Thursday Sunny. Will NB MICHIGAN and STATE MEWS . . . warmer today. High . . . please explain what in the near 60. Fair and cold tonight, world "dead" color is? -Arthur Schlesinger, Jr. STATE low near 30. Friday sunny and UNIVERSITY East Lansing, Michigan Thursday, April 24, 1969 Vol. 61 Number 164 Jury condemns Sirhan to gas LOS ANGELES (AP) - Sirhan Wednesday was Sirhan Bishara condemned to chamber death reported that the jury stood 10 to 2 for the death penalty from the outset of delib¬ sentence to life, but in 19 capital cases that have before him. Walker has exercised this ; year-old lawyer told a news conference. "They can't help, as human beings, but be affected by the unrest in this country." death in the California gas chamber for erations on Monday until it reached unani¬ prerogative only once. mous agreement. There is an automatic appeal of a death Cooper said he will continue to repre¬ what the state called a calculated, cold¬ sentence in the California courts. sent Sirhan without fee during the appeals blooded political assassination that took By its decree, the seven man-fivewoman jury rejected a defense plea for mercy. Moreover, reflecting a growing climate stage of the case. the life of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy. in the United States, California has not At no time did the state enunciate in so "Even Jesus Christ couldn't have saved The alternative to the death penalty was put life imprisonment, with parole possible, a criminal to death in more than two years, many words a demand for Sirhan's life. me," the 2t year-old Christian Arab was Instead. Deputy Dist. Atty. John How¬ but not likely after seven years. although there are 81 condemned men lan¬ quoted as telling his lawyers afterward. ard. a 6-foot-3. 220.pound prosecutor, put it He shed no tears. His face was ashen There is no chance that Sirhan will be guishing on the San Quentin Death Row. executed swiftly. Superior Court Judge The last legal executions in the United another way when he told the jury: "This When the verdict was read at 11 35 defendant will regard permission to live Herbert V. Walker set Mav 14 to hear States occurred in 1967. In April in Califor¬ a.m.. the slight 5-foot-4 defendant betrayed nia and the following July in Colorado. as an additional triumph. You will not be motions for a new trial. At that time, he can no emotion. He chewed gum and his dark pronounce sentence or defer it. Current figures are not now available but obliged to hear this defendant boast that eyes flicked toward the jury as he heard he committed the crime of the century. At that time also, it is within the power as of the first of the year there were about his doom pronounced of the 69-vear-old judge to reduce Sirhan's 450 persons on death row in various states. Others will. " A source who asked not to be identified Howard said. "We have lavishly expend¬ The defense was grimly prepared for the outcome of the long case. After 11 hours ed our resources for the sake of a cold¬ and 45 minutes of deliberation that extend¬ blooded political assassin. Sirhan was entitled to a fair trial, which he has re¬ ed over three days, the jury sent word to the courtroom that it had reached a deci- ceived. He has no special claim to further Condemned preservation." Sirhan Bishara Sirhan, Sen. Robert F. Kennedy's assassin, was "I'll bet you $5 it's death." Sirhan's chief Chief Deputy Dist. Atty. Lynn Compton condemned Wednesday to die in the gas chamber. The same jury Nixon raises told newsmen after Sirhan was condemned: * counsel. Grant B. Cooper, his voice tremb¬ that convicted Sirhan of first-degree murder last Thursday also ling. told a newsman. "We believe it was a proper verdict I think decreed his death. AP Wirephoto Cooper had made the final plea for Sir¬ everybody did a condemendable job han's life during a penalty hearing that to cripple M followed a first-degree murder verdict by the same jury April 17. WASHINGTON (AP)-Maping million war against organized crime. President Nixon suggested to Congress Wednesday that Mafia chiefs might be a $61 in New York concentration The President City because of "heavy of criminal called for a element new law At that time, the silver-haired defense chief turned to Sirhan's 4-foot-ll mother and concluded say I "To you. Mary Sirhan. I can do no more. I the life of your son to the now entrust hands of the BSA raps Sab granting immunity to witnesses in big larger role for urban center crippled financially through use of anti¬ jury Mary Sirhan. may your prayers be crime cases, and an increase in the answered."' trust laws. federal occupational tax on professional Mrs. Sirhan heard the news of the death Implementation of this rather novel idea of striking back at top mobsters gamblers from $50 a year to $1,000 decree at her Pasadena home, as she had Justice Dept. sources said the admin¬ the first-degree verdict. through legitimate businesses they take By JEANNE SADDLER The alliance said that it was not so much The alliance presented several reasons over, said Nixon, could ' strike a criti¬ istration's draft proposals were de¬ The only relative in court was one of Sir¬ State News Staff Writer for their suggestion to transfer minority- signed to overcome federal court ob¬ han's four brothers, Adel, 29. In a choked attacking the curt replies, but the attitude cal blow at the organized crime con¬ group programs from special projects to jections to past legislation in those voice, he declined to comment. The Black Students' Alliance (BSA) is¬ BSA sensed in those replies It is our con¬ spiracy." lields. sued a statement today criticizing the re¬ tention that the attitude displayed, though the center Although BSA saw the 1 "niver The suggestion, to be pursued Dy tne Cooper attributed the death pronounce¬ sitv as having done very little, they ac¬ In addition. Nixon recommended new ment to "an overriding feeling by the com¬ plies of Gordon A. Sabine, vice-president possibly not his usual contention, was en¬ executive branch, was part of a broad knowledged a future potential, and indicat¬ legislation to make bribery of police munity in the entire United States in favor for special projects, at Friday's meeting tirely out of place and detrimental to the anticrime package Nixon outlined in a of the board's activities of that ed the center as "the only viable altt rna- or local officials a federal crime when of law and order." of the MSU Board of Trustees. success special message that incorporated his BSA also urged that all programs involv¬ meeting." the statement read. tive if this potential is to be fully realized." own ideas plus warmed-over suggest¬ illegal gambling promoters are respon¬ "I'm only suggesting these jurors are gov¬ sible for the corruption. ing minority group and disadvantaged stu¬ Stan McClinton. ASMSU vice president erned by the same emotions of love and ions from the Johnson Administration. The statement continued It is time that hate that you and I have." the veteran 66- dents be transferred to the Center for Ur¬ for black affairs, commented on the Declaring that the Cosa Nostra is The chief executive also asked for ban Affairs. statement. "The Center for Urban Affairs Michigan State realized that the n ruit- stronger than ever and seeks the " moral new legislation aimed at putting all Sabine was not available for comment would be more responsive to the needs of ment of all segments of society to this Uni¬ and legal subversion of our society.'' large scale illegal gambling in violat late Wednesday afternoon. disadvantaged students and more capable versity is not a special project -but its most Nixon proposed a $25 million increase ion of federal law when it touches on The statement objected to Sabine's un¬ of developing effective programs. If the ef¬ important responsibility. This realization in appropriations to combat organized interstate commerce. To be liable for could be best manifested by assigning an qualified reply of "no" when asked if there forts of Dr. Sabine can produce no more crime. This would make a total of federal penalties, the operation would established, on-going.^ relevant and recep¬ were 1,000 qualified black students avail¬ than the vague, inadequate response he $61 million. have to involve at least five persons able to be recruited to MSU. Sabine also tive structure the responsibility for its gave, then the vital task of recruiting stu¬ Nixon said his administration will and have daily receipts of more than dents should be transferred to the center execution." replied with a simple "yes" when asked if $ use wiretaps against major racketeers, $2,000 or have been operating more the possibility of recruiting Vietnam vet¬ I do. however, commend his efforts " (please turn to page 111 will establish 20 racketeering field off¬ than 30 days. erans had been fully explored. ices in major cities and will set up a Robert L. Green, associate director of pioneering federal-state racket squad (please turn to page 11) the center, answered the same question on availability of 1.000 blacks affirmatively, CITY ZONING PLAN offered several reasons and cited a need for counselors and assistance for the stu¬ dents after arrival at MSU. according to Troops fire into rioters BSA. '8-3' By WHIT SIBLEY as well as the homes of some East Lans¬ concern ect or indirect elimination of low cost Comparing the two. BSA stated that Green's answer was "the type one would ordinarily have expected from anyone sup¬ to halt Lebanese revolt and machine-gun fire chattered posedly in charge of this responsibility in a BEIRUT. Lebanon (APi Troops and tion State News Staff Writer ing citizens. student housing and urged the commiss¬ university. police with armored cars fired on riot¬ through the streets At leasi one demon¬ The fifth session of the ASMSU stu¬ The Planning Commison's plan as it ion to exclude areas with a high propor¬ The Black Students' Alliance consid¬ strator was killed dent board officially began now stands will affect the land boarded ing students and Palestinian refugees in its year in tion of student housing from its pro¬ ers it a personal affront to not only the two Lebanese cities Wednesday. A state A government communique reported office Tuesday night with a five hour on the north by Linden Street, on the posed B-3 zone. black students and the board of trustees, of emergency was declared to halt the the youthful demonstators broke through a meeting lasting until 1:15 Wednesday morn¬ east by Charles Street, on the south by- but also to all people who have expressed riots in which at least seven persons police barricade and fired on police try¬ ing when the new chairman, Tom Samet. East Grand River and on the west by- th*e hope of making Michigan Chuck Mostov reported that the com¬ State Univer¬ were killed and scores wounded. ing to keep order. rapped his gavel to adjourn the session. Evergreen. mittee on Student Health, established sity a more relevant institution," the state¬ Demonstrators spilled into the streets in In one major board action. Bob Hetrich. The student board gave a statement by Provost Neville on March 5th, is ment said. Beirut, the capital, in the southern port a representative from the Committee to Preserve a Residential Neighborhood, asked for the support of the board in to Hetrich to present to the East Lans¬ ing Planning Commission meeting held Tuesdav night in the East Lansing City investigating the possibility of Olin Health Center collecting medical costs The statement did not call for Sabine's removal as a University administrator of Sidon and in the Bakaa Valley village of Barr Elias. to protest government re¬ Mailer from already existing prepaid medical It did, however, note that unless Sabine's strictions against Arab guerrillas operating opposing the East Lansing Planning Com¬ Hall. "position be clarified, such a suggestion mayoral plans. against Israel from bases in Lebanon. mission's "B-3 Central Business Dist¬ The statement said that the board may indeed be in order .'' Chanting slogans in support of the Arab rict" project. was seriously concerned about the dir¬ (please turn to page 11) guerrilla movement, the demonstrators The B-3 project is designed to set clashed in street battles with security- aside a special zone for retail stores, hotels, offices and to encourage the use of these in a compact area. forces. Thousands of Palestinian refugees in New sparked the rampage in Sidon Students Hetrich said that while the planning took up the fight in Beirut and fiercely, NEW YORK (AP' - Author Norman commission's idea had merit, it would Mailer is on the campaign trail, not as an Arab nationalist Moslems rose up in the be harmful because it would destroy observer, but running for mayor of New Bakaa in eastern Lebanon. two blocks of low cost student housing. York. Is he serious? In Sidon. most of those demonstrating against government curbs on Arab guer¬ "Watch me!" Mailer says. Mailer s run¬ rilla cativities came from the sprawl¬ ning mate, candidate for City Council Recall committee ing Ein-El-Hileh camp. It houses 17.000 persons comprising refugees who fled from president, is another writer. Jimmy Bres- lin. who gave up his newspaper column re¬ Israel in 1948 and their descendants. cently to work on a novel. sets Lansing rally The Lebanese government has tried prevent Palestinian commandos from to using The Mailer-Breslin campaign to win the Democratic party primary opened on a By JIM SYLVESTER Lebanon as a base for operations against rainy Tuesday at St. John's University. State News Staff Writer Israel for fear of reprisals. Breslin warmed up the audience--"You can be in the John Birch Society or the The Committee to Recall Charles Thirteen Lebanese civil airliners were Black Panthers, you still gotta breathe E. Chamberlain will preface its petit¬ destroyed in an Israeli commando raid on the air "--until Mailer arrived. 30 minutes ion drive with a rally at noon Friday Beirut International Airport last Dec. 28. late in front of the Federal Bldg where The Israelis launched the raid in reprisal for an Arab attack on an Israeli El A1 The author of "The Naked and the Dead.^' the. congressman's Lansing office is located. airliner at the Athens airport. "The Armies of the Night" and chronicler Distressed by the circumstances sur¬ Defying a long-standing ban on demon¬ of last year's political conventions, swept down the aisle of the auditorium, past the rounding an automobile accident in Wash¬ strations. the students and refugees took few hundred students there, trench coat ington, D.C., involving Chamberlain, the to the streets in Sidon and Beirut. group hopes to secure the 32,563 sig¬ The army clamped an indefinite curfew billowing. natures needed to bring the question of on both cities and steel-helmeted troops Stepping to the podium to loud applause. a recall before the voters. Mailer. 46. looked more like a lecturer on were patroling all areas as dusk fell. The purpose of the rally, a com¬ In Beirut, students surged through the creative writing than a politician or. for mittee spokesman said, is to call atten¬ ASMSU i Basta area, a densely populated Moslem that matter, the Norman Mailer of legend. Delicate pink and yellow flowers, artifi¬ tion to discrepancies between police At the first meeting of the fifth session of the AS >SU Board, representatives reacted to a presentation quarter and leftist stronghold. Security cial. posed unwilting to one side of the and newspaper accounts of the incident by Bob Hetrich, from the Committee to Preserve a Residential Neighborhood, and issued a statement that forces were stoned from behind hastily stage, left over from something else and Chamberlain's version. they were seriously concerned about the r nation of low cost student housing in East Lansing. erected street barricade^. (please turn to page 11) $tate News photo by Mike Sirna Six armored cars were called into ac¬ (please turn to page 111 2 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Thursday, April 24, 1969 Ride board: portation," Miss Tubaugh said, she said. use with precaution Storaski had made in a WIC- Stormer was strongly against reminding coeds that the cost "Next, leave this information sponsored address concerning the hitchhiking, nothing that "once An attractive, 20-year-old coed "was not much to pay for per- switches with your roommate and also inadvisability of a coed strug- you are inside of a car, the a stack of books sonal safety." or inform her of where you are go- gling with an assailant, Miss means of escape are greatly maybe a suitcase to her left Miss Tubaugh said that there ing and what time you expect Tubaugh paraphrased his advice reduced." arm and sticks out her right are a number of "definite things to arrive," she said. as "going along with the assail- He said that he knew of in¬ hand, thumb uplifted, in the a girl can do" in taking precau- "Finally, call or write ahead ant until you get a chance to stances in which coeds had rolled universal sign of hitch-hikers. tions in the use of the ride to the people at your destination safely do something to get out of a slow-moving vehicle as "Don't do it!" Joy Tubaugh, board." and notify them when you ex- away." it came to a stop sign or turned asst. director for Residence Hall "First, after you've decided pect to arrive," she said. "And 'The idea is to get out of a corner. Programs and faculty adviser on a ride, contact the driver if you are going to be late, the situation by waiting until Means of self-defense which to Women's Inter-residence Coun- and ask his name, student num call ahead so that they don't the assailant is thrown off guard, Stormer offered for a coed as¬ cil (WIC) said. ber and address and check it worry unnecessarily rather than putting up an immed- saulted from behind included "Get a ride on public trans- out with the student directory," ~ * bringing her heel down the as¬ sailant's shin to his instep and. what the wisest thing to do was if he has his hands over her Last la a series depended on the situation and DeGoulle mouth, biting hard. setting of the incident. "In both cases, its just good m "The most important thing sense to take normal precau- He suggested countering a fron¬ tal assault by "scratching for for a girl to do in such a situa- tions." the eyes and bringing the knee tion is to keep her head and Lt. David E. Stormer, a MSU to the groin." if power re foils try to react in the best way possible for the situation," Miss Tubaugh said. police officer, who speaks to coed groups upon request about coed safety measures, had some ad- "If the assailant is armed, a girl can only assume that he is prepared to use the weapon," "Most such assaults are by ditional advice Stormer warned. "What can be men who have, at least to some "Always check the car be- PARIS (AP) -- Georges Pom¬ The outcome is expected to official forum is that of a de- done in a situation like that de¬ pidou. the ex-premier, is the be extremely close, :e. and could and could puty, he has been traveling degree, emotional or mental in- fore getting into it," Stormer pends upon the girl, the cir¬ man in the middle Sunday's go either way. Public opin- around the country, talking to stability," she pointed out. "Con- s£id. "Avoid long trips alone at cumstances and her assailant. " French referendum. ion polls have indicated about political leaders and making sequently, it is important that a night, since mechanical difficul- He said he knew of instances He is campaigning hard for a 52 per cent margin for the speeches. coed in a situation like this ties or a flat tire might leave in which girls had been able to remain more emotionally stable you stranded in ' ' vote. But Pompidou yes vote. A governmental poll The referendum was called an isolated ~ talk their assailants out of the than her assailant order to e£." dream could come true if the about two weeks ago indicated f0r the voters to approve a attack and convince them to outthink him." "If you are being followed, De Gaulle would lose, but a lat- referendum is defeated. Presi- dent Charles de Gaulle has said er sampling swung to a narrow government proposal for set- ting up 21 regions in France While admitting that sex- don't try to ram the car or leave. "Avoid a situation by not put¬ Risky sport will resign if he loses the which would have a degree of motivated assaults may happen anything like that, he said. ting o yourself j—— into a_ ,position Concern over hitchhiking coeds has been expressed referendum on giving more local autonomy, and reforming anywhere, Miss Tubaugh empha- 'Rather than risk injury, drive which might lead to trouble is by local police and administrators after the current power to local authorities. And cret of his yearning to be pres- the Senate These issues have sized that there was "no need to the nearest police station or much easier than trying to rash of assaults. if that happens, Pompidou ident. Since being eased out been pushed to the background, to go around in mortal terror. public place, or flash your lights get out of a situation once the State News stands a good chance of be¬ as premier last July, he has however, by De Gaulle's state- "You can also 8et into an au' and blow y°ur horn t0 attract action has started," he said. photo by Norm Payea coming the next French presi¬ been quietly building his poli- ment that he would quiet if de- tomobile accident every time you drive on the highwav," she said, the attention of a third, unin- volved dent. tical bases. Although his only feated. party." in international affairs. All of these Dialogues will appear in UNIVERSAL SUFFRAGE IS ANYBODY LISTENING as heads of major corporations are career TO CAMPUS VIEWS? exchanging views through means of this publication, and other campus a campus/corporate Dialogue In the course of the entire Dialogue newspapers across the country, Irishchange BUSINESSMEN ARE. Program on specific issues raised by Program. Mark Bookspan, a throughout this academic year. Three chief executive officers—The leading student spokesmen. Chemistry major at Ohio State, also Campus comments are invited, and Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company's will exchange viewpoints with Mr. should be forwarded to Mr. ' Chairman, Russell DeYoung, The Dow Here, David G. Clark, a Liberal Arts DeYoung; as will David M. Butler, in DeYoung, Goodyear, Akron, Ohio; BELFAST. Northern Ireland a narrow decision Wednesday But the narrowness of the Chemical Company's President, graduate student at Stanford, is Electrical Engineering at Michigan Mr. Doan, Dow Chemical. Midland, (AP) - Prime Minister Terence in favor of universal franchise vote intensified the splits in the H. D. Doan, and Motorola's exploring a question with Mr. State, and Stan. Chess. Journalism, Michigan; or Mr. Galvin, Motorola, O'Neill, faced with an ultima- through his divided Unionist ruling party which would have Chairman, Robert W. Galvin—are DeYoung. Administrative activities in Cornell, with Mr. Doan; and similarly, Franklin Park, Illinois, as appropriate. turn from Britain, squeezed out party. to put the "decision into effect. Greece and Austria, along with Arthur M. Klebanoff, in Liberal Arts at ; ' responding to serious questions and however grudgingly. One mem- viewpoints posed by students about broadening experience in university Yale, and Arnold Shelby, Latin her of the Cabinet resigned in . business and its role in our changing society . . . and from their perspective administration, already have claimed Mr. Clark's attention and auger well a American Studies at Tulane, with Mr. Galvin. Texas Basket Special protest-the fifth O'Neill has lost in the past two member OFFER GOOD THURS. AND FRI. The issue was put to a caucus Mr. DeYoung:£an yQU jUStify Texas Burger of the Unionist party's members in the Provincial Parliament. It French Fries only 99' squeaked through 28 to 22. Opponents argued that grant¬ foreign exploitation? Cole Slaw ing the principle of ' one-man. one-vote'' in local elections would represent bowing to what . Dear Mr. DeYoung: Dear Mr. Clark: DOG o SOOS they call a mob-the civil rights demonstrators who used the call for the universal havt- Whether measured by economic In direct consequence the "It is an extraordinary fact, that gained as much as Goodyear has 2755 E. Grand River Avenue franchise as their rallying cry at a time when affluence is gained is questionable, or social yardsticks, the direct host-country's GNP is increased, during the past six months of especially so in the developing results of most modern multi¬ tax revenues swelled, local demonstrations. beginning to be the condition, or at least the potential condition countries. Exploitation is, after national corporate activities in manufacturing stimulated, local of whole countries and regions, all, nothing more than taking the emerging nations is the employment is expanded Others argued it would also fostering of progressive broadly with a wide range of M rather than of a few favorite advantage of the favorable mean bowing to pressure from individuals, and when scientific circumstances of another development—not exploitation ne\A" jobs, and local consumer SMOKY NHHig TIE MBflflfS fcj Britain's Labor government, feats are becoming possible, country which may lack capital under the outdated concepts of nee>!s satisfied—which is of which holds reserve powers in which stagger mankind's wildest dreams of the past, more people in the world are suffering from and/or know-how while justifying to ourselves that it is in their best interest. Admittedly 19th Century mercantilism. Any casting of accounts reveals crucial importance in conserving "hfrtd-money'Veserves or foreign exchange credits. «n«. Northern Ireland and has put its trust in O'Neill as a moderate- that corporate policies, and their The third argument, voiced by such undertakings do provide hunger and want than ever former Commerce Minister Brian Equally, the impact of these A before. Such a situation is so jobs, educational facilities, implementing operations, are focused toward growth within a operations upon local living Faulkner, was that the con< intolerable and so contrary to medical care, better clothing and standards cannot be dismissed sion too late to do any the best interest of all nations shelter to employees and their country. There is also a realistic came families. But this gives rise understanding that those casually. For many it has meant good. His argument, voiced by that it should use the determina¬ operations can be the essential the$ncredible step forward from others in the party, was that tion on the part of the advanced to other questions. motivating force for any viable "bye-survival"existence to a now that the demonstrators and developing countries alike viaWe way of life. To an have tasted victory they ' Are these direct benefits for a progress of the region. to bring it to an end." inordinate number this can be as switch their ground to an assault few people really enough? Essentially, the "in-put" is far This eloquent statement by the Secretary General of the United Nations points up a which any informed problem of citizen must Where are the "above normal" foreign earnings going? What right do we as Americans greater than the outflow, all factors considered. This is clearly revealed from an economic perspective by the bas e as obtaining an adequate supply of potable water, tre^tmeint of diseases we've forgotten about in this country, sufficient food, and at least R on the Ulster police High certainly be aware. Corporations, BBKX and you as Goodyear have to fiscal policy planning and profit literacy level education. also doubtless sense the take resources from another position of many major Style S magnitude of the disparity The dimensions of this picture between the rich and the poor, country for our own profit? companies abroad. As demon¬ oroadened further by the fact between the thriving and the What is Goodyear doing to help strated by Goodyear's own position, we have repatriated are tha an investment climate is by hungry. As the chief executive developing countries become officer of a giant multi-national considerably less than half of our generated that begins to attract Mr, John Carver economically viable and foreign earnings over the past othar major enterprises to the corporation, and as an individual independent members of the area resulting in broader Envy the chiseled mouth of ten years. Conversely, more than who has had considerable Greek goddess? ... Cut world community? Is Goodyear half of our earnings have been diversification. a working experience around the H off tips of old lipsticks at a doing anything to help build up re-invested abroad. This has world, you have seen first-hand 45 degree angle and apply a the wretched state of mankind indigenously owned businesses? been buttressed further by The simple truth is, Mr. Clark, additional capital investment— that the modern multi-national goddess-perfect lip line. referred to by Mr. Thant. Isn't it possible that several U.S. both equity capital and long-term corporation; disciplined by the and other foreign firms operating You'll have silkier hair if At the same time, as Chairman of loans—in the emerging nations. profit and loss risk, is the only in a small, developing country mechanism capable of creating, you brush it all the way down Goodyear, you are the one most could become so centrally linked to the ends, it draws natural Even with this continuing implementing and managing responsible for the long-run A to the economic health of the oils to the hair tips, improves maximization of stockholders' infusion of additional capital, change. Accordingly it is through and prevents split ends. country and hence to its coupled with re-investment, for its operations that rapid social interests in the company. To that end, you have led financial base as to be able to the past three years, returns on and economic development will Miracle During the middle ages, strongly influence the composi¬ capital investment in these areas occur in the emerging nations. Goodyear through a period of tion and style of its government? Don't you agree that its position women wore perfumed gloves still does not equal —let alone significant growth in sales and to attract men. (Why not try domestic is justified? Special exceed —returns on capital investment, most Mr. DeYoung, perhaps the it yourself?) dramatically in areas outside operations. fundamental issue in all these Sincerely, L the United States. "Balancing Act" for thigh- questions relates to the ever¬ This disparity is broadened In response to a rapidly growing growing gap between the prospering and starving nations. further by the tax factor. Taking into account an overall tax rate u*-(^> $088 slimming, hold onto leg - contouring: chair-back and do 2 market for rubber goods abroad, Can American firms really abroad of some 40 per cent, as kneebends keeping heels more than 50% of Goodyear's Russell DeYoung, Chairman raised (raised heels slim the justify their position in the compared to the U.S. corporate The Goodyear Tire & capital expenditures during developing countries when even tax rate of 52.8 per cent, foreign contours) 1963-1967 were for expansion of Rubber Company EACH the most conservative population investment returns still are L international operations. For beautiful shoulders (no biologists tell us that the world markedly less than in our Consider the earnings on total will be experiencing severe food slouch, no hunch) slip a wire domestic operations, notwith¬ assets at home and abroad clothes hanger across should¬ shortages by 1980? Certainly standing the more favorable rate. for the same period. firms investing abroad may er blades and under bra straps, bend wire back into expect a normal return on their Implicit to this picture is the Earnings on investment, but when so many posture of the major corporation "wings". Wear for half hour Total Assets Foreign Domestic of the emerging nations are so abroad both in terms of its 1963-1967 Operations Operations desperately in need of resources relationship to the hosting Range 8.5%—11.5% 5.3%— 6.0% for development in the broadest foreign government, and the Every woman has more sense, are we really justified in effects of its operations on beauty than she suspects. .. Average 9.8% 5.6% and we like to prove itl taking so much out from those economic and social growth. Had Goodyear International's countries for our own Essentially operations are return for 1967 been at the same material aggrandizement? designed to establish a base MR. JOHN'S level as the home for growth while meeting percentage company's, foreign earnings Sincerely. immediate local needs, HAIR FASHIONS 501 1/2 E. Grand River would have been $12.5 million disciplined by the realities of Across From Berkey Hall lower. the profit-motivated free David G. Clark enterprise system. Whether the countries where Graduate Studies, Stanford these operations are located have Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Thursday, April 24, 1969 NEWS Texon receives early Tuesday at Methodist Hos corneal transplant failed when lem will be keeping the optic HOUSTON, Tex. (AP)-John that one eye is now hazel and restore his vision. cells alive. He said pital shortly after the donor, bleeding destroyed the right eye nerve nearly Madden, the world's first reci- the other brown It will at least three weeks million fibers must O. B. Hickman, 55, Houston, but left the optic nerve and eye one nerve pient of a total eye transplant. The 55-year-old Conroe, Tex . before Madden and Dr. Conard summary was reported in excellent condi- photographer and tion Wednesday and undisturbed are hopeful that the transplant his surgeon Moore will know the outcome of We transplant. It was performed died of a brain tumor. Moore said that to his know muscles intact. When the donor eye became grow together restored. if vision is to be ledge it was the first time, ex available two weeks later, Mad¬ A capsule summary of the day's events frorr den himself made the decision our wire services. cept for animal experiments for an entire eye to be transplan to accept a transplant. VP hints: measure to alter ted with an objective of restor¬ ing vision. A Wednesday hospital bulletin "He's very strong minded." his wife said. "Rather indepen¬ dent. He made the decision Current neal plans call for a cor¬ transplant for Madden's left eye after the outcome of the described Madden's condition as total transplant has been deter¬ alone. He just went ahead and Ford's tax-exempt status 'The crisis of Western excellent and said he had taken mined. accepted it as something that Civilization that tve have his first nourishment by mouth was necessary. " since surgery. Mrs. Madden said her hus¬ simply lost the way. Vo one Moore, assisted by Dr. Daniel band has been familiar with a can have any Jaith that the WASHINGTON (AP) - Two the study and travel grants cans who don't like these regis- Moore, asst. director of the Sigband. a Methodist resident certain amount of blindness for of the Nixon Administration's Institute of Opthalmology at the physician, connected the donor men who are running things were "fully justified in edu Nation drives." he commented, several years and surgery for tax recommendations on foun¬ But the sen- Texas Medical Center, said the optic nerves and outer eye coat- cational terms." £ lot of Negroes are being removal of cataracts had pre¬ knoic what they're doing." dations appear to be aimed di¬ ior situation that caused Madden to ints of the donor eye and the Republican member of the i gistered." ceded the unsuccessful corneal \ or man Mailer, rectly at practices of the $3.5 committee. lose his right eye April 14 hap¬ recipient. Rep. John W Rep Sam Gibbons, D-Fla . transplant billion Ford Foundation. pens only about once in 1.000 As a precaution. Madden's candidate for mayor of Byrnes, R-Wis., described j lid. "I would not go so far "But he always keeps up a Vice President Spiro T. Ag- them as severance pay. a: to accuse the Treasury of cases. right eyelid was stitched so it \ew York City new may have had this in mind Madden had corneal dystro¬ cannot be opened for three weeks. good front." she said. "He just when he inserted a tongue-in- phy in both eyes and a routine Moore said the primary probl- goes on." cheek remark into a speech in nanced a voter registration International News New York Tuesday night drive in slum areas of Cleve¬ Agnew said President Nixon land, said to have helped in More colleges joined Wednesday in the stu¬ had asked him to electing Carl B. Stokes mayor. dent sit-in strike against the regime of the new you that as a result of secret Bundy also defended this ac¬ Czechoslovak Communist Party leader, Gus- peace talks held today, a break¬ tivity, saying special precaut¬ through and meaningful nego¬ tav Husak, who replaced liberal-minded Alex¬ ions had been taken to prevent tiations are being held which any overlap of the registration ander Dubcek. Twenty colleges and faculties hopefully will bring about a drive with the political contest. phased withdrawal of the Ford He said moreover that of Prague's Charles University took part in the Foundation from its tax-exempt only a agitation. Many are expected to continue boy¬ status." minor portion of the $475,000 provided to the Congress of cotting classes until tonight. Two administration • • • mendations on foundations tie in Racial Equality and other inner- city groups went for the regis¬ directly with previous testimony Fighting has broken out on the approaches to the House Ways and Means tration drive. to Ban Me Thuet. where leaders of the rebel¬ Committee about the Ford Bundy was not immediately Foundation available for comment on the lious Montagnard tribes met and aligned them¬ One reads "prohibit private Nixon tax messages proposals selves with the South Vietnamese govern¬ foundations from engaging in Rep James C. Corman. D- ment. activities which directly affect Calif. told a reporter it seems • • • to him the administration aimed political campaigns, such as voter registration drives " at the Ford Foundation with Nigerian troops seized Unwahia. the admin¬ Another would require that some of its recommendations istrative capital of secessionist Biafra. after a when a foundation makes a grant "I'm sure there are Republi- two-dav battle Wednesday, the government to an individual, it must make public the of the recip¬ •###•••*#• announced. Biafrans are still fighting on the names # ASMSU POP • ients and a description of acti¬ front while waging guerrilla-type warfare be¬ vities financed by the grant # Entertainment • hind Nigerian lines. The results of such work also # AND • would have to be made public National News The committee received tes¬ timony that the Ford Foundation The giant Soviet SS9, a threat cited to win made grants totaling $131,000 support for the proposed U.S. Safeguard anti¬ to eight former aides of Sen Robert F. Kennedy after Ken¬ missile system, is the same as a missile the nedy s assassination United States abandoned years ago. Sen. Stuart McGeorge Bundy. president Symington. D-Mo.. said Wednesday. of the Ford Foundation, said # THE • • • ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■a ■ FREAKOUT No. 12 * •CLASSICS JV# Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield ^ JEN1SON FIELD HOUSE f says President Nixon should set a June.target • Friday MayV?2 8:00«•*p.m. W Tlrlrors anH A date for starting disarmament talks with the SAT., APRIL 26 Soviet Union regardless of any other consider¬ ation. • • • The government will appeal a federal judge's ruling that young men who object sincerely, THE STATE NEWS although not on religious grounds, cannot be forced to fight in the Vietnam war. Solicitor The State Newt, tl published every class General Erwin N. Griswold announced Wed¬ and Orientation issue nesday. per year • • • Member Associated Press. United Press International. Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Michigan Press Association. Mich¬ Living costs rose eight-tenths of one per igan Collegiate Press Association. United States Student Press A cent in March, the largest monthly increase Second class postage paid at East Lansing. Michigan. in 18 years, the Labor Dept.. reported Wed¬ Editorial and business offices at 34? Student State University. East Lansing, Michigan. nesday. # Michigan News Editorial 355-8252 Gov. Classified Advertising 355-8255 Millikin, speaking at Oakland Uni¬ Display Advertising 353-6400 versity Wednesday, warned student leaders Business-Circulation 355-344? Photographic 355-8311 to be warv of "illegitimate" seizure of cam¬ pus power by violence-bent demonstrators. "Many of the acts of violence now com¬ mitted by students on college campuses Zales has and in high schools are clearly in violation of city or state laws."' • • • something they'll Sen. Philip A. Hart, D-Mich., said Wednes¬ never forget! day the nation cannot afford the Nixon Admin¬ istration's decision to close 59 job corps centers, particularly those in Michigan's up¬ per peninsula. "The price in terms of broken commitments to corpsmen, shattered dreams of self-improvement and growing cynicism among the youth is too high. It's a perfect ex¬ ample of how the government can promise something, then snatch it away," Hart said. Campus News About 12 students stormed the American University administration building in Washing¬ ton. D.C. Wednesday and evicted President George Williams from his office. More protes¬ tors reportedly entered the building later. A school spokesman said the group, believed to have been organized by the university's chap¬ ter of Students for a Democratic Society, was protesting the school's involvement in a police- training program. • • • The 1,100-member faculty of Cornell Univer¬ sity voted today to nullify charges against five black students, surrendering to demands by campus black militants who shocked the cam¬ pus with an armed exit after taking over a Cornell building. A faculty source said the 9R CENTER vote was "clear-cut" in favor of dropping the FEDERAL'S PHONE: 351-0150 charges. EDITORIALS view Too many No easy EDITOR'S NOTE: The following "point solution During these early days it had also come on election of view" was written by Gunter Pfaff, edi¬ tor, Instructional Media Center. Pfaff is a to were our attention that similar dismissals being perpetrated on other campuses founding member of the New University around the nation and it was clear to us Charges of corruption in elec¬ bothered to pick up the ballot Conference (NUC). that we had to try to arouse people to at¬ tion practices are always good box or else decided their pay In January of this year a group of people tempt to stifle and reverse this oncoming for a few news stories. When from MSU stayed on after a public hearing wave of repression-and regression. was too low so they quit early to form a local chapter of the New Univer¬ the charges are founded in val¬ for dinner. There is a consensus of values in the sity Conference (NUC)--a national mem¬ seats of power of society and id complaints, the stories even Infringements that could not ber organization of radical scholars, grad¬ our our uni¬ versities which makes the dismissal of rad¬ be written off "mistakes" uate students and staff. manage to come off with a little as We had heard during that meeting the icals of the left a necessity. It is our obli¬ authenticity. only accounted for 10 votes in presentation of both sides of the issues gation as concerned citizens as well as one case. And of course, dis¬ members of the academic community to~ So the newspaper gets a few relating to the dismissal of Asst. Professor not only rise in protest-but begin to Bert Garskof. It became clear to us then recon¬ headlines, the losers in the ciplinary action will be taken struct the distribution of power and the that the issues were not of an academic election get their two cents against whomever is respon¬ nature, but that a number of weak academ¬ centers of real decision making. Many are sible. The rest of the infringe¬ ic issues were being used as a cover-up for already aware today that the real control in, and the winners manage to in this society comes from the ments were just "white lies", dismissing a known radical from this cam¬ military in¬ sound very amazed and aghast dustrial complex (to use Eisenhower's one or two ballots. pus. It was clear to us then--as it is now- that this type of thing could that this kind of dismissal could not be phrase i and many realize that the univer- The election review board sities~as presently arranged-have been happen. But you know, what tolerated by us. Our first task was to organ¬ made the handmaiden for the preservation can they do? They won, be it has done its investigation and ize in defense of Bert Garskof, our second of the imperialist power elite. It is not its findings are now a matter is the education of this community as to pos¬ fair and square or with a little the real reasons behind his dismissal, the sible however-and never has been-that in of record. Those involved in the course of history a small elite will be help from their friends. third will be to bring about significant able to maintain its power for long, no mat¬ blatantly unethical election changes so that we as a community do in¬ But pretty soon the charges deed become one. ter what kind of repressive measures it may procedures will be reprimand¬ want to apply. stop being hot news. The head¬ ed, but, of course, a new elec¬ At first we held several meetings and lines stop, the losers quit pout¬ rallies to air the issues and discuss their It seems that ours, tion will not be held. Let's be as well as the stu¬ importance with concerned members of dents' voices of protest here ing and forget about the in¬ practical for a minute. The re¬ this community. We also collected several on campus fractions and the winners take are going unheard by those in position to hundred signatures of faculty, staff and view board is under the control act-we seem to be facing the same prob¬ over the job they were elected graduate students asking the administra¬ lem in this unresponse of the same organization that tion to reconsider the withdrawal of the disrespect as to (with a little help from their many other segments of our society, such might be affected by a new two-year contract offer. This contract it¬ as the poor and the black. friends). election, and a re-election 'Speaking to you today about self was already a totally punitive approach to reward Garskof for the excellent results Great numbers of people support our de¬ The next year the same cy¬ would not alcohol in our society change the out¬ . . he had in teaching large numbers of under¬ mand that Bert Garskof be reinstated but cle can start all over again. come significantly anyway. we have yet to see any positive response by graduates. not to mention his excellent Another election, more com¬ So the whole affair can hap¬ research and publication record. the administration or the Psychology Dept. The effort is also being pursued in the plaints and charges, another pen again next year, as it did regular channels of the AAUP and the investigation -- all eventually last year. Until somebody does Faculty Tenure Committee but these com¬ forgotten. mittees are only advisory in nature. The It may make for a couple of something to change the elec¬ dick stoimenoff so-called Proper Channels are very often tion procedures, like inject¬ the tools of those in power to achieve good, sleezy news stories ev¬ ing some sort of strong uni¬ their own ends-that is why most of them ery year, but it does not make formity and control into them. are only advisory in nature. As human his¬ for fairer elections. A king-sized frustration We have our differences with tory has furthermore shown, proper chan¬ The actual nels and correct legal procedures can be infringements ASMSU. but its elections are followed to put an end to the lives of mil- were small, it was decided aft¬ important if students are to be \\ \ lions-especially when those that under¬ er a ' thorough investigation." properly represented and if stand what is going on do not voice their op-^ What this world needs is a good old- your hard-earned money and the lives of do is to punch everybody in the nose who A few cases of ballot stuffing, position in time. the role of student govern¬ fashioned plague. A diabolical, outrag¬ your country's young over to Southeast is responsible for your dilemma. Only We of NUC do not intend to stand idly a few people who never got the trouble is you would get a five-to-ten ment is to be regularly as¬ eously wicked plague that would strike a Asia so General Ky can ride around in by and watch injustice being perpetrated opportunity to vote, for what¬ sessed. completely random sample of the popula¬ American jets with his silk scarf and spot in Jackson for sacrilege, or accost¬ and watch the continuing erosion of human ever reason. But they all aver¬ tion with no precipitating symptoms and lightening-streaked pilot's helmet and his ing an officer, or compromising the se¬ values in a suicidal death spiral. If a Uni¬ The election will soon be leave no clues as to how it did it sunglasses playing Terry and the Pirates curity of the nation or something equally or versity cannot tolerate a radical from the aged out "to a maximum of one stale news and then the head¬ why. All right, if that is too gruesome, and telling American newsmen they can naughty. left then that spells the doom of that uni¬ vote per house that couldn't how about just a mysterious sickness take their military aid and dispose of it So here we are again, nothing to do but lines will stop. The losers have versity. If a society is so far to the right that be accounted.'" and one little that would leave the healthiest of bod¬ in embarrassing parts of their bodies. Go change your major to biochemistrv before it forces its universities to expell these ra¬ had their say. the investigation ies bedridden for exactly 58 days and then Ahead and send a letter and then wait it is too late. But. gosh. I would lose vote dicals. then that society is in very great never really affected an is over, and nothing much has leave as mysteriously. by the mail box until you get your form an awful lot of credits toward graduation need of overhaul and it is time for all of election did it? Well, how else letter telling you. 'Sorry, sir. everything that way. Then I could not do something changed. are we going to get our us to do something about it. Besides, most of the infringe¬ At least this way we are as¬ minds off the fact that the Russkies have possible is being done but it is tempor¬ really significant in the world like con¬ In conclusion I would like to remind ments a 20 megaton baby that can take a divot arily necessary to keep pouring your mon¬ vincing housewives that Great Flakes are those who are attracted by easy solutions were " simply mistakes" sured of a few headlines again 800 feet ey and your sons into the furnance to better than Chewies and besides their deep by 2.400 feet in diameter? Or that never in history have issues disap¬ Most of the • mistakes" can be save face in the Southeast Asian sphere chairman of the board is a lecher. ..next year. It is one assurance more alarming. American science and peared by ostracizing or eliminating the in¬ attributed to election officials technology, with the help of America's of influence." Right now I have more important things dividual who is bringing these issues into we could live without. in individual halls who never best friend, the college, will undoubtedly Well, you can imagine how frustrating to do. I have got to take out the gar¬ the? open-it only postpones their time of -The Editors that is. So. according to the tenets of bage and find someone with notes for develop one that can dig a hole twice return and raises the human cost of their that size in Vladivostok without even modern psychology, the natural thing to all the classes I have missed. reentry. shaking the crystal off the shelves in Prices and Hong Kong. A diversion, that is all we need. Some¬ thing that the forces in the world would MAX LERNER While SDS and other radical dence hall, the reality of the not even begin to understand separately students attempt to dissolve situation demands immediate but. if they worked together, could con¬ MSU's ties with police enforce¬ quer in a matter of decades. By then rectification. something else could be released that ment and the "military-indus¬ Many students have come would dumbfound everyone for another trial complex" from without, a group of graduate students into contact with one basic MSU evils: the 15 cent of the few decades. It is all quite simple. So simple, in fact, that I have decided to change my major to biochemistry with Time to set limits at colleges are attacking the high food cup of coffee. The Union and only one term to go and start working prices in the Owen Hall cafe¬ the International Center are on the diversion first thing in the morn¬ teria from within. ing. After all. the world has waited long major perpetrators of this enough for another saviour. Their petition and the gripe crime What happened at Cornell was the ghast¬ although the latter also The present system only leads to in¬ liest of a series of ghastly recent incidents members so ridden by guilt or so ready if they show promise and preparation behind it are so well substan¬ has a combined two-cups-of- evitable frustration. Frustration that a- for a vicarious violence thrill that they and if }n American campuses: students taking ov- they are ready to use it with civility. tiated that if the ad hoc com¬ rises when a man realizes the decision sit by while their university lies a helpless A college is a delicate organism, and every¬ coffee - for - 25-cents-in-a-little- ^r a university guest building, driving whether he should live or die is lifted victim. Part of it rests with university offi¬ one who is part of it must operate under mittee formed to resolve the out a number of parents who were in it: pot policy. When a 15 cent cup out of his hands and placed on a mahog¬ the same students with shotguns standing cials who are so worried about their pub¬ the rules of the organism. If you are issue does not take quick ac¬ of coffee is sold, coffee lic image and about violence headlines that some any table in Washington. Moscow, or bent on ripping it to pieces, you don't be¬ ^uard over the building, reinforced by a tion. it is telling us that the Peking. The germ which started the they buckle under blackmailing pressures long as part of it and you had better take experts have estimated a earful of weapons; two college officials and sign what is put before them. What¬ committee system is a failure. Enlightenment was the discovery of the your intensities and violence elsewhere. profit of up to 16 cents. But fact that could control his compelled to sign a seven-point agreement, ever else these demands include, they al¬ man own des-, Any society that allows private armies to The substantiation lies in sitting on the steps of the building as the .in the Owen Hall cafeteria tiny. But this germ ran amuck when students stand over them. Whether this ways include the demand for amnesty from operate is doomed to end in the bloodshed two words: excessive over¬ one pays for his daily meals, control of destiny sobn came to mean either university or court sanctions. For the of opposing private armies. If antiwhite destruction of the same. A man can feel happens with black or white students-at whole logic of risking violence is that you pricing. This is something we including coffee, with exces¬ masculine when he knows he can raise Cornell it was blacks-it is intolerable in will be able, through the same violence, black students take arms, it is inevitable that they will be vollowed by anti-black are constantly aware of, but sive profit being handed over any university. and provide for a flock of his own crea¬ to get absolved from paying any penalties whites taking arms. Both are intolerable. The other incidents fit into an almost cannot counteract due to our to the University. tion and live to see the day when his for it. The functions of the university must be equally intolerable violence pattern: at What is clearly happening is a process of own lack of communication. This flock will produce more of the same. A used against both. problem cannot be woman can feel feminine when she can Atlanta a group of college trustees held paying off the terrorists, as in a kidnaping The burden rests on the university pri¬ Fortunately, a group of grad¬ passed-by under the guise of protect that flock in the nest until their captive until they agreed to the rebel stu¬ of a rich man's child when the parent can't uate students have taken the dent demands; at Harvard an administra¬ marily to employ its power of suspension an inflationary trend in prices. legs no longer tremble at the thought of risk anything happening to his loved one. and tion building seized by the extreme leftist expulsion. Beyond what the police initiative. dedicated them¬ doing what she did. We are watching the dangerous, humiliat¬ may have to do to maintain order, on the Quality and quantity of food are Ask any psychologist, he will tell you faction of the SDS. at Columbia news pic¬ ing and self-defeating spectacle of the selves to reaching others in in question, too. ture of two professors climbing out of campus as elsewhere, it is the university that the natural outlet of frustration is ransoming of American colleges. that must be responsible for its own mem¬ the same predicament and. Therefore, it is a question of Philosophy Hall by a window because The notion some professors have re¬ aggression, the old "I know you've had a the building had been taken over for a bership. From this point on any university ; most importantly, followed alleviating this captive hold bad day, honey, but don't take it out on time by a student faction. cently advanced-that we shall have to get official who signs away the university's the kids'' routine. What used to college strikes and violence for through to a point where, at over students now or forever can you expect There have been others, there will be power of discipline by agreeing to • de¬ from a king-sized frustration that en¬ many years to come, just as we have had mands'' of amnesty must be considered as present, their work lies in the forgetting the issue due to the gulfs all but the lucky few in the world §till others. The nation has been patient to accept labor strikes and violence-has an and tolerant of these disruptions. The time having betrayed his university's survival. , hands of a committee. bureaucratic committee who have never had the misfortune of element of nonsense in it. Students are not sys¬ has come to place limits around them, to Copyright 1969. Los Angeles Times The grievances of these stu¬ reading a newspaper. Everyone knows workers, colleges are not commercially tem filing the issue into the isolate those who engineer them, to take run factories, dents would be worthy of some what to expect by now-more Vietnams. college administrations are ' woodwork. These students arms races, missile gaps, credibility prudent but effective action to end them not corporate barons, students are not Letter policy attention if The agenda for making students part of a they were simply have worked long and hard in gaps, and gap gaps. better system of college decision-making is getting wages nor are college presidents the result of high prices. But The State News welcomes all letters. trying to reverse the intoler¬ . And what can one do short of changing still there, to be worked on and completed making profits. The whole analogy is cock¬ his major to biochemistry or beating his eyed. So is the notion of some black-power They should be typed and signed with the j when the quality nnd quantity ant price conditions: it is now head against a wall until unconsciousness But while that is happening the seizures far-out students that college campuses home town, student, faculty or staff stand¬ : of the food purchased cause and disruptions, the kidnaping, the gun- up to the committee to act eases the pain? Well, one could do it are black ghettos where riots, arson and ing. and local phone number included. No toting must all end. The overwhelming unsigned letter will be accepted for publi¬ ; consternation in, at least, two- with the same dedication. the American way, write your congress¬ majority of Americans, including students shotguns must decide the issues. cation. and no letter will be printed with¬ ; thirds of the students in a resi¬ --The Editors man. Tell him you are tired of sending and faculty, have had it and don't want Going to college is neither a way of mak¬ out a signature except in extreme circum¬ ing a living nor a way of overturning a any more. stances. All letters must be less than 300 Part of the society. It is a civil function, a privilege Inmes R. ( r, problem rests with faculty that the community gives its young people words long for publication without editing. MICHIGAN irol ttudrou. A LOT OF OUR GOVS WERE SICK, IT'S HARD NOT TO APPRECIATE STATE NEWS verlining manager REMEMBER ?U)ELL( ICOULD HAVE COME OVER AND BEAT V0URTEAM ALL BY MVSELF, BUT I PIPNTUJANT SUCH COMPASSION! IT UNIVERSITY TO MAKE A FOOL OUT OF YOU... y I'nnkhurnl, editorial edit Six-time recipient of the Pacemaker award for outstanding journalism. Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Thursday, April 24, 1969 5 OUR READERS' MIND Owen Hall: nunnery on campus of not being attacked while a matter of having a man in male your room after midnight (re¬ In the true tradition of King others received some attention), while others oh-so-hung-up on the idea of were pent sinner) but whether you can have a friend, classmate 'Thanks for the memories Arthur's Court, righteousness, quest I made of him when they or father come up at 2 p.m. in To the Editor: people who helped me along the virtue and morality have tri¬ being free to walk around with were all leaving the campus. their hair in rollers, or in their the afternoon to have a con¬ I would like to take this op¬ way to meeting him: the peo¬ umphed again. A certain group Thank you very much. versation. listen to a record, portunity to congratulate the ple in the Natural Science Bldg . of Owen Graduate Hall resi¬ "sexy" 10-laver, floor-length the secretary in ASMSU office And. most of all, a great big o? study for a test without ASMSU Great Issues people for dents have again managed to bathrobes. the fine job they did in getting in the Student Services Bldg.. thanks for Jim McDivitt for other people around. defeat a resolution calling for It is beside the point that Astronaut Jim McDivitt to come the man at the Auditorium with coming here and giving me the 24-hour open house for the freshmen and other dormitor¬ Owen Hall was never the walkie-talkie (I don't know chance to meet him. Thanks to Take another look,SN • here. women's wing of Owen. Alas, ies have more liberal hours or you. Col. McDivitt. great man cesigned to be a fortress -- Being a close follower of the any of their names), and any¬ a these fine, upstanding graduate that Owen's own hours are spor¬ in whose footsteps I hope to be cr a convent. It is a dormi¬ space program ever since its one else I may have bothered students (A good percentage adically enforced. The point is able to follow as my generation Last term a series of articles things do not constitute mean¬ tory. a social setting, where very beginning, it was the great¬ Their help was greatly apprec¬ of them over 35 years of age), that graduate students are ma¬ iated. And I would like to say a takes over the task of manned mature people should be est day of my life yesterday appeared in the State News en¬ ingful student involvement in did not want their atmosphere ture enough to handle open hours allowed to associate with other space flight where your genera¬ titled "Students and Academ¬ departmental structure, what when I was able to meet Jim special thanks to Col. Shaber of study disturbed, or were intelligently and without abus¬ who offered and then did. tion will leave off. Thank you ics." In the offering on March does0 mature people, whenever they McDivitt and shake hands with to, afraid of being attacked by ing the privilege by blatantly wish. him when he arrived at the Aud¬ take my picture shaking hands very much. 8. the student advisory commit¬ The Student Advisory Com¬ "strange men" wandering in disturbing other residents. And itorium. with Jim McDivitt and also Dennis C. Kneer tees of the Depts. of Journal¬ mittee is elected by undergrad¬ the halls (or perhaps afraid the privilege is not exclusively 10 female graduate students Kalamazoo freshman ism and Speech and Theatre uate communication majors I would like to thank all those for performing the other re- were cited as being the more from a slate of candidates, each active within the College of Com¬ of whom petitioned out of their munication Arts. It was further own intiative. We are expected stated that, "according to one to attend most departmental ad hoc committee member, that meetings and are treated as con- students are being subtly held tributive members. We have seen back in other departments" of the results of our opinions in the college. As the Student Ad¬ such things as the cirriculum re¬ visory Committee for the Dept vision. How can anyone say the of Communications, we would students of the Communication suggest that the State News re Dept. are being "subtly held e its information. back0" The Since speech was separated We believe the State News from theatre and merged with had better take another look at communication last July, there the Dept. of Communication was a great need for curriculum and the College of Communi¬ revision within the redefined cation Arts, especially if they Communication Dept. The Stu¬ would like to see the beginnings dent Advisory Committee, along of student participation in aca¬ with other student volunteers, demic areas. The students of the were asked to work on the var¬ Dept. of Communication are a ious Communication Dept. cur¬ Affluent good example of the role of riculum committees so that each undergraduates within the de¬ one had two fully participating partmental structure. This exam¬ students. When the new curricu¬ ple should be used as a base for lum was presented, it definite¬ further involvement in our de¬ ly reflected student opinion. Now partment and in other depart¬ students and faculty are work- ments in the University. If in¬ in together to plan the con¬ tent of the core courses for com¬ dividual student prejudices and public misrepresentation by stu¬ munication maors. dent media discount real efforts, Poor. then it is unrealistic to expect The Student Advisory Com¬ that students will gain the voice mittee has been active in other in academic affairs to which we areas, too. We have suggested are entitled. a textbook-ordering policy which has been implemented in de¬ Signed: Student Advisory Com¬ partments throughout the Uni¬ mittee versity. We have organized open Dept. of Communication houses to provide an opportunity for many students and faculty EDITOR'S NOTE: The State to exchange ideas and informa- News is aware of no intention¬ tiot. We attended the meetings al misrepresentation of facts. to orient majors to the new cur¬ riculum in order to increase our efficiency as liasons between students and faculty We are sponsoring a journal to publish research articles by communica¬ tion undergraduates All of the things mentioned take time, energy and faculty cooperation By faculty cooper¬ Will a Michigan Bankard change all this? No. ation. we mean that we are heard when we voice ideas, But it sure can help. whether or not our opinions agree faculty. These opinions with the are then discussed and. if shown Remember when the color TV you wanted was to be valid, adopted. If these marked down 30%? But you didn't have the cash. With a Michigan Bankard you could have charged it ATTENTION CAR OWNERS * at the sale price. Complete front end repair and alignment Then there was the summer you got socked by * Brakes * Suspension those big dental bills. You already had your hands full * Wheel balancing * Steering paying off other charge account balances, 25% each month. With a Michigan Bankard you can pay as little LISKEY'S Auto Safety Center If your family income is around $14,000 a year, as 5% a month. 124 SOUTH LARCH IV 4-7346 give or take a thousand or two, yoi're a member of a Add up your checking account costs. 10c to new class: The Affluent Poor. 12^ a check. 10 or 15 checks a month. 12 months a Remember back around ^ 1958, when you year. Year in and year out. With a Michigan Bankard earned $7,500 a year and lived like a king? Now, even you write just one check per month for all purchases. with your wife working to bring the family income to And you have up to 25 days to pay without interest or nearly $14,000, you always feel pinched. service charge. Twice that long if you arrange pur¬ . . .for this Spring is the Blame it on the quart of mil* that used to cost chases at the very beginning of your billing cycle. pants skirt in solid or A Michigan Bankard doesn't bring you more 24 cents. Now it's 34 cents. prints. Blame it on the fact that your only child in money. But it does save you money. Gives you greater, Choose from our 1958 is more flexible spending power. Helps you live within large selection no longer an only child. Blame it on higher taxes. your income. Sizes 5-13 Blame it on all the Joneses in the world. It's Remember? Like back in '58. from $9.00 to $14.00 tough enough keeping up with just one of them. Between your growing expenses and the univer¬ Michigan Bankard Get a Michigan Bankard sal urge of every person to continue bettering his application at hanks and merchants wherever you see does all the work... the red, white and blue sign, standard of living, the outgo is 'orever outpacing the "Your Michigan Bankard welcome here." income. aitd you ^et all the credit 6 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Thursday, April 24, 1969 Israeli songsters Deeply affected cast independence brings Sade' to life MSU's first official Sade show, tine to superb. It is hard to sin¬ Hedva and David will appear gie Hall. New York's Palace the MSU Israeli Club and the playing tonight through Sunday gle out a few without slighting in Fairchild Theater, is a stun¬ several, but certain credit must Theatre and other major cul¬ Hillel Foundation, will be open on campus tonight as part of the Israeli Independence Day cele¬ tural centers throughout the to the MSU community. Light ning and impressive affair. Al¬ be given. And for once, no one bration at MSU. world. refreshments will be served. though the first night was marred was notably weak. It's just that Their accomplishments also by self-consciousness, on stage some stood out as deeply af¬ The two renowned Israeli en¬ and in the audience, the Per¬ fected, well directed actors. tertainers will be in the Union include performing in night¬ clubs and recording albums for forming Arts Co. tackled Peter First there was Louis Bauer. Parlor at 8 p.m. Hedva and David began their RCA Victor. They are presently Two chairmen Weiss's grueling 'Marat Sade" with impressive skill and relish. Almost unfairly suited to the role of Duperret. his slow, minc¬ on a tour of the United States, careers as entertainers in the Israeli Army They traveled which has included appearances in Home Ec Besides the large and uneasy audience, there were several sur¬ ing were moves and sour expression perfect. Even with that in Washington. D C.. New Hav¬ from base to base and have since prising accomplishments in the somehow wrong quality in his en. Cleveland. Chicago and New traveled throughout Europe. Their musical style ranges York. After Hedva and David's per¬ resign posts play. An appropriately inventive set. correct costumes and some voice, Bauer looked and moved like a true tortured satyr. Out of from native folk songs to the lat¬ formance. at the 21st anniver¬ Two chairmen in the College Hevda and David clever lighting created the vis¬ focus or in. his was the finest est in international hits. Their of Home Economics uals to near-perfection. The per¬ taneity. created a really clinch of the principal characterizations. sary celebration, guests will be recently an¬ Hevda and David are two cf the stars that will be repertoire includes songs from invited to formance of the intense musi¬ ing atmosphere. A very close second was Bon¬ join in the community nounced their resignations as de¬ featured during the entertainment for the Israeli With a cast of 38 displaying France. Spain, Italy. Greece. cal score, interwoven with ac¬ nie Raphael, who. as Simone, singing and folk dances, led by partment heads. Independence Day celebration. The program will tion that was a well-calculated all shades of snakepit lunacy, Portugal. Turkey and America accordianist Abraham Kumian- Beatrice Paolucci, acting also got attention and sympathy take place in the Union parlcrs. mixture of direction and spon- performances ranged from rou- whether it was her scene or not. The Israeli duo has performed ski. chairman of the Dept. of Fam¬ at the Olympia in Paris. Carne¬ The She twitched and moaned in a program, sponsored bv ily and Child Sciences for the 100 Vet. Clinic past two years, announced her resignation Saturday, at the 20th ARCADE PSYCHEDELICS brilliantly low-keyed her few self-conscious lines were way, and •FLICKS- Annual Home Economics Alum¬ ni reunion. easily forgotten. Hers was the evening's most beautiful act¬ ing. and strangely, all the best Heavy Mrs. Paolucci. formerly one mus area of MSU's most distinguished pro¬ acting in this production seems Sophia Loren fessors, will continue teaching to be silent. In silence every one of the ac¬ and research at MSU. Jean-Paul Belmondo tors were excellent. The major Margaret Jacobson, associate By MARK McPHERSON Lake Lansing tonight. If you entertainment, in terms of repu¬ the Jams" in the best anti-sys¬ roles of Corday. Sade and Marat R af Val lone professor of home management State News Reviewer like your tation alone, could tend to cool and child development, will suc¬ psychedelia at water¬ tem style. were diminished only by their Gentle Thursday seems to be side. or groove to people like The off The Heat as well as make Tickets for tonight's two unconvincing delivery. Rick Hite. ceed Mrs. Paolucci as chairman going down the drain along with TWO of the department. a string of other once-upon-a- Woolies. The MC-5 or The Canned Heat, now is the chance. even the sheepish. Woolies seem a bit shows are at the door. $3 advance and $3.25 They are available as fact, the sinister herald was, the only major speaker Mary L. Gephart. chairrfian of time institutions. Unless the cry Freshly arrived from Texas at Marshall Music. Parapherna¬ who was always believable. WOMEN the Dept. of Textiles, Clothing and Related Arts for nine years, is begun on a newspaper page, nobody, these days, seems eager last night, the Canned Heat will The MC-5. ther boys, those White Pan¬ who singed local lia and Paramount News. John Reese was suitably ef¬ appear in East Lansing during Look for the Canned Heat on fective as Roux, loping around in also announced her resignation. to take advantage of what Thurs* at the Kab-a-Ra directed by the day and at the Lake Lansing ears lately, campus From 2-4 today, as they a straight jacket and scream¬ Robert Rice, associate pro¬ day can potentially be. Mavbe with ditties like "The Motor Amusement Arcade at 7 and will be "Goin Up Country" in ing, "Love live the Revolution!" Vittoria DeSica fessor of the Dept. of Housing :that is why Thursday is only 9:30 tonight. City Is Burning 'Teenage their own sound wagon, just to Of the lesser loonies, he and and Interior Design at the Uni¬ once a week: it is meant to b* Lust" and "I Want You Now." Accompanying "The Heat's" truck around and rap with any¬ Linda Lashbrook inspired the 7 and 9 p.m. versity of Missouri, will suc¬ special. So why not use it? are on the prowl again. To say DONATION 75C ceed Mrs. Gephart. own unique sound. Lansing's lo¬ one who would care to. most feeling. But in very per¬ If you have felt in the moot} cal lads. 'The Woolies" of "Who they are of the "new" vein of At 4:30-5 p.m. Dean Jeanette Lee of the Col¬ in 35 Union the sonal ways, each cast member for a bit of "jam-kicking." o'.' Do You Love0" and hard-rock, below-the-belt bands, Love groups will hold a reception and deserves praise-if just for the lege of Home Economics made if that is Greek to you. sonru> Words" fame will be adding to would be appropriately a gross at 5:30 they will all convene and the announcement. tremendous effort required to heavv music, make it out to the Gentle Thursday trio. understatement. At any rate, you begin a motorcade which will survive that holocaust of a play. ■on >485-6485 can count on these chaps, as A third addition to the Arcade wind its way to the Amusement TODAY At 1:15 well as the others, to "Kick Out Sidney Berger also deserves the r 3:20-5:25-7:30-9:35 QLADMER arcade, site of tonight's concert. Betty Crocker award for whip¬ ping together so many unusual A TONIGHT AT 8:30 HILARIOUS WESTERN COMEDY! elements into a meaningful and frightening concoction. Of course, LEE it is Weiss's play, but this time WINNER MARVIN Berger seems responsible if we discovered how easily a crowd ACADEMY' TOSHIRO MIFUIME SUPP< becomes a mob. (shouting ""We want a revolution NOW! '' > or if AWARDS YOUR best A Carlo Ponti Production Antonioni's we that not had doubts when we heard this sort of thing could BEST ACTRESS happen nowadays. We LOCA1 film BLOW-UP more Civilized ' KATHARINE HEPBURN The play is a mad. provoca¬ euro TECHNICOLOR of Vanessa David Hemmings Redgrave • Sarah Miles tive bathhouse show of Char¬ lotte Corday running through the TECHNISCOPE 1966! COLOR bloody streets or Paris sere —0-;.with Claire Bloom ing. " What Kind of town is this?'' It is ranting lunatics, P6T6ROTOOL6 CHEROKEE PRODUCTIONS Presents taunting a decaying revolution¬ KATHAR1N6 H6PBURN MARTIN POII JAMES GARNER JOAN HACKETT WALTER BRENNAN ary with. " Poor old Marat, HELL . 1H6 LION IN WINT6R lie prostrate, while others are SUPPORT YOUR LOCAL SHERIFF IN THE gambling with France's fate!" PACIFIC I G | Suflflcstefl fQ' GENERAL COLOR by Deluxe UJilted AntlStS * "J-slat 109 Anthony n;oosP It is a scene of "General copu¬ GARY LOCKWOOD ELKE SOMMER QAM PUS lation." And then the sudden PANAVSON ■ TECHNICOLOR" CRC E NEXT! "They Came To Rob Las Vegas" Next! "TWISTE D NERVE' * The Horror Of Dracula end. when we find that some seeds have really drifted from >f 25c in the stage gun to grow. and have, indeed, be¬ ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ Business Ad TONIGHT PROGRAM INFORMATION ^ 482*3905 The CANNED HEAT Smith* &. 'Incredinle Shows at Journey' 12:45-2:;.'.= - 5: 0-S:40 p.m. STARTS FRIDAY G^ICHIGAW sponsors workshop 3-day Are The MSU Graduate School of Business Administration RYAN O'NEAL ■ LEIGH TAYLDR-Y0UNG HELLO sponsor a three-day workshop in advanced salesmanship for , NANCY. HI, JACK. representatives from 20 com¬ "Goin' Up Country" WHAT'LL WE DO TONIGHT? HOW DOES THE CEMETERY panies throughout the United States Kellogg Center beginning today The event is designed to shar¬ at GRAB YOU? pen the salesman's skills in the To GROOVY. areas of consumer understand¬ ing and application of this know¬ ledge to his job. the Lake Lansing Amusement TECHNICOLOR * PANAVISION* FROM WARNER BROS-SEVEN ARTS^SS?!^ SN correction: Park Arcade Thurs. April 24 with Gates Open At 7:00 International Club TONIGHT! ALL COLOR! The MSU International Club The WOOLIES EXCLUSIVE SHOWING elections will be held from 7 to 10 room tonight in the Union Ball¬ instead of Wednesday night as was originally reported CANNED HEAT in Wednesday's State News and This election is a very im¬ ' on campus portant one for the club." Ernie "Doing their Felton, vice-president and elec¬ tion chairman said, " because it thing" will determine the future and 4:30 pm direction of the club. All club Advance Sale Tickets $3.00 At The Door $3.25 The MC-5 members are urged to vote to¬ night so that the club's objec¬ tives may be attained." Also, there will be no entrance charge for the 25th annual Inter¬ OPEN NIGHTLY AT 7:00 national Festival to be held May Lake Tickets Av citable at Lansing Park NOW! ALL COLOR! MARSHALL MUSIC PARAPHERNALIA East on Grand River 402 S. Washington 541 E Grand River . ANDY S AN 245 Ann St. cflndg Griffith, PARAMOUNT NEWS EX MARINE Left onto Haslett-Okemos Rd. WVIC Radio TURNED 201 N. Washington PREACHER IN To Corner of Lake 2517 E. Mount Hope 537 E. Grand River Lansing Rd. EVER1 inmaPocKefe Shown at 7:50 and late /r it s how vou s*ot CON do/t/ who you j ROUGH IT WITH THEM » Won't You? PBULDEmmBn^i The Secret Warof hrrrvhhgg AT 10:00 Only Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Thursday, April 24, 1969 * SPORTS Eastern botsmen here By GARY WALKOWICZ This season, the Hurons have MSU was two for two against today Executive Sports Editor The Huron hitting attack is led Spartan leftfielder and lead- won 10 games in 14 outings and the Hurons last season, win¬ off Joe Gavel will be in The MSU baseball team will by catcher Gary Karpinski. bat¬ man the victories include a 4-2 tri¬ the ning 5-0 and 5-1 in a twinbill at ting a hefty .409. Third baseman starting lineup today after try to beat the Michigan weath¬ umph over neighboring Michi¬ East Lansirig. Jeff Peck has a .370 average and recovering from a collision er and a tough Eastern Michi¬ gan. five triples, while second base¬ with the lettfield fern-.- last Sat¬ gan team today at 3:30 p.m. at "Oestrike has done an ex¬ Rain this season has made man Terry Collins, .306, leads urday against Michigan. Kobs Field. cellent job at Eastern," Oestrike uncertain of his pitch¬ Spartan the team in RBI's with 11. Eastern The Spartans have had as Coach Danny Litwhiler ing rotation, but the Spartans will Michigan , >It hold said re¬ ceremonies much trouble with the elements probably bat against the likes The Spartans will send Phil dedicatii.; .»■-•.t ium- cently. "They are really com¬ baseball field bet on- saumkn as with opposing teams this of Rick Krumm (3-0. 3.46 E R A. i Fulton to the mound today and - ing on strong in baseball. twinbill. The EMI .-.i.iUium mi season. They have had four "We're expecting three tough Rich Berrvman (2-2, 4.08 E R A. > follow with Mickey Knight and eludes covered grands>.imIs and games postponed or canceled games," the Spartan coach add¬ and Tom Burgere (2-0. 4.09 Dan Bielski Saturday at Ypsi¬ has a seating capacity »»i 2,200 by the weather and have had ed. ERA.) this weekend. lanti. several practice sessions forced indoors. Today's contest was hastily arranged after MSU's sched¬ uled contest with Notre Dame Tuesday was washed out. MSU Stickmen's effort falls short as Falcons win 7th straight is slated to meet the Hurons Sat¬ urday at Ypsilanti for a double- header. The Spartans. 14-5 on the sea¬ son and riding the crest of an eight-game winning streak, will By DAVE WEST The Falcon dropped MSU. 12-2. in the Spartan attack with two be hard-pressed to keep their State News Staff Writer last vear goals' and three assists while win string alive against EMU. The MSU Lacrosse Club fell Thev are the best team R,ck Ba>'s added three goals, Eastern Michigan baseball, to the Bowling Green varsity we've plaved so far. MSU The Spartans'°the' ^ wf as most other sports at the Wednesday. 10-6, but not before Coach Turf Kauffman said. re™rded ^ Ron VV,nter who Belly-flopper Ypsilanti school, is undergoing an intensive building program. battling the Falcons on even terms throughout the second "Thev had fantastic stick con- troj ' also accounted for two assists. MSU goalie Bill Herrmann. MSU's Rich Jordan slides safely back into first base arter an attempted pick- Under Coach Ron Oestrike, half. I m reallv proud of our bovs. who entered the game with a off by a Michigan pitcher last Saturday. Eastern Michigan, which meets MSU EMU has gone from .500 seasons We plaved' our best game strong 66 7 Perfnt sr today at 3:30 at Kobs Field, will have to be on their toes if Jordan gets on base in 1965 and 1966 to 30-15 and Playing on a cold, wet and today.' he added a8e- turned back 30 of 39 shots today. The Spartan centerfielder has stolen 10 bases this season. 28-15 seasons over the past two rainy afternoon in Bowling Larry Berger was the big man tor a 77 percent figure. State News Green's new stadium, the Spar¬ photo by Mike Beasley tan club equaled the Falcon's three scores in the second half MHA-WIC PRESENTS after trailing, 7-3. at midpoint. THE THINKING MAN S COMEDY OF THE YEAR! Cleveland loves'The Boiling Green, who stretched their, season mark to 7-0. is ratei' by lacrosse observers as the ,\To. 1 team in the Midwest big Lacrosse Assn. this year after Harrelson gets tleneck. silk scarf and white model deployed by a local rad- J finishing behind champion Denison last spring. ■■«■■■■■■■■■■■■■ defending CLEVELAND Harrelson and his (UPI> - Ken wardrobe The newest member of the Indians accomplished the feat boots, the Hawk emerged io station. FREAKOUT No. 12 " ■ THE NOW AND THEN ■ drew more people to Cleveland despite a driving rain accom- from his jetliner to a roar from The Indians got Harrelson * Hopkins Airport Wednesday than panied by 40-degree temper- some 400 mod young fads spill- and Boston pitchers Dick Ells- AND RON ENGLAND J I the Cleveland Indians and the atures. ing out of the terminal. worth and Juan Pizzaro for ■ SAT., APRIL 26 ■ I Detroit Tigers lured to an after- Magnificent in his russet- They rushed the plane while pitchers Sonny Siebert and Vin- 2 Demonstration Hall 5 noon game at Cleveland Stadium checked, edwardian suit with he accepted a bouquet of flow- cente Romo and catcher Joe last week. bell bottom trousers, white tur- ers and a kiss from a pretty Azcue. •#•••••••• All University FEE HILL 9 £ 0 ASMSU Pop Entertainment % and # • 'Tk ; • featuring MIXER % * THE Greek Week present itn % # 2°th "THE FUNNIEST PICTURE I HAVE SEEN I Centu^xPEjER qook DUDLEY MOORE and ELEANOR BRON fri. night in STANLEY DONENs' "bedazzled" 9-12 50C • and J RAQUEL WELCH as Lust DELTA SIGMA PI •the • reduced and fretted by TANLE V D0NEN-Scm*** PETER COOK-From tt*story b»P£TER COW and DuOliV KICfl Muse by DUDLEY MOORE ■ PANAVISION* Color by DeLuxe ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ •classics • JENISON jv* FIELD HOUSE J Beal Film Group Presents TONIGHT and Friday The Delta Sig businessmen 0 Friday May 2 8:00 p.m. W TONITE - 7 & 9:15 p.m. Stanley Kromer's Color Production of congratulate their new £ . T ickets $2 and $3 0 pledge class ^ Marshall Music Union a BRODV HALL ■■ ADM. 50C w Campbell's Truck ^ * Dr. Suess's J • •••••MM Open to MSU Students & Faculty — I.D's Required Chuck Bonneau Doug Farnell ^jThe 5000 Fingers of Dr. Tj 7 and 9 106 B Wells n° ID required Leo Litowick Ron Neimish Bill Borland Bruce Smithers Jim Sarko Terry Roberts Larry Nash Joe Iska * 50c Fri. - Sav. & Sundays and Cybele ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ THE BIG ONE Special Added Attraction COUNTRY JOE AND THE FISH PlU5 T eegarden and VanWinkle Sat. MAY 10 8:30 P.M. COBO ARENA BIGGER All Seats Reserved $6.50, $5.50, $4.50, $3.50 FOR MAIL ORDERS: Enclose tag AND certified check d or stamped money or- addressed envelope to Cobo A- self- ; rena Box Office, 1 Washing- ! ton Blvd., Detroit, Mich. BETTER than last time | 48226. | In Association with Audio Art O Paraphernalia Fashion Show So, Stare at Your study e companions: • -thetvay TONIGHT with the Phonograph Faust TITLES TITLES L "LAS VEGAS SIX" Grapes of Wrath Crucible Hamlet The Stranger New Testament Daisy Miller Turn of the Screw L (APPEARING WED. THRU SUN.) No Cover S Don't Miss It Laagh-ln is off - -. But the Next Best Thing is the Best of Laugh-In. As* for "Laugh-in '69." Then You •Wc-n't Have to Wait for Fall. It's a No Cover Reprise Album. Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Thursday, April 24, 1969 SPORTS Trench By MIKE MANLEY State News Sports Writer warfareold hat saw limited action as reserves last year. Bullough added all four are playing at heavier weights Much of MSU's football success in the coming season Talking about his four starters from a year ago, Bullough this spring than last season. Nowak is 6-4. 235. and Martin will be decided in the trenches--the yard of no man's land is reserved in his praise. goes 6-1. 230. Curl is 6-1 and weighs 238 while Dawson 6-3 where the offense and defense line-men slug it out at close "They should be pretty good players but it's awfully early. is up to 242. quarters. They need to work on techniques but they are playing with " This is the •"blood They've got to take some of that weight off. Bullough alley" of football. Being a lineman is reckless abandon,'' he said. said, "but right now they are seeing just how much a thankless job with often times only your teammates and termen who could give the Spartans an outstanding defen¬ The four players saw considerable action in last Satur¬ they can coaches recognizing the job you're doing. sive front. carry." day's scrimmage and were often found in the offensive But the job is even less glamorous and dirtier during Many football coaches around the country believe that Returning intact from last season are ends Wilt Martin backfield roughing up prospective ball-carriers. the game is decided up front. With four spring practice when the only guys you can belt may live and Gary Nowak and tackles Ron Curl and Bill Dawson "They played hard in the scrimmage. The boys made experienced start¬ ers and two reserves who have across the hall from you. All four men will be juniors this fall. some mistakes. They were reckless mistakes, but they went logged considerable plav- ing time, the Spartans would seem to be in a rather enjoy¬ This spring Henry Bullough. the Spartans defensive line Battling these four players for a starting berth during the out after people, and I'd say they did a real good job." able position on the defensive side of the trench coach, is in the process of molding a veteran group of let- spring are veterans Ron Joseph and Rick Benedict who both Bullough said. NCAA vote Fans, athletes come alive for annual Drake Relays on FORT lllini athletic ban LAUDERDALE, Fla. which resulted in ouster of three linois from appearing on By DON KOPRIVA State News Sports Writer DES MOINES, Iowa-It often served as its home in 1909. At that time, talk of a four-minute mile or a 29-foot long jump or combat. for the They're Iowa schools, not always either; tional telecasts of athletic these (UPI)--The National Collegiate coaches. seems like a sleepy little sub¬ 17-foot people like winners and Athletic Assn. executive com- The action, effective May 7, events and taking part in post¬ pole vault could get one they know how to treat them. urb out here instead of the state committed to an asylum This mittee Tuesday released the Uni- was routine and had been ex- season football or basketball Last, but not least, there are play. capital of Iowa. But for two year, however, the meet has the athletes. They come from versity of Illinois from sanctions pected. weeks at the end of April, this at last succumbed to imposed two years ago in an The sanctions were imposed reality and around the country. They come Forced to resign as a result city comes alive when it spon¬ will be run on an-all-weather illegal aid to athletes scandal May 7. 1967. They prevented II- and go with names like Jim of the scandal were Head Foot¬ sors its pride and joy-the famed track-one of its few concessions Ryun and Randy Matson and ball Coach and athletic direc¬ Drake Relays. to changing time in its long his¬ Charlie Green and countless The "Drakes," the old- tory. tor-designate Pete Elliott, Head as MOTHER'S DAY Basketball Coach Harry Combes and Assistant Basketball Coach Howie Braun. Big timers call it, is a mixture of the old and the new, of the excit¬ ing and the solemn, of specta¬ The meet has been exciting, as when Jim Ryun, a Kansas sopho¬ more. ran two mile legs here un¬ tion. They come for the competi¬ They come for the excite¬ ment. They come to win. tors and competitors. der four minutes. That was in Challenger Dave Zygle 'icz topples to the canvas That is the is ■ FREAKOUT No. 12 ■ like a cigar store India i Tuesday night in Houston It's a carnival here in every 1967 and it was exciting. But and that is essence why they come to of track, the as Joe Frazier (right! successfully defends his sense of the word. From the things get solemn too. "Drakes." ■ THE NOW AND THEN ■ crack of the starter's gun on Fri¬ sometimes not until the after¬ heavyweight title with i knockout in 1:36 of the LOVE jj ■ 5 AND RON ENGLAND SAT., APRIL 26 Demonstration Hall g ■ 5 first round. AP Wirephoto day through the gala parade Sat¬ urday morning and into the mile relay finals Saturday afternoon. math. as last year, when a plane crash killed the Lamar Tech coach and some of his athletes How ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■I Earn Up To $2.50 For Less Drake means form. excitement in on their way back to Texas. The meet is spectators, too. YOU they some ★★★★★★★★ The meet--a legend in its time with thousands from the Corn Than 1 Hon Of Your Time among track people-is still held Belt filling the stadium to watch and }JET TO EUROPE? THIS SUMMER Male Undergr aduates wanted who are willing -o be subjects in in the venerable stadium which their gladiators battle in clean < stand night games not included > Round T rip a game-pla>ing experiment. JUST THINK! a GIFT 1 Detroit-London Call 353-6418 8 a.m. to 12 a.m. 41 DAYS IN EUROPE! American } s204 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. DETROIT 8 4 667 from * (Limited Seats Available) Students for Israel Visit Holland, Berlin, Germany, Boston New York 8 7 6 6 .571 .538 Washington 7 10 412 * Austria, Italy, San Marino, Cleveland 1 11 083 Presents c discussion on Switzerland, France and England. WESTERN DIVISION 5 JUNE 24- SEPTEMBER 16) Sign ) Work/Study Programs in Israel Join S.T.O.P. Tours "Bon March, departing New York June 22 returni Minnesota Chicago Kansas City W 6 7 8 5 6 5 L PCT .615 545 538 956 Trowbridge Rd. 3 up Union Board * 355-3355 ' Documentary Movies to follow August 2. Oakland Seattle California 7 5 4 7 7 7 500 .417 364 Only $1050 from N.Y.C. Wednesday s Results Washington 9, Boston 3 Thursday May 1, 8:00 p.m. Minnesota 7. Oakland 6 New York at Cleveland (rain. Mural Room, Union Bldg. DETROIT at Baltimore i night COLLEGE TRAVEL OFFICE California s. Chicago jukeeinighti 130 W. Grand River 351-6010 Seattle at Kansas City garland National EBERM>WH,S^= night included i ( games not EASTERN DIVISION W L PCT Chicago * 11 4 733 Pittsburgh 10 4 714 For Mother... out magnetic Montreal New York St. Louis 6 5 5 8 8 9 429 384 .357 Philadelphia 4 8 333 WESTERN DIVISION PICTURE EASEL Atlanta Los Angeles W L PCT 10 9 4 4 714 692 Cincinnati 9 5 . 545 San Francisco 7 6 . 538 San Diego 5 9 .357 Houston „ 3 12 .200 Wednesday's Results St. Louis at Chicago < rain i Philadelphia at Montreal iraim Pittsburgh at New York i night t San Diego at Houston < night1 Cincinnati at Los Angeles (night i Atlanta at San Francisco i night > i recision Imports pecializing in finer sports cars' Volvo Jaguar Triumph Lotus AlphaRomeo MG Renault 10 Austin Healey Bruce Jim "Financing Available" She can display snapshots so easily in this hand¬ 1915 E. Michigan IV 4-4411 some easel. Magnetic straps hold them in any pat¬ formerly Stratton Sports Center tern. Gold leaf in attractive bamboo design with off-white or almond'green background. 11" x 10". Blow Yourself MO00 UP Go To Pieces PHOTO Take culottes and lots of stripes... JIGSAW PUZZLE for any instance Sock it to a flare-thee-well, baby! That's your pant thing for Assorted Styles and Spring and ever after. 20-to 25-inch colors - coulottes and skirts leg openings (that's big!), that pleat, cuff, flare, dare you to $9 to $12. Tops to match $6. Photo DartBoard 1 ftdiameter $4.50 swing out. Pick prints that swirl, that flower, that stripe... cool it solid. The fabrics... Ula*ufa ormula S miles 1 owner Excellent condi¬ good mech- tQw™"on 1 new a BYSITTER WANTED, my home 4-speed floor Phon* tires Clea> ^Jfside Body little tion. Growing family forces sale 15 part-time 4 davs Would con- 337-9430 6-4 2! rough 484-1766 5-4 25 NFED MONEYS? s der with child 353-0925 itpa^to know" Reserve Your Space $2,500 337-2054 after 5 p.m woman 3-4 24 barracl'da Why Not Sell Great 1968 340S. Power steering Gold fastback 30.000 4-speed JAGUAR 1964 XKE roadster Ex¬ Auto Service & Parts Books of the Western H' iUSEKEEPER TO go to cottage at cellent condition Take over pay¬ miles 4E 70 Polyglass. 6.000 miles. World to ments of $82 40 per month. Phone ACCIDENT PROBLEM-1 Call KALA¬ qualified f arbor Springs, for July and Au- $2500 after BARRACUDA 6p.m. 355-0228 1969 days. Mod top 351-6126 4-4 25 $2900 Credit Manager. I.EMANS CONVERTIBLE IV 9-2379. New bat¬ C MAZOO STREET BODY SHOP Small dents to large wrecks American and foreign cars. Guaranteed work 482-1286 East Kalamazoo C prospects? Call 484-4475 (ist. 3 adults ED 2-1239 3-4 25 With Us Now f DICK LYON CHRYSLER-PLY- tery. tires, good condition. Good LANDSCAPE LABORERS Full time MOITH-JEEP. 227 North Cedar deal' 351-5559 5-4/29 5! z day week Pay time and >2 Start Mason 677-3931 2-4 25 GOOD YEAR tires 5. whitewalls. immediately Call 484-5421 after 1 >' ©WESTERN FIRM is interviewing MERCURY 1967 -Cyclone, 4 speed, 600x14 Excellent tread $45 351- p.m.. Monday-Friday Equal Oppor BUCK SPECIAL convertible 1964 good condition Green with black 9282 evenings 2-4 25 tunity Employer 3-4 24 for full-time summer positions, dur- Navy blue with white vinyl top 372-1432 3-4 25 ng-the-school-sessions are also top $700 Call 353-64(H) before 5 BABYSITTING-In my licensed East vailable Automobiles are required pm Ask for MERCURY 1951 Mechanically ex¬ Lansing home Large fenced-in play ■umrner income will average $1850. cellent. very good body, rebuilt area, by experienced mother 351 *vith a $700 base salary as a mini- engine $300 353-4472. after 7 p.m utes while your car is washed num guarantee. Interviews at 6:00 im and 8 00 p.m Mondav and Tues¬ and waxed Also cleans underneath car An almost perfect job 430 THF. PARAMOl'NTS n*ed two horns day. April 28 and 29. at the Inn \merica 1-4 24 CAMARO 1967 White red interior South Clippert. back of Ko-KO BAR C-4 24 ? ZFILLED" I ^RTICIPANTS NEEDED for sociol- YOU GET MORE ADVANTAGES WHEN YOU GET LIFE INSURANCE V-8. 3-speed. radio. $1 600 IV 9- are an equal opportunity employer 7124 3-4 28 MASON BODY SHOP. 812 East Kala Give us a call ya all 355-6358 5-4 25 •igy study. $3.50 for 112 hour session EARLY1 The earlier you begin your mazoo Street Since 1940 Com¬ •ill 353-7984 between 1 and 4 p.m. family's life insurance program, the plete auto painting and collision RESORT HOTEL Hostess Dining more you benefit. Your premium service IV5-0256 C room, nights only Top wage Per¬ Sri'DENTS FOR gardening work payments are lower, easier to sonal interview required Phone East Tawas. 362-3451 Mrs Anderson ipring term. Full or half davs. budget. And your physical eligibil¬ Avaition X17-5 1 ITVISS LANDSCAPE CENTER 351- ity is easier to establish It also CHEVELLE MAL1BI" 1967 283 V-8 MUSTANG. 1968 6-cylinder. auto¬ pays to know how State Farm can automatic Two door hardtop In matic Take over payments 694-0317 financial bind Must sell 372-9042 2-4 24 RESORT HOTEL, cocktail waitress provide a Fife insurance nights-top wage Personal inter¬ FEMALE PARTTIME Light de¬ plan that best fits your 3-4 25 MUSTANG 1966 $1050 353-2140 view required Phone East Tawas livery Must , have car 10 a m to needs and your budget. 362-3451. Mrs Anderson xl7-5 1 '2.3p.m. to5p.m.. 482-9175. 2-4 25 So ask me about it today! FRANCIS AVIATION: So easv to learn CHEVROLET 1962 Belaire $350 Call in the PIPER CHEROKEE. Special $5 offer 484-1324 REMAN FOR FOREMAN .penenct FOB '-"V n g crew FILLED No train ■nds nth Starting salarv commensurate experience. Well lighted parking Only $60.00 .rea Close to hospital Call MASON 337-0735 or see at 6 Saginaw $225 3-4/24 699-2204 489-8010 332-2462 3-4/25 area. 485-6581 2-4/24 MARIGOLD APARTMENTS: 911 Mari¬ MARIGOLD APARTMENTS Summer NORWOOD APARTMENTS Fur FAIRWAY CAMPUS sublet 2-man luxury 2 air-condi¬ gold Avenue New deluxe l bedroom nished, now renting for summer GOLF RANGE COLLEGE TRAVEL furnished 2-man apartments, avail¬ tioners Reduced 351-7452 3-4/25 able now for summer and fall leas and fall. Reduced summer rates ELECTROLUX TANK vacuum clean Miniature Golf OFFICE WASH N' GAS Call 351-7694 5-4/29 er-Excellent condition, less than 4 ii« Phone IV 9-9651 or 332 2335 O Driving Range SPACIOUS APARTMENT Delta Arms years old Cost $150 new. will IGolf clubs for sale New - Used 130 West Grand River Blvd. Summer 2 bedrooms. Reduced rent NEW CEDAR Village Summer sutv sell for $35 Phone 393-5072 3-4/24 SUMMER SUBLEASE 1 girl for 4 351-0643 3-4/25 Few minutes from MSU let. 1 or 2 men needed Reduced 351-6010 248 W. Grand River 106 USED vacuum cleaners-Tanks, 332-8745 girl. University Terrace Apartment rates Extras 351-3462 5-4/28 351-6867 M/* SUMMER LEASING. 126 Milford cannisters. and uprights All in Street. 2-man deluxe furnished, air- MILFORD STREET 126 Two blocks good condition. $7 88 and up Guar- » WORLD S LARGEST $140. 372-5767 or DENNIS DISTRIBUTING Dorothy's CONTACT LENS . TWO-MAN furnished apartment 129 conditioned from campus Deluxe, air-condi¬ ranteed V ARCHERY CENTER Burcham. $125 to $135 124 Cedar tioned. furnished 2 and 3 man COMPANY. 316 North Cedar, op¬ Bridal & Gift Shop SERVICES Phone for free Street. *150 to $160 135 Kedzie Summer and fall leasing $170 FOUR-MAN apartment, furnished posite City Market C-4 '24 discount catalogue WHITE HALL Manor Male to share D. M. DEAN, O. D. Drive. $170 to $180 All Utili Phone 489-1656 or 372-5767. O With swimming pool Heat paid Complete Bridal Apparel ties furnished except electricity deluxe apartment Summer term $62 50 each EAST LANSING MAN HEATHKIT TRANSISTORIZED ster and accessories 210 Abbott Rd. " f \ ANDERSON Close to campus 351-4574. after 6 C Suite # ARCHERY Call days, 487-3216. evenings 882 AGEMENT. 351-7880 eo amplifier and tuner FM con¬ 15972 Turner 16 Grand Ledge verter for car 351-0495 4-4/25 627-2003 2316. until 10 p.m O 332-6563 OVER 5.000 BOWS IN STOCK 372-6941 FOR LEASE. Colonial Apartments SUMMER NEED 1 for 4-man apart GIRL WANTED to share luxury, SCHWINN RACER. 8 months old Learn to fly? Sure you I If you are a careful driver, Corner of Burcham and Alton. Brand ment Eydeal Villa, pool, air-con¬ furnished. East Lansing apartment BLOCK FROM Berkey lease June New condition With all accessories new. deluxe 1-bedroom Furnished ditioned 351-3870 3-4/25 Private room, fireplace 332-0662 June, to 4-6 men, about $360 month, Dave. 353-2072 4-4 25 Use our Air Taxi-Service you may qualify for State UNIVERSITY or unfurnished For graduate stu¬ 5-4/28 less in summer Furnished, utib Farm's top-notch protection Buy a new Piper BEAUTY SALON dents. college faculty or personnel, NEEDED ONE i in, Cedar Village. ties paid 351-8971 3-4/24 All at: at rock-bottom rates. Call or 10% off with this coupon or professionals Select clientele immediately sumi ?r $35 per month SUMMER SUBLEASE 1 block from Call 332-3135 or 882-6549 21-4/30 351 3913 3-4/25 PIANO SALE Francis Aviation see your State Farm agent to¬ 3000 E. Kalamazoo Berkey 4-man Air-conditioned. 351- 2 blocks W. of 3791 5-4/28 Capitol City Airport day. Ed Karmann, 702 Abbott University THREE-MAN summei apartment Mason-Hamlin Specials, 5'4" 484-1324 Road, 332-2554. Village 372-8900 Utilities paid, close i NEAR FRAN DOR 2-bedroom furn¬ SPACIOUS. FURNISHED. 6-bedrooms Baby Grand walnut finish. Save expensive 332-8163 ished ground floor Swimming pool Near campus, for summer Call 356- NOW OPEN Custom Picture Framing? and garage Newly decorated $185 0619. 5-4 <29 $1,000. 5'11" Grand—wal¬ BROOKS Imported Cars nut finish. Save $1,000. Scon- WILLOWS RECREATION Give us a call! monthly including utilities. Adults 372-4629 3-4/24 FIVE GIRLS--4 bedrooms Near Brody soles. Contemporary, mod¬ Sales and Driving Range Miniature Golf Bob Jones Pamts NOW Furnished, utilities included 332-2462 Pitching Machine ern, traditional, and French CAPITOL NEAR Pleasant studio 3-4 25 ProvinciaL Save $600 on style 5 minutes W. of Waverly Rd. Kitchen privileges 482- 1473 MASON Single girl. Near on M-78 toward Potterville bus lines 372-4583 5-4 28 SUBURBAN PLUSH house of your choice. country 5014 N. Grand River, Lansing 646-5621 677-8141 3 fireplaces. 4 bedrooms 2 baths SUMMER SUBLFT ' Cha¬ Completely furnished 5 acres Beau- Leasing For Fall Term - _ nxnry VILLAGE BUD'S let apartREMTtU ,ced 351-9144 rate 5-4 78 tiful landscaping Prefer family ED 7-7151 $300 per month 10-5 5 HUNTINGTON MOTORCYCLE Condlec rafter AUTO PARTS INSURANCE Shoptown Shopping Burcham Woods Apartments GRADUATE WOMEN able Spaces avail THREE BEDROOM boose lor rent MUSIC low rates Center, Haslett Late Model Motors and starting summer 4-prI a- 1513 Prospect Married couple parts a speciality DARRELL BROWN 339-8456 partmenU Haslrtt Albert $96 per *140 month Call IV M2» 3-4 24 2016 East Michigan Open daily 9:30-5:00 Halfway between Holt and Model open every day mooth Utilities incMed Completely hrmshed 337 2XK 5-4 7» FOUR GIRLS House Rec Room (at Fairview) Agency 339-&27T Mon.-Thurs.-Frt. nite till 9 Mason on N. Cedar 699-2154 Carafe, new twrmtme 170 each SUMMER TWO-Man apartment 32 -00 332-4M2 4-4 2» 489-J939 1 to 4p.m, Steeps 4 Balcony Ha M block from SPRING SALE PAR-MOR Largest Selection of LANSING EAST ode 2 and 3-bedr PERKINS COLF COURSES Sandals in the area* campos 361 -MM 3-4 14 homes with farm tore Far lease bv LEATHER SHOP Illuminated Driving Range 5 Minute Heel Service FOl'RROOM small Jmne 4®~4W7 or 372-4747 M W E. L. Management bedroom stMfent 4M-7IM $49 per Lansing apartment month Older W24 2- THREE BEDROOM home for rent 1224 OC R LOW overhead Optical Discount % 41( Save Lp To 40% Thurs,, April 24-Sun., April 27 9 Hole Par 3 & Regulation MSU SHOE REPAIR 225 E. Grand River North Grand River Lansing $17} Open Noon - 10 p.m, Corner Park Lk. Rd. & E.M-78 •r* Phone IV 2-4M7 C-4 25 332-3619 2410 S, Cedar £P2-^ 351-7880 per month Call m-tnm ii-i 14 372-3439 VACITM HEADERS Kir IOVELY FURNISHED I. 2. 3 bed¬ Hoovers. Rainbow Rex-aires • EYES EXAM'NED 123cc Single room houses Sommer rales »| hys Bectrofan flM and «p 'Gnaran- WALT KOSS • GLASSES for 5350 3-4 2* teedi DENNIS DISTRIBUTING 31* RESTAURANT • CONTACT LENS JACK PINE R'S| N Cedar Opposite City Market C Sl*MMER. FALL Women * indent* Fine food, entertainment pizza C, L. Chase, Optometrist YAMAHA SIGN YOUR LEASE NOW Large home dry 332-1918 EAST Kitchen, parking LANSING duple* Furnished, laon; 2-4 %■ SCOTT STEREOS Consoles in contemporary, Reservations - 655-2175 About 7 miles east of M.S.L. in Wiliiamston Co-Optical Services 5218 S.Logan 393-4230 28 North East St. 489-2917 | frar campus Available for summer modern or traditional styles. pu'WPBaa.'H wwu] H'K'vq NEW BONDIFYING YOUR HAIR Check or longer 332-0425 3-4 2* Save up to $300 on the model | HIGHLAND HILLS f Gives just body hold. No rods | C LINCOLN LIFE'S FOR FALL TERM FURNISHED FOUR-Bedroom house of your choice. Lear-Jet auto tape players. Complete display of 8-track | GOLF COURSE Second 9 free with coupon, x 6 Corner N. US-27 and | * used for all types of hair. FLORENCE ANDERSON Beauty Salon jj| Deferred Payment GRAD PLAN Close to campus Summer term Re¬ players for car and home 209 Abbott Rd. Apt. 201 Above duced rent Call 351-6734 S-4 3L use. f AlwardRoad. 669-9873 ? Since 1905 Ph. 332-5025 I S"'" ED 2-4314 HUNTINGTON SPARTAN HALL Women and mfl. MUSIC leasing summer, fall Reasonably For Sale For Sale For Sale 2016 East Michigan SEVEN-THIRTY-ONE 372-1031 10-4 ?.8 M-2 INSTAMATIC Movie camera (at Fairview) EIGHT-TRACK auto tape plavers- 489-1939. Ranger mini-8. $59 95 and up. very little, a few attachments $15 | Call 677-8621. after 3 p m Lear Jet-$69 95 and up * MAIN 731 Burcham COMPONENT STEREO. Kenwood re¬ ELECTRONICS. 5558 South Penn¬ BRITTAMCA GREAT Books Com CRESTWOOD GUITAR 12 s ceiver AM-FM 40 watt Garrard sylvania. Lansing Q plete 54 volune set Includes Sny- CLIFFORD STREET 610 Comfoi: topicon" 351-5696 3-4 28 case, pickup $140 Brand new. SL 75 Mark 4 speakers Koss head able sleeping rooms and 355-8630 off-street GUITAR-HARMONY folk with case phones 1/3 off 2 months old 353- parking 482 9944 or 485-4540 3-4 <4 7426 5-4 24 played 4 months Golf clubs-good set of 4 woods and 9 irons 332-4435 3-4 28 HARPSICHORDS AND Clavichords I Seven-Thirty-One offers the discriminating stu¬ SOUTH END-Sleeping for gentle¬ KEYBOARD SALES. Grand Ledge | dent the finest in apartment living at aprice you can men Off-street parking Phone 8s~2- Open Sundavs closed Saturdavs. afford to pay. 731 is loaded with extras not available 4907 3-4'» 5272 627-9002 . i anywhere else in East Lansing at any price. Enjoy MEN CLEAN, quiet, cooking, pa k IF YOU PROMISED YOURSELF a GIBSON EB-2 bass guitar and Guild better job, check the •Employ¬ 731's swimming pool and party lounge with color TV ing. supervised Close to camp is Thunder bass amplifier 351-9162. 487-5753 or 485-8836 0 ment" column after 10 p.m Full Steam Ahead! and billiard table. Attend 731 s free TG's, 2-4 25 open to residents and guests. Relax in your air-condltloned TROPHIES & PLAQUES £ apartment, attractively furnished with shag carpet¬ ing, rattan furniture, vivid wall hues, and deluxe oven 1000 TIOPHIIS ON display' NO WAITING ■ IMMCDIATl DlLIVlt: appl including dishwashers. All this for $72 per month per Spc B=|| AT STORE OFFICE. LIMIT ONE PER ADULT vities within a student's college, living unit and community. Yearbook Day today to help make their book even better CUSTOMER PER STORE VISIT L JI "We are trying to recognize PETER'S WHOLE OR DOUBLE BREASTED OR Nine seminars, covering all the outstanding seniors in this facets of yearbook production, PORTION ElONED. ROLLED FRESH PICNIC STYLE year's senior class." Christman said. "The people who have con¬ will be offered to the young edi¬ & TIED FULLY COOKED I ■ K tors. Principal speaker will be tributed most to MSU will be selected." Otto W Quale, executive direc¬ PORK BONELESS I tor of the National Scholastic The 69 seniors chosen for the FRYERS Press Assn. club will be guests at a banquet on The May 28 at Kellogg Center. banquet will be in conjunc¬ Stan Soffin. instructor, and Boyd L. Miller, asst. professor of journalism, are chairmen of ROAST HAM tion with the announcement of the event which ends at 2 p.m. students who will appear in the 39l79| Ring Bologna Ting the film Go« 691 Prices and Coupons Good Thru Sun, Apr. 27, 1969 The Free University is sponsoring a in Still Photography at 7 30 tonight In Lansing ; Board will meet at 9 tonight in 31 Uni 825 EXTRA TOP I SOAP The Russian and East Shook the World a film European Studies Group will sponsor Ten Days That on the Bolshevik Revolution at 8 tonight in 109 South VALUE STAMPS Kedzie Hall The deadline to purchase tickets for the Ag Honors Barbecue to be held at 6:30 p m May 6 is Friday Tickets of 50 cents for students and $2 for guests #l □ 50 may be purchased at 121 Ag Hall. 124 Anthony Hall. 109 Natural Resources Bldg or from an Ag and NR Council member The MSI International Club will hold elections from 7-10 tonight in the Forerunners of Greek art will William P Donovan. tonight at Kresge Art Gallery Donovan, who has excavated i Greece, teaches at Macalester College St Paul. Minn fj#6 a 25 y #7 □ ioo £°HH|US°^old7 n j #8 CD 50 Sr08-«o^IWLY home pride 21-oz AAxI * □ 50 "({meWLI'I Fabric Softener 3 0r/As $1 #9 Pie Filling 2 wt cans OTyl L wi,h th. ,u,cho.. a 50 ?hstant MTLK11" K o tiara creme ipe. oran Check our .c . i #10 i th the purchase of sery 2 p kg s or more lland bulbs. every ■ Sandwich Cookies^>°/c39< Hi-C Drinks 3 o?c£;s 79<| b aged. rose bush, shade ■ Wallace contact lenses combine ' fruit tree or every " special label-nev/ kroger beauty with natural vision ^<#11 CD 50 KROGE'R9 dotted evergreen OYSTER CRACKERS ,d..m at Kroq.r u, Sun., April 27 i Gain Detergent wt pkg 68( Cottage Cheese wt ctn 49d You will be thrilled with contact lenses. Tiny plastic lenses are -ith .h. pur cho»« of ground and polished to your pre¬ #12 CD 50 EASY &ONDAY FABRIC SOFTENER scription, determined through aneye examination by our doctors. The lenses fit comfortably and offer complete natural vision while allow¬ S #13 CD 50 co'/'MIHUTE 'MA'D°' n > ORANGE JUICE ing you to look your best. Use Your Michigan Bankard at Wallace's downtown Office Open Monday 9 to 9 11 #m o so Frandor Office Thursday 9 to 9 WALLACE OPTICIANS VINE AT CLIPPERT (Opposite Sears) Ph. IV 5-7137 Jl #,s °50 limit one per customer Dr. W. J. Jensen, Dr. R. J. Spagnuolo, registered optometrists j ^oupon Strip Good Thru Sun, April 27, 1969J DOWNTOWN —107 N. Washington Ph. IV 2-1175 Dr. R. C. Jones, Dr. J. Craaybeek, registered optometrists