Missing By DIANE PETRYK State News Staff Writer peared after she had home. accepted a ride "We consider her coed missing if a room¬ mate is concerned enough to report it," "We try to keep the until the latter part of parents out of it the search," the spurs Are coeds safe on campus they do to protect themselves? and what can Miss Joy Tubaugh, asst. director of us "We when issu depend on roori|mates to inform girls are missing. That's all we have to work with." Miss Tubaugh said, Thus arise the questions of dormitory Nonamaker said. "At that point we con¬ spokesman said, explaining that this po¬ Neglecting to tell anyone where she residence hall programs and WIC advi¬ licy exists to keep the parents from be¬ indicating that girls should be concern¬ Iwas going, an MSU coed left her resi- sign out policy and the advisability of tact other residents to find out where she ser said "girls believe that they're safe ed when their roommates fail to return the "ride board" where students (or non- might be, then the campus police ." coming too alarmed. hall room Monday afternoon and on campus so they avoid the common when expected. students) offering or requesting rides to Bher whereabouts remained unknown for sense rules like not accepting rides from For various areas post their names. The slain A spokesman for the University police University police reported three miss¬ girls worried about guarding them¬ |three days. U-M coed found her ride home through said that if the case of a missing person ing persons cases in the last eight hours strangers." Miss Tubaugh suggests that girls re¬ selves against possible assailants. Miss It eventually was discovered that the Thursday concerning two females and one Tubaugh announced that Women's In¬ the U-M ride board." and never reach¬ reaches them they first check with area frain from going out alone at night, be ■Holmes Hall freshman had merely gone male and termed them "fairly common." ter-Residence Council is sponsoring lec¬ ed her destination. hospitals and other police departments. careful to walk in well-traveled and well- |to visit friends for several days. If nothing comes from this, they check Although MSU has had a very mild his¬ tures by Fredric Storaska. a self-defense The incident, however, sparked more According to Eldon Nonamaker, associ¬ back with friends, roommates, boyfriends tory of serious incidents stemming from lighted areas, and tell someome where speaker with degrees in Karate and Judo, Bconcern than usual since the slaying last ate dean of students, the new regulation and anyone else who might have pertinent missing students, concern has risen in the they are going and when to expect them (please turn to page 21> week of the fourth female in the Ann Ar- dissolving the requirement for girls in wake of the slayings near Ann Arbor. back. information. residence halls to sign in and out makes Jbor area. The last three killed were found ■sexually molested. A University of Michi- it difficult to determine if a girl is ac¬ |gan coed, the third female slain, disap¬ tually missing Friday MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY STATE STATE MEWS East Lansing, Michigan Friday, March 28,1969 Vol. 61 Number 146 0 Senate confirms appointment of Hannah to executive post By GEORGE BULLARD Hannah has been conferring with AID de¬ partment heads for several weeks. He had Jk State News Staff Writer The Senate confirmed President Han¬ no idea Thursday what his first official acts nah's nomination as director of the Agency as chief AID director would be. for ^International Thursday. Hannah, Development (AID) contacted in the Washington. really It's a a 24-hour-a-da;- job," he said, "not matter of what you'll be how much you can get done." doing, but 10 candidates Urgent security D.C.. AID headquarters, said that he ex¬ Both Michigan senators hailed Hannah's in ailed urgent session Thursday wl f e the the Security Council in New York was Jordanian ambassador declared that pects to take his oath of office Tuesday, the first day in 28 years that he has not been MSU president appointment and confirmation. Sen. Philip A. Hart, D-Michigan. called the decision a "superb appointment." for selection srael had adopted ( "arrogant policy" of massive and concerted He will move from his MSU office Mon¬ Hart worked closely with Hannah when Eight faculty members and two ad H. Knisely. director of the Institute of targets on Jordanian territory. (See story day. The day will end the longest tenure of the latter was chairman of the U.S. Civil ministrators were named Wednesday as Biology and Medicine, and Paul A. Yargi AP Wirephoto any major university president Rights Commission. candidates for positions on the presiden¬ dean of the College of Arts and Letters. There are few men in the civil rights tial search and selection committee. Nominations for the positions were field whom I grew to admire more." Hart The elected faculty members of the made by all faculty members. The Fac¬ said Dr. Hannah always told it the way Academic Council will choose four facul¬ ulty Committee on Committees consid¬ CLASSES 'PRETTY FULL' it was-north or south." ty and 12-man one administrator to serve all-University committee on the Tues¬ ered all the nominations and presented the slates of candidates to the elected One way to judge a man is by weighing the strength of the institutions that he day. faculty members of the Academic Coun¬ heads." he continued. "And certainly MSU cil. The facultV candidates are Arthur Ad¬ Psych boycott doubtful stands as fine testimony to Hannah's abil- ams, chairman of the Russian and East The faculty and administrator will be European Program and director of the Hu¬ joined on the search and selection com¬ mittee by an undergraduate student, a Se i Robert P. Griffin. R-Michigan, said man Research Center; John E. Cantlon. professor of botan.' and plant pathology; graduate student, a black student, a tl. ,t i; was "very pleased and very proud" black faculty member, an "alumnus, a said Clarence Wir.dc de.- of the ses t.) put pressure on the department. about Hannah's appointment. Robert L. Ebel. professor of counseling: By CHRIS ME AD faculty member of Oakland University Executive Reporter Garskof. asst. professor of psychology College of Social Science, asked the de¬ Hannah is one of the most able leaders James D. Edwards, professor and chair¬ and Dale E Hathaway, the chairman t tin.il ao ' ;r. non-tenure con¬ partment chairman at the time he wih that the state has produced." he said. "I man of accounting and financial admin¬ The chairman of the D^pt •, t'- drew the contract that Garskof be put on of the Steering Committee of the Fac- tact was not renewed by the dean of have no doubt that he will do an excellent istration; Thomas A. Greer, professor of I chologv said Thursday that enrollment fulltime research." humanities; Elinar Hardin, professor and 1 figures for psychology courses do not in the College of Social Science, will not job." The committee will aid the board, of "Full-time research is a euphemism associate director of labor and industrial | dicate any evidence of a student boycott. be teaching Psychology 151 this term as Hannah was nominated for the AID post trustees in gathering nominations and scheduled. for doing nothing." Garskof said He ad¬ Feb. 17 by President Nixon. The nomina¬ relations; Donald J. Montgomery, profes¬ Lawrence I. O'Kelly the department ded that he feels his profession is to screening candidates for the presidency Garskof s section of the course was tion confirmed along with several oth¬ sor of metallurgy and physics and W. Don¬ I chairman, said that exact figures were was of the University canceled Wednesday but was later re¬ teach and that compartmentalizing "re¬ ald Weston, asst. professor of psychiatry 1 unavailable but that all psychology clas er Nixon appointments by voice vote of the search" and "teaching" is wrong be¬ Administrative candidates William ses were "pretty full ' opened under another instructor on re¬ are cause a good teacher will do both. "The introductory courses which in- quest of the students. Gordon Wood. asst. I eludes Psychology 151- arc. for the most professor of psychology and co-ordinator I part, pretty much filled.' he noted Students in the Movement, the group of introductory courses, will replace Gar¬ skof. Eisenhower's I which last term rallied behind Bertram Although Garskof was listed in the a University-wide open ad spring term schedule book, he maintains weak heart Garskof and I that the decision to relieve him on his missions policy, had discussed the pos I sibility of a boycott of psychology clas¬ teaching duties was made earlier. He hits plateau |Nixon-appointed panel dent WASHINGTON (AP) - Former Presi¬ Dwight D. Eisenhower's condition leveled off Thursday and doctors reported to study draft choices a halt in the weakening of his heart. After reporting a steady deterioration of the 78-vear-old general's heart func¬ WASHINGTON < APi Pre )■!• : t . ::ould not predict when tion for several days. Walter Reed Army on, moving toward rede, miny a campaign Hospital said in the late-afternoon bulle¬ pledge to end the military draft, appointed ed as chairman of the commission tin he was resting more comfortably and an advisory commission Thursday to rec¬ lomas S. Gates Jr., secretary of de- breathing more easily. ommend, ways of establishing an all-volun¬ n the last years of the Eisenhower "Gen. Eisenhower has rested more com¬ teer armed force. stration and now chairman of the fortably today and there is no evidence at Nixon asked the panel to report by early ive committee of Morgan Guaranty this time of further deterioration of his , November. congestive heart failure. When press secretary Ronald L. Zieg- itatement. Nixon said: ive directed the commission to de- "His breathing appears to be some¬ ler was asked if this indicated the Presi¬ what easier this afternoon He remains dent might be prepared to push the proj- velop ; nprehensive plan for eliminat- generally weak and has slept for longer ect in the 1970 congressional session, he recalled that Nixon has said "he wants . ing con nptic and r ,-ing t The commission Vietnam t periods today. He has taken some semiso¬ lid nourishment. Mrs. Eisenhower and to move toward an all-volunteer army vill study a broad range of possibilities when expenditures in Vietnam are sub¬ ■ ii increasing the supply of volunteers Secretary of State William Rogers, left foreground, testified Thursday on the situation in South Vietnam members of the immediate family have visited and conversed with the general at stantially reduced (Please turn to page21) at a hearing held by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. AP Wirephoto intervals." Doctors said their patient sleeps about a third of the time. Rogers ready for secret talks The easing off of the cardiac deterio¬ ration came after a series of reports that Eisenhower was growing weaker Earlier Thursday, doctors reported that Mrs. Ei¬ senhower was keeping close by her hus¬ WASHINGTON iAP> - Secretary of State by Sen. J W. Fulbright. D-Ark -and the The secretary of state said that basically, hope that the other side will soon put pole¬ band's bedside. '' cordial atmosphere contrasted with the a satisfactory settlement bringing stability mics aside and begin in good faith to nego¬ Spartacuss. MSU s answer t.. .vtion ilii mi P Rogers declared U.S. readiness Line", solves student problem an¬ chill accorded Dean Rusk during his latter to Southeast Asia probably must come from tiate an end to this tragic war. ' "The evidence of congestive heart fai¬ i! lor secret talks with the enemy swers questions cutting through r.h- months as secretary of state an international political agreement rath¬ On the military side, Rogers said, the lure persist unchanged." the Thursday i .• fit lenient, and for simul- eaucratic red tape Many committeemen found Rusk too er than a Korea-type solution leaving siz¬ United States is seeking agreement with morning bulletin said i. Vietnamese troop with- "He sleeps for longer periods." the able U.S. forces still on the scene for guard North Vietnam on mutual troop pullouts Jhe organization, financed bv iwal over a w ry short period of time." tough on Vietnam policy News and ASMSU. was established L-: I think your first performance has been which would scale down hostilities and pro¬ Thursday morning report said, "but when 1-.iii R< avoided saying such private awake is lucid and able to converse with . and is housed in 327 Student Services excellent very useful and an auspi¬ He treated the Viet Cong's attack on the mote peace talks. year gotiations ha ye already begun at Paris- . . . members of the family, and last even¬ Bldg. The Spartacuss staff may tie grounds that talking about secret talks cious beginning." Fulbright told the 55- Saigon government's offer of private nego¬ tiations as probably "propaganda" and said "We are prepared to begin withdrawals ing. with President Nixon reached at 355-4560 from 1-5 p m on ipairs their usefulness-and he indicated vear-old Rogers, a former lawyer, at the that past negotiating progress in the Paris of our forces simultaneously with those weekdays i enemy has not yet accepted Saigon's wind-up of three hours of testimony of North Vietnam," he said. "Mrs. Eisenhower remains close to the talks and "out of the way places" had come During the past quarter. Spartacuss test offer for informal meetings. Rogers ranged through current foreign As for the political future of South Viet¬ general's bedside and is a constant source has dealt with problems which range It 's like asking someone else to dinner. ' issues in his over-all presentation-defend through secret sessions, also in Paris. of support and encouragement both to nam, he testified that is an issue to be from finding all the goodies students •gers said. You can only have dinner with ing President Nixon's go-ahead for an T don't put much faith in what they say settled among the South Vietnamese them¬ the general and others present." can get for free on their 21st birthday f he antiballistic missile system, expressing Only the vigorous treatment he is re¬ sup publicly." Rogers said of Hanoi and Viet selves. to extracting an extra bureau from the Foreign Rela- hope for a Middle East solution foresee¬ The United States does not want to ceiving. doctors have said. i» keeping Ei¬ Cong utterances. "If they are serious about management of Abbott Hall ' ' global ing potential substantial progress in deal that part of an senhower alive. giving a peace and want to talk in good faith, we are wield veto power over . .■ •. men living in one room eign policy of the new ing with the Soviets. ready." over-all settlement, he said. The latest report confirmed that the | < Beginning the new quarter with an - x- on The session was car- On Vietnam, he offered the fullest out Sen. Albert Gore, D-Tenn.. voiced con¬ general's heart is slowly but surely losing Rogers added that the United States and panded. already seasoned staff. Spar', line publicly delivered by the \ixon ad its allies "are offering an honorable and cern about what he described as Pentagon the powe>- to pinno hlood to his vital cuss has resolved to continu¬ of state's first ministration to date on how !• t ope- to organs fervent ■ e -onable outcome" and "It is our (Please turn to page 21) ing its usefulness to tin- MSI c i m 'tie group headed achieve peace. Friday, March 28, 1969 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan A Officials Jordon slam 1 Ferris disr for N ATIONS. N village \ ITK1 > i in Cairo. Egyptian President Israelis "resorted to the used Gamal Abdel Nasser told a con- Controversy still surrounds the incidents of racial vio¬ acc bombing of civilians in Jordan," lence and arrests which occurred at Ferris State College Security gress of his Arab Socialist Fl-Farra said He called for staging Union that the Big Four must recently The House Committee on Colleges and Univer¬ "adequate action under Chapter sities met with the Michigan State Police Wednesday to Didanian act quickly to defuse the situa- Seven" of the U.N. charter, receive testimony on the events at the college. to head oft Sig Four tion in the Middle Fast because authorizing sanctions and even ling the it was nearing the explosion use of military force, as the Early this month. Ferris was shaken by demonstrations point only things that could stop Is¬ evolving from racial incidents. Victor F Spathelf. pres¬ counter- The crisis cannot wait any raeli attacks. ident. ended the unrest by charging 265 black and three -or war more than it has. he said in white students with trespassing. The students barricaded lermines Tekoah said Ein Hazar was a broadcast speech monitored themselves in a campus building during the demonstrations in Beirut It is a miracle that the operational headquarters of uc. Kin it has remained so long without Al-Fatah. the Arab organiza¬ Rep. Vincent Pettipren. chairman of the House comm¬ of Salt tion he blamed for most terror ittee. said. "Through the insensitivity of the administrat¬ exploding." ion to the cultural and racial needs of the student body, the cause it Amman claims that 18 civil- acts against Israel. The Israeli ambassador said Ferris campus incidents resulted in violence." terror ians were killed and 25 wounded it if tho when four Israeli jets bombed it included armories, canteens Pettigren said that "no preventive measures were taken" not stop an(i rocketed the area around and living quarters for Arab during the racial incidents. Through the inaction of the 1 would Salt, about halfway between commandos and a roadblock administration in arresting violators earlier, it resulted where civilian travelers were in state and nation wide adverse publicity regarding our that capital and the Jordan- m"t in- River crossing to Israeli-oc- questioned-but there are no ability to get along with each other, he said. ith sides civilian villages in it." eupied territory. Pettipren thought that arrests should have been made red tor a ( V Nasser claimed that on U.S. poli- the Middle East has not "These centers of attack Published when were the injured. original violence occurred in which 22 students against Israel, these bases for meeting c hanged under President Nixon, how to operations of terror and murder Although the official report from the House sub-committee He said he received an The Paper, which has had trouble find ig a publisher, at last went on distribution against Israeli citizens." he has not vet been publicized, several parties have offered American working paper on the around campus. Mark Hayes, T ra\ rse City sophomore, was one of several said, "were the targets of yes¬ Middle Fast crisis a few days Opinions and recommendations on the subject. terday's action." distributing the paper near the Auditor 'm. State News photo by Jerry McAllister ago and asserted that it "ex¬ The original demands of the black students were out¬ SN correc pressed full support for the lined to a MSU Black Students' Alliance fact-finding team Israeli position." He warned as the following: students of reprisals for Israeli raids HOUSING OF 'PAPER' -Protection for black Ferris students when asked for. against Egyptian soil. -Black representation besides cooks and janitors. in The The day will come." Nasser - An end to black discrimination, and Legislator blasts officials Wed- declared, when the bombing -That no black students be reprimanded for the canir incor- shelling of Egyptian civil- pus incidents. pie in ians will be answered by the Abraham Ulmer. Detroit district executive of the Mich¬ ichers bombing and shelling of Israeli igan Civil Rights Commission, said that Ferris officials impanies and dent Services Bldg about two edv. Lilian ID HUTCHISON It provides provides rent-tree space at transportation others and operate a business it her: companies and dent business weeks Services Bldg. about two weeks ago after requesting were "out of step with the times and of the pre-( ivil Wat- icher i-itv C< Am- the very verv time time it nresMire.s the ago after requesting legislature f< ;o that all profits from it would space since June. vintage." hassador Muhammad H. Fl- and 4o to newly ordained ministers Milton B. Dickerson. vice- 'Until the administration college president join us Farra of Jordan and Yosef Rep. Dennis O. Cawthorne. outlay approp at Fei very own tax-free church." president for student affairs, in the 20th century, there will be racial Tekoah gave sharply contrast¬ R-Manistee. criticized Univer¬ ris State College." he said. Questioned about Cawthorne s said he was not going to sit ing pictures of the Israeli raid. sity officials Thursday for pro¬ See related article. Page 18 eference "> deviant sexual Robert L. Green, associate director o in judgment "at this point viding office space for "The iractice. Freedman said on student use of offices in the ban Affairs and professor of education, led the cam- Paper." kissing is pus after the incidents. After making w he called an Cawthorne objects to the tax¬ maybe he think;- Student Services Bldg. lade the fol- THE STATE NEWS I have let the student gov¬ intense observation" of the situation. 1 payer subsidizing the under¬ In an editorial. Freedman ernment (ASMSlIi do most lowing recommendations to the Michig n Rights Com¬ ground operation. He said the the mission: explained that total sexuality of the work advising me of the March 24 issue. "Total Sex- p™*ec, thy University ." the context of the current -Increased black employment as ad in which should be used . space uality. ' contained "obscen¬ David Freedman. The the total phy- lessors, and student representatives. Pap¬ • by various student organizat¬ ities. immodest illustrations, -More activity in the area of hun ers" editor, claims to be an al lov ions." Dickerson said. thinly-disguised invitations to ordained minister of the n two persons in Cawthorne also objects to black-white communication. ted Press International. Inland l)ail\ Pn deviate sexual relationships and -A rumor control program. Press. Michigan Press Association. Mi Universal Life Church. Inc The of becoming them- The Paper's" claim of be¬ draft and tax dodge advice. " • -A black studies program and assui sexuality issue calls itself a ing published by Jo Hooper t think it's obscen- and physical safety The Republican legislator religious publication, Enterprises. Inc." objecting to." Fred- Cawthorne said "The Paper Green said the situation involved a mple: pointed out that the University Cawthorne said part of the newspaper provides advice on 1 referring to Caw- applied for incorporation in he probably doesn't March 1%9 but the applicat- Rep. Donald Holbrook. whose district includes h RUSH said he th the political per- returned because of supported Spathelf s actions. "Student disorder has to be controlled, he said Sigma Alpha Mu of the paper - which iack 0f sufficienfinformation. "Qualify for a'jdra something thai " Holbrook blamed the difficulties on others than Jo Hooper Enterprises. Sammies ion. legaily use druj le Republicans Inc.. has in fact never incor¬ directly involved of church sacrament reedman said I believe Ferns was used as a testing ground t April 7 and April 9 porated under the laws of Mich¬ counts accorded the granted spac igan or any other state and is. how far students can go. he said. I don't think th dents should run our university campuses, and if therefore, a legal nullity. are disorders, they should be quelled immediately I object to having the tax¬ Asked if he felt the situation had been sufficient payer subsidize this operation, vestigated. Holbrook replied that he did not know a Marshall Music Co. particularly when the news¬ sr mMshaus had not read the transcript of the House sub-comn paper claims to be a private Holbrook said he intends to learn as much as he can corporation publishing relig- the situation. materials." EAST LANSING Giant Record "EVERYTHING i ® Monaco SALE FANTASTIC 2 FOR $3 SALE frorr hun¬ dreds of great artists on top labels, such as . . . Glen Camobell, The Sjprerr.es, ' Judy Collins, Johnny Riv¬ ers, Cher, Mamas & Papas, Bobby Golds- boro, the 4 Seasons, Aretha Franklin, Ti¬ juana Brass, the Roll¬ ing Stones, Jack Jones, 3750 Roger W i 11 iam 3, Lov- in* Spoonful and MONACO You'll v ant to grab by Weatlie1(3 an armful at these low Marshall Music VALUES TO $5.79 ea. (®) YOUR CHOICE 2 for $3 Redwoods Ross •WHILE T HEY L AST' traditional rxJUmrr 205 E. Grand River March 28. 1969 3 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan NEWS summary nam Viets PARIS (AP (--North and the Viet Cong Viet¬ Thurs¬ see Their statements at the full-scale session of the peace talks hinted that they expected private talks 10th expressed surprise that the Viet Cong's National Liberation Front delegation had not accep¬ as trickery eorrect the the basis of Hanoi md tlM good will to political solution" MK's s on four points t've points day denounced as trickery the ted the Thieu proposal But President Nixon's administra¬ I'h<-e demands efforts of Washington and Sai¬ are jn.i\:mum tion to run short of time and a Front spokesman character¬ gon to get private talks started the sami including a complete withdraw¬ ized the Saigon offer as "in¬ A capsule summary of toe day's on a Vietnam settlement. But feel a heavy weight of public- nine al nt I S troops. pressure to end the war in a solently' demanding that the prev they left the door ajar. Front proceed to its own dis¬ titions «>! They did not reject the con¬ hurry One source said the solution. changes Defense rests Communist side might be over¬ cept of private talks as such As for the formal session of but the conditions attached, estimating that pressure 5 1 4 hours, there was no vis¬ next Thur- U.S. Ambassador Henry Ca¬ particularly those laid down ible sign of progress. Asked From v bot Lodge, in a brief exchange by President Nguyen Van Thieu prepared to be¬ Lodge replied: "You'll in Sirhan trial "H e are following the formal statments. about this. in news conference Tuesday. gin withdrawals of oar fon t's si in alia aeoa s l\ with llitist» o\ The defense rested Thurs- ■ P \orth \ ietaani." al of Sirhan Bi-hara Sirhan a case a psy -II i Ilia in /'. liofjers. Secretary of Stale Regional a in nature but nonetheless valid ts -i attornev Crant B Cooper announced invh -t defense testimony concerning Robert F Kennedy revamped iu n and iour w »men then was dismissed tale on Friday will begin rebuttal testi- International News i»n\. adding ecord already over 7.000 pages since the rial beg i iJan WASHINGTON speech in the California Demo- meteorological satellite equipped with solar . further systematic restructuring is on the "" ing urban and social problems Thursday in a ,i! .1 ■ fiivei.«d op|\ moments before and a few batteries to obtain information about weather move he said will have major impact on fed¬ way." he said. •.a1 roin h;s"assassination in Los Angeles Ambassador eral services to everybody. "Each reform." the President said in a prospects. The aim is to make it possible for citizens statement. "I believe will have a major The satellite is in an orbit ranging from •vei Sup> or Court Judge Herbert V Walker denied as well as state and local officials to turn to impact on the quality of American govern- ics to sh. w the 12 minute film, saying it would be in- 427 to 386 miles above the earth. central offices for help with problems involv¬ ment-an impact which will benefit all of our ,itiT.v - n. e Sirhan in. his testimony gave no indication • • citizens-in all parts of our country-well be¬ • ing the national government. • heard Kennedy speak. The first step was a presidential order set¬ yond the lifetime of this administration. Prime Minister Harold Wilson arrived in ting up eight regional headquarters for five "The actions I announce today are im¬ Nigeria Thursday on a mission he hopes departments and agencies with closely re¬ portant steps toward achieveing such changes." INTRODUCING will bring an end to the 21-month-old civil lated activities in which he called disad¬ The President contended that more day- war between the federal government and the vantaged areas of our society. by-day authority can be given to those at The order covers the departments of Hous¬ lower levels in the administrative agencies secessionist Biafra. ing and Urban Development, Health. Educat¬ and bring about better and quicker decisions. Nigeria is a former British colony. ion and Welfare. Labor, the Office of Econ¬ The immediate changes will involve dis¬ I • • • omic Opportunity, and the Small Business Administration. mantling regional offices now operating in Leaflets appeared on the streets of Rio They will set up regional headquarters in many cities and the moving of some em¬ de Janeiro calling for formation of a peo¬ Boston, New York. Philadelphia. Atlanta, Chi¬ ployes. Philip S. Hughes, assistant budget direct¬ ple's army to overthrow Brazil's military- Dallas-Fort Worth. Denver and San Fran¬ J cago. or. said that 1 200 or 1.500 employes may be cisco. These offices will handle aifVwhere dominated government. faced with moving now. but that others will each. The unsigned leaflets said: "The only true from two to 11 states New York and New Jersey, plus Puerto transfer to other government offices remain¬ " ing in the cities where they now work. opposition to dictatorships is that organiz¬ Rico and the Virgin Islands, will form one The process of putting the new program into _ ed by the people themselves, fighting and region. The Denver office will cover 11 effect, he said, may require 18 months. mountain and prarie states. organizing for the fight." • • • Olivetti Under'.von T'.nrinn calculator Japanese automobile exports in February registered a 71.5 per cent increase from the nanv as three corresponding month last year with an all- time high of 70.099 units, the Japan Auto¬ L 328 L.iKjtsly ired results—up to simultaneously three mobile Manufacturers Assn. announced Thurs- nylon jacket for the man ic ma k—up and mark—dowi da>' with outdoor-action hobbies phone Mr. Andrews • i a power with Information Minister Nguven Hgoc An lift¬ ed Thursday a month-long suspension of Hoa like golfing, sailing, backyard business Binh-Peace. a Saigon daily published by a machines co. Vietnamese Roman Catholic priest. puttering. . .anything that An said the paper may resume publication today. It had been suspended on the grounds requires action-ease in a that it had distorted the truth and denied the legal status of some government agencies. transeasonal jacket. Blue, • Chancellor Kurt Georg • • Kiessinger of West rust, yellow or navy 5 * HI CD'S' IT U.U. o. WAYNE COCHRAN and Ms CC. Riders ** Germany arrived in Vienna Thursday for a two day official visit. He is expected to con¬ with concealed hood, fer with Chancellor Josef Klaus on East European affairs and Austria's wish for a link with the Common Market. drawstring bottom • • • Sizes S,M,L,XL A potentially damaging earthquake struck the Philippines Thursday registering seven on 14.00 the Richter scale of 10. The quake, centered 170 miles southeast of Mindano. was estimated as being capable of damaging a populated area. National News Gen. Ralph E. Haines, Jr., Army com¬ mander-in-chief in the Pacific, told a lunch¬ Ja cob son's 210 ABBOTT RD. eon club in Houston. Texas. Thursday that the U.S. had essentially defeated the formal enemy in Vietnam. ^FUN* of — • • • Republican Mayor John V. Lindsay picked LEARN Chief Police Inspector Sanford Garelik. a FLYING... Democrat. Thursday as his running mate in his bid for re-election. • • • Eighty to 90 prisoners in the Cuyahoga Coun¬ ty Jail near Cleveland tore up bunks, plumb¬ WHEN YOU ENROLL IN THE MSU FLYING CLUB'S SPRING TERM GROUND SCHOOL. All students, faculty, and staff are en¬ ing and started fires before order was restor¬ AVIATION ed Thursday by deputies using tear gas and couraged to attend. firemen using high-pressure hoses. A Ground School, with the aid of text materials, maps, and visual aids, Sheriff Ralph Kreiger said the disturban¬ introduces you to the fundamentals of FLYING and air navigation. When ces centered around a restriction on visiting you finish the course, you're ready for the Private Pilot Written Exam. privileges. Be sure to come to our introductory class Michigan News MONDAY, 7 P.M., ROOM 31, UNION BLDG. A bill was introduced in the Michigan and find out just what we're talking about ! Take on the challenge of house Thursday to give cities 80 per cent FLYING . . . become a "Winged Spartan" today ... a pilot tomorrow. of the $100-million recreation bond money and outstate areas 20 per cent. Rep. James Bradley, D-Detroit. chief spon¬ ^Vfic VMH ., The Blue-eyed King of Soul sor of the plan said the money should go "where Michigan's problems are.'' And His C.C Riiiers in Person • • • A bill aimed at facilitating human organ r.D.'s Three Big Cochran Shows: transplants in the state received preliminary approval in the Michigan Senate Thursday. The measure specifies who may donate a 6.30 p.m. AT C.D.'s ON NORTH 27 }yL heart, liver or other organ, and provides pro¬ 11:30 p.m. CNLY $2.50 PER PERSON w tection for physicians performing such opera¬ MICHIGAN STATE UNIVFRSITY FLYING CLUB A:* it" tions. ika ( line, executive editor es S. (,rtinelli, managing edit. iria instett, campus editor MICHIGAN V I'ankhurst, editorial editor Carol Hudrou\ advertising manag< Deborah hitch, outdoor STATE NEWS a The State News is a free and editorially independent student newspaper. Editorials express the unanimous opinion of the UNIVERSITY editorial board of the State News unless otherwise indicated. Under the provisions of section 6.1 of the "Report on Aca¬ demic Freedom for Students at Michigan State University," final responsibility for all news and editorial content rests with the editor-in-chief. Six-time recipient of the Pacemaker award for outstanding journalism. EDITORIAL Nixon's campus Nixon's crackdown on cam¬ handcuffs on us as we try to pus violence last week appear¬ deal effectively with our prob¬ ed to be less of a slam aimed lems." at campus disrupters and more , Another fear is that college of an appeasement to all par¬ officials will hesitate to dis¬ ties caught in the crossfire be¬ cipline dissidents when they tween college administrators, know the federal penalty is enraged state and federal law¬ going to make punishment makers, disinvolved students, much more stringent than and ultra-radicals who often they desire. seem intent on tearing down a Perhaps the federal govern¬ lot more than they intend to ment should have kept their build back up. hands out of campus issues Nobody likes to have the entirely, but if a crackdown tranquility of a college's state¬ was unavoidable, it is of at ly buildings and lavish land¬ least some consolation that it scapes disrupted-nobody ex¬ occurred with a thud instead 'I believe that was the shortest performance cept perhaps the ultra-radicals. of a slam. of 'Dionysius '69' I've ever seen' The philosophical arguments on the role of violence as a tactic in social change is per¬ haps better left to the revolu¬ LARRY LERNER tionaries. Nearly everyone will also admit that not all is hun- ky dory on campuses. Nixon expressed this admission when Finch, seek to tip the scales campus dissidents. So far Ted: on he stated, "Student unrest does not exist in a vacuum but re¬ flects a deep and growing so¬ toward the law of the balance. and order side The two laws, HEW has failed to issue any guidelines for administrators waiting in the wings both of which deal with cut¬ to follow in enforcing the new cial unrest affecting much of laws. A law that is not en¬ ting off federal assistance to our world today. Self-righteous rebels involved in campus dis¬ forced serves only to make a indignation by society will orders, earmarked what ap¬ mockery of the judicial pro¬ solve none of this." Thus far the anti- The 'Kennedy Syndrome." a term I use peared to be a trend toward cess. new "He may not Justice important federal intervention in campus disruption laws have never with much solemnity, has occurred twice have the literary prowess of /'resident in the past five and one-half years. It is Earle W. Clifford, dean of been used, and until the vague¬ John Kennedy nor the magnetic appeal of Robert disruptions. caused by the unexpected, violent death of student affairs at Rutgers, ness is removed from the pro¬ the senior politically active member of the Kennedy, but he does have something all his own. pressed the same point one Solution from within visions it is doubtful college Kennedy family. The "Syndrome" itself involves the rapid departure of those in He has the thoughtfulness, dedication and sincerity step further when he suggest¬ Surprisingly, however, Nix¬ officials will be able to ef¬ the senior Kennedy's constituency to the ed that universities striving for on's crackdown statement last needed to lead this nation fectively enforce them. There next eldest. law and order should first be¬ week will probably crack few is also a reluctance on the part In the fall of 1963. Robert F. Kennedy, gin with justice, after which campus radicals. Rightly so, of college officials to be fed¬ then attorney general, inherited a substan¬ Robert's executive position, attorney gen¬ rying on of Robert Kennedy's conct tial number of the followers of President eral. the substantive law and order would follow. Nixon chose to leave enforce¬ eral law enforcement agents. as reasons for their about the American Indian, improving t John Kennedy. He began his campaign for not becoming "Senate men." conditions of our cities, but he will be co (Somewhat reminiscent of the ment of the laws to the ad¬ Senate seat from New York the following As a a "Senate man." the senator is mak¬ David D. Henry, president of ing out with his own legislative progrj refutations to the clamor last ministrators themselves, thus spring, wept openly at the Democratic ing tremendous strides. He has become this spring which may offer significant pi depleting the federal govern¬ the University of Illinois, National Convention in Atlantic City when Majority Whip, a so-called " nothing" job. year for law and order in ci¬ he stepped up to the podium in a tribute to posals to add to or counteract those ties. ) ment's role in carrying out the pointed out that many educa¬ his late brother, and won the Senate seat which places him in the Senate leader¬ President Nixon. tors consider such laws to be ship. This adds to his already burdensome The problem that exists for campus purges. No administra¬ from Republican Kenneth Keating by some responsibilities including taking care of Sen. Kennedy's warmness, affable i universities is to maintain an tors want the federal govern¬ overlapping and difficult to in¬ 700.000 votes that November. his family-plus Robert's 11 children. ture and. ""unfortunately." his position the last of the four Kennedy brothe atmosphere conducive to a free ment breathing down their terpret. "Everybody endorses As junior senator, he became active in Appropriately for a Kennedy, he has make him the undisputable head of t programs and legislation to help the poor, more than met these responsibilities. He interplay of learning, while necks telling them how their the purpose of such legisla¬ those in the ghettos, the American Indian, attacked the purpose Democratic totem pole. With this, t behind the Sentinel tion." he said, "but whether second, and final advent of the " Kenne still admitting the value of college is to be run. Even the and to try to get us out of Vietnam. When deployment project-the purpose that De¬ the legislation achieves that he died by an assassin's bullet in the midst fense Sec. Laird, from his statements, had Syndrome." there is. indeed, hope for some of the immediate is¬ Rev. Theodore Hesburgh, Pres¬ better America of his own campaign for the presidency shown to be bankrupt of any practicality sues, if not the ideologies, ident of the University of Notre purpose or becomes restrictive last June, the R. F. K. followers were be¬ or consistency. But let us Ijeware. The senator can It Dame and famous for his 15 is less easy to resolve. There that arouse campus radicals. side themselves with grief. All America Not only has he provided " liberals" with this nation, but only with an end to I is the danger of creating in¬ wept But. of course, the nation had to con- Achieving a balance minute "meditation period" a strong voice on issues such as aid to Bia- Hncism. Imperialism, and Oppres Achieving that balance is for campus disrupters, said. justices. and these in turn Continue it did and so the second phase fra. revising the draft, reorienting the role now stands for. can he lead this nati of the United States in the world, the car¬ justly, in moral strength and in unity. make for more provocations.'' the juggling act that universi¬ "The only point I wanted to of the Kennedy Syndrome" was ushered ties will have to concern them¬ make . . . was that the only in. Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, eulogizing his Officials handcuffed slain brother as "a good and decent man." selves with this spring. Two ultimate solution must come The Paper statement was the last surviving son of Joseph P. new federal laws, passed in from within universities." Dean Clifford of Rutgers has Kennedy, once ambassador to The Court late 1968 and outlined to ad¬ also noticed that "When Con¬ of St. James. ministrators in a letter from Unenforced gress adopts laws which in¬ Ted Kennedy after two months of self- EDITOR'S NOTE: Following is a state¬ ciologists explored all aspects of sex s vade the area of educational exile spoke to the nation and proclaimed Health. Education and Wel¬ A number of problems arise that he would pick up the fallen stand¬ ment by The Paper concerning recent cri¬ MSU students received credits tow< fare (HEW) Sec. Robert from Nixon's soft crackdown discipline, they begin to put ard" of his brothers. In the frenzy of the ticisms of his publication. The editor is the graduation for participating in the : Democratic National Convention rumors Rev. David Freedman. posium. The Total Sexuality issue of 1 Paper was published in the same spi began circulating that Teddy" would ac¬ OUR READERS'MIND cept a draft or that he would openly de¬ The Paper is the name of the second cam¬ of open and unabashed inquiry into nature of sex and love in America. clare his candidacy. It seems that even pus newspaper at MSU. Manistee Rep "What is at stake here, however, isi, Mayor Daley called him to say that the Dennis Cawthorne today attacked offi¬ merely pornographic material. The Paj Support volunteer bill nomination was his for the asking. But. cials at MSU for providing free office is outspoken on politics as well as morali army even though it seemed obvious that dele¬ gations from New York. Massachu¬ setts. Pennsylvania. California. Michigan space which to The Paper, the latest issue of deals with sexuality and its place in Editorially, it is against the United Stat involvement in the Vietnam War. it the Western world. and others would lead the Kennedy ban¬ against MSU's chemical and biological w To the Editor: Accompanying articles on the subordi¬ fare research and other University pr case histories as possible. If you feel a concise summary c o 26 Robert Circle. ner in a last second unfurling of emotions. nate role of women in American I have corresponded with Sen. Mark society, ects not in the interests of citizens of i your personal freedom has been dimin¬ Syosset, New York. 11791 Of course, Edward Moore Kennedy could not bring Hatfield (R-Ore.) several times in on contemporary sexual morality, on the United States. Legislators have done wl ished by the threat of conscription, so any comment on other details of the Vol- himself to plunge into the contest. role of sex in rock music, some love the last few months about the Volunteer much so that you have altered career ifciteer Army bill will be appreciated. they could in the past to pressure MSU However, the Kennedy Syndrome" had poems, and some articles on strictly poli¬ Army bill that he has introduced in the plans of otherwise done things you Bruce J. Chasan arrived again. Two girls from "The Vil¬ suppress The Paper, and this latest att£ tical topics, were several photographs of a current session of Congress. The rea¬ on the University is only a further exa wouldn't ordinarilv do. please send me Svo . NY lage" in New York City started an "EMK male and female embracing in the nude. sons why I support this bill are myraid. in '72" campaign with buttons bearing the pie of that process of stifling dissent. T1 Rep. Cawthorne said that this "Total Sex¬ is found it difficult to I am particularly anxious to eliminate above inscription distributed throughout one reason we sect uality" Issue of The Paper contained "ob¬ the eers need for young men to choose car¬ that fit the bureaucratic criteria Fine group of young people the country. Thousands of letters contin¬ scenities and thinly disguised invitations a printer ' " What is involved is an attempt to p uously have poured into his offices each to deviate sexual relationships." the of being in the national interest in week; some undoubtedly love letters from vent expression of politi To the Editor: The editor, an ordained minister of the order to obtain a deferment; for when issues in a public medium of commuii They are welcome to come to the little and big girls alike. The rumors about Universal Life Church, says: To the Vice President of Student Affairs: tion. The suppression of this issue of 1 our government gains this much con¬ Pines any time as they really behaved when he will declare his candidacy for the trol over our lives, then we are losing For the past week we have had a group like young adults and not like spoiled "Obscenity is in the eye of the beholder Paper is really an attempt by the Powe '72 election are about ready to be spread. Sex is the battle for freedom at home as well of thirty-eight students from MSU stay¬ only one aspect of a love relation¬ that-Be to prevent people from coi Yes. the Kennedy 'charisma" is still in ship, and the Total Sexuality issue of The abroad. ing with us and we want to compliment We eating and discussing their ideas about as appreciate the way Mr. John G. existence. Although many past supporters the University on what a fine group of Paper is really about love--and the distort¬ cial change in this country. As a result of my correspondence, and Munn counseled the group as we had of John and Robert do not have the stom¬ ed role in which young people they are. We sometimes sex is viewed in our so¬ It suggests that Michigan legislat provided this bill reaches the appro¬ have so much trouble with the college no complaints on them from the rest ach to remain in the political arena, the ma¬ ciety. are more interested in preserving th priate Senate and House committees. students that we have thought of out¬ of the group or from our guests. jority of them will attempt to lead another "There is nothing obscene' about Mi- version of "law and order' and in impr Raymond Underwood, legal counsel to Pauline Hasty Kennedy, Ted. to the White House. Senator Hatfield, will request my appear¬ lawing them from our lodge, but the Pines Resort Apts chaelangelo's l)aiid or Rodin's The Kiss. ing their public image than in promot The senator has all the qualities of a witness. students from MSU have renewed our although public censors may have con¬ constructive social change. And there ance as a faith in them again. Aspen. Colorado great president. He may not have the liter¬ demned them at the time these sculptures Hence, I wish to accumulate as many certainly nothing obscene' about two p ary prowess of President John Kennedy appeared. A recent Supreme Court rul¬ nor the magnetic appeal of Robert Ken¬ pie in love unless there is someth. LINUS, HERE, HAS DEVELOPED A I GJANT EVERVONE It) LINE UP ing established that so-called pornograph¬ seriously wrong with the society in wh NEld PRINK THAT WILL HELP US OVER HERE... WE'LL PASS THE nedy, but he does have something all his ic material must be entirely without 'so¬ own. He has the thoughtfulness, dedica¬ they live." TO COIN A FEW BALL GAMES... IT'S CUP ALONG THE LINE... cially redeeming value ' A BAlANCEPELECm Th< aids only seven or eight people ids and develop a love/hate grounds. music and the rhythms of the Wisconsin Assembly Thursda; relationship of memorable pro¬ takes trip in writing, it will have been worth the effort. ' Student governments should portions while floating a dis¬ integrating steamship down¬ But the acting is sheer plea sure, and Huston uses his lo¬ East. Lucas appeared at the coffee¬ passed a bill to require th pulsion from Wisconsin publi» ALGIERS cations with astonishing re¬ house last winter and filled it (APt President Nikolai V Soviet Pdgorny begin to use the resources To market. . . river to blow up a German sults. The film was shot al¬ to overflow Located in the universities of any student con victed of disruptive behavior a available for changing the de¬ gunboat. arrived on an officia I visit When she goes to market, she really goes to most entirely on the black, Student Services Bldg base¬ any university in the nation. cisions feel are hurting Everything is delightfully swampy Ruiki River in the Con Thursday to this country which we market. But contrary to what it rrvjst seem, this ment. The Joint should once The measure requires that ; We must begin to organ¬ hokey, to be sure. The final go, and many of the hazards keeps the head of its oi us. coed is simoly examining an entry at the art show again attract capacity crowds. student convicted of such ; lawed Communist ize the students, the proposal scene (which must be seen incurred in making "The Al¬ Off campus, the Rising Sun- party being held at the Kresge Art Center. crime be expelled from si: to be believed) goes beyond rican Queen were as impres- liners are appearing at Grand¬ State News photo by Norm Payea months to two years, at the dis Students will be able to almost any boundaries of log- sive as the film itself (those mother's. and a comedy impro¬ Podgorny s special 1 y u shin cretion of the university admin flew in with an escort < pick up the list in all living visation group ney. George Hamilton and Ringo varying reactions. last performed in public Aug. 29. "Ow. this is terrible. I kep "Soul Mixer" J loter hav Fran offered then hoping they'd come back." Victoria Adrian, a petite 1? yL million a night or more to go year-old brunette. stage, but the Beatles, "First Paul gets married a featuring J back not on hurting for money, have now we're never going to se refused. them any more-I don't knw The and the clothes- which is worse." said teen-age j The size Paramou tearing mood of ecstatic audiences, plus increasing com¬ Beatles Sally Webster. McCartney ried New York divorcee Lind ma'i J ■ TONITE ADM. } * plexity of the pop group's elec¬ tronic has musical paraphernalia made logistics for live Eastman howling protest of outside his house. this month It's just as well they're nc to worshiper th performances comparable to ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ planning a small-scale war. coming back." another fan said. NOW! Gadtei.NOW! CABARET THEATRE HIT SATIRICAL REVUE "BRISK, BITING . . DETROIT NEWS "POLITICS & FUN . . DETROIT FREE PRESS SUNDAY THRU WED. 8:00 P.M. IN THE RATHSKELLER ADMISSION—$ 1.50 FOR STUDENTS WITH I.D. $2.50 FOR GENERAL PUBLIC RESERVATIONS — 337-131 1 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Noted pianist to visit MoU ed Lateiner. himself, is noted this work for RCA Victor Professionally he has an artist is , in oppot for his some 18 years ago admirable background Per- be missed interpretations of Beeth¬ oven. This affinity started for forming the Emperor Con¬ Due to the special r Lateiner's parents wer«' certo with the Boston Sym¬ him at age 16. when he insisted this program tickets ; Monday night in the Auditor¬ Polish immigrants who had phony at age 19. he recieved offered free to all Ni ium, MSU is fortunate to be on studying Beethoven's final moved to Cuba Both amateur able to present a work, the "C Minor Sonata. a standftt^ ovation Soon after¬ dents, on presentation o special con¬ muicians. they taught their son ward he made his New York cert by the widely acclaimed Op. 111." Playing this difficult tivity Book Coupon K to play piano at age 4 Later, debut, already a veteran of 80 are available at pianist. Jacog Lateiner selection he auditioned for lateiner and his younger now recitals and orchestral ap¬ Union Ticket Office, and h particular interest is the world Serge Koussevitzky. and won brother moved to the U.S. and pearances, including a tour of the performance at the premiere of a new composition an immediate engagement to were granted scholarships to Australia. orium by Roger Sessions, one of play in the Beethoven Festival the Curtis Institute of Music Special rates are at Tanglewood. He also record- It is rare that such an ev< available to Lecture-Co America's leading contemp¬ in Philadelphia occurs at MSU. Witnessing Series season ticket hoi orary composers. entirely new composition per- all high s The Ford Foundation formed bv such a distinguished and college groups annually sponsors three new pieces, two of which are to be performed outside of New York. This year, because of the out- musical Isenberg # I TONIGHT AT 8:30 P..V. "1H€ LION IN WINTtR" Nominated for nwiiiriWHH , standing reputation of its Lec- yyi I /w r rv* ochines I I I I [I ^ [J I 7 Academy ture-Concert Series. MSU has g been chosen as one of the pre- / miere sites. The piece. Sessions' "Minds and Machines" will The collision of materialists Awards new "Sonata No. 3." is one of four fuse into the finale of the Isen¬ and idealists is an old one in selections to be played by Lat¬ berg Lecture Series, beginning philosophy and is the reason einer. The other include Three tonight. why "Minds and Matters" was Including: In progress each term since chosen as the lecture topic, Impromptus. Op. 90." by Windows SouVof Schubert. "Phantasie in C 1965. the series concentrates on varying areas of philosophy said Herbert Bohnert. visiting lecturer of philosophy and co¬ BEST PICTURE Major. "Op. 15," also by ■ Students staged "Th< Windows of My Soul," which featured Richard Thomas, Schubert. and "Variations with a barrage of renowned ordinator of the series. • Best Actor • Best Actress * netta Byons and 'am Jackson. The production was produced by Charles on a theme by Paganini (Book lecturers. Bohnert feels that machines • Best Screenplay • Best Director 9 "Dualism in Minds. Models di rected by E Gray and choreographed by Dorothy Jones. 1), ' by Brahms. • Best Costume Design $ lery, *uce and Robots," by Marvin Minsky are now as creatiy^ as the mind by having the ability to • BEST opens the lecture series. Min- UNDO WS OF MY SOUL' skv from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology has de¬ write and arrange thoughts "Minds and Machines" is not ORIGINAL MUSICAL # veloped a hand-eve coordinating peculiar to MSU. Stanford SCORE A f,\ % Gamut to air black specia robot. Films of the robot will University and other campuses be shown at the lecture. have developed similar courses. Hao Wang of the Rockefel¬ The conclusion of the series ler University will present is due to budget difficulties By DAVID GILBERT hat the has attempted to focus ponent of the black bacji-to- by an African dance with "Mathematics By Minds and relating to "needed new pro¬ • ' State News Staff Writer on the question. What shall I Africa movement of the 1920 s. dancers Bernetta Byous. Mar¬ By Machines. April 18. A Wk"PH6 LeVINtAN AVCO EMBASSY F1LM fessors" in the Philosophy Dept The role of Garvey in the film sha Boozer. Richard Brown and "The Windows of My Soul. believe in now'.'" Working with computer developed by Wang can The committee has also run | dramatic examination of vvh\ Bruce Gray, director, and i portrayed by actor Bob Lott> Pam Jackson creating rhythmic be programmed to solve 350 out of resources for new lec¬ P6T6R _ . KATHAR1N6 Dorothy Jones, professional is to place the question of and visual counterparts to the theorems in 8.3 minutes. i such emphasis on choreographer. Demery struc¬ "blackness" into historical per¬ spoken episode. "Minding and Mattering." will ture topics and speakers who OTOOL6 H6PBURN Slackness" in the black com- have not already appeared at will be shown on tured the film in terms of three spective. Demery said. The third section presents be presented by Warren Mc- the University," Bohnert said. Gamut" at 11:30 Saturday episodes connected by dramatic- The second section presents Maxine Gordon, past president Cullock. Massachusetts Insti¬ h WMSB-TY am dances. a black African. Kamuyu Kane- of the MSU chapter of the tute of Technology. May 16 The lectures, presented at 1H€ LION 1NW1NT6R thye. who gives a modern Af¬ NAACP. who represents the A professor of Neurophysiolo¬ 8 p.m. each Friday in Conrad ■Chuck Demery. graduate stu- The first portion of the film JANEMERROW^""*" JOHN CASTLESSST ii."A .hv £;a: . \! ' deals with the historical figure rican's view of black Ameri¬ black American looking at gy. McCulloch has written a Auditorium, are open to the ANTHONY HOPRiNS"'r-Vr NIGEL «IiXK pnt in television and radio fid producer of this film, said **Marcus Garvev. famous pro¬ ca His presentation is followed "blackness." book "Embodiment of Mind." public. JAMES GOLDMAN JOSEPH E. LfVINE JAM-.'-' j. >': " ■ : M.\ . L Rita Breen. music and re¬ ANTHONY HARVEY «^"=-JOHN FU.RV i'" ■ i • search consultant for the pro¬ duction. was able to obtain the hree College sound track for lievers." a black documentary in music bv Voices. Inc. "The Be¬ $1,000.00 SPARTAN TWIN WEST FRANDOR CENTER • 351 0030 Performances & Prices: All Seats Re Demery cited the essential Wednesday & Saturday Matinees at 2:30 — iced' by o wor value of the film as "a direct confrontation" with the issue of "blackness." The film closes REWARD! Sunday at 2:30 & 7:30 — $2 iO Monday Though Saturday at 8:30 |NEW YORK < AP > Tony math at college or become an For INFORMATION tvong Jr.. 16. is such a worrier industrial math researcher. But [ he took the College Board ■ 800's nath first there is college. swer: Resulting In The Arrest lams three tunes-and earned fcrfect scores on nine mathe¬ achievement and aptitude tests. Tony learned his English at He applied to Princeton. City College. Copper Union and the "I am black. Understand me 'or what I am. Do not try to And Conviction Of SPARTAN TWIN R SHOPPING CENTER 3100 EAST SAGINAW Phone 351 IV iO EAST Institute of make me what you would want Person, Or Persons, matics and science tests. an Irish mission school in Hong Massachusetts ■ The fledgling mathematician Kong, speaks it with the kind Technology, in that order, and I owe you no special respect Responsible For The Theft ell his of perfection that indicates he hopes for a scholarship from until you see the beauty in my SHOWN DAILY AT From The Campus Theatre ferbal tests. 696 learned it at school, and con¬ Princeton. blackness." lie 800 But he siders himself bilingual. East Lansing 1:00 - 3:50 - 6:45 and 9:30 p.m. jimigrant who arrived from his Miss Margaret Thorne. who On MARCH 22, 1969 Ltive Hong Kong only two years And 696. with his grades. directs the College Board test¬ ing program, said Kwong could Petitioning open for two posts These Nazis |>uld get him into any college T the country be credited with only four per¬ fect bee the other: CONTACT . . . aren't lor real! (Tony is a slender and hand e duplicates although eac in Big 10 ResidenceHalls Assn. y Is senior class at who ranks fifth in Seward Park >n on different tests. Petitioning is open until April 9 for the positions of execu¬ POLICE DEPARTMENT They are Allied agents High School, the school most of tive secretary and executive treasurer of the Big 10 Resi¬ who must win Chinese - American dence Halls Assn. EAST LANSING, •en-agers attend Students interested in these positions may pick up peti¬ World Warll J He started taking the college (ltranee examinations as a jun That still places him among the top 17 pupils of the 1.4 tions at 323 Student Services Bldg. The association, serving over 100.000 students in the resi¬ MICHIGAN this weekend r last May- t<>r practice million who took College Boards dence halls of all Big 10 schools, seeks to keep its member jHe took them officially last this year. universities informed about each other's policies and phys¬ ■ •.or die (ecember and then, worried that Kwong has four brothers and ical facilities. had not done well enough. sisters. Their lather is man¬ I? took them again in January ager of a small garment fac¬ le need not have worried. tory in Manhattan's Chinatown. | He won perfect s( Tony hopes someday to teach Best n Foreign Filrr STATE ONIGHT Calendar- fc> 2 Features! a dull town until |jfri the Iradilion of "ALFIE" and "MORGAN" ...now from swingiii' lAtndon Sheriff McCullough took over He launched He turned Calendar the "keep Calendar into a boom town beautiful" campaign SUPPORT YOUR LOCAL SHERIFF * JAMESGARNER-JOAN HACKETT WALTER BRENNAN '.'SUPPORT YOUR LOCAL SHERIFF introducing ANTHONY TRENT Shown at I 1 co-starring HARRY MORGAN JACK ELAM Written and Produced by WILLIAM BOWERS Directed by BURT KENNEDY Ufllted Al and (omaok WP Knight wasn't the only one. will work the opener against LP- Davis allowing three' hits and an un¬ MSU picked up two runs in " I've always wanted to be baseball commissioner.'' Kuhn s earned run in five innings of upon accepting the job. "You down on the Dodge assembly line, come on now, di'I Spartan pitchers Zana Easton you always want to be the commissioner of baseball,'' Pete W | Sidelined star and Dave Williams gave up MSU crushed Florida A&M, 16-1, Thursday, des¬ three hits over the final four innings. 1 Irish vered meir of the Detroit News sneered the following afternoon The Free Press's Joe Falls abstained-the afternoon tition had already worked Kuhn over pretty well and no conr| pite the fact that catcher "Harry Kendrick, last A sensational, back-handed would pay a dime to read Falls saying "Me, too " Falls let it | year's leading MSU hitter, was not in the lineup. hang out later when he said "I mean, 'ike man. what is this sp< I Kendrick batted .392 in 40 games in 1968. diving grab in deep left-center field by leftfielder Tim Bo- must Id offen writing business coming to° They name Bowie Kuhn commissi I er of baseball. The players go on strike. Spencer Haywood si I a referee. Ted Williams thinks he can manage Bowie was condemned on all fronts, and why not'' The | Tigers drop another, SOUTH BEND. Ind (UPI) - Notre Dame's spring tionale was perfect; the logic was flawless. football practice will open today, weather permitting, with Kuhn was the serf of the owners They put him where he v| Coach Ara Parseghian's major objective to rebuild his and with that one year contract in their hands, they could | offensive unit. him down the moment he crossed them Queen for a Day" Nine of the starters on the 1968 offensive unit will grad¬ competition: call it "Czar for a Year.'' lose in extra innings uate. ' and Parseghian backfield experience. will have only three players with any We may have to change our offensive philosophy.' Par seghian said. Personnel dictates the type of offense that II Kuhn's handling of the Donn Clendenon affair, however, ccl herald the biggest reversal since Becket double crossed Hrl Of course it might be possible to underestimate the beneficil CLEARWATER. Flu IT1 with a Detroit 2M 001 Ml MO- 4 U 1 can be used, so we will have to do a lot of experimenting role played by the major league owners. If so. however, -A a sacrif Philadelphia 0M 811 110 Ml- 5 15 1 to determine exactly what type of skills we will have. throwing error by short¬ Lolish, Wvatt Radatz (9) Schermao either a first or at least cause to reach for the record book. stop Tom Matchick with two out The Tigers took a 2-0 lead Parseghian lost three starters from his defensive unit (11) and Price, Ceraich 17); Wise. Wag He hoped to get in at least four practice sessions before Historically, there have been few groups as grasping and as I in the 12th inning Thursday en¬ in the first inning when Mickev BACK TO as the major league owners. Comparatively speaking. I ner (7) Wilson (•) Boozer (11) and Ryan. lous abled the Philadelphia Phillies Stanley doubled and added their Edwards (7) Sail!van (12). WP -Boozer. spring vacation begins April 3 Practice will resume April baseball careers of this select club's membership would ml LP-Scherman. 14 with the annual inter-squad game May 10 PLAYING THE BOYS to defeat the Detroit Tigers 5-4 third run off Rick Wise in the Attila the Hun look like a little leaguer. Any notion which I . Matchick threw low to first sixth on Gates Brown's single. after Rick Joseph had led off Willie Horton's double and a sumes Walter O'Malley and Co. was moved by pious purpc | when it compromised on Czar Bowie the First is possible, sacrifice fly. probability remains open for conjecture. v The Phillies scored single HOLD 2ND IN NCAA TOURNEY The satrap of the Astrodome Heart at runs in the fifth and sixth off For his first confrontation with the power elite Kuhn pic I a worthy adversary in Judge Hofheinz. While not a wily old c: f Mickey Lolich and tied the score grapplers advance tacean like Giant owner Horace Stoneham, Hofheinz is more 11 hits Jensen 9 S' in the seventh John Briggs' doubled home a run that gave a handful. RENO. Nev. (UPI)-Jackie Philadelphia a 4-3 lead in the Not only the Astros' sugardaddy. Hofheinz is also the man | Jensen, the former "Golden eighth Stanley's sacrifice fly 13-7 decision hind the most celebreated stadium since the Colosseum- at 191. also got a pin. drop¬ over Roger Weigel place at the end of the first Bov" of college football and sent home the typing run in the By GARY WALKOWICZ of Astrodome. At his command the air conditioner functions Oregon State. round action. ninth. Executive Sports Editor ping James Zguris of Massa¬ grass grows from plastic major league baseball, was in chusetts Spartan 123-pounder Mike Mc- Iowa State led the field with serious condition Thursday fol¬ The I 'hiHit had PROVO. Utah - MSU ad¬ The in 1:14 Gilliard. seeing his first 14 points, while MSU and Ore¬ Like his namesake. Judge Roy Bean. Hofheinz hails from d | vanced nine of its 11 entries only Spartans to lose around the Pecos where money supports George Wallace lowing a heart attack Thursdaj Deron Johnson their first round matches intercollegiate action of the gon State each had 12 points. Jensen, 42. head baseball les pulled a muscle in his side, into the second round of the were vear. defeated James Sarirno Big Ten runnerup Iowa was minute and buys racing cars the next. The green stuff sc | NCAA Wrestling 167-pounder Pat Karslake and inglv is piped around the state like oil and is at the beck coach at the University of Championships of Wyoming, 8-2. fourth with 11 points and Big during batting practice. Tonv 152-pounder Ron Ouellet. call of anyone who knows where to find the tap Nevada, was hospitalized Wed¬ Thursday afternoon John Abajace. wrestling at Eight powers Oklahoma and Ok¬ Taylor strained his achilles Karslake dropped a 5-1 de¬ To a northerner, the machinations of the Texas mafia are nesday after suffering a severe Heavyweight Jeff Smith took 145 for the first time thi's lahoma State were tied for fifth, tendon again. John Callison cision to a tough Pete Maas heart attack during practice bruised a shin sliding home and the first step toward his show¬ season, pinned Steve Johnson of each with eight points. yond fathoming. For a tidewater Yankee like Kuhn. a confro I Doctors at Washoe medical down with Oregon State s Jeff of Oklahoma State Cal Polv in 4:38. tion with a member of the Longhorn brotherhood can lead tc V rookie Ron Stone hit the center, who listed his condi¬ left hand was on Lewis by pinning Bob Knudsen Jack Zindel of MSU won his vert conflict with anything from John Mecom's millions to I by a pitch. of Missouri in 2:30. Lewis won Ouelett. who was switched Kickers improve President of the United States-once removed. Maybe even Li tion as critical when he was 177 match, decisioning Richard his from 145 to 152 for this tourn¬ Industries. admitted, changed it to serious opening match with a pin Wright of Portland State. 5-2 NEW YORK (UPIi -- National in 1 00. ey. was pinned bv Robert Fer- Ma jor league morality Thursday. He remained in the Keith Lowrance. who won the Football League placekickers John Schneider, the favorite raro of Indiana State at 7:55. The Clendenon Affair was actually a question of morality- cardiac intensive care section. 137-pound title in the recent improved their accuracy dur¬ five seconds before the end of jor league style Without going into what Bill Veeck tells so I the match. Big Ten meet, moved into the ing the 1968 season with newcom¬ in The Hustler's Handbook.'' just consider the owners fori second round be beating Mike er Don Cockroft leading the way. moment as a group of old horse traders. They peddle flesl msn's Hall association Big Ten 160 champ Tom Muir decisioned James West of Cali¬ fornia State of Los Rogers of Colorado. Gary Bissell. moved down to Cockioft. who replaced the re¬ tired Lou Groza as the Cleve¬ the old caveat emptor tradition; nothing is finer than to s I an old sore-armed veteran even-up for a brilliant young rookie I woiws inter-residence council Angeles. land Browns' kicker, made good 115 pounds for this meet, drew 9-1. The horse trader deals in the quick, however: not the dl a bye into the second round on 18 of 24 field goal attempts Mike Ellis advanced with a If one side can't deliver the goods on the hoof, the deal's off. MSU was in a tie for second for a .750 percentage. The Clendenon affair was similar to this. The Montreal ex I sion club traded a pair of their fire-sale players for the As I oooo o o oo o o o •VeClde Kotice* brilliant young All-Star. Rusty Staub. Clendenon, who was \ I (please turn to page 9) •SINEWS m THE SICESST: : Z PIECE BOD III CSPTIVITTTf HUMPHREY BOGART KATHARINE HEPBURN . TheAMiCJHU SELMUR PICTURES in collaboration with ROBERTSON ASSOCIATES presents CLIFF ROBERTSON XVA9LV»,-CLAIRE ' ' BLOOM I TECHMCOIM' TECNWSI | -c M Sugsested for Mature Audienc I PLEASE NOTE: On Saturday & Sunday "CHARLY" not shown at matinee scheduled at 5:35-7:35-9:40 •SATURDAY & SUNDAY* Matinee Only--Shown 1:00 & 3:00 ONLY SBUEY Children's Film Festival Opening Speech The Bear & The Mouse The Story of Cinderella PTA I •FtlXl EHKICR E PUBLIC EM ¥$ Ti-Jean Goes Lumbering Dimensions APPRCN Paddle To The Sea S527 SHAKevs S-CedajJ fSA/ovv AVAH-ABie for SPec/jL AT { Christmas Cracker ALL SEATS $1.00 Friday, March 28, 1969 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan sports Lafayette forto p Spartan swim team places in All-Star cage two men in ed out of the national finals competition with In the 200-yard individual INDIANAPOLIS, -Twenty Ind. of the nation's top (UPI) Boston College at 6-7. The west club also has Gene Williams of Kansas State. Bud of St. John's of New York, Tom Hagan of Vanderbilt, Herm Gill¬ iam of Purdue, George Thomp¬ The MSU swimming team medley. Bruce Richads placed college basketball players begin a bad back. Henderson will be Ogden of Santa Clara, Bobby son of Marquette. Bill Justus of placed two entrants into the unable to compete in the three- 17th with a time of 1:5963. arriving today for Saturday's Smith of Tulsa, Willie McCarter Tennessee and Bill Keller of finals into action Thursday af¬ Sprint ace Kalmb;ch failed East-West All-Star game in meter event. of Drake, Butch Beard of Louis¬ Purdue. ternoon at the NCAA Swim¬ to reach the .finals o the 50- Hinkle Fieldhouse. Spartan's 400-yard med¬ An invitation was sent to Lew ming Championships at In¬ The Despite the limitations of a ville, Don Griffin of Stanford ley relay team qualified for the yard freestyle. Kalmbich swam and Harry Hall of Wyoming. Alcindor, UCLA's towering pi- diana University. 21.9. which put hin in 23rd two-hour practice for each club, consolation finals. The team The east club includes John votman, but he did not respond, Senior Duane Green qualified place. West Coach Branch McCracken, of Bob Burke. Dick Crittenden. Jones, Villanova, John Warren game director Don Bates said. for the finals in the one-meter On Wednesday MSJ placed a former great pilot at Indiana, Mark Holdridge and Mike thinks the players will perform diving event. four entrants into s«ni-finals Three other Spartan divers Kalmbach swam a 3:34.92 in well. in the three-meter di\ing com¬ failed to make the finals af¬ ter qualifying for the semi-fi¬ qualifying for the finals. Three Spartans failed to qual¬ consolation petition led by Todd. Big Ten teams hal placed "When you have good ball players like these, you know Canadian skaters nals. Doug Todd finished in 16th 16 men among the 32 qualify¬ ify for the finals in preliminary they'll put on a good show for place. Dave Coward finished action. 20th and Bill The Scott was 25th. Spartan hopes in diving Freestvler George Gonzalez ing for semi-finals in both the one and three-meter events. MSU and Ohio State* led all the crowd." McCracken said. Veteran Coach Tony Hinkle of Butler will handle the East fall to Swede rally suffered a big blow when ju¬ placed 34th in the 500-yard free¬ schools by placing eigit men team. Hinkle over the years STOCKHOLM (UPI) - Haakan Nygren also tallied tor nior Jim Henderson was forc¬ style with a time of 4:49.46. Sweden in the final period as for the two events. has molded teams to a ball con¬ Ulf Sterner scored two goals and assisted on a third Thurs¬ the Swedes whipped the Canadi¬ Highlights of Thursd;r after¬ trol offense, while McCracken's jrilliant ans for the second time. noon action included a Hoosier clubs have traditionally day night to pace Sweden to a 4-2 triumph over Canada in a Canada's two goals were scored Indiana teshmen 'S'--lowa gr 4:33.2 Mark by Spitz in the 500-ya:d free¬ been fast-breaking teams. The west team should have wild, fist-swinging world ice in the second period by Gerry Pinder and Bill Heindl. style. an advantage on the boards, with hockey championship game. Indiana's chances for a sec¬ The 28-year-old Sterner, a Penalties played an important of foil three centers on the roster at port ond straight national titb were given a great boost wlen the 6-9 or 6-10. Jack Gillespie of Montana State stands 6-10, while former National player with the New York Hockey League part in the with two of their on power plays. Swedes' victory goals coming A total of 27 season game on Nov. 22 against Big Ten voted to allow fresh¬ Ted Wierman of Washir on Rangers, scored in the first NEW YORK (UPI) -- A minutes in penalties were call¬ television schedule featuring 37 Michigan will probably be reg¬ men competition. State and Ron Peret of Texas period anc 'iggered a three- ed on Canada by referees Hal ionally tel vised. Spitz was part of a loosier A & M both measure 6-9. goal third period rally with games -- including four night freshmen team that hal been another score which brought Trumble of the United States contests - involving 46 teams The four night games listed The east has a 6-10 star in Sweden from behind to win its and Anatoly Seglin of Russia, announced Wednesday for are Air Force-SMU on Sept. as impressive as the /arsity Neal Walk of Florida, but the was and Canadian star Kevin O'Shea sixth game in eight starts. this fall's college football sea¬ 13. which schedule. opens the. season Mississippi-Alabama in intra-squad meets. Even without the frshmen, TOM BROWN... next tallest are Lee Lafayette of MSU and Terry Driscoll of Stiggoeran Johansson and was banished from the game. son by ABC-TV Sports. Indiana managed the 8g Ten on Oct. 4. Notre Dame-Georgia There will be two more games on TV than last year, although Tech on Nov. 15 and UCLA- title this year. | (continued from page eight) USC on Nov. 22. The Hoosiers are a solid to the Astros along with Jesus Alou. decided it was time to hang the total of 11 national tele¬ choice to win the naticnal ti¬ them up and refused to report to the Houston club's training casts remains the same. r Fo.c€ t SMI' i night i tle on their home pod where The wild card game innova¬ national TV camp. The Astros called the deal void and demanded their form¬ Sept. 20--Texas at California. Indiana at they have never been be*en. er player return to Houston. Staub said he would retire if he tion. first used last season, Kentucky. Kent State at Ohio University Yale, which had beei expect¬ couldn't play for his new team, and the Expos petitioned Kuhn. will be repeated in 1969 with and Arizona at Wyoming on regional TV ed to challenge Indian; for the ABC picking a game in Novem¬ Sept 27-Princeton at Rutgers. Rich¬ asking for relief mond at VMI. Washington at Michigan. team title, had seveal poor ber - probably Nov. 15 - for national TV. Last year's "wild Auburn at Tennessee and Texas A & M performances Thursda' to all Kuhn decided to let the trade stand and ordered the two teams Nebraska regional TV. card game'" was Notre Dame- : on sippi at Alat i night i but kill their chances. to decide on a substitute for Clendenon before 5 p.m. Wednes¬ Southern California and drew day. Otherwise Kuhn said he would pick a substitute for Clen the largest viewing audience of denon. any regular season game, col¬ lege or pro. TV Oct. 18-California at UCLA o Auburn Tigers sell The decision is a wise one. The Montreal, and a player of Staub's the operation. Expos operate on thin ice caliber lends a little class For international baseball to be a success, the nec¬ in to Defending national champion Oct 25-Michigan State at Iowa. Ohio Stae will three times probably be seen this year. The at LSU. Texas Tech at SMU. New icoat West Texas St on regional TV, Nov. 1-Air Force at Army. Ohio Mex- State Pepper essary fans must be converted by a reasonably proficient team. A group of clowns like the early Mets organization will only make every person in Quebec line up earlier at the Forum for Buckeyes' game at Northwest¬ at Northwestern. Miami at Houston. Texas ern on regional TV Nov. 1 is listed for A & M a sippi o regional TV i LSU at Mis: to Expcs hockey season tickets. In hfc decision Kuhn demonstrates to nu> a desire to sacrifice Oklal an occasional sacred cow during the present in order to assure Nov 8-Tov t India .. The Bucks' game against Georgia ; MONTREAL (UPI ► The Purdue on Nov 15 will prob¬ ford at Washington on regional T National League Monteal Ex¬ the sport a healthier future. ably be the "Wild card" game Nov 15-Notre Dame at Geor pos Tuesday bought fiat base¬ in a doubleheader with Notre 1 night i on national TV man Don Pepper from the De¬ Nov 22-Four regional gam Dame playing Georgia Tech tha» troit Tigers for an unisclosed amount of cash. night. Ohio State's final regular UCLA-l'SC night at Los Angeles on rv Pepper. 25. played Jie last 27-! Thanksgiving Dayi-Texas two years with Toled' in the irkansas on national TV Philadelphia International League. He hit .277 in 1968 and 248 1st year and hit 29 homers in the two seasons. San Diego 0 0 WEDNESDAY RESULTS Boston 114. Philadelphia 100 San Francisco 99. Los Angeles 84 scheduled !S > ALPHA PHI ALPHA presents BOBBY TAYLOR and the 41 17 15 97 291 VANCOUVERS 39 26 8 86 220 : 34 24 15 83 228 : plus THE ORIGINALS 33 29 11 77 231 : who has his 33 33 8 74 270 : Saturday, March 29 WEST hands full with GF 9-12 p.m. Union Ballroorr W L 36 25 14 T PTS 86 201 < moonshine in, 28 36 1 67 212 249 Tickets $2.50 in advance, $3.00 at the loor the church 19 34 2 58 166 218 24 40 57 179 250 available at basement... 18 42 1 50 184 260 Pittsburgh 19 45 10 48 184 248 Paramount News (E. Lansing & Laning) ghosts in the WEDNESDAY RESULTS Toronto 6, Montreal 4 or call 351-0815 cemetery...and the Pittsburgh 8, Los Angeles 4 Chicago 6. New York 4 Johnny's Record Shop in Lansinc wacKiest family St Louis 5. Oakland 3 ever / FUN/FUND RAISING / ** Your sorority, fraternity, dorm, or social group can thpw a bowling party and .raise money at the same time. Not c&ly is it a painless way to raise funds for a worthy cause, Hit it's fun. Suggested For GENERAL a For information call; Rich Mauvy Holiday £aMi JUST NORTH OF FRANDOR Jerry VanDyks-K^Medford-Henry Jones-Lee Msritether-EdgarBuchananGarvColfts Wnllef! by JIM fftilflU ml E1MTT GRff WUWI DitectedGyMllM.il . »UK^PSIH PiCTW nTECMKU > Friday, March 28, 1969 10 Michigan State Michigan News, East Lansing, SPORTS & Spartans trail Michigan in with a 6.13 mark while Purdue, has a 6.42. Northwestern has competing only in six, the dubious distinction of fielding MSU finished seventh country for a one point fall lead in second in football but seventh in cross all-sports football jand first in ov£r UM, which took country. cross MSU holds race 1968-69 titles in cross tling. while UM boasts crowns in' hockey and gym¬ nastics and Ohio State has country and wres¬ championships in football and fencing. MSU is running second after the winter sports season the league's worst teams overall with a 9.17 average. But the Wolves stormed back in i'inter sports. They Purdue in basketball. Indiana in Football and cross country are the only fall sports placed first in gymnastics and hockey, second in swim¬ swimming and Wis¬ in the competition for the Big Ten all sports cham¬ ming, third in track, tied for third in wrestling, and consin in track round out the champs. pionship. counted in the tally, since soccer is not played by a ma¬ In finished fourth in basketball. spring sports, Minnesota is the general favorite The rankings follow: 1. Michigan 2.94 (that is. in eight jority of Big Ten teams. MSU's national co-champion The Spartans, on the other to defend its baseball title soccer team would obviously lower the Spartan average. hantf. could only take successfully with threats S fall and winter sports, the Wolves averaged close to a one first, in wrestling, coupled with second in coming from MSU, Michigan and Wisconsin' In the winter sport arena, all conference schools have hockey, £ third place finish); 2. MSU 3.56 (9 sports): 3. Ohio State third in swimming, a tie for third i| gymnastics, fourth Indiana and Michigan figure to challenge Wiscon¬ 4.72 (nine sports): 4. Minnesota 4.93 (eight sports*, and teams in basketball, wrestling, swimming and track;, sin s indoor track but four schools Michigan, Purdue, Minnesota, and in track, tie for fourth in fencing, ^nd a 3-wav tie for champs for the outdoor title while Wisconsin4.94 (ninesports). - MSU golf coach Bruce Fossum thinks his fifth in basketball. squad can win Northwestern do not have fencinjPfcquads. ' • f- Illinois heads the second division with a 5.38 average - Big Ten titles have been fairly well spread around it all after fourth, third and second place campaigns for eight sports while Indiana follows closely with a Purdue and Northwestern do not have gymnastics thus far. with six schools taking league honors, three Michigan remains powerful in tennis with MSU's rack- while only U-M. MSU. OSU, Wisconsin and j£ 5.44 average in eight. Iowa, with eight sports, is sig- teams, of them in two sports. etmen depleted by graduation. 5.44 average in eight. Iowa, with eight sports, is eighth Minnesota have hockey teams. VARSITY LETTERS AWARDED fS' ruggers face 'S' athletes nine-game slate MSU has awarded 64 varsity ton (No Farmington); Daniel O'Connor, enceville); Lorin Rosenberg, Los By PAM BOYCE players joined the Michigan rug¬ letters and 58 frosh numerals to Montreal, Que, (Loyola); Michael Ol¬ geles, Calif., (Venice) State News Sports Writer son, Peoria, 111., (Richwoods); Robert HOCKEY (19)-David Bosman. Muske¬ by team this Christmas in Eng¬ performers in five winter sports. Pattullo. Dearborn, Charles Phillips, gon ; Robert Campbell. East Lansing (Lan¬ The MSU Rugby Club will land. The awards went to athletes in Copper Cliff, Ont ; Patrick Russo, Sault sing Gabriels); William Fifield, Agin- resume practices this afternoon Also playing will be Scot basketball, fencing, gymnastics, Ste Marie; Randy Sokoll, Detroit (Red- court, Ont . (Collegiate Institute > : Gilles in preparation for its nine- Stibitz, Muskegon senior, who ford); Ron Springer, St. Clair Shores Gagnon. Montreal. Que , (De La Dauveri- hockey and swimming. Dennis Hogan. Sudbury, Ont ; Larry game schedule this season. is entering his third season, and (Lakeview); Alan Swanson. Marquette; ere i; The varsity award winners are William Watt, Duluth, Minn (Morgan Jakinovich, Detroit (Osborn'; Kenneth The team, which has its first Mickey Charnev. who has played , as follows: Park); Managers-John Hancock. Grosse Joseph. East Lansing; Allen Laking, match next Saturday with Mich¬ rugby in France. Garson, Ont. (Garson-Falconbridget: lie; Mike O'Connor, Taylor. igan. is searching for new per¬ BASKETBALL (lli-Rudy Benjamin, Dale McCann. Pontiac (West Bloomfield): SWIMMING (16)-George Alward, iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiinaiii Dayton. Ohio. (Roosevelt i: Tim Bogra- sonnel to add to its ranks. In- kos. Flint (Centrali; Bernard Copeland, Grand Haven; Michael Boyle, Webster Robert Michelutti. Sudbury. Ont.. (St. Groves, Mo (Chaminade); Gregory Charles); Paul Mooney. Sault Ste Ma¬ , terested recruits are invited to Inkster (Brundidge, Ala. Hillcresti . Brown, St rie, Ont (Dunn i; John Patenge. East attend the 4 p.m. practice held Rugby schedule Paul Dean. Alma; Robert Gale, Trout Joseph. Mo, (Central); Robert Burke, Flushing. N.Y., (Santa Lansing (Okemos >; Herbert Price, Farm¬ in the IM dirt arena today. Creek: James Gibbons, Blissfield: John Clara, Calif ); Thomas Cramer, Essex- ington; William Ravlin. Detroit iCooley); Holms, Lansing (Sextoni; Lee Lafayette, David Roberts, Detroit Thurston i; The Rugby squad, which will ville (Garber); Richard Crittenden, i Grand Rapids (South), Tom Lick, (Gay- Palo Alto, Calif., (Cobberley); Charles James Rossio. Royal Oak (Kimball): meet Notre Dame, Ohio State lord); Harrison Stepter, St. Louis. Mo., Geggie, Birmingham (Seaholmi; George Donald St Jean. Sudbury. Ont., (La and University of Chicago dur¬ (McKinfev); Lloyd Ward, Romulus; Man¬ Gonzalez, Rio Piedras. Puerto Rico. Salle); Donald Thompson. Toronto, Ont, agers-Ted Densley. Detroit; Don Spauld- ing the season, practiced twice (Pine Crest); Duane Green, Battle (Thistletown i; James Watt, Duluth'. ing, Benton Harbor a week during winter term. They Creek (Central); James Henderson, Minn., (Morgan Parki; Manager-Thomas FENCING (5i~Robert Kreitsch, Ply¬ Lansing (Everett); Mark Holdridge. Bay Fales, Detroit. played a nine-game schedule —Detroit Rugby Club during fall term. Lost contact mouth; Larry Norcutt, Clare: Satchell, Ponca City. Okla . Donaid (Westfield, Village. Ohio, (Dearborn, Mich); Rob¬ ert Jones, East Lansing; Mike Kalm- SWIMMING Warren (18- Anthony (Fitzgerald). Bazant, Michael Bigane. Mike Auer, coach and cap¬ N.J.); Bobby Tyler, Flint (Southwest¬ bach, Sylvania, Ohio: Donald Rauch, Riverside. 111. iFenwicki; Patrick The MSU rugby team ex itself against Windsor Black Rock last spring. The tain of the club, said last year's ern); Glenn Williams. Chicago. Ill . (St. Philadelphia, Pa., (St. Joseph): Bruce Burke Whitefish Bay. Wis . William entire team will be back this Spartan ruggers open a e-game spring schedule April 9 against Michigan Mel vi n - Richards. Tacoma, Wash . (Wilson); Van Burke, Detroit (Bishop Gallagher); Peter Old State News photo by Mike Beasley Rockefeller. Huntington, Ind Mana¬ Fetters, East Lansing. Jeffrey Friedle. season. He added, however, the on College Field. GYMNASTICS il2)-Thomas Campbell, . ■iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiii ger-Jay Geiger, Rockford, 111 Royal Oak (Kimball); Dennis Gookin, Ionia; Norman Haynie. Canoga Park. team is looking for new play¬ * FROSH NUMERALS Saginaw iArthur Hill); Fred Juengling. Calif.. (Tafti: .Norman Jolin, St. Clair; ers. BASKETBALL (13)-William Ager. Ann Warren (Cousino); Jeffrey Lanini. Plea Craig Kinsey. Hinsdale. 111.; Dan Kinsey. Brian Lee. Auer. a Harvard graduate Baseball briefs Costa Mesa. Calif.: John Kirchhoff. Park Ridge. Ill iMaine Township East); Rich¬ Arbor (St Thomas); Johnnie Brown. De¬ troit (Southeastern!; William Cohrs. santon, Calif, (Amador' St Joseph; John Mason. Pontiac (Cen¬ presently working on his doc¬ . Vicksburg. Mark Faller. Bay Village. tral), Arthur Miller. St. Joseph; Bruce ard Murahata, Boulder. Colo.. (Fair- torate in education at MSU, is Ohio, (Bay); Ronald Gutkowski, Detroit Ness, Minneapolis. Minn . (Whitefis! view); Dennis Smith, St. Clair: Herbert entering his tenth season with AT WEST PALM BEACH. FLA. AT POMPANO BEACH. FLA Sorg. Mt. Lebanon. Pa.: Toby Towson, (Catholic Central); Gary Haglund, East Bay, Wis.); Ernest Porter Plymouth; AT TAMPA. FLA AT ST PETERSBURG. FLA (12 innings) Tawas (Tawas Areai; Craig Larsen. Robert Rienas. Plymouth Robert Rum- the ruggers. Baltimore 000 010 000- 1 2 Blue Mound. 111.. (Macon); Michael Uram, New York ( A > 000 200 000- 2 3 1 Los Angeles 010 002 100 000- 4 1 Lvndora. Pa.. (Butler, Pa.); Ed Witzke. Ypsilanti; Robert Lorente, Dearborn sey, Chicago. 111 . (Mt. Carmeli; John Other outstanding returnees Atlanta 200 400 lOx- 7 Tliuerer. Rhinelander. Wis Bruce Minnesota 000 001 000 - 1 7 0 Vashington 010 300 Royal Oak (Kimball i; Manager-Craig Heights i Riverside >; Patrick Miller. include Peter Quail, who has Stottlemyre. Hamilton 8j and Fer Osteen, Mikkelsen (8) and Haller: Pas- Menominee; Vernon Minton, Flint (Hama- Treadway, Bay Village. Ohio Foerch. Okemos. played rugby for Sydney Univer¬ nandez. Munson 8); Hall. Miller (8- and i WP-Upshaw LP-Cuellar. BR¬ cual. Dukes (7) Miles (9) Humphreys HOCKEY dy); Gary Przybylo. Schenectady. N Y , Roseboro. (10) Baldwin (12) and Casanova. Camilli (20(-Kenneth Anstey, Sud¬ (Linton); Ralph Simpson. Detroit (Per¬ sity. Australia. George Larri- Mitterwald 8 WP-Stottle bury, Ont., (Lockenbyi; Nelson DeBene doctoral student from myre LP-Hall HR-Tresh (5i French (10). WP-Baldwin LP-Mid- shing). Lawrence Trybulec. Detroit ' mer. a Scotland who will be playing his kelsen. HR-O. Allen det. Copper Cliff, Ont ; Gerald DeMar- co, Sudbury. Ont., (St. Charles); Michael (Salesian Catholic); Weber, Creve Coeur, Mo Manager-Joseph Women's IM first season with the MSU .team: AT COCOA, FLA AT YUMA. ARIZ DeMarco. Sudbury. Ont.. (St Charles); FENCING (4)-Keith Olson, Detroit AT SARATOGA.FLA Robert DeMarco. Sudbury. Ont. (St. Lakes.-Minn ; Larry Sanderson, Battle and Bill Thelen from Michi¬ Kansas City 100 000 000- 1 3 2 Seattle 000 003 030- 6 9 2 AT VERO BEACH. FLA Pittsburgh 030 220 010- 6 9 Houston 002 000 30x 5 8 1 San Diego 001 001 001- 3 7 0 Charles) Richard Duffett, Kirkland Creek (Crystal Lake, 111 >: Ira Schwartz, blooperball teams is 10 p.m. Wednesday gan. Montreal 100 002 230- 8 Chicago (A) 000 100 100 2 5 - Bell, Aker (5), Henry (7), Morris Lake. Ont (Owen Sound); William Enri¬ Kenmore. NY.. (West*. Paul Wenner- The entry deadline for residence hall Nelson. Zachary (5) Wickersham (8> <8i , Tom Kajander. Barrington. Los Angeles B 000 000 010-1 Blass. Delcanton «8> Wal" Haney: Kelley, Roberts <6> and co. Duluth. Minn.. (East); Daniel Fine- berg. Sawyer (Three Oaks River Valley) bowling is 10 p.m. April 9 Grant. Jaster 17) and Batemai Sanguillen. Nyman. Osinski ;. Paepke (5); Griffin, Reed 111., junior, and Jeff Sundstrom. (71 Gladding < 9> and Edwards, Bryant Breeden. HRS~Haney, Bi gan. Islington. Ont., (Burrhamthor GYMNASTICS (4 (-Albert Beaudet. din, Staab '6> Brubaker t8> and T < 8 • and Pavletich WP-BU Aker. LP-Roberts Norman Gaffney. Port Hui Catholic) Houston. Texas. (St. Peters Prep, Jer¬ Sault St. Marie junior, are also t' WP-Griffin. LP-Nelson WP -Grant LP-Purdin Richard. Houtteman. St. Clair Shore sey City, N.J.I; Thomas Kuhlman, East BLACK STUDENTS! returning to the team. Both (Lakeview); Robert Johnson, F, Lansing. Charles Morse. Livonia (Clar- MAKE A REAL COMMITMENT Marshall Music Co. TO OUR PEOPLE. k'nirshau's 245 ANN ST. EAST LANSING Share your talents Brothers and Sisters In Black colleges. Apply for teaching positions through the Southern Program, Inca non-profit Education with Giant Record "EVERYTHING IN MUSIC" organization serving all of the Black institutions. Placement is quick and free of charge. For information write: sale S.E.P. 859 1/2 Hunter St., N.W. FANTASTIC Atlanta, Ga. 30314 How to Wrecognize a Wreal Wrangler. STEREO AND MON¬ COLUMBIA RECORDS AURAL L.P.'s SPIRIT 5hr (hrmtiur 4ntitatum Citr Choose from hun¬ dreds of great artists on top labels, such as . . . Glen Campbell, Most Wrangler* jeans have The Supremas, Judy the "W" stitched on in Collins, Johnny Riv¬ plain sight, but other kinds ers, Cher, Mamas & of Wranglers are a little Papas, Bobby Golds- more modest.They're made boro, the 4 Seasons, Aretha Franklin, Ti¬ just as well and they fit just as well, but the "W" is juana Brass, the Roll¬ ing Stones, Jack Jones, tucked away on a tag or Williamrs, Lov- label. You'll find it's worth Spoonful and looking for. .These sportback slacks, $7.00. You'll want to And the jeans $5.50. Both per grab armful at these low manently pressed and creased. All in carefree Fortrel Marshall Music polyester and cotton. Shirts from $4.00 to $5.00. VALUES TO $5.79 ea. Wrangler Jeans YOUR CHOICE ; and Sportswear 2 for $3 in Celanese Fortrel. "WHILE THEY LAST" m Meijers Thrifty Acres ATLANTIC RECORDS (rQ9 FREEDOM SUITE vS"0 Rudy's Men's Wear THE RASCALS EACH Friday, March 28, 1969 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan New tank B Museum addition declared a boo-boo pays Museums may historical past, represent the Hannah tribute received in the foreign from heads of state countries. plays, whifll should be ed in a week, will include a open¬ but a need One other display, entitled study of the Eskimo and of the always exists for moderniza¬ cultures of Melanisia. WASHINGTON (AP) - A "bil¬ tion, updating, and improve- "The Hannah Family, 28 Years lion-dollar boo-boo" by the of Service" includes the presi¬ dent's mortar board and gown. Army was the way Rep. Samuel Many new plans, projects, Stratton, D-N.Y., described the and ideas for the MSU museum Family pictures are also pre¬ development of a new tank have been introduced. A new sented in this display. Also in the new case is a Court overturns rushed into combat in Vietnam. exhibit case was installed in historical representation of the After six days of secret tes¬ the main floor lobby. Dirk H. Guinghuis, curator of exhibits, Campus' development since 1967conviction timony on the Sheridan tank explained that the new addi¬ 1941. A three-dimensional by his House armed services committee which ended Tuesday, tion was designed and built by model shows that Campus boun¬ daries in that year were Ma¬ of ogling adult the museum staff, and it holds Stratton directed the Army to short term exhibits. son Abott and Jenison Field- LANSING (AP) - Michigan's make public a previously clas¬ The house Compared to the 1969 Court of Appeals Thursday resignation of Presi¬ sified document saying the dent Hannah provided Gringhuis map, the model shows 28 years overturned the conviction of a tank: with material for the first ex¬ of campus growth. man charged with ogling a 12- -Can be heard three miles In the Hall of Archeology, year-old girl. hibit in the new case, which away although it is a reconnai¬ now displays moments and trib¬ west wing ground floor, the Arthur W. Colling Jr. was ssance vehicle. history of the Michigan In¬ • sentenced in 1967 to two years utes to Hannah. One unique picture shows Han¬ dian is displayed in an exhib¬ probation and fined $75 in De¬ --Has a "rooster tail exhaust" nah in 1942 as he inspected it finished early this week. troit Municipal Court after that makes it an easy target. the. first daily issue of the State From 11,00 B.C. to the nine being found guilty of ogling. --' When operating in jungle teenth century, the display spe¬ Court testimony revealed that News. Hannah's meetings with or heavy underbruch, vegetation cializes in Michigan's own In¬ Colling followed a 12-year-old various world figures and dig¬ will clog air intake grills and dian, his culture, customs, girl in his car, smiled at her the radiator, requiring frequent nitaries are pictured in the artifacts, and evolution. and gestured to her to come cleaning to avoid overheating." Tribute to first display. The next case is a tribute Models of actual diggings and to his auto. -Its caseless ammunition is The MSU Museum has on display a tribute to and campus life, was designed and built by the to Hannah's overseas assign¬ archeological maps are included The girl, however, ran to a ultraflammable. leaves burning President Hannah, who 1 'ill be retiring April 1. Museum staff. in the display which will be group of girls and the defendant ments, displaying gifts that he residue in the breech which used both to supplement arch¬ drove away, testimony revealed. The display, picturing H jnnah's accomplishments can prematurely ignite a round eology classes and by the Mich¬ Colling appealed on the and is adversely affected by igan Assn. of Archeology. grounds that his attorney was never effectively permitted to 'moisture, oil and rough handling 2 BATTLES Another display features a painting of two Indians which present his defense in court. -"Due to a problem with includes artifacts from 1780- The appeals court agreed, fuel-tank leaks, frequent checks 1820. saying the tAal court was for spilled fuel to prevent fires. " must -"The should be made Shillelagh not be fired when the launch vehicle is in motion. " missile SAIGON U.S. engages enemy (API - U.S. on into the night, with the thun¬ hurled tons of explosives. sistance in Cong a by DMZ part of the Viet stronghold of Mt. Coto In Saigon, the U.S. Command reported 266 Americans were More will be exhibits and His paintings of this type included in two new in the Hall of Man World. These dis¬ "clearly prejudicial in inter¬ rupting counsel on occasion and by argumentatively questioning witnesses." -Under extremely dusty con¬ troops fought the North Vietna¬ der of American artillery and Preliminary battlefield re¬ near the Cambodian border, a killed last week, the lowest toll ports said 35 North Vietnamese ditions. er the present air clean¬ requires cleaning or re¬ mese in two sharp engagements Thursday south of the demili¬ enemy mortars echoing across the coastal hills. Allied and 11 Americans were killed. Americans were spokesman said. The irregulars swept down since the enemy offensive began Feb. 23. The total was 85 less Offices filled at placement every lVfe hours. tarized zone. One battle raged patrols in the area had Another 31 than the week before. from a crest known as the "mil¬ been making frequent contact with the North Vietnamese re¬ wounded. Since Con Thien is only about lion Dollar Knoll" because of er. The number of killed, howev¬ brought the U.S. total in of MSU Emplo ye 'the costly bombing of Mt. Coto cently, indicating that the ene¬ five miles from the coast, it was eight years of war within 300 of Senior wins my is making increasing use of the demilitarized zone dividing obvious the North Vietnamese were being supplied through the and got into a "fantastic" cave network, the spokesman report¬ the 33, 629 combat fatalities ir the Korean War. the fourth Two new and three incumbent officers were three-year positions on the board of directors elected to and credit ed. committee of the MSU Employes Credit Union at the or¬ zone if they did not themselves for size sensi Vietnam. An Army spokesman eral hundred infantry said sev¬ of the 1st come through it. As part of what the United The advisers found 55 irregulars and U.S. bodies in the bloodiest in American history. The heaviest toll in the spring offensive was 453 U.S. troops ganization's annual meeting Tuesday night. Re-elected to the board of directors were Gabel H Conner, and mound of equipment, professor of veterinary surgery and medicine, and Leonard caves a A MSU senior in mechani¬ tion in which he described a Brigade. 5th Mechanized Divi¬ States said was an understand¬ killed in the first week. including 560 weapons. 1.5 tons Luker, associate professor in the Office of Institutional Re¬ cal engineering won a regional piece of apparatus he designed sion. began a sweep looking for ing in halting the bombing of of ammunition, 11 radios and A U.S. spokesman said the and constructed that sorted the enemy a little west of Con North Vietnam Nov. 1, the search. Also elected to the board was Robert Shackleton, contest for his paper and work such odds and ends as movie lower total last week was partly with size sensing and sorting spherical objects within .001 Thien and four miles south of North Vietnamese were not to die to the failure of the enemy director of development for the Alumni Assoc. of of inch of a specified size. the abuse the zone. Hanoi denies cameras, typewriters and loud¬ Howard C. Zindel, chairman of the Dept. of Poultry Sci¬ spherical objects. an zone: to follow up nightly rocket and Loren D. Simons presented He presented both the experi¬ Forging through dense under¬ there was any understanding. speakers. mortar attacks on U.S. bases ence. was re-elected to the credit committee and Ted L. mental equipment and the theo¬ Another battle, much shorter, Only about half the cave com¬ Smith, asst. manager of the Dept. of Residence Halls, also his paper and a demonstra- growth, they ran into about 500 with ground attacks on the scale retical basis for the apparatus. North Vietnamese who opened broke out 30 miles south of Con plex has been searched, the of those in previous weeks. won a seat on the committee. The contest, held by the fire about 10 a.m. from trenches Thien. Enemy mortarmen pump¬ spokesman, said. Officers on The week's totals brought the spot estimate that about American Society of Mechani¬ and foxholes. The U.S. infantry into a fire OCC to circulate cal Engineers, was the re¬ was without its usual tanks ed a barrage support base of the U.S. 101st two battalions of enemy troops U.S. battlefield losses in the war to 33,329. Another 1,362 could have been housed there. gional phage of a national con¬ and armored vehicles because Airborne Brigade, then 60 ene¬ Amerians were wounded last first newsletters test. Fifteen papers were Annamite range foothills there my troops charged. A search is still on for a big week, bringing the war's total presented at the conference are too steep. One of the attackers made it hospital complex almost cer¬ to 209,045. There were 31 non- to 20,000 students March 22. The battle continued through¬ through the barbed wire and tainly, in the area. combat deaths last week, and The effort to root the guerril¬ As winner of the Region V out the day. As darkness fell, was shot down. The rest fell the figure on the war now A quaterly newsletter will las from Mt. Coto has been contest, Simons received a the Americans struggled to back. The action was over in 35 stands at 5,565. attempt to untangle the compli¬ going on for more than a month. $100 award and a trip to Los clear a night defense perimeter minutes with 15 enemy slain cated lines of communication Angeles, Calif., for the purpose and came under intense fire and 17 U.S. soldiers wounded, w between Off Campus Council of competing in the national UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTS from mortars, rocket-propell¬ a spokesman said. (OCC) and the 20.000 stu¬ finals to be held in November. ed grenades, machine guns and In the Mekong Delta, Viet¬ dents it represents. Simons was supervised in rifles. namese irregulars with U.S. GRADUATE STUDENTS and FACULTY MEMBERS "The main purpose is to work by John F. Foss. advisers apparent¬ his Supporting U.S. Army and Green Beret THE ASSOCIATION OF PRIVATE CAMPS get people aware of OCC and associate professor of mechan¬ Marine artillery and warplanes ly broke the back of enemy re¬ . . . comprising 350 outstanding Boys, Girls, Brolh«r-Sisi*r what it is doing, to let the ical enginnering. and Stanley and Co-Ed Camps, located throughout the New England, Mid¬ 20,000 students we represent J. Kleis, instructor of mechan¬ dle Atlantic States and Canada. know we are here," Bob Kraay. How much i- by the student, members of the sics at the Institute for Ad¬ Academic Council, subject to EVERYTHING vanced Study at Wesleyan Uni¬ approval bv the Student Board versity. the proposal questions of ASMSU FROM FINS the relevance of present higher Since aiding in these deci¬ TO HOODS education. sions is an important maturing "Certainly the t»>acher will and learning process, students DIVERS AIR have no function or honor active in their departments and AT worthy of the name until we colleges would receive univer¬ are prepared to restore (educa¬ sity credit for their efforts. tion to its central purpose: the The proposal is presently un¬ molding of men rather than the der study by the Ad-Hoc Com¬ production of knowledge. Ar¬ mittee on Student Participation rowsmith stated. SO CEDAR LANSING. MICHIGAN in Academic Government The Committee on the Student HOURS-- in Higher Education of the Ha- Mon. thru Fri. 9-.9 zen Foundation calls for in Sat. 9-6 Sun. 2-6 creased student participation in educational policymaking and Sky voice orders boy to hurry home KANSAS CITY (AP - Ti¬ FLOWER mothy Adams, go home" boomed a thundering voice from the heavens. Timothy Adams. 6. ^as a small figure on the ground, loitering on his way home from POWER kindergarten and it was now 5 p.m. His mother. Mrs. Paul Ad¬ ams. had called police some 90 minutes after school had FEATURING: let out Within minutes William Dycus and James Treece. in a police UNIVERSAL FAMILY helicopter, saw a boy streaking for home and By 5:lb p.m. Mrs. Adams called police again and repor¬ TOM & LINDA ted the safe arrival of her 6- year-old who had run into the with house wide-eyes in excite¬ ment and announcing. A big A HEAVY LIGHT SHOW voice in the sky told me to come home " by THE EYE SEE THE LIGHT COMPANY She told police she did nothing to clear up for her son the FRIDAY, MARCH 28 UNION BALLROOM mvsterv of the origin of the 9-12 P.M. $ i. 50 Friday, March 28, 1969 13 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Catholic priest target of racial controversy CAIRO, 111. (AP)~ Roman Catholic and Protestant clergy¬ men rallied Wednesday in sup¬ port of a white priest whose Montroy "moral and physical support." More are expected Thursday and Friday. Bishop Zuroweste issued a ter where an they could help, it's organization to help every He said the group has never &¥>/> Campus 4 activities on behalf of blacks statement saying he also is been called out. though mem¬ have made him controversial. bers did voluntarily come out sending a group of priests to to help during a storm last Local officials have accused investigate the situation. him of associating with black year. The bishop said. "Some pro¬ irtilitants and have asked for "But we don't need the White his removal. grams and projects should be initiated to solve the Hats, he said. "We have a problems, darn good The priest, the Rev. Gerald ease the tension, and promote police department Montroy. 29, was sent to Cairo here." justice for all the citizens." in August by his bishop, the He added that Montroy had Preston Ewing, president of Most Rev. Albert 0. Zuroweste worked to start such programs. the Cairo branch of the Nat¬ of the Belleville, 111., diocese, ional Assn. for the Advance¬ There are an estimated 600 to work among the poor. ment of Colored members. of the White Hats, People, said Montroy has charged that a there formerly were two Ro¬ officially known as the Cairo group called "the White Hats" Committee of Ten Million. man Catholic churches in Ca¬ is acting as an armed vigilante iro but that the one attended organization to keep blacks in Montroy said the White Hats by blacks, St. Columbus, was line and that their activities have weapons and patrol Cairo closed recently. Ice jiun could set off racial violence streets with dogs and use two- There are two blacks on a in this southern Illinois town pie come from all over to use the facilities at way radios in their tars. He police force of 18. Ewing said. MSU ice skating rink. The rink is also the with a history of racial con¬ said the city police cooperate ne of the rough and ready ice hockey compe- flict. with the group Recently, he said, the NAACP got up a group of citizens to go bold stompers 3ns during the winter. About 20 clergymen arrived The White Hats were organ¬ to a gymnasium after a basket¬ from East St. Louis to lend State News photo by Norm Payea ized in 1967 after racial dis¬ ball game to escort some black turbances. However. Chief of Police Carl youths home after they were intimidated by an ex-policeman by Pussyfoots KILLER SOUGHT J. Clutts said: "This organiza¬ and some White Hats with po¬ tion wasn't formed for any rac¬ lice dogs. of this group. Montroy was part take over spring ial troubles, but for any disas¬ Mother talks •••••••••••••••••••• dressing with ANN private ARBOR I PI -A 16- pointment she did not keep, funeral had been a change in her re¬ NDTICE TO STUDENTS LECTURF-CONCERT SERIES antiqued gusto A. Kensington. the year-old girl who wandered until she was sexually abused cently. DISTRIBUTION DATE and killed more than 24 hours "Suddenly, we just couldn't strap stomper in hand- through tht' psychedelic world talk her any more." Mrs. of LSI) heroin and other drugs later. to for Reserved Seat Tickets is antiqued chili, oak or Beverly Scannell of the Wayne Strahan said. Her whole County (Detroit) sheriff's of¬ personality just seemed to whiskey leather. $15 fice Flint silanti said to her the area was fatal Ann trip from Arbor-Yp- connected with change. She was cold and dis¬ tant. would keep to herself all the time." TODAY B. Skywatche. Miss Skelton was picked up by UNION TICKET OFFICF stomper in ha a hit the the drugs she had used off and since she was 13 years sheriff s officers twice in No¬ on tiqued navy. oak. : Her vember and again earlier this older hippies" old. parents had just month, in narcotics raids. or redwood leatlu. r.$ 1 4 moved from Romulus to Flint in the ("liege towns of Ann in an effort to lure Miss Skel¬ "She tried it all." Police¬ Arbor and Ypsilanti. Her nude woman Scannel said. Pep body w.is found Tuesday in a ton away from her college- C. Lancaster wear'; wooded area, and .in autopsy town friends. pills one day. heroin the next. Apr. 7 Mrs. Skelton said her daugh¬ The combination was overwhelm¬ hardware trim. In hand- indicated she had beei. killed ter received a telephone call ing. She seemed to get her Sunday night or t ai :> Mon- CLEVELAND ORCHESTRA Apr. 15 antiqued earth tones <>t Thursday night greatest bang out of LSD. When she hung up she told "The girl was all over Wayne marble or oak leather. .•ill be me she had to pay money to County buying and selling large quantities." Mrs. Scannell said. $16 "Maralyi someone in Ypsilanti.' Mrs. Skelton said "I gave her "She was often high on the gre ;asket. her *SPE CI ALS* MO." stuff when she talked to me." Archie Skelton. "ANTIGONE" (French Play) Her mother said Maralvnn Investigators said they were said. 1 picked out a pale (Admission $2.00; public S3.00) was a sweet and loving girl keeping in mind the slayings yellow dress and 1 want pink until around Christmas time." of three other girls in the and red rosebuds for her " "Then she became moody Ann Arbor-Ypsilanti area since April 10 FERRANTE & TE ICHE R, Piano Duo Police sought to trace the ReservedSeats $3.50, S3.00, $2.50 and seemed in a daze at times." two summers ago. The other girl's whereabouts from Sat¬ three girls had been students ($1.00 reduction to MSU students w urday afternoon, when she tele¬ at the University of Michigan validated I.D.) Miss Skelton's sister. Mrs. phoned a friend from a shop¬ Strahan. in Ann Arbor or Eastern Michi¬ Barbara agreed there ping center to make an ap¬ gan University in Ypsilanti. Two of them had been stabbed "union ticket office to death and one was shot 2 psychiatrists given through the head. ton least was Miss Skel¬ clubbed to death. At three of the four girls Hours 8-5 had been sexually molested medical faculty posts Or X Duane Sommerness. superintendent, and Dr. Paul E Kauftman director of training and research at Traverse been given medical faculty appoint¬ Citv State Ij ments at MS? Sommerness is an Li. associate clinical professor of psychiatry Garden and Kauftman is an asst. clinical professor of psychiatry. Dr Allen .1 Eneiow. chairman of the Dept. of Psychiatry at MSI --aid the appointments are the first step in the de¬ velopment of an affiliation between the hospital and MSU. Eneiow and Dr Donald Weston. MSI asst. professor of psych,;-1» ., 1 ■ •• •• <• -- The ley list it and eotne back 117 countries The average sold on grocery shelves at a pound of CSM a day for $664 federal government has shipped '' cost 8 cents million a year at retail prices- >rnied chairman ot a Senate subcom- Indians on a San Bernadino the judiciary to reconsider tritional problem is deficiency Bad weather did not domestic distribution irietv ot ways-irom mittee whose widely publicized its decision In s""h a case, help their chore. County. Calif., reservation. of one or more nutrients, such State News Robert Idol, a deputy director MKi;. - to lu-ead. cookies and hearings on hunger in America Bert Tollefson. president of the compromise proposal says. photo by Jer as protein, vitamins or miner¬ of the department s Commodity resumed Thursday, says a lojod the American Corn Millers Fed- als. or of calories. Distribution Service, said the I'h. : rodui-t wa> developed like CSM could go a long way eration. estimated that when product-known as CSM-now i* 1 r*'1 .'"\ernment and toward solving malnutrition his packaged tor retail destribution Early reports, he said, "clear¬ being given to the poor Ameri¬ cans in two limited tests "CSM has been very accept.! ""I • • .rdustry i..in t'l help conquer and growth-stunting that plague ill nour- panel lound in many parts of the country. Private industry ready in this countrv a five-pound sack of CSM would cost about 65 cents. ly indicate an alarming preva¬ lence of those characteristics that are associated with under¬ British mission to Angui ble in the foreign program. ,hed underdeveloped nations. McGovern noted in a recent Using the figure of 14 million nourished groups." including re¬ hints bre island Idol said But before the de¬ according to Agri- speech that CSM can be pro- inadequately nourished Ameri- tarded growth, anemia, goiter partment embarks on broader ■ultui )ept records, the gov- duced in pasta form, and added cans given in a 1968 report on and dental problems distribution to America's hungry, ern has bought and shipped that "Private industry is ready hunger, this means each hungry Officials of the government's he said, it wants to know will 812 on pounds <51 CSM to to produce it and it can be American could be given a food programs have told inquir¬ ANGUILLA (APi-A possi- Asked if Lord Caradons trip ing senators that the 22 foods now available ble break in the Anguilla crisis to Anguilla could be interpreted get them back i through the com¬ modity distribution program appeared to be developing Wed- as a response to Webster's de- tion with St Kitts and Nevis yield an adequate diet when from which they seceded two) properly used. United Nations ambassador. Webster traveled to New York As examples, they said both and other prominent Foreign last week to present Anguilla's Ij I corn meal and dried milk, two Office official will come this rebellious Caribbean island to case before the United Nations CV6ninQCOMBCJ(| ingredients of CSM, are avail¬ He conferred with Caradon in able. No protein-rich soy flour is offered, but instead there are Vai officials the mission could serve indicated to ne¬ New York. A London announcement Wed- offers rapid i. canned meats and peanut but¬ gotiate a settlement with An¬ nesday said Caradon would readina course BRITAIN ter, also high in protein. guilla secessionist leaders, who "jo to Anguilla hriday in his go ** Average distribution refuse to deal with the ap¬ capacity as British minister of Neill Freeman, commodity pointed British commissioner state for foreign and Common¬ id reading designed to improve! distribution program director, for the island. Tony Lee. wealth affairs. It was under general reading ability will be( said the average county distri¬ Ronald Webster, the pro¬ stood he would be accompanied offered this term. butes 18 of the 22 foods. But, he claimed president of Anguilla, by Sir Arthur Galsworthy. ON/I said, counties has demanded that Britain send Emplu.sis w' . be placet some give out Webster partisans say the in a Cabinet-level official mproving the student's r only a half dozen, government Lee plans to set up ng rate, comprehension enlarging Ins vocabulary Interested students may SHOESTRING. Renault '69 roll at the c»n'« rence registra-l tion desk ■ 11 Kellogg Center I There is a course fee of $25 Classes will begin Monday. 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EXCLUSIVE ve yell ovv discolora- •ay hair. and Stratford-upon-Avon. Travel-study programs, summer X# With RENAULT: A week in an international stu¬ jobs, summer schools. M ■UNLIMITED : >t of the fu- dent centre for 525. Special student tour packages -i t starting at S675, including air fare. MILEAGE ■\ill be le to set, dry Discotheques, folk singing and omb out a hairstyle— Concerts, festivals, operas, sports. 12 Months Factory jazz clubs, coffeehouses, pubs, inns, the san time! WARRANTY' % To British Travel, Bo> 923- New York, N.Y. 10019. Live A Little -Save A Lot-Go Please send me your free 40-page book: "A Guide for Students RENAULT*. Visiting Britain" plus *2-page color book: "Vacations in Britain." Al Edwards Sports Car Center Overseas Delivery MR. JOHN'S HA'R FASHIONS 1200 E. OAKLAND PHONE 432-1226 Open Monday & Thursday Evenings til 9 Friday, March 28, 1969 ]5 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan ^ I-rtS ■■■ WHAT'S mrnnA aA i Dirksen attacks enforcing fair employmen WASHINGTON ~ pacted. icy formations waiting ma¬ now totaling $2.88 million does River 80 miles upstream from chines and more than 700 big Musante said he expects his case will influence other ",Men and machines, in a running for balmy spring weather to not include $1.05 million spc1 St. Paul, the stream had inched priests facing a choice between the priesthood and a wife, .Head start and helped by kind start the melt, trucks were operating Thursday on flood protection works along for sandbags, pumps and shu i up to 16.1 feet this morning, flood will pres but he declined to talk about any of the controversial issues vyeather. are building or shoring Helping to build new protec- the Minnesota. St. Croix. Miss- plastic used to fight temporary still below the 19-foot being debated now within the Roman Catholic Church ijjp bulwarks along Minnesota l've works is the Army Corps dike undermining and oth" stage, but rising. The Weather He said he wanted to stay away from such issues because. grad . d Red Rivers to fight 'streams to ward off predicted of Engineers which has awarded issippi a ater the Weather Bur- Bureau has predicted a 29- r I believe it is necessary I use discretion on these problems •'record or near-record floods federal money contracts to 70 the high between The Minnesota River joins foot depth for Mankato, 32 feet Not because someone has asked me to do so but just because ;rTie big wa ored in flood-threatened Minnesota the Mississippi at. St. Paul, if 112 inches of moisture comes. vand mid-April. Marilyn M. Garst. a I want it s big sn where flooding also is threat¬ Mankato had 29.1 feet of wa¬ doctoral candidate in music at I am a Catholic." he asserted emphatically "And so is ened if the ter when the damaging floods spring runoff meas¬ my fiancee. I have left the priesthood but my faith is un¬ struck in 1965. MSU, will present a concert ures up to preductions. featuring works by Bach. Schu¬ changed. Bells HOUSE Twin Cities' Weather Bureau predictions for St. Paul, where its Like St. Paul. Mankato raised dikes after the 1965 flood and this spring has raised them mann Tuesday and in Ravel at 8:15 p.m. the Music Audi¬ Musante denied he had left the priesthood to marry. He said he had taken the decision and made it known to Vatican authorities months before he met Miss Carlevaro flood stage is listed at 19 another six feet in vulnerable torium. feet, call for a stage of 22 Her recital, which is open Probably my decision to marry speeded up the request, St. Paul is putting an Bangles spots. of feet-an additional three feet it l'-a inches of moisture falls between now and mid-April additional three or atop a floodwall protecting an industrial area. four feet to will the public without charge, include "English Suite No. 3 in G Minor'" by Bach. he said. But I met Miss Carlevaro when I had realized I could no longer be a priest. The only thing I want now is to be a good husband, a good father and have a normal family life-awav from publicity So far the weather has been Many residents of low-lying "Symphonic Etudes. Op. 13"' "We will marry soon, sometime in April, after Easter, Bedspreads INDIA perfect for a moderate runoff Nights have been cool, with midday temperatures generally areas, operating with ample warning, have moved or are moving possessions to high by Schumann. "Gaspard de la Nuit" Cope's by Ravel and David "Three Two-part In¬ possibly in a church dedicated to the Madonna, to whom we are both very devoted. After that, we want to be forgotten, left alone, to live " ventions'" and "Piano Sonata in the 30s. slowing the melt. ground. 101 E. GRAND RIVER; as any normal family " Beads downstairs No. 2." Mrs. Garst, who performed' . Musante said he hoped to start work soon. "My new job will be with a cultural association, he re¬ Chopin's "Concerto in E between kesel's and Minor'' recently with the MSU ported. He refused to elaborate. As a priest he worked for Bsandals cunningham's 332-8403 Symphony Orchestra, is a grad¬ uate assistant at MSU and over 20 years in the vicarate of Rome, the equivalent of a diocese. teaching piano. She is also I don't consider my experience as a priest as time I studying piano with Ralph Vota- wasted, he went on At that time I did what I felt I should do." pek. asst. professor of music Miss Carlevaro said she and Musante met in November, GWfiy~does She began studying in her hometown of Bakersfield. Calif., in the home of friends. at the Aspen School of Music I liked him immediately." she added Before Christmas a perfect si in Colorado and at the Juil- we had decided to marry, but the authorization for the Vati¬ liard School of Music. can came only in mid-Februarv. Asked if reports that she was " very rich" were true, she lookperfect replied: Well not "very rich' --but rich enough only21day$ Medicare sign up everymontfi? deadline Monday The Staff Benefits Office has been notified by the Social Se¬ curity Administration that the current Medicare general enroll¬ ment period ends Monday. Any¬ one age 65 or over who has not yet enrolled in the Supplemen- Why should a traditional tal Medical Insurance (SMI) club tie have the new part of Medicare may do so dur¬ full fashion shape? ing this period. (The SMI part of Medicare covers doctor bills Only the new more luxurious full- fashion shape (fuller under-the- and expenses for some ether knot, wider throughout) is right with related medical services.) today's bolder shirt collars, wider This will be the last chance jacket lapels. 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His ooinion heard, help to win a great mandate » cramps and headaches, growth has been phenomenal - growth in for Ted. *CON DE NSE RS knowledge, in stature, in his search for ex¬ V ►'Heaves emotions on edge.) cellence as his brothers searched before him. Start now by displaying an u< 2 V oblong KF.NNHDY-IN *-That's why so He would bring to the Presidency youth, an attractive KENNKDY-IN- 72 bumper sticker (great for taping on walls, doors, win¬ many women take PAMPRIN MORRIS AUTO PARTS vitality, a forward look, and the important ability to attract unusually capable men to dows). Send $1 for any 2 items of your It gently relieves water-weight gain his administration. to help prevent pre-menstrual puffiness, •COMPLETE LINE OF PARTS Richard Nixon began his campaign immediate¬ LFADF.RSHIP 1972. BOX 421. BROOK ly after Johnson was elected. We have no l INF VILLAGE, MASS. 02147. State which tension, and pressure-caused cramps. desire to undermine the new Administration, college you attend. (Also, if you want to work IV 4-5441 but like President Nixon, we believe in the ;arly toward his possible candidacy, please PAMPRIN makes sure a perfect principle of loyal opposition. : this) size 7 never looks less than perfect. 814 E. Kalamazoo 8-5;30 Mon.-Sat. m perfect, '• Friday, March 28, 1969 17 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Clergymen question colloquy By CAROL CORRIERE State News Religion Editor material and spiritual worlds The idea fresh look was as to take a sexuality. Palms good, ing the findings of social scien¬ tists, psychologists and biolog¬ is here that the clergymen have found fault with the colloquy. in the small discussion groups, he said. are separate and opposing On the whole, they have not Not all ministers are so Crit¬ added. It assumed to a certain ists to their interpretation of spheres. objected to the presentation of ical of the colloquy. In fjkctj Many local clergymen, while The true Christian view, extent that people were in¬ God's word. These findings have even those who criticized me praising the general aspects of given them new insights into the more liberal views of some Wietzke said, is that the mater¬ formed about the religious lack of religious represent^ the winter term sexuality collo¬ viewpoint and did not cover the "reasons" behind some of the speakers. They feel, how¬ ial and spiritual world are one ion frequently praised the other quy, have found its presentat¬ this aspect. doctrines. ever, that the church's side of in the same and make up the the question was poorly repre¬ aspects of it. '*» ion of the religious outlook on total reality. Perhaps this fact is the un¬ Most churches, even the Cath¬ • sented. The Colloquy was designed sexuality lacking. Father Francis Zipple, pas¬ derlying cause of the clergy olic Church which has long been , The church was represented to "foster a dialogue in tBe These ministers have criti¬ men's discontent with the coll¬ considered ultra-conservative, tor of St. John's Student Par¬ community." Ward said. It was cized not so much what was Everyone - students, have been emphasizing a pos¬ as viewing sex as wrong, bad. ish, said that speakers quoted oquy. not trying to deny any aspect said as what was implied and planners and speakers itive view of human sexuality. dirty and was blamed for link¬ the Catholic Church unfactually of the question then not openly discussed. assumed that the religious view They stress that sexuality, used ing all sex with guilt and sin. and presented a misrepresen¬ The Colloquy was not meant the clergymen felt. At the same tation of the church's teaching. is "Sex is sin" and left it at properly, is a beautiful and won¬ The major complaint that the to provide pat answers; it was that. derful thing. time, the overall religious pc ministers have is that the coll¬ "The colloquy was a bit lop¬ a search for perspective. As It is in the decision of what sition on the nature of sex and sided,'' Rev. Roger C. Palms In reality, few of today's oquy presented a distorted, out¬ is proper and what is improper human sexuality was inade¬ such, it has raised many ques¬ dated version of the Judeo- of the University Baptist Chap¬ clergymen voice that opinion. tions. el said. Theologians have been apply¬ that controversy arises and it quately presented. Christian position on human The real test of the colloquy Xo a large extent, the problem sexuality and the nature of sex. was a function of the speakers. will be in its results, in how The Colloquy Steering Comm¬ the University now follows up The colloquy, according to ittee invitedifive speakers in the the questions it has raised. Both Rev. Walter Wietzke of Univer¬ sity Lutheran Church, presen¬ ted the a persistent caricature of Judeo-Christian position on Priests celibacy, criticize area of theology and religion. Rev. man Don J. Ward, co-chair- of the committee, said. These speakers chose their educators and clergy feel that as long as the discussion con¬ tinues, the colloquy was valid. Foreign relations The speakers assumed many advocate individ own topics and often spoke on topics in another field or on Pope Paul VI and President Richard M. Nixon look popular beliefs on church teach¬ at a present which the Pope gave Nixon during a recent meeting in Rome. Nixon has asked for a ing to be true, Wietzke said. They often furthered the Hellen¬ NEW ORLEANS (AP A The convention took no action the moral theology of artifi¬ Father O'Donoghue, 39, and the Rev. John E. Corrigan, 37, very narrow religious quest- Ward added that the public Civil rights national convention of Roman on renewal of diplomatic relations with the Vatican. istic view of Christianity that lectures comprised only about director cial contraception. Pope Paul who made up the Washington there is a severe dichotomy be¬ Catholic priests ended here Franklin D. Roosevelt was the last president to one-third of the total output Wednesday with strong appeals VI condemned that form of delegation, were censured last send a papal envoy to Rome. tween bodv and soul-that the birth control in a 1968 encycli¬ fall by Patrick Cardinal O'Boyle of the colloquy. that a priest wishing to get for saying husbands and wives There much discussion speak married be allowed to quit with¬ cal that started a heated con¬ was out disgrace and that the church troversy throughout Catholic- had the right to obey their con¬ sciences in of the religious aspect of sex to consider having both married using contracep¬ Classes in religion tives. The two priests thanked Walter R. Greene, deputy and celibate priests. During open debate on the director of the Michigan Civil final day. Washington and New the convention for passing a The convention also asked resolution about suspended Rights Commission, will speak the church to lift secrecy from York City delegations brought at the Hillel supper-forum at diocesan financial records. in a resolution asking for "an priests. 6 p.m. Sunday. history, ethics Father O'Donoghue said that More than a dozen resolu¬ open accountability of all finan¬ in the of "so He will speak on black-white cover tions voted by 250 delegates cial assets in a diocese with a name many victims "of relations and urgent issues in¬ from most of the American dio¬ view to measuring the extent aribitrary Church authority" he wanted to express volving black people. ceses included a request that to which Church wealth is truly Greene has been active in and the American bishops main of¬ directed to the needs of gratitude "for the hope you Campus religion classes oi- ethics is more interested in expresses them in sym¬ have brought those men." civil rights groups, religious fer the student a variety of the bols, Robert T Anderson, as¬ fice end the "disheartening and society." application of religious organizations and in the field ideas and doctrines. sociate professor of religion, scandalous" suspension of The assembly approved the The resolution "deplored" subjects including church his¬ of equal employment oportunity. tory. world religions, contem¬ said in describing the various Washington and San Antonio. idea by voice after the Rev. the punishment of priests As regional director of the Classes are also offered "without a prior, fair and im¬ courses. Tex., priests who defied their Henry Browne, a parish priest porary theology and ethics. in Hebrew Defense Dept.'s contract com¬ thought. Hinduism. that the archbishops. in New York's St. Gregory Although the Dept. of Re¬ Buddhism. Islam, and religions He said theologian partial hearing." It said the pliance section, he investigated speaks with a commitment and The National Federation of Church, argued that the Catholic Church could not very well ligion offers approximately 30 of the Far East employment practices at MSU that the philosopher with no Priests' Council-NFPC-, con¬ Church remains "the only large courses, some 12 are being of¬ preach human dignity without last year fered this term. The courses For people interested main¬ commitment. He is concerned cluding a three-day general as¬ corporation in the United States respecting such dignity in its Greene was also a delegate are usually taken on an elec¬ with the questions, what is the sembly, also put its support that does not have hearings on own priests. ly in Christianity, classes are to the 1968 World Council of tive basis by students inter¬ offered which the Old highest good'.' The theologian behind selective conscientious budgets or make some at¬ Churches. cover The resolution on suspended WALTER R. GREENE ested in the various aspects and New Testaments, the life then is committed to the sup¬ objectors to war and a Calif¬ tempt at open airings of our of religion. position of the highest good. ornia grape workers boycott. finances." priests was put onto the floor About 20 stu¬ of Christ, the writings of Saint dents are majoring in religion. Paul and Christian thought. "The theologian asks the It urged that President Nixon Father Browne was second¬ by the Rev. William Murphy of the Detroit Archdiocese on St. Johns EPISCOPAL SERVICES Depending upon the course, Religion classes ditter trom question, what is it I want that put off for at least one year ing the resolution on finances, Student Parish Alumni Chapel I would not sacrifice anything the building of an antiballistic introduced by the Rev. Joseph behalf of federation local coun¬ the classes cover the history philosophy classes in their ap¬ 327 M.A.C. Phone ED 7-9778 else0" Anderson said. missile defense system. O'Donoghue of Washington. cils of Michigan and Illinois. (Auditorium Drive) and development of religion or proach Theoretically the HOLY WEEK MASSES its practical application. 9:00 A.M. and 5:15 P.M. philosopher deals with con¬ 332-2559 nursery Sunday- 7:00-8:15-9:45- The courses in Christianity cepts and cuts across the sys¬ UNIVERSITY UNIVERSITY University 310 11:15-12:30-4:45-6:00 p.m. Holy Communion & Sermon are topically oriented to God tem while the theologian takes SEVENTH-DAY BAPTIST Wardcliff Christian North Monday through Thursday and man while the course in the presuppositions of systems ADVE NT 1ST CHURCH _, , Hagadorn All Saints Episcopal CHURCH Sch001 Church University Lutheran Masses- 8:00-12:30-4:30- Church Sabbath School 9:30 9:00 (American Baptist) Church Good Friday Services- 800 Abbott Rd. Worship Service 11:00 Gerard G. Phillips, Pastor 1:00 p.m. - Liturgy 1:45 8:00 A.M. Holy Communion Pope greets 504 Ann St. (Corner of Division) Worship 10:00 a.m. & 7:30 p.m. Church School 11:10 a.m. Holy Saturday Vigil Service- 8:00 p.m. Wednesday prayer Church School Loy G. Foil, Pastor hour 6:45 p.m. Communal Penance 9:15 & 10:30 atheis a.m. during Free Bus Service and Nursery 332-1888 KAIL RUFFNER, 332-5193 Minister 332-3035 Services 8:15, 9:15, 10:30 & 11:30 a Service- Wed. 7:30 p.m. UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST VATICAN CITY i AP >- astrology, which was talked Central Methodist LUTHERAN CHURCH of LANSING EAST LANSING Some scholars who in their about during the symposium. Across From the Capitol WORSHIP Red Cedar School, Sever Street The Pope also said he hoped FRIENDS MEETING writings have assigned God JjJ- First Baptist Church Martin Luther Chapel tle or no place in the scheme to save men from the des¬ WORSHIP SERVICES Phone 351-4582 of human meaning shook hands pair. the anguish, the void" 9:45 and 11:15 meeting for worship 3 p.m. of East Lansing with Pope Paul VI Thursday which the absence of religious 10:45 a.m. — "Abortion, the Law and Human Values" All Saints Parish 940 S. Harrison Rd. "He Practiced What He in a special Vatican audience belief produces in the heart Presented by William Kemper, attorney and of Preached!" 800 Abbott Road Sunday Worship Services But in a speech to them arid man Sunday School 9:45 a.m. John N. Collins, assistant professor of political science MSU other participants in a sympo¬ Franziskus Cardinal Koenig. Dr. Howard A. Lyman Upper level, corner room Morning Service 11:00 a.m. 9:30 - 11:00 a.m. sium on atheism, the Pope head of the Vatican Secretariate Child care provided Training Union 6:00 p.m. Church School - Creative Workshop for Grades 1 through preaching Rev. David A. Kruse deplored what he called the de¬ Tor Nonbelievers. presented the All welcome Evening Service 7:00 p.m. Missouri Synod Junior High. Church School 9:45 to 11:45 are gradation into which the idea scholars to the Pope. Among Wednesday Evening Nursery and Kindergarten Crib Nursery For Transportation or of God had fallen in some the 25 conference participants So Bring The Eaby IV 5-9477 Information call, 337-0241 modern scholarship. present were French Jesuit Clad in a white cassock, the theologian Henri Cox of the Peoples Church F irst Church of Sunday at 11:00 a.m. pontiff congratulated the mem¬ Harvard University Divinity "From Whose Point of View?" Christ Scientist bers of the symposium: spon¬ School. will be the sermon topic at East Lansing 709 E. Grand River * sored by the Vatican and the "We have a great esteem, a CASTminSTCR PRCSBYTGRian ChURCh Interdeftominational 1 East Lansing University of Californi a at Berkley, for "the good work great respect in our each of you-no heart for matter what 1315 Abbott Rd. cost ransino. cmcnican UST LANSING TRINITYInterdenominational McDonald Middle School CHURCH Sunday Service 11 a.m. done" and urged them to con¬ the differences of thought and 1601 Burcham Drive SUNDAY SCHEDULE tinue their studies on why conviction." the Pope said in SERMON some people live a godless life. informal remarks in Italian. E. Eugene Williams—PASTORS--Terry A. Smith SUNDAY SERVICE Worship Services— 9:00 and 11:00 a.m, University Class 9:45 a.m. "We wish to raise up again "This encounter could go on 9:30 11:00 "REALITY" Assembly for children through third grade 9:00 a.m a.m. - a.m, the idea of God from the de¬ without end since there are so Church School for children, youth, and adults 10:00 a.m "God's Created Community" 7:00 p*m* SUNDAY SCHOOL gradation into which it has fall¬ many thoughts, hopes and aspi¬ Trinity Collegiate Fellowship 8:30 p.m. en with many men of our time, rations which we would like NURSERY PROVIDED ALL TIMES 'To What City?" 11:00 a.m. - regular Wednesday: Mid-week discussion and prayer hour at 7:00 p.m. and from the fantastic supersti¬ to express." Rev. Robert David Leas 337-0183_ tions which we often en¬ Free BUS SERVICE — See schedule in your dorm 9:30-11:00 a.m. - college class . . . by Dr. Wallace Robertson WEDNESDAY counter in modern life. he FIRST CHRISTIAN REFORMED CHURCH EDGEWOOD UNITED CHURCH 1:00 p.m. - Evening Meeting said. His mention of super¬ 469 North Hagadorn Road stitions" seemed a plain re¬ FOREST VIEW SCHOOL Sunday Services and Church School CHURCH SCHOOL Free Public Reading Room ference to the rising cult of Zales MORNING SERVICE 3119 Stoneleigh, 10:00 Lansing EVENING SERVICE 7:00 p.m. 9:30 & 11:00 a.m. PALM SUNDAY 9:30 a.m.-ll:00 a.m. 134 West Grand OPEN River National symbol, Weekdays — 9-5 p.m. Constellation Rev. Brink, preaching Special Palm Sunday Service with Folk Music and sermon by Dr. Truman A. Morrison Crib through Adults' Mon., Tues., Thurs., Fri. 6th century harp, Evenings 7 p.m. - 9 p«m. stolen in Ireland Diamond CAMPUS STUDENT CENTER, 217 Bogue Dramatic Reading St., Apt. 3 Singles Group, 35 yrs. & under 12:30 p.m. Luncheon & Discussion Refreshment period in Social Hall following worship serv- All are welcome to attend Church Services and visit and Alvin Hoksbergen, Director Phone 351-6360 University Group—6 p.m. use the reading room. DUBLIN. Ireland «AP > FREE BUS SERVICE--See Schedule on Edgewood Church Bus route, Conrad, Holmes and Hubbard, beginning at 10:40 a.m. Someone broke into Trinity Col¬ Residence HalJ Bulletin Board. Call 332-8693 or 332-0606 for information lege library and stole the 1.300- year-old harp of King Brian fi UNIVERSITY UNITED Boru, police reported Tuesday With a snake on its bow and fish embossed on its frame, Mm SOUTH BAPTIST CHURCH 1518 S. Washington METHODIST CHURCH 1120 South Harrison Phone: 351-7030 the ancient harp is the most famous musical instrument on W SUNDAY 7:00 P.M. Choir Concert the Emerald Isle. Registered "The Groans of Growth" as the official symbol of the Stainer's "Crucifixion" country, its image is tamped DR. HOWARD SUDGEN, PASTOR Rev. Burns try, its image is stamped on $150 speaking the back of all Irish coins. Zales heavenly diamond 9:45 A.M. COLLEGIAN But now it is gone from its design, expertly styled FELLOWSHIP by master craftsmen in College Bible Class glass case, and officials said fine 14 karat gold . in the fireside room 8:30 p*m. fragments on the library floor Dr. Ted Ward, Teacher Fireside Room Morning Worship 8:30, 9:30, 11:00 Convenient Terms showed burglars might have Church School 9:30 (for all ages) damaged the harp when they 11:00 thru grade six jimmied open the case Monday 11:00 A.M. "Road to Riches" Nursery under supervision of a night. The harp's exact age is a Zales FREE BUS SERVICE Morning and Evening registered nurse. Free bus transportation 15 to mystery, but authorities date it Call 482-0754 for information. 30 minutes before each service. from the 6th or 7th century Friday, March 28, 1969 18 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Plagued Paper' publishes The newspaper Paper, an underground with offices in the David I. Freedman, Vestal, tion of sex and love "in reply N Y. senior and editor of The to the Sexuality Symposium" Presecutor might take it as an "it's possible that the County The Paper's sexuality is- Student Services Bldg. encoun- hesitant to give conducted on campus last term. excuse to arrest the people As far this issue goes involved in campus disorders," sue was refused by fifteen tered difficulty when the regu- details concerning publication as "It's hard to find printers there isn't anything obscene he said, printers with publication be- lar printer refused to print because they're afraid they involved. I see nothing of- To avoid possible legal ac- ing set back t>.ee weeks be- both the main article and the fore a print .r was finally accompanying photographs for might get busted and end up fensive about love," he said. tion, this issue of The Paper If legal proceedings are car- is not for sale but "contribu- found. the recent Sexuality Issue. ried out against The Paper, tions are being taken.' "After our regular printer they would be for political, only legal action that could refused to print it we shopped rather than pornographic rea- be taken would be for pos¬ session rather than sale of Huber around in Michigan and fin- sons Freedman said. to ally tried to find someone Chicago. Even the National "This freedom of is not a question of speech or obscen- pornography," he said. Freedman said he was dis¬ Enquirer (which is noted for ity but rather of political re- satisfied with the issue as a graphic displays of violence) pression," he said, whole partially for technical confirmation refused to print it. printers will print nudes, but not nudes touching," he said. Freedom said that the sexual- Most Since many Paper writers have been involved in campus demonstrations, Freedman said, there was a possibility that reasons. iSSue graphs m in. not satisfied with this general weren t The clear photo- enough Sen. Robert Huber, R-Troy. Varner's stand concerning a film ity issue was not meant to be the sexuality issue could be and I was sad because we said Thursday he will attempt festival on the Oakland campus pornographic but rather an used as an excuse for prose- didn't have more local stuff open and honest" presenta- cuting the writers. from local people. Fire figh jI Engint ering 422 lab had a practice session in the use of fire ex- of Oakland University to the cates Va unacceptability Placement Bureau for Arts Council position. rtasks recently. A representative from the safety services Michigan Arts Council. The chairman of the Senate He further stated that if Varner started a f students practiced fire prevention methods by the Engineer- State News photo by Bill Porteous State Affairs committee said really believes he does not have ing Bldg. the authority to control some of the activities on his campus, NEW YORK LIFE INSUR¬ The following employers will civil, electrical, mechanical he should resign as chancellor. ANCE CO.: Accounting and fi¬ be interviewing from April 7 metallurgical engineering (B) 5-YEARS WITH ENEMY Huber referred to several through April 11,1969. Location: Michigan, Indiana nancial administration, busi¬ occurances including a publisher If you are interested in an or- Ohio and various, ness law and office administra- refusing to print the student ganization, please report to the FIRESTONE TIRE & RUB- tion, economics, hotel, restau- newspaper, a nude student read¬ Placement Bureau AT LEAST BER CO.: Summer Employ- rant and institutional manage- Major tells of Viet WASHINGTON i AP i An pleasantly surprised to see. the was going as well as it 31-vear-old Texas, said. native of ordeal McAllen, Viet Cong. Rowe remembered that the ing poetry in a classroom, the burning of an American flag and there the recent film festival where he saii Varner asserted was no[hing because of court decisions. he could do TWO SCHOOL DAYS in advance to to should sign up for an interview and obtain additional information, Military Obligation: interview with Students employ- ment: ous. for Juniors in general business administration, mar- keting, management, and retail- ing. Location: Midwest and vari- ment. and marketing and trans- portation administration iB). Location: Lansing. NORTHERN STATES POW- ER CO.: Electrical engineering Army office ho ' is a pris- war ers even though they have not FORD MOTOR CO : Summer (B). Location: Eau Claire or La- I came face to face with military code of conduct re- Varner was appointed bv Gov. oner of the ■my in Vietnam completed their military serv- Employment: for Juniors in the Crosse, Wis. years said Wed- Rowe. a special forces the fact there is a supreme be- quired him to evade enemy Milliken Wednesday to the state ice. Most employers will be in- College of communication arts. NORTH STAR CAMP FOR the Viet Cong Green Beret'" when captured, ing. he said. questions and "Ilied a lot. agency established to promote terested in the student before Location. Dearborn BOYS Summer Employment: we're definitely convinced" told a depressing story of sur¬ At night, Rowe said, the Viet Rowe said the Viet Cong kept the arts in Michigan. and after his duty with the GLADWIN COMMUNITY All majors, All colleges (Men) vival in one jungle prison camp Cong strapped him into leg him at several prison camps in ^he films shown at the fes- Armed Forces. SCHOOLS: Early and later ele- Location: Hayward, Wis. they were winning the war. He said they almost persuad¬ after another, of learning to eat irons and locked him up in a the U Minh forest in South Viet- tival. all previously approved mentary education, remedial ROCHESTER COMMUNITY April 7, Monday: ed him; too. rats, bee larva and snakes, and cage-like structure with wood- nam's Mekong Delta, shifting a student-faculty group, AIS CORP.: Accounting, fi¬ reading (B,M). Junior High SCHOOLS: Early and later ele- en bars. to a different place only when w'ere devoid of artistic merit Maj James Nicholas Rowe struggling to maintain his san- nancial administration (B). Lo¬ School: mathematics and so- mentary education, remedial By day. he was put to work an attack seemed imminent, and were blasphemous and ob¬ told Pentagon newsmen that ity. cation: Lansing. cial science (B.M). Senior high reading, speech correction, and trying to catch fish or animals The maximum number of scene. Huber charged. ARMADA PUBLIC school: art, English, general diagnostician iB.M). Junior and for food, chopping wood and POW's at any one camp never "It these underground film SCHOOLS: Early and later ele¬ science, and home economics Senior High School. All Secon- attending Communist propa- exceeded five, he said, any makers want to crank out such (B.M). Location: Gladwin. dary (except English. Social mentary education, music, and ganda classes. these were guarded by as many films and student groups want HIGHLAND PARK Studies, and Mathematics) and Either they converted you or physical education (B.M). Jun¬ as 20 Viet Cong, to show them, all right, but ior High School: English, Math¬ SCHOOLS: Early and later ele- Special Education (B.M). Loca- fgMiriH ^ CIRCLE of eliminated vou." the slender of- ficer said, five years adding that after the Viet Cong "were ^ For a time, one prison com¬ panion was M. Sgt Daniel L. let's to not allow support them.' Huber the However, the senator was pes¬ taxpayers said. ematics ior High (B,M). Junior and Sen¬ School: Latin, English, mentary education, art, counse- lor. music, maladjusted, men- tion: Rochester SAGINAW VALLEY COL- SOUND about to close the gate on Pitzer of Spring Lake. N.C.. who was freed by the Viet Cong in 196?. simistic on the chances of de¬ feating the appointment. "There music, home economics (B.Mi. Senior music, High School: French. speech, american lit- tallv handicapped, physically handicapped, remedial reading and speech correction (B.M). LEGE: Philosophy, sociology, economics, biology, languages (French & Spanish), history •But probably aren't enough others erature, government, and busi- Junior high school: Art, Spa- (American & European), psy- asked why Pit- concerned, but there may be." ness education (B.M). Location: nish, music, maladjusted, reme- chology, political science, chem- wanted to do. and I couldn't zer, and not he, was voluntarily he said. do them Armada. dial reading (B,M). Junior and istry and English, business ad- by dying in there. ' released by the enemy. He re- BULLOCK SCHOOL DIS- Senior High School: General ministration, accounting, mar- Rowe said he played games plied: "My attitude was real- TRICT: Early and later ele- Science and mathematics (B,M). keting. and mathematics iD). with his " incompetent inter- ly not too good, and I had tried New drug program mentarv education and spe- Location: Highland Park. Location: University Center, rogator" whom he found easy to escape." cial education type A (B.M). KEARSLEY COMMUNITY ST. CLAIR COUNTY INTER- to mislead. aimed at helping Senior High School: English. SCHOOLS: Early and later ele- MEDIATE SCHOOL DISTRICT: He declined to say whether Rowe succeeded on his last mathematics, physical science, mentary education. Type A. Senior High School: Diagnosti- he was tortured, contending chance Dec. 31 when U.S. ar- that this might result in beat- med helicopters raided the area 'experimenters' type A, and industrial arts (B, Mi. Location: Midland. speech correction (B,M). Sen- cian (B.M). System-wide: Men- ior high school: Business edu- tally handicapped Type A and ings for men still held by the where he was held. CAMP MISSAUKEE: Summer cation (B.M). Location: Flint. trainable. physically handi- I WASHINGTON (AP)--A na- Employment. Location: Lake LOS ANGELES CITY SCHOOL capped-classroom. speech cor- Make THIS I tionwide information program City. Mich DISTRICTS: Early and later rection, and school social work- The TROUBADOR • Z590 J aimed at helping youngsters re- CITY OF DETROIT: Account- elementary education (B.M). Junior and senior high school: er (B,Mi. Location: Port Hu- ron. featuring FM/AM/Stereo FM Radio Art, history, English, French. UNITED PRESS INTERNA- ■ 100 Watts of Peak Music Power year for • month by the National Institute engineering, foods and nutri Spanish. music, health educa- TIONAL: Journalism and All ■ Micro-Touch" 2G Tone Arm I of Mental Health. tion, medical tecf^ 1 L tion, physical education, gen- Majors of the Colleges of Arts ■ Tape Input/Output and I The campaign, using all news istry and nursing eral science, biology, home eco- and Letters. Communication Arts Stereo Headphone Jacks EUROPE! | I media, will be divided into sev- eral segments directed at wide- Detroit, Mich. COLE NATIONAL CORP nomics, mathematics, cal science, acoustically, men- physi- and Social Science ing Michigan1 Sat. 9-6 Sun. 2-6 Choose from convenient and fun tours J adults who overuse ampheta- COOK PAINT AND VARNISH industrial arts (B.M). Loca- Mt. Kisco, N Y. by S.T.O.P., Olson's, A.Y.A., Brownell, Os¬ J mines and barbituates and in- CO.: Chemistry, Chemical engi tion: Los Angeles. Calif MCDONALD'S SYSTEM, The following employers will borne or University. J ner-city dwellers exposed daily neering (B). Location: Detroit. INC.: Hotel, Restaurant and be interviewing from April 7 I to the dangers of heroin ad¬ through April 8. 1969. diction. Institutional Management (B. April 7 and 8,1969: Or, travel independently with many ex- Mi Location: various. t ARTHUR ANDERSEN AND MICHIGAN BLUE SHIELD CO Accounting No children $110 per month. Call refrigerator and disposal included. sublease 3-4 1 Excellent location Kitchen. nished apartment Close to MS U area Reasonable rent. 585-6329 Private drive. Washer and dryer HOSMER STREET. 315-Low( Graduate or young faculty member after 9 p.m. weekdays or Barb R . available. $210 month including SPRING-NEED 1 man to share 351-3426. 4-4 1 300 East Nine Mile. Ferndale 5-4 2 utilities. Deposit required Phone PORTABLE ZENITH stereo Has GIRLS 238 Bailey 3 bedrooms house with graduate student. Private 882-4726. 3-3 28 never been used Black and wal¬ furnished home All utilities pa bedroom Close $65 337-9510 . 373- ONE MAN for luxury apartment. 1 ONE GIRL needed for 4-girl apart¬ Lease now for summer and ni nut $100. Call 351-0602 3-4 1 2555 (weekends 1. 1-3 28 ment Water's Edge Spring only ONE GIRL needed Furnished, clean, year. Stop in, or call 489-4363 351-8193 3-3 31 walking distance $55 332-5320. EAST LANSING-Wardcliff. room duplex, carpeting, after6p m 6-4 4 MALE STUDENTS PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE. South off GIRLS: 504 Abbott 4 bedroom range. $190 month . Ca ONE BEDROOM modern apartment cooking Block Uni Michigan Avenue Efficiency, men ished home. All utilities paid green. 332-3839 in Lansing $135 a month Days, only. Share bath. $60 a month plus Lease now for next year Stop i phone 337-9886, nights, phone 393- deposit 627-5454 2-3 28 processed. $2 90 with this ad MAR- or call 489-4363 EXTRA MCE EK REXALL DRUGS PRESCRIPTION ONE GIRL needed for spring t LADIES VACANCY for one to share ng RENTED. CENTER at Frandor New Lower at 711 East Apartments, Burc large house $55 - Close 351-5705 GIRLS: SUMMER and fall terms 1-3 28 lan Block cam- Drive Phone after 4 p.m.. Near campus, 332-8903 after 6 MOVING SALE Parts for Morris it. ED 2-8498: P m 3-3 28 3-3 31 Minor 1000. complete Sunbeam Al¬ ZIG-ZAG sewing machine 3 months pine. Westinghouse range, size 15 old Does everything. Cost $259 new. COMPLETELY FURNISHED and fire¬ lan. Apartment place for 4 to 5 single persons will sell for $99 Has lifetime Phone 351-4476 Reduced 351- Near Capitol. 484-1938. 5-4 1 guarantee. Has 24 cams for de¬ 3-3 28 signs Phone 393-5072 C-3 28 FENDER SUPER Reverb amplifier and Guild Starfire III Excellent 487-5753 or 485-8836 condition. Call 484-2135. 3-3 28 DUPLEX 319 W rented. NOTICE TO MARRIED STUDENTS EAST room campus lease. LANSING: Students - 2 bed¬ furnished house 2 blocks from Garage. $175 351-5285 after - 3 4:30 month p.m. BICYCLE Join your most friends at Creek Farm Townehouses . . . rapidly becoming the popular married students' community In the Lansing area. At Creek Farm, your money buys more living per dollar than anywhere else In SALE 10-4 8 town . . . and you'll find many other student families with the same In¬ terests that you have. Come and see the beautiful ly-furnlshed models today. ALL YOU WANT IN * YOU'LL GET THESE OUTSTANDING FEATURES , Individual 1 & 2 story Townehouses * Loads of closet space AN APARTMENT.. * Large living room * Separate formal dining area * 2 or 3 bedrooms * 1 or 1 1/2 baths * Modern kitchen with deluxe oven and range, two door refrigerator- freezer, custom cabinets * Full private basement * Private front and rear entrances * Private backyard * Only $345 moves you In * Income tax deductions * * No personal mortgage liability Choice of colonial or ranch-type homes 1 * FRIDAY, MARCH 28, 1969 Landscaping and maintenance included \ Plumbing and appliances replaced or repaired a* no additional cost * 1:30 p.m. * As low as $104. per month Including heat and all utilities except electric at Salvage Yard CREEK FARM TOWNEHOUSES Farm Lane, M5U Campus Go 1/2 Mile South of Jolly Road on Logan Turn left on Haag Road and Follow Model Signs Various makes and conditions. All items may be seen at Salvage Yard from 8:30 Model townehouses open da'ly and Sunday—Noon to 8 p.m. S.m. to 1:00 p.m. Saturday, Noon to 5 p.m. Closed Thursday. Phone: 882-1725 TERMS: CASH 635 Abbott Rd. The All New The Voice of Music IS AT "Vanguard" UNIVERSITY Model 372 Solid State Fortable Phono with AM/FM Tuner Fall leasing VILLA Exciting . . . begins Wednesday April 2—from $55/rr point, then resume play again at any time. In- eludes •counterweight tone arm modular design. Case covered ij 10URE JHEDORM sory (Model 1561). ened winter ter *furnished and completely •4-speed Supreme, mono and stereo. * Power output: 40 watts total Peak SO I ! AAA carpeted Music Power (EIA Test Method) •Flip-over Diamond-Sapphire styli. *laundry facilities ■•Frequency response: 80Hz-12 kHz, •Solid State stereo amplifier. *4-speaker stereo sound system *24 hour maintenance service •FM with AFC. ♦Dimensions: 1Q 1/8" h. x 21 1/2" 1 c 16 7/8" d. *Halstead offices on premises Of East Lansing CLEANERS Halstead Management—351-7910 Distributed Through Fulton Radio Supply NeJac's 543 East Grand River Phone 337-1300 LOUIS 623 E. Grand River East Lansing Friday, March 28, 1969 21 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan warships Sale Peanuts Personel Soviet For REGEANT VIP 12x50. Ten min¬ utes from campus. Must sell. 699-2586 CHAMPION-1967 rent. peting, on For Full air-conditioning, car¬ skirting, sale 3-3/28 King Arthur's or Real Estate in Atlantic The Russian near flotilla, he British navy Iceland ships and Indian Ocean next month. A lot. Swimming facilities. Phone LONDON (AP)--A task 351-5651 or 353-3936 3-3/28 force of 19 Soviet warships, biggest Soviet sea force to Shackleton bombers from the British Defense Ministry CHARMING ENGLISH tudor home including two missle cruisers approach the Atlantic in Royal Air Force kept watch spokesman said, "We have no GREAT LAKES 1968 53X12 6 months 4-bedroom, excellent condition, spa . and eight submarines, began cent years, mustered for the on the Russian vessels but idea whether the fleet off Scot¬ old, 2 bedrooms, carpeted through¬ cious grounds Walking distance t< exercises 400 miles off the definite report was available land is the same one.-' out. furnished except beds, priced University. Call after 5 p.m., 332 exercises today 200 miles to sell. Lot 131 Stonegate, 332- 4034 . 3-3/21 south of Iceland, Britain's on where the force was head¬ ed. Royal Navy reported. 1969 LIBERTY 3-bedroom, 2 months OLDER HOME: 1 block to M.S.U. 3 The Soviet ships crossed the Job folder token, 4 bedrooms Attached garage old. 12X65. On lot, 10 minutes to or Artie Circle earlier this week Owner will finance to qualified buy¬ campus 882-0386 NEW MOON: 1966 10X50 3-3/28 Carpeted er 332-3692. TRADE OR SELL Lake Michigan re¬ 3-3/31 Secret talks and naval observers ulated they were bound for the Russian east coast follow- spec¬ ask prompt return front living hall and master room, sort community residential-commer¬ Vietnam policy of the Johnson ing clashes on the Chinese- The office of the work-study bedroom. Lovely fruitwood panel¬ (continued from page one) cial income property for East Lan¬ ling throughout. Completely fur¬ estimates that it might take two administration that Sen. Jacob Soviet frontier program is missing a folder nished. Well sing area property Phone 351- listing jobs available for spring cared for. Located in Maneuvers would slow down to three years to bring home K. Javits, R-N.Y . warned City Trailer Court. Buying home, such but naval ex- term. Unless the folder is re¬ must sell quickly. 489-3627 3-3/28 against the Nixon administra a voyage by the perts said it still turned. many needy students tion being "trapped was pos¬ sible they headed for will be jeopardized in their Lost & Found WHITE BIRCH WESTERN SHOP. Ev¬ Rogers turned down the idea Johnson approach to the war were Asia and combining the search for employment. erything for the horse and horse¬ it would take that long, though Javits and Republican Sen. voy¬ with exercises. The office requests that the man. 1939 South Meridian Road, he refused to give any specific Clifford P. Case of New Jersey age Mason. 677-0071. 2-3/28 timetable. "We are prepared, if contended that the American A Tass report from Moscow person who walked off with the said Soviet naval units would folder return it to 257 Sfudent LOST: FEMALE cat, tiger Last the other side is prepared, to public had become increasingly seen 3/17 in vicinity of Grove withdraw over a very short per- frustrated with ■ Nixon's Demo-- be visiting Mauritius in the Servic.es Bldg. immediately and Linden. Reward. 332-8081 iod of time," he said. cratic predecessor over failure "So tell mo, Chadsworth, what has your Under the declaration adopted to successfully conclude the Missing coed - by the Vietnam allies at their war. doctoral thesis in astronomy come BABYSITTING Ii\ my Spartan Village Manila summit meeting after Rogers said somehow it home. Days, nights, weekends. 1626 le that using (continued from page o educational and benefi- up with?" I. Call 355-9910 5-4/2 they started sending troops to doesn't seem to Vietnam in 1965, the troop con- the words "honorable peace' is DRESS MAKING and alterations. tributors pledged to pull their trite." nor is the phrase "mu- p r Phone MRS. WARREN, 487-3318. forces out within six months of a tual withdrawal of troops.' room. 7 p.m. in Conrad audi¬ dent Donna O'Donahue said. 3-3/28 North Vietnamese the same time he disputed the torium. and at 9:30 p.m. in Storaska will discuss the pullout and a subsiding of the level of vio¬ notion that use of language sim¬ Wilson auditorium. There will types of people who assault, en¬ FREE A Thrilling hour of beau- ALTERATIONS AND dressmaking by lANASONIC lence. The six-month time per¬ ilar to that employed by the be no admission charge. vironmental conditions that con¬ STEREO: Receiver, turn- Re* SIAMESE KITTENS for sale tv For appointment, call 484- experienced seamstress. Reason¬ tribute to assaults, and ways Table. speakers Best offer or $100 tered Frost and Chocolate Point 4519 MERLE NORMAN COSME¬ able charge. Call 355-5855 3-3/28 iod was not mentioned in Rog¬ Johnson administration meant "In view of the recently re¬ to pSl-4346 '' 3-3 28 Excellent dispositions. Wormed TICS STUDIO 1600 East Michigan er's testimony. the Nixon policymakers were ported Ann Arbor assault of a prevent then. He will also ex¬ C-3'26 Litter trained. Joan Copps 337 PAINTING AT Low winter prices So much of the new secretary not evolving a new formula for 16-year-old girl, we feel that plain how a woman can avoid Free estimates Call BOB MAY of state's phrasing sounded like achieving peace. sponsoring Mr. Storaska 11 being harmed by defending her- RENT A TV from a TV Company - 393-4173. 10-4/1 assault does — self if an occur. $9.00 per month. Call 337-1300. WING MACHINE clearance sale NEJAC TV RENTALS C Because accepting rides with d new month portables--$49.50. $5.00 Large selection of re- itioned used machines. Singers, POODLE. 12 inch AKC. Black female miniature. Family pup pet FINISHING THESIS'' Complete edi¬ torial services. Inquire P Rush, BARBI MEL: Tvoine. nr Draft study panel strangers is a major taboo for girls, the question has been rais¬ No job too large or i ed as to the viability of MSU's es. Necchis. New Home and 332-4812 2-3 28 3414 Parchmount, Kalamazoo. Indi¬ others." $19 95 to $39.95 Block off campus. 332-3255 (continued from page one! The chief executive said finance committee of the Du- ride board in the Union, which nv cate title, completion schedule EDWARDS DISTRIBUTING 3-3/28 for service, including i achievement of his goal would Pont Co.. Wilmington. Del.: Alan has provided a service over the POODLE PUPPIES--AKC. Choco¬ ANN BROWN: Typist and multilith [OMPANY 1115 North Washington C-3 28 late miniatures. Reasonable Call T HONTETTPE RSON AL~ offset printing. Dissertations, theses, creased pay. benefits, recruit- ■require the best efforts of our Greenspan. New York City years for students seeking or 372-0270. 3-3/28 DATING SERVICE manuscripts general typing IBM ment incentives and other prac- military establishment and the economic consultant: Stephen offering rides to various places. [RTHDAY CAKES--7'-$3.64: 8'- leet someone you're 19 years experience 332-8384 C ticable measures to make mili- best advice we can obtain from Herbits. a Washington D C. Re¬ BLACK LABRADOR retrievers AKC. 9"-$5.20. Delivered KWAST compatible with tary careers more attractive to eminent citizens and experts searcher: the Rev. Theodore that it is a stu¬ Maine bred Beautiful compan¬ DONNA BOHANNON Profession (AKERIES. 484-1317 C-3'28 For information send a postcarc Hesburgh. president. Univer¬ dents responsibility to investi¬ ions, hunters 332-0564 3-3 28 typist. Term papers, thesis IBM young men." with your name and address gate the persons he might ac¬ MPEX SPACE 4460 tapedeck. pur- Selectric. 353-7922. C Nixon said the panel also The commission. Nixon said, sity of Notre Dame. South Bend. r n C P.O. Box 2137 Ind.: Jerome Holland, presi¬ cept rides from. Dickerson SIAMESE KITTEN -Male. 3 months l.U.O. would suggest "what standby -will consider possible changes Ann Arbor, Mich. PAULA ANN HAUGHEY: A unique dent. Hampton Institute. Hamp¬ said. "I wouldn't accept a ride old Very affectionate, excellent machinery for the draft will be in selection standards and in markings $15 393-5908 2-3 28 quality thesis service IBM typing, ton. Va.: John Kemper, head¬ from just anyone and I think a IA tank-regulator-back- SPORTS CAR OWNERS: Watch Mon¬ multilith printing and hard binding required in the event of a na- utilization policies which may New Motorola tran- day's State News for more complete tional emergency and will give master. Phillips Academy. And- coed should be even more care¬ i 337-1627 C assist in eliminating the need radio--Antenna $25 DALMATIAN PUPPIES-Black, white. servicing of your car. 1-3/28 serious consideration to our re- over. Mass.: Jeanne L. Nobel, ful than I am." for inductions. 2-3 28 AKC registered, excellent blood lines, wormed and shots. 332- T ransportation quirements for an adequate re¬ professor of education. New Milton Dickerson. vice presi¬ He also said it would look into serve forces program." York University. W. Allen dent of student affairs, WEEKENDS TO Somerset Center. "estimated costs and savings expres¬ On Feb. 5, Nixon had directed Wallis. president. University of Michigan Fort Wayne, Indiana sed the view that the Union OVERLAND EXPEDITION INDIA. or the Defense Dept. to draft rec¬ resulting from an all-volunteer Rochester, and Roy Wilkins. Phone 353-3567 3-3/28 Board BEAGLE—18 months male, Leaves London June 24 $485 De¬ force, as well as the broader so¬ might be justified in "sovPr registered. Started hunting tails D Aarons-23 Manor House ommendations for moving to a volunteer basis cial and economic implications executive director. National As¬ sociation for the Advancement taking a look at its (the ride 2460, after 5 p.m. Drive. London NW6. 5-4/2 board i value." STEVE SMYTH TRIO. Dance music Ziegler said he assumed this of this program of Colored People. for the sophisticate Reasonable Wanted project has been going forward In addition to Gates, eommis- ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■ Apartment Store 372-5179, after 5 p.m. FOR ALL our friends at 2-3/28 State, a BLOOD DONERS NEEDED: $7 50 for all positive. A negative. B negative and. fn creating fhe commis- sion, Nixon instructed the Pen- tagon and all other agencies "to sion members include two form- er supreme allied commanders in in Europe. Retired Gens. Al- Look ■ East Lansing Managenmnt special sale is on our slate. We're boxing up all our Junk, even pack¬ and AB negative. $10 00 O negative- $12 00 MICHIGAN COMMUNITY support this study and provide needed information and assist- fred Gruenther and Norstad. Lauris Be Shi ing Grandma's trunk. Every box of BLOOD CENTER. 507^ E Granc ance as a matter of high priori- SHAVE YOUR OPTICAL COSTS stuff we'll weigh, and by the pound River, East Lansing. Above the new ■ 351-7880 is how you'll pay and by the pound, the funniest auc¬ By the box Sale starts Satur¬ Campus Book Store. Hours 9 a.m. 3:30 p.m. Monday. Tuesday and Fri ty-' of Other members are: Republican Rep. Thomas Curtis Missouri: Frederick Former Dent, Glasses at Discount ■ tion sale around. day; Wednesday and Thursday. 12 president. Mavfair Mills. Spar¬ ALL PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED Open 'til noon Sat. day, March 29th. TOM AND JER¬ RY'S JUNK EMPORIUM. 317 E. Grand 6:30 p.m. 337-7183. C Who's tanburg. S.C.: Milton Friedman, j 317 M.A.C. River. McAllister Lansing Auctioneer, Norm . 0-328 WANTED: USED woman's English Whose professor of economics. Univer- 205 Ann Street Artmar 332-5520 Op■ ■ COMMISSION PORTRAITS: Oil, char¬ coal, pastel. Sittings arranged. URGENT. PARKING space close to PI.\ MINGS Will show samples 351-9114 Cedar Village needed Will pay 1-3/28 351-6945. 3-4/1 Joan Koehn, Adrian freshman. Phi Mu to Bill Mathers. De¬ troit freshman. Phi Kappa Psi Martha Wern, Lake Orion sophomore to Gary Sanford. Ft. Lauderdale. Fla. graduate. Theta Delta Chi. every day ENGAGEMENTS Roberta Soden, Ames. Iowa THE INCLUDING SATU^AYovvn BESTSERVICE IN graduate MSU to Edward Brill. Merrick, N.Y. senior. Sue Kirkpatrick. East Lan¬ sing senior, Sigma Kappa to John W. Anderson. Caseville It's been single-edged,double-edged, VaAti PROFESSIONAL senior, Theta Delta Chi. xt banded, injectored, plastic-coated, DRY CLEANERS AND Judith R. Dauer. Menlo Park. SHIRT LAUNDERERS Calif., Kappa Delta to Ronald also coin operated Wickline, Grosse Pointe Woods. and now electro-coated. LLr FRANDOR SHOPPING CENTER and 2801 W. SAGINAW Alpha Tau Omega. Place Your THE WETBACK PEOPLE REACHER WANT AD WIGGLE Today . . . Just clip, complete, mail. STATE NEWS will bill you later. But it's still straight. That's the action you perform when you're driving in warm, humid wt ther Your wet shirt is stuck to the bacirt-st and y<. . wish you had a stick to get where vour ha,".d can t reach There s a better way to go Get a Thermo Kimj auto air conditioner1 A Thermo Kit ' osts far less than a factory system, and is even rnon . fficient You travel cool, clean and 4 w» >1 pressed in ck^ .midified air filtered free of dust and p<<;if"t AnotherDif »• feature you can save money Consecutive Dates to Ru lat. by switching •' to your next car when you trade Heading THERMO KING t auto air conditioning LARGEST DISCOUNT IN TOWN uts Personals must be placed in per 'ore/co you can't get any closer 10 Words or Less: Over 10 Words Add; □ □ ail to: Michigan State News 346 Student Services Bldg MSU East Lansing, Mich, BOO E. KALAMAZOO Friday, March 28, 1969 22 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan MONDAY 10:3Qam12:30pm MASOM WILLIAMS Will beweRe to CLASSICAL p€rsom4lly AUT06IWH HIS GAS" & LAreST pes seniug book. "THe mason wilua/hs WINS M "CiNpeReLLA l plcajty of R0CKAF61-LA Books iaj stock. H€4D WRiT&R FOR FAT PAU HCAP FOR. SMOTHeRS BROTHeRS COMCPY AT AMPUSpOOK^TORE jCri-KO ROM BERKEY HALL