Absence < . . Friday of thought" is the MICHIGAN Cloudy . STATE NEWS "Absence of action" is STATE ■ . 75 to 80 . and cooler with degrees. a high of UNIVERSITY j 63 Number 48 East Lansing, Michigan Friday, August 28, 1970 ..jt: Cm5 Final campus unrest report recommends a tough line' By JEFFSHELER • State News Staff Writer Campuses are not to be considered sanctuaries for lawbreakers. agreement with their students, and vice However, the report concludes that A special committee • There is a need for tougher presidents versa. "such organizations investigating campus • The purpose of as SDS" are disorders in Michigan released its at institutions of higher education must "sophisticated" revolutionary groups that final higher education. report be defined. "aided by the reluctance of the Thursday recommending that a • The problem of university autonomy are "tougher line" be taken against student needs to be "redebated" and Huber cited an advisory report on academic community" to finally accept their dissidents and college presidents in an resolved. campus unrest, compiled by a private subversive nature. effort to crack down on • Schools organization and published last spring, that campus turmoil. must maintain their The 51-page report, which cost contained statistical information responsibility to the state. "proving" approximately $59,000 in state funds to • There is that student newspapers "do not reflect (please turn to page 11) an organized revolutionary the opinion of the majority of students." produce, was the product of a 20-month movement on the campuses that is being "Student newspapers give the extremist investigation by U.S. deaths a Special Senate aided by state funds and facilities. Committee to Investigate • students the opportunity to Colleges and Subsidies to student newspapers should promote their Universities, headed by State Sen. Robert be discontinued. own philosophies," Huber said. J. Huber, R-Troy. • The lack of communication between The final report included results of a Huber explained to newsmen what the legislature and the survey that showed only 17 per cent of the he schools, as well as considered the key points to result from the study: within the schools, must be resolved. • Schools must maintain a contractual students at Wayne State University Law School felt the student paper, The South in Viet war End, "was well written." "This poses the interesting question of whether or not the notion of GOP SPLINTER a university as an arena for free thought and discussion is valid in terms of the expressions of the hit new low campus newspapers," the report states. SAIGON In presenting the report, Huber said that (AP) — The U.S. Command Conservatives student bodies "want tougher who will keep order on the He cited Hillsdale presidents" campuses. announced Thursday the lowest American battle losses in Vietnam in nearly 4! years. The command reported 52 Americans . College President J. were killed and 358 wounded last week, Donald Phillips example of a "tough" file as an reflecting a general slackening in the president. os separate "Dr. Phillips has done a good job openly stating the rules of operation for the student body so they know what is fighting. It said 33 others died of nonhostile causes. The toll may rise next week when State conservatives who met at New casualties from a disastrous helicopter loss new party as a source of leverage to be used expected," Huber said. Buffalo last weekend banded together at the state Republican convention in However, he would not name university are incorporated in the next report. Detroit this weekend. The combined total last week of 410 Thursday and filed with the state as the presidents whom he thought were not Conservative party of Conservative Republicans hope to gain Americans killed or wounded marked the Michigan. doing an adequate job. lowest one- week toll since the first week Sen. Robert J. Huber, a conservative concessions from the GOP, possibly in the "I don't think that this is within the form of a candidacy offer to Huber. of March 1966. In that week there were 61 Republican from Troy who was a leader at Huber reports the New Buffalo meeting, told newsmen Conservatives at the meeting in New scope of the committee report," Huber said. U.S. servicemen killed and 177 wounded for a total of 238. Thursday that "there is no room in the Buffalo, some of whom were Republicans While the report includes a section on the Sen. Robert Huber of The low casualty count was announced a Troy released Thursday the final report of Republican party for conservatives." and others members of the American Students for a Democratic Society and the Huber said he did not expect the few hours after Vite President Spiro T. his committee studying unrest in the state. The 51-page report was party to Independent party, demanded that the New Left and black movements, it does run candidates for office in the November Republican party give them a greater voice not go into specifics Agnew arrived in Saigon on the third stop compiled at a cost of $59,000 in state funds. Huber also discussed the election and excluded himself as a in the party due to the strong conservative on the groups. of his fast - paced Asian tour. possible "It was not the function of this Agnew met formation of the Michigan Conservative party at the Thursday news Conservative candidate. with South Vietnamese leaders, reassuring showing in the August primary election. investigation to act like the FBI and make conference. State News photo by Dick Warren Observers view the move to create the In that election Huber was narrowly an extensive them of American support despite the U.S. study of these organizations," defeated in a bid for the Republican Huber said. troop pullout. senatorial nomination by Lenore Romney, The low U.S. casualty count was UN 'SALE' CONTROVERSY wife of Housing and Urban Development Sec. George Romney. accompanied by from the South a similar announcement Vietnamese military Huber, who said he doubts if he will Final edition command. attend the state convention, said he and Overall the U.S. summary said 43,418 Vatican Today is the last day of State News assails the conservative party "will be Americans have been killed in action since watching to what publication for the summer. The State January 1961, another 8,425 have died of see happens in Detroit with great interest." News will resume publication Sept. 24. nonhostile causes and 287,216 have been wounded. ONDON (AP) — A Roman Catholic as "the seamy side of the vocations crisis." Kerala, together with a few Indian priests, «paper in Britain said Thursday that O'Grady went on: The good intentions hit on the idea of sending poor Indian girls s recruited in of the organizers may be India turned to credited, but that for nurse training in Germany. It is Btitution after fleeing Catholic nursing does not mean that what they have been calculated that well over 1,000 girls have mes in Germany to escape stern doing can escape grave criticism .. . gone to Germany under this scheme." cipline and drudgery, "In 1963, some German missionaries in (please turn to page 11) coincided with the publication by a ican magazine of four pages of pictures I interviews to counter what it called an "worthy and scandalistic campaign" by wspapers about ndia. alleged nun - purchasing Two Detroit suburbs Vatican's L'Osservatore della raenica two days to delayed its regular publication fcan prelates called bring out the section which a "documented" under nighttime curfew ense against press reports of alleged ®c in Indian nuns by West European ROYAL OAK (UPI) A dusk - to - dawn neighboring shopping center. They taunted (vents. curfew in two of Detroit's northern police, hurled rocks at cars and broke store to story suburbs Thursday closed "the strip" to windows. began making headlines four 's ago when the London Sunday Times thousands of teen - agers who clashed with They were met by charging police who dared that police for the past three nights after a park made more than 600 arrests in three nights. European convents short of The violence spread into neighboring "ww had they gathered in had been closed. "bought" more than 1,200 "an girls for $600 to $700 each. Memorial Park, at 13 Mile Road and Birmingham Wednesday night and a 7 p.m. " a Woodward Avenue — "The Strip" for to 5 a.m. curfew was imposed in both long dispatch from Rome, the communities. Wets suburban teen agers — was closed Monday correspondent, Desmond O'Grady, - The possibility of asking Gov. Milliken to plained why Western convents and night because of parties and widespread declare a state of emergency in southern fjtals take girls from impoverished drug use. That action set off ™a; too confrontations between police and several Oakland County if the trouble spread was few Western girls entering Curfeiv are thousand youngsters, all white and mostly being considered. A state of emergency jjents W these days. could result in the Michigan National girls who used to take orders in from well - to - do homes. venb Guard being called in to maintain order. are now The first two nights saw the skirmishing More than 400 youths violated dusk to taking dictation in Birmingham Mayor Ruth McNamee said dawn curfews at the boundary line of suburban Royal Oak and j®®. O'Grady wrote, between police and the young people Birmingham Wednesday night in the third consecutive day of police - youth conflicts. More than 500 have been described the alleged "nun - running" concentrated in an area near the park and a (please turn to page 11) arrested in the three days of violence. AP Wirephoto MSU By DAVE SHORT stocks which the University must maintain in valued Tampa Electric Co. (15,288); Houghton Treasury Bonds valued at $625,500 and a at m State News Staff Mifflin Co. (14,475); Montana Power Co. Security National Bank of Los Angeles; Writer principle forever; it can only use the $370,000 certificate of deposit from the Household Finance; Celanese Corp. of income from the holdings. (14,190); Purex Co., Ltd. (12,625); the Michigan National Bank. America; Southern Calfornia Edison; The University can use the principle in Chubb ^ °wns bonds, stocks and preferred addition to the income from the holdings Corp. (12,018); Telephone and Telegraph Co. (11,605); American The University also owns either stock, bonds, or preferred stock in the following Indiana Bell Telephone; Virginia Railway; ti'i°m ng as endowment gift funds, funds that come from funds functioning as Beech Aircraft (11,445) and the Detroit companies: Ralston Purina; Massachusetts Commercial Credit; Public Service Electric endowments, annuity and endowments. The annuity and life income Edison Co. (10,200). and Gas; Sears and Roebuck; Southern Investment Trust; Lone Star Cement; tan fur>ds and retirement and funds represent part of funds payable by a In preferred stocks, the University owns Standard Oil; Central and Southwest Corp.; California Steel; Pennsylvania Bell tunds, valued at more than $25 Telephone; Bethlehem Steel; Associate person over a specified time. signficant shares in Textron Inc. (8,230 Mobil Oil; Hanes Corp.; McLouth Steel; Investment; Chase Manhattan Through the retirement and insurance Bank; !°ut $16 million of the $25 million fund holdings, the University has the shares); Sherwin - Williams Co. (1,090), and the Washington Gas Light Co. (1,000). Pacific Gas and Electric; Consumers Power Co.; Dayton Power and Light; Kraftco; Alberta Municipal Finance; Continental *nJ«?resents h°Mngs from the mortgage on the Reid Corp. and a Howard MSU has large investments in corporate McGraw Edison; Conill; First National Oil; International Harvester; International - Bank -l1C* insurance »ersity maintains for funds that the employes who are — Johnson chain on Grand River Avenue in bonds through such companies as United Bank of Boston; General Tire and Rubber; Development; for Reconstruction Metropolitan and Toronto; Detroit. States Steel ($938,000); General Motors NLT Corp.; Dow Chemical; John Deere jdJJ thc regular MSU "retirement The largest amount of common stock Acceptance Corp. ($604,000); American Co.; Magnavox; Scott Paper; General Michigan Bell Telephone; Missouri Pacific; Montgomery Ward; Pacific Telephone and that the University owns is 48,061 shares £iv.ersity buys such stocks for these in the Detroit Bank and Trust Co. common Telephone and Telegraph ($615,000), and the Ford Motor Credit Co. ($460,000). Foods; Republic Steel; Texas Instruments; Eastman Kodak; American Bank and Trust; Telegraph; Potomac Edison; Providence of t Dav y ^king out five per cent of trust fund no. 2. MSU also maintains bonds valued the Aluminum Co. of America; Farm Ontario; Quebec Hydro El"ctric Stmpnt ° C't8 ant* Putting it toward would receive $3,000 a year for the rest of MSU also has a substantial number of $2,225,000 with the Federal National at Commission; Shell Oil; Union n;' " ■> of Bureau Services; Mosman Industries; Ie J^oney. If the employe works lin tu. California and the# Southwestern Bell University until «««> fifi he then "S.- '««<>',o MSU shares in the Harsco Corp. (19,950 shares): Mortgage Assn. It also has United States Cherry Growers, Inc.; Southern Pacific; Telephone Co. 2 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Threats of party split mar plans for GOP convention and Gov. Milliken remains aimed at a number of points on attend the convention but will By JEFFSHELER apparently unresolved despite the ®8enda at the convention. watch "with gieat interest." State News Staff Writer several meetings between the Attempts will likely be made Meanwhile, some 1,300 two aimed at ironing out some to secure conservative planks in delegates must elect candidates bone t utting differences. - the party's platform, especially to round out the party's ticket. The focal point of Michigan in the area of campus unrest in But few real contests appear to Huber. who made a strong the wake of Huber's special politics this weekend will be in be shaping up. "Student newspapers give the Detroit as a fractured showing against Republican committee report released Milliken has already selected extremist students the Republican party attempts to senatorial candidate Lenore Thursday. James Brickley of Detroit as his hold its state convention and Romney in the August primary. But a major effort Is hand .■ picked „„ candidate for opportunity to promote their own Mllll philosophies." emerge with some semblance of has demanded a greater voice for anticipated to the conservative coerce party lieutenant governor. party unity. wing in the moderates and liberals into The governor has also made - State Sen. Robert J. Huber, Republican party. naming a conservative - namely known his preference for Grand Party leaders will have their R-Troy hands full trying to prevent the Milliken said this week that he Huber —to a position on the Rapids attorney William S. Farr conservative wing, led by State does not intend make state ticket. for the attorney general Sen. Robert J. Huber of Troy, concessions party's Huber, however, laughed nomination. Also running for from bolting the party and conservatives who, he said, are Thursday when he was asked asked if if that that spot is Roger Kidston of state he a candidate for the GOP Kalamazoo. running a separate campaign as a not representative of was *- ■ newly formed Conservative Republicans. nomination for secretary of However, the contest for the party of Michigan. Efforts by the conservatives to state. secretary of state spot is left A running feud between Huber assert their influence could be He said he does not plan to undecided as State Sen. Emil Lockwood of Elm Hall and State Rep. Weldon O. Yeager of Detroit have announced their SERVING IN VISTA candidacy. International News The only announced candidates for the two MSU Visits Viets MSU grad fo Hanoi's chief delegate to the Paris peace talks did not Board of Trustees positions are David Diehl of Lansing and show up for Thursday's session but left it up to his Richard Ernst of Grand Rapids. Vice President Agnew crosses his heart with his hand deputy to accuse Vice President Agnew of pushing for a Candidates for the party's two salute to flags in ceremonies at Saigon's Independence military victory in Vietnam. has been terrific, and local The City of Manchester has nonpartisan nominations to the Palace Thursday. At left is South Vietnamese Vice Nguyne Minh Vy accused Agnew of trying "to arouse people seem eager to help the greeted the weekly Manchester state Supreme Court President Nguyen Cao Ky. Agnew arrived in South Vietnam chauvinism in the UnitedStates." staff. with enthusiasm, but the Union incumbent Justice John Dethmers and Detroit Judge Thursday for his second visit of the year. The North Vietnamese delegation again renewed its Although the Manchester has Leader has not, Miss Patterson Edward Piggins. AP Wirephoto demand that the United States withdraw its troops from MANCHESTER. N.Y. - few "professional" journalists, said. The large daily sees the 13 - VISTA (Volunteers In Service the reporting is objective and page tabloid as a threat — South Vietnam before serious talks can begin. To America) is people helping appears to be what the people of possibly to their monopoly over others help themselves. Marilyn Manchester want. Street sales and statewide opinion and, AGNEW IN SAIGON North Vietnam said Thursday that between Aug. 5, Patterson, former State News advertising income enabled the astonishingly, a threat to their 1964, and Nov. 1, 1968, its armed forces and militiamen Staff writer working here on the slaff to finance the entire second circulation of more than 63,000, had airmen. "wiped out or captured" more than 1,000 U.S. federal program, finds herself doing just that in her job as city editor of a new newspaper for issue. As reporters now start seeking stories for the third issue, more than half of the costs she said. If the Manchester can survive the winter months when street War situation reviewed Hanoi's official Vietnam News Agency said in a the city. are covered. sales are low, it will probably SAIGON (AP) — Vice President Spiro T. visit Cambodia, informed sources in Phnom.. broadcast monitored in Tokyo that the men included The townspeople, very much The popularity of The carry on for some time. In Its Agnew received an optimistic war report from said he would arrive late this morning and wo U.S. Air Force"aces and would - be astronauts." in favor of the program, as Manchester can be explained by first two issues, the Manchester U.S. and South Vietnamese officials Thursday have lunch with Premier Lon Nol and ot indicated by the circulation of its reporting techniques and sold more copies through street while Cambodian leaders prepared to greet him Cambodian leaders before heading for Thaila nearly 4,000, appear to find the coverage of topics that the sales than by any other method, in Phnom Penh with pleas for more U.S. aid. last stop on his week • long Asian trip. liberal Manchester weekly a Union Leader finds "in their When the weekly is well Agnew reviewed the entire range of military, While Agnew was meeting with the leaders desirable supplement to the far - best interests" not to report, established, with local people political and economic problems throughout South Vietnam, Premier Thanom Kittikachi right daily coverage of the Miss Patterson said. doing reporting assignments on Southeast Asia in private mettings with President disclosed in Bangkok that Thailand wants National News Manchester Union Leader. The The weekly has provided their own, VISTA volunteers Nhuyen Van Thieu, Vice President Nhuyen Cao withdraw "as many as possible" of its 12, Union Leader is influential information about the draft will leave. Miss Patterson said Ky and U.S. Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker. troops in Vietnam. throughout the state because it pollution of the Merrimack she is optimistic that the Even before the briefings, Agnew told But Thanom said the decision was not rela The Labor Dept. added Thursday seven major cities, is the only morning daily. R>ver, unnecessary police Manchester will survive and that newsmen that the success of the Cambodian to the recent U.S. Senate vote to curb the e including the nation's auto production center of Miss Patterson, Manchester harrassment of young people before her year in VISTA is venture means U.S. troop withdrawals can allowances given Thai, Korean and Filip Detroit, to its list of cities with "substantial city editor, says she does "a and an explanation of a tenant over, she will be on another proceed on schedule. The program calls for U.S. forces in Vietnam but rather reflected the n little bit of everything." She rent strike accompanied by a assignment, looking on from the unemployment." forces in Vietnam to be reduced to 284,000 men to post "battle - tested" troops to protect The announcement brings to 31 the number of large enjoys the challenge of the m|ld expose of a landlord, she outside at the Manchester's by next April. frontiers against a worsening situation community focus that the said. mounting success. While Agnew denied again that he planned to and Cambodia. cities in the "substantial" category with a six to eight Manchester has, contrasted with and nine - tenths per cent of the labor force out of the campus reporting of the work, the highest total of cities in nearly six years. State News. Peace force plans denied The nation's overall jobless rate is five per cent, the Miss Patterson said the response highest in five years. Secretary of Transportation John A. Volpe told Fun to Spare Congress Thursday that SST development must be kept only for looking at "the GO BOWLING SAN CLEMENTE, Calif. (AP) Alexei N. Kosygin: "It is our 18 letter to Kosygin replying to the Mideast came up in going partly to prove whether it "can be operated range of possibilities that — The Western White House said shared obligation to continue at one of Aug. 1 on the occasion of background briefing for Western without harm to the atmosphere or danger to ourearth." and broadcast executives. develop for the Middle East. Thursday there is no plan for all times our common efforts to the 25th anniversary of the news At the same time Volpe and his top aides stressed joining Russia in a peace - preserve and strengthen Potsdam Agreement that Presidential press secretary- While Ziegler kept emphasi there is no evidence to support contentions that the keeping force in the Middle East international peace and justice." established the pattern for the Ronald L. Ziegler told newsmen that this is a time for supersonic transport will alter the stratosphere, drop the and no plan for pursuing the • The two position statements postwar political structure in that the United States had not diplomacy, the possibility world's temperatures or reduce ozone which protects idea. were unrelated except in Europe. discussed the peace - policing joint peacekeeping endeavo: the earth from ultraviolet radiation. It also revealed that President coincidence. The possibility of a U.S. - force idea with the Soviet Union the Israeli - Arab world was Nixon has told Soviet Premier Nixon's words were in an Aug. Soviet peace - policing force for or any other government. The highlight of the briefing fori background sessions, he said, media representatives. A tense confrontation between police and was not designed for putting PARENTS VISITING? demonstrators occurred in front of a courthouse in New forward any new initiatives — Ziegler said Nixon was disturbed by the splash play Haven, Conn., Thursday after a Superior Court jury story got, saying that the pe wound up its second day of deliberations without a keeping force merely figure verdict in the trial of Black Panther Lennie McLucas. There's only one place they can stay and still part of a broad discussion of State police took several persons into custody on the Complete line of Brunswick equipment be in the center of campus activity. Reserve ONE Middle East, and did courthouse steps when scuffles broke out and. assisted in stock them a room at represent an American initia by local police, pushed the crowd of about 100 back HOUR Nixon's concentra across the street onto the New Haven Green. HOLIDAY Thursday was on dom SERVICE affairs. He presided as cl Eleven Marines were injured in a brawl outside a barracks in the Marine Corps recruit depot in San Diego LANES KELLOGG at the meeting of the Council, discussions which from Dom contii Open 9 a.m. Daily lia shortly before midnight Wednesday. meetings on the administrat e)y The brawl between black and white recruits began Just North of CENTER ideas for sharing federal f contact* when several whites began throwing rocks and bottles at blacks outside the gates. Frandor Billiards • • 487-3731 Cocktails On the campus at MSU Color TV in Every Room Corner of Harrison & Michigan LOUIS CLEANERS with state governments. He important meeting, did not take up and said it w althouj specific Air Conditioned Good Food Reservations 332-6571 623 E. GRAND RIVER programs. Michigan News The State Public Health Dept. said Thursday it has mailed applications offering state funds to every grower in the state who employs migrant workers. Norman Papsdorf, chief of the migrant worker unit, It's the Ladies said the state has S500,000 for the construction grants to growers whose proposed camp development plans win health department approval. Under the plan, which was initiated two months ago, real thing Dinner Only 5 to 10:30 p.m. the state will pay half the total construction cost up to a maximum of S5.000 per project for camp construction meeting state standards. Coke. SPECIAL COCKTAIL HOUR 3 to 6 p.m. One Price For All Cocktails Weightwatchers Businessmen's Menu Luncheon Campus News FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover said Thursday that keeping order as college campuses open across the nation this fall "rests squarely with college administrators." Writing in the September issue of the FBI's Law Enforcement Bulletin, Hoover said: Outside Let not the issues of student conduct be clouded by Catering philosophical mouthings of self - determination, cries of repression or claims of attack against intellectual freedom. "College administrators," he said, "must rise to face i. IV 2-6233 Free Parking the issues honestly ..." Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, August 28. 1970 3 U-M ies black enrollment By JOHN BORGER Staff Writer "There's been S?"^rlT nationwide black "W "P '» 'ncre,M agreement included Vice "continual barrage" of why this goal either be News trend to enrollment," Spurr said. President Spiro Agnew, who may years, under the Opportunity and accept our goal ..... U-M s publicity attempting to clarify exceeded or not met. Our experimentation v.„ agreement to seek called it a "callow retreat from Award Program (OAP), to L] per cent black enrollment quota"!,e said. "We have not higher the matter. The publicity — continuing, ™ minority enrollment reality experience shows that almost 90 develop adequate criteria for University included ^ ^ a special of the - 1973, goal, not thaTwe wfll will q.U (1n st'ns*' accept 10 per cent March" resulted from a 12 - day strike ii sa,d alt|'0"gh the ^Per magazine and letters to per cent of our black students require financial aid, and it is "But the basic standard that probability" for students from there be evidence has been widely throughout the country applicants." regard.** of the quality oMhe Movement (BAM) guaranteed, chances i been ^ good the editors of ~ major newspapers, The publicity began therefore " ' meaningless to admit disadvantaged backgrounds. of probable been abandoned. interpreted shortly them if not ®aJTStephen ieiHpnt and dean of Spurr, U-M However, recruiting efforts media throughout the „ quota MUU1,a byuy news Ilt;ws country that it would be met. "All the evidence is that we after the settlement was made we are supply that aid. prepared to "We have tried, in the OAP, We recognize the need for supportive services, but will ODDOrtunitlPS havp Cr}tjcs Qf the jq early April. A special bulletin, We will maintain the basic the statement continued, "to we ^ ^ are attracting substantial dated Apirl 28 which not be lowering performance sent to standard that the admitted numbers of black students," he rely more heavily upon personal requirements for our degrees." high school counselors and __j student must show reasonable ■■ * Iiiiate - ■ .... said. "We rather think well interview, the advice of high jhe statement said the 10 decision make it (the 10 per cent He goal)." principals, following statements: included the probability of success in his academic program." school teachers and counselors and evidence other than t figure applies to the e enrollment, including transfer p emphasized that the 'The funding necessary to The statement said U-M has standard scores. Our experience university has no intention of make it possible for and graduate students, not just Missile expansion OK'd a 10 per been experimenting for several admitting black students has been generally gratifying, entering freshmen, cent black enrollment without indications that there is by 1973-74 will be available. We a "high probability" that they expect to seek vigorously to IaSHINGTON (AP) - The Independently Targetable ban or limit on such weapons as Wq'. increase black enrollment, and for rejected black gl Re-entry Vehicle will be MIRV, Brooke said, the United ... ,te voted Thursday to permit essential if arms - J&JT^5?,5SS • ? ^ the 'guarantee' is that we will uent Nixon to begin with the Soviet control talks States might be left with no uSStood wfthfn L not fall short of the 10 per cent Court sanctions burial Union succeed, suitable one n m opment of an advanced It such talks resul, i„ - target, one - " m tHe , goal by reason of any lack of warhead missile, financial support. , warhead missile as an tive to deployment of a mutual muSSpSStto!. peSststopto "There may be other reasons MIAMI (AP) - A federal judge . headed rockets, each U.S. District Judge William O. Pierce, Fla., funeral home where ] capable of striking a Thursday ordered an all - white Mehrtens ordered the burial had remained ! te target. cemetary to give a black soldier after a one - hour hearing. rvices last Sunday. killed in Vietnam "the six feet , parallel request for the of U.S. ground" his mother Meanwhile volunteers stood vigil j write into law a the body of Spec. t bitter," said William's implementing the sought for her unburied son. Pondexteur E. Williams at a Fort mother, Mary Campbell, after L's often expressed never - the hearing through which she jj.flist policy was withdrawn L it became obvious it could Full presidential commission "I'm glad it's over with. I'm father actions the Senate going back to bury my boy," Ltd, 48 to 33, an Mrs. Campbell said. "I'm [dment to killers ban theofusefood of to meet, hear interim reports grateful, very grateful, and God has heard my prayers." Ein South Vietnam. in, dments triggered by the two Brooke, offered by Sen. ) R-Mass., debate on it The full Presidential Commission on Admissions and Student Body Composition will The admissions five subcommittees procedures standards; high - risk students, are: and Burial with full honors, including a 21 -gun salute and "Taps" played by an Army bugler, was scheduled for 3 p.n military meet Sept. 16 hear interim in strategic policy. reports from its five days after the admissions;" enrollment mix; manager of Hillcrest Memorial | the request of Chairman subcommittees. special programs; and academic Gardens refused to give or sell a 1 Stennis, D-Miss., of the The meeting is the first of the goals and future of the burial plot for Williams because Ve Armed Services full commission since the Jmittee, Brooke changed his subcommittees were established lunendment to authorize, in June. require, the Although they have been The State News, the student newspaper at Michigan State n to begin work on an meeting throughout the summer, University, is published every class day during four school single - warhead the subcommittees have not yet terms, plus Welcome Week edition in September. [was then accepted by Funeral rites completed their work. Their reports to the full commission Subscription rate is $14 per year lis and adopted on a voice Funeral serivces will be simply brief progress Member Associated Press, United Press were conducted Wednesday for Robert Monday The officiating clergyman called his death "the International, ■ reports. Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Fassnacht, a 33 • year - old physicist and father of three The Collegiate Press, killed in the senseless, tragic sacrifice of a good man." meeting is scheduled for 2 Michigan Press Association, Michigan Collegiate Press bombing of a University of Wisconsin building - 4:30 p.m. in the board room Association, United States Student Press Association. AP Wirephoto on the fourth floor of the Administration Bldg. Second class postage paid at East Lansing, Michigan Editorial and business offices at 347 Student Services Investigator of tells Building, Michigan State University, East Lansing, cages' Michigan. Phones: Editorial . 355-8252 Classified Advertising 355 8255 Through Luce, Harkin Frank Walton, chief public Party entered and found the which Harkin said he saw in the Display Advertising 353-6400 I By BARNEY WHITE State News Staff Writer introduced student who to a Vietnamese had just been safety director in Vietnam, "tiger cages." repeatedly denied that there By Harkin's estimation there pits, had been denied by the Vietnamese and American When he continued to hold Harkin said, four members of the committee met secretly Business-Circulation Photographic . 355-3447 355-8311 released from Kon Son. The rare 250 men-and 250 women, pCHESTER, N.H. - student was at first hesitant 'tiger cages" and that the governments. and issued a report on the .s Harkin, the man who speak with the Americans, prisoners ahything but some of whom were as young as 15 years old, imprisoned in the Harkin said that he committee's findings that made |sed the atrocities of the Harkin said, because he feared happy. immediately began to take only a passing mention of Kon )nIsland prison, described cages. The cages consisted of pictures of the prisoners and the ,, , , , ,, „T. gon The intent according to Investigation Thursday for they worked for the CIA. Map drawn concrete pits 10 feet long by five -f " £!*' J Harkin, was to squelch his > the United States " ° nQmoco' Harkin said he and Luce, who feet wide by 10 feet deep. They t Press Assn. ;ss here. (USSPA) the chance" because Hp th^.nht had also come alon»?' had a map covered with iron bars, and to them. Harkin declined. there were troughswasofperiodically lime which over in explained that he had it might help his . .. g ». brothel who P™sbother, whn was draW" by the Vietnamese student they had interviewed Harkln claimedthe He said he also continued to Harkin stated that, to the best still confined in Kon Son prisoners jiy become attached to that indicated the location of sPri"kled on record the conversations of the of his knowledge 'tiger Select Committee ^ ^ t ^ Of 12 congressmen the the "tiger cages." Harkin Pun'shment. day with a tape recorder he had cages'" Kon Kited" to " Investigate "The seIect committee, only four explained" that the cages Couldn't stand secreted in his briefcase. Son Island. He said that he had Harkin said that none of the in in Vietnam through his came to hear the st"dent speak purposely hidden by u.e According to Harkin, there heard reports, however, that lintance with - - - - and only two remained to authorities men and women that he other attempts to < indicate that Vietnamese Rep. Neil and, without the |-ongressman Wowa. Harkin'had been hear him all the way through map, he and the rest of his party him into turning c number of r the film, individuals, authorities into are the moving the pits Kon Son jungle looming Smith's staff ***?• The next would have never been able to including members of the House out where they to Washington to momin8 tthree fou' find them, shackled. The use of shackles. Select Committee. will i "patronage job" and to representatives scheduled to visit According to Harkin, ulaw degree. Kon Son abruPt'y declined to Vietnamese nmandant comman l» member of the staff of ™ake the trjP;, ®"ly Rep< .Guj repeatedly tried to keep the Special Purchase! Renault pouse Select Committee, Hawkins, D-Calif., remained party away from the "tiger intent upon visiting the island, p's duties were to assemble . cage" location. At the door that Wee members and to material for heJalf: ... ... . cages, the Special Prices! help "a?'"s (stated that he,„ was f commandant insisted that there e agenda once was in thev were this official afrald that the trip would be ca,led off alto*5ether- so he he said. nothing on the other side, The only imported car made in Special Deals! that Harkin first hpard P,eaded with other members of At this point the door North America June of the infamous Rhe ^ lRep. selling at Special Savings! Bill T£2S opened, apparently mistakenly, Anderson, 'nS' D-Tenn., |«ges" of Kon Son Island. by a guard on the inside, Harkin . y contacted Don Harkin said, he Luce, agreed to Kon come along. commandant of the prison Son Island, the and related. Over the protest of the commandant and Walton, the members of the investigating $1,725 ACT NOW" i journalist. It was int to obtain Luce's P assembling the agenda, ™ (Luce) was an expert in iMese affairs and CHECK OUR SPECIALS knew |People in Saigon. RACK. Many Great MPG! "tec/ Ladies LP's at Low Prices! Made in Canada at tln9 Britain fONfrom the (AP) - Red Mediterranean DISC SHOP • and France! 12 Month Full Warranty—Unlimited Mileage Ning Britain this year,, 323 E. Grand River % of I from Painted Ladies are Open Mon. - Fri. 9 a.m. - 9 p.n • Rated Tops For All-Year Driving & Comfort OPEN TONIGHT the same area, Sat. 9 a.m. - 6 p.m. Pterists reported. Both are Phone: 351-5380 Rated Tops By Commuters & Travelers fof butterfly. I • Cruise 70-80 MPH [andall's LOOK WHAT YOU GET WITH A IEALTH our door's open in Brookf ield Plaza ,s: ?nM.h: just across from the A&P - stop in and OODS browse thru our selection of organic foods. * Grains * Sugarless * Natural er cosmetics * Juices * Dietetic Open Mon. & Thurs. * Vegetarian Evenings till 9 * 1200 E.OAKLAND Honey # Allergy - free PHONE 482-1226 Overseas Delivery Arranged 6892 - GOOD NUTRITION THRU NATURAL VITAMINS Mich MICHIGAN EW STATE NEWS 51 UNIVERSITY Australia not really GEORGE BULLARD hardhat paradise editor-in-chief FREDERICK J. LESLIE a advertising manager KENNETH KRELL, editorial editor washingi EDITOR'S NOTE: The following first time LARRY LEE, city editor Rom JEANNE SADDLER, associate editor Point of View was written by an MSU JEFF ELLIOTT, sports editor student from Australia. Since his views ,merica have > first that might affect his status here, he has a translatii asked that his name be withheld. j the newly Six-time recipient of the Pacemaker award inuscripts. for outstanding journalism. There will on The platitudinal Associated Press article American migration to Australia, based Australia thous, < becom survey done by the Australian EDITORIALS on a Immigration Dept., invites some icomes Elij and correctional remarks. Firstly, the statement that Australia in pocalyPse w the evelation. past has "maintained a hands - off policy toward the United States, as a migrant source" because "the Canberra government has been anxious to avoid being accused of people - poaching," is Sfuc Affidavit pla simply not true. A few years ago the Australian minister of immigration came to the United States hoping to sign a formal poaching" that has inhibited Aust openly soliciting migrants. It is ridiculous to suggest that the migration agreement with this country. The U.S. government insisted that there States treatment, was singled out for when Australia has jesi must be no discrimination against Black "people - poaching" in every We registration and other minority ethnic groups in the selection of the migrants, if such an agreement were to be signed. It was this insistence on the principle of non - European country for 26 ereat great is is Australia's Australia's desire "yearl'lnfo® ^chJSJ/ desire i., settlers, she has recently signed a inia lo attract •,. »> ..chers bet teaching agreement with Yugoslavia, a Comra discrimination by the United States and country. dministrati point: parental control. Once a person — not the anxiety to avoid "people - (ofessor c Secondly, that only 10 per cent o "No man is good enough to govern another any person — reaches 21 in Michigan, he is ontended hei man without that other's consent. " sample of U.S. migrants came fron legally free of parental control. No law South has "exploded the Addressing - Abraham Lincoln binds him to dol anything his parents ask, theory jnerican Soc Australia is attracting white ^_UU1 or threaten. AP NEWS ANALYSIS Americans" is absurd. How many letting, Henr (B^merTol Two members of the East Lansing City Upon turning 21, a citizen may legally do Council seem willing to give students a fair all those things associated with full white inhabitants of Michigan would^™^ to the category of "white shake in registering to vote. Council independence in a democratic society: Americans"? The two "i members Wilbur Brookover and Mary vote, drink, smoke, contract At 21, he Nixon treads Asian ... tightrope organizations at present adver Sharp promised Wednesday to carry to city is free from parents — legally, morally and Australia are not in the South - jiitotle said, council an affidavit that would permit all politically. dje of a l AUSTCO, is in Long Beach, Calif., ar citizens to register without lengthy hassle. The East Lansing city clerk is overly ik"' other, BUCKEYE, is in Fairborn, Ohii But, in addition, Brookover and Mrs. worried about parental control, yet she has 20,000 of the 63,000 U.S. troops are to be officials are convinced Seoul's fears of a AUSTCO literature is openly Sharp should carry to council the refined not defined it. What is it? Certainly no pulled out by next June 30. new Communist attack are exaggerated. honestly racist. That "few, if any," I arguments of both students and Zolton parent controls the mind or body of any In a series of appearances Wednesday, Agnew's task becomes much more are interested in teaching caree Ferency, who acted as students' counsel in 21 year - old offspring. - Agnew demonstrated backing for both complicated as he heads south from this Australia is astonishing. Blacks not w ling quail Wednesday's joint meeting. By legal definition, any 21 - year - old is sides of the doctrine. beautiful, mountain resort where Chiang to teach in a country whose domesti As Ferency so ably told the Wednesday an independent, free soul on this earth. By SUN MOON LAKE, Formosa - Vice monalities On a muddy visit to American GIs who Kai-shek spends his summers. President Spiro T. Agnew, acting as foreign policies are based on ifluence on gathering, the law does not give registering simple declaration, a 21 - year - old can man the front lines just four miles from For the administration has yet to come officials a blank check to write criteria for declare himself free of parental control — spokesman for the Nixon administration, is supremacy? North Korea, Agnew declared: "The to grips with the problems stemming from Blacks not wanting to teach in act voting applicants. Certainly, city clerks just as by declaration a parent can legally treading a tightrope in seeking support for United States has no intention of relaxing its desire to avoid reinvolvement of U.S. which cannot create separate criteria for any disown an adult son or daughter. Both an Asian policy that combines reduction of practices apartheid at its its vigilance or running out on its troops in Cambodia while doing, as Agnew almost American forces with reassurances to U.S. effectively as South Africa particular group of citizens. parents and offspring — if they are at least commitments." put it on the trip across the Pacific, Ferency also feels that the city attorney 21 — are free agents. allies. internally? Blacks not wanting to tea As he did in Vietnam last January, he "everything we can to help Lon Nol." has gone far beyond reasonable bounds in We hope Brookover and Mrs. Sharp carry Built - in contradictions in the Nixon country where the needs of its warned the troops against paying too much Under the Nixon doctrine, the way to do aboriginal minority are largely ign setting down 18 criteria that include these arguments to city council, as well as doctrine, the policy outlined by the President when he visited Asia 13 months attention to "isolated reports" from back it is to help the Cambodian's themselves, ludicrous questions on parents' marital the fact that students are acting in good Astonishing! home about those "few opportunists who while also helping the South Vietnamese To the liberal expatriate Australia! status, automobile registration and other faith with city council. ago, have never been more evident than on Foth feels th After being may wish to see us bug out." and Thais to assist the Phnom Penh regime. irrelevant issues. In addition, he cited the Agnew's current Asian trip. Yet there are by now has pencil poised for iluition pre shortchanged for years, they are calmly indications the policy may be succeeding in Less than two hours later, a bit wilted Strong congressional opposition exists to latest court which establish that rebuttal, I will concede his point. T developme cases asking for a piece of the political action. from the rain and his protracted any kind of U.S. Involvement irt Cambodia, thousand non students, indeed, may vote where they American government, after all, bases part in surmounting these contradictions. - Euorpeans per ye leaching pe Under the doctrine, the United States, negotiations with South Korea's President direct or indirect. Ssp.,§trom, Thurmond,, migrate to Australia. But with a uld alio attend school. itself upon universal suffrage. Council over the next few years, will reduce sharply Chung - Hee - Park, he calmly told R-S.C., told the Senate last week that most migration target of 175,000, this is ministrators In Attorney General V. Miller, 266 members, before voting on the affidavit its Far East military force of more than reporters that U.S. troop withdrawal plans Americans would rather pay the bill for tokenism. udent Michigan, (1934), pp. 142-3, the court proposal, should absorb the Lincoln quote extend far beyond the first 20,000. another country than have U.S. soldiers And to the white racist who is pa pi 750,000 men. At the same time, the ucational goa said, "a student at college who is free from that heads this editorial. If council Once modernization of the Korean continue to fight but inability to win United States will provide its allies with a his luggage, a warning. The younj parental control, regards the place where members want to govern students, they ''Setting nuclear shield and the necessary arms for military establishment can be completed, approval of the necessary funds could workers and the Opposition party are the college is situated as his home, has no should permit students free access to them to defend themselves. hopefully within five years, all U.S. troops defeat the Nixon policy before it even gets to power. Racism in generally ar other to which to return is as much voting booths. probably will leave Korea, the vice ... Since the doctrine was unveiled started. particular manifestation in Vietnai entitled to vote as any other resident of the Hiding behind gray interpretations of law administration spokesmen have taken an president said, adding: "Whether we would The Thais are likely to raise this problem their targets. In a recent trade place where the college is situated." serves neither the community nor the leave any token force after that is very with the vice president later this week, students who are an integral part of it. outspoken public posture, denouncing congress in Melbourne, the Unionists Ferency elaborated on an interesting doubtful." while he is likely to join them in deploring critics who demand faster withdrawals upon Australian troops in Vietna while reassuring allies their security won't Agnew made clear this plan had been the actions of the U.S. Senate. This does mutiny and most members of be communicated to Park. While the South not provide solution to Vhat looms the jeopardized. a as Australian Labor party called upo At the Korean leader is unhappy about the initial most difficult test for both the Nixon same time, the United States has young to defy the Draft Laws. I pushed ahead with troop withdrawal plans, reduction, he has little leverage in doctrine and for Agnew's diplomatic think this is quite what the "hard • ha Focus on actio both in Vietnam and in Korea, where negotiating with the United States. U.S. efforts. New York were championing last OUR READERS' MIND J student egovernments by A • • . i i i The trouble with student organizations Instead, hour upon hour was spent American spirit must be cleansed To the Editor: such as the National Student Assn. (NSA), mouthing monotonously obscene rhetoric brought some of our members to tears and better life for all the people must be found. compromise that concern. Robert Kel To Sen. Hart: which caused other to react with an These problems cannot be solved once said, "We also know that only which recently completed its annual on the Vietnam war, the Middle East, the by taking As chairman of MSU Students for Hart, I internal anger which can only be directed the politically safe course, nor can they be who dare to fail greatly can ever ai congress; the United States Student Press evils of capitalism and not - even - the - feel that it is my obligation to write you inwards. It is the same kind of deep Assn. (USSPA), which currently is in chaos delegates - could - be - sure - what - else. solved by either dropping out or resorting greatly." This is my belief. This i in New Hampshire; and often, ASMSU, now The congress adopted resolutions by the regarding your repudiation of the amnesty disappointment which many-of use felt to violence. hope. I hope you share it. in summer hibernation, is that they score: stop the Vietnam war, free Puerto plank and your reluctance to accept the when Robert Kennedy was killed. The entire American spirit must be never Vietnam plank of the Michigan Democratic Novices fror find their own troubles. It is the kind of disappointment which cleansed, and this only come about by Randolph L. B Rico, end the draft - all safely removed can Mount Calv NSA delegates, for example, spent no from the areas in which NSA could platform. I write you not to disagree with results when you have been working for courageous and concerted action by those Chairman, MSU Students f( your position, although I strongly disagree, interviews ir time developing methods to counterset realistically be expected to produce results something for a long time, have finally who are concerned and are unwilling to Aug. 26 but to relate to you the hopes and achieved a victory, only to find out that growing antistudent sentiment within the "safely removed," because there is no — Silent Majority. They spent not a moment need to make responsible suggestions if aspirations of many people which were sadly shattered, perhaps beyond repair, by the thing for which you were originally MSOI trying to form a cohesive national student one's "solutions" will be ignored anyway. working no longer seems to exist. I can statement. Rhetoric: noble tradition your only hope, and all of us hope, that this organization, which could honestly And so NSA spent up to sue hours a night represent American student sentiment. for three consecutive Only one who has been intimately disappointment will not be justified in the nights debating related to these hopes, and only one who future. Vietnam, and not a minute talking about their We own are immediate not concerns. suggesting that NSA should has shared these aspirations, as have I, can fully understand the depth of these feelings and the extent to which they have The results of this and other action cannot, at this time, be fairly assessed. As To the Editor: A ideology assumes decision change can occur as a - makin result of Pea $01 for myself, I am not yet ready to give up. frequently used contemporary ad rhetorical transactions, rather Huberts ignore the Vietnam war. But since the delegates were in near - unanimous agreement on the central issue ("The war is been shattered. Many of us have worked tirelessly since the end of last winter for you, sustained by It is easy to say that all our efforts will be blocked, but the same foolish idealism with hominem strategy is to accuse a man of being a purveyor of rhetoric. (Terry Smith, requiring a resort to force and v Moreover, when Mr. Smith laments State News, Aug. 21) The strategy stems of rhetoric, he is P™ bad"), a resolution to that effect could have been passed within minutes — and had our belief that perhaps, just perhaps, we which I started your campaign keeps coming back to haunt me. from a view of rhetoric as empty bombast the use rhetoric, just as I am presently Prac 1 inc Edsel as much effect as the compromised mess they eventually passed. garbled, might be able to improve the course of this nation and truly make a better world. Now, as we look back, it seems as if our idealism I guess if so much didn't have to be done in this country it would be easy to forsake or name calling. Actually, Dame Rhetoric has enjoyed a in responding to his lament. Crusty pedants are not th< Time could then have been spent on more it, much the same way certain Democrats long, distinguished tradition. Consider who decry the demise of a te was in vain. these three definitions "®n South The much heralded report on campus have forsaken it. But I feel that much has representing ancestry. In a recent editorial ( - pressing problems which NSA had half a ok of iife» Even when we were able to re-order the different time periods the history of unrest limped into its public debute chance of solving. to be done in this country and to abandon 1970), the Boston Globe asserted: Thursday, leaving observers appalled at the priorities of a party, the leadership it now would be to turn my back on man's development: Persons who disagree by ""ergies to Hopefully, the proposed alliance of the * final results of a $59,000 expenditure. student governments of MSU, the effectively blocked its implementation. mankind. Others may give up. Still others Aristotle: "Rhetoric may be defined as "Rhetoric!" make as much sense an Me, und< Many of us on your campaign at MSU have the faculty of observing in any case the ute Sen. Robert Huber and his colleagues University of Michigan and Wayne State will, inevitably, turn to violence. the same thing as those who ap Pushed talked to people, carried petitions for you, I cannot take either course. Whether we available means of persuasion." onalist party offered nothing new. Their 51 - page report University will be more than another more familiar and aromatic is a low raised money for you, and have conducted do this together or not, I will continue to Francis Bacon: "Rhetoric is the art of - key rambling of collected NSA-type debating club. Hopefully, it will the ENTIRE Hart campaign in Ingham appelations to their adversaries a g j'wnment si antedotes purporting to represent the core concentrate solutions to the schools' fight for what I believe. I would hope applying reason to imagination for the They betray a merely pre-matricuia of campus unrest. On college newspapers, on County supported by the hope that we othets would do the same. Much has to be better moving of the will." "jstratlve 'dual docuir ir common problems. Its leaders should at, you guessed it, rhetoric. for example, they use the South End of remember that the important thing is not could put a man back in the Senate who would take a stand on issues, recognize the changed in this nation. Donald rationale Bryant: of "Rhetoric' is the For shame Mr. Smith! Your rhet Hlic» conteni Wayne State. The South End, though it has who solves the problem or the method of A War must be ended immediately, informative and suasory human necessities of this nation, and refuse discourse." slip is showing. will its merits, does not represent college must be destroyed at once, our be solution but that the problem is indeed racism Gerald R- journalism in Michigan. solved. In the past, lack of this emphasis to compromise his beliefs for some course people in Canada must be allowed to Thus, as traditionally conceived and professor of »!•«»» ft"" Som The rest of the report is largely the has often prevented any solution at all. of action which was more politically return for their only crime was a refusal, studied, rhetoric is the cornerstone of a J*J" dimer commission's opinion or contradiction of For example, student leaders within expedient. It now seems that this hope has been betrayed. which I share, to kill another human, and a democratic society: The democratic J bulky must be to. the interim staff report, released earlier. On ASMSU have often, in times of crisis a few key issues, the senators rejected the demanding fast decisions and effective I cannot begin to describe to you, Sen. TWO BREAD..TWRTY-NINE TWICE.. PEACHES...TWENTY-SEVEN... HEY, FREP, HOW MUCH ON ft®* The findings of grass - roots research by their action, called for a referendum to Hart, the deep disappointment which has COOKIES.. FORTY-NINE..PEANl/T Bl/TTER. THE PEANUT GUTTER T0PAY? landlords staff workers. determine "the mood of students." been felt on this campus and across the ■ified. In T=r A report that contradicts the findings of theory, this is a fine idea; in actuality, it state by people like us. The booklet ■ raw data seems to be of little value in disappointment is much deeper than the «d Colo has too - often proved an excuse for guiding either the legislature or the public. inaction and hesitancy. issues involved. It is a much more personal "J'xed bio The report will be quietly tucked away The new student confederation should disappointment which can only occur when something in which J** "ty will ider and remembered as a $59,000 lesson in take a lesson from the follies of national you have i wasted energy. Tomorrow it will believed suddenly indicated that the belief tn<* book be a student groups. One definite action is 1e lovable anachronism, like the Edsel. worth reams of rhetoric. is no longer desired. booklet v\ It is the kind of disappointment which c°untry of Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, August 28, 1970 5 51 schol ars take 25 years Ruling due Mondayon WASHINGTON (AP)t prod uce up-to-date Bible So-called Bible park fate "n . in more than 200 in mnrP gives way, English," Pasture. desire; that I should leave thee ,e first time The New He hath brought me up, on and depart: for withersoever JACKSON Catholics of Roman American Bible," to the up - to - the ie water water of refreshment: (UPI) — Jackson refreshment thou shalt go, I will County Circuit Court Judge merica have a new Bible. It is date language of contemporary go: and "He hath converted John Oaiton has postponed until - that is not a translation man 3 my soul, where thou shalt dwell, I also !e 'translation and the first to "He hath led me on the will dwell. Thy people shall be Monday It is the work of 51 scholars paths a ruling on a county of justice, for his own my people, and thy God my request to the newly discovered ancient name's permanently close ho „ ... . year Period and will sake. God." Goose Lake Park, scene of a There [scripts. will be no more thees ^^uh!hed next "onth by 12 "For though I shall walk in the In the new Bible, the text massive three day rock festival - thous, except in prayers; L The two - ? °Untry old centuries - mdist of the shadow of death, I will fear reads: earlier this month. » »- for thou evils, •• she said, "your Oaiton Wednesday continued a becomes Noah, Ellas Douay version of the 23rd Psalm with me. art sister - in law has gone back to temporary order that bars J^omes Elijah, IsaiaBook - will be went like this: "Thy rod and thy staff, they liah 8 J "The Lord ruleth i have comforted her People and her God. back after your sister - in - law:" Go promoters from staging any e will be the Book of shall want entertainment at the 390 - acre pocalyp5 nothing. The New American Bible: But Ruth said, "do not ask me private park, which evelation. "He hath set me in was designed "The Lord is my to abandon or forsake you, for to be the nation's shepherd; I first shall not want. wherever you go permanent rock festival site. "In verdant pastures he Dalton said he will now consider Students ie repose; "Beside restful waters he leads me; he refreshes my soul. gives wherever you lodge, I will lodge, y°ur people shall be my people, and y°ur God my God." The Rev.Stephen Hartdegen, . „ technical defense county's complaint. motions concerning alleged flaws in the "He guides me in right paths Professor of Scripture at Holy Prosecutor Bruce A. Barton for his name's sake. Name College in Washington, evoluato has charged the park is a public jest "Even though I walk in the dark valley "I fear no evil; for ®;G > and one of the five editors • 'n * chief who worked on the nuisance and asked its closure. The prosecutor cited and drug use educational goals and developing you are at new translation the entire 25 "lewd behavior" during a TUCSON, Ariz.-Studentsare accurate measures of student my side years, said the new Bible is festival Aug. 7 - 9 that drew better judges of teachers progress, "With your rod and your staff "teachable and comprehensive upwards of 100,000 however, young probably .!°Uj£ J~~ to the _ d teaching quality than other prolb,ems which that rive me courage.' reader than any persons. won't m achers or school be solved for many years. In In the Book of Ruth, for book to date.' Another of the five editors .... dministrators, an MSU meantime, student opinion will example, the Douay version read: chief who worked on the entire EDGEWOOD UNITED of soil - tofessor science be the most reliable form of intended here Wednesday. teacher evaluation, and will see "And Noemi said to her; Behold project, the Rev. Louis F. Hartman of Catholic New CHURCH Addressing a session of the much greater use as a means of thy kinswoman is University, 469 N. Hagadorn returned to her people, and to died only last Saturday. His Msgr. Patrick W. Skehan jnerican Society of Agronomy rating faculty performance ' holds of the deluxe edition of the New American Bible a copy at a an ecumenical fellowship. letting, Henry D. Foth said, as Foth said. ' her gods, go thou with her. She death bro"ght to 16 the number Washington news conference Monday. The books, to be published in Worship Service September, use r many 1 ■— jnsumers of teachers' wares, answered: Be not against me, to scholars who did not live to see the contemporary English, eliminating "thees" and "thous" except in prayers. and Church School arejn a favored work published. AP 9:30 A.M. to evaluate teachers in Wirephoto Sermon by he same sense that Vatican Dr. Robert Anderson, hits Hitotle said, 'a guest is a better slave Professor of Religion, MSU dp of a feast than ii the WELCOME! Church Phone 332-8693 I A » ifYi^ * * ~~ The from Kerala State to serve in "They tell us they have entry of Central United Methodist areiuPO(Kl quality because their Vailc*n and published pictures interviews to show that European convents, brought us for 6,000 rupees," missionaries, foreign Gandhi's Congress party is efforts of the Archbishop of a Vatican official denied the letter said. "So what can we aligned with the pro-Moscow Trivandrum, His Grace Benedict Across from the Capitol "les. exert a major Indian nuns are happy and well charses "Our national dignity is Communist party against the WORSHIP SERVICES the charges that that the the chn church was slaves do? They have nailed us to Mar Gregorios, the states leading on evaluation adjusted in Europe despite involved - our country Is militant Marxist Communists being 9 45 and 11:16 a.m. trying to "sweep the nuns' story the cross and we are dying" humiliated, and I want to know headed by former Chief Minister anti-Communist cleric, *'1®g^!onf ,of a "un " fining unde? the rug." He "said, "All creating a " public what our government is doin* Besides E. M. S. Namboodiripad. The 53 year • old Kerala - - complexity of the ^SISSSvy' 8°UrCeS we'™ tryin* to do is ba,ance It relations problem for the about it," Kanwar Lai Gupta, a Namboodiripad's two previous born prelate has said in the past that popular agitation he helped "Do Something Valuable g function and the great 0UJ;- . , Vatican, the nuns'story touched member of the Jana Sangh, governments were ousted for With Your Life" among teachers and The defense appeared rhe church s problem was off political repercussions in shouted in Parliament organize was a factor in the Tuesday, their attempts to pass legislation ouster of the first Communist i also complicates Wednesday in the Vatican's compounded Tuesday by a letter India for Prime Minister Indira The controversy is likely to that would have permitted the Dr. Howard Lyman •revaluation. weekly magazine, L'Osservatore published in Italian newspapers Gandhi. have government in Kerala in 1959 its most immediate takeover of Catholic schools in della Church School 9:45 to 11:4E Domenica, which was and attributed to Sister Anna E. The Indian government repercussions in the the state. Kerala has about four million pulled off the presses Tuesday - T- Elakatiu, one of the Indian announced Wednesday that it elections Sept. 17 Christians, most of whom for the are th feels that the solution to Kerala The Communists were normal publication date — on nuns brought to an Italian has launched a comprehensive legislature, Catholics, ition problems would be in which Mrs thwarted largely due to the orders from high Vatican convent. investigation at home and levelopmeiu of a definition M0S.U. LUTHERAN CAMPUS MINISTRIES authorities, the sources said. Addressed to nuns in Kerala, abroad into the reports. ng performance which the letter said Sister Anna and TheHindu Communal Jana Peoples Church First Church of ALC-LCA allow educational The intent is to counter other Indian girls were made to Sangh party, the second largest East for Students and Faculty at istrators to measure charges published in the London scrub toilets and wash pots and opposition group in India's Lansing Christ, Scientist University Lutheran Church toward Sunday Times that priests in pans while Italian nuns in the Parliament, has India and Vatican officials long accused Division & Ann Streets were convent performed no menial Mrs. Gandhi's government of 332-2559 being too soft on foreign 200 W. Grand Riv Pastors: Walter Wietzke Christian missionaries by at Michigan George Gaiser permitting them to convert Hindus. WORSHIP HOURS Bowing to such pressure, the SUNDAY SERVICE m Matins government has restricted the n Servici 30 a Com EPISCOPAL SERVICES "Praying for You" Sunday School ti Rev. Orin G. Smith UNIVERSITY UNITED METHODIST CHURCH Services at Free Public Reading Room 1120 South Harrison 8:00 and 10:00 A.M. Phone 351-7030 134 Wait Grand River The Reverend William A. Eddy, Rector CHURCH SCHOOL OPEN The Reverend "Bitter Resentment" Richard A. Randall, Weekday* • 9-5 p.m. Mon. & Thur*. eve*. 7 • 9 p.m Curate Crib through Adults Sat. 9 - 1 p.m. Office Phone: 351-7160 Rector's Phone: 337-0467 UNIVERSITY SEVENTH-DAY "When Is Religion Vital?" , Morning Worship 9:30 ADVENTIST CHURCH EAST LANSINGSTRIN 1RINITY CHURCH Church School 9:30 (for all ages) Novices from the Indian state of Kerala are shown Monday at the Our Lady of the Refuge of E. Eugene Williams, 841 Timberlane Drive fl Mount Calvary Convent in Genoa, Italy. The Vatican Wednesday published pictures and Sabbath School 9:30 Minister East Lansing Worship Service 11:00 Stanley R. Reilly, interviews in an effort to rebut allegations of a nun - running scandal. AP Wirephoto K. G. Smith, Assistant Telephone: 351-8200 pastor msonai data Meeting at 504 Ann St. (Corner of Division) University Class Interdenominational 9:45 a.m. SOUTH BAPTIST CHURCH "Our Will - Our God's Will" 6:00 p.m. 1518 S. Washington Lansing Call 361-8994 if you Sunday 7 p.m. need transportation Trinity Collegiate Fellowship 7:30 p.m. Wednesday: Mid-week discussion & prayer 7:00 p.m. South Africans to carry Meeting UNIVERSITY CHRISTIAN Dr. Howard "When Life Falls Sugden Apart" Temporarily In CHURCH CAMPUS HOUSE individual book of life' 310 N. Hagadorn 251 W. Grand River 9:45 A.M. College Bible Class in the fireside room COLLEGIAN FELLOWSHIP 8:30 P.M. Worship 10:0 ALWAYS OPEN Fireside Room JANNESBURG, South Africa (AP) Six - African citizen, a recent photograph which must be renewed occasionally, marital status, details Church Scho< Campus Minister, ok nfiUfth.. Afr,cans must start carrying a on immunization, blood group, allergies, diseases Wednesday pi Minister, Kail Ruffnar "God Comes to Lansing" hiii • recordlng data running a gamut J1 "wi'e'pes"nder to voting districts. 8 new or disorders, driver's license, firearms license, usual address, voting district and whether the 332-5193 332-3035 * 351-7844 FREE BUS SERVICE Morning and Evening population registration holder has voted in any election. Eventually it Fret Transportation Call 482-0754 for information. Pushed through Parliament lst by the ruling will include death details before it is filed away. party, is effective next June 1. FIRST ASSEMBLY Strict regulations for registering have been in Em®nt supporters hall the measure as an force for 20 years, but many persons failed to OF GOD Christian Reformed Church vldi.o^i V1^al masterplece which will streamline file new addresses when they moved. Holders of documentation. the new book must notify the government of any 1125 Weber Dr. Lansing to°s contend that " be it Invades personal privacy change within two weeks. The new landlord must Blk. No. of E. Grand River at and Student Center cumbersome and costly to notify authorities of the tenant's presence. The Downer book holder and his landlord face $140 fines if 1509 River Terrace (across from Hubbard Hall) Hu. ier' Some say the 50-page booklet, a bit Rev. Richard W. Bishop, Pastor tm L rnens'ons than a U.S. passport, will ,, they don't comply. Visit our new Student Center — to carry Experience gained by trying to keep voters constantly. open daily 9 A.M. • 11 P.M. <■»«!» produced to authorized officials rolls up to date shows that on average the 9:45 a.m. COLLEGE CLASS Lunch Wednesday 12:30 • 1:30 P.M. ks lsni 86 inc,ude hank managers, postal equivalent of the entire South African population changes address once every eight "Wied^' P°"cemen and others who may years. This indicates that, based on the present issued only to whites, population, the register will record about 614 million changes of address every eight years. miv?? C°lore(k, the official label for those Each change will be fed into a computer and the hnw 00d' 11 replaces the present Rev. Brink preaching book of life itself will be amended. oritv !.dentity card- South Africa's black Interior Minister Marais Viljoen told Parliament book COntlnue to carry a that once under way, record - keeping will be For Transportation Call Rev. J. Herbert Brink, Rev. Alvin L. Hoksbergen, wi» contain handled easily by computers. 484-6640 484-2807 pastor campus minister name, date of birth, for transportation call 351-6360 or 882-1425 rY of birth, race, whether a South The United party fought the new law. 6 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan U. of Wis. observers say heavy use of police history: tale of continuing trouble three others and left what the necessarily the work of a issues than any other school in anti-war demonstrations. provoked most of the early enforcement personnel EDITOR'S NOTE: For student protests, but campus turmoil. durin uunnl and an inflexible administration university estimates is $6 million student. The Weatherman the country in proportion to the Jaliman said a hearing by his the issues have increasingly sent some years now, are responsible for the worth of damage. faction of Students for a number of student grievances. group a year ago on the research University of Wisconsin, "I can see some sweet little center "were canceled by the students into the streets. More than 40 continuing trouble on the Opinion is sharply divided on Democratic Society have squads fires director of that center." Several violent protests were During whose high academic 34,000 - student campus. why all this violence has come to that travel around creating high school student, thrown into a two - hour oerinH internationally violence stretches to a university with an unrest." this going out and sparked by demonstrations standards are respected, has been the scene The clashes between city police and international reputation for mess, throwing a bomb," he said. Referendum against on-campus recruitment o,ey, "V? of campus violence. Earlier antiwar students in 1967. Three academic excellence. Young is considered a leading contender for the university Michael Jaliman of Great "A university referendum on by firms involved in the war Cambodia, effort. out to extinguish firemen*^ cajf times since February, 1969, Atwell laid much blame for the future of Army Math and more than I this week a campus building Neck, N.Y., president of the National Guardsmen have faced the trouble on the willingness of presidency to be vacated Oct. 1 ROTC was blocked, and new In February, black students fires Again the was destroyed by explosives, the university to call in city by Fred Harrington, who is Wisconsin Student Assn., the restrictions on the use of and white sympathizers rejected demands administrate off with students. Recently school's student government, by killing one graduate student. retiring to rejoin the faculty as a speaking equipment on campus boycotted classes in support ot students that the intermittent fire bombings have police to put down predicted at a Monday news school The following AP News demonstrators. history professor after eight were instituted," Jaliman said. demands for establishment of a closed. plagued campus authorities. years as top adminstrator. conference that the Madison black studies department and Some Special by Arthur Srb, long - As he departed Friday to head "Regents and administrators "If violence is to be averted in critics of the campus could experience more admission to larger numbers of campu time observer of the a college in California, Vice seem to take great pride in the Bear blame bombings. the future, the university must listen to what students have disadvantaged blacks. protests, including legislators, noted after the 196 jJJ university scene, backgrounds Chancellor Robert Atwell said recent massive police actions as a the recent history there. "there will be bloodshed" on the response to student activism," The administrators, however, "The root of the problem," he been protesting about, and it They tried to close the school and 1968 demonstrations that Atwell said. "An escalation of also bear part of the blame for said, "lies in a society where must face up to the realities that but the administration refused. majority of students arrested h campus if attitudes don't people have assumed an arrogant A black studies department has change. violence has risen to the point the violence in the eyes of Paul have been made of research from police were not Wisconsi And bloodshed there was — where there will be bloodshed Soglin, a law student from self - righteousness which the center and of officers who since been established, however. residents - many 0f then three days later. The massive unless sensible persons can find Chicago and member of the prevents them from caring about have graduated from the ROTC The presence of police and natives of Eastern states. Madison City Council. the desires and aspirations of National Guard troops have The legislators and the Some public officials and explosion that ripped through ways to de-escalate." program," he said. regent other people." frequently triggered student succeeded in the Army Mathematics Research "They don't give a darn," Demands for immediate imposing limits o University of Wisconsin withdrawal of U.S. military protests calling, to little avail, out - of state Overreaction Soglin said. "This school has The Math Research Center Center building Monday killed undergraduate - adminstrators blame a small forces from South Vietnam for removal of "outside" law who at one time made minority of radicals while other one graduate student, injured Atwell and some other given less ground on important long has been a target of up nearl observers have contended a third of the 22 ooi instances of overreaction by undergraduate class. " ' With the policemen create more trouble restrictions, tl because they stir up added university eventually will iowe hostilities among students. its nonresident undergrade! Gov. Warren P. Knowles, who enrollment to 15 per cent. Thi summoned the National Guard fall the limit is 25 per cent. twice to quell campus protests The reduction is alread and once when welfare mothers believed to have had an impacj and students went to the Capitol Recently, Wisconsin resident here to protest public aid cuts, have made up more than 50™ differs sharply with Atwell. cent of those arrested in campu He says he is convinced the flareups. apparent bombing of the math Republican State Sen. Gordo center is part of a nationwide Roseleip of Darlington, who ha conspiracy of radicals bent on sought Harrington's ouster fa destroying American society. years because of his allege "This is a conspiracy of a very "soft" attitude t small minority who do not protesters, blames "left win believe in our system of organizations" for the campu woes. government and who are set to "The sooner you get rid of th destroy our present way of life," the Republican governor said. un-American organization, In fact, he added, recent un-American student, activities un-American professor, by protesters "are tantamount to better off this university guerrilla warfare." Chancellor H. Edwin Young, Body rem be," Roseleip asserted "As far as I'm concerned, ya recentl] Dane County (Wis.) police and Madison firemen carry the following explosion that destroyed portions of the can send them to Cuba, Norf surveying the shattered six - an body of Robert Fassnacht from the Army Math Research Vietnam or Communist China c story research center, building. commented, "This was not Center on the University of Wisconsin campus Monday AP Wirephoto Russia." GMLOS ANGELES (UPI) — A team of General Motors Corp. team advantage over a spark ignition engine with advance emission sees low emissions of carbon monoxide and unburned fla hydrocarbons' engineers, after analyzing the performance of two steam - control systems, it must be judged on its other characteristics," compared with internal combustion engines; could be built witli powered cars, reported Thursday that a steam - powered the team told the West Coast meeting of the Society of present technology and construction materials were relatively automobile presently would be an "unattractive alternative" to Automotive Engineers. ' inexpensive, GM said. the internal combustion engine. "The higher costs of construction, increased maintenance, poor But GM said the tests also showed emissions of nitrogen oxides "Since the vapor cycle engine offers no exhaust emission performance and lack of fuel economy make it an unattractive exceeded the proposed 1975 federal standards and emissions of alternative to the properly controlled spark ignition engine." nitrogen oxides and hydrocarbons exceeded 1980 goals. Both cars were built especially for evaluation of exhaust In addition GM said fuel economy was poor, performance v emissions, fuel economy, acceleration, efficiency, cost, "unacceptable in today's traffic," and reliability a performance, reliability and ease of servicing. GM built one car, serviceability would "pose serious customer problems." in MAW/IN and subcontracted the building of the other to Besler Developments Inc. of Oakland, Calif. Besler was given a free hand in building its vehicle, GM said. awEASIWOOD Testing showed the steam - powered vehicles had "reasonably Manson jury hears jean SEBERG mnrm La Bianca accounts YOUR WAGON LOS ANGELES (AP) - "Business was rather slow ai had an opportunity to tali Market owners Rosemary and we HOWLINGLY FUNNY!" he said. "The conversation now! first run showing! Leno La Bianca read newspaper accounts of the bloody Sharon about "the Tate e ^ Tw-Lrt«H.., 4:00-430. Adult. 90t^^ The last time Virgil Tibbs had a day Tate murders shortly before they were similarly slain, was the big news. They s quite interested in it." 1 bought one Sunday paper. I like this was"ln The Heat Of The Night" witnesses said today. 'popular prices^N The wealthy couple purchasec. said, and he threw in a section! f6 papers with banner headlines another that gave extra detal about the Tate case, and LaBianca's body was found Police officer Willi! ] COLOR B AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL eouw«l among them, it was reported. Rodriguez testified that T SHOWN TWICE 7:55 AND LATE AND ON THE SAME PROGRAM John Fokianos, testifying at found LaBianca's body, cladj the trial of four members of a blue pajamas with a sofa pillj come face to face with total terror! hippie - type clan charged in the over his face, lying in the livil MARK LESTER seven deaths, said he sold the room of his Los Felix distrj LaBiancas a paper between 1 and home, amid some 2 a.m. the morning they were pages. Beside him were his $ lain. and a can of beer. , PROGRAM INFORMATION 372-2434 0PEN AT 7:00l >■■3° J A Daily 1 :00- GP>£* COLOR IC^\V Twi-LittHi.. 8:0C erMOVELA. Tonight TONITE OPEN 7:30 P.M.—SEE THE FINEST IN DRIVE-IN ENTERTAINMENT! ALL COLOR I BLUE SCREEN THIS IS THE SLAUGHTERHOUSE RUN | ...down a gauntlet of violence * in a war of survival! ^ k THE MIRISCH PROOUCIION COMPANY pn SIDNEY P0ITIER MARTIN LANDAU m A WALTER MIRISCH PRODUCTION THEYCAll ME M BARBARA McNAIR ANTHONY ZERBE Shown 2nd at 8:07 and Late - ALSO -■ DON LUKE LARRY TYNE ALDO color [gpR:- STROUD ASKEW BISHOP DALY RAY N AMERICAN INHRNAIIONAl • •' « til CHRISLAW TRACE-MARK presents SHOWN AT 7:55 & LATE 8AMMI - ALSO - iayi&jk. umn RICHARD GREENE "•ME MME IMF CHRISTOPHER LEE SHIRLEY EATON COLOR [GP]«33« COLOR by OeLu*e" United Artists SHOWN AT 9:50 ONLY Friday. August 28. 1970 7 WEEKEND ENTERTAINMENT el durini 11 Eleven films and new British films, At the play close Michigan. for anyone who appreciates doesn't move. It's play are offered this the last (Recommended.) just an movie musicals that make it to elaborate excuse to bring weekend of summer term. KELLEY'S all vere HEROES - an the screen with renewed spirit those songs ("They Call mallei Stage the w than 41 uninspired war comedy that tries and life. Winner of the 1968 Best Wind Maria," "I Talk to SHE'D RATHER KISS - The to be another "M*A*SH" but the Picture Oscar, "Oliver" shows at mnistratioi Ledges Playhouse is hosting the ends up just an insensitive miss. Trees," etc.) to the wide screen. by t h e M e • i d i At the Meridian 2. som American premiere of this new At the Meridian 3. school b< British musical with the help of (Recommended.) THE LANDLORD - Beau PAINT YOUR WAGON THEY CALL ME MISTER - Lee Anthony Cornish, an Bridges, as a pampered young TIBBS — Sidney Poitier stars in ht' t'anipu Englishman brought here to help Marvin, who can't sing, and Clint man, gest an overdue lesson in Eastwood and Jean Seberg, who this sequel to "In the Heat of put the show together. "She'd human relations in •r the 196' a black can't act, star in a move that the Night." At the Spartan East. Rather Kiss" runs for two ghetto. Pearl Bailey, Lee Grant pons arrested that i weeks, through Sunday, Sept. 6. Curtain time is 8:30 p.m. and Diana Sands give a trio of b; perfect supporting performances Wiseonsfc By ROBERT KIPPER ^ «f ther AIRPORT — high • class soap opera with cardboard characters State News Reviewer in this entertaining and realistic film. At the Spartan West. Women's lib strike the regent and only scattered moments of (Recommended.) beautiful, humorous, patriotic, THE LOVE BUG-Walt Disney |>t5 limits excitement. Atthe Lansing Mall, sentimental journey through 1 Productions' film abut a car with (''graduate le up nearl Mr. T In BALLAD OF A SOLDIER 1961, Time churned Russia." Winner of the a mind of its own is held over at seen proof of concern magazine top prize the '60 San the Gladmer. Poitier and Barbara NcNair star in "They Call Me Mister Tibbs," the acclaimed this as "the best p 22,00 SidneV Heat of the Night. The film currently is showing at the Spartan Twin sequel to "In the Russian movie made since World Franciscc Film "Ballad" is showing at the State. Festival, MYRA BRECKINRIDGE The Gore Vidal novel of a man - By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS •lions, th East. War II - a vehemently Citing their day of demonstrations as proof that women are original, (Recommended.) who becomes a woman to "act serious about their objectives, women's liberation leaders DOCTOR ZHIVAGO — David said out his fantasies" and dedicate Thursday they will use the momentum of the marchers to gain Lean's Oscar - winning film his equality, child care centers and an end to exploitation. I is an alread impact :ormer student plays part about women a sensitive doctor, the in his life and the confusion and violence of the Russian Revolution is as of particulars" has become not camp, not satire, but a gaudy freak show. Only Mae West, at "This is a mass movement and it's not going to be turned off," concluded Betty Friedan, a leader of the National for Women — NOW — which first called for the strike. Organization "We discovered our real power as 53 reside per cent of the vote. We powerful as it is beautiful. Omar her most vulgar, looks like she's have moved into the serious political arena." than 50 Detroit version of Hair Sharif has the title role, but Julie having fun. At the Campus. First priority for most activists is passage of the Equal Rights |d in campt n Christie and Rod Steiger carry away the acting honors. At the Meridian 1. (Recommended.) OLIVER devilishly R ~ on Moody's fascinating Fagin, Amendment. A committee in Washington headed member Flora Crater plans by NOW lobbying and head - counting on the bn, who ha Lionel Bart's splendid vote. GETTING STRAIGHT- White's inspired "I would warn Sen. Javits ouster fo Elliott Gould's (R-N.Y.) and any other senator that his Former MSU student Denny have a lot of different interests splended choreography, John Box's he really does risk his political future if he votes against this," allege than the other kids." performance save! his film sprawling sets, Charles Dickens' Mrs. Friedan said. airchild said he would stay in PANORAMA ? to war Fairchild said that about campus unrest and classic framework and Carol 'left ■ e Detroit version of the being in the cast really miss them conformist aloof of both the Reed's masterful direction make the c msical "Hair" until he "goes strikers and the establishment. "Oliver" an entertainment must changed him at all. He said that «ld-" "AIRPORT IS TOP FLIGHT ALLTHE WAY!" ME he hasn't • , Fairchild, a theater major here, even bought new clothes. id that he never intended to iidition for "Hair." "George Seaton has scripted and "I didn't come to auditions "I used to at the buy all my clothes GOVERNMENT GETS DISCOUNTS directed a sure-fire hit!"-Doro»h,.Mo, ith the intention of getting a Lansing Salvation Army, because of really irt of anything, I just came up cheap prices. You get really neat e I wanted my friend to looking By DELORES MAJOH la part." Fairchild said that, after he iditioned and got called back State News Staff Writer clothes and broken in." they're already Eth ics of car leasing AIRPORT burtlancastey • dean martin jean seberg jacqueline bisset "I can't think of how ir further auditions, he "got a being in george kennedy helen hayes theater, but I've learned so much "Hair" has changed me, i interested" in the unless, WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Senate Ethics Committee the matter when the House van heflin maureen staplet0n more here in the couple of absence makes the heart grow Congressional leaders aren't the has told Senate Committee returns from its summer barry nelson lloyd nolan weeks than I have at State. fonder of the friends I left back only ones driving cars at Auditioning sn't hard for chairmen and leaders to stop the vacation after Labor Day. danawynter barbara hale worked with school, but I still see them all discount lease rates. The practice of leasing luxury tirchild. Although General Motors does professional directors, the time." government itself gets a big Lincoln Continentals for $750 a ?r "1 made up my songs as soon not lease its cars to government professional actors, and discount on leased cars ranging year and Chrylser Imperials for officials and lawmakers at cut ilansing got up on stage, I didn't members of equity," he said. Most theater productions have from official limousines to TODAY 7:00-9:30 anything planned at all 'til a close knit $900. Without mentioning the rates, it — along with Ford and ■ocarbons "We're just always learning group of characters, economy ■ line cars for the Ford Motor Co. by name, the Sat. Sun. 2:00-4:30-7:00-9:30 uls, I walked in and they had on and off stage, and Fairchild Secret Service. Chrysler — does lease fleets of built witl do Woof's songs. I thought I something really every day," he committee said it was "clearly cars to the government at said that this maxim holds for greatly relative!; added. However, Sen. Clifford P. improper" for Ford, mall theatre ww those until I got on stage, the Detroit cast of "Hair." the reduced rates. "We've grown up a lot here, Case, R-N.J., questions whether company making most of the The charges range from $1,000 found out that I didn't . . . and up at college you grow up I made some up," he said. lot because you're away from "I would say even more so is ethical even for g°vernment leases, to make such a year for Cadillac limousines for Senate officials to .JS Democratic 'We just had a lot of fun." parents," he said. than other plays, simply because ndlvldual arra"8ements with dividual and 1 5628 W.SAGINAW' 484-44Q3 he controversial nude scene your we work together toeether more than man ,QW accept senators. rates n(jt ava,iab|e to the The House Ethics Committee Republican leaders to $100 a ] the end of the first act shocks general," he said. "It's, - .~..6 year for economy Chryslers for Fairchild added the Secret Service. lot of theater goers, but . and simply by working with s expected to take action - professional acting experience 3RD WEEK! lirchild said these people are """^'"Ihat toV you" aer'to "Naturally any auto company ^" . erreacting to the scene. isn't the only advantage to being in the cast of "Hair." He said J„°w them Fromwhat ,'?®ar' ... . , .. — » 15 pr°ud t0 haVe the gOVernment use its cars," Case said m a Box Office Opens 12:45 'It's not re Continuous From 1 P.M. a shocking thing. It's that by talking with the rest of are; he closest Hair" tribes knit of all the m the country. statement. "And surely the illy beautiful," he said. Tairchild said that his role in the cast he has become more government is duty bouynd to Feature 1:15-3:20-5:25-7:30-9:35 aware of the world's social purchase or lease official cars at production is easy for him to problems. "Everybody gets along." the best competitive price. \S toy on stage. 'There's not that much "I've learned like things a lot of about things, racial What will he miss most when he leaves"Hair?" But I think the government should not accept favors from Planet Of The Apes MAE WEST JOHN HUSTON any industry or company. was just fference between what I do on RAQUEL WELCH the beginning... problems, by talking with kids in The people. We ve become the show," he said. such close, close friends. When Certainly lease of a car for age and how I act off stage, "A lot of the people personal use at a greatly reduced icept that I've got dialogue on go someplace < days rate by virtue of official position tity to tal from different walks of life and off. m't wait to get back, j WHAT LIES ' fis.ii ion Fairchild said wrong." that his Kkground in theater at MSU Doors Open 12:45 P.M. MYRA BRECKINRIDGE as helpful to him during the BENEATH fyouts but added that training received during rehearsals for lair" surpassed the academic C3 ICHIGAN Theatre ■ Lansinq NOW... 4th WEEK! MAYBE Beneath d r lody, dad Willi that "d ining. "This is professional theater Michigan State is training, ipposedly for professional "Elliott Gould comes on with both fists, both feet, all the hair he can raise, and everything "Elliott Gould proves that he's possibly the best young American actor today!" THE END! 4THE DLANET ^ f i|sofa pillliv ^ApES in the |re|ix distr "Elliott Gould ml he book that couldn't "It's just possible that Elliott is perfection |newspa Gould is the number one off- in his embodiment of the •ere liis glas that couldn't Nr made! beat actor in this country!" anti-hero!" .igh ELLIOTT GOULD-CANDICE BERGEN GETV#G STRAIGHT Feature 1:00-3:10-5:15-7:25-9:35 RUN Doors Open 6:45 P.M. PROGRAM INFORMATION 332-5817 TODAY... 2 FEATURES! "One of the Year's Best!" 2a I JAMES FRANCISCUS KIM HUNTER MAURICE EVANS "The best Russian movie since World War II. Brilliant, vehemently IKinA WARRIQflM Co siar..nQ paul richaros - victor buono • james Gregory -iinuh nHnmoum WAIT DISNEY original, beautiful, humorous sentimental journey. Surefire sense jeff core* • natalie trundv • thomas gome/ of comedy...the theatre booms with an immense amen to life. Shown Twice at 8:07 and 11:50 and CHARLTON HESTON - ALSO - the true story of che guevara who followed a dream of justice "Chukrai has truly composed a 'ballad'. Lovely imagery...a and freedom... and created a nightmare of terror and violence! m TECHNICOLOR' picture poem that has tempo and feeling. It is humorous, exciting, tender and strong. Crawler, n y r.mes 20th Century fox presents yo4+i/£ OMAR SHARIF ;3; ;i| "ALSO! - ★★★★ «rs)" JACK PALANCE as FIDEL CASTRO it Ballad, of a Mil "4 Stars!" - N.Y. Daily News Soldier1 NO ONE UNDER 18 ADMITTED (X) to GREENE I ro[ MARIA SCHELL Julie Andrews Rock Hudson "Soldier" 7:20, 10:25. - Sat., Sun. in I :iO, 4:30, 7:30. 10:35 - "Bridge" "The LAST BRIDGE" 8:55. Sal., Sun. 3, 6,9:05. "DARLING LILI" (Features unclassified) Shown Once at 10:25 8 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan ^'day, August 28 1970 -SPORTS JIFF ELLIOTT Duffy By JEFF eager ELLIOTT for start of'70 season tackier and is one of the quickest men on the squad, running the 40 yard dash in 4.6. While he feels the Spartans also pointed out that the rest will be stronger this year, Daugherty of the league will be much improved Action--not talk State News Sports Editor "We have four or five deep backs coming back this year and as well. is new grid motto have several outstanding sophomores who will be contending for "A lot of teams have returning players who will make them Somebody forgot to tell MSU Head Football Coach Duffy a starting spot on defense. We're really optimistic. conference contenders," he said. "We don't have that many Daugherty that he's been picked to finish near the bottom of the "We're really high on Brad Van Pelt, who will be used at safety returning starters especially on offense. But we feel the personnel "I'm going to do a little less talking and a little more nl»vi„ Big Ten this year. this year. Brad could play about any position on the squad but we do have plus the best group of sophomores we've had in In his annual pre-season luncheon before some 70 newsmen we feel that he will have the greatest impact soonest on the squad several years will make us a better team." this year," Bill Triplett said, taking a break from mvrtoH Thursday, Daugherty said he's optimistic about the coming year if we start him off as a defensive back. He's got the most physical television, radio and newspaper interviews. a Daugherty said he was changing his approach in handling the It was press day at Spartan Stadium Thursday and and so are the players. „ _ „ ability of anybody we've had since George Webster." offensive and defensive units this year. judging from the throngs of newsmen present, you'd think This year's squad is one of a lot of enthusiasm, Duffy told The kicking game should also show improvement this year, with "In the past some of the players have said I've been partial to Columbus, not East Lansing. you were m reporters and broadcasters. "I can't remember when I've been so several sophomores and a senior contending for the job. Van Pelt, the offense," he said. "I don't mean to criticize anyone, but we're And at one time or another just about every media man eager and happy to start a season." who may become Mr. Everything for MSU before he graduates, is present The popular Spartan boss who will begin his 17th season as going to do things a little different this year. I'll be devoting more collared Triplett for an interview. But the senior tailback the best bet to handle the punting chores. Mark Grua and Marv would time to the offense than I have in the past, and we'll have make no predictions about the coming season. He's head coach at MSU this year, said he felt the team will be Roberts, both sophs, will back up Van Pelt and along with been th meetings together, instead of the offense here and the defense route before. Trip is going into this season as cautious as a f t improved in two vital areas this season - defense and the kicking transfer student Borys Shlapak and senior Gary Boyce, will vie over there. And I'll decide who will play on Saturday." soldier walking through a Vietnam jungle. department. for the extra point and kickoff duties. The MSU head coach didn't venture any predictions on the Triplett's attitude seems to be a common one around the Msr "We definitely feel our defense will be much stronger than last One problem which Daugherty hopes that the defense will cut outcome of this year's Big Ten race, but said he was thankful that camp this late summer. Nobody is going to get themselves year," Daugherty said. "Our front four of Wilt Martin, Ron Curl, down on this year, is the successful third down play by the one poll "didn't have us on the bottom at least." out on the precarious prediction limb this year. caueht Tom Barnum and Bill Dawson are two year lettermen and all have . . it's a long fan opposition. if the limb gives way and Duffy Daugherty and his "Notre Dame had a third down situation against us 13 times "Inasmuch as first and second places in the league have pretty team ha tumbled before. ve last year and all 13 times made their first down," Daugherty said. much been decided (Ohio State and Michigan), we'd like to go after missing all of last year with an injury. Dan is a good solid "That mav not be a record, but it's a damn good average. after that third place spot," Daugherty grinned. Looking at the offense, the first thing that stands out (literallv and figuratively) is the offensive line, which looks like thev belong on the basketball court. MSU basketball coach Gus Ganakas probably eats his heart out everytime he oasse* th football office. ine For starters, there is 6-6 center Tom Beard, the only returning lineman from last year's squad. The tackles are 6-5 Gary Nowak and 6-7 Jim Nicholson. And tight end Billy Joe Dupree is a meager 6-5. Standing next to them, 6-3 guard Joe DeLamielleure and 6-footer Errol Roy look strangely out of place. It's an inexperienced group, as line coach Gordie Serr admits but if size means anything at all in football, the Spartans have a good start. That's a lot of size to move. But it could present a problem or two for the quarterback whether it is sophomore George Mihaiu or junior college transfer Mike Rasmussen. They may need to throw their passes off a stepladder, lest they drill one of the big linemen in the back of the head. Despite the fact that it will be like trying to throw out of the great Redwood Forest, MSU should have a much improved passing offense . .. with either Mihaiu, who is No. 1 right now or the red headed Rasmussen, who is his worthy challenger, - "Last year, In fact, we probably didn't even have the best passing team in Lansing," Daugherty cracked. At the news luncheon todav. Daugherty took great pains not to put undue pressure on either one,sidestepping questions of what Rasmussen or Mihaiu might be able to do for the team this season. "I'm not going to put pressure on either George or Mike by saying anything," Duffy said. Like quarterback, the rest of the backfield is as green as the tartan turf carpeting the football field. Triplett, a former quarterback, is the top man at the tailback position right now, but he has only played there during spring drills. The same goes for junior Henry Mathews, a punishing but inexperienced runner. The third man in the tailback picture is Earl Anderson, who has played there before but is coming off knee surgery and missed all last season and most of spring drills. Experience - wise, fullback is even worse off with sophomores Mark Charette and Ken Alderson competing for the top spot. Both, however, will pick up valuable game time in a hurry. 1970 Michigan State football sq Split end looks like a solid spot with seniors Gordie Bowdell and Steve Kough running one - two at present. Both have plenty of experience and sure hands. So, looking at this year's MSU team, from the offensive side anyway, all one's eyes see is... ??????????? ILLINOIS 1ST OPPONENT S' to play 11 games in'71 ? in 1972 the Spartans would MSU is likely to be playing 11 football travel to Champaign on Sept. 16 games next season for the first game of the season. according to Athletic Director Last year the Big Ten opposed Biggie Munn. Munn and the Big Ten office have both agreed to going to an 11 game schedule, but after the '69 season, they the extra game which would be played Sept. 11. The opponent unanimously passed a resolution would be the University of allowing teams to play an extra Illinois and the game would be game if they wanted. The only held in Spartan Stadium. stipulation was that the opponent must be a member of "We're certainly in favor of the Big Ten. the added game," Munn said. All of the conference schools "Athletic representative John have indicated they will add an Fuzak, coach Daugherty and additional game. Last week the ^ i myself all feel it would be University of Michigan beneficial. Now it's up to the athletic council and we're hoping they'll also be in favor of announced it's added opponent would be Purdue, but that they will open their season against J it." Northwestern. It won't be known until Sept. The only school which will not 22 however whether the have 11 games is Ohio State. The Spartans will be playing the Buckeyes have only scheduled extra game, as the council will nine games in the past and the not meet until then. additional contest will give them While the extra contest with Illinois would be here next year, 10 opponents season. for the 1971 John Fuzak and Biggie Munn MR. DOMINO SEZ; Opening TRY ONE OF OUR DELICIOUS PIZZAS. IT'S PIZZA PERFECTION EVERY TIME WITH FAST FREE DELIVERY DOMINO'S Today A new concept in entertainment. A place designed a double-take of delicate persian with brotherhood print for Miss J a pantdress and shirtdress in mind. give an exciting Live Soul, Rock, new twist to her fall plans in Jazz. Dancing. breeze-weight wool challis covered with swirls and Non-alcoholic curls of jewel-like pinks or blues. Sizes 5-13. refreshment. The pantdress. $38. The shirtdress. $28. Donation $1.50 DOMINO'S THE NORTH END SOCIAL CLUB Jacobson's Miibb J A&op 1214 Turner Street EXE DORMS - OFF CAMPUS |I CALL 351-8870 361-7100CALL | ON CAMPUS _ Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, August 28. 1970 9 SPORTS Last 3 S' foes offer n., Griese and something of everything ^ By JEFF ELLIOTT Phipps. Senior Jeff Brown, probably the fastest # w Jones or sophomore State News Sports Editor Gary the team, also returned in come up with a triple option to pass, they'll have a '69) will be at fullback while pair of ?;±irrlpea.r.',otbc),hc|ik«iy wh«» „ 6rabblng '70 two offense, geared mostly to the junior receivers, Jerry Brown (15 Msl,.s three opponents of £3'££riJ,!£1£ US The 5-11 of Phipps' aerials last year. Spartan football sophomore trackmen are vieing for the other halfback run. Diagneau will still throw grabs for 277 yards) and Barry the 1970 season will range from rh_ minded club to an c!?,oose between' Jones ,_^oss. showed speedster led the nation in kick-off returns and spot. however, his 85 completions for Pearson, who was injured most 1,276 yards in half a season last offe evenly balanced team clubman eff^tive running passing abilitylast and was fifth in scoring \,,th 18 Alvin Hawes, a 6-5, 240 pound year are too impressive for Agase of last year. The defense will be manned by Linebackers Veno tackle fills defensive squad while Danielson is ^spring L"1"' probably the " touchdowns. In the and Jim Teal are Paraskavas wj|| be the quarterback spot a big spot i the not to turn to the pass now and seven starters from last year's PurdU.« dtr rba T Mi better thrower of the two. backfield, Purdue will tough, but the where WI|ere junior unior UTCraig oufr Curry appt;ars offensive line and will be joined then. unit which gave up 306 points American t quarterback e If DeMoss i get ; decent have Bullock """ senior and fullback John ndary will be weak and will the likely 'choTce^akhough he Minnesota will face Ohio State Agase obviously had AI1 " and over 4,000 yards, most of Phipps could be justN as strong . " performance from one of these „ junior JUIIIUI halfback Hill I [JiH'K only played 52 minutes last an(j 10 halfback Mike Adamle in which was compiled by several Scott Clayton Michigan & this year; Northwestern two fhic vpflr: ^ three other candidates, or il-: as starters again ,ast year wil1 make "P m°st of year. (away) mind when he decided to go of the nation's top - rated teams iproved club with ' W11I1 T Last • vpar'c ■ - l««.Hin« with the running game. The last year. rl'tuming of n returning starters on both the offense will be tough. The .Li starters or anri ?°i>ermakers two fine receivers ground gainer will be moved to defend tn Randy Cooper the defensive line which has the defensive line which has only only sound with..™thi^„g\r..„.a^!arSr Barry Mayer eRlieTwLk1oumySpuawheamV the thick of the conference Joel Hall and Jack Derning are offense and defense; one returning starter. the league's top backs returning ri proven linebackers but the third ..«• i, Stan Brown and Ashley Bell Purdue may have the second Minnesota will have iviiiiiiv— u_„l. (u„. two of "i the ine best Desi in the league make room for promising soph for his s vear He's led the Northwestern's Maurie Northwestern history last year spot is up for grabs. In the defensivestarters back^that back Otis Armstrong. toughest trio of opponents to Gophers Dai8neau could have been the when he gained 316 allowed a si 8 only Bel, f>4 2]0 known around madp hjs the conferenci Jm( On the line for four big play in a row next to MSU's. rushins? the Dast two inf years, gaining 745 yards last S B'^ Ten's Passin8 lead^ this against Wisconsin. yards secondary. Rick Telander and safety Eric Hutchison could be linemen who started all of last The Boilermakers meet Notre year, but Coach Alex Agase has Ernie Cook (5.1 average When the Wildcats do decide all conference material. the,e^ .Irlkere hTvJAlways last >'ear as a sophomore whe, ^phomore when year are back as are most of Dame, highly rated Stanford and - C ^' LTk at Quarterback he «rabbpd 49 Pa^s for 66< their under studies. Michigan in games 2-3-4. sr.Kr.srK sssci«si,he - The defense could spell the Just the mention of Minnesota Boilermakers' downfall however. is enough to make Spartan Coach Duffy Daugherty cringe. In ten games against the Gophers Weightlifting Club since he took over as the Green and White's head coach in grows Daugherty has been two and has not beaten 1954, able to win rival coach Murray Warmath since with MSU since 1948 start 1957. The Gophers are always noted for producing big and defensive linemen. They may rugged not be as big this The MSU Weightlifting Club, in conjunction whem pay a annual dues ot $5 or $2 per term, year but with the Dept. of Intramural Athletics, maintains they're experienced and fast, Membership entitles ntitles one to exclusive use of the c Last year's middle guard Bill a weightlifting facility that may have peers in the club facilities from 1 ■ United States but certainly has no superior. tu J , o, 1 ; 4 P,m- °n Tuesday and Light as so quick Warmath will Established in 1948, the club's facilities, in the 'ru The MSU club u" exists Saturdays.reasons: °n for three use him at middle linebacker this First, to season The squad's leading Jenison Field House basement, consisted of one provide instruction and equipment in physical tackier last year, Rich Crawford small room containing a few exercise sets training for all interested students, faculty and and t,wo other donated or owned by the initial members. staff; secondly, the club provides excellent regulars also return this season to make this With the completion of the Men's IM Building in 1957 the accommodations for the apparatus for the maintanence of a loosely knit weighthfting team; lastly, facilities are one Qf the team's strongest •0ft* weightlifting club were vastly improved. maintained for varsity athletic use. positions, Not surprisingly the club has grown with jn the secondary converted the Over the years the club has won five national university and a second room was provided for quarterback Walt Bowser will championships and has been runner - up twice; a stick at and will be the club in 1960 out of space occupied by the dozen state titles, seven NCAA individual joined former Ping Pong and billiard room. by starters Gary Hohman and champs, two AAU titlists, one Pan Am winner, jeff Today the MSU weightlifting club maintains a two members of the 1968 Olympic team and Wright to provide a solid backfield membership of more than 100 persons, each of three "Mr. Michigans." Minnesota's big question mark Dan Werner passes IN GRUDGE MATCH IM News 'PLAY IT SAFE' The Men's IM Bldg. will close Stars meet Lancers for cleaning and repair Sept. 4 Saturday Thornhill all had minor injuries The through Sept. 19. Summer students must clean their lockers by Monday, Aug. 31. Items left in lockers will be collected and made available for By JEFF ELLIOTT but should be ready to go by offensive line will have use by those who are unable to State News Sports Editor Lange and Chuck Shafer at the provide equipment for Saturday. Offensive end Bob ends, Dave Van Elst and Dave Lange suffered a bad cut under themselves. Having conquered one of three his jaw in Porter at tackles, Jerry West and The outdoor pool will remain tough opponents in the league but will be in the Wednesday's practice Tony Conti at guards and starting line-up Roger open. Swimmers are to come this year, the Lansing All - Stars Peltier at center. for Saturday's big game. dressed to swim and enter the will battle the Lackawana, N.Y., On defense, Bob Vinney will Quarterback Charlie pool bv the west side gate. Lancers Saturday night in what Wedemeyer get his first start at end after an only made one outstanding certainly will be a grudge match practice this week but will be at for the Lancers. Game time is the helm of the All - Star attack performance Pontiac. The two tackles will be at ANOTHER 7:30 at Centennial Field at Scott Emlong and Nick Jordan Lansing Everett High School. Last year when the Midwest again. The former Spartan flanker had a good night at and the dependable other end Charlie will be SONY FIRST! ... Get a Scientific Pontiac last week, throwing Johnson. The Tune-Up from Morris. Football League was split in two 'Stars three three touchdown passes. tough divisions, Lackawana captured linebackers George In the backfield, Jim Garrett, Chatlos, the Great Lakes Division while Charlie "Uncola" Thornhill and Dick Allen, Kermit Smith and To spot motor trouble and expense before it Lansing won the Central Ernie Pasteur will all see about Ron Goovert will be at their stops you, Division. In the regular season, familiar spots, while get an electronic test or our complete tune-up. Now is the the same amount of playing time Roillard, the New Yorkers struck Lansing Hetrick, Bob Super and Joe time for that summer auto check. See us with Ken Hines and Tom today. with their only defeat of the Gavel are expected to start in Kajovac also filling in when year in the second game of the needed. the secondary. season, a 35-6 pasting. But the All - Stars won a return match MORRIS AUTO PARTS on their home field and then The Sony TC-8 topped the Lancers in a rough 8-Track Stereo and bruising game, 22 - 12 for the league championship. Tape Deck Recorder "They'll be out to get us, I'm sure about that," Lansing Coach Turf Kauffman said earlier this ALL THE OCEAN PERCH YOU CAN EAT Treat Your week. "They were clobbered by Pontiac two weeks ago but they were several at a of physical handicap with their key players EVERY FRIDAY 5 P.M.-8 P.M. £ HI-FI BUYS Stomach to 1101 E. Grand River injured. They should be at full Phone 337-2310 strength Saturday and I imagine they've added a couple of ball players by now that our scout (Tony Angel) didn't see." The All - Stars came out of the OPEN Sun. thru Thurs. 6 A.M. to 11 P.M. Fri. & Sat. m - Something Coach Turf Pontiac game with three players nursing injured legs. Hetrick, Joe Roillard and Charlie Gordie 6 A.M. to 4 A.M. 2820 E. Grand River Different at... brams GRANDMA'S K PLANETARIUM jafn 1900 E. Kalamazoo F featuring 30 Varieties wishes you It's Honey • Di HEART'S DELIGHT of Italian Sub Sandwiches happy vacation. a & Our classic heart shape one carat diamond says For dreamy bouquets, and Watch for our any "You're mine." day of the year. From our floral and all arrangements flower needs NEAPOLITAN PIZZA next program delicious world of fine gems. on that special day, By the tray or by the slice $1,050.00 beginning i— see us . . . then toss 40" Square Pizza $3.50 20" Square Pizza $1.75 fall term. I REGULAR BOX O'CHICKEN $1.35 the fresh blossoms. i 3 Pes. Chicken, Mashed Potatoes, | other weights available Priced from 250.00 I Gravy, Cole Slaw and Biscuits Free Estimate "SUB VILLA , HOURS: I JUMBO BOX O'CHICKEN $1.80 , Mon. - Thurs. 11-1 I SPECIAL- ' ! 5 Pes. Chicken, Mashed Potatoes Gravy and Biscuit, Cole Slaw | | MORGANS Ion Anthony Fri. & Sat. Sun. 11-2 3 - 11 I 40" PIZZA WITH ALL THRIFT BOX O'CHICKEN $2 55 | Jewelers Since 1876 Florists j THE TRIMMINGS - $5.00 J*1" Plar>etarium, 9 Pes. Chicken ONLY I 809 E. Michigan MsnCp SU?Lansing & Shaw Lane, I I Serves 3 to 4 j 121 S. Washington Meridian Mall • East • Lansing Lansing IV 5-7271 c 4980 NORTHWIND DRIVE 3514731 (across from Yankee Store where Big Al's used - to bej.'j 1o Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, August 28. I persons • only. Call 351-4698, ONE GIRL needs place to live, fall HALSTEAD MANAGEMENT PONTIAC 1965, $125. Real term only. Call after 6 p.m., **<52 332-3311 and 351-8890. O COMPANY, 351-7910. O RATES transportation special. Home 351-8495. 1-8-28 337-9519, work, 484-8443. 3-8-28 MALE OWN room, furnished 1 day $1.50 TWO NEW large rooms, full bath, hou« FURNISHED ONE bedroom September 17. Call Immedlltelv' 15c per word per day private, five minutes from campus, PONTIAC 1963 convertible. 1963 for two. 337-1525. 2-8-28 apartment for Grad student or 351-0788. 3-8-28 3 days $4.00 Comet. Volkswagen van, new AT MEL'S we repair all foreign and Employment For Rent married couple. Close to campu«, 13V2C per word per day engine, good for camper. $550. American cars. If we can't fix it, it 332-2495 after 5 p.m. 4-8-28 THREE BEDROOM house, ill can't be fixed. Call 332-3255. O 5 days $6.50 1965 Dodge wagon, good INTERESTED IN modeling? How TV RENTALS, $8.50/month. Free furnifhed for three students,' mile transportation. Reasonable. Phone about plastic furniture? Cute FURNISHED APARTMENT for 1 to or female. 2705 Harton. 3-8-20 13c per word per day Mel, 332-3226, days. Q-8-28 models call 337-9367; furniture 4 girls. No pets. Close to campus. (based on 10 words per ad) Aviation 332-2495 after 5 p.m. 4-8-28 buyers either, 337-9215. 1-8-28 GRADUATE STUDENTS: one BURCHAM WOODS. 745 Burchim. Peanuts Personals must be FRANCIS AVIATION: So easy to bedroom furnished, beautifully 2 bedroom (3 or 4 man), $2lo! BABYSITTER WEEKDAY UNIVERSITY VILLA: Three and pre-paid. learn in the PIPER CHEROKEE. maintained. Phone 351-5909 after One bedroom (2 man), $160! Special $5.00 offer. 484-1324. C afternoons starting September 1. Apartments 5 p.m. 2-8-28 four man furnished, $185 and up, 35 1-3729. Furnished, heated pool, ample There will be a 50c service SUNBEAM ALPINE Roadster 1966. Own transportation preferred. HALSTEAD parking. Call between 3 • 7 pm Wire wheels. Good condition. Call Phone Saturday only 339-2324 ONE BEDROOM apartments close to MALE MANAGEMENT COMPANY 351-3118. If and bookkeeping charge if STUDENT wants apartment no answ this ad is not paid within 482-6690. 3-8-28 Employment between 10-5. 1-8-28 campus, utilities $100/month. near campus with other ' location in town, trols, push button program selector, illum¬ inated program indicator. Dimensions 6'V wide x 6Vs" deep x 27 V high and weighs only (Etopckmgfjam in a beautiful 4 pounds. Packed without speakers. campus view apartments luxury apartment, hurry to ONLY M4'5 ■ Will if the Street from 4620 S. Hagoo'orn ■Ave nS IsuDervi TSity aPProved 1£ Sed Housing for ■ Michigan WATER'S EDGE and RIVER'S EDGE THE SIEBEO SHQPPE I ■leasina f,udents u«der 21. APARTMENTS MANA GEMENT EXCL USIVEL Y B Y j Chack 1 j |l970-Ca.,;?o^k f°r Fa" Roommate Service Provided At Nelac 0,E",l",ln' 543 E. Grand Rlvar I "GOLDEN our | See Don at 1050 Phona 337-1300 GUARANTEE" J32-6246 Water's Edge or Alco Management Company J call 332-4432. 12 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Friday, August 28, | Clerical crisis looming in By DAVE SHORT Archdiocese, quit the Catholic Church to marry earlier thi« and bad living conditions in Bay Catholic Church Saginaw Catholic Church Diocese offered to assign him to was more threat that 40 concerned about the or 50 people were Even the church's have a lot can™ ZH . I State News Staff Writer News Analysis month. City, Father Miller, a .white, going to withhold their of Burdened by a hierarchy top - Valade had been in charge of became one of their more active and influential oranizers. a church in Saginaw apparently to get him out of Bay City. He collection money than the work Miner""?8'" accordi»* to FaThJ the parochial schools, religious that was being done in Christ's In its staunch opposition to clerical Criticism of his role In the refused. "e heavy with age and dissenters with strict name." t<*,k his case the Roman birth control and abortions, its maintenance and enforcement of education, continuing education, uprising soon came to a head. Father Miller wasn't the first the ,1 conservatism, missions, family life, educational His church, St. Boniface, lost priest to encounter trouble in Michigan Civil Din,i Catholic Church faces a crisis from within its clerical ranks. lack of enthusiastic pro-black church rules. sentiments, and its failure to Among those who have left television and young adults for- $500 In donations over a two the area. Twenty ■ five priests Against Viet war Commission, commission ruled that but Rlgh| eight Michigan counties. have left the Saginaw Diocese in Father Miller, who also is the .J Controversy over the Catholic take a strong stand on the the hierarchy are such week period. wasn't in their And even if the members of As » result, Father Miller was the past six years. against the Vietnam war and the jurisdiction T Church's internal and external Vietnam war, the Catholic prominent figures as Bernard J. Despite what happens Church has been negligent in Cooke, one of the nation's the dissenting clergy have chosen transferred to St. Hedwig's "The institutional church, "super patriot" view, said that FathJ policies have brought about the to stay, as most do, the Catholic the Catholic Church does not Miller says he doesn't plan most notable mass defection of Church in Bay City. But when which today is not the church of using its powers to curb social leading theologists; James Church has made it reconcile leaving the church, however tough for he continued his efforts in the gospel, is part of the racist people about such priests and nuns from the service ills, many critics say. Shannon, former auxiliary There are many priests Within the church, the young bishop of the Archdiocese of St. many of them. things as communism and the »i of the church since the helping the minority groups. society," Father Miller said. nuns who have killing of South Vietnamese by decided Reformation. clergy condemn the hierarchy Paul and Minnepolis; and Frank Miller was relieved of his church "The work that I was doing in to Father Miller's An estimated 6,500 nuns left for not granting priests and nuns Matthews, former head of the and no longer was paid. Bay City, organizing the blacks South Vietnamese. By doing determinate Controversial this, according to Father Miller, to stay. °L the church last year. So serious and Mexican Americans, was to right to marry, for not St. Louis archdiocesan radio and As Catho| - Father James Miller was the a result, the Lacked church the Catholic Church sides with is the shortage of nuns at present modernizing the church and for T.V. projects. center of a church controversy entirely in keeping with the Church has that the Roman Catholic not creating more democratic The list of Catholic priests in Bay City more than a year Until January, 1971, Father gospel that Jesus Christ was war and helps to create it. lost many 0f I hierarchy in India has sold as proceedings. who have left the church in ago. Miller was a man Vrithout a talking about," he said. He contends that the people more liberal, open - minded priests. intelligent gJ have to break up the theory And I many as 2,000 peasant girls But, still, the church has not order to marry is vast. Ms6r. When blacks and Mexican - church. Then, however, the "And yet the Catholic Church may stand to lose many about priests being the only morel there to convents in Europe made any drastic revisions. Arthur Valade, director of Americans rebelled against the months ahead. which sought novices, according Instead, it has weeded out education for the Detroit antiminority group sentiments people who can solve things. "In the future, we have to Family pla to reports of the London Times issued earlier this week. In addition, from 2,000 to de-emphasize the role of the priests. It is profitable for the y I church to have a caste system 4,000 priests in the United States alone made the departure (priests) like this; it is very economical," he said. last year. The that it has Vatican on acknowledges file at least 10,000 for Peace Father Miller says that part of the problem with the Catholic Church today is that the people requests from priests asking to be relieved of their vows. WASHINGTON (AP) - The persons or childless married are content with the. "old Although 13.8 million people joined the Catholic Church over the past three years, the number Nixon administration's plan to send 200 families overseas as Peace Corps volunteers during the past year hasn't worked out. couples, both of whom had to take part in the program. After the initial failure, the program was redesigned to religion." "A lot of people buy God through the church. People are using the church; they pay their JIM'S I RESTAURANT I of incoming priests has not kept Only four families recruited for screen applicants more donations and come to church 8c pace. the program are serving In thoroughly. and it tells them that they're New ratio Now applicants are given a TIFFANY Whereas five years ago, foreign countries. going to Heaven," he there After a faulty start last spring, medical clearance before they LOUNGE emphasized. was a priest for every 1,380 are invited to train — a practice Catholics, worldwide, today, the during which only one family out of six remained, the program that wasn't followed previously. Church 'afraid' ratio is one for every 1,435. was revamped and practically Once they are cleared medically, Father Miller, who now stays "The name What is more, Vatican statistics indicate that the number of merged with other, more they are interviewed In depth for in an Episcopalian rectory in is unassuming . . . successful projects. 2l/i days to learn if they are Bay City, says that the problem seminarians dropped from but the food Director Joseph H. Blatchford emotionally qualified to serve in with the church is that it is just 167,000 in 1964 to 147,000 last a foreign country. announced last Sept. 22 that one "plain afraid" of change. and service year. of the major goals of the new The Catholic Church, the isn't" directions he had prescribed for largest Christian denomination in many the migration. world, ways, has forced, in the clerical the Peace Corps was to send 200 families overseas during the next 12 months. THE SONY 3GG • • Automatic Total-Mechanism Shut-Off Three Heads for Convenient "In this pilot project we wish to remove the one Tape/Source Monitoring great barrier • Mic/Line Mixing Marine which prevents well motivated Americans from meeting the • Exclusive Record Equalization Selector Switch requests for critical skills • Servo-Controlled Back-Tension P.S. Gr»«k Sptcial- overseas," he told a news • Built-in Sound-on-Sound ♦!•« Mrvtd avtry Sat¬ may ha ve conference. "Whereas some Americans have been able to join the Peace • • Exceptional Fast-Forward and Rewind Performance Vinyl Dust Cover urday nijht. Corps and serve and express joined their idealism, those who are married can't unless we can i job for the wife in the same find BSBBI supmaopc i JUTS WASHINGTON (AP) - A man Train explosion town; and should they have claiming to be who defected to the Viet may prove to a U.S. Marine be the first Cong A tank car exploded in flames Thursday near South Byron, N.Y., when an eastbound Penn small prohibited children, from members of the Peace they becoming Corps." are a"U. HI-FI BUYS 1101 E. Grand River American serviceman to go over Central freight train derailed. Sheriff's deputies at the scene said the 111 - car train was carrying During the first eight years of to the enemy in the Vietnam both propane gas and vinyl chloride. the Peace Corps in which 40,000 war, officials said Thursday. volunteers went abroad, its The Marine Corps confirmed it AP Wirephoto members were limited to-single lists a Pfc. John M. Sweeney, 21, prisoner of as a war, isn't certain if he is the same but said it OBSERVERS PARTICIPATE individual who told newsmen in Stockholm, Sweden, he joined the Viet Cong 18 months ago after his company commander tried to kill him on a combat patrol. The Marines said they would Guerrilla' plays scriptless offer the man in Stockholm a "The skit starts off with a chance to return to the United By BECKY BELLINGER University police confiscated the They must be able to ad lib at liberal officer learning how to States. If he refuses, and if he toy guns. any time. Guerrilla use the word 'but' while he is theater has no The other group focused its "For instance, if there is a proves to be Sweeney, then his learning how to kill. He says, for scripts, no stars and no sets. skits on false patriotism, war and heckler in the audience, the official status would be changed instance, 'The Vietnam war was It draws its form from its racism with comments on whole skit would change," Miss from POW to deserter, officials a mistake, but we can't get out audience. women's liberation. This group Terebelo said. said. now.' " Leslie Sjoren, New "Everyone in the streets is part has broken up into study groups The skits also change with The man who identified of York, N.Y., sophomore, who the guerrilla theater," fro the summer. time. Skits on the war started himself as Sweeney arrived in according to Sheri Terebelo, "Guerrilla theater must be full out with a pacifist line but now portrayed one of the skit's Stockholm Tuesday where he MSU characters said. graduate. "People who time. You must devote 24 hours have a more militant one, Miss told newsmen: The skit shows liberal come to observe must a day to it," Miss Terebelo said. Terebelo said. "I was taken ill with malaria students, faculty and and participate." "The best idea is to live in a "Rat plays" are a form of was left by my officers in Guerrilla theater came to MSU administration leaders collective." guerrilla theater which attack a the jungle. They wanted me to in the fall of 1969 with a Free Guerrilla theater is particular idea or person, she attempting to stop the students die so I could be counted as from abolishing ROTC. University course. The first spontaneous, making it said. Killed in action. But two meeting turned into a guerrilla necessary for the players to react One group put on a skit on The guerrilla theater group will Nationalist Liberation Front theater session start meetings again in the fall. on Grand River not only to the audience but ROTC that encompassed these (Viet Cong) soldiers found me Avenue, said Miss Terebelo, who also to their fellow players, she The first skits will be on ROTC and saved my ideas. The name of the skit was life." was in the original class and has said. One player may change the "Reserve Liberal and the police, according to Sweeney asked for asylum in Training been part of the group ever lines in the middle of a skit. The members. They will be presented Sweden. Corps." The "rats" were liberals since. other players must be aware who stand in the way of outside the Men's Intramural Pentagon officials said they The class split into three Bldg. during fall registration. knew of no case in which a enough to pick up from there. abolishing ROTC completely. smaller groups — one of which serviceman deserted and went disbanded. The others prepared over to the enemy in Vietnam. for the Lansing and From time to time, there have Washington moratorium activities. been unconfirmed reports from A highlight of one group's soldiers in the field claiming to activities was a war have seen a Caucasian with Viet skit - a complete with toy guns — whose Cong and North Vietnamese battlefield was the campus. In units. the Administration Bldg., the For ©T GOLDEN FALCON ROOM FINAL ®P HOSPITALITY DINE AND DANCE ON WINGS: WITH NIGHTLY BUFFET DON RODRIGO TRIO A LA CARTE Featuring JERI RAY OFF CAMPUS CALL \s„ COMPLETE Thurs. AFTER 7 P.M. DINNERS Fri. & Sat., AFTER 8 P.M. 337-1631 EASY CREDIT TERMS! 10% Discount to MSU Students X ON CAMPUS CALL Meridian Mall 337-1681 Frandor 485 1764 FOR RESERVATIONS (Capital City Airpoi (FREE PARKING) FREE DELIVERY FCXS Direct Dimond Importers 203 S. Lansing Mall Washingtol