f .S. youth better educated WASHINGTON (AP) - American youth are per cent a decade ago, and 40 million now are in reported that they voted as compared with 70 the better educated, more mobile and less prone to that age group. figures were 64 per cent of the whites and 39 In 1960, 64.9 per cent of men between 18 per cent of the persons 25 years and older." and per cent of minority descent. marry than their counterparts of a decade ago. The population now is younger, with a median From March, 1969, to March, 1970, the report 24 were single, but in 1970, it was 67 per cent. Ten per cent of the male But, as voters, they're shirkers. age of 27.6 years, compared with 29.5 in said, 10.3 million persons between 14 and 24 more high school In 1960, 40.5 per cent of the women were 1960. graduates and nine per cent more of the women single But the figures indicate the new law moved. "Those 22 to 24 years old are but the 1970 figure climbed to 47.7 They also make up a sizable chunk of the the voting age to 18 in lowering especially high school graduates wont to college in 1970 Of the 8.2 million between per cent. federal elections means mobile - 45 per cent of the persons of this ages 20 and 24, 65 nation's civilian labor force — and their incomes politicians will have a difficult moved between 1969 and 1970." age than in 1960. per cent were in the labor force, 22 per cent in are rising, a fact not ignored by the country's job in getting About 94 per cent of young young Americans to the polls. The report showed American people between the armed services and 13 per cent were not businesses. youth are more ages 14 and 17 were enrolled in Ih the November, 1968 apt to get school, working. presidential election, a more extensive education than they compared with 90 per cent a decade ago. The The Census Bureau sketched out Wednesday only 33 per cent of the 18 20 year - olds voted did 10 years ago. Of the 16 - to 21 year old part - time - percentage of 18 - and -19 year olds enrolled was college in states where students, nearly 40 per cent were in the labor its every - 10 • year profile of the nation's youth they could cast a ballot for the Among young adults who would have recently 50 per cent last year, 38 nation's leaders. per cent in 1960. force, an increase of seven per cent from a between ages 14 and 24. completed their schooling 78 per cent of the Of 7.4 million Youth between 14 and 24 now comprise 20 "For all states," the report went whites and 58 per cent of college students, 492,000 were decade earlier. Of the full time college students, on, "only 51 - per cent of the persons 21 to 24 at least minority persons were blacks, a 110 per cent increase in a five year - nearly 37 per cent worked, up 27 per cent from a per cent of the population, compared with 15 years old high school graduates in 1970. In 1960. period. decade ago. Thursday Whatever's. . . MICHIGAN Snow . . . STATE NEWS . . begun in anger ends in shame. STATE . ground, . . getting mushy and on the - Ben Franklin maybe flying UNIVERSITY through the air. Temperatures slightly warmer. Illume 63, Number 121 East Lansing, Michigan Thursday, February 4, 1971 Allies bar news from Laos,- Soviets report intrusions' By The Associated Press broadcast that U.S. and South Vietnamese way." He followed that with a similar Reports say that a considerable number The allies Wednesday continued their troops were massing on the South statement Tuesday. of Saigon ground troops supported by U.S. blackout on news of what is or is not going Vietnamese border for a major operation in On Wednesday the Soviet agency Tass armed forces invaded Laos. U.S. planes on in Laos while Communists provided Laos. carried a statement saying "United States every day make massed raids on the vague reports of allied action that On Monday the Soviet premier, Alexei ruling circles . . are completely- territory of Laos. Heavy bombers. B52s, apparently has reached inside Laos or N. Kosygin, said "an outrageous invasion . take part in these raids." centers the frontier of that responsible for further aggravation of the on nominally of the southern provinces of Laos is under situation in Laos and entire Indochina.' neutrai country. (Please turn to the back page) The U.S. Command in South Vietnam has placed an embargo on certain news from the northern part of the country. Embargos are nothing new in Vietnam, available information indicates the but one VIET 'CREDIBILITY GAP' imposed last week is the strictest yet seen. It also goes beyond the usual bounds of a news blackout. Normal practice is for the command operation to brief newsmen involved and embargo information at the same time. on In this case, officials informed newsmen the the Senate Dems hit secrecy of the embargo but prohibited them from WASHINGTON (AP) • Some leading Frank Church. D - Idaho, said the new EARTH Democratic senators blasted the Nixon credibility gap between those who are mentioning it and did not brief them until attack into Cambodia raised questions directing the American operations and later — thus, in effect, placing an embargo administration for secrecy surrounding about the administration's intentions and those who should advise and consent to Vietnamese operations Wednesday, while Zli on the embargo. News of the embargo has come from others denounced the U.S. backed South criticized Secretary of State William P. Rogers for not telling the Foreign and support such operations." While Byrd said certain information Vietnamese drive into Cambodia as a new Washington, not Saigon. Relations Committee at a closed session must be kept from the enemy, he added The Soviet Union, mentioning the escalation of the war. This Apollo 14 situation for the third day, said it"strongly denounces the armed intrusion of the Democratic leader Mike Mansfield of Montana and his deputy, Sen. Robert C. last Thursday about impending operations. The committee, meanwhile, said it had not received an answer to its invitation for that "in this instance it seems likely that the enemy may know more about what we diagram shows two events which will take place Thursday during are doing than our own people know." United States and Saigon puppets into Byrd of West Virginia, criticized the Rogers and Secretary of Defense Melvin R. the Apollo 14 lunar voyage. The spacecraft is scheduled to go into lunar (Please turn to the back Laos." secrecy surrounding operations near the Laird to testify about developments in page) orbit today, preparing the astronauts for exploration of the moon's The Pathet Lao, the Communist Laotian border. Laos and Cambodia. surface Friday. AP Wirenhoto movement in Laos, did not go that far. It Sens. Edmund S. Muskie, D - Maine, and Mansfield, talking with reporters, said the continuing secrecy "is creating a very difficult situation and a certain amount of apprehension of what is in the offing. Viet troops polio lunar landing still go' "I dislike getting my information from the Russians, the French and the Japanese," he said, referring to foreign press reports of a U.S. - backed South Vietnamese strike at Communist supply bases in southern Laos. launch attack SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) — rendezvous with the moon early Thursday. "If the situation stays as it is, we will while Shepard and Mitchell tested the lunar module systems, Frank said. Byrd, the new assistant Democratic JApollo 14 sped on Wednesday toward a planned moon landing on Friday despite a Evern if the battery is later found to be attempt the landing," Flight Director M.P. Frank said. Space officials said the leader, accused the administration of low battery reading aboard the moon Tender. Officials said the matter was not faulty, it would pose no danger to the astronauts. It would, however, force But he added: "We have to have both electrical agency astronauts would have to turn on Antares' "inexcusable information on bungling" the in blocking operation from in Cambodia cancellation of the moon landing. Mission batteries to commit to a landing. If the systems again. The suspect lenous enough at Congress and the people. present to affect the Control said the battery is one of two on battery has degraded to a point where we battery would be isolated on a circuit and Noting the wide variance in reports SAIGON (AP) - About 10,000 South landing. the ascent stage of Antares, the lunar have no confidence in it, then that would current drawn from it to test the voltage. about the situation, he said "These differing be a no - go situation." Vietnamese troops have launched a new module. These provide electrical power for stories create an entirely unnecessary The low reading was discovered during a the craft while it rockets the astronauts The battery reading discovered (Please turn to the back campaign in Cambodia with full U.S. air was page) fheckout of the lunar module, but the from the surface of the moon and back to combat support to clean out enemy border Tjstronauts. Mitchell and Alan B. Shepard Jr.. Edgar D. Stuart A. a rendezvous with the mother ship. sanctuaries, Saigon officials said Roosa, went to Officials said the battery was giving a Wednesday night. Weep at midmorning Wednesday without The operation hac been in full swing for ■Indicating any concern over the subnormal reading of 36.7 volts, three - tenths of a about a week but no major fighting has volt below the normal of 37. The second battery reading. been reported so far. battery on the ascent stage was normal. The potential trouble ■command ship and the moon lander, developed as the Isnubbed nose to nose, hurtled Into the once Space engineers could not determine at whether the low reading resulted 9§ The officials reported the drive would provide a fresh screen for American troops now being withdrawn from Vietnam and from a faulty gauge. A test was developed Jgravitational influence of the moon and to provide a better view of the battery's would pave way for an announcement by (began picking up speed toward a condition. President Nixon in April of additional cutbacks beyond those already disclosed. Others saw the move simply as an opportunity for Lt. Gen. Do Cao Tri, an 'OLTAGE CUTS aggressive field commander, to deliver new blows to North Vietnamese and Viet Cong forces. Electricity Tri led the major South Vietnamese incursions into Cambodia last May and June that destroyed enemy bases and were credited with speeding an earlier phase of afflict American troop withdrawals from the war northe zone. U.S. ground troops took part in that operation but are now barred by Washington legislation from entering WASHINGTON (AP) - In an customers. Since one customer, like a large Cambodia. ■ unprecedented crisis of One official said the South Vietnamese winter - time apartment building, may house several ■ electric power hundred people, the cutbacks have going back through sanctuaries supplies, the northern are ■ United States has been hit by 19 voltage involved upwards of 50 million people. bordering South Vietnam's 3rd military ■ 'eductions in 21 days — and officials say The power shortages generally are region "to be sure we haven't missed 1more could yet come. blamed on two factors — generating anything that would endanger the ■ According to Federal Power Commission equipment failures which have plagued withdrawal of U.S. troops." ■ ata, the crisis electric utilities for the past five years; and Tri commands the 3rd military region, began in New England on I an; 14 and mushroomed until it reached usually cold weather which put heavier which includes Saigon and 11 surrounding 1■ pu- sout'1 as Virginia and as far west as than usual demands on the generating provinces, and shares 231 miles of border Chicago. facilities remaining in operation. with Cambodia. About 20,000 U.S. I The trouble struck To date, voltage reductions have been combat troops are being withdrawn from ■ Power eight times in the pool serving all New England, seven held to a maximum of five per cent so (Please turn to the back page) I ^ 'n the New I ree times in the York state Power pool, most electricity users have not felt the PJM interchange serving pinch beyond voluntary compliance with I vienn.sylvania' New Jersey, Delaware, utility company requests to go easy on the Job seminar |fT.ry,a"d' Virginia and the District of use of electric appliances. An employment seminar will be held I Rh and once at the Commonwealth The exception was New York City Console shows at 7 p.m. today in 104B Wells Hall. liaison Co., the electric utility serving where; on Tuesday, heat was shut off on Speakers from several diffarant I ''c,a8° and parts of northern Illinois. subway trains for six hours and escalators Apollo 14 Flight Director Gerald Griffin watches television on the console in the Manned Space Center at employment fields will discuss the II in the e,ectric utility companies involved fu power reductions were shut down in some parts of the city Houston, Texas. The Wednesday morning telecast was made from the moonbound spaceship. outlook for the 1971 job market. serve 17 million to preserve power. AP Wirephoto 2 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Thursday, Februa•ary 4,197, news House Dems summary s of AP and UPI. power WASHINGTON (AP) - of retain the chairman or risk losing Wednesday meeting when it Tradition oriented House the White House to the - failed to win a seat on the Ways Democrats rejected Wednesday Republicans in 1972. and Means Committee for its an effort to remove a 72 - year - If McMillan were defeated, candidate, Rep. Donald M. old southerner from a Mills told his fellow Democrats, Fraser of Minnesota. A 119-104 committee chairmanship after it would be seen as a slap in the vote gave the assignment to Rep. "If the faculty member wants shouting down two other moves face to Southerners and the Joe D. Waggonner of Louisiana, to take the chance of getting to dilute the power of South and would cost the a prominent member of the reasons, then he ought to get congressional seniority. Democratic party Southern Southern - conservative them." The party caucus voted 126 support in the 1972 presidential establishment. to 96 to retain Rep. John L. elections. Leland W. Carr Jr. McMillan's chief opponents McMillan of South Carolina in from the District Committee The vote quashed the University attorney the District of Columbia attempt by liberals on the conservatively were Fraser, Diggs, Andrew Committee chairmanship he has Jacobs of Indiana and (See story, p. 9) dominated committee to win Brock held for 22 years. Younger Adams of Washington. election to the chairmanship of liberal members had sought his removal, asserting he runs the Rep. Charles C. Diggs Jr., a Shortly after the vote on Don't throw Michigan black. McMillan, Adams' office panel autocratically and has no announced the Seattle Lights from inside give this greenhouse a symmetrical appearance as each pane of real concern for the needs of the The Northern liberal bloc glass j, Ships violate treaty illuminated lighting the outside too. The glowing greenhouse is next to the - congressman would leave the predominantly black city of lost still another bout in the committee. Building. Horticultural State News photo Washington. by Tom Dolan A fleet of up to 40 Soviet bloc fishing vessels has McMillan's supporters been sighted in restricted waters 60 miles off the coast countered that the critics are of southern New Jersey and will be instructed to leave just embittered by Nixon asks strike limits men the area, the Coast Guard in New York reported ideological differences with the Wednesday. chairman, especially his A Coast Guard spokesman said the fleet opposition to home rule for the - including District now ruled, in effect, by Soviet, Polish and East German vessels — was first WASHINGTON (AP) - Citing day national rail strike that sighted Tuesday afternoon by a Coast Guard air patrol Earlier Wednesday the caucus a threatened nationwide railroad indicated they would mount operation in 60 miles off Cape May, N.J., at the entrance of Congress halted until March 1 stiff opposition in Congress dispute. In a n.tionwi* I handily defeated attempts to walkout March 1, President with a special law. railroads, that w Delaware Bay. limit length of service by all Nixon renewed Wednesday his But Nixon said the current against the law. mean letting unions strike Democratic committee chairmen Secretary of Labor J. D. certain lines but leave | He said the cutter Vigorous was en route to the scene urgent request to Congress for wage dispute of four AFL - CIO Nixon's othen proposal, almost quarter Hodgson said, however, the to four two year terms and to ■ the first new law in a unions emphasizes the need for operating for from New London, Conn., and would attempt to make identical with one he made and as long as 180 prohibit any representative 70 or century to forestall major White House has no hope that broad new legislation to deal days. 1 radio contact after getting an exact count and location older from serving as chairman. strikes. Congress will enact the proposed with national - emergency strikes Congress ignored last year, on the vessels. The The McMillan vote followed a law in time to head off the would abolish the separate Vigorous was due to arrive at the "The urgency of this matter new in railroad, airline, shipping, If there were no March 1 strike threat of nearly Railway Labor Act covering rail settlement in scene at 3 p.m. today. plea by the powerful Ways and should require no new emphasis longshore and trucking 180 days, an Mears Committee chairman, 500,000 rail workers. and airline labor disputes and strike or industry - Wj,je The Coast Guard said the waters in the by anyon*," Nixon said in a industries. lockout, or further area are Wilbur Mills of Arkansas, to reminder of December's bring them under coverage of action by restricted to all fishing from Jan. 1 to April 1 under one - "We are Congress in a special hopeful of resolving Spokesmen for organized the Taft - Hartley Act now law could result. Special treaties negotiated by the United States with the that one by bargaining," labor and the railroad industry covering other industries. If Soviet Union on Dec. 13, 1968, and with Poland on enacted, Nixon's proposal would The third option would June 12, 1969. ATTENTION CAR OWNERS be the first legislation limiting permit the president to appoint Reps d strikes since Taft Hartley went to • a neutral into effect in 1947. panel to impose as 1 England bids to join ECM * Complete front end repbir and final solution in a labor the last offer of either the union dispute Nixon's bill would give the Prime Minister Edward Heath will visit West Germany alignment White House three options to or the management, on the March 21-23 for talks with Chancellor * theory that the two sides would job Willy Brandt, Brakes * Suspension deal with transportation strikes opportun Heath's office in London announced Wednesday. move closer together to avoid threatening the national interest. Government * Wheel balancing * Steering losing too much if the other1! sources said the talks would focus on last offer The first would allow the were accepted. Britain's bid to join the European Common Market and An employment seminar to help president to extend the present on East - West relations. students find jobs will be held Organized labor reaffirmed iti I Heath is also reported talks with President Georges planning a trip to France for LISKEY'S Auto Safety Center at 7 tonight in 10-iB Wells Hall. John D. Shingleton, director of the Placement Bureau, will Taft • Hartley 80 • day cooling • off injunction for an additional 30 days. strong opposition to the bill. AFL - CIO President George Pompidou later in the 124 SOUTH LARCH IV 4- 7346 speak on the total economic situation and give tips on how to go Meany said when the proposii spring as part of the same effort. through job interviews. Or, the president could was introduced last year "It b Roger Seaman, district manager for the Social Security appoint a special board to compulsory arbitration which Shah's proposal supported Administration will discuss federal employment opportunities. determine whether to permit a we will oppose any time, any Ten oil Free 1225 For Seaman will administer the Civil Service examination op campus Saturday. Students interested in taking the test should ci"" place." i\J i ^ J pcoducing nations threw their support contact the Placement Bureau. Wednesday to a proposal by the Shah of Iran that their Away Games & Helen McMurray, consultant, in staff personnel services for the Fights break legislatures take individual action to boost the price of Flint public schools, will speak on the outlook for elementary pil. Addressing a meeting of the Organization of Vacation Trains and secondary education. Ross Ringler, senior staff assistant for college relations from Genera] Motors Corp., will talk on the technical and nontechnical out Petroleum Exporting Countries - (OPEC) in Iran, the . outlook of business and industry. Iranian ruler said that in view of the breakdown in their talks with the world's major oil that they adopt a system that has companies, he suggested "precedents in other 1973? Speakers will direct themselves to the following questions: What is the general outlook in your field for 1971, 1972 and in north Ireland What type of individuals are employers areas." looking for today? (i.e., the intellectual, the versatile individual, the Presumably the shah general or specific BELFAST, Northern Ireland housing and voting. was referring to a unilateral educational background). (AP) - Machine - gun fire raked boost in the price of oil, as Venezuela has done What should the student look for in his first Shouting crowds bombarded through job? an army reserve headquarters, soldiers with acid bottles, higher taxes on the income of oil companies. Time will be allotted following the presentations for questions and battles between British gasoline bombs and bricks, then The shah noted that the six Persian Gulf states have Watch for the engineer in the old time hat — from students on the job market. troops and teen - aged rioters put a nickel or darted away in the back ■ street been seeking a price that would hike their income on a a dime in his bucket and put old 1225 back on the track! erupted in scattered parts of maze of Northern Ireland's barret of oil to SI.25. The gulf nations now earn about Belfast on Wednesday night. The State capital, defying the military to News, the student newspaper at Michigan State Rioting over the past two find them in the dark. SI a barrel on a gross price of SI ..79. University, is published every class day during four school years has stemmed from Twenty - one persons were 33331] terms, plus Welcome Week edition KB in September. religious and political differences arrested by 10 p.m., the hour Hemophiliac released SPARTAN SPECIAL Subscription rate is $14 per year. in this British province where the Catholic minority claims the the pubs close here and any The first hemophiliac to major fighting usually begins. undergo open heart surgery 35«e*gr 33B3K Member Associated Press, United Press International, Protestant majority has denied Two soldiers and a policeman was released from a Inland Daily Press Association, Associated hospital Wednesday. His doctor said Collegiate Press, them equal opportunity in jobs, were injured. the operation's success means that Michigan Press Association, Michigan Collegiate Press hemophilia victims now can undergo any delicate surgery, including heart Association, United States Student Press Association. transplants. Second - class postage paid at East Warren C. Jyrch, 50, an Lansing, Michigan. accountant, underwent Editorial and business offices at 347 Student Services surgery Dec. 15 in Michael Reese Hospital. A defective Building, Michigan State University, East Lansing, valve connecting the aorta and the left side Michigan. of the heart was replaced by an artificial valve in a IVi - hour Phones: operation. Editorial The usually delicate 355-8252 surgery was compounded Classified Advertising because Jyrch suffers from 355-8255 hemophilia, a hereditary Display Advertising 353-6400 disease that prevents blood from Business - Circulation 355-3447 coagulating. Doctors prepared Jyrch for surgery by injecting him with a Photographic 355-8311 recently developed antihemophiliac globulin - AHG. The Biggest Detroit to get rapid transit Construction of a rail rapid transit line between Little Sound in Town! The Senior Class Council & downtown Detroit and Pontiac will get under in We Have A Great Time mid - 1973, assuming funds are allocated for the way It's the BSR McDonald RTS - 20 Stereo System. A compact music The Placement Bureau project. The Southeastern Michigan Transit Authority center for the dorm, apartment or home and the around for stereo savings. biggest system will present In Store For You! (SEMPTA), in announcing the plans Tuesday, said the This space saving music package centers around a strong but sensitive AM/FMtf/FM sstereo receiver. " Featuring Automatic Frequency 26 - mile rapid transit line which will follow the Control - forr ddrift free AM, and Automatic Gain Control - to SITirfc Woodward Avenue Corridor, would on July 4, 1976. The project is part of a $101.5 - million go into operation those distantt A AM stations. And don't let the convenient size of our Micro - Mini Turntable (SW tall) fool you, this allows for placement and it includes a cue and pause control that * rail the' * " unique shapes it up - " CAREER a - - year rapid transit program in eastern Michigan for which no money has vet been appropriated. as good as they sound. The BSR RTS - 20, only at the Disc Shop and still only $129.95, so stop in and take in the "Biggest Little Sound in Town." For sound OPPORTUNITIES Chrysler pact ratified savings it's BSR! The United Auto Workers announced in Detroit Wednesday its 110,000 hourly rated workers at Chrysler $129.95 '71' Corp.'s American and Canadian plants have ratified a Guest speakers include new, three - year contract with the company. 1. lack Shingleton, Director of Placement, will Douglas A. Fraser, a UAW vice president and director the broad employment picture. cover several areas of of its Chrysler Dept., said all the votes were in and 88 2. Mr. Roger W. Seaman, District Manager of Social Security FINE DINING & ELEGANT per cent of the unskilled workers and 82 per cent of the Administration, speaking on Federal Employment. 3. Mrs. Helen McMurray, Consultant, Staff Personnel SURROUNDINGS. ALL YOU SUPPLY skilled workers had accepted the agreement, which will Services, Flint Community Schools, speaking on the outlook for Secondary and IS THE COMPANY cost Chrysler at least SI billion in additional wages and Elementary teaching. 4. Ross Ringler, senior staff assistant to fringe benefits. College Relations from "1 am gratified not only by the overwhelming DISC SHOP : General Motors Corporation, covering the technical and non technical employment outlook of Business and Industry. - GAS BUGGY ROOM 323 E. Grand River * majority which voted for ratification, but by the fact Any senior who does not yet have a job, this ti a must! that a majority was obtained in every single unit voting Open Mon. - Fri. 9 a.m. - 9 p.m.# Sat. 9 a.m. 6 p.m. but one," Fraser said. • » THE {LYCOS'PLAZA The contract will become effective Monday. Phone: 351-5380 * 104 B Wells Hall TONIGHT 7 pm 126 W. Michigan across from tha Capitol Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Thursday. February 4. 1971 3 Veteran Egypt announces decision prisoner on post-cease-fire By The Associated Press by Sadat. The president relayed Egypt's course course of action might In a press statement, Abu Egypt announced Wednesday that decision Wednesday to the have domestically as well as in Hamad said the UN By JUSTIN BAVARSKIS it had decided on its course of Central Committee of the Arab the Arab world and abroad. representatives of the Big Four action after expiration of the Socialist Union (ASU) Egypt's In were expected to issue a United Press International Beirut, Lebanese Foreign Middle East cease - fire but only political party. Minister Khalil Abu Hamad said declaration "stressing the need J DETROIT (UPI) — A lieutenant received a Bronze Star with a refused to say what that course The broadcast said the there for the implenetation of the UN were signs the Big Four would be. committee discussed Sadat's |V for Valor" device after pushing two North Vietnamese powers would make an eleventh Security Council resolution of Irisoners from a flying helicopter, according to a young man who The armies of Egypt, Jordan and other Arab states were on report, taking into consideration - hour move to save the cease - November 1967 as a basis for Lid he was a Vietnam war veteran. possible repercussions that fire. peace in the Middle East. alert, and Israel shored up its Murphy Roy, who said he was with the 101st Airborne defenses along the Suez Canal. hjvision of the Army, also said Tuesday, "I have helped in But sources in Beirut, Lebanon, torturing prisoners." and elsewhere in the Middle East remained hopeful that the six - 1 Speaking in a smoky ballroom crowded with more than 500 Lersons, the vast majority of them young and many sitting on the ||oor \rtny because all the chairs were taken, Roy added that, as an interrogator, he and others sometimes cut off prisoners' month truce would be extended when the deadline arrives midnight along the Suez Canal and the River Jordan. Friday House Republican «rs. Cairo radio said Egyptian Roy spoke during the third and final day of the Winter Soldier President Anwar Sadat will make investigation IVietnam Veterans in Detroit. The investigation was sponsored by Against The War, and sought to show that Jftmcrican Soldiers committed war crimes in Vietnam "as an known his at an government's decision emergency session of Egypt's parliament Thursday of revenue sh ■nexorable result of national policy." evening. Egypt's public position has Nixon's staff chief for domestic During Operation Junction City near the Cambodian border, been that it will not WASHINGTON (AP) - A comfortable position renew the .. ?0y said "five or six" prisoners were taken and a lieutenant who . high - level White House affairs, and other White House lad joined the company five days before said he would personally cease - fire, unless progress is presentation on revenue sharing spokesmen after they had "But I can't accept the registered at the Middle East briefed Interrogate the prisoners while they were on a helicopter. apparently left a number of the conference of all assumption that Uncle Sam can peace talks going on under the House Republicans unconvinced Republican House members. perform the miracle of the Roy said the lieutenant, whom he did not name, first pushed auspices of UN special envoy "I would like to go along with >ne prisoner out, then pushed out another when he still received Gunnar V. Jarring in New York. Wednesday, including the chief loaves and fishes. I don't think GOP spokesmen on revenues, the President ..." Byrnes said he has been endowed with that lio information. But Egyptian leaders have later. "I don't find myself in a indicated that, even without a Rep. John W. Byrnes of power." J When the lieutenant approached a third prisoner, Roy said a truce extension, Cairo would not Wisconsin. ■prisoner was pointed out who turned out to be a North order a resumption of fighting, Byrnes said afterward he still (Vietnamese lieutenant. Demonstrator ignored unless Egypt is attacked. Israel opposes on both practical and The American lieutenant suosequently "wrote himself up for a The audience attending the "Winter Soldier Investigation" has said it will not fire the first philosophical grounds President Run for the Sun! I medal and got a Bronze Star with a V Device in it for valor. The shot if the truce ends. Nixon's proposal to turn over to |"V" was for valor," Rov said. ignored this single protestor. She was asked to be seated but Cairo radio said state and local governments, was allowed to continue waving her Egypt's with oo strings tied, $5 billion of flag. She is the only position was decided upon Pack as much excitement in your Spring Break as possible. Others who said they were veterans added that they saw the federal tax take. protestor to enter the three day investigation by a private Tuesday at the meeting of the I genitals cut off prisoners and saw several shot. ■ Byrnes, senior Republican group. AP Wirephoto Higher Defense Council headed Jet from Lansing to Florida and spend 3 days and nights at member of the House Ways and the luxurious Gait Ocean Mile in Ft. Lauderdale, 2 days and Means Committee, met privately with John D. Ehrlichman, nights in Nassau, 1 day and night in Freeport and 1 day and ire razes munitions plant "Old Towne" New England CLAM BAKE! •Whole Lobster night cruising on the Flavia. I BRUNSWICK, GA. (AP) - A Dorothy Peeples of the police Hospital in St. Marys. other buildings and at least 10 Seventeen airplanes and eight •Clams 'Shrimp For more information c levastating blast and fire leveled department in nearby Kingsland, The blast started a huge blaze wooded acres of the isolated helicopters were used to • Corn-on-the-Cob said: "The last count we had at about 25 miles south of evacuate many of the injured. [ concrete and steel munitions that consumed the remains of area Every Friday 6 to 11 p.m. [uilding Wednesday at a Thiokol least 25 known dead and they're the building where magnesium Brunswick near the communities Aircraft used a taxi strip about TOSSED SALAD-CORN BREAD fchemical Corp. plant. still finding bodies." trip flares were being of Woodbine and Kingsland. three miles from the building. DRAWN BUTTER CALL FOR INFORMATION J More than 25 persons were Billed. Estimates of the number She said 19 bodies had been counted at the scene and six manufactured Indochina. for use in Some of the victims were reported trapped under a Pilots reported difficulty flying in the area because of a BILL'S College Travel Tf injured ranged up to 100. other bodies were at Gilman The blaze spread to three collapsed wall. huge pall of smoke. 130 W. Grand River Survivors of Tom RESTAURANT & BAR the disaster Buffington, company 351-6010 estimated about 100 were director of finance and ■egis loto r injured. They were flown or administration, said he was in proposes tudy driven to hospitals at St. Marys, Folkston and Brunswick, Ga., and Jacksonville, Gla. "We don't know how many another building about 2,000 away occurred. when the explosion Buffington said the company bodies we are going to find employs about 500 persons at >f rental deposi because some of them have been burned," Miss Peeples said. "We don't know either how many the plant but there are several buildings dispersed throughout the area and he did not know I That $270 were in the building, but there how many were in the wrecked rental deposit you slapped down between the person making the deposit and the were at least 70." structure. Ball term to secure your apartment may be easier person accepting it. 0 get back this spring. Ford said that, technically, the deposit is Rep. Thomas G. Sharpe, R-Howell, Tuesday required to protect an owner from breakage, not Introduced a resolution proposing a committer for cleaning for which many students have been Jo study the misuse of mandatory rental deposits charged. Red R l»y landlords and rental agencies. "I was billed myself for having the carpet in I "I intend to insure that people get back their my apartment cleaned twice when it had only been cleaned once while I lived there," he said. ■eposits without going to court," Sharpe said. 1 Sharpe and several other legislators have received complaints from MSU and Almost any apartment dweller has a standing irritation about money being withheld for 1oo,S3" University of damages, Ford said. Michigan students about difficulties they have Ford said he hoped the study committee Encountered in getting back rental deposits. JON ANTHONY 1 "I don't feel escrow funds are the might get managers concerned enough so they property of would discontinue the practice of withholding Florist Ihe manager or rental agency until there is some rent deposits. ■estruction other than normal wear and tear to 809 E. Michigan "While there is a definite problem, I don't ■he apartment," IV 5-7271 Sharpe said. think we can constitutionally pass a law I Rep. Thomas G. Ford, R-Grand Rapids, said ■ here has always been great differentiation restricting landlords. It would be an infringement Free parking behind store. on their personal property rights," he said. Miss J's canvas runabout is extra special as casual shoes go There's ZIP-LINED ALL WEATHER a rope-edged sole of gripper crepe under colors to match with your RAIN COAT sun-fun wardrobe. Red, REGULAR 50.00 VALUE yellow, green, natural or white canvas $5. NOW 36." ALSO open your own Hut44 ^ J REDUCTION - OTHER ZIP COAT Jacobson's Young Adult AND TOPCOATS Charge Account. . . it will simplify your shopping and you will Stop in enjoy its convenience and apply for yours. . . HOLDENMl REID it takes just a few minutes FRANDOR CENTER Jacdbsoriei LOGAN • DOWNTOWN LANSING MALL • ST. JOHNS Jacobflorig • michigan BARNEY WHITE STATE NEWS university Icy cold flashes: ,0 time-tripping time FREDERICK J. LESLIE advertising manager We were flashing down the road giggling, fishtailing and drinking sweet, red wine. MARK EICHER, Then we hit a snow drift and spun out. managing editor ED HUTCHISON, city editor First • reverse, first • reverse: nothing. BARBARA PARNESS, campus editor Stuck tight. KEN KRELL, editorial editor Get out of the car and take a look -- GARY WALKOWICZ, sports editor minus 35 chill index straightens you right up -- the fog of many pitchers vanishes in an instant as the fell fingers of Boreas Seven-time recipient of the Pacemaker award for outstanding manipulate your inner organs. Wow, journalism. whatta bummer. Reality: five - foot drifts and an evil wind -- where before? The Big Snow of '67, yea that's it -- nostalgia flash of other times EDITORIALS and places, of smells and sights now gone. Tinkling sound fading into a Gordon And I loved her, Lightfoot sweet melancholy. The sluice • though I never sain „ And, lord, I still do! Ghosts, I gates of situations passed is blasted hear asunder. clanking of their chains: of spirits evil*! Larger Moving forward from snow issues through years and beers, classes and lasses. Wait, there she is moving through my memory. Not so very long ago as time goes. grinning, taunting who I cannot have. I remain in the ghost - girl. me with knowledge,! love Wl® Of course, she still lives in the definite by ASMSU,coun sense. Saw her a few days ago. But thath. OUR READERS' MIND person carrying the same name, face, void It is not, however, her. The wind still whips the The Academic Council Tuesday if the Academic Council and trustees will, cold in blowing off the field, across the'dune-« tabled a motion to delete the accept ASMSU's recommendations. is it from the endless past In order to drink in grown cold in sections from the Academic Freedom Report dealing with professional rights of the faculty. A True, the conflict exists until the Academic Council accept and trustees that recommendation, and Snyder Hall » passing? Shiver, for the cold is in your hem awful cold of the Outside, situational setting not allowed to fruition, of a space - time vector ri of , reach full resolution to that effect, ASMSU may be able to get a To the Editor: 1971. For an explanation of why some of For over twenty (20) will be allowed to bleeding from your life - matrix. recommended by a conference judiciary hearing next Monday, but some reason, a liquor policy must go the points were included, see Pioneer Bob The girl I knew/that I still love no committee of ASMSU and the the judiciary may look doubtfully at on file in some official's office somewhere; consumtalcoholicbeverages. lonn Boyer, RA of Snyder Hall; he will fluently 2. People with incidences of exists. She was a four - dimensional to meet the demand for necessary diagnosed entity University Student Advisory an ASMSU suit that may be resolved clarify any problems of interpretation of madness may not be allowed to consume The look - alike I met on the street the bureaucratic red tape, the enclosed policy the policy. alcoholic beverages. other day has three coordinates Committee, will be reconsidered by at the next trustee meeting to the comet was unanimously passed by the Snyder - but the fourth was askew -• it had the Academic Council Tuesday. apparent satisfaction of all parties Phillips Dorm Council on Sunday, Jan. 24. beet 1. People below twenty three (23) and 3. Alcoholic moved forward several months, more - beverages will not be or At the heart of the debate lie two involved. consumed in less. public places, rooms, items. First, removing Section 2.2, the faculty rights section, would But the conflicts Taylor and the Freedom reports between the Observe concert safety bathrooms, or hallways. Drinking of alcoholic beverages will be allowed in That's why you can never go back. the street meeting you become flush At with storage - rooms only and drinking times the feeling that it was so remove the legal impasse between aside, the logic that concludes that To the Editor: very wrong. You either with people being injured or the must be set up ten (10) days prior to the want to say something to her, the Taylor Report and the freedom this University needs a separate It seems that the Sly episode has started put it il University taking action to limit or stop drinking bout with the drinkee's RA. back together -- make up for your mistakes new lines of report, since the conflict between faculty rights document and a some thought concerning our shows on campus — either one would 3a. Each bottle must be stamped with an and madnesses, sooth over the lesions ol concerts here on campus. On one be the two involves who could amend separate students' rights document is hand, a stone drag. indelible serial number and the name of the false parting. kids are finding out that they are an To insure the continuation of concerts the faculty rights section of the contrary to the concept that we are party or parties using the indicated bottle. But the scene is dead, as dead as if it integral part of the show; musical the Pop Entertainment Committee must The serial number will be registered with never All freedom report. all members of the academic was. memories: complex performances backed with the living ask that safety precautions be observed. the RA at the time of the Consuming hydrocarbon molecules and suchlike afloat Secondly, faculty have been community working together toward theater. On the other hand, we should pay Audience participation is a measure of Registration (see in the chemical soup called your brain. closer attention to sec. 3.) pressing for removal of the faculty scholarly pursuit. We are all equal a few specific things success. Concerts are becoming pretty big 4. Women who wish to drink and are Real? But it was, is. The feeling (?) is still that are happening. references in the freedom report, partners in this noble endeavor. To affairs, and they are going to get better if eligible according to the above criteria there: the love, the joy Now that people are getting together a we can regulate them a bit ourselves. . . . Feeling? just since a subcommittee of the Faculty compartmentalize the various must have a "D" tattoed on their bodies another electrical configuration in the bit more some concern has been raised to The Byrds concert will probably be a Affairs Committee is currently symbolizing "debauchery" and all women brain - broth. components of the University by the future handling of concerts here; test of sorts and with the Dean coming in must have a TB skin test. Burned out, then: no chance left. The drafting a faculty freedom guaranteeing their rights in separate specifically, when 9,000 people in Jenison March we don't want to blow this concert 5. Men who wish to drink and old shall live are never again. The only hope:i document, to be placed on a par documents would be paramount to or 3,800 people in the Auditorium get off. Realization of these few expectations eligible according to the above criteria new scene. No . . . there is as yet no lij with the Academic Freedom Report. writing one constitution for down, there's a lot of smoking, a lot of prior to this Friday night can help all to must either be us circumcised or have a peering over the horizon of ifness. ASMSU agreed to the conference Democrats and occupied aisles, a lot of chairs being moved plan accordingly. one for Republicans. around and match pierced ear. Tinkling sounds and flashes of the lighting. A human 1 committe report recommending Furthermore, unless machinery tendency is to recognize the potential J3JJOO 3tj5l Onafanya kitu changu. Unafanya nini searing softness of Gordon Lightfoot -. unataca kufanya. fold Swdhfll deleting the faculty rights section in was established to resolve disputes danger but at the same time saying, "What John Garofalo ftdVaffejT' ' why this image? . . . She really dug him. ' The wind whips the scarf across raj part because the committee between the faculty and student the hell. same Nothing will go wrong." Kris Ernst Judi Rentschler face: report also included a rights documents on an equal plane, Unfortunately a disaster could happen, Pop Entertainment Committee Wyoming, Ohio, sophomore "Hey man, we gotta get this he recommendation stipulating that a caste system would be written into Feb. 1,1971 Jan. 24,1971 unstuck before It gets snowed in solid." proposed amendments to the law. If the Academic Council can freedom report will not become operative without the approval of veto any amendment to the students' freedom report, should not students White hat the ASMSU Student Board. be able to veto any amendment to To the Editor: But agreeing to remove the faculty the faculty rights document? Your editorial "Washed-Out Warnings" references also destroyed, for all As matters now stand, if all parties in the issue of 1-28-71 makes an understandable error. You say, "In seeking practical purposes, any legal standing continue on the present course, the ASMSU might have had before the Student - Faculty Judiciary, since the legal conflict between the Taylor chasm within this University will widen. There should be no "student a solution to the problems of phosphates, a number of solutions have been offered, none of which have proven very effective." That was last year. It is no longer true. Living in a world of actors rights" or "faculty rights," only and Freedom reports will be removed academic rights. The same Dow Chemical Co. that is often pictured in black hat — despite some At one time in my life, I imagined man trying to take his son away from his Gary is a liberal's liberal. His bag is remarkable contributions to mankind's myself a great thespian. Early in the divorced wife, I revolted. personal freedom, national freedom and well being has developed chemical formation of these ideas, I can remember But this is not a treatise on the pitfalls Laotian — a international liberation. All his friends, like news treatment for the handling of phosphates. Current use in Grand Rapids, under repeated warnings against so-called professional hazards. of acting, it was not meant to be. As far as I can see there are hazards in all him, know what's happening and where it's at. Many times, Federal supervision, of this technique has though, Gary is in on Almost always they were linked with professions. But I think that this concept things he can't really justify. Whenever he not been publicized — both Dow and the can be applied to people in general, South Vietnamese troops, in all censorship concerning psychology. So many times I had heard, starts thinking about them too much, he news about Gout agencies involved preferring to wait regardless of occupation. probability, have entered or are Southeast Asia. The news media have "Half those actresses in Hollywood don't feels bad, so he finds some comfort in until everyone has had an opportunity to Sometimes we go for so long pretending about to enter Laos. No one can sacrificed the people's right to know know who they are. After they've played telling himself that there is no justice in the study, evaluate and wallow in happy to be what we are not, what we think we world. He frowns his psuedocynic's brow so many characters, they start forgetting really say for sure, though, because for the Army's right to destroy. repetitiveness. who they are and create a character who should be, or what we think other people and chucks the of an agreement made in 1966. At But it is want us to thought. working — and working they call themselves." be, we forget (if we ever knew) There must be American reporters beautifully. It means that municipalities who We run into people like them every day that time the government of South we are. in southern Laos and northwes rn — in class, at work and maybe even in» Vietnam and the United States can now handle phosphates without the Examples were given of people who had It happens in so many ways, and goes so mirror. South Vietnam; the press must know costly plants that seemed the only answers continually played the part of gangsters unnoticed. mission in South Vietnam set up to the problem. They could go ahead and killers until they began to believe that Here are but a few examples. I wonder guidelines concerning the release of what is going on. But all the tomorrow using their existing facilities. that was who they were. Women who were how many of us fit into at least one of these Even amateur psychologists know that if American media have done so far is you tell someone something over and ova information about new military (But since they have until 1972 to meet cast in roles depicting prostitutes began to categories: to make subtle hints again, he'll eventually be conditioned to action. American television networks concerning the tighter specs on phosphates — you can see themselves as such and act accordingly Mary raised in believing it. American activity in Laos. was a religion which she and imagine what will happen. Does this (although the percentage for success was printed media agreed to accept The press has long complained suggest an area for organized citizen always preached to me to be five per cent now finds irrelevant in her life. In fact, in Remember those great army films? One of the enemy appears wounded traintoj those guidelines. so many ways she rebels against its dogma. about pressuring?) talent, 95 per cent sex). But Mary continues to go to church. She and calls to an American soldier for aid. As Because of this agreement, a credibility gap in Washington Loius K. Cramton Even moviegoers, seemed to like or between feels that it's the least she can do. After all, the soldier bends down to help, the enemy ' lcrica is being left completely in the government and the State Representative dislike people based on the roles they that's what her mom and dad would want slits his throat. After 50, or 60 of those, i i ' dark concerning the current people. The news blackout Jan. ay, lyyi played. Rock Hudson, Debbie Reynolds her to do. And it's better to believe in even the most cynical would have had to concerning the new allied offensive is and the Robert Young types took all the situation in Laos. The mere existence something, isn't it? have some feeling toward that enemy: killa applause, while the cold - hearted villians Village drab a giant step towards the of breadwinners, he who may cause of a news blackout indicates that creation of a and the post - World War II Nazi and Laura was raised in a faith which has wife to be a widow, he who has no senseo y°u| something is afoot near the Laotian credibility gap between the media Japanese types like Peter Lorre, Humphrey very strict demands. For one thing, it and the people. honor or integrity. border. The possibilities are Bogart and James Garfield received all the demands certain outward forms of To the Editor: frightening. We will not be able to evaluate the As a Spartan catcalls. acknowledgment and Laura knows that But just as that kind of conditioning cM Village resident for the past I very Perhaps the blackout is being wisdom of the present news blackout two years naturally considered that my religion isn't "cool." Not being a square, work negatively, it can work for usasw» news I have experienced annual rent and wanting very much to parents and all others concerned with this keep up with When a good teacher finds a student * used to cover up a U.S. invasion in until it is lifted. There have been increases. The rate has been raised either propagandizing the current thought, she has been preconditioned to believing W Laos. More likely is the possibility instances when the news media were $4 to $5 per month each year that I have were coloring the truth. prefers to ignore the whole issue. But isn't capable of accomplishing as much" been at MSU. As of yet there has been no After several theater classes, very, very quietly that South Vietnamese troops with wise in delaying their though, I Laura longs for Providential reports; D - proportional increase in living standards or could better understand these so-called peace and his peers, she builds/him up, finds ways» love. American air support have entered Day, for example. services. The incinerators continue to pitfalls. It seemed like so much work to praising him in hope of giving him thesel the supposedly neutral kingdom. Philip is a "conservative." So are all his confidence he lacks. Nonethless, the North Vietnamese bellow forth smoke and ashes. Room really "get into character," and friends. All the people he doesn't like are Senate Republican leader Hugh must know by now that something is temperatures are erratic and cannot be occasionally, particularly when I was a "liberals." On some issues Philip is able to We can do the same thing for the peopjj Scott has confirmed that a major going on near the South Vietnam controlled. Spartan Village streets are little depressed, I tried to imagine what I'd see a more we meet who loudly or silently are asking - unsafe to drive on for many days after a do and how I'd handle my problems if I progressive appraoch, but he us to free them from their roles. No on allied operation is underway in the Laos border. The mere knows that the country is censorship of snowfall. were this other character. already too far likes to be mercilessly toppled; iw| j northwestern part of South Vietnam. the American press should tell them gone with so much freedom and broken bones never heal correctly. Bu Even if an individual wishes to make his He recognizes a need for law anarchy. The Kyodo news agency of Japan has that. It will be Having seen so many Spencer Tracy and and order, gentle word of encouragement, -a subtle interesting to hear surroundings more habitable he is often Katharine Hepburn films, I was quite and he realizes that that confirmed that 4,000 to 5,000 South how the Pentagon and the media stymied by Married Housing regulations. is, after all, what offer of aid . . . who knows what miraC conditioned to expect old Spencer to be any right - thinking, clean - cut American work for that friend in Vietnamese troops had begun justify the blackout. A case in point would be the regulation the good guy. My immediate reaction boy ought to feel. Didn't his daddy bring one can clas^- operations in southern Laos. The We feel there prohibiting the removal of the drab when I saw a film picturing him as a greedy him up right? the job and even on the other side ot will be no mirror. stereotyped furniture in favor of some of Soviet government newspaper justification. No military reasoning more livable quality. If residents of Married Izvestia has reported that a major could justify a news blackout on this DXSDD3/i hear \ force of South Vietnamese with vital issue. We are afraid that the Housing have furniture of their own they should be allowed to use it. Not only (uhn6s flappin6j (uioopgtockl) /mwmmm) / U anhone who returns from a l0n6 trip should American advisers has broken into blackout is being used to cover would the University have to spend less j; greetep with a eea6le , up at Laos. least temporarily, some sort of allied money on replacements and repairs but the residents would have a more attractive r\ fi How does one tell the lies from the truth? One doesn't because the action in Laos. We await a explanation of what is occurring in thorough and comfortable apartment. y ij American news media have Laos and why we were Ronald Meyers kept from submitted themselves to knowing for East Lansing senior Pentagon so long. Feb. 2,1971 / A ^ l_2.--.tf Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Thursday, February 4, 197 i 5 IrB FROM WASHINGTON ixon's goal: fear of central government J "The chief justice of the United States still inclined to think his most profound the FBI's revelation of the alleged plot to ■d the associate justices of the Supreme Imprint on America may be his demolition kidnap Kissinger involving the Berrigan certainly, Mr. Nixon has picked his slogan fcurt!" bawled the doorkeeper, of the tremendous Warren court and and his antagonist for 1972. substitution of a lackluster, conservative brothers, two Roman Catholic priests, for fcrybody got up and applauded. Through which a total of six indictments have been He has a new target, the fear of the L swing doors at the back of the House body whose justices (you recall) central government. Yet even while he serve for issued. We won't presume to bmber came the elderly justices in black life. judge a points with alarm he advocates a gigantic pending case, but we Jbes like a costumed procession out of Agnew this: if the bizarre are pretty sure of story doesn't hold federalized welfare system. (ibert and Sullivan with eight "very This week Vice President Illinois and Indiana to start the Agnew goes to water, J. Edgar Hoover is not going to cut Mayors and governors appeared before ceptible Chancellors" instead of one, job of the ribbon on the gigantic new FBI Sen. Proxmire last week announcing ■tiering down the central aisle to hear Mr. selling Mr. Nixon's great new theme: "take building whose three instant bankruptcy if Washington didn't on's puzzling State of the Union government back to the story deep bail them out. Yet it people." excavation now occupies more than a city frequently appeared ech. (The ninth, Mr. Justice Brennan, Mentioning the vice president prompts a block on Pennsylvania Avenue. that they had rejected local graduated i absent). I suppose you get used to digression. We had almost lost track of him (With income taxes. Take Ohio. It is the 15th after the unhappy election. Then typical bad taste the flippant Washington taring a black kimono or graduating suddenly press are calling it the richest state. Yet for generations GOP he surfaced, attacked Kissinger kidnap |wn all your working hours. It is part of Rep. Anderson, D - caper). governors have undertaxed it so that it ranks 49th in per capita tax revenue. The Well, to get back to more humdrum - We use the word "puzzling" because matters, newly elected Democratic governor, John the we leaned over the balcony of the Nixon speech is so hard to come to press gallery the other night to look down Gilligan, is trying to bring it into the 20th grips with. century. We think the family welfare on Mr. Nixon's program is glossy waved hair as he delivered his State of the Union splendid. When he promises "a basic income Four days later we listened to speech. Rep. Mills, the most powerful man in floor under every family with children in this Rep. Wilbur Congress, examined the revenue sharing - Mill's resonant monotone as he attacked proposal last week in a brilliantly organized nation" we cheer. The question is not the idea the revenue - sharing feature of the speech. House speech. His conclusion: that to share but the commitment. Is it a program, or Finally we ended the week curled up with revenue a you must have more revenue to the federal budget, the size of the ploy? Los share, namely, more taxes. Mr. Nixon's Angeles telephone book, with its even Friday budget seemed to bear this out. A heftier prospective $18.6 billion deficit. left out some of the other items we should health insurance program. Every other big judicial occupational hazard. The Tenn., for "self - serving clap - trap" and The be nation has one. whopping $18.6 billion deficit this year, .ices handle the robes neatly, swishing "popping off for political advantage. ' Washington skyline has changed more certain. Hitherto he has and $11 billion next, which he offered Em over their knees when they sit down That's our Spiro! we said admiringly. The considerably with these developments. emphasized the humanitarian feature to Restructuring the Cabinet? — Maybe, brightly with rare Keynesian liberal audiences; the brutal maybe no; it will take at least a Jcircumspectly as a Newport dowager congressman he denounced is evidently a Nixon speech compulsory work feature to conservatives. Somehow, yes; resourcefulness: it would be a balanced ■th train. But my, my; looking down generation as the President very well budget, he said, if the nation were a dangerous type who criticizes J. Edgar We use the word Mr. Nixon breeds suspicion even when his ■ wondered irreverently how long the Hoover. He commits this sacrilege under "puzzling" because the knows. If he had been more serious he operating at "full employment." Nobody Nixon speech is so hard to come to goal may be excellent; he is so doubtful of would have gone over it with congressional ee senior patriarchs will be on hand: the grips could put it more prettily than he: "The protective coloration of a Naval with. We think the family welfare the world himself that he is leaders in advance. program tempted to Eck, 85 next month; Douglas, 72 with a Academy degree, combat awards for is splendid. When he promises "a basic mask laudable objectives in artifice. How Revenue - sharing, strengthening local full employment budget idea is in the nature of a self fulfilling prophecy; by |art pacer; Harlan a year younger with an submarine patrols, and the erstwhile income floor under every family with about other proposals? government, carrying government "back to - le problem. Mr. Nixon has added two to command of the Nautilus (first atomic children in this nation" we cheer. The operating as if we were at full employment, the people?" - Our judgment is that this Jb court and tipped the balance from left submarine). Evidently a formidable cover. question is not the idea but the The Nixon health plan? — We think this proposal has flaws, and that Congress will we will help to bring about that full | right. With whatever he may do in the From his privileged sanctuary the egregious commitment. It is a program, or a is employment." ploy? If a device to head off a next - to - reject it. lxt two years in the legislative line we are congressman has had the nerve to question the President had concentrated on this and True, we think; but imagine if a irresistible drive in Congress for a national A challenge to Congress? Yes; almost Democrat had said it. Academic NOTICE TO All STUDENTS Advising, Enrollment and Registration For 1971 Spring Term GENERAL INSTRUCTIONS FROM COLLEGE OF COMMUNICATION ARTS THE REGISTRAR COLLEGE OF NATURAL SCIENCE COLLEGE OF HUMAN MEDICINE Audiology and Speech Sciences 353-8780 February 8-17 1. Schedule an appointment for a conference with The 1971 Spring Term Schedule of Courses and Academic your Advertising 355-2314 February 8-17 academic adviser by signing the appointment sheet MEDICAL TECHNOLOGY STUDENTS Handbook will be available to dormitory residents in their Journalism his available hours. This sheet will be designating 353-6430 February 8-17 posted near his office residence halls on Friday, February 5; and to other students at Television and Radio door 4 All students must have made an appointment and seen their the counter in Room 150, Hannah Administration 355-8372 February 8-17 on February. Conferences are to be held during the Building Communication period 8 February to 17 February. academic adviser bv February 17th. Please come to Room 48 beginning on Monday, February 8. Giltner Hall or call 353 - 7800. Letters have been mailed to all Communication majors giving 2. For your appointment, the Adviser's group meeting dates and bring to your academic adviser your A summary of what to do — where, when concerning the listing the Adviser's enrollment and registration procedure for . . . office hours during the advising period. Enrollment Agreement planned program for Spring term and go over it with him for Spring term is forms must be completed by all students before either his suggestions. COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING outlined in the 1971 Spring Term Schedule of Courses and early or Academic Handbook. regular registration for Spring Term, 1971. 3. Students with major in the All College of Natural Science majors must see their College of Engineering should have received information about Your discussion with your adviser will be based LYMAN BRIGGS COLLEGE academic advisers each term to discuss their program. advising appointments frpm their on a Student adviser. Any student who has not received Academic Progress notificat'io'n should Plan which you should develop (or may contact his adviser immediately. wish to modify or 1. Students should contact their academic advisers HONORS COLLEGE develop further) in conference with your during the adviser. Bring your Progress Plan record with you to see your period of February 8 through February 17. academic adviser according to the All Honors College members are arrangement in your college requested to confer with their JAMES MADISON COLLEGE (and possibly department) as outlined below: 2. Following approval of the program, students should academic advisors prior to the bring to beginning of enrollment on E-30 Holmes Hall a copy of their programs February 18. No Preference students and those who have according to the During the period of February 8-17, all James Madison following schedule: questions concerning advisor assignments should see a staff students are asked to meet with their academic adv isor to plan COLLEGE OF ARTS AND LETTERS member in Eustace Hall. a Spring term schedule. The advisement conference should Wednesday, February 17 8-12 and 1-5 A-D take place during the advisor's office hours or All by appointment. undergraduates in the College of Arts and Letters, except Thursday, February 18 8-12 and 1-5 E-J This is a good opportunity for Studio Art majors may see their academic advisers during their some long - range aca^i mic Friday, February 19 8-12 and 1-5 K-0 COUNSELING CENTER planning, so be sure to bring your Madison Student Handbook office hours on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, Monday, February. 22 8-12 and 1-5 P-S CHANGE OF MAJOR and MSU catalog. February 8, 9,10 and 11. ENGLISH MAJORS WHO WISH TO Tuesday, February 23 8-12 and 1-5 T-Z SEE AN ADVISER SHOULD GO FIRST TO 201 MORRILL UNIVERSITY COLLEGE Again this quarter, on a limited basis, non-Madison students HALL. MUSIC MAJORS SHOULD GO FIRST TO THE STUDENTS (Freshmen and will be admitted to certain Madison courses. For more DEPARTMENT ADVISING CENTER, 155 MUSIC COLLEGE OF SOCIAL SCIENCE Sophomores) information and further details, please call 3-6734 or BUILDING. THEATRE MAJORS SHOULD SCHEDULE stop by the office of the Assistant Dean, 319L South Case. APPOINTMENTS AS SOON AS POSSIBLE IN 149 The Handbook of Undergraduate Courses in the College of Changes of major are initiated in a Counseling Center Office. AUDITORIUM. Advisers will be in their offices at least one Social Science is prepared each term to assist students in Students living in a Residence Hall Complex should go to the hour each morning and afternoon of these four selecting courses for their next term's schedule. Course days. Check Counseling Center Office in their complex. All others should with department offices for the hours of individual advisers. outlines submitted by the Faculty usually include information go to the Counseling Center in the Student Services Building. COLLEGE OF VETERINARY MEDICINE Make an appointment to minimize on textbooks or reading lists, course content and waiting in line or if you objectives Staff will be available according to Ihe following schedule: cannot come at the hours scheduled. You and guidelines to be followed. may also see your Counseling Center 207 Student Services Building PREVETERINARY advisers before or after these dates during their regular office 1:00 -5:00 M, T, W, Th, F hours or by appointment. Handbooks may be examined after Feb. 10 in the Libraries, Residence Halls, Fraternities, Sororities, Brody Counseling Office 224 Brodv Hall Co-op Houses 9:00 -12:00 T, Th All students Studio Art majors should see their Art advisers should see their adviser by February 17. on Monday, Counseling Center, in each Social Science Major Department 1:00 -3:00 with academic advisors and in each Dean's Office. Please ask M, Th Appointment schedules are posted outside adviser's office. February 8. All Studio classes will be dismissed on that day 3:00 - 5:00 T and advisers will be in their offices from 8-12 for it if not readily displayed. and 1-4. East Campus Counseling Office 229 West Fee Hall Labor and Industrial Relations Graduate students should - see 8:00 -11:00 M, T, Th, F VETERINARY COLLEGE OF BUSINESS their advisors before enrollment and registration. 1:00-4:00 W 2:30 - 5:00 T, Th Academic advising for Social Science - Undergraduates — First term seniors (130 cr.) Spring Term, 1971, will take place 3:00 - 5:00 M All students will be "mass enrolled" by the Dean's during the period of February S-17. Students should adhere to must see their advisor before picking up Permit to Register. Office. South Campus Counseling Office 36 South Wonders Those students not wishing to be included in the following schedule: Miss the crowds by coming during the term. Advisor office "mass 1:00 -5:00 M, T, W, Th, F enrollment" must notify the Dean's Office by February hours are posted in 207 Linton Hall. See your own advisor. 17. 1. Freshmen and Social Science - Graduates 206 UPPERCLASSMEN (Juniors and Seniors) Sophomores in Accounting and Financial - Berkey Hall. Phone 355-7531 Administration, General Business, General Business Prelaw, for an appointment. COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURE Management, Marketing, and Hotel, Restaurant, and Anthropology - Mrs. Judy Tordoff, Undergraduate Advisor A change of major made after admission to a degree granting AND NATURAL RESOURCES Institutional Management should see counselors in the is available in her office, Room 118 Baker Hall, daily from 8 college with Junior standing is initiated in the office of the Advisement Center, Office of the Assistant Dean, Room 7, to 12 and 1 to 5. Assistant Dean of the College in which the student is currently Eppley Center. Counselors will be available from 8-5. registered. College of Agriculture and Natural Resources students should Geography - See Michael Graff, Undergraduate Advisor in see their academic advisers by appointment during the period Room 318 Natural Science during regular office hours or call 2. JUSTIN MORRILL COLLEGE February 8 - 17. Appointments should be made prior to Freshmen and Sophomores in Economics, Business 355-4649 for an appointment. February 8. Education, Distributive Education, Office Administration, and Political Science - Students wishing to be advised prior to 1. During the period Feb. 8 - 17, students should see their onore College should see their advisors in the respective enrollment and registration should call Miss Susan Lawther. academic assistant or faculty advisor to plan their class hours ^Ur'n® advisors' regularly scheduled office Faculty Advisor for Undergraduates, anytime between schedule for spring term. SENIORS are reminded that for UNIVERSITY COLLEGE - February 8 through 17. graduation, your Field of Concentration must be approved in NO PREFERENCE 3. Juniors and Psychology - Mrs. Mary Donoghue, Undergraduate Advisor in writing by your JMC faculty advisor. Seniors in all majors should see their advisors in the Department, will be in her office, 112 Olds Hall, February 2. Justin Morrill students will early enroll for all their courses An appointment card for a conference with your academic- the respective departments during the advisors' regularly 8 through 17 during posted hours, for advising prior to (university and JMC) in the Snyder Hall trophy room from 8 - adviser has been mailed to each No Preference student. If you early scheduled office hours. All Seniors should review their enrollment. 11:30 according to the alphabetical schedule and dates did not receive a card or were unable to keep your graduation requirements with their advisor. published in the spring 1971 edition of the Schedule of Sociology - If additional advising is needed, majors should appointment, you may come to the advisement office before Courses and Academic Handbook. February 18. 4. arrange an appointment by telephone with their academic Graduate students should make advisers. 3. JMC course descriptions will be available outside the appointments to see their respective advisors. Advising Center on Frictay, February 5. Each No Preference student who has earned 85 credits (junior Criminal Justice - Students who have not had their programs 4. Non - Justin Morrill students cannot early enroll for JMC standing) by the end of Winter term 1971 must declare a planned for the Spring term should report to room 412 Olds First priority is given to students in the Hall for advising on the following dates: February 16, 17 and courses. college. JMC major before the end of the term. This may be done at the courses are then open to all students during early and regular Advisement Center or at the Counseling Center. COLLEGE OF HUMAN ECOLOGY 18. Students with programs already developed need not registration in March. report. No-Preference Advisement Centers: February 8-17 Academic Advising period Residents of Case-Wilson-Wonders-Holden S33 Wonders Social Work - Freshmen and Sophomores - See Mrs. Sally COLLEGE OF EDUCATION Any student who desires an appointment with his adviser Parks, Room 220 Baker Hall, 353-8626, Feb. 8 thru 17, during Residents of Brody complex 109 Brodv should schedule an appointment during this Academic Students in Health, Physical Education, and Recreation, in Residents of East Campus 245 West Fee posted office hours. Advising period. Appointment sheets will be posted outside the Industrial Arts, and upperclassmen in Special Education, All others (including off-campus students 170 Bessey Hall door of each adviser's Juniors and Seniors See Mrs. Betty Duley, Room 234 Baker office. It is imperative that - should consult with their advisers between February 8 and and residents of Abbott, Mason, Phillips, need of special students in Hall, 353-8619, Feb. 8 thru 17, 8 a.m. to noon. help make appointments including: February 17. Advisers will observe normal office hours during Shaw, Snyder and West Circle Halls) Urban Planning - For early advising and enrollment see this period. «ti ^ew ^restlmen dents. 3. All and transfer students. 2. Honors College advisors during posted office hours located outside of their Undergraduate Elementary Education and Special Education students who have transferred to Human coiogy and have not planned a offices, Feb. 8 thru 17. majors who are assigned to the Advisement Center need not Students enrolling in evening classes only may confer with an visers 4 program with their new see their advisers unless special assistance is needed. Advisers adviser by telephone (355-3515). students on academic probation. 5. Students Landscape Architecture - For early advising and enrollment see will hold open office hours Feb. 10-17 for students ^vising long. term plans. needing advisors during posted office hours located outside of their assistance. Office hours for each adviser will be Please bring ybu schedule posted in book and a tentative plan with you. offices, Feb. 8 thru 17. Erickson Hall lobby. 6 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Thursday, February^ j 'Hunter' derives strength Recital $ef from authentic acting senior | "The Heart is i£: Hunter" throbs a Lonely with the seek him out, pour out their troubles to him, find understanding. Rather than dominating a for S ayl :•£ gentle humanity of Carson confidence in his scene, Arkin underplayed it & McCullers' novel and Linda Boozer, Grand encouragement but never or retreated to the Rapid. I :£ advances with the inner sighs take heed of the lonely senior, will present her senior :£ and silent shrieks of Alan beneath the man pleasant background. But regardless of recital at 2 p.m. I :£ Arkin in the leading role. a scene's emphasis on another Sunday, in the I appearance. Music Building Auditorium. character, the viewer's eyes Ijj$ It is a beautiful film with Singer's torment swells and thoughts are riveted on Miss Boozer, a music within him until he can Singer. The excellence of the major I authenticity of its story and studying viola, will include on P setting and resonance gained contain it no longer. It erupts supporting cast is made her program works from three with an uncharacteristic act complete by Arkin's by Handel superb Schubert and Mozart. performances. that shakes his friends into reception of a message and belated sorrow. reaction to it. Istrength derivd from the Arkin plays John Singer, a She attended the deaf mute. "The Heart is a The role of Arts Academy as well as Interlochen I Lonely Hunter" focuses on with a family and befriends presented Arkin Singer with the Arkin literally audience to tears drives the National Music the I as he paces Camp g Singer as he searches for Mick, the daughter of the challenge of his career. the streets alone, appeared as soloist desperately with u - friendship, offering counsel family. Mick is a plain - Forsaking histrionics and Grand Rapids Youth Symphony and a listening ear to anyone looking young girl who moving his fingers as he twice. ' ■ I finding a range more subtle speaks to himself with the who wants them but finding, dreams of the end of and expressive than dialog, to his desperation, no one language of the mute. As he adolescence. She finds in Arkin delivered a triumphant faces each She performed a around when he needs help disappointment recital jn ■ Singer a mature and performance. Denied a voice, with a reassuring glance or a Nassau, Bahamas, last spring and I and reassurance. undemanding companion. Arkin used his eyes, hands quick shrug, one instantly taught string music at a fine arts I Singer goes to a small Mick is one of Singer's and expressions to project recognizes the tragedy camp near Philadelphia, Pa. Southern town, rents a room many erstwhile friends. They poignance and speechless implied. Miss Boozer's recital is ope to the public without charge. The Senior Class Council & The Placement Bureau present Ruli ng increa rock sou CAREER OTTAWA (AP) - government order is making sure A shifting gradually to music featuring Canadian artists or achieving one of the goals set forth by Pierre Juneau, chairman paradise because he can choose among the three U.S. networks Toronto, because it is designed to rescue a native TV production do see is the best available in the world." television I | OPPORTUNITIES that Americans visiting Canada get a full quota of country and recorded in Canada. For many it meant little change, but some of of the commission. That is the development of Canadian talent and the two Canadian, while in "have not" areas only the industry being strangled by alien mediocrity. Dalton Camp, Conservative politician, said: "It is not the I I Guest '71' speakers will talk on the various aspects of today's rock music. That was not the aim of the the middle - of - the - road stations had to double their and a industry. Canadian recording Canadian available. networks will be "But the situation remains purpose of a communications system to breed talent, I I regulation, but it has worked out Canadian content, mostly with Don Tarlton, Montreal music "One can applaud the CRTC job market — and your chances. that way. patently unfair. It can begin to otherwise let us have a network I rock. impresario, said: "The Canadian decision on patriotic grounds," be justified if - and only if - have for novelists, poets and bassoon I The Canadian Radio Some station owners record industry didn't have a he said,"especially if one is an not viewers can be assured that TONIGHT, 104 B Wells Hall 7 p.m. Television Commissioner ruled complained that the new system market place two years ago. out - of - work TV actor living in players, as we are woefully short I that the music programing of . . the limited foreign content they of all three." was going to make all stations Now it's the third largest radio stations must show a 30 sound the same, and that they seller of contemporary records per cent Canadian content. The new rule became effective were going to have to include in the world. And this happened KRSMANOVICH CHORUS inferior records to meet the 30 Jan. 18 without fanfare, since only with the threat of per cent requirement. legislative radio." most stations already had been But the change apparently is There has been more I lovERfMtD 'other flRAAGERS JF Friday & Saturday ONLY! grumbling which television will about require to directives Canadian increase Canadian content to 60 per cent. its Yugoslavian repertoire I Thursday 6:15, 8:15 i J No more than 30 per cent of the 50% OFF remainder can come from any M'min M'mm Good! ^ Anything Hanging in the Shop! one country. This will cut back the use of U.S. shows. The government - owned shows vitality, diversity ^XAer&ctG&rlirfMySotqy Canadian Broadcasting Corp. has until October this year to PETER SELLERS • GOLDIE HAWN comply. The private network Slavic classic and folk pieces. Their diction also was v Thursday 6:30, 8:15 COLOR ® CTV has until October 1972. Under the direction of the flawless. At times, however, 0r5 ' I Friday 6:00-8:00-9:55 rasi . - 1 Thurs. Twi-Llte Hr. 6:00-6:30, Adults 90c t One of the critics is Douglas Marshall, TV writer for A 1,000 was treated to highly skilled conductor for the receptive audience of about Belgrade an the opera, Bogdan Babich, their Slavic tone quality became a little cumbersome for the more I BUTCH & THE KID ARE BACK! Maclean's magazine. He notes concert got off to a delicate, subtle compositions of that Toronto is TV viewer's unusually broad range of choral a music at seemingly slow start as the the Renaissance. PAUL NEWMAN Monday night's chorus encountered definite performance here of the highly The second half of the | BUTCH CASSIDV AND acclaimed Branko Krsmanovich pitch problems. Soon, under concert Babich's control, the choir began brought THE SUNDANCE KID Chorus of Yugoslavia. to show that form which had Krsmanovich Chorus out in their | it world acclaim. full native costume for an I The 80 - voice mixed chorus won The chorus had a peculiar, of Slavic music and dance, an had an enormous repertoire Slavic tone quality of heavy, hour that passed all too quickly. including works from the Slavic, French, Italian and English almost Russian - type basses, The music was exuberant, Renaissance. Also included were brilliant tenors, heavy altos and almost strident laced with rhythmic vitality. The I Mass, a Spanish folk sopranos. Mass, spirituals, modern pieces Throughout the first half of the soloists, especially the tenors, Branislov Simonovich | (including works by Zolton concert the chorus showed a Milovoje Retrovich, had strong Kodaly) and a separate, seemingly unlimited range of voices and j an excellent blend. complete repertoire of native dynamics and tone qualities. Most notable was the wari attitude of the choir and the I gracious manner of Babich as they imparted a strong picture of the simple folklife of their native Yugoslavia. The audience response was strong and Bogdan Babich and his Branko Krsmanovich Chorus were well | deserving of the ovation they received. An electronic magazine of American pop culture with flashes by: Paul Krassner, Richard Pryor, Lenny Bruce, The Ace Trucking Co., Joan Baez, Rhinoceros, Ron Carey, Tuli Kupferberg, Sha-Na-Na, Allen Ginsberg, Leonard Cohen, Malcolm X, Peter Max Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Thursday, February 4,1971 7 Play relates youth The Irish adolescent experience is basically the same potent dialog with his father, who is old enough to be his cannot take any furthering or pangs major steps in stage, so that both the public cementing their Gar and the audience can view grandfather and who considers shaky alliance. In Gar's mind, all the private Gar as a separate as in America and probably in many other cultures. This seems PANORAMA their age difference one of the of the Ballybegers are "buggers." entity that both have to contend for their failure to relate What makes "Philadelphia, with. to be an underlying theme in • reasons Brian Friel's "Philadelphia, Here to one another. At present, Gar Here I Come!" an evening worth WIFE I Come!" the current Performing and "Screwballs" (the name he one's attention is author Friel's Despite its contemporary device of having both the relevance and familiarity, Friel's Arts Company (PAC). privately calls his father) only "public Gar" and the "private play is a bit overlong. production. occasionally exchange superficial Gar" on stage at once. Gar's Gar O'Donnell's traumas andf comments. inner self is much more exciting "Philadelphia, Here I Come!" torments as he experiences and In fact, Gar has trouble than how he comes across with will continue at 8 tonight re-experiences them the night! establishing a deep and before and morning of his By KENNETH STERN meaningful relationship with people. Uncensored and through Sunday night at the unbridled, this inner Gar goads Arena, and then will tour the departure from BallybegJ State News Reviewer anyone. He is not one of the i Ireland, to Philadelphia, Pa., and provokes the skin and bones campus playing Wonders Kiva on boys, since Gar cannot indulge of the outward Gar and says and Feb. 8 and 9; Brody Arena, Feb. U.S.A., is much the same as is elderly housekeeper, and she will in their gross exaggerations and does all the things one cannot do 10-11, and McDonel Kiva, Feb. | suffered by many adolescents. only go as far as she can, which, loud barks but no bites. in public. 12 and 13. Kiva performances There is a feeling of unfortunately for Gar, is not He says he loves Kate Doogan jC*1 commonality, a sense of kinship enough. I among contemporary He desperately desires a but he really does not know where is with her, will not and Director Beatrice O'Donnell sets the two Gars apart on the begin at 7:15 p.m. Tickets to all performances are $1. adolescents, and Friel's play succeeds in strengthening the bonds of empathy. Here I Gar is a 20 - year - old university dropout, who, when taking stock of himself, confirms An MHA-WIC Presentation his realization that he has no real friends, no meaningful ■ Philadelphia, Here I Come!" by Brian Friet is being presented by PAC at 8 tonight through communication with his father Sunday night in the Arena and will also tour campus residence halls. The play concerns an Irish and no real faith or confidence adolescent's trip from Ireland to Philadelphia. Tickets for all performances are $1. in himself. The only person he State News photo by Tom Dolan can at all relate to is Madge, the FRIDAY NIGHT Prof to perform at reci J Clarinetist Elsa Ludewig, 107, for Clarinet and Piano" by the MSU Richards Woodwind Issociate professor of music, will Reger; two songs by Franz Quintet. lerform works by Reger, Schubert for soprano, clarinet Kindemith and Schubert in a and piano; and "Quartet for Assisting her will be four lecital at 8:15 p.m. Friday in the Clarinet, Violin, and Cello, and members of the music faculty: Music Building Auditorium. Piano" by Paul Hindemith. pianist David Renner, asst. 1 The program, open to the Miss Ludewig is the principle professor of music; soprano lublic without charge, will clarinetist of the Lansing Leona Witter, asst. professor of Include "Sonata in B Flat, Opus Symphony and is a member of music; cellist Louis Potter Jr., professor of music, and violinist Walter Verdehr, asst. professor of music. ^DSers receive Miss Ludewig has performed with pianist Rudolph Serkin and conductor and cellist Pablo Casals and has been on two :hoice of housing concert Marlboro. tours of Music She has presented recitals in From New York; Boston; Washington, Presidents of four major governing groups have invited Alumni D.C.; Norfolk, Va.; Denver, and I Distinguished Scholarship (ADS) participants to stay in student Michigan. For the past two I housing Saturday night following the examination. summers, she has been principal I University authorities have provided motel accommodations ELSA LUDEWIG clarinetist of the Brevard (N.C.) ■ for this year's competitors, since feedback from last year Festival Orchestra. . A A . I indicated that students could not get adequate rest before the test doctor of musical arts degree I when housed in residence halls on Friday night. Miss Ludewig holds the from the Eastman School of Performers Certificate and a Music in Rochester, N.Y. Executives of Men's Hall Assn. (MHA), Women's Inter - ■ residence Council (WIC), Inter - Fraternity Council (IFC) and Pan I Hellenic Council (Panhel) said the optional program would allow Auburn Film Group Presents ■ ADS students the opportunity to visit campus living situations 'Dennis Hopper's most violent epic" - Variety I they might not otherwise see. "One of the most savage motorcycle thrillers ever filmed." L.A. Times 7:00-8:45-10:30 Thurs G.8 Holden Hall Fri & Sat. 108 B Wells Participants have their choice of staying in a residence hall, I fraternity or sorority on Saturday evening. Individual students plus "I Want More" (short) Fri. & Sat. $1.00 will assume the additional costs of meals and linen. Sue Carter, Niles junior and president of WIC, said this 'BLACK SOULS'vs. the STOMPERS' ■optional program was the best suggestion in providing an ■academic atmosphere on Friday night and a social one Saturday. "Students need a good night's sleep before the exam, but also CYCLE GANG-WAR! I need the opportunity to see what the campus is really like," Miss ...and a | Carter said. Terry Rapchak, Naperville, 111., junior and president of Panhel, ra NEW Alan J FbUa Produce-- ■ said the program might prove to be good relations for the greek KIND Poromount Pictures Presents An — "r/leril© ■ system. OF ^ /I0LENCE Cuckoo CORRECTION: # IS BORN! the bagpiper Tonight in Wilson 7, 9 p.m. OPEN WEDNESDAYS $1.00 admission ID's required £) AND THURSDAYS UNTIL 9 P.M. !**★* ★★★★★★★★★ PRING 4 The Senior Class Council & The Placement Bureau will present CUNT EASTWOOD CAREER ftcftpuue $219 OPPORTUNITIES M9NTEG9 &A* '71' LEE $219 Guest speakers include vancleef Jack Shlngleton, Director of Placement, will cover several areas of ALDOGIUFFRE MARIO-BREGA ^ NASSAU the broad employment picture Mr Roger W. Seaman. District Manager of Social Security Administration, speaking on Federal Kmployment. Mrs. Helen McMurray, Consultant, Staff Personnel Services, Flint AH prices include round bar,)| Community Schools, speaking on the outlook for Secondary and I. n champagne meal, all tranfers, happy hour*." DELUXE HOTEL trip jet, open taxes & tips,} Elementary Ross General teaching. Ringlcr, senior staff assistant to College Relations, from Motors Corporation, covering the technical and non Tonight in Conrad 7:30 only technical employment outlook of Business and Industry. Any senior who does not yet have a job - this is a must! Ellen Radner Bob Lelder 351-1267 $1.00 admission ID's required r 0i»n"7 "oou 355-3573 104 B Wells Hall TONIGHT 7 pm I tacu%8taff & their lmmedia^f^i^^ B Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Thursday, February 4j Green to join investigations COGS se of bias toward black GIs officers, p/a f be principally as a person The Council of Graduate Students By DIANE PETRYK on Equal Opportunity in the "I am also hopeful that one of (COGS) elected new offi concerned about urban Tuesday and endorsed a group life insurance plan for State News Staff Writer problems. I'm strongly Armed Services was reactivated at his request, Diggs said. the new black members (of the students. wad^'lUatpula pointed out, of the MSU victory over very at the Livestock Pavilion on Shaw Lane across from Anthony Hall. Two MSU students By CRAIG F still haven't tried non-verbal communication?" ACCOMMODATIONS AT scuba Indiana State last weekend. State News S Among the staff members (Incidentally, the little woman I refer to is not, as you might FLAGLER INN $80 (+ $10 TIPS) sailing slated to participate are Robert think, my wife. My wife is far from a little woman. She is, in fact, he MSU nearly seven feet high and mantled with rippling muscle. She is a full- blooded Chiricahua Apache and holds the world's shotput record— MARCH 19 - 26 fishing water skiing Green of the urban affairs center and Robert Perrin, vice president win paddleball meet lgs into actii ng the possib 908 feet. The little woman I refer to is someone we found crouching under the sofa when we rented our flat back in 1924. She has been with LIMITED SPACE AVAILABLE car & cycle rental THE for university relations. Admission is $1 with tickets Two MSU students recently won the state doubles paddleball Andy Homa participated in tin three - day tournament last three starti be able to since, although to be perfectly honest, she's really not much available at the Union Ticket PIZZA ever championships. Steve Kelley and weekend at Ann Arbor duled meet, fun to have around. She never speaks except to make a sort of moist, gagging sound when she's hungry, and she'll often sneak up and tusk Contact : defeated Lynn Beekman hris Held ar Dave Johnson of Ann Arbor you while you're busy watching television. Still and all, with my wife away putting the shot most of the time, at least it gives me somebody MSU TRAVEL OFFICE SPONSORED BY: PEOPLE the finals to reign as the sti severe colt :h Charles MSU UNION BOARD Clearance Sale 2ND FLOOR • STU. UNION to hack around with.) 11:30 • 4:30 Mon. - Fri. ADMIN. SERV. BY: champions. The scores of t not mal But I digress. "Isn't it odd, my dear," I said the other night to championship matches were, urday at C the little woman, "that colleges still haven't tried non-verbal commu¬ 353-9777 STUDENTS INTERNATIONAL -16, and 21 -11. nication?" And it if odd. Why do teachers keep talking to students? Surely they've learned by now that talking is no way to communicate. open only to students, faculty & staff of Michigan State University Sweaters regularly 14.96 and Enroute to the finals, Keele Homa defeated It's been proved over and over in encounter groups, T-groups, sensi¬ and their immediate families students Paul Lawrence and Crsij t if the tea tivity groups and grope groups that people don't really, truly reach other people with language. How can they? Words, by their very na¬ ture, are ambiguous and artificial and conceal more than they reveal. now $8.®® Finga in Lawrance and the semi - Finga were nationil finali es Feurig, E th Center) ; There is only one way to really, truly communicate with another hu¬ MASS MEETING : runner - ups in 1969. n, says they man being, and that is to touch him and feel him. This is honest and natural and basic and beautiful and legal in some states. TUES., FEBRUARY 9, 7:30 P.M. Body Shirts regularly 17.00 In singles competition, Alder of MSU won consolatioi rip," Schmit either Held And yet teachers go right on talking. No wonder they get no feed¬ UNION BALLROOM singles. Keeley garnered a thin back. Let us say, for example, that a teacher is trying to get a student 1A 00 place finish, losing to Lawrano to learn Boyle's law. Talk won't do it, not even if the teacher talks the whole semester long. But if one day he will simply and silently reach now IU. who was the 1969 nationil M gra out and just hold the student for a minute or two, maybe even dance champion. i with him a little bit, he will find that the student has learned not only Boyle's law but probably the fox trot too. Students 'Int'l Medi /Ilia- Qieat Lawrance then defeated 14 doubles teammate Finga for the Big 10 And what is more, the teacher will discover he has a new friend. singles championship No longer will student and teacher snarl and make coarse gestures when they see each other on campus. Instead they will run together, announces an introductory lecture in of Flared Pants identical, 21 - 5 scores. ichigan iten team bee clasp and nuzzle, trade hats, and finally, without a word—for what do they bei friends need with words?—repair to a nearby tavern for that friend¬ Q 7. 95 ACAPULCO >is lost to Transcendental liest of all ceremonies: the sharing of Miller High Life Beer. up 8 Days - Jet Air Wolverim cd Purdue Cruise with Unlimited wence loss tssm. Liquor, Nightclub as Henry Meditation 2 Membership to Bocaccio Club, Swimming pools, etc. Dints. n at shockt Iowa scored a c grand river Wwre Style Si Alwy^'ln' $208.00 P'us gratuities phone 332-6878 Call Stan Feldman 393- TONIGHT a in the t crushed W Warriors led HOURS: Point befoi at disoount Dally 9:30-8:30 2 5 ANN STrecords . PHONE: 351-8460, Sat. 9:30-6:00 Sun. 12:00-5:00 No beer binds a friendship the way Miller High Life does. I could The only complete record store In Lansing or East Lansing tell you why if I wanted to. In fact, I could go on for hours about the glories of Miller High Life. But I won't, for we all know, don't we, that slUllUIV language is not the way to communicate? So here is all I will say: Get yourself a can or bottle of Miller (a keg if you are a very large person). Pour a glass for your friend, a glass for yourself. Link arms. FROM Tie your neckties together. Drink. Can words describe the resultant euphoria, the enveloping one¬ ness, the ripening occlusion? No; words are useless. Just Miller and a friend: that's all you need to know. And if, by chance, you don't have Engineering Bldg. CAPITOL friend, get two Millers. You'll never walk alone. RECORDS But I digress. Talking, as we have seen, is obsolete. And of course, writing is on its last legs too; in fact, I give the literature game another Immediately following the six months at the outside. Naturally, being a sort of writer, I'm a little lecture those who wish to sorry to see this happen, but on the other hand, I'm not really worried. The shotput game, thank Heaven, is better than ever, and I feel confi¬ dent my wife will always earn enough for me and the little woman, begin Meditation appointment instruction. Transcendental can for make an personal §L SEA TRAIN RLOODROCK The brewing game also looks healthy from where we sit, which is in For information Milwaukee, from whose storied environs we have been bringing you Miller High Life, the Champagne of Beers, for more than 115 flavorful years. Try Call 351-7168 $3.59 $2.99 fome; you'll see why. "■y4,l97| n State News, East Lansing, Michigan Thursday, February 4, 1971 11 -SPORTS . - -•.....................Mcwwwxv.o:>xw>x«<<«4D«^«wAwm9inm«mwn^nwsvw/9WA%w^/WiP///W4C^^ ubba Smith ByGARYWALKOWICZ apologizes Stats News Sports Editor ?hph°ne i"terview Tuesday Smith said he was upset with the and I wanted to get one too. But I didn't get one from Duffy," allegedly made after Smith was named "UPI Lineman of the | « , Free Press ran. Smith said. Year" in 1966. nijf spartan football great Bubba Smith says he's sorry for I*1'"? S?rry thlngs came out Uke they ^d," Smith said. "I'd like The Free Press also quoted Smith as saying that some of the "The reporter went to him (Duffy) for a comment," Smith % ^remarks he made about MSU Coach Duffy Daugherty in a io apologize to Duffy." stars of the 1965 - 66 teams like Webster, Jones and Gene said, "and Duffy said 'Sure Bubba had a good year but George ? ^Lper interview recently. of°f or pulled oneWhat 1 aid wasn>t ^PPosed to be printed. Falls kind Washington would go ask Daugherty for money when they Webster was the greatest lineman in the history of MSU.' " 3 IfciSth ' "" who played at MSU from 1964 - 66, said that most of over on me. needed it and would get it. marks were not intended for publication and that some of "That remark really upset me. Sure Webster % didn't come out in print exactly as he meant them. i"R"ffy and,A intention wasn't tonever 41(1 rea,ly see eye - to - eye, but my cut him up in that interview." "I never said that they got money from Duffy," Smith claimed. "I said that all of them usually had money. Some of football player, but the reporter had asked about was a me. fantastic I felt that I % I Smith was interviewed for the Detroit Free Press by Joe Falls Srmth was quoted in the Free Press as saying that "he (Duffy) them couldn't have been getting it from home. I just made the had contributed enough to MSU to warrant better treatment than $ that. i: ' d Jack Saylor and in the question - and - answer interview was got George (Webster) and Clinton (Jones) and all of them a car - a assumption that they were getting it from the coaches. None of || of Daugherty as a coach and charged that some of his Dodge Dart." the players ever told me they were though." The star defensive end of Baltimore "But that was the only thing that I was really upset with Duffy % m teammates had received cars and money from the MSU denies making that charge. Smith emphasized that the only portion of the interview that about. I was wrong in some of my statements and coming down 4 1 didn't say that Duffy got them cars, I said they all had cars he intended for publication concerned a remark that Daugherty on Duffy hard." so § KEEPS TEAM WINNING Watt holds key to icer success netminder Bob Johnson left the Wmm by me. So I decided to keep low By RICK GOSSELIN sweeps and a split against title. He will have a chance to team. The Spartans needed a Wisconsin in the and stay in the net on the State News Sports Writer term's first capitalize on personal goals this 1;«,: v.: MSU hockey coach Amo Bessone was succinct in his stand by netminder desperately, and Watt (as the three series. Though MSU could only split screens and try to take the shot away from the guy as it came weekend when the Spartans travel for a two game series junior varsity goaltender) was in through the openings. Sure, I've Mm ytjpi ■ &:• 05? evaluation of last Friday night's game with the University of a position to help them. Watt played in two contests that with the Badgers, it was far and away Watt's best series this had my share of pipe shots, but I've also saved few of against Minnesota - Duluth in Watt's home town. The junior rfy'-'-wsBm on a goalkeeper not only wants to Notre Dame. season. For a stretch of 88 season, allowing four goals. them." beat Duluth, but also shut them consecutive minutes, Watt kept "Jimmy Watt won the game This season, Watt was out. for us," the Spartan mentor said, Wisconsin shots out of the net. Watt thinks that his defense expected to back-up Rick "It's as simple as that." Duffett for the first part of the Only three goals in the last has just as much to do with the "There definitely will be some ne of hit A look at the statistics shows period of the second game team's success in the defensive added incentive when we go play year, and then step into the n against that Bessone's statement did not crease in January after Duffett's spoiled a third Spartan sweep. zone as he has. in Duluth this weekend," Watt lment of apply solely to Friday's mid-year graduation. said with a smile. "It's been Against Minnesota in a "Our defense is really good," three and one - half years since I » of his SETS"~aia ;T"ueat;ohoUr;i winning cause at home, Watt protected the Spartan net to the Watt said. "They improve with every game. That's the played there last. State hasn't shut out anyone in a long time, m Gaunt Jim Watt has been the difference in the retention of a stable „ w * jd ^ tune of 45 shots on net. His difference between the defenses and I'd love to get one this experienced: it wasn't as if I was excellent reflexes and his of last year and this year. Last weekend. You might say I've P aL°, b,e"h 88 t0ih? middle of the pack standing that totally green or anything. I knew uncanny ability in making saves year's seemed to stay at a steady been up for this one since I came the Spartans have grown tat \^ to do >he £b and l on screen shots and deflections pace all year long, whereas this here." jge accustomed to. also knew that I could." Watt wasn't content in sitting aided Watt immensely in that game. year's just gets better and better as the season progresses." As a strong, steady, able Spartan Watt has been pressed into emergency duty twice in the around till January before he got "Earlier in the year, I would replacement for Duffett, Watt Watt is well on his way in has proven that he is the equal past two years for the Spartans, warmed up to competition. The go out of the net and try to get accomplishing two perennial d Spartan netminder Jim Watt has done more than his share in keeping MS1'j's hockey team near of any goaltender in the WCHA. the top of the As a sophomore last season, junior net minder's play the angle on the shot when I was team goals in his first year of All that is left is for him to standings this season. Taking over for Rick Duffett at mid season. Watt has Watt was tossed into the college throughout fall term led Bessone being screened," Watt said. "But now - starting status: get his team in prove that he is not only equal compiled an 8-2 record. State News photo by Teri Franks pressure cooker when back-up to comment, "There will be no the puck always seemed to get the playoffs and win the Big Ten — hesitation if but the best. a change is needed compete. in goal." $3, and $2 I CHAMPAIGN, ILL. On the team's second road Swinging Jet Holiday with tickets nison ticket trip (Minnesota), Watt started the first game of the series. He was victimized, 3-1, but could B10WY0URSEUUP TO POSTER SIZE on the SPANISH RIVIERA Leaving Non-stop from tount News not be faulted for the loss. In Detroit March aiSfSSsxt 2FTx3FT*3.50 20, i and East S' • t cers ■**>■ A in . t the first period alone, Watt turned aside 19 shots to keep the Spartans within one goal. Incfdentally, that loss to the 5i5rGi,s lost to CO Iowa Tuesday cookbook will be published on Feb. 15, but the deadline for your recipes is Feb. 9. t Air e Wolverines, now 5 - 0, cd Purdue Send them now. (3-1) its first llimited !rence loss 85-69 at Ann itclub r as Henry Wilmore scored hip >mts. All you have to do is fill out the small form below, Club, J™ shocked the Illini, attach it to your recipe (s) and bring it in or mail it at Iowa City >o!s, etc. as Fred to the Food Editor whose address is also below. n scored a career high of 36 gratuities a non • conference game Wtte, ranked first and id in the Recipe categories are: Salads, Breads, two wire service Cakes, Cookies, Meats, Low - Calorie, Foreign Dishes, crushed Wisconsin, 89-75. warriors led by 39 Pastries, Drinks, and Miscellaneous. points at 301 W. Grand Point before pulling their River All recipes printed will contain the student's name and hometown only. Crafted in Norway of rich satin - lustre pewter set with ARTHUR TREACHER'S contrasting stones, it makes a fitting gift for an important day. So impressive, and so surprisingly inexpensive. Bracelet. $5.00; Neck ring, $6.95; THE ORIGINAL Earrings. $3.95; Ring, $3.95 Snail Form Below Food Editor State News Room 341 TWO GREAT LOCATIONS IN LANSING: Student Services Bldg. RIGHT PAST FRANDOR AT Name Use one of our I Home Town convenient payment plans 2418 E. MICHIGAN _ 99c and at ZALES 4100 S. LOGAN j Category I Downtown and East Lansing - 209 E. Grand River I Lansing Mall "Treat Yourself to the Treacher Taste" Downtown -113 S. Washington il 12 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Thursday, February 4( |g MichjK^ STATE NEWS iSTATE NEWS Recrea CLASSIFIED Room 347 Student Services, will help you give a Valentine via Classifieds today. CLASSIFIED 355-8255 355-8255 SDAV'SO Delux fe&nkLy speaking . The State News do*1 not For Rent by Phil Frank For Sale permit racial or relijlious • For Rent For Sale ii Frank Bu^ discrimination in- its ONLY $8.50/month. Free deliveries. MEN'S SINGLE room, 3 blocks from MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS, all MINIATURE POODLES." Hill OR \ advertising columns. The SELCO COMMUNICATIONS TV Union. Available immediately. brands. 30% off list price. Rich: Old. Dark ner. C»" ' gray. State News will RENTALS. 372-4948. C Phone 337-1408 before 12, after 5 361-7389. A-10-2-11 not 351 5869. C ' • AUTOMOTIVE accept advertising which discriminates agiainst TV RENTALS — Students only. Low p.m. 3-2-5 ONE HALF double for woman. Near . BASS GUITAR. Must sell Mobile Hornet 15^ monthly and immedietely. For information, call Scooters & Cycles religion, race, coloir or 351-7900 to Union, $10/week. 332-1895. 355-2754. 3-2-4 mj'VE worked reserve yours. Auto Parts & Service national origin. UNIVERSITY TV RENTALS. C 5-2-10 GENERAL, 8x35, By Coral ~G7hi Close J now is the Aviation to MSU. Move i„ oying the best ROOMS FOR Over Revco • EMPLOYMENT STEREOS AND Refrigerators for man. Cozy, 1H bedrooms Furn,* M beautiful i Store. 211V4 E. Grand River. Excellent rent. A TO Z RENTAL, condition, t, ||y 0Wh°S ®r< • FOR RENT 349-2220. O 5-2-10 FLEA MARKET RUMMAGE 351-7679 after 5 p.m. 4-2-5 «ths. fantastic f Automotive - r°om> 1 Apartments SALE. 30,000 library books, 10c ,ing IN farmhouse for females Houses TV AND stereo rentals, satisfaction ROOMS each. 2,000 children's books, 10c NAMCO 1969. Furni.hwTr fve and more OLDSMOBILE F85. 1969. guaranteed. Free delivery, service who like to live comfortably. each. Open 9 - 6 p.m., Saturday alto washer, dryer, diihwi |0W $39.90° Rooms 676-1362. 5-2-10 Automatic six, low mileage, new and pick-up. Call NEJAC, and Sunday. Call 669:9311. 3-2-5 garbage disposal. 627-9166. 3-j ointment. Vou » FOR SALE tires. Excellent condition. Call )did. Martha N 337J 300. C REMBRANDT, SIMON RE^ Animals 355-6006. 5-2-10 MEN. SHARE room. $130 a term. PIANO WURLITZER Spinet French 12x50 1970 7ui PARKING SPACES Stoddard r Clean, quiet, cooking. 1 block to Provencial Cherry wood. Rarely carpeted. Furnished, with sto™ emos Branch, - Mobile Homes TEMPEST PONTIAC 1965. 4-door, Burger King. $5 monthly. Call campus. 487-5753, 485-8836. O shed and used. Originally $875 will consider garbage disposal M, • PERSONAL white, power steering, automatic 351 8238. O best offer. 351-9226 after 6 p.m. sell fast. Call 676-1415 cing"for lov V-8. $650. Call Linda, 373-2132 ROOMS 10 minutes from campus. 2-2-4 482-4954. A5-2-4 With adequs • PEANUTS PERSONAL Completely furnished. 372-8077 or 882-8483. A-5-2-4 ,n 3 bedroom r » REAL ESTATE Apartments before 4 p.m. C SANSUI 5000A 180 watt AM-FM 1967 ROYCRAFT, 51x12^ aoe fenced van bedroom. On • RECREATION SKYLARK GS 1966. Great shape, eceiver. TEAC 4010S a lot in (L (priced at $21, DESPERATE: NEED one man for Ledge. Carpeted living room FHA/V/ • SERVICE low mileage. Make offer. For Sale automatic reverse stereo tape A you. 353-5733. 3-2-4 "731" 3-man. No deposit, conditioned. |n excm ^ Administrat deck. Kenwood KR 100 AM-FM Typing Service reduction in price. 351-2416. ONE PAIR Criterion 150A speakers. 140 watt stereo receiver. Sony condition. 627-7062 5-2-8 '' ,ilable. To see. • TRANSPORTATION VW 1959. New engine, rebuilt 5-2-9 $40 each or best offer. 355-6825. TC255 stereo tape deck. —; ery, 351-521 • WANTED transmission, gasoline heater, 3-2-5 Warfedale W30D speakers. Sansui Lost & Found AL ESTATE. ' snow tires. Needs starter. Best ONE GIRL to sublease spring term. model 200 4 way 5 speaker fltb, 349-3310. Cedar Village. Phone 351-0702. DEADLINE offer. 351-7078.3-2-8 3-2-5 MORE FUN in the sun with Sun system. Craig model 2704 stereo LOST: LADIES WATCH Leather band. ~T~u« 1 P.M. class cassette deck. STEREO amplifiers, Library one day VW 1958, 1966 engine, new brakes, Shades. OPTICAL DISCOUNT, Erickson. 337-7370. 1-2-4 tuners, receivers, turntables, and before publication. battery, for details, 355-6341. APARTMENT FOR rent across from 2615 East Michigan Avenue, tape recorders. TV sets. 98 track Cancellations - 12 3-2-8 campus. 113 Louis Street, East 372-7409. C-2-5 one class day noon before Lansing. Inquire after 4 p.m. 3-2-5 tape players. 250 used 8 track tapes, cassettes and reel tapes. GREEN PARAKEET dead or alive - - IosTR^ Valuable. Doajry 43 USED sew machines $15.00 up. publication. Scooters & Cycles S FROM MSU sailing club in Zig - Zaggers and straight stitchers. AM-FM and police band radios bite, 355-2616. 2-2-4 Haslett. Need one man for two 26 used vacuum cleaners $6.00 and oriental wall tapestries. Se/ri PHONE 1968 HONDA 350 Scrambler. $450 WILCOX SECONDHAND 355-8255 or best offer. Phone 337-9388. bedroom, two man apartment. up. Tanks and uprights. STORE, 509 East Michigan, Personal Call 339-8390 after 5 p.m. 3-2-5 ELECTRO GRAND, 804 East SSMAKING, A 4-2-5 485-4391, 8 - 5:30 p.m., Monday RATES Michigan, Hours 9 - 5 p.m.; thru Saturday.C TONIGHT IRMALS. E MAN TO share one bedroom luxury Saturday 9-12. 0-2-5 Stroh's quarts, 75c iso nab I e cha 1 day $1.50 Auto Service & Parts apartment - pool, reduced rent, no NIKKOR 105 mm f/4 telephoto, Carl's Bad Tavern 15c per word per day 100 USED cleaners. Tanks, deposit. 332-3650. 3-2-5 vacuum case, shade, filter. $70. Dennis Round Lake Road 3 days $4.00 MASON BODY SHOP, 812 East For Rent For Rent canisters and uprights. Guaranteed 353-8658. 1-2-4 With Live Rock Band ES BOARDED 13%c per word per day MODERN SPACIOUS 2 bedroom one full year. $7.88 and up. Kalamazoo Street . . .Since 1940. 1-2-4 oor arena, past 5 days fully carpeted apartment. G.E. DENNIS DISTRIBUTING $6.50 Complete auto painting and OKEMOS, ONE bedroom apartment, NOW IN stock, OVATION , Training less appliances, air conditioner, COMPANY, 316 North Cedar. BASS 13c per word per day collision service. IV 5-0256. C furnished, parking, utilities paid. GUITARS. See and hear the best PLAYER, EXPERIENCE! loon, garbage disposal. In Haslett, only Opposite City Market. C-2-4 MARSHALL needed for professional rock b« AQHA (based on 10 words per ad) 351-6586. 5-2-10 at MUSIC. East AT MEL'S minutes from campus. No pets. IMMEDIATELY, MAN for luxury MUST SING. No students C we repair all foreign and Phone 339-2490 for appointment. SEWING MACHINE Clearance Sale. Lansing. C-2-4 littered - grade American cars. If we can't fix it, it apartment. Close, reasonable, Steve, 484-4343. 2-2-5 • March Peanuts Personals must be EAST LANSING, MSU near. 4 Brand can't be fixed. Call 332-3255. 0 5-2-9 reduced deposit. 332-6909. 5-2-4 new portables $49.95, PHOTOGRAPHER'S SERVICES, Limit! student farmhouse. Private, pre-paid. $5.00 per month. Largt selection carpeted, furnished. 337-2285. ROSY SALES PITCH .LER RANCI OWN ROOM in 4-girl Beech street of reconditioned user* .achinas. There will be a 50c service 5-2-5 i-7762. C Aviation duplex, $55 or best offer. Singers, Whites, Necchis New Cosmeticians In a California and bookkeeping charge if Home and Immediate occupancy, 351-3747, "Many Ot.iers." $1C.95 drug store are encouraged to this ad is not paid within ONE GIRL TO sublease winter term. FRANCIS AVIATION: So easy to 332-2961. X-3-2-5 to $39.95. Terms. EDWARDS LARGE ASSORTMENT of rolls of wear sunglasses in the WOMEN: ROOMMATE(S) needed to Rivers Edge Apartments. store one week. DISTRIBUTING COMPANY. with the price tags learn in the PIPER CHEROKEE. pennies and nickels. Call GRAND RIVER 2822, North 5 share luxury apartment near 351-1416. 5-2-5 1115 North Washington, 351-7391, after 5:30 hanging The State News will be Special $5.00 offer. 484-1324. C campus. Call 351-0782 9 a.m. - 6 p.m. 3-2-4 from the frame. rooms furnished, just remodeled. 489 6448. C-2-4 responsible only for the Water p.m. TF paid, private entrance. Houses TYPEWRITER, first day's incorrect Employment $90/month. 371-1173, 484-0897. NOW ONE girl needed, next to MOVING FEBRUARY 25th. 6500 UNDERWOOD portable, $24.95., Used furniture You'll through look rose at the world colored glasses insertion. 10-2-16 BTU air conditioner, $100, campus, $60 per month, in 3-man, ONE MAN, own room 5 blocks from of all kinds. ABC SECONDHAND RECEPTIONIST POSITION for when you attract new Rotary antenna VHF - UHF, STORE, 1208 Turner. C mature woman in young modern SPACIOUS LUXURY two bedroom 'Muj•••• DENTAL ASSISTANT. Full or part with wide, telephoto lenses. 1021 ROOMMATE WANTED 340 STUDIOS. C-2-4 time, with orthodontis experience. rooms. Hickory. IV 5-1864 Call 351-0782 9 a.m. - 6 p.m. TF or OR 6-5502. 4-2-5 Evergreen upstairs, $60 month. Nearly new. Rod, 355-6813. 3-2-5 .CAMARO, 1969 Z-28, 23,000 miles. Downtown. 482-9695, days; 351-8840, 332-1677. 5-2-10 SOMETHING FOR everyone. Try Polyglas. full power. Call 484-0702 evenings. 3-2-5 SOUTH END, ranch, 3 bedroom, U.S. ARMY class "A" uniforms' 1 LHASA - APSO, AKC registered 337-1134. 5-2-5 THREE BEDROOM spacious. hot comb. UNION BUI LOIN furnished, deposit. 882-6823 after shots. Champion lines. 372-0089. Available GIRL NEEDED for four girl house. coat - 38S, 2 pants 29W, $50. BARBERSHOP. C-2-4 PART TIME employment: 12-20> February 14th. 5 p.m. 5-2-4 Brand newl 355-8079. 3-2-5 5-2-10 349-0242 after 5 p.m., weekends. Share room. $62.50. 351-3054. CHARGER, 1969, Special Edition. hours per week. Automobile 1-2-4 Small V-8, 35,600 miles. Evenings, required, 351-5800. 0 5-2-8 TWO BEDROOM furnished mobile SMITH CORONA typewriter. Peanuts Personal 489-2042. 4-2-5 home units. Lakeview lots. TWO GIRLS for Manual, pica type. Excellent (TWO) GIRLS needed in our GRADUATE OR serious student. $30/week. No lease. 15 minutes house, 2 blocks from condition. $20. 351-2533. 3-2-5 CHICAGO: ONLY the beginnin| CHEVELLE 1970. 4-speed, low telephone office three hours per Close to campus. Quiet. 2-man. from campus. 641-6601. 0-3-3 campus. Own room, $110 plus utilities. ED 2-5374. $50/month. 332-5711, 351-6212. only just the start. Sharon 1 mileage, excellent condition. Call evening 5 days a week. $30 a week PERSIAN STUDENT must sell two FREE BLACK Labrador puppy. All 1-2-4 Gall. 1-2-4 393-1980 after 4 p.m. 3-2-5 plus bonuses. For this 5-2-8 WANTED ONE man for spring term, 7'x10' authentic Persian carpets. shots. Male. 4 months. 487-0801. opportunity, call 372-8089. 3-2-4 241 Cedar Street, apartment 12. 2-2-5 SPACIOUS TWO bedroom. HEATHKIT AA-15 150 watts, 355-5855. 0-2-5 Recreation 351-2723.3-2-8 GIRL WANTED, to clean Bordering electrovoice EV-1177 receiver, SAINT house. on campus. WIG, HUMAN hair, dark BERNARDS. AKC. Three will bargain, 353-8451. 3-2-8 brown, References. Mileage plus wages. $155/month. Partially furnished. GIRL females. Your pick. $120. Call EUKt PE, $209, round trip jet I NEEDED to shore nicely excellent quality, will sell CHEVROLET 1970 Nova. 4-door. 349-0329. 3-2-4 337-1127.4-2-5 furnished reasonable. 337-0433 482-5887. 3-2-5 London, summer '71. Call & apartment. Okemos. FOUR GIRLS, spring; 6 girls, or Under 8,500 miles. Like Call 349-1736. 2-2-5 393-7620. 5-2-5 new. summer; 7 girls, fall. Large, well - 353-8825. 1-2-4 Economical 6-cylinder. Fiberglas YOUNG MEN willing to work in GIRL NEEDED spring term. Two POODLE - MINIATURE black, 2 kept, furnished house, all utilities tires, spare never used. $1,900. IV exchange for horse's board or for bedroom, three man. Chalet. SMALL SOFA, red floral upholstry, years old, gentle. Call 393-5049 Spring Break in LANSING OR East Lansing. One paid. Washer, dishwasher, air - 9-6296. 3-2-4 horse and board. MILLER 337-2448. 3-2-4 excellent after 5 p.m. 2-2-4 bedroom furnished. Large, airy conditioning, dishes, study room condition, reasonable. CHEVROLET 1965 Super Sport and RANCH, 645-7362, 645-7762. C TWO BEDROOM luxury apartment. rooms. Air conditioned. with desks. Phone 351-8182. 337-0433 or 353-8825. 1-2-4 Acapulco Beautifully maintained. Suitable __5jl2J_0 station LIZARDS NEW Bar and Restaurant, $200. For spring term only. & Jamaica i wagon. Call 651-5130. for faculty, grad students, business GARAGE SALE, February 6, 7, 9 224 Abbott Road (across from the 351-5516. 4-2-5 TWO GIRLS needed for 4-girl house 1-2-4 a.m. - 6 p.m., 514 Division. Hearse State Theater, East Lansing). Taking new applications for people, married couples. 332-3135 or 882-6549. O Lease. on Gunson. 3 bedroom. No lease - camper, books, bed, toys, etc. 10% STUDENT DISCOUNT on fish 8 Days CHEVROLET 1968 Impala IMMEDIATELY NEEDED: girl for 351-2054. S-2-4 351-8544. 2-2-5 convertible, 327. Good condition, bartenders, cooks, waitresses and busboys. Applicants that have luxury apartment, $55. 337-1107, WOODSIDE APARTMENTS. New, ONE and other live merchandise (now you can buy a friend) at plus gratuities I sacrifice. Must sell. Phone after 5 p.m. 3-2-4 GIRL to share bedroom in previously applied should reapply one bedroom furnished, balcony, DOCKTOR PET CENTER, Call Stan Feldman 393-6575 694-2460. 5-2-10 house. 1037 East Grand River, this week in person also. 5-2-5 laundry, security locks, quiet area. Meridian Mall, 349-3950. 5-2-5 TWO BEDROOMS furnished. All across from Red Barn. $60 351-4698, ED 2-2920, 349-9152. CORVAIR 1962. Suitable for short utilities furnished except 351-5571. C STEREO AND 8 track car GET IN on the funl Read the tape distance driving. $125. Call electricity and telephone. Walking player, with FM stereo, $75 each. Peanuts Personals in the Want Ads 332-8748, after 5 p.m. 3-2-5 distance to campus. Four man LANSING, NORTHEAST, 3 rooms Rooms 627-5865, after 6 p.m. 5-2-5 each dayI $66.25 a person, three man furnished. Share bath, utilities £ CORVAIR 1964. 4 speed stick. Good $77.50 a person. HALSTEAD PART TIME, earn up to $50 - $75 paid. Deposit required. One man, FURNISHED ROOM. 334 Michigan Turn COLLECTABLES into cash! condition, dependable. $150. per week. Car necessary. Call MANAGEMENT, 351-7910. $23 weekly. Phone 485-6696. Avenue. Across from Williams Sell antiques with low-cost Want 355-7995. 3-2-5 351-7319 for interview. C 0-14-2-19 5-2-5 Dorm. 351-7492. 5-2-9 Ads. Dial 355-8255 today I FIAT 1969 convertible, 850 Spider, TWYCKINGHAM APARTMENTS are now leasing student white. Call after 5 p.m., 372-8976. 5-2-3 units. These spacious luxury apartments KAMINS are completely FIAT 66 heater, 5-2-10 station $350. wagon. Phone Radio, 349-9318. carpeted and furnished with distinctive Spanish Mediterranean furniture. Each individual control unit has central a dishwasher, garbage disposa1 and air conditioning. These four man STEREO SHOP 12. Before 13. Horse feed 34. 14. Howl 35. 16. Poisonous tree 36. FIREBIRD automatic, 1967, overhead $1295. 6, Leaving units have up to time has been 3 parking spaces per adequately planned for with unit. The student's leisure a giant heated STEREO 17. Cosmic cycles 39. 18. Risen 42. country. After 5 p.m., 351-3799. 3-2-8 swimming pool, recreation want rooms and private balconies. If you to bo among the first residents of TWYCKINGHAM call SPEAKERS 19. 21. Jewel Similar 43. 44. FLORIDA? 1955 22. Halfway Cadillac Hearse REG. $9.95 camper. Equipped, sleeps 4. $500 today. There 2 bedroom units start at $65/month per man. 25. Resilient 45. or best offer. 351 -8544. 2-2-5 27. Tarry 46. MODEL OPEN EVERYDAY FORD, 1957, V-8 automatic, power EXCEPT SUNDAY Hang on i % H r- e T r- 5— steering. 50,000 miles. FOR RENTAL INFORMATION CALL: % Flush type 1 12 13 Mechanically perfect, $150. Call 349-2494. 4-2-5 MARSHA CHANEL 372-2797or 332-6441 or % 16 SIX, NINE and TWELVE MONTH LEASES V/, LEMANS, 1966. AM-FM, buckets, stick. Nice condition. $900. Call AVAILABLE. si 1995 INCLUDING SPEAKERS '9 /o n % TTC .6 %% 23 21 355-8997. 5-2-8 26 u % 11 STEREO TAPE PLAYER and FM % (Etopcfungfjam MERCURY 1961. Standard shift, V-8, best offer. 482-3491. 1-2-4 MULTIPLEX RADIO 26 29 30 MODEL XEM-1156... Features: Plays 8-Track * % ii 33 MGB 1965. Radials, needs some body work. $600, best. 485-9844. 4620 S. Hagadorn cartridges and 4-Track with GIDGET®, phan¬ % '1 % W A-5-2 5 just north of Mt. Hope Rd. tom slide rule dial with illuminated channel indicators, FM stereo indicator, mono-mpx %% >7 3P % 39 10 MUSTANG MACH I, 1969. 7,500 miles, 428 ram - air, power MANA CEMENT EXCL USIVEL Y B Y: switch for poor reception areas. Operates on H2 i 13 steering, disc brakes, stereo radio and tape system, many other Alco Management Company 12 volt negative ground source. SIZE: 8"W x 4s i *4 'fa extras 32-8 Call 882-0846 after 6 p.m. 7%"D x 21/2"H. % % State News, East Lansing, Michigan Michigan iary4,l9l Student Service directory BAUTEL'S SUEDE and LEATHER Yarns - Supplies Cleaning and Reflnishing hooking, knitting, weavl Okemos crocheting Dry Cleaners 7leal Estate 2916 Turner IV 5-9212 2155 Hamilton Road Okemot 332-0611 tome* nu'i/E worked hard and feel n* is «he time '° b89in MSU Volunteer Rap Hour OFFICIAL best in life. So start Every Thursday 3 - 5 p.m. Passport Photos °hVa 1 beautiful new home In a MSU Volunteer Bureau in 1 day Ok.mo» area. 3 bedrooms. "L fantastic family room and Room 26 Student Services * room. Everything you 353-4400 I and more and the price is $39 900. Call for an Timent. You will be so glad did Martha Mertz, 339-9466 ■Contact lens LARRY'S FROZEN FOODS "siMON REAL ESTATE. services ^Branch, 349-331^4-2^ d. m. dean, an LOW price and big 210 Abbott Rd. Suite #16 With adequate space? This —°"u porK Dundies. , Lockers rented. Custom processed 3 bedroom ranch with 2 car 332-6563 1 fenced yard, full basement foriced at $21,900 is the home • EYES EXAMINED ou. FHA/VA and Farmer's NORTON'S Fnndor Shell Station. Major • GLASSES i Administration financing is "table To see. call Maynard repairs including muffler and • CONTACT LENS ,y 351-5210, or SIMON brake work. Mechanic on DR. I.Li. Collina, Optometrist AL ESTATE, Okemos - MSU duty. All State Road Service. Co-Optical Services nch, 349-331^5-2-5 3024 E. Saginaw. 489-8010. 5218 S. Logan. 393-4230 rCH. Tue EAST LANSING - 3 ranch. 5%% assumabie '• 1-2-4red glassM binding of theses, resumes, its, references. 372-8158. C publications. 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If you can't make a reservation, f 'a'er ^uare Fr- rooi®1 wew'n anywaV • THURSDAY, FRIDAY, or SATURDAY and we'll work you in asoon as g 30 zard TODAY & FRIDAY 10 A.M. - 9 P.M. SATURDAY 10 A.M. - 5 P.M. • 14 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Thursday, February 4 CONFUSION CONTINUES Apollo 14 (Continued from page 1) Meanwhile Apollo 14 zips ever faster as it nears the moon. It whips around the lunar backside early Thursday at 5,503 miles per hour and the astronauts fire a News blackout remains (Continued from page 1) troops from Thailand. The Pathet Lao said have said the enemy might launch rocket at 2:01 a.m. EST to slow the craft g Thailand had sent a battalion to the and settle it into the moon's gravitational possibly to dominate the plateau. Wednesday's reports coincided with a Bolovens Plateau in southern Laos. Sisouk said North Vietnamese embrace. y Saigon announcement of a new incursion The South Vietnamese reported fire tanks, captured Muong The pull of earth's gravity has slowed it by South Vietnamese forces into Wenesday they had begun a second north of Vientiane. The North Soui, i'o» „ 10 a speed of 1,600 mph. Cambodia. incursion into Cambodia by 10.000 troops Vietnar Four hours later in a 69 - by -195 - mile Tass declared the "spreading of the war rarely have used tanks. supported by U.S. air power to clean our The town is considered orbit, another rocker firing pushes the to the territory of Laos by the United a key to enemy bases and help speed the withdrawal strategic Plain of Jars to the southwest spaceship to within 11.5 miles of the moon States and its puppets" was in defiance of of American troops from South Vietnam. its fall might clear the way for surface, the lowest and riskiest command the U.N. charter and the Geneva If the report of a massing along the attack other important points near the ship orbit ever attempted. agreements on Indochina. border of southern Laos is true, the South p|ai, This low orbit sets the stage for Shepard "Certain circles in the United States government battalion held Muong Vietnamese incursion raises the possibility and Mitchell to cast off in Antares toward captured by Laotian forces last fall, hope by spreading the aggression in Laos to of a pincers movement against North the moon's surface. mend their fences, to arrest and push back Vietnamese supply bases and lines in They fire a rocket that sends them a strong liberation movement in Cambodia and Laos. plunging to a 4:16 a.m. EST landing Friday Indochina," Tass said. in a rugged mountain valley. Shepard and Mitchell will separate . . "New aggressive actions from the U.S.A. . jeopardize the contacts that have been The U.S. Command has placed an embargo on operations in the northern part of South Vietnam near the Laotian border. Viet attack Antares from commandship Kitty Hawk at established between the political forces of This embargo did not apply to the South (Continued from page 1) 11:50 p.m. EST, Thursday, and swoop Laos with the aim of seeking a peace Vietnamese incursion. the 3rd military region in the next ■ toward the Fra Mauro highlands. They will settlement for that country To solve ... In Washington, administration officials months. This will leave only about 61 skip past 600 ■ feet - high ridges to land the problem of Indochina it is necessary to said the embargo would be lifted soon. U.S. combat troops plus support amid auto - sized boulders and craters. achieve a political settlement that would be forces' They said the first word of maneuvering on region once the prime responsibility of During 34 hours on the moon, Shepard in keeping with the national interests of the border with Laos would come from Americans. and Mitchell will twice walk the moon's the peoples of Vietnam, Laos and Saigon. About 7,500 South Vietnamese surface, becoming the fifth and sixth Cambodia." Sisouk Na Champassak, Laotian Defense already in Cambodia were joined by 21 humans to step on the black lunar dust. These peoples, the Soviet agency said, fresh Ministry spokesman, said in Vientiane he troops sent across the b«r During their first moon walk, beginning have an "unquestionable right to be had no knowledge that South Vietnamese Officials said the United EST States about 8:53 a.m. Friday, the sovereign masters in their countries." astronauts will set up an atomic - powered The Pathet Lao statement reporting a troops had landed on Bolovens Plateau. providing full helicopter gunship, mtltl Laotian spokesmen in Vientiane seemed evacuation helicopter and logistics science station. Saturday they will begin an massing of U.S. and Saigon forces asserted supp more concerned with what was happening They also are 8,000 - foot moon hike to the 400 - foot - they would operate in conjunction with providing in the north than in the south, where they Stratofortresses and tactical high ridge of Cone Crater and gather rocks fighte bombers as required, they added. which scientists hope will date from the This represented change in U.S. beginning of the solar system, 4.6 billion po Dems hit socrecy on providing support from the 3rd years ago. mili Both walks will be televised live, and in region for South Vietnamese operation Cambodia. color, for the first time by all major supported by U.S. air power to clean out Before the new operation, officials) television networks in the United States (Continued from page 1) enemy bases. the South Vietnamese would and will be relayed abroad. He said Rogers "gave us no idea" that req. "The Pentagon appears to be working helicopter support and each request wo Shepard and Mitchell will blast off from from one set of blueprints while the State such an operation was being planned, be reviewed on merits. the moon at 1:47 p.m. EST Saturday and Department seems to be working from an adding "He might well have told us in "Now," said one official, "when, rendezvous with Roosa, still orbiting in advance what was planned." entirely different set," Byrd told the Vietnamese call for helicopters they