Monday MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY STATE STATE NEWS Monday, May 5,196^ Vol. 61 Number 171 East Lansing, Michigan Do black lights and or strobe lights harm your eyes? Mike Page, Wyandotte senior. Dr. James Feurig. director of Olin Health Center, told Spartacuss that the ultraviolet rays given off by black lights Stevens pledges agreement can be harmful to the eyes. The covering of the eye can be damaged and after prolonged exposure the lens can become clouded and retina damanged. Luckily most black lights are shielded into the eyes. so the ultraviolet light does not shine directly Strobe lights can also harm the eyes if you look directly into them for a prolonged period. with U' selection committee By LINDA GORTMAKER a statement issued after a joint meeting any of the selections political," Stevens that they will vote for an AUSSC candi¬ Can Spartacuss tell me what brand of cigars President Adams said. date for president should not be neces¬ Executive Reporter Saturday of the Board and AUSSC. smokes? A compulsive cigar smoker who wishes to remain sary, Stevens said. Don Stevens, chairman of the MSU Although Stevens spoke as only one Stevens had rejected a motion by War¬ He said he made the statement this anonymous. Board of Trustees, said Sunday that his boar* member, he feels his statement ren Huff, D^Plymouth. at the April President Adams says he smokes Dutch Master Presi¬ refle- ts weekend to "re-emphasize"that he would choice for MSU's next president would be the wishes of other trustees board meeting. Huff asked the board .to vote for someone on the AUSSC final dents. When asked how many he smokes a day he replied. and doesn't know of any trustee who affirm that they would act on their in¬ a nominee suggested by the All-University "That information is classified." His wife has been trying to list and that the board "pretty much sup¬ Search and Selection Committee (AUSSC). woul£ n't support it." dividual "conscience and conviction"' in find out for years. Ste 'ens said Sunday he hoped his state¬ ported this idea, anyway" when it adopted "I will vote for one of the candidates selecting University officials. Stevens on the list submitted who in my most ment Would eliminate any speculation that and two other trustees voted against the Taylor Report (procedure guide I have relatives in East Germany and would like much for AUSSC i at its March meeting. very careful and considered judgment is the „ the lext president would be ultimately what Stevens termed a iovalty oath to visit them. I tried to get information on obtaining a visa electtd for political reasons. best qualified individual to lead this for a 3-3 deadlock. from the West German consulate in Detroit, but they said they "I A resolution bv all the trustees University," Stevens, D-Okemos. said in ersonally never thought of making stating couldn't help me. Can Spartacuss help? Ann Wacksmuth, Rose- ville sophomore. Spartaues talked to H. R. Phelps. Jr. at the East German Ideally, of course, the hope is that desk of the State Department. He told Spartacuss that since the board's preferences and the prefer¬ the United States does not recognize East Germany, it is MSU PROVOST ences of the committee will be found to therefore, not in a position to extend to American travelers coincide, or at least partially to overlap, there the consular and protection services customarily avail¬ so that the' interests of both groups may Neville able to American citizens traveling abroad. The U.S. govern¬ be readily accomodated. It is. however, ^ ment, however, does not place any restrictions on such travel Phelps was also kind enough to send Spartacuss a letter de¬ tailing the procedures and do's and don't's concerning travel in Fast Germanv. SDartacuss will mail that out to you. resigns the frank the spirit of this instrument, that Board shall appoint a person from the recommended list." Dale Hathaway, AUSSC chairman, re¬ for Claremont presidency I'm in a jam. My boyfriend's birthday is next weekend and he ceived Stevens' statement Saturday and as just loves turtle soup. Can Spartacuss help me locate a can of of Sunday had not discilssed it with his this delectable delicacy? Linda Wood, Midland senior. committee You can pick up a can of 'Green Turtle' soup in the Gour¬ met Dept. at Knapp's downtown. The department supervi¬ "We will have a hard time finding any¬ He said he felt Stevens' statement em¬ By STEVE WATERBURY The announcement was made Friday one who will work as hard and be as de¬ phasized the feeling that the entire aca¬ sor. Mrs. Redfield. has on hand everything from Schalet Suzanne soups, carried by Apollo astronauts to Kangaroo State News Staff Writer at Claremont by Edwin Corbin. chairman dicated to academic principles as Mr. Ne¬ demic community has "a single basic Provost Howard R. Neville, chief aca¬ of the Claremont Board of Trustees, and by ville." he added. interest: that of obtaining the best person Tail soup. Other delicacies include smoked octopus and rattle¬ snake meat. She informed us they were temporarily out of tig¬ demic officer at MSU, will be leaving the representatives of the board's presidential Neville. 43. has been at MSU since 1952. available to serve as president of our University this fall to accept the presi¬ searteh and selection committee. He University. er and elephant meat but they would be getting some in soon was a graduate assistant in economics dency of Claremont Men's College in Cali¬ Nrville. provost of MSU since 1963. will (please turn to page 9) (please turn to page 9) What fornia. takt over his new duties Sept. 1. happens to guns confiscated by the Dept. of Natural Resources for hunting violations? Dave Yurk, Flint sopho- Hf "had been considered by many as a con! *nder for the position of permanent Each September the Dept. of Natural Resources auctions off all guns confiscated. If you will write to: Department of Natural Resources, Law Enforcement Division. Mason Bldg.. sublessor to former President John Han¬ nah T Us'tees had reported Neville to be East Wilson Council Lansing. Michigan, they will put your name on a list and notify Hat lah's personal choice for acting pres¬ you before the auction as to the exact time and location. In addition, they will upon request send you a catalog describ¬ ing the guns to be auctioned. The number of guns auctioned ident, a position which the board gave to facility member Walter Adams. V<^ville succeeds George C. S. Benson, seeks hearing answers who resigned his post at Claremont to be¬ "remained unenlightened concerning the usually runs between 30-40 a year. come asst. secretary of defense in the Nix¬ Responding to recent events in Wilson degree of racism in Wilson cafeteria. cafeteria, the East Wilson Council pre¬ Around Farm Lane Bridge there is always a lot of trash on Administration. "Many residents pf East Wilson have sented the "opinions of the majority ol Claremont is a liberal arts college found¬ indicated a reluctance to accept the because so many leaflets are passed out. Why doesn't some¬ (Wilson i residents" and questions ed in 1946. It currently enrolls 800 men. recommendations of the committee as one put trash barrels in the area? John Paul, Dayton, Ohio concerning the demonstration to Acting entirely valid, because they are un senior. It is part of a six-member system, which President Walter Adams and members also includes Claremont University Cen¬ aware of the factual findings on which John Zink from the Grounds Maintenance Dept. said, of the Hearing committee and East those recommendations are based. . "Why don't people quit passing out leaflets?' He also said. ter/ Harvey Mudd College, Pitzer College. Wilson residents in the form of an Pomona College and Scripps College. "East Wilson residents looked to th< (&avflLTp ^7Mr h°wever' i OW that they have trash barrels in supply, and he will MSU Board Chairman Don Stevens, D- open letter to the University commun¬ committee to pronounce judgment o Ail c(¥r/\0(' make tlie necessary arrangements to place them around ity. these issues: the committee only chos' the Okt'mos. expressed regret that Neville bridge. The West Wilson Hall Council endorsed is leaving the University to make recommendations. The com "Mr. Neville has made a real contri¬ the East Wilson position in a meeting mittee's recommendations \vould be I fell in the Red Cedar the other day and now I'm concerned about whether I should get a tetanus shot. I'm especially bution to the success and development Sunday night. better accepted by East Wilson resi worried because I have several open cuts on my body. Name of MSU in the years he has been here." dents if the committee made public the The open letter said that the coun¬ withheld upon request. he said. factual findings upon which its recom¬ cil wished to announce its position on mendations are based Olin says to get over there on the double! Since the Red Stevens pointed out that several MSU "those few things we know, and request administrators have left to become pres¬ The Wilson Council asked the com Cedar has such a high polution rate and you have several answers about many things we do not idents of other colleges around the coun¬ mittee to reveal "its findings on each open wounds, the possibility of tetanus is very great. The cost is a mere 25 cents. try. He said MSU would "rank high on the The letter said members of council allegation in the seven specific charges list" as a source for presidents of colleges and tell its general findings on tht HOWARD R. NEVILLE across the country. extent of racism in the Wilson cafe There are lots of places that will make up a poster from a In discussing a successor for Neville. teria." black and white snapshot. Can Spartacuss find a place that will do a color poster from a color snapshot? Randy Johnson, Stevens said he hoped for "full parti¬ Nader speaks In the letter to the council "recog¬ Sparta senior. A color poster, the size of most of the black and white ones, Businessmen cipation by faculty and students in select¬ ing a successor." Ralph Nader, the leading crusader for nized the right of demonstrations' felt "as a general rule that demonstrat¬ but Trustee Frank Merriman, R-Decker- increased auto safety, will speak on con¬ ions should be designed so as not to would probably run between $100 and $150. Photographers sumer protection at 7:30 tonight in the vitle. also praised Neville's performance penalize third party bystanders. say it's an entirely different process, and involves much more work and equipment. march, as provost at MSU. *4erriman indicated he felt this position wa a "key one," and said that trustees Auditorium. Following tonight's speech, co-spon¬ sored by ASMSU Great Issues and Greek "In short, while we are principle to such tactics as the seizure, we recognize the possibility that no opposed in Week, Nader will participate in an in¬ other recourse was available. We must w' 'aid have to "face this situation quick¬ What can be done to stop some of the accidents around the Farm Lane Bridgfe? Could a light or overpass be installed? Wilson ly ' MSU has lost a good provost." Trustee formal question and answer torum in 111 Bessey Hall. The forum is being spon¬ ask the committee for its factual ings." the letter said find¬ Charles Massogaia, Chapil Hill, N.C., sophomore. sored by the Union Board. By WHIT SIBLEY r White, D-Bay City, said. (please turn to page 9) Robert Billsell, public safety staff service officer, State News Staff Writer said an overpass or light is not really necessary because A group of East Lansing businessmen students can walk under the bridge. They were going to marched from Brookfield Plaza to Beau¬ post a sign to that effect, but they decided not to because they mont Tower Saturday to demonstrate were worried about coeds using it at night their dissatisfaction with the settlement of the Wilson Hall sit-in and to "mourn Due to the unpredictability of Michigan weather, I am now in the death of the administration." the market for a plastic bike cover. Can Spartacuss please ..After placing a wreath at the base of locate one for me? Art Yeramyan, Evanston, III., graduate the tower, John A. Marble, the group's student. spokesman, read a statement of the group's Pick one up at East Lansing Cycle. 1215 E. Grand River with "the concern destruction of civil Ave. They cost $3.30. rights of a silent majority by a vocal minority in all aspects of American life I t)hhk I have got venereal disease. What do I do? Name with¬ Acting President Adams said that the held by request. group never discussed their views with him Go to Olin Health Center. They will give you a blood test "Some people jump to conclusions to see if you definitely have VD. If the test is positive, without looking at the specific facts," treatment will Adams said. begin immediately. Your case by law must be referred to the Michigan Health Dept.. who will keep tabs Adams said that people draw upon on the state of your illness. Under ordinary circumstances their impressions from events at other parents are not notified, but if the students fail to start treat¬ campuses which may not apply here ment, action must be taken to force him to allow treatment "The black students' sit-in had cer¬ The law requires that VD be treated. Failure to do so can re¬ tain notable conditions," Adams said. sult in incarceration until the patient is non-infectious. He said that there was no damage to life and limb, no disruption of academic processes, and that no property damage occurred. "The group decided to act in order to in- (please turn to page 9) I have five pounds of mercury. Several girls on my floor have given me different prices on what it "is worth. How much is it worth and where can I sell it? Vicki Sawicki, Allen Park Blood drive junior. Sam Darnell, stockman for the Chemistry Dept.. said that A Lansing area blood drive begins the girls on your floor could all be right Mercury is worth today and will extend through Friday. different prices depending on its purity. To have your mer Blood is needed in types A positive cury appraised, take it to the first floor of the Chemistry and B The blood collected Bldg. and show it to Willard Patterson. He can tell you what grade of mercury you have. Your mercury could be worth children. positive. will be used in open heart surgery on See page six for details, Typical Spart from $18.25 per pound to as little as 40 cents per pound Dar¬ including the bloodmobile schedule on A great way to keep your shape in shape is getting out on a spring afternoon and giving the old ball a toss nell asked Spartacuss to warn you that mercury is danger¬ campus. around as these two athletlc coeds demonstrate on the lawn of Abbott Hall. State News photo by Bob Ivins ous, and if taken internally can be fatal. Monday, May 5, 1969 2 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan JUSTICE BRENNEN SPEAKS Dems scrutin No possibility of justice party By JANE SCHOLZ objecti representatives. If the Democra- when government deified State News Staff Writer tic party received 60 per cent Party relevance, representa- of the vote and the Republi- tion of minorities and alienation cans 40 per cent, the Democratr of of young voters were the main ic representative would have justice are open in America By G.J. WOJCHIHOSKY Brennen told a Fairchild aud- Deify government topics of discussion when the 6/10 of a vote and the Repub- and that the people do not have Slate News Staff Writer ience that "all around us. men Justice Brennen noted that Democratic party scrutinized it- lican4/10. to use force and violent means self Saturday in the Union. McClure also called upon the A Michigan Supreme Court are restless. They cry for just- when people look to the govern- to resolve inequities. , lustice and a former Missouri ice ." ment to solve all their prob¬ • The Michigan Democratic Par¬ party to spend less time decid¬ "We must remember that our ;enator discussed man's cry lems, they deify that institu- ty Commission on Political Re¬ ing who is to run for office and The chief justice said that society came from revolution form heard testimony more time determining well- :or justice and channels for from itself,'' the former senator said. correcting injustices as part the observances "mark a day "Governments are human in- local party officials, students thought out party programs and If the channels to change are )f the law day observances in set aside to remind us that stitutions euided bv trembling 11 l1"" L,Ku,,,v,i' "* ** and other interested citizens policies. the Lansing area Thursday. just laws, fairly enacted and dle'din.Tn human hands, depending on im- im- denied, where do the people go but to the streets. And if the in an effort to determine (as man Harv Dzodin, former vice chair¬ of ASMSU and chairman Despite constant heckling. firmly enforced represent perfect human wisdom, speak- a district chairman said) "what best hope for, continued streets are closed, they go the hell is wrong of the Students for Kennedy, Chief Justice of the Michigan through halting human with the underground " said that "bossism. Supreme Court Thomas E. this planet.'' voices," the chief justice said. Curtis said that we must ask Justice for all party in Michigan." "The political Daley and manipulation signi¬ Mayor "When people delude them- ourselves whether or not such parties must selves into believing that Thorn E. Brennen, justice of the Michigan Supreme periodically take a hard look fy the party now." e and justic "The Democratic party is government can answer all their Court spoke at Fairchild Theater, stating that at ^hemseives to see if they 2 SN writers win prayers, they make the govern¬ ment their god-and they be¬ comes its creatures and its are in open. "We should be our aware of this society, since in the last men for are "it crying for justice and they shall have it is their birthright." His speech was in are adequately their public duties." Sen. San¬ der M. carrying out Levin, state Democratic run by ential a few rich and influ¬ people." Dzodin said, "youth demand access to the decade there have been two conjunction with Law Day observances. chairman who party and influence without presided at the club prizes slaves. But wishing that govern¬ State News photo by Bob Ivins undeclared wars," he said. snickering from older members." press ment could be god-like, does not make it so." Justice Brennen said that a hearings, said, "Otherwide they must expect public disinterest, disenchantment and disquiet." Dan Aapinsky. James Madison College sophomore, said the Council weighs Two State News staff writers won first prizes Friday night party must become government which is expected Acting President Walter Ad¬ more at the Detroit Press Club Foundation's annual awards pre¬ to achieve happiness for its ams told members of the re¬ relevant to today's issues be¬ sentation in the Sheraton Cadillac Hotel. citizens is a government which form committee that he has cause students and others who Gerald J. Wojchihosky, Lincoln Park senior, received the is destined to fall. learned in the last few months are concerned with- issues foundation's grand award of $750 for excellence in college that a government can func¬ "don't think of politics in X-grade, Freedom in peril journalism plus the first place award in news reporting Jerry G. Pankhurst, Midland senior of $350 for excellence and former editorial "We are a free people in imminent freedom." he peril of losing our said. "There is on dro The changes in the X and I nature, tion effectively by the consent of the governed. "I'm deeply conservative by terms more." of political parties any¬ Speaking for the black com¬ editor, received the first place award of $350 for excellence still time to see ourselves as By MARILYN PATTERSON also neans- that the student Adams said, "but re- munity. J. C Williams from in expression of opinion. we really are. And to tell it State News Staff Writer has n«t completed class work: grades were suggested by the form jn our party institutions Lansing's West Side Commun¬ Wojchihosky's article, appearing in the State News Nov. however, I grade must be EPC by the Assistant Dean's js ity Center, said that deprived like it really is." When the Academic Coun- an necessary to preserve what 18. 1968. discussed the North Wonders Hall staff's attempt He said we must see our cil meets approved by the assistant dean. Group. we have." citizens who think in terms of Tuesday, it will to do something about the public flaunting of liquor during government as a human insti- consider proposals to extend EPC proposes elimination The dean said that the pro- with regard to student and day-to-day survival look at life differently from bourgeois football Saturday drinking parties. tution with human failings, its the free drops and adds per- of the X grade and no author- posed change would provide faculty participation on the Parkhurst's editorial appeared in the State News Oct. 18, An X grade indicates that a means for the instructor MSU 30ard of Trustees, Adams whites ana DiacKS wno com¬ responsibilities entrusted to iod and to eliminate the X- 1968. Headed "Voting in an Absurd Political Year.' it the student has not completed *° accomplish what he now that the academic com- pose the Democratic party public officers. grade'. discussed the State News non-endorsement of a presidential "All around us, men cry for The Educational Policies Com- class work through some fault class tr'es do with X-condition munity will not accept an "Parties are becoming ob- candidate. It is recorded with negative results. administration which "runs" the solte. ' Williams said. Party justice," the justice said. "And mittee (EPC> will propose of hi ivn. , leaders view black problems Twenty-two awards totaling $7,400 for excellence in pro¬ intil the work is satis- EPC has been considering university, they shall have it-for it is their an extension of the period for fessional. college and high school journalism were present¬ the change in the drops and' The most important thing from their own socio-economic birthright." dropping a course with no grade factor y completed. The instruc¬ ed by James M. Roche, foundation president and chairman At a Law Day banquet spon- reported to the middle of the tor di ts not need special au- adds period since October is t0 listen to people, Adams backgrounds, rather from the of General Motors Corp.. during the foundation's fourth an¬ sored by the Ingham County Bar term and elimination of the X thoriz, tion to give an X grade. Presently the free drops said "You have to let people perspective of the black poor." nual awards banquet and adds period is through the know your hearing aid Mike McCarthy, a graduate Assoc . the Honorable Thomas grade with modification of the An . or incomplete, grade isn't Following the dinner. NBC newscaster and commentator Missouri I-grade to include the con- needed to the I first .two weeks of classes, turned off." of MSU and a communications B. Curtis, former izatiol use Chet Huntley discussed the aspects of communication by senator said that the channels ditions of an X grade. After that the adviser's approv- James McClure, chairman student, said that revision of grade saying "a littie bit about a lot of things. al. signature of the instruc- of the partys Sixth Congres- the communications media is tor and recording of the grade S10na, District Committee, told needed to make politics more are required for changes 4 t^e commission that the great- relevant to today's problems Bv current practice, however. est probiem the party faces is Typewriter protest' planned in most cases a course car. pr0per representation of minor- be dropped for three weeks ltjes Half of field finish alter the free drop period "Minorities have lost confi- Bv By CHRIS CHRIS MF. MEADAH ■ * with a recorded "no-grade After the mid-point of dence in the the we have lost touch'with the partv because Snyder road rally Executive Reporter term, acceptable reasons for Only 14 of the 38 cars ei Students from the School of Journalism will meet with the people. ' McClure said teced in the Snyder Safari dropping are evaluated mofe McClure added that black Road Rally Saturday finished dean of the College of Communication Arts today with a list of rigorously and the instructor aruj other minority groups see no the courses. Rodney C. slut- grievances against the School's 77-year-old'building and its fa¬ is more likely to record a grade reaSon to cilities. rpspect a system which zkv. rallymaster, and Glencoe. on a drop slip. EPC said has no respect for their point 111. junior said. The students are charging that the University and the College With regard to fee refund- 0fview. of Communication Arts are. in effect, "phasing out" the In first place was a 196! ing. now the student receives He proposed the formation Journalism School by ignoring its needs a refund if he drops with no of a unicameral state legisla- Opel driven by Vickv P. The students also have an appointment Tuesday with Acting Fan of Haslett Her naviga- grade and the drop moves him ^ure with proportional represen- President Walter Adams to present the list of 13 demands to alle¬ into another fee category. lor was Jerry Black. tation as one solution to the viate the alleged inadequate facilities in the school. Buckhannon. W. Va graduate extension there . With the Under the rallying cry of "Build it up or burn it down." (re¬ problem, student. will come a restriction of According to McClure's plan, ferring to the buildingi the students plan to march to Adams' A Domino's pizza delivery acceptable reasons for late each district would have two car tied for 11th p!.»ce office each carrying a typewriter and united by an unbroken stream of copy paper from wire service machines. The grievances to be presented to Adams and Dean Jack Bain of the College of Communication Arts include over¬ crowded classrooms, inadequate reading room facilities, insuf¬ ficient office space for faculty-student conferences and a poor¬ ly-equipped photography lab. MSU queen hospitalized Samuel C. Gringrich, University fire inspector, inspected the building Thursday and noted that the sprinkler svstemwas"the only reedeeming factor" the building could claim. Furthermore, the Accreditation Committee of the American after plane propeller mishap Council on Education for Journalism recently sent former Pres¬ A nurse at the hospital said the landing ramp. ident Hannah a review on the Journalism School which alleged¬ Miss Landis would remain in The aircraft was not moving. ly called the school's physical facilities seriously inadequate Nancy Landis. MSI s 19KK an intensive care unit until Student dissatisfaction with the building bloomed Friday but the engine was still running oming Queen, is listed Arthur Libbers, the pilot, had further notice from her physi¬ when nearly 50 journalism students met with Erwin Betting- The pen is mightier than the sic condition at St. Lawrence just landed the aircraft, return¬ cian. haus. asst dean of the College of Communication Arts, to dis¬ Hospital following an airplane ing from an instruction flight cuss the greivanees Dean Bain was asked to speak but could not come because of illness. Bettinghaus told the student group that he was sympathetic Journalism municatlon students met Friday with Erwin Bettinghaus, asst arts, to air grievances about inadequate facilit'&s of the Jou accident Friday night Miss Landis was caught in the Miss Landis was waiting in a U-M president Bldg, One of the antiquated typewriters, used by journalism lasses, was ied propeller of a plane at Capitol parked car 75 feet from the to their cause but had no line of authority" to deal with the problems. to Dean Jack Bain's office in a Coke case. State News pF oto by Don Gerstne City Airport as she ran out onto aircraft. When the plane landed, she got out of the car and ran to address "We can't operate on more funds than the legislature hands onto the ramp. us," he said, "the Dean's hands are tied " Several students said they were irked by the plush facilities "It is the practice of the Lansing club pilot to shut off the engine be¬ in other buildings, such as the new Natural Resources Bldg.. and the $3,000-plus Rosewood table for the MSU Board of Trustees DEMAND BLACK EDITOR fore anyone leaves or boards the plane!" Doug Dinkle. presi- Bettinghaus explained that these and other examples were dent of the Winged Spartan Club, igan (U-M). will speak Wed- funded by gifts from private sources. In contrast, the School of said Sundav "Miss Landis was nesdav following a U-M alumni Wayne militants threaten Journalism received only $283 in gifts last year, he said. excited about the ride and. on banquet at the Country Club of Bettinghaus said Dean Bain meets with the journalism an impulse ran up to the plane Lansing. faculty "at least once a year" to talk about budget requests. Dinkle explained that it was Fleming is expected to be Frank Senger. chairman of the School of Journalism, later and "naked suppression of the difficult to see the propeller at available for questions after stated that the supply and maintenance budget of the school The publications committee was named editor-in-chief of democratic process." night since the lighting is not his talk, according to Larry has been consistently cut bv the dean each vear. of Wayne State University has the controversial WSU news- ■r \ attacked separately by Part of the pressure exerted intense Stone, alumni president. The Following the meeting with Bettinghaus. a contigent of the backed down on its choice of paper on April 26 by the pub- g' ^up of four or five black on the committee to renege on banquet is sponsored by the students took one of the school's broken typewriters over to Bain's ut * who hit each student pilot thought she would U-M Alumni and Alumnae Clubs • editor-in-chief on the Wayne lications committee. consist- The its original decision came from office with the following message "Howwouldyoulikeyour State South End due to threats ing of six students and three vc' al times and fled. wait until the engine was of Lansing. Lonnie Peek, chairman of the secretarytohavetousethistvpewriter'' Signed, thestudentsinthe of general violence if a black faculty members, )i April 29 the publications Association of Black Students, stopped, he said. He yelled Fleming assumed office as SchoolofJournalism PS WearelocatedintheformerBotany editor is not named m littee passed a motion to which supports at her to stop when he saw her the ninth president of the U-M ■6 sider Richard Davis, Bldg ." John Grant, a white student. Grant was one of five stu¬ its selection of the only black candidate f throughout the year with special Welcome Week cry heard A $25.00 Value and Orientation issues in June and September Subscription rales are Sit Four at Columbia last "They knew there would be more helicopter losses were an¬ spring of nounced Sunday by the U.S. Command in Sai¬ one Nager too many was not Columbias ." at the dis¬ no restraint They knew they on their action " were in a PERFECT POP ART 2x3 ^35° Member Associated Press. I nited Press International. Inland l>ail> Cr gon. including the third air collision in 12 davs. turbances But toured the sec¬ community where they could Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Michigan Press Association, Mi All eight American crewmen were killed. In tion Sunday morning and talk¬ do anything they wanted to. PHOTO JIGSAW PUZZLE S45 igan ( ollegiatc Press Association. I nited States Student Press Association DaNang. a long-sought Viet Cong guerrilla, Kditorial and business offices at :W7 Student >erwces Building. Michi| wanted for the assassination of ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ University. Kast Lansing. Michigan ment workers, was killed in a U.S. many govern¬ PHOTO DART BOARD s450 Suite bush. an American spokesman disclosed. Army am¬ i SOUTH COMPLEX * 5 WEEKEND Display Advertising Business-Circulation At the United Nations, The American Friend * IS JH0T0 POSTER Inc. 210 E. 23rd St.. Dept. C N Y 10010 Photographic Service Committee urged Sunday night that President Nixon "order a cease-fire and with¬ 5 COMING drawal from Vietnam, unilaterally and imme¬ MAY 9,10,11 diately." ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ The 52-year-old Quaker organization said the South Vietnamese army "has no will to fight" and "will never successfully take over the For guys who work night shifts military burden now carried by the United States." • • • See a pill for the day shift. In Australia, American Astronaut Walter R. Cunningham told a news conference Sunday the Soviet Union is ahead of the United States in one field of the space race-unmanned space shots to planets. • Richard B. Finn, the • • U.S. State Depart¬ Maitlecake Nothing can kill a day like a hard night Yet every campus has its nocturnal heroes dedicated to the art of playing it cool. ment's officer in charge of Japanese affairs, If you're one of them, we'd like to offer arrived in Tokyo Sunday for talks with Japa¬ you a little food for thought What we have in mind is NoDoz8. The pill nese leaders on the Okinawa reversion issue that helps you shift through the day shift. and other U.S.-Japan problems. NoDoz has the strongest stimulant you can buy without a prescription And it's not habit forming. National News With a couple of NoDoz, m id Tuesday; Hot Dog Nite 25C "workers of the night can fight Sen Philip A. Hart, D-Mich., said Saturday Wednesday: Sloppy Joe Nite 35C anotner day night that the Pentagon has a "half as expen¬ sive" plan in mind should Congress defeat the proposed Safeguard Antiballistic Missle Sys¬ tem (ABM». But Hart, a leading opponent of JUNE GRADU the ABM. said chances of its defeat will be slim if the administration keeps up its "very LIBERAL ARTS emotional pitch" in favor of Safeguard. • • • BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION Civil rights forces and labor union strate¬ TAX ADMINISTRATION CAREERS gists see the strike of black hospital workers in Charleston. S.C.. as the first step toward or¬ WITH ganizing the 2.5 million nonprofessional hos¬ U.S. TREASURY DEPARTMENT pital workers across the nation. INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE REVENUE OFFICERS. Michigan News Work principally outside the office discussing the satis¬ faction of delinquent Federal Tax obligations with Business The Detroit Free Press has won one of the and individuals from all walks of life. highest honors in American communications- The Honor Medal of the University of Mis- TAX TECHNICIANS suri. The citation was presented for distin¬ Consult with a variety of taxpayers to identify and guished service in journalism. explain tax issues and determine their correct Fed¬ eral tax liability. JIME OPENINGS Campus News FLINT LANSING KALAMAZOO JACKSON BENTON HARBOR GRAND RAPIDS The nation's largest organization of college professors is on record as favoring use of civil On Campus Interviewing & Testing May 13 power to end campus disorders only after all For Appointment Contact: Call or Write else fails. Some 800 delegates representing MR. IVER W. BRADLEY 90,000 professor-members of the American PLACEMENT OFFICE RECRUITMENT COORDINATOR Assn. of University Professors (AAUPi, ap¬ RECEPTIONIST ntv.tr 1 lumii P.O. BOX 84 DETROIT, MICHIGAN 48231 proved a soft-line approach to campus disrup¬ AREA CODE 313 226-7215/7284 tions at the close of their two-day convention "AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER" Saturday. Mi EDITORIALS Greek Week an Um-hmms and head-shaking Ho. hum, it's Greek Week one of selective discrimination viewed with great reserva¬ time again. Tricycle races, wa¬ predicated on nebulous, "elit¬ tions. )eep within the inner soul of that fa- ist" qualifications. The glaring The "community service" nrjus "silent majority" lies the mak- ter fights, frisbee contests, of racial intermixture ir js of wild-eyed student radicals. To When nearly 50 journalism students met Friday to chugging tournaments, and oh, lack projects that Greeks so gen¬ bi ing that radical quality to the fore, within the Greek system, then, erously participate in this week si nply mix one sincere effort towards express concern for the conditions of the Journalism yes-- "community service" projects. points to be a built-in attitude point this fact up all too well. n eded change with one blatant disregard Bldg. and the shortage of faculty, many were fully f< r the sincerity of that effort. For both Greeks, and GDI s, among Greeks that any skin Kiddy day was Saturday, and When nearly 50 journalism students baptised into the ranks of irrationalism. Greek Week is a harmless, color other than white is not all the fraternity houses bussed rret Friday to express concern over the sociable good time. It does, compatible with those quali¬ in underprivileged youngsters conditions of the Journalism Bldg and fications. This, at best, is for two hours of fun and games the shortage of faculty, many were fully however, bring Greeks to the b-ptised into the ranks of irrationalism. that work in our classrooms, chairs that would do to help us-except, of course, attention of the University, racism. (with lunch thrown in the We discovered first that the dean of our aren't broken in the lobby. sympathize. and hence raises some more We must wonder then, how deal). Their intents and mo¬ college (to whom our concerns were to Feeling that these requests were not I had gone to the rally feeling not at Pfive been directed* had taken ill and. completely unreasonable, we only asked all hostile, rather quite confident that long the University can contin¬ tives, however, must be ques¬ important, more critical ques¬ -o his deep regret, missed our meeting. for some action, or reaction, or anything we could accomplish some good. But I tions about the Greek system ue to tolerate the Greeks as tioned. Their suddenly bene¬ had expected to be greeted on an adult had. of course, an underling-the col- less passive thap sympathy. as it now exists. they now exist. Any organiza¬ volent attitude seems more a r'ge's dean of students-to hear us out. But our "de3n of students" spoke as if level with answers and suggestions as to tion that either by structure mask to cover up the overtly Within seconds the tone of the meet- telling a child he could not have a lolli¬ what we could do to correct the situa¬ One of the important maxims pop 10 minutes,before dinner. tion. So much for that. or nature is racist has no legi¬ g was set: that has evolved from the racist practices exercised the 'Dean." one student began, "our sug- in the tace ot such complete disre¬ Perhaps Walter Adams will have more black movement with regard timate place in the academic rest of the year than a sincere ^stions have been made to college of- gard not only of your intent but also of than sympathy for us when we talk to you yourselves, how can you react except to universities is that racism community. attempt to aid those who do not cials many times and all we have got- in anger? And an angry reaction is him Tuesday morning. I could name n is a lot of head shaking." about 50 people who will be there with Hence, we must question have the resources Greeks do. cannot, and will not. be toler¬ "um-hum." said the dean, shaking more likely to be a violent one. as wit- bells on. ated within an institution that the sincerity of those Greeks in Even the projects of Greeks is head. nessed.by the 'violence on our campuses," as the news magazines And we will. too. see the dean of < student government of the year fail to cov¬ say. supposedly is dedicated to so¬ and other the rest And so it went. "What do we have to do to get some college, as our "dean of students" so the obvious nature of the We asked about the proposed new cial change. It follows, logic¬ organizations who clammer er I results?" one student asked, "go sit on litely suggested. When he returns to work, uilding. He said that is not his respon¬ he will find on his desk our calling card, ally. that neither can any sys¬ for such high and noble ideals system. What is it that Greeks sibility. the trustees had not allocated the trustees' rosewood table? They have a typewriter straight from a journalism a $3800 table and we can't even get tem based on racial discrimi¬ as open admission for blacks, are attempting to instill in those 1 le money so we would have to talk to classroom with a personal note reading: tyepwriters with ribbons in them." nation be tolerated when it ex¬ expanded recruitment of ghet¬ they "help"? Show 'em what vhe trustees. "Well." our dean of students" said, Dean-howwouldyoulikeyoursecretaryto students, and abolishment We asked about expansion of the present tvpedepartmentlettersonatypewriterthat ists under the auspices of the to you've got so they can strive building. He said the trustees will not "it ISa big table of racism within the Univer¬ to attain your status? It is hasnospacebar9 University. expand the old building because a new sity. The word of people who doubtful that any black, under¬ building is proposed. One cannot help but note the We asked about the maintenace-or careful selectivity with which profess to one ideology, and privileged children are seek¬ - lack of it-- of the present building. He Greeks choose their future, yet practice a completely op¬ ing the value system of the said that is not his responsibility, the posite philosophy in their per¬ Greeksi dean keeps the budget and we should life-long brothers and sisters. The process sonal and social lives must be The Greek system is not talk to him as soon as he recovers from would seem to be his illness. without its good points. Cer¬ We asked about the incredibly poor sup- tainly there is great potential >lies in our newswriting classrooms. He inherent within the system. said that was not his responsibility, mon- the school fund for Sacrifice What must evolve is a change >y comes out of ex in the practices and goals of Greeks if they are to realize that and nan We we should talk of the School of Journalism. asked what his responsibility to the chair- is 1 le said he is dean of students. democratic that potential. for ' Pan The Executive Hellenic and Interfrater- Council of 1o •Well." you see papers'.' one student quipped, in this room besides news¬ 'what The MSU Boaru of Trus¬ ulty will not be around to in¬ nity Council has said that Greek He said he is mainly concerned with tees and the chairman of the fluence its choice? getting students graduated, scheduling Week is a time for Greeks "to We are concerned that the and drops and adds He. the dean of stu¬ Presidential Search and Selec¬ reassess our goals and our as¬ dents. has no line of authority within tion Committee have choice of the University's ex¬ pirations.'' We only wish they the college to cope with student prob¬ pressed a desire to have ready president should not be made meant it. lems. We asked if he cared what happened for final consideration the fin- by a small group of trustees --The Editors to students while they were here. He said .al three names of and "influential" persons prospective yes. he is in complete svmapthy with MSU presidents by in the absence of the people the end of us ; summer. who will be most affected by We asked what he as dean of students It sounds like that choice. If the Committee Red Cedar report would do to help us help our school. He a reasonable said he is in complete sympathy and we will sacrifice some of its goal-the University needs a By JIM DeFOREST should go to the dean as soon as he is haste in favor of a more demo¬ president, and Waiter Adams back. cratic treatment of the task at We asked if he is aware of the conditions himself has expressed his hand, we may avoid the future of the building and the shortage of fa¬ hopes that he will be acting culty. He said yes. inconveniences which would We asked what he has done or is doing president for as short a time Some members of the MSU Board as possible so he can go back crop up under an unpopular of Trustees want to fill University va¬ about it. He said. 'well, we have cancies with politicians. Mayor Daley asked •to teaching. president. We said no. what have YOU done. for president? But the idea of the Search The delay in making the He said nothing. and Selection Committee was final appointment of- the new This isn't a university, it's an old By this time I was on the edge of my chair (I was one of the ones fortunate to provide for the expression president would not be terri¬ politicians' home. enough to have a chair) glaring in com¬ of mass faculty and student bly significant-a month or We see Grounds and Maintenance plete amazement at the circles in which two-but giving the students our "dean of students" spoke. opinion in the selection of painted the crosswalks. Parents' Week¬ " and the faculty a chance next end must be near. For the first time I knew why student MSU's next president: how demonstrators become militant. And the fall to have a voice in the 'can that committee func¬ Most middle-class Americans only read more he passed his bureaucratic buck from final narrowing-down of pros¬ place to place, the more I knew. tion as it was intended if it about the conditions of hunger in disad¬ pects is vital to the future vantaged areas, but reading can't convey It wasn't as if we were asking for a 'It's my roommate. He fell asleep : ries to do the bulk of its job student-run university or a beer keg in academic climate at MSU. the real thing You can help bridge this under the Sunlamp!' : during the summer, when communications gap-send home a parcel every dormitory room. All we asked was -The Editors office space for our facultv. typewriters most of the students and fac¬ of dorm food. OUR READERS' MIND Aiding The Search' Racism charge untrue To the Editor: eral stance toward the social problems dragged through the dirt He has been cist." It is surely a sin to be a racist EDITOR'S NOTE: To gain addi¬ ment a credit-no credit system denounced racist, liar, back- But it is just as surely no sin to be callec tional knowledge of how MSU stu¬ throughout its curriculum0 I wish to protest the cruel injustice of the day. as a a a which was done to Mr. Joseph Tran- Is this the profile of a racist9 Hardly. stabber a racist, when the facts so clearly show dents think about their University- Outside involvement: tham. Thursday at Wilson Hall. I have And anyone who. without a personal axe It was no sin to be called a traitor b\ that just the opposite is true what it is. what it should be. the type -How do you feel about (all East and examined, the list of charges Hitler. It was no sin to be called a Thank vou for vour time. of president it should have-the AS- Lansing > book store prices? seen, to grind, knows Joe Trantham. knows which were circulated. At best, the charg¬ that he is anything but a racist. Fascist by Stalin. It was no sin to be MSU Presidential Selection Board -What should MSU's relation¬ And yet this man has been hounded called a Communist by Joe McCarthy. Floyd R. Smitl es seem to be non sequiturs, or. worse asks the following questions of the ship be with the military-industrial Todav's catchword seems to be "ra¬ Lansing graduate studen yet, outright fabrication. For I also know •from his job and seen his good n;imp student body: complex9 (research commitments. Joe Trantham. and he is surely not the Social policy ROTC, Placement Bureau > charges make him seem ROTC must not be tolerated here -What do you think is the role of racist that these -What role should students play the University in bringing economi¬ to be in determining the social policies Here is a man who, in his work, of MSU? cally deprived students to MSU aside from scholarship and loan has made a definite effort to hire black the existence of ROTC forces the ai -Do you think students should be To the Editor: programs9 people: has worked with the Urbarj, courage and develop man's intellect, forces into more authoritarian modes required to live on campus0 The issue of ROTC is clearly not the -What do you think the open house Presidential qualifications: League On-the-Job Training Program curiosity, and spirit of freedom. ROTC. creating an elitest class of college edu issue of whether or not SDS has allied -What are the most importan1 to train black workers; and who. in his on the otfjer hand, has as its goal to cated. policy should be0 itself with the anti-ROTC struggle. No privileged officers, whose train¬ Academic involvement: personal and professional criteria recent hiring, has hired more black work¬ structure. condition, and indoctrinate ing emphasizes leadership rather thar one on this campus is being "duped" by that should characterize the new ers than white. the student ROTC is engaged in de¬ combat. This at a time when tensior -By what methods should students in his SDS. Godless Communism, or any other evaluate their instructors9 MSU president9 Here is a man who. personal stroying individuality and stifling intel¬ between officers and enlisted men is form of The Great World ■ Conspiracy. Answers should be sent to the life, is proud to claim black people as lectual curiosity. These goals are anti¬ -What role should students play Nor is ROTC higher than ever The ROTC issue has his friends, and to welcome them to a question of student free¬ thetical. it has been said that eliminating been in curriculum development"' Spartan Room. Student Services dom There are some courses that the greatly obscured by hints of SDS the groups of which he is a member. ROTC would change the nature of the plots, and the contention that validity -Should University imple¬ University cannot support The question Here is a man who has an open and lib- . armed forces in the direction of author¬ of ROTC hinges on the morality of the to ask is why should we take away a stu¬ itarianism because of the absence of war in Vietnam. These fallacies merely dent's opportunity to enroll in ROTC un¬ officers w(th a liberal, college orienta¬ obscure the fact that ROTC should not. der the auspices of MSU9 tion But college-trained men will still must not be tolerated here. Analyzing this question, we must look serve in the Army, and their training Robert into the structures and functions of MSU Renninger and ROTC. A universitv. first, must en¬ will be adequately provided. Actually. Monongahela. Pa., sophomore MICHIGAN STATE NEWS Trinka Cline, executive editor Norman J. Saari, managing editor George K. Bullard, campus editor UNIVERSITY Deborah Fitch, feature editor Six-time; recipient of the Pacemaker award for outstanding journalism. Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Monday, May 5, 1969 5 Volunteers to promote Farewell happening 'Pride Day' The MSU Volunteer Bureau non-tenured faculty member has announced that it intends By ANN HODGE who will be leaving MSU this Dept." for dropping his con¬ Bryne said he has enjoyed tract. working with MSU students very to collaborate with the East , "There are complex reasons much but is delighted to be leav¬ Lansing Jaycees in recruit¬ Ove' 100 students staged a Edmund Byrne was honored behind their decision." he said. ing 'U' students to promote "happening" in front of Beau- with balloons, a jug band and ing. "I just don't fit into the pro¬ "After all. there are student? Community Pride Day May 17. mont Tower on Thursday to say ^e Byrne buttons at his. in other places too," he said. John Cauley, bureau direc¬ goodby and thank you to an farwell "happening gram." asst. He was hired three years One coed at the farewell party He will be moving to Indian¬ tor, said that the bureau will be REV. ANDREW YOUNG WILLIAM GRIER CHARLES HAMILTON professor of philosophy ago as a non-tenured faculty said Byrne gave her a new per¬ apolis. Ind.. to help establish the focal point in the Univer¬ member. His contract was not spective on the world and de¬ a combined branch of Indiana sity to channel University sup¬ renewed this vear. scribed sitting in his classroom and Purdue Universities in the port to East Lansing, sponsor¬ ing this occasion. PROVOST SERIES LAUNCHED Judy Green. St.Paul. Minn . as a "unique experience'' inner city. He pointed out that students junior, organized the event as generally are not anti-protest for students • on campus an aware of the extent of the city- who dug Byrne as a man and a Poet delivers keynote talk Wilson that it is "much more than teacher.' Grand River Avenue." By vol¬ Byrne said the "happening*' unteering services to residents was "beautiful' and compared who need help in doing spring his feelings about leaving MSU cleaning, students will have an opportunity to become ac¬ quainted with the community, Le Roi Jones, poet, playwright and author, will deliver the keynote address for the Provost Lecture Series. "The Black Experience in America," at 4 p.m. today in the Auditorium the Hamilton sity. is professor of political cience and director of graduate program in urban studi § at Roosevelt Univer¬ * to Gen. De Gaulle's his forced retirement reaction to today "The only thing either one ©i Beginning today until about May 20, Wilson Road between the he said. Under the joint sponsorship of ASMSU and the Honors Col¬ Thursday's speaker will be Dr V\ i am H. Grier. director us can say is that is was great Bogue Street traffic circle and the loop at Conrad Hall will be The Volunteer Bureau serves lege, Provost Lectures will include four speakers and of the Child Psychiatric Clinic in San 'rancisco's Community Mental Health Services and asst. ^f>r« essor of psychiatry at to be here but we've all got to closed. as an information center for corresponding campus activities. University Police advised that east-west traffic normally using volunteer work and brings to¬ The Rev. Andrew Young, executive director and chief admin¬ the University of California Medical Cen ;r go sometime." he said Wilson Road should switch to Shaw Lane or Mount Hope Road istrator of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, Co-author of the recent book. "Blacl Rage." Grier will dis¬ Byrne said students had gether volunteer and recruiter offered to plan a riot in his Local traffic to the Vet Clinic will be maintained Established in the fall of will speak Tuesday. Confidante of and adviser to the late cuss "Black Rage and Urban Unrest." Wilson Road's honor, but he does not blame closing is due to the excavation for a steam Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.. Young will discuss 'The Young, The lecturers Tuesday through Thurs lay will speak at 4 p.m. 1968, it has since expanded to in the Philosophy tunnel to the new medical complex the Black and the Poor " in Fairchild Theatre. approximately 3,000 to 5.000 Charles V. Hamilton, co-author of "Black Power volunteers with regular com¬ The mitments, Politics of Liberation in America." will lecture Wednesday ments. on "Political Development in Black America.' UNIQUE Morfar Board AND at Beaumont UNUSUAL Mortar Board, national sen- Mary Kay Marshall. Oil City. Laurine Fitzgerald, asst. ior women's honorary, tapped Pa . Eleanor Adams. Ham- dean of students, was pres- GIFTS 24 new members and one iiton. Ohio; Virginia Stover, ented with an honorary mem- honorary member Thursday Pittsburgh. Pa ; Jill Templelin. bership in recognition of her at May Morning Sing Dearborn Heights: Carol Wal professional and scholarly FOR THAT monies in front of Beaumont ters. Ypsilanti Wilson. Oscoda Selected for membership for their outstanding contri- the areas scholarship and of leadership, service were MSU group sponsors Cassandra Book. Kankakee. 'Arabian Nights' gala 111.. Mary Lou Cantrill. Grand Rapids; Diane Matthews. Liv¬ onia; Eleanor Farrell. South Plainfield. N.J.: Emily Moore. Indianapolis. Ind. Ai Also tapped were Elizabeth . Monroe. Key Westi Fla.. Ni ' Velma Jane Scholz. Sylvania. H; Ohio. Marcia Day. Grand Hi Rapids; Susan Gebelein. But¬ ler. Pa: Sally Shea. New Or¬ leans. La. : Paula Sikes. War- 7 30 p m ren: Barbara Hickok. East dinner for the refugee child" Lansing: Betty Julian. Detroit; ren of Palestine. Candis Simone. Iron Mountain: Peg Stevenson. East Lansing: Judy King. Plymouth; Margaret Korda. Corning N.Y.: Judy List. Bay City: Monday, May 5, 1969 5 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Snyder's poetry Travelogue revitalizes words in It is all a too easy By DAVID GILBERT State News Reviewer for poetry to become merely academic university community. We sit before plates of parsed disappointing The best thing about "Inga verses, and plough through pages of images, metaphors and is Sky Over Holland.' the laughably implausable. One would do better, ot course, even an oxymoron or two. 20-minute short running with to merely consider Inga" Finally, we hand in papers of scholarly and nebulous phrases, it. Superficially. "Sky" is a with which we try to prove that we have gained something trom a very long mistake playing travelogue-a dirty word to with an excellent short feature a term's brief and wearying journey. Somewhere in the pro¬ most film lovers- but it goes cess. the poetry, the refreshing vitality of life, is lost, and we far called "Sky Over Holland." so beyond the typical travel¬ "Dutchman" hold in our hands dead words, empty echoes. ogue that it seems better de¬ "Dutchman. on the other Gary Snyder put the live echoes back into words on Thurs¬ fined as an art film. hand, is REALLY a short day night Reading to a floor-packed audience in the (iold Without a word of dialogue feature, running slightly under Room of the Union. Snyder extracted the clear essence of (not even "Holland is a land an hour This screen adapt¬ May Day. and made the evening § celebration of spring of many contrasts"). John ation of LeRoy Jones play Combining what he cited as the traditional themes of May Ferno has fashioned an im¬ (which will be shown as a Day-fertility, good magic and revolution. Snyder read trom pressionistic series of breath¬ matinee a number of poems covei ing the range of his writing career. only. Monday through taking air photography, paint¬ His 1954 " Praise or Sick Women" began with an almost Thursday > is an expression ings by the Dutch masters early as the credits, wnich oriental abstraction and of black rage that comes highlights of Holland's list an actress named Lotta across like a kick in the groin. The female is fertile, and discipline industries and sports into an Persson. and the laughter ('contra naturami Anthony Harvey (whose only experience worth the entire doesn't stop until the final confuses her only other film. "The Lion price of admission. shot of a "dear John" letter, W ho has, head held sideways First Edition As for the feature, well. torn to shreds and floating In Winter." was a big-budget whopper i did a commendable Arm out softly, touching. Inga'' is the funniest' new- out to sea. Sounds of the First Edition and the Classics IV filled J#nison Fieldhouse Friday job of transferring Jones' play A difficult dance to do. but not in mind. film of recent memory . If the Swedes think about to film, especially consider¬ night as part of MSU's Pop Entertainment Series. unintentionally, of course. The (or dot anything but sex. State News photo by Jim Richardson audience chuckle as ing that the whole thing was Snyder's voice rang with music, echoing and re-echoing starts to it has been carefully edited filmed in six days on a fake the voices of words and streams. Dreaming, we readied out of this film, which resem¬ subway car in England-a few poem's end. bles a dubbed version of -vords are cock-full of themselves; established scenes being His they refresh each "Candv' performed (or other like glasses out of streams, filling and cold, quench¬ AREA RED CROSS more accurately. bumbling shot illegally in a subway station-and a skimpy New York ing, reconquering us through • serious intent Snyder's poems tell $60,000 budget, which was us about the man: his rhythm and feel, It's about that old cliche, the texture of his thoughts the "desires of a woman in mainly scraped up by Shirley Blood drive seeks donors His reading told us more about ourselves: why was this the bodv of a child Miss Knight. man so calm, so relaxed, so non-professional and yet so Marie Liljedahl is no child, Miss Knight turns in an comforting'' Readings interspersed with informal chatter but since everyone in the eye-catching performance -histories of poems and what they were reaching for. film keeps reminding us how as Lula. the sluttish white histories of man: delighting MSU students are being urged and will continue through Fri¬ Michigan and the Mayo Clinic. 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Tuesday; at young she is (especially an girl who flaunts herself at None of us wanted him to stop. When he did. we letl a tn participate in the Lansing day Donated blood will be used The Bloodmobile schedule Brody. 2nd floor. 1965 Room artificially - aged actress who middle-class blacks Although little high and happy, touched by the supersensitivity ol all Regional Red Cross Blood Drive in open heart surgery tor child¬ begins at .North Campbell. Re- fron: 2-8 p.m Wednesday: at ought to be selling Folgers she steals scene after scene things: Gary Snyder's poems. this week by Robert L Refior. ren in the Lansing area. Blood Creation Room, from 11 a.m.- Hubbard class rooms. fr»m2p.m.- coffee i. we might as well Jones' provides her with * p.m today. The stations for go a long with the gag little more motivation than a chairman of the Mid-Michigan types A positive and B positive 8 p.m. Thursday, and in- Shaw Red Cross Chapter are needed for these operations 'he reamainder of the week are Hall, lower lounge from 10 Although "Inga" isn't half sexual insanity somewhere I NO MILEAGE CHARGE The blood drive begins today Scabbard tional and Blade, a Military Honor Society, Na¬ it East Wilson, basement, from a.m.-4 p m. Friday. as embarrassing tor funny, left of Dada. so the real | depending on your sense of acting kudoes belong to Special Rates for MSU Students and Faculty is sponsoring a contest along humor' as its notorious pre¬ Freeman's solidly founded I PAC accepting views. it does contain portrait of the frustrated black Greek Weelc '69 wilh the blood drive Student numbers will be drawn and door contrived excuses for the re¬ who has sold out " to whit.- weekend mail order tickets values. prizes will be awarded moval of garments, during most daily As a branch of the American of which the actresses seem It's shame th«.i Jon- for 'Little Mary' a - BUDOEr% Red Cross the Lansing Re ;nore conscious of the camera occasionally substitutes .he enlarge lonal Program supp'its blood : han of t h<- other perfoi mers XFNT m CJUI SYSTtM ^5 J 5- c ~ r >J5 Mail the duction orders Pei.orming Arts Co ot the for tickets musical tor pro¬ to 73 hospitals in of Michigan counties to scope man's This is movie-none of the shock for genuine drama sim strictly a dirty old ilar to the hand-irnpalemem in The Pawnbroker" Never¬ spool PLUS GAs "Little Mary Sunshine will Lansing residents as well as artistic pretenses of "Ther- theless. "Dutchman i« a col MSU students will be able to Greek Week, an MSU tradi¬ sponsor its third annual Creek and Isabe,.. here..but djrtv be accepted from PAC cou¬ (,S(, losal blending of the intellc-c- tion for the past quarter cen¬ Week Art Show Tuesday night pon holders today. The show receive services previously , men wjH undoubtedlv tual and the emotional whid 1969 Pontiacs-Fully Equipped available only in such medical tury will aim at all segments where tour categor.es of art tind will be presented in Fairchild Mjss Liljcdahls continual w.ll haunt vou ;or months | centers as the of the University, not just the will be judged by members You must be 21 and have a valid MSU LD. card. Theater at 8 p.m. May 20-25. University of state of disarray quite stirn after the final terri! Greeks this year ot the art department ». and ui-,ting and her surroundings awarded ribbons. today thru thurs.: 214 So. Capitol 372-8660 Matinees Only Week It sa Happening Time-Greek 69 will try to make events apply more to the whole Shown at 1:00 and 2:30 p.m. campus and not just to the 'GAMBIT' PRODUCERS Greek system." Bob Stelling- tvorth. chaii ot Greek THERE HAS NEVER BEEN SHOWN IN CONJUNCTION Week f lid ANYTHING LIKE THIS ON »Vv-'// W ITH MSU'S "THE BLACK EXPERIENCE IN AMERICA" THE AMERICAN SCREEN'" - o This 30 sponsor par Greek Week Ralph Nader at will Grad student heads slate JtfC thL agency jvdtcnum, < tonight in the Auditorium. faua nou/imfiJm Throughout the week there i'-Vill be open voting for the Ug¬ of broadcasting officers DUTCHMAN liest Greek in the Union Con¬ COLLEGE NIGHT ss course. Tuesday at 7 p.m. Inter-Fra- MSU Broadcasters, which Board, proposed that the group MSU Broadcasters is open I ternitv Council will sponsor a produces the weekly television investigate the possibility of to TV and radio film majors I track meet at the MSU track series "Gambit ". elected new- student filpi festival in addi- and others interested in the I Wednesday night will -ing officers for the coming year tion to the production of the production of a television pro- [ an all night TG at the G. ?s. at a meeting Saturday. weekly series Gambit ' gram. Do You Like A Place a MSU Greek Week first President is Lyle Cruisck- v Alpha Epsilon sorority will With Atmosphere ? shank. East Lansing graduate student; vice president. James »Good Food • Soft lights • Good Music r.04.>- >-rea..T,0k^48844M Cruickshank (no relation) Winners anno QLAPMER Battle Creek junior: secretary. Ruth Miller. Southfield junior. Monday night - Two for one Pi/za The organization's weekly in Greek SingConfesf| Top Quality- All 'aiter f>:00 P.M.) series is seen on channel 10 Cocktail Hour—Everyday 4:30-6:30 SUPPORT at 10 a.m Saturdays Kappa Delta and Delta Chi sung their way to lirst place Sundav in this year's Greek Sing Contest - ' Th< Sound ot You Can Eat! YOUR * President-elect Crucikshank. Color TOWN*; The two groups took first place in the mixed division LOCAL* who has several years ot ex¬ with Kites are Fun and Lazy Days perience with the Canadian Film Have you visited Sveden House yet? If not, In the sorority division. Pi Beta Phi placed first with | By the Light of the Silvery Moon and All in the Golden why not come out tonight for the biggest dinner bargain in townl Enjoy all you can SHERIFF Afternoon eat of our Crisp CountryChicken, three other MICHIGAN. Lambda Chi Alpha the fraternity division with Loi PUMP [c] COLOR by Deluxe United Artists meat dishes, vegetables, salads, and rolls NEXT. . . "THEY CAME TODAY i Feature at J;15- l the ;ed div competition were Delta Gamm. --all for $1.59. (You'll pay slightly more if TO ROB LAS VEGAS" 3:20-5:20-7:30-9:35 ukI Delta I'psilon singing Requiem for the Masses' : in you want dessert and beverage.) third place were Alpha Chi Omega and Sigma \'u with Wade You'll love the cozy atmosphere around our 307 S.GRAND IV 9-6614 THE BEST IN FOREIGN FILMS Marion Richard in the Water big Swedish fireplace. And you'll like the ■UOWN LANSING °Pen Brando Boone Second Blacks in the sorority Become of division was Alpha Kappa Alpha's Age ": in third place was Alpha Delta I food, tool You just can't cook a comparable meal at home for $1.59. Come to our house. Pi singing "Brigadoon". At Greek Sing the second time champs of the Phi Delta Sveden House. Tonightl Theta Frisbv Contest Delta Tau Delta announced Phone* 3Z-2B1* ) JfrlI ITuWiVERSAt RELEASE lECHNICOLOtT - - was SPARTAN TWIN THEATRE TONIGHT from 7:15 p.m. Luncheons (11 a.m.-2 p.m.) ^J 19 $^9 SEE Dinners (4:30 p.m.-8 p.m:) | TODAY AT 8:30 P.M. ] Sunday (1 1 a.m.-7 p.m.) $^79 Dessert and Beverage Extra WINNER 3& RAY BMURURY R m.i-;leiwcc winner BEST ACTOR- of the supernatural1 ACADEMY® CLIFF ROBERTSON MARBLE CAKE IT'S EASY TO GET TO SVEDEN HOUSE 1 Take Grand River west to Oakland, Oakland 1 to the left. Waverly. Left on Continue west o Waverly 2 blocks- AWARDS I Don't dare 7:55 and Later OfAjlty NEXT TECHNICOLOR 321 S. Waverly Rd. stare^ TECHNISCOPE at ~~c with Claire Bloom P6TfcRO'TOOL€ THE KATHARIN6 HtPBURN IUUSTR3TED MEN |m! Tuesday: Hot Dog Nite 25C THt LION IN WINTCR ROD STEI6ER" all you can eat CtaiRE BLOOM I0HN CASSAVETES' Thursday: Sloppy Joe Nite: 35C c»»pw all you can eat FACES Your house of hospitality from coast to coast. E veninqi at I 30 p HT ^ ^ H TECNNICOL Next! "TWISTED NERVE* FROM WARNER B Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Monday, May 5, 1969 SPORTS Interceptions By MIKE MANLEY State News Sports Writer highlight Duffy Daugherty said after he called a cease fire for the 95th running of the Kentucky Derby. "We are pretty banged on the day's most exciting play. With the ball resting on their own eight yard line. Trip¬ Harold Phillips probably did not realize he was setting up on offense with injuries to several key players, but lett hit his split end racing down the sideline for a touch¬ a precedent when he sprinted 30 yards with an intercept¬ ^there was a lot of good hitting out there today." down covering 92 yards. The pair hooked up on two other While the No. 1 defense was stealing the spotlight with ed pass early in Saturday's scrimmage at Spartan Stadium long gainers during the day. one covering 25 yards their defensive warfare, one player on the white squad Don Highsmifh had a good day carrying the ball for the But that interception was the opening shot of what proved • was doing his best to dismember opposing ballcarriers Green squad, reeling off severai sizable gains. The senior to be an afternoon of hard-hitting defensive football. Minutes after his first interception, the junior defensive Big Ron Joseph, a 6-5. 270 pound tackle, spent most of halfback scored twice, one coming on a 20-yard run around the two-hour scrimmage in the Green squads' backfield left end. back picked off two more passes-running one back 37 Time after time Joseph smashed backs as they crossed yards for his second score of the afternoon. Although there were numerous bumps and bruises suf¬ the line of scrimmage. fered The interception fever became contagious when only during the scrimmage, the only serious injury was minutes after Phillips' third interception, linebacker Tom "Ron played real well in the scrimmage." Daugherty to freshman Gary Van Elst. VanElst suffered a sprained tion when he jumped up. tipped the pass high into the air. said. " He Barnum. playing with Phillips on the green-shirted No. 1 was really hustling today. It's tough to get a boy neck and will be out of drills for about a week then grabbed it as it came down and hustled 25 yards into that big in shape, but he's coming around now. If we can defense, grabbed an errant pass and rambled 30 yards to In Friday's State News, it was reported that Tom Beard the end zone. just keep him in shape all summer, we'll get a sustained the five yard line to set up another touchdown. sustained a broken ankle on Thursday. The injury actually The other member of the linebacking trio. Don Law. inter¬ effort out of him." Not to be upstaged by his teammates, linebacker Mike occurred to starting guard Don Baird. who will miss the cepted one later in the scrimmage. The offense had its moments during the scrimmage, how¬ rest of spring drills Errol Roy and Mike Tobin filled Hogan picked one off midway through the scrimmage. Ho- T think our defense was way ahead of our offense today."' ever. with Bill Triplett and Frank Foreman combining Baird's position over the weekend gan. however, added a little dramatic flare to his intercep¬ Batsmen's By GARY WALKOWICZ Executive Sports Editor straight games this weekend as Big 10 hopes slim Bi£ Ten title, dropped four ing Minnesota, which is now 7-1 -We just had our whole team MSU began its two-day road trip by dropping a 5-1 verdict Whea they're going good, they look great. But when things to Indiana Friday, then proceed¬ Think ot the biggest surprise a Pai1' oi medicore conference g0 int0 a siump MSI' Coach aren'l going good, they'll look in your life, then forget it ed to lose three consecutive teams-Indiana and Ohio State- Dannv Litwhiler said in trving veryj)ad. he said. It probably could never match almost eliminated the Spartans to explain the disastrous week. one-run dcisions- 3-2 to Ind¬ Th»^ is a good baseball what happened to the MSU base- from the championship race. iana. 2-1 to Ohio State and 7-6 I en(j jj was just several ear; never thought we'd ever ball team this weekend. The stunning turn of events to the Buckeyes. ,ose a doubleheader. much less individuals The Spartans, breezing along left the Spartans with a 2-4 'nd'v'duals >n a slump "We weren't hitting and we jive, straight games, but I'm with a 16-7 record and rated .league record and put them four play over it. but it weren't getting the big plays cominced we're going to come whole team ' when needed them." Lit¬ as one of the favorites for the full games back of league-led- we but of our slump. You'll see a whiler said. different team next weekend." T1 around for MSU baseball teams. costly errors. absorbed the loss, while Ulmer - The Classics IV and the First Edition take a break with a The fit"t over the high barriers and Spartan freshmen team Dave Leisman worked the pitched the seventh Pizza from Domino's Saturday dropped American games to Eastern Michigan's freshmen. 6-1 and 6-2. at Kobs takes B CALL: EASTERN DIVISION Janson DOMINO' S Field. W L PCT pizza Baltimore Washington 20 16 11 8 714 593 KMU put away the opener with a run in the third inning 351-8870 or 351-7100 Boston 14 10 583 and two more in the fourth DETROIT 11 13 458 Bob Gebben was the starting fya&t fynee. golfers rally to3rd New York 11 15 423 Cleveland 3 18 143 1 and losing pitcher for the Spar¬ WESTERN DIVISION W L PCT tans with David Kkelman Greg Ulmer also seeing and duty as Minnesota _ 16 7 696 on the mound Oakland " 13 10 565 ed their The Spartans By CH AS FLOWERS of the home-course advantage Kansas City 13 10 565 behind Lynn Janson's spect Chicago 8 11 421 only run of the game in the State News Sports Writer acular Saturday play which they hope for in the Big Ten Seattle 8 14 364 fourth when catcher Ron Pru- Meet earned him medalist honors California 7 13 350 itt tripled to deep center field COLUMBUS, Ohio Saaday'i results and rode home on a single to .Janson. Boston 4 Detroit 2 '11 innings Spartan golf team finished a junior from East Baltimore 5.14 New York 3 2 Washington 4. Cleveland 3 center bv Shaun Howitt In the nightcap, the Spar- strongly for in the a Northern third-place tie Invitational Lansing. rounds of 72 fired and blistering 69 in the Petrocelli's Minnesota 4 Chicago 3 final 36 holes after a Friday Kansas City 15: California 1 total of 152 to win by five Netters beaten homer beats Seattle 6 Oakland 4 «2nd game inc twice; > strokes. Houston, a perennial golf powerhouse, won the tourna¬ National Gray only brightspot ment with 1514. second at 1524. and MSU and host Ohio State were tied one Purdue was Tigers, 4-2 By DENNIS COGSWELL stroke back at 1525 BDSTON (UPI)-Rico Pet¬ EASTERN DIVISION rocelli's two-run homer in the We thought it was the least we could do for those W L PCT i 8 State News Sports Writer It was probably the finest of you MSI's hope for a first division finish in Bin Ten tennis took a lltl inning Sunday gave the who have this prcblem. Chicago 18 9 667 team golf Michigan State has Boston Red Sox 4-2 You don't wan* to miss the sun. Or miss out on Pittsburgh 15 10 600 dive this weekend, as the Spartans lost to Minnesota. 8-1. and a victory and ever played.'" Coach Bruce a few extra bucks for summer work. But you want Philadelphia 11 11 500 1 Iowa 7-2. Fossum said a three-game sweep over the New York 11 14 440 of his team's MSU now has an individual match record of 16-38 in the con- Detroit Tigers. to get closer to your degree. You want to take a class St Louis 10 15 400 final round 368. a total ference and stands 4-4 in the regular season. you didn't have time to squeeze in. And you want to earn Montreal 9 15 375 '2 even Houston couldn't ap¬ Petrocelli's homer came off some credits. WESTERN DIVISION Despite a rather disappointing weekend for the team. Tom proach W L PCT B Tiger reliever Don McMahon. a For you, Roosevelt offers a choice of three summer Grav continued to look impressive for MSI The Waterloo. AUanta 17 8 680 Graham former Boston bullpen special¬ sessions, one in the evening beginning June 23, San Francisco 15 10 600 Iowa, sophomore won both of his singles matches, and teamed Rick Woulfe and ist. with one out after Reggie and two during the day,,beginning June 23 and August 4. Los Angeles 15 10 600 with .John Good to win the No 1 doubles match against Iowa. Cooke each scored 309 for Smith and walked. Cincinnati 11 14 440 Against Minnesota. Coach Stan Drobac thought his team the tourney. Denny Vass total¬ San Diego 12 16 429 1 did not play too badly led 310. with Larry Murphy Houston 8 20 286 1 2 I guess we just have to admit that they were better than us. and Lee Edmundson each back The Red Sox had led 1-0 Saaday'i result* frQpi the first until the eighth he said. Gray was the Spartans' only victor, taking a 6-3. 6-4 at 314 New York 3.3, Chicago 2.2 decision from the Gopher's Lou Smolin The but had to rally from behind Cincinnati 3,12. San Diego 2.0 Spartans have yet to Montreal 6, Pittsburgh 4 MSU could not do much better against Iowa, although Gray beat for a run with two out in the play at home, so this week AUanta 4. Los Angeles 1 Tom Esser 3-6. 6-1. 6-2 Good teamed with Gray to beat the Hawk- end's last of the ninth to send the 24-team Spartan Invit ? Philadelphia 5. St. Louis 0 Houston 3. San Francisco 1 eves' Sandvig and Esser 4-6. 6-3. 11-9. in No. 1 doubles. ational should test the strength game into extra innings. Monday, May 5, 1969 8 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan STATE NEWS STATE NEWS CLASSIFIED WANT ADS DELIVER RESULTS.... BUT EVERY WANT AD USER KNOWS THAT! CLASSIFIED 355-8255 355-8255 Employment For Rent For Rent The State News does not R.N.'s: 11 p.m.-7 a.m. shift week¬ FURNISHED APARTMENTS for 3 and 4-ROOM furnished apartment start¬ HOLT AREA-1 bedroom apartment MASON BODY SHOP, 812 East Kala¬ permit racial or religious ends Starting salary commensurate single rooms Girls only, 21 or over. ing summer or fall. Near campus Unfurnished, stove and refrigerator mazoo Street Since 1940 Com¬ with experience. Well lighted parking discrimination in its ad¬ For summer and fall terms. 5 blocks ED 2-5514. 3-5/7 Couples only No children, no pets. plete auto painting and collision area. Close to hospital Call MASON TV CENTALS students only $100 month Heat furnished. 332- C ~ Low from campus. Sufficient parking 694- vertising columns. The service IV5-0256 GENERAL HOSPITAL 677-9521 10-5 7 monthly and term rates Call 484- 8266 10-5/12 0111 10-5/12 State News will not accept TROWBRIDGE ENCO Open under 2600 *o reserve yours UNIVERSITY • AUTOMOTIVE advertising which discrim¬ new management. Student and fac¬ TWO bedroom Refrigerator, stove SUMMER LEASING, 126 Milford inates against religion, ulty discount 7 days a week 10-5/13 No children. Quiet $90 332-4651 Street. 2-man deluxe furnished, air- • EMPLOYMENT 0780 3-5/7 372-1586. 5-5/8 SUBLET FOR summer 2-bedroom, condiUoned. $140 372-5767 or 489- FOR RENT race, color or national or¬ Apartment 2-man. Only $65. Call either 351- • igin1. Avaition 0728 353-7961 10-5/16 • FOR SALE MEDICAL TECHNOLOGISTS EAST LANSING 1-bedroom fv or MARIGOLD APARTMENTS 911 Man FRANCIS AVIATION: So easy to learn To work Friday nights, 11 p.m to 7 30 nished apartment $125 month includ¬ • LOST & FOUND gold Avenue New deluxe 1-bedroom LUXURY APARTMENT Available in the PIPER CHEROKEE. Special a.m. only ASCP registered or eligi¬ furnished 2-man apartments, avail¬ ing utilities. Parking. From June • PERSONAL ble. Would consider non-registered 10 And, large 3-bedroom furnished immediately Reduced rates. Call *5 offer 484-1324 C. able now for summer and fall leas¬ SUMMER SUBLEASE Beech wood, • PEANUTS PERSONAL if qualified through experience Ex Fall term $230 month plus utilities 351-4429 5-5/6 ing Phone IV 9-9651 or 332-2335 O 3. 4, man $150 month No damage • • REAL ESTATE SERVICE Automotive Scooters & Cycle? cellent salary Apply PITAL Personnel or SPARROW HOS¬ call 487-6111. Phone 332-2361 3-5/7 NEWLY MARRIED? deposit. Air conditioned. 351-4407 3-5/5 extension 333 5-5 8 ONE GIRL needed for University • TRANSPORTATION CHECK WITH us before you buy Terrace summer term $55 montli TANGLEWOOD HONDA OF HASLETT Honda bikes. DO YOU need £ a $50 a week" • WANTED parts and riding accessories. Only If you have 351-3518 1-5/5 APARTMENTS minutes from East Lansing 1605 for interview SUMMER SUBLET 2. 3 man Popl. 1 Bdrm., unfur., from $124.50 DEADLINE Haslett Road Phone 339-2039 O air-conditioning No deposit 351- " MERCEDES BENZ 1961 Needs body PHONE CANVASERS wanted 8am 5254 5-5-/9 351-7880 work Mechanically perfect *600 P.M. one class day 3-5 7 SUZUKI 305 1968 $650 or best of¬ to 12 or 1 p.m. to 5 p.m $1.65, plus 711 EAST APTS. 1 be¬ 332-8821 NEED ONE girl for summer term fer Also, gas range 485-6181, aft¬ commission MICHIGAN SOFT WA 711 Burcham Drive SUMMER SUBLET 4-man air-con¬ fore publication. Close to campus Colonial House NEAR SPARROW Hospital 2 fur¬ MERCURY METEOR 1963. fine er 5 p.m 3-5/5 TER, 487-5953 3-5 5 ditioned Delta Arms 351-9137 5-5 9 Cancellations - 12 noon one Summer Rates Apartments. 351-0589 3-5/6 nished apartments One and two bed¬ condition, faculty owner, complete rooms Available in June $120 and class day befoire publica- maintenance records, new engine BOUNCER-FLOORMAN i good-sized $50 per man on 3-man TWO MAN air-conditioned Summer $150 351-4530 10-5/9 Good buy 351-8971 3-5 6 man) 4 nights per week Room and Hagadorn and Grand River 351 board. $2.25 per hour Resort Hotel $60 per man on 2-man 3505 5-5 9 ONE MAN needed summer Cedar East Tawas. Michigan Phone Mrs IV 9-9651 or 351-3525 HONDA SUPERHAWK 1965 Low SUMMER TERM Campus Hill Air- Village Location Reduced Mike, PHONE mileage, good condition, extras $325 Anderson for interview. 362-3451 EAfT SIDE Apartments: 2 bedroom DELTA ARMS, summer. 2 bedrooms conditioned. dishwasher. 4 persons 351-3912 3-5/5 12 block from campus 351-0643 34 7 351-3905 5-<« 17-5 22 possibilities Furnished or partly $45 each 332-0251 S-5 6 LEASING, IMMEDIATE occupancy- 355-8255 BARTENDER fur-nhed $125 and $150 a month FREE-STUDIO couch, vacuum with APARTMENTS, Bur¬ MUSTANG CONVERTIBLE-1967 3- YAMAHA 250cc Big Bear Scrambler $110, 5 nights per Re»ing now Summer or fall. 351- COLONIAL summer sublease of spacious 4 man speed. 6-cylinder Dark green, black Top condition Helmet $350 After week, room and board REFERENCES cham and Alton Brand new deluxe RATFS REQUIRED Resort hotel East Ta 5323 , 10-5 15 Reduced rates. 351-8310 3-4 7 furnished For profes¬ top Excellent condition 627-5551 3-5 6 2pm 351-8683 5-5 9 1-bedroom, was, Michigan Phone Mrs Ander Cha- NORTHWIND sional. graduate students, college I day $1.50 son for interview. 362 3451 17-5 22 i ONE SENIOR coed desires fall, spdng faculty or personnel. Select clien¬ 15£ per word per day Employment FARMS tele ALSO, other new apartments 3 days $4.00 MALE OR female Part-time now IMMEDIATE OPENING Full or part Write. Allen, 620 Poplar. Roval Oak Faculty Apartments available for June and September time employment Transmitter Michigan 48073 3-$ 7 leasing Call 332-3135 or 882-6549 13 l/2f per word per day OLDSMOBILE 1962 -Dynamic 88. full-time summer Well paid job in neer FCC First Class license engi¬ re¬ 351-7880 5 days ...... $6.50 4-door sedan Look over, make promotional work Lansing or out- TWO OR three-man. Capitol Vftla quired A good place to study Call CAPITOL NEAR Pleasant studio 13£ pef word per day offer 339-8062. after 3 p m 3-5 5 482-1334 15-5 21 occupancy now or summer term J51- rWO-MAN furnished apartment 129 6912 or 351 -0307 34 7 Kitchen privileges Single girl Burcham, $125 to $135 124 Cedar (based on 10 words per ad) 5686 3-5 6 Near bus lines 372-4583 5-5'7 OLDSMOBILE F-85 1963 4-door. ENGINEERING STUDENT Full time Street, $150 to $160 135 Kedzie ONE. TWO or 3 men wanted summer All utili¬ There will be a 50tf service power steering and brakes, new summer and part-time fall opening Beal Street Apartments Cedartrook Arms 332-3270 9 Drive. $170 to $180 tires Excellent condition 355-6543 in our engineering dept for M E ties furnished except electricity and bookkeeping charge if Leasing this week. 1/2 block major to handle drafting and special Call days. 487-3216; evenings 882- this ad is not paid within from campus. 2-3 man units. SUMMER. CAMPUS Hill Air-c&n- 2316. until 10 p m O ARTS AND Crafts Counselor Boys project assignments under supervision one week. OLDSMOBILE 1963 Cutlass of a project engineer V, bdel apartments open 6:30- ditioned 1-2 men $55 month 351- convert camp. Berkshire Mountains, Massa Must be an $20 CASH bonus for sublease of ible. Faculty 6357 5-99 owned Automatic, chusetts. needs man over 20 to experienced draftsman Interviews 7:30 p.m. Mon.-Fri. 216 Beal bucket seats $350 335-0479 2-5 6 will be held Mav 2nd or Mav 14th partysize corner apartment Also The State News will be teach woodwork and ceramics Top Street. Apt. 2A. IMMEDIATE SUBLEASE 1-bedroom $55 reduced rent 351-3378 3-5 6 salary Write CAMP LENNOX. 37 Apply JOHN BEAN DIVISION 1305 responsible only for the PLYMOUTH BARRACUDA 1967 . 383 South Cedar, Lansing. EQUAL Op¬ 3.12-0641 351-3713 unfurnished Luxury Married, grad first day's incorrect inser- Wood Valley Lane Port Washing¬ uate students $150 351-8416 5-5 9 4-speed 50.000 miles warranty Like ton. New York 11050 3-5 5 portunity Employer 5-5 6 CAPITOL NEAR. Single girl to share new Must sell 627-6242 3-5 6 Deluxe 2-bedroom Furnished, air- KEY PUNCH SUBLET SUMMER term 3 or "4- conditioned. carpeted $55 484- OPERATORS HOUSEKEEPER COOK Doctors PONTIAC CATALLNA 1963 Depend¬ NEEDED IMMEDIATELY 1 girl for man. $180 Call 351-0430 5-5 9 9169 21-5/59 Day & Evenings. Full or part family desires mature, responsible able. good looking transportation woman to live in or out New luxury 2 girl luxury apartment One month s $550 Call 332-0157 10-5 12 time. Some experience Alpha - LANSING FOUR rooms and bath 2nd home, private room. TV Nursemaid free rent No damage deposit Call 351 Numeric. Call Mrs. Kathryn floor Stove and refrigerator $190 NORWOOD APARTMENTS Fur all ready employed References re¬ PONTIAC 1964 GTO convertible, Plus utilities Adults 339-2787 5-r. 9 Phoenix, THE SERVICE BUR¬ quired 484-4584 or after 5 p.m.. 351 i nished. now renting for summer and tnpower Automatic, power steer¬ EAU CORP., 5-5 8 fall Reduced Call Subsidiary of 0393 FOUR-MAN apartment, furnished summer rates ing. brakes, windows Dunlops $795 CLEAN. QUIET apartment living at 351-7694 5-5/7 If you are 18 or older IBM. 2201 E. Grand River With swimming pool Heat paid 225 Division Street-1 block fr£rm Avenue, Lansing, Mich. $«J.50 each EAST LANSING MAN Berkev We are renting for sum you qualify for a "In¬ SUMMER SUBLET 3 or 4-man Re TcaSSOLD PONTIAC CATALINA 48912 Tel: (517) 485-549.5 mer. fall 9 available After 4 p.m. or 12 month 351-5119 leases duced rates Call 351-3154 or Barb. terpersonal Happening' An Equal Opportunity Employ - RENT A TV from a TV Company-- 3-» 7 351-7910,1 to 5 p.m 3-5 5 Interpersonal Dating Bl'ICK SKYLARK 1967 2-door coupe $9 00 per month Call 337-1300 Power steering, brakes, radio, heat NEJAC TV RENTALS C PORSCHE CONVERTIBLE This fine HISTO-TECHNOLOGISTS CEDARBROOK ARMS--2 girls, er By owner $150 down Call 351 sum PjQ.BOX 2137,Ann Arbor,Mlch sports car is in excellent condition CYTO-TECHNOLOGISTS mer Reduced 351-3522 3-5 2 RE )L'CED RATES Sublease summer $1250 337-9692 9-5 9 Needed for immediate employment term 4 man at University Terrace TV RENTALS GE 19 portable $8 50 ASCP registered or eligible Excellent WANTED ONE man for summer Cap¬ (AMARO 1968 V-8 per month including stand Call J R 351-0272 3-5 6 SKYLARK -GRAN sport 1965 Mi salary and benefits. Applv SPARROW itol Villa Own room $55 351 dial tires Kxceller CULVER COMPANY. 351-8862 220 HOSPITAL Personnel or call 487 IT'S TIME TO THINK chelin X s Mist green with white 7026 5-5 9 372-5677 interior Call 351-9507 or 351-9495 6111. extension 333 5-5 8 Albert Street. East Lansing C DRAFTSMEN NEED structural, de¬ NEW GE portables and stands rent TRIUMPH-1964 Spitfire Front end sign. architectural, mechanical $6000 ed ONLY to MSU students and fac¬ GRADUATE WOMEN Spaces avail ABOUT SUMMER AT rebuilt, good tires Runs verv well up Phone Bill James. 372-4050. ulty $8 84 month (includes tax' able starting summer Four girl CHEVROLET 1968 Impala 4-door $600 485-8098after 5pm ' 3-5 6 SNELLING AND SNELLING PER¬ STATE MANAGEMENT CORPORA apartments Haslett Albert $55 per NEEDED ONE man Chalet, summer tordtop V-8 automatic, power SONNEL 3-5 '7 TION 444 Michigan Avenue 332 rmnth Utilities included Complete¬ sublet $42 per month No deposit TRIUMPH SPITFIRE 1968 Yellow- 8687 C ly furnished 337-2336 5-5 5 351-3218 3-5 7 ments of $b)< ;4 Phone Credit Man¬ convertible Excellent condition KEY PUNCH operator 04 to fill imme¬ ager CORVETTE IV 9-4013 1957 283 4-speed C Good Phone 372-3270 VOLKSWAGEN CONVERTIBLE 1961 3-5 5 diate part-time, full-time, day or night vacancies Salary range. $418 to $492 monthly Starting salary de¬ 711 EAST New top. good tires pending on qualifications All Michi¬ Rebuilt engine BURCHAM DRIVE gan Civil Service benefits, including $325 353-7533 4-5 8 an outstanding state contributory in¬ surance program, excellent retire¬ ment plan, longevity bonus, unlimit¬ ed opportunities for personal advance¬ *Two air-conditioners ment. and liberal vacation and sick per apartment VOLKSWAGEN 1969 Engine, tires, leave allowance, plus Social Security Must have six months experience in *Balconies battery very good condition De¬ pendable 9-5 pm 355-9723 After the operation of an alphabetic key punch *Three-man units machine or completion of a recog- 9 pm 355-7857 Leaving the coun¬ *Completely carpeted try 3-5 6 * For additional information, call the Parking VOLKSWAGEN 1967 Excellent ron recruitment section. Michigan De *Completely furnished dition Extras 26 000 miles Call partment of Civil Service, 373-3032 KAIRLANE OTA 1967 Polvglas Bruce 351 9474 5-5 5 For other job opportunity informa¬ *Laundry facilities tion. :call 373-3051. day or night VOLVO 122S- 1966 Excellent con¬ for .An Equal Opportunity Employer 5-5 '9 To le summer dition Low mileage Clean Radio 355-2897 3-5 6 or fall phone Mrs. In- 500 4-door Summer . gh ram 489-9651 or Auto Service & Parts Employment 351-3525 ACCIDENT PROBLEM'' Call KALA All apartments furnished with Full and part time summer po¬ MAZOO STREET BODY SHOP Small sitions for MSU students with GENERAL ELECTRIC stoves, dents to large wrecks American and foreign cars Guaranteed work full time merchant whole¬ refrigerators, and air-condi¬ FORD GALAXIE 500 1959 $150 482 1286 East Kalamazoo C saler. Excellent compensation tioners. Good body Moving, must sell 353 5293 351 4524 3-5 7 SPRING programs and meaningful ex¬ is tune-up time perience. Automobile re¬ Expert tune-up quired. For further informa¬ Burcham Woods is good place to live this summer For help in subleasing mm am1 Brake and Exhaust a tion, phone . . . 8:00 - 5:30 Man-Fri The Society Corporation an apartment call E. L. Management at 351-7830 r call >he Opf Campus CROSSWORD PUZZLE REEDS GARAGE Housing Office at 355-8303 Model phone 332-3711 ACROSS . s Judj-es □Hscna asans 2707 E. Kalamazoo 489-1626 I Assemblage chamber aan snugs i Cake decorati ?'! You and me ana mail rass JO 31 Acidity Bested SI1BQH assays WOMEN: Under 33 Stannum hhhhss! Kiasnra ana ass ssa 26 Corpulent 37. Formicid an^nc ssa off Cedar Village move campus gassTJ aaauaa aauaaa bqsob aHHlUMH BHEIEH CAMPUS DOWN 1 Kitchen utensil 3 Commence VIEW 2 More impolite 4 Small tumor 5 Hinder APARTMENTS 6 Black STUDENT APARTMENTS 7 Heart H Rubber i Leases are still available for our luxurious, air-con¬ ditioned apartments. 2 BEDROOM 10 Capture i? On ;,uard 1 / Share These apartments are the 20 Through finest in supervised hous¬ ing. They allow you luxur¬ NOW LEASING F00 FAIL 21 Encore 22 Feminine ious apartment living . . . pronoun 21 Barbarian even if you are under 21. MODEL OPEN 25 Coffee houses 28 Gum arabic Mon-Fri 12:00-4:30 p.m. 27. Mixed 28 Beard of grain 32 Different Sat & Sun 1:00-5:00 p.m. 33 Lukewarm 1 34. Loafs CAMPUS VIEW APARTMENTS PHONE 332-5051 35. Require 37 Sweetsop 324 EAST MICHIGAN m % 38. Inlet 40 Generation w 332-6246 42. Individual Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Monday, May 5, 1969 For Rent For Sale CAMPUS HILL ury term apartment One 2-bedroom lux¬ or spring/summer 8862 J R. CULVER COMPANY Available spring $180 351 C 487-5753 485-8836 ELECTRIC GIBSON guitar mazoo amplifier tion 372-4278. DRUM SET: 3 piece and Kala Excellent condi¬ Slingerland with 5-5/8 BE IN the swing for spring with a Decoupage Basket Purse from BEV¬ Slevens pledges support for selection committee or hard cases Silver sparkle Excel¬ ERLY BATEN S ANTIQUES. 319'/i 3-5/5 lent condition. Best offer 351-3607 PRIVATE ROOMS for men avail¬ East Grand River, (upstairs), 332- able in student house Share kit¬ 3-5/6 6098 X3-5/5 BAY COLONY APARTMENTS: 1 and chen, bath, living room $13 week 2 bedrooms Furnished and unfur¬ VACUUM CLEANERS (usedi Kir- RENT A ly for summer 332-3979 . 2-5/6 TV from a TV Company-- that he "didn't think the com¬ pleted. Hathaway said the nished Summer leases available bys, Hoovers, Rainbow Rex-aires, $9.00 (continued from page one) more than 20 names com¬ per month Call 337-1300 Board thinks Al'SSC should Also 6, 9, and 12 month leases Call EAST LANSING, unsupervised nice Electrolux $7 88 and up. (Guaran¬ NEJAC TV RENTALS "Our several meetings with mittee is highly conducive to pleted by July, and the final C Jack Bartlett. 337-0511 teed) DENNIS DISTRIBUTING, 316 "act with dispatch." manager. room without cooking, private en¬ the trustees have been construc¬ bowing to political pressure, list of at least three names Corner of Haslett and Hagadorn Roads trance. bath, parking $180 summer N Cedar. Opposite City Market C Stevens said the board real¬ Peanuts Personel tive to this end and the com¬ anyway.-' compiled by the end of the term. Phone 332-2361. 3-5/7 ized the original final dead¬ mittee shares their sense of This joint meeting Saturday summer. FENDER STRATOCASTER, plush was the third discussion AUSSC line of July was " a little too SUMMER SUBLET, reduced rates, ROOMS CLOSE, cooking, inexpen¬ lined case Treolo, triple pickup urgency in proceeding with the had with the Board. ihe committee's job should luxury 2-man Call days, 337-2253 sive. Summer, fall. 398 Park Lane $225 351-5693 3-5/5 task at hand.' nights, 332-8567 5-5/6 351-8164 5-5/9 Hathaway said he hoped Stev¬ Both groups discussed a ten¬ basically be done by Septem¬ WEDDING DRESS, train, veil-size ber.'' Hathaway said. BOB, PERISH is the word. Di 1-5/5 ens' statement would eliminate tative timetable for when nom¬ MEN. SINGLE rooms Fall Block 10 Originally $160 Best offer Call 3-5/5 ination stages should be com¬ campus. Serious students ED 2-8498 ED 2-8139. CONGRATS TO Hutchi-pooh. Boom any political issue and added afternoons 3-5/7 2-3 bedroom duplex available June Boom. King of Jungle Ed! How was 15th. Close to schools and campus St Louis''-State News Fans. 1-5/5 KALAMAZOO. WEST 1211 Room for Carpeted Phone 351-5908 15-5/19 couple with kitchen privileges 3576 484 2-5 7 ATP PINMATE Club presents Presidents Award to Edward the Mc- Neville Businessmen protest Caslin for one wonderful year 1-5/5 (coi ^inued from page one) He was appointed director of MEN S SUITS, size 38-short Kitchen GOON-HAPPY Birthday to you' until 1 54, when he became a MSU's Continuing Education continued from page one) have to break the vick From Tanya, Freddy, Ginny and FALL: WOMEN students Large home, table Music organ, church, piano, membe ' of the faculty in the Service in 1956. a post he held action on their griev¬ of hate and restore kitchen, parking, laundry Call 332- me too! I love you. Idooo! Boob opera 482-3277 5-5/9 busines; until 1962 when he named 1918 2-5 5 college. was es.'' Adams said, "after atmosphere of calm in which asst. provost. HALF PRICE-custom AM FM stereo they did that, what should have reason and rationality can exist.' NEED TWO girls for extra large 2- MARY KAY: Congrats on Mortar He currently is a director of amplifier, 2 speakers, record chang¬ bedroom modern duplex Furnished $50 per month 332-5144 3-5 6 MAN: GRADUATE or vate, with 332-5157 bath employee Pri¬ Utilities, parking 3-5'5 er Tenor guitar: electric grill, broils and bakes 882-2511 3-5'7 Board it. tapping You really deserve Your roomie knows. Love. Cindy Wilson Hall the Midwest sortium for Universities Con¬ International Acti- sistent and calm and try to set This is what I vities. and MSU representative ^ IDEAL FOR 6 students, completely 1 continued from page one) to the Committee on Institution furnished on East Side of Lansing Close to campus For further infor al Cooperation. 3-5 6 The question presented to mationcalllV 9-9634 STEREO--1968 Admiral Ada n9 was: portable PLUSH COUNTRY home. 6 miles Costs $90 new. will ell for $50 -Or what basis were the south 4 bedrooms. 3 fireplaces, Call 372-7477. after 5p m 3-5 7 comn ittee members chosen0 completely furnished Landscaped EIGHT-TRACK auto tape plavers-- Graduate students or faculty Avail¬ Ranger mini-8. $59 95 and up. Recreation Qu£ stions to committee Co- able now $400 month 351-4530 10-5 14 Lear Jet--$69.95 and up *MAIN Chair nen.Milton Dickerson and ELECTRONICS. 5558 South Penn¬ WHITE BIRCH WESTERN SHOP Ev Vanc< : IMMEDIATELY ONE sylvania. Lansing C DIAMOND BARGAIN: Wedding and en erything for the horse and horseman -W; s the effectiveness of the mates Own room 1939 South Meridian Road. Mason gagement ring sets Save 50 per rent 332-3010 cent Large selection of 677-0071 2-5/2 hearii.g affected by the loose GERRARD 4 speed changer 20 watt or more Knight amplifier i extra outputs' plain and fancy diamonds $25-150 structure of the informal at¬ COLLEGE ROAD-Duplex Carpet Knight FM tuner Speakers in con¬ WILCOX SECONDHAND STORE Real Estate mosphere0 ed. remodeled, modern kitchen sole. 882-4916 3-4 6 509 East Michigan 485-4391 C "W; is the effectiveness of $135, utilities paid Couple only THREE BEDROOM Colonial, family the hearing affected by the short Deposit No pets 676-5983 . 676- NOW OPEN for business OPTI TRAILER high sides. $75. room, fireplace Near schools, shop¬ notice to all participants? CAL DISCOUNT at 2615 East Mich¬ Also 9x9 umbrella ping, MSU. Assume 6 per cent fi¬ -W ly THREE BEDROOM home for rent 1224 igan Avenue, ground floor Free 7361 after 5 p.m. nancing $32,500. Call owner 351- were other employes parking at rear 372-7409 C not culled as witnesses to help North Grand River. Lansing $175 BOLEX H-16mm movie camera; Bo- per month Call 882-0185 15-5/14 lex lenses Excellent condition $175 illumChate the contradictions 332-0564 3-5/5 TRADE OR SELL Lake Michigan re¬ betw« en the testimony of the FOR LEASE $300 a month Room for sort community residential-commer¬ two s |les ? 4 6 Large yard Outside SET OF Great cial income property for East Lan¬ to men HARPSICHORDS AND Clavu-hords p. the Western 1 ie Wilson Council asked cooker Garage. Close to campus KEYBOARD SALES. Grand Ledge World Will SOL.U Mint condi sing area property Phone 351- theci Timittee: 332-0939 10-5'13 tion. $200. 393-5177 5-5/6 5543 s open Sundavs. closed Saturdays 627 -W: s there information nol 5272.627-9002 " 5-5/6 EAST LANSING-Wardcliff area A brougit out at the hearing that quality built 2-year old. 3-bedroom. was considered in reaching tlu WHITE PORTABLE sewing machine DALMATION PUPPY Lshaped ranee with carpeted of¬ Beautifully committee's recommendations0 with all attachments $60 489-0485 fice in basement, fireplace in liv¬ marked AKC registered. Perma¬ after 6 p. m 3-5 6 nent shots Phone 332-3943 5-5/6 ing room, country kitchen with beam -Why were the views of Wil ceiling 332-5760 3-5 6 son residents not sought and con PERFECT APARTMENT puppies sidered by the committee0 Weaned on Budweiser Free 484-1263 after 5 p.m They asked Don Coleman tc 5-5 5 Please elaborate publicly or 3 MALE PUPPIES. Mother pure PAINTING AT low winter prices. the conclusions and statement? Samoyed 8 weeks, gentle, good Free estimates. Call BOB MAY. in your testimony at the heal¬ family dog. 351-0277 evenings 3-5 6 393-4173 20-5 '8 ing." Sticking GERMAN SHEPHERD and Labrador WHY LOSE your di The letter said that it wa> our neck mixed puppies each. IV 7-3957 7 weeks old $15 1.5/5 Carpets cleaned at dent budget 355-7968 council's hope that " the dia logue. from this particular sit Getting to uation will open channels s< DRUMS. VIBES, marim MSU students and Michigan legislators met Friday for the first session of " that no individual need evei Forum", a dialogue set up to enhance comm.jnication and understanding betw FROLIC. 1969 tion 332-6223. again consider it necessary t( shut a component down." the two groups. State News photo by Mike Sii 677-7001 DRESSMAKING GOWNS a tions. Experienced R< LAKF.WOOD. 1960 charge Call 355-1040 tially furnished, lot 339-8738 Compare Our 50X10" MARLETTE 2-bedroom, kitchen and living .area Fully applianced and carpeted Near campus Approximately $3,000 Tom Eardley, 351-0250 Furnished 5-5 8 ALTERATIONS by and experienced seamstress sonable charge Call 355-5855 DRESSMAKING Rea 3-5 5 Students, legisla • LEASE ^Typing Service • • • APARTMENTS RENT SFR VICES Lost & Found $20 REWARD for sign Ada's Treasure Vault - ANTIQl'ES- No questions PAULA ANN HAUGHEY quality thesis service IBM typing, multilith printing and hard binding A unique Forum' with enthusiasm be held this week tr ill be decided by students 111 asked 2500 East Mount Hope. Lan 337-1527 C get a full spectrum, they must prestid sing 373-6023 3-5 7 By LARRY LEE be there.'' future or The Forurr in working on such an • FACILITIES ANN BROWN Typist and multilith itate News Staff Writer ngoing dialogue. Laughlin said. it was suggested th;it tfie " offset printing Dissertations, theses, Thi Forum, dialogue between Most important point is Although he and Michael LOST MINK furpiece between Union manuscripts general typing IBM awareness of who each other tivitv be sponsored stud' nts and legislators, was Hvelv. K Traverse Citv. were Before you decide, we want and Jacobson's parking lot call ED 2-6935 Reward Please 1-5/2 19 years experience 332-8384 C are." Serotkin said. The meet¬ while, and that a othei gree ed with enthusiasm from sion with legislate would prob ,h' primary elements in you to compare Northwind BARBI MEL: Typing, multilithing both groups at its first session ing helped to break up the ablv be held ne, the end of "P ,h"' Krst session L with No job too large or too small Block stereotypes each group holds, said he hoped the students any other student off campus 332-3255 C Thursday. he added. I was extremely pleased take il over completely apartment. SECRETARIAL with the way the session went.'' Laughlin said a meeting would Future plans of The Forum end of the term I'at Laughlin. one of the organ¬ Reserve your fall term apartment now University Villa Princeton Arms izers of The Forum, said. "It ARTS AND LETTERS was really good having the stu¬ Only $60.00 OFFSET PRINTING of theses and dis¬ dents feel they could identify Beechwood sertations from either your typed WTr original multilith master Low¬ with the legislators." Faculty meeting weighs or 2-3-4 Man Units est prices available COPYGRAPH Er^ht Republican representa¬ SERVICES, 487-5906 29-5 29 $50 per man — 4 ma tive:- and approximately 60 stu¬ $67.50 per man— 3 ma dents gathered in the Steffanoff demand for student voice Rental office 635 Abbott Lounge in Student Services Bldg. - to discuss various topics of con- Halstead Typewriter 'cern, such as the educational Model Apartment Open Daily 9-5; Weekends By Appointment (Electrics) the Management Co. stru-'ture. politics of the The Contact: Northwind Management, 2771 Northwind Drive question of student par¬ clude Phone: 337-0636 351-7910 Repair board of trustees and pending ticipation in faculty govern¬ suggestions for discuss- and regular meetings involv- legi: la tion at the Capitol. ion groups in all large lec- ing students in discussion con- Foreign & Domestic ment was discussed at a meet¬ Louis E. May.Sr. ED 2-0877 I was a wonderful thing to tures. informal discussion sec- cerning curricula and methods Campus Book Store- bat the breeze around.'' David ing Sunday between the Dean's tions for interested students of teaching. Place Your Across from Union Serttkin. R-Mt Clemens, said. Advisory Council, the Faculty TERM PAPERS, thesis manuscripts, Student Advisory Committee "It's imports[,t to get legisla¬ and department chairmen from PEOPLE REACHER WANT AD general typing IBM Selectric tors and students talking be¬ Today . . . Just clip, complete, mail. JANET. 337 2603 LET SOMETHING GOOD HAPPEN' 20-5 5 cause they are concerned.' til t noting that there were so- and Letters. department from the College of Arts chairman arid Zurich prof calH'd "radical-types" attend¬ Get extra cash for don't needs with Prior to the STATE NEWS will bill you later. ing. Serotkin said, "in order to meeting, tie a Classified Ad Dial 355-8255 Dean's Student Buddhism, Advisory Com¬ Three Americans mittee mendations sent to a list of Paul recom Varg. m / Address dean of the College of Arts With a whispering voice, arms hanging close to the body bent VQ) and Letters, for discussion City Zip Code expelled, Czech at the spring term faculty at the elbows on and hands clasped, he looked as if he should speak Eastern meditation. Student No. NEED A JOB DONE"' People who do ne vs Paul Horsch. professor and chairman of the Dept. of Eastern Phone them advertise in tht Classified agency says The recommendations echo¬ Studies in Zurich. Switzerland, spoke on campus recently and Ads Check now Consecuti ve Datps tr> Pun V ENNA ed the demand for a student traced the history of Buddhism, beginning with the influence of (AP) - Three voice in decisions affecting UNFURNISHED THREE or 4 bedroom Americans and six other per¬ yogi on Buddha and his later rejection of it. Heading sons have been expelled from their University careers. In attaining yogi, he said, the subject must concentrate on a sin house By June 1 Latest June 15 It implied that the possiWl Print LA Call Family Radio 676-2488 3-5'7 Cze^hsolovakia in the last few- gle object or throught until the whole conscious gets unified itv of student disorders, like ONE GIRL to share our apartment sum day:. the Czechoslovak news when it gets very deep it is the perfect concentration. the ones at Harvard, could The thought or objection then disappears leaving a blank mind mer term, prefer graduate s ageilcy CTK reported Sunday. Call 351-8421 3-5'7 They included: happen at MSI' in the futuiie or "unbounded conscious." It stated that the prevalent - Three reporters and cam¬ Delving into the theories and practices of Buddha. Horsch said BLOOD DONORS NEEDED $7 50 for attitude among MSC students all positive A negative, B negative eramen for the British Broad¬ the mystic used meditation to attain an end to the universal Personals must be placed in was one of apathy "rot person. and AB negative $10.00 O negative casting Corp . Martin Bell. experience of suffering. $12 00 MICHIGAN COMMUNITY William Bagling and Erik apathy stemming from disin¬ The path to this starts with morality and ends in attentive- BLOOD CENTER. 507'2 E Grand Thieren. terest. but rather apathy stem¬ ness meditation." he said 3 days - $4.00 5 days - $6.50 10 Words or Less: 1 day - $1.50 River, East Lansing Above the new -Three ming from disenchantment and After successful meditation, a person realizes his previous 15£ per word 40£ per word 65£ per word Campus Book Store Hours 9 a m employes of Dutch the belief that really effective Over 10 Words Add; to 3 30 p.m. Monday. Tuesday and television. Hedrik Having. Piet life was evil His whole personality becomes integrated and de¬ □ changes in the University tached. Horsch explaihed O □ Friday; 12 Wednesday and Thursday to 6:30 p.m 337-7183 C D^f Laag and Jacobus Van Der ZV agenge. system cannot be made "From the East we can learn our inner nature. This appears Mail to: Michigan State News Two students from West through the existing machinery to be the greatest contribution of the East." he continued FRIENDLY ROOMMATE summer or 346 Student Services Bldg. of student representation speech was sponsored by the Depts. of Religion and ? G< 'Tiany. Joerg Klinger and Horseh's longer Over 21 Share spacious 4 Lansing, Mich. The recommendations in¬ MSU East girl 351-0239 1-5/5 Po jI Mauch. Psychology and the Asian Studies Center Monday, May 5, 1969 10 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan 1.50 49* Owen prices were not met by Tues¬ residents Wilkinson; Emory Foster, man¬ veys and petitions are needed -The cafeteria system be Boxed Stationery Envelopes 100 29"; By DENISE FORTNER State News Staff Writer day ager of dormitory and food serv¬ to show discontent. ' ctftitinued -The as is. cafeteria be discontin- 67c Ashad Zaman, Owen Hall ices; Lyle Thorburn, manager Foster presented six options LIMIT 1 LIMIT 1 Owen Hall graduate students of residence halls; and George to Owen residents for considera- u1 Hi and the snack bar opened will meet tonight to decide if president, said Sunday that if Vanburn. manager of Owen, tion at the meeting tonight. d ring restricted hours Expires after 5-10-69 Expires after 5-10-69 1 they will strike against the Owen the demands were not met at a East Lansing Store Only East Lansing Store Only 1 cafeteria Tuesday meeting at 10 p.m. tonight, will attend the meeting. The options are: A regular board contract a strike is "foreseeable." Zaman said that Owen Hall's Last week Owen Hall resi¬ purchased at $143 a term. Acting Vice President for demands are unlike those in 39* 1 dents voted to boycott the caf¬ Business and Finance Roger the Wilson cafeteria last week -A private, establishe Facial Tissue Colloquy centers eteria if demands for lower erer could be hired. because Owen residents "are not fighting for greater power- 200 Tide Laundry Soap just lower prices. " ply Owen cafeteria is operated U' spoils system much in the style of a com¬ mercial cafeteria. Students pay for each food item separately. on agents of rev 19c LIMIT 3 Reg. Size T)i J' LIMIT 1 1 1 The demands, including a 20 The symposium titled Rev¬ University. Expires after 5-10-69 Expires after 5-10-69 1 | dead, trustee says East Lansing Store Only East Lansing Store Only per cent across-the-board de¬ olutionary Ideology and Nation Worsley. author of "The crease, were aired at an Owen Building" will be held in the Third World" and "The Trum¬ Hall Graduate Assn. meeting McDonel kiva today and Tues¬ pet Shall Sound," will speak 23* 65* 1 last .week attended by approxi¬ day. at 7 :30 tonight. By STEVE WATERBURY State News Staff Writer mately 160 graduate students. A 112-48 vote passed the boy¬ The focal point will be rev¬ olution building agents, as op¬ Allardt ture will discuss Structure and Revolution¬ "Cul¬ Dial Soap Ivory Liquid Trustee Clair White. that MSI1 will not be D-Bay City, offered assurance subjected to a 'spoils system" in Friday the se¬ cott proposal. posed to general symposia top¬ ary Ideologies," at 2 p.m. Going to be in Bath Size Detergent ics with general social struo Tuesday. lection of the major administrative officers of the University. Suggestions offered at the meet ture. The issue of whether MSU trustees will select administra¬ inc included costs being cut North lution: will An speak on "Revo¬ Analytic Frame¬ Chicago | 19c giant Size ^9^ 1 Speaking will be two visit¬ tors on the basis of political considerations arose last week by students bussing their own ing sociologists. Peter M. Wors- work." at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday this summer? LIMIT 3 LIMIT 1 I after the content of an exchange of letters between Board trays and streamlining opera¬ tions. ley. professor at the Univers¬ The symposium is sponsored Expires after 5-10-69 Expires after 5-10-69 1 Chairman Don Stevens. D-Okemos. and Warren M Huff. by the Depts of Anthropol¬ Lansing Store Only East Lansing Store Only | The Assn. voted down a pro¬ ity of Manchester. England, and East You can take courses for D-Plymough. were published in a Detroit newspaper. Erik Allardt of the University ogy, Political Science and So¬ "1 don't think there is any question, but that the spoils posal for an immediate strike credit in the evening at system at Michigan State is dead." White said. but Elliot Sanderson, member of Helsinki. Finland, and a ciology. and financed by a 2.00 99* 1 of the food committee, said visiting political scientist. Rob¬ j>ant from the National Sci The University of Chicago, White spoke of the current controversy as - destroying ert C. North from Stanford e ;c£ Foundation. Downtown Center, in most Sheer Panty Hose Gay Zing that something more than sur¬ any possibility" that appointments to administrative positions at MSU will be based on political considerations. undergraduate fields, in¬ Fashion 30 spring 1 I didn't oppose the Republican spoils system at MSU in cluding English, History, Colors order to become the champion of a Democratic spoils system. White stated Humanities, Mathematics, Philosophy, Psychology 89c 57 He termed the spoils system "out of date and out of char¬ LIMIT 3 LIMIT 1 1 acter for a public institution." and Social Science. White suggested one reason MSU has had difficulties with Expires after 5-10-69 Expires after 5-10-69 1 political influence on campus is because of its close physical East Lansing Store Only East Lansing Store Only | proximity to Lansing, the center of political power in Michigan. I wish the politicians in Lansing would leave Michigan State 1.89 2.00 1 alone." White said. Stevens reiterated Friday his disavowal of any intention on his Perfect Fit Glen Raven part of using political considerations in selecting a new Vice President for Business and Finance for MSU. In a letter to Acting President Walter Adams. Stevens Panty Hose Panty Hose wrote. "I should like to repeat that 1 have recommending any candidate for this position." ... no intention of $1« st49 The letter indicated Stevens intends to leave recommenda¬ LIMIT 3 LIMIT 3 tions for the vice presidency for business and finance to Expires after 5-10-69 Expires after 5-10-69 Adams, as specified in the bylaws of the trustees. f East Lansing Store Only East Lansing Store Only *1 39* 1.19 Carters Hi Liters Gillette Foamy !| 26c 69c - LIMIT 1 LIMIT 3 Expires after 5-10-69 Expires after 5-10-09 East Lansing Store Only East Lansing Store Only 12.95 99* Waldorf Sunlamp with Stand Cfeme Rinse $895 quart 49' LIMIT 1 LIMIT 1 Expires after 5-10-69 Expires after 5-10-09 East Lansing Store Only East Lansing Store Only 29* Imported Sunglasses Cocoa Butter 40% OFF the Regular Price 14c LIMIT 1 LIMIT 1 Expires after 5-10-69 Expires after 5-10-69 East Lansing Store Only East Lansing Store Only 1.75 19* Glade Sun Country Sea and Ski Suntan Air Freshener Lotion or Oil trial I5C S108 LIMIT 1 LIMIT 1 Expires after 5-10-69 Expires after 5-10-69 East Lansing Store Only East Lansing Store Only 3.00 99* Nylons Opaque Panty Hose 4 Shades Limited Quantities 2 Pair 57^ SI 57 LIMIT 1 LIMIT 1 Expires after 5-10-69 Expires after 5-10-69 East Lansing Store Only East Lansing Store Only Kodak Ladies 100% Color Film 126-127-620 Nylon Jackets 87c $2" LIMIT 1 LIMIT 1 Expires after 5-10-69 Expires after 5-10-69 East Lansing Store Only East Lansing Store Only | STATE We Cash M.SAJL D ISC0UNT Payroll Checks 307 E. Grand River 1. D. Required II I?