Since . . • Monday ancient times there have MICHIGAN Sunny STATE STATE NEWS n no institutions which might . . . with a high in the 70's. ^develop defects. Partly cloudy tomorrow with a UNIVERSITY high in the 80's. 2 Number 188 East Lansing, Michigan Monday, May 18,1970 cademic Council expands irading options for strikers By STEVE WATERBURY State News Staff Writer Acting on a recommendation from its educational policies the request of the student, subject to the moved to expand committee, the council approval of the instructor." options for the use of J Academic Council Friday approved certain grades for Present regulations prohibit It is recommended that decisions be spring term. As a result drops after recorded in writing. ■ized grading procedures for striking of council action: the middle of the term except in l,ts and requested a study of the --Present regulations restricting the P-N cases such as registration special One premise considered by the Ijjjty of rearranging the Fall, 1970 (Pass - No Grade) system of grading catastrophic events. errors The council action or educational policies committee in making Xnic calendar. waived. were eliminated all restrictions on the use of the the above recommendations to the council I council also amended and accepted --The use of the INC N grade except certification was that grades should not be used "to ■report from its student affairs (Incomplete) grade instructor of by the either penalize or reward a student on the was broadened. a grade. ittee on "Policies and Procedures on -The drop period in which a basis of a decision to dissent or not to student may The council guidelines state that the dissent." is Disturbances." receive a grade of N use (No Grade) using a late of these expanded The council also recommended options "should be at that instructors permit students to do outside work in lieu of class attendance and provide special examinations. The giving of |oard praises, blanket grades is discouraged. supports The resolution the possibility of providing for a study of rearranging the fall term schedule to allow members of the community time to work for political academic candidates of their choice in the November 'harton's strike position election was passed in a nearly unanimous vote. The resolution labeled as "highly commendable" the present "interest, involvement and commitments made by y BARBARA PARNESS the MSU academic same time, the trustees said the University their talents should be community in their Campus Editor addressing the issues desire to bring about "must be responsive to constructive orderly constructive change of Indochina, racism in this changes in society." I Board of Trustees unanimously in a changing society and flexible in its country and our methods of dealing with the concerns of repression in this country." The results of the study will be presented resolution Friday praising He said the to University's resources are not the council for action at the June lent Wharton's handling of the strike. students and faculty." "If change is to come from demonstrated being directed to adequately deal with the meeting. 1 resolution came following nearly ongoing concerns of society. The report I hours need and is to lead to on campus disturbances of discussion Thursday night must specific objectives, it be achieved through a rational "We don't see why the resources that approved by the council was begun Blood bath Representatives from ASMSU, faculty decision were once turned to building up the Diem following widespread conflict at MSU over Kudent strike and antistrike groups. - making process," the resolution government can't now be used to end the the suspension resolution passed by the Plaster of paris replicas of bodies float in a pool of blood. One of the I board commends President Wharton stated. At the informal war," he said. Kibbey suggested that the board of trustees in 1968. "work-in" creations by students in the Art Dept., this display is in front js leadership of the University during Thursday evening session the board was addressed of Kresge Art Center. State News photo by Richard Warren ■fficult period and supports his May by Rick Kibbey, (please turn to back page) (please turn to page 7) ASMSU representative and chairman of the Ttement on the issues," the resolution strike steering committee; Janice Goldman, I believe he has been sympathetic to representative of the Radical Caucus; Harold Buckner, ASMSU Anti-ROT C crowd scattered pgitimate concerns of students and chairman; and , demonstrating a willingness to Terry Sullivan student representative to the Academic Council. ; rapidly as possible toward which be Rick Coglianese and Eric 5 can attained, while Mettala, ■uning the integrity of Michigan State antistrike group representatives; Margaret The protesters later entered the building ■ public university," the resolution Lesher, strike steering committee member; By DAVE SHORT occupied the building since 11 a.m. Wharton came out and addressed the lued. Peter Demonstration Hall usually closes at 6 p.m. from a side door and stayed in the offices crowd for about 15 minutes. Flynn, Council of Graduate Students State News Staff Writer I board affirmed its obligation to president and Norman Pollack, professor of but remained open two hours past and class areas throughout the day. There "I was not there because I have closing just educational opportunities for history, also addressed the board. time. were no ROTC classes scheduled in the finished a meeting with several black Police used tear gas to disperse a rock - ■who attend the University." At the Kibbey told the trustees that the strike No arrests were made during the sit-in building on Friday. students and faculty members. I happen to throwing crowd of 150 anti - ROTC after the tear-gassing. University President Clifton Wharton have a job in this University that steering committee does not want to shut protesters in front of Demonstration Hall requires down the University. A fracas broke out early in the voiced disdain over the events. me to deal with all Friday night. morning groups in the "We don't want to send the students when anti ROTC supporters and ROTC "This was a senseless incident. The University. If this particular The incident occurred - group would home or send the faculty home or have shortly after cadets clashed on the front steps of the question of ROTC on the MSU campus is care to meet with police were summoned to force the me, I am available," anybody lose their job," Kibbey said. "We building. The protesters tried to storm the already being addressed in a constructive Wharton said. think these protestors out of the ROTC headquarters locked front doors when an anti - ROTC manner. This very day, the MSU student people should be left here and there. The anti -1 ROTC supporters had members opened them from the inside. government conducted a campus - wide referendum to ascertain the views of the AD AT ISSUE University community. The results will be known early next week. In addition, the Note re Academic Council has scheduled a special meeting for May 26 to consider all issues 'U' sentim ASMSU wi thholds results involving ROTC," Wharton said. Wharton indicated that, according to police reports, slaying a number of the people involved were not University students. He on said that some came from East Lansing and others communities in the state. of on ROstatus they The anti-ROTC people regrouped started were forced outside the building and to heckle after police. Shortly afterwards, police withdrew into the By JEANNE SADDLER State News Associate Editor In response to the fatal shooting of two black students at Jackson State College by The students charged that placement of a its class curriculum, which is building but came out after the tear gas National Guardsmen in Jackson, Miss., last controlled by four - column by nine - inch ROTC the University. was fired. week, President Wharton sent a letter to advertisement in the bottom left hand It stated further that "if academic credit The protesters, gathered in the Union the president of that college Saturday corner of page five in Friday's State News is withdrawn from after the tear gasing. Then, after a short expressing his "deep personal sorrow" over ASMSU is withholding indefinitely ROTC courses, was unmarked and that its placement meeting, they marched to President the shootings. results of Friday's referendum in University control over the content of across from the editorial page would these courses will be terminated." Wharton's house. Wharton said the letter was written at the compliance with a request Friday by the request of the Black Faculty Caucus and Student - Faculty Judiciary. The judiciary prejudice persons voting in the referendum. The "This tremendous diversity of the Black Liberation Front (BLF). BLF asked that results from section one of the advertisement, entitled "ROTC FACTS", lists 11 facts concerning the background and academic discipline is also issued a statement Sunday referendum, concerning the status of ROTC program at MSU. Several of these critically important," the ad continued. condemning the incident. ROTC on campus be withheld. facts were mentioned in the statement of "This annual influx from the college Tickets on sale The suit was brought before the judiciary campus to the military is a necessary See text of letter page 2. Herman L. King, asst. provost, also printed Tickets still available for Friday morning by Richard P. Oleksa, asst. 'check and are Pop in Friday's paper. That statement was balance', Without ROTC a Entertainment's professor of law and business "Open Air Wharton said 'the two black issued to clarify the academic, financial military caste system will develop. The groups urged administration. He was acting on behalf of citizen Celebration" Sunday. him to convey for them their "sense of and legal issues affecting ROTC. - soldier concept will have been two students, Hugh Lawrence, Yonkers, denied. The various states will have Tickets are available at Campbell's, horror at these shocking events." He said The advertisement explained the origin no Marshall's and the Union. the letter was a reiteration of a N.Y., senior, and Janice L. Goldman, of finances, salaries and buildings for the telephone call he had with John A. Bellwood, 111., freshman. ROTC program, as well as the structure of (please turn to back Peoples Jr., page) (please turn to back page) EMU By JIM CRATE head blamed campus A student senate, and student for Editor-in-chief '69-'70 News Analysis generate resolutions for administrative body president serve only to not involved with the enactment of consumption. They are the '°w legislation. destructive ■ pressure eye at the center of a of tension existing on campus in the weeks preceding last week's administration," according to Arnold Rubin, editor - in • chief of b e' Eastern . Michigan University president Harold violence. the Eastern Echo. It cannot help but radicalize students, he Faculty members are represented by an equally ineffectual ,i0® ls toe disequilibrium responsible for the worst -In late March and early April several faculty members were contends. senate, an elective body, described by a psychology professor as a „ ce ever to strike that 121 year - old school. - notified of their dismissal. In at least one case, that of a lecturer To understand the full potential of that frustration, the visitor "merry - go - 'round." They have no legislative authority. Faculty and students alike agree that feelings of continued Thursda"1 'eaders and some faculty members interviewed in English, the dismissal came directly from Sponberg. He is needs to look at two things. One is the power vested in, or ineffectiveness, of being powerless against the very powerful, reliably reported to have influenced the dismissal of the others, perhaps usurped by, Sponberg. The other is the lack of tti!? Tu moderates alike cite the 52 ; S the stage for last week's - year - old Sponberg violence on the normally through their respective department heads. Only a messy, checks on that power. any contribute to a high state of tension among both. prolonged fight between faculty and administrators won the basic "Sponbergs' ultimate powers are ultimate," explains a member They say the administration of EMU has done nothing to on lnS and unresponsive to student sentiment as The lesson was lost on no one. Faculty and student courts of appeal exist to review these, and And they say it can happen again unless, as newly - elected aSt Such intransigence on the president's part is "building a very other cases. But their recommendations are themselves student president Barry Simon says, "the administration comes two elated issues appear subject to responsible for the high state high wall of frustration between students and their review and reversal by Sponberg. out into the streets and starts talking - and listening - to people." 2 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Larr owe resigns position Wharton letter as str committee Ir yoi/n«« Miss. BY ANN HODGE State News Staff Writer Charles Larrowe, protessor of economics, resigned as chairman committee following Larrowe's resignation. to Larrowe said he will continue strike untl! the student . . , Council work." "reinforced students' belief that the channels don't 'Is it sensible to think that strike leaders, it wouldn't have nia^e any difference," he said. "®ut. we " never know. They didn't respond." the Mart's on The following is the text of the letter killings| sent bv p Wharton to John A. Peoples, of the Faculty - Graduate steering committee officially MSU, alone among colleges 11 interview Sunday, College, Jackson, Miss., concerning the recent president of Jarl ^ _ Assistant Strike Thursday because the post required a "younger, Committee persevering man," he said. decides to return to class. He ha said he will will romnin disposal of striking faculty and student groups. at at fhp the the nation, would not have mili+art+c waitinrr at fho urintrc militants waiting at the wings, ready to come on stage when the moderates have shown their Larrowe said he had agreed to be nun;wmnn chairman of the committee because he felt a tenured faculty member should f faculty 14..* ft that campus. * "May I once again express my the tragic events which took deep place persona, on vour kin" _ llln8s St,te I Thursday. As I explained in my Larrowe s last act chairman f"1 tyh uoi/r iff "Basically, I'm a loner," inability to deliver?" he asked. be in the forefront. telephone can today, the leaders of the Black Larrowe said. "I have sympathy to write a statement to Larrowe said the attitude of student Black Liberation Front at MSU who Faculty Caucus iV " ■ with the project, but not the President Wharton outlining the central administration and "A non-tenured person is on Friday evening asked me to convey to metw tv,111® I energy or the patience to work faculty involvement in the the Academic Council has bred a really taking a risk because he sense of horror at these shocking events. you the! °' with groups " strike. sense of frustration that could can be fired without knowing 5*iH "On their behalf, they also asked William Derman asst In his statement Larrowe said lead to violence and destruction, why," he said. me to \ say that... s stand ready to provide whatever I professor of anthropology, was the committee's meetings with "It may be that if they had Larrowe said a tenured within their power, not assistance and sUpp > elected chairman of the Wharton the Academic responded to the moderate professor can merely as only be punished brotherhood, but also as a an expres'^ 1 with a pay cut and should be prevention of such acts in the future. commitment to work tow'arll.f I 1,61 ^nurhjf willing to make this sacrifice if "As university presidents, we both he really supports the strike. know that them . danger to peaceful protest and dissent is that Police of sen i charge E.L. "The committee has done all it violence and that, if it is to be avoided, all parties man m - can do in this case because it is a maintain coolness and reason. And above from all hearts and minds - white and all, we must I student, not he said. a faculty, strike," of mindless hatred and blind repression. black - the do?^IS0IB * "Both our black faculty and Black Liberation planning appropriate tributes and memorials for Front a Larrowe said the committee in peace march accident should start to work for range educational reform within the long - L. Gibbs and Mr. James E. from them directly. In the Green, and you will be heari meantime, 1 did want vou t! Mr Phiif University, beyond the know that we share your sorrow and demands of the strike. anguish. An East Lansing man was Lansing Deputy Chief preliminary hearing. Maximum Talkin9 trash "As a reflection of the sentiment of the MSU arrested Thursday and directive charged with driving under the influence Lawrence Murphy said the car's sentence of such a charge driver, William H. Bennett, 253 years in jail and r tine 'of t 10U. The faculty group will meet tonight at 7:30 p.m. in 33 Union Words to philosophize on the side of a trash barrel explain a five days." Friday that our flags fly at'toSSJJj ' of intoxicating liquor and tQ discuss future involvement in counter culture, different life style, by which some can Maplewood Drive, was given a » a felonious driving after his d- o Murphy, the strike. live and be free. breathalyzer test. The machine Val- State News photo by Don Gerstner automobile swerved into indicated roA a that Bennett was crowd of marchers near the intoxicated. Murphy said. 'j „ 'J*"® intersection of Michigan Avenue „ . ■ . . ntp! RpIWp nriijrp ^ „Lri BACKBONE EVIDENCE and LaSalle Boulevard He was arraigned at Municipal reach Bennett, marchers bruised , . . Court and released after posting him and tore his clothes, bond. A hearing will be set for a Mac Leish's future date. Two MSU Geologist students were A MUST FOR ALL THEATRE LOVERS Driving liquor is driving a felonious driving. under intoxicating lesser offense than A felonious charge requires a hospitalized for to injuries they sustained in the accident, Admitted Olin Center Thursday was Mary K. Health By JOHN BORGER Although the fossils and animals that lived on firmly Early fish finds the first animals Goulet, Greenville sophomore. A State News Staff Writer actually found by William Melton of the Univereity of nian+a*4 cfaiirc planted stalks. . were notochords. Fossils of Condonts provided the clue fij Health Center official Sunday A scientific evidence of their The hard mineral the Lochriea's lower coating of animals with notochords to the existence Lochriea. Conodonts ai of Sf The State News, the student newspaper at listed her condition as "fine." discovery rated as cord discovered Michigan State found as early many years ago. rounded objects less than"! possibly "the most unusual fossil as provided rigidity, and allowed These notochords, however University, is published every class day during four school David W. Koch, Mount find of our lifetime" by the 1934 by Harold Scott, chairman the nerve center to serve as a quarter of an inch long. Priori terms, plus Welcome Week edition in September. Clemens junior was treated and f the MSU Dept. of the en entire length of the animal's Scott's first findings in 193. MSU geologist who predicted it ?_1 Gelolgy. stabilizer while swimming. Prior Subscription rate is $14 per year. released from St. Lawrence 36 c Scott presented Mo his findings at to this, invertebrates could curl body objects had been found years ago may provide in The discovery of the quantities throughout theworldl Hospital.. After complaining of missing link between ?e N°rth Clntrfl Member Associated Press, United Press International, breathing difficulties, he was and invertebrate animals, " vertebrate A American merman Oenlnaiml Reg'onSociety Geological Wtatv of the and flip to propel themselves, but Lochriea's stiffening rod bears without the mechanical out Some scientists at the ti_ Inland Daily Press Association, Associated admitted Conference held on campus " previous theories that if Collegiate Press, Saturday to Olin Four fossils of a 200 million- - stiffness which a backbone i called them teeth. Others sii Michigan Press Association, Michigan Collegiate Press Health Center. Health Center year - old week. notochord were to develop, it animal, Lochriea provides, their motion was would be at the front of the they were parts of ai Association, United States Student Press Association. officials refused Sunday to issue wellsensis, were discovered in Scott observed the animal with aimless, animal and not run the length of vertebrate. a report on Koch's condition. limestone in central electron micro - probe. He Second class postage paid at East Lansing, Montana. backbone had to be the body, Scott said. Michigan. also split the four fossils "I - called them Editorial and business offices at 347 Student Services developed to enable an animal to Scott is i teeth,! lengthwise, and discovered swim up into open water from proposing that the Scott said. "Everybody else did Building, Michigan State University, East Lansing, evidence of i slightly rigid rod the sea bottom. newly discovered animal but I didn't. I Michigan. extending c - third of the way placed in an entirely new major 'elements' and figured they we - * "There v "— — ecological niche classification, ——— back from the front end of the t iddoi i ii d i inn, the uic phylum piiyiuui body wuj- parts of i Phunes: ready and waiting for an animal that could swim," Scott said, Conodontochordata, because it animal Editorial 355-8252 does not fit into any of the nearly three "The The animal animal is is fasrinatind Classified Advertising 355-8255 inches long and shaped roughly fascinating iously establ Scott said his conclusion n because it may be the first free Display Advertising 353-6400 like a fish. But unlike fish, which - classifications. tm!saiuci All backboned based on his findings of setsol Business-Circulation have backbones, the Lochriea swimming, fishlike animal able animals the four 355-3447 to search out its own food. The n phylum condonts in consi Photographic 355-8311 has only two nerve centers at the Chordata arrangements. Several " 1 * " predecessors of Lochriea The front * phylum is named for since 1934, he had searched * of its new uppermost body, The is bare, while the fixed to one position on tl le sea conodonts, parts of the the whole animal which fIIIoj floor.' lower nerve cord is covered with Lochriea's digestive system, believed had four conodonts ■ OPEN Monday thru Saturday 9:30 Lochriea provides link a phosphorus. Phosphorus is a Conodonts are apparently part part of its body. Soft parts of J between in invertebrate animals Wednesday 12:00 to 9:00 Qf a filtering network used animal may or may not primary ingredient of bone (which have backbone) and intestine to strain ' ' bf structure. our plankton preserved, depending i SL55R This structure was vital half animals which have notochords, scooped up in the animal's open a the predecessor of the backbone. m0uth environmental conditions at thj billion years ago. At that as it swam. time of its death. time, nothing swam although the ocean bottom teemed with 11 NATIONS MEET SPECIAL worms, crab - like invertebrates, We've just received large shipment of a Asians view Cambodia GARRARD SL55B turntables. JAKARTA, Indochina (AP) - any broader It also held the door open w Come The Asian and Pacific on in and we'll Cambodia and Indochina i conference on Cambodia ended the participation of Communis whole. quote you a special price Sunday with a call for the China, North Vietnam a" the conference requested all withdrawal of all foreign troops sides to nonaUgned nations like I: respect Cambodia's whjch refused to come to tin from Cambodia and an end to 1 tattered neutrality, called for the at HI-FI hostilities. reactivation of the International conference, to attend a broader! 1101 E. Grand River At the same time it set Control Commission — ICC — in based meeting o n Indochina.* J—u!- ■ motion an initiative to East bring the Cambodia and of Lansing Phone 337-2310 Communist leadership participants of the 1954 Geneva urged the The significance conference lies in the fact tj Indochina to the conference conference "and all other Asian and Pacific na« table for broader talks. interested parties" to consult c But the final gathered together in ai communique holding a conference to find tackle a grave Asian pro" acknowledged that the meeting solution to the crisis. of 11 nations, with Cambodia as Delegates were anxious to sirs However, it also selected the that while this is in line an observer, was only a first step foreign ministers of Indonesia, in efforts to end the Cambodian President Nixon's doct Japan and Malaysia to form a Asians shaping thel crisis. . Info mants said task force to consult with other destiny, it was not because I South nations to reactivate the ICC and Nixon's policy that they a Vietnam, Laos and South Korea arrange further meetings. ANNUAL SALE expressed desire for a stronger The joint here. stand by the conference to communiqu "There is a widespread desiil drafted after a midnight s Vanity Fair's "Pechglo" Briefs preserve Cambodia's neutrality, stressed that the conference among Asians to be masters J Everyone's 1 A once-a-year opportunity to R while Indonesia, Malaysia sought Japan and to avoid any commitment that might block only "a first step in endeavor to arrest the worsening an objective their own house, Minister Thanat Khoman Thailand said. 6 situation in Cambodia." save on favorite styles in Pechglo, Shepard's for a luxuriously soft blend of rayon/nylon. Brief, 4-7 Take Advantage of our FREE TODAY sizes. Reg. 1.65 each SANDAL OFFER! Two pairs of now 3 pr. 4.15 sandals given away daily. Trunk, 6-7 sizes. Reg. 2.25 each Come in and Register. No Purchase now 3 pr. 5.90 necessary. 43 styles of men's and women's Trunk, 8-9 sizes. Reg. 2.50 each sandals. Women's sizes, 5 - 11 N, W Men's sizes 7 -13 M. now 3 pr. 6.50 Bikini, 4-6 sizes. Reg. 1.50 each ft epard now 3 pr. 3.90 317 E. Grand River < E. Lansing Jacab^oriB H E S Since 1944 First Choice - of MSU Students Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Monday, May 18, 1970 3 NEWS Trustees withhold GM proxies By BARBARA PARNESS summary Campus Editor The Board of Trustees formed auesHnns ^lo 3 inveSl^6 1 thl niSr month ^ °per\h*arinZ last three members in the public month, recommended support interest, Wilkinson said. said Thompson would not have supported Hartman's motion. °J UAW lf'adt'r Walter Reuther and his wife. decided not to vote the Friday statement, includ^ Two CormmLifn ornV°nfrnanrT WHarre" "uff' D-Plymouth, B|anche Martin u.East The board also approved the Con>orate made a motion to reject the ( ■capsule summary of the day's events from o proxies proposals from for the University's nearly 6,000 J „ advocate consumer Responsibility The^ Lansing; Clair White, D-Bay City rifnP.°/ °f.. two shares shares of General Motors V,v/v/v/ Corp. D Roger Ralph Nader auvuiait1 n ur-,, . committee 1 e committee made ™Hp no no the Commission • recommen^at,on on on Corporate and Stevens opposed tabling H^imQn'cmcniniiL dePartment chairmen b nday. (GM) stock. The board had requested i mrtripnt president fWllk'ns?n> for business v,c® and recommendation on proposal to expand the GM Nader's Responsibility. Huff's motion Hartman sresolutlon- r.., ... r,. Edward M. E.senstein, was asked the board to recommend The Ann Arbor Trust Co., the named chairman of the Dept. of nnance, said the committee, board of directors to include "There is voting MSU's stock with the GM voting ■««* for MSU's stock- B,°Phys,cs- Eisenstein, associate a widespread desire management, which opposes wi" be instructed not to submit professor, has been acting among Asians to be Nader's proposals. the University's GM proxies. The chairman of the department Command masters of their own house." — Tlianat Khoman, foreign offic Huff said he favors of large corporations like GM regulation proxies must be returned prior to the annual stockholder's smce Nov- *0, 1968, following the death of the former U by meeting at the end of May. chairman, Leroy G. Augenstein. the "arms of government," minister of Thailand rather than by individual ^he board also heard a report Clair E. N. Viet seteavy advisory commissions. p. , , . . „ c. from David Neuendorff, Toledo, Ohio, junior and chairman of the economic Liedholm, development specialist, was named chairman an n nSl D-Okemos said u he opposed ; Comf"ittee on Student Tuition of the Dept. of Economics. SAIGON (AP) - Cambodian Ort.uvjpi (COST), advocating the Liedholm, 29, is one of the International News - uamDodian Vietnam, viemam, and that operations forces recaptured Kompong Only one known North inside Cambodia along the Vietnamese sanctuary just inside nnt LITh tn » f t adoption of tuition contracts by youngest men appointed to head P ll ,tl the university. an MSU department in recent commander of all U.S. troops in Cambodia ,, launched a new thrust mto would continue. continue ^0 use^ts millions !n 'The University should sign a lorteil Sunday that American forces have captured southern Cambodia. At the si By midafternoon Sunday there is in the southern central profits to oppose federa, tuition and fees contract with jj of the field headquarters of the supreme highlands r response from the Forces campus of Bu Prang and Inniunist command known as COSVN. reported that American forces had seized Viet Cong, whichwhif>h declared o Due Lap, about 120 miles comoratTons " specifying the tuition and fees t Gen. Michael S. Davison said in an interview, "We part of the 48-hour cease - firefit for Buddha's northeast of Saigon. 'w we got part of the COSVN post office. We read Communist command's supreme headquarters (COSVN) birthday last year, In another development, allied Huff's motion failed by a vote of three to four. Trustee obliged to^a "the UnWereity for attending the next four years " Ik of their mail. We think we got a piece of the the main aims of the one of allied With the newly announced *°™ma"dsfK a"nounced that ^nneth Thompson, R-Grand the COST proposal states. ' jncial and economy section and we think we got a incursions. ffensive, 25 000 South North Vietnamese and Rapids, left the meeting prior to Viet Cong troops have been te of the education training section of the COSVN Lt. Gen. Michael S. Davison, >e and 10,000 J', . . t. - . . , the voting. Although the board listened to fdquarters. troops are now kll,ed in the operations inside Trustee Frank of ac,lon "» made commander of all U.S. Hartman, troops ii attacking a dozen North Cambod,a- ioSVN is the objective for the American operation in Cambodia, said that at least part Vietnamese U S Command D-Flint, liiirouucea introduced aa motion moiion toto l p tnistpps military bases fnbodia. At:\°L3boUt miles inside Cambodia. 10 Cambodia southward to within 10 miles of the Gulf of Siam. ,osses jn Cambodia at 142 kiHed motion was tabled when trustee adoPted a memorial resolution Jyprus police were placed on alert Sunday while Other officials tallied up the and 561 wounded. Frank Mernman, R-Deckerville, expressing sorrow over the death lidreds of armed policemen guarded President score after the first two weeks of llibishop Makarios in the wake of unofficial reports the allied campaign in Cambodia m ' |a second assassination attempt against him. and concluded the North ■"he Greek Cypriot daily newspaper Mahi reported Vietnamese and Viet Cong have suffered heavy setbacks. It police had information that the assassination ■empt would come as Makarios was traveling to Topping the battle action Tiagusta. The newspaper correctly predicted the first Sunday, a combined air and ground assault put the fcmpt on the president when his helicopter was shot Cambodians back into full n March 8. control of Kompong Cham, Cambodia's third largest city on loaquin Balaguer has been elected to another term as the Mekong River. Enemy troops withdrew at midmorning Jsident of the Dominican Republic on the basis of under fire of the advancing ■official returns Sunday from national balloting. A Cambodian army and bombing lisiderably high abstention rate seems to indicate and strafing runs by T28 fighter ■position to his candidacy. - bombers of the Cambodian air Ibout 1.5 million Dominicans are eligible to vote, but force. The enemy attempted a Jliminary returns have counted only a million ballots. counterattack in the afternoon, but the drive was broken quickly Belfast, Northern Ireland, Bernadette Devlin by the Cambodian warplanes. junced Sunday she will defend her House of As the Cambodian assault imons seat in the forthcoming election, even from unfolded, South Vietnamese hind bars. skyraiders attacked troops while appealing wrongly believed to be North a six-month jail sentence for her part Vietnamese regulars, killing at |the last August rioting in Londonderry, she said, "I least 10 Cambodian soldiers. e already made plans to direct my campaign from Across the Mekong River three Ison if necessary." Cambodian army companies clung to positions along the river bank after a sharp enemy attack Norwegian explorer Thor Heyerdahl, a seven - man Sunday morning. |w and a monkey sailed out into the Atlantic Ocean The Cambodians suffered a [ndav on an eight - ton bundle of straw in a second setback at Stung Treng, about ■empt to prove that the ancient Egyptians were 110 miles up the Mekong River from Kompong Cham. There, pableof sailing to the new world. military officials in Cambodia was towed out of Safi, Morocco, the same reported, Viet Cong forces Ibarcation point of Heyerdahl's first expedition on Ra overran the Cambodian defenders, giving the enemy National News control of the eastern bank of the Mekong with the exception ■wo Senate war critics said of a few pockets in the northern Sunday that President ■on could and southern parts of Cambodia. conceivably use the same arguments for The South Vietnamese Peking Russia or Red China as he did for sending U.S. Defense Ministry announced the |>ps into Cambodia. drive was aimed at destroying JThis inlander theory that there is in an inherent power in the the North Vietnamese Division headquarter zone in 1st - - chief to do what he pleases is llutely unconstitutional in my view," Sen. J. William Cambodia's Takeo Province. The allied command said that jbright. chairman Imittee, said. of the Senate Foreign Relations a 24-hour allied cease - fire marking Buddha's birthday 1 a separate speech Senate Majority Leader Mike would apply only to South Isfield, D-Mont., said that by attacking the fimunist sanctuary in Cambodia, the president could Jtinue to attack sanctuaries in Laos, North Vietnam Students seek I China. recent- survey by the President's Office of policy change Jergency Phe 1965 Preparedness has shown that a reoccurrence New York northeast power blackout will possibly City, Chicago, St. Louis and incampaigning ■neapolis- St. Paul this summer. The MSU chapter of the Te federal report said "the entire eastern seaboard, Movement to Elect a New 1 1'le exception of Florida and New England, will Congress will meet at 8 p.m. 1 tight power today in room 35 of the Union. capacity problem even if normal The recently formed movement ■mer temperatures prevail, fuel supplies are normal is working to change U. S. policy J■eaction a|l of the system capacity performs as scheduled." by changing the composition of among the power companies in the indicated Congress. ranges from prediction of "brownouts" to simply, Student canvassers are organizing to help antiwar |can 1 happen here." candidates throughout the country. Students are already Michigan News canvassing in congressional fv'd B. DeMaat, 37, of Grand Rapids was under campaigns in Philadelphia and °n bank robbery charges because of a woman New Jersey. J te'ler who wants to help cops and doesn't mind "Using as criteria the |ng involved. candidates' stands on the Indo TMaat was Chinese war, civil rights, poverty, apprehended after a high - speed chase and defense spending, the New ^'"8 u a holdup at the Michigan National Bank in Congress organizers will select Rapids. congressional races, especially in kindit obtained the money primaries, in which student from Mrs. Beatrice "Some people say I was crazy to spend more than $8000 for our Mercedes-Benz. support can make a difference," I h\U!2en 'n 'lcr teller's cage after handing her a note | e "ad a gun and it was a holdup. The bank burglar John Collins, asst. professor of But when my wife and kids are out there-by themselves-on a day like political science, said. that car is the best investment I today, CyWas tr'ggered after he left the building with the The movement grew out "student - faculty of a ever made!' lm|her bank telIer< Wanda Marie Glenn, 25, who administration the strike" starting evening of President Nixon's Inj^ aPP'ied to join Check Mate, a citizens' address on Cambodia on April ■actU 1011 designed to assist policemen, then got into 30, Collins said. The MSU chapter was ILth;sed him down the street and ran through a established on May 12 consultation with after a Iswa where ,1e got into his car, a brown K in h ^iss.G,enn g°t the car license number and a representative from Princeton University, the organizational Phil Gordon's Inc. 2924 E. Grand River Avenue, Lansing, Michigan 48912 Phone: 517-484-2551 T{ le Parking lot phoned police, resulting in the base and clearing house for research and funds. MICHIGAN TUB FROM WASHINGTON STATE HEW' Reflections from the Ellipse UNIVERSITY GEORGE BULLARD editor-in-chief There was this TV truck and under it this nice to be traveling with Buffalo Bill and FREDERICK J. LESLIE loudspeaker and the harangues; and the war girl and a dog; and at least there was shade congressmen. have the greatest They can grass was thick (with a few dandelions) and she said yes, she had picked him up at the advertising manager down there so I crawled under it and felt the dog seemed friendly but needed water. riot at New Haven that turned out not to political , enthusiasm. Congress MARK EICHER, managing editor all alone. There was nobody around maybe 100,000 demonstrators except and it was The girl was traveling with a man with be a riot; and she traveled a lot, mostly by herself. She seemed artless and naive and cabinet knows know?? it, and thecal: ** EDWARD HUTCHISON, city editor strawberry blond beard and whiskers who and even quiet down there, except for the looked like Buffalo Bill. I told her it said her mother was dead but that she had the president was BARBARA PARNESS, campus editor reality and knows it. a younger brother at Williams who KENNETH KRELL, editorial editor gave her Mr. Nixon will advice, and that she hitch - hiked along Cambodia after it is 'tell the JEANNE SADDLER, associate editor GARY WALKOWICZ, sports editor around the country a lot but less so since ■ over anH ,°n she was raped one time in Arkansas. began writing his speech She said it fairly casually and I thought I ought to give her advice, she seemed so innocent; and then I thought, what - the - ™ trr hrj? megatons of rice and hell, maybe she isn't so innocent, and I can't go around giving fatherly advice and, ammunition, and, vastly mn«T- several 2.ye* anyway, the dog needed water. She said Six to eight months of EDITORIALS the dog was a mixture of shepherd and husky and I said that is a hard kind of dog just peace is now in another census rolls sight r! \ arounrt.iT to get acquainted with but this Srath Vietnamese young and friendly, although panting and one was will be ,b|e"j At last: a chan excited with all those see legs. You couldn't the bodies or the people, but some sandaled and some barefoot, and Ignore the me. JJJj* were you However, this is an kind of got a administration. Any feeling what they were like member of Z& just by seeing them pass. The dog didn't can see me any time provided heappfc Southeast As belong to her, she said, but to a man with purple pants. She crawled out after a while, and turned the dog over to me. months in advance. We the words of doubt Lincoln never had to must bear and defeat endure. Letucf n L ■ them! We should lower our voices Within a month Congress will against the President. After the vote As I lay there I realized that it was a kind come together, and let - the National r finally have to take a stand on the on the McGovern - Hatfield of religious experience. They were charged handle troublemakers. 10 Indochina war. Senators George with altruism and idealism and what - not. "Let us shed a tear for amendment, Congress at last assumes the fourst They didn't call it God, but they were at Kent State McGovern, D-S.D., and Mark some responsibility for the war. late that when dissent University who learned looking form something desperately; they turns to violent Hatfield, R-Ore., have been joined by When the amendment comes up knew something had to be done and didn't invites tragedy. Let us not 19 other senators as sponsors of for a vote know what it was and would have given betray 0J! - tentatively within 30 conscript soldiers in Southeast Asia Amendment No. 609 to the Military their lives for it. They stayed on even stand tall beside those days - 100 senators become just as bums who hir Procurement Authorization. The though the performance was boring and been drafted yet. ' responsible as the President for the the speeches terrible. It was like one of "In order that purpose of this amendment is to end killing in Indochina. The war will no our withdrawing sol- those early Methodist meetings in pastures may not be jeopardized I have the war in Southeast Asia. a longer be Nixon's war if the you read about, only here it was the Ellipse surprise for you; I have ordered a - The amendment prohibits the amendment fails; it will be America's behind the White House. force of allied troops, accompanied further expenditure of funds in war. I don't know. Lying there under the bombing, to enter the territory of Laos Vietnam for the purpose of military truck it seemed I had to be honest. It Thailand, whose Congress has a moral responsibility seemed to me this war from the first was neutrality we conflict after December, 1970, to end the scrupulously observing. war. Vietnamization an awful mistake. We can't police Asia. I "To protect our unless Congress declares war. After means indefinite credibility i„ M- American think we have lost the war already. If the and Peking it is vitally important at that date funds may only be intervention nation can't accept it, it is just too bad. in Indochina. If crucial juncture that our government expended for the withdrawal of Congress does not do something, this Other big nations have lost wars. So what? not weakened by critical voices. When troops, termination of U.S. military The bjame belongs to a lot of people, but going gets tough keep the rhetoric cool, country will be stuck with the war that isn't the point. operations, assistance to South "My fellow Americans, if this makes through Inauguration Day, 1973, The moratorium crowd, October 15, was a one - term president, so be Vietnam only as authorized by it; that perhaps beyond. All the rhetoric of a kind of picnic. Not this; it had begun to better than seeing America reduced to Congress, exchange of prisoners, and senators verbally against the war discover something. There are eight million second rate power which defeat in 1} arrangement for asylum of becomes empty if their talk is not college students in this country, they are would assuredly involve. And I ask sup- Vietnamese who may be endangered backed up by a vote for the potentially the biggest political force there in this, not for my own sake but for y is. Up on the platform outside, there was a brave sons, fighting half by U.S. withdrawal. amendment. way round lot of addled talk from speakers about a world to redeem my promises." Furthermore after Dec. 31, 1970, Every senator will within the next "Much of it depends on which side of the bed he nationwide "strike". Nonsense. These kids The dog needed water so I wen no military advisors will be sent to gets up c 30 days go on record as being either around me were just beginning to sense for it. Laos. Withdrawal of all U.S. in the morning!" military for or against the war in Indochina. that if they try they can stop the war; they personnel will be completed by June We urge them to ppss the can put on shoes and go out and elect anti - THE NEW REPUBLIC 3d, 1971. McGovefg - Hatfield amendflien^Jf'^y'ijbrAcit, * a The Amendment to End the War is more inr:'usive amendment than the public will still have been officially informed as to where their Olft READERS' MIND the Cooper - Charch amendment to senator stands on the war. Those terminate all funds for Cambodia by senators up for re-election this June 30, and while it does not year Murder will have to defend their vote in nothing for blacks preclude th Cooper - Church November. The anti - war movement amendment, it also terminates our Cambodian involvement 30 days after passage. will at least know who is their side. really on new To the Editor: colleges and universities; What about the shooting students now I'm scared mentioned earlier, I won't be a student This amendment finally gives . . . . . . Granted, it is the responsibility of potential threat to them?" how could they do it." Congress a chance to do something the President to command our armed . As a friend once put it — naturally my Is this the rationale behind the Free Where were you, my white striken about the war besides acting as its responses to any thing white people do is Well, that's a simple one to answer. Bobby bit? Wow! Look at my head spin! peace and justice, when they cut that forces, but it is Congress' task to They're doing it the same way they've been critic. The Constitution gives Listen to my heart beat faster! Look at the man's genitals off in the South a couple determine when those forces are to doing it to blacks for hundreds of years. Congress control over the granting or tears that I won't let come! Potential years ago — when they bombed those" be used. Congress withholding of funds. This includes probably had no So, what's the deal? Why isn't my black threat! What a laugh! There is no such He's scared! The Great White Father is black girls in that little black church idea that Johnson was face in the student thing potential threat to a black shooting his own white children when they were murdering those Pan military appropriations. Congress is going to seen picket lines and as a man . . . just in think what he would do to me and Need I go on? Why didn't you want to also getting a chance to regain the employ the Gulf of Tonkin my black hand wrapped around a sign our great society ... it's for real. my little saying — shut down the University? ole dark self! down the university then? Where were resolution in the manner he did. Anyway, what can closing down the power of making war and peace, a then? Where will you be after y They now have a chance to regain Obviously you whites don't realize what university do for me except knock the hell "But Chuck, isn't this more reason why demands are met? power it has thrown away in recent you did when you included "Free Bobby out of me their power to declare war. economically for I, as a black you should support our cause?" I'll sign my name for your support years to the executive branch. Seale" in your list of demands for man, am the one who can least afford to Defeat of the amendment means HELL NO! I'll sympathize with your selfish ar* Congress has been justifying a student strike. come back when it reopens. indirectly many more years of war, a war in I'll never strike for hypocrisy! responsible for deaths in Southeast My first reaction to "Free Bobby" was — What if Freeing Bobby Seale isn't going to help which there will never be a winner . yes what if, by some strange Charlesr anybody . . Asia by not previously taking a stand but Bobby Seale and as I — no sss. . .! What are you whites trying to occurrence, Mr. Nixon saw the light? What Flint sen just losers. pull now? if he freed Bobby, no more National Guard on any campus, no more ROTC, no more It has been suggested to me by a white war? Then, the white student's battle is friend that perhaps this particular demand Unfair unemployment won. He can sit back and drink his is an honest attempt to include another beer, How the anti shortcoming administration . of . . not Tricky Dick's just Vietnam, get his tan and enjoy the fruits of his society. Cambodia, the killing of the Kent State Yea! Bring all the brothers home to picketed with signs telling of thi ... students, ROTC, but also to protest what? To The Editor: a hardy "Welcome back you brave disapproval with the war and mMJ stands at th oppression of the black man. Why just free Bobby Seale; How many whites even know who black soldiers," from this society? Not hardly my friends. Would you believe "Here comes the niggers," now that sounds on A subject which has been often ignored campus is student employment. A totalitarian rule exists between throughout the nation. As a resul truck drivers listened to their sw Bobby Seale is or the a little more like it supervisors and the MSU Local 1585 over demands and turned away without m Sherman Cooper, R-Ky.; Norris Cotton, only went to find out who he was after (what you say!). The following senators are co-sponsors of the part - time student their deliveries. R-N.H.; Thomas Dodd, D-Conn.; Peter reading his name on a list of strike "OK won't shoot any more help that it , the McGovern Hatfield amendment: Birch - Dominick, R-Colo.; Allan Ellender, D-La.; demands? students — we blacks and Negroes included employs. I would like to cite just one At approximately 11:45 a.m. all _ Bayh, D-Ind.; Frank Church, D-Idaho; Alan help working the 8 a.m. til noon s . . . Paul Fannin, R-Ariz.; Hiram Fong, example of this that took place at MSU (but don't they can't be students Cranston, D-Cal.; Thomas Eagleton, D-Mo.; Charles Goodell, R-N.Y.; Mike R-Hawaii; J. W. Fulbright, D-Ark.; Albert "But what about your black brothers fighting and dying in Vietnam and for ever)." worry, Stores on Tuesday, May 12,1970. told that they were "layed due to the lack of business that was offindeJn j Gravel, Gore, D-Tenn.; Robert Griffin, R-Mich.; now The student strike movement D-Alaska; Philip Hart, D-Mich.; Fred Edward Gurney, R-Fla.; Clifford Cambodia?" I've been asked. "What about A white boy bought its in.", This event took place without Hansen, got up in one of my classes Harris, R-Okla.; Vance Hartke, D-Ind.; all those Black students in our nation's and exclaimed, pressure to the driveway of the Stores advance notice to the student helped R-Wyo.; Spenard Holland, D-Fla.; Ernest "Oh my God they're Mark Hatfield, R-Ore.; Harold . . . Bldg. on Harrison Road. The students I question the legitimacy of this» Hughes, Hollings, D-S.C.; Roman Hruska, R-Neb.; D-Iowa; Daniel Inouye, D-Hawaii; Edward business" because when the Henry Jackson, D-Wash.; Everett Jordan, wildcat strike was in full force b" Kennedy, D-Mass.; Eugene McCarthy, D-N.C.; Len Jordan, R-Idaho; Russell students ^ D-Minn.; George McGovern, D-S.D.; Lee Metcalf, D-Mont.; Walter Mondale, D-Minn.; Edmund Muskie, D-Maine; Long, D-La.; Gale McGee, D-Wyo.; Thomas Mclntyre, D-N.H.; Warren Magnusen, D-Wash.; Jack Miller, R-Iowa; Joseph Strike central offers alternatives almost at a standstill yet allowed to work their usual hours- , * i0ft J Gaylord Nelson, D-Wis.; Abraham Ribicoff, A dejected group of D-Conn.; Stephen Young, D-Ohio. Montoya, D-N.M.; Frank Moss, D-Utah; Robert Packwood, R-Ore.; Mike EDITOR'S NOTE: The following East Lansing, call Lynn, 351-3412. Stores at noon last Tuesday stu^" ondeii Mansfield, 7. Planning of Alternate Curriculum. These senators have indicated support for D-Mont.; John Pastore, D-R.I.; James release was issued by Strike Central. Lansing, call Charlie Paradise. 317-5558. how they were going to m\ the amendment: Jacob 5. Lansing Area Peace Council. Marg Lesher, 5-7028. Javits, R-N.Y.; Pearson, R-Kan.; Claiborne Pell, D-R.I.; Want to do something to stop the war or 8. Support the 18 family, or pay tuition, orr keep F Charles Mathias Jr., a. Telephone tax resistance — How-to - year - old vote. Leave R-Md.; Richard Charles Percy, R-Ill.; Winston Schweiker, R-Pa. The following senators will probably vote . R-Vt.; William Proxmire, D-Wis.; Jennings Randolph, D-W.Va.; Richard Russell, Prouty, advance social change? The following are ongoing activities now in progress. All of them need people: info and house to house b. Peace candidate work with the Committee for a New - - canvassing. coordinated your name and number for Bev 3-5298. 9. Wiener at Arrange a speaker for your group. Call z.'szxtisr-si against the bill: James Allen, D-Ala.; D-Ga.; William Saxbe, R-Ohio; Hugh Scott, Congress Gordon Allot, R-Colo.; Henry Bellman, 1. Lansing Area Citizen's Committee for (the Yale Project). Mary Donoghue, 5-7271 for Critical R-Pa.; Margaret Chase Smith, R-Maine; a Vote on the War. University or Dave Smith, 3-6722. Dept. of R-Okla.; Carl Curtis, R-Neb.; Robert Dole, Raising support for the c. Church involvement. Ralph Smith, R-Ill.; John Sparkman, McGovern Bill to withdraw financial 6. Parents Weekend Teach-in. Anthropology. R-Kan.; James Eastland, D-Miss.; Sam D-Ala.; William Spong, D-Va.; John Needs support for the Indochina war on a specific For further Ervin, D-N.C.; Barry Goldwater, R-Ariz.; publicity and bodies. See Colline Mazur, suggestions call Strike Stennis, D-Miss.; Ted Stevens, R-Alaska; timetable. Call 3-6770 8 a.m. — 5 p.m. 3-9594. Central, 3-5081. John McClennan, D-Ark.; Karl Mundt, Stuart Symington, D-Mo.; Herman 2. Justin - Morrill College Teach-Out. R-S.D.; George Murphy, R-Cal.; Strom Talmadge, D-Ga.; Joseph Tydings, D-Md.; Thurmond, R-S.C.; John Tower, R-Tex. Informing the Lansing Area community Harrison Williams, D-Md.; John THEY FLY ALL OVER, ANP NEVER These senators have not yet taken a stand Williams, about the war and the strike. 63 Snyder R-Del.; Ralph Yarborough, D-Tex.; Milton Hall. Call 3-5298. GET L05T...TMEYU5ETME STARS on the bill: George Aiken, ANP THE St/N TO FIND THEIR WAV... R-Vt.; Clifford Young, R-N.D. 3. Economic Anderson, D-N.M.; Howard Baker, We urge you to write to those senators Boycott Committee THEY ALWAYS KNOU) (JHERE THEY'RE 60INS Coordinators of national boycotts against R-T^nn.; Wallace Bennett, R-Utah; Alan that are still uncommitted, telling them Coca-Cola and Phillip Morris (they've Bible, D-Nev.; Caleb Boggs, R-Del.; Edward what you think about the McGovern Brooke, R-Mass.; Quentin Burdick, D-N.D.; - already established antiwar lobbies as a Hatfield amendment to end to war now. It result of the Harry Byrd Jr., D-Va.; Robert Byrd, will take an all - out effort on the boycott) and local actions. part of G-64 Wilson Hall. Call 5-8725. D-W.Va.; Howard Cannon, D-Nev.; Clifford all Americans against the war to Case, R-N.J.; Marlow Cook. pass this 4. Booths providing cards and telegrams R-Ky.; John amendment. to be sent to congressmen and senators. L i State News, East Lansing, Michigan Monday, May 18, 1970 TO RESOLVE WAR Give Nixon tim CAROL CORRIERE "It seems reasonable to me word and he's only asking for important that \ State News Staff Writer that if two presidents had eight some semblance of order." years it's not unreasonable to If it becomes A student strike is necessary, unnecessary give our President eight weeks," would continue to and people should support governors have the power to call give President he said. Nixon on a "limited" basis. Nixon more time to resolve the out the Guard. This is the "He's (Nixon) made good on it Asked about the presence of war, United States Rep. Charles purpose of the Guard, he said. — he's bringing people home," National Guard E. troops "I think federal troops i Chamberlain, R-Lansing, said Chamberlain said. "He's kept his campuses, he said, "It's very in a recent last r Chamberlain added. telephone interview. "If students feel this (a strike) is an effective way of expressing themselves, it's prerogative," he said. "I their don't feel that it is necessary in so far Return to values essential as making grievances known to mindful of the controversial nature of the issue in Vietnam, However, he chamber™ said he would to save By JULIE CLARKE earth, expert character, he said: "Wes has met says Stuttman said every one of Chamberlain said. The strike is the enemy, and des is us." A return to these conditions not r basic values is already exists Feed time already necessary because aware, he said. we are Dili until it reaches the House essential for saving the world the "The symbol for early 1940s progress in was a somewhere in the world. "I don't know of . from man, Leonard Stuttman, He reported that every eight students add finishing touches to this piece of art, related to anyone who The American nokestack smokPcfaf-t with smoke art strike issues outside of isn't concerned," he added. people gave two noted environmentalist, said residents presidents (Kennedy billowino billowing nnt out. m_ seconds an American child is ie Art Center. Construction of the mouth is part of the Art Dept.'s work-in. (Kennedy and „,™„ti„ recently- Chamberlain said his mail was Johnson) eight years to build up The former president of the would dare be presented like hi,? born Dorn who wno WIHwill use use 560b million mii,lon State News photo by Richard Warren running Nixon's four to ne against troops in Vietnam, Chamberlain Nature Way Assn. emphasized tod^r, ^ this today," he observed. 6 gallons of water, 10,000 pounds actions Cambodia, observed. the need for Stuttman said that if things of.„meatJ and 28,000 pounds of TER LEGAL REVISIONS within changing values the next 10 years in a have changed this much * years, they will change " mi,k and cream In hls l,fet,me speech These huge resource demands co • sponsored by the more rapidlv ' rv>"""11 the next 25 of Americans require between bortion issue Adoptable Children years. fU„ n,„„ • n 40 percent perceiu anuand 50 percent of ou percent 01 the return me I By LARRY LEE kte News Staff Writer News "I expected don't know why they rw in h\ tHe FifSt Presbyterian Church, Lansing. JSCIZZ* helping control the worlds drinki bearing water Senses, ••«-S"nes of th. earth's future" involving allocation children sterilization of . Stuttman said. total production. "I am optimistic only on the basis that we're going to have a then Analysis wanted us to sit in on all the said. "And are Hungary and England moving to tighten r up their population," oarth's conditions "The dinlcs examinations day to obtain |ong _. -j- in our society i support of the legislation to hearings if they weren't going to laws.'• changing hunting license, New York ,iK .. wiIi admit 5t is one of the most consult with us," at jet - pace and must asl: liberalize ... the .... law, she said, but Fleming said, He added sloppily drafted bills we've had that the illegal outselves where our priorities « «.•* „ Conato for the they have 1)66,1 denied the ri8ht in years." He said the bill, as presently . , , abortion rate is also rising , "S!ta»te?toch«k tn'arlH this state to the tottatrWM. r.Sen' James Fleming, !lsaB.a/y Brown, D-Hljhtad »ritte„ would "cause Park, who is a proponent of who performs an operation of L docjr Colorado a.tdMifomia. ... Stuttman is currently History class The question is, do we solve edia (states that have liberalized D-J.ac^so"> w|?° led the fieht complete repeal of present state abortion to be open to widest the problem by permissive consultant ir the field of to ' ■long . standing Vbortion fg®1"81 ''berahzation, said the abortion statutes but voted Possible leS?al complications." legislation," Fleming said. environmental quality and reconvene ■ upper chamber by a 18-19 thS^rteK'ufe,0"the Ca"6d " Flem'"g alS0 "ld " WaS " is wither th^ ""t T education. "We're 8(111 operating on Douglas Miller, associate 1 Thursday ts bill declined defeat the previous allowing to coTrm;n^:,;ie^,t^„Hf:Hbrs overwhelmingly supports the "unenforceable," he said. He "Most countries who "w have allow women — and their determining when they families - to.help themselves want - by We can't ,„u«, they just don't work afford he said to "and anymore, Paul Professor of history, will teaching his History 327 class Wednesday. towomen living in the Bunyanize the Miller's class was indefinitely [for three months and in ,. n , i , to go oaseu on that, llldl, I1 say we nave back and resoive the jssue have JS-!t T1 $7° * ^~ t^ir !aws ha. found bill to the Judinnrv mmmiHen thp illpoal rntp is inprpneino " hp nnnfml j: bodies. SSBKS' country _ * _ as our postponed since the beginning of lRt wil7cSomeP ufawin ilLf?T °\ life'" Fleming said" I" "Other states who have is early °c7ate Lmm« This'? not a religious view; it is liberalized their laws have ■the legislature = reconvenes a mo view- well-defined procedures spelled ring a hreak rino. break for for thethe Aucust Augus o Het woul(J a,befear that the SenateexPress?d out," Fleming said. "There is no setting reasQn ^ thoge ^ formed rilhPrt Rurslev R-Ann Preced®nt' allowing future this bill could not have learned Ihn who cnnncoreH sponsored thp the 8eneratlons to legislate "mercy from (those states)." has already killing» of the aged and He also criticized the "useless." committee for writing the bill ■»d the bill be introduced 1,1971 when office, a new Senate favor But Fleming, who does any liberalization not of and not senators who consulting were on three the special (sonnet entitled how to run the world) for the members Michigan's 124 - year - old committee that held several in thp ctntphni.sp thp hill abortion law- also **16 the hearings around the state. The "i too -innnu sloppy, loofliiv legally, it it 'egis'ation before the Senate was Senators on the committee were a legal mess. F,eming( gen Jerome pd their moral or religious "Even those who favor the bill ^ > or they had D-Saginaw, and Bursley. A always don't there B ■the I to heavy pressure anti abortion groups. being no such thing Jrborn, Lorraine the Senate's Beebe, only Student gets 30 days for C can't casts no shadow D drink and Ti member and a leader for pizing the law, has blamed B)g both the Roman n religious pressure, for hitting policeman flic Church and the Dutch E eat of her voice in whose silence the music of ■hest opponents. Church as the A Wayne State University graduate student who was convicted of assault and battery for striking an MSU policeman during a spring vote moral was based on convictions," protest last November, was sentenced last week to 30 days in jail, fined $250, and placed on two years probation by the lives F feel opens but shuts understand Ingham fceebe said. "As legislators, County Circuit Court. lust look beyond personal Marshall S. Michaelson, 28, was convicted of striking Lt. G gladly forget little having less Haywood W. Julian during an anti ■ General Electric Co. protest [vote also violated the first in the Student Services Bldg. Nov. 10. Students supporting the of the U. S. nearly 147,000 GE workers who were on strike at that time, were pitution guaranteeing protesting GE job recruiting activities on campus. freedom," Mrs. Beebe Michaelson and about 12 other members of Students for a with every s M religions in the state are Democratic Society, picketed the University Placement Bureau and attempted to disrupt recruitment activities. least each most remembering H highest fly only the flag that's furled STEERING COMMITTEE AND ACADEMIC COUNCIL MEMDERS! (sestet entitled grass is flesh or swim who can and bathe who must or any dream Here the channels! than sleep as are means more more than know means guess) Call the student academic council members 1 item i immaculately owe I Terry Sullivan 355-7 192 dying one life and will my rest to these children building this rainman out of DON'T STRIKE ADDITIONS The | snow Singing Statemen cummings j e e 1970 - 71 Men's Glee Club S 19 & 20 Music Bldg Information copyright 1935 by e e cummings; renewal 1963 by morion morehouse cummings. Reprinted from his volume I'oems 192 3 Hurcourt Urucc & World, Inc. Presented here, with the permission of Hurcourt Bruce, by ICIixubeth Harrison. - 1954 by permission of 4:00 p.m. Room 121 355-0623 £ Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Mondai Minority' issue prompts GM faces groupl McKee Report vote delay backed by DETROIT (AP) -- General NqJ Project's rlrst . By SHIRLEY JOHNSON far the Civil Rights Act of McKee said the report was Campaign qm i as Wifh~llf , . Motors Corp. faces off formally L State News Staff Writer 964 was concerned." developed as a response to the feelings within the ip farnltv thnt. it committec appro.val changesbyin th,s the this week against a Ralph Nader forcing the giant Following a debate the Killingsworth said that after faculty that it „ Freedom . ' - backed group engaged in an pl®ce two of it* . McKee Report at the American consultation with several noted -a* time for students to become *^P°r* ,:Can ^ effort "to make GM . . ine nvolved in University accomplished, . KilUngsworth statement. With« Leland authorities, Assn. of University Professors ^ including added. responsible" through a proxy . - _ directed by the & 'hisl . W. Carr, University governance, ( AAUP) meeting, a motion \ T "No other committee has such fight. requesting passed requesting the Academic attorney, the uie closest c.osesi legal.ega. The members strong and conclusive oowers GM's advantage will be proved Exchange 7*^1 interpretation of the minority «mmittee which wrote the on Friday when stockholders are Campaign GM woftl Council to v^uunui following final tu wait wan for iui two iwu passage weeks wccna of the 1 representation dealt . ..... „ A t with the report felt that if students , 0nce the Academic Cou!XhS expected to vote over - left without a Dlaif I approved a resolution from this report before placing it on the 14th Amendment to the not to be represented they should whelmingly against two attempts to raiser"11 only have a voice to express committee, the Senate is by Academic Senate's agenda. The AAUP felt that the Constitution, "irrelevant to the question.' which opinions but should also be Pf*d a"d fth,f resolution goes - proposals pushed Washington - based group which by the annual meeting SukfTl into effect,' given a vote, he said. Killingsworth Chairman faculty needed a _ chance to _ While Killingsworth continued. calls itself Campaign GM. There james MDy M' Rm JT cw thT report "after" Charles concentrated on specific points Student representation would McKee accused are 1.35 million stockholders gavel. Killingsworth But Kinningsworth, professor of within the McKee report he be a sizable minority acceptable of "sliding into the politics of eligible to vote more than 285 discussion ofthPB„ claimed were disturbing to the to both faculty and students, - - ' labor and industrial relations, million shares. add fear", basing his arguments on three pointed out that the provisions faculty, James B. McKee, McKee said. the belief that students would But Philip Moore, 27 - year - members to the | for minority representation by professor of sociology, spoke of heKillingsworth said that while always vote in a block with the old executive director of the directors and estahiuB shaky footing the basic principles in the report. supported the same objectives McKee, he felt that the faculty dividing their vote ( campaign, claims opinion voctory, and says the a public committee corporation's to — ^*1I - .„,,uns| provisions by which students issue and 8'v'n8 ^e students extent of the group's influence r1® public - Wj|| ^ m were to be represented were of a p°^er" won't be known for months: /^is, says Moore "dubious" value. McKee said student The battle is being waged by a important Group schedules gain representation on the Academic . After a close observation of group of young Washington victory." the report, it was "alarming and Council is designed so that every lawyers, associated with Nader, Moore save iu I jolting what he found in the fine print," Killingsworth said. wide variety of student opinions "" ° va',£,K' " i ' . who formed Campaign GM as an offshoot of their broader Project specific issues GM's at tfc ^ education festiva the If the report were passed by available. Killingsworth Academic stated, Senate, error no Killingsworth's is the fundamental assumption that Riveted on Corporate Responsibility, The Project is sparring with other firms over the public safety, air reliability responsib tv nollut mass L tri 1 The day ,ong festival called organization which could be and will act in"unified mind students are of a A workman stands riveted to his position. But he does and "the social wefT*l Students group known as the - a unified manage a smile for the photographer despite the air responsibility issue, but nation." areoll and Faculty "Different Ways for Different identified as faculty government manner," McKee said. primarily through litigation. Concerned for Humanity in Days" will nclude inrlnHp "ran would "rap wnnlrt exist, pvi hammer's movement as it tears up the asphalt in the street. The GM encounter is Moore and his Education is and arts and crafts "The faculty would lack the colleatJ sponsoring j they will be pleasantly shJ "Festival of Education' exhibits. The festival will take power as a group to prevent if they received as much! Saturday, John Noling place in Erickson Hall, with drastic redefinitions of faculty per cent of the vote and! Muskegan senior, announced. some activities held outside in rights," he continued. ^ happy with 5 or 6 the surrounding area. Killingsworth noted that the percentj Moore Rap sessions will on such provision for a faculty and conceded topics as encounter groups, student affairs committee has a disappointed by the ru, from universities, Pittenger bid opposed drugs and education, urban 13-6 student majority, banks and other i mutual fg] minority education and the open This committee has the power classroom. to which the initiate corporation! - and review all acknowledged control »| faculty am mend men ts -- "We have a lot of and proposals to 12 per cent of the firm's behind us who are resource the Academic Freedom Report, A group of MSU students have May 7, accused the presidents of The group plans to distribute Students interested in joining it people," Noling said. "We have he said< Wtt^nira''"S™,!!SUfAgainSt MSU, Wayne State University literature concerning Pittenger's the group are asked to call Bache GM Board Chairman 200 people who have committed Pittenger committee in and the University of Michigan Ri .... _ . . -1,4.1.1 at 353-8441 or Jeff Crause at has stated that the real themselves to working on the \A/AASR r*\r opposition to Rep. Philip 0. of "failing miserably, neglecting resolutlon and to picket hls go Pitipncrpr'c ( 353.8377 The group's 0ffice ls Campaign GM is an festival and comina coming to to it." it.' M ,V,OU hiH fnv T nncinrr'c to C enforce iL- 1 the laws and 1 even campaign U Aa/)/«iiQvt headquarters ow i« in . . located in 335 Student Services ~ The idea for the MSU festival "against the entire c., • . • I sympathizing with the law Lansing, Bldg., 355-8266, extension 34. system of management." came about after a recent made to a Toronto fesitval of trip VI6WSOD Stflke Rep. Pittenger, one of three violators." n . t Livonia educational alternatives, Noling Campus television WMSB' candidates campaigning for Rpnnhlipnn Son HurnM . Douglas and freshman Bache,committee C< said. The NSU festival will be "Assignment 10" will show a Republican Sen. Harold W W. ^ngerfordV ""'at TriTwJv chairman of the group, called modeled after the Toronto cross section of University and """^eword s wat, last week Symposium Pittenger.s resolution conference. Literature on new approaches community viewpoints concerning the Strike issues at ™cnigan Legislature calling for "irrespon^eandImUonal.' program set th.e of rf^naion,of Michigan's "if presidents to education at uji willwhi beoc available avdiiduie atdi 10:20 a.m. and 3 f p.m. today on l™ of .. Mi«hiBo«'= , . not 'antigovernment the festival. closed circuit channel 4. .. three major destroyers' or students who universities. follow campus radicals," Bache t;UINCH Pittenger's introduced into the House rooftiti.i™ „ on sald» "but we are students concerned about our University and its good name." for African Freedom Dayl fat the SEE "This University needs a friend in the state Senate, not an An African Freedom Day Hochmann an Eastern Michigan "All Africans •• Africans i enemy," he said. "We need an weekend of program is scheduled for the University professor; the continent, Africans fromH intelligent senator to give voice rooms 38 andMay 23 - 24 in Kamuyu-wa-Kange'ethe of U.S.A., Africans 6 39 in the Union PASOA; Dr. Hisham Sharabi of to its needs and concerns, not Middle East, and Africans f| May 22, 23 o^jrrse ss sr™., rsi the Carribean; ail Africans -| welcome," according to M .J.ut campus.' tJ.o^ousU'iemT'SS UbCr,"0n Kenyanhi, president ofPASl is like (3 and Canada ICHIGAN In a statement last week, Gov. are sponsoring the program which marks African Milliken was highly critical of Freedom Day, May 23. CURRENT ISSUES Pittenger's resolution. The symposium program will DINNER william wyler's "I think it's asinine and irresponsible,' the governor said! ^ Ration on at home! Bache said the committee will concentrate its activities in the East 'b"f1Afr'ca Israel, according to PASOA representatives. and Seminars worlc | Lansing and Meridian Lecture topics will range from Township area for the rest of spring term. "The Warfare "African Politics Within of Guerrilla Israel" Independence to and for An thro Grand Opening Neo-Colonialism" Liberation to Struggle in the "The The Dept. of Anthropology is sponsoring seminars or action School, 300 Bailey St. ToJ discussion concerns the ell African Diaspora." groups to continue the of war on the ecolo!yl Among speakers will be Larry educational work of the Indochina, department during the strikes. The minority groups so These groups are open to the w111 meet Tuesday and 1 public and are not limited to from 7 t0A 1° p'f„ MSU students and faculty Museum Auditorium. ! DOUBLE FEATURE The Indochina seminar group Program will be concerned 1 will meet today and May 25 the relationship between* from 7 to 10 p.m. at Bailey and all minority the Forbin presently enrolled within ■ University. A local level politics s« Project PLUS! "JOURNEY TO cp will meet Wendesday and 1 27 from 7 to 10 p.m. «■ Saints Episcopal Church, ■ THE FAR SIDE OF Abbott Rd. The topic of the J THE SUN" discussion will be "" and Politics." An education and c seminar will meet Thursday^ May 28 from 7 to 10 P- Union Parlor A. "Mass J we are trying to provide you the University and | with entertainment quality. Quality for different ik Community" will be discuss the first meeting. people Quality drinks different nights. ... a full shot unicorn in each drink. Quality service . . . the best bartenders and waitresses in town. Quality atmosphere our ... best to make the we are trying PRESENTS place look the way you want it to. This is our grand week schedule: opening Mon May 18 . . . Mon. Lionel Hampton with Lett's Fashion Show . . . . Tues. Ladies Nite (Girls drinks less than V2 price) LIONEL (more girls than guys -) . Cover . . Fri. & Sat. & Sun. No HAMPTON The "Socialites" Admission $4.00 mon. nitesonly| connor on (America's Greatest All-Girl Band) appearing all week Reservations FOR A QUIET TRIP 489-7433 We want you for a customer if you are ready for quality 372-8971 GRANNY'S PRESENT^ ^ACOUSTICAL GUITAR entertainment without the 'CONNOR & EVANS Follow Grand River to US 27 North usual college image. So if you — Just 15 minutes from campus — like the idea, come on out. If not stick with PR's or the Gabes. Senior Nite — WfltU Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Monday, May 18, 1970 7 ^SMSU offers Black Tamu' [pen air festival By JACQUI MILLER State News Staff Writer J happening is coming to MSU. That is, the Open Air Ihration Sunday is planned as an opportunity for people to toy LOS ANGELES (AP) - A black earn a market profit for the first time, black dolls, Gilyard said. The , music and do just about anything else they feel like Louis Smith, now honorary doll that talks — with such dolls retail from $4.95 to $7.95 B remarks as "Cool it, baby" — manager, conceived the and are made of plastic and Open Air Celebration is the first such concert on a college hits the nation's toy market next dollmaking idea after the Watts vinyl, with either Afro or JL and is the long sought - after "brain child" of ASMSU. month, the latest product of an 1965 riots as a way blacks could straight hair styles, Rouslv P°P concerts were not making enough money to all - black toy factory in Watts. fill a retail need and provide Gilyard said the black dolls ort a project of this proportion. The talking doll, wliith the themselves with jobs. The toy have helped promote racial e concert will be a day - long celebration of music by the Swahili name of Tamu — which factory, limited so far just to understanding because they are irson Airplane; Chicago; Delaney, Bonnie and Friends; John means "sweet" — may bring joy doll - making, is a division of placed side by side with white in; the Small Faces with Rod Stewart, and the Rotary Operation Bootstrap, a Watts - to some little girl but is also dolls in many stores and that based nonprofit agency of blacks when white girls play with black designed to help promote racial Iketsare still on sale for $5 at the Union, Marshall Music and understanding and provides jobs and whites which tries to start dolls they come to understand ■ bell's. The concert committee also has sent tickets to for black workers. small business for black workers, "there are different kinds of lying areas. Mail - order sales have also begun and The firm makes five types of skin." Irtisements have been sent to most central Michigan college standpoint, we're providing people with jobs — and tiginally, the concert was planned for the stadium but was economics is the basis of our yftnsiTy Kged to the larger Old College Field. Although the groups will problem," says Phil Gilyard, having outside, hearing and seeing them will be difficult black manager at the toy Jnd the concert area itself. The stage will consist of a 40 by factory, Shindana, which Joot bandshell opening onto the field. The sound system will employes 30 full time black ■irected toward this area. workers — two thirds of them Id College Field is surrounded on three sides by the Red Cedar Jr and on the fourth side by a fence. Students will be 5 P.M. - 8 P.M. SPECIAL ■oned around the perimeter to insure that the audience will be Plans for open Shindana can turn out 800 to 1,200 dolls a day. This year it OFFER GOOD MON., TUE., WED., & THURS. ■ to enjoy the concert without outside interference. Tarps may hopes to produce 200,000 dolls, 1 ITEM 12" MED. PIZZA Ised on portions of the fence closest to the stage. achieve sales of $650,000 and 95c lo hundred student auxiliaries from the New Community ALSO SALAMI SUBS - 50c ■nteered personal assistance within the concert area. Because 1 Ete persons refused payment, ASMSU Pop Entertainment will. CREWMEN BEATEN NO TAKE OUT $1,000 to the New Community for use as legal service Campus police will assist in directing traffic and similar 8 P.M. 2 A.M. SPECIAL |rst aid facilities, lost and found booths, toilet areas and water [tains will be provided within the concert area. Concession Is withing the area will be managed by Crossroads Cafeteria, in or shine, gates will open to ticketholders at 9 a.m. Sunday Pueblo captured exploit depicted - OFFER GOOD MON.-TUES.-WED. & THUR. Kiing. Each of the six groups will play for about one hour with By'JIM JIM SHELDON captured by North Koreans in ■ exception of the Jefferson Airplane, which will end the State News Staff Writer 1968. camp. The Communists would destroy letters from home and then taken ordered to evasive get the records action SAVE $1.00 iert with an hour and a half performance. t ■ ti , . - „ Hayes, navcd, an admitted an auiuibtcu meiiiuer of member ui tell the i that Americans destroyed and to wait for help !e music of the day promises to be a blend and assortment of ,H^TcaypeS'Siefrad;°lirn,for the John Birch Society, spoke cared _ about sports than which was promised but never ON DELIVERY ONLY k, blues, folk and soul. PoH i? Friday at the Erickson Kiva in the Pueblo !W," Hayes said. Hayes said. A 2 ITEM 12" MED. PIZZA $1.50 ?.±™Lthl°*Vhin* sustained that crewmen the first of the Great Issues He said these things began to came, "Mary people have the wrong ALSO A GIANT HAMBURGER spring lecture series. sem true to crew members. idea about the amount of He was discharged from the He said he believed the Pueblo WITH EVERYTHING ON IT. 50c classified information seized," Navy on Aug. 14,1969, after six as captured to "embarrass the ALSO SALAMI SUBS 75c Hayes explained. "Most of the lushroom cult years active duty. North Koreans captured the Pueblo in January, 1968, and United States" and to show American she naval power, ;n't the greatest classified papers were destroyed from the highest classification down. The Communists did MINIMUM DELIVERY $1.50 CALL: 332-6517 charged the intelligence ship ~ - The Pueblo's closest approach receive some classified violated the 12 • mile limit off to the Korean mainland was information. We did the best w If Korean shores. Crewmen religion, 13.5 miles, Hayes said. The ship could with what we had." aut released Dec. 23, 1968, after an 11 month imprisonment. • "I don't think you people was 15 miles off shore the day before the attack, he continued, Authorities feared a nuclear Hayes said the Pueblo "seized," and Bucher did allow the Communists to take it. was not GRADUATION BND0N realize how bitterly these people take over of South Korea by the (AP ■■ A leading Testament at Manchester the mushroom cult as the true, hate Americans" The last two words heard on the ■sh philologist says the Hayes said i North, and the Pueblo was on a radio were "Good luck," he said, ■sh and University, makes his claim in a though vieled, purcursor of wou|d ijke you to know just "routine naval mission" to learn Christian religions new book released today -■ "The Christianity and Judaism. what Communists are like " North Korea's intentions, Hayes iL'«?t ^ in ?hr*gNlJaiS n*Ciei Mushroom 81,(1 The £n?p0' °n\ °i " 1°i He said the North Koreans said. He compared his ship's ■shipped L EaSj C™ss" the * sacred scholars who studied Moses, Abraham, Jesus none Sea Scrools, contends that many ■■ the Dead were "antireligion" and told actions to "Soviet trawlers' crewmen that "God didn't exist 1- of these men ever existed, «pung the tly United Stages. Marco of the Bible stories are because the Russians had shot When Allegro, contends Allegro. "mushroom myths" common him down" One man froversial lecturer on the Old His book seems to establish approached, the Pueblo was not throughout the Middle East and ''singing hymns," he added. alarmed, he said. Armed with dating back to 3500 B.C. would be beaten until two .50 caliber machine guns, Allegro, who trained to be a j, apologized for some covered at the time, the ship was Academic Council Methodist minister but is now an "COncocted crime" and asked to be forgiven, Hayes said. He told not "light supply ship" and prepared to fight, he said, the audience that terror was Hayes said the Pueblo continued from page one) actions to mushroom worshippers could something he could not put into faculty members. commander Lloyd Bucher le resolution, later rescinded pass on their spells and beliefs in words The council approved an She board, allowed the MSU a way to escape persecution by ^ do not hate Communists," ■ident to suspend any student amendment to the Academic Freedom Report which requires authorities. he observed, "but I do despise fightingj Allegro claims the mushroom what they are doing to millions that any .change ln.be report has, since the beginning of time, and miiiions of people enslaved ■ediate threat to the normal 1 orderly operation of the which deals with "the been an object of mystery. beneath them and the way they CAPS and GOWNS CARDS ■ofessional rights and "Every aspect of the are duping other people, |tersity." responsibilities" of the faculty mushroom's existence was for spring term • JUNE 14TH • campus disturbances "Americans should understand REMEMBER FATHER'S DAY orieinallv oresenteri first be referred to the elected uc »««»■» fraught with sexual allusions, that there are thousands of graduation, - JUNE 21ST ■the council inoll in November,l faculty council prior to and in its phallic form the American prisoners still held in "When you think of Cards" At that time the council consideration by the Academic ancients saw a replica of the prisons abroad," Hayes Sunday, June 14, 1970, CARD SHOP the matter back to Council. fertility god himself," he writes, observed. "These men need our can be picked up at ■mittee with the specific "It was the son of God. It was in The Academic prayers and help." the UNION BUILDING Itive that ASMSU involve Freedom fact, God himself manifest on Report change must be approved Hayes claimed his parents had starting June 1, 1970. ■<* students in earth. To the mystic it was the written him 25 letters which he the ■ulation of the report. by the Board of Trustees before divinely given means of entering never received in the prison it becomes effective. heaven. he campus disturbance report pissed by the council contains NOW HEAR THIS FROM THE TOP-HINGE policy statement rejecting AT THE STORE WITH THE RED DOOR Jence ■ and acts of destruction dissenters and amends the Pty bylaws to provide for the ■tion of a Committee on pc Safety, which will exist Something New At The as Rular standing committee of WHIFF & PUFF BAR ^Academic Council. Tf new committee will be Where can you get the FPosed of five faculty SNUFF Jjlws, four Joents and undergraduates one graduate Made in England by the G. S. Smith & Sons. 12 flavors HIGHEST RATE to choose from — so drop of return ! council also type voted to ■ Pone Wednesday's session 1 Academic Senate to allow of by and get a snoot full. on any f'tional time for the F"ination of information |cerning Friday's council ELL'S ■ SUBURBAN SHOP of bank savings? Take A Break Live |A graduate scnoolwith x s real teeth. AT AB & T OF COURSE! Set your sights on this: The computer industry is only fifteen years old and already there 3uei I is 15 billion dollars worth of computer equip- jI No other bank offers higher rates of (312) interest on any type of savings By 1975, that will double, creating more account or certificate of deposit. than 500,000 new computer-related jobs. A.B.& T. is the place to save ... no Honeywell can prepare you for this bright future. Vou'll be able to apply computer question about itl technology to your chosen field. Or you can make a promising career as a computer specialist. We have the only program that's exclusively for college graduates. And because we make computer equipment, we're particularly well- qualified to teach you what computers are all about. • I j Approved ol by thi Olllc» of th« Suptrint«nd«nt Public Instruction Stat* ol Illinois. Classes for the next session are forming right now. This could be your big chance. The Other Computer Company Pounce on It. Send the coupon. ____ Honeywell __ 0 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan -SPORTS- _ Monday:Ma, |£ Mathews' spring wind-up game before offense at this stage of the offense. We'll just have running to 7 2-7 leads win By JEFF ELLIOTT approximately 5,100 fans. to wait back of the line of former Spartan players, Executive Sports Writer until we see the films to scrimmage to signed including guard Mike Tobin, who The only Henry Mathews put on a one - show for the Greens. He Daugherty, now with 3V4 did a good job today." see just behind the linebackers. The backfired as Mathews took autographs with fans before, tackle Chris King and end Brian major ini,,* I The MSU football team split man scored two touchdowns on runs months in which to evaluate this Daugherty lavished with praise move Kolch pitchout and, aided by a during the half and after the McConnel, was especially tough. tackle ?flayk.WD suffered bylfll its doubleheader Saturday. The of six and 41 yards and finished spring's performances before the on Mathews. a game. Also starting for the Greens on pound senior Ron Curl. The ffrl key block from flanker Randy cracked Y-i start of fall practice, indicated Proceeds of the game will No. 1 defense won one game, "Henry has had an outstanding Davis on offense were Black, center hi8right and the No. 2 offense captured the day with a game leading 192 yards in 33 carries. Both of there may be some made when practice changes spring and he really capped it off linebacker Hamilton, took off for his Ernie again Luther go to King the Dr. Martin Jr. Spartan Morgan Justice and tackle Terry was out the in arm Et rest of th? '""I the second. Mathews scores came in the begins next today," Daugherty said, second score of the day. Once Lewis. Scholarship Fund to help needy b* - But because both of the August. obviously pleased that he may One of the more interested last year, winning squads were on the second quarter when all scoring "We may have to take another have more than one past the line of scrimmage, good Mathews simply outraced the non-athlete students at MSU. spectators at the scrimmage at Curl Went L % in the game occured. look at our offensive line," running back for a change. "He's drawn in Washington was in charge of Saturday was junior college Mike halftime, returned team, the Greens squeaked then'Sr^l same the third MSU Head Coach Duffy Daugherty said. "It may be some shown he secondary. Safety Tim getting professional players to out a 12-7 win over the White really wants to play Jones made a Rasmussen, all-American the hospital quarter, Daugherty said after the game: members of the Green's squad football this desperate leap for come to the game. after the squad in the Spartan's annual "Our defense is ahead of our deserve a shot at year and we're Mathews at the six but Kolch went the entire route quarterback, who recently the No. 1 certainly fell short. going to give him the Mathew's for the Greens and completed signed a letter of intent to play opportunity." attempt for a two - at MSU next fall. After the Linebacker Dan Kulinkowski point coversion fell one yard nine of 16 passes for 95 yards. short. Four of his passes went to split game, Rasmussen said he was set up the Green's first impressed with the enthusiasm score when he picked off a Whites finally came to life near end Frank Butler for 57 yards. and inspiration of the Saturday along with Cwfl George the end of the first half. Mihaiu Kolch also picked up 40 yards in Spartans Kutschinski Mihaiu pass - one of three passes and a backfield of Ken Alderson and said he was looking forward captained the and Bill tJi that went eight running attempts but lost to becoming part of it next White's T awry for Mihaiu at fullback, Earl Anderson at half in pass attampts. For the fall. Saturday » and returned it to The red headed southpaw - spent the 14 yard line. Several running back, and Eric Allen at most part, the Green lineman most of the afternoon on the plays wing back, took turns in protected Kolch later, Mathews turned right end well and sidelines with Daugherty. carrying earned the ball J! and followed guard Bob Black's carrying the ball. Starting from opened up big holes for Mathews Rasmussen flew out from his the outstanding their own 25, the Whites went and fullback Ron Slank. award on the Green toll key block at the two to score. 35 yards in seven home in Fresno, California, with The point after was The Whites, who blocked. netted 104 the ball on plays to put the Green's 40. The right side of the line, Daugherty's brother - in law. - Martin, who (please turn spenT.^j to p3Qe!ll" With a third and five yards on the ground in 46 carries against confronting him, Mihaiu went a tough Green defensive for broke and connected with a line and linebacker crew, could do nothing after the Green long bomb to split end Gordie Bowdell. Bowdell, racing clown score. Brad Van Pelt, punting for the right sideline, was closely the White squad, booted to the covered by Green backs, Brad Green's 24 - yard line where Van Pelt and Harold Phillips. Mathews and Co. promptly went But Bowdell got a step on both to work again. After the defenders, and Mihaiu lifted a Whites broke through to nail quarterback perfect floater to him three Fred Kolch for a six yards deep in the end zone. It - yard loss, was to be the White's Mathews picked up 34 yards in only bright three carries. The spot of the day. Marv Roberts, 6-3, 198 pound junior - to - be used his sophomore placekicker from size to his Akron, Ohio, added the extra advantage. Several point to complete the times, prior to getting hit, day's Mathews lowered his head and scoring. shoulders and bulled right over Saturday's game marked the end of the five - week spring the defender for an additional practices Running three or four yards. With the ball resting on the 41 and attracted the best professional football several of Henry Mathews, is shown going through a huge hole partially created by guard Mike Tobin. - yard line and third and short players in the country. Minnesota's Joe Kapp, Gene Tobin and his teammates opened holes like this one most of the afternoon and Mathews took yardage situation, the White defensive backfield moved Washington and Clint Jones and advantage of it to gain 192 yards in 33 carries. State News photo by Don Gerstner up Detroit's Mel Farr and Lem from their normal 12 yards in Barney, along with a handful of SPARTANS THIRD IU rallies for Big 10 golf title By OLG OLSON second link championship in State News Sports Wi first round, but, after taking round could have been even Peterson finished between three years. The Hoosiers, who some advice from his father, better CHAMPAIGN, 111. - Defending champion MSU and tied with Iowa for third straightened out his play on the but the East Lansing Indiana's senior carded two double Padgett and Shircliff bogies carding a 72-hole score of 313 Collision course place at the halfway mark, greens. and a triple bogey along with six strokes. Edmundson and Woulfe White quarterback surprising Minnesota shared the George Mihaiu hands off to running back Earl Anderson charged to a D five - man total of Leading the Hoosiers' birdies. each registered 316s with Vass in the first half of I lead through 36 holes of the 72 - Saturday's Green and White Game. Green defenders ready to „ . _ 1,542 strokes. It was a far shot Saturday comeback was Wayne Janson had birdies on all four coming in at 319 strokes to close stop Anderson are Wilt Martin I hole Big Ten golf championship who received the most valuable lineman award for here only to be brushed aside by from MSU's victory margin of McDonald who finished in a tie par 5S) as wen as on the par 4 out the Spartan scoring, broken arm a few plays later. the Greens and Ron Curl (94) who suffered a I 1,501 a year ago. f°r second place with Iowa's loth where he sank a 65-foot state News photo by Don Gerstner a fired - up Indiana Hoosier link Minnesota was second with Bob Mulert. Both had 72-hole team in putt and the par 3 18th where Saturday's final 36 1,555; MSU, third 1,561; totals of 304. That twosome was he dropped a" 30-footer for his holes. followed by Iowa, 1,564; followed by Greg Harvey of Spartan netters finish 3rd,| final birdie, but being seven The Spartans and Minnesota Purdue, 1,571; Ohio State, Indiana and MSU's Lynn Janson. strokes over par netted him 73. had identical opening round 773 team totals. The Gophers had 1,582; Illinois, 1,583; Michigan, Janson was the only Spartan in Indiana's McDonald received 1,584; Wisconsin, 1,613 and contention for the individual not been considered a contender Northwestern carding a team plenty of help from teammate honors during Saturday's play. Harvey and Kevin for Proctor conference title, total of 1,-634 for 10th place. Spartan sophomore John 309 Don Padgett cardine with a Minnesota played consistently a 312 Michigan's Randy Erskine VanderMeiden had a 154 after and' far behind powerful U-M Saturday to finish second Wayne Shircliff's 72-hole captured" medalist honors opening day but fell to the total of 314 overall, six strokes up on the rounds of 77-75-74-76 — 302. wayside in Saturday's play Spartans, who placed third. The Battle Creek senior had Pr0ctor had a 72 Saturday. He Janson had a sparkling 73 in Indiana, in winning, gained its putting problems in the the second round Friday. The of 60 was the only p,ayer in th/field linksters to match par on the 36-36 University of Illinois By JOHN VIGES row, leaving runner-up Indiana to break the serve of fired up Schedule Gray a Savoy Golf Course. Padgett was State News Sports Writer and third place MSU only with gained momentum 11 last year's medalist. McLaughlin. used his over - powering serve I Also F*«nan finally had win 6-3 and 6-2. competing for MSU What was supposed to be draw its only consolation from a chance in Janson conference tennis a a J Geoff Hadson fell to Gray i - VanderMeiden, who finished with three with fhrao teams topmc cfrimo race, struggling for tnr second <"!»Dl/.k place finishes by Tom Gray and Rick Ferman while the fervi h WIICII th U1B tIWU g Weft! u UBUd the semi - 1 by a 6-2, fr with a 315 total, were Lee first place, evolved Into a H ttt Q« ® count Hoosiers captured two Edmundson (the only other runaway for Michigan's powerful Mke Madura Briggs, Di senior on the Spartan unit), Rick squad at the Big Ten championships, the No. 5 singles and No. 2 doubles. vS^ th^ McShH?was fust ?u "vJ vaawv mvuciugiuiii wao juot »»••*>«•»•« and Tom Gray at Rhoads S1V„k.J Woulfe, Denny Vass and John Tournament in Minneapolis. able to reach. McLaughlin's shot 1 doubles and and RickHick Ve I d , . ... .. No. Peterson. Woulfe, Vass and Peterson are juniors. The Wolverines easily won their third championship In a tSwSIm1taftStataInttt The Wolves had finalists in eight aPPeared to be 'onf5 and Ferman, and Ferman at the No. 3 doub ready for a return, let the ball go all reached the semis b''f» of nine events and they captured seven of the first place medals. oniy tQ gee lt ,an(J Qn the being halted. backcourt line. The Wolverine R Michigan finished the season -p-i,,,, was Madura defeated Sco with 131 points, far ahead of then able to hold his -Zjg pearlstein of Wisconsin 6-3, Indiana's 98. The Spartans were to win a spot opp«< third with a 74 • point total In the final game, Minnesota's Dave Cross. Ma followed by Minnesota, 59 and McLaughlin Illinois, 47. Iowa, Northwestern, gained two quick points and able to break Ferman's was then started quickly breatoj serve to Cross' first Wisconsinnd Purdue rounded 50 count" to wirT the "set Gopher's co-captain would out the final standings. 12-10. give up. He broke Madura s sen MSU's biggest problem was an late in the set and went on Ugliest Spartan Contest inability to post a victory over raasras* SFSSSSS times MSU lost to year. and The loss Ferman, since the shot was a he hard one for he had gone let go win 8-6. Cross took advantage asiaffigLansin a foe that was two met eariier in East lospital sp Union Steps they had beaten during the regular season with three of the losses coming against a Michigan especially haunting. "I'll dream about that shot for the next 20 years," he said after Madura was a B }c„ fel| t0 6-2,6-1 winner. Bruce DeBoer ( » — player. In MSU's dual meet with thfi tniimnmonf the tournament tirnc was avav M, hf°® _ in the semi An»liar • fiM" the Wolverines the Spartans _ ^ Beaten by Deuieu . vy ««*&&- r r • s earlier — „ in,irfl Ferman reached the finals by captured three wins, but year DeBoer used well F defeating Wisconsin's Larry shots to gain a service brean Michigan avenged their losses at Pollack 6-4, 3-6, 11-9 in a hard each set for a 6-4,6-3 victory, Pan-Hel & AWS Symposium the No. 3 doubles, No. 4 and 6 singles in the tournament. "Michigan simply had more fought match and Bob Girswold of Iowa by a 6-4, 6-3 count. The other Spartan to reach the Rhoads Minnesota t " j and Rill Bill B Gray rross Cross 8nu and mat poise and more confidence than finals Tom Gray, captured his I«nt l™"1""' any other team," MSU Coach second runner-up medal in as J'ake u" ." 6-2, by ' ... . in a9-11. longW^ 7-5 co«* afM Stan Drobac said after the meet. Women's Liberation Dan Ferman made up McLaughlin's victory was one of the wins that over many years. Last year finished behind Michigan's Dick Dell at the No. 1 spot and this Gray beating Purdue s team before 3 Vetter and Ferman lost for an early season loss. The defending champion at No. season the Wolverine's Jon Michigan in the semiflj 7:00 6 singles, McLaughlin was to avenge his earlier to Ferman. eager 8-6, 6-4 loss Hainline proved to be Gray's nemesis. Hainline, last year's champion 3-6, 6-2, 6-3 score. and dropped'the8 Spartan duo by McLaugh at No. 5 singles, did not over In the finals championship8 McLaughlin broke power Gray but his well placed Winning Ferman's serve and his last for a shots kept the Spartan junior off „ .. Mark Conti, 6-2 first set victory. Ferman had Michigan we Joe| balance and Gray, who did not Lantern Night Serenade trouble placing his first serve in the service area and was forced to the defensive. often play his best game, fell by a 6-3, 6-3 score. J; HalJJline,noRner'. No; McLaughlin, ""f No. No. and The second set was a standoff Gray was almost upset before Conti, —. No. I ,in d • doub| i up on f ] he reached the finals. Ken Bartz n' Mc "!.ired other a* 12:00 mid-night for 21 the one ymes as the two players of Wisconsin played excellent Indiana C«P each held serve. Ferman, the top tennis as he scrambled to a 6-4 T m punker f tl>eoutsi Rick Ferman seeded ... player - . - at the No, — " - first set victory. But, Bartz could No. f^ 5 single plus p Hodson * 2 dou P°n .aZfi ghnt consistently, but he h y'ng unable was m°re not hand,e the more P°werful DfITel Solace medals, Gray in the next two sets as winning first place State News, East Lansing, Michigan Monday, May 18, 1970 9 SPORTS- Herb 7sf, Spartans By DON KOPRIVA Washington loaned at the tape fast start of the blocks, he had done it in practice and State News Sports Writer to nip Indiana's Mike Goodrich Butchee was sixth in the 220 Washington and Harris Heikkila slipped to third thought he could do it in the and Wehrwein grabbed the s "n** o RT nnMiwrTnw i a "Ji1? Harris, 38 nec't " and - neck to the tape but meet. He came along and made in the triple jump to close high jump, Wisconsin's Mike Snar£rt hv S » 7 f1 we^ tlm,ed ,n 9 5 to enaMe Herb leaned just enough to nip it in the right one," Spartan MSU's Bond fouled three times in the thruE thrilling 100 21hg1 100-yard dash win and last ^We.n§ at least record of 9 4 to the Ohio State flash, the another year, Coach Fran Dittrich said, scoring. Surprisingly, only two meet triple jump, and two other Bob Karrs apparent second placer sin "It was a real good team records were set before the small defending champs from unexpected third Defending champ Larry Goodrich seemed to fade Wisconsin, Dean Martell (three place in the a bit performance for us," Dittrich pole vault, MSU Highbaugh was fourth. MSU's he neared the line. crowd in cloudy, cool weather. noted, "If anyone had let miie) and Fred Lands Hoosier sophomore Steve Kelley the W(t*otSL-t°v.^akC• Big Ten track championships thiliu«LaS"e sixth, and one B"tchee was edged for point for the More pleasing coaches to the Spartan down we would have been sixth shattered the old steeplechase (steeplechase) failed to finish, Wisconsin's mile relay, with all ere was the Saturday instead of third, Saturday at Billy Hayes MSU cause, by Michigan's Gene mark of 9:00.5 with the performance of sophomore Top placer for MSU outside of members from its 1969 clocking, while Minnesota's Wach'inotrm'c * Brown. ... Butchee. He had a 9.7 in the 100 Washington was Soph ai freshman distance sensation, winning quartet back, dropped was thp Innrtans' i v. ?ry , " d®clslon was not and a 21.9 in the 220. But he Henderson, who placed second Garry Bjorklund, cracked Ray to second behind surprising Sfort hn?P. ?♦£ TTng 0rthC0mT»ng f°r Tite Some had run 215 in Friday's in the 440-yard dash in 47.5, a Illinois. pnaK? tl h c » ? P S seemed obvious preliminaries and served notice career best for the Detroit East Arrington's old mile standard of thrpt 1 Spartans to sneak by Washington had won, and three that he'll make his mark the on Catholic graduate. Henderson 4:03.9 with a 4:03.6 clocking. Wisconsin won five individual 1ST tehind068 spot behind IIndiana H- thir2 and Frf ( I°,Ur) hrd Flint speedster first,Pilked the Big Te" Sprints in the next two but the years. ^d Washington also - - Bjorklund was the meet's only double winner as he came back titles while Indiana nabbed four individual crowns and the 440 Wisconsin. next 440 relay with Mike Holt and hour after the mile to win the places were a toss v UP- Karr, a junior who had cleared relay title. The other wins As expected, Indiana LaRue Butchee, which placed three mile in 13:40.6 only were Finally, after m than an 15-0 and 15-6 in practice but pretty well spread out, with dethroned the third. ' 1 " — •' Badgers as hour's wait, the placers were never in a meet came up with MSU placed third i Michigan, Minnesota and Illinois L ®_Tp,0n' totaling..117 _ mnct'pvor in , rP°ints- 7' announced, , and even~ then, V ." a 15-0 effort to secure third. He "I"*" aeuute uiiru. ne with Bill Wehrwein relay witn wenrwein leading each accounting for two, MSU The best news for MSU for under a new 108 naer anew 6 4 2 1 1U-8-6-4-2-1 scoring hard hard to pick between P rGoodrich L ^ ? kbounced a15'4 ^ but the bar bit and finally fell off' followed bV Ho,t. John Mock and Hpnderson looking ahead, was that all but one and Northwestern for system. Wisconsin had of the Following MSU were 91. Illinois and spot. Harris for the runner-up off. Wisconsin's Joe Vikto! Henderson. Other third r places c from one points Spartans' returns non in - relay 1971. By class breakdown, juniors .. JS*V; with with at; b5, Michigan with 64 e7 and J Washington, obviously pleased c,eared *,,, u- t u • . , the same height rather shakily, but the crossbar held on freshman John Morrison in the «««-—-• Wehrwein's one in the triple ,n e mpie and sophomores dominated the 1a"fo0txa, Wlth 63' 120-yard high hurdles, junior - • ■ • jump and his share of the mile - U had 48, Northwestern 18. Iowa Ohio State with the win> said he began to and gave the 1968 indoor champ Wayne Hartwick meet, with juniors taking six IAl Henderson and Mike Holt 16 and Purdue 8. 18, Iowa eain gain on Goodrich about on Goodrich ahnnt 70 after the Hoosier speedster got a 7n vnrHs yards v,;c his second ieague titie "We took Karr along because :ntermediate hurdles in the and relay's six points losses for MSU. are the only titles and sophomores five. Badger Mark Winzenried, a freshman"" Ken Popjoy the Defending champions fell by junior, was the only returning | WINS TWO mile the wayside in most events, as champ to successfully defend his 4-0 GAMES Spartan included Mock fourth in placers the 880, Wehrwein was not entered in the 440, Highbaugh failed to repeat title. Three seniors earned top honors and Bjorklund was the Washington in the 220 and his fantastic 100-220-long jump only freshman champion, with Lloyd Bridges with a career best wins of 1969 (placing fourth, two titles marked up after his of 23-10 in the long Maas, Fulton blank Cats twice jump, third and fifth), Minnesota's Tim |y RICK GOSSELIN te News Sports Writer ® Sf r!^IOVigh-hanClur' The Spartans t00k UP in the runners, and giving him four 'he slammed a double over the If4and agal" th® second game, where they left off RBI's for the afternoon. centerfielders' head again 4 2 °,3 JJ8!?.,?"8* in th®0Pe"er by rattling Wildcat IST0N, III. After the mes in 4-2 and his strikeout ace Stan Kmet for two in down Phil Rashead stroked a double the leftf.eld line scoring Dace from first and Sunday games count to 36. runs two giving Ellis three second game the first. batters later, but the (Stern history, the host After scoring was RBIs from three hits in three a mild threat in the first Boyce given inning of the first game, the a 3-2 count to become the first halted . might be a bit fearful of was a free pass on at two. at.bats Pruitt drove a shot their mark in the history In the fifth inning, the Spartan Spartans pushed through the second baseman for jnce again. i , ~ : across first run in the second, bunt the Spartan runner. Vary dropped a tallied their final two runs, an error Ellis alertlv scorine down the first base line, giving Maas little more Spartan baseball team, Tim Bograkos drined hjs first hjt breathing from second on the play. takil ~the" se when no one Si*.?"""m two years of Big Ten room. Vary drew a one-out The shutout was preserved as I Fulton, whitewashed co»ered, fo, , single. Dace flied walk, but Dace's infield ground competition - a single to "center. to left, Bograkos made a diving one - i the first game Steve Cerez followed with a Ellis advancing the runners, ll°" ball "f—"** struck " ' u,~ Vary, erasing him handed catch of s short fly to in bill, 4-0. In the second slapped a sharp single to from the base ll„eh three - hi. pitching bloop single to the same area. center, driving home both credited with path. Dace was center with one m in on in the ■irk Maas evened the JJJ fanned, Gary a single. Ellis last inning. Dj. Tpn record at 5.5 B°yce 'aced his second single of , P BLl nf thJ nnLpr P the day with Bograkos scoring Booters ' from second. But Northwestern Wisconsin Friday doubleheader was _ainoH rained nnt out °u*°fn th* in!»n8 was thrown out at the ■» m attempted double steal Cerez plate on edged ?S"yMldo.te jl l mlll Tg toThe"Spartans upped the eouht ■ ■ nf rainprf . . nut 0. Snturdav .n ^ 4"° in the third as ^our hatters of the inning reached base. A Vary and single by Rich a walk to John Dace first 2-1, to close drills , who had been t. the Put runners n. . on first and second. . MSU's varsity soccer team fell 8oaI after the game . was Janes, the alumni goalie, but an T" ! °C Rob Ellis doubled prey to an experienced Spartan 22-minutes old^ He^ sted offside penalty nullified the , over the alumnfin exciting 2-1 contest the play u" *u~ by former * All - goal. 0irS„(a,S'?H centerfielders' head, drWnglh Saturday afternoon on the MSU American Trevor Harris. MLtES hrscorel^s runs and advancing to third gocce/ field. The game The varsity had several choice impressed with the play of ■ stringto"l6 and^imDrove^ the throw to the plate. Ron concludes spring practice forThe scoring opportunities in the first freshman Jerry Murray Borys ■ ■ ad to 10 6 o-z. 2 Thre^of inree 01 the me Pruitt bounced a sln8le ttihc cuorf nnn fus-j short and third, scoring Ellis and between Spartan varsityJ in vpreparation .. r half but each time the ball went Shlapak and Demling. He — ...uu „ .. . .. .. for the next fall. wid® the net. In the satisfied with the Spartan If r the § b anking h Cats, the ^ climaxing the scoring. MSU threatened fn Instead of playing „v„, under dosing minutes of the half, defense but cited ball control the sixth 1 righthander lowered his «... th b ft . ' collegiate rules which divide the iunior Ray Korkiala finally put problem as the offensive game into four quarters of 22 the varsity in the scoring column weakness, SfbSrthree'-hit ^third®KinTe^wit^ =te^'TeamTdVcided to minutes, the teams decided to as he scored an unassisted goal. "By next fall we hope to Present vs. past r® (°"e M play according to international At half time the match was a 1-1 overcome this weakness," Fuller wa®°fJth? bloop single to left. Vary got to - - rules which split the play deadlock. said after the game. "We were I aII a tPrnCnnn S first as the the shortstop bobbled his a us- into two equal halves 0f 45 In second half play Coach not moving the ball as well as we Varsity soccer star John Houska (in white) tries to kick the ball past an alumni foe during minutes Payton Fuller elected to give can in front of the goal, Saturday's varsity - alumni soccer game at the MSU field. The alumni nipped the varsity, 2-1, in freshman goalie Nick Dujohn "I thought it was a real good L,« i .n„ t-Eiiis - Denny scoring Boles opened for the alumni with a some game Replacing the veteran goalie Les experience, game between two good teams." this annual windup to spring practice. State News photo by Gill Porteous Lucas, Dujohn responded with hSBURGH'S Chevrolet Right Car. some fancy goalkeeping while BRIERE making five saves. For 40 minutes the second half remained a scoreless duel Injured icer improves ^TREAL (UPI) - The surgeon who operated on was being rushed from the scene dominated by a battle of defenses. Having the advantage of playing together in recent weeks, MSU's varsity offense Right Price. Right Now. lirgh Penguin hockey Briere, Dr. Claude Bertrand, of the accident to Val D'or. His displayed serious scoring threats 1 Michael Briere was in chief of neurosurgery at Notre ambulance struck a motorcycle at times but were continually better" condition Dame, said it would not be and killed the rider, 18 - year - harassed by a Spartan alumni n a Montreal hospital known whether Briere suffered old Raymond Perrault of that included three fromer All - Jeing placed on the critical permanent physical disability Malartic. Americans. |urday night. until at least 48 hours after the Briere was a rookie with With five minutes remaining, injured Friday night operation. Pittsburgh last season. He scored Harris, who year was accident near Malartic, Briere's parents arrived here 12 goals, had 32 assists and was bothered with severe ankle some 350 miles from Malartic late Saturday to the acknowledged team leader as injury, found an open corner of 'est of Montreal. He was be with their son. The speedy the Penguins made the National the net to break the 1-1 tie. [to•a' Notre Dame Hospital in skater was to have been married Hockey League Stanley Cup Moments later TDemling = Saturday morning, and in Malartic in two weeks, the playoffs for the first time. kicked the ball past George NOW ON SALE. Impala. America's most popular car. ""it a four - hour hospital revealed. 1 for You simply buy any Impala V8 model. a frattured skull The accident occurred late And you simply order Turbo Hydra-matic transmission, flood clot on his brain. radio, Friday, when the car in which white stripe tires, front and rear bumper guards and the convenient 1««piUl spokesman said Briere and two companions were BASEBALL STANDINGS Comfortilt steering wheel. Then we include a big regular fuel 400- J £ last "he'snight much better and is than riding left the road and crashed cubic-inch V8 and dual exhausts. At no extra charge, during The Big Impala 400 Sale. now in in a ditch. The other passengers ■ctory 1 Saturday condition." The bad received fractures. Briere was American Notional night, the thrown clear of the wreck. F®n said, was not He was rushed to nearby Val w l EAST l pct. gb pct. Pal, and came 1st • operative as part of D'or, where hospital facilities Baltimore Nova now $159 LESS* reaction. were found inadequate to handle New York I 0' year old center St. Louis Now you can order a new Nova at - was his case and he was quickly Detroit Pittsburgh SI59 price reduction. ■""conscious Sunday, and a Sn'tal spokesman said he flown to Montreal. The four - hour operation Saturday was ®°a^h""gtor Philadelphia Montreal Coupe or sedan. C|eveiand Four-, six- or eight-cylinder engine. expected to regain termed a success by Dr. With these Novas the day-night |°usness until sometime Bertrand. w L PCT. CB mirror, bias belted ply tires, cigarette Tragedy struck again as Briere lighter and seat belt retractors, formerly Chevelle. $148 LESS* ™[^ota 26 19 10 IS .722 .559 _ standard, are still available as options. Chevelle $147 LESS*' 6 19 15 .559 Place your order at your Chevy dealer's. America's most popular mid-size 6 Now America's lowest priced Green-White Game 18 16 .529 8'/j sedan at a new low price. mid-size hardtop. We took America's best selling mid-size car. Then added °ntinued from two new lower priced models. Lower priced page 8) they are But lower rough afternoon all day. Triplett priced looking and feeling they aren't. Mternoon in the Whjte,s was leading ground gainer with "S RESULTS SUNDAY'S RESULTS Baltimore at Washington, New York at Philadephia, rain Lin'. received the 46 yards in 11 carries. Earl •DETROIT at New York, St. Louis 4, Chicago 3 Monte Carlo, is hundreds of dollars less than Ireen! E.-,. "etnan's award A panel of sports for Anderson, who ran behind Triplett, finished with 29 yards Cleveland at Boston, rain Cincinnati 5, Atlanta I (1st game) other personal luxury cars. Hundreds. Vet Monte Carlo's a car of ' Montreal 8, Pittsburgh 7 thickly padded in 13 tries. Mihaiu picked up 40 seats. An instrument panel with the look of |^s and writers picked yards in 12 carries. San Erancisco at Los Angeles, inc. Carpathian burled elm. Plush carpeting. Monte Carlo is every bit the luxury car. Punier B°Wde11' who Mihaiu didn't have one of his Try the real thing at your Chevrolet dealer's. I anH four one passes for 77 better days passing. He hit Allen TODAY'S GAMES TODAY'S GAMES New York at Montreal, night the touchdown, for a 15 - yarder and connected DETROIT at Boston, night outstanding back Baltimore at New York, night Philadelphia at Pittsburgh, night with Billy Jo DuPree for a 27 - Cleveland at Washington, night Chicago at Cincinnati, night award for the 1e yard pickup in addition to the California at Chicago, night St. Louis at Houston, night starting Whites four completions to Bowdell. In Minnesota at Kansas City, night Los Angeles, night F'anri ivi 1 aiu' Allen, Bill all, Mihaiu went six for 20 for a Oakland at Milwaukee, night (only games scheduled) Putting you first, keeps us first. f and Mark Charette had a total of 97 yards. 10 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Monday, \ STATE NEWS CLASSIFIED Karen is on duty from 5 - 7 to receive your calls. state news 355-8255 Phone 355-8255 and place your ad today! classified The State News does not A utomotive FRANKLY SPEAKING by Phil frank For Rent For Rent permit racial or religious * miEsamEEa discrimination in its TV RENTALS: G.E. 19" Portable, 2 MEN needed for 4-man. New Cedar ur«enf 2 GIRLS advertising culumns. The $8.50 per month including stand. Village. Summer. for Cedar:,?-! Wast! State News will not Call JR. CULVER 351-8862. 217 Ann Street, East CO., 3-5-20 351-1405. accept advertising which >24 CEDAR * AUTOMOTIVE MG MIDGET 1969. Yellow GIRL TO share air conditioned s, discriminates against Scooters & Cycles tops. 8,000 miles. Wire wheels. efficiency, Burcham - Abbott. " an furnished religion, color TV RENTALS Students only. Low , , O race, or 484-9723. 5-5-22 - Total $125 from June 15 to includes heat. Auto Parts & Service $62.50 national origin. monthly and term rates. Call August 15. Nancy, 351-1280. Aviation 351-7900 to reserve yours. 1-5-18 wo MUSTANG 1968 : 2 door, six .,«tp * UNIVERSITY EMPLOYMENT cylinder, standard floor shift. TV RENTALS. C * FOR RENT AUSTIN HEALEY 3000, 1965, semi 22,000 miles. Excellent condition. LEASING FOR Summer term. - fair condition. $475. 353-7915 Best offer. 351-5781. 5-5/19 RENT A TV from a TV Company. Furnished apartment for 3 girls. Apartments after 2 p.m. 6-5/22 $9.50 per month. Call 337-1300. Close to campus. 694-8266 after 5 Houses NEJAC TV RENTALS. C p.m. 5-5-22 cedar Rooms OPEL red. KADETTE, 1968, 4-speed, $1,100. 372-4683 GOOD NEWS for hobbyists! There HAS LETT AND greei(s| * FOR SALE Hagadorn; cute 1 Pool p.m. 5-5/19 are lots of good buys in today's bedroom, furnished apartment. Animals Classified Ads! Married graduate students. Surnmer Leases | or Mobile Homes CHEVELLE 1966. Malibu Available June 1. Call after 3 p.m., convertible. 327 V-8 Air 351-6287. 2-5-19 One * PERSONAL Conditioned. 351-1747. 3-5-20 LEASE COLOR TV. $15.95 per Bedroom • F * PEANUTS PERSONAL i, parts and service free, NEED ONE girl summer, $62.50, one buy. Call IV 9-5214. REAL ESTATE CHEVELLE MALIBU 307, 1968. Call | * or two fall, $66.67. Across from Best offer. Phone 332-6514. iLETRONICS INDUSTRIES. Berkey, own room. Senior 351-8631 * RECREATION or Grad 3-5-20 preferred. Fran, 351-5197. 5-5-22 * SERVICE NEW G.E. PORTABLE and stands Typing Service CHEVROLET 1963 SS. Dark Green, only to MSU students and * * TRANSPORTATION WANTED wheels. 484-0754. faculty. $8.84 monthly (including STATE MANAGEMENT 731 campus. $55 complet,™ CORPORATION, 444 Michigan East Lansing's Finest Student Residence DEADLINE CHEVROLET PICKUP, 1948. Now Renting for 1 P.M. one class day Excellent mechanical condition. Summer & Fall rates. Fall leases before publication. Good body, tires, radio. $225. and 4 man availableJ 351-8118. 3-5/18 furnished 351J Cancellations — 12 noon PER halstead managI one class day before CHRYSLER NEWPORT 1965, *0 RESIDENT _ COMPANY, 351-7910, Q; publication. 4-door. Will sacrifice. After 6 • 1, 2, 3 man/woman vacancies NEEDED 2 men for 4 p.m., or anytime weekends. •Pool and Party Lounge PHONE Meadowbrook Trace Fi«l 351-7378. 5-5-22 Walk to Campus 355-8255 353-2651.3-5/19 1 Sponsored resident parties RATES CORVAIR, 1962, 2 door hardtop. Luxurious furniture, carpeting, TWO - THREE girls, 1 Excellent condition. $225. Phone appliances term. Close day $1.50 332-2069. 3-5/18 to 15c per word per day MODELS, RENTAL neaby. Air - conditioned I OFFICE OPEN rent. 351-3244. 5-5/21 3 days $4.00 11-7 Mon.-FRI. CORVETTE 1965, convertible, 13'/2C per word per day COUPLES, FURNISHED, utilities 731 BURCHAM, 327/365, 4 speed, disc brakes, VOLKSWAGEN 1964. Sunroof. $115 - $135. 332-2803 5 days $6.50 excellent E. LANSING. SPACIOUS 2 condition. 351-0950. Rebuilt, excellent condition. or 332-2157. 3-5/19 PHONE 351 7212 carpeted, luxury 13c per word per day 3-5/19 $750. Phone 355-6213. 3-5/18 GE appliances, apartmait.l KALAMAZOO STREET BODY garbage dii (based on 10 words per ad) largest full - line WANTED ONE SHOP. Small dents to large merchant wholesaler. Automobile girl for fall term. DODGE DART, 1965. Available wrecks. American and foreign New Cedar. Damage deposit paid. 126 MILFORD Haslett, STREET. Peanuts Personals must be early June. Phone 355-8209. Scooters & Cycles required. Part time positions Call Margie, 351-2794. 2-5/18 2-man only 5-5/19 cars. Guaranteed work. 482-1286. available. Phone deluxe, air - conditioning, 2 blocks campus. $135 and u pre-paid. 2628 East Kalamazoo. C Society from campus. Summer and Fall 339-2490 for Corporation 351-5800 O ape There will be 50c service BRIDGESTONE, 1967, 4 speed, leasing. $170. 5-5/21 a JAGUAR XKE: 2+2, yellow, 1967. 372-5767, 175cc, Trail Scrambler. $300. AT MEL'S We r, II foreign and MALE SUMMER HELP, $98. 50 for 489-1656. Days, 484-1579. TF and bookkeeping charge if Automatic transmission, AM-FM; 351-8118 after 5 p.m. 3-5-20 first 20 hours. Call 371-1913 this ad is not paid within Michelin X tires. Excellent I. Call 332-3255. TF between 9:30 - 12; 1:30 - 3:30. C condition. $3,650. 353-0193. EAST LANSING. Comfortable one week. SUZUKI 1969. T-S 250 under 300 SUMMER SUBLET, deluxe, 2 5-5-22 furnished efficiency apartment miles. $650. 353-7451, 353-6307. ' bedroom. Furnished, air The State News will be NOTHING BUT nothing will find a across from MSU. Air 5-5-22 responsible only for the Aviation buyer for your sporting goods conditioning, TV. Dishwasher and conditioning, carpeting in clean Mason. 1 block west of 127 more quickly than a Want Ad. carport. South Lansing. Call BURCHAM WOODSl 'irst day's incorrect KAWASAKI 1968. apartment building. All utilities Expressway at Mason - Cedar 250cc, A-1-S-S, FRANCIS AVIATION: So easy to Dial 355-8255 882-3086. 2-5/18 now. paid except electric $140. Phone Street exit. Save $$$$ on Buick's 2,000 miles. Must sell. 355-6272. learn in the PIPER CHEROKEE!! J.R. Culver Co. 351-8862 or Summer and Opel's, American Motors. Watch 5-5-22 EXPERIENCED BEAUTICIANS. NEW MANAGEMENT. Bay Colony Special $5.00 offer. 484-1324. C for Full time. MARTIN'S HAIR and Princeton Arms. 1 and 2 371-1569. 10-5/21 Efficiencies, $125.00; 1 "outstanding" buys in this YAMAHA 1966. 5 speed. 250cc. FASHIONS, East Lansing. bedrooms from $130. 337-0511, Bedroom, $16 us. C Helmet and extras. $350. Employment 332-4522. 5-5/19 HALSTEAD MANAGEMENT Bedroom, $21O.0| Automotive 353-1528. 3-5/18 COMPANY, 351-7910. O Furnished pool, MACH I, 1069. 428, Cam-air, cruise - EARN-UP to $3000 this summer. CBr ;NURSES RN, LPN. F FURNISHED APARTMENT for two parking. C. BRISTOL 1600 lbs., 180 h.p. BSA 1968, Victor, Special 441cc. . o - matte, traction lock, power necessary. Earn and learn in yocir Nursing Home, 707 Armstrong BURCHAM WOODS apartment. Mint condition, customized paint. or three girls located two blocks Excellent condition. 353-2205. steering, disc Road. 3-11, 11-7, full or part 745 Burcham Drive I brakes, $2,400. $800. Call 351-2162. 3-5-20 spare time. Call 351-7319 for from campus for summer. Sublet summer. Two bedrooms, 1-5-18 time. Excellent 625-3164. 3-5-20 salary. 393-5680, Mrs. Flannery. 5-5/18 Call $135/month complete. IV 5-2737 or ED 7-0973. 5-5/19 air conditioning, swimming pool. Reasonable. 351-2025. 5-5/20 Call 351-3118 between 3 p.m. and 7 p.m. | SUMMER JOBS available throughout Michigan. We can find them for YAMAHA 125cc . New only 200 you. S. E. S. EMPLOYMENT, miles. Call 393-2804 after 6 p.m. Phone 372-0032, Lansing, Michigan. We charge only $5.00. Sights sad Sounds ef the 70's 5-5-22 X5-5/19 2 GIRLS and one man wanted for sales at FREE SPIRIT. A Special Supplement to The Michigan State News companies. Any cycle, any Application only. 5-5/20 GIRL FOR housework, Okemos. 3or HENDRICKSON INSURANCE. 2 4 mornings weekly. Own locations: 505 Albert, East transportation. 351-7718. 3-5-20 Lansing and 2205 East Michigan, Lansing. 484-8173. O "Sights and Sounds of the 70's" will be a special tabloid supplement published this Auto Service & Parts Thursday, May 21. Featuring articles concerning stereo equipment, records, performing groups, photographic equipment and techniques, and other entertainment MASON BODY SHOP, 812 East features in a Kalamazoo Street . . . Since 1940, COUNT ON CLASSIFIED ADS! modish format. If you dig the pulsating world of sights and sounds, don't miss this Complete auto painting and They help reach people who need collision service. IV 5-0256. C your services. Call 355-8255 nowl Thursday's edition of the Michigan State News Admit TWYCKINGHAM APARTMENTS are now leasing student ULK! it. units. These spacious luxury apartments are completely carpeted and furnished with distinctive Spanish Mediterranean furniture. Each unit has a dishwasher, garbage disposal and 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 You want all the comforts of a luxury apartment swimming pool, recreation rooms and private balconies. If you want to be among the first residents of TWYCKINGHAM call for a fair price. today. There are units starting at $70/month per man. Reach out to the 70's and relate to real living! Capture that very warm feeling of living the good quality of life you deserve. You've got to plan now for this summer and fall. Northwind Apartments offer you two bedrooms, Plan now on a swimming pool, billiards room, lounge area and 1-2-3 bedroom apartments with wall - to - wall air-conditioning, dishwashers, NEW carpeting, MODEL (APT. B-7) OPEN: 1-6 p.m. every day except Sunday carpeting, draperies, private balcony or terrace and much more! Plan this weekend to reach out to the 70's and relate furniture and furnishings, plenty of parking and PHONE: 332-6441 to better and happier living! many other extras. NINE AND TWELVE MONTH LEASES AVAILABLE LIMITED SUMMER LEASES NOW ACCEPTED All this for only $57.50 per month. Think about ©upefungfjam Northwind Apartments before you sign a fall lease. Meadowbrook 4620 S. Hagadorn TRACE n- Phone 337-0636 MANA GEMENT EXCL US! VEL Y B Y: 4925 Dunckel Road, Lansing - APARTMENTS Jolly Exit, I-496 Phone: 393-0210 turno KK2771 F## rn mm Northwind Drive East Lansing Alco Management Company a State News, East Lansing, Michigan Monday, May 18, 1970 11 For Rent For Rent For Rent For Sale For Sale I delta Sorority. Rooms SUMMER RENTAL. 3 man and" ROOM AND board for For Sale For Sale Lost & Found Summer. Phi Lie for Summer session. man. 126 372-5767 or 489-1656. 0 Milford Stree Mu Sorority. 332-8835. 337-9706 MAGNAVOX PORTABLE stereo. GARAGE SALE, 544 Haslett I included. 5 weeks, $130; 10 8-5/22 Good sound, dark brown. $130 East Lansing. Street, FREE PARKING at rear of store, for ANTIQUE TRUNKS. Beautifully LOST: WEIMARANER. K $255- 52® MAC. new, sell for $55. 371-1199 after nage and misses your convenience. OPTICAL Large gray S p.m. 3-5/18 clothes, 7cpp''Miscellaneous and male wearing chain collar. J659. 3-5-20 Houses CAMPUS NEAR. Single room with householo~ems. Thursday DISCOUNT, 2615 East Michigan graduating or wedding gifts. Large 337-1851 or 332 0848. 2-5/18 cooking, 351-9504. 3-5-20 noon Avenue, 372-7409. C-5-22 selection. through Saturday. 3-5/15 Also, 12 foot yellow Kent IeEDED T for Campus View nexi year. Reasonable. 4 GIRLS for summer only. $110 full LARGE ROOM for 2 girls fall term. $190.. Hotpoint 2 door refrigerator. Call LOST ON PEACE MARCH. Please term. Sun deck, utilities l. 353-2094. X-4-5/18 SHURE TU 2-9157. 3-5/18 VOCALMASTER 1^3-5-20 351-7621. 2-5/18 paid Semi - private bath, kitchen, one block from campus. GIBSON BYRDLAND guitar Shure mic.Qnes and PA. stands 3 8 Turn ■. TF marijuana prisoner, to Ethel $50/man. 1957, Animals Bud I OS. Furnished. On SHARE 3 351-1302. 5-5/21 OR 58, 50 $600. c,0 .ime 1-782-3332. Kosht, 1420H, Spartan Village. bedroom duplex with 2 wj", Marshall lead Nighttime 1-787-1106.3-5/15 BLANK 8 track cartridges and title Xl ania Ave Available in amp with hip grad students. Own room QVV-att bottom, 2 labels, dust bugs, tape cleaners, f$1l0 a month plus deposit. T454 after 3 p.m. 3-5-20 351-3747. 3-5/19 SPARTAN HALL - Singles, men, Sunn soni.^. '0V,stem. Matching $139.50. Stereo record players, 5-522 June 15th. Summer p.m. 5-5/21 speakers.rs. .>,-9492. .>.,-9492. 2-5/15 B.C. WHAT? A khed Close to campus. rate, SALESMAN SAMPLE sale. $29.50, up. Stereo headphones, legalized pig? $180/month. Bring Land fall leases. 351-7910. 351-5696. 5-5/18 332-6715, GIANT FRONT vard sale. Sai friends. Salesman is selling over $5.95, up. Stereo speakers, Mobile Homes Dubious! What next white eyes? L. Barney. 1-5-18 ■tesd Management Company. 1, 2 and 3 man furnished rooms 2 400 golf shirts size medium. $15-$20, pair. Realtone AM/FM blocks from campus. tent, golf '' 0,s Mod v> Sweaters size * stereo receiver. 200 stereo albums, Single $65 LP's. jm. Knit shirts, 1959 CIRTUS. 34 x 8. $1095. Just EAST LANSING. Comfortable per month, double and triple $45 -• '^O-ure- miscellaneous. size medi' -O^-cks, size 32, and .50 - $1.50. Cassette i Real Estate rooms across from MSU. apiece. Cooking and Thursday^rriday, Thursday ~i-r. , Saturday. 574 34. All /Sw sealed. Warren Poplars. John fcCHAM. Deluxe 2 or J man New laundry Stoddard. 3-5/15 MUNSINGWEAR 351-7219. 6-5/22 furniture and carpeting. Utilities facilities. Call Ward products at 50% OFF retail. 1 day cartridge players. >d ' apartments. Now leasing 351-7970, Reel to reel mer and Fall. Phone IV included. From $65. J.R. Culver evenings or Grady 337-2581 CHURCH GARAGE SALE. Clothing, only, Sunday, May 17, 1 to 5:30. recorders. Late model TV sets, CHESTERFIELD HILLS, East CHAMPION 10'x50' 2 Co. 351-8862. C-10-5/21 5-5-22 $2 $49.50, Clock radios, $5.95, Lansing, 339 Kensington Road: 4 baby items, dishes, toys, furniture cover applied toward purchase. up. furnished, $2,000. 6335 Park and Call 351-3228 for information. up. Electric shavers, $5.95, up. bedrooms, 2 baths, double garage, odds Mj) ends. 147 Lake Road, Lot 37, Bath, ONE GIRL beginning June 15th. ROOMS, STUDIO. Available 3-5/15 Adding machines. Typewriters. $30,000. Can assume mortgage at Lexingtor. C,Ojf Lansing. Behind Michigan. 5-5/18 Icampus view Own room, 12 - month lease. immediately. Close entrance. in. Private Brookfield Plaza Shopping Center. Movie cameras and projectors. Diamond 5 3/4%. 351-4740, 5-5/18 332-4949. 3-5/18 Parking. ■apartments 1-5-18 332-2947. Friday and Saturday, May 15th and MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS, brands, 30% off list price. Rich: All $19.95, up. engagement Watches, $3.95, sets, up. LIFE CAN be beautiful with great sporting goods you find in the OKEMOS, 2133 River 16th, 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. 2-5/15 >d, by ELSWORTH HOUSE has openings 337-0703. O Italian wall tapestries. Electric the Want Ads. Check now. ; the Street from for Fall term. Room and board MEN, SINGLES and double. Close. fans. Golf clubs. Polaroid cameras, BRIDAL GOWN and matching veil. pins Hall on Michigan only $200 per term. Call Quiet. Free parking. Call Worn for April wedding. Size OUR USED EQUIPMENT $5, up. Motorcycle helmets. ALMA 10'x50', 2 bedroom. Washer 14, | University approved - 332-3574. 5-5/18 332-3094. 3-5-20 DEPARTMENT IS LOADED: 6 Motorcycle jacket, Man's small. $75. 484-4193 after 6 for dryer, tool shed. Near MSU. Lrvised Housing for details. 3-5/18 p.m. month old Kenwood receiver 1967 650 Triumph scrambler 351-3224. 3-5-20 len students under 21. 3 BEDROOM Furnished, 2 baths MEN - WEEK, HALF, full term. TK-66; Empire turntable; Ampex pipes. Use your Michigan Bank Eng this * week for Fall $160. Phone 485-4917, 372-4747* Reasonable. Call 355-2923. 19-6-5 332-8635 • MATCHING BIRDS — eye maple music center; 2 Garrard Altec receiver and changers; Card or Master Charge at WILCOX SECONDHAND STORE, 509 1966 RICHARDSON, 12'x60'. Front $27,500,351-7621.2-5/18 Call Today: 3-5/18 end tables and round table, $15 many others. kitchen, 2 large bedrooms, n All units guaranteed. HI-FI East Michigan. 485-4391, 8 a.m. BARGAINS ARE always sprouting each. Cor- tion Zenith TV, BUYS. - furniture. Good location. Tra East Lansing. 3-5/18 5:30 p.m. O up in the Want Ads read them 332-6246 FURNISHED 3 and 4 bedroom cpV, Haven. 351-9513. 6-5/19 .. record . For Sale AM/FM radio, $50. everyday. houses. After 6 call, 332-0425 1 blond coffee table, 1 end table - 3-5/18 matching, $20. 489-0589 after 9 G.E. STEREO - p.m. 3-5/15 ■ ONE GIRL to sublet su AM-FM stereo, pli Own room. Close 355-5904. 3-5-20 351-1451.5-5/20 FLUTE AND piccolo, plus case, by EMPLOYMENT DUPLEX FOR rent. Okemos. 1 Armstrong. Excellent condition. bedroom. Stove, refrigerator and 355-5904. 3-5-20 ■, QUIET apartment. For ss couple. 5 minute drive carpeting. Like new. $160 including utilities. GLOBE STALLION, 1968, 7 horsepower SECRETARY With impus. 484-0497. 3-5/19 REALTY riding lawn - good COMPANY mower. 36" cut. of REALTORS. 337-1661 evenings. 4559 sense humor, plus proven East secretarial abilities. Ron Decker. 351-7401. 4-5/20 Professional staff. $6,000 to THREE MAN, 340-344 Evergreen. $7,000. Ph. 485-5481 All utilities, $105. Summer lease. KUSTOM P.A. 200 watts, 2 Bellinger Personnel. 332-1677. 1-5-18 old, 8-12" JBL's. Great cheap. 353-0293. 5-5-22 GENERAL OFFICE - Duties SUMMER. 3 bedroom furnished of a variety. Accurate typing. home. 2 blocks from campus. For PERCOLATOR, TOASTER, c Excellent working conditions 5 or 6 students. $50 silverware per month with liberal company IROOM, luxury Everything apiece. Utilities paid. Call Ward benefits. $380. Ph. 485-5481 couple preferred. Car Package deal. 351-3227 after 5 351-7970 evenings or Grady y. 393-2004. TF 337-2581. 5-5-22 p.m. 3-5-20 Bellinger Personnel. ' 3 ELECTRIC GUITAR. Perfect BEDROOM townhouse close to condition. Suitable for lead or elementary school. Reduced rent for summer. Available June 15th rhythm. Ask for Tom. 351-5481. 2-5-19 BELLINGER 332-8747. 3-5-20 12 STRING electric Goya guitar, PERSONNEL HOUSE FOR rent: Lansing - East side. Rangemaster. 1J4 years old, Furnished, 4 bedrooms. Clean. 1 year lease. June to June. specially imported from France. SERVICE Perfect condition. Original $450, Reduced rates for Summer. Call 372-5882. 3-5-20 asking $325. Amplifier included. Mary bklcinoer 5-5/21 I SUBLEASE: 2-3 man wimming pool, air Rooms QUALITY STEREO, Sansui 2000 Call 351-1946. 100 watt AUVvM, KLH model 485-5481 17's MEN, SINGLES, doubles, close. Gall>pV72B. Shure M91E, New in jJS. Cost $520 now only J Quiet, private entrance. 332-0939. $400. 353-7563. 3-5/18 5-5/18 ALPHA XI Delta /E St. Summer. 2 ment, No. 12. 351-4389 after bedroom available Breakfast for and sorority summer dinner served. rooms session. 10 Reduced Fall Rates fan. 5-5/18 $225, 520 weeks, 332-4659. 5-5/20 Linden, Ole Cedar Village [LOCATION. Grad students 12 month leases CAPITOL CLUB leasing summer, Fall. 351-9561 fall. Furnished, unfurnished. $240/month Starting $12. 484-4422. 17-6/5 $260/month |EST ONE and two bedroom $265/month Close to MEN 21 and Clean campus. over - quiet |9'0. Halstead Management rooms. Cooking and parking. New Cedar pv. 351-0705 . 0 Close, 485-8836. TF reasonable. 487-5753, Village " 12 month leases FALL houses and nents 2 blocks from $250/month SUNBATHE ON «. 351-6586. 5-5-22 $260/month PTELY FURNISHED 2 $270/month THE RED CEDAR... — 9 month leases are an additional when you live in $5 per person per month. |p Ml ufM bath. Utilities paid, V 5-1864. 3-5/18P or WATERS EDGE APTS. RIVERS EDGE APTS. SIX BIG REASONS... % 5^ •1 |CHAM. Need Pitmen,. $60 a month. Call |7« after 5:30 1 man for 3 p.m. 3-5/18 on the river, 1 block from campus, 2 Cedar V to wheel on over to State Management for luxurious fall living. All apartments wm bathrooms, balconies, Service? You bet! iv am See Don in Waters Edge feature air conditioning, patios (for sun loving people), excellent decor, and a price you Tf ■j•"'Ad p0R something find a to do . . . 332-4432 Ask the guy or girl who lives here can't afford to miss. After you've made the rounds to other mm par, . time summer rental $50 per man 332-5051 Bogue St. at the Red Cedar apartment buildings, circle fe|ac] on over to State Management. If^jOM-MADE BEST $ VALUE I10 FIT YOU! LEASES NOW BEING SIGNED FOR THE 1970 - 71 ACADEMIC YEAR. ■ latest styles - 15 to IN EAST LANSING W from. Made of finest V Pnme leather. SUMMER FALL ■"W to your foot will ' HASLETT ARMS DELTA ARMS EVERGREEN ARMS lrtalem the Eearj sandals most you'll $150 1 BEDROOM $185 1 BEDROOM what to do: $200 2 BEDROOM $230 2 BEDROOM • CEDARBROOKE ARMS • UNIVERSITY TERRACE • LOWEBROOKE ARMS .in between MODEL OPEN 3, 9, 12. MONTH LEASES May 18-26 on "'y lit «iu pav your $5 ntment" Up an State. rtoday; >ia" Shoe Repair (Jofate Apartments J, /fpafdmmt 6 Hcuiu^ement SpecuitfuU (Stixinaqem&rttGnptnatw// 444^afl r 332-407d4RiVer ^Campus Drupel Corner of Haslett Rd. and M-78 Contact Roger Taskey 351-3420 or Stan Guski 351-8160 12 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Monda? Real Estate Cigarettes OKEMOS BRICK 3-4 bedrooms, Rec Note reveals Board praises Wharton Eaton's Bond Corrjsj|l room, 6%%. Low 30's. 351-6632. 5-5/18 3/95c Typing asking the University to take FRANDOR NEAR. Older home, like inside. Pick (continued from page one) Referring specifically to the "murder and maiming of relationship of black nationalism to the white radical movement, (continued from page one) attention of stand on political issues," he Limit 1 49c new up 6K% innocent black students at the nature of demands and the faculty and students said. "I don't think a public (coupon) Limit l mortgage. $114.45 full monthly president of the college. be directed to finding ideas to institution is the place for this. I Jackson State College, as well as level of organizational East Lansing Store Only payment, less than $3,000 down. "The most profound efficiency deal with the Expires After 5-23-70 2 bedrooms. Phone the recent murder of six in the black student community problems of don't thing it's the position of ^PiresAfter 5.; 0niv | Lloyd sympathy of all of us is brothers in Augusta, Ga.," the and the future needs of the society. anyone within the University to Bergren, 484-9876 or Lee extended to the families of these black community. Miss Goldman, representing a take a stand on these things." Halstead, Inc. 372-8550. 3-5-20 statement continued: new victims as it was in the Kent coalition including SDS, the Mettala presented the board State deaths," Wharton stated. The executive EAST home, LANSING dining roor - "In keeping with the spirit of "The Jackson State College members incident is only one example of give the asked black students to council Weathermen, Young Socialist's Alliance and Socialist Democrats with more than 1,100 signatures on petitions supporting the right wMake Up 2 fireplaces, 2-car universal brotherhood of all meeting priority over among others, said the room. Near campus. Phone garage. Hahn students, faculty and officials, a continuing process of the other commitments. University should set up a of students to attend without intimidation. classes Mirror w/stand Rubber Bands institutionalized repression of Agency, Inc., 484-7002. 3-5-20 the flags at Michigan State will "We "radical curriculum" to deal black people and coincides with do not feel that it is "I will not be prepared to fly at halfstaff for five days as a mark of concern and respect our commemoration of the mandatory to demand that the with the strike issues. "If we don't, I'm just going to out into the public to educate go 89c 39' Service for those who died at Jackson martyrdom of our beloved University suspend classes for have to sit in the strike office for unless I have my degree. I want Limit 1 Brother Malcolm X, who fell in Tuesday afternoon, but we feel to be educated in the (coupon) Limit 1 State. 24 hours a day and answer way I East Lansing Store Only PROFESSIONAL PAINTING. the struggle for justice for black the need for the University to Interior and exterior. 351-2436 for estimate. 10-5/26 Call "We redouble our appeal for sanity and reason on all people." reflect some degree of sympathy telephones," she said. "I don't added. for the situation," the statement want to shut the University originally signed up to be," he Expires After 5-23-70 .•SiisBBa. campuses, and we ask the read. down, but we do have to ASMSU chairman Buckner GUITAR LESSONSS. Private, Rock, Michigan State community to Lamarr Thomas, executive council member of the Front, rechannel. There are lots of ways told the trustees the strike is a 30% off the Folk, Semi - Classic. MARSHALL The Front also continue to set an example of announced a we can educate people." success because "more people MUSIC C-5-18 COMPANY, 351-7830. how important issues can be announced a mass meeting for all members of the MSU black scheduled for "revolutionary - cultural event" Mettala, representing the than ever have been educated on retail price on Sparklers pursued without resorting to Tuesday night at 8 Michigan Students' Assn. and the demands." However, he said community Tuesday at 1 p.m. in o'clock. They said the PROFESSIONAL SUEDE and threats to life," he said. place Students for Rational Action, ASMSU will withdraw its leather cleaning and refinishing BLF's statement condemned 108B Wells Hall. would be announced afternoon and in Tuesday two antistrike groups, said the support of the strike, if the all - Polaroid sunglasses service. Now being offered at the "all acts of murder perpetrated Thomas said the purpose of Tuesday's "It's University should not take a University referendum does not What's OKEMOS DRV CLEANERS, by the repressive, racist the meeting would be to deal Happening" column in stand on the strike issues. indicate support for the 2155 Hamilton Rd„ 332-0611. authorities of this the State News. "The strikers demands. HOME country." with issues such as the are basically OF THE PROFESSIONALS. O Miss Sullivan criticized the channels in the University for life WHAT'S, its wnni i DRESSMAKING, ALTERATIONS, formals. Experienced. Reasonable Results withheld their ineffectiveness "responding to pressing issues." in Trial Size Cheer MNG charge. Call 355-1040. 2-5/29 PLANT A Want Ad today and (continued from page one) Student - Faculty Judiciary, said that the judiciary requested that She pointed out that even in 40,000 people agreed on a goal, Laundry Detergent Opaque control In it grow into results. Dial 355-8255 to plant your Want Ad. defense." the common results of the referendum be it would take three months to a minimum of Knee Son withheld indefinitely. He said implement that $1.00 „ service Advisory Committee are The statement of Lawrence and Miss Goldman begins, "We the students making the charges goal. "If you don't give students 7 oz. |0C 69' charge per must file a formal request that a a Typing Service insertion - to be available in 205 Berkey and will be pre-paid. 12 available through Wednesday, May the undersigned, believe that this hearing on the matter be held chance to use the channels, Limit 3 printing, clearly a political they're going to go out to the (coupon) (coupon) p.m. deadline 1 class day before. 20- before an injunction can be East Lansing Store Only ANN BROWN: Typing and multilith advertisment, although neither streets," Miss Sullivan predicted. Expires After 5-23-70 store 0l,|y offset printing. Complete service issued. -xplres A«er 5-23.70 Mixer specified as such nor signed, for dissertations, featuring Francis X and the STUDENTS FOR HART will meet 9 constitutes thesis, an immediate and manuscripts, general typing. IBM. Bushmen, 9 - 12, Saturday, Wonders p.m. tomorrow night, Rm. 34, 1.79 20 years experience. 332-8384. C Hall. $.50 donation. Union. Plans will be made for a voter irreparable infringement on student rights as defined in registration drive further information on Saturday. For call Sue or Article 1 of the Academic Perfect Fit Ugly Duckling CLIFF & PAULA HAUGHEY Attention all students advised in the Freedom Report." George, 351-1465. Professional Thesis Preparation For Master's & Doctoral BOA Dept: Important election. Vote for the students who will represent Sailing Club will m The reasons statement for their charge. The lists four Panty Hose Panty Hose Candidates. Professional Thesis you on the BOA Teaching and night, the Club's site. Lake Lansing, first is that Typing, Multilith Printing and Hard Binding. Free Brochure and Advisory Committee. The election will be held May 20, 21. Ballots will 7:30 p.m. All members are urged to referendum, with a question the ASMSU $119 99' attend, as we will be forming work Estimates. Call 337-1527. C be available on these days from the concerning the role of ROTC on Limit 6 Limit 6 departmental secretaries in Rm 215 campus, was held the same day (coupon) (coupon) follow the meeting, with juice East Lansing Store Only Typewriter Eppley Center. cookies being served. as the printing of the .Expires After 5-23-70 Repair advertisement. (Electrics) The second reason is that Foreign <6 Domestic -»:15 p.m. President Wharton's statement in Fairchild - IM, Sports Arena. Elimination 12 issued earlier in that week, that Campus Book Store Theater. Zolton Ferency, Democratic across from Louis E. May Sr. Union noon. Finals and Demonstration, 7:30 p.m. MSU Karate Club's 4th Candidate for Governor will speak on the results of the referendum Virginia Maid Burlington Ballet ED 2-0877 "Environmental Football: 4 downs would be decisive in the annual Karate Tournament. and goa, for ecopolitics." formulation of future Panty Hose Panty Hose administration policy, would A Pentecostal meeting will be held A benefit for the Draft Information Center will be held Sunday, 3 p.m. tonight, 7:30 p.m., Union Ballroom. All students of all denominations are "constitute prejudice extraordinary under the present $|39 TYPING: TERM papers and theses. Featuring Plain Brown Wrapper, Limit 6 invited. conditions." Electric typewriter. Fast service Virgin Dawn and Universal Family. (coupon) Call 332-4597. 5-5-22 Concert wilt be at the city park The third reason is that the East Lansing Store Only Kiva Players presents "A Funny Expires After 5-23-70 behind the fast Lansing Bus Depot, ambiguous status of the TERM Thing Happened on the Way to the advertisement, as well as printing PAPERS, dissertations, etc. Experienced. Electric typewriter. Grandmothers. A donation of $1 will Forum," May 22, 23 8 p.m., King's statement, "will Call Karen, 882-2639. 0-5-18 be McDonel Kiva. asked, to help the draft center irreparably prejudice and harm TYPING cover operating expenses. Lansing area members of Mortar the accurancy of the outcome of Women's Arrid Extra SERVICE in my East Board Alumnae are invited to attend today's referendum with regard A Pentecostal meeting will be held Lansing home. Phone 332-3306 0-5-18 Monday, 7:30 p.m.. Union Ballroom. All students of all denominations are the initiation of new undergraduate Mortar Board memberi at 10 a.m., to the ROTC issue." The students also said that an Foot Sox Dry Deodorant Saturday, May 23, 106 Kellogg illegal distribution of unsigned TYPING. TERM papers, letters, etc. Rapid, accurate service. Center. Following this will be a business meeting and, at 11:30, the pamphlets about ROTC in the 19' '«• 49' Experienced. 393-4075. 5-5-22 The Gay , Liberation residence halls could have annual luncheon in the MSU invites its members to a grasser - Kellogg influenced the voters. Center Centennial Room. ACCURATE TYPING: term papers, type picnic this Sunday, 1 p.m. Any Fred woman who has been initiated into Leslie, advertising etc. Experienced. 332-6341 after Refreshments and music will be an active chapter of Mortar Board, manager for the State News, 5:30 p.m. 1-5-18 provided. Bring your own picnic defended the printing of the basket. Donation $1.00. For advertisement on the grounds WHEN IT'S Spring - a - ling - ling, it's time to give Want Ads a ring - a - information call 355-6238, between 1 -4 p.m. or 7 - 10 p.m. t member, is eligible for membership in the Lansing - East Lansing Alumnae that it is not a political Scotties Calypso 20C off the chapter. Those eligible may contact advertisement. ling - ling. Call 355-8255. The organization of Arab Students of Miss Beth Benson, 919 Vine, (484-6439 Lansing He added that all political Colors Tissue discount price in | MSU will hold its Arabian Night on or 355-7542) by advertisements are attributed if COMPLETE THESIS Service. Saturday, 7:30 p.m., VFW Hall, 2108 Wednesday to make luncheon they are indeed political, as is Discount Printing. IBM typing and N. Cedar St., Holt, Arabian Food, reservations. specified in the "Publication 200s any hair spray binding of thesis, publications. Across from campus, resumes, music and dances. Tickets $5 per person, for tickets call 353-6800. Prof. Collins, Pol. Sci. will speak at a Laws for Newspapers for the 2 ply 24c corner MAC and Grand River, meeting tonight to elicit support and State of Michigan." Phone 351-3180 world's finest bridal salons Limit 1 below Style membership for the movement for a Scott Ames, Grand Ledge 4960 northwind drive (coupon) Shop. Call Make sure your weekend includes • east lansing East Lansing Store Only COPYGRAPH SERVICES South New Congress, 8 p.m.. Union. senior and chairman of the Across from Coral Gables Complex's production of 337-1666. C Archibald Macleish's poetic drama, "J.B." A must for all theatre lovers. Attention all students whose major BARB I MEL: Typing, multilithing. Tonight and tomorrow. Wonders department or program is in the No job too large or too small. Block off campus. 332-3255. C Kiva, 8:30 p.m. sharp. Available tickets at the door, Marshall's, State Discount and Campbell's. College of Social Science: Do you want to have a greater voice in academic government? Petitions for Yardley Lipstick My Own Feminine | NEED SPACE in your closets? A The next year's all - College Student Deodorant Spray Want Ad will find a buyer for Advisory Committee are now available in 205 Berkey Hall, and will your 355-8255. "DON'T NEEDS." Dial Professional Educators of Peace will meet Sunday, 7 p.m., Rm 222 be available through Wednesday. 99c ,.5 0*. 99c Erickson Hall. Actions that can be Attention all students advised in the Limit 1 taken by educators to end the war(s) BOA Dept.: Important election. Vote (coupon) will be discussed. Transportation for the students who will represent East Lansing Store Only Expires After 5-23-70 Kiva you on the BOA Teaching & Players present a musical BUFFALO: SHARE flying expenses. comedy play, "A Funny Thing Advisory Committee. The will be held May 20, 21. Ballots will Accommodate two. May 23/24. 355-6133. 3-5/18 Happened on the Way to the Forum," May 15, 16, 22, 23, 8 p.m., be available on these days from the 20( off the McDonel Kiva. departmental secretaries, Rm. 215, Maybelline EVERYTHING IS coming up dollars for you when you place a Want Eppley Center. Ultra Lash discount price Beta lota Chapter of Epsilon Sigma The follow'nfl Free U classes will Ad. Call 355-8255 today. Alpha Service Sorority will hold tonight: Man, Morals on any Suntan Lot*1 book sale this Friday and Saturday at Meridian Mall. Hours will be the same Medicine, 7 p.m., Contemporary Poetry and Music, 302 Bessey 65c Wanted as the Mall's hours. On sale will be p.m., 522 Sunrise St., Knitting, Limit 1 Limit 1 p.m., Snyder Hall Upper Lounge; (coupon) (coupon) many paper back books, novels, East Lansing Store Only East Lansing Store Or children's books and some school Anarchistic Movement, 7 p.m., 301 Expires After 5-23-70 Expires Aft " BLOOD DONORS Needed. $7.50 for Bessey; Woodcutting, 104 Bessey. all positive. A negative, B negative and AB negative, $10.00. O All Academic Council and Steering Scott Paper Towels Hillel Foundation will have a buffet negative, $12.00. MICHIGAN Committee members: Here are the COMMUNITY BLOOD CENTER, supper, Sunday, 6 p.m., 319 Hillcrest channelsl Call the Academic Council 50754 East corner W. Grand River. Rev. Roben Grand River, East Student Members — Terry Sullivan Lansing. Above the new Campus C. Gardner, Chaplain to Episcopal 355-7192 or Dave Snyder 337-1721. Book Store. Hours: 9 a.m. to 3:30 students at MSU will lead discussion p.m. Monday, Wednesday and Friday. Tuesday and Thursday, 12 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. 337-7183. C on "Agnew's Jeremiahs" evaluation of student unrest. Sabbath services Saturday 10 a.m. followed a moral KADEMA discussion will have an tonight, 7:30 p.m., M-A Room, Brody Hall. D. Millin will open 32' by Kiddush. make the opening remarks. The topic will be "Is the Mideast becoming ONE GIRL to sublease Fall term at SAAC (Student Academic Advisory Russian's Vietnam?" Twyckingham. Call 353-6286 Expires After 5-23-70 1-5-18 Committee) of the Multi Disciplinary Program of the College Student Lobby Against the War will of Social Science wishes to announce meet tonight, 7 p.m. Mason Lobby. WANTED: ANYONE teaching or that petitioning for teats on next We will discuss the formation of a thinking of teaching in Atlanta year's SAAC will be open today. student lobby to talk to Michigan this fall. 351-8388. 3-5/19 Petitions are available at the main State representatives and senators. CHANNEL 1 STUDENT CONSUMER SERVICE I desk in the MDP office (where the academic advisers are) on the second floor of Linton Hall. Y'all come. Topics to be discussed for Jackie campus unrest, and others. Vaughn's are peace support political oppression bill, State Discount Also, issue two of the groovey SAAC Moo.-Fri. 3-5pm newsletter (announcing results of the MSU Folklore Society will meet vote, among other thing*) is available today at the main desk (probably tonight, 7:30 p.m.. The Joint, 307 E. Grand River 355-8302 right next to the petitions, in fact.) basement of Student Services. interested persons are welcome. All