Friday Colder. . . Man MICHIGAN with? a chance qf TATE NEWS . . . snow flurries. High today of 5 to 10. STATE Low tonight 0 to -5. UNIVERSITY East Lansing, Michigan January 10,1969 Vol. 61 Number 103 OPEN HOUSE, HOURS Six new committeemen join MHA, WIC debate By MARILYN PATTERSON jections. It may reconsider both propo¬ jections might be seriou^ or they might not compromise the origi lal proposal bul sals and accept them as originally pro¬ State News Staff Writer be changes that are necer^sary for admin committee members with six posed, in amended form or only in part. Six new istrative purposes. I'll ji^t have to wail Any compromise measure it approves, new opinions will be heard when the Fac¬ however, must be agreeable to Dickerson ulty Committee on Student Affairs meets and MHA and WIC before the proposals today to discuss changes in the Men's are passed. Halls Assn. (MHA) open house proposal The new committee members are Rob¬ and Women's Inter-residence Council ert Glenn Wright, asst. professor in Justin (WIC) no-hours proposal. Morrill College; Donald Weston, asst. pro¬ MHA, WIC The new members were not present fessor of psychiatry; Theodore Brooks, when the committee approved the two instructor of social work; Helen Green, proposals but will vote on the changes to be recommended by Milton B. Dick- professor of business law. office admin erson, vice president for student affairs. The proposals, one of which gives in¬ istration and education; Vandel Johnson associate professor of administration anc reaffirm dividual halls the right to determine hours, higher education; and Robert Michel asst. professor of pathology. By SHARON TEMPLETON attire, supervision and open or closed door Retired from the committee are; T State News Staff Writer policy, and the other, which would give Clinton Cobb, professor of advanced stud The Men's Hall Assn. (MHAi and Wo¬ freshman women selective hours, were ies; Allan Mandelstamm. professor vl men's Inter-Residence Council (WIC) de¬ passed by the faculty committee late last economics; Lauren Harris, asst. profes cided to continue their endorsement of term. They were returned to the committee for reconsideration by Dickerson and must sor of psychology; and Donald Twohy the MHA open house pojcy and the WIC State of have his approval before they can go into asst. professor of microbiology Members of the committee, both old anc no-hours proposal for freshman women at their meetings Wednesday night Gov. Romney takes i back seat to Lt. Gov. William Milliken during Milliken's State of the State address The committee must now decide wheth¬ new, are adopting a wait and see" policj The MHA proposal, as passed by the Thursday. Milliken will take over the reins of Michigan Jan. 20 when Romney assumes the Housing and with regard to changing the proposals Faculty Committee on;Student Affairs, State News Photo by Mike Marhanka er or not it agrees with Dickerson s ob- Urban Development Cabinet post in the Nixon Administration. By late Thursday. Dickerson had not yet allows the individual hull the authority contacted committee chairman A. L. Thur to determine the hours,, supervision, and man to formally present his objection? dress attire for open houses. It also gives to the proposals. each hall the right to decide on a closed My decision hinges entirely on what " or open door policy. Milliken cites parochial plight Dickerson has to say," James Bath, asst The WIC proposal on no-hours, also professor of entomology, said. passed by the Faculty Committee, would "It is reasonable that he might havt allow freshmen women to select their some thoughts that differ from the com own hours on entering land leaving the mittee's. He hasn't been there at somt residence halls. Milliken said he would oppose "any tain that such legislation conforms with prove the system of financial support for of our deliberations and I'd like to heai "We see no need to cc-mpromise on the By WES THORP public schools. efforts to pork-barrel these funds or to what he has to say. I am not. however proposals which have already gained suf¬ our constitutional restrictions." State News Staff Writer Concerning disputes between teacher's dissipate their effectiveness by stretch¬ opposed to compromise ficient support to be parsed by both AS- Lt. Gov. William G. Milliken expressed unions and school boards, he said. "While ing the spending over too many years. I have no idea what his objection? MSU and the Faculty Committee." Brian sympathy about the plight of parochial See related story, page 2 these disputes are going on. the right of Before the level of state spending can are." Matthew Medick. professor of me Hawkins. MHA president, said. schools in his State of the State message our children to an education has at times chanical engineering, said. "He might poin: The proposals were rejected Monday by Milliken also told the legislators that be raised, there must be additional reve¬ to the legislature Thursday, but he did not seemed almost to be forgotten." they would have to find a source for the nues, he said. What form these additional out something that we overlooked. The ob Milton B. Dickerson. vice president for make any specific proposals to relieve that Milliken said that as governor he will student affairs, due to his concern about funds which would be required to finance revenues might take he did not say. plight. concentrate much of his efforts on the the 24-hour open houses and the well-being Milliken. who will assume the governor¬ such aid. He urged legislators to establish spend¬ About education in general, he said problems of urban Michigan. ing priorities to avoid any financial diffi¬ of first-term freshmen women, the pres¬ ship when Gov. Romney resigns, said. "It "I will reorganize state government to culties. idents of MHA and WIC s^id Thursday. would be tragic, if circumstances should that "much of education today is monu¬ provide constant, high priority, on-the- Dickerson said Mond>v that he can¬ cause the private schools and colleges, re¬ mentally ineffective." scene attention to the urban centers," he Voluntary efforts to solve state prob¬ He said, " We must be vigorous in our not accept certain parts»f the proposals' ligious-affiliated or otherwise, to deterior¬ said. lems would be encouraged in his adminis¬ and has sent both back to the Faculty insistence on responsible innovation by tration, Milliken said. But he said that the ate and disappear.'' Committee for reconsideration. If the legislature enacts legislation to our educators."' "We have all been hearing voices from voluntary efforts of the private sector The Faculty Committee will reconsi¬ He indicated that he would favor tak¬ the streets and it is now time that we all privide aid to parochial schools, he warned cannot do the job alone. der the proposals Friday and decide the legislators, "then you must make cer¬ ing pressure off the property tax to im- listen, and that we communicate on earth " An innovative and well-planned effort (Please turn to-page 13» as well as we do from space. " by the public sector is essential." he said. Making state services such as manpower training, vocational education, housing LEGISLATURE SPEECH and social services more effective will be dissidents a goal of the new administration. Milliken said. He pledged that he would do all in his Frisco State : Romney urges action power to see basic human that all our laws involving rights, particularly in job locked in struggle opportunities, access to the advantages of modern life, and housing, will be stren- to aid public schools ously implemented and enforced." Milliken also pledged that his adminis¬ tration would wage a ceaseless battle power These organizations embrace all the 12 with screaming strikers. At the center of against lawlessness, whether organized SAN FRANCISCO (APi - The factions the uproar of the 18.000-student campus groups supporting the .strike. They feel or unorganized, whether by mob or Mafia, Retiring Gov. Romney said Thursday not advocate that all private schools be which have split the once peaceful campus is the Black Students Union. The BSU calls they are locked in a kind of war against shut down. He said that decision "would whether exploitive or simply callous. of San Francisco State are locked in a what they regard as a* racist institution that Michigan must deal with the public the shots. It is the most vocal. It is dead school problem if this country is not to go be up to the churches. " The $435 million bonding program passed struggle for influence and power, and and an establishment bureaucracy that certain it knows what it wants. down the drain. Romney concluded that, "churches and last November by the people must be re¬ few observers here are willing to predict frustrates the aspirations of minority The Third World Liberation Front of To solve the problem. Romney proposed others obviously have an unchallenged lated to people, rather than to political or the outcome. persons. They demand "relevant education non-white non-black minorities has clear¬ that the new govenor, the state legislature right to operate schools and supply both regional considerations, according to Mil- ly tied its star to the black group to meet the needs of the jninorities. " and the people have an extensive dialogue secular and religious education." "Maybe the whole campus will have They equate the "establishment with to be shut down for two years to phase Striking teachers are demanding a ne¬ on the problem, in his introduction of his gotiated contract, plus implementation of Republican Gov. Ronald Reagan, who has out all the protester parties." said a mem¬ successor Lt. Gov. William Milliken a joint vowed to keep SF State open even "at ber of the American Federation of Teach¬ the striking students' 15 demands. The session of the 75th legislature. the point of a bayonet. " ers, which went on strike this week. union claims 400 members, the school ad¬ 1 Romney said that when he proposed Mon¬ The BSU. which claims an enrollment Judiciary hol Meantime police daily stand nose to nose ministration says 229. day night that public school money be of all 836 Negro students on campus, cur¬ spent on public schools, he was telling rently is being led by hardliners Jerry it like he sees it. Varnardo. Leroy Goodwin and Benny Stew¬ He said that he does not envision the dis¬ art. Regarded as the*ec_ding moderates appearance of all church-related and other non-public schools. But. he said, "All church related and other non-public schools can enrich American life only if ban on fratern are A Jack Alexis and Nes^it Cruichfield struggle for power among them sur¬ faced during the last days of the school's former president. Robert Smith, when stu¬ By ED HUTCHISON dent-faculty convocations were held in a they retain private support, undiluted by State News Staff Writer fruitless attempt to jolve the campus government money and influence." According to Romney. his proposal did The Student-Faculty Judiciary's deci¬ crisis. VerBurg said that his major dissatis¬ sion Wednesday to prevent Holmes Hall During one session. Alexis and Crutch- from enforcing its motion which "orders faction is that the judiciary utilized Article 4.3.4.6 of the Academic Freedom Report field spoke for the BS.J, trading theories Hannah to leave all forms of fraternity rush be banned from the property of Holmes Hall" rep¬ which includes provisions for "expedited consideration of urgent cases in which it is with Smith and otlu auditorium crowde ilty leaders in an * ,h 800 students resents a compromise, Thomas H. Ver- and teachers. alleged that a regulation or administra¬ rights commission Burg. Jenison, freshman and East Holmes president, said Thursday. tive decision irreparable threatens infringement immediate on and student were The next day. Ale^s and Crutchfield displaced by the haHliners. VerBurg said that the judiciary agreed Early last year the school hired Dr. Na¬ By United Press International rights. .". with their complaints but not the proce¬ than Hare perhaps the most prestigious President Hannah said Thursday he dures that Holmes used to protect resi¬ would resign soon from the U.S. Civil VerBurg maintains that the Holmes Hall Negro on the campus. He is a sociologist dents from fraternity rushing procedures. motion in no way caused "immediate and with a masters degree and doctorate in Rights Commission on which he has served The controversy concerns a motion that as chairman since its creation in 1957 Holmes Hall legislature passed Oct. 19. irreparable infringement on student his field from the unive^ity of Chicago. Hannah said he would remain active on (Please turn to page 13) Hare was hired as curriculum coordi¬ 1968 that "orders all forms of fraternity nator for black studies offered in 14 cour¬ the commission for another three or four rush be banned from the property of ses under established departments. months until President-elect Richard M Holmes Hall" and Inter-Fraternity Coun¬ Nixon has time to settle into office. He "Actually, this is probably the first cil's (IFC) reaction to the motion request¬ was initially appointed by President Eisen¬ ing the judiciary to enjoin the motion "un¬ SN open house move lack at any college '.o try to solve the people's probk'ms through educa¬ hower and reappointed by Presidents Ken¬ til the end of rush week. Jan 12, 1969, The State News will hold an open house tion," he said at the tiiue. nedy and Johnson. when a proper judicial clarification can "When I was appointed. I expected to at 7:30 p.m. Monday in the Stefanoff Memor Last spring. Hare suggested a full- be obtained." ial Lounge of the Student Services Bldg. fledged Department o" Black Studies, and stay in the post for about 10 years. And it's The Holmes Hall motion prohibited ad¬ this came about during the current strike. State News editors will discuss the news¬ been more than that now," Hannah said be¬ fore leaving for Washington and a meeting vertising in the dorm, mass-mailing and paper's operation and answer questions. Picket Hare was named acting chairman. the prohibition of rushing in living areas Hare, who is on the BSU's Central Com¬ of the commission. Anyone interested in working on the Hannah, 66, said he believed racial bias or lounges. Lehigh Burstein, Meridian, State News may apply for reporting, copy A picketing student at San Francisco State Col lege gri maces in pain mittee, found himself squeezed between Miss., senior and IFC vice-president in won't be eliminated iin America until a editing, sports and Spartacuss positions. as policemen twist his arm in another of a series of campus scuf¬ the hard and moderate BSU factions last charge of rush, said. fles. The student was arrested after a brawl with another student. summer while organizing the black studies "new generation of Negroes with access to Burstein said IFC wanted to "stop the UPI Telephoto curriculum. adequate educational opportunities" motion before any incidents would occur emerges. Friday, January 10, 1969 2 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan U.S. ills itical and concern social system is ir¬ relevant," he said. "More and more money spent without making a is being dent in State News profile Milliken has said these man¬ ifestations of deeper trouble the problem, he said. Michigan's new governor is a The reason welfare has failed concerned man. He is concerned so impersonal recipients drown in sharply rising rates of crime, in the sea of red tape before to achieve its purpose accord¬ about what is wrong with alcoholism, drug addiction, di¬ ing to Milliken is that , "we America. vorce and violence." He said this alienation goes are a^s0 ev'dent in welfare have never brought to bear on Lt. Gov. William G. Milliken, But he has said these are down to the very values in- programs which he said, have the problem enought personal who will soon take office when only manifestations of deeper herent in American institutions, become so impersonal recipients compassion, enough resource::, Gov. Romney resigns to becone trouble. These manifestations "Many young people have con- drown in the sea of red tape or enough thoughtful planning to part of the Nixon Cabinet, said, "are evident in the deep alien- eluded that the American pol- before or they can save themselves be saved. develop flexible systems which "This country's weaknesses show meet the needs." "Whatever our intentions," he said, "welfare is not the warm About the future, Milliken personal hand of friendship but has said, "If we take advantage Students voice opinions it is the cold impersonal had of grudging patronage." Milliken, a World War II of our opportunities, if we meet fear with faith and reasoned action, this time will be re¬ Block and combat veteran, said that a membered not as the time Am¬ 10-point grading system problem more widespread than erica lost its soul, but as the ck and Bridle are preparing their prize animals with lots < on police brutality is emotional brutality. time America found its con- nnual show Saturday. State News Photo by Jj^ri Ri< By KATHY CHIABAI sophomore. "It takes the ob¬ system. She felt that on a four "It is where society in gen¬ Many students voiced the opin¬ jectivity of the instructor out." -point scale, the student often had the benefit of the doubt eral says, in effect, I would EDI1 NESTED ion in a recent State News Some students felt that the new rather turn away from human when he was on the borderline Survey that the new 10-point system, grading students on a suffering and injustice than to Obscenity charges clos,e and received a higher grade. involved," Milliken said. grading system which went into 10-point scale from 0 to 4.5, become effect fall term gave them " a gave a better indication of the Aileen Peters, Matton, 111, The underlying problem in our fairer representation of grades." actual grade than the former society, according to Milliken, "It's a more precise grading system with four letter grades. junior, said, "I don't like it. "is man's inhumanity to man; If they're going to broaden the system because it gives grades it is prejudice, prejudging others Many thought that their grades grading scale they should make and their motives; it is lack between a B and a C for in¬ stance," Dawn Airey, Ann Arbor senior, said. "I think it's much fairer," said Chuck Touri, Muskegon were higher because of the it a 15-point system. Now there's change. But some agreed with no difference between a B minus Peggy Hunter, Allegan junior, and a C plus. It's just an easy who said she preferred the old way to get out of giving a 3 of compassion and it is a fear of things we don't understand, like other Americans of different colored skins. " college newspaper The prosecutor's Office issued case" involving violation of a of office meetings7 and hearings to determine t^e fate of the Lant¬ point and a 4 point." Michigan criminal statute pro¬ a temporary injunction against horn. The answer to these problems, hibiting the distribution of ob¬ the college and against Wassermai The Board 3f Control on Dec. Other student thought that scenity. he has said, "begin in the home, The editor of a Grand Valley after Bussard had been tipped 20 decided hat the Lanthorn the change was and improv¬ Bussard noted that, enforce¬ where habits and attitude are State College newspaper charged off by the Ottawa County Sheriff should contin. e under the author¬ The State News, the student newspaper at Michigan State University, is ement, but that a 15-point system ment of the anti-obscenity statute published every class day throughout the year with special Welcome Week would be even better. formed." with printing "obscenities" is Dept. that the newspaper had been was not uniform throughout the ity of the College. The Board and Orientation issues in June and September. Subscription rates are $14 The new governor, who served out of jail on $1,000 bond, printing "obscenities." also decided to set up a News¬ four years in the State Senate James W. Bussard, Ottawa Cou¬ Bussard said the sheriff's nearly all of the "Many times if it isn't called paper Board^ Composed about per year However, before becoming lt. gov., has received number of Member Associated Press, United Press International, Inland Daily Press students in favor of the nty prosecuting attorney, said office had a to our attention, we (pros¬ equally of Gr and Valley students Associated Collegiate Press, Michigan Press Association, Mich¬ said that youth can help re¬ Wednesday. complaints from residents of the ecutor's office) don't even hear and faculty, to oversee the Association, change in grading agreed with igan Collegiate Press Association, United States Student Press Association. Peggy Innis, Kalamazoo junior, build decaying cities, work for James Wasserman, editor of the Grand Valley area that the Lant¬ about it, so there's nothing done,'' operation of the Lanthorn. who said, "I think it's great. peace through better wourld un¬ student-run "Lanthorn," was horn was distributing obscene A College official reported that Second class postage paid at East Lansing. Michigan derstanding and they can become arrested Dec. 3 by the Ottawa literature. he said. Wasserman is registered as a Editorial and business offices at 347 Student Services Building, Michigan It helped my grade point aver¬ Bussard said that $1,000 bond a true friend of racial equality. By order of the Prosecutor's was "standaiu" in a case like student for winter term and is State University, East Lansing. Michigan age. I wish we would have had County prosecutor's office on it before!" charges of distributing obscene Office, the editorial office of technically free'' to edit the this, and that Wasserman would Phones Milliken often has been literature. the Lanthorn was cocked by the newspaper." However, on the Editorial 35M2S2 UNION BOARD critical of the present welfare Bussard said that bond was college administration. probably be granted a trial by advice of ^is lawyer, he will Classified Advertising 355^255 Flights to Europe jury soon by the Ottawa Countv nor resume1 his duties as editor Display Advertising 3SS-6400 366-3447 8 weeks - $233 system. originally set at $5,000 but was He said that the present wel¬ reduced to the present $1,000 The Sheriff's Dept. has also judge. Business-Circulation confiscated nearly all of the until after Ks trial. Photographic 3SM311 12 weeks - J204 fare system rather than help when his office learned that While Wasserman was held Sign up starts Jan. 15 offending issues of the Lanthorn. Due to tl nature of his case, people become independent Wasserman not from Bussard called the Wasserman by the Prosecutor's Office, the and the fa^. that his trial date Further information was Grand Valley State's Board of makes them become dependent. Michigan. call: 355-3355 or 355-3354 Lanthorn situation a "routine Control (similar to MSU's has not be^ri determined, Was¬ serman has refrained from mak¬ Board of Trustees) held a series ing statements to the press. Saturday Is The weekly Lanthorn. in the EICO Introduces The Last Day meantime, as scheduled to make its first appearnace since the obscenity eiiarge next week. 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ABOVE NEW CAMPUS BOOKSTORE MARSHALL MUSIC CO. 245 ANN ST. with the LARGEST selection of HUMAN HAIR products in MID-MICHIGAN area, you can't go wrong. when you resupply your action wardrobe for the current winter season during our sale. Get the right-now flared and tapered pants in solids stripes and plaids of woolens and blends. Sizes 5-13. IMPORTERS WIG WAREHOUSE JacobgoriS PH. 372-2332 1820 E. MICHIGAN NEXT TO THE PAGODA RESTAURANT Friday, January l£, 1969 3 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan NEWS ASMSU adds post summary for public relations contained unit apart trom East cation channels^between the stu¬ By ROSANNE BAIME State News Staff Writer Lansing leads to poor community dent board and individual stu¬ dents that do not transmit in¬ A new vice presidency was relations between the two. Bang¬ formation properly create a created this week on the ASMSU hart said. East Lansing res¬ lack of knowledge about gov¬ "The future icill not be de¬ Cabinet to improve student gov¬ idents not connected with the ernment functions. ernment's image to students, University have no way of get¬ termined by the scientists and Application of communication faculty, the community and even ting a true picture of student technicians, but by the people the state, according to Don opinions "across the street theories to these problems could earth. Because explora¬ (Grand River Avenue i. bring their solutions closer in on Banghart, cabinet president. about two years. Graf estimated. tion is really the esse nee of The post, vice president for Cooperation from the Com¬ public relations, highlights a munications Dept. will play a "A lot of specialized know¬ of the human spirit, and I number of recent changes in major role in the communi- ledge available to us that could hope ue never forget that.'''' that body's structure. help get ASMSU's programs Astronaut Frank Borman It has been under discussion across to the students hasn't in the cabinet for two months, been utilized vet." Graf said. according to Banghart and was Female The four cabinet committees approved by the ASMSU Student currently in existence that will Board Tuesday night. come under the direction of the International News "We want to get our message across and get it straight." still availa new vice president will also ascertain what information is • Premier-designate Rashid Karami of Lebanon said Tues¬ Banghart said. received by students. day he will give Israel no excuse for attacking Lebanon. But Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Dayan warned in Jerusalem To get this "message" across the new vice president will have with ASM Through the freshman or¬ ientation. consumer relations that Arab guerrilla bases onLebanese soil are open to assult. at his disposal a number of and student opinion research pro¬ established committees and ASMSU's committee on the • Czechoslovakia's largest trade union backed down Thurs¬ grams we'll find out what in¬ selection of a female member- day night from its threat to strike over the demotion of Josef three newly-created ones. formation is being transmitted The three new committees at-large representative for the Smrkovskv. one of the nation's most popular progressive;?. properly to the students and what under the vice president for Student Library Committee and The one million member union asked, however, that Smrkov- isn't " Banghart said. the All-University Traffic Com¬ sky be considered later this month for the job of chairman of public relations, student rela¬ tions, faculty-community rela¬ mittee has begun to interview the new assembly. Open petitioning for the public tions and communications re¬ students who have petitioned for relations vice presidency will • Canada will keep its military forces in the North Atlan¬ search, will be "a working ex¬ the positions. run through Monday Jan. 13. tic Treaty Organization for another year but will make no Sophomore member-at-large. periment in community rela¬ Petitioning for the posts of long-term commitment to European defense before reviewing tions," according to Banghart. Chuck Mostov. chairman of the vice president of student military policies. Prime Mihister Pierre Elliott Trudeau de¬ The student relations commit¬ committee, emphasized that pe¬ services and vice president of clared today. Trudeau confirmed that Canada wants to re¬ tee will titioning for 12 positions will re¬ attempt to open up a University programs on the cognize Communist China. "You stand to gain nothing by two-way communication channel main open until Jan. 13. although Cabinet will also end Jan.13. not recognizing a regime that represents one-quarter of the interviewing has begun. between student government and Petitions may be obtained in world's population." he said. The female member-at-large students on the house level. the ASMSU offices on the third Paul Graf, cabinet vice presi¬ position entails serving on the floor of the Student Services National News dent for student services, said. ASMSU Board until mid-April, Building The director of student re¬ when the spring general election • The Space Agency Thursday named astronauts Neil A. lations will be responsible for will be held UNION BOARD Armstrong. Michael Collins and Edwin A. Aldrin to the Apol¬ Three positions are open on Flights to Europe developing a program that will lo 11 crew—the American team that will have the first the All-University Traffic Com¬ 8 weeks - $233 both inform students of student chance of landing on the moon. Armstrong, a civilian, was 12 weeks - $204 board and cabinet activities and mittee Representatives are Sign up starts Jan. 15 named Apollo 11 commander involve them in government pro¬ needed from married housing, further information grams and decision-making, ac¬ off-campus housing and on-cam- call: 355-3355 355-3354 • The Navy says it is considering extending the enlistments or cording to Graf. pus residence halls. of 22 Pueblo crewmen to keep them in the service until a The faculty-community rela¬ court of inquiry completes its investigation of the ship's seizure by North Korea. The enlistments expired while the tions committee will have two men were in captivity. Their enlistments already have been functions: to inform the faculty of academic services offered by extended 30 days-dating from their arrival in the United ASMSU to students and to im¬ States on Dec. 23 after 11 months' captivity, but this is the maximum extension permitted for ' administrative and medi¬ prove East Lansing-MSU re¬ lations. cal purposes.' To be kept past Jan 23. the crew must either re-enlist or be made party to the court of inquiry. MSU's position as a self- Bold' Apollo 8 astronauts given presidential medals WASHINGTON i AP > The ives to cheer the arrival of the makes us realize that we all dc astronauts for a joint meeting of exist on one small globe. For Apollo 8 astronauts, hailed as the House and Senate. from 230.000 miles away it real "history's boldest explorers." lv is a small planet." received medals from President Rep. John McCormack. D- Mass.. speaker of the House, "As we headed back toward Johnson and a standing ovation introduced Borman. Lovell and earth," Borman said, "we look¬ from Congress Thursday as the Anders as "three brave men ed back at the moon and thought nation's capital pulled out the who have made a notable con¬ that hopefully within a few stops to honor them for their months man will land that tribution to our understanding on historic moon orbit mission. In a White House ceremony, of the exploration of space. " landscape the President decorated Air Apollo 8 commander Borman replying for the astronauts, ac¬ 295.00 250.00 Force Col. F>ank Borman. Navy knowledged the support that Capt. James A. Lovell Jr. and Air Force Lt. Col. William A Congress has given the space FOX'S Jewelers Since 1917 Anders with Distinguished Ser¬ program FRANDOR SHOPPING CENTER Borman said he and his fellow- vice Medals of the National and 203 S. WASHINGTON Aeronautics and Space Admini¬ moon travelers have been asked now save often what they remember most stration. about the flight. Johnson told the space heroes I think the one overwhelm¬ on they had mankind blazed a new trail for out into the vastness of ing emotion that we said, "was when we saw the had." he your extraterrestrial space earth rising in the distance over More than 2.000 persons jam¬ the lunar landscape. It fashion med the House of Representat¬ leg HOBIE'S be assured We're Open Till quality, 3 a.m. On Weekends. Knapp's "W Value" pa If you're a weekend night owl, stop In or give us a call after the late date or late anything. the others have rolled in the We're up and delivering after sidewalks. One hours are rough Bates Floater on sidewalks—but nice for hungry people. FARE FOR THE Smoked Salami Genoa Salami WEEKENDER $1.15 1.25 for This Bates a Floater boot was warm, selected for wear by sale 3-4.50 Long legs, short legs all seem lanky-long n the Turkey 1.25 the 1964 Olympic Team at the winter games in dandy look of legs stretched to the waist in panti¬ Roast Beef ' 1.35 Innsbruck, Austria. Designed for wear in all kinds ' hose. And where else but at Knapp's coulc] you • of winter weather, this shearling lined boot treats find this fashion-of-the-minute at such savings? Chefs Salad 1.25 you to fireside warmth and the added advantage Hurry and stock up. Choose from rhumba, t^upe- of water repellency. This winter join the U. S. and smoke. Proportioned 351-3800 CARRY OUT • FAST FREE DELIVERY Olympic Team in comfort with this surprisingly lightweight boot by Bates. $20.-$25. tone, rosetone, woodtone sizes S, M. T. XT. nosih.e) - s tet h i in hi h is r t i \st\{. * s iout i on mi \ ~ s/'/•/■ i i 11 111 i tsi / i \n/ V Trinka Lline, executive editor James S. Cranelli, managing editor Patricia Anstett, campus editor MICHIGAN Carol Budrow, Jerry Pankhurst, editorial editor Tom Brou n, sports editor advertising managei Deborah Fitch, associate campus editi STATE NEWS The State News is a free and editorially independent student newspaper. Editorials express the unanimous opinion of the UNIVERSITY editorial board of the State News unless otherwise indicated. 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-lime recipient of (he Pacemaker award for outstanding journalism. EDITORIAL Scrawny chickens for the other sons learning." While we must, of its quota for students, but ov¬ for competent medical per¬ Ceorgy, Porgy, I'uddin and sonnel, but apparently the state course, maintain and improve er-filled it because of its re¬ pie, kissed the girls and made doesn't need the new med the "overall quality of our sponsibility to society, and the them cry. school as badly as it needs to higher education system," we state, to provide higher edu¬ Only this time he didn't kiss cation for as many as possi¬ protect the "unique status of the girls, he kissed the Univer¬ must particularly protect "the the University of Michigan." ble. The University of Michi¬ sity of Michigan and kicked the unique status of the Univer¬ Romney was successful in sity of Michigan." gan did not, however. MSU, rest of Michigan's universities healing many of Michigan's He went on to say that "it meanwhile, continued to op¬ and colleges in the pants. serious financial ills, but it is is no reflection on our other erate on a budget designed for In a relatively lackluster most unfortunate that he was farewell address, Gov. Rom- fine state colleges and univer¬ only its pre-baby boom quota. This inequity has continued unsuccessful in seeing beyond sities today that we can only ney left the majority of Mich- since, to the point that today the blind, arrogant pride of afford one institution with the iganders half asleep after a the University of Michigan is having "a unique status" uni¬ stature of the University of speech that inspired few and now receiving a dispropor¬ versity that is several thou¬ excited none, and contained few Michigan. It would be a trage¬ sand students smaller than tionate amount of funds, be¬ surprises-except in his re¬ dy if we were to deny the Uni¬ MSU. Instead of providing cause of its "unique status." marks concerning parachial versity of Michigan the extra Higher education, with the equity in higher education, he schools. financial support required to used his power and prestige to In the are£ of aid to paro¬ maintain its margin of ex¬ exception of the University of sustain the absurdity. chial schools, Romney summed cellence and its well-earned Michigan, has not received -The Editors worldwide reputation. " widespread legislative support, up his feelings when he stated Romney is like the father who. to say the least, under the that the churches ought to stick while having several children, Romney administration. One HOWARD &ABE to giving religious training, and leave secular education to the cannot avoid handing special recent example of this is praise and privileges to one of MSU's fight for a four-year medi state--a statement that met widespread criticism. Romney's remarks on higher them because of his singular ex¬ cellence on the little league team. Prize-pitcher Peter gets cal school. The State Board of Education recommended that the school be placed at MSU in The bus drivers' final exam education amounted to a praise of the University of Michigan, a new bike every Christmas 1967, but no action has been tak¬ and a damnation of the rest of while the other sons get only a en by Romney or the legislature. door is left ajar I wish to take this time Michigan's colleges and uni¬ chicken. This proposal is not concerned "Hello men! to welcome you to the MSU Bus versities. And we've been handed some with furthering the status of Drivers' College of Advanced Motor "Very good. pretty scrawny chickens MSU, (we wouldn't dream of Skills. As you train to become part Romney said that we "are par¬ "It's snowing ami* hailing out. There attempting to overshadow Ann of our fantastic team. I want you to ticularly fortunate" to have one lately. are 56 people wait-hg in front of the know that you are about to become A few years ago, when the ef¬ Arbor U) but is in the best in¬ Union Bldg. to b \fcchigan Make sure State th,-it it is University an official Campus ations: and third, by becoming aware when all of a sudden you see a coed Transportation Ticket. Winter Term. of the $1.50an hour pay rate." running towards the bus waving her 1969 (3) Check >|ie number on the "Oh. I see there's a question...yes hands in an effort to get you to stop. Lyndon Johnson's departure ticket and make su.-e that it is not one Mr. Cranitz?" What do you do°" of the numbers oh our Hot List. <4> "Don't you think that $1.50 an hour "Duh. I check to see if she's Check the student* number and name is a meager sum for us cream of good looking ." with the number and name on their the crop"1'" "Wrong. Mr. Schmearcase. We pictured ID. caPd. <5> Then ask "Well Mr. Cranitz, you must re¬ treat all our passengers alike. It the passenger for today's officially- member that it's $1.50 an hour plus tips seems to me that you've been a little approved password. <6> Then let earlier than it did. There are other ways and commission. You get five lax with your reading assignments. the next person aboard and start the There is always a sadness about men of keeping the crises from turning intc cents per person whenever the number "Oh. I know. I know. Call on me Official Bus Pas; Check procedure who leave power reluctantly, but in the A departing President's wars impossible to wage, and it is tc of passengers on the bus exceeds 75 teacher.'' all over again. " ; case of Lyndon Johnson & Co. there is a last melancholy duties are Lyndon Johnson's credit that he has beer students. Phillip Phink. our head bus "Yes Mr. Zorch." double sadness because so much of what exploring such ways in every situatior driver, made $7,500.15 in commissions "You open up one of the small "Perfect I can .see that you've all they did was on the credit side of the bal¬ housekeeping chores . . . since Vietnam. last winter during final exam week." windows and yell out: This aint learned your les^ns and are now ance sheet of history, and the one big but his favors no longer The question is how much the new for "On the night we had 17 inches of a bus stop, vah dumb broad. qualified to receive the official MSU debit item of the Vietnam mess tipped the eign policy team will have studied anc snow. Mr Phink removed the dis¬ "Good...and then what?" dark blue bus driver's cap with the whole balance the wrong way. carry any rewards, his profited from the failures and succes tributer caps off all the buses except "Then I must remember to close golden radiator MsigHia ses of the old one. If Nixon's appoint his. It was estimated that the Olympic the small window so that the fresh¬ Let s get ifi those buses men and Unjust? It may well be. But while the historian owes justice to his subjects, his¬ froivns no sting, his threats ments in this field-William Rogers stuff-the-bus-record was broken at men on the bus won't be able to muscle. Melvin Laird. Henry Cabot Lodge. Alex hear what the coed is saying as a tory itself—in the sense of the consequen¬ no 11:30 a.m. in front of the Union building, is Johnson, Henry Kissinger and the brisk wind from the fields around ces that follow from events-isn't con¬ when Mr. Phink had a total of 17. cerned with justice. The moving finger continuance of Ellsworth Bunker a! 396 passengers. Spartan Stadium blows her away of history makes its mark, fair or unfair, its military strength for a showdown with Saigon-mark a break with the basic out "You must also remember that you from the bus. " Red Cecfor report look of the Johnson team, it is a break "Excellent. and moves on. Decades later the historian, Vietnam as early as 1962, when Hanoi receive a 10 per cent rebate from all the for which little evidence exists on the "Mr. Pinkertown. describe the By JIM DeKORKST equipped with hindsight, tries to set the breached the agreement over Laos. This neighborhood dry-cleaning establish¬ record. bus judgment straight. He will say in 1980. I is another way of shifting the responsi¬ ments. So let's keep that slush fly¬ proper way to maneuver your And whosoever The stress is on continuity, not sharp around the Shaw depot. phall smite thee on suspect, that while Lyndon Johnson was bility for the Vietnam failure from Lyn¬ ing from beneath <*our tires! Re¬ the right cheek, ti^'n also to him your not as good as his self-image, he was a don Johnson to John Kennedy, who was change, whether in the conduct of the war member...hitting those mud puddles "If I'm the first bus there. I park left cheek and then si lite his airliners." far better President than we now judge President in 1962. or the Paris peace negotiations or in the during the spring showers is just by the snow banks and the bus stop him. But for practical purposes it will I am afraid it won't wash. Rostow rings larger problem (which Mr. Johnson fin like money in the bank. sign. I then watch the students climb The incoming Secretary of the Interior be too late. his hands over the difficulty of conduct¬ ally recognized) of finding a middle road "Now a few questions directed to in knee deep snow just to find the Walter Hickel cafnot understand the between the two dangerous roads: be door barracaded by the sign. If all A departing President's last melancholy ing foreign policy in a democracy which tween the road of intervening with force specific members of the class to see saving of lands and forests just for the pur¬ duties are housekeeping chores, tidying won't act until a crisis has become se¬ whether or not you're ready for the other buses are already parked and the road of withdrawal from an area, pose of saving Or. to paraphrase another everything, making final reports to Con¬ vere. and he is right in that judgment of your diplomas. by the snow banks, then I drive my up thus creating a vacuum into which a bus alongside another bus. so that prominent Republican. If you've seen gress and the people. But his favors no democracy. But he is wrong in arguing "Mr. Schmearcase. there's a one tree, you've seer, them all." longer carry any rewards, his frowns no that America should have committed it¬ less scrupulous power will move. blizzard outside: you're driving along the clearance between the two is less sting, his threats no muscle. He is in that self to a massive Vietnamese war much Copyright 1969. Los Angeles Times curious limbo where he still formally re¬ tains a power he can neither relinquish nor OUR READERS' MIND exercise Alfred Tennyson's remark to Queen Vic¬ POINT OF VIEW toria in the years of her widowhood, ' You are so alone on that terrible height."' ap¬ Acting roles, MSU plies to every American President. There are some who talk of the Vietnam deci¬ sions as having been made by a "warrior caste'' or a "security complex"' but, who¬ Channels' threatened dent of WIC only learned of his actions To the Editor: One Freedom question, please. Is the Academic Report still in effect"? of order. ferences among But, due to physical dif¬ the living units, no all- University regulation can be valid. The the Men's Hall Assn. (MHAi and Women's only legitimate policy would be one that al¬ EDITOR'S NOTE: The following "Point Tuesday after the story had hit the If it is, then neither Milton Dicker- ever may have influenced him, Lyndon Inter-residence Council (WIC) proposals late lows each individualjiving unit to provide Johnson carries the responsibility for of View" was written by Charles H. Mos- State News. Dickerson has not seen fit to son nor President Hannah nor the MSU of last term, which were approved by the for order according its own needs, as the those decisions, as he does for the others tov, ASMSU sophomore member-at-large. involve the students through MHA. WIC Board of Trustees can possibly have any As a result of the actions subsequent to students and the faculty of this University, MHA policy does. that came out much better. He had to and the ASMSU Board in the discussions. objection to the MHA and WIC policies that these channels have been seriously threat¬ Presumably any other possible causes of make all of them "alone on that terrible the MSU Board of Trustees' resolution of This cannot be tolerated. were passed by the appropriate faculty ened. disorder in these policies would have been height.'' Sept. 20, the established channels of coop¬ Further. Dickerson, in administrative committee. Section 5.2 of the Academic Freedom discovered by the faculty committee. There¬ His assistant for security affairs, Walt eration among students, faculty and ad¬ buck-passing of the highest degree, has Report states that "if both bodies approve The Freedom Report says that all Uni¬ fore, if Dickerson has an objection, it must Rostow. takes another tack in defending ministrators as set up in the Academic seen fit to indicate, as reported in the the regulations, the vice-president for versity reguations shall seek to com¬ be that either the faculty committee was im- the Vietnam policy. He argues, against Freedom Report were affirmed State News of Jan. 7, 1969, that the board student affairs shall make public his deci¬ the stream of opinion, that military con¬ However, by virtue of the course of of trustees will make the final determina¬ bine "maximum freedom with necessary competent, or the administration is refusing sion regarding the regulations." This the order." To an unimaginative person to grant students freedom even though tainment was the right policy but came too events taken by the vice-president for tion. This procedure is not indicated in the student affairs in surreptitiously blocking vice-president failed to do; so the presi¬ like myself who cannot read between the this would entail no loss of order. And if late and that America should have used Academic Freedom Report. lines, this would indicate that the only the latter is true, th; Academic Freedom Since it has been more than adequately shown that the students and the faculty of legitimate restriction on any student ac¬ Report is effectively nullified; and I tivity must be rationalized on the basis think that I. as a Member of a student this University, who make up more than 90 of "necessary order." judiciary, have the right to know this. per cent of its population, are in favor of these proposals, and if the channels in Certainly freshman women's hours If this "due process" thing is really a cannot be rationalized in this way. farce, then we participants in student gov¬ which we have placed our faith continue If selective hours for ernment ought to procure costumes and a to be arbitrarily blocked, strong measures upperclass wom¬ outside the structures will be utilized by en create no problems of order, then neith¬ supply of greasepaint so that we may act er should selective hours of freshmen. Of out our roles with the. proper flavor. the students of the University for achiev¬ Howard Brody course, open houses, on the other hand, ing the rights allegedly guaranteed by the do have a potential for creating a problem McHenry. sophomore Freedom Report. Friday, January 10, 1969 5 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Sexuality invention' of society By SUE BELNIAK sexuality: not "Most parents." he said, "do communicate sexual infor¬ guilt, frustration and inade- quacy," he said. "These in turn He added that people receive social recognition and support judged a failure for many things," Gagnon said, "but rar- Stale News Staff Writer decline itself declines in for many things, but ordinarily a search for perspective mation as much as anxiety." as sex ely for failing sexually, as only In a speech entitled "Sex: A Gagnon noted that adolescents importance. there is no basis for recognition their partners really know. And ■ Cultural Artifact,'' a New York . learn a little about sex through Gagnon said that this decline for sexual competence. they are equally committed to I sociologist said that human sex- luality is not an inborn force but formal mass sex education, but the media is more influential "Conversely people may be ' Ian invention of society which and peer group talk is the most I owes little to biology. influential. Banghart cites misbeliefs I ^Speaker at Wednesday's ses- He added that boys learn Ision of. the Colloquy on Sexual¬ from boys to be concerned pri¬ ity, "essor John H. Gagnon, associate marily with the physical aspects of sociology from the of sex while girls learn from IState University of New York, ■ said that man has a biological ■ capacity for sex which does not other girls that romantic love is the essential thing. For males, the movement on ASMSU opportunities By STEVE WATERBURY by a social clique, Banghart they underestimate their own (determine his overall behavior will be from sex to love and for stated that student government ability and overestimate the a- I more than any other biological the females from love to sex," State News Staff Writer is open to all students and in¬ bility of those already in student I capacity. Gagnon said. ASMSU Cabinet President Don dicated that there are numerous government. "If sex plays an important He listed silence about sex as Banghart outlined difficulties Irole." Gagnon stated, "it is ex- faced by ASMSU in its attempts positions in ASMSU that are Banghart also said many over¬ another influence on sexual at- to recruit student for positions presently open to petitioning. estimate the amount of time |act!y because societies histori¬ Banghart said that part of the that would be required of them city have invented or created in student government as efforts "There is even major diffi¬ recruitment problem may be that if s importance." for personnel recruitment begin they became involved in culty in talking to the self students misunderstand the men- ASMSU. for winter term. (gagnon noted that sexuality about sex most of the time." ing of the word "petitioning." He pointed out that many now lattains the appearance of a bas- Banghart spoke of mistaken lic drive because of the way in Gagnon said. fears and misinformation which The type of petition requires involved in ASMSU and other 6Cultural artifact' • According to Gagnon, most information only and not ■ which it is talked about and not create a gulf between campus organizations have discovered people lack the ability to talk signatures, like an application. they now have as much time for John H. Gagnon, associate professor of Sociology at I talked about. most persons have learned to re about their own sexual activity, organizations seeking to recruit He said that those students the State University of New York, addressed the Wed¬ He added that while adoles- students and students interestdd studying and socializing as thev gard as sexual. particularly with persons with who would like to become in¬ did before they became active nesday audience of the sexuality colloquy. His topic ■ cents and adults are potentially in becoming more involved in whom thev are having sex re¬ Isexual. only Gagnon said that the manne volved often do not do so because because they now use their time was "Sex, a Cultural Artifact." .* a small percentage lations. University organizations. in which people talk about se State News Photo by Lance Lagoni lof their interpersonal encounters Labeling as false the belief more efficientlv. I have a sexual significance and plays a major role in shaping that student government is run Coming child's sexuality loccur only in a context which BOB SEGER and Neil Diamond LANSING IN EAST January 26 Auditorium 8 p.m. ASMSU popular HAVE A PROBLEM? Courts raise traffic fines entertainment Tickets on sale Jan 13 A By LARRY LEE State News Staff Writer new fine rate, effective im- fire traffic. There hydrant and obstructing are several changes in hour over the speed limit. For failure to stop, resulting in an accident, the new fine will Court will be violations occur¬ ring in the shaded area in the accompanying map. Marshall Music lambel Is Unioi call I mediately, will raise the amount moving violation fines. Speed¬ be $10 plus $4.90 court costs, I of fines assessed for traffic vio- ing infractions will change $1 up from the total of $11 pre- I lations, William Montgomery. per mile over the speed limit to I East Lansing Municipal Court | administrator, said this week. All $2 parking fines will be I increased to $5. These include $5 hour er. for one over, and to five $10 plus costs for 10 miles per $25 plus miles per $4.90 court hour ov¬ $4.90 court Failure to stop for a resulting in an accident, will also draw a total assessment of $14.90. red light, SPARTACUSS costs for 15 or more miles per I double parking, parking by a Mutilation of an operator's or chauffeur's license will draw a line of $5 plus $4.90court costs. With the establishment of dis¬ trict courts, replacing justice of the peace courts, charged with traffic violations will go either to District Court persons CAMPUS INTERVIEWS 5 pi. Positions with the 1 55 in Mason or the East Lansing For Civilian U.S. Air Force Systems Command Municipal Court, depending on where the alleged violation oc¬ • curred. January 13, 1969 The Systems Command utilizes the skills of All moving violations occurring SCIENTISTS, ENGINEERS, and TECHNICALLY on the academic campus will also ORIENTED ADMINISTRATORS to meet its mission as go through the Municipal Court, except for a section of Shaw Lane east of the Bogue Street the Air Force's involved These single overall manager for in the acquisition of aerospace openings exist throughout the country and offer the steps systems. LETT'S traffic circle, which will go to the exceptional first-job involvement in professional work. District Court. Most positions a're in the Career Civil Service. Also going through the District Contact your campus Placement Officer to arrange an interview, or write to: DOZEN ROSES Headquarters Air Force Systems Command Andrews Air Force Base (SCPCB-CN) sjm Cash & Carry Washington, D.C. 20331 Jot 1 Anthony An Equal Opportunity Employer b09 E. Michigan Ask the people involved with jobs for minority groups SERVED EVERY —about ^Etna. BELOW COST MONDAY & TUESDAY SALE IN JANUARY "Little Joe Special" The Ribeye Steak Salad, Baked Potato, 990 There's a lot more to be done. But we feel we've Texas Toast number of pioneer programs for the made a start. With a disadvantaged. One teaches men to work computers. Another helps women learn office skills. Still another DRESSES Values to $70 790 And, if the kids dress up in COWBOY COSTUME, gets non-drivers qualified for licenses—and jobs. their steak dinners cost only 69C Some go to work for jEtna, but there are no strings attached. The important thing is we've prepared them for good jobs. We understand human needs like these. Our business SPORTSWEAR uP 0 off may be selling insurance. But our concern is people. jEtna is the kind of place where you can do good and BONANZA* SIRLOIN PIT #205 make good, too. Corner of N. Butler Take the E. Lansing Straight to Lett's. & Ottawa Fisher Bu n Equal Opportunity Employer LIFE & CASUALTY jjy OUR CONCERN IS PEOPLE "LET'S LET LETT'S GUIDE YOU TO FASHION EXCELLENCE" Friday, January 10, 1969 fy Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Police Ad group Oboe slates visits Chicago faculty music recital The and a early hour, the weather late train Wednesday to frost the once combined department. fielded a few Questions a^out recent charges of graft what has been Poe Maeterlinck or Rollinat, as Oboist Daniel Stolper, a many of his fellow im¬ high spirits of 60 students and termed the- "Chicago Police member of MSU's music faculty, were pressionist colleagues, such as faculty of the School of Police Riot. Administration bound on an ex¬ will present a recital at 4 p.m. Debussy, for example. cursion to Chicago. Sunday in the Music Auditorium. Stolper is a memeber of the The trip was sponsored by Conlisk dismissed charges Stolper, an assist, professor, Richards Woolwind Quinted and Alpha Phi Sigma, the national made »n a recent issue ot will be accompanied by pianist together with Renner last season police honorary, in cooperation Life magazine concerning an David Henner and violist Lyman with the Svool of Police Ad- F.B.I, report on Mafia contacts Bodman, also music faculty he also played solo recitals at ministration and the Dept. of w'th the Chicago police e Carnegie Hall, New York and members at MSU. Corcoran Gallery in Wash¬ Public Safety. said the report was false and Supt. Conlisk, director of the that the same list of charges The first half of the program ington. D.C. Chicago Police Dept., greeted the were investigated in 1963 and will include three 20th century The past few summers he has tour. He explained the or- found to be untrue works: "Introduction and Allegro participated in Rudolf Serkin's ganizational structure of the The ^ ^ toured thg (1952) by Alvin Etler, "Son- Marlboro Festival, which has /i>OST^A/ police headquarters. They were included work with Casals. atine" (1964) by Lennox shown rjodern crime detec- Loeffler's "Deux Rhapsodies." Berkeley, and "Rhapsodie pour ticftf l^bor^tory, the latest Hautbois" (1948) -Michel Damase. The Damase by Jean dating from 1905, is one of the 'mPressionistic works for her Before coming to was first MSU, Stol- oboe with the LIBRARY THEFTS police application of com¬ puterized (lata processing and work was used as the test oboe ana.*a_s J "The Pool" and "The San Antonio and New Orleans some, of tfie more recent de¬ Poems' 'by Maurice Rollinat. dubious Orchestras and a faculty mem¬ velopments' in photography and Security effects piece of the Paris Conserv- aroire in 1848. ber at Eassat Eastman School of fingerprintidentification. Born in 1861 at Muelhausen. Music during summer On the second-half of the pro- Alsace-Lorrain. Loeffler never- gram Stolper will perform "Drei the-less spent a good part of his Other magazines are ruined The group also saw the police Romanzen," Op. 94 by Robert life composing in America and By HOWARD GABE Almost every day the "system Henry C. Koch. assiciate as both sexes use the wide communications center. It is th world's most Schumann, and -- together with also functioned' as associate- Stolen books and mutilated is triggered by typewriters, director of libraries and who margins as scratch paper. one of notebooks with heavy metal bind- is in charge of building book vanced ant» receives over 12.000 Renner and Bodman - "Deux concertmaster of the Boston Music Note: Violinist Walter periodicals seems to be a major the end of each school and purses, according to collections, labels replacement At emergency palls every day. Rhapsodies" for oboe, viola and Symphony Orchestra until his ers Verdehr. a faculty member of the concern every university. a student assistant in the cir- of books and not thefts as the year, as the janitors clean out piano by Charles Martin Loeffler. retirement in 1903 Music Dept.. will be soloist in ^ue to the lack in staff size, culation department. Somewhat of a mystic, the Tchaikovsky Violin Concerto the Sentronic Security System, However, many librarians The Schumann "Romanzen ' when the Lansing Symphonv Or- U S. Patent 3292080. was in- doubt whether a thief was ever $5 book may cost as much as and periodicals are returned to Formal fraternity are, in fact, the only solo re- Loeffler s imagination was often chestra performs at Everett High stalled in the main library here corralled by the sensative turn¬ $35 to replace, in addition to cital pieces for oboe written by Prov°ked by such nature orient- School at 8 p.m. Saturday. at MSU to assist in eliminat¬ the clerical costs involved,'' a major Romantic composer. e(* mVsitc poets as Verlaine. ing thefts. stile. according to Koch. rushee pledging "But you don't necessarily hunt for an ulti¬ grammer no matter what your major. We'll loads of books "A computer has no mind of its own. Its mate right answer. There can be as many start you off with up to twenty-six weeks of magazines and books that are being stolen. Koch discovered to which return car they have amassed over Sunday in Union 'brainpower' comes from the people who classroom and practical training. solutions to a programming problem as that two editions of the Europ¬ the quarters. But according to create the programs," says Rod Campany. Formal: fraternity pledging ean Potato Journal had dissap- Koch, this spring house cleaning there are programmers. That's where the art Visit your placement office Rod earned a B.S. in Math in 1966. Today, comes in. Any given program may work, but peared. Sign up at your place¬ the he's an IBM Systems Programmer working on how well it works depends entirely on the ON Male students are not ment office for an inter¬ The police have recommended Rushees who intend to pledge a portion of Operating System/360, a ingenuity of the programmer." only ones involved in destroy¬ view with IBM. Or send CAMPUS ing library property. According other detecting devices, includ- a fraternity this term should go hierarchy of programs that allows a computer a letter or resume to to Koch, coeds seem to have ing a set of "phonv" television to the Un-^n between 6:30 and to schedule and control most of its own Programmers hold a key position in the Irv Pfeiffer, IBM. JAN. a propensity to employ pages cameras, which, when located 8:30 p.m. Ajnday to pick up their operations. country's fastest growing major industry- of magazines as a substitute in certain strategic areas, bids, information processing. Business Week re¬ Dept. C. 100 South Wacker Drive, Chicago. 29, 30, 3 < for tissue paper when wiping should ward off the would be Each rushee must have with off excess lipstick. thieves. A mixture of science and art ports that the computer market is expanding Illinois 60606 him his registration card if it about 20 percent a year. has not al eady been turned into "Programming" means writing the instruc¬ the Interfr iternity Council office. tions that enable a computer to do its job. An Equal Opportunity Employer After p eking up his bids, the You don't need a technical degree Says Rod, "It's a mixture of science and art. rushee will register as a pledge You're a scientist in the sense that you have to analyze problems in a completely logical way. If you can think logically and like to solve problems, you could become an IBM pro¬ IBM SMALL'S with the house of his choice YOUR SPICE NIGHT ANNUAL * TONIGHT* FE.E HALL 9 P.M. 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This was Shaw, theatre as Lilliwi Gish. Kather- • who managed to make many 'ne Cornell. He%r;n Hayes, Tallu- theater. Biff McGuire and Jean- That play, Rodgers and Ham- lives of one. As novelist, critic, Bankhead, Cornelia Otis nie Carson are, for instance. They are actors by profession PANORAMA: merstein's final lump of sac¬ charine, added little more than Thursday evening, British musician, religionist, sexual re- former, educator, and apprecia- Skinner, and < ,hers. In more recent years, hv' played Profes- and have spent several years syrup to their original collabora¬ actor Bramwell Fletcher por¬ its sor Henry Higg:ns in "My Fair before and after their marri¬ tion, "Oklahoma!"' And near¬ trayed George Bernard Shaw tor of American^baseball Lady" opposite ;Julie Andrews- mm with a gusto which G.B.S. him- advantage over Cricket is * /---I—* that age. working in and around the ly two decades separated the it's over sooner") we are left a role he recreated some 200 theater. And they love it. The plays. True, "Oklahoma!" had self would have relished. Facing marvellcng at tne universal times, couple appeared at MSU Mon¬ revolutionalized the musical the rigors presented by the theater in 1943, but things did prospect of a one-man show, image which this wry He is more lan just a day night in Cactus Flower.'' with which they are touring for not stop there. And if tastes do he proved himself quite the looking the ^art. Bramwell six months. change with times, how could medium to summon up the Spirit himself, "The Sound of Music" be such of Shaw, "out of the past, now No stranger to the world of Fletcher IS Bernard Shaw to Individually they are versa¬ tile and talented. McGuire is big box office in I9609 into the future." best known for Broadway scale But America can still learn, The evening's performance, by the Lecture-Con- teens with the Royal Shakespeare that he is the latter's comedy and dramatic roles. Re¬ posed her to factions with which Every performer who comes to carnated form And as the self- cently he has done some note¬ she had previously had no ex¬ MSU comments on tht? enthus¬ cert Series, was presented in an Company in England Prior to this time, he. like proclaimed, c^ain-ratting. catch worthy supporting roles in film iasm of the college audience, autobiographical form, entitled as well. perience. "The Sound of Mu¬ and these actors are reassured. "Bernard Shaw, The Man: Out- Shaw, had toiled in the "Dicken- em if-you-car#Ghost Hunter of sic," for instance, was a "start- sian Prison" of and office, as- this campus, for me this was His wife has been on the stage gareous, Witty, and Wise." ling" period in her life. Bound The McGuires and the. others It was an interesting couple pired to become a painter, and no unaffecting/xperience. for 15 years and has had her own by contract to songs and lines who are truly concerned hope eventually found the stage to be In speaking of his family, his television series. In New York of hours to spend, if only from and on tour she has starred in of the production his destiny. It was at this time loves, or any of his immodest Bernard Shaw? an aspect itself, apart from the efforts of too, that the young Fletcher ac- achievements Shaw seemed to such lavish productions as met George Bernard return to ths sarthly shpere the "Camelot," with McGuire. and This distinguished looking gentleman is Bramwell even Fletcher to give this multi¬ Shaw, occasion which he yet other night. This in a sense. "The Sound of Music.'' For the country hailed her for "the or reject important works, Fletcher portraying Shaw, the late and great British versity his theatrical best. Tech¬ I for one c oose to believe. comfort and convenience they nically, the pre-formance preserves in memory. beauty conveyed" to them. Dif- Young audiences ripe for expo- playwright. Fletcher entertains audiences in much moments boded ill for him, Since his early appearances And as I've • emarked before. enjoy working together. And ferences in taste considered. Car- sure to theater,and ready to mold the same way that Shaw entertained his personal as G.B.S.-himse% wherever he is. the actor doggedly sought to per¬ the state. Bramwell Fletcher anyone who saw their "Cactus son found that aspect dreadful. the elements of today's culture Flower" cannot question their guests with stories of his life. fect his stage direction cues has starred in many critically wou'd ^ave f keen seriously If American audiences can into it. And audiences adding an State News Photo by Wayne Munn complementary charms. still hail "The Sound of Music" element of hope for progress. right up to the time of the acclaimed performances. op- Yet they are both deeply con¬ audience's arrival into the Aud¬ posite such great ladies of the cerned about the theater today. itorium. This, however, was not Its popularity in America is not the fault of Mr. Bramwell CAMPUS SCENE ATTENTION CAR OWNERS Fletcher. Despite the lack of equalled by its urgency. Its prin¬ ciples are being destroyed by expertise offered by his MSU commercial interests. And helpmates, as a professional, the latter handled the make-do Doc' most important, its audiences Flicks, * Complete front end repair and are not young enough. situation with enough cool to There must be some reasons. cope. alignment Lack of permissiveness has ne¬ Perhaps the most exciting way Submarine," Steve McQueen's Donning his makeup. Fletcher , ver been a huge issue in the Japanese thriller. "Woman In Suspension theater. Audiences have been the Dunes " Nominated for sev- to spend an evening would be action thriller "Bullitt" and the cleanshaven performer re- indoctrinated in sex and violence eral Oscars, "Woman " presents to torsake the movies altogether Joseph Losey's baroque night- turned raconteur, the bearded as reformer Shaw; and charmei since the. days of the Dionysian On-campus entertainment for its simple story of sexual cap- a"d visit Erickson Kiva. Doc moare "Secret Ceremony." * ' of all who were there to see' Wheel balancing Steering festivals. Shakespears and the weekend is limited, but high tivity with such force tha it ^atson is here. This country ^nd jf tflat jsn>t enough, you him. If the real Shaw could have becones profoundly allegorical, "lues vocalist has long been can tune jn the first few minutes seen it all, he may have just Strindberg and Sarte have dealt with situations which still deal directly with young feelings and quality. For those who can stomach Julie Andrews gushing through Austria, "The Sound of The the direction acting, the photography, . . all are be- considered one of the great 0f "Where the Boys Are." laughed; or perhaps not. Another 'lving t°lk artists, with his un- Based on a novel by an MSU LISKEY'S Auto Safety Center minds. Even the film, though Music" invades the Auditorium vond reproach. Known primarily usual choice of ethnic material, alumnus, "Boys" deals with the case °* the Star In the Sticks 124 SOUTH LARCH a growing nucleus of youthful tonight. This pretty lump of for X: its slow pace X I_ T and stylized r:i his dynamic stage presence and migration hi S fdlltclStiC 3 bi li ty ciS an ^ Fort of « MSU ' *Lauderdale * * « students • to I suppose; during spring hectic mnrmontc at anyhad moments hoH once the rate,noccoW passed, fVna the acting, the Japanese film _ -- _ culture, cannot express the great sentiment is strictly for immediacy of live drama. escapists, but since box office dustrv has never seen anything „ tertainer-at . Saturday and break, and the opening sequences evening progressed smoothly. Commercialism is the un- results indicate that "Music" quite like "Woman" before. Sunday. Erickson Kiva. were actuaiiy filmed here in "The only predictable thing avoidable hazard in successful is the answer to the American Raw. elimental and sweatily Off campus, the Edgewood East Lansing, presumably to show about me " remarked etcher- stage production. Six-figure dream, who am I to stand in erotic. this brilliant film owes Church offers another great why we leave So if you would Shaw, Js^ the unpredictable costs are now frequent, as act- the way of a spun-sugar monster0 more to Bergman Than Kur- film like to see Connie Francis 4 " ' ; and big-i At 7:30 tonight in the Auditorum. osawa. Not to be missed. At The Shameless Old Lady bopping past Berkey Hall, check stars now demand extraordinary For the more adult, the MSU 7 and 9 tonight in 100 Vet 's a m'nor masterpiece about channle 10 at 9 tonight. salaries. And these are only get¬ Film Society offers a brilliant Cinic, Saturday in 109 Anthony and °'d woman (flawlessly played by beteran French actress ting higher. Svlvie McGuire is certainly not about to protest higher salaries, but as SiV correction a patron he does object to pay¬ WIC presents Dea ing $12 for a ticket. These fig- The Thursday edition of the "The Silencers. ures obviously limit Broadway State News erroneously stated a series of dreadful Matt Helm pletelv believable and completely audiences. that Doc Watson will be appear- films. "The Silencers" is only heart warming. "The Shameless The only way to curb the out- ing Friday and Saturday nights for dino's diehard fans, although Old Lady is the most moving rageous prices, deduction He he said, is with mentioned the of this weekend. Doc will ap- the Slaygirls are sufficiently un- to emerge trom France APA Repertory Co. as an exam¬ ple of first rate actors who work for next to nothing in order to offer great works to the Ameri¬ can public. This is shifting the focus from business to profes¬ sionalism in the theater. Wider exposure at lower prices will bring plays to the attention of another generation of Ameri- Carson is always perceptive about audience reactions. Her years in musical comedy ex- Friday, January 10, 1 £ 8 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan SPORTS » 482-3905 n TODAY Feature at 1:10 MICHIGAN 3:15-5:15-7:25-9:35 p.m. 4th SMASM WEEK! I^unda>^nIy-^how^a^l 1:45-4:00-6:20-8:30 p.mj Tigers want re A terrific face 'S' icers movie Bv PAM BOYCE State News Sports Writer All illusions come to an end. The Spartans, will also be out for their first WCHA win this weekend. The MSU skaters are Wisconsin. Jim Albrecht and John Amundsen will probably be playing the wing positions on -just right for Steve McQueen. Fast, well-acted, The Colorado College hockey winless in the league. 0-4. and Collyard's line this weekend written the way people talk, it is dense with team's glorious dreams of get- are out to raise their present Another Tiger skater the Spar- tans detail about the way things work. ting back on the winning road 3-8 record. tans will try Townsend Bull,to who stopput two in McQueen embodies his special kind of aware, after defeating Wisconsin twice Colorado defeated strong t^e net§ agajnst Wisconsin last shattered Wednesday by twice last weekend existential cool-less taut and hardshell Wisconsin team 10-2 loss to Michigan Tech. weekend on Wisconsin's home than Bogart, less lost and adrift than Other sophomores leading the The Tigers will attempt to Mastroianni, a little of both!m*s ground, both games going into scorjng attacR against the Spar. seek their revenge by clawing overtime periods with the Tigers ^ sRaters wU, be Casey Rvan at the Spartan skaters tonight Whatever you may have pulling out 5-3 and 3-2 victories. Dale yutgyk and CHjf pur. heard about the auto STEVE at the Ice Arena. The Tigers. 5-6 overall and Leading the Tiger skaters to- pur. a North Dakota product who night will be Bob Collyard. Min- scored the winning goal in the Hold that | MCQUEEN chase in Bullitt is probably 0-5 in the Western Collegiate nesota sophomore. The Colorado first overtime game with Wis- true....a terrifying, Hockey Assn.. suffered their deafening shocker. worst loss of the season _ center has scored 15 goals this consin Spartan goalie Dick Duffett keeps his eye on the bounding puc ck during MSU's only AS loss to Michigan Tech. year, including three against Yutsyk. a sophomore from against Colorado College last year. BULLITT js a winner. It ■ iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiaaiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiaiiiiii"""111111111111 Canada, joined the Tiger skaters after Christmas, when he be¬ loss in four starts State News Photo by Lpnce Lagoni fastens your seat belt 'BULLITT' Spartan Sportscene came eligible Tending goal for the Tigers right from the start. This is a super- n will be Don Gale. Ontario sen- USC's Sogge TOM BROWN Friday - Hockey, Colorado College, 7:30 p.m. i()r who has averaged 6 3 goals Saturday - Swimming, Big Ten Relays, 1p.m. Weightlifting, Michigan Olympic Championships, 5 p.m. e Starting Ume for each mghts signs LA The streamlined Hockey, Colorado College, 7:30 p.m. is 7:30 d m LOS ANGELES l UPI >-Steve Sogge. versatile quarterback of the Southern California football metal-flaked FRI-SAT-SUN! team and catcher on the Trojan AM Color Program baseball squad today was signed shaft Thursday to a contract by a Los Angeles Dodgers farm club. Elec. In Car Heaters the NCAA The salary for the right-hand In what can only be considered a reactionai y . slugger who signed with the took steps Wednesday to stave off the haunti% spectre of in¬ Spolane Indians was not dis¬ creased student unrest. > closed in the announcement by Conjuring up the only weapon their primeval minds under¬ SeaitConne the parent club. Sogge was captain of both of stand. namely coercion, the academic dim bulb^ who composed the majority of the lopsided 167-79 vote adopted a proposal to the Trojans NCAA Championship halt "the financial aid of a student-athlete if he is adjudged to squads in 1968. with the dis¬ have been guilty of manifest disobedience. SHALAKO tinction of captaining both foot¬ ball and baseball squads the same Couched in that term - manifest disobedience' are a of sins, not the least of which is interfering plethora with the normal means and orderly conduct of an institution's athletic pr gram. Well, at least it's not a federal rap. ROBERT VAUGHN Action! farms Apparently athletic prospects of an administrators are scared witless by the instant replay in the boycott department. And like their performance in conjunction wTth the AAU. the JACQUELINE BISSET DON GORDON- ROBERT DUVALL SIMON OAKLAND Action NCAA has once again decided to solve its pr0lems at the ex¬ NORMAN FELL-: "" " -WW pense of the individuals who give reason to >he NCAA's con¬ . means [m}su6scst!0 for mature tuoiENCES TECHNICOLOR' FROM WARNER BROS. SEVEN ARTS tinued existence. (Parental Discretion Advised)--Next—"The Sergeant" Bardot! The athlete. \ What the hell is so wrong with college athletirs that they have to shore up the whole stinking mess with repressive measures, veiled threats and coercion? ^SPARTAN TWIN WEST FRANDOR Today at 7:30 & 9:30 SHOPPING CENTER 3100 EAST SAGINAW Sat. & Sun. at ^hone 351-00-?" on_Q. •? n_=;. ^n_-. in e. 1:30-3:30-5:30-7:30 9.30 p>m. & PLANETARIUM Now The story, you see. is that it student wide scale. And rebellion pinkos. And communists could move has been widely rumored'" that soon into colle-ie athletics on a BECAUSE OF THE UNUSUAL ENDING Presents: And pot smokers. No one will be admitted during the last 12 minutes. THE YEXR OF THE Then kindly consider all that pap they tertl v -u about the glor¬ ies of athletics, the clean mind, sound bodw B$b Richards and a PLANETS ALSO The story of a bowl of Wheaties. The whole package is so popular with Ameri¬ Preview of many of the can vouth. the NCAA proposal tells us. that Jack Armstrong girl called Sara interesting events involv¬ and Frank Merriwell have to be threatened with the loss of their Sandy Dennis Anthony Newley and the key she ing the planets this year. scholarships in order to prevent them from hijacking an airliner gave to a different . and heading for Cuba Theodore Bikel man each month. Program Schedule But then Jack Armstrong and Frank Merriwell were nice clean IN » cut Anglo-Saxon boys and everyone knows the black athletes are the ones causing all the trouble. "Shalako" "Sweet at 7:07 and late November" 9:30 only Sfi loverrtb Fridays -- 8:00 p. m. Saturdays—2:30, 8:00 p.m. I used to think that athletics YOU Fx were no plate for demonstra¬ Sundays—2:30 & 8:00 p.m. SPICE SIGHT tions and NCAA pol tics, but now the show; me nothinT is FRISAT-SUN Information 355-4672 * TONIGHT * sacred Nice shot ELECTRIC- Abrams Planetarium, Sci- ^' \ A ence/,pRd. and Shaw Lane, FEE HALL 9 P.M. MSU, East Lansing. IN CAR HEATERS WAR makes lor LIFELONG FRIENDSHIPS 5 FEATURE (sa SPARTAN TWIN WEST i0od 3r£l MSU PERFORMING ARTS COMPANY PRESENTS WHAT A LOVELY WAR I Satire Dedicated to the Proposition That War if Swell! ARENA THEATRE: JAN. 14-198:00 P.M. WONDERS KIVA: JAN. 20-i'l 7:15 P.M. Fairchild Box Office open Jan. 10.13.14 Wilson Hall Concourse for t ckets 12:30-5:00 P.M. (Coupons only) Jan. 16-17 5:00-7:00 P.M Charles Aznavour Marlon Branch Richard Burfon James Coburn John Huston Walter AAatthau BR0DY ARENA: JAN. 22-23 7:15 P.M. McDONEL KIVA: JAN. 24 7:15 P.M. Ringo Starr ,Ewa Auliru Northeast Brodv Lobby for tickets: Conrad Hall for tickets | Candy Jan. 22-23 5:00-7:00 P M: Jan. 20-21 5:00-7:00 P M John Astin Elsa Mcrtinelli Sugar Ray Robinson Anita Pailenberg Flonnda Bolkan Mortlu Tolo • Nicoletta Mochiavelli Umberto Orsini ADMISSION: 75C Friday, January It , ] 969 9 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan SPORTS INDIANA FAVORED Olympic lifters here Saturday "Several of our powerlifters Spartans By JOHN VIGES State News Sports Writer winners Don lie Hickcox. McKenzie and Char¬ mamoto strength to the will add tanks of the host needed I By DON KOPRIVA The Hoosiers best relay effort freestylers. are also training for Olympic State News Sports Writer Eight Olympians will be on is likely to be made in the 300 lifting."' Lacy said, "and I have Coach McCaffree's big men display Saturday in the Men's yard breaststroke where McKen¬ in the backstroke will be Mike noticed quite a few freshmen who | Weightlifting. a sport heard about at MSU. rarely have a lot of potential."' I.M. pool when MSU hosts zie, Olympian Dave Perkowski Boyle and Bob Bur.e while his seen or and sophomore Pete Dahlberg the I3th annual Big 10 Swim¬ breaststrokers are Greg . will be in the spotlight at 5 p.m. are slated to work. top Gary Wandell. Madison ming Relays. Richard Crittenden and ^Saturday when the MSU club Brown, I. Diving will also be a Hoosier hosts the Michigan Class A and Heights junior, is entered in the Spartan swimming coach Richards. Charles McCaffree sais. "the strongpoint. Indiana will bring B Olympic Weightlifting Champ¬ 148 pound class. Gene Waldo, Olympians Jim Henry and Win The top Spartan in the butter¬ ionships in the Men's I.M. Sports 1968 MSU graduate, is entered quality of this tournament is in the 242 pound class and is second only to the Big 10 finals. Young to the tournament. fly will be Van Pelt Rockefeller Arena. called a potential record-breaker This will definitely be the best Michigan is the likely second and the mainstays in the indivi¬ "One of the reasons we place finisher. The Wolverines dual medley will be Bob Jones bv Lacy. Other club members and most exciting event at MSU decided to have this meet was will compliment Olympian Juan and Bruce Richards. are expected to compete this year.'' to revive Olympic weightlifting Bello with a fine sophomore con- The relays, which were found¬ at MSU.'' meet director Bill Olympic lifting consists of the ed at MSU in 1956, will include tigent. Last years U-M frosh Hoping to give H^nrv and Lacy said. standing press, snatch and clean won the Big 10 freshmen meet. Young of Indiana a rough time and jerk. Technique is the main all the teams in the conference MSU will be sending 22 men in the diving will be Spartans Lacy noted that in the past factor here rather that strength, except Illinois, Northwestern and few years there has been a so much time is spent on im¬ Kid pleaser Purdue. into the pool Saturday. Leading George Alward. Dave Coward, the fight against Indiana and Tom Cramer, Duane Green and decline in Olympic liffting and 'Indiana will be the top team proving speed'and flexibiltv. and increase in powerlifting Powerlifting, composed of the A familiar face on the West Coast, Spartan Coach once again," McCaffree says, U-M will be Olympian George Jim Henderson. Gonzalez in the freestyle events within the MSU Club. MSU's bench press, squat and dead Duffy Dougherty signs an autograph for a young fan "and it looks like Michigan will All-America Don Rauch in the The diving will start at 12:30 powerlifters have won the lift. national championship the last concentrates on raw during workouts in Santa Clara, Calif., before the probably be second. We'll be in breaststroke and individual p.m. .Saturday and the swim¬ there fighting for third with Ohio strength rather than technique. 1968 East-West Shrine Game. medley. ming events at 1 p.m. General two years and Lach thinks Admission to the meet is 50 State News Photo by Morgan Moore State*and Wisconsin." admission will cost $1 but MSU they have an excellent chance Indiana is almost everyone's Joining Gonzalez and Rauch students will be able to get in at winning again. in the freestyle relays will be JIM HENDERSON favorite to take its fourth with ID s. Charles Geggie. Mark Hold- straight relay championship. The defending NCAA champion ridge. Gary Langley and Bill Scott. bring six Olympians to East NAMED TOP COACH IM News will Lansing including gold medal Ben Schelley and Steven Ya- Paterno honored by peers Root described his selection Three held-A levels of competition will be Ladder for championship ability. HU«D HALL LOS ANGENES (UPIi - Sli¬ "I'm really overwhelmed." B Ladder for intermediate ability and C HtSEMs „ —.. . . „ . , Paterno said "It is just fantas¬ as College Division Coach of Ladder for novice, ghtly-built. bespectacled Joe Pa- the Year as "amazing and grati- • • terno of Penn State and rookie tic. I haven't calmed down from head coach Jim Root of New that squeeker in the Orange fying." In his first year at New Noon toda>' 's the deadline for signing £Pf°r fraternity and independent basket¬ Si*mE Hampshire, Root's team post- V Bowl." Hampshire Thursday were the • choices of their fellow football ed a 6-2 record. d ams Paterno. who coached Penn mentors as winners of the 1968 State to its best in his¬ Coach of the Year awards. season - STUDENTS Like Warm Southern Sunshine tory in 1968. Wednesday turned Paterno won the University Division award by a wide mar¬ gin over seven rivals but Root down a "generous offer" to be¬ come head coach of the Pitts¬ burgh Steelers of the National It's Great For A Date yHH Like warm a soft and ray of Kentucky sunshine, golden to brighten your captured the College Division Football League. award so narrowly that the bal¬ smile and warm the inner you. Ken¬ lots were counted twice. Bowling tucky.Fried Chicken is all this and OVf MSU Film Society Presents; more. That's because KFC is Love, Celluloid "I" IS TWICE THE FUN Truth, Beauty, Chicken, and a little WHEN THERE'S MORE salt. Friday and Saturday Kush does THAN ONE. "A CINEMA MASTERPIECE! abt>ut-face A powerful, luminous and violent j Billiards-Refreshments- Good Food yiT-^fn j^ntwkii fried Ukiikw existential thriller!" 40 Brunswick Lanes For Your Bowling Pleasure on Pitt job 1040 E. Grand River, E. Lansing 351-5550 484-7759 HotidtytoMS 1620 E. Michigan Ave., Lansing TEMPE. ARIZ (UPI)-Ariz¬ ona State University *., Rod Taylor Claudia Cardinale llDINEUIER V " RK DOUGLAS MARTIN RlTT in The Hell With Heroes PANAVISION & METR0C0L0R AM"A O" Shown 2nd at 9} 18 NEXT./'Three in the Attic" Friday, January 10, IS 10 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan City By TIM BANNISTER Slate News Staff Writer an launches The Model Neighborhood has a crime rate twice the city rate, infant mortality rate 50 per cent higher than the rest of Lansing occurrence of tuberculosis three times greater than tne The Model Cities back to the involvement of the people. a Program, Sowles said, is an attempt to get "We hope to go beyond what cities have done in the past," The city of Lansing, presently facing the same urban problems and an he said. "The program is not urban renewal. We want to go be¬ which confront many other communities, is attempting to solve entire city. yond physical planning to social and economical planning. We them with a different idea. An estimated 33 per cent of the housing units are overcrowded, will develop programs to get to the root of the problems." This new method for attacking a city's problems is called and the related physical environment anp social problems are far "A lot of the Model Cities Program will be people doing things the Model Cities Program. It originated on approval from the fed¬ greater and more concentrated than in any other city area. for themselves," Sowles said. "We'll just be giving them the eral government with an application to the Dept. of Housing and "In contrast to the affluent society around him, the Model tools." Urban Development for a grant planning a model program. Neighborhood resident knows only poverty, blight and decay," The program will also attempt to pool all ability from the en¬ According to the application, a concentration of social and phys¬ the application summarizes. "He is very likely to have a health tire community to work on the problems, he said. ical blight in the inner city was the beginning point for determin¬ problem which affects his ability to be employed and his educa¬ He has already discussed MSU's commitment with President ing the model city boundaries, and this area was selected for the tional achievement." Hannah and Don Stevens, board of trustees chairman. Sowles attempt to reduce poverty and blight and provide adequate "Because he lacks a proper education," the summary contin¬ has asked for staff people and students to become involved in housing for the disadvantaged Lansing resident. ues, "he cannot secure an adequate job to support his family. making the program successful. The end result, according to Walter Sowles, director of the Because he lacks employment he does not have an adequate in¬ "A big portion of the problem in Model Cities is communica¬ Model Cities Program, was the selection of a high impact area come to live in a decent home or have the proper food and cloth¬ tion," Sowles said. "We hope to communicate to residents in the in the city not greater than 10 per cent of the total population and ing." neighborhood and residents throughout the community as to physical area. This section is in the form of a large "J", with the Victims of circumstance what we want to accomplish. In this program it is important Capitol occupying the space within the curve. to get the cooperation of everyone." Non-white area Because he could not choose his parents or the background in Faces opposition The Model Neighborhood, as the inner city area is called, is which the Model Neighborhood resident was raised, he has be¬ The Model Cities Program is still in a formative stage. It "the victim of a series of circumstances over which he the oldest section of Lansing. According to the application, it is made up mainly of black and non-white families who migrat¬ come has very little control. " An added factor to the problems within the neighborhood is the is presently facing opposition from some members of Lansing's City Council who. according to Joel Ferguson, councilman-at- > • ed into the area after the original settlers grew more affluent large, question the accuracy of the application. and moved out of the neighborhood. danger of racial isolation. "We are heading in the right direction though," he said, "by The original cycle did not repeat itself, however, and the peo¬ According to Richard D. Letts, Lansing's human relations di¬ admitting something has to be done." rector, racial isolation brings about alienation when people feel ple who moved in did aot become increasingly affluent. Instead Regardless of opposition, the Model Cities Program offers they are confined by social structure. Hostility, resentment and they became hosts for more families looking for employment. frustration in an attempt to express themselves are products promise of real solutions through the involvement of its own Many have stayed and the neighborhood grows older. citizens, the best use of available resources and a suitable de¬ of the "confined" residents of a racially-centered area such as "The 10 per cent of residents living in the Model Neighborhood total about 15,000 individuals." Accorcbwg to the model cities ap¬ the Model A Neighborhood. key factor in eliminating Lansing's urban problems will be gree of public commitment. According to the application summary, the program's overall Hope fo plication. "these individuals represent 62 per cent of the unem¬ citizen involvement. goal is to make the achievement of freedom as easy as possible This tot will hopefully be able to offer her children ployed, 36 per cent of the poverty families and 22 per cent of the for every citizen who will live and work according to his de¬ welfare case load. They reside in 28 per cent of the dilapidated "In the early days of the United States," Sowles said, "we had better opportunities if the Model Cities Program gets sires, not limited by race or lack of opportunity. the town meet and decide its own program and destiny. As our under way to improve housing conditions in the Lans¬ housing in the city. When the required ordinance is passed to give the program representative government developed we voted for a man and legality, Lansing wi}l have an opportunity to provide answers ing area. State News Photo by Bob Ivins then became apathetic to the problems. Let him do it. Some¬ to an urban problem affecting much of the country. times he was too far from the issues to solve them.'' ADAM CLAYTON POWELL LANSING PROJECT Jan. JMC students Sponsored counsel youth to talk to. identify with and use GREAT ISSUES By DENISE FORTNER as models. He said an oppor¬ tunity to talk to college students Justin Morrijl College students partially melts the barrier that of ASMS are acting a^ companions and guidance counselors for disad¬ offenders these feel exists between Mouthful college life and vantaged Lansing area children. them. The project is required as an College life seems far removed independent study for a JMC to these teens. Cade said. If For The Finest In psychology course. Several hours they realize that college students a week the students offer guid¬ have problems, too. perhaps col¬ Classics Its ance and friendship to teens who are wards of the court. lege won't seem like such a dis¬ tant goal, he added. Some of the students work at Paula M. Barr. Gross Point Deutsche Grammophon Blighted a hers juvenile detention center. Ot¬ are involved with disad¬ freshman, who worked at the Center last term, believed that the program was beneficial for vantaged children at an area Lansing's Model Cities Program is working in an effort to clearn local blighted youth center. the teens. She said they seemed ALL DG.G. areas and to offer better housing facilities to the needy residents. LP's The Ingham County Juvenile to appreciate the sessions and State News Photo by Bob Ivins grew to trust the college students Center is for minors who have WHERE committed crimes and are on She also explained that one ob¬ on SALE 3.49 Film series sets probation. The center aids teens jective of the project was to in learning how to live within (show the juveniles that a col¬ PER L.P. IT'S AT! DAVID GILBERT The film version of Rodger? society. lege education can be attainable. "Most of them are fed up with and Hammerstein's stage mu¬ The West Side Action Center. the general situation and have DON'T FORGET OUR sical, "The Sound of Music.' ., , . , ,. not to trust anyone." STEREO EQUIPMENT presents will be presented in the Univer- Provides friendship and recrea- learned said. "We didn't sity Auditorium at 7:30 p.m. U°n for disadvantaged children Miss Barr KENWOOD, GARRARD, K.UH., Thursday and Friday. who are. wfds of the court for preach or use psychology on therr Starring Julie Andrews and no"criminal reasons we just let tiem feel that some¬ Discover the discounts SONY, FISHER, McDONALD, Christopher Plummer. the film Cade- Profess01" of psy- one cared. I d like to go back in USA, Mexico, Hawaii , . STANDARD AND MANY OTHERS ?hology. ^ated the project and probably will." Collage will be sponsored by MSU's In- Canada & the Caribbean. ternational Film Series. Tickets [or. . cou[se fal1 term Cade Jim M. Yousling. Sycamore. THE DISC SHOP A will be available at the door. feels that the y°uth -need adults 111., senior, alsp participated in the program last term. He said A Pyramid Book, only $2.25 some problems with the project DOC WATSON 323 East Grand River at your campus bookstore were due tojack of time. In one OPEN or wherever paperbacks term it waf impossible to rea¬ are sold. lly get to know any of them. MON.-FRI. 9 A.M.-9 P.M. SAT. 9 A.M.-6 P.M. JANUARY 14 AMERICA'S FINEST Yousling saj^J FOLK GUITARIST He also felt the fall term pro¬ PHONE 351-5380 ject could have been better org¬ anized. Cade agreed that the project ■Ye CWe Notice could have been better organized The Library He also cit*d a need for closer AESDUTELY H0HHE5E ELSE relations with the individual case workers. "In spite of the difficulties "A graduate encountered fall term." Cade stated, "it was a beginning. We know now what problems any other we have to overcome. " Cade is continuing the pro¬ ject in his winter term class relax WINTER IS HERE ! YOUR CAR NEEDS HELP NOW * Starters . . . can people sing louder, eat better pizza and have more * Generators 9 * Heater Needs fun for less money. Get up a group and find out. Every night is "dutch treat" night. (Unless you're the last of ^ Ice Scrapers * Windshield the "Big Time Spenders," Dad!" De leer 560 Auto-Reverse Stereo « Dry Gas « Thermostats Comp^pt Tape System * Antl-Freeze All Your Wonter Batter Needs CEDAR LANSING. MICHIGAN MORRIS AUTO PARTS hou -is— 956 Trowbridge Rd. » from Wilson, Wonders, Case Mon. thru Fri. 9-9 Sat. ')-6 Sun. 2-6 SSZTSCeda- 333*3230 and Holden Halls 8 14 E . Kalamazoo -5:30 Mon.-Sat. Friday, January 10, IS 11 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Pope's ban stirs dissent By DELORES MAJOR vocated the use formed conscience in the of an in¬ ple of the world to pray for peace in Vietnam and more lenient rules cerning interfaith marri¬ con¬ Religion Editor expressed doubts that both ages within the Catholic making of human deci- Church. In an age of revolutions parties sincerely desired and protests, the Catholic to end the conflict. The National Confer¬ church received their of Catholic Bishops New ence Methodists unite Lansing synagogue share of dissent from cler¬ after debating and voting After 30 years in the gy and lay people. in close secrecy reached In April the former same building, the Jewish Sparked by Pope Paul Methodist and Evangeli¬ general agreement to sup¬ community in the greater VI's encyclical "Hymanae cal United Brethren port the Pope's reaffirma¬ Lansing area, congrega¬ Vitae," reaffirming the churches merged to form tion of the church's long¬ tion Shaarey Zedek, will Catholic Church's tradi¬ the 11.2 million member standing ban on artificial build a new synagogue at tional ban on artificial United Methodist Church. birth control. the cost of $75,000 on birth control, controversy over the issue still rages The Protestants meet most prominent can In late September, Vati¬ officials announced Coolidge Road in East Nuns dism on now, six months after Protestant event of the that they were considering The University Luther¬ Sister Mary E lien (right), one of three Roman Catholic nuns dismissec from their the retrial of the 17th cen¬ the proclamation. year was the fourth Gen¬ an Church also announced New York school for allegedly teaching there is no sin, is shown at i news con¬ Rebel priests have spok¬ eral Assembly of the tury mathematician - as¬ this year that they too ference Tuesday with Sister Rose Mary, supervisor of the Holy Name, Provincial out against the pon¬ tronomer Galileo, in order en tiff's decision, some have World Council of Church¬ to set the record straight would begin work on a pro¬ Home. UPI Telephoto es in July in Uppsala, Swe¬ posed $300,000 educational left the church voluntari¬ and reverse the church's den, a meeting of world unit in the fall of 1969. The ly, others have been religious leaders who mistake in convicting him new unit, to be built at Principal thrown out. of heresy 335 hears ago. urged both sides of the bombing in North Viet¬ 1016 Harrison Roap is the Archbishop John F. Deardon and other theolo¬ Paris peace talks to "take risks for peace.'' nam as a sign of good faith prior to the Paris talks. The former Jacquiline Kennedy's marriage to the divorced Aristotle Onasis first step in a three stage building program, when nuns gians have said that the The National Council of In many of his Sunday completed the total invest¬ Pope's recent proclama¬ Churches issued a state¬ audiences in St. Peter's defied Roman Catholi¬ ment in the project will teaching tion is not "Infallible cism's teachings. yet ment in February urging Square, Pope Paul VI approach $800,000. teachings'' and have ad¬ Washington to halt the continually urged the peo¬ brought speculations of over NEW YORK (AP)--A Roman One of the nuns termed the sulted from deferences in ap¬ Catholic parochial school on Sta- charges "distortions and misun¬ proach." ten Island has dismissed its derstandings." He said the criticism of the principal and two other nuns ac¬ The dispute reflected wide¬ displayed a highly con¬ black nuns Jews cused of teaching "evolution vs spread, current tension in the servative viewpoint." tending to rap creation" and not adhering to Church doctrine angels and sin. about devils, Roman Catholic church over old and newer styles of teaching theological concepts. limit the presentation of doc¬ trine to a fixed form. He added that the nuns Here not teach¬ cuase by doing so he shores up 2.' 5-1/13 NEEDED: GIRL to share apartment. Rent paid by babysitting Tuesdays • WANTED TWO MEN needed for 4 man apart¬ and Thursdays Call 353-7950 " 3-1/10 BOYS to take over lease winter CORVAIR 500, 1964 three-speed RAMBLER <0^^ W< DELIVERY ment spring 48 Northwind Apartment GIRL NEEDED immediate occupancy. $295 Must sell. Phone 332-8142. Call Bill at 5-1/13 DEADLINE after 5pm. 3-1/13 Call 351-8760 Winter. spring Cedar Village 351-5559 3-1/10 VOLKSWAGEN 1963. Rebuilt engine 1 P.M. one class day be¬ ONE GIRL needed for 4-girl apart¬ new front end. perfect running condi¬ MARRIED COUP!'*' — ment immediately Chalet Call LANSING EFFICIENCY apartment fore publication. tion. Body needs work Good trans¬ Furnished Utilities included. Re¬ of Febru. 351-4294 l-i 10 Cancellations - 12 noon one portation. Excellent for dune buggy decorated £5 month 489-7635 Call 372-2454 3-1/14 * 5-1 14 class day before publica¬ tion. HOUSEWIVES - STUDENTS DODGE DART 1966 Two door hard PARTTJME PHONE top Six cylinder 25,000 miles Snow VOLKSWAGEN 1968 camper, de¬ Nf RTHWIND Five other good tires. One 355-8255 tires owner $1300 373-1235 daytime luxe AM-FM miles. 355-7800 radio, tent 12,800 5-1/15 "Spare me, and the treasures of 3-5 HRS. PER DAY NEEDED TWO girls. Three bedroom ARMS 655-1442 after 6pm the universe are yours!" DAYTIME ONLY duplex. $65 Private parking 'Faculty Apartments RATES DODGE DART 1962 440 Good trans¬ 484-4475 351-3821 GIRL NEEDED for quiet 2-gir 4-1 13 I 151 -7880 1 day $1.50 portation. Good mechanical condition FRANCIS AVIATION: So easy to learn BUSBOYS NEF.n«^ c fy and spring ment near campus. Very GIRL NEEDED desperately for three 15£ per word per day Must sell to best offer 351-3439 PIPER CHEROKEE. Special term fall £ \\X-^ ";iew. girl. Redu -ed rates. Call 351-3035. 3-1 3 days ...... $4.00 in the $5 offer 484-1324 C Employment Employment r 4i io ient. 351-9457 10 13 l/2£ per word per day STUDENT RESIDENT manager Lux for 2 or 5 days $6.50 WINGED SPARTANS AVIATION MALE SALES/stock clerk 40 hour ury East Lansing apartment desires ool $145 13£ per word per day GROUND SCHOOL: Sign up and in- formation meeting Wednesday 15th. week--$1 60 an hour Apply in per- son 9-12. STUDENT BOOK STORE. two, responsible two or three man GIRL TO share luxury furnished 71 v 5-1 14 groups Available immediately Phone (based on 10 words per ad) DODGE 1965 Coronet 440 V-8 4-door. 7 p.m. 31 Union. 4-1/14 East Lansing 5-110 351-8862. " C-l 17 NIGHT AUDITOR F»" me 11 pm- East Lansing apartment. Fireplace private room 332-0662 4-1 15 There will be a 50-Kridjv collar job. Call or drop in any day HASLETT: MAN to share luxury Meals plus remuneration Sigma apartment with two. $72 Call; after ment jn ace Hurtin MERCURY 390 V8. Mint condition. after 3pm and all day Saturday. 3-110 TRAILERS FOR rent $100 month and -will CHEVROLET IMPALA 1965 Must Red. no rust Power steering, brakes, window $1150 332-3991 DRIVER 21 or over part time and full Alpha 351-8829. Mu Fraternitv Call Bernie 3-1 13 BUSBOYS WANTED for fraternity up Security deposit Utilities not in¬ cluded Near campus On bus route 6pm 339-8869 or 351-7404 . 3-1 14 CAPITOL de^ VILLA 31. ,*i\ One man needed 3-110 sell Excellent condition Low mile¬ rear time Apply Varsity Cab Company NEEDED ROOMMATE immediately Steve 3-1 13 122Woodmere 5-1 16 BABYSITTER NEEDED two blocks house. Dinner and or lunch Meals No pets. 332-2437 3-1 13 age. stereo, extras Call 351-8647 and pay. Call 351-0665 3-1 10 $70 month Luxurv apartment, pri¬ a-1 10 from Union Afternoons and alter¬ vate room 351-3796 3-1 14 TELEPHONE CANVASSERS: Full RENT A TV from a TV Company- WANTED: TWO girls to share apart¬ nate weekends 351-9578 before MGB 1963 Fiberglass hardtop. New CASHIER WANTED part-time Best ment on" • block from Berkey $70 a CHEVROLET BISCAYNE 1963 Two time or part time. Apply in person 2-1 13 $9 00 per month Call 337-1300 paint. Real sharp. Call 372-8330 to RALPH BACHWICH 3230 Nortl East 2:30pm Steak House. Apply in person. NEJAC TV RENTALS C month is luding utilities. 351-8286 door, six cylinder, stick shift. Good or 332-5987 5-1 10 Street. 5-1 16 484-2254. " 3-1 13 condition $375 355-0953 5-1 13 TWO TO 4 man or woman room on HOLT V CE 2 bedroom duplex apart private estate with private bath and ment ur, jrmshed. featuring gas range cooking facilities. Use of den and li¬ rft water, all carpeted, DON'T SIGN THAT LEASE brary ALL UTILITIES PAID. $150 a month 6064 Abbott Rd 351-0630 COMPLETE CHALET drapes ^Full basement with good storage, shaded yard $150 plus gas and electricity 684-0613 2120 Meadow Lawn 4-1 10 for winter term unless you have SEVEN □ □ complete soundproofing—between rooms and Drive the exciting new apartments THIRTY ONE BMW □ □ ample parking--Cedar Village has parking for over 500 cars -- 3 story parking ramp □ □ choice of 6 or 9 month leases WE HAVE THEM I OPEN HOUSE BAVARIAN MOTOR WORKS Rectangle, Round, Oval □ □ convenient location--we adjoin the campus We Fill Prescripclons for 6:30-9 Mon.-Thurs. Car and Driver calls this newest BMW "the most Germany's famed Bavarian Motor Works, where 1-5 Sunday □ □ a full-time maintenance staff on 24 hour call spectacular bargain in the entire spectrum of racing victories are a 50-year tradition. Recent Regular & Sunglasses. 731 BA-cham Drive BMW triumphs include winning the last three Frames Repaired St Replaced imported cars!" Road and Track calls it one of races in a row at Spa Francorchamps in Belgium. Come In And Pick Up Open House Phone □ □ air conditioning the seven best-made cars in the world. You'll >332-8109 This annual 24-hours race is the world's most our FREE Lens Cleaner call it unbelievable. A cruising speed of 100 private study desk for each student important event for touring cars. For the driv¬ □ [-] mph. Up to 30 miles to a gallon of gas. Fantastic roadholding. And more. That's the latest from ing thrill of your life, drive this new BMW today! Artmar 205-Ann St. Opticians 332-5520 /• >«?• GulueA, Go.. 351-8862 □ □ dishwashers and large refrigerator-freezers 22V Albert □ □ built-in bookshelves □ □ Hoover vacuum cleaners for every 2 apart¬ ments □ □ large walk-in storage closet □ □ incinerator chute on every floor rate 28 Peduncle i I'ifamv 32. Cow genus □ □ large laundry rooms with washers and dryers Shore bird 33. Mandible i Dange; 34. Missiif- shelter □ □ hi-powered T.V. antenna reception l. Riding school 3b Brown i. Bites Bohemian □ □ interior decorated apartments with wall-to-wall '.Lenient 37. Firm carpeting including the bath vanity i. Frock'. 38. Keep ) Oaf 39. Grape conserve Form of John 40 Our national snack bar with stools '. Garden parties bird i Relish 41. Only electronic intercom-- safety lock system 2 3 i 7 natural brick decorator wall in living room % % " .2 All these features are included at ■3 % % 1 Advantageous European delivery for tourists. b . • Cedar *> 17 % 15 1 19 20 % .8 ia awjfo a UK 21 % 22 'T 2 & I Bedroom Apartments %% V/A is PhilGordon's 23 24 26 23. Grave Available January 5th 27 20 29 U6 h ?1. Aoex XI 33 34 % % PHONE 332-5051 2924 E. GRAND RIVER 35 36 37 3fi i 39 * 3.3. Prison THE WORLD'S LARGEST PRIVATELY- OWNED STUDENT APARTMENT COMPLEX LANSING 484-2552 % 40 % 41 1 36. Duster 37. Alcoholic liniiiii Friday, January 10, 1969 13 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan III VIETNAM For Rent FprRent For Sale For Rent .For Rent A STEEL Hammond Organ and Les¬ casualties EAST LANSING: Men, close to cam¬ OR 2 girls needed for large Fewest ONE |Hou Large double room. Quiet, lie Speaker. Very cheap. 484-9094 DIATE OCCUPANCY: Two man THIRD GIRL needed to share luxury house Near Berkey. Phone 351- pus. 3-1/13 apartment. Near campus. Contact 0681 a-1'10 private home. No cooking. Phone ED I furnished luxury apartment near cam- LANSING: residential living. x-1/15 I pus. Stoddard Apartments ask for 351-4276 after 5pm. 3-1/13 EAST 2-1001 after 5:30 p.m. NEW UNDERWOOD typewriter, car¬ I Manager. Duplex two-bedroom, stove, refrig¬ 1665 HASLETT Road: 2-bedroom du¬ ribbon; IBM elite symbol ele¬ 5-1/14 bon October erator, dishwasher, disposal, full unfurnished. Completely car¬ since plex ment. 489-6479. 5-1/10 basement, drapes, carpeting, large peted. Nice kitchen with eating WO GIRLS needed to complete four yard. $170 a month plus utilities area. Basement $160 per month. gui¬ I girl apartment for winter term only Phone 337-2407. 3-1/13 **"* Available January 15th. GOV AN ROOMS FOR rent with cooking privi¬ SNOW TIRES chrome reverses, 1 Riverside East. 351-0541. 3-1/10 APARTMENT left-three peo¬ leges. Call 351-0960 or 351-0788 tar, tape recorder. 351-3373 or ONE MANAGEMENT. Phone 351-7910 or 337-2366. 3-1/13 SAIGON (AP) - The latest the lowest casual' v figures since x-4/13 ple-one block to Campus. Call NE- LOVELY H'^'KITEU bed¬ 332-5860 0-1/21 weekly casualty toll disclosed the week of Oct. .3-19 when 100 IEEDED ONE, 2 or 3 men for luxury JAC 337-1300. All utilities paid room Hou REN *_^or $150 plus SNOWMOBILE CANADA'S best Boa- killed and 5$ w ounded. I apartment. Free case for first man utilities. 35.-jo96. 5-1/10 ONE, TWO and three men rooms. Thursday that 7,693 American were e in. Phone 351-0686 5-1/14 Panelled, carpeted, paved parking. Ski. Buy in the crate-assemble and servicemen have been killed in U.S. and Soud Vietnamese 3-1/10 Cooking and laundry facilities avail¬ save. $659 Samples on display 351-5723. STASZUKS MOVING & STORAGE, action since the United States figures showed that 9.020 South able. $45 per month. 425 Ann Street. Call Don 351-3432. 5-1/10 1301 Turner 485-2241 5-1/15 and North Vietnam opened pre¬ Vietnamese servicemen and FRANDOR AREA 3 graduate stu¬ 83,280 enemy soldiers were kill¬ dents or family. Large 3-bedroom. liminary peace talks in Paris XJUR TO SIX students all male or REDUC-opK\"VE0 d one girl Stove, refrigerator, basement, fire¬ ONE BLOCK from Berkey Clean DOUBLE BED $12. 332-3283 after May 13. ed since the Paris peace talks I female. Hi fi, TV, laundry, fre- winter • 5-1/10 singles and doubles. Some with cook¬ The U.S. Command announ¬ I place, 2 baths. New carpeting. $180 began. ezer, kitchen privileges Private ing and efficiency apartment. 337- I bath, shower. $400month. 332-2110. MEN: CLEAN, quiet, cooking, park¬ FIVE BLOCKS FP^rs mpus. car¬ plus utilities. Phone 372-8876. 3-1/0 0132. 5-1/10 LANG SKI boots size 9>/j. M. $75, Head ced that 101 Americans were Since South Vietnam's delega¬ 3-1/10 ing, supervised. Close to cam¬ peted, Virginia. Standard skiis with bindings size killed and 599 wounded last week tion left for Pa is Dec. 7 and SIX ROOM house furnished. Sleep pus. 487-5753 or 485-8836 O 351-8111 5"1/10 six. Two car garage. $250 month. :epinu 6"11" $90. 351-3248 after 6pm INE GIRL until June. Must like ani- 339-2584 3-1/10 5-1/13 Peanuts Personal while negotiations have been I mals $60 Norwood Apartments BRAND NEW deluxe colonial apart¬ EAST LANSING three bedroom du¬ stalled by wran^ (ng over proce¬ | 332-5195 3-1/10 ments Corner of Burcham and Alton. plex. 1V4 bathrooms Carpeted liv¬ WEDDING DRESS. Satin, detachable dure, 587 An*rican and 821 Available for business, professional, ing room with fireplace, dining train. 9-10. Veil. $25 355-3117, EDAR VILLAGE. Two men. 332-0119 MEN: CLEAN quiet, cooking, park¬ South Vietnams ie have been college personnel or graduate stu¬ room, kitchen, panelled family 353-2259 1-1/10 ing, supervised Close to campus. killed inaction. dents Furnished or unfurnished. 332- room. Call 351-5614 5-1/10 487-5753 or 485-8836 O 3135 20-1/31 South Vietnamese headquar¬ HOUSE FOR RENT: East L ansing 3 MALE GRADUATE student. Sunset CAPITOL NEAR Efficiency studios bedrooms furnished. Walking dis¬ ters reported 150,150 government Single girls. Kitchen On college tance to MSU and stores. $175 Avail¬ MEN: SINGLE rooms available in new Lane. Bachelor's home. 332-3617. dO-1/17 SCUBA EQUIPMENT enUre outfitting Recreation troops were killei and 602 wound¬ I ONE MAN for four man luxury ranch 1 style home in East Lansing. Winter busline 372-4583 5-1/10 able immediately. 355-9723 or 351- home. Refrigerator privileges. 1147 Call Tim Caine 332-3568 3 1/11 ed last week, a harp drop from Frye ED 2-5791. Call after 5:30 or MALE HOUSING: Double room Block BRIDGE CLASSES starting soon the 279 killed a-id 901 wounded and spring. Call 351-0476 after 5pm. ONE MAN for four --- ipartment anytime weekends. 3-1/13 3-1/10 Union. Cooking. 314 Evergreen. 332- Certified instructor, BetUe Brick- " the previous w?ek The allied I FOURTH MAN neeH-;-* *lk to cam- 55*' RENTED Vjjjjj ONE MAN for 2-man studio ment. In quiet neighborhood, apart¬ north 3839 5-1/10 MINIATURE SCHNAUZER puppies ner. ED 7-9476. 5-1/13 commands sa 1.846 enemy AKC. Seven weeks old. Two male pus. LarP" including of Brody Ideal for serious student For Sale SSCC ICE troops were t^t>d1 last week, or 351J BAY COLONY Apartments: One or $50 complete. 332-858 1. 1-1/10 332-5776. 3-1/14 one female 485-6107 after 5pm 9 runs. Sunday Timed Practise ith3 two bedroom furnished and unfi¬ 5-1/16 starts a.m. runs 1 p.m One the ice at time $2 50 nished Call Jack Bartlett. Mana¬ DOUBLES, SINGLES, close. Clean, car on a of Haslett Sable, entry fee Fun. trophies. Follow ger 337-0511 Corner quiet, reasonable, parking. 237 Ked- GERMAN SCHEPERDS, AKC. Abbot Road the The decline in casualties re¬ and Hagadorn Road 5-1/10 zie. 351-9584 . 5-1/10 FURS: Six trade-ins. Excellent shape silver, black, and tan. IV4-4427 Round to Lake end, turn right For information flected the recent battlefield lull 3-1/13 to From $30 to $75. Call 351-6212. ; Edge STUDIO ROOM, private lavatory, 3-1/10 call 393-1480 2-1 10 that has persisted despite more ■one GIRL needed for four girl apart- refrigerator, warm, parking space MOBILE HOMES than 100 allied ^weep operations winter term. Chalet Apart- Call 332- : ts. Call 351-3741. 4-1/10 but need transportation. GREEK FOOD Service designed to force the enemy to 3393. after 5 p.m. 5-1/14 fight. And Other Food From Most Foreign ■OKEMOS: 2 th furnished THIRD MAN Okemos Utilities paid. SINGLE ROOM for quiet girl. No Countries-including U.S. 1 apartm Q 1 . .narried couple EYDEAL VILLA Apartments. Two Garage, parking, fireplace $50. 332- smoking $45 337-0283 evenings SHAHEENS FAMILY 10 x 46 GREAT LAKES. Two bed¬ 3-4 st JU.us. 332-6802 4-1/10 bedroom apartments for $240 month 8082 after 5 p.m. 4-1/14 3-1/10 FOOD FAIR rooms. Located in Trailer Haven. Mes *• ALTERATIONS AND dress making by- Swimming pool GE appliances, 1001 W. Saginaw 485-4089 339-9087 10-1/17 | NOW AVAILABLE: APARTMENTS garbage disposals, furnished for NEAR SPARROW One block Michigan Bankard Welcome experienced seamstress. Reasonable for 2 through 4 students $60 month — charge 355-5855 1-1/10 each. Utilities included 103 at corner of Abbott Road Northlawn Apply -«-■ rented $10. 485- 5-1/14 LARGE SELECTION of frames. Glas¬ PARKWOOD 1966 12 x 52. utes to campus. Must Ten min¬ sell. Call (continued i om page one) Apartment 5 between 11am through ses for everyone. OPTICAL DIS¬ collect, Perry, 625-7158 5-1/10 4pm. 4-1 10 APPROVED LARGE double room COUNT, 416 Tussing Building Phone rights" and * that the judi¬ C-l/10 Private bath, parking, cooking. $12.50. IV2-4667 Lost & Found TRANSPORTATION ciary had no leason to utilize 332-5214. 3-1/10 the expedited Rearing provision NEEDED ONE man for luxury apart- SKIS-NEW Kneissl White Wings- RIDERS BREAK - Cheap round trip of the report. * 351-3447. REV 5-1/13 SINGLE OR double room. One block $115. Used Red Stars~$90. 353- Florida Lauderdale. Davtona. In requesting, the judicial ac¬ to Berkey Parking available. 351- 4022 3-1/10 Miami. 351-8491 1 I DELTA APARTMENTS 1 girl needed 6443 3-1/10 tion, IFC said, in part, that the THREE ELECTRIC ;r term 332-5324. . 6-1/14 guitars-2 acous¬ CHILDREN in my licensed home "presence of *;uch a question¬ WOMEN STUDENTS: Large home. tic, 1 solid. 2 amplifiers. Must Close campus, infants and pre¬ Kitchen, laun¬ able regulati^i during rush | ONE 1 RENTED man luxury NEED MEN to fill house. carpeted at 551 and 545 Virginia. Furnished, Excellent location. dry. parking. 332-1918. 5-1/10 sell! 353-4021. 5-1/14 LOST: BROWN key case Monday be¬ schoolers ED 2-4307 3-1 10 week will lead to a hostile en¬ apartment. joi-9466. 2-1/1C vironment unN such time as Take Spartan Avenue (Varsity Piz¬ CARPETING: LIVING room-12x36 tween Commuter Lot and Agricul¬ HORSES BOARDED. Best of care and WANTED GIRL to share completely | CAMPUS HILL: 2 bedroom, available corner) to Beech Turn right NEAR CAPITOL Privacy, parking, gold multi-tweed. End of roll. Cost tural Hall. Call Bill, 355-8524. 3-1/10 feed. Close to campus Box stall it has been "proven that the September furnished luxury apartment Easy za now Lease until walk to campus. 351-5352 then next left at Virginia. Showing kitchen, lounge. Attractive $14.00. $359, will sell for $213 or $9 a $45 References 669-9519 x3-l 13 Holmes Hall legislature does 351-7795. 3-1/13 day or evening. 2-1/10 IV 2-2287. 882-4603 3-1/13 month Phone 482-2677 C-l/10 REWARD $10! MENs MSU Class indeed have tie power to issue Ring 1969 Initials L.D.G. Lost Typing Servic FURNISHED HOUSE for 4. $200 Mens IM. 3554650 3-1/10 such a regulati >n." TWO MEN. $12 50 per week each. CARPET 12x20 new commercial, Close in. Utilities included. 332- IFC said tha they were not in¬ Large carpeted room. Private en¬ with heavy rubber pad on back DONNA BOHANNON Professional 0480 5-1/14 trance. 332-4076 3-1/13 Cost $216, will sell for $141.75 or formed of the^notion until Dec. $7 month. Phone 482-2677 C-l/10 typist Term papers, thesis IBM a Selectric. 353-7922 C 3. 1968 and d 1-not have suffi¬ SUBLEASE SPACIOUS double size cient time to room for girl. Near MSU. Cheap DYNA STEREO PAULA ANN HAUGHEY: A unique £operly challenge 351-4359 after 5 p.m X3-1/10 the regulation through judicial every DAY ONE MAN for 4-man supervised quality thesis service ing, multilith printing binding. 337-1527 IBM typ¬ and hard C channels befor) rush began. Joseph Ennest. graduate resi¬ housing. Cooking. 410 Park Lane. dent adviser, said there had been NEED 1 man y=pV»Vn8 House. 332-2414. X4-1/13 GUITAR GIBSON Firebird Electric $40 C1o:^EN I 3-l/10 with case and Bruce 150 watt am¬ BARBI No job MEL: Typing. too large or numerous complaints with rush¬ MEN-SUPERVISED doubles, singles ing which indicated violations THIRD MAN needed for 3-man house plifier with extras. Phone IV 2- Block of campus. 332-3255 Cooking. parking. 327 Hillcrest. 7343. 3-1/10 of the IFC-Men's Hall Assn. Private bedroom. Utilities paid. 332-6118,337-9612. X4-1/13 TWELVE STRING GUITARIST - vo¬ Furnished Inquire 351-3869 or 521 calist looking for Byrds-type band ANN BROWN: Typist and multilith. rush regulations. FANTASTIC TRAYNOR Public Ad¬ Lexington. 3-1/10 355-5603. 1-1/10 offset printing. Disertations, theses, dress system with heavy Bogen Amp! manuscripts general typing. IBM PROFESSIONAL 351-7813. 3-1/10 C MHA 18 years experience. 332-8334 DRY CLEANERS AND DIAMOND BARGAIN: Wedding and en¬ TYPING TERM papers and theses. SHIRT LAUNDERERS also coin operated FRAND0R SHOPPING CENTER and 2801 W. SAGINAW Apartment gagement WILCOX 509 East ring sets. Save 50 per cent or more. Large selection of plain and fancy diamonds. $25-$150 SECONDHAND Michigan. 485-4391 STORE. C EVERYONE KNOWS AND LOVES ENCYCLOPEDIA BRITANNICA Electric typewriter Call 332-4597 Transportation Fast service O the (continued from page one) whether to continue proposals or to withdraw. "If the committee support of contin¬ WHY NOT SELL IT. ues its support, the proposals BICYCLE SALES and service. Also Store used. EAST LANSING CYCLE. 215 East Grand River Call 332-8303 C FROM LEADS ONLY. 484-4475 will not come to a standstill," Hawkins said. TELE FUNKED G.E FM PORTABI stereo o with AM-FM COU^ radio Perfect RECORDING ARTISTS: THE BLUES COMPANY and other groups avail¬ "The Academic Freedom Re¬ port is ill-defined to where the Concertinq The diversification of our business provides you with one- condition. Huu price. 351-4765 . 4-1/10 able PEAR PROMOTIONS. 355- proposals should go in case of 8811 5-1/15 deadlock between the commit¬ No problemj[—refined—effective! 2x15 Watts music power. Automatics stop service to satisfy YOUR living requirements. EICO ST-96 AM-FM ' iner. Scott 121- ROCK MUSICIANS wanted! Organ and tee and the vice president for keyboard man and drummer. Must be BLOOD DONERS NEEDED $7 50 for student affairs-." he said. electronic tuning, 5 FM push-buttons,. If you are investigating apartment living, a visit or call heavy and should sing. Immediate all positive. A negative. B negative •Dickerson said Monday that electronic tuning indicator, automatic FM to our office definitely can eliminate the "legwork" 'of work. Call 351-7937 or 489-3206 and AB negative. $10.00 O negative- if the com mi tee does not see fine-tuner (AFC^/ apartment-hunting. $12 00 MICHIGAN COMMUNITY need for revision, the MSU BLOOD CENTER. 507 >2 E Grand Board of Trij^tees would have River, East Lansing. Above the new Complete with Turntable SILVER TONE 2 pick-up guitar plus Campus Book Store Hours: 9am - the final say on the proposals ONLY $329.95 EAST LANSING MANAGEMENT CO. Crestwood Amplifier dition. Both $70. 351-4765. Perfect con¬ 4-1/10 THE SOUL SYSTEM. Lansing s num 3:30pm day; Monday, Tuesday and Fri¬ Wednesday and Thursday, 12- at their January meeting." he said. ber one soul band now booking Call 6:30pm 337-7183 C 487-3919 or 485-3930 5-1/14 351-7880 other select brands at MAIN ELEC¬ RENT A TV from a $9.00 per month. TV Company- Call 337-1300 TRONICS, 5558 South Pennsylvania. Our New Location: 317 M.A.C. NEJAC TV RENTALS C Lansing. C Peanuts Personal NOTICE TO MARRIED STUDENTS Join your friends at Creek Farm Townehouses . . . rapidly becoming the mosY popular married students' community In the Lansing area. At Creek Farm, your money buys more living per dollar than anywhere else In town . . . and you'll find many other student families with the same In¬ terests that you have. Come and see the beautifully-furnished models today. COLD WEATHER NEEDS YOU'LL GET THESE OUTSTANDING FEATURES * Individual 1 & 2 story Townehouses Special Rates for MSU Students * Loads of closet space WEEKEND * Large living room ALL UNIVERS * Noon Frl. Noon Mon. Separate formal dining area - * 1, 2 or 3 bedrooms * * * 1 or 1 1/2 baths Modern kitchen with deluxe oven freezer, custom cabinets Full private basement and range, two door refrigerator- *35 PLUS GAS NO MILEAGE CHARGE FEE HALL MIXER * Private front and rear entrances * Private backyard * Only $345 moves you In * * Anti-freeze * Windshield De-icer * Income tax deductions ♦ Batteries • Spark plugs * * No personal mortgage liability $13 ;Per Day °lus Gas MILEAGE Featuring the Coral Choice of colonial or ranch-Kype homes * CHARGE Landscaping and maintenance Included Gables House Band * replaced or repaired at no additional cost * Hoses * Mufflers * Tailpipes • * Plumbing and appliances LARGEST DISCOUNTS IN TOWN! * As low as $102 per month Including heat and all utilities except electric All Cars New CREEK FARM TOWNEHOUSES Fully-Equipped 1969s Go 1/2 Mile South of Jolly Road on Logan Turn left on Haag Road and Follow Model Signs have ; You a must be 21 and valid MSU LQ card. i TONIGHT! Fee Class Rooms Model townehouses open da'ly and Sunday—Noon to 8 p.m. Saturday, Noon to 5 p.m. Closed Thursday. Phone: 882-1725 372-1660 50C 9:00-12:00 800 E. KALAMAZOO Friday, January 10, 1969 14 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan McCarthy yields key post to hawk WASHINGTON