Thursday Cooler. . . The great MICHIGAN and cloudy with occasional STATE NEWS ■ . rain likely. High today, 70 and . . . are great only because we are on our knees. Let us rise! STATE low tonight in the lower 40s. --Stirner UNIVERSITY East Lansing, Michigan Thursday, May 8,1969 Vol. 61 Number 174 Questions over Wilson conflict spur By LARRY LEE State News Staff Writer action to halt MSU funds teria sit-in have been people of the state of Michigan. 2 That the administrators of the th" Abena Ji'jt Huff said, "I would concur with distinguished that not representative from only the board should gation to reassure the legislature what was done. " As yet, the board itself has not re¬ A resolution threatening to withold The three requests in Swallow's res¬ University show to the legislature what kr ow the facts and decisions and have ceived a full report, but Huff expects funds from MSU for the next school olution are: process was used in extending a "fair it dear in their minds that due process Adams to have a report at the next year was circulated in the Michigan 1. That the administrators of the hearing" to the two supervisors, Joseph w- s followed, but the board has the obli- board meeting beginning Thursday. legislature Wednesday by Rep. Joseph University reveal to the legislature the E. Trantham and Elaine M Mishler. "I have a deep respect for the pub¬ Swallow, R-Alpena full extent of the agreement made April who were demoted as a result of events lic right to know." he said. Thirty legislators reportedly had 30. 1969. and present such facts as they of April 28-30. That the student body of the Uni¬ Stevens and Adams were unavailable signed the resolution declaring their feel necessary to show that such agree¬ 3. intent to refuse to approve appropriat¬ ment was in the best interests of the versity, either by resolution of its stu¬ Grier canceled for comment. ions to MSU until three requests relat- University, the student body and the dent government or by a legitimate poll The Studerjt body already has issued conducted by its student government, Dr. William Grier, co-author of "Black statements revealing its position. R^ge," will not speak today as scheduled express to the legislature its position for the Provost Lecture Series on "The During events surrounding the Garskof relative to violent and unlawful activit¬ BUck Experience in America," due to controversy during winter term. ASMSU ies which disrupt the orderly process il'i*ess. published a position paper in February of the University. Faculty petition backs Swallow admitted the resolution "may denouncing the use of violence in settl¬ The lecture has been canceled since no Sit-out unfortunately work a hardship on the ing campus disputes, and a petition de¬ replacement could be found.1 An attempt crying the use of force on the MSU vast majority of students who are mind¬ Owen cafeteria stands deserted wi?l be made to reschedule both Grier campus gathered 13,000 signatures in fully seeking an education." all his co-author, Dr. Price Cobbs, who during the residents' boycott. Swallow said he is not asking that the March. Till to cancel an engagement here a few Plans call for the boycott to con¬ Adams' sit-in handling Wednesday evening he Trantham said House vote on the resolution, but that v t/>ks ago due to illness of his wife. tinue until prices are lowered. they sign it to "let them know we are had just heard of the resolution and did not want to comment on it. State News photo by Lance LagonI Nearly 100 faculty and graduate stu¬ Charles P. Larrowe, professor of dents have indicated their support of economics and one of the sponsors of "But this action that we are taking the petitions, said is the only action the legislature can Acting President Adam's handling of that a great many the Wilson Hall cafeteria take-over by people are unhappy with the outcome, take because control of MSU is vested PRICE BATTLE black students last week. rather than the procedure, of the en¬ in an autonomous board of trustees." he said. Owen cafeteria closes In a commendation circulated by five tire situation. faculty members, the 94 signatories "If people in support of Adams didn't Referring to the praise Trustee Don placed their names "on record as speak up. then even their silence would Stevens, D-Okemos. gave Acting President supporting and commending Dr. Walter be construed as supportive of the Adams in his handling of the affair. Swal¬ Adam's leadership in handling the Wil¬ critics."' Larrowe said. low said, "Autonomous control is desirable son Hall Affair.' " Among other points, the commendation boycott cuts business for the promotion of academic freedoms, noted that Adam's has "respected the rights of students to express their griev¬ ances, created a climate for the full dis¬ but these freedoms do not extend license to the board of trustees to violent or unlawful activities." condone as cussion of crucial issues and responded Trustee Warren Huff. D-Plymouth. so long as our help is being paid, we set up last week met twice to discuss quickly to prevent violence." feel we can put them, to work at more the problem. took exceptions to the legislators' in¬ tent. "I don't think the legislature has useful purposes. Fo^t<#"said. Acting President Adams then asked (See page 4 for complete text.) to withhold appropriations to obtain in¬ The Owen cafeteria was shut down Foster pointed out tjiat he had offered the committee to do two things, Wil¬ The commendation was circulated in formation," he said. — Tuesday by Emery Foster*, manager a number of proposal^to Owen residents kinson said. First, they were to look the Dept of Social Science. American "I do not agree with that part of of dormitory and food services. The regarding possible alternatives to the at the problem and the trust obligat the Thought and Language. Mathematics, action followed a student food boycott present cafeteria system He said that ions involved, and second, they were to resolution that seems to imply that the Economics and the School of Labor and legislature is without a source of know- that began Monday. the best proposals is for 10 meals re-evaluate the pricing structure of Industrial Relations. We are not doing any business and a week (two per day) at a cost the food in Owen Hall of $143 a term or $2.51 a day. This In the second meeting, Foster pre¬ proposal would involve an assured sented his proposals to the student mem¬ volume on a contract basis, he said. bers of the committee. Elliot Sanderson Council adopts resolution "I don't see how we can operate one and Larry Lang, who asked Wilkinson feeding operation at a loss." he con¬ and Foster to appear before a group of tinued. Owen Hall students Monday night. Foster If Owen -were to operate at a loss, presented his proposals again at the Mon¬ the Owen cafeteria would have to be day meeting. subsidized by the undergraduate resi¬ for U' employe hearings Wilkinson said the management feels dence halls. Ths would result in the that a change in the pricing structure undergraduate students subsidizing the is not possible, while the students feel graduate students eating. Foster said. they have not had their problem i be conducted by a three-man committee were denied due process at the hearing last I feel I have done everything I ely answered By MARILYN PATTERSON that is acceptable to both the administra¬ week. consciously know how to do and have U honorary offers State News Staff Writer The Academic Council Wednesday adopt¬ tion and representatives of the two em¬ Killingsworth had submitted a proposal had people both on and off campus ed a resolution to correct alleged injustices ployes, the resolution said. Tuesday that the council condemn the un¬ examine the problem and suggest pro¬ blood drive prizes to two food services employes during the take-over of Wilson Hall cafeteria and to prevent future occurrences of the same sit¬ The resolution also asks Acting President Walter Adams to establish a committee to develop a permanent adjudication process fairness of the proceedings toward Miss Mishler and Trantham. Albert Rabin, professor of psychology, posals," he said. "Mr. Roger Wilkin¬ son and I and my staff have done every¬ thing we know how. The next move McCarthy: Fifty-four more pints of blood were col¬ , for all administrative and professional em¬ tod offered a substitute motion that the is up to them. " Kennedy uation. lected by 4 30 p.m. Wednesday, making The resolution, introduced by Richard ployes of the University. "ouncil appoint a committee to investigate George Vanburen, manager of Owen 213 pints the total for the first three days E. Sullivan, professor and chairman of his¬ It "strongly urges" that the recommen¬ ■he situations leading to and the conse¬ Hall, and Wilkinson, acting vice-presi¬ of the American Red Cross- campus blood dations of the Committee of Sixteen be quences of the "Wilson Hall affair." dent for business and finance, had nc drive. tory, calls for a new hearing for Elaine Scabbard and Blade, the national mili¬ tary honorary, is offering prizes to the two Mishler. manager of Wilson Hall, and Jo¬ seph Trantham. food services manager of Wilson Hall, if they so desire. implemented and that Adams appoint a multi-racial committee "to recommend procedures for investigation complaints Both Rabin and Killingsworth withdrew heir motions in favor of the Sullivan reso- comment to make regarding the closing of the Owen cafeteria. Wilkinson said the ad hoc committee for 1972 fraternities, sororoties or cooperatives of racial discrimination and insuring re¬ that The new hearing, if it is called for. will (please turn to page 12) Acting President Walter Adams with the highest percentage of donors. WASHINGTON (AP> - Sen Eugene J. dress when discrimination is found." The first prize will be credit at the Coral A hearing committee set up last week McCarthy. D-Minn.. emerged from a co¬ Gables for five cases of beer. The second when members of Black Students' Alli¬ coon of silence Wednesday to tab Sen. Ed¬ prize will be credit for three cases Academic Senate ance (BSA) took over the Wilson Hall cafe¬ PEACEFUL DISSENT ward M. Kennedy of Massachusetts as the The bloodmobile schedule for the re¬ teria recommended that Miss Mishler and current best bet for the 1972 Democratic mainder of the drive is as follows: Hub¬ The Academic Senate will meet at 4 today Trantham be transferred to positions in presidential nomination. bard Hall classrooms from 2-8 p.m. today; in 109 Anthony Hall. Acting President Walt¬ other buildings on campus. Ranging a field of national issues, the and Shaw Hall lower lounge from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Friday. er Adams will deliver a major policy state- C. C. Killingsworth. professor of labor and industrial relations, said that the two ASMSU to hold rally Minnesota senator, who made an unsuc¬ cessful bid for the 1968 nomination, also: -Left the door open to changing his po¬ sition that he will not run for re-election at RO TC F on ing his party's ticket next year. -Criticized President Nixon for college presidents to crack down on urg¬ By WHIT SIBLEY Students' Alliance (BSA' newsletter, the campus demonstrators. State News Staff Writer BSA adviser to the South Complex, chair¬ -Said the Nixon Administration is not Board man and special projects director of the The ASMSU passed a motion pushing hard enough for a settlement in Cabinet's black affairs division. Tuesday to sponsor a rally on the steps Vietnam, but offered no specific sugges¬ of Jenison Fieldhouse May 17 to coincide The board withdrew amendments to ar¬ tions. With the Reserve Officers Training Corps ticles 4.2.1, 4.2.1.06, 4.2 1.0 and 4.2.2 of the Academic Freedom Report (AFR) which -Pledged to work in the current session J ROTC) Field Day. of Congress for a revision of the draft, Chuck Mostov, ASMSU vice chairman, are now before the Faculty Committee which he said is shot through with "injus¬ Aho proposed the motion, said that the on Student Affairs (FCSA) tices and irrationality." Article four of the AFR refers to judi¬ Purpose of the rally is to "promote peace¬ cial process and the student's rights to The Minnesota senator, giving every ful dialogue on the ROTC issue and to ^uide dissent directed toward the field due process of law. indication he does not believe he will be The amendments were passed by last in the running for a presidential nomina¬ lay." The motion passed by an eight to five year's ASMSU board which was under the tion three years frogi now, said that "in Margin, with one voting member .being ab¬ impression that female students accused the early book, the best place to put your of violations of women's signout regula¬ money" is on Kennedy as the Democratic sent. tions were not given the option of a judi¬ opponent for Nixon. 'The representatives from Women's Inter-residence Council and Inter-Coop¬ cial hearing, but were required to have an He said former Vice President Hubert erative Council, senior member-at-large administrative hearing. H Humphrey, the 1968 nominee, is "keep¬ Allen Mintzer, junior member-at-large yilease turn to page 12) ing in training" and could be a serious Bill Rustem and general member-at-large contender. He added that Sen. Edmund Gary Klinsky voted against the motion S. Muskie. of Maine, the 1968 vice presi¬ In other action, the board appointed dential nominee, seems interested in the Mike Hudson. Inkster freshman and can¬ top spot. didate for sophomore member-at-large As for his own future, McCarthy said he doesn't much possibility that he will Council hears in this year's ASMSU general elections, . see . to Cabinet vice president in charge of change his announced decision not to seek student services. re-election. But he added that some cir¬ Richard E. Sullivan, professor and chairman of the History Dept., Introduces a resolution to the Acadenr Hudson has been a member of the Case cumstances he did not anticipate could Ic Council calling for a new hearing for the two Wilson Hall employes that were charged with discrimim Hall General Council, editor of the Black change his position. tion. 2 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Thursday, May S, 1969 Selection By LINDA GORTMAKER Executive Reporter The ASMSU Board expressed had that agreed the over list of the weekend nominations secrecy at any point "The faculty list and the nominations are irks ASMSU said. She said that the student "wide open" his not belief that AUSSC operate unless the list of could "secrecy" tection of but one of privacy" for the can¬ .pro¬ A A ct Cr od student list compare pretty nominations was not revealed didates involved. concern Tuesday night that the should not be open to public well, anyway." Miss Gebelein Hathaway said that it was He iaid it was not a matter of "One student mentioned to All-University Search and Se¬ lection Committee (AUSSCi me the other night that this would not release names of secrecy thing is a phony issue, nominees for MSU's next presi- CIRCULATED ON CAMPUS anyway." Hathaway said. The Committee will have After a closed meeting with greatly detailed information on Dale individuals nominated. We could Hathaway. AUSSC chair¬ the board passed a mot¬ get sued if we let any of.this Petition man. e inquiry information ion to be delivered to the com¬ out." Hathaway = i mittee through AUSSC student He said just giving students representative. Sue Gebelein The motion the names to discuss and not acknowledged trust in AUSSC student repre- the information would be- just 2tt Ry into Chamberlain inzident senatives and "yields to their like giving them a toy or game — discretion." to play with. "However, it (the board > "They can't come up with asserts that to best insure any good decisions on the can¬ aool ere selection of a president com¬ didates if they don't have good whs ,Wt. mitted to serving the students By DARIA SCHLEGA manner consistent with public strings for the city." McGraff bar*. MSU background information.' he A petition asking the U.S. trust graduate student of MSU. an entirely open dis¬ said. House ot Representatives to "un- Ms raff said that Rothbard < Black cussion of candidates is ad- The campus committee circu- McGraff also said that the Students' Alliance is pre =>ured by the Michigan Civ¬ dertake a thorough and public 11 work Corporation Council was guilty "with the committee IOC; per lating the petitions il S cvice Commission to resign Hathawav said earlier Tues¬ day that he planned to explain investigation" of the recent traf¬ fic incident involving Rep ith James McGraff. head of the all-district committee spon- of "not fulfilling the public his leadership of the effort to cent." Hathaway said. He said Miss Gebelein might not Sgree "Beg your pardon's " trust" by holding the meeting rec; 1) Chamberlain because of to the board the committee s Charles E Chamberla soring the peition. A campus behind closed doors. with the secrecy idea, "but she his osition in the state Office of for Mich is being circulated on He noted that Supreme Court will abide by the rules. reasons keeping the nom¬ . committee member noted Pla: liing Coordination. This sign gracing a door in Abbot Hall shows that inations closed. campus "She is uncertain because that while only those of voting Justice Hugo C. Black recently P (Uions may be picked up or someone has been studying his math. Perhaps it's "The board invited me to The petition which is to be she has not really gone through . age could circulate or sign the appeared in an open hearing a sigriVU at the Union 11 a.m. to Einstein's interpretation of Genesis. discuss the issue with them presented to Chamberlain at the process of selecting a presi¬ 11 petition, anyone can sign traffic violation. The Corpora 5 p i,)1, today and Friday. State News photo by Norm Payea and I hope they will listen testimonial dinner given in his dent before." he said. or < irculate the present peti- tion Council did not find Cham and understand our reasons. honor in Jackson May 16 also tion berlain guilty, states that the undersigned do Hathaway said McGraff-said that The Corporation Council not feel that the Corporation ouple of Awards dinner —7— Miss Gebelein. her alternate Mike Geiszer. black student Council ot Washington. D C. has issues are involved "Chamberlain ran on the law guilty because it permits an ab- use of diplomatic immunity by j—j representative as. Lamarr Thorn and his alternate Rich Allen ed against Rep. Chamberlain the case and order East he platform and wrote the Lansing Traffic Code, vet feels above the law. runs the legislators. McGraff said "Diplomatic immunity not intended to cover up inade- lauds 3 faculty Milliken delays endorsing down a policeman, and throws quaeies pf the legislators, but in agriculture his weight around in the Cor- poration Council because he is on the Ways and Means Com- to help the continuity of the legislative process." he said, McGraff took over the Cham- T tree MSU faculty members rectived Outstanding Faculty amendment to parochiaid mittee which controls the purse berlain effort from Robert Roth- Aw; rds at the annual Agricul¬ By SHARON TEMPLETO* er. D-Bay City, to add a token year before 1 fully endorse the ture Honors Banquet Tuesday State News Staff Writer unding of $100,000 for 1969-70 move " nigti. The ind a $44 million appropriation He firmly denied that he had legislature is moving Students cau R'.vognized by students for outstanding contributions to un¬ toward chiaid a solution of the paro¬ problem. Gov. Milljken fiscal 1970-71 for nonpub- lic schools to the public school made any deals' with Demo eratic House leaders regarding dergraduate education were: said aid bill. the passage of the amendment Tuesday morning at a Cap¬ Herniy D. Foth. professor of avoid Governor to carnival soil •science. Gerhardt Schneid¬ er associate professor of itol press conference. Commenting on the passage study amendment The governor explained that although he has not had enough \ Political deal charged The charges of a political deal to gain support for the paro- All students are warned to stay away from all electrical by the House Appropriations tbrc'try. and Woodrow W. Committee of an amendment to time to carefully study the de- chiaid bill were made Mondav wires on both sides of the Red Cedar in the vicinity of the Snyoer. professor of dairy tails of Taxler's amendment, Auditorium. tack parochiaid on the pyblic by Mrs Jane Tate, legislative school aid bill, the he was not surprised to hear of chairman of the Michigan Par governor Gary Ittigson. chairman of productions committee for the rviee the committee's action. ent-Teachers Assn. and said the amendment "is not in- a Water Carnival, said all the wires are "hot and have enough t*ie 1 consistent with guidelines I have "The general procedure to staunch critic of the bill. current to kill someone. College of Agriculture.and Nat- established." , attach an amendment to a bill "I have not arranged any spi Ittigson said that all the wires are cased so that there is no ural Resources. contacted is not new." he said, "but I will real danger to someone stepping on the wires. The committee approved Mon- meetings with legislators. und^rgraduates in making selec- have to study the financial im- the governor said All my de We just don't want people playing with the wires. day night the amendment pro- Ittig- tions for the awards. posed by Rep. J. Robert Tax- plications for the 1970-71 fiscal cisions are made publicly. The amended bill, if passed The wires are being strung for lights, the water winch and the trailers on both sides of the river. The wires will be by the House, will then go to the Senate for consideration An used until Mav 20. Spring $845 million public school bill was recently passed bv aid the Couldn't Our neurotic "anti-Communism Greater complex" gets a penetrating analysis in this "hard-hitting ( report [whichj traces the Coulottes history and growth of anti- Russian and anti-Chinese policies...and suggests more Shooters intelligent alternative actions for the future."* Skirts Slacks Anatomy ol Wide Selection of Colors and Patterns $8 to $14 203 East Grand River Open Wed. 9:30 to 9 unique arr hp and < unusual gifts for Time won't stop . . . H MOTHER'S DAY Tickets on Sale May 11th Water Carnival -- 1969 MAY IIth (Mioim "When you think of Cards" Highlighting Spring Carnival Weekend Friday and Saturday, May 16 & 17 Tickets available at 956 Trowbridge CARD SHOP Across from Home Ec. Bldg. Union -- Campbell's -- Scwoomobile 10:30-8:30 Mon. - F ri. 9:30-5:30 Sat! 309 E. Grand River Ph. 332-6753 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Thursday, Me 1969 3 NEWS A Harvard professor Blocks Experience in America." said "normative values" and gone question into middle class mediocrity?" separate organization and that activities," Hamilton said It wrote that a modernizing society the black thrust has been the ahead to deal with structures he asked the churches have failed- is absolutely essential in summary undergoes for new a constant values and search forms major force questioning Amer- ican values. He contends that the black and white student movements have in Yes, some of them marched Selma, but they left be- terms of present of some groups that these alienation A capsule summary of the day's events frorr of decision-making. When the After World War II we got been properly concerned with what we were integrating them hind people who voted consist- people control the schools, ur wire services. p search stops the society this ideological battle with values well as structure. into-a jungle. Maybe we don't ently against open housing. building code enforcement and The want into the mainstream pre¬ decays. Russia .and stopped check¬ herd start program¬ Kven higher education. Ham- some of the maintenance' fun A black man answered. "En- ing our values." he said me never stopped to ask cisely because it is polluted llton said, has "copped out ctions of law enforcement with racism." he said. ter the major contribution of Hamilton. co-author of what we were giving those on us." Commenting on Hamilton, talking about nec black America." Black Power with He charged that labor has Stokely little blacV kids How much courses required for his own law essary major changes, implied Charles V. Hamilton, speak said that this not engaged in the search Curmichael. did we asl; about the content'' for values or there would be degree, he asked "Where were that perhaps the system of "I don't think any ing Wednesday in the Provost country traditionally Busy with the structure, were no need for the blacks in a the laws on welfare rights and states is archaic. "Chicago Lecture Ser i the "Black assumed the validtv of its giving them a head start is served by having we plant in Detroit to form a tenant rights. the laws rel- has more in common with the I* resident telling < evant to my people''" 'ake area and Gary than with Hamilton claims no major dowstate Illinois. Are we wise presidents to craek do interest in equitable distri- enough'' Indeed, are we nonesi student demonstrators, It is PREPARES FOR LAND POST bution of goods and services, enough to make a major re- When they riot, give em. give vision (regional and metro- much easier to he I're em. give'em more jobs, houses politan government as opposed of the ( nited States than to he president oj lege." Bucher Cmdr. to attend school and camps for their kids on Saturday." able "In political terms, equit- distribution of decision- to current state systemi?" he asked Turning to campus issues during a question and answer —Sen. Eugene J. \le( WASHINGTON intelligence ship who survived This will prepare him to move to the Bureau of Naval Person- Lloyd M Bucher go to North Korean imprisonment al¬ into one jf the making power is needed-we period. Hamilton stated. It />- Navy's senior nel that he is very pleased with know that he who gives can is not a threat of more guns, school and 43 of his Pueblo ready have left the Navy or are management posts this assignment." the Pentagon also, take away. Maybe we don't crew members have drawn new in the process of doing so Bucher 'equested assignment but a question of can univer- said. He will report to Mon- want that jungle of an apart sities really reorient them assignments outlined by the Bucher. 41-vear-old former to the training billet, which Na- terey in July after a period of ment building. ' he said selves to meaningful change Navy Wednesday skipper of the ship, will attend val office!S described as a high- leave. Hamilton warned that and become actually relevant International News ly sought ; fter assignment. The immediate future is thus perpetuation of the welfare a I only fear they will put blacks ('nidi. Bucher has indicated quite different from the one mentality," will bring an arm- into black studies programs U.S. 25th Division troops fought a series ot Buche ight have faced ed-camp response. What sot- hoping the blacks will then A naval court of inquiry had Lebanese skirmishes Wednesday with North Vietnam¬ ial units should perform what leave them alone " recommended he be court-mar¬ ese troops in a touchy area northwest of Sai¬ accuse tialed for failing to resist* the social functions0 We're ing at the level of serious talk- Hamilton warned against in- volvement in the rhetoric of gon where the enemy is reportedly being with¬ North Koreans when they com¬ change. The system must be those who way Relevant drawn in preparation for new attacks. mandeered the intelligence ves¬ totally transformed If not. is becoming a cliche, we don t In chasing the enemy, infantrymen turned up a 19-ton cache of rice and reported killing of attack on b sel in January 1968 Secretary of the Navy John H. Chafee Tuesday set aside that there added Now must we be must violence." talk he about know me riculum an what average and it means-show college eur- 38 North Vietnamese. The recommendation and all other COmmunitv control of what irrelevant B> THK ASSOCIATED PRESS Baath party cliches reached a cres¬ some • • • cendo Tu- sday in a battle near proposals for punitive meas¬ A Lebanese border village The charge brought a sharp ures against Pueblo crewmen, the town if Kater Rikha about The United States has returned to the Soviet is under siege by about 2.000 denial from A1 Saika headquar- seven miiI's from Hasbaya. Le¬ maintaining they had already Arab guerrillas, government ters jn Damascus and a warn- suffered enough. Union a metal object believed to be part of a banese officials said at least sources in Beirut said Wednes- ing to Beirut not to interfere one Lebanese soldier was killed "Soviet spaceship, the State Dept. announced jay The Lebanese accused a with the commandos' foravs and for the first time identi¬ ando outfit ot i aga ist Israel. Show her you Wednesday. Washed ashore in Alaska some fied the attackers as • non- ter-minding the assault. A1 Saika proposed that a com- time ago. the object was returned under Ar¬ A Lebanese communique said Palestinian armed groups." care on mission be set up with the Le¬ Later ticle IV of the Treaty on Rescue and Return the mountain village of Hasbaya. they placed the blame banese army and various guer- close to the Israeli border had rilla organizations to investi- directly upon Al Saika. Mother's Day of Astronauts, which prescribes that space The Ai Saika command in been virtuallv encircled bv gate responsibilitv for the inci- objects and their component parts must be „ guerrillas of .he Al Saika^ den,s in southern Lebanon where with Lovely that the clashes in Lebanon returned to the launching authority. Thunderbolt - organization af- the Lebanese army has been • • • filiated with "are an r> tempt by a third par¬ flowers from Syria's ruling under attack for several days. ty to drive a wedge between The Communist party newspaper Rude Pra- the Lebanese army. Al Saika Barnes Floral and other Palestinian guerrilla vo published belatedly Wednesday a demand from the Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences Friends honor Truman organizations." The command warned the Le¬ of E ast Lansing that censorship be abolished. But the move banese army not to retaliate Order E arly to offered no hope that curbs on news report¬ against Al Saika. or try to Assure Delivery ing would be eased. at 85th birthday party encircle its bases supplies fi'V its fighters. or cut off 215 Ann St. Appearance of the academy statement coin¬ candles and "Any a' ^empt to obstruct our their join in KANSAS CITY. Mo I®!! own cided with a demand from the new Commu¬ forces oi those of any other World War I buddies and other singing " Happy Birthday ." 332-0871 Palestine 1 group would be re- nist leadership for a basic change that would •i put still more of the party line into news¬ friends of Capt Harry will whoop it up as usual at a Kan¬ Bottles of sherry will carry- special labels with Truman's garded ; Zionist i ajliance with the We telegraph flowers worldwide Browse sas City hotel But former Pres¬ signature and the slogan -85 IN BROOKFIELD PLAZA papers. radio and television. ident Harry S Truman will ob¬ and going on 100." against serve his 85th birthday quietly at his suburban Independence National News home Thursday THE STATE NEWS Aliscount records Although the nation's 33rd A dozen youthful demonstrators marched president still takes his morn¬ ing walks, he makes almost no nto the Colorado State Senate today and de¬ published every class da> throughout the year with special Welcome Week clared. "We don't think this is a legitimate formal public appearances these days and does not plan to attend and Orientation issues in June and September. Sut-scription rates are $14 inc. the birthday party at the hotel 3ody." and took over the rostrum. There It has been three years since Member Associated Press. United Press International. Inland Daily Press 225 ANN ST. were shouts of "Boo. Boo."' and "Viva."' Truman last visited one of the Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Michigan Press Association. Mich from the protesters as police and Colorado celebrations igan Collegiate Press Association. I nited States Student Press Association New and Great From Columbia Records state patrolmen carried them one at a time The theme which began at that 1%6 party-" President Tru¬ from the chamber. CHICAGO man. the man of peace -will continue this year. Guests will TRANSIT be served petit fours, bearing Kditorial dove of peace, the figures 8f; a Classified Ad - AUTHORITY A respected Justice Dept. official for 16 and a small candle. 353-frluo NOW IN STOCK years. Nathaniel E. Kossack. 56. has been As the large birthday cake is 355-3447 355-8311 "2 RECORD SET quietly transferred to a lesser Agriculture wheeled in. guests will light Dept. post after becoming embroiled in a dispute with Asst. Atty. Gen. Will R Wilson ONLY $4.98 A department spokesman would give no rea¬ son Wednesday for the demotion, but he de¬ scribed the dispute between Wilson and Kos¬ sack as "a personality conflict.'" SONGS FROM A ROOM LEONARD COHEN $3.19 "I'll be walking on a tightrope," says Howard $3.19 THE ILLINOIS SPEED PRESS 'Lee. the first black to be elected mayor of a AND SPIRIT —COLUMBIA predominantly white Southern town. Lee. 34. THE "CRYAN SHAMES" RECORDING ARTIST—LIVE larrowlv defeated a white opponent Tuesday IN DETROIT MAY 16 COLUMBIA RECORDING ARTIST o become the top municipal official in Cha¬ TICKETS ON SALE HERE AT GRANDMOTHER'S THIS SUNDAY pel Hill. N.C.. home of the University of North Carolina. "How I perform could have a heavy Dearing on the political future of other Ne¬ MOTHER': DAY IS THE HITS ARE ON CAPITOL RECORDS groes." Lee said Wednesday. SOBS Of CH8MPUN THIS SUNDA f-MAY 11 GREAT NEW WEST COAST The Queen Elizabeth 2 sailed into New York Show her you < are with GROUP >n her maiden voyage Wednesday. Exercising a gift from Ca npus Book "THE SONS i feminine prerogative, she was four months OF CHAMPLIN" COME IN > ate for her first date with New York •MSB IEWELRY • RECORDS AND LISTEN "FANTASTIC" Michigan News • STATIONERY • BOOKS THfi 90I1S Of CHBMPUI 1 A complete selection A 20-year-old U.S. infantryman was killed • REVEON COSMETICS for her pleasure lear Chu Lai, South Vietnam, on Feb. 9- iight months before his planned wedding to Karenn MacGregor, 19. of Royal Oak. And so $3.19 $4.98 tym ^ook Karenn organized Pyramid for Peace. Inc.. o help finance a $2,200 full-page ad in the Detroit Free Press. It appeared in the paper vith the bold-face headline: Too many Ameni- ?ans are Dying in Vietnam." Readers were (iscount records 225 ANN ST. i EXTRA SPEC ALL FOLK AND JAZZ ON THESE IAL--THURS., FRI. SAT. ONLY. FOLKWAYS - VANGUARD COLUMBIA - CAPITOL isked to send donations to help pay for re¬ Mon. - Fri. 9:30-8:30 LABELS ON RCA - ELEKTRA prints and distribution of the ad. Karenn gives Across From The Unio Across From Berkey Hall Sat. 9:30-6:00 no figures but says the response has been City Parking At Rear Free Parking At Store Side Sunday 12:00-5:00 SALE $3.19 AND $3.99 I 'fantastic." « EDITORIAL ier Legislative Representative Joseph P. Hesburgh issued at Notre bre tion and the subsequent agree¬ Campuses up in arms: part Swallow. R-Alpena, began a Dame? We wonder how much ment with the Black Students' petition drive Wednesday to blood would have been shed Alliance. withhold tax funds from MSU Brown is distressed that the needlessly if Adams would Who are the universities for? Who It is logical from the parodox college The whole approach in the educatio until such a time as Adams have followed that type of trustees are condoning "vio¬ do they serve? What are the educa¬ administrators are in that there is some¬ al system needs a revamping away fro tional priorities of our institutions of proves to the legislature that course. lence or unlawful activities." thing drastic^lv wrong in the universities the negative approach it has now. T! higher learning? What lies behind the and, more generally, the "system." Since educational system is saying that if law and order still prevails at Criticism after the fact What Brown has not yet 'ormation of SDS and the Young Ameri¬ demonstrators are at odds with the uni¬ doesn't give a great credit work-load the Big U. learned is that calling in cops cans for Freedom? Are cries of freedom versities that is where a basic change comes easily, but all too often students, they will just "goof-off." B The legislators have learned and troops only aggrevates a 'eally euphemisms for totalitarian tac- must occur. what about the many students who ha uselessly. How would you have And the first basic change that must so much required work that they car that the one way they can get had Adams handle the situa¬ demonstration. It doesn't do There absolute are no answers to these occur is in tfae area of educational prior¬ do any outside reading or take part universities to listen to their tion? Your much to alleviate the causes of questions. There coming from ities. This means that required courses reactionary re¬ are answers voluntary activities which may be not on the confrontation. :hose in power, those oppressed and those such as those, in natural science must be relevant to them, but which squawking is to hit em where it sponse after the fact indicates in between. But there are no answers done away with In its place, if the uni¬ should hurts-in the pocketbook. We've heard from Brown be¬ a priority over other activities and c-ours that you could not have kept as to satisfy all. versities nee9 requirements, there should required for a degree? Swallow and his comrades fa¬ cool and remained in control fore. This isn't the first time he Right now we are at the stage where be not only -black studies courses, but After looking at some of these ide vor withholding funds until as well as Adams managed. has mounted his soapbox. For¬ beating around the bush" or "sidestep¬ black-white studies courses. Students are it stands to reason that in order to pi ping" issues by administrators on the col¬ tired of being forced to memorize what tunately we've learned to take vent separate "totalitarianisms" (SE * Adams reveals the "full ex¬ Swallow stated " this action lege campus can no longer be accepted Da Vinci and Galileo accomplished. They YSA. YAFi from becoming a nori tent" of the agreement with we are taking is the only ac¬ Brown's mouthing as being a -unless taking over buildings is to become have gotten these facts over and over the educational system must be altert black students. and until tion the legislature can take little humorous, a little pathe¬ a campus tradition. in high school and grammar school. If But it's going to take more than a coi And so in trying to answer the above students have interest in natural sci¬ Adams proves that a "fair because control of MSU is vest¬ tic, but mostly just breeze-bat- an mittee system to do it. t questions college administrators need not ence. they will know it in high school A week of university, college and hi« hearing" was conducted into ed in an autonomous board of ting. 'urn to each question specifically as they and by forcing college students to take school discussions across the nation, wi • the blacks' charges that racial trustees." We're grateful for a voice of .ire all tied together. these courses, resentment for those sci¬ out exception, would be a major st rationality expressed by Chair¬ First, one must recognize that uni¬ ence courses and the administrators who in the direction of discrimination really was It sounds as though these leg¬ a relevant educatic versities are for the people. With this established them is built-up in students' al system man William R. Copeland of The fight is against i practiced by the cafeteria su¬ islators are pouting because assumption SDS at Columbia, Harvard minds. lack of communication and (2 > the i pervisors at Wilson. their prodigy is ignoring the the House Appropriations Com¬ &nd other colleges have decided that the This example goes for other required tion in certain groups that their ide It is unfortunate that the leg¬ master. Will cutting off our mittee. Copeland said he could university cannot encroach on the living courses as well. If students are mature are the only possible ones for everyo area of minority groups-i.e., Columbia's enough to go away to college, they can to follow. islators have not learned yet not support " denying appro¬ yearly allowance really serve aborted move to construct a gymnasium formulate their programs with basic gui- that withholding appropria¬ to keep the prodigal son in priations to colleges because in Harlem and the Harvard Corporation's dence help-thev don't need rigid require¬ If we don't move immediately to of the actions of a few stu¬ ments. It isn't enough that we have an solve these two barriers, undoubtedly tl tions is not the best way to con¬ line? potential expansion into Roxbury. And to act out those demands. SDS Honors College for very bright students will cause further obstacles to fall trol the University. If blacks The dents." legislature has vested has taken over buildings-often violently who are allowed to form a flexible pro¬ the path of a rapproachement ami radicals or reactionaries It is apparent that this move the members of our society. or responsibility for the opera¬ with the loss of student support-in per- gram. or anyone else really wanted tion of the University in the to withhold funds from MSU suance of its convictions. is a legislative attempt to gain Now. SDS and other concerned students to disrupt the University. Swal¬ board of trustees. Their stand ♦realize that the universities do not serve low and his cronies have pro¬ on the Wilson situation is al¬ control over the state-run uni¬ poor people, minority groups; that col¬ vided the surest means-make versities. One wishes the legis¬ ready public. You cannot now lege entrance exams and other tests re¬ the legislature so angry that it rescind the trustees' lature would realize that the flect middle class values and, according¬ power. withholds funds. Did you ever If word "control" is completely ly. do not relate to the minority groups reprimand for the situation and underprivileged: that many of our col¬ try to run a university with¬ must come, it must evolve antithetical to the goals and leges have set priorities in the area of out money? It would not be from within the University, purposes of an academic com¬ natural sciences rather than the humani¬ ties and the social sciences, and that this long before the school would either from the board of trus¬ munity. has made any relevance to the survival be shut down-with the legis¬ tees or from the grass roots -The Editors of our society a too systematic and tech¬ lature's approval. of the University. Letter policy " nological scheme. Since no one seems to do anything or One of the demands of the Rep. James Brown R-Oke- The State News welcomes all letters wants to do anything within the ela¬ petitioners is that the admin¬ mos. has decided to get into They should be typed and signed with the borate committee system established to home town, student, faculty or staff stand¬ istration 'express a formal the circus by starting his own change university structures. SDS and ing. and local phone number included. No other groups have gone outside the sys¬ position on campus violence act. Brown is sponsoring a unsigned letter will be accepted for publi¬ tem in order to really change the uni¬ and destruction." What would resolution that expresses the cation. and no letter will be printed with¬ versities and the economic system they you like to see. legislators? legislative "outrage" at the out a signature except in extreme circum¬ are a part of or die in the attempt. A statement of the varietv that stances. All letters must be less than 300 The horror in this, many people say. handling of the Wilson situa¬ words long for publication without editing. is that in promoting freedom so far. tactics of SDS now bear a striking resem¬ blance to those of the Nazis. Then, in point of view * order to make the entire environment both ludicrous and frightening, groups such as Academic Senate needs reform the Young Americans for Freedom must resort to the same "totalitarian" tactics as a reaction. So university administrators are in a EDITOR'S NOTE: The following "point bind: if they bring in the police, stu¬ of view" written dent solidity is strengthened and furth¬ was by John R. Hurley, professor of psychology. er violence is inevitable; if administa- *tors make some kind of deal with de¬ Allegedly the "keystone of faculty- peftceAjTAGC of euQiBLC participation in educational policy formu¬ monstrators. they are known as accom¬ ATTEND/A/g A1 fll 4CAPSH/C lation at MSU. our Academic Senate plices in crime by many including alum¬ /AEEr/W6S I9LO- /9b9 ni iwho can have a great say in the uni¬ appears to be widely regarded by faculty , 'I know I voted for it dummy-but as a sham if not a laughingstock. Our versity through monetary pressure), and 1 eligible faculty simply do not find the the students may grab for more student I didn't expect them to build on my senate sufficiently meaningful even to at¬ power as long as they know they can get property! ' • tend its meetings This fact seem ade¬ away with it. And to top it all off, often the demands are "non-negotiable." quately documented by the data given in Figure 1 about faculty attendance. Ear¬ lier data about the proportion of eligible faculty attending senate meetings is not available, but these, covering the past 10 our reader's mind years, seem to adequately document this contention Thus, faculty participation has '66 ' '*/ ' 'LI '13 'if 77 Vl Jb7 '67 'L* Make donations for relief effort averaged less than 20 per cent since 1966: the record low mark oi 10 per cent be expected to communicate what it is ing to select its own chairman, or dis¬ has been closely approached at four of the not experiencing to students. An inevit¬ solve. Further support of the present farce senate's nine meetings since 1966 Plain¬ able outcome of the process would appear is an affront to both the principles of 1 To the Editor: The ly our Senate is discredited in the eyes to be submissive and somewhat apathe¬ democratic government and simple logic- majoj concern of Operation Out¬ protein food which will feed thous; of its membership Is such a sick organ To Thomas G. Diffell. Stephen S. Sel- tic faculty trying unsuccessfully to in¬ Even if my diagnosis that the senate s rage is to provide food for the starving of children for several weeks. Peri ization worth trying to save0 fon: children in *Biafra Nigeria. Through the it will spire a rather indifferent, confused, and re¬ illness is basically due to a lack of fa¬ keep them alive until the par bellious student body If that description Mr Diffell and Mr. Thomas, if you Why Have an Academic Senate? culty power is less than completely ac¬ cooperation of Food Services we found in this world realize what is goinj I think there are sound reasons for hav¬ sounds familiar, it is to our mutual an¬ have found a way of persuading 16,000 that we could guarantee 50 cents for the and do something effective to bring curate, clearly this patient is in dire ing a democratic organization in which a guish. straits and needs urgent attention be¬ dormitory students to donate $1 for the relief effort for every student who fasted war to an end. faculty body as numerous as ours-in ex fore attendance dips slightly to zero per Nigeria Biafran relief effort, please let during supper on May 7th. We have en¬ cess of 2.000 members-can debate and us know about it. listed the help of approximately 12.500 Why is Our Senate in the Doldrums'.' Operation Outrage tries to be r< formulate academic policies. The absence We have tried a direct appeal to stu¬ dormitory students, as well as many tic and realizes that many students of an effective and meaningful unit of I thfhk the basic difficulty is that our Reform Now dents at pre-registration and registration sororities and fraternities, by exploiting elsewhere on fast-night. We are not this kind in the university's structure tends faculty has virtually no meaningful power at the beginning of this term. We estab¬ the appeal of a campus-wide fast to I urge reform rather than dissolution to make the students feel good, bi to encourage in MSU's present Academic Senate and. because I believe that this University lished a booth at the IM Bldg. and ap¬ parochial interest groups of help starving children. We expect to col¬ provide food for the starving chil many kinds, such as colleges, depart feeling disenfranchised, has no confidence genuinely needs a faculty forum where proximately 35,000 students passed the lect between $6,000 and $7,000 as a result. Thus we gratefully accepted the and other cohesive elements in this institution Believe it or not. our booth. In seven days we collected $2,200 This fast will provide money to buy ments. to contemporary educational policies can be from the pizza establishment, who acts senate is even powerless to select its -an average of 7 cents per student. and transport about 50 tons of high- as special pressure groups: such a forged. It now seems timely to initiate that they would be selling many vacuum also deprives administrators of the own presiding officers! Since what seems long-overdue changes in the senate's struc¬ pizzas on that night. The 25-cent • wisdom of faculty-generated guide¬ like time immemorial (I've been here "on¬ ture. Although many of my colleagues I tion for each order may total to lines. Some administrators, perhaps be¬ ly" 15 years), MSU s president has been have long expressed a desire for a freer lieving in their own infinite wisdom, the self-appointed "presiding officer" of senate, many felt that former President We support Dr. Adams actions than $125 If you wish to make i nation to the relief effort, or need 1 would prefer, of course, not to share any the senate I submit that any body of Hannah might feel personally attacked if er information about the Nigerian real power with the faculty. But more nearly 2.000 Ph.D.'s that is incapable of such proposals were made in the twilight maintaining the functions of the university conflict, EDITOR'S NOTE: The following is a pe¬ ran please contact: enlightened administrators now recog¬ selecting its own officers should either be of his leadership. Acting Presiding Adams community tition circulated among the faculty, signed nize that shared responsibility produces given a dignified burial or-if it is not has no apparent interest in maintaining -creating a climate for the full discus¬ by 94 faculty members in support of Act¬ better results. The older viewpoint seems quite that late-try some institutional an ineffective status quo. Adams could sion of crucial issues Operation Outrage ing President Adams' handling of the "Wil¬ plainly destructive to the entire education¬ psychotheraphv The consequences of this take an important step toward democra¬ son Hall Affair." -demonstrating that academic leader¬ MSU Chapter al enterprise, for a captive and inexpres¬ lack of meaningful representation seem tizing MSU by simply resigning the presi¬ WHEREAS Michigan State University ship can be accessible and reasonable 327 MAC Ave obvious in the attendance figures. I be¬ AND WHEREAS our silence might East Lansing sive or uninfluential faculty can never dency of the senate and calling upon has witnessed in the recent proceedings at be 48823 develop a sense of meaningful identity lieve that our senate should either im¬ that body to exercise the responsibility construed as support of the President's Wilson Hall the actions of its new acting and responsibility, nor can it rationally mediately begin to reform, through mov- of selecting its own officers. President In: critics; BE IT RESOLVED, that we place our -responding quickly to prevent violence Graham B. name on record as supporting and com¬ -respecting the rights of students to ex Bristol. United Kingdom, giaduate sti press their grievances mending D-. Walter Adams' leadership Co-Chairman and Treas in handling the "Wilson Hall Affair " -exercising wisdom and restraint in Operation Out MICHIGAN STATE NEWS Trinka Cline, executive editor Norman J. Saari. managing editor George K. Bullard, campus editor I'NIVKRSITY Deborah Fitch, feature editor Kenneth Krell, editorial director Jeff Elliott, sports editor of the Pacemaker award for outstanding journalism. Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Thursday, May 8, 1969 5 CCNY closes offer racial By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Black students fought with troopers from New Hampshire streaming blood, seven white and Vermont broke down doors students were taken frtm the the South east gate to the CCNY Campus, which black As campus clash atives of the dissident students. disorders es¬ to get out. -Several clashes blacks and whites near a sub¬ between students calated. three congressmen white students Wednesday at at Dartmouth College to eject CCNY campus to nearby and Puerto Rican the gates of the City College Knickerbocker Hospital after blockaded from April 22 to last urged a withdrawal of federal way station. student demonstrators. funds from colleges that fail the battle at the gates. Monday. Gallagher closed the school of New York CCNY and state Their heads and faces to put down student uprisings. before the CCNY President Buell G CCNY reopened on Tuesday, biggest outburst, Gallagher ordered the 20.000 But other congressmen doubt- the clash at the east gates. amid scattered disorder and^ ■ed student school shut down for that a cutoff would solve Blacks scaled the iron gates U' fast to bring$6,000 the second time in three weeks. A spokesman said later tension, which built up to the major violence Wednesday. the problem. Gallagher said this series carrying White clubs students and sticks. tore limbs CCNY will reopen Thursday The blacks and Puerto Ri ' of incidents forced his dec¬ from campus trees and fought for Operation Outrage with "adequate police protect¬ ion on campus. " cans had barricaded the cam¬ pus in demanding a separate ision to close CCNY: Black youths invaded the back. Police said some residents There three objectives Earlier school of black and Hispanic of Harlem joined in the battle. By DELORES MAJOR are Wednesday, state engineering building, swinging studies and a freshman enroll One of the seven injured State News Staff Writer of the campaign.' Kerr said, police, helmeted but without clubs and injuring several stu¬ . "first, to bring the whole sit¬ clubs, ment in proportion to the black robbed white youths had to be carried A dragged and carried dents and a coed was campus-wide fast held by uation before people, second, out sbme of 60 Dartmouth and Puerto Rican enrollment from the campus. MSU students in residence halls at knife point by several black to encourage people to work students in the city high schools, which The white students outnum Wednesday night is expected for the cause, and third, to sitting in to protest girls in the women's room at the Reserve Officers Train¬ is about 40 per cent. Townsend Harris Hall. bered the blacks and the blacks to bring in over $6,000 toward retreated the gates, collect money for relief as a ing Corps. Others left the The Board of Higher Educa¬ over then Operation Outrage, a national tion. which governs the' -Club-wielding black you¬ fled as police cars approached, temporary solution." administration building in Han¬ campaign to aid the starving He added that nearly 75 per 165.000-student City Univer¬ ths blacked passage onto the sirens screaming. over, N.H., peacefully. children in Biafra/Nigeria. South Campus and ordered cent of the dormitory population Helmeted New York sity. has authorized negotia¬ In an earlier clash, black Graham Kerr, United King¬ City on campus had participated in tors to meet with represent¬ persons in the school library and Puerto Rican students in¬ dom graduate student, and Sue policemen were stationed at the fast. vaded the engineering building- Sing, East Lansing graduate swinging golf clubs and sticks- student, co-chairmen of the Mrs. Sing added that the and charged into a group ol campus-wide fast would not be Geometry of mobility MSU chapter of the campaign, Stanford white students and faculty prof the end to the campaign here said that over 12,500 students members Robert C North a Stanford University professor, out of 17,000 on campus. . residing in dorm¬ CCNY said several students diagrams the fine points of his presentation on so- itories participated in the fast. "We're certainly going to go on." she said, "but now were injured and a faculty lity, riots and depressed groups to his au- In addition, Kerr said, sev¬ member struck in the prompted by we'll be circulating petitions was McDone! Kiva. North said riots are not a eral fraternities and sororities face. have given monetary donations demanding a cease-fire and pelessness, but change. government assistance." At Dartmouth, state police State News photo by Mike Sirna in lieu of fasting. Kerr said that the campaign today." he said. from two states were used Revolution comes not at the and improving technology is the in the Lansing area will put basic cause for revolution." We even give them combat under a mutual aid compact most depressed point in a so¬ with the more emphasis on petitions and ciety. but rather when the de¬ North said. experience in Vietnam to pre¬ troopers being de¬ encourage people to write post¬ pressed group is improving its "The astonishing thing is not pare them for the fight." North putized for the operation. Allardt: cultural revolutions cards and letters to their repre¬ conditions, a visiting Stanford that we have revolutions, but When this discontent becomes sentative in Washington and University political scientist that we have so few of them, President Nixon. he added organized to any extent, then i recision said Tuesday. there is a real revolutionary "There are bills being pre¬ Robert C. North, in discussing Using Oakland, Claif. as an potential, he concluded. Imports asking for increases can use existing structures sented now his model of revolution caus¬ example. North said Oakland s North was speaking at the in foriegn aid. we re hoping to ation. said this improvement growing black population and- third and final meeting of the . 'specializing in fine put pressure on Fulbright and causes growing expectations increasing educational oppor¬ Cross-Cultural Symposium on the President." he said. which, when not met by ade¬ tunities have led to growing By WILLIAM B! I.TM AN structure as they relate to rev¬ Revolution. Sponsored by the "With a loose generalization "There is no set time for Revolutionary ideology in it¬ olutionary movement. quate resources, cause discon¬ expectations. "These expectat Detp. of Anthropology. Po¬ Reasonalbe Rates we may say that revolutions the campaign's end." Mrs. form the foundation ions have not been validated self does not bring about a Social structure, which in¬ tent and litical Science and Socioloev. Ample Parts Supply succeeding in cultural recon¬ Sing said, "we'll continue as for a revolution. when the reality of the ghetto the symposium was financed change in existing power struct¬ cludes distribution of property, struction anil institutions. r;ith«>r. it are instigated by long as our help is needed." "The lack of resources in was faced. This then becomes by a grant from the Natural ures the power structure and the ex¬ underdog movements in which ' Kerr added that the campaign¬ relation to a growing population a prime cause for the turmoil Science Foundation. istence of institutions, is basic- them sociologist Eiik \ll;irdt ail" independent of its culture. there has been ideological acti¬ ers will stage another life line, Bruce Jim vity, as in the Cuban revolut¬ candleight procession. said Tuesday in McDonel K:vtl Allardt said. ion.'' he said. "Financing Available" "Our last one on April 16 Speaking on Culture. Struct¬ A change in the social struct¬ ure and revolutionary Ideolot;- ure through ideology presupposes the use revolutionary The creation of ture which would a new serve cul¬ as a was quite successful, he said. "About 200 were present during J>r