Wondering . Friday michigan Sunny . if where I've been is worth TATE NEWS , l^'iv,brsu stati university 102 Number 1 East Lansing, Michigan Friday, April 17,1970 Apollo IpifE CENTER, Houston (AP) -• The r* l3 pilots, four troubled days Haise Jr. and Jack L. astronauts astronauts, James A. Lovell Jr., Fred W. Swigert Jr. to don 12:53 p.m. -- Begin reentry altitude 400,000 feet. period; coax "I'm already scared that Jack will have it closed before I get up there," Lovell said. next ship home Apollo flight rehearsed the various spaceship and aborted its mission of r' n them coaxed their cold and ailing extra underwear and sleep huddled on the 1:07 p.m. -- Splashdown. proposed plans in spaceship simulators on landiing in the lunar highlands. It houses floor of their Laughter rang through Mission Control. the ground, searching for as practical a test the ruptured W—*n"«' place they have. moon lander, the warmest The astronauts were told to make the re - It was one of the few light moments as possible of what would work and what oxygen tank, the dead command ship engine and the ^ . a splashdown In the Pacific Ocean On the ground, experts set a tentative entry in light coveralls, leaving their heavy space suits in storage. All Apollo flights to since Monday accident. night's spaceship crippling would not. producing fuel cells. power - schedule for the events of the torrid re "We want to get rid of the service The lunar module has acted as a lifeboat date have made these Br«ion control directed the astronauts "We have - so - called shirt - a lot of work to do because we module as soon as possible and entry and the last duties of the crew. keep the to bring the astronauts home. Its Eve ■6 the ship a small thruster jolt at 7:53 The timetable: sleeve re - entries. have an unusual situation," explained lunar module as long as possible," Slayton electricity, oxygen, water and rockets have esT Friday morning to aim the ship Going over the last minute details, Lovell Donald K. (Duke) Slayton, chief of the said. "It gets a little sticky at times. But stood between the astronauts and disaster. tiselv at the splashdown target, 7:07 a.m. EST -- Six hours before told Mission Control that as soon as he finished astronauts. Once re - entry procedures are we're going to try to make the re - entry as Until Wednesday they had been tg |ast minute thruster jolt is a weak ■ maneuvering with the lunar perfected, he said, he would not be normal as possible and we've been using the splashdown, the crew mans the command running command ship with its couches only as a I, intended only to refine the ship's aim. ship. lander's thrusters before re entry Friday, - "I'll scramble up and close the LM hatch." concerned about bringing the crew down through a lot of things on the simulator." bedroom, but it got too cold to sleep there, kilo 13 is already on a path that would safely. The service module the of the -- scene and they took the cramped and less Xi it to a landing somewhere in the 8:23 a.m. -- Jettison the crippled service Mission control approved his recital of To insure that safety, the crew of the Monday night explosion that crippled the comfortable floor of the lunar lander. All EL even without the new adjustment. module and attempt to photograph it. the plan but added, "Don't forget to close the command module hatch on your power was off in the command ship. degree chill forced the 11:53 a.m. •• Jettison the lunar lander. way The command ship will bring them home, bucking the heat of re - entry with its heat shield. The little lunar lander, when it is jettisoned shortly before, will burn to lates permitted dust as it plummets toward the Pacific (please turn to back page) ASMSU resets vote EOP pro for off-campus positions earns o two forms. columns computerized ballot this election will know who he's vote for," Watts said. going to Wharton Iff. campus election of ASMSU district There was also considerable In other action, the board approved a Iresentatives was rescheduled to argumentation concerning the order and revised version of Article Six of the Tday, April 21 by the Student Board placement of candidates' names on the Academic Freedom Report. This version, President Wharton affirmed his support ballots. Some board members which now goes to the Academic Council, ■nesday night. Campaigning remains were for the development of "a sound, until midnight April 20, but concerned whether the names would appear in two columns or four and whether the Academic Senate and the board of M systematic, affirmative action program for ire prohibited from making trustees for further approval, omits any women" at the annual Bosses Luncheon of Btional campaign expenditures, the previously established random order of reference to the State News or Wolverine, the MSU Business Women's Club late designation will be permitted on names would run across the columns or and provides an opportunity for eventual Thursday. up "I, for one, believe that the time for ■ballots Tuesday. Off - campus elections and down columns. incorporation of the State News. study alone is over," Wharton said. "What 1 been postponed from Wednesday to "It's been assumed by this board that the The board issued a recommendation to we need on this campus is an affirmative | lieStudent slate Faculty Judiciary time to rule people they're representing are ignorant," Watts said, stressing that too much the Academic Council that Section D of the Report on Campus Disturbances be action program for women now." question. He outlined plans for this program to be ie present Student Board will remain in e until midnight April 21. "A new emphasis had been placed on the order of candidates' names on the removed. The section states that violence and acts of destruction cannot be Whartons dine carried out by the University's Equal voters woufQ select whoever assumption that Opportunities Programs (EOP) office 1 vice chairman will be elected happened to condoned, that agreements cannot be made which will include study of admissions Ispecial board meeting April 23. be on the ballot first. under duress, and that amnesty cannot be President and Mrs. Whartom dine at the Business Women's luncheon policies, the status of a women as students r procedures governing the off - "Anyone who takes the time to vote in guaranteed. he/Sjin the Big Ten Room at Kellogg Center Thursday. and employment practices and i elections approved by Student State News Photo By Norm Payea opportunities. Jrd Wednesday include: ■ Twelve off Both the EOP program and the newly • campus polling stations created Committee Against Discrimination ■ be manned by Off - Campus Council will make use of a recent survey of MSU TC), Inter Cooperative Council (ICC), ASMSU closes Bl ack Office • women in academic and higher ftellenic, and Inter Fraternity Council - administrative positions conducted by the B). Each organization is required to Office of Institutional Research, he said. Bide at least ten individuals to staff the Wharton said EOP and the anti - discrimination committee will study the ■ Four additional polls at the discussion between several Union, Michael Hudson, director of the Office of Services Bldg. to discuss the issues. Some groups at the recruitment of women for faculty inational Center, Berkey and Bessey Student Services Bldg. ■be staffed by ASMSU. Black Affairs, who arrived at the meeting students supported the closing of the Black Wednesday night, positions, tenure status of female faculty, the executive council of the Black salary levels of and later, said that the Board was not within its Affairs Office to achieve wider men women performing [ The present random order of rights to close down the office. representation and involvement in the Liberation Front announced a meeting to the same work, promotion policies and ice of candidates' names on the The Office of Black Affairs has been resolve all of the issues. criteria and rate of advancement of women ill remain. Names will be "They do not have the legitimacy to office, while others vehemently opposed placed in "temporarily suspended" by the Student "Because of the commotion created, the compared to men. close the Black Affairs Office, and it will bringing the issue before the Student Board Board of ASMSU. In a 7 - 2 vote that came Front will be meeting with all Africans on I" addition, he advised both agencies not be closed," Hudson stated. at all. to after a 20 minute closed session, the Board this campus in the next week to resolve consider the recruitment Before the closed session, several black Hudson said that the Black Affairs Office policies of approved the motion of Rodney Watts, students sat in on the meeting. When the became all but "budgetarily" any problems," Riddle announced to the independent ection pulls senior member at closed. large, that the office be closed session was approved to discuss Watts' motion, approximately 12 black of ASMSU last term. whole board. (please ti o back page) "We became officially independent of The motion recommended that "ASMSU students who opposed the closing of the them when the vice presidency for Black 3ak turnout impound room 313 (the Office of Black Affairs) and take whatever procedures office, left the room in protest. Sam Riddle, general member - at - large left with - Affairs became the Office of Black Affairs," Hudson explained. APPROVAL SOUGHT necessary to restrict entry until such time the students. director of Black Affairs be "If the board insists on discussing this He now carries the title of the Director U' disclose as a new can By JACQUI MILLER history appointed or elected by the black student body of MSU." issue in closed session," Riddle announced to the Board members, "then I feel I must leave to respect my constituency before of Black Affairs rather than that of a vice president of ASMSU. The motion came before the Board as the - Nixon State News Staff Writer Watts said that he had "no comment to this body." result of a move by several students to gain e than 6,000 students turned I for eight on relatives Wednesday in the largest - campus out to district make at this time" as to why he presented the motion to the Board. During and after the closed session, black students began to arrive at the Student more voice in the operation of all black student affairs. After hour of for postoffice Ion in the ASMSU WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Nixon eight cents, a ■ District 1 history. unveiled Thursday a compromise present rate. (Snyder, Phillips, Mason, plan to The package, largely worked out by reform the postal system, give more ■Mnl ■ ^an Hoosen residence halls) pay to federal and union negotiators, was designed cClendon, Mt. Clemens sophomore mail handlers, and avoid a 10 - cent letter to improve chances of congressional and ■feted TJistrictwith 231 votes. 2 (Wonders and charge. Nixon pared down his rate public approval. Case residence request to I™ choice AFL-CIO President George Meany, was Paul Korda, Detroit f-with 286 votes. appearing before newsmen at the White House, was one of the first to jump on the Kbin I i"candidate> Larry Stempel, Dickerson offers bandwagon, declaring, "This is one of the tin i • soPhomore, won with a most significant events in the history of fcn!,. ° 505 votes in District 3 liquor proposition collective bargaining." , fnel and Shaw halls). As part of a compromise, Nixon not only i4,, halls) 'Hubbard and Holmes revised postal rate increases he proposed elected p„. '0Wa> junior John as Farley, their to MSU trustees just two weeks ago but also abandoned his .. 1969 plan to turn the Post Office jntetive with 225 votes. -C p.. 'Campbell, Emmons, Mayo, By MARILYN PATTERSON Department into an independent State News Staff Writer corporation. I el0J j lstv and W'H'ams residence The key to the latest reform idea would Milton B. Dickerson, vice president for lit i n d Helene "Sam" Waldroop, student affairs, be creation of a United States Postal Pernor, m a close race. She received presented to the trustees Thursday night a recommendation that Service that would b» insulated from liquor be allowed in residence hall rooms political pressures and patronage while VDCi6-!Brody ComP'ex) Roderick and at social functions on campus if the remaining a part of the executive branch. J438 votes soPhomore> was elected participants are 21 years of age. Other principal features of the package I t)on!)J l^ers and ^ee residence over The recommendation will allow students 21 to possess and consume liquor in program: -Postal workers would get an 8 per cent [sentatjvp „ ore was the elected their residence hall rooms and at social pay increase, over and above the 6 per cent E 8 mH1e.polled 215 votes- functions with Dickerson's approval. governmentwide increase Nixon signed into LJ d RobertandRosenthal, Wi,son residence I elected o It will prohibit possession of liquor in law Wednesday and would reach top pay Miami, classrooms or classroom buildings and scales in eight years instead of the current University offices or office buildings. 21 years. F Will hp r^100 of the election The proposal is being made to bring the --The postal workers would bargain Ions ;lreleased later- Bob Grossfeld, University policy closer to state law which collectively with the proposed postal could not be allows citizens to purchase and consume service over wages, hours and working liquor at 21 years of age. (please turn to back page) ■uiim th„ „ -day's elections is The state law prohibiting the ■ '"ogal camDa !f'-thc main comP,aints consumption of alcohol on state property ^ il nlPK gnmg Procedures. Postal applies only to state fair grounds. Liquor Financial aid |n was 6,1648r V°teS CMt in the provisions for all other state institutions Applications for all types of President Nixon talks with George Meany, left, president of the AFL-CIO. Between them is Sen. Gale McGee, are under the jurisdiction of the individual financial aid I *the hlghest voter turnout in the 'Ptease turn to back D-Wyo chairman of the Senate Post Office Committee. In the background at right is Sen. Hiram L. Fong. institution. be picked up ii are due May 1. They may 264 Student Services R.Hawaii. page) v~? AP Wirephoto (please turn to back page) Bldg. ^ Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, April 17 j Alcoholic units seek funds Board picks ne\ By SHARON TEMPLETON State News Staff Writer °n Alcoholism, a coalition of "Over - emphasis on drug some 60 agencies' the group problems is overshadowing and asked for more state support of short - changing programs to $200,000 accumulated liquor license that so has been provide anything far from Sunday scattered services. revenues should be more than Wolverine editor! More than 100 citizens from efforts to treat alcoholics. combat alcoholism in Michigan," itmi_ L u L . t various private and community The group's main attack was Wayne County Judge Ira G. used to set up a statewide There should be at the state alcoholic treatment agencies aimed at a proposal which would Kaufman, spokesman for the comprehensive alcoholism ,evel an integrated, organized Mary Genovese, Romulus junior, has been named eriiin treatment agency. agency to draw all these private in ■ chief of the 1971 Wolverine, the MSU yearbook. throughout Michigan told a divert some of the state's Inter Agency Council, said.- agencies together to help them The announcement came at a Wednesday luncheon special legislative committee revenue from Sunday liquor "We have to alert Michigan exPlained. that hospitals to obtain federal funds," he said. State News and Wolverine Advisory Board. of th e ' I Thursday that the state needs a license sales into a new statewide lawmakers to the fact that and other facilities in the state Father Vaughn Quinn, director have Miss Genovese, 20, has been a member of the comprehensive, statewide drug abuse program. alcoholism continues to U~"~ 'inactive" alcoholism Qf Detroit's Sacred Heart Clinic, staff for three years. Last year she was off - Wolverine alcoholism treatment program. Gov. Milliken had originally families, lives and careers,' he programs because of lack of testified that limited funds have campus editor I Representing the Wayne proposed the fund shift, but funds. and this year feature and copy editor of the book. 1 leaders added. kept its services at "inadequate "I don't have any definite plans yet," Miss County Inter ■ Agency Council later decided to drop the idea. Kaufman said that and primitive" levels. Genovese sai conference "To be sure, the problem of of her plans for next year's Wolverine. "I'm still tossin I drug abuse in Michigan is serious different ideas around, since it's and needs attention," he said. Although more than $200,000 definite." » early for anything I Block education "But the disease of alcoholism . , . reaches a far greater number of , has accumulated in the liquor license revenue fund, the Pernor's office for Sunday the past Miss Genovese, an English major and journalism plans to teach both and hopes to advise high school publications. minor 1 ' I MARY GENOVESE conduct first aitenuon msi year wneii iney appropriation from legislature to spend it. The Black Educators of Affairs (CUA), will be held from heroin users in the Detroit area, || || Michigan, a newly formed 10 a-m- to 4 P m- in Union, demanded community of their schools. control compared to 125,000 alcoholics, ON U""M ICCIIE ISSUE organization of black teachers The morning session will Arthur Johnson, a ratio of n than 10 to 1. and school administrators from feature Rhody McCoy, unit superintendent of the Detroit Witnesses < behalf of more all over the state will hold their admini first conference here Saturday. Brownsv lie district oftfle of the New New public P school system * will also state funds for alcoholic clinics Lawmaker - ^ ^ induded the directors of several York public school system. The P opinion The conference, which is being aftP,nrmn wnrkshnn local alcoholic treatment hosted by the Center For Urban black district drew national ^ ^ ^ McCoyP agencjes and persQns who ha£, Johnson, Joe McMillan, director been alcoholics, se of Equal Opportunities By SHARON TEMPLETON ....... .. t , preference based on race," creating a vicious circle which Programs, Robert Green. George Williams, president of State News Staff Writer Swallow said. "And in my can only lead to chaos," he iq7o 1A , director of CUA, and Charles lAh® Michigan Alcoholic State Rep. Joseph P. Swallow, Mirhioan 00 year opinion it is violative of both the added. universities Addiction Assn, said the present > Warfield assistant R-Alpena, said Thursday he will federal and state constitutions. Swallow said what the consiuullonal|y autonomy! superintendent of the 'eve' state fund'nB f°r the ask for the attorney general's "If a special quota is set for universities need is a criteria for Kalamazoo oublic schools. treatment programs is unable to opinion on the constitutionality black students, it logically "But our universities enrollment that disregards race, subject to the rule of of the University of Michigan's follows that a quota should also creed or color, 10 per cent black enrollment for white students, constitution," he said. "At EUROPE or JAPAN agreement between the board of Mexic; Americans and ..rru "The , ■ law should .j i_ , the attorney general feels be color - y*M has violated the I from regents and the Black Action students from rural poor areas of blind,"he said. "If it is anything action can be taken " Movement. the state," he said. other than color blind, then it's DETROIT or CHICAGO "Unquestionably this is a "Then all we are doing is unconstitutional." - Swallow said he couli, Now, for your convenience, ALL , . . > Predict how the attorney «e plained that the might react to h:- Union Board flights The State News, the student newspaper at — Michigan State legislature could do nothing University, is published every class day during four school guessed that he leave from Detroit or Chicago: about the guarantee of 10 terms, plus Welcome Week edition in September. cent black enrollment by the per "speculate upon it" time. 1. June 21 - Sept. 2 Amsterdam $242 - Detroit Subscription rate is $14 per year. 2. June 24 - Aug. 18 London $234 - Detroit Member Associated Press, United Press Hair St 3. June 25 - Sept. 15 London $209 - Detroit International, Inland Daily Press Association, Associated 4. July 16 - Aug. 31 Japan $419 ■ Detroit Collegiate Press, 7. Aug. 11 - Sept. 9 London $223 ■ Michigan Press Association, Michigan Collegiate Press Chicago 8. July 26 - Sept. 13 London $219 - Detroit Call the Union Board Association, United States Student Press Association. Second class postage paid at East Lansing, Michigan. byPatrici Office (355-3355) for reservations Editorial and business offices at 347 Student Services is ... pleased to NOW! Building, Michigan State University, East Lansing, announce an Michigan. $100 deposit due at sign - up addition to their Balance due May 1. Phones: fine staff... Editorial 355-8252 Open to MSU and Oakland students, faculty, staff and Classified Advertising 355-8255 MARGE ANDR0L employees and their immediate families. Members of immediate families may take Display Advertising 353-6400 advantage of this offer, even if Business-Circulation the MSU affiliate does not 355-3447 501/2 E, Grand River 4 m East Lansing go along. Photographic 355-8311 Call 332-0904 Michigan HOURS discount records DAILY 9:30 -8:30 ph 351-8460 SAT. 9:30 - 6:00 SUN. 12:00-5:00 225 ANN ST TOO HOT TO HANDLE! THE TEMPTATIONS Catch them here on campus this Saturday, April 18, 8:00 p.m. in Jenison Fieldhouse... Catch them again at 8:00 p.m. Monday night on NBC in a return engagement of "TCB"with the Supremes.. Then catch them for keeps on Motown, from Discount Records (Stereo LP's, Stereo 8 Cartridge Tape, and * Cassettes.) QE11 HI A discount records 225 ANN ST. Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, April 17, 1970 APPOINTS ADVISERS NEWS summary Milliken starts attack on of tha day's avants from our wira services. state economic slowdown immary Acapju'fl' By LARRY LEE The governor said a special —the Senate "Just State News Staff Writer task force possibility of work Minority Leader as racism has been he appointed in stoppages in major industries Gov. George S. Fitzgerald, D-Grosse interwoven into our society and Milliken told the February has reported that the which could trigger secondary Pointe Park, called our institutions, discrimination "sexism" is or sex Michigan Legislature Thursday he is beginning a three - pronged economy should see gradual lay - offs in supplier industries, improvement except for the —reduced business profits. governor's appointment of the special committee a "trademark lucky you if equally attack to battle the state's summer months when graduates On the other hand, Milliken of his administration," but said endemic." economic slowdown. and students enter the work noted several favorable factors it "accomplishes little." - MSU President Wharton Noting a rise in unemployment levels from 3.6 per cent in force and industry has the automobile model change - that could boost the They are: economy. "Once again, the governor has placed himself in the ridiculous you wear a tiny December, 1969, to a peak of —an added $4.5 billion position of sounding an alarm, 6.7 cent in "Looking ahead, the per February, Milliken announced the said it appears Michigan's benefits in task force nationally in April. Social Security sticking his head in the sand while wearing rose - colored shoe! dress and appointment of a special economy would improve greatly —removal of the in 1971 and return to those income federal glasses and at the same time economic advisory group of tax International News economists who will periodically levels achieved in the 1960s increase of personal exemptions surcharge, and trying to pour oil on the waters troubled by his administration's casual samples report to the governor. when our state had unparalleled to $650 in July. failure to take dynamic action," Hie State Dept. said Thursday the United States is Milliken said his proposals are economic growth,"Milliken said. —gradual easing of monetary he said. amining a request from Cambodia for military designed to: He told the legislators he did restrictions. Little shoes with lots and lots of style, in (stance understood to be in the form of arms and —provide additional income not intend to "alarm you, but to —expected wage increases for sizes 5, 5Vi and 6B. Flats and heels for dress iterials. maintenance and supportive alert you... to the courses of the remainder of the year. ★★★★★★★★ and casual wear. Great new sandals, too. One protection for the long - termed action which we can follow to Milliken also noted a bill he of - a - kind shoes in a i TOLKIEN - officials said the request was tor such things as guns unemployed. soften the impact on Michigan groovy array of signed into law Tuesday that, spring - summer colors. d ammunition and not for troops. —increase the availability of of a national cooling off of the beginning May 10, will add 75c per book employment and manpower economy." $ 1 50,000 per day in North Vietnam and the Viet Cong accused the United training programs. Unfavorable factors facing unemployment benefits. NEW 12.90 —provide economic additives Michigan's economy, Milliken ates Thursday of deliberately spreading the Vietnam which will assist in The governor said he has asked ir throughout the Indo - Chinese peninsula in the boosting the said, include: the Michigan Employment state's economy on a short - —a Federal cutback of military Securities Commission to seek U MAN & NATURE ipe of avoiding inevitable defeat in South Vietnam, term basis. expenditures. fhis was the latest in a series of charges and additional increase the federal state's funds to ^ Bookstore 328 Student Services manpower untercharges in the 63rd weekly session of the Paris the e talks. As of yet there has been no hint of a break deadlock. Proliferation training 12,000. program by 7,500 to jLNovv open Saturday 12 • 10.90 rwenty - three more American servicemen have been S Have Archie anted asylum in Sweden since March 2, the Swedish Tarpoffs Do Your Migration lursday. and Naturalization fhis brings the total to 409 Americans who, since 167, have been given asylum for "humanitarian Board announced topic The Winds of Change Seminar of magazines such ■ Catering Knapp's will sponsor a panel discussion on, "Problems of Proliferation," of Peace Research." Harvard as the "Journal Professor George [CAREFUL,ARTISTIC PLANNING Campus Center Die United States and the Soviet Union opened at 8 p.m. tonight in Erickson Quester is actively involved in ■ Kiva. ■ Parties, Meetings, Rehearsal Dinners, Wedding international relations and arms gotiations Thursday in their strategic arms limitation control. ■ Receptions, Banquets - all kinds - all sizes. Iks with mutual wariness but some guarded optimism The program will include three out reaching agreement. professors of political science. ■ You Can President Nixon in an opening statement that he Richard Brody, Stanford Rely on Archie ped the two nations could first agree to curb their University, is the co - author of .autrec Photographers * For the "Simulation in International Weddings, Parties, clear missile arms race and then agree to reduce their Relations." Portraits and ienals of these weapons. Paul Smoker of Northwestern Graduations. Technical theses S BEST FOOD University and the University of Special rates for National News Lancaster in England, is a students BEST SERVICE frequent r contributor to The nation's industrial production index, a key dicator of the state of the economy, rose slightly BEST PRICES iring March to reverse seven consecutive monthly ps. the Federal Reserve reported Thursday. Anytime, Anywhere rhe Dept. of Transportation proposed Thursday new les to prohibit most flights by civil aircraft over the lited States at speeds that would cause a sonic boom reach the ground. In announcing the proposal, Secretary John A. Volpe id: "This action is intended to make air transportation mpatible. not competitive, with the environmental lality of the nation." Kickapoo Creek Outdoor Rock Concert New York mEmORIJUl MY canned heat • b b. king . Thursday filed suit against four major immobile UJEEKETID delaney & bonnie ft friends f| j Mnagu manufacturers, asking them for triple for allegedly suppressing the Scientific HLHY 3D paul butterfield blues development and HEYW0RTH,ILLINOIS band . smith . Backstreet eu stallation of anti - pollution devices on automobiles. one-eyed jacks • guild • bloomsbury people The suit seeks |f triple damages for the city and for its^ sidents tor pollution of the air since 1953. It alleges TUNE-UP HEADQUARTERS nickle bag • for days & a night finchley boys«reo speedwagon • easy street . bluesweed lat the bucktooth • esquires • feather train • zebra four auto makers and their association phoenix • night people • truth • seven • blue >nspired from 1953 to 1969 to challengers uncle meat spare chaynge 5u| suppress the To spot motor trouble and expense before it stops • • velopment and installation of anti pollution devices genesis • arrow memphis • gideon s bible you, get an electronic test or our complete tune-up. - 'automobiles. litter — hot set up Now is the time for that spring auto check. See us today. Michigan News he northwest Detroit home of one of the Teamsters ion dissidents behind a week - MORRIS AUTO PARTS long wildcat walkout truck drivers here was damaged by a bomb dnesduy night. His wife and two children were at 814 E. KALAMAZOO Mon. - Sat. 8-5:30 roe but were not injured. he bomb, which police said had been thrown or ced against the w a siding of the house at ground level, foot - square hole in the siding, broke the plaster the interior wall and shattered six windows. Spokesman for the "unity committee" of Teamsters cal 299, who asked not to be identified, blamed the At The 'dent on the union's "goon squad." t • time policeman in Huron Township near "All Newr Wlt Was charged with manslaughter Thursday in the 'ng of a 17 year - old boy he found prying open Reserve Your - *jn "ig machine in a New Boston gas station, jayne County Prosecutor William L. Cahalan drew up ^slaughter warrant against Patrolman Donald R. KO - KO Bar i£5who Ncw Boston, moonlights a truck driver father of six as a policeman several nights a — three brands of beer on tap Place with the Sun — the best food in town ADMITTANCE CAN ONLY said he feared 17 - year - old David W. Patch of til closing BE GUARANTEED WHILE oston was armed and when the youth started to —peoples' prices TICKET SUPPLY LASTS e 0Ward him he fired a shotgun blast into his back. Prosecutor said Patch had no weapon and there was Order tickets direct from: :ahTiaS°nable necessity" to fire at him. KICKAPOO CREEK INC. f nen r" protested there P°licemen in are "poorly trained, part - BOX 606, HEYW0RTH, ILLINOIS 61745 many of our suburbs." Name lursda C°unty Circuit Court Judge Charles Wickens Address e cit y ^SUec* a temporary restraining order barring >mdii Ludington and five Ludington companies City State Zip... rhe r!I!fln8 cyanide into Lake Michigan. School Age.... illev fij came shortly after Atty. Gen. Frank J. ar8jn '? a su't against the city and the firms, I enclose $ for tickets. st 8 they have dumped cyanide in the lake in the MICHIGAN L. C. LERNER STATE NEWS UNIVERSITY Benign selectivity JOSEPH M. BYRD equals censorship acting advertising manager Preface: Look it's very indecisive about facts NORMAN J. SAARI, -- simple, you see. and ^1 managing editor First, there's my buddy and me . . . and occurrences -- when one must face. ^ campus editor we're in agreement: censorship per se faced individual: one who is deft in KENNETH 111 KRELL, editorial *vivuuijj cUltUrial Ieditor of trickery because he doesn't really exist; it's actually "benign can JEFF ELLIOTT, sports editor intention i JEANNE SADDLER, associate editor neglect" of certain information. play both sides against the middle and/ he will provide the public withafeein Six-time recipient of the Pacemaker award For instance, take any moderate or right uncertainty about his present and for - wing daily journal. Now, it is apparent actions, i.e., Richard Nixon. outstanding journalism. that the lack of a preponderance of printed leftist articles is not due to any deliberate Accordingly, Spiro Agnew can l attempt by newspaper or news media respected -- not because of his political, editors to censor; rather, there is just a social views (which are atrocious! h because he says what he feels EDITORIALS limit to the space a paper can provide for articles. Hence, certain stories must be Not only does Agnew bask in (intp honest?! j" eliminated ("benign selectivity"). he has developed a wild streak of arrow to accompany the resounding Yet, to eliminate information in any receotion his household wordiness. systematic manner could conceivably be considered "censorship." But if those In Mr. Agnew's best attribute resides in h The danger charge of newspapers, magazines or television news reports are not attuned to many areas of potential news •• or if some causing an uproar of criticism from i left. Tremendous! Finally, something writers / editors just "don't know" -- then someone (protesting the war(s), calling!, an end to starvation, making known th there is no premediated attempt to plight of the poor, mis present a slant to the news ("benign - educated an in adherence unenlightenment"). As you can guess, the fundamental diseased have not been too far) has awakened not only the left but the quiescent effective thu loquacio! majority (?) aswe| fallacious. While other problem occurs with the latter group. The (According to a recent poll, only 4gKl^^TD At a recent panel discussion on situation is always unfortunate -- the cent of Americans support U.S. involvement in Southeast Asia, Administrations may have acted on presiden people relying on the news media are Nixon's efforts to end the Vietnam wai Herbert D. certain beliefs, this does not verify always frustrated, anxious, uncertain, Spivak. diplomat in Ru The vice president's worst asset residence and visiting professor at the conditions causing the beliefs. If con® of his being the person most MSU, attempted to justify many of anything, there is much evidence to STEVE ALLEN initiate a "censorship of the likelv i news medii our government's actions since 1954 support the contention that many in the near future. Perhaps, the stu> in Vietnam. As beliefs held and subsequent actions being set for 1976. expected, his taken by the U.S. in Southeast Asia argument coincided with the Nixon Chorus: Censorship is only a tragedy I Administration's stated were serious mistakes — so serious the extent that people goal of actually read u, achieving an "honorable end" to the war and saving face by gradually that our they are the primary present paradox in Vietnam. reason for And today in Southeast Asia desire information. If most "read," "did" or "acted," instead of tryii to impress others with their people reall handing the conflict over to the suppose To now suppose that the Nixon knowledge and insight, censorship woul South Vietnamese. then be an abridgement of freedom. Administration deserves to be left alone in trying to extricate the U.S. Until we learn to USE Spivak tried to defend the past It used to be simple. You would go to looted shops and burned Cambodians alive. The South Vietnamese fighting the Viet rather than our freedoms, from Vietnam according to what it the AP wire to get the day's summary of just to talk about them actions of the U.S. Government in They slit their stomachs open, even young Cong and the Cambodians. The (the Administration) believes to be what happened in Vietnam. The Americans children. The barbarians abused young girls potential use, we are providing t Cambodians fighting the South Vietnamese Southeast Asia by explaining that in imposed censorship. true is just to make more serious a and a few South Vietnamese were fighting and killed them." and the Viet Cong. The Viet Cong fighting each separate instance, i.e., the 1954 the Viet Cong and the North Vietnamese. And then there were the people whi series of mistakes followed The Vietnamese are traditionalenemies of the Cambodians and the South defeat of the French, the by the There were some token Australians and couldn't afford to read; who could nevi the Cambodians. For the past few years, Vietnamese. And a sideshow in Laos. leaders in Washington. Administration in Washington acted Koreans on one side and the other side did though, they had been getting along. But know the meaning of All of which leaves a unique problem. "censhorship' This then is the have weapons made in Moscow, but it was now thousands of Vietnamese, many of Where do the Americans come In? They because at an early age they wen according to what it believed to be danger inherent in all happening in the same place. them living on the Cambodian side of the could "preventively - detained" from becomin true. In other words, Spivak urged Spivak's and the Nixsonian support Cambodia and South Nevermore. First there was Laos and the South Vietnam border, have been rounded criminals within, a society which is itself that we not condemn past actions by Vietnam, but then both would get mad at philosophy (assuming Spivak follows annual Plain of Jars offense by the Pathet up by the army for interrogation. Many are us for supporting the other, crime against humanity ; who administration claiming we our government in Vietnam. The line) - that our Lao succeeded in spite of Air America. still being held in detention camps and were helping the other in their war against "slow learners" in public school, taugh reason: these actions were present position is rationalized by And then there was Prince Sihanouk's many of those released have lost their jobs. them. Consider also the clamor in this only limited material because of thei undertaken according to previously reference to past positions. The goodby party next door in Cambodia, Vietnamese costumes are no longer seen. country if we tried to start sending supposed "underachiever" status, held beliefs, i,e„, a "Communist followed by rumors that the Viet Cong Special identification cards must by held extensive aid to Cambodia. Imagine also finally considered "failures" when thei at . validity of those ideas is would take over any day. results on upper - middle class standardize! by all Vietnamese and all Vietnamese must what would happen if we just stayed where monolith," which have no unimportant, only their popularity is It may get worse. The new Cambodian be off the streets at night. tests confirmed their terrible deprivation we were, helping the South Vietnamese. foundation in 1970. relevant. This leads, we believe to a We would inevitably be drawn into fighting government has started an anti - Viet Cong Any similarity between this and Nazi No, the problem is not simply censorshi dangerous position of leaving - well - propaganda campaign that now appears to Germany is purely intentional. The the Cambodians. And if we did not aid of the news media -- the media whid However, Spivak's argument - enough - alone and "what sufficed in be aimed at all Vietnamese living in the. extermination may soon begin in earnest. Cambodia, the present government would fall when serves only those who can afford the span defending former Administrations in the past will suffice now." country. (A few atrocities have occurred, the worst the Viet Cong decide to take or the leisure time away from the struggle order to rationalize allowing the About 600,000 Vietnamese currently live was at the town of Prasaut where 73 over. to survive to watch television and in Cambodia. After the overthrow of the people were slaughtered. One officer Nixon Administration free rein in A choice may have to be made newspapers. The concern is wit Sihanouk government Viet Cong attacks claimed that they were all Viet Cong, amonn determining Vietnam policy is one of these policies unless we censorship of people -• the poor, diseased - increased, which, in turn, increased anti - apparently including the old women and get out oi Vietnamese Cambodians. feelings among many children. "Now how does this affect me?" asks the Vietnam down in now. At first just South Vietnam. we were It bogger now seems the American Indian, those whom we don' agree with, right - wingers and left a The "salvation silent American. We have let massacres go possible for us to become wingers, the old. new government" completely To become concerned with tlu sponsored a recent anti • Vietnamese rally on before, what's another massacre? submerged in Southeast Asia. We are Office peripheral problem of a censorship of Educa containing a skit where Cambodians killed persons in Vietnamese dress. While this skit apparently was directed against the Viet And it really does not matter, unless the present Saigon government gets truly concerned about the Vietnamese in already in a mess, and that become messier. The time may come when we will not mess may well words is to become callous to people people. By abnegating others, we only further deny ourselves. Cong, on the same day leaflets were distributed with this message referring to Cambodia. Fortunately they are not too concerned in this case. Otherwise South only have a secret timetable for withdrawal from Vietnam, but also from Epilogue: Until we learn to USE Art Laos, freedoms, rather than just to talk at eLov land grant all massacred Vietnamese: "(T)he Vietnamese the Cambodians. Thev Cambodian heads for cooking pots. used They Vietnam Cambodia. may well declare war on Imagine the mathematical possibilities! Cambodia and God knows where else. And didn't MacArthur say to never become them or their potential use, we providing a self • imposed censorship. involved in an Asian land war... So it goes . . . ArtCarvi The Federal Office of Education approved by the Senate. Henry has decided that the land grant Dykema, director of financial aids, OUR READERS' MIND beaut don't ii college system in America is an said this will mean we will receive They're c anachronism. One spokesman has the same funds we did this year. loving Lower comprehensive said that the federal assistance given every d fees Nixon, however, vetoed this year's to these universities insignificant that it did not affect the operations of the institutions." "is so HEW bill and Dykema noted that funds were cut substantially over last year's. To lower his budget, Nixon exams are potentially beneficial to wealthy exam "In other words," bemoans Mr. B. Allen aTo To the Editor: fee to $10 or $15 is widening n< . can do the same thing next year. and We would like to comment on Mr. Bertril underprivileged students alike. We're Benson, "it is already an uphill fight for gap but is narrowing it by allowing boll Meanwhile, back at the first land "We're in for a battle," Dykema said. trying to lower the comp fees within the A. Benson's letter of April 13 concerning economically deprived students at this lower and upper class students to cofflM grant college, the vice president for the range of EVERY student income. Our goal University, and making it easier for middle indiscriminate of income. 2.) Why show! We wonder who the Office of comprehensive examination fee takes into account that many students who business and finance said the amount structure. and upper class students to obtain their student be delayed from graduat^T cannot afford to pay the present rates MSU could lose, $385,949 if the Education talked to inside the Mr. Benson begins by calling "naive" degree is just widening the gap of possibly a term early because he cantoj universities before deciding that the those students who wish to lower comp might, easily alot $10 or $15 for the same inequality." won't pay the standing exam charges, wn«i program is abolished, is equivalent to item. To this the amount spent annually on one amount of federal assistance was so exam charges. We don't consider refusing we reply: 1.) Reducing a comp by doing so, he opens a position in residential college, a large teaching insignificant. It seems hard to to pay unjust charges "naive." If, when a academic community for another stud department or the amount set aside for student aid. imagine that any one universities could find the money of the 69 consumer shops, he sees a product selling for more than it is worth, is he naive when he confronts the merchant with his ideas? Edit like lousy Western who is then selected by the University We conclude that allowing any student achieve according to his capabilities. J j without increasing the students' Secondly, Benson accuses those who To the Editor: citizens example allowing him to graduate ane * But land grant institutions should want to lower comp fees of being "self • and, I think, as moral human schedule through comprehensive exa 1 burden - with fewer classes, fewer It I am writing in regard to your editorial beings. not be dismayed; the House of seeking," a view which he finds "common on Judge Hoffman which appeared in the fulfilling the University's educaw* professors or an increase in fees. I object to the freedom the State News Representatives approved an • in. middle and upper class" Americans. April 7 edition of the State News. takes in making such value function. Nancy M<1 We are working not only for ourselves but judgments as amended version of the proposal, Peter P. Muirhead, associate Your coverage of the trial of the Chicago "Clearly Judge Hoffman is too prejudiced" Farmington fres for the benefit of all students. Granting Mr. Seven and editorial comments concerning it Roger W which means we stand to lose only commissioner for higher education, and "... we are not Benson his assumption that students from dealing with a judge two - thirds of the amount next year. said the $12.12 million worth of aid indicate that the State News deplores what who emulates the 'logical thinker.' " What Richfield, Ohio fres " low income families are "just as intelligent happened in the Chicago courtroom. You we are dealing with is a judge who had to Then when the 69 universities are still as students from wealthy suburbia," comp was being withdrawn so more called Judge Hoffman's behavior"ludicrous put up with seven young men who through in existence without two - thirds of emphasis could be placed on and highly untenable." What would you their the amount, they can extending equal education call the behavior of the Chicago Seven? animalistic behavior abused their Letter out the whole program the naturally phase following opportunities to as many young Bleak musical Besides being "ludicrous and highly untenable," the defendants were crude, rights as citizens. Editorials such as the one On Hoffman shows The State News' ever Judge The State News welcomes all 1$ year. people as possible. And, in weighing vulgar, and obnoxious. Hoffman may have - the land grant appropriations against To the Editor: increasing tendency to criticize the actions They should be typed and signed wi "J President Wharton went before the In spite of what your reviewer said on overstepped his rights as a judge (I refer of "The Establishment" without home town, student, faculty or , other projects, the office decided you to the Illinois State Code of Ethics for examining state legislature at the end of March April 10, "Your Own Thing" was a bleak reasons or causes for those actions. It's like standing, and local phone nil other projects came out ahead. the conduct in the courtroom of lawyers a bad Western - the State included. No unsigned letter «i 1 musical because none of the characters News constantly asked for $71,148,508 for the East and judges. You may be surprised to learn could sing and because this debilitated cheers for the good guys (supposedly all accepted for publication, and nole .1 Lansing campus. Governor Milliken, It's the old cliche of robbing from what rights judges do have. But the State be printed without a signature excep j version of Twelfth Night substituted young revolting students) and boos anyone however, proposed News is overlooking the fact that through extreme circumstances. All letters a a budget of $10 Peter to pay Paul - the moral being repetition for the action and wit of the wearing black. their behavior during the trial the Chicago less than 300 words long for Pu61 million less than Wharton's total that giving to Paul gleans a lot of original by W. Shakespeare. Susan Bennett Seven overstepped their rights as American without request. favorable Perhaps the show was better with the Saginaw, freshman editing. publicity, while taking New York Company but I fail to see how it from Peter, (one portion is the aid could be really great when the book has a President Nixon recommended given to our megaversity) is so badly simplified plot, sans wit, sans grace, that appropriations for NDEA loans, insiginificant that poor Peter will sans everything but a modicum of novelty. never know what he lost. The characters were supposed to dance, which are a basis for a great deal of too. MSU's financial aid, be reduced to Fictive flashes of photographs and Until Peter goes to pay his tuition, lights $135 million next year. The House add novelty, but you can't hide a feeble that is. passed a $270 million appropriation, plot behind a curtain of psychedelia. M.E. Murray however, which now has to be —The Editors James Madison College writing coach in State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, April 17, 1970 Dorm reconsiders coed status By CHAS FLOWERS there support a coed residence ok'd a proposal for i State News Staff Writer hall. Dan Peters, Snyder Hall an attempt to assess student said he was optimistic that (comP,ex manager)," John that has reached the desk of feelings on this issue. Snyder would rejoin MHA. McConnell, Grand Rapids senior, Eldon Nonnamaker, associate Peters said the hall government . z»ofthe,rhir dean of students. Peters said the councils is negotiating a seven - point "I think once they understand what we mean by a commune said" "He would work for us rather tlian Schmidt, Thorburn are proposal, "needs of students," that they will seek this for their and the Board of Trustees." Monday on whether termg " students Ule lasl b(Jlh housM 16 Peters said. "I am Meanwhile, hall independence point "declaration," including the right of students to hopeful that our goals and theirs r^mained >n fact, if not in - - - will somehow coalesce " University regulation. When a inspect financial records, „ student mentioned that the Peters Black political class plans in said the Snyder doors now effect." The "needs" - might be ,ocked include establishment of a Phillips councils support a McConnel quipped: commune "with the power to commune "so that the needs of "That's Justin going to be a dictate its own needs as a living Morrill College and permanent part of the janitor's unit." Snyder - Phillips can be met." job here. He's going to have to demonstration at concert Results of a referendum held by Phillips Hall were not in at the time of second "We want regulations to above suspend dorm Tom Smith come in, punch in and doors back on the put the hinges " By JEANNE SADDLER writing, but the proposal for 24 - FREE definite political according to Johnson, but hope hour Associate Campus Editor open house was expected to follow up the demonstration to pass. Snyder has had Members of the Malcolm X "The Temptations' songs have with workshops i black art ii hour open house since Sunday Freedom School, a black no progressive political line," the community, when students took hinges off political education class that Johnson said. "It emotionalizes doors separating the halls. The Hot tin roof meets in the Lansing black the death of black people, tells community, have announced us war's not a Part they will picket the Temptations and presents an unreal image of politics Teach- in doors have not been locked since that time. Snyder Hall Council was to DELIVERY worshippers get a better view of the while f./MJO area concert Saturday night. meet Thursday with Men's Hall cepting the sun's rays by lounging on a local roof. Terry Johnson, spokesman for Johnson said he feels pop h e Assn. (MHA) to discuss Snyder's State News Photo By Don Gerstner the class, said they feel this form "d wj]j secession from that body near ^ouprhave oups have the the potential to L be T S the topic f Iu speech by Dr. the end of winter term. Peters impose npose revolutionary values on .P of a sPeech b> Garret de R°.f a DIAL 351-6300 Bell, editor of the the people, but that they fail to 2" Ff J, ! ctronics service do this. He said black art has not been "a part of the „ m^todav uurw^' in u u j0 ' %% w peoples' Xllkak i uK ? movement." „ Bel 1® dlso a lobbyist for Zero Population Growth, Inc., a lustem, U' to "If black inspiration community from artists they the must receive black be SrouP concerned with Population, AAA Aiili over - •©1 responsive to the black WWW X Western lew Ku Chairman Bill Rustem of local merchants and Community want the Milton B. Dickerson, vice community," he said. "We are not trying to single out the Temptations, but they have the best image in the community. MOTELS RESERVATIONS Vneet with University co - operative'removed from the president for student affairs, We want to put national pressure PHONE 351-5500 | M I next week to discuss the Student Services Bldg. President Wharton; Jack Breslin, on black artists." AREA CODE 517 ■ Immunity electronics co - Rustem wants the co - secretary of the University; and • The picketers MAIM & NATURE |e. operative to stay. other officials, outside of Jenison Fieldhouse. BOOKSTORE rawmsnrni] pais are concerned that "it saves students money, so it 328 Student Services operative, which is 1100 has a valid place in ASMSU," he P NOW OPEN SATURDAY^ University TROWBRIDGE . - ,g on said Thursday, 12-6 )f y, is hurting the business Rustem plans to meet with EVERYBODY ★★★★★★★★ E. LANSING MICHIGAN l^On 'Fri.-Sat. 1 P.M. Campus Daily 4 P.M. to 2 to 1 A.M. A.M. Sunday 2 P.M. to 1 A.M. LOVES sansuio Try our BRBQ Pizza I at HOLIDAY LANES OPEN 9 aii>n. daily In Try this pizza with BRBQ sauce and one of your favorite [BOWLING DAY AND EVENING at HI-FI items at a price lower than most of our competition. Just North of Frandor 1101 E. 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FROM THE ENTERTAINMENT CENTER $1°° OFF ON ALL TAPES PRICED $5.94 1 Murphy's WITH THIS COUPON coupon /rm STORE HOURS • Coca-Cola Compan; MERIDIAN MALL 9 9 Mon. Sat. - 12 6 Sun. - - R. C. MURPHY Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, April 17 , Cuban majority By JOHN JUEL Americans should be better Mrs. Nute said; the advantages of benefits in spite of hard lift living were much higher before There is hardly the same to carry out radical reforms relations. Secondly, the current she said. "A State News Staff Writer informed on the conditions that the poor have not risen sharply the Revolution." degree of personal freedom in without strong hand at the likelv * I While standards of living in actually exist in Cuba. because much of Cuba's But many radical reforms have Cuba that we are accustomed to a top," she said. U.S. embargo would have to be lifted. Third, the Vietnam War this is that under siege the idea >1 Cuba have dropped sharply for "There's been a very serious resources have been plowed into been carried out under the new in the United States, Mrs. Nute Mrs. Nute mentioned four would have to end. And fourth, North helps them by the aian( 'l omission on our part in using commented. There is political the former middle class, the future investments in education, regime, Mrs. Nute added, and preconditions the Cuban "the U.S. would have to stop our democratic privilege of the majority of the people — the majority of the population is medicine and industry. repression and no free press, she government said must be met exploiting other peoples." Mrs. finding out the facts and making Nute's SDe.„, I "People getting tired of the peasants in rural areas — have said; newspapers are before any reconciliation would better off under the new regime, up our own minds," she said. are "It is this fourth condition sponsored by the T 1 a member of the Quaker U.N. great amount of physical labor benefited. Cuba now has free propagandistic party organs. take place with the U.S. First, which shows Cuba is probably Faculty Coalition, the & "At this uneasy time in our own the U.S. would have to take the Program said Wednesday night at society, when all they have to do, most of it in education, nursery school "They reply to this criticism not very serious about any form Friends and the things are not the fields, and rations are through university, free medical by stating it would be impossible first step, since they broke off FellcTfl the Union. right, we should not be afraid to of reconciliation with the U.S.," Reconciliation. ^1 Betty Richardson Nute, look at the alternatives followed scarce," she noted. "One of the care, free telephone calls on a discussing a trip she made to by other countries." greatest dangers is local basis and free rent in some demoralization, especially in the areas, she said. Cuba in June, 1969, said Life is still very hard in Cuba, Havana area where standards of There is also a philosophy of a NEW FAMILY IMAGE "new man," she explained. A child is brought up with the idea Midwestern GOP elects he is not out to take what he can get; instead, he should serve his MSU senior as chairman community. He will be rewarded to the extent he can do this, she said. The family is viewed as an extension of the community as an extension of self, the Sociologist into existence in the sees 15th change Kenneth Asquith, East Lansing senior, was the family and the nation as an century with the introduction of Asquith, accepting the chairmanship of the it." recently elected by unanimous acclamation, Federation for 1970-1971, extension of the community, she pillows, chimneys and glass for chairman of the Midwest Foundation of expressed his hope to „ window. Today the same ideal is College spread the College Republican movement added Families are becoming less not "The privatized Republicans. throughout the Midwest. "The people take pride in the privatized and less isolated, a family called right for everyone, she said. Seventeen MSU College for very close "We want to make people who Republicans joined changes that have taken place sociologist said Thursday at the relations," she 1,200 students from 13 Midwest States "The overall goal of the said. "Either you love each other will fit their assigned roles in at the movement is to defeat since the Revolution," Mrs. Nute Family and Child Sciences Dept. Lincoln Motor Hotel, the Democratic or you hate like brothers." Indianapolis, Ind., April party, to defeat liberalism on said. "They feel they have colloquy on the family and its- society." 10-12, for the Federation's 19th Annual campuses," Asquith said. gotten rid of a corrupt society future- u Relationships are not going to She said there is a need to Convention. Asquith was the chairman of MSU intense in the future, Mrs. College and replaced it with a just jessie question production and the Deborah A. Ludlow, Port Huron Republicans in 1968 and 1969. Last Bernard, honorary Bernard predicted extra money gained junior, headed year he society. People will come up to research scholar from from a the MSU group. MSU served as Federation "I'm not sure what wife's job in relation to its effect College Republicans have Secretary, Region 5. He is you on the street and ask,'How Pennsylvania State University, we 170 members. planning graduate study in law. do you like our new Cuba?" perceive as a good family today the family. ^ the privatized famiiy camp Before we had examples of a 'If get six refrigerators, but c pot, what have we gained." Mrs. Bernard young people actually know said today's H The Forbidden Planet Story Of Three Consenting Adults In The Privacy Of Their Own Home more than their elders. "They know more about drugs, abortion and all kinds of ■3 JESSIE BERNARD things. I don't think there is any asked if it has any future J Palomar Pictures International presents generation gap and that's the says yes, but she alsi ALTAIRE an Associates and Aldrich problem. Talk to them about any issue and they've already been there. We're just catching have many options, "I don't think come to a time when men w J up." women won't want one ar IV on Mrs. Bernard is writing a book the future of marriage. When and need one another commit themselves." 1 Nothing has been left out of "The Adventurers" "The FORBIDDEN PLANET' EXCITING a world in which WEEK! the Destructive power of the ID is unleashed. FORBIDDEN PLANET Stars Killing.. ROBBIE THE ROBOT "/Sister George- JOSEPH E. LEVINE PRESENTS THE LEWIS GILBERT FILM OF WALTER PIDGEON | j waning . THE ADVENTURERS ANNE FRANCIS Based Beryl Reid Susannah York Coral Browne the Novel THE ADVENTURERS by HAROLD R0BBINS on CHARLES AZNAVOUR ALAN BADEL CANDICE BERGEN COLOR "A FILM THAT SHOULD BE SEEN! THOMMY BERGGREN ROSSANO BRAZZI DELIA BOCCARDO OLIVIA de HAVILLAND ERNEST BORGNINI BEKIM FEN | One of the frankest and genuinely ANNA MOFFO LEIGH TAYLOR-YOUNG erotic scenes to have come to film. MICHAEL HASTINGS and LEWIS GILBERT LEWS g1°BErT ' anVc^'carlOS JO&M WELLS HALL FILMS Fri. & Sat. Only Nothing is left to the imagination!" 1 Admission DAILY AT - 2 P.M. - 5:30 and 8:45 P.M. RATED $1.00 Showtimes 'No one will be seated during the last 88 minutes, 7:00 HURRY! ENDS M| X & 4 Shows Daily they'll all beon the floor,laughing.-lookmagazine Fri. & Sat. Only 9:45 • ■ HAS THAT YOUTHFUL ACCENT WHICH PLACES ^ Some of the best lunatic humor since th IT IN A LEAGUE WITH ZEFFIRELLI'S 'ROMEO AND JULIET. {Marx Brothers invaded the opera.'-newsweek An EROTIC exploration of the OCCULT -John Mahoney, FM and Fine Arts Magazine Joseph E Levine Presents WITCHCRAFT THROUGH ZECC HOSTEL Richard Burton in M«l Brooks' THE AGES "THE PCCDICECS" "Witchcraft Through the Ages is unrelenting in its Horrible and Wildest Excesses of Satanic Obsession in the middle Unflinching treatment of Genevieve Bujold as ANNK BOLEYN A Sidney Glazier Production ages ... it is a Daring & Terrifying film. The director creates a Nightmare World of Violence & Eroticism." Hrilis/i I 'ilm liisiiiuh IN THE HalWallis PRODUCTION Witchcraft Through the Ages contains much Eroticism, Nudity, and elements of I 0 uarring Gene Wilder • Dick Shawn as i sD Horror. . . The Black Mass is recreated . . . This film is unique Genuine d/y-nne (ofttie sf*
< In Color Pi IrenePapas • • Rom 108B wells Anthony Quayle • John Colicos ^ Next! Elliott Gould in "M - A - S - H" State News, East Lansing, Michigan Michigan Friday, April 17, 1970 i it By SHARMAN Red Cedar improves with MAM CTCtAJ A DT STEWART Water Resources • Commission • Cedar of years past. Detergent ^ i.. .. age injures another use of water, _ State Newt Staff Writer the MSU Agriculture Research discussion ire concerned with presented the report Wednesday pollution is a worse problem Waste materials currently as a part of a Center, according to Wilson. thp current the rum issuing of several campus - wide today, although the foam cannot flooding the Red Cedar come A waste assimilation study will Pollution of the Red Cedar is new licenses for trailer Environmental Teach In. - be seen, according to Ball. from six Major sources; a factory camps. less today than 10 be conducted this ! The camps were disapproved by years ago and Slides presented showed the "The fuzz has been taken out in Fowlerville, Weberville, BP is steadily improving, according visual differences in the Red but there is far more phosphorus Williamston, East Lansing and East Lansing and MSU. Citizens attending the citizens because of the poor V**1 to a report "The Red Cedar, Past Present and Future." Cedar over the years. "A major problem, raw sewage now said. than 10 years ago," Ball sewage control they offer. Robert Ball, director ^rom East Lansing's overloaded "An abundance of fish of the Institute of Water sewage plant, was eliminated by populated the river in the Resources; Niles Kevern, construction of a new plant 1930s," Kevern said. "Pollution chairman of CUA branch the Dept. of seven years ago," Ball said. lowers the oxygen level and kills plans Fisheries and Wildlife, and Mounds of white detergent the fish." Ronald Wilson of the Michigan foam framed slides of the Red Now small mouth bass and suckers can be found in only a few areas. P PETITION PRESENTED A pollution free river depends continuous change in location on research and improvements, according to the three speakers. Madam' The East Lansing is now running at must decide to add sewage plant capacity. "We on to it or staff of twenty college students and two full aide time recipients receive assistance in Preparing for high school equivalency tests from the build a new one," Ball said. graduate students participate in in duces Summer Tutorial center. The fight against pollution is a In two weeks the Center for a Recreation The CUA provides technical GRAND RAPIDS (UPI) - A inquiry difficult one, because " it is lawful , Wilson said, Urban Affairs (CUA) expand its facilities to the Le - -— will — Program. This tutorial and program provides recreational and direct aid to the Friendship Day Care Center. CUA is also purportedly the "madam" of the water for waste assimilation. It Jon Building, 1801 W. Main St. assistance for youths on linked with the Ingham County house of prostitution -• which operation. She pleaded guilty becomes lawfully termed This new location will house the Lansing's West and North sides, Medical Society and MSU allegedly operated without Feb. 24 to operating a house of pollution when it damages or Urban Extension Center. Fireplug inspector police interference for 25 years prostitution or lewdness and is , With services offered bv the Coordinating University resources in an effort to assist College of Human Medicine in conjunction with helping the Ijoyce Canfield, New Hudson senior, collects geology has prompted a prosecutor's awaiting sentence. The request for the grand jury Bus BuSlOrel fare 1 cent Cent CUA expanding ereatlv since Lansing's Model Cities day care center, petition ■samples and other specimens from a fire hydrant near grand jury J}* request forthe grand jury .. 1968, the center found that it ^gram is another area of area of Visits to the new location may ■ Grand River Ave. State News Photo By Terry Luke 'r?mJ r?id 'h0 h°u» ,0 Cut Pollution can „„ ]„„ge, operate the Urban be arranged by Nolan Ellison at StSn^ L™"„iti^ WaS welfare CUA. will hold a hearing today on the N.M. (API ,Clty bus Passengers will pay ^tension Center in the Church of God ln Christ- 2" J aJm""y a ride on Earth academy of Advertising petition. Marje Dennjs will join the staff The petition -- presented by rf.' JL as part of the expanded food Asst. Kent County Prosecutor .. , y commission approved nutrition program. Robert Stephans Wednesday afternoon specified no details. f the Environmental Teach - In . CUA now actively participates i several projects in Lansing. A annual meeting Committee Circuit Judge Roman Snow said >onsors the reasons for the grand jury e American Academy of teachers to develop a mutually Education," and "Curriculum petition would be brought out today. Hie GOLDEN 11 itc 19th beneficial relationship. Innovations Present and Leon Buer, attorney for Mrs. FALCON • — irtis,ng will sponsor its 12th Highlights of v this Future" are the topics discussed Steenland, said Wednesday, "We lual Meeting this weekend on year's campus. The Academy Pro^m *»» ir\cludf ^eral today. have nothing to fear from it (the . ... J national organization for « snppnhps speeches outstanding hv pHnpat.nre by educators members of nnH and the the Saturday the focus will be on grand jury). If they want to future. continue the HOSPITALITY ROOM Icators and practitioners in field in Discussion will case, it is fine with ON WINGS: Kellogg Center. include "New Directions in us, even though Mrs. Steenland's [advertising profession, "Advertising and Today's The PAMPERED fciiie objectives of the Advertising Research" and "The health is not the best and she has (AT THE AIRPORT, FOR Inization are to provide for Pressing Social Issues," "New American Academy of been undergoing a terrific strain EXCITEMENT OF . * THE BEST IN DINING) imunication among teachers ^'rections Advertising Advertising in the 1970s." since last October." INTERNATIONAL ■he Held, to evaluate methods FLIGHT. (FREE PARKING) ■ to stimulate practitioners of lertising to work with Family Films. roses roses, roses, 1 DOZEN RED ROSES fenit&iJQIKT Wis "Lansing's Quality and Service Florist" S3» tetSffi&Y 31? 13EEG CJLTIVS fairy tale film 485 1764 FOR RESERVATIONS taHS< Kosar festival. TONIGHT BOBimiEK HANNAH SCHOOL 'BEST SUPPORTING h/te\TS£Ri/ia^ 809 E.MICHIGAN call: IV 5-7271 ACADEMY AWARD WINNER ACTOR' GIG YOUNG li presents Jack Hamilton RESTAURANT & TIFFANY LOUNGE BEST folk singer in the A SPECIAL PLACE FOR THAT SPECIAL DATE PICTURE Rathskeller COME IN AND ENJOY YOUR FAVORITE COCKTAIL NIGHTLY. GREEK MENU OF THE YEAR!" EVERY SATURDAY IN ADDITION TO OUR REGULAR -National Board of Review Thurs., Fri., Sat. nites MENU. Have you ever tried a turquoise margarita? DOWNTOWN LANSING COCKTAIL Hour TODAY 4-7 p.m. 489-1196 / 116 E. Michigan / Free Parking "BEST ACTRESS JIIKFNNr -New York Film Critics ABC PICTURES CORP PRESENTS A PAIOMAR PICTURE A CHARTOff WINKLER POLLACK PRODUCTION STARRING JANE FONDA MICHAEL SARRAZIN SUSANNAH YORK "THEY SHOOT HORSES. 00N7 THEY? GIG YOUNG BONNIE BEDELIA AND RED BUTTONS SCREENPLAY BY JAMES P0€ ANO ROBERT E THOMPSON BASED ON THE NOVEL BY HORACE McCOY ASSOCIATE PRODUCER-MUSIC JOHN GREEN EXECUTIVE PRODUCER THEODORE B SILLS PRODUCED BY IRWIN WINKLER AND ROBERT CHARTOFF DIRECTED BY SYDNEY POLLACK C&0R PANAVISION* Soundtuck Ritofdmg on A B C Wtordt] £» A SUBSIDIARY Of THE AMERICAN BROADCASTING COMPANIES INC DISTRIBUTED BY CINERAMA RELEASING CORPORATION NGC THEATRE CORP. SAT. & SUN. AT 2:30 SPARTAN TWIN WEST FRANDOR SHOPPING CENTER 4:50-7:15 & 9:30 • 3100 EAST SAGINAW Phone 351 0030 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, April 17, ACTING 'FLAWLESS' Pop group sows 'Anne:' hollow production via music Word By ROBERT KIPPER with her falling out, trial, betrayal and execution. If one manages State News Reviewer flickering concern for Anne, it is only because of Miss Bujold's and three women* determination in the final scenes. perform tonight at 8 „ 7 Since my initial review of "Anne of the Thousand Days," a The makers of "Anne" have packaged their epic with glowing Sports Arena of the I.M. bldg. This JL? number of peoplehave expressed strong disagreement with my photography, ornate sets and elaborate costumes. These of a concert is nationwide PJ negative position. I wrote that this film study of Anne Boleyn's trappings, combined with the bogus sense of importance any tour brief reign as Queen of England was a pretentious and historical film enjoys and the recent windfall of 10 Oscar y>™ unimaginative costume drama. In response to the arguments I've received, I am writing this second review, not as a reappraisal but nominations, have led many viewers to view "Anne" important historical film. To me, it is not. Its fidelity to history is as an SSXHL'" The purpose of the Ch"" a further clarification -- and defense of my views. questionable, its prevailing dullness -- beyond doubt. -- to grout, is To begin with, I have no qualms about the acting of Richard Historical films need not be heavy and dull. Many overlook the communicate their Burton as the vibrant, egotistical king who changes his nation's long empty phases of "Anne" because it is historical and religious solution to »h. destiny because of his lust for an otherwise unattainable girl and therefore handicapped by its scholarly material. Motion questions students are pictures asking Genevieve Bujold as the coquettish girl whom power transforms at their best can animate stagnant material such as TTiey have done personal T V history and into a ferociously determined and unscrupulously willful woman. bring it to life, clarify it and make it exciting. "Anne," instead of appearances and their album' It was flawless. opening up the fascinating story it has to tell, mutes it with 'People in Motion," Wjn wJ My negativism concerns the courtly, almost hollow production conventional approach and static photography, released soon. editing and Tickets may be that showcases them. pacing. obtained at Neither the Union, Campbells playwright or screenwriters clearly show the Compare "Anne" with a compelling work like "A Man For All tumultuous love affair that changed the course of history. Instead Seasons," an exciting -- though not entirely accurate -• work like Campus Book Store and they work for dramatic effect alone. The screenplay is little more "The Lion in Winter" or a challenging work like "Becket." These rock crusaders Marshall Music Shop or at door Prices are $2 the than a series of head on verbal classes between its protagonists films proved that history could be illuminated by films; "Anne" general without pause to explain motivation or provide transitional sadly, but clearly, does not. Armageddon, a pop - rock yruup, group, will perform •»» «■■■■ en■«■... at the «- Arena, Men's I.M. Friday night. The admission and $1.50 for information. In 1968 Franco Zeffirelli demonstrated the enormous students. singers pose religious solutions to young peoples' problems Anne's fall from favor is all too rapid. The births of her children possibilities of costume dramas with his inspired "Romeo and come nearly back to back without establishing the necessary Juliet." "Anne," takes the viewer back years of cinematic growth tension or sense of impending tragedy in between. The film with its stodgy presentation, reminiscent of 1950 film styles. spends too much time with Anne and Henry's meeting and Rather than elevate their film -- and us -- to the 'Forbidden Planet' complexity of courtship. The more important and dramatic elements of Anne's its subject, the makers of "Anne" have reduced her tale to tired, reign are handled rapidly and clumsily. The viewer has barely witnessed Henry and Anne's marriage when they are confronted melodramatic levels. Many have expressed their settle for such mediocrity. Others, myself included, refuse to. willingness to scores BURGER CHEF highly the direction of Fred M. Wilcox as gr°up (Walter Pidgeon) living in sci-fi"Forbidden Planet" is one of at MGM. plush splendor with his daughter the more intelligent creations in SPECIAL Bellerophon Expedition was (Anne Francis, of "Honey West" the sci - fi field. While it last heard of 20 years previously never renown) and Robby, the made the Oscar nominations, It 1956 was a very good year for when it landed on a planet far blushing robot. The only does avoid the blatant ... science fiction — the '50s in from earth. Captain J. J. Adams problem seems to be a strange sensationalism that so pervades general were. One of the better (Leslie Nielsen) and his crew are force THE examples of the genre is sent to investigate and discover that seeks to destroy its kind, limiting its monster toi anyone planning to leave the one - toed invisible creature REGULAR 94C "Forbidden Planet," made under one survivor of the "« SUPER SHEF VALUE original planet. which makes only a late relatively brief and violence considerably are appearance. Gore held down with more and attention paid to subtle humor. ' & FRENCH FRIES NOW 69' The best word to describe the entire film would be "I HIRES ROOT BEER . Not screenplay only is Ceril Hume's nicely underplayed but also the acting leaves few Tastier than a regular burger — complaints, with Pidgeon, I Francis and Nielsen Faster than you can make it at home - working well Better than a three course meal - together. Robby, the infamous Super Shefl robot, is the most charming of Super Shef. Made of V4 pound pure the beef hamburger, catsup, lettuce, tomato, characters, and " pickle, onion rings and creamy dressing, all aspect of low comedy to the o production. Next time you're in Burger Chef look up. It might be the mighty Super Shef. In terms of effects, "Forbidden Planet" Offer good reminiscent of an early "Stir SECOND BIG HIT * Trek" episode. Color filters, RAUL. NEWMAN IS ^ JohnUfcyne color schemes and well 622 N. Homer - Offer expires Sunday, April 19 - across from Frandor BUTCH CASSJDV AND RoekHiSgS. designed sets are used, their 4319 W. Saginaw THE SUNDANCE WO RAIED GP , Room C-12 8:30- 12:30 25c "IT GRIPPED ME AS STRONGLY AS a Pifer - Bidwell production ANYTHING I HAVE RECENTLY SEEN ON THE SCREEN! A really good movie about sport! Anyone, whether he cares about this sport or any sport, must respond! 'Downhill Racer' is invigorating good, strong, purging stuff!" -Richard Schick *1. Li It Mtgatini "A PERCEPTIVE, UNSENTIMENTAL PORTRAIT OF A YOUNG ATHLETE ON THE MAKE! Director Michael Ritchie freshens up his first film with some electrifying camera work! The exhilarating danger of downhill racing is perfectly portrayed! And Robert Redford's performance as the skier rings true to the last schuss!" FEAST Chicken Dinner "®2!V AND nlJSItLPH0T0GRAPHED DANGER! It cuts F0R speed among its subject and moods with great succeeds with chilling agility. 'Downhill Racer' efficiency!" -Regtr Gruntpun. Naw York Timat $1.09 R*g. $1.45 "uAvicM? Movants hero, U • BEAUTIFULLY CRAFTED Friday Only expertly played by Robert Redford, is perfect! The race photography is 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. a large wonder! And the climax is a brilliant dramatic construction!" "Com* and I —Joseph Morgamlarn, Nawtwaak OPEN ROBERT REDFORD GENE HACKMAN CAMILLA SPAR!/ Sun., Thru Thuri. MICHAEL RITCHIE £rZ 'DOWNHH / rater 6A.M. TO 11 P.M- mooucfoir RICHARD GREGSON men,., SECOND FEATURE AT STARLITE JAm^URncSS FrI & Sat. ONLY JACK LEMMON 6A.M. TO 2 A.M. WALTER MATTHAU "THE ODD COUPIF" 8S20 $ Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, April 17, 1970 * Motown arrives Live shows by Armageddon, will be a theatrical Friday, The Temptations, flop, stars centuries of witchcraft is a portrayed should not be missed. Zero Mostel and Gene Wilder. THE CASTAWAYS. Walt Saturday, and The Spirit,| Check ad for location and grotesque and unredeemingly Highly recommended at the Sunday, brighten the weekend experience. Check ads for Spartan West. Disney's comedy adventure showtime. showtime and location. shows at the Lansing Mall. entertainment outlook. Z, a film that can be GUESS WHO'S COMING TO FORBIDDEN PLANET. A DINNER. Stanley Kramer's appreciated as simply as an Music ARMAGEDDON performs at pseudo • socio - comedy about goodie for science fiction buffs. Check ads for showtimes. exciting police chase film or a timely political document. Softball game 8 Friday night in the Mens' miscegenation among the Either way it is approached, "Z" Intramural Building. THE TEMPTATIONS perform affluent and/or liberal minded has enough platitudes, Lansing DOWNHILL area films RACER. Hailed is a film that shouldn't soon be benefits blind forgotten. At the State. at 8 p.m. Saturday in Jenison stereotypes and simplifications to by critics as "exhilerating," Phi Delta Theta Fraternity will Fieldhouse as-part of ASMSU's boggle the mind and numb the "thrilling" and "absorbing," ANNE OF THE THOUSAND clash with members of the popular entertainment series. intellect. Along with Kramer's Micheal Ritchie's long awaited DAYS. The acting is exceptional Michigan Senate and House in a Doors will open at 7 rosey sociology, "Dinner" has but the film itself p.m. and By ROBERT KIPPER paean to skiing stars Robert plodding and charity softball game at 2 p.m. both the North and South fancy sets, a happy ending, Redford and shows at the spectacularly uninvolving. Shows Saturday. State News Reviewer entrances to the Katherine Hepburn's tears, Gladmer. at the Campus. The game will be played at building will be Spencer Tracy's grit and Sidney used. The seating THE KREMLIN LETTER. Ranney Park on East Michigan arrangement THE SPIRIT, this rock THE ADVENTURERS. A for the program will be group Poitier's gleaming smile. Strictly John Huston's spy film about a Avenue, "straight glossy mixture of international adjacent to Frandor appears with Universal Family for the "Julia" crowd. Shows at - out;" that is, not in the round group of American agents stars and settings, a tasteless Shopping Center. and Ormandy, a fantastic 7 & 9:15 Friday as in group night in Wilson involved in the Moscow blend of There will be no admission fee previous programs. Pianist OWEN JORGENSON with a lively single about to be Hall, Saturday night in Conrad. sexuality and brutality but underworld opens tonight at the and a any donations will be given will released, for two shows Sunday THE KILLING OF SISTER cheapjack screen version present a concert of at Michigan. Not reviewed by press of Harold Robbins' best seller. to Tower Guard to buy Grandmothers. Shows from 3 GEORGE. This rather superficial - "forgotten sounds" on five 7 and 8 time. At the Spartan East. equipment for blind students 12. Admission is - pianos at 4 p.m. Sunday in the - study of three lesbians is best THEY SHOOT HORSES attending MSU. Music Auditorium. Each of the $3.50 with no age limit. remembered for its superlative DON'T THEY? Called "a work Dynamic soul five pianos will be tuned differently — according to rules On -Campus films acting and graphic lovemaking scene. Check ads for location of unmistakable greatness" by Detroit Free Press critic Susan CHECK OUR SPECIALS for THE PRODUCERS, the Oscar and showtime. Temptations will perform at 8 p.m. Saturday to a tuning used centuries before Stark, this gripping illustration i capacity crowd at Jenison Fieldhouse. The performance is modern became equal temperament winning comedy, hailed by Time as one of the best comedies in WITCHCRAFT THE AGES. THROUGH This tale of of a dance marathon and the RACK. Many Great firmly established. personal and national anguish part of the ASMSU popular entertainment series. years — about two promoters Admission is free. who finance what they're sure LP's at Low Prices! iecognized songwriter GRANDMA'S at The DISC SHOP Mulli us misses as singer Job 323 E. Grand River Open Mon. - Fri. 9 - 9 Sat. 9 - 6 Phone 351-5380 that's where his new album is warning against LSD, especially songs are those that are in a flawed. The best song on the album is when the lyrics caution: "Lucy's country - western vein, including FREE DELIVERY starts TODAY: , p.0»» ««,»»,,0.WKS -I "Desperado," Mike Mullius' "If Jesus Was Alive Today," a gonna get you do up-tight — the ballads "Poor Boy Michael You'll have to send an S.O.S." Strange" and the minute and a SPECIAL 3 pes. m ICHIGANI chicken, C jew ablum on Uni Records, is a semi • religious song that deals half BOX3 Matinees Daily 1:00 P.M. Theatre ■ Lantinq 1 long "I Want To Be With pes. chicken, hi pfferent and not totally likeable with people's hang - ups and Another song that's topical in You." Slaw, Biscuits. that employs an reactions as well as what Jesus 1, Mashed Potatoes, Gra nature is "Algiers Motel," a song Biscuit. Cole Slav Jnorthodox singing voice in would face if he were present written about one of the tragic ■resenting 11 original today. It would probably come incidents that occurred during If only Mike Millilis could raise lompositions. out out even better if it were the 1967 Detroit riot. Its soft his vocals to the high standards I Mullius has received most of sung by Joe South (who has instrumentation is of his imaginative lyrics, his lis earlier recognition for his quite a Schedule of Deliv- success with anti - social songs) contrast to the upbeat "Desperado" album would be Ingwriting, not his singing, and or were given a gospel - type background that music and great. As it stands, it will IF YOU MISS THE FIRST FIVE MINUTES, I considered by Agnes treatment by the Edwin probably be better for YOU MISS ONE SUICIDE, TWO EXECUTIONS, ONE SEDUCTION, saxophone work in the lunningham of "Broadside" Hawkins Singers. quavering and poor vocal everybody's ears if his next AND THE KEY TO THE PLOT. Jiagazine as a more important "Lookout For Lucy" can number "Datenite U.S.A." album is strictly country - tngwriter than Bob Dylan. definitely be interpreted western. Don't -trust ANYONE in ■ Mullius has had songs recorded as a Vocally, the best performed > Elvis Presley and Jimmy ^ |iadcliff, and most recently was ponsible for the children's ' THE # Revision special "Christopher liscovers America." ■ While it's true that his song$ SCIENCE FICTION " incredible Jidex Yertie KREMLIN LETTER well construed apd X BUY ANYTHING" ently topical, it takes more Walt Disney BftLROG BOOKSHOP ., in that to sell an album. I Emerging as a mixture of a I JUJiS I hftXhS throated Dylan or a • up Rod McKuen, ZOli e.G.Ro ACROSS (TROM THE UfilON I!! i' voice is almost always 20th Century-Fox Presents John Huston's Production of THE KREMLIN LETTER [rained and rough ■ edged, and In Association With Corter De Haven ^CHEVALIER MIUS SANDERS WHITE Starring BIBI ANDERSSON ■ RICHARD BOONE NIGEL GREEN LILA KEDROVA MICHAEL MACLIAMMOIR PATRICK O NEAL BARBARA PARKIN? ■ DEAN JAGGER TECHNICOLOR' [G] GEORGE SANDERS MAX VON SYDOW ORSON WELLES IBRAMS # ltJ0 0IIW, „M, Sun, TODAY! Stars Seasons 1 lansing mall 5628 W. SAGINAW • 484-4403 | AT 5:00-7:00-9:00 SAT. & SUN. AT 1:00-3:00-5:00-7:00-9:00 Stunning visual and sound experiences increase our PROGRAM SKY SCAN: understanding of the changes SCHEDULE (Admission Free) which occur around us because of the earth's annual FRIDAYS 8:00 P.M. Learn the constellations. motion. Scale models of I Lunar Modules Command on display SATURDAYS 2:30 P.M. & 8:00 P.M. SUNDAYS Second through 8:00 P.M. Thursday each month August (May 14) 'BEST FOREIGN FILM' I from NASA. 2:30 P.M. & 4:00 P.M. and "BEST FILM EDITING" Information - 355-4672. Abrams Planetarium, Science Road and Shaw Lane, MSU, East Lansing. No Preschoolers Admitted. NORTHSIDE jgl'VE-IN THEATRE Now Thru Tues. pits Horth on US-?7.. 482-74091 Exclusive 1st Run Showing You never met a pair like Butch and The Kid! rautrouwAN „ ROBERT REDFORD KATHARINE ROSS BUTCH CASSIDV AND THE SUNDANCE KID' "Butch Cassidy" Shown twice at 7:30 and 11:40 They Lived A Thundering Adventure That Rocked Two Nations In Eastmancolor Hankie jill dennis george Horror House twice at 7:35 and 11:20 - Crimson Cult ONCE at 9:40 _ STATE Theatre ^ 0 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, April 17. |97n 6 to attend I Chicano conference By ROSA MORALES Six MSU Mexican students will attend ■ Ampri I a two Chicano conference SatJay I and Sunday sponsored Urban Institute at the bv^l of Notre Dame. Univ JM n,versity ■ Mario Soza, Saginaw i,,„ I Carlo Soliz, Saginaw Rosa Morales, 2°r;| Saginaw sel l Ronald T. Vera, Los a^I Calif., senior; Richard £'l McAllen, Tex., graduate stud jI and Alfredo 5| make a grand stand in Garland Francisco, Calif., student, will represent MSU The MSU students RivaSi dod*| I members are aii I Take to easy care, easy wear cotton knit Esfuerzo of Movimiento I Chicano de *?«. 1 (MECHA). from the Midwest College stufil coordinates this summer. Sleeveless turtleneck the pros and cons of will discuss ■ Midwest and Southwest having J American groups Mexican! Mop in navy, brown white. S-M-L.$5. Knit pants to a| - or merge into national group and also thJ possibility of establishing match in a western mood. Navy or brown. 6-16. $12 regional center for Mexican , Americans in the Midwest. The conference will Striped tank top in red/navy/white. S-M-L.$5. Pull-on position papers from Michigan! present ■ Kansas, Ohio, Illinois and| Indiana. Julian knit bermudas in navy or brown. 6-16. $6. Campus Center Samora, on the! faculty of Notre Dame, will be| the main speaker. and Sportswear, Meridian Mall. Also participating in thi conference are Mexican ._ American representatives the U.S. from I Commission; the Civil Righu| Dept. 0[| Health, Education and Welfare! the National Institute f0|| Health; the Dept. of Justice:tbel Dept. of Commerce; the of DeptJ Labor and Cabinet! Committee for the Spanish! speaking. MECHA students from J will also attend a second I Chicano conference April 24 -| 25 at Yale University sponsored! by another MECHA Movimiento Estudiantil Chicanol group,! de Aztlan. V The Yale conference will| include workshops on the| Chicano identity, the Barrio| culture, the Chicano in the East,! the Chicano studies University, Third Movements in the United States| and rap sessions. I Grace Oliveras, law student atl Notre Dame University, will btl main speaker. Miss Oliveras hasl been instrumental in planning! Midwestern Chicano (male) andl Chicana (female) conferences. I Also involved in the Chicano conference Yale! art! Moctesuma Esparza, Chicanol student leader UCLA, and Luisl Nogales, special assistant to thef president of Stanford University! MSU compilesj your number for the IRS Social security numbers an now a necessity on eacl paycheck issued by the ■ university. I Paul Rumpsa, controller, said I the Dept. of Internal Revenue! previously allowed the! University to send out W2| income tax forms using only I student numbers. I "We have not been complying I to federal regulations and may I be subject to penalty," Rumpsa I said. Fines could be imposed on I MSU costing up to $5 P« student, Rumpsa commented. |I The university payroll office is ■ attempting to compile an I accurate social security number I listing of all students and I graduate assistants. I Clella Norris, asst. supervisor ■ of payroll, said many current ■ records have incorrect or missing r numbers that must be reported I Numbers cannot be taken ■ from past records since t»I percentage of error IS I Also they cannot be stated ove ■ the phone since the departwf1 I hopes to minimize errors whic | could arise from transp' digits. , ■ Student employe a° I graduate assts. are urged I check their social security i number on the next pa>' I date. People with inaccurate" I missing numbers should bring l their social security card to | Administration Bldg. Club sponsors | vehicle check eCSufrl sponsor a from 10 vehicle a.m. safety to 6 p.m. Sa '^y [I at Meridian Mall. drive Students are invited to Saturday shop East Lansing 9:30 to 5:30, Meridian Mall all day 10:00 to 9:00 their cars through t',e minute safety check. j Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday. April 17. 1970 •A n \J uest Excursions, a Christian rock blames students," Quest said. "Now physical face lift. Volunteers ills of on denia group. we're concentrating on the longer anything to which people dignity because of his origin in "Logical evidence reveals JANETOPPS prepared to Christianity is the name of the scene. We're also consideringdrug Bv would also aid In establishing can be called. He questioned the open up their lives, Jesus Christ, and it is logical reasoning behind the to make a faith move St,tt Newt Staff Writer the black businesses designed to basis on which through toward game to Quest, a Christianity possibility of sending 1,000 produce whatever goods the people who reject this origin that truth is cause and effect of the universe. Jesus Christ in the same all authority can set way dealing with the "now" person Christian stuento to live on up their established for everybody. The ontological argument reveals they do toward other evidences, college campus will buy. own. social action simply In the of Jesus. Quest Is college Pittsburgh's North side as 'slaves' "All this would be done In the "Outside of functioning in that man is looking for then they will have fulfillment !° of humanity doesn't make coordinator to the Pittsburgh to the black people during the name of Jesus, not Just "Some people reject all other relationship to that truth and fulfillment. Where did he get a and meaning." ' fth John Guest. Love beads, Experiment, which he describes summer of 1071." authority and yet say 'War is that origin, man's existence must concept of something more than He said Christianity offers l. ^ leans a romeo-lsh hair style as "an endeavor to Infiltrate humanity. Humanity outside of wrong, we should love.' But If he has? a the Working under the direction of the Qod scehe is ridiculous," there Is no objective truth who always be an enigma because good basis for revolution in h straightforward British society of Pittsburgh with the the North side residents, the Ouest said. you have no other court of "Historical evidence is given society because it answers who "Inner characterized the Christian Qod scene." students would Improve homes, Guest blamed the condition of says I should love? Maybe 1 appeal, you have nowhere else to for the Jews, for the happening man is and what he's for. and "5 i»!h Anallcan minister as he "You can't be Involved In the repair plumbing, organize block American society on the don't say. And there Is so much go," Quest said. of Israel and for the happening makes it possible for him to S on campus last weekend college scene without being parties - In short, attempt to rejection of any truth as war, how do we know It Is Guest said everyone of Jesus Christ coming out of know what society should be SS"52-«« - Involved In Issues which concern wrong? Maybe Qod digs It." wit- give the area a psychological and objective, saying there is no Quest said man has Innate Including scientists - that scene," Guest said. Guest said that the evidence, like. continually make faith moves on "You can't change society given sensual and rational when examined, warrant a until you c hange ourself," Guest IX, MARRIAGE evidences. He there are also contended that psychological person to move toward Jesus Christ with a faith move. said. "Society is people, not a mass. Legislation doesn't change and historical evidence on which "When these evidences come people on the inside. But if I additional faith moves can be together in a person's get changed I can tell the next E.L. pastor views love aspects based. experience, when they're guy, 'Hey, dig it. Dig Christ.'" By JANETOPPS Trinity Church launched into frustration suffering and real The State News Staff Writer dynamic love produced by not "togetherness" Marriage" at a meeting Tuesday m°"jent8 We attempt°f incompatabllity. to define God Is unleashed most "oneness" and it is this . love, prominently In the area of sex, that provides the real mystery of is the feeling you feel sponsored by the Campus but 14 ls,Jh"d to, cla88lfy. Williams said. marriage. you feel you're joing to Williams said love is ^ ,-am8,8t It can t be neatly "God has a very prominent feeling like you've never a whole packaged in simple declarative "Jesus el a before." experience of life which grows In sentence to which we can always a place for sex In his love Droeram "Jfsus Christ never said it It oeiore Defining love facetiously at dimensions, a learning process refer back. It Is not simple, but Important to understand where and because of this it Is J*1""'8*® basically the Rev. E. Eugene which encompasses all complex, taking place In the the lf ?ou "° % ta,llB aspect of love fits of a ca* anf dog together they re rst nii'ams Hpastor of East Lansing experiences In life, Including total configuration of life in," physical llllams' experience." he said 8"IB• no,l *°'n* said t0 ]>« married. Christ a husband and wife are one Williams said mature love involves loving a person In spite designed" to be Drth odox stimulation and as such It can Referring to the Biblical of some qualities which may be never stand alone as sexual unlovable. teachings which forbid sexual aatlsfactlon. Intercourse before Aft.er years of marriage marriage, .. there Is still 10 per cent of "Petting as an end In Itself Is Williams said such teachings are my playing at the game of love, "hard to take," but If followed ets Easter wlfes personality that I dont like. I was foolish to think I would ever change that part of causing us to miss what was make sense, providing a new designed for us by Someone experience of richness In love, greater than ourselves," Williams sex and marriage, since that new Holy Week begins Sunday for service of Lamentations follows "Km, ,. .. r'chnes8 lg what God desires to JLt Z . . . 200,000,000 communicants later in the evening. ! W"Ham' ",d that marrlge to »,ve' ■ Eastern Orthodox the athollc Church throughout the service "y During the Resurrection he wor d Ind^she " ^u J n'IH orld. The seeming late date for the before Hghta !lg-to are jlng ^ accept, extinguished just are .extinguished . that AJovabIe cent of me," Williams said. 25 per Whodox C.thollc observance conation. Easter Is based on a tradition candles, aaaemblea before the resurrection of Christ midnight folding as the lighted Williams cited the love of Jesus ChJiiru'th'.^lftaT^'.^cJ! S SL*h,,Lm Ito«5oo55 Choir performs ut the be celebrated after the closed doors of the church. At klrJ of LJ „gj " ,t°,J midnight t'he priests and people «.! TloS sacred music not.n Passover, which begins begin th'Wnt the story of Isyear on April 21. During the days prior to Easter Christ's victory over death as they re • enter the church for Eh muit S? lutnLi Sex nurj«f The Rev. Eugene Williams spoke recently on "Love, Sex, Marriage and Related unday a number of services are Resurrection Matins. ,.Yo'„ „tv„ in .vnil(,i Topics" at a eld in Orthodox Catholic station The 96-volce Everett High School choir will campus crusade meeting in Fee Lounge. The Rev. Williams is lurches, including a >rvlro nn service on th« the On Easter Sunday, April 26, RpsiirrpnHnn Resurrection T.lttirav Liturgy is ic of SS i„g^urn ■ ■ ... can't of sacred music Sunday at the East Lansing present a program Trinity Church, 841 Church. pastor of the East Lansing Trinity State News Photo By Terry Luke love someone simply because he Tlmberlane Dr. The program will begin at 7 p.m. oly Thursday at which the 12 celebrated as congregational I passages recounting the Is a lovely person. We can love The choir has performed around the midwest, In New York members greet each other with fir.i invoH hours »„ in In the ti life of Chriat an the word.: "Chrlet I. rla.nl" and rh»ut w« qtnto ^..*"1 >nri In Ontario, Canada. The choir performed the ECOLOGIST SPEAKS 1. can leam real quality living and Broadway musical, Kismet last weekend before capactly audiences to which the response is made: loving when we receive this In the Everett auditorium. ISLEVST "^peclauJoly^Wwk aervlcee will Choir membership consists of an equal number of male and i Icon of Christ down from the symbolic which la he held cross tomb. A and tughout the throu^ouUh. St. Andrew Orthodox Catholic parish, Qreencrest Street, week at .xylene/end lowing him iVIlllams said. to female vocallsta from the 10th. through 12th. grades. The Everett Chorale, composed of 20 students from the full choir, will add special selections to the musical program. The director of the choir and chorale Is Tom O. Special services Special sefvi Thompson, are being held a.m. worship services. "But it is the job of Church who In conjunction with the "Solving the environmental people, acting in concert with UNIVERSITY CHRISTIAN was graduated from MSU. Peoples Church Following the evening service, Trinity Collegiate Fellowship will Environmental Teach-in this crisis is not the task of the their fellow citizens." CHURCH CAMPUS HOUSE present a special symposium on "Christianity and the Drug Sunday at the Martin Luther Church as such." Rev. David Schneider is a consultant for East Lansing Problem." The meeting, open to all MSU undergraduates, will Chapel at 444 Abbott Road. Kruse, the chapel's pastor said, the Atomic Energy Commission. 310 N. Hagadorn 261 W. Grand River Dr. Gary Schneider, ecologist begin with the traditional student supper for 26 cents. in the Dept. of Forestry, will Interdenominational Nursery 200 W. Grand River at Michigan Flrit Church of EAST LANSING speak at the 9 a.m. and the 11 UNITARIAN Seminary prof talks Campus Minister, UNI VERSALIST Minister, Kail Ruffner FRIENDS MEETING CHURCH OF LANSING on Sunday Schools Gary Hawes SUNDAY SERVICES Christ, Scientist meeting for worship 3 p.m. 332-5193 332-3035 • 351-7844 0:30 and 11 a.m. Grind River at Heilett Entrance All Saints Parish Meeting at Red Cedar School Pree Transportation A seminary professor who did a controversial Etit Laming 800 Abbott Road Sever St., East Lansing study of the ten largest Sunday Schools in the country will speak Sunday at the "God's Solution to the Human Dilemma " Sunday Servlcei lltOOa.rr Upper level, corner room 11 a.m. service of the First Assembly of God church, 1125 Weber 11 A.M. "The Marks of Men" Child Dr., Lansing. care provided The Rev. Elmer L. Towns of All welcome "Environmental Problem Trinity Evangelical Divinity EAST LANSING TRINITY CHURCH Ltiion — aermon Subject are Dr. Wallace Robertson School. Deerfield, 111., will discuss the issues raised Your Own Community" by the book For Transportation he wrote on the study. The book, us well as the 841 Tlmbsrlana Orlva or Panel Dltcutilon sermon, is titled Interdenominational "Doctrine of Information call, 337-0241 "The Ten Largest Sunday Schools and. What Made Them Grow," last Lsnalng lea By Ariia Klnnee CHURCH SCHOOL Atonement" E. Eugene Williams, Pastor EDGEWOOD UNITED University Claw 8:45 A.M. 9:30 snd 11 a.m. EPISCOPAL SERVICES CHURCH Central United Methodist UNIVERSITY 'Etfaugit Withdrawal" Crib through Adults AcroM from the Cepitol 00-vaiee sholr from Hvarett H.I. Jjqq p.m. All Salnta Church •/fly /V. llaittHltini baptist t Trinity Collegiate fellowship WORSHIP SERVICES 11:30 p.m. Free Publle Reading Room an ecumenical fellowship. CHURCH tVardallrtBahw, Wadnesdsy: Mid-week OlieuHlon end prayer hour at 1 60 800 Abbott Rd. 9 45 end 11:16 e.m. p.m. 114 Wait Grand River Worship Service 9:30 free bub BEHVIG1 See schedule in your I American Baptist) 8-00, 9:30, and 11:00 a.m. ___ 3PEN Fell* Liturgy iiiflO "Do You Know Gerard d. Phillips, Pastor Weekday! «• 9'i p.m. M.S.U. LUTHERAN CAMPUS MINISTRIES FIRST ASSEMBLY Men.. Tues., fhurs., Kri. Alumni Chapel the Shepherd ' " Worship 10:00 a.m.47:00 p.m. iveningf f p.m.« 9 p.m. University Group Dinner A W-lca LGMS OF OOD Auditorium Rd. Program fl • 8:J0p.t tof Students 1136 Weber Dr. Church School 9 45 end Psaulty al tor Students at Lansing All are weleeme to attend Church tins Seri h e. morning A to 1145 Univeriity Lutheran ehureh Martin Luther ehapei Blk. No. of E. Grand River at Church Sirvisen and visit an use the reading room. evening call 3J2 0606 or Crib Nursery Bivlsion 81 Ann Streets 444 Abbott Road $324693 485-9477 Downer IM2I69 fed-2 077S Rev. Richard W. Bishop, Pastor Collegian Seminar OKEMOS FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Walter Wletrke 9:30 a.m. UNIVERSITY • Pastot David Krusa 9:46 a.m. COLLEGE CLASS 4864 Marsh Rd., Okemos George Qaticr SEVENTH-DAY 11:00 a.m. ELMER TOWNS FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH (2 ml. E. of Hagadorn, W ml. S. of Gd. R. behind MEIJER'S) Christian Id. Prof., ADVE NTIST WORSHIP HOURS WORSHIP HOURS An CHURCH:} Trinity temlnsry, III. OTTAWA AT CHESTNUT Independent Church With A Biblical MettHHitc :'S im Mstlns 9:30 am Worship 7:00 p.m. EVANGELISTIC REV. IRVING R. PHILLIPS - PASTOR 9:46 a.m. Church School - all ages Sabbath School 9:30 tl| Common Service Worship Service 11:00 1st and 3 rd Comm. 11:00 a.m. & 7:00 p.m. Worship Services 0 em 7:30 p.m. WEDNESDAY WORSHIP-9:30 a.m. & 11:00 a.m. Common Service 2nd and 4th Matins K.G.Smith, ^ ,m Nsw Forms of YOUTH & ADULTS SERMON: "I'll Meet You at the Corner" 6:15 p.m. Collegiate Fellowship Inspiration Refreshments pastor ji; pm Wcrship 11 ;00 am Worship (Comm.! - Wednesday Evening 7:30 pm Wednesday Meeting at 604 Ann St. 1 FREE BUS SERVICE TO AND FROM THE CHURCH For Transportation Call 332-2133 (Corner of Communion Service (Vespers) For Transportation Call or 361-5125 Division) J*; WORSHIP, COUNSEL, FELLOWSHIP, STUDY WITH US. 484-6640 (See bus schedule for both services in your dorm) Call 355-0839 if you < 484-2807 . Robinson, Pastor E.D. Dawson, Ed. Minister need transportation * Christian Reformed Church SOUTH BAPTIST CHURCH 1518 S. Washington and Student Center 1509 River Terrace Sunday 11:00 a.m. (across from Hubbard Hall) Dr. Wendell O. Johnston Visit our new Student Center - President, Detroit Bible College r nn "ch l ti open dally 9 A.M.-11 P.M. Wednesday 12:30 • 1:30 P.M. 9:45 AJvl. COLLEGIAN Student Supper Sunday 5:00 P.M. College Bible Class FELLOWSHIP in the fireside room 8:30 p.m. M°RNING SERVICE EVENING SERVICE Dr. Ted Ward. Teacher Fireside Room n v' WOO A.M. 7:00 P.M. Bri"k preaching Rev. Hoksbergen preaching 7:00 p.m. "Church on the Move" Glenn Blossom ^ Jo^rt Brlnk'' Rev. Alvln L. Hokabergen, FREE BUS SERVICE Morning and Evening tor campus minister transportation call 351-6360 or 882-1425 Call 482-0754 for information, 12 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, April 17, i97n SPORTS 'S' By GARY WALKOWICZ batsmen inning relief job against EM with a 1.76 mark. Part of this Kreuger has the best won - lost hurt seek him, and, of course, we AROUND-Spartan UMto pitchers Cns Peck Wednesday. The EMU »tar pitcher and walked for Executive Sports Editor Wednesday. He retired six fine showing may be attributed mark on the team at 4-0. His didn't get him any runs." time on hi8 n, straight batters to save the win to his ability to consistently get should be lauded for the way went down swinging twice, filed base. The o forr°y ERA stands at 2.75 after 33 JUST MSU Coach Danny Litwhiler for Kirk Maas and hit a two - run the ball the BATTING thev handles EM slugger Jeff to left twice, tapped to the dropped Peck's averZ > over plate. Fulton innings of work. Ill send «.,f will seniors Phil out »nin« Phil K-nJton Fulton u home jn hjs only time at bat. has thrown just 13.8 pitches per .519 to .473. ^ "on, and Rick Kreuger against CMU. Perhaps the most impressive Fulton shows the best ERA inning, easily the best record Spartan in the EMU Fulton was sharp in a two among the four Spartan starters the Spartan team! doubleheader was freshman Sports of sorts reliever Rob Clancy. He sent six straight hitters back to the JJJ.U wrestler 118-pound Greg i„. Michigan dumps stickmen; dugout, four of them via johnt0l strikeouts. Clancy now has Lansing was runner uUP - allowed only one earned run in 114.5 Olympic team 1 forth, eight relief appearances for an berth in 1968. fr*«ty|, 0.87 ERA. travel to Denison today Although Litwhiler said "he may get a start next week," the Spartan coach has no definite MSU sophomore Washington 60-yard dash at sprinter H* of Flint WonT the A By RICK GOSSELIN State News Sports Writer able to keep 28 out of the Spartan goal, however. The Spartans were guided offensively by co - plans for moving Clancy into the regular starting rotation. Kh" Re,ay8 Field House and in meet-5 Spartan J2 captains Dan Denov and Rick Bays, who each "We need at least one real record time of :06.0 ^ For the sixth time in six games, the MSU scored a pair of goals. John Kelley was able to good reliever in our bullpen, and * * *' - . . lacrosse team has failed to put together a winning beat U-M goalie Jay Johnson for the fifth MSU's Clancy is just that," Litwhiler j average home f0oty attendance in the 1960s combination at home or on the road. This time, Spartan tally. Steve Hart was the scoring star for in the rJS the University of Michigan dumped the Spartans in Ann Arbor Wednesday, 13-5. the Wolverines, beating Hermann with three Another freshman, Larry Ike, top three nationally year but one. eveU^ In doing so, U-M swept the two game series shots. Four other U-M players scored two goals suffered his first loss of the apiece. season Wednesday after four between the two clubs. The Spartan road record The Spartans will travel to Granville, Ohio, MSU faculty representative!, straight wins. But Litwhiler ££ has fallen to 0-5; the overall record is a disappointing 0-6; and the stickmen will have to today to take on national power Denison. thought Ike might have pitched : athletics Dr. John new chairman of Fuza?ut£ Denison is seeking to capture its fourth straight his best 8ame of the season in Academic the NCAA* win their last six games in order to finish the MLA title this season. The Big Red has an overall l"®* 3*0 loss, and TesUn! season at .500. record of 3-2 this season and have yet to play a "Larry was making fewer Requirements Committee. 1 In the game against the Wolverines, Spartan league game. In their home opener, Denison P'tches and pitched a good When U-M goalie Billy Hermann was once again bombarded knocked off Cleveland, 22-2. Hobart was next to Litwhiler said. "He just plays at MSU the by the enemy, facing a total of 41 shots. He was crowds gather. In ' (continued on page 14) matJe a couple of mistakes that months the football between the two schook attracted 79,368, the baskets game 12,511, hockey 3,742 Z gymnastics 1,350. Pitcher's Brad Van Pelt, MSU freshman athletic star from MSU's Phil Fulton gets that rare treat for a pitcher - a home run - as he connects on this pitch Owosso, hat already performed for Spartan against Eastern Michigan Wednesday at Kobs Field. Fulton's two - run blast gave him a perfect yearling football and basketball performance as he was 1 for 1 at bat and retired six straight EMU batters from the mound. teams and has a shot at a vanity State News Photo By Mike Beasley baseball team berth. NETTERS ON THE ROAD Badgers, 'Cats 'S' foes at Ohio State's opener last week, let up at all," he said. "The undoubtedly give the Spartans a 9 - 0 victory. conference race is going to be a trouble. On Saturday, Coach Stan dogfight, and these two teams Drobac will counter these two Drobac's team will battle a will probably be in it." fine players with one of his own, Wisconsin team that got off to a The Spartans will have to Dusty Rhoads. Rhoads. 7 - 3 start this year. The Badgers contend with two fine No. 1 transfer from UCLA, is 1 • 1 for may be softened up by the time singles players, North western's the season with a victory over MSU arrives in Madison, Don Lutz and the Badgers' Chris Ohio State's Rick Bowen and a however, as they face defending Burr. defeat at the hands of Indiana's champion Michigan today. Lutz, brother of Davis Cupper Mark Bishop. The top man Drobac is hoping that his Bob Lutz, was the Spartans is expected by Big 10 champion you fig aijttAd'Wni com^' tip; witfc1 his sophomore year and last Drobac to have a fine teasonud two big victories, but h* says he seasdn lost has looked impressive so far. Only two'conference knows the going will be tough. matches, both to Dick Dell of Rhoads combines with last "Both schools have good Michigan, the eventual winner in year's No. 1 man and rum teams and we won't be able to No. 1 In the singles. Burr is having Big Ten, Tom Gray, to trouble getting started this year, form a potent doubles team that but the former member of the could be one of the best in tht Canadian Davis Cup team could (continued on pags 14) ****************** COMPUTER DATING by Cybernetic», Inc. ^ The modern way to date. Meet new, exciting people. J Write P.O. Box 9111, Lansing, Mich., 48909 for an application or Information. ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★** EUROPE-BOUND? FANTASTIC SAVINGS ON THE THIS IS THE WATCH PILOTS HELPED DESIGN • CENTRAL MICHIGAN'S ONLY RENAULT THIS IS GLYCINE AIRMAN OVERSEAS DELIVERY We asked active assistance of commercial airline and armed service • EUROPEAN MANAGEMENT pilots in designing a watch especially for the flying man. The result, The Glycine Airman. 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Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, April 17, 1970 SPORTS 13 Bv JEFF Injuries ELLIOTT _ _ blocking drill with a looked at the only bright still spot of Nicholson and hauntin BASEBALL American STANDINGS National teammate. The sophomore the situation. Gary Van Elst as basketball game this winter. Two State Sporti Editor linebacker injured what appears "With several regulars out for a much work as possible at their other Spartans, Gordie Bowdell really a blessing in disguise is to freshman Brad Van Pelt. MSU varsity football be a pinched new position," nerve in his couple of days, it'll give us a Daugherty and Tom Kutschinski are also Daugherty said that hell have to completed its third day of shoulder. Both Wieleba and chance to get a better look at commented. "None of them basketball casualties and will be make decision soon St? nuniV with an old a on where Morrissey will be out of action some of our have ever played offensive tackle out for an indefinite time. Detroit s 3 younger players, hell use Van Pelt. SSS nemesis ;• injur'e8ff;; for several weeks and the rest of spring drills. possibly especially the freshmen," he before and they'll all need a lot of work." "We've really stressed "He can play Washington 3 commented. "But losing conditioning these first three almost any New York 1 Two Neither Nicholson nor Van days," Daugherty said. "With 14 position want him Cleveland other Spartans whom Mittleberg leaves us with only we to," 2 "ow'Sp«rt"» "•? Daugherty was counting on as one big tackle - Gary Nowak Elst have been in pads yet this - 15 guys on the sidelines now - Daugherty said. "But we want to *1Adelines with some type of starters next fall suffered and he's never played there - spring, Nicholson still recovering many of them potential starters get him at one definite spot so Jury after Wednesday's drills. sprained ankles and were before. from a knee injury of last year - we sure don't want to add to he can concentrate on it. He's WESTERN DIVISION Sph Wieleba, a junior withheld from action Thursday. "We want to give Nowak, Jim and Van Elst recuperating from that list." too good a player not to be out Minnesota linebacker who came on strong Brad McLee, a defensive a back injury suffered in a One individual problem that is on the field somewhere." California 5 2 .714 7msU in the final couple of roverback, and Vic Mittleberg, a Kansas City 3 4 .429 s last year, suffered a 235 pound Oakland 3 4 .429 junior tackle will be Chicago compound fracture of his index out a couple of days with ankle Milwauke 3 5 .375 «nT The Dearborn junior was injuries. Wi Los Angeles 3 .333 ■55 !■*>° • rf8""" THURSDAY'S RESULTS DETROIT 4, Cleveland 2 THURSDAY'S RESULTS when his mishap took place. Trying not to become too Boston 8, New York 5 Pittsburgh 7, New York 4 Mike Morrissey also suffered a discouraged with the sudden Kansas City 8, Milwaukee 6 Chicago 7, Philadelphia 5 rash of injuries, San Diego at Atlanta, Ibad injury when he was working Daugherty Washington at Baltimore, night night Los Angeles at Cincinnati, Chicago at Oakland, night night San Francisco at Houston, Minnesota at California, night night TODAY'S GAMES Linksmen search TODAY'S GAMES Boston at DETROIT Minnesota at Oakland, night Kansas City at California, night New York at Baltimore, night Philadelphia St. Louis at at New York Montreal at Chicago Pittsburgh, night San Francisco at Cincinnati, night Los Angeles at Atlanta, night for improvement Fifteen teams are entered in By OLG OLSON this weekend's Illinois State News Sports Writer Intercollegiate, a tourney in which the Spartans finished [ The ups and downs of the fourth last year. USU golf team could be The Spartans got under way Bctified this weekend with the this morning in the first 18 holes beginning of play today on the along with host Illinois, Ohio Savoy Course near the State, Iowa, University of Illinois in the Minnesota, Northwestern, «6-hole Illinois Intercollegiate, Missouri and severalBradley, Michigan, f "This is a good group of Illinois universities. other You gotta b mifers," MSU golf coach Bruce The same teams will finish That s the cry echoed by MSU Head possum said, "and they're going with 18 holes Saturday with Trainer Gayle period prior to each Spartan practice this 0 find their game improving as Robinson and Head Football Coach spring in hopes of play starting at 7:30 a.m. Duffy Daugherty. reducing injuries. State News Photo By Bill Porteous he season goes on." Robinson has been in charge of an extensive warm - up [ Take for instance, Lee Jmundson and Lynn Jansen, e two Spartan seniors. Both NORTHWESTERN HERE > averaging 74 before last eekend's ninth place finish in Trackmen expect improvement le Robert Kepler Invitational at Dhio State. 1 Edmundson, who has a career laverage of 76.7, led the Spartans "uring the Southern tour. Last with reekend, though, the Ludington By DON KOPRIVA losing to Purdue but we Juniors Howard just weren't ready because of the Doughty and against Illinois and added a 45-9 lenior soared to 236 for 54 State News Sports Writer Wayne Hartwick will also win in the weather." triple jump. koles, a 78.6 average. With concentrate on the high barriers Bill Wehrwein, A1 Henderson ON CAMPUS \5tfeCbesaj£j a week of tough Perhaps the best duel Saturday while Hartwick will follow later Jansen, Spartan captain from workouts on the track under will and Mike Murphy will have to come in the hurdles where in CALL the meet with the ■East Lansing, has a 74.7 career their belts, the Spartan trackmen freshman John Morrison, heir - 440-yard contend with Northwestern's intermediate hurdles. [average, but last weekend in the expect some rapidly improving Ron Drozd in the 440, who ran fepler tourney averaged out to times and distances as MSU apparent to Charles Pollard's position as number one hurdler, Herb Washington and LaRue a fine 48.7 at Illinois. Henderson 337-1681 79 per three rounds. and Murphy were third and fifth *, tangles with Northwestern at 1 tangles with Northwestern junior Butchee, 1-2 finishers in the 100 in the league indoor meet while I Two other returnees from the p.m. Saturday on the Ralph Dick Taylor. at Purdue, should encounter Big Ten champs of 1969, Rick fooulfe and Denny Vass, also 1 their troubles putting at Young track. Only a short time back, the Spartans were floundering in the Taylor had an easy 14.4 little trouble with the Cats, and victory in the highs last week as may be ready to team with Mike the Cats fell to Illinois 113-41 Holt and A1 Henderson for a Wehrwein is the outdoor champ in the 440 at 46.2. defending OFF CAMPUS Pizza Treat snow and were unable to while Morrison was one of the faster time in the 440-yard relay. Ken Leonowicz and Ralph Dhio State along with fifth - get in Zoppa, XALL USE EXPRESS MENU FOR in John VanderMeiden. much - needed workouts in few bright spots in the Spartan The Spartans posted a fine first - presently MSU's top distance men, will again go in FAST ON-CAMPUS DELIVERY preparing for the hazardous aggregation, running a strong meet 41.5 last week. ire that the five •coring points for your six - man men outdoor schedule. This non - 14.6 into the wind. Both should Lloyd Bridges, who went be ready to go Saturday and if 23-814 to win the long jump last the three mile and steeplechase. Junior Chuck Starkey should 337-1631 IN RADIO DISPATCHED TRUCKS. will play poorly in a preparation resulted in a two point lost to Purdue in last the wind is right and the track week, will face off against Dick give added strength at three. 1203 |toumament," Fossum said, "but weekend's triangular with the fast, both could dip near or Feezel, runner-up in the indoor Ken Popejoy and Dave Dieters st weekend at Ohio State was E. GRAND RIVER Boilermakers and Bradley at under 14.0. Big Ten meet who went 23-11 lA (continued ■rulyan exception." on page 14) West Lafayette. I "We practiced hard this "We think we can be a much ■week," Fossum added, "and I stronger team against Expect the boys will finish better Northwestern because of the ithis weekend, getting back into solid work we're getting in this TAKE OUT A FISH, Ithe swing of play they displayed Dittrichweek," MSU Coach Fran ■down south." said. "Ofcoureeljvasjdi^ TONIGHT. For only $1.35 you can take out our famous fish dinner "Great Sh with all the extras. And for your convenience, piping-hot carry-out specials take only seconds to prepare our An Evening with Shakespeare or you can call ahead and we'll have it waiting for you. Don't forget that we also offer carry-out service on most of presented by the food items on our menu; chicken or shrimp for instance. If you're in a hurry for excellent food and service. Hurry in to Holiday Inn. GREEN SPLASH Holiday Inn East - 3121 E. Grand River 489-2481 In the Woman's IM Pool April 17,18 at 8 p.m. April 19 at 2 p.m. Monday Tickets available at the Union Spaghetti Dinner $1.50 —^^^"Ticket Office and at the door IF YOU'RE PROUD OF YOUR CAMPUS SHOW IT OFF-RESERVE YOUR GUESTS A ROOM AT KELLOGG CENTER If your parents have come to visit you, they might as well be part of the campus scene. Kellogg Center is located on north campus just south of Michigan Ave., minutes away from most MSU points of interest, such as Kresge Art Center, Abrams Planetarium, the Cyclotron, and Beaumont Tower. The State Room, on the main floor, provides excellent dining at reasonable prices. Color Television. Air Conditioning, Radio. PHONE 332-6571 FOR RESERVATIONS 14- -Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan _ ^ ^ Friday, April 17, 1970 — SPORTS DETROIT Harkness selected (UPI) - Ned University coach said upon Cornell for the past seven years, gaps (between as new college and Red Wing coach canned two games into the have to work hard if you want said Harkness accepted a "long - term during the past season (he only was Harkness, Wh0 f taking the job with Detroit from He was 163 27 - 2 in that time, - professional coaching)," the 48 - - 70 NHL season. to win. The name of the game is handshake" Thursday to become Sid Abel, who retains his role as saw a dozen NHL games because 1969 admitted he was joininu hi ^ topped off by a perfect 29-0 and year - old Harkness said. " But of his job) and a club which was "I have a long term skating and the name of the Gordie Howe, also ^t coach of the Detroit Red Wings general manager. the last of his four NCAA titles, the hockey is hockey wherever it's eliminated in four 4-2 games by agreement and a good shaking of game is hustling — and winning conference. e press and the first college coach to go Harkness coached at "Sid will be a great assistance played." the Chicago Black Hawks after hands — the same as I had at RPI t°°." "I can't wait for the to the National Hockey League. Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in helping me bridge the many ice tn M "I don't feel it's such a making the Stanley Cup playoffs and Cornell," the intense new back in," Harkness "This is the greatest challenge for 14 seasons, with a 176 - 96 - transition as it might have been a said under Abel for the first time in coach of the Red Wings said. 'The pros want to win. So do sure Gordie is of my career," the Cornell 7 record, before switching to few years ago," Bruce A. Norris, glad it's down u saowMut " four seasons. 'I've been eating for 25 years college players. And so do I," I can't i't wait." owner of the Red Wings, said of Abel resumed the dual role of and I'll continue to eat. I hope the selection of Harkness. "His coach - general manager after the handshake is for the rest of Water Polo Club vies record speaks for itself." Harkness will be taking over a Bill Gadsby — the man hired to relieve him of the two - job my life." "I believe in discipline and team he saw play six times pressures the previous season — conditioning," he said. "You for championship The MSU Water Polo Club is competing this weekend in the 16-team National A.A.U. The MSU forward line of Mark Manrique, Dennis Manrique, Lee Weishar and Jere Johnston is McAuliffe the Championships in Chicago. expected to provide a balanced two The Spartans will open with games Friday, one against St. Louis and the other against offense. But the defense, led by goalie Chuck Hall, could have it rough with two high scoring as Tigers top 1969 third place team, Chicago Eastern teams. in the first five innings DETROIT (UPI) - Dick runners Heidemann and a sacrifice fly by Portage. If the Spartans continue "The New York Athletic Club McAuliffe drove in the tie - and walked six batters. He gave Ted Uhlaender. advancing, they'll play in the and the Northern Virginia breaking run with a single and up six hits and struck out six. Three straight hits in the quarter - finals Saturday and Aquatic Club are two of the top later added an insurance run second inning -- a single by Willie semi - final and final rounds teams outside California and Cleveland tied the game in the Horton, with his first home run of the a double by Jim Sunday. should be in the running for the fourth when Duke Sims and Northrup and a single by Bill "This is a great opportunity season Thursday to spark the championship," Wood said. Detroit Tigers to a 4 - 2 victory Craig Nettles both walked and Freehan -• brought in the first for us as we will be competing Key men on the Spartan Ned Harkness over the Cleveland Indians. scored on a single by Jack two Detroit runs. against many Olympic caliber defense include Pat Zelek, Ron Don Wert led off the fifth players," player - coach Bill Pohlonski, Tom Sullivan and Wood said. Wood. inning with a single and was Women's IM sacrificed to second by winning pitcher Earl Wilson, who went Mike Madura and Rick Ferman. the route in picking up his first (continued from page 12) The Men of Omega Psi Phi Coed badminton will be held wjn j„ three tries. McAuliffe conference. They had two Madura is conference play. undefeated in from 6:30 to 10:30 tonight in then snapped a 2 - 2 deadlock victories last week and hope to the lower gym of the Women's wjth a ground single over second Northwestern has started present IM Building. All students and faculty are welcome. base duplicate the feat this weekend. Other Spartans seeing action slowly this season. The Wildcats have a 2 - 4 record and even Losing pitcher Dean Chance, now 1 - 1, served up McAuliffe's will be DeArmond Briggs and Lutz has lost twice, once to OMEGA WEEKEND (APRIL 17-19) home run in the seventh. Wilson stranded nine Cleveland Rick Vetter at the third and fourth singles and No. 2 doubles, Buster Brown of Notre Dame, a team MSU plays Wednesday. Summer FRIDAY, APRIL 17 - 3 P.M. APT. 321 Waters Edge Apt. in Cleveland Oakland end killed riik' FRIDAY, April 17,7:30 P.M. "tfflV $1.00 at the Union Bldg. Undergraduate and grad¬ Oakland Raider tight end Roger Hagberg was run over and uate students can earn up to 9 semester hours of killed Wednesday night by a hit - and - run driver after his credit during the seven- own car went out of control and he was thrown out. FRIDAY HUBBARD HALL 10 P.M. -? week term at Case West¬ Hagberg, a former University of Minnesota star, played $1.00 ern Reserve pro University football for nine years. (June 22-Aug. 7). AP Wirephoto For further informa¬ SATURDAY, April 18 Jack Tar Hotel tion, write to the Office of the Summer Session, Case eCirt music by "The Soul System" IM SOFTBALL ..Sv* also "Light Show" Western Reserve Univer¬ sity, Cleveland, Ohio SCHEDULE ll 44106, or stop in during 10:00 P.M. 2:00 $alL for11 plus - a.m. your spring break. Case Post Party to be announced Western Reserve SUNDAY, April 19,9 p.m. University Apt. 321 Waters Edge COME IN TODAY Lacrosse (continued from page 12) AND LIVE A LITTLE fall, 15-5. But Denison roadblock when it ran headed ito somewhat of east, losing to a At either of our two Locations nationally ranked Virginia, 16-6. Cornell, the Ivy League champion, eked out a 13-8 decision over brazier 310 W. Grand River, East 6724 S. Cedar at the X-Way, Lansing or Lansing the Big Red on merit of a fine fourth comeback. But Denison jumped back on the winning track when it crushed Duke, 18-4. period Track (continued from page 13) Murphy's are entered as MSU's top milers and MSU assistant Jim expects somewhat their from 4:16.4 effort by Dieters. times to drop Gibbard last week's MALL Record week John Mock, outkicked last ready in for the a 880, should be top effort there while Paul Cooke and Bob May will have to battle a tough MERCHANTS!! Riot Northwestern duo of Tom Bach and Don Drozd in the 660-yard run, an event Ten. unique to the Big MSU's mile relay, a surprise loser at Purdue with two regulars missing, should be back at full strength with Henderson, Murphy, Mock and Wehrwein making up the team. A Northwestern quartet went 3:14.8 on Illinois' fast track while MSU clocked 3:17.6. But this same MSU team won the Big Ten indoor title in the event and had a 3:15.0 best so it should be ready to lower its time. PASSING THE BATON: The dual marks the first time MSU and NW have ever met outside so every winning performance wil go as an automatic meet record ■ You are cordially invited to attend a breakfast with a . . the only other MSU home meet comes May 9 when indoor special guest speaker. Prof. William Haight of the M.S.U. Advertising Department, to offer you champ Wisconsin and runner-up some very Indiana take on the third pla« timely information about retail advertising. This informative and informal Spartans ... Big Ten scoring meeting will be held been changed from five places on Wednesday, April 22, at 8:00 a.m., at the Okemos six, and will be totaled on Masonic Temple, 2175 Hamilton Road in Okemos. 10-8-6-4-2-1 basis instead « The presentation, sponsored by the greater East 5-4-3-2-1 . . . Class B state mee Lansing and Meridian Township Chamber of Commerce will be here May 23 . • • P11 in conjunction with the Michigan State News and the Kim Hartman, injured >« Towne Courier, will be of special interest to all runner - auto accident last ia > Meridian Mall Merchants. We'll be expecting you. doing well and should be able run cross country in the fa» • ■ Big Ten meet this year is Indiana, with cross country n MEBIPIAH MALL :.S6. C. MIIBPHV in the fall and indoor me*' '71 already set for Wisconsin, outdoor for Illinois . • ■ Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, April 17, 1970 15 state news Make Mother classified happy with a Peanuts Personal Ad. STATE NEWS 355-8255 CLASSIFIED Call 355-8255 or stop in 347 Student Services Building. 355-8255 The State News does not permit racial religious Automotive FRANKLY SPEAKING by Phil Frank or Scooters & Cycles Employment discrimination in its CORVETTE 1963 - 300 horsepower, Employment advertising columns. The 4-speed, black with black interior, CYCLE INSURANCE 3, 6, 12 month State 355-0575. 5-4/17 WAITRESSES FOR full or part time FEMALE News will not policies, any cycle, any driver. HOUSEKEEPER part shift. Experience preferred but time. $40 per week plus room accept advertising which Compare our rates. For immediate will train. Call THE and DODGE POUR .automotive discriminates against condition. GT 1965. Excellent coverage, call the specialist, HOUSE, Restaurant and Cocktail board. Live-in. Phone 351-6729. 4-4/17 Scooters & Cycles religion, race, color 44,000 actual miles. HENDRICKSON INSURANCE Lounge 646-2201 for or 372-2643. T5-4/21 Auto Parts & Service national origin. AGENCY, 2205 East Michigan, ^pointment 5-4/17 FEMALE ROCK Group needs full Lansing. 484-8173. 5-4/21 . Aviation DODGE LANCER G.T. 1962. EMPLOYMENT standard transmission, new BULTACO 1967 Metralla, 250cc. children, r„r*rL:t;'sl P,omoliora z;.. battery, radio, snowtires. $195 Detuned 362 Tuseol, Bay h FOR REnt 351-5783.3-4/17 road racer (fast, light, 4°1 Salarv ci,v' 48706- 892-5501. Out Of responsive). Absolutely mint. Best callI 351-1546. 5-4/17 Apartments Automotive reasonable offer by Friday. oopn open, Sight! 4A/y/ DODGE 1964. Good Houses condition. 332-0586, 351-2506. 3-4/17 LINE UP your Spring term job now. AUSTIN HEALEY Automatic, power steering, good F||| . "Z-7mc 7 ^7 TT~ Rooms Sprite. Needs work. Best offer. 353-7572 1963. tires. Must sell! 351-9137. HONDA, 1967. 160 cc. Excellent Car necessary. Call 351-7319 for interview C fLL TIME male helP wa"»ed for temporary mailing room work. for sale after 6 p.m. 3-4/21 T5-4/21 condition. Reasonably priced. Call Apply in person at 3308 South Animals Mobile Homes BARRACUDA 1966 Formula-S, New 351-9526. 3-4/17 Need EEG TECHNICIAN experienced - L.P.N. technician to _J^a^No.1J^Lanjmg. 3-4/2^ brakes, clutch, exhaust, shocks. part TIME BMW 1966. R695. Low mileage, with employment Summer personal Elliot, 351-0720. XA6-4/20 windshield, carrier, large seat and complete staff of an established opportunities also available, department. Pull time peanuts personal tank. IV 4-4673, IV 2-6874. employment. All benefits, Automobile required. Phone THE BUICK 1961, 3 speed. Olds FALCON SOCIETY CORPORATION real estate Good Shape. Call 489-7832 or engine. 1964 wagon. Radio, T5-4/22 including good salary with merit 351-5800 O heater. Good condition. recreation 351-3241. 1-4/17 $350/best. 355-5879. 1-4/17 1969 NORTON Commando. 4,000 increases. Apply SPARROW service miles. Newly painted. Call Doug, __"^_Pi1^.L_PerSOnn_el 3 4/21 N'GHT MANAGEF» at Burger Chef CAMARO RALLY Sport. Must sell, FIBERGLAS SPORTS 332-2491. 34/20 Typing Service TRANSPORTATION 4 speed, 350 cubic inch 250 hp with spoilers. 372-4590 engine, Original cost: $700. car body. Make offer. HONDA 250 Scrambler. BUMP AND paint man needed for auto work part time and possible necessary. 224-2226. 5-4/17 $85 a^eek^t^start' After 5 p.m., 337-9294. 4-4/21 Rebuilt full time. Very good pay. Ask for , WANTED 5-4/20 engine. Call 351-9592 anytime Bart 484-5315. 1-4/17 3 FULL TIME men FORD 1966 F100 pickup Vi ton. Saturday. 4-4/17 needed high pav deadline CHEVROLET "64". Good Ca» 371-1813, 9:30 am 12 oo Good condition. $1,000. Call ATTRACTIVE HOSTESS, - dining 1:30 -4:00. C ' , pM. one class day condition, new battery. $350. 882-8983.2-4/17 A uto Service & Parts room. Resort area. Room and Phone after before publication. 6 p.m., 489-1694 board. Five days a week. 4-4/17 n Cancellations - 12 noon References required. Call after 3 tOr Kent class day before p.m. or write for personal publication. FORD 1966, 8 passenger super ' 'TH 355-9395. 3-4/17 -^967 Bonneville, cOV-Vl'lent condition. COOK FOR July in Harbor - August at cottage Springs. 332-1239. Kildea Super Sunoco T5-4/22 ED 7-9320 918 £'. Grand River (corner of Bogue & Gr. River) Rranran □□□□ Reduced CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 1. Dull and flat 32. Counselor 34. Burgeon □□IIEOE nsmna □an □□□□□□Ha □UEE Ronu □□ In conjunction with our policy to be the most progressive apartments for MSU 7. Cross-stroke 37. Kindled □nnnn an □□□ students, ^n a letter 38. Angry aarann □□□□ Groove up to the 70's the new management of Cedar Village has negotiated 41. Glossy paint new reduced fall rates with the 12. Public speaker 43. Spanish friend saoa HCTPeio Its a new age. owners. Reduced fall rates 13. Self-esteem Em ns unuan are as follows: 14. Glandular 45. Norse sagas Anew way of 46. Boulevard aa Haeo ueoa apartment living that turns on all organ 47. Deceives Village 15. Flock of wild HfunniiCTaH naa e Possibilities you expect¬ ances for good times Ole Cedar New Cedar geese 48. Crib □□Hsm unrnHHu - 16. Golf mound □msa rat-isuu 12 month leases 17. Twitching DOWN Places for quiet times- 12 month leases 18. Caked 1. Shock Places for friendly times- 19. Wool fat 2. Canal 6. Syllable of 9. Outfits Bus service to and from campus this summer - $240/month $250/month 23. Berate 25. Idler 3. Spear 4.Shoshonean hesitation 7. Roomy 10. Aimless 11. Extremities MJ>rn9se than just an apartment, all the wonderful $260/month 29. Buyer 5. Correlative of 8. Work unit 15. Fish's you expect of the70's. Groove up today and see what we're $260/month 31. Grape conserve 2 B M T- * neither f A ' i° " breathing organ diking about! $265/month $270/month li % 13 17. Toward 20. Egyptian skink summer and fall. Now leasing for IM %IS 21. Unnecessary - 9 month leases are an additional $5 per person per month. li % 17 22. Part of a church 19 20 % 21 % 18 23.105 24. That man %% 22 'ti % Meadowbrook 26. Science of 23 2 . Marigold, across from campus. Summer only. Owner vacation. Carpeted. MJE: THE buffalo bums of Xi TET 35mm, 8 and Super 8 movie Parquet dining, skirting, seamstress. Reasonable char# .Deluxe 2-man furnished EAST LANSING near campus. One BLACK LIGHTS, bulbs and fixtures. storage welcome you back to MSU 351-8257, evenings. T5-4/23 cameras and Polaroids. Binoculars. house, putting 355-5855. 0-4/23 ,apartments. Now leasing for bedroom, furnished. greens, swimming Summer and Fall. IV 9-9651 or rooms. Air Large airy Telefunken stereo AM/FM S-W pool. 16 minutes to MSU __1j4/17 conditioned. MASON: FURNISHED 2 bedroom, radio, turntable and extension 351-1237. TF Beautifully clientele. maintained. Select Lease 332-3135 or speakers., 100 used stereo albums, 372-9337. 0-4/17 LIFE CAN be beautiful with the great sporting goods you find in XEROX COPIES! ;i'24 CEDAR Stre 882-6549. O utilities furnished. 663-4392! $1.50 each. 20 used late model RITZCRAFT, 1969, 12'x60'. the Want Ads. Check now. class notes M ^homework I T5-4/23 portable STEREO CONSOLE. Excellent typewriters, $29 up. Transistor portable radio, used condition. $150. One year old. Unfurnished. $5,900. 489-7486 thesis 1 I i bran,' material after 2:30 p.m. A5-4/17 it makes cents to Xerox '> ■includes heat. $62.50 to $80 per 711 BURCHAM. Deluxe 3-man CACKY, HAPPY Birthday to a EAST LANSING, 597 Spartan stereo record players. Zenith, Call 351-5683. T5-4/23 Bic Fine Point Pons , -..man. 135 Kedzie Drive, $85 to furnished apartments. Now leasing fellow celebrant. Only 364 days to 20c Felt Tip Highlighters 3l 15th and September 1st. Days 9-9651 or 351-3525. TF Long microscopes. Porta Built-in near campus or short term lease. Call - Scribe type. Changeable 351-8299. 4-4/17 STUBBIES: THE voters were wrong. j, 487-3216, Evenings, 882-2316. after 4:30, 485-6222. T5-4/23 overhead projector. WILCOX decorator front. USed three SYSTEMS THREE MEN needed summer term. You are a winner. I am behind 541 East Grand River . SECONDHAND STORE, 509 East months. $175. 351-0495. T5-4/23 Cedar Village Apartments Call you forever. Little One. 1-4/17 332-5246 (across from Berkey! filRL OVER 22, share house. Own Michigan. 485-4391, 8 - 5:30 p.m. Lost & Found .bedroom. Many conveniences. 351-1035. 5-4/21 Rooms SOUND SELLS fast! Cash f_. ALPHA XI Delta sisters: Happiness r„ TENT Cottageaire, 9'x 12' with stereo with a low-cost .t . 882-4691 after 3 p.m. 5-4/17 DID YOU know tl t even while you SINGLE - LOST - ALPHA Phi Alpha Fraternity on Founders' Day I The Pledges. Want Ad ROOM for girl student. BLANK 8 track cartridges and title 9'x7' kitchen attachment. $75. Call 355-8255 to place Ads Pin. Please call Cheryl. 353-8049. 1-4/17 y are working Near campus. Kitchen privileges. Call 351-0495. T5-4/23 ^A^TASTIC apartments. SAVINGS Next to on 3-man for you? 351-8325. 2-4/17 labels, dust bugs, tape cleaners, plugs and jacks galore. All at 1-4/17 todayI campus. 2 MAN apartment catalog pripes. MAIN MAGNA-COMBO lUnicord); LOST INTERST7 Sell Simmer. 332-5048. 3-4/21 available, June .1st. hobby items MEN I Typing Service f) 21 and Near over - Clean quiet ELEPTBON ICS, 5558 Sooth epiphone guitar; bass guitar; 12 campus. Men only. i&ICOOL girls need 4th for summer, 351-6636.5-4/20 rooms. Cooking and parking. Pennsylvania, 882-5035. C string guitar; 355-4015. T5-4/24 Want Ad. Dial 355-8255. Close, reasonable. Jllfcedar Village apartment. 485-8836. TF 487-5753, WANT ADS Real Estate CLIFF & PAULA HAUGHEY 353-1200. T5-4/23 INFLATABLE are the oldest form in SINGLE GIRL to share expenses. PLASTIC chairs, Professional Thesis Preparation Nice location, west side, near sofas. Many colors. Cheap. Call print of getting buyer and seller Personal For Master's & Doctoral TEACHERS TO share Fisher 337-9215 noon midnight. 5-4/17 together. Phone 355-8255. ATTRACTIVE 3 bedroom ranch. large home Body. Reasonable. - Candidates. Professional The south of campus. Will hold for 372-9659. T5-4/22 Family room, full basement. Near campus. Fenced Typing, Multilith Printing a summer or fall. 337-7564 SINGLE ROOM .i-cnsle student. TAPE DECK. Ampex Model 250. Animals yard, quiet street. Hard Binding. Free Brochure and evenings. 1-4/17 2-BEDROOM. Furnished. Spring and 337-0184. 1-4/17 Stereo. One year new. $125. Estimates. Call 337-1527. C Summer term. Close to Close inRCvi finer) furnished. 372-8015. 3-4/17 MSU. HASLETT AREA, modern 1 Immediate 332-2471. 3-4/17 OKEMOS, BRICK, 3-4 bedroom, COMPLETE THESIS occupancy. $150. Service. peneled study. 61/»% mortgage. Discount 351-9036. 3-4/20 STOVES, REFRIGERATORS, beds. Printing. IBM typing and carpeted. New GE appliances, Buy/sell. ABC Secondhand Store, Owner, 351-6632. 5-4/20 binding of garbage disposal, air conditioning. For Sale 1208 Turner. TF COUNT ON Classified Ads. They thesis, resumes, publications. Across from OKEMOS AREA. One bedroom $125. Phone 339-2490 help you find a better job! Start EAST LANSING, Heritage Hill for deluxe apartment, unfurnished. MUSICAL corner MAC and Grand River, INSTRUMENTS, All BUFFET checking nowl appointment. T5-4/23 MAHO^JNY, $35. - Perfect for two married below Style Shop. Call or brands, 30% off list price. Rich: Quality dine.§0^"-J with 2 couples. 337-2060 between 6 337-0703. 22-5/15 COPYGRAPH SERVICES, WANTED: ONE hip guy for two man - matching chai.s, $35. 482-5875. GARAGE ART SHOW = April 18 7:30 p.m. T5-4/22 thru 26, 9 - 5 p.m., 1883 Ann 337-1666. C in New Cedar 3-4/17 Village. Reduced St. i rent. No PIONEER SR202 reverberation DOBERMAN PINSCHER puppies. 6 6-4/24 UNUSUAL RANCH, 2 damage deposit. LCC AND State offices near. Lovely fireplaces, 2 ^ immediate occupancy. Apt. 111. amplifier. 5 months old, like new, LEICA 200mm F4 weeks old. 2 male, 2 female. AKC, car garage, 3-4 acres. Pond. Rent furnished 2 bedroom. Call latest, mint, t 3-4/17 $70,351-3815. T5-4/22 $140. Phone 351-7131 after 6:00 show quality. 663-8970. 3-4/21 DRAFT INFORMATION ®375 or sell. About 15 372-2208. 4-4/17 minutes p.m. 3-4/17 MSU. Quality references. Call IV CENTERS jfclARRIED COUPLES, Spring term. SUBLEASE FURNISHED 5-6128/ Joanna Sargeant, broker 2 bedroom furnished. $160. Cedar East 1-4/17 APARTMENT, 2 or 3 man. Ideal 1969 DELUXE horse trailer. Padded Lansing: location, specially furnished. stalls, running lights, electric Over 332-5051 5-4/17 brakes. 393-5319. 3-4/17 Campus Bookstore HASLETT LONG-TERM MSU PhD Wist. 351-9422. A5-4/17 A-Frame house. 2 Electric Room 205 IBM typewrite MINIATURE, AKC registered male bedrooms, carpet, fireplace, large UNIVERSITY VILLA, 4 blocks 1 Grace Rutherford, 3370138. to LUDWIG Schnauzer, salt and pepper. - 5 p.m. Mon. Fri. wooded lot. $16,900. 339-2938. Student Union. Summer and Fall MICHIGAN - PENNSYLVANIA. 2 DRUMS - 5 piece set. - 3-4/17 POOL TABLE 4x8. 1 piece solid, 482-1767. 1-4/17 6 8 p.m. Mon. 3-4/17 ieases available. 2, 3, and 4 man bedroom furnished, near MSU Cymbals and cases included. In - - Thurs. 3/4" slate, $350. 393-0046. good condition. 663-6331. 3-4/17 furnished from $170. 351-4694, FREE DOG. Friendly, Lansing: MANUSCRIPT TYPING i $50. Phone manager, 484-9876. 5-4/20 lively, 9 - HALSTEAD MANAGEMENT BARGAINS ARE always month terrier mix. Female. Call Michigan Theater campus, experienced. 351-4524 COMPANY, 351-7910. O 5-4/17 up in the Want Ads 351-7814. 1-4/17 Arcade Recreation after 1:30 p.m. 8-4/24 WE DO most repairing and replace . .. everyday. 1 5 p.m. Every INDIA OVERLAND $204, regular TWO PEOPLE to take over lease o broken frames. OPTICAL SIAMESE - Sunday KITTENS, lilac point. trips. 39 Lansdowne Gardens, BARBI MEL: Typing, multilithing. two man apartment. Call after DISCOUNT, 2615 East Michigan Bred for good temperament 351-5283 Call London S.W.8. UK. 45-6/5 No job too large or too small. p.m., 351-1739. 4-4/17 Avenue, 372-7409. C-4/17 332-2970. 3-4/17 SOCIAL - ECONOMIC Development Block off campus. 332-3255. C employment opportunities JOIN THE motorcycle Ride For nationwide IBM THESES typing, math included. directories of Peace, May Day, MSU Anarchists positions. All Phone Mrs. Lippincott, 48 TWYCKINGHAM APARTMENTS are now leasing student relevant Accurate. Current. Inexpensive. fields. 12-5/1_ 5-4/20 units. These NOTHING BUT nothing will find a spacious luxury apartments are completely Information write: Sociocom, Box 317 Harvard buyer for your sporting goods Square carpeted and furnished with distinctive Spanish Mediterranean Cambridge, Mass. 02138. 4-4/17 P.O., more quickly than a Want Ad Dial 355-8255 now. Transportation furniture. Each unit has a dishwasher, garbage disposal and u/md individual control - central air conditioning. These four man units have up to 3 parking spaces per unit. The student's leisure time has been adequately planned for with a giant heated Wanted swimming pool, recreation rooms and private balconies. If you want to be among the first residents of GRADUATE STUDENT desi TWYCKINGHAM call are now leasing today. There are units starting at $70/month per man. Hi 1 mgr. position mech. Experience 351-5575. T5-4/22 ROOMMATE FOR trailer c side of Lansing. Call 353-8894 for My name mornings. 2-4/20 and . summer MODEL (APT. B-7) OPEN: 1-6 p.m. every day except Sunday GARDEN SPACE to rent in Okemos, 332-6819 after PHONE: 332-6441 is East Lansing area. 5 p.m. T5-4/23 fall terms NINE AND TWELVE MONTH LEASES LIMITED SUMMER LEASES NOW ACCEPTED AVAILABLE KAREN i BLOOD DONORS Needed. all positive. A negative, B $7.50foj nega and AB negative, SI0'00' . negative, $12.00. MicW" Community Blood Center, 5U'» ...Ask I will be taking Classified Ads between 5 p.m East Grand River, East Lai** Find out & 7 p.m. Above the new for yourself.. someone who lives Ctopcfcmgjjam evenings Monday through Friday for your convenience. If ad & are unable to call you would like to place an thru the day, please call Store. Hours: 9 a.m. to Monday, Wednesday, and f"° I Tuesday and Thursday, 12 Pm CamPu^ 3.*>f there 4620 S, Hagadorn you looking forward to hearing from 6:30 p.m. 337-7183. C Just dial 355-8255 and I will be ONE BEDROOM living quarters help you in placing your Classified happy to Ad. cooking facilities for ma HWIND APARTMENTS couple starting summer ter MANA GEMENT EXCL USIVEL Y B Y: 351-5543. S-4/20 NORTHWI ND DRIVE LANSING, MICHIGAN WANTED WOMEN to sell Fashions 2 or 3 evenings per" BeeJ Phone 337-0636 Alco Management Company New wardrobe twice a V«*. MODEL OPEN DAILY 9 - 5 p.m. and up per hour. Ph«* ^ personal interview 372-02 676-2298. 4-4/17 Michigan Ftate News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, April 17, 1970 17 Women's action plan one) with Welfare overhaul (mm oaae jnued from page one) a respected identity respected individual rights." identity anHand interwoven into the fabric of ■ our said using the MSU jempl°yers, He expressed the view that oTsex discrimf'11^'011^ lsexis.m' Although sex discrimination I I placement that women Bureau "to ensure receive equivalent consideration and 'ob °ffers ln today will "raise furor» of the same jntensity oppressedJ ethnic ' groups of the e^rL-hS't,on ,s equally we "It is Hri not ' u nlu ®"ough to say that will not be eliminated immediately, Wharton expressed confidence "that every effort passes in House programs. I he recruitment process past and present. discriminate, for in will be made to achieve WASHINGTON (AP) - The I' ln another proposal for "Just as racism has been manv ry^ man " tWP WC dosoeach significant progress in this vital House passed Thursday a In addition to the basic federal floor of $500 annual income action program, day without sweeping overhaul ■ "affirmative knowing it," he human " of the for I Wharton advocated a study to area nation's welfare system, the first two family members, |Wn ider the possibility of providing a floor under family $300 for each additional landing MSU's continuing ■ education program for women IS need additional tra.n.ng to Soviet appro ship income working and poor. The bill, strongly including backed by the member, food stamps worth about $820 would be for the typical four - available person President Nixon, goes to the family. ■reenter a professional or ■ technical field. Senate, where efforts already are I «We should help to provide Ithe opportunities these women I Id to resume constructive ■ne,itir>ns in government, Apollo's splashd under benefits. way to increase the While opponents insisted the cost of adding to the welfare Trustees (continued from page one) P0- and the academic world MOSCOW (AP) Four Soviet and, if called upon, rolls 13 million persons, mostly ss -- r„., "to make seas for massive naval exercises. the working poor, would _ rdes commensurate with their ships Apollo were steaming 13 „ to -- the — the most most resolute resolute actions to give The Soviet Union has taken the cost far propel The trustees discussed the I talents and education," he said. splashdown site assistance in the rescue of the the wraps off Apollo press beyond the $4.4 proposal at their closed finance billion yearly estimate, backers committee session I "More than personal gain is Thursday, one of them a missile astronauts." coverage since the space mishap. Thursday contended the of the ni8ht and wi" act on ■involved for the benefit to tracker equipped with The fact that one of the rescue Soviet news media that had cost at the I nrietv through an enlarged helicopter. Jssels is a missile tracker and virtually ignored man's third present plan is spiraling of*5" session this morning, ^ _lv of highly skilled and Tass said the Chumikan and agency's reference „ , to voyage to the moon in its early uncontrollably. The measure At the finance committee J rained women would be fishing trawler No. 8452 were other Russian sian ships in the area stages now carry regular progress would substitute a new financed assistance plan federally session the trustees will also ordered ■considerable," he added. to ordered to join join the the cargo carriers c caused speculation that reports on the crippled space assuring decide how to vote on the I Wharton depicted today's Academician Rykachev and Previously announced Soviet craft. families, including those of the General Motors Corp. proposals, ■women's liberation movement as Novopolotsk converging c naval maneuvers might be in Tass distributed a message working poor, an income ^wo which are sponsored by i "campaign for recognition as Pacific target area. progress not far from the Thursday from the 18 surviving Peace-for everyone calculated at $1,600 persons. for four consumers rights'crusader Nader. Ralph individual — not a member of Tass said all other Soviet ships splashdown site. cosmonauts expressing their These two concerned citizens march peacefully outside the [ stereotyped group saddled jn nearby waters have been A" fou'' Soviet fleets concern about the Apollo 13 Lansing Federal Bldg. The march followed a rally sponsored The federal government would assume a The University holds 7,100 bigger share of the cost shares of G.M. stock, utdated cliches and instructed to pay close attention currently deployed in the crewmen and wishing "them by the Lansing Area Peace Council Wednesday. and the administration for most Nader's ■behaviors, but as a human being to reports on AdoIIo's Pacific, Atlantic and adjoining proposals included progress safe return on native earth." State News Photo By Dick Warren states releasing local welfare expanding the board of directors funds for savings or expansion of from 24 to 27 to include three representatives in the public interest, amending the certificate COAX SHIP HOME of incorporation to put GM on record as limiting its endeavors to those in the public interest of health and safety and requiring GM management to set up a Apollo (continued from page one) nears splashdown shareholders oversee decisions. the committee public impact of GM At the monthly open session this morning, the trustees will to The astronauts used flashlights Ocean. continued to refine the last expected on station early consider President Wharton's to find their way around in the The new course will minute procedures to bring the Friday. recommendations for the posts bring darkened command ship. Apollo spaceship home safely. The spaceship was at the time of vice them to a landing in the Pacific Mission ""'i president for business MSU Control, checking The aircraft carrier Iwo Jima 140,000 miles out in and finance and chairman of the Sport Cycle Club having 580 miles southeast of Samoa, observed fielc occasionally by radio, said the set out from Samoa for the space, but. its speed, answering commission on admissions. trials Saturday, While space experts pondered command ship's systems were in recovery site. It is the prime Cavanaugh Rds. Sign up the advisability of a fourth but beck of earth's gravity, w Roger Wilkinson, now acting als 1 good shape. "u,~ 'in a fleet recovery ship ~ of ships Picki"g "P- It will be traveling at vice president p.m. Go your own minor course correction, the The experts in Mission Control for business and astronauts rested from the rigors The carrier was 24,623 miles an hour when finance, will be recommended Dursts into the earth's of their flight and for the permanent position, kept tab of atmosphere. Former state superintendent of the consumable items that keep The Soviet Union, which had them alive. public instruction Ira Polley is There was plenty of everything for the final day in space, Post office reform offered naval help along with Britain, France, Japan and Brazil for the recovery (he candidate for chairman of the commission on admissions, operations, sent Jack Breslin, executive vice providing nothing else goes (continued.^ n pacje one) expenditures into balance with four ships postal revenues," he said, "I now steaming to the scene, president of the University, will wrong. one of them a missile The inventory: conditions. generally, with propose to: tracking propose that the trustees place ship with a helicopter. Soviet Water enough for 21 hours negotiating impasses being construction of a performing -- ships have been nearby during beyond the end of the missron at - finally resolved, if necessary, by earlier U.S. splashdowns. arts center high on the priorities current low binding arbitration. The weather in the consumption rates. It is used for coo''nB- Postal rates would be from six cents to eight' cents. recovery The open session is at 10 a area continued to increased, but by considerably "-Keep the price of the improve as a today in the board rt Oxygen -- a present ™ g. tropical storm moved some 700 fourth floor less in the aggregate than Nixon mail il stamp at 10 cents. 155 hours with the miles away from the target area. Administration Bldg. lander's -t. llf.. supply, 15 hours had recommended -The Post Office Department April 3. Union Bldg., Parlor C, 7:30 w,thOUt It. would nn lnnupr hp a Hahinpt A sexuality Sunday, 7:30 p.m., „„„„ 131 Electricity- a safety margin of 31 hours in low power flight. tt' level agency and the postmaster Stoddard. Lithium hydroxide -- the general would be hired by a canisters which remove carbon bipartisan commission with his Hillcrest, corner w tenure "based on performance dioxide from the cabin air, a and not on politics." cGrd. eR,ver' 332-1916 having safety margin of 38 hours. -The coni lH6'hC6S' conducted f'Hp't3V' Kiddush by students. In a which, when at full , A. commissioners have broad authority would to fix ing. Sunday. 4 6 p m Rabbi strength, have more than enough postal rates and pay scales, but Zemach will be available at Hiiiei power for re - entry. either house of Congress could ail Passover Re - entry is normally made on veto proposed rate changes by a Hagaddaha available the command ship's batteries. two - thirds vote. The difference this time is that the big service module engine is Postmaster General Winton M. dead and cannot be used to Blount said he is confident the •„ Nixon - endorsed reforms would David M Earl EMlT P^01™ an>' of the preliminaries avert wildcat strikes of the sort History, Sunday, 7 p.m.,' to ready the command ship for that crippled mail service in a 32, Union. His appearance is re - entry. number of major cities last The last three days month. conservation have produced the surpluses in the stricken Meany said he saw the program as "setting the stage for spacecraft. the future" and expressed belief that collective bargaining can be extended later to all federal workers. Election (continued from page one) Nixon said he would like to see the postal system put on a pay - as - you - go basis history of ASMSU," Grossfeld immediately but went along said. with a compromise that would He said he also expects a high gradually decrease federal md percentage of students to vote in subsidies for the system from an v. the off - campus elections as estimated $850 million in the Dan Johnson, Lynn first year - or 10 per cent of Well. The.se elections will be held and Jeanne ... expelled T (J from 8 am. to 5 p.m. operating expenses to zero by study (ria, where they conducted conferences and student Results of the Vietnam Jan. 1,1978. -- Chicken referendum on the ballots will "In the interest of making Unidentified coed makes "bTi'ied5''SUBVERSIVE'\°~e they'll not be released until the off - realistic progress toward the an outdoor grill. £ break from pizzas and it ones to fix barbequed chicken on be talking about their experiences, campus elections are held. The objective of bringing postal State News Photo By Fred Ferri reading poetry, etc. Saturday, rationale behind this is that the TENTATIVELY, poet Richard results could influence the trend Thomas (if he gets back in town in Df the second election if they are 2 or folk strummers. re]ease(j ahead of time. Admission$1. TO HIGH SCHOOL STUDEHTS TAPE RECORDING AT ITS BEST ROBERTS 771X ROBERTS 450-A Prof gives yearbook tips * Cross field head By EILEEN LEHNERT Instead they help the student understand the years he lived » 40 Watts peak power 3 Heads The key to successful yearbooks is a "sense of through in school - not just now but in future years. » Sound-on-sound All solid state history" a Hanson suggested that the student • 2 VU meters University of Illinos journalism professor said to about 175 high evaluate their own Sound-with-Sound school students attending MSU's Annual Yearbook yearbooks in this light by answering two questions: » 4 digit reset index Walnut Enclosure Day. Author of several books on yearbooks, Glenn Manson told the "First, is my yearbook distinct from every other counter yearbook students Thursday that the main purpose of a published anywhere at any time? Every school serves a distinct » Extended range speakers yearbook is to "preserve today's nows in a deep freeze." $17995 Yearbooks are experiencing serious problems, Hanson said. The "Second, is my yearbook distinct from every other yearbook crux of the problems is "fiscal ill health." Reg. $399.95 NOW $29995 CONVENIENT TERMS AVAILABLE These problems stem from the state of our society. Students are published in previous years in my school? The problems of the community, the school and the students change every year." rejecting yearbooks because they consider them a link with the establishment, Hanson explained. Yearbooks, continued Hanson, should interpret the life of To combat this situation, yearbooks should students. It should show what it meant to be a student, to be ia» THE SUMO SHOPPI history." This one quality, Hanson said, will make yearbooks exciting. They will be exciting fpr those students them as well as those who read them." possess a "sense of who work on extracurricular activities or in athletics. "A yearbook should be say, 'that's the way it was.' " something that people will look at and Check Our Hanson also explained two important dividends for °'den Guarantee" NeJac of East Lansing Hanson emphasized that yearbooks are "Yearbooks are perfectly preserved distillations of the nows of high school years," he said. history themselves. yearbook editors: "A good yearbook is a service to the community which will grow in value as years pass and the being However, yearbooks are not just collections of the raw data of experience of working on a good yearbook will stand you in good stead for the rest of your life. There is pictures and copy from a student's high school years, he said. always a need for people who can communicate." 18 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, April i Report gives students "Up until now a student sitting on a committee didn't wield much influence unless they spoke up often. Now as voting really a vote on the Academic Council, on the various the Academic Council, standing committees of committei members all students will wield the same minority representation on the Council allowed to participate in academic degree of influence on and the establishment of a new Faculty - Student Committee on that the students should have a government ami .k The recommendations in the McKee Report on Student committees," she said. Academic Governance. role, but don't lit M ' "Actually the amount of power granted to students will depend done in the McKee Report," she said. said e the Wavl Participation in Academic Government have been amended and on each college and to what extent they wish to involve students Discussion in the council approved by the Academic Council, but what will this mean to during the students at MSU? in a meaningful way," Miss Sullivan said. selection they will use to select student recommendations in the McKee Report voting , representatives. Miss reveal The first three recommendations of the McKee faculty representatives the Council feel the "Basically, it just puts their foot in the door," Terry Sullivan, that each academic department or school within Report suggest Sullivan said she doesn't expect students to be seated on the on with a vote would cause a polarization seatin thal student representative to the Academic Council, said. the University, committees before that date. Miss Sullivan disagrees with this within the r.n„ °!' "A lot of it now is just how much the students are willing to every college within the University and all centers and institutes within the University develops methods of The vote to accept the McKee Report proved the majority of "I don't think we'll see forecast. ^ouncil. work with academic involving students in any more polarization than government," she said. academic decision - making. the faculty's acceptance, but Miss Sullivan said there are still two in the Council," she said. The real change is that now student members on n Weseet University The McKee Report further recommends student camps within the council that oppose student involvement in The McKee Report now goes before committees are entitled to a vote. involvement in academic government. the ArarW during that body's May meeting. aem'c Ed refo advocate to spea Michael Rossman, advocate of educational reform, will be on campus Monday through Wednesday addressing groups on his views of educational reform. His visit is being sponsored by the New Community Education Reform Project. Rossman believes that current education systems are too rigidly structured. Elimination of the primary importance of teachers' power over students and of the value of tests would bring education to a more personal level, with greater chances of individual achievement he believes. He also sees great importance in making education relevant to personal and social needs, as opposed to merely theoretical training. Many of Rossman's views have caused him to be considered in radical circles as a leading theoretician in educational reform. He is not well known in non - radical circles, however. Anyone interested in hearing Rossman during his visit can get his schedule from Steve Crocker, 3514248 or 353-6633, or Lenny Brenner, 351-3820. Both are members of the New Community project. Jury indicts Collins for Oregon death SALINAS, Calif. (UPI) - John Norman Collins, 22, already charged with the slaying of a coed in Michigan, was indicted Wednesday for the first degree murder of a 17 - year - old girl. The body of Roxie Ann Phillips, of Milwaukee, Ore., was found last July 13 i; heap just outside the Carmel City limits. The indictment by the Monterey County Grand Jury followed three hours of testimony. Superior Court Judge Gordon Campbell ordered that the details of the testimony be kept secret. Collins, a student at Eastern Michigan University, has charged with the murder of Karen Sue Beineman, an 18 - year - old EMU coed, the seventh young woman killed in the past two years in the Ypsilanti and Ann Arbor, Mich., areas. The slashed and sexually abused body of Miss Beineman, of Grand Rapids, Mich., found in a ditch last July 23. She had been strangled. Miss Phillips' body was found two weeks after her disappearance from the Salinas home of friends with whom she had been spending the summer. Vet Clinic set for'Veto-visit' The Veterinary Clinic will open its doors to the public Saturday from 9 a.m. until 5 p.m. for the yearly "Veta - visit." Sponsored by veterinary medicine students and medical technologists, the event is aimed at informing the public of the many phases of veterinary medicine and the careers available in that field. Throughout the Clinic exhibits explaining veterinary surgery, medicine, experimental medicine and clinical pathology and diagnosis will be manned by students in those majors. Each year from 4,000 to 5,000 veterinarians and high school and college students from all parts of the nation Veterinary Clinic during Veta visit. tour the - J . lllllllllll > .. ;x: ' • II