Friday Mild.. . A man does... MICHIGAN with increasing cloudiness. STATE NEWS . . . ... what he must-in spite of High today of 40 to 45. Low to¬ personal consequences, in spite of obstacles and dangers and STATE night 22 to 26. pressures-and that is the basis UNIVERSITY of all human morality. John F. Kennedy February 21,1969 East Lansing, Michigan Vol. 61 Number 133 SEEKS BACKING Arabs brace for Israeli Movement' to confront counterblow Arab nations, braced for an expected trustees with Remands MSU's new president was sent to the taken to initiate action along these lines. counterblow from Israel, have been warn¬ board of trustees Thursday Robert L Dale Hathaway, chairman of the Steer¬ ed by Defense Minister Moshe Davan Green, associate professor of education ing Committee of the Academic Coun¬ that they will be hit "in the place that The Movement'' will present de¬ in James Madison College and the Cen¬ cil. said Tuesday that the Council of Grad¬ will hurt them most" in reprisal for guer¬ mands for rehiring of Bertram Garskof ter for Urban Affairs, asked the trustees uate Students. ASMSU. the Alumni Assn. rilla attacks. and opening of the University to "Third to let black faculty and students choose and representatives of Oakland Univer¬ ^ Defense Ministry spokesman insisted World" peoples at the MSU Board of their own representatives to the final sity have been given copies of the pre¬ that Dayan was not referring directly to Trustees' meeting today. selection committee. liminary report the latest Arab attack on an Israeli air¬ In a leaflet circulated Thursday on Green cited the statements of trus¬ liner. but he issued the warning the day- campus, the Movement asked students tees Warren Huff. D-Plymouth. and Clair guerril¬ just after the El A1 plane was hit by las in Zurich. Reliable informants said Dayan declar¬ to "confront the trustees with demands: University." rehire Garskof and open our the White. State News D-Bay City, made in Thursday's versity community" to calling for the "entire Uni¬ become involved Board r ed in a statement Wednesday before the Don Stevens, board chairman, said in the selection. Weizmann Institute of Science: "We re¬ gard our neighboring states as responsible Thursday that he thought the Movement wanted to discuss their position with the (See text page four) Brill censu for all terrorist activities. When we will board. He said that the board's regular make reprisals, we will hit them in the place that will hurt them most and will meeting is open to the public, if there is room, but the board would not stand for tion He said that traditionally the selec¬ procedures have excluded blacks and still in effect be the most convenient for us any disruption. that participation is needed on the search The Advisory Board for the State News "We will not be bound to any partic¬ ular target." ''Organic' We have our agenda and will stick to it. Stevens said. "We will not de- . committee by blacks who will be "sen¬ sitive and responsive to the needs of and Wolverine retained in a meeting Thursday its censure of State News Edi of viate from it for any group, not the alum¬ black students and faculty on this cam¬ tor-in-Chief Edward A Brill Arab leaders are well aware from past Bertram Garskof (right) explained to Albert Rabin, professo ni or the State News, and no one could pus and blacks throughout the nation. The board wishes to point out that this experience that retaliation could come psychology, his concept of the organic learning process. Rabin against targets anywhere from the Nile along with Charles Cumberland, professor of history, rejected the expect us to." The board will meet in Kellogg Center censure' is precisely a public statement to the Euphrates. A new demand in the selection of for breakfast before their regular meet¬ of criticism bearing upon the editor's controversial viewpoint. State Nsws Photo by Mike Marhankc "We'll let the Arabs stew for a while.'' ing. At that time the Ad Hoc Commit¬ published actions." Anne Garrison, board a leading Israeli commentator said All tee on Procedures to choose a new presi¬ their governments are certain of a big dent for MSI' will make a presentation Our censure is based on our respon Israeli reprisal and are scurrying around to the board. sibility as outlined in Sec 6 of the Aca¬ Garskof, faculty duo clash frantically to accuse each other of com¬ The committee's preliminary report demic Freedom Report which charges us plicity and thus escape the consequences will be presented to the Academic Coun¬ with giving "advise, counsel ar.d criti¬ themselves " cil at a special meeting Tuesday after¬ cism. Mrs. Garrison said Israel's militant elements have held noon. The council will then work out the The censure was initially issued Feb off in demands for retaliation, however, final procedures for the faculty's partic¬ 14 to reprimand Brill for lack of edi¬ they awaited the outcomd of calls ipation in choosing President Hannah's torial judgment" and the inaccuracy of idea as organic learning' from their government and the United the attribution of inflammatory remarks States for international action to protect civil aviation. over This preliminary report is the one to be presented to the board today. The final to a student when those remarks wer actually those of ah outsider In an editorial Monday. Brill demand In a message. Israeli Foreign Minister report will be considered by the trustees Abba Eban asked U N. Secretary-Gener¬ recommendations along with supporting "It's too early to tell whether it's when the time comes to formally begin ed that the board rescind its censure and By CHRIS MEAD going to be ignored or about to be an¬ al 1' Thant Thursday to spell out his re¬ arguments he chooses to make concerning the search for a president The final take action on charges directed at Louis State News Staff Writer swered. he said. cent call for "constructive international the disposition of the Garskof case." choice rests with the board Berman. general manager of the State Two faculty members disagreed strong¬ If Winder chooses to return the deci¬ Rabin speculated that Winder would News, bv Brill and his editors. action" to prevent repetitions of the Zur¬ Stevens and other trustees have voic¬ ly with Bertram Garskof's concept of or¬ sion to the department. Garskof explain¬ rospond to Garskof's request and added ich attack. ed their opinion that not only faculty but The Advisory Board will considei ganic learning Wednesday night in an in¬ ed. the faculty would have three options: that it would be a "sign of greatness" if formal discussion with about 50 students also students and alumni should have a charges which the editors directed against Winder found it necessary to admit he firing him. continuing his two-year, non¬ role in the selection. Steps have been Berman at their next meeting. and faculty members. tenure status or granting him three years made a mistake. In memorlam Participating in 'the discussion were as an asst. professor It came as rather a surprise-if not a Garskof. Albert Rabin, professor of psy¬ shock to me-that Winder didn't consult Garskof said he sent a letter to Win¬ Many black students, faculty, adminis¬ chology and chairman of the local Ameri¬ the faculty in the first place." Rabin der requesting full explanation of his trators and residents of the Lansing com¬ munity will forego regular classes and activities today in tribute to Malcolm X, can Assn. of University Professors i AAl'P >. and Charles Cumberland, professor of his- torv ar,' former chairman of the Univer- decision tract. to terminate the original con¬ said. (please turn to back page) EMU students protest slain hero of the black revolution. sitv I . l eau j Committee. Black Students' Alliance has scheduled alleged racism ..ot began by saying the decision several activities, most of which will be restricted to blacks, to replace regular classes and activities during the day. ,::ade by the psychology faculty Wednes¬ day was in many respects a victory for "The Movement." campus Ruth Hamilton, professor of sociology, The faculty that afternoon drafted a cruitment of inner-city blacks. About 700 of By GEORGE BULLARD will conduct a forum open to the Univer¬ statement to' Clarence Winder, dean of State News Staff Writer EMU's 17.000 studen's are black. sity on the ideals of Malcolm X at 3 p.m. the College of Social Science, request¬ Disruption broke out on the Eastern In addition, protesiers have called for in the Union parlors. ing that' he "rescind his unilateral ac¬ amnesty for arrested demonstrators and a Michigan University (EMU) campus Malcolm X was slain four years ago to¬ tions (in firing Garskof> and instead ex¬ Malcolm X "Cultural Center. Thursday after black students failed in day in New York City. ercise his prerogative of requesting the an early morning attempt to control the Psychology Dept. to consider whatever EMU administration building. Ralph Chaprrfan. chief of the EMU News Bureau, said that demonstrators have been Approximately 75 students chained the doors to the building at 8 a.m. Police vague in presenting their demands to the administration from Washtenaw County and Ypsilanti AWAIT APPROVAL cleared the building within an hour after the demonstration began. Twenty students were arrested when they refused to leave Garrison Fraternities the building. The students who are protesting alleged racism on the EMU campus then marched to the home of EMU President Harold E as alias plea 24-hour open Sponberg. Police formed a barricade around Sponberg's house to prevent any attempt at entry. NEW ORLEANS Jim Garrison and his four-man prosecu¬ Dist. Attv. ASMSU Board and the MSU Faculty Com¬ Sponberg agreed to meet with black tion team abruptly rested their case The Inter-Fraternity Council Melvin - "I control talks with Russia Laird made it clear his riding concern is with Russia over- The new defense told the Senate Foreign Rela- tions Committee that: secretary for pressed Laird for a commit- ment to delay deployment of the Sentinel ABM. arms system in escalating the arms race towers over other ques¬ tions involved in the contro- Case haltsaid "these things have gotten to such a state where they are so horrible that we lean toward going forward pushing a strategic weapons -The Russians have escalat- Sen. Clifford P. Case. R- versy. including cost and ef- should make this arms control with an antimissile system and ed the buildup "at a very high rate" arms race, including N.J.. expressed the view that fectiveness. negotiation our first order of A capsule summary of the day's events from rejected Senate pleas to delay and with Red China's missile test of a "sophisticated the effect of an antimissile Referring to the arms race. business." "ur wire servicas. its deployment pending arms threat in the mid--1970s. ABM antiballistic missile svs- The New Jersey Republican tem.' looked at Laird and said I -Communist China is expect¬ Nixon 3 to fill urge that you reconsider'' his Opposition ed to have 20 to 30 interconti¬ nental missile launchers in names attitude on not holding up the ABM pending arms talks with key diplomatic posts place by 1975 This figure is Russia. 5th about a dozen missiles Laird listened in silence. "The sooner ice get rid of in peac than the 18-to-20 used at a news conference last bigger figure Laird WASHINGTON The three appointments, Later. Sen. John Cooper. R-Ky.. told Laird he Sherman m all administrators, the soon¬ week had a "tremendous opportuni¬ President Nixon named a sea- which had been forecast in ad¬ PARIS (APi - A U.S. ported: "Everything I said was -The sonel professional diplomat. rounded out Nixon's dip¬ ty'' to stop the arms race and er u e start educating. *' search for common ground in misrepresented and rejected.'' Soviet Union has in vance. that the Nixon administration —Bertram Garskof being or under construction Jacob D Beam, to be US lomatic assignments to key Eu- the quest for peace in Vietnam He said with a smile, how¬ should than the 1.054 U.S. ICBMs ambassador to Moscow Thurs press in this direction ran into a wall of opposition he did not consider that more fupean posts as he prepared ever. to give greater security to the and is embarked on a "crash t" leave for a week-long tour from North Vietnam and the United States." m program'' to catch up with the As his ambassador to Great ot the continent. The President National Liberation Front Lodge commented that it is About the most the senators United States in missile-launch¬ Britain he chose Walter H previously had asked Sargent Thursday. highly unlikely that any nego¬ got out of Laird was his state¬ The fifth and briefest session tiated settlement will be reach¬ ing submarines. The Soviets Annenberg. millionaire Phila¬ Shriver to remain as ambassa¬ ment that he shares the hope of of the expanded peact talks ed without the elements of the won't close the missile subma¬ delphia publisher and a friend dor to France. rine gap until 1973 or 1974. he of Nixon for 20 years. All three of the newly desig¬ Secretary of State William P. failed after 5 1 2 hours to Geneva accords of 1 John S Eisenhower. 46-vear- nated envoys will require Sen¬ Rogers that nuclear weapons produce any sign of progress but the Hanoi and NLF dele In old of former President negotiations can start before The four relays committee mem- son ate confirmation and thus will delegations meet gations pushed for U.S. with bers-none of whom spoke up any U.S. antimissile system is Dwight D. Eisenhower, was not be taking up their posts International News again next Thursday, on the drawal "completely and uncon deployed. for the ABM-unsuccessfully named ambassador to Belgium. until after Nixon's return eve of President Nixon's visit ditionally Any settlement to France. they repeated, must be on the U.S. Ambassador Henry Ca¬ A plane reported to be Nigerian bombed the basis of the "political program' bot Lodge insisted that the 1S54 of the front. Biafran capital Thursday, wrecking a welfare Geneva accords which divided clinic and killing 45 persons, most of them chil¬ Vietnam do. in fact, provide an dren Nineteen others were injured. area of common ground. He • • • challenged Hanoi and the Viet Cong's NLF to cooperate in Authorities in Prague Thursday blocked stu¬ dent attempts to rename Red Aimv Square in seeking out his area. Returning to the U.S. Embas¬ sy after the meeting. Lodge re- THE honor of Jan Palach. the student who burned himself to death last month in an anti-Soviet ★★★★★★★★. jL CASE HALL MIXER NEW protest. Castro-Communist • • • guerrillas are apparently ^ 5 featuring ^ "SEXIEST VOICE on Th* J LOOK J using the nearby Caribbean island of Trinidad as a base of operations and jumping off for CAMPUS CONTEST"^ wide, invasions of Venezuela, the government in * With "The Pillowcase" * bold, Caracas said Thursdav. Saturday, Feb. 22 beautiful yL 9-12 p.m. 50C * National News CANADIAN-AMERICAN A CONFERENCE possibly faulty guidance and navigation unit aboard the Apollo 9 spaceship was or¬ Youth in Politics $195 Rich 14 karat gold bands dered replaced Thursday but the space agency Saturday-Pane Is with overlapping design said And Workshops everything remains on schedule for next week's launch. 10:00 AM-Youth In • • • Canadian Politics Convenient Terms President Nixon urged upon Congress Thurs¬ day a modest program of Electoral College re¬ form. saying he is "not wedded to the details" E rickson Kiva Zales of any formula. But. he would like to see the Call 355-2350 system improved before the 1972 election. • • • Four persons had new hope for life Thurs¬ The State News, the studeni spa per at Michigan State University, is day and two others were to have a new chance published every class day throughout the year with special Welcome Week and Orientation issues in June and September Subscription rates are $14 for sight-with six organs taken from the body of a 57-year-old man who died of a brain tumor. Member Associated Press, United Press International. Inland Daily Press Surgeons said the operations marked the first Association, Associated Collegiate Press, Michigan Press Association, Mich¬ igan Collegiate Press Association. United States Student Press Association time that so many organs were removed from Second class postage paid at East Lansing. Michigan a single donor for transplantation into six sep¬ Editorial, and business offices at 347 Student Services Building. Michigan arate recipients. State University. East Lansing. Michigan • • • Phones A U.S. judge in Madison. Wis.. Thursday de¬ Editorial 355-8252 Classified Advertising 355-8255 clared a high school ban against long hair Display Advertising 353-6400 Business-Circulation 355-3447 unconstitutional and ordered the expulsion of Photographic 355-8311 the shaggy-maned 16-year-old revoked. Campus News About 500 students chanting anti-war slo¬ gans forced three Marine Corps recruiters to cancel a recruitment session at Oberlin College in Ohio and escorted them off the campus. • • • At Clark University in Worcester. Mass.. 15 black students seized control of the switch¬ board of the school and issued a series of de¬ mands to the school's administration. smile. • • just • Leaders of a student sit-in said Thursday they will keep pressure on University of Penn¬ wear a and a Jantzen. Whatever shape B. Sea-siren shaping with hi- sylvania officials until they promise to re¬ store a predominantly black neighborhood dis¬ you're in, there's a Jantzen to top bodice and brief wedded to¬ turbed by campus expansion. show it off. Daringly bared to gether with self fabric rings • • • coyly covered. Exciting beach in front. Nylon/spandex print. The board of regents opened a two-day meet¬ brighteners all set for your $23. ing Thursday at the University of California's spring fling in the sun are on C. Modified hip-riding bikini Berkeley campus with mounting violence at *1 O II o o the Knapp's scene now. Which with button-trimmed bra, top- the nine-campus university system certain to ii «» (I II 41 1 41 O 4» it <> of these 4 basics is for you? banded little boy-legbrief. Navy/ be the major topic of discussion. The board « ■» pJMiJ*1 white abstract print nylon. $22. includes Gov. Ronald Reagan. • • • A. Gypsy print bikini with shir¬ A deluge of letters and telegrams hit the red and wired bra top, snap gat¬ D. See-thru sculptured lace of office ot ihe president of the University ot hered brief to regulate baring. nylon-spandex in a plunging vee Notre Dame i'huiaday backing his "get In silky black/white Antron® body suit. White matelasse tex¬ GLYCINE KNOWS WHAT TIME IT IS tough" policy for disruptive student demon¬ From top down: nylon. $18. ture, partial nude lining. $27. strations. The Automatic • • • Compressor, $59.50. T- v'; uun Day and Date. $120 More than 100 black students at Roosevelt Campus Center The Day and Date A romatic $85 University in Chicago stormed into the pres¬ ident's office Thursday and shouted their de¬ mands for a black studies program and am¬ nesty for five expelled students. President Rolf Weil told the students that no decision JEWELERS /f SINCE 1876 East Lansing could be made on their complaints at this 121 S. Washington Lansing, Michigan time. Trinka (.line, executive editor J a me* S. Cranelli, managing editor Patricia Anstett, campus editor MICHIGAN Jerry Pankhurst, editorial editor Carol Budrous, Tom Brou n, sport* editor adverti»ing manager STATE NEWS Deborah Fitch, a**ociate campus editoi The State News is a free and editorially independent student newspaper. Editorials express the unanimous opinion of the UNIVERSITY editorial board of the State News unless otherwise indicated. Under the provisions of section 6.1 of the "Report on Aca¬ demic Freedom for Students at Michigan State University," final responsibility for all news and editorial content rests with the editor-in-chief. Six-time recipient of the Pacemaker award for outstanding journalism. EDITORIAL SIT TWO SAPART! TAES Selecting trustees a new will then make the MSU president least of which is the student. participate in an important de¬ Over breakfast .today, the cision. MSU Board of Trustees will final selection. He must be ready to deal with John F. A. Taylor, profes¬ Next Tuesday the commit-, consider recommendations the growing surge of student sor in the Dept. of Philosophy, unrest. tee's recommendations will be from the Ad-hoc Committee on made public at the Academic remarked that the Ad-Hoc Com¬ Procedures that was organized mittee "will bring into one con¬ One method of doing this Council meeting. Then we can last term to outline the proce¬ would be to establish rapport all take a more critical look at dures and composition for the cert representatives from the with the students from the their report. From the infor¬ Committee of Search and Se¬ faculty and administration, the students and the alumni." beginning of his administra¬ mation disclosed thus far it lection. tion. What better way to do this seems that their report will The Ad-Hoc Committee is it¬ And that is what's important. than to select a President for All factions of the University represent a more equitable self a sub-committee of the whom the students have al¬ community must have a voice procedure for selection. Steering Committee of the Aca¬ ready indicated a preference? It is not yet certain how soon demic Council. in the selection of the new The presidential appoint¬ President Hannah will be leav¬ That should make it the President. This should include ment is not a normal appoint¬ the important group of black ing the University, but it will Steering Committee of the Aca¬ ment, such as a faculty or even be within a few weeks. Thus demic Council s Ad-Hoc Com¬ students, faculty and adminis¬ another administrative posi¬ the orderly procedures for sel¬ mittee on Procedure^ for rec¬ trators. One cannot take for tion. After all. this University ecting must be finalized with ommendations to the* Commit¬ granted that they are fully rep¬ has not been in the position all due speed and equity for all tee of Search and resented on the other bodies Selection. of the Universitv. of selecting a new president involved. The sooner we can That's a lot of bureaucratic since 1941. The hearings before find a president, the sooner committees and sub-commit¬ ASMSU is the appointment must be con¬ very interested progress can proceed smooth¬ 'We've got a problem!' tees. but they could be to the in assuring student voice in ducted in a scholarly, open ly- advantage of everyone within the selection of the new presi¬ manner that will lend itself --The Editors the academic community who dent. and during the recent to free discussion from all is concerned about the selec¬ segments of the community. campaign for trustee seats, sev¬ tion of a new President. eral trustees indicated their Another favorable point in The Ad-Hoc Committee's pur¬ LARRY LERNER concern that the entire com¬ the Ad-Hoc Committee's rec¬ pose is not to select the person munity be granted fair consid¬ ommendations is that when the who will be the new president. eration. time comes for nominations, It will only lay the ground rules, students will have the oppor¬ designate the composition and The resignation of Presi¬ determine the charge for the Committee of Search and Selec¬ dent Hannah has occurred dur¬ ing a critical period in the de¬ tunity to make an unlimited number of suggestions. If this right is exercised in a respon¬ Malcolm X: life in death tion. the body which will make velopment of this campus. His sible manner, it can be an ex¬ the final recommendations for successor must be acceptable ample that all limbs of the aca¬ the presidency. The board of to a great many people, not the demic body can cooperate and As the barrage of bullets ripped into his flesh, the man known as Malcolm X ceased to exist-in the physiqal sense. But, in the "4 more appropriate label to describe him, if one OUR READERS'MIND four years since his violent assassination, wishes to use one, would be an "internationalist.' He his soul, his spirit have continued to live and to grow, they are now the inspiration had come to believe that all people, regardless of leading black people toward their human skin color, regardless of nationality, must be a part A university must serve the people rights. tent. Malcolm X. in life and death, remains a controversial figure. But. to a great ex¬ this is due to peoples' inability to of the revolution to rid the world of oppression, ra¬ cism and imperialism." To the Editor: They serve only the needs of a wealthy white people. Special programs to recruit read the words of the man. words about the AX OPEN LETTER TO THE TRUSTEES: minority. man and the words describing his life. Be¬ minority and working-class people are As we look around the Kellogg Center The purpose of the Thursday night oc¬ sheer tokenism. This injustice fore one can say that Malcolm X was this zines. white and black people refused to says: "We have committees, channels of must be for "Continuing Education." we get some cupation of Kellogg Center was to con¬ that, one must first attempt to under¬ search into the real meaning communication, etc.. for change These corrected. The University must not be or his words idea of the people which MSU serves. front the real directing forces of this allowed to practice class discrimination stand the man-and that means a genuine held. They refused to understand the change people won't wait because thev know that The conferences, convocations, and train¬ no real change, from their viewpoint will university with our demands, to dram¬ on the basis of middle-class oriented ad¬ attempt. Malcolm was going through. The labels ing sessions, the $15 a night carpeted atize our position, and to demonstrate the Without thrown around to describe him made the result. missions policies and standards. going into his entire life, some rooms, the high-priced restaurant-all are differences between the students and the ideas about Malcolm X must be brought The setting up. for a short time, of Mal¬ We have brought our two just demands public believe he was a "hate-monger, here to the well-heeled business¬ colm V (niversity at Brandeis Univer¬ serve alleged representatives of the people, the before you. for you now hold state power forth. "a man of violence." "a separatist." and men. not the workers in the auto plants trustees. at MSU. We ask you to decide-are you He went through two dramatic changes "a racist." sity in January by some militant black stu¬ crthe black people in the ghettos. We want the people to recognize whose in his life. The first occurred in prison dents. the renaming for a brief time, of going to continue to allow this Univer¬ Malcolm X was none of these things. A Kellogg Center is a symbol of the needs the trustees serve. The trustees are sity to be a racist, elitist, school for in¬ ihe served seven years for burglary > more appropriate label to describe him. City College of New York's administra¬ function of MSU. It serves the corpora¬ selected by conventions of the two most where he converted to the Black tion building. Malcolm \ l iberation ( enter. doctrination. or are you going to join us was if one wishes to use one. would be an in¬ tions. education the struggles at San Francisco State Col¬ as our serves to com¬ powerful political parties. They are obli¬ to open it up ? Muslim faith led by Elijah Muhammad. ternationalist." He had come to believe partmentalize and dehumanize us to serve gated to these parties and must serve Organizing Committee In prison, he went through the entire that all people, regardless of skin color, lege. Duke University. University of Wis¬ those corporations. them. Those who control the two major consin. MSU-they are all a part of the The Movement dictionary writing out words and defini¬ regardless of nationality, must be a part It houses the wealthy, not the poor, in black and white movement for human political parties are the same people who tions. This was to be a great help to him of the revolution to rid the world of op¬ the same way that the admissions policy control the economic system of our so¬ as a Black Muslim minister in the 12 pression. racism and imperialism But Rights. favors the Grosse Pointe applicants over ciety. It is through politics that the eco¬ he served under Elijah Muhammad Malcolm X is remembered today as the he believed that black people must first those from the ghetto. Admission stan¬ nomic elite control the educational sys- Hit and run vears 11952-19641. martyr, hero, leader, god of the black be unified-they must have their own pride, dards are "neutral; but somehow, work¬ tem and thus perpetuate their economic movement today. But many whites, too. » The second change resulted from his consciousness, oneness. They must be ing-class people don't get in. Very domination. Thus the trustees, both To the Editor: break with Elijah Muhammad look up to his courage, his sincerity, his neu¬ as in March. proud of the fact that they are a beautiful tral. political representatives of the establish¬ To Mr. Fedore (asst. dean of students i: 1964. It was this second change that wisdom. And more leaders like Eldridge people and. if necessary, they must resort Cleaver and Stokelv Carmichael The Kellogg Center image pervades ment and as "our educational directors." Enclosed is a $35.00 statement I are tak¬ re¬ caused all the controversy over what Mal¬ to violence to get their human rights. the University The dormitories social¬ are the obvious people to approach if we ceived today from Lansing Mercy Am¬ colm stood for. Malcolm was not willing to wait around ing the place that up until now was so ize us in bourgeois ways: our classes wish to change the system. The changes bulance Service. I have been informed The trouble was that Malcolm, in his vacant with the passing of Malcolm X. another few hundred years to get what teach us that working people are inferior we propose are contained in the basic de¬ that you are familiar with my case (hit It is my hope that people will, at the last year of life, had been radically his people deserved now. And he gradu¬ i and their absence from our classes proves mands. and run) that occurred the evening of changing from his former views. As a very least, make the attempt to discover ally came to realize that other people are the real Malcolm X. He can only be it»: the grading system and course re¬ /. M demand that Professor ■ Garskof President Hannah's "State of the Uni¬ Black Muslim, under Elijah Muhammad, oppressed, too. These people, he hoped found bv the person with an open mind- quirements force us to wade through bull be rehired with tenure and full privileges versity" address at Fairchild Theatre. he believed that blacks must eventually in his last few days, would join black on the way to education. Since the campus police were respon¬ a person who is not afraid to change his ns a professor, including the right to con¬ return to Africa and set up their own people sincerely, valiantly, militantly The question we ask is " Should the duct classes his Bert Garskbf's sible for taking me to Olin Health Center mind when he realizes he may have oun ic«y. independent" nation. Furthermore, he. to gain what is rightly theirs University serve the needs of the students dismissal, a culmination of long-stand¬ but were "all tied up quelling a riot at well all other Black Muslims, did been wrong as as And that's where the present day. 1969. and the entire society, or should it pander ing abuses, was symptomatic of the type Olds Hall"- I feel the University should not want the aid. physically and. above When a persof does this he may see fits in perfectly. The campuses are in to the desires of the ruling elite?" We be¬ of university of which we are members. handle this statement as I am a full- all financially, of white people. that Malcolm was not just ablack man. turmoil. Both blacks and whites are in lieve the University should serve the Because of Professor Garskof's educa¬ time student and the accident took place But from March. 1964 till his death in but a dedicated man. a great man. revolt against the "Establishment" that whole society tional philosophy, he was viewed as a I was confined to Olin for on campus. February. 1965. Malcolm was a different In an academic atmosphere, all the danger to the system. Because this Uni¬ four and one-half days. person. He set up his own religious base, tentacles of the ruling elite. Kellogg Cen¬ versity is run by and for corporate-capital¬ Would you also please check with the the Muslim Mosque. Inc.. and founded ter. the Thailand Project. ROTC. and ism. any threat to the methods and police (campus) to see just what action the Organization of Afro-American Unity the Placement Bureau, are alien bodies ideological underpinnings of that system is systematically eliminated. This is why Bert was fired-and why he must be re- is being taken to find the driver of the vehicle that struck me, or is it necessary for me to contact higher police officials (OAAlJi which was patterned after the Organization of African Unity (OAU> Green's statement Clarification of the state? formed in Addis Ababa. During this time he made a pilgrimage to Mecca, visited the EDITOR'S NOTE: Robert L. Green, academic posts were filled through "nor¬ This demand symbolizes the kind of Thank you for your cooperation sir; I Middle East and Africa and suddenly came associate professor of education, James mal" University election and selection education we want at MSU-one which remain, to realize that many brown, light brown and Madison College and Center for Urban procedures. If the "entire University com¬ Both sections of the letter. ACLl stance on Garskof. which appeared in serves the objective needs of the people Sincerely. white people believed in the same things Affairs, directs the following to mem¬ munity" is to become involved in the and does not dehumanize and compart¬ Bruce Forche he did. He learned then that skin color is bers of MSU's Board of Trustees-Don selection of the new University Presi¬ the State News Feb. 20 were written mentalize them. Our second demand con¬ East Lansing, sophomore not important-a common belief, faith, or Stevens, Blanche Martin, Frank Hart- dent, (as suggested by Mr. Clair White by Harold Hart, chairman of the Lan¬ cerns the class divisions in society which EDITOR'S NOTE: Bruce Forche was in¬ man, Frank Merriman, Stephen S. Nis- and Warren Huff), then traditional selec¬ sing Branch. American Civil Liberties goal is essential. MSU perpetuates and reinforces. II. «»■ jured on the night of Feb. 11 following Malcolm also began moving toward a bet. Warren Huff, Kenneth W. Thomp¬ tion procedures for the proposed "search Union, the first section directed to the demand that the I niversify institute the "Counter-State of the University" socialistic philosophy. In his days as a son, Clair White-and to Dale Hathaway, committee" must be by passed in order editors, the second addressed to Law¬ a policy of admissions for black. Third speech given by the Movement outside chairman of the Steering Committee of to insure black student and faculty repre¬ rence O'Kelly. chairman. Dept. of Psy¬ open disciple of Elijah Muhammad, he felt World, and white working class people. Fairchild Theatre while President Han¬ that blacks must work and prosper in the Academic Council and John A. Han¬ sentation. In this regard black students chology. They were to serve as public and clarification, but have caused some con¬ The University's recruitment policy is nah gave the "State of the University" their own black community, under the nah, president, MSU. faculty on this campus should be giv¬ directed toward upper and middle class address inside. Traditional election and selection pro¬ en the opportunity to select their own fusion. guise of a capitalist system, but he came to believe that the oppression and racism cedures have historically excluded black representatives for this committee as¬ CHRISTMAS?.1 600P 6RIEF, NO.' I LIVE IN CONSTANT FEAR WE ALL HAVE OUR ANXIETIES pervading this capitalist society could faculty and students from involvement signment. rather than having them ap¬ THIS 15 -STILL FEBRUAIW... THAT CHRISTMAS (JILL COME, not be repeated by blacks. So when Mal¬ in policy decisions made at MSU. A quick pointed by MSU administrative officials. AND I U)ONTKNOWA0OI/r IT... colm was struck down he was searching survey of such positions as department The full participation of the black com¬ to consolidate this new philosophy. In the chairman and deans and the composition munity in selecting their representatives of College Advisory Councils, the Aca¬ to this committee, will maximize the ambiguous terms of his day and ours he was a "black nationalist-plus." His demic Senate, the Steering Committee of search for a president who will be sensi¬ life was cut short before he could explain the Faculty, and the Committee on Com¬ tive and responsive to the needs of black mittees all reflect 99.9 per cent white students and faculty on this campus and fully this "plus." Malcolm X was misunderstood. He was representation. Yet these committees and blacks throughout the nation. misunderstood because newspapers, maga- Friday, February 21, 1969 5 On East On Violence Lansing I don't favor violence. In these days \ eg roes weren't allowed after dark in If ice could bring about rec¬ East Lansing proper. That's ognition and respect of our where Michigan State I di¬ people by peaceful means, versity is located . . . East well and good. But I'm al¬ so a realist. The Lansing harassed us so only people much that we had to move in this country who are asked to be non-violent are again. On the Ideal black people I believe Society ... / believe in a society in we should protect ourselves which people can live like by any means necessary where we are attacked by ra¬ human beings on the basis cists. of equality. On Manhood The Role of Students I'm the man you think If the students in this coun¬ you are. And if it doesn't try forgot the analysis that take legislation to make you has been presented to them, \lnlcolm \ li as on cam pit > on Jan. 21. I <)(>.{. u here he man and get your rights and they went into a huddle a a speech on lilack Islam, lie spoke to an overflow mnlien recognized, don't even talk Irikson /win. On lliis />a»e r>J' tribute are excerpts from and began to research this eraI of Malcolm \ speeches. to me. Vo, if we're both hu¬ problem of racism for them¬ selves, independent of pol¬ man beings we'll both do the same thing. And if you iticians and independent of want to knoic what I'll do, we say that we want to form all the foundations (which nt ling to defend himself anti are a part of the power struc¬ figure out what you'll do. something IIml's basal on prolet I himself. This is what I'll do the same thing—only black people gelling togeth¬ On Being Anti-American ture). and did it themselves, tut 1 people haven't done more of it. er. the white man tails thai tintI some of them, at lettsl This government should feel lucky that its people then some of their findings On Education racism. at the high academic level, aren't anti-American. They should get down on their would be shocking. Hut they So it takes education to On Racism hands and knees every morning and thank Cod that would see that they would dim I want lt>. Hal most eliminate (racism). And Lsually the black racist 22 million black people have not become anti-Ameri¬ never be able to bring about tn en't a I that level. solution to racism in this just because you have col¬ has been produced b\ the On Vietnam can. You've given us every right to. The whole a In world would side with us if we became anti-American. country as long as they're leges and universities, white racist. most cases II e are nt>t anti- tmeri- doesn't mean you have edu¬ where you sec it. il is the anti You know, that's something to think about. relying on the government (tin. II e are or against cation. The colleges and uni¬ react ion to while rat ism. and what imericu is to do it. fitting wrtmg versities in the American if analyze il closely, it's EDITORIAL you in ttther parts of the world On Power educational system are skill¬ in tt really It link racism. I as well as here. I ml what she Tower in defense of free¬ fully used to miseducate. think black people have Malcolm's dom is greater than power in tlitl is ivrong. in the Congo in It's criminal, cri¬ 11)() I behalf of tyranny and op¬ minal. intl wluil she tlitl to after the t pression. real power, because power, comes Jrom This page, prepared by the Black Students' Alli¬ ance, is a tribute to the late Malcolm X, who was the tmerican the I merit-tin public to go public, to get These brief comments are of American blacks. Interna¬ conviction which pro¬ slain Feb. 21, 1965, in New York City. BSA has asked tionalization of the Black Revo¬ along with it. is criminal. written with some reluctance. duces action. u ncom pro¬ black students, faculty, administrators and Lansing lution in America. Re-establish¬ II hat she's tloing in South As has been often commented. mising action. It also pro¬ area residents to forego classes and regular activities Brother Malcolm is " too many ing the dignitv of black man¬ I ielntun is crimina I. She's hood by any means necessary. duces insurrection against this day. things to too many people." i tin sing tmerican soldiers to Opinions of his meaning run the Racial cooperation. Black soli¬ oppression. This is the only be m urtleied every day. gamut of emotion. darity. Malcolm truly the pro¬ way you end oppression-- shown less racist tendencies killefl every flay, die every was The role of whites Our reluctance stems not with power. phet of the black revolution. Whites who are sincere than any people since the fifty, for nt> reason fit all. only from this, but from the His ideas are the basis of much That's wrong. \ow. you're fart that Malcolm would ordi¬ that is said and done todav. His On Capitalism don't accomplish anything beginning of history ... If not supposefl to be so blintl narily need no editorializing. It is impossible for capi¬ by joining \egro organiza¬ you come to put a rope 'For only a chosen few have attempts to bring unity to black with people have been taken up by talism to survive, primar¬ tions and making them inte¬ around my neck and I hang patriotism thfit you been able to successfully cap¬ can't face reality/It rong is many. ily because the system of cap¬ for it. to me that's not ture the "certain spirit" that grated. II hites who are mak¬ you Malcolm was precise in his italism needs some blood to racism. My reaction is the re¬ wrong, no matter who does marked this man. ing them and who are sin¬ analysis, staunch in his be¬ it who il. careful, liefs. incorruptible in his prin¬ suck. Capitalism used to be cere should organize among action of a human being, re¬ tn sfiys A thoughtful lead¬ ing of his life and philosophy ciples. and an uncompromising like an eagle, but now it's themselves and figure out would reveal elements of truth revolutionary in his determina¬ more like a vulture. some strategy to break down difficult to relate. A sincere tion to create a truly equalitar- and dedicated man emerges- ian world society. On the Cause of Race prejudice that exists in ideas could Prejudice white communities. This is a man whose This question must certain¬ where they can function change the condition of human ly be asked: why are black Ignorance and greed, and suffering in today's world. people only now beginning to a skillfully designed pro¬ more intelligently and more But most people refuse to iully grasp the significance of gram of miseducation that effectively in the white com¬ read with such open minds. Malcolm's philosophy'1 The an¬ Some persist in believing only swer reveals much about the goes right along with the munity itself, and this has those statements of Malcolm nature of the black revolution. American system of exploit¬ never been done. that found favor with the mass Malcolm at first, became an ation and oppression. On Prejudice media. In their distorted opin¬ outward symbol of the inner If the entire American ion. Malcolm becomes the sym¬ feelings of frustration and self- On Alliances bol of race hatred, black sep¬ hatred that black population were properly people have It hites can help us but aratism. and the like. expressed among themselves. educated—by properly edu¬ they can't join us. There can Others want to acknowledge With Malcolm, they found a cated, I mean given a true be no black-white unity un¬ only the Malcolm that best way to vent their accumulated picture of the history and suites their personal philoso¬ hatred for "the man." til there is first some black contributions of the black- phies. Hence. Malcolm as a har¬ But just as Malcolm's final unity. There can be no work¬ ideas evolved into full devel¬ man— I think many whites dened anti-white black revolu¬ ers solidarity until there is tionary is presented. opment. so too is the collec¬ would be less racist in their Not too many people desire to tive spirit of black people. Just first some racial solidarity. H e cannot think of uniting feelings. They would have take the time to discover Mal¬ as Malcolm internalized the more respect for the black colm's transitions before his black revolution, so too are with others until we have man's contributions to sci¬ untimely death. In not doing black people internalizing Mal¬ first united among ourselves. so. a most vivid story of hu¬ colm. ence and civilization have self-development is gross¬ Brother Malcolm becomes not White Support been in the past, man the white ly obscured. the symbol of our frustration, 44You never will get the man's feelings of supriority There were tenents in Mal¬ but the symbol of our possi¬ solution from any white lib¬ would be at least partially colm's evolving philosophy that bilities. Embodied in Malcolm eral; Let you and I sit down negated. would have provided the ideol¬ and his ideas, we find the past and future of the black exper¬ and discuss the problem, ogical base needed to unify all On "Reverse Racism" come up with what we feel people in a newer and bolder ience. revolutionary struggle against Malcolm's strivings are the the solution will be; and then Every effort we make to the oppressive forces of the strivings of all men. As Mal¬ unite ourselves on the ba¬ colm became, so too can we be¬ if they want to help it, then world. sis of what we are, they label let them help in their way, Black self-determination. Ac¬ come. it as what? racism. If in a way that they can help." . . . ceptance of the African origin -The Black Students' Alliance 6 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, February 21, 1969 U.S. tribute Celluloid "V Presents Tonight & Tomorrow By BARBARA PARNESS State News Staff Writer On Feb. 2 of that year, which marked the 200th anniversary pays the memory of the first pres- prominantly engaged in the cel¬ ftfE ident from Feb. 22 to Thanks- ebration being entriely compos¬ In 1932 they really celebr¬ of Washington's birth, Pres- giving Day. ed of Federalists, the Dem¬ ated George Washington's birth¬ ident Herbert Hoover issued The Post Office Dept. that ocrats came to consider the 4CRY day—the celebration lasted 276 a presidential proclamation year issued a series of 12 twenty-second of February as calling on Americans to honor commemorative stamps show¬ a political anniversary, and TONIGHT From 7:00 P.M. ing a portrait of Washington they abstained from participat¬ ONE-FOURTH OF HUMANITY 4TH HILARIOUS taken from paintings and statues by well-known artists. One of these stamps featured a re¬ ing in the ceremonies direct¬ ed by their political opponents. m| ■■ WEEK! This abstention extended even ^^TnfyfgETHSI—N FEATURES AT 7:35 AND 9:45 production of Gilbert Stuart's to volunteer companies not in famous protrait of President sympathy with the Federalists." Washington. Only after Washington's death The almost year-long cele¬ in December of 1799 did the bration was brought to an end celebration of his birthday be¬ on Nov. 24. 1932. with the come free of poltical partisan¬ placing of a wreath at the base ship. Congress adopted as one of the Washington monument of its last acts before leaving in the nation's capital. Philadelphia to meet in the mm Americans do not always cel¬ new capital in the District of ebrate the birthday of their Columbia a resolution recom¬ first chief executive for such mending that Feb. 22. 1800. be an extended period of time. observed throughout the United In fact for a long time they States with exercises to ex¬ did not celebrate the anniver¬ French forces aiding the rev- day and encouraged its cele- press the popular esteem for sary at all. olutionists. bration. Thomas Jefferson, how- declared a holiday Washington. The first observance of the for his troops in honor of ever, ignored the day- Today Washington's birthday birthday outside of Wash¬ is celebrated Washington's birthday. The he became president on Feb. ington's immediate family of French and American officers The celebration did not win state € which any record has been found celebrated the occasion with general acceptance for occurred at Valley Forge. Pa., a special dinner. during the winter of 1778. At that time the band of the Fourth Continental Artillery marched was a partisan political dem- rather than Washington's to onstration. This feeling did not birthd; Washington s headquarters bration. On the evening of Feb After Jan 1. 1971. Washing¬ and serenaded the commander. entirely even after 22. 1783, a group of gentlemen ton's birthday will be cele¬ In 1781 the Comte de Roch Washington's retirement from Released before met at a hotel in the city for the presidency. brated on the ihird Monday ambeau, commander of the dinner and made speeches in Nov. 1 Not February as it presently A book describing the cus¬ Classified praise of Washington. They dec¬ is in th* state of Massachu- ided at that time to meet every toms of the early 19th century se ts. Washington's birthday Fri. 7 & 9 100 Vet Clinic /ear for this same purpose Philadelphia describes the is one of the four holidays 109 Anthony BRAMS When John Adams succeeded celebration. The book states: included in a recent law passed AB Sat. 7 & 9 "Washington s birthday was by Congress which designates COLOR Exactly as presented LIVE on stage in San Franc/sJ"a^d Los Angeles! an occasion orations and for processions, certain holidays to be celebrat¬ banquets, and ed each year on a Monday. should have "A FILM EVERY AMERICAN rachel.AND P^'Heartfe® been a national This will give four perman- NEXT! holiday. in which all SHOULD SEE!" people ent three-day weekends to gov¬ •»>»» TIMOTHY I >A I TON ANTHONY HOr*K'!NS«p, Nir.t'I. .STOCK* NIGBI.TKRRY«*«.j~ JA*Mfc>TGOLDM A N .M7s F. PTTB, LEV IN E JAMES GOLDMAN MARTIN mi.l. ANTHONY HARVEY ^^OHN BARRY «. vmrasnv v.-, panavkio*. „0nut* me lola albright-chad everett TOMORROW AT 2:30 and 8:30 P.M. • SPARTAN TWIN WEST • SHOWN TWICE AT 7:09 and 11:18 aslily Ca-Stami| JOHN RUSStll■ MM PHENIISS 2nd Color Featurette Schedule of Performances and Prices SPARTAN TWIN WEST THEATRE I ROWAN AND MARTIN Jp'^'-MHyRraNNEll Original Star* aid Screenplay by Charles "A Man Has tt live" kv Saimy fan Martin - Produced aid Directed ky Charles Martin- COtOR BY 1ASIMAN AT THE MOVIES dffSfe I ALL SETS RESERVED Special Short Subject I SHOWN TWICE at 7 p.m.-11:09 SHOWN TWICE AT 7:07 and 11:00 p.m. WED., SAT. and SUN. at 2:30 P.M. 3rd Color Hit 2nd Color Adult Feature MONDAY thru SATURDAY at 8:30 P.M. I SUNDAY EVENfNG at 7:30 P.M. — PRICES — I ELVIS PRESLEY gl CUNT EASTWOOD WED. & SAT. MATINEES (All Scats) I $2.00 All Evening Performances and Sunday . Matinee I HANG'EM HIGH" Prices $2.50 »t«mp«d envelope with check or money order nyiMt I .OR By 0*Luit "323^ '""TED ARTISTS ... Hi —™"T"' 3'®° El" L«n»fn», Mich. —J4M12 L PAMVISI0N*MD MtTROCOLOR FOR SPECIAL GROUP RATES CALL MR. SORENSEN OR MR. MATTHEWS 351-0031 Friday, February 21, 1969 "J Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Bogart to By JIM YOUSLING State News Reviewer their range and artistry is re¬ markable. Including psychedel- freak-out: weekend fare Bogart fans will be thrilled to know that one of their hero's finest films is back, courtesy In 109 Anthony Lion in Winter" and "Romeo and Juliet. - as well as a ing new womedy. "The Night charm¬ MSU students have once ics, documentaries, parodies and "message" films, this of the Beal Flim Group. Dir¬ They Raided Minsky's," which again been flooded with enough ected by John Huston, whose will be reviewed next week. entertainment to fill several series indeed offers the pro¬ father Walter proves to be Bo- weekends. verbial "something for every¬ one." gart's match, "The Treasure Live, students can dance to of the Sierra Madre" mixes the Woolies at the fourth in a series of "freak-outs," spon¬ sored by a local charity organ¬ The films will be shown to¬ night and Saturday, and later on Feb. 28 through March 3 in the rugged aventure with mascu¬ line irony in this tale of pros¬ PAC opens chaotic Natural Resources Auditorium, pecting and greed. One of the ization, Saturday night in the Union Ballroom. And if one night of dancing is not enough, and in Conrad Auditorium on Feb. 24, 26 and 27. On all even¬ great films of the Forties, this evergreen will be shown at 7 and 9 tonight and Saturday in Torch Bearers' play Francis X and the Bushmen will ings, complete showings begin 104 Wells. at 7 and 9:30. Tickets ($1.50) be swinging their axes on Fri¬ the list goes on. The Performing Arts Co. opens its sixth offering of the available at the door or, will be shown tonight in 100 And MHA- day in McDonel Hall, while are season. George Kelly's comical play. The Torch Bearers." Feb. in advance, from the Union Vet Clinic and Saturday in 109 WIC presents "Von Ryan's Ali the Lovely People headline 25-March 2 at Fairchild Theatre Brodv's all-soul mixer. Ticket Office. Anthony. The film, accepted by Express." a taut, exciting sus¬ Director Mariam Duckwall. who successfully directed "Royal The MSU Film Society also a Little Rascals short, begins pense film with special appeal The coffeehouse scene has Gambit" last fall, leaves her forte of intense psychological drama at 7 and 9 p.m. both nights. for Frank Sinatra fans. The offers the unusual this week¬ and enters the chaotic stage of the clown recently expanded. In addition train pulls out at 7 and 9:30 to Friday and Saturday activi¬ end. "Two for the Road," Cinema Guild gives us still As PAC's Art Novak explained, the story centers on Mrs. Pam- ties in the Joint, located in the which was earlier announced, another controversial work. tonight in Wilson and tomorrow in Conrad. pinelli. pseudo-authority supreme in all matters theatrical and Student Services Bldg. base¬ has been cancelled, but in its Peter Brook's magnificent film one of the "guiding spirits'" in the Little Theatre movement of of "Marat ,'Sade." Turning the Finally, owners of PAC sea¬ ment, coffeehouses have also place the group will present son tickets should be reminded the 1920 s Sworn to stop at nothing in her ci'usade to contribute sprung up in Case and Snyder Edgar Snow's documentary on Royal Shakespeare Company's to the cause of theatre, she succeeds in upsetting the domestic that their coupon book will Halls. Red China. "A Quarter of production of a highly theatri¬ tranquility of the Ritter family, with the ensuing chaos the cal experience into a film pres¬ admit them to a showing of the Movies, however, are once Humanity." Tracing the rise of focus of the plot. ented some strong conflicts of film version of Tennessee Will¬ Mao from 1935 to the present, Featured in the case are Roberta Dahlberg. Jay Raphael, again the most varied category iams's on campus. Under the wing of this important film contains media which are left unresol¬ "Summer.^nd Smoke and Karen Moorehead and a fine supporting company many scenes never shown be¬ ved. but "Marat/Sade" packs This tragedy of a spinster's ASMSU. a series of outstand¬ The Fairchild box office will be open from 12:30-5:00 p.m. fore outside (or inside) the such a wallop that it would prob¬ conflicting religious and sexual ing student-made films, coll¬ All seats are reserved, and tickets are $2.00 to non-coupon hold- desires stars Lawrence Har¬ Kab-a-ra cutie ectively titled 'Genesis I," Bamboo Curtain, including the ably come off well on radio. makes its local debut tonight. only filmed interview with Mao Avant-garde. witty. grue¬ vey and the ever-excellent The MC-5 performed at the Kab-a-ra Club in Lan¬ These 17 short films were sel¬ in existence. some and literate, this film is sing to the delight of fans and music-lovers. ected from the best American First released in the United yet another not-to-be-missed State News Photo by Jim Richardson and British film schools, and States in October. Snow's eye- experience. and The assassination persecution begin at 7 •Ye©Me Notice* opening work is having its first local exposure, thanks to and 9 tonight and Saturday in the Film Society. Humanity" 108 Wells. 1 SPECIAL OFFER BEAUTY, SCHOLARSHIP Judges set high criteria I McDonel < in Miss MSU pageant ically go on to the Miss Mich¬ igan Contest, to be held this be rah' more than the spirit, which something fading rah- ► \ ^f c Hall PRESENTS: j IFROM SH&KETTC < old June in Muskegon. like Homecoming usually only I Francis X j briefly creates on a campus." wail the fact that Saturday The purpose of the Miss MSU The twelve finalists, select¬ /<*« night is the loneliest night of competitions, meant to be more the week. Well if so. than that of a beauty contest ed from 50 semifinalists from per¬ haps it's because many of the alone, is to combine both dormitory and sorority nom¬ best-looking girls will all be scholastic interest with extra- inations. are expected to per¬ together this weekend, doing icular ctivities. form before a crowd of about ► AND THE i one thng in particular and at Mis MSU will represent the 500 Saturday evening. Asked Get half a one place. Another elusive school throughout the year and whether or not such a pros¬ phase of the feminine mysti¬ que'' Actually not. for the rea¬ son your best girl may be un¬ serve as its ambassador, siding- at university functions and greeting visitors to pre¬ the pect would make some them nervous, of the contestants answer¬ ed in the affirmative. Yet others Bushmen! ^7 \ Shakey's pizza available to you. could be her seemed to have different anxie¬ campus. Unionization come Saturday "She will became more, than ties. -1,13!/ j ► FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1969 i > night 'jiH* a title." saf& D§ive- ffitads. Tomorrow evening at 8 p.m It seems that smiling or walk¬ 50C ADMISSION i speical events director for Un¬ ing no longer remains the big¬ ► 9 p.m. - 12 free! in the Union Ballroom, the Un¬ ion Board. Miss MSU must ion Board will sponsor its third gest problem confronting these annual Miss MSU Pageant girls. I just hope.'" one finalist Twelve finalists will be com¬ All-German cast MeN'S HALL ASSOCIATION said, "that on the night of the peting for the coveted title of Campus Queen, and will under¬ go several of |he same judg¬ stars in comedy pageant in here i it's the a little warmer Ballroom i: bath¬ ing standards met by the year¬ ly Miss America contestants at Zerbrochene The Broken Jug" i Krug" . Der a com¬ ing suits in February is jumping the gun a bit. don't you think?" iVDMeN'S iNTeRPesiDeNcecaiNciL Atlantic City. edy by Heinrich von Kleist. i Whatever happened to Queens Talent, swimsuit and even¬ will be presented in German in draftv castles? > ing gown categories are but at 8:15 tonight in the Music Tickets for Saturday even¬ three factors for considering Auditorium. ing's production are available the finalists. In addition, The play will be performed at the Union Ticket Office and per¬ sonal poise, beauty, and intel¬ bv the Westdeutsche Tournee- Campbell's Suburban Shop The lectual awareness are factors tbeater and will starr Wilhelm price for general admission M Mund and Blanca Blaha seats is $2.00. which the judging panel will look for The winner and first and second runners-up of the page¬ will $500. $250 SPARTAN TWIN EAST ant receive FRANDOR SHOPPING CENTER • 3100 EAST SAGINAW Phone 351-0030 Second Big Week! HILLEL 332-1916 319 HILLCREST; SUNDAY FEB. 23 6 PM Hurry! Ends Tuesday! SUPPER-FORUM SHOWN AT 2:00-4:15-6:45 and 9;00 p.m. DR. SIDNEY BERGER ItrtfcH Assoc. Prof. Theatre A TROPICAL JUNGLE BECOMES A "HAVE THE FUN-FILLED ISLAND PARADISE. PERFORMING ARTS L.viyx1, GONE TOO FAR?" Everyone Welcome. Rides. STEREO SOUND V&4 m BY SONY Take this coupon to Shakey's PRIPAY NlfeHT Pizza Parlor WILSON WW Ml* Aft fat M & Ye Public House ADM. 5$ 6527 SOUTH CEDAR •SHOWS- This coupon is good for 1/2 off the price of • s^ws- 7'OOT.M- the pizza of your choice when you eat at 7:00P.M. Shakey's! Offer expires February 28, 1969 AI\H> MP q;"50 p-M. ^■■00 P.M. 560 Auto-Reverse Stereo Compact Tape System 5411 SO CCDAR LANSING. MICHIGAN HOURS-- Mon. thru Fri. 9-9 Sat. 9-6 Sun. 2-6 8 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, February 21, 1969 Gophers test Cagers risk streak on road Saturday in crucial esota scorer, weekend series has 17 goals and has 12 points on By MIKE MANLEY State News Sports Writer Tom Mitchell, who started at guard in the first game, has By PAM BOYCE three goals and them once, both in Minneapolis. MSU Coach John Benington lost his place in the lineup to State News Sports Writer 17 assists for 34 points. He nine assists. "We have a lot at stake in admits it will be hard for his 6-2 senior Keith Burington. has 20 points in the WCHA. The Minnesota Gophers bur¬ Murray McLachlan, the the Big Ten when we meet club to get up for Saturday's Coach John Powless hopes that row into the Spartans' den this Captain Bill Klatt. last year's WCHA's top rookie last year, Minnesota this weekend," Bes¬ contest with Wisconsin in Mad- the hot-shooting Burrington can weekend, hoping to erase the Big WCHA scoring leader, stands will tend goal for the Gophers. sone said. add some scoring punch to the Ten title tied for second place in the McLachlan, a Toronto junior, "The next four games mean hopes MSU now enter- The Spartans. 10-8 overall and Badger attack. league this year with 25 points is tied for third place in the a lot to us as far as who we 5-4 in the Big Ten, will carry a The rest of the lineup is in¬ on 15 goals and 10 assists. He WCHA with a goals-against av¬ The Minnesota hockey team play in the WCHA playoffs." four game winning streak into tact with John Johnson and is in third place on the Min¬ meets the Spartans full-force erage of 2.9. Back-up goalie Game time tonight and Sat¬ the Badger's Fieldhouse. Wis¬ Chuck nesota scoring roster with 34 for Minnesota is junior Ron Nagle at the forwards tonight at the MSU Ice Arena, urday is 8 p.m. consin is 9-10 on the year and and Clarence Sherrod at the ot¬ accompanied by such outstand¬ points. Dockin, with a 3.0 average in 3-6 in the conference. her guard positions. ing players at the 1967-68 West¬ Sophomore Steve Hall has a league play. MSU Johnson dropped the Badger here is the ern Collegiate Hockey Assn. total of 20 points for the Goph¬ ers. followed by Mike Kurtz The Gophers hold fifth place in the WCHA, one place ahead Ousted Badger in January 77-67 behind a red- leading Bad¬ ger scorer with an 18.5 average scoring leader and last year's hot first half. while Sherrod is hitting 11.3. WCHA Sophomore-of-the Year. with eight goals and five assists. of the Spartans. Minnesota is The Gophers will be led by ers Top defensemen for the Goph¬ are Toronto senior Don 8-8-2 in league play, overall. MSU is 6-7-1 in the 11-11-3 athletic director "I wish we could play Pur¬ due before we faced Wiscon¬ Nagle is scoring at an 11 point clip. their top scorer Pete Fichuk. Fraser and Minnesota sopho¬ sin," Benington said. "With Benington will start the same The Minnesota goals and 19 assists for 37 senior has 18 more Wally Olds. Fraser. who WCHA with a 10-12-1 record. The Spartans have a 3.92 goals- dies in accident the conference title all but clinched by Purdue, the teams lineup that has brought the Spar¬ tans four straight wins with Lee has a total of 44 penalty min¬ points and is presently tied per-game average, while their now start to look for individual utes on 14 penalties, has scored MADISON. WIS. (UPIi - Lafayette. Jim Gibbons and for second place in the WCHA opponents have a 3.38 goals- games. Bernie Copeland up front and 13 points for the Gophers on Ivan B. (IVY i Williamson, with 25 points. Senior Rick against average. "It will be hard for us not Harrison Stepter and Tim Bo- three goals and 10 assists. Olds who coached the University of Yurich. second highest Minn- Coach Amo Bessone refers to Wisconsin in its most glorious to look ahead to the Purdue grakosat the guards. the Gophers as a tough team. game on Tuesday. This game T hope our momentum and "DAZZLING! Once you see it, you'll never again picture The Spartans have defeated football era but saw disaster strike as athletic director, is against Wisconsin will be a all-around play can continue." 'Romeo& Juliet' quite the way you did before!" -life them once this year and tied dead. tough one for us to plav." he Benington said: I never thought said. they could play the way they Williamson. 58. died at Uni¬ PARAMO! NT I'KTl RKS "In fact they will be as have in the last four games , versity Hospital Wednesday night, about two hours after he tough for us to play on the road as Purdue will be here at home had fallen down the basement Franco Zeffirelli stairs of his Madison home. We have played two hard "Zeffirelli best director" A had hospital spokesman said he suffered games in a row and to get thjs one out of the way we d like S' frosh Romeo * Nat. Board of brain stem "irreversible damage" due to Bulldozed Badger for the big one." Benington b a Review of head injury. turn (^juliet Motion Pictures Death came one month and nine days after Williamson had MSU center Lee Lafayette goes over and through of Wisconsin has made personnel changes since thev a couple been fired as athletic director in the wake of two consecutive Wisconsin star James Johnson (35) for two in the January meeting between MSU and the Bad¬ points lost here last month. Henry, 6-9, will be at center in Albert 'M' cag winless football seasons and gers. Looking on is Wisconsin forward Dave Zink place of Craig Mayberrv. Henry (32). State News played the pivot when Wiscon¬ Ralph Simpson scored forty- mounting athletic department photo by Bob Ivins debts. sin upset Kentucky back in De¬ two points as he led the MSU cember. freshmen to a hard-fought 92- 91 win over Michigan Thurs¬ CORONET day "night in Ann Arbor AUTOMATIC 10" Simpson hit on eighteen field • ELECTRIC Automatic Return Carriage S'greets Gopher grapplers By GARY WALKOWICZ at 3:30 p.m. Saturday in the attempt to close out their Big Nichols and Mike Maas. goals and 6 foul shots for his game leading total. Gary Pry zbylo hit 19 and Ron Gutkow- ski added 17 for the Spart¬ Full Executive Sports Editor ans, Lamont King paced the 88-character I M, Arena Ten dual meet season with a Nichols, a 123-pounder has a The MSU wrestling team gets Wolverines with 24 office size Keyboard The Spartans, who will play perfect record. 14-6-1 showing for the season Michigan led 43-42 at the its final test before the Big Ten host to the conference meet on » 5 yr. Guarantee MSU. the third-ranked wrest¬ while Maas has 15 of 19 meet when they face Minnesota Feb 28 and March 1. will won half. The second half was a -Released Prior to Nov. lst~Not Class If iec ling team in the country, has matches. sea-saw affair with neither :e $109.50 won all four of its matches Reid ; Z* OUVW HUSSf* LrG\AfiC WHf Lampere < 13-7-1 at team able to hold more than V 0 O'SHtA MCHAh mi wm ri ALL U-MIXER against conference foes and has 130. Tony Sworshy < 12-7-2 ■ a three point advantage. FRANCE BflUSA: MM 0 AMICE AN!H0N> HAVftOCX ALlAN and jOHN BRABOURNt s13498 Recording Artists FROM DETROIT: •ord o -rail at 1 152 and Gary Pelcl 145 are other Gophers 19-6- Toomey anc at who could provide th^JSpar »» FRANCO Mill — HP & the Grassroots Movement Sp¬ r Murahat. Dennis Smith and all- against IU. was edged by Hoo- Saturday in the Men's I. M. 'Uram has had rapid im¬ Szypula siad that Wisconsin Kinsev's major obstacle to Olympians.' OhioStafp sier sprint ace Mike Goodrich Sports Arena MSU. 4-3 in dual meets and provement and is looking good.' is hurting badly on tramp and victory. Lantry scored 9.1 in arounder Pete Sorg. the 300 but came back anchor the mile relay to i 2 in the conference, should MSU Coach George Szypula receive their strongest chall- said hoping his injury Mr. Doan: with a 47-second clocking. enge from the Buckeyes. Ohio won t set him back and keep Kim Hartman. holding stead- State, irl its last meet him out of competition.' Ohio State has a good all- ily around 4:10 in the mile, will Michigan, lost with 171.70 while around performer in Bruce again run his specialty while Wisconsin managed 157.15 Trott. His best event is high : will attempt to igainst Minnesota's 171.05. What looked like easy compe¬ bar where he should be a chall¬ improve his 9:04.8 best Dear Mr. Doan: two mile tition for the Spartans is be¬ enge for Spartan Norm Haynie. No major challence will con¬ Pat Wilson will tr; coming more formidable since Just once and for all —will business admit front MSU's Toby Towson in win in the 600 alter third all-arounder Mickey Uram has that it does make mistakes? Over and over floor exercise but Ohio's Mike place effort against the Hoo- been out three days with a bone again we see the major corporations siers while Dean Rosenberg will chip in his wrist. He is a Sexton will push him in valut. stamping out criticism as they cover up flaws. Somehow the "ethics" always seem to get lost in the rhetoric. Dear Mr. Chess: Several notable cases come to mind, the most recent being the much-publicized Big Business does not hold itself out as a Equally, an inquiry into press- affair of the General Motors Goliath sacred cow whose actions or ethics are sensationalized episodes of bribery, versus Ralph Nader. Here Big Business not subject to scrutiny or valid criticism. collusion, kickbacks and callgirls proDably exposed itself as being oversensitive to will reveal involvement of the same kinds constructive criticism—as well as callous in But in making value judgments of the of cheaters and schemers looking for a AN EVOLUTION its ignominious attack on its critic. "rightness" or "wrongness" of business, fast dollar. No company that I know Surely, while we don't expect Big Business I question whether isolated instances are condones this conduct. It simply does not IN FILM! to change its ways overnight, we can definitive critferfaV' represent the ethics of business, any more expect a rational consideration — than does industrial espionage. Frankly, I ASMSU PRESENTS Critical judgments should be made in and not merely a cover-up job. think its significance has been perspective with the phenomenal growth quite exaggerated. STUDENT FILM FESTIVAL of our national economy since the end of Yet the IMader episode is not unique. One recalls a similar overreaction —and World War II; a period during which our What it all adds up to is that most this time by the chemical industry—to gross national product more than tripled business enterprises, under the strict Feb. 21, 22 and 28. Mar. 1, from $208.5-billion to approximately discipline of our competitive profit-making 2, 3, at Natural Resources Rachel Carson's expose on indiscriminate uses of insecticides. The Big Business $740-billion last year. system, constantly are providing Auditorium improved products and better service. In Feb. 24, 26, and 27 at Conrad response to Jessica Mitford's eye-opening This growth has resulted from a continuous doing so they mirror the community of Auditorium 7:00 an.d 9:30 portrayal of the realities of the funeral effort on the part of the business com¬ which they are an integral part both in business was equally bitter—not so much p.m.-2 shows each night$1.50 munity to respond both to society's the advances made, and in their standards against her arguments in "The American demands, and its needs. On the one hand, General Admission of performance. In the course of this, Way of Death" but against the author the constant demand for product Advance tickets at the Union mistakes, as distinguished from unethical herself. In none of these instances did Ticket Office. improvement leads to better design and practices, occur. I suppose that those business admit its imperfections on its greater performance through advances in who make them are no less reluctant to own accord. Only public pressure—and the technology. Similarly, society's needs admit their mistakes, or to sustain public GENESIS FILMS LTD./A FILMWAYS CO. fear of continued negative publicity—was prompt extensive research for the criticism, than people in other able to draw out the truth about auto development of completely new products walks of life. hazards, bug sprays and casket costs. —which create the additional profit- I am not acquainted with all the facts making opportunities essential for the It's instances like these that prove business surrounding General Motors' issue with nation's economic growth while Renault - is responsible for the myth that it sees Ralph Nader, but it is a matter of record satisfying a social purpose. only the facts it wants to see. It's that James Roche, then President of GM, instances like these that reinforce the The measles vaccine developed at Dow is made a public apology on this matter image of business justifying any means an example. The benefits to society from before the Senate's Investigating Com¬ that maximize the ends—the ends being planned inoculation programs multiply mittee. • Rar 4 Tops By Road-Test monetary profit. It's as if Mammon in astounding geometric proportions. Not As regardsRachel Carson and Magazine himself had updated the business only can the total incidence of measles insecticides, I will say that my own • Ra^d Tops By Commuters code of ethics. be cut substantially, but also a far lesser company had done research on the number will suffer the crippling mental & Travelers toxicology of insecticides long before the Twentieth Century Big Business appears defects which before destined many to a Food & Drug Administration voiced any • Rated Tops For Winter Driv¬ to be nothing more than a reincarnation of life of perpetual care in institutions. concern in this subject. Research was not the Nineteenth Century stereotype, the Human lives are being saved, their useful forced by Miss Carson's work. The ing & Comfort Robber Barons. Jay Gould's stock-market purposefulness unimpaired, while millions chemical control of agricultural pests • 35 To 40 N/PG rigging has its 1961 counterpart in G.E. of dollars are freed for reallocation certainly has a direct bearing on the very and Westinghouse price-fixing. We have to other uses. • cruise 70-80 MPH critical question of world food supply. our Billie Sol Estes and our Bobby Bakers. Such control measures, coupled with Today's business covertly sanctions such The focus on profit-making products to serve definable social needs reflects the applied research by agronomists improving noble practices as bribes, kickbacks, crop yields, constantly are increasing company callgirls and tacit collusion. times just as the community's mores food supplies to meet expanding The "ethics" of Big Business have always affect standards of ethics. In this less-than-perfect society in which we live, population needs. >till created a business unto itself—industrial Only the ranks of business, and government, that while your question espionage. Here anything goes —from I feel, therefore, and education, and virtually every other "What's Right About Big duplicated office keys to parabolic as to segment of the community, unfortunately 1 microphones. And even packaging frauds Business" focuses on its conduct, rather 1,775 are becoming more and more blatant harbor those who cheat and scheme to than its accomplishments real objectivity in today's age of the 10-ounce gain their personal ends. It's probably requires that both be weighed in balance. rather remarkable that our times have not On this broad scale, then, business is giant economy size. produced more Billie Sol Estes and Bobby pace setting the times in accordance with Thus, when college youth are asked, Bakers. But usually they are found out in the community's needs and the ground p.O.E. "What's wrong with Big Business?", we short order. Neither I, nor any other rules of its environment. answer most simply, "What's right with responsible businessman, condone their actions. Certainly their conduct cannot be Big Business?" Very little, it seems. Cordially, * regarded as typifying business any more 12 MONTH FULL WARRANTY Sincerely, than the activities of the S.D.S. on various 4— campuses speak for the majority segment H. D. Doan . of the student body. President, The Dow Chemical Company UNLIMITED MILEAGE WHO CARES ABOUT STUDENT OPINION? Here, Stan Chess, a Journalism senior at "LIVE A LITTLE" GO-RENAULT!! Cornell, is exploring issues with Mr. Doan. BUSINESSMEN DO. With experience as a working reporter on the Al Edwards These Dialogues will appear in this publication, Three chief executive officers—The Goodyear Long Island Press, and as Editor-in-Chief of and other campus newspapers across the the Cornell Daily Sun. Mr. Chess is pointing Tire & Rubber Company's Chairman. Russell country, throughout this academic year. toward newspaperman. Snnrta a career as a DeYoung, The Dow Chemical Company's Campus comments are invited, and should be itOT President. H D. Doan, and Motorola 's Chairman. In the course of the entire Dialogue Program. forwarded to Mr. DeYoung, Goodyear. Akron. Robert W Galvin—are responding to serious Ohio; Mr. Doan. Dow Chemical, Midland, David M. Butler, in Electrical Engineering questions and viewpoints posed by students Michigan; or Mr. Galvin, Motorola, Franklin about business and its role in our changing at Michigan State, also will exchange Park, Illinois, as appropriate. society and from their perspective as heads viewpoints with Mr. Doan; as will Mark | °V'| fj . . . ij 1200 E. OAKLAND PHONE 482-1226 of major corporations are exchanging views through means of a campus /corporate Dialogue Bookspan. a Chemistry major at Ohio State, and David G. Clark. Political Science MA candidate at Stanford, with Mr. DeYoung; and Program on specific issues raised by leading Open Monday & Thursday Evenings til 9 student spokesmen similarly. Arthur M. Klebanoff, in Liberal Arts at Friday, February 21, 1969 10 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan 'The First Circle MSU bookstore Stalin's hierarchy profits from sales As far as this writer knows horrible calm that sets the EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the ly parallels Trotsky's account no other "department" of the first in a weekly series of art¬ of Stalin in his autobiography. novel's tone. icles which will deal with University is allowed to make A government official, on his Whether because of the trans¬ •THE FIRST CIRCLE/' by college and university book¬ monetary profit, either for its way to report to Stalin, swit¬ lator's art or the author's, Aleksandr I. Solzhenitsyn stores. Staff writer Valerie own or another department's ches his fountain pens from tremendous artistic growth benefit. Translated from the Russian Restivo will present some of an inner to an outer pocket, is apparent from Solzhenitsyr's bv Thomas P. Whitney: Harper the It is certainly acceptable for as the Leader does not like 1962 "A Day in the Life of problems, proposals and & Row. 1968. $10.00 Avail¬ prospects for change. Response a privately owned book store to see a hand thrust into an Ivan Denisovich" to 1968's able at the Campus Book Store. from readers is welcome, some to make a solid, reasonable inner pocket. "The First Circle." The for¬ At the opening of "The comments from readers may profit It seems out of line Stalin's hierarchy of fear mer was rather dull, in spite First Circle" one man is joy¬ be included in this series. for a so-called "department ous. He has arrived from the is briefly but meticulously of its fiery content. of the Univeristy - a state described. "The First Circle" is long, By VALERIE RESTIVO Stalinist prisons of horror to university, at that, to become With all their freedom, the yet it is apparently brief. The State News Staff Writer a new He can place. He can read books. eat his fill. He can work zeks are allowed an annual -writer*'s art is refined. He does No positive In 1967 the MSI' Bookstore a profit-making enterprise, at considerable expense to stu¬ visit with wife or close rel¬ not need to rely on sensational¬ advertised itself as" ... the as an intelligent man again. Community leaders discussed the success of current programs in the Lansing dents and faculty ative. Holding hands or kiss¬ ism to hold the reader's atten¬ only University-owned store. He tells another: area and concluded that they have not yet had positive results. The discussion We Many students and faculty ing is forbidden. With sturdy tion. He is beginning to create are a department of the members think it is time for "Perhaps I'm in heaven." table and a prison guard sep¬ took place during the Evening College's "Racism in the Black-White Commun¬ a place for another great Russ¬ University and consequently He is told that he is. as be¬ ity" courses. State News Photo by Jim Richardson have your best a change Some would like to arating man and wife, a couple ian novelist. interests at fore. in hell. But this is the uphold the grand tradition" tries in 30 minutes to sustain the MSU Bookstore mentions highest-the first-circle of a relationship for three or 10 The MSU bookstore was found¬ hell. The sharashka. or pris¬ in its advertising but ignores or 30 years. ed as the MAC Cooperative Book on for intellectuals, was begun in reality The store has a tra¬ in Dante's "Inferno", where the Through the years, the zeks must sustain not only their RACISM PANEL Buying Assoc students and by a group of faculty members dition of cooperative booksell- enlightened men were separated belief in relationships but in 18%. From then until 1940 ing. from ordinary sinners and week: Prospects for belief in themselves. Their the store grew, but remained need placed in a rather elegant hell Programs fate is uncertain. They try to a co-operative whose only pro¬ of their own. work as little as possible on fits were fed back into sal¬ To explain the sharashka a prisoner, or zek. quotes a news the projects assigned them, aries and maintenacne of facil¬ ities. Prof selec in the hope of stalling pro¬ Current Lordell Taylor, chairman of programs for im- the inner city." he said. "Our " It has been proved that a gress of the regime. They secretly think or write in provement of racist elements attitudes keep us from know- the Lansing N.A.A.C.P. Youth Then the Campus Bookst opened on Grand River Avei for NAEB high yield of wool from sheep in Lansing are not having pos- ing how it really is.' The black Group commented on whites in and began to advertise in mt- journals of things forbidden. Terry Johnson, member of #■ . depends on the animals' care itive results, agreed several wage earner fell behind his charge of black-oriented org¬ and feeding.' " In the end, Stalin catches community leaders at a panel white counterpart. Ewen black anizations and on the frict¬ the NAACP Youth Group in newspaper became the Union The MAC Co-Op Book Store Iqi- fh ree years The zeks indeed well up with all the levels of hell ion between the police force Lansing said that to change are discussion Wednesday in Erick- schools are older, averaging and makes them one, before racism. you'd have to inte¬ no longer a cooperative. An MSU bed and well cared for. Theirs son Kiva as part of the Evening out to 50 years old as corn- and the black community profes fate is to catch up with Stalin. grate the economic system of In 1964 the Union Book Stor is He related a personal inci¬ elected to the boar of dire a special, refined torture. College's "Rasism in the pared to 25 years (for the America. I d like revolution¬ becme the MSU Bookstore The zeks order food from Many accounts are given Black White dent that occured in Lansing of the Instruetiona of Siberian prison camps, Community" average white school > " ary changes to make every¬ With the new label came re Services Div of the National Moscow gourmet shops. They course. "Racism is subtle." he add- in which he and two black bro¬ starvation and hard labor in body equal." location in the new Cente Assoc of Educational Broad¬ work on projects that use their The five member thers went to a police station - panel ed. " but ever so real." for International Programs, ex Stalinist Russia. The upper casters i NAEB1. intelligence and special train¬ agreed that present programs Ernie Boone, of the Michigan to lodge a complaint about the Forrest Walker of the Lans¬ classes of the condemned unfair treatment of black panded facilities and highe Filing S Jorgensen. assoc¬ ing. require more direction and bet¬ Welfare League, made sir a ing Urban League agr have a milder terror, but prices. iate director of MSU s .Instruc¬ Although in uniform, each ter administration to be eff¬ observations without use of sta¬ couple i ing that "racism con< the Today neither students no terror it is. "Do tional Media Center, will tries to assert his separate ective. tistics. i ha vi > be white absence of money among blacl serve One man wears his cov¬ faculty can effect, or even al a three-year term in his self. Solzhenitsyn's style fits his Relying heavily on statistics. We are all of us - blac k and hen people. With the gain of mon feet, policies, prices or pre new eralls minus one button with subject. He alternates a cat¬ plain'.'" Tayloi isked the au- Robert Rentschler. represent; whitef- white racists. This is money, most of these problem: cedures of the MSU Bookstore loosened belt Another looks aloguing of fear with pleasant ing the Lansing Community Ser¬ predicated on the belief that thoritv on duty could be eliminated. ' The store is a retail orgar impeccable, wearing an old narrative, war with romance. vices Council, painted a pic¬ "white is right."' he said "Yeah, was eply 1965. Jorgensen taught at the The ization whose profits go to th Like zeks. the among panel of Moi but dignified shirt and tie with the pain the ture of black Lansing. most potent manifestation of a capital W ' Center for International Pre Rentschler commen- assisted in the dev the coveralls. reader feels is not primarily Racism is present in the racism in this community Referring to the conditions oney is equivalent to grams, which is already we] educational televisi Solzheni/.syn's portrait of physical. The reader awaits slums, in the ghettos, and in educational system. For one for blacks in Lansing public endowed, and to other Univer ind was refuted by state of Montana. He also Stalin's paranoic fears close¬ their destiny with the same week we ( in the public schools as well as schools in helped Boone. sity projects as well as fo supervise the Midwest Program schools i discuss Afro-Am- general. Taylor observed I the maintenance ot the boot think myself, as a youngster on Airborne TV Instruction store itself. of the ghetto, that there needs The DAYTONA tbe GIRLS are BEA Husky, silent quartermaster m the the BOYS I ACTION i took blows for Pueblo crew World "WORLD'S MOST FAMOUS BEACH" on the The welcome mat is out for collegians this spring along 23 MILES OF A a CORONADO. Calif husky quartermaster, ac¬ claimed by Pueblo officers as natural leader of the ship's AP t- he tarilv men also Law. for took had done. beating: things othe sitting erect the Why Rent.... when room you suite can for own as this fine 8-plece living lit'tle as 10% down and Look FREE PUBLIC BEACH where sun. sand, and surt await your pleasure The Daytona Beach Resort Area is where it's all happening. Join the FUN crowd at the IN Write: dept. place , . . . where there s so much more to do1 Chamber of Commerce enlisted men. he from received tors-some his 250 North with said Thursday a to 300 Korean blows cap¬ four-by-four witness folded in chair hered to the U S duct his with his lap. said he ad Code of Con rs at hand: first $10.87 per 24 months, tax included! board-because he refused to but I deviated City Island, daytona Beach, F/a. 32014 inform on fellow crewmen. Quartermaster l.C. Charles Sofa, 2 end tables, Law Jr.. of Chehalis. Wash GUEST ROOMS . coffee table told 2 lamps, 2 chairs, s23692 Black enamel, diamonds $150 a Navy court of inquiry barbarians T happen. And we were and 14 karat gold com¬ Company Coming? with them kicking vm bine to give the trea¬ sured antique look. Business Associates Due? ing you and threatet Convenient Terms • 202 Deluxe Rooms (Sharp/) 5411 SO CEDAR LAN ING, MICHIGAN Zales • Sensible Rates electronic calculator Mon. thru Fri. 9-9 Sat. 9-6 Sun. 2-6 WLW business ; /nsu FREAKOUT 1 student UNION FRI. COMING FEB 28 Z) machines^ ■" N^4 PARLOUS I- 0 Phone 351-5500 for Reservations ther clock Dec. 22 and I appr the natelv morning. %".' 1100 Trowbridge Road, Off 127 at Trowbridge Exit Saturday said At the Campus, Michigan State University I was beaten intermitt¬ ently for eight hours I GUEST ROOMS was in a kneeling position in front of desk FRI a . . and I was hit with a circul¬ The Big Hits Are At The ar size of piece of wood a two-by-two. about the FEB 21 When it broke in half. Law Disc Shop said, both the North Koreans used pieces to strike him some more-then got a four-by-four and hit him across the should- DONOVAN'S GREATEST HITS 3.49 STEREO He said the North Koreans FEED YOUR HOUSE ASSOCIATIONS GREATEST wanted him to confess that other men had given vulgar 2.79 Have A HITS Bowling Party To gestures in propaganda photo-, HEAD of STEREO graphs, carved on dining room tables and sent messages HAIR (BROADWAY CAST) 3.49 Raise Funds The Easy Way through crossword puzzles. Turn on to House of India's selection of INDIA STEREO . Let Singing Statesmen decorative necessities. us help you WE ARE CONTINUING 3.19 make some money to present winter CREAM-GOODBYE for your fraternity, We've got hookahs of all sizes-from the STEREO concert small and simple, to the large and ornate. 101 E. Grand River sorority, dorm, social group. or Sunday Regular pipes of many types too; brass or hand carved wood--even "Toad" pipes made 332-8403 IRON BUTTERFLY 2.79 For informati all The Singing Statesmen will from stone. BALL STEREO Rich Maury present thei% winter concert at 7:30 p.m. Sunday at the We've also got a fine selection of accessor¬ University Methodist Church. An "underground" store i ies such as roach clips, stashballs, candles THE DISC SHDP Tfie Statesmen, a group of 50 men who are chosen on the (floating, scented, strobe) and incense of all UoMak 323 East Grand River (DOWNSTAIRS) basis of audition, will sing types. classical to contemporary num¬ OPEN MON.-FRI. 9 A.M.-9 P.M. Everything to make your life a little more Between Kessel's and bers. mainly written by Amer¬ • SAT. 9 A.M.-6 P.M. colorful! Well-almost everything. ican composers. Cunninghams PHONE 351-5380 JUST NORTH OF FRANDOR The Statesmen will also sing on the Todav Show March 19. Friday, February 21, 1969 ]] Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Group to Canadian Youth fight for lost By LARRY LEE Stale News Staff Writer Lewis Zerby. professor of phil¬ but he accused the court with osophy. said that the United going too far with too little. values duct of the Court's decisions. "In the post World War II By CAROL CORRIERE State News Staff Writer Politicians, students and pro¬ to a The conference, which is open the public, will begin with dinner at 6:30 p.m. Friday A speaker at a colloquium States is in a "moral revolu¬ fessors from 20 universities in However, he said he could era. it was natural for the court in the Gold Room of the Union. on the Administration of Crim¬ tion" that involves a reinter- see that the court was forced Canada and the United States to set its sails more for indi¬ The Hon. John Turner, Canad¬ inal Justice Wednesday, said pretation of human rights. This into its role because of the in¬ will discuss "Youth in Politics" vidual rights than any other ian minister of justice, will the present revolt of students developing at the fourth annual Intercoll¬ philosophy, which action of legislators, execu¬ court in history," Day said, against adult thought is really he said is more exciting than tives, and the citizens them¬ explaining that it was impor¬ egiate Conference on Canadian- Turner is an important fig¬ an acceptance of traditional the problem of sexuality, holds selves, and that upgrading of American Relations here this tant members of society should ure in Canadian politics. Koh¬ values. The students, however, that a person has a right to the weekend. police has been a by-pro¬ not get lost as a number. ler said that he is already accuse adults of betraying those those things he needs. The conference has tradit¬ "campagining" for the prime values. "How do we produce a mor¬ ionally been sponsored by the ministership should a pres¬ ality that is acceptable to the Committee of Canadian-Ameri¬ ent Prime Minister Elliot Tru affluent and the poor, the ma¬ can Studies at MSU in an effort deau retire from office. acquaint Americans with urged to jority and the minority?" he asked.-He warned that if people cannot find that solution, trou¬ Nixon Canada, according to Larrv Ko- hler. administrative assistant On Saturday there will formal panel discussions fea¬ be two turing Canadian and American ble will continue. to the committee. politicians each followed by in¬ "We have to examine what "Canadians know quite a bit formal. "wise-open" discuss¬ is morally right and morally wrong." Zerby said. "If the lunches from about the United States," Kohler said, "but we know very little ions in which anyone can have his say. Kohler said. black nation does not consider about them. The purpose of this The Saturday discussion, the white man's law his own conference is for us to get to WASHINGTON (AP)~ The ious malnutrition problem." % from 10 to 11 a.m. in Erick law, he has not done anything know them better chairman of the special Senate Sen. George S McGovern. D- son Kiva. will be on "Youth morally wrong in his own way He said that for this reason of thinking." committee on hunger said S.D.. said, disclosing he will Criminal Justice the conference is "terribly in¬ in Canadian Politics." Mem¬ Thursday he will ask the Nixon ask Atty. Gen. John N. Mit¬ bers of the panel will be Heath The problem confronting the administration to exempt school chell to see if a way can be Frank Day, professor of police administration, said formal and oriented toward the Macquarrie. a political scien administration of criminal jus¬ -lunch programs when federal found to continue lunch pro¬ Wednesday that the Supreme Court has gone too far students." tist and member of Parliament, tice is what constitutes "rea¬ with decisions that restrict the police. Day was one "We learn not just about the funds for Southern schools are grams when other funds are and Lome Nystrom. at 23 the sonable doubt," he said. What's off because of civil stopped. of three speakers at a colloquy on the "Administra¬ topic discussed." he said, "but youngest member of parliament cut rights also about Canadian schools, reasonable to one group may Meanwhile, the Dept. of Agri¬ tion of Criminal Justice." in violations. history. not be the least bit reasonable culture discussed with Gov. students, attitudes and institut- "It's a mistake to use a civil State News photo by Jim Richardson The afternoon discussion on to another group. Robert E. McNair of South Car¬ "Youth in American Politics rights issue to aggrevate a ser Another speaker said the de¬ olina the details for distribut¬ will be from 2 to 3 in Eriek- cision-making process in ad¬ ion of free good stamps in Beau¬ son Kiva and will feature Michi¬ ministering criminal justice is not always a sample case of justice, but may be the result Book captures cartoon capers fort and Jasper counties. Indi¬ cations were stamps would be made the first free avail¬ Student-run newspaper gan Atty. and State Gen. Frank Kelley Representative Dale Warner R-Eaton Rapids. of pressures. able next week. Each panel discussion will begins publication at MC John McNamara, associate McGovern hailed the decis¬ be followed by an informal professor of police administra¬ of Phil Frank ion of Secretary of Agriculture workshop in which students can tion. said criminal justice phil¬ Clifford M. Hardin to supply confront the speakers and dis¬ osophy is moving toward a less Looking back over the past the free stamps to the poorest cuss the points raised. These punitive response to deviant be¬ four years through the cartoons After an aborted attempt to The earlier MC effort at pub¬ expression, Betzold said. people in an area cited by wit¬ will be very informal discuss¬ havior and more toward the of Phil Frank is the purpose of nesses as having a high degree produce a student publication lication 'SNORK'.'" ceased Bruce Watson. Honolulu. Ha¬ ions. Kohler said. rights of the offender. the Senior Class Council's pub¬ of hunger and disease. earlier this term, James Mad¬ publishing early in February be¬ waii, sophomore, said that the The conference is open to But he said one of the prob¬ lication- Frankly—MSI . ison College (MC> published cause Dean Herbert Garfinkle "Review," being locally cen¬ Testimony at the third and the public and the panel dis¬ lems of police when they sin¬ Frank, a 1965 MSU graduate in final day of hearings by the Se¬ its first student-run paper Mon¬ ruled that the college was not tered, would be more condu¬ cussions and workshops are cerely want to move in the di¬ day. obligated to provide mimeo¬ cive to student contributions. On cam rection of non-punitive action graphic arts, worked for two lect Committee on Nutrition graph facilities for the publi¬ free of charge. The only cost years as an artist-writer for Hall¬ and Human Needs into hunger in is for meals. Students tire of The "Phalensterv Review." cation of unsponsored student He noted that the college pub¬ never is that they feel they run the mark Cards and is presently do¬ South Carolina indicated federal lication, "Madison Notes" is Tickets for the Friday and a free circulation paper for on¬ viewing the famous cam¬ risk of losing their man sup¬ ing free lance work. His editorial school-lunch funds are inade¬ papers. Saturday night dinners, avail¬ ly MC students was describ¬ useful as an information bul¬ pus landmark, Beaumont portive sector of society, the cartoons have appeared in the quate. that many poor people able at the Arts and Letters ed by editor Michael Betzold Both "SNORK0" and the cur¬ letin from the dean's office, Tower. This night scene right wing. State News can not afford to buy food stamps Office. 201 Berkey Hall, and as an opportunity for students rently publishing "Review" are but that it does not meet the Frank D. Day, professor of Is representative of the Frankly—MSI will be on sale and that as many as one million to submit material without fear a response to student needs for need for a forum of student at Campbell s Suburban Shop, beauty found on the MSU police administration, said po¬ for $1 at book stores and dormi¬ persons in the Southeast are in¬ are $3. lice have had much to do with of censoring and editing. a more independent medium of opinion. tories by the middle of March. fested with worms. the kind of restrictive decisions SN Photo by Norm Payea the Supreme Court has hand¬ ed down in the last eight years. CD SCOTT 'U' co claim HU&BARp Mi U Field Effect Transit ClExelutlve Automatic Variable Band* □ Complete component control* (loud minority distorted MUSIC SYSTEM id tape cartridge play The West Circle Coordinat¬ campus did not represent the ing ment Council issued a state¬ Tuesday night stating that the "minority has been common attitude of the stu- y/iK misrepresented as the major¬ ity in the current discord on the MSU campus " Delta Zeta starts Misery Loves Co AM/FM/FMI STEREO The statement also opposed campus toy drive the State News, stating that the council deplores the misrep¬ resentation of facts concerning with dessert, film Friday 9-12 many issues" and that it feels MARSHALL MUSIC The members of Delta Zeta the retractions and corrections following an inaccurate article sorority will sponsor a kick- off dessert for their first Phil¬ Adm. 500 402 S. Washington, Lansing were inadequate and ineffect- anthropy Toy Drive at 7 p.m. The council is composed of All presidents of living units the presidents of the six resi¬ and residence halls have been dence halls in West Circle. The statement is representative invited and professor of Herbert J. Oyer, audiologv. will with the LARGEST selection of HUMAN HAIR of what they thought the major¬ show a film and explain why ity of the women in the West can't go wrong. the toys are needed and how Circle voted on Halls felt by the residents It was not they will be used. The purpose of the drive, products in MID-MICHIGAN area, you The Council also stated that which will last until March 6. it wanted to make known the is to get tovs and monetary national news media that the contributions for the Speech and Hearing Clinic on campus. dissenting persons on the MSU BONANZA HASFAMILY-STYLED COME SEE USIBRING WHOLE FAMILYW I GET RID OF THE HONGRIES WITH A BONANZA LUNCH BONANZA STEAK SANDWICH $"|39 CHUCK-FUL-O-BEEF SANDWICH 99c PERCH ON A BUN SANDWICH 89c Take lunch at the IMPORTERS BONANZA* And wherever you find a congenial crowd, you'll SIRLOIN PIT #205 find Coca-Cola. For Coca-Cola has the refresh¬ ing taste you never get tired of. That's why things go better with Coke, after Coke, after Coke. WIG WAREHOUSE COME AS YOU ARE'OPEN 11 A.M. TO 9 P.M. 1120 E. MICHIGAN PH. 372-2332 NEXT TO THE PAGODA RESTAURANT [ Coca-Cola Bottling Co. of Michigan _ |5 State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, February 21, 1969 Marriage 'God-squads' similarity of By JANE TOPPS Although an interfaith mar- to war resisters, deserters State News Staff Writer riage can be happy in a general By TOM MILLER Comes now the myth of the losophy and theology students Veterans for Peace. Resistance Something vital is missing sense, a couple realizes that College Press Service "new morality," and its new showed up. workers, some of the more con- from the lives of married cou- is a gap in their experience (CPS) It's happening on - commandments: Speak open There were of course, two of servative SDSers. the Grape pies of different faiths, the and that there is no way of practically every campus. More ly and honestly. Sleep together the founders, William Sloane Strike crowd, and the keep-the- Rev. Tom Stark, pastor of Univ- filling this vacuum. Stark said. and more, the campus ministry if you really "mean" it. (what Coffin, Jr. and Rabbi Abraham U.S. - out - of - Latin - America - couple may settle for • ersitv Reformed Church said A is playing an active role-some- that, but it deprives the marr¬ ever "it" is). Turn on, but keep J Hirschel. Both spent most gang all made their appear- recently. times a leading one-in aggres¬ your perspective. And above all the three days giving encour- ances. The Reformed Church dis¬ iage of real strength and dir¬ sive political and moral stands (to borrow an old Quaker max agement to those clergymen Dave Harris of Resistance courages such matches. ection." he said. the war. Selective Service, on im> let your lives speak. who came from isolated areas gave the best-received speech of "The denomination has tried merely an intel- racism and community devel¬ "If faith is Younger chaplains emerge and thus "are forced to fight the the conference. Earlier his wife, to point out the responsibilities iectual conviction, it is not opment. And, like other Move¬ So there has been a change S00*1 fi8ht alone." as Coffin Joan Baez, entertained the au- and benefits of a Christian difficult for a person desiring ment factions, anti-war organ¬ in the attitudes of a good many puts it. dience with songs. Harris' pre- riage. It should unite two peo¬ marriage with a non-Christian izations centered around chur¬ campus chaplains. All of the Just as the inaugural dem- mise was that "Vietnam is not ple similarly committed to or Roman Catholic to give it ches are groping for new issues feelings which are now out in onstrations marked the demise a contradiction of the Ameri- Christ." Shark said. It is not up." Stark continued. to pursue while the Paris talks the open in society have always °f continuing "hit-and-run can way of life-the frighten- possible for marriage to have A true Christian lives in vital. W/i deflate anti-war sentiment. existed, covered up. Now that street-action, so did the latest ing fact is that Vietnam ex- Us fullest meaning if such a with God Alignment with radical cau¬ they are exposed, the campus CALCAV meet show that anti- presses it unification is not the founda¬ ses is relatively new to Harris. who faces a three year through Jesus Christ." Stark campus "god-squads," often with the war gatherings don't produce tion of the relationship. said, "and that relationship is churches on such a large scale. younger chaplain in the fore- the same fire they once did. jail sentence for refusing induc¬ The most profound problems Before the mythical "new mo- something he can't help but want front, are involving themselves Yet CALCAV, by the nature tion, told the CALCAV au¬ arise When a Christian marries to share with his maj-riage part- raliy" came into vogue, col¬ just as political groups are. of its constituency, does not dience "it's an honor to be a a non-Christian. Stark said. " lect ministries would often be National church organiza- share many features with other political prfsoner in modern If one partner has found a filled with retired missionaries tions were neither structured nor anti-war groups. Most of its America-I've found no better Stark believes that spiritual life through whose benevolence would often equipped to handle this new members are professionals in occupation." Christ, he won t find this unitv Christian could never shelve or extend to mood. While the National Coun- form or another-few are Harris' humanistic theology with a non-Christian." Stark compromise his faith Lenten ceremony permitting bake sales some seemed to catch the mood of to go until midnight, appearing cil of Churches had a lot of the students, said "A true Christian would be ves ashes during a ral in "Is there a God0" panel dis¬ same sentiment, its too-broad- The regulars-those who make the whole conference: Political •Differences arise as to how repudiating not a system of audience in St. ; Cathedral in the Vatican cussions. and serving as advi- ly-based constituency wouldn't to most peace gatherings in prisoners are prisoners for the City. life is to be approached: how ideas, but a person He would The ceremony symbolizes Ash Wednesday, the start sers to discriminatory fraterni really allow it to move rapidly the East were there Vietnam crime of life. children are to be instructed. be turning his back on someone of the 40-day season of Lent. into such specialized activity. how money and time will be he loved UPI Cablephoto ties So it was natural and inevit¬ spent in involvement with the able that some group would work of Christ." he said. These problems accumulate. " LANSING CENTER arise. It did. during the Christ¬ mas bombing pause of 1965 ^difficulties inherent in a when of the country's of a group Christian-Roman Catholic mar¬ better-known pastors and their riage. while" not as profound lay supporters .formed Clergy Spiritualist revival nearing as those in a Christian-non- and Laymen Concerned about Effective use of radio and Christian match, are vexing Vietnam (CALCAV i. The Catholic Church re¬ montages of Nothing militant goals of the church will be innovative quires that Protestant marr¬ CALCAV has a lot going for examined in a Christian Insti¬ religious program¬ iage partners agree not to in¬ "The gift of mediumship movement now beginning to stir appear. it. First, its name: nothing ming. for radio and for televis- fluence their spouse in the should be used as an important throughout the country. The nucl- The power of Christ is within, tute on Broadcasting in Kel¬ will be shown during the militant, simply "concerned. logg Center today. icse of faith Children must ual Episcopal Church of Lans- step to higher spiritual attain¬ ement already he says. The soul grows and afternoon. Another advantage is the facade Attending the conference will be raised in the Catholic faith. ment." he said recently exists in this area according develops in proportion to one's ing. believes that communic- of the cloth. For some mysti- be representatives of Michigan's The institute is to Elsesser. belief in the inner power. sponsored The differing Catholic and ation with the spiritual world The Spiritual Episcopal cal reason, no matter how ag- Protestant stands birth Church in Lansing is located The movement will be spark- When you appeal to the God radio and television stations, bv the Dept of Radio-Televis- on con- is a part of religion but that ed when more people under- gressivelv a clergymen takes a as well as clergy and church ion of the Michigan Council trol present an issue which - not all mediums are advanced 230 S. Holmes St.. Sunday wor¬ Power within with belief and stand on an issue, he gets a laymen interested in religious of Churches and the MSU Com- cannot be ship services are held at 10:30. stand soul growth' or spirit- faith, and are willing to follow compromised. spiritually. much less emphasized negative reaction broadcasting, mittee on Church Pr Catholics and Protestants "Too many of them become in- a m Night worship and healing ual unfoldment directions when you are shown than other protesters because of service held at 7:30 Wednes- by the inner ning of the the way. the right answer to The Rev. Chares Brackbill. may have differing concepts of volved in the psychic phenomena is his profession. associate chairman for planning. the role of the church in spir- and fail to develop their spirit- day Bible." he said.. praver will come. he said. CALCAV. though, seems al- Division of Mass Meida. United itual life. Stark said. ual powe Elsesser believes Lansing This come only with the un¬ Elsesser said that people can ready to have reached its peak Presbyterian Church, will give Alabama woman could become the center for learn to control their minds derstanding the laws of creat- and it is now looking for new the keynote address LUTHERAN revival of the spiritualist SEVENTH-DAY a. Elsesser believes the reli¬ by tuning in the Universal Rhythm One then begins to things. The glamour Brackbill. whose .headquart¬ to discuss race WORSHIP ADVENTIST ing from anti-war activity. ers is in New York City, is master worry, anxiety and im¬ gious denominations as we know Martin Luther Chapel Services Saturday UNIVERSITY them today will eventually dis- patience They may have found a new- focal working in Los Angeles with at Stan church dinner point in working with Freberg. advertising corner of Ann &. Division BAPTIST Wardcliff draft resisters and military de¬ comic, on a second series of Mr: CHURCH School University 332-2559 nursery serters. If what went on at their ssages Sunday Worship Services (American Baptist) Christian third annual meeting in Wash¬ used on prime time fusal to move to the rear of the ington is any indication, mili¬ throughout the nation 9:30 - 11:00 a.m. Minister L. G. Foil Gerard G. Phillips, Pastor Church ersity Lutheran tant His topic is bus sparked a bus boycott will pacifism and resistance "How' tan the Rev. David A. Kruse speak at the Trinity African Worship 10:00 a.m. & 7:30 p.m, work might catch on. Church Do the Job°" Hear the "Voice of Pro¬ Chu rch Missouri Synod ~ , Methodist Episc opal Church's Free Bus Service and phecy" on radio. See Church School 11:10 a.m. Participation down There were considerably few¬ Dempsev general an„ua| „ J" Relations Ban " Faith for Today" on Wednesday prayer manager of WZZM-TV ,n Orand , Saturdav Nursery Both Services hour 6:45 p.m. er participants in this year's Rapids, will respond in a talk — Television. The banquet will eommei . Free Bus Service conference than last, despite on "How Can We Do The Job orate Brotherhood and Race Re and Nursery Church School CALCAV's 25.000 membership. Together0' Peoples Church First Church of Nursery 332-1888 But Thomas F Baldwin and Brad- lations Sunday. Bhtk Histor> 9:15 & 10:30 a.m. the stalwarts were there. KAIL RUFFNER, Minister Week and Founder's Da\ Christ Scientist , li i_ ru ier- u . .. .. . Services and a sizeable number of phi- lev S. Greenberg. both ol the East Lansing 709 E. Grand River St. Johns 332-5193 332-3035 8:15,'9:15, 10:30 & 11:30 a Dept.r of Communication, will -p^ere will be ir,_ an • exhibit "shov ' . ,. .. ing achievements in all ot the- Interdenominational East report a variety ot audience Lansing Student Parish areas Central Methodist EAST LANSING SBC surveys, including one dealing Th* banque{ wjH be a{ g... 327 M.A.C. Phone ED 7-9778 with the effects of violence Sunday Service 11 a.m. Across From the Capitol FRIENDS MEE TING p.m. in the church's Fellow First Baptist Church as depicted by the mass media. ship Hall. Tickets are $3.00. and SERMON Sunday Masses— WORSHIP SERVICES Churchmen will show how SUNDAY SERVICE interested persons should call 7:00-8:15-9:45-11:15 .9:45 and 11:15 meeting for worship 3 p.m. of East Lansing commercial programs may be 882-5722 or 882-7068 for 9:30 11:00 reserva- a.m. - a.m 12:30-4:45-6:00 p.m. All Saints Parish . "MIND" Masses Mon. 940 S. Harrison Rd. used to illuminate the church tions. - Fri. 800 Abbott Road SUNDAY SCHOOL 8:00-12:30-4:30-9:00 p.m. Sunday School 9:45 a.m. Thru Sat. Noon - 6 11:00 Upper level, corner room "That Spring Check-Up" a.m. - regular Masses each class day Dr. Howard A. Lyman Morning Service 11:00 a.m. 9:30-11:00 a.m. - college class Alumni Chapel preaching Church School Child care provided Training Union Evening Service 6:00 7:00 p.m. LAST CHANCE SALE By Dr. Wallace Robertson 9:45 to 11:45 All are welcome p.m. 4:15 p.m. Saturday masses 8:00 a.m.-9:15 a.m.-ll;45 a.m. So Crib Nursery Bring the Baby IV 5-9477 Wednesday Evening 30-50% OFF Free Public ON ALL ITEMS CHURCH SCHOOL Reading Room 9:30 a.m.-ll:00 a.m. 134 West Grand River EDCEWOOD UNITED CHURCH FIRST CHRISTIAN REFORMED CHURCH JEWELRY INCENSE EARRINGS OPEN 469 North Hagadorn Road SUNGLASSES PIPES FLOWERS Crib Weekdays 9-5 p.m. Sunday Services and Church School FOREST VIEW SCHOOL POSTERS ET ALL through Adults — CANDLES Mon., Tues., Thurs., Frl. 9:30 & 11:00 a.m. 3119 Stoneleigh, Lansing 124 W. GRAND RIVER Refreshment period in Hall following worship serv- Social Evenings 7 p.m. - 9 p.m. All are welcome to attend Church Services and visit and "A Report "The Battlefield Is Man" From Biafra" - George Axinn Chumley's ABOVE GIBSON'S "A DIALOGUE ON PAROCHIAiD - 12:10 to 1 p.m. use the reading room. Singles Group, 35 yrs. & under 12:30 p.m. Luncheon & Discussion CAMPUS STUDENT CENTER, 217 Bogue St., Apt. 3 1518 S. SOUTH BAPTIST CHURCH University Group—6 p.m. Edgewood Church Bus route, Conrad, Holmes and Hubbard, beginning at 10:40 a.m. Alvin Hoksbergen, Director Phone 351-6360 FREE BUS SERVICE—See Schedule on Washington Call 332-8693 or 332-0606 for information Residence Hall Bulletin Board. SUNDAY 7;00 PcMt IS THE WORD i!God Is Not Sunday at 8:30 and 11:00 a.m. Stingy!" "Righteousness -- Not Ritual" Dr. Howard Sudgen will be the Sermon Topic at And What Could * CASTmmSTCR PRCS8yTCRMn ChURCh Say It Better Than 9:45 AM. COLLEGIAN 120 EAST UNSINC TRINITY CHURCH 7375 Abbott Rd. casT ransinG. fmcmGan An Exquisite Diamond; Spartan Ave. Interdenominational College Bible Class FELLOWSHIP E. Eugene Williams—PASTORS—Terry A. Smith SUNDAY SCHEDULE From Fox's in the fireside room 8:30 p.m. University Class 9:45 a.m. Dr. Ted Ward, Teacher Fireside Room Worship Services— 9:00 and 11:00 a.m. T.C.F. students in charge of servic 7:00 p.m Assembly for children through third grade 9:00 a.m, 11:00 A.M. "The Touch Of God" Church School for children, youth, and adults 10:00 a.m. Trinity Collegiate Fellowship 8:30 p.rr FREE BUS SERVICE NURSERY PROVIDED ALL TIMES Morning and Evening Wednesday: Mid-week discussion and prayer hour at 7:00 p.m Free BUS SERVICE — See schedule in your dorm Rev. Robert David Leas 337-0183 Call 482-0754 for information. UNIVERSITY UNITED EPISCOPAL SERVICES METHODIST CHURCH 1120 South Harrison Phone: 351-7030 Alumni Chapel (Auditorium Drive) "The Religion Gap" 9:00 A.M. and 5:15 P.M. 'The Lover Who Never Gives Up" Holy Communion & Sermon ALL SAINTS EPISCOPAL CHURCH Morning Worship 8:30, 9:30, 11:00 DIRECT DIAMOND 800 Abbott Rd. Church School 9:30 (for all ages) 11:00 thru grade six JF IMPORTERS Nursery under supervision of a 8:00 A.M. Holy Communion registered nurse. 9:30 A.M. Communion Free bus transportation 15 to FRANDQR DOWNTOWN 11:15 A.M. Ante-Communion and Sermon 30 minutes before each service. SHOPPING CENTER 203 S. WASHINGTON Friday, February 21, 1969 ]3 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan ifB WHAT'S Shades of old, habits mm greet allowed to date freely, students she al¬ course work consistent with senior, took advantage of the By KAY FARISON ways had to double date. their academic program at opportunity for social service Conforming to higher skirt "Mv Colombian parents were MSU. They live with Colombian by teaching English part time lengths, vet only permitted to at the Cnited States Informat¬ families and have the opportun¬ double date." represents conservative about dat¬ " very Arab Ctab is sponsoring a coffee hour at 7:30 tonight in 35 Union Two fill ity to work in social service ion Service of the Colombo- about the Middle East will be shown Everyone is welcome and there is no admissi some of the contrast encoun¬ ing." she commented. " Even American Institute tered by 11 MSU students who their 22-year-old daughter and organizations." Greeted by families The university's semester traveled to Colombia last July her 26-year-old boy friend weren't permitted to go out When they arrived in Bogota, ended in mid December, but as part of the Semester in the group was not required Latin America program. the students were greeted by the Becky A Blazo. Birmingham City structures vary families with whom they would to return together. The round The soulful sounds of "The Lonely People, plus Miss Blazo contrast in stay. Miss Blazo took on a trip plan ticket they had pur¬ with cash prizes, will be featured at the Brody Co sophomore in Justin Morrill saw chased in Miami. Fla temporary set of parents, a per¬ the' physical structures of the . in Brodv multi-purpose rooms. Admission is 50 cents • College, found shades of the mitted old and new in Bogota, the city also. 22-v e a r-old sister and 17- stop-over privileges in Love Inn coffeehouse in the North Case Hall basement will be open fr cities on the way back capital of Colombia, where Bogota is about the size of year-old brother. - tonight and Saturday Mission Frost will appear tonight and Corky will Classes started early in Aug¬ The expenses include tuition, tured Saturday she lived with a family for Detroit, she said. Because of ust. and every morning during room and board and flight fare five months. rapid development in recent the week. Miss Blazo took a Semester credits transfer to The Joint, a coffeehouse sponsored by the MSU Folklore Society will "Recent clothing fashions years, there is a marked con¬ bus to the university, which MSI* with 1 1 2 times the value. at 8 30 tonight. Saturday and Sunday Tom Reed will perform tonight, wi are quite popular in Bogota, trast between its very old and McAllen and Loni and Shelley Saturday Sunday ai very modern buildings. had an enrollment of about Program requirements she said In fact. 1 had to 2.500. Its modern buildings To be eligible for the pro¬ shorten my shirts even more Downtown, she noted, there Edgar Snow s documei to keep up with the Colom¬ was a 16th century church were nestled at the foot of a gram. a student must have at by the MSU Film Sociel Anthony bian girls." standing across from a .'iti- least two years of Spanish oi Dating practices floor skyscraper On holidays and Sunday4after¬ the equivalent by placement ex But when it came to dating, i was surprised at the great noons. she joined the family in Face-lifting she noted, the standards were difference between social clas¬ traveling to neighboring cities Twelve students have ilread-. redecorating Eustace Hall, ses." she said "Most wealthy or to a cottage in the mountains applied at the Oversea- Stud\ This workman is busy completely different. Although families have servants, while Teaching Opportunities next to the Journalism Bldg., as the old landmark she was encouraged to bring Another member of the MSI' friends home from the univer¬ some poor families beg on t he receives a complete face-lifting. State News Photo by Hal Caswell sity where she studied and was streets. Colombia's middle group. Jan P. Devlin. Boston class is just emerging Program sponsors The semester program is MSI' will host the Fourth Annual Intercollegiate Conference on Canadian under the direction of the Latin American Relations this weekend John Turner Minister of Justice will speak at a dinner at 6:30 tonight in the Gold Room of the Union Tickets are of Canada, CONTROLS NEEDED American Studies Center of In¬ $3 and are available at Campbell s Suburban Shop and the Arts and Letters Of¬ ternational Programs < LAS fice in 216 Berkev CIP . Honors College and the "\outh in Polities'' is the topic o tions Canadian taking place Saturday in Erik Politics' at 10 a m an on Kiva Youth Panel discussio in American P Prof ra ps science Office of International Exten sion of the Continuing Edncat n Serv Norris C. adm An informal buffet dinner at the Inn America at'6 30 p.m. Sati rative coordinator of the pro- for 'lac of mora Is' elude the Conference on -Canadian-American Relations. Tickets a tram. describes the program, available at Campbell s and the Arts and Letters Office in 216 Berkey tating. Students enroll at the niversity of Los Andes, taking night Admission is 50 c< By DIANE PETRYK Krupka said, explaining his be¬ Having spent several years 8 tonight at 1118 S Harm lief that scientists tend to " go working for industry. Krupka s State News Staff Writer where the money is" irrespect¬ lofty opinions of scientists Author Uris' wife ring Francis X and t Bigger cars and air pollution heart transplants and over-popu¬ ive of the possible results -hanged. He said He feels more lation...trips to the moon and Krupka said he believes there scientists must make value judg¬ found fatally shot Student Duplicate Bridge Club will meet at 1 p m Saturday in 141 F'< starvation on earth.. better" should be some sort of control ments and go into areas they The Open Pairs Club Championship will take place at 2 p.m Sunday in 14 weapons and greater damage to placed on research for the pro¬ good, "in¬ think will do social Hall. Call Mike or Steve at 3-2070 for information. life and property.. tection of society. " People in stead of spending a lifetime on Aspen slopes Beal Film Group presents Humphrey Bogart in the classic Western Tl These are the paradoxes of science and technology have a searching for better deodorants ASPEN. Colo. iAP -The sure of the Sierra Madre at 7 and 9 tonight and Saturdav in 104 B We modern technology Are we head¬ feeling that they're free to do or better dog food." Admission is 50 cents and no I D is required 25-year-old bride of author ed toward progress or sophistic¬ what the hell they please." he Krupka also suggested that Leon I ris was found dead Thur ated self-destruction'.' said. This total and absolute sociologists should give direct¬ MSU Sport Parachute Club will jump at Eaton Rapids Saturday and Sunday sday in fresh-fallen snow close R. freedom is an illusion. The scien¬ ion to science. "Sociology." he Lawrence Krupka. assoc¬ to their home on Red Mountain tist is a part of society and he raid, "must be the ultimate "The Now Look of Black America" is the theme of a fashion show ar iate professor of natural science, overlooking this ski resort in from 7-12 p.m Sunday at the West Side Qr,?p-In Cpntfti;,^ Buf)er. ,U i: expressed, his concern recently must be a*humamstfcir&t. , judge of science ." the Colorado Rockies Because there is money in¬ over the growing misdirection Dist of science and technology. Ac¬ volved. Krupka said he believ¬ In opposition to Krupka s view Atty Martin G Dumont science is easily " perverted at Glenwood Springs, whose dis cording to Krupka. scientists to¬ es Richard I*. Byerrum. dean of trict covers Aspen, said Sheriff day spend too much of their by government and business. the College of Natural Science, Carroll Whitmire told him that time creating useless and some¬ Government has the money said he believes that scientists Students for Israel will hold their first meeting at 3 p.m Sun so it can involve scientists in Mrs. Marjorie I ris had been Room of the Union Two Israeli officers will discuss their ■ times harmful products and too should have freedom to do pret¬ the June 1967 war All interested faculty and students are in fatally wounded by a bullet fired little time trying to solve the making such things as arm¬ ty much what they want to do views in aments and costly space appar¬ into her mouth pressing problems of our cities Byerrvm denied that scientists Sidnev Berger. associate professor of theatre at MSU. will d atus he said. Because business. are product-oriented and cited Need for Control Dumon said the officer re¬ Have the Performing Arts Gone Too Far"1 at the Hillel Fou forum at6pm Sunday at Hillel House Science has no morals." is greedy it desires new products as an example the research be¬ ported a revolver was found to market. ing done at MSU in water pol¬ near the body None of these things are de¬ lution and similar areas. The district attorney said l'r- signed to improve our quality of life. Krupka insisted A scientist s attempt to dis¬ is told officers that he heard semi-annual Gulf between cover what nature is all about He cited an example of what three shots fired at about 8 can backfire, but that depends Wednesday. famous can happen if a scientist is not p.m , on the use made of the discov¬ concerned with the application Dumont said the sheriff re¬ eries." Byerrum said. of his work. ported that Mrs I ris appar plu At the same time. Herbert wig sale Suppose a scientist discov¬ entlv had fired two shots prior may cause ers liow to make synthetic cof¬ fee Docs he have the right to sell this knowledge even if he D Doan. president of the Dow Chemical government Co. has called for new policies that would to the fatal shot pierced the woman's purse and One bullet the .ither apparent!v was tired America may look forward to a civil war oi a miles east of Madagascar When the Fi ch set¬ knows it Vill destroy the Braz¬ make it profitable for industry into t!ie ground, the • ficer said tled on 'he island, they imported Afi leans as to solve the nation's social ills. generally plural society, separate institutions ilian ecoi >my°" human hair slaves to work the sugar plantations. Higham for blacks and whites. John Higham. I'niver- sity of Michigan professor of histoi v and author explained When slavery was finally abolished on the island, the French replaced the slaves ♦ FAST ♦ FAST ♦ FAST FAST ♦ FAST * FACT * FACT + fact hand-made trig 59.95 of Strangers in the Land said Wednesday night at Wonders Hall In order to test this pluralist theory, he said human hair his lecture Comparative View of the Ameri¬ in semi hand-made can Melting Pot Americans can study the gulf between black and white to find the source of wig 33.30 American racism. They can also study the American drive for assimilation wheie it has functioned most successfully-- Hawaii human hair \ comparative view of two islands can help America understand the black and white prob¬ long fall 49.95 lem. the professor said ■"Nowhere in the world have so many ethnic groups gotten along so well. Higham said of human hair Hawaii Higham chose to compare Hawaii t<> Mauri¬ mini fall 32.95 tius because of the similarity of their geograph¬ ical isolation, the similarity of their economic- Political and base and the similarity of their racial divisions he said, are pi human hair Mauritius is an island about the size of Ha¬ gether. But in : waii's second largest island and is located 500 breed contempt wiglet 10.60 synthetic HOCKEY HOCKEY HOCKEY wig 16.65 on synthetic Michigan State Network "Taste The Difference" fall 13.30 WMSN Stu. Services FRIDAY 7:55 p.m. "ace-a-di^monds Our best-selling 1007 human hair and synthetic hairpieces now at WBRS exciting semi-annual savings. A Brody MINNESOTA style, a color for everyone to WMCD brighten your spring outlook. • SATURDAY 7:55 p.m. Speedy HOT. FREE DELIVERY McDonel MINNESOTA * DORMS and OFF CAMPUS WKME Shaw GET ALL THE PLAY BY PLAY ACTION 351-8800 Shop East Lansing WEAK ON YOUR MSN RADIO STATION £ FAST ♦ FAST ♦ FAST hASI ♦ ♦ FAST ♦ FAST Saturday 9:30-5:30 Wonders FAST ♦ ♦ FAST ♦ 14 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, February 21, 1969 get set for fas Knhen you place a classified j ad It's easy and profitable; just dial 355-8255 for a friendly ad writer and get ready for RESULTS Automotive Automotive Employment Employment The State News does not' DATSl'N-1967. RL 411. sedan 96 C.G0ll MEDICAL TECHNOLOGIST to work GLAMOUR. MONEY be £ with VIVIAN'E WOOD¬ permit racial or religious h p Excellent condition Book value - on night shift. 11:30 p.m. to 7:30 a.m. can vours WARD COSMETICS Free make up discrimination in its ad¬ $1,275 My third car. must sell in a general hospital Excellent sal¬ 5 IV 5-8351 C Make reasonable offer 351 3557 2-2 24 and benefits Opportunity to at vertising columns. The VOLKSWAGEN ary tend University under tuition reim¬ State News will not accept DODGE - 1959. Rebuilt engine, new CAMP COUNSELORS for co-ed chil¬ bursement program Call 372-3610, • AUTOMOTIVE advertising which discrim- battery Looks and runs good. $125 extension 256 or write Pathologist. dren's summer camp on Maryland s 351-3257. after 6 p.m. Chesapeake Bay Within easy reach • EMPLOYMENT inates against religion, 5-2 21 SAINT LAWRENCE HOSPITAL, 1210 of Washington. DC Philadelphia. • FOR RENT race, color or national or¬ Call after 5p m 489-5504 West Saginaw. Lansing 48914 New York City. FAIRLANE 500 1962 Really good 5-2/21 • FOR SALE igin condition Dependable, economical 339 9061 evenings 3-2 24 I*) YOU • LOST & FOUND call 351-7319 • PERSONAL FALCON 1962 Rebuilt engine Stud¬ HORTICULTURE AND LANDSCAPE • PEANUTS PERSONAL ded snow tires. Clean $300 432- Architecture students Saturday and Automotive 4108 5-2 25 STUDENT WIFE to do telephone work Sunday retail sales of plants and • REAL ESTATE in office Six hours our a dav Good garden supplies Commission and • SERVICE VOLKSWAGEN 1959 pay for right girl Call 372-9560 for guaranteed base Experience not nec- FORD 1964 Galaxie 2-door hard • TRANSPORTATION Dented fenders but appointment. 5-2/21 Orientation prior top. V-8. Cruise-o-matic. low- gine $195 332-3866 • WANTED mileage $850 882-8627 3-2 21 CHEVROLET 1965 -Caprice Bur gundy hardtop. V-8. automatic trans¬ DEADLINE mission. power steering. radio, MALES FEMALES Models needed whitewall tires, tinted windshield, Thursday nights 332-5918 Eve¬ p.m. one class luxury interior $1,150 337-2021 NEED SHARP GIRL with good figure nings. 353 7817 5-2 27 1 day be¬ Re¬ fore publication. FORD stored 1928 -spec Original ial coupe Before March. Scooters & Cycles for display work a'-<\sing Home Builders Expos'* v^C^.oruary 26 Cancellations - 12 noon one CHEVROLET IMP ALA convertible Beauty 332-8558 2-2 24 March 2 O jt\ Adamson or 1967 21.000 miles. Original guaran class day before publica- I-lank HuisgX \OSE HILL REALTY. TV RENTALS GE 19' tee Clean. 355-3174 1-2 21 portable *8 50 GALAXIE 1962. ComfortaN . depend- per month including stand Call J R. CULVER COMPANY 351-8862 220 CHEVROLET 1954 Powerglide. ra¬ Albert Street East Lansing C PHONE dio. good tires and mechanical con¬ time All shop equipment furnished dition. 51.000 miles. Very reliable Call John's General Repair 627- TV RENTALS-students only. Low ' $100 393-4780 1 2 21 6257 5-2/25 monthly and term rates Call 484- 355-8255 JAGL'AR 1959. 3.4 liti 2600 to reserve vours UNIVERSITY spares. Service manu PEUGEOT 1968 -Less than 100 miles 3490 $850 or best offer TV RENTALS C RATES Never been licensed or titled 49cc CHEVROLET IMPALA 1965 2-door. Engine 372 6672 $150 3-2 21 RENT A TV from a TV Company- 1 day $1.50 V-8 Powerglide, brakes, steering, MERCURY MINT condition Bright RESEARCH ASSISTANT Full time $9 00 per month. Call 337-1300. 15£ per word per day air conditioning, radio, heater red in and out Low mileage Many College of Human Medicine based, NEJAC TV RENTALS C 3 days $4.00 28.000 actual miles $1,150. 882 extras Tuned Must sell 332-3991 'Can you stand a little criticism?' health services planning group NEW GE 5-2 27 Would handle details of Social Sci¬ portables and standi 13 l/2£ per word per day ed ONLY to MSU students ar fac- ence type research Bachelor's re¬ 5 days $6.50 CHEVY 11 1967 $5 offer 484 1324 quired General research methods ultyj. $8 84 month i includes STATE MANAGEMENT CORPORA 13£ per word per day er. whitewall I course work and or experience TION 444 Michigan Avenue 332- helpful 353-5072 REGIONAL MED¬ 8687. t (based on 10 words per ad) condition. Call after 4 MUSTANG IAL PROGRAMS 3-2 25 1966 convertible Good There will be a 5(ty service tires Very clean Sacrifice 351- OPEL 1968 Rallve Cadett All op¬ ACCIDENT PROBLEM ' Call KALA PORSCHE COUPE 1965 Very fine APARTMENT MANAGER to manage 6658 5-2 24 MAZOO STREET BODY SHOP Small and bookkeeping charge if tions on it. 14,000 miles, balance condition Must sell 339-9061 eve dents to large wrecks deluxe East Lansing complex Ma¬ of warranty Excellent inside and American this ad is not paid within MUSTANG 1966 Excellent condition and foreign cars Guaranteed work ture. single student Long term. 351- out Call 669-9214. after 6pm 4-2 21 .1 R CULVER COMPANY C-2 24 one week. White Plush interior 3-speed 332- 482-1286 2628 East Kalamazoo < CORVETTE STINGRAY 1967 Yellow PLYMOUTH 1965 2-door Automa LARGE 2 bedroom lower half of tic. radio, extra clean $785 Eve¬ LIKE YOl R Seivice reliable HAH The State News will be PONTIAC BONNEVILLE 1967 Beau Neat appearing you: g women house Utilities included Partially ter tops Lavishly equipped Or.e nings. 355-1015 3-2 25 OLD S SPARTAN SI NtH'O -cormM furnished 325 N Pennsylvania. Lan responsible only for the ler Perfect condition Low mile- OLDSMOBILE 1966 F-85 Standard uful burgundy black vinyl top for new public relations staff. sing $150 EXTRAS 482 3393after 6 p m 3-2 21 per month Phone 351- first day's incorrectinser- Jonesville near Jackson 849- SHELBY COBRA GT-350 1967 $2.00 per hour plus incentive 4530 5-2 25 306hp 289 Cobra engine modi MASON BODY SHOP 812 East Kala bonus. No Sales. Call or see fied to approximately 315h p Last ONE MAN for 3-man apartment street Since 1940 Com¬ Mr. car actually made by Shelby Ex mazoo Atchley, 2:30 - 5 pm plete auto painting and collision Spring $65 771 Burcham 351-9255 Phone 351-8983 service IV 5 0256 C Monday through Friday . 5-2 21 recreational proper¬ VISTACRUISER 1964-Excellent ties inc., 6840 s. Cedar. dition Fully equipped. Must con sell Employment Phone 699-2148. $795. or take over payments 655- 3205 1-2 21 F.XPERIENCED HEAD cook and or SPANISH FOOD pasti y cook for Glen Lake. Michi¬ gan resort Serve 35 to 60 guests And other food from most daily American Plan. Sunday night AFBOR FOREST East Lansing For buttet June 12 through Labor Day Faculty Only Attractive 1 and 2- foreign countries-including U.S. GO BAHAMAS Housing furnished State age. sal- bedroom with private balcony Sit arv required and references. Write uated in Chalet surrounding with only 189.00 OLD ORCHARD INN Cedar. Michi- swimming pool and party house SHAHEEN'S 8 South of Harrison. East on Trow¬ days - , nights at the new FAMILY FOOD Holiday Inn on the ocean bridge to Palmer Lane Resident 1001 VV. Manager Phone 337-< 634. 10-3 3 Saginaw 485-4089 March 15-22 Michigan Bankard Welcome Cheryl Crane 355-037: BRAND NEW deluxe colonial apart¬ ments Corner of Burcham and Alton Available for business, pro¬ fessional. college personnel or grad¬ The new uate students ished 332-3135 Furnished or unfurn¬ 20-2 28 SPRING TERM 5 minutes to cam Mercedes-Benz 280SL: pus Roommates needed morith up Hurrv' Phone J R. CULVER COMPANY $50 per 351-8862 C "The sports car they said was too comfortable!' newly married? TANGLEWOOD The Mercedes Benz 280SL tion, "It can't be," they protest. "It* just too k new AFARTMENTS s designed from the tires up. comfortable1 I he critics have called the 280SL 1 Bdrm„, unfur., from $124.50 J You II note that those chubby, 14 new 351-7880 inch tires seem to bulge out from "over engineered ' because it has gone far be- the sides of the 280SL., \ond being a sports car in the spartan tradi¬ Tires were the first thing Chief Lngineer tion. It s true. And Mercedes Benz is proud Rudi Uhlenhaut thought of when he sat of it. down at his drawing board, f le insisted on I he 280SL is the sum total of everything OKEMOS TOWNHOUSE 3 bedrooms. radial plv tires for lheir superior rood hold Mercedes-Benz has learned about high per¬ 1.700 square feet, I'z bafhs. fully- carpeted. finished basement, cent¬ ih g. I hen he designed the suspension to formance sporting machinery in 74 years of ral air. range, dishwasher 351- match the charac teristics of the tires. Result? competition and 4,403 racing victories (in¬ Road holding that one road test called "mm- cluding a pair of back-to-back World Cham¬ pionships). The successor to that tradition is In fact, a growing body of expert opinion on display in our showroom now. Come in claims that this smaller, lower car eclipses the for a demonstration drive today. legendary Mercedes Benz 300SL "gull wing" in sheer handling REDUCED RATES Quiet Girl Spring Cedar Village 351 5686 Vet man\ of these same experts after 5 30 p.m 5-2 25 balk at calling the 2M>SL ONE GIRL :L spring sprinp $41 month. spotts car in the classu • utilities q P ^4T t-L'Qom. close to campu! I* iTiprnnons .inri evenines 351-3338 DATING SE RVICE meet someone you're compatible with For information send a postcarc with your name and address IDS p-aBox2137 Ann Arbor, Mich. Travel Posters Phil Gordon's THE VILL 2924 E. Grand River Lansing, Michigan SHOPPE Phone 484-2551 Friday, February 21, 19 15 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan For iale Peanuts Personal T ransportation For R ent NEEDED RIDE Florida, spring HASLETT: 5724 Lake Drive: Four 2 DIAMOND BARGAIN: Wedding and eiv break Share expenses Call Mar | CAPITOL. NEAR Efficiency and stu¬ bedroom. 1 bath: one 3 bedroom, 112 gagement ring sets. Save 50 per cia. 351-7887 3 2 24 dio Single girls. Kitchen On college cent or more Large selection of baths. Unfurnished apartments Com¬ bus line. 372-4583 5-2/24 pletely carpeted including kitchen plain and fancy diamonds $25-$150 WANTED FEMALE WILCOX SECONDHAND STORE, EMU OF En companion for and baths Stove and refrigerator trip to New York Call Art 355- THREE ROOMS furnished 1 bed¬ 509 East Michigan 485-4391 C not Jim's. You re only 21 furnished. Under construction 9011 3-2/21 room. utilities, private entrance Sorry. Dave and parking 2 blocks to shopping Available April 1st. Rent *225 and STUDDED SNOW t $155 plus utilities. GOVAN MAN¬ DAYTONA LAUDERDALE-one way I ONE GIRL needed Evergreen Arms AGEMENT 351-7910: After 5 p.m Need 2 riders 69 Camaro con¬ Perfect location Immediate occu¬ 332-5860 0-2 26 vertible Leaving March 14. 351- pancy. 351-3566 3-2/21 EAST SIDE-sublease bedroom. Real Estate GIRL NEEDED March 1st or imme¬ unfurnished. $130 diate occupancy Block from cam¬ 2-2 24 FOR SALE - 1054 Marigold Walk YVanted 485-0576 or 372-2789. pus Utilities paid. Roberta 351- BRAND NEW Cassette tape record¬ ing distance to campus 3 bedroom, 0046. S3-2/21 er Christmas present, must sell den, 11/2 baths. Call 351-6710. 4-2/21 BLOOD DONERS NEEDED $7.50 for LUXURY APARTMENT immediately $69 Call 355-6905 all positive, A negative. B negative NORTHWIND One man needed Paul. 1 and AB negative $10 00 O negative- FARMS 0728 or 353-7961 Recreation $12 00 MICHIGAN COMMUNITY V-M PORTABLE stereo turntable BLOOD CENTER. 507v2 E Grand Faculty Apartments OPEN ALL Year TWO GIRLS for house near campus with 2 speakers. $70 or best offer Round. Horseback River, East Lansing Above the new Fireplace, laundry facilities, own 351-7880 353-0935 3-2/24 ling. Hay rides. Riding Campus Book Store Hours 9am - bedroom $60 332-8289 3-2'21 tions. HIGHWAY RIDERS RANCH 3:30pm. Monday. Tuesday an of the friendly managers. pex. Sony, Scott, Fisher and man Block of campus. 332-3255 C Apartments Available SPARTAN HALL - Leasing for other select brands at MAIN ELEC For Spring & Summer spring term. Men and women. 332- TRONICS, 5558 South Pennsyh TERM PAPERS, Theses, manuscripts, 3979 9-3 4 Lansing. general typing IBM Selectric EAST LANSING MANAGEMENT JANET. 337-2603. 19-3 7 CALL 351-7880 NM1DAPTS Summer in Detroit to London Europe OVER 25 years experience OPTICA Contact: DISCOUNT, 416 Tussing Building 355-8255 June 10-Aug. 10 phone IV 2-4667 NORTHWIND MANAGEMENT $209.00 Transportation Burcham Woods Eydeal Villa 2771 Northwind Drive, PING PONG table, $35. 2 book shel¬ Resident Manager Call: Cheryl Crane esident Manager ves. $5 pair. 351-3257. after 6 p.m. Phone: 337-0636 355-0375 351-5021 351-3583 5-2/21 MINIATURE Dachshund puppies 7 CIRCLE SOUND weeks AKC registered. 2 females TU 2-0565 2 males. 5-2/25 plUP1 cept in stereo sound Model z565 LAST DAY for Block and Bridle Horse Show entries Make yours The Moderne. before 3 p.m in Room 27. Anthony CHARLAMAR 1961 - 10' x 50 2- $19995 bedroom. furnished. Excellent condition Phone 655-3441 Near MSU 5-2 24 MARLETTE 1969-never lived in. WEEKEND SPECIAL $7,800 take Paid $500 loss down OX $1,000 4-0291 after Will THE HOLD LINE! WITH THE PURCHASE OF A "CIRCLE OF SOUND" WE OFFER FREE 5 Stereo L. P.'s Reg. $3.84 Each. LIBERTY utes from 1969 campus 12x65 On Thre lot Pay your classified bills Features you can't pa j_U£ Lost & Found by Friday FEB 21st. ALL 'W z?' rou 80 Watts From New 80 watts of Peak Music Power Solid-State Amplifier classified bills must be NeJac REWARD' LOST Baron watch. Zenith Stereo Precision Automatic Record Changer CLEANERS Zenith Exclusive Micro-Touch® 2G Tone Arm paid in advance. LOUIS 623 E. Grand Rivi East Lansing Tape Input/Output and Stereo Headphone Jacks 543 E . Grand R iv FOUND shell, 2403. WOMAN'S glasses, tortoise near Mens IM Call 353- S-2 27 Personal NOTICE TO MARRIED STUDENTS RENT A TV from a TV Company- $9.00 per month. Call 337-1300. Join your friends at Creek Farm Townehouses . . . rapidly becoming tha NEJAC TV RENTALS C most popular married students' community in ths Lansing area. At Creek Farm, your money buys more living per dollar than anywhere else in town . . . and you'll find many other student families with the same in¬ terests that you have. Come and see the beautiful ly-furnished models today. HELP WANTED Management stu¬ dent wishes to start student co-op Any information about co-ops. ideas, or merchandise wanted Bring to YOU'LL GET THESE OUTSTANDING FEATURES S.O.C Lounge, 4th floor. Union * Morgan Carter. 355-7520. x2-2 21 Individual 1 & 2 story Townehouses * Loads of closet space WHAT'S A Cassette'1 If you know, * see page 2. If you don t know, go Save In Large living room Every Department * back 3 places, miss 1 turn and pay Separate formal dining area $200 fine to Lucy's Better Mental At Kramer Auto. We Have * 1, 2 or 3 bedrooms Health for Beagles Fund 1-2 21 * Everything For Your Car * 1 or 1 1/2 baths LAST DAY for Block and Bridle Modern kitchen with deluxe oven and range, two door refrigerator- Horse Show entries Make yours At The LARGEST DIS¬ before 3 p.m in Room 27. Anthony. freezer, custom cabinets COUNTS IN TOWN!! * Full private basement * Private front and rear entrances NAT SCI 191. 192 Quest! * Private backyard * Only $345 moves you in Watch For Our * Income tax deductions GIRLS ON the go little sisters know * its Alpha Gamma Rho For girls on ! Auto Air Conditioner * No personal mortgage liability the go. if so come to AGR Little Choice of colonial or ranch-type homes Sister Rush. Tuesday and Thursday * * Landscaping and maintenance included 7-8:30p m 1-2 21 * Plumbing and appliances replaced or repaired a> no additional cost THE GOLDEN VIPERS need pitcher As low as $102 per month including heat and all utilities except electric tor their dvnamite experienced I M Softball team <6-1-1 in 681. 35! CREEK FARM TOWNEHOUSES Peanuts Personal Go 1/2 Mile South of Jolly Road on Logan Turn left on Haag Road and Follow Model Signs AKRON MILK RUN: TG. start all over again Happy 21st, Joy Love Room¬ ies 1-2/21 Model townehouses open da'ly and Sunday—Noon to 8 p.m. Saturday, Noon to 5 p.m. Closed Thursday. Phone: 882-1725 600 E. KALAMAZOO 16 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, February 21, 1969 'NON-ACADEMIC' PROGRAM ROTC draws fire across < CP S i-The Reserve Off¬ But the big issue this year is decline in ROTC enrollments of the early demands of mili¬ State. Ole Miss. Davidson. Ro¬ icer Training Corp. commonly and a substantial decrease in the tants at San Francisco State chester. Douglass, the Univer¬ no longer whether mandatory called ROTC. has come under ROTC interferes with personal number of schools with man¬ College, but the issue has sity of Texas. Clemson. Hobart. liberties: heavy attack this school year. that it does is us¬ datory programs. During the apparently been drowned bv Michigan State. California at Buildings on at least four last five years, enrollment has others. At Lehigh University, Santa Barbara. Wisconsin. ually taken for granted. Now the campuses were bombed or set the question of credit is under Massachusetts, and others. question is whether the mili¬ dropped from 159. 849 to 150. afire early first semester Stu¬ At about 100 schools. ROTC tary training-whether manda¬ 982. Ninety-five mandatory study. In October. 300 students dent hostility toward the war is still tory or voluntary-should carry protested ROTC and the univ¬ compulsory Some UFO re and university complicity with programs still exist, but they have dropped from 132 in 1964. ersity's military mind. The army-school contracts require academic credit at all the government manifested it¬ The third issue in the ROTC The Army says the number of University of Pittsburgh has that a certain number of cadets This seemingly unidentified flying object carrys within its walls the secrets self in growing protests against ROTC graduates receiving co- also faced this issue. The stu¬ be enrolled, and administrators controversy is whether a coll¬ and mysteries of outerspace—as all Humanities and Natural Science students campus military training missions has increased and that dent government at the Univ¬ find that compulsory ROTC is a ege campus is an appropriate *ill attest to. State News Photo by Bob Ivins 30 more institutions will have ersity of Pennsylvania voted good way to guarantee the min¬ place to conduct military train¬ Now disfavor has become for removal of academic imum. So the first step in re¬ ing legitimatized as increas¬ adopted the training program by cre¬ more 1972. No school has dropped dit. but the form these institutions is When Vale stripped ROTC ing number of faculties and president vetoed at of its academic status, a fac¬ Garslcof, (continued from page t suiting the departmental facul- facul that because a protessor administrations assaults feel has on no ROTC. launch place in official which they an aca- ROTC in the past five years, it said proudly. But that glowing report can¬ not mask the growing dissatis¬ the bill until the issue could be studied further. The Michi¬ gan Daily editorialized. academic value, no academic "No usually making the by a number of schools. courses untary. This step has been taken vol¬ ulty program member compared to "singing in Whiffenpoofs." the the competent in everv demic setting, faction with ROTC. examples credit." The St. Louis Univer¬ The debate, which became He noted that each discipline nust be careful how This week the Harvard fac¬ of which can be seen in the sity faculty revoked ROTC cre¬ heated at times, centered on has a wide latitude of possible ulty voted to withdraw academic Mill results of a College Press Ser¬ dit in December. Garskof s subject matter in his subject matter but we are un- Garskof countered that teach- status trot ROTC is also under attack at vice survey. courses. Both Cumberland and fortunately operating in a cer- ing was not a matter of "pass- the oldest Elimination of credit was one Middlebury. Middle Tennessee Rabin accused Garskof of tain conventional tradition, ing on expertise.'• He also said director of the program said cheating his students by deviat- It is a violation of the aca- disciplines are compartment- he vvouId recommend to the ing too much from the topic at demic freedom of students to alized not to help people to Pentagon that ROTC be ended hand-psychology. be cheated out of the expertise but to prevent them from at Harvard. Rabin accused Garskof of ' c a professor is supposed to of¬ learning Garskof was particularly dis¬ Yale took similar action last Paraphernalia lossal egotism" because he r< fer. Rabin said week, stripping ROTC of aca¬ vised the defined i Cumberland said he turbed because he believes that course as agreed demic credit and relegating it the catalog without first coi with Rabin in principle' and the people who made the deci¬ to extra-curricular status, sions in his firing reallv knew little not hi ng a taught his classes bout" how "he day Dartmouth College the announced it would next limit 20% off Vietnam He said there issues at hand: are two basic determining the credit ... to ,, only , , two ^ „ courses. ;aid on all merchandise and its military installations would no longer require stu¬ continued fro ii truth in what he teaches in class page one i dents to take ROTC. Cornell is and deciding how academic Ot these. 20.0(M> :{().(MM) are With aerial and ground freedom expected to take some action considered assault troops. They applies in the class¬ sweeps, the allies are trying to room as far as include several thousands based defining what On the top of all this, the Army upset any enemy offensive just across the boarder m Cam¬ topics will be discussed in the plans. ;md B52 Stratofortresses class announced statistics showing a bodia. Against them, the allies are pounding base areas of the have about 50.(MM) combat in¬ North VM and Vi< fantrymen Three other North Vietnam- Cong. Wo rid Travel mimand is preparing to show film lids beatles, greatness, nother offensive. Troops of A film monumental < i Spain will be pre- bullfights, fairs, villages and S 1st Air ("avail v Divis sented at 8 p.m tightly shut, stones, originality imitation, Saturday in cities of Spain, Take al capital ot Tay Ninh •i/ed !' I 2 tons ot rice ah the Audito ium as part of the advantage of our 20% off sale on all listening. fudge, generated through Feb. 24-March 1 Bumiller has produced four merchandise for men and for women. Start you hear; cream, creative, at grandmother's Woi id Tra\ ?1 Series other color films. By Jeep Around the World." "Four Sea¬ your spring wardrobe-buying now. The ground sweeps aroi Ted Bumiller. Cincinnati ar- sons of Scandinavia." Ger¬ Shaw Saigon while producing no n jot battles, are taking a ste; toll as shown by 197 I S en hiteet and world traveler, will arrate A Journey Through many." and Italy." A Summer in NEWLY REM Sp< It depicts the life of Tickets will be available at bat deaths last week, the s he Spanish people, the fiestas. the door. 541 E. Grand River OPEN: 10-9 ond highest weekly figures FRI, 10-6 SAT. I9HH ? has been IFC lot ted aid ai with Lee d David \\ Fern dead to kill Kennedy rh llarv ii he (continued from page one existing Academic Report rule "for which ther Freet Here's one card ou no demonstrable need . r •Judge sides then til 0a.m. Kdward of Criminal adj< A ts from Haggertv District Court both said dent M fraternity house pre iupported the open hou approval, but said they woi AUTO PARTS from the establishment Frida; enact a policy similar to that Aith I will then Haggertv' a shock ." .. the residence halls. We will probably plement the 24-houi -7-da.y p icy. but feel we should ha not n that no student will ever burn. ■ would study the the opportunity if we choose Don't Let Your Car Free, Fast Delivery Get Spring Break! B and B2 prepared with parts from Morris 300 OFF ♦Starters ""Points ♦Generators *Condensors *Brakes ""Transmission Work *-^'u^ers *Tail PiPes to all Hubbard Hall orders ♦Fuel Pumps ""Spark Plugs ""Shocks *A11 y°ur aut0 part needs on 2 21 69with this coupon B CALL 351-7100 8-5:30 Mon-Sat. Morris Auto Parts 814 E. Kalamazoo FOR AGES 11 THRU It * •O Going » cn oo Rathskeller Home? ■ Ai MY- State £ye Coior 2»p Code CO QO cr> Have a favorite frauleir SEE Take her to Brauer's Delicious German - 08A ' JO 1530- REVERSE American cuisine U <2.2«jJ BlrtMsy) 213 South Grand Avenue ' YX h < >i ffJlLi