Campus groups organize By BARBARA PARNESS State News Staff Writer "We are just trying to get the message across to Michigan taxpayers that the ma¬ jority of MSU students are just interested He added that 75 per cent of the people approached about the petition reacted fa¬ vorably toward it. will of the majority of students. " against violence Hens noted that the demonstrations at MSU this winter have in his opinion been In protest of the "drink-in," SPASM staged its own "milk-in." Approximately 250 students gathered on rooftops and oth¬ er areas surrounding WSU's Campus Ac¬ on A leaflet "milk-in" the distributed by SPASM at the explained the protesters' stand demonstration. The reasons for the "milk-in" were: Not every protest group wants to take Hens said that he first got the idea for minor as compared with demonstrations at lover an administration building--some in going to school," Hens said. tivities Center to watch three leaders of "To show that there exists a means of "Concerned Students" after he was unable other campuses in the country. Hens' group began circulating petitions the counter-protest group and one uniden¬ practical and legal protest for those stu¬ [groups are doing their protesting with "milk-ins." blood drives and the tradition- shortly after the Movement demonstrations to cash a check at the Administration Bldg. Support evident "We have received letters from students tified cow hand out small cartons of milk dents and faculty who acknowledge and on the afternoon of the Garskof rally. He lal anti-demonstration petition. began. The petitions state, in part: at other universities and Michigan taxpay¬ to students. (Please turn to page 7) "It is the aim of the undersigned students considers the closing of the Business Office On some college campuses across the ers who commend us for our actions and a disruption of the University's functioning. and faculty at MSU to seek the welfare (United States se groups are being organized to violent demonstrations which inter¬ of all the students while preserving the dig¬ "Concerned Students" is "toying with the who want to know what more can be done idea of remaining intact through spring along this line at other universities," Hens nity of the University. fere with the regular educational processes "This can never be accomplished in an term," Hens said. He added that his group said "This shows that this type of attitude In response to the recent demonstrations is spreading and that many people outside atmosphere of intimidation, violence and expects further and more expansive demon¬ lat MSU by the Movement in which the new of MSU agree with it." strations at MSU with the coming of spring ■Administration Bldg. was occupied by over disruption which is being fostered by irre¬ Drink-in protest term and warmer weather. 1600 students, a group known as the Con- sponsible people." The Society for Prevention of Asinine The petitions were presented to Hannah Scott R. Em long. St Joseph Honors Col¬ . Icerned Students of Michigan State has been Student Movements (SPASM) was born at last month with 9.800 signatures. The pe¬ lege graduate student, freshman football | formed. tition drive has achieved its projected goal asst. working with "Concerned Students," Wichita State University (WSUi. Wichita. The Concerned Students, a group of 13 said that the group has no specific plans for Kan. to protest "illegitimate student dem¬ of 13.000 signatures. Hens said. ■ headed by Peter Hens, Greenwich, Conn., the future. onstrations." "The poll was successful in that the ■senior, was organized to publicly express "We don't have any future action WSU was recently the scene of a beer I the "majority" views of MSU students and number of persons who signed the petition in the short time it was circulated was so planned." Emlong said. "We feel that we "drink-in" staged by students demanding ■oppose "disruptive violence." as illustrated have achieved our main purpose in that the abolition of a university rule which pro¬ ■by the events on the night of President large," Hens said. We were working with hibited the drinking of the beverage on cam- small staff and were not formally or¬ people are aware of student opinion and that lHannah's "State of the University" ad- a ganized." any future violence will be contrary to the Idress. Tuesday MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY STATE STATE NEWS East Lansing, Michigan Tuesday. March 4, 1969 I Vol. 61 Number 140 stronauts unveil *bug' [during busy earth orbit SPACE CENTER. Houston iThe Apollo 9 astronauts, working calmly iAP- auts told so mission control they busy "we kind of missed lunch." "Roger, understand had been you guys have handling back to a characteristics of the piggy¬ spacecrafts, a maneuver necessary flight to the moon rockets on the sight and toward the sun. S4B and sent out of "It's on the way." Scott called as Heads in land quietly, flawlessly performed the A signal from the ground sent the the huge rockets pushed the rocket Apollo 9 crew James McDivitt, David Scott and Russell Schweic- ■first key maneuvers Monday in a flight really been at it." the controller re¬ hull away. It's just like a bright star kart leave their quarters for a nearby van to be transported to S4B booster stage out of sight and into ■that will put America on the moon's plied disappearing in the distance." their space capsule. The astronauts blasted off Monday on a 10- a solar orbit while the three crewmen ■threshold or slam the door indefinite¬ After thundering into orbit atop the day earth-orbital journey. UPI Telephoto watched. Minutes later, the ground announced mighty Saturn 5 rocket, the world's ly largest, the crew executed the com¬ Only minor problems appeared with shutdown of the rocket engine and Mc¬ Air Force Cols. James A. McDivitt either of the machines, and mission Divitt replied land David Scott and civilian astronaut plicated docking and extraction of the was nothing to lunar landing spacecraft in almost rou¬ controllers said there "Roger, he's just a speck in the dis¬ Red Chinese protests ■ Russell L. Schweickart unveiled to space indicate the flight wouldn t continue tance right now ." tine fashion Then they circled the earth I for the first time the buglike moon for its full 10 days. Another ignition of the S4B engines with the lunar module and command ■ shop that is essential to America's The only excited comment of the day later sent the rocket hull away from module locked together. |drive for a lunar landing this summer. The crew then fired up the powerful from the crew came when a signal the earth and into an orbit of the sun. rock Soviet embassy Just before the crew called an end to from the ground lighted up the powerful The rocket reached a speed of more Ithe action-filled day. one of the astron¬ service propulsion engine to test the than a thousand miles a minute as it flashed away from the earth and out of contact with the ground controllers. It the Soviet Embassy shouting "Down was more than 53.000 miles from earth TOKYO (AP> - Red Chinese with the Soviet revisionists" and "Down Board of trustees debates when its engines cut off. About three hours after their 11 a.m. EST launch from Cape Kennedy, the Apollo 9 crewmen deftly executed the swarmed around the Soviet in Peking Russian slogans while China and the Embassy Monday. chanting anti- Soviet Union swapped protest notes over with American imperialism Additional Soviet police were placed around the Red Chinese Embassy in Moscow, apparently as a precaution difficult transposition and docking man¬ a clash between their forces on the against possible Soviet demonstrations. lHannah's that was critical to the success Manchurian border euver In unprecedented move, the Soviet severance pay an of their flight. Plodding through snow. Red Guards government made public a note of protest Scott started the maneuvers by sep¬ and workers waved placards.emblazoned which claimed that 200 Red Chinese with demands to "hang" Soviet Pre¬ The vote on the minutes could become arating the command module from the soldiers took part in the shooting on Don Stevens. D-Okemos and chairman of booster, moving away 50 feet and then mier Alexei N. Kosvgin and to "fry" the focal point of a move to reverse the de¬ Damansky Island in the Ussuri" River cision to pay Hannah the $40,000. The sev¬ the board of trustees, said Monday that skillfully guiding the docking probe on Soviet Communist party chief Leonid I. which forms part of the border between Brezhnev. The board of trustees will vote March 21 erance pay proposal was passed during a payment of the $40,000 is in accordance with the command module nose into a dock¬ Red China and the Soviet far east. to approve or disapprove the minutes of a February meeting at Cowles House attend¬ University regulations. ing collar on the moonship, which was The Peking correspondent of the Jap¬ The Moscow note said some Soviet motion to pay President Hannah $40,000 ed by five trustees "The rules and procedures of the Uni¬ still secured to the booster. guards were killed and others wounded. anese newspaper Asahi Shimbun said he severance pay when he leaves MSU to be¬ Besides the $40,000 Hannah also is in line versity are clear." he said. President Han¬ "Everything came off just right." demonstrators also carried effigies of It demanded "strictest punishment' for to receive a $23.000-a-year pension. The AID nah and others of his status are entitled McDivitt reported those responsible and added that steps come director of the Agency for Interna¬ Kosygin and Brezhnev. to one year's severance pay on retirement. Later, the command module and lunar must be taken at once to prevent any tional Development < AID post pays $42,500 a year. The Peking correspondent of the Stevens emphasized that the rule on sev¬ module, locked together into a rigid Yugoslav news agency Tanjug said tens more such incidents. erance pay has never been violated in structure, was spring-ejected from the of thousands of demonstrators blocked (Please turn to page 7) the history of MSU S4B 'U' AAUP executive The board has acted to treat the presi¬ dent in the same manner as other indi¬ viduals. he continued. I shall not be a TELEVISED CONFERENCE party to any move that would violate endorses altered Tay these established University rules. " By LINDA GORT.MAKER State News Staff Writer If the report gets approval trom tne Senate next week, it needs final consid¬ Opposition to the payment has developed around ure as a ment. interpretations of Hannah's depart¬ resignation rather than a retire¬ Nixon WASHINGTON ( AP '--President Nixon, reports lengthy talks with key leaders in each. both Eur Republican and Democrat leaders of executive council eration by the board of turstees to Clair White. D-Bay City, attacked the The news conference, double the usual Congress Tuesday morning on his first The nine-member moving quickly to report to the nation, of MSU's chapter of the American Assn. become policy. severance pay plan as a "very, very lucra¬ scheduled an hour-long White House news time, will be carried live on nationwide presidential diplomatic mission abroad. AAUP is not planning any fight in tive arrangement for certain University television and radio from the East Room The European trip and the controver¬ of University Professors (AAUPi en¬ conference for 9 p.m. EST today devoted the Senate." Rabin said I'm hoping officers." in prime evening time. sial antiballistic missile system question dorsed Friday the amended Taylor Re¬ solely to his European trip and U.S. foreign the amended report will be approved "Universities classify themselves as Reporters were told their questions must are on the agenda for a National Secur¬ port approved by the Academic Council Wednesday without any changes." monarchies." he said, "and the kings often Nixon plans with an opening statement be limited to foreign policy and that no ity Council meeting Wednesday morning Rabin added that any arguments or take the treasury with them when they domestic problems would be discussed. Nixon said on arrival home Sunday Albert Rabin, chapter president and to sum up his impressions of the eight- leave." The President scheduled a briefing with night he sensed "a new trust on the part professor of psychology, said that the (Please turn to page 71 (Please turn to page 11 day visit to five European nations and of Europeans for the United States" as a endorsement of the report that set up result of open channels of communica¬ procedures to select a new University tion. president would not be considered by the profs push for involvement entire MSU AAUP membership be¬ "I think there is developing a new trust t tween 300 and 400' because the revised document will not be published until later this week "It was not possible or necessarily essential to call a meeting of the mem¬ U' According to Massey. the committee has in the future." Nixon is based on said He said .this allied confidence that "to¬ gether we are going to be able to develop new understanding with those who have opposed us on the other side of the world " By MITCH MILLER tee to study student participation on the indications of the range of levels of stu¬ bership before the March 10 Academic Senate meeting. " Rabin said Executive Reporter council. dent involvement-from voting seats on The trip was hailed a success by Re¬ The committee recommended that an publican congressional leaders and a ve¬ Student involvement in academic af¬ every departmental committee to no all-University committee be set up to study participation at all. hicle of hope by Democrats fairs at MSU is a recent innovation-five student involvement not only on the coun¬ Petitioning years ago it was not considered. cil but throughout the University. Because of variation in department make¬ "New lines of communication were The deadline for petitions for State But pressure for The new committee, officially titled up due to their subjects, structures, fac¬ opened between the President and the News editor-in-chief advertising manager such involvement ulty. students and administrators, effec¬ heads of state." said House GOP leader the Ad Hoc Committee on Student Partici¬ 4nd Wolverine editor-in-chief for 1969-70 tive student participation may take differ¬ Gerald R Ford. has not come entire¬ pation on Academic Affairs, is being ent forms in each unit. Some departments has been extended to March 24. ly from students, of chaired by Gerald Massey, professor of are so small that the full faculty and all Rep. Ed Edmondson of Oklahoma, Students interested in applying for any either militant or philosophy. Massey has been instrumen¬ students meet often to discuss policy. speaking on behalf of House Democrats, of these positions should prepare a resume moderate persua¬ tal in increasing the voice of students in Other departments are so large that even said it is "a little early" to assess re¬ giving personal and academic information sion. Much of the University decision-making. with an active advisory committee many sults of the trip including major, grade point average, movement in this di¬ The committee, which has eight faculty, students are unrepresented. journalism courses taken and any ex¬ rection has come three undergraduate, and two graduate members of student advisory Chairman Massey indicated that he be¬ perience on newspapers, from faculty, al¬ dents who are ismm» student members is attempting to obtain lieves that the most effective student par¬ f, A statement as to why the petitioner though mostly be- MASSEY a complete picture of student participation committees, departmental and college com¬ believes he should be appointed to any of hind the scenes and not as vocally as stu¬ before it makes any recommendations to mittees. from answers to letters sent out ticipation was that in which students into the three positions should be noted. the regular faculty power structure, rath¬ dent efforts. the Academic Council or any other agency. by the committee to each college and de¬ Petitions should be submitted to Anne er than create separate student organiza¬ The Academic Council in November of In attempting to survey the situation, the partment, and from informal contacts Garrison, chairman of the State News with students and faculty members. tions. (Please turn to page 7) last year asked its Faculty Affairs Commit¬ group is relying on data obtained from stu¬ and Wolverine Advisory Board. Trinka Cline, executive editor Jame* S. Granelli, managing editor Patricia Anttett, campux editor MICHIGAN Jerry Pankhunt, editorial editor Carol Budrotc, Tom Brown, xport« editor advertising manager STATE NEWS Deborah Fitch, axxociate campux editoi The State News is a free and editorially independent student newspaper. Editorials express the unanimous opinion of the UNIVERSITY editorial hoard of the State News unless otherwise indicated. Uader 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 Six-lime recipient of the Pacemaker award for outstanding journalism. with the editor-in-chief. EDITORIALS Hannah: a new d President Hannahs recent tems and the like, which are ru's coast have been shot at or time it would take to dump beneficial to the host country's captured. Thieu and Ky. appointment as director of the economy as well as to the com¬ Now there are rumblings in Judging from the report of Agency for International De¬ Hannah's international de¬ pany's profits. Washington about cutting off velopment (AID) raises spec¬ Peru's $35 million in aid and ulation about the nature and However, investment be¬ velopment committee, we may comes imperialism when it about a boycott of Peruvian su¬ expect to see an emphasis on direction of U.S. foreign aid results in a net loss to the host gar. To avoid economic disaster, university exchange programs programs under his adminis¬ Peru is hastily establishing and technical aid under Han¬ tration. country, impedes the country's trade agreements with the nah's administration. We hope A report drawn up by a spe¬ economic progress or leads to USSR and other socialist coun¬ that AID Director Hannah will cial foreign aid committee un¬ political control of the country^ der Hannah s chairmanship for by outside forces. tries as well as calling on La¬ recognize that not only AID's A department store chain tin American countries for sup¬ educational and technical aid the National Assn. of State Universities and Land-Grant opening branches in Brazil may port. programs, but the economic de¬ not necessarily be hurting any¬ Under the terms of the Hick- velopment programs as well Colleges (NASULGC) proposed be divorced from the a special government agency for one, but much American invest¬ enlooper Amendment, which must ment in foreign countries is in prohibits American financial State Dept.'s political ambi¬ administering overseas educa¬ aid to countries which expro¬ tions if AID is to be more than tional and technical assistance extractive industries such as a curse word or a symbol of oil drilling and mining. Owner¬ priate or discriminate against projects independently of U.S. AID •We have the capsule in view...Achoo!' ship of a country's raw mater¬ American investments. cynicism to the nations "aided." foreign policy aims. There was often becomes a bludgeon to --The Editors little in the report, however, ial industries by American busi¬ which could be construed as ness can have profoundly harm¬ keep other nations economic¬ criticism of AID's loyal devo¬ ful effects on that country's ally dependent on the United tion to State Dept. policies and ability to expand its manu¬ States. POINT OF VIEW AID money is sometimes history of developing U.S. busi¬ facturing industries or even used transfusion to keep Faculty representation inadequate ness. to use its own natural re¬ as a sources. corrupt pro-U.S. regimes going As an example of how AID has fact of served the interests of Ameri¬ Furthermore, dependence of in the popular resis¬ a country's economy on a sin¬ tance or economic difficulty. can investors, we might men¬ EDITOR'S NOTE: The following point blv of the Senate. I recall vividly the di¬ cision-making processes of the university, AID has recently announced so that their ideas can be fairly tested in tion that 98 per cent of AID com¬ gle industry or on a single ex¬ of view was written by Arnold M. Paul, mensions and thrust of this movement for the university "marketplace." Otherwise, modity expenditures in 1968 was port product can lead to eco¬ plans to give the South Vietnam¬ professor of history. electoral reform and faculty responsi¬ it ill behooves top-level administrators nomic and ese government $50 million over To the Editor: bility. which had to encounter strong ini¬ for American goods. AID political slavery. A tial opposition from a prestigious Academ¬ or politicians to complain that faculty the next 10 years for "land re¬ As a recently-appointed professor at provides direct encouragement fitting example of this is Peru, MSU, who transferred from the University ic Council, naturally taken aback by a (or student radicals) go "outside the chan¬ which depends on the United form," to buy land from large of California. Santa Barbara. 1 t?ke this "grass roots" upsurge. Nevertheless, the nels." for American investment I believe that, right now. in the estab¬ States to buy large volurhes of landholders to distribute to pea¬ means to express my surprise and con¬ faculty movement achieved most of its abroad by offering investment objectives. The Senate Advisory Commit¬ lishment of the mechanism for choice of sants. The South Vietnamese cern at the lack of significant faculty insurance its sugar-about $45 million now- a new president, is an opportunity for against expropria¬ democracy in the proposed provisions tee to the Regents contained representa¬ tion, war, revolution and cur¬ and which enjoys American government already has 1.3 mil¬ for advising on the choice of a new pres¬ tives from each of the nine campuses, faculty assertion of true representative¬ lion acres of land which it has chosen by procedures determined bv the ness and responsibility. The reliance in the rency incontrovertability. Oth¬ ownership of its petroleum and ident at MSU Taylor Report on "Selected faculty m not distributed since 1956 and I think the University community may faculty of each campus. The typical proce¬ er AID services to American mining industries. Recently be interested in my experience in Cali¬ dure was for nominations by petitions bers of the Academic Council" is cleaflv* Peru moved toward economic before. inadequate. I do not question the earnest business include subsidy of ov¬ fornia. When Clark Kerr was unceremon¬ signed by a half-dozen faculty, nomina¬ concern of these faculty and their cer¬ independence by developing The National Liberation tions by the Committee on Committees, erseas investment surveys as iously dismissed as president of the vast tain competence. But it takes no advanced Front (NLF) which has been and submission of all the names to a mail well as loans. a very large fish meal industry, University of California system in Janu¬ ballot for a weighted vote (first choice, study in public administration to know that but until recently has not been fighting for land reform, is seen ary 1967 (under what seemed clear poli¬ such faculty members, chosen largely from American capital investment tical pressure from the new governor. second choice, and so on). as an obstacle to carrying out senior professors by limited faculty partici¬ abroad is not necessarily an able to withstand American poli¬ Ronald Reagan', faculty on all the UC Happily, our present situation at MSU the AID-South Vietnamese proj¬ has not arisen out of a similar crisis. Nev¬ pation in routine elections, cannot proper¬ tical and economic pressures campuses protested vigorously the dump¬ evil imperialistic imposition ect, and no progress in land re¬ ing of Kerr, and then determined to have ertheless. it is clear that events of the past ly claim representative responsibility for on the countries involved. Many against regaining control of its an effective choice in the choice of his two years throughout the country make it an overriding issue like choice of a pres¬ oil resources. form is projected until the NLF even more imperative that faculty seek ident in a time of tension. of the so-called "underde¬ The proposals of the AAUP for modi¬ The current "excitement" is defeated. The "land reform" and maintain an active, vigorous voice veloped" countries lack the Traditional procedures at UC provided fication of the Search and Selection Com¬ in the principal political decisions of every over Peru stems from the ex¬ project is apparently another for the appointment of a top-level faculty rejected by the Aca¬ funds, economic resources and universitv--not simply the academic and mittee. which were State Dept. attempt to lend legi¬ advisory committee, membership un¬ demic Council, were themselves, in my technical knowledge to build propriation of an American known. to consult with the Board of Re¬ administrative matters with which faculty timacy and prestige to a gov¬ have customarily been preoccupied (per¬ opinion, too moderate. In the first place, their own economies. Much petroleum company by the gents in their choice of a president. But in faculty should have, in a university this Peruvian government and in¬ ernment which, without U.S. early 1967. with a new spirit on the UC haps to the relief of the real power struc¬ American investment involves tures in most universities). size, at least double the number of mem¬ campuses, faculty, particularly younger the building of roads, railroads, cidents in which American fish¬ support or NLF opposition, Furthermore, faculty members them¬ bers they have been allocated. But more faculty, insisted on three basic changes: important, faculty should insist on the right airports, electrical power sys¬ ing vessels "poaching" off Pe¬ would last no longer than the that the membership of this faculty com¬ selves are divided on fundamental issues of to choose-by special ballot from a repre¬ the role of the university in society and mittee be known, that it be responsible the role of faculty therein. A growing sentative slate. to the faculty in the Academic Senates by number of faculty challenge the assump¬ Although procedures seem to be moving reporting back to them; and. most impor¬ OUR READERS' MIND tant. that it be a representative committee tions of conventional university teaching and the university's relations with out¬ rapidly. I believe these matters can be brought up at the full Academic Senate chosen, or at least approved, by the faculty side social systems. These faculty should meeting scheduled for March 10. which is discriminate at large in a special elective process. Right have an opportunity to be heard at all lev¬ open to all ranks, and appropriate action to As one of the regular Santa Barbara rep¬ resentatives to the university-wide Assem- els through the various electoral and de¬ taken. To the Editor: To the MSU Board of Trustees: system, the State News need not satisfy, In a society, rights are reserved to the the desires nor measure up to the standards of its "subscribers." It is guaranteed its Smokers, repent! POINT OF VIEW populace only when it has been proven income by the coercive power of the board To the Editor: that the exercise of such rights does not of trustees. For those whose political, Open letter to the International Cafe¬ constitute a threat to the rights of oth¬ quell movement teria: Arrests attempt to moral, or emotional preconceptions are ers, be they enumerated rights or Con¬ What do you put constantly attacked in the State News, in your grilled cheese sidered to be of natural origin, such as that draws smoke? there is no happy coincidence to miti¬ Every day when I try the right to life to eat my grilled cheese invariably every gate the effects of the trustees' obvious The Freedom of the Press is predicated To the former we reply that these four abridgement of their natural and universal¬ person lights up. Today was a typical EDITOR'S NOTE: The following "Point mission that our demands really do run on the obvious right of the general popu¬ activists were no more responsible for Gar¬ ly acknowledged right to discriminate. day, I sat down and the guy to the left of view" was written by the Students For contrary to the normal functioning of lation to abstain from reading anything of me lit up, then the gal in front of me skof s firing or MSU's failure to serve the We must never forget that Freedom of a Democratic Society. "Points of View" the University, that an attempt to make which they deam unfit for their own con¬ lit up, and then the guy to the right of people than the civil rights workers were the Press rests on the public's right to express the opinion of the writer alone and this University serve the people instead of sumption. In our commercial society, discriminate. Without the right of per¬ me. With every bite I got a mouthful the ruling class is everlastingly unaccept¬ responsible for Southern racism. If they such discrimination usually takes a mone¬ do not represent those of the editors. sonal discrimination, we do not have a of smoke mixed with my grilled cheese. able. In this rather perverse fashion the helped to bring these issues to light, then tary cast; we refuse to buy any writing free press, but an established press. Please, no smoked cheese! Movement is being given help in making they should be rewarded by this commu¬ Within the last week four people have for which we. personally, can find no use I have a suggestion. Perhaps half the its nity. To influence the latter group of doubt¬ No matter what our method, we do dis¬ Ugly as it may sound, the State News been arrested for their political activity point. cafeteria could be for smokers (and read¬ ers. we can only point out that no counter- is an established press. We submit that on this campus: Mike Price, an East criminate. and this discrimination is a ers), the other half for people who would It is important to recognize that repres¬ demonstrators were arrested for assault, there is neither moral nor economic justi¬ Lansing SDS organizer. Bill Avers, a re¬ far more basic right than Freedom of like to eat unsmoked food. I fully realize sion of this sort (or worse) is quick to fol¬ no police were charged with dereliction of fication for this condition. We request gional traveller for SDS. Alan Maki. a the Press. low whenever people begin to fight for that the board of trustees, as the body that smokers would not follow this sug¬ Grand Rapids high school SDS organiz¬ duty for allowing them to beat up some In our present situation, the basic right their own interest. For instance, after po¬ demonstrators, and no newsmen were ar¬ responsible for the present odious situa¬ gestion (for it would be too inconvenient er: and Tony Ladiner. a resident of Ann lice had forced 75 black students to aban¬ to discriminate is being abused, if not for them). However, I could legally throw rested for their aggressive behavior toward tion, study the obvious immoral inequi¬ Arbor. All were fighting for the two de¬ nullifed. by the un-democratic action of the smokers a nasty glance upon moving don their occupation of the administration the crowd, while SDS people have beep ties inherent in the fiscal organization mands raised by the Movement-the re¬ the MSU Board of Trustees. Through the building at Eastern Michigan University, singled out and charged with serious of the State News and, after such study, my lunch to a clearer seat. hiring of Bert Garskof and the establish¬ imposition 0f the tax for student pub¬ Mrs. Linda North police randomly arrested 14 members of the crimes. This is not evidence of apolitical lications. the trustees force the students modify the MSU by-laws so as to bring ment of a policy of open admissions for departing crowd. Thirteen were charged Warren, sophomore law enforcement, and we can only pre¬ them into a closer approximation of those all black. Third World, and white working of this University to subsidize and, in ac¬ with conspiracy, and the remaining stu¬ dict that the law will seem less and less rights and privileges which are consid¬ class people who want to attend MSU-and tuality, purchase the State News, no mat¬ ered to be the rightful property of all cit¬ Correction all were released from jail only after post¬ dent was charged with inciting to riot. Their real crime was to demand an end to neutral as our movement grows in ter what their personal feelings on the izens. strength Carmel M. Littleton, whose name ap¬ ing bails set at $2000 to $2500 racism in their university. In Houston. subject. While we are sure that there Dugald McMillan are many people on this campus who peared on the list of signers of a letter Texas, Lee Otis Johnson was sentenced East Lansing graduate student It is clear that the arrests are intended The only response which can be made which appeared in the Monday edition, to 30 years in jail because one marijuana agree wholeheartedly with the policies and to such repression, here or anywhere else, did not sign the letter. The State News to destroy our political movement in its views of the present editors, such agree¬ cigarette was planted on him by a cop. His is to continue organizing. Certainly the Michael J. Henley wishes to correct the error in the list of early stages so that the demands it is rais¬ ment, lamentably, can only be considered crime was being a SNCC organizer. hesitance of the police to make their ar¬ Lansing sophomore signers. ing can be ignored. The reasoning appears And in Oakland. California, scores of Black pure coincidence. For, under the present rests while the level of activity was high- to be that if enough of its leadership is in Panthers have been murdered and ar¬ they waited two weeks before touching jail or fighting legal battles, the Move¬ rested by police. Their crime is to refuse Price and Avers, three before arresting ment can be made directionless and if to allow their community to be brutalized Maki-indicates the value of a strong poli¬ enough people can be arrested on serious and exploited any longer tical movement. At present legal defense charges, those who remain can be frighten¬ Now there will be some people who will is necessary, and we will accept whatever j ed back into their dorm rooms. But while we can only offer that this strategy is go¬ justify this repression by calling these help is offered: but unless we continue to four victims of the law "outside agitators" organize and fight, we will no longer be ing to fail, we should not avoid learning and others who will insist that their ar¬ free to raise our demands, much less win from it. Not only do these repressive acts them. reveal an uptight mentality among the rests were not politically motivated, but Students for a Democratic Society opposition, but they also serve as an ad¬ only the result of ordinary police work. Tuesday, March 4, 1969 3 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan NEWS Blacks By MARK EICHER at Lyle Hall, assist, director of Ferris sit in ed for offenders who incite subject to immediate suspen¬ for safety •-Students rumored to pos¬ uDscenities or other indefens¬ summary A State News Staff Writer quiet but tense air hung security, said one student was arrested by the State Police campus incidents. Spathelf said the college does sion. --Any student who attempts sess firearms or other unlaw¬ ful weapons would be dealt with ible actions resulting from the use of intoxicants will be sub¬ ject to college or legal action over Ferris State College Mon¬ Thursday for carrying a con¬ not intend to permit or condone to incite or organize any form promptly. under the charge of disorderly cealed weapon, but no arrests any repetition of the campus of violence faces disciplinary -Any individual involved in A capsule summary of the day's events from day following an all-night sit- action including separation from destruction of college property conduct. in by some 60 black students have been made since then. disorders. our wire services. Victor Spathelf. president of He said: the college and may further will be ousted from the college at the campus library. Hall said he did not anti¬ Ferris State College, released -any student, found by sup¬ be subject to prosecution un¬ and legal action will be taken Approximately 150 black stu¬ der state statutes. He stressed to assure restitution. cipate any further trouble, but dents voted to stay there at a set of rules Monday which portable evidence to be involv¬ said. "We are prepared for ed in "jumpings" with intent that "outsiders" involved would --Individuals publicly taunt¬ includes expulsion and crim¬ closing time Sunday night "for any time we might have trouble.'' their own safety. " inal prosecution when warrant¬ to do bodily harm, will be be subject to prosecution. ing others through the use of A spokesman for the students "\4.-l ( f is not planning any said they were afraid to leave ufight in the Senate. I'm hoping the building because of rumors h m f A VII IBEAI A I that have swept the Big Rapids W IrB A I I V ^the amended report uill be campus since 22 persons uapproved without any were injured, none seriously, I changes." in clash between black and proposal aims at snipers a __Albert Rabin, 4 41 P president white students ing. "It's specific difficult reasons Thrusday even¬ to pin down for the House trouble." Donnald Scannell. dir¬ Bv ED HUTCHISON O'Brien said that the incidence Penalties for sniping under the Some of the bills are aimed at "I'm worried about the in- ector of college relations at State News Staff W riter of death by sniping is important, bill range from 10 to 20 years eliminating discretionary power crease in violent crime and its Ferris, said. No demands have A proposal to amend the state but is not a full measure of the for firing a weapon during a 0f judges to set sentences, effect on the community," been made by the blacks. constitution to make sniper slav- crime. He cited harassment of riot or civil disorder. 20 to 50 O'Brien hopes to set mandatory O'Brien said. "We should re- for injuring a person dur- minimum jail sentences for verse the processes of parole and National News "Apparently there had been ing punishable bv death has been firemen during the Detroit riots. years the same circumstances and crimes such as murder, rape or probation by forcing judges to reports of jumping of individ¬ introduced in the House by Rep. We have to protect the public ing from this kind of crime where life imprisonment without parole assault. ' use mandatory minimum jail The Supreme Court agreed today to consid¬ uals and these rumors spread. E D. O'Brien. D-Detroit _ sentences." er imposing strict mathematical guidelines for Scannell said. drive for the amendment the victims are forced to suffer for causing death by sniping Thomas Avery. editor-in- stems from ^e 1967 Detroit much more than the criminal." breaking down segregated school faculties chief of the Ferris Torch, said . 0'Bri< Co-sponsors of the resolution include Democrats and Repub¬ W. German Communists across the country. tensions between blacks and 43 lied, manv whites at Ferris have been licans. O'Brien said 34 legisla- • • • bv sniper fire building for a month and came O'Brien said in a survey tors signed the resolution and Former President Dwight D. Eisenhower, to a head Thursday when two about one more have indicated they would 78, continued to show progress recovery from major surgery and the pneu¬ monia that complicated it. Monday in his blacks were attacked by 10 to 12 students. State police were called in year after tin r those'question* of the death pen t re i>r per in cent of favor sniping vote in favor of it. This is a bi-partisan effort all the way." he said criticize Bonn BERLIN (APi -- West Ger¬ the working classes." candidates Czechoslovakia's official Com¬ to assist the campus security I believe wt ild have the Gov. Milliken at his Friday The Communists said Schroe- munist newspaper. Rude Pravo. A medical bulletin released Monday said his many's new Communist party force in quelling the distur¬ question submr > the people press conference said he was der joined the Nazi party entered a declaration that the opposed to capital punishment. joined its Soviet and East Ger- decision to hold the election in vital signs remain stable and his strength is bance Thursday May 1. 1933. the year Hitler O'Brien said the governor has man partners Monday in snip- seized power, and later signed West Berlin-which the East gradually returning. no voice" in the resolution ing at the presidential election up with other Nazi organizations contends is not a party of West • • • Space experts predicted after Apollo 9 was Israeli factional other than opinion. expressing his own that the Bonn republic intends to hold in West Berlin. While arrangements moved including the SA. which eventu¬ ally became an • elite fighting Germans-will Bonn's announcement work against policy of It is entirely a legislative unit. Schroeder does not dispute normalizing relations with East¬ launched Monday that American chances are matter.' O Brien said. Joint res¬ ahead for the voting by the Europe. threatens La ern now better for beating the Soviet Union to the olutions introduced as consti¬ 1.036-member Federal Assem¬ moon. tutional amendments may not bly here Wednesday, the sur¬ TEL AVIV (AP> - Moshe Dayan's refusal to lend his be vetoed by the governor. rounding East Germans ignored • • • voice to the nomination of Golda Meir as Israel's interim Introduced as a joint resolu¬ an eleventh hour Western bid to THE STATE NEWS The United States and its allies responsible prime minister was seen Monday as a threat to the unity tion. the proposal needs approv¬ sit down and resume talks about the mounting crisis. for West Berlin have told Moscow the Soviet of the ruling Labor party. al of two-thirds of the House and The State News, the student newspaper at Michigan State University, Is defense minister abstained from the vote of Labor The West German Commu¬ Union remains responsible for the safety of The Senate to put it on the Novem¬ published every class day throughout the year with special Welcome Week nists. who formed a legal party and Orientation issues In June and September. Subscription rates are $14 party Cabinet ministers in selecting, the 70-year-old lor- ber 1970 ballot. air traffic to West Berlin despite the Russian mer foreign minister Sunday night. But she has the over¬ The 1963 Michigan constitution to succeed one long attempt to "absolve itself of any responsibil¬ whelming majority of the Cabinet ministers and presumably provides that no law shall be outlawed, attacked both the can- Member Associated Press, United Press International, Inland Dally Press ity." the job is hers if she wants it. enacted specifying the death djdates^seeking to succeed Pres- Association, Associated Collegiate Press, Michigan Press Association, Mich¬ • • • Mrs. Meir. a political foe of Dayan. has indicated re¬ penalty. The provision is an " L igan Collegiate Press Association, United States Student Press Association. luctance to accept the job because of her health. Party extension of an 1855 constitu¬ Second class postage paid at East Lansing, Michigan. The four aquanauts who made the Sealab 3 officials said she intends to announce her decision Thurs¬ tional ban on capital punishment. A charge of Nazism was lev¬ Editorial and business offices at 347 Student Services Building. Michigan dive in which Berry Cannon died had suffered day. at the end of the mourning period for Levi Eshkol. O'Brien is also readying a eled at Defense Minister Ger¬ State University, East Lansing. Michigan. Dayan's abstention and an approved statement issued package of 60 bills on crime pre¬ from exposure during a previous descent a hard Schroeder. a Christian by his followers who once formed the old Rati party of vention and control for intro¬ short time before, a Navy board of inquiry was David Ben-Gurion is believed to have jolted the party mach¬ duction in fhe House this week Democrat, and his Social Demo¬ Editorial 355-8252 cratic rival. Justice Nfinister Classified Advertising 355-8225 told ine designed to carry Mrs. Meir to the leadership. the bills calls for a 353-6400 ' Monday. One of Gustav Heinemann. who was Display Advertising • • • Dayan's move came as a complete surprise. definition of sniping, which could Business-Circulation 355-3447 accused of helping to bring Photographic 355-8311 Although it was fairly certain he would agree to serve put sniping in the category of Sirhan Bishara Sirhan's mother testified Mon under Mrs. Meir for the time being, sources close to him manslaughter or murder. about laws "directed against day in her son's murder trial that her family said all Dayan's routes to the prime minister's post through the party were blocked and he may decide to pull out and suffered extreme hardship while living in head his own team for the November elections Palestine in an attempt to show how childhood experiences crippled him mentally before he COME TO A FREE killed Sen. Robert F. Kennedy. Past mistakes Christian Michigan News Science 6 jobs in 6 years is called job hopping? can be Lecture Pontiac police using tear gas and clubs corrected. 8:00 p.m., clashed with off-duty city firemen and strik¬ Thursday, March 6 ing city workers today. The incident trig¬ East Lansing High School gered another walkout by the city's 140 fire¬ fighters. Fire Chief Charles Marion says 609 Burcham Drive that only seven men remain on duty -far from the number needed to handle a major We have a practice called fire. "planned mobility," a kind of • • • intramural job hopping. It means you don't go into a training Secretary of State James M. Hare and an program. You go to work—at aide were warned Monday they might land in different growth jobs that broaden jail if they fail to appear here for sentencing Not necessarily. you professionally, benefit you March 12 on a contempt of court citation. Not at Du Pont. personally, and help you find the specific field you want to grow in. The notice was posted shortly after the two Here's how it worked for were found by Circuit Court Judge William R. Jim Davis, an M.E. from the Peterson in contempt for ignoring a summons University of Pittsburgh: • to appear at a court hearing involving a li¬ cense revocation order. Campus News "My first assignment was installation of improved polymer transfer systems." says Jim. Urging abandonment of Defense Dept. anti- "Then some research. A patent ballistic missile plans, 40 University of Michi¬ was issued on my device to gan physics professors warned Monday the apply steam to a running threadline. Next I was a college system would prove to be "a grave mistake." recruiter. After that I worked The physicists said there were too many on a five-year forecast of the faults in the system to make it worth the ex¬ company's engineering needs. Now I'm in a cost penditure. For Jim, it added up to six reduction group." assignments in six years. Film tell ' be some kind of a to This may record. But he didn't *. waste time. Every day of A one hour film in response Committee to End the War in * it was solid profit. Du Pont Company • Room 6689 ' I to the city of Chicago and Mayor Vietnam and the Youth Inter¬ Wilmington. DF. 19898 ■ Richard Daley's film "What national Party. [Trees Do They Plant?" will be ■ shown at 7 tonight in McDonel The film is sponsored by I'd like umr latest information on Young Democrats and Amer¬ opportunities at Du Pont for graduates I Kiva and tonight in 106B Wells. icans for Democratic Action, with degrees in The film, " The Seasons and donations will be accepted. I Change." containing eye-wit- The film will also be shown Your Du Pont recruiter is a | ness accounts of people in Chi- at 7 30 p.m. Wednesday at the guy a lot like Jim. Ask him jo, attempts to create a more Lansing YWCA, 217 Townsend about planned mobility. University . I complete public understanding St. Donation is $1. Ask him anything. The coupon .Graduation Date I of events surrounding the Dem- . A panel discussion will fol¬ will get you some background I ocratic Party National Conven- low the film. Included on the information before you Address | tion. . . panel will be Bertram E. Gar- meet him. "The Seasons Change" was skof. asst. professor of psy¬ City I produced by Documentary Inter- chology, Col. Fredrick Davids, I lock, Inc., at the request of state police commander, and College Relations I the American Civil Liberties Solomon Bienenfeld. and asst. I Union, the National Mobilization attorney general. An Equal Opportunity Employer (M/F) Tuesday, March 4, 1969 1 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Cinema Academy Award time has world are The best Vanessa actress Redgrave woos nominees ("Isa- 0scar nominations for supp- orting r°les went to actors Oscar "Star" and "Chitty Chitty Bang Ban." The latter should be a rolled around again. The nom¬ dora") and Barbara Streisand ^aclc Albertson ("The Sub- shoo-in if previous winners inations are. of course, larg- ('Funny Girl"), in addition Ject Was Roses"). Seymour - Zip-A-Dee-Doo-Dah " and ly predictable, the only sur¬ to previous winners Katherine Cassel ("Faces ), Daniel "Chim-Chim-Cheree" are any prises being a few omissions. Hepburn ("The Lion in Win- Massey ("Star"), Jack Wild indication of tastes, As always, " the bigger the ter"), who received last year's ("Oliver") and Gene Wilder As always, we critics are a better" is Hollywood's rule- award for "Guess Who's Com- <"The Producers"), and to bit aghast at some of the inclus- of-thu* as reflected by the ing to Dinner." Patricia Neal actresses Lynn Carlin <"Fac- i0ns and omissions. but we major contenders -"Oliver," ("The Subject Was Roses"), es"), Ruth Gordon ("Rose- learn to grin and bear a so- with a total of 11 nominations. who won a 1963 award for her rnary s Baby"), Sondra Locke called qualified academy which Funny Girl." with 8. and " The role in " Hud. and Joanne '"The Heart Is a Lonely Hun- considers Fred Zinnemann a Lion in Winter." not far behind Woodward ("Rachel, Rach- ter V.' Bedford ("Funny better director than Antonioni with 7. ell"), who copped the 1957 Girl") and Estelle Parsons and "In the Heat of the Night" Oscar for "The Three Faces ("Rachel. Rachel"), who won a better film than "Bonnie and The "Best Picture of the of Eve." an Oscar last year for her sup- Clyde" or even "The Grad- Year" category includes the previously-nominated stars as Astonishingly absent from the porting role in "Bonnie and uate." above - mentioned films, plus Peter o'Toole ("Lion in Win- list is Mia Farrow, who not Clyde." Only time and. hopefully a Romeo and Juliet " and ter -, an(j Alan Arkin ("The " only drew critical raves for Although the best-direction higher set of artistic standards "Rachel. Rachel." both of which Heart is a Lonely Hunter"), "Rosemary's Baby" but im- nominations usually, and illog- will bear us out. Meanwhile. are currently playing in East Lansing. as wen as Alan Bates Fixer"). Ron Moody The mediately topped herself in the more recent " Secret Cere- ica,1y- match up with the best picture category, this year pro¬ are most the immediate rewards Oscars, whose distri¬ N* Competition for the best actor award should be stiff, with such iver") and Cliff Robertson rCharlv'i. vides two exceptions. Directors Stanley Kubrick and Gillo Pon- bution, fair or not, can be wit¬ nessed on Monday. April 14. Oliver ove tecorvo are up for Oscars, but at 10 p.m. on channel 12. "2001: A Space Odyssey" and1 Jack Wild (the Artful Do< r, I.) and Mark Lester (Oliver, R.) trot their way At least they didn't nominate through a scene from "( er!" as the movie led all motion pictures with II "The Battle of Algiers" are "The Green Berets" for best MSU delegates hold key UPI Telephoto nominations In the 41st ual Academy Awards race. not. More traditional were the documentary. nominations of Franco Zeffire- Ili ("Romeo and Juliet"), Anthony Harvey ("The Lion In PRESIDENTIAL SELECTION to college GOP elections Winter" i and veteran direct¬ or Carol the only Reed ("Oliver"), representative of an The MSI' B> BILL CUMMINGS State News Staff Writer delegation of the Michigan Feder¬ ation of College Republicans will represent the newly-elected club leaders on his candi¬ dacy and platform. The candidate said he was proposing both Democratic and Republican legislators to list earlier makers. Stanley dazzled" generation of film¬ Regrettably Donen ). ignored were ( Joseph Losev Be¬ Varied voices iiiiiiiiaiMiiiimiiiiiiiiiim ted Taylor report. The alumnus, fori instance, will be chosen by the I a pivotal force" when collegians meet to elect problem areas in which they desire additional the federation chairman in April. Richard research and information. This list of prob¬ ("Secret Ceremony") and Alumni Assn.. the black student I Brvnvch ("The Fifth The Committee for Search and the principle recommendation Haines, one of the candidates for the position lem areas would be suggested to College Re¬ Zbvnek Taylor Report by the black students and the! Selection of the president will of the Ad Hoc Faculty Commit- said. publicans and to campus newspapers as topics Horseman Is Fear "). These Oakland representative by the| for term papers, special study programs, sen¬ may not have been the year's Oakland faculty Haines, a past student of Saginaw Valley College where he majored in political science, ior theses and graduate work. greatest films, but they were in the selection of President The search and selection eom- The original Taylor report call-1 directorial feats of impress¬ ed for the chairman of the Steer-I said the MSlT delegation is important because Haines said the program would help "bridge Hannah's successor. mittee is "a design for bringing of its unity in the group and the fact that it the gap between university and urban prob¬ ive magnitude. Brynych's film Establishment of the all-Uni¬ together into one concert all separate from the search and ing Committee to appoint thel customarily votes as a block. The 25 votes lems as well as provide meaningful involve¬ is also notably missing from "best versity committee was approved parts parts ofof our academic commu- our academic commu- selection committee. Since it chairman of the search and se-f the foreign language" lection committee. could swing the election, as past elections ment a/id accessability to a member of the category, which includes Hun¬ last week by the Academic Coun¬ nitv." the report of the ad hoc already has a subcommittee. however, the board felt it better An amendment introduced byfl have been very close, he said legislature cil. It now awaits approval of committee said. Haines. John Cameron of Albion College and gary's " The Boys of Paul the Academic Senate and the "The representation of the fa¬ not to have a trustee on the Jeff Zeig. student representative! K also proposed a Congressional Club, a Street. Czecholovakia's search and selection commit¬ to the council, made the Steer-T Rusty Frank of Eastern Michigan University Firemen's Ball." Italy's board of trustees. culty. students, alumni and Oak- are the three candidates running for chairman. monthly dinner meeting placing five or six "The tee." ing Committee chairman thel "The Girl With the Pistol." The 12-man committee is to be land University will be under The Academic Council approv¬ The convention will be held April 25 and 26 College Republicans in an unstructured dis¬ temporary chairman of the! cussion situation with a Republican legislator. Russia's 12-hour epic "War composed of four faculty mem- the shelter of this committee, ed the trustees' suggestion. search and selection committee [ in the Jack Tar Hotel bers. administrator, fa- -John F A. Taylor, chairman of Haines visited MSI last weekend to confer At these meetings discussions over relevant and Peace" and France s one cultv member from Oakland Uni- one the ad hoc committee, said "It According to a council amend- The committee will then choost| causes would take place "Stolen Kisses." the latest film mend. the black seats will not its own chairman. with past MSI' club chairman Paul Asquith and by Francois Truffaut. versity. the chairman of the must represent to the board of permanent but will be The major concern, Tayloil Nominations for best original ASMSU Board, the president of trustees what is the view of the ™ said, was that members of the I song went to "The Windmills the Council of Graduate Stu- whole academic community on search and selection committetl of Your Mind" (from "The dents (COGS), one alumnus, one selecting a president." would now know each other wel V black student, black profes¬ SPECIAL OFFER! Thomas Crown Affair") and to the title songs from "For the sor and the one chairman of the Taylor committee report was mUtee for reaSQns that j h enough at first to choose a chair I man acceptable both to the c Love of Ivy," "Funny Girl." Steering Committee of the Fa- that the search and selection Wll, not , pertain. " Gerald mittee and the board of Trustees I culties group have 11 members, includ- MasseV( professor of philosophy That is why we suggestetl The committee will report to mg the chairman of the board an(J drafter of the „special ap. that the chairman of the Steer | the board of trustees the recom- of trustees bu had no special pointmenr amendment said, ing Committee appoint him!' mendations of the academic provisions for black members. .., . b d nrprpripnt he said. "However. Mr. Zeifl community on the new president When the trustees previewed * or any oS has given us a very civilizec | of the University. the Taylor report, however, they ldentiflable group accor(1(.d spe. way of handling this." TONIGHT from 7:15 p, requested that the trustee po- sition be eliminated in favor of ciaUtatus ..8 The chairman of the search an I 6 ACADEMY AWARD ROSES ROSES the membership of a black stu¬ "The same sort of occasion selection committee will be th<| NOMINATIONS! dent and a black faculty mem- that prompts us to ask blacks liaison between: the committe<| INCLUDING ROSES to participate in this particular election mav be run into with and the trustees- subcommittee | Picture-Rachel, Rachel Taylor said. Best Best Actress-Joanne Woodward Jon Anth "The board of trustees has ap- .... . pointed its own subcommittee another troup. £ the next. .. ^ •• time the "He will do the major legl Best Actor-Alan Arkin 809 E. Michigan work and correspondence for th<| committee." he said He will Committee members to Hurry! Last Day are be a busy chairman and wil I be selected by ROMEO & JULIE T the appropriate probably have to be absolved o | 2:00-4:30-7:00-9:30 interest group, according to the all other duties. PROOHAM INFORMATION » 482-3fr C Starts Tomorrow at 1:00 P.M. rachel, rachel WINNER OSCAR NOMINATION FOR BEST ACTOR GP^dboer ^ ! Ou*u MICHIGAN I ONCE ONLY AT 9:20 SELMUR PICTURES in collaboration with ROBERTSON ASSOCIATES presents WED:. .Ladies Day CLIFF ROBERTSON, . . 75< to 6:00 p.m. 1 sK irt" dry-cledned * DROP-OFF 40* PER POUND DRY-CLEANING ONLY I FREE GIANT DILL 7 AcademyAwards BEST PICTURE Pickle Day JOS€PH e LtVINt P6T6R AN AVCO 6MBASSY FILM KATHARINt OTOOL6 H6PBURN We love active people . 0 active people love us! Tueaday only (March 4,1969) with ANY HOBIE'S SUBMARINE I 3 (>reat Locations For Your Convenience 36 LION IN Tomorrow 2:30 pm and at J Salami & Ham Turkty • Roast Baaf 1 - 213 Ann Street • WINT6R "N 8:30 pm 2 - Corner of Harrison & Wilson Road 3 - NorthwinH Dr. Facing Yankee Stadium Plaza HOBIE'S" SPARTAN TWIN WEST 351-3800 CARRY OUT • FAST FREE DELIVERY — Parformancaa & PHcm ALL SEATS RESERVED — 1I1 Ticktlt Oa IKtNwAI I Bax Office Wtd. & Sot. at 2:90 p.m. 52.00 I 1 p.m. to f p.m. I •Jo.M Those Who E OPEN WEEKDATS TILL £>A.M. Moo. thni Sat. at 1:30 p.m Son. at 2:30 A 7:30 $2.50 WJO I Tuesday, March 4, 1969 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan SPORTS- Haywood, Mounf Cagers eye second; UPI cage NEW YORK (UPI) -- Lew Alcindor of UCLA, the most dom¬ journey to Illinois By MIKE MANLEY Schmidt will most likely start Price (12.21. •the lineup that opened MSU's lineup will remain the ineering figure in college basketball in over a decade. Monday State News Staff Writer same against MSU in the first meet¬ with Tom Lick getting became only the fourth player to gain first team recognition With their final home game same ing Dave Scholz (19.6» and another starting nod at center on the United Press International All-America squad in three behind them. MSU must now successive seasons. take to the road in quest of a Randy Crews (5.1) will be after his play against Purdue and at forward with big Greg Jack¬ Ohio State. With Lick at center. The 7-foot-l1z inch senior, the top vote-getter as a sophomore second place finish in the Big and second to Elvin Haves in last year's balloting, received Ten. starting tonight at Ill¬ son (16.7) at center. Lee Lafayette, who is the Spar¬ 623 of a possible 626 points in the voting conducted of 313 inois. Game time is 9:00 p.m. Illinois' guards will be Jody tan's leading scorer with a 18.9 Harrison (10.6) and Mike will move to forward. sports writers and sports announcers across the nation. He EST. average, joins Tom Gola (1953-55). Oscar Robertson (1958-60> and Jerry The Spartans own a 6-6 con¬ Lucas (1960-62) as the only three-time All-Americas in the ference record which puts them out of second place with two 21-year history of the voting. two holdovers and two newcomers join Alcindor on the 1969 games remaining. Purdue. 11 MSU's Brenner All-America first team. Pete Maravich of LSU and Calvin 1, has clinched the title while Murphv of Niagara, both juniors, are the returnees Rick Mount of Purdue and sophomore Spencer Haywood of and junior Ohio State. Illinois and Mici- an are in a thre^&ay tie for to all-academic Detroit are the newcomers. second spot with identical 7-5 Maravich. the nation's leading scorer for the second year, was second in the balloting with 563 points. Mount, a straight It's a bird, i marks. MSU played one of their fin¬ MSU's A1 Brenner was elected to both the offensive and defensive units of the 1968 Academic All-America football second team selection last year, was next with 484 points fol¬ MSU and Ohio Sta est games of the season here team which was announced Monday by the College Sports Actually it's a Bernie Copeland basket that has the ! 15 when they downed lowed by Haywood with 386 and Murphy with 378. ers agape during MSU's 85-72 win Saturday. on Feb. Information Directors of America. Charlie Scott of North Carolina and Jo Jo White of Kansas, State Ne i photo by Jim Richardson the Illini 75-70. At that time Brenner, the senior captain of the Spartans this past two members of the 1968 Olympic team, were selected to the Illinois was ranked No. 8 in season, was selected as an offensive end and defensive second team along with Bob Lan- the country. safety in the balloting. He is believed to be the only play¬ ier of St. Bonaventure. Mike Since then Illinois has won er ever to be named to both units in the same year Calihan quits as U-D coa ch Malov of Davidson and Bud Og- three out of four games, beat¬ To qualify for nomination, players had to maintain at den of Santa Clara. ing Ohio State. Michigan, and least a "B" average academically during the past two sern Dan Issel of Kentucky. Neal Wisconsin while losing to Iowa esters or during their Walk of Florida. Howard Porter on the road. Coach Harv college career They officials and the outcome has of Villanova. Butch Beard of Lou¬ Schmidt's squad now has a 16- also had to be first string isville and Jim McMillian of DETROIT (UPI i - Bob board reportedly voted 10-1 coaching for 25 years. I have been the fact that the University 5 overall mark. football performers. Calihan. Head Basketball coach not to allow Calihan another recently been giving serious of Detroit has offered me a new. MSU Coach John Benington Brenner is the 15th play¬ Columbia were third team se¬ lections. at the University of Detroit vear at Detroit. consideration to the possibility extended contract and substant¬ said Assembly Hall has become er from MSU to make the for 21 years and athletic dir¬ "As I do near the end of of retiring as head basketball ial additional responsibilities as ^,u ,ia" "aa honor squad since 1952. ector the past five seasons, every basketball season." said coach. director of «lhletics. full time dir ,he ougheSl ing team to '°r. " V play, noting that The most recent selec¬ Calihan who once had remarked • I have discussed my feeling prepared Gibson signs abruptly announced his retire¬ ment from coaching Monday. he would like to remain in on this matter with University the Illini have not in 1Q games this season. lost at home tion Pat was defensive tackle Gallinagh in 1966 Calihan. whose Titans were The 50-year-old. graying De¬ Illinois, of the top de¬ In addition to Brenner, $125,000 pact one troit alumnus had 16 winning plummeted into the national fensive teams in the country, linebacker Rich Saul was ST. PETERSBURGH (UPI (--Pitcher Bob Gibson spotlight with the addition of Olympic star Spencer Haywood to the team, saw U-D win 10 Kaline gets $90,000, years head c No his 21 rn upH had to abandon their man-to¬ man defense here in the first named to the third team. Offensive tackle Van Elst and offensive Dave atter jumPed off to only Horton unsigned Mondav became the highest paid coed Calihan Same iately named t a huge lead. Benington said that plaver in St. Lou.s Cardinal s 1965 Vinyl top En sport coupe NEW Sum-ii r Work ONE GIRL Faculty Apartments The State News will be 9252. after 5 p.m.. weekdays 5 spring responsible only for the K' $1150 351-8706 or 337-1721 VOLVO 1963. P1800S Overdrive. 24 "tour guides" needed in 351-7880 first day's incorrect inser- Michelins. Blautpunct radio, new exquisite location. $64 per upholsterv $1,550 IV 7-0046 4-3 7 week. Exciting, interesting FOUR-BEDROOM furnished ho assignments with other col¬ East Kalamazoo Available Auto Service & Parts lege contemporaries. To qual¬ spring, summer terms 332-0425 Automotive MOUNT HOPE 3 .bedroom house ify, you must be a college girl 4 to 5 students or singles. Furn¬ CAR WASH 25 cents. Wash. wax. with pleasant personality and ished IV5-8298: IV7-6069 7-3 7 vacuum U-DO-IT 430 South Clip NEEDED IMMEDIATELY 1 re able to spend 7 Saturdays in mate for house $55 a month. C pert Bac k of KO-KO BAR C-3 6 April and May training at to campus Own bedroom 351-7027 ACCIDENT PROBLEM'1 Call KALA¬ $1.40 per hour, for assign¬ MAZOO STRBET BODY SHOP Small ment from June to September dents to large wrecks. American when school is out. Interviews NEED FOURTH girl, l'a blocks Ber and foreign cars Guaranteed work. arranged in East Lansing the key Spring summer Reduced rates 482-1286 2628 East Kalamazoo C 35i-3651 2-3 5 week of the 10th of March. ONE GIRL needed Furnished Pri¬ MASON BODY SHOP. 812 East Kala¬ Reply with essential details in STARTING SPRING term and on 1 vate room. $65 monthly 332-5320. mazoo street . Since 1940. Com¬ writing to College Placement roommate needed in 2 girl Cedar after 6 p.m 4-3 7 plete auto painting and collision Division, R. G. Hudson & Co. Village Apartment. Call collect i3131 833-0484 after 9:30 p.m. EAST LANSING Employment Agency, 1755 Pe¬ nobscot Building, Detroit, Appliances, recr FREE SUNDAY'S ONLY One quart age $165 per it oil with lubrication. oil. filter Michigan. p m 339-2955 change HAROLDS SPARTAN SUN¬ OCO Corner MEDICAL TECHNOLOGIST for clini¬ Michigan-Harrison cal laboratory at MSU Veterinary ATTENTION WORKING personnel and Clinic. Salarv competitive. Call Avaition Dr R I Michel 355-6450 exten- grads. 3-room. unfurnished, near NEED ONE man to take c month 351-8902 Brodv Available immediately. Quiet, till September. Universi FRANCIS AVIATION: So easv to learn mature people onlv $115. FABIAN 351-3184 REALTY ED 2-0811 or IV 5-3033 in the PIPER CHEROKEE. Special LINE l'P job for spring break now $5 offer 484-1324 C Dick at 484-4448 OKEMOS: TOWNHOUSE 3-bedroc UPSTAIRS APARTMENT Fully car¬ Scooters & Cycles peted. refrigerator, electric stove 1.700 square feet, l'j baths, t ANN ARBOR Drapes included. Heat furnished carpeted, finished basement. TWO-MAN apartment behind The SUZUKI X6 POLICE DEPARTMENT No children or pets. $110. OX 4- Gables $110 351-5285. after 4 30 Runs well, Representatives of the Ann pm. 5-3 6 after 5:30 pm 3-3 4 Arbor Police Department will be interviewing fo r the po¬ SUBLET FOUR-man apartment CHECK WITH us before vou buy sitions of patrolmen. March 4 Spring summer Close to campus. HONDA OF HASLETT: Honda bikes 351-0707 5-3 6 from 12 noon to 4 p.m. and SUMMER TERM. 4 furnished parts and riding accessories. Only man minutes from East Lansing 1605 6-9 p.m. March 5 from 9 a.m. luxury apartment overlooking swim¬ Haslett Road Phone 339-2039 8-3 7 to 12 noon at the University ming pool Air-conditioned, inex¬ Inn Motel, 1100 Trowbridge, pensive 351-3797 4-3 7 HONDA 350. 1966 $325 Call 484- NEED MAN for double Clean, East Lansing. Anyone inter¬ NEEDED FOURTH girl spring, quiet. Private entrance Parking ested in discussing job oppor¬ summer 1 $50 Furnished Call Refrigerator Phone 332-4709 3-3 4 SUZU'KI 1966 X6 2600 miles In tunities, should phone for ap¬ evenings. ,1 313-789-3789. 313 234- 8592. 313-234-0017 5-3 5 eludes 2 bucco helmets $400 351 pointment or come along dur¬ Apartments Available 4399 after 5:30pm 3-3 ( ing time listed. 351-5500. WAITERS. WAITRESSES, bartenders, Employment floormen. a m doormen. Hours 8-2:30 Good wages Call THE DELLS 339-2916 between 10-4 p.m 4-3 7 DATING SERVICE NGR1HWINDAPT5 NEAT COMFORTABLE apartment meet someone you're Contact: 3-3 4 STUDENTS: FOR gardening work One man to sublet spring. Balcony, compatible with | NORTHWIND MANAGEMENT air-conditioning, dishwasher, park¬ For information send a postcard spring term. Full or half davs 2771 Northwind Drive, DAY WAITRESSES - Weekend waitresses. 1100-2 30 pm Phone TWISS LANDSCAPE CEN ing Rent reduced 1 3 . 351-0936 with your name and address I EAST LANSING Friday. Satur¬ TER. 351-0590 4-3 7 Find Your Place In The Sun day, but Sunday not necessarv Experience helpful, call Mr. Valente. 485-1764 For interviews, 4-3 5 Ana Arbor, Mich. | Phone: 337-0636 CROSSWORD Cedar Village WANTED LAB Technician or Med¬ ical Technologist familiar with bio¬ at chemical OR niques Call 353-0677 immunological tech¬ 3.3 5 PUZZLE GLAMOUR. MONEY and excitement 32. Remnant can be yours with VIVIANE WOOD¬ 33. Christened WARD COSMETICS Free make-up 35. Half score instructions. IV 5-8351 C PART-TIME SALES leading to career position. $5.00 per hour. 10 hours APARTMENTS i. Century plant 41. Urchin per week Phone 332-5025 for ap- 1. Gothic rib 43. Solid alcohol LEGAL SECRETARY receptionist Model Apartment Now Open j Kitchen utensil 45. Feeble 46. Rock salt If you're looking for a truly luxurious 7. Form of John 47. Measured m place to live this spring and summer Excellence in typing, grammar and and dictaphone steps . . . at a price you can afford to pay . . . take a look at Seven-Thirty-One. spelling Shorthand MODEL OPEN 48. Beans Dive into 731's swimming pool. Enjoy free TG's for residents and guests. preferred. 332-8444 5-3 5 DOWN Relax in the club room and enjoy color TV and billiards. Then retire to I. Heb. letter Monday - Friday your aii conditioned apartment, where you'll enjoy the rattan furniture, 12:00 to 4:30 p.m. Saturday - Sunday 1. Animai'r coat 1. Ball-rope 3. Deep gorge shag carpeting, dishwashers, and vivid room decor that make Seven- Thirty-One the most attractive apartments in the East Lansing area. A MEN STUDENTS 18-25 Par 6:30 to 9:00 p.m.' ' :00 p.m. to 5 p.m. few apartments are still available for spring term at $75 per person. Summer rentals start at $53 per person per month. Reserve your place in the sun today at Seven-Thirty One! TROPHIES & PLAQUES SOUNDFROOFED * AMPLE PARKING 1 * 9 OR 12 MO. LEASES OVER 1000 TROPHIES ON DISPLAY NO WAITING - IMMEDIATE DELIVERY w. w % Sptc'ol Prices for Quantity Pure hates * BEST LOCATION IN EAST LANSING 2m • Verbena-like i Indigenous S Preceded ■ SUMMER LEASE ONLY ) Arrest 200 Albert Above Knapp's Campus Center - 351-8862 I 2 bedroom -- $160/mo. %Va I. Command to a ■ 1 bedroom —$ 120/$ 130 mo, 1 % 5. Color green 5. Embellish crafted Li ,V,NIS'' 3. Jot 463-0645 For fall lease sign-up ^^APPLIANCES 3. Potables oCarry Cushion Sporting Qoodi 1. Breach "Hotpoint 1 BLK. N. OF MICH.-WEST OP SEARS "IAN5ING S HOUSE OF TROPHIES" 332-5051 Man's nickname Tuesday, March 4, 1969 7 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan For Rent For Sale Student involvement progress towards fuller stu¬ (continued from page one) noted, is that the students find to make any changes, when often dent participation. BIRTHDAY CAKES-7"-»3.64 8"- exactly the opposite is true. : CLEAN quiet, cooking, parking, $418; 9"-$5.20. Delivered. KWAST & "Often separate organizations that they are not able to make "Some people," he observed, Close to campus. 487- C-3/6 develop into parallel power any real changes, become dis "associate student participation )r 485-8836 0 BAKERIES, 484-1317. » There are lots of apathetic W. structures, with activity on the couraged and drop out. with" student dictatorship. The PROCESSING REGULAR or Super 8 students, but there are lots of two are not the same. Kodak color movie film or Koda- Hi part of the students involved This leads to frequent charges apathetic faculty, too. They are "I condemn lawlessness." chrome 135-20 with this ad, $1.29. I but without much effective¬ willing to let administrators con¬ REXALL DRUGS PRE¬ ly Those that are effective by faculty that students are dis¬ he said, referring to last month's MAREK ness. trol their destiny. If we respond¬ CENTER at Frandor interested in having a voice in academic Council meeting which "GLE ROOM for graduate SCRIPTION serve as feeders into the exist- ed to only the apathetic faculty dent. Separate entrance Light ho New Lower Everyday Discount decisions that concern them. passed a resolution condemn¬ C-3/6 ing structure. we wouldn't have any faculty keeping. $75 month. 332-2745. 3 Prices. ^ "I feel that bringing students "Many faculty members think ing violence, "but I condemn things in their departments are organization-and the same holds even more strongly the atti¬ SEWING MACHINE clearance sale into the present power struc¬ true for students.' Brand portable«-$49.50 $5.00 fine. They feel that they get tudes which make violence new ture is the most important thing per month. Large selection of re¬ enough informal contact with Massey indicated that the at¬ seem the only way available to we can do titudes of some faculty members conditioned used machines. Singers. students to know' that students The reason many student ad¬ change the system. " ~N: SINGLES doubles. Close, quiet, Whites, Necchis, New Home and are apathetic and don't want are responsible for delays in After the initial state of sur¬ private entrance Call after 3 p.m , "many others." $19.95 to $39 95 visory groups are ineffective, he 332-0939 9-3 7 Terms EDWARDS DISTRIBUTING veying and brainstorming, the COMPANY, 1115 North Washington committee plans to prepare al¬ 489-6448 C-3/6 ternative recommendations for ROOM. BOARD, fellowship, Ells¬ worth Co-op. parking 332-3574 $180 12-3 7 DAVENPORT: ROSE nylon, telephone seat, mahogony Upholstered host chair. IV 2-3348. mahogony end tables Chinese protests presentation to the Academic Council for approval, then to im¬ plement specific recommen¬ MALE SUPERVISED HOUSING: 1, of bloodshed after another" and dations where they are applica¬ 2 and 3 man rooms. $120 per per- (continued from page one I into Chinese territory in four said such intrusions had oc¬ ble. spring term Panelled, TANK VACUUM cleaner Excellent arm ore d cars and trucks on for condition. Has all attachments. Still Shooting incidents on the So¬ curred on "many occasions" "Our power is a spiritual one," carpeted, furnished Paved park¬ viet-Chinese border date to the despite repeated warnings from Cooking and laundry facili¬ has 1 year guarantee. First $20 south of Chenpao and "on a still Massey said, "and I hope that ing Chinese border guards and ties. 425 Ann Street Call Don, takes it. Phone 393-5072. C-3/6 regime of Premier Nikita S. great number of occasions. So¬ recommendations never Khrushchev but this was be¬ "outrageously ordered cannon our 351-3432 10-3 7 and gun fire, killing and wound¬ viet military planes intruded have a need for legal power. It ZIG-ZAG sewing machine, 1968 lieved to be the first time the Has 24 cams. into China's air space over seems almost self-defeating to Does everything Russians made an official an¬ ing many Chinese frontier SPRING TERM - Study and bedroom. Cost $259. Will sell for $99 Has guards." Heilungkiang Province." force them on people. " Private entrance and bath Park¬ lifetime guarantee Phone 393-5072 nouncement and disclosed that The Soviet Union and Red What is the ultimate aim of the ing. Ideal for 2. Phone 351-5313. it had filed a protest. Tanjug said Peking de¬ China share a 4.150 - mile committee? According to Mas¬ Informed sources expressed nounced the Soviet note as border which has been belief that the Russians were sey. it is striving to help create MEN COOKING, parking Singles, "gangster logic of the Soviet re¬ described as the world's long¬ "an academic community -- a doubles Supervised 327 Hillcrest. anxious this time to beat Peking visionist clique which bedecked 4-3/7 to the propaganada punch and est. community of scholars which is 332-6118,337-9612 itself with the cover of czarist The Chinese have long charg¬ GOLD COTTON material. 20 yards, responsible to the felt needs of perhaps set the stage for drum¬ Russian imperialism. " ed that they are the victims all its segments, rather than to drapes. Never for used slip $30 covers 40" or Westinghouse elec¬ A tisket, a tasket ming Mao Tse-tung and his sup¬ The Chinese note claimed that of unfair treatment dating to one entrenched segment. " tric range Excellent condition, $85 porters out of the world Com¬ the days of the czars. Peking 489-0137 1-3 4 work is never done. This petite example munist camp. Soviet border guards had in¬ claims that about 600,000 is depending on a Big Boy for some help. The New China News Agency. truded 18 times in the Chiliching square miles of Soviet territory State News photo by Bob Ivins (NCNA) said Peking count¬ area, north of Chenpao Island is rightly Chinese and have ac¬ 9" SINGLE ROOM for male student ered with its own protest. between November 1967 and cused Moscow of "Socialist Parking available Cooking privi¬ Couched in similar terms to the Jan. 5. 1968 It said thev had portable TV imperialism" in holding on to leges 538 Grove. East Lansing SUCH A deal' 15" Russian note, it called the dis¬ "disrupted Chinese people's those areas. Mrs E Henderson 3-3/6 Perfect for student room. Great condition. $45. 372-4425 3-3/6 TOM S BARBER SHOP. 3007 Vine. puted island Chenpao and claim¬ production and on many occas¬ ed that it is "indisputable ions killed and wounded Chinese TWO ROOMS for single man Each a month 532 Abbott Road. 332- 0625. after 5 p.m Available imme¬ Vine and Homer across from Fran- dor 4-8844 8-5:30 Tuesday-Saturday " 0-3/6 IV The Parks and Recreation Resources Chinese territory." The Chinese Foreign Ministry people who were engaged in productive labor. " Sex speech Pepperoni diately 3-3/6 NCNA charged that the Rus¬ Club will meet at 7 tonight in 338 Natural numbers of fully TWO MEN needed for 4 man room. GUILD 3623 12-string guitar. Call 351- S-3/4 FREE ty. For A Thrilling hour of beau¬ appointment, call 484- Resources Bldg. Election of officers will take place. said "large armed'' Soviet troops crossed sians had created "one incident on television 4519 MERLE NORMAN COSME¬ Cooking Living P Supervised Close room and bedroom separate 410 TICS STUDIO, 1600 East Michigan DIAMOND BARGAIN: Wedding and en- ' C-3/6 There will be a meeting of Students for Taylor report Park Lane 332-2414 5-3 7 gagement ring sets. Save 50 per Effective Education at 7 tonight in 35 cent or more. Large selection of Union. Ron Lee, director of the Center Bro SINGLE FOR mature male student nstructor No cooking. Parking plain and fancy diamonds. 125-1150. of Urban Affairs, will spe?k 146 WILCOX SECONDHAND STORE, active as soon possible ." Holden 106. Ill available ED2-2882 3-3 5 (continued from page one) come 509 East Michigan. 485-4391. C Petitioning for ASMSU senior, junior, I Hubbard 31.32 protest in the Senate would Rabin reaffirmed his state¬ SINGLE ROOM for i AVOID COMPULSORY miseducation. sophomore and general members at large, McDonel 102. Kiva Animals obtain VIEWPOINT, the Course and senior class president and vice presi¬ only "slow things up" and it ment that the amended report Vet. Clinic 100 Evaluation book, at the local book- dent will continue through Friday. Pe¬ "is important that the search was near the original AM P Wilson C-1.C-2.C-4 titions are available in 310 Student Serv¬ held from 4-6 pit SINGLE ROOM, clean, quid and selection committee be- suggestios for change The lecture will be ices Bldg. between3-5 p.m. block campus Spring terrr 9625 after 5p m RENT A TV from a TV Company- Dale E. Hathaway, steering committee chairman, has in¬ State will not see z WIREHAIRED FOX Terriers - AKC $9.00 per month Call 337-1300 Petitioning for ASMSU Popular Enter¬ NEJAC TV RENTALS C tainment chairman will continue through structed the Committee on Com¬ registered. 2 males $50 each. 882-9689 3-3/5 Wednesday. Petitions may be picked up ABM target mittees to initiate nominating local BROOKWOOD - NEAR Wacousta. On Phone in 307 Student Services Bldg procedures for faculty mem¬ open letter Riverside Drive. 2 beautiful 't-acre MINIATURE DASCHUND puppies 9 bers on the search committee, wooded lots 393-0690 3-3 4 weeks $75: 2 AKC registered One male. females. $85 393-0558 for discussion as outlined in the report. backing Garskof Peanuts Personal z DIAMOND PIERCED earrings, re¬ "I the Senate or the board Dlsirendra Sharma. asst. pro- cently apparised value $100; will A discussion of Anti-ballistic sell for $70 Call 351-4374 2-3 4 Mobile Homes CAPTAIN DOWAGIAC: We re going The Christian Science hold Organization will missies i ABM > will be spon¬ of trustees fails to approve . lessor of philosophy, said Mon- - testimony meeting at 6:45 tonight a in the Alumni Memorial Chapel sored by the department of the proposal, the nominating day that the open letter backing FIRST QUALITY MATERIALS and LIBERTY mobile home. 8' x 35 The Mafia 2-3 4 effort will be halted. Hath¬ Bertram Garskof will not be workmanship OPTICAL DISCOUNT. $1,350 Very good condition Call chemistry and physics at 7:30 416 Tussing Building Phone IV2- 332-6750. before 7 p.m. 4-3/7 tonight in 118 Physics-Astron¬ away said in a letter F;iua< sent t<> the governor or any Real Estate to Leo Deal, chairman of the state legislators as earlier an¬ A 4667 C-3 7 omy Bldg LIBERTY 1969 12' x 65 3-bedroom Assistant chairman of the Committee on Committees nounced. 3 months old. 10 minutes from cam¬ BEAUTIFUL RESIDENTIAL lot. near Sharma had said Sunday that On lot. Skirted, fireplace, East Lansing High School Walking The Women's Varsity Basketball team department of chemistry Jack "There is a two-and-a-half pus distance Phone 337- will play against Calvin College at 6 30 Kinsinger will he chairman of time period involved in nomin¬ the petition, which has been utility shed. $1,000 off. 882-0386 to campus tonight in the Women' sM 9455, after 6 p.m. 4-3/7 the discussion. signed by over 200 faculty and The Block and Bridle Club will hold a ating and electing faculty repre¬ staff members, would be sent AUDIO COMPONENT SERVICE. Am regular membership meeting at 7:30 to¬ The speakers are: William sentatives to the committee." to the Gov. Milliken and legis¬ ... pex. Sony. Scott. Fisher and many HOLE IN ONE! Maybe not, but check' Service night in 110 Anthony. Hartman. assistant pro¬ other select brands at MAIN ELEC¬ M Hathaway said Monday. lators through the mail. today's Classified Ads for good buys fessor of physics. Thomas H TRONICS, 5558 South Pennsylvania, John F. A. Taylor, chairman in golf clubs! He said he received several Lansing C PAINTING AT low winter prices. Greer, professor and chairman of the committee that drafted Free estimates. Call BOB MAY calls Monday morning from per¬ of Humanities, and Jeffrey Mil- the document, said Monday that 393-4173. 4-37 sons connected with the letter The Movement of East Complex will stein. assistant professor of if all the nominating machinery hold a meeting at 7:30 tonight in the Fee and the consensus was that the political science works smoothly, a search and Garskof issue was a "commun¬ Hartman will discuss the tech¬ selection committee should be 7 tonight in the Rathskeller nology of ABM. Greer will sum¬ ity conflict " and the state TYPING TERM papers and theses Gables. All membe— — ( selected and ready to work in legislators should not be in- Electric typewriter Fast service marize the argument for ABM Call 332-4597 O April. ANITA WARREN: SCM Electric, Hannah's pay dissertations, theses, term papers (continued from page one) Call 9-7. 351-0763 3-3 6 White said that he would for money from the legislature BARBI MEL. Typing, multilithing. vote "no" on a proposal to and then it comes from the peo- No job too large or too small Block off campus 332-3255 C pay Hannah the $40,000 pie's pockets." "The people of Michigan White said that Hannah was al- PAULA ANN HAUGHEY A unique can't afford this luxury." he ready "handsomely taken care quality thesis service IBM typing, said. "The board of trustees of" and that he saw no need to multilith printing and hard binding. are beggars. We've got to beg pay the additional $40,000 " DONNA BOHANNON Professional Anti-demonstration FOR typist. Term papers, thesis. IBM (continued from page one) the Organization of University Selectric, 353-7922 C value the idealistic principles Centers for Rational Alterna¬ ANN BROWN: of education to an equal or great¬ tives. a group of 400 professors Typist and multilith. er extent than the idealistic prin¬ at more than 36 campues. in¬ WISE CATS offset printing. Dissertations^theses. $]00 manuscripts general typing IBM ciple concerning beer on cam¬ cluding S. I. Havakawa. acting 19 years experience 332-8384 C pus president of San Francisco State "To demonstrate the theory College. and effectiveness of peaceful Hook believes that the present Transportation That's right! I only pay $50 a month for my WANTED: TWO riders rado leaving March to Vail. Colo¬ 14-Rita. 351- and intelligent legal strations as opposed to vailing theory of violent, ille¬ demon¬ the pre¬ tactics of violence employed by campus demonstrators are ac¬ tually attacks on academic free- KNOW ONLY BEECHWOOD apartment! But |ust look at all 4180 2-3 5 I get: A room/ 2-bedroom apartment, carpet¬ gal and asinine demonstrations. ing, air conditioning, new furniture, and only a 5-m;nute walk to campus! They even found DRIVERS 21, Riders any age. Around March 15th - round trip anywhere At Blood drive at Purdue Purdue University Semper Fidelis Society, a group the Recall student leaders At San Francisco State a group called the Committee for Aca¬ you save Mon. roommate! And summer rates are even when you buy me a Florida ALSO car leaving for Cal¬ connected with Air Force ROTC. ifornia March 7th 351-8491 O demic Environment has been lower. That's why I say, for the money. . . is sponsoring a blood drive, active since the start of cam¬ you just can't bea' BEECHWOOD. Wanted their answer to disturbances at other campues. pus disorders November. at the school last & NEED CASH? Always buying toy elec¬ tric trains dition. Any make. age. con¬ Single items, collections Sgt. Allen Force, who is head¬ ing the drive to collect 500 pints of blood, was quoted in an Asso¬ One of the main actions of group has been the circulation of a petition urging the recall of the COOK'S Tues. jj.il. Culu&i 339-8759 5-3 7 ciated Press story as saying that the officers of the student gov¬ BLOOD DONERS NEEDED $7 50 f?r all positive, A negative. B negative and AB negative $10.00 O negative- the blood drive is an attempt to show that "the activists, riot¬ ing and burning buildings, are ernment in favor of strike at the school. the student TRAVELERS To 200 Albert-Above Knapp's Campus Center-351-8862 $12 00 MICHIGAN COMMUNITY small minority representing a Dorms n i L jj BLOOD CENTER, 507^ E Grand River, East Lansing. Above the new Campus Book Store Hours: 9am - 3 30pm. Monday, Tuesday and Fri¬ colleges falsely." The most tions on recent demonstra¬ the Purdue campus it¬ 'IT College tests require permits CHEQUES day: Wednesday and Thursday, 12- self occurred this month over STILL ONLY -1| "V BEEtMvteob t] |— ifARSITY Permits for Spring Term Un¬ 1 r u.wc i. . 6:30pm 337-7183. C the return of the CIA to the Uni iversity College Independent —II Uai Lsi_ TYPISTS-5 evenings per week, 4-10 versity. More protests are ex¬ Study Examinations must be ob¬ 75c issuance charge ON $100 70 wpm with accuracy. Call 337- pected this spring at the West tained at 170 Bessey Hall. S33 isrno 1661, 3-5 p.m. w Lafayette. Ind.. campus. Professors unite Wonders. 109 Brodv. or G 36 Hubbard BEFORE' March 10. Available at College Travel Office, 130 W. Grand River NEEDED: Village by APARTMENT IN March 15th Cash for Cedar New York University philo¬ 1969. The examinations will be Washburne Travel Center Inc., 228 Abbott Road 332-6517 one month Will sign lease Phone sophy professor Sidney Hook given on Monday. March 24th. 372-9230. extension 233 2r3/5 has initiated the formation of Tuesday, March 4, 1969 8 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Big 10 sorority appeal Frnlernilie* andSoi Appeal to national drops University of Wisconsin By KAREN BRIER Pan-Hel allowed sororities Membership in sororities is State News Staff Writer also decreasing at the Univer¬ that held their national conven¬ When freshman coeds enter tions in summer of 1968 to con¬ sity of Wisconsin. the Big Ten universities, they tinue using recommendations un¬ "The are fa<" ' with question of wheth¬ til the time of their next national average student tends er or not to pledge a sorority. not to be the conservative convention when the policy Although the coeds are not could be changed. Greek," a Pan-Hel member exactly aware of what the sor¬ said. "It is hard to convey Those sororities that had their to the rushees what intangible ority system is, they have formed opinions based on infor¬ national conventions after Pan- things the Greeks have to offer, mation they have heard. Hel decided that recommenda¬ such as sisterhood." The sorority systems at Big tions must be abolished had to She also added that many pros¬ Ten universities are gradually appeal to their national head¬ declining today as a greater quarters. If the nationals would pective rushees are exposed to number of coeds elect not to not drop the mandatory recom¬ the Greek apathy felt by the although rush is not as big as it rush and pledge mendation system, then Pan- was in the past, the number of older girls in the residence from an alunmus or the high Hel did not allow those sorori¬ halls. University of Michigan school the rushee attended. pledges taken at Illinois this ties to rush on campus. A controversy arose during fall year was the same as in 1968. University of Wisconsin has 17 University of Michigan sor¬ national orities have not yet felt the drop rush at U-M when the universi¬ The question of whether Pan- "Many girls are interested sorority chapters on in sororities, but because of the campus. They feel that by begin¬ in the number of rushees. ty's Pan Hellenic council (Pan- Hel has the authority to dictate "The new rule allowing fresh¬ Hel) decided that sororities the rush policy of all sorori¬ stereotyped image a sorority ning a quota system, limiting should not discriminate against ties at U-M, or whether the al¬ member is given, girls tend to be the number of members in each man coeds to move into apart¬ the rushees with the recommen¬ reluctant to rush." she said. house, the smaller houses will ments may harm the system." umnae of the individual nation¬ dation system. Sororities provide a large num¬ eventually become stronger. the Alpha Gamma Delta mem¬ al sororities has that right, re¬ ber of activities for the coeds bership chairman said. Many of the sororities have mains unanswered. A unique problem felt by the at Illinois. Recommendations are requir¬ national requirements as to individual houses at Wisconsin membership, however, which University of Illinois Independent students cannot is the pressure they are receiv¬ ed for each rushee before she can residence halls to pro¬ make alumni recommendations A Pan-Hel member at the count on be given a .bid to pledge. A ing from the human rights com¬ mandatory. University of Illinois said that vide activities as they do at MSU. mittee and the recommendations may come faculty members to sign a certificate stating that they will not discriminate a- gainst race, color or creed. If ERASE RIVALRIES the certificates are not signed by 1972. the national chapters will be forced to go local. IFC seeks internal unity The sororities need the permis¬ sion of their national headquar¬ ters to sign such a certificate. Although the decreasing num¬ activities, such as co-sponsor¬ to formulate a workable policy. ber of rushees is harming the By "SHARON TEMPLETON of IFC will help to unite the ship of a drug forum with the The term project for spring Stae News Staff Writer system and make IFC aware Men's Halls Assn and a sorority systems at Big Ten of the needs of each frater- pop is a study of the fraternity universities The Inter-Fraternitv Council today, Pan-Hel is op¬ entertainment program with system and its relevance to timistic about the eventual rise (IFC' is looking forward to a ASMSU. more unified system through Presidents of several frater¬ University life of the system. IFC plans to enact policies IFC is drawing up plans to nities will also divide into com¬ emphasis on the internal struc¬ that will be relevant to the When the problem is evalua¬ ture of fraternity organization. mittees to form their own pol¬ analyze the fraternity system icies and make recommenda¬ fraternity system, not just pat¬ and determine how attitudes ted. positive steps can be taken Through an emphasis on in¬ terned after the residence halls ternal organization we hope to tions to IFC toward fraternity life have by Pan-Hel to familiarize rush¬ Dziak said he hopes to get policies. changed The report will be ees with the Greek way of life. unite the fraternity system to¬ "Until now. IFC and the frater¬ finished by the end of spring ward more effective external to know the president of each nity system has been following term. fraternity to become familiar programs." Ted Dziak. presi¬ dent of IFC. said. Dziak said the goal of IFC with then individual problems and needs. the policies set up by the resi¬ dence halls, but now working on policies that affect we are will Spring be term held rush activities April 7 to 13 Procedures will be more un¬ Great Through this internal coop¬ figure'8' for spring term and next year eration. IPX will be able to only the fraternities." Dziak structured than last term, elim¬ will be cooperation among fra¬ ternities for greater fraternity make their policies more rel¬ inating the exact number of The major issue before IFC houses a rushee must visit. involvment in IFC. evant to the programs of the now is the liquor proposal which We want to erase inter- University. would allow liquor in fraternity house rivalries by making IFC "Up until now. the frater¬ houses. Possible legal ramific¬ POLICE RIOT? closer to the houses and to nity system has been generally ations may deter passage of LAW AND ORDER? the house presidents and by looked upon as irrelevant Our the policy until these problems involving all houses, large and goal is to change this image are solved. What happened in Chicago last and make the University more August? See The Seasons small, in IFC programs he IFC is meeting with the head aware of the Greek system." said. of the State Change, film sponsored by the Liquor Commission American Civil Liberties Un¬ Formation of a Presidential Advisory Board of house pres¬ Future plans of IFC include ion, Tomorrow, 7:30 p.m. at idents to advise the president more cultural and scholastic RODEO CLUB the YWCA, Lansing. Discussants: Col. Davids, Mich. State Police, Prof. Ber¬ meeting March 4 tram Garskof, Asst. Attorney Chapel in new capitol 9 p.m. 110 Anthony Gen. Bienenfeld Campus Showings Tonight at 7:00, Mc Done! Kiva and Hall urged by legislatress Open meeting 9:00, 106B Wells Hall, sponsored by Young Demo¬ and Americans for Dem¬ The exclusion of a chapel in the new capitol plans that are crats presently under consideration by Michigan legislators has re¬ ocratic Action. Donations ac¬ Dues due sulted in a resolution introduced into the House by Rep. Nelis cepted at door. J. Saunders. D-Detroit. If the resolution is approved by the legislators, a "chapel of all faiths will be included in the plans for a new capitol. either a chapel for each legislative chamber or one centrally located for both Houses." Mrs. Saunders said. I feel we should have it for many reasons. Many legislators Do you wish Christian Science feel a need for a communion with God before entering the cham¬ bers and making decisions." she said. "There are 30 senators and you had more Lecture 110 of the representatives and I believe that most of us would make use chapel faith in God? 8:00 p.m., Mrs. Saunders' resolution is now in the Senate Business Com¬ Thursday, March 6 mittee. She said that the resolution has received considerable support. ist Lapsing High School If we are spending $49 million for a new capitol. certainly a 609 Burcham Drive chapel wouldn't add a great deal to the cost." she said "It would serve a. real need for legislators who are making deci¬ sions for the niore than eight million people in the state of Michi- Mrs. Saunders pointed out that the U.S. Capitol Bldg. has a but nobody prayer room between Each daily session the State Senate the House and Senate wings. of the State House of Representatives and begins with a prayer, she said. noticed And aren't you happy! 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