Thursday MICHIGAN Partly Cloudy. . . The dogmas. ... inadequate for the stormy pre¬ sent. We must think anew, we must disenthrall ourselves. . of the quiet past are --Abraham Lincoln . UNIVERSITY STATE STATE NEWS East - February 20, 1969 . . . High of 35 to 40. Partly cloudy Friday with not much change in temperature. Lansing, Michigan Vol. 61 Number 132 I Al jetliner attack produces Israeli demands, guerrilla split JERUSALEM-BEIRUT - i AP > - The at¬ i Israel's air routes." Coupled ith this note to the president of the U.N. General In July it hijacked an El Al Boeing out tack on the El Al jetliner by the members was a warning of counteraction. Assembly. Emilio Arenales of Guatemala, of Rome and forced it to fly to Algiers. The The Arab guerrilla raid on an El Al jet¬ for circulation to the 126 member coun¬ aircraft and its passengers were even¬ -f the Popular Front for the Liberation of liner at Zurich-the third blow at Israel's tries to "alert government and world opin¬ tually returned to Israel. Palestine has produced angry demands from Israel and divisions among the Arab civil aviation in seven months-prompted ion to the dangers to international civil In December two front men shot up an Transport Minister Moshe Carmel to de¬ aviation posed by Arab terrorist attacks." El Al Boeing at Athens, killing one Israeli. ruerrilla organizations clare the air routes "are of the highest se¬ "Israel has the full moral right and oper¬ The two raiders went to Athens from Israel demanded Wednesday that Arab ■rnments and airlines "take imme¬ curity priority.' ational ability to take all necessary defen¬ Beirut. Israeli held Lebanon responsible Israel was understood to be readying a sive measures at any place to break up the and two days later Israeli commandos diate measures to prevent further attacks ring of terrorism on the airways and assure destroyed 13 Lebanese civilian planes that Israel has completely free air traffic." at Beirut airport. Carmel said in an address to the Knesset, In Washington. U.S. reaction to the at¬ the national parliament. tack in Zurich came on two fronts: Hannah, AID: He aimed his warning specifically at Lebanon, and the Popular Front which claimed responsibility for the attack, and -It was learned that U.S. diplomats are quietly advising Israel to straint and avoid a retaliatory exercise re¬ strike. said it was planned in the Jordan River -The State Dept. called for " prompt conflict of interest Valley. The Popular Front is rapidly becoming efforts" to safeguard international civil aviation and said it would raise the sub¬ By CHRIS MEAD possibility of Senate opposition to his de¬ an outcast among Arab guerrilla organiza¬ tions. ject Monday at a meeting of the Interna¬ tional Civil Aviation Organization Coun¬ Faculty State News Staff Writer sire to retain the formal title of Univer¬ General Arab reaction to the Popular cil in Montreal. Foreign Relations Committee MSU faculty members met Tuesday to discuss the recent Garskof The Senate sity president till the end of the current Front and its speciality-attacks on Israel's The Popular Front, however, warned issue at their faculty meeting. They were met by 75 students from nay consider whether President Hannah academic year El Al airline-has been mixed that it had a list of targets for attack out¬ is in possible conflict of interest when it In a press conference following Presi¬ The Popular Front is divided into two side Israel. Implying that El Al might be The Movement who read a statement of their demands. discusses his confirmation as director of dent .Nixon's formal announcement of factions whose rivalry has become increas¬ hit again, a spokesman said the guerrillas State News photo by Bob Ivins the Agency for International Development the AID appointment. Hannah was asked ingly bitter over the last few months. did not regard it as a civil airline iAIDi. an AID spokesman said Wednes¬ if his continuation as MSU president might It was not immediately clear which fac¬ day be construed to mean that Nixon does tion of the Popular Front was responsible 1 The Senate committee, W Fulbright. D-Ark . headed by Sen. may consider not consider the AID post a full-time job "No. that isn't his idea at all.'' Hannah for the Zurich attack. Reports from Amman. Jordan, said the REQUEST INFORMATION wo aspects when it rules on the Nixon- replied. "They (AID officials) want me two factions indulged in a shoot out there here at the earliest possible moment. If Monday night when members of one wing ider appointed post: Psych Would MSU's extensive contracts with I am gone, it won't be for more than a tried to arrest the leaders of the other. AID put he stays Hannah in conflict of interest if on as president till June 30; day and not any more often than neces¬ sary.'' The Popular Front is a Marxist-leaning group whose leaders believe guerrilla ac- reconsi and would Hannah's desire to work on a (Please ti pagell) tivitv against Israel should also include iiiiiiiamiiiiiii "shared time basis with MSI and AID political indoctrination of the Palestinian against Garskof make his position appear a "part-time people. job ." The University currently has 10 over¬ seas projects under the auspices of AID Pre-enrollment Registration for students whose last names begin with the letters P-S will This view is not shared by the other com¬ mando groups, including the powerful Al Fatah. They formed a joint military com¬ actions which adds up to a total of nearly $14 mand Tuesday to co-ordinate operations By KEN KRELL with supporting arguments he chooses to Change must come from the tside You be held in the Men's I.M. today. State News Staff Writer million in funds committed by the agency. against Israel, but the Popular Front was make concerning the disposition of the (the Movement i are the dues who are The spokesman for AID in Washington. left out -» - A group of approximately 75 students Garskof case." making history at MSU said Hannah will probably complete- Permits for repeating University Col¬ greeted the psychology faculty members 3.C Scott Braley. former MSU student and The motions carried yesterday by the delegates also boycotted a meet¬ . lege final examinations must be obtained Front y retire from MSU if the Senate Foreign Tuesday afternoon when they convened a member of the Movement Steering Com¬ Dept of Psychology constituted a com¬ Relations Committee questions the pro¬ at 170 Bessey Hall, S33 Wonders, 109 ing of the Palestine National Council in to discuss the actions taken by Dean Win¬ mittee. said. "I think the faculty believes plete turnabout from the vote taken two Brody, or G36 Hubbard, before Friday. Cairo early this month, when Al Fatah's priety of further ties with the University. der in the Bertram Garskof case. this is a question of "who gets to fire Bert, weeks ago by the same group when they leader. Yasser Arafat, was elected head Hannah has already considered the Thirty-four faculty members were pres¬ but it is not. The faculty is upset because gave Dean Winder a vote of confidence in of the Palestine Liberation Organization. ent at the faculty meeting that voted to their perogative was taken away We don't his handling of the Garskof case The front claims to carry out activities within Israel itself and the occupied terri¬ "request the dean to rescind his unilateral care who's perogative it was. we are going They are now asking the Dean to tell action and instead exercise his prerogative to push until we get Bert rehired them his recommendations and supporting tories. chiefly Gaza, but its most specta¬ of requesting the Psychology Dept to While waiting for the faculty's vote, the cular blows have been against Israel's na¬ consider whatever recommendations along arguments on Gatjskof tional airline. small mass discussed future action to be In the vote two weeks ago. the faculty taken. It was decided that a group of stu¬ members were not allowed to see Windei > dents would stage an all-night vigil Thurs¬ confidential report on Garskof They now day at Kellogg Center before holding a i Please turn fo page 11> ASMSU seeks probe rally Friday morning when the board mass of trustees convenes at 10 a.m. at Kellogg Our confrontation there will basically " be to show our support mand (the open of the second de-" admissions demand. U' judiciary of Berman controversy If the accusations against Berman are Brad Lang. Movement East Lansing sophomore and Steering Committee member tells position 355-4560 By DAVE SHORT State News Staff Writer found to be accurate by the State News When the faculty meeting convened, a representative from the Movement was in hours issue The ASMSU Board entered the State Advisory Board. ASMSU further recom¬ My family in India has Luchaderma, a disease which causes News controversy Tuesday night by un¬ mended that judicial action be under¬ allowed to read a statement outlining the white spots on the skin. For medication they have been taking group's demands. animously passing a motion requesting taken against him under the grounds pro¬ Maladinine 9, a French product made by Grimauld. They have RED the State News-Wolverine Advisory Board vided in the Academic Freedom Report. The statement requested the faculty to The Student-Faculty Judiciary Tuesday run out and I'd like to send them some, but I can't find any in refuse, as we have, to allow yourselves issued its interpretation of the questioned " to undertake an investigation of the State In other board actions, a motion was the local pharmacies and Olin doesn't know anything about it. to be used as puppets. We urge you to student handbook section which resulted Khari Dharam. Kampur, India graduate student. News editorial staff's charges against passed unanimously asking the MSU Board of Trustees to amend its bylaws recognize that both demands are attempts in Holmes and Phillips Hall's approval their advisor. Louis J. Berman. Spartacuss discussed this with Parke Davis specialists in The ASMSU motion asks the Advisory in order to seat a non-voting student repre¬ to make the university really serve the of unlimited late permissions for fresh¬ Detroit who told us that, unfortunately, this product is not people " man women last term Board, after undertaking the investiga¬ sentative on the board. available in the United States under any name. The psychology faculty issued a second As currently stated in the handbook. tion, to publicize its findings at the ear¬ The proposal is an attempt by the stu¬ statement along with the request that they Section 3a provides that permission for liest possible time. I have a question you might be able to answer for me; what dent government to alleviate communica¬ be allowed to discuss the Garskof case early departure from, or late return to. is the meaning of this symbol (at right). It appears on the tion breakdowns which occurred between a residence hall may be granted to fresh¬ They went on record as stating that this South Korean flag and I've seen it in lots of other places students, administrators and the trustees action in no way constitutes a lack of confi¬ man coeds whose special plans or ob¬ as well. Trustees u in the past. dence in our dean. On the contrary the de¬ ligations require" it. The handbook says Minden Angel. East Lansing junior. Controversy erupted during the board partment has the highest confidence and that coeds wishing such exception to Our Special Consultant on Mystical-Affairs. Frani Shiovitz. tells us that the Yin and Yang symbol originated in the Tao- choice of meeting over the passage of an ASMSU position paper, formulated by Harv Dzo- great esteem for Dean Winder While waiting for the meeting to dismiss, closing hour regulations should get per¬ mission from the appropriate residence ist philosophy of ancient China. It represents in a graphic way By RON INGRAM din. ASMSU vice-chairman. the students that had gathered in the hall¬ hall authority in advance the dualism which the Taoists saw as inherent in everything. BLACK State News Staff Writer The position paper listed the student way and on the third floor steps heard sev¬ This section clearly implies that spe¬ The black portion, or Yin. is the negative, passive, feminine Two members of MSU's Board of Trus¬ eral speakers. cific permission is to be granted only to government's stand on the recent cam¬ principle of the universe; the Yang is the active, positive, tees Wednesday expressed the hope that Clark Akatiff. asst. professor of geogra¬ coeds whos^ special plans or obligations pus disorders and recommended ways masculine principle Both are recognized as inseparable and the entire University community will be¬ that changes and progress would be made phy. said in a short speech. The situation require that they leave the residence be¬ this recognition is reflected in the fact that a small circle come involved in the choosing of a new is that the University cannot change itself fore it officially opens or return after it in the University community. or germ of the Yin appears in the Yang and vice versa. president for MSU. officially closes." the judiciary said Clair White. D-Bay City, and Warren The word ""permission" implies that trying to track down a 78rpm single called, provoca¬ Huff- D-Plymouth. made their state¬ there be criteria for evaluat¬ ch I'm can some tively, "Chickenfat." It's an exercise record sung by Robert Preston and originally released by Meredith Wilson for the President's Council on Physical Fitness. Nobody knows any¬ ments in anticipation of the board meet¬ ing with the Ad Hoc Faculty Committee on Procedures for Choosing a New Presi¬ Milliken urges ing the exception, or that the coed at least be required to relate the* circum¬ stances. requiring the exception, her de¬ thing about it. dent. The meeting will take place Friday stination and her expected time of re¬ Darlene Hoggard, Milford junior. We do. Write to the U.S. Junior Chamber of Commerce. P.O Box 7. Tulsa. Oklahoma and enclose 50 cents payment. De¬ morning prior to the board's regular meet¬ ing at 10. I think the board should seek the ad¬ in urba area prog turn. the judiciary said "Given these three criteria." it said, "the appropriate evaluating agent would places to live. But they are in trouble, livery should take about ten days. vice, council and consent of the faculty, and we must act " then be in a position to determine whether students, alumni and general public in an individual's request constitutes a suf¬ A new post on Milliken's executive staff, I'm interested in finding out what ever happened to the center choosing the new president." Huff said, a special assistant for urban affairs was ficient reason for the exception. Gov Milliken called Tuesday for a on the University of Illinois basketball team who was suspend- White said that he was "prepared to go The judiciary said that the section as created in January to " make certain that ed as a result of the slush-fund scandal a couple of years ago. along with the due process under the new redirection and improvement of existing presently written is "extremely vague" urban affairs programs. the problems of the cities are promptly I think his last name Has Jones. structure of the Academic Council and recommended that it be reviewed Such a redirection is necessary. Milliken and properly brought to my attention." Art Weiss, Southfield junior. i'm glad the Faculty Bylaws were re- Milliken said. by ASMSU and the Faculty Commit¬ said, because " realistically, we simply do Spartacuss contacted Sports Information in Champaign-Ur- established and I hope some guidelines Milliken has appointed John T Demp- tee on Student Affairs for clarification. not have more money to spend." despite bana who informed us that Rich Jones had since transferred would have been set up in them." The judiciary's interpretation came in budget increases that "represent major in¬ sey to the position In this capacity. Demp- to Memphis State where he is averaging 21.7 points a game The references to change made by White fusions of public money in urban areas." sey. will examine, review and evaluate the wake of controversy over the legality were to the revision of the Faculty By- of the proposals passed bv Holmes and Much of the vitality of our state stems state programs dealing with urban af- I've tried everyplace I can think of in this area and no one laws in 1968 The new version was ap- from the cities. They are the centers of in¬ gairs and stimulate suggestions on how Phillips Hall has any frankincense. Do you suppose you could use your in- proved in May, 1968 The All-University Student Judiciary the state can better serve urban commu¬ fluence to find some for me? Major changes in the bylaws were dustry. commerce, culture and other ac¬ (AUSJ) upheld the Holmes and Phillips tivities which make Michigan so dynamic nities. Eric Richardson, Pittsburgh, Pa. freshman. ^j,e inclusion of the sections on the fac- proposals saying that the halls had not on the world scene." Milliken said in his Dempsey will be based in the gover¬ We called several places too. finally arranged to have a ship- uitys roie in the choice of the Univer- violated the letter of the section. AUSJ nor's office in Detroit. This placement. ment in to Questing Beast on Abbott, across from the State sity's president. Meetings of the Academ- special message on urban affairs to the warned, however, that permissions must Milliken said, has a two-fold significance; Theater. It should be there now. ,c Council were also opened to the public legislature. be gra nted on a n i nd i vidua 1 basis. "As such, the cities can be stimulating (Please turn to page 11) (Please turn to page 11 > (please turn to page 11) Thursday, February 20, 1969 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Shaw witness hears Coed downspancakes) 12 shots, NEW ORLEANS • eati1 A prosecution witness, who It was a sixth floor window On cross-examination, Carr S; State News Staff Writer ticipate on his team. -S said he was ordered by the FBI in that building, the Warren said of the man who walked from Pancakes to the left of them, Miss Lockland consumed a pancake every pancakes to the to keep his mouth shut, testi¬ Commission concluded, from the depository: "I would know right of them, but with a little syrup, on they 6 seconds for the first eight minutes, and then S fied at the Clay Shaw trial which Oswald fired the fatal that man if I saw his hide in % ate the gallant eight. slowed down her pace for the remaining 22 ijjj shots. a tannery. " Wednesday that he heart shots This was the description of the action which minutes to have an Overall pancake consump- % fired from behind a picket fence Carr. an Army Ranger vet¬ But he left the stand without >•: took place at the International Pancake House tion average (OPCAi of one pancake every 15 ji-i when President Kennedy was eran of World War II action either side asking if he could £ on Michigan Avenue. Tuesday afternoon. seconds. assassinated in Dallas. in Africa and Normandy, tes¬ identify any of the men. The £ The event was the Shrove Tuesday (the day The world's greatest female pancake eater is The witness. Richard Ran¬ tified he heard four shots, not Warren Commission concluded % 5 foot-7 inches and weighs 106 pounds. *£: preceding Ash Wednesday i pancake eating dolph Carr of Dallas, confined three as most other witnesses that Oswald walked from the £■ contest in which four teams comprised of one Much to the amazement of the others. Miss >j to a wheelchair because of an said. The first. Carr said, depository minutes after the :v Lockland did not even force herself For an boy and one girl each consumed silver dollar accident, also told of seeing sounded like small arms, but shooting and boarded a bus. lunch, she consumes "10 sandwiches, iv pancakes for 30 consecutive minutes. average four men hurry from the mur¬ the last three were "a high- Another witness. Mrs. Jessie The winning team. Wayne Brown. Southfield 3 or 4 cans of soup, and 3 quarts of pop. ' *iv der Nov. 22. 1963. His powered rifle." The winners are guaranteed at least a port- •;£ Patty cake scene Parker of New Orleans, testi¬ senior, and Diane Lockland, a Wayne State testimony came during ques¬ Q. Where did the shots come fied that while she was a hos¬ University student, consumed 170 pancakes. able tape deck for their efforts, and may be - tioning by Dist. Atty. Jim from? tess at an airlines VIP room Here sits the little coed, amidst syruppy remnants However, the sum of the winning eaters was lucky enough to compete nationally for a trip*:* Garrison. A. They came from where I at New Orleans International of the 120 pancakes which she consumed in order collected in a most unusual manner. The fe¬ to England. ' >:•: Earlier testimony linked was standing at the new court- The moral of this contest gentlemen, think jjj: Airport, Shaw singed the name to win the Pancake Eating Contest. The event was male member, ate 120 pancakes while only 50 , Shaw to a mysterious "B house-they came from in this pancakes were eaten by the male. twice before you ask that "thin" girl out to •£ I direction here, he pointed to "Clay Bertrand" to the guest sponsored by the International House of Pancakes rand." the name a key 1 Grand River Avenue. Brown, a member of Delta Upsilon frater¬ dinner. For the money you save, mav be vour *% register on Dec. 14.1966. located on claims Shaw used an aerial photo exhibit, behind ness State News photo by Mike Marhanka nity. heard of the reputation of the Wayne this picket fence. Star prosecution witness plotting Kennedy's death. Shaw. 55. retired business¬ The fence. Carr said, was on Perry Raymond Russo testi¬ fied earlier in the trial that man. is on trial on a charge the grassy knoll. Several other state witnesses have said they Shaw used to name "Clem of conspiring with Lee Har¬ vey Oswald and David W. thought the shots came from that area, as opposed to the Bertrand" in plotting in 1963 with Oswald and Ferrie. a PUEBLO OFFICER SOBS Ferrie. both now dead, to ass¬ assinate Kennedy. depository. former airline pilot, to kill Carr was the 43rd witness Carr said he saw a "light Kennedy. in Garrison's attempt to prove Kennedy spiratorial died in crossfire ing Shaw and not at the hands a con¬ involv¬ Rambler station wagon" parked on the street near the deposit- It was parked on the wrong Dr. ologist Kansas, when John at on court M. the Nichols, path¬ University the stand briefly resumed Wednes¬ of Crewman wanted to kill killed himself "Was there a plant in the of a lone gunman. Oswald, as side of the street It was day. told of conducting experi CORONADO. Calif. (APi- nesdav he wanted to kill him- a plant his captors had gers. wiped his eyes and his him instead. mouth. folded his hands room '" Harvey asked the Warren Commission con¬ headed in the wrong direction." ments with rifles fired at human Shaking with sobs and gasping self in a North Korean pris- I killed it." Harris cluded The commission said he said. Immediately after wrists and ribs in his research for breath, the youngest officer on. could not do it and finally Freckle-faced Lt. ij.g.» gritted his teeth. replied. Timoth« Harris. 23. had to "Well, "he muttered • I urinated on it. I had an it found no credible evidence the shooting, there were three of the fatal shot. on the USS Pueblo said Wed- over a four-month period hatred for of conspiracy. men who emerged from the back leave a court of inquiry into "Could I rephrase my extreme everything the conduct of the Pueblo crew there and when they gave me Garrison himself, making of the School Book Depository." question?" Bergner said this damn plant it took me four another of his infrequent court¬ Two of the men got into the during its 11-month impris- "After the initial phase did room the appearances. questioning medium-built cut. man graying sandy hair of with handled Carr. a crew- Cart- car. Carr said said, driven by a dark-com- plextioned man. or a Latin, The other man. Carr "came down the street Allied troops, enemy clash ionment because controlled crying. the I of his just want to apologize to court for breaking down: un- you "Yes blurted, get resistance? sir stronger breaking . in your Harris into sobs, months but I finally killed it." Harris and Lt. nth. :ellent library. 1 $30 F SALE .... Polynesian Decorations Live in CUERNAVACA Near Mexico City, at 4,500 fee elevation, with Mexican families or in dorms or bungalows. Reed Screens, 6 x 15-ft. Regular $9. 98 ... .7.88 Approx. $80 per month. 6 x 25-ft. Regular $14.98 11.88 Flower Request catalog from String, Regular $1.19 Registrar — Cidoc W. Cork Lamp, Regular $4.98 .2.88 Godot/ Apdo. 479, Cuernavaca, Mexico CHARGE IT On Sears Revolving Charge. MARGARET VIBBERT DIANE WILLETS PATRICIA FINN Thursday, February 20, 1969 3 Michigan State News, Ea~ 5, Michigan NEWS Reds hold firm line; ■ summary Vance is PARIS. (AP)--The last of optimistic appeal as re-establishment of two-way talks to include South A capsule summary of the day's events from former President Johnson's ne- the demilitarized zone, as first Vietnam and the NLR Asked if he said farewell to | ^ur wire services. gotiators left Paris Wednesday steps toward peace. The North the North Vietnamese negotia- night, expressing confidence Vietnamese have declared they that a Vietnam settlement will will stick to their basic demand, tors, he replied "yes." To a be reached which the Americans regard as query whether the meeting was a demand for surrender and cordial, he responded: "All the • One always feels one is not "The first American (the making progress as rapidly as abandonment of South Vietnam's talks have over been courteous and Indian) is still the last Amer¬ would like." Ambassador government. correct these many reek mee ican in terms of employment, Cyrus R. Vance told reporters Ambassador Henry Cabot months." "These talks are at a begin¬ Members of Inter-Fraternity Council and Panhellenlc Council met Tuesday night as he prepared to leave for Mor- Lodge, expects little of signifi- ning stage," Vance said, "and education, a decent income, occo. 'However. I do believe cance to happen until the talks to chart plans for the upcoming Big Ten convention. Left to right, they are Steve you must remember that in a Baumhardt and Ann Konde, general co-chairmen; Mabel Peterson, Panhellenlc and the chance for a Jnll that eventually a settlement will get into a secret phase, as dis- come out of the Paris meeting.' tinguished from the Thursday problem as complex and diffi¬ adviser; Fred Tlmpner, housing chairman; and Nancee Schlesinger, meals co- life." cult as this, it requires time for The fifth session of the four- plenaries. which involve the chairman. State News photo by Bill Porteous a solution." Sen. Edward M. Kennedy. way talks opens Thursday with presence of 60 delegates and a It-Mass. another no progress dav in pros- score of secretarial personnel, North Vietnam accuses the pect. There were no indications from either the Americans or Americans of deliberately OEO CHANGES The South Vietnamese that they spreading rumors of secret International News would have anv new proposals meetings, and the way this was In Moscow, Irina Belogorodakava. who sought to protest the treatment of an impris¬ oned writer, was sentenced Wednesday to a to offer at this North Vietnam is point. holding firm to positions already laid down at previous sessions, and the Viet Cong's National put suggested that it is months too early for such a develop- ment. Vance is credited with con- Liberation ducting the negotiations with Job Corps WASHINGTON iAP> -- Pres- important new move, Nixon shifts agencies ation of the Corps. now-separate Job told Congress in a special Front was. if anything, appar- the North Vietnamese in Paris jdent Nixon, backtracking on submit year in a labor camp in the latest government ently even less inclined toward that led to Johnson s decision to some election campaign views message that he pledges to Meanwhile, he said, the Nixon said he will support "a national commit¬ to Congress before June 30 move against dissident Soviet intellectuals. any sort of compromise. order a full halt in the bombing told Congress ~ Wednesday he ment to providing all Ameri¬ labor dept. will try to de¬ another message embracing There was a brief, angry scuffle outside the the Americans at the fifith of North Vietnam and to the en- wants to keep the Job Corps velop on a priority basis "a can children an opportunity for "a comprehensive proposal courtroom between about 20 of her supporters session are expected again to largement of the preliminary alive for at least another year, comprehensive manpower pro¬ for the future of the poverty but remove it from the anti- healthful and stimulating de¬ gram. designed to make cen¬ including recommen¬ and grim secret police agents. poverty agency. velopment during the first five program, trally available to the un¬ dations for revising and Nixon, who called for abolish¬ years of life. " employed and the underem- National News 'Issues' course ing the Job Corps campaign, during the also announced to Head Start, offering summer¬ time preschooling to the de¬ prived. normally affects voung- ploved a full range of federal job' framing and placement ser- 'fndi"« ,a« itself beyond lts scheduled 1970 exp.rat.oll Congress that he will switch For Last Minute Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass.. declared Tuesday the plight of Indians in American so¬ focuses on war the popular Head Start program from the Office of Economic Opportunity to the Dept. of sters4and5yearsold^ While Nixon said Head remains an Start experiment and "its He many said it is essential that federal manpower pro¬ Spring-Break Travel call ciety was a " national tragedy and a national Health. Education and Welfare. effects are simply not known." grams be "integrated and college travel The " War Problem' will be course to focus on the "War his associates said he might coordinated." a move that disgrace." Loss of the Job Corps and the focus for study and dis- Problem from economic, Head Start will remove from wind up expanding the program- could result in eventual elimin- 351-6010 Kennedy made the observation as his sub¬ eussion in the Great Issues literary. historical. psycho¬ a move he had suggested during OEO about half of its $2 bill¬ committee on Indian education took testimony course for spring term logical and ideological per- the campaign. ion annual budget for anti- from Indian experts and others on how to im¬ A team of professors from As a campaigner. Nixon poverty efforts. various MSU departments will The couse is open to all sen¬ praised Head Start, but said: prove education and the general welfare of the present their analyses of the iors. regardless of their major. While there had been spec¬ "On the other hand, an exam- The State News, the student newspaper at Michigan State University, is ulation early in the adminis¬ published every class day throughout the year with special Welcome Week approximately 500.000 redmen both on and off nature of war and the 'war- Since a different issue is taught tration that Nixon might even pie of current poverty pro¬ and Orientation issues in Jane and September Subscription rates are $14 reservations. One expert called the Indians system. now threatening man's each term, a student may re- abolish the OEO. he said gram that should be eliminated civilization and survival. enroll for credit in the course is the Job Corps. This is one not only a "conquered people, but a brutalized perience has proven Member Associated Press, United Press International. Inland Daily Press Major topics that will be up to a total of 12 credit hours. value of having" in the fed- program that has been a fail- Association. Associated Collegiate Press, Michigan Press Association, Mich¬ people." and said their education had been put surveyed include the forces in charge of " a bunch of handpicked Uncle eral government an agencv ure It sounds good, but it costs igan Collegiate Press Association. United States Student Press Association making for war. the arms race, whose special concern is the $10,000 a year to train a man Second class postage paid at East Lansing. Michigan. Tomahawks." the toward "warfare arms state.'' efforts control, and re¬ SN corrections for a exist." job that may not even Editorial and business offices at 347 Student Services Building. Michigan • • • But he pictured OEO's great¬ State University. East Lansing. Michigan. The Apollo 9 astronauts successfully re¬ quired conditions and structures for international of IFC members est value as devising new pro¬ In his message Wednesday. Nixon voiced no current value peace and Phones There in Mon¬ grams and serving as an "in- Editorial 355-8252 hearsed the final three hours of the countdown order. was an error cubator" for them "during their judgment about the Job Corps day's State News concerning Classified Advertising 355-8256 Great Issues will be aught but recommended it be con- and launching of their last major test before the IFC officers. initial, experimental phases." Display Advertising Jtt-MOO by Lawrence H Battistii By shifting- the Job Corps Business-Circulation the 10-day earth orbit flight scheduled to fessor of social science. Georg Steven C Douse. Nashville Photographic start Feb. 28. The major goal of the Apollo 9 A Borgstrom. professor of junior, is vice president for to the Labor Dept. andI reliev- ■ FREAKOUT No. 4 ■ development and a member of ^ OEO of responsibility for operating Head Start, the I mission is to test the lunar module, which on geography and food science. TheWoolies ■ Phi Gamma Delta fraternitv. President said that agency 5 Thomas H Greer, professor of later flights will transport two men to the Steven R Baumhardt'. O- & ■ humanities and Great Issues. ■ The 2nd Coming ■ moon. Frederic Reeve, professor of wosso junior, is vice president could concentrate its energies 5 FrI. Feb. 21 lifbermann's= • • • American Thought** and Lan¬ for public relations and a mem- on innovation. .... ■ guage and Charles F Wrigley. ber of Theta Delta Chi fra- *n what was described by ■ UNION PARLORS ■ The chairman of a special Senate committee professor of psychology. ternitv. White House sources as an ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■a urged immediate federal food distribution in rural South Carolina Wednesday after hearing The diversity in field of these professors will enable the Roomy and convenient... our testimony about extensive malnutrition-espe- ZIPPER ATTACHE cially among negroes-and wide-spread infesta¬ tion by stomach worms. " If the people get 800 or 900 calories and the worms get half of that, ••#••••• Watch F riday's Sta'e News Record Thursdayi for that's an emergency." Sen. George S. McGov- T remendom • ••••• ern. D-S.D.. said. Offer From WM.\- • ••••• \ % Michigan News LOOK AT THESE PRICES Sen. Philip A. Hart, D-Mich.. challenged an SHEET'S Pizza Parlor Mfg. List Our Reg. Record Thurs. PRICES • • • Prices Low Prices estimate made by Defense Secretary Melvin & Ye Public House $1.69 • Laird that the Soviet Union was outspending $1.98 $1.89 •••••••••• 1.99 • the United States 4 to 1 on strategic defenses. 2.50 2.19 • 2.39 • In a letter to the secretary. Hart asked for 2.98 2 59 clarification. High 3.98 2.99 2.79 • 3k • • • • 3.79 A pre-midnight raid in the Detroit suburb Style 4.98 3.99 4.69 • 5.98 4.89 of Southfield by officials from four agencies • Tuesday night resulted in the arrest of 28 per¬ by 6.98 5.99 4.99 sons. six of them on charges of possession of Mr, John Carver marijuana. One of the oldest beauty aids is the mask. Masks Campus News were and used other by Cleopatra great beauties Record-of-the-week of ancient times. uilfkium Newest Release A heavy turnout was reported Wednesday at In your beauty treat— the University of Windsor where students are ments do not neglect these judy collins voting whether to support the demands of dis¬ important areas : hands, "Wildflowers" sidents who have occupied the theology de¬ neck, elbows and knees. partment for the last ten days. If you want to feel as The students are demanding that a fired theology professor be offered a new con¬ tract. that they be given equal voting power lovely as you look, try a bubble bath. Step in. Relax. Soak. Scrub. Rub. Step out. $Q09 j each Great carry-all for books and papers. 11" with faculty, in all departmental decisions, Despite—or perhaps be¬ high, with 3-way zipper opening and double that there be "openness" in all university cause of—the fact that she face from carrying handles, hardy fabric-backed vinyl hides her sun in bronze, brown,blue,black,white. decision-making and that there be no reprisals and air, the typical Near against the dissidents-known on campus as Eastern lady has a lovely Today and every Thursday our entire L.P. record stock Is reduced "The Occupiers." skin. to special low low prices. New stock arrives weekly In our discount • • • "It is better to be beau¬ record department. A University of Michigan rent strike against tiful than to be good, but Ann Arbor landlords entered its fifth day to¬ it Is better to be good than ugly" (Oscar W ilde) day with strike leaders reporting more than $30,000 withheld from apartment managers. We want you to be beau¬ j pPUS POOK^ tiful. Stop in and see us Striking students have begun to flood Ann ° ' Arbor city hall with complaints of building code violations written on form letters pro¬ MR. JOHN'S vided by strike leaders. A spokesman for the students expects that a thousand such letters HAIR FASHIONS will reach city hall this week. East Lansing - 209 E. Grand River An Ann Arbor official said that 60 student Across From The Union Across From Berkey Hall Downtown - 107 S. Washington Free Parking at Store Side complaints were received Wednesday and that City Parking At Rear Door each one would be investigated. OUR READERS' MIND Complexity ignored The executions in Iraq a Muslim or a Hindu or a and to ment has invariably declared EDITOR S NOTE: Following Arab lands in general.'" Buddhist goes through the the innocence of the persons proclaim that only "Israel and Whose paper? from are excerpts an essay concerned, accused the Arab same experience, no world¬ oversimplification, from what¬ by Fayez Al-Sayegh, a leading its strength" can stand "between wide campaign of vilification spokesman for Palestinean re¬ the design of genocide and its government in question of anti- ever quarter, that constitutes To the Editor: If anyone should be editor. I Jewish practices, and waged of the state that apprehends the greatest disruption of and think it should be one of us fugees and a former philosophy perpetration." him follows; but. if a Jew is I wonder who Rep. Jim Brown. its faithful followers . . professor. The full text of the Within hours, these asser¬ thgugh Dear Prof. Garrison: poses the greatest threat to an R-Okemos. would run OIR that is, a member of the stu¬ abroad a world-wide anti-Arab convicted of. and punished academic community, especial¬ dent body. statement is available from the tions and the several implica¬ for. register my protest newspaper if he were editor? campaign of vilification-only espionage or treason I wish to Arab club. Box 369 East Lansing. tions thereof were echoed by ly "at a time of great tension." Would it be OUR newspaper0 Keep fighting.. to admit some time later that or subversion or sabotage, the Faculty-Student . against Al-Sayegh will be on campus May Israel's faithful followers Joe Vallender then the cries of anti-semitism Advisory Board censure of Ed¬ Ours' only in the sense that 16. No views abroad-i.e. those well known in fact they engaged in espion¬ Barry Gross. each one of us might still be Beaver ton junior printed in "point of age or subversion on behalf fill the air. This is parti¬ ward Brill. view" columns should be con¬ organizations, public figures and In failing to explain why the Barry Gross, asst. professor. paying dollar toward it each of Israel and at the behest of cularly so when the state Dept. of English one Protest strued as the views of the edi¬ publicists, in Western Europe concerned is an Arab state, attribution of "inflammatory term and the United States, who have the Israeli authorities. This is tors. or a state hostile to Israel. remarks" to a "student" rath¬ happened in connection with To the Editor: in the past automatically taken er than to an "outsider" consti¬ their cues from the statements Egypt, Syrai, and Iraq. tutes in itself, grounds for cen¬ Values-the real issue stron- I would like to register a protest about the irres¬ The execution by the Iraqi of Israeli spokesmen and in¬ (Specific examples follow in the text, e.g., the Lavon of This reflects discrimination: two forms discrim¬ sure. and in failing to docu¬ Government, on 27 January 1969. variably used their respective case to resort to language of this ponsible reporting practices of documented in Israel Di¬ ination in favor of the Jew ment the far more serious To the Editor: of your staff writers, and of fourteen Iraqi nationals, of positions and influence to further and sort to make any impression one gest. vol. VI, No. 5 and Vol. VI against the non-Jew; and charge of "biased reporting." To Mr. McGoff: of the State News policy which the Muslim. Christian and Jew¬ the cause of Israel in all their discrimination against Arabs at all! The statement could no. 9,1955. ~ed>. the board has not served the I read with a great deal of allowed the article-reporting ish faiths-all of whom had actions and prolific utterances have been made by any one of in particular and all those who cause of editorial freedom, concern a report regarding your If the cries of innocence are thousands of youths or adults, on an interview with me-- to been convicted of espionage, pertaining to Middle Eastern are critical of Israel in gen¬ however it may be defined. call for the ouster of the MSU and sentenced to death, by an affairs. untrue, then so too are the whether they be black or white, be published (State News.Feb. eral. State News publication from the 12, p.ll). Iraqi court-has promptly sti¬ Let us take first of all the accompanying charges of per (at The demand that a hi posing the matter of edi¬ student or non-student. News secution of Jews, inspired by Michigan Press Assn.. and a About a third of the material mulated widespread comment. assertion that the convicted men Jew be spared, simply be¬ torial freedom in terms of eith¬ statement stories tend to throw an ex¬ Eshkol's statement that "the by Representative is sufficiently misquoted to give Concern for those who were were innocent. cause he is a Jew, the pun¬ er service or disruption and in tremely bad light on those who sole and only crime of these Philip Pittenger calling the stu¬ a very misleading conception executed and for the fate of On what basis can such an ishment which a non-Jew, citing the examples of the man dent disorder story of Feb. 12 dare to differ with the generally nine martyrs consists in their of what alcoholism is all about. those who are reported to be assertion be made by anyone when guilty of the same who shouts fire and the man accepted principles, modes of "filth." (For example, there is little, who has had no access to the being Jews." For, if the con¬ who reports that shout, the speech, and actions. If morals awaiting trial -when it is based victed persons are guilty of crime, receives, • is a plea It is true, of course, that if any, evidence to support the on purely humanitarian grounds, evidence offered to the court board has substituted rhetoric are to be considered (and it for discimination against non- many readers do not consider crimes against the security of notion that problems of drink¬ and expressed by persons or in its secret sessions? It would for argument, false analogy for appears that they are), then the state concerned (and Is¬ the "four letter word" used ing are progressive ones for groups known for the univer¬ seem that no basis exists for analysis. in the article to be proper, perhaps an examination by all rael has invariable admitted (b> Similarly, when an of us of our own values should most people. We live in a drink¬ sality and non-discriminatory such declaration of innocence but then neither do a great the guilt of those whose in¬ Arab state punishes its con¬ ing culture, and some of us- character of their humanitarian save Israel's own assertion that The board has ignored the be discussed, rather than the nocence it earlier proclaim¬ many readers consider the for a variety of reasons, not interests-is understandable. it had not commissioned, hired, victed national. including use of one small word. complexity of the issue involv¬ circumstances surrounding the all of which are related to al¬ On the other hand, expres¬ or authorized any of these men ed), then it cannot be said Jewish nationals, the punish¬ ed. The definitions of "student" I for one applaud the spirit neressiix for such a statement coholism-use alcohol as one sions of concern which reflects to commit espionage on its that their punishment is caused ment is attributed to anti- and "outsider" at a public in¬ of the "State News'' and hope to be proper. This article, and by the fact of their Jewishness. Jewish prejudice. whereas stitution and of editorial free¬ to continue reading their en¬ way of coping with the problems political motivation or inject behalf. There are two other pertin¬ the courage of the "State News" of living i. political issues call for further But. clearly, this is e flimsy when a non-Arab state punishes dom are at least as difficult to to print it. helps in bringing lightening presentations. ent facts in the present instance its convicted Jewish nationals Another third of the article examination. basis for wholesale exoneration- determine as the definition of Mrs. R. L. Allen First: the convicted men includ¬ • to light the real problems which contains material that we never formal disavowal of their con¬ no such prejudice is post¬ East Lansing Principal themes obscenity And it is precisely beset our country, and the need discussed: I presume your re¬ The tone of many of the pol¬ nection with apprehended spies ed Muslims and Christans, as ulated. In this connection, it well as Jews. And, secondly, will be recalled that the first porter either got his notes on itically-inspired comments and or saboteurs is a standard prac¬ seven of the Jews brought to the interview mixed up. or else protests was set by Israeli tice dutifully, though unconvin- spies convicted and executed was working from some of the Premier Levi Eshkol in the cingly. followed by all states trial were acquitted. The port¬ for espionage in peacetime rayal of the trials, convictions, by the United States Govern¬ ACLU stance on Garskof reading material I d him to. What is perhaps referred most un¬ declaration he made, on be¬ half of his government, before Israel's parliament on 27 Janu¬ as a matter of routine, and no greater credibility should be at¬ tributed to this Israeli disclaimer or executions-which non-Jews, and only some of the accused Jews-as manifestations affected ment and Ethel were Jews Rosenberg sentenced to death - - Julius who in fortunate about this business ary 1969 than is generally attributed to were similar disclaimers made by of "anti-Jewish" prejudice, as March 1951 and executed on To the Editor: Dear Prof. O'Kelly: | is that Mr. Molnar's inaccur- After flatly denying the espion¬ similar cir¬ "racialist" phemomena, or as 19 June 1953. Several parties involved in the Gar¬ This is in response to your letter of | ate and misleading work could age charges on which the nine other states under skof case have been quoted in your | have easily been corrected, had Jewish Iraqi nationals were con¬ cumstances. expressions of a "design for Feb. 3 concerning the disclosure of con¬ In its reply of 20 April 1964. paper as following recommendations of • he followed through on his pro- victed and describing them as Another reason genocide," is therefore outright fidential information in Prof. Bertram the Department of State de¬ the American Civil Liberties Union, es¬ : mise to let me see the article "complete fabrications," Esh¬ There is, however, another groundless slander. Garskof's personnel file. clared: pecially with regard to the disclosure of prior to publication. I consider kol announced: "The sole reason why objective observers Major implications It should be clear that It is our opinion that personnel infor¬ the • information. However, those recom¬ •: this to be irresponsible report- and only crime of these nine should be specially wary of The politically-motivated mation is confidential and should not be Department of State does not mendations have never been made ex¬ •: ing practice. accepting at its face value Is¬ uproar against the executions made public. Information which the de¬ martyrs consists in their being regard the Jewish people' plicit publicly One factual point for the Jews." rael's announcement of the in¬ in Irag has several impli¬ partment does not choose to make avail¬ nocence of the Iraqis in ques¬ cations, of which two are of concept as a concept of inter¬ record. I am not affiliated with From this starting point. Enclosed is a copy of our reply (Feb. able to Prof. Garskof (such as confiden¬ - the utmost gravity. national law." tion. In the course of the past 4) to a request from Prof. O'Kelly for tial letters) certainly cannot be released j: Rutgers University (although Eshkol proceeded to say that ACLU guidelines about release of con¬ :• I was until the beginning of "the executions in Baghdad are twenty years, in every instance The first grave implication publicly in any form whatsoever. in which an Arab government is the belief that a Jew. For Last Minute fidential information which were a part One permissible way to proceed would this academic yean. I am further proof, if such proof of the psychology department's person¬ be to present Prof. Garskof with a letter :• right here at MSU. on the faculty is still needed, of the sim¬ has apprehended, and Arab simply because he is a Jew. Spring-Break Travel courts have tried, covicted, and should enjoy special immunity nel decision. To quote Prof. O'Kelly, containing a list of those facts and rea¬ :: of the Psychology Dept ilarity between the Arab and call "We are concerned with the protection of which central to and support Robert A. Zucker Nazi regimes:" to postulate sentenced to death for espion¬ against charges of crime or sons were Asst. professor. an official "design of genocide" age or subversion, one or more guilt, or must be granted COLLEGE TRAVEL Prof. Garskof's rights, but we are also the department's decision. The letter Dept. of Psychology in Iraq: to castigate the world Jewish nationals of the country special impunity when his 351-6010 concerned with the reputation and integ¬ should also advise Prof. Garskof that he EDITOR'S NOTE: There was and all its institutions" for hav¬ concerned, the Israeli govern¬ guilt is proven. If a Christian rity of our department." I hope you will may elect to make said letter public. print our reply in full. Furthermore, we see no objection to the :• apparently a misunderstanding ing "failed to muster the nec¬ If the psychology department were to department's publicly stating that it had :j between Professor Zucker and essary determination in this mat- follow our recommendation and present the State News. The State News ter-and the matter of Jews in given Prof. Garskof a letter contain¬ Prof. Garskof with a list of reasons for ing the' reasons for its action. This would apologizes for any part of the its action, these reasons could then form misunderstanding which is its McDonel Hall Presents protect the reputation and integrity of the basis for a hearing before an impar¬ the department. fault. The reporter recalls no >. promise to show the article FRANCIS X tial third party not previously involved Sincerely yours, in the decision, provided that the reasons Harold Hart, Chairman of the Lansing •: to anyone before publication, AND THE BUSHMEN > and the material quoted in the are not acceptable to Prof. Garskof and Branch American Civil Liberties Union I FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 21, 1969? article was in fact discussed that he would request such a hearing. 7 9 p.m. -12 50£ Admission} in the interview. Professor Lawrence I. O'Kelly, Chairman Department of Psychology Free, Fast Delivery and LIVE A LITTLE... 300 OFF "Come On, React!" ■ to all Ho!mes Hall orders on 2/20 '69 with this coupon CALL 351-7100 The Fireballs DOMINO'S PIZZA ■ Mi. MaAiuii HAIR FASHIONS NEW HAIRPIECE PRICES Oriental and European Hair Cascades dark shades from $12.95 light shades from $15.00 (Reg. price $35) FALLS all shades from $39 Wiglets all shades from $9.95 Stretch Wigs from 39.95 COME ON, REACT! • LIGHT IN THE WINDOW • IT'S EASY FOR ME TWO LOCATIONS WOMAN HELP ME • MR. REEVES • GOOD LOVIN'S SO HARD TO FIND GET OUT OF MY LIFE WOMAN • LONELY TOO LONG Spartan Shopping Center 332-4522 LITTLE BITTY BUCKET • LOUIE, GO HOME 914 Southland 0 Lansing just north of Logan & Holmes by Yankee Store On Atco Rerords 882-2700 Send for FREE catalogue: ATLANTIC RECORDS, 1841 Broadway, New York, N.Y. 10023 Thursday, February 20, 1969 £ Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Radio series to seal * Shaw, Snyder communications gap consider go By JAY HILLIS an administrator. A WKAR gin spring term." a spokesman moderator would preside. for the group said, isn't a rebel attempt " A By ANN HODGE This problem in the plan, weekly 'Meet the Press" Two men's residence halls to create a coed dorm." she Rod Slutzky. president of style radio program has been Membership of the panel Don Stevens, chairman of the considering coed living- said. ' It's only a matter of Snyder views the plan as a proposed as a new channel of would vary from week to week MSU Board of Trustees, will are communication between stu- in order to assure a broad appear on the first program. not with men and women in breaking up the tripled rooms total living-learning experi- representation of student opin- separate wings, however, but in Phillips." ence for Justin Morrill Coll- study grQup members believe on separate floors. A committee of R.A.'s. ege students. He disagrees that lon that the series' success de- Floors in Snyder Hall, tra¬ advisors, management and stu- the change would be beneficial The second portion of the pends on the support of the ditionally a men's dorm, might dents are now discussing the for the students because it would broadcast, the final 10 or 15 student body, be open to women from Phillips change and expects to make a cut down on their, contact vith the proposal after studying the minutes, would be live. During ..We have designed a com_ Hall in the future if the halls decision next month. There is other majors problem of how to improve stu- this period the moderator would munication channfel which, we decide the plan will work possibility that the plan could Shaw residents spurred, talk dent body -administration ask questions phoned in by the feel can serve as an effective A committee in Shaw Hall is be implemented by fall term about making the hall coed communication. audience during the taped por- Julie Jenkins, means of communicating ideas currently considering making president of when 70 per cent of the men The proposal calls for a ti°n.of the Pr°gram. and the and aHm,n,ctratnr h*m£' ,ntPr- positions. The channel will the hall coed, with the possi¬ Phillips, said the halls would reported they wanted this series of weekly, hour-long administrator being inter- be open, however, only as long bility that the upper half of the become almost an exclusive change on a survey last spring broadcasts over WKAR radio viewed would respond, as it is used. To be trulv val- dorm would house women with living unit for Justin Morrill term. men living in the lower half. students. Jan Blakslee. head advisor of each broadcast consisting of two "We are planning an initial ^w!dely used The plan for Phillips and Phillips now houses about 30 East Shaw, said he has been in¬ parts. broadcast for the first week in * th.e,.stufe.nt bod>'' a. mera' Snyder was first suggested dur- women not enrolled in Justin formed by residence hall dir¬ The first part. pre-t£ _ March this term. This pilot her of the study group said. ing the Justin Morrill College Morrill College. In Snyder the ectors that the idea should be would feature a student panel program will help us correct Several administrators, in- planning weekend in Januray. ation is half and half. presented in a package with an of four representatives of cam- problems so that a regular eluding President Hannah, Judy Amstutz. head advisor It the two dorms combine it academic program for the pus groups asking questions of series of broadcasts can be- Vice President for Student in Phillips, thinks that the plan would make the University sit dorm. Affairs Milton B. Dickerson Oh-oh spaghettios wo„uld solve the problem of up and take notice." Miss Jen¬ 'He said the hall is consider¬ and Associate Dean of Stu¬ overcrowding in the hall. She kins said. "It would also help ing a program associated with dents Eldon Nonamaker. have Spaghetti kills! Well, it depends on how you make it. said -it would also compensate promote the idea of commun¬ University College to sponsor Great Issues expressed support of the pro- Graffiti style, maybe it does. But then again, have you ever seen a dead trash can? for the ratio of one man to two women in Justin Morrill Coll¬ ity living." She predicted that parental informal dialogue with profess¬ ors in the hall. Hannah said. "One of the State News photo by Eric Wehner ege reaction would be the main "It's a dream that would en¬ Muskie Maytalk problems as in many in this University, other areas of our hance education." he said. just a matter of time and getting It's Sen Edmund Muskie. D- speech has not been finalized. society, is a lack of adequate communication. The proposed PRINCETON PROTESTS the necessary people involved. " Blakslee said the building is more suited for housing women Maine, will be the final Other lectures in the series series of broadcasts, as ex- in the upper half and men in the speaker in this year's Great include: plained to me by members of Air youth fares eliminated Issues Lecture series. -Pierre Salinger. press the study group, appears to be lower half When this idea was presented Approval for Muskie's speech secretary to the late John F. a useful step in the right di- to Shaw men on last year's sur¬ and others in the series was giv- Kennedy. March 6. rection and I will be happy to en by the ASMSU Board Tues- -Clark Kerr, former presi- cooperate." vey. 61 per cent were in favor stantiallv similar services." of it. day night. dent of the University of Calif- By BARB JONES Arthur Present. CAB exam- the Princeton group said. iner. ruled against the fares be- Blakslee thinks the major Muskie's speech will be part ornia at Berkeley. April 3. and The broadcasters at WKAR State News Staff Writer The group at Princeton does of Spring Carnival Weekend. -Ralph Nader. self-pro- have enthusiastically supported le elimination of airline cause he said they were in vio- gaids the general welfare of problem in making Shaw coed not believe that services for millions of young people c-annot May 22-25. The date of his claimed guardian of consumer's the proposal. Station Manager youth and young adult fares lation of section 404 of the Fed- full and half fare is the obligation to the existing rights, May 5 in conjunction Richard D. Estell encouraged has prompted a group of Prince- eral Aviation Act of 1958 which passengers are be permitted. " residents He said many men similar to bus services because The CAB has agreed to review For Last Minute with Greek Week the studv group to develop the ton University students to start prohibits unreasonable" dis- like the all-male identity of lience of flying the ruling and the legality of Petitioning for positions on idea. Lyle Haskin. WKAR pro- a nationwide campaign to save crimination in fares. The case 'of the Shaw Spring-Break Travel without reservations and the youth fares and will begin hear- John Englei. president of the Great Issues committee has gram director, drew attention the fare. was initiated by Trailwavs Bus been extended to Monday. Pet- to the need for a balanced The fares were supposed to Co. possibility of being - bumped" ings on Feb. 26 The board must East Shaw said that Shaw's all- itions may be picked up in the in flight. Also if there is a be convinced, the Princeton male environment is unrealis- COLLEGE TRAVEL presentation of controver- be discontinued Feb. 20 by an For discrimination in fares to ASMSU offices and returned to sial issues, and discussed pra- action of the Civil Aeronautics exist, passengers must be char- shortage of meals, half-fare group asserts, that students tic because it doesn't exist 351-6010 passengers are not served and 313 Student Services Bldg. ctical problem areas. Board (CAB' ged different amounts for "sub- across the country are upset by anywhere outside the Univer- half-fares are not available dur¬ the ruling and that half-fare ser- sity. ing periods of peak traffic. 'ices are unlike those offered The students issued a state¬ full-fare passengers. ment saying: It is obvious to The group urges everyone con¬ Impatient judge Ma Bell us that the charges of discrim¬ cerned to write a letter m cir¬ ination have been trumped up by the bus companies in an at¬ culate a petition and mail it to the Civil Aeronautics Board, spies defendant tempt to discourage young peo¬ c o Mr John H. Crooker Jr . seated in jury ple from flying and to force Chairman. 1825 Connecticut them to travel bv bus. Ave.. NW Washington. D C . AKRON. Ohio iAP»-The judge, impatient because he cculd not find the defendant transmits: ir an auto suit case, decided COGS pro t j start without him. Then Butcher in he a spotted Clarence crowd of 14 people. Where have you been"1" he changes asked Butcher. " Sitting back there with all those people." Butcher replied visors. Because of ths limited Judge Edward Mahonev of At its regular meeting the Summit County Common Pleas Graduate Council heard a access he feels graduate stu¬ pro¬ Court declared a mistrial Tues¬ dents should have an intermed¬ posal ffom Walt Chappell. day. president of the Council of Grad¬ iary to the judicial board. Those people were the jui y. uate Students (COGSi. that called for a change in the Ac¬ ademic make it uate students. Freedom Report more relevent to grad¬ to ASMSU picks junior cil he Chappell did not ask he for did say immediate coun¬ action, but to head Homecoming he would present a definite proposal at their John R. Phillips. Okemos to whip up school spirit next meeting. junior, was approved general during Homecoming weekend Chappell said, in an interview chairman of Homecoming His first duty as homecoming after the meeting, that for near¬ Tuesday night by the ASMSU general chairman will be to ly a year many people involved Board. pick his executive board-his with the amending procedures Phillips is ending a year as executive assistants and com¬ of the report have been con¬ president of the Union Board. mittee chairman. cerned with its lark of appli¬ His approval came after he cation to graduate students was selected Monday night by Although most work on home¬ the coming will not begin until late But. he said, little action Homecoming Chairman Selection committee headed spring term the executive board has been taken to correct the ' will meet regularly early in the matter. Because of this inac¬ by Jim White, general chair¬ term to determine basic poli- tion. Chappell said, man of Homecoming "68. "in the future COGS will take a strong¬ "Homecoming can be im¬ Petitioning for executive er stand on this matter. proved with new ideas and a Chappell said that he envis¬ lot of work. "Phillips said bof<( scheduled . to close originally Friday. ioned the Graduate Student Af¬ Tuesday night. •I. "It ch™,iHni shouldn't will be extended to be allowed to remain Tuesday. fairs Sub-committee of the coun¬ stag¬ cil as a sort of board of re¬ nant." Anyone interested in these view for graduate students Phillips hopes to get new positions can pick up a petit- brought before the Student- ideas from creative workers ion in the ASMSU offices, third and contact with other schools. floor of the Student Services Faculty Judiciary. He cited that the judicial He feels a study of homecom¬ Bldg . and return it to 313 Stu¬ ings at other schools can pro¬ dent Services Bldg. before 5 p.m. bojd is currently made up of four undergraduates and seven duce new perspectives and new Tuesday. faculty. This, he said, is not trial by one's peers. He said that ASMSU has suggested that graduate students be added to Shaw Hall bulletin c/uesJ the judicial board. But Chap¬ pell feels this would not great¬ ly improve the situation. His greatest concern is with Riders, give your the 5.000 masters candidates Shaw Hall's Ride Board wants gan or other states can fill out who are only at MSU for one to help students with and without form cards and place them on or two years. Chappell contends transportation to get together. the Shaw bulletin board. that their only contact these Students wanting passengers Bill Peplinski. North Branch students have with the Academ¬ and students needing week-end freshman: Don Taylor, Louis- ic Report is through their ad¬ rides to any locations in Michi- ville, Kv freshman; and Manny . Echeverilla, graduate adviser for West Shaw Hall, came up Student with the idea for Ride Board early in December. Typewriters Cleaned and Lubricated Ken Walker. Hazel Park freshman, decorated the board All Makes with the theme "Give you thumb a rest". In the center a fat Manual Portables - $7.50 man in gym shorts and sneak¬ Electric Portables - $12.50 ers hold a large map of Michi¬ gan divided into seven zones rree Pick-Up and Delivery for rides. The Ride Board be American Business Machines in the east and west lobbies of can seen 339-2654 5923 Boislle Dr. Haslett Shaw Hall. Thursday, February 20, 1969 7 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Fellini's 'Cabiria' depicts Film lovers, unite! MSU may night with the lady called Ca- biria (7:30 p.m. in 109 An- umentary to prostitute's despair from the straight TV-type doc- each, and most of them operate bers," in an effort to pro- mind-blowing 0n such a high level of quality pogandize for birth-control, sents the tragic world of the female impersonator with a Bldg. this Friday and Saturday, and March 1. 2 and 3: and in offer only three cinema cour¬ thony). psychedelic stuff. There are that one is stunned by the pro- becomes a memorable anti-sex brilliantly planned compactness Conrad Auditorium Feb. 24. 26 ses, but extra-curricularly. the epic. "7362 " outdoes any pre- and sensitivity, and 27. Tickets, priced at $1.50. Experimental flicks comedies, surrealist fantasies, fessionalism in them. campus situation is better than As for your upcoming week parodies, "message"' films and vious attempts at psvchedelics ... , are available now in the Union ever. well, I have suggestions even abstract art experiments. "Orange" makes the peeling in a graphic hallucination that . ,Genf , 6, C„°T Ticket Office and at the door ple,e showings at 7 and 9:30 . . . In addition to the usual week¬ for that, too. There are 17 films in all, of a fruit into an amazingly will make your eyes bleed. And for all performances. end film showings (which will The recent explosion of film- ranging from 3 to 16 minutes sexual experience. "num- "Behind Every Good Man" pre- P ni., in 158 Natural Resources be discussed tomorrow), we consciousness among students now have two extra threats, one has led. as you must know by tonight and one for the upcoming now, to the emergence of a great week. The first, Federico Felli¬ ni's "The Nights of Cabiria," many student film makers, DISPLAYS SCHMALTZ whose biggest problem is simply represents some of the finest the lack of distribution services film making of the decade past. for their works. The second, a collection of l Then, late last year, a UCLA Ballet America shorts under the title, "Gene¬ desperate longing for affection grad student named Richard sis I," provides an exciting leads her into a heartbreaking Childs gave them a gigantic series of betrayals. sampling of where the cinema break. He convinced Martin rests today. Technically. "Cabiria" rep¬ Ransohoff. resents a transition period in president of the For Fellini fans and. for that matter, for anyone who en¬ Fellini's career, for although ™mways Production let him create a Filmways sub- Co.. to sequence. The whole "requiem - - his plot retains the parable¬ hard joys fine films, the MSU Film Ballet America is a Society presentation of "The like simplicity of the earlier jidiary devoted to the distri- bution of high-quality student company to criticize. Their for a gunfighter" number was a little embarrassing, if not sac- "La Strada," Fellini was al¬ Nights of Cabiria" offers wel¬ films. youth and vitality rates an A come relief from mid-week ready experimenting with the plus, but so does their schmaltz. religious. The resting company, called baroque sets and lighting effects "Genesis." will The first act varied between tedium. Starring Giulietta present its first Unfortunately, the calibre and Masina (Mrs. Fellini). the and the episodic structure which originally of their material is a slow Agnes de Mille expres¬ to make his next two fea¬ collection of experimental films sions and raucus Michael Kidd waifish woman whose haunting were to the MSU public from tomor¬ flat zero. face dominated such other Fell¬ tures. "La Dolce Vita"' and barnstormers. Both are lovely row night through March 3. ini films as "Juliet of the Spri- "8'''2." so metaphysically spec¬ "Big Country'" was the title and exciting in small doses. tacular. The films, themselves are But then after intermission we its" and "La Strada." "Cab¬ of this year's cantata-like pre¬ iria.'' the film unravels the In other words. I wholeheart- uniformly excellent, represent- sentation. It was a montage of were treated to "The Great simple tale of a prostitute whose edly suggest that you spend to- ing every type of film short dance, songs and narration sa¬ Awakening" of Americanesque luting the hardy lot that built religion, complete with baptism this country. But though the and Jew's harp. This meant music may have belonged to that \*ire saw twenty five min- Soloist Docksey displays frontier America, the dancing surely did not. That part was just European ballet, as Ameri¬ canized by Broadway and Holly- cers. vats *ho of nearly drowned in hokey choreography, Their ages (16-22) and years of "\es of hillbillies shaking the blues away. classical training were enough classical uses of trumpet Not that ters" have our two "dance cen¬ short-changed us. but to make their two hours of spin- ning and running around palat- able. So the dancing seemed ^ew Orieans, dors where ftowSTven- sing lullabyes on streets ch0ked with drv ice vapors. Then By JIM ROOS bone) in a jaunt through some trumpet, its neo-Baroque writ- T, the dancers broke int0 swing- an festive Baroque music. much better than that. "Big Country" lost track of a pioneer "Highland Fling' White two-step, and a State News Reviewer everything else. Within the first was well flavored with energy Peter Genarro tap dance. It was Though the trumpet is the king of jazz and swing, its solo i«r:f waLVapr;rna Bankelsangerlieder" ( of un¬ great aplomb, z: ^ deftly handling five minutes it was obvious that we were watching a hy¬ and great gymnastics. jazzy all right, but the mood was less Fats Waller than Ted Mack. opportunities in the realm of the frequent rhythm changes classical music are more lim¬ known authorship) and "Can- cnat give the piece its slightly Swing your brid of Agnes de Mille's "Ok¬ lahoma!"' and Michael Kidd's But the narrator was neither ited. Occassionally the first zona Bergamasca" by the 17th contemporary sound. This is dusty nor fun. Suiting his ma¬ Burch Mann, dire'lor and century composer Samuel Sche- The "Americana" motif of Tuesday night's Ballet "Seven Brides for Seven Broth¬ desk of a major symphony or¬ the sort of music that shows terial. which would make choreographer, has an impres- chestra will be asked to man America performance was expressed In the style ers." (which will be seen on "Death Valley Days" proud, he sive dance background and a the solo spot for an evening Though it was originally the trumpet off well, and Dock- of an old-time square dance. local TV. Channel 7. at 7:00 spoke like an adolescent in a fine troupe of dancers to work of concertos by Haydn or written as a study piece for sey made the most of it. State News photo by Mike Marhanka p.m. on Friday) Both are great, Christmas pageant. He turned with. Her ideas on the mixture standard Americana. Jolivet. But, more often the the serious true-to-life hardship 0f dance forms are good, but But what is Americana, any¬ orchestral trumpeter must be stories into instant soapsuds. what results looks like an Amer¬ way? Ballet America gave us content to shine through the orchestral fabric of a Respighi PIANO RECITAL its version with 3 singers. 16 The light was also inept, and ican ballet confined to the stage of tlje forties and the screen of dancers and a narrator tone poem, or be heard from a distance in the nostaglic, heroic The singers were bright and il Provided more two of the evening's theMiss appalling moments. One fifties. Mann's aim is to mold tuneful, often capturing a dusty Style fails to match works utterance of a Beethoven "Leon- folk spirit. Still, they were no was the narrator's voice say- ballet and folk forms into a ore" Overture. Peter. Paul and Mary. And. ir; ing "Indians!" at which point breed of dance that everybody Not so last Monday night in fact, their sounds tended to de¬ the Music Auditorium. Trum¬ fer the tract from the more important peter Joe Docksey was pres¬ By JIM ROOS points in the Beethoven and or Bach, may be totally uni- stylistic mayonnaise periods action at stage center enting his Senior Recital and State News Reviewer Bach was her stylistically diomatic for Brahms and Schu- music of different More exciting were the dan- solo display was the order of Pianist Ellen Larson pre¬ correct, non-legato touch, and 5ert simply will not do. the evening. sparing use of the sustaining sented a senior recital in On the first half of the pro¬ the Music Auditorium last pedal. However, she did not Hopefully, in times ahead Miss GO BAHAMAS gram Docksey performed a Con- seem to realize that what is Larson may come to realize »m=hi^ t $j79°° isager and a Concerto by the fortunatelv one - dimensional 20th century English composer John Addison (not to be con¬ character. The opening Beethoven "son¬ Dining out is March 16-23 fused with the 17th century ata No. 6 in F Major" received a digitally facile performance, 'IN'... At Freeport Inn Grand Bahama Island composer of the same name). crisply articulated. Accents only Hotel with 100% students Both works have certain sim¬ ilarities, such as muted slow were nicely placed, inner JIM'S the voices balanced well against movements and pleasant crafts- the melodic lines, and phrasing Greek Food Internationally known happy hour manlike-rather than inspired- Featured Every • musical content. But the writing well throughout, unlimited liquor 50£ night for the solo instrument is ef- The Bach "G Major Toccata Saturday Evening • fectively virtuosic, and Dock- that followed started out with • Dinner I Price includes round trip ajrfare sey played with a strong, re- a sharply outlined Allegro, Favorites 2 sonant tone, good control and ' however, in the Adagio Hotel, Trans, Transfers & Gratuities well articulated tonguing-ex- Larson began to reveal some of Nightly e cept for a few blurred runs here the major deficiencies in her and there playing. One of these is a lack Call Mike Irvine or Bill Cropf Musically, too he seems to be of tonal volume and shading and 351-6707 351-8216 an assured instrumentalist, yet ^ dyna^ one could have imagined a more [AN PET A PIECE or call JACK LAPELLE atmospheric, and sustained re¬ 332-3516 Ct j Stuaentours of - ED 2-0841 ndering of the Adagio Misterioso 1 of the Addison Concerto in part¬ Grosse Polnte 886-0844 icular. In this regard, however, he was not helped much by his piano accompanist, Winni- Sherburn. who seemed fred more preoccupied with playing McGraw-Edison notes than finding meaning in the music. The program second was a half of the total delight, Power System Division though. Docksey was joined first by a four-man brass ensemble A national manufacturer of electrical distribut¬ (Alan Moore, trumpet; Phil¬ ion and transmission products will be on campu lip Stanton, French Horn; Stew¬ art Taylor, Tenor Trombone; and Jeffrev Price. Bass Trom- FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1969 ■ CANADIAN-AMERICAN ■ To interview degree candidates in; ■ CONFERENCE J S YOUTH In ■ ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING J POLITICS ■ MECHANICAL ENGINEERING ■ SATURDAY ■ ■ PANELS-WORKSHOPS * S FOR MORE ■ or positions in field sales, design and de- ■ INFORMATION " elopment, and production engineering. j 355-2350 ■ OPENINGS ARE FOR CANONSBURG, PA., •••#•••••• ft Watch Friday's # The power systems division is an autonomous member of the McGraw-E dison Company, with ft State News # headquarters located In Canonsburg, Pa., • for • eighteen miles southwest of Pittsburgh. ft T remendous ft ft Offer From # •SEAKET'Sj • Pizza Parlor • & Ye Public House ® • Contact your to placement office arrange an interview. Thursday, February 20, 1969 g Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan SPORTS Frosh cagers MIKE MANLEY 2 Confidence two Rv mike manley By MIKE MANLEY Detroit Magri has Losing Magri Losine prep has forced forced team but foes they run exception¬ exception- Vern Minton Vern Minton atat the the forwards forwards. to cage State News Sports Writer the Wolverines to resort to a ally well." MSU Frosh Coach Gutkowski has been a tower Bob Nordmann said. Our of strength for the Spartans A pair of former Detroit small quick team, emphasiz¬ on Watching MSU play its last four basketball games, it is possible biggest problem will be try¬ offense and defense, averaging high school stars will resume ing speed rather than strength. to summarize their success in one word. their basketball warfare tonight U-M will probably start 6-4 ing to keep them from break¬ 16 points and 15 rebounds in Confidence. when the MSU freshmen tangle Matt Anderson from Detroit ing." the two games. Minton is av¬ The whole team is playing like they can't be beat. During with arch-rival Michigan in Ann Southeastern at center. He is MSU will open with the same eraging 8.5. It should be a close, tight the first part of the season, the Spartans were unsure of Arbor. Game time is 8 p.m. also a familiar face to Simp¬ lineup that beat Notre Dame. themselves, primarily because Jphn Benington was changing son, who faced Anderson many 101-80. last week. ballgame." Nordmann said. Ralph Simpson and U-M " I think both teams will be his lineup more often than Tiny Tim changes his name. standout Lamont King began times in the City League Simpson and Gary Pryzbylo. But all that has changed. Benington finally hit upon a com¬ Wayne Grabiec, 6-5, and Eric who is averaging 12.5 in the two very much up for the game. their court combat back in the bination that began to click. MSU has scrambled into third Ford, 6-4, will open at for¬ freshman contests, will start Many of these boys played City League several years ago. against each other in high place in the Big Ten with wins over Michigan. Illinois and wards with King and 5-8 speed¬ at guard. Bill Cohrs. hitting Simpson was starring for Per¬ school and should really go at Iowa not to mention Notre Dame. You could have got some ster Dave Hart at the guards. eight points a game, will be the shing while King was leading an center with Ron Gutkowski and each other down in Ann Arbor good odds at the beginning of the season that they would "Michigan is not a real big outstanding Northwestern High never even see the first division. team. The two teams usually So what has caused this turnabout in the Spartan basketball met for the league title. fortunes? Who has been responsible? Report details ABA draft It should be quite a match¬ It is impossible to pin it down to one individual, but the shadow of Lee Lafayette seems: to standout over the rest. up because both players have been outstanding in previous - He's doing everything that can be done on a basketball frosh games. Simpson is av¬ court. He scores, rebounds, blocks shots and smothers his eraging just under 40 points in opponents with excellent defense. Oh yes. he even brings No. 1 pick, Alcindor,to NY his two games while King fired the ball up court against the press. In the last four games, in 29 as Michigan beat the Lee has played the best ball of his three-year career. Toledo freshmen, 77-70, earl¬ He has destroyed just about every one he has encountered ier this month. this year. Twice he has put Michigan's Rudy Tomjanovich ST. PAUL, Minn. (UPI)- Neal Walk of Florida and Los California, and Oakland. Jack in his back pocket At this point Lee is playing better than King, a 6-1 guard-forward, The St. Paul Pioneer Press Angeles Sammy Hill of West Gillispie. Montana State. any big man in the conference. is extremely strong. He is a Texas State, the newspaper said. Houston opened the second Wednesday published a list of But one man doesn't make a winning team. Ask Pete hard-driving type of player who players it said it had learned Other first-round choices round, according to the Pioneer Maravich of LSI' if you don t believe me is in constant motion on the were chosen in a two-round named by the Pioneer Press: Press, by choosing Steve Mix. Tim Bograkos came off the bench down at Indiana and court. Dallas. Tom Hagan. V'anderbilt; Toledo: New York picked Bob I've got it! had secret draft conducted Satur¬ New Orleans. Rusty Clark. Arnzen. Notre Dame, and Los took over the reins of the Spartans. He is the leader that The Wolverines have day by the American Basketball Benington spent halt the year looking for. an eligiblity problem much Assoc. (ABA). North Carolina: Kentucky Dave Angeles took Bobby Smith. Tul¬ Bograkos is playing with the confidence of a senior, MSU freshman Bill Cohrs flips a rebound out two New York, Scholz. Illionis: Miami. Bill and Bob Wierman, Wash¬ like the Spartans this winter. winning a coin sa. directing the offense, playing hard-nosed defense, and above teammate Vern Minton (44) during the Spartan Coach George Pomey lost his flip for first choice, chose Bunting. North Carolina: Min¬ ington State. all he refuses to panic under pressure % frosh's recent win over Western Michigan. promising 6-10 center Ernie UCLA All-America Lew Al- nesota, Luther Racklev. Xavier Then New Orleans chose Hai - And he hasn t been afraid to shoot. Against Iowa, he missed State News photo by Lance Lagoni Magri because of grades. cindor and Houston then took of Ohio; Denver. Bob Presley. ley Swift. East Tennessee State; his first two shots from the deep corner but he was open a Kentucky Herman Gilliam. Pur¬ minute later for the same shot, took it and hit it. Confidence. due: Miami Larry Cannon. La He runs the show on the court and Benington couldn't be hap- Salle Indiana Willie McCarter. EYE BIG TEN CROWN Drake Minnesota Bob Whitmore. Notre Dame: Denver Bob Port- Benington is getting outstanding play in the corners from Jim Gibbons and Bernie Copeland. Creighton. and Oakland Ron Tay¬ Gibbons, in the loss here to Michigan, fell victim to the ready lor. Southern California, the Skaters zone, hitting only 2 of 15 shots. But when the teams met story said. two weeks later in Ann Arbor. Gibbons came right back and demolished the Wolverine zone by canning 10 of 14 shots. Confidence. By PAM BOYCE State News Sports Writer ently in fifth place in the WCHA with an 8-8-2 record in league sophomore Rick Houtteman. Houtteman, a St. Clair from gan Minnesota and if Michi¬ and Wisconsin split this Bucks A lot handles his of the credit players. belongs to Benington and the way he The MSU hockey team eyes a play and an overall 11-11-3 rec¬ Shores sophomore, scored weekend," he said. After his 20 point game against Wisconsin. Harrison Stepter As it now stands, Wiscon¬ Big Ten title as it meets the Minnesota Gophers at the Spar¬ tan Ice Arena this weekend. ord. MSU stands in sixth place in the WCHA with a 6-7-1 rec¬ ord, 10-12-1. the ver winning goal for the Spar¬ tans in the 2-1 upset in Den¬ He also scored his first sin of is a half a game ahead the Spartans which does not belong to the Wisconsin, right began to press. The harder he tried, the worse the results. So Benington sat him on the bench, figuring the pressure would be less if h*> came into the game after it had started In two previous encounters goal of the season the night The move worked to perfection. Or at least Stepter is making the Gophers Alcindor Two wins over in Minneapolis the Spartans de¬ before in the 9-4 loss to the WCHA, meets fourth-place his coach look like a genius could put MSU in first place in the Big Ten conference, ahead feated the Gophers. 2-1, and Pioneers. Michigan this weekend. Since the win over Michigan that Started the streak. Stepter tied them. 2-2. The Spartans "He did a fine job and Ken Anstey continues to lead MILWAIKEE 1UPI1 The has been playing his best ball in two years His hustle and of present first-place team have overall record of played well for us," Bessone the Spartans in scoring with defense have helped put the Spartans in their present position. Wisconsin, Minnesota is pres- an general manager and the presi¬ said. "His goal was a good 29 points, scoring two goals Confidence 19-56-4 against Minnesota. dent of the Milwaukee Bucks Coach Amo Bessone was breakaway shot that ended and one assist against Denver. Many reasons, from many differentisources. have been offered strongly denied Wednesday that Bill Watt is in second place for the recent success of MSI'. extremely pleased with his up winning the game." they had won the National Bas¬ team's win over second-place Bessone called goalie Bob with 21 points, followed by ketball Assoc. draft rights to If you listen to Asst. Coach Gus Ganakas, he'll tell you JEWELRY SUNGLASSES Denver praised Saturday night and the performance of Johnson the team's outstand¬ ing player in Friday's loss to Nelson DeBenedet points and Bob DeMarco and Pat Russo, each of whom with have 16 rTATP Lew Alcindor. A spokesman for NBA Presi that the streak is due to his luek> blue tie that he the past four games. has worn POSTERS the Pioneers. RICK HOUTTEMAN dent Walter Kennedy, in a If you listen to me tand never make that mistake* 1 11 prob¬ 15 points. INCENSE McDonel Hall presents: "If I had to pick an out¬ statement, called the report of ably tell you that it started when I began going on road trips PIPES standing player that night it Sophomore Randy Sokoll is the early NBA draft ridic with the club The only one I missed since the first of the FRANCIS X in fifth place with 13 points, CANDLES would be Johnson," the coach year was Indiana when the Spartans got beat AND THE BUSHMEN followed by Mike and Gerry EARRINGS said. "He did a marvelous There will be no deter¬ But no matter who you listen to. sooner or later the word * FLOWERS ^FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1969^ job, but our defense wasn't DeMarco who have and Bob Pattullo, eight points apiece. Volleyball mination of Alcindor's draft "confidence'' will crop up You can sense the change in basketball fortune everywhere, ET ALL [9 p.m. - 12 50< Admission j clearing the puck from in Goalie Rick Duffet returned MSU Volleyball club will seek status until such time as the stands, at a press luncheon. * ru SAT. NOON-6 front of the goal." to first place in the WCHA to maintain its unbeaten string last place teams in each divi¬ in the locker room, in the Bessone said there will be ahead of Denver's Gerry sion of the NBA participate in But nowhere is it more noticeable fffan in the press box. ^Last Chance Sale For Last Minute Spring-Break Travel >a lot at stake for the Spar¬ tans this weekend. Powers, Duffet has a 2.4 tonight against a team organiz¬ ed by the Mott Foundation from a flip of the coin to determine which has the first selection nade terms of how J ^ Chumley's 124 w. Gd. Rvr. COLLEGE TRAVEL call We will be first in the Big Ten if we can take two goals-against Johnson in WCHA play. has a average. 4.3 average Bob Flint. Game time will be S p.m. in Gym 216 of Women's IM Bldg. Spectators are welcome. of the those 1969 last college draft-once place teams have ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■a ■ thru SAT. NOON-6 ■ you When the coulJ have Spartans were 2-4, the pick of ~ finally been determined." ABOVE GIBSON'S any seat up »'>>ere but now even 351-6010 2milesnorth S F ARRINGS J the Detroit .ane s are starting WINNER Northside ' Drive-In " uc ofUS-27 482-7409 •WFil 30-50% OFF 124 W. Gd. Rvr J ■ to send men to cover Spartans. the TOMORROW ■Chumley': " Above Gibson's ■ [That's when you know things Jet To Europe . Best Picture of the Year. M?3/ 3 MILE5 EASTOFMS.U. [ -New York Film Critics J 3-Colo" Hits PHONE ED2-I042." THIS SUMMER TONIGHT ONLY! P6TeROTOOL€ katharinc H6PBURN CELLULOID 1 PRESENTS." FEDERICO DETROIT-LONDON NOMINATED FELUNl'S 8 weeks. . . .$233 FOR SEVEN "THE NIGHTS OF GOLDEN GLOBE 12 weeks. . . .$204 AWARDS INCLUDING "BEST PICTURE" CKBIRIA' Starring G-lul/effa M^Sina SIGN UP UNION BOARD OFFICE SPARTAN TWIN WEST ONir / 109AWTHOwy Tickets On Performances & Prices Sale Now At ALL SEATS RESERVED MHA-WIC PRESENTS You Can Wed. & Sat. at 2:30 $2.00 Box Office 1 p.m. to 9 p.m. On Us... To Mon. thru Sat. at 8:30 Sun. at 2:30 & 7:30 SPECIAL GROUP RATES CALL MR. SORENSEN $2.50 $2.50 Mail Orders >031 FRANK SINATRA Your Money Pro TREVOR HOWARD At East Lansing STATE BANK SPARTAN TWIN EAST ^ON RYAN'S " FRANOOR SHOPPING CENTER • 3100 EAST SAGINAW Www 35H)030 Youl Save with ThriftiChecks Low-cost student checking accounts. The only EXPRESS charge is 10c per check; no other printing a MARK ROBSON or service charges. I MMMSKM'. Students are also encouraged to open saving CRtSIINA FERRARE The most daring mass escape accounts at the bank that saves you money. TWICF 7=09 -1 1-lfl ever conceived. It begins at — 2nd Hit Pes cara. It spreads into high Rotfcn & Martin adventure as they highjack Two Convenient Locations their own prison train, LAUGH-IN shoots past Rome.. .Florence TWICE at 7 p.m.-l 1:09 You'll Find ThriftiChecks Only At . . .Bologna. . .It hightails 2nd Feature into the Majola Pass with .lesserschmitts in hot pur¬ suit. Cast C^lansino frenzied . .and makes a final lunge for Switzer¬ $TATE BANK land—and freedom 1 GRAND RIVtK AT ABBOTT EAST LANSING, MICHIGA. TONIGHT - - 7 & 9:30 p.m. - - BRODY HALL Branches in Okemos, Haslett, & Brookfield Plaza ADM. 50C -3rd at 9: 17 Member Federal Deposit Insurance Coir■ •pen to MSU Students & Faculty Only - I.D.'s Required Thursday, February 20, 1969 Q Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan SPORTS Mef ace S Wisconsin prep grid star to ST. PETERSBURG, ploy Fla. want it to remain rega that way. I decides to enroll at MSU (UPI)--Tom Seaver, the Nat- don't want baseball to become unionized. tures from Wisconsin, Notre Bond, who has increased his His high was 273 yards against ional League's Rookie-of-the- FOND DU LAC, Wis. (UPI) -- Year in 1967, said Wednesday he "I have to get my arm in Dame, Kentucky, Minnesota and weight from 185 to 200 pounds Green Bay Preble. He was Jim Bond, one of the most Northwestern, among others, and hopes to play college ball names United Press Inter¬ "doesn't want baseball to be¬ shape, I have to be ready to sought after high school foot¬ and said MSU "has always been at 205 was an All-State choice national Back of the Year come unionized" and he will pitch and I will pitch this ball prospects in Wisconsin in season," he said. my favorite school." at halfback last fall. He broke in Wisconsin. pitch the season for the New recent years, has announced he Bond scored 27 touchdowns in York Mets even though he will Three of the mets, Nolan will enroll at MSU in "I just like everything about the 18-year-old conference September his career. 20 of them last not report for the first work¬ Ryan, Jerry Grote and Danny Bond, considered one of the the school. I think I have a good rushing record by gaining out Thursday. Frisella, said Wednesday they finest running backs ever pro¬ chance to play as a sophomore." 1,432 yards in eight games. Seaver said, "I'll play this would report for the opening duced in the rugged Fox River season whether the issues are workout Thursday. Valley Conference, said he would settled or not." He said he sign a Big Ten tender with has a date set in his mind (which he will not reveal) and he will honor the strike only until that Bob Boyd retires MSU March date allowed. would 15~the He said he also sign the national letter of earliest Hoosiers top Hometown hero date. "If the issues aren't settled to coach for Colts intent, which will take effect BLOOMINGTON. Ind.- Strong Indiana per¬ jumps and one-three in the triple jump. MSU football and classroom standout Al Brenner May 20. formances in the field events overcame MSU's BALTIMORE (UPI ) Roger Merchant and Wayne Hartwick were by that date." he said. "I'll honored by his hometown Niles, Michigan fans expected strength on the running track here was double winners for the Spartans. Merchant still report." Bobby Boyd, veteran Baltimorf during halftime of Friday's Niles High basketball A Big Ten tender binds an He added, "I believe base¬ Wednessay as the Hoosiers downed the Spar¬ won the 880 and 1.000 yard runs while Hart¬ defensive back, announced Wed athlete to the conference, and game. At Brenner's left is Spartan Asst. Football tans, 84-65. wick took the 70-yard high and low hurdles. ball remains one of the few nesday he is retiring to becom< the national letter binds him to Coach Gordon Serr. The Hoosiers dominated the field events, In the mile. MSU's Kim Hartman estab¬ things that reward individual defensive backfield coach of t*i«^ the school with which he signs. effort in our country and I Colts. State News photo by Dick Ivins sweeping the shot put and the pole vault lished an Indiana fieldhouse mark with a The Fond Du Lac High while finishing one-two in the high and long School star turned down over¬ winning time of 4:10.7. Bill Wehrwein figured in the Spartans two other firsts. The Roseville senior won the 440-yarck South of Joy Executive Sports Editor cartilage condition in his knees and was bothered by the same against Iowa's Joe Carstensen. heavvweight champ, has won at 152. After several years cf 15 matches this year without The rest of the MSU lineup Call 834-4904 who had gone unbeaten against injury problems, MSU wrestUr problem most of last year. loss. will include Tom Muir < 8-2' Keith Lowrance is finally round¬ After a 10-8 dual meet mark. top competition until that match. a Coming Next Week Lowrance finished the season "Keith has really been doing Other Spartans grappling Sat- at 160. Pat Karslake < 9-5-21 Frl. and Sat. ing into top shape and his tim¬ urdav are Garv Bissell (13-4 at 167 and Jack Zindel «11-6 > strongly and was third in the a good job for us," Peninger ing couldn't be better for the Spartan grappling team. conference at 137. said. "We always knew how at 123, Mike Ellis < 14-3» at at 177. Steepperwolf Three> Dogs Night However, it wasn't until his capable he was. but those in¬ over With the Big Ten meet ju it a week away, Lowrance's last few matches this season juries held him back. He's just CIVIL ENGINEERING Sunday MC-5 now rounding into top shape." that Lowrance has really hit fine performances of late aug..kr well for MSU's hopes fov a top form. MSU Coach Grady A product of Granbv High SENIORS! FRIDAY AND SATURDAY School in Norfolk. Ya.. one of fourth consecutive conferee Peninger said. YOUR FUTURE CAN BE IN TRANSPORTATION! Lowrance has won decisions the nation's top wrestling schools. Lowrance has one year Our expanding transportation engineering by 22-2. 16-5. and 15-3 mar- gains in his last three matches of eligibility left at MSU. program includes an annual Jjj billion dollars in KEITH LOWRANCE Lowrance, who must be rated highway construction. a top contender for the Big Ten No Exam-Tuition refunds for Graduate Study. 137-pound crown, gets his last test before the conference meet See our recruiter on February 25, 1969. Visit your Saturday when MSU plays host Placement Office Now for brochures and SIGN UP to hear Fencers face Titans, Chikas; to the Minnesota. The Gophers should provide Spartan grapplers with a the full story, or write to: Director of Manpower tough warmup for the confer¬ NEW YORK STATE DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION homecoming for S' coach Building 5, Albany, New York 12226 ence meet. Minnesota gave Mich¬ State Campus igan a rugged battle before being subdued 15-12. Peninger will employ the" By DENNIS COGSWELL State News Sports Writer This Saturday will be a home¬ nine matches The task will not be easy as Schmitter feels Detroit hAs same lineup that has won eight of ten dual meets this year. Heavyweight Jeff Smith will ATTENTION CAR OWNERS * coming of sorts for MSU fenc¬ one of its best teams in veafs attempt to close out the dual Complete front end repair and ing Coach Charles Schmitter The Titans beat MSU 15-12. meet season with the Spartan's alignment as the Spartans travel to the in 1968. This season Detroit has chalked up victories ov&r University of Detroit * Brakes * Suspension Schmitter helped organize the Wisconsin and Ohio State first Titan team in 1930 and In addition to Detroit, the excelled in the foil and sabre Spartans will also face the Rvgby Club * Wheel balancing * Steering as an undergraduate He as¬ University of Illinois-Chicago The MSU Rugby Club will Ends sumed coaching duties at Detroit Circle. The MSU fencers topped Today: in 1935. three years before com¬ the Chikas. 15-12. last year ing to MSU Schmitter does not place any¬ hold a business meeting at 7 tonight in room 203 of the LISKEY'S Auto Safety Center ! t&CAtU ALASKAN MSU has the incentive to more emphasis on beating &is Men's IM Bldg. 124 SOUTH LARCH IV 4-7346 SAFARI stcrts TOMORROW: win this weekend, because this old alma mater than on sm¬ is their final dual meet of the other school - ROSES ROSES IF YOU CANT STAND THE season and a pair of victories I don't believe in singling . w program information p400-0400 ROSES _ would better last year's 6-8 out any one team to beat, he TODAY AT i:i5 TERRIFIC GIRLS record. With the Big Ten said. "All our oppenents £re 3:20 5:25 7:30 9:40 p.m. jpgjL.ADMER I Championships coming up tough, and most of all. I l^ke Jon Anthony - - - . (lQ'SHQ) March 1. the Spartans have to go undefeated." Schrr tter 809 E. Michigan Some men are THERE'S ALWAYS THE COMICS CHARLES SCHMITTER dropped seven of their last said. ; iK4 ■ FREAKOUT No. 4 ■ starved for love. ■ ■ ■ The Woolies ■ Grappler coaches All University ■ ■ The 2nd & ■ ■ Paxton Quigley's Coming H ■ problem was FrI. Feb. 21 Soul Mixer completely ■ are seeing double ■ ■ UNION PARLORS ■ the MSU's wrestling coaches ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■a opposite! ^ IWIWEUX realize how important it is Featuring thfe soulful sound of ■ SUNGLASSES 5 C+4RiSioPUERl to have a companion to wrestle in the same weight class. All The Lovely People 5 POSTERS ■ JoNES, ■ LAST CHANCE SALE ■ liNiteAlTiC Asst. Coach Doug Blugaugh became the father of twin boys Mini-skirt contest • - $5 prize shortly after MSU defeated arch-rival Michigan Saturday • Dance contest - $5 prize afternoon. It is the second set NEXT BERYL RE ID-SUSANNAH YORK Light-show . . . • of twin sons for the Blubaugh 'DAZZLING" 'The KILLING OF SISTER GEORGE' family. -LIFE Head Coach Grady Peninger Friday Night 8:30-12:00 p.n TONIGHT From 7:00 P.M. is the father of a set of twins Brody Hall * 500 also, 12-years-old Grady and THIRD WEEK! Pamela. Franco ZKKFIRKI.U Romeo ^juliet Pre-Marital AN EVOLUTION Love? IN FILM! ASMSU PRESENTS STUDENT FILM FESTIVAL F.b. 21, dn28. a21 Mar. I, Whisht they raided mihsky'S" 2, 3, at Natural Resources TECHNICOLOR * A PARAMOUNT PICTURE. jason robards - britt ekland Audltorlurr| Released Prior to Nov. 1st ANDREWS • JOSEPH Feb. 24, 2n, and 27 at Conrad Not Classified DCNH0LM (lllOt • UUOTT GOULD • Audltorlurr 7:00 and 9:30 4 SHOWS DAILY COLOR p.m.-2 shows each nlght$1.50 2:00-4:30-7:00-9:30 Released prior General Admission information » 332-6944 to Nov. I Advance tickets at the Union Not Clas sified Exactly as presented LIVE on stage in San Franc/s^d Los Angeles! Ticket Office. CAMPOS MC.'Rachel, NEXT Rachel' and OINESIS FILMS LTD./A FHMW1YS CO. 'ffie^eart isacLoneh}cHunter Thursday, February 20, 1969 10 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Mi[33 i#\ m Sell things you aren't using with State News Classified Ads. .. Dial 355-8255 to place your action-ad NOW! Automotive For Rent The State News does Pot" ONE GIRL*spring term luxury apart OLDSMOBILE 1967 F85 3-speed on ment Evergreen Arms 351-0845 permit racial or religic J8 floor. V-8 2-door coupe $1400 or 3-2 24 discrimination in its ad¬ take over payments of $89.00 month ONE GIRL needed to share furnished GIRL TO share 4-girl apartment vertising columns. The 393-3066 3-2 20 duplex until Julv. Own room 351- Spring-summer l'z blocks Berkey State News will not accept 0667 5-2 25 351-3651 3-2 20 OPEL 1968 Rallye Cadett. All op¬ • AUTOMOTIVE advertising which discrim - tions on it. 14.000 miles, balance THREE ROOMS furnished 1 bed¬ NEW GE portables and stands rent¬ CAPITOL. NEAR Efficiency and stu¬ • EMPLOYMENT inates against religion, of warranty Excellent inside and ed ONLY to MSU students and fac¬ dio Single girls. Kitchen On college room. utilities, private entrance race, color or national or- out Call 669-9214. after 6 p.m. 4-2/21 ulty. month (includes bus line 372-4583 5-2 24 and parking 2 blocks shopping • FOR RENT $8 84 taxi and bus 332-5157 3-2 24 igir. STATE MANAGEMENT CORPORA¬ • FOR SALE PONTIAC BONNEVILLE 1967 Beau TION 444 Michigan Avenue 332- • LOST & FOUND tiful burgundy, black vinvl top 8687 C PERSONAL EXTRAS 482-3393 after 6 p.m. 3-2 21 • NORTH WIND • PEANUTS PERSONAL FARMS • REAL ESTATE Automotive THREE GIRLS needed to sublet Faculty Apartments spring Haslett Apartments • SERVICE nings 3-2 24 term 3-2 24 • TRANSPORTATION CORVETTE STINGRAY 1967 Yellow 351-7880 351-6885 convertible with black summer and • WANTED SHELBY COBRA GT-350. 1967 LARGE 2 bedroom lower half of ONE MAN needed immediately for winter tops Lavishlv equipped One (jwner Perfect condition. Low mile¬ 306h.p 289 Cobra engine modi house Utilities included Partially Pine Forest Two man apartment fied to approximately 315h p Last furnished 325 N. Pennsylvania. Lan¬ 351-0495 332-3881 5-2 fi Jackson 849- . DEADLINE age Jonesville near car actually made by Shelby. Ex¬ sing $150 per month Phone 351- REDUCED RATES Quiet Girl. 7958. Ron cellent condition Phone 351-8983 4530 5-2 25 HASLETT 5724 Lake Drive Four 2 5-2 26 Spring Cedar Village 351 5686 1 P.M. one class day be¬ after 5:30 p.m 5-2 25 bedroom. 1 bath: one 3 bedroom, 1>2 V-8. ONE MAN for 3-man apartment baths Unfurnished apartments. Com¬ fore publication. DODGE. 1962. 4-d( VOLKSWAGEN 1965 REbuilt engine automatic Good interior and exter¬ Spring $65 771 Burcham 351-9255 pletely carpeted including kitchen Cancellations - 12 noon one Radio Good tires plus snow tires 5-2 21 ior Trailer hitch mount included and baths Stove and refrigerator 355-0969 5-2 24 class day before publica¬ $275 351-3483 , 3*2 20 $40 CASH for first i furnished Under construction tion. over lease spring te ONE GIRL needed Evergreen Arms. Available April 1st Rent *225 and VOLKSWAGEN 1966 Sunroof, gas $155 plus utilities GOV AN MAN¬ DODGE 1960-Good condition, de¬ lage. 351-3412 Perfect location. Immediate occu¬ heater. 25.000 miles. Must sell AGEMENT 351-7910 After 5 pancy. 351-3566 3-2 21 pm pendable. bodv needs work 351- PHONE 7358. Ron 1-2 20 Call after 5 p.m. 489-5504 5-2 25 332-5860 0-2 26 GIRL NEEDED March 1st or imme¬ VOLKSWAGEN 1968 Sunroof, red, 355-8255 DODGE 1959 Rebuilt engine , new with AM-FM stereo radio, white- diate occupancy Block from cam¬ battery Looks and runs good ,$125 pus Utilities paid Roberta 351 wall tires plus two studded snow- 0946 RATES 351-3257. after 6 p.m 5-2 21 tires on rims. $1,650 or best of¬ S3-2 21 fer Call 372-1955, after 6 p.m 3-2 21 ONE MAN needed New Cedar Vil¬ 1 day $ 1.50 FAIRLANE 500 1962 Really good AFBOR FOREST. East Lansing For ONE GIRL spring term $41 month, utilities included Own room, close lage Spring Reduced Rates Call 15tf per word per day condition Dependable, economical VOLKSWAGEN 1962 $225 Call 332 Faculty Only Attractive 1 and 2- 339-9061 evenings 3-2 24 to campus Afternoons and evenings alter 5p m 351-3873 3-3 24 3 days $4.00 bedroom with private balcony Sit 351-3338 3-2 21 13 l/2£ per word per day uated in Chalet surrounding with ONE MAN immediate occupancy 5 days $6.50 VOLVO PV544 1960 4-speed From "I'm using Voe organic method of swimming pool and partv house South of | NEWLY MARRIED? Luxury 731 Apartment $75 month West Coast. Showroom condition in¬ Harrison. East on Trow¬ 351-5213 3-2 24 I3f per word per day side and out Phone 485-3888 2-2 20 study th!s term, Dad bridge to Palmer Lane Resident Tanglewood Manager Phone 337-0634 10-3 3 (based on 10 words per ad) afartments FORD MODEL A 1929 Tudo and inter¬ Re Scooters & Cycles There will be a 50 of GARAGE SALE 340 Whitehills Drive 1968 ZIG ZAG sewing machine Has appeared 45 minutes after the Ann Arbor. N. Lorraine Beebe of Dearborn, who are Republi¬ June 10-Aug. 10 24 cams. Does everything Excellent MINIATURE Dachshund puppies 7 East Lansing. Saturday. February weeks AKC registered. 2 males. PAULA ANN HAUGHEY: A meeting had started. Prior to cans The two Democratic Senators are Charles N Youngblood $209.00 condition Cost $259 - will sell for unique 22nd, 9 a m to 5 p.m Beds, chests 5-2/25 $99 Has lifetime guarantee. Call 2 females. TU 2-0565. quality thesis service. IBM typ¬ this time the faculty members Jr.. and Michael O'Brien of Detroit. end tables. lamDS. miscellaneous.3-2/21 Call: Cheryl Crane 393-5072 C-2/20 ing, multilith printing and hard did not have the necessary num¬ FOUR TIRES, black wall 8 15x15 MINIATURE SCHNAUZER puppies, binding. 337-1527. C 355-03 75 AKC, 1 male. 2 female. Phone 485- , ber of people to reach a quo¬ 355-3215 3-2/21 6107. 3-2/21 BARBI MEL: Typing, multilithing. rum. and consequently could 11% WHAT'S. INDIAN FOOD No job too large or too small not take any action. Hi And other food from most Block of campus 332-3255 C BRAND NEW Cassette tape record¬ After the Dept. of Psychology foreign countries-including Christmas present, must sell CO BAHAMAS er IBM SELECTRIC. Dissertations, thes¬ meeting, the small number of immediately. $69 Call 355-6905. U.S. 2-2/21 es, term papers Experienced Call demonstrators who remained only 189.00 SHARON VLIET, 484-4218 0-3/7 marched over to the Administra¬ SHAHEEN'S 8 days 7 nights at the - new V-M PORTABLE stereo turntable CHARLAMAR 1961 - W x 50'. 2- tion Bldg. to hold a sit-in until FAMILY FOOD Holiday Inn on the ocean with 2 speakers. $70 or best offer. bedroom. furnished. Near MSU TERM PAPERS, Theses, manuscripts, the building closed at 5:30 p.m. 1001 W. Saginaw 485-4089 March 15-22 353-0935 3-2/24 Excellent condition Phone 655-3441 general typing IBM Selectric 5-2/24 JANET, 337-2603. 19-3/7 Michigan Bankard Welcome Cheryl Crane 355-0375 MARLETTE 19#9-never lived in $7,800 Paid down $1,000. Will take $500 loss. OX 4-0291 after LET KAMINS GET YOUR CAR READY FOR 4:30 p.m 5-2/25 TERM scripts PAPERS, Thesis. Accurate, reasonable Call Manu¬ Trustees LIBERTY 1969 12x65 Three bed me. 372-1028. Smith-Corona 400 room Three months old. 10 min¬ electric. 3-2/20 (continued from page one) utes from campus On lot Skirt¬ and not held in closed session ed. fireplace, utility shed $1,000 as in the past. Off 882-0386 5-2/23 Transportation "I wrote a letter to Presi¬ Lost & Found dent Hannah before the elec¬ The Student Advisory Committee to the History Dept. will meet at 7:30 tions last fall," White said, tonight in the conference room on the third floor of Morrill Hall All inter¬ WANTED FEMALE companion for "asking him to announce his ested students are invited to attend trip to New York. Call Art 355- retirement. I was afraid the 9011. 3-2/21 REWARD! LOST Baron watch, near Free University Lansing Model Cities Seminar will meet at 4 today University would not be pre¬ A rapids Inscription: Loving you. in 120 Physics-Astronomy Tom Riley, J C. Womack. Brian Selinsky and Ginger 485-5964 3-2/24 NEEDED RIDE: Florida, spring pared to act when the time Terry Melman will deliver a report of the model cities community organizers break Share expenses Call Mar came for him to retire. We cia. 351-7887 3-2/24 were almost caught in th#t sit¬ The Home Economics Community Services Organization will meet at 6:30 Personal uation." tonight in 102 Home Economics Bldg Two speakers from local welfare agen¬ cies will discuss areas open to community service majors All interested per¬ RENT A TV from a TV Company- Wanted Tune Ups $9 00 per NEJ AC TV RENTALS month Call 337-1300 C BLOOD DONERS NEEDED $7 50 for Dale Hathaway, chairman of the steering committee of the sons are invited to attend all posiUve, A negaUve, B negative Academic Council, said Tues¬ Eugene Roelofs, professor of fisheries and wildlife, will speak on "Oceano¬ 6 and AB negaUve »10.00 O negaUve- graphy" at a meeting of Beta Beta Beta at 7 30 tonight in Union Parlors A cyl $6.95 $12.00. MICHIGAN COMMUNITY day that at the time the pro¬ and B. 8 BLOOD CENTER, 507 V» E Grand cedures committee was form¬ cyl $8.95 River, East Lansing Above the new ed it thought it would have at John Frye will show slides and talk abou HELP WANTED Management stu Campus Book Store. Hours: 9am - Wildlife Refuge at a meeting of the Fish a plus name brand parts dent wishes to start student co-op least two years to make its re¬ 183 Natural Resoucres Bldg Any information about co-ops, 3:30pm Monday, Tuesday and Fri¬ day; Wednesday and Thursday. 12- port. He said that though this ideas, or merchandise wanted. Jeffrey Milstein. asst professor of political science, will speak on "The Use AMINS 6:30pm .337-7183. C was the case, the committee Bring to S.O.C. Lounge, 4th floor. of Computer Simulation in International Politics" at 7:30 tonight in 33 Union. had been instructed to be ready Only 4 & 8 Track Union Morgan Carter, 355-7520 2-2/20 COME ON in, the Leather s fine Milstein is speaking at an open meeting of Delta Phi Upsilon, the foreign to report by the April meeting service fraternity FIVE Tape Players FREE A Thrilling hour of beauty BROTHER GAMBIT SLICK TRAD¬ of the Academic Council but ING COMPANY Next to the State o games against Adrian at Minutes call 484-4519 decided to have a preliminary Gjuio Paul* For appointment, 3-2/21 S3Q95 MERLE NORMAN COSMETICS STU- Theater report ready by the March F rom piO. lfiOO E^st Mictuean C-2/J0 THREE GRAD STUDENTS want 4th meeting. He said that this was College Life, the weekly meeting of Campus Crusade for Christ, will be held CamDUS " $15 in free tapes with each LARCH 484-4596 WHERE THE GIRLS ARE! TheyVe man for University Terrace Apart¬ "very fortunate" in view of the at 9 tonight in the College Life House at 544 Abbott Rd For rides call 337- tape player purchased reading the "Personal" column in ment. Spring and/or summer $65 early retirement of Hannah. 2505 Everyone is welcome to attend. today's Classified Ads. Tiy it now! 1 per month. 351-3096 1-2 20 Thursday, February 20, 1969 12 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan ROTC By RICH BERNARD position undergoing status changes tion is that this had little or no role to play in the faculty cou"e of act,°" erably among ROTC person- consid- institutions desiring ROTC programs would have to to host grant the senior officer a pro- walks of life." He felt that such opinion may exert enough ROTC is stronglv supported. Pell said Army because of their possi¬ ble influence Although on other schools. the Ivy League said. Harvard the "We men don't believe that should be denied opportunity to fulfill their Stale News Staff Writer pressure against the governing Faculty members of three action,'the spokesman said. nel- Pell said But if these fessorship." Pell explained bodies to cause modification of schools do n$ contribute many militarv obligation bv wav of 'This is not the first time recommendations are approv- "For this reason, unless this the proposal, although he was officers because they are pres¬ ROTC Ivy League schools have voted such a re-evaluation of the ed unchanged. ROTC might 100 smaller colleges around the tige schools, the programs have "As part of the American to withdraw academic credit point of the recommendation careful to call this opinion nation are seeking ROTC pro- from courses offered by the RO¬ ROTC programs has been con- Just as wel1 have been removed overturned. ROTC would • conjecture. grams on their campuses He been kept."' Pell explained. tradition of the citizen-soldier, TC sidered at Yale-or other cam- completely. have to be moved from Har- said that during 1967 and 1968 But it may be time to re¬ the input of officers into the programs on their cam¬ puses. puses--in the 50 years since second point of the rec- "We feel confident that this 30 such schools initiated ROTC consider this policy. services should come from a ROTC was initiated. ' he said ommendation (concerning fac- Pell said that his telephone action and that at other Ivy programs. It is the consensus of those broad spectrum." he said Further action concerning the status 1 of the ROTC units at "In at least the last eight or ultv appointments of ROTC in¬ structors) is in direct conflict "has been ringing incessently" League schools will provide . Pell said that Ivy League in the services that we want "This." he concluded. must v , „ a nine years, this has come up " u"eLl from calls made by "outraged backlash action at the grass colleges received special con ROTC at Harvard, but not un¬ include men from all kinds of almo/t , „ Yale. Harvard and Dartmouth rest in the hands of their annuaU alth „ with the ROTC Revitalization alumni and citizens from all roots-at the institution where sideration by the Dept it the der '"tolerable conditions, he institutions " now tion!; know if it has been voted Act °* 1964- Ahich stated that respective governing corpora¬ on before.'' The possible results of these ^eordiog to conferences w,'h P"**"' ROTC students EVERY CARD A WINNER „rti. «.t< anH n.h„ ,a. the spokesman said that cred¬ it was not a major concern to students enrolled in ROTC and that the discontinuation of "a'spokesman r — from the Army cred"particular any ™ou'd pr°bab'y n°' have effect on. the pro- ROTC at Yale, who requested that his name be withheld, said Sram a v aU f Two Beootifol Panaris to Choose-Windfall or Sonaot that the termination of the two obligation Play Krogsr's Exciting Easy Street Game! I definitely believe that the credits given for ROTC and u ■ c .u » .. . umversitv has an obligation to ... ,. . "Easy Street" Rulesl....Enter now-You may win ^ 6 * changing of the ROTC status $1,000-$ 100-^20-$ 10-J5 or $1 or up to 10,000 Top TRIDENT MELAMINE provide well-rounded individ¬ .. to the extracurricular status at S1.00 uals as officers in the services." Value Stamps. Easy-Free-No Purchase Required. Yale Saucers followed a reduction of the needed to total number of credits graduate from 40 to he said. "It is frnpossible for me to Free Game Card and one free game piece Per Adult per store visit on request at end of check ^ out lanes or at Kroger store Office. Or mail re¬ say for sure what effect this action at Yale and similar ac¬ quest to Glendinning P.O. Box 62, Westport Conn. . ly ulum revews and new put into the academic curric¬ sometimes courses . being current . tion at other will have ^ programs on Ivy League schools other schools' RO- spokesman concluded, "the pos¬ "But. the USDA CHOICE TENDER AY 06880. NO PURCHASE NECESSARY 1 PESCHKE'S 33$ COASTAL BRAND DOUBLE BREASTED OR sibility exists that this may FULL SHANK HALF courses which thev feel need re-evaluation, servf as f lm"f"s tow^ds 3-LEGGED recommended the changes embodied resolution which the in the faculty s™'lar act,ons at ,hese other According to Col. Robert H RIB SMOKED FISH passed last Thursday 30'. the spokesman said. Yale'Armv' First evaluation ROTC Pel1' atPressor ence Harvard,of the outlined in the faculty's resolu¬ military conditions sci- STEAKS HAMS STICKS FRYERS tion provide for "everything ex¬ "Although the ROTC pro¬ cept outright banishment" of grams were the first to be eval¬ EH S3 EE E3 uated of the total number of credits "SDS took the lead in cam¬ needed to graduate from Yale, other courses are also due to paigning to cause ROTC to be driven from campus. Pell come under consideration." he said, "but originally four pro- said. The Yale spokesman said P°sals rang,"g,simply rf; that the committee on course studies was unable to explain uu" ' why ROTC was the first cur- aire CENTER ECKRICH BEEF Identical positions HERRUD SMOKED SMOKETTES OR 200 2-PLY WHITE OR ASSORTED FACIAL 10c OFF LABEL riculum to come under evalua¬ "As the debate grew more tion. other than that "it seem¬ ed the obvious place to begin." emotional. the less extreme Party Han Snok- Kleenex 4 BOXES J] Ivory Liquid ^o/stl45< The Yale resolution reads: "It elements soon these varying disappeared and Assortmoat Slices Y-Liiks BATHROOM TISSUE (650 1-PLY SHEET) WAGNERS GRAPE, GRAPEFRUIT OR is the sense of the faculty of positions became Yale University that the train¬ almost identical." he explain¬ ed "Ultimately, of the four 'pkc89* 89* 10-OZ 1T PKG Charmin 3 55? $1 Orange Drink 4 $1 ing of students for military commissions under the original proposals, the next to 304 OFF LABFL 15c OFF LABEL-DETERGENT u.iuci auspices inc duspiccs t pvtrpmp was na«P(l " REGULAR OR MILD PESCHKE'S of the Armv and Navv ROTC ™st extreme vvas passed_ should be given extracurricular The Harvard Student Advisory Committee's Faculty propos- Herrud Franks Le69( Ring Bologna lb 63( $1.02 Cli66r 6-ozlpkg 63c status without credit The fac- . . . n . al. to the Harvard Corp.. which „ ultv , USDA CHOICE TENDERAY reasons that the command- „,00 was „000„,j on7 t passed 207 to 145 on Feb r . 75-2 PLY ASSORTED ing officers of these units should be designated by a title indica¬ 4. provided for a five point res¬ Boneless Boston RolLs89t VAL VITA KLEENEX olution. which included: KROGER ting that they do not have the PESCHKE'S i -withdrawal of credit on academic authority usually as¬ sociated with a professorship. courses offered by the three branches of ROTC at Harvard: Hot Dogs 2 PKG $1.19 PEACHES TOWELS The faculty requests that the president and fellows of the universi \ ini late ear \ nego- -termination of faculty ap- p(S(1,menIS of presenl r01£ USDA CHOICE TENDERAY STANDING 4TH & STH CORN nations with the appropriate instructors as after ,he end soon Qf the as possible Rib Roast lb 89{ agency so to alter the existing academic vear and n0 (uture w. Reserve The Right To Limit contracts as to bring about the realization of these goals." new appointments: -withdrawal of the descrip¬ Not to be abolished tion of ROTC courses from the Prices and Coupons Good 12-OZ 1 -LB The Yale Army ROTC Thru Sun., Feb. 23, 1969 catalog. WT 13-OZ 2-ROLL In Lansing spokesman pointed out that the -cessation of the free allo¬ PKG resolution did not call for the CANS CANS withdrawal of money and sup- cation bui|dingstorROTc of space in university 925 EXTRA TOP port or the abolition ot the ROTC programs at Yale -provision of scholarship VALUE STAMPS funds to students where need He said that he did not think results from the action. that completely ROTC would be cut off and would probably continue to give that Yale taken The proposal will probably be up by the president, S #1 SMU.TEtftVilEF CD 50 FRIT^PS 1 VALUABLE COUPON VALUABLE COUPON VALUABLE COUPON VALUABLE COUPON 75-2 ply assorted KROGER DAWN FRESH credit in ROTC to those stu¬ treasurer and five fellows which 2 SAVE I0c-ROBIN HOOD are the governing board of the □ 50 KLEENEX TOWELS dents already in the programs Harvard Corp. at their Feb. 17 m delmonico srrAKS J Floor Cottogo Cheese Kooblors J-LB Honey Grahams, 14-ox WT who enrolled believing they meeting Their action is in turn 2 2 -pkgs.roll. $ £ |i would receive credit. Although student groups like subject to some overview by the Harvard Board of Overseers, #} □ 50 3pfc« SlenrdVsr.c°e«° ' ECKRICH CHIPPED V : 5 5." 39* Cinnamon Crisps. 15-oz WT Penguins or 14-oz WT Pk redeem at kroger thru ifl 1 Fudge Stripe !> ^ L sds rather vocally demanded Radoam ot Krofl.r R.d.om ot Kroger f ■ sun. feb. 23, 1969. ■ the complete removal of the which next meets March 17. #4 CJ 50 STORE MADE MEAT LOAF ' 5_ Thru Sun., Feb:_23,_1969j Thru^Sum, Feb.^ 1969^ m,iThru Sun., Feb. 23, 1969 ROTC programs, my evalua- The ideas on the likely 50 Ts-ib0 onv I KROGER DAWN FRESH #5 O JW FROZEN MEATS m CDioo WHITE COTTAGE BEAN Angels' c #11 CD 50 CHEESE COFFEE oF^nV-C^ur*,.0 to sponsor k #ii. #u CD □ 50 J v 75 MORTON DINNER T'ekg e* Grocer ° BAKING NUTS By RICH BERNARD sors were chosen, functions as k State News Staff Writer a female auxiliary to the Air Air Force cadets recently Force ROTC The sorority par¬ #14 □ 50 "«'a 2-lbUpkg0" * W KROGER SALTINES chose their eight unit and ex¬ ticipates in such projects as tracurricular activity coed visiting a verterans home in #13 a 50 wu*-opr:"0co;.°' ALPO DOC FOOD k sponsors from among the 35 Battle Creek and sending letters women who are members of and gifts to an orphange in the Angel Flight service sor¬ #H a 50 HIL~LS MOS COFFEE ority. After meeting the coeds from "Angel Flight and especially #i; O 50 *P>kS QUALE S Vl'z Z A the Fr ei en VALUABLE COUPON VALUABLE COUPON Angel Flight, each cadet de¬ girls who are chosen spon¬ GOLDEN RIPE 1 signated four women as his sors idea attempt to promote the of the Air Force ROTC #u CD 50 *W o F^rJi'nPS"TEHOUWERS SIZZLE STEAK 1 25 Extra T.V. WITH THIS COUPON A Stamps ** 25 Extra T.V. Stamps M BB M choice for the sponsor positions. Jean A. Allison. Greensboro. Md.. senior, who has been a on the campus," she explained. Chosen as deputy group spon¬ so £^vVS"" FANCY I I I THE PURCHASE OF AV2-GAL OF KROGER PURE ORANGE JUICE ■■ WITH THIS COUPON & ■! ■■ II THE PURCH AWV K . a aA RED RIPE sor is Cheryl L. Mayle, Flint sponsor in previous years, was ORANGE JUICE | ORLO-CAL II AN,,LS BANANAS [ Drinks "Smflowir Setd*L STRAWBERRIES _ named the Air Force group junior. Serving as sponsor for sponsor. A group is an Air Squadrons 3801,3802 and 3803 ^ ^^ cmScolate'Vilk Fruit Kroger Force unit between a squadron respectively are seniors Nanet¬ •deem at M|| Redeem at Kroger bmJI and a wing in size. te A. Krieger, Sodus, Connie ruSunj, Feb. 23^ t*J|Thru Sun.. Feb. 23, JTfjl ■ QUART BASKET | "Our job as sponsors is V. Kurosky. Dearborn, and jun¬ ior Mary J. Day. Lindhurst. #11 □ so i^3r' mostly to promote enthusiasm and give moral support to the Ohio. CD 50 kROCEV'ICE >25 Extra T.V. Stamps■■ 25 Extra T.V. Stamps; 69 MILK Air Force ROTC units we re¬ said. The Sabre Drill Team's spon¬ WITH THIS COUPON & ■■ "VhE VHRCH^F^ present," . Miss Allison sor is Carolyn S. Winslow, THE PURCHASE OF ■■ 6 0R MORE FRESH "Most of our activity takes Birmingham junior. Sponsor for place during spring term when the Arnold Air Society is Joan LIMIT ONE PER CUSTOMER ( A4-LBBACOF ■[ California we review the cadet Miss Allison said that parades." Angel M. Moyer, Sinking Springs, Pa., freshman, sophomore Janet M iPopcoraPopeyti; at Kroger Redeem Lenons at Kroger Flight sevice which she and the other spon¬ sorority, from Travis, Chelsea, is the spon¬ sor for the Security Police. •^Feb. 23,_ m|Thru Sun., Feb. 23,