Tuesday MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY STATE STATE NEW S East Lansing, Michigan Vol. 1 Number 120 Rally, sit-in for Garskof prompt plans By CHRIS MEAD State News Staff Writer two Basically, the students have -That demands: Bertram Garskof. asst. agreed on profes¬ " If a for strike strike should it would deteriorate the happen." he said. efforts of peo¬ ple. including myself, who are working for Society and BIjick Students' Alliance in behalf of Garskof. Garskof himself also spoke spoke and reiterat¬ Chanting "On strike, shut it down! ", hun¬ change in a peaceful manner. " ed that he did not want his termination dreds of students poured out of the new sor of psychology, be reinstated with ten¬ to be the focal point of any proposed The consensus at the sit-in "rap ses¬ Administration Bldg. Monday and headed ure and that his concept of "organic learn¬ strike. He said the students should break sion" was that the University is basically for Holmes Hall to begin building a broad ing" be continued and expanded a racist, imperialist institution which, with down the barriers between the education¬ base of student support for a general strike -That the University admit all black, al elite and poor working people few exceptions, educates only middle class against the University. third world" and poor white working Charles Larrowe. professor of econom¬ students to fit into the "military-indus¬ Following a rally of 400 people, accord¬ class students without charge ics. was at the rally and suggested that the trial complex." of the student organizers Psyched ing to a University police estimate, and a sit-in at the new Administration Bldg the . The program is to move toward a general student strike Students also discussed grades which most felt were the administration's way of tenured skof psychology faculty reopen the Gar¬ case in light of massive student reac¬ students overwhelmingly voted to begin through " mass recruiting, mass picket¬ pitting students against each other and tion. Garskof seemed relaxed during the ra|lwr of the new Admlnlstra- ing. mass organizing and mass disruption political organization in the reside"v° allowing big business and government to The Department of Psychology is re¬ tion Blag., where he claimec he is no loflfctr rhe issue prompting The rally began at 2 p.m. in the plaza halls, starting Monday night in East Com¬ determine where students fit in the " na¬ sponsible for this for not standing up to student unrest. Students staged a sit-in t,t thfe building but left in front of the Administration Bldg . but plex. tional interest." the dean for taking action without consult¬ peacefully when asked, leaving only their litter behind. The students planned to spend the night moved inside to formulate major policy Prior to entering the building, members ing them. Larrowe said State News photos by Bob Ivin.s ard Mike Marhanka there. of the facultv. Students for a Democratic (please turn to page An organic plan was to mandate a group of students to spend the night in the Ad¬ ministration Building while the rest went 'LOOK AT DATA' to Holmes. It was later decided in the in¬ terest of solidarity, that the group should go to Holmes Hall en masse. Two persons, who stayed in the building Prof urges Psy and who were arrested at about 6.10 p.m. by police officers, were identified, ques¬ tioned and released. Warrants for tres¬ passing will be sought from the Ingham County Prosecuting Attorney this morn¬ to reconsider ing. Milton B. Dickerson. vice president lor student affairs, gave the order for the crowd to disperse when the building clos¬ ed at 5 "30 p.m. His comments were met by i'\ MITCH MII.LER We all mage ?ry day . . . I propose His proposal provides for a period of at boos and hisses, but the students left the that the Aei chology be charged least 90 days in which Professor Garskof building peacefully as earlier agreed upon h t cutive Reporter with the rus^ to set its own house can validate his instructional methods by The students will reassemble at the Ad¬ John R Hurley, professor of psychology, in order - establishing their merits before his col¬ ministration Bldg. at 10 a.m. today to work issued a statement Monday calling on his Hurley indicated that he felt that the leagues . . . And by designing some mutually on plans for residence hall organizing and colleagues to reconsider the termination of the appointment of Bertram Garskof. department ta< ulty had not had sufficient satisfactory negotiations with Professor the general strike against the University time to " look <-,t the data." The whole dis¬ Garskof, the Dept. of Psychology can af¬ It is no dishonor to acknowledge error. Monday's rally was sparked when Clar¬ cussion of the situation at the last faculty firm its competence to deal productively ence L. Winder, dean of the College of So¬ meeting, .he said, lasted only about 75 with its rich resources." cial Science, revoked a two-year teaching Only if "sincere and thorough efforts to contract that had originally been offered felt Clarence Winder. confront and articulate their differences' Israel denies He add«*J tin • to Garskof. dean of the College of Social Science, had have been unable to produce a reconcilia¬ • to the rally. Winder said. unnecessarily pola :ed the situation" by tion. Hurley continued, should their be a In response "There are a great many things going on Isolated considerate and humane separation But " stepping in. in departments, colleges and from stu¬ An unidentified student was removed from the. new Administrat I'know there is no precedent Arab claims only after this University community has As tar as dents on committees. The most construc¬ canceling the appointment because Bldg. following a student rally. Except for isolated instances, for his unmistakeably demonstrated its dedication tive thing that can happen is for the stu¬ student body left peacefully and headed for Hubbard Hall. Mr (iarskot had not replied by a partic¬ to the pursuit of enlightenment and under¬ dents to work through these channels to State News Photo by Bob Iv ular date standing in the here-and-now " get things done I am not sure what action would have of plane loss been ta&n it the dean had not intervened." The statement noted that many senior headed facults members are among Dean Winder's es two BEIRUT. Lebanon < AP > An went into action over touching off rival Iraqi claims that the forces of aircraft Israeli spokesman in Tel Aviv Israeli plan¬ Jordan Monday and Jordanian each shot down den¬ closest pe' sonai friends, and that many are or have served as administrators and "are especially-sensitive and sympathetic to the plight ot ffllow administrators." According to Hurley, if the faculty had Hannah By RON INGRAM not true." Hannah said "There has ice but none of these reports have been confirmed. Hannah eign turned aid in headed for a Nixon task force on for and on Jan 17 report recommending that not supported, the dean's move, he would State News Staff Writer been some discussions with key people Hannah has served in the administra¬ a ied that any planes were lost Two have h< i, ,,mA ISf of the Agency for International De¬ of trustees, said Monday evening that was no truth to the rumor that Robert S. Shaw, as president of the velopment (AID), an agency within there ian positions in the lrbed district. He the Dept. of State. Williams will be the next president. college in 1941. Hannah started a build¬ said groundfire downed one near Tiberias Hannah said that Harlan was incor¬ Stevens had no comment on the board ing program that made MSU and Hannah and the other on the Golan plateau IP- rect in his information. meeting called for tonight. He said nationally famous At this p">int Tej Aviv said only two "Reports that I intend to resign are President Hannah he would take a wait and see attitude. •MICHIGAN TRINKA CflNE STATE NEWS UNIVERSITY Trinka ( line, executive edit h,hear,I I. Hrill Is your name Cotton Mather? James S. Cmnelli, Patricia ins*ett, campus edi Jerry Pankhirst, edi I edit, l orn Hroun, -sports t coerced intimidated by the com¬ they find. He is only sure that he is or Deborah huh, asso, "concerned." mittee." I contend he coerced a whole Huber said he came in good faith Wilson Auditorium full of people Thurs¬ Six-time recipient of the Pa- emaker award for outstanding journalism. sibly hare ("I don't have to be here day night. His resignation is late. tonight.") to find out what students He got his compliance; he got just "You, I'm ■e Ire be have to say about the "problem." And EDITORIAL Thank you. \lr. Hen Miscoated. presumably he came to make it a two- what way street he wanted and it wasn't of sincerity, cooperation, a two- way street; but how can students .tell candor and intelligence. The whole Probably the greatest thing we all him about the "problem" if we don't thing was the farce he wanted it to be could have done Thursday night would know what the problem is that he wants and the farce that he himself is. On strike! Shut it down!?? have been to walk out on Sen. Huber to know about0 He wanted to be ridiculed and har¬ -of the Senate We learned nothing about the com¬ Investigating Commit¬ assed and mocked by SDS typers. He tee on something or another-after mittee and its plans: we heard nothing, loved every minute of it. the first question of the question and nothing, nothing about what we thought Forewarned is forearmed, answer period. he was there for. if really there in He definitely reinforced potential Note: I did not say after the first good faith.' conceptions as to the mentality of they say, and with that in mind answer of the q a period because we We did hear him defend himself on tytr Senate committee. Any commit- teie made up and supported by people the administration might do got NO answers. irrelevant issues-"I am not a bigot. 1 didn't really go to ask Huber We heard about his five businesses of Huber's lacks and of people like well to consider yesterday's any¬ and how hard he works his Sen. Joseph Mack. D-Ironwood. who can thing. 1 d been told he is a sincere at good gathering of students at the man and should be given the benefit living. subscribe to the philosophy of Russia new administration building as of the doubt. So I went to give him His committee has fantastically pre¬ being a country "without morals" and Sen. James Fleming. R-Jackson. who a call to arms. The plague is his chance . . . and he really blew it. pared itself for this whole event (it seems only logical to have a basis can stereotype with the best of them out of the box and what was Sincerity is in itself not always a • "shaggy-haired idiots "> well, virtue and when not accompanied by and a reason for a committee BEFORE seen yesterday was vowed by supportive native ability, it is disas¬ the committee is set up): he has not. what can I say° The composition those involved to be only the trous. Even his - sincerity" is open to for example, read MSU's Academic speaks for itself. Freedom Report which he acknowledges And Huber doubts that any students preliminary sniffles in a long question is a legal document and which surely will be subpoenaed since they already bout of the grippe. Maybe I should have asked him about has some relationship to anything his have so many volunteers. Accepting the state legislator who There were, of course, the supplied broads committee might want to study testimony that just drifts in also tells for the delegates, newsmen and friends, And us much about the sincerity and intel¬ inevitable calls for a Univer¬ for right now he doesn't think his com¬ example, during the Democratic IIP National Convention in Chicago, and ap¬ mittee has the right to subpoena stu¬ ligence of Huber and Company. sity-wide strike. The chants dent records. No. the masses aren't really rush¬ echoed in the high-vaulted cor¬ parently does it on a year-round basis. ing downtown to help guide the com¬ And he offered to resign as com¬ Has he told that one to his constitu¬ mittee and make this investigation a suc¬ ridor, a catchy little slogan, a ents and wondered if mittee chairman "if any student is they would be cess and a triumph. Hell no. Huber la San Francisco State) of "On concerned knowing that0 Is' that not as wants and is going to get a whale of a "immoral" and detrimental strike, shut it down! On strike, seem more credible to the IV^SU to the circus. Selectivity i although the sub¬ mant refusal to openly discuss "morality" of my generation as any¬ poena idea is obnoxious because of how shut it down!" Perhaps it was student. The suggestion was to thing done on campuses'.' the dismissal of Garskof with Red Cedar report it looks on one's record ' > would be best exemplified by the couple boycott all Psychology classes, the sizeable number of students It takes a lot of nerve to ask my essential to a high-level investigation who got caught up by it all both now and at Spring regis¬ wide-eyed generation to swallow such aimed at the deeper causes of the re¬ who felt concerned over it con¬ By JIM DeFOREST and started doing the boogaloo. a pile of garbage. Respect men like bellion and changes on campuses and tration. thus underscoring the stitutes a rebuttal of what had Huber? Respect the laws made by America today. Perhaps it all seems incon¬ students' displeasure with what been an alternative-free-flow¬ A question for college instructors: I predict that the questions and an¬ gruous. the mobility of the boo¬ is essentially a Psychology De¬ At least we can give at least one Which would you rather have, tenure, swers during testimony before the ing discussion between con¬ cheer at least Cole¬ or three hundred angry students0 committee will be galoo coupled with the threats partment affair. cerned parties. Their rebuttal to one senator. as low-key as many of a crippled University. The man Young. D-Detroit: "When the younger of the questions and all of the answers The beauty of this plan is of a reasonable request has now generation shows intelligent protest given Thursday night cries for massive disruption, to that it focuses on the specific the answer which is given by the re¬ The trouble with TV lectures is And that will thrill Huber and friends shut down the University, the generated confrontation. The solution is to witch hunt." that I and shock the problem, hus encouraging the keep expecting the prof to say serve to god-fearing tax¬ box is open and the adminis¬ "and now a word from our payers into voting for more of that earnest, impassioned speech¬ less radical students to join tration should not count on the Those of us there Thursday learned sponsor caliber when election time comes again. that Huber has- no idea of what the es. belie that seeming incon¬ in the»effort. Its success or And the circus following students will traditionally placid nature of "problem" on college campuses is . gruity however. If the methods failure wi uld be a good gauge the average and he knows nothing about education: Another thing about lectures: the laugh and scream louder and louder. ! of the crowd did, in fact, appear student to nail it professor, when about to give the most And that's called playing into the ( of the ac.ual discontent which neither does he know what or how his shut again. committee will handle the situation" important point, lights a cigarette and hands of the "Establishment" back¬ incongruous, their intent did does exisP on the campus con¬ --The Editors what mumbles for the next ten minutes lash. nor they expect to do with what not. cerning, th s case. We doubt, however, that much support exists at this Uni¬ Sadly. 1 owever. the issue is OUR READERS' MIND no longer Garskof. That fact versity for a strike in the mag¬ was graphically underscored nitude of a Columbia or San by Francisco State. The issue isn't right, the weather is too cold, and what's the use of hanging the fact that he left the rally well before it was before twjo of the activists es¬ over, well Public hearing To the Editor: on Garskof needed of the University community are not is being withheld by the Psychology around East Lansing if you're pousing his cause gave them¬ I have just read the various arti¬ involved in the "retain Garskof" move¬ Dept., the Social Science College and George A. Colburn selves up in symbolic surren¬ cles in Monday's State News which Instructor, Dept. of ATL not going to go to school? Per¬ ment. But. most certainly, just about the University administration. The health der to Vhe police. The issue has concern the Garskof case. Although and well-being of this University de- haps it is because mid-Western¬ everyone at MSU is concerned and con¬ become s t udent-controlled Monday's rally and the president's fused. They ers are as seraphically prag¬ desire, I think, an open warning "to take whatever action is discussion of the matter. The presi¬ matic as the cows who make up campuses, and. somehow, U.S. required to permit the University to dent claims Prof. Garskof's refusal Imperialism. The issue has be¬ function in an orderly fashion" might a large part of our campus come corfrontation and Gar¬ make suggestions for continued rational to respond to an appointment offer of Nov. 25 and the fact that "recent in¬ population. Whatever it is. the skof has become a catalyst, his discussion of the case irrelevant. I formation collected from a variety of idea of STRIKE! STRIKE! is feel compelled to make the attempt. sources and information provided to dismissal, lost in a runaway The ultimate decision on the tiring unlikely to gel at MSU. chain reac tion. of Prof. Garskof, I assume, still lies the dean by the department chairman" In the midst of all the crowd- with the duly-elected board of trus¬ prompted Prof. Garskof's dismissal. The president further claims that the tees. Because of the baiting. however, there was one The administration cannot nature of this decisions "have not been made has¬ case-the dangerous potential involved notable proposal, notable be¬ avoid being caught up in this tily" and that discussions "have been etc.-l would like to suggest that the cause of its realistic nature, reaction; indeed, they are an trustees lengthy and the considerations far reach¬ reject their usual "rubber ing." Rather than satisfying the Uni notable because it will likely integral part of it. Their ada- stamp" function in the hiring and fir¬ versity community, the president's ex¬ ing of personnel and order a public planation further muddies the water. hearing into the reasons for the dis¬ To declare that "The officers of the missal of a professor who has the fer¬ POINT OF VIEW vent loyalty of hundreds of students. University are satisfied that the faculty had good and sufficient reasons to take This is no ordinary case: the profes¬ the actions they have" means, I as¬ Emotional sor is not unknown to the trustees. sume, that the officers are privy to response Refusing tion of this case is, to accept the recommenda¬ University administrators in I believe, quite within information denied the University com¬ munity at large. It also indicates that the officers do not want any inter¬ EDITOR'S NOTE: The following but witto 'is students. But neverthe¬ their rights. ference from the trustees on this mat¬ "Point of view" was written by Peter less the teacher should have recog¬ The president's "Open letter to the ter. In the best interest of faculty and Ellsworth, chairman, ASMSl . and nized the situation and rectified it University community" does not. I students I urge the trustees to provide Pierce .Myers, president. Inter- by selectivity, admitting only conscien¬ feel, settle the issue for students and Fraternity Council (IFC). tious studeits or bv demanding that faculty. To be sure, most members the University community with the es¬ sential information in this case which basic requirt ments be met. Student response to the dismissal Second While the dean of the Col¬ of Dr. Garskof has been emotional lege of Socila Science may have been rather than rational We wish to dis¬ justified withdrawing the original sent from the position of sympathy offer taken to not in Dr to Garskof. have he consulted was mis¬ Irresponsible accusations for the Garskof cause taken by our more ex¬ To the Editor: moral and social inequities which are colleagues on the ASMSl' Board tensively with faculty members and Last night I received a leaflet which so tightly woven into the fabrics of Three things are clear to us First: students* from the psychology depart- at once decried the firing of Dr. Bert the society and University of which I Dr. Garskof was lax enough in his Garskof and criticized several aspects treatment of Psychology 490 to war¬ Third Whenever questions of ten¬ am a part, and I suspect that men and activities of MSU It also invited with power are committing a lament¬ rant University attention Academic ure or dismissal arise, students should me to attend a rally to be held in able error in firing Doctor Garskof. freedom requires academic responsi¬ be consulted with at the departmental front of the new ad building i I'm glad However. I cannot sympathize with shout- bility -and academic responsibility means level. While we agree with those who to see students availing themselves of ers of irresponsible (if not necessar¬ a certain degree of discipline in the suggest that students may not be in a this new and costly facility* and warned classroom. Dr. Garskof apparently as¬ position to judge the professional com¬ ily untrue) accusations, or with any¬ that we will proceed to take the action one who things to undermine the ef¬ sumed that when students entered the petence of a faculty member, we do necessary to gain our demand ii.e. ficiency or reputation of my university. 490 arena they did so ready and will¬ submit that concerning matters of teach¬ Garskof's reinstatement). 1 cant help No. I'm not overcome with any kind ing to impose upon themselves the ing ability and interest in students, but wonder to whom the writers as¬ of Orwellian patriotism and tearful grat¬ degree of self-discipline true learn¬ student opinions are most valid sume the word we will refer on Mon¬ itude when I think of MSU. but I'm ing requires. Unfortunately, too many To rush to the defense of one Ber¬ day. and also who the we' will act¬ not so blind as to be unable to recog¬ of Dr. Garskof's students were not tram Garskof without first consider¬ ually be when that action necessary' nize the excellence of Drs. Hendry. so ready and willing: too many re¬ ing the reasons for his dismissal and is realized, since it doesn't credits; having done- and the appear Karon. Mandelstamm. Juan. Herbst and ceived six larger question of student par¬ that the man will be reinstated in the gotten-too little. Perhaps the real ticipation in tenure decisions, threatens many others, all of thom tauftht me. near future. I'm not oblivious to the fault here lies not with the teacher the integrity of our student population. and who. to me. are MSU. as much. I daresay, as Garskof is to the stu¬ dents in his classes. Thoughtful and constructive activity sees man at his best, but it is difficult for me to ima¬ gine a constructive outcome when stu¬ "What did you wish to punch dents mass to resist illegitimate au¬ President Hannah in the nose about?' thority' and proceed to take the ac¬ tion necessary' to secure their ends. Peter Thall Ann Arbor sophomore Tuesday, February 4, 1969 3 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Mich igan TALKS IN DEADLOCK The State News, the studeti newspaper at Michigan State University, is published every class day throughout the year with special Welcome Week and Orientation issue* in June and September Subscription rates are *14 NEWS per year Ky delays political issue, Member Associated Press United Press InternaUonal, Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press. Michigan Press Association, Mich¬ igan Collegiate Press Association. United States Student Press AssociaUon summary Second class postage paid at East Editorial and business offices at Lansing, Michigan 347 Student Services Building. Michigan East Lansing, Michigan refuses Hanoi's demands State University, A capsule summary of the day's events front Editorial 355-8252 Classified Advertising 355*255 PARIS (AP)--Vice Presi¬ Lodge, chief of the U.S. delega- tary problems be considered in- nam and we were the puppets, Display Advertising dent Nguyen Cao Ky declared tion, Ky told an impromptu divisible at the conference dis- Now we challenge them to per- Business-Circulation news conference at his official cussions. Hanoi and the front mit foreign forces to withdraw Photographic 355-8311 Monday night South Vietnam is willing to make "more conces residence that he is willing to gave equal priority to political on both sides and let "us meet face to face. sions" to speed up peace talks meet privately with the North an(j military questions, but here, but his stand on the other Vietnamese-as distinct from sist they be discussed simulta- me) '"The decision reasons came from (not to rehire higher up. The given were academ¬ side's basic demand indicated little chance for breaking the deadlock. After an hour-long meeting the Viet Cong's National Libera- neously. tion Front (NLF). *We can discuss no political But, he said, he is unwilling to problems before a ceasefire or meet the demand of Hanoi and the end of the fighting," Ky Ask the man ically total non-sequitors." Hertram Garskof with Ambassador Henry Cabot the NLF that political and mili- said He insisted that military problems such as mutual with¬ drawal of foreign troops be dis¬ who never stops Reds eye cussed first and then, "once the war of aggression has ended, we os possible will have to discuss many other problems." Asked about rumors impending change in the South Vietnamese government, of an Ky going to school International News SAIGON (AP)--A lot of ene- Military headquarters an- A hand grenade, thrown at a passing military vehicle a few minutes after Israeli Defense Min¬ my movement on distant ap- proaches to Saigon, though large- ly by small units, led a U.S. nounced American and South Vietnamese forces killed 160 of the enemy. Eleven Americans said thaJ\ l^ese.^ere,TU~ j?01"8, ^ heve; ments but can should be- change the deve/°P; ad?ed thf* picture —about/Etna. spokesman to suggest Monday and 31 Vietnamese were killed [J1®" 8 canand? in Sc >th here 5" ister Moshe Dian passed by. killed two Arab that the Communist command and 43 Americans and 30 Viet- He said that if a change were has again placed the capital on namese were wounded boys and wounded 10 other persons in th"£ oc¬ its list of objectives. In one of the stiffest actions necessary, including even a cupied city of Gaza Monday. Vietnamese infantry com¬ change of government, he was President Nguyen Van """"" "Our offensive capabilities V' " sure The teeming city has been the scene of bitter have forestalled or postponed a Panfs' about J00h" Thieu "is ready to accept confrontations and violence during the past * ■»«- * r making a helicopter two weeks. or strange or important about ussd-.it in ihe Mekong Delta 60 this." * « • there can be isolated incident miles southwest of the capital. of terror." Ky was asked about an inter¬ The Viet Cong dug in along a The 10-year cost of making South Vietnam Another American source de¬ view with Tran Buu Kiem pub¬ cana! bank, killed 28 of the gov¬ lished by the leftist publication self-supporting will be about $30 billion, ac¬ scribed the e^emy operations ernment soldiers and wounded Le Nouvel Observateur in which cording to an economic report being prepared -usually from about by 12 groups to 100 ranging men-as 15 with heavy rifle and ma¬ the NLF chief of delegation for President Nixon and President Nguyen Van chine-gun fire. Enemy casual¬ hinted he opposed re-establish- backing and filling movements ties were undetermined. Thieu. "They move forward, tlun , ... , ment of the demilitarizdd zone The major part of the funds would come back," he said. "Then forward .me"ia"S..uW!r!,™ ounded when elements L! for fear that the front move¬ or sideways. There is no dis- ment would be crushed without from the United States, although some would of the 199th Light Infantry Bri¬ full measure of Hanoi's aid. cernable trend. " a be raised from private firms in Vietnam and gade went against guerrillas in "I am glad to hear that." Ky The combination of enemy man- bunkers by a river 22 miles Japan. euvers and allied drives stirred replied. "For months and years We teach school. northwest of Saigon, • • • they always claimed they were up a half-dozen hard fights Sun- The enemy reinforced to 150 the real majority in South Viet- Last year we had over seven thousand students. That's Prime Minister Terence O'Neill of Northern day in areas ranging from 20 to men spokesmen said, while a larger student body than 90' < of the colleges in this 60 miles of Saigon and made it U.S. armor, jets and helicopter country. And our training never stops. Ireland announced Monday that he will call a one of the heaviest days of con- ^unships moved in for support DOZEN ROSES We want every ^Etna employee and sales representative general election Feb. 24. tact since mid-December. of the 199th. to be the most knowledgeable in the business. So special Northern Ireland has been recently troub¬ S3W Cash & Carry programs, advanced study and refresher courses go on all led by civil rights discord and O'Neills Union¬ Jon Anthony ist party has asked for his resignation. • • • ATTENTION CAR OWNERS 809 E. Michigan After all, it's the caliber of our people that made £Ltna one of the largest companies in the world handling all kinds of insurance—business and personal. Boris Karloff, English actor known to mil¬ * Complete front end repair and F reakout No. 2 lions mainly for his movie role as Franken¬ alignment MC-5 stein's monster, died of a respiratory ailment "Guerilla Rock" in London Sunday. He wTas 81. Brakes Suspension Set. Feb. 8 OUR CONCERN IS PEOPLE Union Ballroom National News Wheel balancing Steering Sec. of Interior Walter J. Hickle Monday that he may order off-shore oil drill¬ indicated LISKEY'S Auto Safety Center Do you think 124 SOUTH LARCH ing halted in the Santa Barbara Channel until a way is found to prevent future spillage from a bright young engineer seafloor wells. PIZZA Hickle was in Santa Barbara to investigate the current oil leak that has already spewed A LANSING, INC. should spend an estimated 126,000 gallons to the surface 2021 E. MICHIGAN AVE. since last Tuesday. • • • LANSING, MICHIGAN 48912 his most imaginative years on President Nixon is laying plans for a working visit to Western Europe this spring, and the White House indicated that it might come be¬ the same assignment? fore the end of March. • • • Secretary of Labor George P. Schultz called Monday for an all-out effort to settle the 45- day-old longshoremen's strike and named a spe¬ Neither do we. cial federal mediator to help. That's why we have a two- Y.ou may select special- A tentative agreement was reached several Fri Thr year Rotation Program for ized jobs, or broad systems- weeks ago, but the union says the strike will 4 p.m. to 3 < graduating engineers who type jobs. Or you can choose continue until it is ratified. would prefer to explore several not to change assignments if Sundays Till Midnight • • • technical areas. And that's why you'd rather develop in-depth Monday the scheduled airlines and their Free Dorm Deliveries many of our areas are organ- skills in one area, pilots jointly offered a $25,000 reward aimed ized by function- rather than L Either way, we think Vtetch for Ad in the State News Thursday • you'll like the Hughes ap- our to deter plane hijackings. by project. The reward will be paid for information lead At Hughes, you mighi ( ~ . proach. ing to arrest and conviction of anyone violat¬ work on spacecraft, communi- |t means you'll become ing federal hijacking statutes involving air¬ cations satellites and/or tacti- more versatile in a shorter craft operated by a U.S. airline. cal missiles during your first If you qualify, we'll arrange for time. r twoyears. you to work on several different (And your j HUGHES : Campus News All you need is an EE, ME assignments... and you can salary will L J or Physics degree and talent, help pick them. show it.) «»o.ap««*om«owA'" Acting president S.I. Hayakawa of San Fran¬ cisco State College defended Monday his prompt and massive use of police force when he took over the riot-rocked campus eight weeks ago. "I had ample force available arid demon¬ CAMPUS INTERVIEWS: strated a willingness to use it quickly to pro¬ tect people and property from attack," Haya¬ | February 18, 1969 kawa testified before a House education sub¬ committee. | Representatives of several activities of Hughes Aircraft Company (each with highly- • • • 1 specialized personnel requirements and separate interview schedules) will visit your A student sit-in at the University of Chicago ! campus. If your career interests lie in one or more of the following fields of aero- protesting the firing of a sociology profes¬ february 14th : space/electronics, contact your Placement Office TODAY to make sure your name sor entered its sixth day Monday. i gets on the interviewing schedule for HUGHES AEROSPACE DIVISIONS: Students have controlled the administration "W'ien you think of Cards" Microwave & Antenna Engineering Electro-Optical Engineering building since noon Thursday in support of Mar- j Guidance & Controls Engineering Microcircuit Engineering lene Dixon, asst. professor of sociology. Space Systems Engineering CARD SHOP I Spacecraft Design Engineering Sixty-one students have been ' temporarily > Components & Materials Engineering Missile Systems Engineering suspended" for not answering a summons for Across from Home Ec. Bldg. | Weapon Systems Engineering Circuit Design Engineering disciplinary action served to protestors Thurs¬ 309 E. Grand River Ph. 332-6753 I U.S. Citizenship required/An equal opportunity employer. day. Tuesday, February 4, 1969 4 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan WMSB airs voices The first program in the set - Vincent first met Handy in nearly blind, he loved recalling of past most famous Blues songs, "Beal Street Blues," "Memphis eras only existing record of Theo¬ dore Roosevelt's voice, using ies is devoted to "The Father 1942 when he came to Vincent's the successes of his great past. Blues" and "St. Louis Blues " an Edison wax cylinder recor¬ The premiere program of 0f the Blues," with the (-f studio in Radio City, N.Y., to On the program, Handy's v Other programs in the series der. "Spin Back the Years,'' a new W.C. Handy telling how tl<^ record a program for the Army. recalls the days of '90s and will include the voices of such Since that beginning, Vin¬ 13-week series of programs Blues was born. Although Handy was old and early 1900s when he wrote his noted persons as Winston Church¬ cent's accomplishments in sound utilizing voice recordings from ill, Adolf Hitler, Albert Ein¬ recordings and collecting have the past, will be repeated Tues¬ been stein, Enrico Caruso and George numerous. plans class, va day at 12:30 p.m. on WMSB Bernard Shaw. The He has obtained voice record¬ Show programs (Channel 10). will be ings of such famous people as presented on Sundays at Personal insights and anec¬ 2:30 p.m. and repeated on Tues¬ Sarah Bernhardt, Jane Addams, dotes about each personality re¬ William McKinley, P.T. Bar- days at 12:30 p.m presented on the programs are approach num. "Buffalo Bill" Cody, Vincent's desire to preserve provided by G. Robert Vincent, curator of the National Voice new this invaluable aural heritage Charles Gandhi. Lindberg and Mahatma resulted in the formation of the Library, located in the MSU Li¬ human values originated by Harry The first option offers one He was awarded the Legion A novel approach to educ; - National Voice Library in May, brary. Maurice Crane, professor Brumer, Detroit senior. credit hour for a paper and dis- of Merit award by the U.S. Army of Humanities, joins Vincent in tion is developing in East Shaw 1962. At the invitation of Rich¬ for his V-Disk Project, which Hall's Precinct Six. ard Chapin, director of MSU informal conversation about turned out over 30 million un¬ each recording. That concept is a class in libraries, Vincent moved his revolve around the interaction Option two involves discus- breakable phonograph records collection of 8.000 voices and between students and faculty on sion of the implications of var- sent to overseas troops during sounds from Santa Monica. World War II. YOU CAN ALWAYS TELL A VAN DYKE Calif., to its permanent home In 1945. Vincent set up the at MSU. PORTRAIT The class is sponsored by the plays. Two credits can be earned. sound system for the U.N. Con¬ College of Education The third option combines the Since 1962, the collection has ference for International Organ¬ SPECIAL J <8*'° The proposal for the class efforts of the first two. so that grown to 20,000 recordings ization in San Francisco, for states that it should overcome the student can earn three ered- spanning the past 80 years. which he received a citation oil color if desired additional charge from the Secretary of State. He Voices of old the impersonal instruction of a its. Vincent terms it "the most in¬ big university, offer a 'state- Reaction to the class has been clusive collection of its kind in was also in charge of the multi¬ G. Robert Vincent, left, and Mauric of-the-Arts" educational con- mixed this country." lingual interpreting sound sys¬ ff 2 doors south Vincent's interest in history tem for the Nuremberg Trials one of the recordings featured on "Spin E of State Theater cept and provide a sample for "I think it's a good idea," and was the officer in charge of Years" a series of programs of the voices c 209 Abbott Road further experiments in educa- said James E. Ekdahl. Topeka. began early in life, hand in hand with his interest in recording. the sound system for the United from the past. The premiere progra ED 2-8889 distressed by this Kan., sophomore. " But parts At the age of 12, he obtained the Nations in New York. ed on WMSB, Channel 10, at 12:30 p.m. s concept of living- of the class have been awarded Brumer said. It is with too much credit. Unless related to a living- the requirements are increased. only be a way of increasing The proposal offers three op- the grade points of members in BOOSTS BENEFITS tions for the men in the the Die pre the precinct, which is unfair 9u ^ ■ ■ 4^ Men's co-ops incorporate 4 MSU INTERNATIONAL FILM SERIES "HAMLET" presents Plans made Thursday sets. ICC, in the Fred Fry, president of cited several advantages joint assets budget. Under will pay the incorporation by¬ laws all residents of the houses the same rent pay¬ ments into a common fund. Under the new by-laws, each house will pay 25 per cent of the days were more Shakespeare's classic tragedy, filmedinEng- to incorporate the seven men's cooperative living units at MSU. will "Incorporation of the co-ops give the organization a vide Incorporation also will pro¬ the advantage of lower cost of maintenance and the corporation will pay the bal- The Inter-Cooperative Coun¬ land by and with Laurence Olivier as the stronger financial outlook, en¬ group interest rates. cil 'ICC) and the president abling us to think about expan¬ Dane. Cast includes Eileen Herlie, Basil Syd¬ Fry stresses that in the area till ney, Jean Simmons, Among and others. the great films of all time. Mag¬ from each of the co-ops voted unanimously to incorporate their governments and financial sion and better maintenance." Fry said. The co-ops will be governed by a board of directors con¬ sisting of one member from of government newly created c of the houses, the nificent musical background. not interfere \ budgets to work together for each house. Working together we will be " procedures of € expansion and better mainten¬ better able to relieve the risk GREEK WINTER Individual houses will still Tues., Wed. - Feb. 4 & 5 - 7:30 p.m. ance. of any co-ops going out of exis¬ have individual autonomy with¬ The tence due to lack of funds." in the areas that are not for The new by-laws drafted at he said. mutual benefit of the houses. meeting must be pas¬ UNIVERSITY AUDITORIUM the ICC sed by the members of each Fry explained that a vicious Each house will still pay for eral other colleges such as U-M. WEEKEND its own food and short-term Berkeley of California and var¬ co-op before they become ef¬ circle is created when the house ious Canadian colleges Admission $1.00 fective. expenses. is low on members, causing . Tickets on Sale at Union Ticket Office Incorporation of the coopera¬ rent payments to be raised and Rent money will be used for tive living units will provide the thus discouraging additional mortgage payments on the house ^i , i Saturday, February 8 Wed. Matinee 3 P.M. Fairchild Theatre houses with over $500,000 in as¬ members to live in the house. real estate taxes, general main- \-IOSS TO GXplOTG universe theories Professionalism at Grumman ..♦is personal developm As a graduating engineer, how can you position yourself so that your career chances are con¬ stantly optimized? Answer—get with an aerospace company where the optimum conditions are . . . Grumman. Here we take a keen interest in seeing that our engineers and scientists develop The tuition fee for the four- personally. We are sincerely interested in jheir personal progress within the company . . . that they keep abreast of the sweeping advance*! in technology, not because they can contribute more (although this is true), but more because if makes for greater individual progress and well-being. Job satisfaction, if you will. Let's look at these personal development programs. 5p.m. or from 6:30-7:30p.m. " - -p.4B2.3905 M.CHIGAN HURRY ~ LAST 3 DAYS TOMORROW IS LADIES DAY 75f i rom ,:00 to 6:00 PJM. Feature at 1:10 - 3:10 r 5:15- 7:25 & 9:35 P.M. CHARMIN PAPER PRODUCTS COMPANY STEVE A subsidiary of Proctor & Gamble MCOLJEEIX will interview engineers one vear Ironi their final degree, either BS or NTS in fngi- neering. Paper Technology, or MBA with technical BS *S'BULLITT i Advised) Tuesday, February II Fri.l ALASKAN SAFARI Here's an opportunity to evaluate your technical skills and interests with one of mam'lacturers in the nation s 1()th largest industry' You gain WED. . . . LADIES DAY Each problem assigned to you will he in accordance with vour particular level ot training and will be an actual problem for which we neqd an answer. To solve it. you will put to direct practical use many of the techniques you have just learned Paxton Quigley is a in school. Length ot program is flexible; minimum length is H weeks Salary comparable to salaries paid by other loading c prisoner of love. programs. Round-trip travel expenses paid from your ever is nearer, to w here you will work. Choice ot three locations: C'.reen Ba\. Wisconsin, Cheboygan Michigan, or EXTRA' COLOR CARTOON Tuesday, February 4, 1969 5 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan ACTING HOSTESS Frats By SHIRLEY JOHNSON Little sisters aren't always the little adopt little sisters' sisters ternity give a party for the and the fra¬ -cream social and several car washes for the fraternity. Little Sigmas. members, along with These charter A fraternity that is holding the frater¬ rush for the first time for a lit¬ underprivileged children of the The Sigma Alpha Mu Little nity. will form the guidelines for tle sisters group is Tau Delta in a sorority, sometimes they the prospective members. An opert Phi. Rush is scheduled for Feb. Sisters has only been on cam¬ have big and little brothers. rush will be held at the end or 12-16. On Feb. 12 Little Sisters of the Shield of pus one year. On Jan. 25 and 26 open rush Many fraternities have organi¬ Theta Delta Chi fraternity be¬ the little sisters and the fra¬ this term or the beginning of\ will be held for interested coeds. zations for women known as the spring term for new members. gan two years ago with five ternity painted the Eastside Ac¬ Unlike many of the other fra¬ little Sisters. Other fraterni¬ Phi Kappa Psi has a Sister founders and has grown to 50 tion Community Center in Lan¬ ternities, the man of Tau Delta ties are involved in the plan¬ of the Golden Shield group for members. Rush for new sisters sing. The girls also act as rush Phi do not believe that little ning stages for a little sisters will be held Feb 18 and 19 hostesses. A rush is held for women who show an interest in sisters should merely be a group organization. sisters every spring. the house. They have social func¬ The women chosen for these This year the little sisters and new of pin-mates, lavelier-mates or tions with the fraternity. The fiances. The the fraternity have adopted and Sigma Chi fraternity began its fraternity hopes groups engage in a variety of 'little sisters with six charter high point of the year is the Ball the group will do more than aid activities. They paint homes in are helping a needy family in the area. members fall term. The ra¬ of the Golden Shield to honor with rush. Hopefully the women Lansing, act as hostesses when ter nity is thinking of a name for the women. Delta Sigma Phi fraternity will participate in community the fraternity is having rush Little Sisters of the Rose is began the Little Sisters of the the group and may call them the and charitable projects. and arrange dates for the men. the little sisters organization of Nile in 1967. The organization Tau Delta Phi plans for the Most of the fraternities hold Pi Kappa Phi fraternity. On has now grown to 50 members group of little sisters to include a rush for little sisters once a year. Pinmates of the fra¬ Last year the women read to the blind. Each term the women Lansing luncheon Jan. 20 eight women were ini¬ tiated into membership. While at least one girl from each sor¬ ority on campus as well as ternity men, fiances and frater¬ aid the fraternity by acting as everything is in the planning nal sisters automatically be¬ honors Romney, representatives from many of rush hostesses. Several t mes a stage now, the women expect to the residence halls. come little sisters of the fra¬ year the fraternity and tfte Lit¬ help out with fraternity rush. ternity. tle Sisters of the Nile Gov. Milliken The women would like to become The coeds receive invitations ^et to-' involved with other houses in to rush from the fraternity and gether for several sociai func¬ tions. A nonpartisan testimonial service activities for the com¬ little sisters. The women usually Alpha Tau Omega gained their luncheon honoring HUD Secre¬ munity. attend a tea and another socul first group of Sisters of the tary George Romney and Gov. function. After meeting the women the Maltese Cross last winter term The women attend the frater- ' Milliken was held Saturday at the Lansing Civic Center. D fraternity chooses the new sis¬ nity 's intramural games to cheer About 1.000 people came to ters. The women receive a for¬ mal invitation and are initiated the men on. They also serve see Romney wish Milliken luck Eastern-Type Fruit Cocktail i#ioz.can 19c as hostesses during rush. in his new job as governor. into the organization. Delta Upsilon fraternity just Romney gave a short speech SUBMARINE One of the oldest little sis¬ Peaches Yellow Cling ter organizations on campus is the Little Sisters of Minerva began Little Sisters of the Seven Stars spring term of l£68 with urging a continuation of the present policies of the govern- SANDWICHES Sliced or Halves 303 Cans 4/100 under Sigma Alpha Epsilon fra¬ 11 charter members. Rush was 4ZL Stewed Tomatoes held fall term and the number,, Romney received a painting ternity. This little sisters or¬ grew to 31. The coeds have main¬ by Armand Merizon of Grand Pineapple Grapefruit Drink ganization has been on campus for 20 vears. Every Christmas ly helped with rush situations. They are now planning an ice Rapids. Mrs. Romney was pre¬ sented with a sculpture by De¬ 351-3800 f 1 quart 14 oz. Cans 4/88c troit artist Marshall Fredericks, her favorite artist. Milliken CARRY OUT and received a color television set Corn-Cream Style FAST FREE DELIVERY IT'S what'S. executive office. Whole Kernal 303 for the 5/100 |hbkJ Cut Green Beans Early Garden Peas SUMMER IN EUROPE Round Trip Detroit to London MEAT Chi Alpha will hold an open meeting at Dr R J Keeran. equine practitionef ONLY $209.00 Fresh USDA Grade A Fryers SJ oo EF MB 9 tonight in 39 Union. Judge James Kali- will speak and show a film about his e' Whole man. Ingham County probate judge, will perience at a meeting of the Pre-Vet CWJ> Leaves June 10, Returns August 10. answer questions about the Christian at- at 7:30 tonight in 146 Giltner Hall Hickory Smoked Fully Cooked Guaranteed Departure Semi Boneless Hams whole or Half 59c ib. StMfent Advi»ory Committee of v»e Dept. of Philosophy will speax at 7 30 See: Cheryl Crane 7:30 tonight Pre-Law Club will meet at in 118 Eppley Center. Mathew McCauley. tonight in the Old College Hall of tfie Union Interested undergrads are invi 109 Gilchrist Oscar Mayer Vac-Pac 69{ dean of the University of Michigan law school, will give information about ad¬ to attend Coffee will be serveo or Mary White Sliced Bacon ^ Pkg* mission to the U-M law school 616 MAC 332-3516 MSU Rodeo Cl*b will meet at 9 tonight in 110 Anthony Hall It is an organizaU-'n al meeting to discuss dues, eligibility. Jld m other requirements. FROZEN The patients of Fort Custer Training All Star Fun Ice Cream Home for the Retarded in Battle Cr\k request used formal dresses of any st' le V2 Gallon Coupon holders may the PAC obtain tickets for production of "The Balcony' size 12 and up, for their first formal dance Saturday Donations may be dejv- Paperbounds on your Chocolate Strawberry CarWn 491 from 12:30-5 p m today at Fairchild Thea ered to Mrs. Robert Digby, 539 Plrk reading list? . tre box office. Performances are at 8 to Lane, East Lansing 5 night through Sunday Tickets are 75 cents ■ ■ Freakout No, 2 ■ ■ MC-5 ■ ■ "Guerilla Rock" ■ ■ By Robert K»Massie PRODUCE ■ ■ Sat. Feb. 8 ■ ■ Ballroofn Michigan Apple Sale ■ Union if ■ Paperback testimony meeting of the Christian Sci¬ This is the story of the Red Rome 4# f ence Organization at 6:45 tonight in the "DAZZLING'' Tsar, his Empress, and Alumni Memorial Chapel -Lih the realm they lost. The Mc Intosh Your "A GREAT MOVIE " Bursts with the joy of story of a man, a woman, and the love they shared— Red Delicious Jonathan Choice 49c being Young and alive an years surrounding the Rus¬ DAIRY sian Revolution. /kkfirki.M 16 pages graphs. of rare photo¬ Spartan Sliced Cheese 24 Slices 1# Pkg. 59" Romeo , JI LIKT Pre-lnventory Sale Hill Bros. Coffee ■COUPON- 59' Still in Progress!! All Grinds Limit 1 with 5.00 Food Purchase LATEST ADDITION TO OUR SALE. p . , a session with JtouhJM/Si J JJ J GOODRICH'S SHOWN AT 7:35 and 9:45 TECHNICOLOR- A PARAMOUNT PIITURE SPARTAN 4 Shows Daily Released prior to Nov. 1 2:00-4:30-7:00-9:30 Not Classified —NEXT— HAGBARD & SIGNE ^AMPUS Ouxi-u "We Give Gold Bond Stamps" Y Winterize your eyes IN SPARTAN SHOPPING CENTER Harrison at Trowbridge IWy with sunglasses from Between Spartan Village and Cherry Lane Apartments Bator 303 Abbott Rd. (Next door to State Theatri) ED 2-5222 Tuesday, February 4, 1969 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Spring fashions By HOWARD GABE State News Staff Writer robes for the soft look. whiA expected to hit as soon as ine melts. , t The models will dance to the mood created by their apparel, The onlookers will find the show explode in color Mary Grace Wilbert. sophomore. Jackie Marion, E Lansing junior, Karen Kincaid. Detroit and Jane Hannah, Sunfield sopho- pants, chains and softer shirts The unisex look, and hers formally his fahions, will continue "New hair does, the Sir Lan¬ celot. completes the unisex look The madras and pasley of snow Detroit freshman. Fay Ferris, with a hair do that both male The spring will bring tfter appealing to the modern Walled Lake sophomore. Gayle to grow, with fashions being yesterday's motifs have given of both sight and sound. and female can wear," Miss birth to the color explosion in fashions, "reflected in the t fab- Schulz, Allegan sophomore, designed in similar production Braverman said. rics like matte jersey, cftpe for both men and women in today's fasions Michelle Lacey, Detroit junior. While plaids, stripes and silk, organza and chiffon, pre checks were once the "in' fash- diets Miss Braverman Pants and jump suits 1 be ions; today's modern female dons herself in a flavorfull variety the up and coming BRIDAL FASHIONS of bright colors in designs that especially St. Laurent. those designed by "splash. up-dated The look in pants has gone Victorian look In the fast moving and con¬ from the bell bottom to the tinuously changing youthful gen¬ eration, the style conscious wom¬ elephant leg which is "more an has to keep on her toes, or she may find out that her leg pant," according to the and Columbia Dance are among dress with Venice lace at the The Knapp's showing of bridal Jewett fashion consultant. By ROSA MORALES wardrobe has become passe. State News Staff Writer the manufacturers who displayed puffed sleeves. The waist is fashions for spring and summer In recent article in Woman's The new dominant colors seem banded and the slightly pleated included 53 selections of gowns a be the patriotic red, white Spring and summer brides their designs at the Bridal Show Wear Daily, the collegiate fe¬ will usher in the new Spring and Summer Col- skirt has a lace trimmed train. for the bridal party and a 14- male is made aware of the fact and blue li wedding dress. lection. _ , , ., peace trousseau. males* and theVii r Fashion interested One of the most unique bride s that "all that militarrniptight- bridal fashion show ^n jvory Victorian dress for pre .ness is gone.' females over 21 will be ab'e to The collection included more gowns presented by Brides the bride has a ruffled collar the Joan Jewett gills mydel- sented by Brides Show< than 40* selections of brides', Showcase is the jumper styled and cuff The hlgh waist and According to Judith Braver- 1047 E. Grand River Ave., and n, fashion consultant for Joan ling the latest creations bridesmaids', mothers' and flo- gown of an Alencon trimmed ti buttons down the front one presented by J.W. Knapp' silk and organza bolero. The shirtwaist Jewett Model Agency. East Lan- Knapps. Plaster of Paris, fcra wer girls' dresses. ives this dress a sing, "the whole look for spring phenalia. and the Style h0p 300 S. Washington, revealed the idal fash The dress fabric will be the sleeves are the "bishop" styl- styling Thursday spring and summe ed sleeves of the Victorian age s softer, more fluid, with pleats, chemises, shirt dresses and th:- Grandmothers. most important feature of wed- trimmed with lace. The collar Another bridal gown is a white The fashion show which wil Some of the country's famous ding parties. For example, high band of Alencon lace return of the hip." bridal designers are offering floor length bridesmaid dress lace The Juliet-styled start at 10:30 p.m. will be di and the headpiece _ , As the hard look of the mili- modernized Victorian look. Phyl¬ will be of ruffled organza and sleeves are a fuller version of bonnet with Alencon lace styles leaves the fashion rected to the collegiate worn lis of Bianehi, Joelle Originals swiss motif applique flowers. the leg o' mutton sleeves. The le. girls prepare their ward- and presented in an unique wa; A matching baby doll scarf will English net is made into a headpiece for this dress is a also be trimmed with applique >mantic skimmer for the bride natural creation of orange flowers. rewn with Venice lace ap blossoms and stephanotis. Grandmother? TRANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION Yellow will be a popular color Pusult i of international educational ex: (that is. using all of the play's theless more cinematic, there¬ change, offers summer pro¬ words and transposing none of fore more successful. Zeffirelli. grams in 48 countries as well as the scenes), Olivier did the im- who also did the smashing Tav- academic semester opportun- Hamlet." He creat- lor-Burton Taming of the ities in 13 location's overseas. The Israeli successful film. Through Shrew." eliminated at least half Participants in the program skillfull manipulation of cam¬ of Shakespeare s dialogue. live with families in a foreign eras and actors, he brought the country and learn first-hand the play to life, with none of the culture of the country. Announces: The Experiment teaches 18 languages in1 an intensive 18- day audiolingual course prior to MEMORIAL SERVICE Prof views departure. In the academic semester, called the Independent Study Program, the participants have six to eight weeks of academic FOR THE VICTIMS os sotirist/ work on individual search projects after study-re¬ leaving their families. but rather of the unrealistic By DENISE FORTNER attitudes of the people towards OF THE Chaucer has been labeled ev¬ WMSB presents erything from a classical writer chivalry." Thurston sid. to a dirty old man. "Chivalry has always been thought of in the past, but dur¬ Pot s Potential' PUBLIC EXECUTIONS "Satirist" has been added to that growing list of descrip¬ ing that period, courtly, roman- ' imitate litera- "Pot's sion of Potential," a discus¬ the use of marijuana, said. "It this will be presented at 7 tonight tive adjectives by Paul T. Thur- ton, a University of Florida »sf u I : and at noon Thursday by WMSB IN IRAQ English professor. i that Cha TV. channel 10. The program will consist of ing Thurston believes he has "ex¬ William W. Heist, professor of interviews with 16 anonymous ploded a 300- year-old-myth" English at MSU said that the students selected from residence about Chaucer's "The Knight's halls, Greek living units, and off- poem has "some comic ele¬ Tale" by proposing that this ments" but he "couldn't accept" campus housing. work was a satire on the age of The students, both and that Chaucer was writing in a users To be held in front chivalry rather than a realistic satirical manne non-users of marijuana will dis¬ account of knighthood. the relevance of the drug of the Beaum-nt Tower "Although Ch cuss In his forthcoming book, "ar¬ joke. laws, the differences between tistic Ambivalance in Chaucer's tha marijuana and liquor, the myths, on Wed. Feb. 5, at 12:30 p.m. Knights Tale," Thurston des¬ serious." Heist said. of marijuana and the extent of cribes Chaucer's account of that Heist bases his assumption on its use on campus. age as, "imaginative and lovely, the fact that "The Knight s Tale" They will also discuss what but just not human. already folklore before Chau¬ is being done in the state legis¬ All Are Welcome was "It is a humorous satire, not cer incorporated it into his lature in regard to the drug of the high ideals of that era. Canterhi'i' T; I"5: Tuesday, February 4, 1969 7 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan SPORTS Jet's By GARY State News WALKOWICZ Sports Writer Richardson: when he discusses the now infamous 18 point spread given to Baltimore and refusal of the writers to give New York a to to sweeten the taste of their collective feet, suggested that the Jets had won because Baltimore was not up for the game. "This was the world championship game," Richardson Former MSU football star Jeff Richardson is typical of many « chance of winning. said. "The Colts certainly weren't flat for it. The first time of the young pro football players earning their livings in the "We knew that Baltimore was a great team but the 18 point they had the ball they moved right down the field, but after AFL and NFL. He's still learning about the finer points of spread was ridiculous," Richardson said. On any given day we stopped that drive and they missed that first field goal the professional game and most of his playing time right now any pro football team can beat any other team. We're the World attempt, I felt we were going to win. " is limited to the specialty squads. Champions and yet Buffalo's only win of the season was Richardson does not take the same stand as some of the But there's an important difference with Richardson He against us. veteran AFL performers when it comes to assessing the rela¬ happens to play his football for the New York Jets and today Joe Namath wasn't the only guy on our team saying we • tive strengths of the two pro football leagues. ^is $23,000 richer, basking in the glory that belongs to the per- t were going to win. We all were saying we could beat the "One game doesn't prove that our league is better than petrators of the biggest upset since David knocked off Colts." Goliath. Richardson was a defensive linemen on MSU's 1965 and Finally Super Sunday arrived and Richardson and his theirs, just as the first two Super Bowl games didn't prove they were better than us," Richardson said. tfW/. ' teammates proved that football games are won on the field Much of the publicity surrounding the third Super Bowl '66 national powerhouse squads and won a Big Ten title as and not in newsprint. centered around the Jets' controversial quarterback, Joe a heavyweight on the Spartan's wrestling team "We won the game because of our great team spirit," Namath, and his run-ins with the press. \w „ Richardson was drafted by the Jets after the 1966 season This year he served as a backup man for all five offensive line positions as well as playing on the specialty units. Richardson said. "We wanted a lot of people to eat their words. "We couldn't let all those people who didn't give us a "Sure Joe doesn't get along well with the writers," Rich¬ ardson said. "The press writes about his off-field escapades and his girls and his mink coat instead of writing that he's a £ visited his alma mater recently and The former Spartan talked about the Jets' 16-7 Super Bowl triumph over Balti¬ chance be right. If we couldn't win the game we at least wanted to give Baltimore the toughest game they'd ever great quarterback. They finally did that, but only after every¬ one in the country had already seen it for themselves in the m$ more. the reverberations of which are still being felt in the had." Super Bowl. football world After the game some of the nation's sportswriters, trying Richardson echoes the words of manv of his teammates Vince Lombardi Jim Ryun heads field Skins coach new GREEN BAY - Vince Lombardi announced Monday he has asked for his release from He spoke off the cuff and the committee continued to meet behind closed doors a.s in Saturday's relays after only three hours sleep and Ryun fell too far behind to By DON KOPRIVA ^the Green Bay Packers to be¬ Lombardi said they were di^ State News Sports Writer a flight from New York. catch up. come chief executive officer, cussing his contract This year he will not be run¬ head coach and part owner of Everyone wants to own some¬ Ryun. nonetheless. holds Crimson and blue are nothing ning in the New York meet, but records the Washington Redskins thing sometime - isn't that Kansas coach Bob Timmons said world at 880 yards like the purple and white Kansas (1:44.9), one mile (3:51.1) Lombardi. who took the Pack¬ right"7" Lombardi said. "And you State cheerleader Ann Snider that he cannot and will not make want to do something that you and 1500-meters (3:33.1) He ers from mediocrity to the best used to, but cheering for was any promises for Ryun. also owns American marks at championship record in football feel you do best. an intra-state rival's colors "I haven't seen him in a while, "I will have a substantial piece two miles (8:25.2) and 800 in his nine years as coach, made should be easier for her Saur- but I know he's been running and of equity and the position wiU meters (1:44 9). the announcement himself as he day at MSU's 46th annual relays. is in shape. He won't return to include coaching. I will hav) school until the beginning of the emerged from a closed session The former Wildcat cheer¬ He has twice been named as of the Packer's executive com¬ control of the club-everything. " (Monday)," leader, now Mrs. Jim Ryun, will new semester "Track and Field News's" Ath¬ mittee in a downtown law of¬ Lombardi explained that Ed¬ Timmons told the State News not have much room for doubt lete of the Year (for 1966 and ward Williams, president of the fice. when the starter's gun signals Sunday in a telephone interview. 1967). "Sports Illu&trated's" It was one year and two days Redskins, will continue in that the start of the mile for her new "I know he's enjoyed coming Sportsman of the Year Award after he had stepped down as position with Lombardi himself husband, the world record-hol¬ to MSU. We all think it's a great and the coveted Sullivan Award, head coach of the Packers. Dur¬ having full control of operations. der from Kansas. meet and enjoy the competi¬ given to America's top amateur ing those years he had guided He said he did not know what tion. I know he'll want a good Ryun, who was married Jan. athlete, have also come his way. the team to an unprecedented that status would be of Otto 25 and has not attended classes race." five National Football League Graham, who has been the Red¬ since last June, will run his Ryun battled a leg injury early The quiet, lanky Wichita na¬ titles and six divisional crowns skins head coach and general first race since the Olympics in the 1968 season only to miss tive has traveled around the He remained as general man¬ manager the past three years. the championship events be¬ world as well as within the Saturday night before an ex ager of Green Buy after quit The Kedsklns reportedly have Injured star peeted full house in Jenison cause of mononucleosis, He re¬ United States and as evidenced ting as coach covered In time to go to Mexico at last year's relays, is sel¬ promised Graham some job to Boiton Celtic player-coach Bill Russell Is ln|ured Ryun ran the mile here as i've asked for my release to the organization. His contract, after making a layup In the final second! of Sun¬ both a sophomore and junior, City as co-favorite with Kenya's dom too busy for reporters or take a position with the Wash each time breaking meet and Kip Keino for the OlymplelUOO- autograph seekers which reportedly calls for $50,- day's Nov/ York-Boston game, Russell landed on ington Redskins," Lombard! tokl 000 u year has two more years ft) hit knee and suffered a severe sprain expected fieldhouse records meter gold medal dozens of newsmen flustered in In his first appearance in 1H«7, Although Hyun ran one of the Ironically. Ryun met his fu¬ to sldellns him a week to 10 days, UPI Telephoto ture wife when he refused her the lobby the Jayhawk star loped through fastest races run at high alti¬ a 4:03,7 mile. Last year he tude, the acclimated Kenyan set autograph request In 1966 edged his old mark with a 4 oa 4 blistering early pace and If you told these people The Peace Corps is Uphill By MIKE MANLEY struggle for teams who figure to battle down the present Big Ten leader, Pur¬ due, The Rick Mount-led Boiler¬ the hypocritical extension of an imperialistic State News Sports Writer to the wire for the Big Ten makers have a 4-0 conference The road ahead of the MSU basketball team is a frighten¬ ing sight but for Spartan fars, crown. Illinois, 13-2 overall and 3-2 in conference play, will be the mark and stand 11-3 for the year. establishments military industrial complex, they Things won't get any easier it should provide sc,re of the finest teams to app-.»a ison Fieldhouse in recent years in Jen- Spartan's firsit test. After the Illini comes a strong Iowa team that beat MSU earlier in the for MSU because coming into Jenison on the heels of Purdue would think you were crazy. is Ohio State, which to this date, Owning a 6-8 overall recorti. season at Iowa city 77-76. The has a 4-1 Big Ten record and the Spartans are now faced with the task of playing six of their Hawkeyes upped their record to 10-4 overall by upsetting No. 3 Davidson Saturday, 76-61. is 12-3 for the season. "We've got great home games, And you would be. final nine games against teams which have combined After playing Wisconsin on coming up, but when I look at a mark^of that schedule it scares me," 59-16. That figures out to be the road, the Spartans return Coach John Benington said. awesome .787 percentage. home on Feb. 25 to tangle with After traveling to Michigan this Saturday for a rematch with the Wolverines, who already dropped the Spartans here, 75- 70. MSU must journey to South Bend to face Dame a powerful Notre squad that r/vns a 13-4 Naval mark thus far. JOHN BE N INGTON Beginning Feb. 15, the Spar¬ tans play four of their next five games at home against the four Research Laboratory Hickok award goes WASHINGTON, D.C. An Equal Opportunity Employer to Jet QB Namath The Navy's Corporate Laboratory—NRL is The former Alamaba ROCHESTER. N Y. (I PI quar¬ engaged in research embracing practically Joe Namath. the strong-armed terback. finishing his fourth all branches of physical and engineering sci¬ season with the Jets, received quarterback who guided the New ence and covering the entire range from York Jets to the pro football 63 first place votes and on a breakdown of three points for basic investigation of fundamental prob¬ championship. Monday was lems to applied and developmental research. named winner of the 19th annual first, two for second and one for third, tallied 321 points { S. Ray Hickok Professional Ath¬ The Laboratory has a continuing need for lete of the Year Award in the McLain had 70 first pi ice votes but had fewer seconds physicists, chemists, metallurgists, mathe¬ closest balloting in the history maticians, oceanographers, and engineers of the citation. and thirds and wound up with Namath, 317. (electronic, electrical, and mechanical). Ap¬ breaking baseball's three-year stranglehold on the pointees, who must be U.S. citizens, receive the full benefits of the career Civil Service. award, beat out Detroit Tigers pitcher Denny McLain by a four- Russell h Candidates for bachelor's, master's, and point margin for the 1968 honor The Jets quarterback compiled 321 points in the balloting while 'Red' tocoacfi doctor's degrees in any of the above fields are invited to schedule interviews with the BOSTON (U*l> -- Arnold NRL representative who will be in the McLain, the 31-game winner for "Red" Auerbach, the most suc¬ the World Series winning Tig¬ ers, had 317 points Pitcher cessful coach in professional MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY Bob Gibson was a distant third basketball and now general man¬ with 131 Vz points ager of the Boston Celtics, will placement office on take over for at least a week to Namath is the first pro foot¬ 10 days the task of rallying the Feb. 11, 12 ball player to win the award defending world champions since Jimmy Brown ot the Cleve¬ Auerbach was forced to step Those who for any re^ < are unable to land Browns captured the ci¬ back into the coaching job when schedule interviews may write to The Per¬ tation in 1964. Last year's win¬ the Celtics' great center and sonnel Office (Code 1818-1), Naval Research was Carl Yastrzemski of coach. Bill Russell, sustained a ner Laboratory, Washington, 1). C. 20390. the Boston Red Sox and the two painful injury to his right knee previous winners were Frank in Sunday's 95-94 loss to the Robinson and Sandv Koufax New York Nickerbockers. J Tuesday, February 4, 1969 8 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan State News State Newt Classified Don't be stopped cold .. .Buy, Sell, Rent with a FAST-ACTING Want Ad. Classified 355-8255 355-0255 For Rent For Sale For Sale Employment The State News does nc-i FURNISHED AND unfurnished Close MIRANDA AUTOMEX camera and to MSU. No lease Phone 337- 135 telephoto lens and other equip¬ permit racial or religion^ EMPLtiYERs *ERLOAD COM- 2080 Saturday 12-6; Sunday 4-6. ment. Best offer 353-2748 5-2 5 discrimination In its ad> f'ANN K\f>i •n< e.i secretaries. Tuesday. Wednesday Friday 8 30 TO WORK FOR YOU vertlslng co'umni. Tire t>n i* mporary as- •9p.m 5-2 10 GUITAR AMPLIFIER Sound 2 12 POODLES AKC 6 weeks 150 White Sute News wjil not accept speakers Reverb tremelo. 105 watts EAST LANSING-Okemos One bed¬ Clean, reasonable 651-6098 after apricot Call 625-4993. after • AUTOMOTIVE advertising which discrim « 30. 4. or 651-5865 3-2 5 room apartment in 3 apartment 5-2 4 • EMPLOYMENT lnates against religion, building Furnished or unfurnished • FOR RENT race, color or national or¬ Swimming pool Students welcome MEN'S ENGLISH Sheepskin jacket Mobile Homes igin. Call 337-0364 after 5p m. fits 42' $90 Must sell' 353 • FOR SALE 5-2 5 661)0 5-2 4 CHARLAMOR 1961 10' X 50 2-bed- • LOST & FOUND DOWNSTAIRS APARTMENT Five room furnished. Near MSU. Ex- • PERSONAL rooms, fully carpeted Refrigera¬ BICYCLE SALES and service Also cellent condition Phone 655-3441 • PEANUTS PERSONAL tor elctric stove and drapes in¬ used EAST LANSING CYCLE. 1215 5-2 10 cluded Heat and light furnished East Grand River Call 332-8303 C • REAL ESTATE Automotive Private car port-$125 1966 ROYCRAFT 12' X 51". On lot. No children • SERVICE or pets Call OX4-0242 3-2 6 SEWING MACHINE clearance sale Must sell $3 700 641-6763 Call • TRANSPORTATION Brand new portables-$49 50 $5 00 late 4-1 31 EFFICIENCY APARTMENT Male per month Large selection of re • WANTED :t-2 ualT or female Furnished One block conditioned used machines Singers. 1967 RITZ-CRAFT Excellent con- P\HT TIMc. from Berkey 337-0132 3-2 6 Whites. N'ecchis. New Home and dition Must sell 487-3956 after DEADLINE manv others'' 119 95 to 139.95 5pm 10-2/13 M\HI\KT '• l DOWNTOWN LANSING One bedroom Terms EDWARDS DISTRIBUTING and two bedroom apartments Also COMPANY 1115 North Washington lye0 MOBILE Manor 10X50 Good 1 P.M. one class day be¬ 10 room house Furnished or un¬ 480 6448 condition 482-9414 5-2 4 fore publication. M>OKIM< KoH furnished Available immediately Cancellations - 12noonone Call Lee Thornburs IV7 0046 or BIRTHDAY CAKES-7 -$3 64 . 8 - class day before publica- 484-5315 $4 16: W $5 20 Delivered KWAST RENT 0R buy a new 2"bedr0<™ H4krHii<\ 484 BAKEHIL* lui ..117 1317 r-2 C2bh Mobile Home from STONEGATE MUSTANG l%7 Peri 1685 HASLETT ROAD 2 bedroom MOBII.E HOMES 2700 Eaton Rap- 289. steering! powet : I. : .1 .,.|».|hl|llent JIM'S duplex Unfurnished Stove re¬ KOOAK COLOR FILM sues 126. ldii Kllild 1 Lo8an Street i. 1/4 351-8624 PHONE l.r.VI C. l< »v| ..ml 1 Ir'KANY frigerator provided Completely car 127 620-99 cents 12 print roll mile south of 1 96 882-7840 5-2 10 peted Immediate occupancy GOVAN processed. $2 90 with this ad . _ OLDSMOBILE I968 < u MANAGEMENT. 351-7910. after 5 MAREK hEXALL DRUGS PRE LOSt & FOUnd 355-6255 Take over payment*, ly 355 6865 L \ LR .'>u KNlAVS \NL) Sorry, I'm late, bui your pizza p.m.. 332-5860 0-2 13 SCHIPTION CENTER at Frandor New Lower Everyday Discount Prices LOST THURSDAY: Man's watch with RATES l.i'Vbt is here. TWO GIRLS needed Cedar .Village C-2 6 black strap Between Anthony and sprmg and or summer Call Pam. Fee 353 1850 Reward 3-2/5 1 day $1.50 fc.NtU LOI'LDIA f MTANNICA 351 3010 2-2 6 BRING YOUR prescription to-OP- 151 per word per day v\ i iv \o i .-.lll rr TICAL DISCOUNT 416 Tussing Build LOST LADIES watch Tissot SiJ- 3 days S4.00 FKt »M ;.'r M*> ONLY. ing Phone IV2-4667 C-2 7 ver with black band Reward 355- 2-2 4 13 1/2f per word per day •iM-j [75 Employment For Rent taNK VACUI M cleaner with all at 2 days $6,50 tachmenis One year old Excellent I3f pit word per day . I>» ■» U. I I . lull or r«rt- NEED PART-TIME job* during the EYDEAl. v 11,1, \ Apartment* Two condition Still ha* one year guar Personal lerm" Call RENT \ STUDENT at bfdioofD apartments lor 1240 month antee left $20 Phone 393 5072 PORSCHE I9t»9 Mwhanica (b;<«t d on lO words per ad) 361-5130 between 9-6 p m Swimming pool GE appliance*, garbage 11 »♦ * *0* service 365-7642 Ho pm TYPIST CLERK 04 T«. li!l im |.«r n an .4 lc. ni .ri Call 351- 96H '/.In /Ml sewing machine with 1-2 4 ,.n I fx- charge if media'e temporary d«'. >»i 4275 Aliw5p.ii C 24 cams Makes button holes Dues night Draft Information Centsr thi- a.1 i« fi"t P»'d Within vacancies to la»' unt'l April 'hi everything Cost *259 new-sell for one wee*. 1989 12 40 hourly Should be able 199 Has lifetime guarantee Phone NEW LOCATION TRIL'MPH IW>7 tiT ii Manv to type 50 wpm and ;«v» gradu 393 5072 C 50" t. Grand River Room 205 including over-drive Unti ated from high school For ad¬ Above New C ampus Book Store The M-Ur News will be ditional information . contact The NEVVL MARRIED? \CROSONIC, BALDWIN spinet piano ing green Cull 337 U4 i Monday through Thursday responM! !e only for the 6 30 p rn Personnel Office. MICHIGAN DE GIRLS CLOSE to campus Reason¬ and bench Asking $650 Twu 21" fir-t day's ir.i orrectinser- PARTMEN'T OK .STATE, first floor TANGLEWOOD able Attractive. Parking 332-8903 TVs. 351-8852 3-2 6 1-5; 6-6 p.m. Friday 1-5 p.m. after 6 p.m. 4-2 7 351-5283 Treasury Building. Lansing Phone AFARTMENTS FENDER PRO-REVERB JBL's. Jazz 373-2r;54 For other job opportuni¬ ties. call 373-3051 day or : 1 Barn... unfur., from $124.50 Bass: Vox folk-electric-12. Ampeg night BT-15 351-3288 3-2 6 An Equal Opportunit\ Employer. Automotive VOLKSWAGEN 1968 s.-J, 3-2 r. j 351-7880 | KIRTABLE CASETTE FREE A Thrilling hour of type recoid Bumper guards AM KM i 920 NORTH Pennsvlva.ua One bed¬ beauty For appointment, call 484- 15 000 miles W-HM ei new Ansco range finder cam room St<;vt. :. ; 'gerator. disposal, Portable radio 351-75% 2-2 "i 45ii« MEK1.E NORMAL COSMET¬ SHARE ROOMY housi era ONE OR t-vo girls to live-in ;i carpeting Utilities paid $110 per ICS STUDIO 1600 East Michi¬ uate men. Private i Mt'ST Kur> SELL III I968 gre.n 2-door hardtop <1.4 LbL»VIVLS> - b rUDENTS exchange for some household du¬ month Phone 1-625-7177 for ap¬ $50. 489-3174 2-2g5 »ll ST SELL cheap' Instamatic color gan C-2 6 ties and nursing assistance With¬ cuiner-i and slide projector Per- pointment 10-2 6 inch engine Viny! ,-nof i • •. i i1 ..'.ft iNlii in walking distance to rumpus l 355-8933 3-2 6 A unique Experience! tor Power steering 13 ?oe tu.il The miles Call 489-9568 ,, interpersonal Dating 5pm .s-5 HKS I L!\ DAY BEAUTIFUL BLUE suede coat Hard¬ Service " For Rent For CHEVELLE Scooters CycisT DW flML GNU LCC AND downtown for 5-girl house 3 girls needed Newly furnished, ly worn 332-0564 Size 12 Best offer Call 3-2 4 information,send with your name and address a postcard 283 4-barr TV RENTALS GE 19 portable $8 50 kitchen panelled and carpeted U per month including stand Call J R tilities paid $60 per girl plus IDS p'0, Box 2137 CULVER COMPANY. 351 8867 . 220 deposit and 6 months lease 372 I Ann Arbor, Mich. | CORTINA Albert Street East Lansing WORLD SEMINAR TOUR Sight¬ li tire*. FARFISA COMBO compact organ cona:tion 353-4127 COLORED TV RENTAL 18 per week Used one vear Excellent condi¬ seeing conferences with educa- ONE GIRL needed immediately to 124 per montlr Call J R CULVER live in furnished home $80 plus tion Bill. 337-7086 5-2 4 TRANCIS AVIATION SO cj-\ COMPANY 351 8882 C utilities 351-0795 3-2 4 .n the PIPEH (HEROM I DIAMOND BARGAIN Wedding and en¬ $5 offer 484-l.'i24 TV Rentals WEST OF Waverly -Duplex 2 Ud gagement ring sets Save 50 per . . .Off Campus Housing rooms unfurnished, modern, large cent or more Large selection of CORVAIR MONZA 1963 Needs body plain and fancy diamonds I25-$150 Hussies? Auto Service & Port* by the nonth yard One chila welcome No pets $120 a month plus utilities 489- WILCOX SECONDHAND STORE. i:ii2 3-2 8 .V)9 East Michigan 485-4391 l OFF CAMPUS COUNCIL ACCIDENT PROBLEM ' ' Ml University TV Ren*a!s >M apartment One block MAZ(X) STREET BO )\ Color * 484-2600 * B & W 355-8300 and foreign cars Guaiantei 482-1286 2628 East K.iljia.. •• NEW GE portables and stands rent¬ ed ONLY to MSI' students and ta< AIVOMATI . AP ulty. $8 84 month nnciud.s tax college personnel or grad- H\BY>'TfEH STATE MANAGEMENT CO«P(W\ TION 444 Michigan Avenue C12 ents :il35 Kui.usncd or unfurn- 20-2 28 WAN'TED ROOM private home or apartment weekdays for young com¬ SEVEN 8887 C muting attorney working on fh I) RENT A TV from a T\' Company Reply Box B-2. State News 4-2 7 TROPHIESi & PLAQUES THIRTY $9 00 :»N DISPLAY month Call 337-1300 Clipper i hack <•» I himIUO M AILABLE per NEJAC TV RENTALS C IIRI. NEEDED beginning spring NO WAITING ■ IMMlClATl DlllVtKY ONE work in Mackinaw City. i.-velv luxurv apartment Close j 'fd'ol Prictt tor Jucnti. ■ Purchom SELECT Ml SIC foi campus 351 4294 3-2 5 i.i i \ | < n»nced MEN: CLEAN quiet, cooking, park i puortssiONAi ! • *'t>er ing. supervised Close to campus ENORAVINO OU* SPECIALTY 487-5753 or 485-8836 O J MASON BODY SHOP I plus tips Dorm r.pace For Rent NOMTHWINI) | Trophit»i or Plaqu»i v.oo week Mini- plete auto painting FARMS »:• 'i n.r- ;•»•' wttk Send Faculty ApantnentJ GTO 1985 Tf.power 4-sp< VII i;i>TM KANT For Sale $1,400 Pa; k Ridge Ten ace Employment s SINGLE GIRL to share Student Ver 351-7880 3020 VINE ST. . ^ - . partments--A 14-Haslett 3 i * t Mu lligan deluxe Townhouse $o2 50 Phoni HANDCRAFTED BEDROOM suite 48 5-0645 . : BEDROOM unfi" White GLAMOUR MONEY and -v <89-5922 or .'.51-67% 5 2 and gold. French Pfovin rented,, cial $175 337-2549. after 6 be vours with VIVIAN J / R.CulaeA, Co.. can pm ARE) ( OSMETICS ► r.. 1 MK N C. v,ICH WtST OF SEARS ins I\ r. 8li5i IAK5ISC S 'lOUSf OF TROPH.ES ' 220 Albert 351-8862 LEBANESE FOOD jiW'J W.ARDCL1KK Furnished 4- AUDIO COMPONENT SERVICE. Am- ONE OR two men needed now for bediooms. 3 iull baths Family pex, Sony. Scott. Fisher and many And Other F".,d Iron. Most Foreign interview ' u .md '< Am-lv H and R BLOCK. tour man furnished apartment .>50 riKirn Built-in kitchen Immediate other select brands at MAIN ELEC¬ Countrie, -including t S TRONICS. 5558 South Pennsylvania. a man. Call 332-6824 3 2 4 Kcupancy until June 15 GOVAN S IAHEEN S FAMILY SALESMAN lull t.me -t pan t.- • M.«nrt..v iu-.ug'. Wednesday MANAGEMENT. 351-7910 after 5 Lansing C K(H >D FAIR $1000 plus a te-'t. \ ,-xf- 11.-.. 3-25 CEDAR VILLAGE One girl sublet pm 332-5880 0-2 13 necessar\ ''.lone ,\Ir la'-l-t Michigan Bankard Welcome \I. HM.EMST Pait time immediately Call 882-8853 ..iter NEED A CAR? < 11 :5 2 7 5p m 2 b GIRL NEEDEU to sublet winter 1 'Uice i on i SEE" Tills one' Furnished. Many spring summer Cedar Village extras 2 adults Only $63 each. * Jackie. 351-0869 10-2 f 5 minutes direct 883-8418 3-2 8 PEOPLE REACHER WANT AD Today . . . j ^ ! clip, mail. Special Rates for MSU Students STA Tb M li > 'nil »./// hfrr. WEEKEND i j j N Noon Fri. - Noon Mon. \ irV / Address " PLUS GAS ) City p Ccd*> 535 NO MILEAGE CHARGE 1 ' 'hock r.- Stjde^t No. in stuff Phcne !6. Unwritten Consecutive Dnto^ to fe.,n A 20 Suffice . ?. Ammal park H»nHlnn Pepper plant M Poppycock P i-1 -it AH Hore M3 Per Day Plus Gas w MILEAGE ):i. Giampus ?t" Exclamation of CHARGE disgust 71 Jap outcast 29. Tailor s goose 32. Queries Peanuts Personals must De placed ir. pt rson. All Cars New 34. Possessive protioun We have plenty of space left Fully-E quipped 1969s I Headdress 10 Words or Less: i day - $1.50 3 dfyc - $4.00 5 days - $6.50 for Fall Term World 1 15£ per word 40^.-per wor:i *>5c p<-r word 4i. Milldam Over 10 Words Add . You must be 21 and 43 Wry face % □ □ □ have a valid MSU LQ card. 54. Emanation M ail to: Michigor Stu'r Np EAST LANSING MANAGEMENT 4b. Delivered 46. Cnop 3 46 StuH^rt S'fv MSU Eos' Lan'l- - • A ^ 351-7880 317 M.A.C. 372-1860 47. Maturity 48. Rabble Tuesday, February 4, 1969 9 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Rodeo club Jobs abound in hotel field the number of out-of-state stu- itless Presently, there are Through figures collected by the Executive Secretary of HR structor in the HR and IM School. _ organizes on campus dents in the University. Now only about 5,000 Hit and IM grad- and IM, the HR and IM graduate While working on this re- MSU s first Rodeo Club will 20 per cent of the University's uates in the country and approx- who has been out of school quirement, the student will in hold a meeting in 110 Anthony Not only does MSU have an enrollment may be from out- imately 450,000 establishments, for ten years in 1964 earned most cases be paid two-thirds Hall at 9 p.m. Tuesday. extensive Agriculture Dept., but of-state. such as motels, hotels, clubs, The purpose of the club is to "Our school was prijbably the hospitals and universities, which an average salary of $14,456 of the average starting salary it also houses the third largest plus fringe benefits. for graduates. unite collegiates for inter-col¬ Hotel, Restaurant and Institu¬ hardest hit when out-of-state hire HR and IM graduates. legiate rodeo competition and to enrollment was cut. Previously This compares to the En- The student will work for one tional Management School in the Bersenik estimated that there support a team for the compe¬ about 50 per cent of our en¬ . , gineering Council report which organization under a "precep- United States. Were ° tition. initiator of the club. Steve rollment was from out-of state, states that 10 years after grad- tor" who will act as an advisor The Hotel Management School, uation the average pay is about and consultant to him. During Swiontkowski. Chicago Veterin¬ with a 1968-69 enrollment of said Frank Borsenik, jction di the first three months, the stu- ary Medicine graduate student, is surpassed only rector of the HR and IN School. The pay is good too. The av- $12,000. said. about 350, erage monthly starting salary The curriculum for hospital- dent will have the opportunity "We still have the same per by the University of Hawaii in Ihe 1967-68 period "for the ity management students begins to work at various jobs. The MSU Rodf> Club will be and Cornell University in New centage of Michigan students," he added. 113 B.A. holders was reported with the basic University Col- While still working during part of the Great Plains re¬ York. National Inter-collegiate The job opportunities in the to be $616 by the Placement lege courses. Students take busi- the last three months, the stu- gion. It was first in the nation in Bureau. ness classes such as accounting, dent will also do an in-depth rodeo Assn. and will compete enrollment until the reduction in hospitality field are almost lim- economics, management, busi- study of a certain operational with rodeo clubs from 13 schools ness law and others. problem that interests him. This in Wisconsin, South Dakota. Specific classes in their major may concern food production, North Kakota. Nebraska. Iowa. include subjects such as Food kitchen layout, the amount or Kansas and Missouri. and Lodging, Quantity Food Pro- type of paperwork, etc. Plans for this year include duction and the Travel Trade. At the end. of the six months rodeo competition at Kansas lilSil IBSi In addition to the 180 class the student will turn in a paper State University, April 18 and 19. hours required for graduation, 0n this study. In addition the and the University of South Da j i the student has to complete at student must keep a brief daily kota. May 2 and 3. least 800 hours of actual work diary during this time, Next year, the Rodeo Club in some phase of the hospital- Since this program was just hopes to be approved by the Na¬ ity industry, before the stu- initiated in the fall, there will Kitchen classroom tional Inter-collegiate Rodeo dent s final term of school. This just be two students participat- Assn. and be able to sponsor a work is non-credit. Hotel and restaurant students get on the job train¬ rodeo at MSU. ing in it in April. One is go- Recently this program has ing to Los Angeles. Calif, and ing in preparing and serving food at the Kellogg The Rodeo Club team will en¬ been renovated. The students en- the other is going to Colorado Center dining room. ter six men's events: Bull riding, tering the Hotel Management Springs, Colo, to work State News photo by Lance Lagoni bareback bronc riding, saddle School before fall term of 1968 bronc riding, bull dogging, calf usually worked during the sum¬ roping and ribbon roping. There mers as clerks, waiters, cooks are three events tor women: and at various other jobs to ful¬ HOPE FOR RELIEF barrel racing, break-away rop¬ fill the 800 hour requirement. ing and goat tying. Beginning with the students Dues to the club will entitle entering in the fall of 1968. Operation Outrage plans a member to ride in a pro¬ HR and IM majors have to com¬ fessional rodeo sponsored by plete the requirement in six con¬ the Rodeo Cowboy s Association secutive months during their which starts in September and junior year. ends in June. Swionkowski said. Personal RENT A TV from a TV' Company - $9 00 month. Call 337-1300 Hup, two,'three. The students will be arrange their schedules so that they will still be able to grad¬ able to teach-in on Biafran plight Dues also include insurance. A student does not need a horse to join and everyone is Eight in the morning is a public discussion of the prob tional and international issues South Dakota, will speak to'the r °! of °utr,age Biafrans°ver dying. the ereattra8edy cert Series audience. On Thurs¬ to include the best of contem- Brandeis University EXPERIENCED MOTHER desires day rather than issues at MIT." faculty and students on the prob- Next, an Ibo veterinarian who day, we will be treated to a porary play writing. The com¬ care of babies in licensed home lems and dangers related tc the northern provinces fine triple-billing: Barrie Sta- pany is now on tour. The Min¬ 372-1219 3-2 5 the present role of science and nesota Theatre Company has Galileo Galilei, in " Lamp at until he fled the massacres in vis's play, "Lamp at Mid¬ technology in the life of our P nation. The fact that no re^ GoUfried1 expressed the fear. ticr Production and re-directing 1966 spoke of the political as¬ night," produced recently on the Hallmark Hall of Fame, produced Stavis's "Harpers Ferry." in addition to its Midnight." The play focuses on three crucial states in Gali- BOHANNON Professional search will be done during thi common among their group, that ^ from destructwe to construc- pects leading up to the war. will feature Morris Carnov- production of "Lamp at Mid- leo'slife. DONNA Independence came in 1960 " day is a symbolic gesture mean^ the misuse of scientific know- typist Term papers, thesis IBM and the government of Nigeria sky. under the direction of night." C to underline the importance o* Selectric 353-7922 was an uneasy coalition between Sir Tyrone Guthrie. Carnovsky • is considered by the issues involved." TERM PAPERS, theses, manuscripts, tary hardware," Gottfried said. the northerners and the south¬ Guthrie is a pioneer in the many critics to be America's vis explores "the problems of The research hal is sched" His " general typing IBM selectric. JAN¬ physicists like myself are con¬ erners." he said. field of American repertory greatest living actor. men who have ushered in new 20-2 10 King Lear," at the Strat- and frequently drastic changes " ET 337-2603 cerned about the weapons race theatre. Primarily dedicated to "Tension grew between the two and such uncalled for expan¬ a classical repertoire, the ford. Conn. Shakespeare Fes- in the existing social order sions as 'the ABM1 system''The J conflict after dev'eJ°Ped the coup int°d0Pe" etat Galileo's discovery of the "true research stoppage, however, will motion of our solar system. . in January 1966. " PAULA ANN quality thesis service HAUGHEY: ing. multilith printing A unique IBM typ¬ and hard involve not only biology and chemistry and other sciences where researchers are physics, but was a The doctor added that the coup popular one since the cor¬ Arab claims denied (unleashed) a host of scien¬ tific and which heralded the social consequences coming In¬ binding 337-1527 C rupt federal government was dustrial Age." # profoundly concerned with the swept away, but soon rumors applications of their discover- Stavis is a native of>JMew BARBI MEL Typing, multilithing were spread that the coup was dan River and both had return- from Underground political ac- York, where he attended Col¬ No job too large or too small Block of campus. 332-3255 C Gottfried indicated that other Panned He stated by the that Ibos. soon after this ed to the base. The Israelis said their planes tivity. In Cairo, the Palestine Wom¬ umbia University. He wrote his first full-length play at age ANN BROWN Typist and multilith. attacks on Ibos started and in- were sent over Jordan shortlv an's Federation called for a 24- 19 His play. "The Man Who offset printing Dissertations, theses, , ., , creased as the months passed. ; fired hour strike throughout the Arab Never Died," has been trans¬ manuscripts general typing IBM We hope in the long run 4 .... . , , ,, , 19 years experience 332-8384 «,ni this will have tQnoihio tangible effects The doctor turther stated that on near Neve Ur, a border set world to support Arab Women i lated into 18 languages and has after a second coup in July 1966, tlement nine miles south of the Israeli-occupied territory. It on the scientific community." been commissioned as an opera. the federal government was in Sea of Galilee. said other women's societies in he said. Stavis believes that it is the the hands of the anti-Ibo north- Opinions as to the immed¬ For about 15 minutes, the Egypt had already approved the essence of nature and man to iate effects of the stoppage are planes strafed the Jordanian de- appeal undergo continued, change." His varied, but some scientists feel In May 1967. Colonel Ojukwu. sert village of Mansiya from jn Beirut, police arrested TYPING TERM papers j , plays " endeavor to capture. . . Electric typewriter Fa it will have a great effect on the military governor of Biafra declared his region as the Re¬ which the army said the Israeli woman said to be connected the precise moment in history Call 332-4597 patrol was fired upon. bomb plot involving Syr- hen society, ripe for change. public of Biafra Jordan charged that several ia and Iraq Security officials TYPING FOR students gjves birth to the catalyst fields in the area were set there said a search of her home sets t^e dynamics of change ablaze by napalm. unearthed documents and lette into accelerated motion.' Transportation Rally moves to Holmes Hall PMice personnel It marked the first Israel had reported a jet on Jordan since Jan. 16. time that attack intended for Syria. Svria and political figures in Iraq are ruled by ri¬ Galileo's views were dis¬ missed as heretical. But. as Stavis has affirmed, "the her¬ (eontinued from page one) from most RIDERS BREAK-Cheap round local departments, the Univer¬ There were flareups elsewhere val wings of Baath Socialist par¬ esy of one age (becomes) the It would be a hard thing for " Florida-Lauderdale. Daytona. sity. East Lansing. Ingham Coun¬ The Israeli settlement of Zar- ty and relations are reported de¬ accepted truth of the next. " ami 351-8491 the Dept. of Psychology to ad¬ it 12 miles east of the Medi teriorating rapidly mit they were wrong in the first ty and Michigan State Police. few hundred place, but it would cut down the were involved in precautionary terrane; conflict between students and administrators," he said. measures taken by University officials. ards from the border of Leba- under Lebanese fire OCC tells apartment problems briefly. An Israeli spokesman The East Lansing Human Re- plaints he has received this Garskof seemed skeptical that said the fire was returned and reinstatement through the Dept. lations Commission met with term concern deposit money not Cap. Adam J Zutaut. < *om" there were no casualties in the of Psychology would work out. mander of the University po" settlement Garskof said he lice, noted that the only ob; suspected the In the Israeli-occupied Gaza ince of apartment buildings. Wanted decision for his dismissal came ed destruction to the building ^'jp1 •ene of wild riots Sun¬ Hopkins said many of the prob- from further up in the Univer¬ glass door broken day. five Arabs were wounded BLOOD DONERS NEEDED $7 50 for river side and a window manager and the City Planning lems can be solved through ra- all positive, A negative. B negative sity administration than was com a grenade exploded in office Thursday to discuss prob- tional. non-emotional discussion and AB negative $10 00 O negative - monly known. the north side. Zutaut Palestine Square, the Is- sa.dI uaza s lems between students and the and cooperation between land- $12.00 MICHIGAN COMMUNITY "From clean through the de¬ witnesses told police the raelis reported. BLOOD CENTER. 507V, E Grand Fr window was broken when an community lord and tenant. But he added River. East Lansing Above the new ijl J partment itself there was no ir¬ bar was thrown through Israe,, authonties announced Unsupervised housing and the that there are cases when legal Campus Book Store. Hours 9am regularity in what I was doing." iron ^ thoy were grantlng an am_ excessive charges levied by action is the only solution 3:30pm Monday, Tuesday and Fri¬ he said. "The last act of the Psy¬ Human Relations Commission Kind of makes you worider if you really want to turn nesty for three Gaza women towing firms were main dis- day: Wednesday and Thursday. 12- chology Dept. was to re-open whose conviction on spy charges members said they would try 21. The menvof Hubbard Hall decided to honor their i topics. 6:30pm 337-7183 C 490. The decision not to rein¬ had touched off the Sunday riots friend, Dave Leu*z> first floor president, when he state Garskof came from higher Zutaut said police are pre¬ olvi: Arab girls The WANTED USED Nikon Leic rere":, ■" r-ug!- age" of adulthood. pared for events that may hap¬ cameras Lenses in go up. The reasons given were aca¬ Sla'e News pno^o by Joe Tyner pen at today's demonstration. tion. Call S55-6421 demically total non-sequiturs " Tuesday, February 4, 1969 10 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Local Y aids By TIM BANNISTER State News Staff Writer gram to help youths escape u derprivi eged tht«r limited en- needy youths erly called Urban Action, is at¬ tempting to produce mature and "We felt that the relationships made with these youngsters pastor for the church, said Ken¬ nedy had begun the project socially adjsted youths from dis¬ shouldn't be broken." about two years ago at the Operating on a "We're where vironment. it's at" principle, the Lansing Through recreation and per- advantaged areas through a var- The proposal was submitted to church. Two nights a week eity of experiences. the Community Chest and the neighborhood junior and senior Young Men's Christian Assoc. sonal relationships, the YMCA'S Tom Helma. associate director program received new funds in high youths play basketball, (YMCA) is sponsoring a pro- Dept. of Urban Programs, form- of the deaprtment. said the ur¬ June. 1968 make popcorn listen to records. ban programs began across the The Chest funds and volunteers, So far the program is recrea¬ country when a 1967 national many from the MSU Volunteer tional, but Helma said they hope directive told local YMCA's to Bureau, helped to diversify the to expand it to include discuss¬ become involved and relate more urban programs. ion groups on race relations. become involved and relate Basically the program is broken Jimmie James, a Drop-In staff more with urban problems. into four areas: the out-reach member, said the program is The Lansing YMCA had start¬ worker concept, the Drop-In re¬ working out very well for the ed its own program prior to the creational program, tutorial pro¬ small number of people work¬ directive, however, when a rac¬ jects and sensitivity groups. ing on it. ial disturbance in 1966 caused The out-reach worker concept Tutoring sessions are held in the Community Chest to award is a carry-over from the first two locations three nights a a $25,000 grant to the chapter program. There are now eight week by 55 volunteer tutors, to try to eliminate racial ten¬ paid staff people and their basic many of whom are MSU stu¬ sion in the city. task is to mingle in the com¬ dents. With the funds available, Her¬ munity. The goal of the projects is to bert Kennedy, director for Ur¬ "They work in an area where establish motivational counsel¬ ban Programs, started "Operat¬ underprivileged kids hang out ing. The tutors form a person- ion Cool"' in June. 1967. For three months six "out¬ and form relations with specific to-person relationship groups of disadvantaged youth." tutoring as a tool. using Dynamic reach workers.'' operating in the Helma said. "Then through that The volunteer tutor also has the With a round robin basketball tournament under way, the Junior Optimist Club underprivileged areas of Lansing, relationship the workers develop option of seeing his student dur¬ plays ambitiously in one of their Thursday night games at the YMCA. The jun¬ "listened to gripes and at¬ leadership toward more positive ing the rest of the week. Some of ior and senior high school members are sponsored by the "Y" Department of tempted to meet the needs" of social action and participation the tutors use this opportunity Urban Programs and the Lansing Optimist Club. the residents. The primary goal in society." to take the youths hunting, pitch¬ State News photo by Tim Bannister of the workers was to cover the The Drop-In recreational pro¬ ing hay or on some other jaunt Adult advice residents' social and recreation¬ gram is made up of a neigh¬ to help foster personal identific- al needs borhood center at the Westminst¬ Adult supervision is of key importance as the Heima and an associate "wrote Presbyterian Church on Logan FACULTY STUDY " er Where possible we use black Lansing YMCA attempts to help disadvantac ed youths. a proposal for a year round bas¬ Street, where west side youths tutors with black youth to en¬ Many MSU students have volunteered their serv¬ is with emphasis on employ¬ can gather. hance identification." Helma ices. State News photo by Tim Bannister ment and education," he said. The Rev. Lee Issleib, assoc. said. The idea sensitivity group is a new- for the YMCA. Over the Course credits BUREAU MATCHES NEEDS Christmas holidays. Dave Hol- lister. a teacher at Eastern High By MARILYN PATTERSON The University is changing partment might request to de¬ State News Staff Writer from a three to a four-credit lete a course for fall term. If School, organized the Inter- School Sensitivity Group from In its continuing studies of cur- institution, John Dietrich, chair¬ it is listed in the catalog as several Lansing high riculuatory problems, the Fac¬ man of the committee said. being offered fall term, the Student employer among change could could cause much meets schools under the theme. "TCB ulty Curriculum Committee will Since 1961 gradual changes have consider within the next year been made so that now the aver¬ inconvenience to'students plan¬ -Taking Care of Business. such issues as how the increase age number of credits for a ning their programs The group was made up of in course credits affects stu¬ course is four. In a review of the curriculum black and white youths from tends to work against freshmen dents' academic programs, the The committee will take a pos¬ guidelines the committee will I plications to the companies," middle and lower class back- By RICH BERNARD Placement Bureau and sophomores seeking sum¬ Early said. problem of continuing suspended ition on the relation of credit take a second look at the prin¬ State News Staff Writer gounds. Its members discussed courses and a review of the 1965 hours to in-class hours, Mander¬ ciples it has set up for avoid- 1 mer work in their discipline The bureau also has a loose- Notices requesting students "gripes and feelings" from high curriculum guidelines. scheid said. ing duplication in courses. for part-time work ranging from since they have not had many leaf binder containing informa¬ school racial problems and These issues and others ct courses in their major and tion concerning summer over¬ The studies are aimed toward In another study, the commit¬ hat checking to dishwashing co¬ PLACEMENT decided now to solve them tee will consider continuing su¬ to the committee's attention | ver the green bulletin boards graduation is still several terms seas employment, including gathering information which BUREAU whom to apply to. deadlines for While the club members and will help the committee decide spended courses. through suggestions from stu¬ near the entrance to the Place¬ dents and faculty members Man- | Summer Job Cagalogue other youths in the program are its position on these issues. Les¬ A number of departments list ment Bureau's offices in the applications and how to prepare derscheid said. Addresses and application for the job. in school, the out-reach work¬ ter Manderscheid. former com¬ in the catalog the terms that Stjdent Services Bldg "The committee continually information for most major ers operate within the halls. mittee member, said. Mandfer- courses will be offered. Dietrich These job requisition cards "Perhaps the biggest mistake evaluates curriculum and curricu-1 students make concerning sum¬ scheid is preparing papers on said. They then request changes are part of the Student Employ¬ companies offering summer em¬ "Because the out-reach worker how the committee can gather in the catalog listings. lum policies as priorities ment Service of the Placement ployment are listed in a sum¬ mer employment, both domes¬ is not an authority figure, a kid its information. For instance, he said, a de¬ change." he saiH Bureau, which is maintained to mer employment catalogue tic and foreign, is not starting can talk with him about school maintained by the bureau their applying early enough.'' assist students in obtaining part- Also included in the catalogue Earlv said. problems." Helma said. time and summer employment. are divisions for camps and re¬ Want to Catch The Bureau's Student Em¬ sorts, packaging, engineering, ployment Service is concerned federal employment and hotel solely with providing MSU stu¬ work. dents with the information per¬ tinent to part-time, full-time With the exception of arrang¬ and summer employment oppor¬ ing interviews with visiting Something Worth Saving? tunities." Thomas W. Early, the companies offering summer em¬ bureau's asst. director in this ployment. most of the Place¬ ment Bureau's activities con¬ area said. Cards Tell All cerning summer employment are limited to counseling, ad¬ "The information on job cards is called, written or brought in vising and answering questions about how to obtain such em¬ by various agencies and individ¬ uals desiring student em¬ ployment. Start Early ployes.'' Early explained. "Such "Students information usually includes a wishing summer employment should start early, description of the job. duration select the employers they are of the job. hours, date needed interested in and fire-off ap¬ and the person to contact for an bles and library work are oth¬ interview." er sources of student employ- Acting on the information on Top Returns With the job cards, students then con¬ Qualifications Considered tact the employer directly. Early said Employers then notify the Students possessing skills and those havng special physical Earn bureau when the jobs are filled handicaps, financial hardships, so the job card may be removed. or other unusu£-; circumstances Job availabilities in % time 51/4 are con¬ are interviewed and registered stant change, depending upon by the bureau ;ind referred to area employers' needs. As many jobs according to thei^ quali¬ DEPOSITS as 5.000 students may be placed fications in part-time employment by the Early stressed that the bur¬ from your MSU EMPLOYEES CREDIT UNION bureau in one eau has nothing to do V'ith pay year. Here's an unbeatable investment opportunity for all MSU Mainly Off Campus Jobs rates students receive * The majority of the part- Although summer vafation is employees: deposit a minimum of $500 in guaranteed 5%% time jobs handled by the bureau still almost two term away, time deposits for one year and watch your savings grow! I nter are off campus, since many on- most companies employing stu¬ est is paid quarterly-into your share account or directly to you. campus employers can reach dents during the sumfner are For complete details on this and the many other advantages your students directly through the already accepting applie itions. credit union offers, phone or stop by today. residence halls or academic Employers Eye Fufcire departments." Early said. "Of "An increasing nur iber of the approximately 6.500 stu¬ employers combine t leir in¬ dents employed on campus, only terviewing for full-time em¬ about their a third of these received jobs through the bureau.' Early said that with the ex¬ ception of the announcements in ployes with in erviewing for summer "These employment.* Early companies >iave an MSU 1019 Trowbridge Rd. • EMPLOYEES Open 9:30 -5:30 Monday thru Friday • Phone 353-2280 the State News, the Placement eye toward the future in em¬ Bureau is the only means by ploying students tor summer Stop in at your nearby Sunshine which most off-campus employ¬ work so that th;se students will ers are able to contact students be more inclined to ^consider Center and we'll show you! them when looking f<*r future EQUAL OPPORTUNITY AT MSU" The main types of jobs which most students take include cam¬ full-time employment.: Early pus food services, office work, explained custodial jobs, housework and Early said that this -actor of a talk by odd jobs. Clerking, waiting ta- potential future employment Assistant Provost Holder) causes fire RONALD B. LEE damage as sleepsstude (Director of the Center for Urban Affairs) We love active people . . active people love us! A fire caused $100 damage in an East Holden Hall room Sat urday while one of its occupants was sleeping 3 Great Locations For Your Convenience Draperies, fishnet and ornaments around the window were destroyed before the blaze was doused by a resident assistant on Tuesday, February 4th 1 - 213 Ann Street 2 - Corner of Harrison & Wilson Road using a fire extinguisher The fire started when heat from a Hurricane lamp on a cork base with a glass chimney) melted t}ie ny'on cord candle at 8:00 p.m. 3 - NorthwinH Dr. Facing Yankee Stadium Plaza holding it up, causing it to fall and ignite the curtains, Ui iversity police said. Forrest Wooldridge, Albany junior, noticed flakes in the win¬ in Parior C of the Union dow and notified Tom Flewelling, Livonia junior, who grabbed the fire extinguisher, went up to the second floor room4and put out the fire. Flewelling received a small cut from glass when (Sponsored by the American Association of he was getting the extinguisher. University Professors) Meanwhile, James Emanuel. Turtle Creek sophomo e, slept peacefully on his bed. oblivious to the blaze until he w/is awak¬ ened by Flewelling.