Let Wednesday us . . Clearing . . . have faith that MICHIGAN STATE NEWS . . . right makes might, and in that faith let us, to the end, dare to do our duty STATE as we understand it. -Abraham Lincoln UNIVERSITY East Lansing, Michigan Wednesday, April 30, 1969 Vol. 61 Number 168 Wilson hearing airs charges; 2 BSA stays; decision pending for the prosecution Sam Riddle, south Hatcher that she had a wonderful" per¬ answer Mrs. Shane's question concerning complex chairman of BSA. presented the sonality, she said he called her to his office the action that would have been taken if witnesses. and had she had svyorn at a white employe Alleged changed her work rating to below "In the future- and this is a warning- Joseph Trantham, food services mana¬ standard because of an alleged personality insults ranging from a threat to kick a when racism exists in a component of this ger of Wilson, and Elaine Mishler, head conflict. black person "in the ass'' to the telling oi institution, we will close that component manager, were the accused, defended by contrived lies designed to pit the black "All we said was Good-morning Joe. down." I>ansing attorney Hildebrand staff members against each other were also The warning was made by Robert L. Carolyn J Hatcher. Joleen Shane, and good-morning Jean; good-bye Joe. good¬ revealed Green associate director of the Center ^oxie Triplett. the complainants, accused bye Jean;-now where's the conflict?". When confronted earlier with her inac ' Mrs Hatcher asked. for I i ban Affairs before approximately rantham and Miss Mishler of several in- tion on these issues and accused of beir 1.000 students and the adjudicating com¬ njents involving racial prejudice includ- Nana Stimson. a white bake-shop em¬ prejudiced against blacks. Miss Mishlei mittee >et up by Acting President Adams ploye, was accused of swearing at Mrs. allegedly told her employes. "Mavbe to invougate charges of racial harass.- Joleen Shane Trantham allegedly re¬ am a little bit prejudiced." Keeping ment i ance i lie by the Black Students' Alli¬ vi against two Wilson Hall admin- i f The adjudicating committee, composed administrators, faculty and students four white-four black), met following the fused to act on the matter, and would not (please turn to page 11) istratoi Acting President Walter Adams met w'th Milton Dickerson, vic« 4-hour hearing. No decision had been Stewait Dunning, Lansing attorney, and president for student affairs, outside the Wilson cafeteria T jes- reached at State New$ deadline; recom¬ day. Stafe News pho^ by Laice La^on Ron Bailey of BSA were the spokesman . mendations will go to acting president Adams before ction being made public. Further by BSA will depend upon the out¬ Milliken opposes come of the committee's deliberation. MAY'S SUCCESSOR ISSUE ing: the alleged changing of Mrs. Hatcher's leaves settlemen By LARRY LEE officials to remove the trespassers work rating from excellent to sub-standard MSU State News Staff Writer and I will take no action unless asked trustee two weeks later with "personality conflict" given as the reason; the denial of the knowledge of a letter written in support of Although opposed to the black students sit-in at Wilson cafeteria. Gov. said Milliken Tuesday that he did not intend to he said. University administrators must mak* the complainants; abusive language and the decisions if the law is broken so interfere with the student take-over. threats made by other employes and the that educational opportunity is deprived In response to questions concerning plea for failure of the management to act upon the the Milliken said. They must take actio., occupation, the governor said. "I'm non-pa incidents; failure of the management to give Mrs Hatcher a regular day off; and the reported open acknowledgement by not in favor, in fact. I'm strongly op¬ posed to a take-over by any group at any time on any campus. because they're the closest. He asserted that the violation of principle has caused more th^; problem By STEVE WATERBlRY way justify Democrats doing the same In the case of the MSU board, this could Miss Mishler that she was prejudiced. "But the decision when to act must the State News Staff Writer result in on campuses than it has solved thing in the future, ilult said a majority of Democrats (five), be left to the administrators." A reporter also asked about the gov Warren M Huff. D-Plymouth. continu- He indicated that an issue central t< his controlling the decisions of the entire Hildebrand. speaking for the defend¬ Milliken's statements reaffirmed the ernor's role the in day-to-day operate ing his plea for non-partisan selection of dispute with Stevens was the use of the board of eight members. ants. said that some of the incidents did not policy that he made last month concern¬ of MSU Milliken said he wa* vei the next MSI1 vice president for business caucus. Huff said that generally in a cau¬ Huff said that the use of the caucus directly involve the accused, thus requir¬ ing non-interference with campus dis¬ terested in its operation, but that ih. and finance, stressed Monday that unity cus. the decision of the majority is binding would effectively end any influence ing no specific comment, and "categori¬ ruption unless university official asked governing board and administration h.. among the trustees and within the Univer¬ on all members, who then vote as a block by the three board Republicans cally denied" all the other charges. for advice. the day-to-day responsibility ot sity must be achieved. 1 11 argue with them, dispute with them, Two weeks after Trantham told Mrs "I've had no request from MSU ing the University. In letters printed in a Detroit newspaper and vote against them." he said. "bu; f Monday. Huff and BCard of trustees chair will not try to disenfranchise them. " man. Don Stevens, disagreed over the sel POP TICKETS In a reply to Steven's letter of March 31. ection of the new vice president. Huff said: Stevens advocated consultation first In 1937 I came to Michigan at the re¬ with Democratic party leaders before the Tickets for Friday's ASMSU Pop En¬ quest of Gov. Frank Murphv to assist in post was filled. Huff favored bi-partisan tertainment concert by the First Edition the installation of a state civil service sys¬ selection. and the Classics IV will be on sale this tem I believed then as I believe now. that The crucial thing now is how we are week at Campbell's Suburban Shop, their the citizens of Michigan are best served going to achieve unity on the board and in van in front ot Bessey Hail. Marshall by appointments based on merit-." the University.' he said Music and the Union. The determination of merit in Univer 3 "The allegation that Republicans tm Tickets are $2 and $.i. sity appointments is not the exclusive properly exercised a University office for property of either political party, the political purposes in the past does in no letter continued, "and I do not believe the citizens of Michigan wish either political party to arrogate to itself the exclusive de¬ cision making process." Huff stressed that partv-oriented consid¬ Small turnout at forums erations were not used when the board selected an acting president. I wish to emphasize that these princi¬ ples did not prevail in the selection of Wal¬ ter Adams as acting president." Huff said fails to dismay students Stevens had stated earlier Monday that his concern for prior consultation among Democrats prior to consideration by the By LINDA GORTMAKER what kind of president they wanted, and entire board stemmed from his desire that Executive Reporter Gieszer said that most of the names nomi¬ the office not be used to support partisan nated have been teacher scholar-writer Nearly 90 students attended ASMSU s trustee campaigns as it was in the past presidential selection forums across the "Most nominees have been humanist- when a Republican held the position. campus Monday night, but student repre¬ sentatives on the All-University Search types." he said, and I'm impressed that the students want a humanist, too." and Selection Committee < AUSSC > did not consider the low number significant. Steering committee members asked for verbal nominations at the forums, but "We shouldn't get upset about numbers," said Sue Gebelein. Butler. Pa., junior and stressed that if students want to submit Minus names to the AUSSC and do not have time AUSSC representative "A few students to get background information, they can The closing of Wilson Hall cafeteria Jue to the BSA sit-in, caused a flood of students into other cafe- here and there will add up to a lot in the send in names terias In the South Complex—prin irily to Holden. Acting President Adams (right) is silhouetted The four residence hall forums Some names already nominated include: behind the closing notice. State News photo by Lance Lagoni Monday John Wilson, former asst provost at MSU night were the first in a series continuing and now president of Wells College in Au¬ through this week and sponsored by AS¬ rora. N Y.: Charles Hamilton, professor of MSU's Presidential Selection Board political science at Cambridge University; Nixon: (PSBi Hubert Humphrey Ralph Bunch; Howard Forums will be held in sorority and fra¬ ternity houses next week, followed by more Over 50 residence hall discussions the next men came to Armstrong Hall's Becker, a Northwestern University sociol¬ ogist; Gordon Sabine, and Waller Adams Miss Gebelein and Geis/er hope for in¬ creased attendance in lorums the rest of By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS down at noon after armed students who campus At the University of Rochester, in Ro¬ In New York, the 20.000-student City this week and significantly more students President Nixon said Tuesday profes¬ chester. NY. about half the students were College remained closed while its presi¬ forum, and five attended Shaw's. seized the administration-library building at the second set of residence hall forums and administrators must not "sur¬ absent from classes as 50 student pickets dent. Buell Gallagher, continued negotia¬ Miss Gebelein said she "got a lot of sors Monday moved into the science building in two weeks render to force" on the college campuses. marched, demanding an end to the pri¬ tions with ideas" from the Shaw discussion and told Top state law enforcement officials stood black and Puerto Rican stu¬ A few hours before he spoke, armed stu¬ vate school s contract to manage a Navy them to bring all their friends next time by near Denmark. It was reported that 400 research institute in Virginia The school dents who have occupied half the Har¬ Attendance in West Circle residence hall dents caused the shutdown of a predomi¬ National Guardsmen and 35 additional lem campus for week forums was low. with 15 in Mayo and 10 in Forums con nantly black college in South Carolina and highway patrolmen had been alerted. has 8.400 students a Williams black campus protests spread to an almost The Voorhees students were demanding "I was impressed all-white college in North Carolina. with the opinions but a selection issue $1 60 an hour minimum for campus em¬ little disappointed in the numbers, Mart ia rhoinpson. Dawson, Pa., freshman said on "There can be no compromise with law¬ lessness and no surrender to force if free education is to survive in the United States ployes. a black studies program and more black jobs in dormitories. Gaullists support Pompidou Miss Thompson, on the board s steering The Steering Committee ol the ASMSU At Belmont Abbey College, an 800-stu- committee, helped guide discussions at of America," Nixon told the annual meet¬ in bid for French presidency Presidential Selection Board is sponsoring dent Roman Catholic school in Belmont. Williams and Mayo student forums this week on the selection ing of the Chamber of Commerce of the N.C.. 8 of the school's 10 black students- Michael Gieszer E. Lansing senior and United States in Washington. of the president positioned themselves on the roof of the AUSSC alternate, commented that there Peaceful dissent is welcome, he said. PARIS (APi- Former Premier Georges will keep silent until a successor is elected. The forums, to be held in residence science building to dramatize their de¬ were considerably more people at the pres¬ halls, will he concerned with the future But when dissenters terrorize other stu¬ mands, including the recruitment of black Pompidou announced Tuesday he will run Pompidou s candidacy was endorsed un¬ idential forums than at "Meet the Candi¬ direction of the University and the criteria dents and school faculties, "it is time for students and more financial aid. in the interest of continuity for the presi¬ animously by the ruling committee of dates" for ASMSU last month the facuily and boards of trustees and While county police stood by dency abandoned by Charies de Gaulle the Gauliist Union for the Defense of the to be used in selecting the president off cam¬ Geiszer said that if students realize how school administrators to have the back¬ pus. the Rev. Jude Cleary, president of the He received quick Gaullist support Republic UDR-and later by a caucus of directly the new president could affect bone to stand up." he said school, issued a statement saying no stu¬ De Gaulle himself, however, has decided UDR members of the National Assembly. TONIGHT them, they will participate more in the Meanwhile, there was an anti-ROTC sit- dent "is constrained to continue a program to remain neutral during the campaign to Squrces said Premier Couve de Mur- 8 p.m. Emmons selection process. in at Dartmouth Tuesday, half the student he deems unsuitable to his needs." choo his infor ville and Foreign Minister Michel Debre, 9 p.m. Bailey. Wilson and llolden body boycotted classes at the Universitv * said. as well as other leaders of Gaullism, "The lack of students shows a failure At Dartmouth, in Hanover, N.H about THURSDAY . in the way it's been organized," Gieszer of Rochester, and New York City Univer¬ :I00 students began a sit-in in the adminis¬ The general, who stepped down Monday joined what was called an acclamation of 7:30 p.m. Gilchrist. Butterfield sity troubles spread to a fourth branch after voters defeated a reform bill on which Pomftidou's candidacy. said. "When we hit close to home, the kids tration building demanding an immedi¬ 8 p.m. Fee The administration of Voorhees Col¬ he had staked his job. was reported to Left-wing Gaullist leaders Rene Capi- will care." 8:15 p.m. Campbell ate end to ROTC at the 3.100-student Ivy Coeds at the Williams forum discussed lege at Denmark, S C., shut the school have passed word to his followers that he tant and Louis Vallon boycotted the caucus. 9 p.m. Case and Wonders League school. Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Wednesday, April 30, 1969 Upward By DAVE SHORT State News Staff Writer the notion government that the federal must direct this I believe that the sities, with their large numbers univer- bers to Bound Cade urged the taculty mem¬ put their scientific money has played of social problems. in the solving The Upward Bound program know-how to use in programs "Our program; I think that the com- of learned men, can carry on concept of money has has been relatively successful like Upward Bound at the become one of the great para¬ but may be dying, the program's munity could run it." he said. programs like Upward Bound " University. He said that he doxes of our times," he said. director said Tuesday. would be willing to donate Speaking at a Faculty Club his ^mmer pay in order to Money problem luncheon. Alex Cade, professor get a University-sponsored "Money is only one stage of of Justin Morrill College and the things needed to solve the program similar to Upward director of Upward Bound at Bound. social problems of our time. MSU. characterized the project The cost involved in such a "The desire and the as "the most successful of all accumulation of money has been program would not be too cost¬ the programs organized by the the main factor in the aliena¬ ly, Cade stressed. He asked Office of Economic Opportunity the faculty to seriously study tion of the black.-the yellow-- lOEOi." the feasibility of that type of and the red man." he contin¬ Upward Bound aims at en¬ program for the University. ued. couraging " so-called dis¬ Cade said there is a need Cade said that in some cases advantaged' high school stu¬ for colleges to relax their money has become a way out dents to aspire for higher edu¬ admissions policies and to also for people who do not want to cation and provide them with make it easier for students to be involved. the academic means to help make it in He said that the college. Upward Bound them get through college. Heart bleed people want to make the type of But it may be dying from program that commits "people lack of support.'' Cade con- "My heart bleeds for people to people." Cade who are not in college and who that Americans can no longer emphasized Umb rella Cade said that' the most op¬ will never get into college." except money or institutions to Beward the sh cans a-ound c ■ -looking um- timistic reports that he has he stated. take the place of people in pro¬ brella seem; caught during the recent rain a be I ligerent received from government offi¬ One of the main successes grams like Upward Bound. litter can. State Nev* ' Wayne M nn cials is that the Upward Bound of the Upward Bound program is that 67 per cent of its people program will be retained for four years, but in a different go on to college, Cain pointed out. He said that the drop-out than it is program structure rate of the Upward Bound stu¬ CIRCULATE LETTERS He said that the most pessi¬ dents is not any higher than mistic reports that he has re¬ any other group of students ceived indicate that the program Cade indicated that there have will die after this year. The OEO. in which Bound was a department, has Upward Alex Cade, Concerned director processor in Justin Morrill College and been other in the program. important "Our students have appreciation of what their role successes gained an ABM foes launch drive already been dissolved. director of the Upward Bound program, spoke at By MARYANNE GEORGE asst. professor of 'history from their respective states On campus, student groups Cade urged the University in society is now," he said. uch the Students for White the Faculty Club luncheon Tuesda/ when he chai— State News Staff Writer and spokesman for thtv group. particularly the 10 senators as faculty to get involved in the "Most importantly, they have whose votes are uncommitted 'ommunitv Action and Leader- acterized the Upward Bound project as success¬ The MSU Stop ABM Com¬ Upward Bound program become more aware of them¬ mittee formulated definite To mobilize student opposi The uncommitted senators ihip '72. a group supporting Community project ful, but that it may be dying from Iack of support. selves and feel better because ien Kdwan! M. plans Monday to mobilize the tion to the ABM the same are: J. Caleb Boggs. R Kennedy's Sta^e News photo by Norm Payea of the "I have never gone along with things that they have MSU and Lansing communities letter will be printed in th< Delaware: John .1 Willing >resi«i<-i. candidacy, have learned and are doing ." against the anti-ballistic mis¬ State News. Students will be R Delaware. Hirai ■ng v'uluti!• - i• i circulate pet- I Responsible role DINING OUT Cade said that the Upward sile system (ABM» asked to clip and send' n R-Hawaii; Idaho. Birch Len B. The committee to Sen. Griffin. Gourlay said. Bayh. D-lnd: Rob to the Bound stuil nts have been play¬ plans to ert Griffin. R-Mich.: Thoma: respoi Griffin has been chosen as culated far has focus its mobilization efforts so Students flock ing a responsible role in some the focus for the letter writing J. MCintvre. D-N H . and Fre( on three areas of the com¬ (liable, a committee of the recent college crises. R. Harris. D-Okla. He cited the Ferris State munity. faculty, students and campaign because he is the noted They also hope I from Michigan. An At present the the College incident, in which black private citizens. senator Senate stands at ize the old McCarthy | abelle Dwyer. commitee mem¬ b ainstthe ABM. while sit-in students took tration over the adminis¬ building in protest of alleged mistreatment, as a case on Sen. Mich.. Philip A. Hart. D- has agreed to speak the ABM issue May 17 ber. said out The committee - of - state encouraged students and of the ABM and \ Dwv id. To defe; wnmittee asked inter- udents and faculty to | in which the program's in Lansing under the joint >5-7813 or 355-6014. As a result of the BSA sit-in in Wilson the demonstration at Wilson Hall for the faculty to write to senators graduate's were involved sponsorship of the Stop ABM Hall's cafeteria Monday night, approximate¬ evening meal, the other cafeterias were unable "Our kids are the ones who Committee and several other to obtain any of it ly 1.100 Wilson students were sent to the are asking the why' questions three other South Complex residence halls community groups. Proposed graduate tax bill Extra help was called Monday night to instead of resulting to tor dinner Holden Hall fed 420 extra people To mobilize faculty opposi¬ assist during tne breakfast and noon meals emotion." after about 5 minutes advance warning tion a letter addressed to Sen. on Tuesday. The spokesman for Holden said One of the problems that Robert P. Griffin. R-Mich A spokesman for Holden cafeteria, who . that they did not think they would need to Upward Bound faces is that it asked to remain anonymous said that cafe¬ opposing the ABM is being use any of the Wilson student employes. gets the students at too late to finance public education sent to all faculty members teria employes did not do a bad job con¬ of an age to help. He said that The spokesman estimated that Holden o be signed and sent to the sidering the short notice given The big rush the program is keyed to high ot students in the dinner line occurred at could continue feeding the Wilson students senator by the individual school sophomores, juniors and 5:30 p.m. he said. for a few more days before the strain would faculty member. not in final form and was elastic | seniors. By MICHELE SHEMIOT Rep. Richard Allen. R-Ithaca. Although food had been prepared before really begin to show on the employes. "Faculty members are en¬ in its payment requirements. Cade criticized the role that A Republican member of the sponsor of a new House bill, couraged to write their own Michigan House of Representa said that educated citizens have For example, he said, if a I letters, but the form letter tives said he believes that ris¬ a higher obligation to society graduate holding a B A. degree| less than $8,500 I Part Of The is being distributed to insure and should carry more responsi¬ earns a year, a ing costs of higher education THE STATE NEWS hat the senator receives a in state colleges and universi¬ bility by helping to finance pub¬ delayed payment could be ar- T large volume of anti- ties can be met by taxing grad- lic education ABM mail." Walter Gourlav. At the moment, he commented.I Campus Scene da> throughout the year with special Welcom in June and September Subscription rates "We're in a shifting societv. he said Property tax was a good measure of obligations to society thei e are two .. present sources of f orsitles—tuition appropriations from the state | and! SNYDER SAFARI But the presence of education is a much better measure of so¬ general fund. Tuition should be kept low. cial obligation and responsibil¬ Allen said, because the taxpayer I ROAD RALLY ity iv not willing to have a 5 per I Second class postage paid at East Lansing. Michigan. In intei cent increase on his personal [ Editorial and business offices at 347 Student Services Building. Michigan ed he thinks Hit tax to finance higher ed- I State I'm versify. East Lansing. Michigan. Sat, May 3 general fund. I lution to raising tund> state supported colleges and Allen indicated $300 million has 9:00 a.m. - Registration been rt urnim-nded tor univer- 10:00 a.m. - 1st Car Off The bill propo: ;ed that a grad- sit\ allocation for the 1969 fiscal I uate holding a B A. or B.S de¬ year: 95 per cent of this amount | $3 per car gree would pay SI00 yearly: a taxes and sales taxes, he said graduate with a MA. $130: a Ph.D graduate. $230: and a M l) The amount requested by col-1 T rophies Awarded $300. t leges and universities for this | Commuter Lot "Y" period is ?400 million, he said. 1 • ; ' nts up that some . i . ruing needs to be I ! le immediately to raise funds | There would be no legislati for the future. control of funds, which woi Allen said he believes that I be collected by a central agen the bill's effect would allow col-[ and sent to the graduates' c leges and universities to provide I lege or university existing facilities and services. [ He explained that the bill MID TERM EXAM SPECIAL! Brides Showcase ^Beef it> your place because we have ev¬ erything for every bride and every pocketbook. ® Mushrooms (or Onions] Reg. Price -- $2.30 Brides Showcase has ex¬ quisite fashions for the en¬ BEWARE OF GIRLS IN TREES tire wedding party, acces¬ They're are comfortable proving that anywhere. NOTABLES Choose a sories and invitations. Complimentary with every detail of your perfect wedding from a • * '2,00 On-Campus Deliveries Only. staff with 30 years experi¬ soft, flexible, chunky heel beauty from ence in 8000 weddings. such colors as antique brown, antique camel and antique spring gray. $15.00 DOIViiiMO'S Mon.-Sat. Use your Ask charge account in both us about FREE PARKING. stores — - 10:00 5:30 p.m. a.m. PIZZA Mon. - Wed eves, trdll. Ms until 9:00 p.m. hep arch Saturday, May 3 351-8870 or 351-7100 h q> c Finals 7:30 p.m. 1047 E. Grand River , E. Lansing Sports Arena -- -- Men's I.M. Building fyaAt tf-iee ^eliveruf, Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Wednesday, April 30, 1969 3 NEWS Committee OKs electoral reform WASHINGTON -- A N.Y., the committee's 80-year- Celler said he will press for the states to amend the Consti¬ constitutional amendment call¬ opinion polls showing 80 per predicted it will untimatelv be summary old chairman who has long fav- House action next month It tution cent of Americans favor direct come the 26th amendment ing for the direct popular elec¬ ored such a change in the elect- takes a two-thirds majority in The senior committee Repub¬ to tion of the president in place elections, called the amendment the Constitution. oral system "The first bold both the House and Senate and lican. of the present system of allot¬ Rep William M Mc- "an idea whose time has A step has been taken." ratification by three-fourths of Culloch of Ohio, major reason for their citing public come." Both he and Celler ting electoral votes by states optimism was the strong bi von overwhelming approval partisan committee support Tuesday in the House Judiciary Committee. ANCIENT FEUDS MUST END Sixteen Democrats and 12 Re¬ publicans voted for the amend¬ By a vote of 28 to 6 the ment. The six votes against committee gave the proposed it were evenly divided between the two parties O'Neill appeals for amendment a strong push down "It is time for the faculty the long and difficult road to¬ "Such an impressive vote unit school boards hare the of trustees and administrators backbone to stand ward ratification. is Even if finally approved, it unlikely to be in effect by BELFAST with dialogue on col¬ lective bargaining Monday. National News A report to the local chapter prepared by Einer Hardin, associate director and professor of labor and industrial rela¬ tions. presented facts that placed the average salary and bene¬ A Nixon Administration plan for strengthen¬ fits of MSU professors in the lower third nationally according ing enforcement of a ban on racial bias in em¬ to an AAUP grading scale. Hardin noted in his report that the University pays ployment was reported Tuesday as a new civil average and above average salaries to asst professors and instructors. rights bill was introduced in the Senate. This is nothing new to MSU." he said. The bill would change the Equal Employ¬ Hardin said that when comparing the 1963-64 average com¬ ment Opportunity Commission to a pensation of 113.107 to the 1968-69 figure of $18,521. the con¬ quasi-judi¬ sumer price index must be cial agency with limited cease-and-desist pow¬ applied to show the actual increase in buying power. When adjusted to a 1957-59 ers. price base, the 1968-69 figure is$14.949 compared to $12,193 in 1963-64 • • • Though the nominal increase looks fine, after taxes and The Nixon Administration asked comparisons, they do not look so fine." Hardin said. Congress The report shows that this year's $700 average pay increase Tuesday for tough new laws against organized when corrected to the base year is actually a $60 decrease in gambling and authority to use wiretapping in buying power Jack Steiber. director of labor and industrial relations and enforcing the statutes. The bill would make it professor of economics, explaining technical information on a federal offense to collective bargaining, said that the Michigan law provides for engage in gambling operations that last for exclusive representation by a specific bargaining unit covering more than 30 days and gross $2,000 in revenue all public employes except civil service workers. Steiver said that collective bargaining has continued to make during a single day. • • headway in junior colleges and community colleges, but failed • to make great strides in institutions which the faculty has had The Pentagon's missile defense specialist much say in university affairs. raised the possibility Tuesday of a minor com¬ He noted that most universities have some kind of vehicle, however, unsatisfactory, in determining important issues. promise in administration plans for the Safe¬ We ought to utilize existing structures to a greater extent." guard antimissile system. Steiber said. "Even today we are not taking advantage of Deputy Sec. of Defense David Packard said they structures." Nixon has suggested that two sites be con¬ structed as a prototype and if a need should Leon G Presents arise. 10 other sites could be purchased. • • • Glass North Carolina Gov. Bob Scot ordered be¬ tween 150 and 200 National Guardsmen into Winston-Salem Tuesday to help enforce an overnight curfew imposed after two nights of racial unrest. • • • ankard always a popular drinking cup A $100-million undersea laboratory to de¬ to symbolize good velop national capability for exploiting the fellowship and cheer. continental shelf has been proposed by the University of Miami. The lab could begin operations within four years on the ocean floor near Miami. Campus News Bobbie Brooks play knits Bobbie Brooks pants are B* About 200 students began a sit-in at Dart¬ Turtleneck tee top in the big news-makers. And mouth College's main administration build¬ melon, yellow or aqua the ways to top them are ing Tuesday afternoon to further dramatize stripes. All cotton. 4.98 their demand for an immediate end to ROTC terrific. Junior sizes. Pull-on Jamaica shorts in at the Ivv League school. melon, aqua or yellow cot¬ A. Turtleneck shift-tunic ton/nylon twill knit. 5.98. 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Grand River Ave. East Lansing APPLICATION CLOSING DATE: MAY 15, 1969 East Lansing MICHIGAN advertising managei STATE NEWS Trinka (.line,^xeculire editor James S. (iranelli, managing editor arms: the universities INIVERSITY Patricia Anstett, campus editor Jerry Hankhurst, editorial editor Tom Brou n, sports editor Deborah hitch, associate campus edih Six-time recipient of the Pacemaker award for outstanding journalism. With sudden alacrity the campus revolt nam war is morally wrong and indefensi¬ any of our business, makes it an unaccept¬ EDITORIALS has hit-and in its wake lies a battered, frightened society. But in order for some ble, then ROTC. a major source of indivi¬ duals for that war. must go. Also in dispute able part of the academic environment. An analogous situation involves allow¬ semblance of reason to prevail two issues is the position of ROTC as an indoctri¬ ing the Oakland Police to recruit on our must be clarified. nation center for American military ideals. campus. If those cops are not racists A major force taking hold on our col¬ There is no one absolute answer to what and murderers, all is fine. But if they For the benefit of lege campuses and in our high schools is the movement among blacks and Third World students for a "piece of the pie. is to be done with ROTC, but the following is clear: an indoctrination center, in which are, they lose their right or freedom to recruit, as the potential recruitees lose their right to be interviewed for posi¬ academic credit is given, cannot be a the rezoning of two blocks . Actually, in many ways, it is a desire for part of an academic community where tions within the Oakland Police organiza¬ The East Lansing Planning draw the zoning lines if it a "piece of the pie" in order to do away student questioning and discussion of ideas tion. north of Berkey Hall which Commission would be wise to is created. with the crust, fruit-filling and topping. and ideals is a necessity for the survival This holds true for ROTC and its poten¬ have high student populations. In other words many black and Third of the liberal university. adopt the recommendations of The creation of the B-3 Cen¬ tial adherents. If ROTC is an agent used This request is based on the World militants are in favor of some kind But a sticky fact remains: if the ROTC to murder Vietnamese, ROTC and its r the Committee to Preserve a tral Business District zone is of socialist state to replace the oppressive, banished from college cam¬ present status of the neighbor¬ program was cruitees lose their right to participate Residential Neighborhood con¬ not being challenged by the hood and the trend of develop¬ racist capitalist one we now are struggling puses would that insure the lack of any in proceedings on the academic campus. t.o define. But first they need some pow- liberal ideals present in the military sys¬ cerning the rezoning of portions committee members. They What we are up against is a giant behe¬ ment in East Lansing. er-the power they have been denied in the tem and. therefore, promote the establish¬ moth of student revolt which cannot be im¬ of the city. There is little agree with the city planning The two blocks in question American system. ment of a military as an enemy to our that could be lost by such an director that setting aside spe¬ Now the trouble today lies not in the fact mediately subdued-it must be understood society? are presently zoned as R-4 that black students took over a build¬ The answer some say is to make ROTC in its entirety. And to understand it, we action and much to gain, cial areas for retail stores, of¬ some cannot have legislators running around residential areas and contain ing and had weapons to arm themselves. an extra-curricular activity which would especially in the area of stu¬ fices and other business estab¬ The difficulty lies in the minds of those trying to pass a quickly worded anti-gun- lishments will aid East Lan¬ many low-cost student rooming then only make it a voluntary club without on-campus bill, an anti-bullhorn-use-on- dent-community relations. houses, including two sorori¬ who want to eradicate these confrontations any academic rank. This is the realistic al¬ campus bill, and all the rest of the bills The commission is faced sing's commercial growth and without first investigating and alleviating ternative since MSU and some other uni¬ ties and a men's cooperative the that provoked them versities now proposed in frenetic legislative ses¬ with two distinct causes are required under law to have problems in are in favor of it. as well as the homes of many At Cornell University actions by stu¬ ROTC somewhere on the campus. sions. the rezoning issue: whether or What they are asking for is dents of the Afro-American Society bring But is this satisfactory? No. it We need understanding-by the "older East Lansing residents. Off- is not be¬ not to create a new type of time. They want the commis¬ this point to the forefront. The black cause its very presence as an agency to re¬ generation." not by students. Otherwise, Campus Council estimates that students took over a building in reaction cruit men to kill others, in a war that isn't this will be just the beginning. zone, the B-3. and where to sion to delay for a few years 300 students live in these over to the burning of a cross at the residence two blocks. • of black female students. This was not a There is little or no business light matter and so the black students made their move. It was only later, after there pressure to move into the area were rumors that white students were now and little is projected for accumulating firearms and after some fra¬ New York Cit the next three to five years. ternity members began a fight with the blacks occupying the building, that the Were this area rezoned, it is black students got weapons to defend them¬ likely that some businesses selves against potential conflict. Norman Mailere would move in but not to the extent that it would become a were Here is the essential point: the weapons for defensive purposes and were a reaction to violence. real "central business district." But many in the Cornell community as i've been Norman Mailered, often revolted, and the ' ever- well as many other Americans saw guns The presence of these busi¬ which meant they saw red. Reason could Maxwell Taylored . . ." go the expanding welfare program nesses, however, could raise not prevail because the reaction to the lyrics to a popular Simon and along with inadequate funds to land values and taxes as well presence of guns was without reason- Garfunkel song. And if Mr. run the city have shaken the not because black students were provok¬ as bring in traffic and noise. Mailer plays his cards right. foundations of the •melting To ing the situation. delay the rezoning of these Some order has since been restored at New Yorkers may be Mailered pot'" of the East. two blocks would not deny the Cornell, but high schools and community as he becomes Mr. Mayor of Accordingly, many consider possibility of rezoning the area colleges as well as other universities New York City the Lindsay administration a in the future if need be. A de¬ are still in open revolt and the polariza¬ tion between students and those wielding Actually. the bandwagon joke. lay would also give the stu¬ Then there those who power will become more acute as legisla¬ hasn't picked up too much are dent residents and the perman¬ tors. some faculty and administration offi¬ speed, but in a city as diverse think that as long as New York ent residents time in which cials react with stiffer penalties instead as New York Mailer will un- is ungovernable, why not have of realistically appraising causes and to prepare for a change. symptoms of student discontent. doubtedlv pick up staunch sup¬ fun trying to do the job? That's In the meantime, quiet, resi¬ The second major force embroiling our porters. As his running-mate where Mailer and Breslin fit dential. low-cost housing for college campuses in crises is the discon¬ for City Council President. in. tent over ROTC. its academic credit, its students would be preserved and Jimmy Breslin. the former Anyone who has read any of place on the college campus. more students would have the SDS has been the main spokesman thus columnist and sports writer, Mailer's works realizes that, chance to experience this type far calling for the abolishment of ROTC should add appeal to the Mail¬ as mayor. Mailer might spend of off-campus living. while all elements of the universities have "The Dean of Women is being held hostage er ticket. more time in jail than at his provided an array of opinion. Since development is not The basic reason for the hatred of ROTC by about 20 young men and she says, 'Don't Most people consider the official residence. However, pressing in this area and it lies in the involvement in Vietnam. And anyone try and rescue me!' " Mailer-Breslin team a joke. others speculate that the big could still be rezoned in the if the American participation in the Viet- But there is another side to the job of running the city would future, the planning commis¬ calm down Mailer and, in turn, story sion has nothing to lose by POINT OF VIEW The story unravels when one provide exceptional leadership adopting the proposal. By adop¬ looks at the crises New York ior the strike-ridden town. ting it, they would show their May Day: freedom day City has faced under the Lind¬ Certainly. Mailer's candidacy concern for the students liv¬ say Administration. There have cannot be ignored. But. in all ing in their midst and thus been teacher's strikes almost honesty, we believe Joe DiMag- foster better student-community every year, the sanitation, po¬ gio has the votes, oo-oo-oo! have if is to persist in the face of moderate socialist leadership: and Chin relations. EDITOR'S NOTE: man was lost to communism. No longer coul lice and fire departments have -The Editors --The Editors The following Point of View was writ¬ his own destructive potentials. What has happened to May Day in the ruling circles follow the path of rele ten by Clark Akatiff, asst. professor of the United States, and what is the lesson tively beneign isolationsim: instead the geography. launched a anti-communist crusade worl this history teachers? OUR READERS' MIND Thursday is May Day. The first day of wide in scope and totalitarian in scopt One of the primary results of World War May-a traditional holiday that dates from I was the Russian Revolution. This By the early '50s to celebrate May Day even in its non-political form-was intei the dawning of our culture. Reverberating marked the first successful seizure of state Society bears Sirhan's gui through the spring festivals of numberless tribal and national groups. May Day has been the holiday that focuses on man's power by forces with an communist • viewpoint explicitly social Though breakthrough occurred in a relatively back¬ this preted as an act of dubious patriotism, not outright subversion. Finally, in a pr< verse and profoundly totalitarian mov May Day was stolen from the America longing for freedom and peace in a world ward nation in respect to the material it is instead a symptom of furthering To the Editor means to wash our own hands of guilt that is often violent and unfree. Freedom prerequisites for socialism, even this lim¬ people. violence. Perhaps most tragic of all are Since the mid '50s, May 1st in th than to force one man to pay Bobby- and peace-the conditions of utopia-if not ited success of the communist movement In the recent death verdict for Sirhan those who find justification by assuring United States has been Law Day-a da Kennedy's death price. One can hardly forever, at least for a day Thus did the set off waves of paranoid reaction in the Sirhan one finds the sickness of a themselves that it was Bobby we did it in which we are exhorted from the T\ guilt- escape the fact that American society ancient Celtic peoples light the beltaine ruling circles of the advanced capitalist ridden society crystalized into rock-hard for. Surely, the Bobby America knew, the radio and the lecturn that ue is committing the same crime against fires, symbolic of the sun which burned nations In the United States this reaction evidence of American misjustice whose ideals we have kicked asiide in obey all laus. We are fed the unmit Strange¬ Sirhan that Sirhan himself committed away the cold oppressive winter, and like¬ took the form of repressive laws against ly enough, the periodic revival of "an against Bobby Kennedy. our stampede to be freed of our own wise did the peasant folk of medieval radicals, restriction of free immigration, gated lie that our freedom is only th partial guilt-it is this Bobby who would freedom to obey the law. Thus the Amer eye for an eye" justice coincides large¬ To those in the ranks who reason that Europe choose May Day to frolic and revel and a policy of international isolationism. be most ashamed of us now. can people-you and I~are robbed of oi ly with times when society suffers from this form of justice is a needed treat¬ in disrespect of the conventions of their It was as if, having perceived the virus Ron Van Til culture. But the people will out, ar enlarged self-guilt. What more effective ment for growing violence. I submit that society. May Day is a league between of communism, the American ruling elite Grand Rapids freshman we shall begin by seizing the day. Let i man and nature to prove the eternal dom¬ imposed a quarantine upon the continent inance of life over death, freedom over understand that freedom is a verb, not and began innoculating the people with mas¬ restraint and the new over the old noun We cannot be given freedom, sive doses of anti-communism. One of No one speaks for majority Open it up In the United States during the last the victims of this campaign was May must take it. Lincoln did not free tl century May Day was transformed into a slaves, he merely changed their cond Day. tions of servitude; liberation flows froi To the Editor hundred and To the Editor: day during which not only traditional di¬ First, by the establishment of Labor Day ROTC! One fifty may the refusal to accept servitude. The protest As JMC students who participated in versions were entertained, but also the a large sector of the labor movement was rally at the new Adminis¬ seem like an inconsequential number to Therefore in the spirit of May Day 1- tration most militant and far reaching demands of co-opted of their traditional holiday. Bldg last Friday points out clearly the casual observer, but considering that the two-day open "rap" session of all what so many of us have feared: SDS has the then awakening working class were Still. May Day persisted as a cultural this Thursday be a day of freedom this is almost as large a crowd as attend¬ interested members of the JMC commun¬ MSU Refuse participation in the mea succeeded in stirring the masses against ed the last Junior Varsity Fencing match, put forward. Often taking the form of mass event for small children and as a day of ity, we are deeply disturbed about the ingless procedures that oppress you. I work stoppages, parades and rallies, this demonstration for the left which was it is clear that the movement has snow¬ slanted and selective coverage of the transformation of a traditional holiday briefly strong during the 1930s. However, your own thing—if you have you o\ balled. session. Our purpose was to "OPEN IT swept around the world. By World War I after World War II anti-communist para¬ thing, or join with others in cornmuni There, shoulder to shoulder with the other UP," not to mark the death of JMC. The May Day had become established as the action. Several .activities art Letter policy moral patriots, stood our ASMSU Chair¬ session signified a rebirth rather than a first truly international holiday-a day in noia increased to even greater heights. the wind;" definitely a rally with mus man. Tom Samet Speaking strictly as "a death. The "funeral" was an isolated The United States emerged from the war which people, regardless of cultural dif- as the undisputed leader of world capital¬ and revelry noonish at the Administrate student." despite the fact that ASMSU 10 minutes within two days of promis¬ diferences. were united in their common ism and unquestionably the most power¬ Bldg. Have you recognized your indlvi The State News welcomes all letters co-sponsored the rally, Samet proclaimed a ing discussion and demonstrated the senti¬ ual power and freedom? If so join mandate from "most of the students at ments of five or six students. The State longing for freedom and their willingness ful nation on earth. Still, the Empire They should be typed and signed with the to seize that freedom, if only for a day inherited was in a shakey condition-the open discussion, parades, and fun. Brii home town student, faculty or staff stand¬ MSU and most of the people in the United News failed to mention the 150 students and As 'such. May Day was a significant Soviet Union survived the war and extended flags, musical instruments, your head ai ing. and local phone number included. No States" to abolish ROTC I demand to faculty who spent two days discus¬ first step toward the development of World its influence; India-keystone of British your heart. There is no greater power thi know on what basis he or anyone else sing issues and arguing differences in an unsigned letter will be accepted for publi¬ Community-a community that we must Empire- achieved independence under the people united. cation. and no letter will be printed with¬ can speak for the student majority on attempt to revitalize the college. this issue. There has been no survey, We feel that many issues and prob¬ out a signature except in extreme circum¬ stances All letters must be less than 300 thus no consensus. Whether or not Samet lems facing JMC were laid on the table words long for publication without editing. qualified his statements "as a student," and that something concrete can be the nature of his position makes him the accomplished from this. The "funeral" de facto voice of the student body in the was not at all indicative of the spirit eyes of the public. I am offended by his of the two days. » presumptions as are many I know who Tom Ri ley- were spoken for without being first con¬ Detroit senior sulted Dale Tim White Nancy Hack Clare sophomore Mt. Kosco; N.Y. junior Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Wednesday, April 30, 1969 5 Officers installed IASMSU slates talk at OCC meeting The By DELORES MAJOR Stale News Staff Writer new officers for Off Cam¬ presenting all their grievances and complaints." "This council wants to know by reformist Nader lation from Congress. Nader what the student wants," he himself appeared many times be- pus Council were installed ear¬ said, "we want to hear their to testify before Congressional ly last week during the weekly Ralph Nader, self-proclaimed council meeting. griefs and get some construc¬ subcommittees until Congress tive criticism and ideas." protector of the consumer's in¬ passed its auto safety bill in Aug¬ Officers for this year's coun¬ He said that instead of sim¬ terests. will appear at 7:30 p.m. ust 1966. cil are president. Norm Mayer, ply setting up office, this new Friday in the ASMSU Great Is¬ Norther Woordmere. N.Y., jun- Since then Nader has watched council will try to let the stu¬ sues Lecture Series. kor: vice president. Bob Kraay, dent living off campus know they over the National Traffic Safety Lansing, freshman; treasurer, He considers his goal to be represent him. Agency, set up in 1966. and Jack Fries, Durand graduate stu¬ "nothing less than the qualita¬ brought about an investigation of "Students Jiving off campus dent; secretary. Karen Sullivan tive reform of the Industrial Petoskey. sophomore; and board just don't know where to go with their complaints," he said. Brain Revolution." that agency by the Senate Com¬ merce Committee, charging that represenative. Pam Durling, Lan¬ "We want to know that we are Nader's speech is being co- it acted too much in the interest Hard work pays off in fhe long run and the 4.00 students of winter term found sing junior. here to help them." sponsored by the planning board of industry. New council members are Cal their reward in the form of a reception and dinner in the Union. Acting President "We have to convince them of Greek Week, Saturday Some of Nader's other cam¬ Confer, Atlanta, Ga. junior; Jeff Adams was unable to attend because he was at the Wilson cafeteria sit-in. that we're doing all this work through May 9. paigns include strengthening Elliot, Fenton sophomore, Rick Stave News pholo by Jim Richardson for them." Mayer added. federal inspection standards for Hiscox, East Lansing, junior; His current campaign is di¬ the fishing industry, stopping Allen Mintzer. Beechwood. rected against the leadership of the United Mine Workers indiscriminate use of X-rays in Ohio, senior; and Ron Tracey. Detroit junior. The newly, elected president HONORS COLLEGE (UMW). In a letter to Congress this week Nader called for an in¬ dental work, improving safety- standards in the gas pipeline said that the council will try vestigation of UMW leadership, industry and improving the lot of the American Indian charging that relatives of a union Students overlook benefits "to strengthen the bonds of off campus people, and truly repre¬ executive received large He was also instrumental in sent all students living off cam¬ amounts of money for no visible the passage of the 1967 reason. pus.'' 180 credits is the most Wholesale Meat Act. requiring widely Allows extensive study He outlined a plan to unify By MARY ANNE GEORGE vantage of them. William W Nader's most noted drive was federal inspection of most of the apartments off campus State News Staff Writer Kelly, director of the Honors Col- known advantage of member¬ The independent study program his campaign for auto safety. RALPH NADER the nation's slaughterhouses and ship in the college. Kelly said allows a student to do an exten¬ "We hope to have representa¬ Not enough students are aware lege, said, meat processing plants. The waiver of all degree re- This waiver of requirements sive study and research on a He first became interested in tives from each apartment that of the benefits of the Honors means that a student with his particular subject of his own auto safety while attending Har¬ Nader majored in government will speak for all the students. College and fail to take ad- quirements other than obtaining adviser's approval may formu choosing He then compiles his vard Law School, when he wrote and economics in his undergrad¬ Nader's efforts started show¬ late a curriculum that is tail¬ research in a term paper and an article for the "Harvard Law- ing results in 1965 when his ex¬ uate work at Princeton Univer¬ Police worn U ored to his individual interests. I am waiver of convinced that requirements is the this receives credit for the paper. he Kelly said that in the future hopes to involve students in Record" criticizing American cars. After receiving his degree in pose of auto safetv standards. "Unsafe at Any Speed." became a best-seller. sity and cum 1955. was graduated magna laude and Phi Beta Kappa in greatest attraction of the Hon¬ the annual review committee as 1958 Nader campaigned on Jocal to beware In his 1966 "State of the Un¬ He will speak at 7:30 p.m. in the ors College." Kelly said. well the admissions board. and moc Kelly emphasized that this as on "The student viewpoint must auto state levels safety for effective legislation. He ion" address. President John¬ Auditorium. General admis¬ sion tickets will be available at privilege must be experienced be well-represented to give max¬ moved his drive to the national son acknowledged Nader's work By RICH BERNARD ment on the checks. by calling for auto safety legis¬ the door for 50 cents. Murray advised that a would- with integrity. Students cannot imum consideration to honors level in 1964 when he became State News Staff Writer This leaves him free to move be subscriber can verify a use the privilege without a specif¬ students and prospective honors a consultant to the Dept. of La- A sympathetic- heart for a on to new territory, with the salesman's legitimacy by call¬ ic curriculum plan, or only to itudents." Kelly said. bor "fellow student" working his way through college by selling magazines has backfired into student to $65. or "Don't believe merchant out $30 ing the East Lansing city clerk, since all salesmen are required avoid taking the University Col- Free Ovation TIRED OF LIVING anything about to register with the city. Some curriculums such as en¬ minor financial heartbreak for off-campus students. In the past month. East Lan¬ contests or salesman Sgt. Richard J Murray of the points." "Should you figure you've been conned." Murray out that gineering afford less freedom and confine the student by nec¬ Cosmetic Make-Overs IN h BARN? East Lansing police said, "be¬ sing police have received re¬ suggested, "stop payment on essity to certain disciplines. But cause nine out of ten times the check immediately. Let us these students can elect dif¬ ports from two coeds and a it's baloney. ferent math or science sequen¬ All Day fraternity house being hood¬ know about it as soon as possi "Ask the salesman to show winked by fraudulent door-to- ble. since the fraudulent sales¬ ces. waiving prerequisites or door magazine salesmen some sort of company identi¬ man might still be in the area taking graduate courses. Friday & Saturday fication indicating that he is a Because of the weeks which Cooperation between the stu¬ legitimate representative and University police said there lapse between the time the sub¬ copy his name down." Murray had not been any incidences dent and his adviser is the key to the success of this program. Wen Featuring scriptions are paid for and the of similar selling practices re¬ time the subscribers realize "Make the check out to the Kelly said. ported on campus. Soliciting on Lynne Largent -- New York that the first issue is long company and not the salesman." campus can only be done by ob¬ Kelly said that MSU has one overdue, many more students of the inosi liberal honors pro¬ trained cosmetic artist. he warned. "That way the check taining the University secre¬ may have also fallen victim. cannot be cashed until it reaches grams in the Big Ten. Few other tary's written permission, and The fradulent salesmen, pos¬ universities waive degree re¬ Come in and try the the company's distribution violaters are quickly reported to ing as students in order to en¬ offices." campus police quirements Most other pro- list their prey's sympathy, spin hav •re prescriptive "Natural look" of Ovation a line about a contest for sel¬ honors progr . he said. ^ ling the most subscriptions Mini Rose Petal Talking their "subscribers" into buying the magazines fol¬ Izvestia praises The purpose view adopted of the annual re¬ with the new le¬ Wiglet 2 Wire Base Elsworth is oz. gislation is to insure that the stu¬ lows easy enough the contest ruse is used to get the payment in a check made out to the retiring De Gaulle dent does have honors program. a direction to his still $12.95 'saT. a Home. salesmen personally. The waiver of degree require¬ ELSWORTH HOUSE offers the ultimate In co-operative The swindler promptly takes ments is not the only advantage living. For only $190 per term you get good food, com¬ MOSCOW (APi -- The Soviet government newspaper of the Honors College. Honors fortable living quarters, free parking, and the freedom Elegante the check to the nearest store Izvestia praised Charles de Gaulle Tuesday for providing and cashes it. thereby nullify¬ students may also take graduate of off-campus living even if you're under 21. Whatever Europe with an alternative to "Atlanticism" while he was courses for undergraduate credit, you want in a living unit, we've got: house government, ing any after-thoughts of the new "subscriber" which may president of France. waive prerequisites for courses, 541 E. Grand River Next to Paraphernalia sports, or just a quiet place to study. Want to live in lead to the stopping of a pay- "Atlanticism" is used here as a term of condemnation Jo research and formulate inde¬ 332-3341 a home next fall? Come to our informal open house to¬ for close cooperation between the United States and Europe pendent study programs. Open Daily 10-6 Wed. till 9:00 night and get acquainted with our most important asset: which the Kremlin sees as contrary to its own interests. the men of Elsworth. _ Call 332-3574 for rides. Petitioning open Izvestia indicated concern that French foreign policy may for judiciary seats change now that De Gaulle is out of power. The general was often praised here for his opposition to I influence and his refusal to go along with efforts to unilv Western All-University Student Ju- Europe. cidiary petitioning for seats on that committee and two junior seats on the Student Faculty "IHhat gnu bo Btill brttrrB uihat ia fconr.' The Winter's Talr. Judiciary are open. Pick up pe¬ titions in 101 Student Services ANNOUNCING. THE 215 ANN ED 2=0871 COMPUTE THE SOUNDS OF COLOR Greek Sing PELICAN May 4, 2:00 p.m. Main Auditorium SHAKESPEARE The thirty-eight softcover volumes that com¬ prise the Pelican Shakespeare form one of the PASSENGERS SIGNED UP most highly praised and best-selling editions FOR of Shakespeare's works ever published. The UNION BOARD series was recently completed under the gen¬ FLIGHTS eral editorship of Professor Alfred Harbage of IMPORTANT MEETING MAY 1 Harvard, with individual plays edited by lead¬ 3-5 p.m. UNION BALLROOM ing Shakespearean scholars. Now, to fill the need for an outstanding, one- volume collection, the thirty-eight books in the ASMSU POP series have been brought together in THE COM¬ Entertainment # PLETE PELICAN SHAKESPEARE-with a new # AND # General Introduction, new forewords, full bibli¬ • GREEK WEEK • ographies, and a simplified system of notes. This new hardcover volume is beautifully de¬ # presents signed and illustrated, and is packaged in an • THE attractive protective slipcase. jfflSIMM • and • THE COMPLETE PELICAN SHAKESPEARE is the one-volume Shakespeare to read and refer to . . . and to give for important occasions. • the Your bookstore has copies now. •CLASSICS JV* Special pre-publication price • JEN1SON FIELD HOUSE £ (to December 31,1969}... $12.50 a Friday May 2 8:00 p.m. A J Tickets $2 and $3 T •MARSHALL MUSIC UNIONW © PENGUIN BOOKS INC (o) 7110 Ambassador Road Campbells Truck • t ••••••••• Baltimore, Md. 21207 Wednesday, April 30, 1969 £ Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Free U' By CHRIS MEAD Executive Reporter of cannot tuition-free be found designs expansion courses in the that cat- the Crisis Clinic would have to establish is a sense of counter -- experimental college has lined university/ Morton students said. "is interested at getting this Free University is no long¬ alogue Recently. Students for trust so that people in a up are ongoing movie festi- The founders of the I'niver er The University of Man and "personal crisis can feel free val, a newspaper and a cata- sitv of Man and Nature origin Nature is born. to call and not worry about the logue of course offerings in ally were going to wait until Or at least it is in the U. police or the FBI. time for fall registration. fall to begin setting their plan fetal stage. Doug Morton said. But now that Free University Some of the other projects "The most important thing." into motion, but decided to Morton is a former student is to be supplanted by the begin right away by ordering who is now working full time to remake the old Free Uni versitv into a new univer¬ University of Man and Nature, the emphasis is off scattered courses and shifted to a broad¬ Students movies and setting up classes Basically, the question of goals of the New Uni versitv er base. is summed up in its position sity within a multiversity- sort of a experimental counter-university college, as One of the first founders are going to work on is a bookstore things where stu- to campus paper: "How do we want our own university to be run'' he calls it The sound of rock fills the enough money for office space What do we want to learn The idea for 1 expanded dents can purchase books from airways of the MSU radio net- and other expenses. Kucinski and how? What is the purpose Free University germinated 15 to 20 per cent less than work as MSU disc jockeys bring said "enough to get by." of our learning"'" two months ago when student: in local bookstores. the student the music he wants The station plays rock, pro- The answer: "Socially rel- working with MSU's Free I attended a conference The books and bookstore will videotapes to sup- order tohear. The MSU radio network is of easy listening." gressive rock and "a little bit evant classes with student Kucinski centered teaching. These are th« Ring-a-round Horticulture Gardens behind the Kansas and saw w other plement the University of Man divided into five separate stat- said. the foundations for the cvoh ? fountain in Stud^t Services Bldg. universities are doing and Nature, and may event ions with WMSN. located in the "I put in between 10 to 12 ing philosophy of envisioning ves to be a gra d pla/ground for rollicking youngsters. When the fountain Morton said the expanded ually bec< ■o-op. Morton Student Services Bldg.. serving hours a week on the job. but and implementing the future filled, students he 'e been known to launch canoes for a mighty voyage, 'round concept at MSU will be based sa'd as th„> central station of the net- a MSU disc jockey's job varies in a university. State News photo by Hal Caswell on "sensitivitv. creativity and Another innovation already work. The other four stations from 4 to 12 hours a week." —* in the planning stage include WBRS in Brody. WEAK WMCD disc jockey Bob Priebe. sitv Clinic-a 24 hour "rcferr in Wonders. WKME in Shaw and Dearborn sophomore, said. I£ Sk if* u £ 3 KL£ fk W /ith agency WMCD in McDonel. Most MSU disc jockeys do F AKUEI 13? AV'«||KAvT ght When it is finally set u MSU has "the largest college not get paid for their work, ich- possibly hy the end of Ma network in the world and the Priebe said. "However, some at the Free MSU University two leadership years of w£ ag o under Michael at all from people who hav blems with the draft, only University carrier system in the world." WMSN general manager Ken Kucinski. Detroit junior, said. disc jockeys at WMSN get paid 50 cents an hour." Priebe added. Disc jockeys do not consider Pistol club accents safety Lopez. New Haven. Coi in., sen- c-hild beating or any The network is financed by a themselves competitors with "A small group of MSI stu fore we allow a member to fire curacy and for competition," ior Since then. F $1 student tax out of each stu- other media. Priebe said. dents gathers every Wednesda; a gun. we instruct him in the Smith added, iversitv has offered a dent's residence hall payment I feel I'm doing something n.ght in the basement of De ts equip- proper methods of using and "The club plans to form a pis- every term, with the exception for other students. We are stu- monstration Hall, and after arm handling the gun and try to make tol team to compete against pis- of summer term. Kucinski said, dents broadcasting to other stu- ing themselves, the Spartan Pis : $5 and lasts all members avtfare of the im- tol teams from University of For the 1968-68 fiscal year it dents and we are not being tol Club ember is at portance of safety," Smith said. Michigan. Ohio State and other came to $52,000. Kucinski restricted by advertisements, ir members After a five-minute prepara- universities.' Smith added Using a high standard semi¬ added which results in better educed cost tion period, the club shoots ten Smith said that anyone in- Asked if the network had communication." Preiebe said. automatic pistol and soft-lead se the club's rounds slow fire, five rounds terested in learning the proper range bullets, the 15-member club strives for mastery and the; t have one timed fire and five rounds rap- procedure in the use of fire- who is interested in PUS irn'ii Smith. id fire at targets," Smith said. arms or 9th Week!( tfuairu accuracy in the use of pistols "We shoot purely for enjoy¬ shooting interested in as a our sport would be club " The Spartan Pistol Club was ment. for improvement of ac- founded two years ago with the THE BEST IN FOREIGN FILMS Feature 1:10 3:15 ACADEMY - ASMSU Pop Aim AWARD - 5:20 - 7:25 - 9:30 Detroit publisher Entertainment i This is cinema art gathered fr LADIES' DAY and Venice, Mannheim. Oberhaus< n . , from Czecnoslov. WINNER! 75c to 6 p.m. in newspaper Greek Week kia, France, Hungary, Germany, sing. 34 present land, Japan and the United states. CLIFF paper business will be held ' . m ne\ > and.edit¬ TONIGHT FROM 7:00 p.r THE Each program is calculated exhilarate and delight student a ROBERTSON today with Philip Pov ors. pub- orial. 34 Union 2 pm. business " 'The Umbrellas of lisher of the Observ r news- and publishing innovations. 34 evitably followed by cheer?, apple BEST ACTOR Cherbourg,' 'A Man and a fipers. a suburban Detroit I'nion >15 p.m.. jobs. 504 Woman,' 'Elvira Madigan' OF THE YEAR So'ith Kedzie Hall -and now, 'Joanna.'" • and • J MSU INTERNATIONAL FILM SERIES { 10 12:15 the -Judith Crist, New York Magazine • the • presents Gr< R<>< of the Union. •class ICS ivf • JENISON FIELD HOUSE PROGRAM 1 TODAY ...from 1:00 PAL 0 Friday May 2 8:00 p.m. J At 1:15-3:20-5:25-7: 0-9:30 i^n AnMBD # f T ickets $2 and $3 % in the Festival of New Film ^ Marshall Music Union a | ™ 1 LADIES' DAY ... 75 - - :00 to 6:00 PJvl. Campbells Truck ^ •••••••••• Thurs., May 1 - 7:30 p.m. HILARIOUS WESTERN COMEDY! 482-3905 MICHIGAN — the fastest f1nci UNIVERSITY AUDITORIUM 'SUPPORT in the we: Color by DeLuxe LADIES* DAY — 75 FRIDAY 2 Bj North oa US-27 ■ ■ 482-7WS FIRST RUN MARIE LILJEDAHL 'Night of the Following Day" 0 3 ADULT FEATURES REG. ADM. $1.75 Tough Thrill...Tease... . Paxton Quigley's crime e was passion...and punishment fits exactly! 1 JbDV PACE MAGGiE THCETV L WARD WILSON NORMAN HERMAN STEPHEN WA CHA0STUART SAMUEL Z ARK0FF ... ~AMES H NICHOLSON Shown twice at 8 p.m. and 11:45 An adult look at a police detective. "THE FUNNIEST PICTURE I HAVE SEEN IN AGES!' Sunday At The DELLS WAYNE COCHRAN S Plus the 20th Century-Fox presents bedaz7«ed PANAVISI0N* Color by P , First at b p.;r. — 3rd Adult Hit FRANK SINATRA $2.00 Cover Contact the Dells ROGUES Casino Royale THE DETECTIVE Once at 10 p.rr (all this week) Wednesday, Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Scientists add pro High Noon' refines cliches The Beal Film week offerings represent high Group's mid¬ so fying the result seems totally satis- Demon." but unfortunately the film's distributors decided to of the Demon startling, frightening piece rem.)Ins Countless hundreds of West- stick in a shot of the fantasy, a tribute to an in points from two of the cin¬ to produc ema's most popular genres: ' High Noon" turns the West- erns we great have have only ones. been a made, but handful High Noon of is demon The after public. Tourneur they would feel cheated without this left, decided, ventive appreciated and generally director chills commence at 7 and 9 un- The g ern into something quite re- Apartment dwellers may soon i; spectable. without sacrific¬ one of a rare species and. obigatorv shot. Thursday and Friday nights as such, should not be missed. be able to stop fretting about ing popular appeal for art- Despite ^iis flaw, "Curse in 106 Wells Hall. * istrv The first chorus of "Do poor diets and still stick to (as did "Lonely Are Nor Forsake Me. Oh My Darl¬ their pop and potato chip menus the Brave"*. And "Curse Food scientists at MSU have ing" begins at 7 and 9 tonight 11*8 WHAT'S |i of the Demon" belongs to an in 106 Wells Hall. found a way of secretly packing even tinier minority-that of nutrition into food so that the MG classic horror movies. Classic chiller consumer is unaware of the The Western was a natural Monster movies (as op¬ added protein. The nutritional for film. Even in the crudest value of these plant proteins posed to psychological horror days of cinema archaeology, evils with such direct simplir- films like "Baby Jane" and is as high as that of meat audiences were thrilled by itv that the film not only protein. the scenic vistas and action- succeeds as a gripping "Psycho") have always suf¬ fered from the fact that filled plots that lent them- suspense tale but seems to be Extracting proteins from selves so beautifully to the saying something profound their basic characters plants is an old process, but new visual medium. about loyalties as well. Frankenstein. Dracula. the The Boxing Ctab will meet at 6 tonight on the fourth floor of Jenison Fieldhouse neutralizing the green color Mummy. King Kong -- were and the "grassy" taste is a By the time "High Noon" There is probably less here given ideal treatment in the recent discovery of the MSU and "Shane" came along (in tha' meets the because early 30s. Since then, there Food Science Dept The color¬ 1952 and '53. respectively) Fret Zinnemann such a has been little to do but pit t 8 tonight in 30 Union. Volunteer workers less. tasteless, odorless fluid most of the classic plots had ponlerousl; director them against each other or can be added to bread, rice been worn into the ground. <"( klahoma. Ian tor Abbot and Costello. Only one Winning personality t May Morning Sing meals, potatoes and candies These two films, however, all Seasons" 1 that we are ijor character, the Wolfman. took the cliches and did them often forced to read intellec¬ without disturbing the quality «s successfully introduced of the food. M'-s. America, Joan Fisher of Salt Lake City, a little better than ever done tual levels into his films to ter this Golden 1 7-8:15 tonight in 34 Age of views her reign as a rewarding experience for a before or since accoupt for the manner in J. Robert Brunner and John housewife. Mrs. Fisher is taking a leave of ab¬ "High Noon." starring Gary which he constantlv downplays " " Finlev. of the Food Science sence from substitute teaching this yea- in order to Cooper and Grace Kelly, epit¬ his scripts. In "High Noon. ^ve. therefore, almost Dept.. have been using this travel. She spoke to reporters at the Jack Tar omizes the "good sheriff in however the "I'm - a - goin' no m°dern classics in the piocess on alfalfa with great Hotel in Lansing. a rotten town" myth, present¬ •I m-a-stavin' " plot isaselemen- ™nster ni0VJe genre^ One ot the tew is Jacques Tourn- 1 Cinemaphotography at 7 30 t success. They hope to extract Sta:e News photo by Norm Payed ing its conflicting goods and eur's "The Cat people." protein from other plants as which The Free University is sponsoring its first class in Beginning Bartending well. developed quite an 7:45 at tonight. Car pools will be organized from the first-floor lounge of the intellectual following in 1942. Union to an off-campus classroom Those who own cars are requested to bring " The plant protein extract so it seems only appropriate would be useful in the United REWARDING EXPERIENCE that of M. Tourneur's the Demon" should take "Curse States for dry products such as au gratin potatoes and its place as one of the few original monster movies of Mrs. America soups." Finlev said. "It has implications in other areas of the world, too. We reminisces the ster 50s and certainly England's ONLY great mon¬ film (Tourneur as is, a hope to use the water hyacinths Frenchman who did most of and elephant grass from South By DICK CAMPBELL in a State News interview, laugh- ca contest Mrs Fisher won the Mrs. his work in Hollywood, but t 7:30 tonight in 203 Men's I.M Plans will fc ingly recalled many of the ex¬ She said that her family told America contest from a field of America and Africa, where pro¬ A first grader in Salt Lake "Demon was made under periences she has had as Mrs. her that she ruins every com- 51 contestants. The competition tein deficiency great Qtv utah. brought her "mom¬ the banner of England's Ham¬ America. Her husband entered mercial for them because lasted 10 days and included SCOPE will meet at 3 30 p.m. today ii problem " mer Film Productions 1. my" to school for show and her in the contest, she said, tell them that a particular com- rents dealing with home- i across from Berkey Hall > Everyone is tell." but the "mommv was and was dismayed when she merical took two or three weeks domestic Tourneur proved conclusive¬ unteer Bureau for further information Brunner envisions a plan keeping and Joan Fisher. Mrs. America for to make.' activities ly in The Cat People" similar to the creamery system 1969.70 that the most terrifying mon¬ Mrs. Fisher said that her child¬ Bauer nail 10 discuss nu iv ana ine way Day Demonstration for harvesting and handling the A graduate of Birgham Young She and her husband. M By- ^rs Fisher, a 29-year-old. 5- ren love having Mrs. America sters are those that are never plant juice Farmers would 5 hazel-eved brunette is University, Mrs. Fisher is an seen, only hinted at by the cam¬ as their mother because it makes bring in fresh alfalfa juice after the voungest Mrs America in elementary " school substitute " ' ~ and state repr tive in Salt era. He carried this phil¬ adding stabilizers to stop the Lake City, w three-week the past 19 years osophy into "Curse of the cause of the traveling she ha: 'acation to South America, which protein breakdown by enzymes. ^he talkative mother of three Being Mrs. America is the to do as Mrs 11 take some- PROGRAM INFORMATION ► 485 6435 most rewarding experience a is not teaching this ye housewife er said. can have." Mrs. Fish¬ QUAQMER 'U' dairy science prof as Traveling around the country Mrs. America has given me the opportunity to meet many- Beal Film Group Frensents TODAY fascinating people and to appear Tonight Only wins research award on television." she said. She is presently doing com¬ mercials for various local ap¬ loy S. Emery, professor of Feed Manufacturers Assn. pliances companies and is a dairy science, whose studies in Award*for his studies in animal representative for Beeline Fash¬ Ol Fashion Coney nutrition have had wide appli nutrition and rumen physiology ions Inc. and the Quaker Oats cation in the dairy industry, has jn received MSU's Sigma Xi Jun¬ Co.. sponsors of the Mrs. Ameri- Island Hot Dogs ior Research Award. The award is given annually Every Night to an outstanding scientist un¬ der 40 years of age Emery's research is centered on milk composition and on ways of increasing milk protein "Two methods for accomplishing the latter," Emery said, "are to administer special feed rations and to put extra amino acids into a cow's blood supply " Nationally known for his re¬ search, Emery was awarded the TH€ LION IN W1NT6R WINNER 3 ACADEMY! AWARDS "BEST ACTRESS" KATHARINE HEPBURN • BEST SCREENPLAY • BEST MUSICAL SCORE XXtmt LEVINSmm ANAVCOCMSA5SYFILM PCT6R OTOOL6 ' KATHARIN6 H6PBURN .MATONPOIL TH€ LION IN WINT6R JANE MERROW —— — JOHN CASTLE-*— mm, TIMOTHY DALTOS.«^~.«^» ANTHONY HOPKINS«»—•»»»«>» NIGEt. STOCK-—— NIG EL TERRY-JAMES*GOLDMAN JOSEPHS LEVINfi JAMES GOLDMAN MARTIN POLL ANTHONY HARVEY IS^JOHN BARRY -avco kmmssy — tanaviskw ►cour* Reserved Seats at Box-Office or By Mail FRANDOR SPARTAN TWIN WEST SCHBDULK OF PERFORMANCES AND PRICES - ALL SEATS RESERVED; MATINEES CENTER 351-0030 WED., SAT., SUN. AT 2:30 P.M.; EVENINGS MON. THRU SAT. AT 1:30; SUNDAY AT 7:30 PM.; WED. A SAT. MATINEES *2.00. EVENING PERFORMANCES $2.50. SUNDAY MATINfcE A EVENING *2.50. NO PHONE RESERVATIONS. MAIL ORDERS ACCEPTED. Wednesday, April 30, 1969 lugau Jju;e News, East Lansing, Michigan JMC group Volunteer Bureau alternate GIRL SCOUTS: The Girl Scouts have a term in order that a close contact with the able manner The boys may have social, :'tis wrtkU column is a joint effort of the >utr News and the Office of Volanteer Programs. Students, facvhy and staff can join in the MSI' Volunteer Action effort which includes those opportunities listed special troop for retarded teers are ing the troop members weeklv meetings girls Volun¬ needed to assist in transport¬ to and from the little brother may HOPE HOUSE: is be maintained year haffway house mentally handicapped persons who are re¬ for emotional The pose or delinquency problems Big Brother is assigned for the pur of assisting the boy in becoming a happy, independent, mature citizen and to CURRENT OPPORTUNITIES: cently released from State mental in¬ reach adulthood with goals and plans for below and others by contacting the MSU By SHARON TEMPLETON sity policy in women's resi- said, they hope said, they to provoke hope to provoke more more their freedom their fr and open house Volunteer Bureau; 21 Student Services NORTH SIDE COMMUNITY ACTION stitutions. Three volunteers are needed to this period of life. CENTER: Volunteers are needed to work work in one-to-one situations with indi BOY S CLUB OF LANSING: Volunteers State News Staff Wi dence halls, or isolate the mixing among JMC students. policy Bldg.. 353-44M. NEW OPPORTUNITIES: in the North Side Children's Club on Sat¬ viduals in the home. The volunteer will are needed from all areas at the Boy s The Study Commission on women's floors so that men The proposal would also be Slutzkv said he thinks the pro- I BIG BROTHERS There are several re urday mornings. Activities vary from tutor functional arithmetic The individ¬ Club of Lansing. Any individual interested Residential Aspects of Justin could not go through them after posal will be passed some time in working with boys from 6-18 would be useful to help redistribute the quests for Big Brothers This would in¬ week to week and the children always uals in need of tutoring help are young next year as soon as the de¬ Morrill College (JMC) closing hours," he said. outnumber the volunteers. men (21-22 years old). They cannot make welcome Boys from the club would par¬ overflow of women students liv¬ volve meeting with a Little Brother at recommended recently to Dean tails can be worked out. s that ai GREATER EAST LANSING CHAMBER change, fill out bank deposit slips, or ticularly like someone to conduct a tumb¬ The open house policy in ing in Phillips Hall. both individuals The Big Brother OF COMMERCE: The Sixth Annual Green¬ perform other elementary tasks involving ling workshop or help organize a tumbling D Gordon Rohman that the pro¬ ;o Snvder-Phillips allows the Women residents appear to The study commission will wich Village Days Sidewalk Art Show will the use of numbers The time require¬ club. will be encouraged to correspond with the TUTORS NEEDED: Tutors are needed posal to alternate men's and maximum freedom under the favor the proposal more than continue to review the proposal I little Brother during the summer months be held on May 23 and 24 Volunteers are ment will be two hours per evening for women's floors in Snyder and and make another recommen- I EAST SIDE ACTION CENTER: has re¬ needed to help organize and plan for the two evenings per week for the duration for MSU minority group freshman All Men's Halls Assn. proposal the men living in Synder Hall. quested a group of volunteers to assist of the term. tutoring will be done on campus at times Phillips Halls not be imple¬ passed last term. The men fear that mixing the dation to Dean Rohman next [ in the distribution of its newsletter. This BOY SCOUTS OF AMERICA: Have re¬ EMERGENCY SERVICE CORPS: Two convenient to the tutor and the tutoree mented. By alternating floors, Slutzkv floors would end by limiting year. ladies have volunteered to coordi¬ OPERATION SHOPPING BASKET: This would be done once a month on Saturdays quested two male volunteers to serve as young The proposal suggests that and would be a good project for a resi¬ asst leaders for gym and swim club pro¬ nate an "emergency service corps " There is a program conducted at the North Side has recently been a large number of re¬ Action Center Volunteer drivers are Snyder and Phillips bo con¬ dence hall, fraternitv. or sororitv grams Volunteers will work with youth of all ages and backgrounds quests for volunteers on an emergency needed two hours a month The volun verted into coed residence halls BLACK VOLUNTEERS NEEDED There is a request for one or two black VETERAN S ADMINISTRATION HOS¬ basis to assist invalids and to take care teer would pick up a lady from the North with alternating floors of men females to work in a group counseling PITAL-BATTLE CREEK Has requested of children for parents who are undergo¬ Side Community and take her shopping and and women students. DISCUSS DIRECTION format with about 10 girls from West Jun¬ volunteer's help The V A Hospital is a ing emergency medical care or consulta- offer hints on food marketing habits mental facility with a 2.000 bed capacity The opportunity offers a rewarding exper- Rod Slutzkv, president of Sny¬ ior High School Volunteers for this op¬ portunity are needed immediately. Trans¬ This is a very excellent opportunity for CTMPUS COMMUNITY COMMISSION: :e for a t This is der Hall, said the proposal will Critical University vents The CCC is a student program that works particularly good opportunity for wr portation will be provided anyone interested in the field of mental a be postponed until next year due INGHAM COUNTY MEDICAL SOCIETY health Volunteers leave campus at 3 00 primarily with elementary school chil¬ of MSU faculty-staff and graduate s to lack of time to adequately dren in the Lansing area The elementary AND BOY SCOUTS OF AMERICA is in p.m on Tuesdays. consider all the details of the need of one male and one female volun¬ READERS are needed to assist MSU program consists of (11 a recreation pro¬ teer to work every other Wednesday night blind students All volunteer work is ar¬ gram five days a week, during the noon proposal. hour designed to keep the children off with group of high school boys and girls ranged at the convenience of the volun¬ Locker larcenies The proposal suggested concerns at rap session a the streets, (2) an afternoon program was The purpose of the group is to explore the teer and the student MICHIGAN TRAINING UNIT-IONIA: five days a week, 3:00-5:00 p.m. any after¬ at the Winter Planning Weekend medical profession and consequently Jast term, but several compli¬ last Volunteer opportunities are available at noon incorporating recreation and a var¬ volunteers from the "Health Sciences'' Michigan Training Unit (MTU) in Ionia iety of clubs aimed at helping the up over year cations arose which we don't FAMILY SERVICE AGENCY: would The MTU is a boy's training prison where children with their studies, (3) a Sat¬ to consider this Student and faculty' members of Critical in. and supporters of an ideologically-based I inmates, ranging from 16-21 years old. may urday program including recreation, arts Four recent thefts in the lock¬ *iave time like a volunteer to tutor a woman with "ear." Slutzkv said. University held a three-hour "rap session" restructuring of the entire University. complete their high school education This and crafts from l:30-5p.m (4) and field er rooms of the Men's intra¬ multiple sclerosis who is taking correspon- Monday evening in the Union. is an excellent opportunity for graduate trips and parties with the children per mural Bldg. pushed the num¬ "There was a lack of student One participant in the dialogue said that the | FAMILY SERVICES: is in need of a volun¬ students in corrections, psychology, coun¬ iodically Other programs include adult The general topics covered were methods ber of total non-residence hall greement over such details as difference between the two positions teer driver. The agency has a fully in¬ seling. sociology and other disciplines education. Tuesday and Thursday even¬ of organizing additional support and concern sured vehicle and is in need of a .'-iver Transportation will be provided by the ings, and a teenage program in which locker larcenies well past the ;hich floors would be reserved whether the Critical University should strive I over the direction of the organization. on Thursday afternoons Volunter- must MSU Volunteer Transportation Pool This local teens participate in all program¬ 100 total reported to University *■ or men or women, building to ' shift around the lines of the bureaucracy [ be 18 years old and have a valid i .ver s opportunity is limited to faculty, and grad¬ ming as Junior Staff. police for the nine-month period security and lock up." he ex- or change the basic foundations of the Uni uate students only WEST SIDE COMMUNITY ACTION CEN¬ Members were critical of irrelevant courses, sitv." SCOPE: Greeks are needed to assist in TER: The West Side Community Action ending March 31. )lained. and a University structure that "implicitly SPECIAL REQUEST: Leslie Elementary manning a community center run by stu¬ Center has requested several MSU black The nine-month total was al¬ supports the ruling elite instead of the people. " School has requested a volunteer ■oi t; The problem of women's After about two and a half hours the ses with a boy of exceptional ability who .i-cus dents and people from the community. A students to act as Big Brothers and Bif ready running ahead of the total lours was the major compli¬ Differences in orientation among partici¬ broke up into smaller groups according to I variety of programs are held at the cen¬ Sisters to black children of the West Sidt motivation and cultural experience The for the same period a year ear¬ volunteer will be expected to involve the ter and all talents are needed Community. cation, he said. pants in the discussions were evident in several academic major. These groups plan to meet I BROTHERS: lier by almost 50 per cent s cultural experiences such NORTH SIDE ACTION CENTER: Four LANSING BIG Faculty "Two possibilities were open areas. There was a division between those who separately prior to the next general meeting. [ the plant Big Brothers are needed at the North Side staff and graduate students are needed as A total of $146 in currency, to be heid May 12 on the third floor of the | o it i. Action Center Preference will be given Big Brothers for fatherless boys in Lan¬ to us. either hire a night favor a non-ideologic'al organization which wallets, a watch and judo gear Union. to applicants who are from the Lansing sing. Big Brother work seeks to help .receptionist, which is univer¬ strives for reform of the University from with¬ were taken. Why Pay More! Why P ay More! Why Pay Mote! Why P ay More! Why Pay More! Why Pay More! WhyPayMore Gourmet's Delight - Armour's Star ANY SIZE CANADIAN BAC lb. 9* PIKE TRUIT CKTAUnm I8< tuyn®K 5* Fruits and Vegetables DRIVEi DETERGENT 5* Enjoy Its Fresh-Picked Unhusked BW Flavor and Goodness SWEET C Doz. ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■I pfRK and BEANS""" S 9< I |m I Personal Six* Soap SSAVE with this coupon toward the purshase of 9c ^ f\ l»! Bf| n J IW SAVE 99c 199< *•■1 j 10 / SAVE 10c llOj I I "I Vhy | IVORY SOAP 19°~ | 112x24 I Picture FREEil j j 29° 32-ox. i I pock - in dressing I table with $5.00 ir. purchase Expires Sat., May 3, 1969. I coupons redeemable with $5.00 purchase or more beer, wine, cigarette items or coupon per customer. Expires Sat., May 3, 1969. items { ^ j table with $5.00 mer. purchase Expires Sat., May 3, 1969. or mor Meijer & Thrifty Acres Coupon HBfl Meijer & Thrifty Acres Coupon jX; " ."20<; SAVE 20c 120' SAVE 10c 10" I with this coupon toward the purshaM of H 5125 W. Saginaw I Reg. or Electric Perk Grinds C 4 AQ | au°BD COFFEE | Any or — all coupons redeemable with $5.00 purchase or 1 « | Any or all coupons redeemable with $5.00 purchase or mor & thrifty acres | excluding beer, wine, cigarette item* or coupor | excluding beer, wine, cigarette items or coupon itemi THRIFTY ACRES IS OPEN FROM 9 A.M. TO per customer. Expire* Sat., May 3, 19*9. " i "t one per customer. Expires Sat., May 3, 1969. 10 P.M. DAILY, EXCEPT SUNDAY, FOR jjMeijer 6200 S. Pennsylvania Dept. I®. Meijer & Thrifty Acres Coupon, m YOUR SHOPPING CONVE NIE NCE. SUNDAY & Thrifty Acres Coupon \MSNjj HOURS 9 A.M. TO 7 P.M. Why Pay More! Why Pay More! Why Pay More! Why Pay Morel Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Wednesday, April 30, 1969 9 Van E 1st By MIKE MANLEY State News Spurts Writer will ' keep Nicholson on offense. Both linebacker players are excellent prospects and we don't want to his old split end position, the tight end situation was wide open when spring drills got underway. mages. as and Cal Fox. All five men have looked strong in early scrim¬ When spring football practice started two weeks ago. the to keep them both at the same position," Daugherty said As it stands now, Nicholson and Kulezsa will fight it out Daugherty said that both his big freshmen should benefit "Gary has played linebacker before and has had more ex¬ for the job, with Nicholson holding a 60-pound weight ad¬ from the move two biggest players on the squad were both freshmen and were both listed as tight ends. perience on defense than Jim so we decided to move him." vantage. Daugherty says Kulezsa has done a good job so After last Saturday's scrimmage, the Spartan head coach far this spring and it will be up to Nicholson to dislodge him. Jim Nicholson, the mammoth 6-7. 260 pound Hawaiian, and Gary VanElst, who goes 6-5. 255. battled letterman said that they needed someone with size at the tight end posi¬ While the end situation has dwindled by one, the lineback- tion in order to move those huge defensive linemen. ing competition has increased by 255 pounds with the addi¬ Daugherty pointed out. however, that the switch is not in¬ Bruce Kulesza for the starting job during early practice. tended to be permanent. Frank Foreman played there last year when A1 Brenner tion of VanElst. Coach Duffy Daugherty decided that was too much talent to have at one position. was the split end. Foreman only weighed 195 pounds and The Middleville freshman will fight returning starters "We're going to watch them both during the spring and After watching his two big men work for two weeks. was called on to block defensive men that outweighed him Don Law and Mike Hogan along with Ken Little, a starter see how they progress before making a definite decision." at defensive end last fall, and 1968 reserves Tom Barnum he said. Daugherty has moved VanElst to linebacker on defense and by 30 to 40 pounds each game. So with Foreman moving back 'S' netters Western rallies for 3 in 9th; top Broncos squad ran Spartan batsmen lose 6-5 MSU's tennis their season mark to 4-2 Tues- day with a 6-3 win over host Western Michigan. The Spar¬ in his first inning of relief the Spartan pitcher later Dick McKeon. third Bronco tans took four of the five By GARY WALKOWICZ •. Executive Sports Editor retired the Spartans in order scored the final run of the pitcher, got credit for the win. singles-matches and two of the while Williams suffered the loss three doubles contests. V estern Michigan rallied for in the last of the ninth. inning on a single by Rich A home run to left f^ld by Jordan. --his first this season. Tom Gray, playing at No. 1 thr *e runs in the ninth inning Kirk Maas The Broncos, ranked 15th singles after missing last Tuesday to hand MSU a 6-5 Spartan catcher Harry Kendrick MSU starter week's match due to illness, lo£ at Kobs Field, the Spar- triggered to Spartans' three- worked a strong six innings nationally, are now 19-6 on the tai s second straight loss at run uprising in the eighth. and left the game with a 2-1 season, while the Spartans' rec¬ defeated his opponint 6-0. 6-1. ord slipped to 16-7. ho' le. An error on a ground ball lead, but WMU scored twice John Goode won at No 2 ' hit by Williams brought in the in the seventh off reliever Phil singles 6-1. 6-4. Andy Yoll- he game, which had started second run of the inning and Fulton. weiler beat his man at No. 3 ou as a low-scoring pitcher's du- 1 was a seesaw affair for the singles. 2-6. 6-1. 8-6: and John Buffe won at the No. 5 fin d three innings when the lead arche ch nged hands three times. singles 6-1.6-3 No Gray and Goode won the 1 doubles 6-1. 6-3 while M3U leftfielder and lead-off man Joe Gave! takes a Big cut at a pitch during the first t partan pitcher Dave Will- iafls. the third of four Spartan Spartan Buffe and Wes Ichesco swept hu lers used in the game, en- New pocket-size travel book Michigan game at Kobs Field. WM'J rallied the No. 3 doubles 6-4. 3-6. 6-3. inning for of Tuesday's M5U-Western three runs in the ninth inning for a 6-5 win. State News photo by Hal Caswell teied the top of the ninth with a 5-3 after MSU had tallied for college | "London Discovery 1969'' fea¬ ■ tures money-saving discount certificates at places where thiee times in the last of the I Londoners themselves eat. Two members of the MSU Ar- Robert Burcaw and Mike An- eij hth. I shop, have fun Save on res- Williams chery Club travel to Tempe, derson, Lansing juniors, are co- | taurants, clothes, pipes, leather got himself into HAIR STAYS tr< uble in that final frame when Ariz., today for the U.S. Inter¬ collegiate Archery Champion¬ national Collegiate holders of Miniature the U.S. Duyrea | goods, car rental, theatertickets, | etc. Book saves you many times he walked the first two hitters he faced. ships held at Arizona State Uni¬ Tournament, which they won | its price. Send $4.95 (ppd) to: versity this weekend. in October. I LONDON DISCOVERY, INC. Weh rweir. Duld be able to partici- re drills tic Director Burt Smith. \ force-out out of the inning, produced the first but the next Bionco hitter laced a ground single to right, driving home IM News Burcaw's wife. Lois Burcaw. is presently the U.S. I Please send Intercollegiate Women's Archery I of I DEPT. CN • (Ruby) j DETROIT. MICH «8231 P. 0 BOX 2028 :-cyv ' By JEFF ELLIOTT son promptly handed the in this week's dual meet coach his equipment and left ore run. The deadline for entering the IM inde- champion, but is unable to com- State News Sports Writer pate A'MU catcher Dan Benoit then Wehrwein was one of sev¬ pendent golf tourney is noon Thursday pete this year because she Is Bill Wehrwein's hair Un¬ nnesota Dittrich said he Wehrwein showed up Thurs¬ A limited number of entries are still ere! trackmen told to cut or ri >ped his third hit of the game pot presently attending Tl!cqe. real reason why the MSI track was undecided day morning at the Union where being accepted. the team was boarding the bus trim their hair All but long double to right center Green fees must be paid in Room star was kept from partici¬ Wehrwein said, however, the The Burcaws are members of Wehrwein agreed. Wehrwein fif Id—to drive home the tying 201. Men's IM. by noon Thursday for the main controversy is based to leave for the weekend meet. the U.S. Inter-collegiate All- pating in the Drake Relays has. however, agreed to at- ai d winning runs. tourney which will be held Saturday and last week0 Disagreement be¬ on his hair and his decision America Archery team. Bronco pitcher John Pasierb, tween Head Track Coach not to cut it. Fran Dittrich and his star The issue began a week he was going to use once they Why Pay More! Why Pa \ M o > e ! Wh \ Vu v Morel W runner have left the question ago Monday when Dittrich got to Iowa. However. Dittrich unanswered. asked Wehrwein to have his spurned the idea and refused Dittrich says it is only a hair cut by Wednesday. When to let him go. small reason why Ijfe Rose- ville junior failed to make Wehrwein showed up at prac¬ tice Wcdnesdav. Dittrich told Wehrwein showed up practice Tuesday afternoon and at GREAT $UMMER the trip to Des Moines. him to turn in his gear if was issued his equipment back Bill after a didn't make the trip because of trich disciplinary reasons. said. However Bill has Dit¬ he tan< wasn't with his request going to comply The Spar- top performer this sea¬ conversation three-way telephone involving Wehr¬ wein. Dittrich and Asst Athle- COOLERS IN changed his attitude and will be practicing with the team this week. He has agreed to Students for Israel EASY CARE COTTONS work real hard in practice this week." Dittrich said Presents a discussion on When asked if the indoor 600-vard world record hold- PASSENGERS SIGNED UP FOR Work/Study Programs in Israel Documentary Movies to follow "BRA TOP" UNION BOARD FLIGHTS IMPORTANT MEETING MAY 1 3-5 p.m. UNION BALLROOM Thursday May 1, 8:00 p.m. Room 35, Union Bldg. DRESSES Loads of colors, patterns and solids. Choose from dots, florals, geometries, abstracts and more. All 100% cotton. Ladles SIZES: junior 5 to 12 Dresses missy 8 to 16 Dept. TO $797 BAYER ASPIRIN TABLETS LIMIT 2 per custome THRIFTY ACRES IS OPEN FROM 9 A.M. TO 10 P.M. DAILY,EXCEPT SUNDAY,FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE. SUNDAY HOURS 5125 W. Saginaw & 6200 S. Pennsylvania 9 A.M. TO 7 P.M. Why Pay More! Why Pay More! Wh ; '(iv More! Why Pay More! Why Wednesday, April 30, 1969 10 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan state news state news classified ST "" I had great response. Sold it the very first day! classified 355-8255 1 355-8255 E mployment For Rent For Rent For Rent The State News does no? FRANCIS AVIATION So easv to learti WAITRESS 2 3 nights Experience TV RENTALS GE 19 portable $8 50 SAVE $10 month 1, 2 SUMMER SUBLET luxury 2 man. No per month including stand Call J R men Capitol permit racial or religious in the PIPER CHEROKEE. Special preferrew mileage Good the right girl No experience need¬ tion. Hon 882 4887 BAY COLONY APARTMENTS i and ed Musi have pleasant voice Ca'l For further information call SUMMER SUBLET-Mangold Apart EAST SIDE Apartments 2-bedroom 2 bedrooms Furnished and unfur¬ BSA 500cc, 1965 Road machine Ex 372-9560 for appointment 3-5 2 ments. spacious 2-man. Air-con¬ possibilities Furnished or partly MERCEDES-BENZ 1 nished Summer leases available 372-6200, ext. 80, 9-5 Mon¬ ditioned Next to campus Reduced furnished $125 and $150 month. phone 190-SL Motor overhauled Good Also 6. 9. and 12 month leases Call day-Friday. rates. 351-0204 4-5/2 a IMMEDIATE OPENING Full or part Jack Bartlett Renting now. summer or fall. 351- tires Sacrifice at $1250 Call 484 time .employment Transmitter engi manager. 337-0511 5323 10.5/1 355-8255 neer FCC First Class license re Corner of Haslett and Hagadorn Roads MUSTANG 1967 289 radio white- quired. A good place to studv Call SUMMER SUBLET 4-man. air con¬ rates . 482 1334 15-5 21 ditioned. swimming pool wall tires, power steering, heavv SUMMER TWO girls for 4 girl FURNISHED APARTMENTS for 3 and Reduced NORBER MANOR 5821 Richwood 351-3797 5-5'6 phone 882 8631 or visit 6221 Gar apartment across from Mason Re¬ 1 day $ 1.50 denia. Lansing. 5-7p.m 3-4 30 ENGINEERING STUDENT Full time duced 351-3178 5-5 2 For summer and fall terms. 5 blocks New 2-bedroom units for up to 4 15tf per word per day summer and part tune fall opening from campus Sufficient parking. 694- persons Air-conditioned, swimming 3 GIRLS FOR Northwind Apartments MUSTANG 1967 289, radio, white in our engineering dept for M E F «266 10-5 12 pool Furniture rental also avail¬ Summer Barb. 353-1031. 351-6870 3 days $4.00 i NEWLY MARRIED0 able wall major to handle drafting and special Special rates for yimmer 393- 1-4/30 tires, power steering, heavy 13 l/2tf per word per day project assignments under supervision 4276 0-5/1 5 days $6.50 phone 882-8631 denia. Lansing. 5-7p.m or visit C621 Gar HONDA CG 350 of i project engineer Must be an TANGLEWOOD Sl'BLEASE IMMEDIATE occupancy 3-4 .'10 Whitehall Manor $125 List $145 13< per word per day parts TT pipes experienced draftsman. Interviews APARTMENTS Scrambler bars Pe Hurry! 351-8416. 3-5 1 will be held May 2nd or May 14th OLDSMOBILE CONVERTIBLE 1964 ■(based on 10 words per ad) Jetstar 88 Brown, excellent Pro- Apply JOHN BEAN DIVISION 1305 1 Bdrm., unfur., from $124.50 NEEDED IMMEDIATELY 1 girl for There' will be a 50 V « RIVERSIDE EAST GRADUATE WOMEN Spaces avail¬ $67.50 per man— 3 man matic Beautiful rose and while with able starting summer Four girl If you are 18 or older burgu'ndv interior Low mileage apartments Haslett Albert $55 per you qualify for a "In¬ Rental office 635 Abbott Best offer over 5950 332 1944 2-4 30 month Utilities included Complete¬ terpersonal Happening EMPLOYERS OVERLOAD COM ly furnished 337-2336 5-5 5 Halstead PONTIAC CATAL1NA Automatic power, perfect condi PANY Experienced secretaries Interpersonal Dating tion. 337 1260 3-5 1 tvpisis to work on temporary as¬ WANTED HIP Management Co. signments. Never a fee Phone 487 only Cedarbrook Arms One block PX).BOX 2137,Ann Arbor,Mlch 351-7910 PONTIAC l%8 LeMans convertible DISHWASHER HI S from Justin Morrill $54 351 BARRACUDA 1966 Formula S 4 speed Built tu S< i 'A ;pet ificatH ns \p.,iy CQ ,N 353-0192 3-4 3" ids Starling salarv m ROOM, furnished CAKES ' East Gr ind Rivei , Near campus ED 2-5514 IT'S TIME TO THINK - PONTIAC CATA UNA 1963 Depend able ■e.i ( lose to hospital Call MASON 4-5 2 good-looking transportation ENFRAL HOSPITAL 677 <*>21 10-5 7 $550 Call 3324157 10 5 12 CHEVROLET 1963 Impala A PORSCHE CONVERTIBLE This fi.ie ABOUT SUMMER AT lh-ive. $170 to $180 matic. power steering brakes lie. private room TV Nur- ties furnished except conditioning exceptional $65u $1250 337 9692 9- S «» RESORT HOTEL ■nces required 184 1584 or aI 2316. until 10 p m 4 PORSCHE 1965 Abarth. other ex CHEVROLET IMPALA -I'JM •client condition vertible 283. power steering, matic 355-8970 SKYLARK -GRAN apartment furnished 711 EAST sport 1965 CHEVROLET 1962 Biscayne 4-door chelin X s Mist green with ■ BURCHAM DRIVE 6-stick. new clutch, brakes $175 interior Call 351 9597 or 351-9495 nights top wage Personal inter 353-6872 1-4 30 view required Phone East Tawas. 162 3451 Mrs Anderson xl7-5 1 BABYSITTER TO live n Thr.-e chil THUNDERBIRD 1966 I-andau Real CHEVROLET 1964 Biscayne V 8 au dren Flexible hours Can have own *Two air-conditioners tomatic Custom clean A-1 shape, low mileage 485- interior, record 1779.351-6261 3 5 2 children 339-9081 or 339-2781 3-4 30 For Rent per apartment player 351-3797 5-5 1 RENT A TV from a TV Company *Balconies SUMMER EMPLOYMENT Fuil and CHEVY II VOLKSWAGEN CONVERTIBLE 1%1 wagon 1965 Nova 6 $9(Hi per month. Call *Three-man units stick, one owner Recent tune-up Rebuilt engine, new top. good tires NEJACTV RENTALS 351-6148 after 4 p r.i Or 351 $325 353-7533 3-5 1 *Complete!y carpeted 0586 5.5 | Parking IF YOL money, EXPECT check the * LOT good for buys vour in rubber $325 485-7510 ence tiiei \utomobtle required information, phone THE SO For fui Discount ^Completely furnished *Laundry facilities Automotive today '1ETA < ORPORATION at 337 134" Photofinishing VOLKSWAGEN i967 Excelleni To lease for summer COMET 1961-rebuilt engine De COLOR PRINTS $2.90 dition Extras 26.000 miles pendable local transportation $150 Bruce 351-9474 (12 exp. develop & print) or fall phone Mrs. |n- Call 353-1380 3-5 1 REPRINTS 20 each ghram, 489-9651 or VOLKSWAGEN 1968 sedan He < ontac t Ken Young. 332 351-3525 CORVETTE FASTBACK 1967 127-0. BLACK & WHITE $1.04 435 hp 21.000 actual miles on COLD " en Inspections iHKl (12 exp. develop & print) gine IV 7 3334 2 4 30 Owmet Miy 3423 RECEPTIONIST FULL All apartments furnished with REPRINTS 09 $1 75 an hour to stai GENERAL ELECTRIC stoves, Cl'TLASS CONVERTIBLE T ivlor IV 9-401.3 196ft Mid MOVIES S1.29 refrigerators, and air-condi¬ night blue with white tup Buckets tioners. Mag wheels Call 351 6432 3 4 30 EX'TTINt DODGE DART ANTED 1963 64 An apartment with a heated sob araeeji Auto Service & Parts I*-' YOU need If you have LINN'S swimming pooi from CROSSWORD wawaama nnn^ fi-r interview CAMERA SHOPS E. L. Management PUZZLE asnaia hubbus FAIRLANE 1964 6 cylinder stand ACCIDENT PROBLEM ' Call KALA H@q nmaaQSH MAZOO STREET BODY SHOP Small Any Linprint Dealer 351-7880 28. Mythical lance ard transmission air New clutch and clean No rust factory 482 dents to large wrecks American NEED A CAR? ACROSS ?9. The Rail ana [jpgasn 8882 3 5 2 potter. Splitter CM sraa aaaaa 482 1286 East Kalamazix FALCON 1963 2-door hardtop V 8 Twitching id Spoiled raausn sna Recent engine overhaul Sharp Must CAR WASH 25 cents Wash, wax Crowbai 33. Robins QHaHHd ataia U DO-IT sell $525 Phone 489-9475 2-4 30 vacuum pert. back of KO-KO BAR 430 South Clip- I Firmness 36. Smoked salmon aaaaacats @ns Candlenut tree 37. Also Kasssu angqs Cedar Village TROWBRIDGE ENCO Herb of grace 38 Prize rings Open ,.nd«-r . Shakespearean 42. Negligee saas auunaau ulty discount 7 days a week 10 5 13 -pecial Rates for MSIT Students Khv -15. Grampus maiija ass aoi Turmeric 46. Cake FORD GALAXIE 500. 1959 $150 Good bodv Moving must sell 353 TWO MONARCH tubeless tires 8.000 WEEKEND Table cloth ingredient miles 7 75 x !4 Plus rims $30 4. Infuriate 3293.351-4524 7 5 2 Jacob's seventh 47 Girl's name 351^804 after 4 30 p.m 2 5 1 Noon Fri. Noon Mon. - 48. Creek 5. Undertook 1 Uncivilized 6. Haw baking pit GTO--19M Convertible, new engine MASON BODY SHOP. 812 East Kala Congeal 49. Court Met production 50. Bobbin 2. Neighborhood 7. Freight PI US <2 ft. sleeps 6 Self ( BLOOD DONERS NEEDED $7 50 for all positive. A negaUve, B negative 5643 and AB negative $10 00 O negative complete with brakes, aw Tape Recording Industries Reese Hitch $12 00 MICHIGAN COMMUNITY One Month's Rent $1600 or r offer 627-6193 '"HANKFUL? A Card of Thanks BLOOD CENTER. 507W E Granc ^n the Peanuts Personal column is River, East Lansing Above the new 1101 East Grand River Ave., E. Lansing 337-2310 *tn easy way to express your grat- Campus Book Store Hours 9 a m NEW MOON 10 x 50' in excellent FREE! condition Completely furnished, in¬ cluding utility shed Available June "tude your Come in today to place Peanuts Personal They must 3 30 p m. Monday, Tuesday and Fri day; Wednesday and Thursday. 12 OPEN TONIGHT UNTIL 9:00 Be placed in person and 6:30 p.m. 337-7183 C 641-6895 5-5 1 pre-paid 8 x 45 MARLETTE on East Lan¬ sing lot. An excepUonal buy. Call 337- 2082 3-4 30 should call your I think you new Apartments VENTURA DELUXE model Must ASMSU POP ENTERTAINMENT and GREEK WEEK Present The Classics IV The First Edition r That's right! If you submit the best name for we'll give you and your three roommates a solutely free! (When you sign a 12-month lease) Formerly known as Eydeal Villa, the apartments are located at 1240 Haslett Rd., near the corner of M-78 and Hagadorn. These ex¬ Highcut or oxford tra clean 2, 3, or 4-man apartments feature swimm'ng pool, ample style. Black or parking, laundry facilities, new carpeting, and all utilities paid, ex¬ white. 4-14. 9.95 cept electricity. Mail or bring your entry to the J. R. Culver Company today—you could be the lucky winner of a free month's rent! Enter as often as you wish, but hurry—the deadline for entries is this Friday, May 2. "But you know I Love you" Decision of the judges is final. "What condition My Condition is In" JENISON FIELD HOUSE SPORTING GOODS DOWNTOWN LANSING Fri. May 2 8:00 p.m. Tickets $2 and $3 APARTMENT MANAGEMENT SPECIALISTS Mon., Fri. 'til 9 p.m Now on Sale at Marshall Music - Campbell's - Campbell's Van - Union 220 Albert St. - Above Knapp's Ccmpus Center - 351-8862 other days 'til 5:30 Wednesday, April 30, 1969 |2 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan H.L PRICES 'EEK-ENB 111 IK AD mm j Swift's Gold Crest 6 to 20 lbs. HEECTHE FEAT! TURKEYS Store Hojrs THRU SWH Sundays - 10: a.m. - 7 p.m. Weekdays 8 a.m. - 10 p.m. 4i: GRADE A A 3301 EAST MICHIGAN HE. largeeggs iSP 'I * m 921 WEST HOLMES RD. ! SwIff'S Pre^ium 8 to 22 lbs 15407 NORTH EAST ST. Hwy. 27 WTflMU TORKEVS - 49= We Reserve Quantity Rights Wipf TURRET BREASTS ... 68' Falarski 0^' LIMIT ONE--WITH $5 FOOD PURCHASE KINGSFORD CHARCOAL S|I jflpAj i LB 49t beet sugar Fresh Picnic Style BRIQUETS 20# PORK ROAST Swrft S Sweet Ra9her .. 35$ SLICED BACON 49C t|29 Eckrich Slender SLICED MEATS «« 29C Spartan Frozen dinners Chicken, Beef, Turkey Reg. 1.39 Pasquale's Froz. DELUXE PIZZA 4 Fishermen Fr M" PERCH FILLETS 4 Fishermen Froz.. 39< Reg. 99c Pasquale's Froz. Macaroni & Cheese 18 ct. LIMIT 4 CHEESE PIZZA 791 FISH STICKS 4 oz. wt. 491 & J Country Fresh Creamed cottage cheese ' &&&>■ Eberhards Tender Krust Country Fresh IceCream . white /Jin cake roll j# rl I :'r ? Fresh, Tender, Florida urttfSsf* sweet corn Hawaiian Red Scott 1-Ply 13 x 3" FAMILY NAPKINS PUNCH E EBERHARD COUPON Save 9c With Coupon Pkg. IV 12 fl. oz. can K> COMET HAIR CLEANSER ,t ° VITALIS Reg. 79c Noxema New Lime DRESSING Fresh, Sweet Juicy California Llrrvt One--With $5 or more Food Purchase Thru Sun. May 4 SHAVE CREAM n EBERHARD COUPON Reg. 1.39 Mlni-M:st Dry Pollyanna Shortcake STRAY SHAMPOO £ 994 BISCUITS FACIAL 2 Ply Pollyanna - TISSUE 175 Ct. Pkg. 15' Reg. 61c Efferdent DESSERT CUPS 6FOR 29' Limit One—W:th $5 Purchase — or More Food Thru Sun. May 4 DENTURE TABLETS £ 44t