Monday MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY Volume 63 Number 161 STATE East Lansing, TATE NEWS Michigan Monday, April 19,1971 Trustees grant extensions to 2 nat sci assistant profs However, the University Tenure into an illegal management dominated By STEVE WATERBURY Committee has recommended to Provost - University Professors has recommended union. John E. Cantlon that written reasons be that, in the event of a decision to not renew his DIANE PETRYK given, if requested in writing by the faculty An employment commission ruling that' appointment, a faculty member "should be advised of the reasons which State News Staff Writers member. department chairmen may not participate The trustee action, which extended the in departmental advisory committee contributed to that decision." Two assistant professors of natural The trustees also granted tenure to 66 contracts of the two faculty members until meetings also could alter proceedings in science were granted one - year contract Aug. 31, 1972, was supported by Dr. numerous departments at MSU and other faculty members and promoted 83 faculty extensions by the board of trustees universities in the state. members to the rank of professor, 86 to Friday Blanche Martin, D-East Lansing; Warren M. to allow the question of their the rank of associate professor and 13 to Huff, D-Plymouth; Don Stevens, Committee A of the American Assn. of reappointment to come under new the rank of assistant p D-Okemos, Clair A. White, D-Bay City, and procedural safeguards for nontenured Patricia Carrigan, D-Ann Arbor. faculty members. Stevens said not giving reasons for "There is not way for a person to be Board passes (See related stories, p. 2 & 3) afforded due process if he doesn't know Tassell and Bertram G. Murray, filed charged of unfair labor practices with the what he's being accused of," Stevens said. "If people are being separated from the University and not told the reasons why, for stodent then how can they defend themselves?" The primary difference between Michigan Employment Relations the Cantlon, however, said another side to By JOHN BORGER committee's Commission April 8,1970, after appeals to two proposals was the the issue exists. State News Staff Writer department committees and an appeal to frequency of meeting. Proposal I called for the University Tenure Committee had Five trustees overrode student student advisers to attend and have the failed to secure a satisfactory resolution of "Review, in many instances, would not objections Friday and approved right to speak at all public board meetings; a proposal I_ be in the best interest of the individual," for "student trustee advisers" which Proposal II would have had the advisers grievances. Cantlon said. The still unresolved case raised the issue ASMSU Chairman Harold Buckner discuss student concerns with the trustees The trustees passed a motion in of whether faculty members who are not February characterized as "not even a step only once a term, although they would be instructing President Wharton to designate sideways." invited to attend all public board Out on reappointed reasons for have the the right contract to receive nonrenewal. a committee to reconsider University Three trustees who have strongly meetings. Both proposals spelled out various other policy in this area. supported student rights of the student advisers. Presently at MSU, a department which The trustee action concurred with a participation in l\ tree limb overhanging the Red Cedar River near Shaw Hall provides academic At the outset of the student adviser decides not to retain a nontenured faculty governance favored a stronger recommendation by University Attorney |n unusual vantage point for a view of canoers. member is not required to provide reasons Leland W. Carr Jr., who had represented proposal and voted against the weaker discussion, Patricia Carrigan, D-Ann Arbor, for the action. measure. moved the acceptance of Proposal I. State News photo by Doug Bauman MSU in the employment commission The proposal passed calls for three "Proposal I is more conservative than hearings. undergraduates and the board has supported Trial one graduate student before, but it is a Examiner James P. Kurtz has who "will meet at least once per term with significant step forward," she said. :arth Week to feature recommended to the commission that all charges against the University be dismissed. However, attorney Kenneth Laing Jr., filed exceptions to the trial examiner's the trustees or a committee of trustees to discuss potential problems, current issues and future directions." Special meetings between the advisers Proposal I died on a 4-4 tie, with Mrs. Carrigan, Dr. Blanche Martin, D-East Lansing; Don Stevens, D-Okemos, and Warren Huff, D-Plymouth, supporting it. recommendation, and the commission has and the trustees may be held "at the Clair White, D-Bay City; Frank Hartman, not released decision in the local pollution problems a case. discretion of the president or the board of D-Flint; Kenneth Thompson. R-Grand trustees." Rapids, and Frank Merriman, Should the commission back Murray and Miss Van Tassell, procedural standards for (Please turn to page 11) A committee of one the renewal or nonrenewal of nontenured undergraduate, one graduate student and a representative of By DENISE McCOURT Agricultural Hall and at 7 p.m. Thursday in said faculty at universities throughout Michigan the office of either President they looked upon the report s just a could be affected by the decision. Wharton or State News Staff Writer Earth Week, beginning today on campus 158 Natural Resources Bldg. The Sierra Club is sponsoring a bike - in, beginning. "It showed that we do have a pollution The legal brief filed contends that the departmental by Laing also Executive Vice President Jack Breslin will determine the agenda of the adviser - Youth council which will explore the campus at 2 p.m. problem here at MSU," Tanner said. advisory trustee meetings. Jl focus on the local pollution problems Wednesday. Interested students should committee is a labor organization within the The approved proposal was ■h film representations, a pugh campus and a discussion of the diversity Waste Control Authority on bicycle trek meet in the parking lot behind the library. Emery G. Foster, asst. vice president of Contrary to many students' opinions, the University is not polluting the Red Cedar River, Moore said. The pollution comes meaning of the Public Employment Relations Act, and that the presence of weaker than either of two by a student - administrator considerably plans suggested - trustee forms policy chairman Emanuel Hackel business operations, will address a joint (Please turn to page 12) during the committee which met between the March Jnpus. deliberations of the committee made it Students l-Qual) for Enviromental Quality will show environmental films and meeting of E-Qual and the Sierra Club at 7:30 Wednesday night in G-8 Holden Hall. Foster is the chairman of the University and April board meetings. propositions |des at 7 p.m. Tuesday in 213 Waste Control Authority (WCA), a group ESTES PARK, Colo. (AP) - A cross - section of America's young people which represents the grounds dept., the began dept. of public safety, the faculty and molding a 10 - point policy recommendation Sunday at the White jovief students. WCA is studying control methods House Conference on Youth and it cra for pollution problems at MSU. WCA was developed this year as a result of a pollution study done at MSU last appeared the final draft would contrast sharply with the Nixon administration's |eporfec/ Vietnam war policy. spring by a St. Louis, Mo., engineering Elliot Richardson, secretary of Health, firm. One suggestion of the report was to Education and Welfare, was to be the top form a University study group. Last fall the board of trustees approved administration representative here for the opening session Sunday night. )r $35,000 for the Waste Control Authority, space which has met twice since it was formed Rogers Morton, secretary of the Interior, was expected Tuesday and there was a MOSCOW about a month ago. AP The Soviet Union is - Fred Moore, director of E-Qual and its possibility President Nixon might appear pected to launch a manned before the session closes late spacecraft representative to the WCA, said they are Wednesday, a _'° ea[^ ■ another orbit within the next two days now looking for a full - time director. conference spokesman said. step towards building an orbital "Our ideal director would be someone Stephen Hess, appointed by Nixon to Ic? ,s'at'on> reliable Soviet sources concerned about the environment and head the conference, said the President has Tprted Sunday. told him he would "take the preserving what little we have left here," P.7 jj'd not say how many cosmonauts Moore said. recommendations very seriously . . . pa he aboard the craft, but it was The eight- man group has just begun to They'll be taken very seriously at the joerstood the mission would be highest levels of government." part of look into the research report, but Moore fyuz series which has dominated the Many of the 1,000 youth delegates aren't « manned space expressed dissatisfaction with the report. program since 1968. "It's a poor report," he said. "They try sure, however, just how much influence Jnn™ ,'ned S°yuz 4 and Soyuz 5 to cover so many things. Basically, they got they will have on the administration. ift Jl -January 1968, when the two bogged down in details." Joint Effort, a coalition of dissenting fctKfp, <• together and carried out a Howard A. Tanner, director of natural delegates, called for denying President Nixon an official copy of the conference's ■ficialiu ,t1W0 cosmonauts — was resources and a member of the committee, lerimont ,called "the world's first recommendations. James Branscome, on Tjnmental space station." the poverty task force and active in Joint Effort, said that by giving the Imonauk ii3!"181' Iaunchin8 of seven recommendations directly to Nixon the B9 ion t % tT°sr"lation e sPace craft in October that a sPace stat|°n Petitioning open youths would be indicating they believe he L- ' but official reports said the Petitioning is open through Friday would implement them. only tested the effect of Instead, he said, the report should go to for ASMSU cabinet director. Petitions lelaftT0" we,din8 Processes, ■yuz 9 fnovf manned space effort was are available Services outside 307 Student Bldg. and in 333 Student Milton E. Meeting the Rev. Ralph Abernathy, Mexican - American leader Cesar Chavez and other Muelder, vice president for research development, sits at a barren trustee table Friday, waiting for the prominent minority leaders not invited to fcolavev ,J"ne *970, when Andrei Services Bldg. MSU octet to appear. Trustees arrived one hour and 15 minutes late for the the conference. Joint Effort claims it had earth for rj^ ^vastyanov drc,ed |piutes meeting. days 16 hours and 54 State News photo by Doug Bauman support from about 50 delegates here. (Please turn to page 12) lack, Greek blocs form BV JOANNA FIRESTONE State News Staff "flaming liberals" have been replaced by a other. in ASMSU board candidates ok'd without the votes of the exchange for black and on - campus This is not to say that the election of Writer strong coalition of fraternity and sorority support for Kevin Harty who is expected chairman and vicechairman are closed members. The bitter subterfuge and name- to seek the vice issues. Student boards are not famous for calling chairmanship. of the past session thas Lon hint that the seventh Greek known that board members have made it they hope to fill several top positions. The black coalition is expected to vie for board polite "After attitude you, my dear given way to a Alphonse" According to informal polling, Buckner appears to have enough support to win their "I cross my heart and allegiance and surprises are hope to die" always part of ■"about in .may do a complete positions, including board vicechairman chairmanship, cabinet as the new board members re-election on the first ballot. McDonel - the regular agenda. fren predece^ 6r from its conflict - and chairman of the policy committee with director and chairman of the agenda gladhand one another, trying to win Shaw representative Larry Stempel, a If either group oversteps its boundaries |li°ns alreafkTs 'earmterest to 1)6 *rouP* and additional spots on the agenda and budget committee. In anticipation of the aipport for their own causes. possible dark -horse candidate for of power and crushes the toes of the other flexln«their appropriations committees. election of the Apparently, the strategy thus far lias vicechairman, predicts that the election block, the entire session could disintegrate The second major voting block, on - board chairman expected succeeded. Several members of the Greek will be settled "within 20 minutes'" Sunday, blocs into the same vicious personal attacks of its ■"on. visibiTsh-f) e.,ected Wednesday, has a campus black > epresentatives led by the are enganging in a flurry of political coalition have indicated that In return for supporting Buckner, the they will predecessor. WS£Thoard t0lhe rl*ht of the old member called the Office of Black Affairs, has also been busy grooming its supporters for toD board wheeling and dealing. Both blocs realize that neither can get their pet projects and support Harold Buckner in his bid for re-election to the chairman's seat in on - campus and black representatives have agreed to back Harty for vicechairman. Already it is reported that several board (Please turn to page 11) 2 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Monday, April 19 i news Board OKs co-ed housing plaJ By DIANE PETRYK trustees in March, stated: summary State News Staff Writer "A limited number of additional halls should opportunity to develop coeducational units with an 'alternating floor concept' (i.e., 'layering' such as currently exists in Shaw, have the and provide space for all students who wish is necessary to create a better balance Otherwise, we would have to either limit enrollment to enroliTb0'1^ between it From the wires of AP and UPI. The board of trustees modified their stand on co-ed housing Mayo and Williams) providing that adequate house and/or hall Briggs students elesewhere, while the space in Friday by unanimously passing a proposal to allow additional alternating floors of men and women in residence halls. security can be maintained. "The choice of such additional options will be subject to went unoccupied. "Therefore, we can now designate the first —"^I In an amended version of Recommendation 7 of the floor Campus considerations of physical feasibility and the distribution of Holmes as a men's floor, while the r Variable Living Options Plan, the administration suggested academic programs across the campus. continues to be assigned to women," he said. remainder of »°k We#- "favorable reconsideration of continuance of the N| prerogative to "Initial approval will be required from (hall) student Dickerson added that the second area assign entire floors which can be securely separated either to men whert> ■ "Assuming the other trustees government, management and advisory staff with final approval needed is in Fee Hall, where it is expected that Dart py *1 or women when, in the judgment of the administration, such nr won't change their votes now, by the President of Residence Hall Assn., the manager of will be remodeled into medical school assignment is needed to: residence halls, and the dean of students, prior to April 7, 1971." "Because of the disruption during the facilities. F*| (on the housing issue) a change A. Maintain an academically better mix among freshmen and remodelin Milton B. Dickerson, vice president for Student Affairs, said said, "the entire wing will be closed next year ami in the situation might develop to returning students, the modification would initially affect two housing problems on B. Maintain a more even income among the various occupants of East Fee will be offered the sixth floi)r an J0"16" allow them to change. A case in trusts, campus. Both of the problems, he said, were instrumental in C. Increase the occupancy and income levels in the residence leading to the policy change. and rooms in West Fee." Partment»| point is the age of majority — if halls, and He noted that similar assignments of floors to it becomes a problem of "In Lyman Briggs College, there will be more men students D. Preserve the idea of residential colleges." I halls enrolled in September than can be accommodated in East Holmes year. during the Past I depriving adult citizens their The original version of Recommendation 7, defeated by the Hall," he said. Any future applications of this policy will be denen,w I rights because they arc of age." situations which fall within the guidelines approved bvthTh I -Trustee Patricia Carrigan, IN USAC ACTION and will only be at the initiative of the In other business Friday, the trustees: administration he sain ' ■ D-Ann Arbor • Unanimously approved amendment of Article Seven Academic Freedom Report to correct of a I procedures for amending the document and too ambiguity with resnw*.I to I Nominating issue solved give g the board ofl trustees the explicit right - document, as well as the right — ^to ofpropose . i —lendments amendments to final approval or reiertinJthe I to th> i on of I I amendments. n of I Counteroffensives launched By DAVE PERSON for at-large seats designated for nonwhite students be nominated by the University Student Affairs Committee, ASMSU iously I State News Staff Writer by appropriate nonwhite student groups, in a manner to insure Academic Council. J and the | a • East Pakistani independence forces were reported fair representation among such groups. Unanimously approved Article Four of the document I The University Student Affairs Committee "In addition, the committee is to entertain "Graduate Student Rights and making a last ditch attempt Sunday to keep the Pakistan (USAC) Friday nominating basis to provide due process for the Responsibilities," on an interim I agreed upon a method of nominating minority at-large students petitions from student groups and individuals and to provide in hearing of cases involvin. I army from regaining control of the secessionist to positions on the Academic Council. graduate students until the full document, which is province. USAC was acting on the request of the board of trustees to the ballot for the possibility of write-ins." confirmation in the Academic Senate, becomes pendinS I The Indian government radio in New Delhi said Previously, the Taylor Report only required the Committee on • The document has been effective. I incorporate six changes into the Taylor Report on student nominations to "consult with the established nonwhite previously approved by the Council I followers of Sheik Mujibur Rahman had launched two participation in academic government. of Graduate Students, the Graduate organizations." Council and the Academi! I The other five changes were made by USAC at a During the meeting at which the recommendations were Council. c I counteroffensives, one in the eastern part of the meeting April • 9. A solution to the issue of minority nominations to the council Established province to recapture tl:e important Akhaura railway was not reached at that time. initially discussed, USAC amended the Taylor Report and the faculty bylaws so: a clinical Dept. of Obstetrics, Gynecology and Reproductive Biology in the College of Human I junction and the other in tue western sector to regain A special meeting of the Academic Council will be • At least five of the at-large seats would be reserved for effective July 1, and named Dr. Thomas H. Medicine I Chuadanga. 3:15 p.m. Tuesday in the Con Con Room of the International held at medical school at the University of California at Kirschbaum, of the I Center to consider USAC's recommendations. women. • chairman. Los Angeles k II Nothing in the bylaws would "prevent the board of trustees • The recommendations must be approved Truce ruled out in Ceylon the Academic Senate before by the council and from taking prompt action on urgent financial and personnel Accepted gifts and grants totaling more than $2.7 million I they are returned to the trustees for matters when such action is in the best interests of the University. including a grant of $159,000 from the U.S. Dept. of Labor to be I Army officers ruled out a truce with youthful final consideration. Such emergency actions do not, however, relieve the board of used in part to provide employment assistance for the young and I The trustees have asked that the recommendations be its commitment to utilize to the fullest extent rural disadvantaged. insurgents Sunday, in Kegalte, Ceylon, raining mortar returned possible the 1 to them no later than May. advisory judgments provided for in these bylaws." fire on their strongholds and ordering summary USAC's recommendation on the issue of executions for prisoners believed to be rebels. minority nominations • The trustees would have final judgment in states that: "The slate prepared by the Committee on disputes resulting "We have learned too many lessons from Vietnam and Malaysia. We must destroy them completely. We have no choice," said Lt. Col. Cyril Ranatunga, a 41 - Nominations shall name at least 22 candidates for the 10 positions to be filled. The committee is free to set its own rules. "It is, however, expressly instructed to insure that candidates from the statement that "any act which diminishes, compromises the distinctively professional rights or duties of the faculty is destructive of the interests of the University and is suspends or Nobel recipient forbidden . . year - old graduate of Sandhurst, the British military to speak MSllI • Any amendment of the bylaws affecting the substance of school. academic governance shall be referred to the board of trustees for its approval." at A sixth proposal, recommended Israel eyes federation by USAC and revised at the Stevie The 1970 Nobel Peace Prize meeting of the steering committee last week states that "all Prize - the highest award [J winner Norman E. Borlaug will service to mankind necessary support" to academic government at the for Defense Minister Moshe Dayr.n of Israel cautioned University give one lecture and speak in crucial role in the - level will be the responsibility of the provost and the vice two seminars here during a visit of develop™ Sunday against "Despairing of prospects of a partial president for student affairs. new wheat varieties that boil to campus May 11. VVonder settlement with Egypt" because of the new Egypt - the promise of abolishing hun£ Borlaug, director of wheat for millions of Syria - Libya federation. improvement at the throughout the world. peoM In announcing the federation Saturday, President Anwar Sadat of Egypt declared the three nations' TOM International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center near leaders agreed they would neither negotiate nor make peace with Israel. He added tiiat "the liberation of SAv/yshs Mexico City, Mexico, will deliver the 1971 MSU Distinguished Lecture in Agriculture and occupied Arab territories is an objective toward which Natural Resources at 8 p.m. in all potentials should be committed." Corner of Ann & MAC the Auditorium. Addressing a;i Israeli Press Assn. meeting, in Tel Aviv, We f His topic for Dayan said lie did not regard the new federation as "a CarryJ distinguished lecture will be the radical change" in the Arab world. "China Books ' "The Green Revolution — Its Newspapers & *Back Issues Magazines Genesis, Impact, Dangers and Banks Hope." profit in '70 of whole Earth "Chemical Feast In conjunction with the catalogs 'President's lecture, MSU will confer on Major banks rang up hefty profits in 1970 while the *25 underground Commission general economy sagged. on Borlaug the honorary degree of papers Obscenity & doctor of science. And they are making a strong showing in the early •Zap No. 4 Pornography Earlier in the day, Borlaug will month of 1971. participate in two seminars: One Big banks, especially in the metropolitan money Central Michigan's Book Store on international agricultural centers achieved sharp profit gains development . at 9:30 a.m. in although interest 106B Wells Hall, and one on rates slumped from record levels. That was because the future • challenges in food interest they paid for funds fell more than their charges development at 2 p.m. in 109 011 loans to customers. Anthony Hall. 4 I "For major banks 1970 was another said the brokerage firm of Keefe vintage year," FfffcA tfl A native of Iowa, received the 1970 Nobel Peace Borlaug NORMAN E. BORLAUG Bruyette Woods, Inc., in New York which specializes in bank stocks. 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Honeywell Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Monday, April 19, 1971 3 )00 books jonated By DIANE PETRYK State News Staff Writer na visit-basis for "The event, as I view it," "These things are far removed there's a real peace conference hope Hiniker said, "is a positive from a ping - pong game," he sufficiently unified at this time |o China would probably play an Library response to earlier American to make such a said. gesture. overtures to the Chinese — important part. "It still remains to be Most Hales said the event is "But it's clear that if there is seen MSU experts in how loosening trade restrictions, evidence that China finally sees to be any we respond to the disciplines relating to China allowing Americans to purchase the need to develop relations real improvement in gestures," he said. agree that the recent American Chinese goods in U.S. - China relations we will table tennis team's visit to Red Hong Kong, with other countries. He also have to get out of Vietnam. The Anthony Koo, professor of validating American passports acknowledged the Taiwan economics, said the contact China is a promising for travel to China. war and U.S. support of Chaing between problem and said Taiwan might China and the Ic'hynnyk, lown internationally f°r his research W°rk breakthrough in Sino relations. - American "It also shows a desire on the get together with Communist China. Kai - Shek are major obstacles at this point." American people is good because "contact leads to better part of the Chinese to prevent Gourlay said Nixon has to do Walter E. Gourlay, asst. Paul A. understanding." |?heShcollection, which professor of history, views the growth of a solid coalition between the Americans and the Varg, professor of history, said Red China does not more than has been because "probably all along it done He expressed cautious lnmoromises volumes in the visit as a forward step that now Soviets." like the "Two China" policy of has been American hostility to optimism and said an earlv 111 of ichthyology , taxonomy , - depends on Washington. the United States but feel it is prediction is that the event China" that has caused the rift toloey, hydrobiology and Kwan Wai So, associate better than the previous in might ease the tensions of the TLted subjects, was donated to "The unknown quality is policy relations between the world. professor of history, said the of recognizing only Taiwan. countries. J,e library by Ovchynnyk's what Nixon has in his mind," he recent events are a "step toward "Peking wants United States "It's too early to tell about said. "If he wants to Varg said it is the Chinese [dow at his death in December, relations with China he improve do normalcy" but that "it takes presence to be withdrawn from who are responding to American the U.N.," he said. ■70. it. can two parties to come to any Taiwan," Gourlay said. gestures made recently and over Commenting on the event's agreement or any kind of "Nationalist China is largely a period of significance, Joseph Lee, ■included in the collection are "Several times in the past understanding." ninning close to the end of its years. associate professor of T! of periodicals such as Peking has sent feelers to the While Dell rope anyway. It depends on U.S. "While we're not certain of all the reasons the regime reacts humanities, said it was a fcmal Behavior, Canadian Flsh United States and up to the Hales, asst. "melting of the ice" but whether policy and support. Communist [Jurist, Copeia, Ecology, present time has been pretty professor of linguistics and China would probably be in this fashion at this time, there it will lead to tenable results Eltematic Zoology and well rejected." Oriental and African languages, said he thought it was "the most to promise not to attack Taiwan willing are some he said. pretty good guesses," remains to be seen. Enactions of American if the United States He said he seriously doubts if 11 eries Society These Lsitions have enabled the Viewing it in terms of as a breakthrough possibly promoting tremendous development in the last 20 years," L. H. Battistini, pulls out." Gourlay added that whether Varg said one of these guesses Communist China will is that the Chinese government is a solution to the help find Taiwan retains its seat in the Vietnam War professor of social science, said irary to either fill in its more contact and ending China's the American visit was "not too United Nations should be lldingsor to duplicate some of isolation from the American significant because the real issues decided by Peking and the T recent volumes in heavy use. people, Paul J. Hiniker, asst. weren't dealt with." United Nations, not by the The State News, the student newspaper at Michigan Stata professor of political science, lOvchynnyk. was the curator of Oops—another flat! said he feels this is an excellent According to Battistini, the United States alone. Battistini said the Red University, is published every class day during four school terms, plus Welcome Week edition in l|d - blooded vertebrates at the This man shouldn't look so surprised at being caught with time for the Nixon real issues involve Chinese are adamant that there Subscription rate is $14 per year. September. BU Museum at the time of his a administration to come forward Taiwan, flat tire. Everyone gets them at one Vietnam and time or another. military should be only one Chinese with more overtures to establish State News photo by encirclement of Communist government. Member Associated Press, United Press Doug Bauman relations. China. Inland Daily Press Association, Associated International, "They won't accept Taiwan Collegiate Press, being in the U.N. General Michigan Press Association, Michigan Collegiate Press OR UNIVERSITY Assembly," he said, "but the United Association, United States Student Press Association. States is stuck with Taiwan. Unless Peking accepts Second - class postage paid at East Lansing, Michigan. the two Editorial and business offices at 347 Student Arbor China policy, Taiwan Ann - Services Trust will be expelled." Building, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Gourlay said he does not feel Michigan. the warming of relations with Red China means that they will Phones: By JOHN BORGER board of directors. D-Flint; Clair White, D-Bay City; Mrs. Carrigan's motion failed help us end the Vietnam War. Editorial State News Staff Writer This motion failed 3-5, with 355-8252 •A bylaw amendment to Kenneth Thompson, R-Grand Classified 3-5, with only Mrs. Carrigan, the same board division. "What China wants is for the Advertising 355-8255 allow for constituen t Display Advertising Rapids, and Frank Merriman, R- Stevens and Martin supporting With two exceptions, the United States to get out. I don't 353-6400 I The board of trustees Friday participation in the selection of Deckerville, favored allowing think we can count on China to Business - Circulation trustees voted the same way this 355-3447 |ted 5-3 to allow the Ann directors by providing three Ann Arbo? Trust Co. to vote the Photographic Stevens moved to rescind the year as they did on a similar GM pressure North Vietnam, but if 355-8311 bor Trust Co. to vote the directors for employes, stock. Stevens; Patricia Carrigan, right of Ann Arbor Trust Co. to stock voting question last diversity's GM stock. The trust consumers and dealers. D-Ann Arbor, and Dr. Blanche vote the University's stock in the In both cases, Huff, year. Thompson, Jnpany is expected to vote •disclosure in the Martin, D-East Lansing, opposed future without specific board Hartman and Merriman favored ■th GM management against corporation's annual report of the motion. approval. management and Martin and jnpaign GM. company action in airpollution Following the vote, Mrs. "This doesn't apply to this Stevens favored the reform ■Involved in the stock - voting control, autosafety and minority Carrigan asked the board to Campaign GM case, because measures. m are three hiring and franchising practices, Campaign GM establish a student faculty we've already made a decision Mrs. ■orporate "The Ann Arbor Trust Co, - Carrigan, who joined the responsibility'. committee on corporate on that," he said. "But in the board in and a Protestant is not better qualified to make January, replaced responsibility to recommend future, I want to know how this Stephen Nisbet, R-Fremont, liscopal Church proposal decision for me than I am," Don action on similar situations in University's stock is who had *ing GM to discontinue Stevens, D-Okemos, objected. the future. being supported voted." management. Inufacturing operations in Ann Arbor Trust Co. is the Mrs. Carrigan said she wanted Bt/i Africa because of that voting agent for all University ■ a clear directive from the board lantry's policy of racial owned stock. Warren Huff, on the matter, although the legation. D-Plymouth, made the motion [The three Campaign GM posals called for: fan amendment laws to to the II to have the company vote MSU's stock. "Proposals as suggested by provide a process for Campaign GM in my opinion are University Committee Business Affairs is currently establishing a subcommittee of this type. FREE preholder nomination and profoundly conservative because i of members of the they attempt to Ladies Day Movie' bring corporate responsiveness by internally 8 Hour Sale wo restaurants changing corporate procedures," Stevens said. All ladles are invited to the Lansing Mall Theater tomorrow He also supported the at 10 a.m. for the week's free movie sponsored by the lel( pool permits proposal of the Domestic and Lansing Mail Merchant Association. Foreign Missionary Society of ■Requests for pool room the Protestant Episcopal Church pnses by two East Lansing that GM discontinue its South After the movie, register for free prizes In all participating laurants will be among the African jns under manufacturing stores and shop their super buys. consideration at the operations. ■"day night meeting of the Huff; Frank Hartman, P Lansing City Council. Remember: a movie chosen ■Lizard's, 224 Abbott Road, especially for yoa will be shown free every Tuesday at 10. Be our guest, wont you. V The Best Steak House, 218 Texperimental films Bbott Road, have I conrad auditorium applied for JI monda\ [ licenses. The meeting is Jeduled for 8 p.m. I City Hall. Monday at seven and nine pm | ajxil 13&20§! ISI laiiNtiiff in*»ii 5330 W. Saginaw Hwy. Only 2 more SENIOR NITE" 3 J WEDNESDAY, __ gifts APRIL 21 - contests - drink specials 8 p.m.-2 a.m. 6*£fir! GOURMET DINNER the shortcut makes !QnQoQ Roast Prime Ribs of Angus Beef Au Jus "legsing it" a Miss J pastime and we've favorite Remember Mother Aged and Roasted to Perfection got this short little cotton on May 9 1*1 ROAST PRIME RIBS pant and the shirts to go with OF ANGUS BEEF EVERY SATURDAY a Mother's Day Card AU JUS on top any way she wants • Fantasy of Fresh Fruit ^ ou also choose j fl j Crisp Tossed Green • can to wear them plain and Salad from our wide variety of $4.75 • Baked Idaho Potato trimmed, bright and dark • Fresh Garden Vegetable Graduation Cards • Delicious Apple Pie Sizes 5 to 13. • Coffee or Tea The shortcut pants ALSO: and shirts. $7 to $12. SCOTT BRADSHAW AT THE PIANO For Reservations Call - EAST °Pen. Wed. Jacob^on'B and Thurs. till 9 p.m. 3121 E. Grand River Ave. New Phone 351 1440 IBFIb - MICHIGAN Dorm policy STATE MEWJ UNIVERSITY When unrealistic, they were 10 y not justified KENNETH R. LYNAM advertising manager other 61s were already To the Editor: . TJe unrealistic, ludicrous housing MARK EICHER, managing editor at MSU amazes reformed the policy was us. Although S?! ED HUTCHISON, city editor BARBARA PARNESS, campus editor designed to accommodate the obviously^! financbt I academic needs of KEN KRELL, editorial editor students, but rath* I* I GARY WALKOWICZ, sports editor enhance the University's funds. I It seems quite preposterous that a junior, who by the fate of to asm* I Seven-time recipient of the Pacemaker award MoT I for outstanding journalism. Nature will not be 20 years old by the SI of registration for fall term, '71, will J! I living McDonel in Wonderful Wonders MarSI or Beautiful Brody am^l hordes of freshmen, irrelevant hou»l EDITORIALS meetings, banana split parties and exchan*! dinners. vI It seems quite realistic, on hand, that this same student would eniovl the other I the privacy of off - campus housing whew I he can live according to his financial statiul A necessary and needs. But, because of the policy's stipulations, parental housinl permissionI personal preference and even finance I situations often overlooked. Until are thcl golden age of 20, the dorm is oni'il '■ for Michigan Join the march on "home!" such Certainly, the University has regulations because of the! underpopulated dorms and the increasim I imposed! number of students who rapidly move off! Politicians have been complaining campus as soon as possible. But should the I for some time about the inequities of unfortunates who turn 20 after Sept. 22bt| forced to pay the monetary and socitll property taxes and the faults of price of on - campus life merely became! Michigan's education system. Finally this University planned poorly and nowhul Gov. Milliken is attempting to do an excess of dorm rooms? I something about it. Toni Pellilo I In a special message to the Southgate sophomonl APHL24 Debbie Gammon ■ legislature, Milliken has proposed Troy sophomonl eliminating the property tax as a Julie Modroctkl source of education revenue. Grand Rapids sophomonl Presently, those who are either April 12,19711 disinclined or unable to own property pay no direct tax. The home - owner thus carries most of educational tax structure provides Hello Drafteel the load. improved elasticity. Tax rates should To the Editor: Bring all the GFs home now! Under Milliken's program, this not have to be perennially adjusted. Hello Mr. Draftee: system will change. He has proposed As the state's education needs The pictures you have in front of you uJ an increased income tax and a value - increase, so should the state's income of the enemy. Or are they civilians? well, who cares? Your job should you oj added tax, the latter suggested so tax revenue. forced into it, is to kill, maim, i that Michigan's corporate income tax The state's income tax structure itself also needs to be restructured. Buses leave from the Union 7 p.m., April 23, arrive in D.C, 7a.m., the otherwise destroy all the North Vietnai will favorably compare with tax 24th. Coming home the buses leave Washington by 10 a.m. April 25 you can. As usual, should your mil schedules in other states. These taxes Presently the state charges all and will be back by 10 p.m. that night. become known, the U.S. Army il will spread the tax burden more citizens the same income tax rate. disavow any knowledge of you J evenly among all Michigan residents. The poor pay the same percentage of responsibility for your mission. The dn THE ROUND TRIP TICKET COSTS $23.00 AND ARE AVAILABLE will not self destruct for at least two yd Milliken's. their paychecks as the wealthy. ( proposals provide for AT: Your friendly ltd more educational revenue with strict Michigan needs a graduated STUDENT MOBILIZATION COMM. OFFICE draft bo standards of accountability to assure income tax. The well - to - do can John K.B 320 STUDENT SER VICES BLDG. Michigan's school dollars are spent afford to pay a much higher PHONE: 353-9799 AND A T SELECTED AREAS ON CAMPUS (SOME wisely. Presently, local school percentage of their incomes than DORMS) officials determine their own they are presently paying. Perhaps educational priorities, creating vast the state income tax law can be differences in the quality of revamped so that an individual pays education throughout the state. state tax based on his federal income BILL HOLSTEIN Under Milliken's plan, school tax. The state already needs a boards will still be allowed to raise referendum to eliminate the Poll: propaganda? extra revenue for special local property tax as an education revenue enrichment programs. state Financing education through the income tax also allows local source; restructuring the income tax might well also appear on On the whole, though, Milliken's the ballot. survey or education officials to tend at long education program will help head off James Brock, Lansing graduate student, concerning which method of opinion Brock, who resigned on April 6, said Some misunderstanding existed as to the rolei last to their primary function: the collapse of Michigan education. there was "substance to the notion that the the committee. Perrin thought of ■ resigned last week from the MSU opinion taking would be used, Stapleton said. education. Presently, local school Revamped funding of the education purpose of the questionnaire was committee as a "working committee" inf Poll Committee. The resignation and the Feeling board officials spend much time system is a necessary first step reasons behind may raise serious questions "My feeling," Perrin said, "and I think appeasement or to provide the community "advisory sense" rather than a d the attitude of the ad hoc committee, was with a sense of involvement and making committee. trying to pass property tax increases. toward rebuilding quality in about the design and purposes of the But Brock said he resigned his p< Most campus - wide poll. that a survey might be more scientifically participation as opposed to attaining importantly the proposed Michigan education. anything which really represents opinions." because "I did not feel that it was re valid but it lacked the advantages of getting The controversy concerning the poll conducted in February centers around one a lot of people involved, a lot of people Perrin called this "a rather tortured committee In which the members made decisions." And that mod committj discussing the issues, giving everyone an interpretation and assumption." question: was the poll primarily a public "I have difficulty answering that because of the groundwork, certainly <■ relations effort designed to give members opportunity to vote, having the of the University community the illusion educational value of having questions that it's so foreign to what we were really trying organization of the committee, tr were announced in advance to give people to do. I just frankly can't see how this authority structure within the commit* March on W the administration is responsive to their opinions? While a second opinion poll is not an opportunity to think about them before they voted." under any rational interpretation could be considered appeasement because we're not and the objectives of the committee! been established before the committee eij Perrin said the poll was intended as "a trying to buy favor from anyone," Perrin met once." scheduled for the near future, the validity means of communication" and a "channel said. Brock said he suggested 1 of any futher polls may remain in doubt if committee use a statistical sample crucial to w this question is not answered. One key consideration is not whether the to the administration." Other criticisms of the scientific validity Results Accounts of the polling operation and the results appeared in the State News, the which we could draw significant r« but was informed by Perrin that the ffl of the poll have been made concerning the poll was scientifically valid: both the lack of conditional responses and the State Journal, wire services and hence in had already been decided by the ad"! people who constructed the poll and those several Michigan newspapers and in various committee in favor of the open poll. L who are experts in survey techniques agree "general and fuzzy" wording of the Perrin, according to Brock, also saOB educational association newsletters. Antiwar sentiment is building garnering public and legislative the poll was not as scientifically valid as questions. that time "one of the primary purpo»« One article appeared in the newsletter of across the nation, but active protests support. We have suggested possible. Perrin and members of the opinion poll the opinion poll was to give students T the National Assn. of State Universities and against the war remain subdued. Fall alternatives to protest, such as The question is rather whether Robert committee set up in the fall to administer Land Grant Colleges. feeling of a voice in the running 0 1 and winter have been lean seasons Perrin, vice president for University the poll, say the poll was primarily University." _ helping peace candidates or recalling "The results of the first MSU campus for concerted efforts against U.S. relations, was justified in releasing the poll designed for use during times of stress such According to the letter sent from « "hawk" legislators. results for use in a wide range of opinion poll indicates significant involvement in Vietnam. This as the strike last spring. differences of opinion between students office to the participating or8a"'^J But demonstrations are the most publications where they might be easily "From the administration's view, we the committee was set up "to deternw and the faculty," the item began. phenomenon seems caused by a visible and immediate means of misinterpreted. were always somewhat at a loss to know "Anybody who reads that is not going to the specific' -nechanism for conduc T| growing belief that nothing protest, a point from which those "I don't think Perrin has got any right to the real depth and extent of attitudes on be misled, I don't think, about the extent balloting, including the physical pror* Americans can do will bring a publish one number or one percentage," campus, particularly last spring," Perrin for casting votes, acquisition of ne concerned can rally efforts. Right of the poll. We did not try to pretend that Brock said. said. The Feb. 23 and 24 polling was done his was the opinion of Michigan State equipment, identiflcaion of ellPb'e speedier end to the war. We have now, a demonstration of massive size Criticism to test the mechanism even though no and the ballot design and eomiting p succumbed, it appears, to the is exactly what we need to inform One criticism of the poll's scientific issues were particularly evident, Perrin University in toto — no attempt here to and to "select, formulate and puNMJl mislead anyone as to the nature of the inevitable frustration of taking on a Nixon, once again, that Americans validity is that the sampling of the poll added. results," Perrin said. topics.' The committee was not a«jL allowed those people who feel strongly PR? recalcitrant administration. are tired of playing politics with lives to discuss fundamental editorial writing. A!' mathematical "Remarks on he The ronff> sotr s u" lror major, is an editorial writer for the State winning publications from this visit I. News. region, which includes Michigan, Ohio, ■uate sturiL sponsored by D"tot the End of a tr Sue Tumanis, Battle Creek senior, won western will be Pennsylvania and West Virginia, second place for the best nonfiction sent to the SDX national wishing to travel out of Lansing to Chicago or Detroit will have to find means of transpoitation other headquarters to compete with winning -Tuesday11 lnk°t,?i~e a >t 4 Persons than a passenger train after May 1 when all such trains through the East Lansing depot will cease. magazine article. Miss Tumanis, a journalism major, is a State News copy articles from across the country. The finalists will receive recognition at the I ^P»ratlon of DNA." State News photo by Jim Klein editor and former tfren editor for the Battle annual SDX national convention in fall. Creek Enquirer. Sht is also a member of Monday, April 19, i97, Conference Saturday 'beautiful,' • was on planning for strikes set By BILL HOLSTEIN but festival turnout low State News Staff Writer By DAVID BASSETT Ohio, as Mario Savio was here, then it About 100 administrators and board "U.S. Out of Indochina," I *' members from Michigan school districts State News Staff Writer comes as an enormous surprise to see a we trained Diem's police thought "j festival of social change and alternative force?" seeking plans for their schools in the event It little like Peoples' Park last When a was a was chanting Hare Krishna » lifestyles attract an obscenely minute ' of a teacher strike will attend a conference spring, a little Greek Week used to be three past me smiling, I thought of Z beginning at 9 a.m. Thursday at Kellogg four years ago and a little like the portion of this community. Stadium filled with wild Center. or annual art sale on Grand River Avenue. It was a festival, a carnival, and the and - eyed stunUl The conference on Strike - Contingency If you measure success by what was people there made no bones about having a J alumni screaming "Kin, g®5" • Planning for School Management, being done and not by the number of good time. They smiled, gave flowers away, talked, sang, danced and ate. What happened sponsored by the School of Labor and people, then the festival was a smash. Saturday was beauts When a little kid walked up to me and but what didn't happen was Industrial Relations, will offer the officials The organizers of the festival and the sad Thew J added a flower to my collection, I thought so much there capable of a "skeleton of a plan" from the different ehanein. people manning the literature tables and ■ types of strike situations that could "And we just elected a 'Greek Slate' to opening, of building, of bringing displays were more than pleased, but I had ASMSU?" that this community could . develop, Keith Groty, conference organizer expected more in terms of attendance. be chan immeasureable in • and asst. professor of personnel Maybe it was the threat of rain and the When I saw a sign saying "smash racist small a short time if Jf! J management services, said. muggy, overcast weather that kept people imperialism, " I thought "And Wesley Fischel used to teach here?" Shaw portion of our Hall and absorbed 40,000 had m!t I Groty noted that even though Michigan inside their houses and residence hall just a little J I has a no-strike law for public employes, a rooms and apartments complaining about When I saw a leaflet with the headline what was there. ® J surprising number of school districts want society instead of walking to the festival ; help in planning for strikes, and learning how to change it. j "I think the thing that worries them is I guess "expectation" described the BY JULY 1, 1971 » questions like, 'What didn't we think feeling in most peoples' minds Saturday. « about? What didn't we prepare for?' " The Hare Krishna people, the SDS I Groty said. people, the representatives of E - QUAL, t Although the conference is aimed at the Change Information Center, the Young 1 ; J • planning for strikes by teachers, bus drivers and similar unions, a lot of it is applicable to student strikes, Groty said. He also said the conference will include Socialist Alliance, the Free School and dozens of ^other what they were social change groups knew doing and cared about it. Official reco They were there to inform us, but I guess » "no attempt at providing any other side" most of us didn't want to be informed. of a strike situation such as the difficulties tighter • A small stream of people kept trickling ^ J a union might encounter. He said this is because the School of Labor and Industrial Relations is divided past the booths and displays all afternoon, but the groups selling pottery and jewelery were attracting more attention than the sign ; into two divisions, management and labor, pamphleteers. v with the management division organizing While the Michigan state highway billboard is located and the billfaoa Tbe Streetcorner Society, the Suitcase 5 the conference. Theater and Hare Krishnas provided music director has termed present billboard company have to be notified before1. » The conference will attempt to and improvisational drama throughout the control law "cumbersome," billboard state can remove them, a process which! 5 delineate guidelines to answer questions bandits continue to cut down illegally often very slow. day, but the juke box in the Shaw Hall grill v' such as maintaining the security of those wasn't hurting either. located billboards on the state's highways. "Michigan's billboard control law is I J who are not striking, maintaining contact About 80 billboards have been felled in the cumbersome and so hazi:y defined ins When you consider that it was the local past few weeks. that we are not able to do the jobl ^ with the community through press areas, 2 released, and determining when or if to chapter of SDS that kept the national Henrik E. Stafseth, highway directofr, are supposed to do," he said. ; suspend services. group going financially in the mid- 1960s, has warned that, unless new legislation is Stafseth said the U.S. Dept. J Roland Lubbinge, director of employe that MSU was the second major university introduced which will impose more Transportation has threatened to withh| 3 relations for Grand Rapids Public Schools to have a building taken over by student stringent control on billboard placement, millions of dollars from states, includi who experienced a teachers' strike in 1969, 3 will be a keynote speaker. Young lif demonstrators, that MSU has as many professors canned each year for their the state stands to lose millions of dollars in federal highway construction funds. Michigan, which do minimum federal regulations not comply in regardsB i 3 The manager of employe relations for The Alternative Life Styles Festival, sponsored by Lansing Area Peace "radicalism" as any other school, that it Stafseth said illegal billboards are being billboard placement. > General Electric's Maryland branch will hasn't been very long since Linda Evans erected at a rate three times as fast as the "We definitely need Council Saturday in Shaw Hall, meant a helium balloon tied on her • discuss his experiences with strikes lasting wrist to this little girl. went to school here, that SDS held its state can remove them. This, he explained, strengthened control as of July 1 d ■» from three to 18 weeks and his back national convention here in 1968, that is because under present law, both the year," he said. ground in collective bargaining. State News photo by Jeff Wilner Brad Lange is as well - known in Oxford, of the The night before the director in • owner property where the remarks the "billboard bandits" st again, this time felling signs along about 10 miles north of Jackson. U.S.l| U' haven for A reporter for the Michigan Daily.ll serves as U-M student newspaper, and a fred severe, he said, is the number of added that he is considering taking when he leraned she runaways was staying in a boy's she had been sick. photographer authorities on were a property, which is a felony. arrested by <" charge of aiding abetting the malicious destruction! By NAT ABBATE organizations which will take in runaways. correspondence courses. room, but he got over it when she She said her parents were glad to have The pair claim that they were only! State News Staff Writer Still, he said, campus police turn up an "I've learned a lot from just being here," her back and that conditions have the scene as observers and that the«i^ explained that her temporary roommates occasional runaway sleeping in a hall he added. As another term grinds on, it may be lounge. When one is apprehended, he said, Ken meal gave her complete privacy. improved greatly since she returned home. When asked if she would of the student newspaper approved | eats one a day, which his ever run away assignment. surprising to learn that there are still some he is handed over to juvenile authorities, roommate brings from the cafeteria for When asked if she was treated like an again, she said that she wouldn't have to, The two students, out on bond pen! people who are enjoying their stay on who call the runaway's parents. him. outcast when she returned to school, because her parents have promised to let an examination May 6, said they did | campus. "Sometimes," Bernitt said, "the parents "Sometimes I steal food from grocery Andrea said she had been gone for such a her move out as soon as she finishes her know the identity of They have no classes to attend, no papers tell the authorities that they can't do a stores," he said. "I'm not starving." short time that her teachers just thought junior year of high school. responsible for cutting down the signs, I to hand in, and they don't have to pay thing with their child, and the authorities Police are not much trouble, he said, room and board or tuition. As a matter of take the runaway to a juvenile home." because they have no way of knowing on fact, the University hardly knows that they MSU apparently attracts runaways sight that he is a runaway. He figures that ADA FINIFTER SAYS exist. because the campus offers a person the if he isn't caught stealing, he will be able to remain on campus until it warms up One runaway who has escaped detection so far is Ken, an 18 - year - old high school senior who enough to hitchhike to Florida. When asked if he ever intends to go home to his family, Ken said he would return for short visits but would never live at home Political participation has been living in an MSU residence hall in the again. Mrs. Finifter said "eco "In comparison with voting, rtka' - guerrillas" who room of a hometown friend for the past two "It would just be the same hassle," he use dye markers to show the flow of high level of participation and would! said. "Oh sure, they'd be nice to me for the industrial waste in water and citizens who very hard to represent as alienation, ^ months. first week, but after a while it would get added. The students and other citizens who cut down billboards along highways are even worse. It always does." march in protests this spring are physically involved in the political system. Mrs. Finifter is currently prepariM One high school student who ran away to manifesting a profound commitment to the She noted that some cultures have do research on political alienation in* They are high school runaways, and they opportunity to be lost, Bernitt said. There MSU and then returned home found that the situation between her parents and political process, according to Ada Finifter, placed a great premium on voting, but some United States, specifically on numbers of people who are e~""* thejw live with friends who are students at MSU. is not much difference between the asst. professor of political science. political scientists are now realizing that Just how many runaways live on campus herself had improved. "All of a sudden, new ways of measuring a person's participation in from the country. appearance of a high school senior and a is unknown, but most RAs and residence college freshraan, he said. Andrea Harrison, 17, of 16098 Riverside participating in the political process are politics goes beyond asking, "Did you wear "In general, the idea of trying toenail hall managers questioned said the number One runaway who has escaped detection Drive, Livonia, said she overheard her emerging," Mrs. Finifter said in a recent a button or sign a petition?" the system does not mean one! is insignificant. . so far is Ken, an 18 - year - old high school parents talking one night last month about interview. "To march in Washington on April 24 is alienated," she said. j Richard 0. Bernitt, director of the Dept. how they wished she would move out. She "People have come to the conclusion — a very costly form of She said more than 40,000 people°L senior who has been living in an MSU participation, giving of Public Safety, estimated that less than said she left the house and began rightly or wrongly — that the old ways are up great amounts of time, money and leave the United States annually. residence hall in the room of a home town 10 high school runaways have been hitchhiking. She got a ride from a friend not working," she said. effort," Mrs. Finifter said. these people go to Canada. friend for the past two months. Ken asked apprehended on campus so far this year. that his last name not be used. who stopped to pick up two male Very few of these emigrants are ^ However, according to Lt. William Ryan His parents and school were the main hitchhikers, MSU students. age males, age 15 to 24, despite aiP°W of the Lansing Police Dept., there have reasons for leaving home, Ken said. He told When she told them what had happened misconception that most people leav ■ been about 190 cases of juvenile runaways of his parents as "always yelling at me for at home, they offered to let her stay in United States to avoid the Selective reported this no reason." their room. She accepted, and stayed with System, she noted. year in Lansing alone. It is - conceivable that some of these people "I hated school," he continued. "It was them for a week until her father came to "Even if everyone who went to U might have stayed for some time in a so simple, except I hated every teacher. get her. who was a male aged 15 t0 2, f J friend's residence hall room. assumed to be avoiding the drait, Jl They were always pushing work on me. I "I wrote a letter to my girlfriend," she "There certainly are more than we know knew how to do it, but I had better things said, "and her mother told my mother. would represent less than 25 per ■ about," Bernitt said. "It's an increasing to do, like playing sports." Before I knew it, my dad came to pick me the emigrants - even if they took soroj problem, but not a severe one." Ken said he doubts if he will ever return with them, which the draft dodgers up." One of the reaons the problem is not to finish his last year of high school but She said that her father was a little upset do," Mrs. Finifter said. - She said no systematic survey ■ been conducted on the emigre"'s, ■ assumed that they must be dissatis T Prof love requires aspect of the United States. I some Although some people m» J says politically alienated, many have new sense of Involvement in through demonstrations, Mrs. H" "1 "Marches on Washington are no 1 lifetime I made by leftists, but by those w • time, people to really get to know one another and share an I-thou reverse Calley's verdict," she sat ■ "I think people don't realize to which naive to demonstrations have expect a total turn w ,■ ■ J By DENISE McCOURT relationship. policy from any form °^.m ij^J State News Staff Writer While admitting that it might sometimes take the spontaneity there are really less American out of love, Anderson said he believes in the institution of Vietnam now," she said. The willingness of two people to make a lifetime commitment „nhapP~ to one another makes T. Anderson, chairman of the sex a profound expression of love, Robert marriage and "it's worth the risk." He said he doesn't favor sex outside of marriage because no commitment exists in this She said young people 1968 when Eugene Mcpart ythcctiiJ di(jn't] Dept. of Religion, said Thursday. relationship. the Democratic nomination a M Anderson was a speaker at last week's sex colloquy sponsored convention, but they should by Akers Hall. He briefly explained his ideas about sex and love A wedding ceremony is a visible expression of this commitment, in the "love relationship" and then answered questions from that is otherwise hard to define, he said, so he believes people protests probably did k^P students. should make that commitment publicly. Johnson from seeking re-eled'on- - Too many people feel the Bible condemns "a good deal of what we do with sex," Anderson said. But he Asked about the increasing divorce rate, Anderson said he was scared by the number of divorces in America and didn't have any Discussion on sex "Marches put tremendous p policymakers. It would be * ( disagrees. Instead, for President Nixon to escalate he says, the Bible exalts the profoundness of sex as the deepest easy answers to the problem. Robert Anderson, chairman of the Dept. of Religion and expression of love and condemns it being wasted on "trivial "I don't really see any other institution taking up the slack." director of right now," Mrs. Finifter noted. ■ means." Studies have shown that even in communes people tend to Residence Instruction, spoke to a group of students Friday in Akers "It would be too bad iJgJJ The love relationship is a lifetime commitment two people polarize into couples, he said, proving that it is not simply a Hall lounge as part of the Human Sexuality Symposium. define marches as a fai,u^'rira#al stick with "for better or for worse," he said. It takes time for two cultural influence that makes people monogamous. State News photo by John that might lead to withdraw Harrington participation," she said. Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Monday, April 19, 1971 7 U', Iran officials review exchange project By BARBARA FARY to discuss a proposed linkage departments agreement between at the Iranian The to smaller cooperative State News Staff Writer the two creation of an research, students universities. university. international exchange, both opportunities for faculty "We must take Amin's visit is part of a move interuniversity training and advisory graduate and undergraduate; members who have sometimes the lead in The chancellor of the Arya Chancellor Mohammed Reza network is one of the main arrangements. utilizing our own resources and by the Office of International curricular interlocking and been limited by some Amin toured the points of a report on the in finding |M hr University of Technology colleges of Studies and Programs to "Our move toward creating course equivalence agreements, departments and colleges to resources from E Tehran, Iran, met with Engineering and Natural Science develop activities and program priorities linkages would be a reasoned and continuing cooperative and studying in countries where an the outside," Smuckler said. President |r Wharton and and the Computer which have Center, all of cooperative scholar exchange programs with overseas of internaitonal studies in 1970s submitted to the the attempt to identify new modes joint research abroad and in the MSU commitment exists: "We must not merely react to v officials this weekend counterpart of beneficial cooperation in United States. universities. The report suggests that opportunities, but initiate them. Academic Council by Ralph H. . keeping with the mood and Funds for the linkage program, inviting foreign scholars We must see that all that can be to teach Smuckler, dean of international reality of the new decade," the which will be built gradually, learned from the values and studies. regularly in a department here report states. will be obtained through all - one year out of three cultures of other countries is "need not Smuckler said the report, Special relationships with relevent and valuable to our own institutions abroad might grow University, department and wait for the growth of a system which will be discussed by the college funds, new government of formal institutional ties; in society today CapitaVCVpsules as it experiences council within six weeks, has naturally out of technical agencies, the Midwest fact, it might help lead to it." rapid change." received assistance or other favorable reactions ongoing Universities Consortium for One recommendation is that The report urges that several from President Wharton, the institutional contacts or through International Activites the International Programs provost's office, the Standing the initiative of the International (MUCIA), of which MSU is a Office remain decentralized but multidisciplinary task forces be Committee on International Studies Office. developed to study specific sets MEMBERS OF THE MICHIGAN and would make it member, sabbatical leave funds at the same time strengthen its of problems which will a misdemeanor for any public Some ways to increase ties affect Programs and the International and possible new foundation role in defining new issues for LEGISLATURE are expected to take action official to destroy the records. All records would Studies Student Advisory abroad would be through faculty grants. the international and domestic iuesday to avoid delays in sending welfare have to be study. scene in the next decade. ADC families, Gov. Milliken maintained, at least on Microfilm, for Committee. exchange (penodic visits of Linkage benefits kymcnts seven years after a building has been destroyed The report was written at the varying length, genuine matched Linkage abroad will benefit nnounced. and all previous owners deceased. exchange, joint appointments); students and request of President Wharton. increase , legislature has already reached basic The second bill would "We must find require all municipal ways to ■peement on how to provide the money," the agencies that maintain such records to allow encourage a constant pattern of ■ovemor said, "and the administration has taken public inspection of the records during normal faculty interaction with foreign Preliminary steps to expedite handling of the working hours. hecks in anticipatipn of swift action by the colleagues in intellectually and Lslature Tuesday." "When records are professionally meaningful capriciously destroyed, or ways," the Smuckler ♦ * * kept secret from the public, all that can occur are report states. undesirable ends," Faxon said. "Not THE PROTECTION OF TENANTS against the public lose only does Future strategy ^persistent slum landlords" is the object of two enforcement of health and confidence in the effective The report said that although Is announced Friday by state Sen. Jack Faxon, housing codes; worse in the past heavy reliance was yet, private citizens lose access to l. Detroit. precious information necessary to placed on technical assistance I The first would enact rigid standards for the bring to justice persistent slum landlords." contracts abroad, future strategy ■servation of housing code violations, he said, and policies should turn way from massive technical programs phone: 482-6226 NOTICE TO AIL STUDENTS Academic Advising, Enrollment, and Registration For 1971 Summer early enrollment and early and Fall Terms college of arts and letters college of veterinary medicine registration for summer term justin morrill college The 1971 Summer term Schedule of Courses and Academic All PRE VETERINARY undergraduates in the College of Arts and Letters, except Handbook is available at the counter in Room 150, Hannah Studio Art majors, may see their academic advisers All students should see their adviser SUMMER TERM. JMC students Administration Building. You may also pick up, at the same during by April 30. Appointment planning on taking courses at their office hours on Monday, schedules are posted outside adviser's office. MSU during summer 1971 should discuss their time, your Registration Section Request form which should be Tuesday, Wednesday and plans with their Thursday, April 26, 27, 28 and 29. ENGLISH MAJORS academic adviser during the period April 20 - 30. Course completed and returned to Room 150, Hannah Administration SHOULD GO FIRST TO THE UNDERGRADUATE OFFICE VETERINARY descriptions for JMC summer courses are available now in the Building at your earliest convenience — but no later than IN MORRILL HALL 213. MUSIC MAJORS All students will be "mass enrolled" by the Dean's Office. Advising Center, 11 Snyder. Enrollment instructions are in the SHOULD GO Wednesday, May 5,1971. FIRST TO THE DEPARTMENT ADVISING Those students not course descriptions. SENIORS are reminded that for CENTER, wishing to be included in "mass MUSIC BUILDING 155. Advisers will be in their offices at enrollment" must notify the Dean's Office graduation, your Field of Concentration must be approved in The course sections that you by April 30. request in enrolling on the least one hour each morning and afternoon of these four writing by your JMC faculty adviser. All advisers will not be Registration Section Request form will be reserved for you days. Check with department offices for the hours of individual college of education available in the summer, so if you will be a candidate for only through Early Registration which will be held in the advisers. Make an appointment to minimize degree at the end of summer Men's Intramural Building on June 8, 9, 10 waiting in line or Students in Health and Physical Education should term, see your adviser April consult with 20-30. (Tuesday, if you cannot come at the hours scheduled. You may also see advisers in the HPR Advisement Center between [1 Wednesday, Thursday). All students who register at Regular your advisers before these dates during their regular office April 30. Students majoring in Recreation, Industrial April 20 and Registration on June 21-22 must obtain class cards for each hours or by appointment. Your discussion with Arts, or JMC students planning on taking courses from another college course. your adviser Special Education should consult with their should be based on The Student Academic respective or university (non-MSU courses) should pick up « copy of the Progress Plan which Academic advisers during the same time period. academic advising you have already developed or which you wish to modify or statement "Transferring Courses To Michigan State University Students enrolled during this 1971 Spring term who plan to and Justin Morrill College" available in the develop further in conference with your adviser. Bring your Undergraduates assigned to the Advisement Center in Erickson Advising Center. attend the 1971 Summer term and/or Fall term should see Progress Plan with you. Hall, who need special assistance, may arrange a their academic adviser according to the program FALL TERM. JMC students can sign arrangements in the planning conference any time prior to May 1. by coming to up for fall term 1971 colleges and departments as outlined below. Studio Art majors should see their Art advisers on 134 Erickson Hall or JMC courses on a first - come, first - served basis on Monday, calling 355-1900 for an appointment. May 26, 27 and 28 from 8 - 11:30 a.m. in the April 26. All Studio classes will be dismissed on that day and Snyder trophy room. The advisers will be in their offices from 8 -12 and 1 4. Course descriptions will be available in the Catalog, and college and departmental mimeographed - Graduate students should contact their Advising Center respective advisers. May 14. This internal sign-up will give present JMC students an materials, will be available for use by academic advisers in Any graduate student who is in need of assistance with working with advisees during Spring term. The printing of the problems of a procedural or administrative nature should opportunity to reserve fall JMC courses before they are college of natural science Fall term Schedule of Courses and Academic Handbook is contact the Office of Graduate Student opened up to incoming freshmen during summer Orientation. Affairs, 252 Erickson Reservations made during this period will be held delayed until the final meeting of the Academic Council in Hall, or should call 355-7346. only if a^ 1. Schedule an appointment for a student also early enrolls through the mail June. conference with your during the summer academic adviser by with the Registrar's office for the same courses. enrollment for fall term signing the appointment sheet designating In his available hours. This sheet will be posted on or near his university college - no preference July, the Fall term Schedule of Courses and Academic office door about 19 April. Conferences are to NON-JMC STUDENTS. You cannot early enroll for JMC Handbook (including a blank Registration Section Request be held during An appointment card for a conference with the period 26 April to 30 your academic JMC summer courses are open to you at form) will be mailed to each student who was enrolled during April. adviser has been mailed to each No Preference courses. Registration 2. For your appointment student for June 8, 9, 10 or June 21 and 22. JMC fall courses will be Spring term, and who plans to return for the 1971 fall term. bring to your academic adviser program planning for Fall term. If you have not received a your planned program for Summer and/or Fall term available to you at Registration and card or were unable to keep your appointment, you may come Sept. 20, 21 and 22. More discuss it with him for his information on Justin Morrill 1. The student at that time should refer to his "academic suggestions. to the advisement office before College and courses in the 3. All College of Natural Science May 1. college is available in the Advising Center, 11 Snyder or call progress plan" developed with his academic adviser, and majors must see their Each No Preference student who has earned 85 academic advisers EACH TERM to discuss their credits 3-9599. The Center is open 10-5 and 7-10 p.m. Mon. - Thurs. complete his Registration Request form in accordance with programs. (junior standing) by the end of Spring term 1971 must declare that plan. and 10-3 p.m. on Fridays. You should see a major before the end of the term. This may be done at the your academic adviser for information on how a Justin Morrill Advisement Center or at the College course Counseling Center. be used in your program. j 2.returned The completed Registration Section Request form should be college of social science No Preference Advisement Centers: Residents of Case - can by mail to the Office of the Registrar no later than The Handbook of Wilson - Wonders - Holden, S33 Wonders; Residents of August 13. Undergraduate Courses in the College of Brody Social Science is being prepared to assist students in Complex, 109 Brody; Residents of East Campus, 245 Fee; All selecting others (Off - campus students, residents of registration for fall term courses for their Fall Term Schedule. It will be available prior Abbot, Mason, college of communication arts Students should complete to the end of Spring Term. Watch for an announcement in the Phillips, Shaw, Snyder & West Circle Halls), 170 Bessey. registration and pay fees during the Students enrolling in evening classes Advising Schedule for Fall and/or Summer term, 1971 Period Monday State News after May 12. through Wednesday, September 20-22. The only may confer with alphabetical Schedule of Registration will be included in the an adviser by telephone (355-3515). Handbooks may be examined in the Advertising 355-2314 19'1 Fall Schedule of Courses and Academic Handbook. Libraries, Residence Halls, Anyone who wants to pre - enroll and pre - register for April 20-30 Fraternities, Sororities, Co-op Houses, Counseling Center, in Summer term should see an adviser before Audiology and Speech Sciences 353-8780 April 20-30 each Social Science Major Department with academic May 1 in the Journalism 353-6430 college of business advisers appropriate Student Affairs Office as indicated above. Pre April 20-30 and in each Dean's Office. Please ask for it - Television and Radio 355-8372 Academic advising for Summer and Fall if not readily enrollment sheets must be in the Registrar's Office by May 5. April 20-30 place Terms, 1971, will take displayed. Communication* 355-3471 during the period of April 20-30. Students should adhere April 20-30 t° the following schedule: Labor and Industrial Relations — Graduate Students should college of agriculture and *A11 students who expect to enroll in the Summer Session Freshmen and Sophomores in Accounting and Financial see their advisers before enrollment and registration. 1971, and/or Fall Quarter 1971, should see their advisers natural resources Administration, General Business, General Business Prelaw, Social Science during regularly scheduled office hours and complete the Management. — Undergraduates — Office hours of the required early enrollment forms. nstitutional Marketing, and Hotel, Restaurant, and advisers are posted in 207 Linton Hall. Please see All students in the College of Agriculture and Natural Management should see counselors in the your own Resources should see their academic advisers adviser. Graduates — 206 visement Center, Office Berkey Hall. Phone 355-7531. by appointment of the Assistant Dean, Room 7 during the period of April 20-30. 1971. Appointments should PPley Center. Counselors will be Anthropology Mrs. Judy Tordoff, Undergraduate Adviser is be made as early in the available from 8 - 5. — advising period as possible. "ashmen and Sophomores in Economics, Business available in her james madison college n, office, Room 118 Baker Hall, Daily from 8 to ucation. Distributive 12 and 1 to 5. During the period between April 19 Education, Office Administration, and - 30, all James Madison denT Colk'ge should see their advisers in the respective counseling center students are asked to meet with their academic advisers to Geography — Mr. Michael Graff, Undergraduate Adviser in the plan change of major Summer and Fall term schedules. Students should make an hours during the advisers' regularly scheduled office Department will be in his office, 318 Natural Science, during UNIVERSITY appointment to see their advisers at this time, and to use this posted hours, April 20 thru May 5. COLLEGE STUDENTS (Freshmen and ft ^un'°rs and Seniors in all majors should see their advisers in Sophomores) opportunity to undertake some long - range academic Je,spective departments during the advisers' regularly Political Science — Students planning. You are reminded to bring your Student Handbook wishing to be advised prior to Changes of major are initiated in a Counseling Center Office. 0raH rd ofr,ce hours- All Seniors should review their uation enrollment and registration should call Miss Susan Lawther, Students living in a Residence Hall Complex should go to the and MSU catalog when you see your adviser. requirements with their adviser, Faculty Adviser for Undergraduates, anytime between Counseling Center Office in their complex. All others should 20 and May 5. April respective ^ dents s*lou'(' make appointments to see their Psychology — Mrs. Mary Donoghue, Undergraduate Adviser in go to the Counseling Center in the Student Services Staff will be available according to the following schedule: Building. college of human medicine the Department, will be in her MEDICAL TECHNOLOGY (Summer and/or Fall). All the honors college office, 112 Olds Hall, April 20 Counseling Center 207 Student Services Building thru May 5, 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. 1:00-5:00 students must see their academic adviser by May 28. Call M, T, W, Th, F I to t°hpPireft\rence students in the Honors College should report Sociology — If additional advising is needed, majors should Brody Counseling Office 224 Brody Hall 353-7800 for an appointment. I advisino i?TfVlsers 'n Honors College office for academic arrange an appointment by telephone with their academic 10:00 12:00, 2:00 - 4:00 - M advisers. I ^1 term ^mpleting preregistration procedures for the 3:00 - 5:00 T lyman briggs college Criminal Justice — Students who have not had their 9:00 - 12:00 w ^onors College students should arrange to visit the planned for the Summer & Fall terms should report to Room programs 1:00-4:00 Th During the period of April 20 - April 30 students interested in I Kgistratl in their ne,ds ^fore completing the 412 Olds Hall for advising on one of the following dates: April 11:00-12:00,1:00-4:00 F attending summer school should contact their academic enr0||m(!°" procedures outlined by the college of their 28, 29 or 30, 9 a.m. to 12 noon and 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. East Campus Counseling Office 229 West Fee Hall advisers to prepare a Social Work — Freshmen and Sophomores see Mrs. 1:00-5:00 M program for Summer Term. Similarly, students should consult with their academic Sally Parks, advisers Room 220 Baker Hall, 353-8626, April 20 thru 9:00-11:00,2:00-5:00 T their Fall Term regarding May 5. i Stude c0llege 0f human ecology Monday, Wednesday and Friday, 8 a.m. to 12 noon, Tuesday 9:00- 11:00,1:00-4:00 W program during the period April 20 - April 30. forbolh i?°Uld make appointments with academic advisers and Thursday, 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Juniors and Seniors see Betty 9:00- 9:00-11:00 11:00,2:00-5:00 Th '0r Dlan*1? k"" P'ans *or the academic year 1971-72 and Duley, Room 234, Baker Hall, 353-8619, April 20 thru May 5, F college of engineering 8 a.m. to 12 noon. South aPPointmpn1 Summer term programs. Please make " Urban Planning — 1:00-5:00 Campus Counseling Office Academic advising for Summer term, April 21 - May 5. possible n? a® ear|y the academic advising period as For academic advising see advisers during Engineering students planning to attend summer school at posted office hours located outside of their offices, April 26 to | adviser. drop in" without an appointment with your 30. UPPERCLASSMEN (Juniors and Seniors) A change of Michigan State University should see their advisers on or major made after admission to a degree granting before May 5. Way 5^>?dem* Advising Period. Landscape Architecture — For academic advising see advisers during posted office hours located outside of their offices college with Junior standing is initiated in the office of the Academic advising for Fall term. Students will receive Summer tenT f°r subm,tt,nB section request forms for Assistant Dean of the College in which the student is appointment information in the mail. Students who have not April 26 to 30. currently registered. * received notification by May 15 should contact their advisers. 8 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Monday, April 19 I97| SPORTS Cigarettes 3/95c Nylon Knee Hi Sheer Sox 59' Doubles By MIKE ABERLICH Wednesday, have had little bv Kevin Conway and Scott coming from 6-2. shine behind for a 3-6, 7-5 win in Saturday's 6.2i 6-1, and Wisconsin's John 6-7, 6-4, 6-3 decision Schwartz, 6-1,6-2. Symington topDeH S Limit 1 Limit 3 trouble in setting down Perlstein of Wisconsin, 6-3, 7-6. (Coupon) State News Sports Writer whomever they have faced. Symington and Ferman won match. No. 4 man Vetter got by Jon Northwestern opponent . (Coupon) Drobac's first two singles men Vegosen, 6-1, 6-2, but against then ran into Wisconsin's\ Expires After 4-24-71 Expires After 4-24-71 Northwestern's Bill Meyers twice, getting by the Wildcat No. East Lansing Store Only East Lansing Store Only MSU tennis Coach Stan and Bob Riessen were blitzed 3 team, 6-3, 6-4, on Friday and continued on their winning Wisconsin's Kevin Conway had - haired Scott Perlstein -P by Drobac may finally have found the ways. Gray broke Bill Meyers' to come fr0m behind to earn his tagged him with a 5.7 potent Spartan duo. 6-0, 6-1. serve in their first set and his doubles combinations. and on Saturday Kenny Bartz It was the work of the and Pat Klingelhoets got the quickly posted a 6-3 advantage, but the Wildcats No. 1 proved OpaqOe Opaque doubles team that paved the way blunt of the No. 1 doubles 1 Knee Sox as the Spartans blanked team's attack, 6-4, 6-2. Northwestern, 9-0, on Friday Mike Madura and Rick Vetter Ex-Spartan more stubborn in the second set, with Gray eventually posting a n KlfflfC UU r\ J HliQl v Laic ers, ^ ■ w ^ Panty Hose and then made short work of and the No. 3 team of Jim 7-6 win. | | 69c $f09 Wisconsin with a 7-2 Saturday afternoon win to run their Symington likewise had and Rick little Ferman trouble, as added to'S Bullets Knicksw regular season record to 4-1. easily. Bartz's serve proved a Limit 3 they both went through the grid staff Both meets were hosted by the (Coupon) Expires After 4-24-71 Spartans. weekend undefeated. S as^th/'Badge? NoM BALTIMORE (UPI) - Blowing out to a 20 - point lead with East Lansing Store Only Tom Gray and DeArmond Madura - Vetter topped Doug Conant and Ken Cohen of wafke» £ 52.2 in the medium barriers was 1 ^tUSea"d.RouC bu" not w"7, "f *»"'"« ™»- by relay teams and individuals hurdles and LaRue Butchee was his best effort of the vear and bntfy"1 Sandwi ched L" Michigan and Ea8te held to one jn jjje run each time. mile relay title Friday but had to settle for a tie on its other tripled off defending -2K5ES!=!£i= STSTS championship. Ohio judges, despite the doubts of State impion Minnesota and the u i to shortstop, fLRay Smith n ul . dropped the v.. bvitball ...Iowa s Spartans put two . and iater jn the men on base even gave the Notre Dame the Irish a hurdlers, share of the jnnjng vja walks | 2 ugh to move TZZrtL'llZm the bpartans *>**and Pruitt were both arte, Rovrp nnH Pruitt Jnhn wpi*p hnfh cafo . only Boyce was able to score. . shuttle hurdle relay crown with place I» first place in *-"B° Ten yy- B Dlav John nooo Dace „ then grounded to In the•»«= seventh MSU. ocvcuui a pair ui of walks Force * * J ca/«nnr1 Kacaman a yair play T,_ lim ~ wuiks Distancemen Dave Dieters, Mean, the only other , . ^°. and « single by Dace produced i f e rence school to [»^ed the ball cleanly bu one run, but Minnesota brought MSU second baseman Ron Randy Kilpatrick, Pete Reiff and Ken Popejoy combined for a m*. kend of conference action, ISC ^STb^l^eS ... . . _ into '".■"v'Winneld.whoeaveup only two hits in the first game, an DeLonge (5) fires to first base in attempted double play after forcing a Minnesota runner 17:03.9 four mile win while the Iowa dugout. Pruitt raced hurdlers t with the Hawkeyes on to slip a called third strike past at second base. MSU split its twinbill with the Gophers and Wayne Hartwick, Rich home on the play and MSU ay and divided a twin bill now won two from Iowa to jump into first place in the Jacques, Dave Martin and John had runners on second and third. (Please turn to page 12) Big Ten. Minnesota in Saturday's State News photo by Doug Bauman "Must be he biggest win of the BY regarded as BROTHER JOHN' kend was the 7 - 6 squeaker i Iowa. The game started out DENISON, OSU among the best in the world ... a gem of a company." —Cllve Barnes, N Y. Times Starring Sidney Poitier Today at 9:30 Only GP slugfest but settled down in FIRST AMERICAN TOUR ALSO middle innings to a duel "McKENNA'S GOLD' Stickmen beaten twice FOLLOWING NEW YORK AND ween relief pitchers Brian LONDON TRIUMPHS •kfelt of MSU and Fernando Starring Gregory Peck igo of Iowa. SHERMAN PITLUCK Today at 7:15 Only seventh inning of the presents jn which Iowa scored a By NICK MIRON Trailing 3 • 1 at halftime, the off 14 THE CELEBRATED State News Sports Writer Buckeye shots in one of Although the 12 - 2 score and the Spartans followed SjPartans took the offensive and his better days on the field but would indicate nothing less than a pair of scores after two had been retired, held the The MSU lacrosse team lost fifth straight game Sunday at its «<.W .t0 *[thi" onf> 4 * 3. could not get ample offensive a rout, Coach Ted Swoboda felt NETHERLANDS «Ur, quarter- support form his teammates to his team played aggressively and rd of more than 2,000 on Ige of their seats, OdColeeeFieldbv thenlLw MSU *>fgan the final quarter in *u pull out a victory. should have been closer to DANCE margin of 4 3 to Ohlo State complete control of the ball but MSU, minus the offensive Denison in the scoring column. took the lead, when, I the first man flied out, two The Spartan stickmen Dlaved roughly five minutes threat of Doug Kalvelage who is Sunday's game seemed to THEATRE gniritedlv after beim? crushed 12 rema'"'?8 began to collect costly sidelined with a back injury, stress what Swoboda had said a Fabulous company of 40 ■ght singles sent Lleckfelt to .2 the day before^jy powerful penaltles' tf^nj Ohio State could not sustain their attack week earlier, "What's really been ■bench. Before the pair of Denison. and scored only once on nine Goalie Fred Hartman warded hurting us is penalties. " You can't " Ohio State penalties. win when you have penalties. MSU's scoring came on ■INS 7TH GAME, 4-2 second quarter charge on the net by attackman Dan Denov and third quarter scores by Jim iMonfrea/ ups Walters and Val his style - hard, and Washington. Washington's shot was typical of straight on. Walters put his shot low and the ■. fcSTON (UPI) — Frank Boston from , bounce carried over the goalies the Stanley Cup losses. guard lovlich scored two goals as playoffs. The Bruins who whipped I Montreal The two weekend engagements Canadiens Montreal, which moves on in Montreal five times in six games fcleted a stunning upset of the playoff series to play the dropped MSU to a 1 - 2 record en route to a record - breaking jn the Midwest Lacrosse defending champion Boston Minnesota North Stars on regular season championship led Association. Denison is now 1 - is Sunday in a 4 - 2 victory Tuesday, captured the last for just under eight minutes of I marked the 11th straight q an(j Qhio State 2 • 1 in quarter finals in the decisive the first period before Montreal conference play |the Canadiens have dumped seventh game Rookie Canadien took charge Denison caught MSU sleeping goalie Ken A capacity Boston Garden in the first Dryden, clearly the outstanding crowd, winch has seen the match and quarter of Saturday's Bruins set 37 individual and quarter lead andup a 4 . 0 fl^t rolled BASEBALL player in the series, gave up Bruin goals to Ken Hodge in the MSU never team records for scoring and came cjose first period and John Bucyk in winning during the season, gave the third, but made 46 saves, as both the losers and the visitors a they boosted their all - time standing ovation during the playoff record with Boston to traditional handshaking Barbra Streisand si 13 series wins and only two ceremony at game's end. 'PEN AT 7:00 - IN CAR HEATER! PROGRAM INFORMATION M2 24H The Owl and the rr NOW! 3 ADULT HITS! 1 0 JESUS CHRIST M6e*—It »H)LLAR0 ELK(NS PR0DUCTI0Ni SUPERSTAR ENTIRE PROGRAM IN COLOR tT).GH.GLawr€nce,s Lm® lauah noi l rioi evear THE VIRGIN AND THE GYPSY MrMou Color Prints by MovieUb AND 7:45 ONLY [§] & Elaine Hay "ANeuLear o SENIOR A Howling Hellcat Humping A Meridian 3 Today at 5:30, 7:30 NIGHT Steel Hog on a Roaring Rampage IHINGTON-OOWNIOI Twl-Llte Hour, Adults 90c, 5:00 of Revenge. - 5:30 OPEN AT 12:45 P.M. Meridian 4 Rated 'R* Shown at 7:45 & Late TWO FEATURES: Today at 6:30, 8:30 ^is _ ALSO At 2:40-6:20-LATE Twl-Llte Hour, Adults 90c, 6:00 Wednesday THEY LIVE HARD LOVE HARD .. . . . . THEY Shown at 9:30 Only PLUS DoMlind Ruiiell - 6:30^ April 21 IL Shown Late "Nin. Pollifat ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ 8pm-2 am •8' Ipy" COL. * . * fftftVtSEWCE Brilliant" J the Gables G02DF Shown Once at 9:40 An - Clive Barnes N. Y Times J n yL outstanding musical triumph" ^ W. Kerr N. Y. Times J - ePartment of Theatre — Michigan State University ■DOWNTOWN "The most beautiful music I've ever heard — yL LIVIMNCOJNCKUI 'What Kind of Fool am presents OPEN 12:45 1:00 - 3:45 - - 4 Shows 6:45 - Dally 9:15 I?'^ - Earl Wilson N. Y. Post "ORCHESIS in CONCERT" DLSY1N HOFFMAN THE AMERICAN ROCK OPERA COMPANY SToPTrfEWofsP and a program of modern dance Student Artists directed by Dixie Durr LITHE BIG MAN } The Grand Rapids Symphony ,'CHIEF DAN GEORGE ItWHTTbCETofF * MAY 12, 7 P.M. Qirchild Theatre April 23- 8 PM Jnd R'ipids Cr Auditorium atyir-fojle »lu4ica( o 0x Office Opeeis April 24 - 2PM } ckets 0J #4 . ^5.00 M 21-23 Starring Ted Mollis with Juliana Boehnlein ♦ M?i ,iers Now To: =30—5 PM April 25 - 8PM MARCELLO MASTROIANNI / OPENS WEDNESDNV j ExhibitoiS id Building, r " ">ny ifth Floor 1 hour before FOR 8 BIG 3 Grand F nd* ^"^hinan 49502 concert as The PERFORMANCES I ®lePhonte self addressed jok and 355-0148 All Tickets $1.50 ORGANIZER Special Matinee Friday April 23, at 2:00 — $1.50 Ttckets on sale at Union, State Discount, M.irstv "s - $2.00 ^ ^ta nped n.el.if t (Unclaislfled) * A A * ★★★★★★★★?** /t★★★ 10 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Monday, April 19 , The State News does not A utomotive Scooters & Cycles Employment murtAds permit racial or religious discrimination in- its PLYMOUTH FURY III 1969. Dark CYCLE INSURANCE. Central PHYSICAL THERAPIST NURSE - ANESTHETIST SUMMER furnished, SUBLET. 2 man Marigold Apartments. SUBLET apartment. SUMMER ' Michigan's largest Insurer. Any Must be eligible for Michigan Air, nat,0 "| approval Patterson, 313 - 663-9135 after 6 5-4-23 5-4-23 campus. Supervised apartments Animals p.m. 5-4-22 For Rent 351-2144. 5-4-23 J Mobile Homes VOLKSWAGEN 1965 black. Radio, 1968 TRIUMPH Daytona 500. NEEDED IMMEDIATELY 5 people women students. LesZB * PERSONAL CHEVROLET Impala. 1967 Power station wagon, steering, air, trailer hitch. Very good condition. $500. 355-8124. 2-4-20 Custom paint and high bars. Good condition. 355-9002. 3-4-21 not afraid of a challenge and hard work. Call 393-8081. 2-4-20 TV RENTALS-Studentsonly. Low monthly and term rates. Call ONE bedroom MAN needed to sublet own and bathroom. this week for fall. Call evenings: summer^ • PEANUTS PERSONAL 485-9568 after 5 p.m. 3-4-21 351-7900 UNIVERSITY TV $67/month. 332-1788. 3-4-21 VOLKSWAGEN CAMPER Bus, 1970 HONDA S90. Female owned LIVE AND travel with Chicago RENTALS. C 332-6246 ♦ REAL ESTATE 1968. Pop tap, sink, icebox, radio, SUMMER TERM. Sublet 2 bedroom CHEVROLET 1965. Impala SS396. and driven equals excellent family as mother's helper for 3 RECREATION Jalousie windows, sleeps 4. GIRL ♦ 4-speed. Good condition. Rick, condition. Phone 393-7984 after small children. You must hav.e REFRIGERATORS AND Stereos for efficiency apartment. One block WANTED Excellent condition. $2100. Call 1972. • SERVICE 351-1162. 5-4-19 351-5607. 5-4-23 9:30 p.m. 5-4-23 experience with kids, be patient, tireless, flexible and fun. Room rent. A 349-2220. O TO Z RENTALS. from 3-4-21 campus. $135. 351-7131. c.a.rvM^-a 351-1966.2-4-19 C"" Typing Service 1970 BULTACO. Circle S200cc. and board and salary. Call Paula, CHEVY CONVERTIBLE 1964. VOLKSWAGEN 1964. New brakes, • TRANSPORTATION' Impala. Yellow console, buckets, $400. Call 482-9761 after 6 p.m. Scrambler 675-7161. 5-4-19 with extras. Call 337-9644 or Becky 351-2765. ONLY $8.50/month. Free deliveries. NEAR SPARROW Hospital. HASLETT ARMS. ', man 3-4-21 SELCO COMMUNICATIONS TV Furnished, 1 bedroom. bedroom • WANTED all power. 353-2840. 5-4-19 382 North Hayford. B2-4-19 apartments, furnish^l Now renting for summer DEADLINE 1968 ROYAL Enfield Interceptor. LIZARD'S: FULL time broiler cook. RENTAL, 372-4948. O $145/month. 694-6461. 5-4-23 Utilities paid. Discount for 9 and 12 n andlS 56 CHEVY Nomad. Body and VW 1969 light blue. Excellent 750 cc. Purchased abroad, Apply in person. 224 Abbott TV AND stereo rentals, satisfaction leases signed prior to 1 P.M. one class day engine. Good for parts or condition. $1425. Call 669-9875. beautiful ju™ 11 machine, world's finest, Road, 3 - 5 p.m. Must have OWN BEDROOM. No demage Call 351-7662, or before publication. restoring. Best offer. Joe, 3-4-19 $1000. 351-3567. 3-4-20 guaranteed. Free delivery, service HALSTfJ 641-4478. 2-4-19 experience and references. 3-4-21 and pick-up. Call NEJAC, deposit. Across from campus. $50 MANAGEMENT, 351-7910.0 J Cancellations - 12 noon 337-1300. C per month. 351-6856. 5-4-23 , 1971 KAWASAKI 250 Enduro. 550 one class day before FORD 1965, Fairlane 500. 6 Scooters & Cycles MOTHER'S HELPER. Summer SUMMER, CHEAP. Next miles. Excellent condition. Call Rick or Jerry publication. cylinder, stick shift, good body, cottage, Petoskey area. July, MEADOWBROOK TRACE, 4 man 332 oS Helmets included. $800. $950 tires. Needs some mechanical 1965 HONDA 305. Good shape. August. Call 351-4555 after 6 Apartments furnished, summer, $190 month, 3-4-20 ** PHONE value. 351-2356. S-5-4-20 work. $225. 332-4184. 5-4-23 $275. Tim, after 1 p.m. 332-0844. p.m. 5-4-23 $50 deposit. 393-3094. 5-4-23 3558255 X-1-4-16 WE HAVE moved. ROLL LANSING OR East EFFICIENCY SUMMER term - ROSSER WANTED COUNTRY air talent Lansing. One bedroom FOURTH GIRL wanted Summer, Air conditioned, close to JAVELIN 1969. 6 cylinder, Motorcycle Insurance Specialist. furnished. Large, airy cs RATES 1968 BSA Lightening. Excellent, sell combo first ticket. Part timer $45, Cedar Village. Phone 332-1769. 3-4 20 automatic, radio, studded snows. Phone 489-4811. Our new address rooms. Air conditioned. 1 day $1.50 or trade for Ski Boat. Phone 22-35 hours a week. Must have 353-1112 Debbie. 3-4-21 $1400 or make offer. 355-5805. 2400 North U.S. 27. Lansing. TF Beautifully maintained. Suitable 339-2535 before 8:30 p.m. 3-4-21 adult voice. Some experience, no GIRL 15c per word per day 5-4-19^ beginners. Good breadll for faculty, grad students, business NEEDED spring term tgl 3 days Auto Service & Parts people, married couples. Lease. FEMALE GRAD student, man along Grand Riv< $4.00 MUSTANG 1965 289 4 barrel HONDA 1967. 305 Scrambler. 9600 Telephone for interview, Call 351-8102 or 332-3135 or 882-6549. O professional. 2 girl, 2 bedroom, 13%c per word per day automatic. New polyglas, many 393-1010 after 10 a.m. David X-3-4-19 miles, knobby. Nice. $400. MASON BODY SHOP , 812 East luxury near campus. 332-2817. 5 days $6.50 extras. Best offer. 355-8819. 355-6156. 1-4-16 Kalamazoo Street Since 1940. Donahue, program manager. MARIGOLD APTS 1-4-19 . .. 7-4-22 NEW TWO bedroom 13c per word per day _JM-21 Complete auto painting and 911 Marigold Ave. 1969 SUZUKI X6 Scrambler 250cc. apartments. Central m (based on 10 words per ad) collision service. IV 5-0256. C 1 bedroom furnished deluxe SUMMER TERM. 2 girls, $45. Cedar MUSTANG 1965 yellow hardtop. dishwashers, Excellent condition. 4200 miles. 2 man apts. Across from Village. Call Wendy, 355-1337. garages, fireplK«l Completely overhauled, no rust, $450 or best offer. Must sell. AT MEL'S NOTICE 3-4-21 attractive four u Peanuts Personals must be we repair all foreign and new battery, two spare tires. 355-1530. S-4-20 American cars. If we can't fix it, it campus. Leasing now Summer furnished or umurnisnu pre-paid. $475. 482-4931.3-4-20 I Fall. 337-7328 337-0780 can't be fixed. Call 332-3255. O SUMMER JOBS available in Torch CAPITOL COMPLEX in Lansing. 3 _ 332-1183 after 5 p.m. 10-4-26 | There will be a 50c service HONDA 1969, SS125. Superb Lake Resort area for 2 sharp '351-4878 room furnished, $130. Also 2 room MUSTANG CONVERTIBLE, 1966. NEED ONE and bookkeeping charge if 27,000 miles. 6 cylinder, stick condition. Must see to believe! VW - GUARANTEED repair. attractive gals. Reception and efficiency, $105. Includes utilities. apartment man to sublet diij summer term. 1 $300 firm. Call 349-1314 or RANDY'S MOBIL. I-96 at general office work. Housing Girls married this ad is not paid within or couples, no location. 351-5877. 5-4-20 355-7055. S-5-4-20 Okamos Road. 349-9620. C available. Send picture and resume children or pets. Call 489-1276. one week. OLDSMOBILE 1965 Cutlass to Mr. Rankin, MIDWEST UNIVERSITY VILLA: ndw renting 5-4-21 FOR GLAD tidings look for 124 CEDAR Street. 129 Burcn The State News will be convertible. Four speed, four NORTON 750. Mint. 1970 RESORT PROPERTIES, Bellaire, 2 and 3 and 4 man furnished barrel. Blue / white top. Commando Roadster. 4000 miles. something you've lost with a Want Ml 49615. 20-4-30 Drive. 135 Kedzie. 2 responsible only for the apartments for summer and fall. If 513 HILLCREST. Close in pleasant 627-5464. 3-4-20 Ad. Dial 355-8255 looking for low rates, this is the area. Air conditioned, dishwashers, furnished apartments. IncluJ first day's incorrect heat. $62.50 to $90 per n, LINE UP a spring job now. Car building. Call 337-2361 or tasty furnishings. 1 or 2 large insertion. OPEL, 1970 GT. Excellent condition. 70 TRIUMPH Daytona 500. $1050. Aviation necessary. Also train for full time HALSTEAD MANAGEMENT, bedrooms. Summer and fall leases. Leases starting June 15 and Sta Low mileage. $2695. Call 482-5626, between 6 p.m. and 8 summer work. Call 351-7319 for 351-7910.0 1 Days. 487-3216. Evenings till LEARN TO FLY! From $45 person. 351-0705 or 393-7397 after 2 p.m. 3-4-19 p.m. X8-4-24 Complete flight p.m., 882-2316. 0 / appointment. C 655-1022. 3-4-19 LOOK THEM OVER I See the Want training. All courses are UNIVERSITY TERRACE: Now FOR SALESPOWER try a little Ads for the living quarters you're Classified Ad tc sell a large mobile YAMAHA 1970, 250cc Street. government and VA certified. HRI STUDENT to cook part time at renting 3 and 4 man furnished Houses Excellent condition. $500. After 4 FRANCIS AVIATION, Airport after. Check "FOR RENT" nowl home! Dial 355-8255 today. night. Apply in person, apartments for summer and fall. CEDAR GREENS P.m.. 355-3165. 1-4-19 Road, Call 484-1324. C HOSPITALITY MOTOR INN, Walking distance to campus. Call 1 bedroom furnished 1-496 at Jolly Road exit. 5-4-21 351-9117 or HALSTEAD POOL Your MANAGEMENT. 351-7910. O Blueprint Call 351-8631 1971 - 1972 school year. I, PART TIME employment: 12 - 20 BAY COLONY: 1 and 2 bedroom home. Excellent I oca J hours per week. Automobile apartments furnished and Kitchen, parking, laundry. I required, 351-5800. O unfurnished. Located on corner of woman students. PRINCETON ARMS: 1 bedroom , 332-W| Haslett Road and Hagadorn. 2-4-20 furnished and unfurnished. All gofon Offering 3, 9 and 12 month leases. utilities paid, except electricity YES- -TWO JOHNS Call 351-3211 or MANAGEMENT. 351-7910. O HALSTEAD and telephone. Offering 3, 9 and 12 month leases. Call 332-8511 or EAST SIDE. 3 bedroom furnii $160 month plus utilities. Ap NOW HALSTEAD MANAGEMENT, September. After 6 | PER APARTMENT, LEASING: apartments. 2 and Close to campus. $170. 126 Milford. 372-5767 and 3 man 351-7910. O 332-0425. 5-4-23 ONE MAN for 4 man and balconies too NEED 489-1656, evenings. 20-5-3 NORTH POINTE: 1 and 2 bedroom apartments, furnished and campus. 5-4-19 Over 21. 351-851 ONE girl for 2 bedroom. unfurnished. Has swimming pool RIVER'S EDGE $80/month. 351-2147 after 5 p.m. 3-4-19 and picnic aree. Discount for all 9 and 12 month leases June signed prior NEED GIRL $50/mont«a£NTtO, immed to 1st. Call 351-3407 or 5-4-191 and 711 EAST APTS. available. Can 351-1204. HALSTEAD MANAGEMENT, 711 Burcham 351-7910. O NEED ONE girl this term. Deluxe large 1 bedroom Twoj| WATER'S EDGE furnished apartments. Suitable for 2 & 3 man. EVERGREEN: bedroom ALL 4 man, apartments furnished. 2 summer necessary. and next 485-8588. 5-4-19 year, C APARTMENTS Now leasing for Summer and Fall. 9 & 12 month Now renting for summer and fall. Discount for 9 and 12 month GIRLS occupancy. NEEDED, $50 per 1 leases signed before June 1st. Call leases. See Frank or JoAnne 332-1313, or HALSTEAD Utilities included; furnished. Fj 337-7328 337-0780 bread and milk. Ideal l< 332-4432 MANAGEMENT, 351-7910. O 351-4878 337-1611.3-4-20 BEECHWOOD APARTMENTS: Now ONE OR two girls. To * renting, 2, 3 and 4 man 2-bedroom furnished 4 bedroom l~ furnished apartments. Discount for 485-4833. 5-4-21 all 9 end 12 month leases signed prior to June 1st. Cell 351-0965 or GIRL NEEDED HALSTEAD MANAGEMENT, $50/month. No damage de 351-7910.0 Utilities included. Close.351-JOj TWO 3-4-19 BEDROOMS, unfurnished. Near MSU, Okemos area. Heat SE VE N GIR LS start ing Septeml* furnished, modern air conditioned, carpeted. $160 per large, well-kept, furnished h» Still lew Utilities paid. Close to places month. 349-1586. O a MODEL APT. C-17 OPEN Phone 351-8182. 5-4-21 EVERYDAY 1 6 except Sunday - left for Phone 332-6441 or 372-2797 CROSSWORD summer & fall MARSHA CHANEL PUZZLE TWYCKINGHAM APARTMENTS are now leasing student units. These spacious luxury apartments are completely carpeted and 30. Stow cargo ACROSS furnished with distinctive Spanish Mediterranean furniture. Each 32. Short haircut unit has a dishwasher, garbage disposal and individual control - 1. Semester 34. Take to court man! central air conditioning and Hotpoint appliances. These four man 5. Nourished 35. Fairies 3 mo. leases units have up to 3 parking spaces per unit. The student's leisure time has been adequately planned for with a giant heated swimming pool, 6 mo. leases 9 mo. leases per 8. 11. 12. Not many Agave Scull 37. One addressed 39. Eng. essayist 41. Use recreation rooms and private balconies. If you want to be Sir or Madam, whichever!? 13. Exasperation 45. Tenacity among the 12 mo. leases first residents of TWYCKINGHAM call today. There are units 14. Underground 48. Abstract being starting at $60/month per man. 17. Glossy 49. Oath Join the Mob at... 18. Fibs 50. Indian 19. Shank mahogany 4 Thorn app'f I 2i. Memoranda 51. Fruit drink 1. Russ. news 5. On behalf'11 24. Wood sorrel 52. Compass point agency 6. Nobleman P 27. Dowry 53. Brings forth 2. Heb. month 7. Deplete 29. Appellation young 3. Mantle 8. Festivals APARTMENTS 9. Epoch - 10 Small M"* I We brought it all together! For openers, there's the its£lr saii°r [C; ®topcfungf)am 20 h ing meters, and gas money. Say "Hello" to the u 22. Ratite biro I Campus Hill Mob who enjoy the romantic social 23. Diocese area. Picnic tables, Bar-B-Q pits, acres of grass along the banks of the Purple Cedar. Wow! Brand new swimming pool. All together for a mere $52.50 m PP 24. Bravo 25. Wolf'a"11" I > per person. 26. Contrary ■ Central Air 28. Yoyo . Conditioning ■ All Utilities included 31. Anguilla® except electricity ■ Carpeting Throughout ■ Drapes TVZ/CKI/CHAM APTS. 4620 S. HAGADORN just north of Mt. Hope Rd. ■ ■ Completely Furnished ■ Balcony or Patio Units Study Area with drop lite ■ Walk thru Kitchen featuring ■ Refrigerator ■ Range ■ Disposer i 33. 36. Will) P'! ColaR<^er 38. Grape c°ni« g ■ Dishwasher ■ Laundry facilities ■ Storage and 40. Shakespe'" J management exclusively by: ■ Unlimited Parking. ■ Party Room I P 42 river Wild ox gsgBBB 349-3530 43, Relig'°1,s image 1 ALCO MANAGEMENT COMPANY If: 45, Vegetal J JS 46. Conclos*! State News, East Lansing, Michigan Michigan Monday, April 19, 1971 H for Rent For Sale For Sale ' Peanuts Personal HARMON Furnished. Student advisers' OK'd t TWO bedroom. KARDON stereo. PHI MU Sisters, Thanks for I , «l air conditloninB. Available Slightly used component system Animals happy 21st berthday. a very r imer and/or tall. Phone with matched speakers, original 1-4-19 Mary. cost $449, now $295. Used R2-32°2- 23 Realistic stereo amp and PEDIGREE PUG, 10 months old extension housebroken, $50. After 5 p.m ' dT'ra 4 girls. near campui, speakers. Selection of used 351-8650. 5-4-22 Recreation (Continued from page 1) meetings proposal. The original Eking, laundry. 2 bath.. portable stereo and Howell phonographs. stereo Bell BASSETT PUPPIES. AKC 6 Proposal II called for the Proposal II had a chance passing, I'd support it," he said. of effect," Buckner said. Ki-2605.6-4-23 recorder. cassette weeks SUMMER FLIGHTS to Europe. R-Deckerville, opposed it. advisers to meet with the entire Martin's motion failed 5-3, Used Westinghouse old. $50 each. Phone $165. New York to London. Call Merriman then "But I don't." portable TV, plays good $45. 484-2288 moved the board. with only Martin, Huff and area. 2 bedroom home, New 4-4-19 Frank Buck. "It's getting to the point that c 9x12 Oriental pattern 351-8604J 7-4-28 adoption of an amended ftoposal "I find Proposal II personally Stevens supporting it. r^||V furnished. $125 per wall tapestries. 1500 used rugs and AKC ALASKAN Malamute UNION BOARD flights to Europe. _ II. His amendments deleted any students don't expect much Merriman's motion then 1 h. Call 349 0330 9 a.m. til 5 and puppies. reference to: unsatisfactory," Mrs. Carrigan from the board of trustees. guaranteed steieo records and Champion blood lines, $50 and Beginning $199. Caledonia said. passed 5-3. Stevens, Martin and , weekdays. 5-4-22 track stereo 8 669-3423. 10-4-19 Airlines. 353-9777. C • Procedures for the election "One month something good Mrs. tapes. Hermes up. "Proposal II is basically not is passed in principle, and the Carrigan voted against it. portable typewriter, of the student advisers. ("I don't excellent even a step sideways," Buckner next month the board rejects it Nearly 30 students attending Rooms condition, $39. Selection of QUALITY OLD English care how they're picked," he 35mm SLR cameras puppies for Sheepdog Service said. "That's told the trustees in answer to a when it comes to putting it into the meeting walked out used. sale. Pet and show up to the request for his opinion. "It's a following the board's action. Polaroids and movie cameras. available. Call 393-5919. ■ SHARE ,W0 *Tla" r0Omt- 5-4-21 AVON PRODUCTS are available to students.") waste of time to hold an election Bosch t, own bedroom, oookin8. microscopes. and Lombe Used 8 track and used AKC you on campus. Contact Mary at • The right of the student for that limited amount of K.136G .6 4--19 cassette auto REGISTERED black cocker 353-2517. 5-4 20 advisers to request the president student participation. tape players, all spaniel. 5 months. Has all to tested and guaranteed. Bargains on shots. arrange special adviser - "Defeat it — it's not even mr'oi NEAR one room itudio. Good with children. $50 PAINTING EXTERIOR. Free ASMSU board used trustee meetings. ■'ished redecorated, pleasant. lovely diamond ring 655-2975. 10-4-19 estimates, grad students, • worth the effort," he said. |lking. A lady. Parking. $12.50 engagement sets, $39 up. experienced, references. Brighten Inviting the advisers to "It's insulting to students for Layaways„8ankcard, Mastercharge. AKC attend all public board lek. iv 4-5150. 5-4-20 REGISTERED. St. Bernard up your house for spring. • meetings. us to force them to take a WILCOX SECONDHAND Puppies. Well 349-4817. C Sending advisers advance marked. Phone proposal they don't want and STORE, 509 E. 663-3689. 5-4-20 copies of agendas for public | SINGLE rooms for rent. $60 Michigan, had nothing to do with," I month. 131 Bogue. Call Lansing. Phone 485-4391. Hours VERSATILE YOUNG man needs meetings. (Continued from page 1) daily 8 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. C ST. BERNARD • Stevens said. and ■7.9091. 5-4 20 pups and stud work after school and weekends. Allowing the advisers to leaders have aroused the ire of revitalization" for service. 2 males. AKC "We should try Proposal II registered. Phone 332-1976 after 5:30 p.m. suggest possible items for future fraternities and sororities, GRETSCH TENNESSEAN Electric 482-5887. 3-4-21 for a while and then try to representatives by their efforts (SPRING ,errn 'n coec' 4-4-20 meetings. put a Interfraternity Council President Guitar. Very good shape. Best little meat on the bones," Huff to intimidate board members Kp $180 room and board. • Giving advisers access to all Jospeh Ditzhazy has said. offer. 355-9503. 5-4-20 WILL DO any kind of said. "It's the only feasible thing into voting submission. B D RICK HOUSE, 140 Mobile Homes home. Also occasional typing in my public proceedings of present New board The blacks, like the Greeks, lingwood, 332-0844. 5-4-21 babysitting. we can do." members are have much to gain by GIBSON ELECTRIC GREAT LAKES. 10'x50'. Call 393-1073. 5-4-21 and past board actions. controlling ES330. Furnished. Martin suggested the full trying to play down the obvious a major • Excellent condition, hardshell Air Reimbursing advisers for segment of the student If AN HALL, singles, men, case. $250. 337-0490. 3-4-21 conditioner, piano. Utility CHILDCARE. LICENSED South travel expenses Proposal II as a substitute for strength of block voting. board. By pooling their votes, l^en Now leasing for summer, shed. $1,900 or best offer. Must incurred in order Merriman's motion. White "There's always a tendency black sell. 485-0552 or Pennsylvania Mt. Hope area to attend their representatives hope to 1351-9286, 372-1031. o PANASONIC PORTABLE color TV. 882-2293 Call - meetings with the seconded Martin's motion. toward block voting early in the 5-4-20 482-5003. 3-4-21 board. gain further recognition of black Under original warranty. Must sell. Buckner was again asked for session," Buckner said. "I'm room. Male student, Merriman also added "or students and fulfillment of black Call 353-2581. 1-4-19 GUITAR, DRUM, Banjo lessons. a his opinion. confident that, as usual, the lens furnished. Near campus, CHAMPION 1969. 12x50. Excellent committee of trustees" to the needs on campus. condition. 2 bedrooms. Furnished. Private, Folk, Rock. Classic. "If I thought the full group vote will disintegrate once line 332-1682. 3-4-20 CANON CLOSE-UP luns $70. Tape Lots of storage space. MARSHALL MUSIC, East we get into the term." The delicate balance now recorder, new - $40; Now - $15. Skirted. 15 Lansing. 351-7830. C-4-19 In the enjoyed by the new board could I room. $130 a term. Clean, minutes from MSU. Must sell. previous session, Must sell. Gary 332-6521. 1-4-19 393-5853 after 6 p.m., weekends. /A it's iia what's conceivably tip and erupt into Jet cooking. 1 block to campus. wnnia „ however, the votes were not cast an all -out war. At the other end 5-4-23 1-5753, 485-8836. o Typing Service with as much "life or death" of the spectrum, however, it MilOfi GREAT significance. The Greek system may father a board that is so LAKES, 1954. 45'x8' on ANN BROWN: at MSU fighting for its very Park Lake. 2 bedroom. $1400. Typing and multilith wary of upsetting rapport that if PORTABLE offset printing. Complete service existance. A strong rush into TYPEWRITER, case, After 5 p.m., 641-4525. 5-4-19 fades into total nonachievement. for student government is only of table. Aquarium, men's ties, dissertations, theses, bricks. Cheap. 355-8091. 3-4-21 AMERICAN 1970. 12x60. Like new. manuscripts, general typing. IBM. the major channels to "relevence 21 years experience. For Sale English decor, 2 bedrooms, fully 349-0850. C The C h LOSE 20 POUNDS MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS, most carpeted, disposal. Brookview r Tuesday in 101 N. Kedzie Hall. TYPIST, EXPERIENCED. Organization will hold a It JnET CONN Victor. Opera brands. 30% off list price. Rich: Mobile Park. Perry, (off M-78). On Christian Science, entitled "Where IN TWO WEEKS! 351-5869.0-4-19 lot with every modern Dissertations, theses, etc. Mary Do Our The Gazebo Back Street Theater g New, used twice. Half off Ann Rights Come From?", from Western Michigan convenience. 339-8777. 5-4-22 Lance, 626-6542. 0-4-19 followed by University Famous U.S. Women Ski Team Diet question and answer |.2671. 3-4-20 SONY TC 255 tape deck. Like new. period at 4 a p.m. today in the will perform at 4 p.m. today on the 1961 ELCAR 10'x50'. COMPLETE THESES Union steps, at 7 p.m. today in Owen During the non-snow off season 353-8755, 351-0336 after 5 p.m. Newly service. Stefanoff Lounge, Student Services Hall lobby and 9 the U.S. Women's Alpine Ski Team |RBEDS - KING SIZE, X-2-4-20 remodeled inside. Call 655-3106. Discount printing. IBM typing and Emmons Hall lounge. p.m. today in members go on the "Ski Team" diet I" direct from West Coast. 10-4-28 binding of theses, resumes, to lose 20 pounds in two weeks. |iai sale $39.95. Lowest price WE DO most repairing and replace publications. Across from campus, Sierra Club will meet at 7:30 That's right e for quality. Ken, broken corner MAC and Grand River, p.m. 20 pounds in 14 days! frames. OPTICAL today in 30 Union Plans will be I. 125 North Hagadorn. Lost & Found below Style Shop. finalized for Earth Week. All are The basis of the diet is chemical food DISCOUNT. 2615 East Michigan Call Tuesday at Demonstration Hall. All action and was devised by a famous ► COPYGRAPH welcome. Avenue, 372-7409. C-4-23 SERVICES, are welcome to attend the smoke-in, Colorado physician especially for the LOST: TIGER torn cat. Scar near 337-1 >6. C joke-in. Pigasus will speak. Sierra Club will have a U.S. Ski Team. Normal |R 600 stereo tuner and tail. Named Liefer. WE love him. displi energy is LESLIE, MUST sell, perfect. Make from 1 to 5 p.m. today and from 2 maintained (very important!) while irrard changer. $200. Fine reward. 351-1656. 5-4-22 NEED COPIES? Want to save? THE offer. Call Jeff, 351-8291 or S p.m. Tuesday in the Union COPY SHOPPE can show a. reducing. You keep "full" no |6770. 5-4-21 355-7062. 5-4-21 you discuss Glossolalia (speaking from 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Wednesdi starvation because the diet is de¬ LOST: MSU class ring. Initials TMF. how to get two Xerox copies for tongues) at 7:30 p.m. today in - in the International Center. Poste SOFA, $9.95; chair, $2.49; chest, Please return. Call 351-1564. the price of one. Phone 332-4222. and 39 Union. signed that way! It's a diet that is |ET RIFLE caliber 22. 2-4-20 541 E. Grand River. C and books will be for sale and oth easy to follow whether you work, cessories. $140 or $11.95; TV, $12.95. ABC pamphlets will be given away. travel or stay at home. Ioffer. 351-9004. 5-4-19 SECONDHAND STORE, 1208 FOUND: COMPLETE Alpha Phi Sigma, pc This is, honestly, a fantastically Turner. C GREY change TYPING and purse. printing honor society, will meei ai i successful diet. If it weren't, the U.S. Vicinity Beaumont. 8:30 p.m. service. Copy stored on |AGUAR Combo Organ, $150. trombone with HAMMOND ORGAN one year old, Thursday. Call 355-0429. 2-4-20 tape. This eliminates all magnetic re-typing Refreshmer s will be served. today in 33 Union. New membi Women's Ski Team wouldn't be per¬ case, $75. - urged to attend. mitted to use it! Right? So, give in fine condition. double keyboard, Leslie speaker. except author's changes and The following Free U classes will Call,after yourself the same break the U.S. Ski Feature many Instruments. Like corrections. ALDINGER DIRECT meet today: Long Distance Bike ■ p.m., 641 -6652. 3-4-19 - Veterans new, $200 down, take over Personal MAIL ADVERTISING, across RMinR, 6;30 p.m.. S. Campbell Hall invite your - there is stUl time to instructors to the Team gets. Lose weight the scientific, from Frandor. Phone lounge; Male - Female Relationships, proven way. Even if you've tried all 393-3796. 5-4-21 337-1773. C Veterans Assn. student payments. 9:30 p.m., 152 Gunson St.; - faculty tea the other diets. you„Q34'e it to HELP SAVE AMERICA from 5 to 8 p.m. Wednesday in the your¬ Astrology, 7:30 p.m., 105C Wells East Lansing American self to try the U.S. Women's Ski Join the AMERICAN VIGILANTES! TYPING, THESES and letters, etc. Hall: Drawing, 7 Legion Hall. p.m., 201 Bessey Here is a chance to meet Team Diet. That is. if you really do For information - Buy and Read Rapids, accurate service. Hall; Movement Improvisation, 7 your instructors on a personal level. want to lose 20 pounds in two weeks. CHECK THE AMERICAN VIGILANTE Experienced. 393-4075. O p.m., Union Parlor B. Anyone Order today. Tear this out as a By Alaric, Branden Press, 221 interested can get a spring term The Folklore Society will meet at JNARD WHOLESALE'S ■ LOW PIONEER RECEIVER model Columbus Avenue, Boston, Mass., BARBI MEL: Typing, multilithing. catalog at Man and Nature Bookstore 7:30 p.m. today in 134 Music Bldg. reminder. Send only $1.00 ($1.25 for Rush PRICES ON SX770. Cost $250 new. Very 02116. $4.95. 15-4-27 No job too large or too small. or at 325 Student Services Bldg. All are welcome to attend. Block off campus. 332-3255. C cash is O.K. : Ski clean. Like new condition with Team Diet. 279 Sheffield Dr.. "Alphabet 26" and the Dept. of Dept. ■ JEWELRY Diamonds carton, $140. 393-3228. 3-4-20 MCAT EXAM six day kaplan Art will present experimental films at AX, Santa Barbara. Calif. 93103. tutoring DOUBLE BED and for May course being assembled 1st exam. 851-6077 Transportaiion 7 and 9 p.m. today and Conrad Hall auditorium. Tuesday in Don't order unless you expect to lose 20 pounds in two weeks! Because springs, $20. 15-4-23 Suits, size 42, best offer. RIDE NEEDED: Two that's what the Ski Team Diet will do! Leslie area Erwin Chargoff, speaker for the Miscellaneous household goods. BOARD EXAMS - Kaplan students, to and from school. third annual Distinguished Scientist Joe, 6.41-4478. 2-4-19 tutoring classes now being formed for June Classes 8 3 p.m. Phone Seminar, will speak on "Remarks on and July. ATGSB Exams and 1 -589-9115 after 4 p.m. 3-4-19 the Current Revulsion from Science" SUPPORT YOUR business with a gala TWIST CONTEST everyone to join the women's * boost from Want Ads. Advertise contingent and march on Washington Wednesday, Saturday. Bus tickets are available services there. Dial 355-8255. April 21 (ppooi&oRe through Women's Liberation in 314 * BLOOD DONORS needed. $7.50 for Student Services Bldg. or Student 8 p.m. - 2 a.m. Mobilization Committee in 320 all positive, A negative, B negative Student Services Bldg. for $23. Child and AB negative, $10.00. O care will be available. negative, $12.00. MICHIGAN COMMUNITY BLOOD CENTER, 507Vi East Grand River, East Lansing. Above the new Campus Book Store. Hours: 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m., Monday, Thursday and Women who would like to spend time Saturday through May 5 in Washington should contact Anne Francis of the Lansing Area Peace Council. Ma 507 E. Grand River Friday. Tuesday and Wednesday 1 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. 337-7183. C Stevie Yittle CaesaiS You Wonder SPECIAL FOR SPRING! never have to worry about pollution at II PICKUP OR YOUR OLD SANDALS m ColUngtooot) are worth DELIVERY ON CAMPUS Apartments; (formerly Northwind Apts.) $2.00 1071 TROWBRIDGE UNLIMITED PARKING 'DISHWASHERS towards NEW SANDALS *SHAG CARPETING 'BALCONIES at AIR CONDITIONING *AND MUCH M0RE OFF CAMPUS Br tall leases now being accepted, at $55 per man M.S.U. Shoe Repair 1203 E. GR. RIVER Iz!!J51-8282 2771 Northwind Dr. (behind Yankee Store) 3 - MINUTE HEEL SERVICE 337-1631 225 E. Grand River 332-3619 1 2 Michigan State News, East Lansing, Michigan Green, Farmer discuss needs of society By JAMES BARFIELD Hospitality Weekend Green emphasized the need for meeting, In his address, Green outlined two possible steps. The first step students will be more ready to said, should reflect society's lawyers should not only be cope, he explained. work, he said. needs. The problems facing us experts on the constitutional According to Farmer, the State News Staff Writer the faculty, administration and is that universities as institutions The other step is to encourage indicate that new teaching part of law but be experts on the responsibility of all businessmen trustees to search for ways in can not remain silent. It is the universities to reshape their methods and models should be day to - day problems that should be to provide upward Universities cannot remain in which universities in general can universities' responsibility to priorities. found. poor - people face. They include mobility for those that have position until it to move up. becameSl fosss* the background if they are going make a response to these make their philosophy known to Green also talked of training He used the legal plight of the rent, food and other problems failed. To illustrate his to prepare students to meet the everyone. Once it is known, idea p. social needs of today, Robert problems. programs. These programs, he poor as an example. In 1971, with which the poor can not One of the biggest failures of the 60s was that businessmen explained" Yn In inn HI ho'w U » , ' assistant could serv! „ "Cl Green, director of the Center for teacher i 88811 did nothing to provide mobility to tho the Urban Affairs, said Saturday. for those who were being He noted that some FOR ROLE IN "THE PRICE' oppressed. Very few, if any, training at the same HIB hopes of becoming a universities have already begun assistance was given to those t The same cou|T"'s ■ playing significant roles in helping students to meet the who did not have anything. The nurse.s aides °„ld>l for fault, Farmer said, that all named was the armed services social problems of today. Green spoke at a Hotel, Restaurant and Institutional Management (HRI) conference Scott the assistance was being given to only those who were "making It." Farmer explained that now it Another way mobility to those who n would be to to help , businesses in these with James Farmer, former asst. NEW YORK (AP) - George making a movie called Cassidy for "The Andersonvillo Ebsen to the production. "The Holbrook for the movie "/ is necessary to form "career This would also communis secretary of Health, Education C. Scott, who won an Oscar "Hospital." His agent said there Trial" — directed by Scott for Andersonville Trial" has been Clear and Present Danger,' ladders." create ii(Tj after saying he would refuse it, money for all those and Welfare. would be no further comment the Hollywood Television nominated for outstanding Richard Widmark for the two These ladders must extend involved. 1 "The problem is not the could win a second acting award, on the Oscar. Theater on public television. drama where one of its part movie "Vanished" and Gig laterally as well as upward. Using pa,m„ J students," Green said. It is the Scott has been nominated for The En nominations, It was Scott s first television competitors is "ThePrice." Young — an Oscar winner a year this idea, Farmer said that it already beine ri this * students who are concerned an Emmy for his leading role in which will be presented May 9 directorial assignment, and he Scott's wife Coleen ago for his supporting role in would be possible for a person Bedford Stuvvnu^ ' about doing something to the television adaptation of take on an interesting twist. was instrumental in attracting Dewhurst, was nominated for ^They Shoot Horses Don't to move up with training. But if correct the problems we face. Arthur Miller's "The Price," seen Among Scott's rivals for such stars as Cassidy, Cameron outstanding performance by They?" — for the movie "The - parts of the county*' For the most part students are on NBC Feb. 3. outstanding actor in a single Mitchell, William Shatner. actress for her role as his wife in Neon Ceiling." more socially aware today, he He won the Academy Award dramatic performance is Jack Richard Basehart and Buddy 'The Price." In that category ^1 The nominee for said, and want to help build a for best actor for his role in she faces a double threat from outstanding single program better society. "Patton," which altogether Lee Grant, nominated twice for include "Hamlet," "They're Youth il When issues like civil rights, received seven Oscars in "The Neon Ceiling" and Tearing Down Tim Reilly's Bar," pollution and Vietnam began to ceremonies Thursday night, counci "Ransom for a Dead man." a segment of "Night Gallery" BELIEVE IT OR NOT loom, it was the students who Scott denounced the event — Besides Scott and Cassidy the and the two - part movie responded to the call. It wasn't and any others like it — as a other nominees for actor are Hal "Vanished." About Wednesday's Special the faculty, administration or "meat parade" and declined to (Continued from page 1) first order of business" at the the board of trustees that carried accept an Oscar. The actor could the issues. It was students who not be reached for comment on The task force conference and urged ' Darbeque Chicken, Cole Slaw Accounting Majors on economy immediate and complete ran the risk of getting involved, the Emmy nomination, and all and unemployment suggested in withdrawal from the conflict." and Mashed Potatoes Green said. newsmen were barred from the its preliminary report that the xj,e 10 task force reports Speaking as part of the HRI set in New York where he is "Indochina war be made the covering such topics as foreign Earn $12,000 Annually Eor ONLY 1.45 relations, ethics and drugs, will 5 - 8 p.m. National organization working exclusively with college housing serve as a base for the larger units (fraternities, sororities, independent dorms) seeks man to opposite Sears delegations working on each establish and operate office on campus of his choice. We have Batsmen win 3 the only computerized accounting system in the country 301 Clippert - Across from Frandor subject. The final reports are to programmed for undergraduate housing record - keeping. This be complete by Wednesday program can be handled on a part - time basis evenings until full afternoon. potential is reached. Extremely small cash outlay required. If and into the Ked Cedar. A single bringing Rashead to bat. The They will be presented to the you want a secure income with real growth opportunity, write today for complete details. (Continued from p by Dace, a walk to Ellis and a senior third baseman slapped a President, as well as to single by Howitt produced the grounder towards first which hit "institutions influential in its FRATERNITY ALUMNI SERVICE Roh Ellis which ended the MSU Rob final run. the bag and the resulting bad issue area." These, some Division of The Carson Company th™ hop caused the first baseman to delegates sav, represent "the ; MSU opened ,, , . j and closed the + u was Clancy's shutout of Minnesota equally impressive as the miss the ball. Pruitt scored on estaWishment " four gamesetwith 2-1 victories the play and DeLonge came in a Pontine sophomore scattered ^ond later on a wild pitch, as C ancy and Dave leisman three hits and allowed only two Dace had the only two Spartan kept their opponents swinging at Gophers to reach second base. hit. nf the air most of the Jay. The ^ _ .. hlts °r the contest- victory against the Gophers, Clancy and Winfield were combined with his win in relief '<><*«> up in a ctosic prtching AppllCdtlOIIS against Iowa raised Clancy's duel until the fifth inn.ng when record to 6 - 0. Leisman also MSU scored twice without the Tuesday is the last day to remained unbeaten, raising his benefit of a hit. After one man was retired, submit a diploma application for mark to 3 • 0. Both Spartan hurlers kept their earned run Pruitt and Ron DeLonge walked, spring teJ"m- average well below 1.0. Leisman limited Iowa to only two hits, both by first baseman Tom Hurn, as he pitched to only BASIC OUTLINES ATL: 111, 112, 113 23 batters. The lanky junior did Hum.: 241, 242, 243 not allow a walk and only nine Soc.: 231 A. 232A & B, 233 A & B of his 63 pitches missed the Nat. Sci.: 191A, 192A & B & C. 193 A & B plate. Chem.: 130, 141 Boyce gave Leisman the only run lie needed when he smacked Economics: 200, 201 a ball over the rightfield fence Geography: 204 History: 121, 122 Math: 108, 109, 111, 112, 113 Earth Week Psych: 151 Phys. Sci.: 203 (Continued from page 1) Statistics: 121 from business and industry. "PLUS "(These Book Digests At $1.00 Each.)" The Sierra Club and E-Qual are also encouraging people to Devil in Massachusetts recycle glass containers. A Citizen Tom Paine collection bin is open every Puritan Dilemma Saturday on the corner of Autobiography of Ben Franklin Harrison Avenue and Kalamazoo The Black Experience Street. The bottles must be Afro - American History - Frazier clean, and the metal rings Uncle Tom's Cabin removed. They must be divided into clear, brown and green Poor White colors. Profits from the recycled Biography of Malcolm X glass will go into making new Campus Mumc Shop. bins on the campus, Moore said. The two groups will also be selling literature and posters all day Wednesday at a booth in the 217 E. GRAND RIVER 332-4 Union. Just Arrived at the KENT STATE: What Happened and Why by James Michener If you're concerned about things happening in the world today, you'll want to read James Michener's newest book. Michener recreates events of that long weekend at Kent State in a dramatic day - to • day narrative. He weaves his vivid documentary from hundreds of tape recorded interviews with eye witnesses. Startling photographs — some never before shown — illustrate the action. But the book deals with more than Kent State. Michener shows how the turmoil there fits into the larger pattern of violence that has overwhelmed campuses and society in general. Why not get your copy today while they last. You'll also enjoy browsing through these best sellers: 6. The Rising Sun by John Toland. 2. Stilwell and the American 7. The Underground Man by Ross McDonald Experience in China by Barbara Tuchman. 8. The Sensuous Man by "M" 9. The Throne of Saturn by 3. Knots by R. D. Laing Allen Drury 4. Future Shock by 10. Passions of the Mind — Alvin Toffler Biographical Novel of 5. QB VII Sigmund Freud by Irving by Leon Uris. Stone. Student Book Store Across from Olin