREO (Grundig Majes­ Medical school MAN NEEDED for Delta Arms Apart­ LARGE 3 bedroom unfurnished. Block tic) AM-FM. Excellent sound. Best medical • education funds, a The com m ittee issued a to campus. Many extras. Available (continued from page one) ments. Winter term. Call 351-8073. offer. 355-5388 Jim. 3-12/4 letter of reasonable assurance well-documented report which 3-12/6 now. Phone332-0318after4 p.m. To introduce the new MSU 4-12/4 that the MSU m edical school stressed the sta te 's need for FIRST DAY cover stamp issues since m edical students to clinical WH.LIAMSTON, NINE miles from 1960 Offers 355-5388 Jim . 3-12/4 would be accredited w a s-sen t more physic wsre wr?v:* ’ m ed icin e ,- the Edward W college. One bedroom apartm ent DESPERATE: ONEman winter.spring. to the I '.S. com m issioner fef ih ’ * a31'r t W v z e d a fu ff j c j i >,y Furnished. Utilities included. 6115/ Own rdbm. Utilities paid. Parking. Sparrow Hospital of Lansing Mhic-sii^N-bv JitY , y w o c &?*■- LUDWIG DRUM set. Four piece. nivviwai v e 'p ro g ra m month 655-2437 or 655-3071 4-12/6 351-7556. * 5-12/6 Sky blue pearl. Like new. 351-5419. agreed to establish a 45-bed m ittee on M edical Education 3-12/4 U niversity Service based in the of the American Medical Assn. FACULTY-STAFF, ARBOR FOREST WANTED three girls for five girl hospital’s new wing which was The State Board of Educa­ APARTMENTS. Trowbridge Road. house on Gunson. Call 351-0464 5-12/5 GIBSON ATLAS bass amp. $250. in 1965. tion approved the recom m en­ Deluxe apartments available. Unfur­ then under construction. Hagstrom bass. will trade 355- nished. Party House, pool. 337- THREE MEN needed starting winter 3-12/4 In July of 1966 MSU re­ dations of the C om m ittee on 9494 The agreem ent between 0834 C-12/5 term. Near Frandor. $45. 484-8241. quested approval from the Education for Health Care in 5-12/4 NORTHLAND SKIS, 190cm. Cortina Sparrow Hospital and MSU State Board of Education tor a January 1967 and called fund­ ONE MAN wanted winter, spring boots size 7 Call Frank. 332- provided for MSU to assum e full m edica 1-degree program. ing requirem ents to the -atten­ terms. Campus Hill. Reduced 332- NEED ONE girl for 8 girl house. Near 3937. 4-12/4 the responsibility for the ed­ 4172. 3-12/5 tion of the governor and the campus. 351-7969. 4-12/6 ucational asp ects of the hos­ The request w as referred to EXAKTA 35mm SLR camera, 2 bodies. legislature. ,FOUR MAN luxury apartment. New GIRL FOR Duplex near campus. Win­ 3 lens, 3 teleconverters, case, tri­ pital’s intern and residency the C om m ittee on Education Cedar Village. Winter-spring. 351- for Health Care, a citizens' The recom m endations have ter, spring. 351-7381 after 5:30 p.m. pod and bellows. $300. 355-0090. programs. 6194. 4-12/6 3-12/5 been hanging in the legislature croup' previously appointed by FOURTH MAN needed. Close to cam­ To allow MSU to apply the board to study health man­ since then. It is expected that ONE GIRL needed winter term Cha­ pus. $47 per month. 351-9315. 3-12/4 DIAMOND BARGAIN: Wedding ahd governm ent the legislature will approve the let Apartments. Call 351-3223. 4-12/6 the federal power needs. engagement ring sets. Save fifty needed appropriations for the FURNISHED THREE bedroom house. per cent or more. Large selection ONE GIRL for Beechwood Apartments of plain and fancy diamonds. $25- expansion of the College of Five minutes to campus. Call 489- winter. $45. 351-3150. 4-12/6 6358. 5-12/6 $150. WILCOX SECOND HAND Human Medicine to a four- STORE. 509 E. Michigan. 485-4391. I f f e W H A T 'S year degree-granting institu­ FOUR MAN apartment to sublet. Close FOUR GIRLS needed for Cedar Street to campus. 332-8824 4-12/6 -C- tion at the end of this month. house. 660 a month. 351-8820 or 351- BLANK 8 track cartridge tape 300' 3358. 5-12/6 at $2.79. MAIN ELECTRONICS 5558 The expansion of the med­ EYDEAL VILLA APARTMENTS. TWO bedroom apartments for 6240 month. Swimming pool. GE appli­ ances, garbage disposals, furnished for four man or five man. Call q SMALL HOUSE on Pattengill off Mt. Hope. Stove, refrigerator and utili­ ties. Furnished., $110 month. Good for two students. 484-4794. 3-12/4 South Pennsylvania. FURNITURE: PERFECT for student apartment. Call 351-0309. 3-12/6 C N jH B D N E ical school has been supported by the Michigan M edical So­ ciety and numerous physicians 351-4275 after 5 p.m. and prominent citizens through­ GIRL NEEDED to share house winter ‘Did you ever notice how you get a shock BICYCLE SALES and service. Also out Michigan. H o u ses _ term. Call 351-3734. 3-12/6 used. EAST LANSING CYCLE, 1215 whenever you touch the cafeteria door . . E. Grand River. Call 332-8303. C The Northeast Complex C ollective will m eet at 8 tonight in EAST LANSING: 1231 Ferndale. 3 bed­ NEED FOURTH for well kept four the Union for a discussion of the relationship betw een the MSU room duplex. Unfurnished, carpeted, full basement. Nice y ard 6175 month. GOVAN MANAGEMENT 351-7910. After 5 p.m. 332-0091 O bedroom house. Grad or working .girl. Available until June.*$43.75 plus utilities. 1536 Snyder Road. 351- 4023. 3-12/6 A nim als SIAMESE KITTENS. Seal Point. Just chapter of SDS and the regional and national offices, * * * Deer trophies w ill be displayed at the Fish and W ildlife Club Inheritance in time for Christmas. 372-2142. For Rent F o r Rent 3-12/5 m eeting at 7:30 tonight in the a ctiv ities room of the Natural Re­ (continued from page one) NEED ONE man for three man, three ONE OR TWO girls to sublease. Fur­ than a university setting," nished, $50. Includes utilities except FULLY FURNISHED three bedroom sources Bldg. There w ill also be a short film and refreshm ents. bedroom ranch house. Hagadorn and SPARTAN HALL: Leasing for win­ * * + Jason said. "Consequently, much Beech. 353-3184. Ask for Ken. 4-12/6 electricity. 332-0858; 332-0429. 3-12/6 house to sublet beginning winter ter term. Rooms for men and wom­ M obile Homes term. 351-0598. 5-12/6 en. 372-1031. 5-12/6 The Germ an Club's Christmas Party will be1 tonight at 746 of their learning should take FURNISHED TWO bedroom. Two miles NEED ONE girl winter and spring. MARLETTE 10 x 50, 1964 Furnished. Cowley Ave. Those attending should m eet at 7:30 in A W ells Hall. place in the com m unity. to campus. From $150, utilities Beal Street. 337-2636. Cheap. 3-12/6 TWO GIRLS for house winter-spring. ONE, TWO and three man rooms. $3300. Phone 487-5691. 5-12/6 paid. 337-0512. 4-12/6 $55. Easy walking distance to cam­ Rides will be provided. "For a com m unity-oriented Carpeted, paneled, furnished. Paved * * * FOUR MAN. Cooking, furnished, park­ pus. 351-6194. 4-12/6 parking. Cooking and laundry facili­ MARLETTE 1%5 10 x 52, two bed­ educational program to be suc­ HOUSE: One to four girls $65 each. ing, for appointment call 372-1031, ties. Two blocks to MSU. Supervised room. Completely furnished. Situat­ The Independent Majority will m eet at 7:15 tonight in 39 Union cessful, " he said, "the m ed ical Apartment: Two girls $55 each. 351-7132 after 6 p.m. 3-12/6 SUBLET: two men needed, house $45 month. Call Don 351-3432. 5-12/6 ed on convenient lot. Will sell. $900 to discuss the Board of Education controversy. Both walking distance. Furnished. close to campus. $50. 351-0368. down or rent $115 per month. Call ♦ * * school m ust assum e that the Clean. 332-5320 after 6 p.m. 4-12/6 NEEDED-THREE men for gigantic 3-12/6 MEN--SUPERVISED singles, dou­ Mrs. Dunham, IV 4-5469, TU 2- com m unity to which it sends unsupervised modern house. Indi­ 4457. 3-12/4 There w ill be an open dance from 7 to 8:15 tonight in 34 W omen's its students is optim ally bles. Cooking. Parking. 327 Hill- ' COMPLETELY FURNISHED two bed­ vidual spacious bedrooms. Two ONE GIRL for 4 girl house. Winter, I.M. crest. 332-6118,337-9612 . 4-12/6 * ★ prepared for instructing m ed­ rooms. fireplace, garage. Eight blocks from Union. $60 month. Must spring and summer terms. Close TROTWOOD - 1962 10’ x 46 One minutes walk to Berkey. Married see to appreciate. 332-3813, 351- bedroom. A-l condition. Awning in­ ical students." campus. 351-8102. 3-12/6 WOMEN STUDENTS: Large home Time keepers are needed for the Spartan Invitational D ebate non-smokers. $175. 152 Gunson 8328. 3-12/6 cluded. Located beautiful park. 337- Specific aim s of the project abutting campus. Kitchen, laundry, Tournament (high sc h o o l) Saturday. Call 351-0049 or 882-2604. ED 2-5715. 3-12/5 parking. 332-1918. 4-12/6 7166. 5-12/4 HOUSE FOR five conservative men. (oom s will include developing criteria ONE MAN for four man house, Winter $60 week. Call nights. IV 5-0364. The national police honorary. Alpha Phi Sigm a, will show for selecting com m unity phy­ GARDNER 10’ x 45' with bedroom lerm. $50. 487-0690. 4-12/6 2-12 5 EAST LANSING: Lilac Avenue, rooms for men $204 a term. Cooking, park­ For Sale and den. Near MSU. 337-7665. 4-12/6 slides of foreign police departm ents at 7 tonight in 36 Union. sicians as teachers and devising ing, private entrance. New house. m ethods of helping, them THREE BEDROOM student house. Fur­ ONE OR two girls needed to share CHRISTMAS TREES: Table top $1.10; nished near Frandor. Pay own utili­ four man house across from Berkey. Call 332-2361. 3-12/6 other sizes to $3.25.332-5545. 9-12/6 BANNER 1966-24 foot self con­ The Greek Week E xecutive Board will m eet at 8 tonight in 37 improve their instructional ties. Lease until June. 372-6188. 4-12/6 351-8744. 2-12/5 tained. More information. Call 882- skills. Jason said. EAST LANSING Virginia Avenue: 2146. ' w« Union. GOYA G-17 folk guitar. Soft case. ♦ * * FACULTY-STAFF: Three bedroom, COOL HOUSE, fireplace. Two girls Unsupervised rooms $200 a term. Excellent condition. $200 355-0071 unfurnished, IV« baths. Newly car­ winter, spring. $55.00. 351-9109. Private entrance, parking, new house. Call 332-2361. 3-12/6 3-12/6 Lost & Found Gam m a Beta Upsilon, geography professional fraternity, peted, redecorated. Near campus 3-12 6 w ill elec t officers, accept new m em bers, and plan w inter term $225 month. ED 2-1925. 4-12/6 DOUBLE, PARKING, clean, quiet, DINETTE SET, sofa, recliner, all LOST: CHERRY Hill High School a ctiv ities at a m eeting at 7 p.m. Thursday in 406 Natural Science. WAVETEK m a n u fa c ­ FOUR MAN house needs one man. reasonable. 372-6761. 3-12/6 ring Men's IM. Reward. 353-1558. f u r n i s hw» e ^r . . r * n house house. Five Close campus. $55 month plus utili­ reasonable. 237 Kedzie. 351-9584. 3-12/6 The m eeting is open to all students and refreshm ents will be t u r e r o f p re c is io n e le c ­ ties. 351-8513. 3-12/6 3-12/6 served. tr o n ic g e n e ra tio n and m e a ­ minuti 0 £ N » V 189-6358 GERMAN SKI SHOES Women’s size 12-12/6 7, new $20. Harmony electric guitar WATCH FOUND Sunday. St. Johns s u re m e n t in s tru m e n ts , w ill GIRL: FURNISHED house $60 includes SINGLE ROOM. Male student. Linens Student Parish. Identify and claim furnished. Near campus. Phone 332- $100. Fender reverb amp $200. 337- MSU Scots Highlanders w ill m eet at 7 tonight in Dem onstra- d is p la y t h e ir equipm ent utilities. Judy or Jo. 351-7708. 3-12/6 7883. 3-12/6 at front desk. 1-12/4 h e re on F r id a y , D e c e m b e r 1682. 3-12/6 tion Hall jU . ____________ 6t h , f r o m 8:30 a .m . t i l l ■JSAST LANSING: Two bedroorfi’duplex FQUND: SMALL FUZZY grey long ®Garage,' 'basement, Appliances, $165 MALE HOUSING: Double rijqms. Block ' ...iTWO ,KLH six.spaakesx» $225, 305*11* hair cat. CaH 332-1910. 5-12/6 Tickets are now available at Fairchild Theater Box O ffice for Noon a t the U n iv e r s ity In n , Excellent. $40.1351-083d. 3-12/6 V month. Call evenings 351-7692 3-12/6 Union. 314 Evergreen. Goctiifig. 332- E a s t L a n s in g , 3839. 3-12/6 The Perform ing Arts Company Production of "The Govern­ FENDER BANDMASTER amplifier, LOST: BROWN fur hat. 105B Berkey You Have a Choice! ...GIRLS, $50 per month rent. 521 Monday afternoon. Personal mean­ m ent Inspector” playing at 8 tonight through Sunday at Fairchild. Stratocaster guitar, and Vox Tone- Albert. 351-4482. Near Berkey. 3-12 6 WANTED GIRL to take over contract ing. Reward. 355-7384. 1-12/4 Coupon or $2 cash or check is acceptable. Choose to see us. in Owen through spring. 355-3984. bender. 353-1453 . 3-12/6 Regular G lasses and 2-12/4 Sunglasses . . . MEXICAN FOOD CHRISTMAS TREES-cut your own. Persunai Service Beautiful pines, spruce, or fir. And Other Food From Most Foreign SINGLE ROOM for girl. Now or Jan­ $2.88 . 4811 Ballentine Rd. (Go north Fram es Repaired and uary. Parking. 351-7256, after 5:30. TV RENTALS for students. $9.00 Countries-including U.S. on Abbott or Cha ndler). 3-12/6 BARBI MEL. Typing, multilithing. Replaced 3-12/5 month. Free service and delivery. SHAHEENS FAMILY No job too large or too small. Call NEJAC 337-1300. We guaran­ FOOD FAIR ARE YOU a jogger-nut? 1 have the Block off campus. 332-3255. C A rtm ar Opticians MEN: QUIET, near campus, super­ tee same-day service. C TONIGHT 1001 W. Saginaw 485-4089 new in-place jogging machine. It s Michigan Bankard Welcome vised, no cooking. Parking avail­ IBM SELECTRIC typewriter: Term 205 Ann St. 332-5520 able. Call 332-3170 . 3-12/5 portable. Only $99.50. 351-5582. BICYCLES HAVE a happy winter 332-6680. 1-12/4 papers, theses, dissertations, call with us. SPARTAN BICYCLE STOR­ 3-12 6 MEN, LARGE c o m ^ ^ Q 'e s or sin­ Sharon Vliet, 484-4218. AGE. 355-8156. 1-12/4 gles. Clos entrance. FOR CHRISTMAS: Five concerts Parking av ÏTe 332-0939. 7-12/6 remaining two series A. Best seat­ FREE . . . A Thrilling hour of beauty. TERM PAPERS, theses, general In te r e s te d In ing. 355-2312. 3-12/6 EXCEPTIONALLY NICE room for responsible quiet man. ED 2-1746 5-12/4 CHRISTMAS TREES, Scotch Pine, White and Norway Spruce. U.S. For MERLE appointment NORMAN STUDIO, 1600 East Michigan. call 484-4519. COSMETICS C-12/5 typing. Prompt service. Experienced. 337-2603. LIPPINCOTTS PROFESSIONAL IBM 20-12/4 HAPPY HOUR 8-10 A tte n d in g L a w S c h o o l? Number 1 Premium. YMCA Abbott- theses typing including math, chem­ $200 PER TERM. Room and board. 78.332-8657 . 3-12/6 M.S.U. students, Call 332-3574, or Peanuts personal istry. 489-0358.489-6479. 3-12/6 visit Ellsworth Men's Co-op, 711 ZENITH PORTABLE television. 19” . TO PHI Kappa Tau: Congratulations FRESHMEN, SOPHOMORES, JUNIORS West Grand River. 5-12/6 Excellent condition. $115. ED 2-4838. for your fall term success in win­ FAST ACCURATE service on term 1-12/4 papers. 1156 Burcham. Call 337-2737. ning the annual Tug-of-War and a 3-12 6 MEN: CLEAN, quiet, cooking, park­ block championship in football. The See how you can r e c e i v e a c o m m i s s io n in the ing. Supervised. Close to campus. 487- APARTMENT SIZE-piano. Call 485- pledges. 1-12/4 FAST EFFICIENT typing. Call SHIR* CONTINUOUS 5753 or 485-8836. O 7846. 3-12/6 U.S . M a r i n e C o r p s and be d e la y e d f r o m a c tiv e LEY MENSE 3392009 3-12 6 FURNISHINGS FOR one bedroom THINK FRINK, think frink. think duty w h ile a ttend in g L a w School. C he ck th e s e MENS DOUBLE, clean, private frink, comm. 100 Holden. 1-12/4 apartment. For details phone 699 b e n e f its : entrance. Parking. Living room. Re­ 2748 after 6 p.m. 3-12/6 Transportation frigerator. Phone 332-4709. 4-12/6 LINDY: HAPPY 20th plus two days. Still helter-skelter though; I'm SMALL TWIN engine airplane leaving \ FIRST QUALITY materials and work­ • EARN MORE MONEY miles above you but coming down for Miami Christmas Day returning ENTERTAINMENT manship. OPTICAL DISCOUNT 416 P IZ Z A Tussing Building. Phone 372-7409. fast. Love, Lancelot. 1-12/3 New Year's Day--need four people, • NO ON-CAMPUS C-12/6 male or female, to share expenses. THE 3392890: 3392263. 3-12 6 TRAINING WANT IMPORTED Christmas pre­ MARY: A whole year in a few days- guess what. ABIII 1-12 4 • CO M PLETE YOUR sents? Tanzania, Spain . from ROCHESTER. N Y Riders wanted school project. 351-3373, evenings A L A CONGRATULATIONS fellow December 14th. One wav 351-6721 COLLEGE EDUCATION 337-2366. 3-12/6 member George on pearling Pat. 3-12 5 Jeff and Steve. 1-12/4 • ATTEND THE LAW SAILBOAT 11 used only four times. FLINT-EAST Lansing and return New sail. Very reasonable. V-M tape SCHOOL OF YOUR CHOICE daily winter term. Riders or car deck and tapes. $250 or best offer. Service pool. 313-233-7275, collect if nec­ 337-9450. 2-12/6 essary. 2-12/4 S e rv e w ith the fi n e s t m i l i t a r y o r g a n i z a t i o n . 1965 KLH portable stereo. Perfect RENT-A-STUDENT now back in ac­ FEATURING. tion. Call 351-5130 for all your A sk a M a r i n e . working condition. $135. 351-48%. job needs. 5-12/6 RIDERS WANTED to Los Angeles 3-12/6 area. December 14 Stan, 1-313- 342-4977. 3-12 6 P LA C EM EN T BUREAU ALTERATION AND dressmaking by VOX AMPLIFIER. New. 45 watts. g THE T O D A Y th r u F R I D A Y 3-12/6 experienced seamstress. Reasonable Cheap. 351-7307. charge 355-5855. 2-12/5 RIDER WANTED to Philadelphia. 9 :0 0 A . M . - 4 : 0 0 P . M . C ircle Dorms: Other Dorms; Share driving and expenses. Fiat 351-8870 351-7100 BIRTHDAY CAKES-7', $3.64; 8" 850. Luggage limited. Mitch, 351- $4.16; 9", $5.20. Delivered. Also * yping srv ic e 8135 evenings. 3-12/6 sheet cakes. Kwast Bakeries. 484- 1317. O PAULA ANN HAUGHEY: A unique LAST EXIT NEW quality thesis service. IBM typing, multilith printing and hard binding. Wanted SKIS: KNEISSEL Black Stars, 210 cm., $95/offer. Includes bindings. 337-1527. C NEED ONE MAN, Cedar Village. Win­ 351-3709. 3-12/5 ter and spring terms. 351-3132. 5-12/4 MARILYN CARR: Legal secretary. G.E. Portables and Stand DRY FIREWOOD, seasoned, will de- livery by the cord. 355-9110. 4-12 6 Electric typewriter. After 5:30 p.m. and weekends. 372-7085. Pick-up and delivery. C BLOOD DONORS needed. $7.50 for all positive. A negative. B negative and AB negative $10.00. O negative $12.00 AND THE TWO 12" wolverine woofer speak­ MICHIGAN COMMUNITY BLOOD Rented Onjy ers in walnut enclosures and Knight TYPING DONE in my home. 485-3589. CENTER, 50715 East Grand River, MUSSIES t AM-FM stereo tuner. Excellent con­ 3-12/4 East Lansing. Above the new Cam­ dition. $75. Call 882-2348. 3-12/5 pus Book Store. Hours: 9 a.m .-3:30 PROFESSIONAL TYPIST: Fast, effi­ p.m. Monday, Tuesday and Friday: To MSU Students PROCESSING REGULAR or Soper 8 Kodak color movie film or Kodachrome 135-20 with this ad, $1.29. MAREK cient service. Free pick up and delivery. 351-0763. 3-12/4 Wednesday and Thursday 12 p.m.-6:30 p.m. 337-7183. C DONNA BOHANNON: Professional and Faculty. REXALL DRUGS. SEWING MACHINE clearance sale. C-12/5 typist. Term papers, theses, IBM Selectric. 353-7922. C MALE 21 desires apartment or house near west circle winter and spring. 353-7503. 5-12/5 Brand new portables--$49.50, $5.00 DON’T MISS $8.84/month (includes tax] per month. Large selection of recon­ ditioned used machines. Singers. Whites, Necchis, New Home and TYPING DONE in my home 2V5 blocks from campus. 332-1619. - - - O ONE girl winter term. River House $60. 351-9279. 3-12 6 IT . . . "many others," $19.95 to $39 95. ANN BROWN: Typist and Multilitiy Terms. EDWARDS DISTRIBUTING offset printing. Dissertations, the­ BABYSITTER WEEKDAYS 8 to 5:30 Call 332-4927. 3-12/6 CONTINUOUS STATE MANAGEMENT CORP COMPANY, 1115 North Washington ses, manuscripts, general typing: 489-6448. C-12/5 IBM. 18 years experience. 332- USED VACUUM cleaners, tanks, caii- 8384. C GIRL OR woman about 10 days after ENTER TA INMÉNT sters, and uprights. Prices slashed Christmas 10 p.m. to 8 a.m. to sleep MARILYN CARR: Legal secretary' 444 Michigan Ave. for quick sale. $7.88 and up. DENNIS Electric typewriter. After 5:30 p.m. in and prepare retired professor's DISTRIBUTING CO. 316 North Cedar elderly wife for bed. $30. Phone 337- and weekends 393-2664. Pick-up 332-8687 opposite City Market. 482-2677. C-12 6 i and delivery. C 2731. 3-12/4 / W e d n e s d a y , D e c e m b e r 4, 1968 16 Michigan State N e w s, E a st L an sin g , M ich ig a n REGULAR, D R IP , ELECTRA PERK Swift’s Proten-Full Slices Swift’ s Premium Proten Well Trim m ed POTATO CHIPS A FULL GALLON R O U N D S IR L O IN STEA KS STEA KS 3 9 * full 1- LB. BAG ] PT. BTLS. YOUR CHOICE--ASST. plus deposit lb . EBERHARDS MUSHROOMS P IE C E S & S T E M S I ^ .. OZ. RETURNABLE BTLS NABISCO 4 o z . w t. CANS SNACKS S W IF T ’s PRO TEN C E N T E R CUT S W IF T ’s PRO TEN TA S TY 1C SOCIABLES, BACON THINS, Ic h i p p e h s , s i p N ' C H I P S , e t c , CHUCK STEAK LB. T-BONE STEAKS c S W IF T ’s PRO TEN W HOLE 40 -5 0 LBS . BUT & W R A P P ED BEEF LOINS 8 1 /2 O Z . M IN . WT. RIB ROAST 4-5 -6 R IB S LB. FO R F R E E Z E R S LB. PACK PKG. m M ssm m plus 10 F L . OZ. deposit SW IFT’S PREM IUM FLAVORFUL BTLS. SPARTAN F L E I S C H M A N ’S T R A Y P A C K C O U N T R Y FRESH CANNED HAMS £■$ 1 3 lb. can -$2.99 S W I F T ’S P R E M I U M SLICED BACON LB. Rose Canadian M O R R E LL C EN TER CUT SMOKED PORK CHOPS BACON LB. LOAF BREADED PORK CUTLETS FBERHARD’S FRESH FROZEN FLORIDA 3 LBS. OR M ORE - A L L B E E F FRESH P IC N IC S T Y L E B LA C K P O R T HONEY B U TTO N 39 OfiANGE JUICE PORK ROAST HAM LOAF 2 lb pk9 S W I F T ’S P R E M I U M S A U S A G E HAMBURG BROWN & ' SERVE » » . - . p ' . . 59 CHEF PIERRE FROZEN APPLE, DUTCH APPLE, PEACH SHURTENDA BEEF FRITTERS lb . 79 S W IF T ’S P R E M IU M I JUICY FRANKS ^ PKG 65 L E S S E R A M T S . 53c L B . P O L L Y A NN A FRESH B A K E D B IR D S E Y E B A N Q U ET FR O ZE N - 5 V A R IE T IE S m R E G . 24c E B E R H A R D ’ S COOKIN’ BAGS 4 SAUERKRAUT 19‘ FROZ. AWAKE 9 F L . O Z . CAN 33' R E G . 19c E B E R H A R D ' S W . K . OR NEW R E A M U S HOME S T Y L E FROZEN R E G . 15c B U T T E R F I E L D • S1 E6G NOODLES FOR I LB. 8 O Z. S P E C IA L POTATOES =l8isi? m CREAN CORN ,LB CANS 12 O Z . W T . P K G . I GARDEN PEAS E BE R H A R D ’S N EW — SARA LEE FR ROO Z E N - 10 O Z . W T . ONLY - FOR BLUEBERRY 9 s *1 COFFEE CAKE SPARTAN I LB. CANS RASPBERRY e A. P O L L Y A NN A V IE N N A 3 LB. M APLE CRUNCH DUTCH TOP BREAD 1 LB. loaf 29< SHORTENING CAN E B E R H A R D ’S C U T FOR S T . R E G IS P O LLY ANNA CRACKED R E G . 79c S P A R T A N I N S T A N T ! WAX BUNS 15 1 / 4 O Z . W T . CANS M PAPER PUTES 100 C T . P K G . WHEAT BREAD 3j il'v«s -. 7 9 ' P O L L Y A N N A F R U IT S T O L L E N COFFEE CAKE i 4T0Z 7 9 ' DRY MILK 8 OT, S IZ E P O L L Y A N N A 15 O Z . W T . P O L L Y ANNA ALMOND FRUIT RING 69c P O L L Y ANNA - 2 D OZ. PKG. FRUIT CAKE 1 1 /2 LB. CHOC. CHIP COOKIES R E G . 57c G U L F K I S T C O C K T A I L S P E C IA L ! P O L L Y ANNA CHOCOLATE NUT OARS FOR SHRIMP 4 -1 /2 O Z . W T . CAN