Monday Snow... MICHIGAN and warmer, high of 32. STATE NEWS Opinions . . . . . . Cloudy tonight with snow, low of 14. Tuesday, cloudy and cold . . . founded on prejudices STATE with a chance of snow. are always sustained with the greatest violence. --Jeffery UNI /ERSITY East Lansing, Michigan Vol. 61 Number 99 AWi Faculty committee OKs freshman selective hours cies from required to recommended. The motion, however, was referred back By MARILYN PATTERSON Guest regulations will remain the same to WIC for "study and research." A WIC State News Staff Writer "The majority of the faculty commit¬ survey taken last winter indicated thai Another step towards the liberalization tee members were in sympathy with the 63 per cent of women returning the survey of women's hours was taken at the end proposal and wanted to give WIC the op¬ (Please turn to page 21) of fall term when the Faculty Committee portunity to try it out and see how it on Student Affairs approved a proposal works," Thurman said. that would give freshman women selec¬ The proposal evolved after a WIC sur¬ tive hours. vey of freshmen women indicated that The proposal, submitted by the Wom¬ 97 per cent advocated more liberalized en's Inter-residence awaits the Council (WIC), now approval of Milton B. Dicker- hours and more than half favored a no Nixon n hours policy. son, vice-president of student affairs, be¬ The no hours policy was passed by fore it can go into effect. Dickerson, who has been out of town since the proposal was passed by the faculty committee, will probably consider it this week, A.L. WIC on Nov. 6 and was put to vote in the women's residence halls. On-campus coeds voted 4-1 in favor of the proposal. Lodge h In its proposal. WIC cited four general Thurman, chairman of the faculty com¬ areas of concern in consideration of a no mittee, said. The WIC proposal eliminates hours for hours policy: -The student's right to make his own of peace all freshman women and the special per¬ decision mission clause. This clause requires pa¬ -The discrepancy between the Univer¬ NEW YORK (APi ~ President-elect Nix¬ rental permission for overnight absences sity's desire for students to assume re¬ on Sunday named Henry Cabot Lodge, of freshmen women and residence hall ap¬ twice ambassador to Saigon, to head the New tru sponsibility for their own behavior and proval of special late permission for fresh¬ the restrictive hours that remove the need U.S. delegation to the Vietnam peace talks men. for such responsibility. in Paris after the new Republican admin¬ ■ren Huff and Blanche Martin c » sworn in to the MSU Board of Trustees. They will repla The proposal also changes sign-out poli- -The realization of academic priori istration takes office. > and Connor D. Smith. ties: that "those students whose primary The selection, and that of Lawrence E. Walsh, a New York lawyer and former goal is to further their education will as sume the academic responsibilities im deputy U.S. attorney plied in their proper perspective withoul general, to serve as Smith boardle abusing a no hours policy, while those deputy negotiator, Harlan, who would be insensitive to these priori were announced by ties would be in this position long enougl Ronald L. Ziegler, to abuse them . " ♦ ** r Nixon's press assist¬ period from 1958 to 1962 was the most re¬ -The discriminatory double standari ant. ren Huff and Blanche Martin, who at¬ warding. During this period critics of the which does not allow freshman womer ■% \ » Ziegler announced made by any of the trustees during the tended the December board meeting as By RON INGRAM state said that Michigan was broke and the same responsibilities as freshmer \ that Nixon had asked meeting. Since the two men's terms ex¬ guests. Huff and Martin won election in State News Staff Writer November to eight year terms on the that the state could not meet its bills. men. 4 \ ' Cyrus R. Vance, the Two MSU trustees. C Allen Harlan and pired Dec. 21, the Board meeting was Smith, D-Pinconning, was appointed The proposal is the latest in a series oi current deputy nego¬ their last chance to take any official ac¬ board. Connor D. Smith, quietly retired follow¬ to fill a vacancy in 1950 and again in movements towards liberalizing women'; tiator, to continue as tion while in office. Harlan, D-Southfield, was appointed to ing the Board of Trustees meeting De¬ 1954. He won election to the board in 1954 hours. In the spring of 1967. Associate! a member of the new The vacancies created by Harlan and the board in 1957 and won election to it in cember 12. and 1960. Women Students (AWS) proposed elim LODGE delegation for about Smith will be filled by Democrats War- 1960. No mention of the retirements was Smith sided with the Republicans at ination of hours for junior and senioi Harlan was involved in the conflict of ;a month after the Jan. 20 inauguration "so the September board meeting when a women. The policy was revised to include interest charges centering on Philip J. that no momentum may he lost and that O May, the now retired University treas¬ move was made by the other four Dem sophomores in the no hours r°striotior continuity will be maintained. " ocrats to oust Philip J. May from his and approved after considerable contro urer and vice-president for business and He said Vance agreed. post as University treasurer. The board versy. It was implemented during fal W. Averell Harriman. chief negotiator finance. Both Harlan and May were ac¬ Mott Institute centers cused of using their positions in the Uni¬ versity for personal gain. deadlocked 4-4 because of Smith's vote. The 18 year board veteran said Thurs¬ day that he had no immediate plans to term 1967. In winter term of ASMSU of 1968 the student boarc approved a motion to extent for the purrent administration will leave the post at about the time of the inaugura¬ tion. to be succeeded by Lodge. seek further posts in higher education. weekend closing hours to 2 a.m. and tc Atty. Gen.. Frank Kelley clear¬ inner-city education State extend selective hours to all women ex Smith ran for a seat in the state legisla¬ on ed both men after May had rid himself of certain business connections which af¬ ture from the 102 District in November cept first term freshman. (Please turn to page 21) and lost. fected his position in the University. The workings of the Mott Institute for the institute operates. These are the Although he had cleared Harlan of all Community Improvement were explained Teacher Education Program, the Year charges. Kelley said that he could not to the MSU Board of Trustees at their Dec. One Project, the Program of Community support Harlan's bid for re-election. 12 meeting by two representatives of the College of Education. The institute is a joint effort of the Col¬ lege of Education, the Mott Foundation Service and the Talent Bank. The Teacher Education phasizes involvement inner-city Program em¬ and participation in schools. It provides an oppor¬ Harlan said Friday that Kellev's state¬ ment had nothing to do with his deci¬ sion not to run again. ND head names solution: , and the public school systems in Flint, tunity for students to go into the inner- "To run would have put me in a posi¬ love, laughter bridge gap' » Detroit and Lansing. It was established in city and become better acquainted with tion of running against Warren Huff," August, 1965 by a 10-year grant from the the life, problems and people. Harlan said. ."and I wouldn't do that. Mott Foundation. The Year One Project is involved in the Warren Huff was the finest chairman The main purpose of the institute is to production, application and assessment (1965-66) this University ever had." prepare personnel to work effectively of techniques for developing early reading He said that the war in Vietnam has now knew to be wrong, much less un-Ameri¬ through community schools to help educa skills for the inner-city student. Harlan said that of the 11 years he During the Fall term commencement can." offered the young a "new outlet for their tionally deprived children. 21) ceremony, one of the nation's leading edu¬ leaders of the new newly-learned tactics and their yearning Its objectives are: (Please turn to page had spent on the board he felt that the cators said that two qualities-laughter But when many of the black power structure decided to "go it for personal involvement in a cause. " and love-are vital to bridging today's "gen¬ -To develop an innovative preparation alone," Father Hesburgh said, , the Hesburgh received an honorary doctor¬ eration gap." great majority of active, protesting white ate of laws during the ceremony at which program for teachers of the educationally The Rev. Theodore M. Hesburgh, pres¬ degrees were awarded to 1.581 MSU gradu- young people felt momentarily alienated deprived which will utilize community. State legislator University of Notre Dame, told ident of the University and local resources. MSU fall graduates that "too many of: the --To develop methods and materials young have forgotten how to laugh, and for teachers of the educationally deprived too many of the elders have forgotten how -To explore ways of using University to love. " students and lay personnel to serve as edu¬ "Would not the dark tragedy of our life cational enrichment tutors for under¬ achieving youngsters. --To bring about changes in the Uni¬ session of t issues be lightened," he said, "if only we could all learn to laugh more easily at ourselves and to love one another.'' He observed that the current genera¬ versity curriculum which reflect the com¬ tion of American young people has grown munity school concept of utilizing all By WES THORP in "an affluent society that prizes in¬ community resources in solving educa¬ State News Staff Writer Michigan's legislators will face many News Background up telligence, that provides the best school¬ tional problems. These are four major projects which major issues when they return to Lansing ing that this country has ever seen. " Wednesday for the beginning of the 1969 its medical school from two years to a "They have had more time to think, to legislative session. four-year degree granting institution. discuss, to criticize, to read, to travel, to The lawmakers will face such issues as compare, to judge-this is the stuff of which The legislators will also be expected good education is made," he said. aid to parochial schools, the ever increas¬ Doctors optimistic ing public employe strikes, the revision of to revise the existing welfare system. State welfare costs are expected to rise But the result of this education, he point¬ ed out, is that many of our young people the entire state criminal code and the substantially over this year's price tag have seen the American dream "acquire problem of financing higher education. about flu's decline They will also have to confront such of $229 million. some of the aspects of a nightmare rhe Reverend added, "Thus, the Amer- problems as organized labor's demand for Revision of Michigan's criminal code, major outbreak of Hong Kong Nu is a higher minimum wage, and will be ex¬ ic in nation they discovered is not indivi- No which contains over 3,000 laws that date expected at Olin Health Center during si le, but clearly divisible into two na- pected to deal with the problems raised back as far as the Civil War will also be winter term. tii ns: black and white, poor and affluent, by heart transplants. on the legislative calendar. Immunity acquired by many students State aid to parochial schools will rate h< >efu 1 a nd hopeless.'' (Please turn to page 21) le told the MSU graduates, their fami- during vacation will probably prevent a a high priority on the legislative calendar. Parochial schools, with a student popula¬ li s and friends that for a time white and major outbreak, Dr Thomas Hill, staff tion of over 300.000, are finding it increas¬ bl ick young people marched together in physician, said Sunday Millions of Americans have been the vic¬ tl ? South, sensing "new confidence in the ingly difficult to keep their doors open be¬ tims of the Hong Kong flu epidemic, but cause of an inability to keep up with ris¬ Tickets distributed ri [htness of their cause, new power in w lat they were able to achieve by protest Dr. James S. Feurig, director of Olin ing costs. ai d organized action against what they Health Center, of the Hong said that not many cases Kong flu have been reported The state already provides non-public for Lecture-Concert at MSU schools with bussing and special educa¬ Ticket distribution for the Lecture-Con¬ The first case of the Hong Kong flu was tion grants. cert Series opens Tuesday at the Union reported at Olin on Dec. 1, and only four In the last legislative session parochial Ticket office. or five other cases have appeared from the bills worth o- er $20 million died in com¬ Winter term schedule includes: first until MSU closed for Christmas vaca mittee. Coupon A Gregg-Smith Singers Jan. 13, or Permits to Register and Section Reser¬ 'Learn to tion. Michigan' colleges and universities are vation Enrollment cards can be picked up Lamp at Midnight, Feb. 6 Many students who think they are suf expected * ask the legislature for about beginning today at the student's individual $270 mi'lii/ii this year. Coupon B Hague Philharmonic, Jan. 23; Rev. Theodore M. Hesburgh, president of the University of Notre fering from the Hong Kong flu are, in real¬ college department. ity, the victims of a respiratory virus in¬ This includes requests for medical or Moscow Symphony, Mar. 3 Coupon C Royal Winnipeg Ballet, Feb. Students may then register late at 107 Dame, urged a relearning of the arts of laughter and love when he schools expansion at MSU, Wayne State Administration Bldg. Friday is the last day addressed fal I term graduates at the commencement ceremony. fection. These symptions are a head *>d 13; or Ballet America State News i-hoto by Ha! Caswell and the University of Michigan. bronchial congestion, and a sore thro > Coupon D Rita Streich. Mar. 5 of late registration. (Please turn to page 21) MSU has requested $800,000 to expand Monday, January 6, 1969 2 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Rioters end truce Hussein sees outside help in North Ireland needed for Mideast peace LONDONDERRY, Ireland Northern civil rights leaders The committee had called for an end to marches and BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP)-King violence on encouragement that what is happening here, not called off their unofficial truce demonstrations to await the Hussein of Jordan, terming the it said the Arab governments only in their own interests but Sunday after a night of rioting government's promised re¬ were giving to terrorists. in the interests of world peace," in which more than 120 per¬ forms in housing allocations and danger of a now war immense, urged the big powers Sunday -to The congress, meeting in Hussein said. sons were hurt. Street barri¬ local elections. intensify their efforts to pro¬ Rome, approved a resolution The Israelis, who said they cades went up in Londonderry In turn, the Protestant-domi¬ mote a settlement of the Mid¬ saying direct negotiations be¬ struck at Beirut because of an as the city prepared for more nated government has held over dle East crisis. tween the Arabs and Jews are attack on an Israeli airliner at trouble. until May charges against civil Similar views were expressed necessary to bring peace. That Athens, Dec. 26 by two Le¬ By midafternoon a crowd of rights leaders arrested in riots is in line with the thinking in banese-based Arab guerrillas, in Bogside, last year and indicated that the by Egypt's press. Though Israel has made plain Prime Minister Levi Eshkol's warned Saturday that they Weather 2,000 had gathered Londonderry's main Roman charges would be dropped if she would resist the imposition Israeli government. would hit again if Lebanon per¬ mes wonder Catholic district, armed with Londonderry kept the peace. of a settlement from the out¬ King Hussein stopped hi Bei¬ mitted guerrillas to operate Students trekking their way across the tundra at East Complex somet State News Photo by Bob Ivins iron bars and clubs studded The riot followed the arrival side, the Cairo newspaper A1 rut on a flight to London for from Lebanese territory. at their own feats of endurance winter term. State News Photo with nails. in Londonderry of 200 leftist Akhbar declared the only re¬ medical treatment, and had a They were incensed by charges students calling themselves maining hope is a Big Four 90-minute talk with Lebanon's that riot police rampaged "The People's Democracy." agreement on a coordinated president, Charles Helou. Secu¬ through the district early this They had marched 72 miles plan. "An immediate decisive ef¬ rity guards surrounded Hussein at Beirut's International Air¬ BIDS, PARTIES, SKITS morning, with their batons. smashing windows from Belfast. Over the last six miles they ran the gaunt¬ let of rock-throwing attacks fort is needed to solve the prob¬ port, where Lebanese planes Leaders of the Londonderry peacefully, otherwise an were the target of an Israeli Citizens Action Committee, set by militant Protestants. final stages lem armed clash becomes inevit¬ able," the newspaper said. In Moscow, Pravda charged that "certain western patrons of raid Dec. 28. The Jordanian monarch told newsmen self Israel has shown it¬ ready ,'to challenge the Rush begins up last year to press the city's civil rights campaign, dissuaded the crowd from marching on police headquarters. Precautions Israel" were hindering a set¬ world's will." day night and will continue during which rushees visit only Instead they sent a protest tlement. Without naming countries, the I believe the world is begin¬ ning to appreciate what the dif¬ By SHARON State News TEMPLETON Staff Writer and will continue them Jan. 17. through through Thursday. Open rush will be conducted Monday those houses to which they were invited. delegation of 15 men, march¬ ing at the head of a column of q? Sirhan Soviet Communist party news¬ ficulties always have been in MSU's sororities and fra- Sorority rush began its sec- through Wednesday during which Rushees will pick up their 1,000 women. paper said some western pow¬ ers are the area" he said. "The dan¬ playing a two-faced gers are immense as to the fu¬ ternities rush procedures began this term's ond stage Sunday, after pros- prospective members will visit Sunday night pective members picked up at least five fraternity houses. their bids Saturday at the Union. bids will Sunday at the Union and pledge during the following dow Hardly a ground floor win¬ remained unbroken in opens Tu ture." night fraternity week. They may become active LOS ANGELES (AP) -- game by denouncing Israel's Monday Bogside, a district of close- The King, who flew from Am¬ of MAC Avenue members at the end of winter or The trial of Sirhan Bishara commando raids while failing The second stage consists houses east packed tenement houses. man, his capital, at the con¬ Tuesday night, at the beginning of spring term. The weekend riots disrupted Sirhan, the young Jordanian to do anything effective to curb of parties providing skits and will be open; them. trols of his own plane, report¬ decorations on the theme of west of MAC Avenue; and Wed¬ Fall term last year over 1,500 an unofficial truce between the charged with murdering Sen. "When it comes to practical ed he discussed the Beirut raid with Helou. He said he still Prize-winning each house. Coeds attended nesday night, all houses will men went through rush, and over 500 pledged the 35 MSU fra¬ Belfast government and lead¬ of the Londonderry Citi¬ Robert F. Kennedy, Tuesday in a small courtroom opens measures," Pravda said, "some four parties Sunday and will be open. ers x hopes for an Arab summit meet¬ reinforced with steel plates western diplomats throw their attend four more tonight. Thursday night is closed rush ternities. zens Action Committee. hands in the air, step aside and delay because of their merce¬ ture." ing "in the not too distant fu¬ gift to mother The third stage of sorority O over its windows* "We don't want another Dal¬ "If the situation further dete¬ rush will be conducted Satur¬ las," sheriff's deputies have nary interests." SALINA, Kan. (AP) - The On the other hand, the gov¬ riorates it will affect world day and Sunday nights. Coeds said of precautions taken for Salina Journal conducts a con¬ the great pow¬ test each year to find out who will attend parties at five dif¬ the trial. They referred to the sorority erning council of the World Jew¬ peace and I hope ish Congress blamed regional ers will take a closer look at got the most unusual Christmas gift from among its readers. ferent houses. "Fantasies will be the title MSU slaying by Jack Ruby of Lee Harvey O s w aid. assassin of President John F. a c cused When Mrs. E. W. Krenkel Jr., for the third stage of rush. Kennedy. a nurse from Kansas City, Mo., demand creativity/ Sorority women will be dressed Sirhan, 24. apprehended while The State News, the student newspaper at Michigan State University, is visited her mother-in-law, Mrs. in costume," Sue Solmo, first Sen. Kennedy lay mortally E. W. Krenkel in Cawker City, vice president of Panhel in published every class day throughout the year with special Welcome Week wounded in the kitchen of the and Orientation issues in June and September. Subscription rates are $14 Kan., in December, she said, charge of rush, said. Ambassador Hotel on June 6, per yea*. "Roll up your sleeve, mother, I has awaited trial in an isolated Ingenuity and a great deal decorated as background for the this term. The members will want to give you your Christ¬ Preference parties follow as cell on the 13th floor of the Member Associated Press, United Press International, Inland Daily Press of practice and hard work char¬ pirate, Indian and little lost present a skit concerning the Association, Associated Collegiate Press, Michigan Press Association, Mich¬ mas present." the rushees select two houses acterize many of MSU's soror¬ girl's skits. "Hillbilly" theme. gray stonp Hall of Justice. igan Collegiat* Press Association, United States Student Press Association. The present: A Hong Kong from invitations. This fourth For his trial he will be taken ity rush programs which began The Delta Delta Delta house The members of Alpha Gam¬ flu vaccination. Second class postage paid at East Lansing, Michigan. stage of sorority rush will end Sunday night and will continue will present a 17-minute mo¬ ma Delta will present their tra¬ down to the eighth floor court¬ The journal awarded it first Jan. 14 when rushees choose Editorial and business offices at 347 Student Services Building, Michigan through Jan. 17. vie titled "Fly Delta," and ditional skit titled "Sweetshop," room. State University, East Lansing, Michigan place. the one house they would like This second stage of rush will in which they will wear pina¬ Presentation of evidence by members will wear stewardess to pledge. involve several parties and skits. outfits. fores and the house will be dec¬ both sides is expected to take 35W2K orated like Candyland with lol- two months. It is expected that Editorial Move Rushees make a list of two Each sorority house has a Rushees at the Pi Beta Phi Classified Advertising 356-8255 more than 200 witnesses will choices of houses, which are theme around which parties are house will find the members ipops on the front door. Display Advertising 353-6400 presented and the houses are Roaring '20s flap¬ be called. . Business-Circulation 355-3447 With then compared with the lists dressed as. Several will be those who 3654311 decorated. The skits require the pers, with the house decorated Photographic-. , * compiled by the sorority were in the crowded kitchen area members to dress in costume ap¬ as a honky-tonk hideaway. houses. If two houses bid for a propriate to their theme. Most Position open the night Sen Kennedy was fat¬ rushee, the coed gets her first Sigma Kappa sorority will pre¬ of the skits are established pre¬ sent a new skit this term on the ally shot moments after he had choice. Rushees will find out Jan. 17 sentations of the sorority chap¬ theme of "Oriental Fantasy," for SN secretary announced to a cheering throng that he had won the California ters, but several new ideas have in which the members will wear which house they have been in¬ Democrats presidential pri- been added this term. Chinese kimonas and the house Anyone interested in employ¬ vited to pledge. the theme of ment w'*^ the State News as a Fraternity rush began Sun- "Peter Pan" is will be decorated with a pagoda the parties at the Alpha Chi and moon bridge. morning . etary should con¬ Althoufc|Sirhan has pleaded Omega house. The members The Alpha Omicron Pi soror¬ tact Man-" n Editor Jim Gran- innocenfljN^ defense is expected For Rides Call will wear Tinkerbell outfits and ity has based their skit around elli at the u. ^ ews office. to se^OQ>)^erdict which might the three main living rooms are Room 341 Stu Services find guilty but which the opening of a new chapter . Bldg. wouldwarrant the death of the sorority in Hawaii. The The duties of the secretary penalty PHI TAU house will be decorated like the include clipping stories, filing, Defending the slight swarthy inside of an airplane and the answering the telephone and Sirhan will be three attorneys; members will wear sarongs. HAS A BETTER correspondence. The secretary Russell B. Parson. 69; Grant B. Hay and live animals will find their way into the Alpha Epsilon will be needed from 9 a.m. - Cooper.65; and Emile Zola IDEA! noon Monday through Friday. Berman. 65. Phi house for the first time PIZZAS\JW1W1 OR CARRY OUT IN 8 MIN 10 AND 14 INCH PIZZA SPAGHETTI SALADS SANDWICHES BEEF BOAT CRUSADER SUBMARINE HAM SANDWICH (WINE BAKED) Ventilation. Feel the kick of the big¬ No clowns. No hoopla. No 1969 Chevrolet with a big V8 and automatic transmission for less than gest standard V8 in our field. funny hats. Then go down the street or across This is an event for the serious you could last year. town and see how we stack up against Come in and spend some time. car buyer. The man who has X num¬ Those Other Cars. ber of dollars to spend and is deter¬ Dig, probe, as]t questions, take notes. We think you'll wind up with a OPEN— You owe it to yourself to be thorough. mined to get his money's worth and Go for a drive. maybe more. Get a free sample of Chevrolet's More people do, you know. Come to a Chevrolet Showroom luxurious fullrcoil, cushioned ride. during our Value Showdown. Shut the windows and see how fresh Ask the man to show you, on Putting you first, keeps us first. the interior stays, thanks to Astro COATS—fitted shapes; side-button closing; belts; paper, how you can order most any pleats; wools, blends, up-to-the-minute colors. 351-7363 487-3733 484-4406 2417 E. KALAMAZOO 1101 W. WILLOW SEPARATES—great fun choosing from this big groupl Hie Chevrolet Value Showdown is on. AT LOGAN TAKE OUT ONLY 484-4555 2201 S. CEDAR Sun.-Thurs. 4 p.m. To 12;00 P.M.,Frl. & Sat. To 1 A.M. Monday, January 6, I960 3 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan NEWS Study group probes summary current tuition set-up Rustem, commenting on the sociate dean of students; Char¬ les Killingsworth, professor of committee, said that he thought it "would find the present sys¬ I A capsule £;ummary of the day's events from The University's present labor, industrial relations; tem in need of change" and that | our wire serv'ices. tuition system will be under Harold Hart, professor of chem- it would suggest a new change extensive scrutiny throughout istrz; Horace King, registrar; __ winter term by a study com- Stephen Terry, administrative such credit.' as a tuition fee per mittee formed by President assistant; Kermit Smith, assis- The fact that much of the Hannah. tant to the provost; and Paul Rumpsa, comptroller. first committee meeting was "Israel has shown itself Composed of eight adminis¬ trative members and two stu- Walt Chappell, East Lansing spent in ajring gripes and ready to challenge the world's dents, the committee will de- graduate student, and Bill Rus- criticisms of the tuition sys¬ termine whether or not the Univ- tem, Frankenmuth sophomore, tem seems to support Rus- will. The dangers are immense as to the future ersity's tuition system should are the students on the com- tern's views. Under the present plans, the be changed and if so, will re- mittee. —King Hussein of Jordan commend some of the changes Hannah suggested the forma- committee is scheduled to hold needed. tion of the committee after re- three more meetings and then Serving on the study commit¬ ceiving numerous complaints turn in its findings to Hannah tee are Elliott Ballard, assis¬ about the present tuition set-up. at the end of the term. Police search the wreckage of an Afganlstani Ariani airliner after it crashed while tant to the president (chair- Among the criticisms of the Although the next meeting, in which the replies received attempting to land in the fog at London's Gatwick Airport. Fifty-two persons were man); Eldon Nonamaker, as- current system are the assess- International News reported dead. UPI Telephoto ment of such small fees as the music fee. the difficulty en- from other Michigan and Big Ten universities concerning • The Soviet Union launched an unmanned space ship Suit- countered in determining the their tuition systems will be amount of tuition that each stu- analyzed, has not been set. day toward a hoped-for soft landing on Venus, a 155-million mile feat of marksmanship. One Tass science commentator 52 DEAD dent must pfey and the complex- Committee members specul- wrote: "It would be very much easier to solve the problem of ity of the bookkeeping involved. ate that it will be held before Criticisms also argue that the end of the month, hitting a flying honeybee from the window of a moving motor - the system is unable to catch • National Assembly Chairman Josef Smrkovsky appealed to Czechoslovak workers throughout the occupied nation Sun¬ day to call off strike threats that could have "consequences Jet The crashes small brick house of Gatwick airport was closed across a hayfield, in crunched the students who fail to pay the additional $5 fee by not fying that they are repeating the class, and that it does not signi¬ no one can predict." In a long awaited television address GATWICK, England (APi down by fog on Saturday night. An tops of two cars and slammed discourage students from sign¬ Smrkovsky told Czechoslovakians. "I beg you. each and every Police probing through scattered Mr and Mrs. William Jones airport spokesman said: "Visi- into the Jones house. ing ap for 25 or 30 credits and one of you. to consider very carefully every step." wreckage counted 52 persons was^ reduced to rubble. A bility was pretty grim. We The tail section lay atop the then dropping those classes His remarks reiterated warnings in a statement from the dead Sunday in the crash of an policeman pulled their 6-mohth- couldn't see the plane and no one pile of rubble. Most of the fuse¬ that do not fit into their sched¬ Communist party leadership Saturday that public pressure Ariana Afghan Airways jet liner daughter oldpile Beverly from under of bricks. She was still saw the crash. lage and wings were broken ules. for reforms stalled by the August Soviet invasion is getting too low for a The pilot had been given clear¬ into small pieces. Student committee member her damaged crib and not seri- out of hand. The implication, though never mentioned speci¬ ance to make a landing approach fically. was that the Soviets could increase pressure on the Fifteen survived the crash of °usly hurt and decide if he would bring in BOB SEGER Czech nation. the Boeing 727 bound from Kabul to London which came in through The only person aboard not of plane Israel has rejected the latest Soviet proposals to the United dense fog before dawn Sunday Asian origin was Miss Karen Capt. Rahim Naroz, an Afghan had handled the flight on • States and Britain for a Middle East settlement, Foreign Minis¬ and slammed into a brick house Mix, about 16, daughter Pan-American airwavs of a main- who previous trips, radioed the air- ter Abba Eban told the Israeli cabinet in Jerusalem Sunday. just short of Gatwick airport. The huge plane carried 54 tenance man on loan to Ariana P°rt two or three minutes before Eban reported Israel learned of the Russian overtures in west¬ in Kabul. She was believed re- impact. "SYSTEM" ern capitals and informed Washington and London the propo¬ » and a crew of nine 'Everything was correct ex¬ sals "could not serve as a basis or a framework for discus- Two occupants of the house are turning to the United States She was reported dead cept that the pilot came down believed to have been killed. too soon." said George Kelly, chief of the government investi¬ National News New term brings winter break gating team. The plane came down about $2M one and one-half miles short of • President-elect Nixon Sunday named Henry Cabot Lodge, theft reports to U' police the runway. It cut a swath one- if twice ambassador to Saigon, to head the U.S. delegation to the quarter mile long through the beginning of a new term has countryside. Vietnam peace talks in Paris after the new Republican admin¬ As has become the custom, the It lopped the top off a small istration takes office. signaled the report of several thefts to University police. June K. Austin. Owosso junior. Cynthia Reinhardt. Coloma tree, sliced two chimney tops It was also announced that Nixon had asked Cyrus R. Vance, from a house, tore through three the current deputy negotiator, to continue as a member of the junior; and Kelly O. Noel of Scottville told police that a televi¬ more trees plowed a wide scar new delegation for about a month after the Jan. 20 inaugura¬ sion, record player, typewriter and a candle were taken from tion "so that no momentum may be lost and that continuity Room 1114, South Hubbard Hall, between Dec. 14 and Jan. 4. The will be maintained." reseated by Congress but articles w;er,e Margaret valuqd^t $2^,7 Wright,*'Jackson'junior, reported $112 worth of clothing taken from North Campbell Hall study room between Delta Marshall Music • Rep. Adam fined $25,000 Clayton Powell, and stripped of 22 years seniority, said Sunday he 12:30 and 8 p.m. Thursday. She said a suede jacket, jumper, skirt Upsilon went back because Harlem needed him. and winter coat were taken. 332-8676 Michael G. Slaughter. Kalamazoo sophomore, reported that • Using a brick thrown through one of the administration his $125 typewriter was taken from a first:floor lounge of East building's windows/acting president of San Francisco State Wilson Hall between 2 and 5 p.m. Dec. 14 STORE HOURS: WEDNESDAY NOON UNTIL 9 P.M. College, S.I. Hayakawa, pounded stakes on warning signs Sgt. Don Cleeves of the University police said that the depart¬ Sunday that read "Persons who interfere with the peaceful ment receives numerous reports of thefts at the beginning of each MONDAY-SATURDAY 9-30 A M. TO 5:30 P.M. conduct of the activities at San Francisco State College are term, partly because the students have discovered over the subject to arrest." Hayakawa is bracing the college for Mon¬ break that possessions taken the term before were covered by day's scheduled re-opening after a three-week layoff. insurance. JANUARY CLEARANCE The Men of i eurom | DRESSES SPORTSWEAR C-Hl ! Skirts, sweaters, pants, shirts and suburban coats. Two piece suits, leather skirts and alpha INTIMATE APPAREL Cordially invite you Gowns, negligees, slips, robes, pajama loungewear, bras, foundations and girdle to attend open rush MISS J FASHIONS Sweaters, skirts, shifts, jackets. Untrimmed Jan. 5, 6 and Jan. 8, 9 and Fur trimmed coats. Sizes 5-15. SHOES 7-10 p.m. Fall and winter calf, kid, and suede pumps. Some with matching handbags. Casual and sport shoes. FASHION ACCESSORIES MEN'S Handbags, jewelry, gloves, jackets, sweaters, Dress shirts, knit shirts, sport shirts outer¬ scarves shells and travel slippers. wear, rainwear, sweaters and furnishings. • Founded 1922 Sport Coats and Wool Dress Skacks 20 % OF F • Active Members 82 • House Capacity - 54 Sponsors of the Nationally-Known Jr. 500 held each spring at Michigan State University Call ED 2 0841 For Ride Jacobsons 128 HASLETT ST. Trinka Cline, executive editor James S. Granelli, managing editor Patricia Anstett, campus editor Jerry Pankhur.it, editorial editor MICHGAN Carol Budro Tom Brown, sports editor Deborah Fitch, associate campus ed STATE ME b The State News is a free and editorially independent student newspaper. Editorials express the unanimous opinion of the editorial board of the State News unless otherwise indicated. UNIVERSITY Under the provisions of section 6.1 of the "Report on Aca¬ demic Freedom for Students at Michigan State University," final responsibility for all news and editorial content rests with the editor-in-chief. Six-time recipient of the Pacemaker award for outstanding journalism. EDITORIALS Ted Kennedy the 'winds The "winds of change" to Hubert Humphrey. With Hum¬ which Sen. Edward M. Kennedy phrey taking a teaching position in Minnesota and not getting any attributed his victory in the race for Senate Majority Whip younger and with McCarthy's fu¬ ture uncertain as he is leaving last Friday seem to have been the Senate as a Democrat in easterlies. A week before, 1970, only Sen. Kennedy is now Washington officials had been in the limelight. forecasting stagnating winds Four is a long time, Old issues, from the South. But they never developed. years though, and making predic¬ tions at this time is probably fu¬ Sen. Kennedy's last minute the tile. But regardless of the out¬ carry into coup augurs much for Con¬ gress. First, the Democrats, most notably the liberal Demo¬ come in that presidential year, the American people will gain As January's drabness set¬ just ho^ much of the Library crats, have strengthened their through Sen. Kennedy's lead¬ "Did your parents take you to visit tles over campus and we all they wiir be able to use will forces. Sen. Russell Long of ership in the Senate. anyone besides your barber?'' probably be decided tomorrow -The Editors drag out the buckle boots that Louisiana, a conservative with Mom bought us for Christmas, at the Faculty Library Commit¬ tee meeting. The committee is 20 years of congressional exper¬ a new term begins with all the now considering a proposal that ience. was dumped by the way¬ lackluster joys of tramping side in favor of his youthful, MAX LERNER would rjelay the decision until through three feet of snow in mystique surrounded rival. seven degree weather to make summer- of 1970. The committee Secondly. Sen. Kennedy's win it to your eight o'clock. seems : p be having a hard time gives hope to the "neo-liberals" making up its mind. Maybe its of lawlessness of the Democratic Party that The at the dirty gray snow we left end of fall term is still the thorn-in-their-side students who caji't understand why they they may be able to achieve necessary changes in the sys¬ Th e year around, and so are a number shouldn't be able to use their of issues that were somehow tem. Some of the disenchanted Library -all of their Librarv. carried over from fall to win¬ are former McCarthy support¬ ter term. ers. anti-Establishment crusa¬ Also still pending is the tri- universUy suit against the state ders. who may rally to the Ken¬ Thus ends a lawless year, with a reprisal And, of course . . , there has been the internal law¬ Big U still dictates when and nedy banner. Alth^igh many of attack by Israeli commandos at Beirut's under what circumstances you legislature. Apparently the leg-. airport which has stunned the world as a lessness in America all through the year: in the ghettos, Robert Kennedy's followers are opposite sex in islature and the universities are of overreaction to a lawless attack on the unions in crucial indus¬ case can have the still heartbroken. Edward Ken¬ on the campuses, among an Israeli plane by Arab commandos at your room, and when freshmen having a slight disagreement nedy should be able to reach Athens. I plan to return to this episode tries and even . . . among some police. over w&o runs the schools. Mon¬ women have to be behind closed more fully in another piece. most of those who yearn for doors, but by the grace of God ey talks, and since the legisla¬ Meanwhile, when you look at the calen¬ any sanctions on the Russians. geous editors these days are in Prague. Bobby. For sheer courage, it would be hard to and the will of Milton B. Dick- ture appropriates the colleges' Almost forgotten in Sen. Ken¬ dar of events in 1968, can there be any As for the French, they had to suffer a massive lawless student-worker revolu¬ match the conduct of Isaak Dines, the_ erson, vice president for stu¬ money they feel they can raise doubt that lawlessness has become epide¬ tion that paralyzed the country and left it editor of the Jornal do Brazil, who their voice on a number of school nedy's successful upset was mic? Central to everything has been the scrapped a prepared talk and delivered dent affairs, perhaps students Sen. Hugh Scott's victory for lawlessness in the four nations that hap¬ half bankrupt. But De Gaulle might policies. remember that his economic an impromptu attack on the lawlessness will soon be able to regulate the Senate Minority Whip over pen to be-is there a connection0-- the four war against of the regime, knowing that he would be Great Britain, carried on since 1963, left their own social lives. The pro¬ Sen. Roman Hruska, R-Neb. nuclear powers today: America. Russia, him little room for moral maneuver. Bar¬ arrested and held-as he was. I know Dines There will be other issues dur¬ China, France. to be not a far-out radical but a moderate, posals that were initiated last Here, in another close contest, barism against a stricken economy and a term to change these situations ing the term, but these are the stricken people is no less barbaric when it thoughtful liberal who knew when the time the liberal Republicans won the I speak, of course, of the continued had come to challenge the runaway prae- is conducted not in commando raids but in have finally waded through all major one^ which face us im- large-scale operation of American troops torianism of the generals. mediateh A Their resolution victory and placed an Eastern¬ in Vietnam, to counter the operation of high-flown phrases, with exquisite polite¬ the bureaucratic red tape and There are other items on the'calendar er. Scott, in their Senate leader¬ ness. North Vietnamese troops there. In both of 1968 lawlessness that I know less about now await the final verdict. should be forthcoming to brigh¬ Nor is lawlessness any less barbaric when cases, the undeclared war has been essen¬ ten the dreary winter-term-at- ship. This was then a double it is carried out under the guise of "emer¬ in a direct way. but they must be cited. Undergrads still have access victory for the "liberal estab¬ tially lawless, and it has undermined any gency law. I am speaking of the actions of There was the barbaric lawlessness of the to the Library, since the closing MSU landscape. moral authority that either nation may deliberate starving of a whole people in lishment." the,government of President Costa e Silva -The Editors claim in deploring the lawlessness of oth¬ Biafra. which the Americans could have of the stacks was postponed, but It looks as though the conser¬ ers, including the "foot-dragging" behavior in Brazil, in the mass arrests of parliamen¬ used more vigor to remedy, but they were tary deputies, editors and rival political vative sentiment in this coun¬ of Saigon at Paris. I speak, also, of the con¬ deterred by the persuasion of the British leaders. Here. too. I have heard no stern tinuance of lawlessness by the Mao Tse- tie with Nigeria and the danger of Russian try may have been exaggerated. tung government in the mass purges car¬ protest from the American government, influence moving in. There was the con¬ no warning of agonizing reappraisal of AT SN But Kennedy and Scott should ried out during 1968 against technicians, an the American aid program. We can now see tinued lawless genocide of blacks by Arabs provide at the very least a pro¬ scientists, intellectuals and anti-Mao par¬ in the Sudan, little noted, little heeded by how unwise it was for the Americans to be ty leaders. an unmindful world There was the law¬ gressive forum in our nation's so hurried in recognizing and supporting New A new editorship created executive editorship for special capital. Finally, it must be noted how this event affects Sen. Kenne¬ The lawlessness of the Soviet Union is. without doubt, the biggest single political story of 1968. The Soviet rape of Czecho¬ slovakia was in reprisal for nothing except the regime of the generals after the coup that brought them to power. A little less haste, a more sparing and selective sup¬ port. might have served as a warning less seizure of the Pueblo by North Korea and the extortion of confessions from the commander by barbaric threats. And. of course-how could the calendar the desire of the Czechs to run their own fail to include it?-there has been the inter¬ m projects has been created at the State dy's availability for the Demo¬ against adventures like the current one of News, Editor-in-Chief Edward Brill an¬ affairs in their own peaceful way. It was the military regime. nal lawlessness in America all through the nounced today. cratic presidential nomination in unprovoked, mass, cynical. The Ameri¬ I spent the better part of a day with Gen. v£ar: in the ghettos, on the campuses, Trinka Cline, West Union. 111., junior, 1972. Sen. Muskie's decision not cans, bemused by negotiations with Mos¬ Costa e Silva at his army headquarters among the unions in crucial industries and cow for a summit meeting, didn't move even (as the Walker Report points out) has been appointed executive editor, and to risk running for Majority in Petropolis. just before he became will be in charge of special reporting and (as they should have) to use every means president, and he agreed at that time about among some police. on part-time loan to a community news¬ Whip surely hurts his chances of short of war and put the heavy moral bur¬ the importance of an independent press. Could it be that lawlessness, like the paper being organ¬ regaining the fame he re¬ den for the act on the Soviet Union and re¬ Which only makes his manhandling of the Hong Kong flu. is a communicable di¬ ized in the Lansing ceived in the past campaign. Western Europe. When a moral sease0 assure press all the more a mockery of consti¬ area. One of her first That leaves Sen. McCarthy and rebuke did come, it Was too little and too tutional government. Not all the coura¬ Copyright 1968. Los Angeles Times. jobs will be coordi¬ late. Nor did the United Nations impose A nating extensive cov¬ erage for Black His¬ tory Week coming up in February. Miss Cline had the State News as an intern and has since OUR READERS' MIND been a reporter and served as religion editor, co-editor of the editorial writer at the 1968 Welcome Week edition, and most re¬ ordinance? State News before cently as associate campus editor. campus CLINE assuming duties editor last summer. A police ad¬ ministration and public safety major. Miss as on Both Miss Cline and Miss Anstett will sit the editorial board, the making body of the newspaper. prime policy¬ Succeedi ng Miss Anstett as associate cam¬ U' violating its own awakened at three in the morning by those Cline is a member of Theta Sigma Phi, pus editor'is Deborah Fitch. Tampa. Fla.. To the Editor: ministrative Ruling of July, 1953 (A Hand¬ bat. After severl pokes, the bat must have junior. Miss Fitch, also a journalism ma¬ decided that I might be dangerous and slithering noises under the bed professional women's journalism honorary, book for Students, MSU, 1968. p. 8) Open Letter to John Roetman. Manager Peter J. Wagner and the MSU Sport Parachute Club jor, has b?en an intern, copy editor and of Married Housing: One night late this summer, my wife swooped down at me in attack. Fortunate¬ has covered the ASMSU Cabinet and board associate professor. Dept. of Chemistry Replacing Miss Cline in her former posi¬ woke me at three in the morning and said, ly I slapped him right in the fangs and beats. She is member of Delta Gamma My annual letter in response to your tion as campus editor will be Patricia An- a "Do you hear something?" No doubt about knocked him to the floor. He immediately annual letter to the inhabitants of mar¬ stett, Detroit senior. As campus editor. sorority. Alpha Lambda Delta, freshman it. something was flapping through the crawled behind a bureau and inadvertent¬ ried housing as regards the dire conse¬ Miss Anstett is in charge of all local news women's honorary. Thcta Sigma Phi, pro¬ quences of owning a pet is a little late air. "It must be a fly with a broken wing," ly sprang one of the mouse traps we keep Red Cedar report I fessional women's journalism honorary, I answered, "go back to sleep." After set .to help control the monthly invasion of coverage, coordinating a large staff of re¬ this year. We have decided to move, and porters. the Water Carnival executive board, and active in residence hall government. the extra involvement has upset my drinking rum all night (off campus, of non-rats The loud noise must have scared the hell out of him. for he By JIM DeFOREST I Miss Anstett is a member of Sigma Kap¬ was schedule. course). I definitely did not want to dis¬ flapped a hasty As associate campus editor she will super¬ of the bedroom, out of the Madalvn Murray, professional atheist, led cover anything other than a fly flapping retreat out pa sorority and has been active in many Dogs, cats, and other animals are not Greek activities and is now on the Senior vise the intern program and generally aid around in our bedroom. Nonetheless, my front door which my wife had conveniently the attack on Apollo 8's Bible reading. the campus editor. permitted in University residences." Ad- wife turned on the light, and there was a left ajar, and into the outer darkness where Some irate Christians told her where to go, Council. A journalism major, she began at bat searching for prey. there was much gnashing of teeth. After but to Madalyn it's a compliment. THEY U)El?E VERY NICE A&OUT my wife came in and convinced herself THE M0NTH5 ANP tOEEk£ WERE My wife immediately vacated the premi¬ that there were no punctures in our PRETTY GOOP, &UT IT HAP A LOT TAKING IT BACK..THEYSAIPTHIS ses. no doubt because she did not want to During winter term you really notice the childrens' necks, her teeth stopped gnash¬ OF 0AP VMe IN IT... HAPPENS ALL THE TIME be in conflict with the above quoted Uni¬ size of the MSU campus. The Weather Bu¬ ing. versity regulation. As an impassioned reau issues cold wave warnings, but for c believer in law and order, I felt called north of the Red Cedar only. 0 upon to convince this animal that it was not allowed in Cherry Lane. So I picked up a fly swatter (we keep one handy in You may well think becaus.- of the guilt that we are moving feelings created by constantly living in conflict with Univer¬ sity regulations. Actually, there is a sim¬ each room to help beat off the annual in¬ 1 ^r vasion of flies) and began swatting at that pler reason. I don't want my wife to be Monday, January 6, 1969 5 Michigan State News, East Lansing, M ihigan Canadian students build By CAROLCORRIERE State News Staff Writer the This freedd^ is reflected in variety of room arrange¬ ple-two in one room, one in another-they share the lounge history, customs, folkways and anything Indian. Its members also help Indians, who are new the college cooperative spirit of demo¬ cratic living and sharing with others. ed the college over Thanksgiv¬ ing holiday and are in favor of starting something similar at ments possible, the diversity of and kitchen facilities of the MSU. While East Lansing construc¬ to the city, get accustomed to "We have tried to foster the the residents and in the way the Ashrams. "The tion companies have been plan¬ urban life. idea that you have an obligation possibilities are un¬ college curriculum is set up. Gnostic Chambers resemble ning luxury apartments that will Courses in the institute and to help any group that comes limited," Dick Baker. Scotts- Residence at Rochdale is open Franz Kafkas in that they also be quite exclusive"" of stu¬ along," Odelman said. dale, Ariz., junior and execu¬ house three people, 'however, in the whole college are set dents. and a high-rise hotel, as long as space is available. Consequently, Rochdale Col-. tive vice-president of Inter- up according to the interests of students in Toronto. Ont., have Many of the people living there they include a kitchen-dining Cooperative Council said. the students If someone wants lege has been mortgaged and are students at Rochdale Col¬ "Rochdale College was charter¬ built their own college. a course in hand weaving or re-mortgaged to help build co¬ lege itself, others just work Apartments come in two ed and built in less than a year Rochdale College is a new science fiction, he puts up not¬ ops throughout Canada. Co-op there. Some residents attend the styles-one and two bedrooms. way of living for students-it One-bedroom apartments are ices or others interested and a College has also lent its re¬ and a half. Two similar pro¬ is an 18-story co-op that is al¬ University of Toronto, and oth¬ course materializes. There are sources-architects and fund jects in Canada are presently in ers do all three. known as Aphrodite Suites and Inter-Coopera¬ the planning staees.'' so a college run by and for the two-bedrooms are Zeus Suites. no teachers as such, just re¬ raises~to the people who live there. The building has 16 residen¬ tive Council of University of Most Aphrodites and all Zeus's source persons who make their Freedom in life style and in tial floors with five different are unfurnished except for special knowledge available as Michigan which is presently education is stressed at Roch¬ types of units. There are 8- needed and often learn as much building a $1.5 million co-op room suites called Ashrams of stove, refrigerator and drapes. dale. according to Howard Adel- as the students. on their north campus. four doubles and four singles Indians more or less inhabit man. organizer of Co-op Col¬ the 17th floor where the Indian But there is more to Roch¬ Rochdale has also been a that share a washroom, lounge inspiration for the lege. the corporation that found¬ Institute is located. The insti¬ dale College than the freedom it source of ed Rochdale. Everyone "does his and kitchen. There are Franz tute studies Indian language. provides. Rochdale abounds with co-ops here. Six students visit¬ own thing. " Kafkas which house three peo¬ Winter walk * 4 s'Js- frT\ . A cool coed traipses through the scppe that surrounds Beaumont To Trustees approve "J faculty changes f The MSI" Board of Trustees aDoroved The board approved changes for: Wil¬ in December 7 appointments. 13 leaves; liam H Minner. from 4-H youth agent for 20 transfers, assignments and miscella- Jackson. Kalamazoo and Calhoun counties to 4-H youth agent for Jackson. Calhoun. Branch and Hillsdale counties. Nov. 1. Included in the new assignments were 1968 Harold D Rouget. from 4-H youth the naming of Kullervo Louhi associate dean of the College of Business as act ing dean from Jan 1-March 3^. .969 while Dean Alfred L Seelye . ave agent for Branch. Hillsdale. Cjlhoun and Jackson counties. Nov. 1. Ruble, from research ciate 1968. William L. associate to asso¬ professor of agricultura. economics U of absence Frank Borsenik associate and statistics and probability, Jan. 1. professor in the School of Hotel. Restau¬ 1969. and John N Collins, asst profes¬ rant and Institutional Management, be¬ sor of political science with additional comes acting director of the school, suc¬ assignment in the African Studies Cen¬ ter. Jan 1-April 30. 1969 ceeding Henry Ogden Barbour, who left MSU to accept a top management posi¬ Additional assignments w>re granted tion with a hotel corporation for: Griffith O Freed, associate profes¬ sor of psychology with assignments in Appointments approved were Heidi E Spaller. 4-H youth agent for Oakland psychiatry. Dec 1. 1968; t'ederic E. Reeve, professor of American Thought County. Dec. 16. 1968. Burton J Stanley. and Language with an additional assign¬ 4-H youth agent-at-large. Jan 1 1969 Richard John Dunn, asst professor of ment in Justin Morrill College. Jan 1- animal husbandry. Jan 1.1969; and Clare April 30. 1969 Baljit Singh associate Worden Hendee. visiting professor of professor of political scienct and asst. dean of the College of Soci it Science, forestry. March 16-June 15.1969 Other appointments included Iren dropping assignment as ass ciate dean Raisler. instructor in German and Rus¬ of the Honors College and assuming new- sian. Sept 1. 1969: Robert Brittain. visit¬ duties with the Social Science Research Bureau. Jan. 1.1969 ing professor in MSU's Justin Morrill The board accepted resigiations and College. March 1-June 30. 1969: and Alexis John Kniazeff. professor of small terminations for Gordon L Revburn. e. Dec 1. 1968 4-H youth agent for Mecosta and Osce D£>" i Mae d approved sabbatic for: Bill A. Stout, professor of agricul¬ n health, pgi si tural engineering. Sept 1. 1969-Aug 31. 1970. to study at the University of Califor¬ nia at Davis; Donald P White, profes¬ microbiology and public health, > sor of forestry. Feb. 15-Aug 15. 1970. 1968 to study in the United States. Canada. The following retirements %ere This is Checkout Europe. Middle East. Pakistan and ed by the MSU board i first year i Japan; W Robert Houston, professor employment in parentheses) J< of elementary and special education. Ramsev. professor of Romano April 1-Sept 30. 1969. to study al home, guages. July 1. 1970 < 19401, will serve and J Geoffrey Moore, professor of sec¬ one-vear consultantship from July 1. 196 ondary education and curriculum. March professor of English. July 1'. 1970 11935 to serve a one-vear consultantship fror 1-Aug 31. 1970 Also given sabbatical leaves were July 1. 1969. to June 30. 1970. Wanda \ William E Sweetland. professor of teach¬ professor of music. July : er education. April 1-June 30. 1970. to studv 1970 119461. 1969. to June 30. in Africa and Europe: T Harry McKin- nev. professor in Justin Morrill College. March 15-Sept 15. 1969. to study at psvchologv. Julv 1. 1970 M9511. to serve a one-vear consultantship from July 1. home. Clifford J Pollard, associate pro¬ fessor of botanv and plant science. Jan. 1969. to June 30.1970 1-June 30. 1969. to study at the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda. Md : F Obrecht. associate professor of chem¬ We have 15 and Gordon C Spink, asst professor of ical engineering. Jan. 1.1970 < 19471 on one- entomology. July 1-Dec 31. 1969. to study vear terminal leave from Jan 1-Dec. at Brookhaven National Laboratory 31, 1969: Barrett Lyons, asst professor of Sabbatical leaves were granted for social work, July 1 1969 119611; Bohn E. Lesley R Fishel. professor of polit Musgrave. associate professor and asst. Jam Mad Colle 1970. the Cooperative Extension Service. Jan. Sept 1. 1969-Aug . Washington. Paris. Gen 1. 1969 t19301; Stanley Johnston, profes¬ Tokyo: and John J Appel. associate pro¬ sor of horticulture. July 1. 1969 <1920>. fessor of American Thought and Lan¬ and Merrill B Pierson. asst treasurer. guage and James Madison College Sept July 1.1969 < 1942 Retiri Mar 1. 1969-Aug 31. 1970. to study and write in Washington and New York City Hannigan. housekeeper at Cowles House. The board also approved leaves for July 1. 1969 <19491 August Inkuls. Dairy Henry C Koch, associate director of the Library. Sept 15-Dec 15. 1969. to study in Plant Dept July 1 1969 ' 1953 ■. Charles H . Nve. maintenance mechanic in physi¬ 30 dazzling girls wil! efficiently rush you through the hectic England and Italy. Rowland R Pierson. cal plant, July 1 1969 >1947 : George E. professor and director of the MSU Coun¬ seling Center. June 16-Sept. 15.1969. to tra¬ Revenaugh. skilled trades foreman in physical plant. July 1. 1969 H950>; Calvin time of buying books. Forget the never ending lines that in the vel in Europe, and James L Bristor. Leo J Kiev asst professor of health, physical educa¬ tion and recreation. Jan 1 April 30. 1969 Dept . stockroom July 1, 1969 U 947i : supervisor in biochemistry. you usually see. We enlarged our store and our tq study at Indiana University Nov 1. 1969 11928 '; and Gordon H Noo- board granted transfers and utility man in physical plant Jan. book shopping easier for you. The nan, changes in assignments for Ruth Beale. 1.1969 (1948. larger aisles have made from home economist for Jackson. Cal¬ houn and Kalamazoo counties to home economist for Jackson. Calhoun. Branch Remember! and Hillsdale counties. Nov 1. 1968 Jane P Child, from home economist for Kalamazoo. Calhoun and Jackson coun- ASMSU verse, from home economist for Hillsdale and St. Joseph counties economist for Branch. Hillsdale. Calhoun and Jackson counties. Nov 1. 1968 Branch. to home opens petitioning Wider Aisles Other changes approved were Alice for female seat E tenaw Epple. from home economist for Wash¬ program Lenawee and Monroe counties to r for family living edu- ,1968 Elizabeth B Mow- Petitioning will open to fill the ASMSU Board female Tuesday at member-at-large seat. Jackson and Kalamazoo counties to home The position, normally filled economist for Calhoun, Jackson. Branch and Hillsdale counties. Nov 1 1968. and by the spring term general elec¬ Qook S Bethel Jarte Schmidt, from home econo¬ tion, is vacant due to the resig¬ s mist for St Joseph. Hillsdale and Branch nation of Sally Simons, who is counties to home economist for St Jo- transferring to the University tudent tore i for: Gale of Hawaii. jent for St The co-ed selected to assume Joseph and Kalamazoo counties, Nov the position will hold it until 1, 1968, Richard W Brown, from 4-H youth agent for Oakland County to 4-H spring elections. youth agent for Ingham County, Jan 1, Interested co-eds may pick 1969 Jerry A Halm, from 4-H youth up petitions in the ASMSU of¬ agent for Kalamazoo and St Joseph coun fices. third floor, Student Serv¬ 421 at Grand River ties, Nov 1. 1968. and Lynn R Harvey, ices Bldg. from 4-H youth agent for Hillsdale, Branch and St. Joseph counties to 4-H Petitioning closes Monday, youth agent for Hillsdale. Branch, Cal¬ January 13. houn and Jackson counties. 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STATE DISCOUNT Till 9 Next to the Card Shop For This Special Sale Monday, January 6, 1969 8 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan SEXUALITY: a search for 'So faith, hope, love abide, these three; but the greatest of these is !ovs." "We live in a sex-cen¬ tric, yet sex rejecting-so- ciety. It's a culture whose favorite pastime seems to be compounding value mismanagement. The quest for meaningful in¬ terpersonal relationships is paramount. We need a wholistic approach to the total concept of educating for living." "Goodness is something so simple: always to live for others, The Rev. Donald Ward, never to seek one's own advantage." Sexuality colloquy co-chairman "Youth is speaking to us of a new moral¬ ity, of context and consequence \n terms of sexual relationships." 'See it now! Uncensored! Love in the raw!" "Permanent press--with sex." Monday, January 6, 1969 9 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan 'New morality' ousts rules of behavior By PAT ANSTETT questionably risen to national rounding moral decision-mak- Sex physiology open colloquy and international prominence in ^ng This morality no longer Campus Editor Sexuality, for years a nar¬ the markets and media. This increased attention to sex is al- gjves absolute power of right- wrong decisions to society's to rowly defined, closed-door top¬ so requiring a redefinition of institutions. Instead, the "new A seven-week symposium: "Sexuality: A Search for Perspec¬ ic, is undergoing a re-evalua¬ tion today. many past attitudes. morality" emphasizes personal tive" will begin on campus Tuesday. Past views of sexuality were decision-making with an The colloquy, which will unite students, faculty and 21 nation¬ Much of society is redefining mere biological explanations fjnite variety of differentiated ally-known physicians, scientists, theologians and writers, has sexuality in relation to the per¬ relation- , sonalized situations which em¬ approaches to human been in the planning and development stages for one year. The beginning lectures this week will examine the physiologi¬ body contemporary relation¬ A large discrepancy, how¬ cal aspects of human sexuality. ships, instead of rigid moral has arisen among the lecturers this week in¬ standards. The same moral emphasis sexuality: ever, ranks of the "new moralists." The clude: a search for perspective A large group of authors, Dr. Selig B. Neubardt, prac¬ which has plagued the con¬ theologians and educational au¬ ticing obstetrician and gynecolo¬ sciences of a segregation-prac¬ thorities who also want to see gist in New York. Neubardt, ticing, war-participating so¬ sex viewed in its proper per¬ ciety is also characterizing the speaking on "Observations of a close examination of many past spective reluctantly view the Practicing Gynecologist" is the increased sexual freedom which author of "A Concept of Con¬ sexual standards. some individuals seek. One of the major questions traception." James Leslie McCary, pro¬ today is whether there really is a "new morality" or wheth¬ Improper Emphasis fessor of psychology at the Uni¬ er these attitudes have just "Human intercourse has in¬ versity of Houston. The author lain dormant for centuries and trinsic value as an act of love of "Human Sexuality" will speak .and this meaning and sig¬ on "Why Sex Education." prominence i have risen to . . nificance can be abused by cir¬ John Cagnon, associate pro¬ lately through evolution and not fessor of sociology at the State revolution. cumstances and motivation in which it is performed," .Thomas University of New York at Stony- "Phoniest Phrase Harvey Cox, Going" author of "The |A. Wassmer, professor of mor- philosophy at St. Peter's Sex Collo brook. He is the author of num¬ erous selections, including "Col¬ Secular City," contends that College, N.J.. said in a na¬ lective Forms of Sexual De¬ the "new morality" is the tional magazine article. PIanners of the campus's sex colloquy glance over reference materials before the viance," and will speak on "Sex: phoniest phrase going. Moral¬ Still other authorities claim opening lectures of the program begin Tuesday. Rocus of this week s schedule is the A Cultural Artifact." • ity is always new, always chang¬ that the current "sexual revol¬ physiological aspects of human sexuality. State News Photo by Wayne Munn These lecturers will examine ing, because there are always ution" is receiving an improper such topics as serual behavior new situations emerging to emphasis. in both human beings and ani¬ which existing moral principles mals, current views of sexual¬ have to be applied, and this re¬ Urie fessor Bronfenbrenner, pro¬ at Cornell University, PHYSIOLOGICAL ity, the interrelatedness of sex¬ quires new thinking. " in another magazine article uality to disease and health and Still other people claim that a definite change in attitudes News Background said that with all the talk about sexuality today the focus has ASPECTS OF HUMAN the actual nature of sexual acts. The $20,000 colloquy will pro¬ has occured. running far deeper been "almost exclusively on vide not only lectures from visit¬ than mere discussion or toler¬ that only caused a further pol¬ physical aspects of sex. SEXUALITY ing authorities but will attempt to establish an on-going dia¬ ance of sexual attitudes. arization of the sexes. Both without consideration for their Modern methods of contracep¬ men and women had roles and psychological or social signifi¬ Tuesday and Wednesday, Jan. 7 and 8. logue on sexuality on campus. tion and even such suggestions behaviors rigidly defined for cance both for the young person To explicate the fundamental biological fabric of man. as a ba¬ "The colloquy is designed pri¬ as legalizing prostitution in himself and for the society of sis for understanding the various aspects of his individual and marily to help students gain the cities to prevent the wide- matrimony. '» *"d »' ook, will give an discussion from both the visit¬ tonic and where movies invite Personal Approach All-University lecture entitled "Sex. . Cultural Arti¬ uality will finally emerge in its ing lecturers and professors. audiences to see "uncensored It is also marked by a change proper state. fact" at 4 p.m. Wednesday in the Auditorium. love in the raw," sex has un- in the "power structure" sur- Retord Sale Here—Where You Save 25% On Used Books!! Hurry . . . p CLASSICAL SPECIAL RECORD L $■ THURSDAY PRICES u 179 EACH Today thru Thursday s Great Classics Featuring Stockhausen, Stravinsky, Rachmaninoff, Kodaly, Boch. See Our Special Store Hours Below Watch the Johnny Carson Show Tonight for Our Specie' Offer CampusBookStoms AT STORE ACROSS FROM Record Depcm~i BERKEY HALL --THIS STORE WILL BF OP^N MO*' VA'FD. 9-9 10 Michigan State News, East I ansing, Michigan Resolved Winter Term Needs * MSU BOOKSTORE New and Used Books * Huge Paperback Section * MSU BOOKSTORE Book Bags to Protect Your Books * Notebooks, Pens, Pencils, Magic Markers, Highliters * Art & Engineering Supplies * Cliff Notes and Course Aids * Complete Class Supplies * MSU lewelry + iiiit Department * Decoration Posters * Stationery * Need a book we don't carry- tell us, we'll order it! BOOK STORE In The Ce Monday, January 6, 1969 11 I MSI) BOOK is No. 1! Spartan Spirit Shop Visit your new Spartan Spirit Shop in the MSU Bookstore lobby- a new and unique shop for sweatshirts, T-shirts, mugs, contemporary cards, MSU mascots, jewelry, and much more. We think you'll be pleased with this newest addition to the No. 1 store. Hours This Week OPEN TODAY 8:30 AM to 9 PM Tues 8:30 AM to 9 PM Wed 8:30 - 5:30 Thur 8:30 - 5:30 Frl 8:30 - 5:30 International Monday, January 6, 1969 12 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan MSU By MARK EICHER Stale News Staff Writer campus, 1,291 off campus 81 in married housing. and tries fiscal year 1968, 31 57 females left for males and do not health 45 students flunked out, rea- plans. go "We find we are a to through with ther understand "We have not. had the oppor- tunity to do the work with with- referral drawals we have wanted to," he associate professor of institu¬ tional research said, "because of the certain amount of ease not return had not intended on going any further. " right for everyone. The main problem is to make people in¬ vestigate and find the schools "We attempt to show what sons, they like and apply to them," Many students who went home have here in changing ma¬ after exams never returned to personal problems have," L. Michael tfie students 21 Smith, males for the left and and for military, left 31 females 28 center to some." noted that not He may said. someSmith be said. "We in this areaare very, we because lax you verydon't jors and not declaring them Miss Delisle said that complexness of the multiver¬ the Miss Delisle said. MSU. Some were disenchanted Others lacked the money neces¬ director of financial aids, said. "personal reasons." aware that the counseling office have time." right away." sity could not be necessarily "This is for our own files and "Pregnancies are not a big is available or that financial aids attributed to attrition rates. sary for further education. The reason," Smith said. "We do exist. Though there is no way to tell "People move around much is considered confidential. reasons are endless. have some and they normally go Though MSU has no record where MSU stands with other more in education today," she "I've always said there is no 'If and when the student Most non-returning students said, "and it's not all bad. " did not become part of an eas- comes back we know better what down as personal, though some- of those who return once they schools, Smith said it was single answer. It depends on the times they can be listed as health have withdrawn, Smith said that his opinion that MSU had a rela- ily attainable statistic. But the student needs in the way of "Drop out has a negative student." problems." 50 per cent is the national tively low attrition rate. those who left the University counseling and academic guid- Many of those going to the average of students who with- "MSU may actually have less connotation, but it's not at all. before the end of a term usually ance," he said, Sometimes the people who do same prescription isn t went through a formal with- A11 formal withdrawals go financal aids office to withdraw draw but return to a university. attrition,"Frances H. Delisle, drawal procedure which enabled through the financial aids office the University to pinpoint rea- in ^e Student Servicer sons why students left. 1° withdrawing studen From July 1967 to July 1968, usually asked for reasons. 2,183 students went through Smith explained that of the formal withdrawal procedures 205 male and 253 fer"ale fresh- that withdrew during the at MSU. Of these 811 lived on AMLEC offers travel with study Mate -sews Mali writer seven w course ,n. Students with an urge to tra- on here wi„ be conducted vel and see life the way ,t real- universitv location in ly is will have the opportunity to do so bv contacting the MSU- AMLEC European Studv Pro- . . , , " „ , J ^1^^" Humanities Dept. gram which is now-being offered - . Perhaps . the most recent ad¬ through the University. dition to AMLEC's study ros¬ American Language Education ters special emphasis for the Center (AMLEC > curricula of fieW geographv Two cour- the past originally included ses Geog hv 4U and 440. in art and courses Presently, students are offered language^ focus hv ^ 0„ Mems epmphasis the opportunity of pursuing host country a„d the g, study of French. German and w<,slern Europe. wi Spanish at the universities of « ^ re[erence lhe com. ■Manterre Nanterre. Par,.,: Vienna. Aus- Paris: Aus¬ market countr|es. tria: and Barcelona.- Spain, Classes will orient them¬ respectively. selves to the Netherlands and will be attended at The Hague. A special feature of each of Both 411 and 440( offered now the MSU Overseas programs for the first time a'oroad. will be v\ni be will uc incthe muuv sites di study sues at which wiutii ,. , ... , r. , , students will atiend classes. To combined perience. with actual field ex- achieve the feel of study abroad Graduate as well as under¬ efforts will be made to create graduate education is available for the student an awareness of under the auspiies of MSU- the people and culture of his AMLEC. Credit \ ork in Euro¬ respective host country pean Educational Systems will "Our programs give the stu¬ be offered, as welj as the chance dent a chance for studv as well for independent * research by as fun." Keith Odle. " AMLEC the individual. director, said. "It's truly meant Further information on the to be a learning experience, AMLEC-sponsored programs is something the individual will now available from Room 107 carry away with him long after at the Center for International his courses have ended Programs. Enrollment for summer will also contain European study in political science to be conducted from London. England, as well as The Hague. Netherlands. With Instruction for two courses here. Poli. Sci. 455 (Comparative Politics i and 490 dent Research) will be avail¬ able at both locations enabling i Indepen¬ KAPPA a student to earn 10 credits within the seven-week semester. The Dept. of Humanities will SIGMA once again offer Humanities 241 • "Ancient World i and 242-3 DOZEN ROSES For Ritf.es Call S3W Cash & Carry 332-5092 Jon Anthony 809 E. 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With MSU leading 23-21 with seven cagers, scored the Spartans 13-5 in the first four minutes of the second 85-71 MSU opened its Big Ten minutes left in the half, Lee half to run the score to 53-33. basketball season with an ex¬ hibition of cold shooting Satur¬ Lafayette picked up his third Then Benington went to his foul and was pulled by Coach bench and inserted Lloyd Ward day night in Jenison Fieldhouse and the Spartans began to chip John Benington. While Lafayette, when it lost to Northwestern, the only effective Spartan away at the Wildcat lead. Two 85-71. The loss dropped the scorer, watched from the bench, straight baskets by Lafayette Spartan's overall record to 4-5. the Wildcats outscored MSU 19- and Benjamin and a free throw The Spartans were plagued 5 and left the court with a 40- by Ward cut the score to 63- throughout the game by a com¬ 58 with 7:32 remaining but that 28 halftime lead. bination of poor shooting and was as close as MSU could rebounding and could not keep Northwestern appeared to have pace with the deadly marksman¬ the game on ice when they out- ship of the Wildcats, who shot Dale Kelley, the Wildcats 51 per cent from the floor and 81 leading scorer, hit a layup and per cent from the foul line. MSU after a free throw by Ward could manage only 54 per cent 76ers beat Pistons Northwestern reeled off five from the line and 40 per cent straight points to make the from the field while being out- PHILADELPHIA (UPI) - score 70-59 with only six min¬ rebounded, 44-29. Billy Cunningham, Hal Greer utes left to play. and Wally Jones combined- for Northwestern jumped off to a Lafayette, who was in foul 81 points Sunday to lead the night long and Layup for quick 9-3 lead and looked as if it were set on running the Spar¬ tans out of the fieldhouse. But trouble all Philadelphia 76ers to a 126-119 fouled out with 6:15 left in the victory over Detroit in a Na¬ game, led all scorers with 20 Scrappy Spartan guard Lloyd Ward drives the length of the court and soars past the Spartans battled back and tional Basketball Association points. Second half hero Lloyd Northwestern's Terry Gamber to hit a layup to help spark MSU's second half come- grabbed an 11-10 lead on a Game at the Spectrum. Ward picked up 14 points in 16 back. The Spartan's Rudy Benjamin (21) looks on. State News Photo by Bob Ivlns minutes of action and sparked the Spartans with his hustling play. Ward hit on three of four from TOM BROWN DROP PAIR the field and eight of 10 from the foul line. Benjamin was the only other Spartan to hit double A friendly figures with 10. thought 'S' buried in Garden Kelley led Northwestern balanced attack with 19 points, Terry Gamber hit 17, includ¬ ing 13 of 13 from the foul (hie) MSU ran up against two highly Villanova was unbeaten and Spartans they ran up an early 17 point lead. Then the Spar¬ line, while Jim Sarno scored 16 and Don Davis added 14. ranked basketball teams in the nationally ranked before they Question: W hat does the MSI basketball team have in con tans caught fire and pulled to Don Adams was the games top Spartan's first visit to the Holi- iost to North Carolina in the cith Wilt Chamberlin? within four points but the Wild¬ rebounder with 14 while John day Festival at New York's Madi- opening round and against the Answer: Neither can shoot free throws. son Square Garden and came cats held on for a 75-66 win. Holms led the Spartans with At this time it seems almost pointless to carp about the Spartan away from the big city with two six. Bouncing Bernie cagers. MSU does so many things wrong that you feel almost Stepter again paced on the Cold free throw shooting in MSU's Bernie Copeland (45) powers his way past criminal criticizing them. Spartan scorers with 15 but big the first half by the Spartans, After all, the Judeo--Christian ethic frowns on kicking a fellow In the opening game of the Lee Lafayette was held to just who made only four of 13 while three Wildcat defenders for a possible two points In when he's down, right? Besides, if I could even begin to jnake tournament, which featured many two baskets by Villanova's quick the Wildcats hit 12 or 14, gave Saturday night's loss. The Wildcats pictured are sense out of the MSU melange, I'd qualify for Head Coach John of the top ranked teams in the zone defense. the Wildcats their commanding Sterling Burke (23), Don Adams (10) and Jim Sarno. country including UCLA and lead. State News Photo by Bob Ivlns Benington'sjob. What ails the Spartans isn't any one little thing that if correct¬ North Carolina, the Spartans "The team's Northwestern's Dan Davis play was not ed would put MSU's name in the program for the NCAA finals. tangled with home-town favor¬ hit all six of his foul shots It's just no good to slip Lee Lafayette a Ban roll-on app sea tor ite St. John's and came up on good in either game," Assistant during the game to run his Fans like football Coach Gus Ganakas said. "We or hand Benington a bottle of Scope and then just stan< back the short end of a 61-51 score. season string to 31 without a had bad starts in both games MSU has averaged better and watch the results or your money will be cheerfully refunded. The Redmen then went on to miss, a Northwestern record. but we came back against Vill¬ than 65,000 fans at its home If a cure for MSU's fast-fading fortunes were to be presented upset North Carolina before be¬ anova which was encouraging. MSU's next game will be Tues¬ football games everv year since tv Long John in bottled form, it's a cinch the University police ing trounced by top ranked UCLA We didn't get a strong perfor¬ day night against Wisconsin at 1962. wouldn't let him take it into the fieldhouse anyhow in final game. Tenison Fieldhouse. mance from any one person in Therefore, realizing that my two-cents worth is subject to in¬ ■the tournament but it was a flation, I now succumb to the common human insistance upon Cold shooting, both from the valuable experience playing curbing chaos: what ever happened to our free throw shooters? I've seen high school players take the one and one on unfriendly field and the four line led to the defeat which was more one¬ against that kind of competit- STARTS courts where the roar of the crown is like the roar of a hurricane. sided than the finalscore Swish. ' would indicate. MSU made only . To nobody's surprise, UCLA TODAY Then I've seen the MSU player put one up while thousands wait 3 of 10 free throws in the first jfralked over everyone to win with bated breath half. Harrison Stepter led the the Festival and 7-2 Lew Alcindor Rebound. Spartan scoring with a mere was named the tourney's MVP And the disease seems to be communicable. Harrison Step- 10 ponts and no one else could averaging over 30 points a game. ter came to East Lansing a fine foul shooter, but lately Stepter manage more than a handful has lost his eye. against the tenacious pressing With a current free throw average of .594, the Spartans are defense of St. John's. simply unbelievable. I can't accept any explanation that says those figures are indicative of talent. What I have noticed is that In the consolation game, the the MSU foul shooter, excepting several individuals, exudes the feeling that he is going to miss and is almost confident in that Spartan's opponent Villanova, was just as tough as St. John's. JOHN BENINGTON Sportswear Salt!!! So what do you do for snake bite? Maybe Benington should pass around the bottle. (Clip and Save) SWEATERS . . . SHELLS SUCKS... SKIRTS COLLEGE LIFE ACTIVITIES JACKETS A great selection of sportswear JANUARY 1969 by your favorite makers: Bobbie Brooks - Pandora - White Stag - Whistlestop - Koret of California and Others. M ^ ^ Save A 11 P7 Up To TV /Q % tal % <11011 a/3 i4 ti/i n if Outstanding fashions for your every need at great savings! ft2©-2 ?22-f2£" 12I CARCOATS" •Cordiroys •f ake Furs •Cotton Suedes •Wools All Nationally Famous Brands JANUARY ACTIVITIES: 1-New Years Day, Rose Bowl; 2-3 3 OR Registration for Winter term; 5-11-Fraternity open rush; MOREj 5-6-Sorority rush, stage II; 6-Winter term classes begin; 11- 12-Sororlty rush, stage III; 13-Concert: The Greg Smith Singers, 14-Sorority rush, stage. IV; 23-Concert; Hague Philharmonic. It's Never Too Early to Buy Campus organizations wishing to list events in Life Insurance! February's calendar call Jerry at 332-4236 Make A Date With A Good Guy From College Life. . .This Month I Jerry Meagher, C.L.U., College Life Manager Bob Slade Dick Westbrook Jae Wright Monday, January 6, 1969 14 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan SPORTS IWL Booters fit to be tied Dallas tops MIAMI (UPI) - Craig Mor on a post pattern. Vikings The Cowboys game's most valuable player on : By PAM BOYCE State News Sports Writer ATLANTA, Ga.--For the second consecutive year, the MSU soccer team battled its way through the NCAA games only ton, subbing at quarterback cut the lead to 13-10 when offense. He completed 15 of 24 ; to find itself sharing the national title. for Don Meredith, threw a 20- Meredith threw 37-yards to passes for 243 yards in the half : The Spartan booters fought Maryland to a 2-2 tie following Lance Rentzel to set . p Mike he played. yard touchdown pass to Craig two overtime periods during which neither team could dent Clark's 11-yard field g *al. The Baynham with 2:13 to go in the the opposition's net. Complying with tournament rules, a third quarter Sunday as the kick came after Meredith failed Sub-quarterback Gary Cuozzo three times to pass for the go took from Joe Kapp for the co-championship was awarded to each team. Dallas Cowboys bounced back over In the 1967 NCAA finals, a co-championship was awarded from a 13-point deficit to defeat ahead score. Vikings in the second half and to the Spartans and St. Louis after the two teams found the Minnesota Vikings 17-13 in Minnesota moved ahead almost pulled it out. Minnesota themselves in a 0-0 deadlock. The weather conditions forced the ninth annual National Foot quickly in the first quarter when drove to the Dallas five-year officials to cancel the game midway through the first half. ball League Playoff Bowl Bob Bryant took the first Dallas line on Cuozzo's 38-yard pass Senior Tony Keyes and sophomore Frank Morant, both Morton, who took over for punt and raged 81 yards for a to Gene Washington in the last from Jamaica, were responsible for the two Spartan goals. Meredith in the second half touchdown. Earsell Mackbee's period, but on the next play. interception of a Meredith pass Jim Lindsey fumbled and Leroy Keyes ended his final season with a team record of 28 goals. according to a pre-game setup The second goal of the game, scored by Morant, was hir on the Dallas 47-yard line set Jordan recovered for Dallas. by coach Tom Landry, hit Bayn¬ first of the season. ham with a 21-yard pass before up Fred Cox' 37-yard field goal, The Spartans ended their season with an 11-1-3 record, tossing the go-ahead strike to giving the Vikings a 10-0 advan¬ A sparse crowd of 22,961 with two of the ties occurring during NCAA play. The rec¬ Baynham, who caught the ball tage sat through pouring rain to watch ord for MSU soccer teams is now 113-11-12 in 13 seasons, between two Viking defensers. the ninth--and possibly last- Mackbee also set up Min¬ Playoff Bowl. ali under Coach Gene Kenney. A poor Minnesota punt helped nesota's final score of the game This was the fourth year that MSU has reached the NCAA set up the Cowboys' winning in the first quarter. The vet¬ It was also the last time under score, giving Dallas possession eran coi nerback recovered a Don the current contract with the on the Minnesota 41-yard line. Dallas fell behind. 13-0 be¬ Perkins fumble on the Minnesota Orange Bowl committee and the five and the Vikings ended an CBS television network. There fore Meredith got the Cowboys 80-yard march with Cox' sec¬ is speculation that the game may attack moving in the second ond field goal-a 23 yarder. be changed to a playoff between quarter. Tankers leave foes in wake Meredith, goat of the Cow¬ the runners-up of the American With heavy rain falling. Mere¬ boys' loss to Cleveland in the and National Football League, dith threw a 51-yard touchdown Eastern Conference Champion¬ whose merger is completed in pass to Bob Hayes, who out¬ 1970. distanced the Minnesota defense ship game, was named the By DON KOPRIVA team opened its season with Mark Holdridge and Don Rauch ward. Jud Alward. Tom Cramer grabbed 1-2-3-4, respectively, State News Sports Writer two dual victories over Western took first in 3:20.29, followed and Mike Paris finishing in Yamamoto won the 200 free- The Spartan swimming squad Michigan and Oakland by MSU's B team. that order. style in 1:52.19, with George WANTED8 did everything but walk on the water in the IM pool Saturday as Coach Charles McCaffree's MSU took nine of 13 first places as the Spartans whipped the Broncos 78-45 and sank Oakland 77-46 Western beat Springboard diving (1-me- ter i saw the Spartans take the top four places, with Dave Co- Three meter diving was the same as Duane Green. Jim Hen- derson, Alward and Bill Scott Gonzalez second, while Gary Langley and Holdridge went 1-3 in the 50-vard freestyle. Oakland 91-31 in the third por¬ tion of the triple dual. FORMER «S' STAR THE INDIVIDUAL With Western's David Pohlonski was the meet's only double win¬ ner, taking the 500 and yard freestyles 1000 Pitt grid pos MSU's 400 medley relay of KAPPA Bob Burke, Van Pelt Rocke¬ PITTSBURGH (UPI) The Frank Kush as head football ningest coach in Arizona State RUSH - feller. Bruce Richards and Ro¬ coach. football history," never has had University of Pittsburg, in an a losing season. His team was ger Shelley won easily in effort to regain the winning Kush, 39. head coach at Ari¬ SIGMA 3:43.95, while the 400 freestyle State and a native of Wind- 8-2 in 1968 and during his 11- habit, announced Saturday the zona quartet, Steve Yarnamoto. Burke. appointment of former MSU star ber. Pa., succeeds Dave Hart year tenure, Arizona State teams won 81 games, lost 28 and tied The Action who resigned Nov. 25. The one. appointment was announ¬ For Rides Call ced by Casimir Myslinski. Pitt's SKULL HOUSE AT Athletic director, following a "I went looking for a winner , long meeting with Kush at his and I found him.'' Myslinski 332-5092 home in Tempe. Ariz. said. "He"? a hai;d worker., a Kush. described as the "Wiri- scrapper.-' PHi KAPPA SIGMA Final information meeting 236 N. Harrison Call: or Call: 351-4510 351-9787 for applicants for A FRATERNITY IS NOT THIS SPACE FOR SALE SPARTAN AIDE Positions for the 1969 IUST A HOUSE . . . CALL 353-6400 Summer Orientation Program If you think you can qjalify for this important inj influenzal stud ;n: service position, come and learn the details. 6:45 Tuesday night Green Room, J I Student Union IT'S THE MEN IN IT! SIGMA CHI . . •All University Sport Trophy • ASMSU And IFC Leadership OPEN RUSH •Scholarship Monday and Wednesday RUVH PI KAPI'A PHI JANUARY 7 & 8 l<£l WHITEHILLS DR. 729 E. Grand River Call 337-9020 Call 337-9734 For Ride! Monday, January 6, 1969 15 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan -SPORTS INDIANA HERE TODAY [cers 2nd, 3rd in tournaments By PAM BOYCE State News Sports Writer junior Bill Watt scoring all four goals against All-American goal¬ S' By GARY WALKOWICZ grapplers Mike Ellis (130), and Gary 'but our kids really did a job ie Jim Keough. in beating Iowa State. " | The MSU hockey team split Michigan Tech captured first State News Sports Writer MSU opened its 1 pair of games with arch-ri- With a couple of impressive A week ago in LaGrange. 111., place in the tournament, the son with a 24-11 Peninger rnatmer. stamped We hoped we'd plac^ as |al Michigan as they garnered first time the host team has wins already under its belt, the themselves s as a team to be high as second,'" Peninger said, Maryland on Dec. 5. ;ond and third place tourna¬ MSU wrestling team moves into won the tourney since it began ment finishes in action over the Tech defeated Wisconsin, 4-1. action today in a dual meet reckoned with for national iristmas break. against Indiana. wrestling honors when they won in the championship game after the prestigious Midlands Tour¬ I J,n the Great Lakes Interna¬ handing Michigan a 3-2 loss in The Spartan's first home dual Preliminaries tional Intercollegiate Hockey the first-round game. meet of the season begins at nament Iowa State, which finished 115-George Hoddy (MS) dec. Kevin (EM) dec. Willie Thomas (CM) 3-2 tournament held at Detroit's In the second annual Big Ten 3 p.m. in the I.M. Arena. 160-Tom Muir (MS), bye , Phil Freeze second in last year's NCAA Wilson (EMi. 7-0, Jim Squire (CM) dec. blympia Stadium, the Spartans Intercollegiate Hockey Tourna¬ The Hoosiers compiled a 15-3 Dave Taylor . 14-6 (CM) dec. Charles Ash (EM) 6-1 Bropped their first game to Wis¬ ment held at Madison. Wiscon¬ dual meet mark last season, Tourney, went into the meet as 123 Ikuei Yamaoto (EMi dec. Jim Grei- 167-Pat Karslake (MS) dec Dick Sa- the favorite, but MSlT blew away pinned consin, 6-4. In the consolation sin. the Spartans captured sec¬ lame with Michigan, MSU, ond but one of their losses was a from the Cyclones, winning by ner (Mi 8-3; Gary Bissell nis Harland (CMI 8-3 (MS) dec. Den¬ vidge (M) 10-3; Ernie Hinz (CM) Mike Weede (EM), 4:05 place by beating the host 20-9 decision against MSU's 130-Mike EUis (MSi, bye; Glen Moore 177-Wally Podgurski (M) pinned Dave Jrhich had previously lost twice 40 points <102-621 |o the Wolverines, won, 4-2. with Wisconsin team, 3-2. In the championship game, the Spartans Pretzels, anyone? Big Ten titlists. MSU swept all 11 events as Three of MSU's chief rivals CM i dec Darryl Beacher (M) 6-3 137-Keith Lowrance (MS), bye; Ron Thomas (EM), 5.35; Jack dec. Bill Miltke (CM) 8-6 Zindel (MS) they rolled to an easy victory for the Big Ten title. Iowa. Plasman (Mi dec. Larry Hurlburt (CM) 191--John Schneider (MS), bye; Brad lost to Michigan, 8-3, after the MSU wrestler Gary Bissel I (right) Is twisted up like in the MSU Quadrangular on Northwestern, and Michigan, Martin (CM) dec Chris Ferry (CM 111-1 MSU-O coach Wolverines scored five goals with¬ a pretzel with his Central Michigan foe during their Saturday. The Spartans tallied finished 3-4-5. respectively. 145-Ron Ouellet (MS), bye; Tom Minkel Heavyweight-Jeff Smith (MS) pinned Tom Jackson (EMi 2:35; Ralph Burde in the first five minutes of the match in Saturday's MSU Quadrangular. Bissell won . CM > pinned Tom Duck ' P™duce- direct df !«n; Kathy Schleicher. Carol Jacoby Genet's The Balcony:" and immediately becomes boring hit the screen since Virna Lisi act and comprise technical V_ and this writer's favorite. Reg- George Kelly's The Torch emerged from a cake, whipped crews ot costumes lighting and tumes and lights in preparation an Reddy. sets. Yet most of all. they learn, All this is presented for and M!^N1 rMM*rn IWMWWN ► 4S2-30O9 1 "»rlnvFeature at 1^0 ~ 3:15 - cream clad, in "How To Mur- der Your Wife." It is impos- sible to tell from "Candv cess The theatrical education pro- begins w'th bflc studie^ for their presentation to paying house. Clearly undertaking for undergrad- Also an undergraduate pres¬ entation. Dave Steven's "Dra- eula" was smooth and success¬ especially by creative, expres¬ sive beings. So grow-extend * 1 5:15 - 7:25 - 9:35 P.M. whether she can act. but it is ,n PurPose and technique, and ful. He achieved a proper state yourself beyond the tube and obvious that she doesn't need then continues infinitely, Nights in a Barroom dramatic apprehension fit- flick-participate with real folk STEVE to. Miss Aulin is no less than During finals week, this was "Ten intended as a classic melo- ting the tale of the Transylvan- -Discover Theatre' [*1CQLJEEI\ the perfect embodiment of the *'nter v,e*Ted a d,sPlay ot the novel's heroine, a combination dramatic learning process in as'buleitt of sexuality and innocence that Progress with the undergrad- of two class makes Bardot look like Ernest uate Presentation Borgnine The other performers, includ- exercises: "Ten Nights in a Bar Room " a cheerfully fus¬ Cactus Flower' ing Ringo Starr. Marlon Bran- Smith;f,0P sin£ and directed "Dracula," by aKaren suc¬ ■THE FIFTH! explained that families with strong old world ponsible for the court. The first class consists of burdens on circuit courts. Hol- brook said, previously Michigan had -lay t,es Students and faculty from one or more counties. The third Back judges." other departments are invited. class consists of a single city After the excruciating TOG SHOP a single township or a tion of cities and or townships. The second class consists of the combina¬ American students abroad experience of fall term balance of the county except for proposed project subject finals, we're glad the third class districts. to see you back District courts will appoint again. We hope magistrates in sparcely popul¬ ated areas. The magistrates you find winter By SHARON TEMPLETON from a three-month research to find that when they return tc^ are authorized to perform only term a little easier State News Staff Writer trip to the Near East and Asia, the United States they are con- » We wouId like to specific duties. They will not Experiences of American teen- here she visited American sidered black. This is not impor¬ conduct trials. tant in their social lives over¬ make your term I believe district judges and a6ers >n other countries and the schools and interviewed the seas," she said. easier with our super magistrates under the new law. effect on their future is the sub- teenage whodependents of Ameri have lived abroad for Mrs. Useem's proposed study fast delivery service. have the power to marrv." Hoi- Ject of a proposed three-year re- cans than six months. does not include teenagers Thank you friends and brook said search project of Ruth Ann One of the major problems more whose parents work for the U.S. customers for your loyalty. Another new feature of the Usfm- professor of sociology faced by American teenagers military services. Only Ameri¬ HAVE A GRAND NEW YEAR! court system is recording the anc*Mrs. education Useem at MSI returned living overseas if the "fear of recently can schools operated by private proceedings of a district court the known but as yet unconfront- sources or partially supported by' ed." she said, referring to the the U.S. Dept. of State are in- events learned through mass eluded. Most of the Americans, DOMINO'S New computer eases communications, such as riots. When a person his native land for an is away from extended living overseas who are not with the U.S. Dept. of Defense are working for the U.S. State period of time, all he learns Dept.. Peace Corps. American heavy U' about his home nation is through the mass media. This often business and industry, the Unit¬ ed Nations or missionary organi¬ zations. With the addition of a Kateley explained that at that bnngs only the. newsworthy- . Students appear to have ad¬ new time S',. Persons interested in \ ing in areas related to trave » ABE BURROWS planning and information an needed. Based on a play bv /Capri" by » $ 145 W/Ytllfff b/oHSOIH Abbie Forster, Birminghan Playtex invents the first-day tampon " PIERRE BARILLET & JEAN-PIERRE 6REDY For the first time and just In time for you, dia¬ junior and ASMSU travel chair man. is working with othe with (We took the inside out PAT STEVENS LARRY ELLIS mond rings are blossoming into something as fresh travel services on campus ti and extraordinary as the feeling of being engaged. consolidate information to show you how different it is.) JERRY TERHEYDEN YVONNE VINCIC vices in ASMSU. And not only does Orange Blossom guarantee the "There are so many inex Outside: it's softer and silky (not cardbosrdy). LINDA BATES STEVEN MEYER value of your diamond forever, they give you a life¬ Inside: it's so extra absorbent... it even protects on time of free professional cleaning and servicing, pensive ways to travel," Mis DENNIS KENNEDY Forster said. and a year's guarantee against loss, theft or dam¬ your first day. Your worst day! In every lab test against the old cardbosrdy kind... the Playtex tampon was always more absorbent. Staged by LAWRENCE KASHA age. The "CAPRI", one of many exciting new de¬ signs, in a regal setting of 18K gold. to She stated that it is get as much as a 50 pe possibl Actually 45 % more absorbent on the average Hased upon ABE BURROWS staging of the original Netv York production cent discount on travel costs. Miss Forster has informatio than the leading regular tampon. concerning blackout dates, ai Because it's different. Actually adjusts to you. Production Designed by LEO B.MEYER 0 Costumes by SARA BROOK Art-Carv Gold Fashion Diamond travel, passports, car rental It flowers out. Fluffs out. Designed to project every and student discount possibif inside inch of you. So the chance of a mishap TONIGHT 8:15 UNIVERSITY AUDITORIUM Wedding ties in these areas. is almost zero! For further information coi — ^ ^_ r :rr , Reserved Seats $5.00, $4.00, $3.00 Miss Forster between Plffe tact Why Uvebi the past? " On Sale at Union Ticket Office and 5 p.m. in 325 Student Sei vices Bldg.. or call 353-8858. tampons $1.00 reduction for MSU students with validated I.D. 19 Monday, January 6, 1969 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Prof's plan serves By SHARON State News TEMPLETON Staff Writer gram for the blind, deaf, crip¬ pled, retarded and delinquent, for both adults and children. for the mentally retarded is working closely with the school for the physically handicapped Honduras working and doing things, just closed up in a cell," said. not he and a high school change program of Honduras. student ex with the youth Inspired efforts by an MSU previously established in Hon- The Partners for Alliance al States to develop programs "The Special Education Re¬ professor have produced a suc¬ habilitation Program (SERP) so sponsored a caravan trip ol similar to Michigan's in spe¬ cessful program for helping Another important aspect of cial education and rehabilita¬ has developed into a total pro¬ six semi-trucks that drov« handicapped children in Latin the Partners for Alliance pro¬ from Lansing to British Hon tion include Colorado, Florida, gram of national development America. with long-range goals set for gram was the establishment of duras, carrying equipment for Georgia, Illinois, Kentucky, The British Honduras pro¬ a mental hospital to replace the Maryland, Ohio and Texas. five to ten years from now," the hospital, furnishings for the gram, developed by John E. Jor¬ Jordan said. hospital that was in the coun¬ school for the mentally retar Partners for Alliance pro¬ dan, associate professor of edu¬ try three years ago. The rehabilitation program is ded and a tractor for the agri grams include the Latin Ameri¬ cation, has been chosen by the "The mental hospital in Hon a joint effort between the Part¬ cultural college in Honduras can countries of Brazil, Peru, U.S. State Dept. as an example duras was 600 years behind the ners for Alliance and British Ecuador, Columbia, Uruguay, to educators across the nation times, including prison bars or Future projects include the Honduras. The country itself Guatemala. El Salvador, Boliv¬ of what can be done to help the windows," Jordan said. establishment of a Shelter built the school building for the ia, Costa Rica, Mexico, Nica¬ the mentally-retarded or phys¬ "Now these people are Workshop to provide vocational I mentally retarded and the Part¬ ically handicapped child in the ners furnished the equipment. special rehabilitation programs or training for the older childrer ragua, Panama and Paraguay. developing Latin American In January. 1969, Jordan and countries. six professors from several Mich¬ Partners in progress The program began with a re¬ igan universities traveled to Bri¬ quest from British Honduras tish Honduras to conduct a two- through the Partners for Alliance day workshop for the elemen¬ The British Honduras' first school for mentally retarded children is being con¬ to help the mentally retarded tary education teachers who structed in the capital city of Belize. The school, designed by a Peace Corps in their country. teach the handicapped. volunteer, was recommended by John E. Jordan, associate professor of educa¬ From this initial request de¬ veloped the extensive aid pro- "In the two-day workshop, tion, when he made his first inspection of the country s educational facilities. we reached nearly 95 per cent of the elementary education teach¬ ers of the country." he said. Another workshop is being PARTNERS FOR ALLIANCE planned for this month to edu¬ cate the elementary and sec¬ ondary education teachers in the problems of handicapped child¬ PHI SIGMA DELTA roup By SHARON TEMPLETON are aids latin countries the goals of the Natiou il a voluntary organization of priv¬ ate citizens working in coopera¬ fessor of education and direc¬ tor of the rehabilitation pro¬ ren. in The church-state British Honduras problems for first, but later both relationship presented the project at cooperated State News Staff Writer Association for the Partners f^r tion with the National Alliance gram for the handicapped in to make the program success¬ I Social and economic develop- Alliance for Progress for total develop¬ British Honduras, said. ful. pent through reciprocal action The Partners for Alliance «s ment of the Latin American The College of Agriculture "All schools in British Hon¬ countries. duras are operated by the at MSU is planning to send soil Working with 32 states and church. The church provides the science researchers to British their counterparts in 15 Latin building, and trains the teach¬ Honduras. ers, while the state pays the >ver $1 million in gifts, American countries, the Part¬ ners tions for Alliance seeks solu¬ to problems of agricul¬ Business improvements are centered on the potential tour¬ ist trade of the country. teachers' salaries," Jordan said. "The problem arose when we ture. education, industrial de¬ discovered there were two main "Plans are being made to velopment, public health and religious groups in Honduras- Igrants donated to U' preventive medicine. Michigan is participating in the program by .working with build hotels and to open the un- excavated Mayan ruins." Jor¬ dan said. Catholic and Protestant. The program, however, helped to join together these two groups to mu¬ on grant of | Gifts and grants totaling $1 66 million tually sponsor the program for e accepted in December by oardof Trustees. the MSU r pure equipment British Honduras, Each state has several com¬ Doctors States from the United working in British the handicapped," he added. The newly established school Larger than I The largest single grant, totaling $1 in MSU's Cyclotron Laboratorv Aaron mittees to develop programs in Honduras to help plan public Galonsky, director of the laboratory, is Vnillion is from the U.S. Office of Edu¬ cation to support 185 MSU graduate stu- administering the grant, which supports agriculture, business, health, cultural affairs public and edu¬ health programs and improve the unsanitary conditions caused the walls outside rho are National Defense Edu- acquisition of auxiliary equipment for \ct Fellows Forty of the stu- the 55-million electron volt cyclotron: cation. and comparable commit¬ by open sewage canals. re receiving fellowships for the T. M. Brody. professor and chairman tees in the Latin American it Ume this year of pharmacology. In education, Michigan has tranquili- country. | Clarence W Minkel, associate dean of tigation of effects of c "The idea of the program is developed a special program to in the His work School ies, is director for Advanced Graduate of the grant It cov- is supported by, a new $17,283 grant from that the program for develop¬ help the handicapped. It is also 505 MAC a one-year period which began Sep- the National Institute- o; Health ment should begin in the Latin sponsoring a scholarship prog¬ lerl. He is studying systems in the brain ram for 14 Honduras students American country, thep we I The U.S Department 1 and Welfare has of Health, Edu granted $249 992 join in to see what we can do." now studying in Michigan col¬ 332-0875 John E. Jordan, associate pro¬ leges and universities. ■»>r continued support of MSU's Regional ■nstructional Materials Center for Han¬ dicapped Children and Youth 1 Directed by Mrs. Lou Alonso. the cen- s teachers of students who suf- Your Host From Coast To Coast r physical, mental or emotional handi¬ caps. It includes a computer-based infor- n retrieval system to assist teachers The Nation's Innkeeper bnd administrators in Michigan. Indiana pnd Ohio. c y n is, MSU entomologist. has received Energy Commission to Kenneth W Cum- $34,365 from the Atom- study the ener budget" of small crustaceans in Gull Two Locations In Lansing Area 3121 E. GRAND RIVER AVE. Graduate to Better Living! The research is aimed at learning Ph. 489-2481 v i much energy-respiration, reproduc and other factors-is needed to sus- 6051 S. PENNSYLVANIA AVE. PHI KAPPA TAU Ph. 393-1650 ii the population k at MSU's Biological Station i continuation of research he began ft the University of Pittsburgh SPECIAL SPECIAL * The Michigan Dept of Education has MONDAY ranted $20,393 to R G Rex. associate SUNDAY ■ of teacher education, to help ■set up a teacher education ■the dept of education ~ t is unit within reviewing teacher educa- CHICKEN DINNER . $225 SPAGHETTI DINNER . . . $150 i programs in Michigan to determine I institutional compliance with the state's Children $1.25 ;w teacher certification code Rex is i leave from MSU to work with the I state department Who's Looking Forward To YOUR Meeting Winter Term Rushees? HUNGRY? shorten it, T ry a tan- gy pizza or one of our great sandwiches. All delivered instantly at 2 A 50C big 16" one item pizza for $2.50. DORM DEL. ONLY MON.-THURS. CALL 332-6517 VARSITY WE ARE! SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON 4> K T For ride Rush Monday & Wednesday call 332-3577 or 332-3578 131 Bogue Call 337-9091 STATE NEWS CLASSIFIED STATE NEWS CLASIFIED 355-8255 Welcome Back -Have a Happy New Year. 355-8255 Employment For Rent Russians The State News does not MALE SALES/stock clerk. 40 hour 46 GREAT LAKES. Two bed¬ unmanned probe 10 X week--$i.60 an hour. Apply in per¬ UNSUPERVISED SINGLES for men. permit racial or religious STUDENT BOOK STORE, rooms. Located in Trailer Haven. discrimination in its ad¬ son 9-12. UNIVERSITY VILLA. 2-3-4 man Lovely home. Full privileges. Kit¬ 339-9087 10-1/17 East Lansing. 5-1/10 apartments. Just a few left so call chen. Parking. Block from Campus. vertising columns. The us early. GOVAN MANAGEMENT Reasonable Lease and deposit. State News will not accept PARKWOOD 1966 12 x 52. Ten min¬ 635 Abbott. 351-7910. O-1/10 332-0318. 3-1/8 utes to campus. Must sell. Call man to solve the problem of hit¬ • AUTOMOTIVE advertising which discrim¬ collect. Perry, 625-7158 5-1/10 MOSCOW (AP) - The Soviet inates against religion, OKEMOS ~ GROUND floor, three ROOM FOR one or two near campus. Union launched an unmanned ting a flying honeybee from the • EMPLOYMENT SECRETARY: HILLEL Foundation. rooms and bath. Air conditioned, No cooking. Call 355-2312 or 337- window of a moving motorcar. - FOR RENT race, color or national or¬ Good typist. Monday through Fri¬ 3-1/8 space ship Sunday toward a • furnished. All utilities paid 332- 0412 after 6 p.m. "However, great experience FOR SALE igin. day. 9-5. $1.75 hour. Phone Rabbi 4950 or 332-0881 7-1/14 hoped-for soft landing on Venus, of • Zemach 332-1916. 3-1/8 PARKING IN East Lansing, across a 165-million mile feat of marks¬ interplanetary flights of au¬ • LOST & FOUND from Morrill, behind Polacheks. tomatic stations has been ac¬ PERSONAL Snow plowed. $25 the term, in ad¬ manship that would make up • FEMALE SALES CLERK 40 hour vance. Call Mark White. 332-3947. somewhat for recent U.S. dom¬ cumulated in the Soviet week. $1.60 an hour. Apply in per¬ • PEANUTS PERSONAL 410 Albert. 2-1/7 Union," the commentator said. Automotive son 9-12 Student Book Store, East ONE APARTMENT left-three peo¬ WOMEN STUDENTS: Large home ination of manned space flights. • REAL ESTATE Lansing. 5-1/10 Excellent location. Kitchen, laun¬ The official news agency Tass His words illustrated the ple-one block to Campus. Call NE- Draft Information Center • SERVICE JAC 337-1300. All utilities paid. dry, parking 332-1918. 5-1/10 said the Venus 5 vehicle would change of emphasis in the So¬ • TRANSPORTATION For Rent 911 E. Grand River reach cloud-covered Venus by viet space program to un¬ • WANTED FRANCIS AVIATION So easy to'earn DOUBLES, SINGLES, close. Clean, Phone 351-5283 manned flights. PIPER CHEROKEE Social quiet, reasonable, parking. 237 Ked- mid-May and "obtain addition¬ in the NEW GE portables and stands rent¬ zie. 351-9584 5-1/10 Monday-Thursday 3-5, 6-8 al data about the planet's at¬ During the U.S. Apollo 8 $5 offer 484-1324 t C ed ONLY to MSU students and fac¬ . DEADLINE Friday 3-5 mosphere." It was described as triumph last month, Soviet ulty. $8 84 month (includes tax). Auto Service & Parts STATE MANAGEMENT CORPORA¬ Saturday 1-4 a follow-up to the Soviet Venus space experts depicted un¬ 1 P.M. one class day be¬ TION 444 Michigan 4, which made a breakthrough manned flight as safer and C-l/17 fore publication. -1 6 8687 NORTHWIND EYE SEE THE LIGHT SHOW COM¬ Oct. 18. 1967, by transmitting equally, productive of useful Cancellations - 12 noon one ONE, TWO and three men rooms PANY environmental light shows scientific information. They al¬ FARMS 372-2267 or 882-1736. 1-1/6 the first on-the-spot information class day before publica- Panelled, carpeted, paved parking so played up the importance ACCIDENT PROBLEM" Call KALA Faculty Apartments from Venus. Cooking and laundry facilities avail¬ on learning more about the pla¬ MAZOO STREET BODY SHOP Small able. $45 per month. 425 Ann Street NEW AUDITORIUM COMMITTEE Venus 4 showed the planet- dents to large wrecks American RENT A TV from a TV Company- 351-7880 Call Don 351-3432 5-1/10 Organizational meeting. January 7. nets, instead of concentrating and foreign cars Guaranteed v»ork $9 00 per -month. Call 337-1300. system~to be hot and inhos¬ on the moon. PHONE CLEAN, quiet, cooking, park¬ 7:30 p.m 466 Berkey 2-1/7 C pitable. It relayed tempera¬ . NEJAC TV RENTALS. MEN: 482-1286. 2628 East Kalamazoo C ONE BLOCK from Berkey Clean The Soviets have not made ing, supervised. Close to cam¬ SOUL SISTERS - Detroiters and other tures of up to 536 degrees fah- singles and doubles. Some with cook¬ significant manned flight 355-8255 TV RENTALS-students only. Low pus. 487-5753 or 485-8836 O ing and efficiency apartment. 337- soul women: Check your soul so¬ renheit. in an atmosphere con¬ a monthly and term rates. Call 484- 5-110 rority's. Social Chairman or Kay breakthrough since the first UNIVERSITY ONE MAN needed for two man effi¬ 0132. sisting almost entirely of car¬ RATES 2600 to reserve yours. Lucas 372-9010 or 372-8016 at 401 space walks in March 1965. Their TV RENTALS C ciency apartment in quiet neighbor Leslie at Kalamazoo or Jill bon dioxide. hood. $55 month complete 332-8581 South next flight with a man aboard 1 day $ 1.50 Witherspoon or Johnnys Record The new space ship, weigh¬ ended in April 1967 with a crash 151 10 'NEWLY MARRIED? Peanuts Personal day later-sending back what will conduct "extensive re¬ TANGLEWOOD MALE GRADUATE student. Sunset U.S. scientists claimed, was NEED PART-TIME jobs during the search of outer space." It said Lane. Bachelor s home. 332-3617. more information than Venus term" Call RENT-A-STUDENT at the ship would make a "gen¬ VILLA Apartments. Two AFARTMENTS c10-1/17 4 sent. Automotive 351-5130. 5-1 10 EYDEAL bedroom apartments for $240 month. 1 Bdrm., unfur.,'from 124.50 tle descent-' and land softly. MALE HOUSING: Double room. Block Venus 4 parachuted from 15 miles HOW WOULD YOU like to paid Swimming pool GE appliances, 2 Bdrm., unfur., from 139.50 CHEVROLET IMPALA 1965 Must Union Cooking. 314 Evergreen. 332- out while its radio equipment sell. Excellent condition. Low mile¬ to study in comfortable horrid five garbage disposals, furnished for 351-7880 3839 5-1 10 MSU SKI CLUB afternoons a week from 2:30 until broadcast back data. It went age. stereo, extras Call 351-8647 4 30" ED 2-5176. 3-1. 8 HASLETT APARTMENTS. One girl 5-1 10 SINGLE FOR r Cooking. Private dead before landing. Meets for winter spring and/or summer Parking. IV 5- APARTMENTS FOR rent. One bed¬ 2-1/7 ;. ALTERATIONS AND dress Stressing the difficulty of a CHEVROLET IMPALA 1966 Four room ■ Furnished and unfurnished. 372-6444. 3-1/8 by experienced seamstress Venus shot. Tass' science com¬ Wednesday 7:30 P.M. door hardtop 35.000 miles Power 500 block West Ionia. Lansing. 372- sonable charge. 355-5855 BRAND NEW deluxe colonial apart¬ mentator wrote: "It would be 109 Anthony Hall steering. Very clean $1500 353- 1411. 3-1/8 Corner of Burcham and Alton For Sale 6753 : 485-3345 2-1 7 ments very much easier for a marks¬ HELP' HELP' We Available for business, professional, STEREO COMPONENTS: Amp. turn¬ DODGE DART 1962 6 cvlinder auto¬ college personnel or graduate stu¬ table. tuner, and speakers Good matic $250. 1959 Ford 6 automatic dents. Furnished or unfurnished. 332- DONNA SfiHANNAN: Professioal for introduction to high fidelity. $95 651-5517 3-1 8 3135. 20-1/31 337-2681 3-1/8 tvpist., jTerrri, ,papers, thesis. IBM DELIVERY ,P0YS make $2.$3 per , WANTED fGIRL to share completely Selectric. 353-7922 C hour. Also phone girls and inside furnished luxury apartment. Easy Efficiency studios. MGB paint. 1963. Real Fiberglass hardtop. sharp. Call New 372-8330 help. Part 'and full time. After 5 walk to campus. 351-5352. 5-1/10 CAPITOL NEAR Single girls. Kitchen. On college AMPEX with 4 track stereo tape speakers. $150. Two EMI ster¬ recorder . . PAULA ANN . HAUGHEY: A unique KS;E PPER A 332-5987 5-1 10 p.m THE VARSITY 5-110 bus line. 372-4583 5-1/10 quality thesis service IBM typ¬ or Nortli Cedar Furnished Three eo speaker systems $180 Magne- MARRIED COUPLE to live in week 817 All utilities paid cord (.1028) professional stereo ing, multilith printing and hard Tie WHERE THE GIRLS ARE! They re rooms, garage. ONE MAN for four man apartment binding. 337-1527. C reading the "Personal column in of February 1-8. Fjfteen minutes Married couples. 485-3848 3-1/8 winter and spring Cedar Village tapedeck. 337-0243 3-1 8 ^ b ilJL|E]CIS today's Classified Ads. Try it now! from campus. 694-0734 5-1 10 351-3039 5-1/10 AUDIO COMPONENT SERVICE. Am- BARB1 MEL: Typing, multilithing. pex. Sony. Scott. Fisher and many No job too large or too small other select brands at MAIN ELEC¬ Block of campus. 332-3255 C DON'T SIGN THAT LEASE TRONICS. 5558 South Pennsylvania. o blocks from Olin Lansing. C ji rR AtN®T U R N |JN]G SKIIS HEAD Comp Downhill 215 CM |O'R oinTO CO Bindings Ski boots Henke 9-9 1 2 BRIDGE CLASSES starting soon .]l7e i C D p A W ■ N if i T medium 6 buckle Call 337-0142 Certified instructor. Bettie Bnck- for winter term unless you have after 6 p.m. 2-1/7 ner ED7-9476. 5-1 10 YES NO Wanted □ □ complete soundproofing--between rooms and 0746. 3-18 BLOOD DONORS NEEDED. $7 50 for all positive. A negative, B nega¬ apartments DIAMOND BARGAIN: Wedding and en¬ sets. Save 50 per tive and AB negative. $10.00 O T , r-r5-p H4u j-l gagement ring negative-$12.00 MICHIGAN COM¬ □ ample parking--Cedar Village has parking for cent or more. Large selection of .. ...t | : □ over 500 cars -- 3 story parking ramp plain and fancy diamonds. $25-$150 WILCOX SECONDHAND STORE. MUNITY BLOOD CENTER. 507 1 2 E. Grand River. East Lansing Above the new Campus Book Store Hours t • •• t: - —f • , f• 509 East Michigan 485-4391 C 9 a.m.-3:30 p.m. Mondav. Tues- LOVELY FURNISHED three bed¬ dav and Friday; Wednesday and Thurs¬ □ □ choice of 6 or 9 month leases room house near Frandor $150 plus BICYCLE SALES and service Also day. 12-6:30 p.m. 337-7183 C utilities. 351-5696 5-1/10 used. EAST LANSING CYCLE. 215 East Grand River Call 332-8303 C □ □ convenient location--we adjoin the campus LARGE SELECTION of frames. Glas¬ □ □ a full-|;ime maintenance staff on 24 hour call ses for everyone. OPTICAL DIS¬ COUNT. 416 Tussing Building Phone MOBILE HOMES MOVE FAST wh. furnished $50 C-l 10 □ □ air conditioning GIRL TO sublease including utilities except electri¬ IV2-4667. you advertise in Classified. For ; action-getting ad. dial 355-8255 now! city. 332-0429 3-1/8 g p] private study desk for each student LEBANFSE FOOD And Other Food From Most Foreig □ □ dishwashers and large refrigerator-freezers Countries-including U.S. SHAHEEN S FAMILY V%J ISOLD FROM campus. Car¬ THROUGHHTHEI FIVE BLOCKS □ □ built-in bookshelves peted. furnished 4-5. 551 Virginia 5-1/10 1001 W Saginaw FOOD FAIR 485-408 ; j£\. THE sU 351-8111 □ □ Hoover vacuum cleaners for every 2 apart¬ Michigan Bankard Welcome WANT ADS ments EAST LANSING three bedroom du¬ fWO MEN needed for 4 'man apart- plex l1* bathrooms Carpeted liv¬ .ment to take over lease winter, ing room with fireplace, dining spring 48 Northwind Apartment. 5-1 10 □ □ large walk-in storage closet room. kitchen. panelled family room. Call 351-5614 5-1/10 NEW UNDERWOOD typewriter, car¬ bon ribbon: IBM elite symbol ele¬ Place Your □ □ incinerator chute on every floor ment 489-6479 5-1/10 □ □ □ □ large laundry rooms with washers hi-powered T.V. antenna reception and dryers HOLE IN ONE' Maybe not. today's Classified Ads for good buys but check LANG SKI Head boots size 9 1/2 M $75 Standard skiis with bindings size 911" $90 351-3248 after 6 p.m. PEOPLE REACHER WANT AD in golf clubs! Today . . . Just clip, complete, mail. □ □ interior decorated apartments with wall-to-wall STATE NEWS will bill you later. carpeting including thi? bath vanity snack bar with stools electronic intercom—safety lock system Apartment natural brick decorator wall in living room p All these features are included at Store Consecutive Dates to Run Heading . Cedar Print Ad Here: . The diversification of our business provides you with one- stop service to satisfy YOUR living requirements. ri> Avm "— If you are investigating apartment living, a visit or call 2 & I Bedroom Apartments to our office definitely can eliminate the "legwork" of apartmcnt-hunt ing. Peanuts Personals must be placed in person. Available January 5th 10 Words or Less; PHONE 332-5051 EAS1 LANSING MANAGEMENT CO. Over 10 Words Add: THE WORLD'S LARGEST PRIVATELY- 351-7880 Mail to: Michigan State News 346 Student Services Bldg. OWNED ?TUDE NT APARTMENT COMPLEX Our New Location: 317 M.A.C. MSU East Lansing, Mich. Monday, January 6, 1969 21 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan officials seek formula) to launch Paris talks to Thieu to expect no significant have compromised quite J PARIS (AP) -- U.S. officials policy change when Nixon takes enough, by agreeing to sit down lept pursuing Sunday the elu- with the Viet Cong rebels they live combination of compromi¬ office. hate. One issue not blocking the ses that would get Vietnam leace talks rolling before Pres¬ start of peace talks is whether They do not accept the U.S. view that the table issue will ident Johnson's administration the round conference table which all four participating evaporate once real peacemak¬ ftnds two weeks from now. groups now ing begins. Nor do they agree \ All surface indications pointed accept should be marked by a that in reality the Viet Cong o a major American effort with symbolic dividing line. have achieved a degree of president-elect Nixon's backing Washington and Saigon want recognition by having been ad¬ » achieve that goal before the the line because they regard the mitted to the Paris gathering. lauguration in Washington Jan. negotiations as two-sided, not ' In other developments Sun¬ wanting to acknowledge any spe¬ day; | "For the President to step out cial rights or status to the out¬ -The North Vietnamese if office without seeing the peace lawed National Liberation Front. North Vietnam and the NLF delegation scheduled a news con¬ conference launched 81 days ference for Monday presumably Ifter he ended the bombing of North Vietnam,'' one allied offi¬ insist with the talks are four-sided the NLF, political arm of try to make propaganda gains of Washington-Saigon difficulties Aftermath cial observed, "would be some¬ the Viet Cong, entitled to a full over table arrangements. thing approaching a humilia¬ voice in the political future of Several days before Christmas an elderly gentleman and his wife took a tour -A spokesman on the staff of tion." the South. The dividing line is through the East Lansing Post Office, entering through the window on main Vice-President Nguyen Cao Ky 1 The main American hunt for unacceptable to them. declined to confirm or deny a street. State News Photo by Wayne Munn It is no secret here that some |n acceptable formula is going American leaders would settle source's disclosure to the Saigon directed by Am- Associated Press that Saigon assador Ellsworth Bunker and for a round table and let their is withdrawing members of Ky's president Nguyen Van Thieu. imaginations supply the dividing line. But they have the feelings entourage from Paris. More than 1 Nixon announced Saturday lie |m would ask Bunker to stay and prestige of the Thieu gov¬ at his post after Jan. s taken here as a 20. signal ernment to consider. Saigon's rulers consider they 20 members of Ky's staff were said to be affected, with three senior officials due to leave this Under the Program Mott Institute (continued from page one) Hong Kong flu epidemic The best treatment for the flu of Com¬ can consult with school officials They have either had it or built (continued from page one) is bed rest, aspirin, liquids, and itkrawr'B. munity Service, high school ju¬ upon request. This program is Dr. Feurig said that the Hong up a resistance to it. Legislature niors and seniors in participating cities take time out from their presently operating in the Flint Kong flue is incapacitating and Other colleges and cities have proper diet. 1HBDHG affects the whole body. not been as fortunate as 1SU. regular classes each week to (continued from page one) work with social agencies and Schools. The time contributed by "Your head feels like a bal¬ Because a large number of Orientation jobs the staff not only helps the Changes in laws dealing with talk with community and social Flint schools but also keeps the loon," Dr. Feurig said. Americans have contacted the abortion, adultery and homosex¬ uality are expected to draw agency leaders. The Talent Bank is a pool of staff informed on changes in "Other symptoms are chills, fever, vomiting, and diarrhea," flu, the American Red Cross de¬ clared the United States in a open for summer much controversy. public education. University staff members who he said. "disaster situation." Applications for Spartan Aide Organized crime will be; a During Christmas vacation, positions for the 1969 MSU Sum¬ Over 1,200 deaths in the United The organizational meeting of target of the legislature with students were in the areas of mer Orientation Programs are I The ASMSU Committee on such bills as the legalization States have been attributed to the Off-Campus Council's price major flu outbreaks. due at 318A Administration *ug Use, Drug Abuse and Drug of electronic bugging devices. Dr. Feurig said this was a Hong Kong flu and to resulting room Iducation light. will NOT meet to- study committee will be held at 7:30 p.m. Tresday in 316 Stu¬ dent Services Bldg. The meet¬ Public employe strikes which have threatened schools, police Frosh selective hours break for MSU because by now the majority of the students have complications. The Hong Kong flu is found to building this week. The final information meet¬ ing for prospective Spartan Aides service and fire protection ser¬ (continued from page one) be most fatal to elderly people The Evergreen Wives will hold ing is open to any interested per¬ already been exposed to the flu. will be held at 6:45 p.m. Tues¬ vice will be discussed by law¬ and to those suffering from I meeting at 7:30 tonight in the sons. makers. approved the change, 34 per cent second and third term freshmen chronic heart or respiratory di¬ day in the Green Room of the Natural Resources Activities did not approve and 3 per cent have no hours on weekends. seases. Union. Students who did not lim. New machinery will be need¬ wanted --That there be no hours for attend these information meet¬ A program on flower ar¬ an even ranging will be presented. I LaLeche League will meet at 8 p.m. Wednesday at the home of ed to handle public employe disputes before they reach the strike stage. policy. During spring term WIC pre¬ sented three alternative proposal all freshmen women. Of the 3,704 responses to the proposals, 1,462 women approved Lodge The Hong Kong flu made its first appearnace last July in ings fall term are welcome Don Arnoudse. Grand Rapids An organizational meeting of Mrs. Michael Rathke, 2173 Tra¬ Organized labor is expected of the first (continued from page one) Central China. Travelers brought junior, . and Peggy Bailey, Ihe Underground Theater will to resident women. They v proposal, 1,541 were Annandale, Ba., sophomore, are falgar Lane, East Lansing. "Nu¬ Ziegler sidestepped the ques¬ it to Hong Kong where 500,000 held at 8:30 tonight in the to put pressure on the legisla¬ -That first term freshmen favor of the second and 701 tion of what Lodge's reputation residents were infected. the chief Spartan Aides* They trition and Diet for Mothers and ture for a $2 per hour state iJnion Ballroom. babies" will be discussed. Call women have unlimited number preferred the third, as an advocate of hard-line poli¬ The epidemic spread through¬ and other orientation 'staff minimum wage. 332-2233 for transportation. of 2 a.m. later permissions on WIC then tabled the proposals cy in Vietnam would mean in out the world and was found in members will explain the pro¬ They will also demand that |fillThe MSU Folklore Society meet at 7:30 tonight in the migrant farm workers be given weekends and that second and for hours changes until the class the formulation of negotiating Needles, Calif, last November. gram and answer questions. At least one Spartan Aide will the same protection that others positions. >asement lounge, Student Serv- " Ziegler said only that Lodge is A vaccine for the flu has been be chosen to represent each MSU Htrgo Bohm, public relations- get in the areas of social ser¬ • - -That first term freshmen wo- this research which led WIC to "one of the most informed and found, but not enough of it is college. head for Boyne Country, wijl vices, minimum wages, hous¬ men have unlimited 2 a.m. la- finalize its no hours proposal qualified individuals to repre¬ available to innoculate all Amer¬ Applications will be available I "Sardis-1968", an archeology speak at the 7:30 p.m. Wednes¬ ing and workmen's compensa¬ ter permissions on weekends and late last term. sent the United States. " icans. at the Tuesday night meeting. day meeting of the MSU Ski Club tion. presentation given by John Ste¬ in Anthony Hall. He will speak Heart transplants will also phens Crawford of the Harvard on "The Correct Way to Attack be dealt with by legislators dur¬ Jraduate School, will be the the Slopes." Those going on the ing this session. Irogram for the meeting of the ttentral Michigan Society of the ^rcheological Institute of Amer¬ ica at 8 p.m. Tuesday in the Kres- Aspen trip and those planning weekend ski trips must attend. New members will also be taken at this meeting. was An interim study committee the appointed last year to study medical, moral. and legal BE A ■e Gallery. aspects of heart transplants. BUNNY We like girls at Seven-Thirty-One! And since we now offer a draft clause to the fellows, and since women aren't subject to the draft, we really ought to do something special for the girls at Seven-Thirty-One. Oh, sure, the gals love the psychedelic d:»cor, the sw'mrnlng pool, the luxurious furnishings, and even the billiard table in the party lounge. They dig the shag carpeting, dishwashers, and color TV. But we want to do something special. So, here it is, gals! We'll award each of you who sign a lease from now on a cute stuffed rabbit to prove you're a Seven-Thirty-One Bunny. Then come to the next free Sev^f Thirty-One TG and show you mean It! MODELS OPEN I H i J V.U Live below your means. BUNNY FREE 6:30 - 9:00 Monday - Thursday 1:00 - 5:00 rO ALL GIRLS Sunday \ 731 Burcham Drive WHO SIGN LEASES Phil Gord f crafted ^APPUANCE S VOLKSWAGEN INC. 2845 E. Saginaw St. +fcrfcpmn±r 200 Albert Above Knapp's Campus Center - 35I-8862 Monday, January 6, 1969 22 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan S. SAIGON (AP)-The Vietnamese army is preparing South Viet ern newsmen denied the who were present tored charge army Saigon declared that The inbroadcast bade the reporters prisoners of war." He snatched the to film the cameras from the cameras in order to spoil them, it said. "He even had an aircraft spit out a, kind to age the cameras' lens." present reported they saw no fre Faas and other photographers The Viet Cong account after the "three prisoners were to release about a dozen Viet from them and took the film of black smoke in order to dam- smoke and no film was confis¬ presented a "U.S. officer for¬ Cong prisoners early this week contained in a cated. Saigon sources said Sunday. The broadcast also accused Though officials would not the U.S. Command of violating comment, the informants said MEET LITTLE RESISTANCE its pledge not to resume mili¬ the prisoners are expected to be tary activity in the exchange ' set free Tuesday. area for three hours after the It was not determined whether release. there was any connection with the New Year's Day freeing of three American soldiers held by the Viet Cong. The sources said the decision Allies SAIGON (AP)-The U.S. push into Plain of Reeds to try to cut a almost 50,000 new areas rounds of small arms from Cambodia to the Me¬ over "An hour after the handing of the prisoners took place," the broadcast said, "the U.S. forces shelled and fragmentation bombs on the dropped arms ammunition, about 800 kong Delta. was made on humanitarian Command took the wraps off . major Viet Cong supply route American and South Viet¬ route they believed our delega¬ rocket grenade and mortar grounds because the Viet Cong two major sweeps Sunday in west of Saigon. Called Barrier rounds and mounds of fuses, namese infantrymen pursed tion would use." prisoners involved had been i contested territory, a Marine- Reef, the sweep was mounted operations in the U Minh forest A U.S. military spokesman blasting caps and plastic explo- said: "There was no shelling or captivity a long time and had Vietnamese thrust around the by patrol boats, armored moni- region below the delta to wear records of good behavior. abandoned fortress of Khe Sanh tors and landing craft carrying down Viet Cong main force and any military activity any place It was believed the release and an Army-Navy push in the infantrymen of the U.S. 9th Di- Spokesmen said the sweep, close to the negotiating site for along a 56-mile complex of riv¬ guerrilla units. at least three hours." would be made in the 3rd Corps Plain of Reeds west of Saigon. " ers and canals, completed an in¬ Spokesman said both opera¬ Five arms caches turned up the Vam Co Dong River terdiction screen stretching 250 tions began Thursday to keep on "We've found regular un¬ miles from the Gulf of Siam to gon. the enemy off balance in areas a Meanwhile the Viet Cong ac- seldom probed by allied forces. derground supermarket there," the provincial capital of Tay HOBIE'S Baffled Ninh City, 55 miles northwest of " * " cused U.S. officers of confiscat- Neither push had met with a Navy officer reported. The caches-mostly hidden in Saigon. It is aimed to restrict ing film and using a mysterious significant enemy resistance, |n an attempt to see the light, this student mirrors the distraught emotions of thou¬ bewildered black smoke to spoil photo- graphs of the New Year's Day The Marines, however, found an enemy munitions dump in the sunken metal drums-contained the flow of enemy troops and The Loner: where the three hill-studded jungles just west of sands of MSU students who waded their ways ceremony Americans were released. Khe Sanh. Hobie's New One-Man through registration last week. State News Photo by Bob Ivins Associated Press photogra¬ pher Horst Faas and other west- The sweep and the mounted between Khe Sanh Laotian border by about 5,000 U.S. was Basic Outlines (or Gal) Submarine. Marines and South Vietnamese Cooked Salami & Ham $1.15 troops lifted by helicopter. It ATL. NAT. SCI. SOC. HUM. Genoa Salami & Ham 1.25 Off-Campus Council seeks biggest operation in the was three months in the northwest Turkey 1.25 Roast Beef 1.35 corner of South Vietnam, along the western edge of the demili¬ COURSE OUTLINES The Loner isn't as bulky as before or as costly. It three students for positions tarized zone. just tastes better. Too good to share with anyone. Let When Khe Sanh was besieged cake. Or something. But not your Hobie. for 77 days last spring, the HIST: 121,122, STAT: 121, them eat on the food products price store. North Vietnamese had elements ANNOUNCING.. .ta- ta.. .ta-taa... Three positions are open this °"11 p study being conducted this term. OCC is compiling a survey of Anyone who wishes to take of three divisions .in the general part in the — study inshould contact area. Since then most of the en- PSYCH: 151 CHEM: 130,141 CHEFS SALAD $-i25 (OCC . the 11-member . gov- , the OCC office 316 Student emy forces - have pulled back, This is good. Ask about it. J, erning board of .he .Student Assn Off-Campus food stores for different types Services or the Off-Campus The base was abandoned in July. Housing office, Room 162, Stu- MATH: 108,109,111,112,113 Application Jorms may be ■v r picked up in Room 316 of the Student Services Bldg. before h« of shoppers, in addition to quatita|J£ a„alyses of each dent Services Bldg. ECON: 200,201, GEOG. 204 351-3800 CARRY OUT • FAST FREE DELIVERY Jan. 13 All off-campus stu¬ SPARTAN SHOPPING CENTER dents who do not live in co¬ operatives. sorority or fra¬ At MSU Ski PHYSICS: 287, 288,289 Trowbridge at Harrison Rd. Across From MSU ternity houses are eligible to your NOTES FOR: "Citizen Tom Paine" apply. newsstand "The Devil in Massachusetts" "Uncle Tom's Cabin" & "Poor White" We can teach you The governing board meets NOW Wednesday 7:30 P.M. to. consider prob¬ bi-weekly lems affecting off-campus stu- 109 Anthony Hall to read faster — (3-4-5 Times Faster) Juniors and seniors in forest -with better comprehension Guest Speaker - Hugo Bohm products may also sign up dur¬ ing the drop and add period for EVELYN WOOD READING Forest Products 418 (special topics), an independent study DYNAMICS FOR program offered this term in cooperation with OCC. IMPROVED The course will investigate •GRADES the physical aspects of off- • CONCENTRATION campus dwelling and is of spe¬ cial interest to building con¬ • COMPREHENSION struction majors. William B. • STUDY SKILLS Lloyd, professor of forest pro¬ • RECALL SKILLS ducts, will be faculty sponsor Part one of the authorized for the program. Hemingway biography I read somewhere they're solving Straight questions—straight answers MRS. EVELYN WOOD • RESEARCH SKILLS OCC also needs students I've got my interview set and they won't care if the help PLUS: between computer lab and econ rapid transit problems bus is a little late hurry up bus and helping explore the seas and It is difficult for those who read in the plodding, old-fashioned I'll be late for class outer space Get together with Alcoa: way to appreciate the sense of freedom that comes with and working with packaging Feb. 3, 4 eiicrtless reading. Most of you read the way people did a century wonder if Alcoa's doing anything and automotive applications about traffic jams ago-—word by word, at rates of perhaps 150 to 350 words a minute. So when I go in I'll tell it like it is—for me An Equal Opportunity Employer But now there is a new and modern way to read. It is called and they'll tell it like it is— A Plans for Progress Company Reading Dynamics. With it you can read at least three times for them faster than you now do, without skipping or skimming. Yot v of reading in just a few hours (IS) INFORMED SOURCES ... SPILLARD The Reading Dynamics method has been used by many students, HATN NOVEL ... AD FUNNING United States Senators, Congressmen, educatori, business executives and professional people. President Kennedy asked us to give this course to members of his staff in the White House. In the last decade Reading Dynamics has BOQIN THE COCK ••• RUMORED LEADER shown more than 400,000 persons how to increase UNDERGROUND OF THE PERIPHERAL ... KILLED 3Y OVERDOSE OF CLICHE' Change for the better with Alcoa □ALCOA their reading speed and comprehension substantially. We may be able to do the same for you. In fact, if you follow the course correctly, you will at least triple your reading-comprehension rate, or your tuition will be NY DESK (13745KR) ... SORT OF A NOVEL, THAT IS HIS FIRST. THAT IS ALL THE INFORMATION WE HAVE, AND FRANKLY ... FREE DEMONSTRATIONS NEW YORK. NOW (DDAY) ... SENIOR University Inn — 1101 Trowbridge EDITORS EXPRESSED DISMAY AT THIS NBfr PUBLISHING TRMD AND COULD Mori., Jan. 6 — Tues., Jan. 7 CNLY SAY ... 12 Noon; 4, 6 and 8 p.m. Wed., Jan. 8 — 6 and 8 p.m. (MORE) If You Can Attend a Demonstration, Call 337-1222 in Lansing or Mail Coupon INFORMED SOURCES# iff WILLAKD BAIN $2.95 AT BOOKSTORES •iDOUiiLEDAY □ EVELYN WOOD 17320 W. 8 READING DYNAMICS Mile Rd., Southfield, Mich. □ Please send descriptive brochure.