T uesda Warm. The misleading. . MICHIGAN . . . effect of books like George Orwell's "1984" is to the future already exists. a project into state of affairs that -Marshall McLuhan UNIVERSITY STATE STATE NEWS Tuesday, May 6, 19f<9 East Lansing, Michigan Vol. 61 Number 172 Academic Council airs By MARILYN major policy revisions PATTERSON will propose an extension of the aid Massey. professor of philosophy, will propose that each college be represented State News Staff Writer period for dropping and adding courses with no grade recorded. EPC will also by one student in the Academic Council. The Academic Council will consider The committee will also propose that recommend that the present two-week proposed policy changes on drops and student membership of faculty standing free drops and adds period be extended adds. X grades, the Student Faculty Ju¬ committees be increased and that each to include the first five weeks of the diciary. Reserve Officers Training Corps college have student members on the term. (ROTC i and student participation in dean's advisory committee or a student In another proposal. EPC will recom¬ academic government at its meeting mend that the X grade be eliminated advisory committee of equal numbers of this afternoon and that instructors be allowed to give faculty and students to recommend im¬ The Educational Policies Committee provements in undergraduate and grad¬ an "I." or incomplete, grade without the uate teaching and to evaluate every fa¬ authroization of the appropriate asst. dean culty member being considered for ap¬ pointment. retention, promotion or ten¬ Serotkin says The council will also hear dations from the Faculty Committee on Student Affairs that the powers of the recommen¬ ure. In all cases, students are to have a vote as well as a voice, the Ad Hoc Student Faculty Judiciary be increased Communists Under the proposed changes, the vice president for student affairs would not have committee recommended. The committee will also recommend Police that the possibilities for academic credit the power to veto a judiciary's deicision to students support SDS Also, a statement from the judiciary serving on committees be MSU students wait outside the E ast Lansing Police Dept. to see what develops after the arrest of a musi¬ that a regulation or administrative ac¬ investigated. The council meeting will be held at 3:15 cal trio for loud noises behind Haslett Apts. The crowd collected bail for the proclaimed religious tion is inconsistent with the Academic By LARRY LEE p.m. today in the Con Con Room at the musicians. State News photo by Jerry McAllister Freedom Report makes that regulation State News Staff Writer Interntaional Center and is open to the or action null and void. The reaction to disruptive elements Undergraduate student representatives public. on the nations college campuses con¬ Gina Schack and Jeff Zeig will pro¬ tinued Monday when a Michigan legis¬ pose that the ROTC program be re¬ Musical trio arrested for noise lator charged the Students for a Derro- moved from academic status. Miss Schack cratic Society (SDS> with having Com¬ said Monday munist ties Student membership on college and i have become convinced that SDS * is Communist inspired and Communist University committees will increase if the council accepts the report of the Ad > supported. Rep. David Serotkin. R-Mt DeRosa said hat their group had been were "fairly friendly" and had just asked Hoc Committee on Student Participation By RICH BERNARD the arrested entertainers to the police Clemens, said the group to "please be nice hired under a ^verbal contract in which in Academic Government station. They were not allowed inside. Although expressing skepticism of they promised ' to play, and t«| pro Activities were reconvened e rlv Sun¬ The Ad Hoc Committee, headed bv Ger- However, police did not object to their ! f suggestions that all of the nation's ills remaining outside as long as they did mised to take up a collection. day evening with approximately 200 are the product of a Communist con not obstruct exits or traffic We were playing the job as pro people gathering to dance and join ir spiracy. Serotkin said. After careful A weekend of water fights, paper fessional musicians." he added water fights A collection taken up from the crowd study of several documents issued v Provost locture streamers, high spirits and music for helped to pay the $75 bond and obtained The events on Haslett Street, which The musicians joined the crow! aroun. SDS. I have concluded that this group >> the students living along Haslett Street, the i elea: precipitated the; arrests, began Saturday 8 30 p.m.. setting up and turning their pursuing traditional Communist goals The Rev. Andrew Young, executive north of Grand River Avenue, ended in jrdinance prohibits electric; afternoon with dancing and water fights instruments on the lawn of the house using traditional Communist tactics direetor and chief administrator of the three arrests Sunday evening. and included a 'late night showing of the at 146 Haslett He also charged that SDS is operat¬ Southern Christian Leadership Confer¬ ly amplified outdoor music under movie. I wa:.. a Teenage Werewolf. East Lansing police informed the ;rou' ing at least in part with funds provided ence. will speak at 4 p.m. today in Arrested bv East I^ansing Police were general nuisances section An excepti made lor sacred music by religio Karen Latimer, a non student resident that several complaints had been regis" I bv Communists Faitchild Theatre. Charles T Stabnau. Belleville soph¬ is organizations, but permission o. the ci of 146 Haslett St said that the police ered against them. The mu>:-- is the t Robin. Detroit senior, . Liz .Jilbert a spokesman for the Speaking in conjunction with the Pro¬ omore, Harvey .J council is that had visited their gathering Saturda\ (Please turn to page 9i MSC chapter of SDS. dismissed Serot vost Lectures series, "The Black and Timothy 11 . DeRosa P'ast Lansing necessarv. kins charges by saying. Any move- Experience in America." Young will for violation of a city ordinance against j ment for radical change is always discuss "The Young the Black and the loud music Madison police curb rally : bra nek 1 as Communist inspired by the The three, plus a fourth unidentified people in power individual who escaped into a crowd (please turn to page nine! of bystanders, had set up their instru ments. two electric guitars, drums and an organ, behind the Haslett Arms Apt as students protest at jail three musicians taken to declares The were Meir the the East boos Lansing Police Station amidst of a crowd of approximately 200 which had collected around the band. MADISON. Wis. (APi - Police broke About 300 of the students retreated Duung the spirited rally outside the jail, Their day in the East Lansing Munincipal ready fo up X rally of hundreds of University of block away to ttie state Capitol and began students chanted. We want LDyke. re¬ , not JERUSALEM Israeli armed forces are ready if she Court bond was was set at 9 a.m. Wednesday and According set at $25 cash to East Lansing Police Wisconsin students in front of the Dane Courtv jail Monday as turmoil involving young persons and officers went into a a sit-in on the lajvn. of The students;moved off the University Wisconsin campus and started for the ferring to Mayor William Dyke, who re¬ fused to allow the residents of the Mifflin section use a street for a weekend party. are not prepared for a fullscale war is wrong. approximately 50 to 60 persons followed third straight day at Madison jail in a show ~p( support for students al¬ fyke issued a statement late Mon¬ with Israel. Prime Minister Golda Meir 'Occasionally our region is portray¬ ready jailed asia result of violent disturb¬ day saying he would not declare a cur¬ declared Mondav. but she added that ed as being on the point of an explosion ances Saturday and Sunday nights few which may spread beyond this area.'' But when they arrived, police made an Mrs. Meir said in a State of the Union The conflict over use of a street lor initial charge tear down a red banner the dance had escalated to involve hund¬ message to the Knesset. Israel's parl- students had tixed to a lamp post on reds of students who live in university 46-pint donation iment. 'There is no justification for this the courthouse steps Officers then with¬ drew back up Ijhe steps, formed a wedge housing The as well as students from Miff lin. weekend of turmoil has ranged contention. We live in this region and and scattered hundreds of students. perfectly familiar with the actual from skirmishes to pitched battles at begins blood drive,- The officers did not use their clubs or we are street barricades. v state of affairs. irritant gas Monday. 'Israel cannot permit herself to err Some criticism resulted from police The weekend saw more than 1.000 in her evaluation of the situation or use of clubs and gas in breaking up week¬ hippies and other students march through goal set at 1,500 underestimate the gravity of the dangers, nor can it exaggerate them We have end disturbances Saturday and Sunday nights after students insisted on holding a waves of irritant gas to the Capitol. 103 persons arrested and 29 formally listed A goal of 1.500 pints has been set by learned not to create pipe dreams. street dance in the Mifflin community, as injured. Fifteen of the injured were the Mid-Michigan Red Cross Chapter in an area of roe/ning houses occupied by policemen, most hi* bv bricks and bot¬ its campus blood drive this week. Miss "To the best of our judgment the tles. Frances Coull. director of nurses for the Arab countries cannot at the present chapter, said Monday permit themselves to wage a total war." On Monday the bloodmobile in Camp She added, however, that while she believes her government's assessment Wilson forecasts entry bell Hall collected 46 pints. Donated blood will be used in open to have a firm foundation. Israel's mili¬ heart surgery for children in the Lan¬ tary forces "are ready for any event udlitv. even for the eventuality of a sing area bloodmobile schedule for the re¬ mistake in this forecast " into Common Market The mainder of the drive is as follows: Fast Wilson Hall basement, from 11 a m Mrs. Meir's address followed some i 5 p.m. today: Brody. Hall's 2nd tloor- expressions of concern that the fighting 1965 Room, from 2 8 p.m. Wednesday: along the Suez Canal and Jordan River LONDON urchase a class ring will get this handsome attache case in Heather Gray with a lightweight magnesium frame, snap lock latches, cushion-comfort handle with a stain and scuff resistant exterior. Sale begins Monday morning May 5th. Notice to Customers We would like to explain the circumstances of this very special offer. Ordinarily we could never hope to give such a /a'uable gift -- our margin on the sale of rings is far less thai the value of this attache case. These cases came to us as premiums on the purchase of other merchandise over a period of time. Instead of putting them in stock and selling them as is our normal practice we saved them and planned this event as a means to increase our ring sales in May. If this proves as attractive to you as it appears to us we will plan other sales in the future as the opportunity presents itself. "km • , Howick BOOK STORE d In the center for International programs tit ^ 4 tt a& « £ A £ 2 IS *1 ^ *i K ;» •! J . MMBJii dtttiiimataaaaaMiaaiaiiiiaiiii Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Tuesday, May 6, 1969 3 Jones calls nationalism NEWS summary animosity By SUE BELMAK We blacks are notoriously municatif i." of Slate News Staff Writer peaceful, notoriously gentle." A black Jones said. "How do we deal poet, author and with species who do not under¬ playwright called black na self He Tiust "fight a battle" 8ain an awareness of the value tionalism the "underlying ani stand peace or love-with de¬ generate freakish beings as to gain control of his own system that lets him control mosity of the times" Monday this planet. In spite of this, "/ probably haven't pushed in the first speech of the cur¬ mind. Jores said. Jones said, the only things that all for proper mninten- rent Provost Lecture series. Black by race and color is "You can't believe that the will survive in American "are not sufficient without black con¬ in nee of the the (journalism) (j Le Roi Jones, speaking in sciousness. according to Jones. Beatles and the Beachboys will the things that black people the series "The Black Exper¬ continue ' o control you too much think should survive." 'I building because > one has "Go into a bank and listen ience in America." said that longer." fte said. 'Ideas of any aspect of a ;■ pushed me." whatever change is sought must to the background music of those particular beings." he The bUcks have not focused culture are reflections of the f jaek W. liain. dean be based on black nationalism, the greatest good to the great¬ said. "That is their life." on their .^goals and cannot on whole culture." he said. ttollege of (ommu est number of black He explained that blacks must their enemies. Jones said. He people. Jones explained that music, "Nationalism describes us as stress a value system, an ideel- added t\M if what is learned art. and even the architecture a nation of people, a race of ogv of change based on actual in a un versity won't benefit experience and supplemented every b »ck it is irrelevant °f the Auditorium reflected the people, an aggregate of African by black writers such as Mai- and shou 11 be abandoned, whole of the culture. Provost lecturer peoples -- despite sociologist's International News attempts to classify us as face¬ colrn X and Fanon. "Unles every action today "Why do you think this build¬ Le Roi Jones, black poet, author and playwright, It is better to struggle and less Americans." Jones said. wju ^ t^e great majority. ing is grey and flat and square? spoke during the Monday Pro/ost Lectures on Prime Minister Harold Wilson faces the He explained that basically preserve an identity of your t is not valuable and will soon 'It's a reflection of the ones nationalism and black identity. own." Jones said I believe State News blacks are a cultural nation be public illy condemned. Jones who built it." photo by Bob Ivins prospect of yet another electoral rebuff in James Brown music is better trying to get power to become local balloting that got underway through¬ than Sly and the Family Stone." a political nation out Britain Monday. The voting comes with "We are searching for the Jones stressed the possibility of blacks determining a politics FOURTH ESTATE RALLY the popularity rating in opinion polls at a low physical, mental and spiritual of their own. He described pol¬ level for Wilson's badly divided Labor party space to become a self determ¬ itics as an activity interpreted Students ining people." he said. to press' Adams and his beleaguered government. Jones said that a full aware¬ by virtup of the feeling' and • • • ness of nationalism can be de¬ life-stvle of the culture is in¬ volved A veloped through race, culture big enemy arms cache was found Mon¬ and consciousness He said that Your energies should be day by l .S. forces 52 miles north of Saigon, it is not moral or intellectual manifestat B/PATANSTETT for expansion and renovation of room situations, expanding the Dept. of Advertising, said State News Staff Writer the Journalism Bldg. at an 11 insufficient office space for fac¬ that the advertising faculty pre¬ spokesmen said, in another setback for the support of an ideal that holds worth. Jone sented Bain in the world, rather ii i: legitirr Journalism and advertising a.m. meeting today with Act- ulty-student conferences and a a seven-page re¬ Communist command, which has lost 38.000 sway torted by the white man's com- majors ^ 11 continue their rally ing President Walter Adams. improvement of the photo¬ port last year which included a weapons since its offensive was launched Students in the School of graphic laboratory. list of recommendations on Feb. 23. Journalism, now joined by rep¬ Bain welcomed the students physical facilities. The faculty was told that a new building had resentatives of the 450 majors his year-old South Kedzie National News French left tails the Advertising Dept.. will carry typewriters united by an unbroken stream of copy paper office and informed them that he "already started to get things done" Monday morning been proposed, he said. Crawford said that the Dept. Senate Republicans fired a volley of com¬ ot Advertising was anticipating to emphasize the condition of ,, , . , , , , endorse He admitted that he had "done u new building and not expan- unit facilities thev must to use. plaints Monday against Supreme Court Jus¬ practically nothing to correct tice Abe Fortas. They suggested among other A similar typewriter with a «the physical inadequacies of broken space bar was sitting the 77-year-old Journalism things that Fortas resign because he accepted PARIS An got 45 per the first on the desk of Jack.M. Bain. t attempt always at a disadvantage Bldg. this year because ho a $20,000 fee and then waited 11 months to by France' because' l dean of the College of Communi- round. 55 per cent on the sec- cannot count on its thought there would be a new return it. Sen. Edward M. Kennedy joined in a unity presidential candidate militant* to provide a majority. cation Arts, when students met building Defferre's with him Monday morning. The proposed Communication proposals for an investigation of Fortas' trans¬ against Georges Pompidou dis¬ nomination came The urs tied left s candidate I . solved Monday, strengthening with the support probably haven't pushed \rts Bldg a *7.8 million" build¬ action. of j only HO per m the '.%5 presidential elec¬ at all for proper maintenance . the former premier's position cent yf his party's convention tions Francois Mitterrand, pol¬ A contingent of students who ing according to Bain s esti¬ marched to Bain's office Fri¬ of the building." the dean added, • • • as front runner in election June delegates and indicated the led :i 1 "V < i c ent of the votes mate has been the No. 1 prior- day left him the souvenir type¬ "because no one has pushed the eapit.il outlay expendi¬ 1 to pick fragmentation even among the th^' t »-st round against De ty on Unemployment increased sharply among a successor to Charles in writer their reminder of me." de Gaulle. Socialists. Gaulle He was able to increase as ture list to- new buildings blacks, especialv women, while the jobless the inadequate facilities in the for the past tin e years. The Communisty party, the Defferre seems willing to his total to 45 per cent in the rate for white workers remained low and New Socialist party each nomi¬ write off votes of the far left second round. Journalism Bldg He said that the students in hope of gathering some from The key votes come from list of demands was the first unchanged, the government said Monday nated men to oppose Pompidou Students made the Monday Harold Dahnke. direc after failing to agree on a joint ho opposed De the center where interim Pres- specific itemization of recom¬ ;n reporting a slowdown ;n job growth in appointment with Bain to dis¬ mendations that he has received space utihzat >n said ho candidate aulle th.it Pompidou, ident Alain Poher has his poli- cuss a list of 13 demands that that although the building April. The Communists dug deep into prcmier. still tical roots In the present situ- from the school. first new building his • • • they had presented Friday to their stable of old war horses epresents the general's polic ation it seems increasingly un¬ Erwin Bettinghaus. asst. dean continuation of the Life So to likely tlat Poher will declare Frank Senger. chairman of The completely tax-exempt status of at pick Jacques Duclos. a 72- of the College of Communicat¬ Bldg. and air--conditMini !iis the School of Journalism, said year-old senator, as their nom¬ Duclos himself charged that canc idacy For him to gel several east some philanthropic foundations will be ion Arts. that the journalism faculty had buildings on c inee. Earlier in the day. the Deferre really was nut a leftist enough ''otes to survive for the I pre jnded if draft legislation being considered by Socialists had named Gaston and had adopted the st*le of second ballot he .vould need Bettinghaus represented the not "pushed" for building im¬ the the House Ways and Means Committee Defferre. Pompidou help from the moderate left. dean at the Friday discussion provements this year because is mayor of Marseille a this with 45 students who represen¬ every time the subject of re¬ And late Sunday the Unified In the traditional breakdown But he cannot court i enacted. cand- ted demands including: modeling was brought up. the I don't think tl Socialist Party, a small ex¬ of votes in France since the end in the face of Defferre im¬ • • • treme left group, nominated of World War II. the left is idacv. proving overcrowded class- faculty was informed that a ne\»^ building was being con- Youngstown, Ohio, voters with lingering Michel Rocard. 39-vear-old civil servant. memories of a five-week school shutdown, The left wing seemed diso¬ ballot determine Tuesday on an additional 12-mill school levy that will, school officials said, whether schools will open next riented and floating. Rather than issuing Duclos a fighting declaration. said pessimistically: Pol ice block demonstrators He ulty said soon the just don't bring up journalisn realized that The Frenchmen and women things. (maintenance * during Charleston march fall present building' when . who voted no on April 27 hoped for an alliance on th< building was proposed Michigan News basis of defined policy union alone would have per¬ This CHARLESTON. S C. i AP•- conditions would not. permit a permit, but there were no ar- John Crawford, ehairm mitted the defeat of Pompidou r%nonstr,itors marching in mass m;'reh in the area rests. For more than two weeks Direct election of the president by popular but the Socialist party did not sympatln tor Charleston's One column, singing and of almost daily demonstrations, vote is the only way to ensure that "the hesitate to take the responsi¬ striking black hospital work- chanting freedom songs and slo- Charleston police have pursued bility for refusing such union ers were blocked by police gans. was diverted along side a policy of arresting demon- •andidate with the greatest number of pop- a Duclos meant that Defferre Monday as plans were streets to the medical complex strators only as a last resort ilar votes-the choice of the people-will be was an unacceptable candidate announced to extend demon- neat tht state-supported Medi- Tom Offenburger. an official of the president of the American Bar strations to Gre< i Sat- cal Col'ege Hospital and the the Southern Christian Leader SAUd elected, for the Communists, just as Defferre. a moderate-type Soc¬ urday. Charleston County Hospital, ship Conference (SCLC) said \ssn. said Monday ir. a speech in Detroit. , targets of a unionization drive the SCLC's leader, the Rev ialist. would not have agreed to Some :W0 blacks • • • ask for Communist support e-th 1 e^ which h*,s become rights fuht a major civil Ralph David Abernathy. would be in Greenville for Saturday's The lX.OOO-member Michigan Seventh-Day The disunity of the left was Adventist Church announced Monday that is is not increasing Pompidou s vot¬ The marchers had no parade planned demonstration. IN A es. only scattering the strength opposed to any form of state tax aid to of the "left, which has ambitions SANdwich defense against pirate galleons ion-public schools and "all private schools to capture the presidency. In and British warships. JUNE GRAD should be privately funded.'' the French system, a majority Police Chief John Conroy is needed to win June 1 If no turned back several attempts by one gets a majority, the two LIBERAL ARTS Campus News top candidates go into a runoff BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION June 15. In 1965. De Gaulle Arsonists broke into the ROTC offices TAX ADMINISTRATION CAREERS in the old gymnasium at Western Michigan WiTH University early Monday and set fire to books and papers. Firemen doused the flames U.S. TREASURY DEPARTMENT You II find lettuce, tomatoes shortly after 6 a.m. 'INTERNAL REVENUE SERVJCE • • • and special seasonings nestled REVENUE OFFICERS. An estimated 75 demonstrators, watched among the meats and cheese by police, shouted to arriving students that Work principally outside Che office discussing the satis¬ faction of delinquent Federal Tax obligations with Business school was closed at Highland Park Com¬ and individuals from all walks of life. in every Hobie's submarine munity College Monday morning decreasing Your choice of roast beef, * attendance to 50 per cent. The students were TAX TECHNICIANS ham & salami or turkey Try our demanding greater student rights and more Consult with a variety of taxpayers to identify and emphasis on black studies. salad in a sandwich today t kplain tax issues and determine their correct Fed- • • • i ^al tax liability. Dissident students at the troubled Southern University branch campus in New Orleans took over the school's administration build¬ ing Monday and the Louisiana National FLINT JUNIE OPENINGS LANSING KALAMAZOO JACKSON Hobie's CARRY OUT DELIVERY BENTON HARBOR GRAND RAPIDS Guard was called in to restore order. 351-3800 • • • On Campus Inter nng & Testing May 13 About 250 black students from Alabama State For Appointment Contact: Call or Write College were arrested Monday after Board athlete MR. IVER W. BRADLEY SPARTAN SHOPPING CEN;ER refusing to break Up a demonstration in front Bessey Hall is a popular place durini ealhe PL/CEMFNT OFFICE RECRUITMENT COORDINATOR TROWBRIDGE AT HARRISON P.O. BOX 84 of the Alabama capitol. The students pre¬ when the skate board artists, take advantage of the f ECEPTIONIST HOURS-Sun.: 3 p.m.-1a.m. DETROIT, MICHIGAN 48231 Mori. Thor».: llo.m. 2 o.m sented their demand to Gov. Albert Brewer sloping sidewalk, which leads straight inlo the Red — - AREA CODE 313 226-7215/7284 Fri. & Sot.: 11 o.m. — 3 o.m. Cedar River for the unexperienced skate boarder. that the president of Alabama State be 'AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER" State News photo by John Harrington fired. EDITORIALS Increasing academic involvement academic credit should be giv¬ Council The Ad Hoc Committee on educational policies have been today. The task of eval- Student Participation in Aca¬ decided by faculty alone with¬ en for substantial participa¬ t ating student representation demic Government recently out tion in academic government'" vas difficult one and adequate student opinion w formulated a report recom¬ voiced. is good only in the sense that there should be no doubt that Some faculty members may the committee should make a most of the recommenda¬ mending increased student par¬ thorough investigation and de¬ tions, if enacted, will insure ticipation in University af¬ be vehemently against in¬ cide if a credit and/or grade he opening of communica- fairs. Today the Academic creasing student representation Council reviews that report. on this committee due to the incentive would be an appro¬ ion channels among students, Above all, it must be pointed fact that each member must priate addition to the com¬ acuity and administrators. > There may be a out that increased student par- know such a great deal about mittee system. great hesi- ticipation--with vote, without the functioning of the Uni- Perhaps, a proposal getting ancy for members of the Aca- at the heart of the matter is iemic Council to intentionally tokenism~in faculty standing vesrity. This complaint that committees, in the Academic students don't know enough the one which states that imit their own power by giv- Council and in committees at about the University in order there should be teaching com¬ ng students their rightful place mittees containing an equal n the the college level has been sore¬ to contribute meaningfully to upper echelon of the de¬ ly needed for many years. With educational policies proceed¬ number of faculty and students cision-making machinery. But, the Ad Hoc Committee's ad¬ established in each depart¬ f MSU is going to be the ings is at best gobbledygook. vice that students on commit¬ The plain fact is that not ment. These committees would • iqualitarian University we all tees must have a vote, the look into teaching standards, teek. this will be a neces¬ enough has been done in the eradication of tokenism is realm of educational policies discuss ways of improving both sary first step. brought a step closer to real¬ on this campus and the lack undergraduate and graduate ity. of adequate student voice and teaching and make evalua¬ The idea that the Universi¬ vote on this committee has tions of the teaching ability been, the of any person. Since these com¬ Letter policy ty Educational Policies Com¬ reason why. mittee should have nine under¬ The recommendation that mittees are at the department The State News welcomes all letters, have > the University Educational level and students can graduate and six graduate mem¬ ^hev should be typed and signed with the bers is a welcome proposal. Policies Committee look in¬ equal representation along with lome town, student, faculty or staff stand- For too long at this University to the question of "whether faculty, this decentralization ng. and local phone number included. No of power may get the normal¬ insigned letter will be accepted for publi¬ cation. and no letter will be printed with¬ ly non-active student into the out a signature except in Extreme circum¬ If Dracula decision-making process. The recommendations ing for increased student vote call¬ stances. All letters must be less than 300 'Words long for publication without editing. on the Academic Council are it must be of great necessity. The proposal that three voting undergraduate EW Look, if blood, you Dracula is know this has got to be something special. And giving The Bloodmobile will be campus during this whole week and there will be stations at on and two voting graduate rep- resentatives-at-large be Academic Council is impor¬ on the Collective bargaining for Wilson various residence halls for your tant for the entire student body. As I have listened to discussions of was the kind of body that comes into because the committee, after it was apj the Lansing Regional Red convenience. In addition, the notion that» the Wilson Hall controversy, it has struck play in collective bargaining as the penul¬ pointed, decided to follow ground rule, Cross Blood Drive is special. me that a factor underlying some of the timate step in a grievance procedure. Sup¬ laid down in the Academic Freedom Re Student participation in past each college should be repre¬ criticism of the way it was handled may be port for hearings before the Student-Fa pose the union which represents these Much of the blood given will blood drives has provided much sented by one voting student a misunderstanding of the nature of the cafeteria employes had chosen to press cultv Judiciary Those rules, in contr i committee which held the hearing and their grievance against the supervisors. to the usual grievance hearing, allow t< be used in open heart surgery in the area of bringing child¬ representative allows views made recommendations to Acting President The dispute might well have come be¬ lawyers to be present for children in the Lansing ren back to good health. This from certain areas of the Uni¬ Adams fore a joint committee composed of three area. Only blood types A posi¬ year Scabbard and Blade is spon¬ versity to be aired when they Reference to the committee as an "ad¬ members of residence hall managment I come now to a constructive sujzgestio tive and B positive are needed soring a contest with door prizes otherwise would have fallen judicating committee' has tended. I and three members of the union. In collective bargaining, if either par think, to convey the impression that it to a grievance is dissatisfied with such for these operations. But don't as an incentive. on deaf ears. was a kind of court. Viewed this way. it's The six would have decided upon a committee's decision, it carries the disput stay away if you have 0. AR So. be the first in your resi¬ The recommendations of the no wonder the questions have been raised chairman from among themselves, agreed to arbitration. A common form is or something else. Blood is dence hall to beat out Dracula Ad Hoc Committee will be as to the propriety of having people with partite panel upon ground rules, listened to the griev- ;i stake in the dispute sitting in blood and there is somebody to the Bloodmobile-and the discussed, but probably not ' judgment ants and their witnesses and to the su¬ on its outcome. who could use a little of yours. door prize. voted on by the Academic But the committee wasn't a court. It pervisors and theirs. The committee would In the case at hand, residence ha then have withdrawn to weigh the testi¬ mony and re^ch a decision. management would select one meiube the BSA would select one an;! the t\\ would then choose a third, imparti, OUR READERS' MIND the The union, however, chose not to press member, who would serve as chairmai The panel would review the evidence grievance. The Black Students' Al¬ liance ( BSA i, therefore, in going to the aid scrutinize the procedures lollowed by th of the aggrieved employes, became a committee below, and make Wilson trial: To the Editor : rape of due process surrogate for the union. Looked at in this light, it was logical for the committee to be made up of three management rep¬ resentatives ?and three members of BSA which the vance I note, disputants would agree to accept as binding by the way. that in the ment representatives voted as they did. past week, and these tactics have been What was unusual was to have the outside By now the blatant violations of due successful If legitimate grievances exist Statement of BSA Management Co They believed that their jobs were threat¬ co-chairmen and the two lawyers. process in the Wilson Hall cafeteria case have been pointed out by so many that ened implicitly it not explicitly isome of them do not have tenure', and their (and it is not clear that they dot. they must be adjudicated by legitimate means, In sympathy tee.' dations which sets out the nine to Acting President Adams, recommen re it would be superfluous to repeat them But when you consider that no procedures commendation seven calls for creatinr physical well-being was endangered. and not by a rape of due process. To in this letter Such execrable procedures deny To the Editor: whatever have existed until now (although an arbitration system to cope with jus With reference to'Adams' second point, society over the past two centuries is are in themselves repugnant, but it is be- Acting President Walter Adams hand¬ Ron Lee proposed in vain last February such controversies as this I think that had the acting president added some to compound those sins. I could not vond belief that the chairman and two long that they be established > for dealing with admirable proposal (as indeed I do the continue to be associated with a uni¬ ling of the Wilson Hall episode has led other members of the MSU Board of to two positive results, it assures the such conflicts, it seems rather unfair to other eight recommendations and would have had a perfect replic; of Cham¬ versity which persists in approving such . Trustees should publicly commend and black community of the University's blame Mr Adams for adding Vice Presi¬ gest that we put it into effect at berlain at Munich congratulate the acting president for his ipethods commitment to a fair shake'" for them dent Dickerson (who has a law degree- to deal with the present dispute The analogy is not too far-fetched. The approval of this sham Allan B. Mandelstamm It envisages effective and expeditious and professor Vance to the committee as In defense of his weak position. Act¬ plain truth is that we have witnessed co-chairmen without a vote Nazi tactics on this campus within the procedures to handle similar grievances C P Lai ing President Adams has noted that in the future. Illegal acts, even of a sym¬ As the the lawyers, they were present '1 all members of the Hearing Com¬ bolic kind, would become obsolete. mittee agreed to the tinal verdict, Lest these gains be drowned in fester¬ including the representatives from resi¬ ing discontent. 1 would urge the following dence hall management <2' there was Ut¬ ile or no disruption of classes and de¬ Justice lacking at Kangaroo court corrective or additional steps. The two employes concerned. Mr. Trantham and struction of property during the demonstra- To the Editor- Members of the MSI' Board of Trustees: The following members of the Ad Hoc Miss Mishler. be placed on leave (from their administrative positions onlyt with no loss of pay. seniority, or status, and no taint on their record, pending formal Aiding The Search' ( ofrimittee on the Residence Halls are convinced that the recent debacle of demo¬ investigation of the charges against them cratic procedure and due process in the according to accepted procedures. Second, ment credit-no credit EDITOR'S NOTE To gain addi¬ a system steps should be taken to establish im¬ Journal biased take-over and Hall kangaroo court at Wilson the Hearing Committee contained two mediately effective and expeditious pro¬ tional knowledge of how MSU stu¬ throughout its curriculum-' represents the sort of occasion that dents think about their University - Outside involvement: deserves our attention and comment We members of the very group that con¬ cedures for handling ethnic grievances To the Editor: what it is. what it should be. the type - How do you feel about (all East note with dismay ducted the sit-in: within the University the following facts of Lansing i book store prices'' The Lansing chapter of the NAACP relations between management and The dismay aroused by the 'occupa¬ president it should have-the AS¬ MS!" Presidential Selection Board -What should MSU's relation¬ strongly oppose the unfair and biased both white and black emplpyees have tion'' of the cafeteria is understandable. articles appearing in the Lansing State ritten laid ad¬ At the time, it is naive to expect asks the following questions of the ship be with the military-industrial been fearfully dislocated: t same Journal pertaining to the Wilson Hall vance against Miss Mishler and Mr that accumulated grievances of genera¬ student body: complex'' (research commitments. no recordings, written or taped, were Social policy ROTC. Placement Bureau1 protest Unfair and biased reporting and Trantham allowed to be made at the hearings: tions will always come to 'peak" in a editorial handling reflects negatively on the -What role should students play -What do you think is the role of rights ot over 1.100 student residents members of the Hearing Committee smooth and decorous manner To instill the Black Quest for social justice. We were violated: in determining the social policies the University in bringing economi¬ were constrained from making public- confidence in the black community that strongly request the editors of the State regular grievance procedures of the AFL the old order has passed, and at the same of MSU'' cally deprived students to MSU statements explanatory of and in de¬ aside from scholarship and loan Journal to encourage and support objec¬ (TO County and Municipal Employees fense of their conclusions. time to encourage adherence to proced --Do-you think students should be tive reporting and editorial placement of Union were ignored: We deplore lack of judgment, ures which have often failed them in the required to live on campus0 programs0 setting Presidential qualifications: all news ♦ no opportunity was given for obtain¬ -What do you think the open house of an unfortunate precedent, and govern¬ past, is not an easy task. Adams and -What are the most important Vence Bonn ham ing defense witnesses: policy should be° ment by tantrum. the University administration deserve our President. Lansing branch no opportunity was given for cross ex- Academic involvement: personal and professional criteria NAACP Anne C Garrison, chairman and seven support for pursuing these objectives, and that should characterize the other committee members our sympathy and corrective advice when -By what methods should students new evaluate their instructors'' MSU president '' mistakes are made. As the State News -What role should students play \nswers should be sent to the observes all of this is tragic and would be unnecessarv if we lived in g sane in curriculum development"' Spartan Room. Student Services world. Should the University imple¬ Bldg MIC'HIGA N 0ESIDES THAT, I MEAN STATE Nc Trinka Cline, executive editor Norman J. Saari, managing editor (ieorge K. Billiard, campus editor IT Deborah Fitch, feature editor INIVKRSITY Kenneth Krell, editorial director Jeff Elliott, sports editor Six-time recipient of the Pacemaker award for outstanding journalism. Michigan State News, East Lansing, l/ichigan Tuesday, May 6, 1969 5 Students ask for curriculum voice By KATHY MORAN The list of recommendations presented to the rest of the undergraduate representatives whether it was necessary for a on all department curriculum student to devote so much time The final proposal called for State News Staff Worker was drawn up by the Dean's faculty. discussion sections to be committees with voting rights, to them. Student participation on fac- Student Advisory Committee of M ichael Irish, East Lansing arranged for all large lecture The representatives would,, be ulty curriculum committees the college in an effort to in- juni ir and chairman of the Stu- classes but the faculty said that was one of the recommenda- crease student voice in Univer- den? Advisory Committee, ex- appointed from existing student Questions also arose as to proposal is presently tions presented to an informal sity affairs which directly affect plai ed the proposals to the de- advisory committees or elected whether the students should sit possible due to a lack of funds. by open petitioning among maj in on an advisory capacity or be meeting of faculty and students them. pari nent chairmen from the allowed to propose classes or The general from the College of Arts and The purpose of Sunday's coll 'ge and the Dean's Faculty consensus Letters in preparation for the meeting was to discuss con- Adv sory Committee, Arguing in favor of this pro- changes in the existing curri- seemed to be that the only way proposals at the spring faculty structive criticism of the rec- Tiie most debated proposal posal, the students thought that culum and how much weight of implementing this would be this would open a fresh channel should be given to their opin- by cutting discussion sections meeting ommendations before they are concerned the establishment of of opinion to the faculty as well ions in lower level courses to make as gives the students the faculty and graduate decisions affecting their lTi Closely related to this pro- assistants available for dis¬ versity careers. posal. was one recommending cussion groups in the higher 25th International "The students should not do- termine the curriculum their views on the curriculum regular meetings, at least one level or vice versa. n the fall and one in the spring. )etween individual department Following the meeting. Irish should be reflected.' Irish said said that the discussion of the student advisory committees recommendations and the fo Faculty agreed that student and their respective faculty, honors club representatives would be a val¬ uable source of information but questioned the necessity of stu¬ Another suggested that recommendation the Student In¬ questions that had been raised had been valuable in clarifying some of the issues. The 25th annual International two parts, stage shows and search Development ana acting dents attending all meetings structional Rating Report Festival at MSI', sponsored by nationality booths. Sharing the dean of International Programs, "The recommendations will the International Club is being responsibilities of coordinat- he guest of honor at the be revised to reflect the sug¬ dedicated to Shao Chang Lee. ing the stage shows are Nancy evening show, about one-third of a faculty for self-evaluation and review gestions received here and then professor and head emeritus of Buck. Freeland freshman, and Honorary lifetime member- presented to a meeting of the Foreign Studies, who founded the Thanin Taychochaiwongse. shyps the International Club member's time is spent in com- of course methods and mittee meetings. He questioned material." college faculty in a few weeks." International Club 25 vears ago Bankok. Thailand, graduate stu- outstanding contributions to Peace Through World dent international understanding will Miniature UFO Understanding" is the theme of The shows will be presented bfr ^presented to Michael W. this year's festival which will at 2 p.m. and 8 p.m. and will Bv.rn associate news bureau Part of Gr ek Week fun was a frisbee tourname be held Saturday in the Auditor- feature the native dances and ed tor of information service: as Delta 1 au Delta took first place honors ov« ium. cultural ceremonies of the nat- Hi eya Kumata, International Ho I den Hal State News photo by Mike Sir The festival will consist of ionalitv groups comprising the CI b adviser and professor of International Club. co imunication; Bonita Porter. .. ,.. . .. ... loi ?-time member of Internat- The nauonahty booths, which ,0| c,ub and Kenneth w wi e open rom Tt -mpson member of the MSI' Drivers, navigators revving . 11 p.m in the basement of the ' r . Auditorium, make up the sec- . _ Be «rd of Trustees. , , .. , , rr. „ ■ tiss MSU, Sandra Gillespie, on par o e es lva . itings sophomore, and Lete- many nationalities represented ^ Garcia, } ^ Latin Amprjpari American will display hand¬ for Wilson Wipeout Rally on campus Be luty Queen, will be on hand to crafts. art work and household gr« et guests. accessories. ' here will be no charge for Homer D. Higbee. asst. dean an • of the festivals activities, Drivers who feel they are good can get back on the course quick¬ rallys. These checkpoints will issue new directions, keep track of International Programs, will wh.ch are open to the public. ly enough to make up for lost ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ enough 'or racing competition be the guest of honor at the time. of the cars and serve to keep por more information contact and those who drive just for fun afternoon show. Milton Bob Syers. will get a chance tor both in The 70 to 85 mile route will cars following the course. 332-8641 Unlike most rallies, no sophis- Muelder. vice president of Re- p0jan the Fifth Annual Wilson Wipe- follow two-lane paved and gravel out Road Rahy Saturday. roads and will be mainly with¬ A'ltn- ticated timing or mileage equip¬ Six trophies will be given for in Ingham County ment will be allowed. The driver Along with the impr oute has just a navigator with di- the first three finishing drivers and navigators Wilson Hall is for this year are thn manned checkpoints, as in full-fledged rections rely on. and good eyesight to OCC tries n sponsoring the event and provid¬ The navigator plays a crucial ing the route and the trophies • more This year the rally will be professional and better Mock protest part in the rally. In order for a team to win. the navigator to solve ■ tenc pi*e between two parties, dis- must be alert and adept with By DELORES MAJOR organized." Don Hevdens. I'tica c ssion must continue in order ist vear srallv chair- TORONTO i AP '-Five hon directions and figures State News Staff Writer junior and t.,,solve the problem: if one of or students of the I'niversity of While University of Michi¬ man said. Anyone can enter: students, tl • parties threatens the other, This ye chairman. John Toronto School, a private high their friends, the faculty and gan (U-Mi students strike li es of communication often Oak sophomore, school run by the university, staff and their families. If fresh¬ igainst apartment managers in b ;ak down. nit tee has been staged a sit in Monday They men want to enter the rally Ann Arbor. MSU student rent¬ le said that it was not neces- ns for the event carried blank placards and said they must sign up the week be- ers are trying to solve their s«.'y to talk about a possible > ot last term their protest had no purpose and They will be giv- problems by negotiation. st ike. is designed to be they expected to achieve noth directions to allow them to trying to go through Vliss Durling said that although ve on campus during the ral- this rational non-emotional th ire is no one major apart- 3m Durling. Off Carn¬ al board m int problem, all the small¬ Sign-ups and fee payments mav representative said week. "We want to dis- er complaints compound into > made from 3 to 11 p.m. Mon¬ la ge ones. ty through Friday at the East problems before we do We have between 25 to 30 lobby Late entries can ivthing as drastic as the stu-. p< ople coming into the office lade Saturday at the start- dents at U-M ha' ei ch week: their problems range Lot V. before the Miss Durling said that many fr >m unreturned damage depos¬ le of 9a.m. of the problems faced by stu- it to no available parking is $2 for driver. $1 dents at the U-M are common spaces." she said. vigator and an additional to the MSU students, Towing is always consid¬ each passenger. All driv- The rents are comparable to ered a major problem." Mayer 11 be given a bronze dash- those here, but the difference added is in the size of the apartments." Miss Durling estimated that she said. " There they have between 8.000 to 10.000 MSU small apartment houses rather students live in apartments near than the big sprawling com¬ campus. plexes we have here. ' Petitioning open Norm Mayer, president of OCC. said that he did not want to talk about resolving off-cam¬ f°rausj post pus problems in terms of strik¬ Why is Camaro ing Petitioning for the All- I try to have a positive at¬ University Student Judiciary titude rather than a negative Veterans Assn of MSI a ill m et;t jt i AUSJ i and the two junior one when it comes to solving tonight in the Rathskeller ..t end>rdl st^ts on the Student-Faculty the pace car again? ■ables All members should att these problems, he said. leeting for the election of officers Judiciary is open. If we can get things done in Petitions may be picked up a constructive manner, there Artists and photographers inte rested m jqj student Services Pldg impus will be no need for such mea¬ must he completed and sures." Mayer added returned by Friday. Mayer said that in any dis- Because it's the Hugger. Camaro SS has been chosen to be the Indy 500 disc brake: pace car for the second time in three years. That's * linked to 3-speed floor because it has what it takes. ■e, there's a 4 -speed Hurst Engine choices start with a standard 300-hp 350-cu.-in. Turbo-Fire V8 and run up to a 325-hp 396-cu.-in. Turbo-Jet job. There's even a new pacesetting, it i pretty clear Super Scoop hood you can order. It opens on acceleration, pouring cooler air into the engine for vn. At your more go power. The SS version of the Hugger grips the road with 'hevrolet dealer's now. wiQ3-oval tires on 14 x 7-inch-wide wheels, beefed- Putting you first, keeps us first. Pacesetter Values at our Sports Department. i opposing the ABM Tuesday, May 6, 1969 f) Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan WOOING 'FOXEY LADY' Lavender Jimi: an experience' He threw his instrument be¬ WAf'-i Jimi's song, and there he wanted more. By BRUCE FISHER fied drums, his upright posture ous. and overall appearance was re¬ tween his legs, crouching over was playing it, revamping the There was an encore, although Slate News Reviewer miniscent of a psychedelic or¬ and springing upright. He sway¬ lyr^iS to suit the occasion. we're still not sure exactly what When it was all over, it looked ed rhythmically with the music, it was. Everyone was throb¬ as though someone had tried to angutan. Then the spotlight fell B ' then it was closing time. Hendrix himself as the mas¬ grinding and bumping away. bing with Jimi's pulsebeat: the restage a mob scene from "Quo on Hei 1rix mentioned, time enough effect was hypnotic. The encore Vadis" in Detroit's Cobo Arena. ter shimmered onstage. Flashbulbs popped left and right, for ')ne more. What followed in- Clothed in lavender from head trying to record some combina¬ was over too soon, and Hen¬ Several thousand twitching, clut ed a hyped-up "Star-Spang¬ tions of Jimi's seemingly limit¬ drix left the stage, waving screaming people all pressing to foot, Jimi strode into posi¬ led Banner" souled enough to toward the source of the vibra¬ tion wearing daringly low bells less performing positions. maKe Jose Feliciano's flesh "peace" to the crowd, which re¬ turned it most enthusiastically. tions which had kept them in and an open Jamaica-styled shirt. Along about two-thirds of the cra'^l. and the inevitable-"Pur¬ tow for the past hour. That A jewelled belt sparkled way through the evening, the ple Haze." Had there been a concerted ef¬ :e? None other than Jimi around his waist, and a laven¬ Experience performed "Foxey fort to crush toward the stage, W& could feel Redding's bass, Hendrix and his highly exper¬ der headband encircled his close- Lady," and whatever dams had police would have been helpless previously held up broke wide thumping away in the pit of to stem the tide. ienced Experience cropped hair. The combined ef¬ our stomachs, and it felt good Hendrix had previously said fect of Hendrix. Redding, and open. Jimi played his guitar with his teeth. Redding gasped indeed. But our attention was The evening was over, but that he was no longer going to Mitchell was freeeee-ky. out a few "foxey Lay-dee's," now on the crowd, which was the lyrics to "Foxey Lady" were appear in concert in the United But then too, it was supposed Anxious To Become States, devoting most of his time to be. Hendrix wasn't coming and the audience begged for inching its way toward the stage. still screaming around some¬ As the final chords of "Purple where as we left the arena. Rov¬ to work in Europe. That was why out to perform "Lady of Spain" more. Experienced Men! we were sufficiently surprised by a la Segovia: he was going to Then came "Fire," at a tempo Hazs" crashed around the arena, er had moved over-Jimi most a bit too rapid for our tastes. It it was obvious that the masses definitely had taken over. perform his own style of elec¬ . his consent to perform live in Cobo last Friday night. tric excitement. He opened with "Spanish Castle Magic" and WHERE Noel Redding was the first of the group to swagger across threw in a little "Crosstown stage. He was garbed in Traffic" and some other bits DOES shocking pink bell-bottoms and his ratted hair resembled an electrified bale of dried hemp and For pieces for good measure. an enormous Hendrix is world's finest following. guitar Chilly 'Night1 INNOCENCE Mitch Mitchell then took his player. There is little or no Tar-tar STOP place behind a battery of ampli¬ doubt that he is the most sensu¬ picturesque started to act again. Richard f The the coat fountain Student in the Services Horticulture Bldg. received its first of tar in three years as child,-en from the MSU Gardens behind new Boone comes across as one of THE STATE NEWS nursery stop to watch. AND One has to be something of the meanest villians since Rob¬ ert Mitchurn chased his kids State News photo by Jim Richardson a masochist to enjoy "The across the South in "N.ght of The State News, the student newspaper at Michigan State University, it Night of the Following Day." MANHOOD published every and Orientation class day throughout the year with special Welcome Week issues in June and September. Subscription rates are S14 because the suspense unfortun¬ the Hunter." Franklin cries a lot. And Pamela Grad student drowns ately never stops from begin¬ ning to end. Another big attraction is Hu¬ BEGIN? 1 Press i. Michigan Pre When the chills never let up. bert Cornfield's lively and sure¬ in Nil es canoe mishap igan Collegi states Student Pi we are inclined to detach our¬ footed direction. Although Corn¬ field must take half of the blame Funeral services will be held Wedn< Second cli ige paid at East Lansing. Michigan. selves. saying. "It's only a HILARIOUS Editorial and busini Lansing. Michigan. movie." This, of course, wipes out all suspence and any real for the film's one-dimensional script (which, as I said* is not old MSU near graduate student who was Niles after being missing for seven days found !! involvement with the film as all that bad), he gets most of Dale M Armbruster of 14i6 H. -Ion R > the credit for capturing the STORY well. I thoroughly enjoyed "The performance as a dope-snorting bt'rtdle of nerves. bleak beauty of Normandy and missing on April 27 bv a Nik-.- been visiting. Mr Arbruster took . : ^ hu t ■ 353-6400 for getting a maximum *of ter¬ canoe out on the St. Joseph River Displav Advei iarlon Brando, with his hair "n the Night of the Following Day." from minimum of 355-3447 ror a ^xplicit OF Business-C'irc Photographic 355-8311 but I cannot recommend it too indiscriminately. Not everyone st; Saked. hi method has finally dropped of mumbling and violence. 26 and did not return Mr. Armbruster s body was disc ••• : fisherman within the city limits it \;i« - likes a good superficial scare His attention to detail is mag¬ YOUTHFUL ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ Kidnapping Plot No. 7 has been dragged out of the moth¬ TH I NIGHT OF THE FOLLOWING DAY Pr laced and directed by Hubert Corn- nificent. For one. the charae-' ters in a thriller talk as though Police found spot where Mr the broken canoe Armbruster had ! .it •>:: ,* t ' had gone over a dam on the river. EXUBERANCE J * SOUTH COMPLEX * balls here-nubile young heiress nabbed by a group of crooks who fiei ; written by Hubert Cornfield and Rff trt Phippeny; bated on the novel they were remotely related to the real world. For once. & home¬ Police saicj that the accident Armbruster's inexperience in canoeing prob;:hly WEEKEND have troubles of their own. But. like a still life painting of ap¬ "T t Snatchers" by Lionel White; photo- grt 'bed by Willi Kurant; music by Stan¬ made bomb made. really looks home¬ Mr Armbruster. majoring in agru-ulin: • ley Hyers; lyric for "One Early Morning waing The funeral services will take pi.n MANY MEN IS ples. the interest lies not in the subject but in the presen¬ by 'on Hendricks, sung by Annie Ross: related by Universal Pictures; in Tech¬ My only regret, in fact, is nesday at the Emmanuel Lutheran Clmr lor the surprise ending a first-class COMING tation. so endless variations are no CJ%ST: cop out. A rather charmiug cop- possible. Chauffeur Marlon Brando out. however. 62 coeds jo in Ci WILL RECALL MAY 9,10,11 Rita been Moreno (jvho has not working much since "West Leer The Blonde Richard Boone Rita Moreno Do not go to "The N'fght of ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ Side Storv" won her turns in a beautifully an Oscar) controlled The Girl Frieadly Pamela Franklin Jest Hahn the Following Day" expecti-ng very much. But it cai\ scare recognized for AND Fisherman Cop Father Gerard Buhr Hughes Wanner the pants off you if you will A LOT OF WOMEN WILL THINK THEY UNDERSTAND SPECIAL NOTE OF IN TEREST with "THE FIRST TIME" However, we wanted to test it with a theatre aud¬ ience. On Friday, May 2nd we Sneak Screened it at the 9 P.M. show at this theatre. We were right. The audience was "with it". They thoroughly en¬ joyed it.The comment after the show wab of one chorus. "We are glad that we came. It was wonderful. I hope to Transportation set for Greek projects Pick up times t..r (ireck Week Communis Projects will he 9:15 a.m and 2.1.5 p.m. dailv during Greek Week at the cor¬ ners ot \nn Stic t at MAC Michigan A\. iu» Greek Feast, the climax to Greek Week, will be held from 3-6 p.m Saiiivd >\ in Fast LAST 1:1(1 v 15-5:20 DAY! 7:25-9:30 "CHARLY" STARTS WED. Cleaver. Cleaver. Chop. Chop. National General Pictures The Boulting Brothers' ^ Twisted Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Tuesday, May 6, 1969 7 SPORTS Benington home recuperating from the attack. "Barring anything unforseen. I see him continuing in his capacity as head activities. "He ways," is Dr g. -ig to have to Feurig said change his lies going expected of next season." Feurig said With Benin.-ton home resting, his assist I.arry tawa 1- ist Ike. from state champion Ot¬ Hills, and Jeff Christian, both Naderlente. from forwards, should MSU Basketball Coach John Benington coach at Michigan State." Dr. James to hav«- to pace his livir John's had A »hree-month recovery period is ants. Bol> \.>rdmann and Gus Ganakas b. vv-aring Spartan uniforms next win¬ Feurig said. "His recovery has been a good functional recove«\ up t<> now atieatf for the Spartan coach. Since fall are handling the majority of the re¬ ter is expected to be back in his familiar cruiting load. Two lirand' Rapids play¬ good." and should be able to cope with the prat Pee cannot begin before Oct. 15. courtside position directing the Spartan the I baling process should be completed ers have made verbal commitments to There are no other commitments vet' cagers whea practice starts next fall. Dr. Feurig said, however, that Ben¬ coaching activities. But he is going to but several other players that are have to limit his social commitments." by tlv h. play for MSI and the coaches are Benington was released from Sparrow ington. who will be starting his fifth being sought by MSI' should make season at MSU in the fall, is going T "he-wise. there should be no dif¬ expecting signed tmders from then this Hospital last Thursday after suffering ficult* for him to piek up at the start their choices within the next two weeks. to have curtail some of his outside Activities like paddleball. idling a heart attack on April 11. He is now (Net team faces Batsmen hope to hit' undefeated U-M By DENNIS COGSWELL State News Sports Writer Coach Stan Drobac's netmen run head on to a steamroller winning trail vs. ND By GARY WALKOWK young team like ours doesn't off. with .333 and 321 aver¬ this afternoon when they take on undefeated Michigan here Executive Sports Editor ages. respectively are the always hold up under sac! at 3 p.m. The MSU baseball team \ pressure, as you ' saw Ian only other Spartans with bat¬ The Wolverines are the defending Big Ten champions, and ting marks above .300. try to forget a disastr "We at the pace they're going, it's going to take a small miracle to weekend of Big Ten play wl Junior center fieldei Rick may make a few ••ha-' before stop them. Michigan. 6-0 this year, has lost only two in¬ they meet Notre n.,n.. Miller continues t<» hold up a 'es the weekend. dividual matches in the conference \\< might move one of the South Bend today. the Spartans onh consistent outfielders first r. Returning for the Wolverines are Dick Dell. John Hain- The Spartans. now It hitter. Miller rapped out tiv< to base so line and Bruce Deboer--last year's Big Ten titlists at No. 3. are in the midst of a t: hits last weekend to raise his we can get Gary Boyce's bat in the lineup, he said. 4. and 6 singles, respectively. this iasnt bad game losing streak, MSI team-leading average to ;!75. Litwhiler indicated that enough. Michigan also has the longest since 1%4. Miller also tops the team Kirk Maas. Larrv Hooper and returning champions in all three If the Spartans are to ir How doubles events. sume their winning ways and in bases home 141>» runs and «six». RBI's i26> total Rich Krueger would likely pitch against the Irish in the Peter Fishback and Brian Mar¬ become a factor in the Big cus are back at No. 1 doubles: Ten race, they must pick up Right fielder Rich Jordan nine-inning game. Notre Dame they Fishback was also runner-up to Don Lutz of Northwestern in No. May may their run production. Spartan bats have been • .>n- and shortstop George I'etr- is 8-8 for the season 1 singles in 1%8 Dell and Hain- spicuously silent of late MSU stand line were the conference winners A member of the MSU Rugby Saturday's game Club comes out on the short en » of this p!a/ djring with the Detroit Rugby Club, but the Mot >r City 15 came out totaled 18 hits in four j ' ATTENTION CAR OWNERS i night games not included > in No. 2 doubles. Deboer won at against Indiana and Ohio St.ite No last year, but his part¬ on the short end of the 26-6 decision as the Spcrtans evened heir record at 3-3. last weekend the team b,t * has ''J*< Nc p'i to by Mike Beas'«v as Complete front end repair and ner graduated . ting lark 'ell ' American i■ points below last veai • alignrr ent EASTERN DIVISION age. * W L Fct GB "There's no doubt that Brakes * Suspension Baltimore Washington 20 8 714 - 16 11 .593 3'a PLAYOFFS THIS WEEK have to start hitting a if we want to get back * Boston 14 10 583 4 Wheel balancing * Steering Detroit 11 13 458 7 the race." Spartan fi New York 11 13 .458 7 Coach Frank Pellerin * /M teams fight to the wire 3 13 143 13 ^ LISKEY'S Auto Safety Center Cleveland If we don't hit. we ar going to win enough ganv "Our lack of hitting Minnesota 16 7 696 124 SOUTH LARCH IV 4-7346 14 10 583 21.. play offs the Babes. home-run Olson did not allow put added pressure on By JIM ALBl'LOV are 13 11 542 3'. and Baumadrprs. and the Zookeep help r Rub 11 .> Ml to reach the outfield pitching and defense am 'hicago 8 of the Independent League as fi pitched a one-hitter BOB FELLOWS ers Taliforma 8 State News Intramural W :ters C.W. Moss of H olden, and the- heat Toi - Boi in Award's 10-0 win over Seattle 8 Monday's results m'o games Today's games scheduled ing A few teams are still fight¬ for block championships Abelard of Abbot in the Re sidence Hall League 10-0 Don Thompson had a per feet game until he gave up ;i Abel. -Abel intiep single. s only hit was an • Public Service Announcement as the IM Softball League Theta Chi in the Frate Washington at Oakland. ■ night walk with two outs in the last Br' in Dunlop Jim Crotton New York at California • night begins all-University playoffs League All of the above teams hit ome runs to lead C.W. Boston at Seattle, i night > this week have clinched block champion- inning as Worship beat Worm Kansas City at Detroit. < night Minnesota at Cleveland, i night Sunday's late results Oakland 11 Seattle 7 Specials are outstanding team and have a good siiot at the Independent League championship." Chuck an ships, Last week the $ Specials beat Peace. Inc. 4-1. as Tom Drenth pitched a one hitter wood. had a 10-0. home Thompson a 1st run and a triple Mosr Saty to a 12-2 victory over WHERE IN EAST National Cickels. IM director of um¬ Bob Krieger tossed a tv\ LANSING CAN pires. said 'Worship House hitter and Jack Light had fi EASTERN DIVISION of Wonders Hall has an out¬ RBI's to lead the Babes to ; standing pitcher and could go 8-0 shutout all the way in the Residence Men. Hall League " Other teams to watch in the YOU HAVE: is 10 15 400 7 al 9 15 .375 7's WESTERN DIVISION W L Pet GB San Francisco Los Angeles Cincinnati 1 Pr. Slacks dry - cleaneo San Diego Monday 's results No gameS'scheduled 0j> 2Sweaters dry - cleaned at Philadelphia night of. 1 Skirt dry - cleans.!- San Diego at Pittsburgh < ni^ht San Francisco at St Louis Montreal at Atlanta 1 night S' karate club chops opponents The MSU Karate Club won its third annual open tournament Saturday while capturing two second places and a fourth be¬ fore a capacity crowd at the Men s IM Bob Parsons, club instructor, took second place in free fight¬ ing competition at the black belt level for the second con¬ secutive vear r Tuesday, May 6, 1969 S Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Classified 355-8255 Turn to the white pages r and see what yoMr neighbors are doing with Want Ads! . classified 355-8255 Employment For Rent Auto Service & Parts Employment The State News does nof 1 bedroom apartment FURNISHED APARTMENTS for 3 and ACCIDENT PROBLEM ' Call KALA ends Starting salary stove and refrigerator single rooms Girl* only, 21 or over. permit racial or religious MAZOO STREET BODY SHOP Small with experience Well lighted parking No children, no pets For summer and fall terms 5 blocks discrimination in its ad¬ dents to large wrecks Americm Heat furnished 332 from campus Sufficient parking 694- at' i Close to hospital Call MASON MEDICAL TECHNOLOGISTS NEW GE portables and stands mil vertising columns. The and foreign cars Guaranteed work (.1AEHAI. HOSPITAL 677 9521 10 5 7 ed ONLY to MSI' students and fa1 8266 10-5/12 482-1286 East Kalamazoo ro fork Friday nights. 11 pm to 7 30 State News will not accept ulty $8 84 month 1 includes tax I RI - Y PI Mil (U-LRATORS'I i nt only ASCP registered or eligi SI MMER SUBLET 4 man. air advertising which Jiscrim jle Would consider non-registered STATE MANAGEMENT CORPOH \ NEWLY MARRIED? con¬ • AUTOMOTIVE AlTOMATIt CAR Wash only 50 ! D iv i Evening- . Full or part I TION 444 Michigan Avenue :i] ditioned. swimming pool Reduced inates against religion, cents It the best in town You f cualified through experience Ex TANCLEWOOD s • EMPLOYMENT | t Mie. Some experience Alpha- | ' ,client salary Apply SPARROW HOS 351-3797 5-5/' race, color or national or • FOR RENT ' Numeric. lall Mrs. Kathryn i 48761!I iglr. ! Phoenix, THL SERVICE PUR- 1 TV RENTAI.S i)E 19' portable $ APARTMENTS • FOR SALE per month including ftand Call • LOST & FOUND ! E U' CORP., Subsidiary of ' IX) YOl' need ; CULVER COMPANY 351-8862 . 1 Bdrm., unfur., from $124.50 hack of KOKD BAR • PERSONAL j II \l. 2:01 E. (jrand River I Avenue, Lansing, Mich. | If you have for interview Albert Street. East I^nsing 351-7880 • PEANUTS PERSONAL FOREIGN CAR owt $20 CASH bonus for sublease of • REAL ESTATE | 4H912 Tel: (SIT) 485-5495 ! All I udents only Low purtysiM- torner apartment Also • SERVICE Erju.tlOp^ortii'iityEmploy- $55 1 educed rent 351 3378 3-5 6 urs UNIVERSITY NEEDED ONE man Chalet, summer • TRANSPORTATION iff*) MASON BODY SHOP 812 East K.tla NORWOOD APARTMENTS Fur sublet $42 per month No deposit ) TE( *; ists • WANTED mazoo Street Since !940 Com nished now renting for summer and 351-3218. 3-5/7 plete auto painting and collision 1 YTO I'KCIINOLOtilSTS IV-iTeDIATE OPENING Full or part fall Reduced summer rates Call FURY. 1963 convertible Excellent service IV5-0256 . t*;lc employment Transmitter engi Aportm*nts NEED ONE girl for summer term FC(.' Class DEADLINE condition Call 332-1630. 6 8 p m rr'?r First license re- < lose to campus Colonial House TROV.BR I DOE ENCO q tred A good place to study Call MARIGOLD APARTMENTS 911 Man Open under Apartments 351-0589 3-5/6 + 5-1334 15-5 21 gold Avenue New deluxe 1-bedroom 1 \PlTOI. NEAR Pleasant studio 1 P.M. one class day be¬ furnished 2-man apartments avail Kitchen privileges Single g.rl ulty discount 7 days a week 10-5 13 fore publication. E'VlINEERING STUDENT Full time able now for summer and fall leas Nea r bus 11 nes 372 4583 5-5 7 Cancellations - 12 noon one DRAFTSMEN NEK s fnmer and part-time fall opening 1 ng Phone IV 9^9651 or 332-2335 () Scooters & Cycles for M E class day before publica- i<. our engineeririg dept CEDAR OREENS summer sublet Air NORTHWINl) MERCEDES BFNZ 1961 n «jor to handle drafting -.ltd special Beal Street Apartments FARMS CHECK WITH us before v.*i buv f "Jjecl assignments under supervision work Mechanically |* Leasing this week, i' 1 i i^ck 332-8821 HONDA OF HASLETT Honda bikes <» a project engineer Must be an from catnpus. 2-3 man uniis. Faculty Apartments parts and riding ; & Perienced draftsman Interviews CAPITOL NEAR Single girl to share PHONE v^il be held May 2nd or Mav 14th Model apartments open b:30- Deluxe 2 bedroom Furnished, air- 351-7880 MERCl'RV METEOR Haslett Road 1'h A -ply JOHN BEAN DIVISION 1305 7:30 p.tn. Mon.-Fri. 216 lit_.il carpeted $55 484- 355-8255 condition, faculty owne & ath C«>dar lansing. EQUAL Op Street. Apt. 2A. EAST LANSING 1-bedroom fur¬ records i nished apartment $125 mouth includ¬ 3518971 (r ftunity Employer 5-5 6 332-0041 351-37J.> utilities Parking From June RATES I MMER i.FASINti, 126 Milford ing 10 And. large 3 bedroom furnished Hi I N( ER -FLt)ORMAN LEASING. IMMEDIATE mcupam Street 2 man deluxe furnished, air MERCl'RY METEOR 196.) 2. ■ go-id sized Fall term $230 month COLONIAL APARTMENTS Bur- plus utilities 1 day S 1.50 Real economy fine condition r an> 4 nights per week Room and conditioned $140 372-5767 or 489 Phone 332-2361 3.5.7 C 'ard $2 25 per hour Resort HoM 15tf per word per day engine Asking 1425 351-8971 l-lvdri*ini liirmsh«'(i For f 1st Tawas. Michigan Phone Mrs 3 days $4.00 sionjil. SI MMER TERM Campus Hill. Air- * iderson for interview 382 3451 gradu.'-te students 13 l/2< per word per day K'.ST SIDE Apartments. 2 bedr(Him conditioned. dishwasher. 4 persons 17 5 22 $45 each 332-0251 possibilities Furnished or partly S-5'6 5 days ...... $*.50 fiirm hco $125 and $150 a month B/.RTENDER available to l3f per word per day $110. nights per Renting n<^» Summer or fall 351 - week r,K»m and board REFERENCES leading Call' 5ii23 10-5 15 (based on 10 words per ad) REQUIRED Resort hotel East Ta There will be * service was Michigan Phone Mrs Ander v. 382-3451 17 5 22 Summer and bookkeeping cli?rge if Ml stang cowertim:*: i'w: University Villa this ad is not paid within .speed 6-cylinder Dirk irten M; HOUSEKEEPER C«M>K Princeton Arms Employment one week. top Excellent conditi'tn ».2T VYii •ept Full and part time summer po¬ Ml'STANG CONVERTIBI.I i»6 V Beechwood sitions for V1SL' students with ''•me private rixim. T\ Nursemaid 2316. until 10 p m The State News will be 2-3-4 Man Units full time merchant whole¬ HELP W \N II I ready employed References re responsible only fir the • irrd 484 4584 or after 5 pm 351 71 I EAST ARTS saler. Excellent compensation firf=t day's incurred in?-er- S50 par man -- 4 man 71J Burcham Drive programs and meaningful ex¬ OLDSMOBILE K 85 1 S67 per man-- 3 man steering ami ' perience. Automobile re¬ pi.#er Excellent condition Tl \lP51- per man or. •:NT A TV from a TV Halstead tion, phone . . . i«00 per month >o(' per man on J- • OLDSMOBILE 1963 Cutla* Call The Society Automotive IE J AC TV RENTALS I\ 9-9651 or 351- • Management Co. Corporation 'ble Faculty owned bucket seats 1350 332n> steering brakes, real Employment new 5 year 50 000 fash price $2,595 oi BCICK SKYLARK ! PONTIAC CATALINA able good iooking i $550 Call 332-0157 CAMARO !%8 V -an lunches UM VOII ' .rr« Also n»-..l lor «iut or .all : Mr- -.11 student apartments 2 bedroom CHEVY 1MPALA 1966 4 door pow Pa'lis at the POLO BAR ED7-t«57 er steering and b.akes Sl.i95 or best offer 35.-0981 ifterS 3« p m 5^> 12 FXI'UH CHEVROLET hardtop V-8 good family rar Take r i%R automat.( Impal POR.VHE tras Exc< now leasing for fail . ►1PI.OVFRS o. ERI I model open i HEVROl.ET door brakes Sharp IMP A hardtop Powi M; A^or, - F ri 12:00-4:30 p.m. Youll never see ihis at NorBiwind Sat fi Sun 1:00-5:00 p.m. Aprs. Weve got more parking 18 older anv other apartnfenl If you ore com°fex «'OMET 1%I Mec or ,ige 353-1.380 •erpersonol Happenirg' CORVETTE 1954 2M. Interpersonal Dating phone 332-5051 Reserve your fall term apartment ."»ow •►Service Only S60.00 IXlfXiF DART conv. VOLKSWAGEN jO.BOX 2137, Ann \rbor,Mk --Ll— Ml power new tir Suffering from ex| 8832 or 35! 4469 ri5.i 29.J4 .132 1179 DODGE POI.ARA , <;kt a 0 : r .*.;nc Open Dailj 9-5; Ueekencs By Appointment Management, 2771 Northwind Drive Phone: 337-0636 mit ^ CROSSWORD PUZZLE VOLVO 122S I t FAIRI.ANE GTA vw SOLUTION Of YESTtRDAY S FUZZIF I SERVICE MAV SPE Muffler Installation Nov-1 what did ynr Hvnk we Tieant? /ou're kidding! We re talking about Includin., pjrt^, la ■ q it . >an apartments with air conditioning, shag car¬ Rebui11 E ngines peting, raCo- f' rr'it.T ■ and vivid wall decor. A swimming pool, and the TROPHIES & PLAQUES "Pit" pai *. >. • ge -vhcre you'l! attend free T.G.'s every month. We re $175.U0 w.th txci.u! a , ove# iooo rROPHit: on display jp tj lMt?7 only. talk: 1 g nbo » 1' ' A:>^rtmenlr.--loaded with extras and priced from only no wa/t/ng iMMECIATt OHJVfUr . rp, c 0j pncel fof juenh. > PurchaMS Front End Overhaul See 731 today! the north end of M A.C. Models open >49.30 includin parts, tax, ;.id labor. S.-danb t:p tv JVC5 daily See our cidcnt manager apartment 206A or 106C or call onJy. J.R. Culver Co. 3020 VINE ST Phone • // 485-0643 Wary Cuslion Spur/in^ Cjoodl »IK N Of MICH. W£ST Of SHA«S Lansing Foreign Cars 220 A bert M. - Abovtf Knapp's Campus Center - 351-8862 LANSING'S VO'jSt Of TROKHif S" 4b5-7wer Everyday Discount Prices. C-5/8 ment of the Auditorium. ten acres, reasonable price for Communists hope to create BIHTHDAY CAKES--7"-$3.64; 8 groups Near East Lansing. 351- power or authority vacuum in 8503. 2-5 7 Songs and dances, performed $4.18; 9'-$5 20 Delivered KWAST which they can move." Serotk BAKERIES. 484-1317 C-5/8 by foreign students, will be said. EAST LANSING Furnished 4-bedroom Real Estate staged at 2 p.m. and at 8 p.m. SEWING in the Auditorium. The blueprint lor actit faculty home Mid-June to July 24 MACHINE clearance sale $55 a week ED 2-4790 1-5/6 Brand new portables-$49.50 $5.00 THREE BEDROOM Colonial, family The Festival is open to the spelled out in the SDS doci per month. Large selection of recon¬ room, fireplace Near schools, shop¬ ments I have read is one < MATURE RESPONSIBLE couple. Ap¬ ditioned used machines. Singers. public without charge. ping, MSU. Assume 6 per cent fi¬ violence and of contempt ft proximately June 15-September 4 Our Whites. Necchis. New Home and nancing. $32,500 Call owner. 351- 2-bedroorn home. Everything fur¬ 'many others." $19 95 to $39.95 orderly democratic proces: nished $150 monthly References Terms EDWARDS DISTRIBUTING 5972. O Service es." Serotkin continued " The 332-1746. " 1-5/6 COMPANY. 1115 North Washington. contain detailed instructions fc EAST LANSING-Wardcliff area A PAULA ANN HAl'GHEY A unique <39-6448 C-5 8 HOUSE NEAR Brody on Michigan quality built 2-year old. 3-bedroom. quality thesis service IBM typing, disrupting classes. colleg (jfirrard 4 speed changer 20 watt L-shaped ranee with carpeted of¬ multilith printing and hard binding. activities and other function Spring and summer $45-$48 per fice in basement, fireplace in liv¬ 337-1527. c month 355-0536 3-5 8 fought amplifier i extra outputs >. conducted by the so-ealle f night FM tuner. Speakers in con¬ ing room, country kitchen with beai ceiling 332-5760 1-5 6 ANN BROWN* Typist and multilith. establishment " s' *le. 882-4916 3-4 6 offset printing. Dissertations, theses, He called for a two-poin N XW OPEN for business - OPTI- TRADE OR SELL Lake Michigan re¬ manuscripts general typing. IBM program by concerned citizen: 19 years experience 332-8384 c t VL DISCOUNT at 2615 East Mich- sort community residential-commer¬ to combat SDS influence ONE BEDROOM furnished duplex 1 in Avenue, ground floor Free cial income property for East Lan¬ "We must first take actior Summer term only $135/month f 'rking at rear 372-7409. C sing area property Phone 351- TERM PAPERS, thesis manuscripts, to Near M-78 and Hagadorn. 351- general typing IBM Selectric. investigate SDS and othet like groups and to expose theii JA.NET. 337-2603 20-5 5 FOUR-BEDROOM house-near Bur¬ real purposes, leaders and THREE GIRLS cham and Hagadorn Big lawn, with for near-by. large source ot funds " he said barbeque. 351-8342. after 6pm 5-5 12 Yon and "Secondly, we must com¬ your roommates should consider renting a large two-bedroom S' SREO -1968 Admiral portable municate with ( >sts $90 new; will sell for $50 our young people, apartment at Burcham Woods. Twelve and 9-month leases available not preach to them, to ( 111372-7477. aftep 5 p.m 35 7 help beginning September 15. For information call E.L. Management 351-7880 them see what is happening, PAINTING AT low winter prices model phone 332-3711 K H 24. stereo component, turn NEED A JOB DONE'' People who do that is. that their commendable Free estimates. Call BOB MAY. t ble. speakers and FM Dennis. them advertise in the Classified 393-4173. 20-5 8 idealism and willingness to be¬ 3 2-8641 3-5 7 Ads Check now come actively involved in the WHY LOSE damage deposit? huge task of bettering our so¬ WOMEN: Under 21 and your UNFURNISHED THREE or 4-bedroom want to Carpets cleaned at rate to fit stu¬ house By June 1. Latest June 15 ciety is being misused and mis¬ dent budget. 355-7968 3-5 7 Call Family Radio. 676-2488 3-5 7 directed by those who seek to MSN'S SUITS. : move off campus fall term? t >ble Music cpera. 482-3277 < DRESSMAKING: tions. GOWNS and altera¬ Experienced. charge. Call 355-1040 . Reasonable 20-5 29 ONE GIRL mer term, Call 351-8421 to share our apartment sum prefer graduate student 3-5 7 destroy improve it our society. not HALF PRICE-custom AM FM stereo NEED TWO girls for extra large 2- bedroom modern duplex Furnished amplifier, 2 speakers, record chang¬ er Tenor guitar; electric grill, .Typing Service BLOOD DONORS NEEDED $7 50 for ,11 positive A negative. B negative SN sports editor $50 per month. 332-5144. 3-5 6 broils and bakes 882-2511 3-5 7 and AB negative $10.00 O negative- CAMPUS IDEAL BARBI MEL Typing, multilithing $12.00 MICHIGAN COMMUNITY FOR 6 students, completely furnished on East Side of Lansing SET OF Great R;r': _ the Western No job too large or too small Block off campus. 332-3255 C BLOOD CENTER. 507' * E Grand named for '69-'70 VIEW Close to campus For further infor World Will SO»- Mint condi¬ River. East Lansing. Above the new tion. $200 393-5177. 5-5.6 mation call IV 9-9634 3-5 6 SECRETARIAL BOOKKEEPING Campus Book Store. Hours: 9 a.m. Jeff Elliott, Fenton junior APARTMENTS Service: Typing and mimeograph¬ to 3:30 p.m. Monday. Tuesday and FlARPSICHORDS AND Clavichords Friday: Wednesdav and Thursdav has been appointed State News COLLEGE ROAD-Duplex Carpet KEYBOARD SALES. Grand Ledge, ing. Phone 694-9753 O 12 to 6:30 p m. 337-7183. ed. remodeled, modern kitchen C sports editor lor the coming t "en Sundavs. closed Saturdays 627- Leases are still available $135, utilities paid Couple only i 12. 627-9002 5-5/6 OFFSET PRINTING of theses and dis¬ year. A journalism student FRIENDLY ROOMMATE summer or for our luxurious, air-con¬ Deposit. No pets. 676-5983, 676- sertations from either your typed and former State News sports original or multilith master Low¬ longer Over 21 Share spacious 4- ditioned apartments. g ECTRIC GIBSON guitar and Kala- girl 351-0239. 1-5 5 writer and copy editor, Klliott est prices available COPYGRAPH i azoo amplifier. Excellent condi- SERVICES. 487-5906 29-5*29 served three years as sports These apartments are the t >n 372-4278 5-5 8 editor of the Fenton Indep finest in supervised hous¬ dent. C UM SET: 3 piece Slingerland with ing. They allow you luxur¬ s. 353-6047 5-5 7 ■ ird cases. Silver sparkle. Excel- ious apartment living . . . * ntcondition Best offer 351-3607 even if you are under 21. FOR LEASE 3-5 6 $300 month Room for WATER CARNIVAL a 4 to 6 men Large yard. Outside cooker Garage. Close to campus E AMOND BARGAIN Wedding and en- 332-0939 10-5 13 agement ring sets. Save 50 per HWUUCHTING THe THREE-BEDROOM home for rent 1224 lain and fancv diamonds $25-150 North Grand River, Lansing $175 <'ILCOX SECONDHAND STORE per month. Call 882-0185 15-5 14 )9 East Michigan. 485-4391 C CAMPUS VIEW APARTMENTS V CUUM t's. Hoovers. CLEANERS : Rainbow Rex-aires. Kir- 324 EAST MICHIGAN f lectrolux $7 88 and up (Guaran t edi DENNIS DISTRIBUTING. 316 332-6246 f Cedar. Opposite City Market. C 487-5753 or 485-8836 A lima I s PRIVATE ROOMS for men av able in Place Your student house Share I vLMATION PUPPY: Beautifully chen, bath, living room $13 wt larked AKC registered Perma ly for summer 332-3979 2 ent shots. Phone 332-3943 5-5 6 PEOPLE REACHER WANT AD EAST room LANSING, without unsupervised r cooking, private FREE tions. KITTENS, black, assorted combina¬ orange, white Box SATWAYMY mff\ lb trance, bath, parking $180 sumr 3-5/8 Today Just clip, complete, mail. trained 332-2910 ETS (IN SALE . . . term Phone 332-2361 3 STATE NEWS will bill you later. ROOMS. CLOSE, cooking, inexp sive. Summer, fall 398 Park La 351-8164 5- 3 MALE PUPPIES. Mother pure ^amoved 8 weeks, -amily dog. 351-0277 evenings gentle, good 3-5 6 FRee\ 'S e^k-ooM MV Consecutive Dates to Run . Heading SUMMER TERM Room and board. $225 PHI MU Sorority. 301 5 X10' MARLETTE Furnished Charles' Street. ED 2-8835 3-5 8 bedroom, kitchen and living area ully applianced and carpeted Near ROOM. BOARD. Fellowship-$190 ampus Approximately $3,000 Tom term ELSWORTH CO-OP. 332 3574 -*ardley. 351-0250 5-5 8 Apply now for fall residence 1-5*6 Lost & Found nust be $« REWARD for sign - ANTIQUES-- placed in person. \da s Treasure Vault " No questions isked 2500 East Mount Hope. Lan¬ 10 Words or Less: 1 3 days - $4.00 5 sing 373-6023 3-5/7 day - $1.50 days - $6.50 15^ per word 40# per word 65# per word Over 10 Words Add; MOBILE HOME FOR SALE"' Get fast results with a low cost Clas¬ □ □ □ sified Ad Dial 355-8255 today! Mail to: Michigan State News LOST BROWN leather purse between 346 Student Services lake Lansing & East Lansing Re¬ Bldg. ward 351-3770; 351-3696 ; 353-6577 MSU East Lansing, Mich. Tuesday, May 6, 1969 10 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan fU' DRIVING COURSE Bcaurta |9Mmgg |§ bom || Police study pursuit maneuvers IMMMAWUSI HlllMEAMUSl fwKKAmisl jwMumfi ^WALS fr m other departments began By RICH BERNARD Slate News Staff Writer phase of classroom instruction as reviewing general driving of course. the cones which mark the the a third officers run are graded in order to determine on re living the training as part a&vm Jurui Remember how Broderick skills and discussing the physi¬ Another exercise, which must if they have achieved the skills of the mid-Michigan Police Crawford, in the old TV series cal forces which effect vehicles and techniques of safely stopping A< ademy. be completed in a limited time "Highway Patrol," would slam and the psychological forces that a violator. period, tests and develops the on the brakes of his "56 Buick affect drivers. officers' skills in executing the • Approximately 300 officers h ve been certified by MSU cop car, spin the steering wheel He said that the classes then pursuit turns and in handling The present training program hard to the left and take off such simulated everyday situa¬ is a 'modification of course p. lice as having graduated from take up the theory behind the tl ? driving course Among these in the other direction in pu- maneuvers and techniques that tions as driving through an eight- taught by the North Carolia aie officers from other local suit of the bad guys? the officers are taught to use foot chute, backing and park¬ State Police which Sgt. Hay¬ d» partments Since the MSU Dept. lic Safety introduced its Pur¬ of Pub¬ in pursuing and stopping motor¬ ists who have violated some ing. Actual Practice wood Julian of the campus po¬ lice was sent to observe in the from East Lan- si ig and Ingham County. OSCAR MAYER suit Driving Course for police The final test of the trainee- spring of 1966. North Carolina officers three years ago. such had developed the program in Capt. John A. Zutaut. com- "Upon meeting a violater." officers' skills come in two n ander of the University po- tire - screeching, high - speed chase maneuvers in mid-Michi¬ McEntee said, "the officers are taught to immediately scan the and select the best of the on-the-road ions. one pursuit simulat¬ during the day and order to attack habits state troopers had de¬ the driving li ;e. perhaps gave the best p 'ssible tribute to the program FRANKS gan have been left exclusively area one at night. veloped which were contribut¬ ' There has been only one for such TV cops. four recommended pursuit In this final segment, the ing to police accidents. MSU police and officers from turns, depending upon the exist¬ officers take alternate turns a* cident involving an MSU pa- Regular'or Beef ti al car since the initiation of other police departments who Course Begins ing circumstances. in turning after pursuing and tie are members of the Mid-Michi¬ Execute Maneuvers Julian began teaching a program." Zutaut said. stopping a car which approaches " 59c ind that was a non-reportable gan Police Academy, under "After giving the proper sig¬ them from the oppo ite direct¬ course adapted to the Michigan ofte on an icy road in which 1 lb. pkg. whose auspices the course is nal and checking traffic, officers ion. After two practices in each climate to MSU officers the the car slid into a post." operated are instructed in are instructed to execute the of the day and night simulations. following July. Later officers everyday driving maneuvers. maneuver, then take off after They learn techniques of par¬ the violator." he explained Grand Prize allel parking and proper turns, Of the four turns which are One-man, one-vote debate Lean Pork Steak as well as the safest and most taught, two of them involve efficient ways of pursuing law the use of side roads. A "side violators. About 20 per cent of the road right' necessitates stop¬ TENDER CUBED PORK CUTLETS two-week course consists of theoretical. classroom in¬ ping past the road, backing into it and then driving forward and turning left into the new dir¬ nears convention stages Alpine Chopped Veal Steak struction; the rest of the course ection. is divided into eight behind- In a "side road left." the WASHINGTON i AP i-Action Court rulings may reach 38 institutional convention - the the-wheel exercises. Six of officer turns into the road as by only one more state legis¬ this year 'rst since the Constitution was these carried out in a lature is necessary to kick off The Iowa legislature became are if executing a normal left turn, ; rafted in 1789. set up in Parking Lot a king-sized dispute in Con¬ the 33rd last week. At the same time he plans to course then backs out with the car Y and the other two exercises gress over the Supreme Court s This prompted Sen. Joseph i itroduce pointed in the new direction. a constitutional actual on-the-road simu¬ one-man. one-vote rulings D. Tydings. D-Md.. to issue a i'tnendment that would permit arc U-turn Best lations. If traffic and road width per¬ The legislatures of 33 states statement Monday saying. If hctors other than population to now are listed as calling on one more state calls for a 1 e taken into account in the Cpl. Andrew P McEntee. who mit. the safest and most ef¬ Congress to convene a consti¬ constitutional convention, we presently conducts the Pursuit ficient method is a U-turn. apportionment of one branch of tutional convention, one short could face constitutional Campbell Soups -- Mix a Match Driving Course, outlined the Unlike TV policemen, an officer : tate legislatures. program's objectives as veloping attributes of safety, de¬ is taught to come to a complete stop and check traffic before of the required two-thirds. crisis unparalleled in the his¬ tory of the Republic." It also would extend this to or Senate Republican Leader Article V of the Constitution city and county councils, school precision and confidence in the attempting the maneuver Everett M. Dirksen of Illinois, Turkey Vegetable officers we train. The final option open to offi¬ provides that "on the applicat¬ boards and other units of gov¬ Chicken Noodle American spearheading the drive said ion of the legislatures of two- ernment and permit a varia¬ Vegetable Beef Myth cers is a Y-turn. used when Chicken We try to break down the the road is not wide enough Monday he expects a 34th state thirds of the several states- tion of as much as 10 per cent RjCe great American myth that any¬ body can drive a car." Entee explained "We help the or the shoulders are not firm Mc¬ enough for a U-turn. The driving exercises set to join the move soon "We're told a working on it." he reporter, hut he declined Congress shall call a conven¬ tion ments." for proposing amend¬ between the most and the least populous congressional tricts in each state. dis¬ Chicken'n Stars >am of Mush 5/79^=^.5/89 officers find their red line - up in Parking Lot Y include a to say which state legislature But it does not specify how the point for a given driving figure-eight with 40-foot radii he is counting on. delegates to such a convention Coupon situation past which the officer which must be negotiated with¬ Aides of Dirksen said it ap¬ should be chosen. When and if 200 count can no longer be confident in in a timed period both forwards pears the number of state legis¬ a 34th state his ability vehicle." to handle his and backwards. The trainee- officers are penalized for latures petitioning for a conven¬ tion to draft a constitutional legislature acts. Dirksen plans to introduce a resolution pro¬ Scotties Facial McEntee described the initial touching knocking over any amendment to undo the Supreme viding for the convening of a or Tissue 5/s1.00 Limit 5 with $5.00 Food Purchase Expires May 10th Coupon wihwhwwh Pet Ritz Apple Pies DMtHi 19c Spartan Breakfast Drink 1/2 gal. 49c Florida Grapefruit And Oranges shorten it. T ry a tai- gy pizza or one of our 5 lb. Bag 59c great sandwiches. All delivered instantly at Mum Plants 51.99 GOODRICH'S SPARTAN It's the movement supporting equal rights for sneakers. Who says you can't wear them with whatever you want? Mr. Sneekers is on your side! Styled to look good, made for comfort and "We Give Gold Bond Stamps" support, designed for swinging. IN SPARTAN SHOPPING CENTER Get with the sneakers spirit now. Harrison at Trowbridge Wherever Mr. Sneekers goes, Between Spartan Village and can laces be far behind? Cherry Lane Apartments MRiSNifUKS Div. of Mitsubishi Corp., 180 Madison Avenue, New York, N. Y. 10016